`su'.
* The `usermod' from `shadow' allows setting a supplementary group
equal to the user's primary group, so the special hack for the
`nixbld' group is no longer needed.
* Removed /etc/default/passwd since it's not used by the new passwd.
The hash is configured in pam_unix.
* Move some values for `security.setuidPrograms' and
`security.pam.services' to the appropriate modules.
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This ensures that they're gone by the time the shutdown job runs, so
it doesn't have to stop them itself.
* Don't respawn tasks, as it doesn't seem useful (if they fail they're
likely to fail again if they're restarted).
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to use the standard (coreutils) tools.
* Use util-linux's `switch_root' to switch over to the target root
FS. It automatically moves over the /dev, /proc and /sys from stage
1, so stage 2 doesn't need to set them up again.
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or Google Earth) on 64-bit NixOS on NVIDIA hardware. The 32-bit
OpenGL library is symlinked from /var/run/opengl-driver-32, which is
added to the LD_LIBRARY_PATH so that 32-bit binaries can find it.
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function argument, so that the test script can refer to computed
values such as the assigned IP addresses of the virtual machines.
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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.
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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).
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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.
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