8c3264466a
lighttpd doesn't support loading a module more than once. If you attempt to load a module again, lighttpd prints an error message: (plugin.c.131) Cannot load plugin mod_cgi more than once, please fix your config (we may not accept such configs in future releases And it's not just the error message. The module isn't loaded (or is messed up somehow) so that neither sub-service will work properly after this. This is bad news for the current approach to sub-services, where each sub-service lists the needed modules in a server.modules += (...) block. When two sub-services need the same module we get the above issue. (And, AFAIK, there is no way to check if a module is already loaded either.) First I thought about an approach where each sub-service specifies the list of plugins it needs, and that a common server.modules = (...) list is built from the union of those lists. That would loosly couple the sub-services with the main lighttpd nixos module expression. But I think this is a bad idea because lighttpd module loading order matters[1], and the module order in the global server.modules = (...) list would be somewhat cumbersome to control. Here is an example: Sub-service A needs mod_fastcgi. Sub-service B needs mod_auth and mod_fastcgi. Note that mod_auth must be loaded *before* mod_fastcgi to take effect. The union of those modules may either be ["mod_auth" "mod_fastcgi"] or ["mod_fastcgi" "mod_auth"] depending on the evaluation order. The first order will work, the latter will not. So instead of the above, this commit moves the modules from service.modules += (...) snippets in each sub-service to a global server.modules = (...) list in the main lighttpd module expression. The module loading order is fixed and each module is included only if any of the sub-services that needs it is enabled. The downside to this approach is that sub-services need a (tiny) bit of change to the main lighttpd nixos module expression. But I think it is the only sane way to do it (as long as lighttpd is written the way it is). References: [1] http://redmine.lighttpd.net/projects/1/wiki/Server_modulesDetails [2] http://redmine.lighttpd.net/issues/2337
68 lines
1.5 KiB
Nix
68 lines
1.5 KiB
Nix
{ config, pkgs, ... }:
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with pkgs.lib;
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let
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cfg = config.services.lighttpd.gitweb;
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gitwebConfigFile = pkgs.writeText "gitweb.conf" ''
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# path to git projects (<project>.git)
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$projectroot = "${cfg.projectroot}";
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${cfg.extraConfig}
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'';
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in
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{
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options.services.lighttpd.gitweb = {
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enable = mkOption {
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default = false;
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type = types.uniq types.bool;
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description = ''
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If true, enable gitweb in lighttpd. Access it at http://yourserver/gitweb
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'';
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};
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projectroot = mkOption {
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default = "/srv/git";
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type = types.uniq types.string;
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description = ''
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Path to git projects (bare repositories) that should be served by
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gitweb. Must not end with a slash.
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'';
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};
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extraConfig = mkOption {
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default = "";
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type = types.uniq types.string;
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description = ''
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Verbatim configuration text appended to the generated gitweb.conf file.
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'';
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};
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};
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config = mkIf cfg.enable {
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services.lighttpd.extraConfig = ''
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$HTTP["url"] =~ "^/gitweb" {
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cgi.assign = (
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".cgi" => "${pkgs.perl}/bin/perl"
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)
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url.redirect = (
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"^/gitweb$" => "/gitweb/"
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)
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alias.url = (
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"/gitweb/static/" => "${pkgs.git}/share/gitweb/static/",
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"/gitweb/" => "${pkgs.git}/share/gitweb/gitweb.cgi"
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)
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setenv.add-environment = (
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"GITWEB_CONFIG" => "${gitwebConfigFile}"
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)
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}
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'';
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};
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}
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