these changes were generated with nixq 0.0.2, by running
nixq ">> lib.mdDoc[remove] Argument[keep]" --batchmode nixos/**.nix
nixq ">> mdDoc[remove] Argument[keep]" --batchmode nixos/**.nix
nixq ">> Inherit >> mdDoc[remove]" --batchmode nixos/**.nix
two mentions of the mdDoc function remain in nixos/, both of which
are inside of comments.
Since lib.mdDoc is already defined as just id, this commit is a no-op as
far as Nix (and the built manual) is concerned.
Closes#169733
The issue is that Nextcloud fails to start up after a GC because the
symlink from `override.config.php` is stale.
I'm relatively certain that this is not a bug in the Nix GC - that
would've popped up somewhere else already in the past years - and one of
the reporters seems to confirm that: when they restarted
`nextcloud-setup.service` after the issue appeared, an
`override.config.php` pointing to a different hash was there.
This hints that on a deploy `nextcloud-setup` wasn't restarted properly
and thus replacing the symlink update was missed. This is relatively
hard to trigger due to the nature of the bug unfortunately (you usually
keep system generations for a few weeks and you'll need to change the
configuration - or stdenv - to get a different `override.config.php`),
so getting pointers from folks who are affected is rather complicated.
So I decided to work around this by using systemd-tmpfiles which a lot
of other modules already utilize for this use-case. Now,
`override.config.php` and the directory structure aren't created by
`nextcloud-setup`, but by `systemd-tmpfiles`.
With that, the structure is guaranteed to exist
* on boot, since tmpfiles are always created/applied then
* on config activation, since this is done before services are
(re)started which covers the case for new installations and existing
ones.
Also, the recursive `chgrp` was used as transition tool when we switched
from `nginx` as owning group to a dedicated `nextcloud` group[1][2], but
this was several releases ago, so I don't consider this relevant
anymore.
[1] fd9eb16b24
[2] ca916e8cb3
The Nextcloud admin guide says that output buffering must be turned off
or otherwise PHP will return memory-related errors [1]. As the default
value for this PHP setting is 4096 and thus enabled the Nextcloud setup
is thus misconfigured by default. This misconfiguration will be shown in
the "Security & setup warnings" dialog for the administrator.
Fix this misconfiguration by setting "output_buffering=0" by default.
[1]: https://docs.nextcloud.com/server/stable/admin_manual/configuration_files/big_file_upload_configuration.html#configuring-php
Closes#277206
The bug mentioned above was a symptom of the issue fixed here: when
opening the `forms` app which is installed via `extraApps` (or the
app store) the site wouldn't work because `.mjs` files had the wrong
Content-Type.
The actual problem got fixed already[1], however this config was not
used for stuff from `/nix-apps` & `/store-apps` which had their own
location section with only a `root ;` statement.
In fact, this setup isn't strictly supported by Nextcloud upstream[2],
so to fix this for good, I decided to follow the upstream suggestion for
app directories outside the server root, i.e. linking them back into the
store path.
This means that the module generates a new derivation now with
* `services.nextcloud.package` linked into it via `lndir`.
* under `nix-apps` is a symlink to the link farm containing all apps
from `services.nextcloud.extraApps`.
* under `store-apps` is a symlink to `/var/lib/nextcloud/store-apps`.
Since this is only used in the NixOS module that also configures this
location for imperatively installed apps, this seems an OK thing to
do.
Successfully tested the change on a productive Nextcloud 28.0.1 with
several apps installed via `extraApps` (`forms`, `cospend`, `maps`,
`user_saml` and a few more).
[1] 292c74c7a9
[2] https://docs.nextcloud.com/server/28/admin_manual/apps_management.html#using-custom-app-directories
* Always use PHP 8.2: at the time of writing, Nextcloud also suggests to
use 8.2 rather than 8.3 in the manual for v28.
One contributing factor is probably that all plugins need new releases
to declare PHP 8.3 support.
* Fix upgradeWarning for installing v27 now that v28 is out.
* Drop upgrade warning for v24. This one is EOL for quite a while
already, so right now everybody should've switched (or carefully
studied the release notes in case they were upgrading from <23.05) and
we can clean up the module a little bit.
v25 was dropped not so long ago, so if it's still referenced (because
somebody didn't declare `services.nextcloud.package` and has
`system.stateVersion = "22.11";`) it's appropriate to still give a
specialized error.
Closes#216989
First of all, a bit of context: in PostgreSQL, newly created users don't
have the CREATE privilege on the public schema of a database even with
`ALL PRIVILEGES` granted via `ensurePermissions` which is how most of
the DB users are currently set up "declaratively"[1]. This means e.g. a
freshly deployed Nextcloud service will break early because Nextcloud
itself cannot CREATE any tables in the public schema anymore.
The other issue here is that `ensurePermissions` is a mere hack. It's
effectively a mixture of SQL code (e.g. `DATABASE foo` is relying on how
a value is substituted in a query. You'd have to parse a subset of SQL
to actually know which object are permissions granted to for a user).
