This requires removing also the Coq 8.3 and Matita 0.5.8 packages.
Coq 8.3 was released 8 years ago (2010) and there is no trace left
of users of this version (contrary to Coq 8.4, released 2012).
It is well over time to remove it.
Matita 0.5.8 was released in 2010 and because this version was still
used for teaching according to the official website, a legacy release
(0.5.9) was released in 5 years later to compile with more recent
OCaml libraries.
Updating to 0.5.9 (or a more recent version like 0.99.3) should allow
getting rid of the dependency on older OCaml but it is hard to test
given that the package is already broken before this update.
Before, providers were only built indirectly. Since proviers don't
depend on terraform to build they can be moved into their own collection
of packages. This also has the advantage that they can be reached
directly using an attribute path (Eg: terraform-providers.nixos).
Co-authored-by: Wael Nasreddine <wael.nasreddine@gmail.com>
morituri has been dead for a while now and uses gst-python which is
no longer supported wth Python 2. whipper is a maintained fork,
packaged, for example, in Arch.
This aims to make the `weechat` package even more configurable. It
allows to specify scripts and commands using the `configure` function
inside a `weechat.override` expression.
The package can be configured like this:
```
with import <nixpkgs> { };
weechat.override {
plugins = { availablePlugins, ... }: {
plugins = builtins.attrValues availablePlugins;
init = ''
/set foo bar
/server add freenode chat.freenode.org
'';
scripts = [ "/path/to/script.py" ];
};
}
```
All commands are passed to `weechat --run-command "/set foo bar;/server ..."`.
The `plugins' attribute is not necessarily required anymore, if it's
sufficient to add `init' commands, the `plugins' will be
`builtins.attrValues availablePlugins' by default.
Additionally the result contains `weechat` and `weechat-headless`
(introduced in WeeChat 2.1) now.
This reverts commit 0b124c1e91. We
should really stop adding things that are not packages to
all-packages.nix. For example, having nixos-rebuild.nix in
all-packages.nix causes 'nix-env -qa' to evaluate a NixOS
configuration, which obviously is not good for performance. (We should
probably also remove the 'nixos' attribute from all-packages.nix, but
at least that's a function so nix-env will ignore it.)
* mpich2 -> mpich
* remove slurm dependency
* use most recent gfortran
* turn enableParallelBulding on
* ensure mpi[cc,cxx,fort] uses default compilers it was built with
This makes the command ‘nix-env -qa -f. --arg config '{skipAliases =
true;}'’ work in Nixpkgs.
Misc...
- qtikz: use libsForQt5.callPackage
This ensures we get the right poppler.
- rewrites:
docbook5_xsl -> docbook_xsl_ns
docbook_xml_xslt -> docbook_xsl
diffpdf: fixup
I am reverting two name changes that might not be a good idea:
- gnum4 → m4
- apacheAnt → ant
These are debatable changes & not sure what’s best. I prefered the
short version because there are not alternatives- but will not hold
off for now.
If an alias is already defined in all-packages.nix, we want to throw
an error to make it obvious that something is wrong. Otherwise there
is no way to realize that the alias is shadowing the real definition.
I still feel weird about doing this because it seems a little hacky
but this was requested by @Mic92 and seems understandable to not want
to mix up libressl outputs with netcat stuff.
The `tex-gyre-*-math` fonts are moved to the `tex-gyre-math` set for consistency
with `tex-gyre` and to allow them to be easily installed together. Aliases are
created for backwards-compatibility.
Currently broken on NixOS due to hardcoded modprobe binary path (see
bug #30756 from Oct 2017), no activity on a proposed fix for months.
As the protocol is terribly broken anyways, let's better remove it
completely, and not talk about anymore ;-)
Closes#30756.
These (outdated) derivations are only used by nixos/lib/testing.nix.
If we want to provide jquery & jquery-ui packages this is better done
in nodePackages.
* remove EOL ruby versions for security and maintenance reasons.
* only expose ruby_MAJOR_MINOR to the top-level. we don't provide
guarantees for the TINY version.
* mark all related packages as broken
* switch the default ruby version from 2.3.x to 2.4.x
This can be disabled with the `withKerberos` flag if desired.
Make the relevant assertions lazy,
so that if an overlay is used to set kerberos to null,
a later override can explicitly set `withKerberos` to false.
Don't build with GSSAPI by default;
the patchset is large and a bit hairy,
and it is reasonable to follow upstream who has not merged it
in not enabling it by default.
This can be disabled with the `withKerberos` flag if desired.
Make the relevant assertions lazy,
so that if an overlay is used to set kerberos to null,
a later override can explicitly set `withKerberos` to false.
Don't build with GSSAPI by default;
the patchset is large and a bit hairy,
and it is reasonable to follow upstream who has not merged it
in not enabling it by default.
- ghc versions 6.10.4, 6.12.3, and 7.2.2 are broken, and 6.10.2-binary is no
longer necessary after those versions have been dropped
- halvm version 2.4.0 hasn't compiled in a long time
- uhc version 1.1.9.4 hasn't compiled in a long time
WinUSB was renamed to WoeUSB
(https://github.com/slacka/WoeUSB/issues/100).
Also, put mount points in /run instead of /tmp to sidestep security
considerations with /tmp.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
There are separate derivations for these libraries and we don't want
conflict. Multitarget is generally more useful, and will eventually
speed up cross builds, so why not?!
postage is no longer maintained and has been replaced by the identical pgmanage. See:
https://github.com/workflowproducts/postage#postage-has-been-replaced-with-pgmanage
The following error is raised when a user enables the deprecated `services.postage.enable` option:
Failed assertions:
- services.postage is deprecated in favor of pgmanage. They have the same options so just substitute postage for pgmanage.
The biggest benefit is that we no longer have to update the registry
package. This means that just about any cargo package can be built by
nix. No longer does `cargo update` need to be feared because it will
update to packages newer then what is available in nixpkgs.
Instead of fetching the cargo registry this bundles all the source code
into a "vendor/" folder.
This also uses the new --frozen and --locked flags which is nice.
Currently cargo-vendor only provides binaries for Linux and
macOS 64-bit. This can be solved by building it for the other
architectures and uploading it somewhere (like the NixOS cache).
This also has the downside that it requires a change to everyone's deps
hash. And if the old one is used because it was cached it will fail to
build as it will attempt to use the old version. For this reason the
attribute has been renamed to `cargoSha256`.
Authors:
* Kevin Cox <kevincox@kevincox.ca>
* Jörg Thalheim <Mic92@users.noreply.github.com>
* zimbatm <zimbatm@zimbatm.com>
- Remove single rdmd derivation and introduce new dtools derivation with more tools from the repository.
- Update rdmd/dtools 2.067.0 -> 2.075.1
- Adding checkPhase
- Fixing dependencies
- Update derivation description
Move most of wine configurations to winePackages which is not built on Hydra.
Leave two top-level packages:
wine: stable release with an "office" configuration;
wineStaging: staging release with a "full" configuration.
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.