hardware scan was generating a hardware.nix containing
"pkgs.linuxPackages" without having "pkgs" in scope. Also, it
shouldn't define boot.kernelPackages.
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=25192
is now made available in the interactive test driver. For instance,
you can do
$ nix-build tests/ -A quake3.driver
$ ./result/bin/nixos-test-driver
> eval $ENV{'testScript'};
... see VMs + X11 + Quake get started, bots running around ...
>
So after this you can run commands interactively on the VMs in the
state they were in after the conclusion of the test script.
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=25158
interactively on a network specification. For instance:
$ nix-build tests/ -A quake3.driver
$ ./result/bin/nixos-test-driver
> startAll;
client1: starting vm
client1: QEMU running (pid 14971)
server: starting vm
server: QEMU running (pid 14982)
...
> $client1->execute("quake3 ...");
* Use the GNU readline library in interactive mode.
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=25156
attribute name of the machine in the model. This allows
networking.hostName and deployment.targetHost to be omitted for
typical networks.
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=25125
It's really an abstract configuration option that specifies that *some*
SSH daemon should be enabled (which could be OpenSSH).
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=25119
- developed services.disnix.infrastructure option, which contains properties for the Disnix infrastructure model (these properties can be either used by Disnix itself or the Avahi publisher)
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=25052
It turns out that all network interfaces in all VMs had the same
Ethernet address (52:54:00:12:34:56) because we didn't specify any
with the macaddr=... option. This can obviously lead to great
confusion. For instance, when a router forwards a packet, it can
actually end up sending the packet to itself because the target
machine has the same Ethernet address (causing a loop until the TTL
expires), while the target *also* receives the packet. It's amazing
anything worked at all, really.
So now we just set the Ethernet addresses to 52:54:00:12:<virtual
network number>:<machine number>.
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=25020
- implemented --no-out-link option so that invoking these tools from scripts leave no garbage behind
- some misc. cleanups
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=25019
now kills its process group when it exits. Without setsid, this
ends up killing the parent (i.e., the builder).
* Use port 445 instead of 139 because the CIFS kernel module tries
port 445 first. If there is an actual Samba running on the host, it
would end up connecting to that one instead of our own and fail.
svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=25016