This reverts a part of 5bd12c694b.
Apparently there's no way to specify user for RuntimeDirectory in systemd
service file (it's always root) but tor won't create control socket if the dir
is owned by anybody except the tor user.
These hardenings were adopted from the upstream service file, checked
against systemd.service(5) and systemd.exec(5) manuals, and tested to
actually work with all the options enabled.
`PrivateDevices` implies `DevicePolicy=closed` according to systemd.exec(5),
removed.
`--RunAsDaemon 0` is the default value according to tor(5), removed.
[x] Support transparent proxying. This means services behind sslh (Apache, sshd and so on) will see the external IP and ports as if the external world connected directly to them.
[x] Run sslh daemon as unprivileged user instead of root (it is not only for security, transparent proxying requires it)
[x] Removed pidFile support (it is not compatible with running sslh daemon as unprivileged user)
[x] listenAddress default changed from "config.networking.hostName" (which resolves to meaningless "127.0.0.1" as with current /etc/hosts production) to "0.0.0.0" (all addresses)
Currently minio logs with enhanced tty data and journalctl does not include anything useful as a result:
```
Jun 08 11:03:28 alpha minio[17813]: [78B blob data]
Jun 08 11:03:28 alpha minio[17813]: [49B blob data]
Jun 08 11:03:28 alpha minio[17813]: [19B blob data]
Jun 08 11:03:28 alpha minio[17813]: [88B blob data]
Jun 08 11:03:28 alpha minio[17813]: [45B blob data]
Jun 08 11:03:28 alpha minio[17813]: [44B blob data]
Jun 08 11:03:28 alpha minio[17813]: [57B blob data]
```
Indicating that it detected some binary output. With the `--json` flag it logs:
```
Jun 08 11:14:58 alpha minio[18573]: {"level":"FATAL","time":"2018-06-07T23:14:58.770637778Z","error":{"message":"--address input is invalid: address 127.0.0.1: missing port in address","source":["/build/go/src/github.com/minio/minio/cmd/server-main.go:121:cmd.serverHandleCmdArgs()"]}}
```
DBus seems to resolve user IDs directly via glibc, circumventing nscd. In more
advanced setups this leads to user's coming from LDAP or SSSD not being
resolved by the dbus system bus daemon. The effect for such users is, that all
access to the system bus (e.g. busctl or nmcli) is denied.
Adding the respective NSS modules to the service's environment solves the issue
the same way it does for nscd.
* add freeipmi to get power meter readings
* readline support for scontrol
* libssh2 support for X11 supporta
* Add note to enableSrunX11 in module
* fix hwloc support (was detected by configure)
The nixos module adds a new derivation to
systemPackages to make sure that the binaries
get the generated config file. This derivation
did not contain the man pages so far.
Activating the module now makes the man pages
available in the system environment.
This change allows users to specify an alternative database method. For
example an mpd satellite setup where another mpd on the network shares
it's database with the local instance. The `dbFile` parameter must not be
configured in that case.
BIND doesn't allow the options section (or any section I'd guess) to be
defined more than once, so whenever you want to set an additional option
you're stuck using weird hacks like this:
services.bind.forwarders = lib.mkForce [ "}; empty-zones-enable no; #" ];
This basically exploits the fact that values coming from the module
options aren't escaped and thus works in a similar vain to how SQL
injection works.
Another option would be to just set configFile to a file that includes
all the options, including zones. That obviously makes the configuration
way less extensible and more awkward to use with the module system.
To make sure this change does work correctly I added a small test just
for that. The test could use some improvements, but better to have a
test rather than none at all. For a future improvement the test could be
merged with the NSD test, because both use the same zone file format.
This change has been reviewed in #40053 and after not getting any
opposition, I'm hereby adding this to master.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@nix.build>
Cc: @peti, @edolstra
Closes: #40053
The hooks directory contains now one level deep subdirectories which
need to be updated as well.
If you use gitea via ssh, ~/.ssh/authorized_keys also needs to be
updated because of the hardcoded path to gitea in the "command" option.
As shipped with k8s 1.10.3.
Also:
- updated the definition jsons as they are distributed in k8s.
- updated the image uris as they are renamed in k8s
- added imageDigest param as per 736848723e
As shipped with k8s 1.10.3.
Also:
- updated the definition jsons as they are distributed in k8s.
- updated the image uris as they are renamed in k8s
- added imageDigest param as per 736848723e
1) Change start-type to ```notify``` when running MariaDB so that we don't have to busy-wait for the
socket to appear.
2) Do not manually create the directory under /run as we can get systemd to do
that for us. This opens up the possibility later for not having to launch as root.
The Datadog agent requires `gohai` to be available on its `$PATH` in
order to collect certain metrics.
It would previously start up and collect certain types of metrics, but
log errors related to the missing gohai binary.
This commit configures the systemd-unit to make gohai available at
runtime.
This fixes#39810.
It is no longer required to change the config your ipfs repo manually if you change
localDiscovery option in nixos configuration after ipfs repository initialization.
Ideally I'd like the whole `nixos`/`nixpkgs` channel distinction to disappear, but this is a step along that path. After a while being in this state, we can stop creating the magic `nixpkgs -> .` symlink inside our `nixos` channel tarballs and simplify that whole mess a bit.
Wireguard is now split into two pretty much independent packages:
`wireguard` (Linux-specific kernel module) and `wireguard-tools`,
which is cross-platform.
