f326e5a35e
Enhance the heuristics to make sure that a user doesn't accidentally upgrade across two major versions of Nextcloud (e.g. from v17 to v19). The original idea/discussion has been documented in the nixpkgs manual[1]. This includes the following changes: * `nextcloud19` will be selected automatically when having a stateVersion greater or equal than 20.09. For existing setups, the package has to be selected manually to avoid accidental upgrades. * When using `nextcloud18` or older, a warning will be thrown which recommends upgrading to `nextcloud19`. * Added a brief paragraph about `nextcloud19` in the NixOS 19.09 release notes. * Restart `phpfpm` if the Nextcloud-package (`cfg.package`) changes[2]. [1] https://nixos.org/nixos/manual/index.html#module-services-nextcloud-maintainer-info [2] https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/89427#issuecomment-638885727
172 lines
7.6 KiB
XML
172 lines
7.6 KiB
XML
<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
|
|
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
|
|
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
|
|
version="5.0"
|
|
xml:id="module-services-nextcloud">
|
|
<title>Nextcloud</title>
|
|
<para>
|
|
<link xlink:href="https://nextcloud.com/">Nextcloud</link> is an open-source,
|
|
self-hostable cloud platform. The server setup can be automated using
|
|
<link linkend="opt-services.nextcloud.enable">services.nextcloud</link>. A
|
|
desktop client is packaged at <literal>pkgs.nextcloud-client</literal>.
|
|
</para>
|
|
<section xml:id="module-services-nextcloud-basic-usage">
|
|
<title>Basic usage</title>
|
|
|
|
<para>
|
|
Nextcloud is a PHP-based application which requires an HTTP server
|
|
(<literal><link linkend="opt-services.nextcloud.enable">services.nextcloud</link></literal>
|
|
optionally supports
|
|
<literal><link linkend="opt-services.nginx.enable">services.nginx</link></literal>)
|
|
and a database (it's recommended to use
|
|
<literal><link linkend="opt-services.postgresql.enable">services.postgresql</link></literal>).
|
|
</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>
|
|
A very basic configuration may look like this:
|
|
<programlisting>{ pkgs, ... }:
|
|
{
|
|
services.nextcloud = {
|
|
<link linkend="opt-services.nextcloud.enable">enable</link> = true;
|
|
<link linkend="opt-services.nextcloud.hostName">hostName</link> = "nextcloud.tld";
|
|
<link linkend="opt-services.nextcloud.nginx.enable">nginx.enable</link> = true;
|
|
config = {
|
|
<link linkend="opt-services.nextcloud.config.dbtype">dbtype</link> = "pgsql";
|
|
<link linkend="opt-services.nextcloud.config.dbuser">dbuser</link> = "nextcloud";
|
|
<link linkend="opt-services.nextcloud.config.dbhost">dbhost</link> = "/run/postgresql"; # nextcloud will add /.s.PGSQL.5432 by itself
|
|
<link linkend="opt-services.nextcloud.config.dbname">dbname</link> = "nextcloud";
|
|
<link linkend="opt-services.nextcloud.config.adminpassFile">adminpassFile</link> = "/path/to/admin-pass-file";
|
|
<link linkend="opt-services.nextcloud.config.adminuser">adminuser</link> = "root";
|
|
};
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
services.postgresql = {
|
|
<link linkend="opt-services.postgresql.enable">enable</link> = true;
|
|
<link linkend="opt-services.postgresql.ensureDatabases">ensureDatabases</link> = [ "nextcloud" ];
|
|
<link linkend="opt-services.postgresql.ensureUsers">ensureUsers</link> = [
|
|
{ name = "nextcloud";
|
|
ensurePermissions."DATABASE nextcloud" = "ALL PRIVILEGES";
|
|
}
|
|
];
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
# ensure that postgres is running *before* running the setup
|
|
systemd.services."nextcloud-setup" = {
|
|
requires = ["postgresql.service"];
|
|
after = ["postgresql.service"];
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
<link linkend="opt-networking.firewall.allowedTCPPorts">networking.firewall.allowedTCPPorts</link> = [ 80 443 ];
|
|
}</programlisting>
|
|
</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>
|
|
The options <literal>hostName</literal> and <literal>nginx.enable</literal>
|
|
are used internally to configure an HTTP server using
|
|
<literal><link xlink:href="https://php-fpm.org/">PHP-FPM</link></literal>
|
|
and <literal>nginx</literal>. The <literal>config</literal> attribute set is
|
|
used by the imperative installer and all values are written to an additional file
|
|
to ensure that changes can be applied by changing the module's options.
