sidebar entry can be configured and translated
adding a more elaborate qml example
keeping this in dummyqml for now, another commit will follow with
continuation of dummyqml in a more aptly named module
- start of a class to hold configuration information; this can
later be substituted into the WelcomeViewStep and filled from
setConfigurationMap()
In the example application:
- register the Config type
- test application to display the QML (this will be extended
with adding the locale model to it)
- sample QML that does nothing useful yet (will display the locale
model once it's there)
- all the TZ location information now lives in the Calamares
locale service and the TZ list
- replace the Location class that was local to the timezone
widget by the TZZone class
- chase a bunch of small API changes that this needs
- Used in only one place, move to .cpp
- Drop useless scaling all the images *are* that size already
- Add debugging check that the images match expected size
- search for a key and return a type-cast pointer to the result
- while here, simplify some other code
- the find() function could be done with std::find_if but doesn't
get any shorter or more elegant
- By using QList< CStringPair* > consistently, we can save
a bunch of model code at the cost of an occasional dynamic_cast;
it's fairly rare for there to be a need for the derived pointer.
- needs a qwidget to put the top-items (license name, button) in
- fixes issue where the gap between the button and the hrule would
change depending on what is expanded
- 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).
- Just use the existing rsync code, which can do both
files and directory trees.
- The existing code assumed we were always copying directories.
Now double-check beforehand.
- if a default DE is configured but the executable doesn't exist,
believe the .desktop file. Then use that, and warn if the
whole thing can not be found.
- for a DE entry which has a bad executable setting,
update the entry from the .desktop file using TryExec.
This assumes that the TryExec command is actually something
you might want to run.
- Sessions can be X11-sessions (living in xsessions) or Wayland-
(living in wayland-sessions). Look in both places.
- Refactor code a little to make it nicer to read.
- Do the async GeoIP checking in the async requirements-checking phase
- Do not return any requirements results -- we just need the async bit
- Drop the waiting widget, since it's not needed (done by the
requirements phase)
- If there is an item with id "" (empty), it is used as the
"no-package-selected" placeholder text.
- Existing code iterated over the abstract model and used the
name and description at the time the model was set -- but
by getting the name and description from the model, only
a single string was obtained instead of the full range
of translations.
- Therefore, when arriving on the page, the "no-package-selected"
information was displayed from the translation that was active
when the model was set.
Instead, extend the non-abstract model so we can find the no-package-
selected item and pass that explicitly to the page.
FIXES#1241
- Since the package chooser might be used more than once, or for
more specific items than "Packages", introduce a way to provide
specific strings for display.
- The only string needed is the ViewStep name, since the item with
id "" can be used for the no-selection item.
- This helps give meaningful names to code chunks
- Gives clang-format something to work with
- Reduces indentation depth
I think this is a bit of a code-style opinion issue: big complicated
lambdas doing UI things just don't seem like a good idea.
- hangs unpredictably during testing
- replace with the Calamares process-invocation runCommand(), which is also
synchronous but doesn't hang (or, hasn't, in testing so far)
If we don't have/need an image for the rootfs, we might want to
configure the `/` directory as a source for unpackfs. Unfortunately,
this raises an error:
- unpackfs first creates a temporary directory
- it then creates a subdirectory for each source, using the source
path's basename
- when the source is `/`, the basename is an empty string, therefore
the module tries to create an already existing directory
In order to prevent this error, we use the `os.makedirs` function with
parameter `exist_ok=True` instead of `os.mkdir`.
Signed-off-by: Arnaud Ferraris <arnaud.ferraris@collabora.com>
- AppData and AppStream can be disabled independently of finding
their requirements (possibly useful if you want to ignore
AppStream even when it's installed in your build environment).
- Add a little top-level documentation about WITH_
- These don't have to be static methods of PackageItem, a free
function is more convenient.
- Since it's not API of PackageItem anymore, need to
- update tests not to use API
- do API-not-available warnings in consumers
- The smallest size image of the default (or, if there is no
default, the first) screenshot is used.
- Remote URLs are not supported by QPixmap, so most will not
load anyway.
- Use *appstream* as key in one of the items for the package-
chooser to load data from the AppStream cache in the system.
- Usable for some applications; for DE-selection not so much.
- Currently unimplemented.
- Put the implementation entirely in a separate file, keep the
not-supported one in PackageModel.cpp (but only in an #ifdef).
- Makes the various optional-data-sources more similar.
- Simplify the iteration by first determining which partitions
are mountable (at all).
- This guards against the very rare case that a partition
does not have a mountPoint at all (the if guarded against that)
where the lambda passed to sort() would get a KeyError.
Instead of having a special case for extra mounts to be processed right
after the rootfs, a better approach is to add them to the partitions
list, and then sort the list by mount point.
This way, we make sure every partition is mounted right when it is
needed: `/` is obviously mounted first, `/run` is mounted before
`/run/udev`, and so on.
The overall process is therefore more generic and should suit all
use-cases.
Signed-off-by: Arnaud Ferraris <arnaud.ferraris@collabora.com>
- the "Select language" tooltip was applied to the form, so it would
show up inappropriately all over the place
- the buttons didn't have useful tooltips.
- having show*Url and donateUrl seems inconsistent, although
the show*Url settings were originally boolean-only.
- add "show" to the Donate button setting, to make them
all consistent (putting a boolean there will generate a
warning and hide the button, that's all).
