This breaks with networking backends enabled and
also creates large delays on boot when some services depends
on the network target. It is also not really required
because tinc does create those interfaces itself.
fixes #27070
* nat/bind/dhcp.service:
Remove. Those services have nothing to do with a link-level service.
* sys-subsystem-net-devices-${if}.device:
Add as BindsTo dependency as this will make hostapd stop when the
device is unplugged.
* network-link-${if}.service:
Add hostapd as dependency for this service via requiredBy clause,
so that the network link is only considered to be established
only after hostapd has started.
* network.target:
Remove this from wantedBy clause as this is already implied from
dependencies stacked above hostapd. And if it's not implied than
starting hostapd is not required for this particular network
configuration.
This reverts commit 10addad603, reversing
changes made to 7786575c6c.
NixOS scripts should be kept in the NixOS source tree, not in
pkgs. Moving them around is just confusing and creates unnecessary
code/history churn.
Move all the nixos-* scripts from the nixos distribution as real
packages in the pkgs/ package set.
This allows non-nixos users to run the script as well. For example,
deploying a remote machine with:
nixos-rebuild --target-host root@hostname --build-host root@hostname
A module for security options that are too small to warrant their own module.
The impetus for adding this module is to make it more convenient to override
the behavior of the hardened profile wrt user namespaces.
Without a dedicated option for user namespaces, the user needs to
1) know which sysctl knob controls userns
2) know how large a value the sysctl knob needs to allow e.g.,
Nix sandbox builds to work
In the future, other mitigations currently enabled by the hardened profile may
be promoted to options in this module.
This option represents the ZNC configuration as a Nix value. It will be
converted to a syntactically valid file. This provides:
- Flexibility: Any ZNC option can be used
- Modularity: These values can be set from any NixOS module and will be
merged correctly
- Overridability: Default values can be overridden
Also done:
Remove unused/unneeded options, mkRemovedOptionModule unfortunately doesn't work
inside submodules (yet). The options userName and modulePackages were never used
to begin with
The system variable is used from the (possibly polluted) shell
environment.
This causes nixos-install to fail in a nix-shell because the system
shell variable is automatically set to the current system (e.g.
x86_64-linux).