* haskell.packages.ghc884.ghc-api-compat needed us to re-add the 8.6
version of the package.
* haskell.packages.ghc901.ghc-api-compat now points to the newly
released 9.0.1 version of the package.
* haskell.packages.ghc8107.ghc-api-compat now correctly points to
ghc-api-compat 8.10.7.
GHC 9.2.1 is still unsupported (which is to be expected, with it
being a release candidate).
To make sure everything stays working we'll build ghc-api-compat as part
of versionedCompilerJobs.
* no released version of hackage2nix does support distribution-nixpkgs yet.
* hackage-db 2.1.2 fixes an annoying bug introduced in 2.1.1 and also supports
Cabal 3.4: https://github.com/NixOS/cabal2nix/issues/501
Stackage Nighly recently upgraded their version of hackage-db from 2.1.0
to 2.1.1. 2.1.1 had a compatibility fix for Cabal 3.4 [1]. However it
did not increase the version bound on Cabal nor fails to compile with
Cabal 3.2, so Stackage was able to update it.
Unfortunately hackage-db with Cabal 3.2 causes observable issues [2]
in cabal2nix, so we need to downgrade it for all compilers that still
ship a Cabal version < 3.4.
Also ideally we should update the constraints for hackage-db 2.1.0 and
hackage-db 2.1.1 on hackage. See also [3].
[1]: https://github.com/peti/hackage-db/pull/12
[2]: https://github.com/NixOS/cabal2nix/issues/501
[3]: https://github.com/peti/hackage-db/pull/14
They are not an exposed part of haskellPackages per se, so we shouldn't
list them in nix-env. Additionally this should prevent the failed lldb
build from cluttering our jobset output.
In preparation of the upcoming 0.6.0 release I wanted to fix hls.
It introduces two new plugin packages, which are not on hackage yet.
I remove apply-refact overrides, because current apply-refact versions
are compatible with all ghcs we support, according to their changelog.
I override more of the hls dependencies globally on the whole package
set, to avoid a lot of duplicate compilations. And because @peti changed
my mind about this being a good practice.
hls now uses a released version of ghcide
The patchs in question fail to apply against the current versoin, and
thus the package fails to build; `hasktags` is then collateral damage.
Remove reference to the patch and make sure neither package will be
marked broken going forward.