mirror of
https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing.git
synced 2024-11-16 10:28:49 -07:00
380 lines
12 KiB
Groff
380 lines
12 KiB
Groff
.\" Man page generated from reStructuredText.
|
||
.
|
||
.TH "STDISCOSRV" "1" "Apr 18, 2018" "v0.14" "Syncthing"
|
||
.SH NAME
|
||
stdiscosrv \- Syncthing Discovery Server
|
||
.
|
||
.nr rst2man-indent-level 0
|
||
.
|
||
.de1 rstReportMargin
|
||
\\$1 \\n[an-margin]
|
||
level \\n[rst2man-indent-level]
|
||
level margin: \\n[rst2man-indent\\n[rst2man-indent-level]]
|
||
-
|
||
\\n[rst2man-indent0]
|
||
\\n[rst2man-indent1]
|
||
\\n[rst2man-indent2]
|
||
..
|
||
.de1 INDENT
|
||
.\" .rstReportMargin pre:
|
||
. RS \\$1
|
||
. nr rst2man-indent\\n[rst2man-indent-level] \\n[an-margin]
|
||
. nr rst2man-indent-level +1
|
||
.\" .rstReportMargin post:
|
||
..
|
||
.de UNINDENT
|
||
. RE
|
||
.\" indent \\n[an-margin]
|
||
.\" old: \\n[rst2man-indent\\n[rst2man-indent-level]]
|
||
.nr rst2man-indent-level -1
|
||
.\" new: \\n[rst2man-indent\\n[rst2man-indent-level]]
|
||
.in \\n[rst2man-indent\\n[rst2man-indent-level]]u
|
||
..
|
||
.SH SYNOPSIS
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.INDENT 3.5
|
||
.sp
|
||
.nf
|
||
.ft C
|
||
stdiscosrv [\-cert=<file>] [\-db\-dir=<string>] [\-debug] [\-http] [\-key=<string>]
|
||
[\-listen=<address>] [\-metrics\-listen=<address>]
|
||
[\-replicate=<peers>] [\-replication\-listen=<address>]
|
||
.ft P
|
||
.fi
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.SH DESCRIPTION
|
||
.sp
|
||
Syncthing relies on a discovery server to find peers on the internet. Anyone
|
||
can run a discovery server and point Syncthing installations to it. The
|
||
Syncthing project also maintains a global cluster for public use.
|
||
.SH OPTIONS
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B \-cert=<file>
|
||
Certificate file (default “./cert.pem”).
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B \-db\-dir=<string>
|
||
Database directory, where data is stored (default “./discovery.db”).
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B \-debug
|
||
Enable debug output.
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B \-http
|
||
Listen on HTTP (behind an HTTPS proxy).
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B \-key=<file>
|
||
Key file (default “./key.pem”).
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B \-listen=<address>
|
||
Listen address (default “:8443”).
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B \-metrics\-listen=<address>
|
||
Prometheus compatible metrics endpoint listen address (default disabled).
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B \-replicate=<peers>
|
||
Replication peers, \fI\%id@address\fP <\fBid@address\fP>, comma separated
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B \-replication\-listen=<address>
|
||
Listen address for incoming replication connections (default “:19200”).
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.SH POINTING SYNCTHING AT YOUR DISCOVERY SERVER
|
||
.sp
|
||
By default, Syncthing uses a number of global discovery servers, signified by
|
||
the entry \fBdefault\fP in the list of discovery servers. To make Syncthing use
|
||
your own instance of stdiscosrv, open up Syncthing’s web GUI. Go to settings,
|
||
Global Discovery Server and add stdiscosrv’s host address to the comma\-separated
|
||
list, e.g. \fBhttps://disco.example.com:8443/\fP\&. Note that stdiscosrv uses port
|
||
8443 by default. For stdiscosrv to be available over the internet with a dynamic
|
||
IP address, you will need a dynamic DNS service.
|
||
.sp
|
||
If you wish to use \fIonly\fP your own discovery server, remove the \fBdefault\fP
|
||
entry from the list.
|
||
.SH SETTING UP
|
||
.SS Description
|
||
.sp
|
||
This guide assumes that you have already set up Syncthing. If you
|
||
haven’t yet, head over to getting\-started first.
