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Deploying Odoo

This document describes basic steps to set up Odoo in production or on an internet-facing server. It follows installation, and is not generally necessary for a development systems that is not exposed on the internet.

dbfilter

Odoo is a multi-tenant system: a single Odoo system may run and serve a number of database instances. It is also highly customizable, with customizations (starting from the modules being loaded) depending on the “current database”.

This is not an issue when working with the backend (web client) as a logged-in company user: the database can be selected when logging in, and customizations loaded afterwards.

However it is an issue for non-logged users (portal, website) which aren’t bound to a database: Odoo needs to know which database should be used to load the website page or perform the operation. If multi-tenancy is not used that is not an issue, there’s only one database to use, but if there are multiple databases accessible Odoo needs a rule to know which one it should use.

That is one of the purposes of --db-filter: it specifies how the database should be selected based on the hostname (domain) that is being requested. The value is a regular expression, possibly including the dynamically injected hostname (%h) or the first subdomain (%d) through which the system is being accessed.

For servers hosting multiple databases in production, especially if website is used, dbfilter must be set, otherwise a number of features will not work correctly.

Configuration samples

  • Show only databases with names beginning with ‘mycompany’

in /etc/odoo.conf set:

[options]
dbfilter = ^mycompany.*$
  • Show only databases matching the first subdomain after www: for example the database “mycompany” will be shown if the incoming request was sent to www.mycompany.com or mycompany.co.uk, but not for www2.mycompany.com or helpdesk.mycompany.com.

in /etc/odoo.conf set:

[options]
dbfilter = ^%d$

PostgreSQL

By default, PostgreSQL only allows connection over UNIX sockets and loopback connections (from “localhost”, the same machine the PostgreSQL server is installed on).

UNIX socket is fine if you want Odoo and PostgreSQL to execute on the same machine, and is the default when no host is provided, but if you want Odoo and PostgreSQL to execute on different machines 1 it will need to listen to network interfaces 2, either:

  • Only accept loopback connections and use an SSH tunnel between the machine on which Odoo runs and the one on which PostgreSQL runs, then configure Odoo to connect to its end of the tunnel
  • Accept connections to the machine on which Odoo is installed, possibly over ssl (see PostgreSQL connection settings for details), then configure Odoo to connect over the network

Configuration sample

  • Allow tcp connection on localhost
  • Allow tcp connection from 192.168.1.x network

in /etc/postgresql/9.5/main/pg_hba.conf set:

# IPv4 local connections:
host    all             all             127.0.0.1/32            md5
host    all             all             192.168.1.0/24          md5

in /etc/postgresql/9.5/main/postgresql.conf set:

listen_addresses = 'localhost,192.168.1.2'
port = 5432
max_connections = 80

Configuring Odoo

Out of the box, Odoo connects to a local postgres over UNIX socket via port 5432. This can be overridden using the database options when your Postgres deployment is not local and/or does not use the installation defaults.

The packaged installers will automatically create a new user (odoo) and set it as the database user.

  • The database management screens are protected by the admin_passwd setting. This setting can only be set using configuration files, and is simply checked before performing database alterations. It should be set to a randomly generated value to ensure third parties can not use this interface.
  • All database operations use the database options, including the database management screen. For the database management screen to work requires that the PostgreSQL user have createdb right.
  • Users can always drop databases they own. For the database management screen to be completely non-functional, the PostgreSQL user needs to be created with no-createdb and the database must be owned by a different PostgreSQL user.

Configuration sample

  • connect to a PostgreSQL server on 192.168.1.2
  • port 5432
  • using an ‘odoo’ user account,
  • with ‘pwd’ as a password
  • filtering only db with a name beginning with ‘mycompany’

in /etc/odoo.conf set:

[options]
admin_passwd = mysupersecretpassword
db_host = 192.168.1.2
db_port = 5432
db_user = odoo
db_password = pwd
dbfilter = ^mycompany.*$

SSL Between Odoo and PostgreSQL

Since Odoo 11.0, you can enforce ssl connection between Odoo and PostgreSQL. in Odoo the db_sslmode control the ssl security of the connection with value choosed out of ‘disable’, ‘allow’, ‘prefer’, ‘require’, ‘verify-ca’ or ‘verify-full’

PostgreSQL Doc

Builtin server

Odoo includes built-in HTTP servers, using either multithreading or multiprocessing.

For production use, it is recommended to use the multiprocessing server as it increases stability, makes somewhat better use of computing resources and can be better monitored and resource-restricted.

