In the process of making UPower.conf customizable (#73968), it came up
that UPower doesn't load its config from /etc by default.
The UPower derivation is modified to make it load its config from /etc
at runtime, but still install the default config to its nix store path
as before.
The UPower module is modified to put the config in /etc.
When session debugging was enabled in GNOME but not in Pantheon
{
services.xserver = {
desktopManager.pantheon = {
enable = true;
};
desktopManager.gnome3 = {
enable = true;
debug = true;
};
};
}
it caused a conflict:
error: The option `environment.sessionVariables.GNOME_SESSION_DEBUG' has conflicting definitions, in `<nixpkgs/nixos/modules/services/x11/desktop-managers/pantheon.nix>' and `<nixpkgs/nixos/modules/services/x11/desktop-managers/gnome3.nix>'.
gobject-introspection has nothing to do with graphical systems or GNOME, it is needed for language bindings like Python.
This reverts commit d757135c05
Didn't notice this till I tried removing my custom roon user from the one I was testing with. There's not a 'groups' option for users, only group (primary group) and extraGroups. Use these.
(#68337)
The options at `systemd.network` (`links`, `netdevs` and `networks`) are
directly mapped to the three different unit types of `systemd-networkd(8)`.
However there's also the option `systemd.network.units` which is
basically used as a container for generated unit-configs that are linked
to `/etc/systemd/networkd`[1].
This should not be exposed to the user as it's unclear whether or not it
should be used directly which can be pretty confusing which is why I decided to
declare this option as internal (including all sub-options as `internal`
doesn't seem to be propagated to submodules).
[1] 9db75ed88f/nixos/modules/system/boot/networkd.nix (L933-L937)
This PR is part of the networking.* namespace cleanup. We feel that
networking.hostConf is rarely used and provides little value compared to
using environment.etc."host.conf" directly.
Provide sensible default: multi on
Samba 3 has been discontinued since Q1/2015. So I think it's time
to just wipe it from the pkgs. FuseSMB is pretty much abandoned,
upstream does not exist and it's also not as useful as it used to
be anyways.
From looking at
* https://hydra.nixos.org/build/107447356
it appears the subtest fails at this exact step.
OCR in the testing driver has been notoriously
flaky, so let's just match alice's user description.
This does have the downside of not verifying the
appearence of other user cards, which was an
issue with the greeter in the past.
This cuts down the dependency tree on some rust builds where a crate not
just exposes a binary but also a library. `$out/lib` contained a bunch
of extra support files that among other information carry linker flags
(including the full path to link-time dependencies). Worst case this led
to some binary outputs depending on the full build closure of rust
crates.
Moving all the `$out/lib` files to `$lib/lib` solves this nicely.
`lib` might be a bit weird here as they are most of the time just rlib
files (rust libraries). Those are essential only required during
compilation but they can also be shared objects (like with traditional
C-style packages). Which is why I went with `lib` for the new output.
One of the caveats we are running into here is that we do not (always)
know ahead of time of a crate produces just a library or just a binary.
Cargo allows for some ambiguity regarding whether or not a crate
provides one, two, … binaries and libraries as it's outputs. Ideally we
would be able to rely on the `crateType` entirely but so far that isn't
the case. More work on that area might show how difficult that actually
is.
This is a more sane default since we do not magically (without opt-in)
pull in binaries from `~/bin`. That is not really an expected behavior
for many users. Users that still want that behavior can now just flip
that switch.
This PR is part of the networking.* namespace cleanup.
ssmtp used to be configured via `networking.defaultMailServer` which is
sort of misleading since it provides options only for ssmtp. Other
dumb mail relays like nullmailer have always been living under
services.
The intent of this PR is to align ssmtp's options with those of similar
services. Specifically, two renames have been done:
* Rename `networking.defaultMailHost` to `services.ssmtp`.
* Rename `directDelivery` to `enable` because this is what it basically does.
Previously, socket units wouldn't be restarted if they were
changed. To restart the socket, the service the socket is attached
to needs to be stopped first before the socket can be restarted.
Previously systemd-networkd.service ran as systemd-network:nogroup.
The wireguard private key file is now owned by root:systemd-network with
mode 0640. It is therefore required that the systemd-network user is in the group
with the same name, so that it is able to read the key file.
osquery was marked as broken since April.
If somebody steps up to fix it, we can always revive it from the
histroy, but there's not much value in shipping completely broken things
in current master.
cc @ma27
As part of the networking.* name space cleanup, connman should be moved
to services.connman. The same will happen for example with
networkmanager in a separate PR.
The binary name was recently changed from openarena-server to oa_ded in
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/71122 .
That change broke the openarena module and consequently the openarena
test too. This commit fixes both.
As an alternative, we considered reverting the name change in
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/72824 but we decided oa_ded was
a better name for the binary (it's the name upstream use).
This PR is part of the networking.* namespace cleanup.
The Cisco VPN module is currently of limited value since it just creates
config files but does not manage services. The same functionality can be
achieved by using _environment.etc_ instead.
