Commit Graph

13 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Shea Levy
fb565f1a4e amazon-image.nix: Overwrite busybox swapon 2014-08-01 17:55:37 -04:00
Rob Vermaas
04e648f789 Change size of Amazon EC2 S3-backed images to 8GB (was 4GB).
(cherry picked from commit 05543ef6e0)
2014-06-19 11:28:06 +02:00
Rob Vermaas
fe3a63b7d0 EC2: allow building S3-backed HVM ami's
(cherry picked from commit e007559e95)
2014-06-19 10:57:26 +02:00
Rob Vermaas
3da94435c0 Add option ec2.hvm, to set some boot configuration specific for EC2 HVM instances.
(cherry picked from commit 35c76d9173)

Conflicts:
	nixos/modules/virtualisation/amazon-image.nix
2014-05-21 16:37:53 +02:00
Rob Vermaas
7d3dcd9a8c Set console=ttyS0 for Amazon EC2 instances, as suggested by Amazon. 2014-05-12 12:29:04 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
4fc151b5a3 nixos-install: Ask the user to set a root password
This removes the need to have an initially empty root password.
2014-05-09 00:52:02 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
29027fd1e1 Rewrite ‘with pkgs.lib’ -> ‘with lib’
Using pkgs.lib on the spine of module evaluation is problematic
because the pkgs argument depends on the result of module
evaluation. To prevent an infinite recursion, pkgs and some of the
modules are evaluated twice, which is inefficient. Using ‘with lib’
prevents this problem.
2014-04-14 16:26:48 +02:00
Rickard Nilsson
d5211b0e0e Make initialRootPassword overrideable in all virtualisation modules, not just virtualbox. 2014-02-24 18:05:26 +01:00
Rickard Nilsson
0b92ad02c8 Re-introduce security.initialRootPassword, and add a new option users.extraUsers.<user>.hashedPassword 2014-02-05 15:56:51 +01:00
Rickard Nilsson
eb2f44c18c Generate /etc/passwd and /etc/group at build time
This is a rather large commit that switches user/group creation from using
useradd/groupadd on activation to just generating the contents of /etc/passwd
and /etc/group, and then on activation merging the generated files with the
files that exist in the system. This makes the user activation process much
cleaner, in my opinion.

The users.extraUsers.<user>.uid and users.extraGroups.<group>.gid must all be
properly defined (if <user>.createUser is true, which it is by default). My
pull request adds a lot of uids/gids to config.ids to solve this problem for
existing nixos services, but there might be configurations that break because
this change. However, this will be discovered during the build.

Option changes introduced by this commit:

* Remove the options <user>.isSystemUser and <user>.isAlias since
they don't make sense when generating /etc/passwd statically.

* Add <group>.members as a complement to <user>.extraGroups.

* Add <user>.passwordFile for setting a user's password from an encrypted
(shadow-style) file.

* Add users.mutableUsers which is true by default. This means you can keep
managing your users as previously, by using useradd/groupadd manually. This is
accomplished by merging the generated passwd/group file with the existing files
in /etc on system activation. The merging of the files is simplistic. It just
looks at the user/group names. If a user/group exists both on the system and
in the generated files, the system entry will be kept un-changed and the
generated entries will be ignored. The merging itself is performed with the
help of vipw/vigr to properly lock the account files during edit.
If mutableUsers is set to false, the generated passwd and group files will not
be merged with the system files on activation. Instead they will simply replace
the system files, and overwrite any changes done on the running system. The
same logic holds for user password, if the <user>.password or
<user>.passwordFile options are used. If mutableUsers is false, password will
simply be replaced on activation. If true, the initial user passwords will be
set according to the configuration, but existing passwords will not be touched.

I have tested this on a couple of different systems and it seems to work fine
so far. If you think this is a good idea, please test it. This way of adding
local users has been discussed in issue #103 (and this commit solves that
issue).
2014-02-05 15:56:51 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
4ba7dfde5b Don't set an initial null root password for Amazon / VirtualBox images
A null password allows logging into local PAM services such as "login"
(agetty) and KDM.  That's not actually a security problem for EC2
machines, since they do not have "local" logins; for VirtualBox
machines, if you local access, you can do anything anyway.  But it's
better to be on the safe side and disable password-based logins for
root.
2013-11-01 15:04:21 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
259f7a93b1 Rename environment.nix -> nix.package 2013-10-28 22:45:57 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
5c1f8cbc70 Move all of NixOS to nixos/ in preparation of the repository merge 2013-10-10 13:28:20 +02:00