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nixpkgs/nixos/modules/services/misc/taskserver/default.nix

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{ config, lib, pkgs, ... }:
with lib;
let
cfg = config.services.taskserver;
nixos/taskserver: Refactor module for CA creation Now the service starts up if only the services.taskserver.enable option is set to true. We now also have three systemd services (started in this order): * taskserver-init: For creating the necessary data directory and also includes a refecence to the configuration file in the Nix store. * taskserver-ca: Only enabled if none of the server.key, server.cert, server.crl and caCert options are set, so we can allow for certificates that are issued by another CA. This service creates a new CA key+certificate and a server key+certificate and signs the latter using the CA key. The permissions of these keys/certs are set quite strictly to allow only the root user to sign certificates. * taskserver: The main Taskserver service which just starts taskd. We now also log to stdout and thus to the journal. Of course, there are still a few problems left to solve, for instance: * The CA currently only signs the server certificates, so it's only usable for clients if the server doesn't validate client certs (which is kinda pointless). * Using "taskd <command>" is currently still a bit awkward to use, so we need to properly wrap it in environment.systemPackages to set the dataDir by default. * There are still a few configuration options left to include, for example the "trust" option. * We might want to introduce an extraConfig option. * It might be useful to allow for declarative configuration of organisations and users, especially when it comes to creating client certificates. * The right signal has to be sent for the taskserver service to reload properly. * Currently the CA and server certificates are created using server.host as the common name and doesn't set additional certificate information. This could be improved by adding options that explicitly set that information. As for the config file, we might need to patch taskd to allow for setting not only --data but also a --cfgfile, which then omits the ${dataDir}/config file. We can still use the "include" directive from the file specified using --cfgfile in order to chainload ${dataDir}/config. Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
2015-09-27 20:52:55 +01:00
taskd = "${pkgs.taskserver}/bin/taskd";
mkVal = val:
if val == true then "true"
else if val == false then "false"
else if isList val then concatStringsSep ", " val
else toString val;
mkConfLine = key: val: let
result = "${key} = ${mkVal val}";
in optionalString (val != null && val != []) result;
mkManualPkiOption = desc: mkOption {
type = types.nullOr types.path;
default = null;
description = desc + ''
<note><para>
Setting this option will prevent automatic CA creation and handling.
</para></note>
'';
};
manualPkiOptions = {
ca.cert = mkManualPkiOption ''
Fully qualified path to the CA certificate.
'';
server.cert = mkManualPkiOption ''
Fully qualified path to the server certificate.
'';
server.crl = mkManualPkiOption ''
Fully qualified path to the server certificate revocation list.
'';
server.key = mkManualPkiOption ''
Fully qualified path to the server key.
'';
};
mkAutoDesc = preamble: ''
${preamble}
<note><para>
This option is for the automatically handled CA and will be ignored if any
of the <option>services.taskserver.pki.manual.*</option> options are set.
</para></note>
'';
mkExpireOption = desc: mkOption {
type = types.nullOr types.int;
default = null;
example = 365;
apply = val: if isNull val then -1 else val;
description = mkAutoDesc ''
The expiration time of ${desc} in days or <literal>null</literal> for no
expiration time.
'';
};
autoPkiOptions = {
bits = mkOption {
type = types.int;
default = 4096;
example = 2048;
description = mkAutoDesc "The bit size for generated keys.";
};
expiration = {
ca = mkExpireOption "the CA certificate";
server = mkExpireOption "the server certificate";
client = mkExpireOption "client certificates";
crl = mkExpireOption "the certificate revocation list (CRL)";
};
};
needToCreateCA = let
notFound = path: let
dotted = concatStringsSep "." path;
in throw "Can't find option definitions for path `${dotted}'.";
findPkiDefinitions = path: attrs: let
mkSublist = key: val: let
newPath = path ++ singleton key;
in if isOption val
then attrByPath newPath (notFound newPath) cfg.pki.manual
else findPkiDefinitions newPath val;
in flatten (mapAttrsToList mkSublist attrs);
in all isNull (findPkiDefinitions [] manualPkiOptions);
nixos/taskserver: Refactor module for CA creation Now the service starts up if only the services.taskserver.enable option is set to true. We now also have three systemd services (started in this order): * taskserver-init: For creating the necessary data directory and also includes a refecence to the configuration file in the Nix store. * taskserver-ca: Only enabled if none of the server.key, server.cert, server.crl and caCert options are set, so we can allow for certificates that are issued by another CA. This service creates a new CA key+certificate and a server key+certificate and signs the latter using the CA key. The permissions of these keys/certs are set quite strictly to allow only the root user to sign certificates. * taskserver: The main Taskserver service which just starts taskd. We now also log to stdout and thus to the journal. Of course, there are still a few problems left to solve, for instance: * The CA currently only signs the server certificates, so it's only usable for clients if the server doesn't validate client certs (which is kinda pointless). * Using "taskd <command>" is currently still a bit awkward to use, so we need to properly wrap it in environment.systemPackages to set the dataDir by default. * There are still a few configuration options left to include, for example the "trust" option. * We might want to introduce an extraConfig option. * It might be useful to allow for declarative configuration of organisations and users, especially when it comes to creating client certificates. * The right signal has to be sent for the taskserver service to reload properly. * Currently the CA and server certificates are created using server.host as the common name and doesn't set additional certificate information. This could be improved by adding options that explicitly set that information. As for the config file, we might need to patch taskd to allow for setting not only --data but also a --cfgfile, which then omits the ${dataDir}/config file. We can still use the "include" directive from the file specified using --cfgfile in order to chainload ${dataDir}/config. Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
