8b2d86b982
The new format is based on the existing wrapper and generates an INI file with an unnamed global section at the top as is used by *stunnel* for instance. Technically the INI format is a subset of this however testing, type checking, and API guarantees profit from two separate generators. Co-authored-by: tim-tx <tim-tx@users.noreply.github.com> Signed-off-by: benaryorg <binary@benary.org>
275 lines
9.2 KiB
Markdown
275 lines
9.2 KiB
Markdown
# Options for Program Settings {#sec-settings-options}
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Many programs have configuration files where program-specific settings
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can be declared. File formats can be separated into two categories:
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- Nix-representable ones: These can trivially be mapped to a subset of
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Nix syntax. E.g. JSON is an example, since its values like
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`{"foo":{"bar":10}}` can be mapped directly to Nix:
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`{ foo = { bar = 10; }; }`. Other examples are INI, YAML and TOML.
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The following section explains the convention for these settings.
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- Non-nix-representable ones: These can't be trivially mapped to a
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subset of Nix syntax. Most generic programming languages are in this
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group, e.g. bash, since the statement `if true; then echo hi; fi`
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doesn't have a trivial representation in Nix.
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Currently there are no fixed conventions for these, but it is common
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to have a `configFile` option for setting the configuration file
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path directly. The default value of `configFile` can be an
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auto-generated file, with convenient options for controlling the
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contents. For example an option of type `attrsOf str` can be used
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for representing environment variables which generates a section
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like `export FOO="foo"`. Often it can also be useful to also include
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an `extraConfig` option of type `lines` to allow arbitrary text
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after the autogenerated part of the file.
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## Nix-representable Formats (JSON, YAML, TOML, INI, ...) {#sec-settings-nix-representable}
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By convention, formats like this are handled with a generic `settings`
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option, representing the full program configuration as a Nix value. The
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type of this option should represent the format. The most common formats
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have a predefined type and string generator already declared under
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`pkgs.formats`:
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`pkgs.formats.javaProperties` { *`comment`* ? `"Generated with Nix"` }
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: A function taking an attribute set with values
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`comment`
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: A string to put at the start of the
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file in a comment. It can have multiple
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lines.
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It returns the `type`: `attrsOf str` and a function
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`generate` to build a Java `.properties` file, taking
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care of the correct escaping, etc.
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`pkgs.formats.json` { }
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: A function taking an empty attribute set (for future extensibility)
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and returning a set with JSON-specific attributes `type` and
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`generate` as specified [below](#pkgs-formats-result).
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`pkgs.formats.yaml` { }
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: A function taking an empty attribute set (for future extensibility)
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and returning a set with YAML-specific attributes `type` and
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`generate` as specified [below](#pkgs-formats-result).
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`pkgs.formats.ini` { *`listsAsDuplicateKeys`* ? false, *`listToValue`* ? null, \.\.\. }
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: A function taking an attribute set with values
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`listsAsDuplicateKeys`
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: A boolean for controlling whether list values can be used to
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represent duplicate INI keys
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`listToValue`
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: A function for turning a list of values into a single value.
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It returns a set with INI-specific attributes `type` and `generate`
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as specified [below](#pkgs-formats-result).
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The type of the input is an *attrset* of sections; key-value pairs where
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the key is the section name and the value is the corresponding content
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which is also an *attrset* of key-value pairs for the actual key-value
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mappings of the INI format.
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The values of the INI atoms are subject to the above parameters (e.g. lists
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may be transformed into multiple key-value pairs depending on
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`listToValue`).
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`pkgs.formats.iniWithGlobalSection` { *`listsAsDuplicateKeys`* ? false, *`listToValue`* ? null, \.\.\. }
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: A function taking an attribute set with values
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`listsAsDuplicateKeys`
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: A boolean for controlling whether list values can be used to
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represent duplicate INI keys
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`listToValue`
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: A function for turning a list of values into a single value.
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It returns a set with INI-specific attributes `type` and `generate`
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as specified [below](#pkgs-formats-result).
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The type of the input is an *attrset* of the structure
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`{ sections = {}; globalSection = {}; }` where *sections* are several
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sections as with *pkgs.formats.ini* and *globalSection* being just a single
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attrset of key-value pairs for a single section, the global section which
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preceedes the section definitions.
