All 5 daemon types can be enabled and configured through the module and the module both creates the ceph.conf required but also creates and enables specific services for each daemon, based on the systemd service files that upstream provides.
Among other things, this will allow *2nix tools to output plain data
while still being composable with the traditional
callPackage/.override interfaces.
This can be disabled with the `withKerberos` flag if desired.
Make the relevant assertions lazy,
so that if an overlay is used to set kerberos to null,
a later override can explicitly set `withKerberos` to false.
Don't build with GSSAPI by default;
the patchset is large and a bit hairy,
and it is reasonable to follow upstream who has not merged it
in not enabling it by default.
This can be disabled with the `withKerberos` flag if desired.
Make the relevant assertions lazy,
so that if an overlay is used to set kerberos to null,
a later override can explicitly set `withKerberos` to false.
Don't build with GSSAPI by default;
the patchset is large and a bit hairy,
and it is reasonable to follow upstream who has not merged it
in not enabling it by default.
before:
- /var/run/memcached is a bad default for a socket path, since its
parent directory must be writeable by memcached.
- Socket directory was not created by the module itself -> this was
left as a burden to the user?
- Having a static uid with a dynamic user name is not very useful.
after:
- Replace services.memcached.socket by a boolean flag. This simplifies
our code, since we do not have to check if the user specifies a
path with a parent directory that should be owned by memcached
(/run/memcached/memcached.sock -> /run/memcached).
- Remove fixed uid/gid allocation. The only file ever owned by the
daemon is the socket that will be recreated on every start.
Therefore user and group ids do not need to be static.
- only create the memcached user, if the user has not specified a
different one. The major use case for changing option is to allow
existing services (such as php-fpm) opening the local unix socket.
If we would unconditionally create a user that option would be
useless.
The module would fail to evaluate:
```The option value `boot.crashDump.kernelPackages' in ... is not a package.```
Removed the option boot.crashDump.kernelPackage in favor of using
boot.kernelPatches which automatically chooses the same kernel version
as boot.kernelPackage instead of overriding it.
Added option boot.crashDump.reservedMemory to customized crash kernel
memory.
Changed the default of boot.crashDump.kernelParams as the current one
seemed to have no effect.
* lib: introduce imap0, imap1
For historical reasons, imap starts counting at 1 and it's not
consistent with the rest of the lib.
So for now we split imap into imap0 that starts counting at zero and
imap1 that starts counting at 1. And imap is marked as deprecated.
See c71e2d4235 (commitcomment-21873221)
* replace uses of lib.imap
* lib: move imap to deprecated.nix
* removed pid-file support, it is needless to run collectd as systemd service
* removed static user id, as all the files reowned on the service start
* added ambient capabilities for ping and smart (hdd health) functions
* fix/asterisk-module: use unix-group for asterisk-files
* fix/asterisk-module: add configOption to use some default config-files
* fix/asterisk-module: correction of skel copy
* fix/asterisk-module: use /etc/asterisk as configDir
* fix/asterisk-module: add reload; do not restart unit
* asterisk: 13.6.0 -> 14.1.2
* fix/asterisk: compile with lua, pjsip, format_mp3
* fix/asterisk: fix indentation
* fix/asterisk: remove broken flag
This commit introduces a nixos module for the Openstack Keystone
service. It also provides a optional bootstrap step that creates some
basic initial resources (tenants, endpoints,...).
The provided test starts Keystone by enabling bootstrapping and checks
if user creation works well.
This commit is based on initial works made by domenkozar.
riak-cs: added to all-packages
Added Riak CS nix file to pkgs
Added service file for Riak CS
Removed Erlang_basho specific bindings from the Riak CS repo
riak-cs: changed description
riak-cs: added license
riak-cs: added maintainer
riak_cs: chgned indentations
riak-cs: removed overly complex srcs mechanism
riak-cs: added systemd module
riak-cs: changed Erlang module to Basho-specific version
riak-cs: made modular form
riak-cs: Added a default package in service options
riak-cs: Fixed default package in service options
riak-cs: Patched Makefile
riak_cs: added to module-list
riak_cs: changed from string to actual package in modules
riak-cs: changed example
riak-cs: removed default
riak-cs: changed to defaultText
stanchion: changed default option to defaultText
riak-cs: added defaults; changed types to str
Let's first try if we can determine the Git revision from the .git
directory and if that fails, fall back to get the info from the
".git-revision" file... and after that use something generic like
"master".
This should address #17218 in better way, because we don't need to
create another redundant file in the source checkout of nixpkgs.
