* ford-fusion: (259 commits)
clay: remove scaffolding
kiln: make otas continue even if they failed to apply
metadata-store: add cleanup utility, use on-poke:def instead of no-op
clay: flop syntax error trace
landscape/img/codeeval.png: typo in filename
invite-view: reinstate as potato
goad: don't crash on pre-OTA sign
chat-store: responded to comments, cleaned up
-test: support other desks (full beams in args)
arvo: use date instead of kelvin
hoon: re-fix +slab; /tests: fix clay tests
kiln: don't implicitly create syncs
gall: don't make large stack trace
ames: use +cut in +encrypt
pill: solid
dojo: print generator type errors
Squashed commit of the following:
ci: fix herb tests; update pills
ford,kiln: nicer errors
dojo: too many nouns
...
Signed-off-by: Philip Monk <phil@pcmonk.me>
* master: (147 commits)
vere: bump version to 0.10.7
libsigsegv: disable stack vma check
vere: bump version to 0.10.6
ci: add travis as trusted user
jets: use appropriate macro
noun: add -C to control memo cache size
jets: restore fond/play/peek hooks
jam: add commented-out functionality to count size of atom
jets: cap memo cache and remove peek, play, and fond jets
noun: add functions to count size of noun
release: urbit-os-v1.0.23
interface/config: fix production build
soto: run +on-load migration once
publish, links: restore full height
sh/build-interface: amend for SPA
interface/CONTRIBUTING: amend for SPA / webpack
solid: update pill
hood + apps: fix OTA process for feat/SPA
hood: add version %6 for %file-server upgrade
chat: equally size both code + s3 buttons
...
This patches libsigsegv to not check the stack vma on Linux, since that
involves reading procfs, and we make very heavy use of sigsegv. This
eliminates most of urbit's performance discrepancy between Linux and
MacOS. These are the benchmarks used; note this is a local MBP vs a
cloud Linux server, and the MBP is almost certainly faster hardware.
We take two benchmarks, one of which decrements 10 million times and the
other simply allocates 125MB of memory. These are the results:
cpu-heavy == =/ n 10.000.000 |-(?~(n n $(n (dec n))))
mem-heavy == =a (bex 1.000.000.008)
macos, cpu-heavy: 6 seconds
macos, mem-heavy: 1 second
linux-before, cpu-heavy: 30 seconds
linux-before, mem-heavy: 160 seconds
linux-after, cpu-heavy 9 seconds
linux-after, mem-heavy 1.3 seconds
This represents a 3x speedup for the cpu-heavy operation and a 120x
speedup for the memory-heavy operation.
This check was used to try to distinguish stack overflow from other
forms of segmentation fault. In the comments in src/handler-unix.c, it
describes three heuristics it uses, depending on what's available from
the OS. In the linux-i386 case, all three are availble, so we simply
disable the slow one. This correctly recognizes stack overflow if you
simply alloca(10000000000).
1. Fix bug in test builds that was causing failures for some reason I
still don't understand.
`tee` output to stderr was failing with "resource temporarily
unavailable". The hack that fixed it was to simply write the herb
output to a file and dump it to stdout after it fully completes.
2. sh/cachix works without CACHIX keys. Simply doesn't upload in that case.
3. Write code to cache testbus builds (disabled for now)
4. fakeship builds get further in bootstrap sequence before committing.
This fixes problems with PRs from forked repos and enables the scripts
to be run locally.
46a438f introduced use of the stdenv generic builder instead of an
explicit builder.sh script. This was reverted in 1daaf041a as it proved
to cause problems when building on some Linux variants.
This fixes the problem encountered on Linux by calling the standard
configure script with bash in an explicit configurePhase.
Adds a derivation that uses a patched pkg/urbit/vere/lmdb.c that employs
a sixty gigabyte log limit, instead of the default forty. This is
useful for ships e.g. ~zod that receive a lot of traffic on mainnet.
'installPhase' captures all the important stuff that builder.sh
previously did, and use of the generic builder allows stages of the
build to be more easily overridden.
By baking (potentially) multiple pills into an image, we can provide
mainnet vs ropsten images. It is still up to the operator to pass
along the pill path(s) to the entrypoint. For example, using Docker:
docker run --tty urbit -B /share/brass.pill -J /share/ivory.pill ...
The main .image attribute still uses only the solid pill, and image-ropsten
has been provided with brass and ivory pills.
Additionally herb has been added to the image for convenience.
Returns the target %zuse contract configuration to mainnet, and also
tweaks the 'arvo-ropsten' build to use %alef instead of %ames.
Also fixes a merge conflict artifact in nix/ops/default.nix.
0bdced981e introduced the 'arvo-ropsten' derivation. Attempting to
install both 'arvo' and 'arvo-ropsten' via nix-env will result in a
priority error; this assigns a higher priority to 'arvo' to resolve the
conflict.
Fixes#1912.
Arvo testnets typically use Ropsten's deploy of the Azimuth contract
instead of mainnet's. This commit adds an 'arvo-ropsten' derivation for
Arvo as specialised to Ropsten.
In addition to using a different Azimuth address in %zuse, this also
configures %ames and :acme appropriately for running an alternate
network on Ropsten. %ames has its protocol version incremented, and
:acme uses the Let's Encrypt staging API.
Included here are derivations for creating brass and ivory pills using
arvo-ropsten, to boot.
This removes the baked in codedump inspection and wrapper scripts
in favour of downstream tooling overriding this as necessary by
using FROM <image> in their respective dockerfile.