Say more?
NixOS supports headless LUKS, which was an improvement for me in my last distro-hop. The NixOS wiki even has an example of running a TOR Onion service from initrd to accept a LUKS unlock credential.
Say more?
NixOS supports headless LUKS, which was an improvement for me in my last distro-hop. The NixOS wiki even has an example of running a TOR Onion service from initrd to accept a LUKS unlock credential.
Nice.
Here’s another worked example of a less adventurous pi pico (W) project I did recently. It’s C, built with Nix, and doesn’t require setting up all the hardware-debugger stuff (it uses the much simpler hold-bootsel-while-plugging-in and copy-the-.uf2-file mechanism to load code). The 5th commit is the simple blink example from the SDK with all the build mechanisms figured out.
Bumping package versions usually isn’t hard. Here, I’ll do this one out loud here, & maybe you can do it next time you need to:
git clone https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs.git ~/devel/nixpkgs
(or git pull
if you have).git checkout -b stremio
find pkgs -name stremio
$EDITOR pkgs/applications/video/stremio/default.nix
Looks like nixpkgs has version 4.4.142. If I go to https://www.stremio.com/ (link in meta.homepage
in this file) and click ‘Download’, it all says 4.4, which is not helpful. The ‘source code’ link goes to github, and the ‘tags’ link there lists version v4.4.164
, which is what we’re looking for.4.4.142
→ 4.4.164
.sha256-OyuTFmEIC8PH4PDzTMn8ibLUAzJoPA/fTILee0xpgQI=
→ sha256-OyuTFmEIC80000000000000000000A/fTILee0xpgQI=
.nix-build . -A stremio
./result/bin/stremio
. Looks like it works enough to prompt me to log in, at least. I don’t know what stremio is or have an account, but it’s probably fine.git commit -a -m 'stremio: 4.4.142 -> 4.4.164'
git push github
(If this is your first time, create a fork of nixpkgs in the github web UI & git remote add
a remote for it first)I use Nix (not yet NixOS) on a Librem 5. Debian stable is so old, so it’s nice to have Nix as an alternative.
Yea, rain cape / poncho / “boncho” is the way to go! Combine with fenders & giant mudflaps. So fast to get on & off, & the only way to keep dry and cool at the same time.
Thanks for the lead!
It looks like the Buddy Read feature does in fact start with a specific book and organize a group around it, but it invites me to specify all the people that will ever be in the group right away, at group creation time. I get three ways to invite people:
This doesn’t quite fit the “I’m up for this, let me know when it starts” mechanic.
I could create a new group & invite all three of the users with this book in their public ‘to read’ list, but I think folks treat the the ‘to read’ list very, very casually – not at the “I’m ready to commit to a reading group” level. These three users have 723, 2749, and 3771 books on their ‘to read’ lists respectively. I see that I somehow have have 46 books on mine, & haven’t been thinking of it as a ‘ready to commit to reading group’ list.
Thank you for sharing updates about your progress. Good luck rummaging around in found.000. :(
Regulation is slow, full of drama, scales poorly, & can result in a legal thicket that teams of lawyers can navigate better than the individuals it’s intended to advocate for. Decriminalizing interoperability is faster & can handle most of the small/simple cases, freeing up our community/legislative resources to focus on the most important regulatory needs.
Yeah, that’s normal. That’s the seam – where each layer starts/stops. Yours don’t look any worse than mine.
Sometimes you can tweak settings to reduce them a bit, but the only way to avoid them completely is to print in spiral/vase mode (which is very limiting: 1 contiguous perimeter, no infill).
More importantly: You can control where they appear on the part! Your slicer may have settings like ‘nearest’ , ‘random’, ‘aligned’, ‘rear’, or may have a way to paint on the part in the UI where the seams should be. Seams are clearly visible when they’re in the middle of an otherwise-smooth expanse like the side of your boat there, but are barely noticeable if you put them on a corner.
