The original idea behind this change (described in ticket #11064) was to
improve the assertions to avoid that users of the X server accidentally
forget to configure a DM or WM.
However this caused several issues with setups that require X, but no DM
or WM. The keymap testcases became instable as well as now disabling DMs
needs to be done explicitly.
(see https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/31268#issuecomment-347080036)
In the end the idea behind the change and #11064 was obviously a
mistake, so reverting it completely for now should be fine.
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.
This service will never run automatically, but it encapsulates the
necessary logic and configuration to run a restore of the latest
archive, and allows to hook more specific logic, such as loading
a database dump, via `postStart`.
A new option `explicitSymlinks` will set `-H` when creating an archive.
This option makes tarsnap follow any symlinks specified explicitly on
the commandline, but not any found inside the file tree.
A new option `followSymlinks` will set `-L` when creating an archive.
This option makes tarsnap follow any symlinks found anywhere in the file
tree instead of storing them as-is.
X libraries in LD_LIBRARY_PATH seem to not be needed anymore.
I've tracked this addition as far as I could
(02cef04c81) and they seem to be added for unfree
NVIDIA and ATI drivers but at least for NVIDIA they are not needed anymore. We
can add them with patchelf instead if it turns out to be the case with ATI.
Uses the HTTPS url for cases where the existing URL has a permanent
redirect. For each domain, at least one fixed derivation URL was
downloaded to test the domain is properly serving downloads.
Also fixes jbake source URL, which was broken.
Currently broken on NixOS due to hardcoded modprobe binary path (see
bug #30756 from Oct 2017), no activity on a proposed fix for months.
As the protocol is terribly broken anyways, let's better remove it
completely, and not talk about anymore ;-)
Closes#30756.
- prometheus exporters are now configured with
`services.prometheus.exporters.<name>`
- the exporters are now defined by attribute sets
from which the options for each exporter are generated
- most of the exporter definitions are used unchanged,
except for some changes that should't have any impact
on the functionality.
The working directory needs the x flag, otherwise executors (e.g. sparks executor) are unable to cd into their sandbox and create e.g. temporary files.
In AdRoll/hologram#62 support was added to hologram to configure
LDAP-based authorization of which roles a user was allowed to get
credentials for. This adds the ability to configure that.
Additionally, AdRoll/hologram/#94 added support to customize the LDAP
group query, so this also feeds that configuration through.
fixes#37393
Using gitea over ssh had two isses:
1. No shell was set for the user
2. Gitea tried to write logs to
/nix/store/x83q12kyd9gw1pay036dxz2dq0apf17h-gitea-1.3.2-bin/log when
serving the ssh usage.
Commit 1f2b938 introduced a module for evilwm as a window-manager, but
did not actually add this module to window-manager's default.nix which
renders it useless.
Resolved the following conflicts (by carefully applying patches from the both
branches since the fork point):
pkgs/development/libraries/epoxy/default.nix
pkgs/development/libraries/gtk+/3.x.nix
pkgs/development/python-modules/asgiref/default.nix
pkgs/development/python-modules/daphne/default.nix
pkgs/os-specific/linux/systemd/default.nix
Pass the -L flag to curl to make it follow redirects. This fixes an
issue I found when setting up reverse proxy for Jenkins. Without this
fix, the returned HTTP code was stuck at 302, making postStart fail the
service (it expects 200 or 403).
All 5 daemon types can be enabled and configured through the module and the module both creates the ceph.conf required but also creates and enables specific services for each daemon, based on the systemd service files that upstream provides.
I determined which options got changed by executing the following
commands in the strongswan repository:
git diff -U20 5.6.0..5.6.1 src/swanctl/swanctl.opt
git diff -U20 5.6.0..5.6.1 conf
The strongswan-swanctl systemd service starts charon-systemd. This implements a IKE daemon
very similar to charon, but it's specifically designed for use with systemd. It uses the
systemd libraries for a native integration.
Instead of using starter and an ipsec.conf based configuration, the daemon is directly
managed by systemd and configured with the swanctl configuration backend.
