Previously, we were storing the leader pid in a runtime file and
signalled SIGRTMIN+4 manually.
In systemd 219, the `machinectl poweroff` command was introduced, which
does that for us.
* structured config for main config file allows to launch nagios in
debug mode without having to write the whole config file by hand
* build time syntax check
* all options have types, one more example
* I find it misleading that the main nagios config file is linked in
/etc but that if you change the link in /etc/ and restart nagios, it
has no effect. Have nagios use /etc/nagios.cfg
* fix paths in example nagios config files, which allows to reuse it:
services.nagios.objectDefs =
(map (x: "${pkgs.nagios}/etc/objects/${x}.cfg")
[ "templates" "timeperiods" "commands" ]) ++ [ ./main.cfg ]
* for the above reason, add mailutils to default plugins
Co-Authored-By: Aaron Andersen <aaron@fosslib.net>
This is what I've suspected a while ago[1]:
> Heads-up everyone: After testing this in a few production instances,
> it seems that some browsers still get cache hits for new store paths
> (and changed contents) for some reason. I highly suspect that it might
> be due to the last-modified header (as mentioned in [2]).
>
> Going to test this with last-modified disabled for a little while and
> if this is the case I think we should improve that patch by disabling
> last-modified if serving from a store path.
Much earlier[2] when I reviewed the patch, I wrote this:
> Other than that, it looks good to me.
>
> However, I'm not sure what we should do with Last-Modified header.
> From RFC 2616, section 13.3.4:
>
> - If both an entity tag and a Last-Modified value have been
> provided by the origin server, SHOULD use both validators in
> cache-conditional requests. This allows both HTTP/1.0 and
> HTTP/1.1 caches to respond appropriately.
>
> I'm a bit nervous about the SHOULD here, as user agents in the wild
> could possibly just use Last-Modified and use the cached content
> instead.
Unfortunately, I didn't pursue this any further back then because
@pbogdan noted[3] the following:
> Hmm, could they (assuming they are conforming):
>
> * If an entity tag has been provided by the origin server, MUST
> use that entity tag in any cache-conditional request (using If-
> Match or If-None-Match).
Since running with this patch in some deployments, I found that both
Firefox and Chrome/Chromium do NOT re-validate against the ETag if the
Last-Modified header is still the same.
So I wrote a small NixOS VM test with Geckodriver to have a test case
which is closer to the real world and I indeed was able to reproduce
this.
Whether this is actually a bug in Chrome or Firefox is an entirely
different issue and even IF it is the fault of the browsers and it is
fixed at some point, we'd still need to handle this for older browser
versions.
Apart from clearing the header, I also recreated the patch by using a
plain "git diff" with a small description on top. This should make it
easier for future authors to work on that patch.
[1]: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/48337#issuecomment-495072764
[2]: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/48337#issuecomment-451644084
[3]: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/48337#issuecomment-451646135
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@nix.build>
xsession gets passed `dm` `wm`, so the desktop manager would be launched
before the window manager resulting in a regular desktop manager
session.
Fixes https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/76625
This fixes a harmless error from systemd-udevd that looks like:
Dec 23 15:35:23 dellbook systemd-udevd[696]:
/nix/store/iixya3ni5whybpq9zz1h7f4pyw7nhd19-udev-rules/99-local.rules:25
Invalid value "..." for RUN (char 101: invalid substitution type),
ignoring, but please fix it.
Using $$ fixes it using the escaping documented at https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/udev.html.
When using format-strings, curly brackets need to be escaped using `{{`
to avoid errors from python.
And apparently, Perl's `==` is used to compare substrings[1] which is why
the translation to `assert http_code == "304"` failed as the string
contains several headers from curl.
[1] Just check `perl <(echo 'die "alarm" if "foo\n304" == 304')`
The commit b0bbacb521 was a bit too fast
It did set executable bit for log files.
