Before this patch, the gen_number found by regex contains
"-specialisation-foo" if specialisation is used. As a result, applying
int() to gen_number raises ValueError, causing entries containing
a specialisation part not being removed.
Handling of the string length condition in should_update
was broken, as evident with the log message
> leaving systemd-boot 246 in place (250.4 is not newer)
Discussion with @mweinelt came to the conclusion
that Python's "<" operator already does what we need,
so the should_update function can be dropped.
Fixes a30de3b849
Since, 4ddc78818e systemd-boot-builder
is broken in two ways:
* if no systemd-boot is currently installed *and* the NIXOS_INSTALL_BOOTLOADER
env variable is not set, it will try to run "bootctl update", which will fail
* if the currently installed systemd-boot version is newer than the version
we're about to install, it will also try to run "bootctl update", which will fail
This patch changes the behaviour,
* for the first case to still fail, but not even bother to try running
"bootctl update" and instead erroring out with an exception
* for the second case to leave the newer version in place, restoring
the pre - 4ddc78818e behaviour
To do the proper version check a new "should_update" helper function was introduced,
mimicing the compare_product C function from bootctl. If the following systemd
issue gets resolved, we would have a nice way to get rid of this function:
> https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/23450
This change allows to again switch to a different NixOS configuration which contains
an older systemd-boot.
Co-authored-by: Martin Weinelt <mweinelt@users.noreply.github.com>
The regexp was only matching numbers and not the '.', so everyone using
systemd-boot would always see `could not find any previously installed
systemd-boot` on a `nixos-rebuild`.
Some specialisations (such as those which affect various boot-time
attributes) cannot be switched to at runtime. This allows picking the
specialisation at boot time.
On some systems bootctl cannot write the `LoaderSystemToken` EFI variable
during installation, which results in a failure to install the boot
loader. Upstream provides a flag (--graceful) to ignore such write failures -
this change exposes it as a configuration option.
As the exact semantics of this option appear to be somewhat volatile it
should be used only if systemd-boot otherwise fails to install.
os.readlink only resolves one layer of symlinks. This script explicitly relies on the real path of a file for deduplication, hence symlink resolution should recurse.
Catch and ignore errors during writing of the boot entries. These
errors could stem from profile names that are not valid filenames on
vfat filesystems.
fixes#114552
It was introduced in c10fe14 but removed in c4f910f.
It remained such that people with older generations in their boot
entries could still boot those. Given that the parameter hasn't had any
use in quite some years, it seems safe to remove now.
Fixes#60184
This is a temporary fix for #97433. A more proper fix has been
implemented upstream in systemd/systemd#17001, however until it gets
backported, we are stuck with ignoring the error.
After the backport lands, this commit should be reverted.
This fixes an issue where setting both
`boot.loader.systemd-boot.editor` to `false` and
`boot.loader.systemd-boot.consoleMode` to any value would concatenate
the two configuration lines in the output, resulting in an invalid
`loader.conf`.
Grub configs include the NixOS version and date they were built, now
systemd can have fun too:
version Generation 99 NixOS 17.03.1700.51a83266d1, Linux Kernel 4.9.43, Built on 2017-08-30
version Generation 100 NixOS 17.03.1700.51a83266d1, Linux Kernel 4.9.43, Built on 2017-08-30
version Generation 101 NixOS 17.03.1700.51a83266d1, Linux Kernel 4.9.43, Built on 2017-08-31
version Generation 102 NixOS 17.03.1700.51a83266d1, Linux Kernel 4.9.43, Built on 2017-09-01
version Generation 103 NixOS 17.03.1700.51a83266d1, Linux Kernel 4.9.43, Built on 2017-09-02
version Generation 104 NixOS 17.09beta41.1b8c7786ee, Linux Kernel 4.9.46, Built on 2017-09-02
version Generation 105 NixOS 17.09.git.1b8c778, Linux Kernel 4.9.46, Built on 2017-09-02
* systemd-boot-builder.py: add support for profiles
This will also list the generations of other profiles than `system` in
the boot menu. See the documentation of the `--profile-name` option of
nixos-rebuild for more information on profiles.
* Fix errors introduced by previous commit
Since fat32 provides little recovery facilities after a crash,
it can leave the system in an unbootable state, when a crash/outage
happens shortly after an update. To decrease the likelihood of this
event sync the efi filesystem after each update.
This has surfaced since d990aa7163.
The "simpleUefiGummiboot" installer test fails since this commit,
because that commit introduced a small check to verify whether the store
was altered.
While installing NixOS for the first time, the store is usually in
/mnt/nix/store and without the read-only bind mount that's preventing
programs from altering the store.
So after nixos-install is done creating the system closure and setting
it as the active system profile, the bootloader is written from the
closure inside the chroot. The systemd-boot-builder is invoked during
this step, which adds .pyc files for various Python modules of the
Python 3 store path, which in turn invalidates the hash of the Python 3
store path itself.
At the time the system is booted up again, the nix-store is verified and
fails with something like this:
path /nix/store/zvm545rqc4d97caqq9h7344bnd06jhzb-python3-3.5.3 was
modified! expected hash
b2c975f4b8d197443fbb09690fb3f6545e165dd44c9309d7d6df2fce0579ebeb, got
bccca19f39c9d26d857ccf1fb72818b2b817967e6d497a25a1283e36ed0acf01
Running the interpreter with the -B argument prevents Python from
writing those byte code files:
https://docs.python.org/3/using/cmdline.html#cmdoption-B
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Since systemd version 232 the install subcommand of bootctl opens the
loader.conf with fopen() modes "wxe", where the "e" stands for
exclusive, so the call will fail if the file exists.
For installing the boot loader just once this is fine, but if we're
using NIXOS_INSTALL_BOOTLOADER on a systemd where the bootloader is
already present this will fail.
Exactly this is done within the simpleUefiGummiboot installer test,
where nixos-install is called twice and thus the bootloader is also
installed twice, resulting in an error during the fopen call:
Failed to open loader.conf for writing: File exists
Removing the file prior to calling bootctl should fix this.
I've tested this using the installer.simpleUefiGummiboot test and it now
succeeds.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Cc: @edolstra, @shlevy, @mic92
Fixes: #22925
This leads to the following error when trying to install a new machine
where the machine ID wasn't yet initialized during boot:
Failed to get machine did: No such file or directory
In addition this was also detected by the simpleUefiGummiboot installer
test.
So let's generate a fallback machine ID by using
systemd-machine-id-setup before actually running bootctl.
Tested this by running the installer.simpleUefiGummiboot test, it still
fails but not because of the machine ID.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Cc: @edolstra, @shlevy, @mic92
Fixes: #22561