Hydra Eval has been throwing these eval errors for the past four
months, which makes the yellow "Eval Errors" bubble pretty useless:
https://hydra.nixos.org/eval/1790611#tabs-errors
```
in job ‘nixos.tests.installer.separateBoot.aarch64-linux’:
error: Non-EFI boot methods are only supported on i686 / x86_64
in job ‘nixos.tests.installer.simple.aarch64-linux’:
error: Non-EFI boot methods are only supported on i686 / x86_64
in job ‘nixos.tests.installer.lvm.aarch64-linux’:
error: Non-EFI boot methods are only supported on i686 / x86_64
```
This PR moves the failure for the `!isEfi &&
!pkgs.stdenv.hostPlatform.isx86` case from eval-time to runtime, so
the failure gets categorized under the test that produced it, rather
than just being lumped in to the catch-all Eval Errors pile
which... apparently nobody cares about.
The `nix.*` options, apart from options for setting up the
daemon itself, currently provide a lot of setting mappings
for the Nix daemon configuration. The scope of the mapping yields
convience, but the line where an option is considered essential
is blurry. For instance, the `extra-sandbox-paths` mapping is
provided without its primary consumer, and the corresponding
`sandbox-paths` option is also not mapped.
The current system increases the maintenance burden as maintainers have to
closely follow upstream changes. In this case, there are two state versions
of Nix which have to be maintained collectively, with different options
avaliable.
This commit aims to following the standard outlined in RFC 42[1] to
implement a structural setting pattern. The Nix configuration is encoded
at its core as key-value pairs which maps nicely to attribute sets, making
it feasible to express in the Nix language itself. Some existing options are
kept such as `buildMachines` and `registry` which present a simplified interface
to managing the respective settings. The interface is exposed as `nix.settings`.
Legacy configurations are mapped to their corresponding options under `nix.settings`
for backwards compatibility.
Various options settings in other nixos modules and relevant tests have been
updated to use structural setting for consistency.
The generation and validation of the configration file has been modified to
use `writeTextFile` instead of `runCommand` for clarity. Note that validation
is now mandatory as strict checking of options has been pushed down to the
derivation level due to freeformType consuming unmatched options. Furthermore,
validation can not occur when cross-compiling due to current limitations.
A new option `publicHostKey` was added to the `buildMachines`
submodule corresponding to the base64 encoded public host key settings
exposed in the builder syntax. The build machine generation was subsequently
rewritten to use `concatStringsSep` for better performance by grouping
concatenations.
[1] - https://github.com/NixOS/rfcs/blob/master/rfcs/0042-config-option.md
It looks like "make-bcache" also registers the devices, so the separate
registration afterwords is unnecessary.
Previously, the separate registration right afterwords didn't cause
a problem, presumably because it won the race with make-bcache's
registration. After 1640359f33 slightly
changed the timing of command execution in tests, the separate
registration often fails with the error message "device already
registered", stopping the test.
Currently, the installer tests just hang after the initial install phase
on i686 because qemu just quits because of the gic parameter.
Fix this by doing x86 things for both x86-64 and i686.
We apparently didn't fit anymore. I don't think this test is meant
to (also) check closure size.
Note: as of this commit, the test is blocked by a fontconfig problem,
so I tested with that merge temporarily reverted.
The cyclic dependency of systemd → cryptsetup → lvm2 → udev=systemd
needs to be broken somewhere. The previous strategy of building
cryptsetup with an lvm2 built without udev (#66856) caused the
installer.luksroot test to fail. Instead, build lvm2 with a udev built
without cryptsetup.
Fixes#96479.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>