Nix Packages collection & NixOS
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Patryk Wychowaniec 336ef2de99
nixos/containers: allow containers with long names to create private networks
Launching a container with a private network requires creating a
dedicated networking interface for it; name of that interface is derived
from the container name itself - e.g. a container named `foo` gets
attached to an interface named `ve-foo`.

An interface name can span up to IFNAMSIZ characters, which means that a
container name must contain at most IFNAMSIZ - 3 - 1 = 11 characters;
it's a limit that we validate using a build-time assertion.

This limit has been upgraded with Linux 5.8, as it allows for an
interface to contain a so-called altname, which can be much longer,
while remaining treated as a first-class citizen.

Since altnames have been supported natively by systemd for a while now,
due diligence on our side ends with dropping the name-assertion on newer
kernels.

This commit closes #38509.

systemd/systemd#14467
systemd/systemd#17220
https://lwn.net/Articles/794289/
2021-02-26 17:48:49 +01:00
.github CODEOWNERS: add danieldk to Rust build-support (#114111) 2021-02-23 11:13:45 -05:00
doc stdenv/check-meta: change to allowlist and blocklist (#114127) 2021-02-23 10:25:18 -05:00
lib Merge pull request #112885 from alyssais/wiktionary 2021-02-12 19:12:45 +00:00
maintainers maintainers: add pborzenkov 2021-02-24 18:34:32 +03:00
nixos nixos/containers: allow containers with long names to create private networks 2021-02-26 17:48:49 +01:00
pkgs Merge pull request #114373 from r-ryantm/auto-update/rtsp-simple-server 2021-02-25 19:18:04 +02:00
.editorconfig Merge pull request #110395 from zowoq/gemset 2021-01-22 09:31:07 +01:00
.gitattributes
.gitignore
.version treewide: update 21.03 to 21.05 2021-02-12 14:12:48 -08:00
COPYING COPYING: 2020 -> 2021 2021-01-03 00:49:09 +00:00
default.nix
flake.nix nixos: fix "nixos-rebuild build-vm-with-bootloader" for EFI systems 2021-01-08 19:36:10 +01:00
README.md readme: update reference to number of packages 2020-11-29 16:18:12 -08:00

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Nixpkgs is a collection of over 60,000 software packages that can be installed with the Nix package manager. It also implements NixOS, a purely-functional Linux distribution.

Manuals

  • NixOS Manual - how to install, configure, and maintain a purely-functional Linux distribution
  • Nixpkgs Manual - contributing to Nixpkgs and using programming-language-specific Nix expressions
  • Nix Package Manager Manual - how to write Nix expressions (programs), and how to use Nix command line tools

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The sources of all official Nix-related projects are in the NixOS organization on GitHub. Here are some of the main ones:

  • Nix - the purely functional package manager
  • NixOps - the tool to remotely deploy NixOS machines
  • nixos-hardware - NixOS profiles to optimize settings for different hardware
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Continuous Integration and Distribution

Nixpkgs and NixOS are built and tested by our continuous integration system, Hydra.

Artifacts successfully built with Hydra are published to cache at https://cache.nixos.org/. When successful build and test criteria are met, the Nixpkgs expressions are distributed via Nix channels.

Contributing

Nixpkgs is among the most active projects on GitHub. While thousands of open issues and pull requests might seem a lot at first, it helps consider it in the context of the scope of the project. Nixpkgs describes how to build tens of thousands of pieces of software and implements a Linux distribution. The GitHub Insights page gives a sense of the project activity.

Community contributions are always welcome through GitHub Issues and Pull Requests. When pull requests are made, our tooling automation bot, OfBorg will perform various checks to help ensure expression quality.

The Nixpkgs maintainers are people who have assigned themselves to maintain specific individual packages. We encourage people who care about a package to assign themselves as a maintainer. When a pull request is made against a package, OfBorg will notify the appropriate maintainer(s). The Nixpkgs committers are people who have been given permission to merge.

Most contributions are based on and merged into these branches:

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For more information about contributing to the project, please visit the contributing page.

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Nixpkgs is licensed under the MIT License.

Note: MIT license does not apply to the packages built by Nixpkgs, merely to the files in this repository (the Nix expressions, build scripts, NixOS modules, etc.). It also might not apply to patches included in Nixpkgs, which may be derivative works of the packages to which they apply. The aforementioned artifacts are all covered by the licenses of the respective packages.