1
0
Fork 1
mirror of https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs.git synced 2024-12-25 03:17:13 +00:00
nixpkgs/nixos/modules/programs/captive-browser.nix
Maximilian Bosch f073b74c13
nixos/captive-browser: set chromium's data-dir to a XDG-compliant location
To quote the XDG specification:

     There is a single base directory relative to which user-specific
     data files should be written. This directory is defined by the\
     environment variable $XDG_DATA_HOME.

Rather than adding another directory to $HOME, I think that it's better
to follow this standard to avoid a cluttered home-dir.
2020-03-11 20:17:46 +01:00

123 lines
4.7 KiB
Nix

{ config, lib, pkgs, ... }:
with lib;
let
cfg = config.programs.captive-browser;
in
{
###### interface
options = {
programs.captive-browser = {
enable = mkEnableOption "captive browser";
package = mkOption {
type = types.package;
default = pkgs.captive-browser;
defaultText = "pkgs.captive-browser";
description = "Which package to use for captive-browser";
};
interface = mkOption {
type = types.str;
description = "your public network interface (wlp3s0, wlan0, eth0, ...)";
};
# the options below are the same as in "captive-browser.toml"
browser = mkOption {
type = types.str;
default = concatStringsSep " " [ ''${pkgs.chromium}/bin/chromium''
''--user-data-dir=''${XDG_DATA_HOME:-$HOME/.local/share}/chromium-captive''
''--proxy-server="socks5://$PROXY"''
''--host-resolver-rules="MAP * ~NOTFOUND , EXCLUDE localhost"''
''--no-first-run''
''--new-window''
''--incognito''
''http://cache.nixos.org/''
];
description = ''
The shell (/bin/sh) command executed once the proxy starts.
When browser exits, the proxy exits. An extra env var PROXY is available.
Here, we use a separate Chrome instance in Incognito mode, so that
it can run (and be waited for) alongside the default one, and that
it maintains no state across runs. To configure this browser open a
normal window in it, settings will be preserved.
@volth: chromium is to open a plain HTTP (not HTTPS nor redirect to HTTPS!) website.
upstream uses http://example.com but I have seen captive portals whose DNS server resolves "example.com" to 127.0.0.1
'';
};
dhcp-dns = mkOption {
type = types.str;
description = ''
The shell (/bin/sh) command executed to obtain the DHCP
DNS server address. The first match of an IPv4 regex is used.
IPv4 only, because let's be real, it's a captive portal.
'';
};
socks5-addr = mkOption {
type = types.str;
default = "localhost:1666";
description = ''the listen address for the SOCKS5 proxy server'';
};
bindInterface = mkOption {
default = true;
type = types.bool;
description = ''
Binds <package>captive-browser</package> to the network interface declared in
<literal>cfg.interface</literal>. This can be used to avoid collisions
with private subnets.
'';
};
};
};
###### implementation
config = mkIf cfg.enable {
programs.captive-browser.dhcp-dns = mkOptionDefault (
if config.networking.networkmanager.enable then
"${pkgs.networkmanager}/bin/nmcli dev show ${escapeShellArg cfg.interface} | ${pkgs.gnugrep}/bin/fgrep IP4.DNS"
else if config.networking.dhcpcd.enable then
"${pkgs.dhcpcd}/bin/dhcpcd -U ${escapeShellArg cfg.interface} | ${pkgs.gnugrep}/bin/fgrep domain_name_servers"
else if config.networking.useNetworkd then
"${cfg.package}/bin/systemd-networkd-dns ${escapeShellArg cfg.interface}"
else
"${config.security.wrapperDir}/udhcpc --quit --now -f -i ${escapeShellArg cfg.interface} -O dns --script ${
pkgs.writeScript "udhcp-script" ''
#!/bin/sh
if [ "$1" = bound ]; then
echo "$dns"
fi
''}"
);
security.wrappers.udhcpc = {
capabilities = "cap_net_raw+p";
source = "${pkgs.busybox}/bin/udhcpc";
};
security.wrappers.captive-browser = {
capabilities = "cap_net_raw+p";
source = pkgs.writeScript "captive-browser" ''
#!${pkgs.bash}/bin/bash
export XDG_CONFIG_HOME=${pkgs.writeTextDir "captive-browser.toml" ''
browser = """${cfg.browser}"""
dhcp-dns = """${cfg.dhcp-dns}"""
socks5-addr = """${cfg.socks5-addr}"""
${optionalString cfg.bindInterface ''
bind-device = """${cfg.interface}"""
''}
''}
exec ${cfg.package}/bin/captive-browser
'';
};
};
}