nixpkgs-suyu/nixos/modules/services/x11/display-managers/gdm.nix

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{ config, lib, pkgs, ... }:
with lib;
let
cfg = config.services.xserver.displayManager;
gdm = pkgs.gnome3.gdm;
nixos/xserver: Implement configuration of NVIDIA Optimus via PRIME This adds configuration options which automate the configuration of NVIDIA Optimus using PRIME. This allows using the NVIDIA proprietary driver on Optimus laptops, in order to render using the NVIDIA GPU while outputting to displays connected only to the integrated Intel GPU. It also adds an option for enabling kernel modesetting for the NVIDIA driver (via a kernel command line flag); this is particularly useful together with Optimus/PRIME because it fixes tearing on PRIME-connected screens. The user still needs to enable the Optimus/PRIME feature and specify the bus IDs of the Intel and NVIDIA GPUs, but this is still much easier for users and more reliable. The implementation handles both the X configuration file as well as getting display managers to run certain necessary `xrandr` commands just after X has started. Configuration of commands run after X startup is done using a new configuration option `services.xserver.displayManager.setupCommands`. Support for this option is implemented for LightDM, GDM and SDDM; all of these have been tested with this feature including logging into a Plasma session. Note: support of `setupCommands` for GDM is implemented by making GDM run the session executable via a wrapper; the wrapper will run the `setupCommands` before execing. This seemed like the simplest and most reliable approach, and solves running these commands both for GDM's X server and user X servers (GDM starts separate X servers for itself and user sessions). An alternative approach would be with autostart files but that seems harder to set up and less reliable. Note that some simple features for X configuration file generation (in `xserver.nix`) are added which are used in the implementation: - `services.xserver.extraConfig`: Allows adding arbitrary new sections. This is used to add the Device section for the Intel GPU. - `deviceSection` and `screenSection` within `services.xserver.drivers`. This allows the nvidia configuration module to add additional contents into the `Device` and `Screen` sections of the "nvidia" driver, and not into such sections for other drivers that may be enabled.
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xSessionWrapper = if (cfg.setupCommands == "") then null else
pkgs.writeScript "gdm-x-session-wrapper" ''
#!${pkgs.bash}/bin/bash
${cfg.setupCommands}
exec "$@"
'';
# Solves problems like:
# https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Talk:Bluetooth_headset#GDMs_pulseaudio_instance_captures_bluetooth_headset
# Instead of blacklisting plugins, we use Fedora's PulseAudio configuration for GDM:
# https://src.fedoraproject.org/rpms/gdm/blob/master/f/default.pa-for-gdm
pulseConfig = pkgs.writeText "default.pa" ''
load-module module-device-restore
load-module module-card-restore
load-module module-udev-detect
load-module module-native-protocol-unix
load-module module-default-device-restore
load-module module-rescue-streams
load-module module-always-sink
load-module module-intended-roles
load-module module-suspend-on-idle
load-module module-position-event-sounds
'';
defaultSessionName = config.services.xserver.displayManager.defaultSession;
setSessionScript = pkgs.callPackage ./account-service-util.nix { };
in
{
###### interface
options = {
services.xserver.displayManager.gdm = {
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enable = mkEnableOption ''
GDM, the GNOME Display Manager
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'';
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debug = mkEnableOption ''
debugging messages in GDM
'';
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autoLogin = mkOption {
default = {};
description = ''
Auto login configuration attrset.
'';
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type = types.submodule {
options = {
enable = mkOption {
type = types.bool;
default = false;
description = ''
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Automatically log in as the sepecified <option>autoLogin.user</option>.
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'';
};
user = mkOption {
type = types.nullOr types.str;
default = null;
description = ''
User to be used for the autologin.
'';
};
delay = mkOption {
type = types.int;
default = 0;
description = ''
Seconds of inactivity after which the autologin will be performed.
'';
};
};
};
};
wayland = mkOption {
default = true;
description = ''
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Allow GDM to run on Wayland instead of Xserver.
Note to enable Wayland with Nvidia you need to
enable the <option>nvidiaWayland</option>.
'';
type = types.bool;
};
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nvidiaWayland = mkOption {
default = false;
description = ''
Whether to allow wayland to be used with the proprietary
NVidia graphics driver.
'';
};
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autoSuspend = mkOption {
default = true;
description = ''
Suspend the machine after inactivity.
