2025-04-06 17:16:53 +00:00
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== Configuration
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2025-04-06 22:53:03 +00:00
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There are many things you can specify in a configuration, but most
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commonly you need to change:
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2025-04-06 17:16:53 +00:00
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* which services (processes) to run
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* what packages to install
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* permitted users and groups
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* Linux kernel configuration options
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* Busybox applets
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* filesystem layout
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=== Modules
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*Modules* are a means of abstraction which allow "bundling" of
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configuration options related to a common purpose or theme. For example,
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the `+dnsmasq+` module defines a template for a dnsmasq service, ensures
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that the dnsmasq package is installed, and provides a dnsmasq user and
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group for the service to run as. The `+ppp+` module defines a service
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template and also enables various PPP-related kernel configuration.
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Not all modules are included in the configuration by default, because
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that would mean that the kernel (and the Busybox binary providing common
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CLI tools) was compiled with many unnecessary bells and whistles and
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therefore be bigger than needed. (This is not purely an academic concern
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if your device has little flash storage). Therefore, specifying a
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service is usually a two-step process. For example, to add an NTP
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service you first add `+modules/ntp+` to your `+imports+` list, then you
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create a service by calling `+config.system.service.ntp.build { .... }+`
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with the appropriate service-dependent configuration parameters.
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[source,nix]
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----
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let svc = config.system.service;
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in {
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# ...
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imports = [
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./modules/ntp
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# ....
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];
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config.services.ntp = svc.ntp.build {
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pools = { "pool.ntp.org" = ["iburst"]; };
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makestep = { threshold = 1.0; limit = 3; };
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};
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----
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Merely including the module won't define the service on its own: it only
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creates the template in `+config.system.service.foo+` and you have to
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create an actual service using the template. This is an intentional
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choice to allow the creation of multiple differently-configured services
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based on the same template - perhaps e.g. when you have multiple
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networks (VPNs etc) in different trust domains, or you want to run two
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SSH daemons on different ports. (For the background to this, please
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refer to the `+architecture decision record <adr/module-system>+`)
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[TIP]
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====
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Liminix modules should be quite familiar (but also different) if you
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already know how to use NixOS modules. We use the NixOS module
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infrastructure code, meaning that you should recognise the syntax, the
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type system, the rules for combining configuration values from different
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sources. We don't use the NixOS modules themselves, because the
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underlying system is not similar enough for them to work.
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====
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[[configuration-services]]
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=== Services
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In Liminix a service is any kind of long-running task or process on the
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system, that is managed (started, stopped, and monitored) by a service
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supervisor. A typical SOHO router might have services to
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* answer DHCP and DNS requests from the LAN
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* provide a wireless access point
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* connect using PPPoE or L2TP to an upstream network
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* start/stop the firewall
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* enable/disable IP packet forwarding
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* mount filesystems
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(Some of these might not be considered services using other definitions
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of the term: for example, this L2TP process would be a "client" in the
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client/server classification; and enabling packet forwarding doesn't
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require any long-lived process - just a setting to be toggled. However,
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there is value in being able to use the same abstractions for all the
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things to manage them and specify their dependency relationships - so in
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Liminix "everything is a service")
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The service supervision system enables service health monitoring,
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restart of unhealthy services, and failover to "backup" services when a
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primary service fails or its dependencies are unavailable. The intention
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is that you have a framework in which you can specify policy
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requirements like "ethernet wan dhcp-client should be restarted if it
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crashes, but if it can't start because the hardware link is down, then
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4G ppp service should be started instead".
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Any attribute in [.title-ref]#config.services# will become part of the
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default set of services that s6-rc will try to bring up. Services are
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usually started at boot time, but *controlled services* are those that
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are required only in particular contexts. For example, a service to
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mount a USB backup drive should run only when the drive is attached to
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the system. Liminix currently implements three kinds of controlled
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service:
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* "uevent-rule" service controllers use sysfs/uevent to identify when
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particular hardware devices are present, and start/stop a controlled
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service appropriately.
