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Taskserver
Taskserver is the server component of Taskwarrior, a free and open source todo list application.
Upstream documentation: https://taskwarrior.org/docs/#taskd
Configuration
Taskserver does all of its authentication via TLS using client certificates, so you either need to roll your own CA or purchase a certificate from a known CA, which allows creation of client certificates. These certificates are usually advertised as "server certificates".
So in order to make it easier to handle your own CA, there is a helper tool
called {command}nixos-taskserver
which manages the custom CA along
with Taskserver organisations, users and groups.
While the client certificates in Taskserver only authenticate whether a user is allowed to connect, every user has its own UUID which identifies it as an entity.
With {command}nixos-taskserver
the client certificate is created
along with the UUID of the user, so it handles all of the credentials needed
in order to setup the Taskwarrior client to work with a Taskserver.
The nixos-taskserver tool
Because Taskserver by default only provides scripts to setup users
imperatively, the {command}nixos-taskserver
tool is used for
addition and deletion of organisations along with users and groups defined
by and as well for
imperative set up.
The tool is designed to not interfere if the command is used to manually set up some organisations, users or groups.
For example if you add a new organisation using {command}nixos-taskserver org add foo
, the organisation is not modified and deleted no
matter what you define in
{option}services.taskserver.organisations
, even if you're adding
the same organisation in that option.
The tool is modelled to imitate the official {command}taskd
command, documentation for each subcommand can be shown by using the
{option}--help
switch.
Declarative/automatic CA management
Everything is done according to what you specify in the module options, however in order to set up a Taskwarrior client for synchronisation with a Taskserver instance, you have to transfer the keys and certificates to the client machine.
This is done using {command}nixos-taskserver user export $orgname $username
which is printing a shell script fragment to stdout
which can either be used verbatim or adjusted to import the user on the
client machine.
For example, let's say you have the following configuration:
{
services.taskserver.enable = true;
services.taskserver.fqdn = "server";
services.taskserver.listenHost = "::";
services.taskserver.organisations.my-company.users = [ "alice" ];
}
This creates an organisation called my-company
with the
user alice
.
Now in order to import the alice
user to another machine
alicebox
, all we need to do is something like this:
$ ssh server nixos-taskserver user export my-company alice | sh
Of course, if no SSH daemon is available on the server you can also copy & paste it directly into a shell.
After this step the user should be set up and you can start synchronising
your tasks for the first time with {command}task sync init
on
alicebox
.
Subsequent synchronisation requests merely require the command {command}task sync
after that stage.
Manual CA management
If you set any options within
service.taskserver.pki.manual.*,
{command}nixos-taskserver
won't issue certificates, but you can
still use it for adding or removing user accounts.