of usual system counters).
It sets up some cron jobs for collecting the data, and not that often, generating the
graphs. Then the httpd server is configured with a directory with the generated
static files.
http://www.brianlane.com/software/systemhealth/
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=18866
the acpid service.
* Add a pm-utils hook to allow commands to be executed when the system
suspends/resumes etc.
svn path=/nixos/branches/upstart-0.6/; revision=18353
no longer emits specific events for those. Instead it emits a
"runlevel" event. The "runlevel" task starts the "shutdown" task to
perform the desired action.
* Upstart 0.6 no longer has a "shutdown" event, so "stop on shutdown"
no longer works. Therefore the shutdown task explicitly stops all
running Upstart jobs, before sending a TERM/KILL signal to all
remaining processes.
* Do a "chvt 1" at the start of the shutdown task to switch to the
console.
* Use /dev/console instead of /dev/tty1, since if somebody is logged
in on tty1, bad things will happen.
svn path=/nixos/branches/upstart-0.6/; revision=18224
* Add deprecated options for "serviceType", "serviceName", "function" and
"config" without changing the behavior.
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=18150
fetch definitions of oldest options and to add them inside the new option.
Properties are still valid and will not be affected by the renaming. e.g:
with: rename alias "foo.bar" to "baz.quz"
and with the following module:
{
foo.bar = (mkOverride 10 {}) 42;
baz.quz = 21;
}
the result of baz.quz would be 42 because the priority is still working
after the renaming.
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=17484
grub. Its options are no more inside 'boot', but inside 'boot.loader.grub'.
I added a new bootloader configuration for nixos, generationsDir. It creates
/boot/default/{init,initrd,kernel,system} symlinks, and the same for the generations
in /boot/system-$gen/{init,initrd,kernel,system}.
I can program the u-boot loader to load /boot/default files always, and have
a minimal nixos boot loader installer functionality. Additionally, I can refer
to the other system generations easily, with a simple 'ls' in /boot.
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=17460
* Modularised the xorg.conf generation. For instance, the Wacom and
Synaptics support has been moved into separate modules. The
contents of xorg.conf is defined by the option
services.xserver.config, and various other options for specific
sections (e.g. services.xserver.serverLayoutSection).
* displayManager.job.env: made this an attribute set.
* tcpEnable -> enableTCP for naming consistency.
* defaultDepth can be set to 0 to leave it undefined (needed for the
vmware driver).
* Removed some options that seem obsolete or are now the default
(e.g. RenderAccel, AllowGLXWithComposite).
* Removed services.xserver.package. This can now be done using
nixpkgs.config.packageOverrides.
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=17004
adding an attribute "password" that defines the default password for
an account. The default (null, as opposed to the empty string)
means not to set a password.
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=16937
be set from the NixOS configuration. For instance, you can say
nixpkgs.config.firefox.enableGeckoMediaPlayer = true;
environment.systemPackages = [ pkgs.firefox ];
but the more interesting application is to apply global overrides to
Nixpkgs throughout NixOS, e.g.
nixpkgs.config.packageOverrides = pkgs:
{ glibc = pkgs.glibc27;
gcc = pkgs.gcc42;
};
would build the whole system with Glibc 2.7 and GCC 4.2. (There are
some issues with "useFromStdenv" in all-packages.nix that need to be
fixed for packages in the stdenv bootstrap though.)
The implementation of this option is kind of evil though due to the
need to prevent a circularity between the evaluation of
nixpkgs.config and the "pkgs" module argument.
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=16866
separate module, which just declares a configuration value that
causes the xinetd module to add it to xinetd.conf. Also Nixified
the service declarations to abstract over the inetd implementation.
* Renamed the services.xinetd.tftpd options to services.tftpd. The
fact that the tftpd module uses xinetd is an implementation detail.
* xinetd: use -dontfork to let Upstart monitor it, and use -syslog to
get error messages at startup.
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=16803
* Let ConsoleKit track the current logins instead of pam_console.
Udev now takes care of setting the device permissions to the active
user. This works much better, since pam_console wouldn't apply
permissions to new (hot-plugged) devices. Also, the udev+ConsoleKit
approach supports user switching. (We don't have that for X yet,
but it already works for logins on virtual consoles: if you switch
between different users on differents VCs with Alt+Fn, the device
ownership will be changed automatically.)
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=16743
interface names, use udev's own firmware loader, and dropped the
sndMode option (udev puts all audio devices in the "audio" group, so
users can be added to that group if necessary).
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=16692
initialising network interfaces, etc.) to modules/tasks. This
follows the Upstart terminology: a service is a job that doesn't
usually terminate (e.g. a daemon), while a task is a job that does
some work and then exits.
svn path=/nixos/branches/modular-nixos/; revision=15771