<version> is a standard header with C++20 which could cause issues if a library checks it exists then imports it
Because we have the root of this repo in the include path, it'd see that <version> exists (with, e.g., __has_include), and then try to include it as a header
But because it's just a file that says 0.1, this would fail
This happens with libpqxx 7
Without this commit, two jobsets using the same repository as input,
but different `deepClone` options, end up incorrectly sharing the same
"checkout" for a given (`uri`, `branch`, `revision`) tuple. The
presence or absence of `.git` is determined by the jobset execution
order.
This patch adds the missing `isDeepClone` boolean to the cache key.
The database upgrade script empties the `CachedGitInputs` table, as we
don't know if existing checkouts are deep clones. Unfortunately, this
generally forces rebuilds even for correct `deepClone` checkouts, as
the binary contents of `.git` are not deterministic.
Fixes#510
Nixpkgs on unstable has removed `stdenv.lib` as they've been warning for a while now. This removes the extra references to it in the flake.nix
I'm not entirely sure if this is right, but I figured it was trivial enough to give a quick try using the GH Editor while I was waiting for a job to finish
I broke this when I added `me.` in f1e75c8bff
I added me. to disambiguate `id`, but:
* eval.id works on the per-build page
* me.id works on the other pages
* Just id works everywhere if I drop:
, prefetch => { evaluationerror => [ ] },
but this causes a query per row to collect the evaluationerror
records later, this becomes significantly slow on non-trivial
datasets.
Using evals->current_source_alias will use the correct alias
whether it is me or eval or something else.
Exposes metrics:
* http_request_duration_seconds_bucket
* http_request_size_bytes_bucket
* http_response_size_bytes_bucket
* http_requests_total
with labels of action and controller to help identify popular
endpoints and their performance characteristics.
If the project isn't declarative, who cares about it in the response? After
setting the `declfile` to an empty string, everything related to declarative-
ness is wiped out, anyways.