|
|
</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>
|
|
In case the application serves multiple domains (those are checked with
|
|
<literal><link xlink:href="http://php.net/manual/en/reserved.variables.server.php">$_SERVER['HTTP_HOST']</link></literal>)
|
|
it's needed to add them to
|
|
<literal><link linkend="opt-services.nextcloud.config.extraTrustedDomains">services.nextcloud.config.extraTrustedDomains</link></literal>.
|
|
</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>
|
|
Auto updates for Nextcloud apps can be enabled using
|
|
<literal><link linkend="opt-services.nextcloud.autoUpdateApps.enable">services.nextcloud.autoUpdateApps</link></literal>.
|
|
</para>
|
|
|
|
</section>
|
|
<section xml:id="module-services-nextcloud-pitfalls-during-upgrade">
|
|
<title>Pitfalls</title>
|
|
|
|
<para>
|
|
Unfortunately Nextcloud appears to be very stateful when it comes to
|
|
managing its own configuration. The config file lives in the home directory
|
|
of the <literal>nextcloud</literal> user (by default
|
|
<literal>/var/lib/nextcloud/config/config.php</literal>) and is also used to
|
|
track several states of the application (e.g. whether installed or not).
|
|
</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>
|
|
All configuration parameters are also stored in
|
|
<literal>/var/lib/nextcloud/config/override.config.php</literal> which is generated by
|
|
the module and linked from the store to ensure that all values from <literal>config.php</literal>
|
|
can be modified by the module.
|
|
However <literal>config.php</literal> manages the application's state and shouldn't be touched
|
|
manually because of that.
|
|
</para>
|
|
|
|
<warning>
|
|
<para>Don't delete <literal>config.php</literal>! This file
|
|
tracks the application's state and a deletion can cause unwanted
|
|
side-effects!</para>
|
|
</warning>
|
|
|
|
<warning>
|
|
<para>Don't rerun <literal>nextcloud-occ
|
|
maintenance:install</literal>! This command tries to install the application
|
|
and can cause unwanted side-effects!</para>
|
|
</warning>
|
|
|
|
<para>
|
|
Nextcloud doesn't allow to move more than one major-version forward. If you're e.g. on
|
|
<literal>v16</literal>, you cannot upgrade to <literal>v18</literal>, you need to upgrade to
|
|
<literal>v17</literal> first. This is ensured automatically as long as the
|
|
<link linkend="opt-system.stateVersion">stateVersion</link> is declared properly. In that case
|
|
the oldest version available (one major behind the one from the previous NixOS
|
|
release) will be selected by default and the module will generate a warning that reminds
|
|
the user to upgrade to latest Nextcloud <emphasis>after</emphasis> that deploy.
|
|
</para>
|
|
</section>
|
|
|
|
<section xml:id="module-services-nextcloud-maintainer-info">
|
|
<title>Maintainer information</title>
|
|
|
|
<para>
|
|
As stated in the previous paragraph, we must provide a clean upgrade-path for Nextcloud
|
|
since it cannot move more than one major version forward on a single upgrade. This chapter
|
|
adds some notes how Nextcloud updates should be rolled out in the future.
|
|
</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>
|
|
While minor and patch-level updates are no problem and can be done directly in the
|
|
package-expression (and should be backported to supported stable branches after that),
|
|
major-releases should be added in a new attribute (e.g. Nextcloud <literal>v19.0.0</literal>
|
|
should be available in <literal>nixpkgs</literal> as <literal>pkgs.nextcloud19</literal>).
|
|
To provide simple upgrade paths it's generally useful to backport those as well to stable
|
|
branches. As long as the package-default isn't altered, this won't break existing setups.
|
|
After that, the versioning-warning in the <literal>nextcloud</literal>-module should be
|
|
updated to make sure that the
|
|
<link linkend="opt-services.nextcloud.package">package</link>-option selects the latest version
|
|
on fresh setups.
|
|
</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>
|
|
If major-releases will be abandoned by upstream, we should check first if those are needed
|
|
in NixOS for a safe upgrade-path before removing those. In that case we shold keep those
|
|
packages, but mark them as insecure in an expression like this (in
|
|
<literal><nixpkgs/pkgs/servers/nextcloud/default.nix></literal>):
|
|
<programlisting>/* ... */
|
|
{
|
|
nextcloud17 = generic {
|
|
version = "17.0.x";
|
|
sha256 = "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000";
|
|
insecure = true;
|
|
};
|
|
}</programlisting>
|
|
</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>
|
|
Ideally we should make sure that it's possible to jump two NixOS versions forward:
|
|
i.e. the warnings and the logic in the module should guard a user to upgrade from a
|
|
Nextcloud on e.g. 19.09 to a Nextcloud on 20.09.
|
|
</para>
|
|
</section>
|
|
</chapter>
|