how to write a module

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Daniel Barlow 2023-09-17 21:32:22 +01:00
parent 0a2588013a
commit dd0b1734c1

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@ -150,7 +150,110 @@ meaning that it won't be started until that other service is up.
Module implementation Module implementation
********************* *********************
TODO: make your own modules Modules in Liminix conventionally live in
:file:`modules/somename/default.nix`. If you want or need to
write your own, you may wish to refer to the
examples there in conjunction with reading this section.
* how a module exposes services A module is a function that accepts ``{lib, pkgs, config, ... }`` and
* defining types returns an attrset with keys ``imports, options config``.
* ``imports`` is a list of paths to the other modules required by this one
* ``options`` is a nested set of option declarations
* ``config`` is a nested set of option definitions
The NixOS manual section `Writing NixOS Modules
<https://nixos.org/manual/nixos/stable/#sec-writing-modules>`_ is a
quite comprehensive reference to writing NixOS modules, which is also
mostly applicable to Liminix except that it doesn't cover
service templates.
Service templates
=================
To expose a service template in a module, it needs the following:
* an option declaration for ``system.service.myservicename`` with the
type of ``liminix.lib.types.serviceDefn``
.. code-block:: nix
options = {
system.service.cowsay = mkOption {
type = liminix.lib.types.serviceDefn;
};
};
* an option definition for the same key, which specifies where to
import the service template from (often :file:`./service.nix`)
and the types of its parameters.
.. code-block:: nix
config.system.service.cowsay = liminix.callService ./service.nix {
address = mkOption {
type = types.str;
default = "0.0.0.0";
description = "Listen on specified address";
example = "127.0.0.1";
};
port = mkOption {
type = types.port;
default = 22;
description = "Listen on specified TCP port";
};
breed = mkOption {
type = types.str;
default = "British Friesian"
description = "Breed of the cow";
};
};
Then you need to provide the service template itself, probably in
:file:`./service.nix`:
.. code-block:: nix
{
# any nixpkgs package can be named here
liminix
, cowsayd
, serviceFns
, lib
}:
# these are the parameters declared in the callService invocation
{ address, port, breed} :
let
inherit (liminix.services) longrun;
inherit (lib.strings) escapeShellArg;
in longrun {
name = "cowsayd";
run = "${cowsayd}/bin/cowsayd --address ${address} --port ${builtins.toString port} --breed ${escapeShellArg breed}";
}
.. tip::
Not relevant to module-based services specifically, but a common
gotcha when specifiying services is forgetting to transform "rich"
parameter values into text when composing a command for the shell
to execute. Note here that the port number, an integer, is
stringified with ``toString``, and the name of the breed,
which may contain spaces, is
escaped with ``escapeShellArg``
Types
=====
All of the NixOS module types are available in Liminix. These
Liminix-specific types also exist in ``pkgs.liminix.lib.types``:
* ``service``: an s6-rc service
* ``interface``: an s6-rc service which specifies a network
interface
* ``serviceDefn``: a service "template" definition
In the future it is likely that we will extend this to include other
useful types in the networking domain: for example; IP address,
network prefix or netmask, protocol family ...