@fei-xie Yes, NodeBB supports that out of the box. Try composing a reply to this topic, and then close the tab.
... but give it a second or two to actually save 😄
I asked that question briefly here but then I figured maybe the community can hAlp:
What’s the right way to setup permissions, say you’re on linux (ubuntu12), running nginx 1.4 with redis
i’ve got:
drwxr-xr-x 5 www-data www-data 4096 Feb 20 17:50 mysite.com
drwxr-xr-x 2 www-data www-data 4096 Feb 20 17:49 forums.mysite.com
where www-data
is the nginx user, and a my current user is admin
which can sudo btw.
To setup NodeBB in forums.mysite.com
, I will need to sudo
to do anything, from git clone
to running any command in there, should admin
own that directory? or is it just better to place the NodeBB dir in admin’s home?
What is your conventional way of doing that in production? I still want to be able to setup supervisor
to start on boot too, so calling supervisor
shouldn't need sudo
woops. approved... I need to find a better commenting system for WP ( ooh, wonder what that's going to be)
NodeBB, when listening on an unprivileged port, does not require a privileged user, so I just run it under a regular unix account. As long as that account has write access to /public/uploads
(and wherever else it needs to write things), it should be fine.
NodeBB doesn't need to be owned by the nginx user.
gotcha! I end up doing this, seems to work, but not sure how dangerous that is
sudo adduser admin www-data
sudo chown -R :www-data /var/www
sudo chmod -R g+rw /var/www
@v4 This is a risk with any application, and NodeBB is no exception. Think "zero-day exploits" and applications which accidentally let someone "break out" of the environment. It's obviously something we patch and code against, but finding them is often another matter
We maintain an email specifically for handling these issues: [email protected]. If you've located an exploit vector, email use privately there, and we'll get it fixed up!