- All kubernetes components have been seperated into different files
- All TLS-enabled ports have been deprecated and disabled by default
- EasyCert option added to support automatic cluster PKI-bootstrap
- RBAC has been enforced for all cluster components by default
- NixOS kubernetes test cases make use of easyCerts to setup PKI
This round is without the systemd CVE,
as we don't have binaries for that yet.
BTW, I just ignore darwin binaries these days,
as I'd have to wait for weeks for them.
The module is indeed very large but allows configuring every aspect of
icingaweb2. The built-in monitoring module is in an own file because
there are actually more (third-party) modules and this structure means
every module can get an own file.
The OS Login package enables the following components:
AuthorizedKeysCommand to query valid SSH keys from the user's OS Login
profile during ssh authentication phase.
NSS Module to provide user and group information
PAM Module for the sshd service, providing authorization and
authentication support, allowing the system to use data stored in
Google Cloud IAM permissions to control both, the ability to log into
an instance, and to perform operations as root (sudo).
The `iotop` program can't be started by an unprivileged user because of
missing root privileges. The issue can be fixed by creating a
setcap wrapper for `iotop` which contains `cap_net_admin`.
Allow switching out kerberos server implementation.
Sharing config is probably sensible, but implementation is different enough to
be worth splitting into two files. Not sure this is the correct way to split an
implementation, but it works for now.
Uses the switch from config.krb5 to select implementation.
This also includes a full end-to-end CockroachDB clustering test to
ensure everything basically works. However, this test is not currently
enabled by default, though it can be run manually. See the included
comments in the test for more information.
Closes#51306. Closes#38665.
Co-authored-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
Mininet (https://github.com/mininet/mininet) is a popular network emulator that
glues several components such as network namespaces, traffic control
commands into a set of python bindings. It is then "easy" to describe a
topology and run experiments on it.
Imports the `journaldriver` module into the top-level NixOS module
list to make it usable without extra work.
This went unnoticed in #42134 (mostly because my setup imports modules
explicitly from pinned versions).
Fixes#50390