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* the "round-robin" service controller is used for service failover: it
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allows you to specify a list of services and runs each of them in turn
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until it exits, then runs the next.
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* the "health-check" service wraps another service, and runs a "health
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check" command at regular intervals. When the health check fails,
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indicating that the wrapped service is not working, it is terminated and
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allowed to restart.
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==== Runtime secrets (external vault)
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Secrets (such as wifi passphrases, PPP username/password, SSH keys, etc)
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that you provide as literal values in `+configuration.nix+` are
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processed into into config files and scripts at build time, and
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eventually end up in various files in the (world-readable)
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`+/nix/store+` before being baked into a flashable image. To change a
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secret - whether due to a compromise, or just as part of to a routine
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key rotation - you need to rebuild the configuration and potentially
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reflash the affected devices.
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To avoid this, you may instead use a "secrets service", which is a
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mechanism for your device to fetch secrets from a source external to the
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Nix store, and create at runtime the configuration files and scripts
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that start the services which require them.
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Not every possible parameter to every possible service is configurable
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using a secrets service. Parameters which can be configured this way are
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those with the type `+liminix.lib.types.replacable+`. At the time this
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document was written, these include:
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* ppp (pppoe and l2tp): `+username+`, `+password+`
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* ssh: `+authorizedKeys+`
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* hostapd: all parameters (most likely to be useful for
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`+wpa_passphrase+`)
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To use a runtime secret for any of these parameters:
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* create a secrets service to specify the source of truth for secrets
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* use the `+outputRef+` function in the service parameter to specify the
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secrets service and path
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For example, given you had an HTTPS server hosting a JSON file with the
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structure
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[source,json]
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----
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"ssh": {
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"authorizedKeys": {
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"root": [ "ssh-rsa ....", "ssh-rsa ....", ... ]
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"guest": [ "ssh-rsa ....", "ssh-rsa ....", ... ]
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}
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}
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----
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you could use a `+configuration.nix+` fragment something like this to
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make those keys visible to ssh:
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[source,nix]
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----
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services.secrets = svc.secrets.outboard.build {
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name = "secret-service";
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url = "http://10.0.0.1/secrets.json";
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username = "secrets";
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password = "liminix";
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interval = 30; # minutes
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dependencies = [ config.services.lan ];
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};
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services.sshd = svc.ssh.build {
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authorizedKeys = outputRef config.services.secrets "ssh/authorizedKeys";
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};
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----
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There are presently two implementations of a secrets service:
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===== Outboard secrets (HTTPS)
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This service expects a URL to a JSON file containing all the secrets.
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You may specify a username and password along with the URL, which are
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used if the file is password-protected (HTTP Basic authentication). Note
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that this is not a protection against a malicious local user: the
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username and password are normal build-time parameters so will be
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readable in the Nix store. This is a mitigation against the URL being
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accidentally discovered due to e.g. a log file or error message on the
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server leaking.
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===== Tang secrets (encrypted local file)
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Aternatively, secrets may be stored locally on the device, in a file
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that has been encrypted using https://github.com/latchset/tang[Tang].
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____
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Tang is a server for binding data to network presence.
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This sounds fancy, but the concept is simple. You have some data, but
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you only want it to be available when the system containing the data is
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on a certain, usually secure, network.
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____
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[source,nix]
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----
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services.secrets = svc.secrets.tang.build {
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name = "secret-service";
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path = "/run/mnt/usbstick/secrets.json.jwe";
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interval = 30; # minutes
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dependencies = [ config.services.mount-usbstick ];
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};
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----
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The encryption uses the same scheme/algorithm as
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https://github.com/latchset/clevis[Clevis] : you may use the
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https://github.com/latchset/clevis?tab=readme-ov-file#pin-tang[Clevis
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instructions] to encrypt the file on another host and then copy it to
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your Liminix device, or you can use `+tangc encrypt+` to encrypt
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directly on the device. (That latter approach may pose a chicken/egg
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problem if the device needs secrets to boot up and run the services you
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are relying on in order to login).
