# Home Assistant Demo {#demo-homeassistant} **This whole demo is highly insecure as all the private keys are available publicly. This is only done for convenience as it is just a demo. Do not expose the VM to the internet.** The [`flake.nix`](./flake.nix) file sets up a Home Assistant server with Self Host Blocks. There are actually 2 demos: - The `basic` demo sets up a lone Home Assistant server accessible through http. - The `ldap` demo builds on top of the `basic` demo integrating Home Assistant with a LDAP provider. This guide will show how to deploy these demos to a Virtual Machine, like showed [here](https://nixos.wiki/wiki/NixOS_modules#Developing_modules). ## Deploy to the VM {#demo-homeassistant-deploy} The demos are setup to either deploy to a VM through `nixos-rebuild` or through [Colmena](https://colmena.cli.rs). Using `nixos-rebuild` is very fast and requires less steps because it reuses your nix store. Using `colmena` is more authentic because you are deploying to a stock VM, like you would with a real machine but it needs to copy over all required store derivations so it takes a few minutes the first time. ### Deploy with nixos-rebuild {#demo-homeassistant-deploy-nixosrebuild} Assuming your current working directory is the one where this Readme file is located, the one-liner command which builds and starts the VM configured to run Self Host Blocks' Nextcloud is: ```nix rm nixos.qcow2; \ nixos-rebuild build-vm --flake .#basic \ && QEMU_NET_OPTS="hostfwd=tcp::2222-:2222,hostfwd=tcp::8080-:80" \ ./result/bin/run-nixos-vm ``` This will deploy the `basic` demo. If you want to deploy the `ldap` demo, use the `.#ldap` flake uris. You can even test the demos from any directory without cloning this repository by using the GitHub uri like `github:ibizaman/selfhostblocks?path=demo/nextcloud` It is very important to remove leftover `nixos.qcow2` files, if any. You can ssh into the VM like this, but this is not required for the demo: ```bash ssh -F ssh_config example ``` But before that works, you will need to change the permission of the ssh key like so: ```bash chmod 600 sshkey ``` This is only needed because git mangles with the permissions. You will not even see this change in `git status`. ### Deploy with Colmena {#demo-homeassitant-deploy-colmena} If you deploy with Colmena, you must first build the VM and start it: ```bash rm nixos.qcow2; \ nixos-rebuild build-vm-with-bootloader --fast -I nixos-config=./configuration.nix -I nixpkgs=. ; \ QEMU_NET_OPTS="hostfwd=tcp::2222-:2222,hostfwd=tcp::8080-:80" ./result/bin/run-nixos-vm ``` It is very important to remove leftover `nixos.qcow2` files, if any. This last call is blocking, so I advice adding a `&` at the end of the command otherwise you will need to run the rest of the commands in another terminal. With the VM started, make the secrets in `secrets.yaml` decryptable in the VM. This change will appear in `git status` but you don't need to commit this. ```bash SOPS_AGE_KEY_FILE=keys.txt \ nix run --impure nixpkgs#sops -- --config sops.yaml -r -i \ --add-age $(nix shell nixpkgs#ssh-to-age --command sh -c 'ssh-keyscan -p 2222 -t ed25519 -4 localhost 2>/dev/null | ssh-to-age') \ secrets.yaml ``` The nested command, the one in between the parenthesis `$(...)`, is used to print the VM's public age key, which is then added to the `secrets.yaml` file in order to make the secrets decryptable by the VM. If you forget this step, the deploy will seem to go fine but the secrets won't be populated and neither LLDAP nor Home Assistant will start. Make the ssh key private: ```bash chmod 600 sshkey ``` This is only needed because git mangles with the permissions. You will not even see this change in `git status`. You can ssh into the VM with, but this is not required for the demo: ```bash ssh -F ssh_config example ``` ### Home Assistant through HTTP {#demo-homeassistant-deploy-basic} Assuming you already deployed the `basic` demo, now you must add the following entry to the `/etc/hosts` file on the host machine (not the VM): ```nix networking.hosts = { "127.0.0.1" = [ "ha.example.com" ]; }; ``` Which produces: ```bash $ cat /etc/hosts 127.0.0.1 ha.example.com ``` Go to [http://ha.example.com:8080](http://ha.example.com:8080) and you will be greeted with the Home Assistant setup wizard which will allow you to create an admin user. And that's the end of the demo ### Home Assistant with LDAP through HTTP {#demo-homeassistant-deploy-ldap} Assuming you already deployed the `ldap` demo, now you must add the following entry to the `/etc/hosts` file on the host machine (not the VM): ```nix networking.hosts = { "127.0.0.1" = [ "ha.example.com" "ldap.example.com" ]; }; ``` Which produces: ```bash $ cat /etc/hosts 127.0.0.1 ha.example.com ldap.example.com ``` Go first to [http://ldap.example.com:8080](http://ldap.example.com:8080) and login with: - username: `admin` - password: the value of the field `lldap.user_password` in the `secrets.yaml` file which is `fccb94f0f64bddfe299c81410096499a`. Create the group `homeassistant_user` and a user assigned to that group. Go to [http://ha.example.com:8080](http://ha.example.com:8080) and login with the user and password you just created above. ## In More Details {#demo-homeassistant-in-more-details} ### Files {#demo-homeassistant-files} - [`flake.nix`](./flake.nix): nix