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author | Hartmut Goebel <h.goebel@crazy-compilers.com> | 2016-11-29 18:47:16 +0100 |
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committer | Hartmut Goebel <h.goebel@crazy-compilers.com> | 2016-11-29 18:47:16 +0100 |
commit | 3bf428065916f1a47c5ed12f5622f0eff4123644 (patch) | |
tree | f424c57b8a00a019e04fc29f42c8527a811ba281 /doc | |
parent | 2cb64f3b1b3df338acfc0ba9f719875db21812b0 (diff) | |
parent | 683c5ab70accb909697717bb61741a7692c52c09 (diff) | |
download | guix-3bf428065916f1a47c5ed12f5622f0eff4123644.tar guix-3bf428065916f1a47c5ed12f5622f0eff4123644.tar.gz |
Merge branch 'master' into python-build-system
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/guix.texi | 184 |
1 files changed, 150 insertions, 34 deletions
diff --git a/doc/guix.texi b/doc/guix.texi index 153a41dd9c..125e5f0d62 100644 --- a/doc/guix.texi +++ b/doc/guix.texi @@ -567,6 +567,12 @@ guix import}). It is of interest primarily for developers and not for casual users. @item +@c Note: We need at least 0.10.2 for 'channel-send-eof'. +Support for build offloading (@pxref{Daemon Offload Setup}) depends on +@uref{https://github.com/artyom-poptsov/guile-ssh, Guile-SSH}, +version 0.10.2 or later. + +@item When @url{http://zlib.net, zlib} is available, @command{guix publish} can compress build byproducts (@pxref{Invoking guix publish}). @end itemize @@ -814,9 +820,11 @@ available on the system---making it much harder to view them as @cindex offloading @cindex build hook -When desired, the build daemon can @dfn{offload} -derivation builds to other machines -running Guix, using the @code{offload} @dfn{build hook}. When that +When desired, the build daemon can @dfn{offload} derivation builds to +other machines running Guix, using the @code{offload} @dfn{build +hook}@footnote{This feature is available only when +@uref{https://github.com/artyom-poptsov/guile-ssh, Guile-SSH} is +present.}. When that feature is enabled, a list of user-specified build machines is read from @file{/etc/guix/machines.scm}; every time a build is requested, for instance via @code{guix build}, the daemon attempts to offload it to one @@ -832,16 +840,18 @@ The @file{/etc/guix/machines.scm} file typically looks like this: (list (build-machine (name "eightysix.example.org") (system "x86_64-linux") + (host-key "ssh-ed25519 AAAAC3Nza@dots{}") (user "bob") - (speed 2.)) ; incredibly fast! + (speed 2.)) ;incredibly fast! (build-machine (name "meeps.example.org") (system "mips64el-linux") + (host-key "ssh-rsa AAAAB3Nza@dots{}") (user "alice") (private-key (string-append (getenv "HOME") - "/.lsh/identity-for-guix")))) + "/.ssh/identity-for-guix")))) @end example @noindent @@ -875,31 +885,54 @@ The user account to use when connecting to the remote machine over SSH. Note that the SSH key pair must @emph{not} be passphrase-protected, to allow non-interactive logins. +@item host-key +This must be the machine's SSH @dfn{public host key} in OpenSSH format. +This is used to authenticate the machine when we connect to it. It is a +long string that looks like this: + +@example +ssh-ed25519 AAAAC3NzaC@dots{}mde+UhL hint@@example.org +@end example + +If the machine is running the OpenSSH daemon, @command{sshd}, the host +key can be found in a file such as +@file{/etc/ssh/ssh_host_ed25519_key.pub}. + +If the machine is running the SSH daemon of GNU@tie{}lsh, +@command{lshd}, the host key is in @file{/etc/lsh/host-key.pub} or a +similar file. It can be converted to the OpenSSH format using +@command{lsh-export-key} (@pxref{Converting keys,,, lsh, LSH Manual}): + +@example +$ lsh-export-key --openssh < /etc/lsh/host-key.pub +ssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAAEOp8FoQAAAQEAs1eB46LV@dots{} +@end example + @end table A number of optional fields may be specified: -@table @code +@table @asis -@item port -Port number of SSH server on the machine (default: 22). +@item @code{port} (default: @code{22}) +Port number of SSH server on the machine. -@item private-key -The SSH private key file to use when connecting to the machine. +@item @code{private-key} (default: @file{~/.ssh/id_rsa}) +The SSH private key file to use when connecting to the