2015-09-27 20:52:55 +01:00
configFile = pkgs.writeText "taskdrc" (''
nixos/taskserver: Refactor module for CA creation Now the service starts up if only the services.taskserver.enable option is set to true. We now also have three systemd services (started in this order): * taskserver-init: For creating the necessary data directory and also includes a refecence to the configuration file in the Nix store. * taskserver-ca: Only enabled if none of the server.key, server.cert, server.crl and caCert options are set, so we can allow for certificates that are issued by another CA. This service creates a new CA key+certificate and a server key+certificate and signs the latter using the CA key. The permissions of these keys/certs are set quite strictly to allow only the root user to sign certificates. * taskserver: The main Taskserver service which just starts taskd. We now also log to stdout and thus to the journal. Of course, there are still a few problems left to solve, for instance: * The CA currently only signs the server certificates, so it's only usable for clients if the server doesn't validate client certs (which is kinda pointless). * Using "taskd <command>" is currently still a bit awkward to use, so we need to properly wrap it in environment.systemPackages to set the dataDir by default. * There are still a few configuration options left to include, for example the "trust" option. * We might want to introduce an extraConfig option. * It might be useful to allow for declarative configuration of organisations and users, especially when it comes to creating client certificates. * The right signal has to be sent for the taskserver service to reload properly. * Currently the CA and server certificates are created using server.host as the common name and doesn't set additional certificate information. This could be improved by adding options that explicitly set that information. As for the config file, we might need to patch taskd to allow for setting not only --data but also a --cfgfile, which then omits the ${dataDir}/config file. We can still use the "include" directive from the file specified using --cfgfile in order to chainload ${dataDir}/config. Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
2015-09-27 20:52:55 +01:00
# systemd related
daemon = false
log = -
# logging
${mkConfLine "debug" cfg.debug}
${mkConfLine "ip.log" cfg.ipLog}
# general
${mkConfLine "ciphers" cfg.ciphers}
${mkConfLine "confirmation" cfg.confirmation}
${mkConfLine "extensions" cfg.extensions}
${mkConfLine "queue.size" cfg.queueSize}
${mkConfLine "request.limit" cfg.requestLimit}
# client
${mkConfLine "client.allow" cfg.allowedClientIDs}
${mkConfLine "client.deny" cfg.disallowedClientIDs}
nixos/taskserver: Refactor module for CA creation Now the service starts up if only the services.taskserver.enable option is set to true. We now also have three systemd services (started in this order): * taskserver-init: For creating the necessary data directory and also includes a refecence to the configuration file in the Nix store. * taskserver-ca: Only enabled if none of the server.key, server.cert, server.crl and caCert options are set, so we can allow for certificates that are issued by another CA. This service creates a new CA key+certificate and a server key+certificate and signs the latter using the CA key. The permissions of these keys/certs are set quite strictly to allow only the root user to sign certificates. * taskserver: The main Taskserver service which just starts taskd. We now also log to stdout and thus to the journal. Of course, there are still a few problems left to solve, for instance: * The CA currently only signs the server certificates, so it's only usable for clients if the server doesn't validate client certs (which is kinda pointless). * Using "taskd <command>" is currently still a bit awkward to use, so we need to properly wrap it in environment.systemPackages to set the dataDir by default. * There are still a few configuration options left to include, for example the "trust" option. * We might want to introduce an extraConfig option. * It might be useful to allow for declarative configuration of organisations and users, especially when it comes to creating client certificates. * The right signal has to be sent for the taskserver service to reload properly. * Currently the CA and server certificates are created using server.host as the common name and doesn't set additional certificate information. This could be improved by adding options that explicitly set that information. As for the config file, we might need to patch taskd to allow for setting not only --data but also a --cfgfile, which then omits the ${dataDir}/config file. We can still use the "include" directive from the file specified using --cfgfile in order to chainload ${dataDir}/config. Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
2015-09-27 20:52:55 +01:00
# server
server = ${cfg.listenHost}:${toString cfg.listenPort}
${mkConfLine "trust" cfg.trust}
