This option allows users to specify a local UNIX control socket to
"remote control" the daemon. System users, that should be permitted to
access the daemon, must be in the `unbound` group in order to access the
socket. When a socket path is configured we are also creating the
required group.
Currently this only supports the UNIX socket mode while unbound actually
supports more advanced types. Users are still able to configure more
complex scenarios via the `extraConfig` attribute.
When this option is set to `null` (the default) it doesn't affect the
system configuration at all. The unbound defaults for control sockets
apply and no additional groups are created.
Previously we just applied a very minimal set of restrictions and
trusted unbound to properly drop root privs and capabilities.
With this change I am (for the most part) just using the upstream
example unit file for unbound. The main difference is that we start
unbound was `unbound` user with the required capabilities instead of
letting unbound do the chroot & uid/gid changes.
The upstream unit configuration this is based on is a lot stricter with
all kinds of permissions then our previous variant. It also came with
the default of having the `Type` set to `notify`, therefore we are also
using the `unbound-with-systemd` package here. Unbound will start up,
read the configuration files and start listening on the configured ports
before systemd will declare the unit "running". This will likely help
with startup order and the occasional race condition during system
activation where the DNS service is started but not yet ready to answer
queries.
Aditionally to the much stricter runtime environmet I removed the
`/dev/urandom` mount lines we previously had in the code (that would
randomly fail during `stop`-phase).
The `preStart` script is now only required if we enabled the trust
anchor updates (which are still enabled by default).
Another beneefit of the refactoring is that we can now issue reloads via
either `pkill -HUP unbound` or `systemctl reload unbound` to reload the
running configuration without taking the daemon offline. A prerequisite
of this was that unbound configuration is available on a well known path
on the file system. I went for /etc/unbound/unbound.conf as that is the
default in the CLI tooling which in turn enables us to use
`unbound-control` without passing a custom configuration location.
The test relied on moving `initrd` secrets from the store into the
`initrd` which was fine here as it's only an integration test and not a
production environment.
However, this broke in 20.09 when support for this was dropped[1]. To make
sure that the snakeoil key used as hostkey for `sshd` here actually gets
copied into the VM, I added a small script for this that takes care of
this process while building the initial ramdisk.
[1] d930466b77
This test allows to ensure the systemd-journal-gatewayd service is
responding correcly when the NixOS option `enableHttpGateway` is set.
The test has not been added into the main systemd test because a
graphical stack is not required (and rebuilding the graphical stack on
systemd change is huge).
Upstream has apparently changed the configuration format and is now
throwing an error when the `encrypt_sse` option is set. According to the
current version of the documentation encryption moved to the
`sse_config` option that (is optional and) offers all the features we do
not use or care about for this test.
For the same reason Alertmanager supports environmentFile to pass
secrets along, it is useful to support the same for Prometheus'
configuration to store bearer tokens outside the Nix store.
These were broken since 2016:
f0367da7d1
since StartLimitIntervalSec got moved into [Unit] from [Service].
StartLimitBurst has also been moved accordingly, so let's fix that one
too.
NixOS systems have been producing logs such as:
/nix/store/wf98r55aszi1bkmln1lvdbp7znsfr70i-unit-caddy.service/caddy.service:31:
Unknown key name 'StartLimitIntervalSec' in section 'Service', ignoring.
I have also removed some unnecessary duplication in units disabling
rate limiting since setting either interval or burst to zero disables it
(ad16158c10/src/basic/ratelimit.c (L16))
* nixos/postgresql: fix inaccurate docs for authentication
We actually use peer authentication, then md5 based authentication.
trust is not used.
* Use a link for mkForce docs
Co-authored-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Co-authored-by: lf- <lf-@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Use of Tailscale requires using the `tailscale` CLI to talk to the
daemon. If the CLI isn't in systemPackages, the resulting user experience
is confusing as the Tailscale daemon does nothing.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <dave@natulte.net>
Currently lxqt is a desktop environment that's compiled against qt514.
To avoid possible issues (#101369), we (hopefully) use the same qt
version as the desktop environment at hand. LXQT should move to qt515,
and for the long term the correct qt version should be inherited by the
sddm module.
When the stage-1 logs get imported in to the journal, they all get
loaded with the same timestamp. This makes it difficult to identify
what might be taking a long time in early boot.
The hydra tarball step would fail due to the nodes attribute not being
properly inherited. Since we can't execute all the tests and release
steps locally anymore (thanks to the JSONification and faster hydra
eval) these errors will probably keep in appearing.
This is hopefully the last of those introduced by me test runner
refactoring.
Error was seen on hydra (https://hydra.nixos.org/build/129282411):
> unpacking sources
> unpacking source archive /nix/store/bp95x52h6nv3j8apxrryyj2rviw682k1-source
> source root is source
> patching sources
> autoconfPhase
> No bootstrap, bootstrap.sh, configure.in or configure.ac. Assuming this is not an GNU Autotools package.
