forked from cadey/xesite
318 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
318 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: Nixops Services on Your Home Network
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date: 2020-11-09
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series: howto
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tags:
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- nixos
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- systemd
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---
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# Nixops Services on Your Home Network
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My homelab has a few NixOS machines. Right now they mostly run services inside
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Docker, because that has been what I have done for years. This works fine, but
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persistent state gets annoying*. NixOS has a tool called
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[Nixops](https://releases.nixos.org/nixops/nixops-1.7/manual/manual.html) that
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allows you to push configurations to remote machines. I use this for managing my
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fleet of machines, and today I'm going to show you how to create service
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deployments with Nixops and push them to your servers.
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[Pedantically, Docker offers <a
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href="https://releases.nixos.org/nixops/nixops-1.7/manual/manual.html">volumes</a>
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to simplify this, but it is very easy to accidentally delete Docker volumes.
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Plain disk files like we are going to use today are a bit simpler than docker
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volumes, and thusly a bit harder to mess up.](conversation://Mara/hacker)
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## Parts of a Service
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For this example, let's deploy a chatbot. To make things easier, let's assume
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the following about this chatbot:
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- The chatbot has a git repo somewhere
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- The chatbot's git repo has a `default.nix` that builds the service and
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includes any supporting files it might need
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- The chatbot reads its configuration from environment variables which may
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contain secret values (API keys, etc.)
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- The chatbot stores any temporary files in its current working directory
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- The chatbot is "well-behaved" (for some definition of "well-behaved")
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I will also need to assume that you have a git repo (or at least a folder) with
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all of your configuration similar to [mine](https://github.com/Xe/nixos-configs).
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For this example I'm going to use [withinbot](https://github.com/Xe/withinbot)
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as the service we will deploy via Nixops. withinbot is a chatbot that I use on
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my own Discord guild that does a number of vital functions including supplying
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amusing facts about printers:
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```
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<Cadey~> ~printerfact
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<Within[BOT]> @Cadey~ Printers, especially older printers, do get cancer. Many
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times this disease can be treated successfully
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```
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[To get your own amusing facts about printers, see <a
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href="https://printerfacts.cetacean.club">here</a> or for using its API, call <a
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href="https://printerfacts.cetacean.club/fact">`/fact`</a>. This API has no
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practical rate limits, but please don't test that.](conversation://Mara/hacker)
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## Service Definition
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We will need to do a few major things for defining this service:
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1. Add the bot code as a package
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1. Create a "services" folder for the service modules
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1. Create a user account for the service
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1. Set up a systemd unit for the service
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1. Configure the secrets using [Nixops
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keys](https://releases.nixos.org/nixops/nixops-1.7/manual/manual.html#idm140737322342384)
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### Add the Code as a Package
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In order for the program to be installed to the remote system, you need to tell
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the system how to import it. There's many ways to do this, but the cheezy way is
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to add the packages to
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[`nixpkgs.config.packageOverrides`](https://nixos.org/manual/nixos/stable/#sec-customising-packages)
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like this:
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```nix
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nixpkgs.config = {
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packageOverrides = pkgs: {
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within = {
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withinbot = import (builtins.fetchTarball
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"https://github.com/Xe/withinbot/archive/main.tar.gz") { };
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};
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};
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};
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```
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And now we can access it as `pkgs.within.withinbot` in the rest of our config.
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[In production circumstances you should probably use <a
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href="https://nixos.org/manual/nixpkgs/stable/#chap-pkgs-fetchers">a fetcher
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that locks to a specific version</a> using unique URLs and hashing, but this
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will work enough to get us off the ground in this
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example.](conversation://Mara/hacker)
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### Create a "services" Folder
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In your configuration folder, create a folder that you will use for these
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service definitions. I made mine in `common/services`. In that folder, create a
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`default.nix` with the following contents:
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```nix
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{ config, lib, ... }:
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{
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imports = [ ./withinbot.nix ];
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users.groups.within = {};
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}
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```
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The group listed here is optional, but I find that having a group like that can
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help you better share resources and files between services.
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Now we need a folder for storing secrets. Let's create that under the services
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folder:
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```console
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$ mkdir secrets
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```
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And let's also add a gitignore file so that we don't accidentally commit these
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secrets to the repo:
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```gitignore
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# common/services/secrets/.gitignore
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*
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```
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Now we can put any secrets we want in the secrets folder without the risk of
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committing them to the git repo.
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### Service Manifest
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Let's create `withinbot.nix` and set it up:
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```nix
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{ config, lib, pkgs, ... }:
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with lib; {
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options.within.services.withinbot.enable =
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mkEnableOption "Activates Withinbot (the furryhole chatbot)";
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config = mkIf config.within.services.withinbot.enable {
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};
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}
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```
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This sets up an option called `within.services.withinbot.enable` which will only
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add the service configuration if that option is set to `true`. This will allow
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us to define a lot of services that are available, but none of their config will
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be active unless they are explicitly enabled.
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Now, let's create a user account for the service:
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```nix
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# ...
