Commit graph

530 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Florian Klink
4a85559ffc
Merge pull request #87016 from flokli/nsswitch-cleanup
nixos/nsswitch cleanup nss modules
2020-05-14 14:55:43 +02:00
Timmy Xiao
fd13ca9f84 pam: fix spelling mistake in configuration 2020-05-12 15:56:37 -04:00
adisbladis
30236aceaf
Merge pull request #87581 from cole-h/doas
nixos/doas: default rule should be first
2020-05-12 18:38:51 +02:00
Florian Klink
2297508783 nixos/google-oslogin: add to system.nssDatabases.group too
nixos/modules/config/nsswitch.nix uses `passwdArray` for both `passwd`
and `group`, but when moving this into the google-oslogin module in
4b71b6f8fa, it didn't get split
appropriately.
2020-05-11 16:14:50 +02:00
Cole Helbling
01b645e872
nixos/doas: default rule should be first
In /etc/doas.conf, the last-matched rule will override all
previously-matched rules. Thus, make the default rule show up first (but
still allow some wiggle room for a user to `mkBefore` it), before any
user-defined rules.
2020-05-10 22:14:16 -07:00
Dominique Martinet
4c81174f4c
nixos/confinement: add conflict for ProtectSystem service option
Systemd ProtectSystem is incompatible with the chroot we make
for confinement. The options is redundant with what we do anyway
so warn if it had been set and advise to disable it.

Merges: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/87420
2020-05-10 19:25:41 +02:00
Cole Helbling
446fb0097a
nixos/doas: init
`doas` is a lighter alternative to `sudo` that "provide[s] 95% of the
features of `sudo` with a fraction of the codebase" [1]. I prefer it to
`sudo`, so I figured I would add a NixOS module in order for it to be
easier to use. The module is based off of the existing `sudo` module.

[1] https://github.com/Duncaen/OpenDoas
2020-05-04 15:56:06 -07:00
Florian Klink
7457c78989
Merge pull request #86347 from m1cr0man/dnsdocs
nixos/acme: update documentation
2020-05-04 14:11:28 +02:00
Yegor Timoshenko
235f4c4a91
Merge pull request #83121 from emilazy/acme-use-ec256
nixos/acme: change default keyType to ec256
2020-05-03 12:41:23 +03:00
Lucas Savva
037ef70d5c
nixos/acme: fix incorrect example 2020-05-02 00:07:50 +01:00
Lucas Savva
c9f6e5f161
nixos/acme: indicate support for other providers 2020-05-01 18:23:16 +01:00
Florian Klink
4b71b6f8fa nixos/google-oslogin: Move nsswitch config into the module
Motivation: #86350
2020-04-30 17:51:13 +02:00
Lucas Savva
47da7aafdf
nixos/acme: update documentation 2020-04-29 20:31:17 +01:00
worldofpeace
10bf212b4f
Merge pull request #85589 from emilazy/add-acme-maintainers-team
Add ACME maintainers team
2020-04-28 18:38:12 -04:00
worldofpeace
a0ebabf60a
Merge pull request #80896 from clkamp/pam-unix-add-nodelay
nixos/security/pam: Add nodelay option
2020-04-28 17:50:42 -04:00
Jörg Thalheim
72773b9c97
prey-bash-client: remove
prey-bash-client is deprecated since 2018
2020-04-28 09:44:55 +01:00
Dominik Xaver Hörl
c10d82358f treewide: add types to boolean / enable options or make use of mkEnableOption 2020-04-27 09:32:01 +02:00
Emily
ef7e6eeaf4 nixos/acme: set maintainers to acme team 2020-04-20 01:39:31 +01:00
worldofpeace
996ae856b6
Merge pull request #85365 from immae/fix_acme_postrun
nixos/acme: Fix postRun in acme certificate being ran at every run
2020-04-18 13:16:16 -04:00
Ismaël Bouya
8e88b8dce2
nixos/acme: Fix postRun in acme certificate being ran at every run 2020-04-17 22:16:50 +02:00
Arian van Putten
5c1c642939 Revert "nixos/acme: Fix allowKeysForGroup not applying immediately"
This reverts commit 5532065d06.

As far as I can tell setting RemainAfterExit=true here completely breaks
certificate renewal, which is really bad!

the sytemd timer will activate the service unit every OnCalendar=,
however with RemainAfterExit=true the service is already active! So the
timer doesn't rerun the service!

The commit also broke the actual tests, (As it broke activation too)
but this was fixed later in https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/76052
I wrongly assumed that PR fixed renewal too, which it didn't!

testing renewals is hard, as we need to sleep in tests.
2020-04-16 10:37:04 +02:00
Lucas Savva
827d5e6b44
acme: share accounts between certificates
There are strict rate limits on account creation for Let's Encrypt
certificates. It is important to reuse credentails when possible.
2020-04-14 00:15:16 +01:00
Jörg Thalheim
d7ff6ab94a
acme: create certificates in subdirectory
This allows to have multiple certificates with the same common name.
Lego uses in its internal directory the common name to name the certificate.

fixes #84409
2020-04-09 08:26:07 +01:00
Maximilian Bosch
1a5289f803
nixos/acme: don't depend on multi-user.target inside a container
On boot, a container doesn't have an uplink and would run into a timeout
while waiting for cert renewal[1].

