You'll need a VM with 2 disks to demonstrate:
- Configure Calamares to pick "none" as initial action on
the partition page (this is a safe choice),
- Enter partition page,
- No action is selected, and the next> button is greyed out.
- Click erase; notice next> is now available.
- Change devices, notice no action is selected, but next>
is still available. Clicking on it, though, does nothing.
When changing to "no action", update the next-button's
availability.
Avoid the extra indirection through the otherwise-unused
prettyGptType(const QString&), construct table of names
only on first call to avoid static-initialization order
(though that's not important here).
In 4ffa79d4cf, the spelling
was changed to consistently be "autoLoginUser" in the *users*
module, but that changed the Global Storage key as well,
and the *displaymanager* module wasn't changed to follow.
In particular, we need a separate Job class to set the label; this
is invoked after we formatted a partition, and when no other changes
to the partition have been requested in the Edit dialog.
The partition- and filesystem-label setting code was already there,
but not in the call to createNewPartition(); now we set the
FS label twice (once in the call, once afterwards)
When creating or editing a new formatted partition, allow
to set a filesystem label (16 chars maximum). Modify
the KPMHelpers to accept it as a new parameter. Partitions
created by default may get a meaningful label too.
The skip-checking is now in the functions for adding plugins and
subdirectories, so that third-party building should get it
as well, for free. Since AddModuleSubdirectory and AddPlugin
use the newly split-out module, handling SKIP_MODULES and USE_*
consistently across module repositories is now easier.
While here, make accumulating-the-skipped-modules explicit.
- use load() to start loading
- the FetchNextUnless class is useful in more spots in
the loading process
- set status explicitly on success (otherwise, a failure in a
previous URL would leave a failure message lying around even
when the module shows something useful)
- m_queue was not initialized to nullptr, crashes
- split queue-is-done to a separate slot rather than a lambda
- prefer queueing calls to fetchNext(), for responsiveness
Require a ; after RETRANSLATE macros. They are statement-like;
this makes it easier for some of them to be recognized by
clang-format and resolves some existing weird formatting.
Now all the business logic is in Config, the door is open to
building a QML-ified netinstall module. I'm not sure that
would be worth it: packagechooser offers more space for a
nice UI and should be QML'ed first.
There was a mix of autologin and autoLogin, leading to confusion
in the code. QML is sensitive to this, so go to one consistent name.
(Although the names of the settings in the `.conf` file are
different again)
Although the example configurations shouldn't really be used
as a sample of how to configure **your** Calamares for your
distro, many distro's do just copy the examples. So leave
traces of the OEM-configuration settings in the example,
and give the standard configuration a 'nothing changed'
set of presets.
- you can still call set*(), eg. from the UI, when the field is
not editable. Although the code previously ignored the change,
this would lead to a mismatch between what the UI is showing
(the changed value) and what the Config has (old value).
Emit a changed-signal (notify) with the old value so that the
UI is changed *back* as soon as possible.
- warn about fields applied twice (program error)
- warn about fields not used (configuration error)
- add operator<< for "clean" looking preset application
Build up the list of known presets by what the Config-object
expects, not by what the Config file provides. This allows
early detection of mis-matched configurations.
Presets can only apply to Q_PROPERTY properties, and the
preset must match the property name.
It's possible to ignore the "user setting" for restart-now
and call doRestart(true) directly. This is intended for
use with specific UIs that make that choice clear for the user.
Hook up both [finished] and [finishedq] to the "traditional"
restart-if-the-box-is-ticked logic although the example
QML doesn't expose that box.
module builds & runs, config connections are not registering
no errors
finishedq.qml is offering a different option though, running commands directly in qml
plasma-framework executer is used for that
- move most of the business logic to Config
- make retranslate of the page more robust (e.g. changing language
after failure would restore the un-failed message)
There's still some bits left.
- the configuration is still duplicated in the widget, and
functionality still needs to move to the Config object
- the ViewStep is cut down to almost nothing
- the host system's /etc/group is being read, and that varies between
host OS versions; since I was doing today's release on KaOS, the
test was failing because of arbitrary differences between the
default groups on each Linux flavor.
FIXES#1604
(Admittedly, this fixes the problem only when there's Plasma Solid automount
present, and not any of the other kinds; but none of those have been reported
yet, and adding them into AutoMount.cpp is opaque to the rest of the
system)
- It shouldn't be necessary to explicitly .get() pointers for
logging, and it's convenient to know when a pointer is smart.
* no annotation means raw (e.g. @0x0)
* S means shared
* U means unique
- switch logging in job to VERBOSE because we don't want to be printing
pointers to the regular session log
- switch logging in test to VERBOSE to actually see the messages from the Job
- hook the test into the build
- Although unique_ptr is only used when ICU is enabled, include it
always because it is likely that we'll use more unique_ptr
in the implementation at some point.
Ever since signed shim binaries for multiple architectures became
available, the shim binaries installed in Linux distributions have
been renamed to include the EFI architecture in the binary names.
This started in Fedora, but is now used in openSUSE and Ubuntu too.
Reference for shim binary names comes from shim spec in Fedora:
d8c3c8e392/f/shim.spec (_23-32)