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Omar Polo d29a2ee224 get rid of the CGI support
I really want to get rid of the `executor' process hack for CGI scripts
and its escalation to allow fastcgi and proxying to work on non-OpenBSD.

This drops the CGI support and the `executor' process entirely and is
the first step towards gmid 2.0.  It also allows to have more secure
defaults.

On non-OpenBSD systems this means that the sandbox will be deactivated
as soon as fastcgi or proxying are used: you can't open sockets under
FreeBSD' capsicum(4) and I don't want to go thru the pain of making it
work under linux' seccomp/landlock.  Patches are always welcome however.

For folks using CGI scripts (hey, I'm one of you!) not all hope is lost:
fcgiwrap or OpenBSD' slowcgi(8) are ways to run CGI scripts as they were
FastCGI applications.

fixes for the documentation and to the non-OpenBSD sandboxes will
follow.
2022-09-06 16:11:09 +00:00
compat fix getprogname shim 2022-07-04 13:43:27 +00:00
contrib remove the OpenBSD' rc file 2022-07-04 19:22:08 +00:00
have const-ify some tables 2022-03-19 11:02:42 +00:00
regress get rid of the CGI support 2022-09-06 16:11:09 +00:00
site don't hardcode urls; use TREE 'macro' 2022-07-07 08:54:26 +00:00
.cirrus.yml add .cirrus.yml 2021-10-04 10:05:34 +00:00
.dockerignore fix the dockerfile 2021-07-11 20:58:42 +00:00
.gitignore update gitignore for site/ 2022-01-28 12:34:29 +00:00
ChangeLog sync 2022-07-07 18:19:34 +00:00
LICENSE copyright years 2022-07-04 09:48:39 +00:00
Makefile get rid of the CGI support 2022-09-06 16:11:09 +00:00
Makefile.depend refactor the makefile / configure 2022-07-04 13:44:38 +00:00
README.md get rid of the CGI support 2022-09-06 16:11:09 +00:00
configure bump version 2022-07-04 19:18:39 +00:00
configure.local.example add an example configure.local based on mandoc-portable' one 2022-07-04 13:44:53 +00:00
dirs.c don't set d_reclen 2022-07-07 08:54:26 +00:00
fcgi.c const-ify some tables 2022-03-19 11:02:42 +00:00
gg.1 fix gg -P flag description: the `:' is in the optional part 2022-01-30 13:31:29 +00:00
gg.c s/whole/all 2022-01-27 10:37:28 +00:00
gmid.1 get rid of the CGI support 2022-09-06 16:11:09 +00:00
gmid.c get rid of the CGI support 2022-09-06 16:11:09 +00:00
gmid.conf.5 changes for 1.8.4 2022-07-04 14:51:39 +00:00
gmid.h get rid of the CGI support 2022-09-06 16:11:09 +00:00
iri.c copyright years 2022-07-04 09:48:39 +00:00
landlock_shim.h tweak landlock comment 2021-10-08 15:55:48 +00:00
log.c call tzset(3) to fix times in logs 2022-07-07 18:15:06 +00:00
mime.c copyright years 2022-07-04 09:48:39 +00:00
parse.y get rid of the CGI support 2022-09-06 16:11:09 +00:00
proxy.c copyright years 2022-07-04 09:48:39 +00:00
puny.c fix various compilation errors 2021-02-12 12:47:20 +00:00
sandbox.c get rid of the CGI support 2022-09-06 16:11:09 +00:00
server.c get rid of the CGI support 2022-09-06 16:11:09 +00:00
utf8.c fmt 2021-10-18 10:05:55 +00:00
utils.c log when the certificate was successfully generated 2022-04-12 17:40:58 +00:00

README.md

gmid

gmid is a fast Gemini server written with security in mind. I initially wrote it to serve static files, but it has grown into a featureful server.

Features

(random order)

  • sandboxed by default on OpenBSD, Linux and FreeBSD
  • reconfiguration: reload the running configuration without interruption
  • automatic redirect/error pages (see block return)
  • IRI support (RFC3987)
  • automatic certificate generation for config-less mode
  • reverse proxying
  • FastCGI support
  • virtual hosts
  • location rules
  • event-based asynchronous I/O model
  • low memory footprint
  • small codebase, easily hackable

Internationalisation (IRIs, UNICODE, punycode, all that stuff)

Even thought the current Gemini specification doesn't mention anything in this regard, I do think these are important things and so I tried to implement them in the most user-friendly way I could think of.

For starters, gmid has full support for IRI (RFC3987 — Internationalized Resource Identifiers). IRIs are a superset of URIs, so there aren't incompatibilities with URI-only clients.

There is full support also for punycode. In theory, the user doesn't even need to know that punycode is a thing. The hostname in the configuration file can (and must be) in the decoded form (e.g. naïve and not xn--nave-6pa), gmid will do the rest.

The only missing piece is UNICODE normalisation of the IRI path: gmid doesn't do that (yet).

Configuration

gmid has a rich configuration file, heavily inspired by OpenBSD' httpd, with every detail carefully documented in the manpage. Here's a minimal example of a config file:

server "example.com" {
	cert "/path/to/cert.pem"
	key  "/path/to/key.pem"
	root "/var/gemini/example.com"
}

and a slightly more complex one

ipv6 on     # enable ipv6

# define a macro
cert_root = "/path/to/keys"

server "example.com" {
	alias "foobar.com"

	cert $cert_root "/example.com.crt"
	key  $cert_root "/example.com.pem"
	root "/var/gemini/example.com"

	# lang for text/gemini files
	lang "en"

	# only for locations that matches /files/*
	location "/files/*" {
		# generate directory listings
		auto index on
	}

	location "/repo/*" {
		# change the index file name
		index "README.gmi"
		lang "it"
	}
}

Building

gmid depends on libevent2, OpenSSL/LibreSSL and libtls (provided either by LibreSSL or libretls). At build time, yacc (or GNU bison) is also needed.

The build is as simple as

./configure
make

or make static to build a statically-linked executable.

If the configure scripts fails to pick up something, please open an issue or notify me via email.

To install execute:

make install

Please keep in mind that the master branch, from time to time, may be accidentally broken on some platforms. gmid is developed primarily on OpenBSD/amd64 and commits on the master branch don't get always tested in other OSes. Before tagging a release however, a comprehensive testing on various platform is done to ensure that everything is working as intended.

Testing

Execute

make regress

to start the suite. Keep in mind that the regression tests needs to create files inside the regress directory and bind the 10965 port.

Contributing

Any form of contribution is welcome, not only patches or bug reports. If you have a sample configuration for some specific use-case, a script or anything that could be useful to others, consider adding it to the contrib directory.

Architecture/Security considerations

outdated: revisit for gmid 2.0

gmid is composed by four processes: the parent process, the logger, the listener and the executor. The parent process is the only one that doesn't drop privileges, but all it does is to wait for a SIGHUP to reload the configuration and spawn a new generation of children process. The logger process gathers the logs and prints 'em to stderr or syslog (for the time being.) The listener process is the only one that needs internet access and is sandboxed by default. The executor process exists only to fork and execute CGI scripts, and optionally to connect to FastCGI applications.

On OpenBSD the processes are all pledge(2)d and unveil(2)ed.

On FreeBSD, the listener and logger process are sandboxed with capsicum(4).

On Linux, a seccomp(2) filter is installed in the listener to allow only certain syscalls, see sandbox.c for more information about the BPF program. If available, landlock is used to limit the portion of the file system gmid can access (requires linux 5.13+.)

In any case, it's advisable to run gmid inside some sort of container/jail/chroot.