• Shareni@programming.dev
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    7 months ago

    Dude still hasn’t decided where to host the repo. It’s not an alternative, guix is…

    • starman@programming.dev
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      7 months ago

      Aux is more similar to Nix, than Guix is.

      Guix uses the same concepts, but still is very different.

    • toastal@lemmy.ml
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      7 months ago

      Hopefully it is delay due to setting up self-hosted options. I would support it if I didn’t have to use Microsoft GitHub—Nixpkgs is the reason my account hasn’t been deactivated.

        • toastal@lemmy.ml
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          These aren’t well established where you can see the post was created in ’18. If they were established, you would seem them in the raw CONTRIBUTING.md. You can see folks having issues with using Discourse as a mailing list since it doesn’t quite work as expected & still requires review by someone with merge access to the primary repository. There is a SourceHut one that actually has some activity & I believe was once listed under the one of the contributing guides, but I can’t remember where it was listed. I doubt many maintainers are properly checking their email too despite listing them on the maintainer.nix file. I would hedge to say that unless the community migrates away, you would see folks complaining the tread above about disliking that there is no pull requests with instead push to the default branch so we would asume all contributions in practices will be expected to be done thru MS GitHub. As it stands going thru the mailing list puts a lot of friction on everyone & wastes time of other maintainers that are expected to then raise a PR on your behalf for review. Say that PR does get opened on your behalf, now you want to follow it since it’s your patch… well too bad since MS GitHub has no way of subscribing to PR threads like it does some aspects of by adding .atom to the end of a URL. As such, if you really want the in-practice option to not be under Microsoft’s domain, you’ll need to remove Microsoft from being the primary forge, relegating it to a mirror or dropping it outright.

          • meteokr@community.adiquaints.moe
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            7 months ago

            Mailing lists are a platform/protocol not really a UI. IRC is trash if all you are using is some terrible web UI, but much better with proper native apps designed around its use cases. Mailing lists are a massive improvement over Discord that so many projects tend to use instead. I’d take a mailing list over a Discord “server” every day.

            • onlinepersona@programming.dev
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              7 months ago

              Yeah, I’m not even talking about the UI, but the UX of mailinglists. The UI is terrible, but I find the UX even worse.

              IRC is yet another protocol from another era. Most clients don’t parse links and don’t provide link previews, don’t support code blocks or syntax highlighting, don’t support threads, don’t support listing the slash commands, don’t support images, don’t support markdown, no audio, no video, servers can’t group chat rooms like matrix, there’s no encryption either, …
              It’s just shit.

              If it were the choice between mailinglist and discord, I wouldn’t take either and not communicate altogether. Fuck those both.

              Edit: sorry, I really dislike IRC, mailinglists and discord. It’s fine if you do like mailinglists and IRC. You do you 👍

              Anti Commercial-AI license

            • someacnt_@lemmy.world
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              7 months ago

              It always bewilders me to hear that some peasants adopted discord server out of all things for an open source project.

      • Shareni@programming.dev
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        7 months ago

        It’s not really worth it IMO except for lisp and Emacs packages. The biggest issue for me was that nearly every other package I need was seriously out of date.

    • lemmyreader@lemmy.mlOP
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      7 months ago

      Here’s a tl;dr : https://github.com/KFearsoff/nix-drama-explained

      If you’re looking for a TL;DR of the situation, here it is:

      • Nix community had a governance crisis for years. While there has been progress on building explicit teams to govern the project, it continued to fundamentally rely on implicit authority and soft power
      • Eelco Dolstra, as one of the biggest holders of this implicit authority and soft power, has continuously abused this authority to push his decisions, and to block decisions that he doesn’t like
      • Crucially, he also used his implicit authority to block any progress on solving this governance crisis and establishing systems with explicit authority
      • This has led uncountably many people to burn out over the issue, and culminated in writing an open letter to have Eelco resign from all formal positions in the project and take a 6 month break from any involvement in the community
      • Eelco wrote a response that largely dismisses the issues brought up, and advertises his company’s community as a substitute for Nix community

      And a not too long read : https://dataswamp.org/~solene/2024-04-27-nix-internal-crisis.html

      • john89@lemmy.ca
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        7 months ago

        has continuously abused this authority to push his decisions, and to block decisions that he doesn’t like

        Hmm. I’ve seen this before. It looks like the “sensationalist” crowd has issues with people who don’t go along with their sensationalism.

