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Nix-based process management framework

This repository contains a very experimental prototype implementation of an operating system and process manager agnostic Nix-based process managed framework that can be used to run multiple instances of services on a single machine, using Nix to deliver and isolate all required package dependencies and configuration files.

Features:

  • It uses simple conventions to specify system configurations: function definitions (corresponding to constructors), function invocations (that compose running process instances from constructors) and Nix profiles (that assembles multiple process configurations into one package).
  • It identifies process dependencies, so that a process manager can ensure that processes are activated and deactivated in the right order.
  • The ability to deploy multiple instances of the same process, by making conflicting resources configurable.
  • Deploying processes/services as an unprivileged user.
  • Operating system and process manager agnostic -- it can be used on any operating system that supports the Nix package manager and works with a variety of process managers.
  • Advanced concepts and features, such as namespaces and cgroups, are not required.

Supported process managers

Currently, the following process managers are supported:

It can also work with the following solutions that are technically not categorized as process managers (but can still be used as such):

  • docker: Docker is technically more than just a process manager, but by sharing the host's network, Nix store, and bind mounting relevant state directories, it can also serve as a process manager with similar functionality as the others described above.
  • disnix: Technically Disnix is not a process manager but it is flexible enough to start daemons and arrange activation ordering. This target backend is not designed for managing production systems, but it is quite convenient as a simple solution for experimentation that is supported on most UNIX-like systems.

Prerequisites

To use this framework, you first need to install:

Installation

First, make a Git clone of this repository.

The next step is installing the common tools:

$ cd tools
$ nix-env -f default.nix -iA common

Then, at least one tool that deploys a configuration for a supported process manager must be installed.

For example, to work with sysvinit scripts, you must install:

$ nix-env -f default.nix -iA sysvinit

To work with a different process manager, you should replace sysvinit with any of the supported process managers listed in the previous section. For example, to use utilities to generate and deploy systemd configurations, you should run:

$ nix-env -f default.nix -iA systemd

Usage

For each kind of process you need to write a Nix expression that constructs its configuration from sources and its dependencies. This can be done in a process manager-specific and a process manager-agnostic way.

Then you need to create a constructors and processes expression.

The processes expression can be used by a deploy tool that works with a specific process manager.

Writing a process manager-specific process management configuration

The following expression is an example of a configuration that deploys a sysvinit script that can be used to control a simple web application process (with an embedded HTTP server) that just returns a static HTML page:

{createSystemVInitScript, tmpDir}:

let
  webapp = import ../../webapp;
  user = "webapp";
  group = "webapp";
in
createSystemVInitScript {
  name = "webapp";
  process = "${webapp}/bin/webapp";
  args = [ "-D" ];
  environment = {
    PORT = 5000;
    PID_FILE = "${tmpDir}/webapp.pid";
  };

  runlevels = [ 3 4 5 ];

  inherit user;

  credentials = {
    groups = {
      "${group}" = {};
    };
    users = {
      "${user}" = {
        inherit group;
        description = "Webapp";
      };
    };
  };
}

A process expression defines a function:

  • The function header (first line) allows build-time dependencies and common configuration properties to be configured, such as the the function that constructs sysvinit scripts (createSystemVInitScript) and the runtimeDir in which PID files are stored (on most systems this defaults to: /var/run).

In the body, we invoke the createSystemVInitScript function to declaratively construct a sysvinit script:

  • The process parameter specifies which process should be managed. From this parameter, the generator will automatically derive start, stop, restart and reload activities.
  • The args parameter specifies the command line parameters propagated to the process. The -D parameter specifies that the webapp process should run in daemon mode (i.e. the process spawns another process that keeps running in the background and then terminates immediately).
  • The environment attribute set defines all environment variables that the webapp process needs -- PORT is used to specify the TCP port it should listen to and PID_FILE specifies the path to the PID file that stores the process ID (PID) of the daemon process
  • The runlevels parameter specifies in which run levels the process should be started (in the above example: 3, 4, and 5. It will automatically configure the init system to stop the process in the other runlevels: 0, 1, 2, and 6.
  • It is also typically not recommended to run a service as root user. The credentials attribute specifies which group and user account need to be created. The user parameter specifies the user the process needs to run as.

The createSystemVInitScript function supports many more parameters than described in the example above. For example, it is also possible to directly specify how activities should be implemented.

It can also be used to specify dependencies on other sysvinit scripts -- the system will automatically derive the sequence numbers so that they are activated and deactivated in the right order.

In addition to sysvinit, there are also functions that can be used to create configurations for the other supported process managers, e.g. createSystemdUnit, createSupervisordProgram, createBSDRCScript. Check the implementations in nixproc/backends for more information.

Writing an instantiatable process configuration

The example shown earlier only allows you to deploy a single instance of the webapp process. A second instance cannot co-exist because it will allocate conflicting resources, such as the TCP port it binds to and the PID file. These resources can only be assigned once.

It is also possible to revise the example to allow multiple process instances to co-exist, by making conflicting resources configurable.

