This is caused by https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/346945 making
lowdown's CLI always enable the sandbox on macOS with failure being
fatal except when using the lowdown-unsandboxed package variant.
I don't think this is a good idea in the first place, as it should
*simply not have the sandbox setup failure be fatal*, but here we are
with two versions of the lowdown package.
Fixes: lix-project/lix#547
Change-Id: I50c0ecb59518ef01a7c0181114c1b4c5a7c6b78b
This was always a terrible idea independently of whether it crashes.
Stop doing it!
This commit was verified by running nix-shell on a trivial derivation
with --debug --verbose to get the vomit-level output of the shell rc
file and then diffing it before/after this change. I have reasonable
confidence it did not regress anything, though this code is genuinely
really hard to follow (which is a second reason that I split it into two
fmt calls).
Fixes: lix-project/lix#533
Change-Id: I8e11ddbece2b12749fda13efe0b587a71b00bfe5
This change feels kind of gross and reveals a fair bit about the
disorganization of our tests, but I think it makes parts of it a bit
better.
Change-Id: Idb8d9a00cbd75d5c156678c6b408b42b59d5e4d7
While debugging something else I observed that latest `main` ignores
`Control-C` on `sudo nix-build`.
After reading through the capnproto docs, it seems as if the promise
must be fulfilled to actually terminate the `promise.wait()` below.
This also applies to scenarios such as stopping the client
(`nix-build`), but the builders on the daemon-side are still running,
i.e. closes#540
Co-authored-by: eldritch horrors <pennae@lix.systems>
Change-Id: I9634d14df4909fc1b65d05654aad0309bcca8a0a
This is capped at 12 because 3.7 seconds of startup is painful enough
and 5.5 seconds with 24 was more annoying.
Change-Id: I327db40fd98deaa5330cd9cf6de99fb07b2c1cb0
I am tired of bad shell scripts, let me write bad python quickly
instead. It's definitely, $100%, better.
This is not planned as an immediate replacement of the old test suite,
but we::jade would not oppose tests getting ported.
What is here is a mere starting point and there is a lot more
functionality that we need.
Fixes: lix-project/lix#488
Change-Id: If762efce69030bb667491b263b874c36024bf7b6
I followed @pennae's advice and moved the constructor definition of
`AttrName` from the header file `nixexpr.hh` to `nixexpr.cc`.
Change-Id: I733f56c25635b366b11ba332ccec38dd7444e793
The approach that was taken here was to add default values to the type
definitions rather than specify them whenever they are missing.
Now the only remaining warning is '-Wunused-parameter' which @jade said
is usually counterproductive and that we can just disable it:
lix-project/lix#456 (comment)
So this change adds the flags '-Wall', '-Wextra' and
'-Wno-unused-parameter', so that all warnings are enabled except for
'-Wunused-parameter'.
Change-Id: Ic223a964d67ab429e8da804c0721ba5e25d53012
There was a bug report about a potential call to `memcpy` with a null
pointer which is not reproducible:
lix-project/lix#492
This occurred in `src/libstore/filetransfer.cc` in `InnerSource::read`.
To ensure that this doesn't happen, an early return is added before
calling `memcpy` if the length of the data to be copied is 0.
This change also adds a test that ensures that when `InnerSource::read`
is called with an empty file, it throws an `EndOfFile` exception.
Change-Id: Ia18149bee9a3488576c864f28475a3a0c9eadfbb
these two functions are now nearly trivial and much better inline into
makeGoalCommon. keeping them separate also separates information about
goal completion flows and how failure information ends up in `Worker`.
Change-Id: I6af86996e4a2346583371186595e3013c88fb082
we can use our newfound powers of Goal::work Is A Real Promise to remove
completed goals from continuation promises. apart from being much easier
to follow it's also a lot more efficient because we have the iterator to
the item we are trying to remove, skipping a linear search of the cache.
Change-Id: Ie0190d051c5f4b81304d98db478348b20c209df5
Goal::work() is a fully usable promise that does not rely on the worker
to report completion conditions. as such we no longer need the `notify`
field that enabled this interplay. we do have to clear goal caches when
destroying the worker though, otherwise goal promises may (incorrectly)
keep goals alive due to strong shared pointers created by childStarted.
Change-Id: Ie607209aafec064dbdf3464fe207d70ba9ee158a
derivation goals still hold a BuildResult member variable since parts of
these results of accumulated in different places, but the Goal class now
no longer has such a field. substitution goals don't need it at all, and
derivation goals should also be refactored to not drop their buildResult
Change-Id: Ic6d3d471cdbe790a6e09a43445e25bedec6ed446
the field is simply duplicated between the two, and now that we can
return WorkResults from Worker::run we no longer need both of them.
Change-Id: I82fc47d050b39b7bb7d1656445630d271f6c9830
this will be needed to move all interesting result fields out of Goal
proper and into WorkResult. once that is done we can treat goals as a
totally internal construct of the worker mechanism, which also allows
us to fully stop exposing unclear intermediate state to Worker users.
Change-Id: I98d7778a4b5b2590b7b070bdfc164a22a0ef7190
since we now propagate goal exceptions properly we no longer need to
check topGoals for a reason to abort early. any early abort reasons,
whether by exception or a clean top goal failure, can now be handled
by inspecting the goal result in the main loop. this greatly reduces
goal-to-goal interactions that do not happen at the main loop level.
since the underscore-free name is now available for use as variables
we'll migrate to that where we currently use `_topGoals` for locals.
Change-Id: I5727c5ea7799647c0a69ab76975b1a03a6558aa6
drop childException since it's no longer needed. also makes
waitForInput, childFinished, and childTerminated redundant.
Change-Id: I05d88ffd323c5b5c909ac21056162f69ffb0eb9f
there's no reason to have the worker set information on goals that the
goals themselves return from their entry point. doing this in the goal
`work()` function is much cleaner, and a prerequisite to removing more
implicit strong shared references to goals that are currently running.
Change-Id: Ibb3e953ab8482a6a21ce2ed659d5023a991e7923
this simplifies the worker loop, and lets us remove it entirely later.
note that ideally only one promise waiting for interrupts should exist
in the entire system. not one per event loop, one per *process*. extra
interrupt waiters make interrupt response nondeterministic and as such
aren't great for user experience. if anything wants to react to aborts
caused by explicit interruptions, or anything else, those things would
be much better served using RAII guards such as Finally (or KJ_DEFER).
Change-Id: I41d035ff40172d536e098153c7375b0972110d51
this was a triumph. i'm making a note here: huge success. it's hard to
overstate my satisfaction! i'm not even angry. i'm being so sincere ri
actually, no. we *are* angry. this was one dumbass odyssey. nobody has
asked for this. but not doing it would have locked us into old, broken
protocols forever or (possibly worse) forced us to write our own async
framework building on the old did-you-mean-continuations in Worker. if
we had done that we'd be locked into ever more, and ever more complex,
manual state management all over the place. this just could not stand.
Change-Id: I43a6de1035febff59d2eff83be9ad52af4659871
with async runtime scheduling we can no longer guarantee exact error
counts for builds that do not set keepGoing. the old behavior can be
recovered with a number of hacks that affect scheduling, but none of
those are very easy to follow now advisable. exact error counts will
like not be needed for almost all uses except tests, and *those* had
better check the actual messages rather than how many they got. more
messages can even help to avoid unnecessary rebuilds for most users.
Change-Id: I1c9aa7a401227dcaf2e19975b8cb83c5d4f85d64
In 0e6b3435a1, installation of the HTML manual
was accidentally dropped: setting install_dir on a custom_target only sets the
directory where something is going to be installed if it is installed at all,
but does not itself trigger installation. The latter has to be explicitly
requested, which is just what we do here to get the manual back.
Change-Id: Iff8b791de7e7cb4c8d747c2a9b1154b5fcc32fe0
The test suite can load the global configuration files under certain
circumstances, and, though we would really rather it didn't ever do that
at all, we should at least break the mechanism.
Fixes: lix-project/lix#474
Change-Id: Ib27cb43dd5dfaa70ac491c395b5ba308fd7bd289
due to event loop scheduling behavior it's possible for a derivation
goal to fully finish (having seen all paths it was asked to create),
but to not notify the worker of this in time to prevent another goal
asking the recently-finished goal for more outputs. if this happened
the finished goal would ignore the request for more outputs since it
considered itself fully done, and the delayed result reporting would
cause the requesting goal to assume its request had been honored. if
the requested goal had finished *properly* the worker would recreate
it instead of asking for more outputs, and this would succeed. it is
thus safe to always recreate goals once they are done, so we now do.
Change-Id: Ifedd69ca153372c623abe9a9b49cd1523588814f
This moves the "legacy"/"nix2" commands under a new `src/legacy/`
directory, instead of being scattered around in a bunch of different
directories.
A new `liblegacy` build target is defined, and the `nix` binary is
linked against it.
Then, `RegisterLegacyCommand` is replaced with `LegacyCommand::add`
calls in functions like `registerNixCollectGarbage()`. These
registration functions are called explicitly in `src/nix/main.cc`.
See: lix-project/lix#359
Change-Id: Id450ffc3f793374907599cfcc121863b792aac1a
we'll now loop to update displayed statistics, and use this loop to
limit the update rate to 50 times per second. we could have updated
much more frequently before this (once per iteration of `runImpl`),
much faster than would ever be useful in practice. aggressive stats
updates can even impede progress due to terminal or network delays.
Change-Id: Ifba755a2569f73c919b1fbb06a142c0951395d6d
Worker::run() is now entirely based on the kj event loop and promises,
so we need not handle awakeness of goals manually any more. every goal
can instead, once it has finished a partial work call, defer itself to
being called again in the next iteration of the loop. same end effect.
Change-Id: I320eee2fa60bcebaabd74d1323fa96d1402c1d15
notably we will check whether we want to do GC at all only once during
startup, and we'll only attempt GC every ten seconds rather than every
time a goal has finished a partial work call. this shouldn't cause any
problems in practice since relying on auto-gc is not deterministic and
stores in which builds can fill all remaining free space in merely ten
seconds are severely troubled even when gargage collection runs a lot.
Change-Id: I1175a56bf7f4e531f8be90157ad88750ff2ddec4
Revert submission 1946
Reason for revert: regression in building (found via bisection)
Reported by users:
> error: path '/nix/store/04ca5xwvasz6s3jg0k7njz6rzi0d225w-jq-1.7.1-dev' does not exist in the store
Reverted changes: /q/submissionid:1946
Change-Id: I6f1a4b2f7d7ef5ca430e477fc32bca62fd97036b
nothing needs to signal being still active but not actively pollable,
only that immediate polling for the next goal work phase is in order.
Change-Id: Ia43c1015e94ba4f5f6b9cb92943da608c4a01555
this was immensely inefficient on large caches, as can exist when many
derivations are buildable simultaneously. since we have smart pointers
to goals we can do cache maintenance in goal deleters instead, and use
the exact iterators instead of doing a linear search. this *does* rely
on goals being deleted to remove them from the cache, which isn't true
for toplevel goals. those would have previously been removed when done
in all cases, removing the cache entry when keep-going is set. this is
arguably incorrect since it might result in those goals being retried,
although that could only happen with dynamic derivations or the likes.
(luckily dynamic derivations not complete enough to allow this at all)
Change-Id: I8e750b868393588c33e4829333d370f2c509ce99
makeDerivationGoalCommon had the right idea, but it didn't quite go far
enough. let's do the rest and remove the remaining factory duplication.
Change-Id: I1fe32446bdfb501e81df56226fd962f85720725b
this was a debugging aid from day one that should not have any impact on
build semantics, and if it *does* have an impact on build semantics then
build semantics are seriously broken. keeping the order imposed by these
keys will be impossible once we let a real event loop schedule our jobs.
Change-Id: I5c313324e1f213ab6453d82f41ae5e59de809a5b
without circular references we do not need weak goal pointers except for
caches, which should not prevent goal destructors running. caches though
cannot create circular references even when they keep strong references.
if we removed goals from caches when their work() is fully finished, not
when their destructors are run, we could keep strong pointers in caches.
since we do not gain much from this we keep those pointers weak for now.
Change-Id: I1d4a6850ff5e264443c90eb4531da89f5e97a3a0
have DerivationGoal and its subclasses produce a wrapper promise for
their intermediate results instead, and return this wrapper promise.
Worker already handles promises that do not complete immediately, so
we do not have to duplicate this into an entire result type variant.
Change-Id: Iae8dbf63cfc742afda4d415922a29ac5a3f39348
the new event loop could very occasionally notice that a dependency of
some goal has failed, process the failure, cause the depending goal to
fail accordingly, and in the doing of the latter two steps let further
dependencies that previously have not been reported as failed do their
reporting anyway. in such cases a goal could fail with "1 dependencies
failed", but more than one dependency failure message was shown. we'll
now report the correct number of failed dependency goals in all cases.
Change-Id: I5aa95dcb2db4de4fd5fee8acbf5db833531d81a8
these can be unique rather than shared because shared_ptr has a
converting constructor. preparatory refactor for something else
and not necessary on its own, and the extra allocations we must
do for shared_ptr control blocks isn't usually relevant anyway.
Change-Id: I5391715545240c6ec8e83a031206edafdfc6462f
Since fb38459d6e, each `ref` is appended
with `refs/heads` unless it starts with `refs/` already. This regressed
two use-cases that worked fine before:
* Specifying a commit hash as `ref`: now, if `ref` looks like a commit
hash it will be directly passed to `git fetch`.
* Specifying a tag without `refs/tags` as prefix: now, the fetcher prepends
`refs/*` to a ref that doesn't start with `refs/` and doesn't look
like a commit hash. That way, both a branch and a tag specified in
`ref` can be fetched.
The order of preference in git is
* file in `refs/` (e.g. `HEAD`)
* file in `refs/tags/`
* file in `refs/heads` (i.e. a branch)
After fetching `refs/*`, ref is resolved the same way as git does.
Change-Id: Idd49b97cbdc8c6fdc8faa5a48bef3dec25e4ccc3
This was already the de facto requirement, we use the method `full_path`
on a file object (introduced in Meson 1.4.0) in the functional test
suite's build.
This version of Meson is in NixOS 24.05, so there should be no
compatibility issues should this make it into a backported release of
Lix.
CC: lix-project/lix#247
Change-Id: I5c640824807353b6eb4287e7ed09c4e89a4bdde2
Using `configure_file` to copy files has been deprecated since Meson 0.64.0.
The intended replacement is the `fs.copyfile` method.
This removes the following deprecation warning that arises when a minimum
Meson version is specified:
``
Project [...] uses feature deprecated since '0.64.0': copy arg in configure_file. Use fs.copyfile instead
``
Change-Id: I09ffc92e96311ef9ed594343a0a16d51e74b114a
In Meson, `install_subdir` is meant to be used with directories in the source
directory. When using it to install the HTML manual, we provide it with a path
under the build directory.
We should instead specify an install directory for the HTML manual as part of
the custom target that builds it.
What we do currently isn't broken, just semantically incorrect. Changing it does
get rid of the following deprecation warning, though:
``
Project [...] uses feature deprecated since '0.60.0': install_subdir with empty directory. It worked by accident and is buggy. Use install_emptydir instead.
``
Change-Id: I259583b7bdff8ecbb3b342653d70dc5f034c7fad
also gets rid of explicit strong references to dependencies of any goal,
and weak references to dependers as well. those are now only held within
promises representing goal completion and thus independent of the goal's
relation to each other. the weak references to dependers was only needed
for notifications, and that's much better handled entirely by kj itself.
Change-Id: I00d06df9090f8d6336ee4bb0c1313a7052fb016b
now that we have an event loop in the worker we can use it and its
magical execution suspending properties to replace the slot counts
we managed explicitly with semaphores and raii tokens. technically
this would not have needed an event loop base to be doable, but it
is a whole lot easier to wait for a token to be available if there
is a callback mechanism ready for use that doesn't require a whole
damn dedicated abstract method in Goal to work, and specific calls
to that dedicated method strewn all over the worker implementation
Change-Id: I1da7cf386d94e2bbf2dba9b53ff51dbce6a0cff7
with waitForAWhile turned into promised the core functionality of
waitForInput is now merely to let gc run every so often if needed
Change-Id: I68da342bbc1d67653901cf4502dabfa5bc947628
this simplifies waitForInput quite a lot, and at the same time makes
polling less thundering-herd-y. it even fixes early polling wakeups!
Change-Id: I6dfa62ce91729b8880342117d71af5ae33366414
this removes the rather janky did-you-mean-async poll loop we had so
far. sadly kj does not play well with pty file descriptors, so we do
have to add our own async input stream that does not eat pty EIO and
turns it into an exception. that's still a *lot* better than the old
code, and using a real even loop makes everything else easier later.
Change-Id: Idd7e0428c59758602cc530bcad224cd2fed4c15e
When `nix fmt` is called without an argument, Nix appends the "." argument before calling the formatter. The comment in the code is:
> Format the current flake out of the box
This also happens when formatting sub-folders.
This means that the formatter is now unable to distinguish, as an interface, whether the "." argument is coming from the flake or the user's intent to format the current folder. This decision should be up to the formatter.
Treefmt, for example, will automatically look up the project's root and format all the files. This is the desired behaviour. But because the "." argument is passed, it cannot function as expected.
Upstream-PR: https://github.com/nixos/nix/pull/11438
Change-Id: I60fb6b3ed4ec1b24f81b5f0d76c0be98470817ce
like kj::joinPromisesFailFast this allows waiting for the results of
multiple promises at once, but unlike it not all input promises must
be complete (or any of them failed) for results to become available.
Change-Id: I0e4a37e7bd90651d56b33d0bc5afbadc56cde70c
like a normal semaphore, but with awaitable acquire actions. this is
primarily intended as an intermediate concurrency limiting device in
the Worker code, but it may find other uses over time. we do not use
std::counting_semaphore as a base because the counter of that is not
inspectable as will be needed for Worker. we also do not need atomic
operations for cross-thread consistency since we don't have multiple
threads (thanks to kj event loops being confined to a single thread)
Change-Id: Ie2bcb107f3a2c0185138330f7cbba4cec6cbdd95
Without this, verifying TLS certificates would fail on macOS, as well
as any system that doesn't have a certificate file at /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt,
which includes e.g. Fedora.
Change-Id: Iaa2e0e9db3747645b5482c82e3e0e4e8f229f5f9
This is better for privacy and to avoid leaking netrc credentials in a
MITM attack, but also the assumption that we check the hash no longer
holds in some cases (in particular for impure derivations).
Partially reverts 5db358d4d7.
(cherry picked from commit c04bc17a5a0fdcb725a11ef6541f94730112e7b6)
(cherry picked from commit f2f47fa725fc87bfb536de171a2ea81f2789c9fb)
(cherry picked from commit 7b39cd631e0d3c3d238015c6f450c59bbc9cbc5b)
Upstream-PR: https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/11585
Change-Id: Ia973420f6098113da05a594d48394ce1fe41fbb9
These stack traces kind of suck for the reasons mentioned on the
CppTrace page here (no symbols for inline functions is a major one):
https://github.com/jeremy-rifkin/cpptrace
I would consider using CppTrace if it were packaged, but to be honest, I
think that the more reasonable option is actually to move entirely to
out-of-process crash handling and symbolization.
The reason for this is that if you want to generate anything of
substance on SIGSEGV or really any deadly signal, you are stuck in
async-signal-safe land, which is not a place to be trying to run a
symbolizer. LLVM does it anyway, probably carefully, and chromium *can*
do it on debug builds but in general uses crashpad:
https://source.chromium.org/chromium/chromium/src/+/main:base/debug/stack_trace_posix.cc;l=974;drc=82dff63dbf9db05e9274e11d9128af7b9f51ceaa;bpv=1;bpt=1
However, some stack traces are better than *no* stack traces when we get
mystery exceptions falling out the bottom of the program. I've also
promoted the path for "mystery exceptions falling out the bottom of the
program" to hard crash and generate a core dump because although there's
been some months since the last one of these, these are nonetheless
always *atrociously* diagnosed.
We can't improve the crash handling further until either we use Crashpad
(which involves more C++ deps, no thanks) or we put in the ostensibly
work in progress Rust minidump infrastructure, in which case we need to
finish full support for Rust in libutil first.
