ID |
Date |
Icon |
Author |
Author Email |
Category |
OS |
ELOG Version |
Subject |
68835
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Fri Aug 17 22:07:41 2018 |
| Andrew Wade | awade@caltech.edu | Question | Linux | Other | 3.1.2 | Re: Reverse proxy of Elog using Docker and Nginx? |
Yes, I tried setting the URL parameter to the url used by the proxy. It goes to the correct address but that landing is the login page.
Andrew
Stefan Ritt wrote: |
Have you tried the "URL = ..." statement? This determines you elog redirects if you log in. If you reach elog through a proxy, the URL is a different one that if you access it directly. In your case the proxy URL might be necessary.
Stefan
Andrew Wade wrote: |
I've been trying to configured a Synology NAS to run my personal elog with a reverse proxy to the outside world. The best way seems to be running Elog in a Docker instance and then running a separate connected Docker running a nginx-proxy (in this case jwilder/nginx-proxy). This second container manages the certificates to letsencrypt and mapping URL requests to relevant containers so that connection is secured properly.
It worked great in the initial test. However, I have an issue with authentication. When I password protect the elog it goes to a login page. When I give an correct password it loops back to the login page (incidentally when I give an incorrect password it gives an 'Invalid user name or password!' warning). So I know that its getting the correct password but there is some issue that is resetting or ignoring the authentication. I am never able to actually get to the protected content.
Does anyone have any experience in using Nginx to setup a secure reverse proxy? Any insights into why this would mess with the authentication of elog?
Side note: I have tried using Apache to do the same and authentication worked fine. But the pre-canned jwilder/nginx-proxy docker manages all the certificates automatically and seamlessly and allows me to have multiple services running on the same outward facing port on my router. There is no equivalent (as far as I know) that uses Apache for proxying with letsencrypt.
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68836
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Mon Aug 20 12:42:24 2018 |
| Stefan Ritt | stefan.ritt@psi.ch | Question | Linux | Other | 3.1.2 | Re: Reverse proxy of Elog using Docker and Nginx? |
Actually this forum works through an Apache reverse proxy with authentication and it works, so I suspect that the problem has to do with jwilder/nginx-proxy. Since we don't have this here, all I can propose is that you do debugging yourself. Run elogd with the -v flag so that you see all requests coming from the user through the proxy. Compare the requests through Apache and Nginx to see if any argumets are stripped or mangled. Upon successful login, elog sets a cookie with a unique session-ID (the cookie name is "sid") to the browser. If you proxy strips that cookie, you would land on the login page. Maybe look in that direction.
Stefan
Andrew Wade wrote: |
Yes, I tried setting the URL parameter to the url used by the proxy. It goes to the correct address but that landing is the login page.
Andrew
Stefan Ritt wrote: |
Have you tried the "URL = ..." statement? This determines you elog redirects if you log in. If you reach elog through a proxy, the URL is a different one that if you access it directly. In your case the proxy URL might be necessary.
Stefan
Andrew Wade wrote: |
I've been trying to configured a Synology NAS to run my personal elog with a reverse proxy to the outside world. The best way seems to be running Elog in a Docker instance and then running a separate connected Docker running a nginx-proxy (in this case jwilder/nginx-proxy). This second container manages the certificates to letsencrypt and mapping URL requests to relevant containers so that connection is secured properly.
It worked great in the initial test. However, I have an issue with authentication. When I password protect the elog it goes to a login page. When I give an correct password it loops back to the login page (incidentally when I give an incorrect password it gives an 'Invalid user name or password!' warning). So I know that its getting the correct password but there is some issue that is resetting or ignoring the authentication. I am never able to actually get to the protected content.
Does anyone have any experience in using Nginx to setup a secure reverse proxy? Any insights into why this would mess with the authentication of elog?
Side note: I have tried using Apache to do the same and authentication worked fine. But the pre-canned jwilder/nginx-proxy docker manages all the certificates automatically and seamlessly and allows me to have multiple services running on the same outward facing port on my router. There is no equivalent (as far as I know) that uses Apache for proxying with letsencrypt.
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68838
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Tue Aug 28 23:38:55 2018 |
| Andrew Wade | awade@caltech.edu | Question | Linux | Other | 3.1.2 | Re: Reverse proxy of Elog using Docker and Nginx? |
It does indeed seem to be a cookie stripping issue. I just need to figure out how to get Nginx to forward these properly.
Thanks for the help.
Stefan Ritt wrote: |
Actually this forum works through an Apache reverse proxy with authentication and it works, so I suspect that the problem has to do with jwilder/nginx-proxy. Since we don't have this here, all I can propose is that you do debugging yourself. Run elogd with the -v flag so that you see all requests coming from the user through the proxy. Compare the requests through Apache and Nginx to see if any argumets are stripped or mangled. Upon successful login, elog sets a cookie with a unique session-ID (the cookie name is "sid") to the browser. If you proxy strips that cookie, you would land on the login page. Maybe look in that direction.
Stefan
Andrew Wade wrote: |
Yes, I tried setting the URL parameter to the url used by the proxy. It goes to the correct address but that landing is the login page.
Andrew
Stefan Ritt wrote: |
Have you tried the "URL = ..." statement? This determines you elog redirects if you log in. If you reach elog through a proxy, the URL is a different one that if you access it directly. In your case the proxy URL might be necessary.
Stefan
Andrew Wade wrote: |
I've been trying to configured a Synology NAS to run my personal elog with a reverse proxy to the outside world. The best way seems to be running Elog in a Docker instance and then running a separate connected Docker running a nginx-proxy (in this case jwilder/nginx-proxy). This second container manages the certificates to letsencrypt and mapping URL requests to relevant containers so that connection is secured properly.
