For some reason, between Linux 4.4.19 and 4.4.20, the atkbd and libps2
kernel modules lost their dependency on i8042 in modules.dep, causing
i8042 not to be included in the initrd. This breaks keyboard in the
initrd, in turn breaking LUKS.
This only happens on the 16.03 branch; on 16.09, it appears i8042 is
pulled into the initrd anyway (through some other dependency,
presumably). But let's include it explicitly.
http://hydra.nixos.org/build/40468431
It was already ordered after systemd-udev-settle.service, but that
doesn't do anything if no other units require
systemd-udev-settle.service. This was causing random failures during X
server startup, e.g.
machine# [ 12.691372] display-manager[607]: (EE) open /dev/dri/card0: No such file or directory
http://hydra.nixos.org/build/41062823
Currently only for the user services as NixOS handles the named system
instances slightly differently.
syncthing and syncthing-inotify are done the same way.
There are 4 parts to this:
1) Copy in the upstream unit files
2) Make the nixos module use the definition from upstream
3) Enable restarting of all instances (system and user) on resume
4) Allow the traffic in the firewall on default ports if wanted
fixes#18973
Commits
351d12437 ("nixos/release-notes: PHP config-file-scan-dir /etc -> /etc/php.d")
41c8aa8d6 ("php: change config-file-scan-dir from /etc to /etc/php.d")
were merged to master _after_ NixOS 16.09. Commit 351d12437 then wrongly
updated the NixSO 16.09 release notes. Fix by moving the entry to NixOS
17.03.
The new units mirror the upstream systemd units as closely as possible.
I could not find a reason why the service would need to be restarted on
resuming from suspend, and the upstream units also do not contain such a
restriction, so I removed the `partOf = [ "post-resume.target"]`.
This fixes#19525.
This makes it easy to specify kernel patches:
boot.kernelPatches = [ pkgs.kernelPatches.ubuntu_fan_4_4 ];
To make the `boot.kernelPatches` option possible, this also makes it
easy to extend and/or modify the kernel packages within a linuxPackages
set. For example:
pkgs.linuxPackages.extend (self: super: {
kernel = super.kernel.override {
kernelPatches = super.kernel.kernelPatches ++ [
pkgs.kernelPatches.ubuntu_fan_4_4
];
};
});
Closes#15095