Commit d411b7d0 authored by George Hartzell's avatar George Hartzell Committed by Matt Holt

Add doc re running as non-root user on FreeBSD (#2655)

Add a README.md in `dist/init/freebsd` that describes how to configure
the system so that `caddy` can be run without root privileges.
parent 580f7677
# Running caddy without root privileges
FreeBSD systems can use the mac_portacl module to allow access to
ports below 1024 by specific users (by default, non-root users are not
able to open ports below 1024).
On a stock FreeBSD system, you need to:
1. Add the following line to `/boot/loader.conf`, which tells the boot
loader to load the `mac_portacl` kernel module:
``` shell
mac_portacl_load="YES"
```
2. Add the following lines to `/etc/sysctl.conf`
``` shell
net.inet.ip.portrange.reservedlow=0
net.inet.ip.portrange.reservedhigh=0
security.mac.portacl.port_high=1023
security.mac.portacl.suser_exempt=1
security.mac.portacl.rules=uid:80:tcp:80,uid:80:tcp:443
```
The first two lines disable the default restrictions on ports <
1023, the third makes the `mac_portacl` system responsible for ports
from 0 (the default) up to 1023, and the fourth ensures that the
superuser can open *any* port.
The final/fifth line specifies two rules, separated by a `,`:
- the first gives the `www` user (uid = 80) access to the `http`
port (80); and
- the second gives the `www` user (uid = 80) access to the `https`
port (443).
Other/additional rules are possible, e.g. access can be constrained
by membership in the `www` *group* using the `gid` specifier:
```
security.mac.portacl.rules=gid:80:tcp:80,gid:80:tcp:443
```
## See also
- The *MAC Port Access Control List Policy* section of the [Available
MAC
Policies](https://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/mac-policies.html)
page.
- [Caddy issue #1923](https://github.com/mholt/caddy/issues/1923).
# Logging the caddy process's output:
Caddy's FreeBSD `rc.d` script uses `daemon` to run `caddy`; by default
......
Markdown is supported
0%
or
You are about to add 0 people to the discussion. Proceed with caution.
Finish editing this message first!
Please register or to comment