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#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -eu
set -o pipefail
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# I'm a little agnostic on the choices, but supporting a wide
# slate of uses for now, including:
# - import-only: `. create-darwin-volume.sh no-main[ ...]`
# - legacy: `./create-darwin-volume.sh` or `. create-darwin-volume.sh`
# (both will run main())
# - external alt-routine: `./create-darwin-volume.sh no-main func[ ...]`
if [ " ${ 1 - } " = "no-main" ] ; then
shift
readonly _CREATE_VOLUME_NO_MAIN = 1
else
readonly _CREATE_VOLUME_NO_MAIN = 0
# declare some things we expect to inherit from install-multi-user
# I don't love this (because it's a bit of a kludge).
#
# CAUTION: (Dec 19 2020)
# This is a stopgap. It doesn't cover the full slate of
# identifiers we inherit--just those necessary to:
# - avoid breaking direct invocations of this script (here/now)
# - avoid hard-to-reverse structural changes before the call to rm
# single-user support is verified
#
# In the near-mid term, I (personally) think we should:
# - decide to deprecate the direct call and add a notice
# - fold all of this into install-darwin-multi-user.sh
# - intentionally remove the old direct-invocation form (kill the
# routine, replace this script w/ deprecation notice and a note
# on the remove-after date)
#
readonly NIX_ROOT = " ${ NIX_ROOT :- /nix } "
_sudo( ) {
shift # throw away the 'explanation'
/usr/bin/sudo " $@ "
}
failure( ) {
if [ " $* " = "" ] ; then
cat
else
echo " $@ "
fi
exit 1
}
task( ) {
echo " $@ "
}
fi
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# usually "disk1"
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root_disk_identifier( ) {
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# For performance (~10ms vs 280ms) I'm parsing 'diskX' from stat output
# (~diskXsY)--but I'm retaining the more-semantic approach since
# it documents intent better.
# /usr/sbin/diskutil info -plist / | xmllint --xpath "/plist/dict/key[text()='ParentWholeDisk']/following-sibling::string[1]/text()" -
#
local special_device
special_device = " $( /usr/bin/stat -f "%Sd" /) "
echo " ${ special_device %s[0-9]* } "
}
# make it easy to play w/ 'Case-sensitive APFS'
readonly NIX_VOLUME_FS = " ${ NIX_VOLUME_FS :- APFS } "
readonly NIX_VOLUME_LABEL = " ${ NIX_VOLUME_LABEL :- Nix Store } "
# Strongly assuming we'll make a volume on the device / is on
# But you can override NIX_VOLUME_USE_DISK to create it on some other device
readonly NIX_VOLUME_USE_DISK = " ${ NIX_VOLUME_USE_DISK :- $( root_disk_identifier) } "
NIX_VOLUME_USE_SPECIAL = " ${ NIX_VOLUME_USE_SPECIAL :- } "
NIX_VOLUME_USE_UUID = " ${ NIX_VOLUME_USE_UUID :- } "
readonly NIX_VOLUME_MOUNTD_DEST = " ${ NIX_VOLUME_MOUNTD_DEST :- /Library/LaunchDaemons/org.nixos.darwin-store.plist } "
if /usr/bin/fdesetup isactive >/dev/null; then
test_filevault_in_use( ) { return 0; }
# no readonly; we may modify if user refuses from cure_volume
NIX_VOLUME_DO_ENCRYPT = " ${ NIX_VOLUME_DO_ENCRYPT :- 1 } "
else
test_filevault_in_use( ) { return 1; }
NIX_VOLUME_DO_ENCRYPT = " ${ NIX_VOLUME_DO_ENCRYPT :- 0 } "
fi
should_encrypt_volume( ) {
test_filevault_in_use && ( ( NIX_VOLUME_DO_ENCRYPT = = 1 ) )
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}