machine, in +OpenSSH format. -Currently offloading uses GNU@tie{}lsh as its SSH client -(@pxref{Invoking lsh,,, GNU lsh Manual}). Thus, the key file here must -be an lsh key file. This may change in the future, though. +@item @code{daemon-socket} (default: @code{"/var/guix/daemon-socket/socket"}) +File name of the Unix-domain socket @command{guix-daemon} is listening +to on that machine. -@item parallel-builds -The number of builds that may run in parallel on the machine (1 by -default.) +@item @code{parallel-builds} (default: @code{1}) +The number of builds that may run in parallel on the machine. -@item speed +@item @code{speed} (default: @code{1.0}) A ``relative speed factor''. The offload scheduler will tend to prefer machines with a higher speed factor. -@item features +@item @code{features} (default: @code{'()}) A list of strings denoting specific features supported by the machine. An example is @code{"kvm"} for machines that have the KVM Linux modules and corresponding hardware support. Derivations can request features by @@ -915,7 +948,7 @@ machines, since offloading works by invoking the @code{guix archive} and this is the case by running: @example -lsh build-machine guile -c "'(use-modules (guix config))'" +ssh build-machine guile -c "'(use-modules (guix config))'" @end example There is one last thing to do once @file{machines.scm} is in place. As @@ -1209,6 +1242,56 @@ data in the right format. This is important because the locale data format used by different libc versions may be incompatible. +@subsection Name Service Switch + +@cindex name service switch, glibc +@cindex NSS (name service switch), glibc +@cindex nscd (name service caching daemon) +@cindex name service caching daemon (nscd) +When using Guix on a foreign distro, we @emph{strongly recommend} that +the system run the GNU C library's @dfn{name service cache daemon}, +@command{nscd}, which should be listening on the +@file{/var/run/nscd/socket} socket. Failing to do that, applications +installed with Guix may fail to look up host names or user accounts, or +may even crash. The next paragraphs explain why. + +@cindex @file{nsswitch.conf} +The GNU C library implements a @dfn{name service switch} (NSS), which is +an extensible mechanism for ``name lookups'' in general: host name +resolution, user accounts, and more (@pxref{Name Service Switch,,, libc, +The GNU C Library Reference Manual}). + +@cindex Network information service (NIS) +@cindex NIS (Network information service) +Being extensible, the NSS supports @dfn{plugins}, which provide new name +lookup implementations: for example, the @code{nss-mdns} plugin allow +resolution of @code{.local} host names, the @code{nis} plugin allows +user account lookup using the Network information service (NIS), and so +on. These extra ``lookup services'' are configured system-wide in +@file{/etc/nsswitch.conf}, and all the programs running on the system +honor those settings (@pxref{NSS Configuration File,,, libc, The GNU C +Reference Manual}). + +When they perform a name lookup---for instance by calling the +@code{getaddrinfo} function in C---applications first try to connect to +the nscd; on success, nscd performs name lookups on their behalf. If +the nscd is not running, then they perform the name lookup by +themselves, by loading the name lookup services into their own address +space and running it. These name lookup services---the +@file{libnss_*.so} files---are @code{dlopen}'d, but they may come from +the host system's C library, rather than from the C library the +application is linked against (the C library coming from Guix). + +And this is where the problem is: if your application is linked against +Guix's C library (say, glibc 2.24) and tries to load NSS plugins from +another C library (say, @code{libnss_mdns.so} for glibc 2.22), it will +likely crash or have its name lookups fail unexpectedly. + +Running @command{nscd} on the system, among other advantages, eliminates +this binary incompatibility problem because those @code{libnss_*.so} +files are loaded in the @command{nscd} process, not in applications +themselves. + @subsection X11 Fonts @cindex fonts @@ -5172,10 +5255,19 @@ gnu/packages/gettext.scm:29:13: gettext