This was caused by multiple things: First, the module-path was wrong in
the release. Second, when modules tried to load stumpwm, asdf searched
for its sources in /tmp/nix-build-*.
Both of these issues are fixed by a nix-specific patch that tells adsf
to *never* try to load stumpwm (and others) from the filesystem. This is
fine as those modules are already available in the image anyway.
We also refactor some stuff & clean up the build. Stumpish works now
too.
Upstream changelog:
* GUI: in the snapshots pane, protect the age of snapshots against
wrong host time
* NAT Network: fixed a bug which prevented to propagate any DNS name
server / domain / search string information to the NAT
network (4.3.24 regression)
* NAT Network: don't delay the shutdown of VBoxSVC on Windows hosts
* Mouse support: the mouse could not be moved under rare conditions if
no Guest Additions are installed (4.3.24 regression)
* Storage: if the guest ejects a virtual CD/DVD medium, make the change
permanent
* VGA: made saving secondary screen sizes possible in X11 guests
* SDK: fixed the VirtualBox.tlb file (4.3.20 regression)
* rdesktop-vrdp: make it work with USB devices again (4.3.14
regression)
* USB: fixed a possible BSOD on Windows hosts under rare conditions
* iPXE: enable the HTTP download protocol on non-Linux hosts
* Mac OS X hosts: don't panic on hosts with activated SMAP (Broadwell
and later)
* Linux hosts: don't crash Linux 4.0 hosts
The same with bug IDs can be found at:
https://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Changelog
Tested on my machine using the virtualbox NixOS VM test.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
This is espacially cruicial when it comes to Nix 1.9, where we even have
a more restrictive /nix/store. In any event, VirtualBox in hardenend
mode doesn't have to check the /nix/store path, because it's read-only
on NixOS systems. So this check would not introduce more security but
more hurdles, thus I'm removing it (of course _only_ for /nix/store).
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
This is a web browser plugin that allows one to use their Garmin device
on the myGarmin website. It provides a Linux version of the Garmin
Communicator plugin.
The autoconf build system for poppler does not support building the
wrappers separately, so this slightly enlarges the size of closures. To
compensate, the command-line utilities have been separated into their
own package.