Due to the fixed-output derivation hashing scheme, there can be
multiple derivations of the same output path. But build logs are
indexed by derivation path. Thus, we may not be able to find the
log of a build or build step using its derivation. So as a fallback,
Hydra now looks for other derivations with the same output paths.
Doing a chdir in the parent is evil. For instance, we had Hydra core
dumps ending up in the cloned directory. Therefore, the function
‘run’ allows doing a chdir in the child. The function ‘grab’ returns
the child's stdout and throws an exception if the child fails.
Previously, for scheduled builds, "timestamp" contained the time the
build was added to the queue, while for finished builds, it was the
time the build finished. Now it's always the former.
Returning only the first 20 results can cause NixOS/Nixpkgs channel
generation to fail, if the first 20 view results correspond to
evaluations that haven't finished yet. Then URLs like
/view/nixos/tested/latest-finished will return 500 rather than the
latest finished view.
Build product paths cannot reference locations outside of the Nix
store. We previously disallowed paths from being symlinks, but this
didn't take into account that parent path elements can be symlinks as
well. So a build product /nix/store/bla.../foo/passwd, with
/nix/store/bla.../foo being a symlink to /etc, would still work.
So now we check all paths encountered during path resolution.
Symlinks are allowed again so long as they point to the Nix store.
It's pointless to store these, since Nix knows where the logs are.
Also handle (in fact require) Nix's new log storage scheme. Also some
cleanups in the build page.
This gets rid of the openHydraDB function and ensures that we
open the database in a consistent way.
Also drop the PostgreSQL sequence hacks. They don't seem to be
necessary anymore.
For schema upgrades, hydra-init executes the files
src/sql/upgrade-<N>.sql, each of which upgrades the schema from
version N-1 to N. The upgrades are wrapped in a transaction.
to predict how much disk space a package will require.
* Compute the output / closure size using the info stored in the
Nix database (rather than doing a slow "du").
releases as a dynamic view on the database was misguided, since
doing thing like adding a new job to a release set will invalidate
all old releases. So we rename release sets to views, and we'll
reintroduce releases as separate, static entities in the database.
the input build to be specified, as well as constraints on the
inputs of the inputs build. For instance, you can require that a
build has input `system = "i686-linux"'.
This is important when one binary build serves as an input to
another binary build. Obviously, we shouldn't pass a build on
i686-linux as an input to another on i686-darwin. Hence the
necessity for constraint.
The constraint are currently quite limited. What you really want to
say is that the "system" input of the other build has to match the
"system" input of this build. But those require a bit more work
since they introduce dependencies between inputs.