This adds a very minimalistic (in terms of functionality and
dependencies) test for wlroots, Wayland, and related packages.
The Sway test covers more functionality and packages (e.g. XWayland) but
this test has tree advantages:
- Less dependencies: Much fewer rebuilds are required when testing core
changes that need to go through staging.
- Testing wlroots updates: The Sway package isn't immediately updated
after a new wlroots version is released and a lot of other packages
depend on wlroots as well.
- Determining whether a bug only affects Sway or wlroots/TinyWL as well.
Catches failures like https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/149539
that don't happen with AutomaticLoginEnable.
We still have a 0-delay autologin test in gnome-xorg, in case there's
ever an issue that only arises with AutomaticLoginEnable.
One of the subtests in the sudo NixOS test suite was broken: instead of
running the sudo invocation as user 'test2', it was running it as root.
Since root doesn't require a password to use sudo, this was causing
random "broken pipe" errors when trying to pass it a password via stdin.
One use case for Mattermost configuration is doing a "mostly
mutable" configuration where NixOS module options take priority
over Mattermost's config JSON.
Add a preferNixConfig option that prefers configured Nix options
over what's configured in Mattermost config if mutableConfig is set.
Remove the reliance on readFile (it's flake incompatible) and use
jq instead.
Merge Mattermost configs together on Mattermost startup, depending
on configured module options.
Write tests for mutable, mostly mutable, and immutable configurations.
A change in QEMU v6.1.0 has somehow caused QEMU to behave differently
enough to cause this test to fail. This commit forces the test to be ran
with QEMU 6.0.0 from Nixpkgs at revision
e1fc1a80a0, which is the commit prior to
the QEMU 6.1.0 version bump.
Co-authored-by: Julio Sueiras <juliosueiras@gmail.com>
Adds a fully fledged NixOS VM integration test which uses jmtpfs and
gvfs to test the functionality of MTP inside of NixOS. It uses USB
device emulation in QEMU to create MTP device(s) which can be tested
against.
Co-authored-by: nixinator <33lockdown33@protonmail.com>