An instantiatable process expression defines a nested function:

{createSystemVInitScript, tmpDir}:
{port, instanceSuffix ? "", instanceName ? "webapp${instanceSuffix}"}:

let
  webapp = import ../../webapp;
in
createSystemVInitScript {
  inherit instanceName;
  process = "${webapp}/bin/webapp";
  args = [ "-D" ];
  environment = {
    PORT = port;
    PID_FILE = "${tmpDir}/${instanceName}.pid";
  };

  runlevels = [ 3 4 5 ];

  user = instanceName;

  credentials = {
    groups = {
      "${instanceName}" = {};
    };
    users = {
      "${instanceName}" = {
        group = instanceName;
        description = "Webapp";
      };
    };
  };
}
  • The outer function (first line) allows properties to be configured that apply to all process instances, such as the the function that constructs sysvinit scripts (createSystemVInitScript) and the runtimeDir in which PID files are stored (on most systems this defaults to: /var/run).
  • The inner function (second line) refers to all instance specific parameters. To allow multiple instances to co-exist, instance parameters must be configured in such a way that they no longer conflict. For example, if we assign two unique TCP port numbers and we append the process name with a unique suffix, we can run two instances of the web application at the same time.
  • The process should have a unique name to identify it with. If no name parameter was specified, then the name will automatically correspond to instanceName.
  • We must make sure that each has a unique PID file name. We can use the instanceName parameter to specify what name this PID file should have. By default, the PID file gets the same name as the process instance name.
  • To also allocate a unique user and group for the process. We are using the instanceName parameter as a unique user and group name.

Writing a process manager-agnostic process management configuration

This repository contains generator functions for a variety of process managers. What you will notice is that they accept parameters that look quite similar.

When it is desired to target multiple process managers, it is also possible to write a process manager-agnostic configuration from which configuration files can be generated for all supported process management backends.

This is a process manager-agnostic version of the previous example:

{createManagedProcess, tmpDir}:
{port, instanceSuffix ? "", instanceName ? "webapp${instanceSuffix}"}:

let
  webapp = import ../../webapp;
in
createManagedProcess {
  inherit instanceName;
  description = "Simple web application";

  # This expression can both run in foreground or daemon mode.
  # The process manager can pick which mode it prefers.
  process = "${webapp}/bin/webapp";
  daemonArgs = [ "-D" ];

  environment = {
    PORT = port;
    PID_FILE = "${tmpDir}/${instanceName}.pid";
  };
  user = instanceName;
  credentials = {
    groups = {
      "${instanceName}" = {};
    };
    users = {
      "${instanceName}" = {
        group = instanceName;
        description = "Webapp";
      };
    };
  };

  overrides = {
    sysvinit = {
      runlevels = [ 3 4 5 ];
    };
  };
}

In the above example, we invoke createManagedProcess to construct a configuration for any process manager supported by this framework. It captures similar properties that are described in the sysvinit-specific configuration, as shown in the previous example.

To allow the specification to target a variety of process managers, we must specify:

  • How the process can be started in foreground and daemon mode. The process parameter gets translated to foregroundProcess and daemon. The former specifies how the service should be started as a foreground process and the latter how it should start as a daemon.
  • The daemonArgs parameter specifies which command-line parameters the process should take when it is supposed to run as a daemon.

Under the hood, the createManagedProcess function invokes a generator function that calls the corresponding process manager-specific create function.

The createManagedProcess abstraction function does not support all functionality that the process manager-specific abstraction functions provide -- it only supports a common subset. To get non-standardized functionality working, you can also define overrides, that augment the generated function parameters with process manager-specific parameters.

In the above example, we define an override to specify the runlevels. Runlevels is a concept only supported by sysvinit scripts.

Defining process manager-specific overrides

As described in the previous section, the createManagedProcess abstraction only works with high-level concepts that are easily generalizable to all kinds of process managers.

The attribute set of parameters passed to the createManagedProcess function gets translated to an attribute set of parameters for the corresponding process manager-specific abstraction functions, e.g. createSystemVInitScript, createSupervisordProgram, createSystemdService etc.

We can change the content of the generated attribute set, allowing you to get access to any property of a process manager backend including properties for which the createManagedProcess function does provide any high-level concepts.

An override can be be an attribute set that simply overrides or augments the process manager-specific parameter attribute set:

{createManagedProcess, tmpDir}:
{port, instanceSuffix ? "", instanceName ? "webapp${instanceSuffix}"}:

let
  webapp = import ../../webapp;
in
createManagedProcess {
  inherit instanceName;
  description = "Simple web application";

  # This expression can both run in foreground or daemon mode.
  # The process manager can pick which mode it prefers.
  process = "${webapp}/bin/webapp";
  daemonArgs = [ "-D" ];

  environment = {
    PORT = port;
    PID_FILE = "${tmpDir}/${instanceName}.pid";
  };

  overrides = {
    sysvinit.runlevels = [ 3 4 5 ];
    systemd = {
      Service.Restart = "always";
    };
  };
}

In the above example case, we use an override to define in which runlevels the service should start (a sysvinit specific concept), and when systemd is used, the service gets restarted automatically when it stops (which is not a universal property all process managers support, but systemd does).

