On Sat, Dec 16, 2017 at 9:04 AM, Dmytro Bilokha <dmy...@posteo.net> wrote:
> On Sat, Dec 16, 2017 at 03:20:21PM +0100, Miroslav Lachman wrote: > >> Dmytro Bilokha wrote on 2017/12/16 14:59: >> >>> On Sat, Dec 16, 2017 at 01:44:05PM +0100, Miroslav Lachman wrote: >>> >>>> Dmytro Bilokha wrote on 2017/12/16 10:40: >>>> >>>>> Hello, Everyone! >>>>> >>>>> I'm trying to change www/payara port to make it run under the payara >>>>> user instead of root. >>>>> I've added the following line to the UIDs file: >>>>> >>>>> payara:*:221:221::0:0:Payara Application Server >>>>> user:/nonexistent:/usr/sbin/nologin >>>>> >>>>> And this line to the port makefile: >>>>> >>>>> USERS= payara >>>>> >>>>> Also, I've made some another changes to the port's scripts to start >>>>> service under payara user. >>>>> Everything seems to be fine, but the service on start/shutdown creates >>>>> some preferences files, >>>>> caches, etc in the payara user's homedir. >>>>> The problem is, that it is impossible to create these files in >>>>> /nonexistent. This fact makes >>>>> service to show some annoying warnings on every startup/shutdown. >>>>> To make service to work properly I want to create directory writable by >>>>> the payara user and >>>>> set it as payara's homedir. >>>>> And I don't want to put these dir under the /usr/home/, it should be >>>>> somewhere in the application, >>>>> like /usr/local/payara-4.1.2.173/prefs. >>>>> As far as I understand, payara user will be created automatically by >>>>> the >>>>> bsd.port.pre.mk file included in the port's makefile. But, during >>>>> every >>>>> installation somehow payara user's homedir >>>>> should be changed. I can do it with the following one-liner: >>>>> >>>>> /usr/sbin/pw usermod payara -d ${DATADIR}/prefs >>>>> >>>>> So, the questions are: >>>>> 1. Is it a proper way of doing such kind of things? >>>>> 2. Where in the port's makefile should I put my one-liner? Will it be >>>>> OK >>>>> to make it like this: >>>>> >>>>> .......head of the make file with setting variables and so on is >>>>> here...... >>>>> .include <bsd.port.pre.mk> >>>>> do-install: >>>>> .........doing some work here...... >>>>> @/usr/sbin/pw usermod payara -d ${DATADIR}/prefs >>>>> .include <bsd.port.post.mk> >>>>> ....end of the makefile..... >>>>> >>>>> Many thanks for your attention and help. >>>>> >>>> >>>> I don't know Payara but applications should not write its files to >>>> /usr/local. This should work even if /usr/local is mounted Read Only. >>>> If you need to store configuration (preferences) then it should be in >>>> /usr/local/etc/payara. >>>> If the application writes some data files like databases, it goes under >>>> /var/db/payara and log in to /var/log/payara.log or /var/log/payara >>>> (directory) >>>> >>>> Miroslav Lachman >>>> >>> >>> Thanks for the information. Now I'm a little bit confused. >>> I've checked and seems to me that nither www/tomcat85 (servlet >>> container) nor www/glassfish and java/wildfly10 (application servers) >>> ports follow this convention. >>> All of them has directories for logs, configuration and Java >>> applications under the >>> /usr/local. Is there something special in Java servers ports? >>> >> >> >> I know there are ports not following this convention (and I don't >> understand why). Those ports are making troubles if you want to serve >> /usr/local as read only NFS for example. >> >> Miroslav Lachman >> > > Ok, than I'll try to move everything writable from /usr/local to /var. > I plan to put system user's caches and properties to the > /var/payara/X.Y.Z/prefs, > where X.Y.Z is an application's version. > And this returns me to the first question: how to properly change user's > home > directory on port installation? > > -- > Dmytro Bilokha > dmy...@posteo.net > +38-050-607-41-43 > How did you add the user? If you did not use the adduser script or vipw, you must rebuild the database. pwd_mkdb. I would suggest always using vipw as it automatically does everything Kevin Oberman, Part time kid herder and retired Network Engineer E-mail: rkober...@gmail.com PGP Fingerprint: D03FB98AFA78E3B78C1694B318AB39EF1B055683 _______________________________________________ freebsd-ports@freebsd.org mailing list https://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-ports To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-ports-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"