By making askPassword an option, desktop environment modules can
override the default x11_ssh_askpassword with their own equivalent for
better integration. For example, KDE 5 uses plasma5.ksshaskpass instead.
Major changes
- Port to systemd timers: for each archive configuration is created a
tarsnap@archive-name.timer which triggers the instanced service unit
- Rename the `config` option to `archives`
Minor/superficial improvements
- Restrict tarsnap service capabilities
- Use dirOf builtin
- Set executable bit for owner of tarsnap cache directory
- Set IOSchedulingClass to idle
- Humanize numbers when printing stats
- Rewrite most option descriptions
- Simplify assertion
Since we restart all active target units (of which there are many),
it's hard to see the units that actually matter. So don't print that
we're starting target units that are already active.
‘nixos-rebuild dry-activate’ builds the new configuration and then
prints what systemd services would be stopped, restarted etc. if the
configuration were actually activated. This could be extended later to
show other activation actions (like uids being deleted).
To prevent confusion, ‘nixos-rebuild dry-run’ has been renamed to
‘nixos-rebuild dry-build’.
Currently just makes sure that by default it's possible to open a
terminal.
And exactly this should be the main point that might confuse users of i3
in NixOS, because i3 doesn't print a warning/error if it is unable to
start the terminal emulator.
Thanks to @waaaaargh for reporting this issue.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
The grsec-lock unit fails unless /proc/sys/kernel/grsecurity/grsec_lock
exists and so prevents switching into a new configuration after enabling
grsecurity.sysctl.
If the host is shutting down, machinectl may fail because it's
bus-activated and D-Bus will be shutting down. So just send a signal
to the leader process directly.
Fixes#6212.
This was lost back in
ffedee6ed5. Getting this to work is
slightly tricky because ssh-agent runs as a user unit, and so doesn't
know the user's $DISPLAY.
* rewrite to systemd.services
* disable forking to give systemd better control
* verifiably run as ddclient user
* expose ssl option
* unset default value for dyndns server
* rename option "web" to "use" to be consistent with ddclient docs
* add descriptions
* add types to options
* clean up formatting
HAProxy fails to start with the default 'config'. Better disable it and
assert that the user provides a suitable 'config'. (AFAICS, there cannot
really be a default config file for HAProxy.)
The networkd implementation sets systemd.services.dhcpcd.enable to
false in nixos/modules/tasks/network-interfaces-systemd.nix. So we need
to respect that in the dhcpcd module.
If we don't, the resumeCommand is set nevertheless, which causes the
post-resume.service to fail after resuming:
Failed to reload dhcpcd.service: Unit dhcpcd.service is masked.
post-resume.service: main process exited, code=exited, status=1/FAILURE
Failed to start Post-Resume Actions.
Dependency failed for Post-Resume Actions.
Unit post-resume.service entered failed state.
post-resume.service failed.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Since Chromium version 42, we have a new user namespaces sandbox in the
upstream project. It's more integrated so the chrome://sandbox page
reports it as "Namespace Sandbox" instead of SUID sandbox, which we were
re-using (or abusing?) in our patch.
So if either "SUID Sandbox" or "Namespace Sandbox" reports with "Yes",
it's fine on our side.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Typical use:
nix.requireSignedBinaryCaches = true;
nix.binaryCachePublicKeys = [ "hydra.nixos.org-1:CNHJZBh9K4tP3EKF6FkkgeVYsS3ohTl+oS0Qa8bezVs=" ];
(The public key of cache.nixos.org is included by default.)
Note that this requires Nix 1.9 and that most of cache.nixos.org
hasn't been signed yet.
Update chronos default port to match the one documented on
their website (http://airbnb.github.io/chronos). The one in
their repo (the current one) clashes with the marathon documented
one.
The Nixos Qemu VM that are used for VM tests can now start without
boot menu even when using a bootloader.
The Nixos Qemu VM with bootloader can emulate a EFI boot now.
There is no "standard" location for the certificate bundle, so many
programs/libraries have various hard-coded default locations that
don't exist on NixOS. To make these more likely to work, provide
some symlinks.
Sawfish is a versatile, Lisp-based window manager
In that commit I include all Sawfish stack:
- librep, a lisp system;
- rep-gtk, bindings for gtk
- sawfish, the window manager
The PID 1 shell is executed as the last command in a sh invocation. Some
shells implicitly use exec for that, but the current busybox ash does not,
so the shell gets a wrong PID. Spell out the exec.
This test sometimes fails with
Kernel panic - not syncing: assertion "i && sym_get_cam_status(cp->cmd) == DID_SOFT_ERROR" failed: file "/tmp/nix-build-linux-3.14.32.drv-0/linux-3.14.32/drivers/scsi/sym53c8xx_2/sym_hipd.c", line 3399
after "sd 2:0:0:0: ABORT operation timed-out."
Since we don't care all that much about GRUB 1 anymore, don't make the
release depend on it.
http://hydra.nixos.org/build/19563197
When starting from a clean slate, the couchdb service fails.
First, the pre-start script fails because it tries to chown the uriFile,
which doesn't exist. It also doesn't ensure that the directory in which
the uriFIle is placed is writeable by couchdb, which could also cause
failure (though I didn't observe this).
Additionally, the log file's default location isn't a directory owned by
couchdb, nor is the file guaranteed to exist, nor is it guaranteed to be
chowned to the appropriate user. All of which can cause unexpected
failure.
As a bonus I made a small change in the description of the configFile
attribute, in the hopes of making it a little more obvious why it
existed.