It is also possible to write an override as a function which is more powerful -- you can also delete and augment existing parameters with additional information, if desired:

{createManagedProcess, tmpDir}:
{port, instanceSuffix ? "", instanceName ? "webapp${instanceSuffix}"}:

let
  webapp = import ../../webapp;
in
createManagedProcess {
  inherit instanceName;
  description = "Simple web application";

  # This expression can both run in foreground or daemon mode.
  # The process manager can pick which mode it prefers.
  process = "${webapp}/bin/webapp";
  daemonArgs = [ "-D" ];

  environment = {
    PORT = port;
    PID_FILE = "${tmpDir}/${instanceName}.pid";
  };

  overrides = {
    sysvinit.runlevels = [ 3 4 5 ];
    systemd = systemdArgs: systemdArgs // {
      Service = systemdArgs.Service // {
        ExecStart = "${systemdArgs.Service.ExecStart} -D";
        Type = "forking";
      };
    };
  };
}

In the above example, I modify the generated systemd arguments in such a way that the service runs in daemon mode and it is managed as a daemon (by default, the systemd generator prefers to work with foreground processes).

Writing a constructors expression

As shown in the previous sections, a process configuration is a nested function. To be able to deploy a certain process configuration, it needs to be composed twice.

The common parameters (the outer function) are composed in a so-called constructors expression, that has the following structure:

{ pkgs
, stateDir
, logDir
, runtimeDir
, tmpDir
, forceDisableUserChange
, processManager
}:

let
  createManagedProcess = import ../../nixproc/create-managed-process/universal/create-managed-process-universal.nix {
    inherit pkgs runtimeDir tmpDir forceDisableUserChange processManager;
  };
in
{
  webapp = import ./webapp.nix {
    inherit createManagedProcess tmpDir;
  };

  nginx = import ./nginx-reverse-proxy.nix {
    inherit createManagedProcess stateDir logDir runtimeDir forceDisableUserChange;
    inherit (pkgs) stdenv writeTextFile nginx;
  };
}

The above Nix expression defines a function that takes common state configuration parameters that applies to all services:

  • pkgs refers to the Nixpkgs collection
  • stateDir refers to the base directory where all variable data needs to be stored. The default on most systems is /var.
  • runtimeDir refers to the base directory where all PID files are stored
  • tmpDir refers to the base directory where all temp files are stored
  • forceDisableUserChange can be used to globally switch of the creation of users and groups and changing users.
  • processManager specifies which process manager we want to use (when it is desired to do process manager agnostic deployments).

In the body, the function returns an attribute set in which every value refers to a constructor function that can be used to construct process instances.

The webapp attribute refers to a constructor function that can be used to construct one or more running webapp processes. It takes the common parameters that it requires as function arguments.

The constructors attribute facilitates multiple constructor functions. nginxReverseProxy refers to a process configuration that launches the Nginx HTTP server and configures it to act as a reverse proxy for an arbitrary number of web application processes.

Writing a processes expression

The processes Nix expression makes it possible to construct one or more instances of processes:

{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> { inherit system; }
, system ? builtins.currentSystem
, stateDir ? "/var"
, runtimeDir ? "${stateDir}/run"
, logDir ? "${stateDir}/log"
, tmpDir ? (if stateDir == "/var" then "/tmp" else "${stateDir}/tmp")
, forceDisableUserChange ? false
, processManager
}:

let
  constructors = import ./constructors.nix {
    inherit pkgs stateDir runtimeDir logDir tmpDir forceDisableUserChange processManager;
  };
in
rec {
  webapp1 = rec {
    port = 5000;
    dnsName = "webapp1.local";

    pkg = constructors.webapp {
      inherit port;
    };
  };

  webapp2 = rec {
    port = 5001;
    dnsName = "webapp2.local";

    pkg = constructors.webapp {
      inherit port;
    };
  };

  nginx = rec {
    port = 8080;

    pkg = constructors.nginxReverseProxy {
      webapps = [ webapp1 webapp2 ];
      inherit port;
    } {};
  };
}

The above Nix expression is a function in which the parameters (again) specify common state configuration parameters. It makes a reference the constructors expression shown in the previous example.

The function body returns an attribute set that defines three process instances:

  • webapp1 is a web application process that listens on TCP port 5000
  • webapp2 is a web application process that listens on TCP port 5001
  • nginxReverseProxy is an Nginx server that forwards requests to the web application processes. If the virtual host is webapp1.local then the first webapp1 process responds, if the virtual host is webapp2.local then the second process (webapp2) responds. Nginx listens on TCP port 8080.

Building a process configurations profile

We can build all required packages and generate all configuration artifacts for a specific process manager by running the following command:

$ nixproc-build --process-manager sysvinit processes.nix
result/

The above command generates sysvinit scripts and start and stop symlinks to ensure that the webapp processes are started before the Nginx reverse proxy.

The --process-manager parameter can be changed to generate configuration files for different process managers. For example, if we would use --process-manager systemd then the resulting Nix profile contains a collection of systemd unit configuration files.

Deploying a process configurations profile

In addition to generating configuration files that can be consumed by a process manager, we can also invoke the process manager to deploy all process defined in our process Nix expression.

The following command automatically starts all sysvinit scripts (and stop all obsolete sysvinit scripts, in case of an upgrade):

$ nixproc-sysvinit-switch processes.nix

Consult the help pages of the corresponding process manager specific tools to get a better understanding on how they work.

