This implements proper merging of user-provided values and default
values for the settings option.
Without this, the user must provide a complete configuration file, as
changing a single setting replaces the entire JSON value, rendering the
default values completely useless. In fact, the bridge won't even start
using the default settings.
The DynamicUser mechanism does not allow share the bridge
registration.yaml file with matrix-synapse in any easy way:
1. the mautrix-whatsapp group under which the service runs is not in
/etc/group, so you can't add matrix-synapse to this.
This makes the group read bit on the file useless as the group is
effectively always empty.
2. It's not possible to use ACLs or copy the file during preStart or
postStart because the commands are executed with low priviledges.
By using a normal (static) user/group the secret can be shared with
synapse as follows:
services.matrix_synapse.settings.app_service_config_files =
[ "/var/lib/mautrix-whatsapp/whatsapp-registration.yaml" ];
users.users.matrix-synapse.extraGroups = [ "mautrix-whatsapp" ];
Since #246772, cross compiled NixOS is broken because the DateTime perl
package that was used in the update-users-groups.pl script depends on
Testutf8 which does not cross compile (see #198548).
This PR drops the DateTime dependency in favour of TimePiece, which has
less dependencies and whose closure does cross compile.
This change enables _FILE variants for all secrets in Healthchecks
configuration so they can be read from a file and not stored in
/nix/store.
In particular, it adds support for these secrets:
DB_PASSWORD, DISCORD_CLIENT_SECRET, EMAIL_HOST_PASSWORD,
LINENOTIFY_CLIENT_SECRET, MATRIX_ACCESS_TOKEN, PD_APP_ID,
PUSHBULLET_CLIENT_SECRET, PUSHOVER_API_TOKEN, S3_SECRET_KEY, SECRET_KEY,
SLACK_CLIENT_SECRET, TELEGRAM_TOKEN, TRELLO_APP_KEY, and TWILIO_AUTH.
Previously, if someone changed DB to postgres or mysql and forgot to
change DB_NAME, services.healthchecks would have used the hardcoded path
that was meant for the sqlite as DB_NAME.
This change introduces DB and DB_NAME options in
services.healthchecks.settings.
Underneath, systemd-networkd’s reload is just `networkctl reload`. Per
`man networkctl`, calling `reload` is expected to fully handle new,
modified, and removed .network files, but it only handles *new* .netdev
files. For simplicity, assume .network -> reload and .netdev -> restart.
It’s desirable to perform reload instead of restart, as restart has the
potential to bring down interfaces, resulting in a loss of network
connectivity.
Just like with system-wide tmpfiles, call `systemd-tmpfiles --create
--remove` for users during activation. This fixes an issue where new
entries in a user's tmpfiles are not reflected after activation, only at
boot when the user service systemd-tmpfiles-setup.service runs or only
after running systemd-tmpfiles manually.