/lollypops

Lollypop Operations - NixOS Deployment Tool

Primary LanguageNixGNU General Public License v3.0GPL-3.0

lollypops

Lollypop Operations - NixOS Deployment Tool

Contributors badge

Lollypops is a NixOS deployment tool build as a thin, pure nix wrapper around go-task. It provides parallel deployment, secret provisioning from any external source and configuration in nix itself among other other features.

The deployment options and secrets are specified in each host's flake.nix configuration. Lollypops then takes all nixosConfigurations and generates a go-task yaml configuration internally on the fly when executed. This allows to run any selection of tasks in parallel or manually execute a single step and take full advantage of all go-task features while being fully customizable and easily debuggable.

Lollypops is inspired by krops and colmena.

Features

  • Stateless
  • Parallel execution
  • Configured in nix
  • Easily extensible and customizable
  • Minimal overhead and easy debugging
  • Secret provisioning from any source (e.g. pass, bitwarden, plaintext files...)
  • Fully flake compatible
  • Customisable build/deployment tasks

Usage

After configuration (see below) you will be able to run lollypops passing it one or more arguments to specify which tasks to run. To see what tasks are available use --list-all. Arguments are passed verbantim to go-task, use --help to get a full list of options including output customizaion and debugging capabilities or consult it's documentation

# List all Tasks
nix run '.' -- --list-all
* ahorn:
* ahorn:check-vars:
* ahorn:deploy-flake:
* ahorn:deploy-secrets:
* ahorn:rebuild:
* birne:
* birne:check-vars:
* birne:deploy-flake:
* birne:deploy-secrets:
* birne:rebuild:

Tasks are organized hierarchically by hostname:tasks. The above shows two hosts ahorn and birne with their corresponding tasks. To provision a host completely (run all tasks for this host) run:

# Run all tasks for a host
nix run '.' -- ahorn

This would run the tasks ahorn:check-vars ahorn:deploy-flake ahorn:deploy-secrets and ahorn:rebuild. You can also only run a specific subtask e.g.:

# Run specific task for a host
nix run '.' -- ahorn:deploy-secrets

This can be useful to quickly (re-)deploy a single secret or just run the rebuilding step without setting the complete deployment in motion.

There is also a special task called all, which will deploy all hosts.

Lastly you can run multiple tasks in parallel by using the --parallel flag (alias -p) and specifying multiple tasks. Keep in mind that dependencies are run in parallel per default in go-task.

# Provision ahorn and birne in parallel
nix run '.' -- -p ahorn birne

[birne:deploy-flake] Deploying flake to: kartoffel
[ahorn:deploy-flake] Deploying flake to: ahorn
[ahorn:deploy-flake] sending incremental file list
[ahorn:deploy-flake] sent 7.001 bytes  received 125 bytes  14.252,00 bytes/sec
[ahorn:deploy-flake] total size is 667.681  speedup is 93,70
[ahorn:deploy-secrets] Deploying secrets to: ahorn
[ahorn:rebuild] Rebuilding: ahorn
[birne:deploy-flake] sent 9.092 bytes  received 205 bytes  15.252,00 bytes/sec
ssh: Could not resolve hostname kartoffel: Name or service not known
[ahorn:rebuild] building the system configuration...
...

Override nixos-rebuild action

By default the rebuild step will run nixos-rebuild switch to activate the configuration as part of the deployment. It is possible to override the default (switch) rebuild action for testing, e.g. to set it to boot, test or dry-activate by setting the environment variable REBUILD_ACTION to the desired action, e.g.

REBUILD_ACTION=dry-activate nix run '.' -- -p ahorn birne

Configuration

Add lollypops to your flake's inputs as you would for any dependency and import the lollypops module in all hosts configured in your nixosConfigurations.

Then, use the the apps attribute set to expose the lollypops commands. Here a single parameter is requied: configFlake. This is the flake containing your nixosConfigurations from which lollypops will build it's task specifications. In most cases this will be self because the app configuration and the nixosConfigurations are defined in the same flake.

A complete minimal example:

{
  inputs = {
    lollypops.url = "github:pinpox/lollypops";
    # Other inputs ...
  };

  outputs = { nixpkgs, lollypops, self, ... }: {

    nixosConfigurations = {

      host1 = nixpkgs.lib.nixosSystem {
        system = "x86_64-linux";
        modules = [
          lollypops.nixosModules.lollypops
          ./configuration1.nix
        ];
      };

      host2 = nixpkgs.lib.nixosSystem {
        system = "x86_64-linux";
        modules = [
          lollypops.nixosModules.lollypops
          ./configuration2.nix
        ];
      };
    };

    apps."x86_64-linux".default = lollypops.apps."x86_64-linux".default { configFlake = self; };
  };
}

With this you are ready to start using lollypops. The above already should allow you to list the tasks for two hosts with --list-all

nix run '.' --show-trace -- --list-all
task: Available tasks for this project:
* host1:
* host1:check-vars:
* host1:deploy-flake:
* host1:deploy-secrets:
* host1:rebuild:
* host2:
* host2:check-vars:
* host2:deploy-flake:
* host2:deploy-secrets:
* host2:rebuild:

To actually do something useful you can now use the options provided by the lollypops module in your configuration.nix (or whereever your the configuration of your host is specified).

