The Bitmessage protocol v3 became mandatory on 16 Nov 2014 and notbit does not support it, nor has there been any activity in the project repository since then.
Part of the way towards #11864. We still don't have the auditd
userland logging daemon, but journald also tracks audit logs so we
can already use this.
* Patched fish to load /etc/fish/config.fish if it exists (by default,
it only loads config relative to itself)
* Added fish-foreign-env package to parse the system environment
closes#5331
Adds a new service module for shairport-sync. Tested with a local
and remote pulseaudio server. Needs to be run as a user in the pulse group
to access pulseaudio.
This new service invokes `simp_le` for a defined set of certs on a regular
basis with a systemd timer. `simp_le` is smart enough to handle account
registration, domain validation and renewal on its own. The only thing
required is an existing HTTP server that serves the path
`/.well-known/acme-challenge` from the webroot cert parameter.
Example:
services.simp_le.certs."foo.example.com" = {
webroot = "/var/www/challenges";
extraDomains = [ "www.example.com" ];
email = "foo@example.com";
validMin = 2592000;
renewInterval = "weekly";
};
Example Nginx vhost:
services.nginx.appendConfig = ''
http {
server {
server_name _;
listen 80;
listen [::]:80;
location /.well-known/acme-challenge {
root /var/www/challenges;
}
location / {
return 301 https://$host$request_uri;
}
}
}
'';
This module implements a way to start one or more bepasty servers.
It supports configuring the listen address of gunicorn and how bepasty
behaves internally.
Configuring multiple bepasty servers provides a way to serve pastes externally
without authentication and provide creating,listing,deleting pastes interally.
nginx can be used to provide access via hostname + listen address.
`configuration.nix`:
services.bepasty = {
enable = true;
servers = {
internal = {
defaultPermissions = "admin,list,create,read,delete";
secretKey = "secret";
bind = "127.0.0.1:8000";
};
external = {
defaultPermissions = "read";
bind = "127.0.0.1:8001";
secretKey = "another-secret";
};
};
};
This option allows to define (declarative) Jenkins jobs, using Jenkins
Job Builder (JJB) as backend.
Example:
services.jenkins = {
enable = true;
jobBuilder = {
enable = true;
yamlJobs = ''
- job:
name: jenkins-job-test
builders:
- shell: echo 'Hello world!'
'';
};
};
Jobs can be defined using YAML, JSON and Nix.
Note that it really is declarative configuration; if you remove a
previously defined job, the module will remove the jobdir under
$JENKINS_HOME.
Jobs managed through the Jenkins WebUI (or by other means) are not
touched by this module.
Changes v1 -> v2:
* add nixJobs
* let jsonJobs take a list of strings (allows merge)
* 4 space indent in shell code
`man 1 info` says:
The first non-option argument, if present, is the menu entry to
start from; it is searched for in all `dir' files along INFOPATH.
If it is not present, info merges all `dir' files and shows the
result. Any remaining arguments are treated as the names of menu
items relative to the initial node visited.
Which means that this does what previous programs/info did and #8519
(on-the-fly infodir generation for Emacs) wanted to do, but for both
programs.
This provides support for Ubuntu Fan Networking [1].
This includes:
* The fanctl package, and a corresponding NixOS service.
* iproute patches.
* kernel patches.
closes#9188
1: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/FanNetworking
In 14f09e0, I've introduced the module under modules/programs, because
the legacy virtualbox.nix was also under that path. But because we
already have modules/virtualisation/virtualbox-guest.nix, it really
makes sense to put this module alongside of it as well.
This module thus has no change in functionality and I've tested
evaluation against nixos/tests/virtualbox.nix and the manual.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
This module generates a /boot/extlinux/extlinux.conf bootloader
configuration file that is supported by e.g. U-Boot:
http://git.denx.de/?p=u-boot.git;a=blob;f=doc/README.distro;hb=refs/heads/master
With this, all ARM boards supported by U-Boot can be booted in a common
way (a single boot file generator, all boards booting via initrd like
x86) and with same boot menu functionality as GRUB has.
