Things to note:
- DO NOT DEPLOY THIS
- use nixos-container for testing instead
I've played around with nextcloud on NixOS, essentially following the
examples given in the NixOS manual and searching through some of the
other options. Nextcloud itself works fine with this setup, as does
its database (postgres), and most of the other basic stuff.
However, the nextcloud module as it currently exists appears to be fairly
limited and incomplete in its capabilities, e.g. lack of options for redis
or multiple php pools; in general, it lacks extraOptions-hooks. For redis
the documentation even explicitely notes (in caching.redis) that redis
requires additional options set in `config.php`, but it appears these cannot
currently be set using nix.
I guess we have as options:
- I missed something and it does in fact work
- we can wait for later versions; looks like 21.03 will add at least *some* more
- we can fork the module and add options ourselves
- we can configure it nextcloud by manually editing `config.php`, as it's not
actually inside the nix store but at /var/lib/nextcloud/config (veto)
See comments for additional notes and todos.
* make hainich.hacc.space the default virtualHost for nginx
if no host is running on that subdomain, this will be shown
* disable SSL, so no pesky SSL error for empty subdomains anymore
* remove lots of unneeded brackes and semicolons
Since the delivery of mumble.hacc.space/murmur.hacc.space via gitlab pages
broke (for whatever reason), I've packaged the site into an ad-hoc nix
derivation, which is now delivered locally by nginx instead. This has a
couple benefits (mainly that we no longer depend on gitlab pages), but
also the downside that we can't just update the site via gitlab's CI/CD
pipelines anymore.
this removes the old (unused) config for an angel system used during the
fridays for future camp 2020. Since it was configured "by hand" and not
in a declarative manner, and since there is now an actual module
`services.engelsystem` that we already use for the divoc it seems unlikely
that we will ever need the old config again.
From Nix's point of view, this commit is equivalent to doing nothing.
Seems to work fine, except for the domain — the engelsystem tries
to load its ressources from the IP of the container instead of its
url set in the config.
This is a partial revert, reintroducing hexchen to the project.
As it turns out, I am still quite invested in the project and require
frequent access to the nix-based infrastructure.
I am no longer comfortable with putting resources into this project and
therefore request to be removed from all infrastructure. I am still
happy to help out with software I set up, but I will no longer actively
maintain any services. As far as possible, I will remove myself from all
access groups or other privileged positions related to this project.
Essentially, I'm stepping down as a maintainer. I still reserve the
right to make changes via the established change processes (Merge
Requests as well as Issues in the meta-repositories), but I will no
longer make direct changes to infrastructure without going through those
review processes.