- At the top of the release notes, we announce sandboxing is now enabled by default,
then at the bottom it says it's now disabled when missing kernel support. These
can be merged into one point for clarity.
- The point about `max-jobs` defaulting to 1 appears unrelated to sandboxing.
(cherry picked from commit 5d24e18e29ea1fff8fa316701fd95be6941da770)
Otherwise `chmod .`'ing the build directory doesn't work anymore, which
is done in nixpkgs if sourceRoot is set to '.'.
(cherry picked from commit f8dbde0813c4e8beed6dfd09b093589e027a6675)
Every Tuesday I work from Google's 6PS office instead of BEL. I work from my
laptop, which often requires that I ssh into the desktop work station in BEL. I
have settled on a locally optimal workflow that I'd like to improve. To help
seek higher ground, I'm planning on using ssh.el to configure tramp and define
utility functions to lower my cost of exploring new workflows.
- Defines a function, `ssh/desktop-cd-home` that helps me quickly open a dired
buffer for my work station's home directory.
- Documents some variables that I set weeks ago.
- Requires ssh.el in init.el.
Until now my notmuch is usable but not almost always pleasurably so. For
example, when I reply to messages, notmuch warns that "Insert failed:"; when I
check Gmail, the reply sent... strange. After consulting with a fellow notmuch
user and Emacs disciple, tazjin@, I borrowed some of his notmuch configuration.
- notmuch is no longer warning about replies
- Replies do not include noisy email signatures
- I have an Emacs User-Agent header in my outgoing mail
- All of this and more...
Add tag:unread to:
- direct
- broadcast
- systems
Additionally: I added "and not tag:sent" for direct because oftentimes I send
myself mail. Without that condition, my sent mail shows up in direct.
Rasterific appears to generate some pretty surprising, if not
completely wrong, circles at especially low sizes - this was resulting
in unexpected behavior with vision calculation, including the character
never being able to see directly to the left of them, among other
things. This moves back to the old midpoint circle algorithm I pulled
off of rosetta code, but only for the non-filled circle. The filled
circle is still using the wonky algorithm for now, but at some point I'd
love to refactor it such that empty circles are eg always a subset of
non-filled circles.
keybindings.el calls (require 'evil-ex), which I introduced in this commit...
0456a1c4b4
...calling (require 'evil-ex) loads evil. When evil is loaded before
evil-want-integration is set to nil, evil-collection writes to *Warnings* when
Emacs initializes, which I find noisy. This commit ensures the
evil-want-integration is set to nil before evil is loaded, which appeases
evil-collection and thus removes the warning message.
Bonus:
If you git checkout the previous commit, and attempt to run the KBDs...
- `SPC g s`: magit-status
- `s h`: evil-window-vsplit
...from a buffer whose major-mode is dired-mode, you should notice that the
above functions won't execute.
Strangely though, if you look at this commit...
37f8ca04f2
...I fixed these issues. Well I introduced a regression when I added 0456a1c.
My current guess is that when evil-collection complains about
evil-want-integration, it is breaking the evaluation sequence of my init.el
file. wpc-dired.el is downstream from wpc-keybindings.el, which requires
evil-collection. Perhaps no modules required after wpc-keybindings.el are
evaluated after evil-collection warns about evil-want-integration. Even if that
assumption is wrong, what I do know is that this commit fixes the
evil-collection warning and restores the KBDs for dired-mode-map.
Here's to feeding two birds with one scone!
Rather than having a single sentWelcome boolean, avoid running the
initEvent entirely when loading an already-initialized game. Among other
things, this stops us from re-generating a level and then merging it
with the existing one when the game is loaded (oops).
Today I setup declarative gmail filters using some Google internal tooling. I'm
now adding labels to messages from Critique, Sphinx, Ganpati, "The Daily
Insider", messages sent directly to me, and more. These labels are applied
server-side.
On the notmuch, client-side, I'm support saved queries for these newly created
gmail labels.
I can already tag emails with `+` and `-`. Here I'm defining KBDs for moving
messages from my inbox into: action, review, and waiting. I'm also mutually
excluding messages in action, review, and waiting from inbox and vice versa.
