--- title: Paranoid NixOS on AWS date: 2021-08-11 author: Heartmender series: nixos tags: - paranix - aws - r13y --- In [the last post](https://christine.website/blog/paranoid-nixos-2021-07-18) we covered a lot of the base groundwork involved in making a paranoid NixOS setup. Today we're gonna throw this into prod by making a base NixOS image with it. [Normally I don't suggest people throw these things into production directly, if only to have some kind of barrier between you and your money generator; however today is different. It's probably not completely unsafe to put this in production, but I really would suggest reading and understanding this article before doing so.](conversation://Cadey/coffee) At a high level we are going to do the following: - Pin production OS versions using [niv](https://github.com/nmattia/niv) - Create a script to automatically generate a production-ready NixOS image that you can import into The Cloud - Manage all this using your favorite buzzwords (Terraform, Infrastructure-as-Code) - Install an nginx server reverse proxying to the [Printer facts service](https://printerfacts.cetacean.club/) ## What is an Image? Before we yolo this all into prod, let's cover what we're actually doing. There are a lot of conflicting buzzwords here, so I'm going to go out of my way to attempt to simplify them down so that we use my arbitrary definitions of buzzwords instead of what other people will imply they mean. You're reading my blog, you get my buzzwords; it's as simple as that. In this post we are going to create a base system that you can build your production systems on top of. This base system will be crystallized into an _image_ that AWS will use as the initial starting place for servers. [So you create the system definition for your base system, then turn that into an image and put that image into AWS?](conversation://Mara/hmm) [Yep! The exact steps are a little more complicated but at a high level that's what we're doing.](conversation://Cadey/enby) ## Base Setup I'm going to be publishing my work for this post [here](https://tulpa.dev/cadey/paranix-configs), but you can follow along in this post to understand the individual steps here. First, let's set up the environment with [lorri](https://github.com/nix-community/lorri) and [niv](https://github.com/nmattia/niv). Lorri will handle creating a cached nix-shell environment for us to run things in and niv will handle pinning NixOS to an exact version so you can get a more reproducible production environment. Set up lorri: ```console $ lorri init Aug 11 09:41:50.966 INFO wrote file, path: ./shell.nix Aug 11 09:41:50.966 INFO wrote file, path: ./.envrc Aug 11 09:41:50.966 INFO done direnv: error /home/cadey/code/cadey/paranix-configs/.envrc is blocked. Run `direnv allow` to approve its content $ direnv allow direnv: loading ~/code/cadey/paranix-configs/.envrc Aug 11 09:41:54.581 INFO lorri has not completed an evaluation for this project yet, nix_file: /home/cadey/code/cadey/paranix-configs/shell.nix direnv: export +IN_NIX_SHELL ``` [Why are you putting the `$` before every command in these examples? It looks extraneous to me.](conversation://Mara/hacker) [The `$` is there for two main reasons. First, it allows there to be a clear delineation between the commands being typed and their output. Secondly it makes it slightly harder to blindly copy this into your shell without either editing the `$` out or selecting around it. My hope is that this will make you read the command and carefully consider whether or not you actually want to run it.](conversation://Cadey/enby) Set up niv: ```console $ niv init Initializing Creating nix/sources.nix Creating nix/sources.json Importing 'niv' ... Adding package niv Writing new sources file Done: Adding package niv Importing 'nixpkgs' ... Adding package nixpkgs Writing new sources file Done: Adding package nixpkgs Done: Initializing ``` [If you don't already have niv in your environment, you can hack around that by running all the niv commands before you set up `shell.nix` like this:
