Lots of stuff has gotten moved around. Many security libraries have been merged
into the Security monorepo. I’ve cleared them out for now, we will
need to modify Security to build them!
This also moves some things around to more clearly separate
bootstrapping the stdenv from everything else. We want the “normal”
mode to be the non-bootstrapped version. When you ask for “Security”,
you want the actual built software, not a crippled one.
- Add TARGET_OS_OSX to darwin.libSystem. Looks like something
introduced in 10.12. TARGET_OS_MAC is only set when building for
desktop (iOS will have TARGET_OS_MAC set)
- Bump darwin.dtrace
- Bump darwin.libpthread
- Remove SmartCardServices, libsecurity*, etc.
- Install some more headers for darling.
Updates to the latest version of the desktop client available. Tested
the config migration from `nextcloud-client` 2.3.3 with a Nextcloud
14.0.3 instance (hosted using `services.nextcloud`).
Additionally the derivation required the following changes:
* Dropped `Qt5Sql` patch: this has been fixed upstream and isn't needed
anymore (furthermore their CMake structure has changed and the patch
wouldn't apply anymore on 2.5.0).
* Moved to a new upstream repository (nextcloud/desktop), kept
`fetchgit` to properly fetch submodules.
* Added OpenSSL 1.1 integration: `libsync` (the syncing provided by this
package) requires 1.1, furthermore the linking flags had to be fixed
manually by passing `NIX_LDFLAGS` to the derivation.
Furthermore I moved the support for a Gnome3 keyring into its own
wrapper to avoid a full rebuild of the package whenever you alter
`withGnomeKeyring` in an override expressions.
It's still possible to enable keyring (now without recompile) like this:
```
nextcloud-client.override { withGnomeKeyring = true; }
```
To override the derivation itself you now have to use
`nextcloud-client-unwrapped`:
```
nextcloud-client-unwrapped.overrideAttrs (old: {
src = yoursrc;
})
```
Mininet (https://github.com/mininet/mininet) is a popular network emulator that
glues several components such as network namespaces, traffic control
commands into a set of python bindings. It is then "easy" to describe a
topology and run experiments on it.
ao has been renamed to libfive. Because there’s already a libfive
package, we can just remove the old ao package. No packages appear to
depend directly on it.
If the nix store lives on NFS, `ghc 8.2.1` is unable to build a package
database. This bug was fixed by @bgamari in `ghc 8.2.2` here:
https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/13945
This commit upgrades the unpacked bootstrap GHC version, so that we can build
newer versions of GHC even if the store is on NFS.