Daniel García
ea600ab2b8
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6 years ago | |
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docker | 7 years ago | |
libs/jsonwebtoken | 7 years ago | |
migrations | 7 years ago | |
src | 6 years ago | |
.dockerignore | 7 years ago | |
.env | 7 years ago | |
.gitignore | 7 years ago | |
Cargo.lock | 6 years ago | |
Cargo.toml | 6 years ago | |
Dockerfile | 6 years ago | |
LICENSE.txt | 7 years ago | |
README.md | 6 years ago | |
Rocket.toml | 6 years ago | |
diesel.toml | 7 years ago | |
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README.md
Bitwarden_RS
This project is an unofficial implementation of the Bitwarden Core Server written in Rust.
(Note: This project is not associated with the Bitwarden project nor 8bit Solutions LLC.)
Build/Run
This project can be built and deployed in two ways:
Docker Setup (Easy)
Install Docker to your system and then, from the project root, run:
# Build the docker image:
docker build -t bitwarden_rs .
# Run the docker image with a docker volume:
docker run --name bitwarden_rs -t --rm -v bw_data:/data -p 80:80 bitwarden_rs
Then visit http://localhost:80
Manual Setup (Advanced)
Dependencies
Rust nightly
(strongly recommended to use rustup)OpenSSL
(should be available in path, install through your system's package manager or use the prebuilt binaries)NodeJS
(required to build the web-vault, (install through your system's package manager or use the prebuilt binaries)
Install the web-vault
Download the latest official release from the releases page and extract it.
Modify web-vault/settings.Production.json
to look like this:
{
"appSettings": {
"apiUri": "/api",
"identityUri": "/identity",
"iconsUri": "/icons",
"stripeKey": "",
"braintreeKey": ""
}
}
Then, run the following from the web-vault
directory:
npm install
npx gulp dist:selfHosted
Finally copy the contents of the web-vault/dist
folder into the bitwarden_rs/web-vault
folder.
Running
cargo run
Then visit http://localhost:80
Configuration
The available configuration options are documented in the default .env
file, and they can be modified by uncommenting the desired options in that file or by setting their respective environment variables.
Note: the environment variables override the values set in the .env
file.
Disabling user registrations
To disable user registrations, you can uncomment the SIGNUPS_ALLOWED
line in the .env
file and change the value to false
.
You could also set the SIGNUPS_ALLOWED
environment variable. To do that when using Docker, add the following line to the end of the docker run
command:
-e SIGNUPS_ALLOWED=false
Changing the API request size limit
By default the API calls are limited to 10MB. This should be sufficient for most cases, however if you want to support large imports, this might be limiting you. On the other hand you might want to limit the request size to something smaller than that to prevent API abuse and possible DOS attack, especially if running with limited resources.
To set the limit, you can use the ROCKET_LIMITS
variable. Example here shows 10MB limit for posted json in the body (this is the default):
-e ROCKET_LIMITS={json=10485760}
Enabling HTTPS
To enable HTTPS, you need to configure the ROCKET_TLS
option, the same way as SIGNUPS_ALLOWED
.
The values to the option must follow the format:
ROCKET_TLS={certs="/path/to/certs.pem",key="/path/to/key.pem"}
Where:
- certs: a path to a certificate chain in PEM format
- key: a path to a private key file in PEM format for the certificate in certs
How to recreate database schemas (for developers)
Install diesel-cli with cargo:
cargo install diesel_cli --no-default-features --features sqlite-bundled
Make sure that the correct path to the database is in the .env
file.
If you want to modify the schemas, create a new migration with:
diesel migration generate <name>
Modify the *.sql files, making sure that any changes are reverted in the down.sql file.
Apply the migrations and save the generated schemas as follows:
diesel migration redo
# This step should be done automatically when using diesel-cli > 1.3.0
# diesel print-schema > src/db/schema.rs