I am not sure if this is the right sub, but yesterday I was having some issues with login with my user and was getting 403 error if I am not wrong and noticed that the NGINX version is exposed, which is a bad practice.
So if someone from the admins of Lemmy.world see this message, maybe they can change the NGINX config and hide the version flag by setting “server_tokens off;”.
Thanks for the tip, I changed it.
Might as well hide the version, but if someone is going to try an exploit, they’ll just try it and see whether it works.
They likely won’t see this unless you tag them or cross post to !support@lemmy.world
That said, I suspect the version is what’s standard in the docker image, so hidden or not, it’s easy to discover.
Edit: on the other hand, does the latest nginx get pulled at time of creation?
Edit: on the other hand, does the latest nginx get pulled at time of creation?
It depends on how you have your docker compose
file set up. If you pin the version, no, it’s never going to get updated unless a new version with that exact tag is released. If you omit the tag, it’s going to default to whatever is tagged as latest
in the image repository, and that’s only going to actually update the image when you either manually pull the image or relaunch the compose
stack.
If you want it to auto-update without relaunching the stack or manually pulling the latest image, you’d have to set up something like Watchtower and have it monitor that container.
I didn’t tag anyone–its a link to the support community. If you don’t get any traction in a day or so, you can look at some of the names of admins posting in there and tag them with “@user@lemmy.world”
This really should be the default behavior, IMO.