200 lines
8 KiB
Markdown
200 lines
8 KiB
Markdown
# Liminix
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A Nix-based system for configuring consumer wifi routers.
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## What is this?
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This is a Nix-based collection of software tailored for domestic wifi
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router or IoT device devices, of the kind that OpenWrt or DD-WRT or
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Gargoyle or Tomato run on. It's a reboot/restart/rewrite of NixWRT.
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This is not NixOS-on-your-router: it's aimed at devices that are
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underpowered for the full NixOS experience. It uses busybox tools,
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musl instead of GNU libc, and s6-rc instead of systemd.
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The Liminix name comes from Liminis, in Latin the genitive declension
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of "limen", or "of the threshold". Your router stands at the threshold
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of your (online) home and everything you send to/receive from the
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outside word goes across it.
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### What about NixWRT?
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This is an in-progress rewrite of NixWRT, incorporating Lessons
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Learned. That said, as of today (September 2022) it is not yet
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anywhere _near_ feature parity.
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Liminix will eventually provide these differentiators over NixWRT:
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* a writable filesystem so that software updates or reconfiguration
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(e.g. changing passwords) don't require taking the device offline to
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reflash it.
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* more flexible service management with dependencies, to allow
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configurations such as "route through PPPoE if it is healthy, with
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fallback to LTE"
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* a spec for valid configuration options (a la NixOS module options)
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to that we can detect errors at evaluation time instead of producing
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a bad image.
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* a network-based mechanism for secrets management so that changes can
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be pushed from a central location to several Liminix devices at once
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* send device metrics and logs to a monitoring/alerting/o11y
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infrastructure
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Today though, it does approximately none of these things and certainly
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not on real hardware.
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## Building
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### For the device
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These instructions assume you have nixpkgs checked out in a peer
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directory of this one.
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You need a `configuration.nix` file pointed to by `<liminix-config>`, a
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hardware device definition as argument `device`, and to choose an
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appropriate output attribute depending on what your device is and how
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you plan to install onto it. For example:
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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" -A outputs.default
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`outputs.default` is intended to do something appropriate for the
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device, whatever that is. For the qemu device, it creates a directory
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containing a squashfs root image and a kernel.
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### For the build machine
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Liminix also includes some tools intended for the build machine. You can
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run
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nix-shell -A buildEnv --arg device '(import ./devices/qemu)'
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to get a shell environment with (currently) a tftp server and
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a script to start a PPPoE server in QEMU for testing against.
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#### QEMU
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QEMU is useful for developing userland without needing to keep
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flashing or messing with U-Boot: it also enables testing against
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emulated network peers using [QEMU socket networking](https://wiki.qemu.org/Documentation/Networking#Socket),
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which may be preferable to letting Liminix loose on your actual LAN.
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We observe these conventions for QEMU network sockets, so that we can
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run multiple emulated instances and have them wired up to each other
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in the right way
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* multicast 230.0.0.1:1234 : access (interconnect between router and "isp")
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* multicast 230.0.0.1:1235 : lan
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* multicast 230.0.0.1:1236 : world (the internet)
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### Running Liminix in Qemu
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In a `buildEnv` nix-shell, you can use the `mips-vm` command
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to run Qemu with appropriate config for two ethernet interfaces
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hooked up to "lan" and "access" respectively. It connects the Liminix
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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.
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nix-shell -A buildEnv --arg device '(import ./devices/qemu)' --run "mips-vm result/vmlinux result/squashfs"
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If you run with `--background /path/to/some/directory` as the first
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parameter, it will fork into the background and open Unix sockets in
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that directory for console and monitor. Use `connect-vm` (also in the
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`buildEnv` environment) to connect to either of these sockets, and ^O
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to disconnect.
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### Emulated upstream connection
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In pkgs/routeros there is a derivation to install and configure
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[Mikrotik RouterOS](https://mikrotik.com/software) as a PPPoE access
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concentrator connected to the `access` and `world` networks, so that
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Liminix PPPoE client support can be tested.
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This is made available in the `buildEnv`, so you can do something like
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mkdir ros-sockets
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nix-shell -A buildEnv --arg device '(import ./devices/qemu)'
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nix-shell$ routeros ros-sockets
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nix-shell$ connect-vm ./ros-sockets/console
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to start it and connect to it.
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_Liminix does not provide RouterOS licences and it is your own
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responsibility if you use this to ensure you're compliant with the
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terms of Mikrotik's licencing._It may be supplemented or replaced in
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time with configurations for RP-PPPoE and/or Accel PPP.
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## Running tests
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Assuming you have nixpkgs checked out in a peer directory of this one,
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you can run all of the tests by evaluating `ci.nix`:
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nix-build --argstr liminix `pwd` --argstr nixpkgs `pwd`/../nixpkgs --argstr unstable `pwd`/../unstable-nixpkgs/ ci.nix
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or to run a named test, use the `-A` flag. For example, `-A pppoe`
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## Hardware
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How you get the thing onto hardware will vary according to the device,
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but is likely to involve U-Boot and TFTP.
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There is a rudimentary TFTP server bundled with the system which runs
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from the command line, has an allowlist for client connections, and
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follows symlinks, so you can have your device download images direct
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from the `./result` directory without exposing `/nix/store/` to the
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internet or mucking about copying files to `/tftproot`. If the
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permitted device is to be given the IP address 192.168.8.251 you might
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do something like this:
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nix-shell -A buildEnv --arg device '(import ./devices/qemu)' \
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--run "tufted -a 192.168.8.251 result"
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## Troubleshooting
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### Diagnosing unexpectedly large images
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Sometimes you can add a package and it causes the image size to balloon
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because it has dependencies on other things you didn't know about. Build the
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`outputs.manifest` attribute, which is a json representation of the
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filesystem, and you can run `nix-store --query` on it.
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NIX_PATH=nixpkgs=../nixpkgs:$NIX_PATH nix-build -I liminix-config=path/to/your/configuration.nix --arg device "import ./devices/qemu" -A outputs.manifest -o manifest
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nix-store -q --tree manifest
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## Contributing
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Contributions are welcome, though in these early days there may be a
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bit of back and forth involved before patches are merged. Have a read
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of [CONTRIBUTING](CONTRIBUTING.md) and [STYLE](STYLE.md) and try to
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intuit the unarticulated vision :-)
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Liminix' primary repo is https://gti.telent.net/dan/liminix but that
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doesn't help you much because registrations are closed:
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* There's a [mirror on Github](https://github.com/telent/liminix) for
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convenience and visibility: you can open PRs against that
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* or, you can send me your patch by email using [`git send-email`](https://git-send-email.io/)
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* or in the future, some day, we will have federated Gitea using
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ActivityPub.
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## Articles of interest
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* [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):
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"of the access points and routers we reviewed, not a single one
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took full advantage of the basic application armoring features
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provided by the operating system. Indeed, only one or two models even
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came close, and no brand did well consistently across all models
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tested"
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* [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."
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* [PPP IPV6CP vs DHCPv6 at AAISP](https://www.revk.uk/2011/01/ppp-ipv6cp-vs-dhcpv6.html)
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