This together with extraConfig:
{
"subsystem=undertow"."server=default-server"."http-listener=default"."proxy-address-forwarding" = true;
"subsystem=undertow"."server=default-server"."https-listener=https"."proxy-address-forwarding" = true;
}
Allows to run Keycloak behind a reverse proxy that provides
X-Forwarded-* headers.
Allow update commands in the script to be ordered using `mkOrder`.
If we encounter ordered sub-objects we sort them by priority.
To implement this we now explicitly pass current node in `recurse`,
which also allows us to clean up edge case for top-level node.
Also refactor `recurse` to avoid passing result text argument; we
weren't tail recursive before anyway.
Still actively developed and yet stuck on python2. Also marked as
vulnerable and their issue tracker contains yet another security issue
reported in 2021/10 that the upstream hasn't acknowledged yet.
Mind blown.
Closes: #135543, #97274, #97275
The Intel SGX DCAP driver makes the SGX application enclave device and
the SGX provisioning enclave available below the path `/dev/sgx/`. Since
Linux 5.11, a derivation of the DCAP driver is part of the kernel and
available through the X86_SGX config option; NixOS enables this option
by default.
In contrast to the out-of-tree DCAP driver, the in-tree SGX driver uses
a flat hierarchy for the SGX devices resulting in the paths
`/dev/sgx_enclave` for the application enclave device and
`/dev/sgx_provison` for the provisioning enclave device.
As of this commit, even the latest version of the Intel SGX PSW
libraries still tries to open the (legacy) DCAP paths only. This means
that SGX software currently cannot find the required SGX devices even if
the system actually supports SGX through the in-tree driver. Intel wants
to change this behavior in an upcoming release of intel/linux-sgx.
Having said that, SGX software assuming the SGX devices below
`/dev/sgx/` will prevail. Therefore, this commit introduces the NixOS
configuration option `hardware.cpu.intel.sgx.enableDcapCompat` which
creates the necessary symlinks to support existing SGX software. The
option defaults to true as it is currently the only way to support SGX
software. Also, enabling the SGX AESM service enables the option.
The permissions of the devices `/dev/sgx_enclave` and
`/dev/sgx_provison` remain the same, i.e., are not affected regardless
of having the new option enabled or not.
This option makes the complete netdata configuration directory available for
modification. The default configuration is merged with changes
defined in the configDir option.
Co-authored-by: Michael Raitza <spacefrogg-github@meterriblecrew.net>
During working on #150837 I discovered that `google-oslogin` test
started failing, and so did some of my development machines. Turns out
it was because nscd doesn't start by default; rather it's wanted by
NSS lookup targets, which are not always fired up.
To quote from section on systemd.special(7) on `nss-user-lookup.target`:
> All services which provide parts of the user/group database should be
> ordered before this target, and pull it in.
Following this advice and comparing our unit to official `sssd.service`
unit (which is a similar service), we now pull NSS lookup targets from
the service, while starting it with `multi-user.target`.