this is a helper script to send emails to people who've not logged in
for a while (currently hard-coded to "since 2023-01-01"). It also sends
weekly reminders to admins giving the current number of unused accounts.
It is in $PATH for all normal users; for usage, invoke it with --help,
or just see the email it send to admin@.
this should not change their behaviour with "nix run", which was
the reason for putting them there in the first place (however, it does
remove the ability to build them with "nix build", but afaik this has
never been used by anyone).
This means the packages.* output is now left unused, so we can use it
instead for things that actually are programs which want to expose
(see the next commit after this one for an example).
this has not been used for quite some time, and since the new mattermost
version displays the plugin's button more prominently it's now definitly
time to remove this.
this mirrors a change in the nixpkgs definition: the nix-update script
has a hardcoded list of attributes it will update. We can re-use one of
them to make it update mattermost's web frontend at the same time as it
updates mattermost itself.
The list of attribute names is here:
https://github.com/Mic92/nix-update/tree/1.3.1?tab=readme-ov-file#features
original nixpkgs commit by numinit was
1451a58a57e1bd1592460268bdde30cf72923010
1451a58a57
This reverts commit d933a6ef98.
The conference was held months ago, and as agreed beforehand, we would
delete this instance after two months, which is now.
This revert was partially done by hand, since sops does not play nice
with automated git merged (these lead to mac mismatches).
this includes the jump to conftrack, a custom-written configuration
library that'll hopefully be less annoying to deal with than conferer.
It's very much unstable & somewhat incomplete software for now, but
should hopefully reach a stable state soon (this deployment is thus
basically part of testing it).
It also means we can finally write camelCase in config keys without
having the config library fail on us!
this is almost a revert of 147fe172d9,
but we now use the forgejo package of nixos-unstable-small instead of
that from stable nixos.
we were never noticably faster than forgejo maintainance upstream (turns
out that unlike mattermost, some services actually get updated in time);
no update was ever more than just copying the latest upstream package
recipe.
As a side-effect, this also updates forgejo to 7.0.5, which is a
security release:
https://codeberg.org/forgejo/forgejo/src/branch/forgejo/RELEASE-NOTES.md#7-0-5
it sometimes takes a long while to boot & signal being ready to systemd,
which will kill it after the timeout is reached, after which it's rinse
and repeat and yay for a boot loop.
this includes the fix for a remote code excecution as root
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/323761
(probably CVE-2024-6387)
annoyingly it did not bump the version number (to check that the fix
is indeed there, one has to check wich patches are applied).
it also adds nextcloud to the permitteed insecure packages because we
again didn't update it in time (in fairness, it is also broken).
fun irony!
note: tracktrain is now built on nixpkgs-unstable haskell packages;
using nixpkgs-stable with a newer version of haskellPackages.filepath is
unfortunately broken for now.
We can move back to nixpkgs-stable with it once the 24.05 release has
happened.