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substep( ) {
printf " %s\n" "" " - $1 " "" " ${ @ : 2 } "
}
volumes_labeled( ) {
local label = " $1 "
xsltproc --novalid --stringparam label " $label " - <( /usr/sbin/ioreg -ra -c "AppleAPFSVolume" ) <<'EOF'
<xsl:stylesheet xmlns:xsl= "http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform" version = "1.0" >
<xsl:output method = "text" />
<xsl:template match = "/" >
<xsl:apply-templates select = " /plist/array/dict/key[text()='IORegistryEntryName']/following-sibling::*[1][text()= $label ]/.. " />
</xsl:template>
<xsl:template match = "dict" >
<xsl:apply-templates match = "string" select = "key[text()='BSD Name']/following-sibling::*[1]" />
<xsl:text>= </xsl:text>
<xsl:apply-templates match = "string" select = "key[text()='UUID']/following-sibling::*[1]" />
<xsl:text>& #xA;</xsl:text>
</xsl:template>
</xsl:stylesheet>
EOF
# I cut label out of the extracted values, but here it is for reference:
# <xsl:apply-templates match="string" select="key[text()='IORegistryEntryName']/following-sibling::*[1]"/>
# <xsl:text>=</xsl:text>
}
right_disk( ) {
local volume_special = " $1 " # (i.e., disk1s7)
[ [ " $volume_special " = = " $NIX_VOLUME_USE_DISK " s* ] ]
}
right_volume( ) {
local volume_special = " $1 " # (i.e., disk1s7)
# if set, it must match; otherwise ensure it's on the right disk
if [ -z " $NIX_VOLUME_USE_SPECIAL " ] ; then
if right_disk " $volume_special " ; then
NIX_VOLUME_USE_SPECIAL = " $volume_special " # latch on
return 0
else
return 1
fi
else
[ " $volume_special " = " $NIX_VOLUME_USE_SPECIAL " ]
fi
}
right_uuid( ) {
local volume_uuid = " $1 "
# if set, it must match; otherwise allow
if [ -z " $NIX_VOLUME_USE_UUID " ] ; then
NIX_VOLUME_USE_UUID = " $volume_uuid " # latch on
return 0
else
[ " $volume_uuid " = " $NIX_VOLUME_USE_UUID " ]
fi
}
cure_volumes( ) {
local found volume special uuid
# loop just in case they have more than one volume
# (nothing stops you from doing this)
for volume in $( volumes_labeled " $NIX_VOLUME_LABEL " ) ; do
# CAUTION: this could (maybe) be a more normal read
# loop like:
# while IFS== read -r special uuid; do
# # ...
# done <<<"$(volumes_labeled "$NIX_VOLUME_LABEL")"
#
# I did it with for to skirt a problem with the obvious
# pattern replacing stdin and causing user prompts
# inside (which also use read and access stdin) to skip
#
# If there's an existing encrypted volume we can't find
# in keychain, the user never gets prompted to delete
# the volume, and the install fails.
#
# If you change this, a human needs to test a very
# specific scenario: you already have an encrypted
# Nix Store volume, and have deleted its credential
# from keychain. Ensure the script asks you if it can
# delete the volume, and then prompts for your sudo
# password to confirm.
#
# shellcheck disable=SC1097
IFS = = read -r special uuid <<< " $volume "
# take the first one that's on the right disk
if [ -z " ${ found :- } " ] ; then
if right_volume " $special " && right_uuid " $uuid " ; then
cure_volume " $special " " $uuid "
found = " ${ special } ( ${ uuid } ) "
else
warning <<EOF
Ignoring ${ special } ( ${ uuid } ) because I am looking for :
disk = ${ NIX_VOLUME_USE_DISK } special = ${ NIX_VOLUME_USE_SPECIAL :- ${ NIX_VOLUME_USE_DISK } sX } uuid = ${ NIX_VOLUME_USE_UUID :- any }
