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document the module-based-services decision
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doc/adr/README
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doc/adr/README
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Architecture Decision Records
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#############################
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In this directory you will find descriptions of Liminix architecture
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decisions.
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doc/adr/module-system.rst
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Module system
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#############
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**Status:** Adopted; implemented in July-September 2023
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Context
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*******
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Liminix users need a way to assemble a full system configuration by
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combining smaller, more isolated and reusable components, otherwise
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systems will be unwieldy and copy-and-paste will be rife.
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Alternatives
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************
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NixOS module system
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===================
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The NixOS module system addresses many of these concerns. A module is
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a Nix function which accepts a ``configuration`` attrset and some
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other parameters, and returns a new fragment of ``configuration``
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which is merged into it. It includes a DSL describing the permitted
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types of values for each key in the configuration, which is used for
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checking that the supplied parameters are valid and also governs what
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to do if two modules both specify a value for the same key. (Usually
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they are "merged", using some type-appropriate concept of merging.)
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Usually a NixOS module looks only (or mostly only) at a particular
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subtree of the overall configuration which is hardcoded in the module
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definition, but the configuration fragment it returns may touch any
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part of the schema. For example, the factorio module refers to
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``config.services.factorio``, and it returns values for keys in
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``systemd.services.factorio`` and ``networking.firewall``. There is no
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way to use this module to run **two** factorio services with different
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config (e.g. on different ports) - the only way to make that
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possible would be to extend the module definition so that it
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accepts a collection of game configurations and then create
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a systemd service for each.
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NixWRT module system
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====================
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NixWRT, the (now defunct) predecessor of Liminix, used a homegrown
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module system modelled on the Nixpkgs overlay pattern. Each module is
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a function that accepts ``super`` and ``self`` parameters, and
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using <handwaves>that fixpoint magic thing</handwaves>
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is called in a chain with the configuration returned by the previous
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module and the final configuration.
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NixWRT modules mostly don't refer to the configuration object to
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decide how to configure themselves, but accept their parameters
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directly as function parameters. For example, the configuration
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file for "arhcive" (a backup server) includes this text:
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.. code-block:: nix
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(sshd {
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hostkey = secrets.sshHostKey;
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authkeys = { root = lib.splitString "\n" secrets.myKeys; };
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})
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busybox
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(usbdisk {
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label = "backup-disk";
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mountpoint = "/srv";
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fstype = "ext4";
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options = "rw";
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})
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This gives us flexibility that NixOS modules don't: for example, if we
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want to mount two USB disks, we can simply repeat that module twice
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with different parameters - and the module definition doesn't have to
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handle it specially.
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However, the downside of this system is that we didn't implement any
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concept of "types" - there is no type information, so there is no
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systematic checking that parameters are valid, and if two modules set
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the same config key then the rules for merging are entirely ad hoc.
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There is a further (arguable) downside, which is that the
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configuration is not just data - it's now part code. While it could be
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feasible (though I've never seen it done) to encode a NixOS
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configuration using Yaml or XML and then manipulate it as data, this
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is not even possible using the NixWRT system.
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Use services for everything
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===========================
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The most common properties that a Liminix configuration needs to
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define are:
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* which services (processes) to run
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* what packages to install
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* permitted users and groups
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* Linux kernel configuration options
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* Busybox applets
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* filesystem layout
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Suppose we only had services?
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A Liminix service is (also) a derivation, so it is able to
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create any files it likes inside its own store path, and
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transitively require other packages simply by referring to them.
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If it needs particular kernel options it could define them
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as kernel modules to be loaded on demand when the service
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starts (see the nftables module for an example). However:
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* there is no way for a service to add busybox modules
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* it cannot create files outside of its store path, so
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wouldn't be able to make e.g. :file:`/etc/something.conf`
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* no way to create users/groups. We could steal the DynamicUsers idea
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from systemd and make them on demand, but this starts to get a bit
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more complicated.
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These limitations force us to reject this option as a general
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solution - though we should strive *where possible* to implement
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functionality as services and to minimise the proportion of Liminix
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that manipulates the global configuration.
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Decision
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********
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"Why not both?" None of these options is sufficient alone, so we are
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going to do a mixture.
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We will use the NixOS module system, but instead of expecting modules
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to create systemd services as instances, they will expose "service
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templates": functions that accept an attrset and return an
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appropriately configured service that can be assigned by the caller
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to a key in ``config.services``.
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We will typecheck the service template function parameters using the
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same type-checking code as NixOS uses for its modules.
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An example may make this clearer: to add an NTP
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service you first add :file:`modules/ntp` to your ``imports`` list,
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then you create a service by calling
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:code:`config.system.service.ntp.build { .... }` with the appropriate
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service-dependent configuration parameters.
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.. code-block:: nix
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let svc = config.system.service;
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in {
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# ...
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imports = [
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./modules/ntp
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# ....
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];
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config.services.ntp = svc.ntp.build {
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pools = { "pool.ntp.org" = ["iburst"]; };
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makestep = { threshold = 1.0; limit = 3; };
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};
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Merely including the module won't define the service on its own: it
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only creates the template in ``config.system.service.foo`` and you
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have to create the actual service using the template.
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Consequences
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************
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This decision has both good and bad consequences
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Pro
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===
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* We have a workable system for reusing configuration elements in
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Liminix.
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* We have type checking for most imortant things, reducing the risk of
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deploying an invalid configuration.
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* We have a simple mechanism for creating multiple services based on
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the same module, without buulding that logic into the module
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definition itself. For example, we could create two SSH daemons on
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different ports, or DHCP clients with different configurations on
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different network devices.
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* We expect to be able to automate the generation of module
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documentation.
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Con
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===
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* By departing somewhat from the NixOS conventions we increase the
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amount of code we have to write/maintain ourselves - and the
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learning burden on users who are already familiar with that system.
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* Liminix configurations contain function calls and aren't just data,
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which means we can ony realistically interpret or introspect
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them with the Nix interpreter itself - we can't query them
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as data with other non-Nix tools.
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