Sample report:
Lix crashed. This is a bug. We would appreciate if you report it at https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/issues with the following information included:
Exception: std::runtime_error: lol
Stack trace:
0# nix::printStackTrace() in /home/jade/lix/lix3/build/src/nix/../libutil/liblixutil.so
1# 0x000073C9862331F2 in /home/jade/lix/lix3/build/src/nix/../libmain/liblixmain.so
2# 0x000073C985F2E21A in /nix/store/p44qan69linp3ii0xrviypsw2j4qdcp2-gcc-13.2.0-lib/lib/libstdc++.so.6
3# 0x000073C985F2E285 in /nix/store/p44qan69linp3ii0xrviypsw2j4qdcp2-gcc-13.2.0-lib/lib/libstdc++.so.6
4# nix::handleExceptions(std::__cxx11::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char> > const&, std::function<void ()>) in /home/jade/lix/lix3/build/src/nix/../libmain/liblixmain.so
5# 0x00005CF65B6B048B in /home/jade/lix/lix3/build/src/nix/nix
6# 0x000073C985C8810E in /nix/store/dbcw19dshdwnxdv5q2g6wldj6syyvq7l-glibc-2.39-52/lib/libc.so.6
7# __libc_start_main in /nix/store/dbcw19dshdwnxdv5q2g6wldj6syyvq7l-glibc-2.39-52/lib/libc.so.6
8# 0x00005CF65B610335 in /home/jade/lix/lix3/build/src/nix/nix
Change-Id: I1a9f6d349b617fd7145a37159b78ecb9382cb4e9
We don't support GCC anymore for building, so the overlay currently
fails to evaluate with
error: assertion '((stdenv).cc.isClang || lintInsteadOfBuild)' failed
`clangStdenv` seems like a reasonable default now.
Noticed while upgrading Lix for our Hydra fork.
Change-Id: I948a7c03b3e5648fc7c596f96e1b8053a9e7f92f
Previously, Doxygen needed to be ran from the project's source root dir
due to the relative paths in the config's `INPUT` tag. We now preprocess
the relative paths by prefixing them with the absolute path of the
project's source root dir. The HTML output remains unchanged.
Fixes: lix-project/lix#240
Change-Id: I85f099c22bfc5fdbf26be27c2db7dcbc8155c8b2
This caused an infinite loop before since it would just keep asking the
underlying source for more data.
In practice this happened because an HTTP server served a
response to a HEAD request (for which curl will not retrieve any body or
call our write callback function) with Content-Encoding: br, leading to
decompressing nothing at all and going into an infinite loop.
This adds a test to make sure none of our compression methods do that
again, as well as just patching the HTTP client to never feed empty data
into a compression algorithm (since they absolutely have the right to
throw CompressionError on unexpectedly-short streams!).
Reported on Matrix: https://matrix.to/#/!lymvtcwDJ7ZA9Npq:lix.systems/$8BWQR_zKxCQDJ40C5NnDo4bQPId3pZ_aoDj2ANP7Itc?via=lix.systems&via=matrix.org&via=tchncs.de
Change-Id: I027566e280f0f569fdb8df40e5ecbf46c211dad1
The legitimate output of `nix path-info` may visually interfere with the
progress bar, by appending to stale progress output before the latter has been
erased. Conveniently, all expensive operations (evaluation or building) have
already been performed before, so we can simply wipe the progress bar at this
point to fix the issue.
Fixes: lix-project/lix#343
Change-Id: Id9a807a5c882295b3e6fbf841f9c15dc96f67f6e
This test suite was in desperate need of using the parameterization
available with gtest, and was a bunch of useless duplicated code. At
least now it's not duplicated code, though it still probably should be
more full of property tests.
Change-Id: Ia8ccee7ef4f02b2fa40417b79aa8c8f0626ea479
See lix-project/lix#496.
The core idea is to be able to do e.g.
nix-instantiate -A some-nonfree-thing --arg config.allowUnfree true
which is currently not possible since `config.allowUnfree` is
interpreted as attribute name with a dot in it.
In order to change that (probably), Jade suggested to find out if there
are any folks out there relying on this behavior.
For such a use-case, it may still be possible to accept strings, i.e.
`--arg '"config.allowUnfree"'.
Change-Id: I986c73619fbd87a95b55e2f0ac03feaed3de2d2d
Apparently forgejo has a more creative interpretation of \(\) than I was
hoping in their markdown parser and thought it was maths. I have no idea
then how you put a link in parens next to another square-bracket link,
but I am not going to worry about it.
There were several more typos, which I also fixed.
Fixes: lix-project/lix#517
Change-Id: I6b144c6881f92ca60ba72a304ce7a0bcb9c6659a
* Move the extended attribute deletion after the hardlink sanity check. We
shouldn't be removing extended attributes on random files.
* Make the entity owner-writable before attempting to remove extended
attributes, since this operation usually requires write access on the file,
and we shouldn't fail xattr deletion on a file that has been made unwritable
by the builder or a previous canonicalisation pass.
Fixes: lix-project/lix#507
Change-Id: I7e6ccb71649185764cd5210f4a4794ee174afea6
Remove the mutable state stuff that assumes that one file is being
written a time. It's true that we don't write multiple files
interleaved, but that mutable state is evil.
Change-Id: Ia1481da48255d901e4b09a9b783e7af44fae8cff
When generating shell completions, no logging output should be visible because
it would destroy the shell prompt. Originally this was attempted to be done by
simply disabling the progress bar (ca946860ce),
since the situation is particularly bad there (the screen clearing required for
the rendering ends up erasing the shell prompt). Due to overlooking the
implementation of this hack, it was accidentally undone during a later change
(0dd1d8ca1c).
Since even with the hack correctly in place, it is still possible to mess up
the prompt by logging output (for example warnings for disabled experimental
features, or messages generated by `builtins.trace`), simply send it to the bit
bucket where it belongs. This was already done for bash and zsh
(9d840758a8), and it seems that fish was simply
missed at that time. The last trace of the no-longer-working and obsolete hack
is deleted too.
Fixes: lix-project/lix#513
Change-Id: I59f1ebf90903034e2059298fa8d76bf970bc3315
- Rename the listener to not be called a "sink". If it were a "sink" it
would be eating bytes and conform with any of the Nix sink stuff
(maybe FileHandle should be a Sink itself! but that's a later CL's
problem). This is a parser listener.
- Move the RetrieveRegularNARSink thing into store-api.cc, which is its
only usage, and fix it to actually do what it is stated to do: crash
if its invariants are violated.
It's, of course, used to erm, unpack single-file NAR files, generated
via a horrible contraption of sources and sinks that looks like a
plumbing blueprint. Refactoring that is a future task.
- Add a description of the invariants of NARParseVisitor in preparation
of refactoring it.
Change-Id: Ifca1d74d2947204a1f66349772e54dad0743e944
while gcc 12 and older miscompile our generators, gcc 13 and older
outright crash on kj coroutines. (newer gcc versions may fix this)
Change-Id: I19f12c8c147239680eb0fa5a84ef5c7de38c9263
using a proper event loop basis we no longer have to worry about most of
the intricacies of poll(), or platform-dependent replacements for it. we
may even be able to use the event loop and its promise system for all of
our scheduling in the future. we don't do any real async processing yet,
this is just preparation to separate the first such change from the huge
api design difference with the async framework we chose (kj from capnp):
kj::Promise, unlike std::future, doesn't return exceptions unmangled. it
instead wraps any non-kj exception into a kj exception, erasing all type
information and preserving mostly the what() string in the process. this
makes sense in the capnp rpc use case where unrestricted exception types
can't be transferred, and since it moves error handling styles closer to
a world we'd actually like there's no harm in doing it only here for now
Change-Id: I20f888de74d525fb2db36ca30ebba4bcfe9cc838
we're using boost::outcome rather than leaf or stl types because stl
types are not available everywhere and leaf does not provide its own
storage for error values, relying on thread-locals and the stack. if
we want to use promises we won't have a stack and would have to wrap
everything into leaf-specific allocating wrappers, so outcome it is.
Change-Id: I35111a1f9ed517e7f12a839e2162b1ba6a993f8f
When the multi-line log format is enabled, the progress bar usually occupies
multiple lines on the screen. When stopping the progress bar, only the last
line was wiped, leaving all others visible on the screen. Erase all lines
belonging to the progress bar to prevent these leftovers.
Asking the user for input is theoretically affected by a similar issue, but
this is not observed in practice since the only place where the user is asked
(whether configuration options coming from flakes should be accepted) does not
actually have multiple lines on the progress bar. However, there is no real
reason to not fix this either, so let's do it anyway.
Change-Id: Iaa5a701874fca32e6f06d85912835d86b8fa7a16
The AcceptFlakeConfig type used was missing its JSON serialisation definition,
so it was incorrectly serialised as an integer, ending up that way for example
in the nix.conf manual page. Declare a proper serialisation.
Change-Id: If8ec210f9d4dd42fe480c4e97d0a4920eb66a01e
The JSON serialisation should be declared in the header so that all translation
units can see it when needed, even though it seems that it has not been used
anywhere else so far. Unfortunately, this means we cannot use the
NLOHMANN_JSON_SERIALIZE_ENUM convenience macro, since it uses a slightly
different signature, but the code is not too bad either.
Change-Id: I6e2851b250e0b53114d2fecb8011ff1ea9379d0f
This is the repl overlay from my dotfiles, which I think provides a
reasonable and ergonomic set of variables. We can iterate on this over
time, or (perhaps?) provide a sentinel value like `repl-overlays =
<DEFAULT>` to include a "suggested default" overlay like this one.
Change-Id: I8eba3934c50fbac8367111103e66c7375b8d134e
it just makes sense to have it too, rather than just the pass/fail
information we keep so far. once we turn goals into something more
promise-shaped it'll also help detangle the current data flow mess
Change-Id: I915cf04d177cad849ea7a5833215d795326f1946
it doesn't have a purpose except cache priming, which is largely
irrelevant by default (since another code path already runs this
exact query). our store implementations do not benefit that much
from this either, and the more bursty load may indeed harm them.
Change-Id: I1cc12f8c21cede42524317736d5987f1e43fc9c9
updating statistics *immediately* when any counter changes declutters
things somewhat and makes useful status reports less dependent on the
current worker main loop. using callbacks will make it easier to move
the worker loop into kj entirely, using only promises for scheduling.
Change-Id: I695dfa83111b1ec09b1a54cff268f3c1d7743ed6
there's no reason to go through the event loop in these cases. returning
ContinueImmediately here is just a very convoluted way of jumping to the
state we've just set after unwinding one frame of the stack, which never
matters in the cases changed here because there are no live RAII guards.
Change-Id: I7c00948c22e3caf35e934c1a14ffd2d40efc5547
this is not ideal, but it's better than having this stuck in the worker
loop itself. setting ex on all failing goals is not problematic because
only toplevel goals can ever be observable, all the others are ignored.
notably only derivation goals ever set `ex`, substitution goals do not.
Change-Id: I02e2164487b2955df053fef3c8e774d557aa638a
this doesn't serve a great purpose yet except to confine construction of
goals to the stack frame of Worker::run() and its child frames. we don't
need this yet (and the goal constructors remain fully visible), but in a
future change that fully removes the current worker loop we'll need some
way of knowing which goals are top-level goals without passing the goals
themselves around. once that's possible we can remove visible goals as a
concept and rely on build result futures and a scheduler built upon them
Change-Id: Ia73cdeffcfb9ba1ce9d69b702dc0bc637a4c4ce6
whether goal errors are reported via the `ex` member or just printed to
the log depends on whether the goal is a toplevel goal or a dependency.
if goals are aware of this themselves we can move error printing out of
the worker loop, and since a running worker can only be used by running
goals it's totally sufficient to keep a `Worker::running` flag for this
Change-Id: I6b5cbe6eccee1afa5fde80653c4b968554ddd16f
(but only if it is set to relaxed. no security hole here.)
Thanks to lilyball for pointing out this omission in the docs.
Change-Id: I2408a943bfe817fe660fe1c8fefef898aaf5f7e9
Apparently the fmt contraption has some extremely popular overloads, and
the boost stuff in there gets built approximately infinite times in
every compilation unit.
Change-Id: Ideba2db7d6bf8559e4d91974bab636f5ed106198
Fixes:
- Identifiers starting with _ are prohibited
- Some driveby header dependency cleaning which wound up with doing some
extra fixups.
- Fucking C style casts, man. C++ made these 1000% worse by letting you
also do memory corruption with them with references.
- Remove casts to Expr * where ExprBlackHole is an incomplete type by
introducing an explicitly-cast eBlackHoleAddr as Expr *.
- An incredibly illegal cast of the text bytes of the StorePath hash
into a size_t directly. You can't DO THAT.
Replaced with actually parsing the hash so we get 100% of the bits
being entropy, then memcpying the start of the hash. If this shows
up in a profile we should just make the hash parser faster with a
lookup table or something sensible like that.
- This horrendous bit of UB which I thankfully slapped a deprecation
warning on, built, and it didn't trigger anywhere so it was dead
code and I just deleted it. But holy crap you *cannot* do that.
inline void mkString(const Symbol & s)
{
mkString(((const std::string &) s).c_str());
}
- Some wrong lints. Lots of wrong macro lints, one wrong
suspicious-sizeof lint triggered by the template being instantiated
with only pointers, but the calculation being correct for both
pointers and not-pointers.
- Exceptions in destructors strike again. I tried to catch the
exceptions that might actually happen rather than all the exceptions
imaginable. We can let the runtime hard-kill it on other exceptions
imo.
Change-Id: I71761620846cba64d66ee7ca231b20c061e69710
It's nice for this to be a separate function and not just inline in
`absPath`.
Prepared as part of cl/1865, though I don't think I actually ended up
using it there.
Change-Id: I24d9d4a984cee0af587010baf04b3939a1c147ec
the current test relies on derivation build order being deterministic,
which will not be a reasonable expectation for all that long any more.
Change-Id: I9be44a7725185f614a9a4c724045b8b1e6962c03
this makes WorkResult copyable, and just all around easier to deal with.
in the future we'll need this to let Goal::work() return a promise for a
WorkResult (or even just a Finished) that can be awaited by other goals.
Change-Id: Ic5a1ce04c5a0f8e683bd00a2ed2b77a2e28989c1
this should be done where we're actually trying to build something, not
in the main worker loop that shouldn't have to be aware of such details
Change-Id: I07276740c0e2e5591a8ce4828a4bfc705396527e
This caused an absolute saga which I would not like anyone else to have
to experience. Let's put in a laser targeted error message that
diagnoses this exact problem.
Fixes: lix-project/lix#484
Change-Id: I2a79f04aeb4a1b67c10115e5e39501d958836298
This took parsing time from 1421s or so to 1060s or so. The reason is
entirely nlohmann. All of the stuff below is just Obliterated because it's
built in the PCH instead:
**** Templates that took longest to instantiate:
219051 ms: nlohmann::basic_json<>::parse<const char *> (276 times, avg 793 ms)
169675 ms: nlohmann::basic_json<>::basic_json (1127 times, avg 150 ms)
129416 ms: nlohmann::detail::parser<nlohmann::basic_json<>, nlohmann::detail::i... (276 times, avg 468 ms)
98155 ms: nlohmann::detail::parser<nlohmann::basic_json<>, nlohmann::detail::i... (276 times, avg 355 ms)
81322 ms: nlohmann::basic_json<>::json_value::json_value (1405 times, avg 57 ms)
53531 ms: nlohmann::detail::json_sax_dom_callback_parser<nlohmann::basic_json<... (276 times, avg 193 ms)
clang-only. This brings the clang build time to not far from *half* of
the gcc build time.
Also, clang does not enjoy so much to miscompile coroutines. Maybe we
should just be clang-only.
Change-Id: Id3135db0094e4560830674090e32e6da2c22fcc6
This avoids C++'s standard library regexes, which aren't the same
across platforms, and have many other issues, like using stack
so much that they stack overflow when processing a lot of data.
To avoid backwards and forward compatibility issues, regexes are
processed using a function converting libstdc++ regexes into Boost
regexes, escaping characters that Boost needs to have escaped, and
rejecting features that Boost has and libstdc++ doesn't.
Related context:
- Original failed attempt to use `boost::regex` in CppNix, failed due to
boost icu dependency being large (disabling ICU is no longer necessary
because linking ICU requires using a different header file,
`boost/regex/icu.hpp`): https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/3826
- An attempt to use PCRE, rejected due to providing less backwards
compatibility with `std::regex` than `boost::regex`:
https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/7336
- Second attempt to use `boost::regex`, failed due to `}` regex failing
to compile (dealt with by writing a wrapper that parses a regular
expression and escapes `}` characters):
https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/7762Closes#34. Closes#476.
Change-Id: Ieb0eb9e270a93e4c7eed412ba4f9f96cb00a5fa4
nixpkgs delivered us the untimely gift of a meson 1.5 upgrade, which
*does* make our lives easier by allowing us to delete wrap generation
code, but it does so at the cost of renaming all rust crates in such a
way that the wrap logic cannot tolerate the new names on the old meson
version 😭.
It also means that support burden for this is going to be atrocious
until we either give in and vendor meson 1.5 or we make a CI target for
it. Neither seems appealing, though the latter is not super absurd for
ensuring we don't break nixpkgs unstable.
This commit causes meson 1.5 to ignore the .wrap files in subprojects/
entirely (since they have the wrong names lol) and instead use
Cargo.lock, so it now hard-depends on our workspace reshuffling
improvement.
It also deletes the hack that we were using to get the sources of Cargo
deps into meson by using a feature that went unnoticed when this code
was originally written: MESON_PACKAGE_CACHE_DIR:
8a202de6ec/mesonbuild/wrap/wrap.py (L490-L502)
Change-Id: I7a28f12fc2812c6ed7537b60bc3025c141a05874
This is purely to let Cargo's dependency resolver do stuff for us, we do
not actually intend to build this stuff with Cargo to begin with.
Change-Id: I4c08d55595c7c27b7096375022581e1e34308a87
There have been multiple setting types for paths that are supposed to be
canonicalised, depending on whether zero or one, one, or any number of paths is
to be specified. Naturally, they behaved in slightly different ways in the
code. Simplify things by unifying them and removing special behaviour (mainly
the "multiple paths type can coerce to boolean" thing).
Change-Id: I7c1ce95e9c8e1829a866fb37d679e167811e9705
Commit 0dd1d8ca1c included an accidental revert
of 1461e6cdda (actually slightly worse), leading
to the progress bar not being stopped properly when a legacy command was
invoked with `--log-format bar` (or similar options that show a progress bar).
Move the progress bar stopping code to its proper place again to fix this
regression.
Change-Id: I676333da096d5990b717a387924bb988c9b73fab
lix-doc is now built with Meson, with lix-doc's dependencies built as
Meson subprojects, either fetched on demand with .wrap files, or fetched
in advance by Nix with importCargoLock. It even builds statically.
Fixes#256.
Co-authored-by: Lunaphied <lunaphied@lunaphied.me>
Co-authored-by: Jade Lovelace <lix@jade.fyi>
Change-Id: I3a4731ff13278e7117e0316bc0d7169e85f5eb0c
The <() process substitution syntax doesn't work for this one testcase
in bash for FreeBSD. The exact reason for this is unknown, possibly to
do with pipe vs file vs fifo EOF behavior. The prior behavior was this
test hanging forever, with no children of the bash process.
Change-Id: I71822a4b9dea6059b34300568256c5b7848109ac
Closes#460
I managed to trigger the issue by having the following inputs (shortened):
authentik-nix.url = "github:nix-community/authentik-nix";
authentik-nix.inputs.poetry2nix.inputs.nixpkgs.follows = "nixpkgs";
When evaluating this using
nix-eval-jobs --flake .#hydraJobs
I got the following error:
error: cannot update unlocked flake input 'authentik-nix/poetry2nix' in pure mode
The issue we have here is that `authentik-nix/poetry2nix` was written
into the `overrideMap` which caused Nix to assume it's a new input and
tried to refetch it (#460) or errored out in pure mode
(nix-eval-jobs / Hydra).
