This commit adds a new NixOS VM test, which tests that `nix upgrade-nix`
works on both kinds of profiles (manifest.nix and manifest.json).
Done as a separate commit from 831d18a13, since it relies on the
--store-path argument from 026c90e5f as well.
Change-Id: I5fc94b751d252862cb6cffb541a4c072faad9f3b
nix3-profile automatically migrates any profile its used on to its style
of profile -- the ones with manifest.json instead of manifest.nix. On
non-NixOS systems, Nix is conventionally installed to the profile at
/nix/var/nix/profiles/default, so if a user passed that to `--profile`
of `nix profile`, then it would break upgrade-nix from ever working
again, without recreating the profile.
This commit fixes that, and allows upgrade-nix to work on either kind of
profile.
Fixes#16.
Change-Id: I4c49b1beba93bb50e8f8a107edc451affe08c3f7
Notably, ProfileManifest and ProfileElement are useful generic
profile management code, and nix profile is not the only place in the
codebase where profiles are relevant.
This commit is in preparation for fixing upgrade-nix's interaction with
new-style profiles.
Change-Id: Iefc8bbd34b4bc6012175cb3d6e6a8207973bc792
This replaces the external sandbox-exec call with direct calls into
libsandbox. This API is technically deprecated and is missing some
prototypes, but all major browsers depend on it, so it is unlikely to
materially change without warning.
This commit also ensures the netrc file is only written if the
derivation is in fact meant to be able to access the internet.
This change commits a sin of not actually actively declaring its
dependency on macOS's libsandbox.dylib; this is due to the dylib
cache in macOS making that explicit dependency unnecessary. In the
future this might become a problem, so this commit marks our sins.
Co-authored-by: Artemis Tosini <lix@artem.ist>
Co-authored-by: Lunaphied <lunaphied@lunaphied.me>
Change-Id: Ia302141a53ce7b0327c1aad86a117b6645fe1189
This should have been there from the beginning. As much as nix-env is a
pile of problems we don't need trivial docs papercuts like this adding
to it.
Change-Id: I0c53e4b146af2fefdd0e4743d850672729cb2194
That's expected by `build-remote` and makes sure that errors are
correctly forwarded to the user. For instance, let's say that the
host-key of `example.org` is unknown and
nix-build ../nixpkgs -A hello -j0 --builders 'ssh-ng://example.org'
is issued, then you get the following output:
cannot build on 'ssh-ng://example.org?&': error: failed to start SSH connection to 'example.org'
Failed to find a machine for remote build!
derivation: yh46gakxq3kchrbihwxvpn5bmadcw90b-hello-2.12.1.drv
required (system, features): (x86_64-linux, [])
2 available machines:
[...]
The relevant information (`Host key verification failed`) ends up in the
daemon's log, but that's not very obvious considering that the daemon
isn't very chatty normally.
This can be fixed - the same way as its done for legacy-ssh - by passing
fd 4 to the SSH wrapper. Now you'd get the following error:
cannot build on 'ssh-ng://example.org': error: failed to start SSH connection to 'example.org': Host key verification failed.
Failed to find a machine for remote build!
[...]
...and now it's clear what's wrong.
Please note that this is won't end up in the derivation's log.
For previous discussion about this change see
https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/7659.
Change-Id: I5790856dbf58e53ea3e63238b015ea06c347cf92
only decompress the response once all data has been received (in the
fully buffered case), or at least outside of the curl wrapper itself
(in the receive-to-sink case). unfortunately this means we will have
to duplicate decompression logic for these two cases for time being,
but once the curl wrapper has been rewritten to return a real future
or Source we can deduplicate this logic again. the curl wrapper will
have to turn into a proper Source first and use decompression source
logic which also does not currently exist—only decompression *sinks*
Change-Id: I66bc692f07d9b9e69fe10689ee73a2de8d65e35c
this is highly questionable. single-arg download calls will misbehave
with it set, and two-arg download calls will just overwrite it. being
an implementation detail this should not have been in the API at all.
Change-Id: I613772951ee03d8302366085f06a53601d13f132
this lets each implementation of FileTransfer (of which currently only
the one exists at all) implement appropriate handling for its internal
behaviours that are not otherwise exposed. in curl this lets us switch
the buffer-full handling method from "block the entire curl thread" to
"pause just the one transfer", move the non-libcurl body decompression
out of the actual curl wrapper (which will let us eventually morph the
curl wrapper intto an actual source of Sources), and some other things
Change-Id: Id6d3593cde6b4915aab3e90a43b175c103cc3f18
Previously, the garbage collector found runtime roots on Darwin by
shelling out to `lsof -n -w -F n` then parsing the result.
