Unfortunately, rsync returns exit code 23 (Partial transfer due to
error) if it cannot write extended attributes (with -X) because the
target file system does not support it, e.g., the FAT EFI system
partition. We need -X because distributions using file system
capabilities and/or SELinux require the extended attributes. But
distributions using SELinux may also have SELinux labels set on files
under /boot/efi, and rsync complains about those. The only clean way
would be to split the rsync into one with -X and --exclude /boot/efi and
a separate one without -X for /boot/efi, but only if /boot/efi is
actually an EFI system partition. For now, this hack will have to do.
See also:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=868755#c50
for the same issue in Anaconda, which uses a similar workaround.
In other words, support:
hidden: false
selected: true
groups.
This was supposed to work according to README.md, but not actually
implemented. Now it should be working.
- multiple users management.
- ability to set different shells based on configuration.
- ability to select avatars from files and then copy them to a target location in the user's home directory. No specific location suggested due to differences between DEs on where to read avatars from.
These job plugins work similarly to view modules, with the following
differences:
* These jobs need to link only libcalamares, not libcalamaresui. For
this reason, PluginFactory was moved from libcalamaresui to
libcalamares. (It depends only on QtCore.)
* Instead of deriving from ViewModule, derive from CppJob (which is a
subclass of Job).
* Like process and Python jobs, a job plugin is a single job, whereas a
ViewModule can generate a whole list of jobs.
The CppJob and CppJobModule classes are new. In Module::fromDescriptor,
the combination type=job, intf=qtplugin is now supported and mapped to
CppJobModule.