0
0
Fork 0
mirror of https://codeberg.org/forgejo/docs.git synced 2024-11-24 18:09:26 -05:00
forgejo-docs/docs/admin/database-preparation.md
Otto Richter 3d46045045 Update database preparation guide
- it is related to installation instructions
- mention SQLite in the guide
- reduce the complexity of the guide (I think we don't need to cover all the details here, there are better guides available)
2024-09-05 13:23:31 +02:00

13 KiB

title license origin_url
Database Preparation Apache-2.0 e865de1e9d/docs/content/installation/database-preparation.en-us.md

You need a database to use Forgejo. The easiest option is SQLite which managed files next to Forgejo and does not require setting up a database server. However, if you plan to use Forgejo with several hundreds of users, or if you already run a databse server, you might want to choose another option.

Forgejo supports:

  • MariaDB (>=10.0)
  • MySQL (>=8.0)
  • PostgreSQL (>=12)
  • SQLite3

This page will guide into preparing the database. Also take a look at the database section of the config cheat sheet for a detailed list of options in Forgejo.

Database instance can be on same machine as Forgejo (local database setup), or on different machine (remote database).

SQLite

Forgejo distributes binaries that come with SQLite support and you don't need to install additional dependencies on your system.

Note: If you build Forgejo from source, build with make TAGS="sqlite sqlite_unlock_notify" build to include SQLite support.

Choosing SQLite only requires setting the database type and optionally the path to a database file:

[database]
DB_TYPE = sqlite3
# optional if you want to specify another location
# by default, the database file will be stored relative to other data
PATH = data/forgejo.db

If you want to maximize performance, you might want to take a look at the [database].SQLITE_JOURNAL_MODE setting and consider using the WAL mode.

MySQL/MariaDB

  1. Install the MariaDB or MySQL server component on the system you would like to store the database on.

  2. Protect the root user with a secure password or disable the login.

  3. On the database instance, login to database console as root:

    mysql -u root -p
    

    Enter the password as prompted.

  4. Create a new database user which will be used by Forgejo, authenticated by password. This example uses 'passw0rd' as password. Please use a secure password for your instance.

    For a local database:

    SET old_passwords=0;
    CREATE USER 'forgejo'@'%' IDENTIFIED BY 'passw0rd';
    

    If your database is hosted on another system than Forgejo (includes some containerized deployments):

    SET old_passwords=0;
    CREATE USER 'forgejo'@'192.0.2.10' IDENTIFIED BY 'passw0rd';
    

    where 192.0.2.10 is the IP address of your Forgejo instance.

    Replace username and password above as appropriate.

  5. Create database with UTF-8 charset and case-sensitive collation.

    utf8mb4_bin is a common collation for both MySQL/MariaDB. When Forgejo starts, it will try to find a better collation (utf8mb4_0900_as_cs or uca1400_as_cs) and alter the database if it is possible. If you would like to use another collation, you can set [database].CHARSET_COLLATION in the app.ini file.

    CREATE DATABASE forgejodb CHARACTER SET 'utf8mb4' COLLATE 'utf8mb4_bin';
    

    Replace database name as appropriate.

    Using an accent- and case sensitive collation such as utf8mb4_bin is important, because Forgejo often relies on these sensitivities, and if those assumptions are broken, that may lead to internal server errors or other unexpected results.

  6. Grant all privileges on the database to the database user created above.

    For local database:

    GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON forgejodb.* TO 'forgejo';
    FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
    

    For remote database:

    GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON forgejodb.* TO 'forgejo'@'192.0.2.10';
    FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
    
  7. Quit from database console by typing exit.

  8. Optional: On your Forgejo server, test connection to the database (requires that you have a client library installed. The client is not necessary for Forgejo itself):

    mysql -u forgejo -h 203.0.113.3 -p forgejodb
    

    where forgejo is database username, forgejodb is database name, and 203.0.113.3 is IP address of database instance. Omit -h option for local database.

    You should be connected to the database.

