Deployment/New Node Checklist: Difference between revisions
From charlesreid1
| Line 22: | Line 22: | ||
#!/bin/sh | #!/bin/sh | ||
# | # | ||
# Run as root | |||
# | |||
# Use the -s flag to simulate this command before actually running it, | # Use the -s flag to simulate this command before actually running it, | ||
# as libraries tend to shift around a lot between Ubuntu versions. | # as libraries tend to shift around a lot between Ubuntu versions. | ||
echo "export EDITOR=\"vim\"" >> ~/.bash_profile | |||
apt-get install -y \ | |||
aptitude \ | aptitude \ | ||
build-essential \ | build-essential \ | ||
| Line 45: | Line 49: | ||
libssl-dev | libssl-dev | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
==Dotfiles== | ==Dotfiles== | ||
Revision as of 11:41, 25 March 2017
- Aptitude
- apt get update
- aptitude build scripts
- Sysadmin stuff
- Make non-root default user
- SSH
- No root login
Aptitude
Ubuntu 16.04 LTS
Fresh dev machine apt script
Runs apt-get for all the dev things you need. Ubuntu 16.04 LTS.
#!/bin/sh # # Run as root # # Use the -s flag to simulate this command before actually running it, # as libraries tend to shift around a lot between Ubuntu versions. echo "export EDITOR=\"vim\"" >> ~/.bash_profile apt-get install -y \ aptitude \ build-essential \ checkinstall \ make \ m4 \ bison \ flex \ tar \ perl \ binutils \ sed \ gawk \ python2.7 \ python3 python3-pip \ \ libreadline-gplv2-dev \ libncursesw5-dev \ libssl-dev
Dotfiles
Wait until you create a user to install any dotfiles, of course. Root remains plain and uncontaminated.
Unix dotfiles - yargwid repo https://github.com/charlesreid1/yargwid
Mirror: http://git.charlesreid1.com/charlesreid1/yargwid
Users
See Unix/Sysadmin
Add a non-root user
#!/bin/sh
export USERNAME="zappa"
echo "Making user ${USERNAME}"
useradd ${USERNAME}
echo "Setting home directory /home/${USERNAME}"
mkdir -p /home/${HOME}
chown ${USERNAME} /home/${HOME}
usermod -d /home/${HOME} ${USERNAME}
echo "Setting ${USERNAME} shell to bash"
usermod -s /bin/bash ${USERNAME}
echo "If you want to add ${USERNAME} to sudo, do it yourelf."
echo "Set password for ${USERNAME}:"
passwd ${USERNAME}
# Note: doing this in a script is a bad idea.
# usermod -G root ${USERNAME}
# You'll need to add them to sudoers anyway.
Add user to sudoers: