While looking at the sphinx package I noticed it was heavily
undermaintained, which is when we noticed nand0p has been inactive for
roughly 18 months. It is therefore prudent to assume they will not be
maintaining their packages, modules and tests.
- Their last contribution to nixpkgs was in 2019/12
- On 2021/05/08 I wrote them an email to the address listed in the
maintainer-list, which they didn't reply to.
Most programs already run natively under Wayland so extraSessionCommands
isn't as important anymore. XWayland is already covered by
"programs.xwayland.enable = mkDefault true;" in the module.
This should make it easier to get started.
The xdg-desktop-portal backend for wlroots is required and one needs to
"make sure WAYLAND_DISPLAY and XDG_CURRENT_DESKTOP are imported into
D-Bus." [0]
[0]: efcbcb60aa/README.md (running)
This reverts commit 6f6b2cdc98.
Version wasn't updated, and apparently a patch didn't apply. Let's do
this upgrade properly, in a PR, but for now I'm reverting so we don't
have a broken nix package in master.
Both networking.nat.enable and virtualisation.docker.enable now want to
make sure that the IP forwarding sysctl is enabled, but the module
system dislikes that both modules contain this option.
Realistically this should be refactored a bit, so that the Docker module
automatically enables the NAT module instead, but this is a more obvious
fix.
The default config.in template contains
"include @sysconfdir@/sway/config.d/*" but we've dropped it to better
support non-NixOS (which seems like a mistake in retrospect).
This restores that behaviour and extends the default configuration via
nixos.conf to fix#119445.
Note: The security configurations (security.d) where dropped entirely
(but maybe they'll return).
* add an example for services.tor.settings.HidServAuth
* fix HidServAuth validation to require ".onion"
Per https://manpages.debian.org/testing/tor/torrc.5.en.html :
> Valid onion addresses contain 16 characters in a-z2-7 plus ".onion"
ssm-agent expects files in /etc/amazon/ssm. The pkg substitutes a location in
the nix store for those default files, but if we ever want to adjust this
configuration on NixOS, we'd need the ability to modify that file.
This change to the nixos module writes copies of the default files from the nix
store to /etc/amazon/ssm. Future versions can add config, but right now this
would allow users to at least write out a text value to
environment.etc."amazon/ssm/amazon-ssm-agent.json".text to provide
their own config.