Also, it didn't account for other directories in state dir:
```
# ls -la /var/spool/nginx/
total 32
drwxr-x--- 8 nginx nginx 4096 Dec 26 12:00 .
drwxr-xr-x 4 root root 4096 Oct 10 20:24 ..
drwx------ 2 root root 4096 Oct 10 20:24 client_body_temp
drwx------ 2 root root 4096 Oct 10 20:24 fastcgi_temp
drwxr-x--- 2 nginx nginx 4096 Dec 26 12:00 logs
drwx------ 2 root root 4096 Oct 10 20:24 proxy_temp
drwx------ 2 root root 4096 Oct 10 20:24 scgi_temp
drwx------ 2 root root 4096 Oct 10 20:24 uwsgi_temp
```
With proposed change, only ownership is changed for state files, and mode is left as is
except that statedir/logs is now group accessible.
This change brings pre-existing installations (where the logfiles
are owned by root) in line with the new permssions (where logfiles
are owned by the nginx user)
Currently to run borg job manually, you have to use systemctl:
```
$ systemctl start borgbackup-job-jobname.service
```
This commit makes wrappers around borg jobs available in $PATH, which have
BORG_REPO and connection args set correctly:
```
$ borg-job-jobname list
$ borg-job-jobname mount ::jobname-archive-2019-12-25T00:01:29 /mnt/some-path
$ borg-job-jobname create ::test /some/path
```
Closes: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/64888
Co-authored-by: Danylo Hlynskyi <abcz2.uprola@gmail.com>
When installing a fresh NixOS system it occasionally happens that you
encounter issues that are rather hard to track down since
`nixos-install(8)` doesn't provide any debugging flags.
This patch adds `-L` to force `nix build` to display the build-log on
stderr and `-v` to increase the log-level of Nix.
While it's a good idea to automate the linting of the python code used
for our tests, I think that it can be quite distracting when hacking on
a NixOS test.
I figured that it might be more convenient to add an option as a
shortcut for this to avoid that everyone needs to dig into the test
driver again.
Also cleanup a bit, we enabled gnome-settings-daemon even when using elementary-settings-daemon.
I wanted the nixos module ascribe the defaults, not these lists in pkgs.
sway: refactor with a wrapper
This moves the wrapper functionality from the NixOS module to a new package
(wrapper) that wraps the original sway package (sway-unwrapped). Therefore it's
now also possible to properly use Sway on non-NixOS systems out of the box.
The new submodule for the wrapperFeatures makes it easy to extend the
functionality which should become useful in the future.
This also introduces a GTK wrapper feature to fix issues with icon/GTK themes,
e.g. when running waybar or wofi. This should also work for #67704. If not, we
might have to add some additional dependencies/arguments for this case.
When using a modified systemd-package (e.g. to test a patch), it's
recommended to use the `systemd.package`-option to avoid rebuilding all packages
that somehow depend on systemd.
With this change, the modified package is also used by `systemd-nspawn@`
units.
This commit changes the console colors implementation
to use the kernel parameters instead of relying on terminal
escape sequences. This means the palette is applied by the
kernel itself with no custom code running in the initrd
and works for all virtual terminals (not only tty0).
This commit moves all the virtual console related options
to a dedicated config/console.nix NixOS module.
Currently most of these are defined in config/i18n.nix
with a "console" prefix like `i18n.consoleFont`,
`i18n.consoleColors` or under `boot` and are implemented
in tasks/kbd.nix.
Since they have little to do with actual internationalisation
and are (informally) in an attrset already, it makes sense to
move them to a specific module.
In 5532065d06, acme was changed to be
RemainAfterExit=true, but `postRun` commands are implemented as
`ExecStopPost`. Systemd now considers the service to be still running
after simp_le is finished, so won't run these commands (e.g. to reload
certificates in a webserver). Change `postRun` to use `ExecStartPost` to
ensure the commands are run in a timely manner.