bedb3528b6
This updates to the latest version. According to the changelog 0.5.12 was skipped. The changes in this release are required to be compatible with the latest dovecot release. Changes: - duplicate: The test was handled badly in a multiscript (sieve_before, sieve_after) scenario in which an earlier script in the sequence with a duplicate test succeeded, while a later script caused a runtime failure. In that case, the message is recorded for duplicate tracking, while the message may not actually have been delivered in the end. - editheader: Sieve interpreter entered infinite loop at startup when the "editheader" configuration listed an invalid header name. This problem can only be triggered by the administrator. - relational: The Sieve relational extension can cause a segfault at compile time. This is triggered by invalid script syntax. The segfault happens when this match type is the last argument of the test command. This situation is not possible in a valid script; positional arguments are normally present after that, which would prevent the segfault. - sieve: For some Sieve commands the provided mailbox name is not properly checked for UTF-8 validity, which can cause assert crashes at runtime when an invalid mailbox name is encountered. This can be caused by the user by writing a bad Sieve script involving the affected commands ("mailboxexists", "specialuse_exists"). This can be triggered by the remote sender only when the user has written a Sieve script that passes message content to one of the affected commands. - sieve: Large sequences of 8-bit octets passed to certain Sieve commands that create or modify message headers that allow UTF-8 text (vacation, notify and addheader) can cause the delivery or IMAP process (when IMAPSieve is used) to enter a memory-consuming semi-infinite loop that ends when the process exceeds its memory limits. Logged in users can cause these hangs only for their own processes. |
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doc | ||
lib | ||
maintainers | ||
nixos | ||
pkgs | ||
.editorconfig | ||
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.version | ||
COPYING | ||
default.nix | ||
flake.nix | ||
README.md |
Nixpkgs is a collection of over 60,000 software packages that can be installed with the Nix package manager. It also implements NixOS, a purely-functional Linux distribution.
Manuals
- NixOS Manual - how to install, configure, and maintain a purely-functional Linux distribution
- Nixpkgs Manual - contributing to Nixpkgs and using programming-language-specific Nix expressions
- Nix Package Manager Manual - how to write Nix expressions (programs), and how to use Nix command line tools
Community
- Discourse Forum
- IRC - #nixos on freenode.net
- NixOS Weekly
- Community-maintained wiki
- Community-maintained list of ways to get in touch (Discord, Matrix, Telegram, other IRC channels, etc.)
Other Project Repositories
The sources of all official Nix-related projects are in the NixOS organization on GitHub. Here are some of the main ones:
- Nix - the purely functional package manager
- NixOps - the tool to remotely deploy NixOS machines
- nixos-hardware - NixOS profiles to optimize settings for different hardware
- Nix RFCs - the formal process for making substantial changes to the community
- NixOS homepage - the NixOS.org website
- hydra - our continuous integration system
- NixOS Artwork - NixOS artwork
Continuous Integration and Distribution
Nixpkgs and NixOS are built and tested by our continuous integration system, Hydra.
- Continuous package builds for unstable/master
- Continuous package builds for the NixOS 20.09 release
- Tests for unstable/master
- Tests for the NixOS 20.09 release
Artifacts successfully built with Hydra are published to cache at https://cache.nixos.org/. When successful build and test criteria are met, the Nixpkgs expressions are distributed via Nix channels.
Contributing
Nixpkgs is among the most active projects on GitHub. While thousands of open issues and pull requests might seem a lot at first, it helps consider it in the context of the scope of the project. Nixpkgs describes how to build tens of thousands of pieces of software and implements a Linux distribution. The GitHub Insights page gives a sense of the project activity.
Community contributions are always welcome through GitHub Issues and Pull Requests. When pull requests are made, our tooling automation bot, OfBorg will perform various checks to help ensure expression quality.
The Nixpkgs maintainers are people who have assigned themselves to maintain specific individual packages. We encourage people who care about a package to assign themselves as a maintainer. When a pull request is made against a package, OfBorg will notify the appropriate maintainer(s). The Nixpkgs committers are people who have been given permission to merge.
Most contributions are based on and merged into these branches:
master
is the main branch where all small contributions gostaging
is branched from master, changes that have a big impact on Hydra builds go to this branchstaging-next
is branched from staging and only fixes to stabilize and security fixes with a big impact on Hydra builds should be contributed to this branch. This branch is merged into master when deemed of sufficiently high quality
For more information about contributing to the project, please visit the contributing page.
Donations
The infrastructure for NixOS and related projects is maintained by a nonprofit organization, the NixOS Foundation. To ensure the continuity and expansion of the NixOS infrastructure, we are looking for donations to our organization.
You can donate to the NixOS foundation by using Open Collective:
License
Nixpkgs is licensed under the MIT License.
Note: MIT license does not apply to the packages built by Nixpkgs, merely to the files in this repository (the Nix expressions, build scripts, NixOS modules, etc.). It also might not apply to patches included in Nixpkgs, which may be derivative works of the packages to which they apply. The aforementioned artifacts are all covered by the licenses of the respective packages.