nixpkgs/nixos
Stéphan Kochen d1f07e6382 nixos/acme: allow setting security.acme.defaults.server = null to keep old accounts directory
The accounts directory is based on the hash of the settings.

https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/270221 changed the  default of
security.acme.defaults.server from null to the default letsencrypt URL
however as an unwanted side effect this means the accounts directory
changes and the ACME module will create a new a new account.

This can cause issues with people using CAA records that pin the
account ID or people who have datacenter-scale NixOS deployments

We allow setting this option to null again for people who want
to keep the old account and migrate at their own leisure.

Fixes https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/316608

Co-authored-by: Arian van Putten <arian.vanputten@gmail.com>
2024-06-04 20:09:46 +02:00
..
doc/manual doc/release-notes: repalce security.pam.enableSSHAgentAuth with security.pam.sshAgentAuth.enable 2024-06-03 13:34:00 +02:00
lib Merge pull request #312472 from Ma27/networkd-option-rename 2024-05-30 04:06:01 +02:00
maintainers Merge pull request #316162 from adamcstephens/lxd/vm-cfg-rw 2024-06-04 00:16:12 -04:00
modules nixos/acme: allow setting security.acme.defaults.server = null to keep old accounts directory 2024-06-04 20:09:46 +02:00
tests Merge pull request #316248 from shivaraj-bh/open-webui 2024-06-04 15:47:03 +02:00
COPYING
default.nix
README.md Release NixOS 24.05 2024-05-31 20:17:44 +02:00
release-combined.nix nixos/release-combined: add nixosTests.nix-misc to blockers 2024-05-30 21:00:12 +03:00
release-small.nix nixos-small: fix eval 2024-06-04 14:07:11 +02:00
release.nix treewide: rename renamed sddm/displayManager settings 2024-04-08 21:56:38 +02:00

NixOS

NixOS is a Linux distribution based on the purely functional package management system Nix. More information can be found at https://nixos.org/nixos and in the manual in doc/manual.

Testing changes

You can add new module to your NixOS configuration file (usually its /etc/nixos/configuration.nix). And do sudo nixos-rebuild test -I nixpkgs=<path to your local nixpkgs folder> --fast.

Commit conventions

  • Make sure you read about the commit conventions common to Nixpkgs as a whole.

  • Format the commit messages in the following way:

    nixos/(module): (init module | add setting | refactor | etc)
    
    (Motivation for change. Link to release notes. Additional information.)
    

    Examples:

    • nixos/hydra: add bazBaz option

      Dual baz behavior is needed to do foo.

    • nixos/nginx: refactor config generation

      The old config generation system used impure shell scripts and could break in specific circumstances (see #1234).

Reviewing contributions

When changing the bootloader installation process, extra care must be taken. Grub installations cannot be rolled back, hence changes may break peoples installations forever. For any non-trivial change to the bootloader please file a PR asking for review, especially from @edolstra.

Module updates

Module updates are submissions changing modules in some ways. These often contains changes to the options or introduce new options.

Reviewing process:

  • Ensure that the module maintainers are notified.
    • CODEOWNERS will make GitHub notify users based on the submitted changes, but it can happen that it misses some of the package maintainers.
  • Ensure that the module tests, if any, are succeeding.
    • You may invoke OfBorg with @ofborg test <module> to build nixosTests.<module>
  • Ensure that the introduced options are correct.
    • Type should be appropriate (string related types differs in their merging capabilities, loaOf and string types are deprecated).
    • Description, default and example should be provided.
  • Ensure that option changes are backward compatible.
    • mkRenamedOptionModuleWith provides a way to make renamed option backward compatible.
    • Use lib.versionAtLeast config.system.stateVersion "24.05" on backward incompatible changes which may corrupt, change or update the state stored on existing setups.
  • Ensure that removed options are declared with mkRemovedOptionModule.
  • Ensure that changes that are not backward compatible are mentioned in release notes.
  • Ensure that documentations affected by the change is updated.

Sample template for a module update review is provided below.

##### Reviewed points

- [ ] changes are backward compatible
- [ ] removed options are declared with `mkRemovedOptionModule`
- [ ] changes that are not backward compatible are documented in release notes
- [ ] module tests succeed on ARCHITECTURE
- [ ] options types are appropriate
- [ ] options description is set
- [ ] options example is provided
- [ ] documentation affected by the changes is updated

##### Possible improvements

##### Comments

New modules

New modules submissions introduce a new module to NixOS.

Reviewing process:

  • Ensure that all file paths fit the guidelines.
  • Ensure that the module tests, if any, are succeeding.
  • Ensure that the introduced options are correct.
    • Type should be appropriate (string related types differs in their merging capabilities, loaOf and string types are deprecated).
    • Description, default and example should be provided.
  • Ensure that module meta field is present
    • Maintainers should be declared in meta.maintainers.
    • Module documentation should be declared with meta.doc.
  • Ensure that the module respect other modules functionality.
    • For example, enabling a module should not open firewall ports by default.

Sample template for a new module review is provided below.

##### Reviewed points

- [ ] module path fits the guidelines
- [ ] module tests succeed on ARCHITECTURE
- [ ] options have appropriate types
- [ ] options have default
- [ ] options have example
- [ ] options have descriptions
- [ ] No unneeded package is added to `environment.systemPackages`
- [ ] `meta.maintainers` is set
- [ ] module documentation is declared in `meta.doc`

##### Possible improvements

##### Comments