Fixes#183, #110, #116.
The default flake-registry option becomes 'vendored', and refers
to a vendored flake-registry.json file in the install path.
Vendored copy of the flake-registry is from github:NixOS/flake-registry
at commit 9c69f7bd2363e71fe5cd7f608113290c7614dcdd.
Change-Id: I752b81c85ebeaab4e582ac01c239d69d65580f37
This should have been in there originally, which is our mistake,
considering that debugging CI failures is basically impossible without
it.
Change-Id: I4ab8799e6e0abca1984ed9801fe10c58200861a3
We don't need bear anymore, since we don't have any more bad build
systems that lack compile commands generation inside Lix.
Change-Id: I7809ddfd993180468f846e8cd862bdd54d5b31ec
Both of these still needs their own actual documentation, but they are
at least now mentioned that they exist and what they're enabled by.
Change-Id: I235b9e8e627e04ed06611423c8e67a8eca233120
Example: /nix/store/dr53sp25hyfsnzjpm8mh3r3y36vrw3ng-neovim-0.9.5^out
This is nonsensical since selecting outputs can only be done for a
buildable derivation, not for a realised store path. The build worker
side of things ends up crashing with an assertion when trying to handle
such malformed paths.
Change-Id: Ia3587c71fe3da5bea45d4e506e1be4dd62291ddf
This builtin was always a problem and nixpkgs uses it in exactly one
place, to give up if the Nix version is absurdly old. It has no other
use cases, and doesn't work in a multi-implementation world anyway.
Change-Id: I03c36e118591029e2ef14b091fe14a311c66a08a
There are a few places in nixpkgs lib where `**Foo**:` is used as a heading instead of the usual markdown `# Foo` ones. I think this is intentional with how it gets rendered in the manual, e.g. [`lib.lists.sortOn`][1].
[1]: https://nixos.org/manual/nixpkgs/stable/#function-library-lib.lists.sortOn
`nix-doc` prints this as
```
*Laws**:
```nix
sortOn f == sort (p: q: f p < f q)
```
```
chomping off the first asterisk as part of `cleanup_single_line` that's meant to deal with `/** \n * \n * \n */` style doc comments. This also means the usage in lix ends up funny-looking with a trailing asterisk as if there's a footnote to pay attention to (which is how I first noticed it, heh)
The fix:
When cleaning up a single line and removing a prefix comment character,
ensure it's followed by whitespace (or the last character of the line).
Upstream-PR: https://github.com/lf-/nix-doc/pull/26
Change-Id: If2870c53a632f6bbbcca98a4bfbd72f5bef37879
Surely if you have unreleased changes you want them on a page right?
`officialRelease` means "this is a *release version*", which is a
reasonable case to not want it, but we are not that here.
I understand wanting to be able to turn it off for deps reasons or
something, but other than that, uhh, seems better to just turn it on
always; it is basically free compute-wise to the point we run it on
pre-commit.
Part two of fixing lix#297.
Fixes: #297
Change-Id: I0f8dd1ae42458df371aef529c456e47a7ac04ae0
This allows us to have links to peoples' GitHub and Forgejo profiles.
I used YAML because I don't want to introduce a dependency on having a
working Nix evaluator to be able to build release notes, and we already
have a YAML parser in this script.
Change-Id: Idf2813f79e0407460c796cba6c383496465e152d
This does not add missing release notes, and it doesn't do anything
about the profiles feature we would really like to have so we can have
consistent credit.
Change-Id: I72a6f7acfcff85f380be17dac76501a6f4693776
This was a combination of two problems: the python didn't throw an error
because apparently glob on a nonexistent directory doesn't crash, and
secondarily, bash ignores bad exit codes without `set -e` if they are
not in the final/only command.
Change-Id: I812bde7a4daee5c77ffe9d7c73a25fd14969f548
Use the correct directory for the rl-next build, so that the release notes
actually get built and the page doesn't end up empty. I don't know why the
exception didn't cause a build failure before.
Fixes: #297
Change-Id: Ic72b9bb4c0d2d1f633f2af90cce4a3a2796d7f9b
Basically I'd expect the same behavior as with `nix-build`, i.e.
with `--keep-going` the hash-mismatch error of each failing
fixed-output derivation is shown.
The approach is derived from `Store::buildPaths` (`entry-point.cc`):
instead of throwing the first build-result, check if there are any build
errors and if so, display all of them and throw after that.
Unfortunately, the BuildResult struct doesn't have an `ErrorInfo`
(there's a FIXME for that at least), so I have to construct my own here.
This is a rather cheap bugfix and I decided against touching too many
parts of libstore for that (also I don't know if that's in line with the
ongoing refactoring work).
Closes #302
Change-Id: I378ab984fa271e6808c6897c45e0f070eb4c6fac
Now, we can credit folks for their work.
The credit generator is very basic, we probably want a database of
profiles and link to their preferred page or something.
Change-Id: Ida81905750371e5e125d0ce7e554d0526265cf8e
Co-Authored-By: Jade Lovelace <lix@jade.fyi>
Signed-off-by: Raito Bezarius <raito@lix.systems>
This is not like, perfect, since it is a manual operation, but we can
automate it in the future. rclone is used, since it seems like awscli is
not (obviously at least?) able to sync directories such that old things
are deleted, and rclone does this thing properly.
Fixes: lix-project/meta#2
Change-Id: Ia6a46d861342a6d29b22f981ba4e35e79f79e60e
Otherwise, it will be thrown again during exit when the repl is terminated by
end-of-input after the last command was interrupted.
Change-Id: I8456c47bc36cfb0892efdad5420f318f7e6526d5
The interrupt-blocking code was originally introduced 20 years ago so that
trying to log an error message does not result in an interrupt exception being
thrown and then going unhandled (c8d3882cdc).
However, the logging code does not check for interrupts any more
(054be50257), so this reasoning is no longer
applicable. Delete this code so that later interrupts are unblocked again, for
example in the next line entered into the repl.
Closes: #296
Change-Id: I48253f5f4272e75001148c13046e709ef5427fbd
Very basic behavior test to ensure that gzip data gets internally
decompressed by the file transfer pipeline.
Change a std::string_view return value in the test harness to
std::string. I wouldn't call myself a C++ beginner and I still managed
to shoot myself in the foot like three times with the lifetime
managements there (e.g. [&] { return an_std_string; } ends up with a
dangling string_view!).
Change-Id: I1360750d4181ce1ca2a3aa4dc0e97e131351c469
it's no longer used. it really shouldn't have existed this long since it
was just a mashup of both std::promise and std::packaged_task in a shape
that makes composition unnecessarily difficult. all but a single case of
Callback pattern calls were fully synchronous anyway, and even this sole
outlier was by far not important enough to justify the extra complexity.
Change-Id: I208aec4572bf2501cdbd0f331f27d505fca3a62f
also add a few more tests for exception propagation behavior. using
packaged_tasks and futures (which only allow a single call to a few
of their methods) introduces error paths that weren't there before.
Change-Id: I42ca5236f156fefec17df972f6e9be45989cf805