X11 for xdotool. ydotool doesn’t support (& can’t really support with it’s current architecture) retrieving information like the current mouse location, current window, window dimensions & titles. Also, normal (unprivileged) user ydotool use requires udev rules or session scripts and/or running a ydotool daemon & many distros don’t yet ship with this Just Working.
X11 for Alt-F2 r
to restart Gnome Shell without ending the whole session. This is a useful workaround for a variety of Gnome bugs.
There are so many ways do handle backups, so many tools, etc. You’ll find something that works for you.
In the spirit of sharing a neat tool that works well for me, addressing many of the concerns you raised, in case it might work for you too: Maybe check out git annex. Especially if you already know git, and maybe even if you don’t yet.
I have one huge git repository that in spirit holds all my stuff. All my storage devices have a check-out of this git repo. So all my storage devices know about all my files, but only contain some of them (files not present show up as dangling symlinks). git annex tracks which drives have which data and enforces policies like “all data must live on at least two drives” and “this more-important data must live on at least three drives” by refusing to delete copies unless it can verify that enough other copies exist elsewhere.
git annex fsck
on a drive will verify that
I ran Gentoo for ~15 years and then switched to NixOS ~3 years ago. The last straw was Gentoo bug 676264, where I submitted version bump & build fix patches to fix security issues and was ignored for three months.
In Gentoo, glsa-check
only tells you about security vulnerabilities after there’s a portage update that would resolve it. I.e., for those three months, all Gentoo users had a ghostscript with widely-known vulnerabilities and glsa-check was silent about it. I’m not cherry-picking this example—this was one of my first attempts to help be proactive about security updates & found that the process is not fit for purpose. And most fixed vulnerabilities don’t even get GLSA advisories—the advisories have to be created manually. Awhile back, I had made a ‘gentle update’ script that just updated packages glsa-check complained about. It turns out that’s not very useful.
Contrast this with vulnix, a tool in Nix/NixOS which directly fetches the vulnerability database from nvd.nist.gov (with appropriate polite local caching) and directly checks locally installed software against it. You don’t need the Nix project to do anything for this to Just Work; it’s always comprehensive. I made a NixOS upgrade script that uses vulnix to show me a diff of security issues as it does a channel update. Example output:
commit ...
Author: <me>
Date: Sat Jun 17 2023
New pins for security fixes
-9.8 CVE-2023-34152 imagemagick
-7.8 CVE-2023-34153 imagemagick
-7.5 CVE-2023-32067 c-ares
-7.5 CVE-2023-28319 curl
-7.5 CVE-2023-2650 openssl
-7.5 CVE-2023-2617 opencv
-7.5 CVE-2023-0464 openssl
-6.5 CVE-2023-31147 c-ares
-6.5 CVE-2023-31124 c-ares
-6.5 CVE-2023-1972 binutils
-6.4 CVE-2023-31130 c-ares
-5.9 CVE-2023-32570 dav1d
-5.9 CVE-2023-28321 curl
-5.9 CVE-2023-28320 curl
-5.9 CVE-2023-1255 openssl
-5.5 CVE-2023-34151 imagemagick
-5.5 CVE-2023-32324 cups
-5.3 CVE-2023-0466 openssl
-5.3 CVE-2023-0465 openssl
-3.7 CVE-2023-28322 curl
diff --git a/channels b/channels
--- a/channels
+++ b/channels
@@ -8,23 +8,23 @@ [nixos]
git_repo = https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs.git
git_ref = release-23.05
-git_revision = 3a70dd92993182f8e514700ccf5b1ae9fc8a3b8d
-release_name = nixos-23.05.419.3a70dd92993
-tarball_url = https://releases.nixos.org/nixos/23.05/nixos-23.05.419.3a70dd92993/nixexprs.tar.xz
-tarball_sha256 = 1e3a214cb6b0a221b3fc0f0315bc5fcc981e69fec9cd5d8a9db847c2fae27907
+git_revision = c7ff1b9b95620ce8728c0d7bd501c458e6da9e04
+release_name = nixos-23.05.1092.c7ff1b9b956
+tarball_url = https://releases.nixos.org/nixos/23.05/nixos-23.05.1092.c7ff1b9b956/nixexprs.tar.xz
+tarball_sha256 = 8b32a316eb08c567aa93b6b0e1622b1cc29504bc068e5b1c3af8a9b81dafcd12
The benefit of using something fancier than rsync is that you get a point-in-time recovery capability.