$ nix-shell -p niv --run 'niv blah'
](conversation://Mara/hacker) And finally pin nixpkgs to a specific version of NixOS. [At the time of writing this article, NixOS 21.05 is the stable release, so that is what is used here.](conversation://Mara/hacker) ```console $ niv update nixpkgs -b nixos-21.05 Update nixpkgs Done: Update nixpkgs $ ``` This will become the foundation of our NixOS systems and production images. You should then set up your `shell.nix` to look like this: ```nix let sources = import ./nix/sources.nix; pkgs = import ./sources.nixpkgs { }; in pkgs.mkShell { buildInputs = with pkgs; [ niv terraform bashInteractive ]; }; ``` ### Set Up Unix Accounts [This step can be omitted if you are grafting this into an existing NixOS configs repository, however it would be good to read through this to understand the directory layout at play here.](conversation://Mara/hacker) It's probably important to be able to have access to production machines. Let's create a NixOS module that will allow you to SSH into the machine. In your paranix-configs folder, run this command to make a `common` config directory: ```console $ mkdir common $ cd common ``` Now in that common directory, open `default.nix` in ~~emacs~~ your favorite text editor and copy in this skeleton: ```nix # common/default.nix { config, lib, pkgs, ... }: { imports = [ ./users.nix ]; nix.autoOptimiseStore = true; users.users.root.openssh.authorizedKeys.keys = [ "ssh-ed25519 AAAAC3NzaC1lZDI1NTE5AAAAIPg9gYKVglnO2HQodSJt4z4mNrUSUiyJQ7b+J798bwD9" ]; services.tailscale.enable = true; # Tell the firewall to implicitly trust packets routed over Tailscale: networking.firewall.trustedInterfaces = [ "tailscale0" ]; security.auditd.enable = true; security.audit.enable = true; security.audit.rules = [ "-a exit,always -F arch=b64 -S execve" ]; security.sudo.execWheelOnly = true; environment.defaultPackages = lib.mkForce []; services.openssh = { passwordAuthentication = false; allowSFTP = false; # Don't set this if you need sftp challengeResponseAuthentication = false; extraConfig = '' AllowTcpForwarding yes X11Forwarding no AllowAgentForwarding no AllowStreamLocalForwarding no AuthenticationMethods publickey ''; }; # PCI compliance environment.systemPackages = with pkgs; [ clamav ]; } ``` [Astute readers will notice that this is less paranoid than the last post. This was pared down after private feedback.](conversation://Mara/hacker) This will create `common` as a folder that can be imported as a NixOS module with some basic settings and then tells NixOS to try importing `users.nix` as a module. This module doesn't exist yet, so it will fail when we try to import it. Let's fix that by making `users.nix`: ```nix # common/users.nix { config, lib, pkgs, ... }: with lib; let # These options will be used for user account defaults in # the `mkUser` function. xeserv.users = { groups = mkOption { type = types.listOf types.str; default = [ "wheel" ]; example = ''[ "wheel" "libvirtd" "docker" ]''; description = "The Unix groups that Xeserv staff users should be assigned to"; }; shell = mkOption { type = types.package; default = pkgs.bashInteractive; example = "pkgs.powershell"; description = "The default shell that Xeserv staff users will be given by default."; }; }; cfg = config.xeserv.users; mkUser = { keys, shell ? cfg.shell, extraGroups ? cfg.groups, ... }: { isNormalUser = true; inherit extraGroups shell; openssh.authorizedKeys = { inherit keys; }; }; in { options.xeserv.users = xeserv.users; config.users.users = { cadey = mkUser { keys = [ "ssh-ed25519 AAAAC3NzaC1lZDI1NTE5AAAAIPg9gYKVglnO2HQodSJt4z4mNrUSUiyJQ7b+J798bwD9" ]; }; twi = mkUser { keys = [ "ssh-ed25519 AAAAC3NzaC1lZDI1NTE5AAAAIPYr9hiLtDHgd6lZDgQMkJzvYeAXmePOrgFaWHAjJvNU" ]; }; }; } ``` [It's worth noting that `xeserv` in there can be anything you want. It's set to `xeserv` as we are imagining that this is for the production environment of a company named Xeserv.](conversation://Mara/hacker) ### Paranoid Settings Next we're going to set up the paranoid settings from the last post into