The testcase unfortunately only involves checking for the output log
and makes sure that something *is* logged on the first fetch so that
the test doesn't rot when the logging changes since I didn't
manage to trigger the error above with the reproducer from #460. In
fact, I only managed to trigger the `cannot update unlocked flake input`
error in this context with `nix-eval-jobs`.
Change-Id: Ifd00091eec9a0067ed4bb3e5765a15d027328807
this can be a proper WorkResult now. childTerminated is unfortunately a
lot more stubborn and won't be made private for quite a while yet. once
we can get rid of the Worker poll loop that *should* be possible though
Change-Id: I2218df202da5cb84e852f6a37e4c20367495b617
we'll need this once we want to pass extra information out of accepting
replies, such as fd sets or possibly even async output reader promises.
Change-Id: I5e2f18cdb80b0d2faf3067703cc18bd263329b3f
don't keep fds open we're not using. currently this does not cause any
problems, but it does increase the size of our fd table needlessly and
in the future, when we have proper async processing, having builderOut
open in the daemon once the hook has been fully started is problematic
Change-Id: I6e7fb773b280b042873103638d3e04272ca1e4fc
this is useless to do on the face of it, but it'll make it easier to
convert the entire output handling to use async io and promises soon
Change-Id: I2d1eb62c4bbf8f57bd558b9599c08710a389b1a8
only DerivationGoal can set the hook to anything at all. it always sets
buildOutFD to something that is not related to fromHook in any way, and
mixing the two would have rather dire consequences for log consistency.
Change-Id: Ida86727fd1cd5e1ecd78f07f3bde330a346658a8
This is incredibly haunted, but it can happen that you change libutil,
breaking the generation of the .json files, which then does not rebuild
the files. I don't expect they are slow to build, so it does not seem so
bad to just rebuild them every time instead of extracting a list of all
the possible deps.
We want to delete this nonsense anyway and replace it with generated
code.
Change-Id: Ia576d1a3bdee48fbaefbb5ac194354428d179a84
all derivation goals need a log fd of some description. let's save this
single fd in a dedicated pointer field for all subclasses so that later
we have just the one spot to change if we turn this into async promises
Change-Id: If223adf90909247363fb823d751cae34d25d0c0b
we don't need to expose information about how busy a Worker is if the
worker can instead tell its work items whether they are in a slot. in
the future we might use this to not start items waiting for a slot if
no slots are currently available, but that requires more preparation.
Change-Id: Ibe01ac536da7e6d6f80520164117c43e772f9bd9
They are like experimental features, but opt-in instead of opt-out. They
will allow us to gracefully remove language features. See #437
Change-Id: I9ca04cc48e6926750c4d622c2b229b25cc142c42
The target_machine variable is meant for the target
of cross compilers. We are not a cross compiler, so
instead reuse our host_machine based checks.
Fixes Linux→FreeBSD cross, since Meson can't figure
out `target_machine.kernel()` in that case.
Fixes: lix-project/lix#469
Change-Id: Ia46a64c8d507c3b08987a1de1eda171ff5e50df4
This merge commit returns to the previous state prior to the release but leaves the tag in the branch history.
Release created with releng/create_release.xsh
Change-Id: I8fc975f856631dec7fb3314abd436675adabb59c
For years both the documentation and nixpkgs have said that CppNix is
LGPL-2.1-or-later, not LGPL-2.1-only as is somewhat implied by the
README. We are choosing to update the README to match the rest of the
references.
Related: https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/5218
Change-Id: I6a765ae7857a2f84872f80a25983c4c4b2b3b1c1
Seems a little bit Rich that musl does not implement close_range because
they suspect that the system call itself is a bad idea, so they uhhhh
are considering not implementing a wrapper. Let's just fix the problem
at hand by writing our own wrapper.
Change-Id: I1f8e5858e4561d58a5450503d9c4585aded2b216
Turns out strings do not like being resized to -4.
This was discovered while messing with the tests to remove unbuffer and
trying stdbuf instead. Turns out that was not the right approach.
This basically rewrites the handling of this case to be much more
correct, and fixes a bug where with small window sizes where it would
ALSO truncate the attr names in addition to the optional descriptions.
Change-Id: Ifd1beeaffdb47cbb5f4a462b183fcb6c0ff6c524
I was packaging Lix 2.91 for nixpkgs and was annoyed at the expect
dependency. Turns out that you can replace unbuffer with a pretty-short
Python script.
It became less short after I found out that Linux was converting \n to
\r\n in the terminal subsystem, which was not very funny, but is at
least solved by twiddling termios bits.
Change-Id: I8a2700abcbbf6a9902e01b05b40fa9340c0ab90c
This will stop printing stuff to dumb terminals that they don't support.
I've overall audited usage of isatty and replaced the ones with intent
to mean "is a Real terminal" with checking for that. I've also caught a
case of carelessly assuming "is a tty" means "should be colour" in
nix-env.
Change-Id: I6d83725d9a2d932ac94ff2294f92c0a1100d23c9
I noticed there was some stuff setting configureFlags that definitely do
not do anything with meson, so let's rip them out.
As for the empty file, it was added when I was thinking I needed a fake
C++ target to convince meson to create the necessary dependencies. That
was not in fact possible so it should have never been committed.
Change-Id: Ied4723d8a5d21aed85f352c48b080ab2c977a496
We're going for Dragon's Breath because horrors called dibs on it.
It's fine to merge this a little before the final release, since all the
dev versions have -pre in them anyway.
Change-Id: I763acb2fc1bf76030f7feaed983addf6ae2fdd53
this is only used to close non-stdio files in derivation sandboxes. we
may as well encode that in its name, drop the unnecessary integer set,
and use close_range to deal with the actual closing of files. not only
is this clearer, it also makes sandbox setup on linux fast by 1ms each
Change-Id: Id90e259a49c7bc896189e76bfbbf6ef2c0bcd3b2
implementing a build hook is pretty much impossible without either being
a nix, or blindly forwarding the important bits of all build requests to
some kind of nix. we've found no uses of build-hook in the wild, and the
build-hook protocol (apart from being entirely undocumented) is not able
to convey any kind of versioning information between hook and daemon. if
we want to upgrade this infrastructure (which we do), this must not stay
Change-Id: I1ec4976a35adf8105b8ca9240b7984f8b91e147e
this is a bit of a hack, but it's apparently the cleanest way of doing
this in the absence of any kind of priority/provenance information for
values of some given setting. we'll need this to deprecate build-hook.
Change-Id: I03644a9c3f17681c052ecdc610b4f1301266ab9e
sure, linux has been providing argv[0] by default for a while now. other
OSes may not be as forthcoming though, and relying on the OS to create a
world in which we can just make assumptions we could test for instead is
unnecessarily lazy. we *could* default argv0, but that's a little silly.
notably we abort instead of returning normally to avoid confusions where
a caller interprets our exit status like a Worker build results bitmask.
Change-Id: Id73f8cd0a630293b789c59a8c4b0c4a2b936b505
* changes:
sqlite: add a Use::fromStrNullable
util: implement charptr_cast
tree-wide: fix a pile of lints
refactor: make HashType and Base enum classes for type safety
build: integrate clang-tidy into CI
This lets us ensure that nobody is putting in new reinterpret_cast
instances where they could safely use charptr_cast instead.
Change-Id: I6358a3934c8133c7150042635843bdbb6b9218d4
There were several usages of the raw sqlite primitives along with C
style casts, seemingly because nobody thought to use an optional for
getting a string or NULL.
Let's fix this API given we already *have* a wrapper.
Change-Id: I526cceedc2e356209d8fb62e11b3572282c314e8
I don't like having so many reinterpret_cast statements that have to
actually be looked at to determine if they are UB. A huge number of the
reinterpret_cast instances in Lix are actually casting to some pointer
of some character type, which is always valid no matter the source type.
However, it is also worth looking at if it is not casting both *from* a
character type and also *to* a character type, since IMO splatting a
struct into a character array should be a very deliberate action instead
of just being about dealing with bad APIs.
So let's write a template that encapsulates this invariant so we can
not worry about the trivially safe reinterpret_cast invocations.
Change-Id: Ia4e2f1fa0c567123a96604ddadb3bdd7449660a4
This:
- Converts a bunch of C style casts into C++ casts.
- Removes some very silly pointer subtraction code (which is no more or
less busted on i686 than it began)
- Fixes some "technically UB" that never had to be UB in the first
place.
- Makes finally follow the noexcept status of the inner function. Maybe
in the future we should ban the function from not being noexcept, but
that is not today.
- Makes various locally-used exceptions inherit from std::exception.
Change-Id: I22e66972602604989b5e494fd940b93e0e6e9297
This still has utterly unacceptably bad output format design that I
would not inflict on anyone I like, but it *does* now exist, and you
*can* find the errors in the log.
Future work would obviously be to fix that and integrate the actual
errors into Gerrit using codechecker or so.
Followup issue: lix-project/lix#457
Fixes: lix-project/lix#147
Change-Id: Ifca22e443d357762125f4ad6bc4f568af3a26c62
The |> operator is a reverse function operator with low binding strength
to replace lib.pipe. Implements RFC 148, see the RFC text for more
details. Closes#438.
Change-Id: I21df66e8014e0d4dd9753dd038560a2b0b7fd805
This is not a proper fix for the confusion that can happen about how the
tags are supposed to be used.
For a proper fix, we need to do
lix-project/lix#439 and implement
worktrees such that the user never sees the git state anymore.
Change-Id: I7b543967f522cede486e42684b48cad47da95429
This was broken because Nix language's version comparison does not know
how to deal with versions like -rc1 and considers them newer, which is
in this case not desirable.
That in turn led to not tagging 2.90.0 docker images as "latest" since
the heuristic was wrong.
This commit also adds some more cross-checking and failsafes in case the
person running releng does not have a local main branch that is up to
date.
Fixes: lix-project/lix#443
Change-Id: I537103ebab58ae978c00e06972abe14432dd9c80
Currently, the parser relies on the global experimental feature flags.
In order to properly test conditional language features, we instead need
to pass it around in the parser::State.
This means that the parser cannot cache the result of isEnabled anymore,
which wouldn't necessarily hurt performance if the function didn't
perform a linear search on the list of enabled features on every single
call. While we could simply evaluate once at the start of parsing and
cache the result in the parser state, the more sustainable solution
would be to fix `isEnabled` such that all callers may profit from the
performance improvement.
Change-Id: Ic9b9c5d882b6270e1114988b63e6064d36c25cf2
This adds a second form to the `:log` command: it now can accept a
derivation path in addition to a derivation expression. As derivation
store paths start with `/nix/store`, this is not ambiguous.
Resolves: lix-project/lix#51
Change-Id: Iebc7b011537e7012fae8faed4024ea1b8fdc81c3
I definitely don't think we were using this, and it is probably an
omission in the original autoconf deletion more than anything.
Change-Id: Ib7c8082685e550575bca5af06f0e93adf982bd7c
I don't know why but I was getting a spurious -Werror=switch-enum inside
toml11. It does not make sense why it did not occur before, but it
should be stopped.
This was not done at an earlier stage to better match the legacy make
build system, but we don't use it anyway.
Change-Id: I636f8a71e8a0ba5e0feb80b435ae24c3af995c5d
This has been causing various seemingly spurious CI failures as well as
some failures on people running tests on beta builds.
lix> ++(nix-collect-garbage-dry-run.sh:20) nix-store --gc --print-dead
lix> ++(nix-collect-garbage-dry-run.sh:20) wc -l
lix> finding garbage collector roots...
lix> error: Listing pid 87261 file descriptors: Undefined error: 0
There is no real way to write a proper test for this, other than to
start a process like the following:
int main(void) {
for (int i = 0; i < 1000; ++i) {
close(i);
}
sleep(10000);
}
and then let Lix's gc look at it.
I have a relatively high confidence this *will* fix the problem since I
have manually confirmed the behaviour of the libproc call is
as-unexpected, and it would perfectly explain the observed symptom.
Fixes: lix-project/lix#446
Change-Id: I67669b98377af17895644b3bafdf42fc33abd076
* changes:
tree-wide: fix various lint warnings
flake & doxygen: update tagline
nix flake metadata: print modified dates for input flakes
cli: eat terminal codes from stdout also
Implement forcing CLI colour on, and document it better
manual: fix a syntax error in redirects.js that made it not do anything
misc docs/meson tidying
build: implement clang-tidy using our plugin
The growth of the seccomp filter in 127ee1a101
made its compilation time significant (roughly 10 milliseconds have been
measured on one machine). For this reason, it is now precompiled and cached in
the parent process so that this overhead is not hit for every single build. It
is still not optimal when going through the daemon, because compilation still
happens once per client, but it's better than before and doing it only once for
the entire daemon requires excessive crimes with the current architecture.
Fixes: lix-project/lix#461
Change-Id: I2277eaaf6bab9bd74bbbfd9861e52392a54b61a3
This is a preparation for precompiling the filter, which is done separately.
The behaviour should be unchanged for now.
Change-Id: I899aa7242962615949208597aca88913feba1cb8
The seccomp setup code was a huge chunk of conditionally compiled
platform-specific code. For this reason, it is appropriate to move it to the
platform-specific implementation file. Ideally its setup could be moved a bit
to make it happen at the same place as the Darwin restrictions, but that change
is going to be less mechanical.
Change-Id: I496aa3c4fabf34656aba1e32b0089044ab5b99f8
When MANPATH is unset or contains an empty component, a reasonable default is
used. Previously (after 3dced96741), when MANPATH
was unset, the shell hook would only place a location containing the Lix manual
pages there, and system-wide manual pages would become unavailable in the
development shell, which is undesired. Fix the issue by including an empty
component in this case.
Change-Id: Ib3c67a831d709fe2a87520e15917eebb59397bd1
This was always in the lock file and we can simply actually print it.
The test for this is a little bit silly but it should correctly
control for my daring to exercise timezone code *and* locale code in a
test, which I strongly suspect nobody dared do before.
Sample (abridged):
```
Path: /nix/store/gaxb42z68bcr8lch467shvmnhjjzgd8b-source
Last modified: 1970-01-01 00:16:40
Inputs:
├───flake-compat: github:edolstra/flake-compat/0f9255e01c2351cc7d116c072cb317785dd33b33
│ Last modified: 2023-10-04 13:37:54
├───flake-utils: github:numtide/flake-utils/b1d9ab70662946ef0850d488da1c9019f3a9752a
│ Last modified: 2024-03-11 08:33:50
│ └───systems: github:nix-systems/default/da67096a3b9bf56a91d16901293e51ba5b49a27e
│ Last modified: 2023-04-09 08:27:08
```
Change-Id: I355f82cb4b633974295375ebad646fb6e2107f9b
This *should* be sound, plus or minus the amount that the terminal code
eating code is messed up already.
This is useful for testing CLI output because it will strip the escapes
enough to just shove the expected output in a file.
Change-Id: I8a9b58fafb918466ac76e9ab585fc32fb9294819
The docs page has an incorrect escape that leads to a backslash
appearing in output. Meson stuff is self-explanatory, just shortens and
simplifies a bit.
Change-Id: Ib63adf934efd3caeb82ca82988f230e8858a79f9
The principle of this is that you can either externally build it with
Nix (actual implementation will be in a future commit), or it can be
built with meson if the Nix one is not passed in.
The idea I have is that dev shells don't receive the one from Nix to
avoid having to build it, but CI can use the one from Nix and save some
gratuitous rebuilds.
The design of this is that you can run `ninja -C build clang-tidy` and
it will simply correctly clang-tidy the codebase in spite of PCH
bullshit caused by the cc-wrapper.
This is a truly horrendous number of hacks in a ball, caused by bugs in
several pieces of software, and I am not even getting started.
I don't consider this to fix the clang-tidy issue filing, since we still
have a fair number of issues to fix even on the existing minimal
configuration, and I have not yet implemented it in CI. Realistically we
will need to do something like https://github.com/Ericsson/codechecker
to be able to silence warnings without physically touching the code, or
at least *diff* reports between versions.
Also, the run-clang-tidy output design is rather atrocious and must
not be inflicted upon anyone I have respect for, since it buries the
diagnostics in a pile of invocation logs. We would do really well to
integrate with the Gerrit SARIF stuff so we can dump the reports on
people in a user-friendly manner.
Related: lix-project/lix#147
Change-Id: Ifefe533f3b56874795de231667046b2da6ff2461
Expose an option for disabling the BDW-GC build dependency entirely. Fix the
place where one of its headers was included (unnecessarily) without proper
guarding. Finally, use this machinery to exclude BDW-GC from the ASAN builds
entirely (its usage has already been disabled due to compatibility issues
anyway), to ensure this configuration is not regressed again.
Change-Id: I2ebe8094abf67e7d1e99eed971de3e99d071c10b
this begins a long and arduous journey to remove all result state from
Goal, to eventually drop the std::enable_shared_from_this base, and to
completely eliminate all unsynchronized modification of states of both
Goal and Worker. by the end of this we will hopefully be able to start
and reap multiple derivation builds in parallel, which should speed up
the process quite a bit (at least for short local builds, others might
not notice a large difference. the build hooks will remain a problem.)
Change-Id: I57dcd9b2cab4636ed4aa24cdec67124fef883345
In the SSH code, the logger was conditionally paused, but unconditionally
resumed. This was fine as long as resuming the logger was idempotent. Starting
with 0dd1d8ca1c, it isn't any more, and the
behaviour of the code in question was missed. Consequently, an assertion
failure is triggered for example when performing builds against an "SSH" store
on localhost. Fix the issue by only resuming the logger when it has actually
been paused.
Fixes: lix-project/lix#458
Change-Id: Ib1e4d047744a129f15730b7216f9c9368c2f4211
we still mutate goal state to store the results of any given goal run,
but now we also have that information in Worker and could in theory do
something else with it. we could return a map of goal to goal results,
which would also let us better diagnose failures of subgoals (at all).
Change-Id: I1df956bbd9fa8cc9485fb6df32918d68dda3ff48
this is the first step towards removing all result-related mutation of
Goal state from goal implementations themselves, and into Worker state
instead. once that is done we can treat all non-const Goal fields like
private state of the goal itself, and make threading of goals possible
Change-Id: I69ff7d02a6fd91a65887c6640bfc4f5fb785b45c
once goals run on multiple threads these fields must by synchronized as
one, or we try to run build hooks to often (or worse, not often enough)
Change-Id: I47860e46fe5c6db41755b2a3a1d9dbb5701c4ca4
this will usually be used either directly (which is always fine) or in
Finally blocks (where it must never throw execptions). make sure that,
exceptions being handled or not, the calling wait() in Finally doesn't
cause crashes due to the Finally no-nested-exceptions-thrown assertion
Change-Id: Ib83a5d9483b1fe83b9a957dcefeefce5d088f06d
The original attempt at this introduced a regression; this commit
reverts the revert and fixes the regression.
This reverts commit 3e151d4d77.
Fix to the regression:
flakeref: fix handling of `?dir=` param for flakes in subdirs
As reported in #419[1], accessing a flake in a subdir of a Git
repository fails with the previous commit[2] applied with the error
error: unsupported Git input attribute 'dir'
The problem is that the `dir`-param is inserted into the parsed URL if a
flake is fetched from the subdir of a Git repository. However, for the
fetching part this isn't even needed. The fix is to just pass `subdir`
as second argument to `FlakeRef` (which needs a `basedir` that can be
empty) and leave the parsedURL as-is.
Added a regression test to make sure we don't run into this again.
[1] lix-project/lix#419
[2] e22172aaf6b6a366cecd3c025590e68fa2b91bcc,
originally 3e151d4d77
Change-Id: I2c72d5a32e406a7ca308e271730bd0af01c5d18b
I have added an option to turn off this build input because I'm much
more comfortable when I don't have that type of thing on my computer.
Its default value is true in order to avoid impacting anyone who depends
on AWS features.
Change-Id: Ic57f3c9b9468f422e9fbdcf3ba0fe96177631067
* changes:
remove unused headers in installable-attr-path
libexpr: include the type of the non-derivation value in the type error
libexpr: mild cleanup to getDerivations
libexpr: DrvInfo: remove unused bad-citizen constructor
cleanup and slightly refactor DrvInfo::queryOutputs
I was reminded by various evil things puck did to the evaluator
involving null bytes that you can get funny bytes by abusing JSON
parsing. It's neater than putting binary in the source file, so let's do
it.