  • Multiprocessing is enabled by configuring a non-zero number of worker processes, the number of workers should be based on the number of cores in the machine (possibly with some room for cron workers depending on how much cron work is predicted)
  • Worker limits can be configured based on the hardware configuration to avoid resources exhaustion

Worker number calculation

  • Rule of thumb : (#CPU * 2) + 1
  • Cron workers need CPU
  • 1 worker ~= 6 concurrent users

memory size calculation

  • We consider 20% of the requests are heavy requests, while 80% are simpler ones
  • A heavy worker, when all computed field are well designed, SQL requests are well designed, … is estimated to consume around 1Go of RAM
  • A lighter worker, in the same scenario, is estimated to consume around 150MB of RAM

Needed RAM = #worker * ( (light_worker_ratio * light_worker_ram_estimation) + (heavy_worker_ratio * heavy_worker_ram_estimation) )

LiveChat

In multiprocessing, a dedicated LiveChat worker is automatically started and listening on the longpolling port but the client will not connect to it.

Instead you must have a proxy redirecting requests whose URL starts with /longpolling/ to the longpolling port. Other request should be proxied to the normal HTTP port

To achieve such a thing, you’ll need to deploy a reverse proxy in front of Odoo, like nginx or apache. When doing so, you’ll need to forward some more http Headers to Odoo, and activate the proxy_mode in Odoo configuration to have Odoo read those headers.

Configuration sample

  • Server with 4 CPU, 8 Thread
  • 60 concurrent users
  • 60 users / 6 = 10 <- theorical number of worker needed
  • (4 * 2) + 1 = 9 <- theorical maximal number of worker
  • We’ll use 8 workers + 1 for cron. We’ll also use a monitoring system to measure cpu load, and check if it’s between 7 and 7.5 .
  • RAM = 9 * ((0.8*150) + (0.2*1024)) ~= 3Go RAM for Odoo

in /etc/odoo.conf:

[options]
limit_memory_hard = 1677721600
limit_memory_soft = 629145600
limit_request = 8192
limit_time_cpu = 600
limit_time_real = 1200
max_cron_threads = 1
workers = 8

HTTPS

Whether it’s accessed via website/web client or web service, Odoo transmits authentication information in cleartext. This means a secure deployment of Odoo must use HTTPS3. SSL termination can be implemented via just about any SSL termination proxy, but requires the following setup:

  • Enable Odoo’s proxy mode. This should only be enabled when Odoo is behind a reverse proxy
  • Set up the SSL termination proxy (Nginx termination example)
  • Set up the proxying itself (Nginx proxying example)
  • Your SSL termination proxy should also automatically redirect non-secure connections to the secure port

Configuration sample

  • Redirect http requests to https
  • Proxy requests to odoo

in /etc/odoo.conf set:

proxy_mode = True

in /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/odoo.conf set:

#odoo server
upstream odoo {
 server 127.0.0.1:8069;
}
upstream odoochat {
 server 127.0.0.1:8072;
}

# http -> https
server {
   listen 80;
   server_name odoo.mycompany.com;
   rewrite ^(.*) https://$host$1 permanent;
}

server {
 listen 443;
 server_name odoo.mycompany.com;
 proxy_read_timeout 720s;
 proxy_connect_timeout 720s;
 proxy_send_timeout 720s;

 # Add Headers for odoo proxy mode
 proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Host $host;
 proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
 proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Proto $scheme;
 proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;

 # SSL parameters
 ssl on;
 ssl_certificate /etc/ssl/nginx/server.crt;
 ssl_certificate_key /etc/ssl/nginx/server.key;
 ssl_session_timeout 30m;
 ssl_protocols TLSv1 TLSv1.1 TLSv1.2;
 ssl_ciphers 'ECDHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:ECDHE-ECDSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384:ECDHE-ECDSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384:DHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:DHE-DSS-AES128-GCM-SHA256:kEDH+AESGCM:ECDHE-RSA-AES128-SHA256:ECDHE-ECDSA-AES128-SHA256:ECDHE-RSA-AES128-SHA:ECDHE-ECDSA-AES128-SHA:ECDHE-RSA-AES256-SHA384:ECDHE-ECDSA-AES256-SHA384:ECDHE-RSA-AES256-SHA:ECDHE-ECDSA-AES256-SHA:DHE-RSA-AES128-SHA256:DHE-RSA-AES128-SHA:DHE-DSS-AES128-SHA256:DHE-RSA-AES256-SHA256:DHE-DSS-AES256-SHA:DHE-RSA-AES256-SHA:AES128-GCM-SHA256:AES256-GCM-SHA384:AES128-SHA256:AES256-SHA256:AES128-SHA:AES256-SHA:AES:CAMELLIA:DES-CBC3-SHA:!aNULL:!eNULL:!EXPORT:!DES:!RC4:!MD5:!PSK:!aECDH:!EDH-DSS-DES-CBC3-SHA:!EDH-RSA-DES-CBC3-SHA:!KRB5-DES-CBC3-SHA';
 ssl_prefer_server_ciphers on;

