When iodined tries to start before any interface other than loopback has an ip, iodined fails.
Wait for ip-up.target
The above is because of the following:
in iodined's code: src/common.c line 157
the flag AI_ADDRCONFIG is passed as a flag to getaddrinfo.
Iodine uses the function
get_addr(char *host,
int port,
int addr_family,
int flags,
struct sockaddr_storage *out);
to get address information via getaddrinfo().
Within get_addr, the flag AI_ADDRCONFIG is forced.
What this flag does, is cause getaddrinfo to return
"Name or service not known" as an error explicitly if no ip
has been assigned to the computer.
see getaddrinfo(3)
Wait for an ip before starting iodined.
* the major change is to set TARGETDIR=${vardir}, and symlink from
${vardir} back to ${out} instead of the other way around. this
gives CP more liberty to write to more directories -- in particular
it seems to want to write some configuration files outside of conf?
* run.conf does not need 'export'
* minor tweaks to CrashPlanDesktop.patch
GnuPG 2.1.x changed the way the gpg-agent works, and that new approach no
longer requires (or even supports) the "start everything as a child of the
agent" scheme we've implemented in NixOS for older versions.
To configure the gpg-agent for your X session, add the following code to
~/.xsession or some other appropriate place that's sourced at start-up:
gpg-connect-agent /bye
GPG_TTY=$(tty)
export GPG_TTY
If you want to use gpg-agent for SSH, too, also add the settings
unset SSH_AGENT_PID
export SSH_AUTH_SOCK="${HOME}/.gnupg/S.gpg-agent.ssh"
and make sure that
enable-ssh-support
is included in your ~/.gnupg/gpg-agent.conf.
The gpg-agent(1) man page has more details about this subject, i.e. in the
"EXAMPLES" section.
This patch fixes https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/12927.
It would be great to configure good rate-limiting defaults for this via
/proc/sys/net/ipv4/icmp_ratelimit and /proc/sys/net/ipv6/icmp/ratelimit,
too, but I didn't since I don't know what a "good default" would be.
Some users may wish to improve their privacy by using per-query
key pairs, which makes it more difficult for upstream resolvers to
track users across IP addresses.
- fix `enable` option description
using `mkEnableOption longDescription` is incorrect; override
`description` instead
- additional details for proper usage of the service, including
an example of the recommended configuration
- clarify `localAddress` option description
- clarify `localPort` option description
- clarify `customResolver` option description
This commit implements the changes necessary to start up a graphite carbon Cache
with twisted and start the corresponding graphiteWeb service.
Dependencies need to be included via python buildEnv to include all recursive
implicit dependencies.
Additionally cairo is a requirement of graphiteWeb and pycairo is not a standard
python package (buildPythonPackage) and therefore cannot be included via
buildEnv. It also needs cairo in the Library PATH.
Accidentally broken by 4fede53c09
("nixos manuals: bring back package references").
Without this fix, grafana won't start:
$ systemctl status grafana
...
systemd[1]: Starting Grafana Service Daemon...
systemd[1]: Started Grafana Service Daemon.
grafana[666]: 2016/03/06 19:57:32 [log.go:75 Fatal()] [E] Failed to detect generated css or javascript files in static root (%!s(MISSING)), have you executed default grunt task?
systemd[1]: grafana.service: Main process exited, code=exited, status=1/FAILURE
systemd[1]: grafana.service: Unit entered failed state.
systemd[1]: grafana.service: Failed with result 'exit-code'.
Broken by 17389e256f.
The description attributes of mkOption are parsed by XSLT, so we can
create a DocBook manual out of it.
Unfortunately, the passwordHash option had a description which includes
a <password> placeholder which is recognized by DocBook XSL as a valid
start tag. So as there is obviously no </password>, the build of the
manual bailed out with a parsing error.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Reported-by: devhell <"^"@regexmail.net>
In NixOS/nixpkgs@da6bc44 @thoughtpolice
made the Transmission NixOS module override the umask setting in the
Transmission config. This commit removes that override.
I want a different umask setting and I guess it is possible that other
people might want it to. Thus I think it is a good idea to respect the
umask settings in the Transmission config.
