Implements support for Nix's new Perl bindings[1]. The current state
basically does `openStore()`, but always uses `auto` and doesn't support
stores at other URIs.
Even though the stores are cached inside the Perl implementation, I
decided to instantiate those once in the Nix helper module. That way
store openings aren't cluttered across the entire codebase. Also, there
are two stores used later on - MACHINE_LOCAL_STORE for `auto`,
BINARY_CACHE_STORE for the one from `store_uri` in `hydra.conf` - and
using consistent names should make the intent clearer then.
This doesn't contain any behavioral changes, i.e. the build product
availability issue from #1352 isn't fixed. This patch only contains the
migration to the new API.
[1] https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/9863
An empty string is a sneaky way to avoid hard failures --- things that
expect strings still get strings, but it does conversely open the door
up to soft failures (spooky-action-at-a-distance ones because the string
did not have the expected invariants).
"Fail fast" with null will ultimately make the system more robust, but
force us to fix more things up front, and I don't want to change this
without also fixing those things up front, especially as this commit is
for now just part of the the preparatory PR for which this is dead code.
Brought up by @thufschmitt in
https://github.com/NixOS/hydra/pull/1316#discussion_r1415111329 . This
makes this closer to what was originally there --- which just dispatched
off the experimental feature rather than the presence/absense of the
output, too.
This is just C++ changes without any Perl / Frontend / SQL Schema
changes.
The idea is that it should be possible to redeploy Hydra with these
chnages with (a) no schema migration and also (b) no regressions. We
should be able to much more safely deploy these to a staging server and
then production `hydra.nixos.org`.
Extracted from #875
Co-Authored-By: Théophane Hufschmitt <theophane.hufschmitt@tweag.io>
Co-Authored-By: Alexander Sosedkin <monk@unboiled.info>
Co-Authored-By: Andrea Ciceri <andrea.ciceri@autistici.org>
Co-Authored-By: Charlotte 🦝 Delenk Mlotte@chir.rs>
Co-Authored-By: Sandro Jäckel <sandro.jaeckel@gmail.com>
NOTE: I'm well-aware that we have to be careful with this to avoid new
regressions on hydra.nixos.org, so this should only be merged after
extensive testing from more people.
Motivation: I updated Nix in my deployment to 2.9.1 and decided to also
update Hydra in one go (and compile it against the newer Nix). Given
that this also updates the C++ code in `hydra-{queue-runner,eval-jobs}`
this patch might become useful in the future though.
At the moment, aggregate jobs can easily break and cause the entire
evaluation to fail, which is not ideal. For Nixpkgs, we do have some
important aggregate jobs (like `tested`), but for debugging and building
purposes it's still useful to get a partial result even if the channel
won't actually advance.
This commit changes the behaviour of hydra-eval-jobs such that it
aggregates any errors found during the construction of an aggregate, and
will instead annotate the job with the evaluation failure such that it
shows up in a "cleaner" way.
There are really two types of failure that we care about: one is where
the attribute just ends up missing altogether in the final output, and
also where the attribute is in the output but fails to evaluate. Both
are handled here.
Note that this does mean that the same error message may be output
multiple times, but this aids debuggability because it'll be much
clearer what's blocking the job from being created.
It might happen that a job from the aggregate returned an error!
This is what the vague "[json.exception.type_error.302] type must be string, but is null"
was all about in this instance; there was no `drvPath` to stringify!
So we now actively watch for errors and copy them to the aggregate job.
The vague "[json.exception.type_error.302] type must be string, but is null"
is **absolutely** unhelpful in the way Hydra currently handles it on
evaluation.
This is handling *unexpected* errors only; the following commit will
handle the specific instance of the previously mentioned error.
Recently a few internal APIs have changed[1]. The `outputPaths` function
has been removed and a lot of data structures are modeled with
`std::optional` which broke compilation.
This patch updates the code in `hydra-queue-runner` accordingly to make
sure that Hydra compiles again.
[1] https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/3883
Otherwise, errors will not be shown to end-users, which makes debugging
long evals pretty much impossible.
(cherry picked from commit 76299b9174d7cba06427220166dc4707b43d407d)