The Git module now supports SSH and X.509 signing in addition to
OpenPGP/GnuPG, via setting the `programs.git.signing.format` option.
It defaults to `openpgp` for now as a backwards compatibility measure,
but I feel like we shouldn't enforce GPG as the default on everyone,
especially for people who use SSH signing like me.
Accordingly, `programs.git.signing.gpgPath` has been renamed to
`programs.git.signing.signer`, as now the signer binary is not
restricted to GnuPG. Users should only get a warning and everything
should continue to work.
Fixes#4221, supersedes #4235
Co-authored-by: Mario Rodas <marsam@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Sumner Evans <me@sumnerevans.com>
Co-authored-by: Leah Amelia Chen <hi@pluie.me>
Instead of having to manually stub packages that should not be
downloaded we instead automatically stub all packages (except a small
list of whitelisted ones). Tests can re-introduce the real package by
using the `realPkgs` module argument.
We currently have no way of specifying the sender's name inside the
From field, making a patch sent through `git send-email` appear as
coming from "xxx@domain.com".
In this commit we make this field follow the standard
realName <email>
format.
The git-send-email [0] script uses StartTLS if `smtpEncryption` is set
to `tls`, which can break services that don't support StartTLS.
[0]: bd42bbe1a4/git-send-email.perl (L1533)
PR #1395