Add ability to do a more traditional bspwm startup (using the bspwm-session
script provided by nixpkgs.bspwm) as an alternative to directly starting
sxhkd & bspwm
Also added the ability to specify a custom startup script, instead of
relying on the provided bspwm-session
add '-f 100' as an argument to sxhkd to keep it from flooding bspwm
add SXHKD_SHELL=/bin/sh to help default to a faster shell than what may
be set in $SHELL (example: with zsh)
- Enforce that an option declaration has a "defaultText" if and only if the
type of the option derives from "package", "packageSet" or "nixpkgsConfig"
and if a "default" attribute is defined.
- Enforce that the value of the "example" attribute is wrapped with "literalExample"
if the type of the option derives from "package", "packageSet" or "nixpkgsConfig".
- Warn if a "defaultText" is defined in an option declaration if the type of
the option does not derive from "package", "packageSet" or "nixpkgsConfig".
- Warn if no "type" is defined in an option declaration.
Updates gitlab to the current stable version and fixes a lot of features that
were broken, at least with the current version and our configuration.
Quite a lot of sweat and tears has gone into testing nearly all features and
reading/patching the Gitlab source as we're about to deploy gitlab for our
whole company.
Things to note:
* The gitlab config is now written as a nix attribute set and will be
converted to JSON. Gitlab uses YAML but JSON is a subset of YAML.
The `extraConfig` opition is also an attribute set that will be merged
with the default config. This way *all* Gitlab options are supported.
* Some paths like uploads and configs are hardcoded in rails (at least
after my study of the Gitlab source). This is why they are linked from
the Gitlab root to /run/gitlab and then linked to the configurable
`statePath`.
* Backup & restore should work out of the box from another Gitlab instance.
* gitlab-git-http-server has been replaced by gitlab-workhorse upstream.
Push & pull over HTTPS works perfectly. Communication to gitlab is done
over unix sockets. An HTTP server is required to proxy requests to
gitlab-workhorse over another unix socket at
`/run/gitlab/gitlab-workhorse.socket`.
* The user & group running gitlab are now configurable. These can even be
changed for live instances.
* The initial email address & password of the root user can be configured.
Fixes#8598.
NetworkManager needs an additional avahi-user to use link-local
IPv4 (and probably IPv6) addresses. avahi-autoipd also needs to be
patched to the right path.
We don't want to build all those things along with the manual, so that's
what the defaultText attribute is for.
Unfortunately a few of them were missing, so let's add them.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
The test only checked for existence of the rule file in the output path
of the rulefile generator.
However, we also need to check whether the basename of the file is also
the one we're currently searching for.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Partially reverts the following commits:
9f2a61c59c9c13fe6604
As @edolstra pointed out, it would make more sense to do this by default
instead of having that allowImpurePaths option. This of course might
break systems which add extra packages to udev, but on the upside it's
hard to miss one of these paths now because it won't get buried in the
ocean of build output lines.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
So far we were merely printing a warning if there are still references
to (/usr)/s?bin, but we actually want to make sure that we fix those
paths, especially on updates of packages that come with udev rules.
This adds a new option allowImpurePaths, which when set to false will
cause the "udev-rules" derivation to fail.
I've set this to true by default, to not break existing systems too much
and the intention is to set it to false for a few NixOS VM tests.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
We were trying to find FHS references in all of the rules found in
services.udev.packages. Unfortunately we're still fixing up paths in the
same derivation where we are checking those references, so for example
references to /sbin/modprobe were still printed to be needed to fixup
even though they were already fixed at the time.
So now we're printing a more helpful warning message which is also
conditional (before the warning message was printed regardless of
whether there are any rules that need fixup) and is based off the rules
that were already fixed up.
The new warning message not only contains the build-local rule files but
also the original files from other store paths and the FHS path
references that were still found.
With 8ecd3a5e1d reverted, we now get this:
/nix/store/...-udev-rules/63-md-raid-arrays.rules (originally from
/nix/store/...-mdadm-3.3.4/lib/udev/rules.d/63-md-raid-arrays.rules)
contains references to /usr/bin/readlink and /usr/bin/basename.
Which is now more accurate to what is not yet fixed and where it's
coming from.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
In 8ecd3a5, we fixed up the FHS paths for stage 1, but unfortunately we
have a similar udev rules generator twice one for the initrd and one
without. So we might need to refactor this in the future.
For now, let's just fix the references to readlink and basename in the
udev module as well until we have properly addressed this.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Fixes: #12722
This reverts most of 89e983786a, as those references are sanitized now.
Fixes#10039, at least most of it.
The `sane` case wasn't fixed, as it calls a *function* in pkgs to get
the default value.