It would be a different situation if we had a full service module. So if
you are annoyed by this change, please consider write a more featureful
module and put its options unter _services.networking.vpnc_.
Note that this change removes options for *Cisco VPN*, not
*networkmanager-vpn*.
When using `documentation.nixos.includeAllModules = true;` with external
modules, the string context might contain dependencies to derivations
and so `toFile` refuses to evaluate;
```
error: in 'toFile': the file 'options.xml' cannot refer to derivation outputs, at
[...]/nixpkgs/nixos/lib/make-options-doc/default.nix:89:16
```
This is not an issue when using `writeText` (instead of manually
stripping the context).
Unfortunately, you can't configure the default user-session
with GDM like lightdm. I've opened a feature request [0]
but I'd like to be able to do this now.
We use a GObject Python script using bindings to AccountsService
to achieve this. I'm hoping the reliable heuristic for session names
is the file's basename. We also have some special logic for which
method to use to set the default session. It seems set_x_session is
deprecated, and thusly the XSession key, but if that method isn't used
when it's an xsession it won't be the default in GDM.
[0]: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gdm/issues/535
- Add services.hardware.bluetooth.config option
- Use lib.generators.toINI with both config and extraConfig options
hardware/bluetooth: a couple suggestions
Co-authored-by: Aaron Andersen <aaron@fosslib.net>
This adds an `extraConfig` option to timesyncd for setting additional
options in `/etc/systemd/timesyncd.conf`.
This is similar to things like `services.journald.extraConfig` and
`services.logind.extraConfig`.
The new description should give more clear understanding of when to
edit the option.
I used NixOS to set up a DNS server that is authoritative for certain
zones. The description of the `cacheNetworks` option made me think I
needed to set it to `"any"` to allow people to query the zone I set
up. Reading the source of the module would have clarified my
understanding, but at the time I just read the description and thought
little of it. Later I discovered I was getting tons of DNS requests
and presumably being used for a DNS amplification attack or similar.
I have fixed the problem now, but I would like the option to have a
clearer description so others don't make the same mistake I did.
This has been there since v209 [1]
```
The interface name to use. This option has lower precedence than NamePolicy=, so for this setting to take effect, NamePolicy= must either be unset, empty, disabled, or all policies configured there must fail. Also see the example below with "Name=dmz0".
Note that specifying a name that the kernel might use for another interface (for example "eth0") is dangerous because the name assignment done by udev will race with the assignment done by the kernel, and only one interface may use the name. Depending on the order of operations, either udev or the kernel will win, making the naming unpredictable. It is best to use some different prefix, for example "internal0"/"external0" or "lan0"/"lan1"/"lan3".
```
[1] 43b3a5ef61
Updating `systemd-networkd-wireguard` to use the python test runner.
This change was purely syntactic. This migration did not require any
semantic change.
The package set is not maintained. It is also not used by most of the
BEAM community. Removing it to allow a more useful set of tools fit to
the BEAM community in Nixpkgs.
most likely, people enabling the lorri module also want to use it,
without explicitly having to add it to users.users.<username>.packages.
cc @curiousleo @Profpatsch
Add a virtual user system based around pam and a Berkeley
user database.
Adding the:
- localRoot
- userDbPath
- allowWriteableChroot
- virtualUseLocalPrivs
Vsftpd options.
Ever since setting up bonding the `wpa_supplicant-unit-start` script has
been failing. This is because the file `bonding_masters` in
`/sys/class/net/` is *not* a directory containing `uevent`.
Adding a test to verify the `uevent` path to be sourced exists resolves
the problem.
The SLIM project is abandoned and their last release was in 2013.
Because of this it poses a security risk to systems, no one is working
on it or picked up maintenance. It also lacks compatibility with systemd
and logind sessions. For users, there liikely isn't anything like slim
that's as lightweight in terms of dependencies.
we previously immediately returned the first commands output, and didn't
execute any of the other commands.
Now, return the last commands output.
This should be documented in the method docstring.
Slurmdbd requires a password database which is stored in slurmdbd.conf.
A seperate config file avoids that the password ends up in the nix store.
Slurmdbd does 19.5 does not support MySQL socket conections.
Adapated the slurm test to provide username and password.
https://roundcube.net/news/2019/11/09/roundcube-1.4.0-released
* `curl` cmd in the test can fail as roundcube returns a http/401 if
unauthorized (and we're explicitly requesting the login form). By
checking if the `persistent_login` plugin is loaded, the assertion is
still valid)
* Use `$argv[0]` to determine install path in the installer script. I'm
not exactly sure why, but it seems as `__DIR__` now resolves symlinks
which breaks the installer if roundcube is in a `buildEnv` with
third-party plugins.
* Fix path in module for slurm to find plugstack.conf
* Fix configure flags so that slurm can be compiled
without internal X11 support (required for spank-x11).
This prevents services to be started before they're initialized, and
renders the `systemd.targets.ceph.wantedBy = lib.mkForce [];` hack in
the vm tests obsolete - The config now starts up ceph after a reboot,
too.