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config = ... {
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users.users.withinbot = {
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createHome = true;
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description = "github.com/Xe/withinbot";
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isSystemUser = true;
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group = "within";
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home = "/srv/within/withinbot";
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extraGroups = [ "keys" ];
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};
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};
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# ...
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```
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This will create a user named `withinbot` with the home directory
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`/srv/within/withinbot`, the group `within` and also in the group `keys` so the
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withinbot user can read deployment secrets.
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Now let's add the deployment secrets to the configuration:
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```nix
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# ...
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config = ... {
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users.users.withinbot = { ... };
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deployment.keys.withinbot = {
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text = builtins.readFile ./secrets/withinbot.env;
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user = "withinbot";
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group = "within";
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permissions = "0640";
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};
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};
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# ...
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```
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Assuming you have the configuration at `./secrets/withinbot.env`, this will
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register the secrets into `/run/keys/withinbot` and also create a systemd
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oneshot service named `withinbot-key`. This allows you to add the secret's
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existence as a condition for withinbot to run. However, Nixops puts these keys
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in `/run`, which by default is mounted using a temporary memory-only filesystem,
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meaning these keys will need to be re-added to machines when they are rebooted.
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Fortunately, `nixops reboot` will automatically add the keys back after the
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reboot succeeds.
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Now that we have everything else we need, let's add the service configuration:
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```nix
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# ...
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config = ... {
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users.users.withinbot = { ... };
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deployment.keys.withinbot = { ... };
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systemd.services.withinbot = {
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wantedBy = [ "multi-user.target" ];
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after = [ "withinbot-key.service" ];
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wants = [ "withinbot-key.service" ];
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serviceConfig = {
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User = "withinbot";
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Group = "within";
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Restart = "on-failure"; # automatically restart the bot when it dies
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WorkingDirectory = "/srv/within/withinbot";
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RestartSec = "30s";
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};
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script = let withinbot = pkgs.within.withinbot;
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in ''
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# load the environment variables from /run/keys/withinbot
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export $(grep -v '^#' /run/keys/withinbot | xargs)
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# service-specific configuration
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export CAMPAIGN_FOLDER=${withinbot}/campaigns
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# kick off the chatbot
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exec ${withinbot}/bin/withinbot
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'';
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};
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};
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# ...
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```
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This will create the systemd configuration for the service so that it starts on
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boot, waits to start until the secrets have been loaded into it, runs withinbot
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as its own user and in the `within` group, and throttles the service restart so
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that it doesn't incur Discord rate limits as easily. This will also put all
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withinbot logs in journald, meaning that you can manage and monitor this service
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like you would any other systemd service.
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## Deploying the Service
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In your target server's `configuration.nix` file, add an import of your services
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directory:
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```nix
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{
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# ...
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imports = [
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# ...
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/home/cadey/code/nixos-configs/common/services
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];
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# ...
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}
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```
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And then enable the withinbot service:
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```nix
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{
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# ...
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within.services = {
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withinbot.enable = true;
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};
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# ...
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}
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```
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[Make that a block so you can enable multiple services at once like <a
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href="https://github.com/Xe/nixos-configs/blob/e111413e8b895f5a117dea534b17fc9d0b38d268/hosts/chrysalis/configuration.nix#L93-L96">this</a>!](conversation://Mara/hacker)
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Now you are free to deploy it to your network with `nixops deploy`:
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```console
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$ nixops deploy -d hexagone
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```
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<video controls width="100%">
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<source src="https://cdn.christine.website/file/christine-static/img/nixops/tmp.Tr7HTFFd2c.webm"
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type="video/webm">
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<source src="https://cdn.christine.website/file/christine-static/img/nixops/tmp.Tr7HTFFd2c.mp4"
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type="video/mp4">
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Sorry, your browser doesn't support embedded videos.
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</video>
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And then you can verify the service is up with `systemctl status`:
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```console
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$ nixops ssh -d hexagone chrysalis -- systemctl status withinbot
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● withinbot.service
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Loaded: loaded (/nix/store/7ab7jzycpcci4f5wjwhjx3al7xy85ka7-unit-withinbot.service/withinbot.service; enabled; vendor preset: enabled)
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Active: active (running) since Mon 2020-11-09 09:51:51 EST; 2h 29min ago
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Main PID: 12295 (withinbot)
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IP: 0B in, 0B out
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Tasks: 13 (limit: 4915)
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Memory: 7.9M
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CPU: 4.456s
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CGroup: /system.slice/withinbot.service
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└─12295 /nix/store/qpq281hcb1grh4k5fm6ksky6w0981arp-withinbot-0.1.0/bin/withinbot
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Nov 09 09:51:51 chrysalis systemd[1]: Started withinbot.service.
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```
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---
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This basic template is enough to expand out to anything you would need and is
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what I am using for my own network. This should be generic enough for most of
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your needs. Check out the [NixOS manual](https://nixos.org/manual/nixos/stable/)
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for more examples and things you can do with this. The [Nixops
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manual](https://releases.nixos.org/nixops/nixops-1.7/manual/manual.html) is also
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a good read. It can also set up deployments with VirtualBox, libvirtd, AWS,
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Digital Ocean, and even Google Cloud.
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The cloud is the limit! Be well.
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