nixpkgs-suyu/nixos/modules/tasks/filesystems/zfs.nix

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nixos/zfs: Improve the ZFS boot process It turns out that the upstream systemd services that import ZFS pools contain serious bugs. The first major problem is that importing pools fails if there are no pools to import. The second major problem is that if a pool ends up in /etc/zfs/zpool.cache but it disappears from the system (e.g. if you reboot but during the reboot you unplug your ZFS-formatted USB pen drive), then the import service will always fail and it will be impossible to get rid of the pool from the cache (unless you manually delete the cache). Also, the upstream service would always import all available ZFS pools every boot, which may not be what is desired in some cases. This commit will solve these problems in the following ways: 1. Ignore /etc/zfs/zpool.cache. This seems to be a major source of issues, and also does not play well with NixOS's philosophy of reproducible configurations. Instead, on every boot NixOS will try to import the set of pools that are specified in its configuration. This is also the direction that upstream is moving towards. 2. Instead of trying to import all ZFS pools, only import those that are actually necessary. NixOS will automatically determine these from the config.fileSystems.* option. Also, the user can import any additional pools every boot by adding them to the config.boot.zfs.extraPools option, but this is only necessary if their filesystems are not specified in config.fileSystems.*. 3. Added options to configure if ZFS should force-import ZFS pools. This may currently be necessary, especially if your pools have not been correctly imported with a proper host id configuration (which is probably true for 99% of current NixOS ZFS users). Once host id configuration becomes mandatory when using ZFS in NixOS and we are sure that most users have updated their configurations and rebooted at least once, we should disable force-import by default. Probably, this shouldn't be done before the next stable release. WARNING: This commit may change the order in which your non-ZFS vs ZFS filesystems are mounted. To avoid this problem (now or in the future) it is recommended that you set the 'mountpoint' property of your ZFS filesystems to 'legacy', and that you manage them using config.fileSystems, just like any other non-ZFS filesystem is usually managed in NixOS.
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{ config, lib, pkgs, utils, ... }:
#
# todo:
# - crontab for scrubs, etc
# - zfs tunables
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nixos/zfs: Improve the ZFS boot process It turns out that the upstream systemd services that import ZFS pools contain serious bugs. The first major problem is that importing pools fails if there are no pools to import. The second major problem is that if a pool ends up in /etc/zfs/zpool.cache but it disappears from the system (e.g. if you reboot but during the reboot you unplug your ZFS-formatted USB pen drive), then the import service will always fail and it will be impossible to get rid of the pool from the cache (unless you manually delete the cache). Also, the upstream service would always import all available ZFS pools every boot, which may not be what is desired in some cases. This commit will solve these problems in the following ways: 1. Ignore /etc/zfs/zpool.cache. This seems to be a major source of issues, and also does not play well with NixOS's philosophy of reproducible configurations. Instead, on every boot NixOS will try to import the set of pools that are specified in its configuration. This is also the direction that upstream is moving towards. 2. Instead of trying to import all ZFS pools, only import those that are actually necessary. NixOS will automatically determine these from the config.fileSystems.* option. Also, the user can import any additional pools every boot by adding them to the config.boot.zfs.extraPools option, but this is only necessary if their filesystems are not specified in config.fileSystems.*. 3. Added options to configure if ZFS should force-import ZFS pools. This may currently be necessary, especially if your pools have not been correctly imported with a proper host id configuration (which is probably true for 99% of current NixOS ZFS users). Once host id configuration becomes mandatory when using ZFS in NixOS and we are sure that most users have updated their configurations and rebooted at least once, we should disable force-import by default. Probably, this shouldn't be done before the next stable release. WARNING: This commit may change the order in which your non-ZFS vs ZFS filesystems are mounted. To avoid this problem (now or in the future) it is recommended that you set the 'mountpoint' property of your ZFS filesystems to 'legacy', and that you manage them using config.fileSystems, just like any other non-ZFS filesystem is usually managed in NixOS.
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with utils;
with lib;
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let
cfgZfs = config.boot.zfs;
cfgSnapshots = config.services.zfs.autoSnapshot;
cfgSnapFlags = cfgSnapshots.flags;
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cfgScrub = config.services.zfs.autoScrub;
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inInitrd = any (fs: fs == "zfs") config.boot.initrd.supportedFilesystems;
inSystem = any (fs: fs == "zfs") config.boot.supportedFilesystems;
enableAutoSnapshots = cfgSnapshots.enable;
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enableAutoScrub = cfgScrub.enable;
enableZfs = inInitrd || inSystem || enableAutoSnapshots || enableAutoScrub;
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kernel = config.boot.kernelPackages;
packages = if config.boot.zfs.enableLegacyCrypto then {
spl = kernel.splLegacyCrypto;
zfs = kernel.zfsLegacyCrypto;
zfsUser = pkgs.zfsLegacyCrypto;
} else if config.boot.zfs.enableUnstable then {
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spl = kernel.splUnstable;
zfs = kernel.zfsUnstable;
zfsUser = pkgs.zfsUnstable;
} else {
spl = kernel.spl;
zfs = kernel.zfs;
zfsUser = pkgs.zfs;
};
autosnapPkg = pkgs.zfstools.override {
zfs = packages.zfsUser;
};
zfsAutoSnap = "${autosnapPkg}/bin/zfs-auto-snapshot";
nixos/zfs: Improve the ZFS boot process It turns out that the upstream systemd services that import ZFS pools contain serious bugs. The first major problem is that importing pools fails if there are no pools to import. The second major problem is that if a pool ends up in /etc/zfs/zpool.cache but it disappears from the system (e.g. if you reboot but during the reboot you unplug your ZFS-formatted USB pen drive), then the import service will always fail and it will be impossible to get rid of the pool from the cache (unless you manually delete the cache). Also, the upstream service would always import all available ZFS pools every boot, which may not be what is desired in some cases. This commit will solve these problems in the following ways: 1. Ignore /etc/zfs/zpool.cache. This seems to be a major source of issues, and also does not play well with NixOS's philosophy of reproducible configurations. Instead, on every boot NixOS will try to import the set of pools that are specified in its configuration. This is also the direction that upstream is moving towards. 2. Instead of trying to import all ZFS pools, only import those that are actually necessary. NixOS will automatically determine these from the config.fileSystems.* option. Also, the user can import any additional pools every boot by adding them to the config.boot.zfs.extraPools option, but this is only necessary if their filesystems are not specified in config.fileSystems.*. 3. Added options to configure if ZFS should force-import ZFS pools. This may currently be necessary, especially if your pools have not been correctly imported with a proper host id configuration (which is probably true for 99% of current NixOS ZFS users). Once host id configuration becomes mandatory when using ZFS in NixOS and we are sure that most users have updated their configurations and rebooted at least once, we should disable force-import by default. Probably, this shouldn't be done before the next stable release. WARNING: This commit may change the order in which your non-ZFS vs ZFS filesystems are mounted. To avoid this problem (now or in the future) it is recommended that you set the 'mountpoint' property of your ZFS filesystems to 'legacy', and that you manage them using config.fileSystems, just like any other non-ZFS filesystem is usually managed in NixOS.
