For plugins to work properly, their assets need to be precompiled
along with the rest of Discourse's assets. This means we need to build
new packages when the list of plugins change.
Since 3edde6562e, we can no longer use
aliases inside the test framework. This has the implication that we can
no longer use aliases in any NixOS modules used by the test framework as
well (which is good), but does mean we need to clean up any instances
where this is the case.
* Most significant is probably the patching necessary to run plausible
with postgres without superuser privilege. This change includes:
* updating ecto_sql to 3.6 where `CREATE DATABASE` is only executed if
it doesn't exist[1].
* patching a migration to only modify the `users.email` column (to use
`citext` rather than creating the extension. `plausible-postgres`
takes care of that).
* Correctly declare dependencies in systemd.
* A few minor fixes.
[1] 051baf669e
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>
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.
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.
Using `replace-literal` to insert secrets leaks the secrets through
the `replace-literal` process' `/proc/<pid>/cmdline`
file. `replace-secret` solves this by reading the secret straight from
the file instead, which also simplifies the code a bit.
Using `replace-literal` to insert secrets leaks the secrets through
the `replace-literal` process' `/proc/<pid>/cmdline`
file. `replace-secret` solves this by reading the secret straight from
the file instead, which also simplifies the code a bit.
This reverts commit d9e18f4e7f.
This change is broken, since it doesn't configure the proper database
username in keycloak when provisioning a local database with a custom
username. Its intended behavior is also potentially confusing and
dangerous, so rather than fixing it, let's revert to the old one.
Bash doesn't handle subshell errors properly if the result is used as
input to a command. To cause the services to fail when the files can't
be read, we need to assign the value to a variable, then export it
separately.
As the only consequence of isSystemUser is that if the uid is null then
it's allocated below 500, if a user has uid = something below 500 then
we don't require isSystemUser to be set.
Motivation: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/112647
This allows for shared hledger installations, where the web interface is
available via network and multiple user share a SSH access to the
hledger user.
Also added `--serve` to the CLI options, as hledger-web tries to open a
webbrowser otherwise:
hledger-web: xdg-open: rawSystem: runInteractiveProcess: exec: does not
exist (No such file or directory)
Co-authored-by: Aaron Andersen <aaron@fosslib.net>
ChangeLog: https://nextcloud.com/changelog/#latest21
* Packaged 21.0.0, test-deployed it to my personal instance and tested
the most basic functionality (`davfs2`-mount, {card,cal}dav sync, file
management).
* Bumped the default version for unstable/21.05 to `nextcloud21`. Since
`nextcloud20` was added after the release of 20.09 (and thus the
default on 20.09 is still `nextcloud19`), it's now needed to upgrade
across two majors.
This is not a problem though since it's possible to upgrade to v20 on
20.09 already and if not, the module will guard the administrator
through the upgrade with eval warnings as it's the case since 20.03.
* Dropped `nextcloud17` attribute and marked `nextcloud18` as EOL.
4255954d97 set the StateDirectory to 0750,
but nginx wasn't in the Mastodon group. This commit also deletes a line,
that probably was intended to serve this purpose, but makes no sense.
Why should the Mastodon user be added as an extraGroup to the nginx
user?