Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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This ensures proper permissions for the secret key.
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Closes #473.
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This is not strictly needed for integrity (since we already include
the NAR hash in the fingerprint) but it helps against endless data
attacks [1]. (However, this will also require
download-from-binary-cache.pl to bail out if it receives more than the
specified number of bytes.)
[1] https://isis.poly.edu/~jcappos/papers/cappos_mirror_ccs_08.pdf
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chroot only changes the process root directory, not the mount namespace root
directory, and it is well-known that any process with chroot capability can
break out of a chroot "jail". By using pivot_root as well, and unmounting the
original mount namespace root directory, breaking out becomes impossible.
Non-root processes typically have no ability to use chroot() anyway, but they
can gain that capability through the use of clone() or unshare(). For security
reasons, these syscalls are limited in functionality when used inside a normal
chroot environment. Using pivot_root() this way does allow those syscalls to be
put to their full use.
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This reverts commit 9c58691ce3a35833ddcbf157f9f174ab0cc1c37a. Fedora
18/19 images should build again.
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It doesn't build at the moment.
http://hydra.nixos.org/build/19557641
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Fixes #467.
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Fixes #474
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Fixes #453
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We only need to sign the store path, NAR hash and references (the
"fingerprint"). Everything else is irrelevant to security. For
instance, the compression algorithm or the hash of the compressed NAR
don't matter as long as the contents of the uncompressed NAR are
correct.
(Maybe we should include derivers in the fingerprint, but they're
broken and nobody cares about them. Also, it might be nice in the
future if .narinfos contained signatures from multiple independent
signers. But that's impossible if the deriver is included in the
fingerprint, since everybody will tend to have a different deriver for
the same store path.)
Also renamed the "Signature" field to "Sig" since the format changed
in an incompatible way.
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Sodium's Ed25519 signatures are much shorter than OpenSSL's RSA
signatures. Public keys are also much shorter, so they're now
specified directly in the nix.conf option ‘binary-cache-public-keys’.
The new command ‘nix-store --generate-binary-cache-key’ generates and
prints a public and secret key.
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baseNameOf: Don't copy paths to the store first
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It moves runHook to a later position in the rcfile. After that we are
able to set the PS1 environment-variable for a nix-shell environment
e.g.:
# turn the color of the prompt to blue
shellHook = ''
export PS1="\n\[\033[1;34m\][\u@\h:\w]$\[\033[0m\] ";
'';
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due to user permissions)
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$ nix-env -f ~/Dev/nixops/ -iA foo
nix-env: src/libexpr/eval.hh:57: void nix::Bindings::push_back(const nix::Attr&): Assertion `size_ < capacity' failed.
Aborted
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These directories are generally world-readable anyway, and give us the two
most common linux impurities (env and sh)
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Since these come from untrusted users, we shouldn't do any I/O on them
before we've checked that they're in an allowed prefix.
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The DT_UNKNOWN fallback code was getting the type of the wrong path,
causing readDir to report "directory" as the type of every file.
Reported by deepfire on IRC.
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Fix typo (assuming this is a typo)
`allowedRequisites` mentions `allowedReferences` in code example
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I.e., not readable to the nixbld group. This improves purity a bit for
non-chroot builds, because it prevents a builder from enumerating
store paths (i.e. it can only access paths it knows about).
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‘--run’ is like ‘--command’, except that it runs the command in a
non-interactive shell. This is important if you do things like:
$ nix-shell --command make
Hitting Ctrl-C while make is running drops you into the interactive
Nix shell, which is probably not what you want. So you can now do
$ nix-shell --run make
instead.
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So you can have a script like:
#! /usr/bin/env nix-shell
#! nix-shell script.nix -i python
import prettytable
x = prettytable.PrettyTable(["Foo", "Bar"])
for i in range(1, 10): x.add_row([i, i**2])
print x
with a ‘script.nix’ in the same directory:
with import <nixpkgs> {};
runCommand "dummy" { buildInputs = [ python pythonPackages.prettytable ]; } ""
(Of course, in this particular case, using the ‘-p’ flag is more
convenient.)
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This allows scripts to fetch their own dependencies via nix-shell. For
instance, here is a Haskell script that, when executed, pulls in GHC
and the HTTP package:
#! /usr/bin/env nix-shell
#! nix-shell -i runghc -p haskellPackages.ghc haskellPackages.HTTP
import Network.HTTP
main = do
resp <- Network.HTTP.simpleHTTP (getRequest "http://nixos.org/")
body <- getResponseBody resp
print (take 100 body)
Or a Perl script that pulls in Perl and some CPAN packages:
#! /usr/bin/env nix-shell
#! nix-shell -i perl -p perl perlPackages.HTMLTokeParserSimple perlPackages.LWP
use HTML::TokeParser::Simple;
my $p = HTML::TokeParser::Simple->new(url => 'http://nixos.org/');
while (my $token = $p->get_tag("a")) {
my $href = $token->get_attr("href");
print "$href\n" if $href;
}
Note that the options to nix-shell must be given on a separate line
that starts with the magic string ‘#! nix-shell’. This is because
‘env’ does not allow passing arguments to an interpreter directly.
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Fixes "exit: Inappropriate: numeric argument required" errors.
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Fixes #433.
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small documentation fixes
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'... another level of indirection not shown in the figure above ...'
but in the 'user-environments.png' figure there is '~/.nix-profile'.
the figure was updated with the commit: f982df3 on Mar 16, 2005.
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'... when when ...' -> '... when ...'
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