entry point, defines one target host for [colmena](https://colmena.cli.rs) to deploy to as well as the selfhostblock's config for setting up the home assistant server paired with the LDAP server. - [`configuration.nix`](./configuration.nix): defines all configuration required for colmena to deploy to the VM. The file has comments if you're interested. - [`hardware-configuration.nix`](./hardware-configuration.nix): defines VM specific layout. This was generated with nixos-generate-config on the VM. - Secrets related files: - [`keys.txt`](./keys.txt): your private key for sops-nix, allows you to edit the `secrets.yaml` file. This file should never be published but here I did it for convenience, to be able to deploy to the VM in less steps. - [`secrets.yaml`](./secrets.yaml): encrypted file containing required secrets for Home Assistant and the LDAP server. This file can be publicly accessible. - [`sops.yaml`](./sops.yaml): describes how to create the `secrets.yaml` file. Can be publicly accessible. - SSH related files: - [`sshkey(.pub)`](./sshkey): your private and public ssh keys. Again, the private key should usually not be published as it is here but this makes it possible to deploy to the VM in less steps. - [`ssh_config`](./ssh_config): the ssh config allowing you to ssh into the VM by just using the hostname `example`. Usually you would store this info in your `~/.ssh/config` file but it's provided here to avoid making you do that. ### Virtual Machine {#demo-homeassistant-virtual-machine} _More info about the VM._ We use `build-vm-with-bootloader` instead of just `build-vm` as that's the only way to deploy to the VM. The VM's User and password are both `nixos`, as setup in the [`configuration.nix`](./configuration.nix) file under `user.users.nixos.initialPassword`. You can login with `ssh -F ssh_config example`. You just need to accept the fingerprint. The VM's hard drive is a file name `nixos.qcow2` in this directory. It is created when you first create the VM and re-used since. You can just remove it when you're done. That being said, the VM uses `tmpfs` to create the writable nix store so if you stumble in a disk space issue, you must increase the `virtualisation.vmVariantWithBootLoader.virtualisation.memorySize` setting. ### Secrets {#demo-homeassistant-secrets} _More info about the secrets can be found in the [Usage](https://shb.skarabox.com/usage.html) manual_ To open the `secrets.yaml` file and optionnally edit it, run: ```bash SOPS_AGE_KEY_FILE=keys.txt nix run --impure nixpkgs#sops -- \ --config sops.yaml \ secrets.yaml ``` The `secrets.yaml` file must follow the format: ```yaml home-assistant: | name: "My Instance" country: "US" latitude_home: "0.100" longitude_home: "-0.100" time_zone: "America/Los_Angeles" unit_system: "metric" lldap: user_password: XXX... jwt_secret: YYY... ``` > Important: the value of the `home-assistant` field is a string that looks like yaml. Do _not_ > remove the pipe (|) sign. You can generate random secrets with: ```bash $ nix run nixpkgs#openssl -- rand -hex 64 ``` If you choose a password too small, some services could refuse to start. #### Why do we need the VM's public key {#demo-homeassistant-tips-public-key-necessity} The [`sops.yaml`](./sops.yaml) file describes what private keys can decrypt and encrypt the [`secrets.yaml`](./secrets.yaml) file containing the application secrets. Usually, you will create and add secrets to that file and when deploying, it will be decrypted and the secrets will be copied in the `/run/secrets` folder on the VM. We thus need one private key for you to edit the [`secrets.yaml`](./secrets.yaml) file and one in the VM for it to decrypt the secrets. Your private key is already pre-generated in this repo, it's the [`sshkey`](./sshkey) file. But when creating the VM for Colmena, a new private key and its accompanying public key were automatically generated under `/etc/ssh/ssh_host_ed25519_key` in the VM. We just need to get the public key and add it to the `secrets.yaml` which we did in the Deploy section. ### SSH {#demo-homeassistant-tips-ssh} The private and public ssh keys were created with: ```bash ssh-keygen -t ed25519 -f sshkey ``` You don't need to copy over the ssh public key over to the VM as we set the `keyFiles` option which copies the public key when the VM gets created. This allows us also to disable ssh password authentication. For reference, if instead you didn't copy the key over on VM creating and enabled ssh authentication, here is what you would need to do to copy over the key: ```bash nix shell nixpkgs#openssh --command ssh-copy-id -i sshkey -F ssh_config example ``` ### Deploy {#demo-homeassistant-tips-deploy} If you get a NAR hash mismatch error like hereunder, you need to run `nix flake lock --update-input selfhostblocks`. ``` error: NAR hash mismatch in input ... ``` ### Update Demo {#demo-homeassistant-tips-update-demo} If you update the Self Host Blocks configuration in `flake.nix` file, you can just re-deploy. If you update the `configuration.nix` file, you will need to rebuild the VM from scratch. If you update a module in the Self Host Blocks repository, you will need to update the lock file with: ```bash nix flake lock --override-input selfhostblocks ../.. --update-input selfhostblocks ```