# Bitwarden_rs in docker ###### guide-by-example ![logo](https://i.imgur.com/tT3FQLJ.png) # Purpose & Overview Password manager. * [Official site](https://bitwarden.com/) * [Github](https://github.com/dani-garcia/bitwarden_rs) * [DockerHub](https://hub.docker.com/r/bitwardenrs/server) Bitwarden is a modern popular open source password manager with wide cross platform support. But the official Bitwarden server is bit over-engineered, requiring Microsoft SQL server among other things, which makes it not an ideal fit for smaller deployments So here is where Bitwarden_rs by Daniel García comes in.
It is a Bitwarden API implementation written in Rust. It's very resource efficient, uses about 10MB of RAM, and close to no CPU.
Webapp part is build using Rocket, a web framework for Rust, and user data are stored in a simple sqlite database file. All the client apps are still officials coming from bitwarden, only the server is a different implementation. # Files and directory structure ``` /home/ └── ~/ └── docker/ └── bitwarden/ ├── bitwarden-data/ ├── .env ├── docker-compose.yml └── bitwarden-backup-script.sh ``` * `bitwarden-data/` - a directory where bitwarden will store its database and other data * `.env` - a file containing environment variables for docker compose * `docker-compose.yml` - a docker compose file, telling docker how to run the container * `bitwarden-backup-script.sh` - a backup script if you want it You only need to provide the files.
The directory is created by docker compose on the first run. # docker-compose [Documentation](https://github.com/dani-garcia/bitwarden_rs/wiki/Using-Docker-Compose) on compose. `docker-compose.yml` ```yml version: "3" services: bitwarden: image: bitwardenrs/server container_name: bitwarden hostname: bitwarden restart: unless-stopped env_file: .env volumes: - ./bitwarden-data/:/data/ networks: default: external: name: $DOCKER_MY_NETWORK ``` `.env` ```bash # GENERAL MY_DOMAIN=example.com DOCKER_MY_NETWORK=caddy_net TZ=Europe/Bratislava # BITWARDEN ADMIN_TOKEN=YdLo1TM4MYEQ948GOVZ29IF4fABSrZMpk9 SIGNUPS_ALLOWED=false WEBSOCKET_ENABLED=true # USING SENDGRID FOR SENDING EMAILS DOMAIN=https://passwd.example.com SMTP_SSL=true SMTP_EXPLICIT_TLS=true SMTP_HOST=smtp.sendgrid.net SMTP_PORT=465 SMTP_FROM=admin@example.com SMTP_USERNAME=apikey SMTP_PASSWORD= ``` **All containers must be on the same network**.
Which is named in the `.env` file.
If one does not exist yet: `docker network create caddy_net` # Reverse proxy Caddy v2 is used, details [here](https://github.com/DoTheEvo/selfhosted-apps-docker/tree/master/caddy_v2).
Bitwarden_rs documentation has a [section on reverse proxy.](https://github.com/dani-garcia/bitwarden_rs/wiki/Proxy-examples) `Caddyfile` ``` bitwarden.{$MY_DOMAIN} { encode gzip header { # Enable cross-site filter (XSS) and tell browser to block detected attacks X-XSS-Protection "1; mode=block" # Disallow the site to be rendered within a frame (clickjacking protection) X-Frame-Options "DENY" # Prevent search engines from indexing (optional) X-Robots-Tag "none" # Server name removing -Server } # Notifications redirected to the websockets server reverse_proxy /notifications/hub bitwarden:3012 # Proxy the Root directory to Rocket reverse_proxy bitwarden:80 } ``` # Forward port 3012 TCP on your router [WebSocket](https://youtu.be/2Nt-ZrNP22A) protocol is used for notifications so that all web based clients, including desktop app, can immediately sync when a change happens on the server. * environment variable `WEBSOCKET_ENABLED=true` needs to be set in the `.env` file
* reverse proxy needs to route `/notifications/hub` to port 3012
* your router/firewall needs to **forward port 3012** to the docker host, same as port 80 and 443 are forwarded To test if websocket works, have the desktop app open and make changes through browser extension, or through the website. Changes should immediately appear in the desktop app. If it's not working, you need to manually sync for changes to appear. # Extra info **Bitwarden can be managed** at `/admin` and entering `ADMIN_TOKEN` set in the `.env` file. Especially if sign ups are disabled it is the only way to invite users. **Push notifications** are not working at this moment. [Github issue](https://github.com/dani-garcia/bitwarden_rs/issues/126).
The purpose of [Push notifications](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8D1NAezC-Dk) is the same as WebSocket notifications, to tell the clients that a change happened on the server so that they are synced immediately. But they are for apps on mobile devices and it would likely take releasing and maintaining own bitwarden_rs version of the Android/iOS mobile apps to have them working.
So you better manually sync before making changes. --- ![interface-pic](https://i.imgur.com/5LxEUsA.png) # Update [Watchtower](https://github.com/DoTheEvo/selfhosted-apps-docker/tree/master/watchtower) updates the image automatically. Manual image update: - `docker-compose pull`
- `docker-compose up -d`
- `docker image prune` # Backup and restore #### Backup Using [borg](https://github.com/DoTheEvo/selfhosted-apps-docker/tree/master/borg_backup) that makes daily snapshot of the entire directory. #### Restore * down the bitwarden container `docker-compose down`
* delete the entire bitwarden directory
* from the backup copy back the bitwarden directory
* start the container `docker-compose up -d` # Backup of just user data Users data daily export using the [official procedure.](https://github.com/dani-garcia/bitwarden_rs/wiki/Backing-up-your-vault)
For bitwarden_rs it means sqlite database dump and backing up `attachments` directory.
Daily [borg](https://github.com/DoTheEvo/selfhosted-apps-docker/tree/master/borg_backup) run takes care of backing up the directory. So only database dump is needed.
The created backup sqlite3 file is overwritten on every run of the script, but that's ok since borg is making daily snapshots. #### Create a backup script Placed inside `bitwarden` directory on the host. `bitwarden-backup-script.sh` ```bash #!/bin/bash # CREATE SQLITE BACKUP docker container exec bitwarden sqlite3 /data/db.sqlite3 ".backup '/data/BACKUP.bitwarden.db.sqlite3'" ``` the script must be **executable** - `chmod +x bitwarden-backup-script.sh` #### Cronjob Running on the host, so that the script will be periodically run. * `su` - switch to root * `crontab -e` - add new cron job
* `0 21 * * * /home/bastard/docker/bitwarden/bitwarden-backup-script.sh`
runs it every day [at 21:00](https://crontab.guru/#0_21_*_*_*) * `crontab -l` - list cronjobs to check # Restore the user data Assuming clean start. * start the bitwarden container: `docker-compose up -d` * let it run so it creates its file structure * down the container `docker-compose down` * in `bitwarden/bitwarden-data/`
replace `db.sqlite3` with the backup one `BACKUP.bitwarden.db.sqlite3`
replace `attachments` directory with the one from the borg repository * start the container `docker-compose up -d` Again, the above steps are based on the [official procedure.](https://github.com/dani-garcia/bitwarden_rs/wiki/Backing-up-your-vault)