This makes it easier to test just a specific channel rather than to
force testing all builds down the users/testers throat. Especially this
makes it easier to test NixOS channel upgrades only against the Chromium
stable channel instead of just removing the beta/dev channels from the
tests entirely (as done in 69ec09f38a).
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Should clean up a lot of these redundant lines for various sub-tests.
Note that the tests.boot* are now called tests.boot.boot*, but otherwise
all the test attribute names should stay the same.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Cc: @edolstra
Cc: @wkennington
Cc: @bobvanderlinden
So far the networking test expression only generated a single test
depending on the passed "test" attribute. This makes it difficult to
autodiscover the subtests with our shiny new callSubTests function.
This change essentially doesn't change the behaviour of the subtests but
rather exposes them as an attribute set instead of relying on a
particular input argument.
The useNetworkd argument still exists however.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Cc: @wkennington
This should de-clutter the various redundant lines of callTest's on
subtests so that every main test file should have only one line with a
callSubTests instead.
Overrides work the same way as callTest, except that if the system
attribute is explicitly specified we do not generate attributes for all
available systems.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Cc: @edolstra
Now subtests are separate derivations, because the individual tests do
not depend on state from previous test runs.
This has the advantage that it's easier to run individiual tests and
it's also easier to pinpoint individual tests that randomly fail.
I ran all of these tests locally and they still succeed.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Updates gitlab to the current stable version and fixes a lot of features that
were broken, at least with the current version and our configuration.
Quite a lot of sweat and tears has gone into testing nearly all features and
reading/patching the Gitlab source as we're about to deploy gitlab for our
whole company.
Things to note:
* The gitlab config is now written as a nix attribute set and will be
converted to JSON. Gitlab uses YAML but JSON is a subset of YAML.
The `extraConfig` opition is also an attribute set that will be merged
with the default config. This way *all* Gitlab options are supported.
* Some paths like uploads and configs are hardcoded in rails (at least
after my study of the Gitlab source). This is why they are linked from
the Gitlab root to /run/gitlab and then linked to the configurable
`statePath`.
* Backup & restore should work out of the box from another Gitlab instance.
* gitlab-git-http-server has been replaced by gitlab-workhorse upstream.
Push & pull over HTTPS works perfectly. Communication to gitlab is done
over unix sockets. An HTTP server is required to proxy requests to
gitlab-workhorse over another unix socket at
`/run/gitlab/gitlab-workhorse.socket`.
* The user & group running gitlab are now configurable. These can even be
changed for live instances.
* The initial email address & password of the root user can be configured.
Fixes#8598.
NetworkManager needs an additional avahi-user to use link-local
IPv4 (and probably IPv6) addresses. avahi-autoipd also needs to be
patched to the right path.
Add a module to make options to pam_oath module configurable.
These are:
- enable - enable the OATH pam module
- window - number of OTPs to check
- digits - length of the OTP (adds support for two-factor auth)
- usersFile - filename to store OATH credentials in