Changing the state directories

By default, the all processes use the /var directory as a base directory to store all state. This location can be adjusted by using the --state-dir parameter.

The following command deploys all process instances and stores their state in /home/sander/var:

$ nixproc-sysvinit-switch --state-dir /home/sander/var processes.nix

Similarly, it is also possible to adjust the base locations of the runtime files, log files and temp files, if desired.

Deploying process instances as an unprivileged user

It is also possible to do unprivileged user deployments. Unfortunately, unprivileged users cannot create new groups and/or users or change permissions of running processes.

To still allow unprivileged user deployments, user configuration and switching can be globally disabled with the --force-disable-user-change parameter. Then the credentials and user switching parameters are ignored.

The following command makes it possible to deploy all processes as an unprivileged user:

$ nixproc-sysvinit-switch --state-dir /home/sander/var --force-disable-user-change processes.nix

Undeploying the system

It may also be desired to completely undeploy a system when it is no longer needed. The following command completely undeploys all previously deployed processes:

$ nixproc-sysvinit-switch --undeploy

Assigning unique IDs to services

As explained earlier, to ensure that multiple process instances have no conflicts, they require unique process instance parameters.

One catagory of process parameters are unique numeric IDs, such as port numbers, UIDs and GIDs. It is possible to manually assign them, but this process can also be automated.

The following configuration file is an ID resources configuration file (idresources.nix) that defines pools of numeric ID resources:

rec {
  webappPorts = {
    min = 5000;
    max = 6000;
  };

  nginxPorts = {
    min = 8080;
    max = 9000;
  };

  uids = {
    min = 2000;
    max = 3000;
  };

  gids = uids;
}

The above ID resources configuration defines the following resources:

  • The webappPorts is a pool of unique TCP port number assigned to the webapp processes shown in the previous examples. These are unique numbers between 5000 and 6000.
  • The nginxPorts is a pool of unique TCP port numbers assigned to nginx instances. These are unique numbers between 8080 and 9000.
  • uids specifies the range of unique user IDs (UIDs) between 2000 and 3000.
  • gids specifies the range of unique group IDs (GIDs). They are identical to the uids.

To use automatic ID assignments, the processes model (processes.nix) can be augmented as follows:

{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> { inherit system; }
, system ? builtins.currentSystem
, stateDir ? "/var"
, runtimeDir ? "${stateDir}/run"
, logDir ? "${stateDir}/log"
, tmpDir ? (if stateDir == "/var" then "/tmp" else "${stateDir}/tmp")
, forceDisableUserChange ? false
, processManager
}:

let
  ids = if builtins.pathExists ./ids.nix then (import ./ids.nix).ids else {};

  constructors = import ./constructors.nix {
    inherit pkgs stateDir runtimeDir logDir tmpDir forceDisableUserChange processManager ids;
  };
in
rec {
  webapp1 = rec {
    port = ids.webappPorts.webapp1 or 0;
    dnsName = "webapp1.local";

    pkg = constructors.webapp {
      inherit port;
    };

    requiresUniqueIdsFor = [ "uids" "gids" "webappPorts" ];
  };
}

The above process model has the following changes:

  • Every process instance is annotated with a requiresUniqueIdsFor attribute that specifies for which resources the process instances requires unique IDs
  • In the beginning of the expression we have imported the generated ids.nix expression that contains all generated unique ID assignments. If the file does not exists, an empty attribute set is returned.
  • Every process instance consumes the unique IDs from the ids attribute set, as opposed to using hardcoded values. The webapp1 service uses a auto generated port assignment. If no such assignment exists, it defaults to 0 to allow the processes model evaluation not to fail, for the initial IDs assignment.

To automatically generate the ID assignments from an ID resources configuration and processes model, you can run:

$ nixproc-id-assign --id-resources idresources.nix --output-file ids.nix processes.nix

The above command automatically assigns IDs to all processes that require them and writes the output result to the ids.nix file. This file may look as follows:

{
  "ids" = {
    "gids" = {
      "webapp" = 2001;
    };
    "nginxPorts" = {
    };
    "uids" = {
      "webapp" = 2001;
    };
    "webappPorts" = {
      "webapp" = 5000;
    };
  };
  "lastAssignments" = {
    "gids" = 2001;
    "uids" = 2001;
    "webappPorts" = 5000;
  };
}

The above expression defines two attributes:

  • The ids attribute contains for each resource a mapping between process instance and a unique ID.
  • The lastAssignments attribute memorizes the last assigned ID for each resource to prevent reassigning the same IDs, until the maximum ID limit has been reached.

When updating the processes model, you can run the following command to update the ID assignments:

$ nixproc-id-assign --id-resources idresources.nix --ids ids.nix --output-file ids.nix processes.nix

The difference between the above command invocation and the previous is that we take our existing ID assignment in account -- for processes that were already deployed previously we retain their ID assignments to prevent unnecessary redeployments.

In addition to port numbers, we can also assign and retain unique UIDs and GIDs per process instance. We can use a similar strategy to port numbers to propagate these values as parameters, but a more convenient way is to instrument the createCredentials function -- the above processes.nix expression propagates the entire ids attribute set as a parameter to the constructors.