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`pkgs.formats.toml` { }
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: A function taking an empty attribute set (for future extensibility)
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and returning a set with TOML-specific attributes `type` and
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`generate` as specified [below](#pkgs-formats-result).
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`pkgs.formats.elixirConf { elixir ? pkgs.elixir }`
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: A function taking an attribute set with values
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`elixir`
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: The Elixir package which will be used to format the generated output
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It returns a set with Elixir-Config-specific attributes `type`, `lib`, and
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`generate` as specified [below](#pkgs-formats-result).
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The `lib` attribute contains functions to be used in settings, for
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generating special Elixir values:
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`mkRaw elixirCode`
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: Outputs the given string as raw Elixir code
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`mkGetEnv { envVariable, fallback ? null }`
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: Makes the configuration fetch an environment variable at runtime
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`mkAtom atom`
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: Outputs the given string as an Elixir atom, instead of the default
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Elixir binary string. Note: lowercase atoms still needs to be prefixed
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with `:`
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`mkTuple array`
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: Outputs the given array as an Elixir tuple, instead of the default
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Elixir list
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`mkMap attrset`
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: Outputs the given attribute set as an Elixir map, instead of the
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default Elixir keyword list
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[]{#pkgs-formats-result}
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These functions all return an attribute set with these values:
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`type`
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: A module system type representing a value of the format
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`lib`
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: Utility functions for convenience, or special interactions with the format.
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This attribute is optional. It may contain inside a `types` attribute
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containing types specific to this format.
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`generate` *`filename jsonValue`*
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: A function that can render a value of the format to a file. Returns
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a file path.
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::: {.note}
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This function puts the value contents in the Nix store. So this
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should be avoided for secrets.
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:::
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::: {#ex-settings-nix-representable .example}
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### Module with conventional `settings` option
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The following shows a module for an example program that uses a JSON
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configuration file. It demonstrates how above values can be used, along
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with some other related best practices. See the comments for
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explanations.
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```nix
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{ options, config, lib, pkgs, ... }:
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let
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cfg = config.services.foo;
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# Define the settings format used for this program
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settingsFormat = pkgs.formats.json {};
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in {
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options.services.foo = {
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enable = lib.mkEnableOption "foo service";
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settings = lib.mkOption {
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# Setting this type allows for correct merging behavior
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type = settingsFormat.type;
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default = {};
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description = ''
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Configuration for foo, see
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<link xlink:href="https://example.com/docs/foo"/>
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for supported settings.
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'';
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};
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};
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config = lib.mkIf cfg.enable {
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# We can assign some default settings here to make the service work by just
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# enabling it. We use `mkDefault` for values that can be changed without
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# problems
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services.foo.settings = {
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# Fails at runtime without any value set
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log_level = lib.mkDefault "WARN";
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# We assume systemd's `StateDirectory` is used, so we require this value,
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# therefore no mkDefault
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data_path = "/var/lib/foo";
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# Since we use this to create a user we need to know the default value at
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# eval time
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user = lib.mkDefault "foo";
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};
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environment.etc."foo.json".source =
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# The formats generator function takes a filename and the Nix value
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# representing the format value and produces a filepath with that value
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# rendered in the format
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settingsFormat.generate "foo-config.json" cfg.settings;
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# We know that the `user` attribute exists because we set a default value
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# for it above, allowing us to use it without worries here
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users.users.${cfg.settings.user} = { isSystemUser = true; };
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# ...
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};
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}
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```
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:::
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### Option declarations for attributes {#sec-settings-attrs-options}
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Some `settings` attributes may deserve some extra care. They may need a
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different type, default or merging behavior, or they are essential
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options that should show their documentation in the manual. This can be
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done using [](#sec-freeform-modules).
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We extend above example using freeform modules to declare an option for
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the port, which will enforce it to be a valid integer and make it show
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up in the manual.
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::: {#ex-settings-typed-attrs .example}
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### Declaring a type-checked `settings` attribute
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```nix
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settings = lib.mkOption {
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type = lib.types.submodule {
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freeformType = settingsFormat.type;
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# Declare an option for the port such that the type is checked and this option
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# is shown in the manual.
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options.port = lib.mkOption {
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type = lib.types.port;
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default = 8080;
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description = ''
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Which port this service should listen on.
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'';
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};
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};
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default = {};
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description = ''
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Configuration for Foo, see
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<link xlink:href="https://example.com/docs/foo"/>
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for supported values.
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'';
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};
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```
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:::
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