Change-Id: I1ff2e0d829eb303fbed81fa2ebb3a39412e89ff1
* changes:
releng: move officialRelease to version.json
Add -Werror CI job
ci: add a asan+ubsan test run on x86_64-linux
tree-wide: add support for asan!
Shuffled the logic around a bit so the shorter code paths are early
returns, added comments, etc.
Should be NFC.
Change-Id: Ie3ddb3d0eddd614d6f8c37bf9a4d5a50282084ea
DrvInfo's constructor that only takes `EvalState` leaves everything else
empty; a DrvInfo which has no iota of information about the derivation
it represents is not useful, and was not used anywhere.
Change-Id: Ic4d93a08cb2748b8cef9a61e41e70404834b23f9
This was causing a few bits of suffering downstream, in particular, in
the NixOS module, which, after this change, can have the
`officialRelease` stuff in *it* completely deleted since we now have
correct defaulting in package.nix for it.
It also eliminates some automated editing of Nix files, which is
certainly always welcome to eliminate.
Fixes: lix-project/lix#406
Change-Id: Id12f3018cff4633e379dbfcbe26b7bc84922bdaf
We should cause CLs that introduce compiler warnings to fail CI. Sadly
this will only cover Clang, but it will cover Clang for free, so it's
truly impossible to say if it's bad or not.
Change-Id: I45ca20d77251af9671d5cbe0d29cb08c5f1d03c2
This should at least catch out blatantly bad patches that don't pass the
test suite with ASan. We don't do this to the integration tests since
they run on relatively limited-memory VMs and so it may not be super
safe to run an evaluator with leak driven garbage collection for them.
Fixes: lix-project/lix#403
Fixes: lix-project/lix#319
Change-Id: I5267b02626866fd33e8b4d8794344531af679f78
What if you could find memory bugs in Lix without really trying very
hard? I've had variously scuffed patches to do this, but this is
blocked on boost coroutines removal at this point tbh.
Change-Id: Id762af076aa06ad51e77a6c17ed10275929ed578
there are no other uses for this yet, but asking for just a subset of
outputs does seem at least somewhat useful to have as a generic thing
Change-Id: I30ff5055a666c351b1b086b8d05b9d7c9fb1c77a
If `:edit`ing a store path, don't reload repl afterwards
to avoid losing local variables: store is immutable,
so "editing" a store path is always just viewing it.
Resolves: lix-project/lix#341
Change-Id: I3747f75ce26e0595e953069c39ddc3ee80699718
limiting CA substitutions was a rather recent addition, and it used a
dedicated counter to not interfere with regular substitutions. though
this works fine it somewhat contradicts the documentation; job limits
should apply to all kinds of substitutions, or be one limit for each.
Change-Id: I1505105b14260ecc1784039b2cc4b7afcf9115c8
all goals do this. it makes no sense to not notify a goal of EOF
conditions because this is the universal signal for "child done"
Change-Id: Ic3980de312547e616739c57c6248a8e81308b5ee
just update progress every time a goal has returned from work(). there
seem to be no performance penalties, and the code is much simpler now.
Change-Id: I288ee568b764ee61f40a498d986afda49987cb50
bindPath/doBind is a useful function in build that is used in several
parts of LocalDerivationGoal. Moving this function makes it easier to
split LocalDerivationGoal implementation between several files.
Change-Id: Ic5a0768479c153c1aa3ed425f12604b20bbf0f42
Unfortunately, io_uring is totally opaque to seccomp, and while currently there
are no dangerous operations implemented, there is no guarantee that it remains
this way. This means that io_uring should be blocked entirely to ensure that
the sandbox is future-proof. This has not been observed to cause issues in
practice.
Change-Id: I45d3895f95abe1bc103a63969f444c334dbbf50d
Previously, system call filtering (to prevent builders from storing files with
setuid/setgid permission bits or extended attributes) was performed using a
blocklist. While this looks simple at first, it actually carries significant
security and maintainability risks: after all, the kernel may add new syscalls
to achieve the same functionality one is trying to block, and it can even be
hard to actually add the syscall to the blocklist when building against a C
library that doesn't know about it yet. For a recent demonstration of this
happening in practice to Nix, see the introduction of fchmodat2 [0] [1].
The allowlist approach does not share the same drawback. While it does require
a rather large list of harmless syscalls to be maintained in the codebase,
failing to update this list (and roll out the update to all users) in time has
rather benign effects; at worst, very recent programs that already rely on new
syscalls will fail with an error the same way they would on a slightly older
kernel that doesn't support them yet. Most importantly, no unintended new ways
of performing dangerous operations will be silently allowed.
Another possible drawback is reduced system call performance due to the larger
filter created by the allowlist requiring more computation [2]. However, this
issue has not convincingly been demonstrated yet in practice, for example in
systemd or various browsers. To the contrary, it has been measured that the the
actual filter constructed here has approximately the same overhead as a very
simple filter blocking only one system call.
This commit tries to keep the behavior as close to unchanged as possible. The
system call list is in line with libseccomp 2.5.5 and glibc 2.39, which are the
latest versions at the point of writing. Since libseccomp 2.5.5 is already a
requirement and the distributions shipping this together with older versions of
glibc are mostly not a thing any more, this should not lead to more build
failures any more.
[0] https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/300635
[1] https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/10424
[2] https://github.com/flatpak/flatpak/pull/4462#issuecomment-1061690607
Change-Id: I541be3ea9b249bcceddfed6a5a13ac10b11e16ad
In f047e4357b, I missed the behavior that if
building without a dedicated build user (i.e. in single-user setups), seccomp
setup failures are silently ignored. This was introduced without explanation 7
years ago (ff6becafa8). Hopefully the only
use-case nowadays is causing spurious test suite successes when messing up the
seccomp filter during development. Let's try removing it.
Change-Id: Ibe51416d9c7a6dd635c2282990224861adf1ceab
getSelfExe is used in a few places re-execute nix.
Current code in this file uses ifdefs to support several
platforms, just keep doing that
Change-Id: Iecc2ada0101aea0c30524e3a1218594f919d74bf
This was done originally because std::smatch does not accept `const char
*` as iterators. However, this was because we should have been using
std::cmatch instead.
Change-Id: Ibe73851fd39755e883df2d33d22fed72ac0a04ae
Nobody has stepped up to add further support for Hurd since this code
appeared in 2010 or 2014. We don't need it.
Change-Id: I400b2031a225551ea3c71a3ef3ea9fdb599dfba3
Use libprocstat to find garbage collector roots on FreeBSD.
Tested working on a FreeBSD machine, although there is no CI yet
Change-Id: Id36bac8c3de6cc4de94e2d76e9663dd4b76068a9
(cherry picked from commit 8cd1d02f90eb9915e640c5d370d919fad9833c65)
nix flake show: Only print up to the first new line if it exists.
(cherry picked from commit 5281a44927bdb51bfe6e5de12262d815c98f6fe7)
add tests
(cherry picked from commit 74ae0fbdc70a5079a527fe143c4832d1357011f7)
Handle long strings, embedded new lines and empty descriptions
(cherry picked from commit 2ca7b3afdbbd983173a17fa0a822cf7623601367)
Account for total length of 80
(cherry picked from commit 1cc808c18cbaaf26aaae42bb1d7f7223f25dd364)
docs: add nix flake show description release note
fix: remove white space
nix flake show: trim length based on terminal size
test: account for terminal size
docs(flake-description): before and after commands; add myself to credits
Upstream-PR: https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/10980
Change-Id: Ie1c667dc816b3dd81e65a1f5395e57ea48ee0362
Error is pretty large, and most goals do not fail. this alone more than
halves the size of Goal on x86_64-linux, from 720 bytes down to 344. in
derived classes the difference is not as dramatic, but even the largest
derived class (`LocalDerivationGoal`) loses almost 20% of its footprint
Change-Id: Ifda8f94c81b6566eeb3e52d55d9796ec40c7bce8
the goals are either already using std::async and merely forgot to
remove std::thread vestiges or they emulate async with threads and
promises. we can simply use async directly everywhere for clarity.
Change-Id: I3f05098310a25984f10fff1e68c573329002b500
under owner_less it's equivalent to insert(), only sometimes a little
bit faster because it does not construct a weak_ptr if the goal is in
the set already. this small difference in performance does not matter
here and c++23 will make insert transparent anyway, so we can drop it
Change-Id: I7cbd7d6e0daa95d67145ec58183162f6c4743b15
*accidentally* overriding a function is almost guaranteed to be an
error. overriding a function without labeling it as such is merely
bad style, but bad style that makes the code harder to understand.
Change-Id: Ic0594f3d1604ab6b3c1a75cb5facc246effe45f0
Commit 0109368c3f missed to include a required
header, which is not noticed when the precompiled header is enabled because
it's included in that. Also include it in the file so that the build without
precompiled header works too.
Change-Id: Id7a7979684b64f937f7f8191612952d73c113015
Due to a leftover from a previous version where the buffer was allocated on the
stack, the change introduced in commit 4ec87742a1
accidentally passes the size of a pointer as the size of the buffer to the
decompressor. Since the former is much smaller (usually 8 bytes instead of 64
kilobytes), this is safe, but leads to considerable overhead; most notably, due
to excessive progress reports, which happen for each chunk. Pass the proper
buffer size instead.
Change-Id: If4bf472d33e21587acb5235a2d99e3cb10914633
This commit adds a new helper template function to gc-alloc.hh (which is
probably where you want to look at first, O great reviewer [custom file
ordering in review diffs when]), which uses a type argument to determine
the size to allocate, rather than making the caller use sizeof().
Change-Id: Ib5d138d91a28bdda304a80db24ea9fb08669ad22
The purpose of this function has little to do with immutability. Value's
strings are never mutated, and the point of this function is to
singleton empty strings.
Change-Id: Ifd41dd952409d54e4d3de9ab59064e6928b0e480
SimpleLogger is not fully thread-safe, and all loggers that wrap it are
also not safe accordingly. this does not affect much, but in rare cases
it can cause interleaving of messages on stderr when used with the json
or raw log formats. the fix applied here is a bit of a hack, but fixing
this properly requires rearchitecting the logger infrastructure. nested
loggers are not the most natural abstraction here, and it is biting us.
Change-Id: Ifbf34fe1e85c60e73b59faee50e7411c7b5e7c12
it's only used once, and even that one use is highly questionable. more
instances of warnOnce should be much more principled than this has been
Change-Id: I5856570c99cb44462e700d753d0c706a5db03c4b
If useChroot = false, and user namespaces aren't available for some
reason (e.g. within a Docker container), this fixes a pointless warning
being emitted, as we would never attempt to use them even if they were
available.
Change-Id: Ibcee91c088edd2cd19e70218d5a5802bff8f537b
This removes a *whole load* of variables from scope and enforces thread
boundaries with the type system.
There is not much change of significance in here, so the things to watch
out for while reviewing it are primarily that the destructor ordering
may have changed inadvertently, I think.
Change-Id: I3cd87e6d5a08dfcf368637407251db22a8906316
* changes:
Fixup a bunch of references to nixos.org manuals
Add release notes for removing overflow from Nix language
expr: fix a compiler warning about different signs in comparison
* changes:
doc/release-notes: add for pretty printing improvements
libexpr/print: do not show elided nested items when there are none
libexpr/print: never show empty attrsets or derivations as «repeated»
libexpr/print: pretty-print idempotently
* changes:
docs: document the actual comparison rules instead of lies
daemon: remove workaround for macOS kernel bug that seems fixed
daemon: fix a crash bug "FATAL: exception not rethrown"
When the configured maximum depth has been reached, attribute sets and lists
are printed with ellipsis to indicate the elision of nested items. Previously,
this happened even in case the structure being printed is empty, so that such
items do not in fact exist. This is confusing, so stop doing it.
Change-Id: I0016970dad3e42625e085dc896e6f476b21226c9
The repeated value detection logic exists so that the occurrence of large
common substructures does not fill up the screen or the computer's memory.
However, empty attribute sets and derivations (when their detection is enabled)
are always cheap to print, and in practice I have observed them to make up a
significant majority of the cases where I was annoyed by the repeated value
detection kicking in. Furthermore, `nix-instantiate --eval` already disables
this logic for empty attribute sets, and empty lists are already exempted
everywhere. For these reasons, always print empty attribute sets and
derivations as what they are.
Change-Id: I5dac8e7739f9d726b76fd0521ec46f38af94463f
When pretty-printing is enabled, previously an unforced thunk would trigger
indentation, even when it subsequently does not evaluate to a nested structure.
The resulting output looked inconsistent, and furthermore pretty-printing was
not idempotent (since pretty-printing the same value again, which is now fully
evaluated, will not trigger indentation).
When strict evaluation is enabled, force the item before inspecting its type,
so that it is properly known whether it contains a nested structure.
Furthermore, there is no need to cause indentation for unforced thunks, since
the very next operation will be printing them as `«thunk»`.
This is mostly a port of https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/11100 , but we only
force the item when it's going to be forced anyway due to strict
pretty-printing, and a new test was written since the REPL testing framework in
Lix is different.
Co-Authored-By: Robert Hensing <robert@roberthensing.nl>
Change-Id: Ib7560fe531d09e05ca6b2037a523fe21a26d9d58
The insertion marker comment broke the list into two parts, the first
containing only the link to the upcoming release notes and the second the
past releases. This confused the generator, leading to the first part being
discarded. Indent the marker comment so that it's syntactically part of the
preceding item, and in particular doesn't split the list any more.
Change-Id: I357c51bb03e4e0d79a76d30158615fd9eda95ea8
Due to a mistake in the grammar, a dollar character implicitly escapes a second
dollar character that immediately follows, so that it cannot start an
interpolation. Unfortunately, this behaviour has since come to be relied upon,
so it cannot be fixed. Furthermore, the documentation on regular strings did
not mention this behaviour at all, while in the case of indented strings it was
rather implicit.
Mention it explicitly in both cases, and describe how an interpolation can
follow a dollar character (namely, by escaping that). Since we have to touch
that section anyway, state that any character (other than n, r, and t; but
notably including `$` even if not succeeded by `{`) can be escaped using a
backslash in regular strings.
Change-Id: I7e5d68a9a4130eec98ce8218b485168f4b31a677
Previous test implementation assumed that grep supports newlines
in patterns. It doesn't, so tests spuriously passed, even though
some tests outputs were broken.
This patches output (and expected output) before grepping,
so there're no newlines in pattern.
Change-Id: Ie6561f9f2e18b83d976f162269d20136e2595141
this is cursed. deeply and profoundly cursed. under NO CIRCUMSTANCES
must protocol serializer helpers be applied to temporaries! doing so
will inevitably cause dangling references and cause the entire thing
to crash. we need to do this even so to get rid of boost coroutines,
and likewise to encapsulate the serializers we suffer today at least
a little bit to allow a gradual migration to an actual IPC protocol.
(this isn't a problem that's unique to generators. c++ coroutines in
general cannot safely take references to arbitrary temporaries since
c++ does not have a lifetime system that can make this safe. -sigh-)
Change-Id: I2921ba451e04d86798752d140885d3c5cc08e146
this doesn't have a test because this code path is only reached by
clients that predate 2.4, and we really should not be caring about
those any more right now. even the test suite doesn't, and the few
tests that might care are disabled because they will not even work
Change-Id: Id9eb190065138fedb2c7d90c328ff9eb9d97385b
this is not completely necessary at this point because the parser right
now already returns a generator to pass through all input data it read,
but the nar parser *was* very lax and would accept nars that weren't in
canonical form (defined as the form dumpPath would return). nar hashing
depends on these things, and as such rewriting the parser now allows us
to reject non-canonical nars that extract to the same store contents as
their canonical counterpart but have different nar hashes despite that.
Change-Id: Iccd319e3bd5912d8297014c84c495edc59019bb7
Passing through root paths allows external programs to see
which nix and cacert are in a binary tarball,
e.g. to recreate it from substituters
Change-Id: I27431134df53bbc6623484f8a0822004b51f7c87
Although the comparison rules are ugly and we do not like various parts
of them, we must not hide them away for only catgirls to know about, so
the documentation should actually say how they work.
Change-Id: Ib20e9aa0e7b6486ade4f401035aafd85fbb08c91
This was filed as https://github.com/nixos/nix/issues/7584, but as far
as I can tell, the previous solution of POLLHUP works just fine on macOS
14. I've also tested on an ancient machine with macOS 10.15.7, which
also has POLLHUP work correctly.
It's possible this might regress some older versions of macOS that have
a kernel bug, but I went looking through the history on the sources and
didn't find anything that looked terribly convincingly like a bug fix
between 2020 and today. If such a broken version exists, it seems pretty
reasonable to suggest simply updating the OS.
Change-Id: I178a038baa000f927ea2cbc4587d69d8ab786843
This is caused by pthread_cancel effectively throwing a
not-specifically-identifiable C++ exception into the targeted thread,
which, if it is not rethrown, terminates the process entirely.
This is rather "impolite" behaviour, we would say. But thread
cancellation is *always* busted, and we should simply not use it where
unnecessary. It's particularly unnecessary when what we *actually* need
it for is, err, interrupting a poll(2).
That can in turn be achieved by simply listening to more stuff in the
poll, namely, a pipe, which we send a character to when needing to
stop the thread.
While looking at this code, we also investigated whether any of the
poll() madness is required, or was even *ever* required. Curiously we
found in the XNU kernel source code that the thing about needing to
listen to POLLHUP is probably *correct*, but switching it to POLLRDNORM
should not have made any difference at all. We've left a FIXME to look
into that further because what's written here is super janky.
94d3b45284/bsd/kern/sys_generic.c (L1751-L1758)
This is the crash on some Hydra machines:
Thread 1 (Thread 0x7f56b77776c0 (LWP 955542) (Exiting)):
0 0x00007f56b8e9b7dc in __pthread_kill_implementation () from /nix/store/m71p7f0nymb19yn1dascklyya2i96jfw-glibc-2.39-52/lib/libc.so.6
1 0x00007f56b8e49516 in raise () from /nix/store/m71p7f0nymb19yn1dascklyya2i96jfw-glibc-2.39-52/lib/libc.so.6
2 0x00007f56b8e31935 in abort () from /nix/store/m71p7f0nymb19yn1dascklyya2i96jfw-glibc-2.39-52/lib/libc.so.6
3 0x00007f56b8e327f3 in __libc_message_impl.cold () from /nix/store/m71p7f0nymb19yn1dascklyya2i96jfw-glibc-2.39-52/lib/libc.so.6
4 0x00007f56b8e8e8e9 in __libc_fatal () from /nix/store/m71p7f0nymb19yn1dascklyya2i96jfw-glibc-2.39-52/lib/libc.so.6
5 0x00007f56b8ea23c4 in unwind_cleanup () from /nix/store/m71p7f0nymb19yn1dascklyya2i96jfw-glibc-2.39-52/lib/libc.so.6
6 0x00007f56b9d2a1b8 in nix::triggerInterrupt() [clone .cold] () from /nix/store/sahgw550p621m9dy1pd7whl9c5g1g0p7-lix-2.90.0-rc1/lib/liblixutil.so
7 0x00007f56b990ac9d in std:🧵:_State_impl<std:🧵:_Invoker<std::tuple<nix::MonitorFdHup::MonitorFdHup(int)::{lambda()#1}> > >::_M_run() () from /nix/store/sahgw550p621m9dy1pd7whl9c5g1g0p7-lix-2.90.0-rc1/lib/liblixstore.so
8 0x00007f56b90e86d3 in execute_native_thread_routine () from /nix/store/c6r62m84hywf4i6qq1h28f13zv38yqyp-gcc-13.3.0-lib/lib/libstdc++.so.6
9 0x00007f56b8e99a42 in start_thread () from /nix/store/m71p7f0nymb19yn1dascklyya2i96jfw-glibc-2.39-52/lib/libc.so.6
10 0x00007f56b8f1905c in clone3 () from /nix/store/m71p7f0nymb19yn1dascklyya2i96jfw-glibc-2.39-52/lib/libc.so.6
As for testing, we've started a daemon with this change and verified it
deals with HUPs correctly on x86_64-linux, but I don't think we can
easily test the destructor behaviour without whatever Hydra was
doing that broke.
