This fixes#28768 because during an image build, Nix sees bad store
timestamps and attempts to fix them, but can't fix them on a running
system (due to being inside a builder). Since timestamps on the store
are supposed to be 1 anyway, if we fix this, that fixes image building
inside booted images made this way.
Note that this adds quite a bit of noise to the output, because running
`cptofs` under `faketime` causes a bunch of seemingly spurious error
messages and my attempts to suppress them all failed. We'll fix it when
`cptofs` gets a native timestamp preservation feature.
-s, --script: never prompts for user intervention
Sometimes the NixOS installer tests fail when they invoke parted, e.g.
https://hydra.nixos.org/build/62513826/nixlog/1. But instead of exiting
right there, the tests hang until the Nix builder times out (and kills
the build). With this change the tests would instead fail immediately,
which is preferred.
While at it, use "parted --script" treewide, so nobody gets build
timeout due to parted error (or misuse). (Only nixos/ use it, and only
non-interactive.)
A few instances already use the short option "-s", convert them to long
option "--short".
Regression introduced by a02bb00156.
The fix is done by disabling writableStore, because the latter will set
up an overlayfs on the Nix store within the VM, which in turn will
discard all the outputs of the resulting output path.
However in runInMachine we actually *want* the contents of the generated
path and also don't want a writable store within the VM (except of
course for $out, which is writable anyway).
I've added a small regression test to verifify the output in
nixos/tests/run-in-machine.nix to make sure this won't break again in
the future.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
This version should have more conventional regexes that work across many
platforms and regex engines. This is an issue because up until Nix 1.11,
Nix called out to the libc regex matcher, which behaved differently on
Darwin and Linux. And in Nix 1.12, we're moving to std::regex which will
also behave differently here.
And yes, I do actually evaluate make-disk-image.nix on Darwin ;)
machine: must succeed: xwininfo -root -tree | sed 's/.*0x[0-9a-f]* \"\([^\"]*\)\".*/\1/; t; d'
machine: exit status 0
machine: Last chance to match /(?^:dfiirst configuration)/ on the the window list, which currently contains:
machine: [i3 con] container around 0xf8a5f0, i3: first configuration, [i3 con] floatingcon around 0xf8c260, [i3 con] container around 0xf8a380, i3bar for output Virtual-1, [i3 con] bottom dockarea Virtual-1, [i3 con] workspace 1, [i3 con] content Virtual-1, [i3 con] top dockarea Virtual-1, [i3 con] output Virtual-1, [i3 con] workspace __i3_scratch, [i3 con] content __i3, [i3 con] pseudo-output __i3, i3
machine: Last chance to match /(?^:BALICE)/ on the screen, which currently contains:
machine: performing optical character recognition
machine: sending monitor command: screendump /tmp/nix-build-vm-test-run-sddm.drv-0/ocrin.ppm
machine: Session Layout
O O
0 1 : 0 9
Wednesday, June 21, 2017
|_ I
Select your user and enter password
If the test has not passed yet, on the last attempt it now outputs:
machine: Last chance to match /logine: / on TTY2, which currently contains:
machine: running command: fold -w$(stty -F /dev/tty2 size | awk '{print $2}') /dev/vcs2
machine: exit status 0
machine:
<<< Welcome to NixOS 17.09.git.a804ef4 (x86_64) - tty2 >>>
machine login:
to help debug the problem. Notice the "logine" typo in my check.
This changes much of the make-disk-image.nix logic (and thus most NixOS
image building) to use LKL to set up the target directory structure rather
than a Linux VM. The only work we still do in a VM is less IO-heavy stuff
that while still time-consuming, is less of the overall load. The goal is
to kill more of that stuff, but that will require deeper changes to NixOS
activation scripts and switch-to-configuration.pl, and I don't want to
bite off too much at once.
First of all, we're now using ImageMagick to improve the screenshot so
that Tesseract has an esier time to recognize the text. The resulting
image of this post-processing is a scaled up black-and-white version
with the backgrounds almost entirely removed and the text edges a bit
blurred, so the screen shots now more or less resemble an image from a
scanner rather. This is what Tesseract is trained for by default.
