62733b37b4 broke evaluation in all
places `pkgs.mysql` was used. Fix this by changing all occurrences to
`pkgs.mariadb`.
(cherry picked from commit 59e0120aa5c1241d48048afa615e25c65d7e366d)
In 0.3.0 of the json-exporter[1] it was switched to a different jsonpath
library which made some changes - especially for spaces in keys -
necessary. Also I decided to remove the pretty-printed JSON as this
would interfere with the bash quoting too much. If one needs
pretty-printed output, they can still pipe the output to `jq`.
[1] https://github.com/prometheus-community/json_exporter/releases/tag/v0.3.0
(cherry picked from commit 976d668e5c5566c3e96b17d667830a0f3ed1bbb5)
A secret key generated by the nixos module was misspelled, which could
possibly impact the security of session cookies.
To recover from this situation we will wipe all security keys that were
previously generated by the NixOS module, when the misspelled one is
found. This will result in all session cookies being invalidated. This
is confirmed by the wordpress documentation:
> You can change these at any point in time to invalidate all existing
> cookies. This does mean that all users will have to login again.
https://wordpress.org/support/article/editing-wp-config-php/#security-keys
Meanwhile this issue shouldn't be too grave, since the salting function
of wordpress will rely on the concatenation of both the user-provided
and automatically generated values, that are stored in the database.
> Secret keys are located in two places: in the database and in the
> wp-config.php file. The secret key in the database is randomly
> generated and will be appended to the secret keys in wp-config.php.
https://developer.wordpress.org/reference/functions/wp_salt/
Fixes: 2adb03fdae ("nixos/wordpress:
generate secrets locally")
Reported-by: Moritz Hedtke <Moritz.Hedtke@t-online.de>
(cherry picked from commit 724ed08df02546fea2ab38613d615dd47461528c)
Assert that the PostgreSQL version being deployed is the one used
upstream. Allow the user to override this assertion, since it's not
always possible or preferable to use the recommended one.
(cherry picked from commit 544adbfcab2e92c2fe5774cae67f2edf165eb97e)
As per `man systemd.path`:
> When a service unit triggered by a path unit terminates
> (regardless whether it exited successfully or failed),
> monitored paths are checked immediately again,
> **and the service accordingly restarted instantly**.
Thus the existence of the path unit made it impossible to stop the
wireguard service using e.g.
systemctl stop wireguard-wg0.service
Systemd path units are not intended for program inputs such
as private key files.
This commit simply removes this usage; the private key is still
generated by the `generateKeyServiceUnit`.
(cherry picked from commit d344dccf3dc592242f11ef993acb9ecee8d84796)
* The options tlsKey and tlsCert require being accessible by DynamicUser at runtime, which currently requires copying the files into the matrix service state directory. Fixing this might require breaking changes. Thus the module should not be included in a stable release.
Enforce UMask on the systemd unit to restrict the permissions of files
created. Especially the homeserver signing key should not be world
readable, and media is served through synapse itself, so no other user
needs access to these files.
Use a prestart chmod to fixup the permissions on the signing key.
In newer versions of Nix (at least on 2.4pre20201102_550e11f) the
`extra-` prefix for config options received a special meaning and the
option `extra-sandbox-paths` isn't recognized anymore. This commit fixes
it.
It doesn't cause a behavior change when using older versions of Nix but
does cause an extra newline to appear in the config, thus changing the
hash.
Instead of requiring the user to bundle the certificate and private
key into a single file, provide separate options for them. This is
more in line with most other modules.
`install` copies the files before setting their mode, so there could
be a breif window where the secrets are readable by other users
without a strict umask.
Feeding `psql` the password on the command line leaks it through the
`psql` process' `/proc/<pid>/cmdline` file. Using `echo` to put the
command in a file and then feeding `psql` the file should work around
this, since `echo` is a bash builtin and thus shouldn't spawn a new
process.