Change-Id: I29c7de0425674494b6e43c075810126c3ff77363
This also bans various sneaking of negative numbers from the language
into unsuspecting builtins as was exposed while auditing the
consequences of changing the Nix language integer type to a newtype.
It's unlikely that this change comprehensively ensures correctness when
passing integers out of the Nix language and we should probably add a
checked-narrowing function or something similar, but that's out of scope
for the immediate change.
During the development of this I found a few fun facts about the
language:
- You could overflow integers by converting from unsigned JSON values.
- You could overflow unsigned integers by converting negative numbers
into them when going into Nix config, into fetchTree, and into flake
inputs.
The flake inputs and Nix config cannot actually be tested properly
since they both ban thunks, however, we put in checks anyway because
it's possible these could somehow be used to do such shenanigans some
other way.
Note that Lix has banned Nix language integer overflows since the very
first public beta, but threw a SIGILL about them because we run with
-fsanitize=signed-overflow -fsanitize-undefined-trap-on-error in
production builds. Since the Nix language uses signed integers, overflow
was simply undefined behaviour, and since we defined that to trap, it
did.
Trapping on it was a bad UX, but we didn't even entirely notice
that we had done this at all until it was reported as a bug a couple of
months later (which is, to be fair, that flag working as intended), and
it's got enough production time that, aside from code that is IMHO buggy
(and which is, in any case, not in nixpkgs) such as
lix-project/lix#445, we don't think
anyone doing anything reasonable actually depends on wrapping overflow.
Even for weird use cases such as doing funny bit crimes, it doesn't make
sense IMO to have wrapping behaviour, since two's complement arithmetic
overflow behaviour is so *aggressively* not what you want for *any* kind
of mathematics/algorithms. The Nix language exists for package
management, a domain where bit crimes are already only dubiously in
scope to begin with, and it makes a lot more sense for that domain for
the integers to never lose precision, either by throwing errors if they
would, or by being arbitrary-precision.
This change will be ported to CppNix as well, to maintain language
consistency.
Fixes: lix-project/lix#423
Change-Id: I51f253840c4af2ea5422b8a420aa5fafbf8fae75
The actual motive here is the avoidance of integer overflow if we were
to make these use checked NixInts and retain the subtraction.
However, the actual *intent* of this code is a three-way comparison,
which can be done with operator<=>, so we should just do *that* instead.
Change-Id: I7f9a7da1f3176424b528af6d1b4f1591e4ab26bf
upcast_goal was only ever needed to break circular includes, but the
same solution that gave us upcast_goal also lets us fully remove it:
just upcast goals without a wrapper function, but only in .cc files.
Change-Id: I9c71654b2535121459ba7dcfd6c5da5606904032
this will let us turn copyNAR into a generator as well, which in turn is
necessary to turn the users of copyNAR into generators without resorting
to sinkToSource coroutines. currently this uses the SerializingTransform
in all cases, even for copyNAR where it is not necessary. should this be
a performance problem we can easily swap out the transform for one which
does not produce any bytes of its own, but that should not be necessary.
Change-Id: I7e685879318fcbb78d8b88abfddd7752360eb0ce
the sole remaining user of this function can use makeDecompressionSource
instead, while making the sinkToSource in the caller unnecessary as well
Change-Id: I4258227b5dbbb735a75b477d8a57007bfca305e9
the rewriting sink was just broken. when given a rewrite set that
contained a key that is also a proper infix of another key it was
possible to produce an incorrectly rewritten result if the writer
used the wrong block size. fixing this duplicates rewriteStrings,
to avoid this we'll rewrite rewriteStrings to use RewritingSource
in a new mode that'll allow rewrites we had previously forbidden.
Change-Id: I57fa0a9a994e654e11d07172b8e31d15f0b7e8c0
This updates the version of rnix used and refactors the code generally
to be more precise and capable in it's identification of both lambdas
and determining which documentation comments are attached.
Change-Id: Ib0dddabd71f772c95077f9d7654023b37a7a1fd2
this is supposed to be a set of outputs we want to always succeed for
releases. sadly we can't add nixos installer tests using lix to these
because the nixos test framework does not allow overriding nix in the
installer test suites due to unfortunate oversights in the framework.
Change-Id: I815520181ccca70a47205d38ba27e73529347f04
we want to be sure we can cross-build to aarch64 for releases, add a
target to our crossSystems list to make those cheacks easier to run.
Change-Id: Ieb65c1333a5232641ace0ba4d122fc7d528ebc04
`nix-collect-garbage --dry-run` previously elided the entire garbage
collection check, meaning that it would just exit the script without
printing anything.
This change makes the dry run flag instead set the GC action to
`gcReturnDead` rather than `gcDeleteDead`, and then continue with the
script. So if you set `--dry-run`, it will print the paths it *would*
have garbage collected, but not actually delete them.
I filed a bug for this: lix-project/lix#432 but then realised I could give fixing it a go myself.
Change-Id: I062dbf1a80bbab192b5fd0b3a453a0b555ad16f2
DrvInfo's query methods all use mutable fields to cache, but like.
that's basically the entire interface for DrvInfo. Not only that, but
these formerly-const-marked functions can even throw due to eval errors!
Changing this only required removing some `const` markers in nix-env,
and changing a single inline `queryInstalled()` call to be an lvalue
instead.
Change-Id: I796807118f3b35b0e93668b5e28210d9e521b2ae
Activities can set display attributes in their log output using the "Select
Graphics Rendition" functionality. To prevent interfering with subsequent text
displayed, these should be reset after writing the log line. The multiline
progress bar neglected to do this, resulting for example in a colorised
"building …" header in the next line. Reset the attributes properly, like the
standard progress bar already does.
Change-Id: I1dc69f4a1d747a76b83e8721a72d9bb0e5554488
This rather simple function existed just to check some flags,
but the response varies by platform. This is a perfect case for
our subclasses.
Change-Id: Ieb1732a8d024019236e0d0028ad843a24ec3dc59
size tracking can be done with a LengthSink and a tee. match tracking
was defeated by never having done any match tracking, all users would
see the same (empty) set of matches at all times. match tracking with
bytes offsets alone would not be sufficient in the general case, only
because computeHashModulo uses a single rewrite could it have worked.
Change-Id: Idb214b5222e0ea24f450f5505712a342b63d7570
this much more closely mimics what is actually happening: we're reading
data from somewhere else, actively, rather than passively waiting. with
the data flow matching the underlying system interactions better we can
remove a few sinkToSource calls that merely exists to undo the mismatch
caused by not treating subprocess output as a data source to begin with
Change-Id: If4abfc2f8398fb5e88c9b91a8bdefd5504bb2d11
this will let us also return a source for the program output later,
which will in turn make sinkToSource unnecessary for program output
processing. this may also reopen a path for provigin program input,
but that still needs a proper async io framework to avoid problems.
Change-Id: Iaf93f47db99c38cfaf134bd60ed6a804d7ddf688
Turns errors like this:
let
throwMsg = a: throw (a + " invalid bar");
in throwMsg "bullshit"
error:
… from call site
at «string»:3:4:
2| throwMsg = a: throw (a + " invalid bar");
3| in throwMsg "bullshit"
| ^
… while calling 'throwMsg'
at «string»:2:14:
1| let
2| throwMsg = a: throw (a + " invalid bar");
| ^
3| in throwMsg "bullshit"
… while calling the 'throw' builtin
at «string»:2:17:
1| let
2| throwMsg = a: throw (a + " invalid bar");
| ^
3| in throwMsg "bullshit"
error: bullshit invalid bar
into errors like this:
let
throwMsg = a: throw (a + " invalid bar");
in throwMsg "bullshit"
error:
… from call site
at «string»:3:4:
2| throwMsg = a: throw (a + " invalid bar");
3| in throwMsg "bullshit"
| ^
… while calling 'throwMsg'
at «string»:2:14:
1| let
2| throwMsg = a: throw (a + " invalid bar");
| ^
3| in throwMsg "bullshit"
… caused by explicit throw
at «string»:2:17:
1| let
2| throwMsg = a: throw (a + " invalid bar");
| ^
3| in throwMsg "bullshit"
error: bullshit invalid bar
Change-Id: I593688928ece20f97999d1bf03b2b46d9ac338cb
Turns errors like:
let
somepkg.src = throw "invalid foobar";
in somepkg.src.meta
error:
… while evaluating the attribute 'src.meta'
at «string»:2:3:
1| let
2| somepkg.src = throw "invalid foobar";
| ^
3| in somepkg.src.meta
… while calling the 'throw' builtin
at «string»:2:17:
1| let
2| somepkg.src = throw "invalid foobar";
| ^
3| in somepkg.src.meta
error: invalid foobar
into errors like:
let
somepkg.src = throw "invalid foobar";
in somepkg.src.meta
error:
… while evaluating the attribute 'src.meta'
at «string»:2:3:
1| let
2| somepkg.src = throw "invalid foobar";
| ^
3| in somepkg.src.meta
… while evaluating 'somepkg.src' to select 'meta' on it
at «string»:3:4:
2| somepkg.src = throw "invalid foobar";
3| in somepkg.src.meta
| ^
… while calling the 'throw' builtin
at «string»:2:17:
1| let
2| somepkg.src = throw "invalid foobar";
| ^
3| in somepkg.src.meta
error: invalid foobar
And for type errors, from:
let
somepkg.src = "I'm not an attrset";
in somepkg.src.meta
error:
… while evaluating the attribute 'src.meta'
at «string»:2:3:
1| let
2| somepkg.src = "I'm not an attrset";
| ^
3| in somepkg.src.meta
… while selecting an attribute
at «string»:3:4:
2| somepkg.src = "I'm not an attrset";
3| in somepkg.src.meta
| ^
error: expected a set but found a string: "I'm not an attrset"
into:
let
somepkg.src = "I'm not an attrset";
in somepkg.src.meta
error:
… while evaluating the attribute 'src.meta'
at «string»:2:3:
1| let
2| somepkg.src = "I'm not an attrset";
| ^
3| in somepkg.src.meta
… while selecting 'meta' on 'somepkg.src'
at «string»:3:4:
2| somepkg.src = "I'm not an attrset";
3| in somepkg.src.meta
| ^
error: expected a set but found a string: "I'm not an attrset"
For the low price of an enumerate() and a lambda you too can have the
incorrect line of code actually show up in the trace!
Change-Id: Ic1491c86e33c167891bdac9adad6224784760bd6
Turns errors like:
let
errpkg = throw "invalid foobar";
in errpkg.meta
error:
… while calling the 'throw' builtin
at «string»:2:12:
1| let
2| errpkg = throw "invalid foobar";
| ^
3| in errpkg.meta
error: invalid foobar
into errors like:
let
errpkg = throw "invalid foobar";
in errpkg.meta
error:
… while evaluating 'errpkg' to select 'meta' on it
at «string»:3:4:
2| errpkg = throw "invalid foobar";
3| in errpkg.meta
| ^
… while calling the 'throw' builtin
at «string»:2:12:
1| let
2| errpkg = throw "invalid foobar";
| ^
3| in errpkg.meta
error: invalid foobar
For the low price of one try/catch, you too can have the incorrect line
of code actually show up in the trace!
Change-Id: If8d6200ec1567706669d405c34adcd7e2d2cd29d
Add a platform-specific function for starting sandboxed child.
Generally this just means startProcess, but on Linux we use flags
for clone to start a new namespace
Change-Id: I41c8aba62676a162388bbe5ab8a7518904c7b058
Add a new OS-specific hook called `prepareSandbox`, run before forking
On Darwin this is empty as nothing is required,
on Linux this creates the chroot directory and adds basic files,
and on platforms using a fallback this throws an exception
Change-Id: Ie30c38c387f2e0e5844b2afa32fd4d33b1180dae
generators are a better basis for serializers than streaming into sinks
as we do currently for many reasons, such as being usable as sources if
one wishes to (without requiring an intermediate sink to serialize full
data sets into memory, or boost coroutines to turn sinks into sources),
composing more naturally (as one can just yield a sub-generator instead
of being forced to wrap entire substreams into clunky functions or even
more clunky custom types to implement operator<< on), allowing wrappers
to transform data with clear ownership semantics (removing the need for
explicit memory allocations and Source wrappers), and many other things
Change-Id: I361d89ff556354f6930d9204f55117565f2f7f20
the `*Source` name is a slight misnomer since we do also have a
Source type, but we can probably live with this for time being.
Change-Id: I54eb2e59a4009014e324797f16b80b962759c7d3
not used anywhere yet, but we'll use this a lot soon for generators that
return file contents, wire protocol fragments, or indeed any byte stream
Change-Id: I01a46f9bf9d75aaf4a5d7662773b99f498862a28
this will be the basis of non-boost coroutines in lix. anything that is
a boost coroutine *should* be representable with a Generator coroutine,
and many things that are not currently boost coroutines but behave much
like one (such as, notably, serializers) should be as well. this allows
us to greatly simplify many things that look like iteration but aren't.
Change-Id: I2cebcefa0148b631fb30df4c8cfa92167a407e34
not printing activities at all when no progress information is available
hides *all* progress information from e.g. flake show. this is not ideal
and needs to be fixed, but the fix *still* has problems with flake show:
in multiline mode we will overwrite all useful flake show output as soon
as the progress bar is redrawn. flake show output is also mangled in any
number of other situations (like -v being set), so we should probably be
not too worried about it and fix progress reporting properly another day
Change-Id: I6d39d670e261bbae00560b6a8e15dec8e16b35c4
Previously, the progress bar had two subtly different states in which the bar
would not actually render, both with their own shortcomings: inactive (which
was irreversible) and paused (reversible, but swallowing logs). Furthermore,
there was no way of resetting the statistics, so a very bad solution was
implemented (243c0f18da) that would create a new
logger for each line of the repl, leaking the previous one and discarding the
value of printBuildLogs. Finally, if stderr was not attached to a TTY, the
update thread was started even though the logger was not active, violating the
invariant required by the destructor (which is not observed because the logger
is leaked).
In this commit, the two aforementioned states are unified into a single one,
which can be exited again, correctly upholds the invariant that the update
thread is only running while the progress bar is active, and does not swallow
logs. The latter change in behavior is not expected to be a problems in the
rare cases where the paused state was used before, since other loggers (like
the simple one) don't exhibit it anyway. The startProgressBar/stopProgressBar
API is removed due to being a footgun, and a new method for properly resetting
the progress is added.
Co-Authored-By: Qyriad <qyriad@qyriad.me>
Change-Id: I2b7c3eb17d439cd0c16f7b896cfb61239ac7ff3a
we do not have any of these warnings appearing at the moment, but it
seems like a good idea to enable [[nodiscard]] checking anyway. once
we start introducing more functions with must-use conditions we will
need such checking, and the rust stdlib has proven them very useful.
Change-Id: Ibb6b042ae1ec5f527f8dc2809a7816a4c1548ae2
The `allow-flake-configuration` option allows the user to control whether to
accept configuration options supplied by flakes. Unfortunately, setting this
to false really meant "ask each time" (with an option to remember the choice
for each specific option encountered). Let no mean no, and introduce (and
default to) a separate value for the "ask each time" behaviour.
Co-Authored-By: Jade Lovelace <lix@jade.fyi>
Change-Id: I7ccd67a95bfc92cffc1ebdc972d243f5191cc1b4
We previously allowed you to map any flake URL to any other flake URL,
including shorthand flakerefs, indirect flake URLs like `flake:nixpkgs`,
direct flake URLs like `github:NixOS/nixpkgs`, or local paths.
But flake registry entries mapping from direct flake URLs often come
from swapping the 'from' and 'to' arguments by accident, and even when
created intentionally, they may not actually work correctly.
This patch rejects those URLs (and fully-qualified flake: URLs), making
it harder to swap the arguments by accident.
Fixes#181.
Change-Id: I24713643a534166c052719b8770a4edfcfdb8cf3
This is a shameless layering violation in favour of UX. It falls back
trivially to "unknown", so it's purely a UX feature.
Diagnostic sample:
```
error: hash mismatch in fixed-output derivation '/nix/store/sjfw324j4533lwnpmr5z4icpb85r63ai-x1.drv':
likely URL: https://meow.puppy.forge/puppy.tar.gz
specified: sha256-AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA=
got: sha256-a1Qvp3FOOkWpL9kFHgugU1ok5UtRPSu+NwCZKbbaEro=
```
Change-Id: I873eedcf7984ab23f57a6754be00232b5cb5b02c
this most notably affects `nix eval`: if there is no progress bar to be
shown and no activities going on we should not print anything at all. a
progress bar with no activities would print a bunch of terminal escapes
*and a space*, which is not helpful in simple cases like nix eval -E 1.
notably this does *not* affect nix eval called on non-terminal outputs,
but it is slightly confusing nevertheless (and not difficult to avoid).
fixes lix-project/lix#424
Change-Id: Iee793c79ba5a485d6606e0d292ed2eae6dfb7216
MAKEFLAGS hasn't been relevant since we switched off the Make
buildsystem and using the clang environment by default gives you clangd
by default which most developers will want.
Change-Id: I9c11d0613577047e6c908f049c1ffaca5fb5ff67
this gives about 20% performance improvements on pure parsing. obviously
it will be less on full eval, but depending on how much parsing is to be
done (e.g. including hackage-packages.nix or not) it's more like 4%-10%.
this has been tested (with thousands of core hours of fuzzing) to ensure
that the ASTs produced by the new parser are exactly the same as the old
one would have produced. error messages will change (sometimes by a lot)
and are not yet perfect, but we would rather leave this as is for later.
test results for running only the parser (excluding the variable binding
code) in a tight loop with inputs and parameters as given are promising:
- 40% faster on lix's package.nix at 10000 iterations
- 1.3% faster on nixpkgs all-packages.nix at 1000 iterations
- equivalent on all of nixpkgs concatenated at 100 iterations
(excluding invalid files, each file surrounded with parens)
more realistic benchmarks are somewhere in between the extremes, parsing
once again getting the largest uplift. other realistic workloads improve
by a few percentage points as well, notably system builds are 4% faster.
Benchmarks summary (from ./bench/summarize.jq bench/bench-*.json)
old/bin/nix --extra-experimental-features 'nix-command flakes' eval -f bench/nixpkgs/pkgs/development/haskell-modules/hackage-packages.nix
mean: 0.408s ± 0.025s
user: 0.355s | system: 0.033s
median: 0.389s
range: 0.388s ... 0.442s
relative: 1
new/bin/nix --extra-experimental-features 'nix-command flakes' eval -f bench/nixpkgs/pkgs/development/haskell-modules/hackage-packages.nix
mean: 0.332s ± 0.024s
user: 0.279s | system: 0.033s
median: 0.314s
range: 0.313s ... 0.361s
relative: 0.814
---
old/bin/nix --extra-experimental-features 'nix-command flakes' eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'
mean: 6.133s ± 0.022s
user: 5.395s | system: 0.437s
median: 6.128s
range: 6.099s ... 6.183s
relative: 1
new/bin/nix --extra-experimental-features 'nix-command flakes' eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'
mean: 5.925s ± 0.025s
user: 5.176s | system: 0.456s
median: 5.934s
range: 5.861s ... 5.943s
relative: 0.966
---
GC_INITIAL_HEAP_SIZE=10g old/bin/nix eval --extra-experimental-features 'nix-command flakes' --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'
mean: 4.503s ± 0.027s
user: 3.731s | system: 0.547s
median: 4.499s
range: 4.478s ... 4.541s
relative: 1
GC_INITIAL_HEAP_SIZE=10g new/bin/nix eval --extra-experimental-features 'nix-command flakes' --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'
mean: 4.285s ± 0.031s
user: 3.504s | system: 0.571s
median: 4.281s
range: 4.221s ... 4.328s
relative: 0.951
---
old/bin/nix --extra-experimental-features 'nix-command flakes' search --no-eval-cache github:nixos/nixpkgs/e1fa12d4f6c6fe19ccb59cac54b5b3f25e160870 hello
mean: 16.475s ± 0.07s
user: 14.088s | system: 1.572s
median: 16.495s
range: 16.351s ... 16.536s
relative: 1
new/bin/nix --extra-experimental-features 'nix-command flakes' search --no-eval-cache github:nixos/nixpkgs/e1fa12d4f6c6fe19ccb59cac54b5b3f25e160870 hello
mean: 15.973s ± 0.013s
user: 13.558s | system: 1.615s
median: 15.973s
range: 15.946s ... 15.99s
relative: 0.97
---
Change-Id: Ie66ec2d045dec964632c6541e25f8f0797319ee2
These are totally available and you can just turn them on, but they have
very bad dependency tracking and thus bloat incremental change times,
which is not really ok.
