- 0.53.0+ relicensed the server components
- as a result split into per-component packages
- adds missing 2 upload & relay components
- the tested behavior has changed
According to emilazy these were the only usages of sha1 in nixpkgs:
```
pkgs/servers/mx-puppet-discord/node-packages.nix
111: sha1 = "532e01241dbcb0f2769f1b9a7cde313d30101173";
120: sha1 = "68018cab4f59834b3fef2e59fbfd52938403e001";
129: sha1 = "52b0e8bb808a1202602899af67939b049dd42402";
138: sha1 = "0a37a3f9430ff7c29512d29882e25ae738a31283";
```
Anyone motivated to maintain it can feel free to restore this, it's just
not maintained at the moment, and the sha1 hashes need to go.
This was found after Ericson proposed implementing something like
https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/13544 in Lix, which led to the
question "who is using sha1 anyway?" and the realization we could just
*remove* support for it outside of .. the known chromium crimes.
nixos/qbittorrent: add default serverConfig & fix test
Migrate to runTest
Replace lib.optional with lib.optionals
nixos/qbittorrent: update release notes to 2511
The default of 4GB is too low for a production setup and causes
DependencyTrack to hit java.lang.OutOfMemoryError. This causes
Dependency Track to enter a weird state where it will throw 502 and
504 errors.
The initial 4GB was set to make Dependency Track run in the (too
small) VM in the NixOS integration test. Move the explicit heap
configuration there. For the service itself, we now don't set a limit.
This means the JVM will choose its maximum heap on its own, which does
a much better job for realistic scenarios.
I added a release note, because people who run Dependency Track on
very tiny VMs/machines may experience issues.
The project has been unmaintained for a while now and has started failing to build.
Abandonment notice from the maintainer: https://github.com/hbons/SparkleShare/issues/2006
It has been a good run but it is time to say goodbye. Thanks to hbons for all of the work over the years. It looks like there is a good chance of a fork living on but it will take time to see how that shakes out. So for now let's just remove the package.
Introduces `services.varnish.listen` as a list of structured
listen addresses with all allowed variations of arguments
documented in the man page.
Deprecates `services.varnish.http_address`.
This reverts commit a794031c59.
With the following additions:
Allow `CAP_KILL`, so the dovecot master process may interrupt its child
processes.
Allow new privileges, so dovecot and call the setuid sendmail executable.
Allow AF_NETLINK sockets, so dovecot sieve handling can use the
getifaddrs syscall.
Finally, we now asssert, that no options are set on the legacy dovecot2
systemd unit name, to make the user aware they need to update their
overrides.
The tee-supplicant is a program that interacts with OP-TEE OS and allows
loading trusted applications at runtime (among other things). There is
an `optee` test included that uses the pkcs11 trusted application (in
upstream OP-TEE OS), loads it during system startup via tee-supplicant,
and uses `pkcs11-tool` to list available token slots.
Sourcehut went a year with no update in nixpkgs, the packages did not
build for months, the module has issues at runtime, one of the
maintainers stopped using NixOS entirely and the other two don't respond
to issues.
Upstream has since also deprecated the Arch Linux and Debian
repositories to install Sourcehut. The only official way that remains is
Alpine Linux on x86_64-linux.
It is unclear where this list originated, but it doesn't make sense to
ship it with all networkmanager installations. The most excessive plugin
is openconnect, that ships a 250 MB closure including webkitgtk.
Instead users now have to specify the plugins they want explicitly. I
updated the option to give hints on how to find them as best as I can.