This appears to have been broken in ac3e8a4a5920797ce04f1fbc0fe8beb086a2472a,
which removed the `jobsetevals` column from the Projects schema, but didn't
update the Controller accordingly.
Fixes the test added in the previous commit.
To further align with the API, we return custom JSON in order to display a
`visible` field rather than `hidden` -- a `PUT` request expects `visible`, while
a `GET` request returns `hidden`.
This also allows us to rename the `jobsetinputs` field to `inputs` for the same
reason: `PUT` expects `inputs`, while `GET` returns `jobsetinputs`.
* made all columns available via the API (except for forceeval)
* renamed flakeref to flake to unify the API with the database schema
* renamed inputs to jobsetinputs to unify the API with the database schema
The checkbox is only enabled if `email_notification = 1` is set in
`hydra.conf`. However, when creating jobset (in contrast to the edit
form), the checkbox is always disabled because the `emailNotification`
parameter in Catalyst's stash was missing.
This search query is pretty heavy. Defaulting to 500 has caused
Hydra's web UI to appear to be down. Since 500 can take it down, users
probably shouldn't be allowed t ask for that many.
Requires the following configuration options
enable_github_login = 1
github_client_id
github_client_secret
Or github_client_secret_file which points to a file with the secret
To quote the function's comment:
Awful hack to handle timeouts in SQLite: just retry the transaction.
DBD::SQLite *has* a 30 second retry window, but apparently it
doesn't work.
Since SQLite is now dropped entirely, this wrapper can be removed
completely.
In the past, jobsets which are automatically evaluated are evaluated
regularly, on a schedule. This schedule means a new evaluation is
created every checkInterval seconds (assuming something changed.)
This model works well for architectures where our build farm can
easily keep up with demand.
This commit adds a new type of evaluation, called ONE_AT_A_TIME, which
only schedules a new evaluation if the previous evaluation of the
jobset has no unfinished builds.
This model of evaluation lets us have 'low-tier' architectures.
For example, we could now have a jobset for ARMv7l builds, where
the buildfarm only has a single, underpowered ARMv7l builder.
Configuring that jobset as ONE_AT_A_TIME will create an evaluation
and then won't schedule another evaluation until every job of
the existing evaluation is complete.
This way, the cache will have a complete collection of pre-built
software for some commits, but the underpowered architecture will
never become backlogged in ancient revisions.
This hasn't been used in a long time (Guix uses its own CI system),
and it probably doesn't work anymore.
(cherry picked from commit 23c9ca3e94669087d463642baea0cf35a0b8d72f)