I'm also supporting a "muted" tag for now; I'm still learning how to use notmuch
with email threads, but I'm hoping the "muted" tag will prevent future messages
in a thread from arriving in my inbox.
--
97faa5fdfa4cd5d7a74cd9332cddd8a7c1e67b89 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>:
Internal changes
PiperOrigin-RevId: 295164378
--
74990f100b3f4172c770ef8c76c05c8e99febdde by Xiaoyi Zhang <zhangxy@google.com>:
Release `absl::Cord`.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 295161959
--
6018c57f43c45c31dc1a61c0cd75fa2aa9be8dab by Gennadiy Rozental <rogeeff@google.com>:
Introduce independent notion of FlagStaticTypeID.
This change separates static flag value type identification from the type specific "vtable" with all the operations specific to value type. This change allows us to do the following:
* We can move most of "vtable" implementation from handle header, which will become public soon, into implementation details of Abseil Flag.
* We can combine back marshalling ops and general ops into a single vtable routine. They were split previously to facilitate type identification without requiring marshalling routines to be exposed in header.
* We do not need to store two vtable pointers. We can now store only one. The static type id can be deduced on request.
Overall we are saving 24 bytes per flag according to size_tester run.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 295149687
--
986b78e9ba571aa85154e70bda4580edd45bb7bf by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>:
Update internal comments.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 295030681
--
825412b29fd6015027bbc3e5f802706eee0d2837 by Matthew Brown <matthewbr@google.com>:
Change str_format_internal::ConversionChar to an enum (from a struct-wrapped enum).
PiperOrigin-RevId: 294987462
--
f9f88d91809d2cc33fc129df70fa93e7a2c35c69 by Derek Mauro <dmauro@google.com>:
Use more precise wording in the question on live-at-head
PiperOrigin-RevId: 294957679
GitOrigin-RevId: 97faa5fdfa4cd5d7a74cd9332cddd8a7c1e67b89
Change-Id: I081e70d148ffac7296d65e2a2f775f643eaf70bf
After running `systemctl --user enable lieer-google.timer`, systemctl created a
symlink pointing from timers.target.wants -> ../lieer-google.timer. I'm not sure
if tracking symlinks in a git repository is such a useful idea.
This commit reminds me that I could and should be using Nix to better manage
symlink creation and destruction.
Until I have more opinions about my workflow with notmuch, I will redefine the
KBDs from Gmail that I'm comfortable with. While not many KBDs are defined here,
evil-collection defines dozens, many of which I find reasonable; those that I
disagree with, I've unbound in this commit.
Composing emails in notmuch feels similar to writing a commit message with
magit. I want to be able to type :x or :wq, but these commands don't DWIM. For
magit, I'd like that behavior to be the same as `C-c C-c`; not surprisingly, for
notmuch, I'd like the same.
I've bound :x to do this for notmuch. I'd like to define a macro that can easily
define buffer-local evil-ex commands for particular modes. This should lower the
cost of defining evil-ex commands and hopefully convince me to support some of
this desired behavior.
--
dc6d2715f0415082fcc8da8bf74e74bce69b236c by Derek Mauro <dmauro@google.com>:
Correctly detect C++ exceptions support on Clang for Windows
PiperOrigin-RevId: 294905116
--
b43c44501b4820f4a2f396e426619bd02565707e by Derek Mauro <dmauro@google.com>:
Set CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD on the MacOS CMake build
PiperOrigin-RevId: 294730418
--
184a078649167f9738da60b0f12108256bcfd67b by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>:
No need for custom spec to deal with limited platforms.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 294700133
--
b437c7f659b809fc84a45eab284265fec497a3e3 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>:
Not calling sigaltstack on WatchOS and TVOS since they don't allow it.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 294699951
--
23ab8dd381ee4104125dece8455bc96b81239789 by Gennadiy Rozental <rogeeff@google.com>:
Replace use of atomic+global Mutex+bool with absl::call_once for Flag initialization.
This simplifies the initialization logic and helps with upcoming work with value storage rework.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 294654938
--
cee576163a2753c6138bc254e81de4800ea3307a by Gennadiy Rozental <rogeeff@google.com>:
Separate const bits from mutable bits.
