I went through all categories that were already present in the grafana
module and added most options from the official docs at
https://grafana.com/docs/grafana/v9.5/setup-grafana/configure-grafana/
I also modified the descriptions of some existing options to match the
official docs more closely.
This change removes the bespoke logic around identifying block devices.
Instead of trying to find the right device by iterating over
`qemu.drives` and guessing the right partition number (e.g.
/dev/vda{1,2}), devices are now identified by persistent names provided
by udev in /dev/disk/by-*.
Before this change, the root device was formatted on demand in the
initrd. However, this makes it impossible to use filesystem identifiers
to identify devices. Now, the formatting step is performed before the VM
is started. Because some tests, however, rely on this behaviour, a
utility function to replace this behaviour in added in
/nixos/tests/common/auto-format-root-device.nix.
Devices that contain neither a partition table nor a filesystem are
identified by their hardware serial number which is injecetd via QEMU
(and is thus persistent and predictable). PCI paths are not a reliably
way to identify devices because their availability and numbering depends
on the QEMU machine type.
This change makes the module more robust against changes in QEMU and the
kernel (non-persistent device naming) and by decoupling abstractions
(i.e. rootDevice, bootPartition, and bootLoaderDevice) enables further
improvement down the line.
It's supposed to be `memcache.distributed`, not an associative PHP array
named `memcache` with a key `distributed`.
This was probably never caught because the initial `grep -q` check in
the test was invalid: `redis-cli` prints nothing if no keys can be found
when not writing to a tty apparently.
a zfs fileSystems entry with an absolute (e.g. device) path rather than
a zfs dataser is parsed as an empty pool name, causing a doomed-to-fail
import job to be created as a boot dependency. Catch this as an assertion
Lemmy checks the environment variable before the configuration file;
i.e. if the file is used to configure the database but the environment
variable is set to anything, the connection will fail because it'll
ignore the file. This was the previous behavior.
Now, the environment variable will be unset unless the user explicitly
chooses to set it, which makes the file-based configuration function
correctly. It's also possible to manually set the environment variable,
which has the major advantage of working around [this issue][0], which
prevents certain setups from working.
[0]: https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/issues/2945