- added package option to specify which version of redmine
- added themes option back in to allow specifying redmine themes
- added plugins option back in to allow specifying redmine plugins
- added database.socket option to allow mysql unix socket authentication
- added port option to allow specifying the port rails runs on
- cleaned up Gemfile so it is much less hacky
- switched to ruby version 2.4 by default as suggested by documentation http://www.redmine.org/projects/redmine/wiki/redmineinstall#Installing-Redmine
- fixed an annoyance (bug) in the service causing recursive symlinks
- fixed ownership bug on log files generated by redmine
- updates reflecting renames in nixos options
- added a nixos test
From commit b63f65aea0dea11c20e9299210af1d2ee4299b58:
I used tmpfiles.d instead of activation snippets to create the logs.
It's good enough for upstream and other distros; it's probably good
enough for us.
The "reboot-wtmp" subtest fails because it it assumes that there is a
reboot record even on the initial boot. This is only the case if wtmp is
created within the activation script, but the implementation now uses
tmpfiles.d, so the creation of the file is done at a much later stage.
Apart from that, if you think about the state after the installation as
"first boot", using the term "reboot" wouldn't probably make sense
either.
So in our subtest, we now reboot the machine and check the wtmp record
afterwards as we did before.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@nix.build>
Cc: @edolstra, @jameysharp, @Mic92
The socket activation I added to the rspamd module doesn't actually work
and can't be made to work without changes to rspamd.
See: #47421
See: rspamd/rspamd#2035
The test failed on Hydra in one instance because a request to the
server was sent before indexing was finished.
Retry the request until it succeeds (or times out).
The test failed in one run on Hydra, logs look like
dhcpcd changed ipv6 routing at just the wrong time.
Disable dhcpcd. It's not needed, the test uses static IPs anyway.
Test didn't run because it tried to create a VM with 4096M RAM
but qemu-system-i386 has a hard 2047M memory limit.
- reduce memory to 2047M on i686.
- increase timeout 300s -> 1800s because the tests are much slower
on i686 and timed out.
The `pkgs.yabar` package is relatively old (2016-04) and contains
several issues fixed on master. `yabar-unstable` containsa recent master
build with several fixes and a lot of new features (I use
`yabar-unstable` for some time now and had no issues with it).
In the upstream bugtracker some bugs could be fixed on ArchLinux by
simply installing `yabar-git` (an AUR package which builds a recent
master).
To stabilize the module, the option `programs.yabar.package` now
defaults to `pkgs.yabar-unstable` and yields a warning with several
linked issues that are known on `pkgs.yabar`.
The test has been refactored as well to ensure that `yabar` actually
starts (and avoid non-deterministic random success) and takes a
screenshot of a very minimalistic configuration on IceWM.
Fixes#46899
This attempts to improve stability of the test by using existing
services for miniupnpd and transmission.
It also uses explicit addresses for the network interfaces so that the
external IP addresses are valid internet addresses (thus fixing
validation problems from upnpc).
Also disable eth0 from being used to transfer torrents over without that
being the intention.
A sporadic failure occured on Hydra because a request was sent
to smtpd after the systemd unit was started, but before the daemon
was actually listening. Fix by checking for open ports first.
A sporadic failure occured on Hydra because a request was sent
to the daemon after the systemd unit was started, but before the
daemon was actually listening. Fix by checking for open port first.
Generated reverse path filtering rules for the macvlan interface
seem to be incorrect, causing the test to fail - sometimes or always,
depending on the dhcpcd version used.
- Disable reverse path checking temporarily to avoid blocking the channel
- Print more diagnostic information for debugging