* networking/stubby.nix: implementing systemd service module for stubby
This change implements stubby, the DNS-over-TLS stub resolver daemon.
The motivation for this change was the desire to use stubby's
DNS-over-TLS funcitonality in tandem with unbound, which requires
passing certain configuration parameters. This module implements those
config parameters by exposing them for use in configuration.nix.
* networking/stubby.nix: merging back module list
re-merging the module list to remove unecessary changes.
* networking/stubby.nix: removing unecessary capabilities flag
This change removes the unecessary flag for toggling the capabilities
which allows the daemon to bind to low ports.
* networking/stubby.nix: adding debug level logging bool
Adding the option to turn on debug logging.
* networking/stubby.nix: clarifying idleTimeout and adding systemd target
Improving docs to note that idleTimeout is expressed in ms. Adding the
nss-lookup `before' target to the systemd service definition.
* networking/stubby.nix: Restrict options with types.enum
This change restricts fallbackProtocol and authenticationMode to accept
only valid options instead of any list or str types (respectively). This
change also fixes typo in the CapabilityBoundingSet systemd setting.
* networking/stubby.nix: cleaning up documentation
Cleaning up docs, adding literal tags to settings, and removing
whitespace.
* networking/stubby.nix: fixing missing linebreak in comments
* networking/stubby.nix: cleaning errant comments
The original `nexus` derivation required `/run/sonatype-work/nexus3`
which explicitly depended on the NixOS path structure.
This would break `nexus` for everyone using `nixpkgs` on a non-NixOS
system, additionally the module never created `/run/sonatype-work`, so
the systemd unit created in `services.nexus` fails as well. The issue
wasn't actively known as the `nixos/nexus` test wasn't registered in
Hydra (see #40257).
This patch contains the following changes:
* Adds `tests.nexus` to `release.nix` to run the test on Hydra.
* Makes JVM parameters configurable: by default all JVM options were located
in `result/bin/nexus.vmoptions` which made it quite hard to patch
these parameters. Now it's possible to override all parameters by
running `VM_OPTS_FILE=custom-nexus.vmoptions ./result/bin/nexus run`
(after patching the `nexus` shell script), additionally it's possible
to override these parameters with `services.nexus.vmoptions`.
* Bumped Nexus from 3.5.1 to 3.11.0
* Run the `nexus` test on Hydra with `callTest` in `nixos/release.nix`,
furthermore the test checks if the UI is available on the specified
port.
* Added myself as maintainer for the NixOS test and the package to have
some more people in case of further breakage.
* Added sufficient disk space to the `nexus` test, otherwise the service
fails with the following errors:
```
com.orientechnologies.orient.core.exception.ODatabaseException: Cannot create database 'accesslog'
com.orientechnologies.orient.core.exception.OLowDiskSpaceException: Error occurred while executing
a write operation to database 'accesslog' due to limited free space on the disk (242 MB). The database
is now working in read-only mode. Please close the database (or stop OrientDB), make room on your hard
drive and then reopen the database. The minimal required space is 256 MB. Required space is now set to
256MB (you can change it by setting parameter storage.diskCache.diskFreeSpaceLimit) .
```
/cc @ironpinguin @xeji
If docker is enabled, start mesos-slave.service after docker.service
to avoid a race condition that could result in mesos-slave to fail
with "Failed to create docker: Timed out getting docker version"
The pull request that added dhparams (#39507) was made at the time where
the dhparams module overhaul (#39526) wasn't done yet, so it's still
using the old mechanics of the module.
As stated in the release notes:
Module implementers should not set a specific bit size in order to let
users configure it by themselves if they want to have a different bit
size than the default (2048).
An example usage of this would be:
{ config, ... }:
{
security.dhparams.params.myservice = {};
environment.etc."myservice.conf".text = ''
dhparams = ${config.security.dhparams.params.myservice.path}
'';
}
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@nix.build>
Cc: @qknight, @abbradar, @hrdinka, @leenaars
after seeing
`adjtime failed: Invalid argument` in my syslog, I tried using
`ntpd -s` but it would trigger
`/etc/ntpd.conf: No such file or directory`
see https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/31885
Instead of running the daemon with a specific config file, use the
standard file so that user are able to use the ntp executable without
having to look for the current config file.
Tracking scripts in particular, cannot be included in extraOpts, because script declaration has to be above script usage in keepalived.conf.
Changes are fully backward compatible.
When trying to run NSD to serve the root zone, one gets the following
error message:
error: illegal name: '.'
This is because the name of the zone is used as the derivation name for
building the zone file. However, Nix doesn't allow derivation names
starting with a period.
So whenever the zone is "." now, the file name generated is "root"
instead of ".".
I also added an assertion that makes sure the user sets
services.nsd.rootServer, otherwise NSD will fail at runtime because it
prevents serving the root zone without an explicit compile-time option.
Tested this by adding a root zone to the "nsd" NixOS VM test.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@nix.build>
Cc: @hrdinka, @qknight
Without fcrontab being setuid, every attempt by an user in the fcron
group to edit their own crontab (via `fcrontab -e`) results in the
following error:
```
2018-05-06 11:29:07 ERROR could not change euid to 273: Operation not permitted
2018-05-06 11:29:07 ERROR fcron child aborted: this does not affect the main fcron daemon, but this may prevent a job from being run or an email from being sent.
```
Adding setuid by hand has resolved this issue and aligns with the way
fcrontab is installed on other distributions.