Since bit field is not atomic unit for reading/writing, we can't have constant bits which are not protected by data guard to share the space with mutable bits which are protected.
This CL just reorder fields in class and does not make any other changes.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 294501780
--
b4d0e2ab559d04f655c93f008594562234773c15 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>:
Correct the comment.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 294499328
--
a788cf71af6247df033298c49939ba0414d71693 by Derek Mauro <dmauro@google.com>:
Move the FAQ to the top level directory
PiperOrigin-RevId: 294493863
GitOrigin-RevId: dc6d2715f0415082fcc8da8bf74e74bce69b236c
Change-Id: I71b0d8cd401b48d41433417858ae0d69398b6602
I'm borrowing from @tazjin's dotfiles, which are stored in Git on Borg. When you
call `nix-build ~/briefcase/mail`, result will output a systemd units, which you
should move to ~/.config/systemd/user/.
The path to `gmi`, which is Lieer's executable, exists in /nix/store, and you
can read it from the systemd unit file (i.e. lieer-google.service). Lieer
synchronizes notmuch with Gmail and Gmail with notmuch.
Here's a general sequence of commands that I ran to set everything up. Special
thank you to @tazjin for helping me with all of this. These steps are not
certified as a tutorial; I'm recalling them from memory. When I set this up
things didn't work as expected immediately and I had to troubleshoot.
```shell
> mkdir -p ~/mail/account.google
> cd ~/mail/account.google
> nix-env -iA nixpkgs.notmuch
> notmuch setup
> nix-build ~/briefcase/mail
> cp ./result/lieer-google.{service,timer} ~/.config/systemd/user
> rm ./result
> systemctl --user cat lieer-google
...copy the /nix/store path to gmi...
> notmuch new
> /nix/store/gmi init
...follow the OAuth login flow...
>
```
Unknowns?
- Do I need to call `systemctl --user start lieer-google` at startup? Or should
I move these units to user/default.target.wants?
- Can I send email from notmuch?
- How do I use notmuch to delete email? To respond to emails? To do anything?
Todo:
- Once this configuration stabilizes, I should package everything with Nix.
Write a function to merge meeting times. Added an in-place solution, which the
"Bonus" section suggested attempting to solve.
- Added some simple benchmarks to test the performance differences between the
in-place and not-in-place variants. To my surprise, the in-place solution was
consistently slower than the not-in-place solution.
After working with fish for a few weeks, I've decided that I prefer aliases to
abbreviations.
Why? When I reverse search through my command history, I search for the
what I typed and not what it expanded to. Some of my aliases wrap existing
tools encoding my preference for tool A if tool B isn't available. For example I
alias vim to neovim. When nvim isn't available on $PATH, typing vim will
expand to nvim, which will in turn fail.
I previously had an alias defined as `simple_vim`, which would start an instance
of Vim with a bare bones config. I had a to-do to Nixify it. That is
now (mostly) to-done.
When I try and install it with `nix-env -f ~/briefcase -iA tools.simple_vim`,
Nix fails and says that pkgs.stdenv is undefined. I will need to fix this one
day, but it is neither important nor urgent...
I had a spare fifteen minutes and decided that I should tidy up my
monorepo. The work of tidying up is not finished; this is a small step in the
right direction.
TL;DR
- Created a tools directory
- Created a scratch directory (see README.md for more information)
- Added README.md to third_party
- Renamed delete_dotfile_symlinks -> symlinkManager
- Packaged symlinkManager as an executable symlink-mgr using buildGo
At the moment there is no other way for requests from nugget to camden
to resolve correctly, as the Hyperoptic router is eating this traffic
on the LAN.
Adds a user & group which are configured to own the local depot copy,
and a cgit service to serve it.
The depot checkout was configured as:
mkdir -p /var/git && chown git: /var/git
# now, as the git user, in /var/git
git clone --bare ... depot
chmod -R g+rw /var/git
chmod g+s (find /var/git -type d)
git init --bare --shared=all depot
My personal user is a member of the git group, which means that after
the above configuration I can push to the bare repo as my user and
things work.
Also, crucially, the `post-update` hook must be enabled as cgit uses
the dumb HTTP transport.