The test only checked for existence of the rule file in the output path
of the rulefile generator.
However, we also need to check whether the basename of the file is also
the one we're currently searching for.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Partially reverts the following commits:
9f2a61c59c9c13fe6604
As @edolstra pointed out, it would make more sense to do this by default
instead of having that allowImpurePaths option. This of course might
break systems which add extra packages to udev, but on the upside it's
hard to miss one of these paths now because it won't get buried in the
ocean of build output lines.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
With 9f2a61c in place, let's actually use this in the installer tests to
make sure we won't shovel FHS paths down the throad of unstable channel
users.
I've tested this by running all of the installer tests for x86_64-linux
and they all succeeded.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
So far we were merely printing a warning if there are still references
to (/usr)/s?bin, but we actually want to make sure that we fix those
paths, especially on updates of packages that come with udev rules.
This adds a new option allowImpurePaths, which when set to false will
cause the "udev-rules" derivation to fail.
I've set this to true by default, to not break existing systems too much
and the intention is to set it to false for a few NixOS VM tests.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
We were trying to find FHS references in all of the rules found in
services.udev.packages. Unfortunately we're still fixing up paths in the
same derivation where we are checking those references, so for example
references to /sbin/modprobe were still printed to be needed to fixup
even though they were already fixed at the time.
So now we're printing a more helpful warning message which is also
conditional (before the warning message was printed regardless of
whether there are any rules that need fixup) and is based off the rules
that were already fixed up.
The new warning message not only contains the build-local rule files but
also the original files from other store paths and the FHS path
references that were still found.
With 8ecd3a5e1d reverted, we now get this:
/nix/store/...-udev-rules/63-md-raid-arrays.rules (originally from
/nix/store/...-mdadm-3.3.4/lib/udev/rules.d/63-md-raid-arrays.rules)
contains references to /usr/bin/readlink and /usr/bin/basename.
Which is now more accurate to what is not yet fixed and where it's
coming from.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
In 8ecd3a5, we fixed up the FHS paths for stage 1, but unfortunately we
have a similar udev rules generator twice one for the initrd and one
without. So we might need to refactor this in the future.
For now, let's just fix the references to readlink and basename in the
udev module as well until we have properly addressed this.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Fixes: #12722
It's not entirely clear why this happens, but sometimes /proc/1/exe
returns a bogus value, like
/ar3a3j6b9livhy5fcfv69izslhgk4gcz-systemd-217/lib/systemd/systemd. In
any case, we can just conservatively assume that we need to restart
systemd when this happens.
Fixes#10261.
Fixes references coming from the mdadm udev rules.
This addresses #12722 (mdadm udev rules have references to /usr/bin) but
still won't fix the warning, though (if we want to fix the warnings, we
will have to patch the udev rules generater in services/hardware/udev).
For common mdraid functionality, this shouldn't fix anything, because
the wrong references seem to only apply to containers, see these
(wrapped) lines from ${mdadm}/lib/udev/rules.d/63-md-raid-arrays.rules:
# Tell systemd to run mdmon for our container, if we need it.
ENV{MD_LEVEL}=="raid[1-9]*",
ENV{MD_CONTAINER}=="?*",
PROGRAM="/usr/bin/readlink $env{MD_CONTAINER}",
ENV{MD_MON_THIS}="%c"
ENV{MD_MON_THIS}=="?*",
PROGRAM="/usr/bin/basename $env{MD_MON_THIS}",
ENV{SYSTEMD_WANTS}+="mdmon@%c.service"
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Partially reverts commit 901163c0c7.
This has broken remote SSH into initrd because ${cfg.shell} is not
expanded. Also, nsswitch is useless without libnss_files.so which
are installed by initrd-ssh.
Generally we shouldn't ship pre-release versions anyway, and we
certainly don't want them to be release blockers. Also, chromium
builds are just too slow to have them blocking the channel (see
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/12794).
This is a regression introduced by merging the EBS and S3 images. The
EBS images had a special marker /.ebs to prevent the initrd from using
ephemeral storage for the unionfs, but this marker was missing in the
consolidated image.
The fix is to check the file ami-manifest-path on the metadata server
to see if we're an S3-based instance. This does require networking in
the initrd.
Issue #12613.
The default behavior with an m3.medium instance is to relocate
/nix and /tmp to /disk0 because an assumption is made that any
ephemeral disk is larger than the root volume. Rather than make
that assumption, add a check to see if the disk is larger, and
only then relocate /nix and /tmp.
This addresses https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/12613
Regression introduced by 5184aaa1ea.
The fix was intended to remove the "x == true/false" assertions, but by
accident a "x == false" was made "x == true" instead of "(!x)".
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Reported-by: devhell <"^"@regexmail.net>
Before the error if the wrong default desktop was chosen would be:
/nixpkgs-channels/lib/modules.nix:282:11:
Default desktop manager ($(defaultDM)) not found.
which has the string interpolation done incorreclty. Now that is fixed
and it is more user-friendly as:
/nixpkgs-channels/lib/modules.nix:282:11:
Default desktop manager (gnome) not found.
Probably you want to change
services.xserver.desktopManager.default = "gnome";
to one of
services.xserver.desktopManager.default = "gnome3";
services.xserver.desktopManager.default = "none";
First of all this fixes an evaluation error I introduced in ae466ba,
which wasn't triggered by any of my own tests against the change because
there are usually no NixOS options that are declared outside of the
<nixpkgs> tree. I renamed the attribute name from "fn" to "fileName"
first and later to "fullPath" but forgot one still occuring "filename".
Thanks to @vcunat for noticing this.
Another thing that he pointed out was that the "stripPrefix" function
can be factored away entirely, because it's very similar to
"removePrefix" in <nixpkgs/lib>.
Unfortunately we can't use "removePrefix" as is, because we need to
account for the final shlash.
So instead of removing it twice and/or retaining "stripPrefix", let's
append a shlash on every "prefixesToStrip" and we can use "removePrefix"
as is.
Tested with:
taalo-build nixos/release.nix -A tests.installer.simple.x86_64-linux
And:
w3m -dump "$(
nix-build nixos/release.nix -A manual.x86_64-linux
)/share/doc/nixos/options.html"
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Cc: @vcunat
Let's use a simple (unflipped) fold and break out the actual core
stripPrefix function from stripAnyPrefixes (I personally love
point-less^H^H^H^Hfree style but if I'd be anal I'd even go further and
factor away the "fn:").
Also, let's use path as a better name for "fn" (filename), because
that's what it is and also cannot be confused with "fn" meaning
"function".
We now toString all of the prefixes, so there shouldn't be any need to
implicily toString the extraSources anymore.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Regression introduced by e6cd147ae7.
This broke all of the installer tests, because they needed to rebuild
the manual within the test machine, while it only has a closure of the
already pre-built system in place.
The problem here was just that the order of the arguments got mixed up
in stripAnyPrefixes, so it was actually trying to strip the path off the
prefix, not the other way around.
So in the end no prefix was stripped at all, so we ended up having full
store paths in the manual, which in turn caused the build within the VM
to fail, because the prefixes differed.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>