Details on https://github.com/NixOS/nixops/issues/1063#issuecomment-453253666.
`partOf` makes that if `smokeping.service` is stopped, `thttpd.service` will
be stopped as well.
(But not that `thttpd` will be started when `smokeping` is started).
Once `thttpd.service` is stopped that way, `Restart = always` will not apply.
When the smokeping config options are changed, NixOS's `switch-configuration.pl`
will stop `smokeping` (whit shuts down thttpd due to `partOf`), and then restart
smokeping; but this does not start thttpd.
As a result, thttpd will be off after changing the config, which isn't desired.
This commit fixes it by removing the `partOf`, which makes `Restart` work
as expected.
This avoids a common problem:
Until now, port forwarding to multiple hosts running smokeping did not work;
they all show the data of the first smokeping instance.
That ws because the image URLs generated by smokeping are absolute
(`imgurl` setting).
Consequently, if you ran
ssh node-1 -L 8081:localhost:8081
ssh node-2 -L 8081:localhost:8082
ssh node-3 -L 8081:localhost:8083
and try to open http://localhost:8081, http://localhost:8082 and
http://localhost:8083, they all would show the images of node-1!
Using a relative `imgurl` fixes that.
As per smokeping docs on `imgurl`:
> Either an absolute URL to the `imgcache` directory or one relative to the
> directory where you keep the SmokePing cgi.
qemu_kvm is only built for one architecture, so it's smaller and takes
MUCH less time to build if it has to be built from source. And this
module doesn't support running a VM for one architecture from another
architecture, so the one architecture is all we'll need.
Some specialisations (such as those which affect various boot-time
attributes) cannot be switched to at runtime. This allows picking the
specialisation at boot time.
This adds a `wantedBy` clause to the user systemd service for
yubikey-agent, to ensure an enabled agent is started on boot. This
brings the behavior inline with existing documentation.
If the user has selected a graphical pinentry program, then we need to
wait for the graphical environment to exist before starting the
yubikey-agent. I've found that if we start the agent earlier it will
fail when we perform an ssh command later.
pathsInNixDB isn't a very accurate name when a Nix store image is
built (virtualisation.useNixStoreImage); rename it to additionalPaths,
which should be general enough to cover both cases.
Add the `useNixStoreImage` option, allowing a disk image with the
necessary contents from the Nix store to be built using
make-disk-image.nix. The image will be mounted at `/nix/store` and
acts as a drop-in replacement for the usual 9p mounting of the host's
Nix store.
This removes the performance penalty of 9p, drastically improving
execution speed of applications which do lots of reads from the Nix
store. The caveats are increased disk space usage and image build
time.
nixos-rebuild test causes pam_mount to prompt for a password when running with
an encrypted home:
building '/nix/store/p6bflh7n5zy2dql8l45mix9qnzq65hbk-nixos-system-mildred-18.09.git.98592c5da79M.drv'...
activating the configuration...
setting up /etc...
reenter password for pam_mount:
(mount.c:68): Messages from underlying mount program:
(mount.c:72): crypt_activate_by_passphrase: File exists
(pam_mount.c:522): mount of /dev/mapper/vg0-lv_home_peter failed
kbuildsycoca5 running...
This change makes pam_mount not prompt. It still tries to remount (and fails in
the process) but that message can be ignored.
Fixes: #44586
This is done as the s3CredentialsFile specifies the environmentFile
for the systemd service, which can be used for more than just s3.
Co-authored-by: Cole Helbling <cole.e.helbling@outlook.com>
This module was written by @puckipedia for nixcon-video-infra 2020.
Minor changes made by @cleeyv for compat with existing jibri package.
Co-authored-by: Puck Meerburg <puck@puck.moe>
This option enables a jibri service on the same host that is running
jitsi-meet. It was written, along with the jibri module, by @puckipedia
for nixcon-video-infra 2020.
Co-authored-by: Puck Meerburg <puck@puck.moe>
The version 20 of Nextcloud will be EOLed by the end of this month[1].
Since the recommended default (that didn't raise an eval-warning) on
21.05 was Nextcloud 21, this shouldn't affect too many people.
In order to ensure that nobody does a (not working) upgrade across
several major-versions of Nextcloud, I replaced the derivation of
`nextcloud20` with a `throw` that provides instructions how to proceed.
The only case that I consider "risky" is a setup upgraded from 21.05 (or
older) with a `system.stateVersion` <21.11 and with
`services.nextcloud.package` not explicitly declared in its config. To
avoid that, I also left the `else-if` for `stateVersion < 21.03` which
now sets `services.nextcloud.package` to `pkgs.nextcloud20` and thus
leads to an eval-error. This condition can be removed
as soon as 21.05 is EOL because then it's safe to assume that only
21.11. is used as stable release where no Nextcloud <=20 exists that can
lead to such an issue.
It can't be removed earlier because then every `system.stateVersion <
21.11` would lead to `nextcloud21` which is a problem if `nextcloud19`
is still used.
[1] https://docs.nextcloud.com/server/20/admin_manual/release_schedule.html
during the rewrite the checkPasswords=false feature of the old module
was lost. restore it, and with it systems that allow any client to use
any username.
borg is able to process stdin during backups when backing up the special path -,
which can be very useful for backing up things that can be streamed (eg database
dumps, zfs snapshots).
mosquitto needs a lot of attention concerning its config because it doesn't
parse it very well, often ignoring trailing parts of lines, duplicated config
keys, or just looking back way further in the file to associated config keys
with previously defined items than might be expected.
this replaces the mosquitto module completely. we now have a hierarchical config
that flattens out to the mosquitto format (hopefully) without introducing spooky
action at a distance.
/etc/crypttab can contain the _netdev option, which adds crypto devices
to the remote-cryptsetup.target.
remote-cryptsetup.target has a dependency on cryptsetup-pre.target. So
let's add both of them.
Currently, one needs to manually ssh in and invoke `systemctl start
systemd-cryptsetup@<name>.service` to unlock volumes.
After this change, systemd will properly add it to the target, and
assuming remote-cryptsetup.target is pulled in somewhere, you can simply
pass the passphrase by invoking `systemd-tty-ask-password-agent` after
ssh-ing in, without having to manually start these services.
Whether remote-cryptsetup.target should be added to multi-user.target
(as it is on other distros) is part of another discussion - right now
the following snippet will do:
```
systemd.targets.multi-user.wants = [ "remote-cryptsetup.target" ];
```
Makes service more customizeable and makes debuggingin easier through
the use of flags like `--log-debug` or `--dump-settings`.
Signed-off-by: Jakub Sokołowski <jakub@status.im>
The headless option broke with 7d8b303e3f
because the path /bin/vmware-user-suid-wrapper does not exist in the
headless variant of the open-vm-tools package.
Since the vmblock fuse mount and vmware-user-suid-wrapper seem to only
be used for shared folders and drag and drop, they should not exist in
the vmware-guest module if it is configured as headless.