using regular strings works well for docbook because docbook is not as
whitespace-sensitive as markdown. markdown would render all of these as
code blocks when given the chance.
make (almost) all links appear on only a single line, with no
unnecessary whitespace, using double quotes for attributes. this lets us
automatically convert them to markdown easily.
the few remaining links are extremely long link in a gnome module, we'll
come back to those at a later date.
markdown can't represent the difference without another extension and
both the html manual and the manpage render them the same, so keeping the
distinction is not very useful on its own. with the distinction removed
we can automatically convert many options that use <code> tags to markdown.
the manpage remains unchanged, html manual does not render
differently (but class names on code tags do change from "code" to "literal").
our xslt already replaces double line breaks with a paragraph close and
reopen. not using explicit para tags lets nix-doc-munge convert more
descriptions losslessly.
only whitespace changes to generated documents, except for two
strongswan options gaining paragraph two breaks they arguably should've
had anyway.
the conversion procedure is simple:
- find all things that look like options, ie calls to either `mkOption`
or `lib.mkOption` that take an attrset. remember the attrset as the
option
- for all options, find a `description` attribute who's value is not a
call to `mdDoc` or `lib.mdDoc`
- textually convert the entire value of the attribute to MD with a few
simple regexes (the set from mdize-module.sh)
- if the change produced a change in the manual output, discard
- if the change kept the manual unchanged, add some text to the
description to make sure we've actually found an option. if the
manual changes this time, keep the converted description
this procedure converts 80% of nixos options to markdown. around 2000
options remain to be inspected, but most of those fail the "does not
change the manual output check": currently the MD conversion process
does not faithfully convert docbook tags like <code> and <package>, so
any option using such tags will not be converted at all.
I was under the impression that setting `services.redis.servers.<name>.save = []` would disable RDB persistence as no schedule would mean no persistence. However since the code did not handle this case specially it actually results in no `save` setting being written and the internal Redis default is used.
This patch handles the empty case to disable RDB persistence.
Disabling RDB persistence is useful in a number of scenarios:
1. Using Redis in a pure-cache mode where persistence is not desired.
2. When using the (generally superior) AOF persistence mode this file is never read so there is little point to writing it.
3. When saving is handled manually
For more information see https://redis.io/docs/manual/persistence/
This is a breaking change as the user may have been relying on `[]` using Redis defaults. However I believe that updating the behaviour for the next release is beneficial as IMHO it is less surprising and does what the user would expect. I have added release notes to warn about this change.
This improves security, by starting the service as an unprivileged user,
rather than starting as root and relying on the service to drop
privileges. This requires a significant cleanup of pre-init scripts, to
make use of StateDirectory and RuntimeDirectory for permissions.
Riak have been updated a lot since the version 2.2 (now 3.0.10) but
has seen no updated to the package. This is at this point
a problem forcing us to maintain old versions of erlang.
We would be happy to re accept a newer version of Riak if someone want
to spend the time to set it up.
On one of the two machines I have running openldap, openldap failed to start due to a "timeout". Increasing the allowed startup delay didn't help.
I noticed the following in logs:
```
openldap.service: Got notification message from PID 5224, but reception only permitted for main PID 5223
```
It turns out that on this machine at least, openldap apparently sends the notification from a non-main process, which means that we need this NotifyAccess setting for systemd to record that it successfully started. Without it, after 30 seconds systemd kills the process because it didn't receive the sd_notify call.
Somehow the other machine I have on nixos running ldap works fine even without this, but I could not figure out what changes the behavior.
Given that AFAIU NotifyAccess still restricts to "from the cgroup of the service", I think this change should be safe.
OpenLDAP since version 2.5.4¹ supports sd_notify, so we should make use
of it.
Also updates the unit description and documentation with the values
upstream provides.
Starts slapd only after reaching `network-online.target`, which ensures
binding to specific ip addresses is possible, since `network.target`
only guarantees interfaces exist, but not that addressing is finished.
[1] https://bugs.openldap.org/show_bug.cgi?id=8707
It breaks something inside of influxdb2, which results in flurry of errors like these:
> ts=2021-12-21T18:19:35.513910Z lvl=info msg="Write failed" log_id=0YZYwvV0000 service=storage-engine service=write shard=50 error="[shard 50] unlinkat ./L1-00000055.tsi: read-only file system"
I believe this is somehow caused by a mount namespace that systemd creates for
the service, but I didn't investigate this deeper.