# PKI options
nixos/taskserver: Refactor module for CA creation Now the service starts up if only the services.taskserver.enable option is set to true. We now also have three systemd services (started in this order): * taskserver-init: For creating the necessary data directory and also includes a refecence to the configuration file in the Nix store. * taskserver-ca: Only enabled if none of the server.key, server.cert, server.crl and caCert options are set, so we can allow for certificates that are issued by another CA. This service creates a new CA key+certificate and a server key+certificate and signs the latter using the CA key. The permissions of these keys/certs are set quite strictly to allow only the root user to sign certificates. * taskserver: The main Taskserver service which just starts taskd. We now also log to stdout and thus to the journal. Of course, there are still a few problems left to solve, for instance: * The CA currently only signs the server certificates, so it's only usable for clients if the server doesn't validate client certs (which is kinda pointless). * Using "taskd <command>" is currently still a bit awkward to use, so we need to properly wrap it in environment.systemPackages to set the dataDir by default. * There are still a few configuration options left to include, for example the "trust" option. * We might want to introduce an extraConfig option. * It might be useful to allow for declarative configuration of organisations and users, especially when it comes to creating client certificates. * The right signal has to be sent for the taskserver service to reload properly. * Currently the CA and server certificates are created using server.host as the common name and doesn't set additional certificate information. This could be improved by adding options that explicitly set that information. As for the config file, we might need to patch taskd to allow for setting not only --data but also a --cfgfile, which then omits the ${dataDir}/config file. We can still use the "include" directive from the file specified using --cfgfile in order to chainload ${dataDir}/config. Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
2015-09-27 20:52:55 +01:00
${if needToCreateCA then ''
ca.cert = ${cfg.dataDir}/keys/ca.cert
server.cert = ${cfg.dataDir}/keys/server.cert
server.key = ${cfg.dataDir}/keys/server.key
server.crl = ${cfg.dataDir}/keys/server.crl
nixos/taskserver: Refactor module for CA creation Now the service starts up if only the services.taskserver.enable option is set to true. We now also have three systemd services (started in this order): * taskserver-init: For creating the necessary data directory and also includes a refecence to the configuration file in the Nix store. * taskserver-ca: Only enabled if none of the server.key, server.cert, server.crl and caCert options are set, so we can allow for certificates that are issued by another CA. This service creates a new CA key+certificate and a server key+certificate and signs the latter using the CA key. The permissions of these keys/certs are set quite strictly to allow only the root user to sign certificates. * taskserver: The main Taskserver service which just starts taskd. We now also log to stdout and thus to the journal. Of course, there are still a few problems left to solve, for instance: * The CA currently only signs the server certificates, so it's only usable for clients if the server doesn't validate client certs (which is kinda pointless). * Using "taskd <command>" is currently still a bit awkward to use, so we need to properly wrap it in environment.systemPackages to set the dataDir by default. * There are still a few configuration options left to include, for example the "trust" option. * We might want to introduce an extraConfig option. * It might be useful to allow for declarative configuration of organisations and users, especially when it comes to creating client certificates. * The right signal has to be sent for the taskserver service to reload properly. * Currently the CA and server certificates are created using server.host as the common name and doesn't set additional certificate information. This could be improved by adding options that explicitly set that information. As for the config file, we might need to patch taskd to allow for setting not only --data but also a --cfgfile, which then omits the ${dataDir}/config file. We can still use the "include" directive from the file specified using --cfgfile in order to chainload ${dataDir}/config. Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
2015-09-27 20:52:55 +01:00
'' else ''
ca.cert = ${cfg.pki.ca.cert}
server.cert = ${cfg.pki.server.cert}
server.key = ${cfg.pki.server.key}
server.crl = ${cfg.pki.server.crl}
nixos/taskserver: Refactor module for CA creation Now the service starts up if only the services.taskserver.enable option is set to true. We now also have three systemd services (started in this order): * taskserver-init: For creating the necessary data directory and also includes a refecence to the configuration file in the Nix store. * taskserver-ca: Only enabled if none of the server.key, server.cert, server.crl and caCert options are set, so we can allow for certificates that are issued by another CA. This service creates a new CA key+certificate and a server key+certificate and signs the latter using the CA key. The permissions of these keys/certs are set quite strictly to allow only the root user to sign certificates. * taskserver: The main Taskserver service which just starts taskd. We now also log to stdout and thus to the journal. Of course, there are still a few problems left to solve, for instance: * The CA currently only signs the server certificates, so it's only usable for clients if the server doesn't validate client certs (which is kinda pointless). * Using "taskd <command>" is currently still a bit awkward to use, so we need to properly wrap it in environment.systemPackages to set the dataDir by default. * There are still a few configuration options left to include, for example the "trust" option. * We might want to introduce an extraConfig option. * It might be useful to allow for declarative configuration of organisations and users, especially when it comes to creating client certificates. * The right signal has to be sent for the taskserver service to reload properly. * Currently the CA and server certificates are created using server.host as the common name and doesn't set additional certificate information. This could be improved by adding options that explicitly set that information. As for the config file, we might need to patch taskd to allow for setting not only --data but also a --cfgfile, which then omits the ${dataDir}/config file. We can still use the "include" directive from the file specified using --cfgfile in order to chainload ${dataDir}/config. Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
