I made a mistake merge. Reverting it in c778945806b undid the state
on master, but now I realize it crippled the git merge mechanism.
As the merge contained a mix of commits from `master..staging-next`
and other commits from `staging-next..staging`, it got the
`staging-next` branch into a state that was difficult to recover.
I reconstructed the "desired" state of staging-next tree by:
- checking out the last commit of the problematic range: 4effe769e2b
- `git rebase -i --preserve-merges a8a018ddc0` - dropping the mistaken
merge commit and its revert from that range (while keeping
reapplication from 4effe769e2)
- merging the last unaffected staging-next commit (803ca85c209)
- fortunately no other commits have been pushed to staging-next yet
- applying a diff on staging-next to get it into that state
I'm sorry; I didn't notice it contained staging commits.
This reverts commit 17f5305b6c20df795c365368d2d868266519599e, reversing
changes made to a8a018ddc0a8b5c3d4fa94c94b672c37356bc075.
The script assumed that `wget` was available in the environment
along with common CA certificates.
Replaced the detection of GPG, which is not necessary anymore.
Added pulling the public key bash releases and patches are signed with,
without which we cannot verify signatures.
This adds a warning to the top of each “boot” package that reads:
Note: this package is used for bootstrapping fetchurl, and thus cannot
use fetchpatch! All mutable patches (generated by GitHub or cgit) that
are needed here should be included directly in Nixpkgs as files.
This makes it clear to maintainer that they may need to treat this
package a little differently than others. Importantly, we can’t use
fetchpatch here due to using <nix/fetchurl.nix>. To avoid having stale
hashes, we need to include patches that are subject to changing
overtime (for instance, gitweb’s patches contain a version number at
the bottom).
This reverts commit a85b07cbcb7a034bc07dda3642bc68fe621a63ec as
executing the tests in parallel makes them flaky. This can be seen very
easily on armv7l machines (and probably other machines that are slower
than common x86_64 machines as well), but is also reproducible on
x86_64.
This fixes#91706.
Currently the tests take an eternity and are also sometimes flaky. By
following upstream in using xdist for parallel test execution we at
least get the feedback cycle down. On my machine that means instead of
running this for ~25min it runs in 1 minute and 10 seconds.
Since 2.9 bash-completion hardcodes paths in pkgconfig file. We want to
be able to override certain paths, so this commit restores the original
behaviour.
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/71662