Let's take advantage of that, crash all VMs, and boot them up again.
Don't pass user and group to ceph, and rely on it to drop ceps, but let
systemd handle running it as the appropriate user.
This also inlines the extraServiceConfig into the makeService function,
as we have conditionals depending on daemonType there anyways.
Use StateDirectory to create directories in
/var/lib/ceph/${daemonType}/${clusterName}-${daemonId}.
There previously was a condition on daemonType being one of mds,mon,rgw
or mgr. We only instantiate makeServices with these types, and "osd" was
special.
In the osd case, test examples suggest it'd be in something like
/var/lib/ceph/osd/ceph-${cfg.osd0.name} - so it's not special at all,
but exactly like the pattern for the others.
During initialization, we also need these folders, before the unit is
started up. Move the mkdir -p commands in the vm tests to the line
immediately before they're required.
The two new options make it possible to create the interface in one namespace
and move it to a different one, as explained at https://www.wireguard.com/netns/.
In cases where you boot up really quickly (like in the VM test on a
non-busy host), tinydns might want to bind before the loopback interface
is fully up. Order tinydns after network.target to fix that.
Add --use-remote-sudo option. When set, remote commands will be prefixed
with 'sudo'. This allows using sudo remotely _without_ having to use
sudo locally (when using --build-host/--taget-host).
Incorrect merging of modules resulted in dhcpcd being enabled causing flaky network connection.
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/64364
Fixing it uncovered an infinite recursion from the same commit, previously masked by the incorrect merge.
We can just drop the `mkDefault` for `networking.wireless.enable` as it is already `false` by default.
Closes: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/72416
When we did the revert of adding gnome-flashback to systemd.packages [0]
I forgot to test with other display managers. If we use GDM with gnome-flashback
it appears it doesn't try to fallback to non-systemd startup and always fails and
starts the regular gnome-session. So adding gnome-flashback to systemd.packages
was perfectly fine, but we did forgot one detail. We need systemd targets for the
customSessions which is added using mkSystemdTargetForWm in the gnome-
flashback package.
[0]: 42f567b30d
This change ensures that `dhcpcd.service` is restarted as soon as the
exit hook changes. I use this hook to do additional configuration for my
network (like setting a route via the given gateway to my WireGuard) and
when changing parts of this exit hook I'd expect to get this activated
when switching to my new configuration.
Condition seems to be inverted. Crash and shutdown only make sense, when
the machine is booted; i.e. we return immediately otherwise.
In the Perl test driver this is:
return unless $self->{booted};
When the option services.vault.storageBackend is set to "file", a
systemd.tmpfiles.rules was added, with extraneous []. These are not
needed and have been removed.
This is a good example of a package/module that should be distributed
externally (e.g. as a flake [1]): it's not stable yet so anybody who
seriously wants to use it will want to use the upstream repo. Also,
it's highly specialized so NixOS is not really the right place at the
moment (every NixOS module slows down NixOS evaluation for everybody).
[1] https://github.com/edolstra/jormungandr/tree/flake
Automated consumers can use 'sed 1d' or similar to remove this header.
This probably makes this output *easier* to consume correctly. Having
this header show up in consumers' terminal or log output is probably not
useful, but hiding it without hiding all error messages would have been
more troublesome that just stripping it from stdout.
I.e., previously, unsophisticated use would show undesired output:
$ some-other-tool
This attribute set contains:
This attribute set contains:
This attribute set contains:
This attribute set contains:
<Actual some-other-tool output>
The simplest way to hide this undesired output would have been
nixos-option ... 2>/dev/null, which would hide all error messages.
We do not wish to encourage that.
Correct use would have been something like:
nixos-option ... 2> >( grep --line-buffered -v 'This attribute set contains:')
After this change, correct use is simpler:
nixos-option ... | sed 1d
or
nixos-option ... | sed '1/This attribute set contains:/d'
if the caller don't know if this invocation of nixos-option will yield
an attribute listing or an option description.
Switch from convention "appease clang-tidy --checks='*'" to
"References are like non-nullptr pointers". The clang-tidy check
"google-runtime-references" complains about non-const reference
arguments, but this is not a convention used in Nix.
Switch from convention "appease clang-tidy --checks='*'" to
"References are like non-nullptr pointers". The clang-tidy check
"google-runtime-references" complains about non-const reference
arguments, but this is not a convention used in Nix.
Switch from convention "appease clang-tidy --checks='*'" to
"References are like non-nullptr pointers". The clang-tidy check
"google-runtime-references" complains about non-const reference
arguments, but this is not a convention used in Nix.
I don't think this matters. As long as one or the other of these is
a std::string, I get an operator== that looks at content rather than
pointer equality. I picked casting the constant over casting the dynamic
thing in hopes that the compiler would have a better chance at optimizing
away any runtime cost.
Deferring to reviewer.
This is important because this contains some code copied from nix (as an
interim expediency until that functionality can be exported via nix's
API). The license specified here must be compatible with this borrowing.
