nixos/manual/manpages: add description on previewing manpage files
I was a bit lost with the new manpage format and it took me some time to
find the corresponding pull request by @pennae with a very helpful
comment of @alyssais that mentioned this:
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/213256#issuecomment-1407713215
As @pennae noted, the file path is only a fallback if it cannot be resolved in the man database
Co-authored-by: pennae <82953136+pennae@users.noreply.github.com>
This commit changes from a precompiled bundle to
a source file. Accordingly, the expression file is renamed to `default.nix`
and the old attribute name is changed to `tvbrowser`, the old one being now a
throw-message.
The upstream build script tries to download the news plugin; so, we provide
this and pass it as a parameter.
Given that this is still a piece of a precompiled Java bytecode, along with a
main readable source bundle, `meta.sourceProvenance` is updated accordingly.
since we want to move away from docbook and having docbook manpages
around is going to block further progress we have to translate the
current nixos manpages from docbook it *something* else. mdoc seems the
most appropriate choice since markdown can't represent all the things
manpages can differentiate with even more extensions. if we ever need
html manpages we can render them using troff, like many of the online
manpage viewers, or rewrite them again. since we haven't had html
manpages for any of these in many years that seems unlikely to happen.
unlike most of the recent markdown conversions this comes with a lot of
minor rendering changes, mostly in spacing. docbook-xslt creates manual
pages in a very different dialect than mdoc (which is used here).
As announced in the NixOS 22.11 release notes, 23.05 will switch NixOS
to using nsncd (a non-caching reimplementation in Rust) as NSS lookup
dispatcher, instead of the buggy and deprecated glibc-provided nscd.
If you need to switch back, set `services.nscd.enableNsncd = false`, but
please open an issue in nixpkgs so your issue can be fixed.
...for explicitly named network interfaces
This reverts commit 6ae3e7695e.
(and evaluation fixups 08d26bbb727aed90a969)
Some of the tests fail or time out after the merge.
Wordpress bundles some non-essential plugins and themes, then pesters
users to upgrade them. As we make the whole webroot readonly, it is
not possible to trivially delete them. Instead we should have users
explicitly install plugins via the existing nixos module.
this converts meta.doc into an md pointer, not an xml pointer. since we
no longer need xml for manual chapters we can also remove support for
manual chapters from md-to-db.sh
since pandoc converts smart quotes to docbook quote elements and our
nixos-render-docs does not we lose this distinction in the rendered
output. that's probably not that bad, our stylesheet didn't make use of
this anyway (and pre-23.05 versions of the chapters didn't use quote
elements either).
also updates the nixpkgs manual to clarify that option docs support all
extensions (although it doesn't support headings at all, so heading
anchors don't work by extension).
In an effort to better encode version strings and use descriptive pnames
that do not conflict with top level pkgs, we currently use
wordpress-${type}-${pname} for pname. This is good for the nix store,
but when we synthesize the wordpress derivation in our module, we reuse
this pname for the output directory.
Internally wordpress can handle this fine, since plugins must register
via php, not directory. Unfortunately, many plugins like civicrm and
wpforms-lite are designed to rely upon the name of their install
directory for homing or discovery.
As such, we should follow both the upstream convention and
services.nextcloud.extraApps and use an attribute set for these options.
This allows us to not have to deal with the implementation details of
plugins and themes, which differ from official and third party, but also
give users the option to override the install location. The only issue
is that it breaks the current api.
`shell_interact()` is currently not nice to use. If you try to cancel
the socat process, it will also break the nixos test. Furthermore
ptpython creates it's own terminal that subprocesses are running in,
which breaks some of the terminal features of socat.
Hence this commit extends `shell_interact` to allow also to connect to
arbitrary servers i.e. tcp servers started by socat.
as far as we can tell nixos has only ever had a total of one olink, and
currently has no olinks at all. we can't currently represent olinks in
markdown docs, and if we re-add support for cross-document links they
will take a different form (and not use docbook, which will have to be
phased out before we re-add anything).
the olinkdb is thus unused and takes 10 seconds on our machine to build,
holding up the rest of the manual for no benefit.
Without this commit, unsetting any of the `services.kubo.settings` options does not reset the value back to the default. This commit gets rid of this statefulness.
This is achieved by generating the default config, applying the user specified config options to it and then patching the `Identity` and `Pinning` config options from the old config back in. This new config is then applied using `ipfs config replace`.