The constructors expression indirectly composes the createCredentials function as follows:

{pkgs, ids ? {}, ...}:

{
  createCredentials = import ../../create-credentials {
    inherit (pkgs) stdenv;
    inherit ids;
  };

  ...
}

The ids attribute set is propagated to the function that composes the createCredentials function. As a result, it will automatically assign the UIDs and GIDs in the ids.nix expression when the user configures a user or group with a name that exists in the uids and gids resource pools.

To make these UIDs and GIDs assignments go smoothly, it is recommended to give a process the same process name, instance name, user and group names.

The nixproc-id-assign tool is basically just a wrapper around the dydisnix-id-assign tool and internally converts a processes model to a Disnix services model.

Writing integration tests

As explained in the introduction, the framework supports all kinds of interesting features producing all kinds of variants of the same service, such as multiple process managers, multiple process instances, unprivileged deployments etc.

Although a service can support all these variants, writing a model does not guarantee that it will always work under all circumstances. The Nix process management framework supports code reuse, but does not facilitate a write once, run anywhere approach.

To validate a service, we can use a test driver built on top of the NixOS test driver that can be used to test multiple variants of a service.

The following Nix expression is an example of a test suite for the advanced variant of the webapp example with two Nginx reverse proxies:

{ pkgs, testService, processManagers, profiles }:

testService {
  inherit processManagers profiles;

  exprFile = ./processes-advanced.nix;

  readiness = {instanceName, instance, ...}:
    ''
      machine.wait_for_open_port(${toString instance.port})
    '';

  tests = {instanceName, instance, ...}:
    pkgs.lib.optionalString (instanceName == "nginx" || instanceName == "nginx2")
      (pkgs.lib.concatMapStrings (webapp: ''
        machine.succeed(
            "curl --fail -H 'Host: ${webapp.dnsName}' http://localhost:${toString instance.port} | grep ': ${toString webapp.port}'"
        )
      '') instance.webapps);

}

The above Nix expression invokes testService with the following parameters:

  • processManagers refers to a list of names of all the process managers that should be tested.
  • profiles refers to a list of configuration profiles that should be tested. Currently, it supports privileged for privileged deployments, and unprivileged for unprivileged deployments in an unprivileged user's home directory, without changing user permissions.
  • The exprFile parameter refers to a processes model of a system, such as processes-advanced.nix capturing the properties of a system that consists of multiple webapp and nginx instances, as described earlier.
  • The readiness parameter refers to a function that does a readiness check for each process instance. In the above example, it checks whether each service is actually listening on the required TCP port.
  • The tests parameter refers to a function that executes tests for each process instance. In the above example, it ignores all but the nginx instances, because explicitly testing a webapp instance is a redundant operation. For each nginx instance, it checks whether all webapp instances can be reached from it, by running the curl command.

The readiness and tests functions take instanceName as a parameter that identifies the process instance in the processes model, and instance that refers to the attribute set containing its configuration.

In the readiness and tests functions, it is also possible to refer to global configuration parameters:

  • stateDir. The directory in which state files are stored (typically /var for privileged deployments)
  • runtimeDir: The directory in which runtime files are stored (typically /var/run for privileged installations).
  • forceDisableUserChange. Indicates whether to disable user changes (for unprivileged deployments) or not.

In addition to writing tests that work on instance level, it is also possible to write tests on system level, with the following parameters (not shown in the example):

  • initialTests: instructions that run right after deploying the system, but before the readiness checks, and instance-level tests.
  • postTests: instructions that run after the instance-level tests.

The above functions also accept the same global configuration parameters, and processes that refers to the entire processes model.

We can also configure other properties useful for testing:

  • systemPackages: installs additional packages into the system profile of the test virtual machine.
  • nixosConfig defines a NixOS module with configuration properties that will be added to the NixOS configuration of the test machine.
  • extraParams propagates additional parameters to the processes model.

The Nix expression shown earlier is not self-contained -- it is a function definition that needs to be invoked with all its required parameters including the process managers and profiles that we want to test for.

We can compose tests in the following Nix expression:

{ nixpkgs ? <nixpkgs>
, system ? builtins.currentSystem
, processManagers ? [ "supervisord" "sysvinit" "systemd" "docker" "disnix" "s6-rc" ]
, profiles ? [ "privileged" "unprivileged" ]
}:

let
  pkgs = import nixpkgs { inherit system; };

  testService = import ../../nixproc/test-driver/universal.nix {
    inherit nixpkgs system;
  };
in
{

  nginx-reverse-proxy-hostbased = import ./nginx-reverse-proxy-hostbased {
    inherit pkgs processManagers profiles testService;
  };

  docker = import ./docker {
    inherit pkgs processManagers profiles testService;
  };

  ...
}

The above partial Nix expression (default.nix) invokes the function defined in the previous Nix expression that resides in the nginx-reverse-proxy-hostbased directory and propagates all required parameters. It also composes other test cases, such as docker.

The parameters of the composition expression allow you to globally configure the service variants:

  • processManagers allows you to select the process managers you want to test for.
  • profiles allows you to select the configuration profiles.

