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228 lines
9.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
228 lines
9.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
===========================
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Reverse Proxy and Webserver
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===========================
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.. Note::
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All reverse proxies are plugins and need to be installed first.
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Why should a reverse proxy be used?
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===================================
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The packet filter itself cannot decide what should be done in application protocols.
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For such an inspection you can use deep packet inspection or a reverse proxy.
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In addition, a reverse proxy can implement protocol specific access control lists
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as well as other checks to protect the application behind. Such checks are malware,
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spam, web attack detection and so on.
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.. Warning::
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Reverse proxies support you to prevent common attacks to your
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web application by bots but will never provide a 100% success rate in detection of
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bad traffic.
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Especially a targeted attack will very likely be not detected because a lot of
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effort has been taken to prevent detection.
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Do not use a reverse proxy as a replacement / excuse for not fixing the main
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problems like known vulnerabilities in libraries, outdated software, or
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vulnerabilities in your own code by updating / removing them or by changing
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your own code.
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Supported Reverse Proxies in OPNsense
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=====================================
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========= ==========================
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ftp-proxy Makes FTP work
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nginx HTTP, TCP- and UDP streams
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HAProxy HTTP and TCP streams
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postfix SMTP (e-mail)
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relayd TCP streams
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========= ==========================
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Terms
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=====
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**Forward Proxy**
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A Proxy which is used by a client to connect to the internet. It is usually
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used in companies to scan traffic for malware. See the more specific pages
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(:doc:`proxy`) for more background information.
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**Reverse Proxy and Webserver**
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A reverse proxy is software which takes a request or a connection from a client
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and sends it to an upstream server. It may change some data if needed (for
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exmaple inject HTTP header or perform access control). A reverse proxy can be
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generic for any protocol, but is commonly used for HTTP(S).
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A reverse proxy does not need to by fully aware of data it is transferring it needs
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to know, which upstream is responsible to process it and some metadata to know
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what it should do (like for caching a Cache-Control header and for
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authorizing an Authentication header in HTTP).
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A webserver, in contrast to a reverse proxy, finally processes the request
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(the webserver contains the business logic in the web application) and sends
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a response depending on the request, which may be modified or cached
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by a reverse (for example Varnish_, nginx_) or forward proxy
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(see :doc:`how-tos/proxyicapantivirus`, :doc:`how-tos/cachingproxy`).
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For example, a webserver serves a file called index.html from the local file
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system or processes an API endpoint and returns the result.
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A web server usually has an API for calling external interpreters:
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============ ========================== =================================================
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**API** **Typical Use Case** **Implemented at (examples)**
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============ ========================== =================================================
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FastCGI PHP, Rails PHP-FPM, nginx, Apache HTTPd
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AJP Java application servers Tomcat, JBoss, WildFly, Apache HTTPd (mod_jk_)
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(U)WSGI Python Django_ via UWSGI
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============ ========================== =================================================
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Others include the interpreter directly into the webserver,
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are written in this language or in a C/C++ extension:
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============================================= ================================================
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**Technology** **Used for**
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============================================= ================================================
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Passenger Application Server for differnet Languages
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nginx Unit_ Application Server for differnet Languages
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Undertow_ (Raw, JBoss, WildFly) Java application server
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Apache Tomcat Java application server
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unit_, puma_, unicorn_ Many Rack_ based frameworks (RoR_, Sinatrarb_, …)
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gunicorn_ Python application server
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Apache HTTPd (with modules like mod_php) Webserver with interpreter modules
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============================================= ================================================
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.. _Varnish: https://varnish-cache.org/
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.. _nginx: https://www.nginx.com/resources/wiki/start/topics/examples/reverseproxycachingexample/
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.. _Unit: https://unit.nginx.org/
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.. _puma: https://github.com/puma/puma
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.. _unicorn: https://bogomips.org/unicorn/
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.. _gunicorn: https://gunicorn.org/
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.. _Django: https://uwsgi-docs.readthedocs.io/en/latest/tutorials/Django_and_nginx.html
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.. _Rack: https://rack.github.io/
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.. _UWSGI: https://uwsgi-docs.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
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.. _mod_jk: https://tomcat.apache.org/connectors-doc/webserver_howto/apache.html
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.. _Undertow: http://undertow.io/
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.. _RoR: https://rubyonrails.org/
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.. _sinatrarb: http://sinatrarb.com/
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**Upstream, Backend**
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A single or multiple servers which can be used for load balancing the client
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request to. All servers used in an upstream must act equally (same protocol
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etc.) but do not need to run on the same port.