Change-Id: Iaa63ed18a789e74fcb757248cd24c3b194afcc80
This reverts commit 35eec921af.
Reason for revert: Regressed nix-eval-jobs, and it appears to be this change is buggy/missing a case. It just needs another pass.
Code causing the problem in n-e-j, when invoked with `nix-eval-jobs --flake '.#hydraJobs'`:
```
n-e-j/tests/assets » ../../build/src/nix-eval-jobs --meta --workers 1 --flake .#hydraJobs
warning: unknown setting 'trusted-users'
warning: `--gc-roots-dir' not specified
error: unsupported Git input attribute 'dir'
error: worker error: error: unsupported Git input attribute 'dir'
```
```
nix::Value *vRoot = [&]() {
if (args.flake) {
auto [flakeRef, fragment, outputSpec] =
nix::parseFlakeRefWithFragmentAndExtendedOutputsSpec(
args.releaseExpr, nix::absPath("."));
nix::InstallableFlake flake{
{}, state, std::move(flakeRef), fragment, outputSpec,
{}, {}, args.lockFlags};
return flake.toValue(*state).first;
} else {
return releaseExprTopLevelValue(*state, autoArgs, args);
}
}();
```
Inspecting the program behaviour reveals that `dir` was in fact set in the URL going into the fetcher. This is in turn because unlike in the case changed in this commit, it was not erased before handing it to libfetchers, which is probably just a mistake.
```
(rr) up
3 0x00007ffff60262ae in nix::fetchers::Input::fromURL (url=..., requireTree=requireTree@entry=true) at src/libfetchers/fetchers.cc:39
warning: Source file is more recent than executable.
39 auto res = inputScheme->inputFromURL(url, requireTree);
(rr) p url
$1 = (const nix::ParsedURL &) @0x7fffdc874190: {url = "git+file:///home/jade/lix/nix-eval-jobs",
base = "git+file:///home/jade/lix/nix-eval-jobs", scheme = "git+file", authority = std::optional<std::string> = {[contained value] = ""},
path = "/home/jade/lix/nix-eval-jobs", query = std::map with 1 element = {["dir"] = "tests/assets"}, fragment = ""}
(rr) up
4 0x00007ffff789d904 in nix::parseFlakeRefWithFragment (url=".#hydraJobs", baseDir=std::optional<std::string> = {...},
allowMissing=allowMissing@entry=false, isFlake=isFlake@entry=true) at src/libexpr/flake/flakeref.cc:179
warning: Source file is more recent than executable.
179 FlakeRef(Input::fromURL(parsedURL, isFlake), getOr(parsedURL.query, "dir", "")),
(rr) p parsedURL
$2 = {url = "git+file:///home/jade/lix/nix-eval-jobs", base = "git+file:///home/jade/lix/nix-eval-jobs", scheme = "git+file",
authority = std::optional<std::string> = {[contained value] = ""}, path = "/home/jade/lix/nix-eval-jobs", query = std::map with 1 element = {
["dir"] = "tests/assets"}, fragment = ""}
(rr) list
174
175 if (pathExists(flakeRoot + "/.git/shallow"))
176 parsedURL.query.insert_or_assign("shallow", "1");
177
178 return std::make_pair(
179 FlakeRef(Input::fromURL(parsedURL, isFlake), getOr(parsedURL.query, "dir", "")),
180 fragment);
181 }
```
Change-Id: Ib55a882eaeb3e59228857761dc1e3b2e366b0f5e
On operating systems where /bin/sh is not Bash, some scripts are invalid
because of bashisms, and building Lix fails with errors like this:
`render-manpage.sh: 3: set: Illegal option -o pipefail`
This modifies all scripts that use a `/bin/sh` shebang to `/usr/bin/env
bash`, including currently POSIX-compliant ones, to prevent any future
confusion.
Change-Id: Ia074cc6db42d40fc59a63726f6194ea0149ea5e0
I was working on nix-eval-jobs with a dev shell with some shenanigans to
run against a locally built Lix and it was getting really annoying when
`nix develop ../lix#` was messing up my other git repo's hooks.
This is a fix via blunt force, but it is at least obvious how it works.
Change-Id: Ia29eeb5be57ab6a2c88451c00ea18a51e4dfe65e
This is a squash of upstream PRs #10303, #10312 and #10883.
fix: Treat empty TMPDIR as unset
Fixes an instance of
nix: src/libutil/util.cc:139: nix::Path nix::canonPath(PathView, bool): Assertion `path != ""' failed.
... which I've been getting in one of my shells for some reason.
I have yet to find out why TMPDIR was empty, but it's no reason for
Nix to break.
(cherry picked from commit c3fb2aa1f9d1fa756dac38d3588c836c5a5395dc)
fix: Treat empty XDG_RUNTIME_DIR as unset
See preceding commit. Not observed in the wild, but is sensible
and consistent with TMPDIR behavior.
(cherry picked from commit b9e7f5aa2df3f0e223f5c44b8089cbf9b81be691)
local-derivation-goal.cc: Reuse defaultTempDir()
(cherry picked from commit fd31945742710984de22805ee8d97fbd83c3f8eb)
fix: remove usage of XDG_RUNTIME_DIR for TMP
(cherry picked from commit 1363f51bcb24ab9948b7b5093490a009947f7453)
tests/functional: Add count()
(cherry picked from commit 6221770c9de4d28137206bdcd1a67eea12e1e499)
Remove uncalled for message
(cherry picked from commit b1fe388d33530f0157dcf9f461348b61eda13228)
Add build-dir setting
(cherry picked from commit 8b16cced18925aa612049d08d5e78eccbf0530e4)
Change-Id: Ic7b75ff0b6a3b19e50a4ac8ff2d70f15c683c16a
The stdenv phases don’t actually do anything (at least not anymore),
and our justfile doesn’t behave the same as our docs.
This patch removes the stdenv phases from the docs, documents our
usage of just, and makes `just setup` heed `$mesonFlags`.
Fixes#413.
Fixes#414.
Change-Id: Ieb0b2a8ae420526238b5f9a73d7849ec6919995d
Following the latest hacking.md currently fails because of a missing
include in upstream editline. This patch fixes the build by adding
that missing include.
Fixes#410.
Change-Id: Iefd4cb687ed3da71ccda9fe9624f38e6ef4623e5
this was only used in one place, and that place has been rewritten to
use a temporary file instead. keeping this around is not very helpful
at this time, and in any case we'd be better off rewriting subprocess
handling in rust where we not only have a much safer library for such
things but also async frameworks necessary for this easily available.
Change-Id: I6f8641b756857c84ae2602cdf41f74ee7a1fda02
we want to remove runProgram's ability to provide stdin to a process
because the concurrency issues of handling both stdin and stdout are
much more pronounced once runProgram returns not is collected output
but a source. this is possible in the current c++ framework, however
it isn't necessary in almost all cases (as demonstrated by only this
single user existing) and in much better handled with a proper async
concurrency model that lets the caller handle both at the same time.
Change-Id: I29da1e1ad898d45e2e33a7320b246d5003e7712b
This is primarily for readability, but iwrc chaining std::string's
operator+ is also pretty scuffed performance-wise, and this was doing a
lot of operator+ chainging.
Change-Id: I9f25235df153eb2bbb491f1ff7ebbeed9a8ec985
copy-constructing or assigning from pid_t can easily lead to duplicate
Pid instances for the same process if a pid_t was used carelessly, and
Pid itself was copy-constructible. both could cause surprising results
such as killing processes twice (which could become very problemantic,
but luckily modern systems don't reuse PIDs all that quickly), or more
than one piece of the code believing it owns a process when neither do
Change-Id: Ifea7445f84200b34c1a1d0acc2cdffe0f01e20c6
this is only used in one place, and only to set a nicer error message on
EndOfFile. the only caller that actually *catches* this exception should
provide an error message in that catch block rather than forcing support
for setting error message so deep into the stack. copyStorePath is never
called outside of PathSubstitutionGoal anyway, which catches everything.
Change-Id: Ifbae8706d781c388737706faf4c8a8b7917ca278
LocalDerivationGoal includes a large number of low-level sandboxing
primitives for Darwin and Linux, intermingled with ifdefs.
Start creating platform-specific classes to make it easier to add new
platforms and review platform-specific code.
This change only creates support infrastructure and moves two function,
more functions will be moved in future changes.
Change-Id: I9fc29fa2a7345107d4fc96c46fa90b4eabf6bb89
This comes quite often when the available job slots on all remote
builders are exhausted and this is pretty spammy.
This isn't really an issue, but expected behavior.
A better way to display this is a nom-like approach where all scheduled
builds are shown in a tree and pending builds are being marked as such
IMHO.
Change-Id: I6bc14e6054f84e3eb0768127b490e263d8cdcf89
The original idea was to fix lix#174, but for a user friendly solution,
I figured that we'd need more consistency:
* Invalid query params will cause an error, just like invalid
attributes. This has the following two consequences:
* The `?dir=`-param from flakes will be removed before the URL to be
fetched is passed to libfetchers.
* The tarball fetcher doesn't allow URLs with custom query params
anymore. I think this was questionable anyways given that an
arbitrary set of query params was silently removed from the URL you
wanted to fetch. The correct way is to use an attribute-set
with a key `url` that contains the tarball URL to fetch.
* Same for the git & mercurial fetchers: in that case it doesn't even
matter though: both fetchers added unused query params to the URL
that's passed from the input scheme to the fetcher (`url2` in the code).
It turns out that this was never used since the query parameters were
erased again in `getActualUrl`.
* Validation happens for both attributes and URLs. Previously, a lot of
fetchers validated e.g. refs/revs only when specified in a URL and
the validity of attribute names only in `inputFromAttrs`.
Now, all the validation is done in `inputFromAttrs` and `inputFromURL`
constructs attributes that will be passed to `inputFromAttrs`.
* Accept all attributes as URL query parameters. That also includes
lesser used ones such as `narHash`.
And "output" attributes like `lastModified`: these could be declared
already when declaring inputs as attribute rather than URL. Now the
behavior is at least consistent.
Personally, I think we should differentiate in the future between
"fetched input" (basically the attr-set that ends up in the lock-file)
and "unfetched input" earlier: both inputFrom{Attrs,URL} entrypoints
are probably OK for unfetched inputs, but for locked/fetched inputs
a custom entrypoint should be used. Then, the current entrypoints
wouldn't have to allow these attributes anymore.
Change-Id: I1be1992249f7af8287cfc37891ab505ddaa2e8cd
Add the log-formats `multiline` and `multiline-with-logs` which offer
multiple current active building status lines.
Change-Id: Idd8afe62f8591b5d8b70e258c5cefa09be4cab03
If we've consumed the entire input, that doesn't actually mean we're
done decompressing - there might be more output left. This worked (?)
in most cases because the input and output sizes are pretty comparable,
but sometimes they're not and then things get very funny.
Change-Id: I73435a654a911b8ce25119f713b80706c5783c1b
I did a whole bunch of `git log -S` to find out exactly when all these
things were obsoleted and found the commit in which their usage was
removed, which I have added in either the error message or a comment.
I've also made *some* of the version checks into static asserts for when
we update the minimum supported protocol version.
In the end this is not a lot of code we are deleting, but it's code that
we will never have to support into the future when we build a protocol
bridge, which is why I did it. It is not in the support baseline.
Change-Id: Iea3c80795c75ea74f328cf7ede7cbedf8c41926b
without this we will not be able to get rid of makeDecompressionSink,
which in turn will be necessary to get rid of sourceToSink (since the
libarchive archive wrapper *must* be a Source due to api limitations)
Change-Id: Iccd3d333ba2cbcab49cb5a1d3125624de16bce27
don't consume a sink, return a source instead. the only reason to not do
this is a very slight reduction in dynamic allocations, but since we are
going to *at least* do disk io that will not be a lot of overhead anyway
Change-Id: Iae2f879ec64c3c3ac1d5310eeb6a85e696d4614a
if we want have getFile return a source instead of consuming a sink
we'll have to disambiguate this overload another way, eg like this.
Change-Id: Ia26de2020c309a37e7ccc3775c1ad1f32e0a778b
This happened during a PathSubstitutionGoal of a .drv file:
substitution of '/tmp/jade/nix-test/ca/eval-store/store/1lj7lsq5y0f25mfbnq6d3zd0bw5ay33n-dependencies-input-2.drv'
What happened here is that since PathSubstitutionGoal is not a
DerivationGoal, in production builds, the UB was not caught, since it
would early-exit from failing a dynamic_cast to DerivationGoal * on the
very next line, but before the null reference was ever used.
This was nonetheless UB. The fix should be to just rearrange the two
lines; I don't think there is a further bug there, since *substituting a
.drv* **necessarily** means you cannot have the representation of
the derivation as would be necessary for drv to not be null there.
Test failure:
++(eval-store.sh:12) _RR_TRACE_DIR=/home/jade/.local/share/rr rr record -- nix build -f dependencies.nix --eval-store /tmp/jade/nix-test/ca/eval-store/eval-store -o /tmp/jade/nix-test/ca/eval-store/result
don't know how to build these paths:
/tmp/jade/nix-test/ca/eval-store/store/6y51mf0p57ggipgab6hdjabbvplzsicq-dependencies-top.drv
copying 1 paths...
copying path '/tmp/jade/nix-test/ca/eval-store/store/8027afyvqb87y1sf5xhdkqsflqn1ziy8-dependencies.builder0.sh' to 'local'...
copying 1 paths...
copying path '/tmp/jade/nix-test/ca/eval-store/store/7r5pqyncvfgrryf9gzy1z56z3xigi61x-builder-dependencies-input-0.sh' to 'local'...
copying 1 paths...
copying path '/tmp/jade/nix-test/ca/eval-store/store/nhmgm87zlqy3ks96dxrn7l37b72azi99-builder-dependencies-input-1.sh' to 'local'...
copying 1 paths...
copying path '/tmp/jade/nix-test/ca/eval-store/store/nq4qa2j6y8ajqazlfq6h46ck637my1n6-builder-dependencies-input-2.sh' to 'local'...
copying 1 paths...
copying path '/tmp/jade/nix-test/ca/eval-store/store/6vh0vna9l5afck01y7iaks3hm9ikwqyj-builder-fod-input.sh' to 'local'...
building '/tmp/jade/nix-test/ca/eval-store/store/gy91pqymf2nc5v7ld1bad94xpwxdi25s-dependencies-input-0.drv'...
building '/tmp/jade/nix-test/ca/eval-store/store/w7wlkjx97ivmnrymkac5av3nyp94hzvq-dependencies-input-1.drv'...
../src/libstore/build/derivation-goal.cc:1556:22: runtime error: reference binding to null pointer of type 'Derivation'
0 0x734ba59a6886 in nix::DerivationGoal::waiteeDone(std::shared_ptr<nix::Goal>, nix::Goal::ExitCode) /home/jade/lix/lix2/build/src/libstore/build/derivation-goal.cc:1556:12
1 0x734ba59c0962 in nix::Goal::amDone(nix::Goal::ExitCode, std::optional<nix::Error>) /home/jade/lix/lix2/build/src/libstore/build/goal.cc:95:25
2 0x734ba5a1c44a in nix::PathSubstitutionGoal::done(nix::Goal::ExitCode, nix::BuildResult::Status, std::optional<std::__cxx11::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char>>>) /home/jade/lix/lix2/build/src/libstore/build/substitution-goal.cc:38:5
3 0x734ba5a1b454 in nix::PathSubstitutionGoal::init() /home/jade/lix/lix2/build/src/libstore/build/substitution-goal.cc:56:9
4 0x734ba5a2a6c6 in nix::Worker::run(std::set<std::shared_ptr<nix::Goal>, nix::CompareGoalPtrs, std::allocator<std::shared_ptr<nix::Goal>>> const&) /home/jade/lix/lix2/build/src/libstore/build/worker.cc:320:23
5 0x734ba59b93d8 in nix::Store::buildPathsWithResults(std::vector<nix::DerivedPath, std::allocator<nix::DerivedPath>> const&, nix::BuildMode, std::shared_ptr<nix::Store>) /home/jade/lix/lix2/build/src/libstore/build/entry-points.cc:60:12
6 0x734ba663c107 in nix::Installable::build2(nix::ref<nix::Store>, nix::ref<nix::Store>, nix::Realise, std::vector<nix::ref<nix::Installable>, std::allocator<nix::ref<nix::Installable>>> const&, nix::BuildMode) /home/jade/lix/lix2/build/src/libcmd/installables.cc:637:36
Change-Id: Id0e651e480bebf6356733b01bc639e9bb59c7bd0
This was generating an out-of-range verbosity value. We should just
process it as an int and then convert to verbosity with a clamping
function, which trivially avoids any domain type violations.
Change-Id: I0ed20da8e1496a1225ff3008b76827d99265d404
This is really just a question of turning off the production sanitizer
configuration so we get nice diagnostics. Not much else to say.
Change-Id: I76bd6d225320056ed95bd89955f00beff2db0d2f
We got UBSan working on Lix, so we of course immediately found a bug and
some definitely nonsense behaviour.
Accessing `pureEval` or `restrictEval` from a default setting value is
nonsense, since they would never be actually set by the time that value
is set so they are not going to do anything. The configuration is not
applied in an initializer (and even if it were, it's not going to be in
the right order).
After looking into *that*, we hunted down what actually was applying
these, since clearly this code did not do anything. The EvalState
constructor should have a "search path added and removed here :)" sign
on it, because that's where it is done. We added an explicit
initialization of the optional in there because it was otherwise unclear
why pureEval also has the search path to allowed paths setup code run.
We then realized that the `pureEval` documentation was *also* bogus, and
we rewrote it. In so doing, we realized that we forgot to file a bug to
make `builtins.storePath` work in pure eval mode, so we filed one of
those: lix-project/lix#402
Yaks have been thoroughly shorn.
UBSan report:
../src/libexpr/eval-settings.cc:66:10: runtime error: member call on address 0x752fa9a13060 which does not point to an object of type 'nix::BaseSetting<b
ool>'
0x752fa9a13060: note: object has invalid vptr
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
invalid vptr
0 0x752fa95106a6 in nix::EvalSettings::getDefaultNixPath[abi:cxx11]() /home/jade/lix/lix2/build/src/libexpr/eval-settings.cc:66:10
1 0x752fa950e420 in nix::EvalSettings::EvalSettings() /home/jade/lix/lix2/build/src/libexpr/eval-settings.hh:36:15
2 0x752fa9469f1f in __cxx_global_var_init.50 /home/jade/lix/lix2/build/src/libexpr/eval-settings.cc:98:14
3 0x752fa9469f1f in _GLOBAL__sub_I_eval_settings.cc /home/jade/lix/lix2/build/src/libexpr/eval-settings.cc
4 0x752fabbd308d in call_init (/nix/store/k7zgvzp2r31zkg9xqgjim7mbknryv6bs-glibc-2.39-52/lib/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2+0x508d) (BuildId: a5b8228edc9f16078ac3c894af964eeb990ecb4c)
5 0x752fabbd317b in _dl_init (/nix/store/k7zgvzp2r31zkg9xqgjim7mbknryv6bs-glibc-2.39-52/lib/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2+0x517b) (BuildId: a5b8228edc9f16078ac3c894af964eeb990ecb4c)
6 0x752fabbe9c2f in _dl_start_user (/nix/store/k7zgvzp2r31zkg9xqgjim7mbknryv6bs-glibc-2.39-52/lib/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2+0x1bc2f) (BuildId: a5b8228edc9f16078ac3c894af964eeb990ecb4c)
Change-Id: I5d8ffb7bfbe24b6584020ac74eed93d9f2e6d111
The lock usage was obviously wrong so it was entirely serialized. This
has the predicted speedups, the only question is whether it is sound
because it's exposing a bunch of new code to actual concurrency.
