* origin/staging-next: (62 commits)
Re-Revert "lua: fix on darwin by using makeBinaryWrapper (#172749)"
openldap: fix cross-compilation
makeBinaryWrapper: fix codesign on aarch64-darwin
python3Packages.ldap: fix linking with openldap 2.5+
Revert "lua: fix on darwin by using makeBinaryWrapper (#172749)"
wine: enable parallel build again
pkgsi686Linux.gdb: fix formatting for 32-bit systems
gtk4: Fix incorrect merge
nixos/openldap: use upstream unit defaults
openldap: update maintainers
openldap: 2.4.58 -> 2.6.2
Revert "Add mingwW64-llvm cross-system."
lua: fix on darwin by using makeBinaryWrapper (#172749)
python310Packages.python-mimeparse: execute tests
pandas: fix darwin build
gtk3: 3.24.33 -> 3.24.33-2022-03-11
gtk4: patch fixing g-c-c crashes
e2fsprogs: patch for CVE-2022-1304
firefox-unwrapped: fix cross compilation
rustc: expose correct llvmPackages for cross compile
...
Since the list only gates the platforms the nixpkgs flake exposes
packages to build on, the `hydra` label made little sense. It was also
only used for this purpose, so the `tier*` attributes were largely
unnecessary.
To reflect the intention more accurately, we expose
`lib.systems.flakeExposed` and use it to gate flake.nix's system list.
Otherwise, it wouldn't get restarted when a new system configuration
was activatad, so the Postfix configuration wouldn't be updated.
Fixes: fb2fa1b50f ("nixos/postfix: pull setup into its own unit")
There is a comment above the invocation of 'nextcloud-occ app:enable', stating
that the script should not fail if any of the apps cannot be enabled, but there
is nothing in place to suppress errors. The app:enable command already
continues installing the remaining apps when one fails to install, and we do not
want to suppress errors in the setup script, so this just removes the comment
about not failing.
* Removed unused `.package`-option.
* Added explicit postgresql support.
* Create a new meta-package for mailman to make sure each component has
the **same** python and packages can be downgraded if needed (e.g.
psycopg2 or sqlalchemy) without interfering with `pythonPackages` in any way.
* Document why certain python overrides are needed.
Closes#170035Closes#158424
OpenLDAP since version 2.5.4¹ supports sd_notify, so we should make use
of it.
Also updates the unit description and documentation with the values
upstream provides.
Starts slapd only after reaching `network-online.target`, which ensures
binding to specific ip addresses is possible, since `network.target`
only guarantees interfaces exist, but not that addressing is finished.
[1] https://bugs.openldap.org/show_bug.cgi?id=8707
switchboard-plug-power is providing support for this since 2.7.0.
Note that we don't handle the conflict with tlp because we have
no way of knowing which way a user wants to resolve the conflict.
A git command was failing in the test with
error: unable to get random bytes for temporary file: Operation not permitted
error: unable to create temporary file: Operation not permitted
error: .Radicale.lock: failed to insert into database
error: unable to index file '.Radicale.lock'
Recent `wrapGAppsHook` change stops `adwaita-icon-theme` from being added to `XDG_DATA_DIRS`:
b1e73fa2e0
Since `display-manager.service` does not have `/run/current-system/sw/share` in `XDG_DATA_DIRS`, it does not pick up the globally installed icon theme either, preventing icons from showing.
Let’s make Adwaita available to fix that for now.
Fixes: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/171692
Account for all `with*` options causing their respective unit files to
not be built, just like the current code `withCryptsetup` already does.
This fixes build errors like the following:
```
missing /nix/store/5fafsfms64fn3ywv274ky7arhm9yq2if-systemd-250.4/example/systemd/system/systemd-importd.service
error: builder for '/nix/store/67rdli5q5akzwmqgf8q0a1yp76jgr0px-system-units.drv' failed with exit code 1
```
Found by using a customised systemd package as follows:
```
systemd.package = pkgs.systemd-small;
nixpkgs.config.packageOverrides = pkgs: {
"systemd-small" = pkgs.systemd.override {
withImportd = false;
withMachined = false;
...
};
};
```
verbose is a debugging setting one step noisier than debug and should only be turned on when debugging because it leaks quite some credentials and tokens in the journalctl.
we expose it under settings instead of at the listener toplevel because
mosquitto seems to pick the addresses it will listen on
nondeterministically from the set of addresses configured on the
interface being bound to. encouraging its use by putting it into the
toplevel options for a listener seems inadvisable.
The old attribute is deprecated:
trace: warning: In test `chromium-stable': The `machine' attribute in NixOS
tests (pkgs.nixosTest / make-test-pyton.nix / testing-python.nix / makeTest) is
deprecated. Please use the equivalent `nodes.machine'.
Note: This is only a refactoring.
* Add an option services.nextcloud.nginx.hstsMaxAge for setting the max-age
directive of the Strict-Transport-Security HTTP header.
* Make the Strict-Transport-Security HTTP header in the Nginx virtualhost block
dependant upon the option services.nextcloud.https instead of
services.nextcloud.nginx.recommendedHttpHeaders, as this header makes no sense
when not using HTTPS. (Closes#169465)
This should be a significant disk space saving for most NixOS
installations. This method is a bit more complicated than doing it in
the postInstall for the firmware derivations, but this way it's
automatic, so each firmware package doesn't have to separately
implement its compression.
Currently, only xz compression is supported, but it's likely that
future versions of Linux will additionally support zstd, so I've
written the code in such a way that it would be very easy to implement
zstd compression for those kernels when they arrive, falling back to
xz for older (current) kernels.
I chose the highest possible level of compression (xz -9) because even
at this level, decompression time is negligible. Here's how long it took
to decompress every firmware file my laptop uses:
i915/kbl_dmc_ver1_04.bin 2ms
regulatory.db 4ms
regulatory.db.p7s 3ms
iwlwifi-7265D-29.ucode 62ms
9d71-GOOGLE-EVEMAX-0-tplg.bin 22ms
intel/dsp_fw_kbl.bin 65ms
dsp_lib_dsm_core_spt_release.bin 6ms
intel/ibt-hw-37.8.10-fw-22.50.19.14.f.bseq 7ms
And since booting NixOS is a parallel process, it's unlikely (but
difficult to measure) that the time to user interaction was held up at
all by most of these.
Fixes (partially?) #148197