The tests for null patterns where changed in 25754125cef278c7e9492fbd6dc4a28319b01f18,
it's possible utf-8 normalisation is causing different behaviour here.
not ok 54 - LC_ALL='C' git grep -P -f f -i 'Æ<NUL>[Ð]' a
not ok 57 - LC_ALL='C' git grep -P -f f -i '[Æ]<NUL>Ð' a
not ok 60 - LC_ALL='C' git grep -P -f f -i '[Æ]<NUL>ð' a
not ok 63 - LC_ALL='C' git grep -P -f f -i 'Æ<NUL>Ð' a
Dubious, test returned 1 (wstat 256, 0x100)
Failed 4/145 subtests
(less 48 skipped subtests: 93 okay)
Putting the file in $out/share/bash-completion/completions means that it will be loaded on demand by nixpkgs.bash-completion.
With the old location, the user would either have to explicitly source the file during bash startup, or set BASH_COMPLETION_COMPAT_DIR before sourcing bash_completion.sh, which will eagerly load everything in that directory.
There ver very many conflicts, basically all due to
name -> pname+version. Fortunately, almost everything was auto-resolved
by kdiff3, and for now I just fixed up a couple evaluation problems,
as verified by the tarball job. There might be some fallback to these
conflicts, but I believe it should be minimal.
Hydra nixpkgs: ?compare=1538299
Reduces gitMinimal closure size from 329.6M to 174.8M.
Fixes the issue https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/64350.
In git 2.22.0 git-stash is no longer a shell script and now it is just a symlink to git.
`postInstall` assumed that it was a shell script, tried to patch it and
ended up corrupting the file and made `strip` refuse stripping it.
This partially reverts 9029ed933c69287c64a30d40b6b4f9f1ace7dd94 as
`git-instaweb`, which comes with git, needs on gitweb and having them in
separate outputs results in a cycle.
* Make the build system embed the correct path to gitweb into git-instaweb
* Move gitweb fixups to the git expression, to make sure that gitweb
used by git-instaweb is functional
* This will increase the closure size of git, but only with perlSupport
* substitute(): --subst-var was silently coercing to "" if the variable does not exist.
* libffi: simplify using `checkInputs`
* pythonPackges.hypothesis, pythonPackages.pytest: simpify dependency cycle fix
* utillinux: 2.32 -> 2.32.1
https://lkml.org/lkml/2018/7/16/532
* busybox: 1.29.0 -> 1.29.1
* bind: 9.12.1-P2 -> 9.12.2
https://ftp.isc.org/isc/bind9/9.12.2/RELEASE-NOTES-bind-9.12.2.html
* curl: 7.60.0 -> 7.61.0
* gvfs: make tests run, but disable
* ilmbase: disable tests on i686. Spooky!
* mdds: fix tests
* git: disable checks as tests are run in installcheck
* ruby: disable tests
* libcommuni: disable checks as tests are run in installcheck
* librdf: make tests run, but disable
* neon, neon_0_29: make tests run, but disable
* pciutils: 3.6.0 -> 3.6.1
Semi-automatic update generated by https://github.com/ryantm/nixpkgs-update tools. This update was made based on information from https://repology.org/metapackage/pciutils/versions.
* mesa: more include fixes
mostly from void-linux (thanks!)
* npth: 1.5 -> 1.6
minor bump
* boost167: Add lockfree next_prior patch
* stdenv: cleanup darwin bootstrapping
Also gets rid of the full python and some of it's dependencies in the
stdenv build closure.
* Revert "pciutils: use standardized equivalent for canonicalize_file_name"
This reverts commit f8db20fb3ae382eba1ba2b160fe24739f43c0bd7.
Patching should no longer be needed with 3.6.1.
* binutils-wrapper: Try to avoid adding unnecessary -L flags
(cherry picked from commit f3758258b8895508475caf83e92bfb236a27ceb9)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
* libffi: don't check on darwin
libffi usages in stdenv broken darwin. We need to disable doCheck for that case.
* "rm $out/share/icons/hicolor/icon-theme.cache" -> hicolor-icon-theme setup-hook
* python.pkgs.pytest: setupHook to prevent creation of .pytest-cache folder, fixes#40273
When `py.test` was run with a folder as argument, it would not only
search for tests in that folder, but also create a .pytest-cache folder.
Not only is this state we don't want, but it was also causing
collisions.
* parity-ui: fix after merge
* python.pkgs.pytest-flake8: disable test, fix build
* Revert "meson: 0.46.1 -> 0.47.0"
With meson 0.47.0 (or 0.47.1, or git)
things are very wrong re:rpath handling
resulting in at best missing libs but
even corrupt binaries :(.
When we run patchelf it masks the problem
by removing obviously busted paths.
Which is probably why this wasn't noticed immediately.
Unfortunately the binary already
has a long series of paths scribbled
in a space intended for a much smaller string;
in my testing it was something like
lengths were 67 with 300+ written to it.
I think we've reported the relevant issues upstream,
but unfortunately it appears our patches
are what introduces the overwrite/corruption
(by no longer being correct in what they assume)
This doesn't look so bad to fix but it's
not something I can spend more time on
at the moment.
--
Interestingly the overwritten string data
(because it is scribbled past the bounds)
remains in the binary and is why we're suddenly
seeing unexpected references in various builds
-- notably this is is the reason we're
seeing the "extra-utils" breakage
that entirely crippled NixOS on master
(and probably on staging before?).
Fixes#43650.
This reverts commit 305ac4dade5758c58e8ab1666ad0197fd305828d.
(cherry picked from commit 273d68eff8f7b6cd4ebed3718e5078a0f43cb55d)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
This reverts commit 2624f9079617df6b1fffda8c10f6a7a35068ecdc, reversing
changes made to 37aab4cbb5552bf021b20cf05d64e8ded6f3538a.
See:
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/42376#issuecomment-399789096
Basically this breaks at least some users of fetchgit,
so let's revert this until this is sorted out.
I'm working to resolve this but it will take some time
(patches sent to upstream musl, maybe to git afterwards)
and for now this blocks quite a lot.
If that doesn't work out we can explore options such as
always using GNU libiconv with musl.
Otherwise the build fails with the perplexing error
make: *** No rule to make target 'cmd-list.made', needed by 'doc.dep'. Stop.
make: Leaving directory '/tmp/nix-build-git-2.16.3.drv-0/git-2.16.3/Documentation'
on NixOS (but not on Debian, where it succeeds, presumably since it picks up the
system perl).