There is no point in indexing rows with common column values like
"finished = 1", since those are the majority of the table. Only the
exceptions ("finished = 0") are interesting. Having smaller tables
should make updates/insertions faster.
This incorporates the following two commits from <nixpkgs>:
NixOS/nixpkgs@f83af95f8aNixOS/nixpkgs@5e7a1cf955
Hydra was the original reason why I was fixing tempdir creation in the
first place. Seeing that Hydra ships its own versions of these scripts,
we need to patch them here as well.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
If hydra-eval-jobs creates a new root, and hydra-update-gc-roots runs
before hydra-evaluator has had a chance to add the corresponding build
to the database, then hydra-update-gc-roots will remove the root. If
subsequently the Nix garbage collector kicks in, it may remove the
build's .drv file before the build is performed. Since evaluation of
the Nixpkgs and NixOS jobsets nowadays takes a lot of time (e.g. an
hour), the probability of this happening is fairly high.
The quick fix is not to delete roots that are less than a day old. So
long as evaluation doesn't take longer than a day, this should be fine
;-)
Fixes#166.
This adds a Hydra plugin for users to submit their open source projects
to the Coverity Scan system for analysis.
First, add a <coverityscan> section to your Hydra config, including the
access token, project name, and email, and a regex specifying jobs to
upload:
<coverityscan>
project = testrix
jobs = foobar:.*:coverity.*
email = aseipp@pobox.com
token = ${builtins.readFile ./coverity-token}
</coverityscan>
This will upload the scan results for any job whose name matches
'coverity.*' in any jobset in the Hydra 'foobar' project, for the
Coverity Scan project named 'testrix'.
Note that one upload will occur per job matched by the regular
expression - so be careful with how many builds you upload.
The jobs which are matched by the jobs specification must have a file in
their output path of the form:
$out/tarballs/...-cov-int.(xz|lzma|zip|bz2|tgz)
The file must have the 'cov-int' directory produced by `cov-build` in
the root.
(You can also output something into
$out/nix-support/hydra-build-products for the Hydra UI.)
This file will be found in the store, and uploaded to the service
directly using your access credentials. Note the exact extension: don't
use .tar.xz, only use .xz specifically.
Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
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
This makes it easy to set environment variables for the Hydra server
(for example, your configuration.nix can use readFile to read an API
token to upload build results somewhere).
Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>