Updates that remove features and improve user experience.
Adds warnings for trying to install packages without (purescript/psc-package#126 by @Dretch)
Filters "installing" messages for build (purescript/psc-package#130 by @Dretch)
Adds options for limiting jobs for install (purescript/psc-package#127 by @vladciobanu)
Per purescript/psc-package#121, removes the confusing misfeature "add-from-bower", which led to many users thinking this command was for adding "extra-deps" like Stack. See the thread for details on how you could readily replace this command if you used it before.
On darwin llvmPackages is built using python-boot to avoid dependencies
in the stdenv, but we can't and shouldn't use that when building the
manpages since it depends on python packages.
* The ELK stack is upgraded to 6.3.2.
* `elasticsearch6`, `logstash6` and `kibana6` now come with X-Pack which is
a suite of additional features. These are however licensed under the unfree
"Elastic License".
* Fortunately they also provide OSS versions which are now packaged
under: `elasticsearch6-oss`, `logstash6-oss` and `kibana6-oss`.
Note that the naming of the attributes is consistent with upstream.
* The test `nix-build nixos/tests/elk.nix -A ELK-6` will test the OSS
version by default. You can also run the test on the unfree ELK using:
`NIXPKGS_ALLOW_UNFREE=1 nix-build nixos/tests/elk.nix -A ELK-6 --arg enableUnfree true`
This reverts commit 095fe5b43d.
Pointless renames considered harmful. All they do is force people to
spend extra work updating their configs for no benefit, and hindering
the ability to switch between unstable and stable versions of NixOS.
Like, what was the value of having the "nixos." there? I mean, by
definition anything in a NixOS module has something to do with NixOS...
This finally fixes the build to avoid having to completely rebuild
bazel from source a second time just to generate the bash completion
script!
It also makes completion actually _work_ for bash users by
correcting the name of the installed script.
The fzf vim plugin wasn't working because it was making a symlink to a
directory with the full source code. This directory isn't present
anymore since the commit e95f17e272 wich
removes it because it isn't so useful for the go packages.
I fixed it by manually copying the plugin/ directory into the out
derivation, which is the only part of the source that contains the vim
plugin.