#!/bin/sh set -ex # provided by nix init="@init@" kernelParams="@kernelParams@" SCRIPT_DIR=$(dirname "$(readlink -f "$0")") INITRD_TMP=$(TMPDIR=$SCRIPT_DIR mktemp -d) cd "$INITRD_TMP" cleanup() { rm -rf "$INITRD_TMP" } trap cleanup EXIT mkdir -p ssh extractPubKeys() { home="$1" for file in .ssh/authorized_keys .ssh/authorized_keys2; do key="$home/$file" if test -e "$key"; then # workaround for debian shenanigans grep -o '\(\(ssh\|ecdsa\|sk\)-[^ ]* .*\)' "$key" >> ssh/authorized_keys || true fi done } extractPubKeys /root if test -n "${SUDO_USER-}"; then sudo_home=$(sh -c "echo ~$SUDO_USER") extractPubKeys "$sudo_home" fi # Typically for NixOS if test -e /etc/ssh/authorized_keys.d/root; then cat /etc/ssh/authorized_keys.d/root >> ssh/authorized_keys fi if test -n "${SUDO_USER-}" && test -e "/etc/ssh/authorized_keys.d/$SUDO_USER"; then cat "/etc/ssh/authorized_keys.d/$SUDO_USER" >> ssh/authorized_keys fi for p in /etc/ssh/ssh_host_*; do test -e "$p" || continue cp -a "$p" ssh done # save the networking config for later use "$SCRIPT_DIR/ip" --json addr > addrs.json "$SCRIPT_DIR/ip" -4 --json route > routes-v4.json "$SCRIPT_DIR/ip" -6 --json route > routes-v6.json [ -f /etc/machine-id ] && cp /etc/machine-id machine-id find . | cpio -o -H newc | gzip -9 >> "$SCRIPT_DIR/initrd" kexecSyscallFlags="" # only do kexec-syscall-auto on kernels newer than 6.0. # On older kernel we often get errors like: https://github.com/nix-community/nixos-anywhere/issues/264 if ! printf "%s\n" "6.1" "$(uname -r)" | sort -c -V; then kexecSyscallFlags="--kexec-syscall-auto" fi if ! "$SCRIPT_DIR/kexec" --load "$SCRIPT_DIR/bzImage" \ "$kexecSyscallFlags" \ --initrd="$SCRIPT_DIR/initrd" --no-checks \ --command-line "init=$init $kernelParams"; then echo "kexec failed, dumping dmesg" dmesg | tail -n 100 exit 1 fi # Disconnect our background kexec from the terminal echo "machine will boot into nixos in 6s..." if test -e /dev/kmsg; then # this makes logging visible in `dmesg`, or the system console or tools like journald exec > /dev/kmsg 2>&1 else exec > /dev/null 2>&1 fi # We will kexec in background so we can cleanly finish the script before the hosts go down. # This makes integration with tools like terraform easier. nohup sh -c "sleep 6 && '$SCRIPT_DIR/kexec' -e" &