mirror of
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs.git
synced 2024-11-16 06:45:16 +01:00
35b146ca31
Upon testing the change itself I realized that it doesn't build properly because * the `pname` of a php extension is `php-<name>`, not `<name>`. * calling the extension `openssl-legacy` resulted in PHP trying to compile `ext/openssl-legacy` which broke since it doesn't exist: source root is php-8.1.12 setting SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH to timestamp 1666719000 of file php-8.1.12/win32/wsyslog.c patching sources cdToExtensionRootPhase /nix/store/48mnkga4kh84xyiqwzx8v7iv090i7z66-stdenv-linux/setup: line 1399: cd: ext/openssl-legacy: No such file or directory I didn't encounter that one before because I was mostly interested in having a sane behavior for everyone not using this "feature" and the documentation around this. My findings about the behavior with turning openssl1.1 on/off are still valid because I tested this on `master` with manually replacing `openssl` by `openssl_1_1` in `php-packages.nix`. To work around the issue I had to slightly modify the extension build-system for PHP: * The attribute `extensionName` is now relevant to determine the output paths (e.g. `lib/openssl.so`). This is not a behavioral change for existing extensions because then `extensionName==name`. However when specifying `extName` in `php-packages.nix` this value is overridden and it is made sure that the extension called `extName` NOT `name` (i.e. `openssl` vs `openssl-legacy`) is built and installed. The `name` still has to be kept to keep the legacy openssl available as `php.extensions.openssl-legacy`. Additionally I implemented a small VM test to check the behavior with server-side encryption: * For `stateVersion` below 22.11, OpenSSL 1.1 is used (in `basic.nix` it's checked that OpenSSL 3 is used). With that the "default" behavior of the module is checked. * It is ensured that the PHP interpreter for Nextcloud's php-fpm actually loads the correct openssl extension. * It is tested that (encrypted) files remain usable when (temporarily) installing OpenSSL3 (of course then they're not decryptable, but on a rollback that should still be possible). Finally, a few more documentation changes: * I also mentioned the issue in `nextcloud.xml` to make sure the issue is at least mentioned in the manual section about Nextcloud. Not too much detail here, but the relevant option `enableBrokenCiphersForSSE` is referenced. * I fixed a few minor wording issues to also give the full context (we're talking about Nextcloud; we're talking about the PHP extension **only**; please check if you really need this even though it's enabled by default). This is because I felt that sometimes it might be hard to understand what's going on when e.g. an eval-warning appears without telling where exactly it comes from. |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
basic.nix | ||
default.nix | ||
openssl-sse.nix | ||
with-declarative-redis-and-secrets.nix | ||
with-mysql-and-memcached.nix | ||
with-postgresql-and-redis.nix |