However, this requires an lsof binary and can be extremely slow.
The official Apple lsof returns in a reasonable amount of time,
about 250ms in my tests, but the lsof packaged in nixpkgs is quite slow,
taking about 40 seconds to run the command.
Using libproc directly is about the same speed as Apple lsof,
and allows us to reënable several tests that were disabled on Darwin.
Change-Id: Ifa0adda7984e13c15535693baba835aae79a3577
My main motivation for this change is to limit the amount of compile
jobs to make sure my machine is still usable for something else when
building a fresh Lix locally.
Also made `build` a dependency of `install`: this is analogous to
`make install` in CppNix where this both recompiles changed files and
installs the artifacts into `outputs/out`. May be a little more pleasant
to work with that, especially when you're used to contributing to
CppNix.
Change-Id: I321e2b0daf1c5e20f82c04e2dd158056c80ed86c
just accumulate error data into result.data as we would for successful
transfers without a dataCallback. errorSink and data would contain the
same data in error cases anyway, so splitting them is not very useful.
Change-Id: I00e449866454389ac6a564ab411c903fd357dabf
Meson cross files layer, the last value of each key takes effect.
https: //mesonbuild.com/Machine-files.html#loading-multiple-machine-files
Change-Id: I22d886f71cd51f0ce520d3fc22aed4bcf074bb91
This creates new subclasses of LocalStore for each OS to include
platform-specific functionality. Currently this just includes garbage
collector roots but it could be extended to sandboxing as well.
In order to make sure that the generic LocalStore is not accidentally
constructed, its constructor is protected. A Fallback is provided which
implements no functionality except constructors.
Change-Id: I836a28e90b68309873f75afb83e0f1b2e2c89fb3
This commit makes Meson the default buildsystem for Lix.
The Make buildsystem is now deprecated and will be removed soon, but has
not yet, which will be done in a later commit when all seems good. The
mesonBuild jobs have been removed, and have not been replaced with
equivalent jobs to ensure the Make buildsystem still works.
The full, new commands in a development shell are:
$ meson setup ./build "--prefix=$out" $mesonFlags
(A simple `meson setup ./build` will also build, but will do a different
thing, not having the settings from package.nix applied.)
$ meson compile -C build
$ meson test -C build --suite=check
$ meson install -C build
$ meson test -C build --suite=installcheck
(Check and installcheck may both be done after install, allowing you to
omit the --suite argument entirely, but this is the order package.nix
runs them in.)
If tests fail and Meson helpfully has no output for why, use the
`--print-error-logs` option to `meson test`. Why this is not the default
I cannot explain.
If you change a setting in the buildsystem, most cases will
automatically regenerate the Meson configuration, but some cases, like
trying to build a specific target whose name is new to the buildsystem
(e.g. `meson compile -C build src/libmelt/libmelt.dylib`, when
`libmelt.dylib` did not exist as a target the last time the buildsystem
was generated), then you can reconfigure using new settings but
existing options, and only recompiling stuff affected by the changes:
$ meson setup --reconfigure build
Note that changes to the default values in `meson.options` or in the
`default_options :` argument to project() are NOT propagated with
`--reconfigure`.
If you want a totally clean build, you can use:
$ meson setup --wipe build
That will work regardless of if `./build` exists or not.
Specific, named targets may be addressed in
`meson build -C build <target>` with the "target ID" if there is one,
which is the first string argument passed to target functions that
have one, and unrelated to the variable name, e.g.:
libexpr_dylib = library('nixexpr', …)
can be addressed with:
$ meson compile -C build nixexpr
All targets may be addressed as their output, relative to the build
directory, e.g.:
$ meson compile -C build src/libexpr/libnixexpr.so
But Meson does not consider intermediate files like object files
targets. To build a specific object file, use Ninja directly and
specify the output file relative to the build directory:
$ ninja -C build src/libexpr/libnixexpr.so.p/nixexpr.cc.o
To inspect the canonical source of truth on what the state of the
buildsystem configuration is, use:
$ meson introspect
Have fun!