        I’m not a Nix expert nor do I know the inner-workings of its management. I’ve just seen this so many times that I don’t expect more from people at this point.

        It sucks when idiots group together to push smart people into doing their bidding. I respect those who resist it, though.

  • matcha_addict@lemy.lol
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    7 months ago

    Not very clear to me that this is any more valuable than OG NixOS.

    This sounds a lot like the forgejo vs gitea fork. I love the forgejo people but I am yet to see a sufficient differentiator.

    • moonpiedumplings@programming.dev
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      7 months ago

      https://forgejo.org/compare-to-gitea/

      I dunno, some of these are a pretty big deal, in particular:

      Gitea repeatedly makes choices that leave Gitea admins exposed to known vulnerabilities during extended periods of time. For instance Gitea spent resources to undergo a SOC2 security audit for its SaaS offering while critical vulnerabilities demanded a new release. Advance notice of security releases is for customers only.

      Gitea is developed on github, whereas forgejo is developed on and by codeberg, who use it as their main forge (also mentioned on that page). Someone dogfooding gives me more confidence in the software.

    • Mx Phibb@reddthat.com
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      7 months ago

      I think the reason is because apparently a lot of people are unhappy with a deal Nix inked apparently with a company that does business with the US’ Immigrations and Customs

      • cybersandwich@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Wait so people got butthurt that a company made a deal with nix. That company also does business with ICE. And people are mad at Nix?

        What am I missing?

        Also companies and open source entities do business with all manner of government(s) all the time.

        • Mx Phibb@reddthat.com
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          7 months ago

          Don’t really know, hit something about it elsewhere, but it didn’t say anything more than that, but yeah, that seems to be the gist of things.

    • ZWQbpkzl [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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      7 months ago

      I like #Nix, I do not like what has happened to it.

      With no explanation of what happened, the conclusion is almost certainly Internal politics.

      It seems like forgejo split from gitea because it looked like gitea was going the route of gitlab. Idk if NixOS is going to commercialize though. Based on recent gossip it sounds like they’re overly adverse to commercialization. IE banning people for having DoD connections. Aux’s talk about special interest groups makes it sound like they’re going embrace that like redhat.

    • micka190@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      They were still pulling in mainline Gitea changes while introducing their own stuff last I checked.

      • matcha_addict@lemy.lol
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        7 months ago

        Pulling in mainline gitea changes, I did see. But I didn’t see any notable differences from gitea. Do you know of any?

          • matcha_addict@lemy.lol
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            7 months ago

            Gitea claims to be working on federation too, which puzzles me that forgejo presents it as a differentiator.

        • micka190@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          Nothing concrete from what I can tell. Becoming a hard fork is relatively recent though (mid-November of last year, roughly).

          As a side note, I understand why Gitea and Forgejo went for a “copy GitHub Actions” approach to their CI, but man do I wish more self-hosted repo software tried to copy Drone/Woodpecker instead. Iterative containers in the pipeline is such a smoother build experience, and it kind of sucks that Gitness is the only one doing it (that I know of).

        • algernon@lemmy.ml
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          7 months ago

          There’s plenty, but I do not wish to hijack this thread, so… have a look at the Forgejo 7.0 release notes, the PRs it links to along notable features (and a boatload of bugfixes, many of which aren’t in Gitea). Then compare when (and if) similar features or fixes were implemented in Gitea.

          The major difference (apart from governance, and on a technical level) between Gitea and Forgejo is that Forgejo cherry picks from Gitea weekly (being a hard fork doesn’t mean all ties are severed, it means that development happens independently). Gitea does not cherry pick from Forgejo. They could, the license permits it, and it even permits sublicensing, so it’s not an obstacle for Gitea Cloud or Gitea EE, either. They just don’t.