With the following command, we can test our system as a privileged user, using systemd as a process manager:

$ nix-build -A nginx-reverse-proxy-hostbased.privileged.systemd

we can also run the same test, but then as an unprivileged user:

$ nix-build -A nginx-reverse-proxy-hostbased.unprivileged.systemd

In addition to systemd, any configured process manager can be used that works in NixOS. The following command runs a privileged test of the same service for sysvinit:

$ nix-build -A nginx-reverse-proxy-hostbased.privileged.sysvinit

Although the test driver makes it possible to test all possible variants of a service, doing so may be very expensive. In the above example, we have two configuration profiles and six process managers, resulting in twelve possible variants of the same service.

To get a reasonable level of confidence, it typically suffices to implement the following strategy:

  • Pick two process managers: one that prefers foreground processes (e.g. supervisord) and one that prefers daemons (e.g. sysvinit). This is the most significant difference (from a configuration perspective) between all these different process managers.
  • If a service supports multiple configuration variants, and multiple instances, then create a processes model that concurrently deploys all these variants.

Implementing the above strategy only requires you to test four variants, providing a high degree of certainty that it will work with all other process managers as well.

Since the test driver is built on top of the NixOS test driver (that is Linux based), we cannot use the test driver to test service variants on different operating systems. launchd, bsdrc and cygrunsrv can only be tested manually for now.

Integration with Disnix

In addition to the fact that this toolset provides a disnix backend that facilitates universal and easy local deployment, any process model is basically a sub set of a Disnix services model.

By augmenting all processes in a processes model with a number of additional properties, we can turn it into a fully functional Disnix services model:

{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> { inherit system; }
, system ? builtins.currentSystem
, distribution, invDistribution
, stateDir ? "/var"
, runtimeDir ? "${stateDir}/run"
, logDir ? "${stateDir}/log"
, tmpDir ? (if stateDir == "/var" then "/tmp" else "${stateDir}/tmp")
, forceDisableUserChange ? false
}:

let
  processManager = "sysvinit";

  constructors = import ./constructors.nix {
    inherit pkgs stateDir runtimeDir logDir tmpDir forceDisableUserChange processManager;
  };
in
rec {
  webapp1 = rec {
    name = "webapp1";
    port = 5000;
    dnsName = "webapp1.local";

    pkg = constructors.webapp {
      inherit port;
    };

    type = "sysvinit-script";
  };

  webapp2 = rec {
    name = "webapp2";
    port = 5001;
    dnsName = "webapp2.local";

    pkg = constructors.webapp {
      inherit port;
    };

    type = "sysvinit-script";
  };

  nginx = rec {
    name = "nginx";
    port = 8080;

    pkg = constructors.nginxReverseProxy {
      webapps = [ webapp1 webapp2 ];
      inherit port;
    } {};

    type = "sysvinit-script";
  };
}

In the above Disnix services, the following changes were made:

  • The processManager is hardcoded to sysvinit.
  • Every process has been turned into a service by augmenting the following properties: name corresponds to the key in attribute set, and type to the Dysnomia plugin that manages its lifecycle. To manage the lifecycle of a sysvinit-script we can use the Dysnomia plugin with the same name.

Dysnomia, the toolset that manages the lifecycles of services, has plugins for the same process managers that this toolset supports. With a few small modifications, we can make a universal services model that allows us to pick any process management solution that this toolset supports based on the on the value of the processManager parameter:

{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> { inherit system; }
, system ? builtins.currentSystem
, distribution, invDistribution
, stateDir ? "/var"
, runtimeDir ? "${stateDir}/run"
, logDir ? "${stateDir}/log"
, tmpDir ? (if stateDir == "/var" then "/tmp" else "${stateDir}/tmp")
, forceDisableUserChange ? false
, processManager ? "sysvinit"
}:

let
  processType = import ../../nixproc/derive-dysnomia-process-type.nix {
    inherit processManager;
  };

  constructors = import ./constructors.nix {
    inherit pkgs stateDir runtimeDir logDir tmpDir forceDisableUserChange processManager;
  };
in
rec {
  webapp1 = rec {
    name = "webapp1";
    port = 5000;
    dnsName = "webapp1.local";

    pkg = constructors.webapp {
      inherit port;
    };

    type = processType;
  };

  webapp2 = rec {
    name = "webapp2";
    port = 5001;
    dnsName = "webapp2.local";

    pkg = constructors.webapp {
      inherit port;
    };

    type = processType;
  };

  nginx = rec {
    name = "nginx";
    port = 8080;

    pkg = constructors.nginxReverseProxy {
      webapps = [ webapp1 webapp2 ];
      inherit port;
    } {};

    type = processType;
  };
}

In the services model shown above, we have re-introduced the processManager parameter. We use a convenience function that derives the processType from the selected processManager. For example, sysvinit maps to sysvinit-script, systemd to systemd-unit, supervisord to supervisord-program etc. All the service's type attributes bind to the derived processType.

There is also a special case -- when processManager is null, then the selected type will be managed-process, that works with process manager-agnostic JSON configuration files that get converted to a process-manager specific configuration on the target machines (with the nixproc-generate-config tool) and deployed as such.

managed-process is useful when we want to deploy services in a network of machines running various opeating and process managers by using the same deployment specifications.

