This should NOT be backported to 20.09!
When 21.03 is released, the DB changes are about a year old and
operators had two release cycles for the upgrade. At this point it
should be fair to remove the compat layer to reduce the complexity of
the module itself.
In commit a61ca0373b (#100267), the avahi
test expression got an additional attribute, but instead of wrapping the
function, the attributes were introduced by nesting the function one
level deeper.
To illustrate this:
Before: attrs: <testdrv>
After: newattrs: attrs: <testdrv>
So when instantiating tests.avahi.x86_64-linux from nixos/release.nix we
get "value is a function while a set was expected" instead of the
derivation.
I simply re-passed the attributes to make-test-python.nix, since the
function already allows (via "...") arbitrary attributes to be passed.
The reason why I'm pushing this directly to master is because evaluation
for the test is already broken and the worst that could happen here is
that things are *still* broken.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@nix.build>
Cc: @flokli, @doronbehar
The old (slightly broken) behavior of the xmonad module was to put the vanilla xmonad binary into PATH. This was changed to put the users xmonad into PATH instead.
But since the config for the xmonad test uses `launch` (to avoid xmonads self-recompilation logic), it now can't handle the `--restart` flag anymore. So instead use a key binding for restarting, and let xmonad spawn a new xterm on restart.
The key binding has to be explicitly added because the default binding
will shell out to `xmonad --restart` and therefore not work with the `launch` entrypoint.
This changes the default behavior which opened by default the firewall rules.
The users now need to declare explicitely they want to open the firewall.
This exposes 2 scenario running the mediatomb service:
- one running with the unmaintained mediatomb package
- one running with the new maintained gerbera package
Secrets are injected from the environment into the rendered
configuration before each startup using envsubst.
The test now makes use of this feature for the server password.
Secrets are injected from the environment into the rendered
configuration before each startup using envsubst.
The test now makes use of this feature for the db password.
This adds two tests. One is for whether the paths used by the module are
present, while the other is for testing functionality of PipeWire
itself. This is done with the recent addition of installed tests by
upstream.
In version 2.0.15 `gotify` switched to `packr` at 2.x which is why the
UI can't be served properly via HTTP and causes an empty 500 response and
the following errors in `journald`:
```
2020/09/12 19:18:33 [Recovery] 2020/09/12 - 19:18:33 panic recovered:
GET / HTTP/1.1
Host: localhost:8080
Accept: */*
User-Agent: curl/7.72.0
stat /home/ma27/Projects/ui/build/index.html: no such file or directory
```
This wasn't caught by the VM-test as it only tested the REST and push
APIs. Using their internal `packr.go` script in our build as it's the
case in the upstream build-system[1] fixes the issue.
[1] https://github.com/gotify/server/pull/277/files#diff-b67911656ef5d18c4ae36cb6741b7965R48
This commit fixes the ejabberd tests for hydra:
mod_http_upload and mod_disco need to be explicitly enabled, and a
handler needs to be setup to make it work. Also, the client needs to be
able to contact the server.
The commit also fixes the situation where http upload failed: in that
case the client would wait forever because nothing catched the error.
Finally, there remains a non-reproducible error where ejabberd server
fails to start with an error like:
format: "Failed to create cookie file '/var/lib/ejabberd/.erlang.cookie': eacces"
(happens ~15%) I tried to check existence of /var/lib/ejabberd/ in
pre-start script and saw nothing that would explain this error, so I
gave up about this error in particular.