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datasetToPool = x: elemAt (splitString "/" x) 0;
fsToPool = fs: datasetToPool fs.device;
zfsFilesystems = filter (x: x.fsType == "zfs") config.system.build.fileSystems;
nixos/zfs: Improve the ZFS boot process It turns out that the upstream systemd services that import ZFS pools contain serious bugs. The first major problem is that importing pools fails if there are no pools to import. The second major problem is that if a pool ends up in /etc/zfs/zpool.cache but it disappears from the system (e.g. if you reboot but during the reboot you unplug your ZFS-formatted USB pen drive), then the import service will always fail and it will be impossible to get rid of the pool from the cache (unless you manually delete the cache). Also, the upstream service would always import all available ZFS pools every boot, which may not be what is desired in some cases. This commit will solve these problems in the following ways: 1. Ignore /etc/zfs/zpool.cache. This seems to be a major source of issues, and also does not play well with NixOS's philosophy of reproducible configurations. Instead, on every boot NixOS will try to import the set of pools that are specified in its configuration. This is also the direction that upstream is moving towards. 2. Instead of trying to import all ZFS pools, only import those that are actually necessary. NixOS will automatically determine these from the config.fileSystems.* option. Also, the user can import any additional pools every boot by adding them to the config.boot.zfs.extraPools option, but this is only necessary if their filesystems are not specified in config.fileSystems.*. 3. Added options to configure if ZFS should force-import ZFS pools. This may currently be necessary, especially if your pools have not been correctly imported with a proper host id configuration (which is probably true for 99% of current NixOS ZFS users). Once host id configuration becomes mandatory when using ZFS in NixOS and we are sure that most users have updated their configurations and rebooted at least once, we should disable force-import by default. Probably, this shouldn't be done before the next stable release. WARNING: This commit may change the order in which your non-ZFS vs ZFS filesystems are mounted. To avoid this problem (now or in the future) it is recommended that you set the 'mountpoint' property of your ZFS filesystems to 'legacy', and that you manage them using config.fileSystems, just like any other non-ZFS filesystem is usually managed in NixOS.
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allPools = unique ((map fsToPool zfsFilesystems) ++ cfgZfs.extraPools);
rootPools = unique (map fsToPool (filter fsNeededForBoot zfsFilesystems));
nixos/zfs: Improve the ZFS boot process It turns out that the upstream systemd services that import ZFS pools contain serious bugs. The first major problem is that importing pools fails if there are no pools to import. The second major problem is that if a pool ends up in /etc/zfs/zpool.cache but it disappears from the system (e.g. if you reboot but during the reboot you unplug your ZFS-formatted USB pen drive), then the import service will always fail and it will be impossible to get rid of the pool from the cache (unless you manually delete the cache). Also, the upstream service would always import all available ZFS pools every boot, which may not be what is desired in some cases. This commit will solve these problems in the following ways: 1. Ignore /etc/zfs/zpool.cache. This seems to be a major source of issues, and also does not play well with NixOS's philosophy of reproducible configurations. Instead, on every boot NixOS will try to import the set of pools that are specified in its configuration. This is also the direction that upstream is moving towards. 2. Instead of trying to import all ZFS pools, only import those that are actually necessary. NixOS will automatically determine these from the config.fileSystems.* option. Also, the user can import any additional pools every boot by adding them to the config.boot.zfs.extraPools option, but this is only necessary if their filesystems are not specified in config.fileSystems.*. 3. Added options to configure if ZFS should force-import ZFS pools. This may currently be necessary, especially if your pools have not been correctly imported with a proper host id configuration (which is probably true for 99% of current NixOS ZFS users). Once host id configuration becomes mandatory when using ZFS in NixOS and we are sure that most users have updated their configurations and rebooted at least once, we should disable force-import by default. Probably, this shouldn't be done before the next stable release. WARNING: This commit may change the order in which your non-ZFS vs ZFS filesystems are mounted. To avoid this problem (now or in the future) it is recommended that you set the 'mountpoint' property of your ZFS filesystems to 'legacy', and that you manage them using config.fileSystems, just like any other non-ZFS filesystem is usually managed in NixOS.
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dataPools = unique (filter (pool: !(elem pool rootPools)) allPools);
snapshotNames = [ "frequent" "hourly" "daily" "weekly" "monthly" ];
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# When importing ZFS pools, there's one difficulty: These scripts may run