> configuring
> release name is nixpkgs-21.03pre249116.1088f059401
> git-revision is 1088f05940
> building
> no Makefile, doing nothing
> running tests
> warning: you did not specify '--add-root'; the result might be removed by the garbage collector
> warning: you did not specify '--add-root'; the result might be removed by the garbage collector
> checking Nixpkgs on i686-linux
> checking Nixpkgs on x86_64-linux
> checking Nixpkgs on x86_64-darwin
> checking eval-release.nix
> trace: `mkStrict' is obsolete; use `mkOverride 0' instead.
> trace: `lib.nixpkgsVersion` is deprecated, use `lib.version` instead!
> trace: warning: lib.readPathsFromFile is deprecated, use a list instead
> trace: Warning: `showVal` is deprecated and will be removed in the next release, please use `traceSeqN`
> trace: lib.zip is deprecated, use lib.zipAttrsWith instead
> checking find-tarballs.nix
> trace: `mkStrict' is obsolete; use `mkOverride 0' instead.
> trace: `lib.nixpkgsVersion` is deprecated, use `lib.version` instead!
> trace: warning: lib.readPathsFromFile is deprecated, use a list instead
> trace: Warning: `showVal` is deprecated and will be removed in the next release, please use `traceSeqN`
> trace: lib.zip is deprecated, use lib.zipAttrsWith instead
> error: while evaluating anonymous function at /build/source/maintainers/scripts/find-tarballs.nix:6:1, called from undefined position:
> while evaluating 'operator' at /build/source/maintainers/scripts/find-tarballs.nix:27:16, called from undefined position:
> while evaluating 'immediateDependenciesOf' at /build/source/maintainers/scripts/find-tarballs.nix:39:29, called from /build/source/maintainers/scripts/find-tarballs.nix:27:44:
> while evaluating anonymous function at /build/source/lib/attrsets.nix:234:10, called from undefined position:
> while evaluating anonymous function at /build/source/maintainers/scripts/find-tarballs.nix:40:37, called from /build/source/lib/attrsets.nix:234:16:
> while evaluating 'derivationsIn' at /build/source/maintainers/scripts/find-tarballs.nix:42:19, called from /build/source/maintainers/scripts/find-tarballs.nix:40:40:
> while evaluating 'canEval' at /build/source/maintainers/scripts/find-tarballs.nix:48:13, called from /build/source/maintainers/scripts/find-tarballs.nix:43:9:
> while evaluating the attribute 'nodes' at /build/source/nixos/lib/testing-python.nix:195:23:
> attribute 'nodes' missing, at /build/source/nixos/lib/testing-python.nix:193:16
> build time elapsed: 0m0.122s 0m0.043s 17m51.526s 0m56.668s
> builder for '/nix/store/96rk3c74vrk6m3snm7n6jhis3j640pn4-nixpkgs-tarball-21.03pre249116.1088f059401.drv' failed with exit code 1
Fix an error in the validation code when the public key is in a
nonstandard location. The check command fails and the key is
incorrectly assumed to be expiring.
When using the Modern config from the Mozilla SSL config generator,
the `ssl_ciphers` parameter does not need to be set
as only TLSv1.3 is permitted and all of its ciphers are reasonable.
Treat it the same as IPv4 (I'm tempted to disable IPv4 by default);
this is the only option I still need to set manually to enjoy IPv6-only
networks including printer discovery!
This reverts commit aab534b894 & uses the
driverInteractive attribute for the test driver instead.
This has the same effect but removes the extra module in the
nixos-build-vms code.
In 5500dc8 we introduced the --keep-vm-state flag and defaulted to that
flag not being set. This lead to the `runInMachine` tests not longer
working and that going unnoticed for quite some time now.
Previously you would be able to override only the QEMU package to be
used in the test runner. Frankly that doesn't help a lot if you are
trying to get a graphical session. The graphical session requires the
option in the NixOS module system to bet set to the correct QEMU
package.
In this commit I moved most of the test node configuration and
transformations into the `mkDriver` function (previously called
`driver`). The motivation was to be able to create a `driver` instance
with a given QEMU package that will be used consistently througout the
test expression.
According to Python documentation [0], `bufsize=1` is only meaningful in
text mode. As we don't pass in an argument called `universal_newlines`,
`encoding`, `errors` or `text` the file objects aren't opened in text
mode, which means the argument is ignored with a warning in Python 3.8.
line buffering (buffering=1) isn't supported in binary mode,
the default buffer size will be used
This commit removes this warning that appared when using
interactive test driver built with `-A driver`. This is done by
removing `bufsize=1` from Popen calls.
The default parameter when unspecified for `bufsize` is `-1` which
according to the documentation will be interpreted as
`io.DEFAULT_BUFFER_SIZE`. As mentioned by a warning, Python already
uses default buffer size when providing `buffering=1` parameter for
file objects not opened in text mode.
