From 650ae14ceda72dcb294bde4d08988a7ed26ab0ff Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Wed, 22 Jul 2020 13:51:11 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 01/57] Markdown test --- doc/manual/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md | 78 +++++++++ doc/manual/introduction/about-nix.md | 181 +++++++++++++++++++++ doc/manual/introduction/quick-start.md | 79 +++++++++ doc/manual/manual.md | 8 + flake.nix | 21 +++ 5 files changed, 367 insertions(+) create mode 100644 doc/manual/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md create mode 100644 doc/manual/introduction/about-nix.md create mode 100644 doc/manual/introduction/quick-start.md create mode 100644 doc/manual/manual.md diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..037334c4d --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md @@ -0,0 +1,78 @@ +Title: nix-copy-closure + +# Name + +`nix-copy-closure` - copy a closure to or from a remote machine via SSH + +# Synopsis + +`nix-copy-closure` [`--to` | `--from`] [`--gzip`] [`--include-outputs`] [`--use-substitutes` | `-s`] [`-v`] _user@machine_ _paths_ + +# Description + +`nix-copy-closure` gives you an easy and efficient way to exchange +software between machines. Given one or more Nix store _paths_ on the +local machine, `nix-copy-closure` computes the closure of those paths +(i.e. all their dependencies in the Nix store), and copies all paths +in the closure to the remote machine via the `ssh` (Secure Shell) +command. With the `--from` option, the direction is reversed: the +closure of _paths_ on a remote machine is copied to the Nix store on +the local machine. + +This command is efficient because it only sends the store paths +that are missing on the target machine. + +Since `nix-copy-closure` calls `ssh`, you may be asked to type in the +appropriate password or passphrase. In fact, you may be asked _twice_ +because `nix-copy-closure` currently connects twice to the remote +machine, first to get the set of paths missing on the target machine, +and second to send the dump of those paths. If this bothers you, use +`ssh-agent`. + +# Options + +*`--to`* +: Copy the closure of _paths_ from the local Nix store to the Nix + store on _machine_. This is the default. + +*`--from`* +: Copy the closure of _paths_ from the Nix store on _machine_ to the + local Nix store. + +*`--gzip`* +: Enable compression of the SSH connection. + +*`--include-outputs`* +: Also copy the outputs of store derivations included in the closure. + +*`--use-substitutes` / `-s`* +: Attempt to download missing paths on the target machine using Nix’s + substitute mechanism. Any paths that cannot be substituted on the + target are still copied normally from the source. This is useful, + for instance, if the connection between the source and target + machine is slow, but the connection between the target machine and + `nixos.org` (the default binary cache server) is + fast. + +*`-v`* +: Show verbose output. + +# Environment variables + +*`NIX_SSHOPTS`* +: Additional options to be passed to `ssh` on the command + line. + +# Examples + +Copy Firefox with all its dependencies to a remote machine: + + $ nix-copy-closure --to alice@itchy.labs $(type -tP firefox) + +Copy Subversion from a remote machine and then install it into a user +environment: + + $ nix-copy-closure --from alice@itchy.labs \ + /nix/store/0dj0503hjxy5mbwlafv1rsbdiyx1gkdy-subversion-1.4.4 + $ nix-env -i /nix/store/0dj0503hjxy5mbwlafv1rsbdiyx1gkdy-subversion-1.4.4 + diff --git a/doc/manual/introduction/about-nix.md b/doc/manual/introduction/about-nix.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..b3cd00bd3 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/introduction/about-nix.md @@ -0,0 +1,181 @@ +# About Nix + +Nix is a _purely functional package manager_. This means that it +treats packages like values in purely functional programming languages +such as Haskell — they are built by functions that don’t have +side-effects, and they never change after they have been built. Nix +stores packages in the _Nix store_, usually the directory +`/nix/store`, where each package has its own unique subdirectory such +as + + /nix/store/b6gvzjyb2pg0kjfwrjmg1vfhh54ad73z-firefox-33.1/ + +where `b6gvzjyb2pg0…` is a unique identifier for the package that +captures all its dependencies (it’s a cryptographic hash of the +package’s build dependency graph). This enables many powerful +features. + +## Multiple versions + +You can have multiple versions or variants of a package +installed at the same time. This is especially important when +different applications have dependencies on different versions of the +same package — it prevents the “DLL hell”. Because of the hashing +scheme, different versions of a package end up in different paths in +the Nix store, so they don’t interfere with each other. + +An important consequence is that operations like upgrading or +uninstalling an application cannot break other applications, since +these operations never “destructively” update or delete files that are +used by other packages. + +## Complete dependencies + +Nix helps you make sure that package dependency specifications are +complete. In general, when you’re making a package for a package +management system like RPM, you have to specify for each package what +its dependencies are, but there are no guarantees that this +specification is complete. If you forget a dependency, then the +package will build and work correctly on _your_ machine if you have +the dependency installed, but not on the end user's machine if it's +not there. + +Since Nix on the other hand doesn’t install packages in “global” +locations like `/usr/bin` but in package-specific directories, the +risk of incomplete dependencies is greatly reduced. This is because +tools such as compilers don’t search in per-packages directories such +as `/nix/store/5lbfaxb722zp…-openssl-0.9.8d/include`, so if a package +builds correctly on your system, this is because you specified the +dependency explicitly. This takes care of the build-time dependencies. + +Once a package is built, runtime dependencies are found by scanning +binaries for the hash parts of Nix store paths (such as `r8vvq9kq…`). +This sounds risky, but it works extremely well. + +## Multi-user support + +Nix has multi-user support. This means that non-privileged users can +securely install software. Each user can have a different _profile_, +a set of packages in the Nix store that appear in the user’s `PATH`. +If a user installs a package that another user has already installed +previously, the package won’t be built or downloaded a second time. +At the same time, it is not possible for one user to inject a Trojan +horse into a package that might be used by another user. + +## Atomic upgrades and rollbacks + +Since package management operations never overwrite packages in the +Nix store but just add new versions in different paths, they are +_atomic_. So during a package upgrade, there is no time window in +which the package has some files from the old version and some files +from the new version — which would be bad because a program might well +crash if it’s started during that period. + +And since packages aren’t overwritten, the old versions are still +there after an upgrade. This means that you can _roll back_ to the +old version: + + $ nix-env --upgrade some-packages + $ nix-env --rollback + +## Garbage collection + +When you uninstall a package like this… + + $ nix-env --uninstall firefox + +the package isn’t deleted from the system right away (after all, you +might want to do a rollback, or it might be in the profiles of other +users). Instead, unused packages can be deleted safely by running the +_garbage collector_: + + $ nix-collect-garbage + +This deletes all packages that aren’t in use by any user profile or by +a currently running program. + +## Functional package language + +Packages are built from _Nix expressions_, which is a simple +functional language. A Nix expression describes everything that goes +into a package build action (a “derivation”): other packages, sources, +the build script, environment variables for the build script, etc. +Nix tries very hard to ensure that Nix expressions are +_deterministic_: building a Nix expression twice should yield the same +result. + +Because it’s a functional language, it’s easy to support +building variants of a package: turn the Nix expression into a +function and call it any number of times with the appropriate +arguments. Due to the hashing scheme, variants don’t conflict with +each other in the Nix store. + +## Transparent source/binary deployment + +Nix expressions generally describe how to build a package from +source, so an installation action like + + $ nix-env --install firefox + +_could_ cause quite a bit of build activity, as not only Firefox but +also all its dependencies (all the way up to the C library and the +compiler) would have to built, at least if they are not already in the +Nix store. This is a _source deployment model_. For most users, +building from source is not very pleasant as it takes far too long. +However, Nix can automatically skip building from source and instead +use a _binary cache_, a web server that provides pre-built +binaries. For instance, when asked to build +`/nix/store/b6gvzjyb2pg0…-firefox-33.1` from source, Nix would first +check if the file `https://cache.nixos.org/b6gvzjyb2pg0….narinfo` +exists, and if so, fetch the pre-built binary referenced from there; +otherwise, it would fall back to building from source. + +## Nix Packages collection + +We provide a large set of Nix expressions containing hundreds of +existing Unix packages, the _Nix Packages collection_ (Nixpkgs). + +## Managing build environments + +Nix is extremely useful for developers as it makes it easy to +automatically set up the build environment for a package. Given a Nix +expression that describes the dependencies of your package, the +command `nix-shell` will build or download those dependencies if +they’re not already in your Nix store, and then start a Bash shell in +which all necessary environment variables (such as compiler search +paths) are set. + +For example, the following command gets all dependencies of the +Pan newsreader, as described by [its +Nix expression](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/applications/networking/newsreaders/pan/default.nix): + + $ nix-shell '' -A pan + +You’re then dropped into a shell where you can edit, build and test +the package: + + [nix-shell]$ tar xf $src + [nix-shell]$ cd pan-* + [nix-shell]$ ./configure + [nix-shell]$ make + [nix-shell]$ ./pan/gui/pan + +## Portability + +Nix runs on Linux and macOS. + +## NixOS + +NixOS is a Linux distribution based on Nix. It uses Nix not just for +package management but also to manage the system configuration (e.g., +to build configuration files in `/etc`). This means, among other +things, that it is easy to roll back the entire configuration of the +system to an earlier state. Also, users can install software without +root privileges. For more information and downloads, see the [NixOS +homepage](https://nixos.org/). + +## License + +Nix is released under the terms of the [GNU LGPLv2.1 or (at your +option) any later +version](http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/lgpl-2.1.html). diff --git a/doc/manual/introduction/quick-start.md b/doc/manual/introduction/quick-start.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..21c03e3cf --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/introduction/quick-start.md @@ -0,0 +1,79 @@ +# Quick Start + +This chapter is for impatient people who don't like reading +documentation. For more in-depth information you are kindly referred +to subsequent chapters. + +1. Install single-user Nix by running the following: + + $ bash <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) + + This will install Nix in `/nix`. The install script will create + `/nix` using `sudo`, so make sure you have sufficient rights. (For + other installation methods, see + [here](../installation/installation.md).) + +1. See what installable packages are currently available in the + channel: + + $ nix-env -qa + docbook-xml-4.3 + docbook-xml-4.5 + firefox-33.0.2 + hello-2.9 + libxslt-1.1.28 + … + +1. Install some packages from the channel: + + $ nix-env -i hello + + This should download pre-built packages; it should not build them + locally (if it does, something went wrong). + +1. Test that they work: + + $ which hello + /home/eelco/.nix-profile/bin/hello + $ hello + Hello, world! + +1. Uninstall a package: + + $ nix-env -e hello + +1. You can also test a package without installing it: + + $ nix-shell -p hello + + This builds or downloads GNU Hello and its dependencies, then drops + you into a Bash shell where the `hello` command is present, all + without affecting your normal environment: + + [nix-shell:~]$ hello + Hello, world! + + [nix-shell:~]$ exit + + $ hello + hello: command not found + +1. To keep up-to-date with the channel, do: + + $ nix-channel --update nixpkgs + $ nix-env -u '*' + + The latter command will upgrade each installed package for which + there is a “newer” version (as determined by comparing the version + numbers). + +1. If you're unhappy with the result of a `nix-env` action (e.g., an + upgraded package turned out not to work properly), you can go back: + + $ nix-env --rollback + +1. You should periodically run the Nix garbage collector to get rid of + unused packages, since uninstalls or upgrades don't actually delete + them: + + $ nix-collect-garbage -d diff --git a/doc/manual/manual.md b/doc/manual/manual.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..58e37436f --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/manual.md @@ -0,0 +1,8 @@ +Title: Nix Package Manager Guide + +1. Introduction + 1. [About Nix](./introduction/about-nix.md) + 1. [Quick Start](./introduction/quick-start.md) +1. Command Reference + 1. Utilities + 1. [nix-copy-closure](./command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md) diff --git a/flake.nix b/flake.nix index a707e90e7..dfe4ecd49 100644 --- a/flake.nix +++ b/flake.nix @@ -66,6 +66,7 @@ libxslt docbook5 docbook_xsl_ns + lowdown autoconf-archive autoreconfHook @@ -187,6 +188,26 @@ }; + lowdown = with final; stdenv.mkDerivation { + name = "lowdown-0.7.1"; + + src = fetchurl { + url = https://kristaps.bsd.lv/lowdown/snapshots/lowdown-0.7.1.tar.gz; + hash = "sha512-1daoAQfYD0LdhK6aFhrSQvadjc5GsSPBZw0fJDb+BEHYMBLjqiUl2A7H8N+l0W4YfGKqbsPYSrCy4vct+7U6FQ=="; + }; + + outputs = [ "out" "dev" ]; + + buildInputs = [ which ]; + + configurePhase = + '' + ./configure \ + PREFIX=${placeholder "dev"} \ + BINDIR=${placeholder "out"}/bin + ''; + }; + }; hydraJobs = { From e0ea3c82ca9e46359c55c9f716fec016f8d483ea Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Wed, 22 Jul 2020 20:27:23 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 02/57] Use mdbook --- configure.ac | 2 - doc/manual/local.mk | 81 +++++-------------- doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md | 7 ++ doc/manual/src/command-ref/command-ref.md | 2 + .../{ => src}/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md | 0 doc/manual/src/command-ref/utilities.md | 3 + .../about-nix.md => src/introduction.md} | 2 +- .../{introduction => src}/quick-start.md | 0 flake.nix | 5 +- 9 files changed, 32 insertions(+), 70 deletions(-) create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/command-ref/command-ref.md rename doc/manual/{ => src}/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md (100%) create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/command-ref/utilities.md rename doc/manual/{introduction/about-nix.md => src/introduction.md} (99%) rename doc/manual/{introduction => src}/quick-start.md (100%) diff --git a/configure.ac b/configure.ac index 2f29cf864..eecb107d7 100644 --- a/configure.ac +++ b/configure.ac @@ -117,8 +117,6 @@ fi ]) NEED_PROG(bash, bash) -AC_PATH_PROG(xmllint, xmllint, false) -AC_PATH_PROG(xsltproc, xsltproc, false) AC_PATH_PROG(flex, flex, false) AC_PATH_PROG(bison, bison, false) AC_PATH_PROG(dot, dot) diff --git a/doc/manual/local.mk b/doc/manual/local.mk index ce05c6234..a91d497ce 100644 --- a/doc/manual/local.mk +++ b/doc/manual/local.mk @@ -1,84 +1,39 @@ - ifeq ($(doc_generate),yes) -XSLTPROC = $(xsltproc) --nonet $(xmlflags) \ - --param section.autolabel 1 \ - --param section.label.includes.component.label 1 \ - --param xref.with.number.and.title 1 \ - --param toc.section.depth 3 \ - --param admon.style \'\' \ - --param callout.graphics 0 \ - --param contrib.inline.enabled 0 \ - --stringparam generate.toc "book toc" \ - --param keep.relative.image.uris 0 +MANUAL_SRCS := $(call rwildcard, $(d)/src, *.md) -docbookxsl = http://docbook.sourceforge.net/release/xsl-ns/current -docbookrng = http://docbook.org/xml/5.0/rng/docbook.rng +#$(d)/version.txt: +# $(trace-gen) echo -n $(PACKAGE_VERSION) > $@ -MANUAL_SRCS := $(call rwildcard, $(d), *.xml) +clean-files += $(d)/version.txt - -# Do XInclude processing / RelaxNG validation -$(d)/manual.xmli: $(d)/manual.xml $(MANUAL_SRCS) $(d)/version.txt - $(trace-gen) $(xmllint) --nonet --xinclude $< -o $@.tmp - @mv $@.tmp $@ - -$(d)/version.txt: - $(trace-gen) echo -n $(PACKAGE_VERSION) > $@ - -# Note: RelaxNG validation requires xmllint >= 2.7.4. -$(d)/manual.is-valid: $(d)/manual.xmli - $(trace-gen) $(XSLTPROC) --novalid --stringparam profile.condition manual \ - $(docbookxsl)/profiling/profile.xsl $< 2> /dev/null | \ - $(xmllint) --nonet --noout --relaxng $(docbookrng) - - @touch $@ - -clean-files += $(d)/manual.xmli $(d)/version.txt $(d)/manual.is-valid - -dist-files += $(d)/manual.xmli $(d)/version.txt $(d)/manual.is-valid +dist-files += $(d)/version.txt # Generate man pages. man-pages := $(foreach n, \ - nix-env.1 nix-build.1 nix-shell.1 nix-store.1 nix-instantiate.1 \ - nix-collect-garbage.1 \ - nix-prefetch-url.1 nix-channel.1 \ - nix-hash.1 nix-copy-closure.1 \ - nix.conf.5 nix-daemon.8, \ + nix-copy-closure.1, \ $(d)/$(n)) - -$(firstword $(man-pages)): $(d)/manual.xmli $(d)/manual.is-valid - $(trace-gen) $(XSLTPROC) --novalid --stringparam profile.condition manpage \ - $(docbookxsl)/profiling/profile.xsl $< 2> /dev/null | \ - (cd doc/manual && $(XSLTPROC) $(docbookxsl)/manpages/docbook.xsl -) - -$(wordlist 2, $(words $(man-pages)), $(man-pages)): $(firstword $(man-pages)) +# nix-env.1 nix-build.1 nix-shell.1 nix-store.1 nix-instantiate.1 \ +# nix-collect-garbage.1, \ +# nix-prefetch-url.1 nix-channel.1 \ +# nix-hash.1 nix-copy-closure.1 \ +# nix.conf.5 nix-daemon.8, \ clean-files += $(d)/*.1 $(d)/*.5 $(d)/*.8 dist-files += $(man-pages) +$(d)/nix-copy-closure.1: $(d)/src/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md + +%.1: %.md + $(trace-gen) lowdown -sT man $^ -o $@ # Generate the HTML manual. -$(d)/manual.html: $(d)/manual.xml $(MANUAL_SRCS) $(d)/manual.is-valid - $(trace-gen) $(XSLTPROC) --xinclude --stringparam profile.condition manual \ - $(docbookxsl)/profiling/profile.xsl $< | \ - $(XSLTPROC) --output $@ $(docbookxsl)/xhtml/docbook.xsl - +install: $(docdir)/manual/index.html -$(foreach file, $(d)/manual.html, $(eval $(call install-data-in, $(file), $(docdir)/manual))) - -$(foreach file, $(wildcard $(d)/figures/*.png), $(eval $(call install-data-in, $(file), $(docdir)/manual/figures))) - -$(eval $(call install-symlink, manual.html, $(docdir)/manual/index.html)) - - -all: $(d)/manual.html - - - -clean-files += $(d)/manual.html - -dist-files += $(d)/manual.html +$(docdir)/manual/index.html: $(MANUAL_SRCS) + $(trace-gen) mdbook build doc/manual -d $(docdir)/manual endif diff --git a/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md b/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..6897f70d9 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md @@ -0,0 +1,7 @@ +# Table of Contents + +- [Introduction](./introduction.md) +- [Quick Start](./quick-start.md) +- [Command Reference](./command-ref/command-ref.md) + - [Utilities](./command-ref/utilities.md) + - [nix-copy-closure](./command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md) diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/command-ref.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/command-ref.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..b15a50a3b --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/command-ref.md @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ +This section lists commands and options that you can use when you +work with Nix. diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md similarity index 100% rename from doc/manual/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md rename to doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/utilities.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/utilities.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..5ba8a02a3 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/utilities.md @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +# Utilities + +This section lists utilities that you can use when you work with Nix. diff --git a/doc/manual/introduction/about-nix.md b/doc/manual/src/introduction.md similarity index 99% rename from doc/manual/introduction/about-nix.md rename to doc/manual/src/introduction.md index b3cd00bd3..b54b0d02d 100644 --- a/doc/manual/introduction/about-nix.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/introduction.md @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -# About Nix +# Introduction Nix is a _purely functional package manager_. This means that it treats packages like values in purely functional programming languages diff --git a/doc/manual/introduction/quick-start.md b/doc/manual/src/quick-start.md similarity index 100% rename from doc/manual/introduction/quick-start.md rename to doc/manual/src/quick-start.md diff --git a/flake.nix b/flake.nix index dfe4ecd49..cebbdf9d9 100644 --- a/flake.nix +++ b/flake.nix @@ -62,10 +62,7 @@ buildDeps = [ bison flex - libxml2 - libxslt - docbook5 - docbook_xsl_ns + mdbook lowdown autoconf-archive autoreconfHook From 8e41c388679aedc12eb1a7a7aff1b4818040ff4a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Wed, 22 Jul 2020 20:46:12 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 03/57] Remove references to xmllint --- Makefile.config.in | 2 -- doc/manual/local.mk | 2 -- tests/common.sh.in | 1 - tests/nix-channel.sh | 6 ------ 4 files changed, 11 deletions(-) diff --git a/Makefile.config.in b/Makefile.config.in index 5c245b8e9..3845b3be0 100644 --- a/Makefile.config.in +++ b/Makefile.config.in @@ -41,5 +41,3 @@ sandbox_shell = @sandbox_shell@ storedir = @storedir@ sysconfdir = @sysconfdir@ system = @system@ -xmllint = @xmllint@ -xsltproc = @xsltproc@ diff --git a/doc/manual/local.mk b/doc/manual/local.mk index a91d497ce..65acd658c 100644 --- a/doc/manual/local.mk +++ b/doc/manual/local.mk @@ -25,8 +25,6 @@ clean-files += $(d)/*.1 $(d)/*.5 $(d)/*.8 dist-files += $(man-pages) $(d)/nix-copy-closure.1: $(d)/src/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md - -%.1: %.md $(trace-gen) lowdown -sT man $^ -o $@ # Generate the HTML manual. diff --git a/tests/common.sh.in b/tests/common.sh.in index 308126094..5e00d64f1 100644 --- a/tests/common.sh.in +++ b/tests/common.sh.in @@ -32,7 +32,6 @@ export PATH=@bindir@:$PATH coreutils=@coreutils@ export dot=@dot@ -export xmllint="@xmllint@" export SHELL="@bash@" export PAGER=cat export HAVE_SODIUM="@HAVE_SODIUM@" diff --git a/tests/nix-channel.sh b/tests/nix-channel.sh index 49c68981a..63c0f97ba 100644 --- a/tests/nix-channel.sh +++ b/tests/nix-channel.sh @@ -28,9 +28,6 @@ nix-channel --update # Do a query. nix-env -qa \* --meta --xml --out-path > $TEST_ROOT/meta.xml -if [ "$xmllint" != false ]; then - $xmllint --noout $TEST_ROOT/meta.xml || fail "malformed XML" -fi grep -q 'meta.*description.*Random test package' $TEST_ROOT/meta.xml grep -q 'item.*attrPath="foo".*name="dependencies-top"' $TEST_ROOT/meta.xml @@ -47,9 +44,6 @@ nix-channel --update # Do a query. nix-env -qa \* --meta --xml --out-path > $TEST_ROOT/meta.xml -if [ "$xmllint" != false ]; then - $xmllint --noout $TEST_ROOT/meta.xml || fail "malformed XML" -fi grep -q 'meta.*description.*Random test package' $TEST_ROOT/meta.xml grep -q 'item.*attrPath="foo".*name="dependencies-top"' $TEST_ROOT/meta.xml From ebdc1f6dfbc4998dd974ee58bd66b51130b5abde Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Wed, 22 Jul 2020 23:03:13 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 04/57] Typo --- doc/manual/hacking.xml | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/doc/manual/hacking.xml b/doc/manual/hacking.xml index d25d4b84a..5d9f08d38 100644 --- a/doc/manual/hacking.xml +++ b/doc/manual/hacking.xml @@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ i686-linux, x86_64-darwin, x86_64-linux. i.e. -nix-build -A defaultPackage.x86_64-linux +$ nix-build -A defaultPackage.x86_64-linux From 315407c16f16c3f1d6c5edc087b198c3b68d1dff Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Wed, 22 Jul 2020 23:03:28 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 05/57] Remove subtitles --- doc/manual/advanced-topics/diff-hook.xml | 5 +---- doc/manual/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.xml | 2 -- 2 files changed, 1 insertion(+), 6 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/manual/advanced-topics/diff-hook.xml b/doc/manual/advanced-topics/diff-hook.xml index f01ab71b3..85cfdfc02 100644 --- a/doc/manual/advanced-topics/diff-hook.xml +++ b/doc/manual/advanced-topics/diff-hook.xml @@ -5,10 +5,7 @@ version="5.0" > -Verifying Build Reproducibility with <option linkend="conf-diff-hook">diff-hook</option> - -Check build reproducibility by running builds multiple times -and comparing their results. +Verifying Build Reproducibility Specify a program with Nix's to compare build results when two builds produce different results. Note: diff --git a/doc/manual/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.xml b/doc/manual/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.xml index 6cc286ee1..1480ab86a 100644 --- a/doc/manual/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.xml +++ b/doc/manual/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.xml @@ -6,8 +6,6 @@ > Using the <option linkend="conf-post-build-hook">post-build-hook</option> -Uploading to an S3-compatible binary cache after each build -
Implementation Caveats From d004715665046ff424f267deccccb78c9d5cabb7 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Wed, 22 Jul 2020 23:03:53 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 06/57] Fix link --- doc/manual/src/quick-start.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/doc/manual/src/quick-start.md b/doc/manual/src/quick-start.md index 21c03e3cf..3c519217b 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/quick-start.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/quick-start.md @@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ to subsequent chapters. This will install Nix in `/nix`. The install script will create `/nix` using `sudo`, so make sure you have sufficient rights. (For other installation methods, see - [here](../installation/installation.md).) + [here](installation/installation.md).) 1. See what installable packages are currently available in the channel: From ef606760abd87c98371fbc08c1f25ad897823a2a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Wed, 22 Jul 2020 23:17:48 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 07/57] Pandoc conversion --- doc/manual/manual.md | 8 - doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md | 90 +- .../src/advanced-topics/advanced-topics.md | 1 + .../src/advanced-topics/cores-vs-jobs.md | 42 + doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/diff-hook.md | 141 +++ .../src/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.md | 141 +++ .../src/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.md | 113 +++ .../src/expressions/advanced-attributes.md | 233 +++++ .../src/expressions/arguments-variables.md | 72 ++ doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md | 72 ++ doc/manual/src/expressions/builder-syntax.md | 72 ++ doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md | 839 ++++++++++++++++++ doc/manual/src/expressions/derivations.md | 154 ++++ .../src/expressions/expression-language.md | 12 + .../src/expressions/expression-syntax.md | 91 ++ doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md | 61 ++ .../src/expressions/language-constructs.md | 291 ++++++ .../src/expressions/language-operators.md | 32 + doc/manual/src/expressions/language-values.md | 209 +++++ .../expressions/simple-building-testing.md | 57 ++ .../src/expressions/simple-expression.md | 27 + .../expressions/writing-nix-expressions.md | 12 + doc/manual/src/glossary.md | 102 +++ doc/manual/src/hacking.md | 47 + .../src/installation/building-source.md | 34 + doc/manual/src/installation/env-variables.md | 56 ++ doc/manual/src/installation/installation.md | 2 + .../src/installation/installing-binary.md | 273 ++++++ .../src/installation/installing-source.md | 4 + doc/manual/src/installation/multi-user.md | 63 ++ doc/manual/src/installation/nix-security.md | 15 + .../src/installation/obtaining-source.md | 16 + .../src/installation/prerequisites-source.md | 80 ++ doc/manual/src/installation/single-user.md | 9 + .../src/installation/supported-platforms.md | 7 + doc/manual/src/installation/upgrading.md | 14 + .../package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md | 148 +++ .../binary-cache-substituter.md | 42 + doc/manual/src/package-management/channels.md | 42 + .../src/package-management/copy-closure.md | 34 + .../package-management/garbage-collection.md | 61 ++ .../garbage-collector-roots.md | 16 + .../package-management/package-management.md | 4 + doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md | 119 +++ .../src/package-management/s3-substituter.md | 133 +++ .../package-management/sharing-packages.md | 6 + .../src/package-management/ssh-substituter.md | 52 ++ doc/manual/src/release-notes/release-notes.md | 1 + doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.10.1.md | 5 + doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.10.md | 212 +++++ doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.11.md | 167 ++++ doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.12.md | 123 +++ doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.13.md | 55 ++ doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.14.md | 21 + doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.15.md | 5 + doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.16.md | 25 + doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.5.md | 3 + doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.6.md | 64 ++ doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.7.md | 21 + doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.8.1.md | 8 + doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.8.md | 166 ++++ doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.9.1.md | 4 + doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.9.2.md | 11 + doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.9.md | 72 ++ doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.0.md | 68 ++ doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.1.md | 61 ++ doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.10.md | 31 + doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.11.10.md | 21 + doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.11.md | 87 ++ doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.2.md | 97 ++ doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.3.md | 10 + doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.4.md | 22 + doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.5.1.md | 4 + doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.5.2.md | 4 + doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.5.md | 4 + doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.6.1.md | 32 + doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.6.md | 72 ++ doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.7.md | 140 +++ doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.8.md | 88 ++ doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.9.md | 143 +++ doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.0.md | 557 ++++++++++++ doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.1.md | 49 + doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.2.md | 82 ++ doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.3.md | 44 + 84 files changed, 6715 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 doc/manual/manual.md create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/advanced-topics.md create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/cores-vs-jobs.md create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/diff-hook.md create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.md create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.md create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/expressions/advanced-attributes.md create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/expressions/arguments-variables.md create mode 100644 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Introduction - 1. [About Nix](./introduction/about-nix.md) - 1. [Quick Start](./introduction/quick-start.md) -1. Command Reference - 1. Utilities - 1. [nix-copy-closure](./command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md) diff --git a/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md b/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md index 6897f70d9..f562d1db4 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md @@ -1,7 +1,87 @@ # Table of Contents -- [Introduction](./introduction.md) -- [Quick Start](./quick-start.md) -- [Command Reference](./command-ref/command-ref.md) - - [Utilities](./command-ref/utilities.md) - - [nix-copy-closure](./command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md) +- [Introduction](introduction.md) +- [Quick Start](quick-start.md) +- [Installation](installation/installation.md) + - [Supported Platforms](installation/supported-platforms.md) + - [Installing a Binary Distribution](installation/installing-binary.md) + - [Installing Nix from Source](installation/installing-source.md) + - [Prerequisites](installation/prerequisites-source.md) + - [Obtaining a Source Distribution](installation/obtaining-source.md) + - [Building Nix from Source](installation/building-source.md) + - [Security](installation/nix-security.md) + - [Single-User Mode](installation/single-user.md) + - [Multi-User Mode](installation/multi-user.md) + - [Environment Variables](installation/env-variables.md) + - [Upgrading Nix](installation/upgrading.md) +- [Package Management](package-management/package-management.md) + - [Basic Package Management](package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md) + - [Profiles](package-management/profiles.md) + - [Garbage Collection](package-management/garbage-collection.md) + - [Garbage Collector Roots](package-management/garbage-collector-roots.md) + - [Channels](package-management/channels.md) + - [Sharing Packages Between Machines](package-management/sharing-packages.md) + - [Serving a Nix store via HTTP](package-management/binary-cache-substituter.md) + - [Copying Closures Via SSH](package-management/copy-closure.md) + - [Serving a Nix store via SSH](package-management/ssh-substituter.md) + - [Serving a Nix store via AWS S3 or S3-compatible Service](package-management/s3-substituter.md) +- [Writing Nix Expressions](expressions/writing-nix-expressions.md) + - [A Simple Nix Expression](expressions/simple-expression.md) + - [Expression Syntax](expressions/expression-syntax.md) + - [Build Script](expressions/build-script.md) + - [Arguments and Variables](expressions/arguments-variables.md) + - [Building and Testing](expressions/simple-building-testing.md) + - [Generic Builder Syntax](expressions/generic-builder.md) + - [Writing Nix Expressions](expressions/expression-language.md) + - [Values](expressions/language-values.md) + - [Language Constructs](expressions/language-constructs.md) + - [Operators](expressions/language-operators.md) + - [Derivations](expressions/derivations.md) + - [Advanced Attributes](expressions/advanced-attributes.md) + - [Built-in Functions](expressions/builtins.md) +- [Advanced Topics](advanced-topics/advanced-topics.md) + - [Remote Builds](advanced-topics/distributed-builds.md) + - [Tuning Cores and Jobs](advanced-topics/cores-vs-jobs.md) + - [Verifying Build Reproducibility](advanced-topics/diff-hook.md) + - [Using the `post-build-hook`](advanced-topics/post-build-hook.md) +- [Command Reference](command-ref/command-ref.md) + - [Utilities](command-ref/utilities.md) + - [nix-copy-closure](command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md) +- [Glossary](glossary.md) +- [Hacking](hacking.md) +- [Release Notes](release-notes/release-notes.md) + - [Release 2.3 (2019-09-04)](release-notes/rl-2.3.md) + - [Release 2.2 (2019-01-11)](release-notes/rl-2.2.md) + - [Release 2.1 (2018-09-02)](release-notes/rl-2.1.md) + - [Release 2.0 (2018-02-22)](release-notes/rl-2.0.md) + - [Release 1.11.10 (2017-06-12)](release-notes/rl-1.11.10.md) + - [Release 1.11 (2016-01-19)](release-notes/rl-1.11.md) + - [Release 1.10 (2015-09-03)](release-notes/rl-1.10.md) + - [Release 1.9 (2015-06-12)](release-notes/rl-1.9.md) + - [Release 1.8 (2014-12-14)](release-notes/rl-1.8.md) + - [Release 1.7 (2014-04-11)](release-notes/rl-1.7.md) + - [Release 1.6.1 (2013-10-28)](release-notes/rl-1.6.1.md) + - [Release 1.6 (2013-09-10)](release-notes/rl-1.6.md) + - [Release 1.5.2 (2013-05-13)](release-notes/rl-1.5.2.md) + - [Release 1.5 (2013-02-27)](release-notes/rl-1.5.md) + - [Release 1.4 (2013-02-26)](release-notes/rl-1.4.md) + - [Release 1.3 (2013-01-04)](release-notes/rl-1.3.md) + - [Release 1.2 (2012-12-06)](release-notes/rl-1.2.md) + - [Release 1.1 (2012-07-18)](release-notes/rl-1.1.md) + - [Release 1.0 (2012-05-11)](release-notes/rl-1.0.md) + - [Release 0.16 (2010-08-17)](release-notes/rl-0.16.md) + - [Release 0.15 (2010-03-17)](release-notes/rl-0.15.md) + - [Release 0.14 (2010-02-04)](release-notes/rl-0.14.md) + - [Release 0.13 (2009-11-05)](release-notes/rl-0.13.md) + - [Release 0.12 (2008-11-20)](release-notes/rl-0.12.md) + - [Release 0.11 (2007-12-31)](release-notes/rl-0.11.md) + - [Release 0.10.1 (2006-10-11)](release-notes/rl-0.10.1.md) + - [Release 0.10 (2006-10-06)](release-notes/rl-0.10.md) + - [Release 0.9.2 (2005-09-21)](release-notes/rl-0.9.2.md) + - [Release 0.9.1 (2005-09-20)](release-notes/rl-0.9.1.md) + - [Release 0.9 (2005-09-16)](release-notes/rl-0.9.md) + - [Release 0.8.1 (2005-04-13)](release-notes/rl-0.8.1.md) + - [Release 0.8 (2005-04-11)](release-notes/rl-0.8.md) + - [Release 0.7 (2005-01-12)](release-notes/rl-0.7.md) + - [Release 0.6 (2004-11-14)](release-notes/rl-0.6.md) + - [Release 0.5 and earlier](release-notes/rl-0.5.md) diff --git a/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/advanced-topics.md b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/advanced-topics.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..8b1378917 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/advanced-topics.md @@ -0,0 +1 @@ + diff --git a/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/cores-vs-jobs.md b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/cores-vs-jobs.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..846b6356e --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/cores-vs-jobs.md @@ -0,0 +1,42 @@ +# Tuning Cores and Jobs + +Nix has two relevant settings with regards to how your CPU cores will be +utilized: [???](#conf-cores) and [???](#conf-max-jobs). This chapter +will talk about what they are, how they interact, and their +configuration trade-offs. + + - [???](#conf-max-jobs) + Dictates how many separate derivations will be built at the same + time. If you set this to zero, the local machine will do no builds. + Nix will still substitute from binary caches, and build remotely if + remote builders are configured. + + - [???](#conf-cores) + Suggests how many cores each derivation should use. Similar to `make + -j`. + +The [???](#conf-cores) setting determines the value of +NIX\_BUILD\_CORES. NIX\_BUILD\_CORES is equal to [???](#conf-cores), +unless [???](#conf-cores) equals `0`, in which case NIX\_BUILD\_CORES +will be the total number of cores in the system. + +The maximum number of consumed cores is a simple multiplication, +[???](#conf-max-jobs) \* NIX\_BUILD\_CORES. + +The balance on how to set these two independent variables depends upon +each builder's workload and hardware. Here are a few example scenarios +on a machine with 24 cores: + +| [???](#conf-max-jobs) | [???](#conf-cores) | NIX\_BUILD\_CORES | Maximum Processes | Result | +| --------------------- | ------------------ | ----------------- | ----------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | +| 1 | 24 | 24 | 24 | One derivation will be built at a time, each one can use 24 cores. Undersold if a job can’t use 24 cores. | +| 4 | 6 | 6 | 24 | Four derivations will be built at once, each given access to six cores. | +| 12 | 6 | 6 | 72 | 12 derivations will be built at once, each given access to six cores. This configuration is over-sold. If all 12 derivations being built simultaneously try to use all six cores, the machine's performance will be degraded due to extensive context switching between the 12 builds. | +| 24 | 1 | 1 | 24 | 24 derivations can build at the same time, each using a single core. Never oversold, but derivations which require many cores will be very slow to compile. | +| 24 | 0 | 24 | 576 | 24 derivations can build at the same time, each using all the available cores of the machine. Very likely to be oversold, and very likely to suffer context switches. | + +Balancing 24 Build Cores + +It is up to the derivations' build script to respect host's requested +cores-per-build by following the value of the NIX\_BUILD\_CORES +environment variable. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/diff-hook.md b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/diff-hook.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..2c9896fa5 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/diff-hook.md @@ -0,0 +1,141 @@ +# Verifying Build Reproducibility + +Specify a program with Nix's [???](#conf-diff-hook) to compare build +results when two builds produce different results. Note: this hook is +only executed if the results are not the same, this hook is not used for +determining if the results are the same. + +For purposes of demonstration, we'll use the following Nix file, +`deterministic.nix` for testing: + + let + inherit (import {}) runCommand; + in { + stable = runCommand "stable" {} '' + touch $out + ''; + + unstable = runCommand "unstable" {} '' + echo $RANDOM > $out + ''; + } + +Additionally, `nix.conf` contains: + + diff-hook = /etc/nix/my-diff-hook + run-diff-hook = true + +where `/etc/nix/my-diff-hook` is an executable file containing: + + #!/bin/sh + exec >&2 + echo "For derivation $3:" + /run/current-system/sw/bin/diff -r "$1" "$2" + +The diff hook is executed by the same user and group who ran the build. +However, the diff hook does not have write access to the store path just +built. + +# Spot-Checking Build Determinism + +Verify a path which already exists in the Nix store by passing `--check` +to the build command. + +If the build passes and is deterministic, Nix will exit with a status +code of 0: + + $ nix-build ./deterministic.nix -A stable + this derivation will be built: + /nix/store/z98fasz2jqy9gs0xbvdj939p27jwda38-stable.drv + building '/nix/store/z98fasz2jqy9gs0xbvdj939p27jwda38-stable.drv'... + /nix/store/yyxlzw3vqaas7wfp04g0b1xg51f2czgq-stable + + $ nix-build ./deterministic.nix -A stable --check + checking outputs of '/nix/store/z98fasz2jqy9gs0xbvdj939p27jwda38-stable.drv'... + /nix/store/yyxlzw3vqaas7wfp04g0b1xg51f2czgq-stable + +If the build is not deterministic, Nix will exit with a status code of +1: + + $ nix-build ./deterministic.nix -A unstable + this derivation will be built: + /nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv + building '/nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv'... + /nix/store/krpqk0l9ib0ibi1d2w52z293zw455cap-unstable + + $ nix-build ./deterministic.nix -A unstable --check + checking outputs of '/nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv'... + error: derivation '/nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv' may not be deterministic: output '/nix/store/krpqk0l9ib0ibi1d2w52z293zw455cap-unstable' differs + +In the Nix daemon's log, we will now see: + + For derivation /nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv: + 1c1 + < 8108 + --- + > 30204 + +Using `--check` with `--keep-failed` will cause Nix to keep the second +build's output in a special, `.check` path: + + $ nix-build ./deterministic.nix -A unstable --check --keep-failed + checking outputs of '/nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv'... + note: keeping build directory '/tmp/nix-build-unstable.drv-0' + error: derivation '/nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv' may not be deterministic: output '/nix/store/krpqk0l9ib0ibi1d2w52z293zw455cap-unstable' differs from '/nix/store/krpqk0l9ib0ibi1d2w52z293zw455cap-unstable.check' + +In particular, notice the +`/nix/store/krpqk0l9ib0ibi1d2w52z293zw455cap-unstable.check` output. Nix +has copied the build results to that directory where you can examine it. + +> **Note** +> +> Check paths are not protected against garbage collection, and this +> path will be deleted on the next garbage collection. +> +> The path is guaranteed to be alive for the duration of +> [???](#conf-diff-hook)'s execution, but may be deleted any time after. +> +> If the comparison is performed as part of automated tooling, please +> use the diff-hook or author your tooling to handle the case where the +> build was not deterministic and also a check path does not exist. + +`--check` is only usable if the derivation has been built on the system +already. If the derivation has not been built Nix will fail with the +error: + + error: some outputs of '/nix/store/hzi1h60z2qf0nb85iwnpvrai3j2w7rr6-unstable.drv' are not valid, so checking is not possible + +Run the build without `--check`, and then try with `--check` again. + +# Automatic and Optionally Enforced Determinism Verification + +Automatically verify every build at build time by executing the build +multiple times. + +Setting [???](#conf-repeat) and [???](#conf-enforce-determinism) in your +`nix.conf` permits the automated verification of every build Nix +performs. + +The following configuration will run each build three times, and will +require the build to be deterministic: + + enforce-determinism = true + repeat = 2 + +Setting [???](#conf-enforce-determinism) to false as in the following +configuration will run the build multiple times, execute the build hook, +but will allow the build to succeed even if it does not build +reproducibly: + + enforce-determinism = false + repeat = 1 + +An example output of this configuration: + + $ nix-build ./test.nix -A unstable + this derivation will be built: + /nix/store/ch6llwpr2h8c3jmnf3f2ghkhx59aa97f-unstable.drv + building '/nix/store/ch6llwpr2h8c3jmnf3f2ghkhx59aa97f-unstable.drv' (round 1/2)... + building '/nix/store/ch6llwpr2h8c3jmnf3f2ghkhx59aa97f-unstable.drv' (round 2/2)... + output '/nix/store/6xg356v9gl03hpbbg8gws77n19qanh02-unstable' of '/nix/store/ch6llwpr2h8c3jmnf3f2ghkhx59aa97f-unstable.drv' differs from '/nix/store/6xg356v9gl03hpbbg8gws77n19qanh02-unstable.check' from previous round + /nix/store/6xg356v9gl03hpbbg8gws77n19qanh02-unstable diff --git a/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.md b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..197708ee5 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.md @@ -0,0 +1,141 @@ +# Remote Builds + +Nix supports remote builds, where a local Nix installation can forward +Nix builds to other machines. This allows multiple builds to be +performed in parallel and allows Nix to perform multi-platform builds in +a semi-transparent way. For instance, if you perform a build for a +`x86_64-darwin` on an `i686-linux` machine, Nix can automatically +forward the build to a `x86_64-darwin` machine, if available. + +To forward a build to a remote machine, it’s required that the remote +machine is accessible via SSH and that it has Nix installed. You can +test whether connecting to the remote Nix instance works, e.g. + + $ nix ping-store --store ssh://mac + +will try to connect to the machine named `mac`. It is possible to +specify an SSH identity file as part of the remote store URI, e.g. + + $ nix ping-store --store ssh://mac?ssh-key=/home/alice/my-key + +Since builds should be non-interactive, the key should not have a +passphrase. Alternatively, you can load identities ahead of time into +`ssh-agent` or `gpg-agent`. + +If you get the error + + bash: nix-store: command not found + error: cannot connect to 'mac' + +then you need to ensure that the PATH of non-interactive login shells +contains Nix. + +> **Warning** +> +> If you are building via the Nix daemon, it is the Nix daemon user +> account (that is, `root`) that should have SSH access to the remote +> machine. If you can’t or don’t want to configure `root` to be able to +> access to remote machine, you can use a private Nix store instead by +> passing e.g. `--store ~/my-nix`. + +The list of remote machines can be specified on the command line or in +the Nix configuration file. The former is convenient for testing. For +example, the following command allows you to build a derivation for +`x86_64-darwin` on a Linux machine: + + $ uname + Linux + + $ nix build \ + '(with import { system = "x86_64-darwin"; }; runCommand "foo" {} "uname > $out")' \ + --builders 'ssh://mac x86_64-darwin' + [1/0/1 built, 0.0 MiB DL] building foo on ssh://mac + + $ cat ./result + Darwin + +It is possible to specify multiple builders separated by a semicolon or +a newline, e.g. + +``` + --builders 'ssh://mac x86_64-darwin ; ssh://beastie x86_64-freebsd' +``` + +Each machine specification consists of the following elements, separated +by spaces. Only the first element is required. To leave a field at its +default, set it to `-`. + +1. The URI of the remote store in the format + `ssh://[username@]hostname`, e.g. `ssh://nix@mac` or `ssh://mac`. + For backward compatibility, `ssh://` may be omitted. The hostname + may be an alias defined in your `~/.ssh/config`. + +2. A comma-separated list of Nix platform type identifiers, such as + `x86_64-darwin`. It is possible for a machine to support multiple + platform types, e.g., `i686-linux,x86_64-linux`. If omitted, this + defaults to the local platform type. + +3. The SSH identity file to be used to log in to the remote machine. If + omitted, SSH will use its regular identities. + +4. The maximum number of builds that Nix will execute in parallel on + the machine. Typically this should be equal to the number of CPU + cores. For instance, the machine `itchy` in the example will execute + up to 8 builds in parallel. + +5. The “speed factor”, indicating the relative speed of the machine. If + there are multiple machines of the right type, Nix will prefer the + fastest, taking load into account. + +6. A comma-separated list of *supported features*. If a derivation has + the `requiredSystemFeatures` attribute, then Nix will only perform + the derivation on a machine that has the specified features. For + instance, the attribute + + requiredSystemFeatures = [ "kvm" ]; + + will cause the build to be performed on a machine that has the `kvm` + feature. + +7. A comma-separated list of *mandatory features*. A machine will only + be used to build a derivation if all of the machine’s mandatory + features appear in the derivation’s `requiredSystemFeatures` + attribute.. + +For example, the machine specification + + nix@scratchy.labs.cs.uu.nl i686-linux /home/nix/.ssh/id_scratchy_auto 8 1 kvm + nix@itchy.labs.cs.uu.nl i686-linux /home/nix/.ssh/id_scratchy_auto 8 2 + nix@poochie.labs.cs.uu.nl i686-linux /home/nix/.ssh/id_scratchy_auto 1 2 kvm benchmark + +specifies several machines that can perform `i686-linux` builds. +However, `poochie` will only do builds that have the attribute + + requiredSystemFeatures = [ "benchmark" ]; + +or + + requiredSystemFeatures = [ "benchmark" "kvm" ]; + +`itchy` cannot do builds that require `kvm`, but `scratchy` does support +such builds. For regular builds, `itchy` will be preferred over +`scratchy` because it has a higher speed factor. + +Remote builders can also be configured in `nix.conf`, e.g. + + builders = ssh://mac x86_64-darwin ; ssh://beastie x86_64-freebsd + +Finally, remote builders can be configured in a separate configuration +file included in `builders` via the syntax `@file`. For example, + + builders = @/etc/nix/machines + +causes the list of machines in `/etc/nix/machines` to be included. (This +is the default.) + +If you want the builders to use caches, you likely want to set the +option [`builders-use-substitutes`](#conf-builders-use-substitutes) in +your local `nix.conf`. + +To build only on remote builders and disable building on the local +machine, you can use the option `--max-jobs 0`. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.md b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..166b57da6 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.md @@ -0,0 +1,113 @@ +# Using the `post-build-hook` + +# Implementation Caveats + +Here we use the post-build hook to upload to a binary cache. This is a +simple and working example, but it is not suitable for all use cases. + +The post build hook program runs after each executed build, and blocks +the build loop. The build loop exits if the hook program fails. + +Concretely, this implementation will make Nix slow or unusable when the +internet is slow or unreliable. + +A more advanced implementation might pass the store paths to a +user-supplied daemon or queue for processing the store paths outside of +the build loop. + +# Prerequisites + +This tutorial assumes you have configured an S3-compatible binary cache +according to the instructions at +[???](#ssec-s3-substituter-authenticated-writes), and that the `root` +user's default AWS profile can upload to the bucket. + +# Set up a Signing Key + +Use `nix-store --generate-binary-cache-key` to create our public and +private signing keys. We will sign paths with the private key, and +distribute the public key for verifying the authenticity of the paths. + + # nix-store --generate-binary-cache-key example-nix-cache-1 /etc/nix/key.private /etc/nix/key.public + # cat /etc/nix/key.public + example-nix-cache-1:1/cKDz3QCCOmwcztD2eV6Coggp6rqc9DGjWv7C0G+rM= + +Then, add the public key and the cache URL to your `nix.conf`'s +[???](#conf-trusted-public-keys) and [???](#conf-substituters) like: + + substituters = https://cache.nixos.org/ s3://example-nix-cache + trusted-public-keys = cache.nixos.org-1:6NCHdD59X431o0gWypbMrAURkbJ16ZPMQFGspcDShjY= example-nix-cache-1:1/cKDz3QCCOmwcztD2eV6Coggp6rqc9DGjWv7C0G+rM= + +We will restart the Nix daemon in a later step. + +# Implementing the build hook + +Write the following script to `/etc/nix/upload-to-cache.sh`: + + #!/bin/sh + + set -eu + set -f # disable globbing + export IFS=' ' + + echo "Signing paths" $OUT_PATHS + nix sign-paths --key-file /etc/nix/key.private $OUT_PATHS + echo "Uploading paths" $OUT_PATHS + exec nix copy --to 's3://example-nix-cache' $OUT_PATHS + +> **Note** +> +> The `$OUT_PATHS` variable is a space-separated list of Nix store +> paths. In this case, we expect and want the shell to perform word +> splitting to make each output path its own argument to `nix +> sign-paths`. Nix guarantees the paths will not contain any spaces, +> however a store path might contain glob characters. The `set -f` +> disables globbing in the shell. + +Then make sure the hook program is executable by the `root` user: + + # chmod +x /etc/nix/upload-to-cache.sh + +# Updating Nix Configuration + +Edit `/etc/nix/nix.conf` to run our hook, by adding the following +configuration snippet at the end: + + post-build-hook = /etc/nix/upload-to-cache.sh + +Then, restart the `nix-daemon`. + +# Testing + +Build any derivation, for example: + + $ nix-build -E '(import {}).writeText "example" (builtins.toString builtins.currentTime)' + this derivation will be built: + /nix/store/s4pnfbkalzy5qz57qs6yybna8wylkig6-example.drv + building '/nix/store/s4pnfbkalzy5qz57qs6yybna8wylkig6-example.drv'... + running post-build-hook '/home/grahamc/projects/github.com/NixOS/nix/post-hook.sh'... + post-build-hook: Signing paths /nix/store/ibcyipq5gf91838ldx40mjsp0b8w9n18-example + post-build-hook: Uploading paths /nix/store/ibcyipq5gf91838ldx40mjsp0b8w9n18-example + /nix/store/ibcyipq5gf91838ldx40mjsp0b8w9n18-example + +Then delete the path from the store, and try substituting it from the +binary cache: + + $ rm ./result + $ nix-store --delete /nix/store/ibcyipq5gf91838ldx40mjsp0b8w9n18-example + +Now, copy the path back from the cache: + + $ nix-store --realise /nix/store/ibcyipq5gf91838ldx40mjsp0b8w9n18-example + copying path '/nix/store/m8bmqwrch6l3h8s0k3d673xpmipcdpsa-example from 's3://example-nix-cache'... + warning: you did not specify '--add-root'; the result might be removed by the garbage collector + /nix/store/m8bmqwrch6l3h8s0k3d673xpmipcdpsa-example + +# Conclusion + +We now have a Nix installation configured to automatically sign and +upload every local build to a remote binary cache. + +Before deploying this to production, be sure to consider the +implementation caveats in [Implementation +Caveats](#chap-post-build-hook-caveats). diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/advanced-attributes.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/advanced-attributes.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..683b504a7 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/advanced-attributes.md @@ -0,0 +1,233 @@ +# Advanced Attributes + +Derivations can declare some infrequently used optional attributes. + + - `allowedReferences` + The optional attribute `allowedReferences` specifies a list of legal + references (dependencies) of the output of the builder. For example, + + allowedReferences = []; + + enforces that the output of a derivation cannot have any runtime + dependencies on its inputs. To allow an output to have a runtime + dependency on itself, use `"out"` as a list item. This is used in + NixOS to check that generated files such as initial ramdisks for + booting Linux don’t have accidental dependencies on other paths in + the Nix store. + + - `allowedRequisites` + This attribute is similar to `allowedReferences`, but it specifies + the legal requisites of the whole closure, so all the dependencies + recursively. For example, + + allowedRequisites = [ foobar ]; + + enforces that the output of a derivation cannot have any other + runtime dependency than `foobar`, and in addition it enforces that + `foobar` itself doesn't introduce any other dependency itself. + + - `disallowedReferences` + The optional attribute `disallowedReferences` specifies a list of + illegal references (dependencies) of the output of the builder. For + example, + + disallowedReferences = [ foo ]; + + enforces that the output of a derivation cannot have a direct + runtime dependencies on the derivation `foo`. + + - `disallowedRequisites` + This attribute is similar to `disallowedReferences`, but it + specifies illegal requisites for the whole closure, so all the + dependencies recursively. For example, + + disallowedRequisites = [ foobar ]; + + enforces that the output of a derivation cannot have any runtime + dependency on `foobar` or any other derivation depending recursively + on `foobar`. + + - `exportReferencesGraph` + This attribute allows builders access to the references graph of + their inputs. The attribute is a list of inputs in the Nix store + whose references graph the builder needs to know. The value of this + attribute should be a list of pairs `[ name1 + path1 name2 + path2 ... + ]`. The references graph of each pathN will be stored in a text file + nameN in the temporary build directory. The text files have the + format used by `nix-store + --register-validity` (with the deriver fields left empty). For + example, when the following derivation is built: + + derivation { + ... + exportReferencesGraph = [ "libfoo-graph" libfoo ]; + }; + + the references graph of `libfoo` is placed in the file + `libfoo-graph` in the temporary build directory. + + `exportReferencesGraph` is useful for builders that want to do + something with the closure of a store path. Examples include the + builders in NixOS that generate the initial ramdisk for booting + Linux (a `cpio` archive containing the closure of the boot script) + and the ISO-9660 image for the installation CD (which is populated + with a Nix store containing the closure of a bootable NixOS + configuration). + + - `impureEnvVars` + This attribute allows you to specify a list of environment variables + that should be passed from the environment of the calling user to + the builder. Usually, the environment is cleared completely when the + builder is executed, but with this attribute you can allow specific + environment variables to be passed unmodified. For example, + `fetchurl` in Nixpkgs has the line + + impureEnvVars = [ "http_proxy" "https_proxy" ... ]; + + to make it use the proxy server configuration specified by the user + in the environment variables http\_proxy and friends. + + This attribute is only allowed in [fixed-output + derivations](#fixed-output-drvs), where impurities such as these are + okay since (the hash of) the output is known in advance. It is + ignored for all other derivations. + + > **Warning** + > + > `impureEnvVars` implementation takes environment variables from + > the current builder process. When a daemon is building its + > environmental variables are used. Without the daemon, the + > environmental variables come from the environment of the + > `nix-build`. + + - `outputHash`; `outputHashAlgo`; `outputHashMode` + These attributes declare that the derivation is a so-called + *fixed-output derivation*, which means that a cryptographic hash of + the output is already known in advance. When the build of a + fixed-output derivation finishes, Nix computes the cryptographic + hash of the output and compares it to the hash declared with these + attributes. If there is a mismatch, the build fails. + + The rationale for fixed-output derivations is derivations such as + those produced by the `fetchurl` function. This function downloads a + file from a given URL. To ensure that the downloaded file has not + been modified, the caller must also specify a cryptographic hash of + the file. For example, + + fetchurl { + url = "http://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.1.1.tar.gz"; + sha256 = "1md7jsfd8pa45z73bz1kszpp01yw6x5ljkjk2hx7wl800any6465"; + } + + It sometimes happens that the URL of the file changes, e.g., because + servers are reorganised or no longer available. We then must update + the call to `fetchurl`, e.g., + + fetchurl { + url = "ftp://ftp.nluug.nl/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.1.1.tar.gz"; + sha256 = "1md7jsfd8pa45z73bz1kszpp01yw6x5ljkjk2hx7wl800any6465"; + } + + If a `fetchurl` derivation was treated like a normal derivation, the + output paths of the derivation and *all derivations depending on it* + would change. For instance, if we were to change the URL of the + Glibc source distribution in Nixpkgs (a package on which almost all + other packages depend) massive rebuilds would be needed. This is + unfortunate for a change which we know cannot have a real effect as + it propagates upwards through the dependency graph. + + For fixed-output derivations, on the other hand, the name of the + output path only depends on the `outputHash*` and `name` attributes, + while all other attributes are ignored for the purpose of computing + the output path. (The `name` attribute is included because it is + part of the path.) + + As an example, here is the (simplified) Nix expression for + `fetchurl`: + + { stdenv, curl }: # The curl program is used for downloading. + + { url, sha256 }: + + stdenv.mkDerivation { + name = baseNameOf (toString url); + builder = ./builder.sh; + buildInputs = [ curl ]; + + # This is a fixed-output derivation; the output must be a regular + # file with SHA256 hash sha256. + outputHashMode = "flat"; + outputHashAlgo = "sha256"; + outputHash = sha256; + + inherit url; + } + + The `outputHashAlgo` attribute specifies the hash algorithm used to + compute the hash. It can currently be `"sha1"`, `"sha256"` or + `"sha512"`. + + The `outputHashMode` attribute determines how the hash is computed. + It must be one of the following two values: + + - `"flat"` + The output must be a non-executable regular file. If it isn’t, + the build fails. The hash is simply computed over the contents + of that file (so it’s equal to what Unix commands like + `sha256sum` or `sha1sum` produce). + + This is the default. + + - `"recursive"` + The hash is computed over the NAR archive dump of the output + (i.e., the result of [`nix-store + --dump`](#refsec-nix-store-dump)). In this case, the output can + be anything, including a directory tree. + + The `outputHash` attribute, finally, must be a string containing the + hash in either hexadecimal or base-32 notation. (See the [`nix-hash` + command](#sec-nix-hash) for information about converting to and from + base-32 notation.) + + - `passAsFile` + A list of names of attributes that should be passed via files rather + than environment variables. For example, if you have + + ``` + passAsFile = ["big"]; + big = "a very long string"; + + ``` + + then when the builder runs, the environment variable bigPath will + contain the absolute path to a temporary file containing `a very + long + string`. That is, for any attribute x listed in `passAsFile`, Nix + will pass an environment variable xPath holding the path of the file + containing the value of attribute x. This is useful when you need to + pass large strings to a builder, since most operating systems impose + a limit on the size of the environment (typically, a few hundred + kilobyte). + + - `preferLocalBuild` + If this attribute is set to `true` and [distributed building is + enabled](#chap-distributed-builds), then, if possible, the derivaton + will be built locally instead of forwarded to a remote machine. This + is appropriate for trivial builders where the cost of doing a + download or remote build would exceed the cost of building locally. + + - `allowSubstitutes` + If this attribute is set to `false`, then Nix will always build this + derivation; it will not try to substitute its outputs. This is + useful for very trivial derivations (such as `writeText` in Nixpkgs) + that are cheaper to build than to substitute from a binary cache. + + > **Note** + > + > You need to have a builder configured which satisfies the + > derivation’s `system` attribute, since the derivation cannot be + > substituted. Thus it is usually a good idea to align `system` with + > `builtins.currentSystem` when setting `allowSubstitutes` to + > `false`. For most trivial derivations this should be the case. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/arguments-variables.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/arguments-variables.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..9a373d94d --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/arguments-variables.md @@ -0,0 +1,72 @@ +# Arguments and Variables + + ... + + rec { + + hello = import ../applications/misc/hello/ex-1 { + inherit fetchurl stdenv perl; + }; + + perl = import ../development/interpreters/perl { + inherit fetchurl stdenv; + }; + + fetchurl = import ../build-support/fetchurl { + inherit stdenv; ... + }; + + stdenv = ...; + + } + +The Nix expression in [???](#ex-hello-nix) is a function; it is missing +some arguments that have to be filled in somewhere. In the Nix Packages +collection this is done in the file `pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix`, +where all Nix expressions for packages are imported and called with the +appropriate arguments. [example\_title](#ex-hello-composition) shows +some fragments of `all-packages.nix`. + + - This file defines a set of attributes, all of which are concrete + derivations (i.e., not functions). In fact, we define a *mutually + recursive* set of attributes. That is, the attributes can refer to + each other. This is precisely what we want since we want to “plug” + the various packages into each other. + + - Here we *import* the Nix expression for GNU Hello. The import + operation just loads and returns the specified Nix expression. In + fact, we could just have put the contents of [???](#ex-hello-nix) in + `all-packages.nix` at this point. That would be completely + equivalent, but it would make the file rather bulky. + + Note that we refer to `../applications/misc/hello/ex-1`, not + `../applications/misc/hello/ex-1/default.nix`. When you try to + import a directory, Nix automatically appends `/default.nix` to the + file name. + + - This is where the actual composition takes place. Here we *call* the + function imported from `../applications/misc/hello/ex-1` with a set + containing the things that the function expects, namely `fetchurl`, + `stdenv`, and `perl`. We use inherit again to use the attributes + defined in the surrounding scope (we could also have written + `fetchurl = fetchurl;`, etc.). + + The result of this function call is an actual derivation that can be + built by Nix (since when we fill in the arguments of the function, + what we get is its body, which is the call to `stdenv.mkDerivation` + in [???](#ex-hello-nix)). + + > **Note** + > + > Nixpkgs has a convenience function `callPackage` that imports and + > calls a function, filling in any missing arguments by passing the + > corresponding attribute from the Nixpkgs set, like this: + > + > hello = callPackage ../applications/misc/hello/ex-1 { }; + > + > If necessary, you can set or override arguments: + > + > hello = callPackage ../applications/misc/hello/ex-1 { stdenv = myStdenv; }; + + - Likewise, we have to instantiate Perl, `fetchurl`, and the standard + environment. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..256a5cd44 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md @@ -0,0 +1,72 @@ +# Build Script + + source $stdenv/setup + + PATH=$perl/bin:$PATH + + tar xvfz $src + cd hello-* + ./configure --prefix=$out + make + make install + +[example\_title](#ex-hello-builder) shows the builder referenced from +Hello's Nix expression (stored in +`pkgs/applications/misc/hello/ex-1/builder.sh`). The builder can +actually be made a lot shorter by using the *generic builder* functions +provided by `stdenv`, but here we write out the build steps to elucidate +what a builder does. It performs the following steps: + + - When Nix runs a builder, it initially completely clears the + environment (except for the attributes declared in the derivation). + For instance, the PATH variable is empty\[1\]. This is done to + prevent undeclared inputs from being used in the build process. If + for example the PATH contained `/usr/bin`, then you might + accidentally use `/usr/bin/gcc`. + + So the first step is to set up the environment. This is done by + calling the `setup` script of the standard environment. The + environment variable stdenv points to the location of the standard + environment being used. (It wasn't specified explicitly as an + attribute in [???](#ex-hello-nix), but `mkDerivation` adds it + automatically.) + + - Since Hello needs Perl, we have to make sure that Perl is in the + PATH. The perl environment variable points to the location of the + Perl package (since it was passed in as an attribute to the + derivation), so `$perl/bin` is the directory containing the Perl + interpreter. + + - Now we have to unpack the sources. The `src` attribute was bound to + the result of fetching the Hello source tarball from the network, so + the src environment variable points to the location in the Nix store + to which the tarball was downloaded. After unpacking, we `cd` to the + resulting source directory. + + The whole build is performed in a temporary directory created in + `/tmp`, by the way. This directory is removed after the builder + finishes, so there is no need to clean up the sources afterwards. + Also, the temporary directory is always newly created, so you don't + have to worry about files from previous builds interfering with the + current build. + + - GNU Hello is a typical Autoconf-based package, so we first have to + run its `configure` script. In Nix every package is stored in a + separate location in the Nix store, for instance + `/nix/store/9a54ba97fb71b65fda531012d0443ce2-hello-2.1.1`. Nix + computes this path by cryptographically hashing all attributes of + the derivation. The path is passed to the builder through the out + environment variable. So here we give `configure` the parameter + `--prefix=$out` to cause Hello to be installed in the expected + location. + + - Finally we build Hello (`make`) and install it into the location + specified by out (`make install`). + +If you are wondering about the absence of error checking on the result +of various commands called in the builder: this is because the shell +script is evaluated with Bash's `-e` option, which causes the script to +be aborted if any command fails without an error check. + +1. Actually, it's initialised to `/path-not-set` to prevent Bash from + setting it to a default value. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/builder-syntax.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builder-syntax.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..c92acf106 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builder-syntax.md @@ -0,0 +1,72 @@ +# Builder Syntax + + source $stdenv/setup + + PATH=$perl/bin:$PATH + + tar xvfz $src + cd hello-* + ./configure --prefix=$out + make + make install + +[example\_title](#ex-hello-builder) shows the builder referenced from +Hello's Nix expression (stored in +`pkgs/applications/misc/hello/ex-1/builder.sh`). The builder can +actually be made a lot shorter by using the *generic builder* functions +provided by `stdenv`, but here we write out the build steps to elucidate +what a builder does. It performs the following steps: + + - When Nix runs a builder, it initially completely clears the + environment (except for the attributes declared in the derivation). + For instance, the PATH variable is empty\[1\]. This is done to + prevent undeclared inputs from being used in the build process. If + for example the PATH contained `/usr/bin`, then you might + accidentally use `/usr/bin/gcc`. + + So the first step is to set up the environment. This is done by + calling the `setup` script of the standard environment. The + environment variable stdenv points to the location of the standard + environment being used. (It wasn't specified explicitly as an + attribute in [???](#ex-hello-nix), but `mkDerivation` adds it + automatically.) + + - Since Hello needs Perl, we have to make sure that Perl is in the + PATH. The perl environment variable points to the location of the + Perl package (since it was passed in as an attribute to the + derivation), so `$perl/bin` is the directory containing the Perl + interpreter. + + - Now we have to unpack the sources. The `src` attribute was bound to + the result of fetching the Hello source tarball from the network, so + the src environment variable points to the location in the Nix store + to which the tarball was downloaded. After unpacking, we `cd` to the + resulting source directory. + + The whole build is performed in a temporary directory created in + `/tmp`, by the way. This directory is removed after the builder + finishes, so there is no need to clean up the sources afterwards. + Also, the temporary directory is always newly created, so you don't + have to worry about files from previous builds interfering with the + current build. + + - GNU Hello is a typical Autoconf-based package, so we first have to + run its `configure` script. In Nix every package is stored in a + separate location in the Nix store, for instance + `/nix/store/9a54ba97fb71b65fda531012d0443ce2-hello-2.1.1`. Nix + computes this path by cryptographically hashing all attributes of + the derivation. The path is passed to the builder through the out + environment variable. So here we give `configure` the parameter + `--prefix=$out` to cause Hello to be installed in the expected + location. + + - Finally we build Hello (`make`) and install it into the location + specified by out (`make install`). + +If you are wondering about the absence of error checking on the result +of various commands called in the builder: this is because the shell +script is evaluated with Bash's `-e` option, which causes the script to +be aborted if any command fails without an error check. + +1. Actually, it's initialised to `/path-not-set` to prevent Bash from + setting it to a default value. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..a378fe8e4 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md @@ -0,0 +1,839 @@ +# Built-in Functions + +This section lists the functions and constants built into the Nix +expression evaluator. (The built-in function `derivation` is discussed +above.) Some built-ins, such as `derivation`, are always in scope of +every Nix expression; you can just access them right away. But to +prevent polluting the namespace too much, most built-ins are not in +scope. Instead, you can access them through the `builtins` built-in +value, which is a set that contains all built-in functions and values. +For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. + + - `abort` s; `builtins.abort` s + Abort Nix expression evaluation, print error message s. + + - `builtins.add` e1 e2 + Return the sum of the numbers e1 and e2. + + - `builtins.all` pred list + Return `true` if the function pred returns `true` for all elements + of list, and `false` otherwise. + + - `builtins.any` pred list + Return `true` if the function pred returns `true` for at least one + element of list, and `false` otherwise. + + - `builtins.attrNames` set + Return the names of the attributes in the set set in an + alphabetically sorted list. For instance, `builtins.attrNames { y + = 1; x = "foo"; }` evaluates to `[ "x" "y" ]`. + + - `builtins.attrValues` set + Return the values of the attributes in the set set in the order + corresponding to the sorted attribute names. + + - `baseNameOf` s + Return the *base name* of the string s, that is, everything + following the final slash in the string. This is similar to the GNU + `basename` command. + + - `builtins.bitAnd` e1 e2 + Return the bitwise AND of the integers e1 and e2. + + - `builtins.bitOr` e1 e2 + Return the bitwise OR of the integers e1 and e2. + + - `builtins.bitXor` e1 e2 + Return the bitwise XOR of the integers e1 and e2. + + - `builtins` + The set `builtins` contains all the built-in functions and values. + You can use `builtins` to test for the availability of features in + the Nix installation, e.g., + + if builtins ? getEnv then builtins.getEnv "PATH" else "" + + This allows a Nix expression to fall back gracefully on older Nix + installations that don’t have the desired built-in function. + + - `builtins.compareVersions` s1 s2 + Compare two strings representing versions and return `-1` if version + s1 is older than version s2, `0` if they are the same, and `1` if s1 + is newer than s2. The version comparison algorithm is the same as + the one used by [`nix-env + -u`](#ssec-version-comparisons). + + - `builtins.concatLists` lists + Concatenate a list of lists into a single list. + + - `builtins.concatStringsSep` separator list + Concatenate a list of strings with a separator between each element, + e.g. `concatStringsSep "/" + ["usr" "local" "bin"] == "usr/local/bin"` + + - `builtins.currentSystem` + The built-in value `currentSystem` evaluates to the Nix platform + identifier for the Nix installation on which the expression is being + evaluated, such as `"i686-linux"` or `"x86_64-darwin"`. + + - `builtins.deepSeq` e1 e2 + This is like `seq + e1 + e2`, except that e1 is evaluated *deeply*: if it’s a list or set, + its elements or attributes are also evaluated recursively. + + - `derivation` attrs; `builtins.derivation` attrs + `derivation` is described in [???](#ssec-derivation). + + - `dirOf` s; `builtins.dirOf` s + Return the directory part of the string s, that is, everything + before the final slash in the string. This is similar to the GNU + `dirname` command. + + - `builtins.div` e1 e2 + Return the quotient of the numbers e1 and e2. + + - `builtins.elem` x xs + Return `true` if a value equal to x occurs in the list xs, and + `false` otherwise. + + - `builtins.elemAt` xs n + Return element n from the list xs. Elements are counted starting + from 0. A fatal error occurs if the index is out of bounds. + + - `builtins.fetchurl` url + Download the specified URL and return the path of the downloaded + file. This function is not available if [restricted evaluation + mode](#conf-restrict-eval) is enabled. + + - `fetchTarball` url; `builtins.fetchTarball` url + Download the specified URL, unpack it and return the path of the + unpacked tree. The file must be a tape archive (`.tar`) compressed + with `gzip`, `bzip2` or `xz`. The top-level path component of the + files in the tarball is removed, so it is best if the tarball + contains a single directory at top level. The typical use of the + function is to obtain external Nix expression dependencies, such as + a particular version of Nixpkgs, e.g. + + with import (fetchTarball https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-14.12.tar.gz) {}; + + stdenv.mkDerivation { … } + + The fetched tarball is cached for a certain amount of time (1 hour + by default) in `~/.cache/nix/tarballs/`. You can change the cache + timeout either on the command line with `--option tarball-ttl number + of seconds` or in the Nix configuration file with this option: ` + number of seconds to cache `. + + Note that when obtaining the hash with ` nix-prefetch-url + ` the option `--unpack` is required. + + This function can also verify the contents against a hash. In that + case, the function takes a set instead of a URL. The set requires + the attribute `url` and the attribute `sha256`, e.g. + + with import (fetchTarball { + url = "https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-14.12.tar.gz"; + sha256 = "1jppksrfvbk5ypiqdz4cddxdl8z6zyzdb2srq8fcffr327ld5jj2"; + }) {}; + + stdenv.mkDerivation { … } + + This function is not available if [restricted evaluation + mode](#conf-restrict-eval) is enabled. + + - `builtins.fetchGit` args + Fetch a path from git. args can be a URL, in which case the HEAD of + the repo at that URL is fetched. Otherwise, it can be an attribute + with the following attributes (all except `url` optional): + + - url + The URL of the repo. + + - name + The name of the directory the repo should be exported to in the + store. Defaults to the basename of the URL. + + - rev + The git revision to fetch. Defaults to the tip of `ref`. + + - ref + The git ref to look for the requested revision under. This is + often a branch or tag name. Defaults to `HEAD`. + + By default, the `ref` value is prefixed with `refs/heads/`. As + of Nix 2.3.0 Nix will not prefix `refs/heads/` if `ref` starts + with `refs/`. + + - submodules + A Boolean parameter that specifies whether submodules should be + checked out. Defaults to `false`. + + + + builtins.fetchGit { + url = "git@github.com:my-secret/repository.git"; + ref = "master"; + rev = "adab8b916a45068c044658c4158d81878f9ed1c3"; + } + + builtins.fetchGit { + url = "https://github.com/NixOS/nix.git"; + ref = "refs/heads/0.5-release"; + } + + If the revision you're looking for is in the default branch of the + git repository you don't strictly need to specify the branch name in + the `ref` attribute. + + However, if the revision you're looking for is in a future branch + for the non-default branch you will need to specify the the `ref` + attribute as well. + + builtins.fetchGit { + url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; + rev = "841fcbd04755c7a2865c51c1e2d3b045976b7452"; + ref = "1.11-maintenance"; + } + + > **Note** + > + > It is nice to always specify the branch which a revision belongs + > to. Without the branch being specified, the fetcher might fail if + > the default branch changes. Additionally, it can be confusing to + > try a commit from a non-default branch and see the fetch fail. If + > the branch is specified the fault is much more obvious. + + If the revision you're looking for is in the default branch of the + git repository you may omit the `ref` attribute. + + builtins.fetchGit { + url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; + rev = "841fcbd04755c7a2865c51c1e2d3b045976b7452"; + } + + builtins.fetchGit { + url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; + ref = "refs/tags/1.9"; + } + + `builtins.fetchGit` can behave impurely fetch the latest version of + a remote branch. + + > **Note** + > + > Nix will refetch the branch in accordance to + > [???](#conf-tarball-ttl). + + > **Note** + > + > This behavior is disabled in *Pure evaluation mode*. + + builtins.fetchGit { + url = "ssh://git@github.com/nixos/nix.git"; + ref = "master"; + } + + - `builtins.filter` f xs + Return a list consisting of the elements of xs for which the + function f returns `true`. + + - `builtins.filterSource` e1 e2 + This function allows you to copy sources into the Nix store while + filtering certain files. For instance, suppose that you want to use + the directory `source-dir` as an input to a Nix expression, e.g. + + stdenv.mkDerivation { + ... + src = ./source-dir; + } + + However, if `source-dir` is a Subversion working copy, then all + those annoying `.svn` subdirectories will also be copied to the + store. Worse, the contents of those directories may change a lot, + causing lots of spurious rebuilds. With `filterSource` you can + filter out the `.svn` directories: + + ``` + src = builtins.filterSource + (path: type: type != "directory" || baseNameOf path != ".svn") + ./source-dir; + ``` + + Thus, the first argument e1 must be a predicate function that is + called for each regular file, directory or symlink in the source + tree e2. If the function returns `true`, the file is copied to the + Nix store, otherwise it is omitted. The function is called with two + arguments. The first is the full path of the file. The second is a + string that identifies the type of the file, which is either + `"regular"`, `"directory"`, `"symlink"` or `"unknown"` (for other + kinds of files such as device nodes or fifos — but note that those + cannot be copied to the Nix store, so if the predicate returns + `true` for them, the copy will fail). If you exclude a directory, + the entire corresponding subtree of e2 will be excluded. + + - `builtins.foldl’` op nul list + Reduce a list by applying a binary operator, from left to right, + e.g. `foldl’ op nul [x0 x1 x2 ...] = op (op + (op nul x0) x1) x2) ...`. The operator is applied strictly, i.e., + its arguments are evaluated first. For example, `foldl’ (x: y: x + + y) 0 [1 2 3]` evaluates to 6. + + - `builtins.functionArgs` f + Return a set containing the names of the formal arguments expected + by the function f. The value of each attribute is a Boolean denoting + whether the corresponding argument has a default value. For + instance, `functionArgs ({ x, y ? 123}: ...) = { x = false; y = + true; }`. + + "Formal argument" here refers to the attributes pattern-matched by + the function. Plain lambdas are not included, e.g. `functionArgs (x: + ...) = { }`. + + - `builtins.fromJSON` e + Convert a JSON string to a Nix value. For example, + + builtins.fromJSON ''{"x": [1, 2, 3], "y": null}'' + + returns the value `{ x = [ 1 2 3 ]; y = null; + }`. + + - `builtins.genList` generator length + Generate list of size length, with each element i equal to the value + returned by generator `i`. For example, + + builtins.genList (x: x * x) 5 + + returns the list `[ 0 1 4 9 16 ]`. + + - `builtins.getAttr` s set + `getAttr` returns the attribute named s from set. Evaluation aborts + if the attribute doesn’t exist. This is a dynamic version of the `.` + operator, since s is an expression rather than an identifier. + + - `builtins.getEnv` s + `getEnv` returns the value of the environment variable s, or an + empty string if the variable doesn’t exist. This function should be + used with care, as it can introduce all sorts of nasty environment + dependencies in your Nix expression. + + `getEnv` is used in Nix Packages to locate the file + `~/.nixpkgs/config.nix`, which contains user-local settings for Nix + Packages. (That is, it does a `getEnv "HOME"` to locate the user’s + home directory.) + + - `builtins.hasAttr` s set + `hasAttr` returns `true` if set has an attribute named s, and + `false` otherwise. This is a dynamic version of the `?` operator, + since s is an expression rather than an identifier. + + - `builtins.hashString` type s + Return a base-16 representation of the cryptographic hash of string + s. The hash algorithm specified by type must be one of `"md5"`, + `"sha1"`, `"sha256"` or `"sha512"`. + + - `builtins.hashFile` type p + Return a base-16 representation of the cryptographic hash of the + file at path p. The hash algorithm specified by type must be one of + `"md5"`, `"sha1"`, `"sha256"` or `"sha512"`. + + - `builtins.head` list + Return the first element of a list; abort evaluation if the argument + isn’t a list or is an empty list. You can test whether a list is + empty by comparing it with `[]`. + + - `import` path; `builtins.import` path + Load, parse and return the Nix expression in the file path. If path + is a directory, the file ` default.nix + ` in that directory is loaded. Evaluation aborts if the file + doesn’t exist or contains an incorrect Nix expression. `import` + implements Nix’s module system: you can put any Nix expression (such + as a set or a function) in a separate file, and use it from Nix + expressions in other files. + + > **Note** + > + > Unlike some languages, `import` is a regular function in Nix. + > Paths using the angle bracket syntax (e.g., ` + > > > > > import` \) are normal path values (see [???](#ssec-values)). + + A Nix expression loaded by `import` must not contain any *free + variables* (identifiers that are not defined in the Nix expression + itself and are not built-in). Therefore, it cannot refer to + variables that are in scope at the call site. For instance, if you + have a calling expression + + rec { + x = 123; + y = import ./foo.nix; + } + + then the following `foo.nix` will give an error: + + x + 456 + + since `x` is not in scope in `foo.nix`. If you want `x` to be + available in `foo.nix`, you should pass it as a function argument: + + rec { + x = 123; + y = import ./foo.nix x; + } + + and + + x: x + 456 + + (The function argument doesn’t have to be called `x` in `foo.nix`; + any name would work.) + + - `builtins.intersectAttrs` e1 e2 + Return a set consisting of the attributes in the set e2 that also + exist in the set e1. + + - `builtins.isAttrs` e + Return `true` if e evaluates to a set, and `false` otherwise. + + - `builtins.isList` e + Return `true` if e evaluates to a list, and `false` otherwise. + + - `builtins.isFunction` e + Return `true` if e evaluates to a function, and `false` otherwise. + + - `builtins.isString` e + Return `true` if e evaluates to a string, and `false` otherwise. + + - `builtins.isInt` e + Return `true` if e evaluates to an int, and `false` otherwise. + + - `builtins.isFloat` e + Return `true` if e evaluates to a float, and `false` otherwise. + + - `builtins.isBool` e + Return `true` if e evaluates to a bool, and `false` otherwise. + + - `builtins.isPath` e + Return `true` if e evaluates to a path, and `false` otherwise. + + - `isNull` e; `builtins.isNull` e + Return `true` if e evaluates to `null`, and `false` otherwise. + + > **Warning** + > + > This function is *deprecated*; just write `e == null` instead. + + - `builtins.length` e + Return the length of the list e. + + - `builtins.lessThan` e1 e2 + Return `true` if the number e1 is less than the number e2, and + `false` otherwise. Evaluation aborts if either e1 or e2 does not + evaluate to a number. + + - `builtins.listToAttrs` e + Construct a set from a list specifying the names and values of each + attribute. Each element of the list should be a set consisting of a + string-valued attribute `name` specifying the name of the attribute, + and an attribute `value` specifying its value. Example: + + builtins.listToAttrs + [ { name = "foo"; value = 123; } + { name = "bar"; value = 456; } + ] + + evaluates to + + { foo = 123; bar = 456; } + + - `map` f list; `builtins.map` f list + Apply the function f to each element in the list list. For example, + + map (x: "foo" + x) [ "bar" "bla" "abc" ] + + evaluates to `[ "foobar" "foobla" "fooabc" + ]`. + + - `builtins.match` regex str + Returns a list if the [extended POSIX regular + expression](http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/V1_chap09.html#tag_09_04) + regex matches str precisely, otherwise returns `null`. Each item in + the list is a regex group. + + builtins.match "ab" "abc" + + Evaluates to `null`. + + builtins.match "abc" "abc" + + Evaluates to `[ ]`. + + builtins.match "a(b)(c)" "abc" + + Evaluates to `[ "b" "c" ]`. + + builtins.match "[[:space:]]+([[:upper:]]+)[[:space:]]+" " FOO " + + Evaluates to `[ "foo" ]`. + + - `builtins.mul` e1 e2 + Return the product of the numbers e1 and e2. + + - `builtins.parseDrvName` s + Split the string s into a package name and version. The package name + is everything up to but not including the first dash followed by a + digit, and the version is everything following that dash. The result + is returned in a set `{ name, version }`. Thus, + `builtins.parseDrvName "nix-0.12pre12876"` returns `{ name = "nix"; + version = "0.12pre12876"; + }`. + + - `builtins.path` args + An enrichment of the built-in path type, based on the attributes + present in args. All are optional except `path`: + + - path + The underlying path. + + - name + The name of the path when added to the store. This can used to + reference paths that have nix-illegal characters in their names, + like `@`. + + - filter + A function of the type expected by + [builtins.filterSource](#builtin-filterSource), with the same + semantics. + + - recursive + When `false`, when `path` is added to the store it is with a + flat hash, rather than a hash of the NAR serialization of the + file. Thus, `path` must refer to a regular file, not a + directory. This allows similar behavior to `fetchurl`. Defaults + to `true`. + + - sha256 + When provided, this is the expected hash of the file at the + path. Evaluation will fail if the hash is incorrect, and + providing a hash allows `builtins.path` to be used even when the + `pure-eval` nix config option is on. + + - `builtins.pathExists` path + Return `true` if the path path exists at evaluation time, and + `false` otherwise. + + - `builtins.placeholder` output + Return a placeholder string for the specified output that will be + substituted by the corresponding output path at build time. Typical + outputs would be `"out"`, `"bin"` or `"dev"`. + + - `builtins.readDir` path + Return the contents of the directory path as a set mapping directory + entries to the corresponding file type. For instance, if directory + `A` contains a regular file `B` and another directory `C`, then + `builtins.readDir + ./A` will return the set + + { B = "regular"; C = "directory"; } + + The possible values for the file type are `"regular"`, + `"directory"`, `"symlink"` and `"unknown"`. + + - `builtins.readFile` path + Return the contents of the file path as a string. + + - `removeAttrs` set list; `builtins.removeAttrs` set list + Remove the attributes listed in list from set. The attributes don’t + have to exist in set. For instance, + + removeAttrs { x = 1; y = 2; z = 3; } [ "a" "x" "z" ] + + evaluates to `{ y = 2; }`. + + - `builtins.replaceStrings` from to s + Given string s, replace every occurrence of the strings in from with + the corresponding string in to. For example, + + builtins.replaceStrings ["oo" "a"] ["a" "i"] "foobar" + + evaluates to `"fabir"`. + + - `builtins.seq` e1 e2 + Evaluate e1, then evaluate and return e2. This ensures that a + computation is strict in the value of e1. + + - `builtins.sort` comparator list + Return list in sorted order. It repeatedly calls the function + comparator with two elements. The comparator should return `true` if + the first element is less than the second, and `false` otherwise. + For example, + + builtins.sort builtins.lessThan [ 483 249 526 147 42 77 ] + + produces the list `[ 42 77 147 249 483 526 + ]`. + + This is a stable sort: it preserves the relative order of elements + deemed equal by the comparator. + + - `builtins.split` regex str + Returns a list composed of non matched strings interleaved with the + lists of the [extended POSIX regular + expression](http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/V1_chap09.html#tag_09_04) + regex matches of str. Each item in the lists of matched sequences is + a regex group. + + builtins.split "(a)b" "abc" + + Evaluates to `[ "" [ "a" ] "c" ]`. + + builtins.split "([ac])" "abc" + + Evaluates to `[ "" [ "a" ] "b" [ "c" ] "" ]`. + + builtins.split "(a)|(c)" "abc" + + Evaluates to `[ "" [ "a" null ] "b" [ null "c" ] "" ]`. + + builtins.split "([[:upper:]]+)" " FOO " + + Evaluates to `[ " " [ "FOO" ] " " ]`. + + - `builtins.splitVersion` s + Split a string representing a version into its components, by the + same version splitting logic underlying the version comparison in + [`nix-env -u`](#ssec-version-comparisons). + + - `builtins.stringLength` e + Return the length of the string e. If e is not a string, evaluation + is aborted. + + - `builtins.sub` e1 e2 + Return the difference between the numbers e1 and e2. + + - `builtins.substring` start len s + Return the substring of s from character position start (zero-based) + up to but not including start + len. If start is greater than the + length of the string, an empty string is returned, and if start + + len lies beyond the end of the string, only the substring up to the + end of the string is returned. start must be non-negative. For + example, + + builtins.substring 0 3 "nixos" + + evaluates to `"nix"`. + + - `builtins.tail` list + Return the second to last elements of a list; abort evaluation if + the argument isn’t a list or is an empty list. + + - `throw` s; `builtins.throw` s + Throw an error message s. This usually aborts Nix expression + evaluation, but in `nix-env -qa` and other commands that try to + evaluate a set of derivations to get information about those + derivations, a derivation that throws an error is silently skipped + (which is not the case for `abort`). + + - `builtins.toFile` name s + Store the string s in a file in the Nix store and return its path. + The file has suffix name. This file can be used as an input to + derivations. One application is to write builders “inline”. For + instance, the following Nix expression combines [???](#ex-hello-nix) + and [???](#ex-hello-builder) into one file: + + { stdenv, fetchurl, perl }: + + stdenv.mkDerivation { + name = "hello-2.1.1"; + + builder = builtins.toFile "builder.sh" " + source $stdenv/setup + + PATH=$perl/bin:$PATH + + tar xvfz $src + cd hello-* + ./configure --prefix=$out + make + make install + "; + + src = fetchurl { + url = "http://ftp.nluug.nl/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.1.1.tar.gz"; + sha256 = "1md7jsfd8pa45z73bz1kszpp01yw6x5ljkjk2hx7wl800any6465"; + }; + inherit perl; + } + + It is even possible for one file to refer to another, e.g., + + ``` + builder = let + configFile = builtins.toFile "foo.conf" " + # This is some dummy configuration file. + ... + "; + in builtins.toFile "builder.sh" " + source $stdenv/setup + ... + cp ${configFile} $out/etc/foo.conf + "; + ``` + + Note that `${configFile}` is an antiquotation (see + [???](#ssec-values)), so the result of the expression `configFile` + (i.e., a path like `/nix/store/m7p7jfny445k...-foo.conf`) will be + spliced into the resulting string. + + It is however *not* allowed to have files mutually referring to each + other, like so: + + let + foo = builtins.toFile "foo" "...${bar}..."; + bar = builtins.toFile "bar" "...${foo}..."; + in foo + + This is not allowed because it would cause a cyclic dependency in + the computation of the cryptographic hashes for `foo` and `bar`. + + It is also not possible to reference the result of a derivation. If + you are using Nixpkgs, the `writeTextFile` function is able to do + that. + + - `builtins.toJSON` e + Return a string containing a JSON representation of e. Strings, + integers, floats, booleans, nulls and lists are mapped to their JSON + equivalents. Sets (except derivations) are represented as objects. + Derivations are translated to a JSON string containing the + derivation’s output path. Paths are copied to the store and + represented as a JSON string of the resulting store path. + + - `builtins.toPath` s + DEPRECATED. Use `/. + "/path"` to convert a string into an absolute + path. For relative paths, use `./. + "/path"`. + + - `toString` e; `builtins.toString` e + Convert the expression e to a string. e can be: + + - A string (in which case the string is returned unmodified). + + - A path (e.g., `toString /foo/bar` yields `"/foo/bar"`. + + - A set containing `{ __toString = self: ...; }`. + + - An integer. + + - A list, in which case the string representations of its elements + are joined with spaces. + + - A Boolean (`false` yields `""`, `true` yields `"1"`). + + - `null`, which yields the empty string. + + - `builtins.toXML` e + Return a string containing an XML representation of e. The main + application for `toXML` is to communicate information with the + builder in a more structured format than plain environment + variables. + + [example\_title](#ex-toxml) shows an example where this is the case. + The builder is supposed to generate the configuration file for a + [Jetty servlet container](http://jetty.mortbay.org/). A servlet + container contains a number of servlets (`*.war` files) each + exported under a specific URI prefix. So the servlet configuration + is a list of sets containing the `path` and `war` of the servlet + ([co\_title](#ex-toxml-co-servlets)). This kind of information is + difficult to communicate with the normal method of passing + information through an environment variable, which just concatenates + everything together into a string (which might just work in this + case, but wouldn’t work if fields are optional or contain lists + themselves). Instead the Nix expression is converted to an XML + representation with `toXML`, which is unambiguous and can easily be + processed with the appropriate tools. For instance, in the example + an XSLT stylesheet ([co\_title](#ex-toxml-co-stylesheet)) is applied + to it ([co\_title](#ex-toxml-co-apply)) to generate the XML + configuration file for the Jetty server. The XML representation + produced from [co\_title](#ex-toxml-co-servlets) by `toXML` is shown + in [example\_title](#ex-toxml-result). + + Note that [example\_title](#ex-toxml) uses the `toFile` built-in to + write the builder and the stylesheet “inline” in the Nix expression. + The path of the stylesheet is spliced into the builder at `xsltproc + ${stylesheet} + ...`. + + { stdenv, fetchurl, libxslt, jira, uberwiki }: + + stdenv.mkDerivation (rec { + name = "web-server"; + + buildInputs = [ libxslt ]; + + builder = builtins.toFile "builder.sh" " + source $stdenv/setup + mkdir $out + echo "$servlets" | xsltproc ${stylesheet} - > $out/server-conf.xml + "; + + stylesheet = builtins.toFile "stylesheet.xsl" + " + + + + + + + + + + + + + "; + + servlets = builtins.toXML [ + { path = "/bugtracker"; war = jira + "/lib/atlassian-jira.war"; } + { path = "/wiki"; war = uberwiki + "/uberwiki.war"; } + ]; + }) + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + - `builtins.trace` e1 e2 + Evaluate e1 and print its abstract syntax representation on standard + error. Then return e2. This function is useful for debugging. + + - `builtins.tryEval` e + Try to shallowly evaluate e. Return a set containing the attributes + `success` (`true` if e evaluated successfully, `false` if an error + was thrown) and `value`, equalling e if successful and `false` + otherwise. Note that this doesn't evaluate e deeply, so ` let e = { + x = throw ""; }; in (builtins.tryEval e).success + ` will be `true`. Using ` builtins.deepSeq + ` one can get the expected result: `let e = { x = throw ""; + }; in (builtins.tryEval (builtins.deepSeq e e)).success` will be + `false`. + + - `builtins.typeOf` e + Return a string representing the type of the value e, namely + `"int"`, `"bool"`, `"string"`, `"path"`, `"null"`, `"set"`, + `"list"`, `"lambda"` or `"float"`. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/derivations.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/derivations.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..7ffc6fabe --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/derivations.md @@ -0,0 +1,154 @@ +# Derivations + +The most important built-in function is `derivation`, which is used to +describe a single derivation (a build action). It takes as input a set, +the attributes of which specify the inputs of the build. + + - There must be an attribute named `system` whose value must be a + string specifying a Nix platform identifier, such as `"i686-linux"` + or `"x86_64-darwin"`\[1\] The build can only be performed on a + machine and operating system matching the platform identifier. (Nix + can automatically forward builds for other platforms by forwarding + them to other machines; see [???](#chap-distributed-builds).) + + - There must be an attribute named `name` whose value must be a + string. This is used as a symbolic name for the package by + `nix-env`, and it is appended to the output paths of the derivation. + + - There must be an attribute named `builder` that identifies the + program that is executed to perform the build. It can be either a + derivation or a source (a local file reference, e.g., + `./builder.sh`). + + - Every attribute is passed as an environment variable to the builder. + Attribute values are translated to environment variables as follows: + + - Strings and numbers are just passed verbatim. + + - A *path* (e.g., `../foo/sources.tar`) causes the referenced file + to be copied to the store; its location in the store is put in + the environment variable. The idea is that all sources should + reside in the Nix store, since all inputs to a derivation should + reside in the Nix store. + + - A *derivation* causes that derivation to be built prior to the + present derivation; its default output path is put in the + environment variable. + + - Lists of the previous types are also allowed. They are simply + concatenated, separated by spaces. + + - `true` is passed as the string `1`, `false` and `null` are + passed as an empty string. + + - The optional attribute `args` specifies command-line arguments to be + passed to the builder. It should be a list. + + - The optional attribute `outputs` specifies a list of symbolic + outputs of the derivation. By default, a derivation produces a + single output path, denoted as `out`. However, derivations can + produce multiple output paths. This is useful because it allows + outputs to be downloaded or garbage-collected separately. For + instance, imagine a library package that provides a dynamic library, + header files, and documentation. A program that links against the + library doesn’t need the header files and documentation at runtime, + and it doesn’t need the documentation at build time. Thus, the + library package could specify: + + outputs = [ "lib" "headers" "doc" ]; + + This will cause Nix to pass environment variables `lib`, `headers` + and `doc` to the builder containing the intended store paths of each + output. The builder would typically do something like + + ./configure --libdir=$lib/lib --includedir=$headers/include --docdir=$doc/share/doc + + for an Autoconf-style package. You can refer to each output of a + derivation by selecting it as an attribute, e.g. + + buildInputs = [ pkg.lib pkg.headers ]; + + The first element of `outputs` determines the *default output*. + Thus, you could also write + + buildInputs = [ pkg pkg.headers ]; + + since `pkg` is equivalent to `pkg.lib`. + +The function `mkDerivation` in the Nixpkgs standard environment is a +wrapper around `derivation` that adds a default value for `system` and +always uses Bash as the builder, to which the supplied builder is passed +as a command-line argument. See the Nixpkgs manual for details. + +The builder is executed as follows: + + - A temporary directory is created under the directory specified by + TMPDIR (default `/tmp`) where the build will take place. The current + directory is changed to this directory. + + - The environment is cleared and set to the derivation attributes, as + specified above. + + - In addition, the following variables are set: + + - NIX\_BUILD\_TOP contains the path of the temporary directory for + this build. + + - Also, TMPDIR, TEMPDIR, TMP, TEMP are set to point to the + temporary directory. This is to prevent the builder from + accidentally writing temporary files anywhere else. Doing so + might cause interference by other processes. + + - PATH is set to `/path-not-set` to prevent shells from + initialising it to their built-in default value. + + - HOME is set to `/homeless-shelter` to prevent programs from + using `/etc/passwd` or the like to find the user's home + directory, which could cause impurity. Usually, when HOME is + set, it is used as the location of the home directory, even if + it points to a non-existent path. + + - NIX\_STORE is set to the path of the top-level Nix store + directory (typically, `/nix/store`). + + - For each output declared in `outputs`, the corresponding + environment variable is set to point to the intended path in the + Nix store for that output. Each output path is a concatenation + of the cryptographic hash of all build inputs, the `name` + attribute and the output name. (The output name is omitted if + it’s `out`.) + + - If an output path already exists, it is removed. Also, locks are + acquired to prevent multiple Nix instances from performing the same + build at the same time. + + - A log of the combined standard output and error is written to + `/nix/var/log/nix`. + + - The builder is executed with the arguments specified by the + attribute `args`. If it exits with exit code 0, it is considered to + have succeeded. + + - The temporary directory is removed (unless the `-K` option was + specified). + + - If the build was successful, Nix scans each output path for + references to input paths by looking for the hash parts of the input + paths. Since these are potential runtime dependencies, Nix registers + them as dependencies of the output paths. + + - After the build, Nix sets the last-modified timestamp on all files + in the build result to 1 (00:00:01 1/1/1970 UTC), sets the group to + the default group, and sets the mode of the file to 0444 or 0555 + (i.e., read-only, with execute permission enabled if the file was + originally executable). Note that possible `setuid` and `setgid` + bits are cleared. Setuid and setgid programs are not currently + supported by Nix. This is because the Nix archives used in + deployment have no concept of ownership information, and because it + makes the build result dependent on the user performing the build. + + + +1. To figure out your platform identifier, look at the line “Checking + for the canonical Nix system name” in the output of Nix's + `configure` script. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/expression-language.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/expression-language.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..267fcb983 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/expression-language.md @@ -0,0 +1,12 @@ +# Nix Expression Language + +The Nix expression language is a pure, lazy, functional language. Purity +means that operations in the language don't have side-effects (for +instance, there is no variable assignment). Laziness means that +arguments to functions are evaluated only when they are needed. +Functional means that functions are “normal” values that can be passed +around and manipulated in interesting ways. The language is not a +full-featured, general purpose language. Its main job is to describe +packages, compositions of packages, and the variability within packages. + +This section presents the various features of the language. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/expression-syntax.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/expression-syntax.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..935484c33 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/expression-syntax.md @@ -0,0 +1,91 @@ +# Expression Syntax + + { stdenv, fetchurl, perl }: + + stdenv.mkDerivation { + name = "hello-2.1.1"; + builder = ./builder.sh; + src = fetchurl { + url = "ftp://ftp.nluug.nl/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.1.1.tar.gz"; + sha256 = "1md7jsfd8pa45z73bz1kszpp01yw6x5ljkjk2hx7wl800any6465"; + }; + inherit perl; + } + +[example\_title](#ex-hello-nix) shows a Nix expression for GNU Hello. +It's actually already in the Nix Packages collection in +`pkgs/applications/misc/hello/ex-1/default.nix`. It is customary to +place each package in a separate directory and call the single Nix +expression in that directory `default.nix`. The file has the following +elements (referenced from the figure by number): + + - This states that the expression is a *function* that expects to be + called with three arguments: `stdenv`, `fetchurl`, and `perl`. They + are needed to build Hello, but we don't know how to build them here; + that's why they are function arguments. `stdenv` is a package that + is used by almost all Nix Packages packages; it provides a + “standard” environment consisting of the things you would expect + in a basic Unix environment: a C/C++ compiler (GCC, to be precise), + the Bash shell, fundamental Unix tools such as `cp`, `grep`, `tar`, + etc. `fetchurl` is a function that downloads files. `perl` is the + Perl interpreter. + + Nix functions generally have the form `{ x, y, ..., + z }: e` where `x`, `y`, etc. are the names of the expected + arguments, and where e is the body of the function. So here, the + entire remainder of the file is the body of the function; when given + the required arguments, the body should describe how to build an + instance of the Hello package. + + - So we have to build a package. Building something from other stuff + is called a *derivation* in Nix (as opposed to sources, which are + built by humans instead of computers). We perform a derivation by + calling `stdenv.mkDerivation`. `mkDerivation` is a function provided + by `stdenv` that builds a package from a set of *attributes*. A set + is just a list of key/value pairs where each key is a string and + each value is an arbitrary Nix expression. They take the general + form `{ + name1 = + expr1; ... + nameN = + exprN; }`. + + - The attribute `name` specifies the symbolic name and version of the + package. Nix doesn't really care about these things, but they are + used by for instance `nix-env + -q` to show a “human-readable” name for packages. This attribute is + required by `mkDerivation`. + + - The attribute `builder` specifies the builder. This attribute can + sometimes be omitted, in which case `mkDerivation` will fill in a + default builder (which does a `configure; make; make install`, in + essence). Hello is sufficiently simple that the default builder + would suffice, but in this case, we will show an actual builder for + educational purposes. The value `./builder.sh` refers to the shell + script shown in [???](#ex-hello-builder), discussed below. + + - The builder has to know what the sources of the package are. Here, + the attribute `src` is bound to the result of a call to the + `fetchurl` function. Given a URL and a SHA-256 hash of the expected + contents of the file at that URL, this function builds a derivation + that downloads the file and checks its hash. So the sources are a + dependency that like all other dependencies is built before Hello + itself is built. + + Instead of `src` any other name could have been used, and in fact + there can be any number of sources (bound to different attributes). + However, `src` is customary, and it's also expected by the default + builder (which we don't use in this example). + + - Since the derivation requires Perl, we have to pass the value of the + `perl` function argument to the builder. All attributes in the set + are actually passed as environment variables to the builder, so + declaring an attribute + + perl = perl; + + will do the trick: it binds an attribute `perl` to the function + argument which also happens to be called `perl`. However, it looks a + bit silly, so there is a shorter syntax. The `inherit` keyword + causes the specified attributes to be bound to whatever variables + with the same name happen to be in scope. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..cbc484199 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md @@ -0,0 +1,61 @@ +# Generic Builder Syntax + +Recall from [???](#ex-hello-builder) that the builder looked something +like this: + + PATH=$perl/bin:$PATH + tar xvfz $src + cd hello-* + ./configure --prefix=$out + make + make install + +The builders for almost all Unix packages look like this — set up some +environment variables, unpack the sources, configure, build, and +install. For this reason the standard environment provides some Bash +functions that automate the build process. A builder using the generic +build facilities in shown in [example\_title](#ex-hello-builder2). + + buildInputs="$perl" + + source $stdenv/setup + + genericBuild + + - The buildInputs variable tells `setup` to use the indicated packages + as “inputs”. This means that if a package provides a `bin` + subdirectory, it's added to PATH; if it has a `include` + subdirectory, it's added to GCC's header search path; and so + on.\[1\] + + - The function `genericBuild` is defined in the file `$stdenv/setup`. + + - The final step calls the shell function `genericBuild`, which + performs the steps that were done explicitly in + [???](#ex-hello-builder). The generic builder is smart enough to + figure out whether to unpack the sources using `gzip`, `bzip2`, etc. + It can be customised in many ways; see the Nixpkgs manual for + details. + +Discerning readers will note that the buildInputs could just as well +have been set in the Nix expression, like this: + +``` + buildInputs = [ perl ]; +``` + +The `perl` attribute can then be removed, and the builder becomes even +shorter: + + source $stdenv/setup + genericBuild + +In fact, `mkDerivation` provides a default builder that looks exactly +like that, so it is actually possible to omit the builder for Hello +entirely. + +1. How does it work? `setup` tries to source the file + `pkg/nix-support/setup-hook` of all dependencies. These “setup + hooks” can then set up whatever environment variables they want; + for instance, the setup hook for Perl sets the PERL5LIB environment + variable to contain the `lib/site_perl` directories of all inputs. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-constructs.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-constructs.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..a773c239b --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-constructs.md @@ -0,0 +1,291 @@ +# Language Constructs + +Recursive sets are just normal sets, but the attributes can refer to +each other. For example, + + rec { + x = y; + y = 123; + }.x + +evaluates to `123`. Note that without `rec` the binding `x = y;` would +refer to the variable `y` in the surrounding scope, if one exists, and +would be invalid if no such variable exists. That is, in a normal +(non-recursive) set, attributes are not added to the lexical scope; in a +recursive set, they are. + +Recursive sets of course introduce the danger of infinite recursion. For +example, + + rec { + x = y; + y = x; + }.x + +does not terminate\[1\]. + +A let-expression allows you to define local variables for an expression. +For instance, + + let + x = "foo"; + y = "bar"; + in x + y + +evaluates to `"foobar"`. + +When defining a set or in a let-expression it is often convenient to +copy variables from the surrounding lexical scope (e.g., when you want +to propagate attributes). This can be shortened using the `inherit` +keyword. For instance, + + let x = 123; in + { inherit x; + y = 456; + } + +is equivalent to + + let x = 123; in + { x = x; + y = 456; + } + +and both evaluate to `{ x = 123; y = 456; }`. (Note that this works +because `x` is added to the lexical scope by the `let` construct.) It is +also possible to inherit attributes from another set. For instance, in +this fragment from `all-packages.nix`, + +``` + graphviz = (import ../tools/graphics/graphviz) { + inherit fetchurl stdenv libpng libjpeg expat x11 yacc; + inherit (xlibs) libXaw; + }; + + xlibs = { + libX11 = ...; + libXaw = ...; + ... + } + + libpng = ...; + libjpg = ...; + ... +``` + +the set used in the function call to the function defined in +`../tools/graphics/graphviz` inherits a number of variables from the +surrounding scope (`fetchurl` ... `yacc`), but also inherits `libXaw` +(the X Athena Widgets) from the `xlibs` (X11 client-side libraries) set. + +Summarizing the fragment + + ... + inherit x y z; + inherit (src-set) a b c; + ... + +is equivalent to + + ... + x = x; y = y; z = z; + a = src-set.a; b = src-set.b; c = src-set.c; + ... + +when used while defining local variables in a let-expression or while +defining a set. + +Functions have the following form: + + pattern: body + +The pattern specifies what the argument of the function must look like, +and binds variables in the body to (parts of) the argument. There are +three kinds of patterns: + + - If a pattern is a single identifier, then the function matches any + argument. Example: + + let negate = x: !x; + concat = x: y: x + y; + in if negate true then concat "foo" "bar" else "" + + Note that `concat` is a function that takes one argument and returns + a function that takes another argument. This allows partial + parameterisation (i.e., only filling some of the arguments of a + function); e.g., + + map (concat "foo") [ "bar" "bla" "abc" ] + + evaluates to `[ "foobar" "foobla" + "fooabc" ]`. + + - A *set pattern* of the form `{ name1, name2, …, nameN }` matches a + set containing the listed attributes, and binds the values of those + attributes to variables in the function body. For example, the + function + + { x, y, z }: z + y + x + + can only be called with a set containing exactly the attributes `x`, + `y` and `z`. No other attributes are allowed. If you want to allow + additional arguments, you can use an ellipsis (`...`): + + { x, y, z, ... }: z + y + x + + This works on any set that contains at least the three named + attributes. + + It is possible to provide *default values* for attributes, in which + case they are allowed to be missing. A default value is specified by + writing `name ? + e`, where e is an arbitrary expression. For example, + + { x, y ? "foo", z ? "bar" }: z + y + x + + specifies a function that only requires an attribute named `x`, but + optionally accepts `y` and `z`. + + - An `@`-pattern provides a means of referring to the whole value + being matched: + + ``` + args@{ x, y, z, ... }: z + y + x + args.a + ``` + + but can also be written as: + + ``` + { x, y, z, ... } @ args: z + y + x + args.a + ``` + + Here `args` is bound to the entire argument, which is further + matched against the pattern `{ x, y, z, + ... }`. `@`-pattern makes mainly sense with an ellipsis(`...`) as + you can access attribute names as `a`, using `args.a`, which was + given as an additional attribute to the function. + + > **Warning** + > + > The `args@` expression is bound to the argument passed to the + > function which means that attributes with defaults that aren't + > explicitly specified in the function call won't cause an + > evaluation error, but won't exist in `args`. + > + > For instance + > + > let + > function = args@{ a ? 23, ... }: args; + > in + > function {} + > + > will evaluate to an empty attribute set. + +Note that functions do not have names. If you want to give them a name, +you can bind them to an attribute, e.g., + + let concat = { x, y }: x + y; + in concat { x = "foo"; y = "bar"; } + +Conditionals look like this: + + if e1 then e2 else e3 + +where e1 is an expression that should evaluate to a Boolean value +(`true` or `false`). + +Assertions are generally used to check that certain requirements on or +between features and dependencies hold. They look like this: + + assert e1; e2 + +where e1 is an expression that should evaluate to a Boolean value. If it +evaluates to `true`, e2 is returned; otherwise expression evaluation is +aborted and a backtrace is printed. + + { localServer ? false + , httpServer ? false + , sslSupport ? false + , pythonBindings ? false + , javaSwigBindings ? false + , javahlBindings ? false + , stdenv, fetchurl + , openssl ? null, httpd ? null, db4 ? null, expat, swig ? null, j2sdk ? null + }: + + assert localServer -> db4 != null; + assert httpServer -> httpd != null && httpd.expat == expat; + assert sslSupport -> openssl != null && (httpServer -> httpd.openssl == openssl); + assert pythonBindings -> swig != null && swig.pythonSupport; + assert javaSwigBindings -> swig != null && swig.javaSupport; + assert javahlBindings -> j2sdk != null; + + stdenv.mkDerivation { + name = "subversion-1.1.1"; + ... + openssl = if sslSupport then openssl else null; + ... + } + +[example\_title](#ex-subversion-nix) show how assertions are used in the +Nix expression for Subversion. + + - This assertion states that if Subversion is to have support for + local repositories, then Berkeley DB is needed. So if the Subversion + function is called with the `localServer` argument set to `true` but + the `db4` argument set to `null`, then the evaluation fails. + + - This is a more subtle condition: if Subversion is built with Apache + (`httpServer`) support, then the Expat library (an XML library) used + by Subversion should be same as the one used by Apache. This is + because in this configuration Subversion code ends up being linked + with Apache code, and if the Expat libraries do not match, a build- + or runtime link error or incompatibility might occur. + + - This assertion says that in order for Subversion to have SSL support + (so that it can access `https` URLs), an OpenSSL library must be + passed. Additionally, it says that *if* Apache support is enabled, + then Apache's OpenSSL should match Subversion's. (Note that if + Apache support is not enabled, we don't care about Apache's + OpenSSL.) + + - The conditional here is not really related to assertions, but is + worth pointing out: it ensures that if SSL support is disabled, then + the Subversion derivation is not dependent on OpenSSL, even if a + non-`null` value was passed. This prevents an unnecessary rebuild of + Subversion if OpenSSL changes. + +A *with-expression*, + + with e1; e2 + +introduces the set e1 into the lexical scope of the expression e2. For +instance, + + let as = { x = "foo"; y = "bar"; }; + in with as; x + y + +evaluates to `"foobar"` since the `with` adds the `x` and `y` attributes +of `as` to the lexical scope in the expression `x + y`. The most common +use of `with` is in conjunction with the `import` function. E.g., + + with (import ./definitions.nix); ... + +makes all attributes defined in the file `definitions.nix` available as +if they were defined locally in a `let`-expression. + +The bindings introduced by `with` do not shadow bindings introduced by +other means, e.g. + + let a = 3; in with { a = 1; }; let a = 4; in with { a = 2; }; ... + +establishes the same scope as + + let a = 1; in let a = 2; in let a = 3; in let a = 4; in ... + +Comments can be single-line, started with a `#` character, or +inline/multi-line, enclosed within `/* +... */`. + +1. Actually, Nix detects infinite recursion in this case and aborts + (“infinite recursion encountered”). diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-operators.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-operators.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..4fa2eca37 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-operators.md @@ -0,0 +1,32 @@ +# Operators + +[table\_title](#table-operators) lists the operators in the Nix +expression language, in order of precedence (from strongest to weakest +binding). + +| Name | Syntax | Associativity | Description | Precedence | +| ------------------------ | ----------------------------- | ------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ---------- | +| Select | e `.` attrpath \[ `or` def \] | none | Select attribute denoted by the attribute path attrpath from set e. (An attribute path is a dot-separated list of attribute names.) If the attribute doesn’t exist, return def if provided, otherwise abort evaluation. | 1 | +| Application | e1 e2 | left | Call function e1 with argument e2. | 2 | +| Arithmetic Negation | `-` e | none | Arithmetic negation. | 3 | +| Has Attribute | e `?` attrpath | none | Test whether set e contains the attribute denoted by attrpath; return `true` or `false`. | 4 | +| List Concatenation | e1 `++` e2 | right | List concatenation. | 5 | +| Multiplication | e1 `*` e2, | left | Arithmetic multiplication. | 6 | +| Division | e1 `/` e2 | left | Arithmetic division. | 6 | +| Addition | e1 `+` e2 | left | Arithmetic addition. | 7 | +| Subtraction | e1 `-` e2 | left | Arithmetic subtraction. | 7 | +| String Concatenation | string1 `+` string2 | left | String concatenation. | 7 | +| Not | `!` e | none | Boolean negation. | 8 | +| Update | e1 `//` e2 | right | Return a set consisting of the attributes in e1 and e2 (with the latter taking precedence over the former in case of equally named attributes). | 9 | +| Less Than | e1 `<` e2, | none | Arithmetic comparison. | 10 | +| Less Than or Equal To | e1 `<=` e2 | none | Arithmetic comparison. | 10 | +| Greater Than | e1 `>` e2 | none | Arithmetic comparison. | 10 | +| Greater Than or Equal To | e1 `>=` e2 | none | Arithmetic comparison. | 10 | +| Equality | e1 `==` e2 | none | Equality. | 11 | +| Inequality | e1 `!=` e2 | none | Inequality. | 11 | +| Logical AND | e1 `&&` e2 | left | Logical AND. | 12 | +| Logical OR | e1 `\|\|` e2 | left | Logical OR. | 13 | +| Logical Implication | e1 `->` e2 | none | Logical implication (equivalent to `!e1 \|\| + e2`). | 14 | + +Operators diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-values.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-values.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..98ad97c97 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-values.md @@ -0,0 +1,209 @@ +# Values + +Nix has the following basic data types: + + - *Strings* can be written in three ways. + + The most common way is to enclose the string between double quotes, + e.g., `"foo bar"`. Strings can span multiple lines. The special + characters `"` and `\` and the character sequence `${` must be + escaped by prefixing them with a backslash (`\`). Newlines, carriage + returns and tabs can be written as `\n`, `\r` and `\t`, + respectively. + + You can include the result of an expression into a string by + enclosing it in `${...}`, a feature known as *antiquotation*. The + enclosed expression must evaluate to something that can be coerced + into a string (meaning that it must be a string, a path, or a + derivation). For instance, rather than writing + + "--with-freetype2-library=" + freetype + "/lib" + + (where `freetype` is a derivation), you can instead write the more + natural + + "--with-freetype2-library=${freetype}/lib" + + The latter is automatically translated to the former. A more + complicated example (from the Nix expression for + [Qt](http://www.trolltech.com/products/qt)): + + configureFlags = " + -system-zlib -system-libpng -system-libjpeg + ${if openglSupport then "-dlopen-opengl + -L${mesa}/lib -I${mesa}/include + -L${libXmu}/lib -I${libXmu}/include" else ""} + ${if threadSupport then "-thread" else "-no-thread"} + "; + + Note that Nix expressions and strings can be arbitrarily nested; in + this case the outer string contains various antiquotations that + themselves contain strings (e.g., `"-thread"`), some of which in + turn contain expressions (e.g., `${mesa}`). + + The second way to write string literals is as an *indented string*, + which is enclosed between pairs of *double single-quotes*, like so: + + '' + This is the first line. + This is the second line. + This is the third line. + '' + + This kind of string literal intelligently strips indentation from + the start of each line. To be precise, it strips from each line a + number of spaces equal to the minimal indentation of the string as a + whole (disregarding the indentation of empty lines). For instance, + the first and second line are indented two space, while the third + line is indented four spaces. Thus, two spaces are stripped from + each line, so the resulting string is + + "This is the first line.\nThis is the second line.\n This is the third line.\n" + + Note that the whitespace and newline following the opening `''` is + ignored if there is no non-whitespace text on the initial line. + + Antiquotation (`${expr}`) is supported in indented strings. + + Since `${` and `''` have special meaning in indented strings, you + need a way to quote them. `$` can be escaped by prefixing it with + `''` (that is, two single quotes), i.e., `''$`. `''` can be escaped + by prefixing it with `'`, i.e., `'''`. `$` removes any special + meaning from the following `$`. Linefeed, carriage-return and tab + characters can be written as `''\n`, `''\r`, `''\t`, and `''\` + escapes any other character. + + Indented strings are primarily useful in that they allow multi-line + string literals to follow the indentation of the enclosing Nix + expression, and that less escaping is typically necessary for + strings representing languages such as shell scripts and + configuration files because `''` is much less common than `"`. + Example: + + stdenv.mkDerivation { + ... + postInstall = + '' + mkdir $out/bin $out/etc + cp foo $out/bin + echo "Hello World" > $out/etc/foo.conf + ${if enableBar then "cp bar $out/bin" else ""} + ''; + ... + } + + Finally, as a convenience, *URIs* as defined in appendix B of + [RFC 2396](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2396.txt) can be written *as + is*, without quotes. For instance, the string + `"http://example.org/foo.tar.bz2"` can also be written as + `http://example.org/foo.tar.bz2`. + + - Numbers, which can be *integers* (like `123`) or *floating point* + (like `123.43` or `.27e13`). + + Numbers are type-compatible: pure integer operations will always + return integers, whereas any operation involving at least one + floating point number will have a floating point number as a result. + + - *Paths*, e.g., `/bin/sh` or `./builder.sh`. A path must contain at + least one slash to be recognised as such; for instance, `builder.sh` + is not a path\[1\]. If the file name is relative, i.e., if it does + not begin with a slash, it is made absolute at parse time relative + to the directory of the Nix expression that contained it. For + instance, if a Nix expression in `/foo/bar/bla.nix` refers to + `../xyzzy/fnord.nix`, the absolute path is `/foo/xyzzy/fnord.nix`. + + If the first component of a path is a `~`, it is interpreted as if + the rest of the path were relative to the user's home directory. + e.g. `~/foo` would be equivalent to `/home/edolstra/foo` for a user + whose home directory is `/home/edolstra`. + + Paths can also be specified between angle brackets, e.g. + ``. This means that the directories listed in the + environment variable NIX\_PATH will be searched for the given file + or directory name. + + - *Booleans* with values `true` and `false`. + + - The null value, denoted as `null`. + +Lists are formed by enclosing a whitespace-separated list of values +between square brackets. For example, + + [ 123 ./foo.nix "abc" (f { x = y; }) ] + +defines a list of four elements, the last being the result of a call to +the function `f`. Note that function calls have to be enclosed in +parentheses. If they had been omitted, e.g., + + [ 123 ./foo.nix "abc" f { x = y; } ] + +the result would be a list of five elements, the fourth one being a +function and the fifth being a set. + +Note that lists are only lazy in values, and they are strict in length. + +Sets are really the core of the language, since ultimately the Nix +language is all about creating derivations, which are really just sets +of attributes to be passed to build scripts. + +Sets are just a list of name/value pairs (called *attributes*) enclosed +in curly brackets, where each value is an arbitrary expression +terminated by a semicolon. For example: + + { x = 123; + text = "Hello"; + y = f { bla = 456; }; + } + +This defines a set with attributes named `x`, `text`, `y`. The order of +the attributes is irrelevant. An attribute name may only occur once. + +Attributes can be selected from a set using the `.` operator. For +instance, + + { a = "Foo"; b = "Bar"; }.a + +evaluates to `"Foo"`. It is possible to provide a default value in an +attribute selection using the `or` keyword. For example, + + { a = "Foo"; b = "Bar"; }.c or "Xyzzy" + +will evaluate to `"Xyzzy"` because there is no `c` attribute in the set. + +You can use arbitrary double-quoted strings as attribute names: + + { "foo ${bar}" = 123; "nix-1.0" = 456; }."foo ${bar}" + +This will evaluate to `123` (Assuming `bar` is antiquotable). In the +case where an attribute name is just a single antiquotation, the quotes +can be dropped: + + { foo = 123; }.${bar} or 456 + +This will evaluate to `123` if `bar` evaluates to `"foo"` when coerced +to a string and `456` otherwise (again assuming `bar` is antiquotable). + +In the special case where an attribute name inside of a set declaration +evaluates to `null` (which is normally an error, as `null` is not +antiquotable), that attribute is simply not added to the set: + + { ${if foo then "bar" else null} = true; } + +This will evaluate to `{}` if `foo` evaluates to `false`. + +A set that has a `__functor` attribute whose value is callable (i.e. is +itself a function or a set with a `__functor` attribute whose value is +callable) can be applied as if it were a function, with the set itself +passed in first , e.g., + + let add = { __functor = self: x: x + self.x; }; + inc = add // { x = 1; }; + in inc 1 + +evaluates to `2`. This can be used to attach metadata to a function +without the caller needing to treat it specially, or to implement a form +of object-oriented programming, for example. + +1. It's parsed as an expression that selects the attribute `sh` from + the variable `builder`. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/simple-building-testing.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/simple-building-testing.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..bc064c733 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/simple-building-testing.md @@ -0,0 +1,57 @@ +# Building and Testing + +You can now try to build Hello. Of course, you could do `nix-env -i +hello`, but you may not want to install a possibly broken package just +yet. The best way to test the package is by using the command +`nix-build`, which builds a Nix expression and creates a symlink named +`result` in the current directory: + + $ nix-build -A hello + building path `/nix/store/632d2b22514d...-hello-2.1.1' + hello-2.1.1/ + hello-2.1.1/intl/ + hello-2.1.1/intl/ChangeLog + ... + + $ ls -l result + lrwxrwxrwx ... 2006-09-29 10:43 result -> /nix/store/632d2b22514d...-hello-2.1.1 + + $ ./result/bin/hello + Hello, world! + +The [`-A`](#opt-attr) option selects the `hello` attribute. This is +faster than using the symbolic package name specified by the `name` +attribute (which also happens to be `hello`) and is unambiguous (there +can be multiple packages with the symbolic name `hello`, but there can +be only one attribute in a set named `hello`). + +`nix-build` registers the `./result` symlink as a garbage collection +root, so unless and until you delete the `./result` symlink, the output +of the build will be safely kept on your system. You can use +`nix-build`’s `-o` switch to give the symlink another name. + +Nix has transactional semantics. Once a build finishes successfully, Nix +makes a note of this in its database: it registers that the path denoted +by out is now “valid”. If you try to build the derivation again, Nix +will see that the path is already valid and finish immediately. If a +build fails, either because it returns a non-zero exit code, because Nix +or the builder are killed, or because the machine crashes, then the +output paths will not be registered as valid. If you try to build the +derivation again, Nix will remove the output paths if they exist (e.g., +because the builder died half-way through `make +install`) and try again. Note that there is no “negative caching”: Nix +doesn't remember that a build failed, and so a failed build can always +be repeated. This is because Nix cannot distinguish between permanent +failures (e.g., a compiler error due to a syntax error in the source) +and transient failures (e.g., a disk full condition). + +Nix also performs locking. If you run multiple Nix builds +simultaneously, and they try to build the same derivation, the first Nix +instance that gets there will perform the build, while the others block +(or perform other derivations if available) until the build finishes: + + $ nix-build -A hello + waiting for lock on `/nix/store/0h5b7hp8d4hqfrw8igvx97x1xawrjnac-hello-2.1.1x' + +So it is always safe to run multiple instances of Nix in parallel (which +isn’t the case with, say, `make`). diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/simple-expression.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/simple-expression.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..9023f97a4 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/simple-expression.md @@ -0,0 +1,27 @@ +# A Simple Nix Expression + +This section shows how to add and test the [GNU Hello +package](http://www.gnu.org/software/hello/hello.html) to the Nix +Packages collection. Hello is a program that prints out the text “Hello, +world\!”. + +To add a package to the Nix Packages collection, you generally need to +do three things: + +1. Write a Nix expression for the package. This is a file that + describes all the inputs involved in building the package, such as + dependencies, sources, and so on. + +2. Write a *builder*. This is a shell script\[1\] that actually builds + the package from the inputs. + +3. Add the package to the file `pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix`. The + Nix expression written in the first step is a *function*; it + requires other packages in order to build it. In this step you put + it all together, i.e., you call the function with the right + arguments to build the actual package. + + + +1. In fact, it can be written in any language, but typically it's a + `bash` shell script. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/writing-nix-expressions.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/writing-nix-expressions.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..5664108e7 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/writing-nix-expressions.md @@ -0,0 +1,12 @@ +This chapter shows you how to write Nix expressions, which instruct Nix +how to build packages. It starts with a simple example (a Nix expression +for GNU Hello), and then moves on to a more in-depth look at the Nix +expression language. + +> **Note** +> +> This chapter is mostly about the Nix expression language. For more +> extensive information on adding packages to the Nix Packages +> collection (such as functions in the standard environment and coding +> conventions), please consult [its +> manual](http://nixos.org/nixpkgs/manual/). diff --git a/doc/manual/src/glossary.md b/doc/manual/src/glossary.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..c8bdf4fd2 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/glossary.md @@ -0,0 +1,102 @@ +# Glossary + + - derivation + A description of a build action. The result of a derivation is a + store object. Derivations are typically specified in Nix expressions + using the [`derivation` primitive](#ssec-derivation). These are + translated into low-level *store derivations* (implicitly by + `nix-env` and `nix-build`, or explicitly by `nix-instantiate`). + + - store + The location in the file system where store objects live. Typically + `/nix/store`. + + - store path + The location in the file system of a store object, i.e., an + immediate child of the Nix store directory. + + - store object + A file that is an immediate child of the Nix store directory. These + can be regular files, but also entire directory trees. Store objects + can be sources (objects copied from outside of the store), + derivation outputs (objects produced by running a build action), or + derivations (files describing a build action). + + - substitute + A substitute is a command invocation stored in the Nix database that + describes how to build a store object, bypassing the normal build + mechanism (i.e., derivations). Typically, the substitute builds the + store object by downloading a pre-built version of the store object + from some server. + + - purity + The assumption that equal Nix derivations when run always produce + the same output. This cannot be guaranteed in general (e.g., a + builder can rely on external inputs such as the network or the + system time) but the Nix model assumes it. + + - Nix expression + A high-level description of software packages and compositions + thereof. Deploying software using Nix entails writing Nix + expressions for your packages. Nix expressions are translated to + derivations that are stored in the Nix store. These derivations can + then be built. + + - reference + A store path `P` is said to have a reference to a store path `Q` if + the store object at `P` contains the path `Q` somewhere. The + *references* of a store path are the set of store paths to which it + has a reference. + + A derivation can reference other derivations and sources (but not + output paths), whereas an output path only references other output + paths. + + - reachable + A store path `Q` is reachable from another store path `P` if `Q` is + in the [closure](#gloss-closure) of the + [references](#gloss-reference) relation. + + - closure + The closure of a store path is the set of store paths that are + directly or indirectly “reachable” from that store path; that is, + it’s the closure of the path under the + [references](#gloss-reference) relation. For a package, the closure + of its derivation is equivalent to the build-time dependencies, + while the closure of its output path is equivalent to its runtime + dependencies. For correct deployment it is necessary to deploy whole + closures, since otherwise at runtime files could be missing. The + command `nix-store -qR` prints out closures of store paths. + + As an example, if the store object at path `P` contains a reference + to path `Q`, then `Q` is in the closure of `P`. Further, if `Q` + references `R` then `R` is also in the closure of `P`. + + - output path + A store path produced by a derivation. + + - deriver + The deriver of an [output path](#gloss-output-path) is the store + derivation that built it. + + - validity + A store path is considered *valid* if it exists in the file system, + is listed in the Nix database as being valid, and if all paths in + its closure are also valid. + + - user environment + An automatically generated store object that consists of a set of + symlinks to “active” applications, i.e., other store paths. These + are generated automatically by [`nix-env`](#sec-nix-env). See + [???](#sec-profiles). + + - profile + A symlink to the current [user environment](#gloss-user-env) of a + user, e.g., `/nix/var/nix/profiles/default`. + + - NAR + A *N*ix *AR*chive. This is a serialisation of a path in the Nix + store. It can contain regular files, directories and symbolic links. + NARs are generated and unpacked using `nix-store --dump` and + `nix-store + --restore`. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/hacking.md b/doc/manual/src/hacking.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..f8375822d --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/hacking.md @@ -0,0 +1,47 @@ +# Hacking + +This section provides some notes on how to hack on Nix. To get the +latest version of Nix from GitHub: + + $ git clone https://github.com/NixOS/nix.git + $ cd nix + +To build Nix for the current operating system/architecture use + + $ nix-build + +or if you have a flakes-enabled nix: + + $ nix build + +This will build `defaultPackage` attribute defined in the `flake.nix` +file. To build for other platforms add one of the following suffixes to +it: aarch64-linux, i686-linux, x86\_64-darwin, x86\_64-linux. i.e. + + $ nix-build -A defaultPackage.x86_64-linux + +To build all dependencies and start a shell in which all environment +variables are set up so that those dependencies can be found: + + $ nix-shell + +To build Nix itself in this shell: + + [nix-shell]$ ./bootstrap.sh + [nix-shell]$ ./configure $configureFlags + [nix-shell]$ make -j $NIX_BUILD_CORES + +To install it in `$(pwd)/inst` and test it: + + [nix-shell]$ make install + [nix-shell]$ make installcheck + [nix-shell]$ ./inst/bin/nix --version + nix (Nix) 2.4 + +If you have a flakes-enabled nix you can replace: + + $ nix-shell + +by: + + $ nix develop diff --git a/doc/manual/src/installation/building-source.md b/doc/manual/src/installation/building-source.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..c498713de --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/installation/building-source.md @@ -0,0 +1,34 @@ +# Building Nix from Source + +After unpacking or checking out the Nix sources, issue the following +commands: + + $ ./configure options... + $ make + $ make install + +Nix requires GNU Make so you may need to invoke `gmake` instead. + +When building from the Git repository, these should be preceded by the +command: + + $ ./bootstrap.sh + +The installation path can be specified by passing the `--prefix=prefix` +to `configure`. The default installation directory is `/usr/local`. You +can change this to any location you like. You must have write permission +to the prefix path. + +Nix keeps its *store* (the place where packages are stored) in +`/nix/store` by default. This can be changed using +`--with-store-dir=path`. + +> **Warning** +> +> It is best *not* to change the Nix store from its default, since doing +> so makes it impossible to use pre-built binaries from the standard +> Nixpkgs channels — that is, all packages will need to be built from +> source. + +Nix keeps state (such as its database and log files) in `/nix/var` by +default. This can be changed using `--localstatedir=path`. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/installation/env-variables.md b/doc/manual/src/installation/env-variables.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..7946ac437 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/installation/env-variables.md @@ -0,0 +1,56 @@ +# Environment Variables + +To use Nix, some environment variables should be set. In particular, +PATH should contain the directories `prefix/bin` and +`~/.nix-profile/bin`. The first directory contains the Nix tools +themselves, while `~/.nix-profile` is a symbolic link to the current +*user environment* (an automatically generated package consisting of +symlinks to installed packages). The simplest way to set the required +environment variables is to include the file +`prefix/etc/profile.d/nix.sh` in your `~/.profile` (or similar), like +this: + + source prefix/etc/profile.d/nix.sh + +# NIX\_SSL\_CERT\_FILE + +If you need to specify a custom certificate bundle to account for an +HTTPS-intercepting man in the middle proxy, you must specify the path to +the certificate bundle in the environment variable NIX\_SSL\_CERT\_FILE. + +If you don't specify a NIX\_SSL\_CERT\_FILE manually, Nix will install +and use its own certificate bundle. + +Set the environment variable and install Nix + + $ export NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE=/etc/ssl/my-certificate-bundle.crt + $ sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) + +In the shell profile and rc files (for example, `/etc/bashrc`, +`/etc/zshrc`), add the following line: + + export NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE=/etc/ssl/my-certificate-bundle.crt + +> **Note** +> +> You must not add the export and then do the install, as the Nix +> installer will detect the presense of Nix configuration, and abort. + +## NIX\_SSL\_CERT\_FILE with macOS and the Nix daemon + +On macOS you must specify the environment variable for the Nix daemon +service, then restart it: + + $ sudo launchctl setenv NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE /etc/ssl/my-certificate-bundle.crt + $ sudo launchctl kickstart -k system/org.nixos.nix-daemon + +## Proxy Environment Variables + +The Nix installer has special handling for these proxy-related +environment variables: `http_proxy`, `https_proxy`, `ftp_proxy`, +`no_proxy`, `HTTP_PROXY`, `HTTPS_PROXY`, `FTP_PROXY`, `NO_PROXY`. + +If any of these variables are set when running the Nix installer, then +the installer will create an override file at +`/etc/systemd/system/nix-daemon.service.d/override.conf` so `nix-daemon` +will use them. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/installation/installation.md b/doc/manual/src/installation/installation.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..b40c5b95f --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/installation/installation.md @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ +This section describes how to install and configure Nix for first-time +use. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/installation/installing-binary.md b/doc/manual/src/installation/installing-binary.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..d4e412e67 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/installation/installing-binary.md @@ -0,0 +1,273 @@ +# Installing a Binary Distribution + +If you are using Linux or macOS versions up to 10.14 (Mojave), the +easiest way to install Nix is to run the following command: + +``` + $ sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) +``` + +If you're using macOS 10.15 (Catalina) or newer, consult [the macOS +installation instructions](#sect-macos-installation) before installing. + +As of Nix 2.1.0, the Nix installer will always default to creating a +single-user installation, however opting in to the multi-user +installation is highly recommended. + +# Single User Installation + +To explicitly select a single-user installation on your system: + +``` + sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) --no-daemon +``` + +This will perform a single-user installation of Nix, meaning that `/nix` +is owned by the invoking user. You should run this under your usual user +account, *not* as root. The script will invoke `sudo` to create `/nix` +if it doesn’t already exist. If you don’t have `sudo`, you should +manually create `/nix` first as root, e.g.: + + $ mkdir /nix + $ chown alice /nix + +The install script will modify the first writable file from amongst +`.bash_profile`, `.bash_login` and `.profile` to source +`~/.nix-profile/etc/profile.d/nix.sh`. You can set the +NIX\_INSTALLER\_NO\_MODIFY\_PROFILE environment variable before +executing the install script to disable this behaviour. + +You can uninstall Nix simply by running: + + $ rm -rf /nix + +# Multi User Installation + +The multi-user Nix installation creates system users, and a system +service for the Nix daemon. + + - Linux running systemd, with SELinux disabled + + - macOS + +You can instruct the installer to perform a multi-user installation on +your system: + + sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) --daemon + +The multi-user installation of Nix will create build users between the +user IDs 30001 and 30032, and a group with the group ID 30000. You +should run this under your usual user account, *not* as root. The script +will invoke `sudo` as needed. + +> **Note** +> +> If you need Nix to use a different group ID or user ID set, you will +> have to download the tarball manually and [edit the install +> script](#sect-nix-install-binary-tarball). + +The installer will modify `/etc/bashrc`, and `/etc/zshrc` if they exist. +The installer will first back up these files with a `.backup-before-nix` +extension. The installer will also create `/etc/profile.d/nix.sh`. + +You can uninstall Nix with the following commands: + + sudo rm -rf /etc/profile/nix.sh /etc/nix /nix ~root/.nix-profile ~root/.nix-defexpr ~root/.nix-channels ~/.nix-profile ~/.nix-defexpr ~/.nix-channels + + # If you are on Linux with systemd, you will need to run: + sudo systemctl stop nix-daemon.socket + sudo systemctl stop nix-daemon.service + sudo systemctl disable nix-daemon.socket + sudo systemctl disable nix-daemon.service + sudo systemctl daemon-reload + + # If you are on macOS, you will need to run: + sudo launchctl unload /Library/LaunchDaemons/org.nixos.nix-daemon.plist + sudo rm /Library/LaunchDaemons/org.nixos.nix-daemon.plist + +There may also be references to Nix in `/etc/profile`, `/etc/bashrc`, +and `/etc/zshrc` which you may remove. + +# macOS Installation + +Starting with macOS 10.15 (Catalina), the root filesystem is read-only. +This means `/nix` can no longer live on your system volume, and that +you'll need a workaround to install Nix. + +The recommended approach, which creates an unencrypted APFS volume for +your Nix store and a "synthetic" empty directory to mount it over at +`/nix`, is least likely to impair Nix or your system. + +> **Note** +> +> With all separate-volume approaches, it's possible something on your +> system (particularly daemons/services and restored apps) may need +> access to your Nix store before the volume is mounted. Adding +> additional encryption makes this more likely. + +If you're using a recent Mac with a [T2 +chip](https://www.apple.com/euro/mac/shared/docs/Apple_T2_Security_Chip_Overview.pdf), +your drive will still be encrypted at rest (in which case "unencrypted" +is a bit of a misnomer). To use this approach, just install Nix with: + + $ sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) --darwin-use-unencrypted-nix-store-volume + +If you don't like the sound of this, you'll want to weigh the other +approaches and tradeoffs detailed in this section. + +> **Note** +> +> All of the known workarounds have drawbacks, but we hope better +> solutions will be available in the future. Some that we have our eye +> on are: +> +> 1. A true firmlink would enable the Nix store to live on the primary +> data volume without the build problems caused by the symlink +> approach. End users cannot currently create true firmlinks. +> +> 2. If the Nix store volume shared FileVault encryption with the +> primary data volume (probably by using the same volume group and +> role), FileVault encryption could be easily supported by the +> installer without requiring manual setup by each user. + +## Change the Nix store path prefix + +Changing the default prefix for the Nix store is a simple approach which +enables you to leave it on your root volume, where it can take full +advantage of FileVault encryption if enabled. Unfortunately, this +approach also opts your device out of some benefits that are enabled by +using the same prefix across systems: + + - Your system won't be able to take advantage of the binary cache + (unless someone is able to stand up and support duplicate caching + infrastructure), which means you'll spend more time waiting for + builds. + + - It's harder to build and deploy packages to Linux systems. + +It would also possible (and often requested) to just apply this change +ecosystem-wide, but it's an intrusive process that has side effects we +want to avoid for now. + +## Use a separate encrypted volume + +If you like, you can also add encryption to the recommended approach +taken by the installer. You can do this by pre-creating an encrypted +volume before you run the installer--or you can run the installer and +encrypt the volume it creates later. + +In either case, adding encryption to a second volume isn't quite as +simple as enabling FileVault for your boot volume. Before you dive in, +there are a few things to weigh: + +1. The additional volume won't be encrypted with your existing + FileVault key, so you'll need another mechanism to decrypt the + volume. + +2. You can store the password in Keychain to automatically decrypt the + volume on boot--but it'll have to wait on Keychain and may not mount + before your GUI apps restore. If any of your launchd agents or apps + depend on Nix-installed software (for example, if you use a + Nix-installed login shell), the restore may fail or break. + + On a case-by-case basis, you may be able to work around this problem + by using `wait4path` to block execution until your executable is + available. + + It's also possible to decrypt and mount the volume earlier with a + login hook--but this mechanism appears to be deprecated and its + future is unclear. + +3. You can hard-code the password in the clear, so that your store + volume can be decrypted before Keychain is available. + +If you are comfortable navigating these tradeoffs, you can encrypt the +volume with something along the lines of: + + alice$ diskutil apfs enableFileVault /nix -user disk + +## Symlink the Nix store to a custom location + +Another simple approach is using `/etc/synthetic.conf` to symlink the +Nix store to the data volume. This option also enables your store to +share any configured FileVault encryption. Unfortunately, builds that +resolve the symlink may leak the canonical path or even fail. + +Because of these downsides, we can't recommend this approach. + +## Notes on the recommended approach + +This section goes into a little more detail on the recommended approach. +You don't need to understand it to run the installer, but it can serve +as a helpful reference if you run into trouble. + +1. In order to compose user-writable locations into the new read-only + system root, Apple introduced a new concept called `firmlinks`, + which it describes as a "bi-directional wormhole" between two + filesystems. You can see the current firmlinks in + `/usr/share/firmlinks`. Unfortunately, firmlinks aren't (currently?) + user-configurable. + + For special cases like NFS mount points or package manager roots, + [synthetic.conf(5)](https://developer.apple.com/library/archive/documentation/System/Conceptual/ManPages_iPhoneOS/man5/synthetic.conf.5.html) + supports limited user-controlled file-creation (of symlinks, and + synthetic empty directories) at `/`. To create a synthetic empty + directory for mounting at `/nix`, add the following line to + `/etc/synthetic.conf` (create it if necessary): + + nix + +2. This configuration is applied at boot time, but you can use + `apfs.util` to trigger creation (not deletion) of new entries + without a reboot: + + alice$ /System/Library/Filesystems/apfs.fs/Contents/Resources/apfs.util -B + +3. Create the new APFS volume with diskutil: + + alice$ sudo diskutil apfs addVolume diskX APFS 'Nix Store' -mountpoint /nix + +4. Using `vifs`, add the new mount to `/etc/fstab`. If it doesn't + already have other entries, it should look something like: + + # + # Warning - this file should only be modified with vifs(8) + # + # Failure to do so is unsupported and may be destructive. + # + LABEL=Nix\040Store /nix apfs rw,nobrowse + + The nobrowse setting will keep Spotlight from indexing this volume, + and keep it from showing up on your desktop. + +# Installing a pinned Nix version from a URL + +NixOS.org hosts version-specific installation URLs for all Nix versions +since 1.11.16, at `https://releases.nixos.org/nix/nix-version/install`. + +These install scripts can be used the same as the main NixOS.org +installation script: + +``` + sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) +``` + +In the same directory of the install script are sha256 sums, and gpg +signature files. + +# Installing from a binary tarball + +You can also download a binary tarball that contains Nix and all its +dependencies. (This is what the install script at + does automatically.) You should unpack +it somewhere (e.g. in `/tmp`), and then run the script named `install` +inside the binary tarball: + + alice$ cd /tmp + alice$ tar xfj nix-1.8-x86_64-darwin.tar.bz2 + alice$ cd nix-1.8-x86_64-darwin + alice$ ./install + +If you need to edit the multi-user installation script to use different +group ID or a different user ID range, modify the variables set in the +file named `install-multi-user`. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/installation/installing-source.md b/doc/manual/src/installation/installing-source.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..e52d38a03 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/installation/installing-source.md @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ +# Installing Nix from Source + +If no binary package is available, you can download and compile a source +distribution. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/installation/multi-user.md b/doc/manual/src/installation/multi-user.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..17286fdc5 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/installation/multi-user.md @@ -0,0 +1,63 @@ +# Multi-User Mode + +To allow a Nix store to be shared safely among multiple users, it is +important that users are not able to run builders that modify the Nix +store or database in arbitrary ways, or that interfere with builds +started by other users. If they could do so, they could install a Trojan +horse in some package and compromise the accounts of other users. + +To prevent this, the Nix store and database are owned by some privileged +user (usually `root`) and builders are executed under special user +accounts (usually named `nixbld1`, `nixbld2`, etc.). When a unprivileged +user runs a Nix command, actions that operate on the Nix store (such as +builds) are forwarded to a *Nix daemon* running under the owner of the +Nix store/database that performs the operation. + +> **Note** +> +> Multi-user mode has one important limitation: only root and a set of +> trusted users specified in `nix.conf` can specify arbitrary binary +> caches. So while unprivileged users may install packages from +> arbitrary Nix expressions, they may not get pre-built binaries. + +The *build users* are the special UIDs under which builds are performed. +They should all be members of the *build users group* `nixbld`. This +group should have no other members. The build users should not be +members of any other group. On Linux, you can create the group and users +as follows: + + $ groupadd -r nixbld + $ for n in $(seq 1 10); do useradd -c "Nix build user $n" \ + -d /var/empty -g nixbld -G nixbld -M -N -r -s "$(which nologin)" \ + nixbld$n; done + +This creates 10 build users. There can never be more concurrent builds +than the number of build users, so you may want to increase this if you +expect to do many builds at the same time. + +The [Nix daemon](#sec-nix-daemon) should be started as follows (as +`root`): + + $ nix-daemon + +You’ll want to put that line somewhere in your system’s boot scripts. + +To let unprivileged users use the daemon, they should set the +[NIX\_REMOTE environment variable](#envar-remote) to `daemon`. So you +should put a line like + + export NIX_REMOTE=daemon + +into the users’ login scripts. + +To limit which users can perform Nix operations, you can use the +permissions on the directory `/nix/var/nix/daemon-socket`. For instance, +if you want to restrict the use of Nix to the members of a group called +`nix-users`, do + + $ chgrp nix-users /nix/var/nix/daemon-socket + $ chmod ug=rwx,o= /nix/var/nix/daemon-socket + +This way, users who are not in the `nix-users` group cannot connect to +the Unix domain socket `/nix/var/nix/daemon-socket/socket`, so they +cannot perform Nix operations. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/installation/nix-security.md b/doc/manual/src/installation/nix-security.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..1e9036b68 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/installation/nix-security.md @@ -0,0 +1,15 @@ +# Security + +Nix has two basic security models. First, it can be used in “single-user +mode”, which is similar to what most other package management tools do: +there is a single user (typically root) who performs all package +management operations. All other users can then use the installed +packages, but they cannot perform package management operations +themselves. + +Alternatively, you can configure Nix in “multi-user mode”. In this +model, all users can perform package management operations — for +instance, every user can install software without requiring root +privileges. Nix ensures that this is secure. For instance, it’s not +possible for one user to overwrite a package used by another user with a +Trojan horse. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/installation/obtaining-source.md b/doc/manual/src/installation/obtaining-source.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..2937130cf --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/installation/obtaining-source.md @@ -0,0 +1,16 @@ +# Obtaining a Source Distribution + +The source tarball of the most recent stable release can be downloaded +from the [Nix homepage](http://nixos.org/nix/download.html). You can +also grab the [most recent development +release](http://hydra.nixos.org/job/nix/master/release/latest-finished#tabs-constituents). + +Alternatively, the most recent sources of Nix can be obtained from its +[Git repository](https://github.com/NixOS/nix). For example, the +following command will check out the latest revision into a directory +called `nix`: + + $ git clone https://github.com/NixOS/nix + +Likewise, specific releases can be obtained from the +[tags](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/tags) of the repository. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/installation/prerequisites-source.md b/doc/manual/src/installation/prerequisites-source.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..311961fe9 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/installation/prerequisites-source.md @@ -0,0 +1,80 @@ +# Prerequisites + + - GNU Autoconf () and the + autoconf-archive macro collection + (). These are only + needed to run the bootstrap script, and are not necessary if your + source distribution came with a pre-built `./configure` script. + + - GNU Make. + + - Bash Shell. The `./configure` script relies on bashisms, so Bash is + required. + + - A version of GCC or Clang that supports C++17. + + - `pkg-config` to locate dependencies. If your distribution does not + provide it, you can get it from + . + + - The OpenSSL library to calculate cryptographic hashes. If your + distribution does not provide it, you can get it from + . + + - The `libbrotlienc` and `libbrotlidec` libraries to provide + implementation of the Brotli compression algorithm. They are + available for download from the official repository + . + + - The bzip2 compressor program and the `libbz2` library. Thus you must + have bzip2 installed, including development headers and libraries. + If your distribution does not provide these, you can obtain bzip2 + from + . + + - `liblzma`, which is provided by XZ Utils. If your distribution does + not provide this, you can get it from . + + - cURL and its library. If your distribution does not provide it, you + can get it from . + + - The SQLite embedded database library, version 3.6.19 or higher. If + your distribution does not provide it, please install it from + . + + - The [Boehm garbage collector](http://www.hboehm.info/gc/) to reduce + the evaluator’s memory consumption (optional). To enable it, install + `pkgconfig` and the Boehm garbage collector, and pass the flag + `--enable-gc` to `configure`. + + - The `boost` library of version 1.66.0 or higher. It can be obtained + from the official web site . + + - The `editline` library of version 1.14.0 or higher. It can be + obtained from the its repository + . + + - The `xmllint` and `xsltproc` programs to build this manual and the + man-pages. These are part of the `libxml2` and `libxslt` packages, + respectively. You also need the [DocBook XSL + stylesheets](http://docbook.sourceforge.net/projects/xsl/) and + optionally the [DocBook 5.0 RELAX NG + schemas](http://www.docbook.org/schemas/5x). Note that these are + only required if you modify the manual sources or when you are + building from the Git repository. + + - Recent versions of Bison and Flex to build the parser. (This is + because Nix needs GLR support in Bison and reentrancy support in + Flex.) For Bison, you need version 2.6, which can be obtained from + the [GNU FTP server](ftp://alpha.gnu.org/pub/gnu/bison). For Flex, + you need version 2.5.35, which is available on + [SourceForge](http://lex.sourceforge.net/). Slightly older versions + may also work, but ancient versions like the ubiquitous 2.5.4a + won't. Note that these are only required if you modify the parser or + when you are building from the Git repository. + + - The `libseccomp` is used to provide syscall filtering on Linux. This + is an optional dependency and can be disabled passing a + `--disable-seccomp-sandboxing` option to the `configure` script (Not + recommended unless your system doesn't support `libseccomp`). To get + the library, visit . diff --git a/doc/manual/src/installation/single-user.md b/doc/manual/src/installation/single-user.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..f9a3b26ed --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/installation/single-user.md @@ -0,0 +1,9 @@ +# Single-User Mode + +In single-user mode, all Nix operations that access the database in +`prefix/var/nix/db` or modify the Nix store in `prefix/store` must be +performed under the user ID that owns those directories. This is +typically root. (If you install from RPM packages, that’s in fact the +default ownership.) However, on single-user machines, it is often +convenient to `chown` those directories to your normal user account so +that you don’t have to `su` to root all the time. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/installation/supported-platforms.md b/doc/manual/src/installation/supported-platforms.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..8ef1f0e78 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/installation/supported-platforms.md @@ -0,0 +1,7 @@ +# Supported Platforms + +Nix is currently supported on the following platforms: + + - Linux (i686, x86\_64, aarch64). + + - macOS (x86\_64). diff --git a/doc/manual/src/installation/upgrading.md b/doc/manual/src/installation/upgrading.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..24efc4681 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/installation/upgrading.md @@ -0,0 +1,14 @@ +# Upgrading Nix + +Multi-user Nix users on macOS can upgrade Nix by running: `sudo -i sh -c +'nix-channel --update && +nix-env -iA nixpkgs.nix && +launchctl remove org.nixos.nix-daemon && +launchctl load /Library/LaunchDaemons/org.nixos.nix-daemon.plist'` + +Single-user installations of Nix should run this: `nix-channel --update; +nix-env -iA nixpkgs.nix nixpkgs.cacert` + +Multi-user Nix users on Linux should run this with sudo: `nix-channel +--update; nix-env -iA nixpkgs.nix nixpkgs.cacert; systemctl +daemon-reload; systemctl restart nix-daemon` diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..f5c550fd7 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md @@ -0,0 +1,148 @@ +# Basic Package Management + +The main command for package management is [`nix-env`](#sec-nix-env). +You can use it to install, upgrade, and erase packages, and to query +what packages are installed or are available for installation. + +In Nix, different users can have different “views” on the set of +installed applications. That is, there might be lots of applications +present on the system (possibly in many different versions), but users +can have a specific selection of those active — where “active” just +means that it appears in a directory in the user’s PATH. Such a view on +the set of installed applications is called a *user environment*, which +is just a directory tree consisting of symlinks to the files of the +active applications. + +Components are installed from a set of *Nix expressions* that tell Nix +how to build those packages, including, if necessary, their +dependencies. There is a collection of Nix expressions called the +Nixpkgs package collection that contains packages ranging from basic +development stuff such as GCC and Glibc, to end-user applications like +Mozilla Firefox. (Nix is however not tied to the Nixpkgs package +collection; you could write your own Nix expressions based on Nixpkgs, +or completely new ones.) + +You can manually download the latest version of Nixpkgs from +. However, it’s much more +convenient to use the Nixpkgs *channel*, since it makes it easy to stay +up to date with new versions of Nixpkgs. (Channels are described in more +detail in [???](#sec-channels).) Nixpkgs is automatically added to your +list of “subscribed” channels when you install Nix. If this is not the +case for some reason, you can add it as follows: + + $ nix-channel --add https://nixos.org/channels/nixpkgs-unstable + $ nix-channel --update + +> **Note** +> +> On NixOS, you’re automatically subscribed to a NixOS channel +> corresponding to your NixOS major release (e.g. +> ). A NixOS channel is identical +> to the Nixpkgs channel, except that it contains only Linux binaries +> and is updated only if a set of regression tests succeed. + +You can view the set of available packages in Nixpkgs: + + $ nix-env -qa + aterm-2.2 + bash-3.0 + binutils-2.15 + bison-1.875d + blackdown-1.4.2 + bzip2-1.0.2 + … + +The flag `-q` specifies a query operation, and `-a` means that you want +to show the “available” (i.e., installable) packages, as opposed to the +installed packages. If you downloaded Nixpkgs yourself, or if you +checked it out from GitHub, then you need to pass the path to your +Nixpkgs tree using the `-f` flag: + + $ nix-env -qaf /path/to/nixpkgs + +where /path/to/nixpkgs is where you’ve unpacked or checked out Nixpkgs. + +You can select specific packages by name: + + $ nix-env -qa firefox + firefox-34.0.5 + firefox-with-plugins-34.0.5 + +and using regular expressions: + + $ nix-env -qa 'firefox.*' + +It is also possible to see the *status* of available packages, i.e., +whether they are installed into the user environment and/or present in +the system: + + $ nix-env -qas + … + -PS bash-3.0 + --S binutils-2.15 + IPS bison-1.875d + … + +The first character (`I`) indicates whether the package is installed in +your current user environment. The second (`P`) indicates whether it is +present on your system (in which case installing it into your user +environment would be a very quick operation). The last one (`S`) +indicates whether there is a so-called *substitute* for the package, +which is Nix’s mechanism for doing binary deployment. It just means that +Nix knows that it can fetch a pre-built package from somewhere +(typically a network server) instead of building it locally. + +You can install a package using `nix-env -i`. For instance, + + $ nix-env -i subversion + +will install the package called `subversion` (which is, of course, the +[Subversion version management system](http://subversion.tigris.org/)). + +> **Note** +> +> When you ask Nix to install a package, it will first try to get it in +> pre-compiled form from a *binary cache*. By default, Nix will use the +> binary cache ; it contains binaries for most +> packages in Nixpkgs. Only if no binary is available in the binary +> cache, Nix will build the package from source. So if `nix-env +> -i subversion` results in Nix building stuff from source, then either +> the package is not built for your platform by the Nixpkgs build +> servers, or your version of Nixpkgs is too old or too new. For +> instance, if you have a very recent checkout of Nixpkgs, then the +> Nixpkgs build servers may not have had a chance to build everything +> and upload the resulting binaries to . The +> Nixpkgs channel is only updated after all binaries have been uploaded +> to the cache, so if you stick to the Nixpkgs channel (rather than +> using a Git checkout of the Nixpkgs tree), you will get binaries for +> most packages. + +Naturally, packages can also be uninstalled: + + $ nix-env -e subversion + +Upgrading to a new version is just as easy. If you have a new release of +Nix Packages, you can do: + + $ nix-env -u subversion + +This will *only* upgrade Subversion if there is a “newer” version in the +new set of Nix expressions, as defined by some pretty arbitrary rules +regarding ordering of version numbers (which generally do what you’d +expect of them). To just unconditionally replace Subversion with +whatever version is in the Nix expressions, use `-i` instead of `-u`; +`-i` will remove whatever version is already installed. + +You can also upgrade all packages for which there are newer versions: + + $ nix-env -u + +Sometimes it’s useful to be able to ask what `nix-env` would do, without +actually doing it. For instance, to find out what packages would be +upgraded by `nix-env -u`, you can do + + $ nix-env -u --dry-run + (dry run; not doing anything) + upgrading `libxslt-1.1.0' to `libxslt-1.1.10' + upgrading `graphviz-1.10' to `graphviz-1.12' + upgrading `coreutils-5.0' to `coreutils-5.2.1' diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/binary-cache-substituter.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/binary-cache-substituter.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..44f0da238 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/binary-cache-substituter.md @@ -0,0 +1,42 @@ +# Serving a Nix store via HTTP + +You can easily share the Nix store of a machine via HTTP. This allows +other machines to fetch store paths from that machine to speed up +installations. It uses the same *binary cache* mechanism that Nix +usually uses to fetch pre-built binaries from . + +The daemon that handles binary cache requests via HTTP, `nix-serve`, is +not part of the Nix distribution, but you can install it from Nixpkgs: + + $ nix-env -i nix-serve + +You can then start the server, listening for HTTP connections on +whatever port you like: + + $ nix-serve -p 8080 + +To check whether it works, try the following on the client: + + $ curl http://avalon:8080/nix-cache-info + +which should print something like: + + StoreDir: /nix/store + WantMassQuery: 1 + Priority: 30 + +On the client side, you can tell Nix to use your binary cache using +`--option extra-binary-caches`, e.g.: + + $ nix-env -i firefox --option extra-binary-caches http://avalon:8080/ + +The option `extra-binary-caches` tells Nix to use this binary cache in +addition to your default caches, such as . +Thus, for any path in the closure of Firefox, Nix will first check if +the path is available on the server `avalon` or another binary caches. +If not, it will fall back to building from source. + +You can also tell Nix to always use your binary cache by adding a line +to the `nix.conf` configuration file like this: + + binary-caches = http://avalon:8080/ https://cache.nixos.org/ diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/channels.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/channels.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..8a3e92d70 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/channels.md @@ -0,0 +1,42 @@ +# Channels + +If you want to stay up to date with a set of packages, it’s not very +convenient to manually download the latest set of Nix expressions for +those packages and upgrade using `nix-env`. Fortunately, there’s a +better way: *Nix channels*. + +A Nix channel is just a URL that points to a place that contains a set +of Nix expressions and a manifest. Using the command +[`nix-channel`](#sec-nix-channel) you can automatically stay up to date +with whatever is available at that URL. + +To see the list of official NixOS channels, visit +. + +You can “subscribe” to a channel using `nix-channel --add`, e.g., + + $ nix-channel --add https://nixos.org/channels/nixpkgs-unstable + +subscribes you to a channel that always contains that latest version of +the Nix Packages collection. (Subscribing really just means that the URL +is added to the file `~/.nix-channels`, where it is read by subsequent +calls to `nix-channel +--update`.) You can “unsubscribe” using `nix-channel +--remove`: + + $ nix-channel --remove nixpkgs + +To obtain the latest Nix expressions available in a channel, do + + $ nix-channel --update + +This downloads and unpacks the Nix expressions in every channel +(downloaded from `url/nixexprs.tar.bz2`). It also makes the union of +each channel’s Nix expressions available by default to `nix-env` +operations (via the symlink `~/.nix-defexpr/channels`). Consequently, +you can then say + + $ nix-env -u + +to upgrade all packages in your profile to the latest versions available +in the subscribed channels. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/copy-closure.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/copy-closure.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..6573862c0 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/copy-closure.md @@ -0,0 +1,34 @@ +# Copying Closures Via SSH + +The command `nix-copy-closure` copies a Nix store path along with all +its dependencies to or from another machine via the SSH protocol. It +doesn’t copy store paths that are already present on the target machine. +For example, the following command copies Firefox with all its +dependencies: + + $ nix-copy-closure --to alice@itchy.example.org $(type -p firefox) + +See [???](#sec-nix-copy-closure) for details. + +With `nix-store +--export` and `nix-store --import` you can write the closure of a store +path (that is, the path and all its dependencies) to a file, and then +unpack that file into another Nix store. For example, + + $ nix-store --export $(nix-store -qR $(type -p firefox)) > firefox.closure + +writes the closure of Firefox to a file. You can then copy this file to +another machine and install the closure: + + $ nix-store --import < firefox.closure + +Any store paths in the closure that are already present in the target +store are ignored. It is also possible to pipe the export into another +command, e.g. to copy and install a closure directly to/on another +machine: + + $ nix-store --export $(nix-store -qR $(type -p firefox)) | bzip2 | \ + ssh alice@itchy.example.org "bunzip2 | nix-store --import" + +However, `nix-copy-closure` is generally more efficient because it only +copies paths that are not already present in the target Nix store. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/garbage-collection.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/garbage-collection.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..4c8799dfe --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/garbage-collection.md @@ -0,0 +1,61 @@ +# Garbage Collection + +`nix-env` operations such as upgrades (`-u`) and uninstall (`-e`) never +actually delete packages from the system. All they do (as shown above) +is to create a new user environment that no longer contains symlinks to +the “deleted” packages. + +Of course, since disk space is not infinite, unused packages should be +removed at some point. You can do this by running the Nix garbage +collector. It will remove from the Nix store any package not used +(directly or indirectly) by any generation of any profile. + +Note however that as long as old generations reference a package, it +will not be deleted. After all, we wouldn’t be able to do a rollback +otherwise. So in order for garbage collection to be effective, you +should also delete (some) old generations. Of course, this should only +be done if you are certain that you will not need to roll back. + +To delete all old (non-current) generations of your current profile: + + $ nix-env --delete-generations old + +Instead of `old` you can also specify a list of generations, e.g., + + $ nix-env --delete-generations 10 11 14 + +To delete all generations older than a specified number of days (except +the current generation), use the `d` suffix. For example, + + $ nix-env --delete-generations 14d + +deletes all generations older than two weeks. + +After removing appropriate old generations you can run the garbage +collector as follows: + + $ nix-store --gc + +The behaviour of the gargage collector is affected by the +`keep-derivations` (default: true) and `keep-outputs` (default: false) +options in the Nix configuration file. The defaults will ensure that all +derivations that are build-time dependencies of garbage collector roots +will be kept and that all output paths that are runtime dependencies +will be kept as well. All other derivations or paths will be collected. +(This is usually what you want, but while you are developing it may make +sense to keep outputs to ensure that rebuild times are quick.) If you +are feeling uncertain, you can also first view what files would be +deleted: + + $ nix-store --gc --print-dead + +Likewise, the option `--print-live` will show the paths that *won’t* be +deleted. + +There is also a convenient little utility `nix-collect-garbage`, which +when invoked with the `-d` (`--delete-old`) switch deletes all old +generations of all profiles in `/nix/var/nix/profiles`. So + + $ nix-collect-garbage -d + +is a quick and easy way to clean up your system. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/garbage-collector-roots.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/garbage-collector-roots.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..6f4d48e80 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/garbage-collector-roots.md @@ -0,0 +1,16 @@ +# Garbage Collector Roots + +The roots of the garbage collector are all store paths to which there +are symlinks in the directory `prefix/nix/var/nix/gcroots`. For +instance, the following command makes the path +`/nix/store/d718ef...-foo` a root of the collector: + + $ ln -s /nix/store/d718ef...-foo /nix/var/nix/gcroots/bar + +That is, after this command, the garbage collector will not remove +`/nix/store/d718ef...-foo` or any of its dependencies. + +Subdirectories of `prefix/nix/var/nix/gcroots` are also searched for +symlinks. Symlinks to non-store paths are followed and searched for +roots, but symlinks to non-store paths *inside* the paths reached in +that way are not followed to prevent infinite recursion. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/package-management.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/package-management.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..a2d078c16 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/package-management.md @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ +This chapter discusses how to do package management with Nix, i.e., how +to obtain, install, upgrade, and erase packages. This is the “user’s” +perspective of the Nix system — people who want to *create* packages +should consult [???](#chap-writing-nix-expressions). diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..c46adf538 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md @@ -0,0 +1,119 @@ +# Profiles + +Profiles and user environments are Nix’s mechanism for implementing the +ability to allow different users to have different configurations, and +to do atomic upgrades and rollbacks. To understand how they work, it’s +useful to know a bit about how Nix works. In Nix, packages are stored in +unique locations in the *Nix store* (typically, `/nix/store`). For +instance, a particular version of the Subversion package might be stored +in a directory +`/nix/store/dpmvp969yhdqs7lm2r1a3gng7pyq6vy4-subversion-1.1.3/`, while +another version might be stored in +`/nix/store/5mq2jcn36ldlmh93yj1n8s9c95pj7c5s-subversion-1.1.2`. The long +strings prefixed to the directory names are cryptographic hashes\[1\] of +*all* inputs involved in building the package — sources, dependencies, +compiler flags, and so on. So if two packages differ in any way, they +end up in different locations in the file system, so they don’t +interfere with each other. [figure\_title](#fig-user-environments) shows +a part of a typical Nix store. + +![User environments](../figures/user-environments.png) + +Of course, you wouldn’t want to type + + $ /nix/store/dpmvp969yhdq...-subversion-1.1.3/bin/svn + +every time you want to run Subversion. Of course we could set up the +PATH environment variable to include the `bin` directory of every +package we want to use, but this is not very convenient since changing +PATH doesn’t take effect for already existing processes. The solution +Nix uses is to create directory trees of symlinks to *activated* +packages. These are called *user environments* and they are packages +themselves (though automatically generated by `nix-env`), so they too +reside in the Nix store. For instance, in +[figure\_title](#fig-user-environments) the user environment +`/nix/store/0c1p5z4kda11...-user-env` contains a symlink to just +Subversion 1.1.2 (arrows in the figure indicate symlinks). This would be +what we would obtain if we had done + + $ nix-env -i subversion + +on a set of Nix expressions that contained Subversion 1.1.2. + +This doesn’t in itself solve the problem, of course; you wouldn’t want +to type `/nix/store/0c1p5z4kda11...-user-env/bin/svn` either. That’s why +there are symlinks outside of the store that point to the user +environments in the store; for instance, the symlinks `default-42-link` +and `default-43-link` in the example. These are called *generations* +since every time you perform a `nix-env` operation, a new user +environment is generated based on the current one. For instance, +generation 43 was created from generation 42 when we did + + $ nix-env -i subversion firefox + +on a set of Nix expressions that contained Firefox and a new version of +Subversion. + +Generations are grouped together into *profiles* so that different users +don’t interfere with each other if they don’t want to. For example: + + $ ls -l /nix/var/nix/profiles/ + ... + lrwxrwxrwx 1 eelco ... default-42-link -> /nix/store/0c1p5z4kda11...-user-env + lrwxrwxrwx 1 eelco ... default-43-link -> /nix/store/3aw2pdyx2jfc...-user-env + lrwxrwxrwx 1 eelco ... default -> default-43-link + +This shows a profile called `default`. The file `default` itself is +actually a symlink that points to the current generation. When we do a +`nix-env` operation, a new user environment and generation link are +created based on the current one, and finally the `default` symlink is +made to point at the new generation. This last step is atomic on Unix, +which explains how we can do atomic upgrades. (Note that the +building/installing of new packages doesn’t interfere in any way with +old packages, since they are stored in different locations in the Nix +store.) + +If you find that you want to undo a `nix-env` operation, you can just do + + $ nix-env --rollback + +which will just make the current generation link point at the previous +link. E.g., `default` would be made to point at `default-42-link`. You +can also switch to a specific generation: + + $ nix-env --switch-generation 43 + +which in this example would roll forward to generation 43 again. You can +also see all available generations: + + $ nix-env --list-generations + +You generally wouldn’t have `/nix/var/nix/profiles/some-profile/bin` in +your PATH. Rather, there is a symlink `~/.nix-profile` that points to +your current profile. This means that you should put +`~/.nix-profile/bin` in your PATH (and indeed, that’s what the +initialisation script `/nix/etc/profile.d/nix.sh` does). This makes it +easier to switch to a different profile. You can do that using the +command `nix-env --switch-profile`: + + $ nix-env --switch-profile /nix/var/nix/profiles/my-profile + + $ nix-env --switch-profile /nix/var/nix/profiles/default + +These commands switch to the `my-profile` and default profile, +respectively. If the profile doesn’t exist, it will be created +automatically. You should be careful about storing a profile in another +location than the `profiles` directory, since otherwise it might not be +used as a root of the garbage collector (see +[???](#sec-garbage-collection)). + +All `nix-env` operations work on the profile pointed to by +`~/.nix-profile`, but you can override this using the `--profile` option +(abbreviation `-p`): + + $ nix-env -p /nix/var/nix/profiles/other-profile -i subversion + +This will *not* change the `~/.nix-profile` symlink. + +1. 160-bit truncations of SHA-256 hashes encoded in a base-32 notation, + to be precise. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/s3-substituter.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/s3-substituter.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..4740b8b1c --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/s3-substituter.md @@ -0,0 +1,133 @@ +# Serving a Nix store via AWS S3 or S3-compatible Service + +Nix has built-in support for storing and fetching store paths from +Amazon S3 and S3 compatible services. This uses the same *binary* cache +mechanism that Nix usually uses to fetch prebuilt binaries from +[cache.nixos.org](cache.nixos.org). + +The following options can be specified as URL parameters to the S3 URL: + + - `profile` + The name of the AWS configuration profile to use. By default Nix + will use the `default` profile. + + - `region` + The region of the S3 bucket. `us–east-1` by default. + + If your bucket is not in `us–east-1`, you should always explicitly + specify the region parameter. + + - `endpoint` + The URL to your S3-compatible service, for when not using Amazon S3. + Do not specify this value if you're using Amazon S3. + + > **Note** + > + > This endpoint must support HTTPS and will use path-based + > addressing instead of virtual host based addressing. + + - `scheme` + The scheme used for S3 requests, `https` (default) or `http`. This + option allows you to disable HTTPS for binary caches which don't + support it. + + > **Note** + > + > HTTPS should be used if the cache might contain sensitive + > information. + +In this example we will use the bucket named `example-nix-cache`. + +## Anonymous Reads to your S3-compatible binary cache + +If your binary cache is publicly accessible and does not require +authentication, the simplest and easiest way to use Nix with your S3 +compatible binary cache is to use the HTTP URL for that cache. + +For AWS S3 the binary cache URL for example bucket will be exactly + or +. For S3 compatible binary caches, consult that +cache's documentation. + +Your bucket will need the following bucket policy: + + { + "Id": "DirectReads", + "Version": "2012-10-17", + "Statement": [ + { + "Sid": "AllowDirectReads", + "Action": [ + "s3:GetObject", + "s3:GetBucketLocation" + ], + "Effect": "Allow", + "Resource": [ + "arn:aws:s3:::example-nix-cache", + "arn:aws:s3:::example-nix-cache/*" + ], + "Principal": "*" + } + ] + } + +## Authenticated Reads to your S3 binary cache + +For AWS S3 the binary cache URL for example bucket will be exactly +. + +Nix will use the [default credential provider +chain](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/sdk-for-cpp/v1/developer-guide/credentials.html) +for authenticating requests to Amazon S3. + +Nix supports authenticated reads from Amazon S3 and S3 compatible binary +caches. + +Your bucket will need a bucket policy allowing the desired users to +perform the `s3:GetObject` and `s3:GetBucketLocation` action on all +objects in the bucket. The anonymous policy in [Anonymous Reads to your +S3-compatible binary cache](#ssec-s3-substituter-anonymous-reads) can be +updated to have a restricted `Principal` to support this. + +## Authenticated Writes to your S3-compatible binary cache + +Nix support fully supports writing to Amazon S3 and S3 compatible +buckets. The binary cache URL for our example bucket will be +. + +Nix will use the [default credential provider +chain](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/sdk-for-cpp/v1/developer-guide/credentials.html) +for authenticating requests to Amazon S3. + +Your account will need the following IAM policy to upload to the cache: + + { + "Version": "2012-10-17", + "Statement": [ + { + "Sid": "UploadToCache", + "Effect": "Allow", + "Action": [ + "s3:AbortMultipartUpload", + "s3:GetBucketLocation", + "s3:GetObject", + "s3:ListBucket", + "s3:ListBucketMultipartUploads", + "s3:ListMultipartUploadParts", + "s3:PutObject" + ], + "Resource": [ + "arn:aws:s3:::example-nix-cache", + "arn:aws:s3:::example-nix-cache/*" + ] + } + ] + } + +`nix copy --to +'s3://example-nix-cache?profile=cache-upload®ion=eu-west-2' +nixpkgs.hello` + +`nix copy --to +'s3://example-nix-cache?profile=cache-upload&scheme=https&endpoint=minio.example.com' +nixpkgs.hello` diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/sharing-packages.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/sharing-packages.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..846ca6934 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/sharing-packages.md @@ -0,0 +1,6 @@ +# Sharing Packages Between Machines + +Sometimes you want to copy a package from one machine to another. Or, +you want to install some packages and you know that another machine +already has some or all of those packages or their dependencies. In that +case there are mechanisms to quickly copy packages between machines. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/ssh-substituter.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/ssh-substituter.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..482844c7c --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/ssh-substituter.md @@ -0,0 +1,52 @@ +# Serving a Nix store via SSH + +You can tell Nix to automatically fetch needed binaries from a remote +Nix store via SSH. For example, the following installs Firefox, +automatically fetching any store paths in Firefox’s closure if they are +available on the server `avalon`: + + $ nix-env -i firefox --substituters ssh://alice@avalon + +This works similar to the binary cache substituter that Nix usually +uses, only using SSH instead of HTTP: if a store path `P` is needed, Nix +will first check if it’s available in the Nix store on `avalon`. If not, +it will fall back to using the binary cache substituter, and then to +building from source. + +> **Note** +> +> The SSH substituter currently does not allow you to enter an SSH +> passphrase interactively. Therefore, you should use `ssh-add` to load +> the decrypted private key into `ssh-agent`. + +You can also copy the closure of some store path, without installing it +into your profile, e.g. + + $ nix-store -r /nix/store/m85bxg…-firefox-34.0.5 --substituters ssh://alice@avalon + +This is essentially equivalent to doing + + $ nix-copy-closure --from alice@avalon /nix/store/m85bxg…-firefox-34.0.5 + +You can use SSH’s *forced command* feature to set up a restricted user +account for SSH substituter access, allowing read-only access to the +local Nix store, but nothing more. For example, add the following lines +to `sshd_config` to restrict the user `nix-ssh`: + + Match User nix-ssh + AllowAgentForwarding no + AllowTcpForwarding no + PermitTTY no + PermitTunnel no + X11Forwarding no + ForceCommand nix-store --serve + Match All + +On NixOS, you can accomplish the same by adding the following to your +`configuration.nix`: + + nix.sshServe.enable = true; + nix.sshServe.keys = [ "ssh-dss AAAAB3NzaC1k... bob@example.org" ]; + +where the latter line lists the public keys of users that are allowed to +connect. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/release-notes.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/release-notes.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..b05d5ee0a --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/release-notes.md @@ -0,0 +1 @@ +# Nix Release Notes diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.10.1.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.10.1.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..e1ed6558a --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.10.1.md @@ -0,0 +1,5 @@ +# Release 0.10.1 (2006-10-11) + +This release fixes two somewhat obscure bugs that occur when evaluating +Nix expressions that are stored inside the Nix store (`NIX-67`). These +do not affect most users. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.10.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.10.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..bf0e59fad --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.10.md @@ -0,0 +1,212 @@ +# Release 0.10 (2006-10-06) + +> **Note** +> +> This version of Nix uses Berkeley DB 4.4 instead of 4.3. The database +> is upgraded automatically, but you should be careful not to use old +> versions of Nix that still use Berkeley DB 4.3. In particular, if you +> use a Nix installed through Nix, you should run +> +> $ nix-store --clear-substitutes +> +> first. + +> **Warning** +> +> Also, the database schema has changed slighted to fix a performance +> issue (see below). When you run any Nix 0.10 command for the first +> time, the database will be upgraded automatically. This is +> irreversible. + + - `nix-env` usability improvements: + + - An option `--compare-versions` (or `-c`) has been added to + `nix-env + --query` to allow you to compare installed versions of packages + to available versions, or vice versa. An easy way to see if you + are up to date with what’s in your subscribed channels is + `nix-env -qc \*`. + + - `nix-env --query` now takes as arguments a list of package names + about which to show information, just like `--install`, etc.: + for example, `nix-env -q gcc`. Note that to show all + derivations, you need to specify `\*`. + + - `nix-env -i + pkgname` will now install the highest available version of + pkgname, rather than installing all available versions (which + would probably give collisions) (`NIX-31`). + + - `nix-env (-i|-u) --dry-run` now shows exactly which missing + paths will be built or substituted. + + - `nix-env -qa --description` shows human-readable descriptions of + packages, provided that they have a `meta.description` attribute + (which most packages in Nixpkgs don’t have yet). + + - New language features: + + - Reference scanning (which happens after each build) is much + faster and takes a constant amount of memory. + + - String interpolation. Expressions like + + "--with-freetype2-library=" + freetype + "/lib" + + can now be written as + + "--with-freetype2-library=${freetype}/lib" + + You can write arbitrary expressions within `${...}`, not just + identifiers. + + - Multi-line string literals. + + - String concatenations can now involve derivations, as in the + example `"--with-freetype2-library=" + + freetype + "/lib"`. This was not previously possible because + we need to register that a derivation that uses such a string is + dependent on `freetype`. The evaluator now properly propagates + this information. Consequently, the subpath operator (`~`) has + been deprecated. + + - Default values of function arguments can now refer to other + function arguments; that is, all arguments are in scope in the + default values (`NIX-45`). + + - Lots of new built-in primitives, such as functions for list + manipulation and integer arithmetic. See the manual for a + complete list. All primops are now available in the set + `builtins`, allowing one to test for the availability of primop + in a backwards-compatible way. + + - Real let-expressions: `let x = ...; + ... z = ...; in ...`. + + - New commands `nix-pack-closure` and `nix-unpack-closure` than can be + used to easily transfer a store path with all its dependencies to + another machine. Very convenient whenever you have some package on + your machine and you want to copy it somewhere else. + + - XML support: + + - `nix-env -q --xml` prints the installed or available packages in + an XML representation for easy processing by other tools. + + - `nix-instantiate --eval-only + --xml` prints an XML representation of the resulting term. (The + new flag `--strict` forces ‘deep’ evaluation of the result, + i.e., list elements and attributes are evaluated recursively.) + + - In Nix expressions, the primop `builtins.toXML` converts a term + to an XML representation. This is primarily useful for passing + structured information to builders. + + - You can now unambiguously specify which derivation to build or + install in `nix-env`, `nix-instantiate` and `nix-build` using the + `--attr` / `-A` flags, which takes an attribute name as argument. + (Unlike symbolic package names such as `subversion-1.4.0`, attribute + names in an attribute set are unique.) For instance, a quick way to + perform a test build of a package in Nixpkgs is `nix-build + pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix -A + foo`. `nix-env -q + --attr` shows the attribute names corresponding to each derivation. + + - If the top-level Nix expression used by `nix-env`, `nix-instantiate` + or `nix-build` evaluates to a function whose arguments all have + default values, the function will be called automatically. Also, the + new command-line switch `--arg + name + value` can be used to specify function arguments on the command + line. + + - `nix-install-package --url + URL` allows a package to be installed directly from the given URL. + + - Nix now works behind an HTTP proxy server; just set the standard + environment variables http\_proxy, https\_proxy, ftp\_proxy or + all\_proxy appropriately. Functions such as `fetchurl` in Nixpkgs + also respect these variables. + + - `nix-build -o + symlink` allows the symlink to the build result to be named + something other than `result`. + + - Platform support: + + - Support for 64-bit platforms, provided a [suitably patched ATerm + library](http://bugzilla.sen.cwi.nl:8080/show_bug.cgi?id=606) is + used. Also, files larger than 2 GiB are now supported. + + - Added support for Cygwin (Windows, `i686-cygwin`), Mac OS X on + Intel (`i686-darwin`) and Linux on PowerPC (`powerpc-linux`). + + - Users of SMP and multicore machines will appreciate that the + number of builds to be performed in parallel can now be + specified in the configuration file in the `build-max-jobs` + setting. + + - Garbage collector improvements: + + - Open files (such as running programs) are now used as roots of + the garbage collector. This prevents programs that have been + uninstalled from being garbage collected while they are still + running. The script that detects these additional runtime roots + (`find-runtime-roots.pl`) is inherently system-specific, but it + should work on Linux and on all platforms that have the `lsof` + utility. + + - `nix-store --gc` (a.k.a. `nix-collect-garbage`) prints out the + number of bytes freed on standard output. `nix-store + --gc --print-dead` shows how many bytes would be freed by an + actual garbage collection. + + - `nix-collect-garbage -d` removes all old generations of *all* + profiles before calling the actual garbage collector (`nix-store + --gc`). This is an easy way to get rid of all old packages in + the Nix store. + + - `nix-store` now has an operation `--delete` to delete specific + paths from the Nix store. It won’t delete reachable + (non-garbage) paths unless `--ignore-liveness` is specified. + + - Berkeley DB 4.4’s process registry feature is used to recover from + crashed Nix processes. + + - A performance issue has been fixed with the `referer` table, which + stores the inverse of the `references` table (i.e., it tells you + what store paths refer to a given path). Maintaining this table + could take a quadratic amount of time, as well as a quadratic amount + of Berkeley DB log file space (in particular when running the + garbage collector) (`NIX-23`). + + - Nix now catches the `TERM` and `HUP` signals in addition to the + `INT` signal. So you can now do a `killall + nix-store` without triggering a database recovery. + + - `bsdiff` updated to version 4.3. + + - Substantial performance improvements in expression evaluation and + `nix-env -qa`, all thanks to [Valgrind](http://valgrind.org/). + Memory use has been reduced by a factor 8 or so. Big speedup by + memoisation of path hashing. + + - Lots of bug fixes, notably: + + - Make sure that the garbage collector can run successfully when + the disk is full (`NIX-18`). + + - `nix-env` now locks the profile to prevent races between + concurrent `nix-env` operations on the same profile (`NIX-7`). + + - Removed misleading messages from `nix-env -i` (e.g., + ``installing + `foo'`` followed by ``uninstalling + `foo'``) (`NIX-17`). + + - Nix source distributions are a lot smaller now since we no longer + include a full copy of the Berkeley DB source distribution (but only + the bits we need). + + - Header files are now installed so that external programs can use the + Nix libraries. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.11.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.11.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..d2f4d73aa --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.11.md @@ -0,0 +1,167 @@ +# Release 0.11 (2007-12-31) + +Nix 0.11 has many improvements over the previous stable release. The +most important improvement is secure multi-user support. It also +features many usability enhancements and language extensions, many of +them prompted by NixOS, the purely functional Linux distribution based +on Nix. Here is an (incomplete) list: + + - Secure multi-user support. A single Nix store can now be shared + between multiple (possible untrusted) users. This is an important + feature for NixOS, where it allows non-root users to install + software. The old setuid method for sharing a store between multiple + users has been removed. Details for setting up a multi-user store + can be found in the manual. + + - The new command `nix-copy-closure` gives you an easy and efficient + way to exchange software between machines. It copies the missing + parts of the closure of a set of store path to or from a remote + machine via `ssh`. + + - A new kind of string literal: strings between double single-quotes + (`''`) have indentation “intelligently” removed. This allows large + strings (such as shell scripts or configuration file fragments in + NixOS) to cleanly follow the indentation of the surrounding + expression. It also requires much less escaping, since `''` is less + common in most languages than `"`. + + - `nix-env` `--set` modifies the current generation of a profile so + that it contains exactly the specified derivation, and nothing else. + For example, `nix-env -p /nix/var/nix/profiles/browser --set + firefox` lets the profile named `browser` contain just Firefox. + + - `nix-env` now maintains meta-information about installed packages in + profiles. The meta-information is the contents of the `meta` + attribute of derivations, such as `description` or `homepage`. The + command `nix-env -q --xml + --meta` shows all meta-information. + + - `nix-env` now uses the `meta.priority` attribute of derivations to + resolve filename collisions between packages. Lower priority values + denote a higher priority. For instance, the GCC wrapper package and + the Binutils package in Nixpkgs both have a file `bin/ld`, so + previously if you tried to install both you would get a collision. + Now, on the other hand, the GCC wrapper declares a higher priority + than Binutils, so the former’s `bin/ld` is symlinked in the user + environment. + + - `nix-env -i / -u`: instead of breaking package ties by version, + break them by priority and version number. That is, if there are + multiple packages with the same name, then pick the package with the + highest priority, and only use the version if there are multiple + packages with the same priority. + + This makes it possible to mark specific versions/variant in Nixpkgs + more or less desirable than others. A typical example would be a + beta version of some package (e.g., `gcc-4.2.0rc1`) which should not + be installed even though it is the highest version, except when it + is explicitly selected (e.g., `nix-env -i + gcc-4.2.0rc1`). + + - `nix-env --set-flag` allows meta attributes of installed packages to + be modified. There are several attributes that can be usefully + modified, because they affect the behaviour of `nix-env` or the user + environment build script: + + - `meta.priority` can be changed to resolve filename clashes (see + above). + + - `meta.keep` can be set to `true` to prevent the package from + being upgraded or replaced. Useful if you want to hang on to an + older version of a package. + + - `meta.active` can be set to `false` to “disable” the package. + That is, no symlinks will be generated to the files of the + package, but it remains part of the profile (so it won’t be + garbage-collected). Set it back to `true` to re-enable the + package. + + - `nix-env -q` now has a flag `--prebuilt-only` (`-b`) that causes + `nix-env` to show only those derivations whose output is already in + the Nix store or that can be substituted (i.e., downloaded from + somewhere). In other words, it shows the packages that can be + installed “quickly”, i.e., don’t need to be built from source. The + `-b` flag is also available in `nix-env -i` and `nix-env -u` to + filter out derivations for which no pre-built binary is available. + + - The new option `--argstr` (in `nix-env`, `nix-instantiate` and + `nix-build`) is like `--arg`, except that the value is a string. For + example, `--argstr system + i686-linux` is equivalent to `--arg system + \"i686-linux\"` (note that `--argstr` prevents annoying quoting + around shell arguments). + + - `nix-store` has a new operation `--read-log` (`-l`) `paths` that + shows the build log of the given paths. + + - Nix now uses Berkeley DB 4.5. The database is upgraded + automatically, but you should be careful not to use old versions of + Nix that still use Berkeley DB 4.4. + + - The option `--max-silent-time` (corresponding to the configuration + setting `build-max-silent-time`) allows you to set a timeout on + builds — if a build produces no output on `stdout` or `stderr` for + the given number of seconds, it is terminated. This is useful for + recovering automatically from builds that are stuck in an infinite + loop. + + - `nix-channel`: each subscribed channel is its own attribute in the + top-level expression generated for the channel. This allows + disambiguation (e.g. `nix-env + -i -A nixpkgs_unstable.firefox`). + + - The substitutes table has been removed from the database. This makes + operations such as `nix-pull` and `nix-channel --update` much, much + faster. + + - `nix-pull` now supports bzip2-compressed manifests. This speeds up + channels. + + - `nix-prefetch-url` now has a limited form of caching. This is used + by `nix-channel` to prevent unnecessary downloads when the channel + hasn’t changed. + + - `nix-prefetch-url` now by default computes the SHA-256 hash of the + file instead of the MD5 hash. In calls to `fetchurl` you should pass + the `sha256` attribute instead of `md5`. You can pass either a + hexadecimal or a base-32 encoding of the hash. + + - Nix can now perform builds in an automatically generated “chroot”. + This prevents a builder from accessing stuff outside of the Nix + store, and thus helps ensure purity. This is an experimental + feature. + + - The new command `nix-store + --optimise` reduces Nix store disk space usage by finding identical + files in the store and hard-linking them to each other. It typically + reduces the size of the store by something like 25-35%. + + - `~/.nix-defexpr` can now be a directory, in which case the Nix + expressions in that directory are combined into an attribute set, + with the file names used as the names of the attributes. The command + `nix-env + --import` (which set the `~/.nix-defexpr` symlink) is removed. + + - Derivations can specify the new special attribute + `allowedReferences` to enforce that the references in the output of + a derivation are a subset of a declared set of paths. For example, + if `allowedReferences` is an empty list, then the output must not + have any references. This is used in NixOS to check that generated + files such as initial ramdisks for booting Linux don’t have any + dependencies. + + - The new attribute `exportReferencesGraph` allows builders access to + the references graph of their inputs. This is used in NixOS for + tasks such as generating ISO-9660 images that contain a Nix store + populated with the closure of certain paths. + + - Fixed-output derivations (like `fetchurl`) can define the attribute + `impureEnvVars` to allow external environment variables to be passed + to builders. This is used in Nixpkgs to support proxy configuration, + among other things. + + - Several new built-in functions: `builtins.attrNames`, + `builtins.filterSource`, `builtins.isAttrs`, `builtins.isFunction`, + `builtins.listToAttrs`, `builtins.stringLength`, `builtins.sub`, + `builtins.substring`, `throw`, `builtins.trace`, + `builtins.readFile`. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.12.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.12.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..0dc727b69 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.12.md @@ -0,0 +1,123 @@ +# Release 0.12 (2008-11-20) + + - Nix no longer uses Berkeley DB to store Nix store metadata. The + principal advantages of the new storage scheme are: it works + properly over decent implementations of NFS (allowing Nix stores to + be shared between multiple machines); no recovery is needed when a + Nix process crashes; no write access is needed for read-only + operations; no more running out of Berkeley DB locks on certain + operations. + + You still need to compile Nix with Berkeley DB support if you want + Nix to automatically convert your old Nix store to the new schema. + If you don’t need this, you can build Nix with the `configure` + option `--disable-old-db-compat`. + + After the automatic conversion to the new schema, you can delete the + old Berkeley DB files: + + $ cd /nix/var/nix/db + $ rm __db* log.* derivers references referrers reserved validpaths DB_CONFIG + + The new metadata is stored in the directories `/nix/var/nix/db/info` + and `/nix/var/nix/db/referrer`. Though the metadata is stored in + human-readable plain-text files, they are not intended to be + human-editable, as Nix is rather strict about the format. + + The new storage schema may or may not require less disk space than + the Berkeley DB environment, mostly depending on the cluster size of + your file system. With 1 KiB clusters (which seems to be the `ext3` + default nowadays) it usually takes up much less space. + + - There is a new substituter that copies paths directly from other + (remote) Nix stores mounted somewhere in the filesystem. For + instance, you can speed up an installation by mounting some remote + Nix store that already has the packages in question via NFS or + `sshfs`. The environment variable NIX\_OTHER\_STORES specifies the + locations of the remote Nix directories, e.g. `/mnt/remote-fs/nix`. + + - New `nix-store` operations `--dump-db` and `--load-db` to dump and + reload the Nix database. + + - The garbage collector has a number of new options to allow only some + of the garbage to be deleted. The option `--max-freed N` tells the + collector to stop after at least N bytes have been deleted. The + option `--max-links + N` tells it to stop after the link count on `/nix/store` has dropped + below N. This is useful for very large Nix stores on filesystems + with a 32000 subdirectories limit (like `ext3`). The option + `--use-atime` causes store paths to be deleted in order of ascending + last access time. This allows non-recently used stuff to be deleted. + The option `--max-atime time` specifies an upper limit to the last + accessed time of paths that may be deleted. For instance, + + ``` + $ nix-store --gc -v --max-atime $(date +%s -d "2 months ago") + ``` + + deletes everything that hasn’t been accessed in two months. + + - `nix-env` now uses optimistic profile locking when performing an + operation like installing or upgrading, instead of setting an + exclusive lock on the profile. This allows multiple `nix-env -i / -u + / -e` operations on the same profile in parallel. If a `nix-env` + operation sees at the end that the profile was changed in the + meantime by another process, it will just restart. This is generally + cheap because the build results are still in the Nix store. + + - The option `--dry-run` is now supported by `nix-store -r` and + `nix-build`. + + - The information previously shown by `--dry-run` (i.e., which + derivations will be built and which paths will be substituted) is + now always shown by `nix-env`, `nix-store -r` and `nix-build`. The + total download size of substitutable paths is now also shown. For + instance, a build will show something like + + the following derivations will be built: + /nix/store/129sbxnk5n466zg6r1qmq1xjv9zymyy7-activate-configuration.sh.drv + /nix/store/7mzy971rdm8l566ch8hgxaf89x7lr7ik-upstart-jobs.drv + ... + the following paths will be downloaded/copied (30.02 MiB): + /nix/store/4m8pvgy2dcjgppf5b4cj5l6wyshjhalj-samba-3.2.4 + /nix/store/7h1kwcj29ip8vk26rhmx6bfjraxp0g4l-libunwind-0.98.6 + ... + + - Language features: + + - @-patterns as in Haskell. For instance, in a function definition + + f = args @ {x, y, z}: ...; + + `args` refers to the argument as a whole, which is further + pattern-matched against the attribute set pattern `{x, y, z}`. + + - “`...`” (ellipsis) patterns. An attribute set pattern can now + say `...` at the end of the attribute name list to specify that + the function takes *at least* the listed attributes, while + ignoring additional attributes. For instance, + + {stdenv, fetchurl, fuse, ...}: ... + + defines a function that accepts any attribute set that includes + at least the three listed attributes. + + - New primops: `builtins.parseDrvName` (split a package name + string like `"nix-0.12pre12876"` into its name and version + components, e.g. `"nix"` and `"0.12pre12876"`), + `builtins.compareVersions` (compare two version strings using + the same algorithm that `nix-env` uses), `builtins.length` + (efficiently compute the length of a list), `builtins.mul` + (integer multiplication), `builtins.div` (integer division). + + - `nix-prefetch-url` now supports `mirror://` URLs, provided that the + environment variable NIXPKGS\_ALL points at a Nixpkgs tree. + + - Removed the commands `nix-pack-closure` and `nix-unpack-closure`. + You can do almost the same thing but much more efficiently by doing + `nix-store --export + $(nix-store -qR paths) > closure` and `nix-store --import < + closure`. + + - Lots of bug fixes, including a big performance bug in the handling + of `with`-expressions. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.13.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.13.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..21f33e3db --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.13.md @@ -0,0 +1,55 @@ +# Release 0.13 (2009-11-05) + +This is primarily a bug fix release. It has some new features: + + - Syntactic sugar for writing nested attribute sets. Instead of + + { + foo = { + bar = 123; + xyzzy = true; + }; + a = { b = { c = "d"; }; }; + } + + you can write + + { + foo.bar = 123; + foo.xyzzy = true; + a.b.c = "d"; + } + + This is useful, for instance, in NixOS configuration files. + + - Support for Nix channels generated by Hydra, the Nix-based + continuous build system. (Hydra generates NAR archives on the fly, + so the size and hash of these archives isn’t known in advance.) + + - Support `i686-linux` builds directly on `x86_64-linux` Nix + installations. This is implemented using the `personality()` + syscall, which causes `uname` to return `i686` in child processes. + + - Various improvements to the `chroot` support. Building in a `chroot` + works quite well now. + + - Nix no longer blocks if it tries to build a path and another process + is already building the same path. Instead it tries to build another + buildable path first. This improves parallelism. + + - Support for large (\> 4 GiB) files in NAR archives. + + - Various (performance) improvements to the remote build mechanism. + + - New primops: `builtins.addErrorContext` (to add a string to stack + traces — useful for debugging), `builtins.isBool`, + `builtins.isString`, `builtins.isInt`, `builtins.intersectAttrs`. + + - OpenSolaris support (Sander van der Burg). + + - Stack traces are no longer displayed unless the `--show-trace` + option is used. + + - The scoping rules for `inherit + (e) ...` in recursive attribute sets have changed. The expression e + can now refer to the attributes defined in the containing set. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.14.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.14.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..9d58f2072 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.14.md @@ -0,0 +1,21 @@ +# Release 0.14 (2010-02-04) + +This release has the following improvements: + + - The garbage collector now starts deleting garbage much faster than + before. It no longer determines liveness of all paths in the store, + but does so on demand. + + - Added a new operation, `nix-store --query + --roots`, that shows the garbage collector roots that directly or + indirectly point to the given store paths. + + - Removed support for converting Berkeley DB-based Nix databases to + the new schema. + + - Removed the `--use-atime` and `--max-atime` garbage collector + options. They were not very useful in practice. + + - On Windows, Nix now requires Cygwin 1.7.x. + + - A few bug fixes. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.15.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.15.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..48e2a6f1b --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.15.md @@ -0,0 +1,5 @@ +# Release 0.15 (2010-03-17) + +This is a bug-fix release. Among other things, it fixes building on Mac +OS X (Snow Leopard), and improves the contents of `/etc/passwd` and +`/etc/group` in `chroot` builds. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.16.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.16.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..121bbde28 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.16.md @@ -0,0 +1,25 @@ +# Release 0.16 (2010-08-17) + +This release has the following improvements: + + - The Nix expression evaluator is now much faster in most cases: + typically, [3 to 8 times compared to the old + implementation](http://www.mail-archive.com/nix-dev@cs.uu.nl/msg04113.html). + It also uses less memory. It no longer depends on the ATerm library. + + - Support for configurable parallelism inside builders. Build scripts + have always had the ability to perform multiple build actions in + parallel (for instance, by running `make -j + 2`), but this was not desirable because the number of actions to be + performed in parallel was not configurable. Nix now has an option + `--cores + N` as well as a configuration setting `build-cores = + N` that causes the environment variable NIX\_BUILD\_CORES to be set + to N when the builder is invoked. The builder can use this at its + discretion to perform a parallel build, e.g., by calling `make -j + N`. In Nixpkgs, this can be enabled on a per-package basis by + setting the derivation attribute `enableParallelBuilding` to `true`. + + - `nix-store -q` now supports XML output through the `--xml` flag. + + - Several bug fixes. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.5.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.5.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..5cff2da0b --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.5.md @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +# Release 0.5 and earlier + +Please refer to the Subversion commit log messages. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.6.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.6.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..c816c9851 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.6.md @@ -0,0 +1,64 @@ +# Release 0.6 (2004-11-14) + + - Rewrite of the normalisation engine. + + - Multiple builds can now be performed in parallel (option `-j`). + + - Distributed builds. Nix can now call a shell script to forward + builds to Nix installations on remote machines, which may or may + not be of the same platform type. + + - Option `--fallback` allows recovery from broken substitutes. + + - Option `--keep-going` causes building of other (unaffected) + derivations to continue if one failed. + + - Improvements to the garbage collector (i.e., it should actually work + now). + + - Setuid Nix installations allow a Nix store to be shared among + multiple users. + + - Substitute registration is much faster now. + + - A utility `nix-build` to build a Nix expression and create a symlink + to the result int the current directory; useful for testing Nix + derivations. + + - Manual updates. + + - `nix-env` changes: + + - Derivations for other platforms are filtered out (which can be + overridden using `--system-filter`). + + - `--install` by default now uninstall previous derivations with + the same name. + + - `--upgrade` allows upgrading to a specific version. + + - New operation `--delete-generations` to remove profile + generations (necessary for effective garbage collection). + + - Nicer output (sorted, columnised). + + - More sensible verbosity levels all around (builder output is now + shown always, unless `-Q` is given). + + - Nix expression language changes: + + - New language construct: `with + E1; + E2` brings all attributes defined in the attribute set E1 in + scope in E2. + + - Added a `map` function. + + - Various new operators (e.g., string concatenation). + + - Expression evaluation is much faster. + + - An Emacs mode for editing Nix expressions (with syntax highlighting + and indentation) has been added. + + - Many bug fixes. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.7.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.7.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..d873fe890 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.7.md @@ -0,0 +1,21 @@ +# Release 0.7 (2005-01-12) + + - Binary patching. When upgrading components using pre-built binaries + (through nix-pull / nix-channel), Nix can automatically download and + apply binary patches to already installed components instead of full + downloads. Patching is “smart”: if there is a *sequence* of patches + to an installed component, Nix will use it. Patches are currently + generated automatically between Nixpkgs (pre-)releases. + + - Simplifications to the substitute mechanism. + + - Nix-pull now stores downloaded manifests in + `/nix/var/nix/manifests`. + + - Metadata on files in the Nix store is canonicalised after builds: + the last-modified timestamp is set to 0 (00:00:00 1/1/1970), the + mode is set to 0444 or 0555 (readable and possibly executable by + all; setuid/setgid bits are dropped), and the group is set to the + default. This ensures that the result of a build and an installation + through a substitute is the same; and that timestamp dependencies + are revealed. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.8.1.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.8.1.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..7629f81cb --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.8.1.md @@ -0,0 +1,8 @@ +# Release 0.8.1 (2005-04-13) + +This is a bug fix release. + + - Patch downloading was broken. + + - The garbage collector would not delete paths that had references + from invalid (but substitutable) paths. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.8.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.8.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..626c0c92b --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.8.md @@ -0,0 +1,166 @@ +# Release 0.8 (2005-04-11) + +NOTE: the hashing scheme in Nix 0.8 changed (as detailed below). As a +result, `nix-pull` manifests and channels built for Nix 0.7 and below +will not work anymore. However, the Nix expression language has not +changed, so you can still build from source. Also, existing user +environments continue to work. Nix 0.8 will automatically upgrade the +database schema of previous installations when it is first run. + +If you get the error message + + you have an old-style manifest `/nix/var/nix/manifests/[...]'; please + delete it + +you should delete previously downloaded manifests: + + $ rm /nix/var/nix/manifests/* + +If `nix-channel` gives the error message + + manifest `http://catamaran.labs.cs.uu.nl/dist/nix/channels/[channel]/MANIFEST' + is too old (i.e., for Nix <= 0.7) + +then you should unsubscribe from the offending channel (`nix-channel +--remove +URL`; leave out `/MANIFEST`), and subscribe to the same URL, with +`channels` replaced by `channels-v3` (e.g., +). + +Nix 0.8 has the following improvements: + + - The cryptographic hashes used in store paths are now 160 bits long, + but encoded in base-32 so that they are still only 32 characters + long (e.g., + `/nix/store/csw87wag8bqlqk7ipllbwypb14xainap-atk-1.9.0`). (This is + actually a 160 bit truncation of a SHA-256 hash.) + + - Big cleanups and simplifications of the basic store semantics. The + notion of “closure store expressions” is gone (and so is the notion + of “successors”); the file system references of a store path are now + just stored in the database. + + For instance, given any store path, you can query its closure: + + $ nix-store -qR $(which firefox) + ... lots of paths ... + + Also, Nix now remembers for each store path the derivation that + built it (the “deriver”): + + $ nix-store -qR $(which firefox) + /nix/store/4b0jx7vq80l9aqcnkszxhymsf1ffa5jd-firefox-1.0.1.drv + + So to see the build-time dependencies, you can do + + $ nix-store -qR $(nix-store -qd $(which firefox)) + + or, in a nicer format: + + $ nix-store -q --tree $(nix-store -qd $(which firefox)) + + File system references are also stored in reverse. For instance, you + can query all paths that directly or indirectly use a certain Glibc: + + $ nix-store -q --referrers-closure \ + /nix/store/8lz9yc6zgmc0vlqmn2ipcpkjlmbi51vv-glibc-2.3.4 + + - The concept of fixed-output derivations has been formalised. + Previously, functions such as `fetchurl` in Nixpkgs used a hack + (namely, explicitly specifying a store path hash) to prevent changes + to, say, the URL of the file from propagating upwards through the + dependency graph, causing rebuilds of everything. This can now be + done cleanly by specifying the `outputHash` and `outputHashAlgo` + attributes. Nix itself checks that the content of the output has the + specified hash. (This is important for maintaining certain + invariants necessary for future work on secure shared stores.) + + - One-click installation :-) It is now possible to install any + top-level component in Nixpkgs directly, through the web — see, + e.g., . All you + have to do is associate `/nix/bin/nix-install-package` with the MIME + type `application/nix-package` (or the extension `.nixpkg`), and + clicking on a package link will cause it to be installed, with all + appropriate dependencies. If you just want to install some specific + application, this is easier than subscribing to a channel. + + - `nix-store -r + PATHS` now builds all the derivations PATHS in parallel. Previously + it did them sequentially (though exploiting possible parallelism + between subderivations). This is nice for build farms. + + - `nix-channel` has new operations `--list` and `--remove`. + + - New ways of installing components into user environments: + + - Copy from another user environment: + + $ nix-env -i --from-profile .../other-profile firefox + + - Install a store derivation directly (bypassing the Nix + expression language entirely): + + $ nix-env -i /nix/store/z58v41v21xd3...-aterm-2.3.1.drv + + (This is used to implement `nix-install-package`, which is + therefore immune to evolution in the Nix expression language.) + + - Install an already built store path directly: + + $ nix-env -i /nix/store/hsyj5pbn0d9i...-aterm-2.3.1 + + - Install the result of a Nix expression specified as a + command-line argument: + + $ nix-env -f .../i686-linux.nix -i -E 'x: x.firefoxWrapper' + + The difference with the normal installation mode is that `-E` + does not use the `name` attributes of derivations. Therefore, + this can be used to disambiguate multiple derivations with the + same name. + + - A hash of the contents of a store path is now stored in the database + after a successful build. This allows you to check whether store + paths have been tampered with: `nix-store + --verify --check-contents`. + + - Implemented a concurrent garbage collector. It is now always safe to + run the garbage collector, even if other Nix operations are + happening simultaneously. + + However, there can still be GC races if you use `nix-instantiate` + and `nix-store + --realise` directly to build things. To prevent races, use the + `--add-root` flag of those commands. + + - The garbage collector now finally deletes paths in the right order + (i.e., topologically sorted under the “references” relation), thus + making it safe to interrupt the collector without risking a store + that violates the closure invariant. + + - Likewise, the substitute mechanism now downloads files in the right + order, thus preserving the closure invariant at all times. + + - The result of `nix-build` is now registered as a root of the garbage + collector. If the `./result` link is deleted, the GC root disappears + automatically. + + - The behaviour of the garbage collector can be changed globally by + setting options in `/nix/etc/nix/nix.conf`. + + - `gc-keep-derivations` specifies whether deriver links should be + followed when searching for live paths. + + - `gc-keep-outputs` specifies whether outputs of derivations + should be followed when searching for live paths. + + - `env-keep-derivations` specifies whether user environments + should store the paths of derivations when they are added (thus + keeping the derivations alive). + + - New `nix-env` query flags `--drv-path` and `--out-path`. + + - `fetchurl` allows SHA-1 and SHA-256 in addition to MD5. Just specify + the attribute `sha1` or `sha256` instead of `md5`. + + - Manual updates. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.9.1.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.9.1.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..9c20eed1b --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.9.1.md @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ +# Release 0.9.1 (2005-09-20) + +This bug fix release addresses a problem with the ATerm library when the +`--with-aterm` flag in `configure` was *not* used. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.9.2.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.9.2.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..0caaf28de --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.9.2.md @@ -0,0 +1,11 @@ +# Release 0.9.2 (2005-09-21) + +This bug fix release fixes two problems on Mac OS X: + + - If Nix was linked against statically linked versions of the ATerm or + Berkeley DB library, there would be dynamic link errors at runtime. + + - `nix-pull` and `nix-push` intermittently failed due to race + conditions involving pipes and child processes with error messages + such as `open2: open(GLOB(0x180b2e4), >&=9) failed: Bad + file descriptor at /nix/bin/nix-pull line 77` (issue `NIX-14`). diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.9.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.9.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..8c3e1b28e --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.9.md @@ -0,0 +1,72 @@ +# Release 0.9 (2005-09-16) + +NOTE: this version of Nix uses Berkeley DB 4.3 instead of 4.2. The +database is upgraded automatically, but you should be careful not to use +old versions of Nix that still use Berkeley DB 4.2. In particular, if +you use a Nix installed through Nix, you should run + + $ nix-store --clear-substitutes + +first. + + - Unpacking of patch sequences is much faster now since we no longer + do redundant unpacking and repacking of intermediate paths. + + - Nix now uses Berkeley DB 4.3. + + - The `derivation` primitive is lazier. Attributes of dependent + derivations can mutually refer to each other (as long as there are + no data dependencies on the `outPath` and `drvPath` attributes + computed by `derivation`). + + For example, the expression `derivation + attrs` now evaluates to (essentially) + + attrs // { + type = "derivation"; + outPath = derivation! attrs; + drvPath = derivation! attrs; + } + + where `derivation!` is a primop that does the actual derivation + instantiation (i.e., it does what `derivation` used to do). The + advantage is that it allows commands such as `nix-env -qa` and + `nix-env -i` to be much faster since they no longer need to + instantiate all derivations, just the `name` attribute. + + Also, it allows derivations to cyclically reference each other, for + example, + + webServer = derivation { + ... + hostName = "svn.cs.uu.nl"; + services = [svnService]; + }; + + svnService = derivation { + ... + hostName = webServer.hostName; + }; + + Previously, this would yield a black hole (infinite recursion). + + - `nix-build` now defaults to using `./default.nix` if no Nix + expression is specified. + + - `nix-instantiate`, when applied to a Nix expression that evaluates + to a function, will call the function automatically if all its + arguments have defaults. + + - Nix now uses libtool to build dynamic libraries. This reduces the + size of executables. + + - A new list concatenation operator `++`. For example, `[1 2 3] ++ + [4 5 + 6]` evaluates to `[1 2 3 4 5 + 6]`. + + - Some currently undocumented primops to support low-level build + management using Nix (i.e., using Nix as a Make replacement). See + the commit messages for `r3578` and `r3580`. + + - Various bug fixes and performance improvements. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.0.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.0.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..025f827d9 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.0.md @@ -0,0 +1,68 @@ +# Release 1.0 (2012-05-11) + +There have been numerous improvements and bug fixes since the previous +release. Here are the most significant: + + - Nix can now optionally use the Boehm garbage collector. This + significantly reduces the Nix evaluator’s memory footprint, + especially when evaluating large NixOS system configurations. It can + be enabled using the `--enable-gc` configure option. + + - Nix now uses SQLite for its database. This is faster and more + flexible than the old *ad hoc* format. SQLite is also used to cache + the manifests in `/nix/var/nix/manifests`, resulting in a + significant speedup. + + - Nix now has an search path for expressions. The search path is set + using the environment variable NIX\_PATH and the `-I` command line + option. In Nix expressions, paths between angle brackets are used to + specify files that must be looked up in the search path. For + instance, the expression `` looks for a file + `nixpkgs/default.nix` relative to every element in the search path. + + - The new command `nix-build --run-env` builds all dependencies of a + derivation, then starts a shell in an environment containing all + variables from the derivation. This is useful for reproducing the + environment of a derivation for development. + + - The new command `nix-store --verify-path` verifies that the contents + of a store path have not changed. + + - The new command `nix-store --print-env` prints out the environment + of a derivation in a format that can be evaluated by a shell. + + - Attribute names can now be arbitrary strings. For instance, you can + write `{ "foo-1.2" = …; "bla bla" = …; }."bla + bla"`. + + - Attribute selection can now provide a default value using the `or` + operator. For instance, the expression `x.y.z or e` evaluates to the + attribute `x.y.z` if it exists, and `e` otherwise. + + - The right-hand side of the `?` operator can now be an attribute + path, e.g., `attrs ? + a.b.c`. + + - On Linux, Nix will now make files in the Nix store immutable on + filesystems that support it. This prevents accidental modification + of files in the store by the root user. + + - Nix has preliminary support for derivations with multiple outputs. + This is useful because it allows parts of a package to be deployed + and garbage-collected separately. For instance, development parts of + a package such as header files or static libraries would typically + not be part of the closure of an application, resulting in reduced + disk usage and installation time. + + - The Nix store garbage collector is faster and holds the global lock + for a shorter amount of time. + + - The option `--timeout` (corresponding to the configuration setting + `build-timeout`) allows you to set an absolute timeout on builds — + if a build runs for more than the given number of seconds, it is + terminated. This is useful for recovering automatically from builds + that are stuck in an infinite loop but keep producing output, and + for which `--max-silent-time` is ineffective. + + - Nix development has moved to GitHub + (). diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.1.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.1.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..1e658fe15 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.1.md @@ -0,0 +1,61 @@ +# Release 1.1 (2012-07-18) + +This release has the following improvements: + + - On Linux, when doing a chroot build, Nix now uses various namespace + features provided by the Linux kernel to improve build isolation. + Namely: + + - The private network namespace ensures that builders cannot talk + to the outside world (or vice versa): each build only sees a + private loopback interface. This also means that two concurrent + builds can listen on the same port (e.g. as part of a test) + without conflicting with each other. + + - The PID namespace causes each build to start as PID 1. Processes + outside of the chroot are not visible to those on the inside. On + the other hand, processes inside the chroot *are* visible from + the outside (though with different PIDs). + + - The IPC namespace prevents the builder from communicating with + outside processes using SysV IPC mechanisms (shared memory, + message queues, semaphores). It also ensures that all IPC + objects are destroyed when the builder exits. + + - The UTS namespace ensures that builders see a hostname of + `localhost` rather than the actual hostname. + + - The private mount namespace was already used by Nix to ensure + that the bind-mounts used to set up the chroot are cleaned up + automatically. + + - Build logs are now compressed using `bzip2`. The command `nix-store + -l` decompresses them on the fly. This can be disabled by setting + the option `build-compress-log` to `false`. + + - The creation of build logs in `/nix/var/log/nix/drvs` can be + disabled by setting the new option `build-keep-log` to `false`. This + is useful, for instance, for Hydra build machines. + + - Nix now reserves some space in `/nix/var/nix/db/reserved` to ensure + that the garbage collector can run successfully if the disk is full. + This is necessary because SQLite transactions fail if the disk is + full. + + - Added a basic `fetchurl` function. This is not intended to replace + the `fetchurl` in Nixpkgs, but is useful for bootstrapping; e.g., it + will allow us to get rid of the bootstrap binaries in the Nixpkgs + source tree and download them instead. You can use it by doing + `import { url = + url; sha256 = + "hash"; }`. (Shea Levy) + + - Improved RPM spec file. (Michel Alexandre Salim) + + - Support for on-demand socket-based activation in the Nix daemon with + `systemd`. + + - Added a manpage for nix.conf5. + + - When using the Nix daemon, the `-s` flag in `nix-env -qa` is now + much faster. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.10.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.10.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..2bb859536 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.10.md @@ -0,0 +1,31 @@ +# Release 1.10 (2015-09-03) + +This is primarily a bug fix release. It also has a number of new +features: + + - A number of builtin functions have been added to reduce + Nixpkgs/NixOS evaluation time and memory consumption: `all`, `any`, + `concatStringsSep`, `foldl’`, `genList`, `replaceStrings`, `sort`. + + - The garbage collector is more robust when the disk is full. + + - Nix supports a new API for building derivations that doesn’t require + a `.drv` file to be present on disk; it only requires an in-memory + representation of the derivation. This is used by the Hydra + continuous build system to make remote builds more efficient. + + - The function `` now uses a *builtin* builder (i.e. + it doesn’t require starting an external process; the download is + performed by Nix itself). This ensures that derivation paths don’t + change when Nix is upgraded, and obviates the need for ugly hacks to + support chroot execution. + + - `--version -v` now prints some configuration information, in + particular what compile-time optional features are enabled, and the + paths of various directories. + + - Build users have their supplementary groups set correctly. + +This release has contributions from Eelco Dolstra, Guillaume Maudoux, +Iwan Aucamp, Jaka Hudoklin, Kirill Elagin, Ludovic Courtès, Manolis +Ragkousis, Nicolas B. Pierron and Shea Levy. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.11.10.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.11.10.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..d1efe1d0b --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.11.10.md @@ -0,0 +1,21 @@ +# Release 1.11.10 (2017-06-12) + +This release fixes a security bug in Nix’s “build user” build isolation +mechanism. Previously, Nix builders had the ability to create setuid +binaries owned by a `nixbld` user. Such a binary could then be used by +an attacker to assume a `nixbld` identity and interfere with subsequent +builds running under the same UID. + +To prevent this issue, Nix now disallows builders to create setuid and +setgid binaries. On Linux, this is done using a seccomp BPF filter. Note +that this imposes a small performance penalty (e.g. 1% when building GNU +Hello). Using seccomp, we now also prevent the creation of extended +attributes and POSIX ACLs since these cannot be represented in the NAR +format and (in the case of POSIX ACLs) allow bypassing regular Nix store +permissions. On macOS, the restriction is implemented using the existing +sandbox mechanism, which now uses a minimal “allow all except the +creation of setuid/setgid binaries” profile when regular sandboxing is +disabled. On other platforms, the “build user” mechanism is now +disabled. + +Thanks go to Linus Heckemann for discovering and reporting this bug. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.11.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.11.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..381887bd8 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.11.md @@ -0,0 +1,87 @@ +# Release 1.11 (2016-01-19) + +This is primarily a bug fix release. It also has a number of new +features: + + - `nix-prefetch-url` can now download URLs specified in a Nix + expression. For example, + + $ nix-prefetch-url -A hello.src + + will prefetch the file specified by the `fetchurl` call in the + attribute `hello.src` from the Nix expression in the current + directory, and print the cryptographic hash of the resulting file on + stdout. This differs from `nix-build -A + hello.src` in that it doesn't verify the hash, and is thus useful + when you’re updating a Nix expression. + + You can also prefetch the result of functions that unpack a tarball, + such as `fetchFromGitHub`. For example: + + $ nix-prefetch-url --unpack https://github.com/NixOS/patchelf/archive/0.8.tar.gz + + or from a Nix expression: + + $ nix-prefetch-url -A nix-repl.src + + - The builtin function `` now supports downloading + and unpacking NARs. This removes the need to have multiple downloads + in the Nixpkgs stdenv bootstrap process (like a separate busybox + binary for Linux, or curl/mkdir/sh/bzip2 for Darwin). Now all those + files can be combined into a single NAR, optionally compressed using + `xz`. + + - Nix now supports SHA-512 hashes for verifying fixed-output + derivations, and in `builtins.hashString`. + + - The new flag `--option build-repeat + N` will cause every build to be executed N+1 times. If the build + output differs between any round, the build is rejected, and the + output paths are not registered as valid. This is primarily useful + to verify build determinism. (We already had a `--check` option to + repeat a previously succeeded build. However, with `--check`, + non-deterministic builds are registered in the DB. Preventing that + is useful for Hydra to ensure that non-deterministic builds don't + end up getting published to the binary cache.) + + - The options `--check` and `--option + build-repeat N`, if they detect a difference between two runs of the + same derivation and `-K` is given, will make the output of the other + run available under `store-path-check`. This makes it easier to + investigate the non-determinism using tools like `diffoscope`, e.g., + + $ nix-build pkgs/stdenv/linux -A stage1.pkgs.zlib --check -K + error: derivation ‘/nix/store/l54i8wlw2265…-zlib-1.2.8.drv’ may not + be deterministic: output ‘/nix/store/11a27shh6n2i…-zlib-1.2.8’ + differs from ‘/nix/store/11a27shh6n2i…-zlib-1.2.8-check’ + + $ diffoscope /nix/store/11a27shh6n2i…-zlib-1.2.8 /nix/store/11a27shh6n2i…-zlib-1.2.8-check + … + ├── lib/libz.a + │ ├── metadata + │ │ @@ -1,15 +1,15 @@ + │ │ -rw-r--r-- 30001/30000 3096 Jan 12 15:20 2016 adler32.o + … + │ │ +rw-r--r-- 30001/30000 3096 Jan 12 15:28 2016 adler32.o + … + + - Improved FreeBSD support. + + - `nix-env -qa --xml --meta` now prints license information. + + - The maximum number of parallel TCP connections that the binary cache + substituter will use has been decreased from 150 to 25. This should + prevent upsetting some broken NAT routers, and also improves + performance. + + - All "chroot"-containing strings got renamed to "sandbox". In + particular, some Nix options got renamed, but the old names are + still accepted as lower-priority aliases. + +This release has contributions from Anders Claesson, Anthony Cowley, +Bjørn Forsman, Brian McKenna, Danny Wilson, davidak, Eelco Dolstra, +Fabian Schmitthenner, FrankHB, Ilya Novoselov, janus, Jim Garrison, John +Ericson, Jude Taylor, Ludovic Courtès, Manuel Jacob, Mathnerd314, Pascal +Wittmann, Peter Simons, Philip Potter, Preston Bennes, Rommel M. +Martinez, Sander van der Burg, Shea Levy, Tim Cuthbertson, Tuomas +Tynkkynen, Utku Demir and Vladimír Čunát. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.2.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.2.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..e62b2dac9 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.2.md @@ -0,0 +1,97 @@ +# Release 1.2 (2012-12-06) + +This release has the following improvements and changes: + + - Nix has a new binary substituter mechanism: the *binary cache*. A + binary cache contains pre-built binaries of Nix packages. Whenever + Nix wants to build a missing Nix store path, it will check a set of + binary caches to see if any of them has a pre-built binary of that + path. The configuration setting `binary-caches` contains a list of + URLs of binary caches. For instance, doing + + $ nix-env -i thunderbird --option binary-caches http://cache.nixos.org + + will install Thunderbird and its dependencies, using the available + pre-built binaries in . The main advantage + over the old “manifest”-based method of getting pre-built binaries + is that you don’t have to worry about your manifest being in sync + with the Nix expressions you’re installing from; i.e., you don’t + need to run `nix-pull` to update your manifest. It’s also more + scalable because you don’t need to redownload a giant manifest file + every time. + + A Nix channel can provide a binary cache URL that will be used + automatically if you subscribe to that channel. If you use the + Nixpkgs or NixOS channels () you + automatically get the cache . + + Binary caches are created using `nix-push`. For details on the + operation and format of binary caches, see the `nix-push` manpage. + More details are provided in [this nix-dev + posting](https://nixos.org/nix-dev/2012-September/009826.html). + + - Multiple output support should now be usable. A derivation can + declare that it wants to produce multiple store paths by saying + something like + + outputs = [ "lib" "headers" "doc" ]; + + This will cause Nix to pass the intended store path of each output + to the builder through the environment variables `lib`, `headers` + and `doc`. Other packages can refer to a specific output by + referring to `pkg.output`, e.g. + + buildInputs = [ pkg.lib pkg.headers ]; + + If you install a package with multiple outputs using `nix-env`, each + output path will be symlinked into the user environment. + + - Dashes are now valid as part of identifiers and attribute names. + + - The new operation `nix-store --repair-path` allows corrupted or + missing store paths to be repaired by redownloading them. `nix-store + --verify --check-contents + --repair` will scan and repair all paths in the Nix store. + Similarly, `nix-env`, `nix-build`, `nix-instantiate` and `nix-store + --realise` have a `--repair` flag to detect and fix bad paths by + rebuilding or redownloading them. + + - Nix no longer sets the immutable bit on files in the Nix store. + Instead, the recommended way to guard the Nix store against + accidental modification on Linux is to make it a read-only bind + mount, like this: + + $ mount --bind /nix/store /nix/store + $ mount -o remount,ro,bind /nix/store + + Nix will automatically make `/nix/store` writable as needed (using a + private mount namespace) to allow modifications. + + - Store optimisation (replacing identical files in the store with hard + links) can now be done automatically every time a path is added to + the store. This is enabled by setting the configuration option + `auto-optimise-store` to `true` (disabled by default). + + - Nix now supports `xz` compression for NARs in addition to `bzip2`. + It compresses about 30% better on typical archives and decompresses + about twice as fast. + + - Basic Nix expression evaluation profiling: setting the environment + variable NIX\_COUNT\_CALLS to `1` will cause Nix to print how many + times each primop or function was executed. + + - New primops: `concatLists`, `elem`, `elemAt` and `filter`. + + - The command `nix-copy-closure` has a new flag `--use-substitutes` + (`-s`) to download missing paths on the target machine using the + substitute mechanism. + + - The command `nix-worker` has been renamed to `nix-daemon`. Support + for running the Nix worker in “slave” mode has been removed. + + - The `--help` flag of every Nix command now invokes `man`. + + - Chroot builds are now supported on systemd machines. + +This release has contributions from Eelco Dolstra, Florian Friesdorf, +Mats Erik Andersson and Shea Levy. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.3.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.3.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..0c7b48380 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.3.md @@ -0,0 +1,10 @@ +# Release 1.3 (2013-01-04) + +This is primarily a bug fix release. When this version is first run on +Linux, it removes any immutable bits from the Nix store and increases +the schema version of the Nix store. (The previous release removed +support for setting the immutable bit; this release clears any remaining +immutable bits to make certain operations more efficient.) + +This release has contributions from Eelco Dolstra and Stuart +Pernsteiner. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.4.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.4.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..d6d2227f8 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.4.md @@ -0,0 +1,22 @@ +# Release 1.4 (2013-02-26) + +This release fixes a security bug in multi-user operation. It was +possible for derivations to cause the mode of files outside of the Nix +store to be changed to 444 (read-only but world-readable) by creating +hard links to those files +([details](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/commit/5526a282b5b44e9296e61e07d7d2626a79141ac4)). + +There are also the following improvements: + + - New built-in function: `builtins.hashString`. + + - Build logs are now stored in `/nix/var/log/nix/drvs/XX/`, where XX + is the first two characters of the derivation. This is useful on + machines that keep a lot of build logs (such as Hydra servers). + + - The function `corepkgs/fetchurl` can now make the downloaded file + executable. This will allow getting rid of all bootstrap binaries in + the Nixpkgs source tree. + + - Language change: The expression `"${./path} + ..."` now evaluates to a string instead of a path. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.5.1.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.5.1.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..72b29518e --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.5.1.md @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ +# Release 1.5.1 (2013-02-28) + +The bug fix to the bug fix had a bug itself, of course. But this time it +will work for sure\! diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.5.2.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.5.2.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..508580554 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.5.2.md @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ +# Release 1.5.2 (2013-05-13) + +This is primarily a bug fix release. It has contributions from Eelco +Dolstra, Lluís Batlle i Rossell and Shea Levy. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.5.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.5.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..d2ccf8a5d --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.5.md @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ +# Release 1.5 (2013-02-27) + +This is a brown paper bag release to fix a regression introduced by the +hard link security fix in 1.4. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.6.1.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.6.1.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..ed974fe0b --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.6.1.md @@ -0,0 +1,32 @@ +# Release 1.6.1 (2013-10-28) + +This is primarily a bug fix release. Changes of interest are: + + - Nix 1.6 accidentally changed the semantics of antiquoted paths in + strings, such as `"${/foo}/bar"`. This release reverts to the Nix + 1.5.3 behaviour. + + - Previously, Nix optimised expressions such as `"${expr}"` to expr. + Thus it neither checked whether expr could be coerced to a string, + nor applied such coercions. This meant that `"${123}"` evaluatued to + `123`, and `"${./foo}"` evaluated to `./foo` (even though `"${./foo} + "` evaluates to `"/nix/store/hash-foo "`). Nix now checks the type + of antiquoted expressions and applies coercions. + + - Nix now shows the exact position of undefined variables. In + particular, undefined variable errors in a `with` previously didn't + show *any* position information, so this makes it a lot easier to + fix such errors. + + - Undefined variables are now treated consistently. Previously, the + `tryEval` function would catch undefined variables inside a `with` + but not outside. Now `tryEval` never catches undefined variables. + + - Bash completion in `nix-shell` now works correctly. + + - Stack traces are less verbose: they no longer show calls to builtin + functions and only show a single line for each derivation on the + call stack. + + - New built-in function: `builtins.typeOf`, which returns the type of + its argument as a string. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.6.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.6.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..a4583f4e6 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.6.md @@ -0,0 +1,72 @@ +# Release 1.6 (2013-09-10) + +In addition to the usual bug fixes, this release has several new +features: + + - The command `nix-build --run-env` has been renamed to `nix-shell`. + + - `nix-shell` now sources `$stdenv/setup` *inside* the interactive + shell, rather than in a parent shell. This ensures that shell + functions defined by `stdenv` can be used in the interactive shell. + + - `nix-shell` has a new flag `--pure` to clear the environment, so you + get an environment that more closely corresponds to the “real” Nix + build. + + - `nix-shell` now sets the shell prompt (PS1) to ensure that Nix + shells are distinguishable from your regular shells. + + - `nix-env` no longer requires a `*` argument to match all packages, + so `nix-env -qa` is equivalent to `nix-env + -qa '*'`. + + - `nix-env -i` has a new flag `--remove-all` (`-r`) to remove all + previous packages from the profile. This makes it easier to do + declarative package management similar to NixOS’s + `environment.systemPackages`. For instance, if you have a + specification `my-packages.nix` like this: + + with import {}; + [ thunderbird + geeqie + ... + ] + + then after any change to this file, you can run: + + $ nix-env -f my-packages.nix -ir + + to update your profile to match the specification. + + - The ‘`with`’ language construct is now more lazy. It only evaluates + its argument if a variable might actually refer to an attribute in + the argument. For instance, this now works: + + let + pkgs = with pkgs; { foo = "old"; bar = foo; } // overrides; + overrides = { foo = "new"; }; + in pkgs.bar + + This evaluates to `"new"`, while previously it gave an “infinite + recursion” error. + + - Nix now has proper integer arithmetic operators. For instance, you + can write `x + y` instead of `builtins.add x y`, or `x < + y` instead of `builtins.lessThan x y`. The comparison operators also + work on strings. + + - On 64-bit systems, Nix integers are now 64 bits rather than 32 bits. + + - When using the Nix daemon, the `nix-daemon` worker process now runs + on the same CPU as the client, on systems that support setting CPU + affinity. This gives a significant speedup on some systems. + + - If a stack overflow occurs in the Nix evaluator, you now get a + proper error message (rather than “Segmentation fault”) on some + systems. + + - In addition to directories, you can now bind-mount regular files in + chroots through the (now misnamed) option `build-chroot-dirs`. + +This release has contributions from Domen Kožar, Eelco Dolstra, Florian +Friesdorf, Gergely Risko, Ivan Kozik, Ludovic Courtès and Shea Levy. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.7.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.7.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..71a327ed6 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.7.md @@ -0,0 +1,140 @@ +# Release 1.7 (2014-04-11) + +In addition to the usual bug fixes, this release has the following new +features: + + - Antiquotation is now allowed inside of quoted attribute names (e.g. + `set."${foo}"`). In the case where the attribute name is just a + single antiquotation, the quotes can be dropped (e.g. the above + example can be written `set.${foo}`). If an attribute name inside of + a set declaration evaluates to `null` (e.g. `{ ${null} = false; }`), + then that attribute is not added to the set. + + - Experimental support for cryptographically signed binary caches. See + [the commit for + details](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/commit/0fdf4da0e979f992db75cc17376e455ddc5a96d8). + + - An experimental new substituter, `download-via-ssh`, that fetches + binaries from remote machines via SSH. Specifying the flags + `--option + use-ssh-substituter true --option ssh-substituter-hosts + user@hostname` will cause Nix to download binaries from the + specified machine, if it has them. + + - `nix-store -r` and `nix-build` have a new flag, `--check`, that + builds a previously built derivation again, and prints an error + message if the output is not exactly the same. This helps to verify + whether a derivation is truly deterministic. For example: + + $ nix-build '' -A patchelf + … + $ nix-build '' -A patchelf --check + … + error: derivation `/nix/store/1ipvxs…-patchelf-0.6' may not be deterministic: + hash mismatch in output `/nix/store/4pc1dm…-patchelf-0.6.drv' + + - The `nix-instantiate` flags `--eval-only` and `--parse-only` have + been renamed to `--eval` and `--parse`, respectively. + + - `nix-instantiate`, `nix-build` and `nix-shell` now have a flag + `--expr` (or `-E`) that allows you to specify the expression to be + evaluated as a command line argument. For instance, `nix-instantiate + --eval -E + '1 + 2'` will print `3`. + + - `nix-shell` improvements: + + - It has a new flag, `--packages` (or `-p`), that sets up a build + environment containing the specified packages from Nixpkgs. For + example, the command + + $ nix-shell -p sqlite xorg.libX11 hello + + will start a shell in which the given packages are present. + + - It now uses `shell.nix` as the default expression, falling back + to `default.nix` if the former doesn’t exist. This makes it + convenient to have a `shell.nix` in your project to set up a + nice development environment. + + - It evaluates the derivation attribute `shellHook`, if set. Since + `stdenv` does not normally execute this hook, it allows you to + do `nix-shell`-specific setup. + + - It preserves the user’s timezone setting. + + - In chroots, Nix now sets up a `/dev` containing only a minimal set + of devices (such as `/dev/null`). Note that it only does this if you + *don’t* have `/dev` listed in your `build-chroot-dirs` setting; + otherwise, it will bind-mount the `/dev` from outside the chroot. + + Similarly, if you don’t have `/dev/pts` listed in + `build-chroot-dirs`, Nix will mount a private `devpts` filesystem on + the chroot’s `/dev/pts`. + + - New built-in function: `builtins.toJSON`, which returns a JSON + representation of a value. + + - `nix-env -q` has a new flag `--json` to print a JSON representation + of the installed or available packages. + + - `nix-env` now supports meta attributes with more complex values, + such as attribute sets. + + - The `-A` flag now allows attribute names with dots in them, e.g. + + $ nix-instantiate --eval '' -A 'config.systemd.units."nscd.service".text' + + - The `--max-freed` option to `nix-store --gc` now accepts a unit + specifier. For example, `nix-store --gc --max-freed + 1G` will free up to 1 gigabyte of disk space. + + - `nix-collect-garbage` has a new flag `--delete-older-than` N`d`, + which deletes all user environment generations older than N days. + Likewise, `nix-env + --delete-generations` accepts a N`d` age limit. + + - Nix now heuristically detects whether a build failure was due to a + disk-full condition. In that case, the build is not flagged as + “permanently failed”. This is mostly useful for Hydra, which needs + to distinguish between permanent and transient build failures. + + - There is a new symbol `__curPos` that expands to an attribute set + containing its file name and line and column numbers, e.g. `{ file = + "foo.nix"; line = 10; + column = 5; }`. There also is a new builtin function, + `unsafeGetAttrPos`, that returns the position of an attribute. This + is used by Nixpkgs to provide location information in error + messages, e.g. + + $ nix-build '' -A libreoffice --argstr system x86_64-darwin + error: the package ‘libreoffice-4.0.5.2’ in ‘.../applications/office/libreoffice/default.nix:263’ + is not supported on ‘x86_64-darwin’ + + - The garbage collector is now more concurrent with other Nix + processes because it releases certain locks earlier. + + - The binary tarball installer has been improved. You can now install + Nix by running: + + $ bash <(curl https://nixos.org/nix/install) + + - More evaluation errors include position information. For instance, + selecting a missing attribute will print something like + + error: attribute `nixUnstabl' missing, at /etc/nixos/configurations/misc/eelco/mandark.nix:216:15 + + - The command `nix-setuid-helper` is gone. + + - Nix no longer uses Automake, but instead has a non-recursive, GNU + Make-based build system. + + - All installed libraries now have the prefix `libnix`. In particular, + this gets rid of `libutil`, which could clash with libraries with + the same name from other packages. + + - Nix now requires a compiler that supports C++11. + +This release has contributions from Danny Wilson, Domen Kožar, Eelco +Dolstra, Ian-Woo Kim, Ludovic Courtès, Maxim Ivanov, Petr Rockai, +Ricardo M. Correia and Shea Levy. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.8.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.8.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..10a82d52a --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.8.md @@ -0,0 +1,88 @@ +# Release 1.8 (2014-12-14) + + - Breaking change: to address a race condition, the remote build hook + mechanism now uses `nix-store + --serve` on the remote machine. This requires build slaves to be + updated to Nix 1.8. + + - Nix now uses HTTPS instead of HTTP to access the default binary + cache, `cache.nixos.org`. + + - `nix-env` selectors are now regular expressions. For instance, you + can do + + $ nix-env -qa '.*zip.*' + + to query all packages with a name containing `zip`. + + - `nix-store --read-log` can now fetch remote build logs. If a build + log is not available locally, then ‘nix-store -l’ will now try to + download it from the servers listed in the ‘log-servers’ option in + nix.conf. For instance, if you have the configuration option + + log-servers = http://hydra.nixos.org/log + + then it will try to get logs from `http://hydra.nixos.org/log/base + name of the + store path`. This allows you to do things like: + + $ nix-store -l $(which xterm) + + and get a log even if `xterm` wasn't built locally. + + - New builtin functions: `attrValues`, `deepSeq`, `fromJSON`, + `readDir`, `seq`. + + - `nix-instantiate --eval` now has a `--json` flag to print the + resulting value in JSON format. + + - `nix-copy-closure` now uses `nix-store --serve` on the remote side + to send or receive closures. This fixes a race condition between + `nix-copy-closure` and the garbage collector. + + - Derivations can specify the new special attribute + `allowedRequisites`, which has a similar meaning to + `allowedReferences`. But instead of only enforcing to explicitly + specify the immediate references, it requires the derivation to + specify all the dependencies recursively (hence the name, + requisites) that are used by the resulting output. + + - On Mac OS X, Nix now handles case collisions when importing closures + from case-sensitive file systems. This is mostly useful for running + NixOps on Mac OS X. + + - The Nix daemon has new configuration options `allowed-users` + (specifying the users and groups that are allowed to connect to the + daemon) and `trusted-users` (specifying the users and groups that + can perform privileged operations like specifying untrusted binary + caches). + + - The configuration option `build-cores` now defaults to the number of + available CPU cores. + + - Build users are now used by default when Nix is invoked as root. + This prevents builds from accidentally running as root. + + - Nix now includes systemd units and Upstart jobs. + + - Speed improvements to `nix-store + --optimise`. + + - Language change: the `==` operator now ignores string contexts (the + “dependencies” of a string). + + - Nix now filters out Nix-specific ANSI escape sequences on standard + error. They are supposed to be invisible, but some terminals show + them anyway. + + - Various commands now automatically pipe their output into the pager + as specified by the PAGER environment variable. + + - Several improvements to reduce memory consumption in the evaluator. + +This release has contributions from Adam Szkoda, Aristid Breitkreuz, Bob +van der Linden, Charles Strahan, darealshinji, Eelco Dolstra, Gergely +Risko, Joel Taylor, Ludovic Courtès, Marko Durkovic, Mikey Ariel, Paul +Colomiets, Ricardo M. Correia, Ricky Elrod, Robert Helgesson, Rob +Vermaas, Russell O'Connor, Shea Levy, Shell Turner, Sönke Hahn, Steve +Purcell, Vladimír Čunát and Wout Mertens. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.9.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.9.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..01b067aab --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.9.md @@ -0,0 +1,143 @@ +# Release 1.9 (2015-06-12) + +In addition to the usual bug fixes, this release has the following new +features: + + - Signed binary cache support. You can enable signature checking by + adding the following to `nix.conf`: + + signed-binary-caches = * + binary-cache-public-keys = cache.nixos.org-1:6NCHdD59X431o0gWypbMrAURkbJ16ZPMQFGspcDShjY= + + This will prevent Nix from downloading any binary from the cache + that is not signed by one of the keys listed in + `binary-cache-public-keys`. + + Signature checking is only supported if you built Nix with the + `libsodium` package. + + Note that while Nix has had experimental support for signed binary + caches since version 1.7, this release changes the signature format + in a backwards-incompatible way. + + - Automatic downloading of Nix expression tarballs. In various places, + you can now specify the URL of a tarball containing Nix expressions + (such as Nixpkgs), which will be downloaded and unpacked + automatically. For example: + + - In `nix-env`: + + $ nix-env -f https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs-channels/archive/nixos-14.12.tar.gz -iA firefox + + This installs Firefox from the latest tested and built revision + of the NixOS 14.12 channel. + + - In `nix-build` and `nix-shell`: + + $ nix-build https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/master.tar.gz -A hello + + This builds GNU Hello from the latest revision of the Nixpkgs + master branch. + + - In the Nix search path (as specified via NIX\_PATH or `-I`). For + example, to start a shell containing the Pan package from a + specific version of Nixpkgs: + + $ nix-shell -p pan -I nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs-channels/archive/8a3eea054838b55aca962c3fbde9c83c102b8bf2.tar.gz + + - In `nixos-rebuild` (on NixOS): + + $ nixos-rebuild test -I nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs-channels/archive/nixos-unstable.tar.gz + + - In Nix expressions, via the new builtin function `fetchTarball`: + + with import (fetchTarball https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs-channels/archive/nixos-14.12.tar.gz) {}; … + + (This is not allowed in restricted mode.) + + - `nix-shell` improvements: + + - `nix-shell` now has a flag `--run` to execute a command in the + `nix-shell` environment, e.g. `nix-shell --run make`. This is + like the existing `--command` flag, except that it uses a + non-interactive shell (ensuring that hitting Ctrl-C won’t drop + you into the child shell). + + - `nix-shell` can now be used as a `#!`-interpreter. This allows + you to write scripts that dynamically fetch their own + dependencies. For example, here is a Haskell script that, when + invoked, first downloads GHC and the Haskell packages on which + it depends: + + #! /usr/bin/env nix-shell + #! nix-shell -i runghc -p haskellPackages.ghc haskellPackages.HTTP + + import Network.HTTP + + main = do + resp <- Network.HTTP.simpleHTTP (getRequest "http://nixos.org/") + body <- getResponseBody resp + print (take 100 body) + + Of course, the dependencies are cached in the Nix store, so the + second invocation of this script will be much faster. + + - Chroot improvements: + + - Chroot builds are now supported on Mac OS X (using its sandbox + mechanism). + + - If chroots are enabled, they are now used for all derivations, + including fixed-output derivations (such as `fetchurl`). The + latter do have network access, but can no longer access the host + filesystem. If you need the old behaviour, you can set the + option `build-use-chroot` to `relaxed`. + + - On Linux, if chroots are enabled, builds are performed in a + private PID namespace once again. (This functionality was lost + in Nix 1.8.) + + - Store paths listed in `build-chroot-dirs` are now automatically + expanded to their closure. For instance, if you want + `/nix/store/…-bash/bin/sh` mounted in your chroot as `/bin/sh`, + you only need to say `build-chroot-dirs = + /bin/sh=/nix/store/…-bash/bin/sh`; it is no longer necessary to + specify the dependencies of Bash. + + - The new derivation attribute `passAsFile` allows you to specify that + the contents of derivation attributes should be passed via files + rather than environment variables. This is useful if you need to + pass very long strings that exceed the size limit of the + environment. The Nixpkgs function `writeTextFile` uses this. + + - You can now use `~` in Nix file names to refer to your home + directory, e.g. `import + ~/.nixpkgs/config.nix`. + + - Nix has a new option `restrict-eval` that allows limiting what paths + the Nix evaluator has access to. By passing `--option restrict-eval + true` to Nix, the evaluator will throw an exception if an attempt is + made to access any file outside of the Nix search path. This is + primarily intended for Hydra to ensure that a Hydra jobset only + refers to its declared inputs (and is therefore reproducible). + + - `nix-env` now only creates a new “generation” symlink in + `/nix/var/nix/profiles` if something actually changed. + + - The environment variable NIX\_PAGER can now be set to override + PAGER. You can set it to `cat` to disable paging for Nix commands + only. + + - Failing `<...>` lookups now show position information. + + - Improved Boehm GC use: we disabled scanning for interior pointers, + which should reduce the “`Repeated + allocation of very large block`” warnings and associated retention + of memory. + +This release has contributions from aszlig, Benjamin Staffin, Charles +Strahan, Christian Theune, Daniel Hahler, Danylo Hlynskyi Daniel +Peebles, Dan Peebles, Domen Kožar, Eelco Dolstra, Harald van Dijk, Hoang +Xuan Phu, Jaka Hudoklin, Jeff Ramnani, j-keck, Linquize, Luca Bruno, +Michael Merickel, Oliver Dunkl, Rob Vermaas, Rok Garbas, Shea Levy, +Tobias Geerinckx-Rice and William A. Kennington III. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.0.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.0.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..0ce985b2f --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.0.md @@ -0,0 +1,557 @@ +# Release 2.0 (2018-02-22) + +The following incompatible changes have been made: + + - The manifest-based substituter mechanism + (`download-using-manifests`) has been + [removed](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/commit/867967265b80946dfe1db72d40324b4f9af988ed). + It has been superseded by the binary cache substituter mechanism + since several years. As a result, the following programs have been + removed: + + - `nix-pull` + + - `nix-generate-patches` + + - `bsdiff` + + - `bspatch` + + - The “copy from other stores” substituter mechanism + (`copy-from-other-stores` and the NIX\_OTHER\_STORES environment + variable) has been removed. It was primarily used by the NixOS + installer to copy available paths from the installation medium. The + replacement is to use a chroot store as a substituter (e.g. + `--substituters /mnt`), or to build into a chroot store (e.g. + `--store /mnt --substituters /`). + + - The command `nix-push` has been removed as part of the effort to + eliminate Nix's dependency on Perl. You can use `nix copy` instead, + e.g. `nix copy + --to file:///tmp/my-binary-cache paths…` + + - The “nested” log output feature (`--log-type + pretty`) has been removed. As a result, `nix-log2xml` was also + removed. + + - OpenSSL-based signing has been + [removed](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/commit/f435f8247553656774dd1b2c88e9de5d59cab203). + This feature was never well-supported. A better alternative is + provided by the `secret-key-files` and `trusted-public-keys` + options. + + - Failed build caching has been + [removed](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/commit/8cffec84859cec8b610a2a22ab0c4d462a9351ff). + This feature was introduced to support the Hydra continuous build + system, but Hydra no longer uses it. + + - `nix-mode.el` has been removed from Nix. It is now [a separate + repository](https://github.com/NixOS/nix-mode) and can be installed + through the MELPA package repository. + +This release has the following new features: + + - It introduces a new command named `nix`, which is intended to + eventually replace all `nix-*` commands with a more consistent and + better designed user interface. It currently provides replacements + for some (but not all) of the functionality provided by `nix-store`, + `nix-build`, `nix-shell -p`, `nix-env -qa`, `nix-instantiate + --eval`, `nix-push` and `nix-copy-closure`. It has the following + major features: + + - Unlike the legacy commands, it has a consistent way to refer to + packages and package-like arguments (like store paths). For + example, the following commands all copy the GNU Hello package + to a remote machine: + + nix copy --to ssh://machine nixpkgs.hello + + nix copy --to ssh://machine /nix/store/0i2jd68mp5g6h2sa5k9c85rb80sn8hi9-hello-2.10 + + nix copy --to ssh://machine '(with import {}; hello)' + + By contrast, `nix-copy-closure` only accepted store paths as + arguments. + + - It is self-documenting: `--help` shows all available + command-line arguments. If `--help` is given after a subcommand, + it shows examples for that subcommand. `nix + --help-config` shows all configuration options. + + - It is much less verbose. By default, it displays a single-line + progress indicator that shows how many packages are left to be + built or downloaded, and (if there are running builds) the most + recent line of builder output. If a build fails, it shows the + last few lines of builder output. The full build log can be + retrieved using `nix + log`. + + - It + [provides](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/commit/b8283773bd64d7da6859ed520ee19867742a03ba) + all `nix.conf` configuration options as command line flags. For + example, instead of `--option + http-connections 100` you can write `--http-connections 100`. + Boolean options can be written as `--foo` or `--no-foo` (e.g. + `--no-auto-optimise-store`). + + - Many subcommands have a `--json` flag to write results to stdout + in JSON format. + + > **Warning** + > + > Please note that the `nix` command is a work in progress and the + > interface is subject to change. + + It provides the following high-level (“porcelain”) subcommands: + + - `nix build` is a replacement for `nix-build`. + + - `nix run` executes a command in an environment in which the + specified packages are available. It is (roughly) a replacement + for `nix-shell + -p`. Unlike that command, it does not execute the command in a + shell, and has a flag (`-c`) that specifies the unquoted command + line to be executed. + + It is particularly useful in conjunction with chroot stores, + allowing Linux users who do not have permission to install Nix + in `/nix/store` to still use binary substitutes that assume + `/nix/store`. For example, + + nix run --store ~/my-nix nixpkgs.hello -c hello --greeting 'Hi everybody!' + + downloads (or if not substitutes are available, builds) the GNU + Hello package into `~/my-nix/nix/store`, then runs `hello` in a + mount namespace where `~/my-nix/nix/store` is mounted onto + `/nix/store`. + + - `nix search` replaces `nix-env + -qa`. It searches the available packages for occurrences of a + search string in the attribute name, package name or + description. Unlike `nix-env -qa`, it has a cache to speed up + subsequent searches. + + - `nix copy` copies paths between arbitrary Nix stores, + generalising `nix-copy-closure` and `nix-push`. + + - `nix repl` replaces the external program `nix-repl`. It provides + an interactive environment for evaluating and building Nix + expressions. Note that it uses `linenoise-ng` instead of GNU + Readline. + + - `nix upgrade-nix` upgrades Nix to the latest stable version. + This requires that Nix is installed in a profile. (Thus it won’t + work on NixOS, or if it’s installed outside of the Nix store.) + + - `nix verify` checks whether store paths are unmodified and/or + “trusted” (see below). It replaces `nix-store --verify` and + `nix-store + --verify-path`. + + - `nix log` shows the build log of a package or path. If the build + log is not available locally, it will try to obtain it from the + configured substituters (such as + [cache.nixos.org](cache.nixos.org), which now provides build + logs). + + - `nix edit` opens the source code of a package in your editor. + + - `nix eval` replaces `nix-instantiate --eval`. + + - `nix + why-depends` shows why one store path has another in its + closure. This is primarily useful to finding the causes of + closure bloat. For example, + + nix why-depends nixpkgs.vlc nixpkgs.libdrm.dev + + shows a chain of files and fragments of file contents that cause + the VLC package to have the “dev” output of `libdrm` in its + closure — an undesirable situation. + + - `nix path-info` shows information about store paths, replacing + `nix-store -q`. A useful feature is the option `--closure-size` + (`-S`). For example, the following command show the closure + sizes of every path in the current NixOS system closure, sorted + by size: + + nix path-info -rS /run/current-system | sort -nk2 + + - `nix optimise-store` replaces `nix-store --optimise`. The main + difference is that it has a progress indicator. + + A number of low-level (“plumbing”) commands are also available: + + - `nix ls-store` and `nix + ls-nar` list the contents of a store path or NAR file. The + former is primarily useful in conjunction with remote stores, + e.g. + + nix ls-store --store https://cache.nixos.org/ -lR /nix/store/0i2jd68mp5g6h2sa5k9c85rb80sn8hi9-hello-2.10 + + lists the contents of path in a binary cache. + + - `nix cat-store` and `nix + cat-nar` allow extracting a file from a store path or NAR file. + + - `nix dump-path` writes the contents of a store path to stdout in + NAR format. This replaces `nix-store --dump`. + + - `nix + show-derivation` displays a store derivation in JSON format. + This is an alternative to `pp-aterm`. + + - `nix + add-to-store` replaces `nix-store + --add`. + + - `nix sign-paths` signs store paths. + + - `nix copy-sigs` copies signatures from one store to another. + + - `nix show-config` shows all configuration options and their + current values. + + - The store abstraction that Nix has had for a long time to support + store access via the Nix daemon has been extended significantly. In + particular, substituters (which used to be external programs such as + `download-from-binary-cache`) are now subclasses of the abstract + `Store` class. This allows many Nix commands to operate on such + store types. For example, `nix path-info` shows information about + paths in your local Nix store, while `nix path-info --store + https://cache.nixos.org/` shows information about paths in the + specified binary cache. Similarly, `nix-copy-closure`, `nix-push` + and substitution are all instances of the general notion of copying + paths between different kinds of Nix stores. + + Stores are specified using an URI-like syntax, e.g. + or . The following store + types are supported: + + - `LocalStore` (stori URI `local` or an absolute path) and the + misnamed `RemoteStore` (`daemon`) provide access to a local Nix + store, the latter via the Nix daemon. You can use `auto` or the + empty string to auto-select a local or daemon store depending on + whether you have write permission to the Nix store. It is no + longer necessary to set the NIX\_REMOTE environment variable to + use the Nix daemon. + + As noted above, `LocalStore` now supports chroot builds, + allowing the “physical” location of the Nix store (e.g. + `/home/alice/nix/store`) to differ from its “logical” location + (typically `/nix/store`). This allows non-root users to use Nix + while still getting the benefits from prebuilt binaries from + [cache.nixos.org](cache.nixos.org). + + - `BinaryCacheStore` is the abstract superclass of all binary + cache stores. It supports writing build logs and NAR content + listings in JSON format. + + - `HttpBinaryCacheStore` (`http://`, `https://`) supports binary + caches via HTTP or HTTPS. If the server supports `PUT` requests, + it supports uploading store paths via commands such as `nix + copy`. + + - `LocalBinaryCacheStore` (`file://`) supports binary caches in + the local filesystem. + + - `S3BinaryCacheStore` (`s3://`) supports binary caches stored in + Amazon S3, if enabled at compile time. + + - `LegacySSHStore` (`ssh://`) is used to implement remote builds + and `nix-copy-closure`. + + - `SSHStore` (`ssh-ng://`) supports arbitrary Nix operations on a + remote machine via the same protocol used by `nix-daemon`. + + - Security has been improved in various ways: + + - Nix now stores signatures for local store paths. When paths are + copied between stores (e.g., copied from a binary cache to a + local store), signatures are propagated. + + Locally-built paths are signed automatically using the secret + keys specified by the `secret-key-files` store option. + Secret/public key pairs can be generated using `nix-store + --generate-binary-cache-key`. + + In addition, locally-built store paths are marked as “ultimately + trusted”, but this bit is not propagated when paths are copied + between stores. + + - Content-addressable store paths no longer require signatures — + they can be imported into a store by unprivileged users even if + they lack signatures. + + - The command `nix verify` checks whether the specified paths are + trusted, i.e., have a certain number of trusted signatures, are + ultimately trusted, or are content-addressed. + + - Substitutions from binary caches + [now](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/commit/ecbc3fedd3d5bdc5a0e1a0a51b29062f2874ac8b) + require signatures by default. This was already the case on + NixOS. + + - In Linux sandbox builds, we + [now](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/commit/eba840c8a13b465ace90172ff76a0db2899ab11b) + use `/build` instead of `/tmp` as the temporary build directory. + This fixes potential security problems when a build accidentally + stores its TMPDIR in some security-sensitive place, such as an + RPATH. + + - *Pure evaluation mode*. With the `--pure-eval` flag, Nix enables a + variant of the existing restricted evaluation mode that forbids + access to anything that could cause different evaluations of the + same command line arguments to produce a different result. This + includes builtin functions such as `builtins.getEnv`, but more + importantly, *all* filesystem or network access unless a content + hash or commit hash is specified. For example, calls to + `builtins.fetchGit` are only allowed if a `rev` attribute is + specified. + + The goal of this feature is to enable true reproducibility and + traceability of builds (including NixOS system configurations) at + the evaluation level. For example, in the future, `nixos-rebuild` + might build configurations from a Nix expression in a Git repository + in pure mode. That expression might fetch other repositories such as + Nixpkgs via `builtins.fetchGit`. The commit hash of the top-level + repository then uniquely identifies a running system, and, in + conjunction with that repository, allows it to be reproduced or + modified. + + - There are several new features to support binary reproducibility + (i.e. to help ensure that multiple builds of the same derivation + produce exactly the same output). When `enforce-determinism` is set + to `false`, it’s [no + longer](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/commit/8bdf83f936adae6f2c907a6d2541e80d4120f051) + a fatal error if build rounds produce different output. Also, a hook + named `diff-hook` is + [provided](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/commit/9a313469a4bdea2d1e8df24d16289dc2a172a169) + to allow you to run tools such as `diffoscope` when build rounds + produce different output. + + - Configuring remote builds is a lot easier now. Provided you are not + using the Nix daemon, you can now just specify a remote build + machine on the command line, e.g. `--option builders + 'ssh://my-mac x86_64-darwin'`. The environment variable + NIX\_BUILD\_HOOK has been removed and is no longer needed. The + environment variable NIX\_REMOTE\_SYSTEMS is still supported for + compatibility, but it is also possible to specify builders in + `nix.conf` by setting the option `builders = + @path`. + + - If a fixed-output derivation produces a result with an incorrect + hash, the output path is moved to the location corresponding to the + actual hash and registered as valid. Thus, a subsequent build of the + fixed-output derivation with the correct hash is unnecessary. + + - `nix-shell` + [now](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/commit/ea59f39326c8e9dc42dfed4bcbf597fbce58797c) + sets the `IN_NIX_SHELL` environment variable during evaluation and + in the shell itself. This can be used to perform different actions + depending on whether you’re in a Nix shell or in a regular build. + Nixpkgs provides `lib.inNixShell` to check this variable during + evaluation. + + - NIX\_PATH is now lazy, so URIs in the path are only downloaded if + they are needed for evaluation. + + - You can now use as a short-hand for + . For example, + `nix-build channel:nixos-15.09 -A hello` will build the GNU Hello + package from the `nixos-15.09` channel. In the future, this may use + Git to fetch updates more efficiently. + + - When `--no-build-output` is given, the last 10 lines of the build + log will be shown if a build fails. + + - Networking has been improved: + + - HTTP/2 is now supported. This makes binary cache lookups [much + more + efficient](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/commit/90ad02bf626b885a5dd8967894e2eafc953bdf92). + + - We now retry downloads on many HTTP errors, making binary caches + substituters more resilient to temporary failures. + + - HTTP credentials can now be configured via the standard `netrc` + mechanism. + + - If S3 support is enabled at compile time, URIs are + [supported](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/commit/9ff9c3f2f80ba4108e9c945bbfda2c64735f987b) + in all places where Nix allows URIs. + + - Brotli compression is now supported. In particular, + [cache.nixos.org](cache.nixos.org) build logs are now compressed + using Brotli. + + - `nix-env` + [now](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/commit/b0cb11722626e906a73f10dd9a0c9eea29faf43a) + ignores packages with bad derivation names (in particular those + starting with a digit or containing a dot). + + - Many configuration options have been renamed, either because they + were unnecessarily verbose (e.g. `build-use-sandbox` is now just + `sandbox`) or to reflect generalised behaviour (e.g. `binary-caches` + is now `substituters` because it allows arbitrary store URIs). The + old names are still supported for compatibility. + + - The `max-jobs` option can + [now](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/commit/7251d048fa812d2551b7003bc9f13a8f5d4c95a5) + be set to `auto` to use the number of CPUs in the system. + + - Hashes can + [now](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/commit/c0015e87af70f539f24d2aa2bc224a9d8b84276b) + be specified in base-64 format, in addition to base-16 and the + non-standard base-32. + + - `nix-shell` now uses `bashInteractive` from Nixpkgs, rather than the + `bash` command that happens to be in the caller’s PATH. This is + especially important on macOS where the `bash` provided by the + system is seriously outdated and cannot execute `stdenv`’s setup + script. + + - Nix can now automatically trigger a garbage collection if free disk + space drops below a certain level during a build. This is configured + using the `min-free` and `max-free` options. + + - `nix-store -q --roots` and `nix-store --gc --print-roots` now show + temporary and in-memory roots. + + - Nix can now be extended with plugins. See the documentation of the + `plugin-files` option for more details. + +The Nix language has the following new features: + + - It supports floating point numbers. They are based on the C++ + `float` type and are supported by the existing numerical operators. + Export and import to and from JSON and XML works, too. + + - Derivation attributes can now reference the outputs of the + derivation using the `placeholder` builtin function. For example, + the attribute + + configureFlags = "--prefix=${placeholder "out"} --includedir=${placeholder "dev"}"; + + will cause the configureFlags environment variable to contain the + actual store paths corresponding to the `out` and `dev` outputs. + +The following builtin functions are new or extended: + + - `builtins.fetchGit` allows Git repositories to be fetched at + evaluation time. Thus it differs from the `fetchgit` function in + Nixpkgs, which fetches at build time and cannot be used to fetch Nix + expressions during evaluation. A typical use case is to import + external NixOS modules from your configuration, e.g. + + imports = [ (builtins.fetchGit https://github.com/edolstra/dwarffs + "/module.nix") ]; + + - Similarly, `builtins.fetchMercurial` allows you to fetch Mercurial + repositories. + + - `builtins.path` generalises `builtins.filterSource` and path + literals (e.g. `./foo`). It allows specifying a store path name that + differs from the source path name (e.g. `builtins.path { path = + ./foo; name = "bar"; + }`) and also supports filtering out unwanted files. + + - `builtins.fetchurl` and `builtins.fetchTarball` now support `sha256` + and `name` attributes. + + - `builtins.split` splits a string using a POSIX extended regular + expression as the separator. + + - `builtins.partition` partitions the elements of a list into two + lists, depending on a Boolean predicate. + + - `` now uses the content-addressable tarball cache + at , just like `fetchurl` in Nixpkgs. + (f2682e6e18a76ecbfb8a12c17e3a0ca15c084197) + + - In restricted and pure evaluation mode, builtin functions that + download from the network (such as `fetchGit`) are permitted to + fetch underneath a list of URI prefixes specified in the option + `allowed-uris`. + +The Nix build environment has the following changes: + + - Values such as Booleans, integers, (nested) lists and attribute sets + can + [now](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/commit/6de33a9c675b187437a2e1abbcb290981a89ecb1) + be passed to builders in a non-lossy way. If the special attribute + `__structuredAttrs` is set to `true`, the other derivation + attributes are serialised in JSON format and made available to the + builder via the file .attrs.json in the builder’s temporary + directory. This obviates the need for `passAsFile` since JSON files + have no size restrictions, unlike process environments. + + [As a convenience to Bash + builders](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/commit/2d5b1b24bf70a498e4c0b378704cfdb6471cc699), + Nix writes a script named .attrs.sh to the builder’s directory that + initialises shell variables corresponding to all attributes that are + representable in Bash. This includes non-nested (associative) + arrays. For example, the attribute `hardening.format = + true` ends up as the Bash associative array element + `${hardening[format]}`. + + - Builders can + [now](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/commit/88e6bb76de5564b3217be9688677d1c89101b2a3) + communicate what build phase they are in by writing messages to the + file descriptor specified in NIX\_LOG\_FD. The current phase is + shown by the `nix` progress indicator. + + - In Linux sandbox builds, we + [now](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/commit/a2d92bb20e82a0957067ede60e91fab256948b41) + provide a default `/bin/sh` (namely `ash` from BusyBox). + + - In structured attribute mode, `exportReferencesGraph` + [exports](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/commit/c2b0d8749f7e77afc1c4b3e8dd36b7ee9720af4a) + extended information about closures in JSON format. In particular, + it includes the sizes and hashes of paths. This is primarily useful + for NixOS image builders. + + - Builds are + [now](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/commit/21948deed99a3295e4d5666e027a6ca42dc00b40) + killed as soon as Nix receives EOF on the builder’s stdout or + stderr. This fixes a bug that allowed builds to hang Nix + indefinitely, regardless of timeouts. + + - The `sandbox-paths` configuration option can now specify optional + paths by appending a `?`, e.g. `/dev/nvidiactl?` will bind-mount + `/dev/nvidiactl` only if it exists. + + - On Linux, builds are now executed in a user namespace with UID 1000 + and GID 100. + +A number of significant internal changes were made: + + - Nix no longer depends on Perl and all Perl components have been + rewritten in C++ or removed. The Perl bindings that used to be part + of Nix have been moved to a separate package, `nix-perl`. + + - All `Store` classes are now thread-safe. `RemoteStore` supports + multiple concurrent connections to the daemon. This is primarily + useful in multi-threaded programs such as `hydra-queue-runner`. + +This release has contributions from Adrien Devresse, Alexander Ried, +Alex Cruice, Alexey Shmalko, AmineChikhaoui, Andy Wingo, Aneesh Agrawal, +Anthony Cowley, Armijn Hemel, aszlig, Ben Gamari, Benjamin Hipple, +Benjamin Staffin, Benno Fünfstück, Bjørn Forsman, Brian McKenna, Charles +Strahan, Chase Adams, Chris Martin, Christian Theune, Chris Warburton, +Daiderd Jordan, Dan Connolly, Daniel Peebles, Dan Peebles, davidak, +David McFarland, Dmitry Kalinkin, Domen Kožar, Eelco Dolstra, Emery +Hemingway, Eric Litak, Eric Wolf, Fabian Schmitthenner, Frederik +Rietdijk, Gabriel Gonzalez, Giorgio Gallo, Graham Christensen, Guillaume +Maudoux, Harmen, Iavael, James Broadhead, James Earl Douglas, Janus +Troelsen, Jeremy Shaw, Joachim Schiele, Joe Hermaszewski, Joel Moberg, +Johannes 'fish' Ziemke, Jörg Thalheim, Jude Taylor, kballou, Keshav +Kini, Kjetil Orbekk, Langston Barrett, Linus Heckemann, Ludovic Courtès, +Manav Rathi, Marc Scholten, Markus Hauck, Matt Audesse, Matthew Bauer, +Matthias Beyer, Matthieu Coudron, N1X, Nathan Zadoks, Neil Mayhew, +Nicolas B. Pierron, Niklas Hambüchen, Nikolay Amiantov, Ole Jørgen +Brønner, Orivej Desh, Peter Simons, Peter Stuart, Pyry Jahkola, regnat, +Renzo Carbonara, Rhys, Robert Vollmert, Scott Olson, Scott R. Parish, +Sergei Trofimovich, Shea Levy, Sheena Artrip, Spencer Baugh, Stefan +Junker, Susan Potter, Thomas Tuegel, Timothy Allen, Tristan Hume, Tuomas +Tynkkynen, tv, Tyson Whitehead, Vladimír Čunát, Will Dietz, wmertens, +Wout Mertens, zimbatm and Zoran Plesivčak. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.1.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.1.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..08986ef9d --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.1.md @@ -0,0 +1,49 @@ +# Release 2.1 (2018-09-02) + +This is primarily a bug fix release. It also reduces memory consumption +in certain situations. In addition, it has the following new features: + + - The Nix installer will no longer default to the Multi-User + installation for macOS. You can still [instruct the installer to run + in multi-user mode](#sect-multi-user-installation). + + - The Nix installer now supports performing a Multi-User installation + for Linux computers which are running systemd. You can [select a + Multi-User installation](#sect-multi-user-installation) by passing + the `--daemon` flag to the installer: `sh <(curl + https://nixos.org/nix/install) --daemon`. + + The multi-user installer cannot handle systems with SELinux. If your + system has SELinux enabled, you can [force the installer to run in + single-user mode](#sect-single-user-installation). + + - New builtin functions: `builtins.bitAnd`, `builtins.bitOr`, + `builtins.bitXor`, `builtins.fromTOML`, `builtins.concatMap`, + `builtins.mapAttrs`. + + - The S3 binary cache store now supports uploading NARs larger than 5 + GiB. + + - The S3 binary cache store now supports uploading to S3-compatible + services with the `endpoint` option. + + - The flag `--fallback` is no longer required to recover from + disappeared NARs in binary caches. + + - `nix-daemon` now respects `--store`. + + - `nix run` now respects `nix-support/propagated-user-env-packages`. + +This release has contributions from Adrien Devresse, Aleksandr Pashkov, +Alexandre Esteves, Amine Chikhaoui, Andrew Dunham, Asad Saeeduddin, +aszlig, Ben Challenor, Ben Gamari, Benjamin Hipple, Bogdan Seniuc, Corey +O'Connor, Daiderd Jordan, Daniel Peebles, Daniel Poelzleithner, Danylo +Hlynskyi, Dmitry Kalinkin, Domen Kožar, Doug Beardsley, Eelco Dolstra, +Erik Arvstedt, Félix Baylac-Jacqué, Gleb Peregud, Graham Christensen, +Guillaume Maudoux, Ivan Kozik, John Arnold, Justin Humm, Linus +Heckemann, Lorenzo Manacorda, Matthew Justin Bauer, Matthew O'Gorman, +Maximilian Bosch, Michael Bishop, Michael Fiano, Michael Mercier, +Michael Raskin, Michael Weiss, Nicolas Dudebout, Peter Simons, Ryan +Trinkle, Samuel Dionne-Riel, Sean Seefried, Shea Levy, Symphorien Gibol, +Tim Engler, Tim Sears, Tuomas Tynkkynen, volth, Will Dietz, Yorick van +Pelt and zimbatm. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.2.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.2.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..3667a48dc --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.2.md @@ -0,0 +1,82 @@ +# Release 2.2 (2019-01-11) + +This is primarily a bug fix release. It also has the following changes: + + - In derivations that use structured attributes (i.e. that specify set + the `__structuredAttrs` attribute to `true` to cause all attributes + to be passed to the builder in JSON format), you can now specify + closure checks per output, e.g.: + + outputChecks."out" = { + # The closure of 'out' must not be larger than 256 MiB. + maxClosureSize = 256 * 1024 * 1024; + + # It must not refer to C compiler or to the 'dev' output. + disallowedRequisites = [ stdenv.cc "dev" ]; + }; + + outputChecks."dev" = { + # The 'dev' output must not be larger than 128 KiB. + maxSize = 128 * 1024; + }; + + - The derivation attribute `requiredSystemFeatures` is now enforced + for local builds, and not just to route builds to remote builders. + The supported features of a machine can be specified through the + configuration setting `system-features`. + + By default, `system-features` includes `kvm` if `/dev/kvm` exists. + For compatibility, it also includes the pseudo-features + `nixos-test`, `benchmark` and `big-parallel` which are used by + Nixpkgs to route builds to particular Hydra build machines. + + - Sandbox builds are now enabled by default on Linux. + + - The new command `nix doctor` shows potential issues with your Nix + installation. + + - The `fetchGit` builtin function now uses a caching scheme that puts + different remote repositories in distinct local repositories, rather + than a single shared repository. This may require more disk space + but is faster. + + - The `dirOf` builtin function now works on relative paths. + + - Nix now supports [SRI hashes](https://www.w3.org/TR/SRI/), allowing + the hash algorithm and hash to be specified in a single string. For + example, you can write: + + import { + url = https://nixos.org/releases/nix/nix-2.1.3/nix-2.1.3.tar.xz; + hash = "sha256-XSLa0FjVyADWWhFfkZ2iKTjFDda6mMXjoYMXLRSYQKQ="; + }; + + instead of + + import { + url = https://nixos.org/releases/nix/nix-2.1.3/nix-2.1.3.tar.xz; + sha256 = "5d22dad058d5c800d65a115f919da22938c50dd6ba98c5e3a183172d149840a4"; + }; + + In fixed-output derivations, the `outputHashAlgo` attribute is no + longer mandatory if `outputHash` specifies the hash. + + `nix hash-file` and `nix + hash-path` now print hashes in SRI format by default. They also use + SHA-256 by default instead of SHA-512 because that's what we use + most of the time in Nixpkgs. + + - Integers are now 64 bits on all platforms. + + - The evaluator now prints profiling statistics (enabled via the + NIX\_SHOW\_STATS and NIX\_COUNT\_CALLS environment variables) in + JSON format. + + - The option `--xml` in `nix-store + --query` has been removed. Instead, there now is an option + `--graphml` to output the dependency graph in GraphML format. + + - All `nix-*` commands are now symlinks to `nix`. This saves a bit of + disk space. + + - `nix repl` now uses `libeditline` or `libreadline`. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.3.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.3.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..a4bb6ebb0 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.3.md @@ -0,0 +1,44 @@ +# Release 2.3 (2019-09-04) + +This is primarily a bug fix release. However, it makes some incompatible +changes: + + - Nix now uses BSD file locks instead of POSIX file locks. Because of + this, you should not use Nix 2.3 and previous releases at the same + time on a Nix store. + +It also has the following changes: + + - `builtins.fetchGit`'s `ref` argument now allows specifying an + absolute remote ref. Nix will automatically prefix `ref` with + `refs/heads` only if `ref` doesn't already begin with `refs/`. + + - The installer now enables sandboxing by default on Linux when the + system has the necessary kernel support. + + - The `max-jobs` setting now defaults to 1. + + - New builtin functions: `builtins.isPath`, `builtins.hashFile`. + + - The `nix` command has a new `--print-build-logs` (`-L`) flag to + print build log output to stderr, rather than showing the last log + line in the progress bar. To distinguish between concurrent builds, + log lines are prefixed by the name of the package. + + - Builds are now executed in a pseudo-terminal, and the TERM + environment variable is set to `xterm-256color`. This allows many + programs (e.g. `gcc`, `clang`, `cmake`) to print colorized log + output. + + - Add `--no-net` convenience flag. This flag disables substituters; + sets the `tarball-ttl` setting to infinity (ensuring that any + previously downloaded files are considered current); and disables + retrying downloads and sets the connection timeout to the minimum. + This flag is enabled automatically if there are no configured + non-loopback network interfaces. + + - Add a `post-build-hook` setting to run a program after a build has + succeeded. + + - Add a `trace-function-calls` setting to log the duration of Nix + function calls to stderr. From 942cd687f9ae190fc9a989a46c3207bd38377ade Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Wed, 22 Jul 2020 23:44:34 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 08/57] Remove libxml2 / libxslt prerequisites --- doc/manual/installation/prerequisites-source.xml | 12 ------------ doc/manual/src/installation/prerequisites-source.md | 9 --------- 2 files changed, 21 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/manual/installation/prerequisites-source.xml b/doc/manual/installation/prerequisites-source.xml index fa6da9b1e..77955eecc 100644 --- a/doc/manual/installation/prerequisites-source.xml +++ b/doc/manual/installation/prerequisites-source.xml @@ -74,18 +74,6 @@ 1.14.0 or higher. It can be obtained from the its repository . - The xmllint and - xsltproc programs to build this manual and the - man-pages. These are part of the libxml2 and - libxslt packages, respectively. You also need - the DocBook - XSL stylesheets and optionally the DocBook 5.0 RELAX NG - schemas. Note that these are only required if you modify the - manual sources or when you are building from the Git - repository. - Recent versions of Bison and Flex to build the parser. (This is because Nix needs GLR support in Bison and reentrancy support in Flex.) For Bison, you need version 2.6, which diff --git a/doc/manual/src/installation/prerequisites-source.md b/doc/manual/src/installation/prerequisites-source.md index 311961fe9..69b7c5a5e 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/installation/prerequisites-source.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/installation/prerequisites-source.md @@ -54,15 +54,6 @@ obtained from the its repository . - - The `xmllint` and `xsltproc` programs to build this manual and the - man-pages. These are part of the `libxml2` and `libxslt` packages, - respectively. You also need the [DocBook XSL - stylesheets](http://docbook.sourceforge.net/projects/xsl/) and - optionally the [DocBook 5.0 RELAX NG - schemas](http://www.docbook.org/schemas/5x). Note that these are - only required if you modify the manual sources or when you are - building from the Git repository. - - Recent versions of Bison and Flex to build the parser. (This is because Nix needs GLR support in Bison and reentrancy support in Flex.) For Bison, you need version 2.6, which can be obtained from From c20c0823838d257b1e18e71c307f53afac0d2b39 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Thu, 23 Jul 2020 10:38:19 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 09/57] -> --- doc/manual/advanced-topics/cores-vs-jobs.xml | 10 +++--- .../advanced-topics/distributed-builds.xml | 2 +- doc/manual/command-ref/conf-file.xml | 20 +++++------ doc/manual/command-ref/env-common.xml | 34 +++++++++---------- doc/manual/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.xml | 2 +- doc/manual/command-ref/nix-env.xml | 4 +-- doc/manual/command-ref/nix-instantiate.xml | 4 +-- doc/manual/command-ref/nix-shell.xml | 10 +++--- doc/manual/command-ref/nix-store.xml | 2 +- doc/manual/command-ref/opt-common.xml | 6 ++-- .../expressions/advanced-attributes.xml | 6 ++-- doc/manual/expressions/build-script.xml | 14 ++++---- doc/manual/expressions/derivations.xml | 16 ++++----- doc/manual/expressions/generic-builder.xml | 8 ++--- doc/manual/expressions/language-values.xml | 2 +- .../expressions/simple-building-testing.xml | 2 +- doc/manual/installation/env-variables.xml | 10 +++--- doc/manual/installation/installing-binary.xml | 2 +- doc/manual/installation/multi-user.xml | 2 +- doc/manual/introduction/about-nix.xml | 2 +- doc/manual/packages/basic-package-mgmt.xml | 2 +- doc/manual/packages/profiles.xml | 8 ++--- doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.10.xml | 6 ++-- doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.12.xml | 4 +-- doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.16.xml | 2 +- doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.0.xml | 2 +- doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.2.xml | 2 +- doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.6.xml | 2 +- doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.8.xml | 2 +- doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.9.xml | 6 ++-- doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.0.xml | 22 ++++++------ doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.2.xml | 4 +-- doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.3.xml | 2 +- 33 files changed, 111 insertions(+), 111 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/manual/advanced-topics/cores-vs-jobs.xml b/doc/manual/advanced-topics/cores-vs-jobs.xml index 4d58ac7c5..a75dea37f 100644 --- a/doc/manual/advanced-topics/cores-vs-jobs.xml +++ b/doc/manual/advanced-topics/cores-vs-jobs.xml @@ -31,13 +31,13 @@ they are, how they interact, and their configuration trade-offs. The setting determines the value of -NIX_BUILD_CORES. NIX_BUILD_CORES is equal +NIX_BUILD_CORES. NIX_BUILD_CORES is equal to , unless -equals 0, in which case NIX_BUILD_CORES +equals 0, in which case NIX_BUILD_CORES will be the total number of cores in the system. The maximum number of consumed cores is a simple multiplication, - * NIX_BUILD_CORES. + * NIX_BUILD_CORES. The balance on how to set these two independent variables depends upon each builder's workload and hardware. Here are a few example @@ -49,7 +49,7 @@ scenarios on a machine with 24 cores: - NIX_BUILD_CORES + NIX_BUILD_CORES Maximum Processes Result @@ -116,6 +116,6 @@ scenarios on a machine with 24 cores: It is up to the derivations' build script to respect host's requested cores-per-build by following the value of the -NIX_BUILD_CORES environment variable. +NIX_BUILD_CORES environment variable. diff --git a/doc/manual/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.xml b/doc/manual/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.xml index 9ac4a92cd..a649b6f8d 100644 --- a/doc/manual/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.xml +++ b/doc/manual/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.xml @@ -43,7 +43,7 @@ bash: nix-store: command not found error: cannot connect to 'mac' -then you need to ensure that the PATH of +then you need to ensure that the PATH of non-interactive login shells contains Nix. If you are building via the Nix daemon, it is the Nix diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/conf-file.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/conf-file.xml index 1fa74a143..ff9c7d46c 100644 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/conf-file.xml +++ b/doc/manual/command-ref/conf-file.xml @@ -25,20 +25,20 @@ sysconfdir/nix/nix.conf (i.e. /etc/nix/nix.conf on most systems), or $NIX_CONF_DIR/nix.conf if -NIX_CONF_DIR is set. Values loaded in this file are not forwarded to the Nix daemon. The +NIX_CONF_DIR is set. Values loaded in this file are not forwarded to the Nix daemon. The client assumes that the daemon has already loaded them. User-specific configuration files: - If NIX_USER_CONF_FILES is set, then each path separated by + If NIX_USER_CONF_FILES is set, then each path separated by : will be loaded in reverse order. Otherwise it will look for nix/nix.conf files in - XDG_CONFIG_DIRS and XDG_CONFIG_HOME. + XDG_CONFIG_DIRS and XDG_CONFIG_HOME. The default location is $HOME/.config/nix.conf if those environment variables are unset. @@ -195,8 +195,8 @@ false. If the build users group is empty, builds will be performed under the uid of the Nix process (that is, the uid of the caller - if NIX_REMOTE is empty, the uid under which the Nix - daemon runs if NIX_REMOTE is + if NIX_REMOTE is empty, the uid under which the Nix + daemon runs if NIX_REMOTE is daemon). Obviously, this should not be used in multi-user settings with untrusted users. @@ -231,7 +231,7 @@ false. cores Sets the value of the - NIX_BUILD_CORES environment variable in the + NIX_BUILD_CORES environment variable in the invocation of builders. Builders can use this variable at their discretion to control the maximum amount of parallelism. For instance, in Nixpkgs, if the derivation attribute @@ -694,7 +694,7 @@ password my-password - DRV_PATH + DRV_PATH The derivation for the built paths. Example: @@ -704,7 +704,7 @@ password my-password - OUT_PATHS + OUT_PATHS Output paths of the built derivation, separated by a space character. Example: @@ -754,7 +754,7 @@ password my-password If set to true, the Nix evaluator will not allow access to any files outside of the Nix search path (as - set via the NIX_PATH environment variable or the + set via the NIX_PATH environment variable or the option), or to URIs outside of . The default is false. @@ -958,7 +958,7 @@ requiredSystemFeatures = [ "kvm" ]; Nix caches tarballs in $XDG_CACHE_HOME/nix/tarballs. - Files fetched via NIX_PATH, + Files fetched via NIX_PATH, fetchGit, fetchMercurial, fetchTarball, and fetchurl respect this TTL. diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/env-common.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/env-common.xml index 8466cc463..3196cbbd2 100644 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/env-common.xml +++ b/doc/manual/command-ref/env-common.xml @@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ -IN_NIX_SHELL +IN_NIX_SHELL Indicator that tells if the current environment was set up by nix-shell. Since Nix 2.0 the values are @@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ -NIX_PATH +NIX_PATH @@ -50,7 +50,7 @@ nixpkgs=/home/eelco/Dev/nixpkgs-branch:/etc/nixos interpreted as the URL of a tarball that will be downloaded and unpacked to a temporary location. The tarball must consist of a single top-level directory. For example, setting - NIX_PATH to + NIX_PATH to nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-15.09.tar.gz @@ -65,12 +65,12 @@ nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-15.09.tar.gz The search path can be extended using the option, which takes precedence over - NIX_PATH. + NIX_PATH. -NIX_IGNORE_SYMLINK_STORE +NIX_IGNORE_SYMLINK_STORE @@ -84,7 +84,7 @@ nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-15.09.tar.gz except when builds are deployed to machines where /nix/store resolves differently. If you are sure that you’re not going to do that, you can set - NIX_IGNORE_SYMLINK_STORE to 1. + NIX_IGNORE_SYMLINK_STORE to 1. Note that if you’re symlinking the Nix store so that you can put it on another file system than the root file system, on Linux @@ -102,7 +102,7 @@ $ mount -o bind /mnt/otherdisk/nix /nix -NIX_STORE_DIR +NIX_STORE_DIR Overrides the location of the Nix store (default prefix/store). @@ -110,7 +110,7 @@ $ mount -o bind /mnt/otherdisk/nix /nix -NIX_DATA_DIR +NIX_DATA_DIR Overrides the location of the Nix static data directory (default @@ -119,7 +119,7 @@ $ mount -o bind /mnt/otherdisk/nix /nix -NIX_LOG_DIR +NIX_LOG_DIR Overrides the location of the Nix log directory (default prefix/var/log/nix). @@ -127,7 +127,7 @@ $ mount -o bind /mnt/otherdisk/nix /nix -NIX_STATE_DIR +NIX_STATE_DIR Overrides the location of the Nix state directory (default prefix/var/nix). @@ -135,7 +135,7 @@ $ mount -o bind /mnt/otherdisk/nix /nix -NIX_CONF_DIR +NIX_CONF_DIR Overrides the location of the system Nix configuration directory (default @@ -143,7 +143,7 @@ $ mount -o bind /mnt/otherdisk/nix /nix -NIX_USER_CONF_FILES +NIX_USER_CONF_FILES Overrides the location of the user Nix configuration files to load from (defaults to the XDG spec locations). The variable is treated @@ -151,7 +151,7 @@ $ mount -o bind /mnt/otherdisk/nix /nix -TMPDIR +TMPDIR Use the specified directory to store temporary files. In particular, this includes temporary build directories; @@ -161,7 +161,7 @@ $ mount -o bind /mnt/otherdisk/nix /nix -NIX_REMOTE +NIX_REMOTE This variable should be set to daemon if you want to use the Nix daemon to @@ -174,7 +174,7 @@ $ mount -o bind /mnt/otherdisk/nix /nix -NIX_SHOW_STATS +NIX_SHOW_STATS If set to 1, Nix will print some evaluation statistics, such as the number of values @@ -183,7 +183,7 @@ $ mount -o bind /mnt/otherdisk/nix /nix -NIX_COUNT_CALLS +NIX_COUNT_CALLS If set to 1, Nix will print how often functions were called during Nix expression evaluation. This @@ -192,7 +192,7 @@ $ mount -o bind /mnt/otherdisk/nix /nix -GC_INITIAL_HEAP_SIZE +GC_INITIAL_HEAP_SIZE If Nix has been configured to use the Boehm garbage collector, this variable sets the initial size of the heap in bytes. diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.xml index e6dcf180a..8c07984fb 100644 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.xml +++ b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.xml @@ -129,7 +129,7 @@ those paths. If this bothers you, use - NIX_SSHOPTS + NIX_SSHOPTS Additional options to be passed to ssh on the command line. diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-env.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-env.xml index 55f25d959..4dedd90ca 100644 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-env.xml +++ b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-env.xml @@ -277,7 +277,7 @@ also . A symbolic link to the user's current profile. By default, this symlink points to prefix/var/nix/profiles/default. - The PATH environment variable should include + The PATH environment variable should include ~/.nix-profile/bin for the user environment to be visible to the user. @@ -1485,7 +1485,7 @@ error: no generation older than the current (91) exists - NIX_PROFILE + NIX_PROFILE Location of the Nix profile. Defaults to the target of the symlink ~/.nix-profile, if it diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-instantiate.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-instantiate.xml index 53f06aed1..4ff967ecf 100644 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-instantiate.xml +++ b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-instantiate.xml @@ -106,10 +106,10 @@ input. Look up the given files in Nix’s search path (as - specified by the NIX_PATH + specified by the NIX_PATH environment variable). If found, print the corresponding absolute paths on standard output. For instance, if - NIX_PATH is + NIX_PATH is nixpkgs=/home/alice/nixpkgs, then nix-instantiate --find-file nixpkgs/default.nix will print diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-shell.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-shell.xml index 2fef323c5..de9755d58 100644 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-shell.xml +++ b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-shell.xml @@ -141,8 +141,8 @@ also . almost entirely cleared before the interactive shell is started, so you get an environment that more closely corresponds to the “real” Nix build. A few variables, in particular - HOME, USER and - DISPLAY, are retained. Note that + HOME, USER and + DISPLAY, are retained. Note that ~/.bashrc and (depending on your Bash installation) /etc/bashrc are still sourced, so any variables set there will affect the interactive @@ -193,10 +193,10 @@ also . - NIX_BUILD_SHELL + NIX_BUILD_SHELL Shell used to start the interactive environment. - Defaults to the bash found in PATH. + Defaults to the bash found in PATH. @@ -254,7 +254,7 @@ $ nix-shell -p sqlite 'git.override { withManual = false; }' The -p flag looks up Nixpkgs in the Nix search path. You can override it by passing or setting -NIX_PATH. For example, the following gives you a shell +NIX_PATH. For example, the following gives you a shell containing the Pan package from a specific revision of Nixpkgs: diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-store.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-store.xml index d71f9d8e4..459100984 100644 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-store.xml +++ b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-store.xml @@ -1433,7 +1433,7 @@ loads it into the Nix database. The operation prints out the environment of a derivation in a format that can be evaluated by a shell. The command line arguments of the builder are placed in the -variable _args. +variable _args. diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-common.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-common.xml index a68eef1d0..150e732ff 100644 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-common.xml +++ b/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-common.xml @@ -160,7 +160,7 @@ - Sets the value of the NIX_BUILD_CORES + Sets the value of the NIX_BUILD_CORES environment variable in the invocation of builders. Builders can use this variable at their discretion to control the maximum amount of parallelism. For instance, in Nixpkgs, if the derivation @@ -370,10 +370,10 @@ Add a path to the Nix expression search path. This option may be given multiple times. See the NIX_PATH environment variable for + linkend="env-NIX_PATH">NIX_PATH environment variable for information on the semantics of the Nix search path. Paths added through take precedence over - NIX_PATH. + NIX_PATH. diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/advanced-attributes.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/advanced-attributes.xml index 5759ff50e..3a0413ceb 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/advanced-attributes.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/advanced-attributes.xml @@ -139,7 +139,7 @@ impureEnvVars = [ "http_proxy" "https_proxy" ... ]; to make it use the proxy server configuration specified by the - user in the environment variables http_proxy and + user in the environment variables http_proxy and friends. This attribute is only allowed in then when the builder runs, the environment variable - bigPath will contain the absolute path to a + bigPath will contain the absolute path to a temporary file containing a very long string. That is, for any attribute x listed in passAsFile, Nix will pass an environment - variable xPath holding + variable xPath holding the path of the file containing the value of attribute x. This is useful when you need to pass large strings to a builder, since most operating systems impose a diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/build-script.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/build-script.xml index 7bad8f808..44264239d 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/build-script.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/build-script.xml @@ -35,19 +35,19 @@ steps: When Nix runs a builder, it initially completely clears the environment (except for the attributes declared in the - derivation). For instance, the PATH variable is + derivation). For instance, the PATH variable is emptyActually, it's initialised to /path-not-set to prevent Bash from setting it to a default value.. This is done to prevent undeclared inputs from being used in the build process. If for - example the PATH contained + example the PATH contained /usr/bin, then you might accidentally use /usr/bin/gcc. So the first step is to set up the environment. This is done by calling the setup script of the standard environment. The environment variable - stdenv points to the location of the standard + stdenv points to the location of the standard environment being used. (It wasn't specified explicitly as an attribute in , but mkDerivation adds it automatically.) @@ -57,7 +57,7 @@ steps: Since Hello needs Perl, we have to make sure that Perl is in - the PATH. The perl environment + the PATH. The perl environment variable points to the location of the Perl package (since it was passed in as an attribute to the derivation), so $perl/bin is the @@ -70,7 +70,7 @@ steps: Now we have to unpack the sources. The src attribute was bound to the result of fetching the Hello source tarball from the network, so the - src environment variable points to the location in + src environment variable points to the location in the Nix store to which the tarball was downloaded. After unpacking, we cd to the resulting source directory. @@ -93,7 +93,7 @@ steps: /nix/store/9a54ba97fb71b65fda531012d0443ce2-hello-2.1.1. Nix computes this path by cryptographically hashing all attributes of the derivation. The path is passed to the builder through the - out environment variable. So here we give + out environment variable. So here we give configure the parameter --prefix=$out to cause Hello to be installed in the expected location. @@ -103,7 +103,7 @@ steps: Finally we build Hello (make) and install - it into the location specified by out + it into the location specified by out (make install). diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/derivations.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/derivations.xml index 6f6297565..a11de0088 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/derivations.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/derivations.xml @@ -122,7 +122,7 @@ the Nixpkgs manual for details. A temporary directory is created under the directory - specified by TMPDIR (default + specified by TMPDIR (default /tmp) where the build will take place. The current directory is changed to this directory. @@ -133,29 +133,29 @@ the Nixpkgs manual for details. - NIX_BUILD_TOP contains the path of + NIX_BUILD_TOP contains the path of the temporary directory for this build. - Also, TMPDIR, - TEMPDIR, TMP, TEMP + Also, TMPDIR, + TEMPDIR, TMP, TEMP are set to point to the temporary directory. This is to prevent the builder from accidentally writing temporary files anywhere else. Doing so might cause interference by other processes. - PATH is set to + PATH is set to /path-not-set to prevent shells from initialising it to their built-in default value. - HOME is set to + HOME is set to /homeless-shelter to prevent programs from using /etc/passwd or the like to find the user's home directory, which could cause impurity. Usually, when - HOME is set, it is used as the location of the home + HOME is set, it is used as the location of the home directory, even if it points to a non-existent path. - NIX_STORE is set to the path of the + NIX_STORE is set to the path of the top-level Nix store directory (typically, /nix/store). diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/generic-builder.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/generic-builder.xml index db7ff405d..16b0268a7 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/generic-builder.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/generic-builder.xml @@ -38,18 +38,18 @@ genericBuild - The buildInputs variable tells + The buildInputs variable tells setup to use the indicated packages as inputs. This means that if a package provides a bin subdirectory, it's added to - PATH; if it has a include + PATH; if it has a include subdirectory, it's added to GCC's header search path; and so on.How does it work? setup tries to source the file pkg/nix-support/setup-hook of all dependencies. These “setup hooks” can then set up whatever environment variables they want; for instance, the setup hook for - Perl sets the PERL5LIB environment variable to + Perl sets the PERL5LIB environment variable to contain the lib/site_perl directories of all inputs. @@ -78,7 +78,7 @@ genericBuild Discerning readers will note that the -buildInputs could just as well have been set in the Nix +buildInputs could just as well have been set in the Nix expression, like this: diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/language-values.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/language-values.xml index bb2090c88..4a72c67a8 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/language-values.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/language-values.xml @@ -176,7 +176,7 @@ stdenv.mkDerivation { Paths can also be specified between angle brackets, e.g. <nixpkgs>. This means that the directories listed in the environment variable - NIX_PATH will be searched + NIX_PATH will be searched for the given file or directory name. diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/simple-building-testing.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/simple-building-testing.xml index ce0a1636d..33a802e83 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/simple-building-testing.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/simple-building-testing.xml @@ -45,7 +45,7 @@ name. Nix has transactional semantics. Once a build finishes successfully, Nix makes a note of this in its database: it registers -that the path denoted by out is now +that the path denoted by out is now valid. If you try to build the derivation again, Nix will see that the path is already valid and finish immediately. If a build fails, either because it returns a non-zero exit code, because diff --git a/doc/manual/installation/env-variables.xml b/doc/manual/installation/env-variables.xml index cc52f5b4a..436f15f31 100644 --- a/doc/manual/installation/env-variables.xml +++ b/doc/manual/installation/env-variables.xml @@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ Environment Variables To use Nix, some environment variables should be set. In -particular, PATH should contain the directories +particular, PATH should contain the directories prefix/bin and ~/.nix-profile/bin. The first directory contains the Nix tools themselves, while ~/.nix-profile is @@ -23,15 +23,15 @@ source prefix/etc/profile.d/nix.sh
-<envar>NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE</envar> +<literal>NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE</literal> If you need to specify a custom certificate bundle to account for an HTTPS-intercepting man in the middle proxy, you must specify the path to the certificate bundle in the environment variable -NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE. +NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE. -If you don't specify a NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE +If you don't specify a NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE manually, Nix will install and use its own certificate bundle. @@ -56,7 +56,7 @@ the Nix installer will detect the presense of Nix configuration, and abort.
-<envar>NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE</envar> with macOS and the Nix daemon +<literal>NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE</literal> with macOS and the Nix daemon On macOS you must specify the environment variable for the Nix daemon service, then restart it: diff --git a/doc/manual/installation/installing-binary.xml b/doc/manual/installation/installing-binary.xml index 64c7a37fb..ad47ce8b9 100644 --- a/doc/manual/installation/installing-binary.xml +++ b/doc/manual/installation/installing-binary.xml @@ -61,7 +61,7 @@ The install script will modify the first writable file from amongst .bash_profile, .bash_login and .profile to source ~/.nix-profile/etc/profile.d/nix.sh. You can set -the NIX_INSTALLER_NO_MODIFY_PROFILE environment +the NIX_INSTALLER_NO_MODIFY_PROFILE environment variable before executing the install script to disable this behaviour. diff --git a/doc/manual/installation/multi-user.xml b/doc/manual/installation/multi-user.xml index 69ae1ef27..331b5f128 100644 --- a/doc/manual/installation/multi-user.xml +++ b/doc/manual/installation/multi-user.xml @@ -69,7 +69,7 @@ You’ll want to put that line somewhere in your system’s boot scripts. To let unprivileged users use the daemon, they should set the -NIX_REMOTE environment +NIX_REMOTE environment variable to daemon. So you should put a line like diff --git a/doc/manual/introduction/about-nix.xml b/doc/manual/introduction/about-nix.xml index c21ed34dd..ec6f1ca3f 100644 --- a/doc/manual/introduction/about-nix.xml +++ b/doc/manual/introduction/about-nix.xml @@ -76,7 +76,7 @@ extremely well. Nix has multi-user support. This means that non-privileged users can securely install software. Each user can have a different profile, a set of packages in the Nix store that -appear in the user’s PATH. If a user installs a +appear in the user’s PATH. If a user installs a package that another user has already installed previously, the package won’t be built or downloaded a second time. At the same time, it is not possible for one user to inject a Trojan horse into a diff --git a/doc/manual/packages/basic-package-mgmt.xml b/doc/manual/packages/basic-package-mgmt.xml index 0f21297f3..758a4500d 100644 --- a/doc/manual/packages/basic-package-mgmt.xml +++ b/doc/manual/packages/basic-package-mgmt.xml @@ -16,7 +16,7 @@ on the set of installed applications. That is, there might be lots of applications present on the system (possibly in many different versions), but users can have a specific selection of those active — where “active” just means that it appears in a directory -in the user’s PATH. Such a view on the set of +in the user’s PATH. Such a view on the set of installed applications is called a user environment, which is just a directory tree consisting of symlinks to the files of the active applications. diff --git a/doc/manual/packages/profiles.xml b/doc/manual/packages/profiles.xml index 4d10319ab..15085ab58 100644 --- a/doc/manual/packages/profiles.xml +++ b/doc/manual/packages/profiles.xml @@ -41,9 +41,9 @@ store. $ /nix/store/dpmvp969yhdq...-subversion-1.1.3/bin/svn every time you want to run Subversion. Of course we could set up the -PATH environment variable to include the +PATH environment variable to include the bin directory of every package we want to use, -but this is not very convenient since changing PATH +but this is not very convenient since changing PATH doesn’t take effect for already existing processes. The solution Nix uses is to create directory trees of symlinks to activated packages. These are called @@ -122,10 +122,10 @@ $ nix-env --list-generations You generally wouldn’t have /nix/var/nix/profiles/some-profile/bin -in your PATH. Rather, there is a symlink +in your PATH. Rather, there is a symlink ~/.nix-profile that points to your current profile. This means that you should put -~/.nix-profile/bin in your PATH +~/.nix-profile/bin in your PATH (and indeed, that’s what the initialisation script /nix/etc/profile.d/nix.sh does). This makes it easier to switch to a different profile. You can do that using the diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.10.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.10.xml index 9afec4de9..9b4233546 100644 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.10.xml +++ b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.10.xml @@ -184,9 +184,9 @@ irreversible. Nix now works behind an HTTP proxy server; just set - the standard environment variables http_proxy, - https_proxy, ftp_proxy or - all_proxy appropriately. Functions such as + the standard environment variables http_proxy, + https_proxy, ftp_proxy or + all_proxy appropriately. Functions such as fetchurl in Nixpkgs also respect these variables. diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.12.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.12.xml index fdba8c4d5..18978ac4b 100644 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.12.xml +++ b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.12.xml @@ -49,7 +49,7 @@ $ rm __db* log.* derivers references referrers reserved validpaths DB_CONFIGsshfs. The environment - variable NIX_OTHER_STORES specifies the locations of + variable NIX_OTHER_STORES specifies the locations of the remote Nix directories, e.g. /mnt/remote-fs/nix. @@ -156,7 +156,7 @@ the following paths will be downloaded/copied (30.02 MiB): nix-prefetch-url now supports mirror:// URLs, provided that the environment - variable NIXPKGS_ALL points at a Nixpkgs + variable NIXPKGS_ALL points at a Nixpkgs tree. Removed the commands diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.16.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.16.xml index af1edc0eb..43b7622c6 100644 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.16.xml +++ b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.16.xml @@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ N as well as a configuration setting build-cores = N that causes the - environment variable NIX_BUILD_CORES to be set to + environment variable NIX_BUILD_CORES to be set to N when the builder is invoked. The builder can use this at its discretion to perform a parallel build, e.g., by calling make -j diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.0.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.0.xml index ff11168d0..41081a19f 100644 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.0.xml +++ b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.0.xml @@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ previous release. Here are the most significant: Nix now has an search path for expressions. The search path - is set using the environment variable NIX_PATH and + is set using the environment variable NIX_PATH and the command line option. In Nix expressions, paths between angle brackets are used to specify files that must be looked up in the search path. For instance, the expression diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.2.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.2.xml index 748fd9e67..29bd5bf81 100644 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.2.xml +++ b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.2.xml @@ -116,7 +116,7 @@ $ mount -o remount,ro,bind /nix/store Basic Nix expression evaluation profiling: setting the - environment variable NIX_COUNT_CALLS to + environment variable NIX_COUNT_CALLS to 1 will cause Nix to print how many times each primop or function was executed. diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.6.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.6.xml index 580563420..cdb52ed0b 100644 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.6.xml +++ b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.6.xml @@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ features: nix-shell now sets the shell prompt - (PS1) to ensure that Nix shells are distinguishable + (PS1) to ensure that Nix shells are distinguishable from your regular shells. diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.8.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.8.xml index c854c5c5f..326990774 100644 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.8.xml +++ b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.8.xml @@ -105,7 +105,7 @@ $ nix-store -l $(which xterm) some terminals show them anyway. Various commands now automatically pipe their output - into the pager as specified by the PAGER environment + into the pager as specified by the PAGER environment variable. Several improvements to reduce memory consumption in diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.9.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.9.xml index c8406bd20..cc6558b1a 100644 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.9.xml +++ b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.9.xml @@ -62,7 +62,7 @@ $ nix-build https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/master.tar.gz -A hello master branch. In the Nix search path (as specified via - NIX_PATH or ). For example, to + NIX_PATH or ). For example, to start a shell containing the Pan package from a specific version of Nixpkgs: @@ -190,8 +190,8 @@ main = do “generation” symlink in /nix/var/nix/profiles if something actually changed. - The environment variable NIX_PAGER - can now be set to override PAGER. You can set it to + The environment variable NIX_PAGER + can now be set to override PAGER. You can set it to cat to disable paging for Nix commands only. diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.0.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.0.xml index 4c683dd3d..57acfd0ba 100644 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.0.xml +++ b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.0.xml @@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ The “copy from other stores” substituter mechanism (copy-from-other-stores and the - NIX_OTHER_STORES environment variable) has been + NIX_OTHER_STORES environment variable) has been removed. It was primarily used by the NixOS installer to copy available paths from the installation medium. The replacement is to use a chroot store as a substituter @@ -371,7 +371,7 @@ daemon. You can use auto or the empty string to auto-select a local or daemon store depending on whether you have write permission to the Nix store. It is no - longer necessary to set the NIX_REMOTE + longer necessary to set the NIX_REMOTE environment variable to use the Nix daemon. As noted above, LocalStore now @@ -492,7 +492,7 @@ use /build instead of /tmp as the temporary build directory. This fixes potential security problems when a build - accidentally stores its TMPDIR in some + accidentally stores its TMPDIR in some security-sensitive place, such as an RPATH. @@ -546,8 +546,8 @@ are not using the Nix daemon, you can now just specify a remote build machine on the command line, e.g. --option builders 'ssh://my-mac x86_64-darwin'. The environment variable - NIX_BUILD_HOOK has been removed and is no longer - needed. The environment variable NIX_REMOTE_SYSTEMS + NIX_BUILD_HOOK has been removed and is no longer + needed. The environment variable NIX_REMOTE_SYSTEMS is still supported for compatibility, but it is also possible to specify builders in nix.conf by setting the option builders = @@ -574,7 +574,7 @@ - NIX_PATH is now lazy, so URIs in the path are + NIX_PATH is now lazy, so URIs in the path are only downloaded if they are needed for evaluation. @@ -672,7 +672,7 @@ nix-shell now uses bashInteractive from Nixpkgs, rather than the bash command that happens to be in the caller’s - PATH. This is especially important on macOS where + PATH. This is especially important on macOS where the bash provided by the system is seriously outdated and cannot execute stdenv’s setup script. @@ -720,7 +720,7 @@ configureFlags = "--prefix=${placeholder "out"} --includedir=${placeholder "dev"}"; - will cause the configureFlags environment variable + will cause the configureFlags environment variable to contain the actual store paths corresponding to the out and dev outputs. @@ -815,7 +815,7 @@ configureFlags = "--prefix=${placeholder "out"} --includedir=${placeholder "dev" __structuredAttrs is set to true, the other derivation attributes are serialised in JSON format and made available to the builder via - the file .attrs.json in the builder’s temporary + the file .attrs.json in the builder’s temporary directory. This obviates the need for passAsFile since JSON files have no size restrictions, unlike process environments. @@ -823,7 +823,7 @@ configureFlags = "--prefix=${placeholder "out"} --includedir=${placeholder "dev" As a convenience to Bash builders, Nix writes a script named - .attrs.sh to the builder’s directory that + .attrs.sh to the builder’s directory that initialises shell variables corresponding to all attributes that are representable in Bash. This includes non-nested (associative) arrays. For example, the attribute hardening.format = @@ -835,7 +835,7 @@ configureFlags = "--prefix=${placeholder "out"} --includedir=${placeholder "dev" Builders can now communicate what build phase they are in by writing messages to - the file descriptor specified in NIX_LOG_FD. The + the file descriptor specified in NIX_LOG_FD. The current phase is shown by the nix progress indicator. diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.2.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.2.xml index d29eb87e8..cc992fabb 100644 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.2.xml +++ b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.2.xml @@ -114,8 +114,8 @@ import <nix/fetchurl.nix> { The evaluator now prints profiling statistics (enabled via - the NIX_SHOW_STATS and - NIX_COUNT_CALLS environment variables) in JSON + the NIX_SHOW_STATS and + NIX_COUNT_CALLS environment variables) in JSON format. diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.3.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.3.xml index 0ad7d641f..83accf33e 100644 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.3.xml +++ b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.3.xml @@ -60,7 +60,7 @@ incompatible changes: Builds are now executed in a pseudo-terminal, and the - TERM environment variable is set to + TERM environment variable is set to xterm-256color. This allows many programs (e.g. gcc, clang, cmake) to print colorized log output. From f3903035667e158112dfd414091d8d50ef90c5f4 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Thu, 23 Jul 2020 10:44:54 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 10/57] Reconvert --- doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md | 2 + .../src/advanced-topics/cores-vs-jobs.md | 10 +- .../src/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.md | 2 +- doc/manual/src/command-ref/command-ref.md | 2 + doc/manual/src/command-ref/env-common.md | 112 +++++++++ doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common.md | 221 ++++++++++++++++++ .../src/expressions/advanced-attributes.md | 14 +- doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md | 20 +- doc/manual/src/expressions/builder-syntax.md | 20 +- doc/manual/src/expressions/derivations.md | 16 +- doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md | 13 +- doc/manual/src/expressions/language-values.md | 4 +- .../expressions/simple-building-testing.md | 2 +- doc/manual/src/installation/env-variables.md | 10 +- .../src/installation/installing-binary.md | 4 +- doc/manual/src/installation/multi-user.md | 2 +- .../package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md | 8 +- doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md | 8 +- doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.10.md | 4 +- doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.12.md | 4 +- doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.16.md | 2 +- doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.0.md | 2 +- doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.2.md | 2 +- doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.6.md | 2 +- doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.8.md | 2 +- doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.9.md | 8 +- doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.0.md | 28 +-- doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.2.md | 2 +- doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.3.md | 2 +- 29 files changed, 433 insertions(+), 95 deletions(-) create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/command-ref/env-common.md create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common.md diff --git a/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md b/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md index f562d1db4..f9ef1b060 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md @@ -45,6 +45,8 @@ - [Verifying Build Reproducibility](advanced-topics/diff-hook.md) - [Using the `post-build-hook`](advanced-topics/post-build-hook.md) - [Command Reference](command-ref/command-ref.md) + - [Common Options](command-ref/opt-common.md) + - [Common Environment Variables](command-ref/env-common.md) - [Utilities](command-ref/utilities.md) - [nix-copy-closure](command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md) - [Glossary](glossary.md) diff --git a/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/cores-vs-jobs.md b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/cores-vs-jobs.md index 846b6356e..91e95d5b4 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/cores-vs-jobs.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/cores-vs-jobs.md @@ -16,18 +16,18 @@ configuration trade-offs. -j`. The [???](#conf-cores) setting determines the value of -NIX\_BUILD\_CORES. NIX\_BUILD\_CORES is equal to [???](#conf-cores), -unless [???](#conf-cores) equals `0`, in which case NIX\_BUILD\_CORES +`NIX_BUILD_CORES`. `NIX_BUILD_CORES` is equal to [???](#conf-cores), +unless [???](#conf-cores) equals `0`, in which case `NIX_BUILD_CORES` will be the total number of cores in the system. The maximum number of consumed cores is a simple multiplication, -[???](#conf-max-jobs) \* NIX\_BUILD\_CORES. +[???](#conf-max-jobs) \* `NIX_BUILD_CORES`. The balance on how to set these two independent variables depends upon each builder's workload and hardware. Here are a few example scenarios on a machine with 24 cores: -| [???](#conf-max-jobs) | [???](#conf-cores) | NIX\_BUILD\_CORES | Maximum Processes | Result | +| [???](#conf-max-jobs) | [???](#conf-cores) | `NIX_BUILD_CORES` | Maximum Processes | Result | | --------------------- | ------------------ | ----------------- | ----------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | 1 | 24 | 24 | 24 | One derivation will be built at a time, each one can use 24 cores. Undersold if a job can’t use 24 cores. | | 4 | 6 | 6 | 24 | Four derivations will be built at once, each given access to six cores. | @@ -38,5 +38,5 @@ on a machine with 24 cores: Balancing 24 Build Cores It is up to the derivations' build script to respect host's requested -cores-per-build by following the value of the NIX\_BUILD\_CORES +cores-per-build by following the value of the `NIX_BUILD_CORES` environment variable. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.md b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.md index 197708ee5..4f24febb0 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.md @@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ If you get the error bash: nix-store: command not found error: cannot connect to 'mac' -then you need to ensure that the PATH of non-interactive login shells +then you need to ensure that the `PATH` of non-interactive login shells contains Nix. > **Warning** diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/command-ref.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/command-ref.md index b15a50a3b..2c7dbf22e 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/command-ref.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/command-ref.md @@ -1,2 +1,4 @@ +# Command Reference + This section lists commands and options that you can use when you work with Nix. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/env-common.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/env-common.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..14e08e0f1 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/env-common.md @@ -0,0 +1,112 @@ +# Common Environment Variables + +Most Nix commands interpret the following environment variables: + + - `IN_NIX_SHELL` + Indicator that tells if the current environment was set up by + `nix-shell`. Since Nix 2.0 the values are `"pure"` and `"impure"` + + - `NIX_PATH` + A colon-separated list of directories used to look up Nix + expressions enclosed in angle brackets (i.e., ``). For + instance, the value + + /home/eelco/Dev:/etc/nixos + + will cause Nix to look for paths relative to `/home/eelco/Dev` and + `/etc/nixos`, in this order. It is also possible to match paths + against a prefix. For example, the value + + nixpkgs=/home/eelco/Dev/nixpkgs-branch:/etc/nixos + + will cause Nix to search for `` in + `/home/eelco/Dev/nixpkgs-branch/path` and `/etc/nixos/nixpkgs/path`. + + If a path in the Nix search path starts with `http://` or + `https://`, it is interpreted as the URL of a tarball that will be + downloaded and unpacked to a temporary location. The tarball must + consist of a single top-level directory. For example, setting + `NIX_PATH` to + + nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-15.09.tar.gz + + tells Nix to download the latest revision in the Nixpkgs/NixOS 15.09 + channel. + + A following shorthand can be used to refer to the official channels: + + nixpkgs=channel:nixos-15.09 + + The search path can be extended using the `-I` option, which takes + precedence over `NIX_PATH`. + + - `NIX_IGNORE_SYMLINK_STORE` + Normally, the Nix store directory (typically `/nix/store`) is not + allowed to contain any symlink components. This is to prevent + “impure” builds. Builders sometimes “canonicalise” paths by + resolving all symlink components. Thus, builds on different machines + (with `/nix/store` resolving to different locations) could yield + different results. This is generally not a problem, except when + builds are deployed to machines where `/nix/store` resolves + differently. If you are sure that you’re not going to do that, you + can set `NIX_IGNORE_SYMLINK_STORE` to `1`. + + Note that if you’re symlinking the Nix store so that you can put it + on another file system than the root file system, on Linux you’re + better off using `bind` mount points, e.g., + + $ mkdir /nix + $ mount -o bind /mnt/otherdisk/nix /nix + + Consult the mount 8 manual page for details. + + - `NIX_STORE_DIR` + Overrides the location of the Nix store (default `prefix/store`). + + - `NIX_DATA_DIR` + Overrides the location of the Nix static data directory (default + `prefix/share`). + + - `NIX_LOG_DIR` + Overrides the location of the Nix log directory (default + `prefix/var/log/nix`). + + - `NIX_STATE_DIR` + Overrides the location of the Nix state directory (default + `prefix/var/nix`). + + - `NIX_CONF_DIR` + Overrides the location of the system Nix configuration directory + (default `prefix/etc/nix`). + + - `NIX_USER_CONF_FILES` + Overrides the location of the user Nix configuration files to load + from (defaults to the XDG spec locations). The variable is treated + as a list separated by the `:` token. + + - `TMPDIR` + Use the specified directory to store temporary files. In particular, + this includes temporary build directories; these can take up + substantial amounts of disk space. The default is `/tmp`. + + - `NIX_REMOTE` + This variable should be set to `daemon` if you want to use the Nix + daemon to execute Nix operations. This is necessary in [multi-user + Nix installations](#ssec-multi-user). If the Nix daemon's Unix + socket is at some non-standard path, this variable should be set to + `unix://path/to/socket`. Otherwise, it should be left unset. + + - `NIX_SHOW_STATS` + If set to `1`, Nix will print some evaluation statistics, such as + the number of values allocated. + + - `NIX_COUNT_CALLS` + If set to `1`, Nix will print how often functions were called during + Nix expression evaluation. This is useful for profiling your Nix + expressions. + + - `GC_INITIAL_HEAP_SIZE` + If Nix has been configured to use the Boehm garbage collector, this + variable sets the initial size of the heap in bytes. It defaults to + 384 MiB. Setting it to a low value reduces memory consumption, but + will increase runtime due to the overhead of garbage collection. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..ac9d996c3 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common.md @@ -0,0 +1,221 @@ +# Common Options + +Most Nix commands accept the following command-line options: + + - `--help` + Prints out a summary of the command syntax and exits. + + - `--version` + Prints out the Nix version number on standard output and exits. + + - `--verbose` / `-v` + Increases the level of verbosity of diagnostic messages printed on + standard error. For each Nix operation, the information printed on + standard output is well-defined; any diagnostic information is + printed on standard error, never on standard output. + + This option may be specified repeatedly. Currently, the following + verbosity levels exist: + + - 0 + “Errors only”: only print messages explaining why the Nix + invocation failed. + + - 1 + “Informational”: print *useful* messages about what Nix is + doing. This is the default. + + - 2 + “Talkative”: print more informational messages. + + - 3 + “Chatty”: print even more informational messages. + + - 4 + “Debug”: print debug information. + + - 5 + “Vomit”: print vast amounts of debug information. + + - `--quiet` + Decreases the level of verbosity of diagnostic messages printed on + standard error. This is the inverse option to `-v` / `--verbose`. + + This option may be specified repeatedly. See the previous verbosity + levels list. + + - `--log-format` format + This option can be used to change the output of the log format, with + format being one of: + + - raw + This is the raw format, as outputted by nix-build. + + - internal-json + Outputs the logs in a structured manner. NOTE: the json schema + is not guarantees to be stable between releases. + + - bar + Only display a progress bar during the builds. + + - bar-with-logs + Display the raw logs, with the progress bar at the bottom. + + - `--no-build-output` / `-Q` + By default, output written by builders to standard output and + standard error is echoed to the Nix command's standard error. This + option suppresses this behaviour. Note that the builder's standard + output and error are always written to a log file in + `prefix/nix/var/log/nix`. + + - `--max-jobs` / `-j` number + Sets the maximum number of build jobs that Nix will perform in + parallel to the specified number. Specify `auto` to use the number + of CPUs in the system. The default is specified by the + [`max-jobs`](#conf-max-jobs) configuration setting, which itself + defaults to `1`. A higher value is useful on SMP systems or to + exploit I/O latency. + + Setting it to `0` disallows building on the local machine, which is + useful when you want builds to happen only on remote builders. + + - `--cores` + Sets the value of the `NIX_BUILD_CORES` environment variable in the + invocation of builders. Builders can use this variable at their + discretion to control the maximum amount of parallelism. For + instance, in Nixpkgs, if the derivation attribute + `enableParallelBuilding` is set to `true`, the builder passes the + `-jN` flag to GNU Make. It defaults to the value of the + [`cores`](#conf-cores) configuration setting, if set, or `1` + otherwise. The value `0` means that the builder should use all + available CPU cores in the system. + + - `--max-silent-time` + Sets the maximum number of seconds that a builder can go without + producing any data on standard output or standard error. The default + is specified by the [`max-silent-time`](#conf-max-silent-time) + configuration setting. `0` means no time-out. + + - `--timeout` + Sets the maximum number of seconds that a builder can run. The + default is specified by the [`timeout`](#conf-timeout) configuration + setting. `0` means no timeout. + + - `--keep-going` / `-k` + Keep going in case of failed builds, to the greatest extent + possible. That is, if building an input of some derivation fails, + Nix will still build the other inputs, but not the derivation + itself. Without this option, Nix stops if any build fails (except + for builds of substitutes), possibly killing builds in progress (in + case of parallel or distributed builds). + + - `--keep-failed` / `-K` + Specifies that in case of a build failure, the temporary directory + (usually in `/tmp`) in which the build takes place should not be + deleted. The path of the build directory is printed as an + informational message. + + - `--fallback` + Whenever Nix attempts to build a derivation for which substitutes + are known for each output path, but realising the output paths + through the substitutes fails, fall back on building the derivation. + + The most common scenario in which this is useful is when we have + registered substitutes in order to perform binary distribution from, + say, a network repository. If the repository is down, the + realisation of the derivation will fail. When this option is + specified, Nix will build the derivation instead. Thus, installation + from binaries falls back on installation from source. This option is + not the default since it is generally not desirable for a transient + failure in obtaining the substitutes to lead to a full build from + source (with the related consumption of resources). + + - `--no-build-hook` + Disables the build hook mechanism. This allows to ignore remote + builders if they are setup on the machine. + + It's useful in cases where the bandwidth between the client and the + remote builder is too low. In that case it can take more time to + upload the sources to the remote builder and fetch back the result + than to do the computation locally. + + - `--readonly-mode` + When this option is used, no attempt is made to open the Nix + database. Most Nix operations do need database access, so those + operations will fail. + + - `--arg` name value + This option is accepted by `nix-env`, `nix-instantiate`, `nix-shell` + and `nix-build`. When evaluating Nix expressions, the expression + evaluator will automatically try to call functions that it + encounters. It can automatically call functions for which every + argument has a [default value](#ss-functions) (e.g., `{ argName ? + defaultValue }: + ...`). With `--arg`, you can also call functions that have arguments + without a default value (or override a default value). That is, if + the evaluator encounters a function with an argument named name, it + will call it with value value. + + For instance, the top-level `default.nix` in Nixpkgs is actually a + function: + + { # The system (e.g., `i686-linux') for which to build the packages. + system ? builtins.currentSystem + ... + }: ... + + So if you call this Nix expression (e.g., when you do `nix-env -i + pkgname`), the function will be called automatically using the value + [`builtins.currentSystem`](#builtin-currentSystem) for the `system` + argument. You can override this using `--arg`, e.g., `nix-env -i + pkgname --arg system + \"i686-freebsd\"`. (Note that since the argument is a Nix string + literal, you have to escape the quotes.) + + - `--argstr` name value + This option is like `--arg`, only the value is not a Nix expression + but a string. So instead of `--arg system \"i686-linux\"` (the outer + quotes are to keep the shell happy) you can say `--argstr system + i686-linux`. + + - `--attr` / `-A` attrPath + Select an attribute from the top-level Nix expression being + evaluated. (`nix-env`, `nix-instantiate`, `nix-build` and + `nix-shell` only.) The *attribute path* attrPath is a sequence of + attribute names separated by dots. For instance, given a top-level + Nix expression e, the attribute path `xorg.xorgserver` would cause + the expression `e.xorg.xorgserver` to be used. See [`nix-env + --install`](#refsec-nix-env-install-examples) for some concrete + examples. + + In addition to attribute names, you can also specify array indices. + For instance, the attribute path `foo.3.bar` selects the `bar` + attribute of the fourth element of the array in the `foo` attribute + of the top-level expression. + + - `--expr` / `-E` + Interpret the command line arguments as a list of Nix expressions to + be parsed and evaluated, rather than as a list of file names of Nix + expressions. (`nix-instantiate`, `nix-build` and `nix-shell` only.) + + For `nix-shell`, this option is commonly used to give you a shell in + which you can build the packages returned by the expression. If you + want to get a shell which contain the *built* packages ready for + use, give your expression to the `nix-shell -p` convenience flag + instead. + + - `-I` path + Add a path to the Nix expression search path. This option may be + given multiple times. See the NIX\_PATH\ environment + variable for information on the semantics of the Nix search path. + Paths added through `-I` take precedence over `NIX_PATH`. + + - `--option` name value + Set the Nix configuration option name to value. This overrides + settings in the Nix configuration file (see nix.conf5). + + - `--repair` + Fix corrupted or missing store paths by redownloading or rebuilding + them. Note that this is slow because it requires computing a + cryptographic hash of the contents of every path in the closure of + the build. Also note the warning under `nix-store --repair-path`. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/advanced-attributes.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/advanced-attributes.md index 683b504a7..01e18513d 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/advanced-attributes.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/advanced-attributes.md @@ -87,7 +87,7 @@ Derivations can declare some infrequently used optional attributes. impureEnvVars = [ "http_proxy" "https_proxy" ... ]; to make it use the proxy server configuration specified by the user - in the environment variables http\_proxy and friends. + in the environment variables `http_proxy` and friends. This attribute is only allowed in [fixed-output derivations](#fixed-output-drvs), where impurities such as these are @@ -201,15 +201,15 @@ Derivations can declare some infrequently used optional attributes. ``` - then when the builder runs, the environment variable bigPath will + then when the builder runs, the environment variable `bigPath` will contain the absolute path to a temporary file containing `a very long string`. That is, for any attribute x listed in `passAsFile`, Nix - will pass an environment variable xPath holding the path of the file - containing the value of attribute x. This is useful when you need to - pass large strings to a builder, since most operating systems impose - a limit on the size of the environment (typically, a few hundred - kilobyte). + will pass an environment variable `xPath` holding the path of the + file containing the value of attribute x. This is useful when you + need to pass large strings to a builder, since most operating + systems impose a limit on the size of the environment (typically, a + few hundred kilobyte). - `preferLocalBuild` If this attribute is set to `true` and [distributed building is diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md index 256a5cd44..a359ebc46 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md @@ -19,29 +19,29 @@ what a builder does. It performs the following steps: - When Nix runs a builder, it initially completely clears the environment (except for the attributes declared in the derivation). - For instance, the PATH variable is empty\[1\]. This is done to + For instance, the `PATH` variable is empty\[1\]. This is done to prevent undeclared inputs from being used in the build process. If - for example the PATH contained `/usr/bin`, then you might + for example the `PATH` contained `/usr/bin`, then you might accidentally use `/usr/bin/gcc`. So the first step is to set up the environment. This is done by calling the `setup` script of the standard environment. The - environment variable stdenv points to the location of the standard + environment variable `stdenv` points to the location of the standard environment being used. (It wasn't specified explicitly as an attribute in [???](#ex-hello-nix), but `mkDerivation` adds it automatically.) - Since Hello needs Perl, we have to make sure that Perl is in the - PATH. The perl environment variable points to the location of the - Perl package (since it was passed in as an attribute to the + `PATH`. The `perl` environment variable points to the location of + the Perl package (since it was passed in as an attribute to the derivation), so `$perl/bin` is the directory containing the Perl interpreter. - Now we have to unpack the sources. The `src` attribute was bound to the result of fetching the Hello source tarball from the network, so - the src environment variable points to the location in the Nix store - to which the tarball was downloaded. After unpacking, we `cd` to the - resulting source directory. + the `src` environment variable points to the location in the Nix + store to which the tarball was downloaded. After unpacking, we `cd` + to the resulting source directory. The whole build is performed in a temporary directory created in `/tmp`, by the way. This directory is removed after the builder @@ -55,13 +55,13 @@ what a builder does. It performs the following steps: separate location in the Nix store, for instance `/nix/store/9a54ba97fb71b65fda531012d0443ce2-hello-2.1.1`. Nix computes this path by cryptographically hashing all attributes of - the derivation. The path is passed to the builder through the out + the derivation. The path is passed to the builder through the `out` environment variable. So here we give `configure` the parameter `--prefix=$out` to cause Hello to be installed in the expected location. - Finally we build Hello (`make`) and install it into the location - specified by out (`make install`). + specified by `out` (`make install`). If you are wondering about the absence of error checking on the result of various commands called in the builder: this is because the shell diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/builder-syntax.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builder-syntax.md index c92acf106..916159d40 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/builder-syntax.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builder-syntax.md @@ -19,29 +19,29 @@ what a builder does. It performs the following steps: - When Nix runs a builder, it initially completely clears the environment (except for the attributes declared in the derivation). - For instance, the PATH variable is empty\[1\]. This is done to + For instance, the `PATH` variable is empty\[1\]. This is done to prevent undeclared inputs from being used in the build process. If - for example the PATH contained `/usr/bin`, then you might + for example the `PATH` contained `/usr/bin`, then you might accidentally use `/usr/bin/gcc`. So the first step is to set up the environment. This is done by calling the `setup` script of the standard environment. The - environment variable stdenv points to the location of the standard + environment variable `stdenv` points to the location of the standard environment being used. (It wasn't specified explicitly as an attribute in [???](#ex-hello-nix), but `mkDerivation` adds it automatically.) - Since Hello needs Perl, we have to make sure that Perl is in the - PATH. The perl environment variable points to the location of the - Perl package (since it was passed in as an attribute to the + `PATH`. The `perl` environment variable points to the location of + the Perl package (since it was passed in as an attribute to the derivation), so `$perl/bin` is the directory containing the Perl interpreter. - Now we have to unpack the sources. The `src` attribute was bound to the result of fetching the Hello source tarball from the network, so - the src environment variable points to the location in the Nix store - to which the tarball was downloaded. After unpacking, we `cd` to the - resulting source directory. + the `src` environment variable points to the location in the Nix + store to which the tarball was downloaded. After unpacking, we `cd` + to the resulting source directory. The whole build is performed in a temporary directory created in `/tmp`, by the way. This directory is removed after the builder @@ -55,13 +55,13 @@ what a builder does. It performs the following steps: separate location in the Nix store, for instance `/nix/store/9a54ba97fb71b65fda531012d0443ce2-hello-2.1.1`. Nix computes this path by cryptographically hashing all attributes of - the derivation. The path is passed to the builder through the out + the derivation. The path is passed to the builder through the `out` environment variable. So here we give `configure` the parameter `--prefix=$out` to cause Hello to be installed in the expected location. - Finally we build Hello (`make`) and install it into the location - specified by out (`make install`). + specified by `out` (`make install`). If you are wondering about the absence of error checking on the result of various commands called in the builder: this is because the shell diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/derivations.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/derivations.md index 7ffc6fabe..a4df20baa 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/derivations.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/derivations.md @@ -83,32 +83,32 @@ as a command-line argument. See the Nixpkgs manual for details. The builder is executed as follows: - A temporary directory is created under the directory specified by - TMPDIR (default `/tmp`) where the build will take place. The current - directory is changed to this directory. + `TMPDIR` (default `/tmp`) where the build will take place. The + current directory is changed to this directory. - The environment is cleared and set to the derivation attributes, as specified above. - In addition, the following variables are set: - - NIX\_BUILD\_TOP contains the path of the temporary directory for + - `NIX_BUILD_TOP` contains the path of the temporary directory for this build. - - Also, TMPDIR, TEMPDIR, TMP, TEMP are set to point to the + - Also, `TMPDIR`, `TEMPDIR`, `TMP`, `TEMP` are set to point to the temporary directory. This is to prevent the builder from accidentally writing temporary files anywhere else. Doing so might cause interference by other processes. - - PATH is set to `/path-not-set` to prevent shells from + - `PATH` is set to `/path-not-set` to prevent shells from initialising it to their built-in default value. - - HOME is set to `/homeless-shelter` to prevent programs from + - `HOME` is set to `/homeless-shelter` to prevent programs from using `/etc/passwd` or the like to find the user's home - directory, which could cause impurity. Usually, when HOME is + directory, which could cause impurity. Usually, when `HOME` is set, it is used as the location of the home directory, even if it points to a non-existent path. - - NIX\_STORE is set to the path of the top-level Nix store + - `NIX_STORE` is set to the path of the top-level Nix store directory (typically, `/nix/store`). - For each output declared in `outputs`, the corresponding diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md index cbc484199..a00b08b55 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md @@ -22,9 +22,9 @@ build facilities in shown in [example\_title](#ex-hello-builder2). genericBuild - - The buildInputs variable tells `setup` to use the indicated packages - as “inputs”. This means that if a package provides a `bin` - subdirectory, it's added to PATH; if it has a `include` + - The `buildInputs` variable tells `setup` to use the indicated + packages as “inputs”. This means that if a package provides a `bin` + subdirectory, it's added to `PATH`; if it has a `include` subdirectory, it's added to GCC's header search path; and so on.\[1\] @@ -37,7 +37,7 @@ build facilities in shown in [example\_title](#ex-hello-builder2). It can be customised in many ways; see the Nixpkgs manual for details. -Discerning readers will note that the buildInputs could just as well +Discerning readers will note that the `buildInputs` could just as well have been set in the Nix expression, like this: ``` @@ -57,5 +57,6 @@ entirely. 1. How does it work? `setup` tries to source the file `pkg/nix-support/setup-hook` of all dependencies. These “setup hooks” can then set up whatever environment variables they want; - for instance, the setup hook for Perl sets the PERL5LIB environment - variable to contain the `lib/site_perl` directories of all inputs. + for instance, the setup hook for Perl sets the `PERL5LIB` + environment variable to contain the `lib/site_perl` directories of + all inputs. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-values.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-values.md index 98ad97c97..fac0be47e 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-values.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-values.md @@ -120,8 +120,8 @@ Nix has the following basic data types: Paths can also be specified between angle brackets, e.g. ``. This means that the directories listed in the - environment variable NIX\_PATH will be searched for the given file - or directory name. + environment variable NIX\_PATH\ will be searched for the + given file or directory name. - *Booleans* with values `true` and `false`. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/simple-building-testing.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/simple-building-testing.md index bc064c733..c3e8d7f82 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/simple-building-testing.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/simple-building-testing.md @@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ of the build will be safely kept on your system. You can use Nix has transactional semantics. Once a build finishes successfully, Nix makes a note of this in its database: it registers that the path denoted -by out is now “valid”. If you try to build the derivation again, Nix +by `out` is now “valid”. If you try to build the derivation again, Nix will see that the path is already valid and finish immediately. If a build fails, either because it returns a non-zero exit code, because Nix or the builder are killed, or because the machine crashes, then the diff --git a/doc/manual/src/installation/env-variables.md b/doc/manual/src/installation/env-variables.md index 7946ac437..6e78245c9 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/installation/env-variables.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/installation/env-variables.md @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ # Environment Variables To use Nix, some environment variables should be set. In particular, -PATH should contain the directories `prefix/bin` and +`PATH` should contain the directories `prefix/bin` and `~/.nix-profile/bin`. The first directory contains the Nix tools themselves, while `~/.nix-profile` is a symbolic link to the current *user environment* (an automatically generated package consisting of @@ -12,13 +12,13 @@ this: source prefix/etc/profile.d/nix.sh -# NIX\_SSL\_CERT\_FILE +# `NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE` If you need to specify a custom certificate bundle to account for an HTTPS-intercepting man in the middle proxy, you must specify the path to -the certificate bundle in the environment variable NIX\_SSL\_CERT\_FILE. +the certificate bundle in the environment variable `NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE`. -If you don't specify a NIX\_SSL\_CERT\_FILE manually, Nix will install +If you don't specify a `NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE` manually, Nix will install and use its own certificate bundle. Set the environment variable and install Nix @@ -36,7 +36,7 @@ In the shell profile and rc files (for example, `/etc/bashrc`, > You must not add the export and then do the install, as the Nix > installer will detect the presense of Nix configuration, and abort. -## NIX\_SSL\_CERT\_FILE with macOS and the Nix daemon +## `NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE` with macOS and the Nix daemon On macOS you must specify the environment variable for the Nix daemon service, then restart it: diff --git a/doc/manual/src/installation/installing-binary.md b/doc/manual/src/installation/installing-binary.md index d4e412e67..6983452d3 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/installation/installing-binary.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/installation/installing-binary.md @@ -34,8 +34,8 @@ manually create `/nix` first as root, e.g.: The install script will modify the first writable file from amongst `.bash_profile`, `.bash_login` and `.profile` to source `~/.nix-profile/etc/profile.d/nix.sh`. You can set the -NIX\_INSTALLER\_NO\_MODIFY\_PROFILE environment variable before -executing the install script to disable this behaviour. +`NIX_INSTALLER_NO_MODIFY_PROFILE` environment variable before executing +the install script to disable this behaviour. You can uninstall Nix simply by running: diff --git a/doc/manual/src/installation/multi-user.md b/doc/manual/src/installation/multi-user.md index 17286fdc5..6493e717b 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/installation/multi-user.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/installation/multi-user.md @@ -43,7 +43,7 @@ The [Nix daemon](#sec-nix-daemon) should be started as follows (as You’ll want to put that line somewhere in your system’s boot scripts. To let unprivileged users use the daemon, they should set the -[NIX\_REMOTE environment variable](#envar-remote) to `daemon`. So you +[`NIX_REMOTE` environment variable](#envar-remote) to `daemon`. So you should put a line like export NIX_REMOTE=daemon diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md index f5c550fd7..04dad3339 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md @@ -8,10 +8,10 @@ In Nix, different users can have different “views” on the set of installed applications. That is, there might be lots of applications present on the system (possibly in many different versions), but users can have a specific selection of those active — where “active” just -means that it appears in a directory in the user’s PATH. Such a view on -the set of installed applications is called a *user environment*, which -is just a directory tree consisting of symlinks to the files of the -active applications. +means that it appears in a directory in the user’s `PATH`. Such a view +on the set of installed applications is called a *user environment*, +which is just a directory tree consisting of symlinks to the files of +the active applications. Components are installed from a set of *Nix expressions* that tell Nix how to build those packages, including, if necessary, their diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md index c46adf538..984afca55 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md @@ -24,9 +24,9 @@ Of course, you wouldn’t want to type $ /nix/store/dpmvp969yhdq...-subversion-1.1.3/bin/svn every time you want to run Subversion. Of course we could set up the -PATH environment variable to include the `bin` directory of every +`PATH` environment variable to include the `bin` directory of every package we want to use, but this is not very convenient since changing -PATH doesn’t take effect for already existing processes. The solution +`PATH` doesn’t take effect for already existing processes. The solution Nix uses is to create directory trees of symlinks to *activated* packages. These are called *user environments* and they are packages themselves (though automatically generated by `nix-env`), so they too @@ -89,9 +89,9 @@ also see all available generations: $ nix-env --list-generations You generally wouldn’t have `/nix/var/nix/profiles/some-profile/bin` in -your PATH. Rather, there is a symlink `~/.nix-profile` that points to +your `PATH`. Rather, there is a symlink `~/.nix-profile` that points to your current profile. This means that you should put -`~/.nix-profile/bin` in your PATH (and indeed, that’s what the +`~/.nix-profile/bin` in your `PATH` (and indeed, that’s what the initialisation script `/nix/etc/profile.d/nix.sh` does). This makes it easier to switch to a different profile. You can do that using the command `nix-env --switch-profile`: diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.10.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.10.md index bf0e59fad..07b19ff05 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.10.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.10.md @@ -124,8 +124,8 @@ URL` allows a package to be installed directly from the given URL. - Nix now works behind an HTTP proxy server; just set the standard - environment variables http\_proxy, https\_proxy, ftp\_proxy or - all\_proxy appropriately. Functions such as `fetchurl` in Nixpkgs + environment variables `http_proxy`, `https_proxy`, `ftp_proxy` or + `all_proxy` appropriately. Functions such as `fetchurl` in Nixpkgs also respect these variables. - `nix-build -o diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.12.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.12.md index 0dc727b69..aaecfbb70 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.12.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.12.md @@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ (remote) Nix stores mounted somewhere in the filesystem. For instance, you can speed up an installation by mounting some remote Nix store that already has the packages in question via NFS or - `sshfs`. The environment variable NIX\_OTHER\_STORES specifies the + `sshfs`. The environment variable `NIX_OTHER_STORES` specifies the locations of the remote Nix directories, e.g. `/mnt/remote-fs/nix`. - New `nix-store` operations `--dump-db` and `--load-db` to dump and @@ -111,7 +111,7 @@ (integer multiplication), `builtins.div` (integer division). - `nix-prefetch-url` now supports `mirror://` URLs, provided that the - environment variable NIXPKGS\_ALL points at a Nixpkgs tree. + environment variable `NIXPKGS_ALL` points at a Nixpkgs tree. - Removed the commands `nix-pack-closure` and `nix-unpack-closure`. You can do almost the same thing but much more efficiently by doing diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.16.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.16.md index 121bbde28..79074fcdc 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.16.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.16.md @@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ This release has the following improvements: performed in parallel was not configurable. Nix now has an option `--cores N` as well as a configuration setting `build-cores = - N` that causes the environment variable NIX\_BUILD\_CORES to be set + N` that causes the environment variable `NIX_BUILD_CORES` to be set to N when the builder is invoked. The builder can use this at its discretion to perform a parallel build, e.g., by calling `make -j N`. In Nixpkgs, this can be enabled on a per-package basis by diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.0.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.0.md index 025f827d9..cdb257787 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.0.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.0.md @@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ release. Here are the most significant: significant speedup. - Nix now has an search path for expressions. The search path is set - using the environment variable NIX\_PATH and the `-I` command line + using the environment variable `NIX_PATH` and the `-I` command line option. In Nix expressions, paths between angle brackets are used to specify files that must be looked up in the search path. For instance, the expression `` looks for a file diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.2.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.2.md index e62b2dac9..25b830955 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.2.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.2.md @@ -77,7 +77,7 @@ This release has the following improvements and changes: about twice as fast. - Basic Nix expression evaluation profiling: setting the environment - variable NIX\_COUNT\_CALLS to `1` will cause Nix to print how many + variable `NIX_COUNT_CALLS` to `1` will cause Nix to print how many times each primop or function was executed. - New primops: `concatLists`, `elem`, `elemAt` and `filter`. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.6.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.6.md index a4583f4e6..9b83d9274 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.6.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.6.md @@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ features: get an environment that more closely corresponds to the “real” Nix build. - - `nix-shell` now sets the shell prompt (PS1) to ensure that Nix + - `nix-shell` now sets the shell prompt (`PS1`) to ensure that Nix shells are distinguishable from your regular shells. - `nix-env` no longer requires a `*` argument to match all packages, diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.8.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.8.md index 10a82d52a..59af363e8 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.8.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.8.md @@ -76,7 +76,7 @@ them anyway. - Various commands now automatically pipe their output into the pager - as specified by the PAGER environment variable. + as specified by the `PAGER` environment variable. - Several improvements to reduce memory consumption in the evaluator. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.9.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.9.md index 01b067aab..92c6af90b 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.9.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.9.md @@ -39,8 +39,8 @@ features: This builds GNU Hello from the latest revision of the Nixpkgs master branch. - - In the Nix search path (as specified via NIX\_PATH or `-I`). For - example, to start a shell containing the Pan package from a + - In the Nix search path (as specified via `NIX_PATH` or `-I`). + For example, to start a shell containing the Pan package from a specific version of Nixpkgs: $ nix-shell -p pan -I nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs-channels/archive/8a3eea054838b55aca962c3fbde9c83c102b8bf2.tar.gz @@ -124,8 +124,8 @@ features: - `nix-env` now only creates a new “generation” symlink in `/nix/var/nix/profiles` if something actually changed. - - The environment variable NIX\_PAGER can now be set to override - PAGER. You can set it to `cat` to disable paging for Nix commands + - The environment variable `NIX_PAGER` can now be set to override + `PAGER`. You can set it to `cat` to disable paging for Nix commands only. - Failing `<...>` lookups now show position information. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.0.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.0.md index 0ce985b2f..170275f89 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.0.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.0.md @@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ The following incompatible changes have been made: - `bspatch` - The “copy from other stores” substituter mechanism - (`copy-from-other-stores` and the NIX\_OTHER\_STORES environment + (`copy-from-other-stores` and the `NIX_OTHER_STORES` environment variable) has been removed. It was primarily used by the NixOS installer to copy available paths from the installation medium. The replacement is to use a chroot store as a substituter (e.g. @@ -233,7 +233,7 @@ This release has the following new features: store, the latter via the Nix daemon. You can use `auto` or the empty string to auto-select a local or daemon store depending on whether you have write permission to the Nix store. It is no - longer necessary to set the NIX\_REMOTE environment variable to + longer necessary to set the `NIX_REMOTE` environment variable to use the Nix daemon. As noted above, `LocalStore` now supports chroot builds, @@ -296,7 +296,7 @@ This release has the following new features: [now](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/commit/eba840c8a13b465ace90172ff76a0db2899ab11b) use `/build` instead of `/tmp` as the temporary build directory. This fixes potential security problems when a build accidentally - stores its TMPDIR in some security-sensitive place, such as an + stores its `TMPDIR` in some security-sensitive place, such as an RPATH. - *Pure evaluation mode*. With the `--pure-eval` flag, Nix enables a @@ -334,8 +334,8 @@ This release has the following new features: using the Nix daemon, you can now just specify a remote build machine on the command line, e.g. `--option builders 'ssh://my-mac x86_64-darwin'`. The environment variable - NIX\_BUILD\_HOOK has been removed and is no longer needed. The - environment variable NIX\_REMOTE\_SYSTEMS is still supported for + `NIX_BUILD_HOOK` has been removed and is no longer needed. The + environment variable `NIX_REMOTE_SYSTEMS` is still supported for compatibility, but it is also possible to specify builders in `nix.conf` by setting the option `builders = @path`. @@ -353,7 +353,7 @@ This release has the following new features: Nixpkgs provides `lib.inNixShell` to check this variable during evaluation. - - NIX\_PATH is now lazy, so URIs in the path are only downloaded if + - `NIX_PATH` is now lazy, so URIs in the path are only downloaded if they are needed for evaluation. - You can now use as a short-hand for @@ -406,7 +406,7 @@ This release has the following new features: non-standard base-32. - `nix-shell` now uses `bashInteractive` from Nixpkgs, rather than the - `bash` command that happens to be in the caller’s PATH. This is + `bash` command that happens to be in the caller’s `PATH`. This is especially important on macOS where the `bash` provided by the system is seriously outdated and cannot execute `stdenv`’s setup script. @@ -433,7 +433,7 @@ The Nix language has the following new features: configureFlags = "--prefix=${placeholder "out"} --includedir=${placeholder "dev"}"; - will cause the configureFlags environment variable to contain the + will cause the `configureFlags` environment variable to contain the actual store paths corresponding to the `out` and `dev` outputs. The following builtin functions are new or extended: @@ -481,23 +481,23 @@ The Nix build environment has the following changes: be passed to builders in a non-lossy way. If the special attribute `__structuredAttrs` is set to `true`, the other derivation attributes are serialised in JSON format and made available to the - builder via the file .attrs.json in the builder’s temporary + builder via the file `.attrs.json` in the builder’s temporary directory. This obviates the need for `passAsFile` since JSON files have no size restrictions, unlike process environments. [As a convenience to Bash builders](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/commit/2d5b1b24bf70a498e4c0b378704cfdb6471cc699), - Nix writes a script named .attrs.sh to the builder’s directory that - initialises shell variables corresponding to all attributes that are - representable in Bash. This includes non-nested (associative) - arrays. For example, the attribute `hardening.format = + Nix writes a script named `.attrs.sh` to the builder’s directory + that initialises shell variables corresponding to all attributes + that are representable in Bash. This includes non-nested + (associative) arrays. For example, the attribute `hardening.format = true` ends up as the Bash associative array element `${hardening[format]}`. - Builders can [now](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/commit/88e6bb76de5564b3217be9688677d1c89101b2a3) communicate what build phase they are in by writing messages to the - file descriptor specified in NIX\_LOG\_FD. The current phase is + file descriptor specified in `NIX_LOG_FD`. The current phase is shown by the `nix` progress indicator. - In Linux sandbox builds, we diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.2.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.2.md index 3667a48dc..b67d65db7 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.2.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.2.md @@ -69,7 +69,7 @@ This is primarily a bug fix release. It also has the following changes: - Integers are now 64 bits on all platforms. - The evaluator now prints profiling statistics (enabled via the - NIX\_SHOW\_STATS and NIX\_COUNT\_CALLS environment variables) in + `NIX_SHOW_STATS` and `NIX_COUNT_CALLS` environment variables) in JSON format. - The option `--xml` in `nix-store diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.3.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.3.md index a4bb6ebb0..d1f4e3734 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.3.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.3.md @@ -25,7 +25,7 @@ It also has the following changes: line in the progress bar. To distinguish between concurrent builds, log lines are prefixed by the name of the package. - - Builds are now executed in a pseudo-terminal, and the TERM + - Builds are now executed in a pseudo-terminal, and the `TERM` environment variable is set to `xterm-256color`. This allows many programs (e.g. `gcc`, `clang`, `cmake`) to print colorized log output. From efdb89994c2ee79763320d70fb4ba881d0e3b1e8 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Thu, 23 Jul 2020 10:56:15 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 11/57] Convert nix.conf manpage --- doc/manual/command-ref/conf-file.xml | 43 +- doc/manual/local.mk | 6 +- doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md | 2 + doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md | 727 ++++++++++++++++++++++++ doc/manual/src/command-ref/files.md | 4 + 5 files changed, 763 insertions(+), 19 deletions(-) create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/command-ref/files.md diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/conf-file.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/conf-file.xml index ff9c7d46c..4c103f505 100644 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/conf-file.xml +++ b/doc/manual/command-ref/conf-file.xml @@ -21,28 +21,35 @@ By default Nix reads settings from the following places: -The system-wide configuration file -sysconfdir/nix/nix.conf -(i.e. /etc/nix/nix.conf on most systems), or -$NIX_CONF_DIR/nix.conf if -NIX_CONF_DIR is set. Values loaded in this file are not forwarded to the Nix daemon. The -client assumes that the daemon has already loaded them. - + -User-specific configuration files: + + + The system-wide configuration file + sysconfdir/nix/nix.conf + (i.e. /etc/nix/nix.conf on most systems), + or $NIX_CONF_DIR/nix.conf if + NIX_CONF_DIR is set. Values loaded in this + file are not forwarded to the Nix daemon. The client assumes + that the daemon has already loaded them. + + - - If NIX_USER_CONF_FILES is set, then each path separated by - : will be loaded in reverse order. - + + + If NIX_USER_CONF_FILES is set, then each path separated by + : will be loaded in reverse order. + - - Otherwise it will look for nix/nix.conf files in - XDG_CONFIG_DIRS and XDG_CONFIG_HOME. + + Otherwise it will look for nix/nix.conf + files in XDG_CONFIG_DIRS and + XDG_CONFIG_HOME. If these are unset, it will + look in $HOME/.config/nix.conf. + + - The default location is $HOME/.config/nix.conf if - those environment variables are unset. - + The configuration files consist of name = diff --git a/doc/manual/local.mk b/doc/manual/local.mk index 65acd658c..80c517702 100644 --- a/doc/manual/local.mk +++ b/doc/manual/local.mk @@ -12,7 +12,8 @@ dist-files += $(d)/version.txt # Generate man pages. man-pages := $(foreach n, \ - nix-copy-closure.1, \ + nix-copy-closure.1 \ + nix.conf.5, \ $(d)/$(n)) # nix-env.1 nix-build.1 nix-shell.1 nix-store.1 nix-instantiate.1 \ # nix-collect-garbage.1, \ @@ -27,6 +28,9 @@ dist-files += $(man-pages) $(d)/nix-copy-closure.1: $(d)/src/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md $(trace-gen) lowdown -sT man $^ -o $@ +$(d)/nix.conf.5: $(d)/src/command-ref/conf-file.md + $(trace-gen) lowdown -sT man $^ -o $@ + # Generate the HTML manual. install: $(docdir)/manual/index.html diff --git a/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md b/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md index f9ef1b060..e8baf489b 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md @@ -49,6 +49,8 @@ - [Common Environment Variables](command-ref/env-common.md) - [Utilities](command-ref/utilities.md) - [nix-copy-closure](command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md) + - [Files](command-ref/files.md) + - [nix.conf](command-ref/conf-file.md) - [Glossary](glossary.md) - [Hacking](hacking.md) - [Release Notes](release-notes/release-notes.md) diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..3f84373e2 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md @@ -0,0 +1,727 @@ +nix.conf + +5 + +Nix + +nix.conf + +Nix configuration file + +# Description + +By default Nix reads settings from the following places: + + - The system-wide configuration file `sysconfdir/nix/nix.conf` (i.e. + `/etc/nix/nix.conf` on most systems), or `$NIX_CONF_DIR/nix.conf` if + `NIX_CONF_DIR` is set. Values loaded in this file are not forwarded + to the Nix daemon. The client assumes that the daemon has already + loaded them. + + - If `NIX_USER_CONF_FILES` is set, then each path separated by `:` + will be loaded in reverse order. + + Otherwise it will look for `nix/nix.conf` files in `XDG_CONFIG_DIRS` + and `XDG_CONFIG_HOME`. If these are unset, it will look in + `$HOME/.config/nix.conf`. + +The configuration files consist of `name = +value` pairs, one per line. Other files can be included with a line like +`include +path`, where path is interpreted relative to the current conf file and a +missing file is an error unless `!include` is used instead. Comments +start with a `#` character. Here is an example configuration file: + + keep-outputs = true # Nice for developers + keep-derivations = true # Idem + +You can override settings on the command line using the `--option` flag, +e.g. `--option keep-outputs +false`. + +The following settings are currently available: + + - `allowed-uris` + A list of URI prefixes to which access is allowed in restricted + evaluation mode. For example, when set to + `https://github.com/NixOS`, builtin functions such as `fetchGit` are + allowed to access `https://github.com/NixOS/patchelf.git`. + + - `allow-import-from-derivation` + By default, Nix allows you to `import` from a derivation, allowing + building at evaluation time. With this option set to false, Nix will + throw an error when evaluating an expression that uses this feature, + allowing users to ensure their evaluation will not require any + builds to take place. + + - `allow-new-privileges` + (Linux-specific.) By default, builders on Linux cannot acquire new + privileges by calling setuid/setgid programs or programs that have + file capabilities. For example, programs such as `sudo` or `ping` + will fail. (Note that in sandbox builds, no such programs are + available unless you bind-mount them into the sandbox via the + `sandbox-paths` option.) You can allow the use of such programs by + enabling this option. This is impure and usually undesirable, but + may be useful in certain scenarios (e.g. to spin up containers or + set up userspace network interfaces in tests). + + - `allowed-users` + A list of names of users (separated by whitespace) that are allowed + to connect to the Nix daemon. As with the `trusted-users` option, + you can specify groups by prefixing them with `@`. Also, you can + allow all users by specifying `*`. The default is `*`. + + Note that trusted users are always allowed to connect. + + - `auto-optimise-store` + If set to `true`, Nix automatically detects files in the store that + have identical contents, and replaces them with hard links to a + single copy. This saves disk space. If set to `false` (the default), + you can still run `nix-store + --optimise` to get rid of duplicate files. + + - `builders` + A list of machines on which to perform builds. See + [???](#chap-distributed-builds) for details. + + - `builders-use-substitutes` + If set to `true`, Nix will instruct remote build machines to use + their own binary substitutes if available. In practical terms, this + means that remote hosts will fetch as many build dependencies as + possible from their own substitutes (e.g, from `cache.nixos.org`), + instead of waiting for this host to upload them all. This can + drastically reduce build times if the network connection between + this computer and the remote build host is slow. Defaults to + `false`. + + - `build-users-group` + This options specifies the Unix group containing the Nix build user + accounts. In multi-user Nix installations, builds should not be + performed by the Nix account since that would allow users to + arbitrarily modify the Nix store and database by supplying specially + crafted builders; and they cannot be performed by the calling user + since that would allow him/her to influence the build result. + + Therefore, if this option is non-empty and specifies a valid group, + builds will be performed under the user accounts that are a member + of the group specified here (as listed in `/etc/group`). Those user + accounts should not be used for any other purpose\! + + Nix will never run two builds under the same user account at the + same time. This is to prevent an obvious security hole: a malicious + user writing a Nix expression that modifies the build result of a + legitimate Nix expression being built by another user. Therefore it + is good to have as many Nix build user accounts as you can spare. + (Remember: uids are cheap.) + + The build users should have permission to create files in the Nix + store, but not delete them. Therefore, `/nix/store` should be owned + by the Nix account, its group should be the group specified here, + and its mode should be `1775`. + + If the build users group is empty, builds will be performed under + the uid of the Nix process (that is, the uid of the caller if + `NIX_REMOTE` is empty, the uid under which the Nix daemon runs if + `NIX_REMOTE` is `daemon`). Obviously, this should not be used in + multi-user settings with untrusted users. + + - `compress-build-log` + If set to `true` (the default), build logs written to + `/nix/var/log/nix/drvs` will be compressed on the fly using bzip2. + Otherwise, they will not be compressed. + + - `connect-timeout` + The timeout (in seconds) for establishing connections in the binary + cache substituter. It corresponds to `curl`’s `--connect-timeout` + option. + + - `cores` + Sets the value of the `NIX_BUILD_CORES` environment variable in the + invocation of builders. Builders can use this variable at their + discretion to control the maximum amount of parallelism. For + instance, in Nixpkgs, if the derivation attribute + `enableParallelBuilding` is set to `true`, the builder passes the + `-jN` flag to GNU Make. It can be overridden using the `--cores` + command line switch and defaults to `1`. The value `0` means that + the builder should use all available CPU cores in the system. + + See also [???](#chap-tuning-cores-and-jobs). + + - `diff-hook` + Absolute path to an executable capable of diffing build results. The + hook executes if [varlistentry\_title](#conf-run-diff-hook) is true, + and the output of a build is known to not be the same. This program + is not executed to determine if two results are the same. + + The diff hook is executed by the same user and group who ran the + build. However, the diff hook does not have write access to the + store path just built. + + The diff hook program receives three parameters: + + 1. A path to the previous build's results + + 2. A path to the current build's results + + 3. The path to the build's derivation + + 4. The path to the build's scratch directory. This directory will + exist only if the build was run with `--keep-failed`. + + The stderr and stdout output from the diff hook will not be + displayed to the user. Instead, it will print to the nix-daemon's + log. + + When using the Nix daemon, `diff-hook` must be set in the `nix.conf` + configuration file, and cannot be passed at the command line. + + - `enforce-determinism` + See [varlistentry\_title](#conf-repeat). + + - `extra-sandbox-paths` + A list of additional paths appended to `sandbox-paths`. Useful if + you want to extend its default value. + + - `extra-platforms` + Platforms other than the native one which this machine is capable of + building for. This can be useful for supporting additional + architectures on compatible machines: i686-linux can be built on + x86\_64-linux machines (and the default for this setting reflects + this); armv7 is backwards-compatible with armv6 and armv5tel; some + aarch64 machines can also natively run 32-bit ARM code; and + qemu-user may be used to support non-native platforms (though this + may be slow and buggy). Most values for this are not enabled by + default because build systems will often misdetect the target + platform and generate incompatible code, so you may wish to + cross-check the results of using this option against proper + natively-built versions of your derivations. + + - `extra-substituters` + Additional binary caches appended to those specified in + `substituters`. When used by unprivileged users, untrusted + substituters (i.e. those not listed in `trusted-substituters`) are + silently ignored. + + - `fallback` + If set to `true`, Nix will fall back to building from source if a + binary substitute fails. This is equivalent to the `--fallback` + flag. The default is `false`. + + - `fsync-metadata` + If set to `true`, changes to the Nix store metadata (in + `/nix/var/nix/db`) are synchronously flushed to disk. This improves + robustness in case of system crashes, but reduces performance. The + default is `true`. + + - `hashed-mirrors` + A list of web servers used by `builtins.fetchurl` to obtain files by + hash. The default is `http://tarballs.nixos.org/`. Given a hash type + ht and a base-16 hash h, Nix will try to download the file from + `hashed-mirror/ht/h`. This allows files to be downloaded even if + they have disappeared from their original URI. For example, given + the default mirror `http://tarballs.nixos.org/`, when building the + derivation + + builtins.fetchurl { + url = "https://example.org/foo-1.2.3.tar.xz"; + sha256 = "2c26b46b68ffc68ff99b453c1d30413413422d706483bfa0f98a5e886266e7ae"; + } + + Nix will attempt to download this file from + `http://tarballs.nixos.org/sha256/2c26b46b68ffc68ff99b453c1d30413413422d706483bfa0f98a5e886266e7ae` + first. If it is not available there, if will try the original URI. + + - `http-connections` + The maximum number of parallel TCP connections used to fetch files + from binary caches and by other downloads. It defaults to 25. 0 + means no limit. + + - `keep-build-log` + If set to `true` (the default), Nix will write the build log of a + derivation (i.e. the standard output and error of its builder) to + the directory `/nix/var/log/nix/drvs`. The build log can be + retrieved using the command `nix-store -l + path`. + + - `keep-derivations` + If `true` (default), the garbage collector will keep the derivations + from which non-garbage store paths were built. If `false`, they will + be deleted unless explicitly registered as a root (or reachable from + other roots). + + Keeping derivation around is useful for querying and traceability + (e.g., it allows you to ask with what dependencies or options a + store path was built), so by default this option is on. Turn it off + to save a bit of disk space (or a lot if `keep-outputs` is also + turned on). + + - `keep-env-derivations` + If `false` (default), derivations are not stored in Nix user + environments. That is, the derivations of any build-time-only + dependencies may be garbage-collected. + + If `true`, when you add a Nix derivation to a user environment, the + path of the derivation is stored in the user environment. Thus, the + derivation will not be garbage-collected until the user environment + generation is deleted (`nix-env --delete-generations`). To prevent + build-time-only dependencies from being collected, you should also + turn on `keep-outputs`. + + The difference between this option and `keep-derivations` is that + this one is “sticky”: it applies to any user environment created + while this option was enabled, while `keep-derivations` only applies + at the moment the garbage collector is run. + + - `keep-outputs` + If `true`, the garbage collector will keep the outputs of + non-garbage derivations. If `false` (default), outputs will be + deleted unless they are GC roots themselves (or reachable from other + roots). + + In general, outputs must be registered as roots separately. However, + even if the output of a derivation is registered as a root, the + collector will still delete store paths that are used only at build + time (e.g., the C compiler, or source tarballs downloaded from the + network). To prevent it from doing so, set this option to `true`. + + - `max-build-log-size` + This option defines the maximum number of bytes that a builder can + write to its stdout/stderr. If the builder exceeds this limit, it’s + killed. A value of `0` (the default) means that there is no limit. + + - `max-free` + When a garbage collection is triggered by the `min-free` option, it + stops as soon as `max-free` bytes are available. The default is + infinity (i.e. delete all garbage). + + - `max-jobs` + This option defines the maximum number of jobs that Nix will try to + build in parallel. The default is `1`. The special value `auto` + causes Nix to use the number of CPUs in your system. `0` is useful + when using remote builders to prevent any local builds (except for + `preferLocalBuild` derivation attribute which executes locally + regardless). It can be overridden using the `--max-jobs` (`-j`) + command line switch. + + See also [???](#chap-tuning-cores-and-jobs). + + - `max-silent-time` + This option defines the maximum number of seconds that a builder can + go without producing any data on standard output or standard error. + This is useful (for instance in an automated build system) to catch + builds that are stuck in an infinite loop, or to catch remote builds + that are hanging due to network problems. It can be overridden using + the `--max-silent-time` command line switch. + + The value `0` means that there is no timeout. This is also the + default. + + - `min-free` + When free disk space in `/nix/store` drops below `min-free` during a + build, Nix performs a garbage-collection until `max-free` bytes are + available or there is no more garbage. A value of `0` (the default) + disables this feature. + + - `narinfo-cache-negative-ttl` + The TTL in seconds for negative lookups. If a store path is queried + from a substituter but was not found, there will be a negative + lookup cached in the local disk cache database for the specified + duration. + + - `narinfo-cache-positive-ttl` + The TTL in seconds for positive lookups. If a store path is queried + from a substituter, the result of the query will be cached in the + local disk cache database including some of the NAR metadata. The + default TTL is a month, setting a shorter TTL for positive lookups + can be useful for binary caches that have frequent garbage + collection, in which case having a more frequent cache invalidation + would prevent trying to pull the path again and failing with a hash + mismatch if the build isn't reproducible. + + - `netrc-file` + If set to an absolute path to a `netrc` file, Nix will use the HTTP + authentication credentials in this file when trying to download from + a remote host through HTTP or HTTPS. Defaults to + `$NIX_CONF_DIR/netrc`. + + The `netrc` file consists of a list of accounts in the following + format: + + machine my-machine + login my-username + password my-password + + For the exact syntax, see [the `curl` + documentation.](https://ec.haxx.se/usingcurl-netrc.html) + + > **Note** + > + > This must be an absolute path, and `~` is not resolved. For + > example, `~/.netrc` won't resolve to your home directory's + > `.netrc`. + + - `plugin-files` + A list of plugin files to be loaded by Nix. Each of these files will + be dlopened by Nix, allowing them to affect execution through static + initialization. In particular, these plugins may construct static + instances of RegisterPrimOp to add new primops or constants to the + expression language, RegisterStoreImplementation to add new store + implementations, RegisterCommand to add new subcommands to the `nix` + command, and RegisterSetting to add new nix config settings. See the + constructors for those types for more details. + + Since these files are loaded into the same address space as Nix + itself, they must be DSOs compatible with the instance of Nix + running at the time (i.e. compiled against the same headers, not + linked to any incompatible libraries). They should not be linked to + any Nix libs directly, as those will be available already at load + time. + + If an entry in the list is a directory, all files in the directory + are loaded as plugins (non-recursively). + + - `pre-build-hook` + If set, the path to a program that can set extra derivation-specific + settings for this system. This is used for settings that can't be + captured by the derivation model itself and are too variable between + different versions of the same system to be hard-coded into nix. + + The hook is passed the derivation path and, if sandboxes are + enabled, the sandbox directory. It can then modify the sandbox and + send a series of commands to modify various settings to stdout. The + currently recognized commands are: + + - `extra-sandbox-paths` + Pass a list of files and directories to be included in the + sandbox for this build. One entry per line, terminated by an + empty line. Entries have the same format as `sandbox-paths`. + + - `post-build-hook` + Optional. The path to a program to execute after each build. + + This option is only settable in the global `nix.conf`, or on the + command line by trusted users. + + When using the nix-daemon, the daemon executes the hook as `root`. + If the nix-daemon is not involved, the hook runs as the user + executing the nix-build. + + - The hook executes after an evaluation-time build. + + - The hook does not execute on substituted paths. + + - The hook's output always goes to the user's terminal. + + - If the hook fails, the build succeeds but no further builds + execute. + + - The hook executes synchronously, and blocks other builds from + progressing while it runs. + + The program executes with no arguments. The program's environment + contains the following environment variables: + + - `DRV_PATH` + The derivation for the built paths. + + Example: + `/nix/store/5nihn1a7pa8b25l9zafqaqibznlvvp3f-bash-4.4-p23.drv` + + - `OUT_PATHS` + Output paths of the built derivation, separated by a space + character. + + Example: + `/nix/store/zf5lbh336mnzf1nlswdn11g4n2m8zh3g-bash-4.4-p23-dev + /nix/store/rjxwxwv1fpn9wa2x5ssk5phzwlcv4mna-bash-4.4-p23-doc + /nix/store/6bqvbzjkcp9695dq0dpl5y43nvy37pq1-bash-4.4-p23-info + /nix/store/r7fng3kk3vlpdlh2idnrbn37vh4imlj2-bash-4.4-p23-man + /nix/store/xfghy8ixrhz3kyy6p724iv3cxji088dx-bash-4.4-p23`. + + See [???](#chap-post-build-hook) for an example implementation. + + - `repeat` + How many times to repeat builds to check whether they are + deterministic. The default value is 0. If the value is non-zero, + every build is repeated the specified number of times. If the + contents of any of the runs differs from the previous ones and + [varlistentry\_title](#conf-enforce-determinism) is true, the build + is rejected and the resulting store paths are not registered as + “valid” in Nix’s database. + + - `require-sigs` + If set to `true` (the default), any non-content-addressed path added + or copied to the Nix store (e.g. when substituting from a binary + cache) must have a valid signature, that is, be signed using one of + the keys listed in `trusted-public-keys` or `secret-key-files`. Set + to `false` to disable signature checking. + + - `restrict-eval` + If set to `true`, the Nix evaluator will not allow access to any + files outside of the Nix search path (as set via the `NIX_PATH` + environment variable or the `-I` option), or to URIs outside of + `allowed-uri`. The default is `false`. + + - `run-diff-hook` + If true, enable the execution of + [varlistentry\_title](#conf-diff-hook). + + When using the Nix daemon, `run-diff-hook` must be set in the + `nix.conf` configuration file, and cannot be passed at the command + line. + + - `sandbox` + If set to `true`, builds will be performed in a *sandboxed + environment*, i.e., they’re isolated from the normal file system + hierarchy and will only see their dependencies in the Nix store, the + temporary build directory, private versions of `/proc`, `/dev`, + `/dev/shm` and `/dev/pts` (on Linux), and the paths configured with + the [`sandbox-paths` option](#conf-sandbox-paths). This is useful to + prevent undeclared dependencies on files in directories such as + `/usr/bin`. In addition, on Linux, builds run in private PID, mount, + network, IPC and UTS namespaces to isolate them from other processes + in the system (except that fixed-output derivations do not run in + private network namespace to ensure they can access the network). + + Currently, sandboxing only work on Linux and macOS. The use of a + sandbox requires that Nix is run as root (so you should use the + [“build users” feature](#conf-build-users-group) to perform the + actual builds under different users than root). + + If this option is set to `relaxed`, then fixed-output derivations + and derivations that have the `__noChroot` attribute set to `true` + do not run in sandboxes. + + The default is `true` on Linux and `false` on all other platforms. + + - `sandbox-dev-shm-size` + This option determines the maximum size of the `tmpfs` filesystem + mounted on `/dev/shm` in Linux sandboxes. For the format, see the + description of the `size` option of `tmpfs` in mount8. The default + is `50%`. + + - `sandbox-paths` + A list of paths bind-mounted into Nix sandbox environments. You can + use the syntax `target=source` to mount a path in a different + location in the sandbox; for instance, `/bin=/nix-bin` will mount + the path `/nix-bin` as `/bin` inside the sandbox. If source is + followed by `?`, then it is not an error if source does not exist; + for example, `/dev/nvidiactl?` specifies that `/dev/nvidiactl` will + only be mounted in the sandbox if it exists in the host filesystem. + + Depending on how Nix was built, the default value for this option + may be empty or provide `/bin/sh` as a bind-mount of `bash`. + + - `secret-key-files` + A whitespace-separated list of files containing secret (private) + keys. These are used to sign locally-built paths. They can be + generated using `nix-store + --generate-binary-cache-key`. The corresponding public key can be + distributed to other users, who can add it to `trusted-public-keys` + in their `nix.conf`. + + - `show-trace` + Causes Nix to print out a stack trace in case of Nix expression + evaluation errors. + + - `substitute` + If set to `true` (default), Nix will use binary substitutes if + available. This option can be disabled to force building from + source. + + - `stalled-download-timeout` + The timeout (in seconds) for receiving data from servers during + download. Nix cancels idle downloads after this timeout's duration. + + - `substituters` + A list of URLs of substituters, separated by whitespace. The default + is `https://cache.nixos.org`. + + - `system` + This option specifies the canonical Nix system name of the current + installation, such as `i686-linux` or `x86_64-darwin`. Nix can only + build derivations whose `system` attribute equals the value + specified here. In general, it never makes sense to modify this + value from its default, since you can use it to ‘lie’ about the + platform you are building on (e.g., perform a Mac OS build on a + Linux machine; the result would obviously be wrong). It only makes + sense if the Nix binaries can run on multiple platforms, e.g., + ‘universal binaries’ that run on `x86_64-linux` and `i686-linux`. + + It defaults to the canonical Nix system name detected by `configure` + at build time. + + - `system-features` + A set of system “features” supported by this machine, e.g. `kvm`. + Derivations can express a dependency on such features through the + derivation attribute `requiredSystemFeatures`. For example, the + attribute + + requiredSystemFeatures = [ "kvm" ]; + + ensures that the derivation can only be built on a machine with the + `kvm` feature. + + This setting by default includes `kvm` if `/dev/kvm` is accessible, + and the pseudo-features `nixos-test`, `benchmark` and `big-parallel` + that are used in Nixpkgs to route builds to specific machines. + + - `tarball-ttl` + Default: `3600` seconds. + + The number of seconds a downloaded tarball is considered fresh. If + the cached tarball is stale, Nix will check whether it is still up + to date using the ETag header. Nix will download a new version if + the ETag header is unsupported, or the cached ETag doesn't match. + + Setting the TTL to `0` forces Nix to always check if the tarball is + up to date. + + Nix caches tarballs in `$XDG_CACHE_HOME/nix/tarballs`. + + Files fetched via `NIX_PATH`, `fetchGit`, `fetchMercurial`, + `fetchTarball`, and `fetchurl` respect this TTL. + + - `timeout` + This option defines the maximum number of seconds that a builder can + run. This is useful (for instance in an automated build system) to + catch builds that are stuck in an infinite loop but keep writing to + their standard output or standard error. It can be overridden using + the `--timeout` command line switch. + + The value `0` means that there is no timeout. This is also the + default. + + - `trace-function-calls` + Default: `false`. + + If set to `true`, the Nix evaluator will trace every function call. + Nix will print a log message at the "vomit" level for every function + entrance and function exit. + +
