Having a disks object with a dictionary of all the disks and their
properties makes it easier to process multi-disk images.
Note the rename of `label` to `system_label` is because `$label`i
is something of a special token to jq.
Introduce an AWS EC2 AMI which supports aarch64 and x86_64 with a ZFS
root.
This uses `make-zfs-image` which implies two EBS volumes are needed
inside EC2, one for boot, one for root. It should not matter which
is identified `xvda` and which is `xvdb`, though I have always
uploaded `boot` as `xvda`.
This is a private interface for internal NixOS use. It is similar
to `make-disk-image` except it is much more opinionated about what
kind of disk image it'll make.
Specifically, it will always create *two* disks:
1. a `boot` disk formatted with FAT in a hybrid GPT mode.
2. a `root` disk which is completely owned by a single zpool.
The partitioning and FAT decisions should make the resulting images
bootable under EFI or BIOS, with systemd-boot or grub.
The root disk's zpools options are highly customizable, including
fully customizable datasets and their options.
Because the boot disk and partition are highly opinionated, it is
expected that the `boot` disk will be mounted at `/boot`. It is
always labeled ESP even on BIOS boot systems.
In order for the datasets to be mounted properly, the `datasets`
passed in to `make-zfs-image` are turned in to NixOS configuration
stored at /etc/nixos/configuration.nix inside the VM.
NOTE: The function accepts a system configuration in the `config`
argument. The *caller* must manually configure the system
in `config` to have each specified `dataset` be represented
by a corresponding `fileSystems` entry.
One way to test the resulting images is with qemu:
```sh
boot=$(find ./result/ -name '*.boot.*');
root=$(find ./result/ -name '*.root.*');
echo '`Ctrl-a h` to get help on the monitor';
echo '`Ctrl-a x` to exit';
qemu-kvm \
-nographic \
-cpu max \
-m 16G \
-drive file=$boot,snapshot=on,index=0,media=disk \
-drive file=$root,snapshot=on,index=1,media=disk \
-boot c \
-net user \
-net nic \
-msg timestamp=on
```
The way `(lib.formats.yaml {}).generate` generates YAML is compliant
because on YAML 1.2 spec JSON is a subset of YAML but it bugs people's
minds and can lead to problems with software that is not compatible with
YAML 1.2.
This commit also changes the test of the generation function. Data
validation/typing remains the same.
See #133802.
Signed-off-by: lucasew <lucas59356@gmail.com>
This addresses #120263 in part, by allowing users to override the
github-runner derivation that is bound to turn non-functional via the
self-update mechanism. (And it'll allow using a buildFHSUserEnv-based
derivation, if someone ends up building that!)
Printers are usually connected over USB to serial interfaces that are
mounted as tty character devices owned by the dialout group. Add our
octoprint service to this group at runtime to allow access to these
printers.
5.7+ comes with a native exfat implementation, exfatprogs should be used instead.
The exfat package puts a "mount.exfat" binary in the path, which causes
mount to prefer the FUSE version to the non-fuse one. There's no way to
disable the binary, so switch to exfatprogs.
twisted is used in matrix-synapse for smtp handling.
Mostly this is used for password resets, but also notifications
are delivered that way.
older versions of twisted require the e-mail server to
have TLS1.0 enabled.
Obviously, quite a lot of servers have this disabled which means
synapse won't be able to deliver mails using such servers.
matrix-synapse issue:
https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/6211
Recommend to use services.xserver.dpi option instead. Mention in the
documentation that it's a sledgehammer approach and monitor settings should be
used instead.
Also don't set DPI in fontconfig settings; fontconfig should use Xft settings
by default so let's not override one value in multiple places. For example,
user now can set DPI via ~/.Xresources properly.
Previous to this commit, the entire test driver environment was shared
with the actual python test environment.
This is a hefty api surface. This commit selectively exposes only those
symbols to the test environment that are actually meant to be used by
tests.
Deluge 1.x requires Python 2 which upstream has end-of-lifed. Deluge depends
on pythonPackages.twisted, Python 2 support for which upstream has
nowdropped. If pythonPackages.twisted is upgraded then Deluge 1.x breaks.
So, remove it instead of leaving it broken.
Deluge 2.x (deluge-2_x) is available and continues to work.