Use `networking.resolvconf.package` to allow DNS entries to be set using
the system-wide resolver implementation instead of hardcoding systemd or
openresolv.
Extend the tests by adding DNS entries and making one of the peers use
systemd-networkd (hence systemd-resolved).
Also add a few `networkd`-specific settings.
A git command was failing in the test with
error: unable to get random bytes for temporary file: Operation not permitted
error: unable to create temporary file: Operation not permitted
error: .Radicale.lock: failed to insert into database
error: unable to index file '.Radicale.lock'
verbose is a debugging setting one step noisier than debug and should only be turned on when debugging because it leaks quite some credentials and tokens in the journalctl.
we expose it under settings instead of at the listener toplevel because
mosquitto seems to pick the addresses it will listen on
nondeterministically from the set of addresses configured on the
interface being bound to. encouraging its use by putting it into the
toplevel options for a listener seems inadvisable.
Introduced in OpenSSH 9.0 it became the part of the default kexAlgorithm
selection, visibile in sshd_config(5).
It is also enabled by default in the OpenSSH client, as can be seen from
$ ssh -Q KexAlgorithms
Also clarifies that we use the referenced documents as the lower bound,
given that they haven't been updated for 5-7y.
Tailscale uses policy routing to enable certain traffic to bypass
routes that lead into the Tailscale mesh. NixOS's reverse path
filtering setup doesn't understand the policy routing at play,
and so incorrectly interprets some of this traffic as spoofed.
Since this only breaks some features of Tailscale, merely warn
users about it, rather than make it a hard error.
Updates tailscale/tailscale#4432
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <dave@natulte.net>
For some features, tailscaled uses getent(1) to get the shell
of OS users. getent(1) is in the glibc derivation. Without this
derivation in the path, tailscale falls back to /bin/sh for all
users.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <dave@natulte.net>
In a previous PR [1], the conditional to generate a new host key file
was changed to also include the case when the file exists, but has zero
size. This could occur when the system is uncleanly powered off shortly
after first boot.
However, ssh-keygen prompts the user before overwriting a file. For
example:
$ touch hi
$ ssh-keygen -f hi
Generating public/private rsa key pair.
hi already exists.
Overwrite (y/n)?
So, lets just try to remove the empty file (if it exists) before running
ssh-keygen.
[1] https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/141258
Without this, if the network goes down for a while, systemd will give up after 5 restarts:
Scheduled restart job, restart counter is at 5.
Stopped Nebula VPN service for myvpn.
nebula@myvpn.service: Start request repeated too quickly.
Failed with result 'exit-code'.
Failed to start Nebula VPN service for myvpn.
Most network services need this, but for VPNs it's extra important.
See https://blog.prosody.im/prosody-0.12.0-released for more
informations.
We remove the various lua wrappers introduced by
6799a91843 and
16d0b4a69f. It seems like we don't need
them anymore. I'm not brave enough to dig into the Lua machinery to
see what resolved that. Sorry, you'll have to trust me on that one.
We should probably think about the migration from http_upload to
http_file_share for the NixOS module. It's not trivial, we need to
make sure we don't break the already uploaded URLs.
This commit refactors the way how configuration files are deployed to
the `/etc/asterisk` directory.
The current solution builds a Nix derivation containing all config files
and symlinks it to `/etc/asterisk`. The problem with that approach is
that it is not possible to provide additional configuration that should
not be written to the Nix store, i.e. files containing credentials.
The proposed solution changes the creation of configuration files so
that each configuration file gets symlinked to `/etc/asterisk`
individually so that it becomes possible to provide additional config
files to `/etc/asterisk` as well.
This avoids the scenario where you activate a new config over Tailscale,
and a long delay between the "stop services" and "start services" phases
of the activation script lead to your terminal freezing for tens of
seconds, until tailscaled finally gets started again and the session
recovers.