'';
type = types.bool;
};
};
};
###### implementation
config = mkIf cfg.gdm.enable {
assertions = [
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{ assertion = cfg.gdm.autoLogin.enable -> cfg.gdm.autoLogin.user != null;
message = "GDM auto-login requires services.xserver.displayManager.gdm.autoLogin.user to be set";
}
];
services.xserver.displayManager.lightdm.enable = false;
users.users.gdm =
{ name = "gdm";
uid = config.ids.uids.gdm;
group = "gdm";
home = "/run/gdm";
description = "GDM user";
};
users.groups.gdm.gid = config.ids.gids.gdm;
# GDM needs different xserverArgs, presumable because using wayland by default.
services.xserver.tty = null;
services.xserver.display = null;
services.xserver.verbose = null;
services.xserver.displayManager.job =
{
environment = {
GDM_X_SERVER_EXTRA_ARGS = toString
(filter (arg: arg != "-terminate") cfg.xserverArgs);
XDG_DATA_DIRS = "${cfg.sessionData.desktops}/share/";
nixos/xserver: Implement configuration of NVIDIA Optimus via PRIME This adds configuration options which automate the configuration of NVIDIA Optimus using PRIME. This allows using the NVIDIA proprietary driver on Optimus laptops, in order to render using the NVIDIA GPU while outputting to displays connected only to the integrated Intel GPU. It also adds an option for enabling kernel modesetting for the NVIDIA driver (via a kernel command line flag); this is particularly useful together with Optimus/PRIME because it fixes tearing on PRIME-connected screens. The user still needs to enable the Optimus/PRIME feature and specify the bus IDs of the Intel and NVIDIA GPUs, but this is still much easier for users and more reliable. The implementation handles both the X configuration file as well as getting display managers to run certain necessary `xrandr` commands just after X has started. Configuration of commands run after X startup is done using a new configuration option `services.xserver.displayManager.setupCommands`. Support for this option is implemented for LightDM, GDM and SDDM; all of these have been tested with this feature including logging into a Plasma session. Note: support of `setupCommands` for GDM is implemented by making GDM run the session executable via a wrapper; the wrapper will run the `setupCommands` before execing. This seemed like the simplest and most reliable approach, and solves running these commands both for GDM's X server and user X servers (GDM starts separate X servers for itself and user sessions). An alternative approach would be with autostart files but that seems harder to set up and less reliable. Note that some simple features for X configuration file generation (in `xserver.nix`) are added which are used in the implementation: - `services.xserver.extraConfig`: Allows adding arbitrary new sections. This is used to add the Device section for the Intel GPU. - `deviceSection` and `screenSection` within `services.xserver.drivers`. This allows the nvidia configuration module to add additional contents into the `Device` and `Screen` sections of the "nvidia" driver, and not into such sections for other drivers that may be enabled.
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} // optionalAttrs (xSessionWrapper != null) {
# Make GDM use this wrapper before running the session, which runs the
# configured setupCommands. This relies on a patched GDM which supports
# this environment variable.
GDM_X_SESSION_WRAPPER = "${xSessionWrapper}";
};
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execCmd = "exec ${gdm}/bin/gdm";
preStart = optionalString (defaultSessionName != null) ''
# Set default session in session chooser to a specified values basically ignore session history.
${setSessionScript}/bin/set-session ${cfg.sessionData.autologinSession}
'';
};
systemd.tmpfiles.rules = [
"d /run/gdm/.config 0711 gdm gdm"
] ++ optionals config.hardware.pulseaudio.enable [
"d /run/gdm/.config/pulse 0711 gdm gdm"
"L+ /run/gdm/.config/pulse/${pulseConfig.name} - - - - ${pulseConfig}"
] ++ optionals config.services.gnome3.gnome-initial-setup.enable [
# Create stamp file for gnome-initial-setup to prevent it starting in GDM.
"f /run/gdm/.config/gnome-initial-setup-done 0711 gdm gdm - yes"
];
# Otherwise GDM will not be able to start correctly and display Wayland sessions
systemd.packages = with pkgs.gnome3; [ gnome-session gnome-shell ];
environment.systemPackages = [ pkgs.gnome3.adwaita-icon-theme ];
systemd.services.display-manager.wants = [
# Because sd_login_monitor_new requires /run/systemd/machines
"systemd-machined.service"
# setSessionScript wants AccountsService
"accounts-daemon.service"
];
systemd.services.display-manager.after = [
"rc-local.service"
"systemd-machined.service"
"systemd-user-sessions.service"
"getty@tty${gdm.initialVT}.service"
"plymouth-quit.service"
"plymouth-start.service"
];
systemd.services.display-manager.conflicts = [
"getty@tty${gdm.initialVT}.service"