PostgreSQL

  1. Install the PostgreSQL server component on the system you would like to store the database on.

  2. Protect the root user with a secure password or disable the login.

  3. If you use a PostgreSQL version lower than 14, the md5 challenge-response encryption scheme for password authentication is used by default. Nowadays this scheme is not considered secure anymore. Use SCRAM-SHA-256 scheme instead by editing the postgresql.conf configuration file on the database server to:

    password_encryption = scram-sha-256
    

    Restart PostgreSQL to apply the setting.

  4. On the database server, login to the database console as superuser:

    su -c "psql" - postgres
    
  5. Create database user (role in PostgreSQL terms) with login privilege and password. Please use a secure, strong password instead of 'passw0rd' below:

    CREATE ROLE forgejo WITH LOGIN PASSWORD 'passw0rd';
    

    Replace username and password as appropriate.

  6. Create database with UTF-8 charset and owned by the database user created earlier. Any libc collations can be specified with LC_COLLATE and LC_CTYPE parameter, depending on expected content:

    CREATE DATABASE forgejodb WITH OWNER forgejo TEMPLATE template0 ENCODING UTF8 LC_COLLATE 'en_US.UTF-8' LC_CTYPE 'en_US.UTF-8';
    

    Replace database name as appropriate.

  7. Allow the database user to access the database created above by adding the following authentication rules to pg_hba.conf.

    For local database:

    local    forgejodb    forgejo                   scram-sha-256
    host     forgejodb    forgejo    127.0.0.1/32   scram-sha-256  # IPv4 local connections
    host     forgejodb    forgejo    ::1/128        scram-sha-256  # IPv6 local connections
    

    For remote database:

    host    forgejodb    forgejo    192.0.2.10/32    scram-sha-256
    

    Replace database name, user, and IP address of Forgejo instance with your own.

    Note: rules on pg_hba.conf are evaluated sequentially, that is the first matching rule will be used for authentication. Your PostgreSQL installation may come with generic authentication rules that match all users and databases. You may need to place the rules presented here above such generic rules if it is the case.

    Restart PostgreSQL to apply new authentication rules.

  8. Optional: Test connection to the database from the Forgejo container.

    For local database:

    psql -U forgejo -d forgejodb -h localhost
    

    For remote database:

    psql "postgres://forgejo@203.0.113.3/forgejodb"
    

    where forgejo is database user, forgejodb is database name, and 203.0.113.3 is IP address of your database instance.

    You should be prompted to enter password for the database user, and connected to the database.

Database Connection over TLS

If the communication between Forgejo and your database instance is performed through a private network, or if Forgejo and the database are running on the same server, this section can be omitted since the security between Forgejo and the database instance is not critically exposed. If instead the database instance is on a public network, use TLS to encrypt the connection to the database, as it is possible for third-parties to intercept the traffic data.

Prerequisites

  • You need two valid TLS certificates, one for the database instance (database server) and one for the Forgejo instance (database client). Both certificates must be signed by a trusted CA.
  • The database certificate must contain TLS Web Server Authentication in the X509v3 Extended Key Usage extension attribute, while the client certificate needs TLS Web Client Authentication in the corresponding attribute.
  • On the database server certificate, one of Subject Alternative Name or Common Name entries must be the fully-qualified domain name (FQDN) of the database instance (e.g. db.example.com). On the database client certificate, one of the entries mentioned above must contain the database username that Forgejo will be using to connect.
  • You need domain name mappings of both Forgejo and database servers to their respective IP addresses. Either set up DNS records for them or add local mappings to /etc/hosts (%WINDIR%\System32\drivers\etc\hosts in Windows) on each system. This allows the database connections to be performed by domain name instead of IP address. See documentation of your system for details.

PostgreSQL

The PostgreSQL driver used by Forgejo supports two-way TLS. In two-way TLS, both database client and server authenticate each other by sending their respective certificates to their respective opposite for validation. In other words, the server verifies client certificate, and the client verifies server certificate.