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==== Writing services
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For the most part, for common use cases, hopefully the services you need
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will be defined by modules and you will only have to pass the right
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parameters to `+build+`.
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Should you need to create a custom service of your own devising, use the
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[.title-ref]#oneshot# or [.title-ref]#longrun# functions:
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* a "longrun" service is the "normal" service concept: it has a `+run+`
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action which describes the process to start, and it watches that process
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to restart it if it exits. The process should not attempt to daemonize
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or "background" itself, otherwise s6-rc will think it died. Whatever it
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prints to standard output/standard error will be logged.
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[source,nix]
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----
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config.services.cowsayd = pkgs.liminix.services.longrun {
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name = "cowsayd";
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run = "${pkgs.cowsayd}/bin/cowsayd --port 3001 --breed hereford";
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# don't start this until the lan interface is ready
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dependencies = [ config.services.lan ];
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}
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----
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* a "oneshot" service doesn't have a process attached. It consists of
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`+up+` and `+down+` actions which are bits of shell script that are run
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at the appropriate points in the service lifecycle
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[source,nix]
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----
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config.services.greenled = pkgs.liminix.services.oneshot {
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name = "greenled";
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up = ''
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echo 17 > /sys/class/gpio/export
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echo out > /sys/class/gpio/gpio17/direction
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echo 0 > /sys/class/gpio/gpio17/value
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'';
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down = ''
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echo 0 > /sys/class/gpio/gpio17/value
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'';
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}
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----
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Services may have dependencies: as you see above in the `+cowsayd+`
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example, it depends on some service called `+config.services.lan+`,
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meaning that it won't be started until that other service is up.
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==== Service outputs
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Outputs are a mechanism by which a service can provide data which may be
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required by other services. For example:
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* the DHCP client service can expect to receive nameserver address
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information as one of the fields in the response from the DHCP server:
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we provide that as an output which a dependent service for a stub name
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resolver can use to configure its upstream servers.
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* a service that creates a new network interface (e.g. ppp) will provide
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the name of the interface (`+ppp0+`, or `+ppp1+` or `+ppp7+`) as an
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output so that a dependent service can reference it to set up a route,
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or to configure firewall rules.
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A service `+myservice+` should write its outputs as files in
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`+/run/services/outputs/myservice+`: you can look around this directory
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on a running Liminix system to see how it's used currently. Usually we
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use the `+in_outputs+` shell function in the `+up+` or `+run+`
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attributes of the service:
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[source,shell]
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----
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(in_outputs ${name}
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for i in lease mask ip router siaddr dns serverid subnet opt53 interface ; do
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(printenv $i || true) > $i
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done)
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----
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The outputs are just files, so technically you can read them using
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anything that can read a file. Liminix has two "preferred" mechanisms,
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though:
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===== One-off lookups
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In any context that ends up being evaluated by the shell, use `+output+`
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to print the value of an output
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[source,nix]
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----
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services.defaultroute4 = svc.network.route.build {
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via = "$(output ${services.wan} address)";
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target = "default";
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dependencies = [ services.wan ];
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};
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----
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===== Continuous updates
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The downside of using shell functions in downstream service startup
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scripts is that they only run when the service starts up: if a service
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output _changes_, the downstream service would have to be restarted to
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notice the change. Sometimes this is OK but other times the downstream
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has no other need to restart, if it can only get its new data.