 # log
 access_log /var/log/nginx/odoo.access.log;
 error_log /var/log/nginx/odoo.error.log;

 # Redirect longpoll requests to odoo longpolling port
 location /longpolling {
 proxy_pass http://odoochat;
 }

 # Redirect requests to odoo backend server
 location / {
   proxy_redirect off;
   proxy_pass http://odoo;
 }

 # common gzip
 gzip_types text/css text/scss text/plain text/xml application/xml application/json application/javascript;
 gzip on;
}

Odoo as a WSGI Application

It is also possible to mount Odoo as a standard WSGI application. Odoo provides the base for a WSGI launcher script as odoo-wsgi.example.py. That script should be customized (possibly after copying it from the setup directory) to correctly set the configuration directly in odoo.tools.config rather than through the command-line or a configuration file.

However the WSGI server will only expose the main HTTP endpoint for the web client, website and webservice API. Because Odoo does not control the creation of workers anymore it can not setup cron or livechat workers

Cron Workers

To run cron jobs for an Odoo deployment as a WSGI application requires

  • A classical Odoo (run via odoo-bin)
  • Connected to the database in which cron jobs have to be run (via odoo-bin -d)
  • Which should not be exposed to the network. To ensure cron runners are not network-accessible, it is possible to disable the built-in HTTP server entirely with odoo-bin --no-http or setting http_enable = False in the configuration file

LiveChat

The second problematic subsystem for WSGI deployments is the LiveChat: where most HTTP connections are relatively short and quickly free up their worker process for the next request, LiveChat require a long-lived connection for each client in order to implement near-real-time notifications.

This is in conflict with the process-based worker model, as it will tie up worker processes and prevent new users from accessing the system. However, those long-lived connections do very little and mostly stay parked waiting for notifications.

The solutions to support livechat/motifications in a WSGI application are:

  • Deploy a threaded version of Odoo (instread of a process-based preforking one) and redirect only requests to URLs starting with /longpolling/ to that Odoo, this is the simplest and the longpolling URL can double up as the cron instance.
  • Deploy an evented Odoo via odoo-gevent and proxy requests starting with /longpolling/ to the longpolling port.

Serving Static Files

For development convenience, Odoo directly serves all static files in its modules. This may not be ideal when it comes to performances, and static files should generally be served by a static HTTP server.

Odoo static files live in each module’s static/ folder, so static files can be served by intercepting all requests to /MODULE/static/FILE, and looking up the right module (and file) in the various addons paths.

Security

For starters, keep in mind that securing an information system is a continuous process, not a one-shot operation. At any moment, you will only be as secure as the weakest link in your environment.

So please do not take this section as the ultimate list of measures that will prevent all security problems. It’s only intended as a summary of the first important things you should be sure to include in your security action plan. The rest will come from best security practices for your operating system and distribution, best practices in terms of users, passwords, and access control management, etc.

When deploying an internet-facing server, please be sure to consider the following security-related topics:

  • Always set a strong super-admin admin password, and restrict access to the database management pages as soon as the system is set up. See Database Manager Security.
  • Choose unique logins and strong passwords for all administrator accounts on all databases. Do not use ‘admin’ as the login. Do not use those logins for day-to-day operations, only for controlling/managing the installation. Never use any default passwords like admin/admin, even for test/staging databases.
  • Do not install demo data on internet-facing servers. Databases with demo data contain default logins and passwords that can be used to get into your systems and cause significant trouble, even on staging/dev systems.
  • Use appropriate database filters ( --db-filter) to restrict the visibility of your databases according to the hostname. See dbfilter. You may also use -d to provide your own (comma-separated) list of available databases to filter from, instead of letting the system fetch them all from the database backend.
  • Once your db_name and db_filter are configured and only match a single database per hostname, you should set list_db configuration option to False, to prevent listing databases entirely, and to block access to the database management screens (this is also exposed as the --no-database-list command-line option)
  • Make sure the PostgreSQL user (--db_user) is not a super-user, and that your databases are owned by a different user. For example they could be owned by the postgres super-user if you are using a dedicated non-privileged db_user. See also Configuring Odoo.
  • Keep installations updated by regularly installing the latest builds, either via GitHub or by downloading the latest version from https://www.odoo.com/page/download or http://nightly.odoo.com
  • Configure your server in multi-process mode with proper limits matching your typical usage (memory/CPU/timeouts). See also Builtin server.
  • Run Odoo behind a web server providing HTTPS termination with a valid SSL certificate, in order to prevent eavesdropping on cleartext communications. SSL certificates are cheap, and many free options exist. Configure the web proxy to limit the size of requests, set appropriate timeouts, and then enable the proxy mode option. See also HTTPS.
  • If you need to allow remote SSH access to your servers, make sure to set a strong password for all accounts, not just root. It is strongly recommended to entirely disable password-based authentication, and only allow public key authentication. Also consider restricting access via a VPN, allowing only trusted IPs in the firewall, and/or running a brute-force detection system such as fail2ban or equivalent.
  • Consider installing appropriate rate-limiting on your proxy or firewall, to prevent brute-force attacks and denial of service attacks. See also Blocking Brute Force Attacks for specific measures.

