All swap device option sets "have" a label, it's just that sometimes it's
undefined. Because we set a `device` attribute when we have a label anyway it's
ok to just check device prefix.
Fixes#18891.
Get rid of the "or null" stuff. Also change 'cfg . "foo"' to 'cfg.foo'.
Also fixed what appears to be an actual bug: in postStartScript,
cfg.attribute (where attribute is a function argument) should be
cfg.${attribute}.
Using types.str doesn't work if you want to mkBefore/mkAfter across
different module definitions, because it only allows for one definition
for the same priority.
This is especially useful if you deploy Hetzner machines via NixOps,
because the physical specification already defines localCommands.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
This commit removes all references to emacs24 with the exception of
emacs24-macports. The two folders in `pkgs/applications/editors` named
`emacs-24` and `emacs-24` are consolidated to a new `emacs` folder.
Various parts in nixpkgs also referenced `emacs24Packages` (pinned to
`emacs24`) explicitly where `emacsPackages` (non-pinned) is more
appropriate. These references get fixed by this commit too.
It looks like the cpu type part of modalias might have changed, my
systems (4.4.20 and 4.7.2) show something like the following:
```
cpu:type:x86,ven0000fam0006mod003F:feature:,0000,0001,0002,0003,0004,0005,0006,0007,0008,0009,000B,000C,000D,000E,000F,0010,0011,0013,0017,0018,0019,001A,001C,002B,0034,003B,003D,0068,006F,0070,0072,0074,0075,0076,007D,0080,0081,0089,008C,008D,0091,0093,0094,0095,0096,0097,0098,0099,009A,009B,009C,009D,009E,009F,00C0,00C5,0120,0123,0125,0127,0128,0129,012A,0140
```
Update the rngd modalias rule to match this so udev properly has
systemd start rngd.
This reverts commit 1010271c63.
This reverts commit e85e51d41f.
The first commit causes multiple regressions. The second commit tries to
fix the regressions, but does not catch all of them. There are multiple
failing tests, one of which is blocking a package update. That is not
acceptable for a cosmetic patch.
* influxdb module: add postStart
* cadvisor module: increase TimeoutStartSec
Under high load, the cadvisor module can take longer than the default 90
seconds to start. This change should hopefully fix the test on Hydra.
Regression introduced by bccd75094f.
The mentioned commit removed the pkgs.gtk attribute, but forgot to
change this within the xfce module.
Tested using the xfce NixOS test and it has passed on my machine.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Regression introduced by 1010271c63.
This caused the line after using the loginuid module to be concatenated
with the next line without a newline.
In turn this has caused a lot of the NixOS VM tests to either run very
slowly (because of constantly hitting PAM errors) or simply fail.
I have tested this only with one of the failing NixOS tests.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
While entering the chroot should provide the same amount of isolation,
the preStart script will run with full root privileges and so would
benefit from some isolation as well (in particular due to
unbound-anchor, which can perform network I/O).
1. The preStart script ensures consistent ownership, even if the unbound
user's uid has changed
2. The unbound daemon does not generate data that needs to be private to
it, so it would not matter that a different service would end up
owning its data (as long as unbound remains enabled, it should reclaim
ownership soon enough anyway).
Thus, there's no clear benefit to allocate a dedicated uid for the
unbound service. This releases uid/gid 48.
Also, because the preStart script creates the data directory, there's no
need to specify a homedir or ask for its creation.
/dev/random is an exhaustible resource. Presumably, unbound will not be
used to generate long-term encryption keys and so allowing it to use
/dev/random only increases the risk of entropy exhaustion for no
benefit.
The generated files in /etc/pam.d/ typically have a lot of empty lines
in them, due to how the generated Nix strings are joined together;
optional elements that are excluded still produce a newline. This patch
changes how the files are generated to create more compact,
human-friendly output files.
The change is basically this, repeated:
- ''
- ${optionalString use_ldap
- "account sufficient ${pam_ldap}/lib/security/pam_ldap.so"}
- ''
+ optionalString use_ldap ''
+ account sufficient ${pam_ldap}/lib/security/pam_ldap.so
+ ''
This introduces VirtualBox version 5.1.6 along with a few refactored
stuff, notably:
* Kernel modules and user space applications are now separate
derivations.
* If config.pulseaudio doesn't exist in nixpkgs config, the default is
now to build with PulseAudio modules.
* A new updater to keep VirtualBox up to date.
All subtests in nixos/tests/virtualbox.nix succeed on my machine and
VirtualBox was reported to be working by @DamienCassou (although with
unrelated audio problems for another fix/branch) and @calbrecht.
One reason why it took me so long for debugging the test failure with
systemd-detect-virt was that simple-cli has succeeded while the former
has not.
This now makes sure we have consistency accross all the subtests and if
problems like the one in the previos commit ever show up again, we will
have just the headless test succeeding and it's more obvious where the
actual problem resides.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
We don't have (simulated) sound hardware within the qemu VM, neither do
we have it available within VirtualBox that's running within the qemu
VMs.
With sound hardware the VirtualBox UI displays an error dialog, which in
turn causes the VM process to hang on unregister. This in turn has
caused the tests to fail because of the following error:
Cannot unregister the machine '...' while it is locked
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Using waitUntilSucceeds for testing whether the shutdown signalling
files have vanished is quite noisy because it prints two lines for every
try. This is now fixed with a while loop on the guest VM which does the
same check but with only one output for the command that's executed and
another one when the conditions are met.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
- logDriver option, use journald for logging by default
- keep storage driver intact by default, as docker has sane defaults
- do not choose storage driver in tests, docker will choose by itself
- use dockerd binary as "docker daemon" command is deprecated and will be
removed
- add overlay2 to list of storage drivers
modify tests to not fail if the event handlers are
registered too slowly or if the wrong window is in focus
(cherry picked from commit e087b0d12f97604ee1fdd09ef3d78b772c12468e)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
VirtualBox user space binaries now no longer reside in linuxPackages, so
let's use the package for the real user space binaries instead.
Tested using the following command:
nix-build nixos/release.nix -A ova.x86_64-linux
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Switches from the forking service type to simple by running haveged in
the foreground. Also restricts the execution environment a bit (these
are inspired by the Debian service file).
The change is backwards-compatible for users of the NixOS module but not
if people were using the package directly, so let's warn users about
that.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Putting the kernel modules into the same output path as the main
VirtualBox derivation causes all of VirtualBox to be rebuilt on every
single kernel update.
The build process of VirtualBox already outputs the kernel module source
along with the generated files for the configuration of the main
VirtualBox package. We put this into a different output called "modsrc"
which we re-use from linuxPackages.virtualbox, which is now only
containing the resulting kernel modules without the main user space
implementation.
This not only has the advantage of decluttering the Nix expression for
the user space portions but also gets rid of the need to nuke references
and the need to patch out "depmod -a".
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>