Fix the documentation for the tests to reflect what is actually happening.

+5 -2
lib/tests/modules/alias-with-priority-can-override.nix
···
# This is a test to show that mkAliasOptionModule sets the priority correctly
# for aliased options.
{ config, lib, ... }:
···
# Create an alias for the "enable" option.
(mkAliasOptionModule [ "enableAlias" ] [ "enable" ])
-
# Disable the aliased option, but with a default (low) priority so it
-
# should be able to be overridden by the next import.
( { config, lib, ... }:
{
enableAlias = lib.mkForce false;
···
# This is a test to show that mkAliasOptionModule sets the priority correctly
# for aliased options.
+
#
+
# This test shows that an alias with a high priority is able to override
+
# a non-aliased option.
{ config, lib, ... }:
···
# Create an alias for the "enable" option.
(mkAliasOptionModule [ "enableAlias" ] [ "enable" ])
+
# Disable the aliased option with a high priority so it
+
# should override the next import.
( { config, lib, ... }:
{
enableAlias = lib.mkForce false;
+3
lib/tests/modules/alias-with-priority.nix
···
# This is a test to show that mkAliasOptionModule sets the priority correctly
# for aliased options.
{ config, lib, ... }:
···
# This is a test to show that mkAliasOptionModule sets the priority correctly
# for aliased options.
+
#
+
# This test shows that an alias with a low priority is able to be overridden
+
# with a non-aliased option.
{ config, lib, ... }: