The NixOS 21.03 release has been delayed to 21.05. See NixOS/rfcs#80.
There are two instances of 21.03 which have been left as is, since they
are in stateVersion comparisons. This will ensure that existing user
configurations which refer to 21.03 will continue to work.
For sa-update we care about two successful codes:
* 1 -> no updates available: exit successfully
* 0 -> updates have been installed: run sa-compile and pass
through its return code
sa-compile speeds up processing the rules by compiling them from Perl to
C. This needs to be run after every update and is saved in the local
state directory by Perl and SpamAssassin version.
Let systemd create SpamAssassin's state directory and populate it using the
regular updater service. Depend on the updater service on boot but do not
propagate failure to the main service.
spamd's commands to start and reload the service are still executed as
root but user/group are set to properly chown the state directory to the
target user. spamd drops privileges itself for its runner children but
preserves root on the main daemon (to listen and re-exec).
sa-update currently runs as part of the pre-start script of spamd. The
network is not guaranteed to be online at that point and even if we
were to depend on that, it makes the bootup brittle, as there is a
reliance on SpamAssassin's update server as a startup dependency on
boot.
Refactor the setup to move the pre-start script into its own unit.
This allows to perform the setup task only once. Continuous updates
are already done by sa-update.service triggered by sa-update.timer.
Only run sa-update in case /var/lib/spamassassin is empty.
While we are on it, let sa-update.service depend on the network being
online.
Now that smtp_tls_security_level is using mkDefault, and therefore can
be overridden, there's no need for an option for overriding it to a
specific value.
I run Postfix on my workstation as a smarthost, where it only ever
talks to my SMTP server. Because I know it'll only ever connect to
this server, and because I know this server supports TLS, I'd like to
set smtp_tls_security_level to "encrypt" so Postfix won't fall back to
an unencrypted connection.
b478e0043c removed every other instance of uwsgi.service and
httpd.service from Mailman before and requiredBy lists. This one
looks like it was just missed, since I can't see a reason to keep it
but remove the others.
Fixes: b478e0043c ("nixos/mailman: refactor")
Exim spawns a new queue runner every n minutes as configured by the
argument to -q; up to queue_run_max can be active at the same time.
Spawning a queue runner only every 30 mins means that a message that
failed delivery on the first attempt (e.g. due to greylisting) will only
be retried 30 minutes later.
A queue runner will immediately exit if the queue is empty, so it is
more a function on how quickly Exim will scale to mail load and how
quickly it will retry than something that is taxing on an otherwise
empty system.
Mailman can now work with MTAs other than Postfix. You'll have to configure
it yourself using the options in `services.mailman.settings.mta`.
This addition is reflected in the release notes for 21.03.
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))
`sslCACert` was used for trust store of client and server certificates. Since `smtpd_tls_ask_ccert` defaults to no the setup of `smtpd_tls_CApath` was removed.
>By default (see smtpd_tls_ask_ccert), client certificates are not requested, and smtpd_tls_CApath should remain empty.
see http://www.postfix.org/postconf.5.html#smtpd_tls_CAfile
- Add serve.enable option, which configures uwsgi and nginx to serve
the mailman-web application;
- Configure services to log to the journal, where possible. Mailman
Core does not provide any options for this, but will now log to
/var/log/mailman;
- Use a unified python environment for all components, with an
extraPackages option to allow use of postgres support and similar;
- Configure mailman's postfix module such that it can generate the
domain and lmtp maps;
- Fix formatting for option examples;
- Provide a mailman-web user to run the uwsgi service by default
- Refactor Hyperkitty's periodic jobs to reduce repetition in the
expressions;
- Remove service dependencies not related to functionality included in
the module, such as httpd -- these should be configured in user config
when used;
- Move static files root to /var/lib/mailman-web-static by default. This avoids
permission issues when a static file web server attempts to access
/var/lib/mailman which is private to mailman. The location can still
be changed by setting services.mailman.webSettings.STATIC_ROOT;
- Remove the webRoot option, which seems to have been included by
accident, being an unsuitable directory for serving via HTTP.
- Rename mailman-web.service to mailman-web-setup.service, since it
doesn't actually serve mailman-web. There is now a
mailman-uwsgi.service if serve.enable is set to true.
Specifying mailboxes as a list isn't a good approach since this makes it
impossible to override values. For backwards-compatibility, it's still
possible to declare a list of mailboxes, but a deprecation warning will
be shown.