+ + function-trace entered undefined position at 1565795816999559622 + function-trace exited undefined position at 1565795816999581277 + function-trace entered /nix/store/.../example.nix:226:41 at 1565795253249935150 + function-trace exited /nix/store/.../example.nix:226:41 at 1565795253249941684 + +
+ + The `undefined position` means the function call is a builtin. + + Use the `contrib/stack-collapse.py` script distributed with the Nix + source code to convert the trace logs in to a format suitable for + `flamegraph.pl`. + + - `trusted-public-keys` + A whitespace-separated list of public keys. When paths are copied + from another Nix store (such as a binary cache), they must be signed + with one of these keys. For example: + `cache.nixos.org-1:6NCHdD59X431o0gWypbMrAURkbJ16ZPMQFGspcDShjY= + hydra.nixos.org-1:CNHJZBh9K4tP3EKF6FkkgeVYsS3ohTl+oS0Qa8bezVs=`. + + - `trusted-substituters` + A list of URLs of substituters, separated by whitespace. These are + not used by default, but can be enabled by users of the Nix daemon + by specifying `--option + substituters urls` on the command line. Unprivileged users are only + allowed to pass a subset of the URLs listed in `substituters` and + `trusted-substituters`. + + - `trusted-users` + A list of names of users (separated by whitespace) that have + additional rights when connecting to the Nix daemon, such as the + ability to specify additional binary caches, or to import unsigned + NARs. You can also specify groups by prefixing them with `@`; for + instance, `@wheel` means all users in the `wheel` group. The default + is `root`. + + > **Warning** + > + > Adding a user to `trusted-users` is essentially equivalent to + > giving that user root access to the system. For example, the user + > can set `sandbox-paths` and thereby obtain read access to + > directories that are otherwise inacessible to them. + +## Deprecated Settings + + - `binary-caches` + *Deprecated:* `binary-caches` is now an alias to + [varlistentry\_title](#conf-substituters). + + - `binary-cache-public-keys` + *Deprecated:* `binary-cache-public-keys` is now an alias to + [varlistentry\_title](#conf-trusted-public-keys). + + - `build-compress-log` + *Deprecated:* `build-compress-log` is now an alias to + [varlistentry\_title](#conf-compress-build-log). + + - `build-cores` + *Deprecated:* `build-cores` is now an alias to + [varlistentry\_title](#conf-cores). + + - `build-extra-chroot-dirs` + *Deprecated:* `build-extra-chroot-dirs` is now an alias to + [varlistentry\_title](#conf-extra-sandbox-paths). + + - `build-extra-sandbox-paths` + *Deprecated:* `build-extra-sandbox-paths` is now an alias to + [varlistentry\_title](#conf-extra-sandbox-paths). + + - `build-fallback` + *Deprecated:* `build-fallback` is now an alias to + [varlistentry\_title](#conf-fallback). + + - `build-max-jobs` + *Deprecated:* `build-max-jobs` is now an alias to + [varlistentry\_title](#conf-max-jobs). + + - `build-max-log-size` + *Deprecated:* `build-max-log-size` is now an alias to + [varlistentry\_title](#conf-max-build-log-size). + + - `build-max-silent-time` + *Deprecated:* `build-max-silent-time` is now an alias to + [varlistentry\_title](#conf-max-silent-time). + + - `build-repeat` + *Deprecated:* `build-repeat` is now an alias to + [varlistentry\_title](#conf-repeat). + + - `build-timeout` + *Deprecated:* `build-timeout` is now an alias to + [varlistentry\_title](#conf-timeout). + + - `build-use-chroot` + *Deprecated:* `build-use-chroot` is now an alias to + [varlistentry\_title](#conf-sandbox). + + - `build-use-sandbox` + *Deprecated:* `build-use-sandbox` is now an alias to + [varlistentry\_title](#conf-sandbox). + + - `build-use-substitutes` + *Deprecated:* `build-use-substitutes` is now an alias to + [varlistentry\_title](#conf-substitute). + + - `gc-keep-derivations` + *Deprecated:* `gc-keep-derivations` is now an alias to + [varlistentry\_title](#conf-keep-derivations). + + - `gc-keep-outputs` + *Deprecated:* `gc-keep-outputs` is now an alias to + [varlistentry\_title](#conf-keep-outputs). + + - `env-keep-derivations` + *Deprecated:* `env-keep-derivations` is now an alias to + [varlistentry\_title](#conf-keep-env-derivations). + + - `extra-binary-caches` + *Deprecated:* `extra-binary-caches` is now an alias to + [varlistentry\_title](#conf-extra-substituters). + + - `trusted-binary-caches` + *Deprecated:* `trusted-binary-caches` is now an alias to + [varlistentry\_title](#conf-trusted-substituters). diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/files.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/files.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..df5646c05 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/files.md @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ +# Files + +This section lists configuration files that you can use when you work +with Nix. From 504b7abc452936b3118a18efea05026083ed8cdd Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Thu, 23 Jul 2020 12:58:42 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 12/57] Convert commands --- doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md | 11 + doc/manual/src/command-ref/command-ref.md | 6 +- doc/manual/src/command-ref/main-commands.md | 4 + doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md | 130 +++ doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-channel.md | 116 +++ .../src/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.md | 46 + doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-daemon.md | 17 + doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md | 926 +++++++++++++++++ doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-hash.md | 120 +++ doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md | 184 ++++ .../src/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.md | 87 ++ doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md | 291 ++++++ doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md | 954 ++++++++++++++++++ doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common-syn.md | 57 ++ doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-inst-syn.md | 15 + 15 files changed, 2960 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/command-ref/main-commands.md create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-channel.md create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.md create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-daemon.md create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-hash.md create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.md create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common-syn.md create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-inst-syn.md diff --git a/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md b/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md index e8baf489b..80a41f8d7 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md @@ -47,8 +47,19 @@ - [Command Reference](command-ref/command-ref.md) - [Common Options](command-ref/opt-common.md) - [Common Environment Variables](command-ref/env-common.md) + - [Main Commands](command-ref/main-commands.md) + - [nix-env](command-ref/nix-env.md) + - [nix-build](command-ref/nix-build.md) + - [nix-shell](command-ref/nix-shell.md) + - [nix-store](command-ref/nix-store.md) - [Utilities](command-ref/utilities.md) + - [nix-channel](command-ref/nix-channel.md) + - [nix-collect-garbage](command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.md) - [nix-copy-closure](command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md) + - [nix-daemon](command-ref/nix-daemon.md) + - [nix-hash](command-ref/nix-hash.md) + - [nix-instantiate](command-ref/nix-instantiate.md) + - [nix-prefetch-url](command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.md) - [Files](command-ref/files.md) - [nix.conf](command-ref/conf-file.md) - [Glossary](glossary.md) diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/command-ref.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/command-ref.md index 2c7dbf22e..6a78075db 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/command-ref.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/command-ref.md @@ -1,4 +1,2 @@ -# Command Reference - -This section lists commands and options that you can use when you -work with Nix. +This section lists commands and options that you can use when you work +with Nix. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/main-commands.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/main-commands.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..e4f1f1d0e --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/main-commands.md @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ +# Main Commands + +This section lists commands and options that you can use when you work +with Nix. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..7d0567760 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md @@ -0,0 +1,130 @@ +nix-build + +1 + +Nix + +nix-build + +build a Nix expression + +nix-build + +\--arg + +name + +value + +\--argstr + +name + +value + +\--attr + +\-A + +attrPath + +\--no-out-link + +\--dry-run + +\--out-link + +\-o + +outlink + +paths + +# Description + +The `nix-build` command builds the derivations described by the Nix +expressions in paths. If the build succeeds, it places a symlink to the +result in the current directory. The symlink is called `result`. If +there are multiple Nix expressions, or the Nix expressions evaluate to +multiple derivations, multiple sequentially numbered symlinks are +created (`result`, `result-2`, and so on). + +If no paths are specified, then `nix-build` will use `default.nix` in +the current directory, if it exists. + +If an element of paths starts with `http://` or `https://`, it is +interpreted as the URL of a tarball that will be downloaded and unpacked +to a temporary location. The tarball must include a single top-level +directory containing at least a file named `default.nix`. + +`nix-build` is essentially a wrapper around +[`nix-instantiate`](#sec-nix-instantiate) (to translate a high-level Nix +expression to a low-level store derivation) and [`nix-store +--realise`](#rsec-nix-store-realise) (to build the store derivation). + +> **Warning** +> +> The result of the build is automatically registered as a root of the +> Nix garbage collector. This root disappears automatically when the +> `result` symlink is deleted or renamed. So don’t rename the symlink. + +# Options + +All options not listed here are passed to `nix-store +--realise`, except for `--arg` and `--attr` / `-A` which are passed to +`nix-instantiate`. See also [???](#sec-common-options). + + - `--no-out-link` + Do not create a symlink to the output path. Note that as a result + the output does not become a root of the garbage collector, and so + might be deleted by `nix-store + --gc`. + + - `--dry-run` + Show what store paths would be built or downloaded. + + - `--out-link` / `-o` outlink + Change the name of the symlink to the output path created from + `result` to outlink. + +The following common options are supported: + +# Examples + + $ nix-build '' -A firefox + store derivation is /nix/store/qybprl8sz2lc...-firefox-1.5.0.7.drv + /nix/store/d18hyl92g30l...-firefox-1.5.0.7 + + $ ls -l result + lrwxrwxrwx ... result -> /nix/store/d18hyl92g30l...-firefox-1.5.0.7 + + $ ls ./result/bin/ + firefox firefox-config + +If a derivation has multiple outputs, `nix-build` will build the default +(first) output. You can also build all outputs: + + $ nix-build '' -A openssl.all + +This will create a symlink for each output named `result-outputname`. +The suffix is omitted if the output name is `out`. So if `openssl` has +outputs `out`, `bin` and `man`, `nix-build` will create symlinks +`result`, `result-bin` and `result-man`. It’s also possible to build a +specific output: + + $ nix-build '' -A openssl.man + +This will create a symlink `result-man`. + +Build a Nix expression given on the command line: + + $ nix-build -E 'with import { }; runCommand "foo" { } "echo bar > $out"' + $ cat ./result + bar + +Build the GNU Hello package from the latest revision of the master +branch of Nixpkgs: + + $ nix-build https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/master.tar.gz -A hello + +# Environment variables diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-channel.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-channel.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..d427151a0 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-channel.md @@ -0,0 +1,116 @@ +nix-channel + +1 + +Nix + +nix-channel + +manage Nix channels + +nix-channel + +\--add + +url + +name + +\--remove + +name + +\--list + +\--update + +names + +\--rollback + +generation + +# Description + +A Nix channel is a mechanism that allows you to automatically stay +up-to-date with a set of pre-built Nix expressions. A Nix channel is +just a URL that points to a place containing a set of Nix expressions. +See also [???](#sec-channels). + +To see the list of official NixOS channels, visit +. + +This command has the following operations: + + - `--add` url \[name\] + Adds a channel named name with URL url to the list of subscribed + channels. If name is omitted, it defaults to the last component of + url, with the suffixes `-stable` or `-unstable` removed. + + - `--remove` name + Removes the channel named name from the list of subscribed channels. + + - `--list` + Prints the names and URLs of all subscribed channels on standard + output. + + - `--update` \[names…\] + Downloads the Nix expressions of all subscribed channels (or only + those included in names if specified) and makes them the default for + `nix-env` operations (by symlinking them from the directory + `~/.nix-defexpr`). + + - `--rollback` \[generation\] + Reverts the previous call to `nix-channel + --update`. Optionally, you can specify a specific channel generation + number to restore. + +Note that `--add` does not automatically perform an update. + +The list of subscribed channels is stored in `~/.nix-channels`. + +# Examples + +To subscribe to the Nixpkgs channel and install the GNU Hello package: + + $ nix-channel --add https://nixos.org/channels/nixpkgs-unstable + $ nix-channel --update + $ nix-env -iA nixpkgs.hello + +You can revert channel updates using `--rollback`: + + $ nix-instantiate --eval -E '(import {}).lib.version' + "14.04.527.0e935f1" + + $ nix-channel --rollback + switching from generation 483 to 482 + + $ nix-instantiate --eval -E '(import {}).lib.version' + "14.04.526.dbadfad" + +# Files + + - `/nix/var/nix/profiles/per-user/username/channels` + `nix-channel` uses a `nix-env` profile to keep track of previous + versions of the subscribed channels. Every time you run `nix-channel + --update`, a new channel generation (that is, a symlink to the + channel Nix expressions in the Nix store) is created. This enables + `nix-channel --rollback` to revert to previous versions. + + - `~/.nix-defexpr/channels` + This is a symlink to + `/nix/var/nix/profiles/per-user/username/channels`. It ensures that + `nix-env` can find your channels. In a multi-user installation, you + may also have `~/.nix-defexpr/channels_root`, which links to the + channels of the root user. + +# Channel format + +A channel URL should point to a directory containing the following +files: + + - `nixexprs.tar.xz` + A tarball containing Nix expressions and files referenced by them + (such as build scripts and patches). At the top level, the tarball + should contain a single directory. That directory must contain a + file `default.nix` that serves as the channel’s “entry point”. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..7946dc875 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.md @@ -0,0 +1,46 @@ +nix-collect-garbage + +1 + +Nix + +nix-collect-garbage + +delete unreachable store paths + +nix-collect-garbage + +\--delete-old + +\-d + +\--delete-older-than + +period + +\--max-freed + +bytes + +\--dry-run + +# Description + +The command `nix-collect-garbage` is mostly an alias of [`nix-store +--gc`](#rsec-nix-store-gc), that is, it deletes all unreachable paths in +the Nix store to clean up your system. However, it provides two +additional options: `-d` (`--delete-old`), which deletes all old +generations of all profiles in `/nix/var/nix/profiles` by invoking +`nix-env --delete-generations old` on all profiles (of course, this +makes rollbacks to previous configurations impossible); and +`--delete-older-than` period, where period is a value such as `30d`, +which deletes all generations older than the specified number of days in +all profiles in `/nix/var/nix/profiles` (except for the generations that +were active at that point in time). + +# Example + +To delete from the Nix store everything that is not used by the current +generations of each profile, do + + $ nix-collect-garbage -d diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-daemon.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-daemon.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..b0570789c --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-daemon.md @@ -0,0 +1,17 @@ +nix-daemon + +8 + +Nix + +nix-daemon + +Nix multi-user support daemon + +nix-daemon + +# Description + +The Nix daemon is necessary in multi-user Nix installations. It performs +build actions and other operations on the Nix store on behalf of +unprivileged users. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..90bf6ea08 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md @@ -0,0 +1,926 @@ +nix-env + +1 + +Nix + +nix-env + +manipulate or query Nix user environments + +nix-env + +\--arg + +name + +value + +\--argstr + +name + +value + +\--file + +\-f + +path + +\--profile + +\-p + +path + +\--system-filter + +system + +\--dry-run + +operation + +options + +arguments + +# Description + +The command `nix-env` is used to manipulate Nix user environments. User +environments are sets of software packages available to a user at some +point in time. In other words, they are a synthesised view of the +programs available in the Nix store. There may be many user +environments: different users can have different environments, and +individual users can switch between different environments. + +`nix-env` takes exactly one *operation* flag which indicates the +subcommand to be performed. These are documented below. + +# Selectors + +Several commands, such as `nix-env -q` and `nix-env -i`, take a list of +arguments that specify the packages on which to operate. These are +extended regular expressions that must match the entire name of the +package. (For details on regular expressions, see regex7.) The match is +case-sensitive. The regular expression can optionally be followed by a +dash and a version number; if omitted, any version of the package will +match. Here are some examples: + + - `firefox` + Matches the package name `firefox` and any version. + + - `firefox-32.0` + Matches the package name `firefox` and version `32.0`. + + - `gtk\\+` + Matches the package name `gtk+`. The `+` character must be escaped + using a backslash to prevent it from being interpreted as a + quantifier, and the backslash must be escaped in turn with another + backslash to ensure that the shell passes it on. + + - `.\*` + Matches any package name. This is the default for most commands. + + - `'.*zip.*'` + Matches any package name containing the string `zip`. Note the dots: + `'*zip*'` does not work, because in a regular expression, the + character `*` is interpreted as a quantifier. + + - `'.*(firefox|chromium).*'` + Matches any package name containing the strings `firefox` or + `chromium`. + +# Common options + +This section lists the options that are common to all operations. These +options are allowed for every subcommand, though they may not always +have an effect. See also [???](#sec-common-options). + + - `--file` / `-f` path + Specifies the Nix expression (designated below as the *active Nix + expression*) used by the `--install`, `--upgrade`, and `--query + --available` operations to obtain derivations. The default is + `~/.nix-defexpr`. + + If the argument starts with `http://` or `https://`, it is + interpreted as the URL of a tarball that will be downloaded and + unpacked to a temporary location. The tarball must include a single + top-level directory containing at least a file named `default.nix`. + + - `--profile` / `-p` path + Specifies the profile to be used by those operations that operate on + a profile (designated below as the *active profile*). A profile is a + sequence of user environments called *generations*, one of which is + the *current generation*. + + - `--dry-run` + For the `--install`, `--upgrade`, `--uninstall`, + `--switch-generation`, `--delete-generations` and `--rollback` + operations, this flag will cause `nix-env` to print what *would* be + done if this flag had not been specified, without actually doing it. + + `--dry-run` also prints out which paths will be + [substituted](#gloss-substitute) (i.e., downloaded) and which paths + will be built from source (because no substitute is available). + + - `--system-filter` system + By default, operations such as `--query + --available` show derivations matching any platform. This option + allows you to use derivations for the specified platform system. + + + +# Files + + - `~/.nix-defexpr` + The source for the default Nix expressions used by the `--install`, + `--upgrade`, and `--query + --available` operations to obtain derivations. The `--file` option + may be used to override this default. + + If `~/.nix-defexpr` is a file, it is loaded as a Nix expression. If + the expression is a set, it is used as the default Nix expression. + If the expression is a function, an empty set is passed as argument + and the return value is used as the default Nix expression. + + If `~/.nix-defexpr` is a directory containing a `default.nix` file, + that file is loaded as in the above paragraph. + + If `~/.nix-defexpr` is a directory without a `default.nix` file, + then its contents (both files and subdirectories) are loaded as Nix + expressions. The expressions are combined into a single set, each + expression under an attribute with the same name as the original + file or subdirectory. + + For example, if `~/.nix-defexpr` contains two files, `foo.nix` and + `bar.nix`, then the default Nix expression will essentially be + + { + foo = import ~/.nix-defexpr/foo.nix; + bar = import ~/.nix-defexpr/bar.nix; + } + + The file `manifest.nix` is always ignored. Subdirectories without a + `default.nix` file are traversed recursively in search of more Nix + expressions, but the names of these intermediate directories are not + added to the attribute paths of the default Nix expression. + + The command `nix-channel` places symlinks to the downloaded Nix + expressions from each subscribed channel in this directory. + + - `~/.nix-profile` + A symbolic link to the user's current profile. By default, this + symlink points to `prefix/var/nix/profiles/default`. The `PATH` + environment variable should include `~/.nix-profile/bin` for the + user environment to be visible to the user. + +# Operation `--install` + +## Synopsis + +nix-env + +\--install + +\-i + +\--preserve-installed + +\-P + +\--remove-all + +\-r + +args + +## Description + +The install operation creates a new user environment, based on the +current generation of the active profile, to which a set of store paths +described by args is added. The arguments args map to store paths in a +number of possible ways: + + - By default, args is a set of derivation names denoting derivations + in the active Nix expression. These are realised, and the resulting + output paths are installed. Currently installed derivations with a + name equal to the name of a derivation being added are removed + unless the option `--preserve-installed` is specified. + + If there are multiple derivations matching a name in args that have + the same name (e.g., `gcc-3.3.6` and `gcc-4.1.1`), then the + derivation with the highest *priority* is used. A derivation can + define a priority by declaring the `meta.priority` attribute. This + attribute should be a number, with a higher value denoting a lower + priority. The default priority is `0`. + + If there are multiple matching derivations with the same priority, + then the derivation with the highest version will be installed. + + You can force the installation of multiple derivations with the same + name by being specific about the versions. For instance, `nix-env -i + gcc-3.3.6 gcc-4.1.1` will install both version of GCC (and will + probably cause a user environment conflict\!). + + - If [`--attr`](#opt-attr) (`-A`) is specified, the arguments are + *attribute paths* that select attributes from the top-level Nix + expression. This is faster than using derivation names and + unambiguous. To find out the attribute paths of available packages, + use `nix-env -qaP`. + + - If `--from-profile` path is given, args is a set of names denoting + installed store paths in the profile path. This is an easy way to + copy user environment elements from one profile to another. + + - If `--from-expression` is given, args are Nix + [functions](#ss-functions) that are called with the active Nix + expression as their single argument. The derivations returned by + those function calls are installed. This allows derivations to be + specified in an unambiguous way, which is necessary if there are + multiple derivations with the same name. + + - If args are store derivations, then these are + [realised](#rsec-nix-store-realise), and the resulting output paths + are installed. + + - If args are store paths that are not store derivations, then these + are [realised](#rsec-nix-store-realise) and installed. + + - By default all outputs are installed for each derivation. That can + be reduced by setting `meta.outputsToInstall`. + +## Flags + + - `--prebuilt-only` / `-b` + Use only derivations for which a substitute is registered, i.e., + there is a pre-built binary available that can be downloaded in lieu + of building the derivation. Thus, no packages will be built from + source. + + - `--preserve-installed`; `-P` + Do not remove derivations with a name matching one of the + derivations being installed. Usually, trying to have two versions of + the same package installed in the same generation of a profile will + lead to an error in building the generation, due to file name + clashes between the two versions. However, this is not the case for + all packages. + + - `--remove-all`; `-r` + Remove all previously installed packages first. This is equivalent + to running `nix-env -e '.*'` first, except that everything happens + in a single transaction. + +## Examples + +To install a specific version of `gcc` from the active Nix expression: + + $ nix-env --install gcc-3.3.2 + installing `gcc-3.3.2' + uninstalling `gcc-3.1' + +Note the previously installed version is removed, since +`--preserve-installed` was not specified. + +To install an arbitrary version: + + $ nix-env --install gcc + installing `gcc-3.3.2' + +To install using a specific attribute: + + $ nix-env -i -A gcc40mips + $ nix-env -i -A xorg.xorgserver + +To install all derivations in the Nix expression `foo.nix`: + + $ nix-env -f ~/foo.nix -i '.*' + +To copy the store path with symbolic name `gcc` from another profile: + + $ nix-env -i --from-profile /nix/var/nix/profiles/foo gcc + +To install a specific store derivation (typically created by +`nix-instantiate`): + + $ nix-env -i /nix/store/fibjb1bfbpm5mrsxc4mh2d8n37sxh91i-gcc-3.4.3.drv + +To install a specific output path: + + $ nix-env -i /nix/store/y3cgx0xj1p4iv9x0pnnmdhr8iyg741vk-gcc-3.4.3 + +To install from a Nix expression specified on the command-line: + + $ nix-env -f ./foo.nix -i -E \ + 'f: (f {system = "i686-linux";}).subversionWithJava' + +I.e., this evaluates to `(f: (f {system = +"i686-linux";}).subversionWithJava) (import ./foo.nix)`, thus selecting +the `subversionWithJava` attribute from the set returned by calling the +function defined in `./foo.nix`. + +A dry-run tells you which paths will be downloaded or built from source: + + $ nix-env -f '' -iA hello --dry-run + (dry run; not doing anything) + installing ‘hello-2.10’ + this path will be fetched (0.04 MiB download, 0.19 MiB unpacked): + /nix/store/wkhdf9jinag5750mqlax6z2zbwhqb76n-hello-2.10 + ... + +To install Firefox from the latest revision in the Nixpkgs/NixOS 14.12 +channel: + + $ nix-env -f https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-14.12.tar.gz -iA firefox + +# Operation `--upgrade` + +## Synopsis + +nix-env + +\--upgrade + +\-u + +\--lt + +\--leq + +\--eq + +\--always + +args + +## Description + +The upgrade operation creates a new user environment, based on the +current generation of the active profile, in which all store paths are +replaced for which there are newer versions in the set of paths +described by args. Paths for which there are no newer versions are left +untouched; this is not an error. It is also not an error if an element +of args matches no installed derivations. + +For a description of how args is mapped to a set of store paths, see +[`--install`](#rsec-nix-env-install). If args describes multiple store +paths with the same symbolic name, only the one with the highest version +is installed. + +## Flags + + - `--lt` + Only upgrade a derivation to newer versions. This is the default. + + - `--leq` + In addition to upgrading to newer versions, also “upgrade” to + derivations that have the same version. Version are not a unique + identification of a derivation, so there may be many derivations + that have the same version. This flag may be useful to force + “synchronisation” between the installed and available derivations. + + - `--eq` + *Only* “upgrade” to derivations that have the same version. This may + not seem very useful, but it actually is, e.g., when there is a new + release of Nixpkgs and you want to replace installed applications + with the same versions built against newer dependencies (to reduce + the number of dependencies floating around on your system). + + - `--always` + In addition to upgrading to newer versions, also “upgrade” to + derivations that have the same or a lower version. I.e., derivations + may actually be downgraded depending on what is available in the + active Nix expression. + +For the other flags, see `--install`. + +## Examples + + $ nix-env --upgrade gcc + upgrading `gcc-3.3.1' to `gcc-3.4' + + $ nix-env -u gcc-3.3.2 --always (switch to a specific version) + upgrading `gcc-3.4' to `gcc-3.3.2' + + $ nix-env --upgrade pan + (no upgrades available, so nothing happens) + + $ nix-env -u (try to upgrade everything) + upgrading `hello-2.1.2' to `hello-2.1.3' + upgrading `mozilla-1.2' to `mozilla-1.4' + +## Versions + +The upgrade operation determines whether a derivation `y` is an upgrade +of a derivation `x` by looking at their respective `name` attributes. +The names (e.g., `gcc-3.3.1` are split into two parts: the package name +(`gcc`), and the version (`3.3.1`). The version part starts after the +first dash not followed by a letter. `x` is considered an upgrade of `y` +if their package names match, and the version of `y` is higher that that +of `x`. + +The versions are compared by splitting them into contiguous components +of numbers and letters. E.g., `3.3.1pre5` is split into `[3, 3, 1, +"pre", 5]`. These lists are then compared lexicographically (from left +to right). Corresponding components `a` and `b` are compared as follows. +If they are both numbers, integer comparison is used. If `a` is an empty +string and `b` is a number, `a` is considered less than `b`. The special +string component `pre` (for *pre-release*) is considered to be less than +other components. String components are considered less than number +components. Otherwise, they are compared lexicographically (i.e., using +case-sensitive string comparison). + +This is illustrated by the following examples: + + 1.0 < 2.3 + 2.1 < 2.3 + 2.3 = 2.3 + 2.5 > 2.3 + 3.1 > 2.3 + 2.3.1 > 2.3 + 2.3.1 > 2.3a + 2.3pre1 < 2.3 + 2.3pre3 < 2.3pre12 + 2.3a < 2.3c + 2.3pre1 < 2.3c + 2.3pre1 < 2.3q + +# Operation `--uninstall` + +## Synopsis + +nix-env + +\--uninstall + +\-e + +drvnames + +## Description + +The uninstall operation creates a new user environment, based on the +current generation of the active profile, from which the store paths +designated by the symbolic names names are removed. + +## Examples + + $ nix-env --uninstall gcc + $ nix-env -e '.*' (remove everything) + +# Operation `--set` + +## Synopsis + +nix-env + +\--set + +drvname + +## Description + +The `--set` operation modifies the current generation of a profile so +that it contains exactly the specified derivation, and nothing else. + +## Examples + +The following updates a profile such that its current generation will +contain just Firefox: + + $ nix-env -p /nix/var/nix/profiles/browser --set firefox + +# Operation `--set-flag` + +## Synopsis + +nix-env + +\--set-flag + +name + +value + +drvnames + +## Description + +The `--set-flag` operation allows meta attributes of installed packages +to be modified. There are several attributes that can be usefully +modified, because they affect the behaviour of `nix-env` or the user +environment build script: + + - `priority` can be changed to resolve filename clashes. The user + environment build script uses the `meta.priority` attribute of + derivations to resolve filename collisions between packages. Lower + priority values denote a higher priority. For instance, the GCC + wrapper package and the Binutils package in Nixpkgs both have a file + `bin/ld`, so previously if you tried to install both you would get a + collision. Now, on the other hand, the GCC wrapper declares a higher + priority than Binutils, so the former’s `bin/ld` is symlinked in the + user environment. + + - `keep` can be set to `true` to prevent the package from being + upgraded or replaced. This is useful if you want to hang on to an + older version of a package. + + - `active` can be set to `false` to “disable” the package. That is, no + symlinks will be generated to the files of the package, but it + remains part of the profile (so it won’t be garbage-collected). It + can be set back to `true` to re-enable the package. + +## Examples + +To prevent the currently installed Firefox from being upgraded: + + $ nix-env --set-flag keep true firefox + +After this, `nix-env -u` will ignore Firefox. + +To disable the currently installed Firefox, then install a new Firefox +while the old remains part of the profile: + + $ nix-env -q + firefox-2.0.0.9 (the current one) + + $ nix-env --preserve-installed -i firefox-2.0.0.11 + installing `firefox-2.0.0.11' + building path(s) `/nix/store/myy0y59q3ig70dgq37jqwg1j0rsapzsl-user-environment' + collision between `/nix/store/...-firefox-2.0.0.11/bin/firefox' + and `/nix/store/...-firefox-2.0.0.9/bin/firefox'. + (i.e., can’t have two active at the same time) + + $ nix-env --set-flag active false firefox + setting flag on `firefox-2.0.0.9' + + $ nix-env --preserve-installed -i firefox-2.0.0.11 + installing `firefox-2.0.0.11' + + $ nix-env -q + firefox-2.0.0.11 (the enabled one) + firefox-2.0.0.9 (the disabled one) + +To make files from `binutils` take precedence over files from `gcc`: + + $ nix-env --set-flag priority 5 binutils + $ nix-env --set-flag priority 10 gcc + +# Operation `--query` + +## Synopsis + +nix-env + +\--query + +\-q + +\--installed + +\--available + +\-a + +\--status + +\-s + +\--attr-path + +\-P + +\--no-name + +\--compare-versions + +\-c + +\--system + +\--drv-path + +\--out-path + +\--description + +\--meta + +\--xml + +\--json + +\--prebuilt-only + +\-b + +\--attr + +\-A + +attribute-path + +names + +## Description + +The query operation displays information about either the store paths +that are installed in the current generation of the active profile +(`--installed`), or the derivations that are available for installation +in the active Nix expression (`--available`). It only prints information +about derivations whose symbolic name matches one of names. + +The derivations are sorted by their `name` attributes. + +## Source selection + +The following flags specify the set of things on which the query +operates. + + - `--installed` + The query operates on the store paths that are installed in the + current generation of the active profile. This is the default. + + - `--available`; `-a` + The query operates on the derivations that are available in the + active Nix expression. + +## Queries + +The following flags specify what information to display about the +selected derivations. Multiple flags may be specified, in which case the +information is shown in the order given here. Note that the name of the +derivation is shown unless `--no-name` is specified. + + - `--xml` + Print the result in an XML representation suitable for automatic + processing by other tools. The root element is called `items`, which + contains a `item` element for each available or installed + derivation. The fields discussed below are all stored in attributes + of the `item` elements. + + - `--json` + Print the result in a JSON representation suitable for automatic + processing by other tools. + + - `--prebuilt-only` / `-b` + Show only derivations for which a substitute is registered, i.e., + there is a pre-built binary available that can be downloaded in lieu + of building the derivation. Thus, this shows all packages that + probably can be installed quickly. + + - `--status`; `-s` + Print the *status* of the derivation. The status consists of three + characters. The first is `I` or `-`, indicating whether the + derivation is currently installed in the current generation of the + active profile. This is by definition the case for `--installed`, + but not for `--available`. The second is `P` or `-`, indicating + whether the derivation is present on the system. This indicates + whether installation of an available derivation will require the + derivation to be built. The third is `S` or `-`, indicating whether + a substitute is available for the derivation. + + - `--attr-path`; `-P` + Print the *attribute path* of the derivation, which can be used to + unambiguously select it using the [`--attr` option](#opt-attr) + available in commands that install derivations like `nix-env + --install`. This option only works together with `--available` + + - `--no-name` + Suppress printing of the `name` attribute of each derivation. + + - `--compare-versions` / `-c` + Compare installed versions to available versions, or vice versa (if + `--available` is given). This is useful for quickly seeing whether + upgrades for installed packages are available in a Nix expression. A + column is added with the following meaning: + + - `<` version + A newer version of the package is available or installed. + + - `=` version + At most the same version of the package is available or + installed. + + - `>` version + Only older versions of the package are available or installed. + + - `- ?` + No version of the package is available or installed. + + - `--system` + Print the `system` attribute of the derivation. + + - `--drv-path` + Print the path of the store derivation. + + - `--out-path` + Print the output path of the derivation. + + - `--description` + Print a short (one-line) description of the derivation, if + available. The description is taken from the `meta.description` + attribute of the derivation. + + - `--meta` + Print all of the meta-attributes of the derivation. This option is + only available with `--xml` or `--json`. + +## Examples + +To show installed packages: + + $ nix-env -q + bison-1.875c + docbook-xml-4.2 + firefox-1.0.4 + MPlayer-1.0pre7 + ORBit2-2.8.3 + … + +To show available packages: + + $ nix-env -qa + firefox-1.0.7 + GConf-2.4.0.1 + MPlayer-1.0pre7 + ORBit2-2.8.3 + … + +To show the status of available packages: + + $ nix-env -qas + -P- firefox-1.0.7 (not installed but present) + --S GConf-2.4.0.1 (not present, but there is a substitute for fast installation) + --S MPlayer-1.0pre3 (i.e., this is not the installed MPlayer, even though the version is the same!) + IP- ORBit2-2.8.3 (installed and by definition present) + … + +To show available packages in the Nix expression `foo.nix`: + + $ nix-env -f ./foo.nix -qa + foo-1.2.3 + +To compare installed versions to what’s available: + + $ nix-env -qc + ... + acrobat-reader-7.0 - ? (package is not available at all) + autoconf-2.59 = 2.59 (same version) + firefox-1.0.4 < 1.0.7 (a more recent version is available) + ... + +To show all packages with “`zip`” in the name: + + $ nix-env -qa '.*zip.*' + bzip2-1.0.6 + gzip-1.6 + zip-3.0 + … + +To show all packages with “`firefox`” or “`chromium`” in the name: + + $ nix-env -qa '.*(firefox|chromium).*' + chromium-37.0.2062.94 + chromium-beta-38.0.2125.24 + firefox-32.0.3 + firefox-with-plugins-13.0.1 + … + +To show all packages in the latest revision of the Nixpkgs repository: + + $ nix-env -f https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/master.tar.gz -qa + +# Operation `--switch-profile` + +## Synopsis + +nix-env + +\--switch-profile + +\-S + +path + +## Description + +This operation makes path the current profile for the user. That is, the +symlink `~/.nix-profile` is made to point to path. + +## Examples + + $ nix-env -S ~/my-profile + +# Operation `--list-generations` + +## Synopsis + +nix-env + +\--list-generations + +## Description + +This operation print a list of all the currently existing generations +for the active profile. These may be switched to using the +`--switch-generation` operation. It also prints the creation date of the +generation, and indicates the current generation. + +## Examples + + $ nix-env --list-generations + 95 2004-02-06 11:48:24 + 96 2004-02-06 11:49:01 + 97 2004-02-06 16:22:45 + 98 2004-02-06 16:24:33 (current) + +# Operation `--delete-generations` + +## Synopsis + +nix-env + +\--delete-generations + +generations + +## Description + +This operation deletes the specified generations of the current profile. +The generations can be a list of generation numbers, the special value +`old` to delete all non-current generations, a value such as `30d` to +delete all generations older than the specified number of days (except +for the generation that was active at that point in time), or a value +such as `+5` to keep the last `5` generations ignoring any newer than +current, e.g., if `30` is the current generation `+5` will delete +generation `25` and all older generations. Periodically deleting old +generations is important to make garbage collection effective. + +## Examples + + $ nix-env --delete-generations 3 4 8 + + $ nix-env --delete-generations +5 + + $ nix-env --delete-generations 30d + + $ nix-env -p other_profile --delete-generations old + +# Operation `--switch-generation` + +## Synopsis + +nix-env + +\--switch-generation + +\-G + +generation + +## Description + +This operation makes generation number generation the current generation +of the active profile. That is, if the `profile` is the path to the +active profile, then the symlink `profile` is made to point to +`profile-generation-link`, which is in turn a symlink to the actual user +environment in the Nix store. + +Switching will fail if the specified generation does not exist. + +## Examples + + $ nix-env -G 42 + switching from generation 50 to 42 + +# Operation `--rollback` + +## Synopsis + +nix-env + +\--rollback + +## Description + +This operation switches to the “previous” generation of the active +profile, that is, the highest numbered generation lower than the current +generation, if it exists. It is just a convenience wrapper around +`--list-generations` and `--switch-generation`. + +## Examples + + $ nix-env --rollback + switching from generation 92 to 91 + + $ nix-env --rollback + error: no generation older than the current (91) exists + +# Environment variables + + - `NIX_PROFILE` + Location of the Nix profile. Defaults to the target of the symlink + `~/.nix-profile`, if it exists, or `/nix/var/nix/profiles/default` + otherwise. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-hash.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-hash.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..d433cbc5b --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-hash.md @@ -0,0 +1,120 @@ +nix-hash + +1 + +Nix + +nix-hash + +compute the cryptographic hash of a path + +nix-hash + +\--flat + +\--base32 + +\--truncate + +\--type + +hashAlgo + +path + +nix-hash + +\--to-base16 + +hash + +nix-hash + +\--to-base32 + +hash + +# Description + +The command `nix-hash` computes the cryptographic hash of the contents +of each path and prints it on standard output. By default, it computes +an MD5 hash, but other hash algorithms are available as well. The hash +is printed in hexadecimal. To generate the same hash as +`nix-prefetch-url` you have to specify multiple arguments, see below for +an example. + +The hash is computed over a *serialisation* of each path: a dump of the +file system tree rooted at the path. This allows directories and +symlinks to be hashed as well as regular files. The dump is in the *NAR +format* produced by [`nix-store` `--dump`](#refsec-nix-store-dump). +Thus, `nix-hash +path` yields the same cryptographic hash as `nix-store --dump +path | md5sum`. + +# Options + + - `--flat` + Print the cryptographic hash of the contents of each regular file + path. That is, do not compute the hash over the dump of path. The + result is identical to that produced by the GNU commands `md5sum` + and `sha1sum`. + + - `--base32` + Print the hash in a base-32 representation rather than hexadecimal. + This base-32 representation is more compact and can be used in Nix + expressions (such as in calls to `fetchurl`). + + - `--truncate` + Truncate hashes longer than 160 bits (such as SHA-256) to 160 bits. + + - `--type` hashAlgo + Use the specified cryptographic hash algorithm, which can be one of + `md5`, `sha1`, and `sha256`. + + - `--to-base16` + Don’t hash anything, but convert the base-32 hash representation + hash to hexadecimal. + + - `--to-base32` + Don’t hash anything, but convert the hexadecimal hash representation + hash to base-32. + +# Examples + +Computing the same hash as `nix-prefetch-url`: + + $ nix-prefetch-url file://<(echo test) + 1lkgqb6fclns49861dwk9rzb6xnfkxbpws74mxnx01z9qyv1pjpj + $ nix-hash --type sha256 --flat --base32 <(echo test) + 1lkgqb6fclns49861dwk9rzb6xnfkxbpws74mxnx01z9qyv1pjpj + +Computing hashes: + + $ mkdir test + $ echo "hello" > test/world + + $ nix-hash test/ (MD5 hash; default) + 8179d3caeff1869b5ba1744e5a245c04 + + $ nix-store --dump test/ | md5sum (for comparison) + 8179d3caeff1869b5ba1744e5a245c04 - + + $ nix-hash --type sha1 test/ + e4fd8ba5f7bbeaea5ace89fe10255536cd60dab6 + + $ nix-hash --type sha1 --base32 test/ + nvd61k9nalji1zl9rrdfmsmvyyjqpzg4 + + $ nix-hash --type sha256 --flat test/ + error: reading file `test/': Is a directory + + $ nix-hash --type sha256 --flat test/world + 5891b5b522d5df086d0ff0b110fbd9d21bb4fc7163af34d08286a2e846f6be03 + +Converting between hexadecimal and base-32: + + $ nix-hash --type sha1 --to-base32 e4fd8ba5f7bbeaea5ace89fe10255536cd60dab6 + nvd61k9nalji1zl9rrdfmsmvyyjqpzg4 + + $ nix-hash --type sha1 --to-base16 nvd61k9nalji1zl9rrdfmsmvyyjqpzg4 + e4fd8ba5f7bbeaea5ace89fe10255536cd60dab6 diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..449f5f70f --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md @@ -0,0 +1,184 @@ +nix-instantiate + +1 + +Nix + +nix-instantiate + +instantiate store derivations from Nix expressions + +nix-instantiate + +\--parse + +\--eval + +\--strict + +\--json + +\--xml + +\--read-write-mode + +\--arg + +name + +value + +\--attr + +\-A + +attrPath + +\--add-root + +path + +\--indirect + +\--expr + +\-E + +files + +nix-instantiate + +\--find-file + +files + +# Description + +The command `nix-instantiate` generates [store +derivations](#gloss-derivation) from (high-level) Nix expressions. It +evaluates the Nix expressions in each of files (which defaults to +./default.nix). Each top-level expression should evaluate to a +derivation, a list of derivations, or a set of derivations. The paths of +the resulting store derivations are printed on standard output. + +If files is the character `-`, then a Nix expression will be read from +standard input. + +See also [???](#sec-common-options) for a list of common options. + +# Options + + - `--add-root` path; `--indirect` + See the [corresponding options](#opt-add-root) in `nix-store`. + + - `--parse` + Just parse the input files, and print their abstract syntax trees on + standard output in ATerm format. + + - `--eval` + Just parse and evaluate the input files, and print the resulting + values on standard output. No instantiation of store derivations + takes place. + + - `--find-file` + Look up the given files in Nix’s search path (as specified by the + NIX\_PATH\ environment variable). If found, print the + corresponding absolute paths on standard output. For instance, if + `NIX_PATH` is `nixpkgs=/home/alice/nixpkgs`, then `nix-instantiate + --find-file nixpkgs/default.nix` will print + `/home/alice/nixpkgs/default.nix`. + + - `--strict` + When used with `--eval`, recursively evaluate list elements and + attributes. Normally, such sub-expressions are left unevaluated + (since the Nix expression language is lazy). + + > **Warning** + > + > This option can cause non-termination, because lazy data + > structures can be infinitely large. + + - `--json` + When used with `--eval`, print the resulting value as an JSON + representation of the abstract syntax tree rather than as an ATerm. + + - `--xml` + When used with `--eval`, print the resulting value as an XML + representation of the abstract syntax tree rather than as an ATerm. + The schema is the same as that used by the [`toXML` + built-in](#builtin-toXML). + + - `--read-write-mode` + When used with `--eval`, perform evaluation in read/write mode so + nix language features that require it will still work (at the cost + of needing to do instantiation of every evaluated derivation). If + this option is not enabled, there may be uninstantiated store paths + in the final output. + + + +# Examples + +Instantiating store derivations from a Nix expression, and building them +using `nix-store`: + + $ nix-instantiate test.nix (instantiate) + /nix/store/cigxbmvy6dzix98dxxh9b6shg7ar5bvs-perl-BerkeleyDB-0.26.drv + + $ nix-store -r $(nix-instantiate test.nix) (build) + ... + /nix/store/qhqk4n8ci095g3sdp93x7rgwyh9rdvgk-perl-BerkeleyDB-0.26 (output path) + + $ ls -l /nix/store/qhqk4n8ci095g3sdp93x7rgwyh9rdvgk-perl-BerkeleyDB-0.26 + dr-xr-xr-x 2 eelco users 4096 1970-01-01 01:00 lib + ... + +You can also give a Nix expression on the command line: + + $ nix-instantiate -E 'with import { }; hello' + /nix/store/j8s4zyv75a724q38cb0r87rlczaiag4y-hello-2.8.drv + +This is equivalent to: + + $ nix-instantiate '' -A hello + +Parsing and evaluating Nix expressions: + + $ nix-instantiate --parse -E '1 + 2' + 1 + 2 + + $ nix-instantiate --eval -E '1 + 2' + 3 + + $ nix-instantiate --eval --xml -E '1 + 2' + + + + + +The difference between non-strict and strict evaluation: + + $ nix-instantiate --eval --xml -E 'rec { x = "foo"; y = x; }' + ... + + + + + + + ... + +Note that `y` is left unevaluated (the XML representation doesn’t +attempt to show non-normal forms). + + $ nix-instantiate --eval --xml --strict -E 'rec { x = "foo"; y = x; }' + ... + + + + + + + ... + +# Environment variables diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..bf8084e45 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.md @@ -0,0 +1,87 @@ +nix-prefetch-url + +1 + +Nix + +nix-prefetch-url + +copy a file from a URL into the store and print its hash + +nix-prefetch-url + +\--version + +\--type + +hashAlgo + +\--print-path + +\--unpack + +\--name + +name + +url + +hash + +# Description + +The command `nix-prefetch-url` downloads the file referenced by the URL +url, prints its cryptographic hash, and copies it into the Nix store. +The file name in the store is `hash-baseName`, where baseName is +everything following the final slash in url. + +This command is just a convenience for Nix expression writers. Often a +Nix expression fetches some source distribution from the network using +the `fetchurl` expression contained in Nixpkgs. However, `fetchurl` +requires a cryptographic hash. If you don't know the hash, you would +have to download the file first, and then `fetchurl` would download it +again when you build your Nix expression. Since `fetchurl` uses the same +name for the downloaded file as `nix-prefetch-url`, the redundant +download can be avoided. + +If hash is specified, then a download is not performed if the Nix store +already contains a file with the same hash and base name. Otherwise, the +file is downloaded, and an error is signaled if the actual hash of the +file does not match the specified hash. + +This command prints the hash on standard output. Additionally, if the +option `--print-path` is used, the path of the downloaded file in the +Nix store is also printed. + +# Options + + - `--type` hashAlgo + Use the specified cryptographic hash algorithm, which can be one of + `md5`, `sha1`, and `sha256`. + + - `--print-path` + Print the store path of the downloaded file on standard output. + + - `--unpack` + Unpack the archive (which must be a tarball or zip file) and add the + result to the Nix store. The resulting hash can be used with + functions such as Nixpkgs’s `fetchzip` or `fetchFromGitHub`. + + - `--name` name + Override the name of the file in the Nix store. By default, this is + `hash-basename`, where basename is the last component of url. + Overriding the name is necessary when basename contains characters + that are not allowed in Nix store paths. + +# Examples + + $ nix-prefetch-url ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.10.tar.gz + 0ssi1wpaf7plaswqqjwigppsg5fyh99vdlb9kzl7c9lng89ndq1i + + $ nix-prefetch-url --print-path mirror://gnu/hello/hello-2.10.tar.gz + 0ssi1wpaf7plaswqqjwigppsg5fyh99vdlb9kzl7c9lng89ndq1i + /nix/store/3x7dwzq014bblazs7kq20p9hyzz0qh8g-hello-2.10.tar.gz + + $ nix-prefetch-url --unpack --print-path https://github.com/NixOS/patchelf/archive/0.8.tar.gz + 079agjlv0hrv7fxnx9ngipx14gyncbkllxrp9cccnh3a50fxcmy7 + /nix/store/19zrmhm3m40xxaw81c8cqm6aljgrnwj2-0.8.tar.gz diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..c6910e3f5 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md @@ -0,0 +1,291 @@ +nix-shell + +1 + +Nix + +nix-shell + +start an interactive shell based on a Nix expression + +nix-shell + +\--arg + +name + +value + +\--argstr + +name + +value + +\--attr + +\-A + +attrPath + +\--command + +cmd + +\--run + +cmd + +\--exclude + +regexp + +\--pure + +\--keep + +name + +\--packages + +\-p + +packages + +expressions + +path + +# Description + +The command `nix-shell` will build the dependencies of the specified +derivation, but not the derivation itself. It will then start an +interactive shell in which all environment variables defined by the +derivation path have been set to their corresponding values, and the +script `$stdenv/setup` has been sourced. This is useful for reproducing +the environment of a derivation for development. + +If path is not given, `nix-shell` defaults to `shell.nix` if it exists, +and `default.nix` otherwise. + +If path starts with `http://` or `https://`, it is interpreted as the +URL of a tarball that will be downloaded and unpacked to a temporary +location. The tarball must include a single top-level directory +containing at least a file named `default.nix`. + +If the derivation defines the variable `shellHook`, it will be evaluated +after `$stdenv/setup` has been sourced. Since this hook is not executed +by regular Nix builds, it allows you to perform initialisation specific +to `nix-shell`. For example, the derivation attribute + + shellHook = + '' + echo "Hello shell" + ''; + +will cause `nix-shell` to print `Hello shell`. + +# Options + +All options not listed here are passed to `nix-store +--realise`, except for `--arg` and `--attr` / `-A` which are passed to +`nix-instantiate`. See also [???](#sec-common-options). + + - `--command` cmd + In the environment of the derivation, run the shell command cmd. + This command is executed in an interactive shell. (Use `--run` to + use a non-interactive shell instead.) However, a call to `exit` is + implicitly added to the command, so the shell will exit after + running the command. To prevent this, add `return` at the end; e.g. + `--command + "echo Hello; return"` will print `Hello` and then drop you into the + interactive shell. This can be useful for doing any additional + initialisation. + + - `--run` cmd + Like `--command`, but executes the command in a non-interactive + shell. This means (among other things) that if you hit Ctrl-C while + the command is running, the shell exits. + + - `--exclude` regexp + Do not build any dependencies whose store path matches the regular + expression regexp. This option may be specified multiple times. + + - `--pure` + If this flag is specified, the environment is almost entirely + cleared before the interactive shell is started, so you get an + environment that more closely corresponds to the “real” Nix build. A + few variables, in particular `HOME`, `USER` and `DISPLAY`, are + retained. Note that `~/.bashrc` and (depending on your Bash + installation) `/etc/bashrc` are still sourced, so any variables set + there will affect the interactive shell. + + - `--packages` / `-p` packages… + Set up an environment in which the specified packages are present. + The command line arguments are interpreted as attribute names inside + the Nix Packages collection. Thus, `nix-shell -p libjpeg openjdk` + will start a shell in which the packages denoted by the attribute + names `libjpeg` and `openjdk` are present. + + - `-i` interpreter + The chained script interpreter to be invoked by `nix-shell`. Only + applicable in `#!`-scripts (described + [below](#ssec-nix-shell-shebang)). + + - `--keep` name + When a `--pure` shell is started, keep the listed environment + variables. + +The following common options are supported: + +# Environment variables + + - `NIX_BUILD_SHELL` + Shell used to start the interactive environment. Defaults to the + `bash` found in `PATH`. + +# Examples + +To build the dependencies of the package Pan, and start an interactive +shell in which to build it: + + $ nix-shell '' -A pan + [nix-shell]$ unpackPhase + [nix-shell]$ cd pan-* + [nix-shell]$ configurePhase + [nix-shell]$ buildPhase + [nix-shell]$ ./pan/gui/pan + +To clear the environment first, and do some additional automatic +initialisation of the interactive shell: + + $ nix-shell '' -A pan --pure \ + --command 'export NIX_DEBUG=1; export NIX_CORES=8; return' + +Nix expressions can also be given on the command line using the `-E` and +`-p` flags. For instance, the following starts a shell containing the +packages `sqlite` and `libX11`: + + $ nix-shell -E 'with import { }; runCommand "dummy" { buildInputs = [ sqlite xorg.libX11 ]; } ""' + +A shorter way to do the same is: + + $ nix-shell -p sqlite xorg.libX11 + [nix-shell]$ echo $NIX_LDFLAGS + … -L/nix/store/j1zg5v…-sqlite-3.8.0.2/lib -L/nix/store/0gmcz9…-libX11-1.6.1/lib … + +Note that `-p` accepts multiple full nix expressions that are valid in +the `buildInputs = [ ... ]` shown above, not only package names. So the +following is also legal: + + $ nix-shell -p sqlite 'git.override { withManual = false; }' + +The `-p` flag looks up Nixpkgs in the Nix search path. You can override +it by passing `-I` or setting `NIX_PATH`. For example, the following +gives you a shell containing the Pan package from a specific revision of +Nixpkgs: + + $ nix-shell -p pan -I nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/8a3eea054838b55aca962c3fbde9c83c102b8bf2.tar.gz + + [nix-shell:~]$ pan --version + Pan 0.139 + +# Use as a `#!`-interpreter + +You can use `nix-shell` as a script interpreter to allow scripts written +in arbitrary languages to obtain their own dependencies via Nix. This is +done by starting the script with the following lines: + + #! /usr/bin/env nix-shell + #! nix-shell -i real-interpreter -p packages + +where real-interpreter is the “real” script interpreter that will be +invoked by `nix-shell` after it has obtained the dependencies and +initialised the environment, and packages are the attribute names of the +dependencies in Nixpkgs. + +The lines starting with `#! nix-shell` specify `nix-shell` options (see +above). Note that you cannot write `#! /usr/bin/env nix-shell -i ...` +because many operating systems only allow one argument in `#!` lines. + +For example, here is a Python script that depends on Python and the +`prettytable` package: + + #! /usr/bin/env nix-shell + #! nix-shell -i python -p python pythonPackages.prettytable + + import prettytable + + # Print a simple table. + t = prettytable.PrettyTable(["N", "N^2"]) + for n in range(1, 10): t.add_row([n, n * n]) + print t + +Similarly, the following is a Perl script that specifies that it +requires Perl and the `HTML::TokeParser::Simple` and `LWP` packages: + + #! /usr/bin/env nix-shell + #! nix-shell -i perl -p perl perlPackages.HTMLTokeParserSimple perlPackages.LWP + + use HTML::TokeParser::Simple; + + # Fetch nixos.org and print all hrefs. + my $p = HTML::TokeParser::Simple->new(url => 'http://nixos.org/'); + + while (my $token = $p->get_tag("a")) { + my $href = $token->get_attr("href"); + print "$href\n" if $href; + } + +Sometimes you need to pass a simple Nix expression to customize a +package like Terraform: + + #! /usr/bin/env nix-shell + #! nix-shell -i bash -p "terraform.withPlugins (plugins: [ plugins.openstack ])" + + terraform apply + +> **Note** +> +> You must use double quotes (`"`) when passing a simple Nix expression +> in a nix-shell shebang. + +Finally, using the merging of multiple nix-shell shebangs the following +Haskell script uses a specific branch of Nixpkgs/NixOS (the 18.03 stable +branch): + + #! /usr/bin/env nix-shell + #! nix-shell -i runghc -p "haskellPackages.ghcWithPackages (ps: [ps.HTTP ps.tagsoup])" + #! nix-shell -I nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-18.03.tar.gz + + import Network.HTTP + import Text.HTML.TagSoup + + -- Fetch nixos.org and print all hrefs. + main = do + resp <- Network.HTTP.simpleHTTP (getRequest "http://nixos.org/") + body <- getResponseBody resp + let tags = filter (isTagOpenName "a") $ parseTags body + let tags' = map (fromAttrib "href") tags + mapM_ putStrLn $ filter (/= "") tags' + +If you want to be even more precise, you can specify a specific revision +of Nixpkgs: + + #! nix-shell -I nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/0672315759b3e15e2121365f067c1c8c56bb4722.tar.gz + +The examples above all used `-p` to get dependencies from Nixpkgs. You +can also use a Nix expression to build your own dependencies. For +example, the Python example could have been written as: + + #! /usr/bin/env nix-shell + #! nix-shell deps.nix -i python + +where the file `deps.nix` in the same directory as the `#!`-script +contains: + + with import {}; + + runCommand "dummy" { buildInputs = [ python pythonPackages.prettytable ]; } "" + +# Environment variables diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..703e71076 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md @@ -0,0 +1,954 @@ +nix-store + +1 + +Nix + +nix-store + +manipulate or query the Nix store + +nix-store + +\--add-root + +path + +\--indirect + +operation + +options + +arguments + +# Description + +The command `nix-store` performs primitive operations on the Nix store. +You generally do not need to run this command manually. + +`nix-store` takes exactly one *operation* flag which indicates the +subcommand to be performed. These are documented below. + +# Common options + +This section lists the options that are common to all operations. These +options are allowed for every subcommand, though they may not always +have an effect. See also [???](#sec-common-options) for a list of common +options. + + - `--add-root` path + Causes the result of a realisation (`--realise` and + `--force-realise`) to be registered as a root of the garbage + collector(see [???](#ssec-gc-roots)). The root is stored in path, + which must be inside a directory that is scanned for roots by the + garbage collector (i.e., typically in a subdirectory of + `/nix/var/nix/gcroots/`) *unless* the `--indirect` flag is used. + + If there are multiple results, then multiple symlinks will be + created by sequentially numbering symlinks beyond the first one + (e.g., `foo`, `foo-2`, `foo-3`, and so on). + + - `--indirect` + In conjunction with `--add-root`, this option allows roots to be + stored *outside* of the GC roots directory. This is useful for + commands such as `nix-build` that place a symlink to the build + result in the current directory; such a build result should not be + garbage-collected unless the symlink is removed. + + The `--indirect` flag causes a uniquely named symlink to path to be + stored in `/nix/var/nix/gcroots/auto/`. For instance, + + $ nix-store --add-root /home/eelco/bla/result --indirect -r ... + + $ ls -l /nix/var/nix/gcroots/auto + lrwxrwxrwx 1 ... 2005-03-13 21:10 dn54lcypm8f8... -> /home/eelco/bla/result + + $ ls -l /home/eelco/bla/result + lrwxrwxrwx 1 ... 2005-03-13 21:10 /home/eelco/bla/result -> /nix/store/1r11343n6qd4...-f-spot-0.0.10 + + Thus, when `/home/eelco/bla/result` is removed, the GC root in the + `auto` directory becomes a dangling symlink and will be ignored by + the collector. + + > **Warning** + > + > Note that it is not possible to move or rename indirect GC roots, + > since the symlink in the `auto` directory will still point to the + > old location. + + + +# Operation `--realise` + +## Synopsis + +nix-store + +\--realise + +\-r + +paths + +\--dry-run + +## Description + +The operation `--realise` essentially “builds” the specified store +paths. Realisation is a somewhat overloaded term: + + - If the store path is a *derivation*, realisation ensures that the + output paths of the derivation are [valid](#gloss-validity) (i.e., + the output path and its closure exist in the file system). This can + be done in several ways. First, it is possible that the outputs are + already valid, in which case we are done immediately. Otherwise, + there may be [substitutes](#gloss-substitute) that produce the + outputs (e.g., by downloading them). Finally, the outputs can be + produced by performing the build action described by the derivation. + + - If the store path is not a derivation, realisation ensures that the + specified path is valid (i.e., it and its closure exist in the file + system). If the path is already valid, we are done immediately. + Otherwise, the path and any missing paths in its closure may be + produced through substitutes. If there are no (successful) + subsitutes, realisation fails. + +The output path of each derivation is printed on standard output. (For +non-derivations argument, the argument itself is printed.) + +The following flags are available: + + - `--dry-run` + Print on standard error a description of what packages would be + built or downloaded, without actually performing the operation. + + - `--ignore-unknown` + If a non-derivation path does not have a substitute, then silently + ignore it. + + - `--check` + This option allows you to check whether a derivation is + deterministic. It rebuilds the specified derivation and checks + whether the result is bitwise-identical with the existing outputs, + printing an error if that’s not the case. The outputs of the + specified derivation must already exist. When used with `-K`, if an + output path is not identical to the corresponding output from the + previous build, the new output path is left in + `/nix/store/name.check.` + + See also the `build-repeat` configuration option, which repeats a + derivation a number of times and prevents its outputs from being + registered as “valid” in the Nix store unless they are identical. + +Special exit codes: + + - `100` + Generic build failure, the builder process returned with a non-zero + exit code. + + - `101` + Build timeout, the build was aborted because it did not complete + within the specified [`timeout`](#conf-timeout). + + - `102` + Hash mismatch, the build output was rejected because it does not + match the specified [`outputHash`](#fixed-output-drvs). + + - `104` + Not deterministic, the build succeeded in check mode but the + resulting output is not binary reproducable. + +With the `--keep-going` flag it's possible for multiple failures to +occur, in this case the 1xx status codes are or combined using binary +or. + + 1100100 + ^^^^ + |||`- timeout + ||`-- output hash mismatch + |`--- build failure + `---- not deterministic + +## Examples + +This operation is typically used to build store derivations produced by +[`nix-instantiate`](#sec-nix-instantiate): + + $ nix-store -r $(nix-instantiate ./test.nix) + /nix/store/31axcgrlbfsxzmfff1gyj1bf62hvkby2-aterm-2.3.1 + +This is essentially what [`nix-build`](#sec-nix-build) does. + +To test whether a previously-built derivation is deterministic: + + $ nix-build '' -A hello --check -K + +# Operation `--serve` + +## Synopsis + +nix-store + +\--serve + +\--write + +## Description + +The operation `--serve` provides access to the Nix store over stdin and +stdout, and is intended to be used as a means of providing Nix store +access to a restricted ssh user. + +The following flags are available: + + - `--write` + Allow the connected client to request the realization of + derivations. In effect, this can be used to make the host act as a + remote builder. + +## Examples + +To turn a host into a build server, the `authorized_keys` file can be +used to provide build access to a given SSH public key: + + $ cat <>/root/.ssh/authorized_keys + command="nice -n20 nix-store --serve --write" ssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAA... + EOF + +# Operation `--gc` + +## Synopsis + +nix-store + +\--gc + +\--print-roots + +\--print-live + +\--print-dead + +\--max-freed + +bytes + +## Description + +Without additional flags, the operation `--gc` performs a garbage +collection on the Nix store. That is, all paths in the Nix store not +reachable via file system references from a set of “roots”, are deleted. + +The following suboperations may be specified: + + - `--print-roots` + This operation prints on standard output the set of roots used by + the garbage collector. What constitutes a root is described in + [???](#ssec-gc-roots). + + - `--print-live` + This operation prints on standard output the set of “live” store + paths, which are all the store paths reachable from the roots. Live + paths should never be deleted, since that would break consistency — + it would become possible that applications are installed that + reference things that are no longer present in the store. + + - `--print-dead` + This operation prints out on standard output the set of “dead” store + paths, which is just the opposite of the set of live paths: any path + in the store that is not live (with respect to the roots) is dead. + +By default, all unreachable paths are deleted. The following options +control what gets deleted and in what order: + + - `--max-freed` bytes + Keep deleting paths until at least bytes bytes have been deleted, + then stop. The argument bytes can be followed by the multiplicative + suffix `K`, `M`, `G` or `T`, denoting KiB, MiB, GiB or TiB units. + +The behaviour of the collector is also influenced by the +[`keep-outputs`](#conf-keep-outputs) and +[`keep-derivations`](#conf-keep-derivations) variables in the Nix +configuration file. + +By default, the collector prints the total number of freed bytes when it +finishes (or when it is interrupted). With `--print-dead`, it prints the +number of bytes that would be freed. + +## Examples + +To delete all unreachable paths, just do: + + $ nix-store --gc + deleting `/nix/store/kq82idx6g0nyzsp2s14gfsc38npai7lf-cairo-1.0.4.tar.gz.drv' + ... + 8825586 bytes freed (8.42 MiB) + +To delete at least 100 MiBs of unreachable paths: + + $ nix-store --gc --max-freed $((100 * 1024 * 1024)) + +# Operation `--delete` + +## Synopsis + +nix-store + +\--delete + +\--ignore-liveness + +paths + +## Description + +The operation `--delete` deletes the store paths paths from the Nix +store, but only if it is safe to do so; that is, when the path is not +reachable from a root of the garbage collector. This means that you can +only delete paths that would also be deleted by `nix-store --gc`. Thus, +`--delete` is a more targeted version of `--gc`. + +With the option `--ignore-liveness`, reachability from the roots is +ignored. However, the path still won’t be deleted if there are other +paths in the store that refer to it (i.e., depend on it). + +## Example + + $ nix-store --delete /nix/store/zq0h41l75vlb4z45kzgjjmsjxvcv1qk7-mesa-6.4 + 0 bytes freed (0.00 MiB) + error: cannot delete path `/nix/store/zq0h41l75vlb4z45kzgjjmsjxvcv1qk7-mesa-6.4' since it is still alive + +# Operation `--query` + +## Synopsis + +nix-store + +\--query + +\-q + +\--outputs + +\--requisites + +\-R + +\--references + +\--referrers + +\--referrers-closure + +\--deriver + +\-d + +\--graph + +\--tree + +\--binding + +name + +\-b + +name + +\--hash + +\--size + +\--roots + +\--use-output + +\-u + +\--force-realise + +\-f + +paths + +## Description + +The operation `--query` displays various bits of information about the +store paths . The queries are described below. At most one query can be +specified. The default query is `--outputs`. + +The paths paths may also be symlinks from outside of the Nix store, to +the Nix store. In that case, the query is applied to the target of the +symlink. + +## Common query options + + - `--use-output`; `-u` + For each argument to the query that is a store derivation, apply the + query to the output path of the derivation instead. + + - `--force-realise`; `-f` + Realise each argument to the query first (see [`nix-store + --realise`](#rsec-nix-store-realise)). + +## Queries + + - `--outputs` + Prints out the [output paths](#gloss-output-path) of the store + derivations paths. These are the paths that will be produced when + the derivation is built. + + - `--requisites`; `-R` + Prints out the [closure](#gloss-closure) of the store path paths. + + This query has one option: + + - `--include-outputs` + Also include the output path of store derivations, and their + closures. + + This query can be used to implement various kinds of deployment. A + *source deployment* is obtained by distributing the closure of a + store derivation. A *binary deployment* is obtained by distributing + the closure of an output path. A *cache deployment* (combined + source/binary deployment, including binaries of build-time-only + dependencies) is obtained by distributing the closure of a store + derivation and specifying the option `--include-outputs`. + + - `--references` + Prints the set of [references](#gloss-reference) of the store paths + paths, that is, their immediate dependencies. (For *all* + dependencies, use `--requisites`.) + + - `--referrers` + Prints the set of *referrers* of the store paths paths, that is, the + store paths currently existing in the Nix store that refer to one of + paths. Note that contrary to the references, the set of referrers is + not constant; it can change as store paths are added or removed. + + - `--referrers-closure` + Prints the closure of the set of store paths paths under the + referrers relation; that is, all store paths that directly or + indirectly refer to one of paths. These are all the path currently + in the Nix store that are dependent on paths. + + - `--deriver`; `-d` + Prints the [deriver](#gloss-deriver) of the store paths paths. If + the path has no deriver (e.g., if it is a source file), or if the + deriver is not known (e.g., in the case of a binary-only + deployment), the string `unknown-deriver` is printed. + + - `--graph` + Prints the references graph of the store paths paths in the format + of the `dot` tool of AT\&T's [Graphviz + package](http://www.graphviz.org/). This can be used to visualise + dependency graphs. To obtain a build-time dependency graph, apply + this to a store derivation. To obtain a runtime dependency graph, + apply it to an output path. + + - `--tree` + Prints the references graph of the store paths paths as a nested + ASCII tree. References are ordered by descending closure size; this + tends to flatten the tree, making it more readable. The query only + recurses into a store path when it is first encountered; this + prevents a blowup of the tree representation of the graph. + + - `--graphml` + Prints the references graph of the store paths paths in the + [GraphML](http://graphml.graphdrawing.org/) file format. This can be + used to visualise dependency graphs. To obtain a build-time + dependency graph, apply this to a store derivation. To obtain a + runtime dependency graph, apply it to an output path. + + - `--binding` name; `-b` name + Prints the value of the attribute name (i.e., environment variable) + of the store derivations paths. It is an error for a derivation to + not have the specified attribute. + + - `--hash` + Prints the SHA-256 hash of the contents of the store paths paths + (that is, the hash of the output of `nix-store --dump` on the given + paths). Since the hash is stored in the Nix database, this is a fast + operation. + + - `--size` + Prints the size in bytes of the contents of the store paths paths — + to be precise, the size of the output of `nix-store --dump` on the + given paths. Note that the actual disk space required by the store + paths may be higher, especially on filesystems with large cluster + sizes. + + - `--roots` + Prints the garbage collector roots that point, directly or + indirectly, at the store paths paths. + +## Examples + +Print the closure (runtime dependencies) of the `svn` program in the +current user environment: + + $ nix-store -qR $(which svn) + /nix/store/5mbglq5ldqld8sj57273aljwkfvj22mc-subversion-1.1.4 + /nix/store/9lz9yc6zgmc0vlqmn2ipcpkjlmbi51vv-glibc-2.3.4 + ... + +Print the build-time dependencies of `svn`: + + $ nix-store -qR $(nix-store -qd $(which svn)) + /nix/store/02iizgn86m42q905rddvg4ja975bk2i4-grep-2.5.1.tar.bz2.drv + /nix/store/07a2bzxmzwz5hp58nf03pahrv2ygwgs3-gcc-wrapper.sh + /nix/store/0ma7c9wsbaxahwwl04gbw3fcd806ski4-glibc-2.3.4.drv + ... lots of other paths ... + +The difference with the previous example is that we ask the closure of +the derivation (`-qd`), not the closure of the output path that contains +`svn`. + +Show the build-time dependencies as a tree: + + $ nix-store -q --tree $(nix-store -qd $(which svn)) + /nix/store/7i5082kfb6yjbqdbiwdhhza0am2xvh6c-subversion-1.1.4.drv + +---/nix/store/d8afh10z72n8l1cr5w42366abiblgn54-builder.sh + +---/nix/store/fmzxmpjx2lh849ph0l36snfj9zdibw67-bash-3.0.drv + | +---/nix/store/570hmhmx3v57605cqg9yfvvyh0nnb8k8-bash + | +---/nix/store/p3srsbd8dx44v2pg6nbnszab5mcwx03v-builder.sh + ... + +Show all paths that depend on the same OpenSSL library as `svn`: + + $ nix-store -q --referrers $(nix-store -q --binding openssl $(nix-store -qd $(which svn))) + /nix/store/23ny9l9wixx21632y2wi4p585qhva1q8-sylpheed-1.0.0 + /nix/store/5mbglq5ldqld8sj57273aljwkfvj22mc-subversion-1.1.4 + /nix/store/dpmvp969yhdqs7lm2r1a3gng7pyq6vy4-subversion-1.1.3 + /nix/store/l51240xqsgg8a7yrbqdx1rfzyv6l26fx-lynx-2.8.5 + +Show all paths that directly or indirectly depend on the Glibc (C +library) used by `svn`: + + $ nix-store -q --referrers-closure $(ldd $(which svn) | grep /libc.so | awk '{print $3}') + /nix/store/034a6h4vpz9kds5r6kzb9lhh81mscw43-libgnomeprintui-2.8.2 + /nix/store/15l3yi0d45prm7a82pcrknxdh6nzmxza-gawk-3.1.4 + ... + +Note that `ldd` is a command that prints out the dynamic libraries used +by an ELF executable. + +Make a picture of the runtime dependency graph of the current user +environment: + + $ nix-store -q --graph ~/.nix-profile | dot -Tps > graph.ps + $ gv graph.ps + +Show every garbage collector root that points to a store path that +depends on `svn`: + + $ nix-store -q --roots $(which svn) + /nix/var/nix/profiles/default-81-link + /nix/var/nix/profiles/default-82-link + /nix/var/nix/profiles/per-user/eelco/profile-97-link + +# Operation `--add` + +## Synopsis + +nix-store + +\--add + +paths + +## Description + +The operation `--add` adds the specified paths to the Nix store. It +prints the resulting paths in the Nix store on standard output. + +## Example + + $ nix-store --add ./foo.c + /nix/store/m7lrha58ph6rcnv109yzx1nk1cj7k7zf-foo.c + +# Operation `--add-fixed` + +## Synopsis + +nix-store + +\--recursive + +\--add-fixed + +algorithm + +paths + +## Description + +The operation `--add-fixed` adds the specified paths to the Nix store. +Unlike `--add` paths are registered using the specified hashing +algorithm, resulting in the same output path as a fixed-output +derivation. This can be used for sources that are not available from a +public url or broke since the download expression was written. + +This operation has the following options: + + - `--recursive` + Use recursive instead of flat hashing mode, used when adding + directories to the store. + +## Example + + $ nix-store --add-fixed sha256 ./hello-2.10.tar.gz + /nix/store/3x7dwzq014bblazs7kq20p9hyzz0qh8g-hello-2.10.tar.gz + +# Operation `--verify` + +## Synopsis + +nix-store + +\--verify + +\--check-contents + +\--repair + +## Description + +The operation `--verify` verifies the internal consistency of the Nix +database, and the consistency between the Nix database and the Nix +store. Any inconsistencies encountered are automatically repaired. +Inconsistencies are generally the result of the Nix store or database +being modified by non-Nix tools, or of bugs in Nix itself. + +This operation has the following options: + + - `--check-contents` + Checks that the contents of every valid store path has not been + altered by computing a SHA-256 hash of the contents and comparing it + with the hash stored in the Nix database at build time. Paths that + have been modified are printed out. For large stores, + `--check-contents` is obviously quite slow. + + - `--repair` + If any valid path is missing from the store, or (if + `--check-contents` is given) the contents of a valid path has been + modified, then try to repair the path by redownloading it. See + `nix-store --repair-path` for details. + +# Operation `--verify-path` + +## Synopsis + +nix-store + +\--verify-path + +paths + +## Description + +The operation `--verify-path` compares the contents of the given store +paths to their cryptographic hashes stored in Nix’s database. For every +changed path, it prints a warning message. The exit status is 0 if no +path has changed, and 1 otherwise. + +## Example + +To verify the integrity of the `svn` command and all its dependencies: + + $ nix-store --verify-path $(nix-store -qR $(which svn)) + +# Operation `--repair-path` + +## Synopsis + +nix-store + +\--repair-path + +paths + +## Description + +The operation `--repair-path` attempts to “repair” the specified paths +by redownloading them using the available substituters. If no +substitutes are available, then repair is not possible. + +> **Warning** +> +> During repair, there is a very small time window during which the old +> path (if it exists) is moved out of the way and replaced with the new +> path. If repair is interrupted in between, then the system may be left +> in a broken state (e.g., if the path contains a critical system +> component like the GNU C Library). + +## Example + + $ nix-store --verify-path /nix/store/dj7a81wsm1ijwwpkks3725661h3263p5-glibc-2.13 + path `/nix/store/dj7a81wsm1ijwwpkks3725661h3263p5-glibc-2.13' was modified! + expected hash `2db57715ae90b7e31ff1f2ecb8c12ec1cc43da920efcbe3b22763f36a1861588', + got `481c5aa5483ebc97c20457bb8bca24deea56550d3985cda0027f67fe54b808e4' + + $ nix-store --repair-path /nix/store/dj7a81wsm1ijwwpkks3725661h3263p5-glibc-2.13 + fetching path `/nix/store/d7a81wsm1ijwwpkks3725661h3263p5-glibc-2.13'... + … + +# Operation `--dump` + +## Synopsis + +nix-store + +\--dump + +path + +## Description + +The operation `--dump` produces a NAR (Nix ARchive) file containing the +contents of the file system tree rooted at path. The archive is written +to standard output. + +A NAR archive is like a TAR or Zip archive, but it contains only the +information that Nix considers important. For instance, timestamps are +elided because all files in the Nix store have their timestamp set to 0 +anyway. Likewise, all permissions are left out except for the execute +bit, because all files in the Nix store have 444 or 555 permission. + +Also, a NAR archive is *canonical*, meaning that “equal” paths always +produce the same NAR archive. For instance, directory entries are always +sorted so that the actual on-disk order doesn’t influence the result. +This means that the cryptographic hash of a NAR dump of a path is usable +as a fingerprint of the contents of the path. Indeed, the hashes of +store paths stored in Nix’s database (see [`nix-store -q +--hash`](#refsec-nix-store-query)) are SHA-256 hashes of the NAR dump of +each store path. + +NAR archives support filenames of unlimited length and 64-bit file +sizes. They can contain regular files, directories, and symbolic links, +but not other types of files (such as device nodes). + +A Nix archive can be unpacked using `nix-store +--restore`. + +# Operation `--restore` + +## Synopsis + +nix-store + +\--restore + +path + +## Description + +The operation `--restore` unpacks a NAR archive to path, which must not +already exist. The archive is read from standard input. + +# Operation `--export` + +## Synopsis + +nix-store + +\--export + +paths + +## Description + +The operation `--export` writes a serialisation of the specified store +paths to standard output in a format that can be imported into another +Nix store with `nix-store --import`. This is like `nix-store +--dump`, except that the NAR archive produced by that command doesn’t +contain the necessary meta-information to allow it to be imported into +another Nix store (namely, the set of references of the path). + +This command does not produce a *closure* of the specified paths, so if +a store path references other store paths that are missing in the target +Nix store, the import will fail. To copy a whole closure, do something +like: + + $ nix-store --export $(nix-store -qR paths) > out + +To import the whole closure again, run: + + $ nix-store --import < out + +# Operation `--import` + +## Synopsis + +nix-store + +\--import + +## Description + +The operation `--import` reads a serialisation of a set of store paths +produced by `nix-store --export` from standard input and adds those +store paths to the Nix store. Paths that already exist in the Nix store +are ignored. If a path refers to another path that doesn’t exist in the +Nix store, the import fails. + +# Operation `--optimise` + +## Synopsis + +nix-store + +\--optimise + +## Description + +The operation `--optimise` reduces Nix store disk space usage by finding +identical files in the store and hard-linking them to each other. It +typically reduces the size of the store by something like 25-35%. Only +regular files and symlinks are hard-linked in this manner. Files are +considered identical when they have the same NAR archive serialisation: +that is, regular files must have the same contents and permission +(executable or non-executable), and symlinks must have the same +contents. + +After completion, or when the command is interrupted, a report on the +achieved savings is printed on standard error. + +Use `-vv` or `-vvv` to get some progress indication. + +## Example + + $ nix-store --optimise + hashing files in `/nix/store/qhqx7l2f1kmwihc9bnxs7rc159hsxnf3-gcc-4.1.1' + ... + 541838819 bytes (516.74 MiB) freed by hard-linking 54143 files; + there are 114486 files with equal contents out of 215894 files in total + +# Operation `--read-log` + +## Synopsis + +nix-store + +\--read-log + +\-l + +paths + +## Description + +The operation `--read-log` prints the build log of the specified store +paths on standard output. The build log is whatever the builder of a +derivation wrote to standard output and standard error. If a store path +is not a derivation, the deriver of the store path is used. + +Build logs are kept in `/nix/var/log/nix/drvs`. However, there is no +guarantee that a build log is available for any particular store path. +For instance, if the path was downloaded as a pre-built binary through a +substitute, then the log is unavailable. + +## Example + + $ nix-store -l $(which ktorrent) + building /nix/store/dhc73pvzpnzxhdgpimsd9sw39di66ph1-ktorrent-2.2.1 + unpacking sources + unpacking source archive /nix/store/p8n1jpqs27mgkjw07pb5269717nzf5f8-ktorrent-2.2.1.tar.gz + ktorrent-2.2.1/ + ktorrent-2.2.1/NEWS + ... + +# Operation `--dump-db` + +## Synopsis + +nix-store + +\--dump-db + +paths + +## Description + +The operation `--dump-db` writes a dump of the Nix database to standard +output. It can be loaded into an empty Nix store using `--load-db`. This +is useful for making backups and when migrating to different database +schemas. + +By default, `--dump-db` will dump the entire Nix database. When one or +more store paths is passed, only the subset of the Nix database for +those store paths is dumped. As with `--export`, the user is responsible +for passing all the store paths for a closure. See `--export` for an +example. + +# Operation `--load-db` + +## Synopsis + +nix-store + +\--load-db + +## Description + +The operation `--load-db` reads a dump of the Nix database created by +`--dump-db` from standard input and loads it into the Nix database. + +# Operation `--print-env` + +## Synopsis + +nix-store + +\--print-env + +drvpath + +## Description + +The operation `--print-env` prints out the environment of a derivation +in a format that can be evaluated by a shell. The command line arguments +of the builder are placed in the variable `_args`. + +## Example + + $ nix-store --print-env $(nix-instantiate '' -A firefox) + … + export src; src='/nix/store/plpj7qrwcz94z2psh6fchsi7s8yihc7k-firefox-12.0.source.tar.bz2' + export stdenv; stdenv='/nix/store/7c8asx3yfrg5dg1gzhzyq2236zfgibnn-stdenv' + export system; system='x86_64-linux' + export _args; _args='-e /nix/store/9krlzvny65gdc8s7kpb6lkx8cd02c25c-default-builder.sh' + +# Operation `--generate-binary-cache-key` + +## Synopsis + +nix-store + +\--generate-binary-cache-key + +key-name + +secret-key-file + +public-key-file + +## Description + +This command generates an [Ed25519 key pair](http://ed25519.cr.yp.to/) +that can be used to create a signed binary cache. It takes three +mandatory parameters: + +1. A key name, such as `cache.example.org-1`, that is used to look up + keys on the client when it verifies signatures. It can be anything, + but it’s suggested to use the host name of your cache (e.g. + `cache.example.org`) with a suffix denoting the number of the key + (to be incremented every time you need to revoke a key). + +2. The file name where the secret key is to be stored. + +3. The file name where the public key is to be stored. + +# Environment variables diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common-syn.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common-syn.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..b66d318c2 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common-syn.md @@ -0,0 +1,57 @@ +\--help + +\--version + +\--verbose + +\-v + +\--quiet + +\--log-format + +format + +\--no-build-output + +\-Q + +\--max-jobs + +\-j + +number + +\--cores + +number + +\--max-silent-time + +number + +\--timeout + +number + +\--keep-going + +\-k + +\--keep-failed + +\-K + +\--fallback + +\--readonly-mode + +\-I + +path + +\--option + +name + +value diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-inst-syn.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-inst-syn.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..1703c40e3 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-inst-syn.md @@ -0,0 +1,15 @@ +\--prebuilt-only + +\-b + +\--attr + +\-A + +\--from-expression + +\-E + +\--from-profile + +path From efff6cf163fb911689b41d7c2970efd8b17876e1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Thu, 23 Jul 2020 13:09:30 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 13/57] Install all manpages --- doc/manual/local.mk | 17 +++++++++-------- 1 file changed, 9 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/manual/local.mk b/doc/manual/local.mk index 80c517702..13d937f8d 100644 --- a/doc/manual/local.mk +++ b/doc/manual/local.mk @@ -12,20 +12,21 @@ dist-files += $(d)/version.txt # Generate man pages. man-pages := $(foreach n, \ - nix-copy-closure.1 \ - nix.conf.5, \ + nix-env.1 nix-build.1 nix-shell.1 nix-store.1 nix-instantiate.1 \ + nix-collect-garbage.1 \ + nix-prefetch-url.1 nix-channel.1 \ + nix-hash.1 nix-copy-closure.1 \ + nix.conf.5 nix-daemon.8, \ $(d)/$(n)) -# nix-env.1 nix-build.1 nix-shell.1 nix-store.1 nix-instantiate.1 \ -# nix-collect-garbage.1, \ -# nix-prefetch-url.1 nix-channel.1 \ -# nix-hash.1 nix-copy-closure.1 \ -# nix.conf.5 nix-daemon.8, \ clean-files += $(d)/*.1 $(d)/*.5 $(d)/*.8 dist-files += $(man-pages) -$(d)/nix-copy-closure.1: $(d)/src/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md +$(d)/%.1: $(d)/src/command-ref/%.md + $(trace-gen) lowdown -sT man $^ -o $@ + +$(d)/%.8: $(d)/src/command-ref/%.md $(trace-gen) lowdown -sT man $^ -o $@ $(d)/nix.conf.5: $(d)/src/command-ref/conf-file.md From 13df1faf25769924dae07e65f3ef3ffdd66f10ee Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Thu, 23 Jul 2020 13:58:49 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 14/57] Get rid of callouts since Markdown doesn't support them --- .../expressions/arguments-variables.xml | 51 ++++++------- doc/manual/expressions/build-script.xml | 58 ++++++++------- doc/manual/expressions/builtins.xml | 72 ++++++++----------- doc/manual/expressions/expression-syntax.xml | 50 +++++++------ doc/manual/expressions/generic-builder.xml | 34 ++++----- .../expressions/language-constructs.xml | 36 +++++----- .../src/expressions/arguments-variables.md | 28 ++++---- doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md | 32 ++++----- doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md | 54 +++++++------- .../src/expressions/expression-syntax.md | 29 ++++---- doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md | 18 ++--- .../src/expressions/language-constructs.md | 22 +++--- 12 files changed, 233 insertions(+), 251 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/arguments-variables.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/arguments-variables.xml index bf60cb7ee..a4375c777 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/arguments-variables.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/arguments-variables.xml @@ -6,20 +6,25 @@ Arguments and Variables - +The Nix expression in is a +function; it is missing some arguments that have to be filled in +somewhere. In the Nix Packages collection this is done in the file +pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix, where all Nix +expressions for packages are imported and called with the appropriate +arguments. Here are some fragments of +all-packages.nix, with annotations of what they +mean: -Composing GNU Hello -(<filename>all-packages.nix</filename>) ... -rec { +rec { ① - hello = import ../applications/misc/hello/ex-1 { + hello = import ../applications/misc/hello/ex-1 ② { ③ inherit fetchurl stdenv perl; }; - perl = import ../development/interpreters/perl { + perl = import ../development/interpreters/perl { ④ inherit fetchurl stdenv; }; @@ -31,31 +36,19 @@ rec { } - -The Nix expression in is a -function; it is missing some arguments that have to be filled in -somewhere. In the Nix Packages collection this is done in the file -pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix, where all -Nix expressions for packages are imported and called with the -appropriate arguments. shows -some fragments of -all-packages.nix. - - - - + + This file defines a set of attributes, all of which are concrete derivations (i.e., not functions). In fact, we define a mutually recursive set of attributes. That is, the attributes can refer to each other. This is precisely what we want since we want to plug the various packages into each other. + - - - + Here we import the Nix expression for GNU Hello. The import operation just loads and returns the @@ -71,9 +64,9 @@ some fragments of When you try to import a directory, Nix automatically appends /default.nix to the file name. - +
- + This is where the actual composition takes place. Here we call the function imported from @@ -107,15 +100,15 @@ hello = callPackage ../applications/misc/hello/ex-1 { stdenv = myStdenv; }; - + - + Likewise, we have to instantiate Perl, fetchurl, and the standard environment. - + - + -
\ No newline at end of file +
diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/build-script.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/build-script.xml index 44264239d..892274f50 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/build-script.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/build-script.xml @@ -6,32 +6,30 @@ Build Script -Build script for GNU Hello -(<filename>builder.sh</filename>) - -source $stdenv/setup - -PATH=$perl/bin:$PATH - -tar xvfz $src -cd hello-* -./configure --prefix=$out -make -make install - - - shows the builder referenced +Here is the builder referenced from Hello's Nix expression (stored in -pkgs/applications/misc/hello/ex-1/builder.sh). -The builder can actually be made a lot shorter by using the +pkgs/applications/misc/hello/ex-1/builder.sh): + + +source $stdenv/setup ① + +PATH=$perl/bin:$PATH ② + +tar xvfz $src ③ +cd hello-* +./configure --prefix=$out ④ +make ⑤ +make install + +The builder can actually be made a lot shorter by using the generic builder functions provided by stdenv, but here we write out the build steps to elucidate what a builder does. It performs the following steps: - + - + When Nix runs a builder, it initially completely clears the environment (except for the attributes declared in the @@ -52,9 +50,9 @@ steps: attribute in , but mkDerivation adds it automatically.) - +
- + Since Hello needs Perl, we have to make sure that Perl is in the PATH. The perl environment @@ -63,9 +61,9 @@ steps: $perl/bin is the directory containing the Perl interpreter. - +
- + Now we have to unpack the sources. The src attribute was bound to the result of @@ -82,9 +80,9 @@ steps: always newly created, so you don't have to worry about files from previous builds interfering with the current build. - +
- + GNU Hello is a typical Autoconf-based package, so we first have to run its configure script. In Nix @@ -98,17 +96,17 @@ steps: --prefix=$out to cause Hello to be installed in the expected location. - + - + Finally we build Hello (make) and install it into the location specified by out (make install). - + - + If you are wondering about the absence of error checking on the result of various commands called in the builder: this is because the @@ -116,4 +114,4 @@ shell script is evaluated with Bash's option, which causes the script to be aborted if any command fails without an error check. -
\ No newline at end of file + diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/builtins.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/builtins.xml index a18c5801a..478b67ce8 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/builtins.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/builtins.xml @@ -1511,39 +1511,9 @@ in foo - shows an example where this is - the case. The builder is supposed to generate the configuration - file for a Jetty - servlet container. A servlet container contains a number - of servlets (*.war files) each exported under - a specific URI prefix. So the servlet configuration is a list of - sets containing the path and - war of the servlet (). This kind of information is - difficult to communicate with the normal method of passing - information through an environment variable, which just - concatenates everything together into a string (which might just - work in this case, but wouldn’t work if fields are optional or - contain lists themselves). Instead the Nix expression is - converted to an XML representation with - toXML, which is unambiguous and can easily be - processed with the appropriate tools. For instance, in the - example an XSLT stylesheet () is applied to it () to - generate the XML configuration file for the Jetty server. The XML - representation produced from by toXML is shown in . - - Note that uses the toFile built-in to write the - builder and the stylesheet “inline” in the Nix expression. The - path of the stylesheet is spliced into the builder at - xsltproc ${stylesheet} - .... - - Passing information to a builder - using <function>toXML</function> + Here is an example where this is + the case: + $out/server-conf.xml]]> $out/server-conf.xml]]> ① @@ -1575,16 +1545,32 @@ stdenv.mkDerivation (rec { "; - servlets = builtins.toXML []]> - - - XML representation produced by - <function>toXML</function> + The builder is supposed to generate the configuration file + for a Jetty servlet + container. A servlet container contains a number of + servlets (*.war files) each exported under a + specific URI prefix. So the servlet configuration is a list of + sets containing the path and + war of the servlet (). This kind of information is + difficult to communicate with the normal method of passing + information through an environment variable, which just + concatenates everything together into a string (which might just + work in this case, but wouldn’t work if fields are optional or + contain lists themselves). Instead the Nix expression is + converted to an XML representation with + toXML, which is unambiguous and can easily be + processed with the appropriate tools. For instance, in the + example an XSLT stylesheet (at point ②) is applied to it (at point + ①) to generate the XML configuration file for the Jetty server. + The XML representation produced at point ③ by + toXML is as follows: @@ -1608,7 +1594,11 @@ stdenv.mkDerivation (rec { ]]> - + Note that uses the toFile built-in to write the + builder and the stylesheet “inline” in the Nix expression. The + path of the stylesheet is spliced into the builder using the + syntax xsltproc ${stylesheet}. diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/expression-syntax.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/expression-syntax.xml index a3de20713..562a9e9f4 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/expression-syntax.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/expression-syntax.xml @@ -6,33 +6,31 @@ Expression Syntax -Nix expression for GNU Hello -(<filename>default.nix</filename>) - -{ stdenv, fetchurl, perl }: +Here is a Nix expression for GNU Hello: -stdenv.mkDerivation { - name = "hello-2.1.1"; - builder = ./builder.sh; - src = fetchurl { + +{ stdenv, fetchurl, perl }: ① + +stdenv.mkDerivation { ② + name = "hello-2.1.1"; ③ + builder = ./builder.sh; ④ + src = fetchurl { ⑤ url = "ftp://ftp.nluug.nl/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.1.1.tar.gz"; sha256 = "1md7jsfd8pa45z73bz1kszpp01yw6x5ljkjk2hx7wl800any6465"; }; - inherit perl; + inherit perl; ⑥ } - - shows a Nix expression for GNU -Hello. It's actually already in the Nix Packages collection in +This file is actually already in the Nix Packages collection in pkgs/applications/misc/hello/ex-1/default.nix. It is customary to place each package in a separate directory and call the single Nix expression in that directory default.nix. The file has the following elements (referenced from the figure by number): - + - + This states that the expression is a function that expects to be called with three @@ -57,9 +55,9 @@ the single Nix expression in that directory function; when given the required arguments, the body should describe how to build an instance of the Hello package. - + - + So we have to build a package. Building something from other stuff is called a derivation in Nix (as @@ -76,9 +74,9 @@ the single Nix expression in that directory nameN = exprN; }. - + - + The attribute name specifies the symbolic name and version of the package. Nix doesn't really care about @@ -87,9 +85,9 @@ the single Nix expression in that directory packages. This attribute is required by mkDerivation. - + - + The attribute builder specifies the builder. This attribute can sometimes be omitted, in which case @@ -101,9 +99,9 @@ the single Nix expression in that directory ./builder.sh refers to the shell script shown in , discussed below. - + - + The builder has to know what the sources of the package are. Here, the attribute src is bound to the @@ -120,9 +118,9 @@ the single Nix expression in that directory customary, and it's also expected by the default builder (which we don't use in this example). - + - + Since the derivation requires Perl, we have to pass the value of the perl function argument to the @@ -139,9 +137,9 @@ perl = perl; causes the specified attributes to be bound to whatever variables with the same name happen to be in scope. - + - + diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/generic-builder.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/generic-builder.xml index 16b0268a7..71b342f99 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/generic-builder.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/generic-builder.xml @@ -20,23 +20,21 @@ make install The builders for almost all Unix packages look like this — set up some environment variables, unpack the sources, configure, build, and install. For this reason the standard environment provides some Bash -functions that automate the build process. A builder using the -generic build facilities in shown in . +functions that automate the build process. Here is what a builder +using the generic build facilities looks like:
-Build script using the generic -build functions -buildInputs="$perl" +buildInputs="$perl" ① -source $stdenv/setup +source $stdenv/setup ② -genericBuild - +genericBuild ③ - +Here is what each line means: - + + + The buildInputs variable tells setup to use the indicated packages as @@ -54,16 +52,16 @@ genericBuild inputs. - + - + The function genericBuild is defined in the file $stdenv/setup. - + - + The final step calls the shell function genericBuild, which performs the steps that @@ -73,9 +71,11 @@ genericBuild bzip2, etc. It can be customised in many ways; see the Nixpkgs manual for details. - + - + + + Discerning readers will note that the buildInputs could just as well have been set in the Nix diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/language-constructs.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/language-constructs.xml index 0d0cbbe15..4d316609c 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/language-constructs.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/language-constructs.xml @@ -278,7 +278,9 @@ evaluate to a Boolean value. If it evaluates to true, e2 is returned; otherwise expression evaluation is aborted and a backtrace is printed. -Nix expression for Subversion +Here is a Nix expression for the Subversion package that shows +how assertions can be used:. + { localServer ? false , httpServer ? false @@ -290,9 +292,9 @@ otherwise expression evaluation is aborted and a backtrace is printed. , openssl ? null, httpd ? null, db4 ? null, expat, swig ? null, j2sdk ? null }: -assert localServer -> db4 != null; -assert httpServer -> httpd != null && httpd.expat == expat; -assert sslSupport -> openssl != null && (httpServer -> httpd.openssl == openssl); +assert localServer -> db4 != null; ① +assert httpServer -> httpd != null && httpd.expat == expat; ② +assert sslSupport -> openssl != null && (httpServer -> httpd.openssl == openssl); ③ assert pythonBindings -> swig != null && swig.pythonSupport; assert javaSwigBindings -> swig != null && swig.javaSupport; assert javahlBindings -> j2sdk != null; @@ -300,26 +302,24 @@ assert javahlBindings -> j2sdk != null; stdenv.mkDerivation { name = "subversion-1.1.1"; ... - openssl = if sslSupport then openssl else null; + openssl = if sslSupport then openssl else null; ④ ... } - - show how assertions are -used in the Nix expression for Subversion. +The points of interest are: - + - + This assertion states that if Subversion is to have support for local repositories, then Berkeley DB is needed. So if the Subversion function is called with the localServer argument set to true but the db4 argument set to null, then the evaluation fails. - + - + This is a more subtle condition: if Subversion is built with Apache (httpServer) support, then the Expat library (an XML library) used by Subversion should be same as the @@ -327,27 +327,27 @@ used in the Nix expression for Subversion. Subversion code ends up being linked with Apache code, and if the Expat libraries do not match, a build- or runtime link error or incompatibility might occur. - + - + This assertion says that in order for Subversion to have SSL support (so that it can access https URLs), an OpenSSL library must be passed. Additionally, it says that if Apache support is enabled, then Apache's OpenSSL should match Subversion's. (Note that if Apache support is not enabled, we don't care about Apache's OpenSSL.) - + - + The conditional here is not really related to assertions, but is worth pointing out: it ensures that if SSL support is disabled, then the Subversion derivation is not dependent on OpenSSL, even if a non-null value was passed. This prevents an unnecessary rebuild of Subversion if OpenSSL changes. - + - + diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/arguments-variables.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/arguments-variables.md index 9a373d94d..436ae559d 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/arguments-variables.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/arguments-variables.md @@ -1,14 +1,21 @@ # Arguments and Variables +The Nix expression in [???](#ex-hello-nix) is a function; it is missing +some arguments that have to be filled in somewhere. In the Nix Packages +collection this is done in the file `pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix`, +where all Nix expressions for packages are imported and called with the +appropriate arguments. Here are some fragments of `all-packages.nix`, +with annotations of what they mean: + ... - rec { + rec { ① - hello = import ../applications/misc/hello/ex-1 { + hello = import ../applications/misc/hello/ex-1 ② { ③ inherit fetchurl stdenv perl; }; - perl = import ../development/interpreters/perl { + perl = import ../development/interpreters/perl { ④ inherit fetchurl stdenv; }; @@ -20,20 +27,13 @@ } -The Nix expression in [???](#ex-hello-nix) is a function; it is missing -some arguments that have to be filled in somewhere. In the Nix Packages -collection this is done in the file `pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix`, -where all Nix expressions for packages are imported and called with the -appropriate arguments. [example\_title](#ex-hello-composition) shows -some fragments of `all-packages.nix`. - - - This file defines a set of attributes, all of which are concrete +1. This file defines a set of attributes, all of which are concrete derivations (i.e., not functions). In fact, we define a *mutually recursive* set of attributes. That is, the attributes can refer to each other. This is precisely what we want since we want to “plug” the various packages into each other. - - Here we *import* the Nix expression for GNU Hello. The import +2. Here we *import* the Nix expression for GNU Hello. The import operation just loads and returns the specified Nix expression. In fact, we could just have put the contents of [???](#ex-hello-nix) in `all-packages.nix` at this point. That would be completely @@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ some fragments of `all-packages.nix`. import a directory, Nix automatically appends `/default.nix` to the file name. - - This is where the actual composition takes place. Here we *call* the +3. This is where the actual composition takes place. Here we *call* the function imported from `../applications/misc/hello/ex-1` with a set containing the things that the function expects, namely `fetchurl`, `stdenv`, and `perl`. We use inherit again to use the attributes @@ -68,5 +68,5 @@ some fragments of `all-packages.nix`. > > hello = callPackage ../applications/misc/hello/ex-1 { stdenv = myStdenv; }; - - Likewise, we have to instantiate Perl, `fetchurl`, and the standard +4. Likewise, we have to instantiate Perl, `fetchurl`, and the standard environment. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md index a359ebc46..f922182c2 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md @@ -1,23 +1,23 @@ # Build Script - source $stdenv/setup +Here is the builder referenced from Hello's Nix expression (stored in +`pkgs/applications/misc/hello/ex-1/builder.sh`): + + source $stdenv/setup ① - PATH=$perl/bin:$PATH + PATH=$perl/bin:$PATH ② - tar xvfz $src + tar xvfz $src ③ cd hello-* - ./configure --prefix=$out - make + ./configure --prefix=$out ④ + make ⑤ make install -[example\_title](#ex-hello-builder) shows the builder referenced from -Hello's Nix expression (stored in -`pkgs/applications/misc/hello/ex-1/builder.sh`). The builder can -actually be made a lot shorter by using the *generic builder* functions -provided by `stdenv`, but here we write out the build steps to elucidate -what a builder does. It performs the following steps: +The builder can actually be made a lot shorter by using the *generic +builder* functions provided by `stdenv`, but here we write out the build +steps to elucidate what a builder does. It performs the following steps: - - When Nix runs a builder, it initially completely clears the +1. When Nix runs a builder, it initially completely clears the environment (except for the attributes declared in the derivation). For instance, the `PATH` variable is empty\[1\]. This is done to prevent undeclared inputs from being used in the build process. If @@ -31,13 +31,13 @@ what a builder does. It performs the following steps: attribute in [???](#ex-hello-nix), but `mkDerivation` adds it automatically.) - - Since Hello needs Perl, we have to make sure that Perl is in the +2. Since Hello needs Perl, we have to make sure that Perl is in the `PATH`. The `perl` environment variable points to the location of the Perl package (since it was passed in as an attribute to the derivation), so `$perl/bin` is the directory containing the Perl interpreter. - - Now we have to unpack the sources. The `src` attribute was bound to +3. Now we have to unpack the sources. The `src` attribute was bound to the result of fetching the Hello source tarball from the network, so the `src` environment variable points to the location in the Nix store to which the tarball was downloaded. After unpacking, we `cd` @@ -50,7 +50,7 @@ what a builder does. It performs the following steps: have to worry about files from previous builds interfering with the current build. - - GNU Hello is a typical Autoconf-based package, so we first have to +4. GNU Hello is a typical Autoconf-based package, so we first have to run its `configure` script. In Nix every package is stored in a separate location in the Nix store, for instance `/nix/store/9a54ba97fb71b65fda531012d0443ce2-hello-2.1.1`. Nix @@ -60,7 +60,7 @@ what a builder does. It performs the following steps: `--prefix=$out` to cause Hello to be installed in the expected location. - - Finally we build Hello (`make`) and install it into the location +5. Finally we build Hello (`make`) and install it into the location specified by `out` (`make install`). If you are wondering about the absence of error checking on the result diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md index a378fe8e4..f60af9d24 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md @@ -735,31 +735,7 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. builder in a more structured format than plain environment variables. - [example\_title](#ex-toxml) shows an example where this is the case. - The builder is supposed to generate the configuration file for a - [Jetty servlet container](http://jetty.mortbay.org/). A servlet - container contains a number of servlets (`*.war` files) each - exported under a specific URI prefix. So the servlet configuration - is a list of sets containing the `path` and `war` of the servlet - ([co\_title](#ex-toxml-co-servlets)). This kind of information is - difficult to communicate with the normal method of passing - information through an environment variable, which just concatenates - everything together into a string (which might just work in this - case, but wouldn’t work if fields are optional or contain lists - themselves). Instead the Nix expression is converted to an XML - representation with `toXML`, which is unambiguous and can easily be - processed with the appropriate tools. For instance, in the example - an XSLT stylesheet ([co\_title](#ex-toxml-co-stylesheet)) is applied - to it ([co\_title](#ex-toxml-co-apply)) to generate the XML - configuration file for the Jetty server. The XML representation - produced from [co\_title](#ex-toxml-co-servlets) by `toXML` is shown - in [example\_title](#ex-toxml-result). - - Note that [example\_title](#ex-toxml) uses the `toFile` built-in to - write the builder and the stylesheet “inline” in the Nix expression. - The path of the stylesheet is spliced into the builder at `xsltproc - ${stylesheet} - ...`. + Here is an example where this is the case: { stdenv, fetchurl, libxslt, jira, uberwiki }: @@ -771,10 +747,10 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. builder = builtins.toFile "builder.sh" " source $stdenv/setup mkdir $out - echo "$servlets" | xsltproc ${stylesheet} - > $out/server-conf.xml + echo "$servlets" | xsltproc ${stylesheet} - > $out/server-conf.xml ① "; - stylesheet = builtins.toFile "stylesheet.xsl" + stylesheet = builtins.toFile "stylesheet.xsl" ② " @@ -790,12 +766,29 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. "; - servlets = builtins.toXML [ + servlets = builtins.toXML [ ③ { path = "/bugtracker"; war = jira + "/lib/atlassian-jira.war"; } { path = "/wiki"; war = uberwiki + "/uberwiki.war"; } ]; }) + The builder is supposed to generate the configuration file for a + [Jetty servlet container](http://jetty.mortbay.org/). A servlet + container contains a number of servlets (`*.war` files) each + exported under a specific URI prefix. So the servlet configuration + is a list of sets containing the `path` and `war` of the servlet + ([???](#ex-toxml-co-servlets)). This kind of information is + difficult to communicate with the normal method of passing + information through an environment variable, which just concatenates + everything together into a string (which might just work in this + case, but wouldn’t work if fields are optional or contain lists + themselves). Instead the Nix expression is converted to an XML + representation with `toXML`, which is unambiguous and can easily be + processed with the appropriate tools. For instance, in the example + an XSLT stylesheet (at point ②) is applied to it (at point ①) to + generate the XML configuration file for the Jetty server. The XML + representation produced at point ③ by `toXML` is as follows: + @@ -817,6 +810,11 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. + + Note that [???](#ex-toxml) uses the `toFile` built-in to write the + builder and the stylesheet “inline” in the Nix expression. The path + of the stylesheet is spliced into the builder using the syntax + `xsltproc ${stylesheet}`. - `builtins.trace` e1 e2 Evaluate e1 and print its abstract syntax representation on standard diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/expression-syntax.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/expression-syntax.md index 935484c33..9e99a1f60 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/expression-syntax.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/expression-syntax.md @@ -1,25 +1,26 @@ # Expression Syntax - { stdenv, fetchurl, perl }: +Here is a Nix expression for GNU Hello: + + { stdenv, fetchurl, perl }: ① - stdenv.mkDerivation { - name = "hello-2.1.1"; - builder = ./builder.sh; - src = fetchurl { + stdenv.mkDerivation { ② + name = "hello-2.1.1"; ③ + builder = ./builder.sh; ④ + src = fetchurl { ⑤ url = "ftp://ftp.nluug.nl/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.1.1.tar.gz"; sha256 = "1md7jsfd8pa45z73bz1kszpp01yw6x5ljkjk2hx7wl800any6465"; }; - inherit perl; + inherit perl; ⑥ } -[example\_title](#ex-hello-nix) shows a Nix expression for GNU Hello. -It's actually already in the Nix Packages collection in +This file is actually already in the Nix Packages collection in `pkgs/applications/misc/hello/ex-1/default.nix`. It is customary to place each package in a separate directory and call the single Nix expression in that directory `default.nix`. The file has the following elements (referenced from the figure by number): - - This states that the expression is a *function* that expects to be +1. This states that the expression is a *function* that expects to be called with three arguments: `stdenv`, `fetchurl`, and `perl`. They are needed to build Hello, but we don't know how to build them here; that's why they are function arguments. `stdenv` is a package that @@ -37,7 +38,7 @@ elements (referenced from the figure by number): the required arguments, the body should describe how to build an instance of the Hello package. - - So we have to build a package. Building something from other stuff +2. So we have to build a package. Building something from other stuff is called a *derivation* in Nix (as opposed to sources, which are built by humans instead of computers). We perform a derivation by calling `stdenv.mkDerivation`. `mkDerivation` is a function provided @@ -50,13 +51,13 @@ elements (referenced from the figure by number): nameN = exprN; }`. - - The attribute `name` specifies the symbolic name and version of the +3. The attribute `name` specifies the symbolic name and version of the package. Nix doesn't really care about these things, but they are used by for instance `nix-env -q` to show a “human-readable” name for packages. This attribute is required by `mkDerivation`. - - The attribute `builder` specifies the builder. This attribute can +4. The attribute `builder` specifies the builder. This attribute can sometimes be omitted, in which case `mkDerivation` will fill in a default builder (which does a `configure; make; make install`, in essence). Hello is sufficiently simple that the default builder @@ -64,7 +65,7 @@ elements (referenced from the figure by number): educational purposes. The value `./builder.sh` refers to the shell script shown in [???](#ex-hello-builder), discussed below. - - The builder has to know what the sources of the package are. Here, +5. The builder has to know what the sources of the package are. Here, the attribute `src` is bound to the result of a call to the `fetchurl` function. Given a URL and a SHA-256 hash of the expected contents of the file at that URL, this function builds a derivation @@ -77,7 +78,7 @@ elements (referenced from the figure by number): However, `src` is customary, and it's also expected by the default builder (which we don't use in this example). - - Since the derivation requires Perl, we have to pass the value of the +6. Since the derivation requires Perl, we have to pass the value of the `perl` function argument to the builder. All attributes in the set are actually passed as environment variables to the builder, so declaring an attribute diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md index a00b08b55..90bdc556b 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md @@ -13,24 +13,26 @@ like this: The builders for almost all Unix packages look like this — set up some environment variables, unpack the sources, configure, build, and install. For this reason the standard environment provides some Bash -functions that automate the build process. A builder using the generic -build facilities in shown in [example\_title](#ex-hello-builder2). +functions that automate the build process. Here is what a builder using +the generic build facilities looks like: - buildInputs="$perl" + buildInputs="$perl" ① - source $stdenv/setup + source $stdenv/setup ② - genericBuild + genericBuild ③ - - The `buildInputs` variable tells `setup` to use the indicated +Here is what each line means: + +1. The `buildInputs` variable tells `setup` to use the indicated packages as “inputs”. This means that if a package provides a `bin` subdirectory, it's added to `PATH`; if it has a `include` subdirectory, it's added to GCC's header search path; and so on.\[1\] - - The function `genericBuild` is defined in the file `$stdenv/setup`. +2. The function `genericBuild` is defined in the file `$stdenv/setup`. - - The final step calls the shell function `genericBuild`, which +3. The final step calls the shell function `genericBuild`, which performs the steps that were done explicitly in [???](#ex-hello-builder). The generic builder is smart enough to figure out whether to unpack the sources using `gzip`, `bzip2`, etc. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-constructs.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-constructs.md index a773c239b..121e4d998 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-constructs.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-constructs.md @@ -203,6 +203,9 @@ where e1 is an expression that should evaluate to a Boolean value. If it evaluates to `true`, e2 is returned; otherwise expression evaluation is aborted and a backtrace is printed. +Here is a Nix expression for the Subversion package that shows how +assertions can be used:. + { localServer ? false , httpServer ? false , sslSupport ? false @@ -213,9 +216,9 @@ aborted and a backtrace is printed. , openssl ? null, httpd ? null, db4 ? null, expat, swig ? null, j2sdk ? null }: - assert localServer -> db4 != null; - assert httpServer -> httpd != null && httpd.expat == expat; - assert sslSupport -> openssl != null && (httpServer -> httpd.openssl == openssl); + assert localServer -> db4 != null; ① + assert httpServer -> httpd != null && httpd.expat == expat; ② + assert sslSupport -> openssl != null && (httpServer -> httpd.openssl == openssl); ③ assert pythonBindings -> swig != null && swig.pythonSupport; assert javaSwigBindings -> swig != null && swig.javaSupport; assert javahlBindings -> j2sdk != null; @@ -223,33 +226,32 @@ aborted and a backtrace is printed. stdenv.mkDerivation { name = "subversion-1.1.1"; ... - openssl = if sslSupport then openssl else null; + openssl = if sslSupport then openssl else null; ④ ... } -[example\_title](#ex-subversion-nix) show how assertions are used in the -Nix expression for Subversion. +The points of interest are: - - This assertion states that if Subversion is to have support for +1. This assertion states that if Subversion is to have support for local repositories, then Berkeley DB is needed. So if the Subversion function is called with the `localServer` argument set to `true` but the `db4` argument set to `null`, then the evaluation fails. - - This is a more subtle condition: if Subversion is built with Apache +2. This is a more subtle condition: if Subversion is built with Apache (`httpServer`) support, then the Expat library (an XML library) used by Subversion should be same as the one used by Apache. This is because in this configuration Subversion code ends up being linked with Apache code, and if the Expat libraries do not match, a build- or runtime link error or incompatibility might occur. - - This assertion says that in order for Subversion to have SSL support +3. This assertion says that in order for Subversion to have SSL support (so that it can access `https` URLs), an OpenSSL library must be passed. Additionally, it says that *if* Apache support is enabled, then Apache's OpenSSL should match Subversion's. (Note that if Apache support is not enabled, we don't care about Apache's OpenSSL.) - - The conditional here is not really related to assertions, but is +4. The conditional here is not really related to assertions, but is worth pointing out: it ensures that if SSL support is disabled, then the Subversion derivation is not dependent on OpenSSL, even if a non-`null` value was passed. This prevents an unnecessary rebuild of From ca130b73a02f0fbe1d7ef2007d4cd82565eb5eff Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Thu, 23 Jul 2020 14:10:59 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 15/57] Get rid of Markdown doesn't have floats so we can't have this. --- doc/manual/expressions/builtins.xml | 117 +++++++++-------- doc/manual/packages/copy-closure.xml | 2 +- doc/manual/packages/s3-substituter.xml | 29 +++-- doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md | 122 +++++++++--------- .../src/package-management/copy-closure.md | 2 +- .../src/package-management/s3-substituter.md | 18 +-- 6 files changed, 156 insertions(+), 134 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/builtins.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/builtins.xml index 478b67ce8..877fd3a1b 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/builtins.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/builtins.xml @@ -434,88 +434,93 @@ stdenv.mkDerivation { … } - - Fetching a private repository over SSH - builtins.fetchGit { + Here are some examples of how to use + fetchGit. + + + + + To fetch a private repository over SSH: + + builtins.fetchGit { url = "git@github.com:my-secret/repository.git"; ref = "master"; rev = "adab8b916a45068c044658c4158d81878f9ed1c3"; } - - - Fetching an arbitrary ref - builtins.fetchGit { + + + + To fetch an arbitrary reference: + + builtins.fetchGit { url = "https://github.com/NixOS/nix.git"; ref = "refs/heads/0.5-release"; } - + - - Fetching a repository's specific commit on an arbitrary branch - - If the revision you're looking for is in the default branch - of the git repository you don't strictly need to specify - the branch name in the ref attribute. - - - However, if the revision you're looking for is in a future - branch for the non-default branch you will need to specify - the the ref attribute as well. - - builtins.fetchGit { + + + If the revision you're looking for is in the default branch + of the git repository you don't strictly need to specify + the branch name in the ref attribute. + + + However, if the revision you're looking for is in a future + branch for the non-default branch you will need to specify + the the ref attribute as well. + + + builtins.fetchGit { url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; rev = "841fcbd04755c7a2865c51c1e2d3b045976b7452"; ref = "1.11-maintenance"; } - - - It is nice to always specify the branch which a revision - belongs to. Without the branch being specified, the - fetcher might fail if the default branch changes. - Additionally, it can be confusing to try a commit from a - non-default branch and see the fetch fail. If the branch - is specified the fault is much more obvious. - - - - - Fetching a repository's specific commit on the default branch - - If the revision you're looking for is in the default branch - of the git repository you may omit the - ref attribute. - - builtins.fetchGit { + + + It is nice to always specify the branch which a revision + belongs to. Without the branch being specified, the + fetcher might fail if the default branch changes. + Additionally, it can be confusing to try a commit from a + non-default branch and see the fetch fail. If the branch + is specified the fault is much more obvious. + + + + + + + If the revision you're looking for is in the default branch + of the git repository you may omit the + ref attribute. + + builtins.fetchGit { url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; rev = "841fcbd04755c7a2865c51c1e2d3b045976b7452"; } - + - - Fetching a tag - builtins.fetchGit { + + To fetch a specific tag: + builtins.fetchGit { url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; ref = "refs/tags/1.9"; } - + - - Fetching the latest version of a remote branch - - builtins.fetchGit can behave impurely - fetch the latest version of a remote branch. - - Nix will refetch the branch in accordance to - . - This behavior is disabled in - Pure evaluation mode. + + To fetch the latest version of a remote branch: builtins.fetchGit { url = "ssh://git@github.com/nixos/nix.git"; ref = "master"; } - + Nix will refetch the branch in accordance to + . + This behavior is disabled in Pure + evaluation mode. + + diff --git a/doc/manual/packages/copy-closure.xml b/doc/manual/packages/copy-closure.xml index 012030e3e..a336fb293 100644 --- a/doc/manual/packages/copy-closure.xml +++ b/doc/manual/packages/copy-closure.xml @@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ version="5.0" xml:id="ssec-copy-closure"> -Copying Closures Via SSH +Copying Closures via SSH The command nix-copy-closure copies a Nix diff --git a/doc/manual/packages/s3-substituter.xml b/doc/manual/packages/s3-substituter.xml index 868b5a66d..aa5df2026 100644 --- a/doc/manual/packages/s3-substituter.xml +++ b/doc/manual/packages/s3-substituter.xml @@ -5,10 +5,10 @@ version="5.0" xml:id="ssec-s3-substituter"> -Serving a Nix store via AWS S3 or S3-compatible Service +Serving a Nix store via S3 Nix has built-in support for storing and fetching store paths -from Amazon S3 and S3 compatible services. This uses the same +from Amazon S3 and S3-compatible services. This uses the same binary cache mechanism that Nix usually uses to fetch prebuilt binaries from cache.nixos.org. @@ -170,13 +170,22 @@ the S3 URL: } ]]> - - Uploading with a specific credential profile for Amazon S3 - nix copy --to 's3://example-nix-cache?profile=cache-upload&region=eu-west-2' nixpkgs.hello - - - Uploading to an S3-Compatible Binary Cache - nix copy --to 's3://example-nix-cache?profile=cache-upload&scheme=https&endpoint=minio.example.com' nixpkgs.hello - + +
Examples + +To upload with a specific credential profile for Amazon S3: + + +nix copy --to 's3://example-nix-cache?profile=cache-upload&region=eu-west-2' nixpkgs.hello + + +To upload to an S3-compatible binary cache: + + +nix copy --to 's3://example-nix-cache?profile=cache-upload&scheme=https&endpoint=minio.example.com' nixpkgs.hello + + +
+ diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md index f60af9d24..8faf4b939 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md @@ -169,70 +169,76 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. A Boolean parameter that specifies whether submodules should be checked out. Defaults to `false`. - + Here are some examples of how to use `fetchGit`. - builtins.fetchGit { - url = "git@github.com:my-secret/repository.git"; - ref = "master"; - rev = "adab8b916a45068c044658c4158d81878f9ed1c3"; - } + - To fetch a private repository over SSH: + + builtins.fetchGit { + url = "git@github.com:my-secret/repository.git"; + ref = "master"; + rev = "adab8b916a45068c044658c4158d81878f9ed1c3"; + } - builtins.fetchGit { - url = "https://github.com/NixOS/nix.git"; - ref = "refs/heads/0.5-release"; - } + - To fetch an arbitrary reference: + + builtins.fetchGit { + url = "https://github.com/NixOS/nix.git"; + ref = "refs/heads/0.5-release"; + } - If the revision you're looking for is in the default branch of the - git repository you don't strictly need to specify the branch name in - the `ref` attribute. + - If the revision you're looking for is in the default branch of + the git repository you don't strictly need to specify the branch + name in the `ref` attribute. + + However, if the revision you're looking for is in a future + branch for the non-default branch you will need to specify the + the `ref` attribute as well. + + builtins.fetchGit { + url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; + rev = "841fcbd04755c7a2865c51c1e2d3b045976b7452"; + ref = "1.11-maintenance"; + } + + > **Note** + > + > It is nice to always specify the branch which a revision + > belongs to. Without the branch being specified, the fetcher + > might fail if the default branch changes. Additionally, it can + > be confusing to try a commit from a non-default branch and see + > the fetch fail. If the branch is specified the fault is much + > more obvious. - However, if the revision you're looking for is in a future branch - for the non-default branch you will need to specify the the `ref` - attribute as well. + - If the revision you're looking for is in the default branch of + the git repository you may omit the `ref` attribute. + + builtins.fetchGit { + url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; + rev = "841fcbd04755c7a2865c51c1e2d3b045976b7452"; + } - builtins.fetchGit { - url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; - rev = "841fcbd04755c7a2865c51c1e2d3b045976b7452"; - ref = "1.11-maintenance"; - } + - To fetch a specific tag: + + builtins.fetchGit { + url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; + ref = "refs/tags/1.9"; + } - > **Note** - > - > It is nice to always specify the branch which a revision belongs - > to. Without the branch being specified, the fetcher might fail if - > the default branch changes. Additionally, it can be confusing to - > try a commit from a non-default branch and see the fetch fail. If - > the branch is specified the fault is much more obvious. - - If the revision you're looking for is in the default branch of the - git repository you may omit the `ref` attribute. - - builtins.fetchGit { - url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; - rev = "841fcbd04755c7a2865c51c1e2d3b045976b7452"; - } - - builtins.fetchGit { - url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; - ref = "refs/tags/1.9"; - } - - `builtins.fetchGit` can behave impurely fetch the latest version of - a remote branch. - - > **Note** - > - > Nix will refetch the branch in accordance to - > [???](#conf-tarball-ttl). - - > **Note** - > - > This behavior is disabled in *Pure evaluation mode*. - - builtins.fetchGit { - url = "ssh://git@github.com/nixos/nix.git"; - ref = "master"; - } + - To fetch the latest version of a remote branch: + + builtins.fetchGit { + url = "ssh://git@github.com/nixos/nix.git"; + ref = "master"; + } + + > **Note** + > + > Nix will refetch the branch in accordance to + > [???](#conf-tarball-ttl). + + > **Note** + > + > This behavior is disabled in *Pure evaluation mode*. - `builtins.filter` f xs Return a list consisting of the elements of xs for which the diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/copy-closure.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/copy-closure.md index 6573862c0..d78b77e36 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/package-management/copy-closure.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/copy-closure.md @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -# Copying Closures Via SSH +# Copying Closures via SSH The command `nix-copy-closure` copies a Nix store path along with all its dependencies to or from another machine via the SSH protocol. It diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/s3-substituter.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/s3-substituter.md index 4740b8b1c..d96114e3c 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/package-management/s3-substituter.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/s3-substituter.md @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ -# Serving a Nix store via AWS S3 or S3-compatible Service +# Serving a Nix store via S3 Nix has built-in support for storing and fetching store paths from -Amazon S3 and S3 compatible services. This uses the same *binary* cache +Amazon S3 and S3-compatible services. This uses the same *binary* cache mechanism that Nix usually uses to fetch prebuilt binaries from [cache.nixos.org](cache.nixos.org). @@ -124,10 +124,12 @@ Your account will need the following IAM policy to upload to the cache: ] } -`nix copy --to -'s3://example-nix-cache?profile=cache-upload®ion=eu-west-2' -nixpkgs.hello` +## Examples -`nix copy --to -'s3://example-nix-cache?profile=cache-upload&scheme=https&endpoint=minio.example.com' -nixpkgs.hello` +To upload with a specific credential profile for Amazon S3: + + nix copy --to 's3://example-nix-cache?profile=cache-upload®ion=eu-west-2' nixpkgs.hello + +To upload to an S3-compatible binary cache: + + nix copy --to 's3://example-nix-cache?profile=cache-upload&scheme=https&endpoint=minio.example.com' nixpkgs.hello From 136fd55bb2f7c4f8e93992c6b662d54ce941a73a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Thu, 23 Jul 2020 14:16:46 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 16/57] Get rid of
--- doc/manual/packages/profiles.xml | 29 +++++++++---------- doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md | 15 +++++----- 2 files changed, 20 insertions(+), 24 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/manual/packages/profiles.xml b/doc/manual/packages/profiles.xml index 15085ab58..2809def24 100644 --- a/doc/manual/packages/profiles.xml +++ b/doc/manual/packages/profiles.xml @@ -21,19 +21,16 @@ The long strings prefixed to the directory names are cryptographic hashes160-bit truncations of SHA-256 hashes encoded in a base-32 notation, to be precise. of all inputs involved in building the package — -sources, dependencies, compiler flags, and so on. So if two -packages differ in any way, they end up in different locations in -the file system, so they don’t interfere with each other. shows a part of a typical Nix -store. +sources, dependencies, compiler flags, and so on. So if two packages +differ in any way, they end up in different locations in the file +system, so they don’t interfere with each other. Here is what a part +of a typical Nix store looks like: -
User environments - - - - - -
+ + + + + Of course, you wouldn’t want to type @@ -50,10 +47,10 @@ uses is to create directory trees of symlinks to user environments and they are packages themselves (though automatically generated by nix-env), so they too reside in the Nix store. For -instance, in the user -environment /nix/store/0c1p5z4kda11...-user-env -contains a symlink to just Subversion 1.1.2 (arrows in the figure -indicate symlinks). This would be what we would obtain if we had done +instance, in the figure above, the user environment +/nix/store/0c1p5z4kda11...-user-env contains a +symlink to just Subversion 1.1.2 (arrows in the figure indicate +symlinks). This would be what we would obtain if we had done $ nix-env -i subversion diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md index 984afca55..9076033d7 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md @@ -14,10 +14,10 @@ strings prefixed to the directory names are cryptographic hashes\[1\] of *all* inputs involved in building the package — sources, dependencies, compiler flags, and so on. So if two packages differ in any way, they end up in different locations in the file system, so they don’t -interfere with each other. [figure\_title](#fig-user-environments) shows -a part of a typical Nix store. +interfere with each other. Here is what a part of a typical Nix store +looks like: -![User environments](../figures/user-environments.png) +![](../figures/user-environments.png) Of course, you wouldn’t want to type @@ -30,11 +30,10 @@ package we want to use, but this is not very convenient since changing Nix uses is to create directory trees of symlinks to *activated* packages. These are called *user environments* and they are packages themselves (though automatically generated by `nix-env`), so they too -reside in the Nix store. For instance, in -[figure\_title](#fig-user-environments) the user environment -`/nix/store/0c1p5z4kda11...-user-env` contains a symlink to just -Subversion 1.1.2 (arrows in the figure indicate symlinks). This would be -what we would obtain if we had done +reside in the Nix store. For instance, in the figure above, the user +environment `/nix/store/0c1p5z4kda11...-user-env` contains a symlink to +just Subversion 1.1.2 (arrows in the figure indicate symlinks). This +would be what we would obtain if we had done $ nix-env -i subversion From ee051084723333fc5889c604c829669800e8b43c Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Thu, 23 Jul 2020 14:20:54 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 17/57] ->
Pandoc silently ignores ... --- .../expressions/language-constructs.xml | 32 ++++++------ doc/manual/expressions/language-values.xml | 12 ++--- doc/manual/installation/multi-user.xml | 12 ++--- doc/manual/introduction/about-nix.xml | 52 +++++++++---------- .../src/expressions/language-constructs.md | 16 ++++++ doc/manual/src/expressions/language-values.md | 6 +++ doc/manual/src/installation/multi-user.md | 6 +++ 7 files changed, 82 insertions(+), 54 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/language-constructs.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/language-constructs.xml index 4d316609c..82d3afed1 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/language-constructs.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/language-constructs.xml @@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ Language Constructs -Recursive sets +
Recursive sets Recursive sets are just normal sets, but the attributes can refer to each other. For example, @@ -38,10 +38,10 @@ does not terminateActually, Nix detects infinite recursion in this case and aborts (infinite recursion encountered).. - +
-Let-expressions +
Let-expressions A let-expression allows you to define local variables for an expression. For instance, @@ -56,10 +56,10 @@ evaluates to "foobar". - +
-Inheriting attributes +
Inheriting attributes When defining a set or in a let-expression it is often convenient to copy variables from the surrounding lexical scope (e.g., when you want to propagate @@ -129,10 +129,10 @@ a = src-set.a; b = src-set.b; c = src-set.c; when used while defining local variables in a let-expression or while defining a set. - +
-Functions +
Functions Functions have the following form: @@ -248,10 +248,10 @@ in concat { x = "foo"; y = "bar"; } - +
-Conditionals +
Conditionals Conditionals look like this: @@ -262,10 +262,10 @@ where e1 is an expression that should evaluate to a Boolean value (true or false). - +
-Assertions +
Assertions Assertions are generally used to check that certain requirements on or between features and dependencies hold. They look like this: @@ -349,11 +349,11 @@ stdenv.mkDerivation { - +
-With-expressions +
With-expressions A with-expression, @@ -394,16 +394,16 @@ let a = 1; in let a = 2; in let a = 3; in let a = 4; in ... - +
-Comments +
Comments Comments can be single-line, started with a # character, or inline/multi-line, enclosed within /* ... */. - +
diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/language-values.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/language-values.xml index 4a72c67a8..6c0fcbacb 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/language-values.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/language-values.xml @@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ Values -Simple Values +
Simple Values Nix has the following basic data types: @@ -193,10 +193,10 @@ stdenv.mkDerivation { - +
-Lists +
Lists Lists are formed by enclosing a whitespace-separated list of values between square brackets. For example, @@ -217,10 +217,10 @@ function and the fifth being a set. Note that lists are only lazy in values, and they are strict in length. - +
-Sets +
Sets Sets are really the core of the language, since ultimately the Nix language is all about creating derivations, which are really just @@ -307,7 +307,7 @@ a form of object-oriented programming, for example. - +
diff --git a/doc/manual/installation/multi-user.xml b/doc/manual/installation/multi-user.xml index 331b5f128..835bd3a52 100644 --- a/doc/manual/installation/multi-user.xml +++ b/doc/manual/installation/multi-user.xml @@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ arbitrary Nix expressions, they may not get pre-built binaries.
- +
Setting up the build users @@ -52,10 +52,10 @@ This creates 10 build users. There can never be more concurrent builds than the number of build users, so you may want to increase this if you expect to do many builds at the same time. - +
- +
Running the daemon @@ -78,10 +78,10 @@ export NIX_REMOTE=daemon into the users’ login scripts. - +
- +
Restricting access @@ -101,7 +101,7 @@ cannot connect to the Unix domain socket /nix/var/nix/daemon-socket/socket, so they cannot perform Nix operations. - +
diff --git a/doc/manual/introduction/about-nix.xml b/doc/manual/introduction/about-nix.xml index ec6f1ca3f..dd09e2283 100644 --- a/doc/manual/introduction/about-nix.xml +++ b/doc/manual/introduction/about-nix.xml @@ -25,7 +25,7 @@ of the package’s build dependency graph). This enables many powerful features. -Multiple versions +
Multiple versions You can have multiple versions or variants of a package installed at the same time. This is especially important when @@ -39,10 +39,10 @@ uninstalling an application cannot break other applications, since these operations never “destructively” update or delete files that are used by other packages. - +
-Complete dependencies +
Complete dependencies Nix helps you make sure that package dependency specifications are complete. In general, when you’re making a package for a package @@ -68,10 +68,10 @@ scanning binaries for the hash parts of Nix store paths (such as r8vvq9kq…). This sounds risky, but it works extremely well. - +
-Multi-user support +
Multi-user support Nix has multi-user support. This means that non-privileged users can securely install software. Each user can have a different @@ -82,10 +82,10 @@ package won’t be built or downloaded a second time. At the same time, it is not possible for one user to inject a Trojan horse into a package that might be used by another user. - +
-Atomic upgrades and rollbacks +
Atomic upgrades and rollbacks Since package management operations never overwrite packages in the Nix store but just add new versions in different paths, they are @@ -103,10 +103,10 @@ $ nix-env --upgrade some-packages $ nix-env --rollback - +
-Garbage collection +
Garbage collection When you uninstall a package like this… @@ -126,10 +126,10 @@ $ nix-collect-garbage This deletes all packages that aren’t in use by any user profile or by a currently running program. - +
-Functional package language +
Functional package language Packages are built from Nix expressions, which is a simple functional language. A Nix expression describes @@ -145,10 +145,10 @@ function and call it any number of times with the appropriate arguments. Due to the hashing scheme, variants don’t conflict with each other in the Nix store. - +
-Transparent source/binary deployment +
Transparent source/binary deployment Nix expressions generally describe how to build a package from source, so an installation action like @@ -172,31 +172,31 @@ Nix would first check if the file if so, fetch the pre-built binary referenced from there; otherwise, it would fall back to building from source. - +
-Nix Packages collection +
Nix Packages collection We provide a large set of Nix expressions containing hundreds of existing Unix packages, the Nix Packages collection (Nixpkgs). - +
-Managing build environments +
Managing build environments Nix is extremely useful for developers as it makes it easy to automatically set up the build environment for a package. Given a @@ -232,17 +232,17 @@ specifications, Nix makes an excellent basis for a continuous build system. --> - +
-Portability +
Portability Nix runs on Linux and macOS. - +
-NixOS +
NixOS NixOS is a Linux distribution based on Nix. It uses Nix not just for package management but also to manage the system @@ -253,16 +253,16 @@ earlier state. Also, users can install software without root privileges. For more information and downloads, see the NixOS homepage. - +
-License +
License Nix is released under the terms of the GNU LGPLv2.1 or (at your option) any later version. - +
diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-constructs.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-constructs.md index 121e4d998..20d003348 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-constructs.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-constructs.md @@ -1,5 +1,7 @@ # Language Constructs +## Recursive sets + Recursive sets are just normal sets, but the attributes can refer to each other. For example, @@ -24,6 +26,8 @@ example, does not terminate\[1\]. +## Let-expressions + A let-expression allows you to define local variables for an expression. For instance, @@ -34,6 +38,8 @@ For instance, evaluates to `"foobar"`. +## Inheriting attributes + When defining a set or in a let-expression it is often convenient to copy variables from the surrounding lexical scope (e.g., when you want to propagate attributes). This can be shortened using the `inherit` @@ -95,6 +101,8 @@ is equivalent to when used while defining local variables in a let-expression or while defining a set. +## Functions + Functions have the following form: pattern: body @@ -187,6 +195,8 @@ you can bind them to an attribute, e.g., let concat = { x, y }: x + y; in concat { x = "foo"; y = "bar"; } +## Conditionals + Conditionals look like this: if e1 then e2 else e3 @@ -194,6 +204,8 @@ Conditionals look like this: where e1 is an expression that should evaluate to a Boolean value (`true` or `false`). +## Assertions + Assertions are generally used to check that certain requirements on or between features and dependencies hold. They look like this: @@ -257,6 +269,8 @@ The points of interest are: non-`null` value was passed. This prevents an unnecessary rebuild of Subversion if OpenSSL changes. +## With-expressions + A *with-expression*, with e1; e2 @@ -285,6 +299,8 @@ establishes the same scope as let a = 1; in let a = 2; in let a = 3; in let a = 4; in ... +## Comments + Comments can be single-line, started with a `#` character, or inline/multi-line, enclosed within `/* ... */`. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-values.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-values.md index fac0be47e..8ffe2f0f9 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-values.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-values.md @@ -1,5 +1,7 @@ # Values +## Simple Values + Nix has the following basic data types: - *Strings* can be written in three ways. @@ -127,6 +129,8 @@ Nix has the following basic data types: - The null value, denoted as `null`. +## Lists + Lists are formed by enclosing a whitespace-separated list of values between square brackets. For example, @@ -143,6 +147,8 @@ function and the fifth being a set. Note that lists are only lazy in values, and they are strict in length. +## Sets + Sets are really the core of the language, since ultimately the Nix language is all about creating derivations, which are really just sets of attributes to be passed to build scripts. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/installation/multi-user.md b/doc/manual/src/installation/multi-user.md index 6493e717b..4a861691d 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/installation/multi-user.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/installation/multi-user.md @@ -20,6 +20,8 @@ Nix store/database that performs the operation. > caches. So while unprivileged users may install packages from > arbitrary Nix expressions, they may not get pre-built binaries. +## Setting up the build users + The *build users* are the special UIDs under which builds are performed. They should all be members of the *build users group* `nixbld`. This group should have no other members. The build users should not be @@ -35,6 +37,8 @@ This creates 10 build users. There can never be more concurrent builds than the number of build users, so you may want to increase this if you expect to do many builds at the same time. +## Running the daemon + The [Nix daemon](#sec-nix-daemon) should be started as follows (as `root`): @@ -50,6 +54,8 @@ should put a line like into the users’ login scripts. +## Restricting access + To limit which users can perform Nix operations, you can use the permissions on the directory `/nix/var/nix/daemon-socket`. For instance, if you want to restrict the use of Nix to the members of a group called From 802150f987e720452920a3d1993c3b4b36861116 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Thu, 23 Jul 2020 14:28:05 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 18/57] -> Pandoc doesn't know so let's force it to be rendered as italics. --- .../advanced-topics/distributed-builds.xml | 4 +- doc/manual/command-ref/conf-file.xml | 34 +- doc/manual/command-ref/env-common.xml | 18 +- doc/manual/command-ref/nix-build.xml | 24 +- doc/manual/command-ref/nix-channel.xml | 32 +- .../command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.xml | 6 +- doc/manual/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.xml | 16 +- doc/manual/command-ref/nix-env.xml | 120 ++--- doc/manual/command-ref/nix-hash.xml | 24 +- doc/manual/command-ref/nix-instantiate.xml | 28 +- doc/manual/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.xml | 30 +- doc/manual/command-ref/nix-shell.xml | 48 +- doc/manual/command-ref/nix-store.xml | 122 ++--- doc/manual/command-ref/opt-common-syn.xml | 16 +- doc/manual/command-ref/opt-common.xml | 46 +- doc/manual/command-ref/opt-inst-syn.xml | 2 +- .../expressions/advanced-attributes.xml | 18 +- doc/manual/expressions/build-script.xml | 2 +- doc/manual/expressions/builtins.xml | 420 +++++++++--------- doc/manual/expressions/expression-syntax.xml | 10 +- doc/manual/expressions/generic-builder.xml | 2 +- .../expressions/language-constructs.xml | 24 +- doc/manual/expressions/language-operators.xml | 78 ++-- doc/manual/expressions/language-values.xml | 8 +- .../expressions/simple-building-testing.xml | 2 +- doc/manual/installation/building-source.xml | 10 +- doc/manual/installation/env-variables.xml | 6 +- doc/manual/installation/installing-binary.xml | 2 +- doc/manual/installation/single-user.xml | 4 +- doc/manual/introduction/about-nix.xml | 2 +- doc/manual/introduction/quick-start.xml | 2 +- doc/manual/packages/basic-package-mgmt.xml | 4 +- doc/manual/packages/channels.xml | 2 +- .../packages/garbage-collector-roots.xml | 4 +- doc/manual/packages/profiles.xml | 2 +- doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.10.xml | 16 +- doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.12.xml | 16 +- doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.13.xml | 4 +- doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.16.xml | 8 +- doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.6.xml | 8 +- doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.8.xml | 4 +- doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.1.xml | 4 +- doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.11.xml | 8 +- doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.2.xml | 2 +- doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.4.xml | 4 +- doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.6.1.xml | 8 +- doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.7.xml | 12 +- doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.8.xml | 4 +- doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.0.xml | 12 +- doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md | 10 +- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md | 12 +- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-channel.md | 21 +- .../src/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.md | 2 +- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md | 61 +-- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-hash.md | 14 +- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md | 8 +- .../src/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.md | 22 +- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md | 30 +- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md | 80 ++-- doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common.md | 26 +- .../src/expressions/advanced-attributes.md | 10 +- doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md | 372 ++++++++-------- .../src/expressions/expression-syntax.md | 2 +- .../src/expressions/language-constructs.md | 14 +- .../src/expressions/language-operators.md | 48 +- .../src/installation/building-source.md | 2 +- .../package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md | 3 +- doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.10.md | 2 +- doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.12.md | 4 +- doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.13.md | 4 +- doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.16.md | 2 +- doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.6.md | 4 +- doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.11.md | 2 +- doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.4.md | 2 +- doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.6.1.md | 4 +- doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.7.md | 6 +- 76 files changed, 1029 insertions(+), 1020 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/manual/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.xml b/doc/manual/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.xml index a649b6f8d..ec9e98e77 100644 --- a/doc/manual/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.xml +++ b/doc/manual/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.xml @@ -86,7 +86,7 @@ To leave a field at its default, set it to -. The URI of the remote store in the format - ssh://[username@]hostname, + ssh://[username@]hostname, e.g. ssh://nix@mac or ssh://mac. For backward compatibility, ssh:// may be omitted. The hostname may be an @@ -171,7 +171,7 @@ builders = ssh://mac x86_64-darwin ; ssh://beastie x86_64-freebsd Finally, remote builders can be configured in a separate configuration file included in via the syntax -@file. For example, +@file. For example, builders = @/etc/nix/machines diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/conf-file.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/conf-file.xml index 4c103f505..62cc117b6 100644 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/conf-file.xml +++ b/doc/manual/command-ref/conf-file.xml @@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ The system-wide configuration file - sysconfdir/nix/nix.conf + sysconfdir/nix/nix.conf (i.e. /etc/nix/nix.conf on most systems), or $NIX_CONF_DIR/nix.conf if NIX_CONF_DIR is set. Values loaded in this @@ -52,11 +52,11 @@ The configuration files consist of -name = -value pairs, one per line. Other +name = +value pairs, one per line. Other files can be included with a line like include -path, where -path is interpreted relative to the current +path, where +path is interpreted relative to the current conf file and a missing file is an error unless !include is used instead. Comments start with a # character. Here is an @@ -244,7 +244,7 @@ false. instance, in Nixpkgs, if the derivation attribute enableParallelBuilding is set to true, the builder passes the - flag to GNU Make. + flag to GNU Make. It can be overridden using the command line switch and defaults to 1. The value 0 @@ -383,10 +383,10 @@ false. builtins.fetchurl to obtain files by hash. The default is http://tarballs.nixos.org/. Given a hash type - ht and a base-16 hash - h, Nix will try to download the file + ht and a base-16 hash + h, Nix will try to download the file from - hashed-mirror/ht/h. + hashed-mirror/ht/h. This allows files to be downloaded even if they have disappeared from their original URI. For example, given the default mirror http://tarballs.nixos.org/, when building the derivation @@ -421,7 +421,7 @@ builtins.fetchurl { output and error of its builder) to the directory /nix/var/log/nix/drvs. The build log can be retrieved using the command nix-store -l - path. + path. @@ -592,9 +592,9 @@ builtins.fetchurl { accounts in the following format: -machine my-machine -login my-username -password my-password +machine my-machine +login my-username +password my-password For the exact syntax, see my-password A list of paths bind-mounted into Nix sandbox environments. You can use the syntax - target=source + target=source to mount a path in a different location in the sandbox; for instance, /bin=/nix-bin will mount the path /nix-bin as /bin inside the - sandbox. If source is followed by + sandbox. If source is followed by ?, then it is not an error if - source does not exist; for example, + source does not exist; for example, /dev/nvidiactl? specifies that /dev/nvidiactl will only be mounted in the sandbox if it exists in the host filesystem. @@ -1035,7 +1035,7 @@ function-trace exited /nix/store/.../example.nix:226:41 at 1565795253249941684 A list of URLs of substituters, separated by whitespace. These are not used by default, but can be enabled by users of the Nix daemon by specifying --option - substituters urls on the + substituters urls on the command line. Unprivileged users are only allowed to pass a subset of the URLs listed in substituters and trusted-substituters. diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/env-common.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/env-common.xml index 3196cbbd2..ac40fccf7 100644 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/env-common.xml +++ b/doc/manual/command-ref/env-common.xml @@ -25,7 +25,7 @@ A colon-separated list of directories used to look up Nix expressions enclosed in angle brackets (i.e., - <path>). For + <path>). For instance, the value @@ -40,10 +40,10 @@ nixpkgs=/home/eelco/Dev/nixpkgs-branch:/etc/nixos will cause Nix to search for - <nixpkgs/path> in - /home/eelco/Dev/nixpkgs-branch/path + <nixpkgs/path> in + /home/eelco/Dev/nixpkgs-branch/path and - /etc/nixos/nixpkgs/path. + /etc/nixos/nixpkgs/path. If a path in the Nix search path starts with http:// or https://, it is @@ -105,7 +105,7 @@ $ mount -o bind /mnt/otherdisk/nix /nix NIX_STORE_DIR Overrides the location of the Nix store (default - prefix/store). + prefix/store). @@ -114,7 +114,7 @@ $ mount -o bind /mnt/otherdisk/nix /nix Overrides the location of the Nix static data directory (default - prefix/share). + prefix/share). @@ -122,7 +122,7 @@ $ mount -o bind /mnt/otherdisk/nix /nix NIX_LOG_DIR Overrides the location of the Nix log directory - (default prefix/var/log/nix). + (default prefix/var/log/nix). @@ -130,7 +130,7 @@ $ mount -o bind /mnt/otherdisk/nix /nix NIX_STATE_DIR Overrides the location of the Nix state directory - (default prefix/var/nix). + (default prefix/var/nix). @@ -139,7 +139,7 @@ $ mount -o bind /mnt/otherdisk/nix /nix Overrides the location of the system Nix configuration directory (default - prefix/etc/nix). + prefix/etc/nix). diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-build.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-build.xml index 886d25910..ec9145143 100644 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-build.xml +++ b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-build.xml @@ -20,14 +20,14 @@ nix-build - name value - name value + name value + name value - attrPath + attrPath @@ -36,16 +36,16 @@ - outlink + outlink - paths + paths Description The nix-build command builds the derivations -described by the Nix expressions in paths. +described by the Nix expressions in paths. If the build succeeds, it places a symlink to the result in the current directory. The symlink is called result. If there are multiple Nix expressions, or the Nix expressions evaluate @@ -53,11 +53,11 @@ to multiple derivations, multiple sequentially numbered symlinks are created (result, result-2, and so on). -If no paths are specified, then +If no paths are specified, then nix-build will use default.nix in the current directory, if it exists. -If an element of paths starts with +If an element of paths starts with http:// or https://, it is interpreted as the URL of a tarball that will be downloaded and unpacked to a temporary location. The tarball must include a single @@ -104,11 +104,11 @@ also . / - outlink + outlink Change the name of the symlink to the output path created from result to - outlink. + outlink. @@ -131,7 +131,7 @@ store derivation is /nix/store/qybprl8sz2lc...-firefox-1.5.0.7.drv /nix/store/d18hyl92g30l...-firefox-1.5.0.7 $ ls -l result -lrwxrwxrwx ... result -> /nix/store/d18hyl92g30l...-firefox-1.5.0.7 +lrwxrwxrwx ... result -> /nix/store/d18hyl92g30l...-firefox-1.5.0.7 $ ls ./result/bin/ firefox firefox-config @@ -143,7 +143,7 @@ You can also build all outputs: $ nix-build '<nixpkgs>' -A openssl.all This will create a symlink for each output named -result-outputname. +result-outputname. The suffix is omitted if the output name is out. So if openssl has outputs out, bin and man, diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-channel.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-channel.xml index ebcf56aff..2abeca0a0 100644 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-channel.xml +++ b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-channel.xml @@ -20,11 +20,11 @@ nix-channel - url name - name + url name + name - names - generation + names + generation @@ -44,22 +44,22 @@ xlink:href="https://nixos.org/channels" />. - url [name] + url [name] Adds a channel named - name with URL - url to the list of subscribed channels. - If name is omitted, it defaults to the - last component of url, with the + name with URL + url to the list of subscribed channels. + If name is omitted, it defaults to the + last component of url, with the suffixes -stable or -unstable removed. - name + name Removes the channel named - name from the list of subscribed + name from the list of subscribed channels. @@ -71,18 +71,18 @@ xlink:href="https://nixos.org/channels" />. - [names…] + [names…] Downloads the Nix expressions of all subscribed channels (or only those included in - names if specified) and makes them the + names if specified) and makes them the default for nix-env operations (by symlinking them from the directory ~/.nix-defexpr). - [generation] + [generation] Reverts the previous call to nix-channel --update. Optionally, you can specify a specific channel @@ -130,7 +130,7 @@ $ nix-instantiate --eval -E '(import <nixpkgs> {}).lib.version' - /nix/var/nix/profiles/per-user/username/channels + /nix/var/nix/profiles/per-user/username/channels nix-channel uses a nix-env profile to keep track of previous @@ -145,7 +145,7 @@ $ nix-instantiate --eval -E '(import <nixpkgs> {}).lib.version' ~/.nix-defexpr/channels This is a symlink to - /nix/var/nix/profiles/per-user/username/channels. It + /nix/var/nix/profiles/per-user/username/channels. It ensures that nix-env can find your channels. In a multi-user installation, you may also have ~/.nix-defexpr/channels_root, which links to diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.xml index 43e068796..cbcb5add5 100644 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.xml +++ b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.xml @@ -21,8 +21,8 @@ nix-collect-garbage - period - bytes + period + bytes @@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ which deletes all old generations of all profiles in nix-env --delete-generations old on all profiles (of course, this makes rollbacks to previous configurations impossible); and - period, + period, where period is a value such as 30d, which deletes all generations older than the specified number of days in all profiles in /nix/var/nix/profiles (except for the generations diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.xml index 8c07984fb..6fc8c312b 100644 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.xml +++ b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.xml @@ -33,9 +33,9 @@ - user@machine + user@machine - paths + paths @@ -44,13 +44,13 @@ nix-copy-closure gives you an easy and efficient way to exchange software between machines. Given one or -more Nix store paths on the local +more Nix store paths on the local machine, nix-copy-closure computes the closure of those paths (i.e. all their dependencies in the Nix store), and copies all paths in the closure to the remote machine via the ssh (Secure Shell) command. With the , the direction is reversed: -the closure of paths on a remote machine is +the closure of paths on a remote machine is copied to the Nix store on the local machine. This command is efficient because it only sends the store paths @@ -73,8 +73,8 @@ those paths. If this bothers you, use Copy the closure of - paths from the local Nix store to the - Nix store on machine. This is the + paths from the local Nix store to the + Nix store on machine. This is the default. @@ -82,8 +82,8 @@ those paths. If this bothers you, use Copy the closure of - paths from the Nix store on - machine to the local Nix + paths from the Nix store on + machine to the local Nix store. diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-env.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-env.xml index 4dedd90ca..6a97c7e37 100644 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-env.xml +++ b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-env.xml @@ -20,30 +20,30 @@ nix-env - name value - name value + name value + name value - path + path - path + path - system + system - operation - options - arguments + operation + options + arguments @@ -146,7 +146,7 @@ also . - / path + / path Specifies the Nix expression (designated below as the active Nix expression) used by the @@ -165,7 +165,7 @@ also . - / path + / path Specifies the profile to be used by those operations that operate on a profile (designated below as the @@ -194,12 +194,12 @@ also . - system + system By default, operations such as show derivations matching any platform. This option allows you to use derivations for the specified platform - system. + system. @@ -276,7 +276,7 @@ also . A symbolic link to the user's current profile. By default, this symlink points to - prefix/var/nix/profiles/default. + prefix/var/nix/profiles/default. The PATH environment variable should include ~/.nix-profile/bin for the user environment to be visible to the user. @@ -310,7 +310,7 @@ also . - args + args @@ -320,13 +320,13 @@ also . The install operation creates a new user environment, based on the current generation of the active profile, to which a set of store -paths described by args is added. The -arguments args map to store paths in a +paths described by args is added. The +arguments args map to store paths in a number of possible ways: - By default, args is a set + By default, args is a set of derivation names denoting derivations in the active Nix expression. These are realised, and the resulting output paths are installed. Currently installed derivations with a name equal to the @@ -335,7 +335,7 @@ number of possible ways: specified. If there are multiple derivations matching a name in - args that have the same name (e.g., + args that have the same name (e.g., gcc-3.3.6 and gcc-4.1.1), then the derivation with the highest priority is used. A derivation can define a priority by declaring the @@ -362,14 +362,14 @@ number of possible ways: packages, use nix-env -qaP. If - path is given, - args is a set of names denoting installed - store paths in the profile path. This is + path is given, + args is a set of names denoting installed + store paths in the profile path. This is an easy way to copy user environment elements from one profile to another. If is given, - args are Nix args are Nix functions that are called with the active Nix expression as their single argument. The derivations returned by those function calls are installed. This allows @@ -377,12 +377,12 @@ number of possible ways: if there are multiple derivations with the same name. - If args are store + If args are store derivations, then these are realised, and the resulting output paths are installed. - If args are store paths + If args are store paths that are not store derivations, then these are realised and installed. @@ -518,7 +518,7 @@ $ nix-env -f '<nixpkgs>' -iA hello --dry-run installing ‘hello-2.10’ this path will be fetched (0.04 MiB download, 0.19 MiB unpacked): /nix/store/wkhdf9jinag5750mqlax6z2zbwhqb76n-hello-2.10 - ... + ... @@ -556,7 +556,7 @@ $ nix-env -f https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-14.12.tar.gz -iA fir - args + args @@ -566,15 +566,15 @@ $ nix-env -f https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-14.12.tar.gz -iA fir The upgrade operation creates a new user environment, based on the current generation of the active profile, in which all store paths are replaced for which there are newer versions in the set of paths -described by args. Paths for which there +described by args. Paths for which there are no newer versions are left untouched; this is not an error. It is -also not an error if an element of args +also not an error if an element of args matches no installed derivations. -For a description of how args is +For a description of how args is mapped to a set of store paths, see . If -args describes multiple store paths with +args describes multiple store paths with the same symbolic name, only the one with the highest version is installed. @@ -711,7 +711,7 @@ lexicographically (i.e., using case-sensitive string comparison). - drvnames + drvnames @@ -720,7 +720,7 @@ lexicographically (i.e., using case-sensitive string comparison). The uninstall operation creates a new user environment, based on the current generation of the active profile, from which the store paths designated by the symbolic names -names are removed. +names are removed. @@ -745,7 +745,7 @@ $ nix-env -e '.*' (remove everything) nix-env - drvname + drvname @@ -783,9 +783,9 @@ $ nix-env -p /nix/var/nix/profiles/browser --set firefox nix-env - name - value - drvnames + name + value + drvnames @@ -848,8 +848,8 @@ firefox-2.0.0.9 (the current one) $ nix-env --preserve-installed -i firefox-2.0.0.11 installing `firefox-2.0.0.11' building path(s) `/nix/store/myy0y59q3ig70dgq37jqwg1j0rsapzsl-user-environment' -collision between `/nix/store/...-firefox-2.0.0.11/bin/firefox' - and `/nix/store/...-firefox-2.0.0.9/bin/firefox'. +collision between `/nix/store/...-firefox-2.0.0.11/bin/firefox' + and `/nix/store/...-firefox-2.0.0.9/bin/firefox'. (i.e., can’t have two active at the same time) $ nix-env --set-flag active false firefox @@ -940,12 +940,12 @@ $ nix-env --set-flag priority 10 gcc - attribute-path + attribute-path - names + names @@ -959,7 +959,7 @@ profile (), or the derivations that are available for installation in the active Nix expression (). It only prints information about derivations whose symbolic name matches one of -names. +names. The derivations are sorted by their name attributes. @@ -1086,21 +1086,21 @@ user environment elements, etc. --> - < version + < version A newer version of the package is available or installed. - = version + = version At most the same version of the package is available or installed. - > version + > version Only older versions of the package are available or installed. @@ -1174,7 +1174,7 @@ docbook-xml-4.2 firefox-1.0.4 MPlayer-1.0pre7 ORBit2-2.8.3 - + @@ -1187,7 +1187,7 @@ firefox-1.0.7 GConf-2.4.0.1 MPlayer-1.0pre7 ORBit2-2.8.3 - + @@ -1200,7 +1200,7 @@ $ nix-env -qas --S GConf-2.4.0.1 (not present, but there is a substitute for fast installation) --S MPlayer-1.0pre3 (i.e., this is not the installed MPlayer, even though the version is the same!) IP- ORBit2-2.8.3 (installed and by definition present) - + @@ -1218,11 +1218,11 @@ foo-1.2.3 $ nix-env -qc -... +... acrobat-reader-7.0 - ? (package is not available at all) autoconf-2.59 = 2.59 (same version) firefox-1.0.4 < 1.0.7 (a more recent version is available) -... +... @@ -1234,7 +1234,7 @@ $ nix-env -qa '.*zip.*' bzip2-1.0.6 gzip-1.6 zip-3.0 - + @@ -1248,7 +1248,7 @@ chromium-37.0.2062.94 chromium-beta-38.0.2125.24 firefox-32.0.3 firefox-with-plugins-13.0.1 - + @@ -1280,7 +1280,7 @@ $ nix-env -f https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/master.tar.gz -qa - path + path @@ -1288,10 +1288,10 @@ $ nix-env -f https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/master.tar.gz -qa Description -This operation makes path the current +This operation makes path the current profile for the user. That is, the symlink ~/.nix-profile is made to point to -path. +path. @@ -1355,7 +1355,7 @@ $ nix-env --list-generations nix-env - generations + generations @@ -1407,7 +1407,7 @@ $ nix-env -p other_profile --delete-generations old - generation + generation @@ -1416,13 +1416,13 @@ $ nix-env -p other_profile --delete-generations old Description This operation makes generation number -generation the current generation of the +generation the current generation of the active profile. That is, if the -profile is the path to +profile is the path to the active profile, then the symlink -profile is made to +profile is made to point to -profile-generation-link, +profile-generation-link, which is in turn a symlink to the actual user environment in the Nix store. diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-hash.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-hash.xml index 80263e18e..2f80dc568 100644 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-hash.xml +++ b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-hash.xml @@ -22,18 +22,18 @@ - hashAlgo - path + hashAlgo + path nix-hash - hash + hash nix-hash - hash + hash @@ -42,7 +42,7 @@ The command nix-hash computes the cryptographic hash of the contents of each -path and prints it on standard output. By +path and prints it on standard output. By default, it computes an MD5 hash, but other hash algorithms are available as well. The hash is printed in hexadecimal. To generate the same hash as nix-prefetch-url you have to @@ -54,9 +54,9 @@ allows directories and symlinks to be hashed as well as regular files. The dump is in the NAR format produced by nix-store . Thus, nix-hash -path yields the same +path yields the same cryptographic hash as nix-store --dump -path | md5sum. +path | md5sum. @@ -68,9 +68,9 @@ cryptographic hash as nix-store --dump Print the cryptographic hash of the contents of - each regular file path. That is, do + each regular file path. That is, do not compute the hash over the dump of - path. The result is identical to that + path. The result is identical to that produced by the GNU commands md5sum and sha1sum. @@ -92,7 +92,7 @@ cryptographic hash as nix-store --dump - hashAlgo + hashAlgo Use the specified cryptographic hash algorithm, which can be one of md5, @@ -104,7 +104,7 @@ cryptographic hash as nix-store --dump Don’t hash anything, but convert the base-32 hash - representation hash to + representation hash to hexadecimal. @@ -112,7 +112,7 @@ cryptographic hash as nix-store --dump Don’t hash anything, but convert the hexadecimal - hash representation hash to + hash representation hash to base-32. diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-instantiate.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-instantiate.xml index 4ff967ecf..d67be4924 100644 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-instantiate.xml +++ b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-instantiate.xml @@ -29,26 +29,26 @@ - name value + name value - attrPath + attrPath - path + path - files + files nix-instantiate - files + files @@ -58,13 +58,13 @@ The command nix-instantiate generates store derivations from (high-level) Nix expressions. It evaluates the Nix expressions in each of -files (which defaults to -./default.nix). Each top-level expression +files (which defaults to +./default.nix). Each top-level expression should evaluate to a derivation, a list of derivations, or a set of derivations. The paths of the resulting store derivations are printed on standard output. -If files is the character +If files is the character -, then a Nix expression will be read from standard input. @@ -79,7 +79,7 @@ input. - path + path See the corresponding @@ -181,7 +181,7 @@ $ nix-instantiate test.nix (instantiate) /nix/store/cigxbmvy6dzix98dxxh9b6shg7ar5bvs-perl-BerkeleyDB-0.26.drv $ nix-store -r $(nix-instantiate test.nix) (build) -... +... /nix/store/qhqk4n8ci095g3sdp93x7rgwyh9rdvgk-perl-BerkeleyDB-0.26 (output path) $ ls -l /nix/store/qhqk4n8ci095g3sdp93x7rgwyh9rdvgk-perl-BerkeleyDB-0.26 @@ -226,28 +226,28 @@ $ nix-instantiate --eval --xml -E '1 + 2' $ nix-instantiate --eval --xml -E 'rec { x = "foo"; y = x; }' -...... ]]> -... +... Note that y is left unevaluated (the XML representation doesn’t attempt to show non-normal forms). $ nix-instantiate --eval --xml --strict -E 'rec { x = "foo"; y = x; }' -...... ]]> -... +... diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.xml index 621ded72e..db2a6960a 100644 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.xml +++ b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.xml @@ -20,24 +20,24 @@ nix-prefetch-url - hashAlgo + hashAlgo - name - url - hash + name + url + hash Description The command nix-prefetch-url downloads the -file referenced by the URL url, prints its +file referenced by the URL url, prints its cryptographic hash, and copies it into the Nix store. The file name in the store is -hash-baseName, -where baseName is everything following the -final slash in url. +hash-baseName, +where baseName is everything following the +final slash in url. This command is just a convenience for Nix expression writers. Often a Nix expression fetches some source distribution from the @@ -50,7 +50,7 @@ download it again when you build your Nix expression. Since as nix-prefetch-url, the redundant download can be avoided. -If hash is specified, then a download +If hash is specified, then a download is not performed if the Nix store already contains a file with the same hash and base name. Otherwise, the file is downloaded, and an error is signaled if the actual hash of the file does not match the @@ -67,7 +67,7 @@ downloaded file in the Nix store is also printed. - hashAlgo + hashAlgo Use the specified cryptographic hash algorithm, which can be one of md5, @@ -93,14 +93,14 @@ downloaded file in the Nix store is also printed. - name + name Override the name of the file in the Nix store. By default, this is - hash-basename, - where basename is the last component of - url. Overriding the name is necessary - when basename contains characters that + hash-basename, + where basename is the last component of + url. Overriding the name is necessary + when basename contains characters that are not allowed in Nix store paths. diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-shell.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-shell.xml index de9755d58..1d55b5622 100644 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-shell.xml +++ b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-shell.xml @@ -19,20 +19,20 @@ nix-shell - name value - name value + name value + name value - attrPath + attrPath - cmd - cmd - regexp + cmd + cmd + regexp - name + name @@ -41,12 +41,12 @@ - packages - expressions + packages + expressions - path + path @@ -57,17 +57,17 @@ dependencies of the specified derivation, but not the derivation itself. It will then start an interactive shell in which all environment variables defined by the derivation -path have been set to their corresponding +path have been set to their corresponding values, and the script $stdenv/setup has been sourced. This is useful for reproducing the environment of a derivation for development. -If path is not given, +If path is not given, nix-shell defaults to shell.nix if it exists, and default.nix otherwise. -If path starts with +If path starts with http:// or https://, it is interpreted as the URL of a tarball that will be downloaded and unpacked to a temporary location. The tarball must include a single @@ -103,10 +103,10 @@ also . - cmd + cmd In the environment of the derivation, run the - shell command cmd. This command is + shell command cmd. This command is executed in an interactive shell. (Use to use a non-interactive shell instead.) However, a call to exit is implicitly added to the command, so the @@ -118,7 +118,7 @@ also . - cmd + cmd Like , but executes the command in a non-interactive shell. This means (among other @@ -127,10 +127,10 @@ also . - regexp + regexp Do not build any dependencies whose store path - matches the regular expression regexp. + matches the regular expression regexp. This option may be specified multiple times. @@ -150,7 +150,7 @@ also . - / packages + / packages Set up an environment in which the specified packages are present. The command line arguments are interpreted @@ -162,7 +162,7 @@ also . - interpreter + interpreter The chained script interpreter to be invoked by nix-shell. Only applicable in @@ -171,7 +171,7 @@ also . - name + name When a shell is started, keep the listed environment variables. @@ -278,13 +278,13 @@ following lines: #! /usr/bin/env nix-shell -#! nix-shell -i real-interpreter -p packages +#! nix-shell -i real-interpreter -p packages -where real-interpreter is the “real” script +where real-interpreter is the “real” script interpreter that will be invoked by nix-shell after it has obtained the dependencies and initialised the environment, and -packages are the attribute names of the +packages are the attribute names of the dependencies in Nixpkgs. The lines starting with #! nix-shell specify diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-store.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-store.xml index 459100984..352e716ae 100644 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-store.xml +++ b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-store.xml @@ -20,11 +20,11 @@ nix-store - path + path - operation - options - arguments + operation + options + arguments @@ -55,14 +55,14 @@ options. - path + path Causes the result of a realisation ( and ) to be registered as a root of the garbage collector (see ). The root is stored in - path, which must be inside a directory + path, which must be inside a directory that is scanned for roots by the garbage collector (i.e., typically in a subdirectory of /nix/var/nix/gcroots/) @@ -88,11 +88,11 @@ options. garbage-collected unless the symlink is removed. The flag causes a uniquely named - symlink to path to be stored in + symlink to path to be stored in /nix/var/nix/gcroots/auto/. For instance, -$ nix-store --add-root /home/eelco/bla/result --indirect -r ... +$ nix-store --add-root /home/eelco/bla/result --indirect -r ... $ ls -l /nix/var/nix/gcroots/auto lrwxrwxrwx 1 ... 2005-03-13 21:10 dn54lcypm8f8... -> /home/eelco/bla/result @@ -135,7 +135,7 @@ lrwxrwxrwx 1 ... 2005-03-13 21:10 /home/eelco/bla/result -> /nix/store/1r1134 - paths + paths @@ -204,7 +204,7 @@ printed.) with , if an output path is not identical to the corresponding output from the previous build, the new output path is left in - /nix/store/name.check. + /nix/store/name.check. See also the configuration option, which repeats a derivation a number of times and prevents @@ -361,7 +361,7 @@ EOF - bytes + bytes @@ -413,11 +413,11 @@ options control what gets deleted and in what order: - bytes + bytes Keep deleting paths until at least - bytes bytes have been deleted, then - stop. The argument bytes can be + bytes bytes have been deleted, then + stop. The argument bytes can be followed by the multiplicative suffix K, M, G or T, denoting KiB, MiB, GiB or TiB @@ -450,7 +450,7 @@ be freed. $ nix-store --gc deleting `/nix/store/kq82idx6g0nyzsp2s14gfsc38npai7lf-cairo-1.0.4.tar.gz.drv' -... +... 8825586 bytes freed (8.42 MiB) @@ -479,7 +479,7 @@ $ nix-store --gc --max-freed $((100 * 1024 * 1024)) nix-store - paths + paths @@ -487,7 +487,7 @@ $ nix-store --gc --max-freed $((100 * 1024 * 1024)) Description The operation deletes the store paths -paths from the Nix store, but only if it is +paths from the Nix store, but only if it is safe to do so; that is, when the path is not reachable from a root of the garbage collector. This means that you can only delete paths that would also be deleted by nix-store --gc. Thus, @@ -537,8 +537,8 @@ error: cannot delete path `/nix/store/zq0h41l75vlb4z45kzgjjmsjxvcv1qk7-mesa-6.4' - name - name + name + name @@ -547,7 +547,7 @@ error: cannot delete path `/nix/store/zq0h41l75vlb4z45kzgjjmsjxvcv1qk7-mesa-6.4' - paths + paths @@ -560,7 +560,7 @@ information about the store paths . The queries are described below. At most one query can be specified. The default query is . -The paths paths may also be symlinks +The paths paths may also be symlinks from outside of the Nix store, to the Nix store. In that case, the query is applied to the target of the symlink. @@ -603,7 +603,7 @@ query is applied to the target of the symlink. Prints out the output paths of the store - derivations paths. These are the paths + derivations paths. These are the paths that will be produced when the derivation is built. @@ -614,7 +614,7 @@ query is applied to the target of the symlink. Prints out the closure of the store path - paths. + paths. This query has one option: @@ -647,7 +647,7 @@ query is applied to the target of the symlink. Prints the set of references of the store paths - paths, that is, their immediate + paths, that is, their immediate dependencies. (For all dependencies, use .) @@ -656,9 +656,9 @@ query is applied to the target of the symlink. Prints the set of referrers of - the store paths paths, that is, the + the store paths paths, that is, the store paths currently existing in the Nix store that refer to one - of paths. Note that contrary to the + of paths. Note that contrary to the references, the set of referrers is not constant; it can change as store paths are added or removed. @@ -667,11 +667,11 @@ query is applied to the target of the symlink. Prints the closure of the set of store paths - paths under the referrers relation; that + paths under the referrers relation; that is, all store paths that directly or indirectly refer to one of - paths. These are all the path currently + paths. These are all the path currently in the Nix store that are dependent on - paths. + paths. @@ -680,7 +680,7 @@ query is applied to the target of the symlink. Prints the deriver of the store paths - paths. If the path has no deriver + paths. If the path has no deriver (e.g., if it is a source file), or if the deriver is not known (e.g., in the case of a binary-only deployment), the string unknown-deriver is printed. @@ -690,7 +690,7 @@ query is applied to the target of the symlink. Prints the references graph of the store paths - paths in the format of the + paths in the format of the dot tool of AT&T's Graphviz package. This can be used to visualise dependency graphs. To obtain a @@ -703,7 +703,7 @@ query is applied to the target of the symlink. Prints the references graph of the store paths - paths as a nested ASCII tree. + paths as a nested ASCII tree. References are ordered by descending closure size; this tends to flatten the tree, making it more readable. The query only recurses into a store path when it is first encountered; this @@ -715,7 +715,7 @@ query is applied to the target of the symlink. Prints the references graph of the store paths - paths in the paths in the GraphML file format. This can be used to visualise dependency graphs. To obtain a build-time dependency graph, apply this to a store derivation. To @@ -724,12 +724,12 @@ query is applied to the target of the symlink. - name - name + name + name Prints the value of the attribute - name (i.e., environment variable) of - the store derivations paths. It is an + name (i.e., environment variable) of + the store derivations paths. It is an error for a derivation to not have the specified attribute. @@ -738,7 +738,7 @@ query is applied to the target of the symlink. Prints the SHA-256 hash of the contents of the - store paths paths (that is, the hash of + store paths paths (that is, the hash of the output of nix-store --dump on the given paths). Since the hash is stored in the Nix database, this is a fast operation. @@ -748,7 +748,7 @@ query is applied to the target of the symlink. Prints the size in bytes of the contents of the - store paths paths — to be precise, the + store paths paths — to be precise, the size of the output of nix-store --dump on the given paths. Note that the actual disk space required by the store paths may be higher, especially on filesystems with large @@ -760,7 +760,7 @@ query is applied to the target of the symlink. Prints the garbage collector roots that point, directly or indirectly, at the store paths - paths. + paths. @@ -778,7 +778,7 @@ query is applied to the target of the symlink. $ nix-store -qR $(which svn) /nix/store/5mbglq5ldqld8sj57273aljwkfvj22mc-subversion-1.1.4 /nix/store/9lz9yc6zgmc0vlqmn2ipcpkjlmbi51vv-glibc-2.3.4 -... +... @@ -789,7 +789,7 @@ $ nix-store -qR $(nix-store -qd $(which svn)) /nix/store/02iizgn86m42q905rddvg4ja975bk2i4-grep-2.5.1.tar.bz2.drv /nix/store/07a2bzxmzwz5hp58nf03pahrv2ygwgs3-gcc-wrapper.sh /nix/store/0ma7c9wsbaxahwwl04gbw3fcd806ski4-glibc-2.3.4.drv -... lots of other paths ... +... lots of other paths ... The difference with the previous example is that we ask the closure of the derivation (), not the closure of the output @@ -804,7 +804,7 @@ $ nix-store -q --tree $(nix-store -qd $(which svn)) +---/nix/store/fmzxmpjx2lh849ph0l36snfj9zdibw67-bash-3.0.drv | +---/nix/store/570hmhmx3v57605cqg9yfvvyh0nnb8k8-bash | +---/nix/store/p3srsbd8dx44v2pg6nbnszab5mcwx03v-builder.sh -... +... @@ -827,7 +827,7 @@ $ nix-store -q --referrers $(nix-store -q --binding openssl $(nix-store -qd $(wh $ nix-store -q --referrers-closure $(ldd $(which svn) | grep /libc.so | awk '{print $3}') /nix/store/034a6h4vpz9kds5r6kzb9lhh81mscw43-libgnomeprintui-2.8.2 /nix/store/15l3yi0d45prm7a82pcrknxdh6nzmxza-gawk-3.1.4 -... +... Note that ldd is a command that prints out the dynamic libraries used by an ELF executable. @@ -893,7 +893,7 @@ $ nix-store -q --roots $(which svn) nix-store - paths + paths @@ -926,8 +926,8 @@ $ nix-store --add ./foo.c nix-store - algorithm - paths + algorithm + paths @@ -1039,7 +1039,7 @@ in Nix itself. nix-store - paths + paths @@ -1077,7 +1077,7 @@ $ nix-store --verify-path $(nix-store -qR $(which svn)) nix-store - paths + paths @@ -1123,7 +1123,7 @@ fetching path `/nix/store/d7a81wsm1ijwwpkks3725661h3263p5-glibc-2.13'... nix-store - path + path @@ -1131,7 +1131,7 @@ fetching path `/nix/store/d7a81wsm1ijwwpkks3725661h3263p5-glibc-2.13'... The operation produces a NAR (Nix ARchive) file containing the contents of the file system tree rooted -at path. The archive is written to +at path. The archive is written to standard output. A NAR archive is like a TAR or Zip archive, but it contains only @@ -1173,14 +1173,14 @@ links, but not other types of files (such as device nodes). nix-store - path + path Description The operation unpacks a NAR archive -to path, which must not already exist. The +to path, which must not already exist. The archive is read from standard input. @@ -1198,7 +1198,7 @@ archive is read from standard input. nix-store - paths + paths @@ -1220,7 +1220,7 @@ that are missing in the target Nix store, the import will fail. To copy a whole closure, do something like: -$ nix-store --export $(nix-store -qR paths) > out +$ nix-store --export $(nix-store -qR paths) > out To import the whole closure again, run: @@ -1299,7 +1299,7 @@ progress indication. $ nix-store --optimise hashing files in `/nix/store/qhqx7l2f1kmwihc9bnxs7rc159hsxnf3-gcc-4.1.1' -... +... 541838819 bytes (516.74 MiB) freed by hard-linking 54143 files; there are 114486 files with equal contents out of 215894 files in total @@ -1322,7 +1322,7 @@ there are 114486 files with equal contents out of 215894 files in total - paths + paths @@ -1351,7 +1351,7 @@ unpacking sources unpacking source archive /nix/store/p8n1jpqs27mgkjw07pb5269717nzf5f8-ktorrent-2.2.1.tar.gz ktorrent-2.2.1/ ktorrent-2.2.1/NEWS -... +... @@ -1369,7 +1369,7 @@ ktorrent-2.2.1/NEWS nix-store - paths + paths @@ -1424,7 +1424,7 @@ loads it into the Nix database. nix-store - drvpath + drvpath @@ -1441,7 +1441,7 @@ variable _args. $ nix-store --print-env $(nix-instantiate '<nixpkgs>' -A firefox) - + export src; src='/nix/store/plpj7qrwcz94z2psh6fchsi7s8yihc7k-firefox-12.0.source.tar.bz2' export stdenv; stdenv='/nix/store/7c8asx3yfrg5dg1gzhzyq2236zfgibnn-stdenv' export system; system='x86_64-linux' diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-common-syn.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-common-syn.xml index 2660e3bb1..6b7b5c833 100644 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-common-syn.xml +++ b/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-common-syn.xml @@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ - format + format @@ -26,19 +26,19 @@ - number + number - number + number - number + number - number + number @@ -56,12 +56,12 @@ - path + path - name - value + name + value diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-common.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-common.xml index 150e732ff..67950e94b 100644 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-common.xml +++ b/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-common.xml @@ -92,12 +92,12 @@ - format + format This option can be used to change the output of the log format, with - format being one of: + format being one of: @@ -130,13 +130,13 @@ error. This option suppresses this behaviour. Note that the builder's standard output and error are always written to a log file in - prefix/nix/var/log/nix. + prefix/nix/var/log/nix. / -number +number @@ -166,7 +166,7 @@ of parallelism. For instance, in Nixpkgs, if the derivation attribute enableParallelBuilding is set to true, the builder passes the - flag to GNU Make. + flag to GNU Make. It defaults to the value of the cores configuration setting, if set, or 1 otherwise. @@ -271,7 +271,7 @@ - name value + name value This option is accepted by nix-env, nix-instantiate, @@ -280,14 +280,14 @@ automatically try to call functions that it encounters. It can automatically call functions for which every argument has a default value - (e.g., { argName ? - defaultValue }: - ...). With + (e.g., { argName ? + defaultValue }: + ...). With , you can also call functions that have arguments without a default value (or override a default value). That is, if the evaluator encounters a function with an argument - named name, it will call it with value - value. + named name, it will call it with value + value. For instance, the top-level default.nix in Nixpkgs is actually a function: @@ -295,23 +295,23 @@ { # The system (e.g., `i686-linux') for which to build the packages. system ? builtins.currentSystem - ... -}: ... + ... +}: ... So if you call this Nix expression (e.g., when you do - nix-env -i pkgname), + nix-env -i pkgname), the function will be called automatically using the value builtins.currentSystem for the system argument. You can override this using , e.g., nix-env -i - pkgname --arg system + pkgname --arg system \"i686-freebsd\". (Note that since the argument is a Nix string literal, you have to escape the quotes.) - name value + name value This option is like , only the value is not a Nix expression but a string. So instead of @@ -323,17 +323,17 @@ / -attrPath +attrPath Select an attribute from the top-level Nix expression being evaluated. (nix-env, nix-instantiate, nix-build and nix-shell only.) The attribute - path attrPath is a sequence of + path attrPath is a sequence of attribute names separated by dots. For instance, given a top-level - Nix expression e, the attribute path + Nix expression e, the attribute path xorg.xorgserver would cause the expression - e.xorg.xorgserver to + e.xorg.xorgserver to be used. See nix-env --install for some concrete examples. @@ -366,7 +366,7 @@ - path + path Add a path to the Nix expression search path. This option may be given multiple times. See the - name value + name value Set the Nix configuration option - name to value. + name to value. This overrides settings in the Nix configuration file (see nix.conf5). diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-inst-syn.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-inst-syn.xml index e8c3f1ec6..e324a5e6d 100644 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-inst-syn.xml +++ b/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-inst-syn.xml @@ -17,6 +17,6 @@ - path + path diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/advanced-attributes.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/advanced-attributes.xml index 3a0413ceb..794d020d9 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/advanced-attributes.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/advanced-attributes.xml @@ -91,12 +91,12 @@ disallowedRequisites = [ foobar ]; references graph of their inputs. The attribute is a list of inputs in the Nix store whose references graph the builder needs to know. The value of this attribute should be a list of pairs - [ name1 - path1 name2 - path2 ... + [ name1 + path1 name2 + path2 ... ]. The references graph of each - pathN will be stored in a text file - nameN in the temporary build directory. + pathN will be stored in a text file + nameN in the temporary build directory. The text files have the format used by nix-store --register-validity (with the deriver fields left empty). For example, when the following derivation is built: @@ -135,7 +135,7 @@ derivation { Nixpkgs has the line -impureEnvVars = [ "http_proxy" "https_proxy" ... ]; +impureEnvVars = [ "http_proxy" "https_proxy" ... ]; to make it use the proxy server configuration specified by the @@ -297,11 +297,11 @@ big = "a very long string"; bigPath will contain the absolute path to a temporary file containing a very long string. That is, for any attribute - x listed in + x listed in passAsFile, Nix will pass an environment - variable xPath holding + variable xPath holding the path of the file containing the value of attribute - x. This is useful when you need to pass + x. This is useful when you need to pass large strings to a builder, since most operating systems impose a limit on the size of the environment (typically, a few hundred kilobyte). diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/build-script.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/build-script.xml index 892274f50..c9af198f2 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/build-script.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/build-script.xml @@ -58,7 +58,7 @@ steps: the PATH. The perl environment variable points to the location of the Perl package (since it was passed in as an attribute to the derivation), so - $perl/bin is the + $perl/bin is the directory containing the Perl interpreter. diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/builtins.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/builtins.xml index 877fd3a1b..4ad481ad3 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/builtins.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/builtins.xml @@ -22,34 +22,34 @@ available as builtins.derivation. - abort s - builtins.abort s + abort s + builtins.abort s Abort Nix expression evaluation, print error - message s. + message s. builtins.add - e1 e2 + e1 e2 Return the sum of the numbers - e1 and - e2. + e1 and + e2. builtins.all - pred list + pred list Return true if the function - pred returns true - for all elements of list, + pred returns true + for all elements of list, and false otherwise. @@ -57,11 +57,11 @@ available as builtins.derivation. builtins.any - pred list + pred list Return true if the function - pred returns true - for at least one element of list, + pred returns true + for at least one element of list, and false otherwise. @@ -69,10 +69,10 @@ available as builtins.derivation. builtins.attrNames - set + set Return the names of the attributes in the set - set in an alphabetically sorted list. For instance, + set in an alphabetically sorted list. For instance, builtins.attrNames { y = 1; x = "foo"; } evaluates to [ "x" "y" ]. @@ -81,20 +81,20 @@ available as builtins.derivation. builtins.attrValues - set + set Return the values of the attributes in the set - set in the order corresponding to the + set in the order corresponding to the sorted attribute names. - baseNameOf s + baseNameOf s Return the base name of the - string s, that is, everything following + string s, that is, everything following the final slash in the string. This is similar to the GNU basename command. @@ -103,33 +103,33 @@ available as builtins.derivation. builtins.bitAnd - e1 e2 + e1 e2 Return the bitwise AND of the integers - e1 and - e2. + e1 and + e2. builtins.bitOr - e1 e2 + e1 e2 Return the bitwise OR of the integers - e1 and - e2. + e1 and + e2. builtins.bitXor - e1 e2 + e1 e2 Return the bitwise XOR of the integers - e1 and - e2. + e1 and + e2. @@ -154,15 +154,15 @@ if builtins ? getEnv then builtins.getEnv "PATH" else "" builtins.compareVersions - s1 s2 + s1 s2 Compare two strings representing versions and return -1 if version - s1 is older than version - s2, 0 if they are + s1 is older than version + s2, 0 if they are the same, and 1 if - s1 is newer than - s2. The version comparison algorithm + s1 is newer than + s2. The version comparison algorithm is the same as the one used by nix-env -u. @@ -172,7 +172,7 @@ if builtins ? getEnv then builtins.getEnv "PATH" else "" builtins.concatLists - lists + lists Concatenate a list of lists into a single list. @@ -181,7 +181,7 @@ if builtins ? getEnv then builtins.getEnv "PATH" else "" builtins.concatStringsSep - separator list + separator list Concatenate a list of strings with a separator between each element, e.g. concatStringsSep "/" @@ -225,12 +225,12 @@ if builtins ? getEnv then builtins.getEnv "PATH" else "" builtins.deepSeq - e1 e2 + e1 e2 This is like seq - e1 - e2, except that - e1 is evaluated + e1 + e2, except that + e1 is evaluated deeply: if it’s a list or set, its elements or attributes are also evaluated recursively. @@ -239,9 +239,9 @@ if builtins ? getEnv then builtins.getEnv "PATH" else "" derivation - attrs + attrs builtins.derivation - attrs + attrs derivation is described in . @@ -250,11 +250,11 @@ if builtins ? getEnv then builtins.getEnv "PATH" else "" - dirOf s - builtins.dirOf s + dirOf s + builtins.dirOf s Return the directory part of the string - s, that is, everything before the final + s, that is, everything before the final slash in the string. This is similar to the GNU dirname command. @@ -263,21 +263,21 @@ if builtins ? getEnv then builtins.getEnv "PATH" else "" builtins.div - e1 e2 + e1 e2 Return the quotient of the numbers - e1 and - e2. + e1 and + e2. builtins.elem - x xs + x xs Return true if a value equal to - x occurs in the list - xs, and false + x occurs in the list + xs, and false otherwise. @@ -285,10 +285,10 @@ if builtins ? getEnv then builtins.getEnv "PATH" else "" builtins.elemAt - xs n + xs n - Return element n from - the list xs. Elements are counted + Return element n from + the list xs. Elements are counted starting from 0. A fatal error occurs if the index is out of bounds. @@ -297,7 +297,7 @@ if builtins ? getEnv then builtins.getEnv "PATH" else "" builtins.fetchurl - url + url Download the specified URL and return the path of the downloaded file. This function is not available if fetchTarball - url + url builtins.fetchTarball - url + url Download the specified URL, unpack it and return the path of the unpacked tree. The file must be a tape archive @@ -333,9 +333,9 @@ stdenv.mkDerivation { … } The fetched tarball is cached for a certain amount of time (1 hour by default) in ~/.cache/nix/tarballs/. You can change the cache timeout either on the command line with - or + or in the Nix configuration file with this option: - number of seconds to cache. + number of seconds to cache. Note that when obtaining the hash with nix-prefetch-url @@ -367,12 +367,12 @@ stdenv.mkDerivation { … } builtins.fetchGit - args + args - Fetch a path from git. args can be + Fetch a path from git. args can be a URL, in which case the HEAD of the repo at that URL is fetched. Otherwise, it can be an attribute with the following attributes (all except url optional): @@ -526,11 +526,11 @@ stdenv.mkDerivation { … } builtins.filter - f xs + f xs Return a list consisting of the elements of - xs for which the function - f returns + xs for which the function + f returns true. @@ -538,7 +538,7 @@ stdenv.mkDerivation { … } builtins.filterSource - e1 e2 + e1 e2 @@ -569,10 +569,10 @@ stdenv.mkDerivation { - Thus, the first argument e1 + Thus, the first argument e1 must be a predicate function that is called for each regular file, directory or symlink in the source tree - e2. If the function returns + e2. If the function returns true, the file is copied to the Nix store, otherwise it is omitted. The function is called with two arguments. The first is the full path of the file. The second @@ -584,7 +584,7 @@ stdenv.mkDerivation { the Nix store, so if the predicate returns true for them, the copy will fail). If you exclude a directory, the entire corresponding subtree of - e2 will be excluded. + e2 will be excluded. @@ -593,7 +593,7 @@ stdenv.mkDerivation { builtins.foldl’ - op nul list + op nul list Reduce a list by applying a binary operator, from left to right, e.g. foldl’ op nul [x0 x1 x2 ...] = op (op @@ -607,11 +607,11 @@ stdenv.mkDerivation { builtins.functionArgs - f + f Return a set containing the names of the formal arguments expected - by the function f. + by the function f. The value of each attribute is a Boolean denoting whether the corresponding argument has a default value. For instance, functionArgs ({ x, y ? 123}: ...) = { x = false; y = true; }. @@ -625,7 +625,7 @@ stdenv.mkDerivation { - builtins.fromJSON e + builtins.fromJSON e Convert a JSON string to a Nix value. For example, @@ -642,12 +642,12 @@ builtins.fromJSON ''{"x": [1, 2, 3], "y": null}'' builtins.genList - generator length + generator length Generate list of size - length, with each element - i equal to the value returned by - generator i. For + length, with each element + i equal to the value returned by + generator i. For example, @@ -661,13 +661,13 @@ builtins.genList (x: x * x) 5 builtins.getAttr - s set + s set getAttr returns the attribute - named s from - set. Evaluation aborts if the + named s from + set. Evaluation aborts if the attribute doesn’t exist. This is a dynamic version of the - . operator, since s + . operator, since s is an expression rather than an identifier. @@ -675,10 +675,10 @@ builtins.genList (x: x * x) 5 builtins.getEnv - s + s getEnv returns the value of - the environment variable s, or an empty + the environment variable s, or an empty string if the variable doesn’t exist. This function should be used with care, as it can introduce all sorts of nasty environment dependencies in your Nix expression. @@ -694,14 +694,14 @@ builtins.genList (x: x * x) 5 builtins.hasAttr - s set + s set hasAttr returns - true if set has an - attribute named s, and + true if set has an + attribute named s, and false otherwise. This is a dynamic version of the ? operator, since - s is an expression rather than an + s is an expression rather than an identifier. @@ -709,11 +709,11 @@ builtins.genList (x: x * x) 5 builtins.hashString - type s + type s Return a base-16 representation of the - cryptographic hash of string s. The - hash algorithm specified by type must + cryptographic hash of string s. The + hash algorithm specified by type must be one of "md5", "sha1", "sha256" or "sha512". @@ -722,11 +722,11 @@ builtins.genList (x: x * x) 5 builtins.hashFile - type p + type p Return a base-16 representation of the - cryptographic hash of the file at path p. The - hash algorithm specified by type must + cryptographic hash of the file at path p. The + hash algorithm specified by type must be one of "md5", "sha1", "sha256" or "sha512". @@ -735,7 +735,7 @@ builtins.genList (x: x * x) 5 builtins.head - list + list Return the first element of a list; abort evaluation if the argument isn’t a list or is an empty list. You @@ -747,13 +747,13 @@ builtins.genList (x: x * x) 5 import - path + path builtins.import - path + path Load, parse and return the Nix expression in the - file path. If path - is a directory, the file default.nix + file path. If path + is a directory, the file default.nix in that directory is loaded. Evaluation aborts if the file doesn’t exist or contains an incorrect Nix expression. import implements Nix’s module system: you @@ -763,7 +763,7 @@ builtins.genList (x: x * x) 5 Unlike some languages, import is a regular function in Nix. Paths using the angle bracket syntax (e.g., - import <foo>) are normal path + import <foo>) are normal path values (see ). A Nix expression loaded by import must @@ -810,21 +810,21 @@ x: x + 456 builtins.intersectAttrs - e1 e2 + e1 e2 Return a set consisting of the attributes in the - set e2 that also exist in the set - e1. + set e2 that also exist in the set + e1. builtins.isAttrs - e + e Return true if - e evaluates to a set, and + e evaluates to a set, and false otherwise. @@ -832,20 +832,20 @@ x: x + 456 builtins.isList - e + e Return true if - e evaluates to a list, and + e evaluates to a list, and false otherwise. builtins.isFunction - e + e Return true if - e evaluates to a function, and + e evaluates to a function, and false otherwise. @@ -853,10 +853,10 @@ x: x + 456 builtins.isString - e + e Return true if - e evaluates to a string, and + e evaluates to a string, and false otherwise. @@ -864,10 +864,10 @@ x: x + 456 builtins.isInt - e + e Return true if - e evaluates to an int, and + e evaluates to an int, and false otherwise. @@ -875,10 +875,10 @@ x: x + 456 builtins.isFloat - e + e Return true if - e evaluates to a float, and + e evaluates to a float, and false otherwise. @@ -886,31 +886,31 @@ x: x + 456 builtins.isBool - e + e Return true if - e evaluates to a bool, and + e evaluates to a bool, and false otherwise. builtins.isPath - e + e Return true if - e evaluates to a path, and + e evaluates to a path, and false otherwise. isNull - e + e builtins.isNull - e + e Return true if - e evaluates to null, + e evaluates to null, and false otherwise. This function is deprecated; @@ -923,23 +923,23 @@ x: x + 456 builtins.length - e + e Return the length of the list - e. + e. builtins.lessThan - e1 e2 + e1 e2 Return true if the number - e1 is less than the number - e2, and false + e1 is less than the number + e2, and false otherwise. Evaluation aborts if either - e1 or e2 + e1 or e2 does not evaluate to a number. @@ -947,7 +947,7 @@ x: x + 456 builtins.listToAttrs - e + e Construct a set from a list specifying the names and values of each attribute. Each element of the list should be @@ -975,12 +975,12 @@ builtins.listToAttrs map - f list + f list builtins.map - f list + f list - Apply the function f to - each element in the list list. For + Apply the function f to + each element in the list list. For example, @@ -994,12 +994,12 @@ map (x: "foo" + x) [ "bar" "bla" "abc" ] builtins.match - regex str + regex str Returns a list if the extended - POSIX regular expression regex - matches str precisely, otherwise returns + POSIX regular expression regex + matches str precisely, otherwise returns null. Each item in the list is a regex group. @@ -1031,20 +1031,20 @@ Evaluates to [ "foo" ]. builtins.mul - e1 e2 + e1 e2 Return the product of the numbers - e1 and - e2. + e1 and + e2. builtins.parseDrvName - s + s - Split the string s into + Split the string s into a package name and version. The package name is everything up to but not including the first dash followed by a digit, and the version is everything following that dash. The result is returned @@ -1058,13 +1058,13 @@ Evaluates to [ "foo" ]. builtins.path - args + args An enrichment of the built-in path type, based on the attributes - present in args. All are optional + present in args. All are optional except path: @@ -1127,20 +1127,20 @@ Evaluates to [ "foo" ]. builtins.pathExists - path + path Return true if the path - path exists at evaluation time, and + path exists at evaluation time, and false otherwise. builtins.placeholder - output + output Return a placeholder string for the specified - output that will be substituted by the + output that will be substituted by the corresponding output path at build time. Typical outputs would be "out", "bin" or "dev". @@ -1148,10 +1148,10 @@ Evaluates to [ "foo" ]. builtins.readDir - path + path Return the contents of the directory - path as a set mapping directory entries + path as a set mapping directory entries to the corresponding file type. For instance, if directory A contains a regular file B and another directory @@ -1171,24 +1171,24 @@ Evaluates to [ "foo" ]. builtins.readFile - path + path Return the contents of the file - path as a string. + path as a string. removeAttrs - set list + set list builtins.removeAttrs - set list + set list Remove the attributes listed in - list from - set. The attributes don’t have to - exist in set. For instance, + list from + set. The attributes don’t have to + exist in set. For instance, removeAttrs { x = 1; y = 2; z = 3; } [ "a" "x" "z" ] @@ -1200,12 +1200,12 @@ removeAttrs { x = 1; y = 2; z = 3; } [ "a" "x" "z" ] builtins.replaceStrings - from to s + from to s - Given string s, replace - every occurrence of the strings in from + Given string s, replace + every occurrence of the strings in from with the corresponding string in - to. For example, + to. For example, builtins.replaceStrings ["oo" "a"] ["a" "i"] "foobar" @@ -1218,23 +1218,23 @@ builtins.replaceStrings ["oo" "a"] ["a" "i"] "foobar" builtins.seq - e1 e2 + e1 e2 - Evaluate e1, then - evaluate and return e2. This ensures + Evaluate e1, then + evaluate and return e2. This ensures that a computation is strict in the value of - e1. + e1. builtins.sort - comparator list + comparator list - Return list in sorted + Return list in sorted order. It repeatedly calls the function - comparator with two elements. The + comparator with two elements. The comparator should return true if the first element is less than the second, and false otherwise. For example, @@ -1254,13 +1254,13 @@ builtins.sort builtins.lessThan [ 483 249 526 147 42 77 ] builtins.split - regex str + regex str Returns a list composed of non matched strings interleaved with the lists of the extended - POSIX regular expression regex matches - of str. Each item in the lists of matched + POSIX regular expression regex matches + of str. Each item in the lists of matched sequences is a regex group. @@ -1293,7 +1293,7 @@ Evaluates to [ " " [ "FOO" ] " " ]. builtins.splitVersion - s + s Split a string representing a version into its components, by the same version splitting logic underlying the @@ -1305,10 +1305,10 @@ Evaluates to [ " " [ "FOO" ] " " ]. builtins.stringLength - e + e Return the length of the string - e. If e is + e. If e is not a string, evaluation is aborted. @@ -1316,29 +1316,29 @@ Evaluates to [ " " [ "FOO" ] " " ]. builtins.sub - e1 e2 + e1 e2 Return the difference between the numbers - e1 and - e2. + e1 and + e2. builtins.substring - start len - s + start len + s Return the substring of - s from character position - start (zero-based) up to but not - including start + len. If - start is greater than the length of the - string, an empty string is returned, and if start + - len lies beyond the end of the string, only the + s from character position + start (zero-based) up to but not + including start + len. If + start is greater than the length of the + string, an empty string is returned, and if start + + len lies beyond the end of the string, only the substring up to the end of the string is returned. - start must be + start must be non-negative. For example, @@ -1353,7 +1353,7 @@ builtins.substring 0 3 "nixos" builtins.tail - list + list Return the second to last elements of a list; abort evaluation if the argument isn’t a list or is an empty @@ -1364,12 +1364,12 @@ builtins.substring 0 3 "nixos" throw - s + s builtins.throw - s + s Throw an error message - s. This usually aborts Nix expression + s. This usually aborts Nix expression evaluation, but in nix-env -qa and other commands that try to evaluate a set of derivations to get information about those derivations, a derivation that throws an @@ -1381,12 +1381,12 @@ builtins.substring 0 3 "nixos" builtins.toFile - name - s + name + s - Store the string s in a + Store the string s in a file in the Nix store and return its path. The file has suffix - name. This file can be used as an + name. This file can be used as an input to derivations. One application is to write builders “inline”. For instance, the following Nix expression combines and ... + ... "; in builtins.toFile "builder.sh" " source $stdenv/setup - ... + ... cp ${configFile} $out/etc/foo.conf "; @@ -1459,10 +1459,10 @@ in foo - builtins.toJSON e + builtins.toJSON e Return a string containing a JSON representation - of e. Strings, integers, floats, booleans, + of e. Strings, integers, floats, booleans, nulls and lists are mapped to their JSON equivalents. Sets (except derivations) are represented as objects. Derivations are translated to a JSON string containing the derivation’s output @@ -1473,7 +1473,7 @@ in foo - builtins.toPath s + builtins.toPath s DEPRECATED. Use /. + "/path" to convert a string into an absolute path. For relative paths, @@ -1484,12 +1484,12 @@ in foo - toString e - builtins.toString e + toString e + builtins.toString e Convert the expression - e to a string. - e can be: + e to a string. + e can be: A string (in which case the string is returned unmodified). A path (e.g., toString /foo/bar yields "/foo/bar". @@ -1505,10 +1505,10 @@ in foo - builtins.toXML e + builtins.toXML e Return a string containing an XML representation - of e. The main application for + of e. The main application for toXML is to communicate information with the builder in a more structured format than plain environment variables. @@ -1612,26 +1612,26 @@ stdenv.mkDerivation (rec { builtins.trace - e1 e2 + e1 e2 - Evaluate e1 and print its + Evaluate e1 and print its abstract syntax representation on standard error. Then return - e2. This function is useful for + e2. This function is useful for debugging. builtins.tryEval - e + e - Try to shallowly evaluate e. + Try to shallowly evaluate e. Return a set containing the attributes success - (true if e evaluated + (true if e evaluated successfully, false if an error was thrown) and - value, equalling e + value, equalling e if successful and false otherwise. Note that this - doesn't evaluate e deeply, so + doesn't evaluate e deeply, so let e = { x = throw ""; }; in (builtins.tryEval e).success will be true. Using builtins.deepSeq one can get the expected result: let e = { x = throw ""; @@ -1644,10 +1644,10 @@ stdenv.mkDerivation (rec { builtins.typeOf - e + e Return a string representing the type of the value - e, namely "int", + e, namely "int", "bool", "string", "path", "null", "set", "list", diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/expression-syntax.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/expression-syntax.xml index 562a9e9f4..853e40b58 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/expression-syntax.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/expression-syntax.xml @@ -50,7 +50,7 @@ the single Nix expression in that directory Nix functions generally have the form { x, y, ..., z }: e where x, y, etc. are the names of the expected arguments, and where - e is the body of the function. So + e is the body of the function. So here, the entire remainder of the file is the body of the function; when given the required arguments, the body should describe how to build an instance of the Hello package. @@ -69,10 +69,10 @@ the single Nix expression in that directory attributes. A set is just a list of key/value pairs where each key is a string and each value is an arbitrary Nix expression. They take the general form { - name1 = - expr1; ... - nameN = - exprN; }. + name1 = + expr1; ... + nameN = + exprN; }. diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/generic-builder.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/generic-builder.xml index 71b342f99..f6e67813d 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/generic-builder.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/generic-builder.xml @@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ genericBuild ③ subdirectory, it's added to GCC's header search path; and so on.How does it work? setup tries to source the file - pkg/nix-support/setup-hook + pkg/nix-support/setup-hook of all dependencies. These “setup hooks” can then set up whatever environment variables they want; for instance, the setup hook for Perl sets the PERL5LIB environment variable to diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/language-constructs.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/language-constructs.xml index 82d3afed1..86c25d723 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/language-constructs.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/language-constructs.xml @@ -137,7 +137,7 @@ while defining a set. Functions have the following form: -pattern: body +pattern: body The pattern specifies what the argument of the function must look like, and binds variables in the body to (parts of) the @@ -190,9 +190,9 @@ map (concat "foo") [ "bar" "bla" "abc" ] It is possible to provide default values for attributes, in which case they are allowed to be missing. A default value is specified by writing - name ? - e, where - e is an arbitrary expression. For example, + name ? + e, where + e is an arbitrary expression. For example, { x, y ? "foo", z ? "bar" }: z + y + x @@ -256,9 +256,9 @@ in concat { x = "foo"; y = "bar"; } Conditionals look like this: -if e1 then e2 else e3 +if e1 then e2 else e3 -where e1 is an expression that should +where e1 is an expression that should evaluate to a Boolean value (true or false). @@ -271,11 +271,11 @@ evaluate to a Boolean value (true or on or between features and dependencies hold. They look like this: -assert e1; e2 +assert e1; e2 -where e1 is an expression that should +where e1 is an expression that should evaluate to a Boolean value. If it evaluates to -true, e2 is returned; +true, e2 is returned; otherwise expression evaluation is aborted and a backtrace is printed. Here is a Nix expression for the Subversion package that shows @@ -358,10 +358,10 @@ stdenv.mkDerivation { A with-expression, -with e1; e2 +with e1; e2 -introduces the set e1 into the lexical -scope of the expression e2. For instance, +introduces the set e1 into the lexical +scope of the expression e2. For instance, let as = { x = "foo"; y = "bar"; }; diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/language-operators.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/language-operators.xml index 4f11bf529..7f69bfcef 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/language-operators.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/language-operators.xml @@ -25,48 +25,48 @@ weakest binding). Select - e . - attrpath - [ or def ] + e . + attrpath + [ or def ] none Select attribute denoted by the attribute path - attrpath from set - e. (An attribute path is a + attrpath from set + e. (An attribute path is a dot-separated list of attribute names.) If the attribute - doesn’t exist, return def if + doesn’t exist, return def if provided, otherwise abort evaluation. 1 Application - e1 e2 + e1 e2 left - Call function e1 with - argument e2. + Call function e1 with + argument e2. 2 Arithmetic Negation - - e + - e none Arithmetic negation. 3 Has Attribute - e ? - attrpath + e ? + attrpath none - Test whether set e contains - the attribute denoted by attrpath; + Test whether set e contains + the attribute denoted by attrpath; return true or false. 4 List Concatenation - e1 ++ e2 + e1 ++ e2 right List concatenation. 5 @@ -74,7 +74,7 @@ weakest binding). Multiplication - e1 * e2, + e1 * e2, left Arithmetic multiplication. @@ -83,7 +83,7 @@ weakest binding). Division - e1 / e2 + e1 / e2 left Arithmetic division. @@ -92,7 +92,7 @@ weakest binding). Addition - e1 + e2 + e1 + e2 left Arithmetic addition. @@ -101,7 +101,7 @@ weakest binding). Subtraction - e1 - e2 + e1 - e2 left Arithmetic subtraction. @@ -110,7 +110,7 @@ weakest binding). String Concatenation - string1 + string2 + string1 + string2 left String concatenation. @@ -118,19 +118,19 @@ weakest binding). Not - ! e + ! e none Boolean negation. 8 Update - e1 // - e2 + e1 // + e2 right Return a set consisting of the attributes in - e1 and - e2 (with the latter taking + e1 and + e2 (with the latter taking precedence over the former in case of equally named attributes). 9 @@ -138,7 +138,7 @@ weakest binding). Less Than - e1 < e2, + e1 < e2, none Arithmetic comparison. @@ -147,7 +147,7 @@ weakest binding). Less Than or Equal To - e1 <= e2 + e1 <= e2 none Arithmetic comparison. @@ -156,7 +156,7 @@ weakest binding). Greater Than - e1 > e2 + e1 > e2 none Arithmetic comparison. @@ -165,7 +165,7 @@ weakest binding). Greater Than or Equal To - e1 >= e2 + e1 >= e2 none Arithmetic comparison. @@ -174,7 +174,7 @@ weakest binding). Equality - e1 == e2 + e1 == e2 none Equality. @@ -183,7 +183,7 @@ weakest binding). Inequality - e1 != e2 + e1 != e2 none Inequality. @@ -191,28 +191,28 @@ weakest binding). Logical AND - e1 && - e2 + e1 && + e2 left Logical AND. 12 Logical OR - e1 || - e2 + e1 || + e2 left Logical OR. 13 Logical Implication - e1 -> - e2 + e1 -> + e2 none Logical implication (equivalent to - !e1 || - e2). + !e1 || + e2). 14 diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/language-values.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/language-values.xml index 6c0fcbacb..cebafb1f5 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/language-values.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/language-values.xml @@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ You can include the result of an expression into a string by enclosing it in - ${...}, a feature + ${...}, a feature known as antiquotation. The enclosed expression must evaluate to something that can be coerced into a string (meaning that it must be a string, a path, or a @@ -93,7 +93,7 @@ configureFlags = " text on the initial line. Antiquotation - (${expr}) is + (${expr}) is supported in indented strings. Since ${ and '' have @@ -119,7 +119,7 @@ configureFlags = " stdenv.mkDerivation { - ... + ... postInstall = '' mkdir $out/bin $out/etc @@ -127,7 +127,7 @@ stdenv.mkDerivation { echo "Hello World" > $out/etc/foo.conf ${if enableBar then "cp bar $out/bin" else ""} ''; - ... + ... } diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/simple-building-testing.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/simple-building-testing.xml index 33a802e83..f82223df9 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/simple-building-testing.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/simple-building-testing.xml @@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ building path `/nix/store/632d2b22514d...-hello-2.1.1' hello-2.1.1/ hello-2.1.1/intl/ hello-2.1.1/intl/ChangeLog -... +... $ ls -l result lrwxrwxrwx ... 2006-09-29 10:43 result -> /nix/store/632d2b22514d...-hello-2.1.1 diff --git a/doc/manual/installation/building-source.xml b/doc/manual/installation/building-source.xml index 772cda9cc..469aaebe9 100644 --- a/doc/manual/installation/building-source.xml +++ b/doc/manual/installation/building-source.xml @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ following commands: -$ ./configure options... +$ ./configure options... $ make $ make install @@ -26,16 +26,16 @@ $ ./bootstrap.sh The installation path can be specified by passing the - to + to configure. The default installation directory is /usr/local. You can change this to any location you like. You must have write permission to the -prefix path. +prefix path. Nix keeps its store (the place where packages are stored) in /nix/store by default. This can be changed using -. +. It is best not to change the Nix store from its default, since doing so makes it impossible to use @@ -44,6 +44,6 @@ packages will need to be built from source. Nix keeps state (such as its database and log files) in /nix/var by default. This can be changed using -. +. diff --git a/doc/manual/installation/env-variables.xml b/doc/manual/installation/env-variables.xml index 436f15f31..cbce8559a 100644 --- a/doc/manual/installation/env-variables.xml +++ b/doc/manual/installation/env-variables.xml @@ -8,18 +8,18 @@ To use Nix, some environment variables should be set. In particular, PATH should contain the directories -prefix/bin and +prefix/bin and ~/.nix-profile/bin. The first directory contains the Nix tools themselves, while ~/.nix-profile is a symbolic link to the current user environment (an automatically generated package consisting of symlinks to installed packages). The simplest way to set the required environment variables is to include the file -prefix/etc/profile.d/nix.sh +prefix/etc/profile.d/nix.sh in your ~/.profile (or similar), like this: -source prefix/etc/profile.d/nix.sh +source prefix/etc/profile.d/nix.sh
