There was a bug in the pam_mount module that crypt mount options were
not passed to the mount.crypt command. This is now fixed and
additionally, a cryptMountOptions NixOS option is added to define mount
options that should apply to all crypt mounts.
Fixes#230920
According to Ted Unangst, since doas evaluates rules in a last
matched manner, it is prudent to have the "permit root to do everything
without a password at the end of the file.
Source: https://flak.tedunangst.com/post/doas-mastery
This reverts commit 2265160fc0 and
e56db577a1.
Ideally, we shouldn't cause friction for users that bump `stateVersion`,
and I'd consider having to switch and/or manually hardcode a UID/GID
to supress the warning friction. I think it'd be more beneficial to, in
this rare case of an ID being missed, just let it be until more
discussion happens surrounding this overall issue.
See https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/217785 for more context.
this converts meta.doc into an md pointer, not an xml pointer. since we
no longer need xml for manual chapters we can also remove support for
manual chapters from md-to-db.sh
since pandoc converts smart quotes to docbook quote elements and our
nixos-render-docs does not we lose this distinction in the rendered
output. that's probably not that bad, our stylesheet didn't make use of
this anyway (and pre-23.05 versions of the chapters didn't use quote
elements either).
also updates the nixpkgs manual to clarify that option docs support all
extensions (although it doesn't support headings at all, so heading
anchors don't work by extension).
MD can only do the latter, so change them all over now to keeps diffs reviewable.
this also includes <literal><xref> -> <xref> where options are referenced since
the reference will implicitly add an inner literal tag.
markdown cannot represent those links. remove them all now instead of in
each chapter conversion to keep the diff for each chapter small and more
understandable.
fscrypt can automatically unlock directories with the user's login
password. To do this it ships a PAM module which reads the user's
password and loads the respective keys into the user's kernel keyring.
Significant inspiration was taken from the ecryptfs implementation.