The options exposed by the module are grouped into to groups: lollypops.deployment for deployment options and lollypops.secrets to configure... you guessed it, secrets.

Deployment

Specify how and where to deploy. The default values may be sufficient here in a lot of cases.

lollypops.deployment = {
  # Where on the remote the configuration (system flake) is placed
  config-dir = "/var/src/lollypops";

  # SSH connection parameters
  ssh.host = "${config.networking.hostName}";
  ssh.user = "root";
  ssh.command = "ssh";
  ssh.opts = [];

  # sudo options
  sudo.enable = false;
  sudo.command = "sudo";
  sudo.opts = [];
};

Setting lollypops.deployment.local-evaluation to true, will result in evaluation being done on the local side. This requires nixos-rebuild in your $PATH

Note: Rsync is required on the remote for remote evaluation to work. While the lollypops module will add the package to environment.systemPackages it may be missing still on the first deployment. To fix this, either add it to your $PATH on the remote side or do your first deployment with lollypops.deployment.local-evaluation set to true.

Note: If your flake includes remote Git repositories in its inputs, git is required to be installed on the remote host.

Secrets

Secrets are specified as attribute set under lollypops.secrets.files. All parameters are optional and can be omitted except the name. In it's default configuration pass will be used to search for the secret placing it in /run/keys/secretname with permissions 0400 owned by root:root.

You can change the default secret directory using lollypops.secrets.default-dir if you want to default to a different directory.

The cmd option expects a command that will print the secret value. This can be any tool like a password manager that prints to stdout or a simple cat secretfile. This allows integration with external sources of secrets. It will be run on the local system to get the value to be placed in the remote file via ssh.

  lollypops.secrets.files = {

    # Secret from a file with owner and group
    secret1 = {
      cmd = "pass test-password";
      path = "/var/lib/password-from-file";
      owner = "joe";
      groups = "mygroup";
    };

    # Secret from pass with default permissions
    "nixos-secrets/host1/backup-key" = {
      path = "/var/lib/backupconfig/password";
    };

    # Secret from bitwarden CLI
    secret2 = {
      cmd = "bw get password my-secret-token";
      path = "/home/pinpox/password-from-file";
      owner = "pinpox";
      groups = "pinpox";
    };
  };

See module for a full list of options with defaults and example values.

Home-manager secrets

If you are using home-manager, you may want to use secrets in your home configuration as well. For this, lollypops provides a separate home-manager module that can be imported to enable support for user-specific secrets.

In your home-manager configuration import the hmModule provided by the flake:

imports = [ lollypops.hmModule ];

This allows specifying secrets in the same way as the system-wide secrets. For user-specific secrets lollypops defaults to $HOME/lollypops-secrets for it's location and sets the ownership to the user instead of root.

lollypops.secrets = {
  cmd-name-prefix = "nixos-secrets/users/pinpox/";
  files."usertest" = { };
};

Customising tasks

You can also choose which tasks you want to run, define your own tasks, or even override the default tasks:

lollypops.tasks = [ "deploy-secrets" "example" "rebuild" ];
lollypops.extraTasks = {
  example = {
    desc = "An example task";
    cmds = [ "echo 'this is a task'" ];
  };

  rebuild = {
    dir = ".";
    deps = [ "example" ];
    desc = "Rebuild configuration of: example-host";
    cmds = [
      ''
        nix build -L \
        ${self}#nixosConfigurations.example-host.config.system.build.toplevel && \
        REAL_PATH=$(realpath ./result) && \
        nix copy -s --to ssh://user@example-host $REAL_PATH 2>&1 && \
        ssh user@example-host \
        "sudo nix-env -p /nix/var/nix/profiles/system --set $REAL_PATH && \
        sudo /nix/var/nix/profiles/system/bin/switch-to-configuration switch"
      ''
    ];
  };
};

In this example, the user has outlined that the deploy-secrets, example and rebuild tasks should run for this host.
They have set the rebuild task to only run after the example task has finished successfully by using the deps keyword. Since rebuild is the name of one of the default tasks set to run (deploy-secrets, deploy-flake & rebuild) they are opting to override the default definition and instead define how they'd like to run a "rebuild" - in this case, they are relying on nix build to run locally, then copying the resulting closure to the remote machine and eventually switching the remote system profile to it. This is a useful example for cases where the remote machine is a very low resource system.

It's worth noting, since the build takes place on the local system, it's not necessary to run the deploy-flake task, so it is omitted from the lollypops.tasks list.

Debugging

lollypops hides the executed commands in the default output. To enable full logging use the --verbose flag which is passed to go-task.

Contributing

Pull requests are very welcome!

This software is under active development. If you find bugs, please open an issue and let me know. Open to feature request, tips and constructive criticism.

Let me know if you run into problems