EOF
# TODO: give chance to delete if ! headless?
fi
else
warning <<EOF
Ignoring ${ special } ( ${ uuid } ) , already found target: $found
EOF
# TODO reminder? I feel like I want one
# idiom that reminds some warnings, or warns
# some reminders?
# TODO: if ! headless, chance to delete?
fi
done
if [ -z " ${ found :- } " ] ; then
readonly NIX_VOLUME_USE_SPECIAL NIX_VOLUME_USE_UUID
fi
}
volume_encrypted( ) {
local volume_special = " $1 " # (i.e., disk1s7)
# Trying to match the first line of output; known first lines:
# No cryptographic users for <special>
# Cryptographic user for <special> (1 found)
# Cryptographic users for <special> (2 found)
/usr/sbin/diskutil apfs listCryptoUsers -plist " $volume_special " | /usr/bin/grep -q APFSCryptoUserUUID
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}
test_fstab( ) {
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/usr/bin/grep -q " $NIX_ROOT apfs rw " /etc/fstab 2>/dev/null
}
test_nix_root_is_symlink( ) {
[ -L " $NIX_ROOT " ]
}
test_synthetic_conf_either( ) {
/usr/bin/grep -qE " ^ ${ NIX_ROOT : 1 } ( $|\t.{3,} $) " /etc/synthetic.conf 2>/dev/null
}
test_synthetic_conf_mountable( ) {
/usr/bin/grep -q " ^ ${ NIX_ROOT : 1 } $" /etc/synthetic.conf 2>/dev/null
}
test_synthetic_conf_symlinked( ) {
/usr/bin/grep -qE " ^ ${ NIX_ROOT : 1 } \t.{3,} $" /etc/synthetic.conf 2>/dev/null
}
test_nix_volume_mountd_installed( ) {
test -e " $NIX_VOLUME_MOUNTD_DEST "
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}
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# current volume password
test_keychain_by_uuid( ) {
local volume_uuid = " $1 "
# Note: doesn't need sudo just to check; doesn't output pw
security find-generic-password -s " $volume_uuid " & >/dev/null
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}
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get_volume_pass( ) {
local volume_uuid = " $1 "
_sudo \
"to confirm keychain has a password that unlocks this volume" \
security find-generic-password -s " $volume_uuid " -w
}
verify_volume_pass( ) {
local volume_special = " $1 " # (i.e., disk1s7)
local volume_uuid = " $2 "
/usr/sbin/diskutil apfs unlockVolume " $volume_special " -verify -stdinpassphrase -user " $volume_uuid "
}
volume_pass_works( ) {
local volume_special = " $1 " # (i.e., disk1s7)
local volume_uuid = " $2 "
get_volume_pass " $volume_uuid " | verify_volume_pass " $volume_special " " $volume_uuid "
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}
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# Create the paths defined in synthetic.conf, saving us a reboot.
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create_synthetic_objects( ) {
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# Big Sur takes away the -B flag we were using and replaces it
# with a -t flag that appears to do the same thing (but they
# don't behave exactly the same way in terms of return values).
# This feels a little dirty, but as far as I can tell the
# simplest way to get the right one is to just throw away stderr
# and call both... :]
{
/System/Library/Filesystems/apfs.fs/Contents/Resources/apfs.util -t || true # Big Sur
/System/Library/Filesystems/apfs.fs/Contents/Resources/apfs.util -B || true # Catalina
} >/dev/null 2>& 1
}
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test_nix( ) {
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test -d " $NIX_ROOT "
}
test_voldaemon( ) {
test -f " $NIX_VOLUME_MOUNTD_DEST "
}
generate_mount_command( ) {
local cmd_type = " $1 " # encrypted|unencrypted
local volume_uuid mountpoint cmd = ( )
printf -v volume_uuid "%q" " $2 "
printf -v mountpoint "%q" " $NIX_ROOT "
case " $cmd_type " in
encrypted)
cmd = ( /bin/sh -c " /usr/bin/security find-generic-password -s ' $volume_uuid ' -w | /usr/sbin/diskutil apfs unlockVolume ' $volume_uuid ' -mountpoint ' $mountpoint ' -stdinpassphrase " ) ; ;
unencrypted)
cmd = ( /usr/sbin/diskutil mount -mountPoint " $mountpoint " " $volume_uuid " ) ; ;
*)
failure " Invalid first arg $cmd_type to generate_mount_command " ; ;
esac
printf " <string>%s</string>\n" " ${ cmd [@] } "
}
generate_mount_daemon( ) {
local cmd_type = " $1 " # encrypted|unencrypted
local volume_uuid = " $2 "
cat <<EOF
<?xml version = "1.0" encoding = "UTF-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple Computer//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd" >
<plist version = "1.0" >
<dict>
<key>RunAtLoad</key>
<true/>
<key>Label</key>
<string>org.nixos.darwin-store</string>
<key>ProgramArguments</key>
<array>
$( generate_mount_command " $cmd_type " " $volume_uuid " )
</array>
</dict>
</plist>
EOF
}
_eat_bootout_err( ) {
/usr/bin/grep -v "Boot-out failed: 36: Operation now in progress"