- the generic (enum-based) setupButton() can handle all four
of the buttons, so setupLinks() can go away. Only the
(re)translation of the text on the button needs to be
done, so move that to the main RETRANSLATE.
- Handle buttons and their URL-opening in a more
general way with an enum; drop existing three-boot
method and special setupDonateButton()
- Doesn't compile because consumers haven't changed.
As the config files integer are now of type `QVariant::LongLong` instead
of `QVariant::Int`, requirements relying on this type were not parsed
correctly.
This patch fixes this, and adds an option to the python conversion to
take into account `QVariant::LongLong` types.
Signed-off-by: Arnaud Ferraris <arnaud.ferraris@collabora.com>
When the rootfs partition is read-only, mount points for the other
partitions cannot be created, therefore they need to be created in a
tmpfs, already mounted somewhere in `/`.
However, the extra mounts are only mounted at the end, which causes an
error as no tmpfs is currently mounted.
This patch makes sure all extra mounts are mounted right after the `/`
partition, allowing the use of a read-only rootfs.
Signed-off-by: Arnaud Ferraris <arnaud.ferraris@collabora.com>
This variable is declared in `if m:`. Of course if this codepath doesn't
run, the variable is not declared an Python doesn't like this kind of
surprise...
Signed-off-by: Arnaud Rebillout <arnaud.rebillout@collabora.com>
- If KPMcore is found -- it requires some other KDE Frameworks but
at least in pre-4.0 versions doesn't check very well for them --
then missing its dependencies is no cause for CMake failure.
Instead, log it nicely and suppress the module.
- calamares_automoc() sets AUTOMOC, but also adds some flags
to avoid compilation warnings from the generated MOC code.
- drop weird hard-coded include paths
- KDE and GNOME selection images were drawn by me for the bogus
package model, and should not be used.
- Keep Calamares logo though, even if it doesn't make much sense
to use it in package selection.
- Keep the no-selection image since it might be used more often,
but it's not very good.
- The ID and Screenshot entries might be weird in AppData (in particular,
a remove URL) so put those back under the control of Calamares even
when using AppData as the source of descriptions.
- Document all the static inline methods that do the work
- Fill up a QVariantMap from <name>, <summary> and <description><p>
elements, and use that to initialize the PackageItem.
- Doing a manual read of the XML, since existing appdata libraries
don't seem to have a convenient entry for what I need.
- Expand tests to loading AppData (currently, they fail).
- Add a FALLTHRU macro to annotate fallthrough situations in both
Clang and GCC,
- Annotate intentional fallthroughs.
- Add missing break which meant that the selection mode was
always multiple-selection.
- Using id's as keys in a map orders them indeterminately -- in
practice, alphabetically by key. Switch to a list form so that
the products stick to the order they have in the config file
(which means distro's can list "preferred" versions at top).
Package chooser is a **low density** package selector -- unlike
netinstall which offers a high density tree view -- for picking
zero, one, or more items from a small collection of packages.
This can be used, e.g., for "pick exactly one desktop environment",
"pick zero or more text editors" which can then be installed
by another module. The UI is big and shiny (rather than netinstall's
text-based tree view) and isn't suitable for more than a dozen or
so items.
- preservefiles generally needs to have the target filesystems
mounted, so that it can preserve to them; but you can also
configure it such that there is no need for mounted filesystems
(e.g. in OEM setup).
- Add an example line in CMakeLists.txt to show how that would be done.
- The mount module must happen before unpackfs because that (mount)
module sets up the root mount point (in /tmp) and some other
variables needed later.
Added new configuration "efiMountOptions" to fstab.conf
When generating the fstab entry for the ESP, take the mount options from
the new configuration or fall back to "mountOptions".
- The mitigations are slightly intrusive, and may clash
with other, similar mitigations (especially for initramfs,
the recommended solution is to configure the system with
the snippet outside of Calamares).
- These tests exercise the createTargetFile() logic,
which is essential for creating a safe initramfs
configuration snippet.
- Could be moved into libcalamares instead, since the tests
are not really initramfs specific.
- This is a simple variation on the theme of things-that-call-a-
initramfs-updater, so the code is mostly a copy of initramfs/
module. I didn't even bother to strip out the configuration-
handling (I figure it might be good for *something*) so now
"" and "$uname" are valid kernel names as well.
- Fixes security issue where the initramfs ends up readable
by all, and that includes the cryptfile for LUKS.
SEE #1190
- Rename classes and functions to be more descriptive
(a LuksDevice is .. information for a LUKS device, for instance).
- Move the smarts of unpacking a QVariantMap to LuksDevice.
- Apply code formatting
- Use 120 seconds for update-initramfs, instead of 10. Previous
Python code had no timeout at all, which wasn't so hot either.
10 seconds, though, is too short for slow CPU & slow disk.
- new implementation handles blank (maps to "all") configuration,
- allows specifying "$uname" as kernel name, to use `uname -r`,
- allows specifying a specific kernel.
- Just read /proc/partitions and process it; split into columns,
add relevant bits.
- This implementation supports devices named "name", which the other
didn't (but that would be really weird).
The tests now pass.
- This is a tiny bit of TDD to replace the existing implementation
(a shell pipeline) with processing inside Calamares.
- The test fails right now, since the implementations are not
the same.