would be upgraded from 0.18.1.1 to 0.18. gnu/packages/glib.scm:77:12: glib would be upgraded from 2.34.3 to 2.37.0 @end example -It does so by browsing the FTP directory of each package and determining -the highest version number of the source tarballs therein. The command +Alternately, one can specify packages to consider, in which case a +warning is emitted for packages that lack an updater: + +@example +$ guix refresh coreutils guile guile-ssh +gnu/packages/ssh.scm:205:2: warning: no updater for guile-ssh +gnu/packages/guile.scm:136:12: guile would be upgraded from 2.0.12 to 2.0.13 +@end example + +@command{guix refresh} browses the upstream repository of each package and determines +the highest version number of the releases therein. The command knows how to update specific types of packages: GNU packages, ELPA -packages, etc.---see the documentation for @option{--type} below. The +packages, etc.---see the documentation for @option{--type} below. There are many packages, though, for which it lacks a method to determine whether a new upstream release is available. However, the mechanism is extensible, so feel free to get in touch with us to add a new method! @@ -5215,7 +5307,7 @@ usually run from a checkout of the Guix source tree (@pxref{Running Guix Before It Is Installed}): @example -$ ./pre-inst-env guix refresh -s non-core +$ ./pre-inst-env guix refresh -s non-core -u @end example @xref{Defining Packages}, for more information on package definitions. @@ -5281,7 +5373,7 @@ In addition, @command{guix refresh} can be passed one or more package names, as in this example: @example -$ ./pre-inst-env guix refresh -u emacs idutils gcc-4.8.4 +$ ./pre-inst-env guix refresh -u emacs idutils gcc@@4.8 @end example @noindent @@ -10025,7 +10117,7 @@ Return a service that runs @command{mysqld}, the MySQL or MariaDB database server. The optional @var{config} argument specifies the configuration for -@command{mysqld}, which should be a @code{<mysql-configuraiton>} object. +@command{mysqld}, which should be a @code{<mysql-configuration>} object. @end deffn @deftp {Data Type} mysql-configuration @@ -10047,16 +10139,11 @@ For MariaDB, the root password is empty. @cindex mail @cindex email The @code{(gnu services mail)} module provides Guix service definitions -for mail services. Currently the only implemented service is Dovecot, -an IMAP, POP3, and LMTP server. +for email services: IMAP, POP3, and LMTP servers, as well as mail +transport agents (MTAs). Lots of acronyms! These services are detailed +in the subsections below. -Guix does not yet have a mail transfer agent (MTA), although for some -lightweight purposes the @code{esmtp} relay-only MTA may suffice. Help -is needed to properly integrate a full MTA, such as Postfix. Patches -welcome! - -To add an IMAP/POP3 server to a GuixSD system, add a -@code{dovecot-service} to the operating system definition: +@subsubheading Dovecot Service @deffn {Scheme Procedure} dovecot-service [#:config (dovecot-configuration)] Return a service that runs the Dovecot IMAP/POP3/LMTP mail server. @@ -11412,6 +11499,35 @@ could instantiate a dovecot service like this: (string ""))) @end example +@subsubheading OpenSMTPD Service + +@deffn {Scheme Variable} opensmtpd-service-type +This is the type of the @uref{https://www.opensmtpd.org, OpenSMTPD} +service, whose value should be an @code{opensmtpd-configuration} object +as in this example: + +@example +(service opensmtpd-service-type + (opensmtpd-configuration + (config-file (local-file "./my-smtpd.conf")))) +@end example +@end deffn + +@deftp {Data Type} opensmtpd-configuration +Data type regresenting the configuration of opensmtpd. + +@table @asis +@item @code{package} (default: @var{opensmtpd}) +Package object of the OpenSMTPD SMTP server. + +@item @code{config-file} (default: @var{%default-opensmtpd-file}) +File-like object of the OpenSMTPD configuration file to use. By default +it listens on the loopback network interface, and allows for mail from +users and daemons on the local machine, as well as permitting email to +remote servers. Run @command{man smtpd.conf} for more information. + +@end table +@end deftp @node Kerberos Services @subsubsection Kerberos Services |