For now, test only the useful schedulers, there's no need to test all of them.
Co-authored-by: Gliczy <129636582+Gliczy@users.noreply.github.com>
Signed-off-by: John Titor <50095635+JohnRTitor@users.noreply.github.com>
According to the manpage the rsyncd.conf has a global section without a
module header. Settings for listening port or bind address must be put
there and will not work if defined in a global submodule (i.e. below a
"[global]" header).
This commit changes the ini format generator for the rsyncd service to
allow a global section in the config file without a submodule header.
Fixes#304293
Credits to @nydragon
* remove retrocompat, add incompat release notes
- Added a NixOS module using RFC42 and plenty of systemd hardening
- Added a NixOS VM Test which checks the basic functionality
- Refactored the package to support HSM and UI
After RFC-0125 implementation, Determinate Systems was pinged multiple
times to transfer the repository ownership of the tooling to a
vendor-neutral repository.
Unfortunately, this never manifested. Additionally, the leadership of
the NixOS project was too dysfunctional to deal with this sort of
problem. It might even still be the case up to this day.
Nonetheless, nixpkgs is about enabling end users to enact their own
policies. It would be better to live in a world where there is one
obvious choice of bootspec tooling, in the meantime, we can live in a
world where people can choose their bootspec tooling.
The Lix forge possess one fork of the Bootspec tooling:
https://git.lix.systems/lix-community/bootspec which will live its own
life from now on.
Change-Id: I00c4dd64e00b4c24f6641472902e7df60ed13b55
Signed-off-by: Raito Bezarius <masterancpp@gmail.com>
Previously, we relied heavily on OCR to get past the game's tutorial
level, which timed out on aarch64 builders. We also relied on some timed inputs.
We can just do this by writing a line to the configuration, and letting
the simulated "players" die instead of trying to coredump each other
which takes better timing.
Use vwifi to write a proper test for Kismet. This test demonstrates how
to simulate wireless networks in NixOS tests, and extract meaningful
data by putting an interface in monitor mode using Kismet.
Fix compatibility with previous versions by making sure all the uploads
and plugins end up in the correct directory. Add a test for the exact
path we care about to ensure that it doesn't work "on accident."
Discovered while updating instances to unstable.