Select the same license that nix is released under: lgpl2Plus.
Specifically, with
clang-format --style='{ IndentWidth: 4, BreakBeforeBraces: Mozilla, ColumnLimit: 120, PointerAlignment: Middle }'
which was the clang-format invocation that produced the fewest diffs on
the nix source out of ~20 that I tried.
Also add --all, which shows the value of all options. Diffing the --all
output on either side of contemplated changes is a lovely way to better
understand what's going on inside nixos.
Instead of assign the libinput options to touchpad devices only, it
should be appied by any device using libinput.
Due to the fact that `40-libinput.conf` already defines libinput as
driver for any detected input device, we can use `MatchDriver` to appy
options.
I've noticed a similar issue in Pantheon, without this
sound theme installed there's no system sounds.
I believe it's because the gnome theme and the pantheon
theme inherit this one.
Change order of pam_mount.conf.xml so that users can override the preset configs.
My use case is to mount a gocryptfs (a fuse program) volume. I can not do that in current order.
Because even if I change the `<fusermount>` and `<fuserumount>` by add below to extraVolumes
```
<fusemount>${pkgs.fuse}/bin/mount.fuse %(VOLUME) %(MNTPT) "%(before=\"-o \" OPTIONS)"</fusemount>
<fuseumount>${pkgs.fuse}/bin/fusermount -u %(MNTPT)</fuseumount>
```
mount.fuse still does not work because it can not find `fusermount`. pam_mount will told stat /bin/fusermount failed.
Fine, I can add a `<path>` section to extraVolumes
```
<path>${pkgs.fuse}/bin:${pkgs.coreutils}/bin:${pkgs.utillinux}/bin</path>
```
but then the `<path>` section is overridden by the hardcoded `<path>${pkgs.utillinux}/bin</path>` below. So it still does not work.
Adding `systemd-importd` to the build, so that `machinectl`s `import-.*`
may actually do anything. Currently they fail with
```
Failed to transfer image: The name org.freedesktop.import1 was not provided by any .service files
```
as `systemd-importd` is not built. Also registers the regarding dbus
api and service in the systemd module.
Before, we very carefully unapplied and reapplied `set -u` so the rest
of Nixpkgs could continue to not fail on undefined variables. Let's rip
off the band-aid.
For the case of blkfront drives, there appears to be no difference
between /dev/sda1 and /dev/xvda: the drive always appears as the
kernel device /dev/xvda.
For the case of nvme drives, the root device typically appears as
/dev/nvme0n1. Amazon provides the 'ec2-utils' package for their first
party linux ("Amazon Linux"), which configures udev to create symlinks
from the provided name to the nvme device name. This name is
communicated through nvme "Identify Controller" response, which can be
inspected with:
nvme id-ctrl --raw-binary /dev/nvme0n1 | cut -c3073-3104 | hexdump -C
On Amazon Linux, where the device is attached as "/dev/xvda", this
creates:
- /dev/xvda -> nvme0n1
- /dev/xvda1 -> nvme0n1p1
On NixOS where the device is attach as "/dev/sda1", this creates:
- /dev/sda1 -> nvme0n1
- /dev/sda11 -> nvme0n1p1
This is odd, but not inherently a problem.
NixOS unconditionally configures grub to install to `/dev/xvda`, which
fails on an instance using nvme storage. With the root device name set
to xvda, both blkfront and nvme drives are accessible as /dev/xvda,
either directly or by symlink.
Invoke xrandr to actually connect the device.
Additionally, we let systemd create the logs directory and use our module loader
instead of handling it manually.
It seems that dnsdist doesn't actually request CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE, which is why normally it's executed and root and setuids to another, unprivileged, user. This means that as it is, dnsdist will be unable to bind to any port under 1024 and will fail with access denied.
Removing CAP_SETGID and CAP_SETUID is also related to this as we don't actually change the uid or gid after the fact as we use DynamicUser. (That part isn't strictly NEEDED but there's no reason to have those capabilities if we don't use them).
There are also some additional sandboxing we can remove from the service definition as they are assumed true or strict by DynamicUser: specifically PrivateTmp and ProtectSystem respectively.
ProtectHome is still there, despite being assumed read-only as setting it to true means they are seen as empty. I don't think it really matters as I don't know if systemd will ignore it or not, but I didn't see any reason to go hunting for excuses to make it a bigger change.
The recent custom endpoint addition allows us to directly point
certbot to the custom Pebble directory endpoint.
Thanks to that, we can ditch the Pebble patch we were using so far;
making this test maintenance easier.
Add a new option permitting to point certbot to an ACME Directory
Resource URI other than Let's Encrypt production/staging one.
In the meantime, we are deprecating the now useless Let's Encrypt
production flag.
- spawn the geoclue-agent directly instead of running it via bash
- document why we cannot use DynamicUser = true
- have systemd create the home directory instead of using an explicit
tmpfiles.d fragment
* lm_sensors: add fancontrol module + nixos test
fancontrol is a small script that checks temperature sensors and adapts
fan speeds accordingly. It reads a text config file that can be
auto-generated by running the pwmconfig wizard on the live system.