# before the backing devices (physical HDDs, etc.) of the pool have been
# scanned and initialized.
#
# An attempted import with all devices missing will just fail, and can be
# retried, but an import where e.g. two out of three disks in a three-way
# mirror are missing, will succeed. This is a problem: When the missing disks
# are later discovered, they won't be automatically set online, rendering the
# pool redundancy-less (and far slower) until such time as the system reboots.
#
# The solution is the below. poolReady checks the status of an un-imported
# pool, to see if *every* device is available -- in which case the pool will be
# in state ONLINE, as opposed to DEGRADED, FAULTED or MISSING.
#
# The import scripts then loop over this, waiting until the pool is ready or a
# sufficient amount of time has passed that we can assume it won't be. In the
# latter case it makes one last attempt at importing, allowing the system to
# (eventually) boot even with a degraded pool.
importLib = {zpoolCmd, awkCmd, cfgZfs}: ''
poolReady() {
pool="$1"
state="$("${zpoolCmd}" import | "${awkCmd}" "/pool: $pool/ { found = 1 }; /state:/ { if (found == 1) { print \$2; exit } }; END { if (found == 0) { print \"MISSING\" } }")"
if [[ "$state" = "ONLINE" ]]; then
return 0
else
echo "Pool $pool in state $state, waiting"
return 1
fi
}
poolImported() {
pool="$1"
"${zpoolCmd}" list "$pool" >/dev/null 2>/dev/null
}
poolImport() {
pool="$1"
"${zpoolCmd}" import -d "${cfgZfs.devNodes}" -N $ZFS_FORCE "$pool"
}
'';
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in
{
###### interface
options = {
nixos/zfs: Improve the ZFS boot process It turns out that the upstream systemd services that import ZFS pools contain serious bugs. The first major problem is that importing pools fails if there are no pools to import. The second major problem is that if a pool ends up in /etc/zfs/zpool.cache but it disappears from the system (e.g. if you reboot but during the reboot you unplug your ZFS-formatted USB pen drive), then the import service will always fail and it will be impossible to get rid of the pool from the cache (unless you manually delete the cache). Also, the upstream service would always import all available ZFS pools every boot, which may not be what is desired in some cases. This commit will solve these problems in the following ways: 1. Ignore /etc/zfs/zpool.cache. This seems to be a major source of issues, and also does not play well with NixOS's philosophy of reproducible configurations. Instead, on every boot NixOS will try to import the set of pools that are specified in its configuration. This is also the direction that upstream is moving towards. 2. Instead of trying to import all ZFS pools, only import those that are actually necessary. NixOS will automatically determine these from the config.fileSystems.* option. Also, the user can import any additional pools every boot by adding them to the config.boot.zfs.extraPools option, but this is only necessary if their filesystems are not specified in config.fileSystems.*. 3. Added options to configure if ZFS should force-import ZFS pools. This may currently be necessary, especially if your pools have not been correctly imported with a proper host id configuration (which is probably true for 99% of current NixOS ZFS users). Once host id configuration becomes mandatory when using ZFS in NixOS and we are sure that most users have updated their configurations and rebooted at least once, we should disable force-import by default. Probably, this shouldn't be done before the next stable release. WARNING: This commit may change the order in which your non-ZFS vs ZFS filesystems are mounted. To avoid this problem (now or in the future) it is recommended that you set the 'mountpoint' property of your ZFS filesystems to 'legacy', and that you manage them using config.fileSystems, just like any other non-ZFS filesystem is usually managed in NixOS.
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boot.zfs = {
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enableUnstable = mkOption {
type = types.bool;
default = false;
description = ''
Use the unstable zfs package. This might be an option, if the latest
kernel is not yet supported by a published release of ZFS. Enabling
this option will install a development version of ZFS on Linux. The
version will have already passed an extensive test suite, but it is
more likely to hit an undiscovered bug compared to running a released
version of ZFS on Linux.
'';
};
enableLegacyCrypto = mkOption {
type = types.bool;
default = false;
description = ''
Enabling this option will allow you to continue to use the old format for
encrypted datasets. With the inclusion of stability patches the format of
encrypted datasets has changed. They can still be accessed and mounted but
in read-only mode mounted. It is highly recommended to convert them to
the new format.
This option is only for convenience to people that cannot convert their
datasets to the new format yet and it will be removed in due time.
For migration strategies from old format to this new one, check the Wiki:
https://nixos.wiki/wiki/NixOS_on_ZFS#Encrypted_Dataset_Format_Change
See https://github.com/zfsonlinux/zfs/pull/6864 for more details about
the stability patches.
'';
};
nixos/zfs: Improve the ZFS boot process It turns out that the upstream systemd services that import ZFS pools contain serious bugs. The first major problem is that importing pools fails if there are no pools to import. The second major problem is that if a pool ends up in /etc/zfs/zpool.cache but it disappears from the system (e.g. if you reboot but during the reboot you unplug your ZFS-formatted USB pen drive), then the import service will always fail and it will be impossible to get rid of the pool from the cache (unless you manually delete the cache). Also, the upstream service would always import all available ZFS pools every boot, which may not be what is desired in some cases. This commit will solve these problems in the following ways: 1. Ignore /etc/zfs/zpool.cache. This seems to be a major source of issues, and also does not play well with NixOS's philosophy of reproducible configurations. Instead, on every boot NixOS will try to import the set of pools that are specified in its configuration. This is also the direction that upstream is moving towards. 2. Instead of trying to import all ZFS pools, only import those that are actually necessary. NixOS will automatically determine these from the config.fileSystems.* option. Also, the user can import any additional pools every boot by adding them to the config.boot.zfs.extraPools option, but this is only necessary if their filesystems are not specified in config.fileSystems.*. 3. Added options to configure if ZFS should force-import ZFS pools. This may currently be necessary, especially if your pools have not been correctly imported with a proper host id configuration (which is probably true for 99% of current NixOS ZFS users). Once host id configuration becomes mandatory when using ZFS in NixOS and we are sure that most users have updated their configurations and rebooted at least once, we should disable force-import by default. Probably, this shouldn't be done before the next stable release. WARNING: This commit may change the order in which your non-ZFS vs ZFS filesystems are mounted. To avoid this problem (now or in the future) it is recommended that you set the 'mountpoint' property of your ZFS filesystems to 'legacy', and that you manage them using config.fileSystems, just like any other non-ZFS filesystem is usually managed in NixOS.
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extraPools = mkOption {
type = types.listOf types.str;
default = [];
example = [ "tank" "data" ];
description = ''
Name or GUID of extra ZFS pools that you wish to import during boot.
Usually this is not necessary. Instead, you should set the mountpoint property
of ZFS filesystems to <literal>legacy</literal> and add the ZFS filesystems to
NixOS's <option>fileSystems</option> option, which makes NixOS automatically
import the associated pool.
However, in some cases (e.g. if you have many filesystems) it may be preferable
to exclusively use ZFS commands to manage filesystems. If so, since NixOS/systemd
will not be managing those filesystems, you will need to specify the ZFS pool here
so that NixOS automatically imports it on every boot.
'';
};
devNodes = mkOption {
type = types.path;
default = "/dev/disk/by-id";
example = "/dev/disk/by-id";
description = ''
Name of directory from which to import ZFS devices.
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This should be a path under /dev containing stable names for all devices needed, as
import may fail if device nodes are renamed concurrently with a device failing.
