If folders and devices are not configured explicitly, do not wipe the
changes done via the web GUI. Currently the list of devices or folders
will be reset unless overrideFolders/overrideDevices is disabled.
Make the dynamic-dns refresh systemd service (controlled via the
preexisting option dynamicEndpointRefreshSecond) robust to e.g. dns
failures that happen on intermittent network connections.
Background:
When dns resolution fails with a 'permanent' error ("Name or service not
known" instead of "Temporary failure in name resolution"), wireguard
won't retry despite WG_ENDPOINT_RESOLUTION_RETRIES=infinity.
-> This change should improve reliability/connectivity.
somewhat related thread: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/63869
This will add `passthru.schema_version` to be used as default value for
the adguardhome module.
It will also update the `update.sh` to keep the `schema_version` in sync
with the version by inspecting the sourcecode.
This might break existing configs, if they use deprecated values that don't
appear in newer schema_versions and schema_version wasn't set explicitly.
Explicit declarations of schema_version always have higher priority.
This also removes the `host` and `config` settings in favour of using the
appropriate `settings`.
Fixes#173938
Co-authored-by: Sandro <sandro.jaeckel@gmail.com>
*Flags implies a list
slightly relevant:
> stdenv: start deprecating non-list configureFlags https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/173172
the makeInstalledTests function in `nixos/tests/installed-tests/default.nix` isn't available outside of nixpkgs so
it's not a breaking change
The original implementation had a few issues:
* The secret was briefly leaked since it is part of the cmdline for
`sed(1)` and on Linux `cmdline` is world-readable.
* If the secret would contain either a `,` or a `"` it would mess with
the `sed(1)` expression itself unless you apply messy escape hacks.
To circumvent all of that, I decided to use `replace-secret` which
allows you to replace a string inside a file (in this case
`#static-auth-secret#`) with the contents of a file, i.e.
`cfg.static-auth-secret-file` without any of these issues.
Some networks can only transfer packets with a lower than normal maximum
transfer unit size. In these cases, it is necessary to set a MTU that
works for the given upstream network.
Wireguard can tag its packets with a firewall mark. This can be used for
firewalls or policy routing. This is very useful in some setups where
all traffic should go through a wireguard interface. The wireguard
packets cannot go through the wireguard interface and must be routed
differently, which can be done via the Firewall Mark.
The nixos option `config.networking.wireguard.interface.<name>.fwMark`
is of type `types.str` and not `types.int` to allow for specifying the
mark as a hexadecimal value.
most of these are hidden because they're either part of a submodule that
doesn't have its type rendered (eg because the submodule type is used in
an either type) or because they are explicitly hidden. some of them are
merely hidden from nix-doc-munge by how their option is put together.
conversions were done using https://github.com/pennae/nix-doc-munge
using (probably) rev f34e145 running
nix-doc-munge nixos/**/*.nix
nix-doc-munge --import nixos/**/*.nix
the tool ensures that only changes that could affect the generated
manual *but don't* are committed, other changes require manual review
and are discarded.
there are sufficiently few variable list around, and they are
sufficiently simple, that it doesn't seem helpful to add another
markdown extension for them. rendering differences are small, except in
the tor module: admonitions inside other blocks cannot be made to work
well with mistune (and likely most other markdown processors), so those
had to be shuffled a bit. we also lose paragraph breaks in the list
items due to how we have to render from markdown to docbook, but once we
remove docbook from the pipeline those paragraph breaks will be restored.
mostly no rendering changes. some lists (like simplelist) don't have an
exact translation to markdown, so we use a comma-separated list of
literals instead.
this mostly means marking options that use markdown already
appropriately and making a few adjustments so they still render
correctly. notable for nftables we have to transform the md links
because the manpage would not render them correctly otherwise.
most of the screen tags used in option docs are actually listings of
some sort. nsd had a notable exception where its screen usage was pretty
much a raw markdown block that made most sense to convert into docbook lists.
Syncthing config XML uses `fsPath` setting for specifying the path to the versioning folder. This commit adds `services.syncthing.folders.<name>.versioning.fsPath` option to enable this functionality declaratively. Previously, `versioning.params.versionsPath` was used, which doesn't work.
using regular strings works well for docbook because docbook is not as
whitespace-sensitive as markdown. markdown would render all of these as
code blocks when given the chance.
a lot of markdown syntax has already snuck into option docs, many of it
predating the intent to migrate to markdown. we don't convert all of it
here, just that which is accompanied by docbook tags as well. the rest
can be converted by simply adding the mdDoc marker.
this renders the same in the manpage and a little more clearly in the
html manual. in the manpage there continues to be no distinction from
regular text, the html manual gets code-type markup (which was probably
the intention for most of these uses anyway).