Both options were introduced in systemd v243[1]. Those options can be
used to ensure that LinkLocalAddressing is only configured for a given
interface if DHCPv4 fails. To quote `systemd.network(5)`:
```
If "fallback" or "ipv4-fallback" is specified, then an IPv4
link-local address is configured only when DHCPv4 fails. If "fallback", an IPv6 link-local
address is always configured, and if "ipv4-fallback", the address is not configured. Note
that, the fallback mechanism works only when DHCPv4 client is enabled, that is, it requires
"DHCP=yes" or "DHCP=ipv4".
```
[1] 8bc17bb3f7
Default behavior is to continue executing the script even when one or
multiple steps fail. We want to abort early if any part of the
initialization fails to not run with a partially initialized state.
Default behavior also allows dereferencing non-existent variables,
potentially resulting in hard-to-find bugs.
Rename the old ceph test to ceph-single-node and add a new test
ceph-multi-node. The ceph-single-node represents a dev cluster whereas
ceph-multi-node is closer to a prod cluster.
Previously setting `allowKeysForGroup = true; group = "foo"` would not
apply the group permission change of the certificates until the service
gets restarted. This commit fixes this by making systemd restart the
service every time it changes.
Note that applying this commit to a system with an already running acme
systemd service doesn't fix this immediately and you still need to wait
for the next refresh (or call `systemctl restart acme-<domain>`). Once
everybody's service has restarted once this should be a problem of the
past.
While switching NixOS configurations with both
networking.useNetworkd = true;
virtualisation.virtualbox.host.enable;
You often end up waiting for systemd-networkd-wait-online.service.
This happens because the vboxnet0 device doesn't have a carrier until
virtualbox machines are started, so networkd gets stuck in
"Configuring":
⇒ networkctl list
IDX LINK TYPE OPERATIONAL SETUP
1 lo loopback carrier unmanaged
2 wlp2s0 wlan routable unmanaged
3 vboxnet0 ether no-carrier configuring
This updates the NixOS virtualbox host module to include a
RequiredForOnline=no statement in the generated 40-vboxnet0.network
file, so networkd doesn't consider it necessary for
systemd-networkd-wait-online.service to finish.
Let's encrypt bumped ACME to V2. We need to update our nixos test to
be compatible with this new protocol version.
We decided to drop the Boulder ACME server in favor of the more
integration test friendly Pebble.
- overriding cacert not necessary
- this avoids rebuilding lots of packages needlessly
- nixos/tests/acme: use pebble's ca for client tests
- pebble always generates its own ca which has to be fetched
TODO: write proper commit msg :)
From https://github.com/zsh-users/zsh-syntax-highlighting#faq:
"It must be sourced after all custom widgets have been created
(i.e., after all zle -N calls and after running compinit)."
zsh-syntax-highlighting must be sourced to the end.
Updating:
- nixos module to use the new `account_reg.json` file.
- use nixpkgs pebble for integration tests.
Co-authored-by: Florian Klink <flokli@flokli.de>
Replace certbot-embedded pebble
Just maching all network interfaces caused many breakages, see #18962
and #71106.
We already don't support the global networking.useDHCP,
networking.defaultGateway(6) options if networking.useNetworkd is
enabled, but direct users to configure the per-device
networking.interfaces.<name?>.… options.
This adds support for deploying to remote hosts without being root:
sudo nixos-rebuild --target-host non-root@host
Without this change, only root@host is able to deploy.
The idea is that if the local command is run with sudo, so should the
remote one, thus there is no need for adding any CLI options.
Slim is abandoned and won't work with wayland.
It's in our best interest to use the display-manager
that makes most sense for Plasma5, sddm.
We've already moved on from it being default in #30890
and the graphical.nix profile, which the virtualbox profile uses,
has sddm anyway.
Even though the release obviously already happened, I think it might
still make sense to add a short note about the attributes not being
supported any longer (and going forward).
(cherry picked from commit 7163d3a9df35904d0c9acc9f643fd70ee3108539)
(cherry picked from commit a64b8c3c191af1317cfdc1ea4f4e5f881c4cf503)
This option was removed because allowing (multiple) regular users to
override host entries affecting the whole system opens up a huge attack
vector. There seem to be very rare cases where this might be useful.
Consider setting system-wide host entries using networking.hosts,
provide them via the DNS server in your network, or use
networking.networkmanager.appendNameservers to point your system to
another (local) nameserver to set those entries.
This reverts commit 60aedadc59.
Using tests from #71212 I am now unable to reproduce there being issues
with starting the default metacity flashback session without this.