The setgid is currently required for offline enqueuing, and
unfortunately smtpctl is currently not split from sendmail so there's
little running around it.
Rework withExtensions / buildEnv to handle currently enabled
extensions better and make them compatible with override. They now
accept a function with the named arguments enabled and all, where
enabled is a list of currently enabled extensions and all is the set
of all extensions. This gives us several nice properties:
- You always get the right version of the list of currently enabled
extensions
- Invocations chain
- It works well with overridden PHP packages - you always get the
correct versions of extensions
As a contrived example of what's possible, you can add ImageMagick,
then override the version and disable fpm, then disable cgi, and
lastly remove the zip extension like this:
{ pkgs ? (import <nixpkgs>) {} }:
with pkgs;
let
phpWithImagick = php74.withExtensions ({ all, enabled }: enabled ++ [ all.imagick ]);
phpWithImagickWithoutFpm743 = phpWithImagick.override {
version = "7.4.3";
sha256 = "wVF7pJV4+y3MZMc6Ptx21PxQfEp6xjmYFYTMfTtMbRQ=";
fpmSupport = false;
};
phpWithImagickWithoutFpmZip743 = phpWithImagickWithoutFpm743.withExtensions (
{ enabled, all }:
lib.filter (e: e != all.zip) enabled);
phpWithImagickWithoutFpmZipCgi743 = phpWithImagickWithoutFpmZip743.override {
cgiSupport = false;
};
in
phpWithImagickWithoutFpmZipCgi743
Prior to this fix, changes to certain settings would not be applied
automatically and users would have to know to manually restart the
affected service. A prime example of this is
`services.mailman.hyperkitty.baseUrl`, or various things that affect
`mailman3/settings.py`
Previously, some files were copied into the Nixpkgs tree, which meant
we wouldn't easily be able to update them, and was also just messy.
The reason it was done that way before was so that a few NixOS
options could be substituted in. Some problems with doing it this way
were that the _package_ changed depending on the values of the
settings, which is pretty strange, and also that it only allowed those
few settings to be set.
In the new model, mailman-web is a usable package without needing to
override, and I've implemented the NixOS options in a much more
flexible way. NixOS' mailman-web config file first reads the
mailman-web settings to use as defaults, but then it loads another
configuration file generated from the new services.mailman.webSettings
option, so _any_ mailman-web Django setting can be customised by the
user, rather than just the three that were supported before. I've
kept the old options, but there might not really be any good reason to
keep them.
We already had python3Packages.mailman, but that's only really usable
as a library. The only other option was to create a whole Python
environment, which was undesirable to install as a system-wide
package.
It's likely that a user might want to set multiple values for
relay_domains, transport_maps, and local_recipient_maps, and the order
is significant. This means that there's no good way to set these
across multiple NixOS modules, and they should probably all be set
together in the user's Postfix configuration.
So, rather than setting these in the Mailman module, just make the
Mailman module check that the values it needs to occur somewhere, and
advise the user on what to set if not.
This replaces all Mailman secrets with ones that are generated the
first time the service is run. This replaces the hyperkittyApiKey
option, which would lead to a secret in the world-readable store.
Even worse were the secrets hard-coded into mailman-web, which are not
just world-readable, but identical for all users!
services.mailman.hyperkittyApiKey has been removed, and so can no
longer be used to determine whether to enable Hyperkitty. In its
place, there is a new option, services.mailman.hyperkitty.enable. For
consistency, services.mailman.hyperkittyBaseUrl has been renamed to
services.mailman.hyperkitty.baseUrl.
Using a custom path in the Nix store meant that users of the module
couldn't add their own config files, which is a desirable feature. I
don't think avoiding /etc buys us anything.
Motivation:
if enableQuota is true, mail plugins cannot be enabled in extraConfig
because of the problem described here:
https://doc.dovecot.org/configuration_manual/config_file/config_file_syntax/#variable-expansion
doveconf: Warning: /etc/dovecot/dovecot.conf line 8: Global setting
mail_plugins won't change the setting inside an earlier filter at
/etc/dovecot/dovecot.conf line 5 (if this is intentional, avoid this
warning by moving the global setting before /etc/dovecot/dovecot.conf
line 5)
The php installer creates a random one, but we bypass it, so we have
to create one ourselves.
This should be backward compatible as encryption is used for session
cookies only: users at the time of the upgrade will be logged out but
nothing more.
259b7fa065/config/config.inc.php.sample (L73)
If the database is local, use postgres peer authentication.
