Nothing beyond the example module was ever built with the
PythonQt bindings, as far as I can tell. They have been
deprecated, defaulting OFF for over two years now.
QML modules fill the gap with customizable, run-time
interpreted UI and stronger support from the C++ side
of Calamares.
The `partition.conf` file contains an EFI-size. The default is 300MiB,
but distributions might like to use a bigger (or smaller) value.
Apply the configuration consistently everywhere where we need
"the size of the EFI partition". Extend the internal method
to look at the configured size.
Apparently everyone shipping a squashfs image also has the tools
installed, because the error message reporting that the tools-are-
missing contained a reference to an undefined variable.
Fix that, and while here improve the error message so you
don't get a whole path as a title in the error message.
The slightly weird error-message construction is so that no
messages change and no translation work is needed.
All **other** modules fully specify libcalamares; only unpackfs
was importing shortcuts. Change to conventional usage (partly
because that's easier on the pylint implementation, partly because
it's then consistent with the rest).
Apparently nobody ever hit the else-branch here (because
each DM has exactly one implementation -- that's what the
check is there for!) because the logging of the error
itself would raise IndexError or ValueError.
- Make clear that the @ is a string-location, and how long the
pre-script is (although in practice, it will be either null
and 0, or the values set in the loadmodule executable).
Read, then write, the NM file. Add a note about how we might
handle this better. Rename live_user() function to give it
a verb (and avoid UnboundLocal when using a variable of the same name).
This class doesn't really set a pointer -- it is a scoped assignment
through a pointer, which **can** set a value on destruction (when
it leaves scope). Rename it.
While here, extend the API so that it can do an assignment to the
underlying object **now**, while also doing a scoped assignment
later when it leaves scope. This makes some code a bit easier
to read ("in this scope, X is now <v> and then it becomes <v'>")
This class was used only once, and is confusing because
the assignment happens always, but to the opposite value
as what was visible. It can be replaced with other
scoped assignment, instead.
Removes the tests for it, too.
- when an emergency strikes, log the modules that are skipped
with a Once, but if an emergency module runs, refresh that
Once so that the function header is printed again -- to
distinguish JobQueue debugging from the logging from the
emergency module.
- iterate over the lines of the source file, rather
than over indexes, and make clear that the hooks, modules and files
lines are replaced, rather than merged.
- this calls write() more often, but it's only a few lines
- don't chain directly from modify_mkinitcpio_conf() to the
function that writes the file write_mkinitcpio_lines();
split into "figure out what needs to be written" and calling
that writing-function, so that we can test / check / log
if needed between the two.
- put the system-information and -detection functions at top
and the "do the actual work" things below
- don't mix the boolean do-we-use-this flags with the
lists of files and modules which are the important
parts of modify_mkinitcpio_conf