}
# TODO: remove with --uninstall?
uninstall_launch_daemon_directions( ) {
local daemon_label = " $1 " # i.e., org.nixos.blah-blah
local daemon_plist = " $2 " # abspath
substep " Uninstall LaunchDaemon $daemon_label " \
" sudo launchctl bootout system/ $daemon_label " \
" sudo rm $daemon_plist "
}
uninstall_launch_daemon_prompt( ) {
local daemon_label = " $1 " # i.e., org.nixos.blah-blah
local daemon_plist = " $2 " # abspath
local reason_for_daemon = " $3 "
cat <<EOF
The installer adds a LaunchDaemon to $reason_for_daemon : $daemon_label
EOF
if ui_confirm "Can I remove it?" ; then
_sudo "to terminate the daemon" \
launchctl bootout " system/ $daemon_label " 2> >( _eat_bootout_err >& 2) || true
# this can "fail" with a message like:
# Boot-out failed: 36: Operation now in progress
_sudo "to remove the daemon definition" rm " $daemon_plist "
fi
}
nix_volume_mountd_uninstall_directions( ) {
uninstall_launch_daemon_directions "org.nixos.darwin-store" \
" $NIX_VOLUME_MOUNTD_DEST "
}
nix_volume_mountd_uninstall_prompt( ) {
uninstall_launch_daemon_prompt "org.nixos.darwin-store" \
" $NIX_VOLUME_MOUNTD_DEST " \
"mount your Nix volume"
}
# TODO: move nix_daemon to install-darwin-multi-user if/when uninstall_launch_daemon_prompt moves up to install-multi-user
nix_daemon_uninstall_prompt( ) {
uninstall_launch_daemon_prompt "org.nixos.nix-daemon" \
" $NIX_DAEMON_DEST " \
"run the nix-daemon"
}
# TODO: remove with --uninstall?
nix_daemon_uninstall_directions( ) {
uninstall_launch_daemon_directions "org.nixos.nix-daemon" \
" $NIX_DAEMON_DEST "
}
# TODO: remove with --uninstall?
synthetic_conf_uninstall_directions( ) {
# :1 to strip leading slash
substep " Remove ${ NIX_ROOT : 1 } from /etc/synthetic.conf " \
" If nix is the only entry: sudo rm /etc/synthetic.conf" \
" Otherwise: sudo /usr/bin/sed -i '' -e '/^ ${ NIX_ROOT : 1 } $/d' /etc/synthetic.conf "
}
synthetic_conf_uninstall_prompt( ) {
cat <<EOF
During install, I add '${NIX_ROOT:1}' to /etc/synthetic.conf, which instructs
macOS to create an empty root directory for mounting the Nix volume.
EOF
# make the edit to a copy
/usr/bin/grep -vE " ^ ${ NIX_ROOT : 1 } ( $|\t.{3,} $) " /etc/synthetic.conf > " $SCRATCH /synthetic.conf.edit "
if test_synthetic_conf_symlinked; then
warning <<EOF
/etc/synthetic.conf already contains a line instructing your system
to make '${NIX_ROOT}' as a symlink:
$( /usr/bin/grep -nE " ^ ${ NIX_ROOT : 1 } \t.{3,} $" /etc/synthetic.conf)
This may mean your system has/had a non-standard Nix install.
The volume-creation process in this installer is *not* compatible
with a symlinked store, so I' ll have to remove this instruction to
continue .
If you want/need to keep this instruction, answer 'n' to abort.
EOF
fi
# ask to rm if this left the file empty aside from comments, else edit
if /usr/bin/diff -q <( :) <( /usr/bin/grep -v "^#" " $SCRATCH /synthetic.conf.edit " ) & >/dev/null; then
if confirm_rm "/etc/synthetic.conf" ; then
if test_nix_root_is_symlink; then
failure >& 2 <<EOF
I removed /etc/synthetic.conf, but $NIX_ROOT is already a symlink
( -> $( readlink " $NIX_ROOT " ) ) . The system should remove it when you reboot.
Once you' ve rebooted, run the installer again.
