* Vagrantfile: Add Ubuntu 22.04 image
* Recognize Ubuntu 22.04 as supported
* Bump nextcloud to v24.0.0
* Bump Roundcube to 1.6-beta
Still waiting for the final release to come out
* Fix version checking functions
* NextCloud fixes
* Update Roundcube config
* Bump roundcube to 1.6-rc
* FIx nextcloud installation step
* rcm: Update CardDAV plugin to v4.4.0 (Guzzle v7)
* Fix STORAGE_ROOT permissions
* Update RC CardDAV plugin to v4.4.1
* Unpin b2sdk for Ubuntu 22.04
* Comment fix
* Drop support for Debian 10 from this point forward
* Software Updates
* Nextcloud: 24.0.2
* Nextcloud Calendar: 3.4.2
* Roundcube CardDAV: 4.4.2
* Update Roundcube to v1.6.0
* Update Nextcloud to v24.0.3
* Contacts to v4.2.0
* Upgrade Nextcloud to v24.0.4
* Calendar to v3.5.0
Webmail:
* CardDAV to v4.4.3
Nextcloud:
* The Nextcloud user_external 1.0.0 package for Nextcloud 21.0.7 isn't available from Nextcloud's releases page, but it's not needed in an intermediate upgrade step (hopefully), so we can skip it.
* Nextcloud updgrade steps should not be elifs because multiple intermediate upgrades may be needed.
* Continue if the user_external backend migration fails. Maybe it's not necessary. It gives a scary error message though.
* Remove a line that removes an old file that hasn't been in use since 2019 and the expectation is that Ubuntu 22.04 installations are on fresh machines.
Backups:
* For duplicity, we now need boto3 for AWS.
The first version supporting PHP 8.0 is Nextcloud 21. Therefore we can add migrations only to Nextcloud 21 forward, and so we only support migrating from Nextcloud 20 (Mail-in-a-Box versions v0.51+). Migration steps through Nextcloud 21 and 22 are added.
Also:
* Fix PHP APUc settings to be before Nextcloud tools are run.
* Add the PHP PPA.
* Specify the version when invoking the php CLI.
* Specify the version in package names.
* Update paths to 8.0 (using a variable in the setup scripts).
* Update z-push's php-xsl dependency to php8.0-xml.
* php-json is now built-into PHP.
Although PHP 8.1 is the stock version in Ubuntu 22.04, it's not supported by Nextcloud yet, and it likely will never be supported by the the version of Nextcloud that succeeds the last version of Nextcloud that supports PHP 7.2, and we have to install the next version so that an upgrade is permitted, so skipping to PHP 8.1 may not be easily possible.
* certbot's PPA is no longer needed because a recent version is now included in the Ubuntu respository.
* Un-pin b2sdk (reverts 69d8fdef99 and d829d74048).
* Revert boto+s3 workaround for duplicity (partial revert of 99474b348f).
* Revert old "fix boto 2 conflict on Google Compute Engine instances" (cf33be4596) which is probably no longer needed.
The resolve method disables resolving relative names by default. This change probably makes a7710e90 unnecessary. @JoshData added some additional changes from query to resolve.
* Fix path to bind9 startup options file in Ubuntu 22.04.
* tinymce has not been a Roundcube requirement recently and is no longer a package in Ubuntu 22.04
* Upgrade Vagrant box to Ubuntu 22.04
We install b2sdk in two places: Once globally for duplicity (see
9d8fdef9915127f016eb6424322a149cdff25d7 for #2125) and once in
a virtualenv used by our control panel. The latter wasn't pinned
when the former was but should be to fix new Python compatibility
issues.
Anyone who updated Python packages recently (so anyone who upgraded
Mail-in-a-Box) started encountering these issues.
Fixes#2131.
See https://discourse.mailinabox.email/t/backblaze-b2-backup-not-working-since-v57/9231.
We were using duplicity 0.8.21-ppa202111091602~ubuntu1 from the duplicity PPA probably until June 5, which is when my box automatically updated to 0.8.23-ppa202205151528~ubuntu18.04.1. Starting with that version, two changes broke backups:
* The default s3 backend was changed to boto3. But boto3 depends on the AWS SDK which does not support Ubuntu 18.04, so we can't install it. Instead, we map s3: backup target URLs to the boto+s3 scheme which tells duplicity to use legacy boto. This should be reverted when we can switch to boto3.
* Contrary to the documentation, the s3 target no longer accepts a S3 hostname in the URL. It now reads the bucket from the hostname part of the URL. So we now drop the hostname from our target URL before passing it to duplicity and we pass the endpoint URL in a separate command-line argument. (The boto backend was dropped from duplicity's "uses_netloc" in 74d4cf44b1 (f5a07610d36bd242c3e5b98f8348879a468b866a_37_34), but other changes may be related.)
The change of target URL (due to both changes) seems to also cause duplicity to store cached data in a different directory within $STORAGE_ROOT/backup/cache, so on the next backup it will re-download cached manifest/signature files. Since the cache directory will still hold the prior data which is no longer needed, it might be a good idea to clear out the cache directory to save space. A system status checks message is added about that.
Fixes#2123
Update jails.conf to include IPV6 localhost and external ip to ignoreip line. Update system.sh to include IPV6 address in replacement. See mail-in-a-box#2066 for details.
See [mailinabox issue #2088](https://github.com/mail-in-a-box/mailinabox/issues/2088). This also updates the commit hashes to for anyone updating from NextCloud version 17 (as shown in the related issue) since a different hash is used for tags vs releases.
This was tested and verified to work on a setup previously running v0.44 and then updating to the latest version (v56).
It is not strictly required for us to have sshd installed,
for example on baremetal machines where shell access
is physical-only.
Instead we'll skip certain tasks that depend on sshd if
it is not installed.
When building the part of the report about the current DS records founded, they are added in the same order as they were received when calling query_dns(), which can differ from run to run. This was making the difflib.SequenceMatcher() method to find the same line removed and added one line later, and sending an Status Checks Change Notice email with the same line added and removed when there was actually no real changes.