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 a08b3a4d19.tar.gz \
--argstr baseRev b32a094368
result/bin/apply-formatting $NIXPKGS_PATH
Just noticed that I apparently disabled this test while restructuring
the Nextcloud tests[1] effectively disabling the test.
This patch re-adds it and adjusts the code accordingly.
I also noticed that the old check whether the cache is actually used
(`test "[]" = "$(redis-cli --json KEYS "*")"`) was broken because the
`nextcloud.fail()` hid the fact that the `redis-cli` invocation was
failing due to a missing password. Fixed the subtest accordingly.
[1] 0b31ada92b
Starting with Rclone v1.63, which is used in the Nextcloud tests for
synchronization, the client relies on the correct WebDAV endpoint url,
see https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/7103
* Ensure that the redis cache is actually used in the "trivial" case
(`with-postgresql-and-redis`)
* Test against all Nextcloud versions we've packaged
* Actually set a secret to make sure that the provided secret is
properly read by Nextcloud.
* Add myself as maintainer to the secret-test to make sure that I don't
miss any more changes like this that could break the functionality of
that feature.
It's supposed to be `memcache.distributed`, not an associative PHP array
named `memcache` with a key `distributed`.
This was probably never caught because the initial `grep -q` check in
the test was invalid: `redis-cli` prints nothing if no keys can be found
when not writing to a tty apparently.