# Liminix A Nix-based system for configuring consumer wifi routers. ## What is this? This is a Nix-based collection of software tailored for domestic wifi router or IoT device devices, of the kind that OpenWrt or DD-WRT or Gargoyle or Tomato run on. It's a reboot/restart/rewrite of NixWRT. This is not NixOS-on-your-router: it's aimed at devices that are underpowered for the full NixOS experience. It uses busybox tools, musl instead of GNU libc, and s6-rc instead of systemd. The Liminix name comes from Liminis, in Latin the genitive declension of "limen", or "of the threshold". Your router stands at the threshold of your (online) home and everything you send to/receive from the outside word goes across it. ## Building These instructions assume you have nixpkgs checked out in a peer directory of this one. You need a `configuration.nix` file pointed to by ``, a hardware device definition as argument `device`, and to choose an appropriate output attribute depending on what your device is and how you plan to install onto it. For example: NIX_PATH=nixpkgs=../nixpkgs:$NIX_PATH NIXPKGS_ALLOW_UNSUPPORTED_SYSTEM=1 nix-build -I liminix-config=./tests/smoke/configuration.nix --arg device "import ./devices/qemu.nix" -A outputs.default `outputs.default` is intended to do something appropriate for the device, whatever that is. For the qemu device, it creates a directory containing a squashfs root image and a kernel. ## QEMU QEMU is useful for developing userland without needing to keep flashing or messing with U-Boot: it also enables testing against emulated network peers using [QEMU socket networking](https://wiki.qemu.org/Documentation/Networking#Socket), which may be preferable to letting Liminix loose on your actual LAN. We have some tooling to make this easier. ### Networks We observe these conventions for QEMU network sockets, so that we can run multiple emulated instances and have them wired up to each other in the right way * multicast 230.0.0.1:1234 : access (interconnect between router and "isp") * multicast 230.0.0.1:1235 : lan * multicast 230.0.0.1:1236 : world (the internet) ### Running instances `./scripts/run-qemu.sh` accepts a kernel vmlinux image and a squashfs and runs qemu with appropriate config for two ethernet interfaces hooked up to "lan" and "access" respectively. It connects the Liminix serial console and the [QEMU monitor](https://www.qemu.org/docs/master/system/monitor.html) to stdin/stdout. Use ^P (not ^A) to switch to the monitor. If you run with `--background /path/to/unix/socket` it will fork into the background and open a Unix socket at that pathname to communicate on. Use `./scripts/connect-qemu.sh` to connect to it, and ^O to disconnect. ### Emulated upstream connection In the tests/support/ppp-server directory there are instructions and a script to configure [Mikrotik RouterOS](https://mikrotik.com/software) as a PPPoE access concentrator connected to the `access` and `world` networks, so that Liminix PPPoE client support can be tested. _Liminix does not provide RouterOS licences and it is your own responsibility if you use this to ensure you're compliant with the terms of Mikrotik's licencing._ This may be supplemented or replaced in time with configuurations for RP-PPPoE and/or Accel PPP. ## Running tests Assuming you have nixpkgs checked out in a peer directory of this one, NIX_PATH=nixpkgs=../nixpkgs:$NIX_PATH ./run-tests.sh ## Articles of interest * [Build Safety of Software in 28 Popular Home Routers](https://cyber-itl.org/assets/papers/2018/build_safety_of_software_in_28_popular_home_routers.pdf): "of the access points and routers we reviewed, not a single one took full advantage of the basic application armoring features provided by the operating system. Indeed, only one or two models even came close, and no brand did well consistently across all models tested" * [A PPPoE Implementation for Linux](https://static.usenix.org/publications/library/proceedings/als00/2000papers/papers/full_papers/skoll/skoll_html/index.html): "Many DSL service providers use PPPoE for residential broadband Internet access. This paper briefly describes the PPPoE protocol, presents strategies for implementing it under Linux and describes in detail a user-space implementation of a PPPoE client."