diff --git a/doc/manual/installation/installing-binary.xml b/doc/manual/installation/installing-binary.xml index ad47ce8b9..439198e6c 100644 --- a/doc/manual/installation/installing-binary.xml +++ b/doc/manual/installation/installing-binary.xml @@ -421,7 +421,7 @@ LABEL=Nix\040Store /nix apfs rw,nobrowse NixOS.org hosts version-specific installation URLs for all Nix versions since 1.11.16, at - https://releases.nixos.org/nix/nix-version/install. + https://releases.nixos.org/nix/nix-version/install. diff --git a/doc/manual/installation/single-user.xml b/doc/manual/installation/single-user.xml index 09cdaa5d4..e9a761af3 100644 --- a/doc/manual/installation/single-user.xml +++ b/doc/manual/installation/single-user.xml @@ -7,9 +7,9 @@ Single-User Mode In single-user mode, all Nix operations that access the database -in prefix/var/nix/db +in prefix/var/nix/db or modify the Nix store in -prefix/store must be +prefix/store must be performed under the user ID that owns those directories. This is typically root. (If you install from RPM packages, that’s in fact the default ownership.) diff --git a/doc/manual/introduction/about-nix.xml b/doc/manual/introduction/about-nix.xml index dd09e2283..039185703 100644 --- a/doc/manual/introduction/about-nix.xml +++ b/doc/manual/introduction/about-nix.xml @@ -99,7 +99,7 @@ there after an upgrade. This means that you can roll back to the old version: -$ nix-env --upgrade some-packages +$ nix-env --upgrade some-packages $ nix-env --rollback diff --git a/doc/manual/introduction/quick-start.xml b/doc/manual/introduction/quick-start.xml index 1992c14ed..5d9a55e4e 100644 --- a/doc/manual/introduction/quick-start.xml +++ b/doc/manual/introduction/quick-start.xml @@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ docbook-xml-4.5 firefox-33.0.2 hello-2.9 libxslt-1.1.28 -... +... diff --git a/doc/manual/packages/basic-package-mgmt.xml b/doc/manual/packages/basic-package-mgmt.xml index 758a4500d..b8a2c7ab3 100644 --- a/doc/manual/packages/basic-package-mgmt.xml +++ b/doc/manual/packages/basic-package-mgmt.xml @@ -74,10 +74,10 @@ then you need to pass the path to your Nixpkgs tree using the flag: -$ nix-env -qaf /path/to/nixpkgs +$ nix-env -qaf /path/to/nixpkgs -where /path/to/nixpkgs is where you’ve +where /path/to/nixpkgs is where you’ve unpacked or checked out Nixpkgs. You can select specific packages by name: diff --git a/doc/manual/packages/channels.xml b/doc/manual/packages/channels.xml index 1ed2bba52..494a81966 100644 --- a/doc/manual/packages/channels.xml +++ b/doc/manual/packages/channels.xml @@ -45,7 +45,7 @@ $ nix-channel --remove nixpkgs $ nix-channel --update This downloads and unpacks the Nix expressions in every channel -(downloaded from url/nixexprs.tar.bz2). +(downloaded from url/nixexprs.tar.bz2). It also makes the union of each channel’s Nix expressions available by default to nix-env operations (via the symlink ~/.nix-defexpr/channels). Consequently, you can diff --git a/doc/manual/packages/garbage-collector-roots.xml b/doc/manual/packages/garbage-collector-roots.xml index 8338e5392..9c91862b0 100644 --- a/doc/manual/packages/garbage-collector-roots.xml +++ b/doc/manual/packages/garbage-collector-roots.xml @@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ The roots of the garbage collector are all store paths to which there are symlinks in the directory -prefix/nix/var/nix/gcroots. +prefix/nix/var/nix/gcroots. For instance, the following command makes the path /nix/store/d718ef...-foo a root of the collector: @@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ That is, after this command, the garbage collector will not remove dependencies. Subdirectories of -prefix/nix/var/nix/gcroots +prefix/nix/var/nix/gcroots are also searched for symlinks. Symlinks to non-store paths are followed and searched for roots, but symlinks to non-store paths inside the paths reached in that way are not diff --git a/doc/manual/packages/profiles.xml b/doc/manual/packages/profiles.xml index 2809def24..d7529d56c 100644 --- a/doc/manual/packages/profiles.xml +++ b/doc/manual/packages/profiles.xml @@ -118,7 +118,7 @@ can also see all available generations: $ nix-env --list-generations You generally wouldn’t have -/nix/var/nix/profiles/some-profile/bin +/nix/var/nix/profiles/some-profile/bin in your PATH. Rather, there is a symlink ~/.nix-profile that points to your current profile. This means that you should put diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.10.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.10.xml index 9b4233546..01f70acfd 100644 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.10.xml +++ b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.10.xml @@ -46,9 +46,9 @@ irreversible. \*. nix-env -i - pkgname will now install + pkgname will now install the highest available version of - pkgname, rather than installing all + pkgname, rather than installing all available versions (which would probably give collisions) (NIX-31). @@ -85,7 +85,7 @@ irreversible. "--with-freetype2-library=${freetype}/lib" You can write arbitrary expressions within - ${...}, not just + ${...}, not just identifiers. Multi-line string literals. @@ -163,7 +163,7 @@ irreversible. attribute set are unique.) For instance, a quick way to perform a test build of a package in Nixpkgs is nix-build pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix -A - foo. nix-env -q + foo. nix-env -q --attr shows the attribute names corresponding to each derivation. @@ -173,13 +173,13 @@ irreversible. nix-build evaluates to a function whose arguments all have default values, the function will be called automatically. Also, the new command-line switch can be used to specify + name + value can be used to specify function arguments on the command line. nix-install-package --url - URL allows a package to be + URL allows a package to be installed directly from the given URL. @@ -192,7 +192,7 @@ irreversible. nix-build -o - symlink allows the symlink to + symlink allows the symlink to the build result to be named something other than result. diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.12.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.12.xml index 18978ac4b..c30124786 100644 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.12.xml +++ b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.12.xml @@ -59,17 +59,17 @@ $ rm __db* log.* derivers references referrers reserved validpaths DB_CONFIGThe garbage collector has a number of new options to allow only some of the garbage to be deleted. The option - tells the - collector to stop after at least N bytes + tells the + collector to stop after at least N bytes have been deleted. The option tells it to stop after the + N tells it to stop after the link count on /nix/store has dropped below - N. This is useful for very large Nix + N. This is useful for very large Nix stores on filesystems with a 32000 subdirectories limit (like ext3). The option causes store paths to be deleted in order of ascending last access time. This allows non-recently used stuff to be deleted. The - option + option specifies an upper limit to the last accessed time of paths that may be deleted. For instance, @@ -119,7 +119,7 @@ the following paths will be downloaded/copied (30.02 MiB): @-patterns as in Haskell. For instance, in a function definition - f = args @ {x, y, z}: ...; + f = args @ {x, y, z}: ...; args refers to the argument as a whole, which is further pattern-matched against the attribute set pattern @@ -131,7 +131,7 @@ the following paths will be downloaded/copied (30.02 MiB): takes at least the listed attributes, while ignoring additional attributes. For instance, - {stdenv, fetchurl, fuse, ...}: ... + {stdenv, fetchurl, fuse, ...}: ... defines a function that accepts any attribute set that includes at least the three listed attributes. @@ -163,7 +163,7 @@ the following paths will be downloaded/copied (30.02 MiB): nix-pack-closure and nix-unpack-closure. You can do almost the same thing but much more efficiently by doing nix-store --export - $(nix-store -qR paths) > closure and + $(nix-store -qR paths) > closure and nix-store --import < closure. diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.13.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.13.xml index cce2e4a26..8cb0ae9a5 100644 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.13.xml +++ b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.13.xml @@ -95,9 +95,9 @@ features: The scoping rules for inherit - (e) ... in recursive + (e) ... in recursive attribute sets have changed. The expression - e can now refer to the attributes + e can now refer to the attributes defined in the containing set. diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.16.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.16.xml index 43b7622c6..7039d4b0b 100644 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.16.xml +++ b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.16.xml @@ -27,14 +27,14 @@ 2), but this was not desirable because the number of actions to be performed in parallel was not configurable. Nix now has an option as well as a configuration + N as well as a configuration setting build-cores = - N that causes the + N that causes the environment variable NIX_BUILD_CORES to be set to - N when the builder is invoked. The + N when the builder is invoked. The builder can use this at its discretion to perform a parallel build, e.g., by calling make -j - N. In Nixpkgs, this can be + N. In Nixpkgs, this can be enabled on a per-package basis by setting the derivation attribute enableParallelBuilding to true. diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.6.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.6.xml index 6dc6521d3..23fbee173 100644 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.6.xml +++ b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.6.xml @@ -91,10 +91,10 @@ New language construct: with - E1; - E2 brings all attributes - defined in the attribute set E1 in - scope in E2. + E1; + E2 brings all attributes + defined in the attribute set E1 in + scope in E2. Added a map function. diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.8.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.8.xml index 825798fa9..1adb91a23 100644 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.8.xml +++ b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.8.xml @@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ is too old (i.e., for Nix <= 0.7) then you should unsubscribe from the offending channel (nix-channel --remove -URL; leave out +URL; leave out /MANIFEST), and subscribe to the same URL, with channels replaced by channels-v3 (e.g., nix-store -r - PATHS now builds all the + PATHS now builds all the derivations PATHS in parallel. Previously it did them sequentially (though exploiting possible parallelism between subderivations). This is nice for build farms. diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.1.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.1.xml index 2f26e7a24..f7dadb7cb 100644 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.1.xml +++ b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.1.xml @@ -72,8 +72,8 @@ to get rid of the bootstrap binaries in the Nixpkgs source tree and download them instead. You can use it by doing import <nix/fetchurl.nix> { url = - url; sha256 = - "hash"; }. (Shea Levy) + url; sha256 = + "hash"; }. (Shea Levy) diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.11.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.11.xml index fe422dd1f..28f6d4ac8 100644 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.11.xml +++ b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.11.xml @@ -62,8 +62,8 @@ $ nix-prefetch-url -A nix-repl.src The new flag will cause every build to - be executed N+1 times. If the build + N will cause every build to + be executed N+1 times. If the build output differs between any round, the build is rejected, and the output paths are not registered as valid. This is primarily useful to verify build determinism. (We already had a @@ -78,11 +78,11 @@ $ nix-prefetch-url -A nix-repl.src The options and , if they + build-repeat N, if they detect a difference between two runs of the same derivation and is given, will make the output of the other run available under - store-path-check. This + store-path-check. This makes it easier to investigate the non-determinism using tools like diffoscope, e.g., diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.2.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.2.xml index 29bd5bf81..f065f3ccc 100644 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.2.xml +++ b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.2.xml @@ -56,7 +56,7 @@ outputs = [ "lib" "headers" "doc" ]; lib, headers and doc. Other packages can refer to a specific output by referring to - pkg.output, + pkg.output, e.g. buildInputs = [ pkg.lib pkg.headers ]; diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.4.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.4.xml index aefb22f2b..8114ce6b5 100644 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.4.xml +++ b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.4.xml @@ -20,8 +20,8 @@ xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nix/commit/5526a282b5b44e9296e61e07d7d2626a builtins.hashString. Build logs are now stored in - /nix/var/log/nix/drvs/XX/, - where XX is the first two characters of + /nix/var/log/nix/drvs/XX/, + where XX is the first two characters of the derivation. This is useful on machines that keep a lot of build logs (such as Hydra servers). diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.6.1.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.6.1.xml index 9ecc52734..982871b51 100644 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.6.1.xml +++ b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.6.1.xml @@ -19,15 +19,15 @@ are: Previously, Nix optimised expressions such as - "${expr}" to - expr. Thus it neither checked whether - expr could be coerced to a string, nor + "${expr}" to + expr. Thus it neither checked whether + expr could be coerced to a string, nor applied such coercions. This meant that "${123}" evaluatued to 123, and "${./foo}" evaluated to ./foo (even though "${./foo} " evaluates to - "/nix/store/hash-foo "). + "/nix/store/hash-foo "). Nix now checks the type of antiquoted expressions and applies coercions. diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.7.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.7.xml index 44ecaa78d..e736c15a2 100644 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.7.xml +++ b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.7.xml @@ -34,7 +34,7 @@ following new features: download-via-ssh, that fetches binaries from remote machines via SSH. Specifying the flags --option use-ssh-substituter true --option ssh-substituter-hosts - user@hostname will cause Nix + user@hostname will cause Nix to download binaries from the specified machine, if it has them. @@ -49,9 +49,9 @@ following new features: $ nix-build '<nixpkgs>' -A patchelf - + $ nix-build '<nixpkgs>' -A patchelf --check - + error: derivation `/nix/store/1ipvxs…-patchelf-0.6' may not be deterministic: hash mismatch in output `/nix/store/4pc1dm…-patchelf-0.6.drv' @@ -173,11 +173,11 @@ $ nix-instantiate --eval '<nixos>' -A 'config.systemd.units."nscd.service".te nix-collect-garbage has a new flag - Nd, which deletes + Nd, which deletes all user environment generations older than - N days. Likewise, nix-env + N days. Likewise, nix-env --delete-generations accepts a - Nd age limit. + Nd age limit. diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.8.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.8.xml index 326990774..d7e2e99ad 100644 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.8.xml +++ b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.8.xml @@ -38,8 +38,8 @@ log-servers = http://hydra.nixos.org/log then it will try to get logs from -http://hydra.nixos.org/log/base name of the -store path. This allows you to do things like: +http://hydra.nixos.org/log/base name of the +store path. This allows you to do things like: $ nix-store -l $(which xterm) diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.0.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.0.xml index 57acfd0ba..6bef003ca 100644 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.0.xml +++ b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.0.xml @@ -42,7 +42,7 @@ The command nix-push has been removed as part of the effort to eliminate Nix's dependency on Perl. You can use nix copy instead, e.g. nix copy - --to file:///tmp/my-binary-cache paths… + --to file:///tmp/my-binary-cache paths… @@ -136,8 +136,8 @@ http-connections 100 you can write --http-connections 100. Boolean options can be written as - --foo or - --no-foo + --foo or + --no-foo (e.g. ). @@ -551,7 +551,7 @@ is still supported for compatibility, but it is also possible to specify builders in nix.conf by setting the option builders = - @path. + @path. @@ -580,9 +580,9 @@ You can now use - channel:channel-name as a + channel:channel-name as a short-hand for - https://nixos.org/channels/channel-name/nixexprs.tar.xz. For + https://nixos.org/channels/channel-name/nixexprs.tar.xz. For example, nix-build channel:nixos-15.09 -A hello will build the GNU Hello package from the nixos-15.09 channel. In the future, this may diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md index 3f84373e2..92abeb73e 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md @@ -28,8 +28,8 @@ By default Nix reads settings from the following places: The configuration files consist of `name = value` pairs, one per line. Other files can be included with a line like `include -path`, where path is interpreted relative to the current conf file and a -missing file is an error unless `!include` is used instead. Comments +path`, where *path* is interpreted relative to the current conf file and +a missing file is an error unless `!include` is used instead. Comments start with a `#` character. Here is an example configuration file: keep-outputs = true # Nice for developers @@ -216,7 +216,7 @@ The following settings are currently available: - `hashed-mirrors` A list of web servers used by `builtins.fetchurl` to obtain files by hash. The default is `http://tarballs.nixos.org/`. Given a hash type - ht and a base-16 hash h, Nix will try to download the file from + *ht* and a base-16 hash *h*, Nix will try to download the file from `hashed-mirror/ht/h`. This allows files to be downloaded even if they have disappeared from their original URI. For example, given the default mirror `http://tarballs.nixos.org/`, when building the @@ -504,8 +504,8 @@ The following settings are currently available: A list of paths bind-mounted into Nix sandbox environments. You can use the syntax `target=source` to mount a path in a different location in the sandbox; for instance, `/bin=/nix-bin` will mount - the path `/nix-bin` as `/bin` inside the sandbox. If source is - followed by `?`, then it is not an error if source does not exist; + the path `/nix-bin` as `/bin` inside the sandbox. If *source* is + followed by `?`, then it is not an error if *source* does not exist; for example, `/dev/nvidiactl?` specifies that `/dev/nvidiactl` will only be mounted in the sandbox if it exists in the host filesystem. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md index 7d0567760..ddebc4b1b 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md @@ -43,16 +43,16 @@ paths # Description The `nix-build` command builds the derivations described by the Nix -expressions in paths. If the build succeeds, it places a symlink to the -result in the current directory. The symlink is called `result`. If +expressions in *paths*. If the build succeeds, it places a symlink to +the result in the current directory. The symlink is called `result`. If there are multiple Nix expressions, or the Nix expressions evaluate to multiple derivations, multiple sequentially numbered symlinks are created (`result`, `result-2`, and so on). -If no paths are specified, then `nix-build` will use `default.nix` in +If no *paths* are specified, then `nix-build` will use `default.nix` in the current directory, if it exists. -If an element of paths starts with `http://` or `https://`, it is +If an element of *paths* starts with `http://` or `https://`, it is interpreted as the URL of a tarball that will be downloaded and unpacked to a temporary location. The tarball must include a single top-level directory containing at least a file named `default.nix`. @@ -83,9 +83,9 @@ All options not listed here are passed to `nix-store - `--dry-run` Show what store paths would be built or downloaded. - - `--out-link` / `-o` outlink + - `--out-link` / `-o` *outlink* Change the name of the symlink to the output path created from - `result` to outlink. + `result` to *outlink*. The following common options are supported: diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-channel.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-channel.md index d427151a0..0c20788f0 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-channel.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-channel.md @@ -42,25 +42,26 @@ To see the list of official NixOS channels, visit This command has the following operations: - - `--add` url \[name\] - Adds a channel named name with URL url to the list of subscribed - channels. If name is omitted, it defaults to the last component of - url, with the suffixes `-stable` or `-unstable` removed. + - `--add` *url* \[*name*\] + Adds a channel named *name* with URL *url* to the list of subscribed + channels. If *name* is omitted, it defaults to the last component of + *url*, with the suffixes `-stable` or `-unstable` removed. - - `--remove` name - Removes the channel named name from the list of subscribed channels. + - `--remove` *name* + Removes the channel named *name* from the list of subscribed + channels. - `--list` Prints the names and URLs of all subscribed channels on standard output. - - `--update` \[names…\] + - `--update` \[*names*…\] Downloads the Nix expressions of all subscribed channels (or only - those included in names if specified) and makes them the default for - `nix-env` operations (by symlinking them from the directory + those included in *names* if specified) and makes them the default + for `nix-env` operations (by symlinking them from the directory `~/.nix-defexpr`). - - `--rollback` \[generation\] + - `--rollback` \[*generation*\] Reverts the previous call to `nix-channel --update`. Optionally, you can specify a specific channel generation number to restore. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.md index 7946dc875..77b5d42d3 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.md @@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ additional options: `-d` (`--delete-old`), which deletes all old generations of all profiles in `/nix/var/nix/profiles` by invoking `nix-env --delete-generations old` on all profiles (of course, this makes rollbacks to previous configurations impossible); and -`--delete-older-than` period, where period is a value such as `30d`, +`--delete-older-than` *period*, where period is a value such as `30d`, which deletes all generations older than the specified number of days in all profiles in `/nix/var/nix/profiles` (except for the generations that were active at that point in time). diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md index 90bf6ea08..90a2bd351 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md @@ -98,7 +98,7 @@ This section lists the options that are common to all operations. These options are allowed for every subcommand, though they may not always have an effect. See also [???](#sec-common-options). - - `--file` / `-f` path + - `--file` / `-f` *path* Specifies the Nix expression (designated below as the *active Nix expression*) used by the `--install`, `--upgrade`, and `--query --available` operations to obtain derivations. The default is @@ -109,7 +109,7 @@ have an effect. See also [???](#sec-common-options). unpacked to a temporary location. The tarball must include a single top-level directory containing at least a file named `default.nix`. - - `--profile` / `-p` path + - `--profile` / `-p` *path* Specifies the profile to be used by those operations that operate on a profile (designated below as the *active profile*). A profile is a sequence of user environments called *generations*, one of which is @@ -125,10 +125,10 @@ have an effect. See also [???](#sec-common-options). [substituted](#gloss-substitute) (i.e., downloaded) and which paths will be built from source (because no substitute is available). - - `--system-filter` system + - `--system-filter` *system* By default, operations such as `--query --available` show derivations matching any platform. This option - allows you to use derivations for the specified platform system. + allows you to use derivations for the specified platform *system*. @@ -200,17 +200,17 @@ args The install operation creates a new user environment, based on the current generation of the active profile, to which a set of store paths -described by args is added. The arguments args map to store paths in a -number of possible ways: +described by *args* is added. The arguments *args* map to store paths in +a number of possible ways: - - By default, args is a set of derivation names denoting derivations + - By default, *args* is a set of derivation names denoting derivations in the active Nix expression. These are realised, and the resulting output paths are installed. Currently installed derivations with a name equal to the name of a derivation being added are removed unless the option `--preserve-installed` is specified. - If there are multiple derivations matching a name in args that have - the same name (e.g., `gcc-3.3.6` and `gcc-4.1.1`), then the + If there are multiple derivations matching a name in *args* that + have the same name (e.g., `gcc-3.3.6` and `gcc-4.1.1`), then the derivation with the highest *priority* is used. A derivation can define a priority by declaring the `meta.priority` attribute. This attribute should be a number, with a higher value denoting a lower @@ -230,22 +230,23 @@ number of possible ways: unambiguous. To find out the attribute paths of available packages, use `nix-env -qaP`. - - If `--from-profile` path is given, args is a set of names denoting - installed store paths in the profile path. This is an easy way to - copy user environment elements from one profile to another. + - If `--from-profile` *path* is given, *args* is a set of names + denoting installed store paths in the profile *path*. This is an + easy way to copy user environment elements from one profile to + another. - - If `--from-expression` is given, args are Nix + - If `--from-expression` is given, *args* are Nix [functions](#ss-functions) that are called with the active Nix expression as their single argument. The derivations returned by those function calls are installed. This allows derivations to be specified in an unambiguous way, which is necessary if there are multiple derivations with the same name. - - If args are store derivations, then these are + - If *args* are store derivations, then these are [realised](#rsec-nix-store-realise), and the resulting output paths are installed. - - If args are store paths that are not store derivations, then these + - If *args* are store paths that are not store derivations, then these are [realised](#rsec-nix-store-realise) and installed. - By default all outputs are installed for each derivation. That can @@ -359,12 +360,12 @@ args The upgrade operation creates a new user environment, based on the current generation of the active profile, in which all store paths are replaced for which there are newer versions in the set of paths -described by args. Paths for which there are no newer versions are left -untouched; this is not an error. It is also not an error if an element -of args matches no installed derivations. +described by *args*. Paths for which there are no newer versions are +left untouched; this is not an error. It is also not an error if an +element of *args* matches no installed derivations. -For a description of how args is mapped to a set of store paths, see -[`--install`](#rsec-nix-env-install). If args describes multiple store +For a description of how *args* is mapped to a set of store paths, see +[`--install`](#rsec-nix-env-install). If *args* describes multiple store paths with the same symbolic name, only the one with the highest version is installed. @@ -462,7 +463,7 @@ drvnames The uninstall operation creates a new user environment, based on the current generation of the active profile, from which the store paths -designated by the symbolic names names are removed. +designated by the symbolic names *names* are removed. ## Examples @@ -629,7 +630,7 @@ The query operation displays information about either the store paths that are installed in the current generation of the active profile (`--installed`), or the derivations that are available for installation in the active Nix expression (`--available`). It only prints information -about derivations whose symbolic name matches one of names. +about derivations whose symbolic name matches one of *names*. The derivations are sorted by their `name` attributes. @@ -696,14 +697,14 @@ derivation is shown unless `--no-name` is specified. upgrades for installed packages are available in a Nix expression. A column is added with the following meaning: - - `<` version + - `<` *version* A newer version of the package is available or installed. - - `=` version + - `=` *version* At most the same version of the package is available or installed. - - `>` version + - `>` *version* Only older versions of the package are available or installed. - `- ?` @@ -806,8 +807,8 @@ path ## Description -This operation makes path the current profile for the user. That is, the -symlink `~/.nix-profile` is made to point to path. +This operation makes *path* the current profile for the user. That is, +the symlink `~/.nix-profile` is made to point to *path*. ## Examples @@ -882,9 +883,9 @@ generation ## Description -This operation makes generation number generation the current generation -of the active profile. That is, if the `profile` is the path to the -active profile, then the symlink `profile` is made to point to +This operation makes generation number *generation* the current +generation of the active profile. That is, if the `profile` is the path +to the active profile, then the symlink `profile` is made to point to `profile-generation-link`, which is in turn a symlink to the actual user environment in the Nix store. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-hash.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-hash.md index d433cbc5b..3b8bbf740 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-hash.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-hash.md @@ -37,7 +37,7 @@ hash # Description The command `nix-hash` computes the cryptographic hash of the contents -of each path and prints it on standard output. By default, it computes +of each *path* and prints it on standard output. By default, it computes an MD5 hash, but other hash algorithms are available as well. The hash is printed in hexadecimal. To generate the same hash as `nix-prefetch-url` you have to specify multiple arguments, see below for @@ -55,9 +55,9 @@ path | md5sum`. - `--flat` Print the cryptographic hash of the contents of each regular file - path. That is, do not compute the hash over the dump of path. The - result is identical to that produced by the GNU commands `md5sum` - and `sha1sum`. + *path*. That is, do not compute the hash over the dump of *path*. + The result is identical to that produced by the GNU commands + `md5sum` and `sha1sum`. - `--base32` Print the hash in a base-32 representation rather than hexadecimal. @@ -67,17 +67,17 @@ path | md5sum`. - `--truncate` Truncate hashes longer than 160 bits (such as SHA-256) to 160 bits. - - `--type` hashAlgo + - `--type` *hashAlgo* Use the specified cryptographic hash algorithm, which can be one of `md5`, `sha1`, and `sha256`. - `--to-base16` Don’t hash anything, but convert the base-32 hash representation - hash to hexadecimal. + *hash* to hexadecimal. - `--to-base32` Don’t hash anything, but convert the hexadecimal hash representation - hash to base-32. + *hash* to base-32. # Examples diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md index 449f5f70f..179fbf5ba 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md @@ -56,19 +56,19 @@ files The command `nix-instantiate` generates [store derivations](#gloss-derivation) from (high-level) Nix expressions. It -evaluates the Nix expressions in each of files (which defaults to -./default.nix). Each top-level expression should evaluate to a +evaluates the Nix expressions in each of *files* (which defaults to +*./default.nix*). Each top-level expression should evaluate to a derivation, a list of derivations, or a set of derivations. The paths of the resulting store derivations are printed on standard output. -If files is the character `-`, then a Nix expression will be read from +If *files* is the character `-`, then a Nix expression will be read from standard input. See also [???](#sec-common-options) for a list of common options. # Options - - `--add-root` path; `--indirect` + - `--add-root` *path*; `--indirect` See the [corresponding options](#opt-add-root) in `nix-store`. - `--parse` diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.md index bf8084e45..f7de27402 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.md @@ -31,9 +31,9 @@ hash # Description The command `nix-prefetch-url` downloads the file referenced by the URL -url, prints its cryptographic hash, and copies it into the Nix store. -The file name in the store is `hash-baseName`, where baseName is -everything following the final slash in url. +*url*, prints its cryptographic hash, and copies it into the Nix store. +The file name in the store is `hash-baseName`, where *baseName* is +everything following the final slash in *url*. This command is just a convenience for Nix expression writers. Often a Nix expression fetches some source distribution from the network using @@ -44,10 +44,10 @@ again when you build your Nix expression. Since `fetchurl` uses the same name for the downloaded file as `nix-prefetch-url`, the redundant download can be avoided. -If hash is specified, then a download is not performed if the Nix store -already contains a file with the same hash and base name. Otherwise, the -file is downloaded, and an error is signaled if the actual hash of the -file does not match the specified hash. +If *hash* is specified, then a download is not performed if the Nix +store already contains a file with the same hash and base name. +Otherwise, the file is downloaded, and an error is signaled if the +actual hash of the file does not match the specified hash. This command prints the hash on standard output. Additionally, if the option `--print-path` is used, the path of the downloaded file in the @@ -55,7 +55,7 @@ Nix store is also printed. # Options - - `--type` hashAlgo + - `--type` *hashAlgo* Use the specified cryptographic hash algorithm, which can be one of `md5`, `sha1`, and `sha256`. @@ -67,10 +67,10 @@ Nix store is also printed. result to the Nix store. The resulting hash can be used with functions such as Nixpkgs’s `fetchzip` or `fetchFromGitHub`. - - `--name` name + - `--name` *name* Override the name of the file in the Nix store. By default, this is - `hash-basename`, where basename is the last component of url. - Overriding the name is necessary when basename contains characters + `hash-basename`, where *basename* is the last component of *url*. + Overriding the name is necessary when *basename* contains characters that are not allowed in Nix store paths. # Examples diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md index c6910e3f5..9e2b781ab 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md @@ -61,14 +61,14 @@ path The command `nix-shell` will build the dependencies of the specified derivation, but not the derivation itself. It will then start an interactive shell in which all environment variables defined by the -derivation path have been set to their corresponding values, and the +derivation *path* have been set to their corresponding values, and the script `$stdenv/setup` has been sourced. This is useful for reproducing the environment of a derivation for development. -If path is not given, `nix-shell` defaults to `shell.nix` if it exists, -and `default.nix` otherwise. +If *path* is not given, `nix-shell` defaults to `shell.nix` if it +exists, and `default.nix` otherwise. -If path starts with `http://` or `https://`, it is interpreted as the +If *path* starts with `http://` or `https://`, it is interpreted as the URL of a tarball that will be downloaded and unpacked to a temporary location. The tarball must include a single top-level directory containing at least a file named `default.nix`. @@ -91,8 +91,8 @@ All options not listed here are passed to `nix-store --realise`, except for `--arg` and `--attr` / `-A` which are passed to `nix-instantiate`. See also [???](#sec-common-options). - - `--command` cmd - In the environment of the derivation, run the shell command cmd. + - `--command` *cmd* + In the environment of the derivation, run the shell command *cmd*. This command is executed in an interactive shell. (Use `--run` to use a non-interactive shell instead.) However, a call to `exit` is implicitly added to the command, so the shell will exit after @@ -102,14 +102,14 @@ All options not listed here are passed to `nix-store interactive shell. This can be useful for doing any additional initialisation. - - `--run` cmd + - `--run` *cmd* Like `--command`, but executes the command in a non-interactive shell. This means (among other things) that if you hit Ctrl-C while the command is running, the shell exits. - - `--exclude` regexp + - `--exclude` *regexp* Do not build any dependencies whose store path matches the regular - expression regexp. This option may be specified multiple times. + expression *regexp*. This option may be specified multiple times. - `--pure` If this flag is specified, the environment is almost entirely @@ -120,19 +120,19 @@ All options not listed here are passed to `nix-store installation) `/etc/bashrc` are still sourced, so any variables set there will affect the interactive shell. - - `--packages` / `-p` packages… + - `--packages` / `-p` *packages*… Set up an environment in which the specified packages are present. The command line arguments are interpreted as attribute names inside the Nix Packages collection. Thus, `nix-shell -p libjpeg openjdk` will start a shell in which the packages denoted by the attribute names `libjpeg` and `openjdk` are present. - - `-i` interpreter + - `-i` *interpreter* The chained script interpreter to be invoked by `nix-shell`. Only applicable in `#!`-scripts (described [below](#ssec-nix-shell-shebang)). - - `--keep` name + - `--keep` *name* When a `--pure` shell is started, keep the listed environment variables. @@ -199,10 +199,10 @@ done by starting the script with the following lines: #! /usr/bin/env nix-shell #! nix-shell -i real-interpreter -p packages -where real-interpreter is the “real” script interpreter that will be +where *real-interpreter* is the “real” script interpreter that will be invoked by `nix-shell` after it has obtained the dependencies and -initialised the environment, and packages are the attribute names of the -dependencies in Nixpkgs. +initialised the environment, and *packages* are the attribute names of +the dependencies in Nixpkgs. The lines starting with `#! nix-shell` specify `nix-shell` options (see above). Note that you cannot write `#! /usr/bin/env nix-shell -i ...` diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md index 703e71076..a666de49b 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md @@ -37,10 +37,10 @@ options are allowed for every subcommand, though they may not always have an effect. See also [???](#sec-common-options) for a list of common options. - - `--add-root` path + - `--add-root` *path* Causes the result of a realisation (`--realise` and `--force-realise`) to be registered as a root of the garbage - collector(see [???](#ssec-gc-roots)). The root is stored in path, + collector(see [???](#ssec-gc-roots)). The root is stored in *path*, which must be inside a directory that is scanned for roots by the garbage collector (i.e., typically in a subdirectory of `/nix/var/nix/gcroots/`) *unless* the `--indirect` flag is used. @@ -56,8 +56,8 @@ options. result in the current directory; such a build result should not be garbage-collected unless the symlink is removed. - The `--indirect` flag causes a uniquely named symlink to path to be - stored in `/nix/var/nix/gcroots/auto/`. For instance, + The `--indirect` flag causes a uniquely named symlink to *path* to + be stored in `/nix/var/nix/gcroots/auto/`. For instance, $ nix-store --add-root /home/eelco/bla/result --indirect -r ... @@ -262,10 +262,11 @@ The following suboperations may be specified: By default, all unreachable paths are deleted. The following options control what gets deleted and in what order: - - `--max-freed` bytes - Keep deleting paths until at least bytes bytes have been deleted, - then stop. The argument bytes can be followed by the multiplicative - suffix `K`, `M`, `G` or `T`, denoting KiB, MiB, GiB or TiB units. + - `--max-freed` *bytes* + Keep deleting paths until at least *bytes* bytes have been deleted, + then stop. The argument *bytes* can be followed by the + multiplicative suffix `K`, `M`, `G` or `T`, denoting KiB, MiB, GiB + or TiB units. The behaviour of the collector is also influenced by the [`keep-outputs`](#conf-keep-outputs) and @@ -303,7 +304,7 @@ paths ## Description -The operation `--delete` deletes the store paths paths from the Nix +The operation `--delete` deletes the store paths *paths* from the Nix store, but only if it is safe to do so; that is, when the path is not reachable from a root of the garbage collector. This means that you can only delete paths that would also be deleted by `nix-store --gc`. Thus, @@ -379,7 +380,7 @@ The operation `--query` displays various bits of information about the store paths . The queries are described below. At most one query can be specified. The default query is `--outputs`. -The paths paths may also be symlinks from outside of the Nix store, to +The paths *paths* may also be symlinks from outside of the Nix store, to the Nix store. In that case, the query is applied to the target of the symlink. @@ -397,11 +398,11 @@ symlink. - `--outputs` Prints out the [output paths](#gloss-output-path) of the store - derivations paths. These are the paths that will be produced when + derivations *paths*. These are the paths that will be produced when the derivation is built. - `--requisites`; `-R` - Prints out the [closure](#gloss-closure) of the store path paths. + Prints out the [closure](#gloss-closure) of the store path *paths*. This query has one option: @@ -419,29 +420,30 @@ symlink. - `--references` Prints the set of [references](#gloss-reference) of the store paths - paths, that is, their immediate dependencies. (For *all* + *paths*, that is, their immediate dependencies. (For *all* dependencies, use `--requisites`.) - `--referrers` - Prints the set of *referrers* of the store paths paths, that is, the - store paths currently existing in the Nix store that refer to one of - paths. Note that contrary to the references, the set of referrers is - not constant; it can change as store paths are added or removed. + Prints the set of *referrers* of the store paths *paths*, that is, + the store paths currently existing in the Nix store that refer to + one of *paths*. Note that contrary to the references, the set of + referrers is not constant; it can change as store paths are added or + removed. - `--referrers-closure` - Prints the closure of the set of store paths paths under the + Prints the closure of the set of store paths *paths* under the referrers relation; that is, all store paths that directly or - indirectly refer to one of paths. These are all the path currently - in the Nix store that are dependent on paths. + indirectly refer to one of *paths*. These are all the path currently + in the Nix store that are dependent on *paths*. - `--deriver`; `-d` - Prints the [deriver](#gloss-deriver) of the store paths paths. If + Prints the [deriver](#gloss-deriver) of the store paths *paths*. If the path has no deriver (e.g., if it is a source file), or if the deriver is not known (e.g., in the case of a binary-only deployment), the string `unknown-deriver` is printed. - `--graph` - Prints the references graph of the store paths paths in the format + Prints the references graph of the store paths *paths* in the format of the `dot` tool of AT\&T's [Graphviz package](http://www.graphviz.org/). This can be used to visualise dependency graphs. To obtain a build-time dependency graph, apply @@ -449,40 +451,40 @@ symlink. apply it to an output path. - `--tree` - Prints the references graph of the store paths paths as a nested + Prints the references graph of the store paths *paths* as a nested ASCII tree. References are ordered by descending closure size; this tends to flatten the tree, making it more readable. The query only recurses into a store path when it is first encountered; this prevents a blowup of the tree representation of the graph. - `--graphml` - Prints the references graph of the store paths paths in the + Prints the references graph of the store paths *paths* in the [GraphML](http://graphml.graphdrawing.org/) file format. This can be used to visualise dependency graphs. To obtain a build-time dependency graph, apply this to a store derivation. To obtain a runtime dependency graph, apply it to an output path. - - `--binding` name; `-b` name - Prints the value of the attribute name (i.e., environment variable) - of the store derivations paths. It is an error for a derivation to - not have the specified attribute. + - `--binding` *name*; `-b` *name* + Prints the value of the attribute *name* (i.e., environment + variable) of the store derivations *paths*. It is an error for a + derivation to not have the specified attribute. - `--hash` - Prints the SHA-256 hash of the contents of the store paths paths + Prints the SHA-256 hash of the contents of the store paths *paths* (that is, the hash of the output of `nix-store --dump` on the given paths). Since the hash is stored in the Nix database, this is a fast operation. - `--size` - Prints the size in bytes of the contents of the store paths paths — - to be precise, the size of the output of `nix-store --dump` on the - given paths. Note that the actual disk space required by the store - paths may be higher, especially on filesystems with large cluster - sizes. + Prints the size in bytes of the contents of the store paths *paths* + — to be precise, the size of the output of `nix-store --dump` on + the given paths. Note that the actual disk space required by the + store paths may be higher, especially on filesystems with large + cluster sizes. - `--roots` Prints the garbage collector roots that point, directly or - indirectly, at the store paths paths. + indirectly, at the store paths *paths*. ## Examples @@ -708,8 +710,8 @@ path ## Description The operation `--dump` produces a NAR (Nix ARchive) file containing the -contents of the file system tree rooted at path. The archive is written -to standard output. +contents of the file system tree rooted at *path*. The archive is +written to standard output. A NAR archive is like a TAR or Zip archive, but it contains only the information that Nix considers important. For instance, timestamps are @@ -745,8 +747,8 @@ path ## Description -The operation `--restore` unpacks a NAR archive to path, which must not -already exist. The archive is read from standard input. +The operation `--restore` unpacks a NAR archive to *path*, which must +not already exist. The archive is read from standard input. # Operation `--export` diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common.md index ac9d996c3..dce95773a 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common.md @@ -44,9 +44,9 @@ Most Nix commands accept the following command-line options: This option may be specified repeatedly. See the previous verbosity levels list. - - `--log-format` format + - `--log-format` *format* This option can be used to change the output of the log format, with - format being one of: + *format* being one of: - raw This is the raw format, as outputted by nix-build. @@ -68,7 +68,7 @@ Most Nix commands accept the following command-line options: output and error are always written to a log file in `prefix/nix/var/log/nix`. - - `--max-jobs` / `-j` number + - `--max-jobs` / `-j` *number* Sets the maximum number of build jobs that Nix will perform in parallel to the specified number. Specify `auto` to use the number of CPUs in the system. The default is specified by the @@ -144,7 +144,7 @@ Most Nix commands accept the following command-line options: database. Most Nix operations do need database access, so those operations will fail. - - `--arg` name value + - `--arg` *name* *value* This option is accepted by `nix-env`, `nix-instantiate`, `nix-shell` and `nix-build`. When evaluating Nix expressions, the expression evaluator will automatically try to call functions that it @@ -153,8 +153,8 @@ Most Nix commands accept the following command-line options: defaultValue }: ...`). With `--arg`, you can also call functions that have arguments without a default value (or override a default value). That is, if - the evaluator encounters a function with an argument named name, it - will call it with value value. + the evaluator encounters a function with an argument named *name*, + it will call it with value *value*. For instance, the top-level `default.nix` in Nixpkgs is actually a function: @@ -172,18 +172,18 @@ Most Nix commands accept the following command-line options: \"i686-freebsd\"`. (Note that since the argument is a Nix string literal, you have to escape the quotes.) - - `--argstr` name value + - `--argstr` *name* *value* This option is like `--arg`, only the value is not a Nix expression but a string. So instead of `--arg system \"i686-linux\"` (the outer quotes are to keep the shell happy) you can say `--argstr system i686-linux`. - - `--attr` / `-A` attrPath + - `--attr` / `-A` *attrPath* Select an attribute from the top-level Nix expression being evaluated. (`nix-env`, `nix-instantiate`, `nix-build` and - `nix-shell` only.) The *attribute path* attrPath is a sequence of + `nix-shell` only.) The *attribute path* *attrPath* is a sequence of attribute names separated by dots. For instance, given a top-level - Nix expression e, the attribute path `xorg.xorgserver` would cause + Nix expression *e*, the attribute path `xorg.xorgserver` would cause the expression `e.xorg.xorgserver` to be used. See [`nix-env --install`](#refsec-nix-env-install-examples) for some concrete examples. @@ -204,14 +204,14 @@ Most Nix commands accept the following command-line options: use, give your expression to the `nix-shell -p` convenience flag instead. - - `-I` path + - `-I` *path* Add a path to the Nix expression search path. This option may be given multiple times. See the NIX\_PATH\ environment variable for information on the semantics of the Nix search path. Paths added through `-I` take precedence over `NIX_PATH`. - - `--option` name value - Set the Nix configuration option name to value. This overrides + - `--option` *name* *value* + Set the Nix configuration option *name* to *value*. This overrides settings in the Nix configuration file (see nix.conf5). - `--repair` diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/advanced-attributes.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/advanced-attributes.md index 01e18513d..3582fa268 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/advanced-attributes.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/advanced-attributes.md @@ -54,9 +54,9 @@ Derivations can declare some infrequently used optional attributes. attribute should be a list of pairs `[ name1 path1 name2 path2 ... - ]`. The references graph of each pathN will be stored in a text file - nameN in the temporary build directory. The text files have the - format used by `nix-store + ]`. The references graph of each *pathN* will be stored in a text + file *nameN* in the temporary build directory. The text files have + the format used by `nix-store --register-validity` (with the deriver fields left empty). For example, when the following derivation is built: @@ -204,9 +204,9 @@ Derivations can declare some infrequently used optional attributes. then when the builder runs, the environment variable `bigPath` will contain the absolute path to a temporary file containing `a very long - string`. That is, for any attribute x listed in `passAsFile`, Nix + string`. That is, for any attribute *x* listed in `passAsFile`, Nix will pass an environment variable `xPath` holding the path of the - file containing the value of attribute x. This is useful when you + file containing the value of attribute *x*. This is useful when you need to pass large strings to a builder, since most operating systems impose a limit on the size of the environment (typically, a few hundred kilobyte). diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md index 8faf4b939..8f19c692a 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md @@ -9,42 +9,42 @@ scope. Instead, you can access them through the `builtins` built-in value, which is a set that contains all built-in functions and values. For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. - - `abort` s; `builtins.abort` s - Abort Nix expression evaluation, print error message s. + - `abort` *s*; `builtins.abort` *s* + Abort Nix expression evaluation, print error message *s*. - - `builtins.add` e1 e2 - Return the sum of the numbers e1 and e2. + - `builtins.add` *e1* *e2* + Return the sum of the numbers *e1* and *e2*. - - `builtins.all` pred list - Return `true` if the function pred returns `true` for all elements - of list, and `false` otherwise. + - `builtins.all` *pred* *list* + Return `true` if the function *pred* returns `true` for all elements + of *list*, and `false` otherwise. - - `builtins.any` pred list - Return `true` if the function pred returns `true` for at least one - element of list, and `false` otherwise. + - `builtins.any` *pred* *list* + Return `true` if the function *pred* returns `true` for at least one + element of *list*, and `false` otherwise. - - `builtins.attrNames` set - Return the names of the attributes in the set set in an + - `builtins.attrNames` *set* + Return the names of the attributes in the set *set* in an alphabetically sorted list. For instance, `builtins.attrNames { y = 1; x = "foo"; }` evaluates to `[ "x" "y" ]`. - - `builtins.attrValues` set - Return the values of the attributes in the set set in the order + - `builtins.attrValues` *set* + Return the values of the attributes in the set *set* in the order corresponding to the sorted attribute names. - - `baseNameOf` s - Return the *base name* of the string s, that is, everything + - `baseNameOf` *s* + Return the *base name* of the string *s*, that is, everything following the final slash in the string. This is similar to the GNU `basename` command. - - `builtins.bitAnd` e1 e2 - Return the bitwise AND of the integers e1 and e2. + - `builtins.bitAnd` *e1* *e2* + Return the bitwise AND of the integers *e1* and *e2*. - - `builtins.bitOr` e1 e2 - Return the bitwise OR of the integers e1 and e2. + - `builtins.bitOr` *e1* *e2* + Return the bitwise OR of the integers *e1* and *e2*. - - `builtins.bitXor` e1 e2 - Return the bitwise XOR of the integers e1 and e2. + - `builtins.bitXor` *e1* *e2* + Return the bitwise XOR of the integers *e1* and *e2*. - `builtins` The set `builtins` contains all the built-in functions and values. @@ -56,17 +56,17 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. This allows a Nix expression to fall back gracefully on older Nix installations that don’t have the desired built-in function. - - `builtins.compareVersions` s1 s2 + - `builtins.compareVersions` *s1* *s2* Compare two strings representing versions and return `-1` if version - s1 is older than version s2, `0` if they are the same, and `1` if s1 - is newer than s2. The version comparison algorithm is the same as - the one used by [`nix-env + *s1* is older than version *s2*, `0` if they are the same, and `1` + if *s1* is newer than *s2*. The version comparison algorithm is the + same as the one used by [`nix-env -u`](#ssec-version-comparisons). - - `builtins.concatLists` lists + - `builtins.concatLists` *lists* Concatenate a list of lists into a single list. - - `builtins.concatStringsSep` separator list + - `builtins.concatStringsSep` *separator* *list* Concatenate a list of strings with a separator between each element, e.g. `concatStringsSep "/" ["usr" "local" "bin"] == "usr/local/bin"` @@ -76,37 +76,37 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. identifier for the Nix installation on which the expression is being evaluated, such as `"i686-linux"` or `"x86_64-darwin"`. - - `builtins.deepSeq` e1 e2 + - `builtins.deepSeq` *e1* *e2* This is like `seq e1 - e2`, except that e1 is evaluated *deeply*: if it’s a list or set, + e2`, except that *e1* is evaluated *deeply*: if it’s a list or set, its elements or attributes are also evaluated recursively. - - `derivation` attrs; `builtins.derivation` attrs + - `derivation` *attrs*; `builtins.derivation` *attrs* `derivation` is described in [???](#ssec-derivation). - - `dirOf` s; `builtins.dirOf` s - Return the directory part of the string s, that is, everything + - `dirOf` *s*; `builtins.dirOf` *s* + Return the directory part of the string *s*, that is, everything before the final slash in the string. This is similar to the GNU `dirname` command. - - `builtins.div` e1 e2 - Return the quotient of the numbers e1 and e2. + - `builtins.div` *e1* *e2* + Return the quotient of the numbers *e1* and *e2*. - - `builtins.elem` x xs - Return `true` if a value equal to x occurs in the list xs, and + - `builtins.elem` *x* *xs* + Return `true` if a value equal to *x* occurs in the list *xs*, and `false` otherwise. - - `builtins.elemAt` xs n - Return element n from the list xs. Elements are counted starting + - `builtins.elemAt` *xs* *n* + Return element *n* from the list *xs*. Elements are counted starting from 0. A fatal error occurs if the index is out of bounds. - - `builtins.fetchurl` url + - `builtins.fetchurl` *url* Download the specified URL and return the path of the downloaded file. This function is not available if [restricted evaluation mode](#conf-restrict-eval) is enabled. - - `fetchTarball` url; `builtins.fetchTarball` url + - `fetchTarball` *url*; `builtins.fetchTarball` *url* Download the specified URL, unpack it and return the path of the unpacked tree. The file must be a tape archive (`.tar`) compressed with `gzip`, `bzip2` or `xz`. The top-level path component of the @@ -142,10 +142,10 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. This function is not available if [restricted evaluation mode](#conf-restrict-eval) is enabled. - - `builtins.fetchGit` args - Fetch a path from git. args can be a URL, in which case the HEAD of - the repo at that URL is fetched. Otherwise, it can be an attribute - with the following attributes (all except `url` optional): + - `builtins.fetchGit` *args* + Fetch a path from git. *args* can be a URL, in which case the HEAD + of the repo at that URL is fetched. Otherwise, it can be an + attribute with the following attributes (all except `url` optional): - url The URL of the repo. @@ -240,11 +240,11 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. > > This behavior is disabled in *Pure evaluation mode*. - - `builtins.filter` f xs - Return a list consisting of the elements of xs for which the - function f returns `true`. + - `builtins.filter` *f* *xs* + Return a list consisting of the elements of *xs* for which the + function *f* returns `true`. - - `builtins.filterSource` e1 e2 + - `builtins.filterSource` *e1* *e2* This function allows you to copy sources into the Nix store while filtering certain files. For instance, suppose that you want to use the directory `source-dir` as an input to a Nix expression, e.g. @@ -266,9 +266,9 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. ./source-dir; ``` - Thus, the first argument e1 must be a predicate function that is + Thus, the first argument *e1* must be a predicate function that is called for each regular file, directory or symlink in the source - tree e2. If the function returns `true`, the file is copied to the + tree *e2*. If the function returns `true`, the file is copied to the Nix store, otherwise it is omitted. The function is called with two arguments. The first is the full path of the file. The second is a string that identifies the type of the file, which is either @@ -276,19 +276,19 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. kinds of files such as device nodes or fifos — but note that those cannot be copied to the Nix store, so if the predicate returns `true` for them, the copy will fail). If you exclude a directory, - the entire corresponding subtree of e2 will be excluded. + the entire corresponding subtree of *e2* will be excluded. - - `builtins.foldl’` op nul list + - `builtins.foldl’` *op* *nul* *list* Reduce a list by applying a binary operator, from left to right, e.g. `foldl’ op nul [x0 x1 x2 ...] = op (op (op nul x0) x1) x2) ...`. The operator is applied strictly, i.e., its arguments are evaluated first. For example, `foldl’ (x: y: x + y) 0 [1 2 3]` evaluates to 6. - - `builtins.functionArgs` f + - `builtins.functionArgs` *f* Return a set containing the names of the formal arguments expected - by the function f. The value of each attribute is a Boolean denoting - whether the corresponding argument has a default value. For + by the function *f*. The value of each attribute is a Boolean + denoting whether the corresponding argument has a default value. For instance, `functionArgs ({ x, y ? 123}: ...) = { x = false; y = true; }`. @@ -296,7 +296,7 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. the function. Plain lambdas are not included, e.g. `functionArgs (x: ...) = { }`. - - `builtins.fromJSON` e + - `builtins.fromJSON` *e* Convert a JSON string to a Nix value. For example, builtins.fromJSON ''{"x": [1, 2, 3], "y": null}'' @@ -304,21 +304,22 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. returns the value `{ x = [ 1 2 3 ]; y = null; }`. - - `builtins.genList` generator length - Generate list of size length, with each element i equal to the value - returned by generator `i`. For example, + - `builtins.genList` *generator* *length* + Generate list of size *length*, with each element *i* equal to the + value returned by *generator* `i`. For example, builtins.genList (x: x * x) 5 returns the list `[ 0 1 4 9 16 ]`. - - `builtins.getAttr` s set - `getAttr` returns the attribute named s from set. Evaluation aborts - if the attribute doesn’t exist. This is a dynamic version of the `.` - operator, since s is an expression rather than an identifier. + - `builtins.getAttr` *s* *set* + `getAttr` returns the attribute named *s* from *set*. Evaluation + aborts if the attribute doesn’t exist. This is a dynamic version of + the `.` operator, since *s* is an expression rather than an + identifier. - - `builtins.getEnv` s - `getEnv` returns the value of the environment variable s, or an + - `builtins.getEnv` *s* + `getEnv` returns the value of the environment variable *s*, or an empty string if the variable doesn’t exist. This function should be used with care, as it can introduce all sorts of nasty environment dependencies in your Nix expression. @@ -328,29 +329,29 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. Packages. (That is, it does a `getEnv "HOME"` to locate the user’s home directory.) - - `builtins.hasAttr` s set - `hasAttr` returns `true` if set has an attribute named s, and + - `builtins.hasAttr` *s* *set* + `hasAttr` returns `true` if *set* has an attribute named *s*, and `false` otherwise. This is a dynamic version of the `?` operator, - since s is an expression rather than an identifier. + since *s* is an expression rather than an identifier. - - `builtins.hashString` type s + - `builtins.hashString` *type* *s* Return a base-16 representation of the cryptographic hash of string - s. The hash algorithm specified by type must be one of `"md5"`, + *s*. The hash algorithm specified by *type* must be one of `"md5"`, `"sha1"`, `"sha256"` or `"sha512"`. - - `builtins.hashFile` type p + - `builtins.hashFile` *type* *p* Return a base-16 representation of the cryptographic hash of the - file at path p. The hash algorithm specified by type must be one of - `"md5"`, `"sha1"`, `"sha256"` or `"sha512"`. + file at path *p*. The hash algorithm specified by *type* must be one + of `"md5"`, `"sha1"`, `"sha256"` or `"sha512"`. - - `builtins.head` list + - `builtins.head` *list* Return the first element of a list; abort evaluation if the argument isn’t a list or is an empty list. You can test whether a list is empty by comparing it with `[]`. - - `import` path; `builtins.import` path - Load, parse and return the Nix expression in the file path. If path - is a directory, the file ` default.nix + - `import` *path*; `builtins.import` *path* + Load, parse and return the Nix expression in the file *path*. If + *path* is a directory, the file ` default.nix ` in that directory is loaded. Evaluation aborts if the file doesn’t exist or contains an incorrect Nix expression. `import` implements Nix’s module system: you can put any Nix expression (such @@ -361,7 +362,8 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. > > Unlike some languages, `import` is a regular function in Nix. > Paths using the angle bracket syntax (e.g., ` - > > > > > import` \) are normal path values (see [???](#ssec-values)). + > > > > > import` *\*) are normal path values (see + > [???](#ssec-values)). A Nix expression loaded by `import` must not contain any *free variables* (identifiers that are not defined in the Nix expression @@ -393,50 +395,50 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. (The function argument doesn’t have to be called `x` in `foo.nix`; any name would work.) - - `builtins.intersectAttrs` e1 e2 - Return a set consisting of the attributes in the set e2 that also - exist in the set e1. + - `builtins.intersectAttrs` *e1* *e2* + Return a set consisting of the attributes in the set *e2* that also + exist in the set *e1*. - - `builtins.isAttrs` e - Return `true` if e evaluates to a set, and `false` otherwise. + - `builtins.isAttrs` *e* + Return `true` if *e* evaluates to a set, and `false` otherwise. - - `builtins.isList` e - Return `true` if e evaluates to a list, and `false` otherwise. + - `builtins.isList` *e* + Return `true` if *e* evaluates to a list, and `false` otherwise. - - `builtins.isFunction` e - Return `true` if e evaluates to a function, and `false` otherwise. + - `builtins.isFunction` *e* + Return `true` if *e* evaluates to a function, and `false` otherwise. - - `builtins.isString` e - Return `true` if e evaluates to a string, and `false` otherwise. + - `builtins.isString` *e* + Return `true` if *e* evaluates to a string, and `false` otherwise. - - `builtins.isInt` e - Return `true` if e evaluates to an int, and `false` otherwise. + - `builtins.isInt` *e* + Return `true` if *e* evaluates to an int, and `false` otherwise. - - `builtins.isFloat` e - Return `true` if e evaluates to a float, and `false` otherwise. + - `builtins.isFloat` *e* + Return `true` if *e* evaluates to a float, and `false` otherwise. - - `builtins.isBool` e - Return `true` if e evaluates to a bool, and `false` otherwise. + - `builtins.isBool` *e* + Return `true` if *e* evaluates to a bool, and `false` otherwise. - - `builtins.isPath` e - Return `true` if e evaluates to a path, and `false` otherwise. + - `builtins.isPath` *e* + Return `true` if *e* evaluates to a path, and `false` otherwise. - - `isNull` e; `builtins.isNull` e - Return `true` if e evaluates to `null`, and `false` otherwise. + - `isNull` *e*; `builtins.isNull` *e* + Return `true` if *e* evaluates to `null`, and `false` otherwise. > **Warning** > > This function is *deprecated*; just write `e == null` instead. - - `builtins.length` e - Return the length of the list e. + - `builtins.length` *e* + Return the length of the list *e*. - - `builtins.lessThan` e1 e2 - Return `true` if the number e1 is less than the number e2, and - `false` otherwise. Evaluation aborts if either e1 or e2 does not + - `builtins.lessThan` *e1* *e2* + Return `true` if the number *e1* is less than the number *e2*, and + `false` otherwise. Evaluation aborts if either *e1* or *e2* does not evaluate to a number. - - `builtins.listToAttrs` e + - `builtins.listToAttrs` *e* Construct a set from a list specifying the names and values of each attribute. Each element of the list should be a set consisting of a string-valued attribute `name` specifying the name of the attribute, @@ -451,19 +453,20 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. { foo = 123; bar = 456; } - - `map` f list; `builtins.map` f list - Apply the function f to each element in the list list. For example, + - `map` *f* *list*; `builtins.map` *f* *list* + Apply the function *f* to each element in the list *list*. For + example, map (x: "foo" + x) [ "bar" "bla" "abc" ] evaluates to `[ "foobar" "foobla" "fooabc" ]`. - - `builtins.match` regex str + - `builtins.match` *regex* *str* Returns a list if the [extended POSIX regular expression](http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/V1_chap09.html#tag_09_04) - regex matches str precisely, otherwise returns `null`. Each item in - the list is a regex group. + *regex* matches *str* precisely, otherwise returns `null`. Each item + in the list is a regex group. builtins.match "ab" "abc" @@ -481,21 +484,21 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. Evaluates to `[ "foo" ]`. - - `builtins.mul` e1 e2 - Return the product of the numbers e1 and e2. + - `builtins.mul` *e1* *e2* + Return the product of the numbers *e1* and *e2*. - - `builtins.parseDrvName` s - Split the string s into a package name and version. The package name - is everything up to but not including the first dash followed by a - digit, and the version is everything following that dash. The result - is returned in a set `{ name, version }`. Thus, + - `builtins.parseDrvName` *s* + Split the string *s* into a package name and version. The package + name is everything up to but not including the first dash followed + by a digit, and the version is everything following that dash. The + result is returned in a set `{ name, version }`. Thus, `builtins.parseDrvName "nix-0.12pre12876"` returns `{ name = "nix"; version = "0.12pre12876"; }`. - - `builtins.path` args + - `builtins.path` *args* An enrichment of the built-in path type, based on the attributes - present in args. All are optional except `path`: + present in *args*. All are optional except `path`: - path The underlying path. @@ -523,20 +526,20 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. providing a hash allows `builtins.path` to be used even when the `pure-eval` nix config option is on. - - `builtins.pathExists` path - Return `true` if the path path exists at evaluation time, and + - `builtins.pathExists` *path* + Return `true` if the path *path* exists at evaluation time, and `false` otherwise. - - `builtins.placeholder` output - Return a placeholder string for the specified output that will be + - `builtins.placeholder` *output* + Return a placeholder string for the specified *output* that will be substituted by the corresponding output path at build time. Typical outputs would be `"out"`, `"bin"` or `"dev"`. - - `builtins.readDir` path - Return the contents of the directory path as a set mapping directory - entries to the corresponding file type. For instance, if directory - `A` contains a regular file `B` and another directory `C`, then - `builtins.readDir + - `builtins.readDir` *path* + Return the contents of the directory *path* as a set mapping + directory entries to the corresponding file type. For instance, if + directory `A` contains a regular file `B` and another directory `C`, + then `builtins.readDir ./A` will return the set { B = "regular"; C = "directory"; } @@ -544,33 +547,33 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. The possible values for the file type are `"regular"`, `"directory"`, `"symlink"` and `"unknown"`. - - `builtins.readFile` path - Return the contents of the file path as a string. + - `builtins.readFile` *path* + Return the contents of the file *path* as a string. - - `removeAttrs` set list; `builtins.removeAttrs` set list - Remove the attributes listed in list from set. The attributes don’t - have to exist in set. For instance, + - `removeAttrs` *set* *list*; `builtins.removeAttrs` *set* *list* + Remove the attributes listed in *list* from *set*. The attributes + don’t have to exist in *set*. For instance, removeAttrs { x = 1; y = 2; z = 3; } [ "a" "x" "z" ] evaluates to `{ y = 2; }`. - - `builtins.replaceStrings` from to s - Given string s, replace every occurrence of the strings in from with - the corresponding string in to. For example, + - `builtins.replaceStrings` *from* *to* *s* + Given string *s*, replace every occurrence of the strings in *from* + with the corresponding string in *to*. For example, builtins.replaceStrings ["oo" "a"] ["a" "i"] "foobar" evaluates to `"fabir"`. - - `builtins.seq` e1 e2 - Evaluate e1, then evaluate and return e2. This ensures that a - computation is strict in the value of e1. + - `builtins.seq` *e1* *e2* + Evaluate *e1*, then evaluate and return *e2*. This ensures that a + computation is strict in the value of *e1*. - - `builtins.sort` comparator list - Return list in sorted order. It repeatedly calls the function - comparator with two elements. The comparator should return `true` if - the first element is less than the second, and `false` otherwise. + - `builtins.sort` *comparator* *list* + Return *list* in sorted order. It repeatedly calls the function + *comparator* with two elements. The comparator should return `true` + if the first element is less than the second, and `false` otherwise. For example, builtins.sort builtins.lessThan [ 483 249 526 147 42 77 ] @@ -581,12 +584,12 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. This is a stable sort: it preserves the relative order of elements deemed equal by the comparator. - - `builtins.split` regex str + - `builtins.split` *regex* *str* Returns a list composed of non matched strings interleaved with the lists of the [extended POSIX regular expression](http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/V1_chap09.html#tag_09_04) - regex matches of str. Each item in the lists of matched sequences is - a regex group. + *regex* matches of *str*. Each item in the lists of matched + sequences is a regex group. builtins.split "(a)b" "abc" @@ -604,44 +607,44 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. Evaluates to `[ " " [ "FOO" ] " " ]`. - - `builtins.splitVersion` s + - `builtins.splitVersion` *s* Split a string representing a version into its components, by the same version splitting logic underlying the version comparison in [`nix-env -u`](#ssec-version-comparisons). - - `builtins.stringLength` e - Return the length of the string e. If e is not a string, evaluation - is aborted. + - `builtins.stringLength` *e* + Return the length of the string *e*. If *e* is not a string, + evaluation is aborted. - - `builtins.sub` e1 e2 - Return the difference between the numbers e1 and e2. + - `builtins.sub` *e1* *e2* + Return the difference between the numbers *e1* and *e2*. - - `builtins.substring` start len s - Return the substring of s from character position start (zero-based) - up to but not including start + len. If start is greater than the - length of the string, an empty string is returned, and if start + - len lies beyond the end of the string, only the substring up to the - end of the string is returned. start must be non-negative. For - example, + - `builtins.substring` *start* *len* *s* + Return the substring of *s* from character position *start* + (zero-based) up to but not including *start + len*. If *start* is + greater than the length of the string, an empty string is returned, + and if *start + len* lies beyond the end of the string, only the + substring up to the end of the string is returned. *start* must be + non-negative. For example, builtins.substring 0 3 "nixos" evaluates to `"nix"`. - - `builtins.tail` list + - `builtins.tail` *list* Return the second to last elements of a list; abort evaluation if the argument isn’t a list or is an empty list. - - `throw` s; `builtins.throw` s - Throw an error message s. This usually aborts Nix expression + - `throw` *s*; `builtins.throw` *s* + Throw an error message *s*. This usually aborts Nix expression evaluation, but in `nix-env -qa` and other commands that try to evaluate a set of derivations to get information about those derivations, a derivation that throws an error is silently skipped (which is not the case for `abort`). - - `builtins.toFile` name s - Store the string s in a file in the Nix store and return its path. - The file has suffix name. This file can be used as an input to + - `builtins.toFile` *name* *s* + Store the string *s* in a file in the Nix store and return its path. + The file has suffix *name*. This file can be used as an input to derivations. One application is to write builders “inline”. For instance, the following Nix expression combines [???](#ex-hello-nix) and [???](#ex-hello-builder) into one file: @@ -705,20 +708,20 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. you are using Nixpkgs, the `writeTextFile` function is able to do that. - - `builtins.toJSON` e - Return a string containing a JSON representation of e. Strings, + - `builtins.toJSON` *e* + Return a string containing a JSON representation of *e*. Strings, integers, floats, booleans, nulls and lists are mapped to their JSON equivalents. Sets (except derivations) are represented as objects. Derivations are translated to a JSON string containing the derivation’s output path. Paths are copied to the store and represented as a JSON string of the resulting store path. - - `builtins.toPath` s + - `builtins.toPath` *s* DEPRECATED. Use `/. + "/path"` to convert a string into an absolute path. For relative paths, use `./. + "/path"`. - - `toString` e; `builtins.toString` e - Convert the expression e to a string. e can be: + - `toString` *e*; `builtins.toString` *e* + Convert the expression *e* to a string. *e* can be: - A string (in which case the string is returned unmodified). @@ -735,8 +738,8 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. - `null`, which yields the empty string. - - `builtins.toXML` e - Return a string containing an XML representation of e. The main + - `builtins.toXML` *e* + Return a string containing an XML representation of *e*. The main application for `toXML` is to communicate information with the builder in a more structured format than plain environment variables. @@ -822,22 +825,23 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. of the stylesheet is spliced into the builder using the syntax `xsltproc ${stylesheet}`. - - `builtins.trace` e1 e2 - Evaluate e1 and print its abstract syntax representation on standard - error. Then return e2. This function is useful for debugging. + - `builtins.trace` *e1* *e2* + Evaluate *e1* and print its abstract syntax representation on + standard error. Then return *e2*. This function is useful for + debugging. - - `builtins.tryEval` e - Try to shallowly evaluate e. Return a set containing the attributes - `success` (`true` if e evaluated successfully, `false` if an error - was thrown) and `value`, equalling e if successful and `false` - otherwise. Note that this doesn't evaluate e deeply, so ` let e = { - x = throw ""; }; in (builtins.tryEval e).success + - `builtins.tryEval` *e* + Try to shallowly evaluate *e*. Return a set containing the + attributes `success` (`true` if *e* evaluated successfully, `false` + if an error was thrown) and `value`, equalling *e* if successful and + `false` otherwise. Note that this doesn't evaluate *e* deeply, so + ` let e = { x = throw ""; }; in (builtins.tryEval e).success ` will be `true`. Using ` builtins.deepSeq ` one can get the expected result: `let e = { x = throw ""; }; in (builtins.tryEval (builtins.deepSeq e e)).success` will be `false`. - - `builtins.typeOf` e - Return a string representing the type of the value e, namely + - `builtins.typeOf` *e* + Return a string representing the type of the value *e*, namely `"int"`, `"bool"`, `"string"`, `"path"`, `"null"`, `"set"`, `"list"`, `"lambda"` or `"float"`. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/expression-syntax.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/expression-syntax.md index 9e99a1f60..2abe6ac6e 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/expression-syntax.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/expression-syntax.md @@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ elements (referenced from the figure by number): Nix functions generally have the form `{ x, y, ..., z }: e` where `x`, `y`, etc. are the names of the expected - arguments, and where e is the body of the function. So here, the + arguments, and where *e* is the body of the function. So here, the entire remainder of the file is the body of the function; when given the required arguments, the body should describe how to build an instance of the Hello package. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-constructs.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-constructs.md index 20d003348..2699d675f 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-constructs.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-constructs.md @@ -147,7 +147,7 @@ three kinds of patterns: It is possible to provide *default values* for attributes, in which case they are allowed to be missing. A default value is specified by writing `name ? - e`, where e is an arbitrary expression. For example, + e`, where *e* is an arbitrary expression. For example, { x, y ? "foo", z ? "bar" }: z + y + x @@ -201,7 +201,7 @@ Conditionals look like this: if e1 then e2 else e3 -where e1 is an expression that should evaluate to a Boolean value +where *e1* is an expression that should evaluate to a Boolean value (`true` or `false`). ## Assertions @@ -211,9 +211,9 @@ between features and dependencies hold. They look like this: assert e1; e2 -where e1 is an expression that should evaluate to a Boolean value. If it -evaluates to `true`, e2 is returned; otherwise expression evaluation is -aborted and a backtrace is printed. +where *e1* is an expression that should evaluate to a Boolean value. If +it evaluates to `true`, *e2* is returned; otherwise expression +evaluation is aborted and a backtrace is printed. Here is a Nix expression for the Subversion package that shows how assertions can be used:. @@ -275,8 +275,8 @@ A *with-expression*, with e1; e2 -introduces the set e1 into the lexical scope of the expression e2. For -instance, +introduces the set *e1* into the lexical scope of the expression *e2*. +For instance, let as = { x = "foo"; y = "bar"; }; in with as; x + y diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-operators.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-operators.md index 4fa2eca37..b124a2417 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-operators.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-operators.md @@ -4,29 +4,29 @@ expression language, in order of precedence (from strongest to weakest binding). -| Name | Syntax | Associativity | Description | Precedence | -| ------------------------ | ----------------------------- | ------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ---------- | -| Select | e `.` attrpath \[ `or` def \] | none | Select attribute denoted by the attribute path attrpath from set e. (An attribute path is a dot-separated list of attribute names.) If the attribute doesn’t exist, return def if provided, otherwise abort evaluation. | 1 | -| Application | e1 e2 | left | Call function e1 with argument e2. | 2 | -| Arithmetic Negation | `-` e | none | Arithmetic negation. | 3 | -| Has Attribute | e `?` attrpath | none | Test whether set e contains the attribute denoted by attrpath; return `true` or `false`. | 4 | -| List Concatenation | e1 `++` e2 | right | List concatenation. | 5 | -| Multiplication | e1 `*` e2, | left | Arithmetic multiplication. | 6 | -| Division | e1 `/` e2 | left | Arithmetic division. | 6 | -| Addition | e1 `+` e2 | left | Arithmetic addition. | 7 | -| Subtraction | e1 `-` e2 | left | Arithmetic subtraction. | 7 | -| String Concatenation | string1 `+` string2 | left | String concatenation. | 7 | -| Not | `!` e | none | Boolean negation. | 8 | -| Update | e1 `//` e2 | right | Return a set consisting of the attributes in e1 and e2 (with the latter taking precedence over the former in case of equally named attributes). | 9 | -| Less Than | e1 `<` e2, | none | Arithmetic comparison. | 10 | -| Less Than or Equal To | e1 `<=` e2 | none | Arithmetic comparison. | 10 | -| Greater Than | e1 `>` e2 | none | Arithmetic comparison. | 10 | -| Greater Than or Equal To | e1 `>=` e2 | none | Arithmetic comparison. | 10 | -| Equality | e1 `==` e2 | none | Equality. | 11 | -| Inequality | e1 `!=` e2 | none | Inequality. | 11 | -| Logical AND | e1 `&&` e2 | left | Logical AND. | 12 | -| Logical OR | e1 `\|\|` e2 | left | Logical OR. | 13 | -| Logical Implication | e1 `->` e2 | none | Logical implication (equivalent to `!e1 \|\| - e2`). | 14 | +| Name | Syntax | Associativity | Description | Precedence | +| ------------------------ | ----------------------------------- | ------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ---------- | +| Select | *e* `.` *attrpath* \[ `or` *def* \] | none | Select attribute denoted by the attribute path *attrpath* from set *e*. (An attribute path is a dot-separated list of attribute names.) If the attribute doesn’t exist, return *def* if provided, otherwise abort evaluation. | 1 | +| Application | *e1* *e2* | left | Call function *e1* with argument *e2*. | 2 | +| Arithmetic Negation | `-` *e* | none | Arithmetic negation. | 3 | +| Has Attribute | *e* `?` *attrpath* | none | Test whether set *e* contains the attribute denoted by *attrpath*; return `true` or `false`. | 4 | +| List Concatenation | *e1* `++` *e2* | right | List concatenation. | 5 | +| Multiplication | *e1* `*` *e2*, | left | Arithmetic multiplication. | 6 | +| Division | *e1* `/` *e2* | left | Arithmetic division. | 6 | +| Addition | *e1* `+` *e2* | left | Arithmetic addition. | 7 | +| Subtraction | *e1* `-` *e2* | left | Arithmetic subtraction. | 7 | +| String Concatenation | *string1* `+` *string2* | left | String concatenation. | 7 | +| Not | `!` *e* | none | Boolean negation. | 8 | +| Update | *e1* `//` *e2* | right | Return a set consisting of the attributes in *e1* and *e2* (with the latter taking precedence over the former in case of equally named attributes). | 9 | +| Less Than | *e1* `<` *e2*, | none | Arithmetic comparison. | 10 | +| Less Than or Equal To | *e1* `<=` *e2* | none | Arithmetic comparison. | 10 | +| Greater Than | *e1* `>` *e2* | none | Arithmetic comparison. | 10 | +| Greater Than or Equal To | *e1* `>=` *e2* | none | Arithmetic comparison. | 10 | +| Equality | *e1* `==` *e2* | none | Equality. | 11 | +| Inequality | *e1* `!=` *e2* | none | Inequality. | 11 | +| Logical AND | *e1* `&&` *e2* | left | Logical AND. | 12 | +| Logical OR | *e1* `\|\|` *e2* | left | Logical OR. | 13 | +| Logical Implication | *e1* `->` *e2* | none | Logical implication (equivalent to `!e1 \|\| + e2`). | 14 | Operators diff --git a/doc/manual/src/installation/building-source.md b/doc/manual/src/installation/building-source.md index c498713de..35dbd5541 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/installation/building-source.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/installation/building-source.md @@ -17,7 +17,7 @@ command: The installation path can be specified by passing the `--prefix=prefix` to `configure`. The default installation directory is `/usr/local`. You can change this to any location you like. You must have write permission -to the prefix path. +to the *prefix* path. Nix keeps its *store* (the place where packages are stored) in `/nix/store` by default. This can be changed using diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md index 04dad3339..d9c34afc6 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md @@ -60,7 +60,8 @@ Nixpkgs tree using the `-f` flag: $ nix-env -qaf /path/to/nixpkgs -where /path/to/nixpkgs is where you’ve unpacked or checked out Nixpkgs. +where */path/to/nixpkgs* is where you’ve unpacked or checked out +Nixpkgs. You can select specific packages by name: diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.10.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.10.md index 07b19ff05..1301add26 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.10.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.10.md @@ -34,7 +34,7 @@ - `nix-env -i pkgname` will now install the highest available version of - pkgname, rather than installing all available versions (which + *pkgname*, rather than installing all available versions (which would probably give collisions) (`NIX-31`). - `nix-env (-i|-u) --dry-run` now shows exactly which missing diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.12.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.12.md index aaecfbb70..3a4aba07d 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.12.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.12.md @@ -41,10 +41,10 @@ - The garbage collector has a number of new options to allow only some of the garbage to be deleted. The option `--max-freed N` tells the - collector to stop after at least N bytes have been deleted. The + collector to stop after at least *N* bytes have been deleted. The option `--max-links N` tells it to stop after the link count on `/nix/store` has dropped - below N. This is useful for very large Nix stores on filesystems + below *N*. This is useful for very large Nix stores on filesystems with a 32000 subdirectories limit (like `ext3`). The option `--use-atime` causes store paths to be deleted in order of ascending last access time. This allows non-recently used stuff to be deleted. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.13.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.13.md index 21f33e3db..13a60e01c 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.13.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.13.md @@ -51,5 +51,5 @@ This is primarily a bug fix release. It has some new features: option is used. - The scoping rules for `inherit - (e) ...` in recursive attribute sets have changed. The expression e - can now refer to the attributes defined in the containing set. + (e) ...` in recursive attribute sets have changed. The expression + *e* can now refer to the attributes defined in the containing set. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.16.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.16.md index 79074fcdc..23ac53786 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.16.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.16.md @@ -15,7 +15,7 @@ This release has the following improvements: `--cores N` as well as a configuration setting `build-cores = N` that causes the environment variable `NIX_BUILD_CORES` to be set - to N when the builder is invoked. The builder can use this at its + to *N* when the builder is invoked. The builder can use this at its discretion to perform a parallel build, e.g., by calling `make -j N`. In Nixpkgs, this can be enabled on a per-package basis by setting the derivation attribute `enableParallelBuilding` to `true`. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.6.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.6.md index c816c9851..ed2d21583 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.6.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-0.6.md @@ -49,8 +49,8 @@ - New language construct: `with E1; - E2` brings all attributes defined in the attribute set E1 in - scope in E2. + E2` brings all attributes defined in the attribute set *E1* in + scope in *E2*. - Added a `map` function. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.11.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.11.md index 381887bd8..fbabdaa2f 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.11.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.11.md @@ -35,7 +35,7 @@ features: derivations, and in `builtins.hashString`. - The new flag `--option build-repeat - N` will cause every build to be executed N+1 times. If the build + N` will cause every build to be executed *N*+1 times. If the build output differs between any round, the build is rejected, and the output paths are not registered as valid. This is primarily useful to verify build determinism. (We already had a `--check` option to diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.4.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.4.md index d6d2227f8..d23de71ad 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.4.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.4.md @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ There are also the following improvements: - New built-in function: `builtins.hashString`. - - Build logs are now stored in `/nix/var/log/nix/drvs/XX/`, where XX + - Build logs are now stored in `/nix/var/log/nix/drvs/XX/`, where *XX* is the first two characters of the derivation. This is useful on machines that keep a lot of build logs (such as Hydra servers). diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.6.1.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.6.1.md index ed974fe0b..9bb9bb1f8 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.6.1.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.6.1.md @@ -6,8 +6,8 @@ This is primarily a bug fix release. Changes of interest are: strings, such as `"${/foo}/bar"`. This release reverts to the Nix 1.5.3 behaviour. - - Previously, Nix optimised expressions such as `"${expr}"` to expr. - Thus it neither checked whether expr could be coerced to a string, + - Previously, Nix optimised expressions such as `"${expr}"` to *expr*. + Thus it neither checked whether *expr* could be coerced to a string, nor applied such coercions. This meant that `"${123}"` evaluatued to `123`, and `"${./foo}"` evaluated to `./foo` (even though `"${./foo} "` evaluates to `"/nix/store/hash-foo "`). Nix now checks the type diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.7.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.7.md index 71a327ed6..8d49ae54e 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.7.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-1.7.md @@ -89,10 +89,10 @@ features: specifier. For example, `nix-store --gc --max-freed 1G` will free up to 1 gigabyte of disk space. - - `nix-collect-garbage` has a new flag `--delete-older-than` N`d`, - which deletes all user environment generations older than N days. + - `nix-collect-garbage` has a new flag `--delete-older-than` *N*`d`, + which deletes all user environment generations older than *N* days. Likewise, `nix-env - --delete-generations` accepts a N`d` age limit. + --delete-generations` accepts a *N*`d` age limit. - Nix now heuristically detects whether a build failure was due to a disk-full condition. In that case, the build is not flagged as From 69333cb62c0631919ad447629bdd1035df94eb67 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Thu, 23 Jul 2020 14:30:13 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 19/57] Sigh --- doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md b/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md index 80a41f8d7..5f6817674 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md @@ -22,9 +22,9 @@ - [Channels](package-management/channels.md) - [Sharing Packages Between Machines](package-management/sharing-packages.md) - [Serving a Nix store via HTTP](package-management/binary-cache-substituter.md) - - [Copying Closures Via SSH](package-management/copy-closure.md) + - [Copying Closures via SSH](package-management/copy-closure.md) - [Serving a Nix store via SSH](package-management/ssh-substituter.md) - - [Serving a Nix store via AWS S3 or S3-compatible Service](package-management/s3-substituter.md) + - [Serving a Nix store via S3](package-management/s3-substituter.md) - [Writing Nix Expressions](expressions/writing-nix-expressions.md) - [A Simple Nix Expression](expressions/simple-expression.md) - [Expression Syntax](expressions/expression-syntax.md) From 5e3ad1dde0a03b3bd094e1d4ecc0f4fc7abdaa5c Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Thu, 23 Jul 2020 14:55:10 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 20/57] Add a separate manual job --- flake.nix | 24 +++++++++++++++++++----- 1 file changed, 19 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) diff --git a/flake.nix b/flake.nix index cebbdf9d9..f31dc4039 100644 --- a/flake.nix +++ b/flake.nix @@ -144,11 +144,6 @@ installFlags = "sysconfdir=$(out)/etc"; - postInstall = '' - mkdir -p $doc/nix-support - echo "doc manual $doc/share/doc/nix/manual" >> $doc/nix-support/hydra-build-products - ''; - doInstallCheck = true; installCheckFlags = "sysconfdir=$(out)/etc"; @@ -215,6 +210,25 @@ # Perl bindings for various platforms. perlBindings = nixpkgs.lib.genAttrs systems (system: nixpkgsFor.${system}.nix.perl-bindings); + # Separate build for just the manual. + manual = + with nixpkgsFor.x86_64-linux; + stdenv.mkDerivation { + name = "nix-manual-${version}"; + src = self; + buildInputs = [ mdbook ]; + configurePhase = ":"; + buildPhase = ":"; + installPhase = + '' + touch Makefile.config + docdir=$out/share/doc/nix + make docdir=$docdir doc_generate=yes $docdir/manual/index.html + mkdir -p $out/nix-support + echo "doc manual $docdir/manual" >> $out/nix-support/hydra-build-products + ''; + }; + # Binary tarball for various platforms, containing a Nix store # with the closure of 'nix' package, and the second half of # the installation script. From a71d1cedffe17ea4dd6a48c12cf5b9323ca6114c Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Fri, 24 Jul 2020 11:34:01 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 21/57] printVersion(): Show system types --- src/libmain/shared.cc | 2 ++ 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+) diff --git a/src/libmain/shared.cc b/src/libmain/shared.cc index 52718c231..22929cae5 100644 --- a/src/libmain/shared.cc +++ b/src/libmain/shared.cc @@ -277,6 +277,8 @@ void printVersion(const string & programName) #if HAVE_SODIUM cfg.push_back("signed-caches"); #endif + std::cout << "System type: " << settings.thisSystem << "\n"; + std::cout << "Additional system types: " << concatStringsSep(", ", settings.extraPlatforms.get()) << "\n"; std::cout << "Features: " << concatStringsSep(", ", cfg) << "\n"; std::cout << "System configuration file: " << settings.nixConfDir + "/nix.conf" << "\n"; std::cout << "User configuration files: " << From 8d0b311a1ccd0aef49c6f272aad4ecb5105b285a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Fri, 24 Jul 2020 11:43:44 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 22/57] Get rid of footnotes Markdown doesn't support them. --- doc/manual/command-ref/nix-instantiate.xml | 2 +- doc/manual/command-ref/opt-common.xml | 2 +- doc/manual/expressions/build-script.xml | 11 ++++------ doc/manual/expressions/derivations.xml | 19 ++++++++--------- doc/manual/expressions/generic-builder.xml | 6 +++--- .../expressions/language-constructs.xml | 7 +++---- doc/manual/expressions/language-values.xml | 11 +++++----- doc/manual/expressions/simple-expression.xml | 7 +++---- doc/manual/packages/profiles.xml | 13 ++++++------ doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md | 9 ++++---- doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common.md | 6 +++--- doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md | 10 +++------ doc/manual/src/expressions/derivations.md | 17 ++++++--------- doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md | 15 ++++++------- .../src/expressions/language-constructs.md | 7 ++----- doc/manual/src/expressions/language-values.md | 21 +++++++++---------- .../src/expressions/simple-expression.md | 10 +++------ doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md | 16 +++++++------- 18 files changed, 79 insertions(+), 110 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-instantiate.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-instantiate.xml index d67be4924..dc055fa51 100644 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-instantiate.xml +++ b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-instantiate.xml @@ -106,7 +106,7 @@ input. Look up the given files in Nix’s search path (as - specified by the NIX_PATH + specified by the NIX_PATH environment variable). If found, print the corresponding absolute paths on standard output. For instance, if NIX_PATH is diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-common.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-common.xml index 67950e94b..a095039b9 100644 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-common.xml +++ b/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-common.xml @@ -369,7 +369,7 @@ path Add a path to the Nix expression search path. This - option may be given multiple times. See the NIX_PATH environment variable for information on the semantics of the Nix search path. Paths added through take precedence over diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/build-script.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/build-script.xml index c9af198f2..5c55954fc 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/build-script.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/build-script.xml @@ -33,13 +33,10 @@ steps: When Nix runs a builder, it initially completely clears the environment (except for the attributes declared in the - derivation). For instance, the PATH variable is - emptyActually, it's initialised to - /path-not-set to prevent Bash from setting it - to a default value.. This is done to prevent - undeclared inputs from being used in the build process. If for - example the PATH contained - /usr/bin, then you might accidentally use + derivation). This is done to prevent undeclared inputs from being + used in the build process. If for example the + PATH contained /usr/bin, + then you might accidentally use /usr/bin/gcc. So the first step is to set up the environment. This is diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/derivations.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/derivations.xml index a11de0088..0625bcdfe 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/derivations.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/derivations.xml @@ -13,16 +13,15 @@ of which specify the inputs of the build. - There must be an attribute named - system whose value must be a string specifying a - Nix platform identifier, such as "i686-linux" or - "x86_64-darwin"To figure out - your platform identifier, look at the line Checking for the - canonical Nix system name in the output of Nix's - configure script. The build - can only be performed on a machine and operating system matching the - platform identifier. (Nix can automatically forward builds for - other platforms by forwarding them to other machines; see There must be an attribute + named system whose value must be a string + specifying a Nix system type, such as + "i686-linux" or + "x86_64-darwin". (To figure out your system type, + run nix -vv --version.) The build can only be + performed on a machine and operating system matching the system + type. (Nix can automatically forward builds for other platforms by + forwarding them to other machines; see .) There must be an attribute named diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/generic-builder.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/generic-builder.xml index f6e67813d..a6f258abc 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/generic-builder.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/generic-builder.xml @@ -42,14 +42,14 @@ genericBuild ③ bin subdirectory, it's added to PATH; if it has a include subdirectory, it's added to GCC's header search path; and so - on.How does it work? setup - tries to source the file + on. (This is implemented in a modular way: + setup tries to source the file pkg/nix-support/setup-hook of all dependencies. These “setup hooks” can then set up whatever environment variables they want; for instance, the setup hook for Perl sets the PERL5LIB environment variable to contain the lib/site_perl directories of all - inputs. + inputs.) diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/language-constructs.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/language-constructs.xml index 86c25d723..e1c589f61 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/language-constructs.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/language-constructs.xml @@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ is, in a normal (non-recursive) set, attributes are not added to the lexical scope; in a recursive set, they are. Recursive sets of course introduce the danger of infinite -recursion. For example, +recursion. For example, the expression rec { @@ -34,9 +34,8 @@ rec { y = x; }.x -does not terminateActually, Nix detects infinite -recursion in this case and aborts (infinite recursion -encountered).. +will crash with an infinite recursion encountered +error message.
diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/language-values.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/language-values.xml index cebafb1f5..5520a4938 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/language-values.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/language-values.xml @@ -154,11 +154,10 @@ stdenv.mkDerivation { Paths, e.g., /bin/sh or ./builder.sh. - A path must contain at least one slash to be recognised as such; for - instance, builder.sh is not a - pathIt's parsed as an expression that selects the - attribute sh from the variable - builder.. If the file name is + A path must contain at least one slash to be recognised as such. For + instance, builder.sh is not a path: it's parsed + as an expression that selects the attribute sh + from the variable builder. If the file name is relative, i.e., if it does not begin with a slash, it is made absolute at parse time relative to the directory of the Nix expression that contained it. For instance, if a Nix expression in @@ -176,7 +175,7 @@ stdenv.mkDerivation { Paths can also be specified between angle brackets, e.g. <nixpkgs>. This means that the directories listed in the environment variable - NIX_PATH will be searched + NIX_PATH will be searched for the given file or directory name. diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/simple-expression.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/simple-expression.xml index 29fd872ee..ad97220a8 100644 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/simple-expression.xml +++ b/doc/manual/expressions/simple-expression.xml @@ -21,10 +21,9 @@ need to do three things: such as dependencies, sources, and so on. Write a builder. This is a - shell scriptIn fact, it can be written in any - language, but typically it's a bash shell - script. that actually builds the package from - the inputs. + shell script that builds the package from the inputs. (In fact, it + can be written in any language, but typically it's a + bash shell script.)
Add the package to the file pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix. The Nix diff --git a/doc/manual/packages/profiles.xml b/doc/manual/packages/profiles.xml index d7529d56c..3b8c5e293 100644 --- a/doc/manual/packages/profiles.xml +++ b/doc/manual/packages/profiles.xml @@ -18,13 +18,12 @@ of the Subversion package might be stored in a directory while another version might be stored in /nix/store/5mq2jcn36ldlmh93yj1n8s9c95pj7c5s-subversion-1.1.2. The long strings prefixed to the directory names are cryptographic -hashes160-bit truncations of SHA-256 hashes encoded in -a base-32 notation, to be precise. of -all inputs involved in building the package — -sources, dependencies, compiler flags, and so on. So if two packages -differ in any way, they end up in different locations in the file -system, so they don’t interfere with each other. Here is what a part -of a typical Nix store looks like: +hashes (to be precise, 160-bit truncations of SHA-256 hashes encoded +in a base-32 notation) of all inputs involved in +building the package — sources, dependencies, compiler flags, and so +on. So if two packages differ in any way, they end up in different +locations in the file system, so they don’t interfere with each other. +Here is what a part of a typical Nix store looks like: diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md index 179fbf5ba..6c9f2d3e1 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md @@ -82,11 +82,10 @@ See also [???](#sec-common-options) for a list of common options. - `--find-file` Look up the given files in Nix’s search path (as specified by the - NIX\_PATH\ environment variable). If found, print the - corresponding absolute paths on standard output. For instance, if - `NIX_PATH` is `nixpkgs=/home/alice/nixpkgs`, then `nix-instantiate - --find-file nixpkgs/default.nix` will print - `/home/alice/nixpkgs/default.nix`. + `NIX_PATH` environment variable). If found, print the corresponding + absolute paths on standard output. For instance, if `NIX_PATH` is + `nixpkgs=/home/alice/nixpkgs`, then `nix-instantiate --find-file + nixpkgs/default.nix` will print `/home/alice/nixpkgs/default.nix`. - `--strict` When used with `--eval`, recursively evaluate list elements and diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common.md index dce95773a..b9c65c81d 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common.md @@ -206,9 +206,9 @@ Most Nix commands accept the following command-line options: - `-I` *path* Add a path to the Nix expression search path. This option may be - given multiple times. See the NIX\_PATH\ environment - variable for information on the semantics of the Nix search path. - Paths added through `-I` take precedence over `NIX_PATH`. + given multiple times. See the `NIX_PATH` environment variable for + information on the semantics of the Nix search path. Paths added + through `-I` take precedence over `NIX_PATH`. - `--option` *name* *value* Set the Nix configuration option *name* to *value*. This overrides diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md index f922182c2..57222de85 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md @@ -19,10 +19,9 @@ steps to elucidate what a builder does. It performs the following steps: 1. When Nix runs a builder, it initially completely clears the environment (except for the attributes declared in the derivation). - For instance, the `PATH` variable is empty\[1\]. This is done to - prevent undeclared inputs from being used in the build process. If - for example the `PATH` contained `/usr/bin`, then you might - accidentally use `/usr/bin/gcc`. + This is done to prevent undeclared inputs from being used in the + build process. If for example the `PATH` contained `/usr/bin`, then + you might accidentally use `/usr/bin/gcc`. So the first step is to set up the environment. This is done by calling the `setup` script of the standard environment. The @@ -67,6 +66,3 @@ If you are wondering about the absence of error checking on the result of various commands called in the builder: this is because the shell script is evaluated with Bash's `-e` option, which causes the script to be aborted if any command fails without an error check. - -1. Actually, it's initialised to `/path-not-set` to prevent Bash from - setting it to a default value. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/derivations.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/derivations.md index a4df20baa..4cb233e2e 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/derivations.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/derivations.md @@ -5,11 +5,12 @@ describe a single derivation (a build action). It takes as input a set, the attributes of which specify the inputs of the build. - There must be an attribute named `system` whose value must be a - string specifying a Nix platform identifier, such as `"i686-linux"` - or `"x86_64-darwin"`\[1\] The build can only be performed on a - machine and operating system matching the platform identifier. (Nix - can automatically forward builds for other platforms by forwarding - them to other machines; see [???](#chap-distributed-builds).) + string specifying a Nix system type, such as `"i686-linux"` or + `"x86_64-darwin"`. (To figure out your system type, run `nix -vv + --version`.) The build can only be performed on a machine and + operating system matching the system type. (Nix can automatically + forward builds for other platforms by forwarding them to other + machines; see [???](#chap-distributed-builds).) - There must be an attribute named `name` whose value must be a string. This is used as a symbolic name for the package by @@ -146,9 +147,3 @@ The builder is executed as follows: supported by Nix. This is because the Nix archives used in deployment have no concept of ownership information, and because it makes the build result dependent on the user performing the build. - - - -1. To figure out your platform identifier, look at the line “Checking - for the canonical Nix system name” in the output of Nix's - `configure` script. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md index 90bdc556b..6942abe70 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md @@ -27,8 +27,12 @@ Here is what each line means: 1. The `buildInputs` variable tells `setup` to use the indicated packages as “inputs”. This means that if a package provides a `bin` subdirectory, it's added to `PATH`; if it has a `include` - subdirectory, it's added to GCC's header search path; and so - on.\[1\] + subdirectory, it's added to GCC's header search path; and so on. + (This is implemented in a modular way: `setup` tries to source the + file `pkg/nix-support/setup-hook` of all dependencies. These “setup + hooks” can then set up whatever environment variables they want; for + instance, the setup hook for Perl sets the `PERL5LIB` environment + variable to contain the `lib/site_perl` directories of all inputs.) 2. The function `genericBuild` is defined in the file `$stdenv/setup`. @@ -55,10 +59,3 @@ shorter: In fact, `mkDerivation` provides a default builder that looks exactly like that, so it is actually possible to omit the builder for Hello entirely. - -1. How does it work? `setup` tries to source the file - `pkg/nix-support/setup-hook` of all dependencies. These “setup - hooks” can then set up whatever environment variables they want; - for instance, the setup hook for Perl sets the `PERL5LIB` - environment variable to contain the `lib/site_perl` directories of - all inputs. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-constructs.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-constructs.md index 2699d675f..8e267a799 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-constructs.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-constructs.md @@ -17,14 +17,14 @@ would be invalid if no such variable exists. That is, in a normal recursive set, they are. Recursive sets of course introduce the danger of infinite recursion. For -example, +example, the expression rec { x = y; y = x; }.x -does not terminate\[1\]. +will crash with an `infinite recursion encountered` error message. ## Let-expressions @@ -304,6 +304,3 @@ establishes the same scope as Comments can be single-line, started with a `#` character, or inline/multi-line, enclosed within `/* ... */`. - -1. Actually, Nix detects infinite recursion in this case and aborts - (“infinite recursion encountered”). diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-values.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-values.md index 8ffe2f0f9..eca2cab51 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-values.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-values.md @@ -108,12 +108,14 @@ Nix has the following basic data types: floating point number will have a floating point number as a result. - *Paths*, e.g., `/bin/sh` or `./builder.sh`. A path must contain at - least one slash to be recognised as such; for instance, `builder.sh` - is not a path\[1\]. If the file name is relative, i.e., if it does - not begin with a slash, it is made absolute at parse time relative - to the directory of the Nix expression that contained it. For - instance, if a Nix expression in `/foo/bar/bla.nix` refers to - `../xyzzy/fnord.nix`, the absolute path is `/foo/xyzzy/fnord.nix`. + least one slash to be recognised as such. For instance, `builder.sh` + is not a path: it's parsed as an expression that selects the + attribute `sh` from the variable `builder`. If the file name is + relative, i.e., if it does not begin with a slash, it is made + absolute at parse time relative to the directory of the Nix + expression that contained it. For instance, if a Nix expression in + `/foo/bar/bla.nix` refers to `../xyzzy/fnord.nix`, the absolute path + is `/foo/xyzzy/fnord.nix`. If the first component of a path is a `~`, it is interpreted as if the rest of the path were relative to the user's home directory. @@ -122,8 +124,8 @@ Nix has the following basic data types: Paths can also be specified between angle brackets, e.g. ``. This means that the directories listed in the - environment variable NIX\_PATH\ will be searched for the - given file or directory name. + environment variable `NIX_PATH` will be searched for the given file + or directory name. - *Booleans* with values `true` and `false`. @@ -210,6 +212,3 @@ passed in first , e.g., evaluates to `2`. This can be used to attach metadata to a function without the caller needing to treat it specially, or to implement a form of object-oriented programming, for example. - -1. It's parsed as an expression that selects the attribute `sh` from - the variable `builder`. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/simple-expression.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/simple-expression.md index 9023f97a4..857f71b9b 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/simple-expression.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/simple-expression.md @@ -12,16 +12,12 @@ do three things: describes all the inputs involved in building the package, such as dependencies, sources, and so on. -2. Write a *builder*. This is a shell script\[1\] that actually builds - the package from the inputs. +2. Write a *builder*. This is a shell script that builds the package + from the inputs. (In fact, it can be written in any language, but + typically it's a `bash` shell script.) 3. Add the package to the file `pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix`. The Nix expression written in the first step is a *function*; it requires other packages in order to build it. In this step you put it all together, i.e., you call the function with the right arguments to build the actual package. - - - -1. In fact, it can be written in any language, but typically it's a - `bash` shell script. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md index 9076033d7..1950c3121 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md @@ -10,12 +10,13 @@ in a directory `/nix/store/dpmvp969yhdqs7lm2r1a3gng7pyq6vy4-subversion-1.1.3/`, while another version might be stored in `/nix/store/5mq2jcn36ldlmh93yj1n8s9c95pj7c5s-subversion-1.1.2`. The long -strings prefixed to the directory names are cryptographic hashes\[1\] of -*all* inputs involved in building the package — sources, dependencies, -compiler flags, and so on. So if two packages differ in any way, they -end up in different locations in the file system, so they don’t -interfere with each other. Here is what a part of a typical Nix store -looks like: +strings prefixed to the directory names are cryptographic hashes (to be +precise, 160-bit truncations of SHA-256 hashes encoded in a base-32 +notation) of *all* inputs involved in building the package — sources, +dependencies, compiler flags, and so on. So if two packages differ in +any way, they end up in different locations in the file system, so they +don’t interfere with each other. Here is what a part of a typical Nix +store looks like: ![](../figures/user-environments.png) @@ -113,6 +114,3 @@ All `nix-env` operations work on the profile pointed to by $ nix-env -p /nix/var/nix/profiles/other-profile -i subversion This will *not* change the `~/.nix-profile` symlink. - -1. 160-bit truncations of SHA-256 hashes encoded in a base-32 notation, - to be precise. From 758c9ee1bb0e9d4bea420420af93e0128fabf188 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Fri, 24 Jul 2020 12:56:19 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 23/57] Clean up the manpages --- doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md | 12 +- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md | 54 +--- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-channel.md | 36 +-- .../src/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.md | 26 +- .../src/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md | 9 +- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-daemon.md | 12 +- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md | 284 +++++------------- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-hash.md | 50 +-- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md | 76 ++--- .../src/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.md | 38 +-- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md | 103 ++----- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md | 249 +++------------ 12 files changed, 248 insertions(+), 701 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md index 92abeb73e..4fa9cedfc 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md @@ -1,12 +1,8 @@ -nix.conf +Title: nix.conf -5 +# Name -Nix - -nix.conf - -Nix configuration file +`nix.conf` - Nix configuration file # Description @@ -20,7 +16,7 @@ By default Nix reads settings from the following places: - If `NIX_USER_CONF_FILES` is set, then each path separated by `:` will be loaded in reverse order. - + Otherwise it will look for `nix/nix.conf` files in `XDG_CONFIG_DIRS` and `XDG_CONFIG_HOME`. If these are unset, it will look in `$HOME/.config/nix.conf`. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md index ddebc4b1b..a65f53b4b 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md @@ -1,44 +1,18 @@ -nix-build +Title: nix-build -1 +# Name -Nix +`nix-build` - build a Nix expression -nix-build +# Synopsis -build a Nix expression - -nix-build - -\--arg - -name - -value - -\--argstr - -name - -value - -\--attr - -\-A - -attrPath - -\--no-out-link - -\--dry-run - -\--out-link - -\-o - -outlink - -paths +`nix-build` [*paths…*] + [`--arg` *name* *value*] + [`--argstr` *name* *value*] + [{`--attr` | `-A`} *attrPath*] + [`--no-out-link`] + [`--dry-run`] + [{`--out-link` | `-o`} *outlink*] # Description @@ -63,7 +37,7 @@ expression to a low-level store derivation) and [`nix-store --realise`](#rsec-nix-store-realise) (to build the store derivation). > **Warning** -> +> > The result of the build is automatically registered as a root of the > Nix garbage collector. This root disappears automatically when the > `result` symlink is deleted or renamed. So don’t rename the symlink. @@ -94,10 +68,10 @@ The following common options are supported: $ nix-build '' -A firefox store derivation is /nix/store/qybprl8sz2lc...-firefox-1.5.0.7.drv /nix/store/d18hyl92g30l...-firefox-1.5.0.7 - + $ ls -l result lrwxrwxrwx ... result -> /nix/store/d18hyl92g30l...-firefox-1.5.0.7 - + $ ls ./result/bin/ firefox firefox-config diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-channel.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-channel.md index 0c20788f0..6b4bd2459 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-channel.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-channel.md @@ -1,34 +1,12 @@ -nix-channel +Title: nix-channel -1 +# Name -Nix +`nix-channel` - manage Nix channels -nix-channel +# Synopsis -manage Nix channels - -nix-channel - -\--add - -url - -name - -\--remove - -name - -\--list - -\--update - -names - -\--rollback - -generation +`nix-channel` {`--add` url [*name*] | `--remove` *name* | `--list` | `--update` [*names…*] | `--rollback` [*generation*] } # Description @@ -82,10 +60,10 @@ You can revert channel updates using `--rollback`: $ nix-instantiate --eval -E '(import {}).lib.version' "14.04.527.0e935f1" - + $ nix-channel --rollback switching from generation 483 to 482 - + $ nix-instantiate --eval -E '(import {}).lib.version' "14.04.526.dbadfad" diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.md index 77b5d42d3..7b246f3b3 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.md @@ -1,28 +1,12 @@ -nix-collect-garbage +Title: nix-collect-garbage -1 +# Name -Nix +`nix-collect-garbage` - delete unreachable store paths -nix-collect-garbage +# Synopsis -delete unreachable store paths - -nix-collect-garbage - -\--delete-old - -\-d - -\--delete-older-than - -period - -\--max-freed - -bytes - -\--dry-run +`nix-collect-garbage` [`--delete-old`] [`-d`] [`--delete-older-than` *period*] [`--max-freed` *bytes*] [`--dry-run`] # Description diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md index 037334c4d..4026e50de 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md @@ -6,7 +6,13 @@ Title: nix-copy-closure # Synopsis -`nix-copy-closure` [`--to` | `--from`] [`--gzip`] [`--include-outputs`] [`--use-substitutes` | `-s`] [`-v`] _user@machine_ _paths_ +`nix-copy-closure` + [`--to` | `--from`] + [`--gzip`] + [`--include-outputs`] + [`--use-substitutes` | `-s`] + [`-v`] + _user@machine_ _paths_ # Description @@ -75,4 +81,3 @@ environment: $ nix-copy-closure --from alice@itchy.labs \ /nix/store/0dj0503hjxy5mbwlafv1rsbdiyx1gkdy-subversion-1.4.4 $ nix-env -i /nix/store/0dj0503hjxy5mbwlafv1rsbdiyx1gkdy-subversion-1.4.4 - diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-daemon.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-daemon.md index b0570789c..bd5d25026 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-daemon.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-daemon.md @@ -1,14 +1,12 @@ -nix-daemon +Title: nix-daemon -8 +# Name -Nix +`nix-daemon` - Nix multi-user support daemon -nix-daemon +# Synopsis -Nix multi-user support daemon - -nix-daemon +`nix-daemon` # Description diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md index 90a2bd351..cf688100e 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md @@ -1,50 +1,20 @@ -nix-env +Title: nix-env -1 +# Name -Nix +`nix-env` - manipulate or query Nix user environments -nix-env +# Synopsis -manipulate or query Nix user environments - -nix-env - -\--arg - -name - -value - -\--argstr - -name - -value - -\--file - -\-f - -path - -\--profile - -\-p - -path - -\--system-filter - -system - -\--dry-run - -operation - -options - -arguments +`nix-env` + [`--option` *name* *value*] + [`--arg` *name* *value*] + [`--argstr` *name* *value*] + [{`--file` | `-f`} *path*] + [{`--profile` | `-p`} *path(] + [`--system-filter` *system*] + [`--dry-run`] + *operation* [*options…*] [*arguments…*] # Description @@ -103,7 +73,7 @@ have an effect. See also [???](#sec-common-options). expression*) used by the `--install`, `--upgrade`, and `--query --available` operations to obtain derivations. The default is `~/.nix-defexpr`. - + If the argument starts with `http://` or `https://`, it is interpreted as the URL of a tarball that will be downloaded and unpacked to a temporary location. The tarball must include a single @@ -120,7 +90,7 @@ have an effect. See also [???](#sec-common-options). `--switch-generation`, `--delete-generations` and `--rollback` operations, this flag will cause `nix-env` to print what *would* be done if this flag had not been specified, without actually doing it. - + `--dry-run` also prints out which paths will be [substituted](#gloss-substitute) (i.e., downloaded) and which paths will be built from source (because no substitute is available). @@ -135,38 +105,38 @@ have an effect. See also [???](#sec-common-options). # Files - `~/.nix-defexpr` - The source for the default Nix expressions used by the `--install`, - `--upgrade`, and `--query - --available` operations to obtain derivations. The `--file` option - may be used to override this default. - + The source for the default Nix expressions used by the + `--install`, `--upgrade`, and `--query --available` operations to + obtain derivations. The `--file` option may be used to override + this default. + If `~/.nix-defexpr` is a file, it is loaded as a Nix expression. If the expression is a set, it is used as the default Nix expression. If the expression is a function, an empty set is passed as argument and the return value is used as the default Nix expression. - + If `~/.nix-defexpr` is a directory containing a `default.nix` file, that file is loaded as in the above paragraph. - + If `~/.nix-defexpr` is a directory without a `default.nix` file, then its contents (both files and subdirectories) are loaded as Nix expressions. The expressions are combined into a single set, each expression under an attribute with the same name as the original file or subdirectory. - + For example, if `~/.nix-defexpr` contains two files, `foo.nix` and `bar.nix`, then the default Nix expression will essentially be - + { foo = import ~/.nix-defexpr/foo.nix; bar = import ~/.nix-defexpr/bar.nix; } - + The file `manifest.nix` is always ignored. Subdirectories without a `default.nix` file are traversed recursively in search of more Nix expressions, but the names of these intermediate directories are not added to the attribute paths of the default Nix expression. - + The command `nix-channel` places symlinks to the downloaded Nix expressions from each subscribed channel in this directory. @@ -180,21 +150,13 @@ have an effect. See also [???](#sec-common-options). ## Synopsis -nix-env - -\--install - -\-i - -\--preserve-installed - -\-P - -\--remove-all - -\-r - -args +`nix-env` {`--install` | `-i`} *args…* + [{`--prebuilt-only` | `-b`}] + [{`--attr` | `-A`}] + [`--from-expression`] [`-E`] + [`--from-profile` *path*] + [`--preserve-installed` | `-P`] + [`--remove-all` | `-r`] ## Description @@ -208,17 +170,17 @@ a number of possible ways: output paths are installed. Currently installed derivations with a name equal to the name of a derivation being added are removed unless the option `--preserve-installed` is specified. - + If there are multiple derivations matching a name in *args* that have the same name (e.g., `gcc-3.3.6` and `gcc-4.1.1`), then the derivation with the highest *priority* is used. A derivation can define a priority by declaring the `meta.priority` attribute. This attribute should be a number, with a higher value denoting a lower priority. The default priority is `0`. - + If there are multiple matching derivations with the same priority, then the derivation with the highest version will be installed. - + You can force the installation of multiple derivations with the same name by being specific about the versions. For instance, `nix-env -i gcc-3.3.6 gcc-4.1.1` will install both version of GCC (and will @@ -339,21 +301,13 @@ channel: ## Synopsis -nix-env - -\--upgrade - -\-u - -\--lt - -\--leq - -\--eq - -\--always - -args +`nix-env` {`--upgrade` | `-u`} *args* + [`--lt` | `--leq` | `--eq` | `--always`] + [{`--prebuilt-only` | `-b`}] + [{`--attr` | `-A`}] + [`--from-expression`] [`-E`] + [`--from-profile` *path*] + [`--preserve-installed` | `-P`] ## Description @@ -400,13 +354,13 @@ For the other flags, see `--install`. $ nix-env --upgrade gcc upgrading `gcc-3.3.1' to `gcc-3.4' - + $ nix-env -u gcc-3.3.2 --always (switch to a specific version) upgrading `gcc-3.4' to `gcc-3.3.2' - + $ nix-env --upgrade pan (no upgrades available, so nothing happens) - + $ nix-env -u (try to upgrade everything) upgrading `hello-2.1.2' to `hello-2.1.3' upgrading `mozilla-1.2' to `mozilla-1.4' @@ -451,19 +405,13 @@ This is illustrated by the following examples: ## Synopsis -nix-env - -\--uninstall - -\-e - -drvnames +`nix-env` {`--uninstall` | `-e`} *drvnames…* ## Description The uninstall operation creates a new user environment, based on the current generation of the active profile, from which the store paths -designated by the symbolic names *names* are removed. +designated by the symbolic names *drvnames* are removed. ## Examples @@ -474,11 +422,7 @@ designated by the symbolic names *names* are removed. ## Synopsis -nix-env - -\--set - -drvname +`nix-env` `--set` *drvname* ## Description @@ -496,15 +440,7 @@ contain just Firefox: ## Synopsis -nix-env - -\--set-flag - -name - -value - -drvnames +`nix-env` `--set-flag` *name* *value* *drvnames* ## Description @@ -545,20 +481,20 @@ while the old remains part of the profile: $ nix-env -q firefox-2.0.0.9 (the current one) - + $ nix-env --preserve-installed -i firefox-2.0.0.11 installing `firefox-2.0.0.11' building path(s) `/nix/store/myy0y59q3ig70dgq37jqwg1j0rsapzsl-user-environment' collision between `/nix/store/...-firefox-2.0.0.11/bin/firefox' and `/nix/store/...-firefox-2.0.0.9/bin/firefox'. (i.e., can’t have two active at the same time) - + $ nix-env --set-flag active false firefox setting flag on `firefox-2.0.0.9' - + $ nix-env --preserve-installed -i firefox-2.0.0.11 installing `firefox-2.0.0.11' - + $ nix-env -q firefox-2.0.0.11 (the enabled one) firefox-2.0.0.9 (the disabled one) @@ -572,57 +508,21 @@ To make files from `binutils` take precedence over files from `gcc`: ## Synopsis -nix-env - -\--query - -\-q - -\--installed - -\--available - -\-a - -\--status - -\-s - -\--attr-path - -\-P - -\--no-name - -\--compare-versions - -\-c - -\--system - -\--drv-path - -\--out-path - -\--description - -\--meta - -\--xml - -\--json - -\--prebuilt-only - -\-b - -\--attr - -\-A - -attribute-path - -names +`nix-env` {`--query` | `-q`} *names…* + [`--installed` | `--available` | `-a`] + [{`--status` | `-s`}] + [{`--attr-path` | `-P`}] + [`--no-name`] + [{`--compare-versions` | `-c`}] + [`--system`] + [`--drv-path`] + [`--out-path`] + [`--description`] + [`--meta`] + [`--xml`] + [`--json`] + [{`--prebuilt-only` | `-b`}] + [{`--attr` | `-A`} *attribute-path*] ## Description @@ -696,17 +596,17 @@ derivation is shown unless `--no-name` is specified. `--available` is given). This is useful for quickly seeing whether upgrades for installed packages are available in a Nix expression. A column is added with the following meaning: - + - `<` *version* A newer version of the package is available or installed. - + - `=` *version* At most the same version of the package is available or installed. - + - `>` *version* Only older versions of the package are available or installed. - + - `- ?` No version of the package is available or installed. @@ -797,13 +697,7 @@ To show all packages in the latest revision of the Nixpkgs repository: ## Synopsis -nix-env - -\--switch-profile - -\-S - -path +`nix-env` {`--switch-profile` | `-S`} *path* ## Description @@ -818,9 +712,7 @@ the symlink `~/.nix-profile` is made to point to *path*. ## Synopsis -nix-env - -\--list-generations +`nix-env` `--list-generations` ## Description @@ -841,11 +733,7 @@ generation, and indicates the current generation. ## Synopsis -nix-env - -\--delete-generations - -generations +`nix-env` `--delete-generations` *generations* ## Description @@ -862,24 +750,18 @@ generations is important to make garbage collection effective. ## Examples $ nix-env --delete-generations 3 4 8 - + $ nix-env --delete-generations +5 - + $ nix-env --delete-generations 30d - + $ nix-env -p other_profile --delete-generations old # Operation `--switch-generation` ## Synopsis -nix-env - -\--switch-generation - -\-G - -generation +`nix-env` {`--switch-generation` | `-G`} *generation* ## Description @@ -900,9 +782,7 @@ Switching will fail if the specified generation does not exist. ## Synopsis -nix-env - -\--rollback +`nix-env` `--rollback` ## Description @@ -915,7 +795,7 @@ generation, if it exists. It is just a convenience wrapper around $ nix-env --rollback switching from generation 92 to 91 - + $ nix-env --rollback error: no generation older than the current (91) exists diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-hash.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-hash.md index 3b8bbf740..38c9e0f67 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-hash.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-hash.md @@ -1,38 +1,16 @@ -nix-hash +Title: nix-hash -1 +# Name -Nix +`nix-hash` - compute the cryptographic hash of a path -nix-hash +# Synopsis -compute the cryptographic hash of a path +`nix-hash` [`--flat`] [`--base32`] [`--truncate`] [`--type` *hashAlgo*] *path…* -nix-hash +`nix-hash` `--to-base16` *hash…* -\--flat - -\--base32 - -\--truncate - -\--type - -hashAlgo - -path - -nix-hash - -\--to-base16 - -hash - -nix-hash - -\--to-base32 - -hash +`nix-hash` `--to-base32` *hash…* # Description @@ -92,22 +70,22 @@ Computing hashes: $ mkdir test $ echo "hello" > test/world - + $ nix-hash test/ (MD5 hash; default) 8179d3caeff1869b5ba1744e5a245c04 - + $ nix-store --dump test/ | md5sum (for comparison) 8179d3caeff1869b5ba1744e5a245c04 - - + $ nix-hash --type sha1 test/ e4fd8ba5f7bbeaea5ace89fe10255536cd60dab6 - + $ nix-hash --type sha1 --base32 test/ nvd61k9nalji1zl9rrdfmsmvyyjqpzg4 - + $ nix-hash --type sha256 --flat test/ error: reading file `test/': Is a directory - + $ nix-hash --type sha256 --flat test/world 5891b5b522d5df086d0ff0b110fbd9d21bb4fc7163af34d08286a2e846f6be03 @@ -115,6 +93,6 @@ Converting between hexadecimal and base-32: $ nix-hash --type sha1 --to-base32 e4fd8ba5f7bbeaea5ace89fe10255536cd60dab6 nvd61k9nalji1zl9rrdfmsmvyyjqpzg4 - + $ nix-hash --type sha1 --to-base16 nvd61k9nalji1zl9rrdfmsmvyyjqpzg4 e4fd8ba5f7bbeaea5ace89fe10255536cd60dab6 diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md index 6c9f2d3e1..b6bbbe80a 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md @@ -1,56 +1,22 @@ -nix-instantiate +Title: nix-instantiate -1 +# Name -Nix +`nix-instantiate` - instantiate store derivations from Nix expressions -nix-instantiate +# Synopsis -instantiate store derivations from Nix expressions +`nix-instantiate` + [`--parse` | `--eval` [`--strict`] [`--json`] [`--xml`] ] + [`--read-write-mode`] + [`--arg` *name* *value*] + [{`--attr`| `-A`} *attrPath*] + [`--add-root` *path*] + [`--indirect`] + [`--expr` | `-E`] + *files…* -nix-instantiate - -\--parse - -\--eval - -\--strict - -\--json - -\--xml - -\--read-write-mode - -\--arg - -name - -value - -\--attr - -\-A - -attrPath - -\--add-root - -path - -\--indirect - -\--expr - -\-E - -files - -nix-instantiate - -\--find-file - -files +`nix-instantiate` `--find-file` *files…* # Description @@ -91,9 +57,9 @@ See also [???](#sec-common-options) for a list of common options. When used with `--eval`, recursively evaluate list elements and attributes. Normally, such sub-expressions are left unevaluated (since the Nix expression language is lazy). - + > **Warning** - > + > > This option can cause non-termination, because lazy data > structures can be infinitely large. @@ -123,11 +89,11 @@ using `nix-store`: $ nix-instantiate test.nix (instantiate) /nix/store/cigxbmvy6dzix98dxxh9b6shg7ar5bvs-perl-BerkeleyDB-0.26.drv - + $ nix-store -r $(nix-instantiate test.nix) (build) ... /nix/store/qhqk4n8ci095g3sdp93x7rgwyh9rdvgk-perl-BerkeleyDB-0.26 (output path) - + $ ls -l /nix/store/qhqk4n8ci095g3sdp93x7rgwyh9rdvgk-perl-BerkeleyDB-0.26 dr-xr-xr-x 2 eelco users 4096 1970-01-01 01:00 lib ... @@ -145,10 +111,10 @@ Parsing and evaluating Nix expressions: $ nix-instantiate --parse -E '1 + 2' 1 + 2 - + $ nix-instantiate --eval -E '1 + 2' 3 - + $ nix-instantiate --eval --xml -E '1 + 2' @@ -179,5 +145,3 @@ attempt to show non-normal forms). ... - -# Environment variables diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.md index f7de27402..688496969 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.md @@ -1,32 +1,16 @@ -nix-prefetch-url +Title: nix-prefetch-url -1 +# Name -Nix +`nix-prefetch-url` - copy a file from a URL into the store and print its hash -nix-prefetch-url +# Synopsis -copy a file from a URL into the store and print its hash - -nix-prefetch-url - -\--version - -\--type - -hashAlgo - -\--print-path - -\--unpack - -\--name - -name - -url - -hash +`nix-prefetch-url` *url* [*hash*] + [`--type` *hashAlgo*] + [`--print-path`] + [`--unpack`] + [`--name` *name*] # Description @@ -77,11 +61,11 @@ Nix store is also printed. $ nix-prefetch-url ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.10.tar.gz 0ssi1wpaf7plaswqqjwigppsg5fyh99vdlb9kzl7c9lng89ndq1i - + $ nix-prefetch-url --print-path mirror://gnu/hello/hello-2.10.tar.gz 0ssi1wpaf7plaswqqjwigppsg5fyh99vdlb9kzl7c9lng89ndq1i /nix/store/3x7dwzq014bblazs7kq20p9hyzz0qh8g-hello-2.10.tar.gz - + $ nix-prefetch-url --unpack --print-path https://github.com/NixOS/patchelf/archive/0.8.tar.gz 079agjlv0hrv7fxnx9ngipx14gyncbkllxrp9cccnh3a50fxcmy7 /nix/store/19zrmhm3m40xxaw81c8cqm6aljgrnwj2-0.8.tar.gz diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md index 9e2b781ab..d6dbb6e26 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md @@ -1,60 +1,21 @@ -nix-shell +Title: nix-shell -1 +# Name -Nix +`nix-shell` - start an interactive shell based on a Nix expression -nix-shell +# Synopsis -start an interactive shell based on a Nix expression - -nix-shell - -\--arg - -name - -value - -\--argstr - -name - -value - -\--attr - -\-A - -attrPath - -\--command - -cmd - -\--run - -cmd - -\--exclude - -regexp - -\--pure - -\--keep - -name - -\--packages - -\-p - -packages - -expressions - -path +`nix-shell` + [`--arg` *name* *value*] + [`--argstr` *name* *value*] + [{`--attr` | `-A`} *attrPath*] + [`--command` *cmd*] + [`--run` *cmd*] + [`--exclude` *regexp*] + [--pure] + [--keep *name*] + {{`--packages` | `-p`} {*packages* | *expressions*} … | [*path*]} # Description @@ -96,11 +57,10 @@ All options not listed here are passed to `nix-store This command is executed in an interactive shell. (Use `--run` to use a non-interactive shell instead.) However, a call to `exit` is implicitly added to the command, so the shell will exit after - running the command. To prevent this, add `return` at the end; e.g. - `--command - "echo Hello; return"` will print `Hello` and then drop you into the - interactive shell. This can be useful for doing any additional - initialisation. + running the command. To prevent this, add `return` at the end; + e.g. `--command "echo Hello; return"` will print `Hello` and then + drop you into the interactive shell. This can be useful for doing + any additional initialisation. - `--run` *cmd* Like `--command`, but executes the command in a non-interactive @@ -129,8 +89,7 @@ All options not listed here are passed to `nix-store - `-i` *interpreter* The chained script interpreter to be invoked by `nix-shell`. Only - applicable in `#!`-scripts (described - [below](#ssec-nix-shell-shebang)). + applicable in `#!`-scripts (described below). - `--keep` *name* When a `--pure` shell is started, keep the listed environment @@ -186,7 +145,7 @@ gives you a shell containing the Pan package from a specific revision of Nixpkgs: $ nix-shell -p pan -I nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/8a3eea054838b55aca962c3fbde9c83c102b8bf2.tar.gz - + [nix-shell:~]$ pan --version Pan 0.139 @@ -213,9 +172,9 @@ For example, here is a Python script that depends on Python and the #! /usr/bin/env nix-shell #! nix-shell -i python -p python pythonPackages.prettytable - + import prettytable - + # Print a simple table. t = prettytable.PrettyTable(["N", "N^2"]) for n in range(1, 10): t.add_row([n, n * n]) @@ -226,12 +185,12 @@ requires Perl and the `HTML::TokeParser::Simple` and `LWP` packages: #! /usr/bin/env nix-shell #! nix-shell -i perl -p perl perlPackages.HTMLTokeParserSimple perlPackages.LWP - + use HTML::TokeParser::Simple; - + # Fetch nixos.org and print all hrefs. my $p = HTML::TokeParser::Simple->new(url => 'http://nixos.org/'); - + while (my $token = $p->get_tag("a")) { my $href = $token->get_attr("href"); print "$href\n" if $href; @@ -242,11 +201,11 @@ package like Terraform: #! /usr/bin/env nix-shell #! nix-shell -i bash -p "terraform.withPlugins (plugins: [ plugins.openstack ])" - + terraform apply > **Note** -> +> > You must use double quotes (`"`) when passing a simple Nix expression > in a nix-shell shebang. @@ -257,10 +216,10 @@ branch): #! /usr/bin/env nix-shell #! nix-shell -i runghc -p "haskellPackages.ghcWithPackages (ps: [ps.HTTP ps.tagsoup])" #! nix-shell -I nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-18.03.tar.gz - + import Network.HTTP import Text.HTML.TagSoup - + -- Fetch nixos.org and print all hrefs. main = do resp <- Network.HTTP.simpleHTTP (getRequest "http://nixos.org/") @@ -285,7 +244,5 @@ where the file `deps.nix` in the same directory as the `#!`-script contains: with import {}; - - runCommand "dummy" { buildInputs = [ python pythonPackages.prettytable ]; } "" -# Environment variables + runCommand "dummy" { buildInputs = [ python pythonPackages.prettytable ]; } "" diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md index a666de49b..a098beb1e 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md @@ -1,26 +1,15 @@ -nix-store +Title: nix-store -1 +# Name -Nix +`nix-store` - manipulate or query the Nix store -nix-store +# Synopsis -manipulate or query the Nix store - -nix-store - -\--add-root - -path - -\--indirect - -operation - -options - -arguments +`nix-store` *operation* [*options…*] [*arguments…*] + [`--option` *name* *value*] + [`--add-root` *path*] + [`--indirect`] # Description @@ -44,7 +33,7 @@ options. which must be inside a directory that is scanned for roots by the garbage collector (i.e., typically in a subdirectory of `/nix/var/nix/gcroots/`) *unless* the `--indirect` flag is used. - + If there are multiple results, then multiple symlinks will be created by sequentially numbering symlinks beyond the first one (e.g., `foo`, `foo-2`, `foo-3`, and so on). @@ -55,24 +44,24 @@ options. commands such as `nix-build` that place a symlink to the build result in the current directory; such a build result should not be garbage-collected unless the symlink is removed. - + The `--indirect` flag causes a uniquely named symlink to *path* to be stored in `/nix/var/nix/gcroots/auto/`. For instance, - + $ nix-store --add-root /home/eelco/bla/result --indirect -r ... - + $ ls -l /nix/var/nix/gcroots/auto lrwxrwxrwx 1 ... 2005-03-13 21:10 dn54lcypm8f8... -> /home/eelco/bla/result - + $ ls -l /home/eelco/bla/result lrwxrwxrwx 1 ... 2005-03-13 21:10 /home/eelco/bla/result -> /nix/store/1r11343n6qd4...-f-spot-0.0.10 - + Thus, when `/home/eelco/bla/result` is removed, the GC root in the `auto` directory becomes a dangling symlink and will be ignored by the collector. - + > **Warning** - > + > > Note that it is not possible to move or rename indirect GC roots, > since the symlink in the `auto` directory will still point to the > old location. @@ -83,15 +72,7 @@ options. ## Synopsis -nix-store - -\--realise - -\-r - -paths - -\--dry-run +`nix-store` {`--realise` | `-r`} *paths…* [`--dry-run`] ## Description @@ -136,7 +117,7 @@ The following flags are available: output path is not identical to the corresponding output from the previous build, the new output path is left in `/nix/store/name.check.` - + See also the `build-repeat` configuration option, which repeats a derivation a number of times and prevents its outputs from being registered as “valid” in the Nix store unless they are identical. @@ -188,11 +169,7 @@ To test whether a previously-built derivation is deterministic: ## Synopsis -nix-store - -\--serve - -\--write +`nix-store` `--serve` [`--write`] ## Description @@ -220,19 +197,7 @@ used to provide build access to a given SSH public key: ## Synopsis -nix-store - -\--gc - -\--print-roots - -\--print-live - -\--print-dead - -\--max-freed - -bytes +`nix-store` `--gc` [`--print-roots` | `--print-live` | `--print-dead`] [`--max-freed` *bytes*] ## Description @@ -294,13 +259,7 @@ To delete at least 100 MiBs of unreachable paths: ## Synopsis -nix-store - -\--delete - -\--ignore-liveness - -paths +`nix-store` `--delete` [`--ignore-liveness`] *paths…* ## Description @@ -324,55 +283,13 @@ paths in the store that refer to it (i.e., depend on it). ## Synopsis -nix-store - -\--query - -\-q - -\--outputs - -\--requisites - -\-R - -\--references - -\--referrers - -\--referrers-closure - -\--deriver - -\-d - -\--graph - -\--tree - -\--binding - -name - -\-b - -name - -\--hash - -\--size - -\--roots - -\--use-output - -\-u - -\--force-realise - -\-f - -paths +`nix-store` {`--query` | `-q`} + {`--outputs` | `--requisites` | `-R` | `--references` | + `--referrers` | `--referrers-closure` | `--deriver` | `-d` | + `--graph` | `--tree` | `--binding` *name* | `-b` *name* | `--hash` | + `--size` | `--roots`} + [`--use-output`] [`-u`] [`--force-realise`] [`-f`] + *paths…* ## Description @@ -403,13 +320,13 @@ symlink. - `--requisites`; `-R` Prints out the [closure](#gloss-closure) of the store path *paths*. - + This query has one option: - - - `--include-outputs` + + - `--include-outputs` Also include the output path of store derivations, and their closures. - + This query can be used to implement various kinds of deployment. A *source deployment* is obtained by distributing the closure of a store derivation. A *binary deployment* is obtained by distributing @@ -555,11 +472,7 @@ depends on `svn`: ## Synopsis -nix-store - -\--add - -paths +`nix-store` `--add` *paths…* ## Description @@ -575,15 +488,7 @@ prints the resulting paths in the Nix store on standard output. ## Synopsis -nix-store - -\--recursive - -\--add-fixed - -algorithm - -paths +`nix-store` `--add-fixed` [`--recursive`] *algorithm* *paths…* ## Description @@ -608,13 +513,7 @@ This operation has the following options: ## Synopsis -nix-store - -\--verify - -\--check-contents - -\--repair +`nix-store` `--verify` [`--check-contents`] [`--repair`] ## Description @@ -643,11 +542,7 @@ This operation has the following options: ## Synopsis -nix-store - -\--verify-path - -paths +`nix-store` `--verify-path` *paths…* ## Description @@ -666,11 +561,7 @@ To verify the integrity of the `svn` command and all its dependencies: ## Synopsis -nix-store - -\--repair-path - -paths +`nix-store` `--repair-path` *paths…* ## Description @@ -679,7 +570,7 @@ by redownloading them using the available substituters. If no substitutes are available, then repair is not possible. > **Warning** -> +> > During repair, there is a very small time window during which the old > path (if it exists) is moved out of the way and replaced with the new > path. If repair is interrupted in between, then the system may be left @@ -692,7 +583,7 @@ substitutes are available, then repair is not possible. path `/nix/store/dj7a81wsm1ijwwpkks3725661h3263p5-glibc-2.13' was modified! expected hash `2db57715ae90b7e31ff1f2ecb8c12ec1cc43da920efcbe3b22763f36a1861588', got `481c5aa5483ebc97c20457bb8bca24deea56550d3985cda0027f67fe54b808e4' - + $ nix-store --repair-path /nix/store/dj7a81wsm1ijwwpkks3725661h3263p5-glibc-2.13 fetching path `/nix/store/d7a81wsm1ijwwpkks3725661h3263p5-glibc-2.13'... … @@ -701,11 +592,7 @@ substitutes are available, then repair is not possible. ## Synopsis -nix-store - -\--dump - -path +`nix-store` `--dump` *path* ## Description @@ -739,11 +626,7 @@ A Nix archive can be unpacked using `nix-store ## Synopsis -nix-store - -\--restore - -path +`nix-store` `--restore` *path* ## Description @@ -754,11 +637,7 @@ not already exist. The archive is read from standard input. ## Synopsis -nix-store - -\--export - -paths +`nix-store` `--export` *paths…* ## Description @@ -784,9 +663,7 @@ To import the whole closure again, run: ## Synopsis -nix-store - -\--import +`nix-store` `--import` ## Description @@ -800,9 +677,7 @@ Nix store, the import fails. ## Synopsis -nix-store - -\--optimise +`nix-store` `--optimise` ## Description @@ -832,13 +707,7 @@ Use `-vv` or `-vvv` to get some progress indication. ## Synopsis -nix-store - -\--read-log - -\-l - -paths +`nix-store` {`--read-log` | `-l`} *paths…* ## Description @@ -866,11 +735,7 @@ substitute, then the log is unavailable. ## Synopsis -nix-store - -\--dump-db - -paths +`nix-store` `--dump-db` [*paths…*] ## Description @@ -889,9 +754,7 @@ example. ## Synopsis -nix-store - -\--load-db +`nix-store` `--load-db` ## Description @@ -902,11 +765,7 @@ The operation `--load-db` reads a dump of the Nix database created by ## Synopsis -nix-store - -\--print-env - -drvpath +`nix-store` `--print-env` *drvpath* ## Description @@ -927,15 +786,7 @@ of the builder are placed in the variable `_args`. ## Synopsis -nix-store - -\--generate-binary-cache-key - -key-name - -secret-key-file - -public-key-file +`nix-store` `--generate-binary-cache-key` *key-name* *secret-key-file* *public-key-file* ## Description @@ -952,5 +803,3 @@ mandatory parameters: 2. The file name where the secret key is to be stored. 3. The file name where the public key is to be stored. - -# Environment variables From 7a0e6f076a34e214832ac3a8cc6472aea5fd1559 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Fri, 24 Jul 2020 12:58:31 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 24/57] Move figures --- doc/manual/{ => src}/figures/user-environments.png | Bin doc/manual/{ => src}/figures/user-environments.sxd | Bin 2 files changed, 0 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-) rename doc/manual/{ => src}/figures/user-environments.png (100%) rename doc/manual/{ => src}/figures/user-environments.sxd (100%) diff --git a/doc/manual/figures/user-environments.png b/doc/manual/src/figures/user-environments.png similarity index 100% rename from doc/manual/figures/user-environments.png rename to doc/manual/src/figures/user-environments.png diff --git a/doc/manual/figures/user-environments.sxd b/doc/manual/src/figures/user-environments.sxd similarity index 100% rename from doc/manual/figures/user-environments.sxd rename to doc/manual/src/figures/user-environments.sxd From 4a79b3598f077983dd5717d7822ef8cb6a9fa967 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Fri, 24 Jul 2020 13:01:00 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 25/57] Fix nix-copy-closure manpage --- .../src/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md | 46 +++++++++---------- 1 file changed, 23 insertions(+), 23 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md index 4026e50de..2a4558324 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md @@ -37,37 +37,37 @@ and second to send the dump of those paths. If this bothers you, use # Options -*`--to`* -: Copy the closure of _paths_ from the local Nix store to the Nix - store on _machine_. This is the default. + - `--to` + Copy the closure of _paths_ from the local Nix store to the Nix + store on _machine_. This is the default. -*`--from`* -: Copy the closure of _paths_ from the Nix store on _machine_ to the - local Nix store. + - `--from` + Copy the closure of _paths_ from the Nix store on _machine_ to the + local Nix store. -*`--gzip`* -: Enable compression of the SSH connection. + - `--gzip` + Enable compression of the SSH connection. -*`--include-outputs`* -: Also copy the outputs of store derivations included in the closure. + - `--include-outputs` + Also copy the outputs of store derivations included in the closure. -*`--use-substitutes` / `-s`* -: Attempt to download missing paths on the target machine using Nix’s - substitute mechanism. Any paths that cannot be substituted on the - target are still copied normally from the source. This is useful, - for instance, if the connection between the source and target - machine is slow, but the connection between the target machine and - `nixos.org` (the default binary cache server) is - fast. + - `--use-substitutes` / `-s` + Attempt to download missing paths on the target machine using Nix’s + substitute mechanism. Any paths that cannot be substituted on the + target are still copied normally from the source. This is useful, + for instance, if the connection between the source and target + machine is slow, but the connection between the target machine and + `nixos.org` (the default binary cache server) is + fast. -*`-v`* -: Show verbose output. + - `-v` + Show verbose output. # Environment variables -*`NIX_SSHOPTS`* -: Additional options to be passed to `ssh` on the command - line. + - `NIX_SSHOPTS` + Additional options to be passed to `ssh` on the command + line. # Examples From da3d776cb91123a4d0528251b7ce909419ca0c7a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Fri, 24 Jul 2020 14:31:33 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 26/57] Fix some dangling references --- .../src/advanced-topics/cores-vs-jobs.md | 35 +++++---- doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/diff-hook.md | 20 +++--- .../src/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.md | 7 +- doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md | 24 ++----- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md | 2 +- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-channel.md | 1 - doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md | 2 +- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md | 2 - doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md | 2 +- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md | 14 ++-- .../src/expressions/arguments-variables.md | 22 +++--- doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md | 8 +-- doc/manual/src/expressions/builder-syntax.md | 72 ------------------- doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md | 69 +++++++++--------- doc/manual/src/expressions/derivations.md | 5 +- .../src/expressions/expression-syntax.md | 7 +- doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md | 13 ++-- .../src/expressions/language-operators.md | 7 +- doc/manual/src/glossary.md | 38 +++++----- .../package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md | 10 +-- .../src/package-management/copy-closure.md | 2 +- .../package-management/package-management.md | 9 +-- doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md | 3 +- 23 files changed, 139 insertions(+), 235 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 doc/manual/src/expressions/builder-syntax.md diff --git a/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/cores-vs-jobs.md b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/cores-vs-jobs.md index 91e95d5b4..4a9058ca1 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/cores-vs-jobs.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/cores-vs-jobs.md @@ -1,33 +1,32 @@ # Tuning Cores and Jobs -Nix has two relevant settings with regards to how your CPU cores will be -utilized: [???](#conf-cores) and [???](#conf-max-jobs). This chapter -will talk about what they are, how they interact, and their -configuration trade-offs. +Nix has two relevant settings with regards to how your CPU cores will +be utilized: `cores` and `max-jobs`. This chapter will talk about what +they are, how they interact, and their configuration trade-offs. - - [???](#conf-max-jobs) + - `max-jobs` Dictates how many separate derivations will be built at the same - time. If you set this to zero, the local machine will do no builds. - Nix will still substitute from binary caches, and build remotely if - remote builders are configured. + time. If you set this to zero, the local machine will do no + builds. Nix will still substitute from binary caches, and build + remotely if remote builders are configured. - - [???](#conf-cores) - Suggests how many cores each derivation should use. Similar to `make - -j`. + - `cores` + Suggests how many cores each derivation should use. Similar to + `make -j`. -The [???](#conf-cores) setting determines the value of -`NIX_BUILD_CORES`. `NIX_BUILD_CORES` is equal to [???](#conf-cores), -unless [???](#conf-cores) equals `0`, in which case `NIX_BUILD_CORES` -will be the total number of cores in the system. +The `cores` setting determines the value of +`NIX_BUILD_CORES`. `NIX_BUILD_CORES` is equal to `cores`, unless +`cores` equals `0`, in which case `NIX_BUILD_CORES` will be the total +number of cores in the system. The maximum number of consumed cores is a simple multiplication, -[???](#conf-max-jobs) \* `NIX_BUILD_CORES`. +`max-jobs` \* `NIX_BUILD_CORES`. The balance on how to set these two independent variables depends upon each builder's workload and hardware. Here are a few example scenarios on a machine with 24 cores: -| [???](#conf-max-jobs) | [???](#conf-cores) | `NIX_BUILD_CORES` | Maximum Processes | Result | +| `max-jobs` | `cores` | `NIX_BUILD_CORES` | Maximum Processes | Result | | --------------------- | ------------------ | ----------------- | ----------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | 1 | 24 | 24 | 24 | One derivation will be built at a time, each one can use 24 cores. Undersold if a job can’t use 24 cores. | | 4 | 6 | 6 | 24 | Four derivations will be built at once, each given access to six cores. | @@ -35,8 +34,6 @@ on a machine with 24 cores: | 24 | 1 | 1 | 24 | 24 derivations can build at the same time, each using a single core. Never oversold, but derivations which require many cores will be very slow to compile. | | 24 | 0 | 24 | 576 | 24 derivations can build at the same time, each using all the available cores of the machine. Very likely to be oversold, and very likely to suffer context switches. | -Balancing 24 Build Cores - It is up to the derivations' build script to respect host's requested cores-per-build by following the value of the `NIX_BUILD_CORES` environment variable. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/diff-hook.md b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/diff-hook.md index 2c9896fa5..e2234147f 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/diff-hook.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/diff-hook.md @@ -1,9 +1,8 @@ # Verifying Build Reproducibility -Specify a program with Nix's [???](#conf-diff-hook) to compare build -results when two builds produce different results. Note: this hook is -only executed if the results are not the same, this hook is not used for -determining if the results are the same. +You can use Nix's `diff-hook` setting to compare build results. Note +that this hook is only executed if the results differ; it is not used +for determining if the results are the same. For purposes of demonstration, we'll use the following Nix file, `deterministic.nix` for testing: @@ -93,7 +92,7 @@ has copied the build results to that directory where you can examine it. > path will be deleted on the next garbage collection. > > The path is guaranteed to be alive for the duration of -> [???](#conf-diff-hook)'s execution, but may be deleted any time after. +> the `diff-hook`'s execution, but may be deleted any time after. > > If the comparison is performed as part of automated tooling, please > use the diff-hook or author your tooling to handle the case where the @@ -112,9 +111,8 @@ Run the build without `--check`, and then try with `--check` again. Automatically verify every build at build time by executing the build multiple times. -Setting [???](#conf-repeat) and [???](#conf-enforce-determinism) in your -`nix.conf` permits the automated verification of every build Nix -performs. +Setting `repeat` and `enforce-determinism` in your `nix.conf` permits +the automated verification of every build Nix performs. The following configuration will run each build three times, and will require the build to be deterministic: @@ -122,9 +120,9 @@ require the build to be deterministic: enforce-determinism = true repeat = 2 -Setting [???](#conf-enforce-determinism) to false as in the following -configuration will run the build multiple times, execute the build hook, -but will allow the build to succeed even if it does not build +Setting `enforce-determinism` to false as in the following +configuration will run the build multiple times, execute the build +hook, but will allow the build to succeed even if it does not build reproducibly: enforce-determinism = false diff --git a/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.md b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.md index 166b57da6..0d02a8ff3 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.md @@ -17,9 +17,8 @@ the build loop. # Prerequisites -This tutorial assumes you have configured an S3-compatible binary cache -according to the instructions at -[???](#ssec-s3-substituter-authenticated-writes), and that the `root` +This tutorial assumes you have [configured an S3-compatible binary +cache](../package-management/s3-substituter.md), and that the `root` user's default AWS profile can upload to the bucket. # Set up a Signing Key @@ -33,7 +32,7 @@ distribute the public key for verifying the authenticity of the paths. example-nix-cache-1:1/cKDz3QCCOmwcztD2eV6Coggp6rqc9DGjWv7C0G+rM= Then, add the public key and the cache URL to your `nix.conf`'s -[???](#conf-trusted-public-keys) and [???](#conf-substituters) like: +`trusted-public-keys` and `substituters` options: substituters = https://cache.nixos.org/ s3://example-nix-cache trusted-public-keys = cache.nixos.org-1:6NCHdD59X431o0gWypbMrAURkbJ16ZPMQFGspcDShjY= example-nix-cache-1:1/cKDz3QCCOmwcztD2eV6Coggp6rqc9DGjWv7C0G+rM= diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md index 4fa9cedfc..bedf1ec6b 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md @@ -77,8 +77,7 @@ The following settings are currently available: --optimise` to get rid of duplicate files. - `builders` - A list of machines on which to perform builds. See - [???](#chap-distributed-builds) for details. + A list of machines on which to perform builds. - `builders-use-substitutes` If set to `true`, Nix will instruct remote build machines to use @@ -140,8 +139,6 @@ The following settings are currently available: `-jN` flag to GNU Make. It can be overridden using the `--cores` command line switch and defaults to `1`. The value `0` means that the builder should use all available CPU cores in the system. - - See also [???](#chap-tuning-cores-and-jobs). - `diff-hook` Absolute path to an executable capable of diffing build results. The @@ -298,8 +295,6 @@ The following settings are currently available: `preferLocalBuild` derivation attribute which executes locally regardless). It can be overridden using the `--max-jobs` (`-j`) command line switch. - - See also [???](#chap-tuning-cores-and-jobs). - `max-silent-time` This option defines the maximum number of seconds that a builder can @@ -429,12 +424,10 @@ The following settings are currently available: Example: `/nix/store/zf5lbh336mnzf1nlswdn11g4n2m8zh3g-bash-4.4-p23-dev - /nix/store/rjxwxwv1fpn9wa2x5ssk5phzwlcv4mna-bash-4.4-p23-doc - /nix/store/6bqvbzjkcp9695dq0dpl5y43nvy37pq1-bash-4.4-p23-info - /nix/store/r7fng3kk3vlpdlh2idnrbn37vh4imlj2-bash-4.4-p23-man - /nix/store/xfghy8ixrhz3kyy6p724iv3cxji088dx-bash-4.4-p23`. - - See [???](#chap-post-build-hook) for an example implementation. + /nix/store/rjxwxwv1fpn9wa2x5ssk5phzwlcv4mna-bash-4.4-p23-doc + /nix/store/6bqvbzjkcp9695dq0dpl5y43nvy37pq1-bash-4.4-p23-info + /nix/store/r7fng3kk3vlpdlh2idnrbn37vh4imlj2-bash-4.4-p23-man + /nix/store/xfghy8ixrhz3kyy6p724iv3cxji088dx-bash-4.4-p23`. - `repeat` How many times to repeat builds to check whether they are @@ -459,8 +452,7 @@ The following settings are currently available: `allowed-uri`. The default is `false`. - `run-diff-hook` - If true, enable the execution of - [varlistentry\_title](#conf-diff-hook). + If true, enable the execution of the `diff-hook` program. When using the Nix daemon, `run-diff-hook` must be set in the `nix.conf` configuration file, and cannot be passed at the command @@ -595,15 +587,11 @@ The following settings are currently available: Nix will print a log message at the "vomit" level for every function entrance and function exit. -
- function-trace entered undefined position at 1565795816999559622 function-trace exited undefined position at 1565795816999581277 function-trace entered /nix/store/.../example.nix:226:41 at 1565795253249935150 function-trace exited /nix/store/.../example.nix:226:41 at 1565795253249941684 -
