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d5ec11ec51
Signed-off-by: dsomero <xgizzmo@slackbuilds.org>
107 lines
3.1 KiB
Text
107 lines
3.1 KiB
Text
HOW TO CONNECT WITH A WEBDAV SERVER WITH THE DAVF2 APPLICATION
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In this HOWTO, the user is named "user"
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Amend as required for your choice of username.
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1. Login as root
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2. Define a davfs2 group and user:
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# groupadd -g 230 davfs2
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# useradd -u 230 -d /var/cache/davfs2 -g davfs2 davfs2
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3. If (and only if) you have a Slack64 install;
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# export ARCH=x86_64
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4. You may want to set the Package type that you will build:
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# export PKGTYPE=txz
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5. Build and install your package:
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# tar xvf davfs2.tar.gz
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# cd davfs2
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# wget http://ftp.cc.uoc.gr/mirrors/nongnu.org/davfs2/davfs2-1.4.6.tar.gz
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# ./davfs.SlackBuild
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# installpkg /tmp/davfs2-1.4.5-x86_64-2_SBo.txz
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6. Add the user if not already defined. My user shall be called user, so:
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# adduser user
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Read the Slackbook for more details on adduser, choose default settings BUT:
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with the default group list add also davfs2:
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Press ENTER to continue without adding any additional groups
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Or press the UP arrow to add/select/edit additional groups
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: audio cdrom floppy plugdev video power netdev davfs2
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If the user was already defined, then add davfs2 to the groups:
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# usermod -ga davfs2 user
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7. Edit /etc/fstab with the following line:
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WEBDAV_SERVER_URL mount_point davfs noauto,user 0 0
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For example:
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https://example.org/user /home/user/mnt/dav davfs noauto,user 0 0
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8. logout
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9. Login again as your davfs user ("user" in my case).
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10. $ mkdir -p $HOME/.davfs2/certs/private/ $HOME/mnt/dav
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11. Move the certificate to $HOME/davfs2/certs/private and restrict the permission to rw-------:
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For example:
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$ mv CERTIFICATE.pfx $HOME/.davfs2/certs/private/
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$ chmod 600 $HOME/.davfs2/certs/private/CERIFICATE.pfx
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12. Optionally: Switch user to root and copy the system configuration file.
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Then change ownership to the davfs user and exit back to the davfs user. There
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are a lot of interesting comments in these files that might be helpful.
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$ su -
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# cp /etc/davfs2/davfs2.conf ~user/.davfs2/
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# cp /etc/davfs2/secrets ~user/.davfs2/
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# chown -R user:users ~user/.davfs2/
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# exit
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13. Edit $HOME/.davfs2/davfs2.conf with the following line:
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clientcert ~/.davfs2/certs/private/CERTIFICATE.pfx
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Read:
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$ man davfs2.conf
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for all the details and options. Tests have shown that you do not need more
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than the line above, but you may want to set many other interesting
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parameters.
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14. Edit $HOME/.davfs2/secrets with the following 2 lines:
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/home/user/mnt/dav username password
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CERTIFICATE.pfx passphrase
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The username and password are relevant to the Webdav server, not for the
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local account.
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passphrase is the password for the PFX certificate
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You should obtain all these from the Webdav server Administrator
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15. Restrict permssion for $HOME/.davfs2/secrets to rw-------:
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$ chmod 600 $HOME/.davfs2/secrets
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16. Mount the davfs service on $HOME/mnt/dav
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$ mount https://example.org/user
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You should be able to see your WEBDAV server on $HOME/mnt/user
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17. When you would like to disconnect:
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$ umount $HOME/mnt/dav
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You should get a similar response (the pid number is random):
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/sbin/umount.davfs: waiting while mount.davfs (pid 5700) synchronizes the cache .. OK
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