start writing configuration guide
This commit is contained in:
parent
f81aa54444
commit
54526c1e11
2 changed files with 87 additions and 0 deletions
86
doc/configuration.rst
Normal file
86
doc/configuration.rst
Normal file
|
@ -0,0 +1,86 @@
|
|||
Configuration and Module Guide
|
||||
##############################
|
||||
|
||||
Liminix uses the Nix language to provide congruent configuration.
|
||||
This means that to change anything about the way in which a
|
||||
Liminix system works, you make that change in
|
||||
:file:`configuration.nix` (or one of the other files it references)
|
||||
and rerun :command:`nix-build` or :command:`liminix-rebuild` to action
|
||||
the change. It is not possible (at least, without shenanigans) to make
|
||||
changes by logging into the device and running imperative commands
|
||||
whose effects may later be overridden: :file:`configuration.nix`
|
||||
always describes the entire system and can be used to recreate that
|
||||
system at any time. You can usefully keep it under version control.
|
||||
|
||||
If you are familiar with NixOS, you will notice some similarities
|
||||
between NixOS and Liminix configuration, and also some
|
||||
differences. Sometimes the differences are due to the
|
||||
resource-constrained devices we deploy onto, sometimes due to
|
||||
differences in the uses these devices are put to.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Configuration taxonomy
|
||||
**********************
|
||||
|
||||
There are many things you can specify in a configuration, but these
|
||||
are the ones you most commonly need to change:
|
||||
|
||||
* which services (processes) to run
|
||||
* what packages to install
|
||||
* permitted users and groups
|
||||
* Linux kernel configuration options
|
||||
* Busybox applets
|
||||
* filesystem layout
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Modules
|
||||
*******
|
||||
|
||||
**Modules** are a means of abstraction which allow "bundling"
|
||||
of configuration options related to a common purpose or theme. For
|
||||
example, the ``dnsmasq`` module defines a template for a dnsmasq
|
||||
service, ensures that the dnsmasq package is installed, and provides a
|
||||
dnsmasq user and group for the service to run as. The ``ppp`` module
|
||||
defines a service template and also enables various PPP-related kernel
|
||||
configuration.
|
||||
|
||||
Not all modules are included in the configuration by default, because
|
||||
that would mean that the kernel (and the Busybox binary providing
|
||||
common CLI tools) was compiled with many unnecessary bells and whistles
|
||||
and therefore be bigger than needed. (This is not purely an academic concern
|
||||
if your device has little flash storage). Therefore, specifying a
|
||||
service is usually a two-step process. For example, to add an NTP
|
||||
service you first add :file:`modules/ntp` to your ``imports`` list,
|
||||
then you create a service by calling
|
||||
:code:`config.system.service.ntp.build { .... }` with the appropriate
|
||||
service-dependent configuration parameters.
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: nix
|
||||
|
||||
let svc = config.system.service;
|
||||
in {
|
||||
# ...
|
||||
imports = [
|
||||
./modules/ntp
|
||||
# ....
|
||||
];
|
||||
config.services.ntp = svc.ntp.build {
|
||||
pools = { "pool.ntp.org" = ["iburst"]; };
|
||||
makestep = { threshold = 1.0; limit = 3; };
|
||||
};
|
||||
|
||||
Merely including the module won't define the service on its own: it
|
||||
only creates the template in ``config.system.service.foo`` and you
|
||||
have to create an actual service using the template. This is an
|
||||
intentional choice to allow the creation of multiple
|
||||
differently-configured services based on the same template - perhaps
|
||||
e.g. when you have multiple networks (VPNs etc) in different trust
|
||||
domains, or you want to run two SSH daemons on different ports.
|
||||
|
||||
.. tip:: Liminix modules should be quite familiar (but also different)
|
||||
if you already know how to use NixOS modules. We use the
|
||||
NixOS module infrastructure code, meaning that you should
|
||||
recognise the syntax, the type system, the rules for
|
||||
combining configuration values from different sources. We
|
||||
don't use the NixOS modules themselves, because the
|
||||
underlying system is not similar enough for them to work.
|
|
@ -6,6 +6,7 @@ Liminix
|
|||
:caption: Contents:
|
||||
|
||||
tutorial
|
||||
configuration
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Indices and tables
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in a new issue