Release post for 2.91 #34
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@ -51,7 +51,7 @@ You can verify that it works by running the following command:
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```sh
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$ nix --version
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nix (Lix, like Nix) 2.90.0
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nix (Lix, like Nix) 2.91.0
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```
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# Using the Lix NixOS module
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@ -76,7 +76,7 @@ Adding Lix to a flake-based configuration is relatively simple. First, add the L
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# which is often the case. If you've named it something else,
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# you'll need to change the `nixpkgs` below.
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lix-module = {
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url = "https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/nixos-module/archive/2.90.0.tar.gz";
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url = "https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/nixos-module/archive/2.91.0.tar.gz";
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inputs.nixpkgs.follows = "nixpkgs";
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};
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@ -153,7 +153,7 @@ You should now be using Lix! You can verify this by asking the `nix` command to
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```sh
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$ nix --version
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nix (Lix, like Nix) 2.90.0
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nix (Lix, like Nix) 2.91.0
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```
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As long as you see `Lix` in the output, you're good! If you're not sure what to do now, it's a
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@ -180,20 +180,20 @@ section, and add the line provided in the configuration
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#
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# The sha256 hashes were obtained with the following command in Lix (n.b.
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# this relies on --unpack, which is only in Lix and CppNix > 2.18):
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# nix store prefetch-file --name source --unpack https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/archive/2.90.0.tar.gz
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# nix store prefetch-file --name source --unpack https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/archive/2.91.0.tar.gz
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#
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# Note that the tag (e.g. 2.90.0) in the URL here is what determines
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# Note that the tag (e.g. 2.91.0) in the URL here is what determines
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# which version of Lix you'll wind up with.
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(let
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module = fetchTarball {
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name = "source";
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url = "https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/nixos-module/archive/2.90.0.tar.gz";
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sha256 = "sha256-yEO2cGNgzm9x/XxiDQI+WckSWnZX63R8aJLBRSXtYNE=";
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url = "https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/nixos-module/archive/2.91.0.tar.gz";
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sha256 = "sha256-zNW/rqNJwhq2lYmQf19wJerRuNimjhxHKmzrWWFJYts=";
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};
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lixSrc = fetchTarball {
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name = "source";
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url = "https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/archive/2.90.0.tar.gz";
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sha256 = "sha256-f8k+BezKdJfmE+k7zgBJiohtS3VkkriycdXYsKOm3sc=";
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url = "https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/archive/2.91.0.tar.gz";
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sha256 = "sha256-Rosl9iA9MybF5Bud4BTAQ9adbY81aGmPfV8dDBGl34s=";
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};
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# This is the core of the code you need; it is an exercise to the
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# reader to write the sources in a nicer way, or by using npins or
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@ -230,7 +230,7 @@ You should now be using Lix! You can verify this by asking the `nix` command to
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```sh
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$ nix --version
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nix (Lix, like Nix) 2.90.0
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nix (Lix, like Nix) 2.91.0
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```
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As long as you see `Lix` in the output, you're good! If you're not sure what to do now, it's a
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|
|
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@ -78,7 +78,7 @@ Thanks to Nix, we can actually ask Lix to upgrade your system directly. Run the
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sudo --preserve-env=PATH nix run \
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--experimental-features "nix-command flakes" \
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--extra-substituters https://cache.lix.systems --extra-trusted-public-keys "cache.lix.systems:aBnZUw8zA7H35Cz2RyKFVs3H4PlGTLawyY5KRbvJR8o=" \
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'git+https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix?ref=refs/tags/2.90.0' -- \
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'git+https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix?ref=refs/tags/2.91.0' -- \
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upgrade-nix \
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--extra-substituters https://cache.lix.systems --extra-trusted-public-keys "cache.lix.systems:aBnZUw8zA7H35Cz2RyKFVs3H4PlGTLawyY5KRbvJR8o="
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```
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@ -88,7 +88,7 @@ to report its version:
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```sh
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$ nix --version
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nix (Lix, like Nix) 2.90.0
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nix (Lix, like Nix) 2.91.0
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```
|
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As long as you see `Lix` in the output, you're good! If you're not sure what to do now, it's a
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|
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