In /etc/sudoers, the last-matched rule will override all
previously-matched rules. Thus, make the default rule show up first (but
still allow some wiggle room for a user to `mkBefore` it), before any
user-defined rules.
Done by setting `autopilot.min_quorum = 3`.
Techncially, this would have been required to keep the test correct since
Consul's "autopilot" "Dead Server Cleanup" was enabled by default (I believe
that was in Consul 0.8). Practically, the issue only occurred with our NixOS
test with releases >= `1.7.0-beta2` (see #90613). The setting itself is
available since Consul 1.6.2.
However, this setting was not documented clearly enough for anybody to notice,
and only the upstream issue https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/issues/8118
I filed brought that to light.
As explained there, the test could also have been made pass by applying the
more correct rolling reboot procedure
-m.wait_until_succeeds("[ $(consul members | grep -o alive | wc -l) == 5 ]")
+m.wait_until_succeeds(
+ "[ $(consul operator raft list-peers | grep true | wc -l) == 3 ]"
+)
but we also intend to test that Consul can regain consensus even if
the quorum gets temporarily broken.
The systemd socket unit files now more precisely track the IPFS
configuration, by including any multaddr they can make a `ListenStream`
for. (The daemon doesn't currently support anything which would use
`ListDatagram`, so we don't need to worry about that.)
The tests use some of these features.
Specifying mailboxes as a list isn't a good approach since this makes it
impossible to override values. For backwards-compatibility, it's still
possible to declare a list of mailboxes, but a deprecation warning will
be shown.
Virtualbox recommends VMSVGA for Linux guests.
It is also currently the only one supporting 3D acceleration
and it works out of the box with NixOS and auto screen resizing.
VMSGVA is recommended by virtualbox for Linux clients.
Compared to VBoxVGA and VBoxSVGA it also supports 3D acceleration.
Adding the driver makes nixos work with all three supported graphics card
types.
We need to keep the passthru.filesInstalledToEtc and passthru.defaultBlacklistedPlugins in sync with the package contents so let's add a test to enforce that.
Since cd1dedac67d4b077a556a660ef5724c909da8006 systemd-networkd has it's
netlink socket created via a systemd.socket unit. One might think that
this doesn't make much sense since networkd is just going to create it's
own socket on startup anyway. The difference here is that we have
configuration-time control over things like socket buffer sizes vs
compile-time constants.
For larger setups where networkd has to create a lot of (virtual)
devices the default buffer size of currently 128MB is not enough.
A good example is a machine with >100 virtual interfaces (e.g.,
wireguard tunnels, VLANs, …) that all have to be brought up during
startup. The receive buffer size will spike due to all the generated
message from the new interfaces. Eventually some of the message will be
dropped since there is not enough (permitted) buffer space available.
By having networkd start through / with a netlink socket created by
systemd we can configure the `ReceiveBufferSize` parameter in the socket
options without recompiling networkd.
Since the actual memory requirements depend on hardware, timing, exact
configurations etc. it isn't currently possible to infer a good default
from within the NixOS module system. Administrators are advised to
monitor the logs of systemd-networkd for `rtnl: kernel receive buffer
overrun` spam and increase the memory as required.
Note: Increasing the ReceiveBufferSize doesn't allocate any memory. It
just increases the upper bound on the kernel side. The memory allocation
depends on the amount of messages that are queued on the kernel side of
the netlink socket.
Reads a bit more naturally, and now the changes to the
acme-${cert}.service actually reflect what would be needed were you to
do the same in production.
e.g. "for dns-01, your service that needs the cert needs to pull in the
cert"