I'm not going to route of falling back to using .git, because after
55d881e, we already have ".git-revision" files in people's Git
repositories, which in turn means that nixos-version will report that
old file every time even if the working tree has updated.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Cc: @bennofs, Profpatsch
Reported-by: @devhell
Fixes: #17218
GoCD is an open source continuous delivery server specializing in advanced workflow
modeling and visualization. Update maintainers list to include swarren83. Update
module list to include gocd agent and server module. Update packages list to include
gocd agent and server package. Update version, revision and checksum for GoCD
release 16.5.0.
This GID was used to exempt users from Grsecurity's
`/proc` restrictions; we now prefer to rely on
`security.hideProcessInformation`, which uses the `proc` group
for this purpose. That leaves no use for the grsecurity GID.
More generally, having only a single GID to, presumably, serve as the
default for all of grsecurity's GID based exemption/resriction schemes
would be problematic in any event, so if we decide to enable those
grsecurity features in the future, more specific GIDs should be added.
This adds a Taskserver module along with documentation and a small
helper tool which eases managing a custom CA along with Taskserver
organisations, users and groups.
Taskserver is the server component of Taskwarrior, a TODO list
application for the command line.
The work has been started by @matthiasbeyer back in mid 2015 and I have
continued to work on it recently, so this merge contains commits from
both of us.
Thanks particularly to @nbp and @matthiasbeyer for reviewing and
suggesting improvements.
I've tested this with the new test (nixos/tests/taskserver.nix) this
branch adds and it fails because of the changes introduced by the
closure-size branch, so we need to do additional work on base of this.
It was failing with a `Read-only filesystem` failure due to the systemd
service option `ReadWriteDirectories` not being correctly configured.
Fixes#14132
This module adds an option `security.hideProcessInformation` that, when
enabled, restricts access to process information such as command-line
arguments to the process owner. The module adds a static group "proc"
whose members are exempt from process information hiding.
Ideally, this feature would be implemented by simply adding the
appropriate mount options to `fileSystems."/proc".fsOptions`, but this
was found to not work in vmtests. To ensure that process information
hiding is enforced, we use a systemd service unit that remounts `/proc`
after `systemd-remount-fs.service` has completed.
To verify the correctness of the feature, simple tests were added to
nixos/tests/misc: the test ensures that unprivileged users cannot see
process information owned by another user, while members of "proc" CAN.
Thanks to @abbradar for feedback and suggestions.
I'm renaming the attribute name for uid, because the user name is called
"taskd" so we should really use the same name for it.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
hydra user is already pinned, this is needed due to
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/14148
(cherry picked from commit 0858ece1ad0bd281d2332c40f9fd08005e04a3c5)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
- Enforce that an option declaration has a "defaultText" if and only if the
type of the option derives from "package", "packageSet" or "nixpkgsConfig"
and if a "default" attribute is defined.
- Enforce that the value of the "example" attribute is wrapped with "literalExample"
if the type of the option derives from "package", "packageSet" or "nixpkgsConfig".
- Warn if a "defaultText" is defined in an option declaration if the type of
the option does not derive from "package", "packageSet" or "nixpkgsConfig".
- Warn if no "type" is defined in an option declaration.
NetworkManager needs an additional avahi-user to use link-local
IPv4 (and probably IPv6) addresses. avahi-autoipd also needs to be
patched to the right path.
- add missing types in module definitions
- add missing 'defaultText' in module definitions
- wrap example with 'literalExample' where necessary in module definitions
Setting nixosVersion to something custom is useful for meaningful GRUB
menus and /nix/store paths, but actuallly changing it rebulids the
whole system path (because of `nixos-version` script and manual
pages). Also, changing it is not a particularly good idea because you
can then be differentitated from other NixOS users by a lot of
programs that read /etc/os-release.
This patch introduces an alternative option that does all you want
from nixosVersion, but rebuilds only the very top system level and
/etc while using your label in the names of system /nix/store paths,
GRUB and other boot loaders' menus, getty greetings and so on.
The Bitmessage protocol v3 became mandatory on 16 Nov 2014 and notbit does not support it, nor has there been any activity in the project repository since then.
This module implements a way to start one or more bepasty servers.
It supports configuring the listen address of gunicorn and how bepasty
behaves internally.
Configuring multiple bepasty servers provides a way to serve pastes externally
without authentication and provide creating,listing,deleting pastes interally.
nginx can be used to provide access via hostname + listen address.
`configuration.nix`:
services.bepasty = {
enable = true;
servers = {
internal = {
defaultPermissions = "admin,list,create,read,delete";
secretKey = "secret";
bind = "127.0.0.1:8000";
};
external = {
defaultPermissions = "read";
bind = "127.0.0.1:8001";
secretKey = "another-secret";
};
};
};