[1] https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/81371#issuecomment-605526099
2020-03-29 19:59:52 +02:00
Aaron Andersen
6f0c1cdbd9 nixos/duosec: rename ikey option to integrationKey 2020-03-22 20:25:11 -04:00
Aaron Andersen
b9dca769f1 nixos/duosec: replace insecure skey option with secure secretKeyFile option 2020-03-22 20:23:55 -04:00
Emily
62e34d1c87 nixos/acme: change default keyType to ec256
Previously, the NixOS ACME module defaulted to using P-384 for
TLS certificates. I believe that this is a mistake, and that we
should use P-256 instead, despite it being theoretically
cryptographically weaker.

The security margin of a 256-bit elliptic curve cipher is substantial;
beyond a certain level, more bits in the key serve more to slow things
down than add meaningful protection. It's much more likely that ECDSA
will be broken entirely, or some fatal flaw will be found in the NIST
curves that makes them all insecure, than that the security margin
will be reduced enough to put P-256 at risk but not P-384. It's also
inconsistent to target a curve with a 192-bit security margin when our
recommended nginx TLS configuration allows 128-bit AES. [This Stack
Exchange answer][pornin] by cryptographer Thomas Pornin conveys the
general attitude among experts:

> Use P-256 to minimize trouble. If you feel that your manhood is
> threatened by using a 256-bit curve where a 384-bit curve is
> available, then use P-384: it will increases your computational and
> network costs (a factor of about 3 for CPU, a few extra dozen bytes
> on the network) but this is likely to be negligible in practice (in a
> SSL-powered Web server, the heavy cost is in "Web", not "SSL").

[pornin]: https://security.stackexchange.com/a/78624

While the NIST curves have many flaws (see [SafeCurves][safecurves]),
P-256 and P-384 are no different in this respect; SafeCurves gives
them the same rating. The only NIST curve Bernstein [thinks better of,
P-521][bernstein] (see "Other standard primes"), isn't usable for Web
PKI (it's [not supported by BoringSSL by default][boringssl] and hence
[doesn't work in Chromium/Chrome][chromium], and Let's Encrypt [don't
support it either][letsencrypt]).

[safecurves]: https://safecurves.cr.yp.to/
[bernstein]: https://blog.cr.yp.to/20140323-ecdsa.html
[boringssl]: https://boringssl.googlesource.com/boringssl/+/e9fc3e547e557492316932b62881c3386973ceb2
[chromium]: https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=478225
[letsencrypt]: https://letsencrypt.org/docs/integration-guide/#supported-key-algorithms

So there's no real benefit to using P-384; what's the cost? In the
Stack Exchange answer I linked, Pornin estimates a factor of 3×
CPU usage, which wouldn't be so bad; unfortunately, this is wildly
optimistic in practice, as P-256 is much more common and therefore
much better optimized. [This GitHub comment][openssl] measures the
performance differential for raw Diffie-Hellman operations with OpenSSL
1.1.1 at a whopping 14× (even P-521 fares better!); [Caddy disables
P-384 by default][caddy] due to Go's [lack of accelerated assembly
implementations][crypto/elliptic] for it, and the difference there seems
even more extreme: [this golang-nuts post][golang-nuts] measures the key
generation performance differential at 275×. It's unlikely to be the
bottleneck for anyone, but I still feel kind of bad for anyone having
lego generate hundreds of certificates and sign challenges with them
with performance like that...

[openssl]: https://github.com/mozilla/server-side-tls/issues/190#issuecomment-421831599
[caddy]: 2cab475ba5/modules/caddytls/values.go (L113-L124)
[crypto/elliptic]: 2910c5b4a0/src/crypto/elliptic
[golang-nuts]: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/golang-nuts/nlnJkBMMyzk

In conclusion, there's no real reason to use P-384 in general: if you
don't care about Web PKI compatibility and want to use a nicer curve,
then Ed25519 or P-521 are better options; if you're a NIST-fearing
paranoiac, you should use good old RSA; but if you're a normal person
running a web server, then you're best served by just using P-256. Right
now, NixOS makes an arbitrary decision between two equally-mediocre
curves that just so happens to slow down ECDH key agreement for every
TLS connection by over an order of magnitude; this commit fixes that.