-- sample extlinux.conf file --
# Generated file, all changes will be lost on nixos-rebuild!
# Change this to e.g. nixos-42 to temporarily boot to an older configuration.
DEFAULT nixos-default
TIMEOUT 50
LABEL nixos-default
MENU LABEL NixOS - Default
LINUX ../nixos/n7vxfk60nb5h0mcbhkwwxhcz2q2nvxzv-linux-4.1.0-rc3-cpufreq-zImage
INITRD ../nixos/0ss2zs8sb6d1qn4gblxpwlxkfjsgs5f0-initrd-initrd
FDTDIR ../nixos/n7vxfk60nb5h0mcbhkwwxhcz2q2nvxzv-linux-4.1.0-rc3-cpufreq-dtbs
APPEND systemConfig=/nix/store/469qvr43ln8bfsnk5lzcz6m6jfcgdd4r-nixos-15.06.git.0b7a7a6M init=/nix/store/469qvr43ln8bfsnk5lzcz6m6jfcgdd4r-nixos-15.06.git.0b7a7a6M/init loglevel=8 console=ttyS0,115200n8 drm.debug=0xf
LABEL nixos-71
MENU LABEL NixOS - Configuration 71 (2015-05-17 21:32 - 15.06.git.0b7a7a6M)
LINUX ../nixos/n7vxfk60nb5h0mcbhkwwxhcz2q2nvxzv-linux-4.1.0-rc3-cpufreq-zImage
INITRD ../nixos/0ss2zs8sb6d1qn4gblxpwlxkfjsgs5f0-initrd-initrd
FDTDIR ../nixos/n7vxfk60nb5h0mcbhkwwxhcz2q2nvxzv-linux-4.1.0-rc3-cpufreq-dtbs
APPEND systemConfig=/nix/store/469qvr43ln8bfsnk5lzcz6m6jfcgdd4r-nixos-15.06.git.0b7a7a6M init=/nix/store/469qvr43ln8bfsnk5lzcz6m6jfcgdd4r-nixos-15.06.git.0b7a7a6M/init loglevel=8 console=ttyS0,115200n8 drm.debug=0xf
This is essentially what's been done for the official NixOS build slaves
and I'm using it as well for a few of my machines and my own Hydra
slaves.
Here's the same implementation from the Delft server configurations:
f47c2fc7f8/delft/common.nix (L91-L101)
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
I had to make several adjustments to make it work with nixos:
* Replace relative config file lookups with ENV variable.
* Modify gitlab-shell to not clear then environment when running
pre-receive.
* Modify gitlab-shell to write some environment variables into
the .authorized_keys file to make sure gitlab-shell reads the
correct config file.
* Log unicorn output to syslog.
I tried various ways of adding a syslog package but the bundler would
not pick them up. Please fix in a better way if possible.
* Gitlab-runner program wrapper.
This is useful to run e.g. backups etc. with the correct
environment set up.
Details:
* The option `fonts.fontconfig.ultimate.enable` can be used to disable
the fontconfig-ultimate configuration.
* The user-configurable options provided by fontconfig-ultimate are
exposed in the NixOS module: `allowBitmaps` (default: true),
`allowType1` (default: false), `useEmbeddedBitmaps` (default: false),
`forceAutohint` (default: false), `renderMonoTTFAsBitmap` (default:
false).
* Upstream provides three substitution modes for substituting TrueType
fonts for Type 1 fonts (which do not render well). The default,
"free", substitutes free fonts for Type 1 fonts. The option "ms"
substitutions Microsoft fonts for Type 1 fonts. The option "combi"
uses a combination of Microsoft and free fonts. Substitutions can also
be disabled.
* All 21 of the Infinality rendering modes supported by fontconfig-ultimate
or by the original Infinality distribution can be selected through
`fonts.fontconfig.ultimate.rendering`. The default is the medium style
provided by fontconfig-ultimate. Any of the modes may be customized,
or Infinality rendering can be disabled entirely.
'torify' now ships with the tor bundle itself; and using torsocks is
recommended over tsocks (torify will use torsocks automatically.)
Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
We will simply rename the previous module and add a warning whenever the
module is included directly, pointing the user to the right option and
also enable it as well (in case somebody has missed the option and is
wondering why VirtualBox doesn't work anymore).
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>