In practice, this is a strictly stronger condition than target != build
as we never have build = target != host. Really, the attribute should
be removed altogether, but for now we make it work for plain libraries,
which do not care about the target platform. In the few cases where the
compilers use this and actually care about the target platform, I'll
manually change them to use `targetPlatform` instead.
In dced724c009a1646475373cc597ada385d46bde6 this derivation was
unexposed along (in all-packages.nix) with the removal of linux 3.18[1].
I think this file was left behind by mistake.
[1]: dced724c00 (diff-036410e9211b4336186fc613f7200b12L11174)
QEMU can allow guests to access more than one host core at a time.
Previously, this had to be done via ad-hoc arguments:
virtualisation.qemu.options = ["-smp 12"];
Now you can simply specify:
virtualisation.cores = 12;
This reverts commit 9f86136cefbd3e050b96a307346278fe9ad8a5bf.
Rust is nowadays required for building Firefox, so the channel updates
are blocked on this.
(It also builds fine for me.)
- `ccWrapperFun` can be used in a few more places instead of
duplicating its definition.
- `ccWrapper` parameter on `wrapCC` is always substituted with
`ccWrapperFun` so just get rid of that parameter.
This change fixes several defects in the way `wrapGAppsHook` selected
the executable to wrap.
Previously, it would wrap any top-level files in the target `/bin` and
`/libexec` directories, including directories and non-executable
files. In addition, it failed to wrap files in subdirectories.
Now, it uses `find` to iterate over these directory hierarchies,
selecting only executable files for wrapping.
The new version needs TZ configured to a value other than "UTC" for the test
suite to succeed. Otherwise, an assumption in "reg-tests-1d.R" won't hold that
expects
d <- as.POSIXlt("2016-12-06"); d$zone <- 1; format(d)
to throw an error about an invalid time zone.
It was asked by @CMCDragonkai to elaborate on that, so let's just do
this by actually providing a code comment.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
The xrandrHeads option has been there since a long time, so there is no
need to advertise it as a new feature.
Instead, let's focus on just what has changed, which is that we now
assign one head to be primary.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Using invalid module options in the submodule isn't very nice, because
it doesn't give very useful errors in case of type mismatch, also we
don't get descriptions of these options as they're effecively
nonexistent to the module system. Another downside of this is that
merging of these options isn't done correctly as well (eg. for
types.lines).
So we now have proper submodules for each xrandrHead and we also use
corcedTo in the type of xrandrHeads so that we can populate the
submodule's "output" option in case a plain string is defined for a list
item.
Instead of silently skipping multiple primary heads, we now have an
assertion, which displays a message and aborts configuration evaluation
appropriately.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>