I know, I know, clickbaity title but in a way it did. It also brought in the situation in the first place but I’m just going to deliberately ignore that. Quick recap:
Now I feel very stupid but I found a very dangerous mistake by having my lan fail due to a less dangerous mistake so I’ll take this as a win.
Thanks for reading and have a good day! I hope this helps someone at some day.
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Did you expose your router login page to the open internet? How’d they get access? Why are you chmoding anything to be 777?
There was an option that I had enabled years before and forgotten so yes, I didnt know but it was, on some obscure port.
And yes, pihole in docker makes its files be 777 which is pretty disgusting, I know. Thats why I tried to make it 700 and broke my whole network.
I think you are still learning… What you say doesn’t make sense, so I think you may have misunderstood what happened.
Imo we are all constantly learning. Otherwise we stagnate. What I say makes perfect sense, you just dont get it. So let me explain it again, in more detail:
I was going through my docker compose files to sanitize them and upload them to my private forgejo instance.
While doing that I found a directory in my filesystem, a remnant of the early days of my server where my knowledge was severely more limited, that was a docker volume mapped to a regular directory, something I wouldnt do today for something like this.
It was owned by root:root and had 777 permissions which is a bad idea imo. So I changed it to 700 since I dont think I had any other users in group root and others, well.
Nothing bad happened, until today when my unattended backups triggered a restart at noon and the tragedy started. I put it back for now to 777 but I‘ll try and integrate it in a real docker volume which resides in the docker folders.
Well I’m running Pihole in docker and don’t have 777 on anything.
Good for you. What permissions do you have on etc/dnsmasq.d if I may ask?
I don’t run Pi-hole but quickly peeking into the container (
docker run -it --rm --entrypoint /bin/sh pihole/pihole:latest
) the folder and files belong to root with the permissions being755
for the folder and644
for the files.chmod 700
most likely killed Pi-hole because a service that is not running as root will be accessing those config files and you removed their read access.Also, I’m with the guys above. Never
chmod 777
anything, period. In 99.9% of cases there’s a better way.Thanks for checking that. I will change the permissions accordingly and restart pihole to check if it works. Probably later today.
Doubt. You probably need to set the file owners in your volume to the same user running in the container.
You can doubt all you want. I changed it from 777 to 700 and back again because it broke. Couldnt find the user in the container immediately. Will probably just migrate it to a volume and be done with it.
So we’ve poked a hole in your knowledge here unless this super popular open source software really requires 777 on those files and everyone has collectively just been ok with it.