forked from lix-project/lix
64519cfd65
SHA-256 outputs of fixed-output derivations. I.e. they now produce the same store path: $ nix-store --add x /nix/store/j2fq9qxvvxgqymvpszhs773ncci45xsj-x $ nix-store --add-fixed --recursive sha256 x /nix/store/j2fq9qxvvxgqymvpszhs773ncci45xsj-x the latter being the same as the path that a derivation derivation { name = "x"; outputHashAlgo = "sha256"; outputHashMode = "recursive"; outputHash = "..."; ... }; produces. This does change the output path for such fixed-output derivations. Fortunately they are quite rare. The most common use is fetchsvn calls with SHA-256 hashes. (There are a handful of those is Nixpkgs, mostly unstable development packages.) * Documented the computation of store paths (in store-api.cc).
28 lines
584 B
Bash
28 lines
584 B
Bash
source common.sh
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path1=$($nixstore --add ./dummy)
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echo $path1
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path2=$($nixstore --add-fixed sha256 --recursive ./dummy)
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echo $path2
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if test "$path1" != "$path2"; then
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echo "nix-store --add and --add-fixed mismatch"
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exit 1
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fi
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path3=$($nixstore --add-fixed sha256 ./dummy)
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echo $path3
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test "$path1" != "$path3" || exit 1
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path4=$($nixstore --add-fixed sha1 --recursive ./dummy)
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echo $path4
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test "$path1" != "$path4" || exit 1
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hash1=$($nixstore -q --hash $path1)
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echo $hash1
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hash2=$($nixhash --type sha256 --base32 ./dummy)
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echo $hash2
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test "$hash1" = "sha256:$hash2"
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