As mentioned in the previous commit we now also use Tesseract 4, which
further improves the quality of text recognition.
I've spent countless hours just to test different postprocessing
variants and testing what works best for our tests and this is the one
that worked best so far. It's certainly not perfect and I'd like to
avoid the scaling step but we're way better off than before.
In addition to this, the OCR process is now done without an intermediate
file, solely using pipes.
I've tested this using the following VM tests which have OCR enabled:
* nixos/tests/chromium.nix -A stable
* nixos/tests/emacs-daemon.nix
* nixos/tests/installer.nix -A luksroot
* nixos/tests/lightdm.nix
* nixos/tests/plasma5.nix
* nixos/tests/sddm.nix
All of the tests still succeed and comparing some of the recognition
results to the earlier results it now also detects a lot more text than
before this commit.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
I've removed that attribute in 68bc260ca2,
because the language files no longer were distributed as seperate files,
but if we for example only want to use the English training data, the
closure size of Tesseract gets quite large (around 1.2 GB), which is a
bit much just to be able to run NixOS VM tests.
For this reason I've also switched the VM tests back to using only the
English language.
Tested using the following VM tests (the ones that have OCR enabled) on
x86_64-linux:
* nixos/tests/chromium.nix -A stable
* nixos/tests/emacs-daemon.nix
* nixos/tests/installer.nix -A luksroot
* nixos/tests/lightdm.nix
* nixos/tests/plasma5.nix
* nixos/tests/sddm.nix
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
This makes make-disk-image.nix slightly more consistent with other image
builders we have. Unfortunately I duplicated some code in doing so, but
this is temporary duplication on the path to consolidating everything.
See https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/23052 for more details on that.
I'm also exposing the option in the amazon-image.nix maintainer module.
A long-time issue and one of the reasons I've never used that function
before. So let's remove that todo-comment and escape the contents
properly.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Cc: @edolstra
`configuration` seems to be a reference to an argument that was
removed seven years ago in commit 2892aed7.
`configuration.nix` makes it a big more clear what we're referring to.
Ensure that archive members are added in sorted order with a fixed
mtime. This allows `nix-build --check` to succeed (when building a
tarball of a simple system configuration).
We also remove env-vars which doesn't appear to do much apart from
capture a bunch of store paths we probably don't want.
This is an alternative to
4b78a5b5fb
Previously we were using two or three (qemu_kvm, qemu_test, and
qemu_test with a different dbus when minimal.nix is included).
(cherry picked from commit 8bfa4ce82e)
From the upstream changelog:
* Tesseract development is now done with Git and hosted at github.com
(Previously we used Subversion as a VCS and code.google.com for
hosting).
So let's move over to the GitHub repository, where the organisation also
includes a full repository for tessdata, so we no longer need to fetch
it one-by-one.
The build also got significantly simpler, because we no longer need to
run autoconf, neither do we need to patch the configure script for
Leptonica headers.
This also has the advantage that we don't need to use the
enableLanguages attribute for the test runner anymore.
Full upstream changelog can be found at:
https://github.com/tesseract-ocr/tesseract/blob/c4d273d33cc36e/ChangeLog
Tested against all NixOS tests with enabled OCR (chromium, emacs-daemon,
installer.luksroot and lightdm).
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Cc: @viric
tune2fs marks the filesystem as clean to prevent resize2fs from
complaining.
But we were invoking it before we mounted the filesystem, so the
counters would increase to 1 and it broke the functionality.
By moving the call after the mount, I have confirmed it works by:
$ nix-build nixos/tests/ec2.nix
cc @rbvermaa @edolstra
Regression introduced by 4dcb685af9.
Unsetting the environment variable shortly before using it is not going
to end up very well, so let's just filter out the variable from the
output of export and unset it shortly afterwards.
This fixes the runInMachine NixOS test.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>