'';
};
nixos/zfs: Improve the ZFS boot process It turns out that the upstream systemd services that import ZFS pools contain serious bugs. The first major problem is that importing pools fails if there are no pools to import. The second major problem is that if a pool ends up in /etc/zfs/zpool.cache but it disappears from the system (e.g. if you reboot but during the reboot you unplug your ZFS-formatted USB pen drive), then the import service will always fail and it will be impossible to get rid of the pool from the cache (unless you manually delete the cache). Also, the upstream service would always import all available ZFS pools every boot, which may not be what is desired in some cases. This commit will solve these problems in the following ways: 1. Ignore /etc/zfs/zpool.cache. This seems to be a major source of issues, and also does not play well with NixOS's philosophy of reproducible configurations. Instead, on every boot NixOS will try to import the set of pools that are specified in its configuration. This is also the direction that upstream is moving towards. 2. Instead of trying to import all ZFS pools, only import those that are actually necessary. NixOS will automatically determine these from the config.fileSystems.* option. Also, the user can import any additional pools every boot by adding them to the config.boot.zfs.extraPools option, but this is only necessary if their filesystems are not specified in config.fileSystems.*. 3. Added options to configure if ZFS should force-import ZFS pools. This may currently be necessary, especially if your pools have not been correctly imported with a proper host id configuration (which is probably true for 99% of current NixOS ZFS users). Once host id configuration becomes mandatory when using ZFS in NixOS and we are sure that most users have updated their configurations and rebooted at least once, we should disable force-import by default. Probably, this shouldn't be done before the next stable release. WARNING: This commit may change the order in which your non-ZFS vs ZFS filesystems are mounted. To avoid this problem (now or in the future) it is recommended that you set the 'mountpoint' property of your ZFS filesystems to 'legacy', and that you manage them using config.fileSystems, just like any other non-ZFS filesystem is usually managed in NixOS.
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forceImportRoot = mkOption {
type = types.bool;
default = true;
description = ''
Forcibly import the ZFS root pool(s) during early boot.
This is enabled by default for backwards compatibility purposes, but it is highly
recommended to disable this option, as it bypasses some of the safeguards ZFS uses
to protect your ZFS pools.
If you set this option to <literal>false</literal> and NixOS subsequently fails to
boot because it cannot import the root pool, you should boot with the
<literal>zfs_force=1</literal> option as a kernel parameter (e.g. by manually
editing the kernel params in grub during boot). You should only need to do this
once.
'';
};
forceImportAll = mkOption {
type = types.bool;
default = true;
description = ''
Forcibly import all ZFS pool(s).
This is enabled by default for backwards compatibility purposes, but it is highly
recommended to disable this option, as it bypasses some of the safeguards ZFS uses
to protect your ZFS pools.
If you set this option to <literal>false</literal> and NixOS subsequently fails to
import your non-root ZFS pool(s), you should manually import each pool with
"zpool import -f &lt;pool-name&gt;", and then reboot. You should only need to do
this once.
'';
};
requestEncryptionCredentials = mkOption {
type = types.bool;
default = config.boot.zfs.enableUnstable;
description = ''
Request encryption keys or passwords for all encrypted datasets on import.
Dataset encryption is only supported in zfsUnstable at the moment.
For root pools the encryption key can be supplied via both an
interactive prompt (keylocation=prompt) and from a file
(keylocation=file://). Note that for data pools the encryption key can
be only loaded from a file and not via interactive prompt since the
import is processed in a background systemd service.
'';
};
};
services.zfs.autoSnapshot = {
enable = mkOption {
default = false;
type = types.bool;
description = ''
Enable the (OpenSolaris-compatible) ZFS auto-snapshotting service.
Note that you must set the <literal>com.sun:auto-snapshot</literal>
property to <literal>true</literal> on all datasets which you wish
to auto-snapshot.
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You can override a child dataset to use, or not use auto-snapshotting
by setting its flag with the given interval:
<literal>zfs set com.sun:auto-snapshot:weekly=false DATASET</literal>
'';
};
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flags = mkOption {
default = "-k -p";
example = "-k -p --utc";
type = types.str;
description = ''
Flags to pass to the zfs-auto-snapshot command.
Run <literal>zfs-auto-snapshot</literal> (without any arguments) to
see available flags.
If it's not too inconvenient for snapshots to have timestamps in UTC,
it is suggested that you append <literal>--utc</literal> to the list
of default options (see example).
Otherwise, snapshot names can cause name conflicts or apparent time
reversals due to daylight savings, timezone or other date/time changes.
'';
};
frequent = mkOption {
default = 4;
type = types.int;
description = ''
Number of frequent (15-minute) auto-snapshots that you wish to keep.
'';
};
hourly = mkOption {
default = 24;
type = types.int;
description = ''
Number of hourly auto-snapshots that you wish to keep.
'';
};
daily = mkOption {
default = 7;
type = types.int;
description = ''
Number of daily auto-snapshots that you wish to keep.
'';
};
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weekly = mkOption {
default = 4;
type = types.int;
description = ''
Number of weekly auto-snapshots that you wish to keep.
'';
};
monthly = mkOption {
default = 12;
type = types.int;
description = ''
Number of monthly auto-snapshots that you wish to keep.
'';
};
};
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services.zfs.autoScrub = {
enable = mkOption {
default = false;
type = types.bool;
description = ''
Enables periodic scrubbing of ZFS pools.
'';
};
interval = mkOption {
default = "Sun, 02:00";
type = types.str;
example = "daily";
description = ''
Systemd calendar expression when to scrub ZFS pools. See
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.time</refentrytitle>
<manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>.
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'';
};
pools = mkOption {
default = [];
type = types.listOf types.str;
example = [ "tank" ];
description = ''
List of ZFS pools to periodically scrub. If empty, all pools
will be scrubbed.
'';
};
};
};
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###### implementation
config = mkMerge [
(mkIf enableZfs {
nixos/zfs: Improve the ZFS boot process It turns out that the upstream systemd services that import ZFS pools contain serious bugs. The first major problem is that importing pools fails if there are no pools to import. The second major problem is that if a pool ends up in /etc/zfs/zpool.cache but it disappears from the system (e.g. if you reboot but during the reboot you unplug your ZFS-formatted USB pen drive), then the import service will always fail and it will be impossible to get rid of the pool from the cache (unless you manually delete the cache). Also, the upstream service would always import all available ZFS pools every boot, which may not be what is desired in some cases. This commit will solve these problems in the following ways: 1. Ignore /etc/zfs/zpool.cache. This seems to be a major source of issues, and also does not play well with NixOS's philosophy of reproducible configurations. Instead, on every boot NixOS will try to import the set of pools that are specified in its configuration. This is also the direction that upstream is moving towards. 2. Instead of trying to import all ZFS pools, only import those that are actually necessary. NixOS will automatically determine these from the config.fileSystems.* option. Also, the user can import any additional pools every boot by adding them to the config.boot.zfs.extraPools option, but this is only necessary if their filesystems are not specified in config.fileSystems.*. 3. Added options to configure if ZFS should force-import ZFS pools. This may currently be necessary, especially if your pools have not been correctly imported with a proper host id configuration (which is probably true for 99% of current NixOS ZFS users). Once host id configuration becomes mandatory when using ZFS in NixOS and we are sure that most users have updated their configurations and rebooted at least once, we should disable force-import by default. Probably, this shouldn't be done before the next stable release. WARNING: This commit may change the order in which your non-ZFS vs ZFS filesystems are mounted. To avoid this problem (now or in the future) it is recommended that you set the 'mountpoint' property of your ZFS filesystems to 'legacy', and that you manage them using config.fileSystems, just like any other non-ZFS filesystem is usually managed in NixOS.
