- You must read literally this entire README. It is critically important that you do so.
- Open a PR adding yourself to users.nix
I'll grant access to well known members of the community, and people well known members in the community trust.
TLDR: a trusted but malicious actor could hack your system through this builder. Do not use this builder for secret builds. Be careful what you use this system for. Do not trust the results. For a more nuanced understanding, read on.
For someone to use a server as a remote builder, they must be a
trusted-user
on the remote builder. man nix.conf
has this to say
about Trusted Users:
User that have additional rights when connecting to the Nix daemon, such as the ability to specify additional binary caches, or to import unsigned NARs.
Warning: The users listed here have the ability to compromise the security of a multi-user Nix store. For instance, they could install Trojan horses subsequently executed by other users. So you should consider carefully whether to add users to this list.
Nix's model of remote builders requires users to be able to directly import files in to the Nix store, and there is no guarantee what they import hasn't been maliciously modified.
The following is written as me, @grahamc:
I trust everyone who has access, but with limits:
-
I would comfortably run results from this builder on my Raspberry Pi that I don't use for secret things.
-
DO NOT trust this builder for systems that contain private data or tools.
-
DO NOT trust this builder to make binary bootstrap tools, because we have to trust those bootstrap tools for a long time to not be compromised.
-
DO NOT trust this builder to make tools used to make binary bootstrap tools, because we have to trust those bootstrap tools for a long time to not be compromised.
-
DO NOT trust this builder to build the disk image for this builder.
IF YOU ARE: making binary bootstrap tools, please only use tools built by hydra on a system which have never been exposed to things built from this server. If you need help with this, I can help.
Note that point 5 ensures that every time the server reboots, it is in a clean, uncompromised state.
The deployed system has ZERO persistence. Do not store anything on it that you want to keep. It will reboot from time to time and lose everything on the hard drive.
First, put this in your configuration.nix
:
{
programs.ssh.knownHosts."aarch64.nixos.community".publicKey =
"ssh-ed25519 AAAAC3NzaC1lZDI1NTE5AAAAIMUTz5i9u5H2FHNAmZJyoJfIGyUm/HfGhfwnc142L3ds";
nix = {
distributedBuilds = true;
buildMachines = [
{
hostName = "aarch64.nixos.community";
maxJobs = 64;
sshKey = "/root/a-private-key";
sshUser = "your-user-name";
system = "aarch64-linux";
supportedFeatures = [ "big-parallel" ];
}
];
};
}
Note: Make sure the SSH key specified above does not have a
password, otherwise nix-build
will give an error along the lines of:
unable to open SSH connection to 'ssh://[email protected]': cannot connect to '[email protected]'; trying other available machines...
Then run an initial SSH connection as root to setup the trust fingerprint:
$ sudo su
# ssh [email protected] -i /root/a-private-key
The fingerprint should always be:
ssh-ed25519 AAAAC3NzaC1lZDI1NTE5AAAAIMUTz5i9u5H2FHNAmZJyoJfIGyUm/HfGhfwnc142L3ds
If it is not, please open an issue!
Finally, nix-build . -A hello --argstr system aarch64-linux
.
If this doesn't work, ping @grahamc and I can help debug.
You may want to clone nixpkgs on the box occasionally. It clones nixpkgs on
boot, allowing faster clones for users — just pass --reference /tmp/nixpkgs.git
to your git clone
command.
ps: if you want to build the netbooted image, check out ./DEV_NOTES.md