Next: Disco de RAM inicial, Previous: Certificados X.509, Up: Configuração do sistema [Contents][Index]
The (gnu system nss)
module provides bindings to the configuration
file of the libc name service switch or NSS (see NSS
Configuration File in The GNU C Library Reference Manual). In a
nutshell, the NSS is a mechanism that allows libc to be extended with new
“name” lookup methods for system databases, which includes host names,
service names, user accounts, and more (see System
Databases and Name Service Switch in The GNU C Library Reference
Manual).
The NSS configuration specifies, for each system database, which lookup
method is to be used, and how the various methods are chained together—for
instance, under which circumstances NSS should try the next method in the
list. The NSS configuration is given in the name-service-switch
field of operating-system
declarations (see name-service-switch
).
As an example, the declaration below configures the NSS to use the
nss-mdns
back-end, which supports host name lookups over multicast DNS (mDNS) for
host names ending in .local
:
(name-service-switch
(hosts (list %files ;first, check /etc/hosts
;; If the above did not succeed, try
;; with 'mdns_minimal'.
(name-service
(name "mdns_minimal")
;; 'mdns_minimal' is authoritative for
;; '.local'. When it returns "not found",
;; no need to try the next methods.
(reaction (lookup-specification
(not-found => return))))
;; Then fall back to DNS.
(name-service
(name "dns"))
;; Finally, try with the "full" 'mdns'.
(name-service
(name "mdns")))))
Do not worry: the %mdns-host-lookup-nss
variable (see below)
contains this configuration, so you will not have to type it if all you want
is to have .local
host lookup working.
Note that, in this case, in addition to setting the
name-service-switch
of the operating-system
declaration, you
also need to use avahi-service-type
(see avahi-service-type
), or %desktop-services
, which includes it
(see Serviços de desktop). Doing this makes nss-mdns
accessible to
the name service cache daemon (see nscd-service
).
For convenience, the following variables provide typical NSS configurations.
This is the default name service switch configuration, a
name-service-switch
object.
This is the name service switch configuration with support for host name
lookup over multicast DNS (mDNS) for host names ending in .local
.
The reference for name service switch configuration is given below. It is a
direct mapping of the configuration file format of the C library , so please
refer to the C library manual for more information (see NSS Configuration
File in The GNU C Library Reference Manual). Compared to the
configuration file format of libc NSS, it has the advantage not only of
adding this warm parenthetic feel that we like, but also static checks: you
will know about syntax errors and typos as soon as you run guix
system
.
This is the data type representation the configuration of libc’s name service switch (NSS). Each field below represents one of the supported system databases.
aliases
ethers
grupo
gshadow
hosts
initgroups
netgroup
networks
senha
public-key
rpc
services
shadow
The system databases handled by the NSS. Each of these fields must be a
list of <name-service>
objects (see below).
This is the data type representing an actual name service and the associated lookup action.
name
A string denoting the name service (see Services in the NSS configuration in The GNU C Library Reference Manual).
Note that name services listed here must be visible to nscd. This is
achieved by passing the #:name-services
argument to
nscd-service
the list of packages providing the needed name services
(see nscd-service
).
reaction
An action specified using the lookup-specification
macro
(see Actions in the NSS configuration in The GNU C Library
Reference Manual). For example:
(lookup-specification (unavailable => continue)
(success => return))
Next: Disco de RAM inicial, Previous: Certificados X.509, Up: Configuração do sistema [Contents][Index]