2014-10-22 19:17:21 +02:00
assertions = [
{
assertion = config.networking.hostId != null;
message = "ZFS requires networking.hostId to be set";
}
nixos/zfs: Improve the ZFS boot process It turns out that the upstream systemd services that import ZFS pools contain serious bugs. The first major problem is that importing pools fails if there are no pools to import. The second major problem is that if a pool ends up in /etc/zfs/zpool.cache but it disappears from the system (e.g. if you reboot but during the reboot you unplug your ZFS-formatted USB pen drive), then the import service will always fail and it will be impossible to get rid of the pool from the cache (unless you manually delete the cache). Also, the upstream service would always import all available ZFS pools every boot, which may not be what is desired in some cases. This commit will solve these problems in the following ways: 1. Ignore /etc/zfs/zpool.cache. This seems to be a major source of issues, and also does not play well with NixOS's philosophy of reproducible configurations. Instead, on every boot NixOS will try to import the set of pools that are specified in its configuration. This is also the direction that upstream is moving towards. 2. Instead of trying to import all ZFS pools, only import those that are actually necessary. NixOS will automatically determine these from the config.fileSystems.* option. Also, the user can import any additional pools every boot by adding them to the config.boot.zfs.extraPools option, but this is only necessary if their filesystems are not specified in config.fileSystems.*. 3. Added options to configure if ZFS should force-import ZFS pools. This may currently be necessary, especially if your pools have not been correctly imported with a proper host id configuration (which is probably true for 99% of current NixOS ZFS users). Once host id configuration becomes mandatory when using ZFS in NixOS and we are sure that most users have updated their configurations and rebooted at least once, we should disable force-import by default. Probably, this shouldn't be done before the next stable release. WARNING: This commit may change the order in which your non-ZFS vs ZFS filesystems are mounted. To avoid this problem (now or in the future) it is recommended that you set the 'mountpoint' property of your ZFS filesystems to 'legacy', and that you manage them using config.fileSystems, just like any other non-ZFS filesystem is usually managed in NixOS.
2014-10-22 19:17:21 +02:00
{
assertion = !cfgZfs.forceImportAll || cfgZfs.forceImportRoot;
message = "If you enable boot.zfs.forceImportAll, you must also enable boot.zfs.forceImportRoot";
}
{
assertion = cfgZfs.requestEncryptionCredentials -> cfgZfs.enableUnstable;
message = "This feature is only available for zfs unstable. Set the NixOS option boot.zfs.enableUnstable.";
}
nixos/zfs: Improve the ZFS boot process It turns out that the upstream systemd services that import ZFS pools contain serious bugs. The first major problem is that importing pools fails if there are no pools to import. The second major problem is that if a pool ends up in /etc/zfs/zpool.cache but it disappears from the system (e.g. if you reboot but during the reboot you unplug your ZFS-formatted USB pen drive), then the import service will always fail and it will be impossible to get rid of the pool from the cache (unless you manually delete the cache). Also, the upstream service would always import all available ZFS pools every boot, which may not be what is desired in some cases. This commit will solve these problems in the following ways: 1. Ignore /etc/zfs/zpool.cache. This seems to be a major source of issues, and also does not play well with NixOS's philosophy of reproducible configurations. Instead, on every boot NixOS will try to import the set of pools that are specified in its configuration. This is also the direction that upstream is moving towards. 2. Instead of trying to import all ZFS pools, only import those that are actually necessary. NixOS will automatically determine these from the config.fileSystems.* option. Also, the user can import any additional pools every boot by adding them to the config.boot.zfs.extraPools option, but this is only necessary if their filesystems are not specified in config.fileSystems.*. 3. Added options to configure if ZFS should force-import ZFS pools. This may currently be necessary, especially if your pools have not been correctly imported with a proper host id configuration (which is probably true for 99% of current NixOS ZFS users). Once host id configuration becomes mandatory when using ZFS in NixOS and we are sure that most users have updated their configurations and rebooted at least once, we should disable force-import by default. Probably, this shouldn't be done before the next stable release. WARNING: This commit may change the order in which your non-ZFS vs ZFS filesystems are mounted. To avoid this problem (now or in the future) it is recommended that you set the 'mountpoint' property of your ZFS filesystems to 'legacy', and that you manage them using config.fileSystems, just like any other non-ZFS filesystem is usually managed in NixOS.
2014-10-22 19:17:21 +02:00
];
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virtualisation.lxd.zfsSupport = true;
boot = {
kernelModules = [ "spl" "zfs" ] ;
extraModulePackages = with packages; [ spl zfs ];
};
boot.initrd = mkIf inInitrd {
kernelModules = [ "spl" "zfs" ];
extraUtilsCommands =
''
copy_bin_and_libs ${packages.zfsUser}/sbin/zfs
copy_bin_and_libs ${packages.zfsUser}/sbin/zdb
copy_bin_and_libs ${packages.zfsUser}/sbin/zpool
2015-03-29 01:15:41 +01:00
'';
extraUtilsCommandsTest = mkIf inInitrd
''
$out/bin/zfs --help >/dev/null 2>&1
$out/bin/zpool --help >/dev/null 2>&1
'';
nixos/zfs: Improve the ZFS boot process It turns out that the upstream systemd services that import ZFS pools contain serious bugs. The first major problem is that importing pools fails if there are no pools to import. The second major problem is that if a pool ends up in /etc/zfs/zpool.cache but it disappears from the system (e.g. if you reboot but during the reboot you unplug your ZFS-formatted USB pen drive), then the import service will always fail and it will be impossible to get rid of the pool from the cache (unless you manually delete the cache). Also, the upstream service would always import all available ZFS pools every boot, which may not be what is desired in some cases. This commit will solve these problems in the following ways: 1. Ignore /etc/zfs/zpool.cache. This seems to be a major source of issues, and also does not play well with NixOS's philosophy of reproducible configurations. Instead, on every boot NixOS will try to import the set of pools that are specified in its configuration. This is also the direction that upstream is moving towards. 2. Instead of trying to import all ZFS pools, only import those that are actually necessary. NixOS will automatically determine these from the config.fileSystems.* option. Also, the user can import any additional pools every boot by adding them to the config.boot.zfs.extraPools option, but this is only necessary if their filesystems are not specified in config.fileSystems.*. 3. Added options to configure if ZFS should force-import ZFS pools. This may currently be necessary, especially if your pools have not been correctly imported with a proper host id configuration (which is probably true for 99% of current NixOS ZFS users). Once host id configuration becomes mandatory when using ZFS in NixOS and we are sure that most users have updated their configurations and rebooted at least once, we should disable force-import by default. Probably, this shouldn't be done before the next stable release. WARNING: This commit may change the order in which your non-ZFS vs ZFS filesystems are mounted. To avoid this problem (now or in the future) it is recommended that you set the 'mountpoint' property of your ZFS filesystems to 'legacy', and that you manage them using config.fileSystems, just like any other non-ZFS filesystem is usually managed in NixOS.