See: https://wiki.strongswan.org/projects/strongswan/wiki/Charon-systemd
Note that the strongswan.conf and swantctl.conf configuration files are automatically
generated based on NixOS options under services.strongswan-swanctl.strongswan and
services.strongswan-swanctl.swanctl respectively.
Eelco Dolstra wrote:
Hm, this is not really the intended use of stateVersion. From the description:
Every once in a while, a new NixOS release may change
configuration defaults in a way incompatible with stateful
data. For instance, if the default version of PostgreSQL
changes, the new version will probably be unable to read your
existing databases. To prevent such breakage, you can set the
value of this option to the NixOS release with which you want
to be compatible. The effect is that NixOS will option
defaults corresponding to the specified release (such as using
an older version of PostgreSQL).
So this is only intended for options that have some corresponding on-disk state. AFAICT this is not the case for sound. In any case stateVersion is a necessary evil that only exists because we can't just upgrade Postgres databases or change SSH host keys. It's not necessary for things like whether sound is enabled. (If the user discovers that sound is suddenly disabled, they can just enable it.)
I had some vague recollection that we also had a configVersion option setting to control the defaults for non-state-related options, but I can't find it so maybe it was only discussed.
Use systemd to create the directory for UNIX socket. Also use localhost instead
of 127.0.0.1 as is done in default cupsd.conf so that IPv6 is enabled when
available.
Use systemd to create the directory for UNIX socket. Also use localhost instead
of 127.0.0.1 as is done in default cupsd.conf so that IPv6 is enabled when
available.
We want to wait for both stacks to be active before declaring that network is active.
So either both default gateways must be specified or only IPv4 if IPv6 is disabled to
avoid dhcpcd for network-online.target.
When the znapzend module was enabled for the first time with pure =
true; then the list of previous entries is empty, but xargs still tried
to execute a znapzendzetup delete command with no arguments, which made
it fail
network-online.target properly depends on the underlying network
management tool (e.g. NixOS static configuration scripts, dhcpcd,
NetworkManager, networkd) signalling that all interfaces are up and
appropriately configured (to whatever degree possible/required), whereas
network.target only indicates that the network management tool itself
has started.
After the systemd 237 upgrade, radvd wouldn't start anymore because the
PID file cannot be written. It seems that directories in /run has to be
explicitely defined as RuntimeDirectory now. The PID file isn't needed
due to systemd, though, so it was removed along with forking and loggia
via syslog.
This fixes the ipv6 NixOS test.
Alertmanager 0.13.0 doesn't support single dash long options, so '-config.file'
for example is parsed as '-c', which leads to the service not starting.
Previously the parameters were just dropped. Now they can be read
from within the handler script. An example to show this is added.
Makes use of the new writeShellScript function as suggested in:
issue #21557
resolves: #21557
Inspired from the dhcpd service implementation
Only 2 configurations options at the moment:
- enabled
- path to config directory (defaults to /etc/raddb)
Implementation was also inspired from ArchLinux
systemd file and corrected with @dotlambda and
@fpletz help.
If you have more than 1 User with hasedPassword Option set it generates
```
rm -f /var/lib/mosquitto/passwd
touch /var/lib/mosquitto/passwd
echo 'user1:$6$xxx' > /var/lib/mosquitto/passwd
echo 'user2:$6$xxx' > /var/lib/mosquitto/passwd
```
Which ends up in only having 1 user.
l2tp saves its secrets into /etc/ipsec.d but strongswan would not read
them. l2tp checks for /etc/ipsec.secrets includes /etc/ipsec.d and if
not tries to write into it.
Solution:
Have the strongswan module create /etc/ipsec.d and /etc/ipsec.secrets
when networkmanager_l2tp is installed.
Include /etc/ipsec.secrets in
/nix/store/hash-strongswan/etc/ipsec.secrets so that it can find l2tp
secrets.
Also when the ppp 'nopeerdns' option is used, the DNS resolver tries to
write into an alternate file /etc/ppp/resolv.conf. This fails when
/etc/ppp does not exist so the module creates it by default.