On start, unicorn, sidekiq and other parts running ruby code emits
quite a few warnings similar to
/var/gitlab/state/config/application.rb:202: warning: already initialized constant Gitlab::Application::LOOSE_EE_APP_ASSETS
/nix/store/ysb0lgbzxp7a9y4yl8d4f9wrrzy9kafc-gitlab-ee-12.3.5/share/gitlab/config/application.rb:202: warning: previous definition of LOOSE_EE_APP_ASSETS was here
/var/gitlab/state/lib/gitlab.rb:38: warning: already initialized constant Gitlab::COM_URL
/nix/store/ysb0lgbzxp7a9y4yl8d4f9wrrzy9kafc-gitlab-ee-12.3.5/share/gitlab/lib/gitlab.rb:38: warning: previous definition of COM_URL was here
This seems to be caused by the same ruby files being evaluated
multiple times due to the paths being different - sometimes they're
loaded using the direct path and sometimes through a symlink, due to
our split between config and package data. To fix this, we make sure
that the offending files in the state directory always reference the
store path, regardless of that being the real file or a symlink.
Otherwise connecting simply fails:
VPN connection: failed to connect: 'La création du fichier « /tmp/lib/NetworkManager-fortisslvpn/0507e3ef-f0e0-4153-af64-b3d9a025877c.config.XSB19Z » a échoué : No such file or directory'
This reverts commit 2ee14c34ed.
This caused the initializers directory to be cleaned out while gitlab
was running in some instances. We clean out the directory on the
preStart stage already, so ensuring existance and permissions should
suffice.
This fixes an issue with a recent addition of a config file
check in c28ded36ef.
Previously it was possible to supply a path as a string
to `configFile`. Now it will fail checking the config file
during evaluation of the module due to sandboxing.
A toggle to disable the check, more informative log messages
and handling for various configFile values are added.
This solves the dependency cycle in gcr alternatively so there won't be
two gnupg store paths in a standard NixOS system which has udisks2 enabled
by default.
NixOS users are expected to use the gpg-agent user service to pull in the
appropriate pinentry flavour or install it on their systemPackages and set
it in their local gnupg agent config instead.
Co-authored-by: Florian Klink <flokli@flokli.de>
This solves the dependency cycle in gcr alternatively so there won't be
two gnupg store paths in a standard NixOS system which has udisks2 enabled
by default.
NixOS users are expected to use the gpg-agent user service to pull in the
appropriate pinentry flavour or install it on their systemPackages and set
it in their local gnupg agent config instead.
Co-authored-by: Florian Klink <flokli@flokli.de>
This session would fail to start because we didn't have it in systemd.packages
(as we've switched to systemd gnome-session).
Haven't tested custom sessions.
This fixes user environment setup for sessions which doesn't successfully go
through a shell init.
Note we don't go through `sessionVariables` as we want the wrappers to have
highest priority. It would also cause wrapperDir to occur twice when in shell
sessions, as shells use `sessionVariables` too while prepending wrapperDir in a
custom snippet.
In particular logging in and out of gnome-shell could result in a broken path
without this fix.
Bumps `matrix-synapse` to version 1.4.0[1]. With this version the
following changes in the matrix-synapse module were needed:
* Removed `trusted_third_party_id_servers`: option is marked as deprecated
and ignored by matrix-synapse[2].
* Added `account_threepid_delegates` options as replacement for 3rdparty
server features[3].
* Added `redaction_retention_period` option to configure how long
redacted options should be kept in the database.
* Added `ma27` as maintainer for `matrix-synapse`.
Co-Authored-By: Notkea <pacien@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Maximilian Bosch <maximilian@mbosch.me>
[1] https://matrix.org/blog/2019/10/03/synapse-1-4-0-released
[2] https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/5875
[3] https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/5876
This fixes a regression from bb649d96b0.
There were permission problems, when the preStart script tried to copy
the smokeping.fcgi file over the old file.
When having backup jobs that persist to a removable device like an
external HDD, the directory shouldn't be created by an activation script
as this might confuse auto-mounting tools such as udiskie(8).
In this case the job will simply fail, with the former approach
udiskie ran into some issues as the path `/run/media/ma27/backup` was
already there and owned by root.
GDM now specifies ordering between `plymouth-quit` and `display-manager`:
9be5321097
This causes an ordering cycle between GDM and plymouth-quit which can result in
systemd breaking GDM:
```
plymouth-quit.service: Job display-manager.service/start deleted to break
ordering cycle starting with plymouth-quit.service/start
```
Not sure how often this triggers, as I've run my system with plymouth and
9be5321097 without any issues. But I did catch a VM doing this.
NOTE: I also tried to remove the ordering in GDM to see if plymouth managed to
live longer, but it didn't seem to help. So I opted to stick as close to
upstream (upstream GDM specifies ordering, but plymouth does not).
We had these set so gtk2 can discover themes properly, however we failed
realize that gtk2 already has a patch that makes it search in XDG_DATA_DIRS.
I don't believe any issue is solved by setting these.
This option was added by mistake since `listenAddress` exists by default
for each prometheus-exporter. Using
`services.prometheus.exporters.wireguard.addr` will now cause a warning,
but doesn't break eval.
Having `display-manager` conflict with `plymouth-quit` causes this lock up:
- `plymouth-quit-wait` starts up, waiting for plymouth-quit to run
- `lightdm` starts up
- `plymouth-quit` can't start, it conflicts with lightdm
- `plymouth-quit-wait` keeps waiting on plymouth-quit to kill plymouthd
The idea is having LightDM control when plymouth quits, but communication with
plymouth was broken: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/71064
Unfortunately having the conflict breaks switching to configurations with
plymouth enabled. So we still need to remove the conflict.
fixes#71034
The rationale for this is that old filesystems have recieved little scrutiny
wrt. security relevant bugs.
Lifted from OpenSUSE[1].
[1]: 8cb42fb665
Co-Authored-By: Renaud <c0bw3b@users.noreply.github.com>
Default getfacl behavior is to remove leading slash on absolute
paths in its header printed to stdout.
Before the header it will also print a message about it...
Switches -p -or --absolute-names can turn this off
and remove some noise from our tests logs.
In fact, don't create them at all because Nix does that automatically.
Also remove modules/programs/shell.nix because everything it did is
now done automatically by Nix.
gitlab:db:configure prints the root user's password to stdout on
successful setup, which means it will be logged to the
journal. Silence this informational output. Errors are printed to
stderr and will thus still be let through.
The mime type definitions included with nginx are very incomplete, so
we use a list of mime types from the mailcap package, which is also
used by most other Linux distributions by default.