This breaks with networking backends enabled and
also creates large delays on boot when some services depends
on the network target. It is also not really required
because tinc does create those interfaces itself.
fixes#27070
* nat/bind/dhcp.service:
Remove. Those services have nothing to do with a link-level service.
* sys-subsystem-net-devices-${if}.device:
Add as BindsTo dependency as this will make hostapd stop when the
device is unplugged.
* network-link-${if}.service:
Add hostapd as dependency for this service via requiredBy clause,
so that the network link is only considered to be established
only after hostapd has started.
* network.target:
Remove this from wantedBy clause as this is already implied from
dependencies stacked above hostapd. And if it's not implied than
starting hostapd is not required for this particular network
configuration.
This option represents the ZNC configuration as a Nix value. It will be
converted to a syntactically valid file. This provides:
- Flexibility: Any ZNC option can be used
- Modularity: These values can be set from any NixOS module and will be
merged correctly
- Overridability: Default values can be overridden
Also done:
Remove unused/unneeded options, mkRemovedOptionModule unfortunately doesn't work
inside submodules (yet). The options userName and modulePackages were never used
to begin with
Several service definitions used `mkEnableOption` with text starting
with "Whether to", which produced funny option descriptions like
"Whether to enable Whether to run the rspamd daemon..".
This commit corrects this, and adds short descriptions of services
to affected service definitions.
Most importantly, this sets PrivateTmp, ProtectHome, and ProtectSystem
so that Chrony flaws are mitigated, should they occur.
Moving to ProtectSystem=full however, requires moving the chrony key
files under /var/lib/chrony -- which should be fine, anyway.
This also ensures ConditionCapability=CAP_SYS_TIME is set, ensuring
that chronyd will only be launched in an environment where such a
capability can be granted.
Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
This commit adds the following
* the uucp user
* options for HylaFAX server to control startup and modems
* systemd services for HylaFAX server processes
including faxgettys for modems
* systemd services to maintain the HylaFAX spool area,
including cleanup with faxcron and faxqclean
* default configuration for all server processes
for a minimal working configuration
Some notes:
* HylaFAX configuration cannot be initialized with faxsetup
(as it would be common on other Linux distributions).
The hylafaxplus package contains a template spool area.
* Modems are controlled by faxgetty.
Send-only configuration (modems controlled by faxq)
is not supported by this configuration setup.
* To enable the service, one or more modems must be defined with
config.services.hylafax.modems .
* Sending mail *should* work:
HylaFAX will use whatever is in
config.services.mail.sendmailSetuidWrapper.program
unless overridden with the sendmailPath option.
* The admin has to create a hosts.hfaxd file somewhere
(e.g. in /etc) before enabling HylaFAX.
This file controls access to the server (see hosts.hfaxd(5) ).
Sadly, HylaFAX does not permit account-based access
control as is accepts connections via TCP only.
* Active fax polling should work; I can't test it.
* Passive fax polling is not supported by HylaFAX.
* Pager transmissions (with sendpage) are disabled by default.
I have never tested or used these.
* Incoming data/voice/"extern"al calls
won't be handled by default.
I have never tested or used these.
This allows one to add rules which change a packet's routing table:
iptables -t raw -I PREROUTING 1 -m set --match-set myset src -j MARK --set-mark 2
ip rule add fwmark 2 table 1 priority 1000
ip route add default dev wg0 table 1
to the beginning of raw table PREROUTING chain, and still have rpfilter.
This allows the user to add `wpa_supplicant` config options not yet supported by Nix without having to write the entire `wpa_supplicant.conf` file manually.