Reverts 7c7c83e233 which was
only needed for the minimal-kernel.nix test module and clutters the call site.
stdenv can still be overridden with `linuxManualConfig.override { stdenv = ...; }`.
Now that we actually do cleanups for 22.11, it's a good time to
drop these tombstones from before 22.05. For dropped kernel attributes
one NixOS release is IMHO enough as a grace period.
Support will be dropped on 01 Jan 2023[1]. Normally we'd keep it around
until then, but considering that it's an LTS kernel it may be better to
do it before 22.11 to make sure there are no unpleasant surprises.
Closes#199933
[1] https://endoflife.date/linux
Multipath tcp (mptcp) is now part of the official linux kernel. The
official kernel still lacks features compared to this out of tree ones
but considering the userbase, I dont see any compelling reason.
I keep using that kernel and those utilities so they will stay packaged
at https://github.com/teto/mptcp-flake where they wont annoy the whole
nixpkgs crowd that doesn't care about it.
nvidia_x11_open: unbreak 5.19
common kernel code is shared, if the closed build is broken, so is the open one.
nvidia_x11_production: add alias, sort names
nvidia_x11: reintroduce stable as a pure alias
nvidia_x11: don't use alias in override
Support for 7360 got enabled via iosm in mainline kernel:
1f52d7b622
There's few reason to still ship this out-of-tree kernel module, which
broke whenever the laptop was suspended anyways.
Install Parallel Tools updated for version 17 of Parallels for macOS. This
fixes clipboard sharing, so that copy and paste works between the host
macOS and the guest NixOS VM. Support for guests on M1 Apple Silicon-based
Macs (aarch64-linux) is also added.
Co-authored-by: Paul Smith <paulsmith@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Weijia Wang <9713184+wegank@users.noreply.github.com>
Odd-numbered branches like 1.9 are development releases. Upstream
doesn’t consider them ready for production use, and doesn’t provide
prompt updates for security or kernel support.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
This codifies existing practice of avoiding adding new vendor kernels
to Nixpkgs.
Hopefully I've put this comment at the place in the file somebody
hoping to add a new vendor kernel would be most likely to look.