If a configuration does not use services that depend on the
stateVersion, it does not need to be set.
This provides an incentive for services not to rely on
stateVersion, and not to burden users with this.
Invoke `install` separately for each directory to get ownership right --
i.e. not always owned by root. When owned by root, user sessions break
as no user processes are allowed to create directores there. On normal
systems the directories already exist, but in clean environments / NixOS
test VMs, the bug shows.
Before:
$ namei -l /home/user1/.cache/borg
f: /home/user1/.cache/borg
drwxr-xr-x root root /
drwxr-xr-x root root home
drwx------ user1 users user1
drwxr-xr-x root root .cache
drwxr-xr-x user1 users borg
After:
$ namei -l /home/user1/.cache/borg
f: /home/user1/.cache/borg
drwxr-xr-x root root /
drwxr-xr-x root root home
drwx------ user1 users user1
drwxr-xr-x user1 users .cache
drwxr-xr-x user1 users borg
See the discussion starting here:
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/206951#issuecomment-1364760917
The `darwin.builder` derivation had a gratuitous dependency
on the current Nixpkgs revision due to
`config.system.nixos.revision`. Setting the revision explicitly
to null fixes this problem and prevents the derivation from being
rebuilt on every change to Nixpkgs.
This adds a new ``parallelShutdown`` option that allows users to control
how many guests can be shut down concurrently. Allowing multiple virtual
machines to be shut down at the same time reduces the amount of time it
takes to reboot the host.
Upstream documentation: https://www.libvirt.org/manpages/libvirt-guests.html#files
When the option list is empty, the fstab generator does not
automatically add "defaults" and generates a non-working fstab (since it
just emits two spaces around where the options would have been which is
only technically one fstab separator).
The `freeformType` of `settings.publicinbox` in this module prevented
users from setting settings on the `publicinbox` section itself (which
is necessary for making e.g. IMAP work correctly), and only allowed
configuration of nested per-inbox sections.
In general I believe that these overly specific types which are
traditional in NixOS, and this kind of config generation, are a huge
footgun. This commit is the least invasive change that makes the
module work correctly.
This brings back the ability to e.g. configure sane-airscan with
`environment.etc."sane.d/airscan.conf".text = ...`.
(AFAICT, sane-airscan loads all config files it finds, so it'll first
load the one from the nixos hardware.sane.* configuration, then the user
specified one in /etc/sane.d/airscan.conf.)
Fixes: 4fbec87a5b ("nixos/sane: point env vars to /etc for quick reload")
Fixes https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/207262
- Extensive documentation in NixOS manual
- Deterministic mode that fixes various identifiers relative to disk
partitions and filesystems in ext4 case
- UEFI variable recording
When test-input-reader runs, it's standard input exists and will
be buffered, so by the time the file exists, the standard input
can already be written to.
I have no reason to believe that a terminal emulator would start
accepting input _after_ launching the command.
I've tested this for hours in a loop without a single failure or
timeout.
See: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/108984#issuecomment-1364263324
Before this change the supported platforms were unspecified, so
it would default to being only built on `x86_64-linux`. This
fixes that so that hydra.nixos.org builds and caches the Darwin
build products instead
This commit upgrades headscale to the newest version, 0.17.0 and updates
the module with the current breaking config changes.
In addition, the module is rewritten to conform with RFC0042 to try to
prevent some drift between the module and the upstream.
A new maintainer, Misterio77, is added as maintainer.
Signed-off-by: Kristoffer Dalby <kristoffer@tailscale.com>
Co-authored-by: Gabriel Fontes <hi@m7.rs>
Co-authored-by: Geoffrey Huntley <ghuntley@ghuntley.com>
* minio: add legacy fs version 2022-10-24T18-35-07Z
This allows users to migrate their data to versions that already removed
support for the legacy fs backend.
* Update nixos/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2305.section.md
Co-authored-by: Florian Klink <flokli@flokli.de>
Support for ZFS, while desirable, is problematic with newer kernel
releases. The stable ZFS release seldom supports the current newest
kernel version, and this makes the new_kernel image basically useless as
it cannot be published, and is not often built with new kernel releases.
This uses a dirty workaround to work around the fact it is impossible to
remove a list item from a modules system list type. Since ZFS support is
conditional to being supported on the current platform, we can fake ZFS
not being supported *for the no-zfs build only*. This overlay is only
added when evaluating the image, nothing else.
Support for ZFS, while desirable, is problematic with newer kernel
releases. The stable ZFS release seldom supports the current newest
kernel version, and this makes the new_kernel iso basically useless as
it cannot be published, and is not often built with new kernel releases.
This uses a dirty workaround to work around the fact it is impossible to
remove a list item from a modules system list type. Since ZFS support is
conditional to being supported on the current platform, we can fake ZFS
not being supported *for the no-zfs build only*. This overlay is only
added when evaluating the iso, nothing else.