|
||
.SS Installing
|
||
.sp
|
||
Go to \fI\%releases\fP <\fBhttps://github.com/syncthing/discosrv/releases\fP> and
|
||
download the file appropriate for your operating system. Unpacking it will
|
||
yield a binary called \fBstdiscosrv\fP (or \fBstdiscosrv.exe\fP on Windows).
|
||
Start this in whatever way you are most comfortable with; double clicking
|
||
should work in any graphical environment. At first start, stdiscosrv will
|
||
generate certificate files and database in the current directory unless
|
||
given flags to the contrary.
|
||
.SS Configuring
|
||
.sp
|
||
\fBNOTE:\fP
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.INDENT 3.5
|
||
If you are running an instance of Syncthing on the discovery server,
|
||
you must either add that instance to other devices using a static
|
||
address or bind the discovery server and Syncthing instances to
|
||
different IP addresses.
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.SS Certificates
|
||
.sp
|
||
The discovery server provides service over HTTPS. To ensure secure connections
|
||
from clients there are three options:
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.IP \(bu 2
|
||
Use a CA\-signed certificate pair for the domain name you will use for the
|
||
discovery server. This is like any other HTTPS website; clients will
|
||
authenticate the server based on its certificate and domain name.
|
||
.IP \(bu 2
|
||
Use any certificate pair and let clients authenticate the server based on
|
||
its “device ID” (similar to Syncthing\-to\-Syncthing authentication). This
|
||
option can be used with the certificate automatically generated by the
|
||
discovery server.
|
||
.IP \(bu 2
|
||
Pass the \fB\-http\fP flag if the discovery server is behind an SSL\-secured
|
||
reverse proxy. See below for configuration.
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.sp
|
||
For the first two options, the discovery server must be given the paths to
|
||
the certificate and key at startup. This isn’t necessary with the \fBhttp\fP flag:
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.INDENT 3.5
|
||
.sp
|
||
.nf
|
||
.ft C
|
||
$ stdiscosrv \-cert=/path/to/cert.pem \-key=/path/to/key.pem
|
||
Server device ID is 7DDRT7J\-UICR4PM\-PBIZYL3\-MZOJ7X7\-EX56JP6\-IK6HHMW\-S7EK32W\-G3EUPQA
|
||
.ft P
|
||
.fi
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.sp
|
||
The discovery server prints its device ID at startup. In case you are using
|
||
a non CA signed certificate, this device ID (fingerprint) must be given to
|
||
the clients in the discovery server URL:
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.INDENT 3.5
|
||
.sp
|
||
.nf
|
||
.ft C
|
||
https://disco.example.com:8443/?id=7DDRT7J\-UICR4PM\-PBIZYL3\-MZOJ7X7\-EX56JP6\-IK6HHMW\-S7EK32W\-G3EUPQA
|
||
.ft P
|
||
.fi
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.sp
|
||
Otherwise, the URL will be:
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.INDENT 3.5
|
||
.sp
|
||
.nf
|
||
.ft C
|
||
https://disco.example.com:8443/
|
||
.ft P
|
||
.fi
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.SS Replication
|
||
.sp
|
||
The discovery server can be deployed in a redundant, load sharing fashion.
|
||
In this mode announcements are replicated from the server that receives them
|
||
to other peer servers and queries can be answered equally by all servers.
|
||
.sp
|
||
Replication connections are encrypted and authenticated using TLS. The
|
||
certificate is selected by the \fB\-cert\fP and \fB\-key\fP options and is thus
|
||
shared with the main discovery API. If the \fB\-http\fP mode is used the
|
||
certificate is not used for client requests but only for replication
|
||
connections.
|
||
.sp
|
||
Authentication of replication connections is done using \fI\%Syncthing\-style
|
||
device IDs\fP <\fBhttps://docs.syncthing.net/dev/device-ids.html#id1\fP> only \- CA
|
||
verification is not available. The device IDs in question are those printed
|
||
by the discovery server on startup.
|
||
.sp
|
||
Replication connections are unidirectional \- announcements are replication
|
||
from the \fBsender\fP to a \fBlistener\fP\&. In order to have a bidirectional
|
||
replication relationship between two servers both need to be configured as
|
||
sender and listener.