a module named `paranoid.nix`. First we'll need to grab [impermanence](https://github.com/nix-community/impermanence) into our niv manifest like this: ```console $ niv add nix-community/impermanence Adding package impermanence Writing new sources file Done: Adding package impermanence ``` Then open `common/default.nix` and change this line: ```nix imports = [ ./users.nix ]; ``` To something like this: ```nix imports = [ ./paranoid.nix ./users.nix ]; ``` Then open `./paranoid.nix` in a text editor and paste in the following: ```nix # common/paranoid.nix { config, pkgs, lib, ... }: with lib; let sources = import ../nix/sources.nix; impermanence = sources.impermanence; cfg = config.xeserv.paranoid; ifNoexec = if cfg.noexec then [ "noexec" ] else [ ]; in { imports = [ "${impermanence}/nixos.nix" ]; options.xeserv.paranoid = { enable = mkEnableOption "enables ephemeral filesystems and limited persistence"; noexec = mkEnableOption "enables every mount on the system save /nix being marked as noexec (potentially dangerous at a social level)"; }; config = mkIf cfg.enable { fileSystems."/" = mkForce { device = "none"; fsType = "tmpfs"; options = [ "defaults" "size=2G" "mode=755" ] ++ ifNoexec; }; fileSystems."/etc/nixos".options = ifNoexec; fileSystems."/srv".options = ifNoexec; fileSystems."/var/lib".options = ifNoexec; fileSystems."/var/log".options = ifNoexec; fileSystems."/boot" = { device = "/dev/disk/by-label/boot"; fsType = "vfat"; }; fileSystems."/nix" = { device = "/dev/disk/by-label/nix"; autoResize = true; fsType = "ext4"; }; boot.cleanTmpDir = true; environment.persistence."/nix/persist" = { directories = [ "/etc/nixos" # nixos system config files, can be considered optional "/srv" # service data "/var/lib" # system service persistent data "/var/log" # the place that journald dumps it logs to ]; }; environment.etc."ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key".source = "/nix/persist/etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key"; environment.etc."ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key.pub".source = "/nix/persist/etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key.pub"; environment.etc."ssh/ssh_host_ed25519_key".source = "/nix/persist/etc/ssh/ssh_host_ed25519_key"; environment.etc."ssh/ssh_host_ed25519_key.pub".source = "/nix/persist/etc/ssh/ssh_host_ed25519_key.pub"; environment.etc."machine-id".source = "/nix/persist/etc/machine-id"; }; } ``` This should give us the base that we need to build the system image for AWS. ## Building The Image As I mentioned earlier we need to build a system image before we can build the image. NixOS normally hides a lot of this magic from you, but we're going to scrape away all that magic and do this by hand. In your `paranix-configs` folder, create a folder named `images`. This creatively named folder is where we will store our NixOS image generation scripts. Copy this code into `build.nix`. This will tell NixOS to create a new system closure with configuration in `images/configuration.nix`: ```nix # images/build.nix let sources = import ../nix/sources.nix; pkgs = import sources.nixpkgs { }; sys = (import "${sources.nixpkgs}/nixos/lib/eval-config.nix" { system = "x86_64-linux"; modules = [ ./configuration.nix ]; }); in sys.config.system.build.toplevel ``` And in `images/configuration.nix` add this skeleton config: ```nix # images/configuration.nix { config, pkgs, lib, modulesPath, ... }: { imports = [ ../common (modulesPath + "/virtualisation/amazon-image.nix") ]; xeserv.paranoid.enable = true; } ``` [You can adapt this to other clouds by changing what module is imported. See the list of available modules here.](conversation://Mara/hacker) Then you can kick off the build with `nix-build`: ```console $ nix-build build.nix ``` It will take a moment to assemble everything together and when you are done you should have an entire functional system closure in `./result`: ```console $ cat ./result/nixos-version 21.05pre-git ``` [It has `pre-git` here because we're using a pinned commit of the `nixos-21.05` git