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For this case, there is the `+anoia.svc+` Fennel library, which allows
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you to write a simple loop which is iterated over whenever a service's
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outputs change. This code is from
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`+modules/dhcp6c/acquire-wan-address.fnl+`
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[source,fennel]
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----
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(fn update-addresses [wan-device addresses new-addresses exec]
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;; run some appropriate "ip address [add|remove]" commands
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)
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(fn run []
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(let [[state-directory wan-device] arg
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dir (svc.open state-directory)]
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(accumulate [addresses []
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v (dir:events)]
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(update-addresses wan-device addresses
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(or (v:output "address") []) system))))
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----
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The `+output+` method seen here accepts a filename (relative to the
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service's output directory), or a directory name. It returns the first
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line of that file, or for directories it returns a table (Lua's
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key/value datastructure, similar to a hash/dictionary) of the outputs in
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that directory.
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===== Output design considerations
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For preference, outputs should be short and simple, and not require
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downstream services to do complicated parsing in order to use them.
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Shell commands in Liminix are run using the Busybox shell which doesn't
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have the niceties of an advanced shell like Bash let alone those of a
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real programming language.
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Note also that the Lua `+svc+` library only reads the first line of each
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output.
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=== Module implementation
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Modules in Liminix conventionally live in
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`+modules/somename/default.nix+`. If you want or need to write your own,
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you may wish to refer to the examples there in conjunction with reading
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this section.
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A module is a function that accepts `+{lib, pkgs, config, ... }+` and
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returns an attrset with keys `+imports, options config+`.
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* `+imports+` is a list of paths to the other modules required by this
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one
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* `+options+` is a nested set of option declarations
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* `+config+` is a nested set of option definitions
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The NixOS manual section
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https://nixos.org/manual/nixos/stable/#sec-writing-modules[Writing NixOS
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Modules] is a quite comprehensive reference to writing NixOS modules,
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which is also mostly applicable to Liminix except that it doesn't cover
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service templates.
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==== Service templates
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To expose a service template in a module, it needs the following:
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* an option declaration for `+system.service.myservicename+` with the
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type of `+liminix.lib.types.serviceDefn+`
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[source,nix]
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----
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options = {
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system.service.cowsay = mkOption {
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type = liminix.lib.types.serviceDefn;
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};
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};
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----
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* an option definition for the same key, which specifies where to import
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the service template from (often `+./service.nix+`) and the types of its
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parameters.
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[source,nix]
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----
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config.system.service.cowsay = config.system.callService ./service.nix {
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address = mkOption {
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type = types.str;
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default = "0.0.0.0";
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description = "Listen on specified address";
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example = "127.0.0.1";
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};
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port = mkOption {
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type = types.port;
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default = 22;
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description = "Listen on specified TCP port";
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};
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breed = mkOption {
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type = types.str;
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default = "British Friesian"
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description = "Breed of the cow";
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};
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};
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----
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Then you need to provide the service template itself, probably in
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`+./service.nix+`:
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[source,nix]
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----
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{
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# any nixpkgs package can be named here
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liminix
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, cowsayd
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, serviceFns
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, lib
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}:
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# these are the parameters declared in the callService invocation
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{ address, port, breed} :
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let
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inherit (liminix.services) longrun;
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inherit (lib.strings) escapeShellArg;
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in longrun {
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name = "cowsayd";
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run = "${cowsayd}/bin/cowsayd --address ${address} --port ${builtins.toString port} --breed ${escapeShellArg breed}";
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}
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----
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[TIP]
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====
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Not relevant to module-based services specifically, but a common gotcha
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|
when specifiying services is forgetting to transform "rich" parameter
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|
values into text when composing a command for the shell to execute. Note
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here that the port number, an integer, is stringified with `+toString+`,
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|
and the name of the breed, which may contain spaces, is escaped with
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|
`+escapeShellArg+`
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|
====
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==== Types
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All of the NixOS module types are available in Liminix. These
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Liminix-specific types also exist in `+pkgs.liminix.lib.types+`:
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* `+service+`: an s6-rc service
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|
* `+interface+`: an s6-rc service which specifies a network interface
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|
* `+serviceDefn+`: a service "template" definition
|
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|
In the future it is likely that we will extend this to include other
|
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|
useful types in the networking domain: for example; IP address, network
|
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|
prefix or netmask, protocol family and others as we find them.
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