This patch allows creation of files like
/etc/systemd/system/user-.slice.d/limits.conf with
systemd.units."user-.slice.d/limits.conf" = {
text = ''
[Slice]
CPUAccounting=yes
CPUQuota=50%
'';
};
which previously threw an error
Also renames the systemd-unit-path test to sytsemd-misc, and extends it to
test that `systemd.units` can handle directories. In this case we make
sure that resource limits specified in user slices apply.
* nixos/earlyoom: bring the module up to date
Removes deprecated option `ignoreOOMScoreAdjust`, introduces `killHook`
as a replacement for `notificationsCommand`, and adds an `extraArgs`
option for things not covered by the module.
* nixos/earlyoom: add nixos test
* nixos/earlyoom: add reportInterval
Allows setting the interval for logging a memory report. Defaults to
3600 following upstream
(https://github.com/rfjakob/earlyoom/blob/master/earlyoom.default#L5)
to avoid flooding logs.
* nixos/earlyoom: add free{Mem,Swap}KillThreshold
Fixes https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/83504
In https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/142747, the implementation
behind Machine.execute() has been changed to pipe all the command's
output into base64 on the guest machine.
Unfortunately this means that base64 is blocking until stdout is closed,
which in turn means that we now need to make sure that whenever we run a
program in background via "&" we also need to make sure to close stdout,
which we do by redirecting stdout to stderr.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@nix.build>
some change in the last 24 hours altered the behaviour of st such that
it now dies with a non-zero exit code when the shell exits, so kill is
now necessary
It was originally impossible to login in toot without having an
interactive shell. I opened https://github.com/ihabunek/toot/pull/180
upstream to fix that and fetch this patch for this test.
The author decided to fix the issue using a slightly different
approach at a3eb5dca24
Because of this upstream fix, our custom patch does not apply anymore.
Using that stdin-based login upstream feature.
it's really easy to accidentally write the wrong systemd Exec* directive, ones
that works most of the time but fails when users include systemd metacharacters
in arguments that are interpolated into an Exec* directive. add a few functions
analogous to escapeShellArg{,s} and some documentation on how and when to use them.