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As can bee seen from the name of the variable domain which is used to store the value of the command line argument --hostname, that parameter is used for 2 separate things:
the internal name of the Zimbra host providing the proxy server
the external name used to reach this proxy from the internet, and which should end up as CN in the certificates
I have hacked the script so that I have been able to use it on my Zimbra installation - see below for diff. I don't think that my modification is correct for all cases, but it may serve as a start:
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< [[ -z "$domain" ]] && printf 'Unexpected error (check_zimbra_proxy domain not set).\n' >&2 && exit 1
---
> [[ -z "$hostname" ]] && printf 'Unexpected error (check_zimbra_proxy hostname not set).\n' >&2 && exit 1
183c183
< if ! sudo -in -u zimbra -- '$HOME/bin/zmprov' $zmprov_opts gs "$domain" zimbraReverseProxyHttpEnabled | grep -q TRUE; then
---
> if ! sudo -in -u zimbra -- '$HOME/bin/zmprov' $zmprov_opts gs "$hostname" zimbraReverseProxyHttpEnabled | grep -q TRUE; then
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< port="$(sudo -in -u zimbra -- '$HOME/bin/zmprov' $zmprov_opts gs "$domain" zimbraMailProxyPort | sed -n "s/zimbraMailProxyPort: //p")"
---
> port="$(sudo -in -u zimbra -- '$HOME/bin/zmprov' $zmprov_opts gs "$hostname" zimbraMailProxyPort | sed -n "s/zimbraMailProxyPort: //p")"
376,379c376,379
< # If we got no domain from command line try using Zimbra hostname
< if [[ -z "$domain" ]]; then
< ! "$quiet" && printf 'Using zmhostname to detect domain name.\n' >&2
< domain="$("$zmpath/bin/zmhostname")"
---
> # If we got no hostname from command line try using Zimbra hostname
> if [[ -z "$hostname" ]]; then
> ! "$quiet" && printf 'Using zmhostname to detect hostname.\n' >&2
> hostname="$("$zmpath/bin/zmhostname")"
382c382
< [[ -z "$domain" ]] && printf 'Error: No hostname found! Please run with -H/--hostname or check why zmhostname is not working.\n' >&2 && exit 1
---
> [[ -z "$hostname" ]] && printf 'Error: No hostname found! Please run with -H/--hostname or check why zmhostname is not working.\n' >&2 && exit 1
388c388
< (( $? == 1 )) && printf 'Error: Please manually specify your hostname with "--hostname your.host.name".\n' >&2 && exit 0
---
> (( $? == 1 )) && printf 'Error: Please manually specify your domain with "--domain my.domain.name".\n' >&2 && exit 0
764c764,765
< -H | --hostname <my.host.name>: hostname being requested. If not passed it's automatically detected using "zmhostname". Used as Zimbra server name in zmprov, CN and name for certificate.
---
> -H | --hostname <my.host.name>: hostname being requested. If not passed it's automatically detected using "zmhostname". Used as Zimbra server name in zmprov
> -D | --domain <my.domain.name>: primary domain name in certificate (CN)
844a846,850
> -D|--domain)
> [[ -z "$2" ]] && printf 'Error: missing --domain argument\n' >&2 && exit 1
> domain="$2"
> shift
> ;;
853c859
< domain="$2"
---
> hostname="$2"
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
As can bee seen from the name of the variable domain which is used to store the value of the command line argument --hostname, that parameter is used for 2 separate things:
I have hacked the script so that I have been able to use it on my Zimbra installation - see below for diff. I don't think that my modification is correct for all cases, but it may serve as a start:
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: