Added attributes to nixos/tests/mesos.nix to verify that mesos-slave
attributes work. If the generated attributes are invalid, the daemon
should fail to start.
Change-Id: I5511245add30aba658b1af22cd7355b0bbf5d15c
Especially if the user isn't in the vboxusers group anymore, this gets
VERY noisy, because the VBoxSVC process emits warnings for every single
USB device noting that it's only possible to access it when the user is
in the vboxusers group.
So, we now have a debug attribute, where we can enable it when
necessary.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
The "nix-store" command within the VM test is running without
NIX_REMOTE=daemon and since Nix 1.8 tries to open the store database in
read-write mode even for nix-store -qR.
Now, we're doing this properly and rely on setup hooks, which is the
same method that's used when you're building a library which depends on
blivet.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Creates unnecessary cruft in the root users home directory, which we
really don't need. Except the log, but therefore we now cat the log to
stderr and the private temporary directory is cleaned up afterwards.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Essentially adds two more VirtualBox VMs to the test and also increases
the memory size of the qemu VM to 768 MB to make sure we don't run out
of memory too soon.
We're testing whether those two VMs can talk to either each other
(currently via ICMP only) or to/from the host via TCP/IP.
Also, this restructures the VM test a bit, so that we now pass in a
custom stage2Init script that has access to the store via a private
mount over the /nix/store that's already in the initrd. The reason why
this is a private mount is that we don't want to shadow the Nix store of
the initrd, essentially breaking cleanup functionality after the custom
stage 2 script (currently this is only "poweroff -f").
Note that setting the hostname inside the VirtualBox VM is *not* for
additional fanciness but to produce a different store path for the VM
image, so that VirtualBox doesn't bail out when trying to use an image
which is already attached to another VM.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
We're going to create more than one VirtualBox VM, so let's dynamically
generate subs specific to a particular VirtualBox VM, merging everything
into the testScript and machine expressions.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Currently it pretty much tests starting up virtual machines and just
shutting down afterwards, but for both VBoxManage and the VirtualBox
GUI.
This helps catching errors in hardened mode, however we still need to
test whether networking works the way intended (and I fear that this is
broken at the moment).
The VirtualBox VM is _not_ using hardware virtualization support (thus
we use system = "i686-linux", because x86_64 has no emulation support),
because we're already within a qemu VM, which means it's going to be
slow as hell (that's why I've written own subs just for testing
startup/shutdown/whatnot with respective timeouts).
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
This patch should be reverted if either:
- systemd fixes the multi-swapon issue.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=86930
- If we disable the autogeneration of swap and vfat units within
systemd.
Following the discussion NixOS#5021:
- obsolete the nix.proxy option
- add the networking.proxy option
- open a default no_proxy environment variable
- add a rsync option
- Manual tests ok.
- Automatic tests ok.
Amended by lethalman to simplify the option descriptions.
Of course, this could be done via packageOverrides, but this is more
explicit and makes it possible to run the tests with various Chromium
overrides.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Currently, the test is only for testing the user namespace sandbox and
even that isn't very representative, because we're running the tests as
root.
But apart from that, we should have functionality for opening/closing
windows and the main goal here is to get them as deterministic as
possible, because Chromium usually isn't very nice to chained xdotool
keystrokes.
And of course, the most important "test" we have here: We know at least
whether Chromium works _at_all_.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>