The installables syntax is not documented in any of the man pages or
docbook pages for any of those individual commands. And while these
commands really should at least peripherally individually document how
installables work, in the meantime we can at least direct people to the
right place.
This commit also clarifies the unexpected fact that `nix profile remove`
and `nix profile upgrade` do *not* take installables.
Change-Id: I3b1453cb197a613bbab639c66a466365c3592c6d
3.9 KiB
R""(
Note: this command's interface is based heavily around installables, which you may want to read about first (nix --help
).
Examples
-
Show one path through the dependency graph leading from Hello to Glibc:
# nix why-depends nixpkgs#hello nixpkgs#glibc /nix/store/v5sv61sszx301i0x6xysaqzla09nksnd-hello-2.10 └───bin/hello: …...................../nix/store/9l06v7fc38c1x3r2iydl15ksgz0ysb82-glibc-2.32/lib/ld-linux-x86-64.… → /nix/store/9l06v7fc38c1x3r2iydl15ksgz0ysb82-glibc-2.32
-
Show all files and paths in the dependency graph leading from Thunderbird to libX11:
# nix why-depends --all nixpkgs#thunderbird nixpkgs#xorg.libX11 /nix/store/qfc8729nzpdln1h0hvi1ziclsl3m84sr-thunderbird-78.5.1 ├───lib/thunderbird/libxul.so: …6wrw-libxcb-1.14/lib:/nix/store/adzfjjh8w25vdr0xdx9x16ah4f5rqrw5-libX11-1.7.0/lib:/nix/store/ssf… │ → /nix/store/adzfjjh8w25vdr0xdx9x16ah4f5rqrw5-libX11-1.7.0 ├───lib/thunderbird/libxul.so: …pxyc-libXt-1.2.0/lib:/nix/store/1qj29ipxl2fyi2b13l39hdircq17gnk0-libXdamage-1.1.5/lib:/nix/store… │ → /nix/store/1qj29ipxl2fyi2b13l39hdircq17gnk0-libXdamage-1.1.5 │ ├───lib/libXdamage.so.1.1.0: …-libXfixes-5.0.3/lib:/nix/store/adzfjjh8w25vdr0xdx9x16ah4f5rqrw5-libX11-1.7.0/lib:/nix/store/9l0… │ │ → /nix/store/adzfjjh8w25vdr0xdx9x16ah4f5rqrw5-libX11-1.7.0 …
-
Show why Glibc depends on itself:
# nix why-depends nixpkgs#glibc nixpkgs#glibc /nix/store/9df65igwjmf2wbw0gbrrgair6piqjgmi-glibc-2.31 └───lib/ld-2.31.so: …che Do not use /nix/store/9df65igwjmf2wbw0gbrrgair6piqjgmi-glibc-2.31/etc/ld.so.cache. --… → /nix/store/9df65igwjmf2wbw0gbrrgair6piqjgmi-glibc-2.31
-
Show why Geeqie has a build-time dependency on
systemd
:# nix why-depends --derivation nixpkgs#geeqie nixpkgs#systemd /nix/store/drrpq2fqlrbj98bmazrnww7hm1in3wgj-geeqie-1.4.drv └───/: …atch.drv",["out"]),("/nix/store/qzh8dyq3lfbk3i1acbp7x9wh3il2imiv-gtk+3-3.24.21.drv",["dev"]),("/… → /nix/store/qzh8dyq3lfbk3i1acbp7x9wh3il2imiv-gtk+3-3.24.21.drv └───/: …16.0.drv",["dev"]),("/nix/store/8kp79fyslf3z4m3dpvlh6w46iaadz5c2-cups-2.3.3.drv",["dev"]),("/nix… → /nix/store/8kp79fyslf3z4m3dpvlh6w46iaadz5c2-cups-2.3.3.drv └───/: ….3.1.drv",["out"]),("/nix/store/yd3ihapyi5wbz1kjacq9dbkaq5v5hqjg-systemd-246.4.drv",["dev"]),("/… → /nix/store/yd3ihapyi5wbz1kjacq9dbkaq5v5hqjg-systemd-246.4.drv
Description
Nix automatically determines potential runtime dependencies between
store paths by scanning for the hash parts of store paths. For
instance, if there exists a store path
/nix/store/9df65igwjmf2wbw0gbrrgair6piqjgmi-glibc-2.31
, and a file
inside another store path contains the string 9df65igw…
, then the
latter store path refers to the former, and thus might need it at
runtime. Nix always maintains the existence of the transitive closure
of a store path under the references relationship; it is therefore not
possible to install a store path without having all of its references
present.
Sometimes Nix packages end up with unexpected runtime dependencies; for instance, a reference to a compiler might accidentally end up in a binary, causing the former to be in the latter's closure. This kind of closure size bloat is undesirable.
nix why-depends
allows you to diagnose the cause of such issues. It
shows why the store path package depends on the store path
dependency, by showing a shortest sequence in the references graph
from the former to the latter. Also, for each node along this path, it
shows a file fragment containing a reference to the next store path in
the sequence.
To show why derivation package has a build-time rather than runtime
dependency on derivation dependency, use --derivation
.
)""