EOF
fi
return 0
fi
else
if confirm_edit " $SCRATCH /synthetic.conf.edit " "/etc/synthetic.conf" ; then
if test_nix_root_is_symlink; then
failure >& 2 <<EOF
I edited Nix out of /etc/synthetic.conf, but $NIX_ROOT is already a symlink
( -> $( readlink " $NIX_ROOT " ) ) . The system should remove it when you reboot.
Once you' ve rebooted, run the installer again.
EOF
fi
return 0
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fi
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fi
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# fallback instructions
echo "Manually remove nix from /etc/synthetic.conf"
return 1
}
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add_nix_vol_fstab_line( ) {
local uuid = " $1 "
# shellcheck disable=SC1003,SC2026
local escaped_mountpoint = " ${ NIX_ROOT / / '\\\' 040 } "
shift
EDITOR = "/usr/bin/ex" _sudo "to add nix to fstab" " $@ " <<EOF
:a
UUID = $uuid $escaped_mountpoint apfs rw,noauto,nobrowse,suid,owners
.
:x
EOF
# TODO: preserving my notes on suid,owners above until resolved
# There *may* be some issue regarding volume ownership, see nix#3156
#
# It seems like the cheapest fix is adding "suid,owners" to fstab, but:
# - We don't have much info on this condition yet
# - I'm not certain if these cause other problems?
# - There's a "chown" component some people claim to need to fix this
# that I don't understand yet
# (Note however that I've had to add a chown step to handle
# single->multi-user reinstalls, which may cover this)
#
# I'm not sure if it's safe to approach this way?
#
# I think I think the most-proper way to test for it is:
# diskutil info -plist "$NIX_VOLUME_LABEL" | xmllint --xpath "(/plist/dict/key[text()='GlobalPermissionsEnabled'])/following-sibling::*[1][name()='true']" -; echo $?
#
# There's also `sudo /usr/sbin/vsdbutil -c /path` (which is much faster, but is also
# deprecated and needs minor parsing).
#
# If no one finds a problem with doing so, I think the simplest approach
# is to just eagerly set this. I found a few imperative approaches:
# (diskutil enableOwnership, ~100ms), a cheap one (/usr/sbin/vsdbutil -a, ~40-50ms),
# a very cheap one (append the internal format to /var/db/volinfo.database).
#
# But vsdbutil's deprecation notice suggests using fstab, so I want to
# give that a whirl first.
#
# TODO: when this is workable, poke infinisil about reproducing the issue
# and confirming this fix?
}
delete_nix_vol_fstab_line( ) {
# TODO: I'm scaffolding this to handle the new nix volumes
# but it might be nice to generalize a smidge further to
# go ahead and set up a pattern for curing "old" things
# we no longer do?
EDITOR = "/usr/bin/patch" _sudo "to cut nix from fstab" " $@ " < <( /usr/bin/diff /etc/fstab <( /usr/bin/grep -v " $NIX_ROOT apfs rw " /etc/fstab) )
# leaving some parts out of the grep; people may fiddle this a little?
}
# TODO: hope to remove with --uninstall
fstab_uninstall_directions( ) {
substep " Remove ${ NIX_ROOT } from /etc/fstab " \
" If nix is the only entry: sudo rm /etc/fstab" \
" Otherwise, run 'sudo /usr/sbin/vifs' to remove the nix line"
}
fstab_uninstall_prompt( ) {
cat <<EOF
During install, I add '${NIX_ROOT}' to /etc/fstab so that macOS knows what
mount options to use for the Nix volume.
EOF
cp /etc/fstab " $SCRATCH /fstab.edit "