branch. Release channels don't have that suffix there.](conversation://Mara/hacker) From here we need to put this base system closure into a disk image for AWS. This process is a bit more involved, but here are the high level things needed to make a disk image for NixOS (or any Linux system for that matter): - A virtual hard drive to install the OS to - A partition mapping on the virtual hard drive - Essential system files copied over - A boot configuation We can model this using a Nix function. This function would need to take in the system config, some metadata about the kind of image to make and then it would build the image and return the result. I've made this available [here](https://tulpa.dev/cadey/paranix-configs/src/branch/main/images/make-image.nix) so you can grab it into your config folder like this: ```console $ wget -O make-image.nix https://tulpa.dev/cadey/paranix-configs/raw/branch/main/images/make-image.nix ``` Then we can edit `build.nix` to look like this: ```nix # images/build.nix let sources = import ../nix/sources.nix; pkgs = import sources.nixpkgs { }; config = (import "${sources.nixpkgs}/nixos/lib/eval-config.nix" { system = "x86_64-linux"; modules = [ ./configuration.nix ]; }); in import ./make-image.nix { inherit (config) config pkgs; inherit (config.pkgs) lib; format = "vpc"; # change this for other clouds } ``` Then you can build the AWS image with `nix-build`: ```console $ nix-build build.nix ``` This will emit the AWS disk image in `./result`: ```console $ ls ./result/ nixos.vhd ``` [AWS uses Microsoft Virtual PC hard disk files as the preferred input for their vmimport service. This is probably a legacy thing.](conversation://Mara/hacker) ## Terraforming [Terraform](https://www.terraform.io/) is not my favorite tool on the planet, however it is quite useful for beating AWS and other clouds into shape. We will be using Terraform to do the following: - Create an S3 bucket to use for storing Terraform states in The Cloud - Create an S3 bucket for the AMI base images - Create an IAM role for importing AMIs - Create an IAM role policy for allowing the AMI importer service to work - Uploading the image to S3 - Import the image from S3 as an EBS snapshot - Create an AMI from that EBS snapshot - Create an example t2.micro virtual machine - Deploy an example service config for nginx that does nothing This sounds like a lot, but it's really not as much as it sounds. A lot of this is boilerplate. The cost associated with these steps should be minimal. In the root of your `paranix-configs` folder, make a folder called `terraform`, as this is where our terraform configuration will live: ```console $ mkdir terraform $ cd terraform ``` Then you can proceed to the following steps. ### S3 State Bucket In that folder, make a folder called `bootstrap`, this configuration will contain the base S3 bucket config for Terraform state: ```console $ mkdir bootstrap $ cd bootstrap ``` Copy this terraform code into `main.tf`: ```hcl # terraform/bootstrap/main.tf provider "aws" { region = "us-east-1" } resource "aws_s3_bucket" "bucket" { bucket = "xeserv-tf-state-paranix" acl = "private" tags = { Name = "Terraform State" } } ``` Then run `terraform init` to set up the terraform environment: ```console $ terraform init ``` It will download the AWS provider and run a few tests on your config to make sure things are correct. Once this is done, you can run `terraform plan`: ```console $ terraform plan Terraform used the selected providers to generate the following execution plan. Resource actions are indicated with the following symbols: + create Terraform will perform the following actions: # aws_s3_bucket.bucket will be created + resource "aws_s3_bucket" "bucket" { + acceleration_status = (known after apply) + acl = "private" + arn = (known after apply) + bucket = "xeserv-tf-state-paranoid" + bucket_domain_name = (known after apply) + bucket_regional_domain_name = (known after apply) + force_destroy = false + hosted_zone_id = (known after apply) + id = (known after apply) + region = (known after apply) + request_payer = (known after apply) + tags = { + "Name" = "Terraform State" } + tags_all = { + "Name" = "Terraform State" } + website_domain = (known after apply) + website_endpoint = (known after apply) + versioning { + enabled = (known after apply) + mfa_delete = (known after apply) } } Plan: 1 to add, 0 to change, 0 to destroy. Note: You didn't use the -out option to save this plan, so Terraform can't guarantee to take exactly these actions if you run "terraform apply" now. ``` Terraform is very pedantic about what the state of the world is. In this case nothing in the associated state already exists, so it is saying that it needs to create the S3 bucket that we will use for our Terraform states in the future. We can apply this with `terraform apply`: ```console $ terraform apply Do you want to perform these actions? Terraform will perform the actions described above. Only 'yes' will be accepted to approve. Enter a value: ``` If you want to perform these actions, follow the instructions. ```console Enter a value: yes aws_s3_bucket.bucket: Creating... aws_s3_bucket.bucket: Creation complete after 3s [id=xeserv-tf-state-paranoid] Apply complete! Resources: 1 added, 0 changed, 0 destroyed. ``` Now that we have the state bucket, let's use it to create our AMI. ### Creating the AMI In your `terraform` folder, create a new folder called `aws_image`. This is where the terraform configuration for uploading our disk image to AWS will live. ```console $ mkdir aws_image $ cd aws_image ``` [This part of the config is modified from the instructions on how to create an AMI from a locally created VM image here.](conversation://Mara/hacker) Make a file called `main.tf` and we'll add to it as we go through this section. In `main.tf`, add the following boilerplate to make the AWS provider use the terraform state bucket we just created: ```hcl # terraform/aws_image/main.tf provider "aws" { region = "us-east-1" } terraform { backend "s3" { bucket = "xeserv-tf-state-paranoid" key = "aws_image" region = "us-east-1" } } ``` This will tell the AWS provider to use the S3 bucket we just made, but also to put the terraform state in a key called `aws_image`. We will reuse this state later for making our printer facts host. After we do this, we should run `terraform init` to make sure that the state bucket is working: ```console $ terraform init Initializing the backend... Initializing provider plugins... - Finding latest version of hashicorp/aws... - Installing hashicorp/aws v3.53.0... - Installed hashicorp/aws v3.53.0 (signed by HashiCorp) Terraform has created a lock file .terraform.lock.hcl to record the provider selections it made above. Include this file in your version control repository so that Terraform can guarantee to make the same selections by default when you run "terraform init" in the future. Terraform has been successfully initialized! You may now begin working with Terraform. Try running "terraform plan" to see any changes that are required for your infrastructure. All Terraform commands should now work. If you ever set or change modules or backend configuration for Terraform, rerun this command to reinitialize your working directory. If you forget, other commands will detect it and remind you to do so if necessary. ``` Now let's create the S3 bucket that we will put our NixOS image in: ```hcl # terraform/aws_image/main.tf resource "aws_s3_bucket" "images" { bucket = "xeserv-ami-images" acl = "private" tags = { Name = "Xeserv AMI Images" } } ``` Then let's create the IAM role and policy that allows the VM importer service to import objects from S3 into EBS snapshots that we use to create an AMI. In the `aws_image` folder, copy this trust policy statement into `vmie-trust-policy.json`: ```json { "Version": "2012-10-17", "Statement": [ { "Effect": "Allow", "Principal": { "Service": "vmie.amazonaws.com" }, "Action": "sts:AssumeRole", "Condition": { "StringEquals":{ "sts:Externalid": "vmimport" } } } ] } ``` This will be used to give the VM import service permission to act against