- The `undefined position` means the function call is a builtin. Use the `contrib/stack-collapse.py` script distributed with the Nix diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md index a65f53b4b..81dc26a39 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md @@ -46,7 +46,7 @@ expression to a low-level store derivation) and [`nix-store All options not listed here are passed to `nix-store --realise`, except for `--arg` and `--attr` / `-A` which are passed to -`nix-instantiate`. See also [???](#sec-common-options). +`nix-instantiate`. - `--no-out-link` Do not create a symlink to the output path. Note that as a result diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-channel.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-channel.md index 6b4bd2459..ea3a57e69 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-channel.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-channel.md @@ -13,7 +13,6 @@ Title: nix-channel A Nix channel is a mechanism that allows you to automatically stay up-to-date with a set of pre-built Nix expressions. A Nix channel is just a URL that points to a place containing a set of Nix expressions. -See also [???](#sec-channels). To see the list of official NixOS channels, visit . diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md index cf688100e..ab1d10c08 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md @@ -66,7 +66,7 @@ match. Here are some examples: This section lists the options that are common to all operations. These options are allowed for every subcommand, though they may not always -have an effect. See also [???](#sec-common-options). +have an effect. - `--file` / `-f` *path* Specifies the Nix expression (designated below as the *active Nix diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md index b6bbbe80a..ca9ef1fc9 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md @@ -30,8 +30,6 @@ the resulting store derivations are printed on standard output. If *files* is the character `-`, then a Nix expression will be read from standard input. -See also [???](#sec-common-options) for a list of common options. - # Options - `--add-root` *path*; `--indirect` diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md index d6dbb6e26..492351867 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md @@ -50,7 +50,7 @@ will cause `nix-shell` to print `Hello shell`. All options not listed here are passed to `nix-store --realise`, except for `--arg` and `--attr` / `-A` which are passed to -`nix-instantiate`. See also [???](#sec-common-options). +`nix-instantiate`. - `--command` *cmd* In the environment of the derivation, run the shell command *cmd*. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md index a098beb1e..b15340fde 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md @@ -23,16 +23,15 @@ subcommand to be performed. These are documented below. This section lists the options that are common to all operations. These options are allowed for every subcommand, though they may not always -have an effect. See also [???](#sec-common-options) for a list of common -options. +have an effect. - `--add-root` *path* Causes the result of a realisation (`--realise` and `--force-realise`) to be registered as a root of the garbage - collector(see [???](#ssec-gc-roots)). The root is stored in *path*, - which must be inside a directory that is scanned for roots by the - garbage collector (i.e., typically in a subdirectory of - `/nix/var/nix/gcroots/`) *unless* the `--indirect` flag is used. + collector. The root is stored in *path*, which must be inside a + directory that is scanned for roots by the garbage collector + (i.e., typically in a subdirectory of `/nix/var/nix/gcroots/`) + *unless* the `--indirect` flag is used. If there are multiple results, then multiple symlinks will be created by sequentially numbering symlinks beyond the first one @@ -209,8 +208,7 @@ The following suboperations may be specified: - `--print-roots` This operation prints on standard output the set of roots used by - the garbage collector. What constitutes a root is described in - [???](#ssec-gc-roots). + the garbage collector. - `--print-live` This operation prints on standard output the set of “live” store diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/arguments-variables.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/arguments-variables.md index 436ae559d..2956f98f1 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/arguments-variables.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/arguments-variables.md @@ -1,11 +1,12 @@ # Arguments and Variables -The Nix expression in [???](#ex-hello-nix) is a function; it is missing -some arguments that have to be filled in somewhere. In the Nix Packages -collection this is done in the file `pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix`, -where all Nix expressions for packages are imported and called with the -appropriate arguments. Here are some fragments of `all-packages.nix`, -with annotations of what they mean: +The [Nix expression for GNU Hello](expression-syntax.md) is a +function; it is missing some arguments that have to be filled in +somewhere. In the Nix Packages collection this is done in the file +`pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix`, where all Nix expressions for +packages are imported and called with the appropriate arguments. Here +are some fragments of `all-packages.nix`, with annotations of what +they mean: ... @@ -35,9 +36,10 @@ with annotations of what they mean: 2. Here we *import* the Nix expression for GNU Hello. The import operation just loads and returns the specified Nix expression. In - fact, we could just have put the contents of [???](#ex-hello-nix) in - `all-packages.nix` at this point. That would be completely - equivalent, but it would make the file rather bulky. + fact, we could just have put the contents of the Nix expression + for GNU Hello in `all-packages.nix` at this point. That would be + completely equivalent, but it would make `all-packages.nix` rather + bulky. Note that we refer to `../applications/misc/hello/ex-1`, not `../applications/misc/hello/ex-1/default.nix`. When you try to @@ -54,7 +56,7 @@ with annotations of what they mean: The result of this function call is an actual derivation that can be built by Nix (since when we fill in the arguments of the function, what we get is its body, which is the call to `stdenv.mkDerivation` - in [???](#ex-hello-nix)). + in the [Nix expression for GNU Hello](expression-syntax.md)). > **Note** > diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md index 57222de85..e0dda56f8 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md @@ -25,10 +25,10 @@ steps to elucidate what a builder does. It performs the following steps: So the first step is to set up the environment. This is done by calling the `setup` script of the standard environment. The - environment variable `stdenv` points to the location of the standard - environment being used. (It wasn't specified explicitly as an - attribute in [???](#ex-hello-nix), but `mkDerivation` adds it - automatically.) + environment variable `stdenv` points to the location of the + standard environment being used. (It wasn't specified explicitly + as an attribute in Hello's Nix expression, but `mkDerivation` adds + it automatically.) 2. Since Hello needs Perl, we have to make sure that Perl is in the `PATH`. The `perl` environment variable points to the location of diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/builder-syntax.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builder-syntax.md deleted file mode 100644 index 916159d40..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/builder-syntax.md +++ /dev/null @@ -1,72 +0,0 @@ -# Builder Syntax - - source $stdenv/setup - - PATH=$perl/bin:$PATH - - tar xvfz $src - cd hello-* - ./configure --prefix=$out - make - make install - -[example\_title](#ex-hello-builder) shows the builder referenced from -Hello's Nix expression (stored in -`pkgs/applications/misc/hello/ex-1/builder.sh`). The builder can -actually be made a lot shorter by using the *generic builder* functions -provided by `stdenv`, but here we write out the build steps to elucidate -what a builder does. It performs the following steps: - - - When Nix runs a builder, it initially completely clears the - environment (except for the attributes declared in the derivation). - For instance, the `PATH` variable is empty\[1\]. This is done to - prevent undeclared inputs from being used in the build process. If - for example the `PATH` contained `/usr/bin`, then you might - accidentally use `/usr/bin/gcc`. - - So the first step is to set up the environment. This is done by - calling the `setup` script of the standard environment. The - environment variable `stdenv` points to the location of the standard - environment being used. (It wasn't specified explicitly as an - attribute in [???](#ex-hello-nix), but `mkDerivation` adds it - automatically.) - - - Since Hello needs Perl, we have to make sure that Perl is in the - `PATH`. The `perl` environment variable points to the location of - the Perl package (since it was passed in as an attribute to the - derivation), so `$perl/bin` is the directory containing the Perl - interpreter. - - - Now we have to unpack the sources. The `src` attribute was bound to - the result of fetching the Hello source tarball from the network, so - the `src` environment variable points to the location in the Nix - store to which the tarball was downloaded. After unpacking, we `cd` - to the resulting source directory. - - The whole build is performed in a temporary directory created in - `/tmp`, by the way. This directory is removed after the builder - finishes, so there is no need to clean up the sources afterwards. - Also, the temporary directory is always newly created, so you don't - have to worry about files from previous builds interfering with the - current build. - - - GNU Hello is a typical Autoconf-based package, so we first have to - run its `configure` script. In Nix every package is stored in a - separate location in the Nix store, for instance - `/nix/store/9a54ba97fb71b65fda531012d0443ce2-hello-2.1.1`. Nix - computes this path by cryptographically hashing all attributes of - the derivation. The path is passed to the builder through the `out` - environment variable. So here we give `configure` the parameter - `--prefix=$out` to cause Hello to be installed in the expected - location. - - - Finally we build Hello (`make`) and install it into the location - specified by `out` (`make install`). - -If you are wondering about the absence of error checking on the result -of various commands called in the builder: this is because the shell -script is evaluated with Bash's `-e` option, which causes the script to -be aborted if any command fails without an error check. - -1. Actually, it's initialised to `/path-not-set` to prevent Bash from - setting it to a default value. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md index 8f19c692a..3c9bb4533 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md @@ -83,7 +83,7 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. its elements or attributes are also evaluated recursively. - `derivation` *attrs*; `builtins.derivation` *attrs* - `derivation` is described in [???](#ssec-derivation). + `derivation` is described in [its own section](derivations.md). - `dirOf` *s*; `builtins.dirOf` *s* Return the directory part of the string *s*, that is, everything @@ -233,8 +233,8 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. > **Note** > - > Nix will refetch the branch in accordance to - > [???](#conf-tarball-ttl). + > Nix will refetch the branch in accordance with + > the option `tarball-ttl`. > **Note** > @@ -351,19 +351,18 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. - `import` *path*; `builtins.import` *path* Load, parse and return the Nix expression in the file *path*. If - *path* is a directory, the file ` default.nix - ` in that directory is loaded. Evaluation aborts if the file - doesn’t exist or contains an incorrect Nix expression. `import` - implements Nix’s module system: you can put any Nix expression (such - as a set or a function) in a separate file, and use it from Nix - expressions in other files. + *path* is a directory, the file ` default.nix ` in that directory + is loaded. Evaluation aborts if the file doesn’t exist or contains + an incorrect Nix expression. `import` implements Nix’s module + system: you can put any Nix expression (such as a set or a + function) in a separate file, and use it from Nix expressions in + other files. > **Note** > > Unlike some languages, `import` is a regular function in Nix. - > Paths using the angle bracket syntax (e.g., ` - > > > > > import` *\*) are normal path values (see - > [???](#ssec-values)). + > Paths using the angle bracket syntax (e.g., `import` *\*) + > are [normal path values](language-values.md). A Nix expression loaded by `import` must not contain any *free variables* (identifiers that are not defined in the Nix expression @@ -643,11 +642,12 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. (which is not the case for `abort`). - `builtins.toFile` *name* *s* - Store the string *s* in a file in the Nix store and return its path. - The file has suffix *name*. This file can be used as an input to - derivations. One application is to write builders “inline”. For - instance, the following Nix expression combines [???](#ex-hello-nix) - and [???](#ex-hello-builder) into one file: + Store the string *s* in a file in the Nix store and return its + path. The file has suffix *name*. This file can be used as an + input to derivations. One application is to write builders + “inline”. For instance, the following Nix expression combines the + [Nix expression for GNU Hello](expression-syntax.md) and its + [build script](build-script.md) into one file: { stdenv, fetchurl, perl }: @@ -688,8 +688,9 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. "; ``` - Note that `${configFile}` is an antiquotation (see - [???](#ssec-values)), so the result of the expression `configFile` + Note that `${configFile}` is an + [antiquotation](language-values.md), so the result of the + expression `configFile` (i.e., a path like `/nix/store/m7p7jfny445k...-foo.conf`) will be spliced into the resulting string. @@ -786,17 +787,17 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. container contains a number of servlets (`*.war` files) each exported under a specific URI prefix. So the servlet configuration is a list of sets containing the `path` and `war` of the servlet - ([???](#ex-toxml-co-servlets)). This kind of information is - difficult to communicate with the normal method of passing - information through an environment variable, which just concatenates - everything together into a string (which might just work in this - case, but wouldn’t work if fields are optional or contain lists - themselves). Instead the Nix expression is converted to an XML - representation with `toXML`, which is unambiguous and can easily be - processed with the appropriate tools. For instance, in the example - an XSLT stylesheet (at point ②) is applied to it (at point ①) to - generate the XML configuration file for the Jetty server. The XML - representation produced at point ③ by `toXML` is as follows: + (①). This kind of information is difficult to communicate with the + normal method of passing information through an environment + variable, which just concatenates everything together into a + string (which might just work in this case, but wouldn’t work if + fields are optional or contain lists themselves). Instead the Nix + expression is converted to an XML representation with `toXML`, + which is unambiguous and can easily be processed with the + appropriate tools. For instance, in the example an XSLT stylesheet + (at point ②) is applied to it (at point ①) to generate the XML + configuration file for the Jetty server. The XML representation + produced at point ③ by `toXML` is as follows: @@ -820,10 +821,10 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. - Note that [???](#ex-toxml) uses the `toFile` built-in to write the - builder and the stylesheet “inline” in the Nix expression. The path - of the stylesheet is spliced into the builder using the syntax - `xsltproc ${stylesheet}`. + Note that we used the `toFile` built-in to write the builder and + the stylesheet “inline” in the Nix expression. The path of the + stylesheet is spliced into the builder using the syntax `xsltproc + ${stylesheet}`. - `builtins.trace` *e1* *e2* Evaluate *e1* and print its abstract syntax representation on diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/derivations.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/derivations.md index 4cb233e2e..0e5656b5b 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/derivations.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/derivations.md @@ -9,8 +9,9 @@ the attributes of which specify the inputs of the build. `"x86_64-darwin"`. (To figure out your system type, run `nix -vv --version`.) The build can only be performed on a machine and operating system matching the system type. (Nix can automatically - forward builds for other platforms by forwarding them to other - machines; see [???](#chap-distributed-builds).) + [forward builds for other + platforms](../advanced-topics/distributed-builds.md) by forwarding + them to other machines.) - There must be an attribute named `name` whose value must be a string. This is used as a symbolic name for the package by diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/expression-syntax.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/expression-syntax.md index 2abe6ac6e..e3432b577 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/expression-syntax.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/expression-syntax.md @@ -61,9 +61,10 @@ elements (referenced from the figure by number): sometimes be omitted, in which case `mkDerivation` will fill in a default builder (which does a `configure; make; make install`, in essence). Hello is sufficiently simple that the default builder - would suffice, but in this case, we will show an actual builder for - educational purposes. The value `./builder.sh` refers to the shell - script shown in [???](#ex-hello-builder), discussed below. + would suffice, but in this case, we will show an actual builder + for educational purposes. The value `./builder.sh` refers to the + shell script shown in the [next section](build-script.md), + discussed below. 5. The builder has to know what the sources of the package are. Here, the attribute `src` is bound to the result of a call to the diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md index 6942abe70..43275dbf7 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ # Generic Builder Syntax -Recall from [???](#ex-hello-builder) that the builder looked something -like this: +Recall that the [build script for GNU Hello](build-script.md) looked +something like this: PATH=$perl/bin:$PATH tar xvfz $src @@ -37,11 +37,10 @@ Here is what each line means: 2. The function `genericBuild` is defined in the file `$stdenv/setup`. 3. The final step calls the shell function `genericBuild`, which - performs the steps that were done explicitly in - [???](#ex-hello-builder). The generic builder is smart enough to - figure out whether to unpack the sources using `gzip`, `bzip2`, etc. - It can be customised in many ways; see the Nixpkgs manual for - details. + performs the steps that were done explicitly in the previous build + script. The generic builder is smart enough to figure out whether + to unpack the sources using `gzip`, `bzip2`, etc. It can be + customised in many ways; see the Nixpkgs manual for details. Discerning readers will note that the `buildInputs` could just as well have been set in the Nix expression, like this: diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-operators.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-operators.md index b124a2417..1d787ffe3 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-operators.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-operators.md @@ -1,8 +1,7 @@ # Operators -[table\_title](#table-operators) lists the operators in the Nix -expression language, in order of precedence (from strongest to weakest -binding). +The table below lists the operators in the Nix expression language, in +order of precedence (from strongest to weakest binding). | Name | Syntax | Associativity | Description | Precedence | | ------------------------ | ----------------------------------- | ------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ---------- | @@ -28,5 +27,3 @@ binding). | Logical OR | *e1* `\|\|` *e2* | left | Logical OR. | 13 | | Logical Implication | *e1* `->` *e2* | none | Logical implication (equivalent to `!e1 \|\| e2`). | 14 | - -Operators diff --git a/doc/manual/src/glossary.md b/doc/manual/src/glossary.md index c8bdf4fd2..56af9cd85 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/glossary.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/glossary.md @@ -3,7 +3,7 @@ - derivation A description of a build action. The result of a derivation is a store object. Derivations are typically specified in Nix expressions - using the [`derivation` primitive](#ssec-derivation). These are + using the [`derivation` primitive](expressions/derivations.md). These are translated into low-level *store derivations* (implicitly by `nix-env` and `nix-build`, or explicitly by `nix-instantiate`). @@ -53,20 +53,19 @@ paths. - reachable - A store path `Q` is reachable from another store path `P` if `Q` is - in the [closure](#gloss-closure) of the - [references](#gloss-reference) relation. + A store path `Q` is reachable from another store path `P` if `Q` + is in the *closure* of the *references* relation. - closure The closure of a store path is the set of store paths that are directly or indirectly “reachable” from that store path; that is, - it’s the closure of the path under the - [references](#gloss-reference) relation. For a package, the closure - of its derivation is equivalent to the build-time dependencies, - while the closure of its output path is equivalent to its runtime - dependencies. For correct deployment it is necessary to deploy whole - closures, since otherwise at runtime files could be missing. The - command `nix-store -qR` prints out closures of store paths. + it’s the closure of the path under the *references* relation. For + a package, the closure of its derivation is equivalent to the + build-time dependencies, while the closure of its output path is + equivalent to its runtime dependencies. For correct deployment it + is necessary to deploy whole closures, since otherwise at runtime + files could be missing. The command `nix-store -qR` prints out + closures of store paths. As an example, if the store object at path `P` contains a reference to path `Q`, then `Q` is in the closure of `P`. Further, if `Q` @@ -76,7 +75,7 @@ A store path produced by a derivation. - deriver - The deriver of an [output path](#gloss-output-path) is the store + The deriver of an *output path* is the store derivation that built it. - validity @@ -87,16 +86,15 @@ - user environment An automatically generated store object that consists of a set of symlinks to “active” applications, i.e., other store paths. These - are generated automatically by [`nix-env`](#sec-nix-env). See - [???](#sec-profiles). + are generated automatically by + [`nix-env`](command-ref/nix-env.md). See *profiles*. - profile - A symlink to the current [user environment](#gloss-user-env) of a - user, e.g., `/nix/var/nix/profiles/default`. + A symlink to the current *user environment* of a user, e.g., + `/nix/var/nix/profiles/default`. - NAR A *N*ix *AR*chive. This is a serialisation of a path in the Nix - store. It can contain regular files, directories and symbolic links. - NARs are generated and unpacked using `nix-store --dump` and - `nix-store - --restore`. + store. It can contain regular files, directories and symbolic + links. NARs are generated and unpacked using `nix-store --dump` + and `nix-store --restore`. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md index d9c34afc6..8edaca6b0 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md @@ -24,11 +24,11 @@ or completely new ones.) You can manually download the latest version of Nixpkgs from . However, it’s much more -convenient to use the Nixpkgs *channel*, since it makes it easy to stay -up to date with new versions of Nixpkgs. (Channels are described in more -detail in [???](#sec-channels).) Nixpkgs is automatically added to your -list of “subscribed” channels when you install Nix. If this is not the -case for some reason, you can add it as follows: +convenient to use the Nixpkgs [*channel*](channels.md), since it makes +it easy to stay up to date with new versions of Nixpkgs. Nixpkgs is +automatically added to your list of “subscribed” channels when you +install Nix. If this is not the case for some reason, you can add it +as follows: $ nix-channel --add https://nixos.org/channels/nixpkgs-unstable $ nix-channel --update diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/copy-closure.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/copy-closure.md index d78b77e36..d3fac4d76 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/package-management/copy-closure.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/copy-closure.md @@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ dependencies: $ nix-copy-closure --to alice@itchy.example.org $(type -p firefox) -See [???](#sec-nix-copy-closure) for details. +See the [manpage for `nix-copy-closure`](../command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md) for details. With `nix-store --export` and `nix-store --import` you can write the closure of a store diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/package-management.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/package-management.md index a2d078c16..bd26a09ab 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/package-management/package-management.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/package-management.md @@ -1,4 +1,5 @@ -This chapter discusses how to do package management with Nix, i.e., how -to obtain, install, upgrade, and erase packages. This is the “user’s” -perspective of the Nix system — people who want to *create* packages -should consult [???](#chap-writing-nix-expressions). +This chapter discusses how to do package management with Nix, i.e., +how to obtain, install, upgrade, and erase packages. This is the +“user’s” perspective of the Nix system — people who want to *create* +packages should consult the [chapter on writing Nix +expressions](../expressions/writing-nix-expressions.md). diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md index 1950c3121..f3786072d 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md @@ -104,8 +104,7 @@ These commands switch to the `my-profile` and default profile, respectively. If the profile doesn’t exist, it will be created automatically. You should be careful about storing a profile in another location than the `profiles` directory, since otherwise it might not be -used as a root of the garbage collector (see -[???](#sec-garbage-collection)). +used as a root of the [garbage collector](garbage-collection.md). All `nix-env` operations work on the profile pointed to by `~/.nix-profile`, but you can override this using the `--profile` option From 05a282295f3d454c811f9bdd9b755f6a5c07c190 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Fri, 24 Jul 2020 15:46:16 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 27/57] Fix internal links --- .../src/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.md | 3 +- .../src/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.md | 3 +- doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md | 99 ++++++++----------- doc/manual/src/command-ref/env-common.md | 7 +- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md | 5 +- .../src/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.md | 20 ++-- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md | 37 +++---- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-hash.md | 14 +-- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md | 10 +- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md | 50 +++++----- doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common.md | 84 ++++++++-------- .../src/expressions/advanced-attributes.md | 30 +++--- doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md | 39 ++++---- .../expressions/simple-building-testing.md | 10 +- .../src/installation/installing-binary.md | 4 +- doc/manual/src/installation/multi-user.md | 8 +- .../package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md | 7 +- doc/manual/src/package-management/channels.md | 4 +- .../src/package-management/s3-substituter.md | 10 +- doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.0.md | 41 ++++---- doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.1.md | 22 ++--- 21 files changed, 245 insertions(+), 262 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.md b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.md index 4f24febb0..76a5380bf 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.md @@ -134,8 +134,7 @@ causes the list of machines in `/etc/nix/machines` to be included. (This is the default.) If you want the builders to use caches, you likely want to set the -option [`builders-use-substitutes`](#conf-builders-use-substitutes) in -your local `nix.conf`. +option `builders-use-substitutes` in your local `nix.conf`. To build only on remote builders and disable building on the local machine, you can use the option `--max-jobs 0`. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.md b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.md index 0d02a8ff3..7b3ae58fb 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.md @@ -108,5 +108,4 @@ We now have a Nix installation configured to automatically sign and upload every local build to a remote binary cache. Before deploying this to production, be sure to consider the -implementation caveats in [Implementation -Caveats](#chap-post-build-hook-caveats). +[implementation caveats](#implementation-caveats). diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md index bedf1ec6b..306ad23f5 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md @@ -141,10 +141,10 @@ The following settings are currently available: the builder should use all available CPU cores in the system. - `diff-hook` - Absolute path to an executable capable of diffing build results. The - hook executes if [varlistentry\_title](#conf-run-diff-hook) is true, - and the output of a build is known to not be the same. This program - is not executed to determine if two results are the same. + Absolute path to an executable capable of diffing build + results. The hook is executed if `run-diff-hook` is true, and the + output of a build is known to not be the same. This program is not + executed to determine if two results are the same. The diff hook is executed by the same user and group who ran the build. However, the diff hook does not have write access to the @@ -169,7 +169,7 @@ The following settings are currently available: configuration file, and cannot be passed at the command line. - `enforce-determinism` - See [varlistentry\_title](#conf-repeat). + See `repeat`. - `extra-sandbox-paths` A list of additional paths appended to `sandbox-paths`. Useful if @@ -343,7 +343,7 @@ The following settings are currently available: password my-password For the exact syntax, see [the `curl` - documentation.](https://ec.haxx.se/usingcurl-netrc.html) + documentation](https://ec.haxx.se/usingcurl-netrc.html). > **Note** > @@ -434,9 +434,9 @@ The following settings are currently available: deterministic. The default value is 0. If the value is non-zero, every build is repeated the specified number of times. If the contents of any of the runs differs from the previous ones and - [varlistentry\_title](#conf-enforce-determinism) is true, the build - is rejected and the resulting store paths are not registered as - “valid” in Nix’s database. + `enforce-determinism` is true, the build is rejected and the + resulting store paths are not registered as “valid” in Nix’s + database. - `require-sigs` If set to `true` (the default), any non-content-addressed path added @@ -461,20 +461,21 @@ The following settings are currently available: - `sandbox` If set to `true`, builds will be performed in a *sandboxed environment*, i.e., they’re isolated from the normal file system - hierarchy and will only see their dependencies in the Nix store, the - temporary build directory, private versions of `/proc`, `/dev`, - `/dev/shm` and `/dev/pts` (on Linux), and the paths configured with - the [`sandbox-paths` option](#conf-sandbox-paths). This is useful to + hierarchy and will only see their dependencies in the Nix store, + the temporary build directory, private versions of `/proc`, + `/dev`, `/dev/shm` and `/dev/pts` (on Linux), and the paths + configured with the `sandbox-paths` option. This is useful to prevent undeclared dependencies on files in directories such as - `/usr/bin`. In addition, on Linux, builds run in private PID, mount, - network, IPC and UTS namespaces to isolate them from other processes - in the system (except that fixed-output derivations do not run in - private network namespace to ensure they can access the network). + `/usr/bin`. In addition, on Linux, builds run in private PID, + mount, network, IPC and UTS namespaces to isolate them from other + processes in the system (except that fixed-output derivations do + not run in private network namespace to ensure they can access the + network). Currently, sandboxing only work on Linux and macOS. The use of a sandbox requires that Nix is run as root (so you should use the - [“build users” feature](#conf-build-users-group) to perform the - actual builds under different users than root). + “build users” feature to perform the actual builds under different + users than root). If this option is set to `relaxed`, then fixed-output derivations and derivations that have the `__noChroot` attribute set to `true` @@ -631,81 +632,61 @@ The following settings are currently available: ## Deprecated Settings - `binary-caches` - *Deprecated:* `binary-caches` is now an alias to - [varlistentry\_title](#conf-substituters). + *Deprecated:* `binary-caches` is now an alias to `substituters`. - `binary-cache-public-keys` - *Deprecated:* `binary-cache-public-keys` is now an alias to - [varlistentry\_title](#conf-trusted-public-keys). + *Deprecated:* `binary-cache-public-keys` is now an alias `trusted-public-keys`. - `build-compress-log` - *Deprecated:* `build-compress-log` is now an alias to - [varlistentry\_title](#conf-compress-build-log). + *Deprecated:* `build-compress-log` is now an alias to `compress-build-log`. - `build-cores` - *Deprecated:* `build-cores` is now an alias to - [varlistentry\_title](#conf-cores). + *Deprecated:* `build-cores` is now an alias to `cores`. - `build-extra-chroot-dirs` - *Deprecated:* `build-extra-chroot-dirs` is now an alias to - [varlistentry\_title](#conf-extra-sandbox-paths). + *Deprecated:* `build-extra-chroot-dirs` is now an alias to `extra-sandbox-paths`. - `build-extra-sandbox-paths` - *Deprecated:* `build-extra-sandbox-paths` is now an alias to - [varlistentry\_title](#conf-extra-sandbox-paths). + *Deprecated:* `build-extra-sandbox-paths` is now an alias to `extra-sandbox-paths`. - `build-fallback` - *Deprecated:* `build-fallback` is now an alias to - [varlistentry\_title](#conf-fallback). + *Deprecated:* `build-fallback` is now an alias to `fallback`. - `build-max-jobs` - *Deprecated:* `build-max-jobs` is now an alias to - [varlistentry\_title](#conf-max-jobs). + *Deprecated:* `build-max-jobs` is now an alias to `max-jobs`. - `build-max-log-size` - *Deprecated:* `build-max-log-size` is now an alias to - [varlistentry\_title](#conf-max-build-log-size). + *Deprecated:* `build-max-log-size` is now an alias to `max-build-log-size`. - `build-max-silent-time` - *Deprecated:* `build-max-silent-time` is now an alias to - [varlistentry\_title](#conf-max-silent-time). + *Deprecated:* `build-max-silent-time` is now an alias to `max-silent-time`. - `build-repeat` - *Deprecated:* `build-repeat` is now an alias to - [varlistentry\_title](#conf-repeat). + *Deprecated:* `build-repeat` is now an alias to `repeat`. - `build-timeout` - *Deprecated:* `build-timeout` is now an alias to - [varlistentry\_title](#conf-timeout). + *Deprecated:* `build-timeout` is now an alias to `timeout`. - `build-use-chroot` - *Deprecated:* `build-use-chroot` is now an alias to - [varlistentry\_title](#conf-sandbox). + *Deprecated:* `build-use-chroot` is now an alias to `sandbox`. - `build-use-sandbox` - *Deprecated:* `build-use-sandbox` is now an alias to - [varlistentry\_title](#conf-sandbox). + *Deprecated:* `build-use-sandbox` is now an alias to `sandbox`. - `build-use-substitutes` - *Deprecated:* `build-use-substitutes` is now an alias to - [varlistentry\_title](#conf-substitute). + *Deprecated:* `build-use-substitutes` is now an alias to `substitute`. - `gc-keep-derivations` - *Deprecated:* `gc-keep-derivations` is now an alias to - [varlistentry\_title](#conf-keep-derivations). + *Deprecated:* `gc-keep-derivations` is now an alias to `keep-derivations`. - `gc-keep-outputs` - *Deprecated:* `gc-keep-outputs` is now an alias to - [varlistentry\_title](#conf-keep-outputs). + *Deprecated:* `gc-keep-outputs` is now an alias to `keep-outputs`. - `env-keep-derivations` - *Deprecated:* `env-keep-derivations` is now an alias to - [varlistentry\_title](#conf-keep-env-derivations). + *Deprecated:* `env-keep-derivations` is now an alias to `keep-env-derivations`. - `extra-binary-caches` - *Deprecated:* `extra-binary-caches` is now an alias to - [varlistentry\_title](#conf-extra-substituters). + *Deprecated:* `extra-binary-caches` is now an alias to `extra-substituters`. - `trusted-binary-caches` - *Deprecated:* `trusted-binary-caches` is now an alias to - [varlistentry\_title](#conf-trusted-substituters). + *Deprecated:* `trusted-binary-caches` is now an alias to `trusted-substituters`. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/env-common.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/env-common.md index 14e08e0f1..e5fd45a7f 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/env-common.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/env-common.md @@ -92,9 +92,10 @@ Most Nix commands interpret the following environment variables: - `NIX_REMOTE` This variable should be set to `daemon` if you want to use the Nix daemon to execute Nix operations. This is necessary in [multi-user - Nix installations](#ssec-multi-user). If the Nix daemon's Unix - socket is at some non-standard path, this variable should be set to - `unix://path/to/socket`. Otherwise, it should be left unset. + Nix installations](../installation/multi-user.md). If the Nix + daemon's Unix socket is at some non-standard path, this variable + should be set to `unix://path/to/socket`. Otherwise, it should be + left unset. - `NIX_SHOW_STATS` If set to `1`, Nix will print some evaluation statistics, such as diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md index 81dc26a39..026495c8d 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md @@ -32,9 +32,10 @@ to a temporary location. The tarball must include a single top-level directory containing at least a file named `default.nix`. `nix-build` is essentially a wrapper around -[`nix-instantiate`](#sec-nix-instantiate) (to translate a high-level Nix +[`nix-instantiate`](nix-instantiate.md) (to translate a high-level Nix expression to a low-level store derivation) and [`nix-store ---realise`](#rsec-nix-store-realise) (to build the store derivation). +--realise`](nix-store.md#operation---realise) (to build the store +derivation). > **Warning** > diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.md index 7b246f3b3..37587c7e1 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.md @@ -11,16 +11,16 @@ Title: nix-collect-garbage # Description The command `nix-collect-garbage` is mostly an alias of [`nix-store ---gc`](#rsec-nix-store-gc), that is, it deletes all unreachable paths in -the Nix store to clean up your system. However, it provides two -additional options: `-d` (`--delete-old`), which deletes all old -generations of all profiles in `/nix/var/nix/profiles` by invoking -`nix-env --delete-generations old` on all profiles (of course, this -makes rollbacks to previous configurations impossible); and -`--delete-older-than` *period*, where period is a value such as `30d`, -which deletes all generations older than the specified number of days in -all profiles in `/nix/var/nix/profiles` (except for the generations that -were active at that point in time). +--gc`](nix-store.md#operation---gc), that is, it deletes all +unreachable paths in the Nix store to clean up your system. However, +it provides two additional options: `-d` (`--delete-old`), which +deletes all old generations of all profiles in `/nix/var/nix/profiles` +by invoking `nix-env --delete-generations old` on all profiles (of +course, this makes rollbacks to previous configurations impossible); +and `--delete-older-than` *period*, where period is a value such as +`30d`, which deletes all generations older than the specified number +of days in all profiles in `/nix/var/nix/profiles` (except for the +generations that were active at that point in time). # Example diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md index ab1d10c08..c5fcce316 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md @@ -92,7 +92,7 @@ have an effect. done if this flag had not been specified, without actually doing it. `--dry-run` also prints out which paths will be - [substituted](#gloss-substitute) (i.e., downloaded) and which paths + [substituted](../glossary.md) (i.e., downloaded) and which paths will be built from source (because no substitute is available). - `--system-filter` *system* @@ -186,11 +186,11 @@ a number of possible ways: gcc-3.3.6 gcc-4.1.1` will install both version of GCC (and will probably cause a user environment conflict\!). - - If [`--attr`](#opt-attr) (`-A`) is specified, the arguments are - *attribute paths* that select attributes from the top-level Nix + - If `--attr` (`-A`) is specified, the arguments are *attribute + paths* that select attributes from the top-level Nix expression. This is faster than using derivation names and - unambiguous. To find out the attribute paths of available packages, - use `nix-env -qaP`. + unambiguous. To find out the attribute paths of available + packages, use `nix-env -qaP`. - If `--from-profile` *path* is given, *args* is a set of names denoting installed store paths in the profile *path*. This is an @@ -198,18 +198,19 @@ a number of possible ways: another. - If `--from-expression` is given, *args* are Nix - [functions](#ss-functions) that are called with the active Nix - expression as their single argument. The derivations returned by - those function calls are installed. This allows derivations to be - specified in an unambiguous way, which is necessary if there are - multiple derivations with the same name. + [functions](../expressions/language-constructs.md#functions) + that are called with the active Nix expression as their single + argument. The derivations returned by those function calls are + installed. This allows derivations to be specified in an + unambiguous way, which is necessary if there are multiple + derivations with the same name. - If *args* are store derivations, then these are - [realised](#rsec-nix-store-realise), and the resulting output paths + [realised](nix-store.md#operation---realise), and the resulting output paths are installed. - If *args* are store paths that are not store derivations, then these - are [realised](#rsec-nix-store-realise) and installed. + are [realised](nix-store.md#operation---realise) and installed. - By default all outputs are installed for each derivation. That can be reduced by setting `meta.outputsToInstall`. @@ -319,9 +320,9 @@ left untouched; this is not an error. It is also not an error if an element of *args* matches no installed derivations. For a description of how *args* is mapped to a set of store paths, see -[`--install`](#rsec-nix-env-install). If *args* describes multiple store -paths with the same symbolic name, only the one with the highest version -is installed. +[`--install`](#operation---install). If *args* describes multiple +store paths with the same symbolic name, only the one with the highest +version is installed. ## Flags @@ -584,9 +585,9 @@ derivation is shown unless `--no-name` is specified. - `--attr-path`; `-P` Print the *attribute path* of the derivation, which can be used to - unambiguously select it using the [`--attr` option](#opt-attr) - available in commands that install derivations like `nix-env - --install`. This option only works together with `--available` + unambiguously select it using the `--attr` option available in + commands that install derivations like `nix-env --install`. This + option only works together with `--available` - `--no-name` Suppress printing of the `name` attribute of each derivation. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-hash.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-hash.md index 38c9e0f67..edb331e1c 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-hash.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-hash.md @@ -21,13 +21,13 @@ is printed in hexadecimal. To generate the same hash as `nix-prefetch-url` you have to specify multiple arguments, see below for an example. -The hash is computed over a *serialisation* of each path: a dump of the -file system tree rooted at the path. This allows directories and -symlinks to be hashed as well as regular files. The dump is in the *NAR -format* produced by [`nix-store` `--dump`](#refsec-nix-store-dump). -Thus, `nix-hash -path` yields the same cryptographic hash as `nix-store --dump -path | md5sum`. +The hash is computed over a *serialisation* of each path: a dump of +the file system tree rooted at the path. This allows directories and +symlinks to be hashed as well as regular files. The dump is in the +*NAR format* produced by [`nix-store +--dump`](nix-store.md#operation---dump). Thus, `nix-hash path` +yields the same cryptographic hash as `nix-store --dump path | +md5sum`. # Options diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md index ca9ef1fc9..2d6525e77 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md @@ -21,11 +21,11 @@ Title: nix-instantiate # Description The command `nix-instantiate` generates [store -derivations](#gloss-derivation) from (high-level) Nix expressions. It +derivations](../glossary.md) from (high-level) Nix expressions. It evaluates the Nix expressions in each of *files* (which defaults to *./default.nix*). Each top-level expression should evaluate to a -derivation, a list of derivations, or a set of derivations. The paths of -the resulting store derivations are printed on standard output. +derivation, a list of derivations, or a set of derivations. The paths +of the resulting store derivations are printed on standard output. If *files* is the character `-`, then a Nix expression will be read from standard input. @@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ standard input. # Options - `--add-root` *path*; `--indirect` - See the [corresponding options](#opt-add-root) in `nix-store`. + See the [corresponding options](nix-store.md) in `nix-store`. - `--parse` Just parse the input files, and print their abstract syntax trees on @@ -69,7 +69,7 @@ standard input. When used with `--eval`, print the resulting value as an XML representation of the abstract syntax tree rather than as an ATerm. The schema is the same as that used by the [`toXML` - built-in](#builtin-toXML). + built-in](../expressions/builtins.md). - `--read-write-mode` When used with `--eval`, perform evaluation in read/write mode so diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md index b15340fde..1842f8858 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md @@ -79,13 +79,14 @@ The operation `--realise` essentially “builds” the specified store paths. Realisation is a somewhat overloaded term: - If the store path is a *derivation*, realisation ensures that the - output paths of the derivation are [valid](#gloss-validity) (i.e., - the output path and its closure exist in the file system). This can - be done in several ways. First, it is possible that the outputs are - already valid, in which case we are done immediately. Otherwise, - there may be [substitutes](#gloss-substitute) that produce the - outputs (e.g., by downloading them). Finally, the outputs can be - produced by performing the build action described by the derivation. + output paths of the derivation are [valid](../glossary.md) (i.e., + the output path and its closure exist in the file system). This + can be done in several ways. First, it is possible that the + outputs are already valid, in which case we are done + immediately. Otherwise, there may be [substitutes](../glossary.md) + that produce the outputs (e.g., by downloading them). Finally, the + outputs can be produced by performing the build action described + by the derivation. - If the store path is not a derivation, realisation ensures that the specified path is valid (i.e., it and its closure exist in the file @@ -129,11 +130,12 @@ Special exit codes: - `101` Build timeout, the build was aborted because it did not complete - within the specified [`timeout`](#conf-timeout). + within the specified `timeout`. - `102` Hash mismatch, the build output was rejected because it does not - match the specified [`outputHash`](#fixed-output-drvs). + match the [`outputHash` attribute of the + derivation](../expressions/advanced-attributes.md). - `104` Not deterministic, the build succeeded in check mode but the @@ -153,12 +155,12 @@ or. ## Examples This operation is typically used to build store derivations produced by -[`nix-instantiate`](#sec-nix-instantiate): +[`nix-instantiate`](nix-instantiate.md): $ nix-store -r $(nix-instantiate ./test.nix) /nix/store/31axcgrlbfsxzmfff1gyj1bf62hvkby2-aterm-2.3.1 -This is essentially what [`nix-build`](#sec-nix-build) does. +This is essentially what [`nix-build`](nix-build.md) does. To test whether a previously-built derivation is deterministic: @@ -232,8 +234,7 @@ control what gets deleted and in what order: or TiB units. The behaviour of the collector is also influenced by the -[`keep-outputs`](#conf-keep-outputs) and -[`keep-derivations`](#conf-keep-derivations) variables in the Nix +`keep-outputs` and `keep-derivations` variables in the Nix configuration file. By default, the collector prints the total number of freed bytes when it @@ -307,17 +308,17 @@ symlink. - `--force-realise`; `-f` Realise each argument to the query first (see [`nix-store - --realise`](#rsec-nix-store-realise)). + --realise`](#operation---realise)). ## Queries - `--outputs` - Prints out the [output paths](#gloss-output-path) of the store + Prints out the [output paths](../glossary.md) of the store derivations *paths*. These are the paths that will be produced when the derivation is built. - `--requisites`; `-R` - Prints out the [closure](#gloss-closure) of the store path *paths*. + Prints out the [closure](../glossary.md) of the store path *paths*. This query has one option: @@ -334,7 +335,7 @@ symlink. derivation and specifying the option `--include-outputs`. - `--references` - Prints the set of [references](#gloss-reference) of the store paths + Prints the set of [references](../glossary.md) of the store paths *paths*, that is, their immediate dependencies. (For *all* dependencies, use `--requisites`.) @@ -352,7 +353,7 @@ symlink. in the Nix store that are dependent on *paths*. - `--deriver`; `-d` - Prints the [deriver](#gloss-deriver) of the store paths *paths*. If + Prints the [deriver](../glossary.md) of the store paths *paths*. If the path has no deriver (e.g., if it is a source file), or if the deriver is not known (e.g., in the case of a binary-only deployment), the string `unknown-deriver` is printed. @@ -605,13 +606,12 @@ anyway. Likewise, all permissions are left out except for the execute bit, because all files in the Nix store have 444 or 555 permission. Also, a NAR archive is *canonical*, meaning that “equal” paths always -produce the same NAR archive. For instance, directory entries are always -sorted so that the actual on-disk order doesn’t influence the result. -This means that the cryptographic hash of a NAR dump of a path is usable -as a fingerprint of the contents of the path. Indeed, the hashes of -store paths stored in Nix’s database (see [`nix-store -q ---hash`](#refsec-nix-store-query)) are SHA-256 hashes of the NAR dump of -each store path. +produce the same NAR archive. For instance, directory entries are +always sorted so that the actual on-disk order doesn’t influence the +result. This means that the cryptographic hash of a NAR dump of a +path is usable as a fingerprint of the contents of the path. Indeed, +the hashes of store paths stored in Nix’s database (see `nix-store -q +--hash`) are SHA-256 hashes of the NAR dump of each store path. NAR archives support filenames of unlimited length and 64-bit file sizes. They can contain regular files, directories, and symbolic links, diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common.md index b9c65c81d..ee8419fd2 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common.md @@ -71,35 +71,34 @@ Most Nix commands accept the following command-line options: - `--max-jobs` / `-j` *number* Sets the maximum number of build jobs that Nix will perform in parallel to the specified number. Specify `auto` to use the number - of CPUs in the system. The default is specified by the - [`max-jobs`](#conf-max-jobs) configuration setting, which itself - defaults to `1`. A higher value is useful on SMP systems or to - exploit I/O latency. + of CPUs in the system. The default is specified by the `max-jobs` + configuration setting, which itself defaults to `1`. A higher + value is useful on SMP systems or to exploit I/O latency. Setting it to `0` disallows building on the local machine, which is useful when you want builds to happen only on remote builders. - `--cores` - Sets the value of the `NIX_BUILD_CORES` environment variable in the - invocation of builders. Builders can use this variable at their - discretion to control the maximum amount of parallelism. For + Sets the value of the `NIX_BUILD_CORES` environment variable in + the invocation of builders. Builders can use this variable at + their discretion to control the maximum amount of parallelism. For instance, in Nixpkgs, if the derivation attribute `enableParallelBuilding` is set to `true`, the builder passes the - `-jN` flag to GNU Make. It defaults to the value of the - [`cores`](#conf-cores) configuration setting, if set, or `1` - otherwise. The value `0` means that the builder should use all - available CPU cores in the system. + `-jN` flag to GNU Make. It defaults to the value of the `cores` + configuration setting, if set, or `1` otherwise. The value `0` + means that the builder should use all available CPU cores in the + system. - `--max-silent-time` Sets the maximum number of seconds that a builder can go without - producing any data on standard output or standard error. The default - is specified by the [`max-silent-time`](#conf-max-silent-time) - configuration setting. `0` means no time-out. + producing any data on standard output or standard error. The + default is specified by the `max-silent-time` configuration + setting. `0` means no time-out. - `--timeout` Sets the maximum number of seconds that a builder can run. The - default is specified by the [`timeout`](#conf-timeout) configuration - setting. `0` means no timeout. + default is specified by the `timeout` configuration setting. `0` + means no timeout. - `--keep-going` / `-k` Keep going in case of failed builds, to the greatest extent @@ -145,16 +144,17 @@ Most Nix commands accept the following command-line options: operations will fail. - `--arg` *name* *value* - This option is accepted by `nix-env`, `nix-instantiate`, `nix-shell` - and `nix-build`. When evaluating Nix expressions, the expression - evaluator will automatically try to call functions that it - encounters. It can automatically call functions for which every - argument has a [default value](#ss-functions) (e.g., `{ argName ? - defaultValue }: - ...`). With `--arg`, you can also call functions that have arguments - without a default value (or override a default value). That is, if - the evaluator encounters a function with an argument named *name*, - it will call it with value *value*. + This option is accepted by `nix-env`, `nix-instantiate`, + `nix-shell` and `nix-build`. When evaluating Nix expressions, the + expression evaluator will automatically try to call functions that + it encounters. It can automatically call functions for which every + argument has a [default + value](../expressions/language-constructs.md#functions) (e.g., + `{ argName ? defaultValue }: ...`). With `--arg`, you can also + call functions that have arguments without a default value (or + override a default value). That is, if the evaluator encounters a + function with an argument named *name*, it will call it with value + *value*. For instance, the top-level `default.nix` in Nixpkgs is actually a function: @@ -165,28 +165,28 @@ Most Nix commands accept the following command-line options: }: ... So if you call this Nix expression (e.g., when you do `nix-env -i - pkgname`), the function will be called automatically using the value - [`builtins.currentSystem`](#builtin-currentSystem) for the `system` - argument. You can override this using `--arg`, e.g., `nix-env -i - pkgname --arg system - \"i686-freebsd\"`. (Note that since the argument is a Nix string - literal, you have to escape the quotes.) + pkgname`), the function will be called automatically using the + value [`builtins.currentSystem`](../expressions/builtins.md) for + the `system` argument. You can override this using `--arg`, e.g., + `nix-env -i pkgname --arg system \"i686-freebsd\"`. (Note that + since the argument is a Nix string literal, you have to escape the + quotes.) - `--argstr` *name* *value* - This option is like `--arg`, only the value is not a Nix expression - but a string. So instead of `--arg system \"i686-linux\"` (the outer - quotes are to keep the shell happy) you can say `--argstr system - i686-linux`. + This option is like `--arg`, only the value is not a Nix + expression but a string. So instead of `--arg system + \"i686-linux\"` (the outer quotes are to keep the shell happy) you + can say `--argstr system i686-linux`. - `--attr` / `-A` *attrPath* Select an attribute from the top-level Nix expression being evaluated. (`nix-env`, `nix-instantiate`, `nix-build` and - `nix-shell` only.) The *attribute path* *attrPath* is a sequence of - attribute names separated by dots. For instance, given a top-level - Nix expression *e*, the attribute path `xorg.xorgserver` would cause - the expression `e.xorg.xorgserver` to be used. See [`nix-env - --install`](#refsec-nix-env-install-examples) for some concrete - examples. + `nix-shell` only.) The *attribute path* *attrPath* is a sequence + of attribute names separated by dots. For instance, given a + top-level Nix expression *e*, the attribute path `xorg.xorgserver` + would cause the expression `e.xorg.xorgserver` to be used. See + [`nix-env --install`](nix-env.md#operation---install) for some + concrete examples. In addition to attribute names, you can also specify array indices. For instance, the attribute path `foo.3.bar` selects the `bar` diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/advanced-attributes.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/advanced-attributes.md index 3582fa268..bfee28acf 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/advanced-attributes.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/advanced-attributes.md @@ -89,10 +89,10 @@ Derivations can declare some infrequently used optional attributes. to make it use the proxy server configuration specified by the user in the environment variables `http_proxy` and friends. - This attribute is only allowed in [fixed-output - derivations](#fixed-output-drvs), where impurities such as these are - okay since (the hash of) the output is known in advance. It is - ignored for all other derivations. + This attribute is only allowed in *fixed-output derivations* (see + below), where impurities such as these are okay since (the hash + of) the output is known in advance. It is ignored for all other + derivations. > **Warning** > @@ -183,13 +183,14 @@ Derivations can declare some infrequently used optional attributes. - `"recursive"` The hash is computed over the NAR archive dump of the output (i.e., the result of [`nix-store - --dump`](#refsec-nix-store-dump)). In this case, the output can - be anything, including a directory tree. + --dump`](../command-ref/nix-store.md#operation---dump)). In + this case, the output can be anything, including a directory + tree. - The `outputHash` attribute, finally, must be a string containing the - hash in either hexadecimal or base-32 notation. (See the [`nix-hash` - command](#sec-nix-hash) for information about converting to and from - base-32 notation.) + The `outputHash` attribute, finally, must be a string containing + the hash in either hexadecimal or base-32 notation. (See the + [`nix-hash` command](../command-ref/nix-hash.md) for information + about converting to and from base-32 notation.) - `passAsFile` A list of names of attributes that should be passed via files rather @@ -213,10 +214,11 @@ Derivations can declare some infrequently used optional attributes. - `preferLocalBuild` If this attribute is set to `true` and [distributed building is - enabled](#chap-distributed-builds), then, if possible, the derivaton - will be built locally instead of forwarded to a remote machine. This - is appropriate for trivial builders where the cost of doing a - download or remote build would exceed the cost of building locally. + enabled](../advanced-topics/distributed-builds.md), then, if + possible, the derivaton will be built locally instead of forwarded + to a remote machine. This is appropriate for trivial builders + where the cost of doing a download or remote build would exceed + the cost of building locally. - `allowSubstitutes` If this attribute is set to `false`, then Nix will always build this diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md index 3c9bb4533..22f133c33 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md @@ -57,19 +57,19 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. installations that don’t have the desired built-in function. - `builtins.compareVersions` *s1* *s2* - Compare two strings representing versions and return `-1` if version - *s1* is older than version *s2*, `0` if they are the same, and `1` - if *s1* is newer than *s2*. The version comparison algorithm is the - same as the one used by [`nix-env - -u`](#ssec-version-comparisons). + Compare two strings representing versions and return `-1` if + version *s1* is older than version *s2*, `0` if they are the same, + and `1` if *s1* is newer than *s2*. The version comparison + algorithm is the same as the one used by [`nix-env + -u`](../command-ref/nix-env.md#operation---upgrade). - `builtins.concatLists` *lists* Concatenate a list of lists into a single list. - `builtins.concatStringsSep` *separator* *list* - Concatenate a list of strings with a separator between each element, - e.g. `concatStringsSep "/" - ["usr" "local" "bin"] == "usr/local/bin"` + Concatenate a list of strings with a separator between each + element, e.g. `concatStringsSep "/" ["usr" "local" "bin"] == + "usr/local/bin"` - `builtins.currentSystem` The built-in value `currentSystem` evaluates to the Nix platform @@ -77,10 +77,9 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. evaluated, such as `"i686-linux"` or `"x86_64-darwin"`. - `builtins.deepSeq` *e1* *e2* - This is like `seq - e1 - e2`, except that *e1* is evaluated *deeply*: if it’s a list or set, - its elements or attributes are also evaluated recursively. + This is like `seq e1 e2`, except that *e1* is evaluated *deeply*: + if it’s a list or set, its elements or attributes are also + evaluated recursively. - `derivation` *attrs*; `builtins.derivation` *attrs* `derivation` is described in [its own section](derivations.md). @@ -104,7 +103,7 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. - `builtins.fetchurl` *url* Download the specified URL and return the path of the downloaded file. This function is not available if [restricted evaluation - mode](#conf-restrict-eval) is enabled. + mode](../command-ref/conf-file.md) is enabled. - `fetchTarball` *url*; `builtins.fetchTarball` *url* Download the specified URL, unpack it and return the path of the @@ -140,7 +139,7 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. stdenv.mkDerivation { … } This function is not available if [restricted evaluation - mode](#conf-restrict-eval) is enabled. + mode](../command-ref/conf-file.md) is enabled. - `builtins.fetchGit` *args* Fetch a path from git. *args* can be a URL, in which case the HEAD @@ -491,9 +490,8 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. name is everything up to but not including the first dash followed by a digit, and the version is everything following that dash. The result is returned in a set `{ name, version }`. Thus, - `builtins.parseDrvName "nix-0.12pre12876"` returns `{ name = "nix"; - version = "0.12pre12876"; - }`. + `builtins.parseDrvName "nix-0.12pre12876"` returns `{ name = + "nix"; version = "0.12pre12876"; }`. - `builtins.path` *args* An enrichment of the built-in path type, based on the attributes @@ -508,9 +506,8 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. like `@`. - filter - A function of the type expected by - [builtins.filterSource](#builtin-filterSource), with the same - semantics. + A function of the type expected by `builtins.filterSource`, + with the same semantics. - recursive When `false`, when `path` is added to the store it is with a @@ -609,7 +606,7 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. - `builtins.splitVersion` *s* Split a string representing a version into its components, by the same version splitting logic underlying the version comparison in - [`nix-env -u`](#ssec-version-comparisons). + [`nix-env -u`](../command-ref/nix-env.md#operation---upgrade). - `builtins.stringLength` *e* Return the length of the string *e*. If *e* is not a string, diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/simple-building-testing.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/simple-building-testing.md index c3e8d7f82..ca422acea 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/simple-building-testing.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/simple-building-testing.md @@ -19,11 +19,11 @@ yet. The best way to test the package is by using the command $ ./result/bin/hello Hello, world! -The [`-A`](#opt-attr) option selects the `hello` attribute. This is -faster than using the symbolic package name specified by the `name` -attribute (which also happens to be `hello`) and is unambiguous (there -can be multiple packages with the symbolic name `hello`, but there can -be only one attribute in a set named `hello`). +The `-A` option selects the `hello` attribute. This is faster than +using the symbolic package name specified by the `name` attribute +(which also happens to be `hello`) and is unambiguous (there can be +multiple packages with the symbolic name `hello`, but there can be +only one attribute in a set named `hello`). `nix-build` registers the `./result` symlink as a garbage collection root, so unless and until you delete the `./result` symlink, the output diff --git a/doc/manual/src/installation/installing-binary.md b/doc/manual/src/installation/installing-binary.md index 6983452d3..a1dd993c4 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/installation/installing-binary.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/installation/installing-binary.md @@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ easiest way to install Nix is to run the following command: ``` If you're using macOS 10.15 (Catalina) or newer, consult [the macOS -installation instructions](#sect-macos-installation) before installing. +installation instructions](#macos-installation) before installing. As of Nix 2.1.0, the Nix installer will always default to creating a single-user installation, however opting in to the multi-user @@ -64,7 +64,7 @@ will invoke `sudo` as needed. > > If you need Nix to use a different group ID or user ID set, you will > have to download the tarball manually and [edit the install -> script](#sect-nix-install-binary-tarball). +> script](#installing-from-a-binary-tarball). The installer will modify `/etc/bashrc`, and `/etc/zshrc` if they exist. The installer will first back up these files with a `.backup-before-nix` diff --git a/doc/manual/src/installation/multi-user.md b/doc/manual/src/installation/multi-user.md index 4a861691d..de159b603 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/installation/multi-user.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/installation/multi-user.md @@ -39,16 +39,16 @@ expect to do many builds at the same time. ## Running the daemon -The [Nix daemon](#sec-nix-daemon) should be started as follows (as -`root`): +The [Nix daemon](../command-ref/nix-daemon.md) should be started as +follows (as `root`): $ nix-daemon You’ll want to put that line somewhere in your system’s boot scripts. To let unprivileged users use the daemon, they should set the -[`NIX_REMOTE` environment variable](#envar-remote) to `daemon`. So you -should put a line like +[`NIX_REMOTE` environment variable](../command-ref/env-common.md) to +`daemon`. So you should put a line like export NIX_REMOTE=daemon diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md index 8edaca6b0..17b5cc9c2 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md @@ -1,8 +1,9 @@ # Basic Package Management -The main command for package management is [`nix-env`](#sec-nix-env). -You can use it to install, upgrade, and erase packages, and to query -what packages are installed or are available for installation. +The main command for package management is +[`nix-env`](../command-ref/nix-env.md). You can use it to install, +upgrade, and erase packages, and to query what packages are installed +or are available for installation. In Nix, different users can have different “views” on the set of installed applications. That is, there might be lots of applications diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/channels.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/channels.md index 8a3e92d70..c239998d9 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/package-management/channels.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/channels.md @@ -7,8 +7,8 @@ better way: *Nix channels*. A Nix channel is just a URL that points to a place that contains a set of Nix expressions and a manifest. Using the command -[`nix-channel`](#sec-nix-channel) you can automatically stay up to date -with whatever is available at that URL. +[`nix-channel`](../command-ref/nix-channel.md) you can automatically +stay up to date with whatever is available at that URL. To see the list of official NixOS channels, visit . diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/s3-substituter.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/s3-substituter.md index d96114e3c..2824c1a9b 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/package-management/s3-substituter.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/s3-substituter.md @@ -1,9 +1,9 @@ # Serving a Nix store via S3 Nix has built-in support for storing and fetching store paths from -Amazon S3 and S3-compatible services. This uses the same *binary* cache -mechanism that Nix usually uses to fetch prebuilt binaries from -[cache.nixos.org](cache.nixos.org). +Amazon S3 and S3-compatible services. This uses the same *binary* +cache mechanism that Nix usually uses to fetch prebuilt binaries from +[cache.nixos.org](https://cache.nixos.org/). The following options can be specified as URL parameters to the S3 URL: @@ -85,8 +85,8 @@ caches. Your bucket will need a bucket policy allowing the desired users to perform the `s3:GetObject` and `s3:GetBucketLocation` action on all -objects in the bucket. The anonymous policy in [Anonymous Reads to your -S3-compatible binary cache](#ssec-s3-substituter-anonymous-reads) can be +objects in the bucket. The [anonymous policy given +above](#anonymous-reads-to-your-s3-compatible-binary-cache) can be updated to have a restricted `Principal` to support this. ## Authenticated Writes to your S3-compatible binary cache diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.0.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.0.md index 170275f89..9f6d4aa83 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.0.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.0.md @@ -148,11 +148,11 @@ This release has the following new features: `nix-store --verify-path`. - - `nix log` shows the build log of a package or path. If the build - log is not available locally, it will try to obtain it from the - configured substituters (such as - [cache.nixos.org](cache.nixos.org), which now provides build - logs). + - `nix log` shows the build log of a package or path. If the + build log is not available locally, it will try to obtain it + from the configured substituters (such as + [cache.nixos.org](https://cache.nixos.org/), which now + provides build logs). - `nix edit` opens the source code of a package in your editor. @@ -213,16 +213,17 @@ This release has the following new features: current values. - The store abstraction that Nix has had for a long time to support - store access via the Nix daemon has been extended significantly. In - particular, substituters (which used to be external programs such as - `download-from-binary-cache`) are now subclasses of the abstract - `Store` class. This allows many Nix commands to operate on such - store types. For example, `nix path-info` shows information about - paths in your local Nix store, while `nix path-info --store - https://cache.nixos.org/` shows information about paths in the - specified binary cache. Similarly, `nix-copy-closure`, `nix-push` - and substitution are all instances of the general notion of copying - paths between different kinds of Nix stores. + store access via the Nix daemon has been extended + significantly. In particular, substituters (which used to be + external programs such as `download-from-binary-cache`) are now + subclasses of the abstract `Store` class. This allows many Nix + commands to operate on such store types. For example, `nix + path-info` shows information about paths in your local Nix store, + while `nix path-info --store https://cache.nixos.org/` shows + information about paths in the specified binary cache. Similarly, + `nix-copy-closure`, `nix-push` and substitution are all instances + of the general notion of copying paths between different kinds of + Nix stores. Stores are specified using an URI-like syntax, e.g. or . The following store @@ -241,7 +242,7 @@ This release has the following new features: `/home/alice/nix/store`) to differ from its “logical” location (typically `/nix/store`). This allows non-root users to use Nix while still getting the benefits from prebuilt binaries from - [cache.nixos.org](cache.nixos.org). + [cache.nixos.org](https://cache.nixos.org/). - `BinaryCacheStore` is the abstract superclass of all binary cache stores. It supports writing build logs and NAR content @@ -356,11 +357,11 @@ This release has the following new features: - `NIX_PATH` is now lazy, so URIs in the path are only downloaded if they are needed for evaluation. - - You can now use as a short-hand for + - You can now use `channel:` as a short-hand for . For example, `nix-build channel:nixos-15.09 -A hello` will build the GNU Hello - package from the `nixos-15.09` channel. In the future, this may use - Git to fetch updates more efficiently. + package from the `nixos-15.09` channel. In the future, this may + use Git to fetch updates more efficiently. - When `--no-build-output` is given, the last 10 lines of the build log will be shown if a build fails. @@ -382,7 +383,7 @@ This release has the following new features: in all places where Nix allows URIs. - Brotli compression is now supported. In particular, - [cache.nixos.org](cache.nixos.org) build logs are now compressed + [cache.nixos.org](https://cache.nixos.org/) build logs are now compressed using Brotli. - `nix-env` diff --git a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.1.md b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.1.md index 08986ef9d..b88834c83 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.1.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-2.1.md @@ -4,18 +4,18 @@ This is primarily a bug fix release. It also reduces memory consumption in certain situations. In addition, it has the following new features: - The Nix installer will no longer default to the Multi-User - installation for macOS. You can still [instruct the installer to run - in multi-user mode](#sect-multi-user-installation). + installation for macOS. You can still instruct the installer to + run in multi-user mode. - - The Nix installer now supports performing a Multi-User installation - for Linux computers which are running systemd. You can [select a - Multi-User installation](#sect-multi-user-installation) by passing - the `--daemon` flag to the installer: `sh <(curl - https://nixos.org/nix/install) --daemon`. - - The multi-user installer cannot handle systems with SELinux. If your - system has SELinux enabled, you can [force the installer to run in - single-user mode](#sect-single-user-installation). + - The Nix installer now supports performing a Multi-User + installation for Linux computers which are running systemd. You + can select a Multi-User installation by passing the `--daemon` + flag to the installer: `sh <(curl https://nixos.org/nix/install) + --daemon`. + + The multi-user installer cannot handle systems with SELinux. If + your system has SELinux enabled, you can force the installer to + run in single-user mode. - New builtin functions: `builtins.bitAnd`, `builtins.bitOr`, `builtins.bitXor`, `builtins.fromTOML`, `builtins.concatMap`, From 1308c8404e19aacc6458b3813d445857620a60a8 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Fri, 24 Jul 2020 15:48:40 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 28/57] Remove DocBook manual --- .gitignore | 5 - .../advanced-topics/advanced-topics.xml | 14 - doc/manual/advanced-topics/cores-vs-jobs.xml | 121 -- doc/manual/advanced-topics/diff-hook.xml | 202 -- .../advanced-topics/distributed-builds.xml | 190 -- .../advanced-topics/post-build-hook.xml | 158 -- doc/manual/command-ref/command-ref.xml | 20 - doc/manual/command-ref/conf-file.xml | 1244 ------------ doc/manual/command-ref/env-common.xml | 209 --- doc/manual/command-ref/files.xml | 14 - doc/manual/command-ref/main-commands.xml | 17 - doc/manual/command-ref/nix-build.xml | 190 -- doc/manual/command-ref/nix-channel.xml | 181 -- 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a/.gitignore +++ b/.gitignore @@ -22,14 +22,9 @@ perl/Makefile.config /corepkgs/nar/unnar.sh # /doc/manual/ -/doc/manual/manual.html -/doc/manual/manual.xmli -/doc/manual/manual.pdf -/doc/manual/manual.is-valid /doc/manual/*.1 /doc/manual/*.5 /doc/manual/*.8 -/doc/manual/version.txt # /scripts/ /scripts/nix-profile.sh diff --git a/doc/manual/advanced-topics/advanced-topics.xml b/doc/manual/advanced-topics/advanced-topics.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 871b7eb1d..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/advanced-topics/advanced-topics.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,14 +0,0 @@ - - -Advanced Topics - - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/advanced-topics/cores-vs-jobs.xml b/doc/manual/advanced-topics/cores-vs-jobs.xml deleted file mode 100644 index a75dea37f..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/advanced-topics/cores-vs-jobs.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,121 +0,0 @@ - - -Tuning Cores and Jobs - -Nix has two relevant settings with regards to how your CPU cores -will be utilized: and -. This chapter will talk about what -they are, how they interact, and their configuration trade-offs. - - - - - - Dictates how many separate derivations will be built at the same - time. If you set this to zero, the local machine will do no - builds. Nix will still substitute from binary caches, and build - remotely if remote builders are configured. - - - - - - Suggests how many cores each derivation should use. Similar to - make -j. - - - - -The setting determines the value of -NIX_BUILD_CORES. NIX_BUILD_CORES is equal -to , unless -equals 0, in which case NIX_BUILD_CORES -will be the total number of cores in the system. - -The maximum number of consumed cores is a simple multiplication, - * NIX_BUILD_CORES. - -The balance on how to set these two independent variables depends -upon each builder's workload and hardware. Here are a few example -scenarios on a machine with 24 cores: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Balancing 24 Build Cores
NIX_BUILD_CORESMaximum ProcessesResult
1242424 - One derivation will be built at a time, each one can use 24 - cores. Undersold if a job can’t use 24 cores. -
46624 - Four derivations will be built at once, each given access to - six cores. -
126672 - 12 derivations will be built at once, each given access to six - cores. This configuration is over-sold. If all 12 derivations - being built simultaneously try to use all six cores, the - machine's performance will be degraded due to extensive context - switching between the 12 builds. -
241124 - 24 derivations can build at the same time, each using a single - core. Never oversold, but derivations which require many cores - will be very slow to compile. -
24024576 - 24 derivations can build at the same time, each using all the - available cores of the machine. Very likely to be oversold, - and very likely to suffer context switches. -
- -It is up to the derivations' build script to respect -host's requested cores-per-build by following the value of the -NIX_BUILD_CORES environment variable. - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/advanced-topics/diff-hook.xml b/doc/manual/advanced-topics/diff-hook.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 85cfdfc02..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/advanced-topics/diff-hook.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,202 +0,0 @@ - - -Verifying Build Reproducibility - -Specify a program with Nix's to -compare build results when two builds produce different results. Note: -this hook is only executed if the results are not the same, this hook -is not used for determining if the results are the same. - -For purposes of demonstration, we'll use the following Nix file, -deterministic.nix for testing: - - -let - inherit (import <nixpkgs> {}) runCommand; -in { - stable = runCommand "stable" {} '' - touch $out - ''; - - unstable = runCommand "unstable" {} '' - echo $RANDOM > $out - ''; -} - - -Additionally, nix.conf contains: - - -diff-hook = /etc/nix/my-diff-hook -run-diff-hook = true - - -where /etc/nix/my-diff-hook is an executable -file containing: - - -#!/bin/sh -exec >&2 -echo "For derivation $3:" -/run/current-system/sw/bin/diff -r "$1" "$2" - - - - -The diff hook is executed by the same user and group who ran the -build. However, the diff hook does not have write access to the store -path just built. - -
- - Spot-Checking Build Determinism - - - - Verify a path which already exists in the Nix store by passing - to the build command. - - - If the build passes and is deterministic, Nix will exit with a - status code of 0: - - -$ nix-build ./deterministic.nix -A stable -this derivation will be built: - /nix/store/z98fasz2jqy9gs0xbvdj939p27jwda38-stable.drv -building '/nix/store/z98fasz2jqy9gs0xbvdj939p27jwda38-stable.drv'... -/nix/store/yyxlzw3vqaas7wfp04g0b1xg51f2czgq-stable - -$ nix-build ./deterministic.nix -A stable --check -checking outputs of '/nix/store/z98fasz2jqy9gs0xbvdj939p27jwda38-stable.drv'... -/nix/store/yyxlzw3vqaas7wfp04g0b1xg51f2czgq-stable - - - If the build is not deterministic, Nix will exit with a status - code of 1: - - -$ nix-build ./deterministic.nix -A unstable -this derivation will be built: - /nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv -building '/nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv'... -/nix/store/krpqk0l9ib0ibi1d2w52z293zw455cap-unstable - -$ nix-build ./deterministic.nix -A unstable --check -checking outputs of '/nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv'... -error: derivation '/nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv' may not be deterministic: output '/nix/store/krpqk0l9ib0ibi1d2w52z293zw455cap-unstable' differs - - -In the Nix daemon's log, we will now see: - -For derivation /nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv: -1c1 -< 8108 ---- -> 30204 - - - - Using with - will cause Nix to keep the second build's output in a special, - .check path: - - -$ nix-build ./deterministic.nix -A unstable --check --keep-failed -checking outputs of '/nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv'... -note: keeping build directory '/tmp/nix-build-unstable.drv-0' -error: derivation '/nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv' may not be deterministic: output '/nix/store/krpqk0l9ib0ibi1d2w52z293zw455cap-unstable' differs from '/nix/store/krpqk0l9ib0ibi1d2w52z293zw455cap-unstable.check' - - - In particular, notice the - /nix/store/krpqk0l9ib0ibi1d2w52z293zw455cap-unstable.check - output. Nix has copied the build results to that directory where you - can examine it. - - - <literal>.check</literal> paths are not registered store paths - - Check paths are not protected against garbage collection, - and this path will be deleted on the next garbage collection. - - The path is guaranteed to be alive for the duration of - 's execution, but may be deleted - any time after. - - If the comparison is performed as part of automated tooling, - please use the diff-hook or author your tooling to handle the case - where the build was not deterministic and also a check path does - not exist. - - - - is only usable if the derivation has - been built on the system already. If the derivation has not been - built Nix will fail with the error: - -error: some outputs of '/nix/store/hzi1h60z2qf0nb85iwnpvrai3j2w7rr6-unstable.drv' are not valid, so checking is not possible - - - Run the build without , and then try with - again. - -
- -
- - Automatic and Optionally Enforced Determinism Verification - - - - Automatically verify every build at build time by executing the - build multiple times. - - - - Setting and - in your - nix.conf permits the automated verification - of every build Nix performs. - - - - The following configuration will run each build three times, and - will require the build to be deterministic: - - -enforce-determinism = true -repeat = 2 - - - - - Setting to false as in - the following configuration will run the build multiple times, - execute the build hook, but will allow the build to succeed even - if it does not build reproducibly: - - -enforce-determinism = false -repeat = 1 - - - - - An example output of this configuration: - -$ nix-build ./test.nix -A unstable -this derivation will be built: - /nix/store/ch6llwpr2h8c3jmnf3f2ghkhx59aa97f-unstable.drv -building '/nix/store/ch6llwpr2h8c3jmnf3f2ghkhx59aa97f-unstable.drv' (round 1/2)... -building '/nix/store/ch6llwpr2h8c3jmnf3f2ghkhx59aa97f-unstable.drv' (round 2/2)... -output '/nix/store/6xg356v9gl03hpbbg8gws77n19qanh02-unstable' of '/nix/store/ch6llwpr2h8c3jmnf3f2ghkhx59aa97f-unstable.drv' differs from '/nix/store/6xg356v9gl03hpbbg8gws77n19qanh02-unstable.check' from previous round -/nix/store/6xg356v9gl03hpbbg8gws77n19qanh02-unstable - - -
-
diff --git a/doc/manual/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.xml b/doc/manual/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.xml deleted file mode 100644 index ec9e98e77..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,190 +0,0 @@ - - -Remote Builds - -Nix supports remote builds, where a local Nix installation can -forward Nix builds to other machines. This allows multiple builds to -be performed in parallel and allows Nix to perform multi-platform -builds in a semi-transparent way. For instance, if you perform a -build for a x86_64-darwin on an -i686-linux machine, Nix can automatically forward -the build to a x86_64-darwin machine, if -available. - -To forward a build to a remote machine, it’s required that the -remote machine is accessible via SSH and that it has Nix -installed. You can test whether connecting to the remote Nix instance -works, e.g. - - -$ nix ping-store --store ssh://mac - - -will try to connect to the machine named mac. It is -possible to specify an SSH identity file as part of the remote store -URI, e.g. - - -$ nix ping-store --store ssh://mac?ssh-key=/home/alice/my-key - - -Since builds should be non-interactive, the key should not have a -passphrase. Alternatively, you can load identities ahead of time into -ssh-agent or gpg-agent. - -If you get the error - - -bash: nix-store: command not found -error: cannot connect to 'mac' - - -then you need to ensure that the PATH of -non-interactive login shells contains Nix. - -If you are building via the Nix daemon, it is the Nix -daemon user account (that is, root) that should -have SSH access to the remote machine. If you can’t or don’t want to -configure root to be able to access to remote -machine, you can use a private Nix store instead by passing -e.g. --store ~/my-nix. - -The list of remote machines can be specified on the command line -or in the Nix configuration file. The former is convenient for -testing. For example, the following command allows you to build a -derivation for x86_64-darwin on a Linux machine: - - -$ uname -Linux - -$ nix build \ - '(with import <nixpkgs> { system = "x86_64-darwin"; }; runCommand "foo" {} "uname > $out")' \ - --builders 'ssh://mac x86_64-darwin' -[1/0/1 built, 0.0 MiB DL] building foo on ssh://mac - -$ cat ./result -Darwin - - -It is possible to specify multiple builders separated by a semicolon -or a newline, e.g. - - - --builders 'ssh://mac x86_64-darwin ; ssh://beastie x86_64-freebsd' - - - -Each machine specification consists of the following elements, -separated by spaces. Only the first element is required. -To leave a field at its default, set it to -. - - - - The URI of the remote store in the format - ssh://[username@]hostname, - e.g. ssh://nix@mac or - ssh://mac. For backward compatibility, - ssh:// may be omitted. The hostname may be an - alias defined in your - ~/.ssh/config. - - A comma-separated list of Nix platform type - identifiers, such as x86_64-darwin. It is - possible for a machine to support multiple platform types, e.g., - i686-linux,x86_64-linux. If omitted, this - defaults to the local platform type. - - The SSH identity file to be used to log in to the - remote machine. If omitted, SSH will use its regular - identities. - - The maximum number of builds that Nix will execute - in parallel on the machine. Typically this should be equal to the - number of CPU cores. For instance, the machine - itchy in the example will execute up to 8 builds - in parallel. - - The “speed factor”, indicating the relative speed of - the machine. If there are multiple machines of the right type, Nix - will prefer the fastest, taking load into account. - - A comma-separated list of supported - features. If a derivation has the - requiredSystemFeatures attribute, then Nix will - only perform the derivation on a machine that has the specified - features. For instance, the attribute - - -requiredSystemFeatures = [ "kvm" ]; - - - will cause the build to be performed on a machine that has the - kvm feature. - - A comma-separated list of mandatory - features. A machine will only be used to build a - derivation if all of the machine’s mandatory features appear in the - derivation’s requiredSystemFeatures - attribute.. - - - -For example, the machine specification - - -nix@scratchy.labs.cs.uu.nl i686-linux /home/nix/.ssh/id_scratchy_auto 8 1 kvm -nix@itchy.labs.cs.uu.nl i686-linux /home/nix/.ssh/id_scratchy_auto 8 2 -nix@poochie.labs.cs.uu.nl i686-linux /home/nix/.ssh/id_scratchy_auto 1 2 kvm benchmark - - -specifies several machines that can perform -i686-linux builds. However, -poochie will only do builds that have the attribute - - -requiredSystemFeatures = [ "benchmark" ]; - - -or - - -requiredSystemFeatures = [ "benchmark" "kvm" ]; - - -itchy cannot do builds that require -kvm, but scratchy does support -such builds. For regular builds, itchy will be -preferred over scratchy because it has a higher -speed factor. - -Remote builders can also be configured in -nix.conf, e.g. - - -builders = ssh://mac x86_64-darwin ; ssh://beastie x86_64-freebsd - - -Finally, remote builders can be configured in a separate configuration -file included in via the syntax -@file. For example, - - -builders = @/etc/nix/machines - - -causes the list of machines in /etc/nix/machines -to be included. (This is the default.) - -If you want the builders to use caches, you likely want to set -the option builders-use-substitutes -in your local nix.conf. - -To build only on remote builders and disable building on the local machine, -you can use the option . - - diff --git a/doc/manual/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.xml b/doc/manual/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 1480ab86a..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,158 +0,0 @@ - - -Using the <option linkend="conf-post-build-hook">post-build-hook</option> - -
- Implementation Caveats - Here we use the post-build hook to upload to a binary cache. - This is a simple and working example, but it is not suitable for all - use cases. - - The post build hook program runs after each executed build, - and blocks the build loop. The build loop exits if the hook program - fails. - - Concretely, this implementation will make Nix slow or unusable - when the internet is slow or unreliable. - - A more advanced implementation might pass the store paths to a - user-supplied daemon or queue for processing the store paths outside - of the build loop. -
- -
- Prerequisites - - - This tutorial assumes you have configured an S3-compatible binary cache - according to the instructions at - , and - that the root user's default AWS profile can - upload to the bucket. - -
- -
- Set up a Signing Key - Use nix-store --generate-binary-cache-key to - create our public and private signing keys. We will sign paths - with the private key, and distribute the public key for verifying - the authenticity of the paths. - - -# nix-store --generate-binary-cache-key example-nix-cache-1 /etc/nix/key.private /etc/nix/key.public -# cat /etc/nix/key.public -example-nix-cache-1:1/cKDz3QCCOmwcztD2eV6Coggp6rqc9DGjWv7C0G+rM= - - -Then, add the public key and the cache URL to your -nix.conf's -and like: - - -substituters = https://cache.nixos.org/ s3://example-nix-cache -trusted-public-keys = cache.nixos.org-1:6NCHdD59X431o0gWypbMrAURkbJ16ZPMQFGspcDShjY= example-nix-cache-1:1/cKDz3QCCOmwcztD2eV6Coggp6rqc9DGjWv7C0G+rM= - - -We will restart the Nix daemon in a later step. -
- -
- Implementing the build hook - Write the following script to - /etc/nix/upload-to-cache.sh: - - - -#!/bin/sh - -set -eu -set -f # disable globbing -export IFS=' ' - -echo "Signing paths" $OUT_PATHS -nix sign-paths --key-file /etc/nix/key.private $OUT_PATHS -echo "Uploading paths" $OUT_PATHS -exec nix copy --to 's3://example-nix-cache' $OUT_PATHS - - - - Should <literal>$OUT_PATHS</literal> be quoted? - - The $OUT_PATHS variable is a space-separated - list of Nix store paths. In this case, we expect and want the - shell to perform word splitting to make each output path its - own argument to nix sign-paths. Nix guarantees - the paths will not contain any spaces, however a store path - might contain glob characters. The set -f - disables globbing in the shell. - - - - Then make sure the hook program is executable by the root user: - -# chmod +x /etc/nix/upload-to-cache.sh - -
- -
- Updating Nix Configuration - - Edit /etc/nix/nix.conf to run our hook, - by adding the following configuration snippet at the end: - - -post-build-hook = /etc/nix/upload-to-cache.sh - - -Then, restart the nix-daemon. -
- -
- Testing - - Build any derivation, for example: - - -$ nix-build -E '(import <nixpkgs> {}).writeText "example" (builtins.toString builtins.currentTime)' -this derivation will be built: - /nix/store/s4pnfbkalzy5qz57qs6yybna8wylkig6-example.drv -building '/nix/store/s4pnfbkalzy5qz57qs6yybna8wylkig6-example.drv'... -running post-build-hook '/home/grahamc/projects/github.com/NixOS/nix/post-hook.sh'... -post-build-hook: Signing paths /nix/store/ibcyipq5gf91838ldx40mjsp0b8w9n18-example -post-build-hook: Uploading paths /nix/store/ibcyipq5gf91838ldx40mjsp0b8w9n18-example -/nix/store/ibcyipq5gf91838ldx40mjsp0b8w9n18-example - - - Then delete the path from the store, and try substituting it from the binary cache: - -$ rm ./result -$ nix-store --delete /nix/store/ibcyipq5gf91838ldx40mjsp0b8w9n18-example - - -Now, copy the path back from the cache: - -$ nix-store --realise /nix/store/ibcyipq5gf91838ldx40mjsp0b8w9n18-example -copying path '/nix/store/m8bmqwrch6l3h8s0k3d673xpmipcdpsa-example from 's3://example-nix-cache'... -warning: you did not specify '--add-root'; the result might be removed by the garbage collector -/nix/store/m8bmqwrch6l3h8s0k3d673xpmipcdpsa-example - -
-
- Conclusion - - We now have a Nix installation configured to automatically sign and - upload every local build to a remote binary cache. - - - - Before deploying this to production, be sure to consider the - implementation caveats in . - -
-
diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/command-ref.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/command-ref.xml deleted file mode 100644 index cfad9b7d7..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/command-ref.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,20 +0,0 @@ - - -Command Reference - - -This section lists commands and options that you can use when you -work with Nix. - - - - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/conf-file.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/conf-file.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 62cc117b6..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/conf-file.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1244 +0,0 @@ - - - - - nix.conf - 5 - Nix - - - - - nix.conf - Nix configuration file - - -Description - -By default Nix reads settings from the following places: - - - - - - The system-wide configuration file - sysconfdir/nix/nix.conf - (i.e. /etc/nix/nix.conf on most systems), - or $NIX_CONF_DIR/nix.conf if - NIX_CONF_DIR is set. Values loaded in this - file are not forwarded to the Nix daemon. The client assumes - that the daemon has already loaded them. - - - - - - If NIX_USER_CONF_FILES is set, then each path separated by - : will be loaded in reverse order. - - - - Otherwise it will look for nix/nix.conf - files in XDG_CONFIG_DIRS and - XDG_CONFIG_HOME. If these are unset, it will - look in $HOME/.config/nix.conf. - - - - - -The configuration files consist of -name = -value pairs, one per line. Other -files can be included with a line like include -path, where -path is interpreted relative to the current -conf file and a missing file is an error unless -!include is used instead. -Comments start with a # character. Here is an -example configuration file: - - -keep-outputs = true # Nice for developers -keep-derivations = true # Idem - - -You can override settings on the command line using the - flag, e.g. --option keep-outputs -false. - -The following settings are currently available: - - - - - allowed-uris - - - - A list of URI prefixes to which access is allowed in - restricted evaluation mode. For example, when set to - https://github.com/NixOS, builtin functions - such as fetchGit are allowed to access - https://github.com/NixOS/patchelf.git. - - - - - - - allow-import-from-derivation - - By default, Nix allows you to import from a derivation, - allowing building at evaluation time. With this option set to false, Nix will throw an error - when evaluating an expression that uses this feature, allowing users to ensure their evaluation - will not require any builds to take place. - - - - - allow-new-privileges - - (Linux-specific.) By default, builders on Linux - cannot acquire new privileges by calling setuid/setgid programs or - programs that have file capabilities. For example, programs such - as sudo or ping will - fail. (Note that in sandbox builds, no such programs are available - unless you bind-mount them into the sandbox via the - option.) You can allow the - use of such programs by enabling this option. This is impure and - usually undesirable, but may be useful in certain scenarios - (e.g. to spin up containers or set up userspace network interfaces - in tests). - - - - - allowed-users - - - - A list of names of users (separated by whitespace) that - are allowed to connect to the Nix daemon. As with the - option, you can specify groups by - prefixing them with @. Also, you can allow - all users by specifying *. The default is - *. - - Note that trusted users are always allowed to connect. - - - - - - - auto-optimise-store - - If set to true, Nix - automatically detects files in the store that have identical - contents, and replaces them with hard links to a single copy. - This saves disk space. If set to false (the - default), you can still run nix-store - --optimise to get rid of duplicate - files. - - - - - builders - - A list of machines on which to perform builds. See for details. - - - - - builders-use-substitutes - - If set to true, Nix will instruct - remote build machines to use their own binary substitutes if available. In - practical terms, this means that remote hosts will fetch as many build - dependencies as possible from their own substitutes (e.g, from - cache.nixos.org), instead of waiting for this host to - upload them all. This can drastically reduce build times if the network - connection between this computer and the remote build host is slow. Defaults - to false. - - - - build-users-group - - This options specifies the Unix group containing - the Nix build user accounts. In multi-user Nix installations, - builds should not be performed by the Nix account since that would - allow users to arbitrarily modify the Nix store and database by - supplying specially crafted builders; and they cannot be performed - by the calling user since that would allow him/her to influence - the build result. - - Therefore, if this option is non-empty and specifies a valid - group, builds will be performed under the user accounts that are a - member of the group specified here (as listed in - /etc/group). Those user accounts should not - be used for any other purpose! - - Nix will never run two builds under the same user account at - the same time. This is to prevent an obvious security hole: a - malicious user writing a Nix expression that modifies the build - result of a legitimate Nix expression being built by another user. - Therefore it is good to have as many Nix build user accounts as - you can spare. (Remember: uids are cheap.) - - The build users should have permission to create files in - the Nix store, but not delete them. Therefore, - /nix/store should be owned by the Nix - account, its group should be the group specified here, and its - mode should be 1775. - - If the build users group is empty, builds will be performed - under the uid of the Nix process (that is, the uid of the caller - if NIX_REMOTE is empty, the uid under which the Nix - daemon runs if NIX_REMOTE is - daemon). Obviously, this should not be used in - multi-user settings with untrusted users. - - - - - - - compress-build-log - - If set to true (the default), - build logs written to /nix/var/log/nix/drvs - will be compressed on the fly using bzip2. Otherwise, they will - not be compressed. - - - - connect-timeout - - - - The timeout (in seconds) for establishing connections in - the binary cache substituter. It corresponds to - curl’s - option. - - - - - - - cores - - Sets the value of the - NIX_BUILD_CORES environment variable in the - invocation of builders. Builders can use this variable at their - discretion to control the maximum amount of parallelism. For - instance, in Nixpkgs, if the derivation attribute - enableParallelBuilding is set to - true, the builder passes the - flag to GNU Make. - It can be overridden using the command line switch and - defaults to 1. The value 0 - means that the builder should use all available CPU cores in the - system. - - See also . - - - diff-hook - - - Absolute path to an executable capable of diffing build results. - The hook executes if is - true, and the output of a build is known to not be the same. - This program is not executed to determine if two results are the - same. - - - - The diff hook is executed by the same user and group who ran the - build. However, the diff hook does not have write access to the - store path just built. - - - The diff hook program receives three parameters: - - - - - A path to the previous build's results - - - - - - A path to the current build's results - - - - - - The path to the build's derivation - - - - - - The path to the build's scratch directory. This directory - will exist only if the build was run with - . - - - - - - The stderr and stdout output from the diff hook will not be - displayed to the user. Instead, it will print to the nix-daemon's - log. - - - When using the Nix daemon, diff-hook must - be set in the nix.conf configuration file, and - cannot be passed at the command line. - - - - - - enforce-determinism - - See . - - - - extra-sandbox-paths - - A list of additional paths appended to - . Useful if you want to extend - its default value. - - - - - extra-platforms - - Platforms other than the native one which - this machine is capable of building for. This can be useful for - supporting additional architectures on compatible machines: - i686-linux can be built on x86_64-linux machines (and the default - for this setting reflects this); armv7 is backwards-compatible with - armv6 and armv5tel; some aarch64 machines can also natively run - 32-bit ARM code; and qemu-user may be used to support non-native - platforms (though this may be slow and buggy). Most values for this - are not enabled by default because build systems will often - misdetect the target platform and generate incompatible code, so you - may wish to cross-check the results of using this option against - proper natively-built versions of your - derivations. - - - - - extra-substituters - - Additional binary caches appended to those - specified in . When used by - unprivileged users, untrusted substituters (i.e. those not listed - in ) are silently - ignored. - - - - fallback - - If set to true, Nix will fall - back to building from source if a binary substitute fails. This - is equivalent to the flag. The - default is false. - - - - fsync-metadata - - If set to true, changes to the - Nix store metadata (in /nix/var/nix/db) are - synchronously flushed to disk. This improves robustness in case - of system crashes, but reduces performance. The default is - true. - - - - hashed-mirrors - - A list of web servers used by - builtins.fetchurl to obtain files by - hash. The default is - http://tarballs.nixos.org/. Given a hash type - ht and a base-16 hash - h, Nix will try to download the file - from - hashed-mirror/ht/h. - This allows files to be downloaded even if they have disappeared - from their original URI. For example, given the default mirror - http://tarballs.nixos.org/, when building the derivation - - -builtins.fetchurl { - url = "https://example.org/foo-1.2.3.tar.xz"; - sha256 = "2c26b46b68ffc68ff99b453c1d30413413422d706483bfa0f98a5e886266e7ae"; -} - - - Nix will attempt to download this file from - http://tarballs.nixos.org/sha256/2c26b46b68ffc68ff99b453c1d30413413422d706483bfa0f98a5e886266e7ae - first. If it is not available there, if will try the original URI. - - - - - http-connections - - The maximum number of parallel TCP connections - used to fetch files from binary caches and by other downloads. It - defaults to 25. 0 means no limit. - - - - - keep-build-log - - If set to true (the default), - Nix will write the build log of a derivation (i.e. the standard - output and error of its builder) to the directory - /nix/var/log/nix/drvs. The build log can be - retrieved using the command nix-store -l - path. - - - - - keep-derivations - - If true (default), the garbage - collector will keep the derivations from which non-garbage store - paths were built. If false, they will be - deleted unless explicitly registered as a root (or reachable from - other roots). - - Keeping derivation around is useful for querying and - traceability (e.g., it allows you to ask with what dependencies or - options a store path was built), so by default this option is on. - Turn it off to save a bit of disk space (or a lot if - keep-outputs is also turned on). - - - keep-env-derivations - - If false (default), derivations - are not stored in Nix user environments. That is, the derivations of - any build-time-only dependencies may be garbage-collected. - - If true, when you add a Nix derivation to - a user environment, the path of the derivation is stored in the - user environment. Thus, the derivation will not be - garbage-collected until the user environment generation is deleted - (nix-env --delete-generations). To prevent - build-time-only dependencies from being collected, you should also - turn on keep-outputs. - - The difference between this option and - keep-derivations is that this one is - “sticky”: it applies to any user environment created while this - option was enabled, while keep-derivations - only applies at the moment the garbage collector is - run. - - - - keep-outputs - - If true, the garbage collector - will keep the outputs of non-garbage derivations. If - false (default), outputs will be deleted unless - they are GC roots themselves (or reachable from other roots). - - In general, outputs must be registered as roots separately. - However, even if the output of a derivation is registered as a - root, the collector will still delete store paths that are used - only at build time (e.g., the C compiler, or source tarballs - downloaded from the network). To prevent it from doing so, set - this option to true. - - - max-build-log-size - - - - This option defines the maximum number of bytes that a - builder can write to its stdout/stderr. If the builder exceeds - this limit, it’s killed. A value of 0 (the - default) means that there is no limit. - - - - - - max-free - - When a garbage collection is triggered by the - min-free option, it stops as soon as - max-free bytes are available. The default is - infinity (i.e. delete all garbage). - - - - max-jobs - - This option defines the maximum number of jobs - that Nix will try to build in parallel. The default is - 1. The special value auto - causes Nix to use the number of CPUs in your system. 0 - is useful when using remote builders to prevent any local builds (except for - preferLocalBuild derivation attribute which executes locally - regardless). It can be - overridden using the () - command line switch. - - See also . - - - - max-silent-time - - - - This option defines the maximum number of seconds that a - builder can go without producing any data on standard output or - standard error. This is useful (for instance in an automated - build system) to catch builds that are stuck in an infinite - loop, or to catch remote builds that are hanging due to network - problems. It can be overridden using the command - line switch. - - The value 0 means that there is no - timeout. This is also the default. - - - - - - min-free - - - When free disk space in /nix/store - drops below min-free during a build, Nix - performs a garbage-collection until max-free - bytes are available or there is no more garbage. A value of - 0 (the default) disables this feature. - - - - - narinfo-cache-negative-ttl - - - - The TTL in seconds for negative lookups. If a store path is - queried from a substituter but was not found, there will be a - negative lookup cached in the local disk cache database for the - specified duration. - - - - - - narinfo-cache-positive-ttl - - - - The TTL in seconds for positive lookups. If a store path is - queried from a substituter, the result of the query will be cached - in the local disk cache database including some of the NAR - metadata. The default TTL is a month, setting a shorter TTL for - positive lookups can be useful for binary caches that have - frequent garbage collection, in which case having a more frequent - cache invalidation would prevent trying to pull the path again and - failing with a hash mismatch if the build isn't reproducible. - - - - - - - netrc-file - - If set to an absolute path to a netrc - file, Nix will use the HTTP authentication credentials in this file when - trying to download from a remote host through HTTP or HTTPS. Defaults to - $NIX_CONF_DIR/netrc. - - The netrc file consists of a list of - accounts in the following format: - - -machine my-machine -login my-username -password my-password - - - For the exact syntax, see the - curl documentation. - - This must be an absolute path, and ~ - is not resolved. For example, ~/.netrc won't - resolve to your home directory's .netrc. - - - - - - - plugin-files - - - A list of plugin files to be loaded by Nix. Each of these - files will be dlopened by Nix, allowing them to affect - execution through static initialization. In particular, these - plugins may construct static instances of RegisterPrimOp to - add new primops or constants to the expression language, - RegisterStoreImplementation to add new store implementations, - RegisterCommand to add new subcommands to the - nix command, and RegisterSetting to add new - nix config settings. See the constructors for those types for - more details. - - - Since these files are loaded into the same address space as - Nix itself, they must be DSOs compatible with the instance of - Nix running at the time (i.e. compiled against the same - headers, not linked to any incompatible libraries). They - should not be linked to any Nix libs directly, as those will - be available already at load time. - - - If an entry in the list is a directory, all files in the - directory are loaded as plugins (non-recursively). - - - - - - pre-build-hook - - - - - If set, the path to a program that can set extra - derivation-specific settings for this system. This is used for settings - that can't be captured by the derivation model itself and are too variable - between different versions of the same system to be hard-coded into nix. - - - The hook is passed the derivation path and, if sandboxes are enabled, - the sandbox directory. It can then modify the sandbox and send a series of - commands to modify various settings to stdout. The currently recognized - commands are: - - - - extra-sandbox-paths - - - - Pass a list of files and directories to be included in the - sandbox for this build. One entry per line, terminated by an empty - line. Entries have the same format as - sandbox-paths. - - - - - - - - - - - post-build-hook - - Optional. The path to a program to execute after each build. - - This option is only settable in the global - nix.conf, or on the command line by trusted - users. - - When using the nix-daemon, the daemon executes the hook as - root. If the nix-daemon is not involved, the - hook runs as the user executing the nix-build. - - - The hook executes after an evaluation-time build. - The hook does not execute on substituted paths. - The hook's output always goes to the user's terminal. - If the hook fails, the build succeeds but no further builds execute. - The hook executes synchronously, and blocks other builds from progressing while it runs. - - - The program executes with no arguments. The program's environment - contains the following environment variables: - - - - DRV_PATH - - The derivation for the built paths. - Example: - /nix/store/5nihn1a7pa8b25l9zafqaqibznlvvp3f-bash-4.4-p23.drv - - - - - - OUT_PATHS - - Output paths of the built derivation, separated by a space character. - Example: - /nix/store/zf5lbh336mnzf1nlswdn11g4n2m8zh3g-bash-4.4-p23-dev - /nix/store/rjxwxwv1fpn9wa2x5ssk5phzwlcv4mna-bash-4.4-p23-doc - /nix/store/6bqvbzjkcp9695dq0dpl5y43nvy37pq1-bash-4.4-p23-info - /nix/store/r7fng3kk3vlpdlh2idnrbn37vh4imlj2-bash-4.4-p23-man - /nix/store/xfghy8ixrhz3kyy6p724iv3cxji088dx-bash-4.4-p23. - - - - - - See for an example - implementation. - - - - - repeat - - How many times to repeat builds to check whether - they are deterministic. The default value is 0. If the value is - non-zero, every build is repeated the specified number of - times. If the contents of any of the runs differs from the - previous ones and is - true, the build is rejected and the resulting store paths are not - registered as “valid” in Nix’s database. - - - require-sigs - - If set to true (the default), - any non-content-addressed path added or copied to the Nix store - (e.g. when substituting from a binary cache) must have a valid - signature, that is, be signed using one of the keys listed in - or - . Set to false - to disable signature checking. - - - - - restrict-eval - - - - If set to true, the Nix evaluator will - not allow access to any files outside of the Nix search path (as - set via the NIX_PATH environment variable or the - option), or to URIs outside of - . The default is - false. - - - - - - run-diff-hook - - - If true, enable the execution of . - - - - When using the Nix daemon, run-diff-hook must - be set in the nix.conf configuration file, - and cannot be passed at the command line. - - - - - sandbox - - If set to true, builds will be - performed in a sandboxed environment, i.e., - they’re isolated from the normal file system hierarchy and will - only see their dependencies in the Nix store, the temporary build - directory, private versions of /proc, - /dev, /dev/shm and - /dev/pts (on Linux), and the paths configured with the - sandbox-paths - option. This is useful to prevent undeclared dependencies - on files in directories such as /usr/bin. In - addition, on Linux, builds run in private PID, mount, network, IPC - and UTS namespaces to isolate them from other processes in the - system (except that fixed-output derivations do not run in private - network namespace to ensure they can access the network). - - Currently, sandboxing only work on Linux and macOS. The use - of a sandbox requires that Nix is run as root (so you should use - the “build users” - feature to perform the actual builds under different users - than root). - - If this option is set to relaxed, then - fixed-output derivations and derivations that have the - __noChroot attribute set to - true do not run in sandboxes. - - The default is true on Linux and - false on all other platforms. - - - - - - sandbox-dev-shm-size - - This option determines the maximum size of the - tmpfs filesystem mounted on - /dev/shm in Linux sandboxes. For the format, - see the description of the option of - tmpfs in - mount8. The - default is 50%. - - - - - - sandbox-paths - - A list of paths bind-mounted into Nix sandbox - environments. You can use the syntax - target=source - to mount a path in a different location in the sandbox; for - instance, /bin=/nix-bin will mount the path - /nix-bin as /bin inside the - sandbox. If source is followed by - ?, then it is not an error if - source does not exist; for example, - /dev/nvidiactl? specifies that - /dev/nvidiactl will only be mounted in the - sandbox if it exists in the host filesystem. - - Depending on how Nix was built, the default value for this option - may be empty or provide /bin/sh as a - bind-mount of bash. - - - - - secret-key-files - - A whitespace-separated list of files containing - secret (private) keys. These are used to sign locally-built - paths. They can be generated using nix-store - --generate-binary-cache-key. The corresponding public - key can be distributed to other users, who can add it to - in their - nix.conf. - - - - - show-trace - - Causes Nix to print out a stack trace in case of Nix - expression evaluation errors. - - - - - substitute - - If set to true (default), Nix - will use binary substitutes if available. This option can be - disabled to force building from source. - - - - stalled-download-timeout - - The timeout (in seconds) for receiving data from servers - during download. Nix cancels idle downloads after this timeout's - duration. - - - - substituters - - A list of URLs of substituters, separated by - whitespace. The default is - https://cache.nixos.org. - - - - system - - This option specifies the canonical Nix system - name of the current installation, such as - i686-linux or - x86_64-darwin. Nix can only build derivations - whose system attribute equals the value - specified here. In general, it never makes sense to modify this - value from its default, since you can use it to ‘lie’ about the - platform you are building on (e.g., perform a Mac OS build on a - Linux machine; the result would obviously be wrong). It only - makes sense if the Nix binaries can run on multiple platforms, - e.g., ‘universal binaries’ that run on x86_64-linux and - i686-linux. - - It defaults to the canonical Nix system name detected by - configure at build time. - - - - - system-features - - A set of system “features” supported by this - machine, e.g. kvm. Derivations can express a - dependency on such features through the derivation attribute - requiredSystemFeatures. For example, the - attribute - - -requiredSystemFeatures = [ "kvm" ]; - - - ensures that the derivation can only be built on a machine with - the kvm feature. - - This setting by default includes kvm if - /dev/kvm is accessible, and the - pseudo-features nixos-test, - benchmark and big-parallel - that are used in Nixpkgs to route builds to specific - machines. - - - - - - tarball-ttl - - - Default: 3600 seconds. - - The number of seconds a downloaded tarball is considered - fresh. If the cached tarball is stale, Nix will check whether - it is still up to date using the ETag header. Nix will download - a new version if the ETag header is unsupported, or the - cached ETag doesn't match. - - - Setting the TTL to 0 forces Nix to always - check if the tarball is up to date. - - Nix caches tarballs in - $XDG_CACHE_HOME/nix/tarballs. - - Files fetched via NIX_PATH, - fetchGit, fetchMercurial, - fetchTarball, and fetchurl - respect this TTL. - - - - - timeout - - - - This option defines the maximum number of seconds that a - builder can run. This is useful (for instance in an automated - build system) to catch builds that are stuck in an infinite loop - but keep writing to their standard output or standard error. It - can be overridden using the command line - switch. - - The value 0 means that there is no - timeout. This is also the default. - - - - - - trace-function-calls - - - - Default: false. - - If set to true, the Nix evaluator will - trace every function call. Nix will print a log message at the - "vomit" level for every function entrance and function exit. - - -function-trace entered undefined position at 1565795816999559622 -function-trace exited undefined position at 1565795816999581277 -function-trace entered /nix/store/.../example.nix:226:41 at 1565795253249935150 -function-trace exited /nix/store/.../example.nix:226:41 at 1565795253249941684 - - - The undefined position means the function - call is a builtin. - - Use the contrib/stack-collapse.py script - distributed with the Nix source code to convert the trace logs - in to a format suitable for flamegraph.pl. - - - - - - trusted-public-keys - - A whitespace-separated list of public keys. When - paths are copied from another Nix store (such as a binary cache), - they must be signed with one of these keys. For example: - cache.nixos.org-1:6NCHdD59X431o0gWypbMrAURkbJ16ZPMQFGspcDShjY= - hydra.nixos.org-1:CNHJZBh9K4tP3EKF6FkkgeVYsS3ohTl+oS0Qa8bezVs=. - - - - trusted-substituters - - A list of URLs of substituters, separated by - whitespace. These are not used by default, but can be enabled by - users of the Nix daemon by specifying --option - substituters urls on the - command line. Unprivileged users are only allowed to pass a - subset of the URLs listed in substituters and - trusted-substituters. - - - - trusted-users - - - - A list of names of users (separated by whitespace) that - have additional rights when connecting to the Nix daemon, such - as the ability to specify additional binary caches, or to import - unsigned NARs. You can also specify groups by prefixing them - with @; for instance, - @wheel means all users in the - wheel group. The default is - root. - - Adding a user to - is essentially equivalent to giving that user root access to the - system. For example, the user can set - and thereby obtain read access to - directories that are otherwise inacessible to - them. - - - - - - - - - - Deprecated Settings - - - - - - - binary-caches - - Deprecated: - binary-caches is now an alias to - . - - - - binary-cache-public-keys - - Deprecated: - binary-cache-public-keys is now an alias to - . - - - - build-compress-log - - Deprecated: - build-compress-log is now an alias to - . - - - - build-cores - - Deprecated: - build-cores is now an alias to - . - - - - build-extra-chroot-dirs - - Deprecated: - build-extra-chroot-dirs is now an alias to - . - - - - build-extra-sandbox-paths - - Deprecated: - build-extra-sandbox-paths is now an alias to - . - - - - build-fallback - - Deprecated: - build-fallback is now an alias to - . - - - - build-max-jobs - - Deprecated: - build-max-jobs is now an alias to - . - - - - build-max-log-size - - Deprecated: - build-max-log-size is now an alias to - . - - - - build-max-silent-time - - Deprecated: - build-max-silent-time is now an alias to - . - - - - build-repeat - - Deprecated: - build-repeat is now an alias to - . - - - - build-timeout - - Deprecated: - build-timeout is now an alias to - . - - - - build-use-chroot - - Deprecated: - build-use-chroot is now an alias to - . - - - - build-use-sandbox - - Deprecated: - build-use-sandbox is now an alias to - . - - - - build-use-substitutes - - Deprecated: - build-use-substitutes is now an alias to - . - - - - gc-keep-derivations - - Deprecated: - gc-keep-derivations is now an alias to - . - - - - gc-keep-outputs - - Deprecated: - gc-keep-outputs is now an alias to - . - - - - env-keep-derivations - - Deprecated: - env-keep-derivations is now an alias to - . - - - - extra-binary-caches - - Deprecated: - extra-binary-caches is now an alias to - . - - - - trusted-binary-caches - - Deprecated: - trusted-binary-caches is now an alias to - . - - - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/env-common.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/env-common.xml deleted file mode 100644 index ac40fccf7..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/env-common.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,209 +0,0 @@ - - -Common Environment Variables - - -Most Nix commands interpret the following environment variables: - - - -IN_NIX_SHELL - - Indicator that tells if the current environment was set up by - nix-shell. Since Nix 2.0 the values are - "pure" and "impure" - - - -NIX_PATH - - - - A colon-separated list of directories used to look up Nix - expressions enclosed in angle brackets (i.e., - <path>). For - instance, the value - - -/home/eelco/Dev:/etc/nixos - - will cause Nix to look for paths relative to - /home/eelco/Dev and - /etc/nixos, in this order. It is also - possible to match paths against a prefix. For example, the value - - -nixpkgs=/home/eelco/Dev/nixpkgs-branch:/etc/nixos - - will cause Nix to search for - <nixpkgs/path> in - /home/eelco/Dev/nixpkgs-branch/path - and - /etc/nixos/nixpkgs/path. - - If a path in the Nix search path starts with - http:// or https://, it is - interpreted as the URL of a tarball that will be downloaded and - unpacked to a temporary location. The tarball must consist of a - single top-level directory. For example, setting - NIX_PATH to - - -nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-15.09.tar.gz - - tells Nix to download the latest revision in the Nixpkgs/NixOS - 15.09 channel. - - A following shorthand can be used to refer to the official channels: - - nixpkgs=channel:nixos-15.09 - - - The search path can be extended using the option, which takes precedence over - NIX_PATH. - - - - -NIX_IGNORE_SYMLINK_STORE - - - - Normally, the Nix store directory (typically - /nix/store) is not allowed to contain any - symlink components. This is to prevent “impure” builds. Builders - sometimes “canonicalise” paths by resolving all symlink components. - Thus, builds on different machines (with - /nix/store resolving to different locations) - could yield different results. This is generally not a problem, - except when builds are deployed to machines where - /nix/store resolves differently. If you are - sure that you’re not going to do that, you can set - NIX_IGNORE_SYMLINK_STORE to 1. - - Note that if you’re symlinking the Nix store so that you can - put it on another file system than the root file system, on Linux - you’re better off using bind mount points, e.g., - - -$ mkdir /nix -$ mount -o bind /mnt/otherdisk/nix /nix - - Consult the mount - 8 manual page for details. - - - - - - -NIX_STORE_DIR - - Overrides the location of the Nix store (default - prefix/store). - - - - -NIX_DATA_DIR - - Overrides the location of the Nix static data - directory (default - prefix/share). - - - - -NIX_LOG_DIR - - Overrides the location of the Nix log directory - (default prefix/var/log/nix). - - - - -NIX_STATE_DIR - - Overrides the location of the Nix state directory - (default prefix/var/nix). - - - - -NIX_CONF_DIR - - Overrides the location of the system Nix configuration - directory (default - prefix/etc/nix). - - - -NIX_USER_CONF_FILES - - Overrides the location of the user Nix configuration files - to load from (defaults to the XDG spec locations). The variable is treated - as a list separated by the : token. - - - -TMPDIR - - Use the specified directory to store temporary - files. In particular, this includes temporary build directories; - these can take up substantial amounts of disk space. The default is - /tmp. - - - - -NIX_REMOTE - - This variable should be set to - daemon if you want to use the Nix daemon to - execute Nix operations. This is necessary in multi-user Nix installations. - If the Nix daemon's Unix socket is at some non-standard path, - this variable should be set to unix://path/to/socket. - Otherwise, it should be left unset. - - - - -NIX_SHOW_STATS - - If set to 1, Nix will print some - evaluation statistics, such as the number of values - allocated. - - - - -NIX_COUNT_CALLS - - If set to 1, Nix will print how - often functions were called during Nix expression evaluation. This - is useful for profiling your Nix expressions. - - - - -GC_INITIAL_HEAP_SIZE - - If Nix has been configured to use the Boehm garbage - collector, this variable sets the initial size of the heap in bytes. - It defaults to 384 MiB. Setting it to a low value reduces memory - consumption, but will increase runtime due to the overhead of - garbage collection. - - - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/files.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/files.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 7bbc96e89..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/files.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,14 +0,0 @@ - - -Files - -This section lists configuration files that you can use when you -work with Nix. - - - - \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/main-commands.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/main-commands.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 0f4169243..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/main-commands.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,17 +0,0 @@ - - -Main Commands - -This section lists commands and options that you can use when you -work with Nix. - - - - - - - \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-build.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-build.xml deleted file mode 100644 index ec9145143..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-build.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,190 +0,0 @@ - - - - nix-build - 1 - Nix - - - - - nix-build - build a Nix expression - - - - - nix-build - - name value - name value - - - - - - attrPath - - - - - - - - - outlink - - paths - - - -Description - -The nix-build command builds the derivations -described by the Nix expressions in paths. -If the build succeeds, it places a symlink to the result in the -current directory. The symlink is called result. -If there are multiple Nix expressions, or the Nix expressions evaluate -to multiple derivations, multiple sequentially numbered symlinks are -created (result, result-2, -and so on). - -If no paths are specified, then -nix-build will use default.nix -in the current directory, if it exists. - -If an element of paths starts with -http:// or https://, it is -interpreted as the URL of a tarball that will be downloaded and -unpacked to a temporary location. The tarball must include a single -top-level directory containing at least a file named -default.nix. - -nix-build is essentially a wrapper around -nix-instantiate -(to translate a high-level Nix expression to a low-level store -derivation) and nix-store ---realise (to build the store derivation). - -The result of the build is automatically registered as -a root of the Nix garbage collector. This root disappears -automatically when the result symlink is deleted -or renamed. So don’t rename the symlink. - - - - -Options - -All options not listed here are passed to nix-store ---realise, except for and - / which are passed to -nix-instantiate. See -also . - - - - - - Do not create a symlink to the output path. Note - that as a result the output does not become a root of the garbage - collector, and so might be deleted by nix-store - --gc. - - - - - Show what store paths would be built or downloaded. - - - / - outlink - - Change the name of the symlink to the output path - created from result to - outlink. - - - - - -The following common options are supported: - - - - - - - - -Examples - - -$ nix-build '<nixpkgs>' -A firefox -store derivation is /nix/store/qybprl8sz2lc...-firefox-1.5.0.7.drv -/nix/store/d18hyl92g30l...-firefox-1.5.0.7 - -$ ls -l result -lrwxrwxrwx ... result -> /nix/store/d18hyl92g30l...-firefox-1.5.0.7 - -$ ls ./result/bin/ -firefox firefox-config - -If a derivation has multiple outputs, -nix-build will build the default (first) output. -You can also build all outputs: - -$ nix-build '<nixpkgs>' -A openssl.all - -This will create a symlink for each output named -result-outputname. -The suffix is omitted if the output name is out. -So if openssl has outputs out, -bin and man, -nix-build will create symlinks -result, result-bin and -result-man. It’s also possible to build a specific -output: - -$ nix-build '<nixpkgs>' -A openssl.man - -This will create a symlink result-man. - -Build a Nix expression given on the command line: - - -$ nix-build -E 'with import <nixpkgs> { }; runCommand "foo" { } "echo bar > $out"' -$ cat ./result -bar - - - - -Build the GNU Hello package from the latest revision of the -master branch of Nixpkgs: - - -$ nix-build https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/master.tar.gz -A hello - - - - - - - -Environment variables - - - - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-channel.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-channel.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 2abeca0a0..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-channel.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,181 +0,0 @@ - - - - nix-channel - 1 - Nix - - - - - nix-channel - manage Nix channels - - - - - nix-channel - - url name - name - - names - generation - - - - -Description - -A Nix channel is a mechanism that allows you to automatically -stay up-to-date with a set of pre-built Nix expressions. A Nix -channel is just a URL that points to a place containing a set of Nix -expressions. See also . - -To see the list of official NixOS channels, visit . - -This command has the following operations: - - - - url [name] - - Adds a channel named - name with URL - url to the list of subscribed channels. - If name is omitted, it defaults to the - last component of url, with the - suffixes -stable or - -unstable removed. - - - - name - - Removes the channel named - name from the list of subscribed - channels. - - - - - - Prints the names and URLs of all subscribed - channels on standard output. - - - - [names…] - - Downloads the Nix expressions of all subscribed - channels (or only those included in - names if specified) and makes them the - default for nix-env operations (by symlinking - them from the directory - ~/.nix-defexpr). - - - - [generation] - - Reverts the previous call to nix-channel - --update. Optionally, you can specify a specific channel - generation number to restore. - - - - - - - -Note that does not automatically perform -an update. - -The list of subscribed channels is stored in -~/.nix-channels. - - - -Examples - -To subscribe to the Nixpkgs channel and install the GNU Hello package: - - -$ nix-channel --add https://nixos.org/channels/nixpkgs-unstable -$ nix-channel --update -$ nix-env -iA nixpkgs.hello - -You can revert channel updates using : - - -$ nix-instantiate --eval -E '(import <nixpkgs> {}).lib.version' -"14.04.527.0e935f1" - -$ nix-channel --rollback -switching from generation 483 to 482 - -$ nix-instantiate --eval -E '(import <nixpkgs> {}).lib.version' -"14.04.526.dbadfad" - - - - -Files - - - - /nix/var/nix/profiles/per-user/username/channels - - nix-channel uses a - nix-env profile to keep track of previous - versions of the subscribed channels. Every time you run - nix-channel --update, a new channel generation - (that is, a symlink to the channel Nix expressions in the Nix store) - is created. This enables nix-channel --rollback - to revert to previous versions. - - - - ~/.nix-defexpr/channels - - This is a symlink to - /nix/var/nix/profiles/per-user/username/channels. It - ensures that nix-env can find your channels. In - a multi-user installation, you may also have - ~/.nix-defexpr/channels_root, which links to - the channels of the root user. - - - - - - - -Channel format - -A channel URL should point to a directory containing the -following files: - - - - nixexprs.tar.xz - - A tarball containing Nix expressions and files - referenced by them (such as build scripts and patches). At the - top level, the tarball should contain a single directory. That - directory must contain a file default.nix - that serves as the channel’s “entry point”. - - - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.xml deleted file mode 100644 index cbcb5add5..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,63 +0,0 @@ - - - - nix-collect-garbage - 1 - Nix - - - - - nix-collect-garbage - delete unreachable store paths - - - - - nix-collect-garbage - - - period - bytes - - - - -Description - -The command nix-collect-garbage is mostly an -alias of nix-store ---gc, that is, it deletes all unreachable paths in -the Nix store to clean up your system. However, it provides two -additional options: (), -which deletes all old generations of all profiles in -/nix/var/nix/profiles by invoking -nix-env --delete-generations old on all profiles -(of course, this makes rollbacks to previous configurations -impossible); and - period, -where period is a value such as 30d, which deletes -all generations older than the specified number of days in all profiles -in /nix/var/nix/profiles (except for the generations -that were active at that point in time). - - - - -Example - -To delete from the Nix store everything that is not used by the -current generations of each profile, do - - -$ nix-collect-garbage -d - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 6fc8c312b..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,169 +0,0 @@ - - - - nix-copy-closure - 1 - Nix - - - - - nix-copy-closure - copy a closure to or from a remote machine via SSH - - - - - nix-copy-closure - - - - - - - - - - - - - - user@machine - - paths - - - - -Description - -nix-copy-closure gives you an easy and -efficient way to exchange software between machines. Given one or -more Nix store paths on the local -machine, nix-copy-closure computes the closure of -those paths (i.e. all their dependencies in the Nix store), and copies -all paths in the closure to the remote machine via the -ssh (Secure Shell) command. With the -, the direction is reversed: -the closure of paths on a remote machine is -copied to the Nix store on the local machine. - -This command is efficient because it only sends the store paths -that are missing on the target machine. - -Since nix-copy-closure calls -ssh, you may be asked to type in the appropriate -password or passphrase. In fact, you may be asked -twice because nix-copy-closure -currently connects twice to the remote machine, first to get the set -of paths missing on the target machine, and second to send the dump of -those paths. If this bothers you, use -ssh-agent. - - -Options - - - - - - Copy the closure of - paths from the local Nix store to the - Nix store on machine. This is the - default. - - - - - - Copy the closure of - paths from the Nix store on - machine to the local Nix - store. - - - - - - Enable compression of the SSH - connection. - - - - - - Also copy the outputs of store derivations - included in the closure. - - - - / - - Attempt to download missing paths on the target - machine using Nix’s substitute mechanism. Any paths that cannot - be substituted on the target are still copied normally from the - source. This is useful, for instance, if the connection between - the source and target machine is slow, but the connection between - the target machine and nixos.org (the default - binary cache server) is fast. - - - - - - Show verbose output. - - - - - - - - -Environment variables - - - - NIX_SSHOPTS - - Additional options to be passed to - ssh on the command line. - - - - - - - - -Examples - -Copy Firefox with all its dependencies to a remote machine: - - -$ nix-copy-closure --to alice@itchy.labs $(type -tP firefox) - - - -Copy Subversion from a remote machine and then install it into a -user environment: - - -$ nix-copy-closure --from alice@itchy.labs \ - /nix/store/0dj0503hjxy5mbwlafv1rsbdiyx1gkdy-subversion-1.4.4 -$ nix-env -i /nix/store/0dj0503hjxy5mbwlafv1rsbdiyx1gkdy-subversion-1.4.4 - - - - - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-daemon.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-daemon.xml deleted file mode 100644 index a2161f033..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-daemon.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,35 +0,0 @@ - - - - nix-daemon - 8 - Nix - - - - - nix-daemon - Nix multi-user support daemon - - - - - nix-daemon - - - - -Description - -The Nix daemon is necessary in multi-user Nix installations. It -performs build actions and other operations on the Nix store on behalf -of unprivileged users. - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-env.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-env.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 6a97c7e37..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-env.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1503 +0,0 @@ - - - - nix-env - 1 - Nix - - - - - nix-env - manipulate or query Nix user environments - - - - - nix-env - - name value - name value - - - - - - path - - - - - - - path - - - - system - - - operation - options - arguments - - - - -Description - -The command nix-env is used to manipulate Nix -user environments. User environments are sets of software packages -available to a user at some point in time. In other words, they are a -synthesised view of the programs available in the Nix store. There -may be many user environments: different users can have different -environments, and individual users can switch between different -environments. - -nix-env takes exactly one -operation flag which indicates the subcommand to -be performed. These are documented below. - - - - - - - -Selectors - -Several commands, such as nix-env -q and -nix-env -i, take a list of arguments that specify -the packages on which to operate. These are extended regular -expressions that must match the entire name of the package. (For -details on regular expressions, see -regex7.) -The match is case-sensitive. The regular expression can optionally be -followed by a dash and a version number; if omitted, any version of -the package will match. Here are some examples: - - - - - firefox - Matches the package name - firefox and any version. - - - - firefox-32.0 - Matches the package name - firefox and version - 32.0. - - - - gtk\\+ - Matches the package name - gtk+. The + character must - be escaped using a backslash to prevent it from being interpreted - as a quantifier, and the backslash must be escaped in turn with - another backslash to ensure that the shell passes it - on. - - - - .\* - Matches any package name. This is the default for - most commands. - - - - '.*zip.*' - Matches any package name containing the string - zip. Note the dots: '*zip*' - does not work, because in a regular expression, the character - * is interpreted as a - quantifier. - - - - '.*(firefox|chromium).*' - Matches any package name containing the strings - firefox or - chromium. - - - - - - - - - - - - -Common options - -This section lists the options that are common to all -operations. These options are allowed for every subcommand, though -they may not always have an effect. See -also . - - - - / path - - Specifies the Nix expression (designated below as - the active Nix expression) used by the - , , and - operations to obtain - derivations. The default is - ~/.nix-defexpr. - - If the argument starts with http:// or - https://, it is interpreted as the URL of a - tarball that will be downloaded and unpacked to a temporary - location. The tarball must include a single top-level directory - containing at least a file named default.nix. - - - - - - / path - - Specifies the profile to be used by those - operations that operate on a profile (designated below as the - active profile). A profile is a sequence of - user environments called generations, one of - which is the current - generation. - - - - - - For the , - , , - , - and - operations, this flag will cause - nix-env to print what - would be done if this flag had not been - specified, without actually doing it. - - also prints out which paths will - be substituted (i.e., - downloaded) and which paths will be built from source (because no - substitute is available). - - - - system - - By default, operations such as show derivations matching any platform. This - option allows you to use derivations for the specified platform - system. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Files - - - - ~/.nix-defexpr - - The source for the default Nix - expressions used by the , - , and operations to obtain derivations. The - option may be used to override this - default. - - If ~/.nix-defexpr is a file, - it is loaded as a Nix expression. If the expression - is a set, it is used as the default Nix expression. - If the expression is a function, an empty set is passed - as argument and the return value is used as - the default Nix expression. - - If ~/.nix-defexpr is a directory - containing a default.nix file, that file - is loaded as in the above paragraph. - - If ~/.nix-defexpr is a directory without - a default.nix file, then its contents - (both files and subdirectories) are loaded as Nix expressions. - The expressions are combined into a single set, each expression - under an attribute with the same name as the original file - or subdirectory. - - - For example, if ~/.nix-defexpr contains - two files, foo.nix and bar.nix, - then the default Nix expression will essentially be - - -{ - foo = import ~/.nix-defexpr/foo.nix; - bar = import ~/.nix-defexpr/bar.nix; -} - - - - The file manifest.nix is always ignored. - Subdirectories without a default.nix file - are traversed recursively in search of more Nix expressions, - but the names of these intermediate directories are not - added to the attribute paths of the default Nix expression. - - The command nix-channel places symlinks - to the downloaded Nix expressions from each subscribed channel in - this directory. - - - - - ~/.nix-profile - - A symbolic link to the user's current profile. By - default, this symlink points to - prefix/var/nix/profiles/default. - The PATH environment variable should include - ~/.nix-profile/bin for the user environment - to be visible to the user. - - - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--install</option> - -Synopsis - - - nix-env - - - - - - - - - - - - - - args - - - - - -Description - -The install operation creates a new user environment, based on -the current generation of the active profile, to which a set of store -paths described by args is added. The -arguments args map to store paths in a -number of possible ways: - - - - By default, args is a set - of derivation names denoting derivations in the active Nix - expression. These are realised, and the resulting output paths are - installed. Currently installed derivations with a name equal to the - name of a derivation being added are removed unless the option - is - specified. - - If there are multiple derivations matching a name in - args that have the same name (e.g., - gcc-3.3.6 and gcc-4.1.1), then - the derivation with the highest priority is - used. A derivation can define a priority by declaring the - meta.priority attribute. This attribute should - be a number, with a higher value denoting a lower priority. The - default priority is 0. - - If there are multiple matching derivations with the same - priority, then the derivation with the highest version will be - installed. - - You can force the installation of multiple derivations with - the same name by being specific about the versions. For instance, - nix-env -i gcc-3.3.6 gcc-4.1.1 will install both - version of GCC (and will probably cause a user environment - conflict!). - - If - () is specified, the arguments are - attribute paths that select attributes from the - top-level Nix expression. This is faster than using derivation - names and unambiguous. To find out the attribute paths of available - packages, use nix-env -qaP. - - If - path is given, - args is a set of names denoting installed - store paths in the profile path. This is - an easy way to copy user environment elements from one profile to - another. - - If is given, - args are Nix functions that are called with the - active Nix expression as their single argument. The derivations - returned by those function calls are installed. This allows - derivations to be specified in an unambiguous way, which is necessary - if there are multiple derivations with the same - name. - - If args are store - derivations, then these are realised, and the resulting - output paths are installed. - - If args are store paths - that are not store derivations, then these are realised and - installed. - - By default all outputs are installed for each derivation. - That can be reduced by setting meta.outputsToInstall. - - - - - - - - - -Flags - - - - / - - Use only derivations for which a substitute is - registered, i.e., there is a pre-built binary available that can - be downloaded in lieu of building the derivation. Thus, no - packages will be built from source. - - - - - - - Do not remove derivations with a name matching one - of the derivations being installed. Usually, trying to have two - versions of the same package installed in the same generation of a - profile will lead to an error in building the generation, due to - file name clashes between the two versions. However, this is not - the case for all packages. - - - - - - - Remove all previously installed packages first. - This is equivalent to running nix-env -e '.*' - first, except that everything happens in a single - transaction. - - - - - - - - -Examples - -To install a specific version of gcc from the -active Nix expression: - - -$ nix-env --install gcc-3.3.2 -installing `gcc-3.3.2' -uninstalling `gcc-3.1' - -Note the previously installed version is removed, since - was not specified. - -To install an arbitrary version: - - -$ nix-env --install gcc -installing `gcc-3.3.2' - - - -To install using a specific attribute: - - -$ nix-env -i -A gcc40mips -$ nix-env -i -A xorg.xorgserver - - - -To install all derivations in the Nix expression foo.nix: - - -$ nix-env -f ~/foo.nix -i '.*' - - - -To copy the store path with symbolic name gcc -from another profile: - - -$ nix-env -i --from-profile /nix/var/nix/profiles/foo gcc - - - -To install a specific store derivation (typically created by -nix-instantiate): - - -$ nix-env -i /nix/store/fibjb1bfbpm5mrsxc4mh2d8n37sxh91i-gcc-3.4.3.drv - - - -To install a specific output path: - - -$ nix-env -i /nix/store/y3cgx0xj1p4iv9x0pnnmdhr8iyg741vk-gcc-3.4.3 - - - -To install from a Nix expression specified on the command-line: - - -$ nix-env -f ./foo.nix -i -E \ - 'f: (f {system = "i686-linux";}).subversionWithJava' - -I.e., this evaluates to (f: (f {system = -"i686-linux";}).subversionWithJava) (import ./foo.nix), thus -selecting the subversionWithJava attribute from the -set returned by calling the function defined in -./foo.nix. - -A dry-run tells you which paths will be downloaded or built from -source: - - -$ nix-env -f '<nixpkgs>' -iA hello --dry-run -(dry run; not doing anything) -installing ‘hello-2.10’ -this path will be fetched (0.04 MiB download, 0.19 MiB unpacked): - /nix/store/wkhdf9jinag5750mqlax6z2zbwhqb76n-hello-2.10 - ... - - - -To install Firefox from the latest revision in the Nixpkgs/NixOS -14.12 channel: - - -$ nix-env -f https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-14.12.tar.gz -iA firefox - - - - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--upgrade</option> - -Synopsis - - - nix-env - - - - - - - - - - - - args - - - - -Description - -The upgrade operation creates a new user environment, based on -the current generation of the active profile, in which all store paths -are replaced for which there are newer versions in the set of paths -described by args. Paths for which there -are no newer versions are left untouched; this is not an error. It is -also not an error if an element of args -matches no installed derivations. - -For a description of how args is -mapped to a set of store paths, see . If -args describes multiple store paths with -the same symbolic name, only the one with the highest version is -installed. - - - -Flags - - - - - - Only upgrade a derivation to newer versions. This - is the default. - - - - - - In addition to upgrading to newer versions, also - “upgrade” to derivations that have the same version. Version are - not a unique identification of a derivation, so there may be many - derivations that have the same version. This flag may be useful - to force “synchronisation” between the installed and available - derivations. - - - - - - Only “upgrade” to derivations - that have the same version. This may not seem very useful, but it - actually is, e.g., when there is a new release of Nixpkgs and you - want to replace installed applications with the same versions - built against newer dependencies (to reduce the number of - dependencies floating around on your system). - - - - - - In addition to upgrading to newer versions, also - “upgrade” to derivations that have the same or a lower version. - I.e., derivations may actually be downgraded depending on what is - available in the active Nix expression. - - - - - -For the other flags, see . - - - -Examples - - -$ nix-env --upgrade gcc -upgrading `gcc-3.3.1' to `gcc-3.4' - -$ nix-env -u gcc-3.3.2 --always (switch to a specific version) -upgrading `gcc-3.4' to `gcc-3.3.2' - -$ nix-env --upgrade pan -(no upgrades available, so nothing happens) - -$ nix-env -u (try to upgrade everything) -upgrading `hello-2.1.2' to `hello-2.1.3' -upgrading `mozilla-1.2' to `mozilla-1.4' - - - -Versions - -The upgrade operation determines whether a derivation -y is an upgrade of a derivation -x by looking at their respective -name attributes. The names (e.g., -gcc-3.3.1 are split into two parts: the package -name (gcc), and the version -(3.3.1). The version part starts after the first -dash not followed by a letter. x is considered an -upgrade of y if their package names match, and the -version of y is higher that that of -x. - -The versions are compared by splitting them into contiguous -components of numbers and letters. E.g., 3.3.1pre5 -is split into [3, 3, 1, "pre", 5]. These lists are -then compared lexicographically (from left to right). Corresponding -components a and b are compared -as follows. If they are both numbers, integer comparison is used. If -a is an empty string and b is a -number, a is considered less than -b. The special string component -pre (for pre-release) is -considered to be less than other components. String components are -considered less than number components. Otherwise, they are compared -lexicographically (i.e., using case-sensitive string comparison). - -This is illustrated by the following examples: - - -1.0 < 2.3 -2.1 < 2.3 -2.3 = 2.3 -2.5 > 2.3 -3.1 > 2.3 -2.3.1 > 2.3 -2.3.1 > 2.3a -2.3pre1 < 2.3 -2.3pre3 < 2.3pre12 -2.3a < 2.3c -2.3pre1 < 2.3c -2.3pre1 < 2.3q - - - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--uninstall</option> - -Synopsis - - - nix-env - - - - - drvnames - - - -Description - -The uninstall operation creates a new user environment, based on -the current generation of the active profile, from which the store -paths designated by the symbolic names -names are removed. - - - -Examples - - -$ nix-env --uninstall gcc -$ nix-env -e '.*' (remove everything) - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--set</option> - -Synopsis - - - nix-env - - drvname - - - -Description - -The operation modifies the current generation of a -profile so that it contains exactly the specified derivation, and nothing else. - - - - -Examples - - -The following updates a profile such that its current generation will contain -just Firefox: - - -$ nix-env -p /nix/var/nix/profiles/browser --set firefox - - - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--set-flag</option> - -Synopsis - - - nix-env - - name - value - drvnames - - - -Description - -The operation allows meta attributes -of installed packages to be modified. There are several attributes -that can be usefully modified, because they affect the behaviour of -nix-env or the user environment build -script: - - - - priority can be changed to - resolve filename clashes. The user environment build script uses - the meta.priority attribute of derivations to - resolve filename collisions between packages. Lower priority values - denote a higher priority. For instance, the GCC wrapper package and - the Binutils package in Nixpkgs both have a file - bin/ld, so previously if you tried to install - both you would get a collision. Now, on the other hand, the GCC - wrapper declares a higher priority than Binutils, so the former’s - bin/ld is symlinked in the user - environment. - - keep can be set to - true to prevent the package from being upgraded - or replaced. This is useful if you want to hang on to an older - version of a package. - - active can be set to - false to “disable” the package. That is, no - symlinks will be generated to the files of the package, but it - remains part of the profile (so it won’t be garbage-collected). It - can be set back to true to re-enable the - package. - - - - - - - -Examples - -To prevent the currently installed Firefox from being upgraded: - - -$ nix-env --set-flag keep true firefox - -After this, nix-env -u will ignore Firefox. - -To disable the currently installed Firefox, then install a new -Firefox while the old remains part of the profile: - - -$ nix-env -q -firefox-2.0.0.9 (the current one) - -$ nix-env --preserve-installed -i firefox-2.0.0.11 -installing `firefox-2.0.0.11' -building path(s) `/nix/store/myy0y59q3ig70dgq37jqwg1j0rsapzsl-user-environment' -collision between `/nix/store/...-firefox-2.0.0.11/bin/firefox' - and `/nix/store/...-firefox-2.0.0.9/bin/firefox'. -(i.e., can’t have two active at the same time) - -$ nix-env --set-flag active false firefox -setting flag on `firefox-2.0.0.9' - -$ nix-env --preserve-installed -i firefox-2.0.0.11 -installing `firefox-2.0.0.11' - -$ nix-env -q -firefox-2.0.0.11 (the enabled one) -firefox-2.0.0.9 (the disabled one) - - - -To make files from binutils take precedence -over files from gcc: - - -$ nix-env --set-flag priority 5 binutils -$ nix-env --set-flag priority 10 gcc - - - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--query</option> - -Synopsis - - - nix-env - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - attribute-path - - - - - names - - - - - -Description - -The query operation displays information about either the store -paths that are installed in the current generation of the active -profile (), or the derivations that are -available for installation in the active Nix expression -(). It only prints information about -derivations whose symbolic name matches one of -names. - -The derivations are sorted by their name -attributes. - - - - -Source selection - -The following flags specify the set of things on which the query -operates. - - - - - - The query operates on the store paths that are - installed in the current generation of the active profile. This - is the default. - - - - - - - The query operates on the derivations that are - available in the active Nix expression. - - - - - - - - -Queries - -The following flags specify what information to display about -the selected derivations. Multiple flags may be specified, in which -case the information is shown in the order given here. Note that the -name of the derivation is shown unless is -specified. - - - - - - - - Print the result in an XML representation suitable - for automatic processing by other tools. The root element is - called items, which contains a - item element for each available or installed - derivation. The fields discussed below are all stored in - attributes of the item - elements. - - - - - - Print the result in a JSON representation suitable - for automatic processing by other tools. - - - - / - - Show only derivations for which a substitute is - registered, i.e., there is a pre-built binary available that can - be downloaded in lieu of building the derivation. Thus, this - shows all packages that probably can be installed - quickly. - - - - - - - Print the status of the - derivation. The status consists of three characters. The first - is I or -, indicating - whether the derivation is currently installed in the current - generation of the active profile. This is by definition the case - for , but not for - . The second is P - or -, indicating whether the derivation is - present on the system. This indicates whether installation of an - available derivation will require the derivation to be built. The - third is S or -, indicating - whether a substitute is available for the - derivation. - - - - - - - Print the attribute path of - the derivation, which can be used to unambiguously select it using - the option - available in commands that install derivations like - nix-env --install. This option only works - together with - - - - - - Suppress printing of the name - attribute of each derivation. - - - - / - - - Compare installed versions to available versions, - or vice versa (if is given). This is - useful for quickly seeing whether upgrades for installed - packages are available in a Nix expression. A column is added - with the following meaning: - - - - < version - - A newer version of the package is available - or installed. - - - - = version - - At most the same version of the package is - available or installed. - - - - > version - - Only older versions of the package are - available or installed. - - - - - ? - - No version of the package is available or - installed. - - - - - - - - - - - - Print the system attribute of - the derivation. - - - - - - Print the path of the store - derivation. - - - - - - Print the output path of the - derivation. - - - - - - Print a short (one-line) description of the - derivation, if available. The description is taken from the - meta.description attribute of the - derivation. - - - - - - Print all of the meta-attributes of the - derivation. This option is only available with - or . - - - - - - - - -Examples - -To show installed packages: - - -$ nix-env -q -bison-1.875c -docbook-xml-4.2 -firefox-1.0.4 -MPlayer-1.0pre7 -ORBit2-2.8.3 - - - - - -To show available packages: - - -$ nix-env -qa -firefox-1.0.7 -GConf-2.4.0.1 -MPlayer-1.0pre7 -ORBit2-2.8.3 - - - - - -To show the status of available packages: - - -$ nix-env -qas --P- firefox-1.0.7 (not installed but present) ---S GConf-2.4.0.1 (not present, but there is a substitute for fast installation) ---S MPlayer-1.0pre3 (i.e., this is not the installed MPlayer, even though the version is the same!) -IP- ORBit2-2.8.3 (installed and by definition present) - - - - - -To show available packages in the Nix expression foo.nix: - - -$ nix-env -f ./foo.nix -qa -foo-1.2.3 - - - - -To compare installed versions to what’s available: - - -$ nix-env -qc -... -acrobat-reader-7.0 - ? (package is not available at all) -autoconf-2.59 = 2.59 (same version) -firefox-1.0.4 < 1.0.7 (a more recent version is available) -... - - - - -To show all packages with “zip” in the name: - - -$ nix-env -qa '.*zip.*' -bzip2-1.0.6 -gzip-1.6 -zip-3.0 - - - - - -To show all packages with “firefox” or -“chromium” in the name: - - -$ nix-env -qa '.*(firefox|chromium).*' -chromium-37.0.2062.94 -chromium-beta-38.0.2125.24 -firefox-32.0.3 -firefox-with-plugins-13.0.1 - - - - - -To show all packages in the latest revision of the Nixpkgs -repository: - - -$ nix-env -f https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/master.tar.gz -qa - - - - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--switch-profile</option> - -Synopsis - - - nix-env - - - - - path - - - - - -Description - -This operation makes path the current -profile for the user. That is, the symlink -~/.nix-profile is made to point to -path. - - - -Examples - - -$ nix-env -S ~/my-profile - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--list-generations</option> - -Synopsis - - - nix-env - - - - - - -Description - -This operation print a list of all the currently existing -generations for the active profile. These may be switched to using -the operation. It also prints -the creation date of the generation, and indicates the current -generation. - - - - -Examples - - -$ nix-env --list-generations - 95 2004-02-06 11:48:24 - 96 2004-02-06 11:49:01 - 97 2004-02-06 16:22:45 - 98 2004-02-06 16:24:33 (current) - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--delete-generations</option> - -Synopsis - - - nix-env - - generations - - - - - -Description - -This operation deletes the specified generations of the current -profile. The generations can be a list of generation numbers, the -special value old to delete all non-current -generations, a value such as 30d to delete all -generations older than the specified number of days (except for the -generation that was active at that point in time), or a value such as -+5 to keep the last 5 generations -ignoring any newer than current, e.g., if 30 is the current -generation +5 will delete generation 25 -and all older generations. -Periodically deleting old generations is important to make garbage collection -effective. - - - -Examples - - -$ nix-env --delete-generations 3 4 8 - -$ nix-env --delete-generations +5 - -$ nix-env --delete-generations 30d - -$ nix-env -p other_profile --delete-generations old - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--switch-generation</option> - -Synopsis - - - nix-env - - - - - generation - - - - - -Description - -This operation makes generation number -generation the current generation of the -active profile. That is, if the -profile is the path to -the active profile, then the symlink -profile is made to -point to -profile-generation-link, -which is in turn a symlink to the actual user environment in the Nix -store. - -Switching will fail if the specified generation does not exist. - - - - -Examples - - -$ nix-env -G 42 -switching from generation 50 to 42 - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--rollback</option> - -Synopsis - - - nix-env - - - - - -Description - -This operation switches to the “previous” generation of the -active profile, that is, the highest numbered generation lower than -the current generation, if it exists. It is just a convenience -wrapper around and -. - - - - -Examples - - -$ nix-env --rollback -switching from generation 92 to 91 - -$ nix-env --rollback -error: no generation older than the current (91) exists - - - - - - -Environment variables - - - - NIX_PROFILE - - Location of the Nix profile. Defaults to the - target of the symlink ~/.nix-profile, if it - exists, or /nix/var/nix/profiles/default - otherwise. - - - - - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-hash.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-hash.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 2f80dc568..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-hash.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,176 +0,0 @@ - - - - nix-hash - 1 - Nix - - - - - nix-hash - compute the cryptographic hash of a path - - - - - nix-hash - - - - hashAlgo - path - - - nix-hash - - hash - - - nix-hash - - hash - - - - -Description - -The command nix-hash computes the -cryptographic hash of the contents of each -path and prints it on standard output. By -default, it computes an MD5 hash, but other hash algorithms are -available as well. The hash is printed in hexadecimal. To generate -the same hash as nix-prefetch-url you have to -specify multiple arguments, see below for an example. - -The hash is computed over a serialisation -of each path: a dump of the file system tree rooted at the path. This -allows directories and symlinks to be hashed as well as regular files. -The dump is in the NAR format produced by nix-store -. Thus, nix-hash -path yields the same -cryptographic hash as nix-store --dump -path | md5sum. - - - - -Options - - - - - - Print the cryptographic hash of the contents of - each regular file path. That is, do - not compute the hash over the dump of - path. The result is identical to that - produced by the GNU commands md5sum and - sha1sum. - - - - - - Print the hash in a base-32 representation rather - than hexadecimal. This base-32 representation is more compact and - can be used in Nix expressions (such as in calls to - fetchurl). - - - - - - Truncate hashes longer than 160 bits (such as - SHA-256) to 160 bits. - - - - hashAlgo - - Use the specified cryptographic hash algorithm, - which can be one of md5, - sha1, and - sha256. - - - - - - Don’t hash anything, but convert the base-32 hash - representation hash to - hexadecimal. - - - - - - Don’t hash anything, but convert the hexadecimal - hash representation hash to - base-32. - - - - - - - - -Examples - -Computing the same hash as nix-prefetch-url: - -$ nix-prefetch-url file://<(echo test) -1lkgqb6fclns49861dwk9rzb6xnfkxbpws74mxnx01z9qyv1pjpj -$ nix-hash --type sha256 --flat --base32 <(echo test) -1lkgqb6fclns49861dwk9rzb6xnfkxbpws74mxnx01z9qyv1pjpj - - - -Computing hashes: - - -$ mkdir test -$ echo "hello" > test/world - -$ nix-hash test/ (MD5 hash; default) -8179d3caeff1869b5ba1744e5a245c04 - -$ nix-store --dump test/ | md5sum (for comparison) -8179d3caeff1869b5ba1744e5a245c04 - - -$ nix-hash --type sha1 test/ -e4fd8ba5f7bbeaea5ace89fe10255536cd60dab6 - -$ nix-hash --type sha1 --base32 test/ -nvd61k9nalji1zl9rrdfmsmvyyjqpzg4 - -$ nix-hash --type sha256 --flat test/ -error: reading file `test/': Is a directory - -$ nix-hash --type sha256 --flat test/world -5891b5b522d5df086d0ff0b110fbd9d21bb4fc7163af34d08286a2e846f6be03 - - - -Converting between hexadecimal and base-32: - - -$ nix-hash --type sha1 --to-base32 e4fd8ba5f7bbeaea5ace89fe10255536cd60dab6 -nvd61k9nalji1zl9rrdfmsmvyyjqpzg4 - -$ nix-hash --type sha1 --to-base16 nvd61k9nalji1zl9rrdfmsmvyyjqpzg4 -e4fd8ba5f7bbeaea5ace89fe10255536cd60dab6 - - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-instantiate.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-instantiate.xml deleted file mode 100644 index dc055fa51..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-instantiate.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,266 +0,0 @@ - - - - nix-instantiate - 1 - Nix - - - - - nix-instantiate - instantiate store derivations from Nix expressions - - - - - nix-instantiate - - - - - - - - - - - name value - - - - - - attrPath - - path - - - - - - files - - - nix-instantiate - - files - - - - -Description - -The command nix-instantiate generates store derivations from (high-level) -Nix expressions. It evaluates the Nix expressions in each of -files (which defaults to -./default.nix). Each top-level expression -should evaluate to a derivation, a list of derivations, or a set of -derivations. The paths of the resulting store derivations are printed -on standard output. - -If files is the character --, then a Nix expression will be read from standard -input. - -See also for a list of common options. - - - - -Options - - - - - path - - - See the corresponding - options in nix-store. - - - - - - Just parse the input files, and print their - abstract syntax trees on standard output in ATerm - format. - - - - - - Just parse and evaluate the input files, and print - the resulting values on standard output. No instantiation of - store derivations takes place. - - - - - - Look up the given files in Nix’s search path (as - specified by the NIX_PATH - environment variable). If found, print the corresponding absolute - paths on standard output. For instance, if - NIX_PATH is - nixpkgs=/home/alice/nixpkgs, then - nix-instantiate --find-file nixpkgs/default.nix - will print - /home/alice/nixpkgs/default.nix. - - - - - - When used with , - recursively evaluate list elements and attributes. Normally, such - sub-expressions are left unevaluated (since the Nix expression - language is lazy). - - This option can cause non-termination, because lazy - data structures can be infinitely large. - - - - - - - - When used with , print the resulting - value as an JSON representation of the abstract syntax tree rather - than as an ATerm. - - - - - - When used with , print the resulting - value as an XML representation of the abstract syntax tree rather than as - an ATerm. The schema is the same as that used by the toXML built-in. - - - - - - - When used with , perform - evaluation in read/write mode so nix language features that - require it will still work (at the cost of needing to do - instantiation of every evaluated derivation). If this option is - not enabled, there may be uninstantiated store paths in the final - output. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Examples - -Instantiating store derivations from a Nix expression, and -building them using nix-store: - - -$ nix-instantiate test.nix (instantiate) -/nix/store/cigxbmvy6dzix98dxxh9b6shg7ar5bvs-perl-BerkeleyDB-0.26.drv - -$ nix-store -r $(nix-instantiate test.nix) (build) -... -/nix/store/qhqk4n8ci095g3sdp93x7rgwyh9rdvgk-perl-BerkeleyDB-0.26 (output path) - -$ ls -l /nix/store/qhqk4n8ci095g3sdp93x7rgwyh9rdvgk-perl-BerkeleyDB-0.26 -dr-xr-xr-x 2 eelco users 4096 1970-01-01 01:00 lib -... - - - -You can also give a Nix expression on the command line: - - -$ nix-instantiate -E 'with import <nixpkgs> { }; hello' -/nix/store/j8s4zyv75a724q38cb0r87rlczaiag4y-hello-2.8.drv - - -This is equivalent to: - - -$ nix-instantiate '<nixpkgs>' -A hello - - - - -Parsing and evaluating Nix expressions: - - -$ nix-instantiate --parse -E '1 + 2' -1 + 2 - -$ nix-instantiate --eval -E '1 + 2' -3 - -$ nix-instantiate --eval --xml -E '1 + 2' - - - -]]> - - - -The difference between non-strict and strict evaluation: - - -$ nix-instantiate --eval --xml -E 'rec { x = "foo"; y = x; }' -... - - - - - ]]> -... - -Note that y is left unevaluated (the XML -representation doesn’t attempt to show non-normal forms). - - -$ nix-instantiate --eval --xml --strict -E 'rec { x = "foo"; y = x; }' -... - - - - - ]]> -... - - - - - - -Environment variables - - - - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.xml deleted file mode 100644 index db2a6960a..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,131 +0,0 @@ - - - - nix-prefetch-url - 1 - Nix - - - - - nix-prefetch-url - copy a file from a URL into the store and print its hash - - - - - nix-prefetch-url - - hashAlgo - - - name - url - hash - - - -Description - -The command nix-prefetch-url downloads the -file referenced by the URL url, prints its -cryptographic hash, and copies it into the Nix store. The file name -in the store is -hash-baseName, -where baseName is everything following the -final slash in url. - -This command is just a convenience for Nix expression writers. -Often a Nix expression fetches some source distribution from the -network using the fetchurl expression contained in -Nixpkgs. However, fetchurl requires a -cryptographic hash. If you don't know the hash, you would have to -download the file first, and then fetchurl would -download it again when you build your Nix expression. Since -fetchurl uses the same name for the downloaded file -as nix-prefetch-url, the redundant download can be -avoided. - -If hash is specified, then a download -is not performed if the Nix store already contains a file with the -same hash and base name. Otherwise, the file is downloaded, and an -error is signaled if the actual hash of the file does not match the -specified hash. - -This command prints the hash on standard output. Additionally, -if the option is used, the path of the -downloaded file in the Nix store is also printed. - - - - -Options - - - - hashAlgo - - Use the specified cryptographic hash algorithm, - which can be one of md5, - sha1, and - sha256. - - - - - - Print the store path of the downloaded file on - standard output. - - - - - - Unpack the archive (which must be a tarball or zip - file) and add the result to the Nix store. The resulting hash can - be used with functions such as Nixpkgs’s - fetchzip or - fetchFromGitHub. - - - - name - - Override the name of the file in the Nix store. By - default, this is - hash-basename, - where basename is the last component of - url. Overriding the name is necessary - when basename contains characters that - are not allowed in Nix store paths. - - - - - - - - -Examples - - -$ nix-prefetch-url ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.10.tar.gz -0ssi1wpaf7plaswqqjwigppsg5fyh99vdlb9kzl7c9lng89ndq1i - -$ nix-prefetch-url --print-path mirror://gnu/hello/hello-2.10.tar.gz -0ssi1wpaf7plaswqqjwigppsg5fyh99vdlb9kzl7c9lng89ndq1i -/nix/store/3x7dwzq014bblazs7kq20p9hyzz0qh8g-hello-2.10.tar.gz - -$ nix-prefetch-url --unpack --print-path https://github.com/NixOS/patchelf/archive/0.8.tar.gz -079agjlv0hrv7fxnx9ngipx14gyncbkllxrp9cccnh3a50fxcmy7 -/nix/store/19zrmhm3m40xxaw81c8cqm6aljgrnwj2-0.8.tar.gz - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-shell.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-shell.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 1d55b5622..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-shell.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,411 +0,0 @@ - - - - nix-shell - 1 - Nix - - - - - nix-shell - start an interactive shell based on a Nix expression - - - - - nix-shell - name value - name value - - - - - - attrPath - - cmd - cmd - regexp - - name - - - - - - - - - packages - expressions - - - - path - - - - -Description - -The command nix-shell will build the -dependencies of the specified derivation, but not the derivation -itself. It will then start an interactive shell in which all -environment variables defined by the derivation -path have been set to their corresponding -values, and the script $stdenv/setup has been -sourced. This is useful for reproducing the environment of a -derivation for development. - -If path is not given, -nix-shell defaults to -shell.nix if it exists, and -default.nix otherwise. - -If path starts with -http:// or https://, it is -interpreted as the URL of a tarball that will be downloaded and -unpacked to a temporary location. The tarball must include a single -top-level directory containing at least a file named -default.nix. - -If the derivation defines the variable -shellHook, it will be evaluated after -$stdenv/setup has been sourced. Since this hook is -not executed by regular Nix builds, it allows you to perform -initialisation specific to nix-shell. For example, -the derivation attribute - - -shellHook = - '' - echo "Hello shell" - ''; - - -will cause nix-shell to print Hello shell. - - - - -Options - -All options not listed here are passed to nix-store ---realise, except for and - / which are passed to -nix-instantiate. See -also . - - - - cmd - - In the environment of the derivation, run the - shell command cmd. This command is - executed in an interactive shell. (Use to - use a non-interactive shell instead.) However, a call to - exit is implicitly added to the command, so the - shell will exit after running the command. To prevent this, add - return at the end; e.g. --command - "echo Hello; return" will print Hello - and then drop you into the interactive shell. This can be useful - for doing any additional initialisation. - - - - cmd - - Like , but executes the - command in a non-interactive shell. This means (among other - things) that if you hit Ctrl-C while the command is running, the - shell exits. - - - - regexp - - Do not build any dependencies whose store path - matches the regular expression regexp. - This option may be specified multiple times. - - - - - - If this flag is specified, the environment is - almost entirely cleared before the interactive shell is started, - so you get an environment that more closely corresponds to the - “real” Nix build. A few variables, in particular - HOME, USER and - DISPLAY, are retained. Note that - ~/.bashrc and (depending on your Bash - installation) /etc/bashrc are still sourced, - so any variables set there will affect the interactive - shell. - - - - / packages - - Set up an environment in which the specified - packages are present. The command line arguments are interpreted - as attribute names inside the Nix Packages collection. Thus, - nix-shell -p libjpeg openjdk will start a shell - in which the packages denoted by the attribute names - libjpeg and openjdk are - present. - - - - interpreter - - The chained script interpreter to be invoked by - nix-shell. Only applicable in - #!-scripts (described below). - - - - name - - When a shell is started, - keep the listed environment variables. - - - - - -The following common options are supported: - - - - - - - - -Environment variables - - - - NIX_BUILD_SHELL - - Shell used to start the interactive environment. - Defaults to the bash found in PATH. - - - - - - - - -Examples - -To build the dependencies of the package Pan, and start an -interactive shell in which to build it: - - -$ nix-shell '<nixpkgs>' -A pan -[nix-shell]$ unpackPhase -[nix-shell]$ cd pan-* -[nix-shell]$ configurePhase -[nix-shell]$ buildPhase -[nix-shell]$ ./pan/gui/pan - - -To clear the environment first, and do some additional automatic -initialisation of the interactive shell: - - -$ nix-shell '<nixpkgs>' -A pan --pure \ - --command 'export NIX_DEBUG=1; export NIX_CORES=8; return' - - -Nix expressions can also be given on the command line using the --E and -p flags. -For instance, the following starts a shell containing the packages -sqlite and libX11: - - -$ nix-shell -E 'with import <nixpkgs> { }; runCommand "dummy" { buildInputs = [ sqlite xorg.libX11 ]; } ""' - - -A shorter way to do the same is: - - -$ nix-shell -p sqlite xorg.libX11 -[nix-shell]$ echo $NIX_LDFLAGS -… -L/nix/store/j1zg5v…-sqlite-3.8.0.2/lib -L/nix/store/0gmcz9…-libX11-1.6.1/lib … - - -Note that -p accepts multiple full nix expressions that -are valid in the buildInputs = [ ... ] shown above, -not only package names. So the following is also legal: - - -$ nix-shell -p sqlite 'git.override { withManual = false; }' - - -The -p flag looks up Nixpkgs in the Nix search -path. You can override it by passing or setting -NIX_PATH. For example, the following gives you a shell -containing the Pan package from a specific revision of Nixpkgs: - - -$ nix-shell -p pan -I nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/8a3eea054838b55aca962c3fbde9c83c102b8bf2.tar.gz - -[nix-shell:~]$ pan --version -Pan 0.139 - - - - - - - -Use as a <literal>#!</literal>-interpreter - -You can use nix-shell as a script interpreter -to allow scripts written in arbitrary languages to obtain their own -dependencies via Nix. This is done by starting the script with the -following lines: - - -#! /usr/bin/env nix-shell -#! nix-shell -i real-interpreter -p packages - - -where real-interpreter is the “real” script -interpreter that will be invoked by nix-shell after -it has obtained the dependencies and initialised the environment, and -packages are the attribute names of the -dependencies in Nixpkgs. - -The lines starting with #! nix-shell specify -nix-shell options (see above). Note that you cannot -write #! /usr/bin/env nix-shell -i ... because -many operating systems only allow one argument in -#! lines. - -For example, here is a Python script that depends on Python and -the prettytable package: - - -#! /usr/bin/env nix-shell -#! nix-shell -i python -p python pythonPackages.prettytable - -import prettytable - -# Print a simple table. -t = prettytable.PrettyTable(["N", "N^2"]) -for n in range(1, 10): t.add_row([n, n * n]) -print t - - - - -Similarly, the following is a Perl script that specifies that it -requires Perl and the HTML::TokeParser::Simple and -LWP packages: - - -#! /usr/bin/env nix-shell -#! nix-shell -i perl -p perl perlPackages.HTMLTokeParserSimple perlPackages.LWP - -use HTML::TokeParser::Simple; - -# Fetch nixos.org and print all hrefs. -my $p = HTML::TokeParser::Simple->new(url => 'http://nixos.org/'); - -while (my $token = $p->get_tag("a")) { - my $href = $token->get_attr("href"); - print "$href\n" if $href; -} - - - - -Sometimes you need to pass a simple Nix expression to customize -a package like Terraform: - - - -You must use double quotes (") when -passing a simple Nix expression in a nix-shell shebang. - - -Finally, using the merging of multiple nix-shell shebangs the -following Haskell script uses a specific branch of Nixpkgs/NixOS (the -18.03 stable branch): - - - -If you want to be even more precise, you can specify a specific -revision of Nixpkgs: - - -#! nix-shell -I nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/0672315759b3e15e2121365f067c1c8c56bb4722.tar.gz - - - - -The examples above all used to get -dependencies from Nixpkgs. You can also use a Nix expression to build -your own dependencies. For example, the Python example could have been -written as: - - -#! /usr/bin/env nix-shell -#! nix-shell deps.nix -i python - - -where the file deps.nix in the same directory -as the #!-script contains: - - -with import <nixpkgs> {}; - -runCommand "dummy" { buildInputs = [ python pythonPackages.prettytable ]; } "" - - - - - - - -Environment variables - - - - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-store.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-store.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 352e716ae..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/nix-store.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1516 +0,0 @@ - - - - nix-store - 1 - Nix - - - - - nix-store - manipulate or query the Nix store - - - - - nix-store - - path - - operation - options - arguments - - - - -Description - -The command nix-store performs primitive -operations on the Nix store. You generally do not need to run this -command manually. - -nix-store takes exactly one -operation flag which indicates the subcommand to -be performed. These are documented below. - - - - - - - -Common options - -This section lists the options that are common to all -operations. These options are allowed for every subcommand, though -they may not always have an effect. See -also for a list of common -options. - - - - path - - Causes the result of a realisation - ( and ) - to be registered as a root of the garbage collector (see ). The root is stored in - path, which must be inside a directory - that is scanned for roots by the garbage collector (i.e., - typically in a subdirectory of - /nix/var/nix/gcroots/) - unless the flag - is used. - - If there are multiple results, then multiple symlinks will - be created by sequentially numbering symlinks beyond the first one - (e.g., foo, foo-2, - foo-3, and so on). - - - - - - - - In conjunction with , this option - allows roots to be stored outside of the GC - roots directory. This is useful for commands such as - nix-build that place a symlink to the build - result in the current directory; such a build result should not be - garbage-collected unless the symlink is removed. - - The flag causes a uniquely named - symlink to path to be stored in - /nix/var/nix/gcroots/auto/. For instance, - - -$ nix-store --add-root /home/eelco/bla/result --indirect -r ... - -$ ls -l /nix/var/nix/gcroots/auto -lrwxrwxrwx 1 ... 2005-03-13 21:10 dn54lcypm8f8... -> /home/eelco/bla/result - -$ ls -l /home/eelco/bla/result -lrwxrwxrwx 1 ... 2005-03-13 21:10 /home/eelco/bla/result -> /nix/store/1r11343n6qd4...-f-spot-0.0.10 - - Thus, when /home/eelco/bla/result is removed, - the GC root in the auto directory becomes a - dangling symlink and will be ignored by the collector. - - Note that it is not possible to move or rename - indirect GC roots, since the symlink in the - auto directory will still point to the old - location. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--realise</option> - -Synopsis - - - nix-store - - - - - paths - - - - - -Description - -The operation essentially “builds” -the specified store paths. Realisation is a somewhat overloaded term: - - - - If the store path is a - derivation, realisation ensures that the output - paths of the derivation are valid (i.e., the output path and its - closure exist in the file system). This can be done in several - ways. First, it is possible that the outputs are already valid, in - which case we are done immediately. Otherwise, there may be substitutes that produce the - outputs (e.g., by downloading them). Finally, the outputs can be - produced by performing the build action described by the - derivation. - - If the store path is not a derivation, realisation - ensures that the specified path is valid (i.e., it and its closure - exist in the file system). If the path is already valid, we are - done immediately. Otherwise, the path and any missing paths in its - closure may be produced through substitutes. If there are no - (successful) subsitutes, realisation fails. - - - - - -The output path of each derivation is printed on standard -output. (For non-derivations argument, the argument itself is -printed.) - -The following flags are available: - - - - - - Print on standard error a description of what - packages would be built or downloaded, without actually performing - the operation. - - - - - - If a non-derivation path does not have a - substitute, then silently ignore it. - - - - - - This option allows you to check whether a - derivation is deterministic. It rebuilds the specified derivation - and checks whether the result is bitwise-identical with the - existing outputs, printing an error if that’s not the case. The - outputs of the specified derivation must already exist. When used - with , if an output path is not identical to - the corresponding output from the previous build, the new output - path is left in - /nix/store/name.check. - - See also the configuration - option, which repeats a derivation a number of times and prevents - its outputs from being registered as “valid” in the Nix store - unless they are identical. - - - - - -Special exit codes: - - - - 100 - Generic build failure, the builder process - returned with a non-zero exit code. - - - 101 - Build timeout, the build was aborted because it - did not complete within the specified timeout. - - - - 102 - Hash mismatch, the build output was rejected - because it does not match the specified outputHash. - - - - 104 - Not deterministic, the build succeeded in check - mode but the resulting output is not binary reproducable. - - - - - -With the flag it's possible for -multiple failures to occur, in this case the 1xx status codes are or combined -using binary or. -1100100 - ^^^^ - |||`- timeout - ||`-- output hash mismatch - |`--- build failure - `---- not deterministic - - - - - -Examples - -This operation is typically used to build store derivations -produced by nix-instantiate: - - -$ nix-store -r $(nix-instantiate ./test.nix) -/nix/store/31axcgrlbfsxzmfff1gyj1bf62hvkby2-aterm-2.3.1 - -This is essentially what nix-build does. - -To test whether a previously-built derivation is deterministic: - - -$ nix-build '<nixpkgs>' -A hello --check -K - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--serve</option> - -Synopsis - - - nix-store - - - - - - -Description - -The operation provides access to -the Nix store over stdin and stdout, and is intended to be used -as a means of providing Nix store access to a restricted ssh user. - - -The following flags are available: - - - - - - Allow the connected client to request the realization - of derivations. In effect, this can be used to make the host act - as a remote builder. - - - - - - - - -Examples - -To turn a host into a build server, the -authorized_keys file can be used to provide build -access to a given SSH public key: - - -$ cat <<EOF >>/root/.ssh/authorized_keys -command="nice -n20 nix-store --serve --write" ssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAA... -EOF - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--gc</option> - -Synopsis - - - nix-store - - - - - - - bytes - - - - -Description - -Without additional flags, the operation -performs a garbage collection on the Nix store. That is, all paths in -the Nix store not reachable via file system references from a set of -“roots”, are deleted. - -The following suboperations may be specified: - - - - - - This operation prints on standard output the set - of roots used by the garbage collector. What constitutes a root - is described in . - - - - - - This operation prints on standard output the set - of “live” store paths, which are all the store paths reachable - from the roots. Live paths should never be deleted, since that - would break consistency — it would become possible that - applications are installed that reference things that are no - longer present in the store. - - - - - - This operation prints out on standard output the - set of “dead” store paths, which is just the opposite of the set - of live paths: any path in the store that is not live (with - respect to the roots) is dead. - - - - - -By default, all unreachable paths are deleted. The following -options control what gets deleted and in what order: - - - - bytes - - Keep deleting paths until at least - bytes bytes have been deleted, then - stop. The argument bytes can be - followed by the multiplicative suffix K, - M, G or - T, denoting KiB, MiB, GiB or TiB - units. - - - - - - - -The behaviour of the collector is also influenced by the keep-outputs -and keep-derivations -variables in the Nix configuration file. - -By default, the collector prints the total number of freed bytes -when it finishes (or when it is interrupted). With -, it prints the number of bytes that would -be freed. - - - - -Examples - -To delete all unreachable paths, just do: - - -$ nix-store --gc -deleting `/nix/store/kq82idx6g0nyzsp2s14gfsc38npai7lf-cairo-1.0.4.tar.gz.drv' -... -8825586 bytes freed (8.42 MiB) - - - -To delete at least 100 MiBs of unreachable paths: - - -$ nix-store --gc --max-freed $((100 * 1024 * 1024)) - - - - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--delete</option> - -Synopsis - - - nix-store - - - paths - - - - -Description - -The operation deletes the store paths -paths from the Nix store, but only if it is -safe to do so; that is, when the path is not reachable from a root of -the garbage collector. This means that you can only delete paths that -would also be deleted by nix-store --gc. Thus, ---delete is a more targeted version of ---gc. - -With the option , reachability -from the roots is ignored. However, the path still won’t be deleted -if there are other paths in the store that refer to it (i.e., depend -on it). - - - -Example - - -$ nix-store --delete /nix/store/zq0h41l75vlb4z45kzgjjmsjxvcv1qk7-mesa-6.4 -0 bytes freed (0.00 MiB) -error: cannot delete path `/nix/store/zq0h41l75vlb4z45kzgjjmsjxvcv1qk7-mesa-6.4' since it is still alive - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--query</option> - -Synopsis - - - nix-store - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - name - name - - - - - - - - - paths - - - - - -Description - -The operation displays various bits of -information about the store paths . The queries are described below. At -most one query can be specified. The default query is -. - -The paths paths may also be symlinks -from outside of the Nix store, to the Nix store. In that case, the -query is applied to the target of the symlink. - - - - - -Common query options - - - - - - - For each argument to the query that is a store - derivation, apply the query to the output path of the derivation - instead. - - - - - - - Realise each argument to the query first (see - nix-store - --realise). - - - - - - - - -Queries - - - - - - Prints out the output paths of the store - derivations paths. These are the paths - that will be produced when the derivation is - built. - - - - - - - Prints out the closure of the store path - paths. - - This query has one option: - - - - - - Also include the output path of store - derivations, and their closures. - - - - - - This query can be used to implement various kinds of - deployment. A source deployment is obtained - by distributing the closure of a store derivation. A - binary deployment is obtained by distributing - the closure of an output path. A cache - deployment (combined source/binary deployment, - including binaries of build-time-only dependencies) is obtained by - distributing the closure of a store derivation and specifying the - option . - - - - - - - - Prints the set of references of the store paths - paths, that is, their immediate - dependencies. (For all dependencies, use - .) - - - - - - Prints the set of referrers of - the store paths paths, that is, the - store paths currently existing in the Nix store that refer to one - of paths. Note that contrary to the - references, the set of referrers is not constant; it can change as - store paths are added or removed. - - - - - - Prints the closure of the set of store paths - paths under the referrers relation; that - is, all store paths that directly or indirectly refer to one of - paths. These are all the path currently - in the Nix store that are dependent on - paths. - - - - - - - Prints the deriver of the store paths - paths. If the path has no deriver - (e.g., if it is a source file), or if the deriver is not known - (e.g., in the case of a binary-only deployment), the string - unknown-deriver is printed. - - - - - - Prints the references graph of the store paths - paths in the format of the - dot tool of AT&T's Graphviz package. - This can be used to visualise dependency graphs. To obtain a - build-time dependency graph, apply this to a store derivation. To - obtain a runtime dependency graph, apply it to an output - path. - - - - - - Prints the references graph of the store paths - paths as a nested ASCII tree. - References are ordered by descending closure size; this tends to - flatten the tree, making it more readable. The query only - recurses into a store path when it is first encountered; this - prevents a blowup of the tree representation of the - graph. - - - - - - Prints the references graph of the store paths - paths in the GraphML file format. - This can be used to visualise dependency graphs. To obtain a - build-time dependency graph, apply this to a store derivation. To - obtain a runtime dependency graph, apply it to an output - path. - - - - name - name - - Prints the value of the attribute - name (i.e., environment variable) of - the store derivations paths. It is an - error for a derivation to not have the specified - attribute. - - - - - - Prints the SHA-256 hash of the contents of the - store paths paths (that is, the hash of - the output of nix-store --dump on the given - paths). Since the hash is stored in the Nix database, this is a - fast operation. - - - - - - Prints the size in bytes of the contents of the - store paths paths — to be precise, the - size of the output of nix-store --dump on the - given paths. Note that the actual disk space required by the - store paths may be higher, especially on filesystems with large - cluster sizes. - - - - - - Prints the garbage collector roots that point, - directly or indirectly, at the store paths - paths. - - - - - - - - -Examples - -Print the closure (runtime dependencies) of the -svn program in the current user environment: - - -$ nix-store -qR $(which svn) -/nix/store/5mbglq5ldqld8sj57273aljwkfvj22mc-subversion-1.1.4 -/nix/store/9lz9yc6zgmc0vlqmn2ipcpkjlmbi51vv-glibc-2.3.4 -... - - - -Print the build-time dependencies of svn: - - -$ nix-store -qR $(nix-store -qd $(which svn)) -/nix/store/02iizgn86m42q905rddvg4ja975bk2i4-grep-2.5.1.tar.bz2.drv -/nix/store/07a2bzxmzwz5hp58nf03pahrv2ygwgs3-gcc-wrapper.sh -/nix/store/0ma7c9wsbaxahwwl04gbw3fcd806ski4-glibc-2.3.4.drv -... lots of other paths ... - -The difference with the previous example is that we ask the closure of -the derivation (), not the closure of the output -path that contains svn. - -Show the build-time dependencies as a tree: - - -$ nix-store -q --tree $(nix-store -qd $(which svn)) -/nix/store/7i5082kfb6yjbqdbiwdhhza0am2xvh6c-subversion-1.1.4.drv -+---/nix/store/d8afh10z72n8l1cr5w42366abiblgn54-builder.sh -+---/nix/store/fmzxmpjx2lh849ph0l36snfj9zdibw67-bash-3.0.drv -| +---/nix/store/570hmhmx3v57605cqg9yfvvyh0nnb8k8-bash -| +---/nix/store/p3srsbd8dx44v2pg6nbnszab5mcwx03v-builder.sh -... - - - -Show all paths that depend on the same OpenSSL library as -svn: - - -$ nix-store -q --referrers $(nix-store -q --binding openssl $(nix-store -qd $(which svn))) -/nix/store/23ny9l9wixx21632y2wi4p585qhva1q8-sylpheed-1.0.0 -/nix/store/5mbglq5ldqld8sj57273aljwkfvj22mc-subversion-1.1.4 -/nix/store/dpmvp969yhdqs7lm2r1a3gng7pyq6vy4-subversion-1.1.3 -/nix/store/l51240xqsgg8a7yrbqdx1rfzyv6l26fx-lynx-2.8.5 - - - -Show all paths that directly or indirectly depend on the Glibc -(C library) used by svn: - - -$ nix-store -q --referrers-closure $(ldd $(which svn) | grep /libc.so | awk '{print $3}') -/nix/store/034a6h4vpz9kds5r6kzb9lhh81mscw43-libgnomeprintui-2.8.2 -/nix/store/15l3yi0d45prm7a82pcrknxdh6nzmxza-gawk-3.1.4 -... - -Note that ldd is a command that prints out the -dynamic libraries used by an ELF executable. - -Make a picture of the runtime dependency graph of the current -user environment: - - -$ nix-store -q --graph ~/.nix-profile | dot -Tps > graph.ps -$ gv graph.ps - - - -Show every garbage collector root that points to a store path -that depends on svn: - - -$ nix-store -q --roots $(which svn) -/nix/var/nix/profiles/default-81-link -/nix/var/nix/profiles/default-82-link -/nix/var/nix/profiles/per-user/eelco/profile-97-link - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--add</option> - -Synopsis - - - nix-store - - paths - - - - -Description - -The operation adds the specified paths to -the Nix store. It prints the resulting paths in the Nix store on -standard output. - - - -Example - - -$ nix-store --add ./foo.c -/nix/store/m7lrha58ph6rcnv109yzx1nk1cj7k7zf-foo.c - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--add-fixed</option> - -Synopsis - - - nix-store - - - algorithm - paths - - - - -Description - -The operation adds the specified paths to -the Nix store. Unlike paths are registered using the -specified hashing algorithm, resulting in the same output path as a fixed-output -derivation. This can be used for sources that are not available from a public -url or broke since the download expression was written. - - -This operation has the following options: - - - - - - - Use recursive instead of flat hashing mode, used when adding directories - to the store. - - - - - - - - - - -Example - - -$ nix-store --add-fixed sha256 ./hello-2.10.tar.gz -/nix/store/3x7dwzq014bblazs7kq20p9hyzz0qh8g-hello-2.10.tar.gz - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--verify</option> - - - Synopsis - - nix-store - - - - - - -Description - -The operation verifies the internal -consistency of the Nix database, and the consistency between the Nix -database and the Nix store. Any inconsistencies encountered are -automatically repaired. Inconsistencies are generally the result of -the Nix store or database being modified by non-Nix tools, or of bugs -in Nix itself. - -This operation has the following options: - - - - - - Checks that the contents of every valid store path - has not been altered by computing a SHA-256 hash of the contents - and comparing it with the hash stored in the Nix database at build - time. Paths that have been modified are printed out. For large - stores, is obviously quite - slow. - - - - - - If any valid path is missing from the store, or - (if is given) the contents of a - valid path has been modified, then try to repair the path by - redownloading it. See nix-store --repair-path - for details. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--verify-path</option> - - - Synopsis - - nix-store - - paths - - - -Description - -The operation compares the -contents of the given store paths to their cryptographic hashes stored -in Nix’s database. For every changed path, it prints a warning -message. The exit status is 0 if no path has changed, and 1 -otherwise. - - - -Example - -To verify the integrity of the svn command and all its dependencies: - - -$ nix-store --verify-path $(nix-store -qR $(which svn)) - - - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--repair-path</option> - - - Synopsis - - nix-store - - paths - - - -Description - -The operation attempts to -“repair” the specified paths by redownloading them using the available -substituters. If no substitutes are available, then repair is not -possible. - -During repair, there is a very small time window during -which the old path (if it exists) is moved out of the way and replaced -with the new path. If repair is interrupted in between, then the -system may be left in a broken state (e.g., if the path contains a -critical system component like the GNU C Library). - - - -Example - - -$ nix-store --verify-path /nix/store/dj7a81wsm1ijwwpkks3725661h3263p5-glibc-2.13 -path `/nix/store/dj7a81wsm1ijwwpkks3725661h3263p5-glibc-2.13' was modified! - expected hash `2db57715ae90b7e31ff1f2ecb8c12ec1cc43da920efcbe3b22763f36a1861588', - got `481c5aa5483ebc97c20457bb8bca24deea56550d3985cda0027f67fe54b808e4' - -$ nix-store --repair-path /nix/store/dj7a81wsm1ijwwpkks3725661h3263p5-glibc-2.13 -fetching path `/nix/store/d7a81wsm1ijwwpkks3725661h3263p5-glibc-2.13'... -… - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--dump</option> - - - Synopsis - - nix-store - - path - - - -Description - -The operation produces a NAR (Nix -ARchive) file containing the contents of the file system tree rooted -at path. The archive is written to -standard output. - -A NAR archive is like a TAR or Zip archive, but it contains only -the information that Nix considers important. For instance, -timestamps are elided because all files in the Nix store have their -timestamp set to 0 anyway. Likewise, all permissions are left out -except for the execute bit, because all files in the Nix store have -444 or 555 permission. - -Also, a NAR archive is canonical, meaning -that “equal” paths always produce the same NAR archive. For instance, -directory entries are always sorted so that the actual on-disk order -doesn’t influence the result. This means that the cryptographic hash -of a NAR dump of a path is usable as a fingerprint of the contents of -the path. Indeed, the hashes of store paths stored in Nix’s database -(see nix-store -q ---hash) are SHA-256 hashes of the NAR dump of each -store path. - -NAR archives support filenames of unlimited length and 64-bit -file sizes. They can contain regular files, directories, and symbolic -links, but not other types of files (such as device nodes). - -A Nix archive can be unpacked using nix-store ---restore. - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--restore</option> - - - Synopsis - - nix-store - - path - - - -Description - -The operation unpacks a NAR archive -to path, which must not already exist. The -archive is read from standard input. - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--export</option> - - - Synopsis - - nix-store - - paths - - - -Description - -The operation writes a serialisation -of the specified store paths to standard output in a format that can -be imported into another Nix store with nix-store --import. This -is like nix-store ---dump, except that the NAR archive produced by that command -doesn’t contain the necessary meta-information to allow it to be -imported into another Nix store (namely, the set of references of the -path). - -This command does not produce a closure of -the specified paths, so if a store path references other store paths -that are missing in the target Nix store, the import will fail. To -copy a whole closure, do something like: - - -$ nix-store --export $(nix-store -qR paths) > out - -To import the whole closure again, run: - - -$ nix-store --import < out - - - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--import</option> - - - Synopsis - - nix-store - - - - -Description - -The operation reads a serialisation of -a set of store paths produced by nix-store --export from -standard input and adds those store paths to the Nix store. Paths -that already exist in the Nix store are ignored. If a path refers to -another path that doesn’t exist in the Nix store, the import -fails. - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--optimise</option> - - - Synopsis - - nix-store - - - - -Description - -The operation reduces Nix store disk -space usage by finding identical files in the store and hard-linking -them to each other. It typically reduces the size of the store by -something like 25-35%. Only regular files and symlinks are -hard-linked in this manner. Files are considered identical when they -have the same NAR archive serialisation: that is, regular files must -have the same contents and permission (executable or non-executable), -and symlinks must have the same contents. - -After completion, or when the command is interrupted, a report -on the achieved savings is printed on standard error. - -Use or to get some -progress indication. - - - -Example - - -$ nix-store --optimise -hashing files in `/nix/store/qhqx7l2f1kmwihc9bnxs7rc159hsxnf3-gcc-4.1.1' -... -541838819 bytes (516.74 MiB) freed by hard-linking 54143 files; -there are 114486 files with equal contents out of 215894 files in total - - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--read-log</option> - - - Synopsis - - nix-store - - - - - paths - - - -Description - -The operation prints the build log -of the specified store paths on standard output. The build log is -whatever the builder of a derivation wrote to standard output and -standard error. If a store path is not a derivation, the deriver of -the store path is used. - -Build logs are kept in -/nix/var/log/nix/drvs. However, there is no -guarantee that a build log is available for any particular store path. -For instance, if the path was downloaded as a pre-built binary through -a substitute, then the log is unavailable. - - - -Example - - -$ nix-store -l $(which ktorrent) -building /nix/store/dhc73pvzpnzxhdgpimsd9sw39di66ph1-ktorrent-2.2.1 -unpacking sources -unpacking source archive /nix/store/p8n1jpqs27mgkjw07pb5269717nzf5f8-ktorrent-2.2.1.tar.gz -ktorrent-2.2.1/ -ktorrent-2.2.1/NEWS -... - - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--dump-db</option> - - - Synopsis - - nix-store - - paths - - - -Description - -The operation writes a dump of the -Nix database to standard output. It can be loaded into an empty Nix -store using . This is useful for making -backups and when migrating to different database schemas. - -By default, will dump the entire Nix -database. When one or more store paths is passed, only the subset of -the Nix database for those store paths is dumped. As with -, the user is responsible for passing all the -store paths for a closure. See for an -example. - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--load-db</option> - - - Synopsis - - nix-store - - - - -Description - -The operation reads a dump of the Nix -database created by from standard input and -loads it into the Nix database. - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--print-env</option> - - - Synopsis - - nix-store - - drvpath - - - -Description - -The operation prints out the -environment of a derivation in a format that can be evaluated by a -shell. The command line arguments of the builder are placed in the -variable _args. - - - -Example - - -$ nix-store --print-env $(nix-instantiate '<nixpkgs>' -A firefox) - -export src; src='/nix/store/plpj7qrwcz94z2psh6fchsi7s8yihc7k-firefox-12.0.source.tar.bz2' -export stdenv; stdenv='/nix/store/7c8asx3yfrg5dg1gzhzyq2236zfgibnn-stdenv' -export system; system='x86_64-linux' -export _args; _args='-e /nix/store/9krlzvny65gdc8s7kpb6lkx8cd02c25c-default-builder.sh' - - - - - - - - - -Operation <option>--generate-binary-cache-key</option> - - - Synopsis - - nix-store - - - - - - - - - -Description - -This command generates an Ed25519 key pair that can -be used to create a signed binary cache. It takes three mandatory -parameters: - - - - A key name, such as - cache.example.org-1, that is used to look up keys - on the client when it verifies signatures. It can be anything, but - it’s suggested to use the host name of your cache - (e.g. cache.example.org) with a suffix denoting - the number of the key (to be incremented every time you need to - revoke a key). - - The file name where the secret key is to be - stored. - - The file name where the public key is to be - stored. - - - - - - - - - - - - -Environment variables - - - - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-common-syn.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-common-syn.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 6b7b5c833..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-common-syn.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,68 +0,0 @@ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - format - - - - - - - - - - - - - number - - - - number - - - - number - - - - number - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - path - - - - name - value - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-common.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-common.xml deleted file mode 100644 index a095039b9..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-common.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,405 +0,0 @@ - - -Common Options - - -Most Nix commands accept the following command-line options: - - - - - - Prints out a summary of the command syntax and - exits. - - - - - - - Prints out the Nix version number on standard output - and exits. - - - - / - - - - Increases the level of verbosity of diagnostic messages - printed on standard error. For each Nix operation, the information - printed on standard output is well-defined; any diagnostic - information is printed on standard error, never on standard - output. - - This option may be specified repeatedly. Currently, the - following verbosity levels exist: - - - - 0 - “Errors only”: only print messages - explaining why the Nix invocation failed. - - - 1 - “Informational”: print - useful messages about what Nix is doing. - This is the default. - - - 2 - “Talkative”: print more informational - messages. - - - 3 - “Chatty”: print even more - informational messages. - - - 4 - “Debug”: print debug - information. - - - 5 - “Vomit”: print vast amounts of debug - information. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Decreases the level of verbosity of diagnostic messages - printed on standard error. This is the inverse option to - / . - - - This option may be specified repeatedly. See the previous - verbosity levels list. - - - - - - - format - - - - This option can be used to change the output of the log format, with - format being one of: - - - - raw - This is the raw format, as outputted by nix-build. - - - internal-json - Outputs the logs in a structured manner. NOTE: the json schema is not guarantees to be stable between releases. - - - bar - Only display a progress bar during the builds. - - - bar-with-logs - Display the raw logs, with the progress bar at the bottom. - - - - - - - - - / - - By default, output written by builders to standard - output and standard error is echoed to the Nix command's standard - error. This option suppresses this behaviour. Note that the - builder's standard output and error are always written to a log file - in - prefix/nix/var/log/nix. - - - - - / -number - - - - Sets the maximum number of build jobs that Nix will - perform in parallel to the specified number. Specify - auto to use the number of CPUs in the system. - The default is specified by the max-jobs - configuration setting, which itself defaults to - 1. A higher value is useful on SMP systems or to - exploit I/O latency. - - Setting it to 0 disallows building on the local - machine, which is useful when you want builds to happen only on remote - builders. - - - - - - - - - Sets the value of the NIX_BUILD_CORES - environment variable in the invocation of builders. Builders can - use this variable at their discretion to control the maximum amount - of parallelism. For instance, in Nixpkgs, if the derivation - attribute enableParallelBuilding is set to - true, the builder passes the - flag to GNU Make. - It defaults to the value of the cores - configuration setting, if set, or 1 otherwise. - The value 0 means that the builder should use all - available CPU cores in the system. - - - - - - - Sets the maximum number of seconds that a builder - can go without producing any data on standard output or standard - error. The default is specified by the max-silent-time - configuration setting. 0 means no - time-out. - - - - - - Sets the maximum number of seconds that a builder - can run. The default is specified by the timeout - configuration setting. 0 means no - timeout. - - - - / - - Keep going in case of failed builds, to the - greatest extent possible. That is, if building an input of some - derivation fails, Nix will still build the other inputs, but not the - derivation itself. Without this option, Nix stops if any build - fails (except for builds of substitutes), possibly killing builds in - progress (in case of parallel or distributed builds). - - - - - / - - Specifies that in case of a build failure, the - temporary directory (usually in /tmp) in which - the build takes place should not be deleted. The path of the build - directory is printed as an informational message. - - - - - - - - - - Whenever Nix attempts to build a derivation for which - substitutes are known for each output path, but realising the output - paths through the substitutes fails, fall back on building the - derivation. - - The most common scenario in which this is useful is when we - have registered substitutes in order to perform binary distribution - from, say, a network repository. If the repository is down, the - realisation of the derivation will fail. When this option is - specified, Nix will build the derivation instead. Thus, - installation from binaries falls back on installation from source. - This option is not the default since it is generally not desirable - for a transient failure in obtaining the substitutes to lead to a - full build from source (with the related consumption of - resources). - - - - - - - - - - Disables the build hook mechanism. This allows to ignore remote - builders if they are setup on the machine. - - It's useful in cases where the bandwidth between the client and the - remote builder is too low. In that case it can take more time to upload the - sources to the remote builder and fetch back the result than to do the - computation locally. - - - - - - - - - - When this option is used, no attempt is made to open - the Nix database. Most Nix operations do need database access, so - those operations will fail. - - - - - name value - - This option is accepted by - nix-env, nix-instantiate, - nix-shell and nix-build. - When evaluating Nix expressions, the expression evaluator will - automatically try to call functions that - it encounters. It can automatically call functions for which every - argument has a default value - (e.g., { argName ? - defaultValue }: - ...). With - , you can also call functions that have - arguments without a default value (or override a default value). - That is, if the evaluator encounters a function with an argument - named name, it will call it with value - value. - - For instance, the top-level default.nix in - Nixpkgs is actually a function: - - -{ # The system (e.g., `i686-linux') for which to build the packages. - system ? builtins.currentSystem - ... -}: ... - - So if you call this Nix expression (e.g., when you do - nix-env -i pkgname), - the function will be called automatically using the value builtins.currentSystem - for the system argument. You can override this - using , e.g., nix-env -i - pkgname --arg system - \"i686-freebsd\". (Note that since the argument is a Nix - string literal, you have to escape the quotes.) - - - - - name value - - This option is like , only the - value is not a Nix expression but a string. So instead of - --arg system \"i686-linux\" (the outer quotes are - to keep the shell happy) you can say --argstr system - i686-linux. - - - - - / -attrPath - - Select an attribute from the top-level Nix - expression being evaluated. (nix-env, - nix-instantiate, nix-build and - nix-shell only.) The attribute - path attrPath is a sequence of - attribute names separated by dots. For instance, given a top-level - Nix expression e, the attribute path - xorg.xorgserver would cause the expression - e.xorg.xorgserver to - be used. See nix-env - --install for some concrete examples. - - In addition to attribute names, you can also specify array - indices. For instance, the attribute path - foo.3.bar selects the bar - attribute of the fourth element of the array in the - foo attribute of the top-level - expression. - - - - - / - - Interpret the command line arguments as a list of - Nix expressions to be parsed and evaluated, rather than as a list - of file names of Nix expressions. - (nix-instantiate, nix-build - and nix-shell only.) - - For nix-shell, this option is commonly used - to give you a shell in which you can build the packages returned - by the expression. If you want to get a shell which contain the - built packages ready for use, give your - expression to the nix-shell -p convenience flag - instead. - - - - - path - - Add a path to the Nix expression search path. This - option may be given multiple times. See the NIX_PATH environment variable for - information on the semantics of the Nix search path. Paths added - through take precedence over - NIX_PATH. - - - - - name value - - Set the Nix configuration option - name to value. - This overrides settings in the Nix configuration file (see - nix.conf5). - - - - - - - Fix corrupted or missing store paths by - redownloading or rebuilding them. Note that this is slow because it - requires computing a cryptographic hash of the contents of every - path in the closure of the build. Also note the warning under - nix-store --repair-path. - - - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-inst-syn.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-inst-syn.xml deleted file mode 100644 index e324a5e6d..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/opt-inst-syn.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,22 +0,0 @@ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - path - - diff --git a/doc/manual/command-ref/utilities.xml b/doc/manual/command-ref/utilities.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 893f5b5b5..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/command-ref/utilities.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,20 +0,0 @@ - - -Utilities - -This section lists utilities that you can use when you -work with Nix. - - - - - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/advanced-attributes.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/advanced-attributes.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 794d020d9..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/advanced-attributes.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,351 +0,0 @@ -
- -Advanced Attributes - -Derivations can declare some infrequently used optional -attributes. - - - - allowedReferences - - The optional attribute - allowedReferences specifies a list of legal - references (dependencies) of the output of the builder. For - example, - - -allowedReferences = []; - - - enforces that the output of a derivation cannot have any runtime - dependencies on its inputs. To allow an output to have a runtime - dependency on itself, use "out" as a list item. - This is used in NixOS to check that generated files such as - initial ramdisks for booting Linux don’t have accidental - dependencies on other paths in the Nix store. - - - - - allowedRequisites - - This attribute is similar to - allowedReferences, but it specifies the legal - requisites of the whole closure, so all the dependencies - recursively. For example, - - -allowedRequisites = [ foobar ]; - - - enforces that the output of a derivation cannot have any other - runtime dependency than foobar, and in addition - it enforces that foobar itself doesn't - introduce any other dependency itself. - - - - disallowedReferences - - The optional attribute - disallowedReferences specifies a list of illegal - references (dependencies) of the output of the builder. For - example, - - -disallowedReferences = [ foo ]; - - - enforces that the output of a derivation cannot have a direct runtime - dependencies on the derivation foo. - - - - - disallowedRequisites - - This attribute is similar to - disallowedReferences, but it specifies illegal - requisites for the whole closure, so all the dependencies - recursively. For example, - - -disallowedRequisites = [ foobar ]; - - - enforces that the output of a derivation cannot have any - runtime dependency on foobar or any other derivation - depending recursively on foobar. - - - - - exportReferencesGraph - - This attribute allows builders access to the - references graph of their inputs. The attribute is a list of - inputs in the Nix store whose references graph the builder needs - to know. The value of this attribute should be a list of pairs - [ name1 - path1 name2 - path2 ... - ]. The references graph of each - pathN will be stored in a text file - nameN in the temporary build directory. - The text files have the format used by nix-store - --register-validity (with the deriver fields left - empty). For example, when the following derivation is built: - - -derivation { - ... - exportReferencesGraph = [ "libfoo-graph" libfoo ]; -}; - - - the references graph of libfoo is placed in the - file libfoo-graph in the temporary build - directory. - - exportReferencesGraph is useful for - builders that want to do something with the closure of a store - path. Examples include the builders in NixOS that generate the - initial ramdisk for booting Linux (a cpio - archive containing the closure of the boot script) and the - ISO-9660 image for the installation CD (which is populated with a - Nix store containing the closure of a bootable NixOS - configuration). - - - - - impureEnvVars - - This attribute allows you to specify a list of - environment variables that should be passed from the environment - of the calling user to the builder. Usually, the environment is - cleared completely when the builder is executed, but with this - attribute you can allow specific environment variables to be - passed unmodified. For example, fetchurl in - Nixpkgs has the line - - -impureEnvVars = [ "http_proxy" "https_proxy" ... ]; - - - to make it use the proxy server configuration specified by the - user in the environment variables http_proxy and - friends. - - This attribute is only allowed in fixed-output derivations, where - impurities such as these are okay since (the hash of) the output - is known in advance. It is ignored for all other - derivations. - - impureEnvVars implementation takes - environment variables from the current builder process. When a daemon is - building its environmental variables are used. Without the daemon, the - environmental variables come from the environment of the - nix-build. - - - - - - outputHash - outputHashAlgo - outputHashMode - - These attributes declare that the derivation is a - so-called fixed-output derivation, which - means that a cryptographic hash of the output is already known in - advance. When the build of a fixed-output derivation finishes, - Nix computes the cryptographic hash of the output and compares it - to the hash declared with these attributes. If there is a - mismatch, the build fails. - - The rationale for fixed-output derivations is derivations - such as those produced by the fetchurl - function. This function downloads a file from a given URL. To - ensure that the downloaded file has not been modified, the caller - must also specify a cryptographic hash of the file. For example, - - -fetchurl { - url = "http://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.1.1.tar.gz"; - sha256 = "1md7jsfd8pa45z73bz1kszpp01yw6x5ljkjk2hx7wl800any6465"; -} - - - It sometimes happens that the URL of the file changes, e.g., - because servers are reorganised or no longer available. We then - must update the call to fetchurl, e.g., - - -fetchurl { - url = "ftp://ftp.nluug.nl/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.1.1.tar.gz"; - sha256 = "1md7jsfd8pa45z73bz1kszpp01yw6x5ljkjk2hx7wl800any6465"; -} - - - If a fetchurl derivation was treated like a - normal derivation, the output paths of the derivation and - all derivations depending on it would change. - For instance, if we were to change the URL of the Glibc source - distribution in Nixpkgs (a package on which almost all other - packages depend) massive rebuilds would be needed. This is - unfortunate for a change which we know cannot have a real effect - as it propagates upwards through the dependency graph. - - For fixed-output derivations, on the other hand, the name of - the output path only depends on the outputHash* - and name attributes, while all other attributes - are ignored for the purpose of computing the output path. (The - name attribute is included because it is part - of the path.) - - As an example, here is the (simplified) Nix expression for - fetchurl: - - -{ stdenv, curl }: # The curl program is used for downloading. - -{ url, sha256 }: - -stdenv.mkDerivation { - name = baseNameOf (toString url); - builder = ./builder.sh; - buildInputs = [ curl ]; - - # This is a fixed-output derivation; the output must be a regular - # file with SHA256 hash sha256. - outputHashMode = "flat"; - outputHashAlgo = "sha256"; - outputHash = sha256; - - inherit url; -} - - - - - The outputHashAlgo attribute specifies - the hash algorithm used to compute the hash. It can currently be - "sha1", "sha256" or - "sha512". - - The outputHashMode attribute determines - how the hash is computed. It must be one of the following two - values: - - - - "flat" - - The output must be a non-executable regular - file. If it isn’t, the build fails. The hash is simply - computed over the contents of that file (so it’s equal to what - Unix commands like sha256sum or - sha1sum produce). - - This is the default. - - - - "recursive" - - The hash is computed over the NAR archive dump - of the output (i.e., the result of nix-store - --dump). In this case, the output can be - anything, including a directory tree. - - - - - - - - The outputHash attribute, finally, must - be a string containing the hash in either hexadecimal or base-32 - notation. (See the nix-hash command - for information about converting to and from base-32 - notation.) - - - - - passAsFile - - A list of names of attributes that should be - passed via files rather than environment variables. For example, - if you have - - -passAsFile = ["big"]; -big = "a very long string"; - - - then when the builder runs, the environment variable - bigPath will contain the absolute path to a - temporary file containing a very long - string. That is, for any attribute - x listed in - passAsFile, Nix will pass an environment - variable xPath holding - the path of the file containing the value of attribute - x. This is useful when you need to pass - large strings to a builder, since most operating systems impose a - limit on the size of the environment (typically, a few hundred - kilobyte). - - - - - preferLocalBuild - - If this attribute is set to - true and distributed building is - enabled, then, if possible, the derivaton will be built - locally instead of forwarded to a remote machine. This is - appropriate for trivial builders where the cost of doing a - download or remote build would exceed the cost of building - locally. - - - - - allowSubstitutes - - - If this attribute is set to - false, then Nix will always build this - derivation; it will not try to substitute its outputs. This is - useful for very trivial derivations (such as - writeText in Nixpkgs) that are cheaper to - build than to substitute from a binary cache. - - You need to have a builder configured which satisfies - the derivation’s system attribute, since the - derivation cannot be substituted. Thus it is usually a good idea - to align system with - builtins.currentSystem when setting - allowSubstitutes to false. - For most trivial derivations this should be the case. - - - - - - - - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/arguments-variables.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/arguments-variables.xml deleted file mode 100644 index a4375c777..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/arguments-variables.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,114 +0,0 @@ -
- -Arguments and Variables - -The Nix expression in is a -function; it is missing some arguments that have to be filled in -somewhere. In the Nix Packages collection this is done in the file -pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix, where all Nix -expressions for packages are imported and called with the appropriate -arguments. Here are some fragments of -all-packages.nix, with annotations of what they -mean: - - -... - -rec { ① - - hello = import ../applications/misc/hello/ex-1 ② { ③ - inherit fetchurl stdenv perl; - }; - - perl = import ../development/interpreters/perl { ④ - inherit fetchurl stdenv; - }; - - fetchurl = import ../build-support/fetchurl { - inherit stdenv; ... - }; - - stdenv = ...; - -} - - - - - - This file defines a set of attributes, all of which are - concrete derivations (i.e., not functions). In fact, we define a - mutually recursive set of attributes. That - is, the attributes can refer to each other. This is precisely - what we want since we want to plug the - various packages into each other. - - - - - Here we import the Nix expression for - GNU Hello. The import operation just loads and returns the - specified Nix expression. In fact, we could just have put the - contents of in - all-packages.nix at this point. That - would be completely equivalent, but it would make the file rather - bulky. - - Note that we refer to - ../applications/misc/hello/ex-1, not - ../applications/misc/hello/ex-1/default.nix. - When you try to import a directory, Nix automatically appends - /default.nix to the file name. - - - - - - This is where the actual composition takes place. Here we - call the function imported from - ../applications/misc/hello/ex-1 with a set - containing the things that the function expects, namely - fetchurl, stdenv, and - perl. We use inherit again to use the - attributes defined in the surrounding scope (we could also have - written fetchurl = fetchurl;, etc.). - - The result of this function call is an actual derivation - that can be built by Nix (since when we fill in the arguments of - the function, what we get is its body, which is the call to - stdenv.mkDerivation in ). - - Nixpkgs has a convenience function - callPackage that imports and calls a - function, filling in any missing arguments by passing the - corresponding attribute from the Nixpkgs set, like this: - - -hello = callPackage ../applications/misc/hello/ex-1 { }; - - - If necessary, you can set or override arguments: - - -hello = callPackage ../applications/misc/hello/ex-1 { stdenv = myStdenv; }; - - - - - - - - - Likewise, we have to instantiate Perl, - fetchurl, and the standard environment. - - - - - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/build-script.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/build-script.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 5c55954fc..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/build-script.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,114 +0,0 @@ -
- -Build Script - -Here is the builder referenced -from Hello's Nix expression (stored in -pkgs/applications/misc/hello/ex-1/builder.sh): - - -source $stdenv/setup ① - -PATH=$perl/bin:$PATH ② - -tar xvfz $src ③ -cd hello-* -./configure --prefix=$out ④ -make ⑤ -make install - -The builder can actually be made a lot shorter by using the -generic builder functions provided by -stdenv, but here we write out the build steps to -elucidate what a builder does. It performs the following -steps: - - - - - - When Nix runs a builder, it initially completely clears the - environment (except for the attributes declared in the - derivation). This is done to prevent undeclared inputs from being - used in the build process. If for example the - PATH contained /usr/bin, - then you might accidentally use - /usr/bin/gcc. - - So the first step is to set up the environment. This is - done by calling the setup script of the - standard environment. The environment variable - stdenv points to the location of the standard - environment being used. (It wasn't specified explicitly as an - attribute in , but - mkDerivation adds it automatically.) - - - - - - Since Hello needs Perl, we have to make sure that Perl is in - the PATH. The perl environment - variable points to the location of the Perl package (since it - was passed in as an attribute to the derivation), so - $perl/bin is the - directory containing the Perl interpreter. - - - - - - Now we have to unpack the sources. The - src attribute was bound to the result of - fetching the Hello source tarball from the network, so the - src environment variable points to the location in - the Nix store to which the tarball was downloaded. After - unpacking, we cd to the resulting source - directory. - - The whole build is performed in a temporary directory - created in /tmp, by the way. This directory is - removed after the builder finishes, so there is no need to clean - up the sources afterwards. Also, the temporary directory is - always newly created, so you don't have to worry about files from - previous builds interfering with the current build. - - - - - - GNU Hello is a typical Autoconf-based package, so we first - have to run its configure script. In Nix - every package is stored in a separate location in the Nix store, - for instance - /nix/store/9a54ba97fb71b65fda531012d0443ce2-hello-2.1.1. - Nix computes this path by cryptographically hashing all attributes - of the derivation. The path is passed to the builder through the - out environment variable. So here we give - configure the parameter - --prefix=$out to cause Hello to be installed in - the expected location. - - - - - - Finally we build Hello (make) and install - it into the location specified by out - (make install). - - - - - -If you are wondering about the absence of error checking on the -result of various commands called in the builder: this is because the -shell script is evaluated with Bash's option, -which causes the script to be aborted if any command fails without an -error check. - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/builtins.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/builtins.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 4ad481ad3..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/builtins.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1663 +0,0 @@ -