Unfortunately, it seems like existing P-384 certificates won't get
migrated automatically on renewal without manual intervention, but
that's a more general problem with the existing ACME module (see #81634;
I know @yegortimoshenko is working on this). To migrate your
certificates manually, run:

    $ sudo find /var/lib/acme/.lego/certificates -type f -delete
    $ sudo find /var/lib/acme -name '*.pem' -delete
    $ sudo systemctl restart 'acme-*.service' nginx.service

(No warranty. If it breaks, you get to keep both pieces. But it worked
for me.)
2020-03-22 05:27:20 +00:00
Aaron Andersen
4f9cea70bd nixos/duosec: fix indentation 2020-03-21 10:34:12 -04:00
Silvan Mosberger
7c3f3e9c51
Merge pull request #72029 from lschuermann/tpm2-module
nixos/tpm2: init
2020-03-15 15:47:06 +01:00
Leon Schuermann
156b879c2e nixos/tpm2: init
This commit adds udev rules, the userspace resource manager and
PKCS#11 module support.
2020-03-15 12:16:32 +01:00
Aaron Andersen
dbe59eca84 nixos/sshd: add authorizedKeysCommand and authorizedKeysCommandUser options 2020-03-12 21:00:12 -04:00
Silvan Mosberger
4f69262c19
Merge pull request #81369 from mweinelt/pr/acme-chmod
nixos/acme: apply chmod and ownership unconditionally
2020-03-07 03:24:46 +01:00
Yegor Timoshenko
c32da2ed9c nixos/acme: force symlink from fullchain.pem to cert.pem
Co-authored-by: emily <vcs@emily.moe>
2020-03-04 12:52:12 +03:00
Yegor Timoshenko
c16f2218da
Merge pull request #80900 from emilazy/acme-must-staple
nixos/acme: Must-Staple and extra flags
2020-03-03 03:57:40 +03:00
Yegor Timoshenko
31aefc74c5
Merge pull request #80856 from emilazy/adjust-acme
nixos/acme: adjust renewal timer options
2020-03-03 03:49:33 +03:00
Yegor Timoshenko
98cbc40570
Merge pull request #81371 from mweinelt/pr/acme-autostart
nixos/acme: renew after rebuild and on boot
2020-03-01 15:46:31 +03:00
worldofpeace
e906014d4b
Merge pull request #80920 from worldofpeace/rngd-cleanup-shutdown
nixos/rngd: fix clean shutdown
2020-03-01 11:44:22 +00:00
Martin Weinelt
3575555fa8
nixos/acme: apply chmod and ownership unconditionally
Also separate directory and file permissions so the certificate files
don't end up with the executable bit.

Fixes #81335
2020-02-29 20:17:14 +01:00
Emily
ffb7b984b2 nixos/acme: add extraLegoRenewFlags option 2020-02-29 16:44:04 +00:00
Emily
b522aeda5a nixos/acme: add ocspMustStaple option 2020-02-29 16:44:04 +00:00
Emily
7b14bbd734 nixos/acme: adjust renewal timer options
The current weekly setting causes every NixOS server to try to renew
its certificate at midnight on the dot on Monday. This contributes to
the general problem of periodic load spikes for Let's Encrypt; NixOS
is probably not a major contributor to that problem, but we can lead by
example by picking good defaults here.

The values here were chosen after consulting with @yuriks, an SRE at
Let's Encrypt:

* Randomize the time certificates are renewed within a 24 hour period.

* Check for renewal every 24 hours, to ensure the certificate is always
  renewed before an expiry notice is sent out.

* Increase the AccuracySec (thus lowering the accuracy(!)), so that
  systemd can coalesce the renewal with other timers being run.

  (You might be worried that this would defeat the purpose of the time
  skewing, but systemd is documented as avoiding this by picking a
  random time.)
2020-02-29 14:03:36 +00:00
Martin Weinelt
5ff9441471
nixos/acme: renew after rebuild and on boot
Fixes #81069
2020-02-29 14:40:34 +01:00
Christian Lütke-Stetzkamp
dc1efa99a0 nixos/security/pam: Add nodelay option
Closes #65551
2020-02-24 12:38:41 +01:00
worldofpeace
fa76150235 nixos/rngd: fix clean shutdown
It seems disabling DefaultDependencies
removes these implicit dependencies [0] that
we needed for shutdown to happen cleanly.

Fixes #80871

[0]: https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd.service.html#Default%20Dependencies
2020-02-23 18:53:52 -05:00
Emily
8ecbd97f82 nixos/acme: move the crt to fullchain.pem
lego already bundles the chain with the certificate,[1] so the current
code, designed for simp_le, was resulting in duplicate certificate
chains, manifesting as "Chain issues: Incorrect order, Extra certs" on
the Qualys SSL Server Test.

cert.pem stays around as a symlink for backwards compatibility.

[1] 5cdc0002e9/acme/api/certificate.go (L40-L44)
2020-02-23 04:10:34 +00:00
Michele Guerini Rocco
48704fbd4f
Merge pull request #71302 from tokudan/encrypted-swap-entropy-fix
rngd: Start early during boot and encrypted swap entropy fix
2020-02-12 01:28:03 +01:00
Florian Klink
4e0fea3fe2 Merge pull request #77578 from m1cr0man/master
Replace simp-le with lego and support DNS-01 challenge
2020-02-10 11:47:30 +01:00
Silvan Mosberger
cb1f1b4260
nixos/sudo: Fix extraRules example rendering 2020-02-10 01:37:07 +01:00
Lucas Savva
75fa8027eb
nixos/acme: Update release note, remove redundant requires
Merge remote-tracking branch 'remotes/upstream/master'
2020-02-09 16:31:07 +00:00
Lucas Savva
636eb23157
nixos/acme: Fix b.example.com test 2020-02-09 11:34:17 +00:00