This update was generated by hackage2nix v20151217-6-g3c230ba using the following inputs:
- Nixpkgs: b05b64ed59
- Hackage: ce76547c84
- LTS Haskell: 87e2d54643
- Stackage Nightly: 392791fc31
This is a major closure size reduction on Darwin, and probably a less
significant one on Linux. On darwin, retaining the compiler means adding
clang and its dependency llvm to the perl closure, which gives us ~400MB
of extra stuff. Considering that Nix itself depends on this version of
perl, that makes cutting a new Nix release rather unpleasaont Darwin.
After this patch, I was able to get the `nixUnstable` closure down to
21MB after feeding it into a .tar.xz (123MB before compression). There's
still room for improvement but this should carry us over until we split
outputs.
‘When upgrading to 0.29.0 you need to upgrade client as well as server
installations due to the locking and commandline interface changes
otherwise you’ll get an error msg about a RPC protocol mismatch or a
wrong commandline option. if you run a server that needs to support both
old and new clients, it is suggested that you have a “borg-0.28.2” and a
“borg-0.29.0” command. clients then can choose via e.g. “borg
–remote-path=borg-0.29.0 ...”.’
‘The default waiting time for a lock changed from infinity to 1 second
for a better interactive user experience. if the repo you want to access
is currently locked, borg will now terminate after 1s with an error
message. if you have scripts that shall wait for the lock for a longer
time, use –lock-wait N (with N being the maximum wait time in seconds).’
All changes: http://borgbackup.readthedocs.org/en/stable/changes.html
Last bumped Feb 2012. Broken since 2013. Upstream conflicted about whether
it's dead or not. Visited the (read-only) forums which are 93% teenagers
yelling how something called BeamNG is(n't) better so I regret that now.
Add Twisted as build input so that we can continue to have Python
support. (./configure disables Python support unless it finds the
'trial' program, from Twisted.) I don't know whether upstream intended
that, because it seems perfectly fine to run thrift + Python without
Twisted. (Only the TTwisted transport uses Twisted...)
Ah, Thrift use Twisted in its unit tests. Even when we pass
--enable-tests=no to ./configure :-D