Turns out lot of software (including Chromium) use bundled fontconfig
so we either need to wrap every one of those, or re-introduce the global unversioned config.
The latter is easier but weakens hermetic configs. But perhaps those are not really worth the effort.
Since systemd 243, docs were already steering users towards using
`journal`:
eedaf7f322
systemd 246 will go one step further, it shows warnings for these units
during bootup, and will [automatically convert these occurences to
`journal`](f3dc6af20f):
> [ 6.955976] systemd[1]: /nix/store/hwyfgbwg804vmr92fxc1vkmqfq2k9s17-unit-display-manager.service/display-manager.service:27: Standard output type syslog is obsolete, automatically updating to journal. Please update│······················
your unit file, and consider removing the setting altogether.
So there's no point of keeping `syslog` here, and it's probably a better
idea to just not set it, due to:
> This setting defaults to the value set with DefaultStandardOutput= in
> systemd-system.conf(5), which defaults to journal.
This breaks the Nextcloud vhost declaration when adding e.g. another
vhost as the `services.nginx.virtualHosts` option has `{ nextcloud =
...; }` as *default* value which will be replaced by another
`virtualHosts`-declaration with a higher (e.g. the default) priority.
The following cases are now supported & covered by the module:
* `nginx` is enabled with `nextcloud` enabled and other vhosts can be
added / other options can be declared without having to care
about the declaration's priority.
* Settings in the `nextcloud`-vhost in `nginx` have to be altered using
`mkForce` as this is the only way how we officially support `nginx`
for `nextcloud` and customizations have to be done explicitly using
`mkForce`.
* `nginx` will be completely omitted if a user enables nextcloud
and disables nginx using `services.nginx.enable = false;`. (because
nginx will be enabled by this module using `mkDefault`).
This reverts commit 128dbb31cc.
Closes #95259
nginx -t not only verifies configuration, but also creates (and chowns)
files. When the `nginx-config-reload` service is used, this can cause
directories to be chowned to `root`, causing nginx to fail.
This moves the nginx -t command into a second ExecReload command, which
runs as nginx's user. While fixing above issue, this will also cause the
configuration to be verified when running `systemctl reload nginx`, not
only when restarting the dummy `nginx-config-reload` unit. The latter is
mostly a workaround for missing features in our activation script
anyways.