# technically doesn't need the _sudo path, but throwing away the
# output is probably better than mostly-duplicating the code...
delete_nix_vol_fstab_line patch " $SCRATCH /fstab.edit " & >/dev/null
# if the patch test edit, minus comment lines, is equal to empty (:)
if /usr/bin/diff -q <( :) <( /usr/bin/grep -v "^#" " $SCRATCH /fstab.edit " ) & >/dev/null; then
# this edit would leave it empty; propose deleting it
if confirm_rm "/etc/fstab" ; then
return 0
else
echo "Remove nix from /etc/fstab (or remove the file)"
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fi
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else
echo "I might be able to help you make this edit. Here's the diff:"
if ! _diff "/etc/fstab" " $SCRATCH /fstab.edit " && ui_confirm "Does the change above look right?" ; then
delete_nix_vol_fstab_line /usr/sbin/vifs
else
echo "Remove nix from /etc/fstab (or remove the file)"
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fi
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fi
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}
remove_volume( ) {
local volume_special = " $1 " # (i.e., disk1s7)
_sudo "to unmount the Nix volume" \
/usr/sbin/diskutil unmount force " $volume_special " || true # might not be mounted
_sudo "to delete the Nix volume" \
/usr/sbin/diskutil apfs deleteVolume " $volume_special "
}
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# aspiration: robust enough to both fix problems
# *and* update older darwin volumes
cure_volume( ) {
local volume_special = " $1 " # (i.e., disk1s7)
local volume_uuid = " $2 "
header "Found existing Nix volume"
row " special" " $volume_special "
row " uuid" " $volume_uuid "
if volume_encrypted " $volume_special " ; then
row "encrypted" "yes"
if volume_pass_works " $volume_special " " $volume_uuid " ; then
NIX_VOLUME_DO_ENCRYPT = 0
ok "Found a working decryption password in keychain :)"
echo ""
else
# - this is a volume we made, and
# - the user encrypted it on their own
# - something deleted the credential
# - this is an old or BYO volume and the pw
# just isn't somewhere we can find it.
#
# We're going to explain why we're freaking out
# and prompt them to either delete the volume
# (requiring a sudo auth), or abort to fix
warning <<EOF
This volume is encrypted, but I don' t see a password to decrypt it.
The quick fix is to let me delete this volume and make you a new one.
If that' s okay, enter your ( sudo) password to continue . If not, you
can ensure the decryption password is in your system keychain with a
"Where" ( service) field set to this volume' s UUID:
$volume_uuid
EOF
if password_confirm "delete this volume" ; then
remove_volume " $volume_special "
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else
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# TODO: this is a good design case for a warn-and
# remind idiom...
failure <<EOF
Your Nix volume is encrypted, but I couldn' t find its password. Either:
- Delete or rename the volume out of the way
- Ensure its decryption password is in the system keychain with a
"Where" ( service) field set to this volume' s UUID:
$volume_uuid
EOF
fi
fi
elif test_filevault_in_use; then
row "encrypted" "no"
warning <<EOF
FileVault is on, but your $NIX_VOLUME_LABEL volume isn' t encrypted.
EOF
# if we're interactive, give them a chance to
# encrypt the volume. If not, /shrug
if ! headless && ( ( NIX_VOLUME_DO_ENCRYPT = = 1 ) ) ; then
if ui_confirm "Should I encrypt it and add the decryption key to your keychain?" ; then
encrypt_volume " $volume_uuid " " $NIX_VOLUME_LABEL "
NIX_VOLUME_DO_ENCRYPT = 0
else
NIX_VOLUME_DO_ENCRYPT = 0
reminder " FileVault is on, but your $NIX_VOLUME_LABEL volume isn't encrypted. "
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fi
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fi
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else
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row "encrypted" "no"
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fi
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}
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remove_volume_artifacts( ) {
if test_synthetic_conf_either; then
# NIX_ROOT is in synthetic.conf
if synthetic_conf_uninstall_prompt; then
# TODO: moot until we tackle uninstall, but when we're
# actually uninstalling, we should issue:
# reminder "macOS will clean up the empty mount-point directory at $NIX_ROOT on reboot."
:
fi
fi
if test_fstab; then
fstab_uninstall_prompt
fi
if test_nix_volume_mountd_installed; then
nix_volume_mountd_uninstall_prompt
fi
}
setup_synthetic_conf( ) {
if test_nix_root_is_symlink; then
if ! test_synthetic_conf_symlinked; then
failure >& 2 <<EOF
error: $NIX_ROOT is a symlink ( -> $( readlink " $NIX_ROOT " ) ) .
Please remove it. If nix is in /etc/synthetic.conf, remove it and reboot.
EOF
fi
fi
if ! test_synthetic_conf_mountable; then
task " Configuring /etc/synthetic.conf to make a mount-point at $NIX_ROOT " >& 2
# technically /etc/synthetic.d/nix is supported in Big Sur+
# but handling both takes even more code...
_sudo "to add Nix to /etc/synthetic.conf" \
/usr/bin/ex /etc/synthetic.conf <<EOF
:a
${ NIX_ROOT : 1 }
.