By combining the services model shown above with an infrastructure model, and distribution model, we can deploy the system to a network of machines:

$ disnix-env -s services.nix -i infrastructure.nix -d distribution.nix

the following command allows us to pick a different process manager, such as systemd:

$ disnix-env -s services.nix -i infrastructure.nix -d distribution.nix --extra-params '{ processManager = "systemd"; }'

Building a multi-process Docker container

Another useful integration solution is generating multi-process Docker images. We can build a Docker image that launches multiple processes managed by a process manager that is both compatible with Linux and Docker.

To construct such as an image, we can evaluate a Nix expression (e.g. default.nix) that looks as follows:

{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> { inherit system; }
, system ? builtins.currentSystem
}:

let
  createMultiProcessImage = import ../../nixproc/create-image-from-steps/create-multi-process-image-universal.nix {
    inherit pkgs;
  };
in
createMultiProcessImage {
  name = "multiprocess";
  tag = "test";

  exprFile = ../webapps-agnostic/processes.nix;
  processManager = "supervisord"; # sysvinit, disnix, s6-rc are also valid options

  interactive = true; # the default option
  manpages = false; # the default option
  forceDisableUserChange = false; # the default option
}

In the above expression, we evaluate the createMultiProcessImage function with the following parameters:

  • The name refers to the name of the image, whereas tag refers to a Docker image version tag.
  • The exprFile refers to a processes expression file that declares running process instances (as shown earlier)
  • The processManager parameter allows you to pick a process manager. Currently, all the options shown above are supported.
  • We can also specify whether we want to use the container interactively with the interactive parameter (which defaults to: true). When this setting has been enabled, a .bashrc will be configured to make the bash shell usable, and a number of additional packages will be installed for file and process management operations.
  • We can also optionally install man in the container so that you can access manual pages. By default, it is disabled
  • It is also possible to adjust the state settings in the processes model. With forceDisableUserChange we can disable user creation and user switching. It is also possible to control the other state variables, such as stateDir.

The function shown above is basically a thin wrapper around the dockerTools.buildImage function in Nixpkgs and accepts the same parameters, with a number of process management parameters added to it.

The corresponding deployment procedure of an image is also similar to ordinary single root process images. For example, to build the image you can run:

$ nix-build

and load it into Docker as follows:

$ docker load -i result

We can deploy a container instance from the image in interactive mode as follows:

$ docker run --name mycontainer --rm --network host -it multiprocess:test

When interactive mode has been enabled, you should be able to "connect" to a container in which you can execute shell commands, for example to control the life-cycle of the sub processes:

$ docker exec -it mycontainer /bin/bash
$ ps aux

Building a mutable multi-process Docker container

A big drawback of the multi-process container deployed in the previous section is that its deployment is immutable -- the deployment is done from an image that configures all process instances, but when it is desired to change the configuration, a new image needs to be generated and the container must be discarded and redeployed from that new image.

It is also possible to deploy mutable multi-process containers in which the configuration of the managed system can be updated without the need to bring the container down.

The following Nix expression (default.nix) can be used to construct a mutable multi-process image:

{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> { inherit system; }
, system ? builtins.currentSystem
}:

let
  createMutableMultiProcessImage = import ../../nixproc/create-image-from-steps/create-mutable-multi-process-image-universal.nix {
    inherit pkgs;
  };
in
createMutableMultiProcessImage {
  name = "multiprocess";
  tag = "test";

  exprFile = ./processes.nix;
  idResourcesFile = ./idresources.nix;
  idsFile = ./ids.nix;
  processManager = "supervisord";

  interactive = true;
  manpages = false;
  forceDisableUserChange = false;
  bootstrap = true;
}

The Nix expression shown above invokes the createMutableMultiProcessImage function that has a similar interface to the immutable variant shown in the previous section, with the following differences:

  • The exprFile is also used for specifying the process model to deploy from, but a notable difference is that for mutable containers this model is copied into the container and deployed from within the container. If the exprFile parameter is omitted, an empty configuration is deployed.
  • To make deploying process models model possible that also use nixproc-id-assign to automatically assign unique numeric IDs, the idResourcesFile and idsFile parameters can be used to copy these models into the container as well. These parameters are not mandatory.
  • As a container entry point, a bootstrap script is executed, that on first deployment, uses the Nix package manager, and the corresponding nixproc-*-switch tool to deploy the system.
  • The bootstrap parameter allows you to disable the bootstrap entry point. By default, it is enabled.

To make deployments in mutable containers possible, the processes model should not contain any references to files on the local file system (with the exception of the ids.nix model that should reside in the same base directory).

