Adds a fully fledged NixOS VM integration test which uses jmtpfs and
gvfs to test the functionality of MTP inside of NixOS. It uses USB
device emulation in QEMU to create MTP device(s) which can be tested
against.
Without configuring the block size a default of 512 bytes is used, which can
slow down the transfer speed massively.
In a test I've done with a semi-decent USB stick, I only get a transfer speed
of around 180 KB/sec when not specifying the block size but see 27 MB/sec when
setting the block size to 1 MB. This makes the transfer of the minimal
installation ISO take half a minute instead of an hour.
Installs Java into the Jenkins agent and allows specifying the JDK/JRE package to use. This is necessary as Jenkins verifies if the agent contains Java installed through the java -fullversion command, which if not, the connection will fail.
As requested by @roberth, we now have an option similar to
environment.etc. There's also extra store paths to copy and a way to
suppress store paths to make customizations possible.
We also link mount and umount to /bin to make recovery easier when
something fails
the build-time check is not safe (e.g. doesn't protect from bad users or nomissingok
paths missing), so add a new unit for configuration switch time check
Now the service no longer starts immediately,
check if the config we generated makes sense as soon as possible.
The check isn't perfect because logrotate --debug wants to check
users required, there are two problems:
- /etc/passwd and /etc/group are sandboxed and we don't have
visibility of system users
- the check phase runs as nixbld which cannot su to other users
and logrotate fails on this
Until these two problems can be addressed, users-related checks
are filtered out, it's still much better than no check.
The check can be disabled with services.logrotate.checkConfig
if required
(bird also has a preCheck param, to prepare the environment
before check, but we can add it if it becomes necessary)
Since this makes for very verbose builds, we only show errors:
There is no way to control log level, but logrotate hardcodes
'error:' at common log level, so we can use grep, taking care
to keep error codes
Some manual tests:
───────┬──────────────────────────────────────────
│ File: valid-config.conf
───────┼──────────────────────────────────────────
1 │ missingok
───────┴──────────────────────────────────────────
logrotate --debug ok
grep ok
───────┬──────────────────────────────────────────
│ File: postrotate-no-end.conf
───────┼──────────────────────────────────────────
1 │ missingok
2 │ /file {
3 │ postrotate
4 │ test
5 │ }
───────┴──────────────────────────────────────────
error: postrotate-no-end.conf:prerotate, postrotate or preremove without endscript
───────┬──────────────────────────────────────────
│ File: missing-file.conf
───────┼──────────────────────────────────────────
1 │ "test" { daily }
───────┴──────────────────────────────────────────
error: stat of test failed: No such file or directory
───────┬──────────────────────────────────────────
│ File: unknown-option.conf
───────┼──────────────────────────────────────────
1 │ some syntax error
───────┴──────────────────────────────────────────
logrotate --debug ok
error: unknown-option.conf:1 unknown option 'some' -- ignoring line
───────┬──────────────────────────────────────────
│ File: unknown-user.conf
───────┼──────────────────────────────────────────
1 │ su notauser notagroup
───────┴──────────────────────────────────────────
error: unknown-user.conf:1 unknown user 'notauser'
In particular note that logrotate would not error on unknown option
(it just ignores the line) but this change makes the check fail.
using freeform is the new standard way of using modules and should replace
extraConfig.
In particular, this will allow us to place a condition on mails
having pkgs.logrotate depend on mailutils brings in quite a bit of dependencies
through mailutil itself and recursive dependency to guile when most people
do not need it.
Remove mailutils dependency from the package, and conditionally add it to the
service if the user specify the mail option either at top level or in a path
Fixes#162001
This accomplishes multiple things:
- Allows us to start systemd without stage-2-init.sh. This was not
possible before because the environment would have been wrong
- `systemctl daemon-reexec` also changes the environment, giving us
newer tools for the fs packages
- Starts systemd in a fully clean environment, making everything more
consistent and pure
* Change groupId to gid to align with the rest of NixOS modules
* Add a check to the gid option to ensure it is greater than or equal
to 1000
* Use the overridden package for the wrappers
At some point, I'd like to make another attempt at
71f1f4884b ("openssl: stop static binaries referencing libs"), which
was reverted in 195c7da07d. One problem with my previous attempt is
that I moved OpenSSL's libraries to a lib output, but many dependent
packages were hardcoding the out output as the location of the
libraries. This patch fixes every such case I could find in the tree.
It won't have any effect immediately, but will mean these packages
will automatically use an OpenSSL lib output if it is reintroduced in
future.
This patch should cause very few rebuilds, because it shouldn't make
any change at all to most packages I'm touching. The few rebuilds
that are introduced come from when I've changed a package builder not
to use variable names like openssl.out in scripts / substitution
patterns, which would be confusing since they don't hardcode the
output any more.
I started by making the following global replacements:
${pkgs.openssl.out}/lib -> ${lib.getLib pkgs.openssl}/lib
${openssl.out}/lib -> ${lib.getLib openssl}/lib
Then I removed the ".out" suffix when part of the argument to
lib.makeLibraryPath, since that function uses lib.getLib internally.
Then I fixed up cases where openssl was part of the -L flag to the
compiler/linker, since that unambigously is referring to libraries.
Then I manually investigated and fixed the following packages:
- pycurl
- citrix-workspace
- ppp
- wraith
- unbound
- gambit
- acl2
I'm reasonably confindent in my fixes for all of them.
For acl2, since the openssl library paths are manually provided above
anyway, I don't think openssl is required separately as a build input
at all. Removing it doesn't make a difference to the output size, the
file list, or the closure.
I've tested evaluation with the OfBorg meta checks, to protect against
introducing evaluation failures.
Commit 7addb1c0ec disabled this as a
side effect of switching gnome-terminal to gnome-console, but it’s
still useful for gnome-console.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
Lo and behold, we're finally catching up with Mozillas very own firefox
build in terms of speed.
PGO is an optimization technique in which in a first step we create a
build that supports instrumentation, meaning we can use it to create a
profile of how the browser behaved during usage. Then in a second pass
we create the final build that uses the acquired profiling data to
optimize the browser for the workload it actually received during
profiling.
The downside is that with PGO we now need to build Firefox twice, which
increases the build time from around 20 minutes to roughly 50 minutes.
In the Speedometer 2.0 benchmark multiple tests could see a
responsiveness improvemeant around 20-25%, which makes the increased
build time well worth it.
Sadly this benefit seems limited to x86_64-linux, builds on
aarch64-linux get stuck during profiling and I haven't found out why.
Finally, after a long time, we can say:
Closes: #76484
Supersedes: #129503