2015-09-27 20:52:55 +01:00
''}
'' + cfg.extraConfig);
nixos/taskserver: Refactor module for CA creation Now the service starts up if only the services.taskserver.enable option is set to true. We now also have three systemd services (started in this order): * taskserver-init: For creating the necessary data directory and also includes a refecence to the configuration file in the Nix store. * taskserver-ca: Only enabled if none of the server.key, server.cert, server.crl and caCert options are set, so we can allow for certificates that are issued by another CA. This service creates a new CA key+certificate and a server key+certificate and signs the latter using the CA key. The permissions of these keys/certs are set quite strictly to allow only the root user to sign certificates. * taskserver: The main Taskserver service which just starts taskd. We now also log to stdout and thus to the journal. Of course, there are still a few problems left to solve, for instance: * The CA currently only signs the server certificates, so it's only usable for clients if the server doesn't validate client certs (which is kinda pointless). * Using "taskd <command>" is currently still a bit awkward to use, so we need to properly wrap it in environment.systemPackages to set the dataDir by default. * There are still a few configuration options left to include, for example the "trust" option. * We might want to introduce an extraConfig option. * It might be useful to allow for declarative configuration of organisations and users, especially when it comes to creating client certificates. * The right signal has to be sent for the taskserver service to reload properly. * Currently the CA and server certificates are created using server.host as the common name and doesn't set additional certificate information. This could be improved by adding options that explicitly set that information. As for the config file, we might need to patch taskd to allow for setting not only --data but also a --cfgfile, which then omits the ${dataDir}/config file. We can still use the "include" directive from the file specified using --cfgfile in order to chainload ${dataDir}/config. Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
2015-09-27 20:52:55 +01:00
orgOptions = { name, ... }: {
options.users = mkOption {
type = types.uniq (types.listOf types.str);
default = [];
example = [ "alice" "bob" ];
description = ''
A list of user names that belong to the organization.
'';
};
options.groups = mkOption {
type = types.listOf types.str;
default = [];
example = [ "workers" "slackers" ];
description = ''
A list of group names that belong to the organization.
'';
};
};
certtool = "${pkgs.gnutls.bin}/bin/certtool";
nixos-taskserver = pkgs.buildPythonPackage {
name = "nixos-taskserver";
namePrefix = "";
src = pkgs.runCommand "nixos-taskserver-src" {} ''
mkdir -p "$out"
cat "${pkgs.substituteAll {
src = ./helper-tool.py;
inherit taskd certtool;
inherit (cfg) dataDir user group fqdn;
certBits = cfg.pki.auto.bits;
clientExpiration = cfg.pki.auto.expiration.client;
crlExpiration = cfg.pki.auto.expiration.crl;
}}" > "$out/main.py"
cat > "$out/setup.py" <<EOF
from setuptools import setup
setup(name="nixos-taskserver",
py_modules=["main"],
install_requires=["Click"],
entry_points="[console_scripts]\\nnixos-taskserver=main:cli")
EOF
'';
propagatedBuildInputs = [ pkgs.pythonPackages.click ];
nixos/taskserver: Add a nixos-taskdctl command It's a helper for NixOS systems to make it easier to handle CA certificate signing, similar to what taskd provides but comes preseeded with the values from the system configuration. The tool is very limited at the moment and only allows to *add* organisations, users and groups. Deletion and suspension however is much simpler to implement, because we don't need to handle certificate signing. Another limitation is that we don't take into account whether certificates and keys are already set in the system configuration and if they're set it will fail spectacularly. For passing the commands to the taskd command, we're using a small C program which does setuid() and setgid() to the Taskserver user and group, because runuser(1) needs PAM (quite pointless if you're already root) and su(1) doesn't allow for setting the group and setgid()s to the default group of the user, so it even doesn't work in conjunction with sg(1). In summary, we now have a shiny nixos-taskdctl command, which lets us do things like: nixos-taskdctl add-org NixOS nixos-taskdctl add-user NixOS alice nixos-taskdctl export-user NixOS alice The last command writes a series of shell commands to stdout, which then can be imported on the client by piping it into a shell as well as doing it for example via SSH: ssh root@server nixos-taskdctl export-user NixOS alice | sh Of course, in terms of security we need to improve this even further so that we generate the private key on the client and just send a CSR to the server so that we don't need to push any secrets over the wire. Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
2016-04-05 16:31:58 +01:00
};
in {
options = {
services.taskserver = {
enable = mkOption {
type = types.bool;
default = false;
example = true;
description = ''
Whether to enable the Taskwarrior server.
More instructions about NixOS in conjuction with Taskserver can be
found in the NixOS manual at
<olink targetdoc="manual" targetptr="module-taskserver"/>.
'';
};
user = mkOption {
type = types.str;
default = "taskd";
description = "User for Taskserver.";
};
group = mkOption {
type = types.str;
default = "taskd";
description = "Group for Taskserver.";
};
dataDir = mkOption {
type = types.path;
default = "/var/lib/taskserver";
description = "Data directory for Taskserver.";
};
ciphers = mkOption {
type = types.nullOr (types.separatedString ":");
default = null;
example = "NORMAL:-VERS-SSL3.0";
description = let
url = "https://gnutls.org/manual/html_node/Priority-Strings.html";
in ''
List of GnuTLS ciphers to use. See the GnuTLS documentation about
priority strings at <link xlink:href="${url}"/> for full details.