I did audit all the stores' queryPathInfoUncached implementations and
they all look *intended* to be thread safe, but whether that is actually
sound or not: lol lmao. I am highly confident in the s3 one because it
is calling s3 sdk methods that are thread safe and has no actual state.
Others are using Pool and look to be *supposed* to be thread safe, but
unsure if they actually are.
Change-Id: I0369152a510e878b5ac56c9ac956a98d48cd5fef
Unfetched submodules are included as empty directories in archives, so they end
up as such in the store when fetched in clean mode. Make sure the same happens
in dirty mode too. Fortunately, they are already correctly represented in the
ls-files output, so we just need to make sure to include the empty directory in
our filter.
Fixes: https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/6247
Change-Id: I60d06ff360cfa305d081b920838c893c06da801c
2024-06-18 00:54:51 +00:00
604 changed files with 18894 additions and 8855 deletions
This is a file used by the dev shell shellHook in package.nix to check that this is actually a Lix repo before installing git hooks. Its contents have no meaning.
# It's used for crediting people accurately in release notes. The release notes
# script will link to forgejo, then to GitHub if forgejo is not present.
#
# When adding someone from outside the Lix project, you generally want to simply link their GitHub profile without adding a display name unless they are well-known in the community by that display name.
#
# See doc/manual/src/contributing/hacking.md for more documentation on this file's format and typical usage.
synopsis: "Build failures caused by `allowSubstitutes = false` while being the wrong system now produce a decent error"
issues: [fj#484]
cls: [1841]
category: Fixes
credits: jade
---
Nix allows derivations to set `allowSubstitutes = false` in order to force them to be built locally without querying substituters for them.
This is useful for derivations that are very fast to build (especially if they produce large output).
However, this can shoot you in the foot if the derivation *has* to be substituted such as if the derivation is for another architecture, which is what `--always-allow-substitutes` is for.
Perhaps such derivations that are known to be impossible to build locally should ignore `allowSubstitutes` (irrespective of remote builders) in the future, but this at least reports the failure and solution directly.
```
$ nix build -f fail.nix
error: a 'unicornsandrainbows-linux' with features {} is required to build '/nix/store/...-meow.drv', but I am a 'x86_64-linux' with features {...}
Hint: the failing derivation has allowSubstitutes set to false, forcing it to be built rather than substituted.
Passing --always-allow-substitutes to force substitution may resolve this failure if the path is available in a substituter.
synopsis: "The beginnings of a new pytest-based functional test suite"
category: Development
cls: [2036, 2037]
credits: jade
---
The existing integration/functional test suite is based on a large volume of shell scripts.
This often makes it somewhat challenging to debug at the best of times.
The goal of the pytest test suite is to make tests have more obvious dependencies on files and to make tests more concise and easier to write, as well as making new testing methods like snapshot testing easy.
synopsis: "`nix repl` now allows tab-completing the special repl :colon commands"
cls: 1367
credits: Qyriad
category: Improvements
---
The REPL (`nix repl`) supports pressing `<TAB>` to complete a partial expression, but now also supports completing the special :colon commands as well (`:b`, `:edit`, `:doc`, etc), if the line starts with a colon.
synopsis: "Some Lix crashes now produce reporting instructions and a stack trace, then abort"
cls: [1854]
category: Improvements
credits: jade
---
Lix, being a C++ program, can crash in a few kinds of ways.
It can obviously do a memory access violation, which will generate a core dump and thus be relatively debuggable.
But, worse, it could throw an unhandled exception, and, in the past, we would just show the message but not where it comes from, in spite of this always being a bug, since we expect all such errors to be translated to a Lix specific error.
Now the latter kind of bug should print reporting instructions, a rudimentary stack trace and (depending on system configuration) generate a core dump.
Sample output:
```
Lix crashed. This is a bug. We would appreciate if you report it along with what caused it at https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/issues with the following information included:
Exception: std::runtime_error: test exception
Stack trace:
0# nix::printStackTrace() in /home/jade/lix/lix3/build/src/nix/../libutil/liblixutil.so
1# 0x000073C9862331F2 in /home/jade/lix/lix3/build/src/nix/../libmain/liblixmain.so
2# 0x000073C985F2E21A in /nix/store/p44qan69linp3ii0xrviypsw2j4qdcp2-gcc-13.2.0-lib/lib/libstdc++.so.6
3# 0x000073C985F2E285 in /nix/store/p44qan69linp3ii0xrviypsw2j4qdcp2-gcc-13.2.0-lib/lib/libstdc++.so.6
4# nix::handleExceptions(std::__cxx11::basic_string<char,std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char> > const&, std::function<void()>) in /home/jade/lix/lix3/build/src/nix/../libmain/liblixmain.so
synopsis: "`<nix/fetchurl.nix>` now uses TLS verification"
category: Fixes
prs: [11585]
credits: edolstra
---
Previously `<nix/fetchurl.nix>` did not do TLS verification. This was because the Nix sandbox in the past did not have access to TLS certificates, and Nix checks the hash of the fetched file anyway. However, this can expose authentication data from `netrc` and URLs to man-in-the-middle attackers. In addition, Nix now in some cases (such as when using impure derivations) does *not* check the hash. Therefore we have now enabled TLS verification. This means that downloads by `<nix/fetchurl.nix>` will now fail if you're fetching from a HTTPS server that does not have a valid certificate.
`<nix/fetchurl.nix>` is also known as the builtin derivation builder `builtin:fetchurl`. It's not to be confused with the evaluation-time function `builtins.fetchurl`, which was not affected by this issue.
This section describes the notion of *deprecated features*, and how it fits into the big picture of the development of Lix.
# What are deprecated features?
Deprecated features are disabled by default, with the intent to eventually remove them.
Users must explicitly enable them to keep using them, by toggling the associated [deprecated feature flags](@docroot@/command-ref/conf-file.md#conf-deprecated-features).
This allows backwards compatibility and a graceful transition away from undesired features.
# Which features can be deprecated?
Undesired features should be soft-deprecated by yielding a warning when used for a significant amount of time before the can be deprecated.
Legacy obsolete feature with little to no usage may go through this process faster.
Deprecated features should have a migration path to a preferred alternative.
# Lifecycle of a deprecated feature
This description is not normative, but a feature removal may roughly happen like this:
1. Add a warning when the feature is being used.
2. Disable the feature by default, putting it behind a deprecated feature flag.
- If disabling the feature started out as an opt-in experimental feature, turn that experimental flag into a no-op or remove it entirely.
For example, `--extra-experimental-features=no-url-literals` becomes `--extra-deprecated-features=url-literals`.
3. Decide on a time frame for how long that feature will still be supported for backwards compatibility, and clearly communicate that in the error messages.
- Sometimes, automatic migration to alternatives is possible, and such should be provided if possible
- At least one NixOS release cycle should be the minimum
4. Finally remove the feature entirely, only keeping the error message for those still using it.
In an ideal world, we'd have SemVer controls over the language and its features, cleanly allowing us to make breaking changes.
See https://wiki.lix.systems/books/lix-contributors/page/language-versioning and [RFC 137](https://github.com/nixos/rfcs/pull/137) for efforts on that.
However, we do not live in such an ideal world, and currently this goal is so far away, that "just disable it with some back-compat for a couple of years" is the most realistic solution, especially for comparatively minor changes.
@ -39,17 +39,19 @@ $ nix-shell -A native-clangStdenvPackages
### Building from the development shell
As always you may run [stdenv's phases by name](https://nixos.org/manual/nixpkgs/unstable/#sec-building-stdenv-package-in-nix-shell), e.g.:
You can build and test Lix with just:
```bash
$ configurePhase
$ buildPhase
$ checkPhase
$ installPhase
$ installCheckPhase
$ just setup
$ just build
$ just test --suite=check
$ just install
$ just test --suite=installcheck
```
To build manually, however, use the following:
(Check and installcheck may both be done after install, allowing you to omit the --suite argument entirely, but this is the order package.nix runs them in.)
You can also build Lix manually:
```bash
$ meson setup ./build "--prefix=$out" $mesonFlags
@ -64,9 +66,7 @@ $ meson install -C build
$ meson test -C build --suite=installcheck
```
(Check and installcheck may both be done after install, allowing you to omit the --suite argument entirely, but this is the order package.nix runs them in.)
This will install Lix to `$PWD/outputs`, the `/bin` of which is prepended to PATH in the development shells.
In both cases, Lix will be installed to `$PWD/outputs`, the `/bin` of which is prepended to PATH in the development shells.
If the tests fail and Meson helpfully has no output for why, use the `--print-error-logs` option to `meson test`.
@ -168,8 +168,27 @@ or for Nix with the [`flakes`] and [`nix-command`] experimental features enabled
$ nix build .#packages.aarch64-linux.default
```
Cross-compiled builds are available for ARMv6 (`armv6l-linux`) and ARMv7 (`armv7l-linux`).
Add more [system types](#system-type) to `crossSystems` in `flake.nix` to bootstrap Nix on unsupported platforms.
### Cross compiling using the Lix flake
Lix can also be easily cross compiled to the following arbitrarily-chosen system doubles, which can be useful for bootstrapping Lix on new platforms.
These are specified in `crossSystems` in `flake.nix`; feel free to submit changes to add new ones if they are useful to you.
- `armv6l-linux`
- `armv7l-linux`
- `aarch64-linux`
- `riscv64-linux`
For example, to cross-compile Lix for `armv6l-linux` from another Linux, use the following:
```console
$ nix build .#nix-armv6l-linux
```
It's also possible to cross-compile a tarball of binaries suitable for the Lix installer, for example, for `riscv64-linux`:
Metrics about the change in line/function coverage over time will be available in the future (FIXME(lix-hydra)).
## Add a release note
`doc/manual/rl-next` contains release notes entries for all unreleased changes.
User-visible changes should come with a release note.
Developer-facing changes should have a release note in the Development category if they are significant and if developers should know about them.
### Add an entry
Here's what a complete entry looks like. The file name is not incorporated in the document.
Here's what a complete entry looks like.
The file name is not incorporated in the final document, and is generally a super brief summary of the change synopsis.
```
```markdown
---
synopsis: Basically a title
# 1234 or gh#1234 will refer to CppNix GitHub, fj#1234 will refer to a Lix forgejo issue.
issues: [1234, fj#1234]
# Use this *only* if there is a CppNix pull request associated with this change
# Use this *only* if there is a CppNix pull request associated with this change.
prs: 1238
# List of Lix Gerrit changelist numbers; if there is an associated Lix GitHub
# PR, just put in the Gerrit CL number.
# List of Lix Gerrit changelist numbers.
# If there is an associated Lix GitHub PR, just put in the Gerrit CL number.
cls: [123]
# Heading that this release note will appear under.
category: Breaking Changes
# Add a credit mention in the bottom of the release note.
# your-name is used as a key into doc/manual/change-authors.yml for metadata
credits: [your-name]
---
Here's one or more paragraphs that describe the change.
@ -346,6 +370,31 @@ Significant changes should add the following header, which moves them to the top
significance: significant
```
The following categories of release notes are supported (see `maintainers/build-release-notes.py`):
- Breaking Changes
- Features
- Improvements
- Fixes
- Packaging
- Development
- Miscellany
The `credits` field, if present, gives credit to the author of the patch in the release notes with a message like "Many thanks to (your-name) for this" and linking to GitHub or Forgejo profiles if listed.
If you are forward-porting a change from CppNix, please credit the original author, and optionally credit yourself.
When adding credits metadata for people external to the project and deciding whether to put in a `display_name`, consider what they are generally known as in the community; even if you know their full name (e.g. from their GitHub profile), we suggest only adding it as a display name if that is what they go by in the community.
There are multiple reasons we follow this practice, but it boils down to privacy and consent: we would rather not capture full names that are not widely used in the community without the consent of the parties involved, even if they are publicly available.
As of this writing, the entries with full names as `display_name` are either members of the CppNix team or people who added them themselves.
The names specified in `credits` are used as keys to look up the authorship info in `doc/manual/change-authors.yml`.
The only mandatory part is that every key appearing in `credits` has an entry present in `change-authors.yml`.
All of the following properties are optional; you can specify `{}` as the metadata if you want a simple non-hyperlinked mention.
The following properties are supported:
- `display_name`: display name used in place of the key when showing names, if present.
- `forgejo`: Forgejo username. The name in the release notes will be a link to this, if present.
- `github`: GitHub username, used if `forgejo` is not set, again making a link.
### Build process
Releases have a precomputed `rl-MAJOR.MINOR.md`, and no `rl-next.md`.
@ -247,7 +247,6 @@ To ensure that characterization testing doesn't make it harder to intentionally
The integration tests are defined in the Nix flake under the `hydraJobs.tests` attribute.
These tests include everything that needs to interact with external services or run Lix in a non-trivial distributed setup.
Because these tests are expensive and require more than what the standard github-actions setup provides, they only run on the master branch (on <https://hydra.nixos.org/jobset/nix/master>).
You can run them manually with `nix build .#hydraJobs.tests.{testName}` or `nix-build -A hydraJobs.tests.{testName}`
@ -428,14 +427,12 @@ I grepped `src/` for `get[eE]nv\("` to find the mentions in Lix code.
- `NIX_SHOW_STATS_PATH` - Writes those statistics into a file at the given path instead of stdout. Undocumented.
- `NIX_SHOW_SYMBOLS` - Dumps the symbol table into the show-stats json output.
- `TERM` - If `dumb` or unset, disables ANSI colour output.
- `FORCE_COLOR`, `CLICOLOR_FORCE` - Enables ANSI colour output if `NO_COLOR`/`NOCOLOR` not set.
@ -36,7 +36,10 @@ All users of the Lix daemon may do the following to bring things into the Nix st
- Input-addressed, so they are run in the sandbox with no network access, with the following exceptions:
- The (poorly named, since it is not *just* about chroot) property `__noChroot` is set on the derivation and `sandbox` is set to `relaxed`.
- On macOS, the derivation property `__darwinAllowLocalNetworking` allows network access to localhost from input-addressed derivations regardless of the `sandbox` setting value. This property exists with such semantics because macOS has no network namespace equivalent to isolate individual processes' localhost networking.
- On macOS, the derivation property `__darwinAllowLocalNetworking` allows network access to localhost from input-addressed derivations regardless of the `sandbox` setting value.
This property exists with such semantics because macOS has no network namespace equivalent to isolate individual processes' localhost networking.
- On macOS, the derivation property `__sandboxProfile` accepts extra sandbox profile S-expressions, allowing derivations to bypass arbitrary parts of the sandbox without altogether disabling it.
This is only permitted when `sandbox` is set to `relaxed`.
- Output-addressed, so they are run with network access but their result must match an expected hash.
Trusted users may set any setting, including `sandbox = false`, so the sandbox state can be different at runtime from what is described in `nix.conf` for builds invoked with such settings.
@ -292,6 +292,12 @@ Derivations can declare some infrequently used optional attributes.
(associative) arrays. For example, the attribute `hardening.format = true`
ends up as the Bash associative array element `${hardening[format]}`.
> **Warning**
>
> If set to `true`, other advanced attributes such as [`allowedReferences`](#adv-attr-allowedReferences), [`allowedReferences`](#adv-attr-allowedReferences), [`allowedRequisites`](#adv-attr-allowedRequisites),
[`disallowedReferences`](#adv-attr-disallowedReferences) and [`disallowedRequisites`](#adv-attr-disallowedRequisites), maxSize, and maxClosureSize.
will have no effect.
- [`outputChecks`]{#adv-attr-outputChecks}\
When using [structured attributes](#adv-attr-structuredAttrs), the `outputChecks`
attribute allows defining checks per-output.
@ -326,7 +332,6 @@ Derivations can declare some infrequently used optional attributes.
@ -59,8 +61,10 @@ The result is a [Boolean] value.
## Arithmetic
Numbers are type-compatible:
Pure integer operations will always return integers, whereas any operation involving at least one floating point number return a floating point number.
Numbers will retain their type unless mixed with other numeric types:
Pure integer operations will always return integers, whereas any operation involving at least one floating point number returns a floating point number.
Integer overflow (of 64-bit signed integers) and division by zero are defined to throw an error.
See also [Comparison] and [Equality].
@ -143,21 +147,103 @@ All comparison operators are implemented in terms of `<`, and the following equi
| *a*`>`*b* | *b*`<`*a* |
| *a*`>=`*b* | `! (`*a*`<`*b*`)` |
Note that the above behaviour violates IEEE 754 for floating point numbers with respect to NaN, for instance.
This may be fixed in a future major language revision.
[Comparison]: #comparison-operators
## Equality
- [Attribute sets][attribute set] and [list]s are compared recursively, and therefore are fully evaluated.
- Comparison of [function]s always returns `false`.
- Numbers are type-compatible, see [arithmetic] operators.
- Floating point numbers only differ up to a limited precision.
The following equality comparison rules are followed in order:
- Comparisons are first, sometimes, performed by identity (pointer value), and whether or not this occurs varies depending on the context in which the comparison is performed; for example, through `builtins.elem`, comparison of lists, or other cases.
The exact instances in which this occurs, aside from direct list and attribute set comparisons as discussed below, are too dependent on implementation details to meaningfully document.
See [note on identity comparison](#identity-comparison) below.
- Comparisons between a combination of integers and floating point numbers are first converted to floating point then compared as floating point.
- Comparisons between values of differing types, besides the ones mentioned in the above rule, are unequal.
- Strings are compared as their string values, disregarding string contexts.
- Paths are compared as their absolute form (since they are stored as such).
- [Functions][function] are always considered unequal, including with themselves.
- The following are compared in the typical manner:
- Integers
- Floating point numbers have equality comparison per IEEE 754.
Note that this means that just like in most languages, floating point arithmetic results are not typically equality comparable, and should instead be compared by checking that the absolute difference is less than some error margin.
- Booleans
- Null
- [Attribute sets][attribute set] are compared following these rules in order:
- If both attribute sets have the same identity (via pointer equality), they are considered equal, regardless of whether the contents have reflexive equality (e.g. even if there are functions contained within).
See [note on identity comparison](#identity-comparison) below.
- If both attribute sets have `type = "derivation"` and have an attribute `outPath` that is equal, they are considered equal.
This means that two results of `builtins.derivation`, regardless of other things added to their attributes via `//` afterwards (or `passthru` in nixpkgs), will compare equal if they passed the same arguments to `builtins.derivation`.
- Otherwise, they are compared element-wise in an unspecified order.
Although this order *may* be deterministic in some cases, this is not guaranteed, and correct code must not rely on this ordering behaviour.
The order determines which elements are evaluated first and thus, if there are throwing values in the attribute set, which of those get evaluated, if any, before the comparison returns an unequal result.
- Lists are compared following these rules in order:
- If both lists have the same identity (via pointer equality), they are considered equal, regardless of whether the contents have reflexive equality (e.g. even if there are functions contained within).
See [note on identity comparison](#identity-comparison) below.
- Otherwise, they are compared element-wise in list order.
[function]: ./constructs.md#functions
[Equality]: #equality
### Identity comparison
In the current revision of the Nix language, values are first compared by identity (pointer equality).
This means that values that are not reflexively equal (that is, they do not satisfy `a == a`), such as functions, are nonetheless sometimes compared as equal with themselves if they are placed in attribute sets or lists, or are compared through other indirect means.
Whether identity comparison applies to a given usage of the language aside from direct list and attribute set comparison is strongly dependent on implementation details to the point it is not feasible to document the exact instances.
This is rather unfortunate behaviour which is regrettably load-bearing on nixpkgs (such as with the `type` attribute of NixOS options) and cannot be changed for the time being.
It may be changed in a future major language revision.
Correct code must not rely on this behaviour.
For example:
```
nix-repl> let f = x: 1; s = { func = f; }; in [ (f == f) (s == s) ]
[ false true ]
```
## Logical implication
Equivalent to `!`*b1* `||`*b2*.