On start, unicorn, sidekiq and other parts running ruby code emits
quite a few warnings similar to
/var/gitlab/state/config/application.rb:202: warning: already initialized constant Gitlab::Application::LOOSE_EE_APP_ASSETS
/nix/store/ysb0lgbzxp7a9y4yl8d4f9wrrzy9kafc-gitlab-ee-12.3.5/share/gitlab/config/application.rb:202: warning: previous definition of LOOSE_EE_APP_ASSETS was here
/var/gitlab/state/lib/gitlab.rb:38: warning: already initialized constant Gitlab::COM_URL
/nix/store/ysb0lgbzxp7a9y4yl8d4f9wrrzy9kafc-gitlab-ee-12.3.5/share/gitlab/lib/gitlab.rb:38: warning: previous definition of COM_URL was here
This seems to be caused by the same ruby files being evaluated
multiple times due to the paths being different - sometimes they're
loaded using the direct path and sometimes through a symlink, due to
our split between config and package data. To fix this, we make sure
that the offending files in the state directory always reference the
store path, regardless of that being the real file or a symlink.
We create a wrapper which launches gnome-shell with the correct environment and
cap_sys_nice.
We can then override gnome-shell-wayland.service to use this wrapper.
NOTE: We need to force clear the environment, because the defaults aren't good
for user services. That should probably be fixed.
Otherwise connecting simply fails:
VPN connection: failed to connect: 'La création du fichier « /tmp/lib/NetworkManager-fortisslvpn/0507e3ef-f0e0-4153-af64-b3d9a025877c.config.XSB19Z » a échoué : No such file or directory'
This reverts commit 2ee14c34ed.
This caused the initializers directory to be cleaned out while gitlab
was running in some instances. We clean out the directory on the
preStart stage already, so ensuring existance and permissions should
suffice.
This fixes an issue with a recent addition of a config file
check in c28ded36ef.
Previously it was possible to supply a path as a string
to `configFile`. Now it will fail checking the config file
during evaluation of the module due to sandboxing.
A toggle to disable the check, more informative log messages
and handling for various configFile values are added.
This solves the dependency cycle in gcr alternatively so there won't be
two gnupg store paths in a standard NixOS system which has udisks2 enabled
by default.
NixOS users are expected to use the gpg-agent user service to pull in the
appropriate pinentry flavour or install it on their systemPackages and set
it in their local gnupg agent config instead.
Co-authored-by: Florian Klink <flokli@flokli.de>
This solves the dependency cycle in gcr alternatively so there won't be
two gnupg store paths in a standard NixOS system which has udisks2 enabled
by default.
NixOS users are expected to use the gpg-agent user service to pull in the
appropriate pinentry flavour or install it on their systemPackages and set
it in their local gnupg agent config instead.
Co-authored-by: Florian Klink <flokli@flokli.de>
This session would fail to start because we didn't have it in systemd.packages
(as we've switched to systemd gnome-session).
Haven't tested custom sessions.
This fixes user environment setup for sessions which doesn't successfully go
through a shell init.
Note we don't go through `sessionVariables` as we want the wrappers to have
highest priority. It would also cause wrapperDir to occur twice when in shell
sessions, as shells use `sessionVariables` too while prepending wrapperDir in a
custom snippet.
In particular logging in and out of gnome-shell could result in a broken path
without this fix.
Bumps `matrix-synapse` to version 1.4.0[1]. With this version the
following changes in the matrix-synapse module were needed:
* Removed `trusted_third_party_id_servers`: option is marked as deprecated
and ignored by matrix-synapse[2].
* Added `account_threepid_delegates` options as replacement for 3rdparty
server features[3].
* Added `redaction_retention_period` option to configure how long
redacted options should be kept in the database.
* Added `ma27` as maintainer for `matrix-synapse`.
Co-Authored-By: Notkea <pacien@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Maximilian Bosch <maximilian@mbosch.me>
[1] https://matrix.org/blog/2019/10/03/synapse-1-4-0-released
[2] https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/5875
[3] https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/5876
If you want to be able to use OpenSC with ssh-agent, you need to be able
to add it to the ssh-agent whitelist. This adds an option,
agentPKCS11Whitelist, that exposes the option.
Note that I currently work around this by injecting the parameter into
the agentTimeout option:
programs.ssh.agentTimeout = "1h -P ${pkgs.opensc}/lib/opensc-pkcs11.so";
but I feel that a proper option would be better :)
This fixes a regression from bb649d96b0.
There were permission problems, when the preStart script tried to copy
the smokeping.fcgi file over the old file.
When having backup jobs that persist to a removable device like an
external HDD, the directory shouldn't be created by an activation script
as this might confuse auto-mounting tools such as udiskie(8).
In this case the job will simply fail, with the former approach
udiskie ran into some issues as the path `/run/media/ma27/backup` was
already there and owned by root.
GDM now specifies ordering between `plymouth-quit` and `display-manager`:
9be5321097
This causes an ordering cycle between GDM and plymouth-quit which can result in
systemd breaking GDM:
```
plymouth-quit.service: Job display-manager.service/start deleted to break
ordering cycle starting with plymouth-quit.service/start
```
Not sure how often this triggers, as I've run my system with plymouth and
9be5321097 without any issues. But I did catch a VM doing this.
