Commit Graph

7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ruud van Asseldonk
bdd706ccb2 acme-client: use source tarball to avoid autoreconf
This was suggested by the upstream maintainer [1], and it is a nice
simplification. Also change the url to sr.ht as the project has moved
there.

[1]: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/88201#issuecomment-633260151
2020-05-24 23:11:56 +02:00
Ruud van Asseldonk
d4d36c37c7 acme-client: 1.0.0 -> 1.0.1
I submitted my patch upstream, it was merged, and version 1.0.1 which
includes it has been released. So the patch here is no longer necessary.

Also, the maintainer added a Nixpkgs-based build environment to the
upstream CI setup, so in the future the upstream version will likely
not need any patching.
2020-05-24 23:00:17 +02:00
Ruud van Asseldonk
d4c80a478b acme-client: 0.2.5 -> 1.0.0
The upstream version fails to compile due to a missing limits.h include.
I added a patch to fix that.

I opened a pull request to upstream it too, but the project has moved
from GitHub onto sr.ht and now asks me to send a patch to the mailing
list. My default email client is not really suitable for that, and
getting git-send-email set up will take some work, so in the meantime
it is easier to just patch it here.
2020-05-19 23:11:43 +02:00
Ruud van Asseldonk
6d4c8730d9 acme-client: 0.2.4 -> 0.2.5 2019-12-23 20:03:02 +01:00
Ruud van Asseldonk
a7b49ef140 acme-client: 0.1.16 -> 0.2.4
* acme-client: 0.1.16 -> 0.2.3 (#71853)

The upstream acme-client that used to be at [1] has now been integrated
into OpenBSD, and the portable version that it links to at [2] is marked
as unmaintained. However, letsencrypt.org links to [3] for a portable
version, and indeed, that repository contains a version that has recent
activity, so I switched over to that.

It is hard to tell what the difference is between the OpenBSD version
and what is on Github, and even if that would be easy, there are a lot
of Linux-specific changes. This program is dealing with certificates, so
I feel it is important to at least check that thare are no obviously
unintended differences between the previous version and the new, but I
don't know of a good way of doing that at this point. I will continue
to investigate before I open a pull request.

[1]: https://kristaps.bsd.lv/acme-client/
[2]: https://github.com/kristapsdz/acme-client-portable
[3]: https://github.com/graywolf/acme-client-portable

* acme-client: fix Linux build of new upstream

The new source does not include a configure script in the repository,
but we can generate it with automake. Also, the new acme-client-portable
has an OpenSSL compatibility layer, but that actually breaks building
against LibreSSL. Avoid this issue by patching the compatibility layer
to be less eager to define things when linking against LibreSSL. I will
also submit a pull request for that upstream.

I don't expect this to work on Darwin, and the current package suggests
it does, but if the upstream (portable) version is no longer maintained,
for Darwin, perhaps we should just drop support for it. But maybe it
will just work, CI or somebody with a Darwin system will have to try.

* acme-client: 0.2.3 -> 0.2.4

My LibreSSL compatibility patch has been merged upstream into
acme-client-portable, and version 0.2.4 that includes it has been
released, so we can remove the patch here.

* acme-client: address review feedback

 * Replace the manual autoreconf invocation with autoreconfHook.
 * Remove DEFAULT_CA_FILE, which no longer affects the build.
2019-11-03 16:23:11 +01:00
volth
46420bbaa3 treewide: name -> pname (easy cases) (#66585)
treewide replacement of

stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
  name = "*-${version}";
  version = "*";

to pname
2019-08-15 13:41:18 +01:00
Patrick Mahoney
179452154b acme-client: init at 0.1.6 2018-01-26 20:31:51 -06:00