Commit graph

6 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
John Ericson 30dcc19d1f Put functional tests in tests/functional
I think it is bad for these reasons when `tests/` contains a mix of
functional and integration tests

 - Concepts is harder to understand, the documentation makes a good
   unit vs functional vs integration distinction, but when the
   integration tests are just two subdirs within `tests/` this is not
   clear.

 - Source filtering in the `flake.nix` is more complex. We need to
   filter out some of the dirs from `tests/`, rather than simply pick
   the dirs we want and take all of them. This is a good sign the
   structure of what we are trying to do is not matching the structure
   of the files.

With this change we have a clean:
```shell-session
$ git show 'HEAD:tests'
tree HEAD:tests

functional/
installer/
nixos/
```

(cherry picked from commit 68c81c737571794f7246db53fb4774e94fcf4b7e)
2023-12-01 12:06:43 -05:00
Maximilian Bosch 559fd7ffe7
nix flake check: improve error message if overlay is not a lambda (#8582)
* nix flake check: improve error message if overlay is not a lambda

Suppose you have an overlay like this

    {
      inputs = { /* ... */ };
      outputs = { flake-utils, ... }: flake-utils.lib.eachDefaultSystem
        (system: {
          overlays.default = final: prev: {

          };
        });
    }

then `nix flake check` (correctly) fails because `overlays` are supposed
to have the structure `overlays.<name> = final: prev: exp`. However, the
error-message is a little bit counter-intuitive:

    error: overlay does not take an argument named 'final'

While one might guess where the error actually comes from because the
trace above says `… while checking the overlay 'overlays.x86_64-linux'`
this is still pretty confusing because it complains about an argument
not being named `final` even though that's evidently the case.

With this change, the error-message actually makes it clear what's
wrong:

    [ma27@carsten:~/Projects/nix/tmp]$ nix flake check --extra-experimental-features 'nix-command flakes' path:$(pwd)
    error:
           … while checking flake output 'overlays'

             at /nix/store/clgblnxx003hyrq8qkz5ab6kgqkck6qc-source/flake.nix:4:5:

                3|   outputs = { ... }: {
                4|     overlays.x86_64-linux.snens = final: prev: {
                 |     ^
                5|       kek = throw "snens";

           … while checking the overlay 'overlays.x86_64-linux'

             at /nix/store/clgblnxx003hyrq8qkz5ab6kgqkck6qc-source/flake.nix:4:5:

                3|   outputs = { ... }: {
                4|     overlays.x86_64-linux.snens = final: prev: {
                 |     ^
                5|       kek = throw "snens";

           error: overlay is not a lambda, but a set instead
2023-06-27 14:58:29 +02:00
Peter Becich a420ccc6a8
nix flake check: skip derivations for foreign systems (#7759)
`nix flake show` now skips derivations for foreign systems: https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/6988

This commit borrows from that to implement the same behavior for `nix flake check`.

See "nix flake check breaks on IFD in multi-platform flake" https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/4265
2023-05-23 06:59:44 +02:00
John Ericson c11836126b Harden tests' bash
Use `set -u` and `set -o pipefail` to catch accidental mistakes and
failures more strongly.

 - `set -u` catches the use of undefined variables
 - `set -o pipefail` catches failures (like `set -e`) earlier in the
   pipeline.

This makes the tests a bit more robust. It is nice to read code not
worrying about these spurious success paths (via uncaught) errors
undermining the tests. Indeed, I caught some bugs doing this.

There are a few tests where we run a command that should fail, and then
search its output to make sure the failure message is one that we
expect. Before, since the `grep` was the last command in the pipeline
the exit code of those failing programs was silently ignored. Now with
`set -o pipefail` it won't be, and we have to do something so the
expected failure doesn't accidentally fail the test.

To do that we use `expect` and a new `expectStderr` to check for the
exact failing exit code. See the comments on each for why.

`grep -q` is replaced with `grepQuiet`, see the comments on that
function for why.

`grep -v` when we just want the exit code is replaced with `grepInverse,
see the comments on that function for why.

`grep -q -v` together is, surprise surprise, replaced with
`grepQuietInverse`, which is both combined.

Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-03-08 10:26:30 -05:00
Naïm Favier f1ee4ece80
Don't check NixOS modules
NixOS modules can be paths. Rather than dig further down into the layer
violation, don't check anything specific to NixOS modules.
2023-01-05 18:23:30 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra b15c4fdbde Split off 'nix flake check' tests 2022-07-13 21:01:16 +02:00