[0]: https://docs.python.org/3/library/subprocess.html#subprocess.Popen
This fixes an eval error that occurred on hydra with the small channel
and the `nixos.tests.boot.biosCdrom.x86_64-linux` attribute:
> $ nix-instantiate nixos/release-small.nix -A nixos.tests.boot.biosCdrom.x86_64-linux
> warning: unknown setting 'experimental-features'
> error: The option `virtualisation.qemu' does not exist. Definition values:
> - In `/home/andi/dev/nixos/nixpkgs/nixos/modules/testing/test-instrumentation.nix':
> {
> consoles = [ ];
> package = {
> _type = "override";
> content = <derivation /nix/store/q72h2cdcb9zjgiay5gdgzwddjkbjr7xq-qemu-host-cpu-only-for-vm-tests-5.1.0.drv>;
> ...
> (use '--show-trace' to show detailed location information)
In bc2188b we changed test test-instrumentation to also set the QEMU
package that is being used. That change unfortunately caused us to
always assing values to the virtualisation.qemu.package option even when
the option is not defined. The original code was explicitly testing for
the consoles case but the then newly extended version did not adjust the
check as the intention was probably not clear.
With this commit we are always ensuring the entire virtualisation.qemu
section exists and can thus drop the individual tests for each of the
sections since the QEMU module always defines both the package and the
consoles option when it's root is defined..
The test now check the following things:
- Configuring a MySQL server to hold the records
- Loading the PowerDNS schema from file
- Adding records through pdnsutil
In https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/100119 pantheon's greeter
has g-s-d running which allows brightness controls via pkexec.
This is changed in newer versions of g-s-d (pantheon uses a fork currently),
but whenever brightness is changed with a shell of `shadow` we get
```
Oct 10 23:51:44 kirXps pkexec[18722]: lightdm: Executing command [USER=root] [TTY=unknown] [CWD=/var/lib/lightdm] [COMMAND=/run/current-system/sw/bin/elementary-settings-daemon/gsd-backlight-helper /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:02.0/drm/card0/card0-eDP-1/intel_backlight 65587]
```
I'm not sure this should be strictly needed, so we should try to
revert later on when pantheon's g-s-d is updated.
This adds basically an indirection to systemPackages
to automatically install an interface for flatpak for their respective
environments. e.g if I enable pantheon and flatpak you'll get appcenter,
and on gnome you'll see gnome-software.
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/99648#issuecomment-706691174
Nginx fails to start, because it can't read the certificate file. This
happens because PrivateTmp is set for the service, which makes the
system wide /tmp inaccessible.
When we redid the default apps we didn't add gnome-boxes for
rdp/vnc. (plus it doesn't really work well in nixos). With gnome-connections
we can now have this functionality, as file sharing is a default function
in g-c-c Sharing.
When I test a change e.g. in the module system manually, I usually use
`nixos-build-vms(8)` which also gives me a QEMU window where I can play
around in the freshly built VM.
It seems as this has changed recently when the default package for
non-interactive VM tests using the same framework was switched to
`pkgs.qemu_test` to reduce the closure size. While this is a reasonable
decision for our CI tests, I think that you really want a QEMU window of
the VM by default when using `nixos-build-vms(8)`.
[1] bc2188b083
Instead of putting a README in the directory where the manual is
written, put the information from it straight in the docs themselves.
It's a bit untrivial to guess the manual is located exactly there for
contributers.
This should NOT be backported to 20.09!
When 21.03 is released, the DB changes are about a year old and
operators had two release cycles for the upgrade. At this point it
should be fair to remove the compat layer to reduce the complexity of
the module itself.
The `curve25519-sha256` key exchange method is defined in RFC 8731 that
is identical to curve25519-sha256@libssh.org. OpenSSH supports the
method since version 7.4, released on 2016-12-19. It is literally a
violation of the "both in Secure Secure Shell and Mozilla guidelines"
rule, but it provides essentially the same but a future-proof default.
Also, links to the Mozilla OpenSSH guidelines are updated to refer to
the current place.
Signed-off-by: Masanori Ogino <167209+omasanori@users.noreply.github.com>
In commit a61ca0373b (#100267), the avahi
test expression got an additional attribute, but instead of wrapping the
function, the attributes were introduced by nesting the function one
level deeper.
To illustrate this:
Before: attrs: <testdrv>
After: newattrs: attrs: <testdrv>
So when instantiating tests.avahi.x86_64-linux from nixos/release.nix we
get "value is a function while a set was expected" instead of the
derivation.
I simply re-passed the attributes to make-test-python.nix, since the
function already allows (via "...") arbitrary attributes to be passed.
The reason why I'm pushing this directly to master is because evaluation
for the test is already broken and the worst that could happen here is
that things are *still* broken.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@nix.build>
Cc: @flokli, @doronbehar
For a lot of the work the non-interactive drivers are enough and it is
probably a good idea to keep it accessible for debugging without
touching the Nix expression.
Since we previously stripped down the features of `qemu_test` some of
the features users are used to while running tests through the (impure)
driver didn't work anymore. Most notably we lost support for graphical
output and audio. With this change the `driver` attribute uses are more
feature complete version of QEmu compared to the one used in the pure
Nix builds.
This gives us the best of both worlds. Users are able to see the
graphical windows of VMs while CI and regular nix builds do not have to
download all the (unnecessary) dependencies.