--port and --address have both been deprecated and are nonfunctional
starting with kubernetes 1.23. Use --secure-port and --bind-address
instead. This means that users can no longer rely on the insecure port
for anything, so update the release notes accordingly.
The `substituters` option in `nix.settings` uses the order
of the substituters listed to define priority. Prior to https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/139075,
the corresponding option `binaryCaches` is declared in the `nix` namespace,
which is guaranteed to be merged last. However, the order of merging isn't
guaranteed in submodules. This cause definitions to be appended to the default
value instead of prepended, breaking backwards compatibility as reported in https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/158356.
The way this is addressed in the module system is with order priorities via
`mkOrder` and sorting definitions before merging. This PR restores the previous
behavior by setting a higher priority to the substituters option defined internally,
thus all definitions with default priority will be merged before it. This was chosen because
the `mkRenamedOption` function does not preserve order priority so users using legacy options do not have
precise control on placement.
This change should suffice for simple configuration, but further revision to the module system
is needed for to make various `mk*` functions aware of order priorities.
logrotate global options only affect rules following them - as such,
services.logrotate.extraConfig being added last makes the option only
useful for adding new paths but not for setting global options (e.g.
'dateext' so all logs are rotate with a date suffix).
Moving this first solves this problem, and we can then use this instead
of default paths config to append missingok/notifempty.
wtmp and btmp are created by systemd, so the rules are more appropriate there.
They can be disabled explicitly with something like
services.ogrotate.paths = {
"/var/log/btmp".enable = false;
"/var/log/wtmp".enable = false;
};
if required.
In #139075, mandatoryFeatures was removed from the generated
supportedFeatures, which breaks backward compatibility and is
different from what the description of supportedFeatures says.
The module option type `nonEmptyStr` was introduced in commit
a3c5f0cba8
The hylafax module previously simply used
`addCheck str (s: s!="")` to prevent empty option strings,
but the new type is more thorough as
it also catches space-only strings.
If a secret path is a subset of a second secret path, there's a risk
that its secret is substituted for the matching part of the second
path. To prevent this, use the sha256 of the paths as placeholder
string instead.
I think calling i2pd directly in `ExecStart` is much nicer than having an extra shell script for no reason. It's also easier to see what's going on when looking at the generated systemd unit file.
* make slurmd depend on network target to ensure basic networking
is available on startup. This fixes behaviour
where slurmd fails with "error: get_addr_info: getaddrinfo() failed".
* Use tmpfiles.d to ensure spool directory exists on start up.
Fail scripts on pipeline errors and propagate subshell errors.
If an error occurs in a subshell, including while trying to read a
secret file, we want that error to propagate to the main shell
context. That means we have to set the `inherit_errexit` option, which
allows errors from subshells to propagate to the outer shell. Also,
the subshell cannot run as part of another command, such as `export`,
since that will simply ignore the subshell exit status and only
respect `export`s exit status; first assigning the value to a variable
and then exporting it solves issue.
* nixos/nftables: Allow use with iptables
Since iptables and nftables do not actually conflict with each other, there's no real reason to artificially prevent people from combining them.
In fact, this practice is known to cause issues like #88643, which is fixed by this commit.
users.users.*.createHome makes home only owner-readable.
This breaks nginx reading static assets from nextcloud's home,
after a nixos-rebuild that did not restart nextcloud-setup.
Closes#112639
When no devices are given the exporter tries to autodiscover available
disks. The previous DevicePolicy was however preventing the exporter
from accessing any device at all, since only explicitly mentioned ones
were allowed.
This commit adds an allow rule for several device classes that I could
find on my machines, that gets set when no devices are explicitly
configured.
There is an existing problem with nvme devices, that expose a character
device at `/dev/nvme0`, and a (namespaced) block device at
`/dev/nvme0n1`. The character device does not come with permissions that
we could give to the exporter without further impacting the hardening.
crw------- 1 root root 247, 0 27. Jan 03:10 /dev/nvme0
brw-rw---- 1 root disk 259, 0 27. Jan 03:10 /dev/nvme0n1
The autodiscovery only finds the character device, which the exporter
unfortunately does not have access to.