'';
};
organisations = mkOption {
type = types.attrsOf (types.submodule orgOptions);
default = {};
example.myShinyOrganisation.users = [ "alice" "bob" ];
example.myShinyOrganisation.groups = [ "staff" "outsiders" ];
example.yetAnotherOrganisation.users = [ "foo" "bar" ];
description = ''
An attribute set where the keys name the organisation and the values
are a set of lists of <option>users</option> and
<option>groups</option>.
'';
};
confirmation = mkOption {
type = types.bool;
default = true;
description = ''
Determines whether certain commands are confirmed.
'';
};
debug = mkOption {
type = types.bool;
default = false;
description = ''
Logs debugging information.
'';
};
extensions = mkOption {
type = types.nullOr types.path;
default = null;
description = ''
Fully qualified path of the Taskserver extension scripts.
Currently there are none.
'';
};
ipLog = mkOption {
type = types.bool;
default = false;
description = ''
Logs the IP addresses of incoming requests.
'';
};
queueSize = mkOption {
type = types.int;
default = 10;
description = ''
Size of the connection backlog, see <citerefentry>
<refentrytitle>listen</refentrytitle>
<manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
</citerefentry>.
'';
};
requestLimit = mkOption {
type = types.int;
default = 1048576;
description = ''
Size limit of incoming requests, in bytes.
'';
};
allowedClientIDs = mkOption {
type = with types; loeOf (either (enum ["all" "none"]) str);
default = [];
example = [ "[Tt]ask [2-9]+" ];
description = ''
A list of regular expressions that are matched against the reported
client id (such as <literal>task 2.3.0</literal>).
The values <literal>all</literal> or <literal>none</literal> have
special meaning. Overidden by any entry in the option
<option>services.taskserver.disallowedClientIDs</option>.
'';
};
disallowedClientIDs = mkOption {
type = with types; loeOf (either (enum ["all" "none"]) str);
default = [];
example = [ "[Tt]ask [2-9]+" ];
description = ''
A list of regular expressions that are matched against the reported
client id (such as <literal>task 2.3.0</literal>).
The values <literal>all</literal> or <literal>none</literal> have
special meaning. Any entry here overrides those in
<option>services.taskserver.allowedClientIDs</option>.
'';
};
listenHost = mkOption {
type = types.str;
default = "localhost";
example = "::";
description = ''
The address (IPv4, IPv6 or DNS) to listen on.
If the value is something else than <literal>localhost</literal> the
port defined by <option>listenPort</option> is automatically added to
<option>networking.firewall.allowedTCPPorts</option>.
'';
};
listenPort = mkOption {
type = types.int;
default = 53589;
description = ''
Port number of the Taskserver.
'';
};
fqdn = mkOption {
type = types.str;
default = "localhost";
description = ''
The fully qualified domain name of this server, which is also used
as the common name in the certificates.
'';
};
trust = mkOption {
type = types.enum [ "allow all" "strict" ];
default = "strict";
description = ''
Determines how client certificates are validated.
The value <literal>allow all</literal> performs no client
certificate validation. This is not recommended. The value
<literal>strict</literal> causes the client certificate to be
validated against a CA.
'';
};
pki.manual = manualPkiOptions;
pki.auto = autoPkiOptions;
extraConfig = mkOption {
type = types.lines;
default = "";
example = "client.cert = /tmp/debugging.cert";
description = ''
Extra lines to append to the taskdrc configuration file.
'';
};
};
};
config = mkMerge [
(mkIf cfg.enable {
environment.systemPackages = [ pkgs.taskserver nixos-taskserver ];
users.users = optional (cfg.user == "taskd") {
name = "taskd";
uid = config.ids.uids.taskd;
description = "Taskserver user";
group = cfg.group;
};
users.groups = optional (cfg.group == "taskd") {
name = "taskd";
gid = config.ids.gids.taskd;
};
systemd.services.taskserver-init = {
wantedBy = [ "taskserver.service" ];
before = [ "taskserver.service" ];
description = "Initialize Taskserver Data Directory";
preStart = ''
mkdir -m 0770 -p "${cfg.dataDir}"
chown "${cfg.user}:${cfg.group}" "${cfg.dataDir}"
'';
nixos/taskserver: Refactor module for CA creation Now the service starts up if only the services.taskserver.enable option is set to true. We now also have three systemd services (started in this order): * taskserver-init: For creating the necessary data directory and also includes a refecence to the configuration file in the Nix store. * taskserver-ca: Only enabled if none of the server.key, server.cert, server.crl and caCert options are set, so we can allow for certificates that are issued by another CA. This service creates a new CA key+certificate and a server key+certificate and signs the latter using the CA key. The permissions of these keys/certs are set quite strictly to allow only the root user to sign certificates. * taskserver: The main Taskserver service which just starts taskd. We now also log to stdout and thus to the journal. Of course, there are still a few problems left to solve, for instance: * The CA currently only signs the server certificates, so it's only usable for clients if the server doesn't validate client certs (which is kinda pointless). * Using "taskd <command>" is currently still a bit awkward to use, so we need to properly wrap it in environment.systemPackages to set the dataDir by default. * There are still a few configuration options left to include, for example the "trust" option. * We might want to introduce an extraConfig option. * It might be useful to allow for declarative configuration of organisations and users, especially when it comes to creating client certificates. * The right signal has to be sent for the taskserver service to reload properly. * Currently the CA and server certificates are created using server.host as the common name and doesn't set additional certificate information. This could be improved by adding options that explicitly set that information. As for the config file, we might need to patch taskd to allow for setting not only --data but also a --cfgfile, which then omits the ${dataDir}/config file. We can still use the "include" directive from the file specified using --cfgfile in order to chainload ${dataDir}/config. Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