|
||
.sp
|
||
As an example, lets assume two discovery servers:
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.IP \(bu 2
|
||
Server one is on 192.0.2.20 and has certificate ID I6K…H76
|
||
.IP \(bu 2
|
||
Server two is on 192.0.2.55 and has certificate ID MRI…7OK
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.sp
|
||
In order for both to replicate to the other and thus form a redundant pair,
|
||
use the following commands.
|
||
.sp
|
||
On server one:
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.INDENT 3.5
|
||
.sp
|
||
.nf
|
||
.ft C
|
||
$ stdiscosrv \-replicate=MRI...7OK@192.0.2.55:19200 <other options>
|
||
.ft P
|
||
.fi
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.sp
|
||
On server two:
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.INDENT 3.5
|
||
.sp
|
||
.nf
|
||
.ft C
|
||
$ stdiscosrv \-replicate=I6K...H76@192.0.2.20:19200 <other options>
|
||
.ft P
|
||
.fi
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.sp
|
||
The \fB\-replicate\fP directive sets which remote device IDs are expected and
|
||
allowed for both outgoing (sending) and incoming (listening) connections,
|
||
and which addresses to use when connecting out to those peers. Both IP and
|
||
port must be specified in peer addresses.
|
||
.sp
|
||
It is possible to only allow incoming connections from a peer without
|
||
establishing an outgoing replication connection. To do so, give only the
|
||
device ID without “@ip:port” address:
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.INDENT 3.5
|
||
.sp
|
||
.nf
|
||
.ft C
|
||
$ stdiscosrv \-replicate=I6K...H76 <other options>
|
||
.ft P
|
||
.fi
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.sp
|
||
Discosrv will listen on the replication port only when \fB\-replicate\fP is
|
||
given. The default replication listen address is “:19200”.
|
||
.sp
|
||
To achieve load balancing over two mutually replicating discovery server
|
||
instances, add multiple A / AAAA DNS records for a given name and point
|
||
Syncthing towards this name. The same certificate must be used on both
|
||
discovery servers.
|
||
.SS Reverse Proxy Setup
|
||
.sp
|
||
The discovery server can be run behind an SSL\-secured reverse proxy. This
|
||
allows:
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.IP \(bu 2
|
||
Use of a subdomain name without requiring a port number added to the URL
|
||
.IP \(bu 2
|
||
Sharing an SSL certificate with multiple services on the same server
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.SS Requirements
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.IP \(bu 2
|
||
Run the discovery server using the \-http flag \fBstdiscosrv \-http\fP\&.
|
||
.IP \(bu 2
|
||
SSL certificate/key configured for the reverse proxy
|
||
.IP \(bu 2
|
||
The “X\-Forwarded\-For” http header must be passed through with the client’s
|
||
real IP address
|
||
.IP \(bu 2
|
||
The “X\-SSL\-Cert” must be passed through with the PEM\-encoded client SSL
|
||
certificate
|
||
.IP \(bu 2
|
||
The proxy must request the client SSL certificate but not require it to be
|
||
signed by a trusted CA.
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.SS Nginx
|
||
.sp
|
||
These three lines in the configuration take care of the last three requirements
|
||
listed above:
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.INDENT 3.5
|
||
.sp
|
||
.nf
|
||
.ft C
|
||
proxy_set_header X\-Forwarded\-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
|
||
proxy_set_header X\-SSL\-Cert $ssl_client_cert;
|
||
ssl_verify_client optional_no_ca;
|
||
.ft P
|
||
.fi
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.sp
|
||
The following is a complete example Nginx configuration file. With this setup,
|
||
clients can use \fI\%https://discovery.example.com\fP as the discovery server URL in
|
||
the Syncthing settings.
