function argument, so that the test script can refer to computed
values such as the assigned IP addresses of the virtual machines.
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=21939
interface name through the derived option networking.ifaces. This
makes it easier to get information about specific interfaces
(e.g. `nodes.router.config.networking.ifaces.eth2.ipAddress').
Really networking.interfaces should be an attribute set.
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=21938
behind a NAT router and verifying that another client can connect to
it through the NAT (using a UPnP-IGD mapping created automatically
by miniupnpd).
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=21932
machine can now declare an option `virtualisation.vlans' that causes
it to have network interfaces connected to each listed virtual
network. For instance,
virtualisation.vlans = [ 1 2 ];
causes the machine to have two interfaces (in addition to eth0, used
by the test driver to control the machine): eth1 connected to
network 1 with IP address 192.168.1.<i>, and eth2 connected to
network 2 with address 192.168.2.<i> (where <i> is the index of the
machine in the `nodes' attribute set). On the other hand,
virtualisation.vlans = [ 2 ];
causes the machine to only have an eth1 connected to network 2 with
address 192.168.2.<i>. So each virtual network <n> is assigned the
IP range 192.168.<n>.0/24.
Each virtual network is implemented using a separate multicast
address on the host, so guests really cannot talk to networks to
which they are not connected.
* Added a simple NAT test to demonstrate this.
* Added an option `virtualisation.qemu.options' to specify QEMU
command-line options. Used to factor out some commonality between
the test driver script and the interactive test script.
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=21928
console. This uses the `sendkey' command in the QEMU monitor.
* For the block/unblock primitives, use the `set_link' command in the
QEMU monitor.
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=19854
account of the VM. However, it doesn't work yet (the machine
doesn't boot properly and there is no console output). So use a
hard-coded password for now (very dangerous!).
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=19589
verify whether the reverse proxy works correctly if the back-ends go
down and come up. (Moved from the varia repo.)
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=19356
be necessary, because waitForJob shouldn't return until Postgres is
up and running, but we still get errors like this:
postgresql: running command: initctl status postgresql
postgresql: exit status 0
postgresql: running command: createdb trac
postgresql# createdb: could not connect to database postgres: FATAL: the database system is starting up
postgresql: exit status 1
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=19329
failures like this:
machine: running command: parted /dev/vda -- mkpart primary 1M 2048M
machine: exit status 0
machine: running command: parted /dev/vda -- set 1 lvm on
machine: exit status 1
machine: output:
Warning: WARNING: the kernel failed to re-read the partition table on /dev/vda
(Device or resource busy). As a result, it may not reflect all of your changes
until after reboot.
command `parted /dev/vda -- set 1 lvm on' did not succeed (exit code 1) at Machine.pm line 212, <GEN2> line 24.
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=19328
is done by instantiating a webserver that simulates nixos.org.
Using nix-push we create a channel that contains some stuff (namely
the GNU Hello source tarball and the rlwrap program). This was a
bit tricky because nix-push requires a writable Nix store. Using
AUFS this is possible, but not on recent Linux kernels (AUFS1 over
CIFS fails).
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=19327
automatically. This is mostly useful for testing. (KDM also has
this feature, but it's nice not to depend on KDE for non-KDE tests.)
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=19239