2015-09-27 20:52:55 +01:00
script = ''
${taskd} init
echo "include ${configFile}" > "${cfg.dataDir}/config"
touch "${cfg.dataDir}/.is_initialized"
'';
environment.TASKDDATA = cfg.dataDir;
unitConfig.ConditionPathExists = "!${cfg.dataDir}/.is_initialized";
nixos/taskserver: Refactor module for CA creation Now the service starts up if only the services.taskserver.enable option is set to true. We now also have three systemd services (started in this order): * taskserver-init: For creating the necessary data directory and also includes a refecence to the configuration file in the Nix store. * taskserver-ca: Only enabled if none of the server.key, server.cert, server.crl and caCert options are set, so we can allow for certificates that are issued by another CA. This service creates a new CA key+certificate and a server key+certificate and signs the latter using the CA key. The permissions of these keys/certs are set quite strictly to allow only the root user to sign certificates. * taskserver: The main Taskserver service which just starts taskd. We now also log to stdout and thus to the journal. Of course, there are still a few problems left to solve, for instance: * The CA currently only signs the server certificates, so it's only usable for clients if the server doesn't validate client certs (which is kinda pointless). * Using "taskd <command>" is currently still a bit awkward to use, so we need to properly wrap it in environment.systemPackages to set the dataDir by default. * There are still a few configuration options left to include, for example the "trust" option. * We might want to introduce an extraConfig option. * It might be useful to allow for declarative configuration of organisations and users, especially when it comes to creating client certificates. * The right signal has to be sent for the taskserver service to reload properly. * Currently the CA and server certificates are created using server.host as the common name and doesn't set additional certificate information. This could be improved by adding options that explicitly set that information. As for the config file, we might need to patch taskd to allow for setting not only --data but also a --cfgfile, which then omits the ${dataDir}/config file. We can still use the "include" directive from the file specified using --cfgfile in order to chainload ${dataDir}/config. Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
2015-09-27 20:52:55 +01:00
serviceConfig.Type = "oneshot";
serviceConfig.User = cfg.user;
serviceConfig.Group = cfg.group;
serviceConfig.PermissionsStartOnly = true;
serviceConfig.PrivateNetwork = true;
serviceConfig.PrivateDevices = true;
serviceConfig.PrivateTmp = true;
};
nixos/taskserver: Refactor module for CA creation Now the service starts up if only the services.taskserver.enable option is set to true. We now also have three systemd services (started in this order): * taskserver-init: For creating the necessary data directory and also includes a refecence to the configuration file in the Nix store. * taskserver-ca: Only enabled if none of the server.key, server.cert, server.crl and caCert options are set, so we can allow for certificates that are issued by another CA. This service creates a new CA key+certificate and a server key+certificate and signs the latter using the CA key. The permissions of these keys/certs are set quite strictly to allow only the root user to sign certificates. * taskserver: The main Taskserver service which just starts taskd. We now also log to stdout and thus to the journal. Of course, there are still a few problems left to solve, for instance: * The CA currently only signs the server certificates, so it's only usable for clients if the server doesn't validate client certs (which is kinda pointless). * Using "taskd <command>" is currently still a bit awkward to use, so we need to properly wrap it in environment.systemPackages to set the dataDir by default. * There are still a few configuration options left to include, for example the "trust" option. * We might want to introduce an extraConfig option. * It might be useful to allow for declarative configuration of organisations and users, especially when it comes to creating client certificates. * The right signal has to be sent for the taskserver service to reload properly. * Currently the CA and server certificates are created using server.host as the common name and doesn't set additional certificate information. This could be improved by adding options that explicitly set that information. As for the config file, we might need to patch taskd to allow for setting not only --data but also a --cfgfile, which then omits the ${dataDir}/config file. We can still use the "include" directive from the file specified using --cfgfile in order to chainload ${dataDir}/config. Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
2015-09-27 20:52:55 +01:00
systemd.services.taskserver = {
description = "Taskwarrior Server";