Otherwise, use a password file.
Leave database initialisation to postgresql.ensure*.
Leave /var/lib/roundcube creation to systemd.
Run php upgrade script as unpriviledged user.
Supporting a path here is important because it allows e.g. fetching a
configuration from a URL. To do this and provide the configuration as
a string, IFD would be necessary. It's just written into a path
anyway.
A centralized list for these renames is not good because:
- It breaks disabledModules for modules that have a rename defined
- Adding/removing renames for a module means having to find them in the
central file
- Merge conflicts due to multiple people editing the central file
When mailman-web restarts, it removes the generated "static" directory. This
breaks a currently running httpd process, which needs a re-start, too, to
obtain a new handle for the newly generated path.
Any system uid will do, so we let the system allocate
one for us. The 'mailman' group is gone entirely since
we don't need it. Users who wish to run the 'mailman'
administration utility can do so via 'sudo':
$ sudo -u mailman mailman info
Also, simplify the syntax of our user.users entry to
rely on an attribute set rather than a list.
The `keys.target` is used to indicate whether all NixOps keys were
successfully uploaded on an unattended reboot. However this can cause
startup issues e.g. with NixOS containers (see #67265) and can block
boots even though this might not be needed (e.g. with a dovecot2
instance running that doesn't need any of the NixOps keys).
As described in the NixOps manual[1], dependencies to keys should be
defined like this now:
``` nix
{
systemd.services.myservice = {
after = [ "secret-key.service" ];
wants = [ "secret-key.service" ];
};
}
```
However I'd leave the issue open until it's discussed whether or not to
keep `keys.target` in `nixpkgs`.
[1] https://nixos.org/nixops/manual/#idm140737322342384
The new option services.postfix.localRecipients allows
configuring the postfix option 'local_recipient_maps'. When
set to a list of user names (or patterns), that map
effectively replaces the lookup in the system's user
database that's used by default to determine which local
users are valid.
This option is useful to explicitly set local users that are
allowed to receive e-mail from the outside world. For local
injection i.e. via the 'sendmail' command this option has no
effect.
When using a different database, the evaluation fails as
`config.services.postgresql.package` is only set if `services.postgresql` is enabled.
Also, the systemd service shouldn't have a relation to postgres if a
remote database is used.
With this option it's possible to specify a custom expression for
`roundcube`, i.e. a roundcube environment with third-party plugins as
shown in the testcase.
When reworking the rspamd workers I disallowed `proxy` as a type and
instead used `rspamd_proxy` which is the correct name for that worker
type. That change breaks peoples existing config and so I have made this
commit which allows `proxy` as a worker type again but makes it behave
as `rspamd_proxy` and prints a warning if you use it.
The `rmilter` module has options for configuring `postfix` to use it but
since that module is deprecated because rspamd now has a builtin worker
that supports the milter protocol this commit adds similar `postfix`
integration options directly to the `rspamd` module.
The lines stored in `extraConfig` and `worker.<name?>.extraConfig`
should take precedent over values from included files but in order to do
this in rspamd UCL they need to be stored in a file that then gets
included with a high priority. This commit uses the overrides option to
store the value of the two `extraConfig` options in `extra-config.inc`
and `worker-<name?>.inc` respectively.
When the workers option for rspamd was originally implemented it was
based on a flawed understanding of how workers are configured in rspamd.
This meant that while rspamd supports configuring multiple workers of
the same type, so that different controller workers could have different
passwords, the NixOS module did not support this because it would write
an invalid configuration file if you tried.
Specifically a configuration like the one below:
```
workers.controller = {};
workers.controller2 = {
type = "controller";
};
```
Would result in a rspamd configuration of:
```
worker {
type = "controller";
count = 1;
.include "$CONFDIR/worker-controller.inc"
}
worker "controller2" {
type = "controller";
count = 1;
}
```
While to get multiple controller workers it should instead be:
```
worker "controller" {
type = "controller";
count = 1;
.include "$CONFDIR/worker-controller.inc"
}
worker "controller" {
type = "controller";
count = 1;
}
```
When implementing #49620 I included an enable option for both the
locals and overrides options but the code writing the files didn't
actually look at enable and so would write the file regardless of its
value. I also set the type to loaOf which should have been attrsOf
since the code was not written to handle the options being lists.
This fixes both of those issues.
By default rspamd will look for multiple files in /etc/rspamd/local.d
and /etc/rspamd/override.d to be included in subsections of the merged
final config for rspamd. Most of the config snippets in the official
rspamd documentation are made to these files and so it makes sense for
NixOS to support them and this is what this commit does.