# TODO: Add "plymouth-quit.service" so GDM can control when plymouth quits.
# Currently this breaks switching configurations while using plymouth.
];
systemd.services.display-manager.onFailure = [
"plymouth-quit.service"
];
systemd.services.display-manager.serviceConfig = {
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# Restart = "always"; - already defined in xserver.nix
KillMode = "mixed";
IgnoreSIGPIPE = "no";
BusName = "org.gnome.DisplayManager";
StandardOutput = "syslog";
StandardError = "inherit";
ExecReload = "${pkgs.coreutils}/bin/kill -SIGHUP $MAINPID";
KeyringMode = "shared";
EnvironmentFile = "-/etc/locale.conf";
};
systemd.services.display-manager.path = [ pkgs.gnome3.gnome-session ];
# Allow choosing an user account
services.accounts-daemon.enable = true;
services.dbus.packages = [ gdm ];
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# We duplicate upstream's udev rules manually to make wayland with nvidia configurable
services.udev.extraRules = ''
# disable Wayland on Cirrus chipsets
ATTR{vendor}=="0x1013", ATTR{device}=="0x00b8", ATTR{subsystem_vendor}=="0x1af4", ATTR{subsystem_device}=="0x1100", RUN+="${gdm}/libexec/gdm-disable-wayland"
# disable Wayland on Hi1710 chipsets
ATTR{vendor}=="0x19e5", ATTR{device}=="0x1711", RUN+="${gdm}/libexec/gdm-disable-wayland"
${optionalString (!cfg.gdm.nvidiaWayland) ''
DRIVER=="nvidia", RUN+="${gdm}/libexec/gdm-disable-wayland"
''}
# disable Wayland when modesetting is disabled
IMPORT{cmdline}="nomodeset", RUN+="${gdm}/libexec/gdm-disable-wayland"
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'';
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systemd.user.services.dbus.wantedBy = [ "default.target" ];
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programs.dconf.profiles.gdm =
let
customDconf = pkgs.writeTextFile {
name = "gdm-dconf";
destination = "/dconf/gdm-custom";
text = ''
${optionalString (!cfg.gdm.autoSuspend) ''
[org/gnome/settings-daemon/plugins/power]
sleep-inactive-ac-type='nothing'
sleep-inactive-battery-type='nothing'
sleep-inactive-ac-timeout=0
sleep-inactive-battery-timeout=0
''}
'';
};
customDconfDb = pkgs.stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "gdm-dconf-db";
buildCommand = ''
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${pkgs.dconf}/bin/dconf compile $out ${customDconf}/dconf
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'';
};
in pkgs.stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "dconf-gdm-profile";
buildCommand = ''
# Check that the GDM profile starts with what we expect.
if [ $(head -n 1 ${gdm}/share/dconf/profile/gdm) != "user-db:user" ]; then
echo "GDM dconf profile changed, please update gdm.nix"
exit 1
fi
# Insert our custom DB behind it.
sed '2ifile-db:${customDconfDb}' ${gdm}/share/dconf/profile/gdm > $out
'';
};
# Use AutomaticLogin if delay is zero, because it's immediate.
# Otherwise with TimedLogin with zero seconds the prompt is still
# presented and there's a little delay.
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environment.etc."gdm/custom.conf".text = ''
[daemon]
WaylandEnable=${if cfg.gdm.wayland then "true" else "false"}
${optionalString cfg.gdm.autoLogin.enable (
if cfg.gdm.autoLogin.delay > 0 then ''
TimedLoginEnable=true
TimedLogin=${cfg.gdm.autoLogin.user}
TimedLoginDelay=${toString cfg.gdm.autoLogin.delay}
'' else ''
AutomaticLoginEnable=true
AutomaticLogin=${cfg.gdm.autoLogin.user}
'')
}
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[security]
[xdmcp]
[greeter]
[chooser]
[debug]
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${optionalString cfg.gdm.debug "Enable=true"}
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'';
environment.etc."gdm/Xsession".source = config.services.xserver.displayManager.sessionData.wrapper;
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# GDM LFS PAM modules, adapted somehow to NixOS
security.pam.services = {
gdm-launch-environment.text = ''
auth required pam_succeed_if.so audit quiet_success user = gdm
auth optional pam_permit.so
account required pam_succeed_if.so audit quiet_success user = gdm
account sufficient pam_unix.so
password required pam_deny.so
session required pam_succeed_if.so audit quiet_success user = gdm
session required pam_env.so conffile=${config.system.build.pamEnvironment} readenv=0
session optional ${pkgs.systemd}/lib/security/pam_systemd.so
session optional pam_keyinit.so force revoke
session optional pam_permit.so
'';
gdm-password.text = ''
auth substack login
account include login
password substack login
session include login
'';
gdm-autologin.text = ''
auth requisite pam_nologin.so
auth required pam_succeed_if.so uid >= 1000 quiet
auth required pam_permit.so
account sufficient pam_unix.so
password requisite pam_unix.so nullok sha512
session optional pam_keyinit.so revoke
session include login
'';
};
};
}