The manual pages for the following 4 tools where still missing:
- gpgsigs
- keyanalyze
- pgpring
- process_keys
The gpgdir script needs the gpg binary.
The 19 tools are licensed under various licenses.
Additional tools:
- gpg-key2latex
- gpgdir
- gpgwrap
This module is really hacky and the dependencies are very messy... :o
However I tried my best at testing all 19 individual tools and they
should (hopefully) all work now (apart from sendmail which can be
provided by multiple packages) :)
The code is very redundant (sorry) but imho it's easier to read and
maintain it that way.
TODO: There are some additional manual pages that could be included (I'm
too exhausted for that atm...). And there might be a lot of stuff that
could be improved in the future.
This patch restructures the expression and wrapper to minimize Nix store
references captured by the user's state directory.
The previous version would write lots of references to the Nix store into
the user's state directory, resulting in synchronization issues between
the Store and the local state directory. At best, this would cause TBB to
stop working when the version used to instantiate the local state was
garbage collected; at worst, a user would continue to use the old version
even after an upgrade.
To solve the issue, hard-code as much as possible at the Store side and
minimize the amount of stuff being copied into the local state dir.
Currently, only a few files generated at firefox startup and fontconfig
cache files end up capturing store paths; these files are simply removed
upon every startup. Otherwise, no capture should occur and the user
should always be using the TBB associated with the tor-browser wrapper
script.
To check for stale Store paths, do
`grep -Ero '/nix/store/[^/]+' ~/.local/share/tor-browser`
This command should *never* return any other store path than the one
associated with the current tor-browser wrapper script, even after an
update (assuming you've run tor-browser at least once after updating).
Deviations from this general rule are considered bugs from now on.
Note that no attempt has been made to support pluggable transports; they
are still broken with this patch (to be fixed in a follow-up patch).
User visible changes:
- Wrapper retains only environment variables required for TBB to work
- pulseaudioSupport can be toggled independently of mediaSupport (the
latter weakly implies the former).
- Store local state under $TBB_HOME. Defaults to $XDG_DATA_HOME/tor-browser
- Stop obnoxious first-run stuff (NoScript redirect, in particular)
- Set desktop item GenericName to Web Browser
Some minor enhancements:
- Disable Hydra builds
- Specify system -> source mapping to make it easier to
extend supported platforms.
This reverts commit 872770286d.
This will fix fwknop as well (should have done it like this in the first
place, where was my mind...).
Conclusion: Did something stupid... :o - I am *so incredibly sorry*,
will be way more careful (was already careful, but apparently not
enought...) next time and use nox.
Sorry @everyone and thanks @calvertvl for noticing this.
This patch was actively causing harm, because it lead to a "double prefix"
issue where the etc files were installed into $out/$out/etc instead of just
$out/etc.
Saves about 5.2 MiB.
To use geoip, add something like
```
GeoIPFile ${tor.geoip}/share/tor/geoip
GeoIPv6File ${tor.geoip}/share/tor/geoip6
```
to torrc
The 0.2.9 series is now a long-term support release, which will
receive backported security fixes until at least 2020.
tor should now build against libressl, as in
```nix
tor.override { openssl = libressl; }
```
Also re-enable the test-suite; works fine on my end.