For example, if you switch the enclosures weekly, rsync gives you two recovery options: restore to yesterday’s state (from the enclosure not in the safe) and restore to a state from 2-7 days ago (from the one in the safe, depending on when it went into the safe).
Daily incremental backups with a fancy tool like dar let you restore to any previous state. Instead of two options, you have hundreds of options, one for each day. This is useful when you mess up something in the archive (eg: accidentally delete or overwrite it) and don’t notice right away: It appeared, was ok for awhile, then it was bad/gone and that bad/gone state was backed up. It’s nice to be able to jump back in time to the brief it-was-ok state & pluck the content back out.
If you have other protections against accidental overwrite (like you only back up git repos that already capture the full history, and you git fsck
them regularly) — then the fancier tools don’t provide much benefit.
I just assumed that you’d want this capability because many folks do and it’s fairly easy to get with modern tools, but if rsync is working for you, no need to change.
Sounds fine?
Yes: Treat the two enclosures independently and symmetrically, such that you can fully restore from either one (the only difference would be that the one in the safe is slightly stale) and the ongoing upkeep is just:
If I assume a normal incremental backup setup, both enclosures would have a full backup and a pile of incremental backups. For example, if swapped every three days:
Enclosure A Enclosure B
----------------- ---------------
a-full-2023-07-01
a-incr-2023-07-02
a-incr-2023-07-03
b-full-2023-07-04
b-incr-2023-07-05
b-incr-2023-07-06
a-incr-2023-07-07
a-incr-2023-07-08
a-incr-2023-07-09
b-incr-2023-07-10
b-incr-2023-07-11
b-incr-2023-07-12
a-incr-2023-07-13
....
The thing taking the backups need not even detect or care which enclosure is plugged in – it just uses the last incremental on that enclosure to determine what’s changed & needs to be included in the next incremental.
Nothing need care about the number or identity of enclosures: You could add a third if, for example, you found an offsite location you trust. Or when one of them eventually fails, you’d just start using a new one & everything would Just Work. Or, if you want to discard history (eg: to get back the storage space used by deleted files), you could just wipe one of them & let it automatically make a new full backup.
Are you asking for help with software? This could be as simple as dar and a shell script.
My personal preference is to tell the enclosure to not try any fancy RAID stuff & just present all the drives directly to the host, and then let the host do the RAID stuff (with lvm or zfs or whatever), but I understand opinions differ. I like knowing I can always use any other enclosure or just plug the drives in directly if/when the enclosure dies.
I notice you didn’t mention encryption, maybe because that’s obvious these days? There’s an interesting choice here, though: You can do normal full-disk encryption, or you could encrypt the archives individually. Dar actually has an interesting feature here I haven’t seen in any other backup tool: If you keep a small --aux
file with the metadata needed for determining what will need to go in the next incremental, dar can encrypt the backup archives asymmetrically to a GPG key. This allows you to separate the capability of writing backups and the capability of reading backups. This is neat, but mostly unimportant because the backup is mostly just a copy of what’s on the host. It comes into play only when accessing historical files that have been deleted on the host but are still recoverable from point-in-time restore from the incremental archives – this becomes possible only with the private key, which is not used or needed by any of the backup automation, and so is not kept on the host. (You could also, of course, do both full-disk encryption and per-archive encryption if you want the neat separate-credential for deleted files trick and also don’t want to leak metadata about when backups happen and how large the incremental archives are / how much changed.) (If you don’t full-disk-encrypt the enclosure & rely only on the per-archive encryption, you’d want to keep the small --aux files on the host, not on the enclosure. The automation would need to keep one --aux file per enclosure, & for this narrow case, it would need to identify the enclosures to make sure it uses that enclosure’s --aux file when generating the incremental archive.)
It’s worth watching.