* made all columns available via the API (except for forceeval)
* renamed flakeref to flake to unify the API with the database schema
* renamed inputs to jobsetinputs to unify the API with the database schema
The checkbox is only enabled if `email_notification = 1` is set in
`hydra.conf`. However, when creating jobset (in contrast to the edit
form), the checkbox is always disabled because the `emailNotification`
parameter in Catalyst's stash was missing.
Passwords that are sha1 will be transparently upgraded to argon2,
and future comparisons will use Argon2
Co-authored-by: Graham Christensen <graham@grahamc.com>
The default password comparison logic does not use
constant time validation. Switching to constant time
offers a meager improvement by removing a timing
oracle.
A prepatory step in moving to Argon2id password storage, since we'll need this change anyway after
for validating existing passwords.
Co-authored-by: Graham Christensen <graham@grahamc.com>
Some time in the last decade the plugin switched to preferring
a flatter namespace for realm config.
Co-authored-by: Graham Christensen <graham@grahamc.com>
This is a breaking change. Previously, packages named `packageset.foo`
would be exposed in the fake derivation channel as `packageset-foo`.
Presumably this was done to avoid needing to track attribute sets, and
to avoid the complexity. I think this now correctly handles the
complexity and properly mirrors the input expressions layout.
DBIx likes to eagerly select all columns without a way to really tell
it so. Therefore, this splits this one large column in to its own
table.
I'd also like to make "jobsets" use this table too, but that is on hold
to stop the bleeding caused by the extreme amount of traffic this is
causing.
The database has these constraints:
check ((type = 0) = (nixExprInput is not null and nixExprPath is not null)),
check ((type = 1) = (flake is not null)),
which prevented switching to flakes in a declarative jobspec, since the
nixexpr{path,input} fields were not nulled in such an update
Co-Authored-By: Graham Christensen <graham@grahamc.com>
This search query is pretty heavy. Defaulting to 500 has caused
Hydra's web UI to appear to be down. Since 500 can take it down, users
probably shouldn't be allowed t ask for that many.
Duplicating this data on every record of the builds table cost
approximately 4G of duplication.
Note that the database migration included took about 4h45m on an
untuned server which uses very slow rotational disks in a RAID5 setup,
with not a lot of RAM. I imagine in production it might take an hour
or two, but not 4. If this should become a chunked migration, I can do
that.
Note: Because of the question about chunked migrations, I have NOT
YET tested this migration thoroughly enough for merge.