:x
EOF
if ! test_synthetic_conf_mountable; then
failure "error: failed to configure synthetic.conf" >& 2
fi
create_synthetic_objects
if ! test_nix; then
failure >& 2 <<EOF
error: failed to bootstrap $NIX_ROOT
If you enabled FileVault after booting, this is likely a known issue
with macOS that you'll have to reboot to fix. If you didn' t enable FV,
though, please open an issue describing how the system that you see
this error on was set up.
EOF
fi
fi
}
setup_fstab( ) {
local volume_uuid = " $1 "
# fstab used to be responsible for mounting the volume. Now the last
# step adds a LaunchDaemon responsible for mounting. This is technically
# redundant for mounting, but diskutil appears to pick up mount options
# from fstab (and diskutil's support for specifying them directly is not
# consistent across versions/subcommands).
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if ! test_fstab; then
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task "Configuring /etc/fstab to specify volume mount options" >& 2
add_nix_vol_fstab_line " $volume_uuid " /usr/sbin/vifs
fi
}
encrypt_volume( ) {
local volume_uuid = " $1 "
local volume_label = " $2 "
local password
# Note: mount/unmount are late additions to support the right order
# of operations for creating the volume and then baking its uuid into
# other artifacts; not as well-trod wrt to potential errors, race
# conditions, etc.
/usr/sbin/diskutil mount " $volume_label "
password = " $( /usr/bin/xxd -l 32 -p -c 256 /dev/random) "
_sudo "to add your Nix volume's password to Keychain" \
/usr/bin/security -i <<EOF
add-generic-password -a " $volume_label " -s " $volume_uuid " -l " $volume_label encryption password " -D "Encrypted volume password" -j " Added automatically by the Nix installer for use by $NIX_VOLUME_MOUNTD_DEST " -w " $password " -T /System/Library/CoreServices/APFSUserAgent -T /System/Library/CoreServices/CSUserAgent -T /usr/bin/security "/Library/Keychains/System.keychain"
EOF
builtin printf "%s" " $password " | _sudo "to encrypt your Nix volume" \
/usr/sbin/diskutil apfs encryptVolume " $volume_label " -user disk -stdinpassphrase
/usr/sbin/diskutil unmount force " $volume_label "
}
create_volume( ) {
# Notes:
# 1) using `-nomount` instead of `-mountpoint "$NIX_ROOT"` to get
# its UUID and set mount opts in fstab before first mount
#
# 2) system is in some sense less secure than user keychain... (it's
# possible to read the password for decrypting the keychain) but
# the user keychain appears to be available too late. As far as I
# can tell, the file with this password (/var/db/SystemKey) is
# inside the FileVault envelope. If that isn't true, it may make
# sense to store the password inside the envelope?
#
# 3) At some point it would be ideal to have a small binary to serve
# as the daemon itself, and for it to replace /usr/bin/security here.
#
# 4) *UserAgent exemptions should let the system seamlessly supply the
# password if noauto is removed from fstab entry. This is intentional;
# the user will hopefully look for help if the volume stops mounting,
# rather than failing over into subtle race-condition problems.
#
# 5) If we ever get users griping about not having space to do
# anything useful with Nix, it is possibly to specify
# `-reserve 10g` or something, which will fail w/o that much
#
# 6) getting special w/ awk may be fragile, but doing it to:
# - save time over running slow diskutil commands
# - skirt risk we grab wrong volume if multiple match
/usr/sbin/diskutil apfs addVolume " $NIX_VOLUME_USE_DISK " " $NIX_VOLUME_FS " " $NIX_VOLUME_LABEL " -nomount | /usr/bin/awk '/Created new APFS Volume/ {print $5}'
}
volume_uuid_from_special( ) {
local volume_special = " $1 " # (i.e., disk1s7)
# For reasons I won't pretend to fathom, this returns 253 when it works
/System/Library/Filesystems/apfs.fs/Contents/Resources/apfs.util -k " $volume_special " || true
}
# this sometimes clears immediately, and AFAIK clears
# within about 1s. diskutil info on an unmounted path
# fails in around 50-100ms and a match takes about
# 250-300ms. I suspect it's usually ~250-750ms
await_volume( ) {
# caution: this could, in theory, get stuck
until /usr/sbin/diskutil info " $NIX_ROOT " & >/dev/null; do
:
done
}
setup_volume( ) {
local use_special use_uuid profile_packages
task "Creating a Nix volume" >& 2
# DOING: I'm tempted to wrap this call in a grep to get the new disk special without doing anything too complex, but this sudo wrapper *is* a little complex, so it'll be a PITA unless maybe we can skip sudo on this. Let's just try it without.
