by default all cores are used
hoping this will fix the hydra i686 squashfs build issues as all the
failures were using 64 cores
Parallel mksquashfs: Using 64 processors
Creating 4.0 filesystem on ..., block size 1048576.
FATAL ERROR: mangle2:: xz compress failed with error code 5
This reverts commit 6af3d13bec.
Reported by @arcnmx
(https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/148179#issuecomment-987197656):
Does this not completely break the service? It doesn't change the
owner to the same as the ddclient server (which is somewhat difficult
due to it being a DynamicUser), so this now makes the service
completely unusable because the config is only readable by its owner,
root:
ddclient[871397]: WARNING: file /run/ddclient/ddclient.conf: Cannot open file '/run/ddclient/ddclient.conf'. (Permission denied)
Given that the RuntimeDirectory was only readable by the ddclient
service, the warning this PR fixes was spurious and not indicative of
an actual information leak. I'm not sure of what a quick fix would be
due to DynamicUser, but would at least request a revert of this so the
service can work again?
This is horrible if you want to debug failures that happened during
system switches but your 30-ish acme clients spam the log with the same
messages over and over again.
to do this we must replace derivations with attrsets in make-options-doc, since
xml can represent derivations differently from attrset but json cannot. this
also given asciidoc and mddoc the ability to handle derivation differently,
which they previously didn't have.
use the json file derivation we already have to also generate the asciidoc and
md options docs instead of formatting the options in nix. docbook docs are
already produced in derivations.
the new script produce the exact same output as the old in-nix generation.
Instead of patching the path to /public in Discourse's sources, make
the nginx configuration refer to the symlink in the discourse
package which points to the real path.
When there is a mismatch between the path nginx serves and the path
Discourse thinks it serves, we can run into issues like files not
being served - at least when sendfile requests from the ruby app are
processed by nginx. The issue I ran into most recently is that backup
downloads don't work.
Since Discourse refers to the public directory relative to the Rails
root in many places, it's much easier to just sync this path to the
nginx configuration than trying to patch all occurrences in the
sources. This should hopefully mean less potential for breakage in
future Discourse releases, too.