nixpkgs/nixos/tests/firewall.nix
aszlig fb46df8a9a
nixos: Fix ordering of firewall.service
Follow-up to the following commits:

  abdc5961c3cdf9f5893ea1e91ba08ff5089f53a4: Fix starting the firewall
  e090701e2d09aec3e8866ab9a8e53c37973ffeb4: Order before sysinit

Solely use sysinit.target here instead of multi-user.target because we
want to make sure that the iptables rules are applied *before* any
socket units are started.

The reason I've dropped the wantedBy on multi-user.target is that
sysinit.target is already a part of the dependency chain of
multi-user.target.

To make sure that this holds true, I've added a small test case to
ensure that during switch of the configuration the firewall.service is
considered as well.

Tested using the firewall NixOS test.

Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Cc: @edolstra
2016-09-07 15:11:24 +02:00

66 lines
2.1 KiB
Nix

# Test the firewall module.
import ./make-test.nix ( { pkgs, ... } : {
name = "firewall";
meta = with pkgs.stdenv.lib.maintainers; {
maintainers = [ eelco chaoflow ];
};
nodes =
{ walled =
{ config, pkgs, nodes, ... }:
{ networking.firewall.enable = true;
networking.firewall.logRefusedPackets = true;
services.httpd.enable = true;
services.httpd.adminAddr = "foo@example.org";
};
# Dummy configuration to check whether firewall.service will be honored
# during system activation. This only needs to be different to the
# original walled configuration so that there is a change in the service
# file.
walled2 =
{ config, pkgs, nodes, ... }:
{ networking.firewall.enable = true;
networking.firewall.rejectPackets = true;
};
attacker =
{ config, pkgs, ... }:
{ services.httpd.enable = true;
services.httpd.adminAddr = "foo@example.org";
networking.firewall.enable = false;
};
};
testScript = { nodes, ... }: let
newSystem = nodes.walled2.config.system.build.toplevel;
in ''
$walled->start;
$attacker->start;
$walled->waitForUnit("firewall");
$walled->waitForUnit("httpd");
$attacker->waitForUnit("network.target");
# Local connections should still work.
$walled->succeed("curl -v http://localhost/ >&2");
# Connections to the firewalled machine should fail, but ping should succeed.
$attacker->fail("curl --fail --connect-timeout 2 http://walled/ >&2");
$attacker->succeed("ping -c 1 walled >&2");
# Outgoing connections/pings should still work.
$walled->succeed("curl -v http://attacker/ >&2");
$walled->succeed("ping -c 1 attacker >&2");
# If we stop the firewall, then connections should succeed.
$walled->stopJob("firewall");
$attacker->succeed("curl -v http://walled/ >&2");
# Check whether activation of a new configuration reloads the firewall.
$walled->succeed("${newSystem}/bin/switch-to-configuration test 2>&1" .
" | grep -qF firewall.service");
'';
})