slapd does only print the error and not the line number.
Sometimes it is not even clear that it fails to start
due to an incorrect configuration file.
Example output of slaptest:
5e1b2179 /nix/store/gbn2v319d4qgw851sg41mcmjm5dpn39i-slapd.conf: line 134 objectClass: Missing closing parenthesis before end of input
ObjectClassDescription = "(" whsp
numericoid whsp ; ObjectClass identifier
[ "NAME" qdescrs ]
[ "DESC" qdstring ]
[ "OBSOLETE" whsp ]
[ "SUP" oids ] ; Superior ObjectClasses
[ ( "ABSTRACT" / "STRUCTURAL" / "AUXILIARY" ) whsp ]
; default structural
[ "MUST" oids ] ; AttributeTypes
[ "MAY" oids ] ; AttributeTypes
whsp ")"
slaptest: bad configuration file!
A centralized list for these renames is not good because:
- It breaks disabledModules for modules that have a rename defined
- Adding/removing renames for a module means having to find them in the
central file
- Merge conflicts due to multiple people editing the central file
The redis module currently fails to start up, most likely due to running
a chown as non-root in preStart.
While at it, I hardcoded it to use systemd's StateDirectory and
DynamicUser to manage directory permissions, removed the unused
appendOnlyFilename option, and the pidFile option.
We properly tell redis now it's daemonized, and it'll use notify support
to signal readiness.
The default for logFile is /var/log/couchdb.log, and the tmpfile rules chown
${dirOf cfg.logFile}, which is just /var/log, to couchdb:couchdb.
This was found by Edes' report on IRC, which looked like
Detected unsafe path transition /var/log → /var/log/journal during canonicalization of /var/log/journal
While this bug has been present since the initial couchdb module in
62438c09f7 by @garbas, this wasn't a
problem, because the initial module only created and chowned /var/log
if it didn't exist yet, which can't occur because this gets created in
the initial phases of NixOS startup.
However with the recent move from manual preStart chown scripts to
systemd.tmpfiles.rules in 062efe018d (#59389),
this chown is suddenly running unconditionally at every system
activation, therefore triggering the above error.