| 1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738394041424344454647484950515253545556575859606162636465666768697071727374757677787980818283848586878889909192 | 
							- .. include:: serve.rst.inc
 
- Examples
 
- ~~~~~~~~
 
- ``borg serve`` has special support for SSH forced commands (see ``authorized_keys``
 
- example below): if the environment variable SSH_ORIGINAL_COMMAND is set it will
 
- ignore some options given on the command line and use the values from the
 
- variable instead. This only applies to a carefully controlled allowlist of safe
 
- options. This list currently contains:
 
- - Options that control the log level and debug topics printed
 
-   such as ``--verbose``, ``--info``, ``--debug``, ``--debug-topic``, etc.
 
- - ``--lock-wait`` to allow the client to control how long to wait before
 
-   giving up and aborting the operation when another process is holding a lock.
 
- Environment variables (such as BORG_XXX) contained in the original
 
- command sent by the client are *not* interpreted; they are ignored. If BORG_XXX environment
 
- variables need to be set on the ``borg serve`` side, then these must be set in system-specific
 
- locations like ``/etc/environment`` or in the forced command itself (example below).
 
- ::
 
-     # Allow an SSH key pair to only run borg, and only have access to /path/to/repo.
 
-     # Use key options to disable unneeded and potentially dangerous SSH functionality.
 
-     # This helps secure an automated remote backup system.
 
-     $ cat ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
 
-     command="borg serve --restrict-to-path /path/to/repo",restrict ssh-rsa AAAAB3[...]
 
-     # Set a BORG_XXX environment variable on the ``borg serve`` side.
 
-     $ cat ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
 
-     command="BORG_XXX=value borg serve [...]",restrict ssh-rsa [...]
 
- .. note::
 
-     The examples above use the ``restrict`` directive and assume a POSIX-compliant
 
-     shell set as the user's login shell.
 
-     This automatically blocks potentially dangerous SSH features, even when
 
-     they are added in a future update. Thus, this option should be preferred.
 
-     If you're using OpenSSH server < 7.2, however, you have to explicitly specify
 
-     the SSH features to restrict and cannot simply use the ``restrict`` option as it
 
-     was introduced in v7.2. We recommend using
 
-     ``no-port-forwarding,no-X11-forwarding,no-pty,no-agent-forwarding,no-user-rc``
 
-     in this case.
 
- Details about sshd usage: `sshd(8) <https://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi/OpenBSD-current/man8/sshd.8>`_
 
- .. _ssh_configuration:
 
- SSH Configuration
 
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
- ``borg serve``'s pipes (``stdin``/``stdout``/``stderr``) are connected to the ``sshd`` process on the server side. In the event that the SSH connection between ``borg serve`` and the client is disconnected or stuck abnormally (for example, due to a network outage), it can take a long time for ``sshd`` to notice the client is disconnected. In the meantime, ``sshd`` continues running, and as a result so does the ``borg serve`` process holding the lock on the repository. This can cause subsequent ``borg`` operations on the remote repository to fail with the error: ``Failed to create/acquire the lock``.
 
- In order to avoid this, it is recommended to perform the following additional SSH configuration:
 
- Either in the client side's ``~/.ssh/config`` file, or in the client's ``/etc/ssh/ssh_config`` file:
 
- ::
 
-     Host backupserver
 
-             ServerAliveInterval 10
 
-             ServerAliveCountMax 30
 
- Replace ``backupserver`` with the hostname, FQDN, or IP address of the Borg server.
 
- This will cause the client to send a keepalive to the server every 10 seconds. If 30 consecutive keepalives are sent without a response (a time of 300 seconds), the SSH client process will be terminated, causing the Borg process to terminate gracefully.
 
- On the server side's ``sshd`` configuration file (typically ``/etc/ssh/sshd_config``):
 
- ::
 
-     ClientAliveInterval 10
 
-     ClientAliveCountMax 30
 
- This will cause the server to send a keepalive to the client every 10 seconds. If 30 consecutive keepalives are sent without a response (a time of 300 seconds), the server's sshd process will be terminated, causing the ``borg serve`` process to terminate gracefully and release the lock on the repository.
 
- If you then run Borg commands with ``--lock-wait 600``, this gives sufficient time for the ``borg serve`` processes to terminate after the SSH connection is torn down following the 300-second wait for the keepalives to fail.
 
- You may, of course, modify the timeout values demonstrated above to values that suit your environment and use case.
 
- When the client is untrusted, it is a good idea to set the backup
 
- user's shell to a simple implementation (``/bin/sh`` is only an example and may or may
 
- not be such a simple implementation)::
 
-   chsh -s /bin/sh BORGUSER
 
- Because the configured shell is used by `openssh <https://www.openssh.com/>`_
 
- to execute the command configured through the ``authorized_keys`` file
 
- using ``"$SHELL" -c "$COMMAND"``,
 
- setting a minimal shell implementation reduces the attack surface
 
- compared to when a feature-rich and complex shell implementation is
 
- used.
 
 
  |