As part of rspamd 1.8.1 support was added for having custom Lua
rules stored in $LOCAL_CONFDIR/rspamd.local.lua which means that it is
now possible for NixOS to support such rules and so this commit also
adds support for this to the rspamd module.
Several service definitions used `mkEnableOption` with text starting
with "Whether to", which produced funny option descriptions like
"Whether to enable Whether to run the rspamd daemon..".
This commit corrects this, and adds short descriptions of services
to affected service definitions.
The socket activation I added to the rspamd module doesn't actually work
and can't be made to work without changes to rspamd.
See: #47421
See: rspamd/rspamd#2035
/run/rmilter is set by systemd, and have root:root ownership, which
prevent pid file to write.
This fix suggested to be promoted to 18.09 branch.
(Although rmilter itself is deprecated, and I plan to remove it, after
18.09 would be released)
This allows the definition of a custom derivation of Exim,
which can be used to enable custom features such as LDAP and PAM support.
The default behaviour remains unchanged (defaulting to pkgs.exim).
The pull request that added dhparams (#39507) was made at the time where
the dhparams module overhaul (#39526) wasn't done yet, so it's still
using the old mechanics of the module.
As stated in the release notes:
Module implementers should not set a specific bit size in order to let
users configure it by themselves if they want to have a different bit
size than the default (2048).
An example usage of this would be:
{ config, ... }:
{
security.dhparams.params.myservice = {};
environment.etc."myservice.conf".text = ''
dhparams = ${config.security.dhparams.params.myservice.path}
'';
}
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@nix.build>
Cc: @qknight, @abbradar, @hrdinka, @leenaars
The dovecot bump to 2.3.1 caused the dovecot service to fail to start
because it would try to chgrp sockets to dovecot whereas our default
dovecot group is called dovecot2.
`services.postfix.config` is now correctly merged with the default attrset
specified in the module. Some options that are lists in postfix also
have to be lists in nix to be merged correctly. Other default options are
now set with `mkDefault` so they can be overridden via the module system.
The current `remotes` option is a string option containing nullmailer remote
definitions. However, those definitions may contain secret credentials and
should therefore not be put world-readable in the nix store.
I added a `remotesFile` option, which allows to specify a path to the remotes
definition file instead. This way, the definitions can be kept outside of the
nix store with more secure file permissions.
Spamassassin expects its system-wide configuration at /etc/spamassassin, and
some user tools (like sa-learn) need to read those configuration files.
Therefore, we provide a symlink from /etc/spamassassin to the appropriate Nix
store path to make sure those tools work without the user having to pass an
elaborate --siteconfig path that, potentially, changes every time the system
updates.
Fixes https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/29414.
This option got introduced in 7904499542
and it didn't check whether mailUser and mailGroup are null, which they
are by default.
Now we're only creating the user if createMailUser is set in conjunction
with mailUser and the group if mailGroup is set as well.
I've added a NixOS VM test so that we can verify whether dovecot works
without any additional options set, so it serves as a regression test
for issue #29466 and other issues that might come up with future changes
to the Dovecot service.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Fixes: #29466
Cc: @qknight, @abbradar, @ixmatus, @siddharthist
I realize that advanced users like to configure services with Nix
attrsets, but I don't think we should remove the option to use the
(configuration) language provided by upstream.
* The module uses `stringSplit` but it should be `splitString`
* `rmilter` doesn't actually support binding to multiple sockets.
Therefore, bind to the last one specified if `socketActivation` is
`false`.
I also believe there is a bug in this module related to systemd
`ListenStream`. If `socketActivation` is true, Postfix gets
connection timeouts trying to connect to one of the `ListenStream`
inet addresses. I don't know enough about `ListenStream` passing
connections on to `fd:3` to understand what's going on.
These changes are in production (with `socketActivation = false`) via NixOps.
From Postfix documentation:
With this setting, the Postfix SMTP server will not reject mail with "User
unknown in local recipient table". Don't do this on systems that receive mail
directly from the Internet. With today's worms and viruses, Postfix will become
a backscatter source: it accepts mail for non-existent recipients and then
tries to return that mail as "undeliverable" to the often forged sender
address.
Make sure that the output of the sieve compiler produces files that
have a newer time stamp than the source sieve script. Otherwise you
get errors in the logs about Dovecot not being able to compile do to a
permission issue.