AWS on your behalf. In `main.tf`, add the following role and policy to the configuration: ```hcl # terraform/aws_image/main.tf resource "aws_iam_role" "vmimport" { name = "vmimport" assume_role_policy = file("./vmie-trust-policy.json") } resource "aws_iam_role_policy" "vmimport_policy" { name = "vmimport" role = aws_iam_role.vmimport.id policy = <ARN, and in order to give the vmimport service the minimal possible permissions, we need to template out that policy JSON file, and doing this inline in Terraform is a lot simpler.](conversation://Cadey/enby) And now we should run `terraform plan` and `terraform apply` to make sure everything works okay: ```console $ terraform plan Plan: 3 to add, 0 to change, 0 to destroy. $ terraform apply Apply complete! Resources: 3 added, 0 changed, 0 destroyed. ``` Perfect! Now we need to upload the image to S3. You are going to have to build the NixOS image outside of terraform, so run `nix-build`: ```console $ nix-build ../../build.nix ``` This should largely be a no-op and will put the correct `result` symlink in your `aws_image` folder so terraform can read the image metadata. [Practically you would want to make a script to run terraform, and in the script for this folder you would probably want to add that `nix-build` command to that script. However this is trivial and is thus an exercise for the reader.](conversation://Mara/hacker) In your `main.tf` file, add this: ```hcl # terraform/aws_image/main.tf resource "aws_s3_bucket_object" "nixos_21_05" { bucket = aws_s3_bucket.images.bucket key = "nixos-21.05-paranoid.vhd" source = "./result/nixos.vhd" etag = filemd5("./result/nixos.vhd") } ``` Now we need to create the EBS snapshot. Copy this into your `main.tf`: ```hcl # terraform/aws_image/main.tf resource "aws_ebs_snapshot_import" "nixos_21_05" { disk_container { format = "VHD" user_bucket { s3_bucket = aws_s3_bucket.images.bucket s3_key = aws_s3_bucket_object.nixos_21_05.key } } role_name = aws_iam_role.vmimport.name tags = { Name = "NixOS-21.05" } } ``` This step may take a while (more than 5 minutes), so let's run `terraform plan` and then `terraform apply`: ```console $ terraform plan Plan: 2 to add, 0 to change, 0 to destroy. $ terraform apply Apply complete! Resources: 2 added, 0 changed, 0 destroyed. ``` Finally you can create the AMI and export the AMI ID like this: ```hcl # terraform/aws_image/main.tf resource "aws_ami" "nixos_21_05" { name = "nixos_21_05" architecture = "x86_64" virtualization_type = "hvm" root_device_name = "/dev/xvda" ena_support = true sriov_net_support = "simple" ebs_block_device { device_name = "/dev/xvda" snapshot_id = aws_ebs_snapshot_import.nixos_21_05.id volume_size = 40 # you can go as low as 8 GB, but 40 is a nice number delete_on_termination = true volume_type = "gp3" } } output "nixos_21_05_ami" { value = aws_ami.nixos_21_05.id } ``` Then run `terraform plan` and `terraform apply`: ```console $ terraform plan Plan: 1 to add, 0 to change, 0 to destroy. $ terraform apply Apply complete! Resources: 1 added, 0 changed, 0 destroyed. Outputs: nixos_21_05_ami = "ami-0f43f74cbbdd1ddef" ``` Et voila! We have a NixOS base image that we can use for production workloads. Let's use it to create a NixOS server running the [printer facts service](https://printerfacts.cetacean.club/). [**KEEP IN MIND** that this configuration means that every time you rebuild and upload this image you potentially risk breaking production machines. Don't rebuild this config more than once every 6 months (or when you bump to a new release of NixOS) at most.](conversation://Mara/hacker) ### Using the AMI Let's make a new folder in the `terraform` folder called `printerfacts`. In this folder we're going to set up a new terraform state that imports the AMI state we just made and then we will use that AMI to run the printer facts service. ```console $ mkdir printerfacts $ cd printerfacts ``` In `main.tf`, copy the following: ```hcl # terraform/printerfacts/main.tf provider "aws" { region = "us-east-1" } terraform { backend "s3" { bucket = "xeserv-tf-state-paranoid" key = "printerfacts" region = "us-east-1" } } ``` Now you can `terraform init` as normal to ensure everything is working as we expect: ```console $ terraform init Terraform has been successfully initialized! ``` Then let's add the `aws_image` state as a data source. This will let us reference the AMI ID from the remote state file instead of having to build it from scratch every time. ```hcl # terraform/printerfacts/main.tf data "terraform_remote_state" "aws_image" { backend = "s3" config = { bucket = "xeserv-tf-state-paranoid" key = "aws_image" region = "us-east-1" } } ``` AWS wants us to create a keypair for the instance, so to make AWS happy we will make a keypair like this: ```hcl # terraform/printerfacts/main.tf resource "tls_private_key" "state_ssh_key" { algorithm = "RSA" } resource "aws_key_pair" "generated_key" { key_name = "generated-key-${sha256(tls_private_key.state_ssh_key.public_key_openssh)}" public_key = tls_private_key.state_ssh_key.public_key_openssh } ``` [You will need to `terraform init` after this step.](conversation://Mara/hacker) Now we need to create a security group for this instance. This security group should do the following: - Allow port 22 (ssh) ingress - Allow port 80 (http) ingress - Allow ICMP (ping) ingress - Allow ICMP (ping) egress - Allow TCP egress on all ports to everywhere - Allow UDP egress on all ports to everywhere You can do this with this terraform fragment: ```hcl # terraform/printerfacts/main.tf resource "aws_security_group" "printerfacts" { ingress { from_port = 22 to_port = 22 protocol = "tcp" cidr_blocks = ["0.0.0.0/0"] } ingress { from_port = 80 to_port = 80 protocol = "tcp" cidr_blocks = ["0.0.0.0/0"] } ingress { from_port = -1 to_port = -1 protocol = "icmp" cidr_blocks = ["0.0.0.0/0"] } egress { from_port = -1 to_port = -1 protocol = "icmp" cidr_blocks = ["0.0.0.0/0"] } egress { from_port = 0 to_port = 65535 protocol = "tcp" cidr_blocks = ["0.0.0.0/0"] } egress { from_port = 0 to_port = 65535 protocol = "udp" cidr_blocks = ["0.0.0.0/0"] } } ``` Then we can create the AWS instance using our AMI, keypair and security group: ```hcl # terraform/printerfacts/main.tf resource "aws_instance" "printerfacts" { ami = data.terraform_remote_state.aws_image.outputs.nixos_21_05_ami instance_type = "t3.micro" security_groups = [ aws_security_group.printerfacts.name, ] key_name = aws_key_pair.generated_key.key_name root_block_device { volume_size = 40 # GiB } tags = { Name = "xe-printerfacts" } } ``` And then we can create a NixOS deploy config with the fantastic [deploy_nixos](https://github.com/tweag/terraform-nixos/tree/master/deploy_nixos) module from Tweag. Copy this into your `main.tf`: ```hcl # terraform/printerfacts/main.tf module "deploy_printerfacts" { source = "git::https://github.com/Xe/terraform-nixos.git//deploy_nixos?ref=1b49f2c6b4e7537cca6dd6d7b530037ea81e8268" nixos_config = "${path.module}/printerfacts.nix" hermetic = true target_user = "root" target_host = aws_instance.printerfacts.public_ip ssh_private_key = tls_private_key.state_ssh_key.private_key_pem ssh_agent = false build_on_target = false } ``` [You will need to `terraform init` again after this step.](conversation://Mara/hacker) Now let's make the `printerfacts.nix` host definition. We're going to start with a simple config to begin with. This will start nginx in a mostly broken but still semi-functional state on port 80. ```nix # terraform/printerfacts/printerfacts.nix let sources = import ../../nix/sources.nix; pkgs = import sources.nixpkgs { }; system = "x86_64-linux"; configuration = { config, lib, pkgs, ... }: { imports = [ ../../common "${sources.nixpkgs}/nixos/modules/virtualisation/amazon-image.nix" ]; networking.firewall.allowedTCPPorts = [ 22 80 ]; xeserv.paranoid.enable = true; services.nginx.enable = true; }; in import "${sources.nixpkgs}/nixos" { inherit system configuration; } ``` [What is up with that config? It doesn't look like a normal NixOS module at all.](conversation://Mara/hmm) [That is a NixOS config that will use the pinned version of