|
||
.INDENT 0.0
|
||
.INDENT 3.5
|
||
.sp
|
||
.nf
|
||
.ft C
|
||
# HTTP 1.1 support
|
||
proxy_http_version 1.1;
|
||
proxy_buffering off;
|
||
proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
|
||
proxy_set_header Upgrade $http_upgrade;
|
||
proxy_set_header Connection $proxy_connection;
|
||
proxy_set_header X\-Real\-IP $remote_addr;
|
||
proxy_set_header X\-Forwarded\-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
|
||
proxy_set_header X\-Forwarded\-Proto $proxy_x_forwarded_proto;
|
||
proxy_set_header X\-SSL\-Cert $ssl_client_cert;
|
||
upstream discovery.example.com {
|
||
# Local IP address:port for discovery server
|
||
server 192.0.2.1:8443;
|
||
}
|
||
server {
|
||
server_name discovery.example.com;
|
||
listen 80;
|
||
access_log /var/log/nginx/access.log vhost;
|
||
return 301 https://$host$request_uri;
|
||
}
|
||
server {
|
||
server_name discovery.example.com;
|
||
listen 443 ssl http2;
|
||
access_log /var/log/nginx/access.log vhost;
|
||
ssl_protocols TLSv1 TLSv1.1 TLSv1.2;
|
||
ssl_ciphers ECDHE\-RSA\-AES128\-GCM\-SHA256:ECDHE\-ECDSA\-AES128\-GCM\-SHA256:ECDHE\-RSA\-AES256\-GCM\-SHA384:ECDHE\-ECDSA\-AES256\-GCM\-SHA384: DHE\-RSA\-AES128\-GCM\-SHA256:DHE\-DSS\-AES128\-GCM\-SHA256:kEDH+AESGCM:ECDHE\-RSA\-AES128\-SHA256:ECDHE\-ECDSA\-AES128\-SHA256:ECDHE\-RSA\-AES128\-SHA:E CDHE\-ECDSA\-AES128\-SHA:ECDHE\-RSA\-AES256\-SHA384:ECDHE\-ECDSA\-AES256\-SHA384:ECDHE\-RSA\-AES256\-SHA:ECDHE\-ECDSA\-AES256\-SHA:DHE\-RSA\-AES128\-SHA25 6:DHE\-RSA\-AES128\-SHA:DHE\-DSS\-AES128\-SHA256:DHE\-RSA\-AES256\-SHA256:DHE\-DSS\-AES256\-SHA:DHE\-RSA\-AES256\-SHA:AES128\-GCM\-SHA256:AES256\-GCM\-SHA3 84:AES128\-SHA256:AES256\-SHA256:AES128\-SHA:AES256\-SHA:AES:CAMELLIA:DES\-CBC3\-SHA:!aNULL:!eNULL:!EXPORT:!DES:!RC4:!MD5:!PSK:!aECDH:!EDH\-DSS \-DES\-CBC3\-SHA:!EDH\-RSA\-DES\-CBC3\-SHA:!KRB5\-DES\-CBC3\-SHA;
|
||
ssl_prefer_server_ciphers on;
|
||
ssl_session_timeout 5m;
|
||
ssl_session_cache shared:SSL:50m;
|
||
ssl_certificate /etc/nginx/certs/discovery.example.com.crt;
|
||
ssl_certificate_key /etc/nginx/certs/discovery.example.com.key;
|
||
ssl_dhparam /etc/nginx/certs/discovery.example.com.dhparam.pem;
|
||
add_header Strict\-Transport\-Security "max\-age=31536000";
|
||
ssl_verify_client optional_no_ca;
|
||
location / {
|
||
proxy_pass http://discovery.example.com;
|
||
}
|
||
}
|
||
.ft P
|
||
.fi
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.UNINDENT
|
||
.sp
|
||
An example of automating the SSL certificates and reverse\-proxying the Discovery
|
||
Server and Syncthing using Nginx, \fI\%Let’s Encrypt\fP <\fBhttps://letsencrypt.org/\fP> and Docker can be found \fI\%here\fP <\fBhttps://forum.syncthing.net/t/docker-syncthing-and-syncthing-discovery-behind-nginx-reverse-proxy-with-lets-encrypt/6880\fP>\&.
|
||
.SH SEE ALSO
|
||
.sp
|
||
\fBsyncthing\-networking(7)\fP, \fBsyncthing\-faq(7)\fP
|
||
.SH AUTHOR
|
||
The Syncthing Authors
|
||
.SH COPYRIGHT
|
||
2014-2018, The Syncthing Authors
|
||
.\" Generated by docutils manpage writer.
|
||
.
|