  1. On the server with the database instance, place the following credentials:

    • /path/to/postgresql.crt: Database instance certificate
    • /path/to/postgresql.key: Database instance private key
    • /path/to/root.crt: CA certificate chain to validate client certificates
  2. Add following options to postgresql.conf:

    ssl = on
    ssl_ca_file = '/path/to/root.crt'
    ssl_cert_file = '/path/to/postgresql.crt'
    ssl_key_file = '/path/to/postgresql.key'
    ssl_min_protocol_version = 'TLSv1.2'
    
  3. Adjust credentials ownership and permission, as required by PostgreSQL:

    chown postgres:postgres /path/to/root.crt /path/to/postgresql.crt /path/to/postgresql.key
    chmod 0600 /path/to/root.crt /path/to/postgresql.crt /path/to/postgresql.key
    
  4. Edit pg_hba.conf rule to only allow Forgejo database user to connect over SSL, and to require client certificate verification.

    For PostgreSQL 12:

    hostssl    forgejodb    forgejo    192.0.2.10/32    scram-sha-256    clientcert=verify-full
    

    For PostgreSQL 11 and earlier:

    hostssl    forgejodb    forgejo    192.0.2.10/32    scram-sha-256    clientcert=1
    

    Replace database name, user, and IP address of Forgejo instance as appropriate.

  5. Restart PostgreSQL to apply configurations above.

  6. On the server running the Forgejo instance, place the following credentials under the home directory of the user who runs Forgejo (e.g. git):

    • ~/.postgresql/postgresql.crt: Database client certificate
    • ~/.postgresql/postgresql.key: Database client private key
    • ~/.postgresql/root.crt: CA certificate chain to validate server certificate

    Note: Those file names above are hardcoded in PostgreSQL and it is not possible to change them.

  7. Adjust credentials, ownership and permission as required:

    chown git:git ~/.postgresql/postgresql.crt ~/.postgresql/postgresql.key ~/.postgresql/root.crt
    chown 0600 ~/.postgresql/postgresql.crt ~/.postgresql/postgresql.key ~/.postgresql/root.crt
    
  8. Test the connection to the database:

    psql "postgres://forgejo@example.db/forgejodb?sslmode=verify-full"
    

    You should be prompted to enter password for the database user, and then be connected to the database.

MySQL/MariaDB

While the MySQL/MariaDB driver used by Forgejo also supports two-way TLS, Forgejo currently supports only one-way TLS. See the "Add TLS File Path Options for MySQL/MariaDB Database Connection](https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/issues/10828)" issue for details.

In one-way TLS, the database client verifies the certificate sent from server during the connection handshake, and the server assumes that the connected client is legitimate, since client certificate verification doesn't take place.

  1. On the database instance, place the following credentials:

    • /path/to/mysql.crt: Database instance certificate
    • /path/to/mysql.key: Database instance key
    • /path/to/ca.crt: CA certificate chain. This file isn't used on one-way TLS, but is used to validate client certificates on two-way TLS.
  2. Add following options to my.cnf:

    [mysqld]
    ssl-ca = /path/to/ca.crt
    ssl-cert = /path/to/mysql.crt
    ssl-key = /path/to/mysql.key
    tls-version = TLSv1.2,TLSv1.3
    
  3. Adjust credentials ownership and permission:

    chown mysql:mysql /path/to/ca.crt /path/to/mysql.crt /path/to/mysql.key
    chmod 0600 /path/to/ca.crt /path/to/mysql.crt /path/to/mysql.key
    
  4. Restart MySQL/MariaDB to apply the setting.

  5. The database user for Forgejo may have been created earlier, but it would authenticate only against the IP addresses of the server running Forgejo. To authenticate against its domain name, recreate the user, and this time also set it to require TLS for connecting to the database:

    DROP USER 'forgejo'@'192.0.2.10';
    CREATE USER 'forgejo'@'example.forgejo' IDENTIFIED BY 'passw0rd' REQUIRE SSL;
    GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON forgejodb.* TO 'forgejo'@'example.forgejo';
    FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
    

    Replace database user name, password, and Forgejo instance domain as appropriate.

  6. Make sure that the CA certificate chain required to validate the database server certificate is on the system certificate store of both the database and Forgejo servers. Consult your system documentation for instructions on adding a CA certificate to the certificate store.

  7. On the server running Forgejo, test connection to the database:

    mysql -u forgejo -h example.db -p --ssl
    

    You should be connected to the database.