Per the documentation of stopIfChanged, this is only safe to do if the
service definition is robust to stopping the old process using the new
service definition. As the maintainer of the upstream systemd unit, I
can confirm that Tailscale is robust to this scenario: it has to be
in order to work right on several other distros that just do
unpack-then-restart, rather than the more complex stop-unpack-start
dance.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <dave@natulte.net>
1. Update the default values of several addresses-related settings
that have been changed by upstream.
2. Make `dns.address` take multiple addresses. This is needed
for dual stack, now working by default.
The old variables still work but will eventually stop to be supported so
move to the new ones.
Signed-off-by: Otavio Salvador <otavio@ossystems.com.br>
using freeform is the new standard way of using modules and should replace
extraConfig.
In particular, this will allow us to place a condition on mails
This adds the option `networking.wg-quick.interfaces.<name>.autostart`, which defaults to `true`, which is the previous behavior. With this option set to `false`, the systemd-unit will no longer be set to `wantedBy = [ "multi-user.target" ]` and therefore the tunnel has to be enabled/disabled via `systemctl start/stop wg-quick-<name>`.
Co-authored-by: pennae <82953136+pennae@users.noreply.github.com>
Since b9cfbcafdf, the lack of hexdump in
the closure lead to the generation of empty cookie files. This empty
cookie file is making pleroma to crash at startup now we correctly
read it.
We introduce a migration forcing these empty cookies to be
re-generated to something not empty.
We inject the release cookie path to the pleroma derivation in order
to wrap pleroma_ctl with it. Doing this allows us to remove the
systemd-injected RELEASE_COOKIE path, which was sadly
buggy (RELEASE_COOKIE should point to the *content* of the cookie, not
the file containing it).
We take advantage of this to factor out the cookie path.
Now, one can just use `networking.networkmanager.plugins = lib.mkForce [];`
if they want to get rid of the plug-ins.
Co-authored-by: lassulus <lassulus@lassul.us>
Update version to 1.4.231.
Build 231 points to a specific commit from the 1.4.x branch adding many
fixes and improvements. Since this version is an unofficial release, add
an unstable prefix to the version string in Nixpkgs.
Signed-off-by: Felix Singer <felixsinger@posteo.net>
Signed-off-by: Franz Pletz <fpletz@fnordicwalking.de>
New ntopng version supports running as specified user. Create a separate
user for ntopng with a separate Redis instance.
Separate instance is only used for new `system.stateVersion`s to avoid
breaking existing setups. To configure that we add two new options,
`redis.address` and `redis.createInstance`. They can also be used to
specify your own Redis address.
The module option type `nonEmptyStr` was introduced in commit
a3c5f0cba8
The hylafax module previously simply used
`addCheck str (s: s!="")` to prevent empty option strings,
but the new type is more thorough as
it also catches space-only strings.
I think calling i2pd directly in `ExecStart` is much nicer than having an extra shell script for no reason. It's also easier to see what's going on when looking at the generated systemd unit file.
* nixos/nftables: Allow use with iptables
Since iptables and nftables do not actually conflict with each other, there's no real reason to artificially prevent people from combining them.
In fact, this practice is known to cause issues like #88643, which is fixed by this commit.
Empty parantheses are not supported in regular expressions on
Darwin/macOS. The old regular expression produces an error during
evaluation. This commit fixes that.
Nix‘s `builtins.match` works with extend POSIX regular expressions. The
specification for these regular expression states[^1] that the result
for a left paranthesis immediately followed by a right paranthesis
outside of a bracket expression is undefined.
[^1]: https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/V1_chap09.html#tag_09_04_03
Since release 1.18.4, the ModemManager daemon no longer automatically
performs the FCC unlock procedure by default. The user must, under their
own responsibility, enable the automatic FCC unlock as shipped by
ModemManager.
Add a new type, inheriting 'types.str' but checking whether the value
doesn't contain any newline characters.
The motivation comes from a problem with the
'users.users.${u}.openssh.authorizedKeys' option.