  • Blizzard
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    7 months ago

    NixOS forked

    Sounds like it broke and you wanted to f-bomb it in the Good Place.

    • meteokr@community.adiquaints.moe
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      7 months ago

      They are very diverged projects, but share the same philosophy. The Nix packages themselves aren’t the problem, its the organization backing them. So this fork is attempting to create better governance and organization, so that the good underlying tech can keep going and progress.

      For example, Flakes have been held back from truly flourishing because the governing body has purposefully held back changes to those systems for nontechnical problems, but rather political conflicts with their proprietary offerings.

      Think of the fork the same way we had the Alma/Rocky forks off of CentOS. Its political rather than technical, so keeping the same base tech helps adoption. Over time we can improve or replace parts of the ecosystem as the needs of this new project grow.

    • Klara@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      7 months ago

      I think so. The language (Scheme) is a lot more logical to me, and the higher focus on reproducibility in the main channel compared to Nix (Guix can be bootstrapped from a tiny binary seed) is a draw for me.

  • meteokr@community.adiquaints.moe
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    7 months ago

    I would love to host a mirror of the ecosystem once the fork is underway. I made a small attempt a little while ago to create a mirror of the Nix repos but the documentation on how to set it up was lacking. Hosting a Debian mirror is relatively easy, Nix appeared quite a bit more obfuscated.

  • qaz@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    I was just thinking about switching to Nix, but I have no idea what to choose now.

    • d3Xt3r@lemmy.nzM
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      7 months ago

      I disagree with @[email protected] (sorry!) - the biggest issue right now is that package maintainers are leaving in droves - at least 15 contributors left a few days ago, a number which has likely increased these past few days - and will continue to increase. I think the only people left will be the ones who support Eelco and the toxic culture brewed by him.

      What this means is that you risk your packages getting out of date, including slow delivery of security updates (which was already an increasing concern, due to the way the Nixpkgs build system worked). Worst case scenario, some (many?) packages may never even get an update.

      So now’s definitely NOT a good time to switch, and in fact I’d also urge existing users to look at other distros, at least temporarily until this whole thing settles down.

      • Shareni@programming.dev
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        7 months ago

        I disagree with @[email protected] (sorry!)

        Don’t say sorry for making an actual argument, or are you some Canadian lol?

        at least 15 contributors left a few days ago

        According to this list there are 3470 maintainers. Were those 15 doing so much work to warrant calling it the end of days?

        What this means is that you risk your packages getting out of date, including slow delivery of security updates

        A possible delay for some package updates vs certainly outdated packages in my native Debian. Not really a choice IMO

      • Random Dent@lemmy.ml
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        7 months ago

        I’ve been tempted for a while to switch from good old reliable Arch (btw) to NixOS, but now I’m glad I procrastinated and just ran it in a little VM specimen jar instead.

      • ericjmorey@programming.dev
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        7 months ago

        I guess it depends on what you’re planning doing with NixOS or Aux. I wouldn’t use it for anything new and critical. I’d figure out a mitigation strategy if I were relying on it for something critical.

        But for experimental purposes, neither option seems like a bad call.

    • Shareni@programming.dev
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      7 months ago

      Just use Nix and see where the drama goes in a year. I’m guessing your configs will be fully compatible or only require minimal changes, if the forks survive that long in the first place.

      I’d suggest learning nix, flakes, and home-manager before going anywhere close to NixOS. This should help you out

    • jeffhykin@lemm.ee
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      7 months ago

      You should learn the nix lang, flakes, zero to nix, etc and try not to get bogged down in the Nix/Aux stuff. Be prepared to wait for things to settle down on that side.

  • slazer2au@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Ok, but why? Forking generally means you are unhappy with something but no one is saying what.

  • doriancodes@infosec.pub
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    7 months ago

    Nice! I’m really looking forward to this. I’ve been playing with nix for a while, but there were some things that prevented me from seriously adopt it (e.g. flakes are still considered experimental, but they are widely used).

  • itslilith@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    7 months ago

    This looks good, I’ll switch over as soon as they decided on a hoster. I don’t have too much experience working in open source projects, but I’ll try to contribute what I can