NOTE: I also tried to remove the ordering in GDM to see if plymouth managed to
live longer, but it didn't seem to help. So I opted to stick as close to
upstream (upstream GDM specifies ordering, but plymouth does not).
This enlarges the system uid/gid range 6-fold, from 100 to 600 ids. This
is a preventative measure against running out of dynamically allocated
ids for NixOS services with isSystemUser, which should become the
preferred way of allocating uids for non-real users.
We had these set so gtk2 can discover themes properly, however we failed
realize that gtk2 already has a patch that makes it search in XDG_DATA_DIRS.
I don't believe any issue is solved by setting these.
This option was added by mistake since `listenAddress` exists by default
for each prometheus-exporter. Using
`services.prometheus.exporters.wireguard.addr` will now cause a warning,
but doesn't break eval.
Having `display-manager` conflict with `plymouth-quit` causes this lock up:
- `plymouth-quit-wait` starts up, waiting for plymouth-quit to run
- `lightdm` starts up
- `plymouth-quit` can't start, it conflicts with lightdm
- `plymouth-quit-wait` keeps waiting on plymouth-quit to kill plymouthd
The idea is having LightDM control when plymouth quits, but communication with
plymouth was broken: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/71064
Unfortunately having the conflict breaks switching to configurations with
plymouth enabled. So we still need to remove the conflict.
fixes#71034
The rationale for this is that old filesystems have recieved little scrutiny
wrt. security relevant bugs.
Lifted from OpenSUSE[1].
[1]: 8cb42fb665
Co-Authored-By: Renaud <c0bw3b@users.noreply.github.com>
Default getfacl behavior is to remove leading slash on absolute
paths in its header printed to stdout.
Before the header it will also print a message about it...
Switches -p -or --absolute-names can turn this off
and remove some noise from our tests logs.
In fact, don't create them at all because Nix does that automatically.
Also remove modules/programs/shell.nix because everything it did is
now done automatically by Nix.
gitlab:db:configure prints the root user's password to stdout on
successful setup, which means it will be logged to the
journal. Silence this informational output. Errors are printed to
stderr and will thus still be let through.
The mime type definitions included with nginx are very incomplete, so
we use a list of mime types from the mailcap package, which is also
used by most other Linux distributions by default.
The networking.virtual test does not work with networkd yet, for
multiple reasons:
- network-online.target is not reached, because tun0 and tap0 are
considered as required for online but _not_ brought up or assigned
the configured addresses
- the commands later in the test rely on some units from the scripted
network setup
cc @fpletz networkd exper
cc @globin we looked at this together
I have `users.defaultUserShell = pkgs.fish;` set on my server and when I ran `nixos-rebuild switch --target-host …`, the command failed with the following error:
fish: Unsupported use of '='. To run 'nix-store' with a modified environment, please use 'env PATH=… nix-store…'
That is because fish requires env to set environment variables for a program. It should also work on other shells.
This reverts commit e9bf955fd6. We use
nixos-install to ensure that make-disk-image produces the same result
as a regular installation (9802da517f)
and to reduce code duplication. If there is something broken in
nixos-install, it should be fixed there.
xfce4-volumed-pulse is not abandoned, but is superseded by a panel
plugin which is not available when not using the desktop.
Fixes: volume up/down keys support
These improvements come from shopping around
at what other downstreams have done with their
systemd units and recent changes like [0] to gdm.
Note there's no requries or after on dbus.socket because
settings BusName will set this up automaticallly and
give it a type of dbus.
[0]: 2d57f45962
uinput needs to be added to boot.kernelModules in order for the udev
rules defined by steam to be run and set permissions correctly on
/dev/uinput.
See https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/70471.
List all modules that *may* be required depending on individual container
configurations; don't expect that further modules can be loaded after boot.
Fixes https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/38676
Openvswitch was upgraded to the latest
stable version (currenty 2.12.0). This remove ovs-monitor-ipsec
commands.
LTS version is still available using
`config.virtualisation.vswitch.package = pkgs.openvswitch-lts`
it has been upgraded to 2.5.6.
This commit is a split from the original PR #35127.
The initializers directory is populated with files from the gitlab
distribution on start, but old files will be left in the state folder
even if they're removed from the distribution, which can lead to
startup failures. Fix this by always purging the directory on start
before populating it.
Since the preStart script is no longer running in privileged mode, we
reassign the files in the state directory and its config subdirectory
to the user we're running as. This is done by splitting the preStart
script into a privileged and an unprivileged part where the privileged
part does the reassignment.
Also, delete the database.yml symlink if it exists, since we want to
create a real file in its place.
Fixes#68696.
This introduces an option wifi.backend to the networkmanager module.
Co-authored-by: Cole Mickens <cole.mickens@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: worldofpeace <worldofpeace@protonmail.ch>
GNOME initial setup's run is conditioned on whether
the gnome-initial-setup-done file exists in XDG_CONFIG_HOME
Because of this, every existing user will have initial setup
running because they never ran it before.
To prevent this we create the file if the users stateVersion
is older than 20.03 (the release we added this module).
