This makes running wireshark (or more specifically, dumpcap) as root a
bit more secure. From <wireshark-1.11.2>/doc/README.packaging:
The "--with-libcap" option is only useful when dumpcap is installed
setuid. If it is enabled dumpcap will try to drop any setuid privileges
it may have while retaining the CAP_NET_ADMIN and CAP_NET_RAW
capabilities. It is enabled by default, if the Linux capabilities
library (on which it depends) is found.
By enabling ‘services.openssh.startWhenNeeded’, sshd is started
on-demand by systemd using socket activation. This is particularly
useful if you have a zillion containers and don't want to have sshd
running permanently. Note that socket activation is not noticeable
slower, contrary to what the manpage for ‘sshd -i’ says, so we might
want to make this the default one day.
This resolves a cyclic dependency: the daemon depends on tools (for
dbus-send) while tools depends on the daemon. Keeping them separate
doesn't seem very useful in any case.
Our version of SQLite causes the tests to fail, so I'm hereby adding a
patch from dbsrgits/dbix-class@ed5550d36 with the hunk for the Changes
file dropped.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
This causes OpenVPN services to reach the "active" state when the VPN
connection is up (i.e., after OpenVPN prints "Initialization Sequence
Completed"). This allows units to be ordered correctly after openvpn-*
units, and makes systemctl present a password prompt:
$ start openvpn-foo
Enter Private Key Password: *************
(I first tried to implement this by calling "systemd-notify --ready"
from the "up" script, but systemd-notify is not reliable.)
The real path of the schemas is:
$out/share/gsettings-schemas/gsettings-desktop-schemas-3.10.1/glib-2.0/schemas
While the previous approach was to load schemas from:
$out/share/glib-2.0/schemas
So, we're now relying on the setup hook of glib to find the right schema
path.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
If dmenu isn't installed in the user environment, dmenu_run will fail
because it searches $PATH for its own binaries.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Youtube feeds now don't append a "sig" query string argument anymore, so
all those feeds would fail without this patch. For the latter, a pull
request already exists on upstream at pculture/miro#428, so I guess we
can drop our patch upon release of the next new upstream bugfix release.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
This is needed because the pkgconfig file contains linker flags for
alsa-lib. And we had it propagated before already.
Should fix build of quite a lot of SDL dependencies, such as SDL_image:
https://hydra.nixos.org/build/10558332
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
This seems to have combined badly with the systemd upgrade, we'll revert
for now and revisit after the 14.04 branch.
This reverts commit ad80532881, reversing
changes made to 1c5d3c7883.
Unfortunately, github periodically changes output even for raw diffs
(not just raw patches). I'm including the patch in nixpkgs.
I was unable to do it without hash change. Even if I added binary equal file.
This includes a lot of fixes for cross-building to Windows and Mac OS X
and could possibly fix things even for non-cross-builds, like for
example OpenSSL on Windows.
The main reason for merging this in 14.04 already is that we already
have runInWindowsVM in master and it doesn't work until we actually
cross-build Cygwin's setup binary as the upstream version is a fast
moving target which gets _overwritten_ on every new release.
Conflicts:
pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix
This implements some longstanding work of getting the Chromium
derivation more modular. Unfortunately, I didn't manage to decrease the
compile time, which was one of the primary goal for doing the refactor.
A main reason this didn't work out well was the fact that most bundled
libraries are so heavily patched that it's not possible within a limited
time frame to decouple it from the main derivation.
However, it should now be easier to build other derivations that build
upon Chromium, like libcef. Also, it finally adds support for the
non-free PepperAPI Flash and PDF plugins and support for fetching the
corresponding versions through the updater.