Building etc."fish/setEnvironment.fish" needs
config.system.build.setEnvironment, which can be very large. And what
babelfishTranslate does is to translate env vars exported by bash
syntax, which does not need much computing power.
This patch can reduce the network traffic when using remote builders
with almost no harm.
Both Zsh and Bash support aliases that begin with characters also used to
indicate options to the “alias” built-in command, as long as the alias
definition is preceeded by a double dash.
This allows, e.g, for “alias -- +x=chmod +x”.
When a script specifies the shell option “nounset” as part of the shebang (e.g.,
via “#!/usr/bin/env -S zsh -u”), our initialization scripts would produce error
messages of the form:
__ETC_FOO_SOURCED: parameter not set
These messages could probably be confusing to users when running such scripts.
By providing a fall-back in the parameter expansion, we can avoid them.
This patch does not address interactive shell start-up, where such messages may
(or may not) be less problematic.
Zsh ships some rudimentary completions for programs where upstream also ships
their own completions (e.g., curl). So as not to shadow those completions, we
need to prepend to the fpath instead of appending.
Fixes#197502
Neovim does not load the user configuration when enabled through the
module, unlike when the package is added to the home or system packages
directly. I think this difference is worth mentioning in the module's
documentation, because it was confusing to some friends.
Optional functionality of AusweisApp2 requires an UDP port to be opened.
The module allows for convenient configuration and serves as documentation.
See also https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/136269
most of these are hidden because they're either part of a submodule that
doesn't have its type rendered (eg because the submodule type is used in
an either type) or because they are explicitly hidden. some of them are
merely hidden from nix-doc-munge by how their option is put together.
conversions were done using https://github.com/pennae/nix-doc-munge
using (probably) rev f34e145 running
nix-doc-munge nixos/**/*.nix
nix-doc-munge --import nixos/**/*.nix
the tool ensures that only changes that could affect the generated
manual *but don't* are committed, other changes require manual review
and are discarded.
this mostly means marking options that use markdown already
appropriately and making a few adjustments so they still render
correctly. notable for nftables we have to transform the md links
because the manpage would not render them correctly otherwise.
Makes it easier to configure `rust-motd`. Currently, it takes care of
the following things:
* Creating a timer to regularly refresh the `motd`-text and a hardened
service (which is still root to get access to e.g. fs-mounts, but
read-only because of hardening flags).
* Disabling `PrintLastLog` in `sshd.conf` if the last-login feature of
`rust-motd` is supposed to be used.
* Ensure that the banner is actually shown when connecting via `ssh(1)`
to a remote server with this being enabled.
Long story short: the SSH agent protocol doesn't support telling from
which tty the request is coming from, so the the pinentry curses prompt
appears on the login tty and messes up the output and may hang.
The current trick to workaround this is informing the gnupg agent every
time you start a shell: this assumes you will run `ssh` in the latest
tty, if you don't the latest tty will be messed up this time.
The ideal solution would be updating the tty exactly when (and where)
you run `ssh`. This is actually possible using a catch-all Match block
in ssh_config and using the `exec` feature that hooks a command to the
current shell.
Source for the new trick: https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/499133/110465
this renders the same in the manpage and a little more clearly in the
html manual. in the manpage there continues to be no distinction from
regular text, the html manual gets code-type markup (which was probably
the intention for most of these uses anyway).
make (almost) all links appear on only a single line, with no
unnecessary whitespace, using double quotes for attributes. this lets us
automatically convert them to markdown easily.
the few remaining links are extremely long link in a gnome module, we'll
come back to those at a later date.