Fixes errors like:
Caught exception in engine "Wide character in syswrite at /nix/store/498lwsrn5kkdh1q8kn3vcpd3457w6m7a-hydra-perl-deps/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.16.3/Starman/Server.pm line 547."
Note that these errors didn't happen if the database encoding was set
to SQL_ASCII (which was the case for hydra.nixos.org, explaining why
it didn't get these errors). However, now the encoding must be
UTF8. To change it, do:
update pg_database set encoding = pg_char_to_encoding('UTF8') where datname = 'hydra';
This gets rid of the warning:
DBIx::Class::Storage::DBI::select_single(): Query returned more than one row. SQL that returns multiple rows is DEPRECATED for ->find and ->single at /home/eelco/Dev/hydra/src/script/../lib/Hydra/Controller/Project.pm line 15
In the dashboard and on the job page, indicate whether the job appears
in the latest jobset eval. That way, the user gets some indication if
a job has accidentally disappeared (e.g. due to an evaluation error).
Use the following in your hydra.conf to make your instance a
private Hydra instance (public is the default):
private 1
Currently, this will not allow you to use the API, channels
and the binary cache when running in private mode. We will add
solutions for these functionalities later.
This requires adding the following to hydra.conf:
binary_cache_key_name = <key-name>
binary_cache_private_key_file = <path-to-private-key>
e.g.
binary_cache_key_name = hydra.nixos.org-1
binary_cache_private_key_file = /home/hydra/cache-key.sec
All successful, non-garbage-collected builds in the evaluation are
passed in a attribute set. So if you declare a Hydra input named
‘foo’ of type ‘eval’, you get a set with members ‘foo.<jobname>’. For
instance, if you passed a Nixpkgs eval as an input named ‘nixpkgs’,
then you could get the Firefox build for x86_64-linux as
‘nixpkgs.firefox.x86_64-linux’.
Inputs of type ‘eval’ can be specified in three ways:
* As the number of the evaluation.
* As a jobset identifier (‘<project>:<jobset>’), which will yield the
latest finished evaluation of that jobset. Note that there is no
guarantee that any job in that evaluation has succeeded, so it might
not be very useful.
* As a job identifier (‘<project>:<jobset>:<job>’), which will yield
the latest finished evaluation of that jobset in which <job>
succeeded. In conjunction with aggregate jobs, this allows you to
make sure that the evaluation contains the desired builds.
This reverts commit 2d7e106d29.
Unfortunately some jobsets still depend on this behaviour. They could
probably do something like "assert system == input.system; ..." but
changing them all is undesirable.