It worked great in the initial test. However, I have an issue with authentication. When I password protect the elog it goes to a login page. When I give an correct password it loops back to the login page (incidentally when I give an incorrect password it gives an 'Invalid user name or password!' warning). So I know that its getting the correct password but there is some issue that is resetting or ignoring the authentication. I am never able to actually get to the protected content.
Does anyone have any experience in using Nginx to setup a secure reverse proxy? Any insights into why this would mess with the authentication of elog?
Side note: I have tried using Apache to do the same and authentication worked fine. But the pre-canned jwilder/nginx-proxy docker manages all the certificates automatically and seamlessly and allows me to have multiple services running on the same outward facing port on my router. There is no equivalent (as far as I know) that uses Apache for proxying with letsencrypt.
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69393
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Wed Sep 15 13:52:59 2021 |
| Bolko Beutner | bolko.beutner@desy.de | Question | Linux | Other | 3.1.2 | Re: Reverse proxy of Elog using Docker and Nginx? |
I have the same problem -- did you find a solution in using the nginx revese proxy with user login?
Andrew Wade wrote: |
It does indeed seem to be a cookie stripping issue. I just need to figure out how to get Nginx to forward these properly.
Thanks for the help.
Stefan Ritt wrote: |
Actually this forum works through an Apache reverse proxy with authentication and it works, so I suspect that the problem has to do with jwilder/nginx-proxy. Since we don't have this here, all I can propose is that you do debugging yourself. Run elogd with the -v flag so that you see all requests coming from the user through the proxy. Compare the requests through Apache and Nginx to see if any argumets are stripped or mangled. Upon successful login, elog sets a cookie with a unique session-ID (the cookie name is "sid") to the browser. If you proxy strips that cookie, you would land on the login page. Maybe look in that direction.
Stefan
Andrew Wade wrote: |
Yes, I tried setting the URL parameter to the url used by the proxy. It goes to the correct address but that landing is the login page.
Andrew
Stefan Ritt wrote: |
Have you tried the "URL = ..." statement? This determines you elog redirects if you log in. If you reach elog through a proxy, the URL is a different one that if you access it directly. In your case the proxy URL might be necessary.
Stefan
Andrew Wade wrote: |
I've been trying to configured a Synology NAS to run my personal elog with a reverse proxy to the outside world. The best way seems to be running Elog in a Docker instance and then running a separate connected Docker running a nginx-proxy (in this case jwilder/nginx-proxy). This second container manages the certificates to letsencrypt and mapping URL requests to relevant containers so that connection is secured properly.
It worked great in the initial test. However, I have an issue with authentication. When I password protect the elog it goes to a login page. When I give an correct password it loops back to the login page (incidentally when I give an incorrect password it gives an 'Invalid user name or password!' warning). So I know that its getting the correct password but there is some issue that is resetting or ignoring the authentication. I am never able to actually get to the protected content.
Does anyone have any experience in using Nginx to setup a secure reverse proxy? Any insights into why this would mess with the authentication of elog?
Side note: I have tried using Apache to do the same and authentication worked fine. But the pre-canned jwilder/nginx-proxy docker manages all the certificates automatically and seamlessly and allows me to have multiple services running on the same outward facing port on my router. There is no equivalent (as far as I know) that uses Apache for proxying with letsencrypt.
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67179
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Mon Jan 30 18:23:39 2012 |
| Yoshio Imai | $user_email | Question | Windows | 2.9.0 | Re: Return Code |
It depends on how you actually call the elog client, but it outputs a message
Message successfully transmitted, ID=(new message id)
to the console upon successful transmission. Maybe you can catch this and evaluate? |
1889
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Wed Aug 9 19:40:42 2006 |
| Stefan Ritt | stefan.ritt@psi.ch | Question | Windows | V2.6.2-169 | Re: Retain original ELOG id when moving an entry to an archive weblog |
Fergus Lynch wrote: | We have a number of weblogs where we regular archive off 'completed' entries to a separate archive weblog:
Is it possible to retain the original ELOG id when moving an entry to an archive weblog, or have a locked field which holds the original id which we could subsequently reference in the archive? |
First of all, a reference to the original ELOG entry would not help if it's moved into another logbook (archive). Keeping the id is not possible technically, since it severs as a kind of primary key, which must be unique etc. There is however the possibility to create a "secondary" ID, using the Preset xxx = ### functionality. The attribute xxx will have increasing numbers just like the primary ID. You even can combine this with the current year or month (see documentation). The problem now is how to reference such an entry. You cannot just type elog:123 as this only references the primary ID. You would have to do a "hidden" search such as
http://midas.psi.ch/elogs/Forum/?xxx=###
where ### is your secondary id. This will of course be slower because if you click on such a reference, your whole archive will be searched for. |
2099
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Tue Nov 28 12:50:19 2006 |
| Stefan Ritt | stefan.ritt@psi.ch | Question | Linux | Windows | 2.6.2-1755 | Re: Resubmit-as-new-entry behaviour when synchronizing/mirroring |
Andreas Warburton wrote: | Thanks for any comments or insights. |
This problem was introduced a couple of months ago. It is now fixed in the new version 2.6.3. |
556
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Fri Jun 4 16:55:36 2004 |
| Stefan Ritt | stefan.ritt@psi.ch | Bug report | Windows | 2.5.2 | Re: Resubmit as new entry |
> Elogd crashing when "Resubmit as new entry" is executed.
> Tried with demo config, same result, also tried with snapshot version.
> After the first crash i restart elogd, then it crashes every time i enter
> the logbook containing the entry i tried to "Resubmit as new entry"
> Anyone seen same behavior, on win2000 platform ?.
I fixed this problem, was a stack overflow. New snapshot is available. |