This has shown to be flaky in the VM test, at least when running on
the aarch64 ofborg builder(s).
I assume it's some flakyness in systemd-networkd not being fully up, or
at least not up to the point that it properly replies to the _gateway
request.
This part of the test is supposed to test external (non-glibc) nss
module lookup for the host database works, which is already sufficiently
covered in the previous checks (for *.localhost). Drop these redundant
checks. We're not integration-testing networkd here.
Configures the `--cache-dir` parameter for the prune and check commands run after backing up. For `check`, also adds a `checkOpts` flag to enable using the cache, since that is disabled by default.
Build will start failing with the following error in 2.55.1 due to `/build/librsvg-2.55.1/.libs` ending up in rpath:
RPATH of binary /nix/store/78k70limslvxs6y98hdirbcixl3car1q-librsvg-2.55.1-installedTests/libexec/installed-tests/RSVG/api contains a forbidden reference to /build/
https://discourse.gnome.org/t/split-and-rename-of-chrome-gnome-shell/11075815ec9e1af...v42.0
- Renamed and split into a separate repo from the extensions.
- CMake build replaced with Meson (jq also not needed)
- requests Python module not needed since updates are now solely handled by GNOME Shell itself
Also
- Corrected license
- Cleaned up the module
- Replaced PYTHONPATH in a wrapper by Python environment
Changelog-Reviewed-By: Jan Tojnar <jtojnar@gmail.com>
The aarch64-linux builders on hydra have had a good track in the last
year or so and I think it's a good idea to include them in the default
-small jobset.
This happens in preparation of improving the distribution of the
installer ISOs for aarch64-linux systems and advertise them more
prominently on the homepage.
The `boot.zfs.enabled` option is marked `readOnly`, so this is the only way to
successfully build a NixOS installer image for platforms that zfs does not build
for.
Co-authored-by: Alyssa Ross <hi@alyssa.is>
This option allows for the customization of the description of the
created gitolite user.
An example of this being useful is for the integration of gitolite with
cgit, which itself uses the gitolite user's description as the author of
the git repo displayed in its generated site.