- Previous to this commit the boundary was exclusive of the
top level flake.
- This is wrong since the top level flake is still a valid
relative reference.
- Now, the check boundary is inclusive of the top level flake.
Signed-off-by: Timothy DeHerrera <tim.deh@pm.me>
Due to missing <atomic> declaration the build fails as:
src/libutil/util.hh:350:24: error: no match for 'operator||' (operand types are 'std::atomic<bool>' and 'bool')
350 | if (_isInterrupted || (interruptCheck && interruptCheck()))
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ^~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
| | |
| std::atomic<bool> bool
Because the manual is generated from default values which are themselves
generated from various sources (cpuid, bios settings (kvm), number of
cores). This commit hides non-reproducible settings from the manual
output.
No matter what, we need to resize the buffer to not have any scratch
space after we do the `read`. In the end of file case, `got` will be 0
from it's initial value.
Before, we forgot to resize in the EOF case with the break. Yes, we know
we didn't recieve any data in that case, but we still have the scatch
space to undo.
Co-Authored-By: Will Fancher <Will.Fancher@Obsidian.Systems>
This doesn't fix the bug, but makes the code less difficult to read.
Also improve the comments, now that it is clear what part is needed in
each code path.
Add a regular github action that will check the status of the latest
hydra evaluation.
Things aren’t ideal right now because this job will only notify “the
user who last modified the cron syntax in the workflow file” (so myself
atm). But at least that’ll give a notification for failing hydra jobs
Moving arguments of the primOp into the registration structure makes it
impossible to initialize a second EvalState with the correct primOp
registration. It will end up registering all those "RegisterPrimOp"'s
with an arity of zero on all but the 2nd instance of the EvalState.
Not moving the memory will add a tiny bit of memory overhead during the
eval since we need a copy of all the argument lists of all the primOp's.
The overhead shouldn't be too bad as it is static (based on the amonut
of registered operations) and only occurs once during the interpreter
startup.
For a (currently hardcoded and limited) list of stdenvs,
make `.#$nix-${stdenvName}` correspond to a Nix built with the
corresponding stdenv.
For example, `.#nix-${clang11Stdenv}` is Nix built with clang11.
Likewise, `devShells.x86_64-linux.clang11StdenvPackages` is a development
shell for Nix with clang11, that can be used with
```shell
nix develop .#clang11StdenvPackages
```
Fix#4129
/cc @pamplemousse