[Logical implication]: #logical-implication
## \[Experimental\] Function piping
*This language feature is still experimental and may change at any time. Enable `--extra-experimental-features pipe-operator` to use it.*
Pipes are a dedicated operator for function application, but with reverse order and a lower binding strength.
This allows you to chain function calls together in way that is more natural to read and requires less parentheses.
`a |> f b |> g` is equivalent to `g (f b a)`.
`g <| f b <| a` is equivalent to `g (f b a)`.
Example code snippet:
```nix
defaultPrefsFile = defaultPrefs
|> lib.mapAttrsToList (
key: value: ''
// ${value.reason}
pref("${key}", ${builtins.toJSON value.value});
''
)
|> lib.concatStringsSep "\n"
|> pkgs.writeText "nixos-default-prefs.js";
```
Note how `mapAttrsToList` is called with two arguments (the lambda and `defaultPrefs`),
but moving the last argument in front of the rest improves the reading flow.
This is common for functions with long first argument, including all `map`-like functions.
The most common way is to enclose the string between double quotes,
e.g., `"foo bar"`. Strings can span multiple lines. The special
characters `"` and `\` and the character sequence `${` must be
escaped by prefixing them with a backslash (`\`). Newlines, carriage
returns and tabs can be written as `\n`, `\r` and `\t`,
respectively.
e.g., `"foo bar"`. Strings can span multiple lines. The backslash
(`\`) can be used to escape characters: newlines, carriage returns
and tabs may be written as `\n`, `\r` and `\t` respectively; any
other characters can be preceded by a backslash to remove any
special meaning they may have, like the special characters `"` and
`\` and the character sequence `${`.
You can include the results of other expressions into a string by enclosing them in `${ }`, a feature known as [string interpolation].
Due to a parser issue that has since come to be relied upon, the character sequence `$${` is interpreted literally and does not introduce an interpolation.
To express a `$` character immediately followed by an interpolation, the former must be escaped.
[string interpolation]: ./string-interpolation.md
@ -43,16 +46,16 @@
Note that the whitespace and newline following the opening `''` is
ignored if there is no non-whitespace text on the initial line.
Indented strings support [string interpolation].
Since `${` and `''` have special meaning in indented strings, you
need a way to quote them. `$` can be escaped by prefixing it with
`''` (that is, two single quotes), i.e., `''$`. `''` can be escaped
by prefixing it with `'`, i.e., `'''`. `$` removes any special
meaning from the following `$`. Linefeed, carriage-return and tab
by prefixing it with `'`, i.e., `'''`. Linefeed, carriage-return and tab
characters can be written as `''\n`, `''\r`, `''\t`, and `''\`
escapes any other character.
Indented strings support [string interpolation] using `${ }` the same way regular strings do.
`$${` is interpreted literally in indented strings as well, so the `$` character must be escaped if it is to be followed by an interpolation.
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
@ -74,17 +77,14 @@
}
```
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
- Block io_uring in the Linux sandbox [cl/1611](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1611)
The io\_uring API has the unfortunate property that it is not possible to selectively decide which operations should be allowed.
This, together with the fact that new operations are routinely added, makes it a hazard to the proper function of the sandbox.
Therefore, any access to io\_uring has been made unavailable inside the sandbox.
As such, attempts to execute any system calls forming part of this API will fail with the error `ENOSYS`, as if io\_uring support had not been configured into the kernel.
Many thanks to [alois31](https://git.lix.systems/alois31) for this.
- The `build-hook` setting is now deprecated
Build hooks communicate with the daemon using a custom, internal, undocumented protocol that is entirely unversioned and cannot be changed.
Since we intend to change it anyway we must unfortunately deprecate the current build hook infrastructure.
We do not expect this to impact most users—we have not found any uses of `build-hook` in the wild—but if this does affect you, we'd like to hear from you!
- Lix no longer speaks the Nix remote-build worker protocol to clients or servers older than CppNix 2.3 [fj#325](https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/issues/325) [cl/1207](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1207) [cl/1208](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1208) [cl/1206](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1206) [cl/1205](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1205) [cl/1204](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1204) [cl/1203](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1203) [cl/1479](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1479)
CppNix 2.3 was released in 2019, and is the new oldest supported version. We
will increase our support baseline in the future up to a final version of CppNix
2.18 (which may happen soon given that it is the only still-packaged and thus
still-tested >2.3 version), but this step already removes a significant amount
of dead, untested, code paths.
Lix speaks the same version of the protocol as CppNix 2.18 and that fact will
never change in the future; the Lix plans to replace the protocol for evolution
will entail a complete incompatible replacement that will be supported in
parallel with the old protocol. Lix will thus retain remote build compatibility
with CppNix as long as CppNix maintains protocol compatibility with 2.18, and
as long as Lix retains legacy protocol support (which will likely be a long
time given that we plan to convert it to a frozen-in-time shim).
Many thanks to [jade](https://git.lix.systems/jade) for this.
Implementation of the pipe operator (`|>`) in the language as described in [RFC 148](https://github.com/NixOS/rfcs/pull/148).
The feature is still marked experimental, enable `--extra-experimental-features pipe-operator` to use it.
Many thanks to [piegames](https://git.lix.systems/piegames) and [eldritch horrors](https://git.lix.systems/pennae) for this.
## Improvements
- Trace which part of a `foo.bar.baz` expression errors [cl/1505](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1505) [cl/1506](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1506)
Previously, if an attribute path selection expression like `linux_4_9.meta.description` it wouldn't show you which one of those parts in the attribute path, or even that that line of code is what caused evaluation of the failing expression.
at /nix/store/dk2rpyb6ndvfbf19bkb2plcz5y3k8i5v-source/pkgs/top-level/linux-kernels.nix:278:17:
277| } // lib.optionalAttrs config.allowAliases {
278| linux_4_9 = throw "linux 4.9 was removed because it will reach its end of life within 22.11";
| ^
279| linux_4_14 = throw "linux 4.14 was removed because it will reach its end of life within 23.11";
error: linux 4.9 was removed because it will reach its end of life within 22.11
```
Not only does the line of code that referenced the failing attribute show up in the trace, it also tells you that it was specifically the `linux_4_9` part that failed.
This includes if the failing part is a top-level binding:
```
let
inherit (pkgs.linuxKernel.kernels) linux_4_9;
in linux_4_9.meta.description
error:
… while evaluating 'linux_4_9' to select 'meta.description' on it
at «string»:3:4:
2| inherit (pkgs.linuxKernel.kernels) linux_4_9;
3| in linux_4_9.meta.description
| ^
… while evaluating the attribute 'linux_4_9'
at /nix/store/dk2rpyb6ndvfbf19bkb2plcz5y3k8i5v-source/pkgs/top-level/linux-kernels.nix:278:5:
277| } // lib.optionalAttrs config.allowAliases {
278| linux_4_9 = throw "linux 4.9 was removed because it will reach its end of life within 22.11";
| ^
279| linux_4_14 = throw "linux 4.14 was removed because it will reach its end of life within 23.11";
… caused by explicit throw
at /nix/store/dk2rpyb6ndvfbf19bkb2plcz5y3k8i5v-source/pkgs/top-level/linux-kernels.nix:278:17:
277| } // lib.optionalAttrs config.allowAliases {
278| linux_4_9 = throw "linux 4.9 was removed because it will reach its end of life within 22.11";
| ^
279| linux_4_14 = throw "linux 4.14 was removed because it will reach its end of life within 23.11";
error: linux 4.9 was removed because it will reach its end of life within 22.11
```
Many thanks to [Qyriad](https://git.lix.systems/Qyriad) for this.
- Confusing 'invalid path' errors are now 'path does not exist' [cl/1161](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1161) [cl/1160](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1160) [cl/1159](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1159)
Previously, if a path did not exist in a Nix store, it was referred to as the internal name "path is invalid".
This is, however, very confusing, and there were numerous such errors that were exactly the same, making it hard to debug.
These errors are now more specific and refer to the path not existing in the store.
Many thanks to [julia](https://git.lix.systems/midnightveil) for this.
- Add a `build-dir` setting to set the backing directory for builds [gh#10303](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/10303) [gh#10312](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/10312) [gh#10883](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/10883) [cl/1514](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1514)
`build-dir` can now be set in the Nix configuration to choose the backing directory for the build sandbox.
This can be useful on systems with `/tmp` on tmpfs, or simply to relocate large builds to another disk.
Also, `XDG_RUNTIME_DIR` is no longer considered when selecting the default temporary directory,
as it's not intended to be used for large amounts of data.
Many thanks to [Robert Hensing](https://github.com/roberth) and [Tom Bereknyei](https://github.com/tomberek) for this.
- Better usage of colour control environment variables [cl/1699](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1699) [cl/1702](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1702)
Lix now heeds `NO_COLOR`/`NOCOLOR` for more output types, such as that used in `nix search`, `nix flake metadata` and similar.
It also now supports `CLICOLOR_FORCE`/`FORCE_COLOR` to force colours regardless of whether there is a terminal on the other side.
It now follows rules compatible with those described on <https://bixense.com/clicolors/> with `CLICOLOR` defaulted to enabled.
That is to say, the following procedure is followed in order:
- NO_COLOR or NOCOLOR set
Always disable colour
- CLICOLOR_FORCE or FORCE_COLOR set
Enable colour
- The output is a tty; TERM != "dumb"
Enable colour
- Otherwise
Disable colour
Many thanks to [jade](https://git.lix.systems/jade) for this.
- Distinguish between explicit throws and errors that happened while evaluating a throw [cl/1511](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1511)
Previously, errors caused by an expression like `throw "invalid argument"` were treated like an error that happened simply while some builtin function was being called:
```
let
throwMsg = p: throw "${p} isn't the right package";
in throwMsg "linuz"
error:
… while calling the 'throw' builtin
at «string»:2:17:
1| let
2| throwMsg = p: throw "${p} isn't the right package";
| ^
3| in throwMsg "linuz"
error: linuz isn't the right package
```
But the error didn't just happen "while" calling the `throw` builtin — it's a throw error!
Now it looks like this:
```
let
throwMsg = p: throw "${p} isn't the right package";
in throwMsg "linuz"
error:
… caused by explicit throw
at «string»:2:17:
1| let
2| throwMsg = p: throw "${p} isn't the right package";
| ^
3| in throwMsg "linuz"
error: linuz isn't the right package
```
This also means that incorrect usage of `throw` or errors evaluating its arguments are easily distinguishable from explicit throws:
```
let
throwMsg = p: throw "${p} isn't the right package";
in throwMsg { attrs = "error when coerced in string interpolation"; }
error:
… while calling the 'throw' builtin
at «string»:2:17:
1| let
2| throwMsg = p: throw "${p} isn't the right package";
| ^
3| in throwMsg { attrs = "error when coerced in string interpolation"; }
… while evaluating a path segment
at «string»:2:24:
1| let
2| throwMsg = p: throw "${p} isn't the right package";
| ^
3| in throwMsg { attrs = "error when coerced in string interpolation"; }
error: cannot coerce a set to a string: { attrs = "error when coerced in string interpolation"; }
```
Here, instead of an actual thrown error, a type error happens first (trying to coerce an attribute set to a string), but that type error happened *while* calling `throw`.
Many thanks to [Qyriad](https://git.lix.systems/Qyriad) for this.
- `nix flake metadata` prints modified date [cl/1700](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1700)
Ever wonder "gee, when *did* I update nixpkgs"?
Wonder no more, because `nix flake metadata` now simply tells you the times every locked flake input was updated:
```
<...>
Description: The purely functional package manager
Many thanks to [jade](https://git.lix.systems/jade) for this.
- Hash mismatch diagnostics for fixed-output derivations include the URL [cl/1536](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1536)
Now, when building fixed-output derivations, Lix will guess the URL that was used in the derivation using the `url` or `urls` properties in the derivation environment.
This is a layering violation but making these diagnostics tractable when there are multiple instances of the `AAAA` hash is too significant of an improvement to pass it up.
```
error: hash mismatch in fixed-output derivation '/nix/store/sjfw324j4533lwnpmr5z4icpb85r63ai-x1.drv':
Many thanks to [kjeremy](https://github.com/kjeremy) and [isabelroses](https://git.lix.systems/isabelroses) for this.
- Eliminate some pretty-printing surprises [#11100](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/11100) [cl/1616](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1616) [cl/1617](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1617) [cl/1618](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1618)
Some inconsistent and surprising behaviours have been eliminated from the pretty-printing used by the REPL and `nix eval`:
* Lists and attribute sets that contain only a single item without nested structures are no longer sometimes inappropriately indented in the REPL, depending on internal state of the evaluator.
* Empty attribute sets and derivations are no longer shown as `«repeated»`, since they are always cheap to print.
This matches the existing behaviour of `nix-instantiate` on empty attribute sets.
Empty lists were never printed as `«repeated»` already.
* The REPL by default does not print nested attribute sets and lists, and indicates elided items with an ellipsis.
Previously, the ellipsis was printed even when the structure was empty, so that such items do not in fact exist.
Since this behaviour was confusing, it does not happen any more.
Before:
```
nix-repl> :p let x = 1 + 2; in [ [ x ] [ x ] ]
[
[
3
]
[ 3 ]
]
nix-repl> let inherit (import <nixpkgs> { }) hello; in [ hello hello ]
Many thanks to [alois31](https://git.lix.systems/alois31) and [Robert Hensing](https://github.com/roberth) for this.
- `nix registry add` now requires a shorthand flakeref on the 'from' side [cl/1494](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1494)
The 'from' argument must now be a shorthand flakeref like `nixpkgs` or `nixpkgs/nixos-20.03`, making it harder to accidentally swap the 'from' and 'to' arguments.
Registry entries that map from other flake URLs can still be specified in registry.json, the `nix.registry` option in NixOS, or the `--override-flake` option in the CLI, but they are not guaranteed to work correctly.
Many thanks to [delan](https://git.lix.systems/delan) for this.
- Allow automatic rejection of configuration options from flakes [cl/1541](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1541)
Setting `accept-flake-config` to `false` now respects user choice by automatically rejecting configuration options set by flakes.
The old behaviour of asking each time is still available (and default) by setting it to the special value `ask`.
Many thanks to [alois31](https://git.lix.systems/alois31) for this.
- `nix repl` now allows tab-completing the special repl :colon commands [cl/1367](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1367)
The REPL (`nix repl`) supports pressing `<TAB>` to complete a partial expression, but now also supports completing the special :colon commands as well (`:b`, `:edit`, `:doc`, etc), if the line starts with a colon.
Many thanks to [Qyriad](https://git.lix.systems/Qyriad) for this.
- `:edit`ing a file in Nix store no longer reloads the repl [fj#341](https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/issues/341) [cl/1620](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1620)
Calling `:edit` from the repl now only reloads if the file being edited was outside of Nix store.
That means that all the local variables are now preserved across `:edit`s of store paths.
This is always safe because the store is read-only.
Many thanks to [goldstein](https://git.lix.systems/goldstein) for this.
- `:log` in repl now works on derivation paths [fj#51](https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/issues/51) [cl/1716](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1716)
`:log` can now accept store derivation paths in addition to derivation expressions.
Many thanks to [goldstein](https://git.lix.systems/goldstein) for this.
## Fixes
- Define integer overflow in the Nix language as an error [fj#423](https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/issues/423) [cl/1594](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1594) [cl/1595](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1595) [cl/1597](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1597) [cl/1609](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1609)
Previously, integer overflow in the Nix language invoked C++ level signed overflow, which was undefined behaviour, but *probably* manifested as wrapping around on overflow.
Since prior to the public release of Lix, Lix had C++ signed overflow defined to crash the process and nobody noticed this having accidentally removed overflow from the Nix language for three months until it was caught by fiddling around.
Given the significant body of actual Nix code that has been evaluated by Lix in that time, it does not appear that nixpkgs or much of importance depends on integer overflow, so it is safe to turn into an error.
Some other overflows were fixed:
- `builtins.fromJSON` of values greater than the maximum representable value in a signed 64-bit integer will generate an error.
- `nixConfig` in flakes will no longer accept negative values for configuration options.
Integer overflow now looks like the following:
```
» nix eval --expr '9223372036854775807 + 1'
error: integer overflow in adding 9223372036854775807 + 1
```
Many thanks to [jade](https://git.lix.systems/jade) for this.
`nix-collect-garbage --dry-run` did not previously give any output - it simply
exited without even checking to see what paths would be deleted.
```
$ nix-collect-garbage --dry-run
$
```
We updated the behaviour of the flag such that instead it prints out how many
paths it *would* delete, but doesn't actually delete them.
```
$ nix-collect-garbage --dry-run
finding garbage collector roots...
determining live/dead paths...
...
<nixstorepaths>
...
2670 store paths deleted, 0.00MiB freed
$
```
Many thanks to [Quantum Jump](https://github.com/QuantumBJump) for this.
- Fix unexpectedly-successful GC failures on macOS [fj#446](https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/issues/446) [cl/1723](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1723)
Has the following happened to you on macOS? This failure has been successfully eliminated, thanks to our successful deployment of advanced successful-failure detection technology (it's just `if (failed && errno == 0)`. Patent pending<sup>not really</sup>):
Many thanks to [jade](https://git.lix.systems/jade) for this.
- `nix copy` is now several times faster at `querying info about /nix/store/...` [fj#366](https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/issues/366) [cl/1462](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1462)
We fixed a locking bug that serialized `querying info about /nix/store/...`
onto just one thread such that it was eating `O(paths to copy * latency)` time
while setting up to copy paths to s3 and other stores. It is now `nproc` times
faster.
Many thanks to [jade](https://git.lix.systems/jade) for this.
## Development
- clang-tidy support [fj#147](https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/issues/147) [cl/1697](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1697)
`clang-tidy` can be used to lint Lix with a limited set of lints using `ninja -C build clang-tidy` and `ninja -C build clang-tidy-fix`.
In practice, this fixes the built-in meson rule that was used the same as above being broken ever since precompiled headers were introduced.
Many thanks to [jade](https://git.lix.systems/jade) for this.
- Lix now supports building with UndefinedBehaviorSanitizer [cl/1483](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1483) [cl/1481](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1481) [cl/1669](https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1669)
You can now build Lix with the configuration option `-Db_sanitize=undefined,address` and it will both work and pass tests with both AddressSanitizer and UndefinedBehaviorSanitizer enabled.
To use ASan specifically, you have to set `-Dgc=disabled`, which an error message will tell you to do if necessary anyhow.
Furthermore, tests passing with Clang ASan+UBSan is checked on every change in CI.
For a list of undefined behaviour found by tooling usage, see [the gerrit topic "undefined-behaviour"](https://gerrit.lix.systems/q/topic:%22undefined-behaviour%22).
Many thanks to [jade](https://git.lix.systems/jade) for this.
The installer is cross-built to several systems from a Mac using
`build-all.xsh` and `upload-to-lix.xsh` in the installer repo (FIXME: currently
at least; maybe this should be moved here?) .
The installer is cross-built to several systems from a Mac using `build-all.xsh` and `upload-to-lix.xsh` in the installer repo (FIXME: currently at least; maybe this should be moved here?).
It installs a binary tarball (FIXME: [it should be taught to substitute from
cache instead][installer-substitute])
from some URL; this is the `hydraJobs.binaryTarball`. The default URLs differ
by architecture and are [configured here][tarball-urls].
It installs a binary tarball (FIXME: [it should be taught to substitute from cache instead][installer-substitute]) from some URL; this is the `hydraJobs.binaryTarball`.
The default URLs differ by architecture and are [configured here][tarball-urls].
To automatically do the file changes for a new version, run `python3 set_version.py NEW_VERSION`, and submit the result for review.
The website has various release-version dependent pieces.
You can update them with `python3 update_version.py NEW_VERSION`, which will regenerate the affected page sources.
These need the release to have been done first as they need hashes for tarballs and such.
### NixOS module
The NixOS module has underdeveloped releng in it.
Currently you have to do the whole branch-off dance manually to a `release-VERSION` branch and update the tarball URLs to point to the release versions manually.
FIXME: this should be unified with the `set_version.py` work in `lix-installer` and probably all the releng kept in here, or kept elsewhere.