After final improvements to the official formatter implementation,
this commit now performs the first treewide reformat of Nix files using it.
This is part of the implementation of RFC 166.
Only "inactive" files are reformatted, meaning only files that
aren't being touched by any PR with activity in the past 2 months.
This is to avoid conflicts for PRs that might soon be merged.
Later we can do a full treewide reformat to get the rest,
which should not cause as many conflicts.
A CI check has already been running for some time to ensure that new and
already-formatted files are formatted, so the files being reformatted here
should also stay formatted.
This commit was automatically created and can be verified using
nix-build https://github.com/infinisil/treewide-nixpkgs-reformat-script/archive/a08b3a4d199c6124ac5b36a889d9099b4383463f.tar.gz \
--argstr baseRev b32a094368
result/bin/apply-formatting $NIXPKGS_PATH
By some miracle, before, it was possible to reconnect to the `node1` without
doing any relevant dance.
But now we are direct booting (¿), it seems like we need to do the right things.
This introduces a `check_output` flag for `execute` because we do not want to steal the
messages from the backdoor service as we might execute the kexec too fast compared
to when we will reconnect.
Therefore, we will let the message in the pipe if needed.
There's no reason to use a bootloader when testing kexec, this is a feature
that reboots *directly* in the kernel, if anything, we should just direct boot the
kernel and reboots in the kernel.
A bootloader test really makes sense to test "default" systemctl kexec behavior which is already broken
because systemctl kexec will read the ESP to determine what to kexec by default.
`nixos/modules/installer/kexec/kexec-boot.nix` doesn't contain any
custom NixOS config, other than importing `netboot-minimal.nix` (which
imports `netboot-base.nix`, which imports `netboot.nix`.
`netboot.nix` really is just describing a self-contained system config,
running entirely off kernel and initrd, so we might as well move the
kexec script generation there as well.
`netboot.nix` already contains some `system.build` attributes.
Provide a `system.build.kexecTree` attribute (and `kexecScript` for
composability).
You can now run a test in the nixos/tests directory directly using
nix-build, e.g.
$ nix-build '<nixos/tests/login.nix>' -A test
This gets rid of having to add the test to nixos/tests/default.nix.
(Of course, you still need to add it to nixos/release.nix if you want
Hydra to run the test.)