After analyzing the existing modules I realized that in every case with
a single exception[2] the UNIX system user is equal to the db user is
equal to the db name and I don't see a compelling reason why people
would change that in 99% of the cases. In fact, some modules would even
break if you'd change that because the declarations of the system user &
the db user are mixed up[3].
So I decided to go with something new which restricts the ways to use
`ensure*` options rather than expanding those[4]. Effectively this means
that
* The DB user _must_ be equal to the DB name.
* Permissions are granted via `ensureDBOwnerhip` for an attribute-set in
`ensureUsers`. That way, the user is actually the owner and can
perform `CREATE`.
* For such a postgres user, a database must be declared in
`ensureDatabases`.
For anything else, a custom state management should be implemented. This
can either be `initialScript`, doing it manual, outside of the module or
by implementing proper state management for postgresql[5], but the
current state of `ensure*` isn't even declarative, but a convergent tool
which is what Nix actually claims to _not_ do.
Regarding existing setups: there are effectively two options:
* Leave everything as-is (assuming that system user == db user == db
name): then the DB user will automatically become the DB owner and
everything else stays the same.
* Drop the `createDatabase = true;` declarations: nothing will change
because a removal of `ensure*` statements is ignored, so it doesn't
matter at all whether this option is kept after the first deploy (and
later on you'd usually restore from backups anyways).
The DB user isn't the owner of the DB then, but for an existing setup
this is irrelevant because CREATE on the public schema isn't revoked
from existing users (only not granted for new users).
[1] not really declarative though because removals of these statements
are simply ignored for instance: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/206467
[2] `services.invidious`: I removed the `ensure*` part temporarily
because it IMHO falls into the category "manage the state on your
own" (see the commit message). See also
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/265857
[3] e.g. roundcube had `"DATABASE ${cfg.database.username}" = "ALL PRIVILEGES";`
[4] As opposed to other changes that are considered a potential fix, but
also add more things like collation for DBs or passwords that are
_never_ touched again when changing those.
[5] As suggested in e.g. https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/206467
First of all, a few cleanups were made to make it more readable:
* Reordered the sections by their priority so what you're reading in Nix
is also what you get in the final nginx.conf.
* Unified media/asset locations
Most notably, this fixes the
Your web server is not properly set up to resolve "/ocm-provider/".
warning since 27.1.2 where `ocm-provider` was moved from a static
directory in the source tarball to a dynamic HTTP route[1].
Additionally, the following things were fixed:
* The 404 checks for build/tests/etc. are now guaranteed to be before
the `.php` location match and it's not implicitly relied upon Nix's
internal attribute sorting anymore.
* `.wasm` files are supported properly and a correct `Content-Type` is
set.
* For "legacy" routes (e.g. `ocs-provider`/`cron`/etc) a `rewrite` rule
inside the location for fastcgi is used as recommended by upstream[2].
This also makes it easier to understand the purpose of the location
itself (i.e. use fastcgi for PHP code).
[1] https://github.com/nextcloud/documentation/pull/11179
[2] https://docs.nextcloud.com/server/27/admin_manual/installation/nginx.html
This option only has an effect on the initial setup of Nextcloud and
changes later won't have any effect.
Same issue as with `adminpassFile` - it's only passed to the installer
command - but even worse because the username is frequently used as
unique ID in the database, so there's no trivial way to change it, even
imperatively.
Right now, the settings aren't additive which means that when I do
services.nextcloud.phpOptions."opcache.interned_strings_buffer = "23";
all other options are discarded because of how the module system works.
This isn't very nice in this case, though because wanting to override
a single option doesn't mean I want to discard the rest of the -
reasonable - defaults. Hence, the settings are showed as default in the
option's manual section, but are added with normal priority.
That means, to override _all_ options at once, an expression like
services.nextcloud.phpOptions = mkForce {
/* ... */
};
is needed. This is also way more intuitive IMHO because the `mkForce`
explicitly tells that everything will be modified.
Also, APCu enable and the memory & file-size limits are also written
into `services.nextcloud.phpOptions` rather than adding them
silently before passing all options to the PHP package. This has the
benefit that users will realize on evaluation time that they configured
options that would otherwise be set by the module on its own.
It's supposed to be `memcache.distributed`, not an associative PHP array
named `memcache` with a key `distributed`.
This was probably never caught because the initial `grep -q` check in
the test was invalid: `redis-cli` prints nothing if no keys can be found
when not writing to a tty apparently.
Upstream did so in https://github.com/nextcloud/server/pull/36689 and
Nextcloud now complains that
The "X-Robots-Tag" HTTP header is not set to "noindex, nofollow".
This is a potential security or privacy risk, as it is recommended
to adjust this setting accordingly.
This is not needed anymore because the version is EOL for almost a year
now and we don't even have the packages anymore, only the attributes for
compatibility for upgrades from older NixOS versions.