The new option `services.prometheus.enableReload` has been introduced
which, when enabled, causes the prometheus systemd service to reload
when its config file changes.
More specifically the following property holds: switching to a
configuration (`switch-to-configuration`) that changes the prometheus
configuration only finishes successully when prometheus has finished
loading the new configuration.
`enableReload` is `false` by default in which case the old semantics
of restarting the prometheus systemd service are in effect.
* FluidSynth 1.1.11 was kept around as a dependency of some packages
that hadn't yet adjusted to API breakages. All of these packages now
use FluidSynth 2.x, so fluidsynth_1 can be removed. It has been broken
ever since glib was updated to 2.70 and was affected by an unpatched
CVE.
* Refactor expression a bit, use pname instead of name.
* Add changelog entry in case someone was using this downstream
(accidentally?).
Fixes#141508.
Fixes#124624.
The version 20 of Nextcloud will be EOLed by the end of this month[1].
Since the recommended default (that didn't raise an eval-warning) on
21.05 was Nextcloud 21, this shouldn't affect too many people.
In order to ensure that nobody does a (not working) upgrade across
several major-versions of Nextcloud, I replaced the derivation of
`nextcloud20` with a `throw` that provides instructions how to proceed.
The only case that I consider "risky" is a setup upgraded from 21.05 (or
older) with a `system.stateVersion` <21.11 and with
`services.nextcloud.package` not explicitly declared in its config. To
avoid that, I also left the `else-if` for `stateVersion < 21.03` which
now sets `services.nextcloud.package` to `pkgs.nextcloud20` and thus
leads to an eval-error. This condition can be removed
as soon as 21.05 is EOL because then it's safe to assume that only
21.11. is used as stable release where no Nextcloud <=20 exists that can
lead to such an issue.
It can't be removed earlier because then every `system.stateVersion <
21.11` would lead to `nextcloud21` which is a problem if `nextcloud19`
is still used.
[1] https://docs.nextcloud.com/server/20/admin_manual/release_schedule.html