The following process model (processes.nix) eliminates local file dependencies by using builtins.fetchGit to obtain the Nix process management framework:

{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> { inherit system; }
, system ? builtins.currentSystem
, stateDir ? "/var"
, runtimeDir ? "${stateDir}/run"
, logDir ? "${stateDir}/log"
, cacheDir ? "${stateDir}/cache"
, tmpDir ? (if stateDir == "/var" then "/tmp" else "${stateDir}/tmp")
, forceDisableUserChange ? false
, processManager
, webappMode ? null
}:

let
  nix-processmgmt = builtins.fetchGit {
    url = https://github.com/svanderburg/nix-processmgmt.git;
    ref = "master";
  };

  ids = if builtins.pathExists ./ids.nix then (import ./ids.nix).ids else {};

  sharedConstructors = import "${nix-processmgmt}/examples/services-agnostic/constructors.nix" {
    inherit pkgs stateDir runtimeDir logDir cacheDir tmpDir forceDisableUserChange processManager ids;
  };

  constructors = import "${nix-processmgmt}/examples/webapps-agnostic/constructors.nix" {
    inherit pkgs stateDir runtimeDir logDir tmpDir forceDisableUserChange processManager webappMode ids;
  };
in
rec {
  webapp = rec {
    port = ids.webappPorts.webapp or 0;
    dnsName = "webapp.local";

    pkg = constructors.webapp {
      inherit port;
    };

    requiresUniqueIdsFor = [ "webappPorts" "uids" "gids" ];
  };

  nginx = rec {
    port = ids.nginxPorts.nginx or 0;

    pkg = sharedConstructors.nginxReverseProxyHostBased {
      webapps = [ webapp ];
      inherit port;
    } {};

    requiresUniqueIdsFor = [ "nginxPorts" "uids" "gids" ];
  };
}

To deploy a mutable multi-process image container, we can run the following command to build the image:

$ nix-build

and load it into Docker as follows:

$ docker load -i result

We can deploy a container instance from the image in interactive mode as follows:

$ docker run --name mycontainer --rm --network host -it multiprocess:test

On first startup, the container will carry out a bootstrap procedure that uses the Nix process management framework to deploy all the processes in the processes model.

When the deployment of the system is complete, we can "connect" to the container instance as follows:

$ docker exec -it mycontainer /bin/bash

In the container, we can edit the process model (to for example, add a new webapp instance):

$ mcedit /etc/nixproc/processes.nix

and redeploy the new configuration with the following command:

$ nixproc-supervisord-switch

then the new configuration should become active without the need to restart the container. Moreover, when stopping the container and starting it again, the last deployed configuration should become active again.

Building a Nix-enabled Docker container

One of the interesting aspects of a mutable multi-process image is that it provides a fully featured Nix installation in a container that can be used to deploy arbitrary Nix packages.

It is also possible to generate an image whose only purpose is to provide a working Nix installation:

{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> { inherit system; }
, system ? builtins.currentSystem
}:

let
  createNixImage = import ../../nixproc/create-image-from-steps/create-nix-image.nix {
    inherit pkgs;
  };
in
createNixImage {
  name = "foobar";
  tag = "test";
}

Examples

This repository contains a number of example systems, that can be found in the examples/ folder:

  • webapps-sysvinit is a processes configuration set using the example webapp process described in this README, with nginx reverse proxies. The configuration is specifically written to use sysvinit as a process manager.
  • webapps-agnostic is the same as the previous example, but using a process manager agnostic configuration. It can be used to target all process managers that this toolset supports.
  • services-agnostic is a process manager-agnostic configuration set of additional system services used for tests, such as docker, supervisord, and nginx
  • service-containers-agnostic extends the previous examples with configuration files so that these system services can be deployed as Disnix containers -- services in which other services can be hosted.
  • multi-process-image is an example demonstrating how to construct a Docker image that concurrently runs all processes described in the webapps-agnostic example managed by a process management solution of choice.

The Nix process management services repository contains a collection of commonly used services that can be managed with the Nix process management framework.

Troubleshooting

This section contains a number of known problems and their resolutions.

Inspecting log files

When a service does not work as expected, then it is typically desired to check the logs of the corresponding service. Although many process management concepts are standardized by this framework, logging is not standardized at all.

This section contains some pointers for some of the process management solution targets that are currently implemented.

systemd and docker

Some process/service managers have their own logging facility. For example, systemd provides journalctl, and docker provides docker logs. They automatically capture the output (the stdout and stderr) of foreground processes.

sysvinit, bsdrc, disnix

For process management solutions that rely on processes that daemonize on their own (sysvinit, bsdrc and disnix), you need to consult the logs that are managed by the services themselves (a daemon typically detaches itself from the stdout and stderr. As a result, a process manager cannot do it).

Services that only provide foreground processes are automatically daemonized with the daemon command by these three backends. By default, the daemon command will capture their outputs in log files with a nixproc- prefix in the log directory. On a production system, such a log file could be: /var/log/nixproc-myservice.log for services that are started as root users and /tmp/nixproc-myservice.log for services that are started as unprivileged users.

supervisord

supervisord will (if no settings have been configured) store log files (capturing the stdout and stderr of each process) in the temp directory (typically /tmp or the value of the TMPDIR environment variable).

cygrunsrv

By default, the stderr of cygrunsrv managed services are captured in the log folder. An example could be: /var/log/myservice.log.

s6-rc

If there is no logging configured, any output produced by supervised processes is redirected to the s6-svscan process that supervises the entire service dependency tree.

In this framework, by default, longrun services are automatically configured in such a way that there is also logging companion service that captures its output.

The output captured by the logging companion services are stored in the s6-log sub folder in the log directory (which is typically /var/log/s6-log/<service name> on most systems).

License

The contents of this package is available under the same license as Nixpkgs -- the MIT license.

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Experimental Nix-based process management framework

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