- -Built-in Functions - -This section lists the functions and constants built into the -Nix expression evaluator. (The built-in function -derivation is discussed above.) Some built-ins, -such as derivation, are always in scope of every -Nix expression; you can just access them right away. But to prevent -polluting the namespace too much, most built-ins are not in scope. -Instead, you can access them through the builtins -built-in value, which is a set that contains all built-in functions -and values. For instance, derivation is also -available as builtins.derivation. - - - - - - - abort s - builtins.abort s - - Abort Nix expression evaluation, print error - message s. - - - - - - builtins.add - e1 e2 - - - Return the sum of the numbers - e1 and - e2. - - - - - - builtins.all - pred list - - Return true if the function - pred returns true - for all elements of list, - and false otherwise. - - - - - - builtins.any - pred list - - Return true if the function - pred returns true - for at least one element of list, - and false otherwise. - - - - - - builtins.attrNames - set - - Return the names of the attributes in the set - set in an alphabetically sorted list. For instance, - builtins.attrNames { y = 1; x = "foo"; } - evaluates to [ "x" "y" ]. - - - - - - builtins.attrValues - set - - Return the values of the attributes in the set - set in the order corresponding to the - sorted attribute names. - - - - - - baseNameOf s - - Return the base name of the - string s, that is, everything following - the final slash in the string. This is similar to the GNU - basename command. - - - - - - builtins.bitAnd - e1 e2 - - Return the bitwise AND of the integers - e1 and - e2. - - - - - - builtins.bitOr - e1 e2 - - Return the bitwise OR of the integers - e1 and - e2. - - - - - - builtins.bitXor - e1 e2 - - Return the bitwise XOR of the integers - e1 and - e2. - - - - - - builtins - - The set builtins contains all - the built-in functions and values. You can use - builtins to test for the availability of - features in the Nix installation, e.g., - - -if builtins ? getEnv then builtins.getEnv "PATH" else "" - - This allows a Nix expression to fall back gracefully on older Nix - installations that don’t have the desired built-in - function. - - - - - - builtins.compareVersions - s1 s2 - - Compare two strings representing versions and - return -1 if version - s1 is older than version - s2, 0 if they are - the same, and 1 if - s1 is newer than - s2. The version comparison algorithm - is the same as the one used by nix-env - -u. - - - - - - builtins.concatLists - lists - - Concatenate a list of lists into a single - list. - - - - - builtins.concatStringsSep - separator list - - Concatenate a list of strings with a separator - between each element, e.g. concatStringsSep "/" - ["usr" "local" "bin"] == "usr/local/bin" - - - - - builtins.currentSystem - - The built-in value currentSystem - evaluates to the Nix platform identifier for the Nix installation - on which the expression is being evaluated, such as - "i686-linux" or - "x86_64-darwin". - - - - - - - - - - - - builtins.deepSeq - e1 e2 - - This is like seq - e1 - e2, except that - e1 is evaluated - deeply: if it’s a list or set, its elements - or attributes are also evaluated recursively. - - - - - - derivation - attrs - builtins.derivation - attrs - - derivation is described in - . - - - - - - dirOf s - builtins.dirOf s - - Return the directory part of the string - s, that is, everything before the final - slash in the string. This is similar to the GNU - dirname command. - - - - - - builtins.div - e1 e2 - - Return the quotient of the numbers - e1 and - e2. - - - - - builtins.elem - x xs - - Return true if a value equal to - x occurs in the list - xs, and false - otherwise. - - - - - - builtins.elemAt - xs n - - Return element n from - the list xs. Elements are counted - starting from 0. A fatal error occurs if the index is out of - bounds. - - - - - - builtins.fetchurl - url - - Download the specified URL and return the path of - the downloaded file. This function is not available if restricted evaluation mode is - enabled. - - - - - - fetchTarball - url - builtins.fetchTarball - url - - Download the specified URL, unpack it and return - the path of the unpacked tree. The file must be a tape archive - (.tar) compressed with - gzip, bzip2 or - xz. The top-level path component of the files - in the tarball is removed, so it is best if the tarball contains a - single directory at top level. The typical use of the function is - to obtain external Nix expression dependencies, such as a - particular version of Nixpkgs, e.g. - - -with import (fetchTarball https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-14.12.tar.gz) {}; - -stdenv.mkDerivation { … } - - - - The fetched tarball is cached for a certain amount of time - (1 hour by default) in ~/.cache/nix/tarballs/. - You can change the cache timeout either on the command line with - or - in the Nix configuration file with this option: - number of seconds to cache. - - - Note that when obtaining the hash with nix-prefetch-url - the option --unpack is required. - - - This function can also verify the contents against a hash. - In that case, the function takes a set instead of a URL. The set - requires the attribute url and the attribute - sha256, e.g. - - -with import (fetchTarball { - url = "https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-14.12.tar.gz"; - sha256 = "1jppksrfvbk5ypiqdz4cddxdl8z6zyzdb2srq8fcffr327ld5jj2"; -}) {}; - -stdenv.mkDerivation { … } - - - - - This function is not available if restricted evaluation mode is - enabled. - - - - - - builtins.fetchGit - args - - - - - Fetch a path from git. args can be - a URL, in which case the HEAD of the repo at that URL is - fetched. Otherwise, it can be an attribute with the following - attributes (all except url optional): - - - - - url - - - The URL of the repo. - - - - - name - - - The name of the directory the repo should be exported to - in the store. Defaults to the basename of the URL. - - - - - rev - - - The git revision to fetch. Defaults to the tip of - ref. - - - - - ref - - - The git ref to look for the requested revision under. - This is often a branch or tag name. Defaults to - HEAD. - - - - By default, the ref value is prefixed - with refs/heads/. As of Nix 2.3.0 - Nix will not prefix refs/heads/ if - ref starts with refs/. - - - - - submodules - - - A Boolean parameter that specifies whether submodules - should be checked out. Defaults to - false. - - - - - - Here are some examples of how to use - fetchGit. - - - - - To fetch a private repository over SSH: - - builtins.fetchGit { - url = "git@github.com:my-secret/repository.git"; - ref = "master"; - rev = "adab8b916a45068c044658c4158d81878f9ed1c3"; -} - - - - - To fetch an arbitrary reference: - - builtins.fetchGit { - url = "https://github.com/NixOS/nix.git"; - ref = "refs/heads/0.5-release"; -} - - - - - If the revision you're looking for is in the default branch - of the git repository you don't strictly need to specify - the branch name in the ref attribute. - - - However, if the revision you're looking for is in a future - branch for the non-default branch you will need to specify - the the ref attribute as well. - - - builtins.fetchGit { - url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; - rev = "841fcbd04755c7a2865c51c1e2d3b045976b7452"; - ref = "1.11-maintenance"; -} - - - - It is nice to always specify the branch which a revision - belongs to. Without the branch being specified, the - fetcher might fail if the default branch changes. - Additionally, it can be confusing to try a commit from a - non-default branch and see the fetch fail. If the branch - is specified the fault is much more obvious. - - - - - - - If the revision you're looking for is in the default branch - of the git repository you may omit the - ref attribute. - - builtins.fetchGit { - url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; - rev = "841fcbd04755c7a2865c51c1e2d3b045976b7452"; -} - - - - To fetch a specific tag: - builtins.fetchGit { - url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; - ref = "refs/tags/1.9"; -} - - - - To fetch the latest version of a remote branch: - builtins.fetchGit { - url = "ssh://git@github.com/nixos/nix.git"; - ref = "master"; -} - Nix will refetch the branch in accordance to - . - This behavior is disabled in Pure - evaluation mode. - - - - - - - builtins.filter - f xs - - Return a list consisting of the elements of - xs for which the function - f returns - true. - - - - - - builtins.filterSource - e1 e2 - - - - This function allows you to copy sources into the Nix - store while filtering certain files. For instance, suppose that - you want to use the directory source-dir as - an input to a Nix expression, e.g. - - -stdenv.mkDerivation { - ... - src = ./source-dir; -} - - - However, if source-dir is a Subversion - working copy, then all those annoying .svn - subdirectories will also be copied to the store. Worse, the - contents of those directories may change a lot, causing lots of - spurious rebuilds. With filterSource you - can filter out the .svn directories: - - - src = builtins.filterSource - (path: type: type != "directory" || baseNameOf path != ".svn") - ./source-dir; - - - - - Thus, the first argument e1 - must be a predicate function that is called for each regular - file, directory or symlink in the source tree - e2. If the function returns - true, the file is copied to the Nix store, - otherwise it is omitted. The function is called with two - arguments. The first is the full path of the file. The second - is a string that identifies the type of the file, which is - either "regular", - "directory", "symlink" or - "unknown" (for other kinds of files such as - device nodes or fifos — but note that those cannot be copied to - the Nix store, so if the predicate returns - true for them, the copy will fail). If you - exclude a directory, the entire corresponding subtree of - e2 will be excluded. - - - - - - - - builtins.foldl’ - op nul list - - Reduce a list by applying a binary operator, from - left to right, e.g. foldl’ op nul [x0 x1 x2 ...] = op (op - (op nul x0) x1) x2) .... The operator is applied - strictly, i.e., its arguments are evaluated first. For example, - foldl’ (x: y: x + y) 0 [1 2 3] evaluates to - 6. - - - - - - builtins.functionArgs - f - - - Return a set containing the names of the formal arguments expected - by the function f. - The value of each attribute is a Boolean denoting whether the corresponding - argument has a default value. For instance, - functionArgs ({ x, y ? 123}: ...) = { x = false; y = true; }. - - - "Formal argument" here refers to the attributes pattern-matched by - the function. Plain lambdas are not included, e.g. - functionArgs (x: ...) = { }. - - - - - - builtins.fromJSON e - - Convert a JSON string to a Nix - value. For example, - - -builtins.fromJSON ''{"x": [1, 2, 3], "y": null}'' - - - returns the value { x = [ 1 2 3 ]; y = null; - }. - - - - - - builtins.genList - generator length - - Generate list of size - length, with each element - i equal to the value returned by - generator i. For - example, - - -builtins.genList (x: x * x) 5 - - - returns the list [ 0 1 4 9 16 ]. - - - - - - builtins.getAttr - s set - - getAttr returns the attribute - named s from - set. Evaluation aborts if the - attribute doesn’t exist. This is a dynamic version of the - . operator, since s - is an expression rather than an identifier. - - - - - - builtins.getEnv - s - - getEnv returns the value of - the environment variable s, or an empty - string if the variable doesn’t exist. This function should be - used with care, as it can introduce all sorts of nasty environment - dependencies in your Nix expression. - - getEnv is used in Nix Packages to - locate the file ~/.nixpkgs/config.nix, which - contains user-local settings for Nix Packages. (That is, it does - a getEnv "HOME" to locate the user’s home - directory.) - - - - - - builtins.hasAttr - s set - - hasAttr returns - true if set has an - attribute named s, and - false otherwise. This is a dynamic version of - the ? operator, since - s is an expression rather than an - identifier. - - - - - - builtins.hashString - type s - - Return a base-16 representation of the - cryptographic hash of string s. The - hash algorithm specified by type must - be one of "md5", "sha1", - "sha256" or "sha512". - - - - - - builtins.hashFile - type p - - Return a base-16 representation of the - cryptographic hash of the file at path p. The - hash algorithm specified by type must - be one of "md5", "sha1", - "sha256" or "sha512". - - - - - - builtins.head - list - - Return the first element of a list; abort - evaluation if the argument isn’t a list or is an empty list. You - can test whether a list is empty by comparing it with - []. - - - - - - import - path - builtins.import - path - - Load, parse and return the Nix expression in the - file path. If path - is a directory, the file default.nix - in that directory is loaded. Evaluation aborts if the - file doesn’t exist or contains an incorrect Nix expression. - import implements Nix’s module system: you - can put any Nix expression (such as a set or a function) in a - separate file, and use it from Nix expressions in other - files. - - Unlike some languages, import is a regular - function in Nix. Paths using the angle bracket syntax (e.g., - import <foo>) are normal path - values (see ). - - A Nix expression loaded by import must - not contain any free variables (identifiers - that are not defined in the Nix expression itself and are not - built-in). Therefore, it cannot refer to variables that are in - scope at the call site. For instance, if you have a calling - expression - - -rec { - x = 123; - y = import ./foo.nix; -} - - then the following foo.nix will give an - error: - - -x + 456 - - since x is not in scope in - foo.nix. If you want x - to be available in foo.nix, you should pass - it as a function argument: - - -rec { - x = 123; - y = import ./foo.nix x; -} - - and - - -x: x + 456 - - (The function argument doesn’t have to be called - x in foo.nix; any name - would work.) - - - - - - builtins.intersectAttrs - e1 e2 - - Return a set consisting of the attributes in the - set e2 that also exist in the set - e1. - - - - - - builtins.isAttrs - e - - Return true if - e evaluates to a set, and - false otherwise. - - - - - - builtins.isList - e - - Return true if - e evaluates to a list, and - false otherwise. - - - - - builtins.isFunction - e - - Return true if - e evaluates to a function, and - false otherwise. - - - - - - builtins.isString - e - - Return true if - e evaluates to a string, and - false otherwise. - - - - - - builtins.isInt - e - - Return true if - e evaluates to an int, and - false otherwise. - - - - - - builtins.isFloat - e - - Return true if - e evaluates to a float, and - false otherwise. - - - - - - builtins.isBool - e - - Return true if - e evaluates to a bool, and - false otherwise. - - - - builtins.isPath - e - - Return true if - e evaluates to a path, and - false otherwise. - - - - - isNull - e - builtins.isNull - e - - Return true if - e evaluates to null, - and false otherwise. - - This function is deprecated; - just write e == null instead. - - - - - - - - builtins.length - e - - Return the length of the list - e. - - - - - - builtins.lessThan - e1 e2 - - Return true if the number - e1 is less than the number - e2, and false - otherwise. Evaluation aborts if either - e1 or e2 - does not evaluate to a number. - - - - - - builtins.listToAttrs - e - - Construct a set from a list specifying the names - and values of each attribute. Each element of the list should be - a set consisting of a string-valued attribute - name specifying the name of the attribute, and - an attribute value specifying its value. - Example: - - -builtins.listToAttrs - [ { name = "foo"; value = 123; } - { name = "bar"; value = 456; } - ] - - - evaluates to - - -{ foo = 123; bar = 456; } - - - - - - - - map - f list - builtins.map - f list - - Apply the function f to - each element in the list list. For - example, - - -map (x: "foo" + x) [ "bar" "bla" "abc" ] - - evaluates to [ "foobar" "foobla" "fooabc" - ]. - - - - - - builtins.match - regex str - - Returns a list if the extended - POSIX regular expression regex - matches str precisely, otherwise returns - null. Each item in the list is a regex group. - - -builtins.match "ab" "abc" - - -Evaluates to null. - - -builtins.match "abc" "abc" - - -Evaluates to [ ]. - - -builtins.match "a(b)(c)" "abc" - - -Evaluates to [ "b" "c" ]. - - -builtins.match "[[:space:]]+([[:upper:]]+)[[:space:]]+" " FOO " - - -Evaluates to [ "foo" ]. - - - - - - builtins.mul - e1 e2 - - Return the product of the numbers - e1 and - e2. - - - - - - builtins.parseDrvName - s - - Split the string s into - a package name and version. The package name is everything up to - but not including the first dash followed by a digit, and the - version is everything following that dash. The result is returned - in a set { name, version }. Thus, - builtins.parseDrvName "nix-0.12pre12876" - returns { name = "nix"; version = "0.12pre12876"; - }. - - - - - - builtins.path - args - - - - - An enrichment of the built-in path type, based on the attributes - present in args. All are optional - except path: - - - - - path - - The underlying path. - - - - name - - - The name of the path when added to the store. This can - used to reference paths that have nix-illegal characters - in their names, like @. - - - - - filter - - - A function of the type expected by - builtins.filterSource, - with the same semantics. - - - - - recursive - - - When false, when - path is added to the store it is with a - flat hash, rather than a hash of the NAR serialization of - the file. Thus, path must refer to a - regular file, not a directory. This allows similar - behavior to fetchurl. Defaults to - true. - - - - - sha256 - - - When provided, this is the expected hash of the file at - the path. Evaluation will fail if the hash is incorrect, - and providing a hash allows - builtins.path to be used even when the - pure-eval nix config option is on. - - - - - - - - - builtins.pathExists - path - - Return true if the path - path exists at evaluation time, and - false otherwise. - - - - - builtins.placeholder - output - - Return a placeholder string for the specified - output that will be substituted by the - corresponding output path at build time. Typical outputs would be - "out", "bin" or - "dev". - - - - builtins.readDir - path - - Return the contents of the directory - path as a set mapping directory entries - to the corresponding file type. For instance, if directory - A contains a regular file - B and another directory - C, then builtins.readDir - ./A will return the set - - -{ B = "regular"; C = "directory"; } - - The possible values for the file type are - "regular", "directory", - "symlink" and - "unknown". - - - - - - builtins.readFile - path - - Return the contents of the file - path as a string. - - - - - - removeAttrs - set list - builtins.removeAttrs - set list - - Remove the attributes listed in - list from - set. The attributes don’t have to - exist in set. For instance, - - -removeAttrs { x = 1; y = 2; z = 3; } [ "a" "x" "z" ] - - evaluates to { y = 2; }. - - - - - - builtins.replaceStrings - from to s - - Given string s, replace - every occurrence of the strings in from - with the corresponding string in - to. For example, - - -builtins.replaceStrings ["oo" "a"] ["a" "i"] "foobar" - - - evaluates to "fabir". - - - - - - builtins.seq - e1 e2 - - Evaluate e1, then - evaluate and return e2. This ensures - that a computation is strict in the value of - e1. - - - - - - builtins.sort - comparator list - - Return list in sorted - order. It repeatedly calls the function - comparator with two elements. The - comparator should return true if the first - element is less than the second, and false - otherwise. For example, - - -builtins.sort builtins.lessThan [ 483 249 526 147 42 77 ] - - - produces the list [ 42 77 147 249 483 526 - ]. - - This is a stable sort: it preserves the relative order of - elements deemed equal by the comparator. - - - - - - builtins.split - regex str - - Returns a list composed of non matched strings interleaved - with the lists of the extended - POSIX regular expression regex matches - of str. Each item in the lists of matched - sequences is a regex group. - - -builtins.split "(a)b" "abc" - - -Evaluates to [ "" [ "a" ] "c" ]. - - -builtins.split "([ac])" "abc" - - -Evaluates to [ "" [ "a" ] "b" [ "c" ] "" ]. - - -builtins.split "(a)|(c)" "abc" - - -Evaluates to [ "" [ "a" null ] "b" [ null "c" ] "" ]. - - -builtins.split "([[:upper:]]+)" " FOO " - - -Evaluates to [ " " [ "FOO" ] " " ]. - - - - - - - builtins.splitVersion - s - - Split a string representing a version into its - components, by the same version splitting logic underlying the - version comparison in - nix-env -u. - - - - - - builtins.stringLength - e - - Return the length of the string - e. If e is - not a string, evaluation is aborted. - - - - - - builtins.sub - e1 e2 - - Return the difference between the numbers - e1 and - e2. - - - - - - builtins.substring - start len - s - - Return the substring of - s from character position - start (zero-based) up to but not - including start + len. If - start is greater than the length of the - string, an empty string is returned, and if start + - len lies beyond the end of the string, only the - substring up to the end of the string is returned. - start must be - non-negative. For example, - - -builtins.substring 0 3 "nixos" - - - evaluates to "nix". - - - - - - - builtins.tail - list - - Return the second to last elements of a list; - abort evaluation if the argument isn’t a list or is an empty - list. - - - - - - throw - s - builtins.throw - s - - Throw an error message - s. This usually aborts Nix expression - evaluation, but in nix-env -qa and other - commands that try to evaluate a set of derivations to get - information about those derivations, a derivation that throws an - error is silently skipped (which is not the case for - abort). - - - - - - builtins.toFile - name - s - - Store the string s in a - file in the Nix store and return its path. The file has suffix - name. This file can be used as an - input to derivations. One application is to write builders - “inline”. For instance, the following Nix expression combines - and into one file: - - -{ stdenv, fetchurl, perl }: - -stdenv.mkDerivation { - name = "hello-2.1.1"; - - builder = builtins.toFile "builder.sh" " - source $stdenv/setup - - PATH=$perl/bin:$PATH - - tar xvfz $src - cd hello-* - ./configure --prefix=$out - make - make install - "; - - src = fetchurl { - url = "http://ftp.nluug.nl/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.1.1.tar.gz"; - sha256 = "1md7jsfd8pa45z73bz1kszpp01yw6x5ljkjk2hx7wl800any6465"; - }; - inherit perl; -} - - - - It is even possible for one file to refer to another, e.g., - - - builder = let - configFile = builtins.toFile "foo.conf" " - # This is some dummy configuration file. - ... - "; - in builtins.toFile "builder.sh" " - source $stdenv/setup - ... - cp ${configFile} $out/etc/foo.conf - "; - - Note that ${configFile} is an antiquotation - (see ), so the result of the - expression configFile (i.e., a path like - /nix/store/m7p7jfny445k...-foo.conf) will be - spliced into the resulting string. - - It is however not allowed to have files - mutually referring to each other, like so: - - -let - foo = builtins.toFile "foo" "...${bar}..."; - bar = builtins.toFile "bar" "...${foo}..."; -in foo - - This is not allowed because it would cause a cyclic dependency in - the computation of the cryptographic hashes for - foo and bar. - It is also not possible to reference the result of a derivation. - If you are using Nixpkgs, the writeTextFile function is able to - do that. - - - - - - builtins.toJSON e - - Return a string containing a JSON representation - of e. Strings, integers, floats, booleans, - nulls and lists are mapped to their JSON equivalents. Sets - (except derivations) are represented as objects. Derivations are - translated to a JSON string containing the derivation’s output - path. Paths are copied to the store and represented as a JSON - string of the resulting store path. - - - - - - builtins.toPath s - - DEPRECATED. Use /. + "/path" - to convert a string into an absolute path. For relative paths, - use ./. + "/path". - - - - - - - toString e - builtins.toString e - - Convert the expression - e to a string. - e can be: - - A string (in which case the string is returned unmodified). - A path (e.g., toString /foo/bar yields "/foo/bar". - A set containing { __toString = self: ...; }. - An integer. - A list, in which case the string representations of its elements are joined with spaces. - A Boolean (false yields "", true yields "1"). - null, which yields the empty string. - - - - - - - - builtins.toXML e - - Return a string containing an XML representation - of e. The main application for - toXML is to communicate information with the - builder in a more structured format than plain environment - variables. - - - - Here is an example where this is - the case: - - - $out/server-conf.xml]]> ① - - - - - - - - - - - - - "; - - servlets = builtins.toXML []]> ③ - - The builder is supposed to generate the configuration file - for a Jetty servlet - container. A servlet container contains a number of - servlets (*.war files) each exported under a - specific URI prefix. So the servlet configuration is a list of - sets containing the path and - war of the servlet (). This kind of information is - difficult to communicate with the normal method of passing - information through an environment variable, which just - concatenates everything together into a string (which might just - work in this case, but wouldn’t work if fields are optional or - contain lists themselves). Instead the Nix expression is - converted to an XML representation with - toXML, which is unambiguous and can easily be - processed with the appropriate tools. For instance, in the - example an XSLT stylesheet (at point ②) is applied to it (at point - ①) to generate the XML configuration file for the Jetty server. - The XML representation produced at point ③ by - toXML is as follows: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -]]> - - Note that uses the toFile built-in to write the - builder and the stylesheet “inline” in the Nix expression. The - path of the stylesheet is spliced into the builder using the - syntax xsltproc ${stylesheet}. - - - - - - - - builtins.trace - e1 e2 - - Evaluate e1 and print its - abstract syntax representation on standard error. Then return - e2. This function is useful for - debugging. - - - - - builtins.tryEval - e - - Try to shallowly evaluate e. - Return a set containing the attributes success - (true if e evaluated - successfully, false if an error was thrown) and - value, equalling e - if successful and false otherwise. Note that this - doesn't evaluate e deeply, so - let e = { x = throw ""; }; in (builtins.tryEval e).success - will be true. Using builtins.deepSeq - one can get the expected result: let e = { x = throw ""; - }; in (builtins.tryEval (builtins.deepSeq e e)).success will be - false. - - - - - - - builtins.typeOf - e - - Return a string representing the type of the value - e, namely "int", - "bool", "string", - "path", "null", - "set", "list", - "lambda" or - "float". - - - - - - - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/derivations.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/derivations.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 0625bcdfe..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/derivations.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,210 +0,0 @@ -
- -Derivations - -The most important built-in function is -derivation, which is used to describe a single -derivation (a build action). It takes as input a set, the attributes -of which specify the inputs of the build. - - - - There must be an attribute - named system whose value must be a string - specifying a Nix system type, such as - "i686-linux" or - "x86_64-darwin". (To figure out your system type, - run nix -vv --version.) The build can only be - performed on a machine and operating system matching the system - type. (Nix can automatically forward builds for other platforms by - forwarding them to other machines; see .) - - There must be an attribute named - name whose value must be a string. This is used - as a symbolic name for the package by nix-env, - and it is appended to the output paths of the - derivation. - - There must be an attribute named - builder that identifies the program that is - executed to perform the build. It can be either a derivation or a - source (a local file reference, e.g., - ./builder.sh). - - Every attribute is passed as an environment variable - to the builder. Attribute values are translated to environment - variables as follows: - - - - Strings and numbers are just passed - verbatim. - - A path (e.g., - ../foo/sources.tar) causes the referenced - file to be copied to the store; its location in the store is put - in the environment variable. The idea is that all sources - should reside in the Nix store, since all inputs to a derivation - should reside in the Nix store. - - A derivation causes that - derivation to be built prior to the present derivation; its - default output path is put in the environment - variable. - - Lists of the previous types are also allowed. - They are simply concatenated, separated by - spaces. - - true is passed as the string - 1, false and - null are passed as an empty string. - - - - - - The optional attribute args - specifies command-line arguments to be passed to the builder. It - should be a list. - - The optional attribute outputs - specifies a list of symbolic outputs of the derivation. By default, - a derivation produces a single output path, denoted as - out. However, derivations can produce multiple - output paths. This is useful because it allows outputs to be - downloaded or garbage-collected separately. For instance, imagine a - library package that provides a dynamic library, header files, and - documentation. A program that links against the library doesn’t - need the header files and documentation at runtime, and it doesn’t - need the documentation at build time. Thus, the library package - could specify: - -outputs = [ "lib" "headers" "doc" ]; - - This will cause Nix to pass environment variables - lib, headers and - doc to the builder containing the intended store - paths of each output. The builder would typically do something like - -./configure --libdir=$lib/lib --includedir=$headers/include --docdir=$doc/share/doc - - for an Autoconf-style package. You can refer to each output of a - derivation by selecting it as an attribute, e.g. - -buildInputs = [ pkg.lib pkg.headers ]; - - The first element of outputs determines the - default output. Thus, you could also write - -buildInputs = [ pkg pkg.headers ]; - - since pkg is equivalent to - pkg.lib. - - - -The function mkDerivation in the Nixpkgs -standard environment is a wrapper around -derivation that adds a default value for -system and always uses Bash as the builder, to -which the supplied builder is passed as a command-line argument. See -the Nixpkgs manual for details. - -The builder is executed as follows: - - - - A temporary directory is created under the directory - specified by TMPDIR (default - /tmp) where the build will take place. The - current directory is changed to this directory. - - The environment is cleared and set to the derivation - attributes, as specified above. - - In addition, the following variables are set: - - - - NIX_BUILD_TOP contains the path of - the temporary directory for this build. - - Also, TMPDIR, - TEMPDIR, TMP, TEMP - are set to point to the temporary directory. This is to prevent - the builder from accidentally writing temporary files anywhere - else. Doing so might cause interference by other - processes. - - PATH is set to - /path-not-set to prevent shells from - initialising it to their built-in default value. - - HOME is set to - /homeless-shelter to prevent programs from - using /etc/passwd or the like to find the - user's home directory, which could cause impurity. Usually, when - HOME is set, it is used as the location of the home - directory, even if it points to a non-existent - path. - - NIX_STORE is set to the path of the - top-level Nix store directory (typically, - /nix/store). - - For each output declared in - outputs, the corresponding environment variable - is set to point to the intended path in the Nix store for that - output. Each output path is a concatenation of the cryptographic - hash of all build inputs, the name attribute - and the output name. (The output name is omitted if it’s - out.) - - - - - - If an output path already exists, it is removed. - Also, locks are acquired to prevent multiple Nix instances from - performing the same build at the same time. - - A log of the combined standard output and error is - written to /nix/var/log/nix. - - The builder is executed with the arguments specified - by the attribute args. If it exits with exit - code 0, it is considered to have succeeded. - - The temporary directory is removed (unless the - option was specified). - - If the build was successful, Nix scans each output - path for references to input paths by looking for the hash parts of - the input paths. Since these are potential runtime dependencies, - Nix registers them as dependencies of the output - paths. - - After the build, Nix sets the last-modified - timestamp on all files in the build result to 1 (00:00:01 1/1/1970 - UTC), sets the group to the default group, and sets the mode of the - file to 0444 or 0555 (i.e., read-only, with execute permission - enabled if the file was originally executable). Note that possible - setuid and setgid bits are - cleared. Setuid and setgid programs are not currently supported by - Nix. This is because the Nix archives used in deployment have no - concept of ownership information, and because it makes the build - result dependent on the user performing the build. - - - - - - - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/expression-language.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/expression-language.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 240ef80f1..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/expression-language.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,30 +0,0 @@ - - -Nix Expression Language - -The Nix expression language is a pure, lazy, functional -language. Purity means that operations in the language don't have -side-effects (for instance, there is no variable assignment). -Laziness means that arguments to functions are evaluated only when -they are needed. Functional means that functions are -normal values that can be passed around and manipulated -in interesting ways. The language is not a full-featured, general -purpose language. Its main job is to describe packages, -compositions of packages, and the variability within -packages. - -This section presents the various features of the -language. - - - - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/expression-syntax.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/expression-syntax.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 853e40b58..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/expression-syntax.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,146 +0,0 @@ -
- -Expression Syntax - -Here is a Nix expression for GNU Hello: - - -{ stdenv, fetchurl, perl }: ① - -stdenv.mkDerivation { ② - name = "hello-2.1.1"; ③ - builder = ./builder.sh; ④ - src = fetchurl { ⑤ - url = "ftp://ftp.nluug.nl/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.1.1.tar.gz"; - sha256 = "1md7jsfd8pa45z73bz1kszpp01yw6x5ljkjk2hx7wl800any6465"; - }; - inherit perl; ⑥ -} - -This file is actually already in the Nix Packages collection in -pkgs/applications/misc/hello/ex-1/default.nix. -It is customary to place each package in a separate directory and call -the single Nix expression in that directory -default.nix. The file has the following elements -(referenced from the figure by number): - - - - - - This states that the expression is a - function that expects to be called with three - arguments: stdenv, fetchurl, - and perl. They are needed to build Hello, but - we don't know how to build them here; that's why they are function - arguments. stdenv is a package that is used - by almost all Nix Packages packages; it provides a - standard environment consisting of the things you - would expect in a basic Unix environment: a C/C++ compiler (GCC, - to be precise), the Bash shell, fundamental Unix tools such as - cp, grep, - tar, etc. fetchurl is a - function that downloads files. perl is the - Perl interpreter. - - Nix functions generally have the form { x, y, ..., - z }: e where x, y, - etc. are the names of the expected arguments, and where - e is the body of the function. So - here, the entire remainder of the file is the body of the - function; when given the required arguments, the body should - describe how to build an instance of the Hello package. - - - - - - So we have to build a package. Building something from - other stuff is called a derivation in Nix (as - opposed to sources, which are built by humans instead of - computers). We perform a derivation by calling - stdenv.mkDerivation. - mkDerivation is a function provided by - stdenv that builds a package from a set of - attributes. A set is just a list of - key/value pairs where each key is a string and each value is an - arbitrary Nix expression. They take the general form { - name1 = - expr1; ... - nameN = - exprN; }. - - - - - - The attribute name specifies the symbolic - name and version of the package. Nix doesn't really care about - these things, but they are used by for instance nix-env - -q to show a human-readable name for - packages. This attribute is required by - mkDerivation. - - - - - - The attribute builder specifies the - builder. This attribute can sometimes be omitted, in which case - mkDerivation will fill in a default builder - (which does a configure; make; make install, in - essence). Hello is sufficiently simple that the default builder - would suffice, but in this case, we will show an actual builder - for educational purposes. The value - ./builder.sh refers to the shell script shown - in , discussed below. - - - - - - The builder has to know what the sources of the package - are. Here, the attribute src is bound to the - result of a call to the fetchurl function. - Given a URL and a SHA-256 hash of the expected contents of the file - at that URL, this function builds a derivation that downloads the - file and checks its hash. So the sources are a dependency that - like all other dependencies is built before Hello itself is - built. - - Instead of src any other name could have - been used, and in fact there can be any number of sources (bound - to different attributes). However, src is - customary, and it's also expected by the default builder (which we - don't use in this example). - - - - - - Since the derivation requires Perl, we have to pass the - value of the perl function argument to the - builder. All attributes in the set are actually passed as - environment variables to the builder, so declaring an attribute - - -perl = perl; - - will do the trick: it binds an attribute perl - to the function argument which also happens to be called - perl. However, it looks a bit silly, so there - is a shorter syntax. The inherit keyword - causes the specified attributes to be bound to whatever variables - with the same name happen to be in scope. - - - - - - - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/generic-builder.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/generic-builder.xml deleted file mode 100644 index a6f258abc..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/generic-builder.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,98 +0,0 @@ -
- -Generic Builder Syntax - -Recall from that the builder -looked something like this: - - -PATH=$perl/bin:$PATH -tar xvfz $src -cd hello-* -./configure --prefix=$out -make -make install - -The builders for almost all Unix packages look like this — set up some -environment variables, unpack the sources, configure, build, and -install. For this reason the standard environment provides some Bash -functions that automate the build process. Here is what a builder -using the generic build facilities looks like: - - -buildInputs="$perl" ① - -source $stdenv/setup ② - -genericBuild ③ - -Here is what each line means: - - - - - - The buildInputs variable tells - setup to use the indicated packages as - inputs. This means that if a package provides a - bin subdirectory, it's added to - PATH; if it has a include - subdirectory, it's added to GCC's header search path; and so - on. (This is implemented in a modular way: - setup tries to source the file - pkg/nix-support/setup-hook - of all dependencies. These “setup hooks” can then set up whatever - environment variables they want; for instance, the setup hook for - Perl sets the PERL5LIB environment variable to - contain the lib/site_perl directories of all - inputs.) - - - - - - - The function genericBuild is defined in - the file $stdenv/setup. - - - - - - The final step calls the shell function - genericBuild, which performs the steps that - were done explicitly in . The - generic builder is smart enough to figure out whether to unpack - the sources using gzip, - bzip2, etc. It can be customised in many ways; - see the Nixpkgs manual for details. - - - - - - - -Discerning readers will note that the -buildInputs could just as well have been set in the Nix -expression, like this: - - - buildInputs = [ perl ]; - -The perl attribute can then be removed, and the -builder becomes even shorter: - - -source $stdenv/setup -genericBuild - -In fact, mkDerivation provides a default builder -that looks exactly like that, so it is actually possible to omit the -builder for Hello entirely. - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/language-constructs.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/language-constructs.xml deleted file mode 100644 index e1c589f61..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/language-constructs.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,408 +0,0 @@ -
- -Language Constructs - -
Recursive sets - -Recursive sets are just normal sets, but the attributes can -refer to each other. For example, - - -rec { - x = y; - y = 123; -}.x - - -evaluates to 123. Note that without -rec the binding x = y; would -refer to the variable y in the surrounding scope, -if one exists, and would be invalid if no such variable exists. That -is, in a normal (non-recursive) set, attributes are not added to the -lexical scope; in a recursive set, they are. - -Recursive sets of course introduce the danger of infinite -recursion. For example, the expression - - -rec { - x = y; - y = x; -}.x - -will crash with an infinite recursion encountered -error message. - -
- - -
Let-expressions - -A let-expression allows you to define local variables for an -expression. For instance, - - -let - x = "foo"; - y = "bar"; -in x + y - -evaluates to "foobar". - - - -
- - -
Inheriting attributes - -When defining a set or in a let-expression it is often convenient to copy variables -from the surrounding lexical scope (e.g., when you want to propagate -attributes). This can be shortened using the -inherit keyword. For instance, - - -let x = 123; in -{ inherit x; - y = 456; -} - -is equivalent to - - -let x = 123; in -{ x = x; - y = 456; -} - -and both evaluate to { x = 123; y = 456; }. (Note that -this works because x is added to the lexical scope -by the let construct.) It is also possible to -inherit attributes from another set. For instance, in this fragment -from all-packages.nix, - - - graphviz = (import ../tools/graphics/graphviz) { - inherit fetchurl stdenv libpng libjpeg expat x11 yacc; - inherit (xlibs) libXaw; - }; - - xlibs = { - libX11 = ...; - libXaw = ...; - ... - } - - libpng = ...; - libjpg = ...; - ... - -the set used in the function call to the function defined in -../tools/graphics/graphviz inherits a number of -variables from the surrounding scope (fetchurl -... yacc), but also inherits -libXaw (the X Athena Widgets) from the -xlibs (X11 client-side libraries) set. - - -Summarizing the fragment - - -... -inherit x y z; -inherit (src-set) a b c; -... - -is equivalent to - - -... -x = x; y = y; z = z; -a = src-set.a; b = src-set.b; c = src-set.c; -... - -when used while defining local variables in a let-expression or -while defining a set. - -
- - -
Functions - -Functions have the following form: - - -pattern: body - -The pattern specifies what the argument of the function must look -like, and binds variables in the body to (parts of) the -argument. There are three kinds of patterns: - - - - - If a pattern is a single identifier, then the - function matches any argument. Example: - - -let negate = x: !x; - concat = x: y: x + y; -in if negate true then concat "foo" "bar" else "" - - Note that concat is a function that takes one - argument and returns a function that takes another argument. This - allows partial parameterisation (i.e., only filling some of the - arguments of a function); e.g., - - -map (concat "foo") [ "bar" "bla" "abc" ] - - evaluates to [ "foobar" "foobla" - "fooabc" ]. - - - A set pattern of the form - { name1, name2, …, nameN } matches a set - containing the listed attributes, and binds the values of those - attributes to variables in the function body. For example, the - function - - -{ x, y, z }: z + y + x - - can only be called with a set containing exactly the attributes - x, y and - z. No other attributes are allowed. If you want - to allow additional arguments, you can use an ellipsis - (...): - - -{ x, y, z, ... }: z + y + x - - This works on any set that contains at least the three named - attributes. - - It is possible to provide default values - for attributes, in which case they are allowed to be missing. A - default value is specified by writing - name ? - e, where - e is an arbitrary expression. For example, - - -{ x, y ? "foo", z ? "bar" }: z + y + x - - specifies a function that only requires an attribute named - x, but optionally accepts y - and z. - - - An @-pattern provides a means of referring - to the whole value being matched: - - args@{ x, y, z, ... }: z + y + x + args.a - -but can also be written as: - - { x, y, z, ... } @ args: z + y + x + args.a - - Here args is bound to the entire argument, which - is further matched against the pattern { x, y, z, - ... }. @-pattern makes mainly sense with an - ellipsis(...) as you can access attribute names as - a, using args.a, which was given as an - additional attribute to the function. - - - - - The args@ expression is bound to the argument passed to the function which - means that attributes with defaults that aren't explicitly specified in the function call - won't cause an evaluation error, but won't exist in args. - - - For instance - -let - function = args@{ a ? 23, ... }: args; -in - function {} - - will evaluate to an empty attribute set. - - - - - -Note that functions do not have names. If you want to give them -a name, you can bind them to an attribute, e.g., - - -let concat = { x, y }: x + y; -in concat { x = "foo"; y = "bar"; } - - - -
- - -
Conditionals - -Conditionals look like this: - - -if e1 then e2 else e3 - -where e1 is an expression that should -evaluate to a Boolean value (true or -false). - -
- - -
Assertions - -Assertions are generally used to check that certain requirements -on or between features and dependencies hold. They look like this: - - -assert e1; e2 - -where e1 is an expression that should -evaluate to a Boolean value. If it evaluates to -true, e2 is returned; -otherwise expression evaluation is aborted and a backtrace is printed. - -Here is a Nix expression for the Subversion package that shows -how assertions can be used:. - - -{ localServer ? false -, httpServer ? false -, sslSupport ? false -, pythonBindings ? false -, javaSwigBindings ? false -, javahlBindings ? false -, stdenv, fetchurl -, openssl ? null, httpd ? null, db4 ? null, expat, swig ? null, j2sdk ? null -}: - -assert localServer -> db4 != null; ① -assert httpServer -> httpd != null && httpd.expat == expat; ② -assert sslSupport -> openssl != null && (httpServer -> httpd.openssl == openssl); ③ -assert pythonBindings -> swig != null && swig.pythonSupport; -assert javaSwigBindings -> swig != null && swig.javaSupport; -assert javahlBindings -> j2sdk != null; - -stdenv.mkDerivation { - name = "subversion-1.1.1"; - ... - openssl = if sslSupport then openssl else null; ④ - ... -} - -The points of interest are: - - - - - This assertion states that if Subversion is to have support - for local repositories, then Berkeley DB is needed. So if the - Subversion function is called with the - localServer argument set to - true but the db4 argument - set to null, then the evaluation fails. - - - - This is a more subtle condition: if Subversion is built with - Apache (httpServer) support, then the Expat - library (an XML library) used by Subversion should be same as the - one used by Apache. This is because in this configuration - Subversion code ends up being linked with Apache code, and if the - Expat libraries do not match, a build- or runtime link error or - incompatibility might occur. - - - - This assertion says that in order for Subversion to have SSL - support (so that it can access https URLs), an - OpenSSL library must be passed. Additionally, it says that - if Apache support is enabled, then Apache's - OpenSSL should match Subversion's. (Note that if Apache support - is not enabled, we don't care about Apache's OpenSSL.) - - - - The conditional here is not really related to assertions, - but is worth pointing out: it ensures that if SSL support is - disabled, then the Subversion derivation is not dependent on - OpenSSL, even if a non-null value was passed. - This prevents an unnecessary rebuild of Subversion if OpenSSL - changes. - - - - -
- - - -
With-expressions - -A with-expression, - - -with e1; e2 - -introduces the set e1 into the lexical -scope of the expression e2. For instance, - - -let as = { x = "foo"; y = "bar"; }; -in with as; x + y - -evaluates to "foobar" since the -with adds the x and -y attributes of as to the -lexical scope in the expression x + y. The most -common use of with is in conjunction with the -import function. E.g., - - -with (import ./definitions.nix); ... - -makes all attributes defined in the file -definitions.nix available as if they were defined -locally in a let-expression. - -The bindings introduced by with do not shadow bindings -introduced by other means, e.g. - - -let a = 3; in with { a = 1; }; let a = 4; in with { a = 2; }; ... - -establishes the same scope as - - -let a = 1; in let a = 2; in let a = 3; in let a = 4; in ... - - - -
- - -
Comments - -Comments can be single-line, started with a # -character, or inline/multi-line, enclosed within /* -... */. - -
- - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/language-operators.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/language-operators.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 7f69bfcef..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/language-operators.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,222 +0,0 @@ -
- -Operators - - lists the operators in the -Nix expression language, in order of precedence (from strongest to -weakest binding). - - - Operators - - - - Name - Syntax - Associativity - Description - Precedence - - - - - Select - e . - attrpath - [ or def ] - - none - Select attribute denoted by the attribute path - attrpath from set - e. (An attribute path is a - dot-separated list of attribute names.) If the attribute - doesn’t exist, return def if - provided, otherwise abort evaluation. - 1 - - - Application - e1 e2 - left - Call function e1 with - argument e2. - 2 - - - Arithmetic Negation - - e - none - Arithmetic negation. - 3 - - - Has Attribute - e ? - attrpath - none - Test whether set e contains - the attribute denoted by attrpath; - return true or - false. - 4 - - - List Concatenation - e1 ++ e2 - right - List concatenation. - 5 - - - Multiplication - - e1 * e2, - - left - Arithmetic multiplication. - 6 - - - Division - - e1 / e2 - - left - Arithmetic division. - 6 - - - Addition - - e1 + e2 - - left - Arithmetic addition. - 7 - - - Subtraction - - e1 - e2 - - left - Arithmetic subtraction. - 7 - - - String Concatenation - - string1 + string2 - - left - String concatenation. - 7 - - - Not - ! e - none - Boolean negation. - 8 - - - Update - e1 // - e2 - right - Return a set consisting of the attributes in - e1 and - e2 (with the latter taking - precedence over the former in case of equally named - attributes). - 9 - - - Less Than - - e1 < e2, - - none - Arithmetic comparison. - 10 - - - Less Than or Equal To - - e1 <= e2 - - none - Arithmetic comparison. - 10 - - - Greater Than - - e1 > e2 - - none - Arithmetic comparison. - 10 - - - Greater Than or Equal To - - e1 >= e2 - - none - Arithmetic comparison. - 10 - - - Equality - - e1 == e2 - - none - Equality. - 11 - - - Inequality - - e1 != e2 - - none - Inequality. - 11 - - - Logical AND - e1 && - e2 - left - Logical AND. - 12 - - - Logical OR - e1 || - e2 - left - Logical OR. - 13 - - - Logical Implication - e1 -> - e2 - none - Logical implication (equivalent to - !e1 || - e2). - 14 - - - -
- -
diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/language-values.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/language-values.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 5520a4938..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/language-values.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,312 +0,0 @@ -
- -Values - - -
Simple Values - -Nix has the following basic data types: - - - - - - Strings can be written in three - ways. - - The most common way is to enclose the string between double - quotes, e.g., "foo bar". Strings can span - multiple lines. The special characters " and - \ and the character sequence - ${ must be escaped by prefixing them with a - backslash (\). Newlines, carriage returns and - tabs can be written as \n, - \r and \t, - respectively. - - You can include the result of an expression into a string by - enclosing it in - ${...}, a feature - known as antiquotation. The enclosed - expression must evaluate to something that can be coerced into a - string (meaning that it must be a string, a path, or a - derivation). For instance, rather than writing - - -"--with-freetype2-library=" + freetype + "/lib" - - (where freetype is a derivation), you can - instead write the more natural - - -"--with-freetype2-library=${freetype}/lib" - - The latter is automatically translated to the former. A more - complicated example (from the Nix expression for Qt): - - -configureFlags = " - -system-zlib -system-libpng -system-libjpeg - ${if openglSupport then "-dlopen-opengl - -L${mesa}/lib -I${mesa}/include - -L${libXmu}/lib -I${libXmu}/include" else ""} - ${if threadSupport then "-thread" else "-no-thread"} -"; - - Note that Nix expressions and strings can be arbitrarily nested; - in this case the outer string contains various antiquotations that - themselves contain strings (e.g., "-thread"), - some of which in turn contain expressions (e.g., - ${mesa}). - - The second way to write string literals is as an - indented string, which is enclosed between - pairs of double single-quotes, like so: - - -'' - This is the first line. - This is the second line. - This is the third line. -'' - - This kind of string literal intelligently strips indentation from - the start of each line. To be precise, it strips from each line a - number of spaces equal to the minimal indentation of the string as - a whole (disregarding the indentation of empty lines). For - instance, the first and second line are indented two space, while - the third line is indented four spaces. Thus, two spaces are - stripped from each line, so the resulting string is - - -"This is the first line.\nThis is the second line.\n This is the third line.\n" - - - - Note that the whitespace and newline following the opening - '' is ignored if there is no non-whitespace - text on the initial line. - - Antiquotation - (${expr}) is - supported in indented strings. - - Since ${ and '' have - special meaning in indented strings, you need a way to quote them. - $ can be escaped by prefixing it with - '' (that is, two single quotes), i.e., - ''$. '' can be escaped by - prefixing it with ', i.e., - '''. $ removes any special meaning - from the following $. Linefeed, carriage-return and tab - characters can be written as ''\n, - ''\r, ''\t, and ''\ - escapes any other character. - - - - Indented strings are primarily useful in that they allow - multi-line string literals to follow the indentation of the - enclosing Nix expression, and that less escaping is typically - necessary for strings representing languages such as shell scripts - and configuration files because '' is much less - common than ". Example: - - -stdenv.mkDerivation { - ... - postInstall = - '' - mkdir $out/bin $out/etc - cp foo $out/bin - echo "Hello World" > $out/etc/foo.conf - ${if enableBar then "cp bar $out/bin" else ""} - ''; - ... -} - - - - - Finally, as a convenience, URIs as - defined in appendix B of RFC 2396 - can be written as is, without quotes. For - instance, the string - "http://example.org/foo.tar.bz2" - can also be written as - http://example.org/foo.tar.bz2. - - - - Numbers, which can be integers (like - 123) or floating point (like - 123.43 or .27e13). - - Numbers are type-compatible: pure integer operations will always - return integers, whereas any operation involving at least one floating point - number will have a floating point number as a result. - - Paths, e.g., - /bin/sh or ./builder.sh. - A path must contain at least one slash to be recognised as such. For - instance, builder.sh is not a path: it's parsed - as an expression that selects the attribute sh - from the variable builder. If the file name is - relative, i.e., if it does not begin with a slash, it is made - absolute at parse time relative to the directory of the Nix - expression that contained it. For instance, if a Nix expression in - /foo/bar/bla.nix refers to - ../xyzzy/fnord.nix, the absolute path is - /foo/xyzzy/fnord.nix. - - If the first component of a path is a ~, - it is interpreted as if the rest of the path were relative to the - user's home directory. e.g. ~/foo would be - equivalent to /home/edolstra/foo for a user - whose home directory is /home/edolstra. - - - Paths can also be specified between angle brackets, e.g. - <nixpkgs>. This means that the directories - listed in the environment variable - NIX_PATH will be searched - for the given file or directory name. - - - - - Booleans with values - true and - false. - - The null value, denoted as - null. - - - - - -
- - -
Lists - -Lists are formed by enclosing a whitespace-separated list of -values between square brackets. For example, - - -[ 123 ./foo.nix "abc" (f { x = y; }) ] - -defines a list of four elements, the last being the result of a call -to the function f. Note that function calls have -to be enclosed in parentheses. If they had been omitted, e.g., - - -[ 123 ./foo.nix "abc" f { x = y; } ] - -the result would be a list of five elements, the fourth one being a -function and the fifth being a set. - -Note that lists are only lazy in values, and they are strict in length. - - -
- - -
Sets - -Sets are really the core of the language, since ultimately the -Nix language is all about creating derivations, which are really just -sets of attributes to be passed to build scripts. - -Sets are just a list of name/value pairs (called -attributes) enclosed in curly brackets, where -each value is an arbitrary expression terminated by a semicolon. For -example: - - -{ x = 123; - text = "Hello"; - y = f { bla = 456; }; -} - -This defines a set with attributes named x, -text, y. The order of the -attributes is irrelevant. An attribute name may only occur -once. - -Attributes can be selected from a set using the -. operator. For instance, - - -{ a = "Foo"; b = "Bar"; }.a - -evaluates to "Foo". It is possible to provide a -default value in an attribute selection using the -or keyword. For example, - - -{ a = "Foo"; b = "Bar"; }.c or "Xyzzy" - -will evaluate to "Xyzzy" because there is no -c attribute in the set. - -You can use arbitrary double-quoted strings as attribute -names: - - -{ "foo ${bar}" = 123; "nix-1.0" = 456; }."foo ${bar}" - - -This will evaluate to 123 (Assuming -bar is antiquotable). In the case where an -attribute name is just a single antiquotation, the quotes can be -dropped: - - -{ foo = 123; }.${bar} or 456 - -This will evaluate to 123 if -bar evaluates to "foo" when -coerced to a string and 456 otherwise (again -assuming bar is antiquotable). - -In the special case where an attribute name inside of a set declaration -evaluates to null (which is normally an error, as -null is not antiquotable), that attribute is simply not -added to the set: - - -{ ${if foo then "bar" else null} = true; } - -This will evaluate to {} if foo -evaluates to false. - -A set that has a __functor attribute whose value -is callable (i.e. is itself a function or a set with a -__functor attribute whose value is callable) can be -applied as if it were a function, with the set itself passed in first -, e.g., - - -let add = { __functor = self: x: x + self.x; }; - inc = add // { x = 1; }; -in inc 1 - - -evaluates to 2. This can be used to attach metadata to a -function without the caller needing to treat it specially, or to implement -a form of object-oriented programming, for example. - - - -
- - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/simple-building-testing.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/simple-building-testing.xml deleted file mode 100644 index f82223df9..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/simple-building-testing.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,76 +0,0 @@ -
- -Building and Testing - -You can now try to build Hello. Of course, you could do -nix-env -i hello, but you may not want to install a -possibly broken package just yet. The best way to test the package is by -using the command nix-build, -which builds a Nix expression and creates a symlink named -result in the current directory: - - -$ nix-build -A hello -building path `/nix/store/632d2b22514d...-hello-2.1.1' -hello-2.1.1/ -hello-2.1.1/intl/ -hello-2.1.1/intl/ChangeLog -... - -$ ls -l result -lrwxrwxrwx ... 2006-09-29 10:43 result -> /nix/store/632d2b22514d...-hello-2.1.1 - -$ ./result/bin/hello -Hello, world! - -The option selects -the hello attribute. This is faster than using the -symbolic package name specified by the name -attribute (which also happens to be hello) and is -unambiguous (there can be multiple packages with the symbolic name -hello, but there can be only one attribute in a set -named hello). - -nix-build registers the -./result symlink as a garbage collection root, so -unless and until you delete the ./result symlink, -the output of the build will be safely kept on your system. You can -use nix-build’s switch to give the symlink another -name. - -Nix has transactional semantics. Once a build finishes -successfully, Nix makes a note of this in its database: it registers -that the path denoted by out is now -valid. If you try to build the derivation again, Nix -will see that the path is already valid and finish immediately. If a -build fails, either because it returns a non-zero exit code, because -Nix or the builder are killed, or because the machine crashes, then -the output paths will not be registered as valid. If you try to build -the derivation again, Nix will remove the output paths if they exist -(e.g., because the builder died half-way through make -install) and try again. Note that there is no -negative caching: Nix doesn't remember that a build -failed, and so a failed build can always be repeated. This is because -Nix cannot distinguish between permanent failures (e.g., a compiler -error due to a syntax error in the source) and transient failures -(e.g., a disk full condition). - -Nix also performs locking. If you run multiple Nix builds -simultaneously, and they try to build the same derivation, the first -Nix instance that gets there will perform the build, while the others -block (or perform other derivations if available) until the build -finishes: - - -$ nix-build -A hello -waiting for lock on `/nix/store/0h5b7hp8d4hqfrw8igvx97x1xawrjnac-hello-2.1.1x' - -So it is always safe to run multiple instances of Nix in parallel -(which isn’t the case with, say, make). - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/simple-expression.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/simple-expression.xml deleted file mode 100644 index ad97220a8..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/simple-expression.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,46 +0,0 @@ - - -A Simple Nix Expression - -This section shows how to add and test the GNU Hello -package to the Nix Packages collection. Hello is a program -that prints out the text Hello, world!. - -To add a package to the Nix Packages collection, you generally -need to do three things: - - - - Write a Nix expression for the package. This is a - file that describes all the inputs involved in building the package, - such as dependencies, sources, and so on. - - Write a builder. This is a - shell script that builds the package from the inputs. (In fact, it - can be written in any language, but typically it's a - bash shell script.) - - Add the package to the file - pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix. The Nix - expression written in the first step is a - function; it requires other packages in order - to build it. In this step you put it all together, i.e., you call - the function with the right arguments to build the actual - package. - - - - - - - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/expressions/writing-nix-expressions.xml b/doc/manual/expressions/writing-nix-expressions.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 6646dddf0..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/expressions/writing-nix-expressions.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,26 +0,0 @@ - - -Writing Nix Expressions - - -This chapter shows you how to write Nix expressions, which -instruct Nix how to build packages. It starts with a -simple example (a Nix expression for GNU Hello), and then moves -on to a more in-depth look at the Nix expression language. - -This chapter is mostly about the Nix expression language. -For more extensive information on adding packages to the Nix Packages -collection (such as functions in the standard environment and coding -conventions), please consult its -manual. - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/glossary/glossary.xml b/doc/manual/glossary/glossary.xml deleted file mode 100644 index e3162ed8d..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/glossary/glossary.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,199 +0,0 @@ - - -Glossary - - - - - -derivation - - A description of a build action. The result of a - derivation is a store object. Derivations are typically specified - in Nix expressions using the derivation - primitive. These are translated into low-level - store derivations (implicitly by - nix-env and nix-build, or - explicitly by nix-instantiate). - - - - -store - - The location in the file system where store objects - live. Typically /nix/store. - - - - -store path - - The location in the file system of a store object, - i.e., an immediate child of the Nix store - directory. - - - - -store object - - A file that is an immediate child of the Nix store - directory. These can be regular files, but also entire directory - trees. Store objects can be sources (objects copied from outside of - the store), derivation outputs (objects produced by running a build - action), or derivations (files describing a build - action). - - - - -substitute - - A substitute is a command invocation stored in the - Nix database that describes how to build a store object, bypassing - the normal build mechanism (i.e., derivations). Typically, the - substitute builds the store object by downloading a pre-built - version of the store object from some server. - - - - -purity - - The assumption that equal Nix derivations when run - always produce the same output. This cannot be guaranteed in - general (e.g., a builder can rely on external inputs such as the - network or the system time) but the Nix model assumes - it. - - - - -Nix expression - - A high-level description of software packages and - compositions thereof. Deploying software using Nix entails writing - Nix expressions for your packages. Nix expressions are translated - to derivations that are stored in the Nix store. These derivations - can then be built. - - - - -reference - - - A store path P is said to have a - reference to a store path Q if the store object - at P contains the path Q - somewhere. The references of a store path are - the set of store paths to which it has a reference. - - A derivation can reference other derivations and sources - (but not output paths), whereas an output path only references other - output paths. - - - - - -reachable - - A store path Q is reachable from - another store path P if Q is in the - closure of the - references relation. - - - -closure - - The closure of a store path is the set of store - paths that are directly or indirectly “reachable” from that store - path; that is, it’s the closure of the path under the references relation. For a package, the - closure of its derivation is equivalent to the build-time - dependencies, while the closure of its output path is equivalent to its - runtime dependencies. For correct deployment it is necessary to deploy whole - closures, since otherwise at runtime files could be missing. The command - nix-store -qR prints out closures of store paths. - - As an example, if the store object at path P contains - a reference to path Q, then Q is - in the closure of P. Further, if Q - references R then R is also in - the closure of P. - - - - - -output path - - A store path produced by a derivation. - - - - -deriver - - The deriver of an output path is the store - derivation that built it. - - - - -validity - - A store path is considered - valid if it exists in the file system, is - listed in the Nix database as being valid, and if all paths in its - closure are also valid. - - - - -user environment - - An automatically generated store object that - consists of a set of symlinks to “active” applications, i.e., other - store paths. These are generated automatically by nix-env. See . - - - - - - -profile - - A symlink to the current user environment of a user, e.g., - /nix/var/nix/profiles/default. - - - - -NAR - - A Nix - ARchive. This is a serialisation of a path in - the Nix store. It can contain regular files, directories and - symbolic links. NARs are generated and unpacked using - nix-store --dump and nix-store - --restore. - - - - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/hacking.xml b/doc/manual/hacking.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 5d9f08d38..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/hacking.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,74 +0,0 @@ - - -Hacking - -This section provides some notes on how to hack on Nix. To get -the latest version of Nix from GitHub: - -$ git clone https://github.com/NixOS/nix.git -$ cd nix - - - -To build Nix for the current operating system/architecture use - - -$ nix-build - - -or if you have a flakes-enabled nix: - - -$ nix build - - -This will build defaultPackage attribute defined in the flake.nix file. - -To build for other platforms add one of the following suffixes to it: aarch64-linux, -i686-linux, x86_64-darwin, x86_64-linux. - -i.e. - - -$ nix-build -A defaultPackage.x86_64-linux - - - - -To build all dependencies and start a shell in which all -environment variables are set up so that those dependencies can be -found: - -$ nix-shell - -To build Nix itself in this shell: - -[nix-shell]$ ./bootstrap.sh -[nix-shell]$ ./configure $configureFlags -[nix-shell]$ make -j $NIX_BUILD_CORES - -To install it in $(pwd)/inst and test it: - -[nix-shell]$ make install -[nix-shell]$ make installcheck -[nix-shell]$ ./inst/bin/nix --version -nix (Nix) 2.4 - - -If you have a flakes-enabled nix you can replace: - - -$ nix-shell - - -by: - - -$ nix develop - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/installation/building-source.xml b/doc/manual/installation/building-source.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 469aaebe9..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/installation/building-source.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,49 +0,0 @@ -
- -Building Nix from Source - -After unpacking or checking out the Nix sources, issue the -following commands: - - -$ ./configure options... -$ make -$ make install - -Nix requires GNU Make so you may need to invoke -gmake instead. - -When building from the Git repository, these should be preceded -by the command: - - -$ ./bootstrap.sh - - - -The installation path can be specified by passing the - to -configure. The default installation directory is -/usr/local. You can change this to any location -you like. You must have write permission to the -prefix path. - -Nix keeps its store (the place where -packages are stored) in /nix/store by default. -This can be changed using -. - -It is best not to change the Nix -store from its default, since doing so makes it impossible to use -pre-built binaries from the standard Nixpkgs channels — that is, all -packages will need to be built from source. - -Nix keeps state (such as its database and log files) in -/nix/var by default. This can be changed using -. - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/installation/env-variables.xml b/doc/manual/installation/env-variables.xml deleted file mode 100644 index cbce8559a..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/installation/env-variables.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,89 +0,0 @@ - - -Environment Variables - -To use Nix, some environment variables should be set. In -particular, PATH should contain the directories -prefix/bin and -~/.nix-profile/bin. The first directory contains -the Nix tools themselves, while ~/.nix-profile is -a symbolic link to the current user environment -(an automatically generated package consisting of symlinks to -installed packages). The simplest way to set the required environment -variables is to include the file -prefix/etc/profile.d/nix.sh -in your ~/.profile (or similar), like this: - - -source prefix/etc/profile.d/nix.sh - -
- -<literal>NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE</literal> - -If you need to specify a custom certificate bundle to account -for an HTTPS-intercepting man in the middle proxy, you must specify -the path to the certificate bundle in the environment variable -NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE. - - -If you don't specify a NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE -manually, Nix will install and use its own certificate -bundle. - - - Set the environment variable and install Nix - -$ export NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE=/etc/ssl/my-certificate-bundle.crt -$ sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) - - - In the shell profile and rc files (for example, - /etc/bashrc, /etc/zshrc), - add the following line: - -export NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE=/etc/ssl/my-certificate-bundle.crt - - - - -You must not add the export and then do the install, as -the Nix installer will detect the presense of Nix configuration, and -abort. - -
-<literal>NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE</literal> with macOS and the Nix daemon - -On macOS you must specify the environment variable for the Nix -daemon service, then restart it: - - -$ sudo launchctl setenv NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE /etc/ssl/my-certificate-bundle.crt -$ sudo launchctl kickstart -k system/org.nixos.nix-daemon - -
- -
- -Proxy Environment Variables - -The Nix installer has special handling for these proxy-related -environment variables: -http_proxy, https_proxy, -ftp_proxy, no_proxy, -HTTP_PROXY, HTTPS_PROXY, -FTP_PROXY, NO_PROXY. - -If any of these variables are set when running the Nix installer, -then the installer will create an override file at -/etc/systemd/system/nix-daemon.service.d/override.conf -so nix-daemon will use them. - -
- -
-
diff --git a/doc/manual/installation/installation.xml b/doc/manual/installation/installation.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 878959352..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/installation/installation.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,34 +0,0 @@ - - -Installation - - -This section describes how to install and configure Nix for first-time use. - - - - - - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/installation/installing-binary.xml b/doc/manual/installation/installing-binary.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 439198e6c..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/installation/installing-binary.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,469 +0,0 @@ - - -Installing a Binary Distribution - - - If you are using Linux or macOS versions up to 10.14 (Mojave), the - easiest way to install Nix is to run the following command: - - - - $ sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) - - - - If you're using macOS 10.15 (Catalina) or newer, consult - the macOS installation instructions - before installing. - - - - As of Nix 2.1.0, the Nix installer will always default to creating a - single-user installation, however opting in to the multi-user - installation is highly recommended. - - - -
- Single User Installation - - - To explicitly select a single-user installation on your system: - - - sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) --no-daemon - - - - -This will perform a single-user installation of Nix, meaning that -/nix is owned by the invoking user. You should -run this under your usual user account, not as -root. The script will invoke sudo to create -/nix if it doesn’t already exist. If you don’t -have sudo, you should manually create -/nix first as root, e.g.: - - -$ mkdir /nix -$ chown alice /nix - - -The install script will modify the first writable file from amongst -.bash_profile, .bash_login -and .profile to source -~/.nix-profile/etc/profile.d/nix.sh. You can set -the NIX_INSTALLER_NO_MODIFY_PROFILE environment -variable before executing the install script to disable this -behaviour. - - - -You can uninstall Nix simply by running: - - -$ rm -rf /nix - - - -
- -
- Multi User Installation - - The multi-user Nix installation creates system users, and a system - service for the Nix daemon. - - - - Supported Systems - - - Linux running systemd, with SELinux disabled - - macOS - - - - You can instruct the installer to perform a multi-user - installation on your system: - - - sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) --daemon - - - The multi-user installation of Nix will create build users between - the user IDs 30001 and 30032, and a group with the group ID 30000. - - You should run this under your usual user account, - not as root. The script will invoke - sudo as needed. - - - - If you need Nix to use a different group ID or user ID set, you - will have to download the tarball manually and edit the install - script. - - - - The installer will modify /etc/bashrc, and - /etc/zshrc if they exist. The installer will - first back up these files with a - .backup-before-nix extension. The installer - will also create /etc/profile.d/nix.sh. - - - You can uninstall Nix with the following commands: - - -sudo rm -rf /etc/profile/nix.sh /etc/nix /nix ~root/.nix-profile ~root/.nix-defexpr ~root/.nix-channels ~/.nix-profile ~/.nix-defexpr ~/.nix-channels - -# If you are on Linux with systemd, you will need to run: -sudo systemctl stop nix-daemon.socket -sudo systemctl stop nix-daemon.service -sudo systemctl disable nix-daemon.socket -sudo systemctl disable nix-daemon.service -sudo systemctl daemon-reload - -# If you are on macOS, you will need to run: -sudo launchctl unload /Library/LaunchDaemons/org.nixos.nix-daemon.plist -sudo rm /Library/LaunchDaemons/org.nixos.nix-daemon.plist - - - There may also be references to Nix in - /etc/profile, - /etc/bashrc, and - /etc/zshrc which you may remove. - - -
- -
- macOS Installation - - - Starting with macOS 10.15 (Catalina), the root filesystem is read-only. - This means /nix can no longer live on your system - volume, and that you'll need a workaround to install Nix. - - - - The recommended approach, which creates an unencrypted APFS volume - for your Nix store and a "synthetic" empty directory to mount it - over at /nix, is least likely to impair Nix - or your system. - - - - With all separate-volume approaches, it's possible something on - your system (particularly daemons/services and restored apps) may - need access to your Nix store before the volume is mounted. Adding - additional encryption makes this more likely. - - - - If you're using a recent Mac with a - T2 chip, - your drive will still be encrypted at rest (in which case "unencrypted" - is a bit of a misnomer). To use this approach, just install Nix with: - - - $ sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) --darwin-use-unencrypted-nix-store-volume - - - If you don't like the sound of this, you'll want to weigh the - other approaches and tradeoffs detailed in this section. - - - - Eventual solutions? - - All of the known workarounds have drawbacks, but we hope - better solutions will be available in the future. Some that - we have our eye on are: - - - - - A true firmlink would enable the Nix store to live on the - primary data volume without the build problems caused by - the symlink approach. End users cannot currently - create true firmlinks. - - - - - If the Nix store volume shared FileVault encryption - with the primary data volume (probably by using the same - volume group and role), FileVault encryption could be - easily supported by the installer without requiring - manual setup by each user. - - - - - -
- Change the Nix store path prefix - - Changing the default prefix for the Nix store is a simple - approach which enables you to leave it on your root volume, - where it can take full advantage of FileVault encryption if - enabled. Unfortunately, this approach also opts your device out - of some benefits that are enabled by using the same prefix - across systems: - - - - - Your system won't be able to take advantage of the binary - cache (unless someone is able to stand up and support - duplicate caching infrastructure), which means you'll - spend more time waiting for builds. - - - - - It's harder to build and deploy packages to Linux systems. - - - - - - - - It would also possible (and often requested) to just apply this - change ecosystem-wide, but it's an intrusive process that has - side effects we want to avoid for now. - - - - -
- -
- Use a separate encrypted volume - - If you like, you can also add encryption to the recommended - approach taken by the installer. You can do this by pre-creating - an encrypted volume before you run the installer--or you can - run the installer and encrypt the volume it creates later. - - - - In either case, adding encryption to a second volume isn't quite - as simple as enabling FileVault for your boot volume. Before you - dive in, there are a few things to weigh: - - - - - The additional volume won't be encrypted with your existing - FileVault key, so you'll need another mechanism to decrypt - the volume. - - - - - You can store the password in Keychain to automatically - decrypt the volume on boot--but it'll have to wait on Keychain - and may not mount before your GUI apps restore. If any of - your launchd agents or apps depend on Nix-installed software - (for example, if you use a Nix-installed login shell), the - restore may fail or break. - - - On a case-by-case basis, you may be able to work around this - problem by using wait4path to block - execution until your executable is available. - - - It's also possible to decrypt and mount the volume earlier - with a login hook--but this mechanism appears to be - deprecated and its future is unclear. - - - - - You can hard-code the password in the clear, so that your - store volume can be decrypted before Keychain is available. - - - - - If you are comfortable navigating these tradeoffs, you can encrypt the volume with - something along the lines of: - - - - alice$ diskutil apfs enableFileVault /nix -user disk - - -
- -
- - Symlink the Nix store to a custom location - - Another simple approach is using /etc/synthetic.conf - to symlink the Nix store to the data volume. This option also - enables your store to share any configured FileVault encryption. - Unfortunately, builds that resolve the symlink may leak the - canonical path or even fail. - - - Because of these downsides, we can't recommend this approach. - - -
- -
- Notes on the recommended approach - - This section goes into a little more detail on the recommended - approach. You don't need to understand it to run the installer, - but it can serve as a helpful reference if you run into trouble. - - - - - In order to compose user-writable locations into the new - read-only system root, Apple introduced a new concept called - firmlinks, which it describes as a - "bi-directional wormhole" between two filesystems. You can - see the current firmlinks in /usr/share/firmlinks. - Unfortunately, firmlinks aren't (currently?) user-configurable. - - - - For special cases like NFS mount points or package manager roots, - synthetic.conf(5) - supports limited user-controlled file-creation (of symlinks, - and synthetic empty directories) at /. - To create a synthetic empty directory for mounting at /nix, - add the following line to /etc/synthetic.conf - (create it if necessary): - - - nix - - - - - This configuration is applied at boot time, but you can use - apfs.util to trigger creation (not deletion) - of new entries without a reboot: - - - alice$ /System/Library/Filesystems/apfs.fs/Contents/Resources/apfs.util -B - - - - - Create the new APFS volume with diskutil: - - - alice$ sudo diskutil apfs addVolume diskX APFS 'Nix Store' -mountpoint /nix - - - - - Using vifs, add the new mount to - /etc/fstab. If it doesn't already have - other entries, it should look something like: - - - -# -# Warning - this file should only be modified with vifs(8) -# -# Failure to do so is unsupported and may be destructive. -# -LABEL=Nix\040Store /nix apfs rw,nobrowse - - - - The nobrowse setting will keep Spotlight from indexing this - volume, and keep it from showing up on your desktop. - - - -
- -
- -
- Installing a pinned Nix version from a URL - - - NixOS.org hosts version-specific installation URLs for all Nix - versions since 1.11.16, at - https://releases.nixos.org/nix/nix-version/install. - - - - These install scripts can be used the same as the main - NixOS.org installation script: - - - sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) - - - - - In the same directory of the install script are sha256 sums, and - gpg signature files. - -
- -
- Installing from a binary tarball - - - You can also download a binary tarball that contains Nix and all - its dependencies. (This is what the install script at - https://nixos.org/nix/install does automatically.) You - should unpack it somewhere (e.g. in /tmp), - and then run the script named install inside - the binary tarball: - - - -alice$ cd /tmp -alice$ tar xfj nix-1.8-x86_64-darwin.tar.bz2 -alice$ cd nix-1.8-x86_64-darwin -alice$ ./install - - - - - If you need to edit the multi-user installation script to use - different group ID or a different user ID range, modify the - variables set in the file named - install-multi-user. - -
-
diff --git a/doc/manual/installation/installing-source.xml b/doc/manual/installation/installing-source.xml deleted file mode 100644 index c261a109d..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/installation/installing-source.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,16 +0,0 @@ - - -Installing Nix from Source - -If no binary package is available, you can download and compile -a source distribution. - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/installation/multi-user.xml b/doc/manual/installation/multi-user.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 835bd3a52..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/installation/multi-user.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,107 +0,0 @@ -
- -Multi-User Mode - -To allow a Nix store to be shared safely among multiple users, -it is important that users are not able to run builders that modify -the Nix store or database in arbitrary ways, or that interfere with -builds started by other users. If they could do so, they could -install a Trojan horse in some package and compromise the accounts of -other users. - -To prevent this, the Nix store and database are owned by some -privileged user (usually root) and builders are -executed under special user accounts (usually named -nixbld1, nixbld2, etc.). When a -unprivileged user runs a Nix command, actions that operate on the Nix -store (such as builds) are forwarded to a Nix -daemon running under the owner of the Nix store/database -that performs the operation. - -Multi-user mode has one important limitation: only -root and a set of trusted -users specified in nix.conf can specify arbitrary -binary caches. So while unprivileged users may install packages from -arbitrary Nix expressions, they may not get pre-built -binaries. - - -
- -Setting up the build users - -The build users are the special UIDs under -which builds are performed. They should all be members of the -build users group nixbld. -This group should have no other members. The build users should not -be members of any other group. On Linux, you can create the group and -users as follows: - - -$ groupadd -r nixbld -$ for n in $(seq 1 10); do useradd -c "Nix build user $n" \ - -d /var/empty -g nixbld -G nixbld -M -N -r -s "$(which nologin)" \ - nixbld$n; done - - -This creates 10 build users. There can never be more concurrent builds -than the number of build users, so you may want to increase this if -you expect to do many builds at the same time. - -
- - -
- -Running the daemon - -The Nix daemon should be -started as follows (as root): - - -$ nix-daemon - -You’ll want to put that line somewhere in your system’s boot -scripts. - -To let unprivileged users use the daemon, they should set the -NIX_REMOTE environment -variable to daemon. So you should put a -line like - - -export NIX_REMOTE=daemon - -into the users’ login scripts. - -
- - -
- -Restricting access - -To limit which users can perform Nix operations, you can use the -permissions on the directory -/nix/var/nix/daemon-socket. For instance, if you -want to restrict the use of Nix to the members of a group called -nix-users, do - - -$ chgrp nix-users /nix/var/nix/daemon-socket -$ chmod ug=rwx,o= /nix/var/nix/daemon-socket - - -This way, users who are not in the nix-users group -cannot connect to the Unix domain socket -/nix/var/nix/daemon-socket/socket, so they cannot -perform Nix operations. - -
- - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/installation/nix-security.xml b/doc/manual/installation/nix-security.xml deleted file mode 100644 index d888ff14d..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/installation/nix-security.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,27 +0,0 @@ - - -Security - -Nix has two basic security models. First, it can be used in -“single-user mode”, which is similar to what most other package -management tools do: there is a single user (typically root) who performs all package -management operations. All other users can then use the installed -packages, but they cannot perform package management operations -themselves. - -Alternatively, you can configure Nix in “multi-user mode”. In -this model, all users can perform package management operations — for -instance, every user can install software without requiring root -privileges. Nix ensures that this is secure. For instance, it’s not -possible for one user to overwrite a package used by another user with -a Trojan horse. - - - - - \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/doc/manual/installation/obtaining-source.xml b/doc/manual/installation/obtaining-source.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 968822cc0..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/installation/obtaining-source.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,30 +0,0 @@ -
- -Obtaining a Source Distribution - -The source tarball of the most recent stable release can be -downloaded from the Nix homepage. -You can also grab the most -recent development release. - -Alternatively, the most recent sources of Nix can be obtained -from its Git -repository. For example, the following command will check out -the latest revision into a directory called -nix: - - -$ git clone https://github.com/NixOS/nix - -Likewise, specific releases can be obtained from the tags of the -repository. - -
\ No newline at end of file diff --git a/doc/manual/installation/prerequisites-source.xml b/doc/manual/installation/prerequisites-source.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 77955eecc..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/installation/prerequisites-source.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,101 +0,0 @@ -
- -Prerequisites - - - - GNU Autoconf - () - and the autoconf-archive macro collection - (). - These are only needed to run the bootstrap script, and are not necessary - if your source distribution came with a pre-built - ./configure script. - - GNU Make. - - Bash Shell. The ./configure script - relies on bashisms, so Bash is required. - - A version of GCC or Clang that supports C++17. - - pkg-config to locate - dependencies. If your distribution does not provide it, you can get - it from . - - The OpenSSL library to calculate cryptographic hashes. - If your distribution does not provide it, you can get it from . - - The libbrotlienc and - libbrotlidec libraries to provide implementation - of the Brotli compression algorithm. They are available for download - from the official repository . - - The bzip2 compressor program and the - libbz2 library. Thus you must have bzip2 - installed, including development headers and libraries. If your - distribution does not provide these, you can obtain bzip2 from . - - liblzma, which is provided by - XZ Utils. If your distribution does not provide this, you can - get it from . - - cURL and its library. If your distribution does not - provide it, you can get it from . - - The SQLite embedded database library, version 3.6.19 - or higher. If your distribution does not provide it, please install - it from . - - The Boehm - garbage collector to reduce the evaluator’s memory - consumption (optional). To enable it, install - pkgconfig and the Boehm garbage collector, and - pass the flag to - configure. - - The boost library of version - 1.66.0 or higher. It can be obtained from the official web site - . - - The editline library of version - 1.14.0 or higher. It can be obtained from the its repository - . - - Recent versions of Bison and Flex to build the - parser. (This is because Nix needs GLR support in Bison and - reentrancy support in Flex.) For Bison, you need version 2.6, which - can be obtained from the GNU FTP - server. For Flex, you need version 2.5.35, which is - available on SourceForge. - Slightly older versions may also work, but ancient versions like the - ubiquitous 2.5.4a won't. Note that these are only required if you - modify the parser or when you are building from the Git - repository. - - The libseccomp is used to provide - syscall filtering on Linux. This is an optional dependency and can - be disabled passing a - option to the configure script (Not recommended - unless your system doesn't support - libseccomp). To get the library, visit . - - - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/installation/single-user.xml b/doc/manual/installation/single-user.xml deleted file mode 100644 index e9a761af3..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/installation/single-user.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,21 +0,0 @@ -
- -Single-User Mode - -In single-user mode, all Nix operations that access the database -in prefix/var/nix/db -or modify the Nix store in -prefix/store must be -performed under the user ID that owns those directories. This is -typically root. (If you -install from RPM packages, that’s in fact the default ownership.) -However, on single-user machines, it is often convenient to -chown those directories to your normal user account -so that you don’t have to su to root all the time. - -
\ No newline at end of file diff --git a/doc/manual/installation/supported-platforms.xml b/doc/manual/installation/supported-platforms.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 3e74be49d..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/installation/supported-platforms.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,36 +0,0 @@ - - -Supported Platforms - -Nix is currently supported on the following platforms: - - - - Linux (i686, x86_64, aarch64). - - macOS (x86_64). - - - - - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/installation/upgrading.xml b/doc/manual/installation/upgrading.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 592f63895..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/installation/upgrading.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,27 +0,0 @@ - - - Upgrading Nix - - - Multi-user Nix users on macOS can upgrade Nix by running: - sudo -i sh -c 'nix-channel --update && - nix-env -iA nixpkgs.nix && - launchctl remove org.nixos.nix-daemon && - launchctl load /Library/LaunchDaemons/org.nixos.nix-daemon.plist' - - - - - Single-user installations of Nix should run this: - nix-channel --update; nix-env -iA nixpkgs.nix nixpkgs.cacert - - - - Multi-user Nix users on Linux should run this with sudo: - nix-channel --update; nix-env -iA nixpkgs.nix nixpkgs.cacert; systemctl daemon-reload; systemctl restart nix-daemon - - diff --git a/doc/manual/introduction/about-nix.xml b/doc/manual/introduction/about-nix.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 039185703..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/introduction/about-nix.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,268 +0,0 @@ - - -About Nix - -Nix is a purely functional package manager. -This means that it treats packages like values in purely functional -programming languages such as Haskell — they are built by functions -that don’t have side-effects, and they never change after they have -been built. Nix stores packages in the Nix -store, usually the directory -/nix/store, where each package has its own unique -subdirectory such as - - -/nix/store/b6gvzjyb2pg0kjfwrjmg1vfhh54ad73z-firefox-33.1/ - - -where b6gvzjyb2pg0… is a unique identifier for the -package that captures all its dependencies (it’s a cryptographic hash -of the package’s build dependency graph). This enables many powerful -features. - - -
Multiple versions - -You can have multiple versions or variants of a package -installed at the same time. This is especially important when -different applications have dependencies on different versions of the -same package — it prevents the “DLL hell”. Because of the hashing -scheme, different versions of a package end up in different paths in -the Nix store, so they don’t interfere with each other. - -An important consequence is that operations like upgrading or -uninstalling an application cannot break other applications, since -these operations never “destructively” update or delete files that are -used by other packages. - -
- - -
Complete dependencies - -Nix helps you make sure that package dependency specifications -are complete. In general, when you’re making a package for a package -management system like RPM, you have to specify for each package what -its dependencies are, but there are no guarantees that this -specification is complete. If you forget a dependency, then the -package will build and work correctly on your -machine if you have the dependency installed, but not on the end -user's machine if it's not there. - -Since Nix on the other hand doesn’t install packages in “global” -locations like /usr/bin but in package-specific -directories, the risk of incomplete dependencies is greatly reduced. -This is because tools such as compilers don’t search in per-packages -directories such as -/nix/store/5lbfaxb722zp…-openssl-0.9.8d/include, -so if a package builds correctly on your system, this is because you -specified the dependency explicitly. This takes care of the build-time -dependencies. - -Once a package is built, runtime dependencies are found by -scanning binaries for the hash parts of Nix store paths (such as -r8vvq9kq…). This sounds risky, but it works -extremely well. - -
- - -
Multi-user support - -Nix has multi-user support. This means that non-privileged -users can securely install software. Each user can have a different -profile, a set of packages in the Nix store that -appear in the user’s PATH. If a user installs a -package that another user has already installed previously, the -package won’t be built or downloaded a second time. At the same time, -it is not possible for one user to inject a Trojan horse into a -package that might be used by another user. - -
- - -
Atomic upgrades and rollbacks - -Since package management operations never overwrite packages in -the Nix store but just add new versions in different paths, they are -atomic. So during a package upgrade, there is no -time window in which the package has some files from the old version -and some files from the new version — which would be bad because a -program might well crash if it’s started during that period. - -And since packages aren’t overwritten, the old versions are still -there after an upgrade. This means that you can roll -back to the old version: - - -$ nix-env --upgrade some-packages -$ nix-env --rollback - - -
- - -
Garbage collection - -When you uninstall a package like this… - - -$ nix-env --uninstall firefox - - -the package isn’t deleted from the system right away (after all, you -might want to do a rollback, or it might be in the profiles of other -users). Instead, unused packages can be deleted safely by running the -garbage collector: - - -$ nix-collect-garbage - - -This deletes all packages that aren’t in use by any user profile or by -a currently running program. - -
- - -
Functional package language - -Packages are built from Nix expressions, -which is a simple functional language. A Nix expression describes -everything that goes into a package build action (a “derivation”): -other packages, sources, the build script, environment variables for -the build script, etc. Nix tries very hard to ensure that Nix -expressions are deterministic: building a Nix -expression twice should yield the same result. - -Because it’s a functional language, it’s easy to support -building variants of a package: turn the Nix expression into a -function and call it any number of times with the appropriate -arguments. Due to the hashing scheme, variants don’t conflict with -each other in the Nix store. - -
- - -
Transparent source/binary deployment - -Nix expressions generally describe how to build a package from -source, so an installation action like - - -$ nix-env --install firefox - - -could cause quite a bit of build activity, as not -only Firefox but also all its dependencies (all the way up to the C -library and the compiler) would have to built, at least if they are -not already in the Nix store. This is a source deployment -model. For most users, building from source is not very -pleasant as it takes far too long. However, Nix can automatically -skip building from source and instead use a binary -cache, a web server that provides pre-built binaries. For -instance, when asked to build -/nix/store/b6gvzjyb2pg0…-firefox-33.1 from source, -Nix would first check if the file -https://cache.nixos.org/b6gvzjyb2pg0….narinfo exists, and -if so, fetch the pre-built binary referenced from there; otherwise, it -would fall back to building from source. - -
- - - - - -
Nix Packages collection - -We provide a large set of Nix expressions containing hundreds of -existing Unix packages, the Nix Packages -collection (Nixpkgs). - -
- - -
Managing build environments - -Nix is extremely useful for developers as it makes it easy to -automatically set up the build environment for a package. Given a -Nix expression that describes the dependencies of your package, the -command nix-shell will build or download those -dependencies if they’re not already in your Nix store, and then start -a Bash shell in which all necessary environment variables (such as -compiler search paths) are set. - -For example, the following command gets all dependencies of the -Pan newsreader, as described by its -Nix expression: - - -$ nix-shell '<nixpkgs>' -A pan - - -You’re then dropped into a shell where you can edit, build and test -the package: - - -[nix-shell]$ tar xf $src -[nix-shell]$ cd pan-* -[nix-shell]$ ./configure -[nix-shell]$ make -[nix-shell]$ ./pan/gui/pan - - - - -
- - -
Portability - -Nix runs on Linux and macOS. - -
- - -
NixOS - -NixOS is a Linux distribution based on Nix. It uses Nix not -just for package management but also to manage the system -configuration (e.g., to build configuration files in -/etc). This means, among other things, that it -is easy to roll back the entire configuration of the system to an -earlier state. Also, users can install software without root -privileges. For more information and downloads, see the NixOS homepage. - -
- - -
License - -Nix is released under the terms of the GNU -LGPLv2.1 or (at your option) any later version. - -
- - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/introduction/introduction.xml b/doc/manual/introduction/introduction.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 12b2cc761..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/introduction/introduction.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,12 +0,0 @@ - - -Introduction - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/introduction/quick-start.xml b/doc/manual/introduction/quick-start.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 5d9a55e4e..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/introduction/quick-start.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,124 +0,0 @@ - - -Quick Start - -This chapter is for impatient people who don't like reading -documentation. For more in-depth information you are kindly referred -to subsequent chapters. - - - -Install single-user Nix by running the following: - - -$ bash <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) - - -This will install Nix in /nix. The install script -will create /nix using sudo, -so make sure you have sufficient rights. (For other installation -methods, see .) - -See what installable packages are currently available -in the channel: - - -$ nix-env -qa -docbook-xml-4.3 -docbook-xml-4.5 -firefox-33.0.2 -hello-2.9 -libxslt-1.1.28 -... - - - -Install some packages from the channel: - - -$ nix-env -i hello - -This should download pre-built packages; it should not build them -locally (if it does, something went wrong). - -Test that they work: - - -$ which hello -/home/eelco/.nix-profile/bin/hello -$ hello -Hello, world! - - - - -Uninstall a package: - - -$ nix-env -e hello - - - -You can also test a package without installing it: - - -$ nix-shell -p hello - - -This builds or downloads GNU Hello and its dependencies, then drops -you into a Bash shell where the hello command is -present, all without affecting your normal environment: - - -[nix-shell:~]$ hello -Hello, world! - -[nix-shell:~]$ exit - -$ hello -hello: command not found - - - - -To keep up-to-date with the channel, do: - - -$ nix-channel --update nixpkgs -$ nix-env -u '*' - -The latter command will upgrade each installed package for which there -is a “newer” version (as determined by comparing the version -numbers). - -If you're unhappy with the result of a -nix-env action (e.g., an upgraded package turned -out not to work properly), you can go back: - - -$ nix-env --rollback - - - -You should periodically run the Nix garbage collector -to get rid of unused packages, since uninstalls or upgrades don't -actually delete them: - - -$ nix-collect-garbage -d - - - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/local.mk b/doc/manual/local.mk index 13d937f8d..2d730a60e 100644 --- a/doc/manual/local.mk +++ b/doc/manual/local.mk @@ -2,14 +2,6 @@ ifeq ($(doc_generate),yes) MANUAL_SRCS := $(call rwildcard, $(d)/src, *.md) -#$(d)/version.txt: -# $(trace-gen) echo -n $(PACKAGE_VERSION) > $@ - -clean-files += $(d)/version.txt - -dist-files += $(d)/version.txt - - # Generate man pages. man-pages := $(foreach n, \ nix-env.1 nix-build.1 nix-shell.1 nix-store.1 nix-instantiate.1 \ @@ -38,5 +30,4 @@ install: $(docdir)/manual/index.html $(docdir)/manual/index.html: $(MANUAL_SRCS) $(trace-gen) mdbook build doc/manual -d $(docdir)/manual - endif diff --git a/doc/manual/manual.xml b/doc/manual/manual.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 87d9de28a..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/manual.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,52 +0,0 @@ - - - - Nix Package Manager Guide - Version - - - - Eelco - Dolstra - - Author - - - - 2004-2018 - Eelco Dolstra - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/nix-lang-ref.xml b/doc/manual/nix-lang-ref.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 86273ac3d..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/nix-lang-ref.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,182 +0,0 @@ - - Nix Language Reference - - - Grammar - - - Expressions - - - Expr - - - - - - - ExprFunction - - '{' '}' ':' - | - - - - - - ExprAssert - - 'assert' ';' - | - - - - - - ExprIf - - 'if' 'then' - 'else' - | - - - - - - ExprOp - - '!' - | - '==' - | - '!=' - | - '&&' - | - '||' - | - '->' - | - '//' - | - '~' - | - '?' - | - - - - - - ExprApp - - '.' - | - - - - - - ExprSelect - - - | - - - - - - ExprSimple - - | - | - | - | - - | - 'true' | 'false' | 'null' - | - '(' ')' - | - '{' * '}' - | - 'let' '{' * '}' - | - 'rec' '{' * '}' - | - '[' * ']' - - - - - Bind - - '=' ';' - | - 'inherit' ('(' ')')? * ';' - - - - - Formals - - ',' - | - - - - - Formal - - - | - '?' - - - - - - - Terminals - - - Id - [a-zA-Z\_][a-zA-Z0-9\_\']* - - - - Int - [0-9]+ - - - - Str - \"[^\n\"]*\" - - - - Path - [a-zA-Z0-9\.\_\-\+]*(\/[a-zA-Z0-9\.\_\-\+]+)+ - - - - Uri - [a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z0-9\+\-\.]*\:[a-zA-Z0-9\%\/\?\:\@\&\=\+\$\,\-\_\.\!\~\*\']+ - - - - Whitespace - - [ \t\n]+ - | - \#[^\n]* - | - \/\*(.|\n)*\*\/ - - - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/packages/basic-package-mgmt.xml b/doc/manual/packages/basic-package-mgmt.xml deleted file mode 100644 index b8a2c7ab3..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/packages/basic-package-mgmt.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,194 +0,0 @@ - - -Basic Package Management - -The main command for package management is nix-env. You can use -it to install, upgrade, and erase packages, and to query what -packages are installed or are available for installation. - -In Nix, different users can have different “views” -on the set of installed applications. That is, there might be lots of -applications present on the system (possibly in many different -versions), but users can have a specific selection of those active — -where “active” just means that it appears in a directory -in the user’s PATH. Such a view on the set of -installed applications is called a user -environment, which is just a directory tree consisting of -symlinks to the files of the active applications. - -Components are installed from a set of Nix -expressions that tell Nix how to build those packages, -including, if necessary, their dependencies. There is a collection of -Nix expressions called the Nixpkgs package collection that contains -packages ranging from basic development stuff such as GCC and Glibc, -to end-user applications like Mozilla Firefox. (Nix is however not -tied to the Nixpkgs package collection; you could write your own Nix -expressions based on Nixpkgs, or completely new ones.) - -You can manually download the latest version of Nixpkgs from -. However, -it’s much more convenient to use the Nixpkgs -channel, since it makes it easy to stay up to -date with new versions of Nixpkgs. (Channels are described in more -detail in .) Nixpkgs is automatically -added to your list of “subscribed” channels when you install -Nix. If this is not the case for some reason, you can add it as -follows: - - -$ nix-channel --add https://nixos.org/channels/nixpkgs-unstable -$ nix-channel --update - - - - -On NixOS, you’re automatically subscribed to a NixOS -channel corresponding to your NixOS major release -(e.g. http://nixos.org/channels/nixos-14.12). A NixOS -channel is identical to the Nixpkgs channel, except that it contains -only Linux binaries and is updated only if a set of regression tests -succeed. - -You can view the set of available packages in Nixpkgs: - - -$ nix-env -qa -aterm-2.2 -bash-3.0 -binutils-2.15 -bison-1.875d -blackdown-1.4.2 -bzip2-1.0.2 -… - -The flag specifies a query operation, and - means that you want to show the “available” (i.e., -installable) packages, as opposed to the installed packages. If you -downloaded Nixpkgs yourself, or if you checked it out from GitHub, -then you need to pass the path to your Nixpkgs tree using the - flag: - - -$ nix-env -qaf /path/to/nixpkgs - - -where /path/to/nixpkgs is where you’ve -unpacked or checked out Nixpkgs. - -You can select specific packages by name: - - -$ nix-env -qa firefox -firefox-34.0.5 -firefox-with-plugins-34.0.5 - - -and using regular expressions: - - -$ nix-env -qa 'firefox.*' - - - - -It is also possible to see the status of -available packages, i.e., whether they are installed into the user -environment and/or present in the system: - - -$ nix-env -qas -… --PS bash-3.0 ---S binutils-2.15 -IPS bison-1.875d -… - -The first character (I) indicates whether the -package is installed in your current user environment. The second -(P) indicates whether it is present on your system -(in which case installing it into your user environment would be a -very quick operation). The last one (S) indicates -whether there is a so-called substitute for the -package, which is Nix’s mechanism for doing binary deployment. It -just means that Nix knows that it can fetch a pre-built package from -somewhere (typically a network server) instead of building it -locally. - -You can install a package using nix-env -i. -For instance, - - -$ nix-env -i subversion - -will install the package called subversion (which -is, of course, the Subversion version -management system). - -When you ask Nix to install a package, it will first try -to get it in pre-compiled form from a binary -cache. By default, Nix will use the binary cache -https://cache.nixos.org; it contains binaries for most -packages in Nixpkgs. Only if no binary is available in the binary -cache, Nix will build the package from source. So if nix-env --i subversion results in Nix building stuff from source, -then either the package is not built for your platform by the Nixpkgs -build servers, or your version of Nixpkgs is too old or too new. For -instance, if you have a very recent checkout of Nixpkgs, then the -Nixpkgs build servers may not have had a chance to build everything -and upload the resulting binaries to -https://cache.nixos.org. The Nixpkgs channel is only -updated after all binaries have been uploaded to the cache, so if you -stick to the Nixpkgs channel (rather than using a Git checkout of the -Nixpkgs tree), you will get binaries for most packages. - -Naturally, packages can also be uninstalled: - - -$ nix-env -e subversion - - - -Upgrading to a new version is just as easy. If you have a new -release of Nix Packages, you can do: - - -$ nix-env -u subversion - -This will only upgrade Subversion if there is a -“newer” version in the new set of Nix expressions, as -defined by some pretty arbitrary rules regarding ordering of version -numbers (which generally do what you’d expect of them). To just -unconditionally replace Subversion with whatever version is in the Nix -expressions, use -i instead of --u; -i will remove -whatever version is already installed. - -You can also upgrade all packages for which there are newer -versions: - - -$ nix-env -u - - - -Sometimes it’s useful to be able to ask what -nix-env would do, without actually doing it. For -instance, to find out what packages would be upgraded by -nix-env -u, you can do - - -$ nix-env -u --dry-run -(dry run; not doing anything) -upgrading `libxslt-1.1.0' to `libxslt-1.1.10' -upgrading `graphviz-1.10' to `graphviz-1.12' -upgrading `coreutils-5.0' to `coreutils-5.2.1' - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/packages/binary-cache-substituter.xml b/doc/manual/packages/binary-cache-substituter.xml deleted file mode 100644 index c6ceb9c80..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/packages/binary-cache-substituter.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,70 +0,0 @@ -
- -Serving a Nix store via HTTP - -You can easily share the Nix store of a machine via HTTP. This -allows other machines to fetch store paths from that machine to speed -up installations. It uses the same binary cache -mechanism that Nix usually uses to fetch pre-built binaries from -https://cache.nixos.org. - -The daemon that handles binary cache requests via HTTP, -nix-serve, is not part of the Nix distribution, but -you can install it from Nixpkgs: - - -$ nix-env -i nix-serve - - -You can then start the server, listening for HTTP connections on -whatever port you like: - - -$ nix-serve -p 8080 - - -To check whether it works, try the following on the client: - - -$ curl http://avalon:8080/nix-cache-info - - -which should print something like: - - -StoreDir: /nix/store -WantMassQuery: 1 -Priority: 30 - - - - -On the client side, you can tell Nix to use your binary cache -using , e.g.: - - -$ nix-env -i firefox --option extra-binary-caches http://avalon:8080/ - - -The option tells Nix to use this -binary cache in addition to your default caches, such as -https://cache.nixos.org. Thus, for any path in the closure -of Firefox, Nix will first check if the path is available on the -server avalon or another binary caches. If not, it -will fall back to building from source. - -You can also tell Nix to always use your binary cache by adding -a line to the nix.conf -configuration file like this: - - -binary-caches = http://avalon:8080/ https://cache.nixos.org/ - - - - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/packages/channels.xml b/doc/manual/packages/channels.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 494a81966..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/packages/channels.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,60 +0,0 @@ - - -Channels - -If you want to stay up to date with a set of packages, it’s not -very convenient to manually download the latest set of Nix expressions -for those packages and upgrade using nix-env. -Fortunately, there’s a better way: Nix -channels. - -A Nix channel is just a URL that points to a place that contains -a set of Nix expressions and a manifest. Using the command nix-channel you -can automatically stay up to date with whatever is available at that -URL. - -To see the list of official NixOS channels, visit . - -You can “subscribe” to a channel using -nix-channel --add, e.g., - - -$ nix-channel --add https://nixos.org/channels/nixpkgs-unstable - -subscribes you to a channel that always contains that latest version -of the Nix Packages collection. (Subscribing really just means that -the URL is added to the file ~/.nix-channels, -where it is read by subsequent calls to nix-channel ---update.) You can “unsubscribe” using nix-channel ---remove: - - -$ nix-channel --remove nixpkgs - - - -To obtain the latest Nix expressions available in a channel, do - - -$ nix-channel --update - -This downloads and unpacks the Nix expressions in every channel -(downloaded from url/nixexprs.tar.bz2). -It also makes the union of each channel’s Nix expressions available by -default to nix-env operations (via the symlink -~/.nix-defexpr/channels). Consequently, you can -then say - - -$ nix-env -u - -to upgrade all packages in your profile to the latest versions -available in the subscribed channels. - - diff --git a/doc/manual/packages/copy-closure.xml b/doc/manual/packages/copy-closure.xml deleted file mode 100644 index a336fb293..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/packages/copy-closure.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,50 +0,0 @@ -
- -Copying Closures via SSH - -The command nix-copy-closure copies a Nix -store path along with all its dependencies to or from another machine -via the SSH protocol. It doesn’t copy store paths that are already -present on the target machine. For example, the following command -copies Firefox with all its dependencies: - - -$ nix-copy-closure --to alice@itchy.example.org $(type -p firefox) - -See for details. - -With nix-store ---export and nix-store --import you can -write the closure of a store path (that is, the path and all its -dependencies) to a file, and then unpack that file into another Nix -store. For example, - - -$ nix-store --export $(nix-store -qR $(type -p firefox)) > firefox.closure - -writes the closure of Firefox to a file. You can then copy this file -to another machine and install the closure: - - -$ nix-store --import < firefox.closure - -Any store paths in the closure that are already present in the target -store are ignored. It is also possible to pipe the export into -another command, e.g. to copy and install a closure directly to/on -another machine: - - -$ nix-store --export $(nix-store -qR $(type -p firefox)) | bzip2 | \ - ssh alice@itchy.example.org "bunzip2 | nix-store --import" - -However, nix-copy-closure is generally more -efficient because it only copies paths that are not already present in -the target Nix store. - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/packages/garbage-collection.xml b/doc/manual/packages/garbage-collection.xml deleted file mode 100644 index b506f22b0..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/packages/garbage-collection.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,86 +0,0 @@ - - -Garbage Collection - -nix-env operations such as upgrades -() and uninstall () never -actually delete packages from the system. All they do (as shown -above) is to create a new user environment that no longer contains -symlinks to the “deleted” packages. - -Of course, since disk space is not infinite, unused packages -should be removed at some point. You can do this by running the Nix -garbage collector. It will remove from the Nix store any package -not used (directly or indirectly) by any generation of any -profile. - -Note however that as long as old generations reference a -package, it will not be deleted. After all, we wouldn’t be able to -do a rollback otherwise. So in order for garbage collection to be -effective, you should also delete (some) old generations. Of course, -this should only be done if you are certain that you will not need to -roll back. - -To delete all old (non-current) generations of your current -profile: - - -$ nix-env --delete-generations old - -Instead of old you can also specify a list of -generations, e.g., - - -$ nix-env --delete-generations 10 11 14 - -To delete all generations older than a specified number of days -(except the current generation), use the d -suffix. For example, - - -$ nix-env --delete-generations 14d - -deletes all generations older than two weeks. - -After removing appropriate old generations you can run the -garbage collector as follows: - - -$ nix-store --gc - -The behaviour of the gargage collector is affected by the -keep-derivations (default: true) and keep-outputs -(default: false) options in the Nix configuration file. The defaults will ensure -that all derivations that are build-time dependencies of garbage collector roots -will be kept and that all output paths that are runtime dependencies -will be kept as well. All other derivations or paths will be collected. -(This is usually what you want, but while you are developing -it may make sense to keep outputs to ensure that rebuild times are quick.) - -If you are feeling uncertain, you can also first view what files would -be deleted: - - -$ nix-store --gc --print-dead - -Likewise, the option will show the paths -that won’t be deleted. - -There is also a convenient little utility -nix-collect-garbage, which when invoked with the - () switch deletes all -old generations of all profiles in -/nix/var/nix/profiles. So - - -$ nix-collect-garbage -d - -is a quick and easy way to clean up your system. - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/packages/garbage-collector-roots.xml b/doc/manual/packages/garbage-collector-roots.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 9c91862b0..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/packages/garbage-collector-roots.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,29 +0,0 @@ -
- -Garbage Collector Roots - -The roots of the garbage collector are all store paths to which -there are symlinks in the directory -prefix/nix/var/nix/gcroots. -For instance, the following command makes the path -/nix/store/d718ef...-foo a root of the collector: - - -$ ln -s /nix/store/d718ef...-foo /nix/var/nix/gcroots/bar - -That is, after this command, the garbage collector will not remove -/nix/store/d718ef...-foo or any of its -dependencies. - -Subdirectories of -prefix/nix/var/nix/gcroots -are also searched for symlinks. Symlinks to non-store paths are -followed and searched for roots, but symlinks to non-store paths -inside the paths reached in that way are not -followed to prevent infinite recursion. - -
\ No newline at end of file diff --git a/doc/manual/packages/package-management.xml b/doc/manual/packages/package-management.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 61e55faeb..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/packages/package-management.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,23 +0,0 @@ - - -Package Management - - -This chapter discusses how to do package management with Nix, -i.e., how to obtain, install, upgrade, and erase packages. This is -the “user’s” perspective of the Nix system — people -who want to create packages should consult -. - - - - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/packages/profiles.xml b/doc/manual/packages/profiles.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 3b8c5e293..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/packages/profiles.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,154 +0,0 @@ - - -Profiles - -Profiles and user environments are Nix’s mechanism for -implementing the ability to allow different users to have different -configurations, and to do atomic upgrades and rollbacks. To -understand how they work, it’s useful to know a bit about how Nix -works. In Nix, packages are stored in unique locations in the -Nix store (typically, -/nix/store). For instance, a particular version -of the Subversion package might be stored in a directory -/nix/store/dpmvp969yhdqs7lm2r1a3gng7pyq6vy4-subversion-1.1.3/, -while another version might be stored in -/nix/store/5mq2jcn36ldlmh93yj1n8s9c95pj7c5s-subversion-1.1.2. -The long strings prefixed to the directory names are cryptographic -hashes (to be precise, 160-bit truncations of SHA-256 hashes encoded -in a base-32 notation) of all inputs involved in -building the package — sources, dependencies, compiler flags, and so -on. So if two packages differ in any way, they end up in different -locations in the file system, so they don’t interfere with each other. -Here is what a part of a typical Nix store looks like: - - - - - - - -Of course, you wouldn’t want to type - - -$ /nix/store/dpmvp969yhdq...-subversion-1.1.3/bin/svn - -every time you want to run Subversion. Of course we could set up the -PATH environment variable to include the -bin directory of every package we want to use, -but this is not very convenient since changing PATH -doesn’t take effect for already existing processes. The solution Nix -uses is to create directory trees of symlinks to -activated packages. These are called -user environments and they are packages -themselves (though automatically generated by -nix-env), so they too reside in the Nix store. For -instance, in the figure above, the user environment -/nix/store/0c1p5z4kda11...-user-env contains a -symlink to just Subversion 1.1.2 (arrows in the figure indicate -symlinks). This would be what we would obtain if we had done - - -$ nix-env -i subversion - -on a set of Nix expressions that contained Subversion 1.1.2. - -This doesn’t in itself solve the problem, of course; you -wouldn’t want to type -/nix/store/0c1p5z4kda11...-user-env/bin/svn -either. That’s why there are symlinks outside of the store that point -to the user environments in the store; for instance, the symlinks -default-42-link and -default-43-link in the example. These are called -generations since every time you perform a -nix-env operation, a new user environment is -generated based on the current one. For instance, generation 43 was -created from generation 42 when we did - - -$ nix-env -i subversion firefox - -on a set of Nix expressions that contained Firefox and a new version -of Subversion. - -Generations are grouped together into -profiles so that different users don’t interfere -with each other if they don’t want to. For example: - - -$ ls -l /nix/var/nix/profiles/ -... -lrwxrwxrwx 1 eelco ... default-42-link -> /nix/store/0c1p5z4kda11...-user-env -lrwxrwxrwx 1 eelco ... default-43-link -> /nix/store/3aw2pdyx2jfc...-user-env -lrwxrwxrwx 1 eelco ... default -> default-43-link - -This shows a profile called default. The file -default itself is actually a symlink that points -to the current generation. When we do a nix-env -operation, a new user environment and generation link are created -based on the current one, and finally the default -symlink is made to point at the new generation. This last step is -atomic on Unix, which explains how we can do atomic upgrades. (Note -that the building/installing of new packages doesn’t interfere in -any way with old packages, since they are stored in different -locations in the Nix store.) - -If you find that you want to undo a nix-env -operation, you can just do - - -$ nix-env --rollback - -which will just make the current generation link point at the previous -link. E.g., default would be made to point at -default-42-link. You can also switch to a -specific generation: - - -$ nix-env --switch-generation 43 - -which in this example would roll forward to generation 43 again. You -can also see all available generations: - - -$ nix-env --list-generations - -You generally wouldn’t have -/nix/var/nix/profiles/some-profile/bin -in your PATH. Rather, there is a symlink -~/.nix-profile that points to your current -profile. This means that you should put -~/.nix-profile/bin in your PATH -(and indeed, that’s what the initialisation script -/nix/etc/profile.d/nix.sh does). This makes it -easier to switch to a different profile. You can do that using the -command nix-env --switch-profile: - - -$ nix-env --switch-profile /nix/var/nix/profiles/my-profile - -$ nix-env --switch-profile /nix/var/nix/profiles/default - -These commands switch to the my-profile and -default profile, respectively. If the profile doesn’t exist, it will -be created automatically. You should be careful about storing a -profile in another location than the profiles -directory, since otherwise it might not be used as a root of the -garbage collector (see ). - -All nix-env operations work on the profile -pointed to by ~/.nix-profile, but you can override -this using the option (abbreviation -): - - -$ nix-env -p /nix/var/nix/profiles/other-profile -i subversion - -This will not change the -~/.nix-profile symlink. - - diff --git a/doc/manual/packages/s3-substituter.xml b/doc/manual/packages/s3-substituter.xml deleted file mode 100644 index aa5df2026..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/packages/s3-substituter.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,191 +0,0 @@ - -
- -Serving a Nix store via S3 - -Nix has built-in support for storing and fetching store paths -from Amazon S3 and S3-compatible services. This uses the same -binary cache mechanism that Nix usually uses to -fetch prebuilt binaries from cache.nixos.org. - -The following options can be specified as URL parameters to -the S3 URL: - - - profile - - - The name of the AWS configuration profile to use. By default - Nix will use the default profile. - - - - - region - - - The region of the S3 bucket. us–east-1 by - default. - - - - If your bucket is not in us–east-1, you - should always explicitly specify the region parameter. - - - - - endpoint - - - The URL to your S3-compatible service, for when not using - Amazon S3. Do not specify this value if you're using Amazon - S3. - - This endpoint must support HTTPS and will use - path-based addressing instead of virtual host based - addressing. - - - - scheme - - - The scheme used for S3 requests, https - (default) or http. This option allows you to - disable HTTPS for binary caches which don't support it. - - HTTPS should be used if the cache might contain - sensitive information. - - - - -In this example we will use the bucket named -example-nix-cache. - -
- Anonymous Reads to your S3-compatible binary cache - - If your binary cache is publicly accessible and does not - require authentication, the simplest and easiest way to use Nix with - your S3 compatible binary cache is to use the HTTP URL for that - cache. - - For AWS S3 the binary cache URL for example bucket will be - exactly https://example-nix-cache.s3.amazonaws.com or - s3://example-nix-cache. For S3 compatible binary caches, - consult that cache's documentation. - - Your bucket will need the following bucket policy: - - -
- -
- Authenticated Reads to your S3 binary cache - - For AWS S3 the binary cache URL for example bucket will be - exactly s3://example-nix-cache. - - Nix will use the default - credential provider chain for authenticating requests to - Amazon S3. - - Nix supports authenticated reads from Amazon S3 and S3 - compatible binary caches. - - Your bucket will need a bucket policy allowing the desired - users to perform the s3:GetObject and - s3:GetBucketLocation action on all objects in the - bucket. The anonymous policy in can be updated to - have a restricted Principal to support - this. -
- - -
- Authenticated Writes to your S3-compatible binary cache - - Nix support fully supports writing to Amazon S3 and S3 - compatible buckets. The binary cache URL for our example bucket will - be s3://example-nix-cache. - - Nix will use the default - credential provider chain for authenticating requests to - Amazon S3. - - Your account will need the following IAM policy to - upload to the cache: - - - -
- -
Examples - -To upload with a specific credential profile for Amazon S3: - - -nix copy --to 's3://example-nix-cache?profile=cache-upload&region=eu-west-2' nixpkgs.hello - - -To upload to an S3-compatible binary cache: - - -nix copy --to 's3://example-nix-cache?profile=cache-upload&scheme=https&endpoint=minio.example.com' nixpkgs.hello - - -
- -
diff --git a/doc/manual/packages/sharing-packages.xml b/doc/manual/packages/sharing-packages.xml deleted file mode 100644 index bb6c52b8f..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/packages/sharing-packages.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,20 +0,0 @@ - - -Sharing Packages Between Machines - -Sometimes you want to copy a package from one machine to -another. Or, you want to install some packages and you know that -another machine already has some or all of those packages or their -dependencies. In that case there are mechanisms to quickly copy -packages between machines. - - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/packages/ssh-substituter.xml b/doc/manual/packages/ssh-substituter.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 8db3f9662..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/packages/ssh-substituter.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,73 +0,0 @@ -
- -Serving a Nix store via SSH - -You can tell Nix to automatically fetch needed binaries from a -remote Nix store via SSH. For example, the following installs Firefox, -automatically fetching any store paths in Firefox’s closure if they -are available on the server avalon: - - -$ nix-env -i firefox --substituters ssh://alice@avalon - - -This works similar to the binary cache substituter that Nix usually -uses, only using SSH instead of HTTP: if a store path -P is needed, Nix will first check if it’s available -in the Nix store on avalon. If not, it will fall -back to using the binary cache substituter, and then to building from -source. - -The SSH substituter currently does not allow you to enter -an SSH passphrase interactively. Therefore, you should use -ssh-add to load the decrypted private key into -ssh-agent. - -You can also copy the closure of some store path, without -installing it into your profile, e.g. - - -$ nix-store -r /nix/store/m85bxg…-firefox-34.0.5 --substituters ssh://alice@avalon - - -This is essentially equivalent to doing - - -$ nix-copy-closure --from alice@avalon /nix/store/m85bxg…-firefox-34.0.5 - - - - -You can use SSH’s forced command feature to -set up a restricted user account for SSH substituter access, allowing -read-only access to the local Nix store, but nothing more. For -example, add the following lines to sshd_config -to restrict the user nix-ssh: - - -Match User nix-ssh - AllowAgentForwarding no - AllowTcpForwarding no - PermitTTY no - PermitTunnel no - X11Forwarding no - ForceCommand nix-store --serve -Match All - - -On NixOS, you can accomplish the same by adding the following to your -configuration.nix: - - -nix.sshServe.enable = true; -nix.sshServe.keys = [ "ssh-dss AAAAB3NzaC1k... bob@example.org" ]; - - -where the latter line lists the public keys of users that are allowed -to connect. - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/release-notes.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/release-notes.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 2655d68e3..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/release-notes.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,51 +0,0 @@ - - -Nix Release Notes - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.10.1.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.10.1.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 95829323d..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.10.1.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,13 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 0.10.1 (2006-10-11) - -This release fixes two somewhat obscure bugs that occur when -evaluating Nix expressions that are stored inside the Nix store -(NIX-67). These do not affect most users. - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.10.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.10.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 01f70acfd..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.10.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,323 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 0.10 (2006-10-06) - -This version of Nix uses Berkeley DB 4.4 instead of 4.3. -The database is upgraded automatically, but you should be careful not -to use old versions of Nix that still use Berkeley DB 4.3. In -particular, if you use a Nix installed through Nix, you should run - - -$ nix-store --clear-substitutes - -first. - -Also, the database schema has changed slighted to fix a -performance issue (see below). When you run any Nix 0.10 command for -the first time, the database will be upgraded automatically. This is -irreversible. - - - - - - - - nix-env usability improvements: - - - - An option - (or ) has been added to nix-env - --query to allow you to compare installed versions of - packages to available versions, or vice versa. An easy way to - see if you are up to date with what’s in your subscribed - channels is nix-env -qc \*. - - nix-env --query now takes as - arguments a list of package names about which to show - information, just like , etc.: for - example, nix-env -q gcc. Note that to show - all derivations, you need to specify - \*. - - nix-env -i - pkgname will now install - the highest available version of - pkgname, rather than installing all - available versions (which would probably give collisions) - (NIX-31). - - nix-env (-i|-u) --dry-run now - shows exactly which missing paths will be built or - substituted. - - nix-env -qa --description - shows human-readable descriptions of packages, provided that - they have a meta.description attribute (which - most packages in Nixpkgs don’t have yet). - - - - - - - New language features: - - - - Reference scanning (which happens after each - build) is much faster and takes a constant amount of - memory. - - String interpolation. Expressions like - - -"--with-freetype2-library=" + freetype + "/lib" - - can now be written as - - -"--with-freetype2-library=${freetype}/lib" - - You can write arbitrary expressions within - ${...}, not just - identifiers. - - Multi-line string literals. - - String concatenations can now involve - derivations, as in the example "--with-freetype2-library=" - + freetype + "/lib". This was not previously possible - because we need to register that a derivation that uses such a - string is dependent on freetype. The - evaluator now properly propagates this information. - Consequently, the subpath operator (~) has - been deprecated. - - Default values of function arguments can now - refer to other function arguments; that is, all arguments are in - scope in the default values - (NIX-45). - - - - Lots of new built-in primitives, such as - functions for list manipulation and integer arithmetic. See the - manual for a complete list. All primops are now available in - the set builtins, allowing one to test for - the availability of primop in a backwards-compatible - way. - - Real let-expressions: let x = ...; - ... z = ...; in .... - - - - - - - New commands nix-pack-closure and - nix-unpack-closure than can be used to easily - transfer a store path with all its dependencies to another machine. - Very convenient whenever you have some package on your machine and - you want to copy it somewhere else. - - - XML support: - - - - nix-env -q --xml prints the - installed or available packages in an XML representation for - easy processing by other tools. - - nix-instantiate --eval-only - --xml prints an XML representation of the resulting - term. (The new flag forces ‘deep’ - evaluation of the result, i.e., list elements and attributes are - evaluated recursively.) - - In Nix expressions, the primop - builtins.toXML converts a term to an XML - representation. This is primarily useful for passing structured - information to builders. - - - - - - - You can now unambiguously specify which derivation to - build or install in nix-env, - nix-instantiate and nix-build - using the / flags, which - takes an attribute name as argument. (Unlike symbolic package names - such as subversion-1.4.0, attribute names in an - attribute set are unique.) For instance, a quick way to perform a - test build of a package in Nixpkgs is nix-build - pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix -A - foo. nix-env -q - --attr shows the attribute names corresponding to each - derivation. - - - If the top-level Nix expression used by - nix-env, nix-instantiate or - nix-build evaluates to a function whose arguments - all have default values, the function will be called automatically. - Also, the new command-line switch can be used to specify - function arguments on the command line. - - - nix-install-package --url - URL allows a package to be - installed directly from the given URL. - - - Nix now works behind an HTTP proxy server; just set - the standard environment variables http_proxy, - https_proxy, ftp_proxy or - all_proxy appropriately. Functions such as - fetchurl in Nixpkgs also respect these - variables. - - - nix-build -o - symlink allows the symlink to - the build result to be named something other than - result. - - - - - - Platform support: - - - - Support for 64-bit platforms, provided a suitably - patched ATerm library is used. Also, files larger than 2 - GiB are now supported. - - Added support for Cygwin (Windows, - i686-cygwin), Mac OS X on Intel - (i686-darwin) and Linux on PowerPC - (powerpc-linux). - - Users of SMP and multicore machines will - appreciate that the number of builds to be performed in parallel - can now be specified in the configuration file in the - build-max-jobs setting. - - - - - - - Garbage collector improvements: - - - - Open files (such as running programs) are now - used as roots of the garbage collector. This prevents programs - that have been uninstalled from being garbage collected while - they are still running. The script that detects these - additional runtime roots - (find-runtime-roots.pl) is inherently - system-specific, but it should work on Linux and on all - platforms that have the lsof - utility. - - nix-store --gc - (a.k.a. nix-collect-garbage) prints out the - number of bytes freed on standard output. nix-store - --gc --print-dead shows how many bytes would be freed - by an actual garbage collection. - - nix-collect-garbage -d - removes all old generations of all profiles - before calling the actual garbage collector (nix-store - --gc). This is an easy way to get rid of all old - packages in the Nix store. - - nix-store now has an - operation to delete specific paths - from the Nix store. It won’t delete reachable (non-garbage) - paths unless is - specified. - - - - - - - Berkeley DB 4.4’s process registry feature is used - to recover from crashed Nix processes. - - - - A performance issue has been fixed with the - referer table, which stores the inverse of the - references table (i.e., it tells you what store - paths refer to a given path). Maintaining this table could take a - quadratic amount of time, as well as a quadratic amount of Berkeley - DB log file space (in particular when running the garbage collector) - (NIX-23). - - Nix now catches the TERM and - HUP signals in addition to the - INT signal. So you can now do a killall - nix-store without triggering a database - recovery. - - bsdiff updated to version - 4.3. - - Substantial performance improvements in expression - evaluation and nix-env -qa, all thanks to Valgrind. Memory use has - been reduced by a factor 8 or so. Big speedup by memoisation of - path hashing. - - Lots of bug fixes, notably: - - - - Make sure that the garbage collector can run - successfully when the disk is full - (NIX-18). - - nix-env now locks the profile - to prevent races between concurrent nix-env - operations on the same profile - (NIX-7). - - Removed misleading messages from - nix-env -i (e.g., installing - `foo' followed by uninstalling - `foo') (NIX-17). - - - - - - Nix source distributions are a lot smaller now since - we no longer include a full copy of the Berkeley DB source - distribution (but only the bits we need). - - Header files are now installed so that external - programs can use the Nix libraries. - - - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.11.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.11.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 7ad0ab5b7..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.11.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,261 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 0.11 (2007-12-31) - -Nix 0.11 has many improvements over the previous stable release. -The most important improvement is secure multi-user support. It also -features many usability enhancements and language extensions, many of -them prompted by NixOS, the purely functional Linux distribution based -on Nix. Here is an (incomplete) list: - - - - - - Secure multi-user support. A single Nix store can - now be shared between multiple (possible untrusted) users. This is - an important feature for NixOS, where it allows non-root users to - install software. The old setuid method for sharing a store between - multiple users has been removed. Details for setting up a - multi-user store can be found in the manual. - - - The new command nix-copy-closure - gives you an easy and efficient way to exchange software between - machines. It copies the missing parts of the closure of a set of - store path to or from a remote machine via - ssh. - - - A new kind of string literal: strings between double - single-quotes ('') have indentation - “intelligently” removed. This allows large strings (such as shell - scripts or configuration file fragments in NixOS) to cleanly follow - the indentation of the surrounding expression. It also requires - much less escaping, since '' is less common in - most languages than ". - - - nix-env - modifies the current generation of a profile so that it contains - exactly the specified derivation, and nothing else. For example, - nix-env -p /nix/var/nix/profiles/browser --set - firefox lets the profile named - browser contain just Firefox. - - - nix-env now maintains - meta-information about installed packages in profiles. The - meta-information is the contents of the meta - attribute of derivations, such as description or - homepage. The command nix-env -q --xml - --meta shows all meta-information. - - - nix-env now uses the - meta.priority attribute of derivations to resolve - filename collisions between packages. Lower priority values denote - a higher priority. For instance, the GCC wrapper package and the - Binutils package in Nixpkgs both have a file - bin/ld, so previously if you tried to install - both you would get a collision. Now, on the other hand, the GCC - wrapper declares a higher priority than Binutils, so the former’s - bin/ld is symlinked in the user - environment. - - - nix-env -i / -u: instead of - breaking package ties by version, break them by priority and version - number. That is, if there are multiple packages with the same name, - then pick the package with the highest priority, and only use the - version if there are multiple packages with the same - priority. - - This makes it possible to mark specific versions/variant in - Nixpkgs more or less desirable than others. A typical example would - be a beta version of some package (e.g., - gcc-4.2.0rc1) which should not be installed even - though it is the highest version, except when it is explicitly - selected (e.g., nix-env -i - gcc-4.2.0rc1). - - - nix-env --set-flag allows meta - attributes of installed packages to be modified. There are several - attributes that can be usefully modified, because they affect the - behaviour of nix-env or the user environment - build script: - - - - meta.priority can be changed - to resolve filename clashes (see above). - - meta.keep can be set to - true to prevent the package from being - upgraded or replaced. Useful if you want to hang on to an older - version of a package. - - meta.active can be set to - false to “disable” the package. That is, no - symlinks will be generated to the files of the package, but it - remains part of the profile (so it won’t be garbage-collected). - Set it back to true to re-enable the - package. - - - - - - - nix-env -q now has a flag - () that causes - nix-env to show only those derivations whose - output is already in the Nix store or that can be substituted (i.e., - downloaded from somewhere). In other words, it shows the packages - that can be installed “quickly”, i.e., don’t need to be built from - source. The flag is also available in - nix-env -i and nix-env -u to - filter out derivations for which no pre-built binary is - available. - - - The new option (in - nix-env, nix-instantiate and - nix-build) is like , except - that the value is a string. For example, --argstr system - i686-linux is equivalent to --arg system - \"i686-linux\" (note that - prevents annoying quoting around shell arguments). - - - nix-store has a new operation - () - paths that shows the build log of the given - paths. - - - - - - Nix now uses Berkeley DB 4.5. The database is - upgraded automatically, but you should be careful not to use old - versions of Nix that still use Berkeley DB 4.4. - - - - - - The option - (corresponding to the configuration setting - build-max-silent-time) allows you to set a - timeout on builds — if a build produces no output on - stdout or stderr for the given - number of seconds, it is terminated. This is useful for recovering - automatically from builds that are stuck in an infinite - loop. - - - nix-channel: each subscribed - channel is its own attribute in the top-level expression generated - for the channel. This allows disambiguation (e.g. nix-env - -i -A nixpkgs_unstable.firefox). - - - The substitutes table has been removed from the - database. This makes operations such as nix-pull - and nix-channel --update much, much - faster. - - - nix-pull now supports - bzip2-compressed manifests. This speeds up - channels. - - - nix-prefetch-url now has a - limited form of caching. This is used by - nix-channel to prevent unnecessary downloads when - the channel hasn’t changed. - - - nix-prefetch-url now by default - computes the SHA-256 hash of the file instead of the MD5 hash. In - calls to fetchurl you should pass the - sha256 attribute instead of - md5. You can pass either a hexadecimal or a - base-32 encoding of the hash. - - - Nix can now perform builds in an automatically - generated “chroot”. This prevents a builder from accessing stuff - outside of the Nix store, and thus helps ensure purity. This is an - experimental feature. - - - The new command nix-store - --optimise reduces Nix store disk space usage by finding - identical files in the store and hard-linking them to each other. - It typically reduces the size of the store by something like - 25-35%. - - - ~/.nix-defexpr can now be a - directory, in which case the Nix expressions in that directory are - combined into an attribute set, with the file names used as the - names of the attributes. The command nix-env - --import (which set the - ~/.nix-defexpr symlink) is - removed. - - - Derivations can specify the new special attribute - allowedReferences to enforce that the references - in the output of a derivation are a subset of a declared set of - paths. For example, if allowedReferences is an - empty list, then the output must not have any references. This is - used in NixOS to check that generated files such as initial ramdisks - for booting Linux don’t have any dependencies. - - - The new attribute - exportReferencesGraph allows builders access to - the references graph of their inputs. This is used in NixOS for - tasks such as generating ISO-9660 images that contain a Nix store - populated with the closure of certain paths. - - - Fixed-output derivations (like - fetchurl) can define the attribute - impureEnvVars to allow external environment - variables to be passed to builders. This is used in Nixpkgs to - support proxy configuration, among other things. - - - Several new built-in functions: - builtins.attrNames, - builtins.filterSource, - builtins.isAttrs, - builtins.isFunction, - builtins.listToAttrs, - builtins.stringLength, - builtins.sub, - builtins.substring, - throw, - builtins.trace, - builtins.readFile. - - - - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.12.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.12.xml deleted file mode 100644 index c30124786..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.12.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,175 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 0.12 (2008-11-20) - - - - - Nix no longer uses Berkeley DB to store Nix store metadata. - The principal advantages of the new storage scheme are: it works - properly over decent implementations of NFS (allowing Nix stores - to be shared between multiple machines); no recovery is needed - when a Nix process crashes; no write access is needed for - read-only operations; no more running out of Berkeley DB locks on - certain operations. - - You still need to compile Nix with Berkeley DB support if - you want Nix to automatically convert your old Nix store to the - new schema. If you don’t need this, you can build Nix with the - configure option - . - - After the automatic conversion to the new schema, you can - delete the old Berkeley DB files: - - -$ cd /nix/var/nix/db -$ rm __db* log.* derivers references referrers reserved validpaths DB_CONFIG - - The new metadata is stored in the directories - /nix/var/nix/db/info and - /nix/var/nix/db/referrer. Though the - metadata is stored in human-readable plain-text files, they are - not intended to be human-editable, as Nix is rather strict about - the format. - - The new storage schema may or may not require less disk - space than the Berkeley DB environment, mostly depending on the - cluster size of your file system. With 1 KiB clusters (which - seems to be the ext3 default nowadays) it - usually takes up much less space. - - - There is a new substituter that copies paths - directly from other (remote) Nix stores mounted somewhere in the - filesystem. For instance, you can speed up an installation by - mounting some remote Nix store that already has the packages in - question via NFS or sshfs. The environment - variable NIX_OTHER_STORES specifies the locations of - the remote Nix directories, - e.g. /mnt/remote-fs/nix. - - New nix-store operations - and to dump - and reload the Nix database. - - The garbage collector has a number of new options to - allow only some of the garbage to be deleted. The option - tells the - collector to stop after at least N bytes - have been deleted. The option tells it to stop after the - link count on /nix/store has dropped below - N. This is useful for very large Nix - stores on filesystems with a 32000 subdirectories limit (like - ext3). The option - causes store paths to be deleted in order of ascending last access - time. This allows non-recently used stuff to be deleted. The - option - specifies an upper limit to the last accessed time of paths that may - be deleted. For instance, - - - $ nix-store --gc -v --max-atime $(date +%s -d "2 months ago") - - deletes everything that hasn’t been accessed in two months. - - nix-env now uses optimistic - profile locking when performing an operation like installing or - upgrading, instead of setting an exclusive lock on the profile. - This allows multiple nix-env -i / -u / -e - operations on the same profile in parallel. If a - nix-env operation sees at the end that the profile - was changed in the meantime by another process, it will just - restart. This is generally cheap because the build results are - still in the Nix store. - - The option is now - supported by nix-store -r and - nix-build. - - The information previously shown by - (i.e., which derivations will be built - and which paths will be substituted) is now always shown by - nix-env, nix-store -r and - nix-build. The total download size of - substitutable paths is now also shown. For instance, a build will - show something like - - -the following derivations will be built: - /nix/store/129sbxnk5n466zg6r1qmq1xjv9zymyy7-activate-configuration.sh.drv - /nix/store/7mzy971rdm8l566ch8hgxaf89x7lr7ik-upstart-jobs.drv - ... -the following paths will be downloaded/copied (30.02 MiB): - /nix/store/4m8pvgy2dcjgppf5b4cj5l6wyshjhalj-samba-3.2.4 - /nix/store/7h1kwcj29ip8vk26rhmx6bfjraxp0g4l-libunwind-0.98.6 - ... - - - - Language features: - - - - @-patterns as in Haskell. For instance, in a - function definition - - f = args @ {x, y, z}: ...; - - args refers to the argument as a whole, which - is further pattern-matched against the attribute set pattern - {x, y, z}. - - ...” (ellipsis) patterns. - An attribute set pattern can now say ... at - the end of the attribute name list to specify that the function - takes at least the listed attributes, while - ignoring additional attributes. For instance, - - {stdenv, fetchurl, fuse, ...}: ... - - defines a function that accepts any attribute set that includes - at least the three listed attributes. - - New primops: - builtins.parseDrvName (split a package name - string like "nix-0.12pre12876" into its name - and version components, e.g. "nix" and - "0.12pre12876"), - builtins.compareVersions (compare two version - strings using the same algorithm that nix-env - uses), builtins.length (efficiently compute - the length of a list), builtins.mul (integer - multiplication), builtins.div (integer - division). - - - - - - - - nix-prefetch-url now supports - mirror:// URLs, provided that the environment - variable NIXPKGS_ALL points at a Nixpkgs - tree. - - Removed the commands - nix-pack-closure and - nix-unpack-closure. You can do almost the same - thing but much more efficiently by doing nix-store --export - $(nix-store -qR paths) > closure and - nix-store --import < - closure. - - Lots of bug fixes, including a big performance bug in - the handling of with-expressions. - - - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.13.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.13.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 8cb0ae9a5..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.13.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,106 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 0.13 (2009-11-05) - -This is primarily a bug fix release. It has some new -features: - - - - - Syntactic sugar for writing nested attribute sets. Instead of - - -{ - foo = { - bar = 123; - xyzzy = true; - }; - a = { b = { c = "d"; }; }; -} - - - you can write - - -{ - foo.bar = 123; - foo.xyzzy = true; - a.b.c = "d"; -} - - - This is useful, for instance, in NixOS configuration files. - - - - - Support for Nix channels generated by Hydra, the Nix-based - continuous build system. (Hydra generates NAR archives on the - fly, so the size and hash of these archives isn’t known in - advance.) - - - - Support i686-linux builds directly on - x86_64-linux Nix installations. This is - implemented using the personality() syscall, - which causes uname to return - i686 in child processes. - - - - Various improvements to the chroot - support. Building in a chroot works quite well - now. - - - - Nix no longer blocks if it tries to build a path and another - process is already building the same path. Instead it tries to - build another buildable path first. This improves - parallelism. - - - - Support for large (> 4 GiB) files in NAR archives. - - - - Various (performance) improvements to the remote build - mechanism. - - - - New primops: builtins.addErrorContext (to - add a string to stack traces — useful for debugging), - builtins.isBool, - builtins.isString, - builtins.isInt, - builtins.intersectAttrs. - - - - OpenSolaris support (Sander van der Burg). - - - - Stack traces are no longer displayed unless the - option is used. - - - - The scoping rules for inherit - (e) ... in recursive - attribute sets have changed. The expression - e can now refer to the attributes - defined in the containing set. - - - - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.14.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.14.xml deleted file mode 100644 index e5fe9da78..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.14.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,46 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 0.14 (2010-02-04) - -This release has the following improvements: - - - - - The garbage collector now starts deleting garbage much - faster than before. It no longer determines liveness of all paths - in the store, but does so on demand. - - - - Added a new operation, nix-store --query - --roots, that shows the garbage collector roots that - directly or indirectly point to the given store paths. - - - - Removed support for converting Berkeley DB-based Nix - databases to the new schema. - - - - Removed the and - garbage collector options. They were - not very useful in practice. - - - - On Windows, Nix now requires Cygwin 1.7.x. - - - - A few bug fixes. - - - - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.15.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.15.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 9f58a8efc..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.15.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,14 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 0.15 (2010-03-17) - -This is a bug-fix release. Among other things, it fixes -building on Mac OS X (Snow Leopard), and improves the contents of -/etc/passwd and /etc/group -in chroot builds. - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.16.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.16.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 7039d4b0b..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.16.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,55 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 0.16 (2010-08-17) - -This release has the following improvements: - - - - - The Nix expression evaluator is now much faster in most - cases: typically, 3 - to 8 times compared to the old implementation. It also - uses less memory. It no longer depends on the ATerm - library. - - - - - Support for configurable parallelism inside builders. Build - scripts have always had the ability to perform multiple build - actions in parallel (for instance, by running make -j - 2), but this was not desirable because the number of - actions to be performed in parallel was not configurable. Nix - now has an option as well as a configuration - setting build-cores = - N that causes the - environment variable NIX_BUILD_CORES to be set to - N when the builder is invoked. The - builder can use this at its discretion to perform a parallel - build, e.g., by calling make -j - N. In Nixpkgs, this can be - enabled on a per-package basis by setting the derivation - attribute enableParallelBuilding to - true. - - - - - nix-store -q now supports XML output - through the flag. - - - - Several bug fixes. - - - - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.5.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.5.xml deleted file mode 100644 index e9f8bf270..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.5.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,11 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 0.5 and earlier - -Please refer to the Subversion commit log messages. - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.6.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.6.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 23fbee173..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.6.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,122 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 0.6 (2004-11-14) - - - - - Rewrite of the normalisation engine. - - - - Multiple builds can now be performed in parallel - (option ). - - Distributed builds. Nix can now call a shell - script to forward builds to Nix installations on remote - machines, which may or may not be of the same platform - type. - - Option allows - recovery from broken substitutes. - - Option causes - building of other (unaffected) derivations to continue if one - failed. - - - - - - - - Improvements to the garbage collector (i.e., it - should actually work now). - - Setuid Nix installations allow a Nix store to be - shared among multiple users. - - Substitute registration is much faster - now. - - A utility nix-build to build a - Nix expression and create a symlink to the result int the current - directory; useful for testing Nix derivations. - - Manual updates. - - - - nix-env changes: - - - - Derivations for other platforms are filtered out - (which can be overridden using - ). - - by default now - uninstall previous derivations with the same - name. - - allows upgrading to a - specific version. - - New operation - to remove profile - generations (necessary for effective garbage - collection). - - Nicer output (sorted, - columnised). - - - - - - - - More sensible verbosity levels all around (builder - output is now shown always, unless is - given). - - - - Nix expression language changes: - - - - New language construct: with - E1; - E2 brings all attributes - defined in the attribute set E1 in - scope in E2. - - Added a map - function. - - Various new operators (e.g., string - concatenation). - - - - - - - - Expression evaluation is much - faster. - - An Emacs mode for editing Nix expressions (with - syntax highlighting and indentation) has been - added. - - Many bug fixes. - - - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.7.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.7.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 6f95db436..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.7.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,35 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 0.7 (2005-01-12) - - - - Binary patching. When upgrading components using - pre-built binaries (through nix-pull / nix-channel), Nix can - automatically download and apply binary patches to already installed - components instead of full downloads. Patching is “smart”: if there - is a sequence of patches to an installed - component, Nix will use it. Patches are currently generated - automatically between Nixpkgs (pre-)releases. - - Simplifications to the substitute - mechanism. - - Nix-pull now stores downloaded manifests in - /nix/var/nix/manifests. - - Metadata on files in the Nix store is canonicalised - after builds: the last-modified timestamp is set to 0 (00:00:00 - 1/1/1970), the mode is set to 0444 or 0555 (readable and possibly - executable by all; setuid/setgid bits are dropped), and the group is - set to the default. This ensures that the result of a build and an - installation through a substitute is the same; and that timestamp - dependencies are revealed. - - - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.8.1.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.8.1.xml deleted file mode 100644 index f7ffca0f8..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.8.1.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,21 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 0.8.1 (2005-04-13) - -This is a bug fix release. - - - - Patch downloading was broken. - - The garbage collector would not delete paths that - had references from invalid (but substitutable) - paths. - - - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.8.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.8.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 1adb91a23..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.8.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,246 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 0.8 (2005-04-11) - -NOTE: the hashing scheme in Nix 0.8 changed (as detailed below). -As a result, nix-pull manifests and channels built -for Nix 0.7 and below will not work anymore. However, the Nix -expression language has not changed, so you can still build from -source. Also, existing user environments continue to work. Nix 0.8 -will automatically upgrade the database schema of previous -installations when it is first run. - -If you get the error message - - -you have an old-style manifest `/nix/var/nix/manifests/[...]'; please -delete it - -you should delete previously downloaded manifests: - - -$ rm /nix/var/nix/manifests/* - -If nix-channel gives the error message - - -manifest `http://catamaran.labs.cs.uu.nl/dist/nix/channels/[channel]/MANIFEST' -is too old (i.e., for Nix <= 0.7) - -then you should unsubscribe from the offending channel -(nix-channel --remove -URL; leave out -/MANIFEST), and subscribe to the same URL, with -channels replaced by channels-v3 -(e.g., ). - -Nix 0.8 has the following improvements: - - - - The cryptographic hashes used in store paths are now - 160 bits long, but encoded in base-32 so that they are still only 32 - characters long (e.g., - /nix/store/csw87wag8bqlqk7ipllbwypb14xainap-atk-1.9.0). - (This is actually a 160 bit truncation of a SHA-256 - hash.) - - Big cleanups and simplifications of the basic store - semantics. The notion of “closure store expressions” is gone (and - so is the notion of “successors”); the file system references of a - store path are now just stored in the database. - - For instance, given any store path, you can query its closure: - - -$ nix-store -qR $(which firefox) -... lots of paths ... - - Also, Nix now remembers for each store path the derivation that - built it (the “deriver”): - - -$ nix-store -qR $(which firefox) -/nix/store/4b0jx7vq80l9aqcnkszxhymsf1ffa5jd-firefox-1.0.1.drv - - So to see the build-time dependencies, you can do - - -$ nix-store -qR $(nix-store -qd $(which firefox)) - - or, in a nicer format: - - -$ nix-store -q --tree $(nix-store -qd $(which firefox)) - - - - File system references are also stored in reverse. For - instance, you can query all paths that directly or indirectly use a - certain Glibc: - - -$ nix-store -q --referrers-closure \ - /nix/store/8lz9yc6zgmc0vlqmn2ipcpkjlmbi51vv-glibc-2.3.4 - - - - - - The concept of fixed-output derivations has been - formalised. Previously, functions such as - fetchurl in Nixpkgs used a hack (namely, - explicitly specifying a store path hash) to prevent changes to, say, - the URL of the file from propagating upwards through the dependency - graph, causing rebuilds of everything. This can now be done cleanly - by specifying the outputHash and - outputHashAlgo attributes. Nix itself checks - that the content of the output has the specified hash. (This is - important for maintaining certain invariants necessary for future - work on secure shared stores.) - - One-click installation :-) It is now possible to - install any top-level component in Nixpkgs directly, through the web - — see, e.g., . - All you have to do is associate - /nix/bin/nix-install-package with the MIME type - application/nix-package (or the extension - .nixpkg), and clicking on a package link will - cause it to be installed, with all appropriate dependencies. If you - just want to install some specific application, this is easier than - subscribing to a channel. - - nix-store -r - PATHS now builds all the - derivations PATHS in parallel. Previously it did them sequentially - (though exploiting possible parallelism between subderivations). - This is nice for build farms. - - nix-channel has new operations - and - . - - New ways of installing components into user - environments: - - - - Copy from another user environment: - - -$ nix-env -i --from-profile .../other-profile firefox - - - - Install a store derivation directly (bypassing the - Nix expression language entirely): - - -$ nix-env -i /nix/store/z58v41v21xd3...-aterm-2.3.1.drv - - (This is used to implement nix-install-package, - which is therefore immune to evolution in the Nix expression - language.) - - Install an already built store path directly: - - -$ nix-env -i /nix/store/hsyj5pbn0d9i...-aterm-2.3.1 - - - - Install the result of a Nix expression specified - as a command-line argument: - - -$ nix-env -f .../i686-linux.nix -i -E 'x: x.firefoxWrapper' - - The difference with the normal installation mode is that - does not use the name - attributes of derivations. Therefore, this can be used to - disambiguate multiple derivations with the same - name. - - - - A hash of the contents of a store path is now stored - in the database after a successful build. This allows you to check - whether store paths have been tampered with: nix-store - --verify --check-contents. - - - - Implemented a concurrent garbage collector. It is now - always safe to run the garbage collector, even if other Nix - operations are happening simultaneously. - - However, there can still be GC races if you use - nix-instantiate and nix-store - --realise directly to build things. To prevent races, - use the flag of those commands. - - - - The garbage collector now finally deletes paths in - the right order (i.e., topologically sorted under the “references” - relation), thus making it safe to interrupt the collector without - risking a store that violates the closure - invariant. - - Likewise, the substitute mechanism now downloads - files in the right order, thus preserving the closure invariant at - all times. - - The result of nix-build is now - registered as a root of the garbage collector. If the - ./result link is deleted, the GC root - disappears automatically. - - - - The behaviour of the garbage collector can be changed - globally by setting options in - /nix/etc/nix/nix.conf. - - - - gc-keep-derivations specifies - whether deriver links should be followed when searching for live - paths. - - gc-keep-outputs specifies - whether outputs of derivations should be followed when searching - for live paths. - - env-keep-derivations - specifies whether user environments should store the paths of - derivations when they are added (thus keeping the derivations - alive). - - - - - - New nix-env query flags - and - . - - fetchurl allows SHA-1 and SHA-256 - in addition to MD5. Just specify the attribute - sha1 or sha256 instead of - md5. - - Manual updates. - - - - - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.9.1.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.9.1.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 85d11f416..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.9.1.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,13 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 0.9.1 (2005-09-20) - -This bug fix release addresses a problem with the ATerm library -when the flag in -configure was not used. - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.9.2.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.9.2.xml deleted file mode 100644 index cb705e98a..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.9.2.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,28 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 0.9.2 (2005-09-21) - -This bug fix release fixes two problems on Mac OS X: - - - - If Nix was linked against statically linked versions - of the ATerm or Berkeley DB library, there would be dynamic link - errors at runtime. - - nix-pull and - nix-push intermittently failed due to race - conditions involving pipes and child processes with error messages - such as open2: open(GLOB(0x180b2e4), >&=9) failed: Bad - file descriptor at /nix/bin/nix-pull line 77 (issue - NIX-14). - - - - - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.9.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.9.xml deleted file mode 100644 index fd1e633f7..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-0.9.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,98 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 0.9 (2005-09-16) - -NOTE: this version of Nix uses Berkeley DB 4.3 instead of 4.2. -The database is upgraded automatically, but you should be careful not -to use old versions of Nix that still use Berkeley DB 4.2. In -particular, if you use a Nix installed through Nix, you should run - - -$ nix-store --clear-substitutes - -first. - - - - - Unpacking of patch sequences is much faster now - since we no longer do redundant unpacking and repacking of - intermediate paths. - - Nix now uses Berkeley DB 4.3. - - The derivation primitive is - lazier. Attributes of dependent derivations can mutually refer to - each other (as long as there are no data dependencies on the - outPath and drvPath attributes - computed by derivation). - - For example, the expression derivation - attrs now evaluates to (essentially) - - -attrs // { - type = "derivation"; - outPath = derivation! attrs; - drvPath = derivation! attrs; -} - - where derivation! is a primop that does the - actual derivation instantiation (i.e., it does what - derivation used to do). The advantage is that - it allows commands such as nix-env -qa and - nix-env -i to be much faster since they no longer - need to instantiate all derivations, just the - name attribute. - - Also, it allows derivations to cyclically reference each - other, for example, - - -webServer = derivation { - ... - hostName = "svn.cs.uu.nl"; - services = [svnService]; -}; - -svnService = derivation { - ... - hostName = webServer.hostName; -}; - - Previously, this would yield a black hole (infinite recursion). - - - - nix-build now defaults to using - ./default.nix if no Nix expression is - specified. - - nix-instantiate, when applied to - a Nix expression that evaluates to a function, will call the - function automatically if all its arguments have - defaults. - - Nix now uses libtool to build dynamic libraries. - This reduces the size of executables. - - A new list concatenation operator - ++. For example, [1 2 3] ++ [4 5 - 6] evaluates to [1 2 3 4 5 - 6]. - - Some currently undocumented primops to support - low-level build management using Nix (i.e., using Nix as a Make - replacement). See the commit messages for r3578 - and r3580. - - Various bug fixes and performance - improvements. - - - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.0.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.0.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 41081a19f..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.0.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,119 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 1.0 (2012-05-11) - -There have been numerous improvements and bug fixes since the -previous release. Here are the most significant: - - - - - Nix can now optionally use the Boehm garbage collector. - This significantly reduces the Nix evaluator’s memory footprint, - especially when evaluating large NixOS system configurations. It - can be enabled using the configure - option. - - - - Nix now uses SQLite for its database. This is faster and - more flexible than the old ad hoc format. - SQLite is also used to cache the manifests in - /nix/var/nix/manifests, resulting in a - significant speedup. - - - - Nix now has an search path for expressions. The search path - is set using the environment variable NIX_PATH and - the command line option. In Nix expressions, - paths between angle brackets are used to specify files that must - be looked up in the search path. For instance, the expression - <nixpkgs/default.nix> looks for a file - nixpkgs/default.nix relative to every element - in the search path. - - - - The new command nix-build --run-env - builds all dependencies of a derivation, then starts a shell in an - environment containing all variables from the derivation. This is - useful for reproducing the environment of a derivation for - development. - - - - The new command nix-store --verify-path - verifies that the contents of a store path have not - changed. - - - - The new command nix-store --print-env - prints out the environment of a derivation in a format that can be - evaluated by a shell. - - - - Attribute names can now be arbitrary strings. For instance, - you can write { "foo-1.2" = …; "bla bla" = …; }."bla - bla". - - - - Attribute selection can now provide a default value using - the or operator. For instance, the expression - x.y.z or e evaluates to the attribute - x.y.z if it exists, and e - otherwise. - - - - The right-hand side of the ? operator can - now be an attribute path, e.g., attrs ? - a.b.c. - - - - On Linux, Nix will now make files in the Nix store immutable - on filesystems that support it. This prevents accidental - modification of files in the store by the root user. - - - - Nix has preliminary support for derivations with multiple - outputs. This is useful because it allows parts of a package to - be deployed and garbage-collected separately. For instance, - development parts of a package such as header files or static - libraries would typically not be part of the closure of an - application, resulting in reduced disk usage and installation - time. - - - - The Nix store garbage collector is faster and holds the - global lock for a shorter amount of time. - - - - The option (corresponding to the - configuration setting build-timeout) allows you - to set an absolute timeout on builds — if a build runs for more than - the given number of seconds, it is terminated. This is useful for - recovering automatically from builds that are stuck in an infinite - loop but keep producing output, and for which - --max-silent-time is ineffective. - - - - Nix development has moved to GitHub (). - - - - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.1.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.1.xml deleted file mode 100644 index f7dadb7cb..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.1.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,100 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 1.1 (2012-07-18) - -This release has the following improvements: - - - - - On Linux, when doing a chroot build, Nix now uses various - namespace features provided by the Linux kernel to improve - build isolation. Namely: - - The private network namespace ensures that - builders cannot talk to the outside world (or vice versa): each - build only sees a private loopback interface. This also means - that two concurrent builds can listen on the same port (e.g. as - part of a test) without conflicting with each - other. - The PID namespace causes each build to start as - PID 1. Processes outside of the chroot are not visible to those - on the inside. On the other hand, processes inside the chroot - are visible from the outside (though with - different PIDs). - The IPC namespace prevents the builder from - communicating with outside processes using SysV IPC mechanisms - (shared memory, message queues, semaphores). It also ensures - that all IPC objects are destroyed when the builder - exits. - The UTS namespace ensures that builders see a - hostname of localhost rather than the actual - hostname. - The private mount namespace was already used by - Nix to ensure that the bind-mounts used to set up the chroot are - cleaned up automatically. - - - - - - Build logs are now compressed using - bzip2. The command nix-store - -l decompresses them on the fly. This can be disabled - by setting the option build-compress-log to - false. - - - - The creation of build logs in - /nix/var/log/nix/drvs can be disabled by - setting the new option build-keep-log to - false. This is useful, for instance, for Hydra - build machines. - - - - Nix now reserves some space in - /nix/var/nix/db/reserved to ensure that the - garbage collector can run successfully if the disk is full. This - is necessary because SQLite transactions fail if the disk is - full. - - - - Added a basic fetchurl function. This - is not intended to replace the fetchurl in - Nixpkgs, but is useful for bootstrapping; e.g., it will allow us - to get rid of the bootstrap binaries in the Nixpkgs source tree - and download them instead. You can use it by doing - import <nix/fetchurl.nix> { url = - url; sha256 = - "hash"; }. (Shea Levy) - - - - Improved RPM spec file. (Michel Alexandre Salim) - - - - Support for on-demand socket-based activation in the Nix - daemon with systemd. - - - - Added a manpage for - nix.conf5. - - - - When using the Nix daemon, the flag in - nix-env -qa is now much faster. - - - - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.10.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.10.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 689a95466..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.10.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,64 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 1.10 (2015-09-03) - -This is primarily a bug fix release. It also has a number of new -features: - - - - - A number of builtin functions have been added to reduce - Nixpkgs/NixOS evaluation time and memory consumption: - all, - any, - concatStringsSep, - foldl’, - genList, - replaceStrings, - sort. - - - - - The garbage collector is more robust when the disk is full. - - - - Nix supports a new API for building derivations that doesn’t - require a .drv file to be present on disk; it - only requires an in-memory representation of the derivation. This - is used by the Hydra continuous build system to make remote builds - more efficient. - - - - The function <nix/fetchurl.nix> now - uses a builtin builder (i.e. it doesn’t - require starting an external process; the download is performed by - Nix itself). This ensures that derivation paths don’t change when - Nix is upgraded, and obviates the need for ugly hacks to support - chroot execution. - - - - now prints some configuration - information, in particular what compile-time optional features are - enabled, and the paths of various directories. - - - - Build users have their supplementary groups set correctly. - - - - -This release has contributions from Eelco Dolstra, Guillaume -Maudoux, Iwan Aucamp, Jaka Hudoklin, Kirill Elagin, Ludovic Courtès, -Manolis Ragkousis, Nicolas B. Pierron and Shea Levy. - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.11.10.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.11.10.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 415388b3e..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.11.10.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,31 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 1.11.10 (2017-06-12) - -This release fixes a security bug in Nix’s “build user” build -isolation mechanism. Previously, Nix builders had the ability to -create setuid binaries owned by a nixbld -user. Such a binary could then be used by an attacker to assume a -nixbld identity and interfere with subsequent -builds running under the same UID. - -To prevent this issue, Nix now disallows builders to create -setuid and setgid binaries. On Linux, this is done using a seccomp BPF -filter. Note that this imposes a small performance penalty (e.g. 1% -when building GNU Hello). Using seccomp, we now also prevent the -creation of extended attributes and POSIX ACLs since these cannot be -represented in the NAR format and (in the case of POSIX ACLs) allow -bypassing regular Nix store permissions. On macOS, the restriction is -implemented using the existing sandbox mechanism, which now uses a -minimal “allow all except the creation of setuid/setgid binaries” -profile when regular sandboxing is disabled. On other platforms, the -“build user” mechanism is now disabled. - -Thanks go to Linus Heckemann for discovering and reporting this -bug. - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.11.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.11.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 28f6d4ac8..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.11.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,141 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 1.11 (2016-01-19) - -This is primarily a bug fix release. It also has a number of new -features: - - - - - nix-prefetch-url can now download URLs - specified in a Nix expression. For example, - - -$ nix-prefetch-url -A hello.src - - - will prefetch the file specified by the - fetchurl call in the attribute - hello.src from the Nix expression in the - current directory, and print the cryptographic hash of the - resulting file on stdout. This differs from nix-build -A - hello.src in that it doesn't verify the hash, and is - thus useful when you’re updating a Nix expression. - - You can also prefetch the result of functions that unpack a - tarball, such as fetchFromGitHub. For example: - - -$ nix-prefetch-url --unpack https://github.com/NixOS/patchelf/archive/0.8.tar.gz - - - or from a Nix expression: - - -$ nix-prefetch-url -A nix-repl.src - - - - - - - - The builtin function - <nix/fetchurl.nix> now supports - downloading and unpacking NARs. This removes the need to have - multiple downloads in the Nixpkgs stdenv bootstrap process (like a - separate busybox binary for Linux, or curl/mkdir/sh/bzip2 for - Darwin). Now all those files can be combined into a single NAR, - optionally compressed using xz. - - - - Nix now supports SHA-512 hashes for verifying fixed-output - derivations, and in builtins.hashString. - - - - - The new flag will cause every build to - be executed N+1 times. If the build - output differs between any round, the build is rejected, and the - output paths are not registered as valid. This is primarily - useful to verify build determinism. (We already had a - option to repeat a previously succeeded - build. However, with , non-deterministic - builds are registered in the DB. Preventing that is useful for - Hydra to ensure that non-deterministic builds don't end up - getting published to the binary cache.) - - - - - - The options and , if they - detect a difference between two runs of the same derivation and - is given, will make the output of the other - run available under - store-path-check. This - makes it easier to investigate the non-determinism using tools - like diffoscope, e.g., - - -$ nix-build pkgs/stdenv/linux -A stage1.pkgs.zlib --check -K -error: derivation ‘/nix/store/l54i8wlw2265…-zlib-1.2.8.drv’ may not -be deterministic: output ‘/nix/store/11a27shh6n2i…-zlib-1.2.8’ -differs from ‘/nix/store/11a27shh6n2i…-zlib-1.2.8-check’ - -$ diffoscope /nix/store/11a27shh6n2i…-zlib-1.2.8 /nix/store/11a27shh6n2i…-zlib-1.2.8-check -… -├── lib/libz.a -│ ├── metadata -│ │ @@ -1,15 +1,15 @@ -│ │ -rw-r--r-- 30001/30000 3096 Jan 12 15:20 2016 adler32.o -… -│ │ +rw-r--r-- 30001/30000 3096 Jan 12 15:28 2016 adler32.o -… - - - - - - Improved FreeBSD support. - - - - nix-env -qa --xml --meta now prints - license information. - - - - The maximum number of parallel TCP connections that the - binary cache substituter will use has been decreased from 150 to - 25. This should prevent upsetting some broken NAT routers, and - also improves performance. - - - - All "chroot"-containing strings got renamed to "sandbox". - In particular, some Nix options got renamed, but the old names - are still accepted as lower-priority aliases. - - - - - -This release has contributions from Anders Claesson, Anthony -Cowley, Bjørn Forsman, Brian McKenna, Danny Wilson, davidak, Eelco Dolstra, -Fabian Schmitthenner, FrankHB, Ilya Novoselov, janus, Jim Garrison, John -Ericson, Jude Taylor, Ludovic Courtès, Manuel Jacob, Mathnerd314, -Pascal Wittmann, Peter Simons, Philip Potter, Preston Bennes, Rommel -M. Martinez, Sander van der Burg, Shea Levy, Tim Cuthbertson, Tuomas -Tynkkynen, Utku Demir and Vladimír Čunát. - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.2.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.2.xml deleted file mode 100644 index f065f3ccc..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.2.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,157 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 1.2 (2012-12-06) - -This release has the following improvements and changes: - - - - - Nix has a new binary substituter mechanism: the - binary cache. A binary cache contains - pre-built binaries of Nix packages. Whenever Nix wants to build a - missing Nix store path, it will check a set of binary caches to - see if any of them has a pre-built binary of that path. The - configuration setting contains a - list of URLs of binary caches. For instance, doing - -$ nix-env -i thunderbird --option binary-caches http://cache.nixos.org - - will install Thunderbird and its dependencies, using the available - pre-built binaries in http://cache.nixos.org. - The main advantage over the old “manifest”-based method of getting - pre-built binaries is that you don’t have to worry about your - manifest being in sync with the Nix expressions you’re installing - from; i.e., you don’t need to run nix-pull to - update your manifest. It’s also more scalable because you don’t - need to redownload a giant manifest file every time. - - - A Nix channel can provide a binary cache URL that will be - used automatically if you subscribe to that channel. If you use - the Nixpkgs or NixOS channels - (http://nixos.org/channels) you automatically get the - cache http://cache.nixos.org. - - Binary caches are created using nix-push. - For details on the operation and format of binary caches, see the - nix-push manpage. More details are provided in - this - nix-dev posting. - - - - Multiple output support should now be usable. A derivation - can declare that it wants to produce multiple store paths by - saying something like - -outputs = [ "lib" "headers" "doc" ]; - - This will cause Nix to pass the intended store path of each output - to the builder through the environment variables - lib, headers and - doc. Other packages can refer to a specific - output by referring to - pkg.output, - e.g. - -buildInputs = [ pkg.lib pkg.headers ]; - - If you install a package with multiple outputs using - nix-env, each output path will be symlinked - into the user environment. - - - - Dashes are now valid as part of identifiers and attribute - names. - - - - The new operation nix-store --repair-path - allows corrupted or missing store paths to be repaired by - redownloading them. nix-store --verify --check-contents - --repair will scan and repair all paths in the Nix - store. Similarly, nix-env, - nix-build, nix-instantiate - and nix-store --realise have a - flag to detect and fix bad paths by - rebuilding or redownloading them. - - - - Nix no longer sets the immutable bit on files in the Nix - store. Instead, the recommended way to guard the Nix store - against accidental modification on Linux is to make it a read-only - bind mount, like this: - - -$ mount --bind /nix/store /nix/store -$ mount -o remount,ro,bind /nix/store - - - Nix will automatically make /nix/store - writable as needed (using a private mount namespace) to allow - modifications. - - - - Store optimisation (replacing identical files in the store - with hard links) can now be done automatically every time a path - is added to the store. This is enabled by setting the - configuration option auto-optimise-store to - true (disabled by default). - - - - Nix now supports xz compression for NARs - in addition to bzip2. It compresses about 30% - better on typical archives and decompresses about twice as - fast. - - - - Basic Nix expression evaluation profiling: setting the - environment variable NIX_COUNT_CALLS to - 1 will cause Nix to print how many times each - primop or function was executed. - - - - New primops: concatLists, - elem, elemAt and - filter. - - - - The command nix-copy-closure has a new - flag () to - download missing paths on the target machine using the substitute - mechanism. - - - - The command nix-worker has been renamed - to nix-daemon. Support for running the Nix - worker in “slave” mode has been removed. - - - - The flag of every Nix command now - invokes man. - - - - Chroot builds are now supported on systemd machines. - - - - -This release has contributions from Eelco Dolstra, Florian -Friesdorf, Mats Erik Andersson and Shea Levy. - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.3.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.3.xml deleted file mode 100644 index e2009ee3b..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.3.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,19 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 1.3 (2013-01-04) - -This is primarily a bug fix release. When this version is first -run on Linux, it removes any immutable bits from the Nix store and -increases the schema version of the Nix store. (The previous release -removed support for setting the immutable bit; this release clears any -remaining immutable bits to make certain operations more -efficient.) - -This release has contributions from Eelco Dolstra and Stuart -Pernsteiner. - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.4.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.4.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 8114ce6b5..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.4.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,39 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 1.4 (2013-02-26) - -This release fixes a security bug in multi-user operation. It -was possible for derivations to cause the mode of files outside of the -Nix store to be changed to 444 (read-only but world-readable) by -creating hard links to those files (details). - -There are also the following improvements: - - - - New built-in function: - builtins.hashString. - - Build logs are now stored in - /nix/var/log/nix/drvs/XX/, - where XX is the first two characters of - the derivation. This is useful on machines that keep a lot of build - logs (such as Hydra servers). - - The function corepkgs/fetchurl - can now make the downloaded file executable. This will allow - getting rid of all bootstrap binaries in the Nixpkgs source - tree. - - Language change: The expression "${./path} - ..." now evaluates to a string instead of a - path. - - - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.5.1.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.5.1.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 035c8dbcb..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.5.1.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,12 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 1.5.1 (2013-02-28) - -The bug fix to the bug fix had a bug itself, of course. But -this time it will work for sure! - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.5.2.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.5.2.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 7e81dd243..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.5.2.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,12 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 1.5.2 (2013-05-13) - -This is primarily a bug fix release. It has contributions from -Eelco Dolstra, Lluís Batlle i Rossell and Shea Levy. - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.5.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.5.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 8e279d769..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.5.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,12 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 1.5 (2013-02-27) - -This is a brown paper bag release to fix a regression introduced -by the hard link security fix in 1.4. - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.6.1.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.6.1.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 982871b51..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.6.1.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,69 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 1.6.1 (2013-10-28) - -This is primarily a bug fix release. Changes of interest -are: - - - - - Nix 1.6 accidentally changed the semantics of antiquoted - paths in strings, such as "${/foo}/bar". This - release reverts to the Nix 1.5.3 behaviour. - - - - Previously, Nix optimised expressions such as - "${expr}" to - expr. Thus it neither checked whether - expr could be coerced to a string, nor - applied such coercions. This meant that - "${123}" evaluatued to 123, - and "${./foo}" evaluated to - ./foo (even though - "${./foo} " evaluates to - "/nix/store/hash-foo "). - Nix now checks the type of antiquoted expressions and - applies coercions. - - - - Nix now shows the exact position of undefined variables. In - particular, undefined variable errors in a with - previously didn't show any position - information, so this makes it a lot easier to fix such - errors. - - - - Undefined variables are now treated consistently. - Previously, the tryEval function would catch - undefined variables inside a with but not - outside. Now tryEval never catches undefined - variables. - - - - Bash completion in nix-shell now works - correctly. - - - - Stack traces are less verbose: they no longer show calls to - builtin functions and only show a single line for each derivation - on the call stack. - - - - New built-in function: builtins.typeOf, - which returns the type of its argument as a string. - - - - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.6.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.6.xml deleted file mode 100644 index cdb52ed0b..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.6.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,127 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 1.6 (2013-09-10) - -In addition to the usual bug fixes, this release has several new -features: - - - - - The command nix-build --run-env has been - renamed to nix-shell. - - - - nix-shell now sources - $stdenv/setup inside the - interactive shell, rather than in a parent shell. This ensures - that shell functions defined by stdenv can be - used in the interactive shell. - - - - nix-shell has a new flag - to clear the environment, so you get an - environment that more closely corresponds to the “real” Nix build. - - - - - nix-shell now sets the shell prompt - (PS1) to ensure that Nix shells are distinguishable - from your regular shells. - - - - nix-env no longer requires a - * argument to match all packages, so - nix-env -qa is equivalent to nix-env - -qa '*'. - - - - nix-env -i has a new flag - () to remove all - previous packages from the profile. This makes it easier to do - declarative package management similar to NixOS’s - . For instance, if you - have a specification my-packages.nix like this: - - -with import <nixpkgs> {}; -[ thunderbird - geeqie - ... -] - - - then after any change to this file, you can run: - - -$ nix-env -f my-packages.nix -ir - - - to update your profile to match the specification. - - - - The ‘with’ language construct is now more - lazy. It only evaluates its argument if a variable might actually - refer to an attribute in the argument. For instance, this now - works: - - -let - pkgs = with pkgs; { foo = "old"; bar = foo; } // overrides; - overrides = { foo = "new"; }; -in pkgs.bar - - - This evaluates to "new", while previously it - gave an “infinite recursion” error. - - - - Nix now has proper integer arithmetic operators. For - instance, you can write x + y instead of - builtins.add x y, or x < - y instead of builtins.lessThan x y. - The comparison operators also work on strings. - - - - On 64-bit systems, Nix integers are now 64 bits rather than - 32 bits. - - - - When using the Nix daemon, the nix-daemon - worker process now runs on the same CPU as the client, on systems - that support setting CPU affinity. This gives a significant speedup - on some systems. - - - - If a stack overflow occurs in the Nix evaluator, you now get - a proper error message (rather than “Segmentation fault”) on some - systems. - - - - In addition to directories, you can now bind-mount regular - files in chroots through the (now misnamed) option - . - - - - -This release has contributions from Domen Kožar, Eelco Dolstra, -Florian Friesdorf, Gergely Risko, Ivan Kozik, Ludovic Courtès and Shea -Levy. - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.7.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.7.xml deleted file mode 100644 index e736c15a2..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.7.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,263 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 1.7 (2014-04-11) - -In addition to the usual bug fixes, this release has the -following new features: - - - - - Antiquotation is now allowed inside of quoted attribute - names (e.g. set."${foo}"). In the case where - the attribute name is just a single antiquotation, the quotes can - be dropped (e.g. the above example can be written - set.${foo}). If an attribute name inside of a - set declaration evaluates to null (e.g. - { ${null} = false; }), then that attribute is - not added to the set. - - - - Experimental support for cryptographically signed binary - caches. See the - commit for details. - - - - An experimental new substituter, - download-via-ssh, that fetches binaries from - remote machines via SSH. Specifying the flags --option - use-ssh-substituter true --option ssh-substituter-hosts - user@hostname will cause Nix - to download binaries from the specified machine, if it has - them. - - - - nix-store -r and - nix-build have a new flag, - , that builds a previously built - derivation again, and prints an error message if the output is not - exactly the same. This helps to verify whether a derivation is - truly deterministic. For example: - - -$ nix-build '<nixpkgs>' -A patchelf - -$ nix-build '<nixpkgs>' -A patchelf --check - -error: derivation `/nix/store/1ipvxs…-patchelf-0.6' may not be deterministic: - hash mismatch in output `/nix/store/4pc1dm…-patchelf-0.6.drv' - - - - - - - - The nix-instantiate flags - and - have been renamed to and - , respectively. - - - - nix-instantiate, - nix-build and nix-shell now - have a flag (or ) that - allows you to specify the expression to be evaluated as a command - line argument. For instance, nix-instantiate --eval -E - '1 + 2' will print 3. - - - - nix-shell improvements: - - - - - It has a new flag, (or - ), that sets up a build environment - containing the specified packages from Nixpkgs. For example, - the command - - -$ nix-shell -p sqlite xorg.libX11 hello - - - will start a shell in which the given packages are - present. - - - - It now uses shell.nix as the - default expression, falling back to - default.nix if the former doesn’t - exist. This makes it convenient to have a - shell.nix in your project to set up a - nice development environment. - - - - It evaluates the derivation attribute - shellHook, if set. Since - stdenv does not normally execute this hook, - it allows you to do nix-shell-specific - setup. - - - - It preserves the user’s timezone setting. - - - - - - - - In chroots, Nix now sets up a /dev - containing only a minimal set of devices (such as - /dev/null). Note that it only does this if - you don’t have /dev - listed in your setting; - otherwise, it will bind-mount the /dev from - outside the chroot. - - Similarly, if you don’t have /dev/pts listed - in , Nix will mount a private - devpts filesystem on the chroot’s - /dev/pts. - - - - - New built-in function: builtins.toJSON, - which returns a JSON representation of a value. - - - - nix-env -q has a new flag - to print a JSON representation of the - installed or available packages. - - - - nix-env now supports meta attributes with - more complex values, such as attribute sets. - - - - The flag now allows attribute names with - dots in them, e.g. - - -$ nix-instantiate --eval '<nixos>' -A 'config.systemd.units."nscd.service".text' - - - - - - - The option to - nix-store --gc now accepts a unit - specifier. For example, nix-store --gc --max-freed - 1G will free up to 1 gigabyte of disk space. - - - - nix-collect-garbage has a new flag - - Nd, which deletes - all user environment generations older than - N days. Likewise, nix-env - --delete-generations accepts a - Nd age limit. - - - - Nix now heuristically detects whether a build failure was - due to a disk-full condition. In that case, the build is not - flagged as “permanently failed”. This is mostly useful for Hydra, - which needs to distinguish between permanent and transient build - failures. - - - - There is a new symbol __curPos that - expands to an attribute set containing its file name and line and - column numbers, e.g. { file = "foo.nix"; line = 10; - column = 5; }. There also is a new builtin function, - unsafeGetAttrPos, that returns the position of - an attribute. This is used by Nixpkgs to provide location - information in error messages, e.g. - - -$ nix-build '<nixpkgs>' -A libreoffice --argstr system x86_64-darwin -error: the package ‘libreoffice-4.0.5.2’ in ‘.../applications/office/libreoffice/default.nix:263’ - is not supported on ‘x86_64-darwin’ - - - - - - - The garbage collector is now more concurrent with other Nix - processes because it releases certain locks earlier. - - - - The binary tarball installer has been improved. You can now - install Nix by running: - - -$ bash <(curl https://nixos.org/nix/install) - - - - - - - More evaluation errors include position information. For - instance, selecting a missing attribute will print something like - - -error: attribute `nixUnstabl' missing, at /etc/nixos/configurations/misc/eelco/mandark.nix:216:15 - - - - - - - The command nix-setuid-helper is - gone. - - - - Nix no longer uses Automake, but instead has a - non-recursive, GNU Make-based build system. - - - - All installed libraries now have the prefix - libnix. In particular, this gets rid of - libutil, which could clash with libraries with - the same name from other packages. - - - - Nix now requires a compiler that supports C++11. - - - - -This release has contributions from Danny Wilson, Domen Kožar, -Eelco Dolstra, Ian-Woo Kim, Ludovic Courtès, Maxim Ivanov, Petr -Rockai, Ricardo M. Correia and Shea Levy. - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.8.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.8.xml deleted file mode 100644 index d7e2e99ad..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.8.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,123 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 1.8 (2014-12-14) - - - - Breaking change: to address a race condition, the - remote build hook mechanism now uses nix-store - --serve on the remote machine. This requires build slaves - to be updated to Nix 1.8. - - Nix now uses HTTPS instead of HTTP to access the - default binary cache, - cache.nixos.org. - - nix-env selectors are now regular - expressions. For instance, you can do - - -$ nix-env -qa '.*zip.*' - - - to query all packages with a name containing - zip. - - nix-store --read-log can now - fetch remote build logs. If a build log is not available locally, - then ‘nix-store -l’ will now try to download it from the servers - listed in the ‘log-servers’ option in nix.conf. For instance, if you - have the configuration option - - -log-servers = http://hydra.nixos.org/log - - -then it will try to get logs from -http://hydra.nixos.org/log/base name of the -store path. This allows you to do things like: - - -$ nix-store -l $(which xterm) - - - and get a log even if xterm wasn't built - locally. - - New builtin functions: - attrValues, deepSeq, - fromJSON, readDir, - seq. - - nix-instantiate --eval now has a - flag to print the resulting value in JSON - format. - - nix-copy-closure now uses - nix-store --serve on the remote side to send or - receive closures. This fixes a race condition between - nix-copy-closure and the garbage - collector. - - Derivations can specify the new special attribute - allowedRequisites, which has a similar meaning to - allowedReferences. But instead of only enforcing - to explicitly specify the immediate references, it requires the - derivation to specify all the dependencies recursively (hence the - name, requisites) that are used by the resulting - output. - - On Mac OS X, Nix now handles case collisions when - importing closures from case-sensitive file systems. This is mostly - useful for running NixOps on Mac OS X. - - The Nix daemon has new configuration options - (specifying the users and groups that - are allowed to connect to the daemon) and - (specifying the users and groups that - can perform privileged operations like specifying untrusted binary - caches). - - The configuration option - now defaults to the number of available - CPU cores. - - Build users are now used by default when Nix is - invoked as root. This prevents builds from accidentally running as - root. - - Nix now includes systemd units and Upstart - jobs. - - Speed improvements to nix-store - --optimise. - - Language change: the == operator - now ignores string contexts (the “dependencies” of a - string). - - Nix now filters out Nix-specific ANSI escape - sequences on standard error. They are supposed to be invisible, but - some terminals show them anyway. - - Various commands now automatically pipe their output - into the pager as specified by the PAGER environment - variable. - - Several improvements to reduce memory consumption in - the evaluator. - - - -This release has contributions from Adam Szkoda, Aristid -Breitkreuz, Bob van der Linden, Charles Strahan, darealshinji, Eelco -Dolstra, Gergely Risko, Joel Taylor, Ludovic Courtès, Marko Durkovic, -Mikey Ariel, Paul Colomiets, Ricardo M. Correia, Ricky Elrod, Robert -Helgesson, Rob Vermaas, Russell O'Connor, Shea Levy, Shell Turner, -Sönke Hahn, Steve Purcell, Vladimír Čunát and Wout Mertens. - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.9.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.9.xml deleted file mode 100644 index cc6558b1a..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-1.9.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,216 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 1.9 (2015-06-12) - -In addition to the usual bug fixes, this release has the -following new features: - - - - - Signed binary cache support. You can enable signature - checking by adding the following to nix.conf: - - -signed-binary-caches = * -binary-cache-public-keys = cache.nixos.org-1:6NCHdD59X431o0gWypbMrAURkbJ16ZPMQFGspcDShjY= - - - This will prevent Nix from downloading any binary from the cache - that is not signed by one of the keys listed in - . - - Signature checking is only supported if you built Nix with - the libsodium package. - - Note that while Nix has had experimental support for signed - binary caches since version 1.7, this release changes the - signature format in a backwards-incompatible way. - - - - - - Automatic downloading of Nix expression tarballs. In various - places, you can now specify the URL of a tarball containing Nix - expressions (such as Nixpkgs), which will be downloaded and - unpacked automatically. For example: - - - - In nix-env: - - -$ nix-env -f https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs-channels/archive/nixos-14.12.tar.gz -iA firefox - - - This installs Firefox from the latest tested and built revision - of the NixOS 14.12 channel. - - In nix-build and - nix-shell: - - -$ nix-build https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/master.tar.gz -A hello - - - This builds GNU Hello from the latest revision of the Nixpkgs - master branch. - - In the Nix search path (as specified via - NIX_PATH or ). For example, to - start a shell containing the Pan package from a specific version - of Nixpkgs: - - -$ nix-shell -p pan -I nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs-channels/archive/8a3eea054838b55aca962c3fbde9c83c102b8bf2.tar.gz - - - - - In nixos-rebuild (on NixOS): - - -$ nixos-rebuild test -I nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs-channels/archive/nixos-unstable.tar.gz - - - - - In Nix expressions, via the new builtin function fetchTarball: - - -with import (fetchTarball https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs-channels/archive/nixos-14.12.tar.gz) {}; … - - - (This is not allowed in restricted mode.) - - - - - - - - nix-shell improvements: - - - - nix-shell now has a flag - to execute a command in the - nix-shell environment, - e.g. nix-shell --run make. This is like - the existing flag, except that it - uses a non-interactive shell (ensuring that hitting Ctrl-C won’t - drop you into the child shell). - - nix-shell can now be used as - a #!-interpreter. This allows you to write - scripts that dynamically fetch their own dependencies. For - example, here is a Haskell script that, when invoked, first - downloads GHC and the Haskell packages on which it depends: - - -#! /usr/bin/env nix-shell -#! nix-shell -i runghc -p haskellPackages.ghc haskellPackages.HTTP - -import Network.HTTP - -main = do - resp <- Network.HTTP.simpleHTTP (getRequest "http://nixos.org/") - body <- getResponseBody resp - print (take 100 body) - - - Of course, the dependencies are cached in the Nix store, so the - second invocation of this script will be much - faster. - - - - - - - - Chroot improvements: - - - - Chroot builds are now supported on Mac OS X - (using its sandbox mechanism). - - If chroots are enabled, they are now used for - all derivations, including fixed-output derivations (such as - fetchurl). The latter do have network - access, but can no longer access the host filesystem. If you - need the old behaviour, you can set the option - to - relaxed. - - On Linux, if chroots are enabled, builds are - performed in a private PID namespace once again. (This - functionality was lost in Nix 1.8.) - - Store paths listed in - are now automatically - expanded to their closure. For instance, if you want - /nix/store/…-bash/bin/sh mounted in your - chroot as /bin/sh, you only need to say - build-chroot-dirs = - /bin/sh=/nix/store/…-bash/bin/sh; it is no longer - necessary to specify the dependencies of Bash. - - - - - - The new derivation attribute - passAsFile allows you to specify that the - contents of derivation attributes should be passed via files rather - than environment variables. This is useful if you need to pass very - long strings that exceed the size limit of the environment. The - Nixpkgs function writeTextFile uses - this. - - You can now use ~ in Nix file - names to refer to your home directory, e.g. import - ~/.nixpkgs/config.nix. - - Nix has a new option - that allows limiting what paths the Nix evaluator has access to. By - passing --option restrict-eval true to Nix, the - evaluator will throw an exception if an attempt is made to access - any file outside of the Nix search path. This is primarily intended - for Hydra to ensure that a Hydra jobset only refers to its declared - inputs (and is therefore reproducible). - - nix-env now only creates a new - “generation” symlink in /nix/var/nix/profiles - if something actually changed. - - The environment variable NIX_PAGER - can now be set to override PAGER. You can set it to - cat to disable paging for Nix commands - only. - - Failing <...> - lookups now show position information. - - Improved Boehm GC use: we disabled scanning for - interior pointers, which should reduce the “Repeated - allocation of very large block” warnings and associated - retention of memory. - - - -This release has contributions from aszlig, Benjamin Staffin, -Charles Strahan, Christian Theune, Daniel Hahler, Danylo Hlynskyi -Daniel Peebles, Dan Peebles, Domen Kožar, Eelco Dolstra, Harald van -Dijk, Hoang Xuan Phu, Jaka Hudoklin, Jeff Ramnani, j-keck, Linquize, -Luca Bruno, Michael Merickel, Oliver Dunkl, Rob Vermaas, Rok Garbas, -Shea Levy, Tobias Geerinckx-Rice and William A. Kennington III. - -
- diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.0.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.0.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 6bef003ca..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.0.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1012 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 2.0 (2018-02-22) - -The following incompatible changes have been made: - - - - - The manifest-based substituter mechanism - (download-using-manifests) has been removed. It - has been superseded by the binary cache substituter mechanism - since several years. As a result, the following programs have been - removed: - - - nix-pull - nix-generate-patches - bsdiff - bspatch - - - - - - The “copy from other stores” substituter mechanism - (copy-from-other-stores and the - NIX_OTHER_STORES environment variable) has been - removed. It was primarily used by the NixOS installer to copy - available paths from the installation medium. The replacement is - to use a chroot store as a substituter - (e.g. --substituters /mnt), or to build into a - chroot store (e.g. --store /mnt --substituters /). - - - - The command nix-push has been removed as - part of the effort to eliminate Nix's dependency on Perl. You can - use nix copy instead, e.g. nix copy - --to file:///tmp/my-binary-cache paths… - - - - The “nested” log output feature () has been removed. As a result, - nix-log2xml was also removed. - - - - OpenSSL-based signing has been removed. This - feature was never well-supported. A better alternative is provided - by the and - options. - - - - Failed build caching has been removed. This - feature was introduced to support the Hydra continuous build - system, but Hydra no longer uses it. - - - - nix-mode.el has been removed from - Nix. It is now a separate - repository and can be installed through the MELPA package - repository. - - - - -This release has the following new features: - - - - - It introduces a new command named nix, - which is intended to eventually replace all - nix-* commands with a more consistent and - better designed user interface. It currently provides replacements - for some (but not all) of the functionality provided by - nix-store, nix-build, - nix-shell -p, nix-env -qa, - nix-instantiate --eval, - nix-push and - nix-copy-closure. It has the following major - features: - - - - - Unlike the legacy commands, it has a consistent way to - refer to packages and package-like arguments (like store - paths). For example, the following commands all copy the GNU - Hello package to a remote machine: - - nix copy --to ssh://machine nixpkgs.hello - nix copy --to ssh://machine /nix/store/0i2jd68mp5g6h2sa5k9c85rb80sn8hi9-hello-2.10 - nix copy --to ssh://machine '(with import <nixpkgs> {}; hello)' - - By contrast, nix-copy-closure only accepted - store paths as arguments. - - - - It is self-documenting: shows - all available command-line arguments. If - is given after a subcommand, it shows - examples for that subcommand. nix - --help-config shows all configuration - options. - - - - It is much less verbose. By default, it displays a - single-line progress indicator that shows how many packages - are left to be built or downloaded, and (if there are running - builds) the most recent line of builder output. If a build - fails, it shows the last few lines of builder output. The full - build log can be retrieved using nix - log. - - - - It provides - all nix.conf configuration options as - command line flags. For example, instead of --option - http-connections 100 you can write - --http-connections 100. Boolean options can - be written as - --foo or - --no-foo - (e.g. ). - - - - Many subcommands have a flag to - write results to stdout in JSON format. - - - - - Please note that the nix command - is a work in progress and the interface is subject to - change. - - It provides the following high-level (“porcelain”) - subcommands: - - - - - nix build is a replacement for - nix-build. - - - - nix run executes a command in an - environment in which the specified packages are available. It - is (roughly) a replacement for nix-shell - -p. Unlike that command, it does not execute the - command in a shell, and has a flag (-c) - that specifies the unquoted command line to be - executed. - - It is particularly useful in conjunction with chroot - stores, allowing Linux users who do not have permission to - install Nix in /nix/store to still use - binary substitutes that assume - /nix/store. For example, - - nix run --store ~/my-nix nixpkgs.hello -c hello --greeting 'Hi everybody!' - - downloads (or if not substitutes are available, builds) the - GNU Hello package into - ~/my-nix/nix/store, then runs - hello in a mount namespace where - ~/my-nix/nix/store is mounted onto - /nix/store. - - - - nix search replaces nix-env - -qa. It searches the available packages for - occurrences of a search string in the attribute name, package - name or description. Unlike nix-env -qa, it - has a cache to speed up subsequent searches. - - - - nix copy copies paths between - arbitrary Nix stores, generalising - nix-copy-closure and - nix-push. - - - - nix repl replaces the external - program nix-repl. It provides an - interactive environment for evaluating and building Nix - expressions. Note that it uses linenoise-ng - instead of GNU Readline. - - - - nix upgrade-nix upgrades Nix to the - latest stable version. This requires that Nix is installed in - a profile. (Thus it won’t work on NixOS, or if it’s installed - outside of the Nix store.) - - - - nix verify checks whether store paths - are unmodified and/or “trusted” (see below). It replaces - nix-store --verify and nix-store - --verify-path. - - - - nix log shows the build log of a - package or path. If the build log is not available locally, it - will try to obtain it from the configured substituters (such - as cache.nixos.org, which now provides build - logs). - - - - nix edit opens the source code of a - package in your editor. - - - - nix eval replaces - nix-instantiate --eval. - - - - nix - why-depends shows why one store path has another in - its closure. This is primarily useful to finding the causes of - closure bloat. For example, - - nix why-depends nixpkgs.vlc nixpkgs.libdrm.dev - - shows a chain of files and fragments of file contents that - cause the VLC package to have the “dev” output of - libdrm in its closure — an undesirable - situation. - - - - nix path-info shows information about - store paths, replacing nix-store -q. A - useful feature is the option - (). For example, the following command show - the closure sizes of every path in the current NixOS system - closure, sorted by size: - - nix path-info -rS /run/current-system | sort -nk2 - - - - - - nix optimise-store replaces - nix-store --optimise. The main difference - is that it has a progress indicator. - - - - - A number of low-level (“plumbing”) commands are also - available: - - - - - nix ls-store and nix - ls-nar list the contents of a store path or NAR - file. The former is primarily useful in conjunction with - remote stores, e.g. - - nix ls-store --store https://cache.nixos.org/ -lR /nix/store/0i2jd68mp5g6h2sa5k9c85rb80sn8hi9-hello-2.10 - - lists the contents of path in a binary cache. - - - - nix cat-store and nix - cat-nar allow extracting a file from a store path or - NAR file. - - - - nix dump-path writes the contents of - a store path to stdout in NAR format. This replaces - nix-store --dump. - - - - nix - show-derivation displays a store derivation in JSON - format. This is an alternative to - pp-aterm. - - - - nix - add-to-store replaces nix-store - --add. - - - - nix sign-paths signs store - paths. - - - - nix copy-sigs copies signatures from - one store to another. - - - - nix show-config shows all - configuration options and their current values. - - - - - - - - The store abstraction that Nix has had for a long time to - support store access via the Nix daemon has been extended - significantly. In particular, substituters (which used to be - external programs such as - download-from-binary-cache) are now subclasses - of the abstract Store class. This allows - many Nix commands to operate on such store types. For example, - nix path-info shows information about paths in - your local Nix store, while nix path-info --store - https://cache.nixos.org/ shows information about paths - in the specified binary cache. Similarly, - nix-copy-closure, nix-push - and substitution are all instances of the general notion of - copying paths between different kinds of Nix stores. - - Stores are specified using an URI-like syntax, - e.g. https://cache.nixos.org/ or - ssh://machine. The following store types are supported: - - - - - - LocalStore (stori URI - local or an absolute path) and the misnamed - RemoteStore (daemon) - provide access to a local Nix store, the latter via the Nix - daemon. You can use auto or the empty - string to auto-select a local or daemon store depending on - whether you have write permission to the Nix store. It is no - longer necessary to set the NIX_REMOTE - environment variable to use the Nix daemon. - - As noted above, LocalStore now - supports chroot builds, allowing the “physical” location of - the Nix store - (e.g. /home/alice/nix/store) to differ - from its “logical” location (typically - /nix/store). This allows non-root users - to use Nix while still getting the benefits from prebuilt - binaries from cache.nixos.org. - - - - - - BinaryCacheStore is the abstract - superclass of all binary cache stores. It supports writing - build logs and NAR content listings in JSON format. - - - - - - HttpBinaryCacheStore - (http://, https://) - supports binary caches via HTTP or HTTPS. If the server - supports PUT requests, it supports - uploading store paths via commands such as nix - copy. - - - - - - LocalBinaryCacheStore - (file://) supports binary caches in the - local filesystem. - - - - - - S3BinaryCacheStore - (s3://) supports binary caches stored in - Amazon S3, if enabled at compile time. - - - - - - LegacySSHStore (ssh://) - is used to implement remote builds and - nix-copy-closure. - - - - - - SSHStore - (ssh-ng://) supports arbitrary Nix - operations on a remote machine via the same protocol used by - nix-daemon. - - - - - - - - - - - - Security has been improved in various ways: - - - - - Nix now stores signatures for local store - paths. When paths are copied between stores (e.g., copied from - a binary cache to a local store), signatures are - propagated. - - Locally-built paths are signed automatically using the - secret keys specified by the - store option. Secret/public key pairs can be generated using - nix-store - --generate-binary-cache-key. - - In addition, locally-built store paths are marked as - “ultimately trusted”, but this bit is not propagated when - paths are copied between stores. - - - - Content-addressable store paths no longer require - signatures — they can be imported into a store by unprivileged - users even if they lack signatures. - - - - The command nix verify checks whether - the specified paths are trusted, i.e., have a certain number - of trusted signatures, are ultimately trusted, or are - content-addressed. - - - - Substitutions from binary caches now - require signatures by default. This was already the case on - NixOS. - - - - In Linux sandbox builds, we now - use /build instead of - /tmp as the temporary build - directory. This fixes potential security problems when a build - accidentally stores its TMPDIR in some - security-sensitive place, such as an RPATH. - - - - - - - - - - Pure evaluation mode. With the - --pure-eval flag, Nix enables a variant of the existing - restricted evaluation mode that forbids access to anything that could cause - different evaluations of the same command line arguments to produce a - different result. This includes builtin functions such as - builtins.getEnv, but more importantly, - all filesystem or network access unless a content hash - or commit hash is specified. For example, calls to - builtins.fetchGit are only allowed if a - rev attribute is specified. - - The goal of this feature is to enable true reproducibility - and traceability of builds (including NixOS system configurations) - at the evaluation level. For example, in the future, - nixos-rebuild might build configurations from a - Nix expression in a Git repository in pure mode. That expression - might fetch other repositories such as Nixpkgs via - builtins.fetchGit. The commit hash of the - top-level repository then uniquely identifies a running system, - and, in conjunction with that repository, allows it to be - reproduced or modified. - - - - - There are several new features to support binary - reproducibility (i.e. to help ensure that multiple builds of the - same derivation produce exactly the same output). When - is set to - false, it’s no - longer a fatal error if build rounds produce different - output. Also, a hook named is provided - to allow you to run tools such as diffoscope - when build rounds produce different output. - - - - Configuring remote builds is a lot easier now. Provided you - are not using the Nix daemon, you can now just specify a remote - build machine on the command line, e.g. --option builders - 'ssh://my-mac x86_64-darwin'. The environment variable - NIX_BUILD_HOOK has been removed and is no longer - needed. The environment variable NIX_REMOTE_SYSTEMS - is still supported for compatibility, but it is also possible to - specify builders in nix.conf by setting the - option builders = - @path. - - - - If a fixed-output derivation produces a result with an - incorrect hash, the output path is moved to the location - corresponding to the actual hash and registered as valid. Thus, a - subsequent build of the fixed-output derivation with the correct - hash is unnecessary. - - - - nix-shell now - sets the IN_NIX_SHELL environment variable - during evaluation and in the shell itself. This can be used to - perform different actions depending on whether you’re in a Nix - shell or in a regular build. Nixpkgs provides - lib.inNixShell to check this variable during - evaluation. - - - - NIX_PATH is now lazy, so URIs in the path are - only downloaded if they are needed for evaluation. - - - - You can now use - channel:channel-name as a - short-hand for - https://nixos.org/channels/channel-name/nixexprs.tar.xz. For - example, nix-build channel:nixos-15.09 -A hello - will build the GNU Hello package from the - nixos-15.09 channel. In the future, this may - use Git to fetch updates more efficiently. - - - - When is given, the last - 10 lines of the build log will be shown if a build - fails. - - - - Networking has been improved: - - - - - HTTP/2 is now supported. This makes binary cache lookups - much - more efficient. - - - - We now retry downloads on many HTTP errors, making - binary caches substituters more resilient to temporary - failures. - - - - HTTP credentials can now be configured via the standard - netrc mechanism. - - - - If S3 support is enabled at compile time, - s3:// URIs are supported - in all places where Nix allows URIs. - - - - Brotli compression is now supported. In particular, - cache.nixos.org build logs are now compressed using - Brotli. - - - - - - - - - - nix-env now - ignores packages with bad derivation names (in particular those - starting with a digit or containing a dot). - - - - Many configuration options have been renamed, either because - they were unnecessarily verbose - (e.g. is now just - ) or to reflect generalised behaviour - (e.g. is now - because it allows arbitrary store - URIs). The old names are still supported for compatibility. - - - - The option can now - be set to auto to use the number of CPUs in the - system. - - - - Hashes can now - be specified in base-64 format, in addition to base-16 and the - non-standard base-32. - - - - nix-shell now uses - bashInteractive from Nixpkgs, rather than the - bash command that happens to be in the caller’s - PATH. This is especially important on macOS where - the bash provided by the system is seriously - outdated and cannot execute stdenv’s setup - script. - - - - Nix can now automatically trigger a garbage collection if - free disk space drops below a certain level during a build. This - is configured using the and - options. - - - - nix-store -q --roots and - nix-store --gc --print-roots now show temporary - and in-memory roots. - - - - - Nix can now be extended with plugins. See the documentation of - the option for more details. - - - - - -The Nix language has the following new features: - - - - - It supports floating point numbers. They are based on the - C++ float type and are supported by the - existing numerical operators. Export and import to and from JSON - and XML works, too. - - - - Derivation attributes can now reference the outputs of the - derivation using the placeholder builtin - function. For example, the attribute - - -configureFlags = "--prefix=${placeholder "out"} --includedir=${placeholder "dev"}"; - - - will cause the configureFlags environment variable - to contain the actual store paths corresponding to the - out and dev outputs. - - - - - - -The following builtin functions are new or extended: - - - - - builtins.fetchGit - allows Git repositories to be fetched at evaluation time. Thus it - differs from the fetchgit function in - Nixpkgs, which fetches at build time and cannot be used to fetch - Nix expressions during evaluation. A typical use case is to import - external NixOS modules from your configuration, e.g. - - imports = [ (builtins.fetchGit https://github.com/edolstra/dwarffs + "/module.nix") ]; - - - - - - Similarly, builtins.fetchMercurial - allows you to fetch Mercurial repositories. - - - - builtins.path generalises - builtins.filterSource and path literals - (e.g. ./foo). It allows specifying a store path - name that differs from the source path name - (e.g. builtins.path { path = ./foo; name = "bar"; - }) and also supports filtering out unwanted - files. - - - - builtins.fetchurl and - builtins.fetchTarball now support - sha256 and name - attributes. - - - - builtins.split - splits a string using a POSIX extended regular expression as the - separator. - - - - builtins.partition - partitions the elements of a list into two lists, depending on a - Boolean predicate. - - - - <nix/fetchurl.nix> now uses the - content-addressable tarball cache at - http://tarballs.nixos.org/, just like - fetchurl in - Nixpkgs. (f2682e6e18a76ecbfb8a12c17e3a0ca15c084197) - - - - In restricted and pure evaluation mode, builtin functions - that download from the network (such as - fetchGit) are permitted to fetch underneath a - list of URI prefixes specified in the option - . - - - - - - -The Nix build environment has the following changes: - - - - - Values such as Booleans, integers, (nested) lists and - attribute sets can now - be passed to builders in a non-lossy way. If the special attribute - __structuredAttrs is set to - true, the other derivation attributes are - serialised in JSON format and made available to the builder via - the file .attrs.json in the builder’s temporary - directory. This obviates the need for - passAsFile since JSON files have no size - restrictions, unlike process environments. - - As - a convenience to Bash builders, Nix writes a script named - .attrs.sh to the builder’s directory that - initialises shell variables corresponding to all attributes that - are representable in Bash. This includes non-nested (associative) - arrays. For example, the attribute hardening.format = - true ends up as the Bash associative array element - ${hardening[format]}. - - - - Builders can now - communicate what build phase they are in by writing messages to - the file descriptor specified in NIX_LOG_FD. The - current phase is shown by the nix progress - indicator. - - - - - In Linux sandbox builds, we now - provide a default /bin/sh (namely - ash from BusyBox). - - - - In structured attribute mode, - exportReferencesGraph exports - extended information about closures in JSON format. In particular, - it includes the sizes and hashes of paths. This is primarily - useful for NixOS image builders. - - - - Builds are now - killed as soon as Nix receives EOF on the builder’s stdout or - stderr. This fixes a bug that allowed builds to hang Nix - indefinitely, regardless of - timeouts. - - - - The configuration - option can now specify optional paths by appending a - ?, e.g. /dev/nvidiactl? will - bind-mount /dev/nvidiactl only if it - exists. - - - - On Linux, builds are now executed in a user - namespace with UID 1000 and GID 100. - - - - - - -A number of significant internal changes were made: - - - - - Nix no longer depends on Perl and all Perl components have - been rewritten in C++ or removed. The Perl bindings that used to - be part of Nix have been moved to a separate package, - nix-perl. - - - - All Store classes are now - thread-safe. RemoteStore supports multiple - concurrent connections to the daemon. This is primarily useful in - multi-threaded programs such as - hydra-queue-runner. - - - - - - -This release has contributions from - -Adrien Devresse, -Alexander Ried, -Alex Cruice, -Alexey Shmalko, -AmineChikhaoui, -Andy Wingo, -Aneesh Agrawal, -Anthony Cowley, -Armijn Hemel, -aszlig, -Ben Gamari, -Benjamin Hipple, -Benjamin Staffin, -Benno Fünfstück, -Bjørn Forsman, -Brian McKenna, -Charles Strahan, -Chase Adams, -Chris Martin, -Christian Theune, -Chris Warburton, -Daiderd Jordan, -Dan Connolly, -Daniel Peebles, -Dan Peebles, -davidak, -David McFarland, -Dmitry Kalinkin, -Domen Kožar, -Eelco Dolstra, -Emery Hemingway, -Eric Litak, -Eric Wolf, -Fabian Schmitthenner, -Frederik Rietdijk, -Gabriel Gonzalez, -Giorgio Gallo, -Graham Christensen, -Guillaume Maudoux, -Harmen, -Iavael, -James Broadhead, -James Earl Douglas, -Janus Troelsen, -Jeremy Shaw, -Joachim Schiele, -Joe Hermaszewski, -Joel Moberg, -Johannes 'fish' Ziemke, -Jörg Thalheim, -Jude Taylor, -kballou, -Keshav Kini, -Kjetil Orbekk, -Langston Barrett, -Linus Heckemann, -Ludovic Courtès, -Manav Rathi, -Marc Scholten, -Markus Hauck, -Matt Audesse, -Matthew Bauer, -Matthias Beyer, -Matthieu Coudron, -N1X, -Nathan Zadoks, -Neil Mayhew, -Nicolas B. Pierron, -Niklas Hambüchen, -Nikolay Amiantov, -Ole Jørgen Brønner, -Orivej Desh, -Peter Simons, -Peter Stuart, -Pyry Jahkola, -regnat, -Renzo Carbonara, -Rhys, -Robert Vollmert, -Scott Olson, -Scott R. Parish, -Sergei Trofimovich, -Shea Levy, -Sheena Artrip, -Spencer Baugh, -Stefan Junker, -Susan Potter, -Thomas Tuegel, -Timothy Allen, -Tristan Hume, -Tuomas Tynkkynen, -tv, -Tyson Whitehead, -Vladimír Čunát, -Will Dietz, -wmertens, -Wout Mertens, -zimbatm and -Zoran Plesivčak. - - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.1.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.1.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 16c243fc1..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.1.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,133 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 2.1 (2018-09-02) - -This is primarily a bug fix release. It also reduces memory -consumption in certain situations. In addition, it has the following -new features: - - - - - The Nix installer will no longer default to the Multi-User - installation for macOS. You can still instruct the installer to - run in multi-user mode. - - - - - The Nix installer now supports performing a Multi-User - installation for Linux computers which are running systemd. You - can select a Multi-User installation by passing the - flag to the installer: sh <(curl - https://nixos.org/nix/install) --daemon. - - - The multi-user installer cannot handle systems with SELinux. - If your system has SELinux enabled, you can force the installer to run - in single-user mode. - - - - New builtin functions: - builtins.bitAnd, - builtins.bitOr, - builtins.bitXor, - builtins.fromTOML, - builtins.concatMap, - builtins.mapAttrs. - - - - - The S3 binary cache store now supports uploading NARs larger - than 5 GiB. - - - - The S3 binary cache store now supports uploading to - S3-compatible services with the endpoint - option. - - - - The flag is no longer required - to recover from disappeared NARs in binary caches. - - - - nix-daemon now respects - . - - - - nix run now respects - nix-support/propagated-user-env-packages. - - - - -This release has contributions from - -Adrien Devresse, -Aleksandr Pashkov, -Alexandre Esteves, -Amine Chikhaoui, -Andrew Dunham, -Asad Saeeduddin, -aszlig, -Ben Challenor, -Ben Gamari, -Benjamin Hipple, -Bogdan Seniuc, -Corey O'Connor, -Daiderd Jordan, -Daniel Peebles, -Daniel Poelzleithner, -Danylo Hlynskyi, -Dmitry Kalinkin, -Domen Kožar, -Doug Beardsley, -Eelco Dolstra, -Erik Arvstedt, -Félix Baylac-Jacqué, -Gleb Peregud, -Graham Christensen, -Guillaume Maudoux, -Ivan Kozik, -John Arnold, -Justin Humm, -Linus Heckemann, -Lorenzo Manacorda, -Matthew Justin Bauer, -Matthew O'Gorman, -Maximilian Bosch, -Michael Bishop, -Michael Fiano, -Michael Mercier, -Michael Raskin, -Michael Weiss, -Nicolas Dudebout, -Peter Simons, -Ryan Trinkle, -Samuel Dionne-Riel, -Sean Seefried, -Shea Levy, -Symphorien Gibol, -Tim Engler, -Tim Sears, -Tuomas Tynkkynen, -volth, -Will Dietz, -Yorick van Pelt and -zimbatm. - - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.2.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.2.xml deleted file mode 100644 index cc992fabb..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.2.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,143 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 2.2 (2019-01-11) - -This is primarily a bug fix release. It also has the following -changes: - - - - - In derivations that use structured attributes (i.e. that - specify set the __structuredAttrs attribute to - true to cause all attributes to be passed to - the builder in JSON format), you can now specify closure checks - per output, e.g.: - - -outputChecks."out" = { - # The closure of 'out' must not be larger than 256 MiB. - maxClosureSize = 256 * 1024 * 1024; - - # It must not refer to C compiler or to the 'dev' output. - disallowedRequisites = [ stdenv.cc "dev" ]; -}; - -outputChecks."dev" = { - # The 'dev' output must not be larger than 128 KiB. - maxSize = 128 * 1024; -}; - - - - - - - - The derivation attribute - requiredSystemFeatures is now enforced for - local builds, and not just to route builds to remote builders. - The supported features of a machine can be specified through the - configuration setting system-features. - - By default, system-features includes - kvm if /dev/kvm - exists. For compatibility, it also includes the pseudo-features - nixos-test, benchmark and - big-parallel which are used by Nixpkgs to route - builds to particular Hydra build machines. - - - - - Sandbox builds are now enabled by default on Linux. - - - - The new command nix doctor shows - potential issues with your Nix installation. - - - - The fetchGit builtin function now uses a - caching scheme that puts different remote repositories in distinct - local repositories, rather than a single shared repository. This - may require more disk space but is faster. - - - - The dirOf builtin function now works on - relative paths. - - - - Nix now supports SRI hashes, - allowing the hash algorithm and hash to be specified in a single - string. For example, you can write: - - -import <nix/fetchurl.nix> { - url = https://nixos.org/releases/nix/nix-2.1.3/nix-2.1.3.tar.xz; - hash = "sha256-XSLa0FjVyADWWhFfkZ2iKTjFDda6mMXjoYMXLRSYQKQ="; -}; - - - instead of - - -import <nix/fetchurl.nix> { - url = https://nixos.org/releases/nix/nix-2.1.3/nix-2.1.3.tar.xz; - sha256 = "5d22dad058d5c800d65a115f919da22938c50dd6ba98c5e3a183172d149840a4"; -}; - - - - - In fixed-output derivations, the - outputHashAlgo attribute is no longer mandatory - if outputHash specifies the hash. - - nix hash-file and nix - hash-path now print hashes in SRI format by - default. They also use SHA-256 by default instead of SHA-512 - because that's what we use most of the time in Nixpkgs. - - - - Integers are now 64 bits on all platforms. - - - - The evaluator now prints profiling statistics (enabled via - the NIX_SHOW_STATS and - NIX_COUNT_CALLS environment variables) in JSON - format. - - - - The option in nix-store - --query has been removed. Instead, there now is an - option to output the dependency graph - in GraphML format. - - - - All nix-* commands are now symlinks to - nix. This saves a bit of disk space. - - - - nix repl now uses - libeditline or - libreadline. - - - - -
- diff --git a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.3.xml b/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.3.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 83accf33e..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2.3.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,91 +0,0 @@ -
- -Release 2.3 (2019-09-04) - -This is primarily a bug fix release. However, it makes some -incompatible changes: - - - - - Nix now uses BSD file locks instead of POSIX file - locks. Because of this, you should not use Nix 2.3 and previous - releases at the same time on a Nix store. - - - - -It also has the following changes: - - - - - builtins.fetchGit's ref - argument now allows specifying an absolute remote ref. - Nix will automatically prefix ref with - refs/heads only if ref doesn't - already begin with refs/. - - - - - The installer now enables sandboxing by default on Linux when the - system has the necessary kernel support. - - - - - The max-jobs setting now defaults to 1. - - - - New builtin functions: - builtins.isPath, - builtins.hashFile. - - - - - The nix command has a new - () flag to - print build log output to stderr, rather than showing the last log - line in the progress bar. To distinguish between concurrent - builds, log lines are prefixed by the name of the package. - - - - - Builds are now executed in a pseudo-terminal, and the - TERM environment variable is set to - xterm-256color. This allows many programs - (e.g. gcc, clang, - cmake) to print colorized log output. - - - - Add convenience flag. This flag - disables substituters; sets the tarball-ttl - setting to infinity (ensuring that any previously downloaded files - are considered current); and disables retrying downloads and sets - the connection timeout to the minimum. This flag is enabled - automatically if there are no configured non-loopback network - interfaces. - - - - Add a post-build-hook setting to run a - program after a build has succeeded. - - - - Add a trace-function-calls setting to log - the duration of Nix function calls to stderr. - - - - -
diff --git a/doc/manual/schemas.xml b/doc/manual/schemas.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 691a517b9..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/schemas.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,4 +0,0 @@ - - - - From 1d0a7b54fa330b041a720932ee4e05dcad1d2d5c Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Fri, 31 Jul 2020 15:43:25 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 29/57] Enable syntax highlighting --- doc/manual/highlight.pack.js | 6 + doc/manual/local.mk | 1 + doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/diff-hook.md | 118 +++-- .../src/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.md | 50 +- .../src/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.md | 68 +-- doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md | 45 +- doc/manual/src/command-ref/env-common.md | 8 +- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md | 38 +- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-channel.md | 22 +- .../src/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.md | 4 +- .../src/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md | 12 +- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md | 292 +++++++----- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-hash.md | 50 +- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md | 92 ++-- .../src/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.md | 22 +- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md | 142 +++--- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md | 210 ++++---- doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common.md | 12 +- .../src/expressions/advanced-attributes.md | 122 ++--- .../src/expressions/arguments-variables.md | 48 +- doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md | 20 +- doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md | 448 ++++++++++-------- doc/manual/src/expressions/derivations.md | 19 +- .../src/expressions/expression-syntax.md | 66 +-- doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md | 34 +- .../src/expressions/language-constructs.md | 240 ++++++---- doc/manual/src/expressions/language-values.md | 110 +++-- .../expressions/simple-building-testing.md | 32 +- doc/manual/src/hacking.md | 50 +- .../src/installation/building-source.md | 12 +- doc/manual/src/installation/env-variables.md | 20 +- .../src/installation/installing-binary.md | 78 +-- doc/manual/src/installation/multi-user.md | 24 +- .../src/installation/obtaining-source.md | 4 +- doc/manual/src/introduction.md | 34 +- .../package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md | 82 ++-- .../binary-cache-substituter.md | 16 +- doc/manual/src/package-management/channels.md | 16 +- .../package-management/garbage-collection.md | 24 +- .../garbage-collector-roots.md | 4 +- doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md | 48 +- .../src/package-management/s3-substituter.md | 90 ++-- .../src/package-management/ssh-substituter.md | 20 +- doc/manual/src/quick-start.md | 68 ++- flake.nix | 1 + src/libstore/nar-accessor.cc | 3 +- 46 files changed, 1770 insertions(+), 1155 deletions(-) create mode 100644 doc/manual/highlight.pack.js diff --git a/doc/manual/highlight.pack.js b/doc/manual/highlight.pack.js new file mode 100644 index 000000000..fba8b4a5a --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/highlight.pack.js @@ -0,0 +1,6 @@ +/* + Highlight.js 10.1.2 (edd73d24) + License: BSD-3-Clause + Copyright (c) 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a/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/diff-hook.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/diff-hook.md @@ -7,17 +7,19 @@ for determining if the results are the same. For purposes of demonstration, we'll use the following Nix file, `deterministic.nix` for testing: - let - inherit (import {}) runCommand; - in { - stable = runCommand "stable" {} '' - touch $out - ''; - - unstable = runCommand "unstable" {} '' - echo $RANDOM > $out - ''; - } +```nix +let + inherit (import {}) runCommand; +in { + stable = runCommand "stable" {} '' + touch $out + ''; + + unstable = runCommand "unstable" {} '' + echo $RANDOM > $out + ''; +} +``` Additionally, `nix.conf` contains: @@ -26,10 +28,12 @@ Additionally, `nix.conf` contains: where `/etc/nix/my-diff-hook` is an executable file containing: - #!/bin/sh - exec >&2 - echo "For derivation $3:" - /run/current-system/sw/bin/diff -r "$1" "$2" +```bash +#!/bin/sh +exec >&2 +echo "For derivation $3:" +/run/current-system/sw/bin/diff -r "$1" "$2" +``` The diff hook is executed by the same user and group who ran the build. However, the diff hook does not have write access to the store path just @@ -43,44 +47,55 @@ to the build command. If the build passes and is deterministic, Nix will exit with a status code of 0: - $ nix-build ./deterministic.nix -A stable - this derivation will be built: - /nix/store/z98fasz2jqy9gs0xbvdj939p27jwda38-stable.drv - building '/nix/store/z98fasz2jqy9gs0xbvdj939p27jwda38-stable.drv'... - /nix/store/yyxlzw3vqaas7wfp04g0b1xg51f2czgq-stable - - $ nix-build ./deterministic.nix -A stable --check - checking outputs of '/nix/store/z98fasz2jqy9gs0xbvdj939p27jwda38-stable.drv'... - /nix/store/yyxlzw3vqaas7wfp04g0b1xg51f2czgq-stable +```console +$ nix-build ./deterministic.nix -A stable +this derivation will be built: + /nix/store/z98fasz2jqy9gs0xbvdj939p27jwda38-stable.drv +building '/nix/store/z98fasz2jqy9gs0xbvdj939p27jwda38-stable.drv'... +/nix/store/yyxlzw3vqaas7wfp04g0b1xg51f2czgq-stable + +$ nix-build ./deterministic.nix -A stable --check +checking outputs of '/nix/store/z98fasz2jqy9gs0xbvdj939p27jwda38-stable.drv'... +/nix/store/yyxlzw3vqaas7wfp04g0b1xg51f2czgq-stable +``` If the build is not deterministic, Nix will exit with a status code of 1: - $ nix-build ./deterministic.nix -A unstable - this derivation will be built: - /nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv - building '/nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv'... - /nix/store/krpqk0l9ib0ibi1d2w52z293zw455cap-unstable - - $ nix-build ./deterministic.nix -A unstable --check - checking outputs of '/nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv'... - error: derivation '/nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv' may not be deterministic: output '/nix/store/krpqk0l9ib0ibi1d2w52z293zw455cap-unstable' differs +```console +$ nix-build ./deterministic.nix -A unstable +this derivation will be built: + /nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv +building '/nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv'... +/nix/store/krpqk0l9ib0ibi1d2w52z293zw455cap-unstable + +$ nix-build ./deterministic.nix -A unstable --check +checking outputs of '/nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv'... +error: derivation '/nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv' may +not be deterministic: output '/nix/store/krpqk0l9ib0ibi1d2w52z293zw455cap-unstable' differs +``` In the Nix daemon's log, we will now see: - For derivation /nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv: - 1c1 - < 8108 - --- - > 30204 +``` +For derivation /nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv: +1c1 +< 8108 +--- +> 30204 +``` Using `--check` with `--keep-failed` will cause Nix to keep the second build's output in a special, `.check` path: - $ nix-build ./deterministic.nix -A unstable --check --keep-failed - checking outputs of '/nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv'... - note: keeping build directory '/tmp/nix-build-unstable.drv-0' - error: derivation '/nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv' may not be deterministic: output '/nix/store/krpqk0l9ib0ibi1d2w52z293zw455cap-unstable' differs from '/nix/store/krpqk0l9ib0ibi1d2w52z293zw455cap-unstable.check' +```console +$ nix-build ./deterministic.nix -A unstable --check --keep-failed +checking outputs of '/nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv'... +note: keeping build directory '/tmp/nix-build-unstable.drv-0' +error: derivation '/nix/store/cgl13lbj1w368r5z8gywipl1ifli7dhk-unstable.drv' may +not be deterministic: output '/nix/store/krpqk0l9ib0ibi1d2w52z293zw455cap-unstable' differs +from '/nix/store/krpqk0l9ib0ibi1d2w52z293zw455cap-unstable.check' +``` In particular, notice the `/nix/store/krpqk0l9ib0ibi1d2w52z293zw455cap-unstable.check` output. Nix @@ -102,7 +117,8 @@ has copied the build results to that directory where you can examine it. already. If the derivation has not been built Nix will fail with the error: - error: some outputs of '/nix/store/hzi1h60z2qf0nb85iwnpvrai3j2w7rr6-unstable.drv' are not valid, so checking is not possible + error: some outputs of '/nix/store/hzi1h60z2qf0nb85iwnpvrai3j2w7rr6-unstable.drv' + are not valid, so checking is not possible Run the build without `--check`, and then try with `--check` again. @@ -130,10 +146,12 @@ reproducibly: An example output of this configuration: - $ nix-build ./test.nix -A unstable - this derivation will be built: - /nix/store/ch6llwpr2h8c3jmnf3f2ghkhx59aa97f-unstable.drv - building '/nix/store/ch6llwpr2h8c3jmnf3f2ghkhx59aa97f-unstable.drv' (round 1/2)... - building '/nix/store/ch6llwpr2h8c3jmnf3f2ghkhx59aa97f-unstable.drv' (round 2/2)... - output '/nix/store/6xg356v9gl03hpbbg8gws77n19qanh02-unstable' of '/nix/store/ch6llwpr2h8c3jmnf3f2ghkhx59aa97f-unstable.drv' differs from '/nix/store/6xg356v9gl03hpbbg8gws77n19qanh02-unstable.check' from previous round - /nix/store/6xg356v9gl03hpbbg8gws77n19qanh02-unstable +```console +$ nix-build ./test.nix -A unstable +this derivation will be built: + /nix/store/ch6llwpr2h8c3jmnf3f2ghkhx59aa97f-unstable.drv +building '/nix/store/ch6llwpr2h8c3jmnf3f2ghkhx59aa97f-unstable.drv' (round 1/2)... +building '/nix/store/ch6llwpr2h8c3jmnf3f2ghkhx59aa97f-unstable.drv' (round 2/2)... +output '/nix/store/6xg356v9gl03hpbbg8gws77n19qanh02-unstable' of '/nix/store/ch6llwpr2h8c3jmnf3f2ghkhx59aa97f-unstable.drv' differs from '/nix/store/6xg356v9gl03hpbbg8gws77n19qanh02-unstable.check' from previous round +/nix/store/6xg356v9gl03hpbbg8gws77n19qanh02-unstable +``` diff --git a/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.md b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.md index 76a5380bf..c6966a50b 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/distributed-builds.md @@ -11,12 +11,16 @@ To forward a build to a remote machine, it’s required that the remote machine is accessible via SSH and that it has Nix installed. You can test whether connecting to the remote Nix instance works, e.g. - $ nix ping-store --store ssh://mac +```console +$ nix ping-store --store ssh://mac +``` will try to connect to the machine named `mac`. It is possible to specify an SSH identity file as part of the remote store URI, e.g. - $ nix ping-store --store ssh://mac?ssh-key=/home/alice/my-key +```console +$ nix ping-store --store ssh://mac?ssh-key=/home/alice/my-key +``` Since builds should be non-interactive, the key should not have a passphrase. Alternatively, you can load identities ahead of time into @@ -24,8 +28,10 @@ passphrase. Alternatively, you can load identities ahead of time into If you get the error - bash: nix-store: command not found - error: cannot connect to 'mac' +```console +bash: nix-store: command not found +error: cannot connect to 'mac' +``` then you need to ensure that the `PATH` of non-interactive login shells contains Nix. @@ -43,21 +49,23 @@ the Nix configuration file. The former is convenient for testing. For example, the following command allows you to build a derivation for `x86_64-darwin` on a Linux machine: - $ uname - Linux +```console +$ uname +Linux - $ nix build \ - '(with import { system = "x86_64-darwin"; }; runCommand "foo" {} "uname > $out")' \ - --builders 'ssh://mac x86_64-darwin' - [1/0/1 built, 0.0 MiB DL] building foo on ssh://mac - - $ cat ./result - Darwin +$ nix build \ + '(with import { system = "x86_64-darwin"; }; runCommand "foo" {} "uname > $out")' \ + --builders 'ssh://mac x86_64-darwin' +[1/0/1 built, 0.0 MiB DL] building foo on ssh://mac + +$ cat ./result +Darwin +``` It is possible to specify multiple builders separated by a semicolon or a newline, e.g. -``` +```console --builders 'ssh://mac x86_64-darwin ; ssh://beastie x86_64-freebsd' ``` @@ -91,8 +99,10 @@ default, set it to `-`. the `requiredSystemFeatures` attribute, then Nix will only perform the derivation on a machine that has the specified features. For instance, the attribute - - requiredSystemFeatures = [ "kvm" ]; + + ```nix + requiredSystemFeatures = [ "kvm" ]; + ``` will cause the build to be performed on a machine that has the `kvm` feature. @@ -111,11 +121,15 @@ For example, the machine specification specifies several machines that can perform `i686-linux` builds. However, `poochie` will only do builds that have the attribute - requiredSystemFeatures = [ "benchmark" ]; +```nix +requiredSystemFeatures = [ "benchmark" ]; +``` or - requiredSystemFeatures = [ "benchmark" "kvm" ]; +```nix +requiredSystemFeatures = [ "benchmark" "kvm" ]; +``` `itchy` cannot do builds that require `kvm`, but `scratchy` does support such builds. For regular builds, `itchy` will be preferred over diff --git a/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.md b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.md index 7b3ae58fb..bbdabed41 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/advanced-topics/post-build-hook.md @@ -27,9 +27,11 @@ Use `nix-store --generate-binary-cache-key` to create our public and private signing keys. We will sign paths with the private key, and distribute the public key for verifying the authenticity of the paths. - # nix-store --generate-binary-cache-key example-nix-cache-1 /etc/nix/key.private /etc/nix/key.public - # cat /etc/nix/key.public - example-nix-cache-1:1/cKDz3QCCOmwcztD2eV6Coggp6rqc9DGjWv7C0G+rM= +```console +# nix-store --generate-binary-cache-key example-nix-cache-1 /etc/nix/key.private /etc/nix/key.public +# cat /etc/nix/key.public +example-nix-cache-1:1/cKDz3QCCOmwcztD2eV6Coggp6rqc9DGjWv7C0G+rM= +``` Then, add the public key and the cache URL to your `nix.conf`'s `trusted-public-keys` and `substituters` options: @@ -43,16 +45,18 @@ We will restart the Nix daemon in a later step. Write the following script to `/etc/nix/upload-to-cache.sh`: - #!/bin/sh - - set -eu - set -f # disable globbing - export IFS=' ' - - echo "Signing paths" $OUT_PATHS - nix sign-paths --key-file /etc/nix/key.private $OUT_PATHS - echo "Uploading paths" $OUT_PATHS - exec nix copy --to 's3://example-nix-cache' $OUT_PATHS +```bash +#!/bin/sh + +set -eu +set -f # disable globbing +export IFS=' ' + +echo "Signing paths" $OUT_PATHS +nix sign-paths --key-file /etc/nix/key.private $OUT_PATHS +echo "Uploading paths" $OUT_PATHS +exec nix copy --to 's3://example-nix-cache' $OUT_PATHS +``` > **Note** > @@ -65,7 +69,9 @@ Write the following script to `/etc/nix/upload-to-cache.sh`: Then make sure the hook program is executable by the `root` user: - # chmod +x /etc/nix/upload-to-cache.sh +```console +# chmod +x /etc/nix/upload-to-cache.sh +``` # Updating Nix Configuration @@ -80,27 +86,33 @@ Then, restart the `nix-daemon`. Build any derivation, for example: - $ nix-build -E '(import {}).writeText "example" (builtins.toString builtins.currentTime)' - this derivation will be built: - /nix/store/s4pnfbkalzy5qz57qs6yybna8wylkig6-example.drv - building '/nix/store/s4pnfbkalzy5qz57qs6yybna8wylkig6-example.drv'... - running post-build-hook '/home/grahamc/projects/github.com/NixOS/nix/post-hook.sh'... - post-build-hook: Signing paths /nix/store/ibcyipq5gf91838ldx40mjsp0b8w9n18-example - post-build-hook: Uploading paths /nix/store/ibcyipq5gf91838ldx40mjsp0b8w9n18-example - /nix/store/ibcyipq5gf91838ldx40mjsp0b8w9n18-example +```console +$ nix-build -E '(import {}).writeText "example" (builtins.toString builtins.currentTime)' +this derivation will be built: + /nix/store/s4pnfbkalzy5qz57qs6yybna8wylkig6-example.drv +building '/nix/store/s4pnfbkalzy5qz57qs6yybna8wylkig6-example.drv'... +running post-build-hook '/home/grahamc/projects/github.com/NixOS/nix/post-hook.sh'... +post-build-hook: Signing paths /nix/store/ibcyipq5gf91838ldx40mjsp0b8w9n18-example +post-build-hook: Uploading paths /nix/store/ibcyipq5gf91838ldx40mjsp0b8w9n18-example +/nix/store/ibcyipq5gf91838ldx40mjsp0b8w9n18-example +``` Then delete the path from the store, and try substituting it from the binary cache: - $ rm ./result - $ nix-store --delete /nix/store/ibcyipq5gf91838ldx40mjsp0b8w9n18-example +```console +$ rm ./result +$ nix-store --delete /nix/store/ibcyipq5gf91838ldx40mjsp0b8w9n18-example +``` Now, copy the path back from the cache: - $ nix-store --realise /nix/store/ibcyipq5gf91838ldx40mjsp0b8w9n18-example - copying path '/nix/store/m8bmqwrch6l3h8s0k3d673xpmipcdpsa-example from 's3://example-nix-cache'... - warning: you did not specify '--add-root'; the result might be removed by the garbage collector - /nix/store/m8bmqwrch6l3h8s0k3d673xpmipcdpsa-example +```console +$ nix-store --realise /nix/store/ibcyipq5gf91838ldx40mjsp0b8w9n18-example +copying path '/nix/store/m8bmqwrch6l3h8s0k3d673xpmipcdpsa-example from 's3://example-nix-cache'... +warning: you did not specify '--add-root'; the result might be removed by the garbage collector +/nix/store/m8bmqwrch6l3h8s0k3d673xpmipcdpsa-example +``` # Conclusion diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md index 306ad23f5..028b15c9f 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md @@ -70,11 +70,11 @@ The following settings are currently available: Note that trusted users are always allowed to connect. - `auto-optimise-store` - If set to `true`, Nix automatically detects files in the store that - have identical contents, and replaces them with hard links to a - single copy. This saves disk space. If set to `false` (the default), - you can still run `nix-store - --optimise` to get rid of duplicate files. + If set to `true`, Nix automatically detects files in the store + that have identical contents, and replaces them with hard links to + a single copy. This saves disk space. If set to `false` (the + default), you can still run `nix-store --optimise` to get rid of + duplicate files. - `builders` A list of machines on which to perform builds. @@ -214,11 +214,13 @@ The following settings are currently available: they have disappeared from their original URI. For example, given the default mirror `http://tarballs.nixos.org/`, when building the derivation - - builtins.fetchurl { - url = "https://example.org/foo-1.2.3.tar.xz"; - sha256 = "2c26b46b68ffc68ff99b453c1d30413413422d706483bfa0f98a5e886266e7ae"; - } + + ```nix + builtins.fetchurl { + url = "https://example.org/foo-1.2.3.tar.xz"; + sha256 = "2c26b46b68ffc68ff99b453c1d30413413422d706483bfa0f98a5e886266e7ae"; + } + ``` Nix will attempt to download this file from `http://tarballs.nixos.org/sha256/2c26b46b68ffc68ff99b453c1d30413413422d706483bfa0f98a5e886266e7ae` @@ -233,8 +235,7 @@ The following settings are currently available: If set to `true` (the default), Nix will write the build log of a derivation (i.e. the standard output and error of its builder) to the directory `/nix/var/log/nix/drvs`. The build log can be - retrieved using the command `nix-store -l - path`. + retrieved using the command `nix-store -l path`. - `keep-derivations` If `true` (default), the garbage collector will keep the derivations @@ -504,10 +505,9 @@ The following settings are currently available: - `secret-key-files` A whitespace-separated list of files containing secret (private) keys. These are used to sign locally-built paths. They can be - generated using `nix-store - --generate-binary-cache-key`. The corresponding public key can be - distributed to other users, who can add it to `trusted-public-keys` - in their `nix.conf`. + generated using `nix-store --generate-binary-cache-key`. The + corresponding public key can be distributed to other users, who + can add it to `trusted-public-keys` in their `nix.conf`. - `show-trace` Causes Nix to print out a stack trace in case of Nix expression @@ -601,18 +601,17 @@ The following settings are currently available: - `trusted-public-keys` A whitespace-separated list of public keys. When paths are copied - from another Nix store (such as a binary cache), they must be signed - with one of these keys. For example: + from another Nix store (such as a binary cache), they must be + signed with one of these keys. For example: `cache.nixos.org-1:6NCHdD59X431o0gWypbMrAURkbJ16ZPMQFGspcDShjY= - hydra.nixos.org-1:CNHJZBh9K4tP3EKF6FkkgeVYsS3ohTl+oS0Qa8bezVs=`. + hydra.nixos.org-1:CNHJZBh9K4tP3EKF6FkkgeVYsS3ohTl+oS0Qa8bezVs=`. - `trusted-substituters` A list of URLs of substituters, separated by whitespace. These are not used by default, but can be enabled by users of the Nix daemon - by specifying `--option - substituters urls` on the command line. Unprivileged users are only - allowed to pass a subset of the URLs listed in `substituters` and - `trusted-substituters`. + by specifying `--option substituters urls` on the command + line. Unprivileged users are only allowed to pass a subset of the + URLs listed in `substituters` and `trusted-substituters`. - `trusted-users` A list of names of users (separated by whitespace) that have diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/env-common.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/env-common.md index e5fd45a7f..03016dba7 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/env-common.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/env-common.md @@ -54,9 +54,11 @@ Most Nix commands interpret the following environment variables: Note that if you’re symlinking the Nix store so that you can put it on another file system than the root file system, on Linux you’re better off using `bind` mount points, e.g., - - $ mkdir /nix - $ mount -o bind /mnt/otherdisk/nix /nix + + ```console + $ mkdir /nix + $ mount -o bind /mnt/otherdisk/nix /nix + ``` Consult the mount 8 manual page for details. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md index 026495c8d..4bcb8db40 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-build.md @@ -66,20 +66,24 @@ The following common options are supported: # Examples - $ nix-build '' -A firefox - store derivation is /nix/store/qybprl8sz2lc...-firefox-1.5.0.7.drv - /nix/store/d18hyl92g30l...-firefox-1.5.0.7 +```console +$ nix-build '' -A firefox +store derivation is /nix/store/qybprl8sz2lc...-firefox-1.5.0.7.drv +/nix/store/d18hyl92g30l...-firefox-1.5.0.7 - $ ls -l result - lrwxrwxrwx ... result -> /nix/store/d18hyl92g30l...-firefox-1.5.0.7 +$ ls -l result +lrwxrwxrwx ... result -> /nix/store/d18hyl92g30l...-firefox-1.5.0.7 - $ ls ./result/bin/ - firefox firefox-config +$ ls ./result/bin/ +firefox firefox-config +``` If a derivation has multiple outputs, `nix-build` will build the default (first) output. You can also build all outputs: - $ nix-build '' -A openssl.all +```console +$ nix-build '' -A openssl.all +``` This will create a symlink for each output named `result-outputname`. The suffix is omitted if the output name is `out`. So if `openssl` has @@ -87,19 +91,23 @@ outputs `out`, `bin` and `man`, `nix-build` will create symlinks `result`, `result-bin` and `result-man`. It’s also possible to build a specific output: - $ nix-build '' -A openssl.man +```console +$ nix-build '' -A openssl.man +``` This will create a symlink `result-man`. Build a Nix expression given on the command line: - $ nix-build -E 'with import { }; runCommand "foo" { } "echo bar > $out"' - $ cat ./result - bar +```console +$ nix-build -E 'with import { }; runCommand "foo" { } "echo bar > $out"' +$ cat ./result +bar +``` Build the GNU Hello package from the latest revision of the master branch of Nixpkgs: - $ nix-build https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/master.tar.gz -A hello - -# Environment variables +```console +$ nix-build https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/master.tar.gz -A hello +``` diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-channel.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-channel.md index ea3a57e69..f0e205967 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-channel.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-channel.md @@ -51,20 +51,24 @@ The list of subscribed channels is stored in `~/.nix-channels`. To subscribe to the Nixpkgs channel and install the GNU Hello package: - $ nix-channel --add https://nixos.org/channels/nixpkgs-unstable - $ nix-channel --update - $ nix-env -iA nixpkgs.hello +```console +$ nix-channel --add https://nixos.org/channels/nixpkgs-unstable +$ nix-channel --update +$ nix-env -iA nixpkgs.hello +``` You can revert channel updates using `--rollback`: - $ nix-instantiate --eval -E '(import {}).lib.version' - "14.04.527.0e935f1" +```console +$ nix-instantiate --eval -E '(import {}).lib.version' +"14.04.527.0e935f1" - $ nix-channel --rollback - switching from generation 483 to 482 +$ nix-channel --rollback +switching from generation 483 to 482 - $ nix-instantiate --eval -E '(import {}).lib.version' - "14.04.526.dbadfad" +$ nix-instantiate --eval -E '(import {}).lib.version' +"14.04.526.dbadfad" +``` # Files diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.md index 37587c7e1..62a6b7ca0 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-collect-garbage.md @@ -27,4 +27,6 @@ generations that were active at that point in time). To delete from the Nix store everything that is not used by the current generations of each profile, do - $ nix-collect-garbage -d +```console +$ nix-collect-garbage -d +``` diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md index 2a4558324..5ce320af7 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md @@ -73,11 +73,15 @@ and second to send the dump of those paths. If this bothers you, use Copy Firefox with all its dependencies to a remote machine: - $ nix-copy-closure --to alice@itchy.labs $(type -tP firefox) +```console +$ nix-copy-closure --to alice@itchy.labs $(type -tP firefox) +``` Copy Subversion from a remote machine and then install it into a user environment: - $ nix-copy-closure --from alice@itchy.labs \ - /nix/store/0dj0503hjxy5mbwlafv1rsbdiyx1gkdy-subversion-1.4.4 - $ nix-env -i /nix/store/0dj0503hjxy5mbwlafv1rsbdiyx1gkdy-subversion-1.4.4 +```console +$ nix-copy-closure --from alice@itchy.labs \ + /nix/store/0dj0503hjxy5mbwlafv1rsbdiyx1gkdy-subversion-1.4.4 +$ nix-env -i /nix/store/0dj0503hjxy5mbwlafv1rsbdiyx1gkdy-subversion-1.4.4 +``` diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md index c5fcce316..ee838581b 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-env.md @@ -127,10 +127,12 @@ have an effect. For example, if `~/.nix-defexpr` contains two files, `foo.nix` and `bar.nix`, then the default Nix expression will essentially be - { - foo = import ~/.nix-defexpr/foo.nix; - bar = import ~/.nix-defexpr/bar.nix; - } + ```nix + { + foo = import ~/.nix-defexpr/foo.nix; + bar = import ~/.nix-defexpr/bar.nix; + } + ``` The file `manifest.nix` is always ignored. Subdirectories without a `default.nix` file are traversed recursively in search of more Nix @@ -240,44 +242,60 @@ a number of possible ways: To install a specific version of `gcc` from the active Nix expression: - $ nix-env --install gcc-3.3.2 - installing `gcc-3.3.2' - uninstalling `gcc-3.1' +```console +$ nix-env --install gcc-3.3.2 +installing `gcc-3.3.2' +uninstalling `gcc-3.1' +``` Note the previously installed version is removed, since `--preserve-installed` was not specified. To install an arbitrary version: - $ nix-env --install gcc - installing `gcc-3.3.2' +```console +$ nix-env --install gcc +installing `gcc-3.3.2' +``` To install using a specific attribute: - $ nix-env -i -A gcc40mips - $ nix-env -i -A xorg.xorgserver +```console +$ nix-env -i -A gcc40mips +$ nix-env -i -A xorg.xorgserver +``` To install all derivations in the Nix expression `foo.nix`: - $ nix-env -f ~/foo.nix -i '.*' +```console +$ nix-env -f ~/foo.nix -i '.*' +``` To copy the store path with symbolic name `gcc` from another profile: - $ nix-env -i --from-profile /nix/var/nix/profiles/foo gcc +```console +$ nix-env -i --from-profile /nix/var/nix/profiles/foo gcc +``` To install a specific store derivation (typically created by `nix-instantiate`): - $ nix-env -i /nix/store/fibjb1bfbpm5mrsxc4mh2d8n37sxh91i-gcc-3.4.3.drv +```console +$ nix-env -i /nix/store/fibjb1bfbpm5mrsxc4mh2d8n37sxh91i-gcc-3.4.3.drv +``` To install a specific output path: - $ nix-env -i /nix/store/y3cgx0xj1p4iv9x0pnnmdhr8iyg741vk-gcc-3.4.3 +```console +$ nix-env -i /nix/store/y3cgx0xj1p4iv9x0pnnmdhr8iyg741vk-gcc-3.4.3 +``` To install from a Nix expression specified on the command-line: - $ nix-env -f ./foo.nix -i -E \ - 'f: (f {system = "i686-linux";}).subversionWithJava' +```console +$ nix-env -f ./foo.nix -i -E \ + 'f: (f {system = "i686-linux";}).subversionWithJava' +``` I.e., this evaluates to `(f: (f {system = "i686-linux";}).subversionWithJava) (import ./foo.nix)`, thus selecting @@ -286,17 +304,21 @@ function defined in `./foo.nix`. A dry-run tells you which paths will be downloaded or built from source: - $ nix-env -f '' -iA hello --dry-run - (dry run; not doing anything) - installing ‘hello-2.10’ - this path will be fetched (0.04 MiB download, 0.19 MiB unpacked): - /nix/store/wkhdf9jinag5750mqlax6z2zbwhqb76n-hello-2.10 - ... +```console +$ nix-env -f '' -iA hello --dry-run +(dry run; not doing anything) +installing ‘hello-2.10’ +this path will be fetched (0.04 MiB download, 0.19 MiB unpacked): + /nix/store/wkhdf9jinag5750mqlax6z2zbwhqb76n-hello-2.10 + ... +``` To install Firefox from the latest revision in the Nixpkgs/NixOS 14.12 channel: - $ nix-env -f https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-14.12.tar.gz -iA firefox +```console +$ nix-env -f https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-14.12.tar.gz -iA firefox +``` # Operation `--upgrade` @@ -353,18 +375,26 @@ For the other flags, see `--install`. ## Examples - $ nix-env --upgrade gcc - upgrading `gcc-3.3.1' to `gcc-3.4' +```console +$ nix-env --upgrade gcc +upgrading `gcc-3.3.1' to `gcc-3.4' +``` - $ nix-env -u gcc-3.3.2 --always (switch to a specific version) - upgrading `gcc-3.4' to `gcc-3.3.2' +```console +$ nix-env -u gcc-3.3.2 --always (switch to a specific version) +upgrading `gcc-3.4' to `gcc-3.3.2' +``` - $ nix-env --upgrade pan - (no upgrades available, so nothing happens) +```console +$ nix-env --upgrade pan +(no upgrades available, so nothing happens) +``` - $ nix-env -u (try to upgrade everything) - upgrading `hello-2.1.2' to `hello-2.1.3' - upgrading `mozilla-1.2' to `mozilla-1.4' +```console +$ nix-env -u (try to upgrade everything) +upgrading `hello-2.1.2' to `hello-2.1.3' +upgrading `mozilla-1.2' to `mozilla-1.4' +``` ## Versions @@ -416,8 +446,10 @@ designated by the symbolic names *drvnames* are removed. ## Examples - $ nix-env --uninstall gcc - $ nix-env -e '.*' (remove everything) +```console +$ nix-env --uninstall gcc +$ nix-env -e '.*' (remove everything) +``` # Operation `--set` @@ -435,7 +467,9 @@ that it contains exactly the specified derivation, and nothing else. The following updates a profile such that its current generation will contain just Firefox: - $ nix-env -p /nix/var/nix/profiles/browser --set firefox +```console +$ nix-env -p /nix/var/nix/profiles/browser --set firefox +``` # Operation `--set-flag` @@ -473,37 +507,43 @@ environment build script: To prevent the currently installed Firefox from being upgraded: - $ nix-env --set-flag keep true firefox +```console +$ nix-env --set-flag keep true firefox +``` After this, `nix-env -u` will ignore Firefox. To disable the currently installed Firefox, then install a new Firefox while the old remains part of the profile: - $ nix-env -q - firefox-2.0.0.9 (the current one) +```console +$ nix-env -q +firefox-2.0.0.9 (the current one) - $ nix-env --preserve-installed -i firefox-2.0.0.11 - installing `firefox-2.0.0.11' - building path(s) `/nix/store/myy0y59q3ig70dgq37jqwg1j0rsapzsl-user-environment' - collision between `/nix/store/...-firefox-2.0.0.11/bin/firefox' - and `/nix/store/...-firefox-2.0.0.9/bin/firefox'. - (i.e., can’t have two active at the same time) +$ nix-env --preserve-installed -i firefox-2.0.0.11 +installing `firefox-2.0.0.11' +building path(s) `/nix/store/myy0y59q3ig70dgq37jqwg1j0rsapzsl-user-environment' +collision between `/nix/store/...-firefox-2.0.0.11/bin/firefox' + and `/nix/store/...-firefox-2.0.0.9/bin/firefox'. +(i.e., can’t have two active at the same time) - $ nix-env --set-flag active false firefox - setting flag on `firefox-2.0.0.9' +$ nix-env --set-flag active false firefox +setting flag on `firefox-2.0.0.9' - $ nix-env --preserve-installed -i firefox-2.0.0.11 - installing `firefox-2.0.0.11' +$ nix-env --preserve-installed -i firefox-2.0.0.11 +installing `firefox-2.0.0.11' - $ nix-env -q - firefox-2.0.0.11 (the enabled one) - firefox-2.0.0.9 (the disabled one) +$ nix-env -q +firefox-2.0.0.11 (the enabled one) +firefox-2.0.0.9 (the disabled one) +``` To make files from `binutils` take precedence over files from `gcc`: - $ nix-env --set-flag priority 5 binutils - $ nix-env --set-flag priority 10 gcc +```console +$ nix-env --set-flag priority 5 binutils +$ nix-env --set-flag priority 10 gcc +``` # Operation `--query` @@ -633,66 +673,82 @@ derivation is shown unless `--no-name` is specified. To show installed packages: - $ nix-env -q - bison-1.875c - docbook-xml-4.2 - firefox-1.0.4 - MPlayer-1.0pre7 - ORBit2-2.8.3 - … +```console +$ nix-env -q +bison-1.875c +docbook-xml-4.2 +firefox-1.0.4 +MPlayer-1.0pre7 +ORBit2-2.8.3 +… +``` To show available packages: - $ nix-env -qa - firefox-1.0.7 - GConf-2.4.0.1 - MPlayer-1.0pre7 - ORBit2-2.8.3 - … +```console +$ nix-env -qa +firefox-1.0.7 +GConf-2.4.0.1 +MPlayer-1.0pre7 +ORBit2-2.8.3 +… +``` To show the status of available packages: - $ nix-env -qas - -P- firefox-1.0.7 (not installed but present) - --S GConf-2.4.0.1 (not present, but there is a substitute for fast installation) - --S MPlayer-1.0pre3 (i.e., this is not the installed MPlayer, even though the version is the same!) - IP- ORBit2-2.8.3 (installed and by definition present) - … +```console +$ nix-env -qas +-P- firefox-1.0.7 (not installed but present) +--S GConf-2.4.0.1 (not present, but there is a substitute for fast installation) +--S MPlayer-1.0pre3 (i.e., this is not the installed MPlayer, even though the version is the same!) +IP- ORBit2-2.8.3 (installed and by definition present) +… +``` To show available packages in the Nix expression `foo.nix`: - $ nix-env -f ./foo.nix -qa - foo-1.2.3 +```console +$ nix-env -f ./foo.nix -qa +foo-1.2.3 +``` To compare installed versions to what’s available: - $ nix-env -qc - ... - acrobat-reader-7.0 - ? (package is not available at all) - autoconf-2.59 = 2.59 (same version) - firefox-1.0.4 < 1.0.7 (a more recent version is available) - ... +```console +$ nix-env -qc +... +acrobat-reader-7.0 - ? (package is not available at all) +autoconf-2.59 = 2.59 (same version) +firefox-1.0.4 < 1.0.7 (a more recent version is available) +... +``` To show all packages with “`zip`” in the name: - $ nix-env -qa '.*zip.*' - bzip2-1.0.6 - gzip-1.6 - zip-3.0 - … +```console +$ nix-env -qa '.*zip.*' +bzip2-1.0.6 +gzip-1.6 +zip-3.0 +… +``` To show all packages with “`firefox`” or “`chromium`” in the name: - $ nix-env -qa '.*(firefox|chromium).*' - chromium-37.0.2062.94 - chromium-beta-38.0.2125.24 - firefox-32.0.3 - firefox-with-plugins-13.0.1 - … +```console +$ nix-env -qa '.*(firefox|chromium).*' +chromium-37.0.2062.94 +chromium-beta-38.0.2125.24 +firefox-32.0.3 +firefox-with-plugins-13.0.1 +… +``` To show all packages in the latest revision of the Nixpkgs repository: - $ nix-env -f https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/master.tar.gz -qa +```console +$ nix-env -f https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/master.tar.gz -qa +``` # Operation `--switch-profile` @@ -707,7 +763,9 @@ the symlink `~/.nix-profile` is made to point to *path*. ## Examples - $ nix-env -S ~/my-profile +```console +$ nix-env -S ~/my-profile +``` # Operation `--list-generations` @@ -724,11 +782,13 @@ generation, and indicates the current generation. ## Examples - $ nix-env --list-generations - 95 2004-02-06 11:48:24 - 96 2004-02-06 11:49:01 - 97 2004-02-06 16:22:45 - 98 2004-02-06 16:24:33 (current) +```console +$ nix-env --list-generations + 95 2004-02-06 11:48:24 + 96 2004-02-06 11:49:01 + 97 2004-02-06 16:22:45 + 98 2004-02-06 16:24:33 (current) +``` # Operation `--delete-generations` @@ -750,13 +810,21 @@ generations is important to make garbage collection effective. ## Examples - $ nix-env --delete-generations 3 4 8 +```console +$ nix-env --delete-generations 3 4 8 +``` - $ nix-env --delete-generations +5 +```console +$ nix-env --delete-generations +5 +``` - $ nix-env --delete-generations 30d +```console +$ nix-env --delete-generations 30d +``` - $ nix-env -p other_profile --delete-generations old +```console +$ nix-env -p other_profile --delete-generations old +``` # Operation `--switch-generation` @@ -776,8 +844,10 @@ Switching will fail if the specified generation does not exist. ## Examples - $ nix-env -G 42 - switching from generation 50 to 42 +```console +$ nix-env -G 42 +switching from generation 50 to 42 +``` # Operation `--rollback` @@ -794,11 +864,15 @@ generation, if it exists. It is just a convenience wrapper around ## Examples - $ nix-env --rollback - switching from generation 92 to 91 +```console +$ nix-env --rollback +switching from generation 92 to 91 +``` - $ nix-env --rollback - error: no generation older than the current (91) exists +```console +$ nix-env --rollback +error: no generation older than the current (91) exists +``` # Environment variables diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-hash.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-hash.md index edb331e1c..d3f91f8e9 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-hash.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-hash.md @@ -61,38 +61,44 @@ md5sum`. Computing the same hash as `nix-prefetch-url`: - $ nix-prefetch-url file://<(echo test) - 1lkgqb6fclns49861dwk9rzb6xnfkxbpws74mxnx01z9qyv1pjpj - $ nix-hash --type sha256 --flat --base32 <(echo test) - 1lkgqb6fclns49861dwk9rzb6xnfkxbpws74mxnx01z9qyv1pjpj +```console +$ nix-prefetch-url file://<(echo test) +1lkgqb6fclns49861dwk9rzb6xnfkxbpws74mxnx01z9qyv1pjpj +$ nix-hash --type sha256 --flat --base32 <(echo test) +1lkgqb6fclns49861dwk9rzb6xnfkxbpws74mxnx01z9qyv1pjpj +``` Computing hashes: - $ mkdir test - $ echo "hello" > test/world +```console +$ mkdir test +$ echo "hello" > test/world - $ nix-hash test/ (MD5 hash; default) - 8179d3caeff1869b5ba1744e5a245c04 +$ nix-hash test/ (MD5 hash; default) +8179d3caeff1869b5ba1744e5a245c04 - $ nix-store --dump test/ | md5sum (for comparison) - 8179d3caeff1869b5ba1744e5a245c04 - +$ nix-store --dump test/ | md5sum (for comparison) +8179d3caeff1869b5ba1744e5a245c04 - - $ nix-hash --type sha1 test/ - e4fd8ba5f7bbeaea5ace89fe10255536cd60dab6 +$ nix-hash --type sha1 test/ +e4fd8ba5f7bbeaea5ace89fe10255536cd60dab6 - $ nix-hash --type sha1 --base32 test/ - nvd61k9nalji1zl9rrdfmsmvyyjqpzg4 +$ nix-hash --type sha1 --base32 test/ +nvd61k9nalji1zl9rrdfmsmvyyjqpzg4 - $ nix-hash --type sha256 --flat test/ - error: reading file `test/': Is a directory +$ nix-hash --type sha256 --flat test/ +error: reading file `test/': Is a directory - $ nix-hash --type sha256 --flat test/world - 5891b5b522d5df086d0ff0b110fbd9d21bb4fc7163af34d08286a2e846f6be03 +$ nix-hash --type sha256 --flat test/world +5891b5b522d5df086d0ff0b110fbd9d21bb4fc7163af34d08286a2e846f6be03 +``` Converting between hexadecimal and base-32: - $ nix-hash --type sha1 --to-base32 e4fd8ba5f7bbeaea5ace89fe10255536cd60dab6 - nvd61k9nalji1zl9rrdfmsmvyyjqpzg4 +```console +$ nix-hash --type sha1 --to-base32 e4fd8ba5f7bbeaea5ace89fe10255536cd60dab6 +nvd61k9nalji1zl9rrdfmsmvyyjqpzg4 - $ nix-hash --type sha1 --to-base16 nvd61k9nalji1zl9rrdfmsmvyyjqpzg4 - e4fd8ba5f7bbeaea5ace89fe10255536cd60dab6 +$ nix-hash --type sha1 --to-base16 nvd61k9nalji1zl9rrdfmsmvyyjqpzg4 +e4fd8ba5f7bbeaea5ace89fe10255536cd60dab6 +``` diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md index 2d6525e77..5b5ee0439 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-instantiate.md @@ -85,61 +85,77 @@ standard input. Instantiating store derivations from a Nix expression, and building them using `nix-store`: - $ nix-instantiate test.nix (instantiate) - /nix/store/cigxbmvy6dzix98dxxh9b6shg7ar5bvs-perl-BerkeleyDB-0.26.drv +```console +$ nix-instantiate test.nix (instantiate) +/nix/store/cigxbmvy6dzix98dxxh9b6shg7ar5bvs-perl-BerkeleyDB-0.26.drv - $ nix-store -r $(nix-instantiate test.nix) (build) - ... - /nix/store/qhqk4n8ci095g3sdp93x7rgwyh9rdvgk-perl-BerkeleyDB-0.26 (output path) +$ nix-store -r $(nix-instantiate test.nix) (build) +... +/nix/store/qhqk4n8ci095g3sdp93x7rgwyh9rdvgk-perl-BerkeleyDB-0.26 (output path) - $ ls -l /nix/store/qhqk4n8ci095g3sdp93x7rgwyh9rdvgk-perl-BerkeleyDB-0.26 - dr-xr-xr-x 2 eelco users 4096 1970-01-01 01:00 lib - ... +$ ls -l /nix/store/qhqk4n8ci095g3sdp93x7rgwyh9rdvgk-perl-BerkeleyDB-0.26 +dr-xr-xr-x 2 eelco users 4096 1970-01-01 01:00 lib +... +``` You can also give a Nix expression on the command line: - $ nix-instantiate -E 'with import { }; hello' - /nix/store/j8s4zyv75a724q38cb0r87rlczaiag4y-hello-2.8.drv +```console +$ nix-instantiate -E 'with import { }; hello' +/nix/store/j8s4zyv75a724q38cb0r87rlczaiag4y-hello-2.8.drv +``` This is equivalent to: - $ nix-instantiate '' -A hello +```console +$ nix-instantiate '' -A hello +``` Parsing and evaluating Nix expressions: - $ nix-instantiate --parse -E '1 + 2' - 1 + 2 +```console +$ nix-instantiate --parse -E '1 + 2' +1 + 2 +``` - $ nix-instantiate --eval -E '1 + 2' - 3 +```console +$ nix-instantiate --eval -E '1 + 2' +3 +``` - $ nix-instantiate --eval --xml -E '1 + 2' - - - - +```console +$ nix-instantiate --eval --xml -E '1 + 2' + + + + +``` The difference between non-strict and strict evaluation: - $ nix-instantiate --eval --xml -E 'rec { x = "foo"; y = x; }' - ... - - - - - - - ... +```console +$ nix-instantiate --eval --xml -E 'rec { x = "foo"; y = x; }' +... + + + + + + +... +``` Note that `y` is left unevaluated (the XML representation doesn’t attempt to show non-normal forms). - $ nix-instantiate --eval --xml --strict -E 'rec { x = "foo"; y = x; }' - ... - - - - - - - ... +```console +$ nix-instantiate --eval --xml --strict -E 'rec { x = "foo"; y = x; }' +... + + + + + + +... +``` diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.md index 688496969..1cd1063cd 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.md @@ -59,13 +59,19 @@ Nix store is also printed. # Examples - $ nix-prefetch-url ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.10.tar.gz - 0ssi1wpaf7plaswqqjwigppsg5fyh99vdlb9kzl7c9lng89ndq1i +```console +$ nix-prefetch-url ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.10.tar.gz +0ssi1wpaf7plaswqqjwigppsg5fyh99vdlb9kzl7c9lng89ndq1i +``` - $ nix-prefetch-url --print-path mirror://gnu/hello/hello-2.10.tar.gz - 0ssi1wpaf7plaswqqjwigppsg5fyh99vdlb9kzl7c9lng89ndq1i - /nix/store/3x7dwzq014bblazs7kq20p9hyzz0qh8g-hello-2.10.tar.gz +```console +$ nix-prefetch-url --print-path mirror://gnu/hello/hello-2.10.tar.gz +0ssi1wpaf7plaswqqjwigppsg5fyh99vdlb9kzl7c9lng89ndq1i +/nix/store/3x7dwzq014bblazs7kq20p9hyzz0qh8g-hello-2.10.tar.gz +``` - $ nix-prefetch-url --unpack --print-path https://github.com/NixOS/patchelf/archive/0.8.tar.gz - 079agjlv0hrv7fxnx9ngipx14gyncbkllxrp9cccnh3a50fxcmy7 - /nix/store/19zrmhm3m40xxaw81c8cqm6aljgrnwj2-0.8.tar.gz +```console +$ nix-prefetch-url --unpack --print-path https://github.com/NixOS/patchelf/archive/0.8.tar.gz +079agjlv0hrv7fxnx9ngipx14gyncbkllxrp9cccnh3a50fxcmy7 +/nix/store/19zrmhm3m40xxaw81c8cqm6aljgrnwj2-0.8.tar.gz +``` diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md index 492351867..27826717b 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md @@ -39,10 +39,12 @@ after `$stdenv/setup` has been sourced. Since this hook is not executed by regular Nix builds, it allows you to perform initialisation specific to `nix-shell`. For example, the derivation attribute - shellHook = - '' - echo "Hello shell" - ''; +```nix +shellHook = + '' + echo "Hello shell" + ''; +``` will cause `nix-shell` to print `Hello shell`. @@ -108,46 +110,58 @@ The following common options are supported: To build the dependencies of the package Pan, and start an interactive shell in which to build it: - $ nix-shell '' -A pan - [nix-shell]$ unpackPhase - [nix-shell]$ cd pan-* - [nix-shell]$ configurePhase - [nix-shell]$ buildPhase - [nix-shell]$ ./pan/gui/pan +```shell +$ nix-shell '' -A pan +[nix-shell]$ unpackPhase +[nix-shell]$ cd pan-* +[nix-shell]$ configurePhase +[nix-shell]$ buildPhase +[nix-shell]$ ./pan/gui/pan +``` To clear the environment first, and do some additional automatic initialisation of the interactive shell: - $ nix-shell '' -A pan --pure \ - --command 'export NIX_DEBUG=1; export NIX_CORES=8; return' +```shell +$ nix-shell '' -A pan --pure \ + --command 'export NIX_DEBUG=1; export NIX_CORES=8; return' +``` Nix expressions can also be given on the command line using the `-E` and `-p` flags. For instance, the following starts a shell containing the packages `sqlite` and `libX11`: - $ nix-shell -E 'with import { }; runCommand "dummy" { buildInputs = [ sqlite xorg.libX11 ]; } ""' +```shell +$ nix-shell -E 'with import { }; runCommand "dummy" { buildInputs = [ sqlite xorg.libX11 ]; } ""' +``` A shorter way to do the same is: - $ nix-shell -p sqlite xorg.libX11 - [nix-shell]$ echo $NIX_LDFLAGS - … -L/nix/store/j1zg5v…-sqlite-3.8.0.2/lib -L/nix/store/0gmcz9…-libX11-1.6.1/lib … +```shell +$ nix-shell -p sqlite xorg.libX11 +[nix-shell]$ echo $NIX_LDFLAGS +… -L/nix/store/j1zg5v…-sqlite-3.8.0.2/lib -L/nix/store/0gmcz9…-libX11-1.6.1/lib … +``` Note that `-p` accepts multiple full nix expressions that are valid in the `buildInputs = [ ... ]` shown above, not only package names. So the following is also legal: - $ nix-shell -p sqlite 'git.override { withManual = false; }' +```shell +$ nix-shell -p sqlite 'git.override { withManual = false; }' +``` The `-p` flag looks up Nixpkgs in the Nix search path. You can override it by passing `-I` or setting `NIX_PATH`. For example, the following gives you a shell containing the Pan package from a specific revision of Nixpkgs: - $ nix-shell -p pan -I nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/8a3eea054838b55aca962c3fbde9c83c102b8bf2.tar.gz +```shell +$ nix-shell -p pan -I nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/8a3eea054838b55aca962c3fbde9c83c102b8bf2.tar.gz - [nix-shell:~]$ pan --version - Pan 0.139 +[nix-shell:~]$ pan --version +Pan 0.139 +``` # Use as a `#!`-interpreter @@ -155,8 +169,10 @@ You can use `nix-shell` as a script interpreter to allow scripts written in arbitrary languages to obtain their own dependencies via Nix. This is done by starting the script with the following lines: - #! /usr/bin/env nix-shell - #! nix-shell -i real-interpreter -p packages +```bash +#! /usr/bin/env nix-shell +#! nix-shell -i real-interpreter -p packages +``` where *real-interpreter* is the “real” script interpreter that will be invoked by `nix-shell` after it has obtained the dependencies and @@ -170,39 +186,45 @@ because many operating systems only allow one argument in `#!` lines. For example, here is a Python script that depends on Python and the `prettytable` package: - #! /usr/bin/env nix-shell - #! nix-shell -i python -p python pythonPackages.prettytable +```python +#! /usr/bin/env nix-shell +#! nix-shell -i python -p python pythonPackages.prettytable - import prettytable +import prettytable - # Print a simple table. - t = prettytable.PrettyTable(["N", "N^2"]) - for n in range(1, 10): t.add_row([n, n * n]) - print t +# Print a simple table. +t = prettytable.PrettyTable(["N", "N^2"]) +for n in range(1, 10): t.add_row([n, n * n]) +print t +``` Similarly, the following is a Perl script that specifies that it requires Perl and the `HTML::TokeParser::Simple` and `LWP` packages: - #! /usr/bin/env nix-shell - #! nix-shell -i perl -p perl perlPackages.HTMLTokeParserSimple perlPackages.LWP +```perl +#! /usr/bin/env nix-shell +#! nix-shell -i perl -p perl perlPackages.HTMLTokeParserSimple perlPackages.LWP - use HTML::TokeParser::Simple; +use HTML::TokeParser::Simple; - # Fetch nixos.org and print all hrefs. - my $p = HTML::TokeParser::Simple->new(url => 'http://nixos.org/'); +# Fetch nixos.org and print all hrefs. +my $p = HTML::TokeParser::Simple->new(url => 'http://nixos.org/'); - while (my $token = $p->get_tag("a")) { - my $href = $token->get_attr("href"); - print "$href\n" if $href; - } +while (my $token = $p->get_tag("a")) { + my $href = $token->get_attr("href"); + print "$href\n" if $href; +} +``` Sometimes you need to pass a simple Nix expression to customize a package like Terraform: - #! /usr/bin/env nix-shell - #! nix-shell -i bash -p "terraform.withPlugins (plugins: [ plugins.openstack ])" +```bash +#! /usr/bin/env nix-shell +#! nix-shell -i bash -p "terraform.withPlugins (plugins: [ plugins.openstack ])" - terraform apply +terraform apply +``` > **Note** > @@ -213,20 +235,22 @@ Finally, using the merging of multiple nix-shell shebangs the following Haskell script uses a specific branch of Nixpkgs/NixOS (the 18.03 stable branch): - #! /usr/bin/env nix-shell - #! nix-shell -i runghc -p "haskellPackages.ghcWithPackages (ps: [ps.HTTP ps.tagsoup])" - #! nix-shell -I nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-18.03.tar.gz +```haskell +#! /usr/bin/env nix-shell +#! nix-shell -i runghc -p "haskellPackages.ghcWithPackages (ps: [ps.HTTP ps.tagsoup])" +#! nix-shell -I nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-18.03.tar.gz - import Network.HTTP - import Text.HTML.TagSoup +import Network.HTTP +import Text.HTML.TagSoup - -- Fetch nixos.org and print all hrefs. - main = do - resp <- Network.HTTP.simpleHTTP (getRequest "http://nixos.org/") - body <- getResponseBody resp - let tags = filter (isTagOpenName "a") $ parseTags body - let tags' = map (fromAttrib "href") tags - mapM_ putStrLn $ filter (/= "") tags' +-- Fetch nixos.org and print all hrefs. +main = do + resp <- Network.HTTP.simpleHTTP (getRequest "http://nixos.org/") + body <- getResponseBody resp + let tags = filter (isTagOpenName "a") $ parseTags body + let tags' = map (fromAttrib "href") tags + mapM_ putStrLn $ filter (/= "") tags' +``` If you want to be even more precise, you can specify a specific revision of Nixpkgs: @@ -237,12 +261,16 @@ The examples above all used `-p` to get dependencies from Nixpkgs. You can also use a Nix expression to build your own dependencies. For example, the Python example could have been written as: - #! /usr/bin/env nix-shell - #! nix-shell deps.nix -i python +```python +#! /usr/bin/env nix-shell +#! nix-shell deps.nix -i python +``` where the file `deps.nix` in the same directory as the `#!`-script contains: - with import {}; +```nix +with import {}; - runCommand "dummy" { buildInputs = [ python pythonPackages.prettytable ]; } "" +runCommand "dummy" { buildInputs = [ python pythonPackages.prettytable ]; } "" +``` diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md index 1842f8858..193d670c2 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-store.md @@ -47,13 +47,15 @@ have an effect. The `--indirect` flag causes a uniquely named symlink to *path* to be stored in `/nix/var/nix/gcroots/auto/`. For instance, - $ nix-store --add-root /home/eelco/bla/result --indirect -r ... + ```console + $ nix-store --add-root /home/eelco/bla/result --indirect -r ... - $ ls -l /nix/var/nix/gcroots/auto - lrwxrwxrwx 1 ... 2005-03-13 21:10 dn54lcypm8f8... -> /home/eelco/bla/result + $ ls -l /nix/var/nix/gcroots/auto + lrwxrwxrwx 1 ... 2005-03-13 21:10 dn54lcypm8f8... -> /home/eelco/bla/result - $ ls -l /home/eelco/bla/result - lrwxrwxrwx 1 ... 2005-03-13 21:10 /home/eelco/bla/result -> /nix/store/1r11343n6qd4...-f-spot-0.0.10 + $ ls -l /home/eelco/bla/result + lrwxrwxrwx 1 ... 2005-03-13 21:10 /home/eelco/bla/result -> /nix/store/1r11343n6qd4...-f-spot-0.0.10 + ``` Thus, when `/home/eelco/bla/result` is removed, the GC root in the `auto` directory becomes a dangling symlink and will be ignored by @@ -157,14 +159,18 @@ or. This operation is typically used to build store derivations produced by [`nix-instantiate`](nix-instantiate.md): - $ nix-store -r $(nix-instantiate ./test.nix) - /nix/store/31axcgrlbfsxzmfff1gyj1bf62hvkby2-aterm-2.3.1 +```console +$ nix-store -r $(nix-instantiate ./test.nix) +/nix/store/31axcgrlbfsxzmfff1gyj1bf62hvkby2-aterm-2.3.1 +``` This is essentially what [`nix-build`](nix-build.md) does. To test whether a previously-built derivation is deterministic: - $ nix-build '' -A hello --check -K +```console +$ nix-build '' -A hello --check -K +``` # Operation `--serve` @@ -190,9 +196,11 @@ The following flags are available: To turn a host into a build server, the `authorized_keys` file can be used to provide build access to a given SSH public key: - $ cat <>/root/.ssh/authorized_keys - command="nice -n20 nix-store --serve --write" ssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAA... - EOF +```console +$ cat <>/root/.ssh/authorized_keys +command="nice -n20 nix-store --serve --write" ssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAA... +EOF +``` # Operation `--gc` @@ -245,14 +253,18 @@ number of bytes that would be freed. To delete all unreachable paths, just do: - $ nix-store --gc - deleting `/nix/store/kq82idx6g0nyzsp2s14gfsc38npai7lf-cairo-1.0.4.tar.gz.drv' - ... - 8825586 bytes freed (8.42 MiB) +```console +$ nix-store --gc +deleting `/nix/store/kq82idx6g0nyzsp2s14gfsc38npai7lf-cairo-1.0.4.tar.gz.drv' +... +8825586 bytes freed (8.42 MiB) +``` To delete at least 100 MiBs of unreachable paths: - $ nix-store --gc --max-freed $((100 * 1024 * 1024)) +```console +$ nix-store --gc --max-freed $((100 * 1024 * 1024)) +``` # Operation `--delete` @@ -274,9 +286,11 @@ paths in the store that refer to it (i.e., depend on it). ## Example - $ nix-store --delete /nix/store/zq0h41l75vlb4z45kzgjjmsjxvcv1qk7-mesa-6.4 - 0 bytes freed (0.00 MiB) - error: cannot delete path `/nix/store/zq0h41l75vlb4z45kzgjjmsjxvcv1qk7-mesa-6.4' since it is still alive +```console +$ nix-store --delete /nix/store/zq0h41l75vlb4z45kzgjjmsjxvcv1qk7-mesa-6.4 +0 bytes freed (0.00 MiB) +error: cannot delete path `/nix/store/zq0h41l75vlb4z45kzgjjmsjxvcv1qk7-mesa-6.4' since it is still alive +``` # Operation `--query` @@ -407,18 +421,22 @@ symlink. Print the closure (runtime dependencies) of the `svn` program in the current user environment: - $ nix-store -qR $(which svn) - /nix/store/5mbglq5ldqld8sj57273aljwkfvj22mc-subversion-1.1.4 - /nix/store/9lz9yc6zgmc0vlqmn2ipcpkjlmbi51vv-glibc-2.3.4 - ... +```console +$ nix-store -qR $(which svn) +/nix/store/5mbglq5ldqld8sj57273aljwkfvj22mc-subversion-1.1.4 +/nix/store/9lz9yc6zgmc0vlqmn2ipcpkjlmbi51vv-glibc-2.3.4 +... +``` Print the build-time dependencies of `svn`: - $ nix-store -qR $(nix-store -qd $(which svn)) - /nix/store/02iizgn86m42q905rddvg4ja975bk2i4-grep-2.5.1.tar.bz2.drv - /nix/store/07a2bzxmzwz5hp58nf03pahrv2ygwgs3-gcc-wrapper.sh - /nix/store/0ma7c9wsbaxahwwl04gbw3fcd806ski4-glibc-2.3.4.drv - ... lots of other paths ... +```console +$ nix-store -qR $(nix-store -qd $(which svn)) +/nix/store/02iizgn86m42q905rddvg4ja975bk2i4-grep-2.5.1.tar.bz2.drv +/nix/store/07a2bzxmzwz5hp58nf03pahrv2ygwgs3-gcc-wrapper.sh +/nix/store/0ma7c9wsbaxahwwl04gbw3fcd806ski4-glibc-2.3.4.drv +... lots of other paths ... +``` The difference with the previous example is that we ask the closure of the derivation (`-qd`), not the closure of the output path that contains @@ -426,29 +444,35 @@ the derivation (`-qd`), not the closure of the output path that contains Show the build-time dependencies as a tree: - $ nix-store -q --tree $(nix-store -qd $(which svn)) - /nix/store/7i5082kfb6yjbqdbiwdhhza0am2xvh6c-subversion-1.1.4.drv - +---/nix/store/d8afh10z72n8l1cr5w42366abiblgn54-builder.sh - +---/nix/store/fmzxmpjx2lh849ph0l36snfj9zdibw67-bash-3.0.drv - | +---/nix/store/570hmhmx3v57605cqg9yfvvyh0nnb8k8-bash - | +---/nix/store/p3srsbd8dx44v2pg6nbnszab5mcwx03v-builder.sh - ... +```console +$ nix-store -q --tree $(nix-store -qd $(which svn)) +/nix/store/7i5082kfb6yjbqdbiwdhhza0am2xvh6c-subversion-1.1.4.drv ++---/nix/store/d8afh10z72n8l1cr5w42366abiblgn54-builder.sh ++---/nix/store/fmzxmpjx2lh849ph0l36snfj9zdibw67-bash-3.0.drv +| +---/nix/store/570hmhmx3v57605cqg9yfvvyh0nnb8k8-bash +| +---/nix/store/p3srsbd8dx44v2pg6nbnszab5mcwx03v-builder.sh +... +``` Show all paths that depend on the same OpenSSL library as `svn`: - $ nix-store -q --referrers $(nix-store -q --binding openssl $(nix-store -qd $(which svn))) - /nix/store/23ny9l9wixx21632y2wi4p585qhva1q8-sylpheed-1.0.0 - /nix/store/5mbglq5ldqld8sj57273aljwkfvj22mc-subversion-1.1.4 - /nix/store/dpmvp969yhdqs7lm2r1a3gng7pyq6vy4-subversion-1.1.3 - /nix/store/l51240xqsgg8a7yrbqdx1rfzyv6l26fx-lynx-2.8.5 +```console +$ nix-store -q --referrers $(nix-store -q --binding openssl $(nix-store -qd $(which svn))) +/nix/store/23ny9l9wixx21632y2wi4p585qhva1q8-sylpheed-1.0.0 +/nix/store/5mbglq5ldqld8sj57273aljwkfvj22mc-subversion-1.1.4 +/nix/store/dpmvp969yhdqs7lm2r1a3gng7pyq6vy4-subversion-1.1.3 +/nix/store/l51240xqsgg8a7yrbqdx1rfzyv6l26fx-lynx-2.8.5 +``` Show all paths that directly or indirectly depend on the Glibc (C library) used by `svn`: - $ nix-store -q --referrers-closure $(ldd $(which svn) | grep /libc.so | awk '{print $3}') - /nix/store/034a6h4vpz9kds5r6kzb9lhh81mscw43-libgnomeprintui-2.8.2 - /nix/store/15l3yi0d45prm7a82pcrknxdh6nzmxza-gawk-3.1.4 - ... +```console +$ nix-store -q --referrers-closure $(ldd $(which svn) | grep /libc.so | awk '{print $3}') +/nix/store/034a6h4vpz9kds5r6kzb9lhh81mscw43-libgnomeprintui-2.8.2 +/nix/store/15l3yi0d45prm7a82pcrknxdh6nzmxza-gawk-3.1.4 +... +``` Note that `ldd` is a command that prints out the dynamic libraries used by an ELF executable. @@ -456,16 +480,20 @@ by an ELF executable. Make a picture of the runtime dependency graph of the current user environment: - $ nix-store -q --graph ~/.nix-profile | dot -Tps > graph.ps - $ gv graph.ps +```console +$ nix-store -q --graph ~/.nix-profile | dot -Tps > graph.ps +$ gv graph.ps +``` Show every garbage collector root that points to a store path that depends on `svn`: - $ nix-store -q --roots $(which svn) - /nix/var/nix/profiles/default-81-link - /nix/var/nix/profiles/default-82-link - /nix/var/nix/profiles/per-user/eelco/profile-97-link +```console +$ nix-store -q --roots $(which svn) +/nix/var/nix/profiles/default-81-link +/nix/var/nix/profiles/default-82-link +/nix/var/nix/profiles/per-user/eelco/profile-97-link +``` # Operation `--add` @@ -480,8 +508,10 @@ prints the resulting paths in the Nix store on standard output. ## Example - $ nix-store --add ./foo.c - /nix/store/m7lrha58ph6rcnv109yzx1nk1cj7k7zf-foo.c +```console +$ nix-store --add ./foo.c +/nix/store/m7lrha58ph6rcnv109yzx1nk1cj7k7zf-foo.c +``` # Operation `--add-fixed` @@ -505,8 +535,10 @@ This operation has the following options: ## Example - $ nix-store --add-fixed sha256 ./hello-2.10.tar.gz - /nix/store/3x7dwzq014bblazs7kq20p9hyzz0qh8g-hello-2.10.tar.gz +```console +$ nix-store --add-fixed sha256 ./hello-2.10.tar.gz +/nix/store/3x7dwzq014bblazs7kq20p9hyzz0qh8g-hello-2.10.tar.gz +``` # Operation `--verify` @@ -554,7 +586,9 @@ path has changed, and 1 otherwise. To verify the integrity of the `svn` command and all its dependencies: - $ nix-store --verify-path $(nix-store -qR $(which svn)) +```console +$ nix-store --verify-path $(nix-store -qR $(which svn)) +``` # Operation `--repair-path` @@ -578,14 +612,16 @@ substitutes are available, then repair is not possible. ## Example - $ nix-store --verify-path /nix/store/dj7a81wsm1ijwwpkks3725661h3263p5-glibc-2.13 - path `/nix/store/dj7a81wsm1ijwwpkks3725661h3263p5-glibc-2.13' was modified! - expected hash `2db57715ae90b7e31ff1f2ecb8c12ec1cc43da920efcbe3b22763f36a1861588', - got `481c5aa5483ebc97c20457bb8bca24deea56550d3985cda0027f67fe54b808e4' +```console +$ nix-store --verify-path /nix/store/dj7a81wsm1ijwwpkks3725661h3263p5-glibc-2.13 +path `/nix/store/dj7a81wsm1ijwwpkks3725661h3263p5-glibc-2.13' was modified! + expected hash `2db57715ae90b7e31ff1f2ecb8c12ec1cc43da920efcbe3b22763f36a1861588', + got `481c5aa5483ebc97c20457bb8bca24deea56550d3985cda0027f67fe54b808e4' - $ nix-store --repair-path /nix/store/dj7a81wsm1ijwwpkks3725661h3263p5-glibc-2.13 - fetching path `/nix/store/d7a81wsm1ijwwpkks3725661h3263p5-glibc-2.13'... - … +$ nix-store --repair-path /nix/store/dj7a81wsm1ijwwpkks3725661h3263p5-glibc-2.13 +fetching path `/nix/store/d7a81wsm1ijwwpkks3725661h3263p5-glibc-2.13'... +… +``` # Operation `--dump` @@ -651,11 +687,15 @@ a store path references other store paths that are missing in the target Nix store, the import will fail. To copy a whole closure, do something like: - $ nix-store --export $(nix-store -qR paths) > out +```console +$ nix-store --export $(nix-store -qR paths) > out +``` To import the whole closure again, run: - $ nix-store --import < out +```console +$ nix-store --import < out +``` # Operation `--import` @@ -695,11 +735,13 @@ Use `-vv` or `-vvv` to get some progress indication. ## Example - $ nix-store --optimise - hashing files in `/nix/store/qhqx7l2f1kmwihc9bnxs7rc159hsxnf3-gcc-4.1.1' - ... - 541838819 bytes (516.74 MiB) freed by hard-linking 54143 files; - there are 114486 files with equal contents out of 215894 files in total +```console +$ nix-store --optimise +hashing files in `/nix/store/qhqx7l2f1kmwihc9bnxs7rc159hsxnf3-gcc-4.1.1' +... +541838819 bytes (516.74 MiB) freed by hard-linking 54143 files; +there are 114486 files with equal contents out of 215894 files in total +``` # Operation `--read-log` @@ -721,13 +763,15 @@ substitute, then the log is unavailable. ## Example - $ nix-store -l $(which ktorrent) - building /nix/store/dhc73pvzpnzxhdgpimsd9sw39di66ph1-ktorrent-2.2.1 - unpacking sources - unpacking source archive /nix/store/p8n1jpqs27mgkjw07pb5269717nzf5f8-ktorrent-2.2.1.tar.gz - ktorrent-2.2.1/ - ktorrent-2.2.1/NEWS - ... +```console +$ nix-store -l $(which ktorrent) +building /nix/store/dhc73pvzpnzxhdgpimsd9sw39di66ph1-ktorrent-2.2.1 +unpacking sources +unpacking source archive /nix/store/p8n1jpqs27mgkjw07pb5269717nzf5f8-ktorrent-2.2.1.tar.gz +ktorrent-2.2.1/ +ktorrent-2.2.1/NEWS +... +``` # Operation `--dump-db` @@ -773,12 +817,14 @@ of the builder are placed in the variable `_args`. ## Example - $ nix-store --print-env $(nix-instantiate '' -A firefox) - … - export src; src='/nix/store/plpj7qrwcz94z2psh6fchsi7s8yihc7k-firefox-12.0.source.tar.bz2' - export stdenv; stdenv='/nix/store/7c8asx3yfrg5dg1gzhzyq2236zfgibnn-stdenv' - export system; system='x86_64-linux' - export _args; _args='-e /nix/store/9krlzvny65gdc8s7kpb6lkx8cd02c25c-default-builder.sh' +```console +$ nix-store --print-env $(nix-instantiate '' -A firefox) +… +export src; src='/nix/store/plpj7qrwcz94z2psh6fchsi7s8yihc7k-firefox-12.0.source.tar.bz2' +export stdenv; stdenv='/nix/store/7c8asx3yfrg5dg1gzhzyq2236zfgibnn-stdenv' +export system; system='x86_64-linux' +export _args; _args='-e /nix/store/9krlzvny65gdc8s7kpb6lkx8cd02c25c-default-builder.sh' +``` # Operation `--generate-binary-cache-key` diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common.md index ee8419fd2..65e72d000 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/opt-common.md @@ -158,11 +158,13 @@ Most Nix commands accept the following command-line options: For instance, the top-level `default.nix` in Nixpkgs is actually a function: - - { # The system (e.g., `i686-linux') for which to build the packages. - system ? builtins.currentSystem - ... - }: ... + + ```nix + { # The system (e.g., `i686-linux') for which to build the packages. + system ? builtins.currentSystem + ... + }: ... + ``` So if you call this Nix expression (e.g., when you do `nix-env -i pkgname`), the function will be called automatically using the diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/advanced-attributes.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/advanced-attributes.md index bfee28acf..31ebadda1 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/advanced-attributes.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/advanced-attributes.md @@ -6,7 +6,9 @@ Derivations can declare some infrequently used optional attributes. The optional attribute `allowedReferences` specifies a list of legal references (dependencies) of the output of the builder. For example, - allowedReferences = []; + ```nix + allowedReferences = []; + ``` enforces that the output of a derivation cannot have any runtime dependencies on its inputs. To allow an output to have a runtime @@ -20,7 +22,9 @@ Derivations can declare some infrequently used optional attributes. the legal requisites of the whole closure, so all the dependencies recursively. For example, - allowedRequisites = [ foobar ]; + ```nix + allowedRequisites = [ foobar ]; + ``` enforces that the output of a derivation cannot have any other runtime dependency than `foobar`, and in addition it enforces that @@ -31,7 +35,9 @@ Derivations can declare some infrequently used optional attributes. illegal references (dependencies) of the output of the builder. For example, - disallowedReferences = [ foo ]; + ```nix + disallowedReferences = [ foo ]; + ``` enforces that the output of a derivation cannot have a direct runtime dependencies on the derivation `foo`. @@ -41,7 +47,9 @@ Derivations can declare some infrequently used optional attributes. specifies illegal requisites for the whole closure, so all the dependencies recursively. For example, - disallowedRequisites = [ foobar ]; + ```nix + disallowedRequisites = [ foobar ]; + ``` enforces that the output of a derivation cannot have any runtime dependency on `foobar` or any other derivation depending recursively @@ -50,20 +58,20 @@ Derivations can declare some infrequently used optional attributes. - `exportReferencesGraph` This attribute allows builders access to the references graph of their inputs. The attribute is a list of inputs in the Nix store - whose references graph the builder needs to know. The value of this - attribute should be a list of pairs `[ name1 - path1 name2 - path2 ... - ]`. The references graph of each *pathN* will be stored in a text - file *nameN* in the temporary build directory. The text files have - the format used by `nix-store - --register-validity` (with the deriver fields left empty). For - example, when the following derivation is built: + whose references graph the builder needs to know. The value of + this attribute should be a list of pairs `[ name1 path1 name2 + path2 ... ]`. The references graph of each *pathN* will be stored + in a text file *nameN* in the temporary build directory. The text + files have the format used by `nix-store --register-validity` + (with the deriver fields left empty). For example, when the + following derivation is built: - derivation { - ... - exportReferencesGraph = [ "libfoo-graph" libfoo ]; - }; + ```nix + derivation { + ... + exportReferencesGraph = [ "libfoo-graph" libfoo ]; + }; + ``` the references graph of `libfoo` is placed in the file `libfoo-graph` in the temporary build directory. @@ -84,7 +92,9 @@ Derivations can declare some infrequently used optional attributes. environment variables to be passed unmodified. For example, `fetchurl` in Nixpkgs has the line - impureEnvVars = [ "http_proxy" "https_proxy" ... ]; + ```nix + impureEnvVars = [ "http_proxy" "https_proxy" ... ]; + ``` to make it use the proxy server configuration specified by the user in the environment variables `http_proxy` and friends. @@ -116,19 +126,23 @@ Derivations can declare some infrequently used optional attributes. been modified, the caller must also specify a cryptographic hash of the file. For example, - fetchurl { - url = "http://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.1.1.tar.gz"; - sha256 = "1md7jsfd8pa45z73bz1kszpp01yw6x5ljkjk2hx7wl800any6465"; - } + ```nix + fetchurl { + url = "http://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.1.1.tar.gz"; + sha256 = "1md7jsfd8pa45z73bz1kszpp01yw6x5ljkjk2hx7wl800any6465"; + } + ``` It sometimes happens that the URL of the file changes, e.g., because servers are reorganised or no longer available. We then must update the call to `fetchurl`, e.g., - fetchurl { - url = "ftp://ftp.nluug.nl/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.1.1.tar.gz"; - sha256 = "1md7jsfd8pa45z73bz1kszpp01yw6x5ljkjk2hx7wl800any6465"; - } + ```nix + fetchurl { + url = "ftp://ftp.nluug.nl/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.1.1.tar.gz"; + sha256 = "1md7jsfd8pa45z73bz1kszpp01yw6x5ljkjk2hx7wl800any6465"; + } + ``` If a `fetchurl` derivation was treated like a normal derivation, the output paths of the derivation and *all derivations depending on it* @@ -147,23 +161,25 @@ Derivations can declare some infrequently used optional attributes. As an example, here is the (simplified) Nix expression for `fetchurl`: - { stdenv, curl }: # The curl program is used for downloading. - - { url, sha256 }: - - stdenv.mkDerivation { - name = baseNameOf (toString url); - builder = ./builder.sh; - buildInputs = [ curl ]; - - # This is a fixed-output derivation; the output must be a regular - # file with SHA256 hash sha256. - outputHashMode = "flat"; - outputHashAlgo = "sha256"; - outputHash = sha256; - - inherit url; - } + ```nix + { stdenv, curl }: # The curl program is used for downloading. + + { url, sha256 }: + + stdenv.mkDerivation { + name = baseNameOf (toString url); + builder = ./builder.sh; + buildInputs = [ curl ]; + + # This is a fixed-output derivation; the output must be a regular + # file with SHA256 hash sha256. + outputHashMode = "flat"; + outputHashAlgo = "sha256"; + outputHash = sha256; + + inherit url; + } + ``` The `outputHashAlgo` attribute specifies the hash algorithm used to compute the hash. It can currently be `"sha1"`, `"sha256"` or @@ -196,21 +212,19 @@ Derivations can declare some infrequently used optional attributes. A list of names of attributes that should be passed via files rather than environment variables. For example, if you have - ``` + ```nix passAsFile = ["big"]; big = "a very long string"; - ``` - then when the builder runs, the environment variable `bigPath` will - contain the absolute path to a temporary file containing `a very - long - string`. That is, for any attribute *x* listed in `passAsFile`, Nix - will pass an environment variable `xPath` holding the path of the - file containing the value of attribute *x*. This is useful when you - need to pass large strings to a builder, since most operating - systems impose a limit on the size of the environment (typically, a - few hundred kilobyte). + then when the builder runs, the environment variable `bigPath` + will contain the absolute path to a temporary file containing `a + very long string`. That is, for any attribute *x* listed in + `passAsFile`, Nix will pass an environment variable `xPath` + holding the path of the file containing the value of attribute + *x*. This is useful when you need to pass large strings to a + builder, since most operating systems impose a limit on the size + of the environment (typically, a few hundred kilobyte). - `preferLocalBuild` If this attribute is set to `true` and [distributed building is diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/arguments-variables.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/arguments-variables.md index 2956f98f1..12198c879 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/arguments-variables.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/arguments-variables.md @@ -8,25 +8,27 @@ packages are imported and called with the appropriate arguments. Here are some fragments of `all-packages.nix`, with annotations of what they mean: - ... - - rec { ① - - hello = import ../applications/misc/hello/ex-1 ② { ③ - inherit fetchurl stdenv perl; - }; - - perl = import ../development/interpreters/perl { ④ - inherit fetchurl stdenv; - }; - - fetchurl = import ../build-support/fetchurl { - inherit stdenv; ... - }; - - stdenv = ...; - - } +```nix +... + +rec { ① + + hello = import ../applications/misc/hello/ex-1 ② { ③ + inherit fetchurl stdenv perl; + }; + + perl = import ../development/interpreters/perl { ④ + inherit fetchurl stdenv; + }; + + fetchurl = import ../build-support/fetchurl { + inherit stdenv; ... + }; + + stdenv = ...; + +} +``` 1. This file defines a set of attributes, all of which are concrete derivations (i.e., not functions). In fact, we define a *mutually @@ -64,11 +66,15 @@ they mean: > calls a function, filling in any missing arguments by passing the > corresponding attribute from the Nixpkgs set, like this: > - > hello = callPackage ../applications/misc/hello/ex-1 { }; + > ```nix + > hello = callPackage ../applications/misc/hello/ex-1 { }; + > ``` > > If necessary, you can set or override arguments: > - > hello = callPackage ../applications/misc/hello/ex-1 { stdenv = myStdenv; }; + > ```nix + > hello = callPackage ../applications/misc/hello/ex-1 { stdenv = myStdenv; }; + > ``` 4. Likewise, we have to instantiate Perl, `fetchurl`, and the standard environment. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md index e0dda56f8..b1eacae88 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/build-script.md @@ -3,15 +3,17 @@ Here is the builder referenced from Hello's Nix expression (stored in `pkgs/applications/misc/hello/ex-1/builder.sh`): - source $stdenv/setup ① - - PATH=$perl/bin:$PATH ② - - tar xvfz $src ③ - cd hello-* - ./configure --prefix=$out ④ - make ⑤ - make install +```bash +source $stdenv/setup ① + +PATH=$perl/bin:$PATH ② + +tar xvfz $src ③ +cd hello-* +./configure --prefix=$out ④ +make ⑤ +make install +``` The builder can actually be made a lot shorter by using the *generic builder* functions provided by `stdenv`, but here we write out the build diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md index 22f133c33..7c4a62f54 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md @@ -51,7 +51,9 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. You can use `builtins` to test for the availability of features in the Nix installation, e.g., - if builtins ? getEnv then builtins.getEnv "PATH" else "" + ```nix + if builtins ? getEnv then builtins.getEnv "PATH" else "" + ``` This allows a Nix expression to fall back gracefully on older Nix installations that don’t have the desired built-in function. @@ -114,9 +116,11 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. function is to obtain external Nix expression dependencies, such as a particular version of Nixpkgs, e.g. - with import (fetchTarball https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-14.12.tar.gz) {}; - - stdenv.mkDerivation { … } + ```nix + with import (fetchTarball https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-14.12.tar.gz) {}; + + stdenv.mkDerivation { … } + ``` The fetched tarball is cached for a certain amount of time (1 hour by default) in `~/.cache/nix/tarballs/`. You can change the cache @@ -124,19 +128,21 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. of seconds` or in the Nix configuration file with this option: ` number of seconds to cache `. - Note that when obtaining the hash with ` nix-prefetch-url - ` the option `--unpack` is required. + Note that when obtaining the hash with ` nix-prefetch-url ` the + option `--unpack` is required. This function can also verify the contents against a hash. In that case, the function takes a set instead of a URL. The set requires the attribute `url` and the attribute `sha256`, e.g. - with import (fetchTarball { - url = "https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-14.12.tar.gz"; - sha256 = "1jppksrfvbk5ypiqdz4cddxdl8z6zyzdb2srq8fcffr327ld5jj2"; - }) {}; - - stdenv.mkDerivation { … } + ```nix + with import (fetchTarball { + url = "https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-14.12.tar.gz"; + sha256 = "1jppksrfvbk5ypiqdz4cddxdl8z6zyzdb2srq8fcffr327ld5jj2"; + }) {}; + + stdenv.mkDerivation { … } + ``` This function is not available if [restricted evaluation mode](../command-ref/conf-file.md) is enabled. @@ -172,18 +178,22 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. - To fetch a private repository over SSH: - builtins.fetchGit { - url = "git@github.com:my-secret/repository.git"; - ref = "master"; - rev = "adab8b916a45068c044658c4158d81878f9ed1c3"; - } + ```nix + builtins.fetchGit { + url = "git@github.com:my-secret/repository.git"; + ref = "master"; + rev = "adab8b916a45068c044658c4158d81878f9ed1c3"; + } + ``` - To fetch an arbitrary reference: - builtins.fetchGit { - url = "https://github.com/NixOS/nix.git"; - ref = "refs/heads/0.5-release"; - } + ```nix + builtins.fetchGit { + url = "https://github.com/NixOS/nix.git"; + ref = "refs/heads/0.5-release"; + } + ``` - If the revision you're looking for is in the default branch of the git repository you don't strictly need to specify the branch @@ -193,11 +203,13 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. branch for the non-default branch you will need to specify the the `ref` attribute as well. - builtins.fetchGit { - url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; - rev = "841fcbd04755c7a2865c51c1e2d3b045976b7452"; - ref = "1.11-maintenance"; - } + ```nix + builtins.fetchGit { + url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; + rev = "841fcbd04755c7a2865c51c1e2d3b045976b7452"; + ref = "1.11-maintenance"; + } + ``` > **Note** > @@ -211,24 +223,30 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. - If the revision you're looking for is in the default branch of the git repository you may omit the `ref` attribute. - builtins.fetchGit { - url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; - rev = "841fcbd04755c7a2865c51c1e2d3b045976b7452"; - } + ```nix + builtins.fetchGit { + url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; + rev = "841fcbd04755c7a2865c51c1e2d3b045976b7452"; + } + ``` - To fetch a specific tag: - builtins.fetchGit { - url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; - ref = "refs/tags/1.9"; - } + ```nix + builtins.fetchGit { + url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; + ref = "refs/tags/1.9"; + } + ``` - To fetch the latest version of a remote branch: - builtins.fetchGit { - url = "ssh://git@github.com/nixos/nix.git"; - ref = "master"; - } + ```nix + builtins.fetchGit { + url = "ssh://git@github.com/nixos/nix.git"; + ref = "master"; + } + ``` > **Note** > @@ -248,10 +266,12 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. filtering certain files. For instance, suppose that you want to use the directory `source-dir` as an input to a Nix expression, e.g. - stdenv.mkDerivation { - ... - src = ./source-dir; - } + ```nix + stdenv.mkDerivation { + ... + src = ./source-dir; + } + ``` However, if `source-dir` is a Subversion working copy, then all those annoying `.svn` subdirectories will also be copied to the @@ -259,10 +279,10 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. causing lots of spurious rebuilds. With `filterSource` you can filter out the `.svn` directories: - ``` - src = builtins.filterSource - (path: type: type != "directory" || baseNameOf path != ".svn") - ./source-dir; + ```nix + src = builtins.filterSource + (path: type: type != "directory" || baseNameOf path != ".svn") + ./source-dir; ``` Thus, the first argument *e1* must be a predicate function that is @@ -279,10 +299,10 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. - `builtins.foldl’` *op* *nul* *list* Reduce a list by applying a binary operator, from left to right, - e.g. `foldl’ op nul [x0 x1 x2 ...] = op (op - (op nul x0) x1) x2) ...`. The operator is applied strictly, i.e., - its arguments are evaluated first. For example, `foldl’ (x: y: x + - y) 0 [1 2 3]` evaluates to 6. + e.g. `foldl’ op nul [x0 x1 x2 ...] = op (op (op nul x0) x1) x2) + ...`. The operator is applied strictly, i.e., its arguments are + evaluated first. For example, `foldl’ (x: y: x + y) 0 [1 2 3]` + evaluates to 6. - `builtins.functionArgs` *f* Return a set containing the names of the formal arguments expected @@ -298,16 +318,19 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. - `builtins.fromJSON` *e* Convert a JSON string to a Nix value. For example, - builtins.fromJSON ''{"x": [1, 2, 3], "y": null}'' + ```nix + builtins.fromJSON ''{"x": [1, 2, 3], "y": null}'' + ``` - returns the value `{ x = [ 1 2 3 ]; y = null; - }`. + returns the value `{ x = [ 1 2 3 ]; y = null; }`. - `builtins.genList` *generator* *length* Generate list of size *length*, with each element *i* equal to the value returned by *generator* `i`. For example, - builtins.genList (x: x * x) 5 + ```nix + builtins.genList (x: x * x) 5 + ``` returns the list `[ 0 1 4 9 16 ]`. @@ -369,26 +392,34 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. variables that are in scope at the call site. For instance, if you have a calling expression - rec { - x = 123; - y = import ./foo.nix; - } + ```nix + rec { + x = 123; + y = import ./foo.nix; + } + ``` then the following `foo.nix` will give an error: - x + 456 + ```nix + x + 456 + ``` since `x` is not in scope in `foo.nix`. If you want `x` to be available in `foo.nix`, you should pass it as a function argument: - rec { - x = 123; - y = import ./foo.nix x; - } + ```nix + rec { + x = 123; + y = import ./foo.nix x; + } + ``` and - x: x + 456 + ```nix + x: x + 456 + ``` (The function argument doesn’t have to be called `x` in `foo.nix`; any name would work.) @@ -442,23 +473,28 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. string-valued attribute `name` specifying the name of the attribute, and an attribute `value` specifying its value. Example: - builtins.listToAttrs - [ { name = "foo"; value = 123; } - { name = "bar"; value = 456; } - ] + ```nix + builtins.listToAttrs + [ { name = "foo"; value = 123; } + { name = "bar"; value = 456; } + ] + ``` evaluates to - { foo = 123; bar = 456; } + ```nix + { foo = 123; bar = 456; } + ``` - `map` *f* *list*; `builtins.map` *f* *list* Apply the function *f* to each element in the list *list*. For example, - map (x: "foo" + x) [ "bar" "bla" "abc" ] + ```nix + map (x: "foo" + x) [ "bar" "bla" "abc" ] + ``` - evaluates to `[ "foobar" "foobla" "fooabc" - ]`. + evaluates to `[ "foobar" "foobla" "fooabc" ]`. - `builtins.match` *regex* *str* Returns a list if the [extended POSIX regular @@ -466,19 +502,27 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. *regex* matches *str* precisely, otherwise returns `null`. Each item in the list is a regex group. - builtins.match "ab" "abc" + ```nix + builtins.match "ab" "abc" + ``` Evaluates to `null`. - builtins.match "abc" "abc" + ```nix + builtins.match "abc" "abc" + ``` Evaluates to `[ ]`. - builtins.match "a(b)(c)" "abc" + ```nix + builtins.match "a(b)(c)" "abc" + ``` Evaluates to `[ "b" "c" ]`. - builtins.match "[[:space:]]+([[:upper:]]+)[[:space:]]+" " FOO " + ```nix + builtins.match "[[:space:]]+([[:upper:]]+)[[:space:]]+" " FOO " + ``` Evaluates to `[ "foo" ]`. @@ -534,11 +578,12 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. - `builtins.readDir` *path* Return the contents of the directory *path* as a set mapping directory entries to the corresponding file type. For instance, if - directory `A` contains a regular file `B` and another directory `C`, - then `builtins.readDir - ./A` will return the set + directory `A` contains a regular file `B` and another directory + `C`, then `builtins.readDir ./A` will return the set - { B = "regular"; C = "directory"; } + ```nix + { B = "regular"; C = "directory"; } + ``` The possible values for the file type are `"regular"`, `"directory"`, `"symlink"` and `"unknown"`. @@ -550,7 +595,9 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. Remove the attributes listed in *list* from *set*. The attributes don’t have to exist in *set*. For instance, - removeAttrs { x = 1; y = 2; z = 3; } [ "a" "x" "z" ] + ```nix + removeAttrs { x = 1; y = 2; z = 3; } [ "a" "x" "z" ] + ``` evaluates to `{ y = 2; }`. @@ -558,7 +605,9 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. Given string *s*, replace every occurrence of the strings in *from* with the corresponding string in *to*. For example, - builtins.replaceStrings ["oo" "a"] ["a" "i"] "foobar" + ```nix + builtins.replaceStrings ["oo" "a"] ["a" "i"] "foobar" + ``` evaluates to `"fabir"`. @@ -572,10 +621,11 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. if the first element is less than the second, and `false` otherwise. For example, - builtins.sort builtins.lessThan [ 483 249 526 147 42 77 ] + ```nix + builtins.sort builtins.lessThan [ 483 249 526 147 42 77 ] + ``` - produces the list `[ 42 77 147 249 483 526 - ]`. + produces the list `[ 42 77 147 249 483 526 ]`. This is a stable sort: it preserves the relative order of elements deemed equal by the comparator. @@ -587,19 +637,27 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. *regex* matches of *str*. Each item in the lists of matched sequences is a regex group. - builtins.split "(a)b" "abc" + ```nix + builtins.split "(a)b" "abc" + ``` Evaluates to `[ "" [ "a" ] "c" ]`. - builtins.split "([ac])" "abc" + ```nix + builtins.split "([ac])" "abc" + ``` Evaluates to `[ "" [ "a" ] "b" [ "c" ] "" ]`. - builtins.split "(a)|(c)" "abc" + ```nix + builtins.split "(a)|(c)" "abc" + ``` Evaluates to `[ "" [ "a" null ] "b" [ null "c" ] "" ]`. - builtins.split "([[:upper:]]+)" " FOO " + ```nix + builtins.split "([[:upper:]]+)" " FOO " + ``` Evaluates to `[ " " [ "FOO" ] " " ]`. @@ -623,7 +681,9 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. substring up to the end of the string is returned. *start* must be non-negative. For example, - builtins.substring 0 3 "nixos" + ```nix + builtins.substring 0 3 "nixos" + ``` evaluates to `"nix"`. @@ -645,45 +705,47 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. “inline”. For instance, the following Nix expression combines the [Nix expression for GNU Hello](expression-syntax.md) and its [build script](build-script.md) into one file: - - { stdenv, fetchurl, perl }: - - stdenv.mkDerivation { - name = "hello-2.1.1"; - - builder = builtins.toFile "builder.sh" " - source $stdenv/setup - - PATH=$perl/bin:$PATH - - tar xvfz $src - cd hello-* - ./configure --prefix=$out - make - make install - "; - - src = fetchurl { - url = "http://ftp.nluug.nl/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.1.1.tar.gz"; - sha256 = "1md7jsfd8pa45z73bz1kszpp01yw6x5ljkjk2hx7wl800any6465"; - }; - inherit perl; - } + + ```nix + { stdenv, fetchurl, perl }: + + stdenv.mkDerivation { + name = "hello-2.1.1"; + + builder = builtins.toFile "builder.sh" " + source $stdenv/setup + + PATH=$perl/bin:$PATH + + tar xvfz $src + cd hello-* + ./configure --prefix=$out + make + make install + "; + + src = fetchurl { + url = "http://ftp.nluug.nl/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.1.1.tar.gz"; + sha256 = "1md7jsfd8pa45z73bz1kszpp01yw6x5ljkjk2hx7wl800any6465"; + }; + inherit perl; + } + ``` It is even possible for one file to refer to another, e.g., - ``` - builder = let - configFile = builtins.toFile "foo.conf" " - # This is some dummy configuration file. - ... - "; - in builtins.toFile "builder.sh" " - source $stdenv/setup + ```nix + builder = let + configFile = builtins.toFile "foo.conf" " + # This is some dummy configuration file. ... - cp ${configFile} $out/etc/foo.conf "; - ``` + in builtins.toFile "builder.sh" " + source $stdenv/setup + ... + cp ${configFile} $out/etc/foo.conf + "; + ``` Note that `${configFile}` is an [antiquotation](language-values.md), so the result of the @@ -694,10 +756,12 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. It is however *not* allowed to have files mutually referring to each other, like so: - let - foo = builtins.toFile "foo" "...${bar}..."; - bar = builtins.toFile "bar" "...${foo}..."; - in foo + ```nix + let + foo = builtins.toFile "foo" "...${bar}..."; + bar = builtins.toFile "bar" "...${foo}..."; + in foo + ``` This is not allowed because it would cause a cyclic dependency in the computation of the cryptographic hashes for `foo` and `bar`. @@ -744,40 +808,42 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. Here is an example where this is the case: - { stdenv, fetchurl, libxslt, jira, uberwiki }: - - stdenv.mkDerivation (rec { - name = "web-server"; - - buildInputs = [ libxslt ]; - - builder = builtins.toFile "builder.sh" " - source $stdenv/setup - mkdir $out - echo "$servlets" | xsltproc ${stylesheet} - > $out/server-conf.xml ① - "; - - stylesheet = builtins.toFile "stylesheet.xsl" ② - " - - - - - - - - - - - - - "; - - servlets = builtins.toXML [ ③ - { path = "/bugtracker"; war = jira + "/lib/atlassian-jira.war"; } - { path = "/wiki"; war = uberwiki + "/uberwiki.war"; } - ]; - }) + ```nix + { stdenv, fetchurl, libxslt, jira, uberwiki }: + + stdenv.mkDerivation (rec { + name = "web-server"; + + buildInputs = [ libxslt ]; + + builder = builtins.toFile "builder.sh" " + source $stdenv/setup + mkdir $out + echo "$servlets" | xsltproc ${stylesheet} - > $out/server-conf.xml ① + "; + + stylesheet = builtins.toFile "stylesheet.xsl" ② + " + + + + + + + + + + + + + "; + + servlets = builtins.toXML [ ③ + { path = "/bugtracker"; war = jira + "/lib/atlassian-jira.war"; } + { path = "/wiki"; war = uberwiki + "/uberwiki.war"; } + ]; + }) + ``` The builder is supposed to generate the configuration file for a [Jetty servlet container](http://jetty.mortbay.org/). A servlet @@ -796,27 +862,29 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. configuration file for the Jetty server. The XML representation produced at point ③ by `toXML` is as follows: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - + ```xml + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + ``` Note that we used the `toFile` built-in to write the builder and the stylesheet “inline” in the Nix expression. The path of the @@ -830,13 +898,13 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. - `builtins.tryEval` *e* Try to shallowly evaluate *e*. Return a set containing the - attributes `success` (`true` if *e* evaluated successfully, `false` - if an error was thrown) and `value`, equalling *e* if successful and - `false` otherwise. Note that this doesn't evaluate *e* deeply, so - ` let e = { x = throw ""; }; in (builtins.tryEval e).success - ` will be `true`. Using ` builtins.deepSeq - ` one can get the expected result: `let e = { x = throw ""; - }; in (builtins.tryEval (builtins.deepSeq e e)).success` will be + attributes `success` (`true` if *e* evaluated successfully, + `false` if an error was thrown) and `value`, equalling *e* if + successful and `false` otherwise. Note that this doesn't evaluate + *e* deeply, so ` let e = { x = throw ""; }; in (builtins.tryEval + e).success ` will be `true`. Using ` builtins.deepSeq ` one can + get the expected result: `let e = { x = throw ""; }; in + (builtins.tryEval (builtins.deepSeq e e)).success` will be `false`. - `builtins.typeOf` *e* diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/derivations.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/derivations.md index 0e5656b5b..d26a33b7f 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/derivations.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/derivations.md @@ -57,23 +57,34 @@ the attributes of which specify the inputs of the build. and it doesn’t need the documentation at build time. Thus, the library package could specify: - outputs = [ "lib" "headers" "doc" ]; + ```nix + outputs = [ "lib" "headers" "doc" ]; + ``` This will cause Nix to pass environment variables `lib`, `headers` and `doc` to the builder containing the intended store paths of each output. The builder would typically do something like - ./configure --libdir=$lib/lib --includedir=$headers/include --docdir=$doc/share/doc + ```bash + ./configure \ + --libdir=$lib/lib \ + --includedir=$headers/include \ + --docdir=$doc/share/doc + ``` for an Autoconf-style package. You can refer to each output of a derivation by selecting it as an attribute, e.g. - buildInputs = [ pkg.lib pkg.headers ]; + ```nix + buildInputs = [ pkg.lib pkg.headers ]; + ``` The first element of `outputs` determines the *default output*. Thus, you could also write - buildInputs = [ pkg pkg.headers ]; + ```nix + buildInputs = [ pkg pkg.headers ]; + ``` since `pkg` is equivalent to `pkg.lib`. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/expression-syntax.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/expression-syntax.md index e3432b577..2a1306e32 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/expression-syntax.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/expression-syntax.md @@ -2,17 +2,19 @@ Here is a Nix expression for GNU Hello: - { stdenv, fetchurl, perl }: ① - - stdenv.mkDerivation { ② - name = "hello-2.1.1"; ③ - builder = ./builder.sh; ④ - src = fetchurl { ⑤ - url = "ftp://ftp.nluug.nl/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.1.1.tar.gz"; - sha256 = "1md7jsfd8pa45z73bz1kszpp01yw6x5ljkjk2hx7wl800any6465"; - }; - inherit perl; ⑥ - } +```nix +{ stdenv, fetchurl, perl }: ① + +stdenv.mkDerivation { ② + name = "hello-2.1.1"; ③ + builder = ./builder.sh; ④ + src = fetchurl { ⑤ + url = "ftp://ftp.nluug.nl/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.1.1.tar.gz"; + sha256 = "1md7jsfd8pa45z73bz1kszpp01yw6x5ljkjk2hx7wl800any6465"; + }; + inherit perl; ⑥ +} +``` This file is actually already in the Nix Packages collection in `pkgs/applications/misc/hello/ex-1/default.nix`. It is customary to @@ -31,31 +33,27 @@ elements (referenced from the figure by number): etc. `fetchurl` is a function that downloads files. `perl` is the Perl interpreter. - Nix functions generally have the form `{ x, y, ..., - z }: e` where `x`, `y`, etc. are the names of the expected - arguments, and where *e* is the body of the function. So here, the - entire remainder of the file is the body of the function; when given - the required arguments, the body should describe how to build an - instance of the Hello package. + Nix functions generally have the form `{ x, y, ..., z }: e` where + `x`, `y`, etc. are the names of the expected arguments, and where + *e* is the body of the function. So here, the entire remainder of + the file is the body of the function; when given the required + arguments, the body should describe how to build an instance of + the Hello package. 2. So we have to build a package. Building something from other stuff is called a *derivation* in Nix (as opposed to sources, which are built by humans instead of computers). We perform a derivation by - calling `stdenv.mkDerivation`. `mkDerivation` is a function provided - by `stdenv` that builds a package from a set of *attributes*. A set - is just a list of key/value pairs where each key is a string and - each value is an arbitrary Nix expression. They take the general - form `{ - name1 = - expr1; ... - nameN = - exprN; }`. + calling `stdenv.mkDerivation`. `mkDerivation` is a function + provided by `stdenv` that builds a package from a set of + *attributes*. A set is just a list of key/value pairs where each + key is a string and each value is an arbitrary Nix + expression. They take the general form `{ name1 = expr1; ... + nameN = exprN; }`. -3. The attribute `name` specifies the symbolic name and version of the - package. Nix doesn't really care about these things, but they are - used by for instance `nix-env - -q` to show a “human-readable” name for packages. This attribute is - required by `mkDerivation`. +3. The attribute `name` specifies the symbolic name and version of + the package. Nix doesn't really care about these things, but they + are used by for instance `nix-env -q` to show a “human-readable” + name for packages. This attribute is required by `mkDerivation`. 4. The attribute `builder` specifies the builder. This attribute can sometimes be omitted, in which case `mkDerivation` will fill in a @@ -83,8 +81,10 @@ elements (referenced from the figure by number): `perl` function argument to the builder. All attributes in the set are actually passed as environment variables to the builder, so declaring an attribute - - perl = perl; + + ```nix + perl = perl; + ``` will do the trick: it binds an attribute `perl` to the function argument which also happens to be called `perl`. However, it looks a diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md index 43275dbf7..cf26b5f82 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/generic-builder.md @@ -3,12 +3,14 @@ Recall that the [build script for GNU Hello](build-script.md) looked something like this: - PATH=$perl/bin:$PATH - tar xvfz $src - cd hello-* - ./configure --prefix=$out - make - make install +```bash +PATH=$perl/bin:$PATH +tar xvfz $src +cd hello-* +./configure --prefix=$out +make +make install +``` The builders for almost all Unix packages look like this — set up some environment variables, unpack the sources, configure, build, and @@ -16,11 +18,13 @@ install. For this reason the standard environment provides some Bash functions that automate the build process. Here is what a builder using the generic build facilities looks like: - buildInputs="$perl" ① - - source $stdenv/setup ② - - genericBuild ③ +```bash +buildInputs="$perl" ① + +source $stdenv/setup ② + +genericBuild ③ +``` Here is what each line means: @@ -45,15 +49,17 @@ Here is what each line means: Discerning readers will note that the `buildInputs` could just as well have been set in the Nix expression, like this: -``` +```nix buildInputs = [ perl ]; ``` The `perl` attribute can then be removed, and the builder becomes even shorter: - source $stdenv/setup - genericBuild +```bash +source $stdenv/setup +genericBuild +``` In fact, `mkDerivation` provides a default builder that looks exactly like that, so it is actually possible to omit the builder for Hello diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-constructs.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-constructs.md index 8e267a799..cb0169239 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-constructs.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-constructs.md @@ -5,10 +5,12 @@ Recursive sets are just normal sets, but the attributes can refer to each other. For example, - rec { - x = y; - y = 123; - }.x +```nix +rec { + x = y; + y = 123; +}.x +``` evaluates to `123`. Note that without `rec` the binding `x = y;` would refer to the variable `y` in the surrounding scope, if one exists, and @@ -19,10 +21,12 @@ recursive set, they are. Recursive sets of course introduce the danger of infinite recursion. For example, the expression - rec { - x = y; - y = x; - }.x +```nix +rec { + x = y; + y = x; +}.x +``` will crash with an `infinite recursion encountered` error message. @@ -31,10 +35,12 @@ will crash with an `infinite recursion encountered` error message. A let-expression allows you to define local variables for an expression. For instance, - let - x = "foo"; - y = "bar"; - in x + y +```nix +let + x = "foo"; + y = "bar"; +in x + y +``` evaluates to `"foobar"`. @@ -45,38 +51,42 @@ copy variables from the surrounding lexical scope (e.g., when you want to propagate attributes). This can be shortened using the `inherit` keyword. For instance, - let x = 123; in - { inherit x; - y = 456; - } +```nix +let x = 123; in +{ inherit x; + y = 456; +} +``` is equivalent to - let x = 123; in - { x = x; - y = 456; - } +```nix +let x = 123; in +{ x = x; + y = 456; +} +``` and both evaluate to `{ x = 123; y = 456; }`. (Note that this works because `x` is added to the lexical scope by the `let` construct.) It is also possible to inherit attributes from another set. For instance, in this fragment from `all-packages.nix`, -``` - graphviz = (import ../tools/graphics/graphviz) { - inherit fetchurl stdenv libpng libjpeg expat x11 yacc; - inherit (xlibs) libXaw; - }; +```nix +graphviz = (import ../tools/graphics/graphviz) { + inherit fetchurl stdenv libpng libjpeg expat x11 yacc; + inherit (xlibs) libXaw; +}; - xlibs = { - libX11 = ...; - libXaw = ...; - ... - } - - libpng = ...; - libjpg = ...; +xlibs = { + libX11 = ...; + libXaw = ...; ... +} + +libpng = ...; +libjpg = ...; +... ``` the set used in the function call to the function defined in @@ -86,17 +96,21 @@ surrounding scope (`fetchurl` ... `yacc`), but also inherits `libXaw` Summarizing the fragment - ... - inherit x y z; - inherit (src-set) a b c; - ... +```nix +... +inherit x y z; +inherit (src-set) a b c; +... +``` is equivalent to - ... - x = x; y = y; z = z; - a = src-set.a; b = src-set.b; c = src-set.c; - ... +```nix +... +x = x; y = y; z = z; +a = src-set.a; b = src-set.b; c = src-set.c; +... +``` when used while defining local variables in a let-expression or while defining a set. @@ -105,7 +119,9 @@ defining a set. Functions have the following form: - pattern: body +```nix +pattern: body +``` The pattern specifies what the argument of the function must look like, and binds variables in the body to (parts of) the argument. There are @@ -114,42 +130,51 @@ three kinds of patterns: - If a pattern is a single identifier, then the function matches any argument. Example: - let negate = x: !x; - concat = x: y: x + y; - in if negate true then concat "foo" "bar" else "" + ```nix + let negate = x: !x; + concat = x: y: x + y; + in if negate true then concat "foo" "bar" else "" + ``` Note that `concat` is a function that takes one argument and returns a function that takes another argument. This allows partial parameterisation (i.e., only filling some of the arguments of a function); e.g., - map (concat "foo") [ "bar" "bla" "abc" ] + ```nix + map (concat "foo") [ "bar" "bla" "abc" ] + ``` - evaluates to `[ "foobar" "foobla" - "fooabc" ]`. + evaluates to `[ "foobar" "foobla" "fooabc" ]`. - A *set pattern* of the form `{ name1, name2, …, nameN }` matches a set containing the listed attributes, and binds the values of those attributes to variables in the function body. For example, the function - { x, y, z }: z + y + x + ```nix + { x, y, z }: z + y + x + ``` can only be called with a set containing exactly the attributes `x`, `y` and `z`. No other attributes are allowed. If you want to allow additional arguments, you can use an ellipsis (`...`): - { x, y, z, ... }: z + y + x + ```nix + { x, y, z, ... }: z + y + x + ``` This works on any set that contains at least the three named attributes. - It is possible to provide *default values* for attributes, in which - case they are allowed to be missing. A default value is specified by - writing `name ? - e`, where *e* is an arbitrary expression. For example, + It is possible to provide *default values* for attributes, in + which case they are allowed to be missing. A default value is + specified by writing `name ? e`, where *e* is an arbitrary + expression. For example, - { x, y ? "foo", z ? "bar" }: z + y + x + ```nix + { x, y ? "foo", z ? "bar" }: z + y + x + ``` specifies a function that only requires an attribute named `x`, but optionally accepts `y` and `z`. @@ -157,14 +182,14 @@ three kinds of patterns: - An `@`-pattern provides a means of referring to the whole value being matched: - ``` - args@{ x, y, z, ... }: z + y + x + args.a + ```nix + args@{ x, y, z, ... }: z + y + x + args.a ``` but can also be written as: - ``` - { x, y, z, ... } @ args: z + y + x + args.a + ```nix + { x, y, z, ... } @ args: z + y + x + args.a ``` Here `args` is bound to the entire argument, which is further @@ -182,24 +207,30 @@ three kinds of patterns: > > For instance > - > let - > function = args@{ a ? 23, ... }: args; - > in - > function {} + > ```nix + > let + > function = args@{ a ? 23, ... }: args; + > in + > function {} + > ```` > > will evaluate to an empty attribute set. Note that functions do not have names. If you want to give them a name, you can bind them to an attribute, e.g., - let concat = { x, y }: x + y; - in concat { x = "foo"; y = "bar"; } +```nix +let concat = { x, y }: x + y; +in concat { x = "foo"; y = "bar"; } +``` ## Conditionals Conditionals look like this: - if e1 then e2 else e3 +```nix +if e1 then e2 else e3 +``` where *e1* is an expression that should evaluate to a Boolean value (`true` or `false`). @@ -209,7 +240,9 @@ where *e1* is an expression that should evaluate to a Boolean value Assertions are generally used to check that certain requirements on or between features and dependencies hold. They look like this: - assert e1; e2 +```nix +assert e1; e2 +``` where *e1* is an expression that should evaluate to a Boolean value. If it evaluates to `true`, *e2* is returned; otherwise expression @@ -218,29 +251,31 @@ evaluation is aborted and a backtrace is printed. Here is a Nix expression for the Subversion package that shows how assertions can be used:. - { localServer ? false - , httpServer ? false - , sslSupport ? false - , pythonBindings ? false - , javaSwigBindings ? false - , javahlBindings ? false - , stdenv, fetchurl - , openssl ? null, httpd ? null, db4 ? null, expat, swig ? null, j2sdk ? null - }: - - assert localServer -> db4 != null; ① - assert httpServer -> httpd != null && httpd.expat == expat; ② - assert sslSupport -> openssl != null && (httpServer -> httpd.openssl == openssl); ③ - assert pythonBindings -> swig != null && swig.pythonSupport; - assert javaSwigBindings -> swig != null && swig.javaSupport; - assert javahlBindings -> j2sdk != null; - - stdenv.mkDerivation { - name = "subversion-1.1.1"; - ... - openssl = if sslSupport then openssl else null; ④ - ... - } +```nix +{ localServer ? false +, httpServer ? false +, sslSupport ? false +, pythonBindings ? false +, javaSwigBindings ? false +, javahlBindings ? false +, stdenv, fetchurl +, openssl ? null, httpd ? null, db4 ? null, expat, swig ? null, j2sdk ? null +}: + +assert localServer -> db4 != null; ① +assert httpServer -> httpd != null && httpd.expat == expat; ② +assert sslSupport -> openssl != null && (httpServer -> httpd.openssl == openssl); ③ +assert pythonBindings -> swig != null && swig.pythonSupport; +assert javaSwigBindings -> swig != null && swig.javaSupport; +assert javahlBindings -> j2sdk != null; + +stdenv.mkDerivation { + name = "subversion-1.1.1"; + ... + openssl = if sslSupport then openssl else null; ④ + ... +} +``` The points of interest are: @@ -273,19 +308,25 @@ The points of interest are: A *with-expression*, - with e1; e2 +```nix +with e1; e2 +``` introduces the set *e1* into the lexical scope of the expression *e2*. For instance, - let as = { x = "foo"; y = "bar"; }; - in with as; x + y +```nix +let as = { x = "foo"; y = "bar"; }; +in with as; x + y +``` evaluates to `"foobar"` since the `with` adds the `x` and `y` attributes of `as` to the lexical scope in the expression `x + y`. The most common use of `with` is in conjunction with the `import` function. E.g., - with (import ./definitions.nix); ... +```nix +with (import ./definitions.nix); ... +``` makes all attributes defined in the file `definitions.nix` available as if they were defined locally in a `let`-expression. @@ -293,14 +334,17 @@ if they were defined locally in a `let`-expression. The bindings introduced by `with` do not shadow bindings introduced by other means, e.g. - let a = 3; in with { a = 1; }; let a = 4; in with { a = 2; }; ... +```nix +let a = 3; in with { a = 1; }; let a = 4; in with { a = 2; }; ... +``` establishes the same scope as - let a = 1; in let a = 2; in let a = 3; in let a = 4; in ... +```nix +let a = 1; in let a = 2; in let a = 3; in let a = 4; in ... +``` ## Comments Comments can be single-line, started with a `#` character, or -inline/multi-line, enclosed within `/* -... */`. +inline/multi-line, enclosed within `/* ... */`. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-values.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-values.md index eca2cab51..ce31029cc 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-values.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/language-values.md @@ -19,24 +19,30 @@ Nix has the following basic data types: into a string (meaning that it must be a string, a path, or a derivation). For instance, rather than writing - "--with-freetype2-library=" + freetype + "/lib" + ```nix + "--with-freetype2-library=" + freetype + "/lib" + ``` (where `freetype` is a derivation), you can instead write the more natural - "--with-freetype2-library=${freetype}/lib" + ```nix + "--with-freetype2-library=${freetype}/lib" + ``` The latter is automatically translated to the former. A more complicated example (from the Nix expression for [Qt](http://www.trolltech.com/products/qt)): - configureFlags = " - -system-zlib -system-libpng -system-libjpeg - ${if openglSupport then "-dlopen-opengl - -L${mesa}/lib -I${mesa}/include - -L${libXmu}/lib -I${libXmu}/include" else ""} - ${if threadSupport then "-thread" else "-no-thread"} - "; + ```nix + configureFlags = " + -system-zlib -system-libpng -system-libjpeg + ${if openglSupport then "-dlopen-opengl + -L${mesa}/lib -I${mesa}/include + -L${libXmu}/lib -I${libXmu}/include" else ""} + ${if threadSupport then "-thread" else "-no-thread"} + "; + ``` Note that Nix expressions and strings can be arbitrarily nested; in this case the outer string contains various antiquotations that @@ -46,11 +52,13 @@ Nix has the following basic data types: The second way to write string literals is as an *indented string*, which is enclosed between pairs of *double single-quotes*, like so: - '' - This is the first line. - This is the second line. - This is the third line. - '' + ```nix + '' + This is the first line. + This is the second line. + This is the third line. + '' + ``` This kind of string literal intelligently strips indentation from the start of each line. To be precise, it strips from each line a @@ -60,7 +68,9 @@ Nix has the following basic data types: line is indented four spaces. Thus, two spaces are stripped from each line, so the resulting string is - "This is the first line.\nThis is the second line.\n This is the third line.\n" + ```nix + "This is the first line.\nThis is the second line.\n This is the third line.\n" + ``` Note that the whitespace and newline following the opening `''` is ignored if there is no non-whitespace text on the initial line. @@ -82,17 +92,19 @@ Nix has the following basic data types: configuration files because `''` is much less common than `"`. Example: - stdenv.mkDerivation { - ... - postInstall = - '' - mkdir $out/bin $out/etc - cp foo $out/bin - echo "Hello World" > $out/etc/foo.conf - ${if enableBar then "cp bar $out/bin" else ""} - ''; - ... - } + ```nix + stdenv.mkDerivation { + ... + postInstall = + '' + mkdir $out/bin $out/etc + cp foo $out/bin + echo "Hello World" > $out/etc/foo.conf + ${if enableBar then "cp bar $out/bin" else ""} + ''; + ... + } + ``` Finally, as a convenience, *URIs* as defined in appendix B of [RFC 2396](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2396.txt) can be written *as @@ -136,13 +148,17 @@ Nix has the following basic data types: Lists are formed by enclosing a whitespace-separated list of values between square brackets. For example, - [ 123 ./foo.nix "abc" (f { x = y; }) ] +```nix +[ 123 ./foo.nix "abc" (f { x = y; }) ] +``` defines a list of four elements, the last being the result of a call to the function `f`. Note that function calls have to be enclosed in parentheses. If they had been omitted, e.g., - [ 123 ./foo.nix "abc" f { x = y; } ] +```nix +[ 123 ./foo.nix "abc" f { x = y; } ] +``` the result would be a list of five elements, the fourth one being a function and the fifth being a set. @@ -159,10 +175,12 @@ Sets are just a list of name/value pairs (called *attributes*) enclosed in curly brackets, where each value is an arbitrary expression terminated by a semicolon. For example: - { x = 123; - text = "Hello"; - y = f { bla = 456; }; - } +```nix +{ x = 123; + text = "Hello"; + y = f { bla = 456; }; +} +``` This defines a set with attributes named `x`, `text`, `y`. The order of the attributes is irrelevant. An attribute name may only occur once. @@ -170,24 +188,32 @@ the attributes is irrelevant. An attribute name may only occur once. Attributes can be selected from a set using the `.` operator. For instance, - { a = "Foo"; b = "Bar"; }.a +```nix +{ a = "Foo"; b = "Bar"; }.a +``` evaluates to `"Foo"`. It is possible to provide a default value in an attribute selection using the `or` keyword. For example, - { a = "Foo"; b = "Bar"; }.c or "Xyzzy" +```nix +{ a = "Foo"; b = "Bar"; }.c or "Xyzzy" +``` will evaluate to `"Xyzzy"` because there is no `c` attribute in the set. You can use arbitrary double-quoted strings as attribute names: - { "foo ${bar}" = 123; "nix-1.0" = 456; }."foo ${bar}" +```nix +{ "foo ${bar}" = 123; "nix-1.0" = 456; }."foo ${bar}" +``` This will evaluate to `123` (Assuming `bar` is antiquotable). In the case where an attribute name is just a single antiquotation, the quotes can be dropped: - { foo = 123; }.${bar} or 456 +```nix +{ foo = 123; }.${bar} or 456 +``` This will evaluate to `123` if `bar` evaluates to `"foo"` when coerced to a string and `456` otherwise (again assuming `bar` is antiquotable). @@ -196,7 +222,9 @@ In the special case where an attribute name inside of a set declaration evaluates to `null` (which is normally an error, as `null` is not antiquotable), that attribute is simply not added to the set: - { ${if foo then "bar" else null} = true; } +```nix +{ ${if foo then "bar" else null} = true; } +``` This will evaluate to `{}` if `foo` evaluates to `false`. @@ -205,9 +233,11 @@ itself a function or a set with a `__functor` attribute whose value is callable) can be applied as if it were a function, with the set itself passed in first , e.g., - let add = { __functor = self: x: x + self.x; }; - inc = add // { x = 1; }; - in inc 1 +```nix +let add = { __functor = self: x: x + self.x; }; + inc = add // { x = 1; }; +in inc 1 +``` evaluates to `2`. This can be used to attach metadata to a function without the caller needing to treat it specially, or to implement a form diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/simple-building-testing.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/simple-building-testing.md index ca422acea..6f730a936 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/simple-building-testing.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/simple-building-testing.md @@ -6,18 +6,20 @@ yet. The best way to test the package is by using the command `nix-build`, which builds a Nix expression and creates a symlink named `result` in the current directory: - $ nix-build -A hello - building path `/nix/store/632d2b22514d...-hello-2.1.1' - hello-2.1.1/ - hello-2.1.1/intl/ - hello-2.1.1/intl/ChangeLog - ... - - $ ls -l result - lrwxrwxrwx ... 2006-09-29 10:43 result -> /nix/store/632d2b22514d...-hello-2.1.1 - - $ ./result/bin/hello - Hello, world! +```console +$ nix-build -A hello +building path `/nix/store/632d2b22514d...-hello-2.1.1' +hello-2.1.1/ +hello-2.1.1/intl/ +hello-2.1.1/intl/ChangeLog +... + +$ ls -l result +lrwxrwxrwx ... 2006-09-29 10:43 result -> /nix/store/632d2b22514d...-hello-2.1.1 + +$ ./result/bin/hello +Hello, world! +``` The `-A` option selects the `hello` attribute. This is faster than using the symbolic package name specified by the `name` attribute @@ -50,8 +52,10 @@ simultaneously, and they try to build the same derivation, the first Nix instance that gets there will perform the build, while the others block (or perform other derivations if available) until the build finishes: - $ nix-build -A hello - waiting for lock on `/nix/store/0h5b7hp8d4hqfrw8igvx97x1xawrjnac-hello-2.1.1x' +```console +$ nix-build -A hello +waiting for lock on `/nix/store/0h5b7hp8d4hqfrw8igvx97x1xawrjnac-hello-2.1.1x' +``` So it is always safe to run multiple instances of Nix in parallel (which isn’t the case with, say, `make`). diff --git a/doc/manual/src/hacking.md b/doc/manual/src/hacking.md index f8375822d..1aa4e6b5f 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/hacking.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/hacking.md @@ -3,45 +3,63 @@ This section provides some notes on how to hack on Nix. To get the latest version of Nix from GitHub: - $ git clone https://github.com/NixOS/nix.git - $ cd nix +```console +$ git clone https://github.com/NixOS/nix.git +$ cd nix +``` To build Nix for the current operating system/architecture use - $ nix-build +```console +$ nix-build +``` or if you have a flakes-enabled nix: - $ nix build +```console +$ nix build +``` This will build `defaultPackage` attribute defined in the `flake.nix` file. To build for other platforms add one of the following suffixes to it: aarch64-linux, i686-linux, x86\_64-darwin, x86\_64-linux. i.e. - $ nix-build -A defaultPackage.x86_64-linux +```console +$ nix-build -A defaultPackage.x86_64-linux +``` To build all dependencies and start a shell in which all environment variables are set up so that those dependencies can be found: - $ nix-shell +```console +$ nix-shell +``` To build Nix itself in this shell: - [nix-shell]$ ./bootstrap.sh - [nix-shell]$ ./configure $configureFlags - [nix-shell]$ make -j $NIX_BUILD_CORES +```console +[nix-shell]$ ./bootstrap.sh +[nix-shell]$ ./configure $configureFlags +[nix-shell]$ make -j $NIX_BUILD_CORES +``` To install it in `$(pwd)/inst` and test it: - [nix-shell]$ make install - [nix-shell]$ make installcheck - [nix-shell]$ ./inst/bin/nix --version - nix (Nix) 2.4 +```console +[nix-shell]$ make install +[nix-shell]$ make installcheck +[nix-shell]$ ./inst/bin/nix --version +nix (Nix) 2.4 +``` -If you have a flakes-enabled nix you can replace: +If you have a flakes-enabled Nix you can replace: - $ nix-shell +```console +$ nix-shell +``` by: - $ nix develop +```console +$ nix develop +``` diff --git a/doc/manual/src/installation/building-source.md b/doc/manual/src/installation/building-source.md index 35dbd5541..d21a51a82 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/installation/building-source.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/installation/building-source.md @@ -3,16 +3,20 @@ After unpacking or checking out the Nix sources, issue the following commands: - $ ./configure options... - $ make - $ make install +```console +$ ./configure options... +$ make +$ make install +``` Nix requires GNU Make so you may need to invoke `gmake` instead. When building from the Git repository, these should be preceded by the command: - $ ./bootstrap.sh +```console +$ ./bootstrap.sh +``` The installation path can be specified by passing the `--prefix=prefix` to `configure`. The default installation directory is `/usr/local`. You diff --git a/doc/manual/src/installation/env-variables.md b/doc/manual/src/installation/env-variables.md index 6e78245c9..4a49897e4 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/installation/env-variables.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/installation/env-variables.md @@ -10,7 +10,9 @@ environment variables is to include the file `prefix/etc/profile.d/nix.sh` in your `~/.profile` (or similar), like this: - source prefix/etc/profile.d/nix.sh +```bash +source prefix/etc/profile.d/nix.sh +``` # `NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE` @@ -23,13 +25,17 @@ and use its own certificate bundle. Set the environment variable and install Nix - $ export NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE=/etc/ssl/my-certificate-bundle.crt - $ sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) +```console +$ export NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE=/etc/ssl/my-certificate-bundle.crt +$ sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) +``` In the shell profile and rc files (for example, `/etc/bashrc`, `/etc/zshrc`), add the following line: - export NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE=/etc/ssl/my-certificate-bundle.crt +```bash +export NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE=/etc/ssl/my-certificate-bundle.crt +``` > **Note** > @@ -41,8 +47,10 @@ In the shell profile and rc files (for example, `/etc/bashrc`, On macOS you must specify the environment variable for the Nix daemon service, then restart it: - $ sudo launchctl setenv NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE /etc/ssl/my-certificate-bundle.crt - $ sudo launchctl kickstart -k system/org.nixos.nix-daemon +```console +$ sudo launchctl setenv NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE /etc/ssl/my-certificate-bundle.crt +$ sudo launchctl kickstart -k system/org.nixos.nix-daemon +``` ## Proxy Environment Variables diff --git a/doc/manual/src/installation/installing-binary.md b/doc/manual/src/installation/installing-binary.md index a1dd993c4..8b8d1d738 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/installation/installing-binary.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/installation/installing-binary.md @@ -3,8 +3,8 @@ If you are using Linux or macOS versions up to 10.14 (Mojave), the easiest way to install Nix is to run the following command: -``` - $ sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) +```console +$ sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) ``` If you're using macOS 10.15 (Catalina) or newer, consult [the macOS @@ -18,8 +18,8 @@ installation is highly recommended. To explicitly select a single-user installation on your system: -``` - sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) --no-daemon +```console +$ sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) --no-daemon ``` This will perform a single-user installation of Nix, meaning that `/nix` @@ -28,8 +28,10 @@ account, *not* as root. The script will invoke `sudo` to create `/nix` if it doesn’t already exist. If you don’t have `sudo`, you should manually create `/nix` first as root, e.g.: - $ mkdir /nix - $ chown alice /nix +```console +$ mkdir /nix +$ chown alice /nix +``` The install script will modify the first writable file from amongst `.bash_profile`, `.bash_login` and `.profile` to source @@ -39,7 +41,9 @@ the install script to disable this behaviour. You can uninstall Nix simply by running: - $ rm -rf /nix +```console +$ rm -rf /nix +``` # Multi User Installation @@ -53,7 +57,9 @@ service for the Nix daemon. You can instruct the installer to perform a multi-user installation on your system: - sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) --daemon +```console +$ sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) --daemon +``` The multi-user installation of Nix will create build users between the user IDs 30001 and 30032, and a group with the group ID 30000. You @@ -72,18 +78,20 @@ extension. The installer will also create `/etc/profile.d/nix.sh`. You can uninstall Nix with the following commands: - sudo rm -rf /etc/profile/nix.sh /etc/nix /nix ~root/.nix-profile ~root/.nix-defexpr ~root/.nix-channels ~/.nix-profile ~/.nix-defexpr ~/.nix-channels - - # If you are on Linux with systemd, you will need to run: - sudo systemctl stop nix-daemon.socket - sudo systemctl stop nix-daemon.service - sudo systemctl disable nix-daemon.socket - sudo systemctl disable nix-daemon.service - sudo systemctl daemon-reload - - # If you are on macOS, you will need to run: - sudo launchctl unload /Library/LaunchDaemons/org.nixos.nix-daemon.plist - sudo rm /Library/LaunchDaemons/org.nixos.nix-daemon.plist +```console +sudo rm -rf /etc/profile/nix.sh /etc/nix /nix ~root/.nix-profile ~root/.nix-defexpr ~root/.nix-channels ~/.nix-profile ~/.nix-defexpr ~/.nix-channels + +# If you are on Linux with systemd, you will need to run: +sudo systemctl stop nix-daemon.socket +sudo systemctl stop nix-daemon.service +sudo systemctl disable nix-daemon.socket +sudo systemctl disable nix-daemon.service +sudo systemctl daemon-reload + +# If you are on macOS, you will need to run: +sudo launchctl unload /Library/LaunchDaemons/org.nixos.nix-daemon.plist +sudo rm /Library/LaunchDaemons/org.nixos.nix-daemon.plist +``` There may also be references to Nix in `/etc/profile`, `/etc/bashrc`, and `/etc/zshrc` which you may remove. @@ -110,7 +118,9 @@ chip](https://www.apple.com/euro/mac/shared/docs/Apple_T2_Security_Chip_Overview your drive will still be encrypted at rest (in which case "unencrypted" is a bit of a misnomer). To use this approach, just install Nix with: - $ sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) --darwin-use-unencrypted-nix-store-volume +```console +$ sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) --darwin-use-unencrypted-nix-store-volume +``` If you don't like the sound of this, you'll want to weigh the other approaches and tradeoffs detailed in this section. @@ -184,7 +194,9 @@ there are a few things to weigh: If you are comfortable navigating these tradeoffs, you can encrypt the volume with something along the lines of: - alice$ diskutil apfs enableFileVault /nix -user disk +```console +alice$ diskutil apfs enableFileVault /nix -user disk +``` ## Symlink the Nix store to a custom location @@ -221,11 +233,15 @@ as a helpful reference if you run into trouble. `apfs.util` to trigger creation (not deletion) of new entries without a reboot: - alice$ /System/Library/Filesystems/apfs.fs/Contents/Resources/apfs.util -B + ```console + alice$ /System/Library/Filesystems/apfs.fs/Contents/Resources/apfs.util -B + ``` 3. Create the new APFS volume with diskutil: - alice$ sudo diskutil apfs addVolume diskX APFS 'Nix Store' -mountpoint /nix + ```console + alice$ sudo diskutil apfs addVolume diskX APFS 'Nix Store' -mountpoint /nix + ``` 4. Using `vifs`, add the new mount to `/etc/fstab`. If it doesn't already have other entries, it should look something like: @@ -248,8 +264,8 @@ since 1.11.16, at `https://releases.nixos.org/nix/nix-version/install`. These install scripts can be used the same as the main NixOS.org installation script: -``` - sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) +```console +$ sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) ``` In the same directory of the install script are sha256 sums, and gpg @@ -263,10 +279,12 @@ dependencies. (This is what the install script at it somewhere (e.g. in `/tmp`), and then run the script named `install` inside the binary tarball: - alice$ cd /tmp - alice$ tar xfj nix-1.8-x86_64-darwin.tar.bz2 - alice$ cd nix-1.8-x86_64-darwin - alice$ ./install +```console +alice$ cd /tmp +alice$ tar xfj nix-1.8-x86_64-darwin.tar.bz2 +alice$ cd nix-1.8-x86_64-darwin +alice$ ./install +``` If you need to edit the multi-user installation script to use different group ID or a different user ID range, modify the variables set in the diff --git a/doc/manual/src/installation/multi-user.md b/doc/manual/src/installation/multi-user.md index de159b603..6920591c4 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/installation/multi-user.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/installation/multi-user.md @@ -28,10 +28,12 @@ group should have no other members. The build users should not be members of any other group. On Linux, you can create the group and users as follows: - $ groupadd -r nixbld - $ for n in $(seq 1 10); do useradd -c "Nix build user $n" \ - -d /var/empty -g nixbld -G nixbld -M -N -r -s "$(which nologin)" \ - nixbld$n; done +```console +$ groupadd -r nixbld +$ for n in $(seq 1 10); do useradd -c "Nix build user $n" \ + -d /var/empty -g nixbld -G nixbld -M -N -r -s "$(which nologin)" \ + nixbld$n; done +``` This creates 10 build users. There can never be more concurrent builds than the number of build users, so you may want to increase this if you @@ -42,7 +44,9 @@ expect to do many builds at the same time. The [Nix daemon](../command-ref/nix-daemon.md) should be started as follows (as `root`): - $ nix-daemon +```console +$ nix-daemon +``` You’ll want to put that line somewhere in your system’s boot scripts. @@ -50,7 +54,9 @@ To let unprivileged users use the daemon, they should set the [`NIX_REMOTE` environment variable](../command-ref/env-common.md) to `daemon`. So you should put a line like - export NIX_REMOTE=daemon +```console +export NIX_REMOTE=daemon +``` into the users’ login scripts. @@ -61,8 +67,10 @@ permissions on the directory `/nix/var/nix/daemon-socket`. For instance, if you want to restrict the use of Nix to the members of a group called `nix-users`, do - $ chgrp nix-users /nix/var/nix/daemon-socket - $ chmod ug=rwx,o= /nix/var/nix/daemon-socket +```console +$ chgrp nix-users /nix/var/nix/daemon-socket +$ chmod ug=rwx,o= /nix/var/nix/daemon-socket +``` This way, users who are not in the `nix-users` group cannot connect to the Unix domain socket `/nix/var/nix/daemon-socket/socket`, so they diff --git a/doc/manual/src/installation/obtaining-source.md b/doc/manual/src/installation/obtaining-source.md index 2937130cf..0a906e390 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/installation/obtaining-source.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/installation/obtaining-source.md @@ -10,7 +10,9 @@ Alternatively, the most recent sources of Nix can be obtained from its following command will check out the latest revision into a directory called `nix`: - $ git clone https://github.com/NixOS/nix +```console +$ git clone https://github.com/NixOS/nix +``` Likewise, specific releases can be obtained from the [tags](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/tags) of the repository. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/introduction.md b/doc/manual/src/introduction.md index b54b0d02d..f01fe7b38 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/introduction.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/introduction.md @@ -75,21 +75,27 @@ And since packages aren’t overwritten, the old versions are still there after an upgrade. This means that you can _roll back_ to the old version: - $ nix-env --upgrade some-packages - $ nix-env --rollback +```console +$ nix-env --upgrade some-packages +$ nix-env --rollback +``` ## Garbage collection When you uninstall a package like this… - $ nix-env --uninstall firefox +```console +$ nix-env --uninstall firefox +``` the package isn’t deleted from the system right away (after all, you might want to do a rollback, or it might be in the profiles of other users). Instead, unused packages can be deleted safely by running the _garbage collector_: - $ nix-collect-garbage +```console +$ nix-collect-garbage +``` This deletes all packages that aren’t in use by any user profile or by a currently running program. @@ -115,7 +121,9 @@ each other in the Nix store. Nix expressions generally describe how to build a package from source, so an installation action like - $ nix-env --install firefox +```console +$ nix-env --install firefox +``` _could_ cause quite a bit of build activity, as not only Firefox but also all its dependencies (all the way up to the C library and the @@ -149,16 +157,20 @@ For example, the following command gets all dependencies of the Pan newsreader, as described by [its Nix expression](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/applications/networking/newsreaders/pan/default.nix): - $ nix-shell '' -A pan +```console +$ nix-shell '' -A pan +``` You’re then dropped into a shell where you can edit, build and test the package: - [nix-shell]$ tar xf $src - [nix-shell]$ cd pan-* - [nix-shell]$ ./configure - [nix-shell]$ make - [nix-shell]$ ./pan/gui/pan +```console +[nix-shell]$ tar xf $src +[nix-shell]$ cd pan-* +[nix-shell]$ ./configure +[nix-shell]$ make +[nix-shell]$ ./pan/gui/pan +``` ## Portability diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md index 17b5cc9c2..9702a29eb 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/basic-package-mgmt.md @@ -31,8 +31,10 @@ automatically added to your list of “subscribed” channels when you install Nix. If this is not the case for some reason, you can add it as follows: - $ nix-channel --add https://nixos.org/channels/nixpkgs-unstable - $ nix-channel --update +```console +$ nix-channel --add https://nixos.org/channels/nixpkgs-unstable +$ nix-channel --update +``` > **Note** > @@ -44,14 +46,16 @@ as follows: You can view the set of available packages in Nixpkgs: - $ nix-env -qa - aterm-2.2 - bash-3.0 - binutils-2.15 - bison-1.875d - blackdown-1.4.2 - bzip2-1.0.2 - … +```console +$ nix-env -qa +aterm-2.2 +bash-3.0 +binutils-2.15 +bison-1.875d +blackdown-1.4.2 +bzip2-1.0.2 +… +``` The flag `-q` specifies a query operation, and `-a` means that you want to show the “available” (i.e., installable) packages, as opposed to the @@ -59,31 +63,39 @@ installed packages. If you downloaded Nixpkgs yourself, or if you checked it out from GitHub, then you need to pass the path to your Nixpkgs tree using the `-f` flag: - $ nix-env -qaf /path/to/nixpkgs +```console +$ nix-env -qaf /path/to/nixpkgs +``` where */path/to/nixpkgs* is where you’ve unpacked or checked out Nixpkgs. You can select specific packages by name: - $ nix-env -qa firefox - firefox-34.0.5 - firefox-with-plugins-34.0.5 +```console +$ nix-env -qa firefox +firefox-34.0.5 +firefox-with-plugins-34.0.5 +``` and using regular expressions: - $ nix-env -qa 'firefox.*' +```console +$ nix-env -qa 'firefox.*' +``` It is also possible to see the *status* of available packages, i.e., whether they are installed into the user environment and/or present in the system: - $ nix-env -qas - … - -PS bash-3.0 - --S binutils-2.15 - IPS bison-1.875d - … +```console +$ nix-env -qas +… +-PS bash-3.0 +--S binutils-2.15 +IPS bison-1.875d +… +``` The first character (`I`) indicates whether the package is installed in your current user environment. The second (`P`) indicates whether it is @@ -96,7 +108,9 @@ Nix knows that it can fetch a pre-built package from somewhere You can install a package using `nix-env -i`. For instance, - $ nix-env -i subversion +```console +$ nix-env -i subversion +``` will install the package called `subversion` (which is, of course, the [Subversion version management system](http://subversion.tigris.org/)). @@ -121,12 +135,16 @@ will install the package called `subversion` (which is, of course, the Naturally, packages can also be uninstalled: - $ nix-env -e subversion +```console +$ nix-env -e subversion +``` Upgrading to a new version is just as easy. If you have a new release of Nix Packages, you can do: - $ nix-env -u subversion +```console +$ nix-env -u subversion +``` This will *only* upgrade Subversion if there is a “newer” version in the new set of Nix expressions, as defined by some pretty arbitrary rules @@ -137,14 +155,18 @@ whatever version is in the Nix expressions, use `-i` instead of `-u`; You can also upgrade all packages for which there are newer versions: - $ nix-env -u +```console +$ nix-env -u +``` Sometimes it’s useful to be able to ask what `nix-env` would do, without actually doing it. For instance, to find out what packages would be upgraded by `nix-env -u`, you can do - $ nix-env -u --dry-run - (dry run; not doing anything) - upgrading `libxslt-1.1.0' to `libxslt-1.1.10' - upgrading `graphviz-1.10' to `graphviz-1.12' - upgrading `coreutils-5.0' to `coreutils-5.2.1' +```console +$ nix-env -u --dry-run +(dry run; not doing anything) +upgrading `libxslt-1.1.0' to `libxslt-1.1.10' +upgrading `graphviz-1.10' to `graphviz-1.12' +upgrading `coreutils-5.0' to `coreutils-5.2.1' +``` diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/binary-cache-substituter.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/binary-cache-substituter.md index 44f0da238..bdc5038fc 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/package-management/binary-cache-substituter.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/binary-cache-substituter.md @@ -8,16 +8,22 @@ usually uses to fetch pre-built binaries from . The daemon that handles binary cache requests via HTTP, `nix-serve`, is not part of the Nix distribution, but you can install it from Nixpkgs: - $ nix-env -i nix-serve +```console +$ nix-env -i nix-serve +``` You can then start the server, listening for HTTP connections on whatever port you like: - $ nix-serve -p 8080 +```console +$ nix-serve -p 8080 +``` To check whether it works, try the following on the client: - $ curl http://avalon:8080/nix-cache-info +```console +$ curl http://avalon:8080/nix-cache-info +``` which should print something like: @@ -28,7 +34,9 @@ which should print something like: On the client side, you can tell Nix to use your binary cache using `--option extra-binary-caches`, e.g.: - $ nix-env -i firefox --option extra-binary-caches http://avalon:8080/ +```console +$ nix-env -i firefox --option extra-binary-caches http://avalon:8080/ +``` The option `extra-binary-caches` tells Nix to use this binary cache in addition to your default caches, such as . diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/channels.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/channels.md index c239998d9..93c8b41a6 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/package-management/channels.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/channels.md @@ -15,7 +15,9 @@ To see the list of official NixOS channels, visit You can “subscribe” to a channel using `nix-channel --add`, e.g., - $ nix-channel --add https://nixos.org/channels/nixpkgs-unstable +```console +$ nix-channel --add https://nixos.org/channels/nixpkgs-unstable +``` subscribes you to a channel that always contains that latest version of the Nix Packages collection. (Subscribing really just means that the URL @@ -24,11 +26,15 @@ calls to `nix-channel --update`.) You can “unsubscribe” using `nix-channel --remove`: - $ nix-channel --remove nixpkgs +```console +$ nix-channel --remove nixpkgs +``` To obtain the latest Nix expressions available in a channel, do - $ nix-channel --update +```console +$ nix-channel --update +``` This downloads and unpacks the Nix expressions in every channel (downloaded from `url/nixexprs.tar.bz2`). It also makes the union of @@ -36,7 +42,9 @@ each channel’s Nix expressions available by default to `nix-env` operations (via the symlink `~/.nix-defexpr/channels`). Consequently, you can then say - $ nix-env -u +```console +$ nix-env -u +``` to upgrade all packages in your profile to the latest versions available in the subscribed channels. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/garbage-collection.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/garbage-collection.md index 4c8799dfe..fecb30fd6 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/package-management/garbage-collection.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/garbage-collection.md @@ -18,23 +18,31 @@ be done if you are certain that you will not need to roll back. To delete all old (non-current) generations of your current profile: - $ nix-env --delete-generations old +```console +$ nix-env --delete-generations old +``` Instead of `old` you can also specify a list of generations, e.g., - $ nix-env --delete-generations 10 11 14 +```console +$ nix-env --delete-generations 10 11 14 +``` To delete all generations older than a specified number of days (except the current generation), use the `d` suffix. For example, - $ nix-env --delete-generations 14d +```console +$ nix-env --delete-generations 14d +``` deletes all generations older than two weeks. After removing appropriate old generations you can run the garbage collector as follows: - $ nix-store --gc +```console +$ nix-store --gc +``` The behaviour of the gargage collector is affected by the `keep-derivations` (default: true) and `keep-outputs` (default: false) @@ -47,7 +55,9 @@ sense to keep outputs to ensure that rebuild times are quick.) If you are feeling uncertain, you can also first view what files would be deleted: - $ nix-store --gc --print-dead +```console +$ nix-store --gc --print-dead +``` Likewise, the option `--print-live` will show the paths that *won’t* be deleted. @@ -56,6 +66,8 @@ There is also a convenient little utility `nix-collect-garbage`, which when invoked with the `-d` (`--delete-old`) switch deletes all old generations of all profiles in `/nix/var/nix/profiles`. So - $ nix-collect-garbage -d +```console +$ nix-collect-garbage -d +``` is a quick and easy way to clean up your system. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/garbage-collector-roots.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/garbage-collector-roots.md index 6f4d48e80..30c5b7f8d 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/package-management/garbage-collector-roots.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/garbage-collector-roots.md @@ -5,7 +5,9 @@ are symlinks in the directory `prefix/nix/var/nix/gcroots`. For instance, the following command makes the path `/nix/store/d718ef...-foo` a root of the collector: - $ ln -s /nix/store/d718ef...-foo /nix/var/nix/gcroots/bar +```console +$ ln -s /nix/store/d718ef...-foo /nix/var/nix/gcroots/bar +``` That is, after this command, the garbage collector will not remove `/nix/store/d718ef...-foo` or any of its dependencies. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md index f3786072d..fbbfb7320 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/profiles.md @@ -22,7 +22,9 @@ store looks like: Of course, you wouldn’t want to type - $ /nix/store/dpmvp969yhdq...-subversion-1.1.3/bin/svn +```console +$ /nix/store/dpmvp969yhdq...-subversion-1.1.3/bin/svn +``` every time you want to run Subversion. Of course we could set up the `PATH` environment variable to include the `bin` directory of every @@ -36,7 +38,9 @@ environment `/nix/store/0c1p5z4kda11...-user-env` contains a symlink to just Subversion 1.1.2 (arrows in the figure indicate symlinks). This would be what we would obtain if we had done - $ nix-env -i subversion +```console +$ nix-env -i subversion +``` on a set of Nix expressions that contained Subversion 1.1.2. @@ -49,7 +53,9 @@ since every time you perform a `nix-env` operation, a new user environment is generated based on the current one. For instance, generation 43 was created from generation 42 when we did - $ nix-env -i subversion firefox +```console +$ nix-env -i subversion firefox +``` on a set of Nix expressions that contained Firefox and a new version of Subversion. @@ -57,11 +63,13 @@ Subversion. Generations are grouped together into *profiles* so that different users don’t interfere with each other if they don’t want to. For example: - $ ls -l /nix/var/nix/profiles/ - ... - lrwxrwxrwx 1 eelco ... default-42-link -> /nix/store/0c1p5z4kda11...-user-env - lrwxrwxrwx 1 eelco ... default-43-link -> /nix/store/3aw2pdyx2jfc...-user-env - lrwxrwxrwx 1 eelco ... default -> default-43-link +```console +$ ls -l /nix/var/nix/profiles/ +... +lrwxrwxrwx 1 eelco ... default-42-link -> /nix/store/0c1p5z4kda11...-user-env +lrwxrwxrwx 1 eelco ... default-43-link -> /nix/store/3aw2pdyx2jfc...-user-env +lrwxrwxrwx 1 eelco ... default -> default-43-link +``` This shows a profile called `default`. The file `default` itself is actually a symlink that points to the current generation. When we do a @@ -75,18 +83,24 @@ store.) If you find that you want to undo a `nix-env` operation, you can just do - $ nix-env --rollback +```console +$ nix-env --rollback +``` which will just make the current generation link point at the previous link. E.g., `default` would be made to point at `default-42-link`. You can also switch to a specific generation: - $ nix-env --switch-generation 43 +```console +$ nix-env --switch-generation 43 +``` which in this example would roll forward to generation 43 again. You can also see all available generations: - $ nix-env --list-generations +```console +$ nix-env --list-generations +``` You generally wouldn’t have `/nix/var/nix/profiles/some-profile/bin` in your `PATH`. Rather, there is a symlink `~/.nix-profile` that points to @@ -96,9 +110,11 @@ initialisation script `/nix/etc/profile.d/nix.sh` does). This makes it easier to switch to a different profile. You can do that using the command `nix-env --switch-profile`: - $ nix-env --switch-profile /nix/var/nix/profiles/my-profile - - $ nix-env --switch-profile /nix/var/nix/profiles/default +```console +$ nix-env --switch-profile /nix/var/nix/profiles/my-profile + +$ nix-env --switch-profile /nix/var/nix/profiles/default +``` These commands switch to the `my-profile` and default profile, respectively. If the profile doesn’t exist, it will be created @@ -110,6 +126,8 @@ All `nix-env` operations work on the profile pointed to by `~/.nix-profile`, but you can override this using the `--profile` option (abbreviation `-p`): - $ nix-env -p /nix/var/nix/profiles/other-profile -i subversion +```console +$ nix-env -p /nix/var/nix/profiles/other-profile -i subversion +``` This will *not* change the `~/.nix-profile` symlink. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/s3-substituter.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/s3-substituter.md index 2824c1a9b..a4f4d561f 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/package-management/s3-substituter.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/s3-substituter.md @@ -51,25 +51,27 @@ cache's documentation. Your bucket will need the following bucket policy: - { - "Id": "DirectReads", - "Version": "2012-10-17", - "Statement": [ - { - "Sid": "AllowDirectReads", - "Action": [ - "s3:GetObject", - "s3:GetBucketLocation" - ], - "Effect": "Allow", - "Resource": [ - "arn:aws:s3:::example-nix-cache", - "arn:aws:s3:::example-nix-cache/*" - ], - "Principal": "*" - } - ] - } +```json +{ + "Id": "DirectReads", + "Version": "2012-10-17", + "Statement": [ + { + "Sid": "AllowDirectReads", + "Action": [ + "s3:GetObject", + "s3:GetBucketLocation" + ], + "Effect": "Allow", + "Resource": [ + "arn:aws:s3:::example-nix-cache", + "arn:aws:s3:::example-nix-cache/*" + ], + "Principal": "*" + } + ] +} +``` ## Authenticated Reads to your S3 binary cache @@ -101,35 +103,43 @@ for authenticating requests to Amazon S3. Your account will need the following IAM policy to upload to the cache: +```json +{ + "Version": "2012-10-17", + "Statement": [ { - "Version": "2012-10-17", - "Statement": [ - { - "Sid": "UploadToCache", - "Effect": "Allow", - "Action": [ - "s3:AbortMultipartUpload", - "s3:GetBucketLocation", - "s3:GetObject", - "s3:ListBucket", - "s3:ListBucketMultipartUploads", - "s3:ListMultipartUploadParts", - "s3:PutObject" - ], - "Resource": [ - "arn:aws:s3:::example-nix-cache", - "arn:aws:s3:::example-nix-cache/*" - ] - } + "Sid": "UploadToCache", + "Effect": "Allow", + "Action": [ + "s3:AbortMultipartUpload", + "s3:GetBucketLocation", + "s3:GetObject", + "s3:ListBucket", + "s3:ListBucketMultipartUploads", + "s3:ListMultipartUploadParts", + "s3:PutObject" + ], + "Resource": [ + "arn:aws:s3:::example-nix-cache", + "arn:aws:s3:::example-nix-cache/*" ] } + ] +} +``` ## Examples To upload with a specific credential profile for Amazon S3: - nix copy --to 's3://example-nix-cache?profile=cache-upload®ion=eu-west-2' nixpkgs.hello +```console +$ nix copy nixpkgs.hello \ + --to 's3://example-nix-cache?profile=cache-upload®ion=eu-west-2' +``` To upload to an S3-compatible binary cache: - nix copy --to 's3://example-nix-cache?profile=cache-upload&scheme=https&endpoint=minio.example.com' nixpkgs.hello +```console +$ nix copy nixpkgs.hello --to \ + 's3://example-nix-cache?profile=cache-upload&scheme=https&endpoint=minio.example.com' +``` diff --git a/doc/manual/src/package-management/ssh-substituter.md b/doc/manual/src/package-management/ssh-substituter.md index 482844c7c..6e5e258bc 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/package-management/ssh-substituter.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/package-management/ssh-substituter.md @@ -5,7 +5,9 @@ Nix store via SSH. For example, the following installs Firefox, automatically fetching any store paths in Firefox’s closure if they are available on the server `avalon`: - $ nix-env -i firefox --substituters ssh://alice@avalon +```console +$ nix-env -i firefox --substituters ssh://alice@avalon +``` This works similar to the binary cache substituter that Nix usually uses, only using SSH instead of HTTP: if a store path `P` is needed, Nix @@ -22,11 +24,17 @@ building from source. You can also copy the closure of some store path, without installing it into your profile, e.g. - $ nix-store -r /nix/store/m85bxg…-firefox-34.0.5 --substituters ssh://alice@avalon +```console +$ nix-store -r /nix/store/m85bxg…-firefox-34.0.5 --substituters +ssh://alice@avalon +``` This is essentially equivalent to doing - $ nix-copy-closure --from alice@avalon /nix/store/m85bxg…-firefox-34.0.5 +```console +$ nix-copy-closure --from alice@avalon +/nix/store/m85bxg…-firefox-34.0.5 +``` You can use SSH’s *forced command* feature to set up a restricted user account for SSH substituter access, allowing read-only access to the @@ -45,8 +53,10 @@ to `sshd_config` to restrict the user `nix-ssh`: On NixOS, you can accomplish the same by adding the following to your `configuration.nix`: - nix.sshServe.enable = true; - nix.sshServe.keys = [ "ssh-dss AAAAB3NzaC1k... bob@example.org" ]; +```nix +nix.sshServe.enable = true; +nix.sshServe.keys = [ "ssh-dss AAAAB3NzaC1k... bob@example.org" ]; +``` where the latter line lists the public keys of users that are allowed to connect. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/quick-start.md b/doc/manual/src/quick-start.md index 3c519217b..71205923b 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/quick-start.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/quick-start.md @@ -6,7 +6,9 @@ to subsequent chapters. 1. Install single-user Nix by running the following: - $ bash <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) + ```console + $ bash <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) + ``` This will install Nix in `/nix`. The install script will create `/nix` using `sudo`, so make sure you have sufficient rights. (For @@ -16,52 +18,66 @@ to subsequent chapters. 1. See what installable packages are currently available in the channel: - $ nix-env -qa - docbook-xml-4.3 - docbook-xml-4.5 - firefox-33.0.2 - hello-2.9 - libxslt-1.1.28 - … + ```console + $ nix-env -qa + docbook-xml-4.3 + docbook-xml-4.5 + firefox-33.0.2 + hello-2.9 + libxslt-1.1.28 + … + ``` 1. Install some packages from the channel: - $ nix-env -i hello + ```console + $ nix-env -i hello + ``` This should download pre-built packages; it should not build them locally (if it does, something went wrong). 1. Test that they work: - $ which hello - /home/eelco/.nix-profile/bin/hello - $ hello - Hello, world! + ```console + $ which hello + /home/eelco/.nix-profile/bin/hello + $ hello + Hello, world! + ``` 1. Uninstall a package: - $ nix-env -e hello + ```console + $ nix-env -e hello + ``` 1. You can also test a package without installing it: - $ nix-shell -p hello + ```console + $ nix-shell -p hello + ``` This builds or downloads GNU Hello and its dependencies, then drops you into a Bash shell where the `hello` command is present, all without affecting your normal environment: - [nix-shell:~]$ hello - Hello, world! + ```console + [nix-shell:~]$ hello + Hello, world! - [nix-shell:~]$ exit + [nix-shell:~]$ exit - $ hello - hello: command not found + $ hello + hello: command not found + ``` 1. To keep up-to-date with the channel, do: - $ nix-channel --update nixpkgs - $ nix-env -u '*' + ```console + $ nix-channel --update nixpkgs + $ nix-env -u '*' + ``` The latter command will upgrade each installed package for which there is a “newer” version (as determined by comparing the version @@ -70,10 +86,14 @@ to subsequent chapters. 1. If you're unhappy with the result of a `nix-env` action (e.g., an upgraded package turned out not to work properly), you can go back: - $ nix-env --rollback + ```console + $ nix-env --rollback + ``` 1. You should periodically run the Nix garbage collector to get rid of unused packages, since uninstalls or upgrades don't actually delete them: - $ nix-collect-garbage -d + ```console + $ nix-collect-garbage -d + ``` diff --git a/flake.nix b/flake.nix index f31dc4039..8f5a3055c 100644 --- a/flake.nix +++ b/flake.nix @@ -467,6 +467,7 @@ configureFlags+=" --prefix=$prefix" PKG_CONFIG_PATH=$prefix/lib/pkgconfig:$PKG_CONFIG_PATH PATH=$prefix/bin:$PATH + export MANPATH=/home/eelco/Dev/nix/inst/share/man:$MANPATH unset PYTHONPATH ''; }); diff --git a/src/libstore/nar-accessor.cc b/src/libstore/nar-accessor.cc index d884a131e..ed5791b14 100644 --- a/src/libstore/nar-accessor.cc +++ b/src/libstore/nar-accessor.cc @@ -49,7 +49,8 @@ struct NarAccessor : public FSAccessor : acc(acc), source(source) { } - void createMember(const Path & path, NarMember member) { + void createMember(const Path & path, NarMember member) + { size_t level = std::count(path.begin(), path.end(), '/'); while (parents.size() > level) parents.pop(); From 2ae9ac23698276c3e045d9b21f5c6ffb40f38324 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Fri, 31 Jul 2020 16:02:37 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 30/57] console -> shell --- doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md | 12 ++++++------ 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md index 27826717b..fc42a202a 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix-shell.md @@ -110,7 +110,7 @@ The following common options are supported: To build the dependencies of the package Pan, and start an interactive shell in which to build it: -```shell +```console $ nix-shell '' -A pan [nix-shell]$ unpackPhase [nix-shell]$ cd pan-* @@ -122,7 +122,7 @@ $ nix-shell '' -A pan To clear the environment first, and do some additional automatic initialisation of the interactive shell: -```shell +```console $ nix-shell '' -A pan --pure \ --command 'export NIX_DEBUG=1; export NIX_CORES=8; return' ``` @@ -131,13 +131,13 @@ Nix expressions can also be given on the command line using the `-E` and `-p` flags. For instance, the following starts a shell containing the packages `sqlite` and `libX11`: -```shell +```console $ nix-shell -E 'with import { }; runCommand "dummy" { buildInputs = [ sqlite xorg.libX11 ]; } ""' ``` A shorter way to do the same is: -```shell +```console $ nix-shell -p sqlite xorg.libX11 [nix-shell]$ echo $NIX_LDFLAGS … -L/nix/store/j1zg5v…-sqlite-3.8.0.2/lib -L/nix/store/0gmcz9…-libX11-1.6.1/lib … @@ -147,7 +147,7 @@ Note that `-p` accepts multiple full nix expressions that are valid in the `buildInputs = [ ... ]` shown above, not only package names. So the following is also legal: -```shell +```console $ nix-shell -p sqlite 'git.override { withManual = false; }' ``` @@ -156,7 +156,7 @@ it by passing `-I` or setting `NIX_PATH`. For example, the following gives you a shell containing the Pan package from a specific revision of Nixpkgs: -```shell +```console $ nix-shell -p pan -I nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/8a3eea054838b55aca962c3fbde9c83c102b8bf2.tar.gz [nix-shell:~]$ pan --version From a72a20d68fe6ae75f05f69e7de0bc3326d779144 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Mon, 17 Aug 2020 17:44:52 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 31/57] Add 'nix dump-args' to dump all commands/flags for manpage generation --- src/libutil/args.cc | 70 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ src/libutil/args.hh | 8 ++++++ src/nix/command.cc | 13 +++++++++ src/nix/command.hh | 7 +++++ src/nix/flake.cc | 7 +---- src/nix/main.cc | 7 +++++ src/nix/profile.cc | 7 +---- src/nix/registry.cc | 7 +---- 8 files changed, 108 insertions(+), 18 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/libutil/args.cc b/src/libutil/args.cc index 986c5d1cd..bf5e7ce95 100644 --- a/src/libutil/args.cc +++ b/src/libutil/args.cc @@ -3,6 +3,8 @@ #include +#include + namespace nix { void Args::addFlag(Flag && flag_) @@ -205,6 +207,42 @@ bool Args::processArgs(const Strings & args, bool finish) return res; } +nlohmann::json Args::toJSON() +{ + auto flags = nlohmann::json::object(); + + for (auto & [name, flag] : longFlags) { + auto j = nlohmann::json::object(); + if (flag->shortName) + j["shortName"] = std::string(1, flag->shortName); + if (flag->description != "") + j["description"] = flag->description; + if (flag->category != "") + j["category"] = flag->category; + if (flag->handler.arity != ArityAny) + j["arity"] = flag->handler.arity; + if (!flag->labels.empty()) + j["labels"] = flag->labels; + flags[name] = std::move(j); + } + + auto args = nlohmann::json::array(); + + for (auto & arg : expectedArgs) { + auto j = nlohmann::json::object(); + j["label"] = arg.label; + j["optional"] = arg.optional; + if (arg.handler.arity != ArityAny) + j["arity"] = arg.handler.arity; + args.push_back(std::move(j)); + } + + auto res = nlohmann::json::object(); + res["flags"] = std::move(flags); + res["args"] = std::move(args); + return res; +} + static void hashTypeCompleter(size_t index, std::string_view prefix) { for (auto & type : hashTypes) @@ -313,6 +351,22 @@ void Command::printHelp(const string & programName, std::ostream & out) } } +nlohmann::json Command::toJSON() +{ + auto exs = nlohmann::json::array(); + + for (auto & example : examples()) { + auto ex = nlohmann::json::object(); + ex["description"] = example.description; + ex["command"] = example.command; + exs.push_back(std::move(ex)); + } + + auto res = Args::toJSON(); + res["examples"] = std::move(exs); + return res; +} + MultiCommand::MultiCommand(const Commands & commands) : commands(commands) { @@ -387,4 +441,20 @@ bool MultiCommand::processArgs(const Strings & args, bool finish) return Args::processArgs(args, finish); } +nlohmann::json MultiCommand::toJSON() +{ + auto cmds = nlohmann::json::object(); + + for (auto & [name, commandFun] : commands) { + auto command = commandFun(); + auto j = command->toJSON(); + j["category"] = categories[command->category()]; + cmds[name] = std::move(j); + } + + auto res = Args::toJSON(); + res["commands"] = std::move(cmds); + return res; +} + } diff --git a/src/libutil/args.hh b/src/libutil/args.hh index 97a517344..c56044f1d 100644 --- a/src/libutil/args.hh +++ b/src/libutil/args.hh @@ -4,6 +4,8 @@ #include #include +#include + #include "util.hh" namespace nix { @@ -203,6 +205,8 @@ public: }); } + virtual nlohmann::json toJSON(); + friend class MultiCommand; }; @@ -234,6 +238,8 @@ struct Command : virtual Args virtual Category category() { return catDefault; } void printHelp(const string & programName, std::ostream & out) override; + + nlohmann::json toJSON() override; }; typedef std::map()>> Commands; @@ -259,6 +265,8 @@ public: bool processFlag(Strings::iterator & pos, Strings::iterator end) override; bool processArgs(const Strings & args, bool finish) override; + + nlohmann::json toJSON() override; }; Strings argvToStrings(int argc, char * * argv); diff --git a/src/nix/command.cc b/src/nix/command.cc index da32819da..2f1fbded1 100644 --- a/src/nix/command.cc +++ b/src/nix/command.cc @@ -4,12 +4,25 @@ #include "nixexpr.hh" #include "profiles.hh" +#include + extern char * * environ __attribute__((weak)); namespace nix { Commands * RegisterCommand::commands = nullptr; +void NixMultiCommand::printHelp(const string & programName, std::ostream & out) +{ + MultiCommand::printHelp(programName, out); +} + +nlohmann::json NixMultiCommand::toJSON() +{ + // FIXME: use Command::toJSON() as well. + return MultiCommand::toJSON(); +} + StoreCommand::StoreCommand() { } diff --git a/src/nix/command.hh b/src/nix/command.hh index bc46a2028..d60c8aeb6 100644 --- a/src/nix/command.hh +++ b/src/nix/command.hh @@ -21,6 +21,13 @@ static constexpr Command::Category catSecondary = 100; static constexpr Command::Category catUtility = 101; static constexpr Command::Category catNixInstallation = 102; +struct NixMultiCommand : virtual MultiCommand, virtual Command +{ + void printHelp(const string & programName, std::ostream & out) override; + + nlohmann::json toJSON() override; +}; + /* A command that requires a Nix store. */ struct StoreCommand : virtual Command { diff --git a/src/nix/flake.cc b/src/nix/flake.cc index 653f8db1b..ae6f4c5f9 100644 --- a/src/nix/flake.cc +++ b/src/nix/flake.cc @@ -933,7 +933,7 @@ struct CmdFlakeShow : FlakeCommand } }; -struct CmdFlake : virtual MultiCommand, virtual Command +struct CmdFlake : NixMultiCommand { CmdFlake() : MultiCommand({ @@ -963,11 +963,6 @@ struct CmdFlake : virtual MultiCommand, virtual Command command->second->prepare(); command->second->run(); } - - void printHelp(const string & programName, std::ostream & out) override - { - MultiCommand::printHelp(programName, out); - } }; static auto r1 = registerCommand("flake"); diff --git a/src/nix/main.cc b/src/nix/main.cc index e62657e95..fa04bebea 100644 --- a/src/nix/main.cc +++ b/src/nix/main.cc @@ -17,6 +17,8 @@ #include #include +#include + extern std::string chrootHelperName; void chrootHelper(int argc, char * * argv); @@ -172,6 +174,11 @@ void mainWrapped(int argc, char * * argv) NixArgs args; + if (argc == 2 && std::string(argv[1]) == "dump-args") { + std::cout << args.toJSON().dump() << "\n"; + return; + } + Finally printCompletions([&]() { if (completions) { diff --git a/src/nix/profile.cc b/src/nix/profile.cc index cffc9ee44..9241931e9 100644 --- a/src/nix/profile.cc +++ b/src/nix/profile.cc @@ -437,7 +437,7 @@ struct CmdProfileDiffClosures : virtual StoreCommand, MixDefaultProfile } }; -struct CmdProfile : virtual MultiCommand, virtual Command +struct CmdProfile : NixMultiCommand { CmdProfile() : MultiCommand({ @@ -461,11 +461,6 @@ struct CmdProfile : virtual MultiCommand, virtual Command command->second->prepare(); command->second->run(); } - - void printHelp(const string & programName, std::ostream & out) override - { - MultiCommand::printHelp(programName, out); - } }; static auto r1 = registerCommand("profile"); diff --git a/src/nix/registry.cc b/src/nix/registry.cc index ebee4545c..367268683 100644 --- a/src/nix/registry.cc +++ b/src/nix/registry.cc @@ -115,7 +115,7 @@ struct CmdRegistryPin : virtual Args, EvalCommand } }; -struct CmdRegistry : virtual MultiCommand, virtual Command +struct CmdRegistry : virtual NixMultiCommand { CmdRegistry() : MultiCommand({ @@ -141,11 +141,6 @@ struct CmdRegistry : virtual MultiCommand, virtual Command command->second->prepare(); command->second->run(); } - - void printHelp(const string & programName, std::ostream & out) override - { - MultiCommand::printHelp(programName, out); - } }; static auto r1 = registerCommand("registry"); From 6f19c776db280a46e84d6e84d83814445869ef37 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Mon, 17 Aug 2020 19:33:18 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 32/57] Start generation of the nix.1 manpage --- .gitignore | 2 + doc/manual/generate-manpage.jq | 42 +++++++++++++++++++ doc/manual/local.mk | 8 +++- doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md | 2 + .../src/command-ref/experimental-commands.md | 8 ++++ src/libutil/args.cc | 3 +- 6 files changed, 63 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) create mode 100644 doc/manual/generate-manpage.jq create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/command-ref/experimental-commands.md diff --git a/.gitignore b/.gitignore index d456d7da3..b8028e665 100644 --- a/.gitignore +++ b/.gitignore @@ -25,6 +25,8 @@ perl/Makefile.config /doc/manual/*.1 /doc/manual/*.5 /doc/manual/*.8 +/doc/manual/nix.json +/doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix.md # /scripts/ /scripts/nix-profile.sh diff --git a/doc/manual/generate-manpage.jq b/doc/manual/generate-manpage.jq new file mode 100644 index 000000000..cf06da0c8 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/generate-manpage.jq @@ -0,0 +1,42 @@ +def show_flags: + +.flags +| map_values(select(.category != "config")) +| to_entries +| map( + " - `--" + .key + "`" + + (if .value.shortName then " / `" + .value.shortName + "`" else "" end) + + (if .value.labels then " " + (.value.labels | map("*" + . + "*") | join(" ")) else "" end) + + " \n" + + " " + .value.description + "\n\n") +| join("") +; + +def show_synopsis: + +"`" + .command + "` " + (.args | map("*" + .label + "*" + (if has("arity") then "" else "..." end)) | join(" ")) + "\n" + +; + +"# Synopsis\n\n" ++ ({"command": "nix", "args": .args} | show_synopsis) ++ "\n" ++ "# Common flags\n\n" ++ show_flags ++ (.commands | to_entries | map( + "# Operation `" + .key + "`\n\n" + + "## Synopsis\n\n" + + ({"command": ("nix " + .key), "args": .value.args} | show_synopsis) + + "\n" + + "## Description\n\n" + + .value.description + "\n\n" + + (if (.value.flags | length) > 0 then + "## Flags\n\n" + + (.value | show_flags) + else "" end) + + (if (.value.examples | length) > 0 then + "## Examples\n\n" + + (.value.examples | map("- " + .description + "\n\n ```console\n " + .command + "\n ```\n" ) | join("\n")) + + "\n" + else "" end) + ) | join("")) diff --git a/doc/manual/local.mk b/doc/manual/local.mk index c9104ad7e..8f917316d 100644 --- a/doc/manual/local.mk +++ b/doc/manual/local.mk @@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ MANUAL_SRCS := $(call rwildcard, $(d)/src, *.md) # Generate man pages. man-pages := $(foreach n, \ - nix-env.1 nix-build.1 nix-shell.1 nix-store.1 nix-instantiate.1 \ + nix-env.1 nix-build.1 nix-shell.1 nix-store.1 nix-instantiate.1 nix.1 \ nix-collect-garbage.1 \ nix-prefetch-url.1 nix-channel.1 \ nix-hash.1 nix-copy-closure.1 \ @@ -24,6 +24,12 @@ $(d)/%.8: $(d)/src/command-ref/%.md $(d)/nix.conf.5: $(d)/src/command-ref/conf-file.md $(trace-gen) lowdown -sT man $^ -o $@ +$(d)/src/command-ref/nix.md: $(d)/nix.json $(d)/generate-manpage.jq + jq -r -f doc/manual/generate-manpage.jq $< > $@ + +$(d)/nix.json: $(bindir)/nix + $(trace-gen) $(bindir)/nix dump-args > $@ + # Generate the HTML manual. install: $(docdir)/manual/index.html diff --git a/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md b/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md index 5f6817674..4089caf8a 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md @@ -60,6 +60,8 @@ - [nix-hash](command-ref/nix-hash.md) - [nix-instantiate](command-ref/nix-instantiate.md) - [nix-prefetch-url](command-ref/nix-prefetch-url.md) + - [Experimental Commands](command-ref/experimental-commands.md) + - [nix](command-ref/nix.md) - [Files](command-ref/files.md) - [nix.conf](command-ref/conf-file.md) - [Glossary](glossary.md) diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/experimental-commands.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/experimental-commands.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..cfa6f8b73 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/experimental-commands.md @@ -0,0 +1,8 @@ +# Experimental Commands + +This section lists experimental commands. + +> **Warning** +> +> These commands may be removed in the future, or their syntax may +> change in incompatible ways. diff --git a/src/libutil/args.cc b/src/libutil/args.cc index bf5e7ce95..ad83a2414 100644 --- a/src/libutil/args.cc +++ b/src/libutil/args.cc @@ -238,6 +238,7 @@ nlohmann::json Args::toJSON() } auto res = nlohmann::json::object(); + res["description"] = description(); res["flags"] = std::move(flags); res["args"] = std::move(args); return res; @@ -371,7 +372,7 @@ MultiCommand::MultiCommand(const Commands & commands) : commands(commands) { expectArgs({ - .label = "command", + .label = "subcommand", .optional = true, .handler = {[=](std::string s) { assert(!command); From 069340179e91202b2d3adc5ea1e3023ba2a51691 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Tue, 18 Aug 2020 15:15:35 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 33/57] Improve nix.1 manpage generator --- doc/manual/generate-manpage.jq | 72 +++++++++++++++++----------------- src/nix/main.cc | 5 +++ 2 files changed, 40 insertions(+), 37 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/manual/generate-manpage.jq b/doc/manual/generate-manpage.jq index cf06da0c8..d3cf1c601 100644 --- a/doc/manual/generate-manpage.jq +++ b/doc/manual/generate-manpage.jq @@ -1,42 +1,40 @@ def show_flags: - -.flags -| map_values(select(.category != "config")) -| to_entries -| map( - " - `--" + .key + "`" - + (if .value.shortName then " / `" + .value.shortName + "`" else "" end) - + (if .value.labels then " " + (.value.labels | map("*" + . + "*") | join(" ")) else "" end) - + " \n" - + " " + .value.description + "\n\n") -| join("") -; + .flags + | map_values(select(.category != "config")) + | to_entries + | map( + " - `--" + .key + "`" + + (if .value.shortName then " / `" + .value.shortName + "`" else "" end) + + (if .value.labels then " " + (.value.labels | map("*" + . + "*") | join(" ")) else "" end) + + " \n" + + " " + .value.description + "\n\n") + | join("") + ; def show_synopsis: + "`" + .command + "` " + (.args | map("*" + .label + "*" + (if has("arity") then "" else "..." end)) | join(" ")) + "\n\n" + ; -"`" + .command + "` " + (.args | map("*" + .label + "*" + (if has("arity") then "" else "..." end)) | join(" ")) + "\n" +def show_command: + . as $top | + .section + " Name\n\n" + + "`" + .command + "` - " + .def.description + "\n\n" + + .section + " Synopsis\n\n" + + ({"command": .command, "args": .def.args} | show_synopsis) + + (if (.def.flags | length) > 0 then + .section + " Flags\n\n" + + (.def | show_flags) + else "" end) + + (if (.def.examples | length) > 0 then + .section + " Examples\n\n" + + (.def.examples | map(.description + "\n\n```console\n" + .command + "\n```\n" ) | join("\n")) + + "\n" + else "" end) + + (if .def.commands then .def.commands | to_entries | map( + "# Subcommand `" + ($top.command + " " + .key) + "`\n\n" + + ({"command": ($top.command + " " + .key), "section": "##", "def": .value} | show_command) + ) | join("") else "" end) + ; -; - -"# Synopsis\n\n" -+ ({"command": "nix", "args": .args} | show_synopsis) -+ "\n" -+ "# Common flags\n\n" -+ show_flags -+ (.commands | to_entries | map( - "# Operation `" + .key + "`\n\n" - + "## Synopsis\n\n" - + ({"command": ("nix " + .key), "args": .value.args} | show_synopsis) - + "\n" - + "## Description\n\n" - + .value.description + "\n\n" - + (if (.value.flags | length) > 0 then - "## Flags\n\n" - + (.value | show_flags) - else "" end) - + (if (.value.examples | length) > 0 then - "## Examples\n\n" - + (.value.examples | map("- " + .description + "\n\n ```console\n " + .command + "\n ```\n" ) | join("\n")) - + "\n" - else "" end) - ) | join("")) +"Title: nix\n\n" ++ ({"command": "nix", "section": "#", "def": .} | show_command) diff --git a/src/nix/main.cc b/src/nix/main.cc index fa04bebea..0c4fd46fd 100644 --- a/src/nix/main.cc +++ b/src/nix/main.cc @@ -142,6 +142,11 @@ struct NixArgs : virtual MultiCommand, virtual MixCommonArgs printHelp(programName, std::cout); throw Exit(); } + + std::string description() override + { + return "a tool for reproducible and declarative configuration management"; + } }; void mainWrapped(int argc, char * * argv) From 8a97b11374c5165d3602648c5c0327f103072105 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Wed, 19 Aug 2020 12:31:18 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 34/57] Improve margins between sections The default CSS puts almost no space between sections, but a lot of space between subsections. This flips that around. --- doc/manual/book.toml | 2 ++ doc/manual/custom.css | 7 +++++++ doc/manual/local.mk | 2 +- 3 files changed, 10 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) create mode 100644 doc/manual/book.toml create mode 100644 doc/manual/custom.css diff --git a/doc/manual/book.toml b/doc/manual/book.toml new file mode 100644 index 000000000..fee41dfb3 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/book.toml @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ +[output.html] +additional-css = ["custom.css"] diff --git a/doc/manual/custom.css b/doc/manual/custom.css new file mode 100644 index 000000000..69d48d4a7 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/custom.css @@ -0,0 +1,7 @@ +h1:not(:first-of-type) { + margin-top: 1.3em; +} + +h2 { + margin-top: 1em; +} diff --git a/doc/manual/local.mk b/doc/manual/local.mk index 8f917316d..04c57b23b 100644 --- a/doc/manual/local.mk +++ b/doc/manual/local.mk @@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ $(d)/nix.json: $(bindir)/nix # Generate the HTML manual. install: $(docdir)/manual/index.html -$(docdir)/manual/index.html: $(MANUAL_SRCS) +$(docdir)/manual/index.html: $(MANUAL_SRCS) $(d)/book.toml $(d)/custom.css $(trace-gen) mdbook build doc/manual -d $(docdir)/manual @cp doc/manual/highlight.pack.js $(docdir)/manual/highlight.js From 34b22e012350186925e513f34b1292858a81c932 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Wed, 19 Aug 2020 14:21:27 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 35/57] Change option descriptions to Markdown --- src/libexpr/common-eval-args.cc | 2 +- src/libmain/common-args.cc | 6 +++--- src/nix/installables.cc | 6 +++--- 3 files changed, 7 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/libexpr/common-eval-args.cc b/src/libexpr/common-eval-args.cc index 6b48ead1f..10c1a6975 100644 --- a/src/libexpr/common-eval-args.cc +++ b/src/libexpr/common-eval-args.cc @@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ MixEvalArgs::MixEvalArgs() addFlag({ .longName = "include", .shortName = 'I', - .description = "add a path to the list of locations used to look up <...> file names", + .description = "add a path to the list of locations used to look up `<...>` file names", .labels = {"path"}, .handler = {[&](std::string s) { searchPath.push_back(s); }} }); diff --git a/src/libmain/common-args.cc b/src/libmain/common-args.cc index 09f4cd133..3411e2d7a 100644 --- a/src/libmain/common-args.cc +++ b/src/libmain/common-args.cc @@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ MixCommonArgs::MixCommonArgs(const string & programName) addFlag({ .longName = "option", - .description = "set a Nix configuration option (overriding nix.conf)", + .description = "set a Nix configuration option (overriding `nix.conf`)", .labels = {"name", "value"}, .handler = {[](std::string name, std::string value) { try { @@ -51,8 +51,8 @@ MixCommonArgs::MixCommonArgs(const string & programName) addFlag({ .longName = "log-format", - .description = "format of log output; \"raw\", \"internal-json\", \"bar\" " - "or \"bar-with-logs\"", + .description = "format of log output; `raw`, `internal-json`, `bar` " + "or `bar-with-logs`", .labels = {"format"}, .handler = {[](std::string format) { setLogFormat(format); }}, }); diff --git a/src/nix/installables.cc b/src/nix/installables.cc index d34f87982..1f1ed680f 100644 --- a/src/nix/installables.cc +++ b/src/nix/installables.cc @@ -76,7 +76,7 @@ MixFlakeOptions::MixFlakeOptions() addFlag({ .longName = "override-input", - .description = "override a specific flake input (e.g. 'dwarffs/nixpkgs')", + .description = "override a specific flake input (e.g. `dwarffs/nixpkgs`)", .labels = {"input-path", "flake-url"}, .handler = {[&](std::string inputPath, std::string flakeRef) { lockFlags.inputOverrides.insert_or_assign( @@ -116,7 +116,7 @@ SourceExprCommand::SourceExprCommand() addFlag({ .longName = "file", .shortName = 'f', - .description = "evaluate FILE rather than the default", + .description = "evaluate *file* rather than the default", .labels = {"file"}, .handler = {&file}, .completer = completePath @@ -124,7 +124,7 @@ SourceExprCommand::SourceExprCommand() addFlag({ .longName ="expr", - .description = "evaluate attributes from EXPR", + .description = "evaluate attributes from *expr*", .labels = {"expr"}, .handler = {&expr} }); From c8fa39324ad7a56a78f8c6f55c42f8f49dbbbf9a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Wed, 19 Aug 2020 18:28:04 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 36/57] Generate the nix.conf docs from the source code This means we don't have two (divergent) sets of option descriptions anymore. --- .gitignore | 2 + doc/manual/generate-options.jq | 11 + doc/manual/local.mk | 7 + .../src/command-ref/conf-file-prefix.md | 39 + doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md | 691 ---------------- src/libexpr/eval.hh | 51 +- src/libstore/filetransfer.hh | 27 +- src/libstore/globals.hh | 759 +++++++++++++++--- src/libutil/config.cc | 39 +- src/libutil/logging.hh | 10 +- 10 files changed, 802 insertions(+), 834 deletions(-) create mode 100644 doc/manual/generate-options.jq create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file-prefix.md delete mode 100644 doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md diff --git a/.gitignore b/.gitignore index b8028e665..44dbaa5d7 100644 --- a/.gitignore +++ b/.gitignore @@ -26,7 +26,9 @@ perl/Makefile.config /doc/manual/*.5 /doc/manual/*.8 /doc/manual/nix.json +/doc/manual/conf-file.json /doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix.md +/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md # /scripts/ /scripts/nix-profile.sh diff --git a/doc/manual/generate-options.jq b/doc/manual/generate-options.jq new file mode 100644 index 000000000..3ee51ddea --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/generate-options.jq @@ -0,0 +1,11 @@ +. | to_entries | sort_by(.key) | map( + " - `" + .key + "` \n" + + (.value.description | split("\n") | map(" " + . + "\n") | join("")) + "\n\n" + + " **Default**: " + ( + if .value.value == "" or .value.value == [] + then "*empty*" + elif (.value.value | type) == "array" + then "`" + (.value.value | join(" ")) + "`" + else "`" + (.value.value | tostring) + "`" end) + + "\n\n" +) | join("") diff --git a/doc/manual/local.mk b/doc/manual/local.mk index 04c57b23b..dcc02d538 100644 --- a/doc/manual/local.mk +++ b/doc/manual/local.mk @@ -27,9 +27,16 @@ $(d)/nix.conf.5: $(d)/src/command-ref/conf-file.md $(d)/src/command-ref/nix.md: $(d)/nix.json $(d)/generate-manpage.jq jq -r -f doc/manual/generate-manpage.jq $< > $@ +$(d)/src/command-ref/conf-file.md: $(d)/conf-file.json $(d)/generate-options.jq $(d)/src/command-ref/conf-file-prefix.md + cat doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file-prefix.md > $@ + jq -r -f doc/manual/generate-options.jq $< >> $@ + $(d)/nix.json: $(bindir)/nix $(trace-gen) $(bindir)/nix dump-args > $@ +$(d)/conf-file.json: $(bindir)/nix + $(trace-gen) env -i NIX_CONF_DIR=/dummy HOME=/dummy $(bindir)/nix show-config --json --experimental-features nix-command > $@ + # Generate the HTML manual. install: $(docdir)/manual/index.html diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file-prefix.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file-prefix.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..04c6cd859 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file-prefix.md @@ -0,0 +1,39 @@ +Title: nix.conf + +# Name + +`nix.conf` - Nix configuration file + +# Description + +By default Nix reads settings from the following places: + + - The system-wide configuration file `sysconfdir/nix/nix.conf` (i.e. + `/etc/nix/nix.conf` on most systems), or `$NIX_CONF_DIR/nix.conf` if + `NIX_CONF_DIR` is set. Values loaded in this file are not forwarded + to the Nix daemon. The client assumes that the daemon has already + loaded them. + + - If `NIX_USER_CONF_FILES` is set, then each path separated by `:` + will be loaded in reverse order. + + Otherwise it will look for `nix/nix.conf` files in `XDG_CONFIG_DIRS` + and `XDG_CONFIG_HOME`. If these are unset, it will look in + `$HOME/.config/nix.conf`. + +The configuration files consist of `name = +value` pairs, one per line. Other files can be included with a line like +`include +path`, where *path* is interpreted relative to the current conf file and +a missing file is an error unless `!include` is used instead. Comments +start with a `#` character. Here is an example configuration file: + + keep-outputs = true # Nice for developers + keep-derivations = true # Idem + +You can override settings on the command line using the `--option` flag, +e.g. `--option keep-outputs +false`. + +The following settings are currently available: + diff --git a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md b/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md deleted file mode 100644 index fdc8f5265..000000000 --- a/doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md +++ /dev/null @@ -1,691 +0,0 @@ -Title: nix.conf - -# Name - -`nix.conf` - Nix configuration file - -# Description - -By default Nix reads settings from the following places: - - - The system-wide configuration file `sysconfdir/nix/nix.conf` (i.e. - `/etc/nix/nix.conf` on most systems), or `$NIX_CONF_DIR/nix.conf` if - `NIX_CONF_DIR` is set. Values loaded in this file are not forwarded - to the Nix daemon. The client assumes that the daemon has already - loaded them. - - - If `NIX_USER_CONF_FILES` is set, then each path separated by `:` - will be loaded in reverse order. - - Otherwise it will look for `nix/nix.conf` files in `XDG_CONFIG_DIRS` - and `XDG_CONFIG_HOME`. If these are unset, it will look in - `$HOME/.config/nix.conf`. - -The configuration files consist of `name = -value` pairs, one per line. Other files can be included with a line like -`include -path`, where *path* is interpreted relative to the current conf file and -a missing file is an error unless `!include` is used instead. Comments -start with a `#` character. Here is an example configuration file: - - keep-outputs = true # Nice for developers - keep-derivations = true # Idem - -You can override settings on the command line using the `--option` flag, -e.g. `--option keep-outputs -false`. - -The following settings are currently available: - - - `allowed-uris` - A list of URI prefixes to which access is allowed in restricted - evaluation mode. For example, when set to - `https://github.com/NixOS`, builtin functions such as `fetchGit` are - allowed to access `https://github.com/NixOS/patchelf.git`. - - - `allow-import-from-derivation` - By default, Nix allows you to `import` from a derivation, allowing - building at evaluation time. With this option set to false, Nix will - throw an error when evaluating an expression that uses this feature, - allowing users to ensure their evaluation will not require any - builds to take place. - - - `allow-new-privileges` - (Linux-specific.) By default, builders on Linux cannot acquire new - privileges by calling setuid/setgid programs or programs that have - file capabilities. For example, programs such as `sudo` or `ping` - will fail. (Note that in sandbox builds, no such programs are - available unless you bind-mount them into the sandbox via the - `sandbox-paths` option.) You can allow the use of such programs by - enabling this option. This is impure and usually undesirable, but - may be useful in certain scenarios (e.g. to spin up containers or - set up userspace network interfaces in tests). - - - `allowed-users` - A list of names of users (separated by whitespace) that are allowed - to connect to the Nix daemon. As with the `trusted-users` option, - you can specify groups by prefixing them with `@`. Also, you can - allow all users by specifying `*`. The default is `*`. - - Note that trusted users are always allowed to connect. - - - `auto-optimise-store` - If set to `true`, Nix automatically detects files in the store - that have identical contents, and replaces them with hard links to - a single copy. This saves disk space. If set to `false` (the - default), you can still run `nix-store --optimise` to get rid of - duplicate files. - - - `builders` - A list of machines on which to perform builds. - - - `builders-use-substitutes` - If set to `true`, Nix will instruct remote build machines to use - their own binary substitutes if available. In practical terms, this - means that remote hosts will fetch as many build dependencies as - possible from their own substitutes (e.g, from `cache.nixos.org`), - instead of waiting for this host to upload them all. This can - drastically reduce build times if the network connection between - this computer and the remote build host is slow. Defaults to - `false`. - - - `build-users-group` - This options specifies the Unix group containing the Nix build user - accounts. In multi-user Nix installations, builds should not be - performed by the Nix account since that would allow users to - arbitrarily modify the Nix store and database by supplying specially - crafted builders; and they cannot be performed by the calling user - since that would allow him/her to influence the build result. - - Therefore, if this option is non-empty and specifies a valid group, - builds will be performed under the user accounts that are a member - of the group specified here (as listed in `/etc/group`). Those user - accounts should not be used for any other purpose\! - - Nix will never run two builds under the same user account at the - same time. This is to prevent an obvious security hole: a malicious - user writing a Nix expression that modifies the build result of a - legitimate Nix expression being built by another user. Therefore it - is good to have as many Nix build user accounts as you can spare. - (Remember: uids are cheap.) - - The build users should have permission to create files in the Nix - store, but not delete them. Therefore, `/nix/store` should be owned - by the Nix account, its group should be the group specified here, - and its mode should be `1775`. - - If the build users group is empty, builds will be performed under - the uid of the Nix process (that is, the uid of the caller if - `NIX_REMOTE` is empty, the uid under which the Nix daemon runs if - `NIX_REMOTE` is `daemon`). Obviously, this should not be used in - multi-user settings with untrusted users. - - - `compress-build-log` - If set to `true` (the default), build logs written to - `/nix/var/log/nix/drvs` will be compressed on the fly using bzip2. - Otherwise, they will not be compressed. - - - `connect-timeout` - The timeout (in seconds) for establishing connections in the binary - cache substituter. It corresponds to `curl`’s `--connect-timeout` - option. - - - `cores` - Sets the value of the `NIX_BUILD_CORES` environment variable in the - invocation of builders. Builders can use this variable at their - discretion to control the maximum amount of parallelism. For - instance, in Nixpkgs, if the derivation attribute - `enableParallelBuilding` is set to `true`, the builder passes the - `-jN` flag to GNU Make. It can be overridden using the `--cores` - command line switch and defaults to `1`. The value `0` means that - the builder should use all available CPU cores in the system. - - - `diff-hook` - Absolute path to an executable capable of diffing build - results. The hook is executed if `run-diff-hook` is true, and the - output of a build is known to not be the same. This program is not - executed to determine if two results are the same. - - The diff hook is executed by the same user and group who ran the - build. However, the diff hook does not have write access to the - store path just built. - - The diff hook program receives three parameters: - - 1. A path to the previous build's results - - 2. A path to the current build's results - - 3. The path to the build's derivation - - 4. The path to the build's scratch directory. This directory will - exist only if the build was run with `--keep-failed`. - - The stderr and stdout output from the diff hook will not be - displayed to the user. Instead, it will print to the nix-daemon's - log. - - When using the Nix daemon, `diff-hook` must be set in the `nix.conf` - configuration file, and cannot be passed at the command line. - - - `enforce-determinism` - See `repeat`. - - - `extra-sandbox-paths` - A list of additional paths appended to `sandbox-paths`. Useful if - you want to extend its default value. - - - `extra-platforms` - Platforms other than the native one which this machine is capable of - building for. This can be useful for supporting additional - architectures on compatible machines: i686-linux can be built on - x86\_64-linux machines (and the default for this setting reflects - this); armv7 is backwards-compatible with armv6 and armv5tel; some - aarch64 machines can also natively run 32-bit ARM code; and - qemu-user may be used to support non-native platforms (though this - may be slow and buggy). Most values for this are not enabled by - default because build systems will often misdetect the target - platform and generate incompatible code, so you may wish to - cross-check the results of using this option against proper - natively-built versions of your derivations. - - - `extra-substituters` - Additional binary caches appended to those specified in - `substituters`. When used by unprivileged users, untrusted - substituters (i.e. those not listed in `trusted-substituters`) are - silently ignored. - - - `fallback` - If set to `true`, Nix will fall back to building from source if a - binary substitute fails. This is equivalent to the `--fallback` - flag. The default is `false`. - - - `fsync-metadata` - If set to `true`, changes to the Nix store metadata (in - `/nix/var/nix/db`) are synchronously flushed to disk. This improves - robustness in case of system crashes, but reduces performance. The - default is `true`. - - - `hashed-mirrors` - A list of web servers used by `builtins.fetchurl` to obtain files by - hash. The default is `http://tarballs.nixos.org/`. Given a hash type - *ht* and a base-16 hash *h*, Nix will try to download the file from - *hashed-mirror*/*ht*/*h*. This allows files to be downloaded even if - they have disappeared from their original URI. For example, given - the default mirror `http://tarballs.nixos.org/`, when building the - derivation - - ```nix - builtins.fetchurl { - url = "https://example.org/foo-1.2.3.tar.xz"; - sha256 = "2c26b46b68ffc68ff99b453c1d30413413422d706483bfa0f98a5e886266e7ae"; - } - ``` - - Nix will attempt to download this file from - `http://tarballs.nixos.org/sha256/2c26b46b68ffc68ff99b453c1d30413413422d706483bfa0f98a5e886266e7ae` - first. If it is not available there, if will try the original URI. - - - `http-connections` - The maximum number of parallel TCP connections used to fetch files - from binary caches and by other downloads. It defaults to 25. 