This changes
* the plausible HTTP web server
to be listening on localhost only, explicitly.
This makes Plausible have an explicit safe default configuration,
like all other networked services in NixOS.
For background discussion, see: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/130244
As per my upstream Plausible contribution
(https://github.com/plausible/analytics/pull/1190)
Plausible >= 1.5 also defaults to listening to localhost only;
nevertheless, this default should be stated explicitly in nixpkgs
for easier review and independence from upstream changes, and
a NixOS user must be able to configure the
`listenAddress`, as there are valid use cases for that.
Also, disable
* the Erlang Beam VM inter-node RPC port
* the Erlang EPMD port
because Plausible does not use them (see added comment).
This is done by setting `RELEASE_DISTRIBUTION=none`.
Thus, this commit also removes the NixOS setting `releaseCookiePath`,
because it now has no effect.
This fixes the case where users enable harmonia but also have allowed-users set.
Having extra-allowed-users is a no-op when nix.settings.allowed-users is set to "*" (the default)
Docker CE 20.10 seems to stop receiving security updates and bug fixes
after December 10, 2023[1].
1. https://github.com/moby/moby/discussions/45104
There is public commitment for longer maintenance and then it seems
risky to default to it during 23.11 life-cycle.
Signed-off-by: Otavio Salvador <otavio@ossystems.com.br>
In #256226, `backdoor.service` was changed to be part of
`sysinit.target` instead of having default dependencies. This broke
several tests that relied on `backdoor.service` starting after default
targets. For example, `systemd-boot.update` expects `/boot` to be
mounted as soon as the backdoor is running.
These tests really ought to be declaring their dependencies properly
with things like `machine.wait_for_unit("local-fs.target")`, because
it's useful for the backdoor to start as early as possible. But for
now, let's just order it the way it was before in stage 2, and use the
earlier ordering in the new stage 1 context.
This fixes the case where users enable nix-serve but also have allowed-users set.
Having extra-allowed-users is a no-op when nix.settings.allowed-users is set to "*" (the default)
In my earlier commit
manual: Don't suggest exposing VM port to local network.
I made a side change titled
Use `127.0.0.1` also on the VM side, otherwise connections to
services that, in the VM, bind to `127.0.0.1` only
(doing the safe approach) do not work.
Unfortunately, that was wrong:
QEMU inside the VM always communicates via the virtualised
Ethernet interface, not via the VM's loopback interface.
So trying to connect to `127.0.0.1` on the VM's side cannot work.
Newer version of the gitsrht-api service call setrlimit() on startup,
thus allow it in the `SystemCallFilter` definition for the service.
Signed-off-by: Christoph Heiss <christoph@c8h4.io>
I changed my nickname from Ninjatrappeur to Picnoir. My github id is
stable, it shouldn't break too much stuff.
I took advantage of this handle change to remove myself from the
hostapd maintainers: I don't use NixOS as a router anymore.
The setting
QEMU_NET_OPTS="hostfwd=tcp::2222-:22"
caused the VM's port 2222 to be advertised on the host as
`0.0.0.0:2222`, thus anybody in the local network of the host
could SSH into the VM.
Instead, port-forward to localhost only.
Use `127.0.0.1` also on the VM side, otherwise connections to
services that, in the VM, bind to `127.0.0.1` only
(doing the safe approach) do not work.
See e.g. https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/100192
for more info why localhost listening is the best default.
Allows passing custom component packages, that get installed into
home-assistant's state directory.
Python depedencies, that are propagated from the custom component
get passed into `extraPackages`, so they are available to
home-assistant at runtime.
This is implemented in a way, that allows coexistence with custom
components not managed through the NixOS module.
Was introduced in dde6a4f397
but it doesn't work on my machine:
fwupdmgr[439074]: Failed to connect to daemon: The connection is closed
Creating a persistent user does work however
While the word 'simply' is usually added to encourage readers, it often has the
opposite effect and may even appear condescending, especially when the reader
runs into trouble trying to apply the suggestions from the documentation. It is
almost always an improvement to simply drop the word from the sentence.
(there are more possible improvements like this, we can apply those in separate
PRs)