2014-10-22 19:17:21 +02:00
postDeviceCommands = concatStringsSep "\n" ([''
ZFS_FORCE="${optionalString cfgZfs.forceImportRoot "-f"}"
for o in $(cat /proc/cmdline); do
case $o in
zfs_force|zfs_force=1)
ZFS_FORCE="-f"
;;
esac
done
2018-06-16 03:39:07 +02:00
''] ++ [(importLib {
# See comments at importLib definition.
zpoolCmd = "zpool";
awkCmd = "awk";
inherit cfgZfs;
})] ++ (map (pool: ''
echo -n "importing root ZFS pool \"${pool}\"..."
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# Loop across the import until it succeeds, because the devices needed may not be discovered yet.
if ! poolImported "${pool}"; then
for trial in `seq 1 60`; do
poolReady "${pool}" > /dev/null && msg="$(poolImport "${pool}" 2>&1)" && break
sleep 1
echo -n .
done
echo
if [[ -n "$msg" ]]; then
echo "$msg";
fi
2018-06-16 03:39:07 +02:00
poolImported "${pool}" || poolImport "${pool}" # Try one last time, e.g. to import a degraded pool.
fi
${lib.optionalString cfgZfs.requestEncryptionCredentials ''
zfs load-key -a
''}
nixos/zfs: Improve the ZFS boot process It turns out that the upstream systemd services that import ZFS pools contain serious bugs. The first major problem is that importing pools fails if there are no pools to import. The second major problem is that if a pool ends up in /etc/zfs/zpool.cache but it disappears from the system (e.g. if you reboot but during the reboot you unplug your ZFS-formatted USB pen drive), then the import service will always fail and it will be impossible to get rid of the pool from the cache (unless you manually delete the cache). Also, the upstream service would always import all available ZFS pools every boot, which may not be what is desired in some cases. This commit will solve these problems in the following ways: 1. Ignore /etc/zfs/zpool.cache. This seems to be a major source of issues, and also does not play well with NixOS's philosophy of reproducible configurations. Instead, on every boot NixOS will try to import the set of pools that are specified in its configuration. This is also the direction that upstream is moving towards. 2. Instead of trying to import all ZFS pools, only import those that are actually necessary. NixOS will automatically determine these from the config.fileSystems.* option. Also, the user can import any additional pools every boot by adding them to the config.boot.zfs.extraPools option, but this is only necessary if their filesystems are not specified in config.fileSystems.*. 3. Added options to configure if ZFS should force-import ZFS pools. This may currently be necessary, especially if your pools have not been correctly imported with a proper host id configuration (which is probably true for 99% of current NixOS ZFS users). Once host id configuration becomes mandatory when using ZFS in NixOS and we are sure that most users have updated their configurations and rebooted at least once, we should disable force-import by default. Probably, this shouldn't be done before the next stable release. WARNING: This commit may change the order in which your non-ZFS vs ZFS filesystems are mounted. To avoid this problem (now or in the future) it is recommended that you set the 'mountpoint' property of your ZFS filesystems to 'legacy', and that you manage them using config.fileSystems, just like any other non-ZFS filesystem is usually managed in NixOS.
2014-10-22 19:17:21 +02:00
'') rootPools));
};
boot.loader.grub = mkIf inInitrd {
zfsSupport = true;
};
2017-03-02 17:13:54 +01:00
environment.etc."zfs/zed.d".source = "${packages.zfsUser}/etc/zfs/zed.d/";
system.fsPackages = [ packages.zfsUser ]; # XXX: needed? zfs doesn't have (need) a fsck
environment.systemPackages = [ packages.zfsUser ]
++ optional enableAutoSnapshots autosnapPkg; # so the user can run the command to see flags
services.udev.packages = [ packages.zfsUser ]; # to hook zvol naming, etc.
systemd.packages = [ packages.zfsUser ];
nixos/zfs: Improve the ZFS boot process It turns out that the upstream systemd services that import ZFS pools contain serious bugs. The first major problem is that importing pools fails if there are no pools to import. The second major problem is that if a pool ends up in /etc/zfs/zpool.cache but it disappears from the system (e.g. if you reboot but during the reboot you unplug your ZFS-formatted USB pen drive), then the import service will always fail and it will be impossible to get rid of the pool from the cache (unless you manually delete the cache). Also, the upstream service would always import all available ZFS pools every boot, which may not be what is desired in some cases. This commit will solve these problems in the following ways: 1. Ignore /etc/zfs/zpool.cache. This seems to be a major source of issues, and also does not play well with NixOS's philosophy of reproducible configurations. Instead, on every boot NixOS will try to import the set of pools that are specified in its configuration. This is also the direction that upstream is moving towards. 2. Instead of trying to import all ZFS pools, only import those that are actually necessary. NixOS will automatically determine these from the config.fileSystems.* option. Also, the user can import any additional pools every boot by adding them to the config.boot.zfs.extraPools option, but this is only necessary if their filesystems are not specified in config.fileSystems.*. 3. Added options to configure if ZFS should force-import ZFS pools. This may currently be necessary, especially if your pools have not been correctly imported with a proper host id configuration (which is probably true for 99% of current NixOS ZFS users). Once host id configuration becomes mandatory when using ZFS in NixOS and we are sure that most users have updated their configurations and rebooted at least once, we should disable force-import by default. Probably, this shouldn't be done before the next stable release. WARNING: This commit may change the order in which your non-ZFS vs ZFS filesystems are mounted. To avoid this problem (now or in the future) it is recommended that you set the 'mountpoint' property of your ZFS filesystems to 'legacy', and that you manage them using config.fileSystems, just like any other non-ZFS filesystem is usually managed in NixOS.
