AFAIK this is the only reliable way for us to ensure SQLCipher will be
loaded instead of SQLite. It feels like a hack/workaround but according
to the SQLCipher developers [0] "this issue can and should be handled
downstream at the application level: 1. While it may feel like a
workaround, using LD_PRELOAD is a legitimate approach here because it
will substitute the system SQLite with SQLCipher which is the intended
usage model;".
This fixes #108772 for NixOS 20.09 users who upgrade to NixOS 21.05 and
replaces #117555.
For nixos-unstable users this will unfortunately break everything again
so we should add a script to ease the transition (in a separate commit
so that we can revert it for NixOS 21.05).
[0]: https://github.com/sqlcipher/sqlcipher/issues/385#issuecomment-802874340
Well, this should test if the database is encrypted but currently it is
still unencrypted and we need to notice if this behaviour changes in the
future (as it will cause data loss, see e.g. #108772).
Anyway, this doesn't really matter for security reasons but we need this
test to prevent data loss (unfortunately Signal-Desktop and SQLCipher
handle this badly... :o).
This test is important to confirm that $WAYLAND_DISPLAY is correctly
imported via "dbus-update-activation-environment --systemd" which is
done by default since #122605 (00e8e5b123).
It ensures that the gnome3-pinentry pop-ups work as expected to avoid
regressions like #119445 (which also broke screen sharing).
config.boot.kernelPackages.wireguard evaluates to null on machine
closure having a > 5.6 Linux kernels, hence making the evaluation of
this test fail.
Wireguard is now part of the mainline Linux kernel, we do not need to
to add it via a additional kernel module anymore for this test.
Annoyed with the interference of the python formatting of
generated code (see #72964), I took matters into my own hands
as maintainer of dockerTools.
Afterwards, I've created a PR, hoping to unstuck the discussion.
@aszlig took notice and thanks to his python ecosystem knowledge,
the testing efforts of @blaggacao and @Ma27, and a sense of
shared suffering and comraderie we were able to change the
situation for the better in #122201.
Now, we have a proper linter that actually helps contributors,
so it's time to turn it back on again.
I'm glad we could make it happen this quickly!
Thanks!
This reverts commit 4035049af3.
There were a bunch of unnecessary f-strings in there and I also removed
the "# fmt: on/off" comments, because we no longer use Black and thus
won't need those comments anymore.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@nix.build>
The new linter basically does
def testScript
# ...
before calling `pyflakes`. As this test-script is empty, it would lead
to a syntax-error unless `pass` is added.
(It was requested by them.)
I left one case due to fetching from their personal repo:
pkgs/desktops/pantheon/desktop/extra-elementary-contracts/default.nix
This adds a basic test for Sway. Because Sway is an important part of
the Wayland ecosystem, is stable, and has few dependencies this test
should also be suitable for testing core packages it depends on (e.g.
wayland, wayland-protocols, wlroots, xwayland, mesa, libglvnd, libdrm,
and soon libseat).
The test is modeled after the suggested way of using Sway, i.e. logging
in via a virtual console (tty1) and copying the configuration from
/etc/sway/config (we replace Mod4 (the GNU/Tux key - you've replaced
that evil logo, right? :D) with Mod1 (Alt key) because QEMU monitor's
sendkey command doesn't support the former).
The shell aliases are used to make the sendkey log output shorter.
Co-authored-by: Patrick Hilhorst <git@hilhorst.be>
The radicale version is no longer chosen automatically based on
system.stateVersion because that gave the impression that old versions
are still supported.
Follow RFC 42 by having a settings option that is
then converted into an unbound configuration file
instead of having an extraConfig option.
Existing options have been renamed or kept if
possible.
An enableRemoteAccess has been added. It sets remote-control setting to
true in unbound.conf which in turn enables the new wrapping of
unbound-control to access the server locally. Also includes options
'remoteAccessInterfaces' and 'remoteAccessPort' for remote access.
Signed-off-by: Marc 'risson' Schmitt <marc.schmitt@risson.space>
This is a patch I filed against upstream[1] a while ago. As it isn't
merged yet and fixes configurations with all stats enabled in knot
(otherwise it'd crash when sending a request to `localhost:9433`), I
decided that it makes sense to add it to the package directly.
I extended the test to make sure that it only passes with this patch.
[1] https://github.com/ghedo/knot_exporter/pull/6
Currently, the installer tests just hang after the initial install phase
on i686 because qemu just quits because of the gic parameter.
Fix this by doing x86 things for both x86-64 and i686.
Configures the emulated_hue component and expects CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE
to be passed in order to be able to bind to 80/tcp.
Also print the systemd security analysis, so we can spot changes more
quickly.
git-daemon won't start up if its project directory (here /git) doesn't
exist. If we try to create it using the test harness, then we're racing
whether we manage to connect to the backdoor vs. the startup speed of
git-daemon.
Instead, use systemd-tmpfiles, which is guaranteed(?) to run before
network.target and thus before git-daemon.service starts.
rspamd seems to be consuming more memory now sometimes, causing OOMs in
the test.
Increase the memory given to these VMs to make the tests pass more
reliably.
This test was failing because Firefox was displaying a download prompt
rather than the page content, presumably because mumble mumble
content-type sniffing.
By explicitly setting a content-type, the test now passes.
See [0]: "QEMU_OPTS is something that should be set by people running VM
tests interactively, to do port forwardings etc.
We really should not poke with it from the test script - that's what
virtualisation.qemu.options is for."
[0]: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/119615#discussion_r624145020
Co-authored-by: Florian Klink <flokli@flokli.de>