However a simple udev rule can be used to resolve this:
services.udev.extraRules = ''
SUBSYSTEM=="nvme", KERNEL=="nvme[0-9]*", GROUP="disk"
'';
Unfortunately I'm not fully aware of the security implications this
change carries and we should question upstream (systemd) why they did
not include such a rule.
The disk group has no members on any of my machines.
❯ getent group disk
disk❌6:
* fix MTP support on KDE Plasma and Dolphin
* Update pkgs/applications/kde/kio-extras.nix
Co-authored-by: ElXreno <elxreno@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Peter Hoeg <peter@hoeg.com>
Co-authored-by: ElXreno <elxreno@gmail.com>
The `nix.*` options, apart from options for setting up the
daemon itself, currently provide a lot of setting mappings
for the Nix daemon configuration. The scope of the mapping yields
convience, but the line where an option is considered essential
is blurry. For instance, the `extra-sandbox-paths` mapping is
provided without its primary consumer, and the corresponding
`sandbox-paths` option is also not mapped.
The current system increases the maintenance burden as maintainers have to
closely follow upstream changes. In this case, there are two state versions
of Nix which have to be maintained collectively, with different options
avaliable.
This commit aims to following the standard outlined in RFC 42[1] to
implement a structural setting pattern. The Nix configuration is encoded
at its core as key-value pairs which maps nicely to attribute sets, making
it feasible to express in the Nix language itself. Some existing options are
kept such as `buildMachines` and `registry` which present a simplified interface
to managing the respective settings. The interface is exposed as `nix.settings`.
Legacy configurations are mapped to their corresponding options under `nix.settings`
for backwards compatibility.
Various options settings in other nixos modules and relevant tests have been
updated to use structural setting for consistency.
The generation and validation of the configration file has been modified to
use `writeTextFile` instead of `runCommand` for clarity. Note that validation
is now mandatory as strict checking of options has been pushed down to the
derivation level due to freeformType consuming unmatched options. Furthermore,
validation can not occur when cross-compiling due to current limitations.
A new option `publicHostKey` was added to the `buildMachines`
submodule corresponding to the base64 encoded public host key settings
exposed in the builder syntax. The build machine generation was subsequently
rewritten to use `concatStringsSep` for better performance by grouping
concatenations.
[1] - https://github.com/NixOS/rfcs/blob/master/rfcs/0042-config-option.md
Required as visible in the lightdm tests:
> Error updating user /org/freedesktop/Accounts/User1001: GDBus.Error:org.freedesktop.Accounts.Error.PermissionDenied: Not authorized: GDBus.Error:org.freedesktop.DBus.Error.ServiceUnknown: The name org.freedesktop.PolicyKit1 was not provided by any .service files
Empty parantheses are not supported in regular expressions on
Darwin/macOS. The old regular expression produces an error during
evaluation. This commit fixes that.
Nix‘s `builtins.match` works with extend POSIX regular expressions. The
specification for these regular expression states[^1] that the result
for a left paranthesis immediately followed by a right paranthesis
outside of a bracket expression is undefined.
[^1]: https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/V1_chap09.html#tag_09_04_03
Tor waits ShutdownWaitLength seconds (30s by default) before actually shutting down. Since the systemd timeout is also set to 30 seconds, this results in a race condition that ends up killing Tor most of the time on my machine during shutdown.
To fix this, add the ShutdownWaitLength setting and tell systemd to wait 30 seconds more than that.
Arch Linux also has `TimeoutSec` set to 60 seconds: 6df716fe19/trunk/tor.service.
`register_new_matrix_user` is a script provided by the matrix-synapse
package to create a new matrix user on the command line.
This commit provides a wrapper around `register_new_matrix_user` that
automatically passes the url (and `registration_shared_secret`, if
present) as CLI arguments.
- regenerate everything
- hardcode to build with node 14 (upstream doesn't support 16 yet)
- remove optional deps to make things build without python2
- set HOME in service environment to prevent crashing
Changes in node-*.nix are autogenerated.