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**Upstream Server, Backend Server**
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This is your listening application like nginx on port 80 for HTTP or your
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LDAP server on TCP/389.
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**Frontends (HAProxy) and HTTP(S)/Stream Servers (nginx)**
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These are the the configurations for the ports used for incoming connections.
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For example, if you bind a port to TCP/80 (standard port of HTTP), you can
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decide, what is going to be done with this request. The same is true for
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connections.
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**TLS and SSL**
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TLS replaced SSL and it is used to protect the application protocol against a broad
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range of attacks like snooping or data manipulation (for example ad injection,
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redirects, manipulation of downloaded files like executables).
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Modern clients and servers should support TLS 1.2 and TLS 1.3. All others should
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be disabled.
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TLS - Diffenent ways to use it
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==============================
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1) Breaking up the connection on the firewall (down- and upstream are using TLS)
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--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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In this setup we do have two TLS protected connections. One from the client to
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the firewall, and one from the firewall to the backend.
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.. image:: images/sample_network_tls_broken_up.png
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The advantage of this setup is that you can use it to route based on paths or
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other properties and you can present another certificate to the client.
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For example, you can use an internal certificate on the server and the reverse
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proxy will present a probably trusted certificate like one of Let's Encrypt to
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the client. This simplifies certificate handling because the upstream client
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may be invalid (for example outdated). Please note that it is not recommended
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to disable certificate checks in the upstream but it may be required in some
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setups.
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2) Decrypt an encrypted upstream (downstream plain, upstream TLS protected)
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---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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.. image:: images/sample_network_tls_decrypt.png
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This setup may not make much sense in most cases. It may have the advantage
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if you have trouble with some software which does not allow a not encrypted
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port but a special internal client does not support it. For example a machine
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needs to talk to a server but cannot use TLS because the hardware does not
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support it. If you need that, do not make it available via the internet
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because there is probably a reason that the upstream server is TLS only.
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3) TLS Offloading (downstream is TLS protected, upstream is plain)
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------------------------------------------------------------------
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.. image:: images/sample_network_tls_offload.png
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This setup should be preferred when it is supported. It has the advantage
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that it fully supports TLS for the client while it does not need a lot of
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power to do a TLS handshake inside your own computer centre.
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.. Warning::
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You should not use this for upstream servers reachable via untrusted newtworks.
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Use (1) or (4) in such cases.
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(4) TLS Passthough
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------------------
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.. image:: images/sample_network_tls_pass_trough.png
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In this mode, the proxy will just pass though the connection and has no access
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to the encrypted payload. You cannot match on anything of the protocol itself.
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You may use some extension headers like SNI to decide, which upstream is used.
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This setup is recommended if you only want some improved routing decisions
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better than plain NAT.
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.. Note::
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A reverse proxy can still get access to the encrypted content if it has the
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private Key of the server and a cipher without PFS_ is used. In other cases
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the connection can only be decrypted if one of the peers escrows the key.
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Firefox supports this via the environment SSLKEYLOGFILE_.
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This is not supported by OPNsense plugins.
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.. _SSLKEYLOGFILE: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Mozilla/Projects/NSS/Key_Log_Format
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.. _PFS: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forward_secrecy
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Tutorials
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=========
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Basic Reverse Proxy Setup
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-------------------------
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* :doc:`how-tos/nginx`
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* :doc:`how-tos/nginx_streams`
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* :doc:`how-tos/haproxy`
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* :doc:`how-tos/mailgateway`
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Setup Authentication
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--------------------
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* :doc:`how-tos/nginx_basic_auth`
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* :doc:`how-tos/nginx_ip_acl`
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* :doc:`how-tos/nginx_tls_auth`
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Firewalling
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-----------
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* :doc:`how-tos/nginx_waf`
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Misc
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----
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* :doc:`how-tos/nginx_hosting`
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* :doc:`how-tos/haproxy_howtos`
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