Also drop uneeded manual conflicts as systemd.packages
does handle this.
We were only replacing them in the profiles. We also need to do this in
the values of variables, including both the session-relative variables
and the non-session-relative variables.
- register gnome-session and gnome-settings-daemon services.
- gnome-shell is already registered due to having a xdg portal
- manually specify that gsd is wanted by gnome-session
(systemd.packages doesn't pick the .wants directories for some reason)
GDM is now killed if tty1 is started after gdm is launched. This follows
upstream's gdm service config.
This might cause problems with nixos-rebuild switch though. See the reasoning
and work that led to not following upstream on this:
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/214394a180dac46d4da
We don't want to ignore config that can mess up machines. In general
this should always fail evaluation, as you think you are changing
behaviour and don't, which can easily create run-time errors we can
catch early.
The test has recently been failing due to the IPv6 address
on the server still being in the tentative state, when the
client sends its first request. The server will not start
using the IPv6 address until DAD has completed.
Scripted networking seems not to wait for DAD completion
before completing network-online.target, so let's switch
to networkd instead, which does.
https://github.com/MindFlavor/prometheus_wireguard_exporter/releases/tag/3.1.1
This release adds a flag `-l` which takes an address where the exporter
is available. The default is `0.0.0.0` (previously, `0.0.0.0` was used
by default).
Please note that there are no dependency changes in Cargo and therefore
the cargo hash didn't change.
Since version 2.3 (https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/2949 which was
cherry-picked to master) Nix issues a warning when --no-net wasn't
passed and there is no network interface. This commit adds the --no-net
flag to the nix.conf check such that no warning is issued.
This commits makes it clearer to a novice reader how to configure several
diferent types of SSID connections that were otherwise obscurely documented
Resolves#66650
Quoting from the splitString docstring:
NOTE: this function is not performant and should never be used.
This replaces trivial uses of splitString for splitting version
strings with the (potentially builtin) splitVersion.
Fixes eval on darwin after #69072
Resolved conflict in pkgs/tools/security/thc-hydra/default.nix
Basically had to revert a1c0e10564 which
adapts #69210 to master that doesn't yet have
329a88efa7
Tested using maintainers/scripts/eval-release.sh before and after to see
that the fix works
This commit adds a Strict-Transport-Security header to
the nginx config file generated by the nextcloud module.
The Strict-Transport-Security header is recommended in
official guide for hardening Nextcloud installations:
https://docs.nextcloud.com/server/16/admin_manual/installation/harden_server.html
Further, if it is not set, we see a warning in the security scan results
in the Nextcloud admin panel:
```
The "Strict-Transport-Security" HTTP header is not set to at least "15552000" seconds. For enhanced security, it is recommended to enable HSTS as described in the security tips
```
Images generated with nixos-install will be supported by machinectl
problem is that systemd-nspawn's private usersns feature clashes
with DynamicUser and RuntimeDirectory features, which causes NixOS
images to not boot. There is an upstream issue for this
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/13622
Make sure that we don't create a database if we're not going to
connect to it. Also, fix the assertion that usernames be equal to only
trig when peer authentication is used (databaseHost == "").
config.services.postgresql.package is only defined when the postgresql
service is activated, which means we fail to evaluate when
databaseCreateLocally == false. Fix this by using the default
postgresql package when the postgresql service is disabled.
This sets networking.useDHCP to false and for all interfaces found the
per-interface useDHCP to true. This replicates the current default
behaviour and prepares for the switch to networkd.
The state path now, since the transition from initialization in
preStart to using systemd-tmpfiles, has the following restriction: no
parent directory can be owned by any other user than root or the user
specified in services.gitlab.user. This is a potentially breaking
change and the cause of the error isn't immediately obvious, so
document it both in the release notes and statePath description.
In #68792 it was discovered that /dev/fuse doesn't have
wordl-read-writeable permissions anymore. The cause of this is that the
tmpfiles examples in systemd were reorganized and split into more files.
We thus lost some of the configuration we were depending on.
In this commit some of the new tmpfiles configuration that are
applicable to us are added which also makes wtmp/lastlog in the pam
module not necessary anymore.
Rationale for the new tmpfile configs:
- `journal-nowcow.conf`: Contains chattr +C for journald logs which
makes sense on copy-on-write filesystems like Btrfs. Other filesystems
shouldn't do anything funny when that flag is set.
- `static-nodes-permissions.conf`: Contains some permission overrides
for some device nodes like audio, loop, tun, fuse and kvm.
- `systemd-nspawn.conf`: Makes sure `/var/lib/machines` exists and old
snapshots are properly removed.
- `systemd-tmp.conf`: Removes systemd services related private tmp
folders and temporary coredump files.
- `var.conf`: Creates some useful directories in `/var` which we would
create anyway at some point. Also includes
`/var/log/{wtmp,btmp,lastlog}`.
Fixes#68792.
These are the leftovers of an older PR.
a. Send messages to auditd if auditing is enabled.
b. Add missing dbus configuration if dnsmasq is used for DNS