nixpkgs/nixos/modules/security/google_oslogin.nix
2022-02-05 23:33:10 +03:00

72 lines
2.0 KiB
Nix

{ config, lib, pkgs, ... }:
with lib;
let
cfg = config.security.googleOsLogin;
package = pkgs.google-guest-oslogin;
in
{
options = {
security.googleOsLogin.enable = mkOption {
type = types.bool;
default = false;
description = ''
Whether to enable Google OS Login.
The OS Login package enables the following components:
AuthorizedKeysCommand to query valid SSH keys from the user's OS Login
profile during ssh authentication phase.
NSS Module to provide user and group information
PAM Module for the sshd service, providing authorization and
authentication support, allowing the system to use data stored in
Google Cloud IAM permissions to control both, the ability to log into
an instance, and to perform operations as root (sudo).
'';
};
};
config = mkIf cfg.enable {
security.pam.services.sshd = {
makeHomeDir = true;
googleOsLoginAccountVerification = true;
googleOsLoginAuthentication = true;
};
security.sudo.extraConfig = ''
#includedir /run/google-sudoers.d
'';
systemd.tmpfiles.rules = [
"d /run/google-sudoers.d 750 root root -"
"d /var/google-users.d 750 root root -"
];
systemd.packages = [ package ];
systemd.timers.google-oslogin-cache.wantedBy = [ "timers.target" ];
# enable the nss module, so user lookups etc. work
system.nssModules = [ package ];
system.nssDatabases.passwd = [ "cache_oslogin" "oslogin" ];
system.nssDatabases.group = [ "cache_oslogin" "oslogin" ];
# Ugly: sshd refuses to start if a store path is given because /nix/store is group-writable.
# So indirect by a symlink.
environment.etc."ssh/authorized_keys_command_google_oslogin" = {
mode = "0755";
text = ''
#!/bin/sh
exec ${package}/bin/google_authorized_keys "$@"
'';
};
services.openssh.authorizedKeysCommand = "/etc/ssh/authorized_keys_command_google_oslogin %u";
services.openssh.authorizedKeysCommandUser = "nobody";
};
}