Nix system configuration for Deuxfleurs clusters
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Deuxfleurs on NixOS!

This repository contains code to run Deuxfleur's infrastructure on NixOS.

It sets up the following:

  • A Wireguard mesh between all nodes
  • Consul, with TLS
  • Nomad, with TLS

Configuring the OS

This repo contains a bunch of scripts to configure NixOS on all cluster nodes. Most scripts are invoked with the following syntax:

  • for scripts that generate secrets: ./gen_<something> <cluster_name> to generate the secrets to be used on cluster <cluster_name>
  • for deployment scripts:
    • ./deploy_<something> <cluster_name> to run the deployment script on all nodes of the cluster <cluster_name>
    • ./deploy_<something> <cluster_name> <node1> <node2> ... to run the deployment script only on nodes node1, node2, ... of cluster <cluster_name>.

All deployment scripts can use the following parameters passed as environment variables:

  • SUDO_PASS: optionnally, the password for sudo on cluster nodes. If not set, it will be asked at the begninning.
  • SSH_USER: optionnally, the user to try to login using SSH. If not set, the username from your local machine will be used.

Assumptions (how to setup your environment)

  • you have an SSH access to all of your cluster nodes (listed in cluster/<cluster_name>/ssh_config)

  • your account is in group wheel and you know its password (you need it to become root using sudo); the password is the same on all cluster nodes (see below for password management tools)

  • you have a clone of the secrets repository in your pass password store, for instance at ~/.password-store/deuxfleurs (scripts in this repo will read and write all secrets in pass under deuxfleurs/cluster/<cluster_name>/)

Deploying the NixOS configuration

The NixOS configuration makes use of a certain number of files:

  • files in nix/ that are the same for all deployments on all clusters
  • the file cluster/<cluster_name>/cluster.nix, a Nix configuration file that is specific to the cluster but is copied the same on all cluster nodes
  • files in cluster/<cluster_name>/site/, which are specific to the various sites on which Nix nodes are deployed
  • files in cluster/<cluster_name>/node/ which are specific to each node

To deploy the NixOS configuration on the cluster, simply do:

./deploy_nixos <cluster_name>

or to deploy only on a single node:

./deploy_nixos <cluster_name> <node_name>

To upgrade NixOS, use the ./upgrade_nixos script instead (it has the same syntax).

When adding a node to the cluster: just do ./deploy_nixos <cluster_name> <name_of_new_node>

Deploying Wesher

We use Wesher to provide an encrypted overlay network between nodes in the cluster. This is usefull in particular for securing services that are not able to do mTLS, but as a security-in-depth measure, we make all traffic go through Wesher even when TLS is done correctly. It is thus mandatory to have a working Wesher installation in the cluster for it to run correctly.

First, if no Wesher shared secret key has been generated for this cluster yet, generate it with:

./gen_wesher_key <cluster_name>

This key will be stored in pass, so you must have a working pass installation for this script to run correctly.

Then, deploy the key on all nodes with:

./deploy_wesher_key <cluster_name>

This should be done after ./deploy_nixos has run successfully on all nodes. You should now have a working Wesher network between all your nodes!

When adding a node to the cluster: just do ./deploy_wesher_key <cluster_name> <name_of_new_node>

Generating and deploying a PKI for Consul and Nomad

This is very similar to how we do for Wesher.

First, if the PKI has not yet been created, create it with:

./gen_pki <cluster_name>

Then, deploy the PKI on all nodes with:

./deploy_pki <cluster_name>

When adding a node to the cluster: just do ./deploy_pki <cluster_name> <name_of_new_node>

Adding administrators and password management

Adminstrators are defined in the cluster.nix file for each cluster (they could also be defined in the site-specific Nix files if necessary). This is where their public SSH keys for remote access are put.

Administrators will also need passwords to administrate the cluster, as we are not using passwordless sudo. To set the password for a new administrator, they must have a working pass installation as specified above. They must then run:

./passwd <cluster_name> <user_name>

to set their password in the pass database (the password is hashed, so other administrators cannot learn their password even if they have access to the pass db).

Then, an administrator that already has root access must run the following (after syncing the pass db) to set the password correctly on all cluster nodes:

./deploy_passwords <cluster_name>

Deploying stuff on Nomad

Connecting to Nomad

Connect using SSH to one of the cluster nodes, forwarding port 14646 to port 4646 on localhost, and port 8501 to port 8501 on localhost.

You can for instance use an entry in your ~/.ssh/config that looks like this:

Host caribou
	HostName 2a01:e0a:c:a720::23
	LocalForward 14646 127.0.0.1:4646
	LocalForward 8501 127.0.0.1:8501

Then, in a separate window, launch ./tlsproxy <cluster_name>: this will launch socat proxies that strip the TLS layer and allow you to simply access Nomad and Consul on the regular, unencrypted URLs: http://localhost:4646 for Nomad and http://localhost:8500 for Consul. Keep this terminal window for as long as you need to access Nomad and Consul on the cluster.

Launching services

Stuff should be started in this order:

  • app/core
  • app/frontend
  • app/garage-staging

At this point, we are able to have a systemd service called mountgarage that mounts Garage buckets in /mnt/garage-staging. This is used by the following services that can be launched afterwards:

  • app/im