Change-Id: Ia3e7b1e6fae26daf3162e655b4ded611a5cd57ad
This should fix cross compilation in the base case, but this is
difficult to test as cross compilation is broken in many different
places right now. This should bring Meson back up to cross parity with
the Make buildsystem though.
Change-Id: If09be8142d1fc975a82b994143ff35be1297dad8
don't reimplement header parsing. this was only really needed due to the
ancient github bug we no longer care about, everything else we have done
in custom code can also be done using curl itself. doing this also fixes
possible sources of header smuggling (because the header function didn't
unfold headers and we'd trim them before parsing, which would've made us
read contents of one header as a fully formed header in itself). this is
a slight behavior change because we now honor only the first instance of
a given header where previous behavior was to honor either the last or a
combination of all of them (accept-ranges was logical-or'd by accident).
Change-Id: I93cb93ddb91ab98c8991f846014926f6ef039fdb
this was a workaround for a *github* bug that happend *in 2015*.
not only is github no longer buggy, it shouldn't have been nix's
responsibility to work around these bugs like this to begin with
while we're at it we'll also remove another workaround—again for
github specifically and again for etag handling—from 2021 that's
also not needed any more. future workarounds for serverside bugs
should probably come with an expiration date that mutates into a
build warning after a while, otherwise this *will* happen again.
Change-Id: I74f739ae3e36d40350f78bebcb5869aa8cc9adcd
In hopes of avoiding opaque error messages like the one in
https://buildbot.lix.systems/#/builders/49/builds/1054/steps/1/logs/stdio
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/nix/store/wj6wh89jhd2492r781qsr09r9wydfs6m-nixos-test-driver-1.1/bin/.nixos-test-driver-wrapped", line 9, in <module>
sys.exit(main())
^^^^^^
File "/nix/store/wj6wh89jhd2492r781qsr09r9wydfs6m-nixos-test-driver-1.1/lib/python3.11/site-packages/test_driver/__init__.py", line 126, in main
driver.run_tests()
File "/nix/store/wj6wh89jhd2492r781qsr09r9wydfs6m-nixos-test-driver-1.1/lib/python3.11/site-packages/test_driver/driver.py", line 159, in run_tests
self.test_script()
File "/nix/store/wj6wh89jhd2492r781qsr09r9wydfs6m-nixos-test-driver-1.1/lib/python3.11/site-packages/test_driver/driver.py", line 151, in test_script
exec(self.tests, symbols, None)
File "<string>", line 13, in <module>
AssertionError
Change-Id: Idd2212a1c3714ce58c7c3a9f34c2ca4313eb6d55
the previous solution to the wakeup problem (adding a pipe and passing
it as an additional fd to curl_multi_wait) worked, but there have been
builtin alternatives for this since 2020. not only do these save code,
they're also a lot more likely to work natively on windows when needed
Change-Id: Iab751b900997110a8d15de45ea3ab0c42f7e5973
the oldest version checked for here is 7.47, which was released in
2016. it's probably safe to say that we do not need these any more
Change-Id: I003411f6b2ce6d56f7ca337390df3ea86bd59a99
With Nix 2.3, it was possible to pass a subpath of a store path to
exportReferencesGraph:
with import <nixpkgs> {};
let
hello = writeShellScriptBin "hello" ''
echo ${toString builtins.currentTime}
'';
in
writeClosure [ "${hello}/bin/hello" ]
This regressed with Nix 2.4, with a very confusing error message, that
presumably indicates it was unintentional:
error: path '/nix/store/3gl7kgjr4pwf03f0x70dgx9ln3bhl7zc-hello/bin/hello' is not in the Nix store
(cherry picked from commit 0774e8ba33c060f56bad3ff696796028249e915a)
Change-Id: I00920fb33077b831a1bb4a1b68d515ba8c3c2a69
The statically embedded busybox is not required for Lix to work, but
package.nix explicitly sets this, which was accidentally being ignored.
Change-Id: Ieeff830ac7d1f5fabe84d1a6cfd82f13d79035bf
This commit adds the capability for building the Doxygen internal API
docs in the Meson buildsystem, and also makes doing so the default for
the internal-api-docs hydra job. Aside from the /nix-support directory,
which differed only by the hash part of a store path, the outputs of
hydraJobs.internal-api-docs before and after this commit were
bit-for-bit identical on my machine.
Change-Id: I98f0017891c25b06866c15f7652fe74f706ec8e1