readme: added 503 functionality section and bookmarks

This commit is contained in:
Asif Bacchus 2018-10-19 05:17:57 -06:00
parent 2e35e2ff1f
commit 305d571d46

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@ -87,7 +87,7 @@ unavailable' while being backed up. A sample 503 page is included for you.
If you remove the default file or the one you specify is missing, a warning will
be issued by the script but, it will continue executing. More details on the
503 notification can be found later in the [503 functionality]() section of this
503 notification can be found later in the [503 functionality](#503-functionality) section of this
document. **Default: _scriptpath/503.html_**
#### -b _/path/to/filename.file_, path to borg details file
@ -134,7 +134,7 @@ as your NextCloud webroot.
This is used exclusively for 503 functionality since the script has to know
where to copy the 503 file. If you don't want to use this functionality, you
can omit this parameter and the script will issue a warning and move on. More
details can be found in the [503 functionality]() section later in this
details can be found in the [503 functionality](#503-functionality) section later in this
document.
### Borg details file
@ -304,3 +304,77 @@ chown root:root nc_sql.details
# restrict access to root only
chmod 600 nc_sql.details
```
### 503 functionality
This script includes an entire section dedicated to copying an html file to act
as an error 503 notification page. Error 503 is by definition "service
temporarily unavailable" which is exactly the case for your NextCloud server
during a backup since it is in maintenance mode and no logins are permitted.
The script copies whatever file is defined by the *'-5'* parameter (or the
default located at *'scriptpath/503.html'*) to whatever path is defined as the
'webroot' by the *'-w'* parameter. This means that if you omit the *'-w'*
parameter, the script will necessarily skip this entire process and just issue a
warning to let you know about it.
#### Conditional forwarding by your webserver
The script copying the file to the webroot is the easy part. Your webserver has
to look for the presence of that file and generate a 503 error in order for the
magic to happen. To do that, you have to include an instruction to that effect
in your default server definition and/or your NextCloud virtual server
definition file depending on your setup.
##### NGINX
You can copy the following code into the relevant server definition(s) on an
NGINX server:
```Perl
server {
...
if (-f /usr/share/nginx/html/503.html) {
return 503;
}
...
error_page 530 @backup
location @backup {
root /usr/share/nginx/html;
rewrite ^(.*)$ /503.html break;
}
}
```
This tells NGINX that if it finds the file *'503.html'* at the path
*'/usr/share/nginx/html'* (webroot) then return an error code 503. Next,
rewrite any url to *'domain.tld/503.html'* and thus, display the custom 503
error page. On the other hand, if it can't find 503.html at the path specified
(i.e. the script has deleted it because the backup is completed), then go about
business as usual.
##### Apache
I don't use apache for anything, ever... so I'm not sure how exactly you'd do
this but I think you'd have to use something like:
```Perl
RewriteEngine On
RewriteCond %{ENV:REDIRECT_STATUS} !=503
RewriteCond "/var/www/503.html" -f
RewriteRule ^ - [R=503,L]
...
ErrorDocument 503 /503.html
...
```
Let me know if that works and I'll update this document accordingly. Like I
said, I don't use Apache so I can't really test it very easily.
#### Disabling 503 functionality altogether
If you don't want to use the 503 functionality for whatever reason and don't
want your log file junked up with warnings about it, then find the section of
the script file that starts with *'--- Begin 503 section ---'* and either
comment all the lines (put a *'#'* at the beginning of each line) or delete all
the lines until you get to *'--- End 503 section ---'*.