use_special = " ${ NIX_VOLUME_USE_SPECIAL :- $( create_volume) } "
use_uuid = ${ NIX_VOLUME_USE_UUID :- $( volume_uuid_from_special " $use_special " ) }
setup_fstab " $use_uuid "
if should_encrypt_volume; then
encrypt_volume " $use_uuid " " $NIX_VOLUME_LABEL "
setup_volume_daemon "encrypted" " $use_uuid "
# TODO: might be able to save ~60ms by caching or setting
# this somewhere rather than re-checking here.
elif volume_encrypted " $use_special " ; then
setup_volume_daemon "encrypted" " $use_uuid "
else
setup_volume_daemon "unencrypted" " $use_uuid "
fi
await_volume
# TODO: below is a vague kludge for now; I just don't know
# what if any safe action there is to take here. Also, the
# reminder isn't very helpful.
# I'm less sure where this belongs, but it also wants mounted, pre-install
if type -p nix-env; then
profile_packages = " $( nix-env --query --installed) "
# TODO: can probably do below faster w/ read
# intentionally unquoted string to eat whitespace in wc output
# shellcheck disable=SC2046,SC2059
if ! [ $( printf " $profile_packages " | /usr/bin/wc -l) = "0" ] ; then
reminder <<EOF
Nix now supports only multi-user installs on Darwin/macOS, and your user' s
Nix profile has some packages in it. These packages may obscure those in the
default profile, including the Nix this installer will add. You should
review these packages:
$profile_packages
EOF
fi
fi
}
setup_volume_daemon( ) {
local cmd_type = " $1 " # encrypted|unencrypted
local volume_uuid = " $2 "
if ! test_voldaemon; then
task " Configuring LaunchDaemon to mount ' $NIX_VOLUME_LABEL ' " >& 2
_sudo "to install the Nix volume mounter" /usr/bin/ex " $NIX_VOLUME_MOUNTD_DEST " <<EOF
:a
$( generate_mount_daemon " $cmd_type " " $volume_uuid " )
.
:x
EOF
# TODO: should probably alert the user if this is disabled?
_sudo "to launch the Nix volume mounter" \
launchctl bootstrap system " $NIX_VOLUME_MOUNTD_DEST " || true
# TODO: confirm whether kickstart is necessesary?
# I feel a little superstitous, but it can guard
# against multiple problems (doesn't start, old
# version still running for some reason...)
_sudo "to launch the Nix volume mounter" \
launchctl kickstart -k system/org.nixos.darwin-store
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fi
}
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setup_darwin_volume( ) {
setup_synthetic_conf
setup_volume
}
if [ " $_CREATE_VOLUME_NO_MAIN " = 1 ] ; then
if [ -n " $* " ] ; then
" $@ " # expose functions in case we want multiple routines?
fi
else
# no reason to pay for bash to process this
main( ) {
{
echo ""
echo " ------------------------------------------------------------------ "
echo " | This installer will create a volume for the nix store and |"
echo " | configure it to mount at $NIX_ROOT . Follow these steps to uninstall. | "
echo " ------------------------------------------------------------------ "
echo ""
echo " 1. Remove the entry from fstab using 'sudo /usr/sbin/vifs'"
echo " 2. Run 'sudo launchctl bootout system/org.nixos.darwin-store'"
echo " 3. Remove $NIX_VOLUME_MOUNTD_DEST "
echo " 4. Destroy the data volume using '/usr/sbin/diskutil apfs deleteVolume'"
echo " 5. Remove the 'nix' line from /etc/synthetic.conf (or the file)"
echo ""
} >& 2
setup_darwin_volume
}
main " $@ "
fi