0 - means no limit. - - - `keep-build-log` - If set to `true` (the default), Nix will write the build log of a - derivation (i.e. the standard output and error of its builder) to - the directory `/nix/var/log/nix/drvs`. The build log can be - retrieved using the command `nix-store -l path`. - - - `keep-derivations` - If `true` (default), the garbage collector will keep the derivations - from which non-garbage store paths were built. If `false`, they will - be deleted unless explicitly registered as a root (or reachable from - other roots). - - Keeping derivation around is useful for querying and traceability - (e.g., it allows you to ask with what dependencies or options a - store path was built), so by default this option is on. Turn it off - to save a bit of disk space (or a lot if `keep-outputs` is also - turned on). - - - `keep-env-derivations` - If `false` (default), derivations are not stored in Nix user - environments. That is, the derivations of any build-time-only - dependencies may be garbage-collected. - - If `true`, when you add a Nix derivation to a user environment, the - path of the derivation is stored in the user environment. Thus, the - derivation will not be garbage-collected until the user environment - generation is deleted (`nix-env --delete-generations`). To prevent - build-time-only dependencies from being collected, you should also - turn on `keep-outputs`. - - The difference between this option and `keep-derivations` is that - this one is “sticky”: it applies to any user environment created - while this option was enabled, while `keep-derivations` only applies - at the moment the garbage collector is run. - - - `keep-outputs` - If `true`, the garbage collector will keep the outputs of - non-garbage derivations. If `false` (default), outputs will be - deleted unless they are GC roots themselves (or reachable from other - roots). - - In general, outputs must be registered as roots separately. However, - even if the output of a derivation is registered as a root, the - collector will still delete store paths that are used only at build - time (e.g., the C compiler, or source tarballs downloaded from the - network). To prevent it from doing so, set this option to `true`. - - - `max-build-log-size` - This option defines the maximum number of bytes that a builder can - write to its stdout/stderr. If the builder exceeds this limit, it’s - killed. A value of `0` (the default) means that there is no limit. - - - `max-free` - When a garbage collection is triggered by the `min-free` option, it - stops as soon as `max-free` bytes are available. The default is - infinity (i.e. delete all garbage). - - - `max-jobs` - This option defines the maximum number of jobs that Nix will try to - build in parallel. The default is `1`. The special value `auto` - causes Nix to use the number of CPUs in your system. `0` is useful - when using remote builders to prevent any local builds (except for - `preferLocalBuild` derivation attribute which executes locally - regardless). It can be overridden using the `--max-jobs` (`-j`) - command line switch. - - - `max-silent-time` - This option defines the maximum number of seconds that a builder can - go without producing any data on standard output or standard error. - This is useful (for instance in an automated build system) to catch - builds that are stuck in an infinite loop, or to catch remote builds - that are hanging due to network problems. It can be overridden using - the `--max-silent-time` command line switch. - - The value `0` means that there is no timeout. This is also the - default. - - - `min-free` - When free disk space in `/nix/store` drops below `min-free` during a - build, Nix performs a garbage-collection until `max-free` bytes are - available or there is no more garbage. A value of `0` (the default) - disables this feature. - - - `narinfo-cache-negative-ttl` - The TTL in seconds for negative lookups. If a store path is queried - from a substituter but was not found, there will be a negative - lookup cached in the local disk cache database for the specified - duration. - - - `narinfo-cache-positive-ttl` - The TTL in seconds for positive lookups. If a store path is queried - from a substituter, the result of the query will be cached in the - local disk cache database including some of the NAR metadata. The - default TTL is a month, setting a shorter TTL for positive lookups - can be useful for binary caches that have frequent garbage - collection, in which case having a more frequent cache invalidation - would prevent trying to pull the path again and failing with a hash - mismatch if the build isn't reproducible. - - - `netrc-file` - If set to an absolute path to a `netrc` file, Nix will use the HTTP - authentication credentials in this file when trying to download from - a remote host through HTTP or HTTPS. Defaults to - `$NIX_CONF_DIR/netrc`. - - The `netrc` file consists of a list of accounts in the following - format: - - machine my-machine - login my-username - password my-password - - For the exact syntax, see [the `curl` - documentation](https://ec.haxx.se/usingcurl-netrc.html). - - > **Note** - > - > This must be an absolute path, and `~` is not resolved. For - > example, `~/.netrc` won't resolve to your home directory's - > `.netrc`. - - - `plugin-files` - A list of plugin files to be loaded by Nix. Each of these files will - be dlopened by Nix, allowing them to affect execution through static - initialization. In particular, these plugins may construct static - instances of RegisterPrimOp to add new primops or constants to the - expression language, RegisterStoreImplementation to add new store - implementations, RegisterCommand to add new subcommands to the `nix` - command, and RegisterSetting to add new nix config settings. See the - constructors for those types for more details. - - Since these files are loaded into the same address space as Nix - itself, they must be DSOs compatible with the instance of Nix - running at the time (i.e. compiled against the same headers, not - linked to any incompatible libraries). They should not be linked to - any Nix libs directly, as those will be available already at load - time. - - If an entry in the list is a directory, all files in the directory - are loaded as plugins (non-recursively). - - - `pre-build-hook` - If set, the path to a program that can set extra derivation-specific - settings for this system. This is used for settings that can't be - captured by the derivation model itself and are too variable between - different versions of the same system to be hard-coded into nix. - - The hook is passed the derivation path and, if sandboxes are - enabled, the sandbox directory. It can then modify the sandbox and - send a series of commands to modify various settings to stdout. The - currently recognized commands are: - - - `extra-sandbox-paths` - Pass a list of files and directories to be included in the - sandbox for this build. One entry per line, terminated by an - empty line. Entries have the same format as `sandbox-paths`. - - - `post-build-hook` - Optional. The path to a program to execute after each build. - - This option is only settable in the global `nix.conf`, or on the - command line by trusted users. - - When using the nix-daemon, the daemon executes the hook as `root`. - If the nix-daemon is not involved, the hook runs as the user - executing the nix-build. - - - The hook executes after an evaluation-time build. - - - The hook does not execute on substituted paths. - - - The hook's output always goes to the user's terminal. - - - If the hook fails, the build succeeds but no further builds - execute. - - - The hook executes synchronously, and blocks other builds from - progressing while it runs. - - The program executes with no arguments. The program's environment - contains the following environment variables: - - - `DRV_PATH` - The derivation for the built paths. - - Example: - `/nix/store/5nihn1a7pa8b25l9zafqaqibznlvvp3f-bash-4.4-p23.drv` - - - `OUT_PATHS` - Output paths of the built derivation, separated by a space - character. - - Example: - `/nix/store/zf5lbh336mnzf1nlswdn11g4n2m8zh3g-bash-4.4-p23-dev - /nix/store/rjxwxwv1fpn9wa2x5ssk5phzwlcv4mna-bash-4.4-p23-doc - /nix/store/6bqvbzjkcp9695dq0dpl5y43nvy37pq1-bash-4.4-p23-info - /nix/store/r7fng3kk3vlpdlh2idnrbn37vh4imlj2-bash-4.4-p23-man - /nix/store/xfghy8ixrhz3kyy6p724iv3cxji088dx-bash-4.4-p23`. - - - `repeat` - How many times to repeat builds to check whether they are - deterministic. The default value is 0. If the value is non-zero, - every build is repeated the specified number of times. If the - contents of any of the runs differs from the previous ones and - `enforce-determinism` is true, the build is rejected and the - resulting store paths are not registered as “valid” in Nix’s - database. - - - `require-sigs` - If set to `true` (the default), any non-content-addressed path added - or copied to the Nix store (e.g. when substituting from a binary - cache) must have a valid signature, that is, be signed using one of - the keys listed in `trusted-public-keys` or `secret-key-files`. Set - to `false` to disable signature checking. - - - `restrict-eval` - If set to `true`, the Nix evaluator will not allow access to any - files outside of the Nix search path (as set via the `NIX_PATH` - environment variable or the `-I` option), or to URIs outside of - `allowed-uri`. The default is `false`. - - - `run-diff-hook` - If true, enable the execution of the `diff-hook` program. - - When using the Nix daemon, `run-diff-hook` must be set in the - `nix.conf` configuration file, and cannot be passed at the command - line. - - - `sandbox` - If set to `true`, builds will be performed in a *sandboxed - environment*, i.e., they’re isolated from the normal file system - hierarchy and will only see their dependencies in the Nix store, - the temporary build directory, private versions of `/proc`, - `/dev`, `/dev/shm` and `/dev/pts` (on Linux), and the paths - configured with the `sandbox-paths` option. This is useful to - prevent undeclared dependencies on files in directories such as - `/usr/bin`. In addition, on Linux, builds run in private PID, - mount, network, IPC and UTS namespaces to isolate them from other - processes in the system (except that fixed-output derivations do - not run in private network namespace to ensure they can access the - network). - - Currently, sandboxing only work on Linux and macOS. The use of a - sandbox requires that Nix is run as root (so you should use the - “build users” feature to perform the actual builds under different - users than root). - - If this option is set to `relaxed`, then fixed-output derivations - and derivations that have the `__noChroot` attribute set to `true` - do not run in sandboxes. - - The default is `true` on Linux and `false` on all other platforms. - - - `sandbox-dev-shm-size` - This option determines the maximum size of the `tmpfs` filesystem - mounted on `/dev/shm` in Linux sandboxes. For the format, see the - description of the `size` option of `tmpfs` in mount8. The default - is `50%`. - - - `sandbox-paths` - A list of paths bind-mounted into Nix sandbox environments. You can - use the syntax `target=source` to mount a path in a different - location in the sandbox; for instance, `/bin=/nix-bin` will mount - the path `/nix-bin` as `/bin` inside the sandbox. If *source* is - followed by `?`, then it is not an error if *source* does not exist; - for example, `/dev/nvidiactl?` specifies that `/dev/nvidiactl` will - only be mounted in the sandbox if it exists in the host filesystem. - - Depending on how Nix was built, the default value for this option - may be empty or provide `/bin/sh` as a bind-mount of `bash`. - - - `secret-key-files` - A whitespace-separated list of files containing secret (private) - keys. These are used to sign locally-built paths. They can be - generated using `nix-store --generate-binary-cache-key`. The - corresponding public key can be distributed to other users, who - can add it to `trusted-public-keys` in their `nix.conf`. - - - `show-trace` - Causes Nix to print out a stack trace in case of Nix expression - evaluation errors. - - - `substitute` - If set to `true` (default), Nix will use binary substitutes if - available. This option can be disabled to force building from - source. - - - `stalled-download-timeout` - The timeout (in seconds) for receiving data from servers during - download. Nix cancels idle downloads after this timeout's duration. - - - `substituters` - A list of URLs of substituters, separated by whitespace. The default - is `https://cache.nixos.org`. - - - `system` - This option specifies the canonical Nix system name of the current - installation, such as `i686-linux` or `x86_64-darwin`. Nix can only - build derivations whose `system` attribute equals the value - specified here. In general, it never makes sense to modify this - value from its default, since you can use it to ‘lie’ about the - platform you are building on (e.g., perform a Mac OS build on a - Linux machine; the result would obviously be wrong). It only makes - sense if the Nix binaries can run on multiple platforms, e.g., - ‘universal binaries’ that run on `x86_64-linux` and `i686-linux`. - - It defaults to the canonical Nix system name detected by `configure` - at build time. - - - `system-features` - A set of system “features” supported by this machine, e.g. `kvm`. - Derivations can express a dependency on such features through the - derivation attribute `requiredSystemFeatures`. For example, the - attribute - - requiredSystemFeatures = [ "kvm" ]; - - ensures that the derivation can only be built on a machine with the - `kvm` feature. - - This setting by default includes `kvm` if `/dev/kvm` is accessible, - and the pseudo-features `nixos-test`, `benchmark` and `big-parallel` - that are used in Nixpkgs to route builds to specific machines. - - - `tarball-ttl` - Default: `3600` seconds. - - The number of seconds a downloaded tarball is considered fresh. If - the cached tarball is stale, Nix will check whether it is still up - to date using the ETag header. Nix will download a new version if - the ETag header is unsupported, or the cached ETag doesn't match. - - Setting the TTL to `0` forces Nix to always check if the tarball is - up to date. - - Nix caches tarballs in `$XDG_CACHE_HOME/nix/tarballs`. - - Files fetched via `NIX_PATH`, `fetchGit`, `fetchMercurial`, - `fetchTarball`, and `fetchurl` respect this TTL. - - - `timeout` - This option defines the maximum number of seconds that a builder can - run. This is useful (for instance in an automated build system) to - catch builds that are stuck in an infinite loop but keep writing to - their standard output or standard error. It can be overridden using - the `--timeout` command line switch. - - The value `0` means that there is no timeout. This is also the - default. - - - `trace-function-calls` - Default: `false`. - - If set to `true`, the Nix evaluator will trace every function call. - Nix will print a log message at the "vomit" level for every function - entrance and function exit. - - function-trace entered undefined position at 1565795816999559622 - function-trace exited undefined position at 1565795816999581277 - function-trace entered /nix/store/.../example.nix:226:41 at 1565795253249935150 - function-trace exited /nix/store/.../example.nix:226:41 at 1565795253249941684 - - The `undefined position` means the function call is a builtin. - - Use the `contrib/stack-collapse.py` script distributed with the Nix - source code to convert the trace logs in to a format suitable for - `flamegraph.pl`. - - - `trusted-public-keys` - A whitespace-separated list of public keys. When paths are copied - from another Nix store (such as a binary cache), they must be - signed with one of these keys. For example: - `cache.nixos.org-1:6NCHdD59X431o0gWypbMrAURkbJ16ZPMQFGspcDShjY= - hydra.nixos.org-1:CNHJZBh9K4tP3EKF6FkkgeVYsS3ohTl+oS0Qa8bezVs=`. - - - `trusted-substituters` - A list of URLs of substituters, separated by whitespace. These are - not used by default, but can be enabled by users of the Nix daemon - by specifying `--option substituters urls` on the command - line. Unprivileged users are only allowed to pass a subset of the - URLs listed in `substituters` and `trusted-substituters`. - - - `trusted-users` - A list of names of users (separated by whitespace) that have - additional rights when connecting to the Nix daemon, such as the - ability to specify additional binary caches, or to import unsigned - NARs. You can also specify groups by prefixing them with `@`; for - instance, `@wheel` means all users in the `wheel` group. The default - is `root`. - - > **Warning** - > - > Adding a user to `trusted-users` is essentially equivalent to - > giving that user root access to the system. For example, the user - > can set `sandbox-paths` and thereby obtain read access to - > directories that are otherwise inacessible to them. - -## Deprecated Settings - - - `binary-caches` - *Deprecated:* `binary-caches` is now an alias to `substituters`. - - - `binary-cache-public-keys` - *Deprecated:* `binary-cache-public-keys` is now an alias `trusted-public-keys`. - - - `build-compress-log` - *Deprecated:* `build-compress-log` is now an alias to `compress-build-log`. - - - `build-cores` - *Deprecated:* `build-cores` is now an alias to `cores`. - - - `build-extra-chroot-dirs` - *Deprecated:* `build-extra-chroot-dirs` is now an alias to `extra-sandbox-paths`. - - - `build-extra-sandbox-paths` - *Deprecated:* `build-extra-sandbox-paths` is now an alias to `extra-sandbox-paths`. - - - `build-fallback` - *Deprecated:* `build-fallback` is now an alias to `fallback`. - - - `build-max-jobs` - *Deprecated:* `build-max-jobs` is now an alias to `max-jobs`. - - - `build-max-log-size` - *Deprecated:* `build-max-log-size` is now an alias to `max-build-log-size`. - - - `build-max-silent-time` - *Deprecated:* `build-max-silent-time` is now an alias to `max-silent-time`. - - - `build-repeat` - *Deprecated:* `build-repeat` is now an alias to `repeat`. - - - `build-timeout` - *Deprecated:* `build-timeout` is now an alias to `timeout`. - - - `build-use-chroot` - *Deprecated:* `build-use-chroot` is now an alias to `sandbox`. - - - `build-use-sandbox` - *Deprecated:* `build-use-sandbox` is now an alias to `sandbox`. - - - `build-use-substitutes` - *Deprecated:* `build-use-substitutes` is now an alias to `substitute`. - - - `gc-keep-derivations` - *Deprecated:* `gc-keep-derivations` is now an alias to `keep-derivations`. - - - `gc-keep-outputs` - *Deprecated:* `gc-keep-outputs` is now an alias to `keep-outputs`. - - - `env-keep-derivations` - *Deprecated:* `env-keep-derivations` is now an alias to `keep-env-derivations`. - - - `extra-binary-caches` - *Deprecated:* `extra-binary-caches` is now an alias to `extra-substituters`. - - - `trusted-binary-caches` - *Deprecated:* `trusted-binary-caches` is now an alias to `trusted-substituters`. diff --git a/src/libexpr/eval.hh b/src/libexpr/eval.hh index 5855b4ef2..1db3aa766 100644 --- a/src/libexpr/eval.hh +++ b/src/libexpr/eval.hh @@ -357,24 +357,57 @@ struct EvalSettings : Config Setting enableNativeCode{this, false, "allow-unsafe-native-code-during-evaluation", "Whether builtin functions that allow executing native code should be enabled."}; - Setting nixPath{this, getDefaultNixPath(), "nix-path", - "List of directories to be searched for <...> file references."}; + Setting nixPath{ + this, getDefaultNixPath(), "nix-path", + "List of directories to be searched for `<...>` file references."}; - Setting restrictEval{this, false, "restrict-eval", - "Whether to restrict file system access to paths in $NIX_PATH, " - "and network access to the URI prefixes listed in 'allowed-uris'."}; + Setting restrictEval{ + this, false, "restrict-eval", + R"( + If set to `true`, the Nix evaluator will not allow access to any + files outside of the Nix search path (as set via the `NIX_PATH` + environment variable or the `-I` option), or to URIs outside of + `allowed-uri`. The default is `false`. + )"}; Setting pureEval{this, false, "pure-eval", "Whether to restrict file system and network access to files specified by cryptographic hash."}; - Setting enableImportFromDerivation{this, true, "allow-import-from-derivation", - "Whether the evaluator allows importing the result of a derivation."}; + Setting enableImportFromDerivation{ + this, true, "allow-import-from-derivation", + R"( + By default, Nix allows you to `import` from a derivation, allowing + building at evaluation time. With this option set to false, Nix will + throw an error when evaluating an expression that uses this feature, + allowing users to ensure their evaluation will not require any + builds to take place. + )"}; Setting allowedUris{this, {}, "allowed-uris", - "Prefixes of URIs that builtin functions such as fetchurl and fetchGit are allowed to fetch."}; + R"( + A list of URI prefixes to which access is allowed in restricted + evaluation mode. For example, when set to + `https://github.com/NixOS`, builtin functions such as `fetchGit` are + allowed to access `https://github.com/NixOS/patchelf.git`. + )"}; Setting traceFunctionCalls{this, false, "trace-function-calls", - "Emit log messages for each function entry and exit at the 'vomit' log level (-vvvv)."}; + R"( + If set to `true`, the Nix evaluator will trace every function call. + Nix will print a log message at the "vomit" level for every function + entrance and function exit. + + function-trace entered undefined position at 1565795816999559622 + function-trace exited undefined position at 1565795816999581277 + function-trace entered /nix/store/.../example.nix:226:41 at 1565795253249935150 + function-trace exited /nix/store/.../example.nix:226:41 at 1565795253249941684 + + The `undefined position` means the function call is a builtin. + + Use the `contrib/stack-collapse.py` script distributed with the Nix + source code to convert the trace logs in to a format suitable for + `flamegraph.pl`. + )"}; Setting useEvalCache{this, true, "eval-cache", "Whether to use the flake evaluation cache."}; diff --git a/src/libstore/filetransfer.hh b/src/libstore/filetransfer.hh index 25ade0add..0d608c8d8 100644 --- a/src/libstore/filetransfer.hh +++ b/src/libstore/filetransfer.hh @@ -17,15 +17,30 @@ struct FileTransferSettings : Config Setting userAgentSuffix{this, "", "user-agent-suffix", "String appended to the user agent in HTTP requests."}; - Setting httpConnections{this, 25, "http-connections", - "Number of parallel HTTP connections.", + Setting httpConnections{ + this, 25, "http-connections", + R"( + The maximum number of parallel TCP connections used to fetch + files from binary caches and by other downloads. It defaults + to 25. 0 means no limit. + )", {"binary-caches-parallel-connections"}}; - Setting connectTimeout{this, 0, "connect-timeout", - "Timeout for connecting to servers during downloads. 0 means use curl's builtin default."}; + Setting connectTimeout{ + this, 0, "connect-timeout", + R"( + The timeout (in seconds) for establishing connections in the + binary cache substituter. It corresponds to `curl`’s + `--connect-timeout` option. + )"}; - Setting stalledDownloadTimeout{this, 300, "stalled-download-timeout", - "Timeout (in seconds) for receiving data from servers during download. Nix cancels idle downloads after this timeout's duration."}; + Setting stalledDownloadTimeout{ + this, 300, "stalled-download-timeout", + R"( + The timeout (in seconds) for receiving data from servers + during download. Nix cancels idle downloads after this + timeout's duration. + )"}; Setting tries{this, 5, "download-attempts", "How often Nix will attempt to download a file before giving up."}; diff --git a/src/libstore/globals.hh b/src/libstore/globals.hh index e3bb4cf84..ab9f42ce6 100644 --- a/src/libstore/globals.hh +++ b/src/libstore/globals.hh @@ -80,89 +80,209 @@ public: Setting keepGoing{this, false, "keep-going", "Whether to keep building derivations when another build fails."}; - Setting tryFallback{this, false, "fallback", - "Whether to fall back to building when substitution fails.", + Setting tryFallback{ + this, false, "fallback", + R"( + If set to `true`, Nix will fall back to building from source if a + binary substitute fails. This is equivalent to the `--fallback` + flag. The default is `false`. + )", {"build-fallback"}}; /* Whether to show build log output in real time. */ bool verboseBuild = true; Setting logLines{this, 10, "log-lines", - "If verbose-build is false, the number of lines of the tail of " + "If `verbose-build` is false, the number of lines of the tail of " "the log to show if a build fails."}; - MaxBuildJobsSetting maxBuildJobs{this, 1, "max-jobs", - "Maximum number of parallel build jobs. \"auto\" means use number of cores.", + MaxBuildJobsSetting maxBuildJobs{ + this, 1, "max-jobs", + R"( + This option defines the maximum number of jobs that Nix will try to + build in parallel. The default is `1`. The special value `auto` + causes Nix to use the number of CPUs in your system. `0` is useful + when using remote builders to prevent any local builds (except for + `preferLocalBuild` derivation attribute which executes locally + regardless). It can be overridden using the `--max-jobs` (`-j`) + command line switch. + )", {"build-max-jobs"}}; - Setting buildCores{this, getDefaultCores(), "cores", - "Number of CPU cores to utilize in parallel within a build, " - "i.e. by passing this number to Make via '-j'. 0 means that the " - "number of actual CPU cores on the local host ought to be " - "auto-detected.", {"build-cores"}}; + Setting buildCores{ + this, getDefaultCores(), "cores", + R"( + Sets the value of the `NIX_BUILD_CORES` environment variable in the + invocation of builders. Builders can use this variable at their + discretion to control the maximum amount of parallelism. For + instance, in Nixpkgs, if the derivation attribute + `enableParallelBuilding` is set to `true`, the builder passes the + `-jN` flag to GNU Make. It can be overridden using the `--cores` + command line switch and defaults to `1`. The value `0` means that + the builder should use all available CPU cores in the system. + )", + {"build-cores"}}; /* Read-only mode. Don't copy stuff to the store, don't change the database. */ bool readOnlyMode = false; - Setting thisSystem{this, SYSTEM, "system", - "The canonical Nix system name."}; + Setting thisSystem{ + this, SYSTEM, "system", + R"( + This option specifies the canonical Nix system name of the current + installation, such as `i686-linux` or `x86_64-darwin`. Nix can only + build derivations whose `system` attribute equals the value + specified here. In general, it never makes sense to modify this + value from its default, since you can use it to ‘lie’ about the + platform you are building on (e.g., perform a Mac OS build on a + Linux machine; the result would obviously be wrong). It only makes + sense if the Nix binaries can run on multiple platforms, e.g., + ‘universal binaries’ that run on `x86_64-linux` and `i686-linux`. - Setting maxSilentTime{this, 0, "max-silent-time", - "The maximum time in seconds that a builer can go without " - "producing any output on stdout/stderr before it is killed. " - "0 means infinity.", + It defaults to the canonical Nix system name detected by `configure` + at build time. + )"}; + + Setting maxSilentTime{ + this, 0, "max-silent-time", + R"( + This option defines the maximum number of seconds that a builder can + go without producing any data on standard output or standard error. + This is useful (for instance in an automated build system) to catch + builds that are stuck in an infinite loop, or to catch remote builds + that are hanging due to network problems. It can be overridden using + the `--max-silent-time` command line switch. + + The value `0` means that there is no timeout. This is also the + default. + )", {"build-max-silent-time"}}; - Setting buildTimeout{this, 0, "timeout", - "The maximum duration in seconds that a builder can run. " - "0 means infinity.", {"build-timeout"}}; + Setting buildTimeout{ + this, 0, "timeout", + R"( + This option defines the maximum number of seconds that a builder can + run. This is useful (for instance in an automated build system) to + catch builds that are stuck in an infinite loop but keep writing to + their standard output or standard error. It can be overridden using + the `--timeout` command line switch. + + The value `0` means that there is no timeout. This is also the + default. + )", + {"build-timeout"}}; PathSetting buildHook{this, true, nixLibexecDir + "/nix/build-remote", "build-hook", "The path of the helper program that executes builds to remote machines."}; - Setting builders{this, "@" + nixConfDir + "/machines", "builders", - "A semicolon-separated list of build machines, in the format of nix.machines."}; + Setting builders{ + this, "@" + nixConfDir + "/machines", "builders", + "A semicolon-separated list of build machines, in the format of `nix.machines`."}; - Setting buildersUseSubstitutes{this, false, "builders-use-substitutes", - "Whether build machines should use their own substitutes for obtaining " - "build dependencies if possible, rather than waiting for this host to " - "upload them."}; + Setting buildersUseSubstitutes{ + this, false, "builders-use-substitutes", + R"( + If set to `true`, Nix will instruct remote build machines to use + their own binary substitutes if available. In practical terms, this + means that remote hosts will fetch as many build dependencies as + possible from their own substitutes (e.g, from `cache.nixos.org`), + instead of waiting for this host to upload them all. This can + drastically reduce build times if the network connection between + this computer and the remote build host is slow. + )"}; Setting reservedSize{this, 8 * 1024 * 1024, "gc-reserved-space", "Amount of reserved disk space for the garbage collector."}; - Setting fsyncMetadata{this, true, "fsync-metadata", - "Whether SQLite should use fsync()."}; + Setting fsyncMetadata{ + this, true, "fsync-metadata", + R"( + If set to `true`, changes to the Nix store metadata (in + `/nix/var/nix/db`) are synchronously flushed to disk. This improves + robustness in case of system crashes, but reduces performance. The + default is `true`. + )"}; Setting useSQLiteWAL{this, !isWSL1(), "use-sqlite-wal", "Whether SQLite should use WAL mode."}; Setting syncBeforeRegistering{this, false, "sync-before-registering", - "Whether to call sync() before registering a path as valid."}; + "Whether to call `sync()` before registering a path as valid."}; - Setting useSubstitutes{this, true, "substitute", - "Whether to use substitutes.", + Setting useSubstitutes{ + this, true, "substitute", + R"( + If set to `true` (default), Nix will use binary substitutes if + available. This option can be disabled to force building from + source. + )", {"build-use-substitutes"}}; - Setting buildUsersGroup{this, "", "build-users-group", - "The Unix group that contains the build users."}; + Setting buildUsersGroup{ + this, "", "build-users-group", + R"( + This options specifies the Unix group containing the Nix build user + accounts. In multi-user Nix installations, builds should not be + performed by the Nix account since that would allow users to + arbitrarily modify the Nix store and database by supplying specially + crafted builders; and they cannot be performed by the calling user + since that would allow him/her to influence the build result. + + Therefore, if this option is non-empty and specifies a valid group, + builds will be performed under the user accounts that are a member + of the group specified here (as listed in `/etc/group`). Those user + accounts should not be used for any other purpose\! + + Nix will never run two builds under the same user account at the + same time. This is to prevent an obvious security hole: a malicious + user writing a Nix expression that modifies the build result of a + legitimate Nix expression being built by another user. Therefore it + is good to have as many Nix build user accounts as you can spare. + (Remember: uids are cheap.) + + The build users should have permission to create files in the Nix + store, but not delete them. Therefore, `/nix/store` should be owned + by the Nix account, its group should be the group specified here, + and its mode should be `1775`. + + If the build users group is empty, builds will be performed under + the uid of the Nix process (that is, the uid of the caller if + `NIX_REMOTE` is empty, the uid under which the Nix daemon runs if + `NIX_REMOTE` is `daemon`). Obviously, this should not be used in + multi-user settings with untrusted users. + )"}; Setting impersonateLinux26{this, false, "impersonate-linux-26", "Whether to impersonate a Linux 2.6 machine on newer kernels.", {"build-impersonate-linux-26"}}; - Setting keepLog{this, true, "keep-build-log", - "Whether to store build logs.", + Setting keepLog{ + this, true, "keep-build-log", + R"( + If set to `true` (the default), Nix will write the build log of a + derivation (i.e. the standard output and error of its builder) to + the directory `/nix/var/log/nix/drvs`. The build log can be + retrieved using the command `nix-store -l path`. + )", {"build-keep-log"}}; - Setting compressLog{this, true, "compress-build-log", - "Whether to compress logs.", + Setting compressLog{ + this, true, "compress-build-log", + R"( + If set to `true` (the default), build logs written to + `/nix/var/log/nix/drvs` will be compressed on the fly using bzip2. + Otherwise, they will not be compressed. + )", {"build-compress-log"}}; - Setting maxLogSize{this, 0, "max-build-log-size", - "Maximum number of bytes a builder can write to stdout/stderr " - "before being killed (0 means no limit).", + Setting maxLogSize{ + this, 0, "max-build-log-size", + R"( + This option defines the maximum number of bytes that a builder can + write to its stdout/stderr. If the builder exceeds this limit, it’s + killed. A value of `0` (the default) means that there is no limit. + )", {"build-max-log-size"}}; /* When buildRepeat > 0 and verboseBuild == true, whether to print @@ -177,53 +297,156 @@ public: "Whether to check if new GC roots can in fact be found by the " "garbage collector."}; - Setting gcKeepOutputs{this, false, "keep-outputs", - "Whether the garbage collector should keep outputs of live derivations.", + Setting gcKeepOutputs{ + this, false, "keep-outputs", + R"( + If `true`, the garbage collector will keep the outputs of + non-garbage derivations. If `false` (default), outputs will be + deleted unless they are GC roots themselves (or reachable from other + roots). + + In general, outputs must be registered as roots separately. However, + even if the output of a derivation is registered as a root, the + collector will still delete store paths that are used only at build + time (e.g., the C compiler, or source tarballs downloaded from the + network). To prevent it from doing so, set this option to `true`. + )", {"gc-keep-outputs"}}; - Setting gcKeepDerivations{this, true, "keep-derivations", - "Whether the garbage collector should keep derivers of live paths.", + Setting gcKeepDerivations{ + this, true, "keep-derivations", + R"( + If `true` (default), the garbage collector will keep the derivations + from which non-garbage store paths were built. If `false`, they will + be deleted unless explicitly registered as a root (or reachable from + other roots). + + Keeping derivation around is useful for querying and traceability + (e.g., it allows you to ask with what dependencies or options a + store path was built), so by default this option is on. Turn it off + to save a bit of disk space (or a lot if `keep-outputs` is also + turned on). + )", {"gc-keep-derivations"}}; - Setting autoOptimiseStore{this, false, "auto-optimise-store", - "Whether to automatically replace files with identical contents with hard links."}; + Setting autoOptimiseStore{ + this, false, "auto-optimise-store", + R"( + If set to `true`, Nix automatically detects files in the store + that have identical contents, and replaces them with hard links to + a single copy. This saves disk space. If set to `false` (the + default), you can still run `nix-store --optimise` to get rid of + duplicate files. + )"}; - Setting envKeepDerivations{this, false, "keep-env-derivations", - "Whether to add derivations as a dependency of user environments " - "(to prevent them from being GCed).", + Setting envKeepDerivations{ + this, false, "keep-env-derivations", + R"( + If `false` (default), derivations are not stored in Nix user + environments. That is, the derivations of any build-time-only + dependencies may be garbage-collected. + + If `true`, when you add a Nix derivation to a user environment, the + path of the derivation is stored in the user environment. Thus, the + derivation will not be garbage-collected until the user environment + generation is deleted (`nix-env --delete-generations`). To prevent + build-time-only dependencies from being collected, you should also + turn on `keep-outputs`. + + The difference between this option and `keep-derivations` is that + this one is “sticky”: it applies to any user environment created + while this option was enabled, while `keep-derivations` only applies + at the moment the garbage collector is run. + )", {"env-keep-derivations"}}; /* Whether to lock the Nix client and worker to the same CPU. */ bool lockCPU; - Setting sandboxMode{this, + Setting sandboxMode{ + this, #if __linux__ smEnabled #else smDisabled #endif , "sandbox", - "Whether to enable sandboxed builds. Can be \"true\", \"false\" or \"relaxed\".", + R"( + If set to `true`, builds will be performed in a *sandboxed + environment*, i.e., they’re isolated from the normal file system + hierarchy and will only see their dependencies in the Nix store, + the temporary build directory, private versions of `/proc`, + `/dev`, `/dev/shm` and `/dev/pts` (on Linux), and the paths + configured with the `sandbox-paths` option. This is useful to + prevent undeclared dependencies on files in directories such as + `/usr/bin`. In addition, on Linux, builds run in private PID, + mount, network, IPC and UTS namespaces to isolate them from other + processes in the system (except that fixed-output derivations do + not run in private network namespace to ensure they can access the + network). + + Currently, sandboxing only work on Linux and macOS. The use of a + sandbox requires that Nix is run as root (so you should use the + “build users” feature to perform the actual builds under different + users than root). + + If this option is set to `relaxed`, then fixed-output derivations + and derivations that have the `__noChroot` attribute set to `true` + do not run in sandboxes. + + The default is `true` on Linux and `false` on all other platforms. + )", {"build-use-chroot", "build-use-sandbox"}}; - Setting sandboxPaths{this, {}, "sandbox-paths", - "The paths to make available inside the build sandbox.", + Setting sandboxPaths{ + this, {}, "sandbox-paths", + R"( + A list of paths bind-mounted into Nix sandbox environments. You can + use the syntax `target=source` to mount a path in a different + location in the sandbox; for instance, `/bin=/nix-bin` will mount + the path `/nix-bin` as `/bin` inside the sandbox. If *source* is + followed by `?`, then it is not an error if *source* does not exist; + for example, `/dev/nvidiactl?` specifies that `/dev/nvidiactl` will + only be mounted in the sandbox if it exists in the host filesystem. + + Depending on how Nix was built, the default value for this option + may be empty or provide `/bin/sh` as a bind-mount of `bash`. + )", {"build-chroot-dirs", "build-sandbox-paths"}}; Setting sandboxFallback{this, true, "sandbox-fallback", "Whether to disable sandboxing when the kernel doesn't allow it."}; - Setting extraSandboxPaths{this, {}, "extra-sandbox-paths", - "Additional paths to make available inside the build sandbox.", + Setting extraSandboxPaths{ + this, {}, "extra-sandbox-paths", + R"( + A list of additional paths appended to `sandbox-paths`. Useful if + you want to extend its default value. + )", {"build-extra-chroot-dirs", "build-extra-sandbox-paths"}}; - Setting buildRepeat{this, 0, "repeat", - "The number of times to repeat a build in order to verify determinism.", + Setting buildRepeat{ + this, 0, "repeat", + R"( + How many times to repeat builds to check whether they are + deterministic. The default value is 0. If the value is non-zero, + every build is repeated the specified number of times. If the + contents of any of the runs differs from the previous ones and + `enforce-determinism` is true, the build is rejected and the + resulting store paths are not registered as “valid” in Nix’s + database. + )", {"build-repeat"}}; #if __linux__ - Setting sandboxShmSize{this, "50%", "sandbox-dev-shm-size", - "The size of /dev/shm in the build sandbox."}; + Setting sandboxShmSize{ + this, "50%", "sandbox-dev-shm-size", + R"( + This option determines the maximum size of the `tmpfs` filesystem + mounted on `/dev/shm` in Linux sandboxes. For the format, see the + description of the `size` option of `tmpfs` in mount8. The default + is `50%`. + )"}; Setting sandboxBuildDir{this, "/build", "sandbox-build-dir", "The build directory inside the sandbox."}; @@ -237,121 +460,411 @@ public: "Whether to log Darwin sandbox access violations to the system log."}; #endif - Setting runDiffHook{this, false, "run-diff-hook", - "Whether to run the program specified by the diff-hook setting " - "repeated builds produce a different result. Typically used to " - "plug in diffoscope."}; + Setting runDiffHook{ + this, false, "run-diff-hook", + R"( + If true, enable the execution of the `diff-hook` program. - PathSetting diffHook{this, true, "", "diff-hook", - "A program that prints out the differences between the two paths " - "specified on its command line."}; + When using the Nix daemon, `run-diff-hook` must be set in the + `nix.conf` configuration file, and cannot be passed at the command + line. + )"}; - Setting enforceDeterminism{this, true, "enforce-determinism", - "Whether to fail if repeated builds produce different output."}; + PathSetting diffHook{ + this, true, "", "diff-hook", + R"( + Absolute path to an executable capable of diffing build + results. The hook is executed if `run-diff-hook` is true, and the + output of a build is known to not be the same. This program is not + executed to determine if two results are the same. - Setting trustedPublicKeys{this, + The diff hook is executed by the same user and group who ran the + build. However, the diff hook does not have write access to the + store path just built. + + The diff hook program receives three parameters: + + 1. A path to the previous build's results + + 2. A path to the current build's results + + 3. The path to the build's derivation + + 4. The path to the build's scratch directory. This directory will + exist only if the build was run with `--keep-failed`. + + The stderr and stdout output from the diff hook will not be + displayed to the user. Instead, it will print to the nix-daemon's + log. + + When using the Nix daemon, `diff-hook` must be set in the `nix.conf` + configuration file, and cannot be passed at the command line. + )"}; + + Setting enforceDeterminism{ + this, true, "enforce-determinism", + "Whether to fail if repeated builds produce different output. See `repeat`."}; + + Setting trustedPublicKeys{ + this, {"cache.nixos.org-1:6NCHdD59X431o0gWypbMrAURkbJ16ZPMQFGspcDShjY="}, "trusted-public-keys", - "Trusted public keys for secure substitution.", + R"( + A whitespace-separated list of public keys. When paths are copied + from another Nix store (such as a binary cache), they must be + signed with one of these keys. For example: + `cache.nixos.org-1:6NCHdD59X431o0gWypbMrAURkbJ16ZPMQFGspcDShjY= + hydra.nixos.org-1:CNHJZBh9K4tP3EKF6FkkgeVYsS3ohTl+oS0Qa8bezVs=`. + )", {"binary-cache-public-keys"}}; - Setting secretKeyFiles{this, {}, "secret-key-files", - "Secret keys with which to sign local builds."}; + Setting secretKeyFiles{ + this, {}, "secret-key-files", + R"( + A whitespace-separated list of files containing secret (private) + keys. These are used to sign locally-built paths. They can be + generated using `nix-store --generate-binary-cache-key`. The + corresponding public key can be distributed to other users, who + can add it to `trusted-public-keys` in their `nix.conf`. + )"}; - Setting tarballTtl{this, 60 * 60, "tarball-ttl", - "How long downloaded files are considered up-to-date."}; + Setting tarballTtl{ + this, 60 * 60, "tarball-ttl", + R"( + The number of seconds a downloaded tarball is considered fresh. If + the cached tarball is stale, Nix will check whether it is still up + to date using the ETag header. Nix will download a new version if + the ETag header is unsupported, or the cached ETag doesn't match. - Setting requireSigs{this, true, "require-sigs", - "Whether to check that any non-content-addressed path added to the " - "Nix store has a valid signature (that is, one signed using a key " - "listed in 'trusted-public-keys'."}; + Setting the TTL to `0` forces Nix to always check if the tarball is + up to date. - Setting extraPlatforms{this, + Nix caches tarballs in `$XDG_CACHE_HOME/nix/tarballs`. + + Files fetched via `NIX_PATH`, `fetchGit`, `fetchMercurial`, + `fetchTarball`, and `fetchurl` respect this TTL. + )"}; + + Setting requireSigs{ + this, true, "require-sigs", + R"( + If set to `true` (the default), any non-content-addressed path added + or copied to the Nix store (e.g. when substituting from a binary + cache) must have a valid signature, that is, be signed using one of + the keys listed in `trusted-public-keys` or `secret-key-files`. Set + to `false` to disable signature checking. + )"}; + + Setting extraPlatforms{ + this, std::string{SYSTEM} == "x86_64-linux" && !isWSL1() ? StringSet{"i686-linux"} : StringSet{}, "extra-platforms", - "Additional platforms that can be built on the local system. " - "These may be supported natively (e.g. armv7 on some aarch64 CPUs " - "or using hacks like qemu-user."}; + R"( + Platforms other than the native one which this machine is capable of + building for. This can be useful for supporting additional + architectures on compatible machines: i686-linux can be built on + x86\_64-linux machines (and the default for this setting reflects + this); armv7 is backwards-compatible with armv6 and armv5tel; some + aarch64 machines can also natively run 32-bit ARM code; and + qemu-user may be used to support non-native platforms (though this + may be slow and buggy). Most values for this are not enabled by + default because build systems will often misdetect the target + platform and generate incompatible code, so you may wish to + cross-check the results of using this option against proper + natively-built versions of your derivations. + )"}; - Setting systemFeatures{this, getDefaultSystemFeatures(), + Setting systemFeatures{ + this, getDefaultSystemFeatures(), "system-features", - "Optional features that this system implements (like \"kvm\")."}; + R"( + A set of system “features” supported by this machine, e.g. `kvm`. + Derivations can express a dependency on such features through the + derivation attribute `requiredSystemFeatures`. For example, the + attribute - Setting substituters{this, + requiredSystemFeatures = [ "kvm" ]; + + ensures that the derivation can only be built on a machine with the + `kvm` feature. + + This setting by default includes `kvm` if `/dev/kvm` is accessible, + and the pseudo-features `nixos-test`, `benchmark` and `big-parallel` + that are used in Nixpkgs to route builds to specific machines. + )"}; + + Setting substituters{ + this, nixStore == "/nix/store" ? Strings{"https://cache.nixos.org/"} : Strings(), "substituters", - "The URIs of substituters (such as https://cache.nixos.org/).", + R"( + A list of URLs of substituters, separated by whitespace. The default + is `https://cache.nixos.org`. + )", {"binary-caches"}}; // FIXME: provide a way to add to option values. - Setting extraSubstituters{this, {}, "extra-substituters", - "Additional URIs of substituters.", + Setting extraSubstituters{ + this, {}, "extra-substituters", + R"( + Additional binary caches appended to those specified in + `substituters`. When used by unprivileged users, untrusted + substituters (i.e. those not listed in `trusted-substituters`) are + silently ignored. + )", {"extra-binary-caches"}}; - Setting trustedSubstituters{this, {}, "trusted-substituters", - "Disabled substituters that may be enabled via the substituters option by untrusted users.", + Setting trustedSubstituters{ + this, {}, "trusted-substituters", + R"( + A list of URLs of substituters, separated by whitespace. These are + not used by default, but can be enabled by users of the Nix daemon + by specifying `--option substituters urls` on the command + line. Unprivileged users are only allowed to pass a subset of the + URLs listed in `substituters` and `trusted-substituters`. + )", {"trusted-binary-caches"}}; - Setting trustedUsers{this, {"root"}, "trusted-users", - "Which users or groups are trusted to ask the daemon to do unsafe things."}; + Setting trustedUsers{ + this, {"root"}, "trusted-users", + R"( + A list of names of users (separated by whitespace) that have + additional rights when connecting to the Nix daemon, such as the + ability to specify additional binary caches, or to import unsigned + NARs. You can also specify groups by prefixing them with `@`; for + instance, `@wheel` means all users in the `wheel` group. The default + is `root`. - Setting ttlNegativeNarInfoCache{this, 3600, "narinfo-cache-negative-ttl", - "The TTL in seconds for negative lookups in the disk cache i.e binary cache lookups that " - "return an invalid path result"}; + > **Warning** + > + > Adding a user to `trusted-users` is essentially equivalent to + > giving that user root access to the system. For example, the user + > can set `sandbox-paths` and thereby obtain read access to + > directories that are otherwise inacessible to them. + )"}; - Setting ttlPositiveNarInfoCache{this, 30 * 24 * 3600, "narinfo-cache-positive-ttl", - "The TTL in seconds for positive lookups in the disk cache i.e binary cache lookups that " - "return a valid path result."}; + Setting ttlNegativeNarInfoCache{ + this, 3600, "narinfo-cache-negative-ttl", + R"( + The TTL in seconds for negative lookups. If a store path is queried + from a substituter but was not found, there will be a negative + lookup cached in the local disk cache database for the specified + duration. + )"}; + + Setting ttlPositiveNarInfoCache{ + this, 30 * 24 * 3600, "narinfo-cache-positive-ttl", + R"( + The TTL in seconds for positive lookups. If a store path is queried + from a substituter, the result of the query will be cached in the + local disk cache database including some of the NAR metadata. The + default TTL is a month, setting a shorter TTL for positive lookups + can be useful for binary caches that have frequent garbage + collection, in which case having a more frequent cache invalidation + would prevent trying to pull the path again and failing with a hash + mismatch if the build isn't reproducible. + )"}; /* ?Who we trust to use the daemon in safe ways */ - Setting allowedUsers{this, {"*"}, "allowed-users", - "Which users or groups are allowed to connect to the daemon."}; + Setting allowedUsers{ + this, {"*"}, "allowed-users", + R"( + A list of names of users (separated by whitespace) that are allowed + to connect to the Nix daemon. As with the `trusted-users` option, + you can specify groups by prefixing them with `@`. Also, you can + allow all users by specifying `*`. The default is `*`. + + Note that trusted users are always allowed to connect. + )"}; Setting printMissing{this, true, "print-missing", "Whether to print what paths need to be built or downloaded."}; - Setting preBuildHook{this, "", - "pre-build-hook", - "A program to run just before a build to set derivation-specific build settings."}; + Setting preBuildHook{ + this, "", "pre-build-hook", + R"( + If set, the path to a program that can set extra derivation-specific + settings for this system. This is used for settings that can't be + captured by the derivation model itself and are too variable between + different versions of the same system to be hard-coded into nix. - Setting postBuildHook{this, "", "post-build-hook", - "A program to run just after each successful build."}; + The hook is passed the derivation path and, if sandboxes are + enabled, the sandbox directory. It can then modify the sandbox and + send a series of commands to modify various settings to stdout. The + currently recognized commands are: - Setting netrcFile{this, fmt("%s/%s", nixConfDir, "netrc"), "netrc-file", - "Path to the netrc file used to obtain usernames/passwords for downloads."}; + - `extra-sandbox-paths` + Pass a list of files and directories to be included in the + sandbox for this build. One entry per line, terminated by an + empty line. Entries have the same format as `sandbox-paths`. + )"}; + + Setting postBuildHook{ + this, "", "post-build-hook", + R"( + Optional. The path to a program to execute after each build. + + This option is only settable in the global `nix.conf`, or on the + command line by trusted users. + + When using the nix-daemon, the daemon executes the hook as `root`. + If the nix-daemon is not involved, the hook runs as the user + executing the nix-build. + + - The hook executes after an evaluation-time build. + + - The hook does not execute on substituted paths. + + - The hook's output always goes to the user's terminal. + + - If the hook fails, the build succeeds but no further builds + execute. + + - The hook executes synchronously, and blocks other builds from + progressing while it runs. + + The program executes with no arguments. The program's environment + contains the following environment variables: + + - `DRV_PATH` + The derivation for the built paths. + + Example: + `/nix/store/5nihn1a7pa8b25l9zafqaqibznlvvp3f-bash-4.4-p23.drv` + + - `OUT_PATHS` + Output paths of the built derivation, separated by a space + character. + + Example: + `/nix/store/zf5lbh336mnzf1nlswdn11g4n2m8zh3g-bash-4.4-p23-dev + /nix/store/rjxwxwv1fpn9wa2x5ssk5phzwlcv4mna-bash-4.4-p23-doc + /nix/store/6bqvbzjkcp9695dq0dpl5y43nvy37pq1-bash-4.4-p23-info + /nix/store/r7fng3kk3vlpdlh2idnrbn37vh4imlj2-bash-4.4-p23-man + /nix/store/xfghy8ixrhz3kyy6p724iv3cxji088dx-bash-4.4-p23`. + )"}; + + Setting netrcFile{ + this, fmt("%s/%s", nixConfDir, "netrc"), "netrc-file", + R"( + If set to an absolute path to a `netrc` file, Nix will use the HTTP + authentication credentials in this file when trying to download from + a remote host through HTTP or HTTPS. Defaults to + `$NIX_CONF_DIR/netrc`. + + The `netrc` file consists of a list of accounts in the following + format: + + machine my-machine + login my-username + password my-password + + For the exact syntax, see [the `curl` + documentation](https://ec.haxx.se/usingcurl-netrc.html). + + > **Note** + > + > This must be an absolute path, and `~` is not resolved. For + > example, `~/.netrc` won't resolve to your home directory's + > `.netrc`. + )"}; /* Path to the SSL CA file used */ Path caFile; #if __linux__ - Setting filterSyscalls{this, true, "filter-syscalls", - "Whether to prevent certain dangerous system calls, such as " - "creation of setuid/setgid files or adding ACLs or extended " - "attributes. Only disable this if you're aware of the " - "security implications."}; + Setting filterSyscalls{ + this, true, "filter-syscalls", + R"( + Whether to prevent certain dangerous system calls, such as + creation of setuid/setgid files or adding ACLs or extended + attributes. Only disable this if you're aware of the + security implications. + )"}; - Setting allowNewPrivileges{this, false, "allow-new-privileges", - "Whether builders can acquire new privileges by calling programs with " - "setuid/setgid bits or with file capabilities."}; + Setting allowNewPrivileges{ + this, false, "allow-new-privileges", + R"( + (Linux-specific.) By default, builders on Linux cannot acquire new + privileges by calling setuid/setgid programs or programs that have + file capabilities. For example, programs such as `sudo` or `ping` + will fail. (Note that in sandbox builds, no such programs are + available unless you bind-mount them into the sandbox via the + `sandbox-paths` option.) You can allow the use of such programs by + enabling this option. This is impure and usually undesirable, but + may be useful in certain scenarios (e.g. to spin up containers or + set up userspace network interfaces in tests). + )"}; #endif - Setting hashedMirrors{this, {}, "hashed-mirrors", - "A list of servers used by builtins.fetchurl to fetch files by hash."}; + Setting hashedMirrors{ + this, {}, "hashed-mirrors", + R"( + A list of web servers used by `builtins.fetchurl` to obtain files by + hash. The default is `http://tarballs.nixos.org/`. Given a hash type + *ht* and a base-16 hash *h*, Nix will try to download the file from + *hashed-mirror*/*ht*/*h*. This allows files to be downloaded even if + they have disappeared from their original URI. For example, given + the default mirror `http://tarballs.nixos.org/`, when building the + derivation - Setting minFree{this, 0, "min-free", - "Automatically run the garbage collector when free disk space drops below the specified amount."}; + ```nix + builtins.fetchurl { + url = "https://example.org/foo-1.2.3.tar.xz"; + sha256 = "2c26b46b68ffc68ff99b453c1d30413413422d706483bfa0f98a5e886266e7ae"; + } + ``` - Setting maxFree{this, std::numeric_limits::max(), "max-free", - "Stop deleting garbage when free disk space is above the specified amount."}; + Nix will attempt to download this file from + `http://tarballs.nixos.org/sha256/2c26b46b68ffc68ff99b453c1d30413413422d706483bfa0f98a5e886266e7ae` + first. If it is not available there, if will try the original URI. + )"}; + + Setting minFree{ + this, 0, "min-free", + R"( + When free disk space in `/nix/store` drops below `min-free` during a + build, Nix performs a garbage-collection until `max-free` bytes are + available or there is no more garbage. A value of `0` (the default) + disables this feature. + )"}; + + Setting maxFree{ + this, std::numeric_limits::max(), "max-free", + R"( + When a garbage collection is triggered by the `min-free` option, it + stops as soon as `max-free` bytes are available. The default is + infinity (i.e. delete all garbage). + )"}; Setting minFreeCheckInterval{this, 5, "min-free-check-interval", "Number of seconds between checking free disk space."}; - Setting pluginFiles{this, {}, "plugin-files", - "Plugins to dynamically load at nix initialization time."}; + Setting pluginFiles{ + this, {}, "plugin-files", + R"( + A list of plugin files to be loaded by Nix. Each of these files will + be dlopened by Nix, allowing them to affect execution through static + initialization. In particular, these plugins may construct static + instances of RegisterPrimOp to add new primops or constants to the + expression language, RegisterStoreImplementation to add new store + implementations, RegisterCommand to add new subcommands to the `nix` + command, and RegisterSetting to add new nix config settings. See the + constructors for those types for more details. + + Since these files are loaded into the same address space as Nix + itself, they must be DSOs compatible with the instance of Nix + running at the time (i.e. compiled against the same headers, not + linked to any incompatible libraries). They should not be linked to + any Nix libs directly, as those will be available already at load + time. + + If an entry in the list is a directory, all files in the directory + are loaded as plugins (non-recursively). + )"}; Setting githubAccessToken{this, "", "github-access-token", - "GitHub access token to get access to GitHub data through the GitHub API for github:<..> flakes."}; + "GitHub access token to get access to GitHub data through the GitHub API for `github:<..>` flakes."}; Setting experimentalFeatures{this, {}, "experimental-features", "Experimental Nix features to enable."}; diff --git a/src/libutil/config.cc b/src/libutil/config.cc index 8fc700a2b..ff1a71fba 100644 --- a/src/libutil/config.cc +++ b/src/libutil/config.cc @@ -149,11 +149,48 @@ void Config::convertToArgs(Args & args, const std::string & category) s.second.setting->convertToArg(args, category); } +static std::string stripIndentation(std::string_view s) +{ + size_t minIndent = 10000; + size_t curIndent = 0; + bool atStartOfLine = true; + + for (auto & c : s) { + if (atStartOfLine && c == ' ') + curIndent++; + else if (c == '\n') { + if (atStartOfLine) + minIndent = std::max(minIndent, curIndent); + curIndent = 0; + atStartOfLine = true; + } else { + if (atStartOfLine) { + minIndent = std::min(minIndent, curIndent); + atStartOfLine = false; + } + } + } + + std::string res; + + size_t pos = 0; + while (pos < s.size()) { + auto eol = s.find('\n', pos); + if (eol == s.npos) eol = s.size(); + if (eol - pos > minIndent) + res.append(s.substr(pos + minIndent, eol - pos - minIndent)); + res.push_back('\n'); + pos = eol + 1; + } + + return res; +} + AbstractSetting::AbstractSetting( const std::string & name, const std::string & description, const std::set & aliases) - : name(name), description(description), aliases(aliases) + : name(name), description(stripIndentation(description)), aliases(aliases) { } diff --git a/src/libutil/logging.hh b/src/libutil/logging.hh index 09619aac6..63cb2b268 100644 --- a/src/libutil/logging.hh +++ b/src/libutil/logging.hh @@ -37,10 +37,12 @@ typedef uint64_t ActivityId; struct LoggerSettings : Config { - Setting showTrace{this, - false, - "show-trace", - "Whether to show a stack trace on evaluation errors."}; + Setting showTrace{ + this, false, "show-trace", + R"( + Where Nix should print out a stack trace in case of Nix + expression evaluation errors. + )"}; }; extern LoggerSettings loggerSettings; From c3e20d8c28ac777fff17c56f57ac8aa28c9272b4 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Wed, 19 Aug 2020 18:30:17 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 37/57] Consistency --- doc/manual/generate-options.jq | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/doc/manual/generate-options.jq b/doc/manual/generate-options.jq index 3ee51ddea..e0cf496d6 100644 --- a/doc/manual/generate-options.jq +++ b/doc/manual/generate-options.jq @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ . | to_entries | sort_by(.key) | map( - " - `" + .key + "` \n" + " - `" + .key + "` \n\n" + (.value.description | split("\n") | map(" " + . + "\n") | join("")) + "\n\n" + " **Default**: " + ( if .value.value == "" or .value.value == [] From b4ef3d7078133d6c31c77da45a991bfe2210623a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Wed, 19 Aug 2020 21:00:57 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 38/57] Revert "Add a separate manual job" This reverts commit 5e3ad1dde0a03b3bd094e1d4ecc0f4fc7abdaa5c. Manual generation now depends on the 'nix' command. --- flake.nix | 24 +++++------------------- 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 19 deletions(-) diff --git a/flake.nix b/flake.nix index 8f5a3055c..f97197cce 100644 --- a/flake.nix +++ b/flake.nix @@ -144,6 +144,11 @@ installFlags = "sysconfdir=$(out)/etc"; + postInstall = '' + mkdir -p $doc/nix-support + echo "doc manual $doc/share/doc/nix/manual" >> $doc/nix-support/hydra-build-products + ''; + doInstallCheck = true; installCheckFlags = "sysconfdir=$(out)/etc"; @@ -210,25 +215,6 @@ # Perl bindings for various platforms. perlBindings = nixpkgs.lib.genAttrs systems (system: nixpkgsFor.${system}.nix.perl-bindings); - # Separate build for just the manual. - manual = - with nixpkgsFor.x86_64-linux; - stdenv.mkDerivation { - name = "nix-manual-${version}"; - src = self; - buildInputs = [ mdbook ]; - configurePhase = ":"; - buildPhase = ":"; - installPhase = - '' - touch Makefile.config - docdir=$out/share/doc/nix - make docdir=$docdir doc_generate=yes $docdir/manual/index.html - mkdir -p $out/nix-support - echo "doc manual $docdir/manual" >> $out/nix-support/hydra-build-products - ''; - }; - # Binary tarball for various platforms, containing a Nix store # with the closure of 'nix' package, and the second half of # the installation script. From acb99f03f963d00670e5a286c76a92d022ef44b0 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Thu, 20 Aug 2020 11:02:16 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 39/57] Config: Use nlohmann/json --- precompiled-headers.h | 2 ++ src/libstore/globals.cc | 6 ++++-- src/libutil/config.cc | 41 +++++++++++++++++++++-------------------- src/libutil/config.hh | 14 +++++++------- src/nix/show-config.cc | 6 +++--- 5 files changed, 37 insertions(+), 32 deletions(-) diff --git a/precompiled-headers.h b/precompiled-headers.h index 079aa496e..f52f1cab8 100644 --- a/precompiled-headers.h +++ b/precompiled-headers.h @@ -56,3 +56,5 @@ #include #include #include + +#include diff --git a/src/libstore/globals.cc b/src/libstore/globals.cc index 683fa5196..4a5971c3f 100644 --- a/src/libstore/globals.cc +++ b/src/libstore/globals.cc @@ -9,6 +9,8 @@ #include #include +#include + namespace nix { @@ -160,9 +162,9 @@ template<> std::string BaseSetting::to_string() const else abort(); } -template<> void BaseSetting::toJSON(JSONPlaceholder & out) +template<> nlohmann::json BaseSetting::toJSON() { - AbstractSetting::toJSON(out); + return AbstractSetting::toJSON(); } template<> void BaseSetting::convertToArg(Args & args, const std::string & category) diff --git a/src/libutil/config.cc b/src/libutil/config.cc index ff1a71fba..4c5b80d49 100644 --- a/src/libutil/config.cc +++ b/src/libutil/config.cc @@ -1,6 +1,7 @@ #include "config.hh" #include "args.hh" -#include "json.hh" + +#include namespace nix { @@ -131,15 +132,17 @@ void Config::resetOverriden() s.second.setting->overriden = false; } -void Config::toJSON(JSONObject & out) +nlohmann::json Config::toJSON() { + auto res = nlohmann::json::object(); for (auto & s : _settings) if (!s.second.isAlias) { - JSONObject out2(out.object(s.first)); - out2.attr("description", s.second.setting->description); - JSONPlaceholder out3(out2.placeholder("value")); - s.second.setting->toJSON(out3); + auto obj = nlohmann::json::object(); + obj.emplace("description", s.second.setting->description); + obj.emplace("value", s.second.setting->toJSON()); + res.emplace(s.first, obj); } + return res; } void Config::convertToArgs(Args & args, const std::string & category) @@ -199,9 +202,9 @@ void AbstractSetting::setDefault(const std::string & str) if (!overriden) set(str); } -void AbstractSetting::toJSON(JSONPlaceholder & out) +nlohmann::json AbstractSetting::toJSON() { - out.write(to_string()); + return to_string(); } void AbstractSetting::convertToArg(Args & args, const std::string & category) @@ -209,9 +212,9 @@ void AbstractSetting::convertToArg(Args & args, const std::string & category) } template -void BaseSetting::toJSON(JSONPlaceholder & out) +nlohmann::json BaseSetting::toJSON() { - out.write(value); + return value; } template @@ -292,11 +295,9 @@ template<> std::string BaseSetting::to_string() const return concatStringsSep(" ", value); } -template<> void BaseSetting::toJSON(JSONPlaceholder & out) +template<> nlohmann::json BaseSetting::toJSON() { - JSONList list(out.list()); - for (auto & s : value) - list.elem(s); + return value; } template<> void BaseSetting::set(const std::string & str) @@ -309,11 +310,9 @@ template<> std::string BaseSetting::to_string() const return concatStringsSep(" ", value); } -template<> void BaseSetting::toJSON(JSONPlaceholder & out) +template<> nlohmann::json BaseSetting::toJSON() { - JSONList list(out.list()); - for (auto & s : value) - list.elem(s); + return value; } template class BaseSetting; @@ -360,10 +359,12 @@ void GlobalConfig::resetOverriden() config->resetOverriden(); } -void GlobalConfig::toJSON(JSONObject & out) +nlohmann::json GlobalConfig::toJSON() { + auto res = nlohmann::json::object(); for (auto & config : *configRegistrations) - config->toJSON(out); + res.update(config->toJSON()); + return res; } void GlobalConfig::convertToArgs(Args & args, const std::string & category) diff --git a/src/libutil/config.hh b/src/libutil/config.hh index 66073546e..2b4265806 100644 --- a/src/libutil/config.hh +++ b/src/libutil/config.hh @@ -4,6 +4,8 @@ #include "types.hh" +#include + #pragma once namespace nix { @@ -42,8 +44,6 @@ namespace nix { class Args; class AbstractSetting; -class JSONPlaceholder; -class JSONObject; class AbstractConfig { @@ -97,7 +97,7 @@ public: * Outputs all settings to JSON * - out: JSONObject to write the configuration to */ - virtual void toJSON(JSONObject & out) = 0; + virtual nlohmann::json toJSON() = 0; /** * Converts settings to `Args` to be used on the command line interface @@ -167,7 +167,7 @@ public: void resetOverriden() override; - void toJSON(JSONObject & out) override; + nlohmann::json toJSON() override; void convertToArgs(Args & args, const std::string & category) override; }; @@ -206,7 +206,7 @@ protected: virtual std::string to_string() const = 0; - virtual void toJSON(JSONPlaceholder & out); + virtual nlohmann::json toJSON(); virtual void convertToArg(Args & args, const std::string & category); @@ -251,7 +251,7 @@ public: void convertToArg(Args & args, const std::string & category) override; - void toJSON(JSONPlaceholder & out) override; + nlohmann::json toJSON() override; }; template @@ -319,7 +319,7 @@ struct GlobalConfig : public AbstractConfig void resetOverriden() override; - void toJSON(JSONObject & out) override; + nlohmann::json toJSON() override; void convertToArgs(Args & args, const std::string & category) override; diff --git a/src/nix/show-config.cc b/src/nix/show-config.cc index 4fd8886de..3ed1ad2aa 100644 --- a/src/nix/show-config.cc +++ b/src/nix/show-config.cc @@ -2,7 +2,8 @@ #include "common-args.hh" #include "shared.hh" #include "store-api.hh" -#include "json.hh" + +#include using namespace nix; @@ -19,8 +20,7 @@ struct CmdShowConfig : Command, MixJSON { if (json) { // FIXME: use appropriate JSON types (bool, ints, etc). - JSONObject jsonObj(std::cout); - globalConfig.toJSON(jsonObj); + logger->stdout("%s", globalConfig.toJSON().dump()); } else { std::map settings; globalConfig.getSettings(settings); From 3c4f8c91759ac5ed6a211f8e72b9d4e8438db833 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Thu, 20 Aug 2020 11:13:17 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 40/57] List deprecated option aliases in the docs --- doc/manual/generate-options.jq | 9 +++++++-- src/libutil/config.cc | 1 + 2 files changed, 8 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/manual/generate-options.jq b/doc/manual/generate-options.jq index e0cf496d6..ccf62e8ed 100644 --- a/doc/manual/generate-options.jq +++ b/doc/manual/generate-options.jq @@ -1,11 +1,16 @@ . | to_entries | sort_by(.key) | map( " - `" + .key + "` \n\n" + (.value.description | split("\n") | map(" " + . + "\n") | join("")) + "\n\n" - + " **Default**: " + ( + + " **Default:** " + ( if .value.value == "" or .value.value == [] then "*empty*" elif (.value.value | type) == "array" then "`" + (.value.value | join(" ")) + "`" - else "`" + (.value.value | tostring) + "`" end) + else "`" + (.value.value | tostring) + "`" + end) + "\n\n" + + (if (.value.aliases | length) > 0 + then " **Deprecated alias:** " + (.value.aliases | map("`" + . + "`") | join(", ")) + "\n\n" + else "" + end) ) | join("") diff --git a/src/libutil/config.cc b/src/libutil/config.cc index 4c5b80d49..e5297c653 100644 --- a/src/libutil/config.cc +++ b/src/libutil/config.cc @@ -139,6 +139,7 @@ nlohmann::json Config::toJSON() if (!s.second.isAlias) { auto obj = nlohmann::json::object(); obj.emplace("description", s.second.setting->description); + obj.emplace("aliases", s.second.setting->aliases); obj.emplace("value", s.second.setting->toJSON()); res.emplace(s.first, obj); } From dc2f278c95ce4a73749cbb8221a568201535d46a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Thu, 20 Aug 2020 12:21:46 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 41/57] Allow 'nix' subcommands to provide docs in Markdown format --- doc/manual/generate-manpage.jq | 6 ++++- src/libutil/args.cc | 4 +++- src/libutil/args.hh | 4 ++++ src/libutil/config.cc | 37 ------------------------------ src/libutil/util.cc | 41 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ src/libutil/util.hh | 6 +++++ src/nix/add-to-store.cc | 8 +++++++ src/nix/repl.cc | 2 +- 8 files changed, 68 insertions(+), 40 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/manual/generate-manpage.jq b/doc/manual/generate-manpage.jq index d3cf1c601..dd632f162 100644 --- a/doc/manual/generate-manpage.jq +++ b/doc/manual/generate-manpage.jq @@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ def show_flags: ; def show_synopsis: - "`" + .command + "` " + (.args | map("*" + .label + "*" + (if has("arity") then "" else "..." end)) | join(" ")) + "\n\n" + "`" + .command + "` [*flags*...] " + (.args | map("*" + .label + "*" + (if has("arity") then "" else "..." end)) | join(" ")) + "\n\n" ; def show_command: @@ -21,6 +21,10 @@ def show_command: + "`" + .command + "` - " + .def.description + "\n\n" + .section + " Synopsis\n\n" + ({"command": .command, "args": .def.args} | show_synopsis) + + (if .def | has("doc") + then .section + " Description\n\n" + .def.doc + "\n\n" + else "" + end) + (if (.def.flags | length) > 0 then .section + " Flags\n\n" + (.def | show_flags) diff --git a/src/libutil/args.cc b/src/libutil/args.cc index ad83a2414..147602415 100644 --- a/src/libutil/args.cc +++ b/src/libutil/args.cc @@ -359,12 +359,14 @@ nlohmann::json Command::toJSON() for (auto & example : examples()) { auto ex = nlohmann::json::object(); ex["description"] = example.description; - ex["command"] = example.command; + ex["command"] = chomp(stripIndentation(example.command)); exs.push_back(std::move(ex)); } auto res = Args::toJSON(); res["examples"] = std::move(exs); + auto s = doc(); + if (s != "") res.emplace("doc", stripIndentation(s)); return res; } diff --git a/src/libutil/args.hh b/src/libutil/args.hh index c56044f1d..3c1f87f7e 100644 --- a/src/libutil/args.hh +++ b/src/libutil/args.hh @@ -22,6 +22,7 @@ public: virtual void printHelp(const string & programName, std::ostream & out); + /* Return a short one-line description of the command. */ virtual std::string description() { return ""; } protected: @@ -221,6 +222,9 @@ struct Command : virtual Args virtual void prepare() { }; virtual void run() = 0; + /* Return documentation about this command, in Markdown format. */ + virtual std::string doc() { return ""; } + struct Example { std::string description; diff --git a/src/libutil/config.cc b/src/libutil/config.cc index e5297c653..3cf720bce 100644 --- a/src/libutil/config.cc +++ b/src/libutil/config.cc @@ -153,43 +153,6 @@ void Config::convertToArgs(Args & args, const std::string & category) s.second.setting->convertToArg(args, category); } -static std::string stripIndentation(std::string_view s) -{ - size_t minIndent = 10000; - size_t curIndent = 0; - bool atStartOfLine = true; - - for (auto & c : s) { - if (atStartOfLine && c == ' ') - curIndent++; - else if (c == '\n') { - if (atStartOfLine) - minIndent = std::max(minIndent, curIndent); - curIndent = 0; - atStartOfLine = true; - } else { - if (atStartOfLine) { - minIndent = std::min(minIndent, curIndent); - atStartOfLine = false; - } - } - } - - std::string res; - - size_t pos = 0; - while (pos < s.size()) { - auto eol = s.find('\n', pos); - if (eol == s.npos) eol = s.size(); - if (eol - pos > minIndent) - res.append(s.substr(pos + minIndent, eol - pos - minIndent)); - res.push_back('\n'); - pos = eol + 1; - } - - return res; -} - AbstractSetting::AbstractSetting( const std::string & name, const std::string & description, diff --git a/src/libutil/util.cc b/src/libutil/util.cc index c0b9698ee..9e7142e01 100644 --- a/src/libutil/util.cc +++ b/src/libutil/util.cc @@ -1464,6 +1464,47 @@ string base64Decode(std::string_view s) } +std::string stripIndentation(std::string_view s) +{ + size_t minIndent = 10000; + size_t curIndent = 0; + bool atStartOfLine = true; + + for (auto & c : s) { + if (atStartOfLine && c == ' ') + curIndent++; + else if (c == '\n') { + if (atStartOfLine) + minIndent = std::max(minIndent, curIndent); + curIndent = 0; + atStartOfLine = true; + } else { + if (atStartOfLine) { + minIndent = std::min(minIndent, curIndent); + atStartOfLine = false; + } + } + } + + std::string res; + + size_t pos = 0; + while (pos < s.size()) { + auto eol = s.find('\n', pos); + if (eol == s.npos) eol = s.size(); + if (eol - pos > minIndent) + res.append(s.substr(pos + minIndent, eol - pos - minIndent)); + res.push_back('\n'); + pos = eol + 1; + } + + return res; +} + + +////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// + + static Sync> windowSize{{0, 0}}; diff --git a/src/libutil/util.hh b/src/libutil/util.hh index 3a20679a8..082e26375 100644 --- a/src/libutil/util.hh +++ b/src/libutil/util.hh @@ -464,6 +464,12 @@ string base64Encode(std::string_view s); string base64Decode(std::string_view s); +/* Remove common leading whitespace from the lines in the string + 's'. For example, if every line is indented by at least 3 spaces, + then we remove 3 spaces from the start of every line. */ +std::string stripIndentation(std::string_view s); + + /* Get a value for the specified key from an associate container. */ template std::optional get(const T & map, const typename T::key_type & key) diff --git a/src/nix/add-to-store.cc b/src/nix/add-to-store.cc index 713155840..023ffa4ed 100644 --- a/src/nix/add-to-store.cc +++ b/src/nix/add-to-store.cc @@ -36,6 +36,14 @@ struct CmdAddToStore : MixDryRun, StoreCommand return "add a path to the Nix store"; } + std::string doc() override + { + return R"( + Copy the file or directory *path* to the Nix store, and + print the resulting store path on standard output. + )"; + } + Examples examples() override { return { diff --git a/src/nix/repl.cc b/src/nix/repl.cc index a74655200..0cbe9643c 100644 --- a/src/nix/repl.cc +++ b/src/nix/repl.cc @@ -782,7 +782,7 @@ struct CmdRepl : StoreCommand, MixEvalArgs return { Example{ "Display all special commands within the REPL:", - "nix repl\n nix-repl> :?" + "nix repl\nnix-repl> :?" } }; } From 25ecfffdc322d8df5834e6add1c5e28fcf2818f9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Thu, 20 Aug 2020 12:34:04 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 42/57] Remove PrimOp constructor --- src/libexpr/eval.cc | 4 ++-- src/libexpr/eval.hh | 2 -- 2 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/libexpr/eval.cc b/src/libexpr/eval.cc index 0123070d1..9a155c055 100644 --- a/src/libexpr/eval.cc +++ b/src/libexpr/eval.cc @@ -509,7 +509,7 @@ Value * EvalState::addPrimOp(const string & name, if (arity == 0) { auto vPrimOp = allocValue(); vPrimOp->type = tPrimOp; - vPrimOp->primOp = new PrimOp(primOp, 1, sym); + vPrimOp->primOp = new PrimOp { .fun = primOp, .arity = 1, .name = sym }; Value v; mkApp(v, *vPrimOp, *vPrimOp); return addConstant(name, v); @@ -517,7 +517,7 @@ Value * EvalState::addPrimOp(const string & name, Value * v = allocValue(); v->type = tPrimOp; - v->primOp = new PrimOp(primOp, arity, sym); + v->primOp = new PrimOp { .fun = primOp, .arity = arity, .name = sym }; staticBaseEnv.vars[symbols.create(name)] = baseEnvDispl; baseEnv.values[baseEnvDispl++] = v; baseEnv.values[0]->attrs->push_back(Attr(sym, v)); diff --git a/src/libexpr/eval.hh b/src/libexpr/eval.hh index 1db3aa766..38e025a3d 100644 --- a/src/libexpr/eval.hh +++ b/src/libexpr/eval.hh @@ -30,8 +30,6 @@ struct PrimOp PrimOpFun fun; size_t arity; Symbol name; - PrimOp(PrimOpFun fun, size_t arity, Symbol name) - : fun(fun), arity(arity), name(name) { } }; From 88d5c9ec584f000c9a66ad34631fe4eb5c194172 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Mon, 24 Aug 2020 10:37:10 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 43/57] Fix tests --- src/libutil/tests/config.cc | 31 +++++++++---------------------- 1 file changed, 9 insertions(+), 22 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/libutil/tests/config.cc b/src/libutil/tests/config.cc index 74c59fd31..9465fba3f 100644 --- a/src/libutil/tests/config.cc +++ b/src/libutil/tests/config.cc @@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ namespace nix { const auto iter = settings.find("name-of-the-setting"); ASSERT_NE(iter, settings.end()); ASSERT_EQ(iter->second.value, ""); - ASSERT_EQ(iter->second.description, "description"); + ASSERT_EQ(iter->second.description, "description\n"); } TEST(Config, getDefinedOverridenSettingNotSet) { @@ -59,7 +59,7 @@ namespace nix { const auto iter = settings.find("name-of-the-setting"); ASSERT_NE(iter, settings.end()); ASSERT_EQ(iter->second.value, "value"); - ASSERT_EQ(iter->second.description, "description"); + ASSERT_EQ(iter->second.description, "description\n"); } TEST(Config, getDefinedSettingSet2) { @@ -73,7 +73,7 @@ namespace nix { const auto e = settings.find("name-of-the-setting"); ASSERT_NE(e, settings.end()); ASSERT_EQ(e->second.value, "value"); - ASSERT_EQ(e->second.description, "description"); + ASSERT_EQ(e->second.description, "description\n"); } TEST(Config, addSetting) { @@ -152,29 +152,16 @@ namespace nix { } TEST(Config, toJSONOnEmptyConfig) { - std::stringstream out; - { // Scoped to force the destructor of JSONObject to write the final `}` - JSONObject obj(out); - Config config; - config.toJSON(obj); - } - - ASSERT_EQ(out.str(), "{}"); + ASSERT_EQ(Config().toJSON().dump(), "{}"); } TEST(Config, toJSONOnNonEmptyConfig) { - std::stringstream out; - { // Scoped to force the destructor of JSONObject to write the final `}` - JSONObject obj(out); + Config config; + std::map settings; + Setting setting{&config, "", "name-of-the-setting", "description"}; + setting.assign("value"); - Config config; - std::map settings; - Setting setting{&config, "", "name-of-the-setting", "description"}; - setting.assign("value"); - - config.toJSON(obj); - } - ASSERT_EQ(out.str(), R"#({"name-of-the-setting":{"description":"description","value":"value"}})#"); + ASSERT_EQ(config.toJSON().dump(), R"#({"name-of-the-setting":{"aliases":[],"description":"description\n","value":"value"}})#"); } TEST(Config, setSettingAlias) { From 33b1679d75f2a3a5dac053431a41897ebf96a3f3 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Mon, 24 Aug 2020 13:11:56 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 44/57] Allow primops to have Markdown documentation --- doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md | 3 -- src/libexpr/eval.cc | 28 +++++++++++++++++ src/libexpr/eval.hh | 4 +++ src/libexpr/primops.cc | 43 ++++++++++++++++++++------ src/libexpr/primops.hh | 8 +++-- src/nix/repl.cc | 21 ++++++++++++- 6 files changed, 92 insertions(+), 15 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md index 7c4a62f54..c258fb3b3 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md @@ -9,9 +9,6 @@ scope. Instead, you can access them through the `builtins` built-in value, which is a set that contains all built-in functions and values. For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. - - `abort` *s*; `builtins.abort` *s* - Abort Nix expression evaluation, print error message *s*. - - `builtins.add` *e1* *e2* Return the sum of the numbers *e1* and *e2*. diff --git a/src/libexpr/eval.cc b/src/libexpr/eval.cc index 9a155c055..6ac8bbc9f 100644 --- a/src/libexpr/eval.cc +++ b/src/libexpr/eval.cc @@ -525,6 +525,34 @@ Value * EvalState::addPrimOp(const string & name, } +Value * EvalState::addPrimOp(PrimOp && primOp) +{ + /* Hack to make constants lazy: turn them into a application of + the primop to a dummy value. */ + if (primOp.arity == 0) { + primOp.arity = 1; + auto vPrimOp = allocValue(); + vPrimOp->type = tPrimOp; + vPrimOp->primOp = new PrimOp(std::move(primOp)); + Value v; + mkApp(v, *vPrimOp, *vPrimOp); + return addConstant(primOp.name, v); + } + + Symbol envName = primOp.name; + if (hasPrefix(primOp.name, "__")) + primOp.name = symbols.create(std::string(primOp.name, 2)); + + Value * v = allocValue(); + v->type = tPrimOp; + v->primOp = new PrimOp(std::move(primOp)); + staticBaseEnv.vars[envName] = baseEnvDispl; + baseEnv.values[baseEnvDispl++] = v; + baseEnv.values[0]->attrs->push_back(Attr(primOp.name, v)); + return v; +} + + Value & EvalState::getBuiltin(const string & name) { return *baseEnv.values[0]->attrs->find(symbols.create(name))->value; diff --git a/src/libexpr/eval.hh b/src/libexpr/eval.hh index 38e025a3d..db8eb3e16 100644 --- a/src/libexpr/eval.hh +++ b/src/libexpr/eval.hh @@ -30,6 +30,8 @@ struct PrimOp PrimOpFun fun; size_t arity; Symbol name; + std::vector args; + const char * doc = nullptr; }; @@ -240,6 +242,8 @@ private: Value * addPrimOp(const string & name, size_t arity, PrimOpFun primOp); + Value * addPrimOp(PrimOp && primOp); + public: Value & getBuiltin(const string & name); diff --git a/src/libexpr/primops.cc b/src/libexpr/primops.cc index 4e35dedb0..902a37e6b 100644 --- a/src/libexpr/primops.cc +++ b/src/libexpr/primops.cc @@ -445,12 +445,19 @@ static void prim_genericClosure(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * ar } -static void prim_abort(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) -{ - PathSet context; - string s = state.coerceToString(pos, *args[0], context); - throw Abort("evaluation aborted with the following error message: '%1%'", s); -} +static RegisterPrimOp primop_abort({ + .name = "abort", + .args = {"s"}, + .doc = R"( + Abort Nix expression evaluation and print the error message *s*. + )", + .fun = [](EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) + { + PathSet context; + string s = state.coerceToString(pos, *args[0], context); + throw Abort("evaluation aborted with the following error message: '%1%'", s); + } +}); static void prim_throw(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) @@ -2238,7 +2245,20 @@ RegisterPrimOp::RegisterPrimOp(std::string name, size_t arity, PrimOpFun fun, std::optional requiredFeature) { if (!primOps) primOps = new PrimOps; - primOps->push_back({name, arity, fun, requiredFeature}); + primOps->push_back({ + .name = name, + .args = {}, + .arity = arity, + .requiredFeature = std::move(requiredFeature), + .fun = fun + }); +} + + +RegisterPrimOp::RegisterPrimOp(Info && info) +{ + if (!primOps) primOps = new PrimOps; + primOps->push_back(std::move(info)); } @@ -2314,7 +2334,6 @@ void EvalState::createBaseEnv() addPrimOp("__isBool", 1, prim_isBool); addPrimOp("__isPath", 1, prim_isPath); addPrimOp("__genericClosure", 1, prim_genericClosure); - addPrimOp("abort", 1, prim_abort); addPrimOp("__addErrorContext", 2, prim_addErrorContext); addPrimOp("__tryEval", 1, prim_tryEval); addPrimOp("__getEnv", 1, prim_getEnv); @@ -2431,7 +2450,13 @@ void EvalState::createBaseEnv() if (RegisterPrimOp::primOps) for (auto & primOp : *RegisterPrimOp::primOps) if (!primOp.requiredFeature || settings.isExperimentalFeatureEnabled(*primOp.requiredFeature)) - addPrimOp(primOp.name, primOp.arity, primOp.primOp); + addPrimOp({ + .fun = primOp.fun, + .arity = std::max(primOp.args.size(), primOp.arity), + .name = symbols.create(primOp.name), + .args = std::move(primOp.args), + .doc = primOp.doc, + }); /* Now that we've added all primops, sort the `builtins' set, because attribute lookups expect it to be sorted. */ diff --git a/src/libexpr/primops.hh b/src/libexpr/primops.hh index 75c460ecf..ed5e2ea58 100644 --- a/src/libexpr/primops.hh +++ b/src/libexpr/primops.hh @@ -10,9 +10,11 @@ struct RegisterPrimOp struct Info { std::string name; - size_t arity; - PrimOpFun primOp; + std::vector args; + size_t arity = 0; + const char * doc; std::optional requiredFeature; + PrimOpFun fun; }; typedef std::vector PrimOps; @@ -26,6 +28,8 @@ struct RegisterPrimOp size_t arity, PrimOpFun fun, std::optional requiredFeature = {}); + + RegisterPrimOp(Info && info); }; /* These primops are disabled without enableNativeCode, but plugins diff --git a/src/nix/repl.cc b/src/nix/repl.cc index 0cbe9643c..d370ca767 100644 --- a/src/nix/repl.cc +++ b/src/nix/repl.cc @@ -416,7 +416,8 @@ bool NixRepl::processLine(string line) << " :r Reload all files\n" << " :s Build dependencies of derivation, then start nix-shell\n" << " :t Describe result of evaluation\n" - << " :u Build derivation, then start nix-shell\n"; + << " :u Build derivation, then start nix-shell\n" + << " :doc Show documentation of a builtin function\n"; } else if (command == ":a" || command == ":add") { @@ -509,6 +510,24 @@ bool NixRepl::processLine(string line) else if (command == ":q" || command == ":quit") return false; + else if (command == ":doc") { + Value v; + evalString(arg, v); + if (v.type == tPrimOp || v.type == tPrimOpApp) { + auto v2 = &v; + while (v2->type == tPrimOpApp) + v2 = v2->primOpApp.left; + if (v2->primOp->doc) { + // FIXME: format markdown. + if (!v2->primOp->args.empty()) + std::cout << fmt("Arguments: %s\n\n", concatStringsSep(" ", v2->primOp->args)); + std::cout << trim(stripIndentation(v2->primOp->doc)) << "\n"; + } else + throw Error("builtin function '%s' does not have documentation", v2->primOp->name); + } else + throw Error("value does not have documentation"); + } + else if (command != "") throw Error("unknown command '%1%'", command); From a990f063ff7afc6028ab430170ad23e1285d1a6d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Mon, 24 Aug 2020 14:31:10 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 45/57] Move primop docs inline This makes them available to 'nix repl'. --- doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md | 1 + .../src/expressions/builtin-constants.md | 20 + doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md | 878 +----------- src/libexpr/primops.cc | 1178 +++++++++++++++-- src/libexpr/primops/fetchTree.cc | 175 ++- 5 files changed, 1274 insertions(+), 978 deletions(-) create mode 100644 doc/manual/src/expressions/builtin-constants.md diff --git a/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md b/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md index 4089caf8a..8281f683f 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/SUMMARY.md @@ -38,6 +38,7 @@ - [Operators](expressions/language-operators.md) - [Derivations](expressions/derivations.md) - [Advanced Attributes](expressions/advanced-attributes.md) + - [Built-in Constants](expressions/builtin-constants.md) - [Built-in Functions](expressions/builtins.md) - [Advanced Topics](advanced-topics/advanced-topics.md) - [Remote Builds](advanced-topics/distributed-builds.md) diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtin-constants.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtin-constants.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..3345a715b --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtin-constants.md @@ -0,0 +1,20 @@ +# Built-in Constants + +Here are the constants built into the Nix expression evaluator: + + - `builtins` + The set `builtins` contains all the built-in functions and values. + You can use `builtins` to test for the availability of features in + the Nix installation, e.g., + + ```nix + if builtins ? getEnv then builtins.getEnv "PATH" else "" + ``` + + This allows a Nix expression to fall back gracefully on older Nix + installations that don’t have the desired built-in function. + + - `builtins.currentSystem` + The built-in value `currentSystem` evaluates to the Nix platform + identifier for the Nix installation on which the expression is being + evaluated, such as `"i686-linux"` or `"x86_64-darwin"`. diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md index c258fb3b3..ae3bb150c 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md @@ -1,374 +1,20 @@ # Built-in Functions -This section lists the functions and constants built into the Nix -expression evaluator. (The built-in function `derivation` is discussed -above.) Some built-ins, such as `derivation`, are always in scope of -every Nix expression; you can just access them right away. But to -prevent polluting the namespace too much, most built-ins are not in +This section lists the functions built into the Nix expression +evaluator. (The built-in function `derivation` is discussed above.) +Some built-ins, such as `derivation`, are always in scope of every Nix +expression; you can just access them right away. But to prevent +polluting the namespace too much, most built-ins are not in scope. Instead, you can access them through the `builtins` built-in value, which is a set that contains all built-in functions and values. For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. - - `builtins.add` *e1* *e2* - Return the sum of the numbers *e1* and *e2*. - - - `builtins.all` *pred* *list* - Return `true` if the function *pred* returns `true` for all elements - of *list*, and `false` otherwise. - - - `builtins.any` *pred* *list* - Return `true` if the function *pred* returns `true` for at least one - element of *list*, and `false` otherwise. - - - `builtins.attrNames` *set* - Return the names of the attributes in the set *set* in an - alphabetically sorted list. For instance, `builtins.attrNames { y - = 1; x = "foo"; }` evaluates to `[ "x" "y" ]`. - - - `builtins.attrValues` *set* - Return the values of the attributes in the set *set* in the order - corresponding to the sorted attribute names. - - - `baseNameOf` *s* - Return the *base name* of the string *s*, that is, everything - following the final slash in the string. This is similar to the GNU - `basename` command. - - - `builtins.bitAnd` *e1* *e2* - Return the bitwise AND of the integers *e1* and *e2*. - - - `builtins.bitOr` *e1* *e2* - Return the bitwise OR of the integers *e1* and *e2*. - - - `builtins.bitXor` *e1* *e2* - Return the bitwise XOR of the integers *e1* and *e2*. - - - `builtins` - The set `builtins` contains all the built-in functions and values. - You can use `builtins` to test for the availability of features in - the Nix installation, e.g., - - ```nix - if builtins ? getEnv then builtins.getEnv "PATH" else "" - ``` - - This allows a Nix expression to fall back gracefully on older Nix - installations that don’t have the desired built-in function. - - - `builtins.compareVersions` *s1* *s2* - Compare two strings representing versions and return `-1` if - version *s1* is older than version *s2*, `0` if they are the same, - and `1` if *s1* is newer than *s2*. The version comparison - algorithm is the same as the one used by [`nix-env - -u`](../command-ref/nix-env.md#operation---upgrade). - - - `builtins.concatLists` *lists* - Concatenate a list of lists into a single list. - - - `builtins.concatStringsSep` *separator* *list* - Concatenate a list of strings with a separator between each - element, e.g. `concatStringsSep "/" ["usr" "local" "bin"] == - "usr/local/bin"` - - - `builtins.currentSystem` - The built-in value `currentSystem` evaluates to the Nix platform - identifier for the Nix installation on which the expression is being - evaluated, such as `"i686-linux"` or `"x86_64-darwin"`. - - - `builtins.deepSeq` *e1* *e2* - This is like `seq e1 e2`, except that *e1* is evaluated *deeply*: - if it’s a list or set, its elements or attributes are also - evaluated recursively. - - `derivation` *attrs*; `builtins.derivation` *attrs* + `derivation` is described in [its own section](derivations.md). - - `dirOf` *s*; `builtins.dirOf` *s* - Return the directory part of the string *s*, that is, everything - before the final slash in the string. This is similar to the GNU - `dirname` command. - - - `builtins.div` *e1* *e2* - Return the quotient of the numbers *e1* and *e2*. - - - `builtins.elem` *x* *xs* - Return `true` if a value equal to *x* occurs in the list *xs*, and - `false` otherwise. - - - `builtins.elemAt` *xs* *n* - Return element *n* from the list *xs*. Elements are counted starting - from 0. A fatal error occurs if the index is out of bounds. - - - `builtins.fetchurl` *url* - Download the specified URL and return the path of the downloaded - file. This function is not available if [restricted evaluation - mode](../command-ref/conf-file.md) is enabled. - - - `fetchTarball` *url*; `builtins.fetchTarball` *url* - Download the specified URL, unpack it and return the path of the - unpacked tree. The file must be a tape archive (`.tar`) compressed - with `gzip`, `bzip2` or `xz`. The top-level path component of the - files in the tarball is removed, so it is best if the tarball - contains a single directory at top level. The typical use of the - function is to obtain external Nix expression dependencies, such as - a particular version of Nixpkgs, e.g. - - ```nix - with import (fetchTarball https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-14.12.tar.gz) {}; - - stdenv.mkDerivation { … } - ``` - - The fetched tarball is cached for a certain amount of time (1 hour - by default) in `~/.cache/nix/tarballs/`. You can change the cache - timeout either on the command line with `--option tarball-ttl number - of seconds` or in the Nix configuration file with this option: ` - number of seconds to cache `. - - Note that when obtaining the hash with ` nix-prefetch-url ` the - option `--unpack` is required. - - This function can also verify the contents against a hash. In that - case, the function takes a set instead of a URL. The set requires - the attribute `url` and the attribute `sha256`, e.g. - - ```nix - with import (fetchTarball { - url = "https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-14.12.tar.gz"; - sha256 = "1jppksrfvbk5ypiqdz4cddxdl8z6zyzdb2srq8fcffr327ld5jj2"; - }) {}; - - stdenv.mkDerivation { … } - ``` - - This function is not available if [restricted evaluation - mode](../command-ref/conf-file.md) is enabled. - - - `builtins.fetchGit` *args* - Fetch a path from git. *args* can be a URL, in which case the HEAD - of the repo at that URL is fetched. Otherwise, it can be an - attribute with the following attributes (all except `url` optional): - - - url - The URL of the repo. - - - name - The name of the directory the repo should be exported to in the - store. Defaults to the basename of the URL. - - - rev - The git revision to fetch. Defaults to the tip of `ref`. - - - ref - The git ref to look for the requested revision under. This is - often a branch or tag name. Defaults to `HEAD`. - - By default, the `ref` value is prefixed with `refs/heads/`. As - of Nix 2.3.0 Nix will not prefix `refs/heads/` if `ref` starts - with `refs/`. - - - submodules - A Boolean parameter that specifies whether submodules should be - checked out. Defaults to `false`. - - Here are some examples of how to use `fetchGit`. - - - To fetch a private repository over SSH: - - ```nix - builtins.fetchGit { - url = "git@github.com:my-secret/repository.git"; - ref = "master"; - rev = "adab8b916a45068c044658c4158d81878f9ed1c3"; - } - ``` - - - To fetch an arbitrary reference: - - ```nix - builtins.fetchGit { - url = "https://github.com/NixOS/nix.git"; - ref = "refs/heads/0.5-release"; - } - ``` - - - If the revision you're looking for is in the default branch of - the git repository you don't strictly need to specify the branch - name in the `ref` attribute. - - However, if the revision you're looking for is in a future - branch for the non-default branch you will need to specify the - the `ref` attribute as well. - - ```nix - builtins.fetchGit { - url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; - rev = "841fcbd04755c7a2865c51c1e2d3b045976b7452"; - ref = "1.11-maintenance"; - } - ``` - - > **Note** - > - > It is nice to always specify the branch which a revision - > belongs to. Without the branch being specified, the fetcher - > might fail if the default branch changes. Additionally, it can - > be confusing to try a commit from a non-default branch and see - > the fetch fail. If the branch is specified the fault is much - > more obvious. - - - If the revision you're looking for is in the default branch of - the git repository you may omit the `ref` attribute. - - ```nix - builtins.fetchGit { - url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; - rev = "841fcbd04755c7a2865c51c1e2d3b045976b7452"; - } - ``` - - - To fetch a specific tag: - - ```nix - builtins.fetchGit { - url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; - ref = "refs/tags/1.9"; - } - ``` - - - To fetch the latest version of a remote branch: - - ```nix - builtins.fetchGit { - url = "ssh://git@github.com/nixos/nix.git"; - ref = "master"; - } - ``` - - > **Note** - > - > Nix will refetch the branch in accordance with - > the option `tarball-ttl`. - - > **Note** - > - > This behavior is disabled in *Pure evaluation mode*. - - - `builtins.filter` *f* *xs* - Return a list consisting of the elements of *xs* for which the - function *f* returns `true`. - - - `builtins.filterSource` *e1* *e2* - This function allows you to copy sources into the Nix store while - filtering certain files. For instance, suppose that you want to use - the directory `source-dir` as an input to a Nix expression, e.g. - - ```nix - stdenv.mkDerivation { - ... - src = ./source-dir; - } - ``` - - However, if `source-dir` is a Subversion working copy, then all - those annoying `.svn` subdirectories will also be copied to the - store. Worse, the contents of those directories may change a lot, - causing lots of spurious rebuilds. With `filterSource` you can - filter out the `.svn` directories: - - ```nix - src = builtins.filterSource - (path: type: type != "directory" || baseNameOf path != ".svn") - ./source-dir; - ``` - - Thus, the first argument *e1* must be a predicate function that is - called for each regular file, directory or symlink in the source - tree *e2*. If the function returns `true`, the file is copied to the - Nix store, otherwise it is omitted. The function is called with two - arguments. The first is the full path of the file. The second is a - string that identifies the type of the file, which is either - `"regular"`, `"directory"`, `"symlink"` or `"unknown"` (for other - kinds of files such as device nodes or fifos — but note that those - cannot be copied to the Nix store, so if the predicate returns - `true` for them, the copy will fail). If you exclude a directory, - the entire corresponding subtree of *e2* will be excluded. - - - `builtins.foldl’` *op* *nul* *list* - Reduce a list by applying a binary operator, from left to right, - e.g. `foldl’ op nul [x0 x1 x2 ...] = op (op (op nul x0) x1) x2) - ...`. The operator is applied strictly, i.e., its arguments are - evaluated first. For example, `foldl’ (x: y: x + y) 0 [1 2 3]` - evaluates to 6. - - - `builtins.functionArgs` *f* - Return a set containing the names of the formal arguments expected - by the function *f*. The value of each attribute is a Boolean - denoting whether the corresponding argument has a default value. For - instance, `functionArgs ({ x, y ? 123}: ...) = { x = false; y = - true; }`. - - "Formal argument" here refers to the attributes pattern-matched by - the function. Plain lambdas are not included, e.g. `functionArgs (x: - ...) = { }`. - - - `builtins.fromJSON` *e* - Convert a JSON string to a Nix value. For example, - - ```nix - builtins.fromJSON ''{"x": [1, 2, 3], "y": null}'' - ``` - - returns the value `{ x = [ 1 2 3 ]; y = null; }`. - - - `builtins.genList` *generator* *length* - Generate list of size *length*, with each element *i* equal to the - value returned by *generator* `i`. For example, - - ```nix - builtins.genList (x: x * x) 5 - ``` - - returns the list `[ 0 1 4 9 16 ]`. - - - `builtins.getAttr` *s* *set* - `getAttr` returns the attribute named *s* from *set*. Evaluation - aborts if the attribute doesn’t exist. This is a dynamic version of - the `.` operator, since *s* is an expression rather than an - identifier. - - - `builtins.getEnv` *s* - `getEnv` returns the value of the environment variable *s*, or an - empty string if the variable doesn’t exist. This function should be - used with care, as it can introduce all sorts of nasty environment - dependencies in your Nix expression. - - `getEnv` is used in Nix Packages to locate the file - `~/.nixpkgs/config.nix`, which contains user-local settings for Nix - Packages. (That is, it does a `getEnv "HOME"` to locate the user’s - home directory.) - - - `builtins.hasAttr` *s* *set* - `hasAttr` returns `true` if *set* has an attribute named *s*, and - `false` otherwise. This is a dynamic version of the `?` operator, - since *s* is an expression rather than an identifier. - - - `builtins.hashString` *type* *s* - Return a base-16 representation of the cryptographic hash of string - *s*. The hash algorithm specified by *type* must be one of `"md5"`, - `"sha1"`, `"sha256"` or `"sha512"`. - - - `builtins.hashFile` *type* *p* - Return a base-16 representation of the cryptographic hash of the - file at path *p*. The hash algorithm specified by *type* must be one - of `"md5"`, `"sha1"`, `"sha256"` or `"sha512"`. - - - `builtins.head` *list* - Return the first element of a list; abort evaluation if the argument - isn’t a list or is an empty list. You can test whether a list is - empty by comparing it with `[]`. - - `import` *path*; `builtins.import` *path* + Load, parse and return the Nix expression in the file *path*. If *path* is a directory, the file ` default.nix ` in that directory is loaded. Evaluation aborts if the file doesn’t exist or contains @@ -376,535 +22,47 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. system: you can put any Nix expression (such as a set or a function) in a separate file, and use it from Nix expressions in other files. - + > **Note** - > + > > Unlike some languages, `import` is a regular function in Nix. > Paths using the angle bracket syntax (e.g., `import` *\*) > are [normal path values](language-values.md). - + A Nix expression loaded by `import` must not contain any *free variables* (identifiers that are not defined in the Nix expression itself and are not built-in). Therefore, it cannot refer to variables that are in scope at the call site. For instance, if you have a calling expression - + ```nix rec { x = 123; y = import ./foo.nix; } ``` - + then the following `foo.nix` will give an error: - + ```nix x + 456 ``` - + since `x` is not in scope in `foo.nix`. If you want `x` to be available in `foo.nix`, you should pass it as a function argument: - + ```nix rec { x = 123; y = import ./foo.nix x; } ``` - + and - + ```nix x: x + 456 ``` - + (The function argument doesn’t have to be called `x` in `foo.nix`; any name would work.) - - - `builtins.intersectAttrs` *e1* *e2* - Return a set consisting of the attributes in the set *e2* that also - exist in the set *e1*. - - - `builtins.isAttrs` *e* - Return `true` if *e* evaluates to a set, and `false` otherwise. - - - `builtins.isList` *e* - Return `true` if *e* evaluates to a list, and `false` otherwise. - - - `builtins.isFunction` *e* - Return `true` if *e* evaluates to a function, and `false` otherwise. - - - `builtins.isString` *e* - Return `true` if *e* evaluates to a string, and `false` otherwise. - - - `builtins.isInt` *e* - Return `true` if *e* evaluates to an int, and `false` otherwise. - - - `builtins.isFloat` *e* - Return `true` if *e* evaluates to a float, and `false` otherwise. - - - `builtins.isBool` *e* - Return `true` if *e* evaluates to a bool, and `false` otherwise. - - - `builtins.isPath` *e* - Return `true` if *e* evaluates to a path, and `false` otherwise. - - - `isNull` *e*; `builtins.isNull` *e* - Return `true` if *e* evaluates to `null`, and `false` otherwise. - - > **Warning** - > - > This function is *deprecated*; just write `e == null` instead. - - - `builtins.length` *e* - Return the length of the list *e*. - - - `builtins.lessThan` *e1* *e2* - Return `true` if the number *e1* is less than the number *e2*, and - `false` otherwise. Evaluation aborts if either *e1* or *e2* does not - evaluate to a number. - - - `builtins.listToAttrs` *e* - Construct a set from a list specifying the names and values of each - attribute. Each element of the list should be a set consisting of a - string-valued attribute `name` specifying the name of the attribute, - and an attribute `value` specifying its value. Example: - - ```nix - builtins.listToAttrs - [ { name = "foo"; value = 123; } - { name = "bar"; value = 456; } - ] - ``` - - evaluates to - - ```nix - { foo = 123; bar = 456; } - ``` - - - `map` *f* *list*; `builtins.map` *f* *list* - Apply the function *f* to each element in the list *list*. For - example, - - ```nix - map (x: "foo" + x) [ "bar" "bla" "abc" ] - ``` - - evaluates to `[ "foobar" "foobla" "fooabc" ]`. - - - `builtins.match` *regex* *str* - Returns a list if the [extended POSIX regular - expression](http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/V1_chap09.html#tag_09_04) - *regex* matches *str* precisely, otherwise returns `null`. Each item - in the list is a regex group. - - ```nix - builtins.match "ab" "abc" - ``` - - Evaluates to `null`. - - ```nix - builtins.match "abc" "abc" - ``` - - Evaluates to `[ ]`. - - ```nix - builtins.match "a(b)(c)" "abc" - ``` - - Evaluates to `[ "b" "c" ]`. - - ```nix - builtins.match "[[:space:]]+([[:upper:]]+)[[:space:]]+" " FOO " - ``` - - Evaluates to `[ "foo" ]`. - - - `builtins.mul` *e1* *e2* - Return the product of the numbers *e1* and *e2*. - - - `builtins.parseDrvName` *s* - Split the string *s* into a package name and version. The package - name is everything up to but not including the first dash followed - by a digit, and the version is everything following that dash. The - result is returned in a set `{ name, version }`. Thus, - `builtins.parseDrvName "nix-0.12pre12876"` returns `{ name = - "nix"; version = "0.12pre12876"; }`. - - - `builtins.path` *args* - An enrichment of the built-in path type, based on the attributes - present in *args*. All are optional except `path`: - - - path - The underlying path. - - - name - The name of the path when added to the store. This can used to - reference paths that have nix-illegal characters in their names, - like `@`. - - - filter - A function of the type expected by `builtins.filterSource`, - with the same semantics. - - - recursive - When `false`, when `path` is added to the store it is with a - flat hash, rather than a hash of the NAR serialization of the - file. Thus, `path` must refer to a regular file, not a - directory. This allows similar behavior to `fetchurl`. Defaults - to `true`. - - - sha256 - When provided, this is the expected hash of the file at the - path. Evaluation will fail if the hash is incorrect, and - providing a hash allows `builtins.path` to be used even when the - `pure-eval` nix config option is on. - - - `builtins.pathExists` *path* - Return `true` if the path *path* exists at evaluation time, and - `false` otherwise. - - - `builtins.placeholder` *output* - Return a placeholder string for the specified *output* that will be - substituted by the corresponding output path at build time. Typical - outputs would be `"out"`, `"bin"` or `"dev"`. - - - `builtins.readDir` *path* - Return the contents of the directory *path* as a set mapping - directory entries to the corresponding file type. For instance, if - directory `A` contains a regular file `B` and another directory - `C`, then `builtins.readDir ./A` will return the set - - ```nix - { B = "regular"; C = "directory"; } - ``` - - The possible values for the file type are `"regular"`, - `"directory"`, `"symlink"` and `"unknown"`. - - - `builtins.readFile` *path* - Return the contents of the file *path* as a string. - - - `removeAttrs` *set* *list*; `builtins.removeAttrs` *set* *list* - Remove the attributes listed in *list* from *set*. The attributes - don’t have to exist in *set*. For instance, - - ```nix - removeAttrs { x = 1; y = 2; z = 3; } [ "a" "x" "z" ] - ``` - - evaluates to `{ y = 2; }`. - - - `builtins.replaceStrings` *from* *to* *s* - Given string *s*, replace every occurrence of the strings in *from* - with the corresponding string in *to*. For example, - - ```nix - builtins.replaceStrings ["oo" "a"] ["a" "i"] "foobar" - ``` - - evaluates to `"fabir"`. - - - `builtins.seq` *e1* *e2* - Evaluate *e1*, then evaluate and return *e2*. This ensures that a - computation is strict in the value of *e1*. - - - `builtins.sort` *comparator* *list* - Return *list* in sorted order. It repeatedly calls the function - *comparator* with two elements. The comparator should return `true` - if the first element is less than the second, and `false` otherwise. - For example, - - ```nix - builtins.sort builtins.lessThan [ 483 249 526 147 42 77 ] - ``` - - produces the list `[ 42 77 147 249 483 526 ]`. - - This is a stable sort: it preserves the relative order of elements - deemed equal by the comparator. - - - `builtins.split` *regex* *str* - Returns a list composed of non matched strings interleaved with the - lists of the [extended POSIX regular - expression](http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/V1_chap09.html#tag_09_04) - *regex* matches of *str*. Each item in the lists of matched - sequences is a regex group. - - ```nix - builtins.split "(a)b" "abc" - ``` - - Evaluates to `[ "" [ "a" ] "c" ]`. - - ```nix - builtins.split "([ac])" "abc" - ``` - - Evaluates to `[ "" [ "a" ] "b" [ "c" ] "" ]`. - - ```nix - builtins.split "(a)|(c)" "abc" - ``` - - Evaluates to `[ "" [ "a" null ] "b" [ null "c" ] "" ]`. - - ```nix - builtins.split "([[:upper:]]+)" " FOO " - ``` - - Evaluates to `[ " " [ "FOO" ] " " ]`. - - - `builtins.splitVersion` *s* - Split a string representing a version into its components, by the - same version splitting logic underlying the version comparison in - [`nix-env -u`](../command-ref/nix-env.md#operation---upgrade). - - - `builtins.stringLength` *e* - Return the length of the string *e*. If *e* is not a string, - evaluation is aborted. - - - `builtins.sub` *e1* *e2* - Return the difference between the numbers *e1* and *e2*. - - - `builtins.substring` *start* *len* *s* - Return the substring of *s* from character position *start* - (zero-based) up to but not including *start + len*. If *start* is - greater than the length of the string, an empty string is returned, - and if *start + len* lies beyond the end of the string, only the - substring up to the end of the string is returned. *start* must be - non-negative. For example, - - ```nix - builtins.substring 0 3 "nixos" - ``` - - evaluates to `"nix"`. - - - `builtins.tail` *list* - Return the second to last elements of a list; abort evaluation if - the argument isn’t a list or is an empty list. - - - `throw` *s*; `builtins.throw` *s* - Throw an error message *s*. This usually aborts Nix expression - evaluation, but in `nix-env -qa` and other commands that try to - evaluate a set of derivations to get information about those - derivations, a derivation that throws an error is silently skipped - (which is not the case for `abort`). - - - `builtins.toFile` *name* *s* - Store the string *s* in a file in the Nix store and return its - path. The file has suffix *name*. This file can be used as an - input to derivations. One application is to write builders - “inline”. For instance, the following Nix expression combines the - [Nix expression for GNU Hello](expression-syntax.md) and its - [build script](build-script.md) into one file: - - ```nix - { stdenv, fetchurl, perl }: - - stdenv.mkDerivation { - name = "hello-2.1.1"; - - builder = builtins.toFile "builder.sh" " - source $stdenv/setup - - PATH=$perl/bin:$PATH - - tar xvfz $src - cd hello-* - ./configure --prefix=$out - make - make install - "; - - src = fetchurl { - url = "http://ftp.nluug.nl/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.1.1.tar.gz"; - sha256 = "1md7jsfd8pa45z73bz1kszpp01yw6x5ljkjk2hx7wl800any6465"; - }; - inherit perl; - } - ``` - - It is even possible for one file to refer to another, e.g., - - ```nix - builder = let - configFile = builtins.toFile "foo.conf" " - # This is some dummy configuration file. - ... - "; - in builtins.toFile "builder.sh" " - source $stdenv/setup - ... - cp ${configFile} $out/etc/foo.conf - "; - ``` - - Note that `${configFile}` is an - [antiquotation](language-values.md), so the result of the - expression `configFile` - (i.e., a path like `/nix/store/m7p7jfny445k...-foo.conf`) will be - spliced into the resulting string. - - It is however *not* allowed to have files mutually referring to each - other, like so: - - ```nix - let - foo = builtins.toFile "foo" "...${bar}..."; - bar = builtins.toFile "bar" "...${foo}..."; - in foo - ``` - - This is not allowed because it would cause a cyclic dependency in - the computation of the cryptographic hashes for `foo` and `bar`. - - It is also not possible to reference the result of a derivation. If - you are using Nixpkgs, the `writeTextFile` function is able to do - that. - - - `builtins.toJSON` *e* - Return a string containing a JSON representation of *e*. Strings, - integers, floats, booleans, nulls and lists are mapped to their JSON - equivalents. Sets (except derivations) are represented as objects. - Derivations are translated to a JSON string containing the - derivation’s output path. Paths are copied to the store and - represented as a JSON string of the resulting store path. - - - `builtins.toPath` *s* - DEPRECATED. Use `/. + "/path"` to convert a string into an absolute - path. For relative paths, use `./. + "/path"`. - - - `toString` *e*; `builtins.toString` *e* - Convert the expression *e* to a string. *e* can be: - - - A string (in which case the string is returned unmodified). - - - A path (e.g., `toString /foo/bar` yields `"/foo/bar"`. - - - A set containing `{ __toString = self: ...; }`. - - - An integer. - - - A list, in which case the string representations of its elements - are joined with spaces. - - - A Boolean (`false` yields `""`, `true` yields `"1"`). - - - `null`, which yields the empty string. - - - `builtins.toXML` *e* - Return a string containing an XML representation of *e*. The main - application for `toXML` is to communicate information with the - builder in a more structured format than plain environment - variables. - - Here is an example where this is the case: - - ```nix - { stdenv, fetchurl, libxslt, jira, uberwiki }: - - stdenv.mkDerivation (rec { - name = "web-server"; - - buildInputs = [ libxslt ]; - - builder = builtins.toFile "builder.sh" " - source $stdenv/setup - mkdir $out - echo "$servlets" | xsltproc ${stylesheet} - > $out/server-conf.xml ① - "; - - stylesheet = builtins.toFile "stylesheet.xsl" ② - " - - - - - - - - - - - - - "; - - servlets = builtins.toXML [ ③ - { path = "/bugtracker"; war = jira + "/lib/atlassian-jira.war"; } - { path = "/wiki"; war = uberwiki + "/uberwiki.war"; } - ]; - }) - ``` - - The builder is supposed to generate the configuration file for a - [Jetty servlet container](http://jetty.mortbay.org/). A servlet - container contains a number of servlets (`*.war` files) each - exported under a specific URI prefix. So the servlet configuration - is a list of sets containing the `path` and `war` of the servlet - (①). This kind of information is difficult to communicate with the - normal method of passing information through an environment - variable, which just concatenates everything together into a - string (which might just work in this case, but wouldn’t work if - fields are optional or contain lists themselves). Instead the Nix - expression is converted to an XML representation with `toXML`, - which is unambiguous and can easily be processed with the - appropriate tools. For instance, in the example an XSLT stylesheet - (at point ②) is applied to it (at point ①) to generate the XML - configuration file for the Jetty server. The XML representation - produced at point ③ by `toXML` is as follows: - - ```xml - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ``` - - Note that we used the `toFile` built-in to write the builder and - the stylesheet “inline” in the Nix expression. The path of the - stylesheet is spliced into the builder using the syntax `xsltproc - ${stylesheet}`. - - - `builtins.trace` *e1* *e2* - Evaluate *e1* and print its abstract syntax representation on - standard error. Then return *e2*. This function is useful for - debugging. - - - `builtins.tryEval` *e* - Try to shallowly evaluate *e*. Return a set containing the - attributes `success` (`true` if *e* evaluated successfully, - `false` if an error was thrown) and `value`, equalling *e* if - successful and `false` otherwise. Note that this doesn't evaluate - *e* deeply, so ` let e = { x = throw ""; }; in (builtins.tryEval - e).success ` will be `true`. Using ` builtins.deepSeq ` one can - get the expected result: `let e = { x = throw ""; }; in - (builtins.tryEval (builtins.deepSeq e e)).success` will be - `false`. - - - `builtins.typeOf` *e* - Return a string representing the type of the value *e*, namely - `"int"`, `"bool"`, `"string"`, `"path"`, `"null"`, `"set"`, - `"list"`, `"lambda"` or `"float"`. diff --git a/src/libexpr/primops.cc b/src/libexpr/primops.cc index 902a37e6b..78892053a 100644 --- a/src/libexpr/primops.cc +++ b/src/libexpr/primops.cc @@ -275,6 +275,16 @@ static void prim_typeOf(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Valu mkString(v, state.symbols.create(t)); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_typeOf({ + .name = "__typeOf", + .args = {"e"}, + .doc = R"( + Return a string representing the type of the value *e*, namely + `"int"`, `"bool"`, `"string"`, `"path"`, `"null"`, `"set"`, + `"list"`, `"lambda"` or `"float"`. + )", + .fun = prim_typeOf, +}); /* Determine whether the argument is the null value. */ static void prim_isNull(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) @@ -283,6 +293,18 @@ static void prim_isNull(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Valu mkBool(v, args[0]->type == tNull); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_isNull({ + .name = "isNull", + .args = {"e"}, + .doc = R"( + Return `true` if *e* evaluates to `null`, and `false` otherwise. + + > **Warning** + > + > This function is *deprecated*; just write `e == null` instead. + )", + .fun = prim_isNull, +}); /* Determine whether the argument is a function. */ static void prim_isFunction(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) @@ -302,6 +324,14 @@ static void prim_isFunction(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, mkBool(v, res); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_isFunction({ + .name = "__isFunction", + .args = {"e"}, + .doc = R"( + Return `true` if *e* evaluates to a function, and `false` otherwise. + )", + .fun = prim_isFunction, +}); /* Determine whether the argument is an integer. */ static void prim_isInt(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) @@ -310,6 +340,15 @@ static void prim_isInt(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value mkBool(v, args[0]->type == tInt); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_isInt({ + .name = "__isInt", + .args = {"e"}, + .doc = R"( + Return `true` if *e* evaluates to an integer, and `false` otherwise. + )", + .fun = prim_isInt, +}); + /* Determine whether the argument is a float. */ static void prim_isFloat(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { @@ -317,6 +356,15 @@ static void prim_isFloat(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Val mkBool(v, args[0]->type == tFloat); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_isFloat({ + .name = "__isFloat", + .args = {"e"}, + .doc = R"( + Return `true` if *e* evaluates to a float, and `false` otherwise. + )", + .fun = prim_isFloat, +}); + /* Determine whether the argument is a string. */ static void prim_isString(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { @@ -324,6 +372,14 @@ static void prim_isString(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Va mkBool(v, args[0]->type == tString); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_isString({ + .name = "__isString", + .args = {"e"}, + .doc = R"( + Return `true` if *e* evaluates to a string, and `false` otherwise. + )", + .fun = prim_isString, +}); /* Determine whether the argument is a Boolean. */ static void prim_isBool(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) @@ -332,6 +388,15 @@ static void prim_isBool(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Valu mkBool(v, args[0]->type == tBool); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_isBool({ + .name = "__isBool", + .args = {"e"}, + .doc = R"( + Return `true` if *e* evaluates to a bool, and `false` otherwise. + )", + .fun = prim_isBool, +}); + /* Determine whether the argument is a path. */ static void prim_isPath(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { @@ -339,6 +404,15 @@ static void prim_isPath(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Valu mkBool(v, args[0]->type == tPath); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_isPath({ + .name = "__isPath", + .args = {"e"}, + .doc = R"( + Return `true` if *e* evaluates to a path, and `false` otherwise. + )", + .fun = prim_isPath, +}); + struct CompareValues { bool operator () (const Value * v1, const Value * v2) const @@ -459,14 +533,23 @@ static RegisterPrimOp primop_abort({ } }); - -static void prim_throw(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) -{ - PathSet context; - string s = state.coerceToString(pos, *args[0], context); - throw ThrownError(s); -} - +static RegisterPrimOp primop_throw({ + .name = "throw", + .args = {"s"}, + .doc = R"( + Throw an error message *s*. This usually aborts Nix expression + evaluation, but in `nix-env -qa` and other commands that try to + evaluate a set of derivations to get information about those + derivations, a derivation that throws an error is silently skipped + (which is not the case for `abort`). + )", + .fun = [](EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) + { + PathSet context; + string s = state.coerceToString(pos, *args[0], context); + throw ThrownError(s); + } +}); static void prim_addErrorContext(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { @@ -497,6 +580,22 @@ static void prim_tryEval(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Val v.attrs->sort(); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_tryEval({ + .name = "__tryEval", + .args = {"e"}, + .doc = R"( + Try to shallowly evaluate *e*. Return a set containing the + attributes `success` (`true` if *e* evaluated successfully, + `false` if an error was thrown) and `value`, equalling *e* if + successful and `false` otherwise. Note that this doesn't evaluate + *e* deeply, so ` let e = { x = throw ""; }; in (builtins.tryEval + e).success ` will be `true`. Using ` builtins.deepSeq ` one can + get the expected result: `let e = { x = throw ""; }; in + (builtins.tryEval (builtins.deepSeq e e)).success` will be + `false`. + )", + .fun = prim_tryEval, +}); /* Return an environment variable. Use with care. */ static void prim_getEnv(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) @@ -505,6 +604,22 @@ static void prim_getEnv(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Valu mkString(v, evalSettings.restrictEval || evalSettings.pureEval ? "" : getEnv(name).value_or("")); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_getEnv({ + .name = "__getEnv", + .args = {"s"}, + .doc = R"( + `getEnv` returns the value of the environment variable *s*, or an + empty string if the variable doesn’t exist. This function should be + used with care, as it can introduce all sorts of nasty environment + dependencies in your Nix expression. + + `getEnv` is used in Nix Packages to locate the file + `~/.nixpkgs/config.nix`, which contains user-local settings for Nix + Packages. (That is, it does a `getEnv "HOME"` to locate the user’s + home directory.) + )", + .fun = prim_getEnv, +}); /* Evaluate the first argument, then return the second argument. */ static void prim_seq(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) @@ -514,6 +629,15 @@ static void prim_seq(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v = *args[1]; } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_seq({ + .name = "__seq", + .args = {"e1", "e2"}, + .doc = R"( + Evaluate *e1*, then evaluate and return *e2*. This ensures that a + computation is strict in the value of *e1*. + )", + .fun = prim_seq, +}); /* Evaluate the first argument deeply (i.e. recursing into lists and attrsets), then return the second argument. */ @@ -524,6 +648,16 @@ static void prim_deepSeq(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Val v = *args[1]; } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_deepSeq({ + .name = "__deepSeq", + .args = {"e1", "e2"}, + .doc = R"( + This is like `seq e1 e2`, except that *e1* is evaluated *deeply*: + if it’s a list or set, its elements or attributes are also + evaluated recursively. + )", + .fun = prim_deepSeq, +}); /* Evaluate the first expression and print it on standard error. Then return the second expression. Useful for debugging. */ @@ -538,6 +672,17 @@ static void prim_trace(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value v = *args[1]; } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_trace({ + .name = "__trace", + .args = {"e1", "e2"}, + .doc = R"( + Evaluate *e1* and print its abstract syntax representation on + standard error. Then return *e2*. This function is useful for + debugging. + )", + .fun = prim_trace, +}); + /************************************************************* * Derivations @@ -879,6 +1024,17 @@ static void prim_placeholder(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, mkString(v, hashPlaceholder(state.forceStringNoCtx(*args[0], pos))); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_placeholder({ + .name = "placeholder", + .args = {"output"}, + .doc = R"( + Return a placeholder string for the specified *output* that will be + substituted by the corresponding output path at build time. Typical + outputs would be `"out"`, `"bin"` or `"dev"`. + )", + .fun = prim_placeholder, +}); + /************************************************************* * Paths @@ -893,6 +1049,15 @@ static void prim_toPath(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Valu mkString(v, canonPath(path), context); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_toPath({ + .name = "__toPath", + .args = {"s"}, + .doc = R"( + DEPRECATED. Use `/. + "/path"` to convert a string into an absolute + path. For relative paths, use `./. + "/path"`. + )", + .fun = prim_toPath, +}); /* Allow a valid store path to be used in an expression. This is useful in some generated expressions such as in nix-push, which @@ -904,6 +1069,9 @@ static void prim_toPath(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Valu corner cases. */ static void prim_storePath(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { + if (evalSettings.pureEval) + throw EvalError("builtins.storePath' is not allowed in pure evaluation mode"); + PathSet context; Path path = state.checkSourcePath(state.coerceToPath(pos, *args[0], context)); /* Resolve symlinks in ‘path’, unless ‘path’ itself is a symlink @@ -949,6 +1117,15 @@ static void prim_pathExists(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, } } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_pathExists({ + .name = "__pathExists", + .args = {"path"}, + .doc = R"( + Return `true` if the path *path* exists at evaluation time, and + `false` otherwise. + )", + .fun = prim_pathExists, +}); /* Return the base name of the given string, i.e., everything following the last slash. */ @@ -958,6 +1135,16 @@ static void prim_baseNameOf(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, mkString(v, baseNameOf(state.coerceToString(pos, *args[0], context, false, false)), context); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_baseNameOf({ + .name = "baseNameOf", + .args = {"s"}, + .doc = R"( + Return the *base name* of the string *s*, that is, everything + following the final slash in the string. This is similar to the GNU + `basename` command. + )", + .fun = prim_baseNameOf, +}); /* Return the directory of the given path, i.e., everything before the last slash. Return either a path or a string depending on the type @@ -969,6 +1156,16 @@ static void prim_dirOf(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value if (args[0]->type == tPath) mkPath(v, dir.c_str()); else mkString(v, dir, context); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_dirOf({ + .name = "dirOf", + .args = {"s"}, + .doc = R"( + Return the directory part of the string *s*, that is, everything + before the final slash in the string. This is similar to the GNU + `dirname` command. + )", + .fun = prim_dirOf, +}); /* Return the contents of a file as a string. */ static void prim_readFile(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) @@ -989,6 +1186,14 @@ static void prim_readFile(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Va mkString(v, s.c_str()); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_readFile({ + .name = "__readFile", + .args = {"path"}, + .doc = R"( + Return the contents of the file *path* as a string. + )", + .fun = prim_readFile, +}); /* Find a file in the Nix search path. Used to implement paths, which are desugared to 'findFile __nixPath "x"'. */ @@ -1051,6 +1256,17 @@ static void prim_hashFile(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Va mkString(v, hashFile(*ht, state.checkSourcePath(p)).to_string(Base16, false), context); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_hashFile({ + .name = "__hashFile", + .args = {"type", "p"}, + .doc = R"( + Return a base-16 representation of the cryptographic hash of the + file at path *p*. The hash algorithm specified by *type* must be one + of `"md5"`, `"sha1"`, `"sha256"` or `"sha512"`. + )", + .fun = prim_hashFile, +}); + /* Read a directory (without . or ..) */ static void prim_readDir(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { @@ -1082,6 +1298,25 @@ static void prim_readDir(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Val v.attrs->sort(); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_readDir({ + .name = "__readDir", + .args = {"path"}, + .doc = R"( + Return the contents of the directory *path* as a set mapping + directory entries to the corresponding file type. For instance, if + directory `A` contains a regular file `B` and another directory + `C`, then `builtins.readDir ./A` will return the set + + ```nix + { B = "regular"; C = "directory"; } + ``` + + The possible values for the file type are `"regular"`, + `"directory"`, `"symlink"` and `"unknown"`. + )", + .fun = prim_readDir, +}); + /************************************************************* * Creating files @@ -1099,6 +1334,102 @@ static void prim_toXML(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value mkString(v, out.str(), context); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_toXML({ + .name = "__toXML", + .args = {"e"}, + .doc = R"( + Return a string containing an XML representation of *e*. The main + application for `toXML` is to communicate information with the + builder in a more structured format than plain environment + variables. + + Here is an example where this is the case: + + ```nix + { stdenv, fetchurl, libxslt, jira, uberwiki }: + + stdenv.mkDerivation (rec { + name = "web-server"; + + buildInputs = [ libxslt ]; + + builder = builtins.toFile "builder.sh" " + source $stdenv/setup + mkdir $out + echo "$servlets" | xsltproc ${stylesheet} - > $out/server-conf.xml ① + "; + + stylesheet = builtins.toFile "stylesheet.xsl" ② + " + + + + + + + + + + + + + "; + + servlets = builtins.toXML [ ③ + { path = "/bugtracker"; war = jira + "/lib/atlassian-jira.war"; } + { path = "/wiki"; war = uberwiki + "/uberwiki.war"; } + ]; + }) + ``` + + The builder is supposed to generate the configuration file for a + [Jetty servlet container](http://jetty.mortbay.org/). A servlet + container contains a number of servlets (`*.war` files) each + exported under a specific URI prefix. So the servlet configuration + is a list of sets containing the `path` and `war` of the servlet + (①). This kind of information is difficult to communicate with the + normal method of passing information through an environment + variable, which just concatenates everything together into a + string (which might just work in this case, but wouldn’t work if + fields are optional or contain lists themselves). Instead the Nix + expression is converted to an XML representation with `toXML`, + which is unambiguous and can easily be processed with the + appropriate tools. For instance, in the example an XSLT stylesheet + (at point ②) is applied to it (at point ①) to generate the XML + configuration file for the Jetty server. The XML representation + produced at point ③ by `toXML` is as follows: + + ```xml + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + ``` + + Note that we used the `toFile` built-in to write the builder and + the stylesheet “inline” in the Nix expression. The path of the + stylesheet is spliced into the builder using the syntax `xsltproc + ${stylesheet}`. + )", + .fun = prim_toXML, +}); /* Convert the argument (which can be any Nix expression) to a JSON string. Not all Nix expressions can be sensibly or completely @@ -1111,6 +1442,19 @@ static void prim_toJSON(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Valu mkString(v, out.str(), context); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_toJSON({ + .name = "__toJSON", + .args = {"e"}, + .doc = R"( + Return a string containing a JSON representation of *e*. Strings, + integers, floats, booleans, nulls and lists are mapped to their JSON + equivalents. Sets (except derivations) are represented as objects. + Derivations are translated to a JSON string containing the + derivation’s output path. Paths are copied to the store and + represented as a JSON string of the resulting store path. + )", + .fun = prim_toJSON, +}); /* Parse a JSON string to a value. */ static void prim_fromJSON(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) @@ -1119,6 +1463,20 @@ static void prim_fromJSON(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Va parseJSON(state, s, v); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_fromJSON({ + .name = "__fromJSON", + .args = {"e"}, + .doc = R"( + Convert a JSON string to a Nix value. For example, + + ```nix + builtins.fromJSON ''{"x": [1, 2, 3], "y": null}'' + ``` + + returns the value `{ x = [ 1 2 3 ]; y = null; }`. + )", + .fun = prim_fromJSON, +}); /* Store a string in the Nix store as a source file that can be used as an input by derivations. */ @@ -1153,6 +1511,83 @@ static void prim_toFile(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Valu mkString(v, storePath, {storePath}); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_toFile({ + .name = "__toFile", + .args = {"name", "s"}, + .doc = R"( + Store the string *s* in a file in the Nix store and return its + path. The file has suffix *name*. This file can be used as an + input to derivations. One application is to write builders + “inline”. For instance, the following Nix expression combines the + [Nix expression for GNU Hello](expression-syntax.md) and its + [build script](build-script.md) into one file: + + ```nix + { stdenv, fetchurl, perl }: + + stdenv.mkDerivation { + name = "hello-2.1.1"; + + builder = builtins.toFile "builder.sh" " + source $stdenv/setup + + PATH=$perl/bin:$PATH + + tar xvfz $src + cd hello-* + ./configure --prefix=$out + make + make install + "; + + src = fetchurl { + url = "http://ftp.nluug.nl/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.1.1.tar.gz"; + sha256 = "1md7jsfd8pa45z73bz1kszpp01yw6x5ljkjk2hx7wl800any6465"; + }; + inherit perl; + } + ``` + + It is even possible for one file to refer to another, e.g., + + ```nix + builder = let + configFile = builtins.toFile "foo.conf" " + # This is some dummy configuration file. + ... + "; + in builtins.toFile "builder.sh" " + source $stdenv/setup + ... + cp ${configFile} $out/etc/foo.conf + "; + ``` + + Note that `${configFile}` is an + [antiquotation](language-values.md), so the result of the + expression `configFile` + (i.e., a path like `/nix/store/m7p7jfny445k...-foo.conf`) will be + spliced into the resulting string. + + It is however *not* allowed to have files mutually referring to each + other, like so: + + ```nix + let + foo = builtins.toFile "foo" "...${bar}..."; + bar = builtins.toFile "bar" "...${foo}..."; + in foo + ``` + + This is not allowed because it would cause a cyclic dependency in + the computation of the cryptographic hashes for `foo` and `bar`. + + It is also not possible to reference the result of a derivation. If + you are using Nixpkgs, the `writeTextFile` function is able to do + that. + )", + .fun = prim_toFile, +}); static void addPath(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, const string & name, const Path & path_, Value * filterFun, FileIngestionMethod method, const std::optional expectedHash, Value & v) @@ -1223,6 +1658,48 @@ static void prim_filterSource(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args addPath(state, pos, std::string(baseNameOf(path)), path, args[0], FileIngestionMethod::Recursive, std::nullopt, v); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_filterSource({ + .name = "__filterSource", + .args = {"e1", "e2"}, + .doc = R"( + This function allows you to copy sources into the Nix store while + filtering certain files. For instance, suppose that you want to use + the directory `source-dir` as an input to a Nix expression, e.g. + + ```nix + stdenv.mkDerivation { + ... + src = ./source-dir; + } + ``` + + However, if `source-dir` is a Subversion working copy, then all + those annoying `.svn` subdirectories will also be copied to the + store. Worse, the contents of those directories may change a lot, + causing lots of spurious rebuilds. With `filterSource` you can + filter out the `.svn` directories: + + ```nix + src = builtins.filterSource + (path: type: type != "directory" || baseNameOf path != ".svn") + ./source-dir; + ``` + + Thus, the first argument *e1* must be a predicate function that is + called for each regular file, directory or symlink in the source + tree *e2*. If the function returns `true`, the file is copied to the + Nix store, otherwise it is omitted. The function is called with two + arguments. The first is the full path of the file. The second is a + string that identifies the type of the file, which is either + `"regular"`, `"directory"`, `"symlink"` or `"unknown"` (for other + kinds of files such as device nodes or fifos — but note that those + cannot be copied to the Nix store, so if the predicate returns + `true` for them, the copy will fail). If you exclude a directory, + the entire corresponding subtree of *e2* will be excluded. + )", + .fun = prim_filterSource, +}); + static void prim_path(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { state.forceAttrs(*args[0], pos); @@ -1268,6 +1745,41 @@ static void prim_path(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value addPath(state, pos, name, path, filterFun, method, expectedHash, v); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_path({ + .name = "__path", + .args = {"args"}, + .doc = R"( + An enrichment of the built-in path type, based on the attributes + present in *args*. All are optional except `path`: + + - path + The underlying path. + + - name + The name of the path when added to the store. This can used to + reference paths that have nix-illegal characters in their names, + like `@`. + + - filter + A function of the type expected by `builtins.filterSource`, + with the same semantics. + + - recursive + When `false`, when `path` is added to the store it is with a + flat hash, rather than a hash of the NAR serialization of the + file. Thus, `path` must refer to a regular file, not a + directory. This allows similar behavior to `fetchurl`. Defaults + to `true`. + + - sha256 + When provided, this is the expected hash of the file at the + path. Evaluation will fail if the hash is incorrect, and + providing a hash allows `builtins.path` to be used even when the + `pure-eval` nix config option is on. + )", + .fun = prim_path, +}); + /************************************************************* * Sets @@ -1290,6 +1802,16 @@ static void prim_attrNames(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, V [](Value * v1, Value * v2) { return strcmp(v1->string.s, v2->string.s) < 0; }); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_attrNames({ + .name = "__attrNames", + .args = {"set"}, + .doc = R"( + Return the names of the attributes in the set *set* in an + alphabetically sorted list. For instance, `builtins.attrNames { y + = 1; x = "foo"; }` evaluates to `[ "x" "y" ]`. + )", + .fun = prim_attrNames, +}); /* Return the values of the attributes in a set as a list, in the same order as attrNames. */ @@ -1310,6 +1832,15 @@ static void prim_attrValues(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, v.listElems()[i] = ((Attr *) v.listElems()[i])->value; } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_attrValues({ + .name = "__attrValues", + .args = {"set"}, + .doc = R"( + Return the values of the attributes in the set *set* in the order + corresponding to the sorted attribute names. + )", + .fun = prim_attrValues, +}); /* Dynamic version of the `.' operator. */ void prim_getAttr(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) @@ -1329,9 +1860,20 @@ void prim_getAttr(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) v = *i->value; } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_getAttr({ + .name = "__getAttr", + .args = {"s", "set"}, + .doc = R"( + `getAttr` returns the attribute named *s* from *set*. Evaluation + aborts if the attribute doesn’t exist. This is a dynamic version of + the `.` operator, since *s* is an expression rather than an + identifier. + )", + .fun = prim_getAttr, +}); /* Return position information of the specified attribute. */ -void prim_unsafeGetAttrPos(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) +static void prim_unsafeGetAttrPos(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { string attr = state.forceStringNoCtx(*args[0], pos); state.forceAttrs(*args[1], pos); @@ -1342,7 +1884,6 @@ void prim_unsafeGetAttrPos(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, V state.mkPos(v, i->pos); } - /* Dynamic version of the `?' operator. */ static void prim_hasAttr(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { @@ -1351,6 +1892,16 @@ static void prim_hasAttr(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Val mkBool(v, args[1]->attrs->find(state.symbols.create(attr)) != args[1]->attrs->end()); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_hasAttr({ + .name = "__hasAttr", + .args = {"s", "set"}, + .doc = R"( + `hasAttr` returns `true` if *set* has an attribute named *s*, and + `false` otherwise. This is a dynamic version of the `?` operator, + since *s* is an expression rather than an identifier. + )", + .fun = prim_hasAttr, +}); /* Determine whether the argument is a set. */ static void prim_isAttrs(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) @@ -1359,6 +1910,14 @@ static void prim_isAttrs(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Val mkBool(v, args[0]->type == tAttrs); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_isAttrs({ + .name = "__isAttrs", + .args = {"e"}, + .doc = R"( + Return `true` if *e* evaluates to a set, and `false` otherwise. + )", + .fun = prim_isAttrs, +}); static void prim_removeAttrs(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { @@ -1382,6 +1941,21 @@ static void prim_removeAttrs(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, } } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_removeAttrs({ + .name = "removeAttrs", + .args = {"set", "list"}, + .doc = R"( + Remove the attributes listed in *list* from *set*. The attributes + don’t have to exist in *set*. For instance, + + ```nix + removeAttrs { x = 1; y = 2; z = 3; } [ "a" "x" "z" ] + ``` + + evaluates to `{ y = 2; }`. + )", + .fun = prim_removeAttrs, +}); /* Builds a set from a list specifying (name, value) pairs. To be precise, a list [{name = "name1"; value = value1;} ... {name = @@ -1423,6 +1997,30 @@ static void prim_listToAttrs(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, v.attrs->sort(); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_listToAttrs({ + .name = "__listToAttrs", + .args = {"e"}, + .doc = R"( + Construct a set from a list specifying the names and values of each + attribute. Each element of the list should be a set consisting of a + string-valued attribute `name` specifying the name of the attribute, + and an attribute `value` specifying its value. Example: + + ```nix + builtins.listToAttrs + [ { name = "foo"; value = 123; } + { name = "bar"; value = 456; } + ] + ``` + + evaluates to + + ```nix + { foo = 123; bar = 456; } + ``` + )", + .fun = prim_listToAttrs, +}); /* Return the right-biased intersection of two sets as1 and as2, i.e. a set that contains every attribute from as2 that is also a @@ -1441,6 +2039,15 @@ static void prim_intersectAttrs(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * ar } } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_intersectAttrs({ + .name = "__intersectAttrs", + .args = {"e1", "e2"}, + .doc = R"( + Return a set consisting of the attributes in the set *e2* that also + exist in the set *e1*. + )", + .fun = prim_intersectAttrs, +}); /* Collect each attribute named `attr' from a list of attribute sets. Sets that don't contain the named attribute are ignored. @@ -1470,7 +2077,6 @@ static void prim_catAttrs(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Va v.listElems()[n] = res[n]; } - /* Return a set containing the names of the formal arguments expected by the function `f'. The value of each attribute is a Boolean denoting whether the corresponding argument has a default value. For instance, @@ -1508,6 +2114,22 @@ static void prim_functionArgs(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args v.attrs->sort(); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_functionArgs({ + .name = "__functionArgs", + .args = {"f"}, + .doc = R"( + Return a set containing the names of the formal arguments expected + by the function *f*. The value of each attribute is a Boolean + denoting whether the corresponding argument has a default value. For + instance, `functionArgs ({ x, y ? 123}: ...) = { x = false; y = + true; }`. + + "Formal argument" here refers to the attributes pattern-matched by + the function. Plain lambdas are not included, e.g. `functionArgs (x: + ...) = { }`. + )", + .fun = prim_functionArgs, +}); /* Apply a function to every element of an attribute set. */ static void prim_mapAttrs(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) @@ -1526,7 +2148,6 @@ static void prim_mapAttrs(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Va } - /************************************************************* * Lists *************************************************************/ @@ -1539,6 +2160,14 @@ static void prim_isList(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Valu mkBool(v, args[0]->isList()); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_isList({ + .name = "__isList", + .args = {"e"}, + .doc = R"( + Return `true` if *e* evaluates to a list, and `false` otherwise. + )", + .fun = prim_isList, +}); static void elemAt(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value & list, int n, Value & v) { @@ -1552,13 +2181,21 @@ static void elemAt(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value & list, int n, Valu v = *list.listElems()[n]; } - /* Return the n-1'th element of a list. */ static void prim_elemAt(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { elemAt(state, pos, *args[0], state.forceInt(*args[1], pos), v); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_elemAt({ + .name = "__elemAt", + .args = {"xs", "n"}, + .doc = R"( + Return element *n* from the list *xs*. Elements are counted starting + from 0. A fatal error occurs if the index is out of bounds. + )", + .fun = prim_elemAt, +}); /* Return the first element of a list. */ static void prim_head(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) @@ -1566,6 +2203,16 @@ static void prim_head(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value elemAt(state, pos, *args[0], 0, v); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_head({ + .name = "__head", + .args = {"list"}, + .doc = R"( + Return the first element of a list; abort evaluation if the argument + isn’t a list or is an empty list. You can test whether a list is + empty by comparing it with `[]`. + )", + .fun = prim_head, +}); /* Return a list consisting of everything but the first element of a list. Warning: this function takes O(n) time, so you probably @@ -1584,6 +2231,21 @@ static void prim_tail(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value v.listElems()[n] = args[0]->listElems()[n + 1]; } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_tail({ + .name = "__tail", + .args = {"list"}, + .doc = R"( + Return the second to last elements of a list; abort evaluation if + the argument isn’t a list or is an empty list. + + > **Warning** + > + > This function should generally be avoided since it's inefficient: + > unlike Haskell's `tail`, it takes O(n) time, so recursing over a + > list by repeatedly calling `tail` takes O(n^2) time. + )", + .fun = prim_tail, +}); /* Apply a function to every element of a list. */ static void prim_map(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) @@ -1597,6 +2259,21 @@ static void prim_map(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & *args[0], *args[1]->listElems()[n]); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_map({ + .name = "map", + .args = {"f", "list"}, + .doc = R"( + Apply the function *f* to each element in the list *list*. For + example, + + ```nix + map (x: "foo" + x) [ "bar" "bla" "abc" ] + ``` + + evaluates to `[ "foobar" "foobla" "fooabc" ]`. + )", + .fun = prim_map, +}); /* Filter a list using a predicate; that is, return a list containing every element from the list for which the predicate function @@ -1628,6 +2305,15 @@ static void prim_filter(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Valu } } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_filter({ + .name = "__filter", + .args = {"f", "list"}, + .doc = R"( + Return a list consisting of the elements of *list* for which the + function *f* returns `true`. + )", + .fun = prim_filter, +}); /* Return true if a list contains a given element. */ static void prim_elem(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) @@ -1642,6 +2328,15 @@ static void prim_elem(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value mkBool(v, res); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_elem({ + .name = "__elem", + .args = {"x", "xs"}, + .doc = R"( + Return `true` if a value equal to *x* occurs in the list *xs*, and + `false` otherwise. + )", + .fun = prim_elem, +}); /* Concatenate a list of lists. */ static void prim_concatLists(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) @@ -1650,6 +2345,14 @@ static void prim_concatLists(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, state.concatLists(v, args[0]->listSize(), args[0]->listElems(), pos); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_concatLists({ + .name = "__concatLists", + .args = {"lists"}, + .doc = R"( + Concatenate a list of lists into a single list. + )", + .fun = prim_concatLists, +}); /* Return the length of a list. This is an O(1) time operation. */ static void prim_length(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) @@ -1658,6 +2361,14 @@ static void prim_length(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Valu mkInt(v, args[0]->listSize()); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_length({ + .name = "__length", + .args = {"e"}, + .doc = R"( + Return the length of the list *e*. + )", + .fun = prim_length, +}); /* Reduce a list by applying a binary operator, from left to right. The operator is applied strictly. */ @@ -1682,6 +2393,18 @@ static void prim_foldlStrict(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, } } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_foldlStrict({ + .name = "__foldl'", + .args = {"op", "nul", "list"}, + .doc = R"( + Reduce a list by applying a binary operator, from left to right, + e.g. `foldl’ op nul [x0 x1 x2 ...] = op (op (op nul x0) x1) x2) + ...`. The operator is applied strictly, i.e., its arguments are + evaluated first. For example, `foldl’ (x: y: x + y) 0 [1 2 3]` + evaluates to 6. + )", + .fun = prim_foldlStrict, +}); static void anyOrAll(bool any, EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { @@ -1707,12 +2430,30 @@ static void prim_any(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & anyOrAll(true, state, pos, args, v); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_any({ + .name = "__any", + .args = {"pred", "list"}, + .doc = R"( + Return `true` if the function *pred* returns `true` for at least one + element of *list*, and `false` otherwise. + )", + .fun = prim_any, +}); static void prim_all(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { anyOrAll(false, state, pos, args, v); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_all({ + .name = "__all", + .args = {"pred", "list"}, + .doc = R"( + Return `true` if the function *pred* returns `true` for all elements + of *list*, and `false` otherwise. + )", + .fun = prim_all, +}); static void prim_genList(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { @@ -1733,6 +2474,21 @@ static void prim_genList(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Val } } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_genList({ + .name = "__genList", + .args = {"generator", "length"}, + .doc = R"( + Generate list of size *length*, with each element *i* equal to the + value returned by *generator* `i`. For example, + + ```nix + builtins.genList (x: x * x) 5 + ``` + + returns the list `[ 0 1 4 9 16 ]`. + )", + .fun = prim_genList, +}); static void prim_lessThan(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v); @@ -1768,6 +2524,26 @@ static void prim_sort(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value std::stable_sort(v.listElems(), v.listElems() + len, comparator); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_sort({ + .name = "__sort", + .args = {"comparator", "list"}, + .doc = R"( + Return *list* in sorted order. It repeatedly calls the function + *comparator* with two elements. The comparator should return `true` + if the first element is less than the second, and `false` otherwise. + For example, + + ```nix + builtins.sort builtins.lessThan [ 483 249 526 147 42 77 ] + ``` + + produces the list `[ 42 77 147 249 483 526 ]`. + + This is a stable sort: it preserves the relative order of elements + deemed equal by the comparator. + )", + .fun = prim_sort, +}); static void prim_partition(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { @@ -1851,6 +2627,14 @@ static void prim_add(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & mkInt(v, state.forceInt(*args[0], pos) + state.forceInt(*args[1], pos)); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_add({ + .name = "__add", + .args = {"e1", "e2"}, + .doc = R"( + Return the sum of the numbers *e1* and *e2*. + )", + .fun = prim_add, +}); static void prim_sub(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { @@ -1862,6 +2646,14 @@ static void prim_sub(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & mkInt(v, state.forceInt(*args[0], pos) - state.forceInt(*args[1], pos)); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_sub({ + .name = "__sub", + .args = {"e1", "e2"}, + .doc = R"( + Return the difference between the numbers *e1* and *e2*. + )", + .fun = prim_sub, +}); static void prim_mul(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { @@ -1873,6 +2665,14 @@ static void prim_mul(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & mkInt(v, state.forceInt(*args[0], pos) * state.forceInt(*args[1], pos)); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_mul({ + .name = "__mul", + .args = {"e1", "e2"}, + .doc = R"( + Return the product of the numbers *e1* and *e2*. + )", + .fun = prim_mul, +}); static void prim_div(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { @@ -1902,21 +2702,57 @@ static void prim_div(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & } } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_div({ + .name = "__div", + .args = {"e1", "e2"}, + .doc = R"( + Return the quotient of the numbers *e1* and *e2*. + )", + .fun = prim_div, +}); + static void prim_bitAnd(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { mkInt(v, state.forceInt(*args[0], pos) & state.forceInt(*args[1], pos)); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_bitAnd({ + .name = "__bitAnd", + .args = {"e1", "e2"}, + .doc = R"( + Return the bitwise AND of the integers *e1* and *e2*. + )", + .fun = prim_bitAnd, +}); + static void prim_bitOr(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { mkInt(v, state.forceInt(*args[0], pos) | state.forceInt(*args[1], pos)); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_bitOr({ + .name = "__bitOr", + .args = {"e1", "e2"}, + .doc = R"( + Return the bitwise OR of the integers *e1* and *e2*. + )", + .fun = prim_bitOr, +}); + static void prim_bitXor(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { mkInt(v, state.forceInt(*args[0], pos) ^ state.forceInt(*args[1], pos)); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_bitXor({ + .name = "__bitXor", + .args = {"e1", "e2"}, + .doc = R"( + Return the bitwise XOR of the integers *e1* and *e2*. + )", + .fun = prim_bitXor, +}); + static void prim_lessThan(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { state.forceValue(*args[0], pos); @@ -1925,6 +2761,17 @@ static void prim_lessThan(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Va mkBool(v, comp(args[0], args[1])); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_lessThan({ + .name = "__lessThan", + .args = {"e1", "e2"}, + .doc = R"( + Return `true` if the number *e1* is less than the number *e2*, and + `false` otherwise. Evaluation aborts if either *e1* or *e2* does not + evaluate to a number. + )", + .fun = prim_lessThan, +}); + /************************************************************* * String manipulation @@ -1941,6 +2788,29 @@ static void prim_toString(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Va mkString(v, s, context); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_toString({ + .name = "toString", + .args = {"e"}, + .doc = R"( + Convert the expression *e* to a string. *e* can be: + + - A string (in which case the string is returned unmodified). + + - A path (e.g., `toString /foo/bar` yields `"/foo/bar"`. + + - A set containing `{ __toString = self: ...; }`. + + - An integer. + + - A list, in which case the string representations of its elements + are joined with spaces. + + - A Boolean (`false` yields `""`, `true` yields `"1"`). + + - `null`, which yields the empty string. + )", + .fun = prim_toString, +}); /* `substring start len str' returns the substring of `str' starting at character position `min(start, stringLength str)' inclusive and @@ -1962,6 +2832,25 @@ static void prim_substring(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, V mkString(v, (unsigned int) start >= s.size() ? "" : string(s, start, len), context); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_substring({ + .name = "__substring", + .args = {"start", "len", "s"}, + .doc = R"( + Return the substring of *s* from character position *start* + (zero-based) up to but not including *start + len*. If *start* is + greater than the length of the string, an empty string is returned, + and if *start + len* lies beyond the end of the string, only the + substring up to the end of the string is returned. *start* must be + non-negative. For example, + + ```nix + builtins.substring 0 3 "nixos" + ``` + + evaluates to `"nix"`. + )", + .fun = prim_substring, +}); static void prim_stringLength(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { @@ -1970,6 +2859,15 @@ static void prim_stringLength(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args mkInt(v, s.size()); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_stringLength({ + .name = "__stringLength", + .args = {"e"}, + .doc = R"( + Return the length of the string *e*. If *e* is not a string, + evaluation is aborted. + )", + .fun = prim_stringLength, +}); /* Return the cryptographic hash of a string in base-16. */ static void prim_hashString(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) @@ -1988,6 +2886,16 @@ static void prim_hashString(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, mkString(v, hashString(*ht, s).to_string(Base16, false), context); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_hashString({ + .name = "__hashString", + .args = {"type", "s"}, + .doc = R"( + Return a base-16 representation of the cryptographic hash of string + *s*. The hash algorithm specified by *type* must be one of `"md5"`, + `"sha1"`, `"sha256"` or `"sha512"`. + )", + .fun = prim_hashString, +}); /* Match a regular expression against a string and return either ‘null’ or a list containing substring matches. */ @@ -2036,6 +2944,41 @@ void prim_match(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) } } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_match({ + .name = "__match", + .args = {"regex", "str"}, + .doc = R"s( + Returns a list if the [extended POSIX regular + expression](http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/V1_chap09.html#tag_09_04) + *regex* matches *str* precisely, otherwise returns `null`. Each item + in the list is a regex group. + + ```nix + builtins.match "ab" "abc" + ``` + + Evaluates to `null`. + + ```nix + builtins.match "abc" "abc" + ``` + + Evaluates to `[ ]`. + + ```nix + builtins.match "a(b)(c)" "abc" + ``` + + Evaluates to `[ "b" "c" ]`. + + ```nix + builtins.match "[[:space:]]+([[:upper:]]+)[[:space:]]+" " FOO " + ``` + + Evaluates to `[ "foo" ]`. + )s", + .fun = prim_match, +}); /* Split a string with a regular expression, and return a list of the non-matching parts interleaved by the lists of the matching groups. */ @@ -2109,8 +3052,44 @@ static void prim_split(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value } } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_split({ + .name = "__split", + .args = {"regex", "str"}, + .doc = R"s( + Returns a list composed of non matched strings interleaved with the + lists of the [extended POSIX regular + expression](http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/V1_chap09.html#tag_09_04) + *regex* matches of *str*. Each item in the lists of matched + sequences is a regex group. -static void prim_concatStringSep(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) + ```nix + builtins.split "(a)b" "abc" + ``` + + Evaluates to `[ "" [ "a" ] "c" ]`. + + ```nix + builtins.split "([ac])" "abc" + ``` + + Evaluates to `[ "" [ "a" ] "b" [ "c" ] "" ]`. + + ```nix + builtins.split "(a)|(c)" "abc" + ``` + + Evaluates to `[ "" [ "a" null ] "b" [ null "c" ] "" ]`. + + ```nix + builtins.split "([[:upper:]]+)" " FOO " + ``` + + Evaluates to `[ " " [ "FOO" ] " " ]`. + )s", + .fun = prim_split, +}); + +static void prim_concatStringsSep(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { PathSet context; @@ -2129,6 +3108,16 @@ static void prim_concatStringSep(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * a mkString(v, res, context); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_concatStringsSep({ + .name = "__concatStringsSep", + .args = {"separator", "list"}, + .doc = R"( + Concatenate a list of strings with a separator between each + element, e.g. `concatStringsSep "/" ["usr" "local" "bin"] == + "usr/local/bin"`. + )", + .fun = prim_concatStringsSep, +}); static void prim_replaceStrings(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { @@ -2188,6 +3177,22 @@ static void prim_replaceStrings(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * ar mkString(v, res, context); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_replaceStrings({ + .name = "__replaceStrings", + .args = {"from", "to", "s"}, + .doc = R"( + Given string *s*, replace every occurrence of the strings in *from* + with the corresponding string in *to*. For example, + + ```nix + builtins.replaceStrings ["oo" "a"] ["a" "i"] "foobar" + ``` + + evaluates to `"fabir"`. + )", + .fun = prim_replaceStrings, +}); + /************************************************************* * Versions @@ -2204,6 +3209,19 @@ static void prim_parseDrvName(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args v.attrs->sort(); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_parseDrvName({ + .name = "__parseDrvName", + .args = {"s"}, + .doc = R"( + Split the string *s* into a package name and version. The package + name is everything up to but not including the first dash followed + by a digit, and the version is everything following that dash. The + result is returned in a set `{ name, version }`. Thus, + `builtins.parseDrvName "nix-0.12pre12876"` returns `{ name = + "nix"; version = "0.12pre12876"; }`. + )", + .fun = prim_parseDrvName, +}); static void prim_compareVersions(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { @@ -2212,6 +3230,18 @@ static void prim_compareVersions(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * a mkInt(v, compareVersions(version1, version2)); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_compareVersions({ + .name = "__compareVersions", + .args = {"s1", "s2"}, + .doc = R"( + Compare two strings representing versions and return `-1` if + version *s1* is older than version *s2*, `0` if they are the same, + and `1` if *s1* is newer than *s2*. The version comparison + algorithm is the same as the one used by [`nix-env + -u`](../command-ref/nix-env.md#operation---upgrade). + )", + .fun = prim_compareVersions, +}); static void prim_splitVersion(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { @@ -2232,6 +3262,17 @@ static void prim_splitVersion(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args } } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_splitVersion({ + .name = "__splitVersion", + .args = {"s"}, + .doc = R"( + Split a string representing a version into its components, by the + same version splitting logic underlying the version comparison in + [`nix-env -u`](../command-ref/nix-env.md#operation---upgrade). + )", + .fun = prim_splitVersion, +}); + /************************************************************* * Primop registration @@ -2282,15 +3323,6 @@ void EvalState::createBaseEnv() mkNull(v); addConstant("null", v); - auto vThrow = addPrimOp("throw", 1, prim_throw); - - auto addPurityError = [&](const std::string & name) { - Value * v2 = allocValue(); - mkString(*v2, fmt("'%s' is not allowed in pure evaluation mode", name)); - mkApp(v, *vThrow, *v2); - addConstant(name, v); - }; - if (!evalSettings.pureEval) { mkInt(v, time(0)); addConstant("__currentTime", v); @@ -2325,115 +3357,24 @@ void EvalState::createBaseEnv() addPrimOp("__importNative", 2, prim_importNative); addPrimOp("__exec", 1, prim_exec); } - addPrimOp("__typeOf", 1, prim_typeOf); - addPrimOp("isNull", 1, prim_isNull); - addPrimOp("__isFunction", 1, prim_isFunction); - addPrimOp("__isString", 1, prim_isString); - addPrimOp("__isInt", 1, prim_isInt); - addPrimOp("__isFloat", 1, prim_isFloat); - addPrimOp("__isBool", 1, prim_isBool); - addPrimOp("__isPath", 1, prim_isPath); addPrimOp("__genericClosure", 1, prim_genericClosure); addPrimOp("__addErrorContext", 2, prim_addErrorContext); - addPrimOp("__tryEval", 1, prim_tryEval); - addPrimOp("__getEnv", 1, prim_getEnv); - - // Strictness - addPrimOp("__seq", 2, prim_seq); - addPrimOp("__deepSeq", 2, prim_deepSeq); - - // Debugging - addPrimOp("__trace", 2, prim_trace); // Paths - addPrimOp("__toPath", 1, prim_toPath); - if (evalSettings.pureEval) - addPurityError("__storePath"); - else - addPrimOp("__storePath", 1, prim_storePath); - addPrimOp("__pathExists", 1, prim_pathExists); - addPrimOp("baseNameOf", 1, prim_baseNameOf); - addPrimOp("dirOf", 1, prim_dirOf); - addPrimOp("__readFile", 1, prim_readFile); - addPrimOp("__readDir", 1, prim_readDir); + addPrimOp("__storePath", 1, prim_storePath); addPrimOp("__findFile", 2, prim_findFile); - addPrimOp("__hashFile", 2, prim_hashFile); - - // Creating files - addPrimOp("__toXML", 1, prim_toXML); - addPrimOp("__toJSON", 1, prim_toJSON); - addPrimOp("__fromJSON", 1, prim_fromJSON); - addPrimOp("__toFile", 2, prim_toFile); - addPrimOp("__filterSource", 2, prim_filterSource); - addPrimOp("__path", 1, prim_path); // Sets - addPrimOp("__attrNames", 1, prim_attrNames); - addPrimOp("__attrValues", 1, prim_attrValues); - addPrimOp("__getAttr", 2, prim_getAttr); addPrimOp("__unsafeGetAttrPos", 2, prim_unsafeGetAttrPos); - addPrimOp("__hasAttr", 2, prim_hasAttr); - addPrimOp("__isAttrs", 1, prim_isAttrs); - addPrimOp("removeAttrs", 2, prim_removeAttrs); - addPrimOp("__listToAttrs", 1, prim_listToAttrs); - addPrimOp("__intersectAttrs", 2, prim_intersectAttrs); addPrimOp("__catAttrs", 2, prim_catAttrs); - addPrimOp("__functionArgs", 1, prim_functionArgs); addPrimOp("__mapAttrs", 2, prim_mapAttrs); // Lists - addPrimOp("__isList", 1, prim_isList); - addPrimOp("__elemAt", 2, prim_elemAt); - addPrimOp("__head", 1, prim_head); - addPrimOp("__tail", 1, prim_tail); - addPrimOp("map", 2, prim_map); - addPrimOp("__filter", 2, prim_filter); - addPrimOp("__elem", 2, prim_elem); - addPrimOp("__concatLists", 1, prim_concatLists); - addPrimOp("__length", 1, prim_length); - addPrimOp("__foldl'", 3, prim_foldlStrict); - addPrimOp("__any", 2, prim_any); - addPrimOp("__all", 2, prim_all); - addPrimOp("__genList", 2, prim_genList); - addPrimOp("__sort", 2, prim_sort); addPrimOp("__partition", 2, prim_partition); addPrimOp("__concatMap", 2, prim_concatMap); - // Integer arithmetic - addPrimOp("__add", 2, prim_add); - addPrimOp("__sub", 2, prim_sub); - addPrimOp("__mul", 2, prim_mul); - addPrimOp("__div", 2, prim_div); - addPrimOp("__bitAnd", 2, prim_bitAnd); - addPrimOp("__bitOr", 2, prim_bitOr); - addPrimOp("__bitXor", 2, prim_bitXor); - addPrimOp("__lessThan", 2, prim_lessThan); - - // String manipulation - addPrimOp("toString", 1, prim_toString); - addPrimOp("__substring", 3, prim_substring); - addPrimOp("__stringLength", 1, prim_stringLength); - addPrimOp("__hashString", 2, prim_hashString); - addPrimOp("__match", 2, prim_match); - addPrimOp("__split", 2, prim_split); - addPrimOp("__concatStringsSep", 2, prim_concatStringSep); - addPrimOp("__replaceStrings", 3, prim_replaceStrings); - - // Versions - addPrimOp("__parseDrvName", 1, prim_parseDrvName); - addPrimOp("__compareVersions", 2, prim_compareVersions); - addPrimOp("__splitVersion", 1, prim_splitVersion); - // Derivations addPrimOp("derivationStrict", 1, prim_derivationStrict); - addPrimOp("placeholder", 1, prim_placeholder); - - /* Add a wrapper around the derivation primop that computes the - `drvPath' and `outPath' attributes lazily. */ - string path = canonPath(settings.nixDataDir + "/nix/corepkgs/derivation.nix", true); - sDerivationNix = symbols.create(path); - evalFile(path, v); - addConstant("derivation", v); /* Add a value containing the current Nix expression search path. */ mkList(v, searchPath.size()); @@ -2458,6 +3399,13 @@ void EvalState::createBaseEnv() .doc = primOp.doc, }); + /* Add a wrapper around the derivation primop that computes the + `drvPath' and `outPath' attributes lazily. */ + string path = canonPath(settings.nixDataDir + "/nix/corepkgs/derivation.nix", true); + sDerivationNix = symbols.create(path); + evalFile(path, v); + addConstant("derivation", v); + /* Now that we've added all primops, sort the `builtins' set, because attribute lookups expect it to be sorted. */ baseEnv.values[0]->attrs->sort(); diff --git a/src/libexpr/primops/fetchTree.cc b/src/libexpr/primops/fetchTree.cc index 0dbf4ae1d..06e8304b8 100644 --- a/src/libexpr/primops/fetchTree.cc +++ b/src/libexpr/primops/fetchTree.cc @@ -226,18 +226,187 @@ static void prim_fetchurl(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Va fetch(state, pos, args, v, "fetchurl", false, ""); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_fetchurl({ + .name = "__fetchurl", + .args = {"url"}, + .doc = R"( + Download the specified URL and return the path of the downloaded + file. This function is not available if [restricted evaluation + mode](../command-ref/conf-file.md) is enabled. + )", + .fun = prim_fetchurl, +}); + static void prim_fetchTarball(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { fetch(state, pos, args, v, "fetchTarball", true, "source"); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_fetchTarball({ + .name = "fetchTarball", + .args = {"args"}, + .doc = R"( + Download the specified URL, unpack it and return the path of the + unpacked tree. The file must be a tape archive (`.tar`) compressed + with `gzip`, `bzip2` or `xz`. The top-level path component of the + files in the tarball is removed, so it is best if the tarball + contains a single directory at top level. The typical use of the + function is to obtain external Nix expression dependencies, such as + a particular version of Nixpkgs, e.g. + + ```nix + with import (fetchTarball https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-14.12.tar.gz) {}; + + stdenv.mkDerivation { … } + ``` + + The fetched tarball is cached for a certain amount of time (1 hour + by default) in `~/.cache/nix/tarballs/`. You can change the cache + timeout either on the command line with `--option tarball-ttl number + of seconds` or in the Nix configuration file with this option: ` + number of seconds to cache `. + + Note that when obtaining the hash with ` nix-prefetch-url ` the + option `--unpack` is required. + + This function can also verify the contents against a hash. In that + case, the function takes a set instead of a URL. The set requires + the attribute `url` and the attribute `sha256`, e.g. + + ```nix + with import (fetchTarball { + url = "https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-14.12.tar.gz"; + sha256 = "1jppksrfvbk5ypiqdz4cddxdl8z6zyzdb2srq8fcffr327ld5jj2"; + }) {}; + + stdenv.mkDerivation { … } + ``` + + This function is not available if [restricted evaluation + mode](../command-ref/conf-file.md) is enabled. + )", + .fun = prim_fetchTarball, +}); + static void prim_fetchGit(EvalState &state, const Pos &pos, Value **args, Value &v) { fetchTree(state, pos, args, v, "git", true); } -static RegisterPrimOp r2("__fetchurl", 1, prim_fetchurl); -static RegisterPrimOp r3("fetchTarball", 1, prim_fetchTarball); -static RegisterPrimOp r4("fetchGit", 1, prim_fetchGit); +static RegisterPrimOp primop_fetchGit({ + .name = "fetchGit", + .args = {"args"}, + .doc = R"( + Fetch a path from git. *args* can be a URL, in which case the HEAD + of the repo at that URL is fetched. Otherwise, it can be an + attribute with the following attributes (all except `url` optional): + + - url + The URL of the repo. + + - name + The name of the directory the repo should be exported to in the + store. Defaults to the basename of the URL. + + - rev + The git revision to fetch. Defaults to the tip of `ref`. + + - ref + The git ref to look for the requested revision under. This is + often a branch or tag name. Defaults to `HEAD`. + + By default, the `ref` value is prefixed with `refs/heads/`. As + of Nix 2.3.0 Nix will not prefix `refs/heads/` if `ref` starts + with `refs/`. + + - submodules + A Boolean parameter that specifies whether submodules should be + checked out. Defaults to `false`. + + Here are some examples of how to use `fetchGit`. + + - To fetch a private repository over SSH: + + ```nix + builtins.fetchGit { + url = "git@github.com:my-secret/repository.git"; + ref = "master"; + rev = "adab8b916a45068c044658c4158d81878f9ed1c3"; + } + ``` + + - To fetch an arbitrary reference: + + ```nix + builtins.fetchGit { + url = "https://github.com/NixOS/nix.git"; + ref = "refs/heads/0.5-release"; + } + ``` + + - If the revision you're looking for is in the default branch of + the git repository you don't strictly need to specify the branch + name in the `ref` attribute. + + However, if the revision you're looking for is in a future + branch for the non-default branch you will need to specify the + the `ref` attribute as well. + + ```nix + builtins.fetchGit { + url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; + rev = "841fcbd04755c7a2865c51c1e2d3b045976b7452"; + ref = "1.11-maintenance"; + } + ``` + + > **Note** + > + > It is nice to always specify the branch which a revision + > belongs to. Without the branch being specified, the fetcher + > might fail if the default branch changes. Additionally, it can + > be confusing to try a commit from a non-default branch and see + > the fetch fail. If the branch is specified the fault is much + > more obvious. + + - If the revision you're looking for is in the default branch of + the git repository you may omit the `ref` attribute. + + ```nix + builtins.fetchGit { + url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; + rev = "841fcbd04755c7a2865c51c1e2d3b045976b7452"; + } + ``` + + - To fetch a specific tag: + + ```nix + builtins.fetchGit { + url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; + ref = "refs/tags/1.9"; + } + ``` + + - To fetch the latest version of a remote branch: + + ```nix + builtins.fetchGit { + url = "ssh://git@github.com/nixos/nix.git"; + ref = "master"; + } + ``` + + > **Note** + > + > Nix will refetch the branch in accordance with + > the option `tarball-ttl`. + + > **Note** + > + > This behavior is disabled in *Pure evaluation mode*. + )", + .fun = prim_fetchGit, +}); } From 0f314f3c2594e80322c675b70a61dcfda11bf423 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Mon, 24 Aug 2020 14:49:30 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 46/57] Generate builtins section of the manual --- .gitignore | 2 ++ doc/manual/generate-builtins.jq | 6 ++++++ doc/manual/local.mk | 11 ++++++++-- .../{builtins.md => builtins-prefix.md} | 0 src/nix/main.cc | 20 ++++++++++++++++++- 5 files changed, 36 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) create mode 100644 doc/manual/generate-builtins.jq rename doc/manual/src/expressions/{builtins.md => builtins-prefix.md} (100%) diff --git a/.gitignore b/.gitignore index 44dbaa5d7..0ea27c8c8 100644 --- a/.gitignore +++ b/.gitignore @@ -27,8 +27,10 @@ perl/Makefile.config /doc/manual/*.8 /doc/manual/nix.json /doc/manual/conf-file.json +/doc/manual/builtins.json /doc/manual/src/command-ref/nix.md /doc/manual/src/command-ref/conf-file.md +/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md # /scripts/ /scripts/nix-profile.sh diff --git a/doc/manual/generate-builtins.jq b/doc/manual/generate-builtins.jq new file mode 100644 index 000000000..c38799479 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/manual/generate-builtins.jq @@ -0,0 +1,6 @@ +. | to_entries | sort_by(.key) | map( + " - `builtins." + .key + "` " + + (.value.args | map("*" + . + "*") | join(" ")) + + " \n\n" + + (.value.doc | split("\n") | map(" " + . + "\n") | join("")) + "\n\n" +) | join("") diff --git a/doc/manual/local.mk b/doc/manual/local.mk index dcc02d538..297a73414 100644 --- a/doc/manual/local.mk +++ b/doc/manual/local.mk @@ -32,15 +32,22 @@ $(d)/src/command-ref/conf-file.md: $(d)/conf-file.json $(d)/generate-options.jq jq -r -f doc/manual/generate-options.jq $< >> $@ $(d)/nix.json: $(bindir)/nix - $(trace-gen) $(bindir)/nix dump-args > $@ + $(trace-gen) $(bindir)/nix __dump-args > $@ $(d)/conf-file.json: $(bindir)/nix $(trace-gen) env -i NIX_CONF_DIR=/dummy HOME=/dummy $(bindir)/nix show-config --json --experimental-features nix-command > $@ +$(d)/src/expressions/builtins.md: $(d)/builtins.json $(d)/generate-builtins.jq $(d)/src/expressions/builtins-prefix.md + cat doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins-prefix.md > $@ + jq -r -f doc/manual/generate-builtins.jq $< >> $@ + +$(d)/builtins.json: $(bindir)/nix + $(trace-gen) $(bindir)/nix __dump-builtins > $@ + # Generate the HTML manual. install: $(docdir)/manual/index.html -$(docdir)/manual/index.html: $(MANUAL_SRCS) $(d)/book.toml $(d)/custom.css +$(docdir)/manual/index.html: $(MANUAL_SRCS) $(d)/book.toml $(d)/custom.css $(d)/src/command-ref/nix.md $(d)/src/command-ref/conf-file.md $(d)/src/expressions/builtins.md $(trace-gen) mdbook build doc/manual -d $(docdir)/manual @cp doc/manual/highlight.pack.js $(docdir)/manual/highlight.js diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins-prefix.md similarity index 100% rename from doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins.md rename to doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins-prefix.md diff --git a/src/nix/main.cc b/src/nix/main.cc index 0c4fd46fd..210327927 100644 --- a/src/nix/main.cc +++ b/src/nix/main.cc @@ -179,11 +179,29 @@ void mainWrapped(int argc, char * * argv) NixArgs args; - if (argc == 2 && std::string(argv[1]) == "dump-args") { + if (argc == 2 && std::string(argv[1]) == "__dump-args") { std::cout << args.toJSON().dump() << "\n"; return; } + if (argc == 2 && std::string(argv[1]) == "__dump-builtins") { + EvalState state({}, openStore("ssh://foo.invalid/")); + auto res = nlohmann::json::object(); + auto builtins = state.baseEnv.values[0]->attrs; + for (auto & builtin : *builtins) { + auto b = nlohmann::json::object(); + if (builtin.value->type != tPrimOp) continue; + auto primOp = builtin.value->primOp; + if (!primOp->doc) continue; + b["arity"] = primOp->arity; + b["args"] = primOp->args; + b["doc"] = trim(stripIndentation(primOp->doc)); + res[(std::string) builtin.name] = std::move(b); + } + std::cout << res.dump() << "\n"; + return; + } + Finally printCompletions([&]() { if (completions) { From d0690bc311ee4969fc35604fed0fe819d4938704 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Mon, 24 Aug 2020 18:10:33 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 47/57] nix repl ':doc': Render using lowdown --- src/nix/local.mk | 5 +++-- src/nix/markdown.cc | 50 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ src/nix/markdown.hh | 7 +++++++ src/nix/repl.cc | 15 ++++++++++---- 4 files changed, 71 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) create mode 100644 src/nix/markdown.cc create mode 100644 src/nix/markdown.hh diff --git a/src/nix/local.mk b/src/nix/local.mk index b057b7cc6..8ed8eaef7 100644 --- a/src/nix/local.mk +++ b/src/nix/local.mk @@ -15,11 +15,12 @@ nix_SOURCES := \ $(wildcard src/nix-prefetch-url/*.cc) \ $(wildcard src/nix-store/*.cc) \ -nix_CXXFLAGS += -I src/libutil -I src/libstore -I src/libfetchers -I src/libexpr -I src/libmain +# -fpermissive is needed by lowdown. +nix_CXXFLAGS += -I src/libutil -I src/libstore -I src/libfetchers -I src/libexpr -I src/libmain -fpermissive nix_LIBS = libexpr libmain libfetchers libstore libutil -nix_LDFLAGS = -pthread $(SODIUM_LIBS) $(EDITLINE_LIBS) $(BOOST_LDFLAGS) -lboost_context -lboost_thread -lboost_system +nix_LDFLAGS = -pthread $(SODIUM_LIBS) $(EDITLINE_LIBS) $(BOOST_LDFLAGS) -lboost_context -lboost_thread -lboost_system -llowdown $(foreach name, \ nix-build nix-channel nix-collect-garbage nix-copy-closure nix-daemon nix-env nix-hash nix-instantiate nix-prefetch-url nix-shell nix-store, \ diff --git a/src/nix/markdown.cc b/src/nix/markdown.cc new file mode 100644 index 000000000..40788a42f --- /dev/null +++ b/src/nix/markdown.cc @@ -0,0 +1,50 @@ +#include "markdown.hh" +#include "util.hh" +#include "finally.hh" + +#include +extern "C" { +#include +} + +namespace nix { + +std::string renderMarkdownToTerminal(std::string_view markdown) +{ + struct lowdown_opts opts { + .type = LOWDOWN_TERM, + .maxdepth = 20, + .cols = std::min(getWindowSize().second, (unsigned short) 80), + .hmargin = 0, + .vmargin = 0, + .feat = LOWDOWN_COMMONMARK | LOWDOWN_FENCED | LOWDOWN_DEFLIST | LOWDOWN_TABLES, + .oflags = 0, + }; + + auto doc = lowdown_doc_new(&opts); + if (!doc) + throw Error("cannot allocate Markdown document"); + Finally freeDoc([&]() { lowdown_doc_free(doc); }); + + size_t maxn = 0; + auto node = lowdown_doc_parse(doc, &maxn, markdown.data(), markdown.size()); + if (!node) + throw Error("cannot parse Markdown document"); + Finally freeNode([&]() { lowdown_node_free(node); }); + + auto renderer = lowdown_term_new(&opts); + if (!renderer) + throw Error("cannot allocate Markdown renderer"); + Finally freeRenderer([&]() { lowdown_term_free(renderer); }); + + auto buf = lowdown_buf_new(16384); + if (!buf) + throw Error("cannot allocate Markdown output buffer"); + Finally freeBuffer([&]() { lowdown_buf_free(buf); }); + + lowdown_term_rndr(buf, nullptr, renderer, node); + + return std::string(buf->data, buf->size); +} + +} diff --git a/src/nix/markdown.hh b/src/nix/markdown.hh new file mode 100644 index 000000000..78320fcf5 --- /dev/null +++ b/src/nix/markdown.hh @@ -0,0 +1,7 @@ +#include "types.hh" + +namespace nix { + +std::string renderMarkdownToTerminal(std::string_view markdown); + +} diff --git a/src/nix/repl.cc b/src/nix/repl.cc index d370ca767..c7f8af742 100644 --- a/src/nix/repl.cc +++ b/src/nix/repl.cc @@ -32,6 +32,7 @@ extern "C" { #include "globals.hh" #include "command.hh" #include "finally.hh" +#include "markdown.hh" #if HAVE_BOEHMGC #define GC_INCLUDE_NEW @@ -518,10 +519,16 @@ bool NixRepl::processLine(string line) while (v2->type == tPrimOpApp) v2 = v2->primOpApp.left; if (v2->primOp->doc) { - // FIXME: format markdown. - if (!v2->primOp->args.empty()) - std::cout << fmt("Arguments: %s\n\n", concatStringsSep(" ", v2->primOp->args)); - std::cout << trim(stripIndentation(v2->primOp->doc)) << "\n"; + auto args = v2->primOp->args; + for (auto & arg : args) + arg = "*" + arg + "*"; + + auto markdown = + "**Synopsis:** `builtins." + (std::string) v2->primOp->name + "` " + + concatStringsSep(" ", args) + "\n\n" + + trim(stripIndentation(v2->primOp->doc)); + + std::cout << renderMarkdownToTerminal(markdown); } else throw Error("builtin function '%s' does not have documentation", v2->primOp->name); } else From 6a67e57019f39e43866866661df17394c168d29b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Mon, 24 Aug 2020 18:54:16 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 48/57] Add DummyStore (dummy://) DummyStore does not allow building or adding paths. This is useful for evaluation tests when you don't want to initialize a "proper" store. --- src/libstore/dummy-store.cc | 59 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ src/nix/main.cc | 2 +- tests/lang.sh | 1 + 3 files changed, 61 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) create mode 100644 src/libstore/dummy-store.cc diff --git a/src/libstore/dummy-store.cc b/src/libstore/dummy-store.cc new file mode 100644 index 000000000..7a5744bc1 --- /dev/null +++ b/src/libstore/dummy-store.cc @@ -0,0 +1,59 @@ +#include "store-api.hh" + +namespace nix { + +static std::string uriScheme = "dummy://"; + +struct DummyStore : public Store +{ + DummyStore(const Params & params) + : Store(params) + { } + + string getUri() override + { + return uriScheme; + } + + void queryPathInfoUncached(const StorePath & path, + Callback> callback) noexcept override + { + callback(nullptr); + } + + std::optional queryPathFromHashPart(const std::string & hashPart) override + { unsupported("queryPathFromHashPart"); } + + void addToStore(const ValidPathInfo & info, Source & source, + RepairFlag repair, CheckSigsFlag checkSigs) override + { unsupported("addToStore"); } + + StorePath addToStore(const string & name, const Path & srcPath, + FileIngestionMethod method, HashType hashAlgo, + PathFilter & filter, RepairFlag repair) override + { unsupported("addToStore"); } + + StorePath addTextToStore(const string & name, const string & s, + const StorePathSet & references, RepairFlag repair) override + { unsupported("addTextToStore"); } + + void narFromPath(const StorePath & path, Sink & sink) override + { unsupported("narFromPath"); } + + void ensurePath(const StorePath & path) override + { unsupported("ensurePath"); } + + BuildResult buildDerivation(const StorePath & drvPath, const BasicDerivation & drv, + BuildMode buildMode) override + { unsupported("buildDerivation"); } +}; + +static RegisterStoreImplementation regStore([]( + const std::string & uri, const Store::Params & params) + -> std::shared_ptr +{ + if (uri != uriScheme) return nullptr; + return std::make_shared(params); +}); + +} diff --git a/src/nix/main.cc b/src/nix/main.cc index 210327927..e9479f564 100644 --- a/src/nix/main.cc +++ b/src/nix/main.cc @@ -185,7 +185,7 @@ void mainWrapped(int argc, char * * argv) } if (argc == 2 && std::string(argv[1]) == "__dump-builtins") { - EvalState state({}, openStore("ssh://foo.invalid/")); + EvalState state({}, openStore("dummy://")); auto res = nlohmann::json::object(); auto builtins = state.baseEnv.values[0]->attrs; for (auto & builtin : *builtins) { diff --git a/tests/lang.sh b/tests/lang.sh index c797a2a74..61bb444ba 100644 --- a/tests/lang.sh +++ b/tests/lang.sh @@ -1,6 +1,7 @@ source common.sh export TEST_VAR=foo # for eval-okay-getenv.nix +export NIX_REMOTE=dummy:// nix-instantiate --eval -E 'builtins.trace "Hello" 123' 2>&1 | grep -q Hello (! nix-instantiate --show-trace --eval -E 'builtins.addErrorContext "Hello" 123' 2>&1 | grep -q Hello) From d9a8619762fa56bca8ddec5d9bcd5c411adb5b95 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Mon, 24 Aug 2020 19:15:17 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 49/57] Don't barf if corepkgs is in the store but not a valid path This can happen when using a dummy store (or indeed any non-local store). --- src/libexpr/eval.cc | 12 ++++++++---- 1 file changed, 8 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/libexpr/eval.cc b/src/libexpr/eval.cc index 6ac8bbc9f..a5ebd1bf0 100644 --- a/src/libexpr/eval.cc +++ b/src/libexpr/eval.cc @@ -381,10 +381,14 @@ EvalState::EvalState(const Strings & _searchPath, ref store) auto path = r.second; if (store->isInStore(r.second)) { - StorePathSet closure; - store->computeFSClosure(store->toStorePath(r.second).first, closure); - for (auto & path : closure) - allowedPaths->insert(store->printStorePath(path)); + try { + StorePathSet closure; + store->computeFSClosure(store->toStorePath(r.second).first, closure); + for (auto & path : closure) + allowedPaths->insert(store->printStorePath(path)); + } catch (InvalidPath &) { + allowedPaths->insert(r.second); + } } else allowedPaths->insert(r.second); } From b42789f01382c49256b2b5073098f5fb01841950 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Mon, 24 Aug 2020 21:13:39 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 50/57] Fix clang build --- flake.lock | 20 +++++++++++++++++++- flake.nix | 7 ++++++- src/nix/local.mk | 2 +- 3 files changed, 26 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/flake.lock b/flake.lock index 74326d294..f4368b170 100644 --- a/flake.lock +++ b/flake.lock @@ -1,5 +1,22 @@ { "nodes": { + "lowdown-src": { + "flake": false, + "locked": { + "lastModified": 1598296217, + "narHash": "sha256-ha7lyNY1d8m+osmDpPc9f/bfZ3ZC1IVIXwfyklSWg8I=", + "owner": "edolstra", + "repo": "lowdown", + "rev": "c7a4e715af1e233080842db82d15b261cb74cb28", + "type": "github" + }, + "original": { + "owner": "edolstra", + "ref": "no-structs-in-anonymous-unions", + "repo": "lowdown", + "type": "github" + } + }, "nixpkgs": { "locked": { "lastModified": 1591633336, @@ -17,10 +34,11 @@ }, "root": { "inputs": { + "lowdown-src": "lowdown-src", "nixpkgs": "nixpkgs" } } }, "root": "root", - "version": 6 + "version": 7 } diff --git a/flake.nix b/flake.nix index f97197cce..ea0ad7b8a 100644 --- a/flake.nix +++ b/flake.nix @@ -2,8 +2,9 @@ description = "The purely functional package manager"; inputs.nixpkgs.url = "nixpkgs/nixos-20.03-small"; + inputs.lowdown-src = { url = "github:edolstra/lowdown/no-structs-in-anonymous-unions"; flake = false; }; - outputs = { self, nixpkgs }: + outputs = { self, nixpkgs, lowdown-src }: let @@ -188,10 +189,14 @@ lowdown = with final; stdenv.mkDerivation { name = "lowdown-0.7.1"; + /* src = fetchurl { url = https://kristaps.bsd.lv/lowdown/snapshots/lowdown-0.7.1.tar.gz; hash = "sha512-1daoAQfYD0LdhK6aFhrSQvadjc5GsSPBZw0fJDb+BEHYMBLjqiUl2A7H8N+l0W4YfGKqbsPYSrCy4vct+7U6FQ=="; }; + */ + + src = lowdown-src; outputs = [ "out" "dev" ]; diff --git a/src/nix/local.mk b/src/nix/local.mk index 8ed8eaef7..cfe97b0f0 100644 --- a/src/nix/local.mk +++ b/src/nix/local.mk @@ -16,7 +16,7 @@ nix_SOURCES := \ $(wildcard src/nix-store/*.cc) \ # -fpermissive is needed by lowdown. -nix_CXXFLAGS += -I src/libutil -I src/libstore -I src/libfetchers -I src/libexpr -I src/libmain -fpermissive +nix_CXXFLAGS += -I src/libutil -I src/libstore -I src/libfetchers -I src/libexpr -I src/libmain nix_LIBS = libexpr libmain libfetchers libstore libutil From f5219f8d84af57c68f6eb129260bf9f0805b9b47 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Tue, 25 Aug 2020 10:33:41 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 51/57] Fix perlBindings job --- flake.nix | 4 +--- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/flake.nix b/flake.nix index ea0ad7b8a..3f67bfd40 100644 --- a/flake.nix +++ b/flake.nix @@ -73,9 +73,6 @@ openssl pkgconfig sqlite libarchive boost - (if lib.versionAtLeast lib.version "20.03pre" - then nlohmann_json - else nlohmann_json.override { multipleHeaders = true; }) nlohmann_json # Tests @@ -171,6 +168,7 @@ pkgconfig pkgs.perl boost + nlohmann_json ] ++ lib.optional (stdenv.isLinux || stdenv.isDarwin) libsodium; From 24b1c2c66b2f7ee8bbb9f62f4d914eb87a998999 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Tue, 25 Aug 2020 10:51:14 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 52/57] Fix tests --- src/libutil/tests/config.cc | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/src/libutil/tests/config.cc b/src/libutil/tests/config.cc index 9465fba3f..c5abefe11 100644 --- a/src/libutil/tests/config.cc +++ b/src/libutil/tests/config.cc @@ -1,9 +1,9 @@ -#include "json.hh" #include "config.hh" #include "args.hh" #include #include +#include namespace nix { From b8416779e3c17be819a27f1527a53d83c7eccbcf Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Tue, 25 Aug 2020 11:16:45 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 53/57] Document some primops --- src/libexpr/primops.cc | 111 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------------ 1 file changed, 80 insertions(+), 31 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/libexpr/primops.cc b/src/libexpr/primops.cc index 78892053a..cdc526de3 100644 --- a/src/libexpr/primops.cc +++ b/src/libexpr/primops.cc @@ -1053,7 +1053,7 @@ static RegisterPrimOp primop_toPath({ .name = "__toPath", .args = {"s"}, .doc = R"( - DEPRECATED. Use `/. + "/path"` to convert a string into an absolute + **DEPRECATED.** Use `/. + "/path"` to convert a string into an absolute path. For relative paths, use `./. + "/path"`. )", .fun = prim_toPath, @@ -1090,6 +1090,23 @@ static void prim_storePath(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, V mkString(v, path, context); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_storePath({ + .name = "__storePath", + .args = {"path"}, + .doc = R"( + This function allows you to define a dependency on an already + existing store path. For example, the derivation attribute `src + = builtins.storePath /nix/store/f1d18v1y…-source` causes the + derivation to depend on the specified path, which must exist or + be substitutable. Note that this differs from a plain path + (e.g. `src = /nix/store/f1d18v1y…-source`) in that the latter + causes the path to be *copied* again to the Nix store, resulting + in a new path (e.g. `/nix/store/ld01dnzc…-source-source`). + + This function is not available in pure evaluation mode. + )", + .fun = prim_storePath, +}); static void prim_pathExists(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { @@ -2022,9 +2039,6 @@ static RegisterPrimOp primop_listToAttrs({ .fun = prim_listToAttrs, }); -/* Return the right-biased intersection of two sets as1 and as2, - i.e. a set that contains every attribute from as2 that is also a - member of as1. */ static void prim_intersectAttrs(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { state.forceAttrs(*args[0], pos); @@ -2049,13 +2063,6 @@ static RegisterPrimOp primop_intersectAttrs({ .fun = prim_intersectAttrs, }); -/* Collect each attribute named `attr' from a list of attribute sets. - Sets that don't contain the named attribute are ignored. - - Example: - catAttrs "a" [{a = 1;} {b = 0;} {a = 2;}] - => [1 2] -*/ static void prim_catAttrs(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { Symbol attrName = state.symbols.create(state.forceStringNoCtx(*args[0], pos)); @@ -2077,19 +2084,23 @@ static void prim_catAttrs(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Va v.listElems()[n] = res[n]; } -/* Return a set containing the names of the formal arguments expected - by the function `f'. The value of each attribute is a Boolean - denoting whether the corresponding argument has a default value. For instance, +static RegisterPrimOp primop_catAttrs({ + .name = "__catAttrs", + .args = {"attr", "list"}, + .doc = R"( + Collect each attribute named *attr* from a list of attribute + sets. Attrsets that don't contain the named attribute are + ignored. For example, - functionArgs ({ x, y ? 123}: ...) - => { x = false; y = true; } + ```nix + builtins.catAttrs "a" [{a = 1;} {b = 0;} {a = 2;}] + ``` - "Formal argument" here refers to the attributes pattern-matched by - the function. Plain lambdas are not included, e.g. + evaluates to `[1 2]`. + )", + .fun = prim_catAttrs, +}); - functionArgs (x: ...) - => { } -*/ static void prim_functionArgs(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { state.forceValue(*args[0], pos); @@ -2131,7 +2142,7 @@ static RegisterPrimOp primop_functionArgs({ .fun = prim_functionArgs, }); -/* Apply a function to every element of an attribute set. */ +/* */ static void prim_mapAttrs(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { state.forceAttrs(*args[1], pos); @@ -2147,6 +2158,21 @@ static void prim_mapAttrs(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Va } } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_mapAttrs({ + .name = "__mapAttrs", + .args = {"f", "attrset"}, + .doc = R"( + Apply function *f* to every element of *attrset*. For example, + + ```nix + builtins.mapAttrs (name: value: value * 10) { a = 1; b = 2; } + ``` + + evaluates to `{ a = 10; b = 20; }`. + )", + .fun = prim_mapAttrs, +}); + /************************************************************* * Lists @@ -2582,9 +2608,29 @@ static void prim_partition(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, V v.attrs->sort(); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_partition({ + .name = "__partition", + .args = {"pred", "list"}, + .doc = R"( + Given a predicate function *pred*, this function returns an + attrset containing a list named `right`, containing the elements + in *list* for which *pred* returned `true`, and a list named + `wrong`, containing the elements for which it returned + `false`. For example, + + ```nix + builtins.partition (x: x > 10) [1 23 9 3 42] + ``` + + evaluates to + + ```nix + { right = [ 23 42 ]; wrong = [ 1 9 3 ]; } + ``` + )", + .fun = prim_partition, +}); -/* concatMap = f: list: concatLists (map f list); */ -/* C++-version is to avoid allocating `mkApp', call `f' eagerly */ static void prim_concatMap(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { state.forceFunction(*args[0], pos); @@ -2611,6 +2657,16 @@ static void prim_concatMap(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, V } } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_concatMap({ + .name = "__concatMap", + .args = {"f", "list"}, + .doc = R"( + This function is equivalent to `builtins.concatLists (map f list)` + but is more efficient. + )", + .fun = prim_concatMap, +}); + /************************************************************* * Integer arithmetic @@ -3361,17 +3417,10 @@ void EvalState::createBaseEnv() addPrimOp("__addErrorContext", 2, prim_addErrorContext); // Paths - addPrimOp("__storePath", 1, prim_storePath); addPrimOp("__findFile", 2, prim_findFile); // Sets addPrimOp("__unsafeGetAttrPos", 2, prim_unsafeGetAttrPos); - addPrimOp("__catAttrs", 2, prim_catAttrs); - addPrimOp("__mapAttrs", 2, prim_mapAttrs); - - // Lists - addPrimOp("__partition", 2, prim_partition); - addPrimOp("__concatMap", 2, prim_concatMap); // Derivations addPrimOp("derivationStrict", 1, prim_derivationStrict); From 2a2121d264911abaa042be30238a14ec950c1ea7 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Tue, 25 Aug 2020 11:25:01 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 54/57] Use RegisterPrimOp for some undocumented primops --- src/libexpr/primops.cc | 39 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++------------ 1 file changed, 27 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/libexpr/primops.cc b/src/libexpr/primops.cc index cdc526de3..2d3433200 100644 --- a/src/libexpr/primops.cc +++ b/src/libexpr/primops.cc @@ -156,7 +156,6 @@ static void prim_scopedImport(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args } } - /* Want reasonable symbol names, so extern C */ /* !!! Should we pass the Pos or the file name too? */ extern "C" typedef void (*ValueInitializer)(EvalState & state, Value & v); @@ -518,6 +517,11 @@ static void prim_genericClosure(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * ar v.listElems()[n++] = i; } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_genericClosure(RegisterPrimOp::Info { + .name = "__genericClosure", + .arity = 1, + .fun = prim_genericClosure, +}); static RegisterPrimOp primop_abort({ .name = "abort", @@ -563,6 +567,11 @@ static void prim_addErrorContext(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * a } } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_addErrorContext(RegisterPrimOp::Info { + .name = "__addErrorContext", + .arity = 2, + .fun = prim_addErrorContext, +}); /* Try evaluating the argument. Success => {success=true; value=something;}, * else => {success=false; value=false;} */ @@ -1011,6 +1020,11 @@ static void prim_derivationStrict(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * v.attrs->sort(); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_derivationStrict(RegisterPrimOp::Info { + .name = "derivationStrict", + .arity = 1, + .fun = prim_derivationStrict, +}); /* Return a placeholder string for the specified output that will be substituted by the corresponding output path at build time. For @@ -1256,6 +1270,12 @@ static void prim_findFile(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Va mkPath(v, state.checkSourcePath(state.findFile(searchPath, path, pos)).c_str()); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_findFile(RegisterPrimOp::Info { + .name = "__findFile", + .arity = 2, + .fun = prim_findFile, +}); + /* Return the cryptographic hash of a file in base-16. */ static void prim_hashFile(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { @@ -1901,6 +1921,12 @@ static void prim_unsafeGetAttrPos(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * state.mkPos(v, i->pos); } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_unsafeGetAttrPos(RegisterPrimOp::Info { + .name = "__unsafeGetAttrPos", + .arity = 2, + .fun = prim_unsafeGetAttrPos, +}); + /* Dynamic version of the `?' operator. */ static void prim_hasAttr(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) { @@ -3413,17 +3439,6 @@ void EvalState::createBaseEnv() addPrimOp("__importNative", 2, prim_importNative); addPrimOp("__exec", 1, prim_exec); } - addPrimOp("__genericClosure", 1, prim_genericClosure); - addPrimOp("__addErrorContext", 2, prim_addErrorContext); - - // Paths - addPrimOp("__findFile", 2, prim_findFile); - - // Sets - addPrimOp("__unsafeGetAttrPos", 2, prim_unsafeGetAttrPos); - - // Derivations - addPrimOp("derivationStrict", 1, prim_derivationStrict); /* Add a value containing the current Nix expression search path. */ mkList(v, searchPath.size()); From f53b5f10585b1d4c939e45faf0dd2f4dacbca013 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Tue, 25 Aug 2020 13:31:11 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 55/57] Add getDoc() function --- src/libexpr/eval.cc | 19 +++++++++++++++++++ src/libexpr/eval.hh | 11 +++++++++++ src/nix/repl.cc | 25 ++++++++++++------------- 3 files changed, 42 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/libexpr/eval.cc b/src/libexpr/eval.cc index a5ebd1bf0..4f2fd36c1 100644 --- a/src/libexpr/eval.cc +++ b/src/libexpr/eval.cc @@ -563,6 +563,25 @@ Value & EvalState::getBuiltin(const string & name) } +std::optional EvalState::getDoc(Value & v) +{ + if (v.type == tPrimOp || v.type == tPrimOpApp) { + auto v2 = &v; + while (v2->type == tPrimOpApp) + v2 = v2->primOpApp.left; + if (v2->primOp->doc) + return Doc { + .pos = noPos, + .name = v2->primOp->name, + .arity = v2->primOp->arity, + .args = v2->primOp->args, + .doc = v2->primOp->doc, + }; + } + return {}; +} + + /* Every "format" object (even temporary) takes up a few hundred bytes of stack space, which is a real killer in the recursive evaluator. So here are some helper functions for throwing diff --git a/src/libexpr/eval.hh b/src/libexpr/eval.hh index db8eb3e16..80078d8a5 100644 --- a/src/libexpr/eval.hh +++ b/src/libexpr/eval.hh @@ -248,6 +248,17 @@ public: Value & getBuiltin(const string & name); + struct Doc + { + Pos pos; + std::optional name; + size_t arity; + std::vector args; + const char * doc; + }; + + std::optional getDoc(Value & v); + private: inline Value * lookupVar(Env * env, const ExprVar & var, bool noEval); diff --git a/src/nix/repl.cc b/src/nix/repl.cc index c7f8af742..8ecf11900 100644 --- a/src/nix/repl.cc +++ b/src/nix/repl.cc @@ -514,23 +514,22 @@ bool NixRepl::processLine(string line) else if (command == ":doc") { Value v; evalString(arg, v); - if (v.type == tPrimOp || v.type == tPrimOpApp) { - auto v2 = &v; - while (v2->type == tPrimOpApp) - v2 = v2->primOpApp.left; - if (v2->primOp->doc) { - auto args = v2->primOp->args; + if (auto doc = state->getDoc(v)) { + std::string markdown; + + if (!doc->args.empty() && doc->name) { + auto args = doc->args; for (auto & arg : args) arg = "*" + arg + "*"; - auto markdown = - "**Synopsis:** `builtins." + (std::string) v2->primOp->name + "` " - + concatStringsSep(" ", args) + "\n\n" - + trim(stripIndentation(v2->primOp->doc)); + markdown += + "**Synopsis:** `builtins." + (std::string) (*doc->name) + "` " + + concatStringsSep(" ", args) + "\n\n"; + } - std::cout << renderMarkdownToTerminal(markdown); - } else - throw Error("builtin function '%s' does not have documentation", v2->primOp->name); + markdown += trim(stripIndentation(doc->doc)); + + std::cout << renderMarkdownToTerminal(markdown); } else throw Error("value does not have documentation"); } From 7a02865b94f107de1c1ef797b89d45ecd3f01cf1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Tue, 25 Aug 2020 14:06:01 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 56/57] Move import docs --- doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins-prefix.md | 53 ----------- src/libexpr/primops.cc | 93 ++++++++++++++++--- tests/function-trace.sh | 12 --- 3 files changed, 80 insertions(+), 78 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins-prefix.md b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins-prefix.md index ae3bb150c..0f7c3d32f 100644 --- a/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins-prefix.md +++ b/doc/manual/src/expressions/builtins-prefix.md @@ -13,56 +13,3 @@ For instance, `derivation` is also available as `builtins.derivation`. `derivation` is described in [its own section](derivations.md). - - `import` *path*; `builtins.import` *path* - - Load, parse and return the Nix expression in the file *path*. If - *path* is a directory, the file ` default.nix ` in that directory - is loaded. Evaluation aborts if the file doesn’t exist or contains - an incorrect Nix expression. `import` implements Nix’s module - system: you can put any Nix expression (such as a set or a - function) in a separate file, and use it from Nix expressions in - other files. - - > **Note** - > - > Unlike some languages, `import` is a regular function in Nix. - > Paths using the angle bracket syntax (e.g., `import` *\*) - > are [normal path values](language-values.md). - - A Nix expression loaded by `import` must not contain any *free - variables* (identifiers that are not defined in the Nix expression - itself and are not built-in). Therefore, it cannot refer to - variables that are in scope at the call site. For instance, if you - have a calling expression - - ```nix - rec { - x = 123; - y = import ./foo.nix; - } - ``` - - then the following `foo.nix` will give an error: - - ```nix - x + 456 - ``` - - since `x` is not in scope in `foo.nix`. If you want `x` to be - available in `foo.nix`, you should pass it as a function argument: - - ```nix - rec { - x = 123; - y = import ./foo.nix x; - } - ``` - - and - - ```nix - x: x + 456 - ``` - - (The function argument doesn’t have to be called `x` in `foo.nix`; - any name would work.) diff --git a/src/libexpr/primops.cc b/src/libexpr/primops.cc index 2d3433200..821cf0782 100644 --- a/src/libexpr/primops.cc +++ b/src/libexpr/primops.cc @@ -74,10 +74,10 @@ void EvalState::realiseContext(const PathSet & context) /* Load and evaluate an expression from path specified by the argument. */ -static void prim_scopedImport(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) +static void import(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value & vPath, Value * vScope, Value & v) { PathSet context; - Path path = state.coerceToPath(pos, *args[1], context); + Path path = state.coerceToPath(pos, vPath, context); try { state.realiseContext(context); @@ -99,6 +99,7 @@ static void prim_scopedImport(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args return std::nullopt; return storePath; }; + if (auto optStorePath = isValidDerivationInStore()) { auto storePath = *optStorePath; Derivation drv = readDerivation(*state.store, realPath, Derivation::nameFromPath(storePath)); @@ -133,17 +134,18 @@ static void prim_scopedImport(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args mkApp(v, **fun, w); state.forceAttrs(v, pos); } else { - state.forceAttrs(*args[0]); - if (args[0]->attrs->empty()) + if (!vScope) state.evalFile(realPath, v); else { - Env * env = &state.allocEnv(args[0]->attrs->size()); + state.forceAttrs(*vScope); + + Env * env = &state.allocEnv(vScope->attrs->size()); env->up = &state.baseEnv; StaticEnv staticEnv(false, &state.staticBaseEnv); unsigned int displ = 0; - for (auto & attr : *args[0]->attrs) { + for (auto & attr : *vScope->attrs) { staticEnv.vars[attr.name] = displ; env->values[displ++] = attr.value; } @@ -156,6 +158,77 @@ static void prim_scopedImport(EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args } } +static RegisterPrimOp primop_scopedImport(RegisterPrimOp::Info { + .name = "scopedImport", + .arity = 2, + .fun = [](EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) + { + import(state, pos, *args[1], args[0], v); + } +}); + +static RegisterPrimOp primop_import({ + .name = "import", + .args = {"path"}, + .doc = R"( + Load, parse and return the Nix expression in the file *path*. If + *path* is a directory, the file ` default.nix ` in that directory + is loaded. Evaluation aborts if the file doesn’t exist or contains + an incorrect Nix expression. `import` implements Nix’s module + system: you can put any Nix expression (such as a set or a + function) in a separate file, and use it from Nix expressions in + other files. + + > **Note** + > + > Unlike some languages, `import` is a regular function in Nix. + > Paths using the angle bracket syntax (e.g., `import` *\*) + > are [normal path values](language-values.md). + + A Nix expression loaded by `import` must not contain any *free + variables* (identifiers that are not defined in the Nix expression + itself and are not built-in). Therefore, it cannot refer to + variables that are in scope at the call site. For instance, if you + have a calling expression + + ```nix + rec { + x = 123; + y = import ./foo.nix; + } + ``` + + then the following `foo.nix` will give an error: + + ```nix + x + 456 + ``` + + since `x` is not in scope in `foo.nix`. If you want `x` to be + available in `foo.nix`, you should pass it as a function argument: + + ```nix + rec { + x = 123; + y = import ./foo.nix x; + } + ``` + + and + + ```nix + x: x + 456 + ``` + + (The function argument doesn’t have to be called `x` in `foo.nix`; + any name would work.) + )", + .fun = [](EvalState & state, const Pos & pos, Value * * args, Value & v) + { + import(state, pos, *args[0], nullptr, v); + } +}); + /* Want reasonable symbol names, so extern C */ /* !!! Should we pass the Pos or the file name too? */ extern "C" typedef void (*ValueInitializer)(EvalState & state, Value & v); @@ -3429,12 +3502,6 @@ void EvalState::createBaseEnv() addConstant("__langVersion", v); // Miscellaneous - auto vScopedImport = addPrimOp("scopedImport", 2, prim_scopedImport); - Value * v2 = allocValue(); - mkAttrs(*v2, 0); - mkApp(v, *vScopedImport, *v2); - forceValue(v); - addConstant("import", v); if (evalSettings.enableNativeCode) { addPrimOp("__importNative", 2, prim_importNative); addPrimOp("__exec", 1, prim_exec); @@ -3444,7 +3511,7 @@ void EvalState::createBaseEnv() mkList(v, searchPath.size()); int n = 0; for (auto & i : searchPath) { - v2 = v.listElems()[n++] = allocValue(); + auto v2 = v.listElems()[n++] = allocValue(); mkAttrs(*v2, 2); mkString(*allocAttr(*v2, symbols.create("path")), i.second); mkString(*allocAttr(*v2, symbols.create("prefix")), i.first); diff --git a/tests/function-trace.sh b/tests/function-trace.sh index 182a4d5c2..3b7f364e3 100755 --- a/tests/function-trace.sh +++ b/tests/function-trace.sh @@ -32,8 +32,6 @@ expect_trace() { # failure inside a tryEval expect_trace 'builtins.tryEval (throw "example")' " -function-trace entered undefined position at -function-trace exited undefined position at function-trace entered (string):1:1 at function-trace entered (string):1:19 at function-trace exited (string):1:19 at @@ -42,32 +40,24 @@ function-trace exited (string):1:1 at # Missing argument to a formal function expect_trace '({ x }: x) { }' " -function-trace entered undefined position at -function-trace exited undefined position at function-trace entered (string):1:1 at function-trace exited (string):1:1 at " # Too many arguments to a formal function expect_trace '({ x }: x) { x = "x"; y = "y"; }' " -function-trace entered undefined position at -function-trace exited undefined position at function-trace entered (string):1:1 at function-trace exited (string):1:1 at " # Not enough arguments to a lambda expect_trace '(x: y: x + y) 1' " -function-trace entered undefined position at -function-trace exited undefined position at function-trace entered (string):1:1 at function-trace exited (string):1:1 at " # Too many arguments to a lambda expect_trace '(x: x) 1 2' " -function-trace entered undefined position at -function-trace exited undefined position at function-trace entered (string):1:1 at function-trace exited (string):1:1 at function-trace entered (string):1:1 at @@ -76,8 +66,6 @@ function-trace exited (string):1:1 at # Not a function expect_trace '1 2' " -function-trace entered undefined position at -function-trace exited undefined position at function-trace entered (string):1:1 at function-trace exited (string):1:1 at " From c3efef9275ce6db3d65a2eb97aee507e79b626a6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eelco Dolstra Date: Wed, 26 Aug 2020 09:28:10 +0200 Subject: [PATCH 57/57] Remove obsolete comment --- src/nix/local.mk | 1 - 1 file changed, 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/src/nix/local.mk b/src/nix/local.mk index cfe97b0f0..e96200685 100644 --- a/src/nix/local.mk +++ b/src/nix/local.mk @@ -15,7 +15,6 @@ nix_SOURCES := \ $(wildcard src/nix-prefetch-url/*.cc) \ $(wildcard src/nix-store/*.cc) \ -# -fpermissive is needed by lowdown. nix_CXXFLAGS += -I src/libutil -I src/libstore -I src/libfetchers -I src/libexpr -I src/libmain nix_LIBS = libexpr libmain libfetchers libstore libutil