In my earlier commit
manual: Don't suggest exposing VM port to local network.
I made a side change titled
Use `127.0.0.1` also on the VM side, otherwise connections to
services that, in the VM, bind to `127.0.0.1` only
(doing the safe approach) do not work.
Unfortunately, that was wrong:
QEMU inside the VM always communicates via the virtualised
Ethernet interface, not via the VM's loopback interface.
So trying to connect to `127.0.0.1` on the VM's side cannot work.
While the word 'simply' is usually added to encourage readers, it often has the
opposite effect and may even appear condescending, especially when the reader
runs into trouble trying to apply the suggestions from the documentation. It is
almost always an improvement to simply drop the word from the sentence.
(there are more possible improvements like this, we can apply those in separate
PRs)
From systemd 243 release note[1]:
This release enables unprivileged programs (i.e. requiring neither
setuid nor file capabilities) to send ICMP Echo (i.e. ping) requests
by turning on the "net.ipv4.ping_group_range" sysctl of the Linux
kernel for the whole UNIX group range, i.e. all processes.
So this wrapper is not needed any more.
See also [2] and [3].
This patch also removes:
- apparmor profiles in NixOS for ping itself and the wrapped one
- other references for the wrapped ping
[1]: 8e2d9d40b3/NEWS (L6457-L6464)
[2]: https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/13141
[3]: https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Changes/EnableSysctlPingGroupRange
We should sometimes restart the units rather than reloading them so the
changes are actually applied. / and /nix are explicitly excluded because
there was some very old issue where these were unmounted. I don't think
this will affect many people since most people use fstab mounts instead
but I plan to adapt this behavior for fstab mounts as well in the future
(once I wrote a test for the fstab thingies).
the nixos manual contains enough examples to support them as a proper
toc entity with specialized rendering, and if in the future the nixpkgs
wants to use nixos-render-docs we will definitely have to support them.
this also allows us to restore some examples that were lost in previous
translation steps because there were too few to add renderer support
back then.
This makes the following work
disabledModules = [ foo.nixosModules.bar ];
even if `bar` is not a path, but rather a module such as
{ key = "/path/to/foo#nixosModules.bar"; config = ...; }
By supporting this, the user will often be able to use the same syntax
for both importing and disabling a module. This is becoming more relevant
because flakes promote the use of attributes to reference modules. Not
all of these modules in flake attributes will be identifiable, but with
the help of a framework such as flake-parts, these attributes can be
guaranteed to be identifiable (by outPath + attribute path).
this adds support for structural includes to nixos-render-docs.
structural includes provide a way to denote the (sub)structure of the
nixos manual in the markdown source files, very similar to how we used
literal docbook blocks before, and are processed by nixos-render-docs
without involvement of xml tooling. this will ultimately allow us to
emit the nixos manual in other formats as well, e.g. html, without going
through docbook at all.
alternatives to this source layout were also considered:
a parallel structure using e.g. toml files that describe the document
tree and links to each part is possible, but much more complicated to
implement than the solution chosen here and makes it harder to follow
which files have what substructure. it also makes it much harder to
include a substructure in the middle of a file.
much the same goes for command-line arguments to the converter, only
that command-lined arguments are even harder to specify correctly and
cannot be reasonably pulled together from many places without involving
another layer of tooling. cli arguments would also mean that the manual
structure would be fixed in default.nix, which is also not ideal.
nixos-render-docs supports inline anchors, but not ids for blocks. it
seems wise to reserve blocks for special cases that don't have other
syntax already, like admonitions.
pandoc drops .title classes when rendering to docbook, so these are
effectively just paragraphs anyway. without support for including them
in a table of contents the complexity of parsing them in
nixos-render-docs won't be warranted.
the examples for mkPackageOption weren't terminated, leading to pretty
odd nesting of docbook (and thus html) elements. close them properly.
also turn the (likewise unclosed) fenced div containing just an anchor
id and a class that will be silently dropped to an inline anchor while
we're here. we'd have to convert it anyway later.
markdown-it parses deflists slitghtly differently than pandoc does. in
these two cases pandoc would find a deflist item while markdown-it would
not, instead it'd find a lone colon and the rest of the text.
this converts meta.doc into an md pointer, not an xml pointer. since we
no longer need xml for manual chapters we can also remove support for
manual chapters from md-to-db.sh
since pandoc converts smart quotes to docbook quote elements and our
nixos-render-docs does not we lose this distinction in the rendered
output. that's probably not that bad, our stylesheet didn't make use of
this anyway (and pre-23.05 versions of the chapters didn't use quote
elements either).
also updates the nixpkgs manual to clarify that option docs support all
extensions (although it doesn't support headings at all, so heading
anchors don't work by extension).
`shell_interact()` is currently not nice to use. If you try to cancel
the socat process, it will also break the nixos test. Furthermore
ptpython creates it's own terminal that subprocesses are running in,
which breaks some of the terminal features of socat.
Hence this commit extends `shell_interact` to allow also to connect to
arbitrary servers i.e. tcp servers started by socat.