nixos/taskserver: Refactor module for CA creation Now the service starts up if only the services.taskserver.enable option is set to true. We now also have three systemd services (started in this order): * taskserver-init: For creating the necessary data directory and also includes a refecence to the configuration file in the Nix store. * taskserver-ca: Only enabled if none of the server.key, server.cert, server.crl and caCert options are set, so we can allow for certificates that are issued by another CA. This service creates a new CA key+certificate and a server key+certificate and signs the latter using the CA key. The permissions of these keys/certs are set quite strictly to allow only the root user to sign certificates. * taskserver: The main Taskserver service which just starts taskd. We now also log to stdout and thus to the journal. Of course, there are still a few problems left to solve, for instance: * The CA currently only signs the server certificates, so it's only usable for clients if the server doesn't validate client certs (which is kinda pointless). * Using "taskd <command>" is currently still a bit awkward to use, so we need to properly wrap it in environment.systemPackages to set the dataDir by default. * There are still a few configuration options left to include, for example the "trust" option. * We might want to introduce an extraConfig option. * It might be useful to allow for declarative configuration of organisations and users, especially when it comes to creating client certificates. * The right signal has to be sent for the taskserver service to reload properly. * Currently the CA and server certificates are created using server.host as the common name and doesn't set additional certificate information. This could be improved by adding options that explicitly set that information. As for the config file, we might need to patch taskd to allow for setting not only --data but also a --cfgfile, which then omits the ${dataDir}/config file. We can still use the "include" directive from the file specified using --cfgfile in order to chainload ${dataDir}/config. Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
2015-09-27 20:52:55 +01:00
wantedBy = [ "multi-user.target" ];
after = [ "network.target" ];
nixos/taskserver: Refactor module for CA creation Now the service starts up if only the services.taskserver.enable option is set to true. We now also have three systemd services (started in this order): * taskserver-init: For creating the necessary data directory and also includes a refecence to the configuration file in the Nix store. * taskserver-ca: Only enabled if none of the server.key, server.cert, server.crl and caCert options are set, so we can allow for certificates that are issued by another CA. This service creates a new CA key+certificate and a server key+certificate and signs the latter using the CA key. The permissions of these keys/certs are set quite strictly to allow only the root user to sign certificates. * taskserver: The main Taskserver service which just starts taskd. We now also log to stdout and thus to the journal. Of course, there are still a few problems left to solve, for instance: * The CA currently only signs the server certificates, so it's only usable for clients if the server doesn't validate client certs (which is kinda pointless). * Using "taskd <command>" is currently still a bit awkward to use, so we need to properly wrap it in environment.systemPackages to set the dataDir by default. * There are still a few configuration options left to include, for example the "trust" option. * We might want to introduce an extraConfig option. * It might be useful to allow for declarative configuration of organisations and users, especially when it comes to creating client certificates. * The right signal has to be sent for the taskserver service to reload properly. * Currently the CA and server certificates are created using server.host as the common name and doesn't set additional certificate information. This could be improved by adding options that explicitly set that information. As for the config file, we might need to patch taskd to allow for setting not only --data but also a --cfgfile, which then omits the ${dataDir}/config file. We can still use the "include" directive from the file specified using --cfgfile in order to chainload ${dataDir}/config. Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
2015-09-27 20:52:55 +01:00
environment.TASKDDATA = cfg.dataDir;
nixos/taskserver: Refactor module for CA creation Now the service starts up if only the services.taskserver.enable option is set to true. We now also have three systemd services (started in this order): * taskserver-init: For creating the necessary data directory and also includes a refecence to the configuration file in the Nix store. * taskserver-ca: Only enabled if none of the server.key, server.cert, server.crl and caCert options are set, so we can allow for certificates that are issued by another CA. This service creates a new CA key+certificate and a server key+certificate and signs the latter using the CA key. The permissions of these keys/certs are set quite strictly to allow only the root user to sign certificates. * taskserver: The main Taskserver service which just starts taskd. We now also log to stdout and thus to the journal. Of course, there are still a few problems left to solve, for instance: * The CA currently only signs the server certificates, so it's only usable for clients if the server doesn't validate client certs (which is kinda pointless). * Using "taskd <command>" is currently still a bit awkward to use, so we need to properly wrap it in environment.systemPackages to set the dataDir by default. * There are still a few configuration options left to include, for example the "trust" option. * We might want to introduce an extraConfig option. * It might be useful to allow for declarative configuration of organisations and users, especially when it comes to creating client certificates. * The right signal has to be sent for the taskserver service to reload properly. * Currently the CA and server certificates are created using server.host as the common name and doesn't set additional certificate information. This could be improved by adding options that explicitly set that information. As for the config file, we might need to patch taskd to allow for setting not only --data but also a --cfgfile, which then omits the ${dataDir}/config file. We can still use the "include" directive from the file specified using --cfgfile in order to chainload ${dataDir}/config. Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
