Was confused why `make html` didn't work while working on #9032, but
then I realized that after this section was written, the target was
renamed to `manual-html` in 6910f5dcb6.
Before they were an "ad-hoc" header with bold and a colon; now they are
a proper subheader.
For the man pages, this doesn't make much of a difference, but it will
help more on for the HTML manual, where things can be restyled. Again,
good separation of content vs presentation.
Behavior change:
Before we only showed uption if the command-specific options were
non-empty. But that is somewhat odd since we also show common options.
Now, we do everything based on the union of both sorts of options (with
hidden-categories filtered, as before).
Implementation change:
The JSON dumping once again includes all options; the filtering of
hidden categories is done in the Nix instead. This is better separation
of "content" vs "presentation", and prepare the way for the HTML manual
vs manpages / `--help` doing different things.
We will soon add a new implemenation so the one for NARs in `archive.cc`
isn't the only one.
Co-Authored-By: Matthew Bauer <mjbauer95@gmail.com>
Co-Authored-By: Carlo Nucera <carlo.nucera@protonmail.com>
Support using nix flakes in paths with spaces or abitrary unicode characters.
This introduces the convention that the path part of the URL should be
percent-encoded when dealing with `path:` urls and not when using
filepaths (following the convention of firefox).
Co-authored-by: Rendal <rasmus@rend.al>
It was disabled in c6953d1ff6 because
a recent Nixpkgs bump brought in a new systemd which changed how
systemd-nspawn worked.
As far as I can tell, the issue was caused by this upstream systemd
commit:
b71a0192c0
Bind-mounting the host's `/sys` and `/proc` into the container's
`/run/host/{sys,proc}` fixes the issue and allows the test to succeed.
Our FreeBSD headers have `pthread_getattr_np`, but we get a link-time
error that is missing. The good news is that there is another similar
function which does exist, and the upstream project elsewhere does just
the [fallback code] we need.
As the fallback code indicates, the two functions are not identical
however as the other one needs explicit initialization. NetBSD supports
both in fact, and its [manpage] is therefore a good
resource on what the differences are.
[fallback code]: 07a6d0ee88/os_dep.c (L1266-L1272)
[manpage]: https://man.netbsd.org/pthread_attr_get_np.3