    Many network providers provide automatic mitigation for Distributed Denial of Service attacks (DDOS), but this is often an optional service, so you should consult with them.

  • Whenever possible, host your public-facing demo/test/staging instances on different machines than the production ones. And apply the same security precautions as for production.
  • If you are hosting multiple customers, isolate customer data and files from each other using containers or appropriate “jail” techniques.
  • Setup daily backups of your databases and filestore data, and copy them to a remote archiving server that is not accessible from the server itself.

Blocking Brute Force Attacks

For internet-facing deployments, brute force attacks on user passwords are very common, and this threat should not be neglected for Odoo servers. Odoo emits a log entry whenever a login attempt is performed, and reports the result: success or failure, along with the target login and source IP.

The log entries will have the following form.

Failed login:

2018-07-05 14:56:31,506 24849 INFO db_name odoo.addons.base.res.res_users: Login failed for db:db_name login:admin from 127.0.0.1

Successful login:

2018-07-05 14:56:31,506 24849 INFO db_name odoo.addons.base.res.res_users: Login successful for db:db_name login:admin from 127.0.0.1

These logs can be easily analyzed by an intrusion prevention system such as fail2ban.

For example, the following fail2ban filter definition should match a failed login:

[Definition]
failregex = ^ \d+ INFO \S+ \S+ Login failed for db:\S+ login:\S+ from <HOST>
ignoreregex =

This could be used with a jail definition to block the attacking IP on HTTP(S).

Here is what it could look like for blocking the IP for 15 minutes when 10 failed login attempts are detected from the same IP within 1 minute:

[odoo-login]
enabled = true
port = http,https
bantime = 900  ; 15 min ban
maxretry = 10  ; if 10 attempts
findtime = 60  ; within 1 min  /!\ Should be adjusted with the TZ offset
logpath = /var/log/odoo.log  ;  set the actual odoo log path here

Database Manager Security

Configuring Odoo mentioned admin_passwd in passing.

This setting is used on all database management screens (to create, delete, dump or restore databases).

If the management screens must not be accessible at all, you should set list_db configuration option to False, to block access to all the database selection and management screens.

Be sure to setup an appropriate db_name parameter (and optionally, db_filter too) so that the system can determine the target database for each request, otherwise users will be blocked as they won’t be allowed to choose the database themselves.

If the management screens must only be accessible from a selected set of machines, use the proxy server’s features to block access to all routes starting with /web/database except (maybe) /web/database/selector which displays the database-selection screen.

If the database-management screen should be left accessible, the admin_passwd setting must be changed from its admin default: this password is checked before allowing database-alteration operations.

It should be stored securely, and should be generated randomly e.g.

$ python3 -c 'import base64, os; print(base64.b64encode(os.urandom(24)))'

which will generate a 32 characters pseudorandom printable string.

Supported Browsers

Odoo is supported by multiple browsers for each of its versions. No distinction is made according to the browser version in order to be up-to-date. Odoo is supported on the current browser version. The list of the supported browsers is the following:

  • IE11,
  • Mozilla Firefox,
  • Google Chrome,
  • Safari,
  • Microsoft Edge
[1] to have multiple Odoo installations use the same PostgreSQL database, or to provide more computing resources to both software.
[2] technically a tool like socat can be used to proxy UNIX sockets across networks, but that is mostly for software which can only be used over UNIX sockets
[3] or be accessible only over an internal packet-switched network, but that requires secured switches, protections against ARP spoofing and precludes usage of WiFi. Even over secure packet-switched networks, deployment over HTTPS is recommended, and possible costs are lowered as “self-signed” certificates are easier to deploy on a controlled environment than over the internet.