2015-09-27 20:52:55 +01:00
preStart = let
jsonOrgs = builtins.toJSON cfg.organisations;
jsonFile = pkgs.writeText "orgs.json" jsonOrgs;
helperTool = "${nixos-taskserver}/bin/nixos-taskserver";
in "${helperTool} process-json '${jsonFile}'";
serviceConfig = {
ExecStart = "@${taskd} taskd server";
ExecReload = "${pkgs.coreutils}/bin/kill -USR1 $MAINPID";
Restart = "on-failure";
PermissionsStartOnly = true;
PrivateTmp = true;
PrivateDevices = true;
User = cfg.user;
Group = cfg.group;
};
};
})
(mkIf (cfg.enable && needToCreateCA) {
systemd.services.taskserver-ca = {
wantedBy = [ "taskserver.service" ];
after = [ "taskserver-init.service" ];
before = [ "taskserver.service" ];
description = "Initialize CA for TaskServer";
serviceConfig.Type = "oneshot";
serviceConfig.UMask = "0077";
serviceConfig.PrivateNetwork = true;
serviceConfig.PrivateTmp = true;
script = ''
silent_certtool() {
if ! output="$("${certtool}" "$@" 2>&1)"; then
echo "GNUTLS certtool invocation failed with output:" >&2
echo "$output" >&2
fi
}
mkdir -m 0700 -p "${cfg.dataDir}/keys"
chown root:root "${cfg.dataDir}/keys"
if [ ! -e "${cfg.dataDir}/keys/ca.key" ]; then
silent_certtool -p \
--bits ${toString cfg.pki.auto.bits} \
--outfile "${cfg.dataDir}/keys/ca.key"
silent_certtool -s \
--template "${pkgs.writeText "taskserver-ca.template" ''
cn = ${cfg.fqdn}
expiration_days = ${toString cfg.pki.auto.expiration.ca}
cert_signing_key
ca
''}" \
--load-privkey "${cfg.dataDir}/keys/ca.key" \
--outfile "${cfg.dataDir}/keys/ca.cert"
chgrp "${cfg.group}" "${cfg.dataDir}/keys/ca.cert"
chmod g+r "${cfg.dataDir}/keys/ca.cert"
fi
nixos/taskserver: Refactor module for CA creation Now the service starts up if only the services.taskserver.enable option is set to true. We now also have three systemd services (started in this order): * taskserver-init: For creating the necessary data directory and also includes a refecence to the configuration file in the Nix store. * taskserver-ca: Only enabled if none of the server.key, server.cert, server.crl and caCert options are set, so we can allow for certificates that are issued by another CA. This service creates a new CA key+certificate and a server key+certificate and signs the latter using the CA key. The permissions of these keys/certs are set quite strictly to allow only the root user to sign certificates. * taskserver: The main Taskserver service which just starts taskd. We now also log to stdout and thus to the journal. Of course, there are still a few problems left to solve, for instance: * The CA currently only signs the server certificates, so it's only usable for clients if the server doesn't validate client certs (which is kinda pointless). * Using "taskd <command>" is currently still a bit awkward to use, so we need to properly wrap it in environment.systemPackages to set the dataDir by default. * There are still a few configuration options left to include, for example the "trust" option. * We might want to introduce an extraConfig option. * It might be useful to allow for declarative configuration of organisations and users, especially when it comes to creating client certificates. * The right signal has to be sent for the taskserver service to reload properly. * Currently the CA and server certificates are created using server.host as the common name and doesn't set additional certificate information. This could be improved by adding options that explicitly set that information. As for the config file, we might need to patch taskd to allow for setting not only --data but also a --cfgfile, which then omits the ${dataDir}/config file. We can still use the "include" directive from the file specified using --cfgfile in order to chainload ${dataDir}/config. Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
2015-09-27 20:52:55 +01:00
if [ ! -e "${cfg.dataDir}/keys/server.key" ]; then
silent_certtool -p \
--bits ${toString cfg.pki.auto.bits} \
--outfile "${cfg.dataDir}/keys/server.key"
silent_certtool -c \
--template "${pkgs.writeText "taskserver-cert.template" ''
cn = ${cfg.fqdn}
expiration_days = ${toString cfg.pki.auto.expiration.server}
tls_www_server
encryption_key
signing_key
''}" \
--load-ca-privkey "${cfg.dataDir}/keys/ca.key" \
--load-ca-certificate "${cfg.dataDir}/keys/ca.cert" \
--load-privkey "${cfg.dataDir}/keys/server.key" \
--outfile "${cfg.dataDir}/keys/server.cert"
chgrp "${cfg.group}" \
"${cfg.dataDir}/keys/server.key" \
"${cfg.dataDir}/keys/server.cert"
chmod g+r \
"${cfg.dataDir}/keys/server.key" \
"${cfg.dataDir}/keys/server.cert"
fi
if [ ! -e "${cfg.dataDir}/keys/server.crl" ]; then
silent_certtool --generate-crl \
--template "${pkgs.writeText "taskserver-crl.template" ''
expiration_days = ${toString cfg.pki.auto.expiration.crl}
''}" \
--load-ca-privkey "${cfg.dataDir}/keys/ca.key" \
--load-ca-certificate "${cfg.dataDir}/keys/ca.cert" \
--outfile "${cfg.dataDir}/keys/server.crl"
chgrp "${cfg.group}" "${cfg.dataDir}/keys/server.crl"
chmod g+r "${cfg.dataDir}/keys/server.crl"
fi
chmod go+x "${cfg.dataDir}/keys"
'';
};
})
(mkIf (cfg.enable && cfg.listenHost != "localhost") {
networking.firewall.allowedTCPPorts = [ cfg.listenPort ];
})
{ meta.doc = ./taskserver.xml; }
];
}