It is easy to unintentionally insert a newline character at the end of a
string, or even in the middle, for example:
restricted_ssh_keys = command: keys:
let
prefix = ''
command="${command}",no-pty,no-agent-forwarding,no-port-forwarding,no-X11-forwarding
'';
in map (key: "${prefix} ${key}") keys;
The 'prefix' string ends with a newline, which ends up in the middle of
a key entry after a few manipulations.
This is problematic because the key file is built by concatenating all
the keys with 'concatStringsSep "\n"', with result in two entries for
the faulty key:
''
command="...",options...
MY_KEY
''
This is hard to debug and might be dangerous. This is now caught at
build time.
network.target is reached earlier, but with much fewer services
available. DNS is likely to be not functional before
network-online.target, so waiting for that seems better for that reason
alone. the existing backends for network-online.target all seem to do
reasonable things (wait until all links are in *some* stable state), so
we shouldn't lose anything from waiting.
Still actively developed and yet stuck on python2. Also marked as
vulnerable and their issue tracker contains yet another security issue
reported in 2021/10 that the upstream hasn't acknowledged yet.
Mind blown.
Closes: #135543, #97274, #97275
It turns out it's actually possible to fall back to WPA2 in case the
authentication fails with WPA3. This was suggested to me in the hostapd
mailing list: add another network block with only WPA2 and lower
priority, for each network with WPA3. For clients with missing/broken
WPA3, wpa_supplicant will:
1. try the network block with higher priority first
2. fail and temporarily disable the network block
3. try the fallback network block and connect
This takes a little more time (still <5s) because wpa_supplicant
retries a couple times before disabling the network block, but it allows
old client to gracefully fall back to WPA2 on mixed WPA2/WPA3 networks.
To avoid downgrade attacks, clients with proper WPA3 should disable
this; in the future we may want to disable this option by default.
This is a useful utility for monitoring network performance over time
using a combination of MTR and Prometheus. Also adding a service definition.
Signed-off-by: Jakub Sokołowski <jakub@status.im>
Alternative solution to PR #152443.
This fixes authentication failures to WPA3 networks (issue #151729)
by enabling protected management frames.
Note: old client without 802.11w support will still fail.
When startWhenNeeded is enabled, a brute force attack on sshd will cause
systemd to shut down the socket, locking out all SSH access to the machine.
Setting TriggerLimitIntervalSec to 0 disables this behavior.
This never configured where SNI should log to, as it's up to the user to
provide the full sniproxy config (which can be configured to log to a
file).
This option only produced a ExecStartPre script that created the folder.
Let's use LogsDirectory to create it. In case users want to use another
directory for logs, they can override LogsDirectory or set their own
ExecStartPre script.
The systemd syntax is suprising to me, but I suppose it's worth being
compatible as people might be sharing it with other modules.
Our regexp is lenient on IPv6 address part, so this is actually
backwards compatible (i.e. you can put the scope at either place).
dhcpcd does not run properly with some of the hardened system mallocs
that are currently available. assert when an incompatible configuration
is detected, as a switch into such a config from eg auto-update can take
hosts offline.
link to search.nixos.org instead of pulling package metadata out of pkgs. this
lets us cache docs of a few more modules and provides easier access to package
info from the HTML manual, but makes the manpage slightly less useful since
package description are no longer rendered.
most modules can be evaluated for their documentation in a very
restricted environment that doesn't include all of nixpkgs. this
evaluation can then be cached and reused for subsequent builds, merging
only documentation that has changed into the cached set. since nixos
ships with a large number of modules of which only a few are used in any
given config this can save evaluation a huge percentage of nixos
options available in any given config.
in tests of this caching, despite having to copy most of nixos/, saves
about 80% of the time needed to build the system manual, or about two
second on the machine used for testing. build time for a full system
config shrank from 9.4s to 7.4s, while turning documentation off
entirely shortened the build to 7.1s.