nixpkgs/nixos/modules/services/misc/ssm-agent.nix
2020-10-07 09:36:21 +10:00

67 lines
1.8 KiB
Nix

{ config, pkgs, lib, ... }:
with lib;
let
cfg = config.services.ssm-agent;
# The SSM agent doesn't pay attention to our /etc/os-release yet, and the lsb-release tool
# in nixpkgs doesn't seem to work properly on NixOS, so let's just fake the two fields SSM
# looks for. See https://github.com/aws/amazon-ssm-agent/issues/38 for upstream fix.
fake-lsb-release = pkgs.writeScriptBin "lsb_release" ''
#!${pkgs.runtimeShell}
case "$1" in
-i) echo "nixos";;
-r) echo "${config.system.nixos.version}";;
esac
'';
in {
options.services.ssm-agent = {
enable = mkEnableOption "AWS SSM agent";
package = mkOption {
type = types.path;
description = "The SSM agent package to use";
default = pkgs.ssm-agent;
defaultText = "pkgs.ssm-agent";
};
};
config = mkIf cfg.enable {
systemd.services.ssm-agent = {
inherit (cfg.package.meta) description;
after = [ "network.target" ];
wantedBy = [ "multi-user.target" ];
path = [ fake-lsb-release pkgs.coreutils ];
serviceConfig = {
ExecStart = "${cfg.package}/bin/amazon-ssm-agent";
KillMode = "process";
Restart = "on-failure";
RestartSec = "15min";
};
};
# Add user that Session Manager needs, and give it sudo.
# This is consistent with Amazon Linux 2 images.
security.sudo.extraRules = [
{
users = [ "ssm-user" ];
commands = [
{
command = "ALL";
options = [ "NOPASSWD" ];
}
];
}
];
# On Amazon Linux 2 images, the ssm-user user is pretty much a
# normal user with its own group. We do the same.
users.groups.ssm-user = {};
users.users.ssm-user = {
isNormalUser = true;
group = "ssm-user";
};
};
}