Dnscrypt-proxy needs some options to be set before it can do anything useful.
Currently, we only apply what the user configured which, by default, is nothing.
This leads to the dnscrypt-proxy2 service failing to start when you only set
`enable = true;` which is not a great user experience.
This patch makes the module take the example config from the upstream repo as a
base on top of which the user-specified settings are applied (it contains sane
defaults).
An option has been added to restore the old behaviour.
`file_exists` also returns `FALSE` if the file is in a directory that
can't be read by the user. This e.g. happens if permissions for
`nixops(1)`-deployment keys aren't configured correctly.
This patch improves the error message for invalid files to avoid
confusion[1].
[1] https://discourse.nixos.org/t/nixops-deploy-secrets-to-nextcloud/10414/4
This patch:
* Removes an invalid/useless classpath element;
* Removes an unnecessary environment variable;
* Creates the required '/version-2' data subdirectory;
* Redirects audit logging to the "console" (systemd) by default.
A big jump, but the structure hasn't changed much.
This recipe is still based on a binary release provided by upstream.
(It might be interesting to start doing our own builds at some point,
to split client from server, and/or to create packages for removed
"contribs" such as 'zooInspector'. Upstream intends to further slim
down its release tarballs as most deployments only need specific assets.)
Unbound throws the following error:
--8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
error: failed to list interfaces: getifaddrs: Address family not supported by protocol
fatal error: could not open ports
--8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---
The solution is pulled from upstream:
https://github.com/NLnetLabs/unbound/pull/351
Unfortunately, I had a use-case where `services.nginx.config` was
necessary quite recently. While working on that config I had to look up
the module's code to understand which options can be used and which
don't.
To slightly improve the situation, I changed the documentation like
this:
* Added `types.str` as type since `config` is not mergeable on purpose.
It must be a string as it's rendered verbatim into `nginx.conf` and if
the type is `unspecified`, it can be confused with RFC42-like options.
* Mention which config options that don't generate config in
`nginx.conf` are NOT mutually exclusive.