Unstable revision In addition to numerous new and upgraded packages, this release has the following highlights: The Haskell packages infrastructure has been re-designed from the ground up. NixOS now distributes the latest version of every single package registered on Hackage, i.e. well over 8000 Haskell packages. Further information and usage instructions for the improved infrastructure are available at https://nixos.org/wiki/Haskell. Users migrating from an earlier release will find also find helpful information below, in the list of backwards-incompatible changes. Users running an SSH server who worry about the quality of their /etc/ssh/moduli file with respect to the vulnerabilities discovered in the Diffie-Hellman key exchange can now replace OpenSSH's default version with one they generated themselves using the new services.openssh.moduliFile option. Following new services were added since the last release: brltty marathon When upgrading from a previous release, please be aware of the following incompatible changes: Steam now doesn't need root rights to work. Instead of using *-steam-chrootenv, you should now just run steam. steamChrootEnv package was renamed to steam, and old steam package -- to steamOriginal. CMPlayer has been renamed to bomi upstream. Package cmplayer was accordingly renamed to bomi The default NIX_PATH for NixOS now includes /nix/var/nix/profiles/per-user/root/channels, so it's easy to add custom channels. Moreover, whenever a nixos-rebuild <action> --upgrade is issued, every channel that includes a file called .update-on-nixos-rebuild will be upgraded alongside of the nixos channel. The CUPS printing service has been updated to version 2.0.2. Furthermore its systemd service has been renamed to cups.service. Local printers are no longer shared or advertised by default. This behavior can be changed by enabling services.printing.defaultShared or services.printing.browsing respectively. HPLIP (printer, scanner, and fax drivers for HP devices) has been updated to version 3.15.4. This release adds support for the arm6l-linux and arm7l-linux platforms. Haskell packages can no longer be found by name, i.e. the commands nix-env -qa cabal-install and nix-env -i ghc will fail, even though we do ship both cabal-install and ghc. The reason for this inconvenience is the sheer size of the Haskell package set: name-based lookups such as these would become much slower than they are today if we'd add the entire Hackage database into the top level attribute set. Instead, the list of Haskell packages can be displayed by nix-env -f "<nixpkgs>" -qaP -A haskellPackages and packages can be installed with: nix-env -f "<nixpkgs>" -iA haskellPackages.cabal-install Previous versions of NixOS come with a feature called ghc-wrapper, a small wrapper script that allows GHC to transparently pick up on libraries installed in the user's profile. This feature has been deprecated; ghc-wrapper was removed from the distribution. The proper way to register Haskell libraries with the compiler now is the haskellPackages.ghcWithPackages function. https://nixos.org/wiki/Haskell provides much information about this subject. All Haskell builds that have been generated with version 1.x of the cabal2nix utility are now invalid and need to be re-generated with a current version of cabal2nix to function. The most recent version of this tool can be installed by running nix-env -i cabal2nix. The haskellPackages set in Nixpkgs used to have a function attribute called extension that users could override in their ~/.nixpkgs/config.nix files to configure additional attributes, etc. That function still exists, but it's now called overrides.