The only remaining stateful parts of the config are the `Identity` and `Pinning.RemoteServices` settings as those can't be changed with `ipfs config replace`. `Pinning.RemoteServices` also contains secrets that shouldn't be in the Nix store. Setting these options wasn't possible before as it would result in an error when the daemon tried to start. I added some assertions to guard against this case.
Trivial conflict in release notes, except that the xml/docbook parts
are horrible for (semi-)automatic conflict resolution.
Fortunately that's generated anyway.
Adds a new option to the virtualisation modules that enables specifying
explicitly named network interfaces in QEMU VMs. The existing
`virtualisation.vlans` is still supported for cases where the name of
the network interface is irrelevant.
`autosuspend` is a daemon that periodically runs user-defined checks to
verify whether the system should be suspended. It's already available
in nixpkgs. This adds a NixOS module which starts the daemon as a
systemd service.
Co-authored-by: pennae <82953136+pennae@users.noreply.github.com>
following the plan in https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/189318#discussion_r961764451
also adds an activation script to print the warning during activation
instead of during build, otherwise folks using the new CLI that hides
build logs by default might never see the warning.
This commit fixes a papercut in nixos-rebuild where people wanting to
switch to a specialisation (or test one) were forced to manually figure
out the specialisation's path and run its activation script - since now,
there's a dedicated option to do just that.
This is a backwards-compatible change which doesn't affect the existing
behavior, which - to be fair - might still be considered sus by some
people, the painful scenario here being:
- you boot into specialisation `foo`,
- you run `nixos-rebuild switch`,
- whoops, you're no longer at specialisation `foo`, but you're rather
brought back to the base system.
(it's especially painful for cases where specialisation is used to load
extra drivers, e.g. Nvidia, since then launching `nixos-rebuild switch`,
while forgetting that you're inside a specialisation, can cause some
parts of your system to get accidentally unloaded.)
I've tried to mitigate that by improving specialisations so that they
create a dedicated file somewhere in `/run/current-system` containing
the specialisation's name (which `nixos-rebuild` could then use as the
default value for `--specialisation`), but I haven't been able to come
up with anything working (plus it would be a breaking change then).
Closes https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/174065
* Will make it so that GHC.Paths's docdir NIX_GHC_DOCDIR points to an
actual directory.
* Documentation of all packages in the environment is available in
`$out/share/doc`.
This has previously been attempted in #76842 and reverted in #77442,
since documentation can collide when the libraries wouldn't (thanks to
the hash in the lib filename). `symlinkJoin` allows collision, so this
solution should be akin to #77523 (minus `buildEnv`, one step at a
time). `installDocumentation = false` restores the old behavior.
Collision in the documentation only happen if the dependency closure of
the given packages has more than one different derivation for the same
library of the very same version. I'm personally inclined not to claim
that our infrastructure does anything sensible in this case.
Additionally, the documentation is likely largely the same in such
cases (unless it is heavily patched).
Resolves#150666.
Resolves#76837.
Closes#150968.
Closes#77523.
This is a followup of #148921, to allow local builds when
`--target-host` is used again. It also documents the change in
behavior, regarding the specialty of the `localhost` value.
By removing the special handling of an empty `buildHost` and non empty
`targetHost`, this change also slightly alters the behavior of
`nixos-rebuild`.
Originally by specifying `--target-host target --build-host ""`, the
now removed special case would transform those arguments to
`--target-host target --build-host target`.
Now the empty `--build-host` would result in a local build.
Added the RFC42-style added the posibility to use
`services.dokuwiki.sites.<name>.settings' instead of passing a plain
string to `<name>.extraConfig`. ´<name>.pluginsConfig` now also accepts
structured configuration.
Move the manpage-to-URL mapping to `doc/manpage-urls.json` so that we can
reuse that file elsewhere, and generate the `link-manpages.lua` filter from
that file.
Also modify the Pandoc filter so that it doesn't wrap manpages that are
already inside a link.
Keeping a Lua filter is essential for speed: a Python filter would
increase the runtime `md-to-db.sh` from ~20s to ~30s (but Python is not
to blame; marshalling Pandoc types to and from JSON is a costly operation).
Parsing in Lua seems tedious, so I went with the Nix way.
There should be no reason to use this package as it's a remnant of
non-modular X. Chances are you do not want every single library it
used to pull in:
freetype fontconfig xorg.xorgproto xorg.libX11 xorg.libXt
xorg.libXft xorg.libXext xorg.libSM xorg.libICE
Just pick the ones you really need instead.
`nixpkgs` does not have any users of `xlibsWrapper`.
Closes: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/194054