2014-10-22 19:17:21 +02:00
systemd.services = let
getPoolFilesystems = pool:
filter (x: x.fsType == "zfs" && (fsToPool x) == pool) config.system.build.fileSystems;
nixos/zfs: Improve the ZFS boot process It turns out that the upstream systemd services that import ZFS pools contain serious bugs. The first major problem is that importing pools fails if there are no pools to import. The second major problem is that if a pool ends up in /etc/zfs/zpool.cache but it disappears from the system (e.g. if you reboot but during the reboot you unplug your ZFS-formatted USB pen drive), then the import service will always fail and it will be impossible to get rid of the pool from the cache (unless you manually delete the cache). Also, the upstream service would always import all available ZFS pools every boot, which may not be what is desired in some cases. This commit will solve these problems in the following ways: 1. Ignore /etc/zfs/zpool.cache. This seems to be a major source of issues, and also does not play well with NixOS's philosophy of reproducible configurations. Instead, on every boot NixOS will try to import the set of pools that are specified in its configuration. This is also the direction that upstream is moving towards. 2. Instead of trying to import all ZFS pools, only import those that are actually necessary. NixOS will automatically determine these from the config.fileSystems.* option. Also, the user can import any additional pools every boot by adding them to the config.boot.zfs.extraPools option, but this is only necessary if their filesystems are not specified in config.fileSystems.*. 3. Added options to configure if ZFS should force-import ZFS pools. This may currently be necessary, especially if your pools have not been correctly imported with a proper host id configuration (which is probably true for 99% of current NixOS ZFS users). Once host id configuration becomes mandatory when using ZFS in NixOS and we are sure that most users have updated their configurations and rebooted at least once, we should disable force-import by default. Probably, this shouldn't be done before the next stable release. WARNING: This commit may change the order in which your non-ZFS vs ZFS filesystems are mounted. To avoid this problem (now or in the future) it is recommended that you set the 'mountpoint' property of your ZFS filesystems to 'legacy', and that you manage them using config.fileSystems, just like any other non-ZFS filesystem is usually managed in NixOS.
2014-10-22 19:17:21 +02:00
getPoolMounts = pool:
let
mountPoint = fs: escapeSystemdPath fs.mountPoint;
in
map (x: "${mountPoint x}.mount") (getPoolFilesystems pool);
createImportService = pool:
nameValuePair "zfs-import-${pool}" {
description = "Import ZFS pool \"${pool}\"";
requires = [ "systemd-udev-settle.service" ];
after = [ "systemd-udev-settle.service" "systemd-modules-load.service" ];
wantedBy = (getPoolMounts pool) ++ [ "local-fs.target" ];
before = (getPoolMounts pool) ++ [ "local-fs.target" ];
unitConfig = {
DefaultDependencies = "no";
};
serviceConfig = {
Type = "oneshot";
RemainAfterExit = true;
};
2018-06-16 03:39:07 +02:00
script = (importLib {
# See comments at importLib definition.
zpoolCmd="${packages.zfsUser}/sbin/zpool";
awkCmd="${pkgs.gawk}/bin/awk";
inherit cfgZfs;
}) + ''
poolImported "${pool}" && exit
echo -n "importing ZFS pool \"${pool}\"..."
# Loop across the import until it succeeds, because the devices needed may not be discovered yet.
for trial in `seq 1 60`; do
poolReady "${pool}" && poolImport "${pool}" && break
sleep 1
done
poolImported "${pool}" || poolImport "${pool}" # Try one last time, e.g. to import a degraded pool.
if poolImported "${pool}"; then
${optionalString cfgZfs.requestEncryptionCredentials "\"${packages.zfsUser}/sbin/zfs\" load-key -r \"${pool}\""}
echo "Successfully imported ${pool}"
else
exit 1
fi
nixos/zfs: Improve the ZFS boot process It turns out that the upstream systemd services that import ZFS pools contain serious bugs. The first major problem is that importing pools fails if there are no pools to import. The second major problem is that if a pool ends up in /etc/zfs/zpool.cache but it disappears from the system (e.g. if you reboot but during the reboot you unplug your ZFS-formatted USB pen drive), then the import service will always fail and it will be impossible to get rid of the pool from the cache (unless you manually delete the cache). Also, the upstream service would always import all available ZFS pools every boot, which may not be what is desired in some cases. This commit will solve these problems in the following ways: 1. Ignore /etc/zfs/zpool.cache. This seems to be a major source of issues, and also does not play well with NixOS's philosophy of reproducible configurations. Instead, on every boot NixOS will try to import the set of pools that are specified in its configuration. This is also the direction that upstream is moving towards. 2. Instead of trying to import all ZFS pools, only import those that are actually necessary. NixOS will automatically determine these from the config.fileSystems.* option. Also, the user can import any additional pools every boot by adding them to the config.boot.zfs.extraPools option, but this is only necessary if their filesystems are not specified in config.fileSystems.*. 3. Added options to configure if ZFS should force-import ZFS pools. This may currently be necessary, especially if your pools have not been correctly imported with a proper host id configuration (which is probably true for 99% of current NixOS ZFS users). Once host id configuration becomes mandatory when using ZFS in NixOS and we are sure that most users have updated their configurations and rebooted at least once, we should disable force-import by default. Probably, this shouldn't be done before the next stable release. WARNING: This commit may change the order in which your non-ZFS vs ZFS filesystems are mounted. To avoid this problem (now or in the future) it is recommended that you set the 'mountpoint' property of your ZFS filesystems to 'legacy', and that you manage them using config.fileSystems, just like any other non-ZFS filesystem is usually managed in NixOS.
