This option is not documented anywhere and while it may be set
in configuration.nix to enable integration, having it on by
default when using both plasma and firefox is a great convenience;
just like all other desktop environments do it already.
services.networking.firewall might have existed during import of this
module in 2016, but it is unknown as of today.
Point to the proper boolean knob to avoid confusion.
Conform to RFC 1123 [0], specifically to "2.1 Host Names and Numbers",
which allow starting host name with alphanumerical instead of alphabetical characters.
RFC 1123 updates RFC 952 [1], which is referenced in "man 5 hosts".
[0]: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1123
[1]: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc952
The `package`-option is always useful if modifying a package in an
overlay would mean that a lot of other packages need to be rebuilt as
well.
In case of `sudo` this is actually the case: when having an override for
it (e.g. for `withInsults = true;`), you'd have to rebuild e.g. `zfs`
and `grub` although that's not strictly needed.
systemd.exec(5) on DynamicUser:
> If a statically allocated user or group of the configured name
> already exists, it is used and no dynamic user/group is allocated.
Using DynamicUser while still setting a group name can be
useful for granting access to resources that can otherwise only be
accessed with entirely static IDs.
The /run/wrapper directory is a tmpfs. Unfortunately, it's mounted with
its root directory has the standard (for tmpfs) mode: 1777 (world writeable,
sticky -- the standard mode of shared temporary directories). This means that
every user can create new files and subdirectories there, but can't
move/delete/rename files that belong to other users.
* programs.neovim: init
Allows to build a proper runtime folder with after/ ftplugin/ parser/ subfolders etc.
(neo)vim expects a few different folders, for instance to load
treesitter parsers.
This PR reuses the builder from the etc module, notwithstanding the
different modes/uid/gid.
This allows to get rid of some autocmd in customRC (via proper use of
the folder hierarchy) which is a win in my opinion.
Both packages will get EOLed within the lifetime of 20.09. `nextcloud17`
can be removed entirely (the attribute-path is kept however to provide
meaningful errors), however `nextcloud18` must be kept as `insecure` to
make sure that users from `nextcloud17` can properly upgrade to
`nextcloud19` on NixOS 20.09.
Turns out, `dd_url` should only be used in proxy scenarios, not to point
datadog to their EU endpoint - `site` should be used for that.
The `dd_url` setting doesn't affect APM, Logs or Live Process intake
which have their own "*_dd_url" settings.