nixpkgs with niv in order to build everything. It won't work everywhere, however the `hermetic` flag in the `deploy_nixos` Terraform module will make this work.](conversation://Cadey/enby) Now let's deploy all this and see if it works! ```console $ terraform init $ terraform plan $ terraform apply ``` ### Printerfacts Install Now we can add the printerfacts service to the VM. First, add the printerfacts repo to niv: ```console $ niv add git -n printerfacts --repo https://tulpa.dev/cadey/printerfacts Done: Adding package printerfacts ``` Then create a service definition for it in your `common` folder. First create the folder `common/services`: ``` $ cd ../.. $ cd common $ mkdir services $ cd services ``` Then create a `default.nix` file with the following contents: ```nix # common/services/default.nix { ... }: { imports = [ ./printerfacts.nix ]; } ``` And create `./printerfacts.nix` with this service boilerplate: ```nix # common/services/printerfacts.nix { config, pkgs, lib, ... }: with lib; let sources = import ../../nix/sources.nix; pkg = pkgs.callPackage sources.printerfacts { }; cfg = config.xeserv.services.printerfacts; in { options.xeserv.services.printerfacts = { enable = mkEnableOption "enable Printerfacts"; useACME = mkEnableOption "enable ACME certs"; domain = mkOption { type = types.str; default = "printerfacts.akua"; example = "printerfacts.cetacean.club"; description = "The domain name that nginx should check against for HTTP hostnames"; }; port = mkOption { type = types.int; default = 28318; example = 9001; description = "The port number printerfacts should listen on for HTTP traffic"; }; }; config = mkIf cfg.enable { systemd.services.printerfacts = { wantedBy = [ "multi-user.target" ]; script = '' export PORT=${toString cfg.port} export DOMAIN=${toString cfg.domain} export RUST_LOG=info exec ${pkg}/bin/printerfacts ''; serviceConfig = { Restart = "always"; RestartSec = "30s"; WorkingDirectory = "${pkg}"; RuntimeDirectory = "printerfacts"; RuntimeDirectoryMode = "0755"; StateDirectory = "tailscale"; StateDirectoryMode = "0750"; CacheDirectory = "tailscale"; CacheDirectoryMode = "0750"; DynamicUser = "yes"; }; }; services.nginx.virtualHosts."${cfg.domain}" = { locations."/" = { proxyPass = "http://127.0.0.1:${toString cfg.port}"; proxyWebsockets = true; }; enableACME = cfg.useACME; }; }; } ``` Then wire up `common/default.nix` with this: ```nix # common/default.nix imports = [ ./paranoid.nix ./users.nix ./services ]; ``` Then you can add this to your machine config in the terraform directory: ```nix # terraform/printerfacts/printerfacts.nix configuration = { config, lib, pkgs, ... }: { # ... xeserv.services.printerfacts = { enable = true; domain = "3.237.88.228"; # replace this with the IP of your AWS instance }; }; ``` Then `terraform plan` and `terraform apply`: ```console $ terraform plan $ terraform apply ``` And finally get yourself a hard-earned printer fact: ```console $ curl http://3.237.88.228/fact In 1987 printers overtook scanners as the number one pet in America. ``` --- We have gone from nothing to a fully production-ready NixOS deployment including a custom AMI pinned to an exact version of NixOS and an additional service added from its git repo. This will allow you to create a NixOS deployment that can be used by multiple people but will also stay pinned to an exact version of NixOS. Terraform will do all of the NixOS building and ensure that things are kept up to date, meaning that your infrastructure is all configured using the same workflow. This post outlines boilerplate and templates. I'm sure that you could easily adapt these templates for other things as well. If you need to store persistent data, make sure its being put in `/var/lib` so that it isn't wiped on reboot. This took at least a week of research, banging my head against the wall and so many failures to implement this. Many thanks to [Graham Christensen](https://twitter.com/grhmc) for unblocking me on this and pulling me back from the chasm a few times. Hope this helps your prod NixOS adventures!