2014-10-22 19:17:21 +02:00
'';
};
2016-07-19 09:57:13 +02:00
# This forces a sync of any ZFS pools prior to poweroff, even if they're set
# to sync=disabled.
createSyncService = pool:
nameValuePair "zfs-sync-${pool}" {
description = "Sync ZFS pool \"${pool}\"";
wantedBy = [ "shutdown.target" ];
2018-06-09 01:06:22 +02:00
unitConfig = {
DefaultDependencies = false;
};
2016-07-19 09:57:13 +02:00
serviceConfig = {
Type = "oneshot";
RemainAfterExit = true;
};
script = ''
${packages.zfsUser}/sbin/zfs set nixos:shutdown-time="$(date)" "${pool}"
2016-07-19 09:57:13 +02:00
'';
};
2018-06-13 12:38:15 +02:00
createZfsService = serv:
nameValuePair serv {
after = [ "systemd-modules-load.service" ];
wantedBy = [ "zfs.target" ];
};
2016-07-19 09:57:13 +02:00
2018-06-13 12:38:15 +02:00
in listToAttrs (map createImportService dataPools ++
map createSyncService allPools ++
map createZfsService [ "zfs-mount" "zfs-share" "zfs-zed" ]);
nixos/zfs: Improve the ZFS boot process It turns out that the upstream systemd services that import ZFS pools contain serious bugs. The first major problem is that importing pools fails if there are no pools to import. The second major problem is that if a pool ends up in /etc/zfs/zpool.cache but it disappears from the system (e.g. if you reboot but during the reboot you unplug your ZFS-formatted USB pen drive), then the import service will always fail and it will be impossible to get rid of the pool from the cache (unless you manually delete the cache). Also, the upstream service would always import all available ZFS pools every boot, which may not be what is desired in some cases. This commit will solve these problems in the following ways: 1. Ignore /etc/zfs/zpool.cache. This seems to be a major source of issues, and also does not play well with NixOS's philosophy of reproducible configurations. Instead, on every boot NixOS will try to import the set of pools that are specified in its configuration. This is also the direction that upstream is moving towards. 2. Instead of trying to import all ZFS pools, only import those that are actually necessary. NixOS will automatically determine these from the config.fileSystems.* option. Also, the user can import any additional pools every boot by adding them to the config.boot.zfs.extraPools option, but this is only necessary if their filesystems are not specified in config.fileSystems.*. 3. Added options to configure if ZFS should force-import ZFS pools. This may currently be necessary, especially if your pools have not been correctly imported with a proper host id configuration (which is probably true for 99% of current NixOS ZFS users). Once host id configuration becomes mandatory when using ZFS in NixOS and we are sure that most users have updated their configurations and rebooted at least once, we should disable force-import by default. Probably, this shouldn't be done before the next stable release. WARNING: This commit may change the order in which your non-ZFS vs ZFS filesystems are mounted. To avoid this problem (now or in the future) it is recommended that you set the 'mountpoint' property of your ZFS filesystems to 'legacy', and that you manage them using config.fileSystems, just like any other non-ZFS filesystem is usually managed in NixOS.
2014-10-22 19:17:21 +02:00
systemd.targets."zfs-import" =
let
services = map (pool: "zfs-import-${pool}.service") dataPools;
in
{
requires = services;
after = services;
2018-06-15 20:54:49 +02:00
wantedBy = [ "zfs.target" ];
nixos/zfs: Improve the ZFS boot process It turns out that the upstream systemd services that import ZFS pools contain serious bugs. The first major problem is that importing pools fails if there are no pools to import. The second major problem is that if a pool ends up in /etc/zfs/zpool.cache but it disappears from the system (e.g. if you reboot but during the reboot you unplug your ZFS-formatted USB pen drive), then the import service will always fail and it will be impossible to get rid of the pool from the cache (unless you manually delete the cache). Also, the upstream service would always import all available ZFS pools every boot, which may not be what is desired in some cases. This commit will solve these problems in the following ways: 1. Ignore /etc/zfs/zpool.cache. This seems to be a major source of issues, and also does not play well with NixOS's philosophy of reproducible configurations. Instead, on every boot NixOS will try to import the set of pools that are specified in its configuration. This is also the direction that upstream is moving towards. 2. Instead of trying to import all ZFS pools, only import those that are actually necessary. NixOS will automatically determine these from the config.fileSystems.* option. Also, the user can import any additional pools every boot by adding them to the config.boot.zfs.extraPools option, but this is only necessary if their filesystems are not specified in config.fileSystems.*. 3. Added options to configure if ZFS should force-import ZFS pools. This may currently be necessary, especially if your pools have not been correctly imported with a proper host id configuration (which is probably true for 99% of current NixOS ZFS users). Once host id configuration becomes mandatory when using ZFS in NixOS and we are sure that most users have updated their configurations and rebooted at least once, we should disable force-import by default. Probably, this shouldn't be done before the next stable release. WARNING: This commit may change the order in which your non-ZFS vs ZFS filesystems are mounted. To avoid this problem (now or in the future) it is recommended that you set the 'mountpoint' property of your ZFS filesystems to 'legacy', and that you manage them using config.fileSystems, just like any other non-ZFS filesystem is usually managed in NixOS.
2014-10-22 19:17:21 +02:00
};
systemd.targets."zfs".wantedBy = [ "multi-user.target" ];
})
(mkIf enableAutoSnapshots {
systemd.services = let
descr = name: if name == "frequent" then "15 mins"
else if name == "hourly" then "hour"
else if name == "daily" then "day"
else if name == "weekly" then "week"
else if name == "monthly" then "month"
else throw "unknown snapshot name";
numSnapshots = name: builtins.getAttr name cfgSnapshots;
in builtins.listToAttrs (map (snapName:
{
name = "zfs-snapshot-${snapName}";
value = {
description = "ZFS auto-snapshotting every ${descr snapName}";
after = [ "zfs-import.target" ];
serviceConfig = {
Type = "oneshot";
ExecStart = "${zfsAutoSnap} ${cfgSnapFlags} ${snapName} ${toString (numSnapshots snapName)}";
};
restartIfChanged = false;
};
}) snapshotNames);
systemd.timers = let
timer = name: if name == "frequent" then "*:0,15,30,45" else name;
in builtins.listToAttrs (map (snapName:
{
name = "zfs-snapshot-${snapName}";
value = {
wantedBy = [ "timers.target" ];
timerConfig = {
OnCalendar = timer snapName;
Persistent = "yes";
};
};
}) snapshotNames);
})
2017-03-02 17:13:54 +01:00
(mkIf enableAutoScrub {
systemd.services.zfs-scrub = {
description = "ZFS pools scrubbing";
after = [ "zfs-import.target" ];
serviceConfig = {
Type = "oneshot";
};
script = ''
${packages.zfsUser}/bin/zpool scrub ${
if cfgScrub.pools != [] then
(concatStringsSep " " cfgScrub.pools)
else
"$(${packages.zfsUser}/bin/zpool list -H -o name)"
}
'';
};
systemd.timers.zfs-scrub = {
wantedBy = [ "timers.target" ];
timerConfig = {
OnCalendar = cfgScrub.interval;
Persistent = "yes";
};
};
})
];
2012-12-04 19:17:54 +01:00
}