this gives about 20% performance improvements on pure parsing. obviously
it'll be less on full eval, but depending on how much parsing has to be
done (eg whether nixpkgs haskell modules are included or not) it ranges
anywhere from 4% to 10% in our tests.
this has been tested with thousands of core hours of fuzz testing to
ensure that the ASTs produced by the new parser are exactly the same as
the ones produced by the old parser. error messages will
change (sometimes a lot) and are currently not perfect, but we'd rather
leave that open for improvement than having this work rot forever.
Change-Id: Ie66ec2d045dec964632c6541e25f8f0797319ee2
Use positive source filtering for the standalone functional tests job and Perl bindings
(cherry picked from commit 6b6bd9003062c86a49d4384381941cf57f269c45)
Change-Id: I896be67654f893d543ed6beb5d0d0d6c6d36e027
The motivation is as stated in issue #7814: even though the the C++ API
is internal and unstable, people still want it to be well documented for
sake of learning, code review, and other purposes that aren't predicated
on it being stable.
Fixes#7814
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
Building without tests is useful for bootstrapping with a smaller footprint
or running the tests in a separate derivation. Otherwise, we do compile and
run them.
This isn't fine grained as to allow picking `check` but not `installcheck`
or vice versa, but it's good enough for now.
I've tried to use Nixpkgs' `checkInputs`, but those inputs weren't discovered
properly by the configure script. We can emulate its behavior very well though.
- `AC_LANG_PUSH(C++)` is needed for the header check
- The library check is hopeless (without lots of third-party macros I
don't feel like getting) because name mangling
Pkg-config would make all this easier. I previously opened
https://github.com/emil-e/rapidcheck/issues/302, I should write a PR
too.
That flag breaks `-lc++fs` (introducing a duplicate symbol for some
reason). Besides, it was apparently needed for bzip2, but we're not using bzip2
anymore.
With this, Nix will write a copy of the sandbox shell to /bin/sh in
the sandbox rather than bind-mounting it from the host filesystem.
This makes /bin/sh work out of the box with nix-static, i.e. you no
longer get
/nix/store/qa36xhc5gpf42l3z1a8m1lysi40l9p7s-bootstrap-stage4-stdenv-linux/setup: ./configure: /bin/sh: bad interpreter: No such file or directory
See also: https://bugs.archlinux.org/task/73998. Busybox's
FEATURE_SH_STANDALONE feature causes other busybox applets to
leak into the sandbox, where system() calls will start preferring
them over tools in $PATH. On arch, this even includes `ar`.
Let's check for this evil feature and disallow using this as a
sandbox shell.
gives 2-5% performance improvement across a board of tests.
LTO is broken when using clang; some libs link fine while others crash
the linker with a segfault in the llvm linker plugin. 🙁
This dependency is used from quite a long time (now in libcmd) but
was not explicitly stated in the configure phase, possibly leading
to quite late build failures if that was not met (ie. building it
outside the .nix files provided). This MR adds it in the configure
phase so the failure is early and error is much more explicit.
uname checks are not cross-safe.
The normalization for Cygwin doesn't need any equivalent for host_os
because nothing actually checked whether sys_name was cygwin any more.
This fixes both the SunOS/Solaris check, and the libatomic check, which
reference $LIBS, which has not been used since automake was stripped
out of the code.
When performing distributed builds of machine learning packages, it
would be nice if builders without the required SIMD instructions can
be excluded as build nodes.
Since x86_64 has accumulated a large number of different instruction
set extensions, listing all possible extensions would be unwieldy.
AMD, Intel, Red Hat, and SUSE have recently defined four different
microarchitecture levels that are now part of the x86-64 psABI
supplement and will be used in glibc 2.33:
https://gitlab.com/x86-psABIs/x86-64-ABIhttps://lwn.net/Articles/844831/
This change uses libcpuid to detect CPU features and then uses them to
add the supported x86_64 levels to the additional system types. For
example on a Ryzen 3700X:
$ ~/aps/bin/nix -vv --version | grep "Additional system"
Additional system types: i686-linux, x86_64-v1-linux, x86_64-v2-linux, x86_64-v3-linux