- Move layouting code into the .ui file
- Reduce margins hugely -- atop the title block, around the
scroll area, etc -- so that more license is visible at once.
- split shared <h1> message off
- do some string-concatenation, but only of whole sentences
- shave off some vertical space by dropping the mainsubtext item
- In code, add the necessary bool
- document meaning in the config file
- actually expand the full text if the entry is local and set to expanding-
by-default. This implementation is a bit lazy since it just pretends
to click on the toggle button.
- While here, reduce scope for UB by initializing POD members
- The arrows Up, Down, Right are used on toolbuttons, but
in the context of this module, those are directions with
meaning; give them better names.
- Because of #1268, the meaning of up- and down- may be swapped;
I'm not sure of which look makes the most sense. This is prep-
work for easily swapping the looks by using the meaningful names
instead.
SEE #1268
- we loop over all the entries anyway, so calculate allLicensesOptional
along the way (debatable whether std::none_of is clearer)
- always un-check the accept-box when resetting entries.
- Toggling the checkbox could disable the next button
because only the checked-state was used, instead of
the next-is-enabled-if-everything-is-optional member variable.
FIXES#1271
- Move retranslation to a separate slot to allow it to be
formatted nicely.
- Use calculated m_allLicensesOptional in retranslation.
- Untangle determining if all licenses are optional; std::none_of
returns true on an empty list.
- Scenario: *keepDistribution* is true, and the existing file contains
a GRUB_DISTRIBUTION line **followed** by a commented-out GRUB_DISTRIBUTION
line.
- In that case, the commented-out line would change the flag back to
False, and we'd end up writing a second GRUB_DISTRIBUTION line at the end.
Prevent that: the flag can only go to "True" and then stays there.
Editorial: If your grub configuration would have tripped this up, then
you're doing something wrong. Clean up the configuration file first.
- If we update the line, then GRUB_DISTRIBUTION has been set
- If we don't update the line (e.g. because of *keepDistribution*)
then a comment doesn't count as "have seen that line".
This means that if we get to the end of the file, with only commented-
out GRUB_DISTRIBUTION lines, and *keepDistribution* is set, then we'll
still write a distribution line -- because otherwise it's not set at all.
- Previous fix would erase the distribution information (using an
empty string to flag 'preserve existing GRUB_DISTRIBUTION lines'),
but that is fragile. A distro might set that, and yet **not**
set a GRUB_DISTRIBUTION line, in which case it would end up with
a setup without any GRUB_DISTRIBUTION set.
- When a GRUB_DISTRIBUTION line is found, **then** check if it should
update the line or not. This way, we have a suitable distribution
to write if no GRUB_DISTRIBUTION is found at all.
- move the explicit checking for non-empty into a specific
(normal) password check
- leave only the-two-fields-are-equal outside of the password-
requirements framework
- having non-empty is the same as minLength 1, but gives a different
error message
- the two explicit checks are the ones that handle *two*
strings as special cases; all the other checks from
the password-requirements system only handle the one string.
- the explanations under and around the boxes is noisy,
hard to size correctly (viz. issue #1202)
- use tooltips in almost-all fields instead
- add placeholder text to be more suggestive
- since the wording of the checkbox itself (and the functionality)
is to enforce strong passwords, need to switch out some
logic and fix the wording of the documentation.
- Give the whole entry to file_copy, not just the
destination. This will allow file_copy to work
with local excludes.
- Pluck entry.destination out immediately, to keep
code changes minimal.
- Document the parameters.
- list_excludes() turns the extra mounts from global storage
into --exclude parameters for rsync; it doesn't do anything
with the destination parameter.
- while here rename to something more descriptive
- it's ok if item one creates directories where item two will write,
so don't check for existence of all directories on start-up.
Reported by ArcoLinux.
FIXES: #1252
This adds to the *machineid* module (which generates random UUIDs
for DBus and systemd) another key to configure generation of
a urandom pool in the target from the entropy in the host system.
- Improve documentation of the settings
- If sysconfigSetup is true, **only** setup sysconfig and ignore
the rest. This seems to be consistent with existing openSUSE-
derivative distro's, which set displaymanagers to something
nonsensical.
- the *mount* module inserts a rootMountPoint without trailing /
into global storage, so we can't assume that here. On the other
hand, the paths passed in to the Worker functions are absolute
paths -- adjust the tests to follow that.
- The code in Workers.cpp assumes that rootMountPoint ends in a /
so that it can have filenames appended easily; make the tests
fit that assumption, but still need to check that it is so in
production.
- refactor running the command into a helper function,
to deal with the regular if-command-failed-then-complain pattern.
- mark parameters as unused.
- move distinction about kind of DBus file up into the MachineIdJob
and remove the enum that marked it.
- Testing some of the functionality that's been added just now:
- copyfile fails, buggy implementation
- poolsize fails, buggy implementation
- removefile not tested
- read-urandom or copy-existing-file are implemented
- fairly chatty on failure
- needs tests (probably the implementation should be moved to
a separate file and unit-tested)
- keep the rootMountPoint and the path-with-random-data separate
instead of concatenating them at the beginning. Then we can
use the "clean" names also within the host system.
- remove existing files for each kind of random-generation
that is enabled. There's a helper function for the case that
Cala is no longer setuid and needs help to remove those files
from the target (e.g. a setuid helper).