Commit graph

139 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
eldritch horrors 619a93bd54 Merge "libutil: add async collection mechanism" into main 2024-09-26 17:23:52 +00:00
jade b6038e988d Merge "main: log stack traces for std::terminate" into main 2024-09-26 17:06:01 +00:00
eldritch horrors 531d040e8c libutil: add async collection mechanism
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
2024-09-26 16:56:08 +00:00
eldritch horrors ca9256a789 libutil: add an async semaphore implementation
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
2024-09-26 16:32:02 +00:00
jade 19e0ce2c03 main: log stack traces for std::terminate
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
2024-09-25 14:03:45 -07:00
jade 789b19a0cf util: fix brotli decompression of empty input
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
2024-09-18 15:37:29 -07:00
jade 4046e019ca tests/compression: rewrite
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
2024-09-17 19:07:48 -07:00
Rebecca Turner 75c0de3e3c
Test including relative paths in configuration
Change-Id: If6c69a5e16d1ccd223fba392890f08f0032fb754
2024-09-01 15:52:48 -07:00
Rebecca Turner 02eb07cfd5 Merge changes I5566a985,I88cf53d3 into main
* changes:
  Support relative and `~/` paths in config settings
  Thread `ApplyConfigOptions` through config parsing
2024-09-01 22:06:36 +00:00
jade 04f8a14833
tree-wide: shuffle headers around for about 30s compile time
This didn't really feel so worth it afterwards, but I did untangle a
bunch of stuff that should not have been tangled.

The general gist of this change is that variant bullshit was causing a
bunch of compile time, and it seems like the only way to deal with
variant induced compile time is to keep variant types out of headers.
Explicit template instantiation seems to do nothing for them.

I also seem to have gotten some back-end time improvement from
explicitly instantiating regex, but I don't know why. There is no
corresponding front-end time improvement from it: regex is still at the
top of the sinners list.

**** Templates that took longest to instantiate:
 15231 ms: std::basic_regex<char>::_M_compile (28 times, avg 543 ms)
 15066 ms: std::__detail::_Compiler<std::regex_traits<char>>::_Compiler (28 times, avg 538 ms)
 12571 ms: std::__detail::_Compiler<std::regex_traits<char>>::_M_disjunction (28 times, avg 448 ms)
 12454 ms: std::__detail::_Compiler<std::regex_traits<char>>::_M_alternative (28 times, avg 444 ms)
 12225 ms: std::__detail::_Compiler<std::regex_traits<char>>::_M_term (28 times, avg 436 ms)
 11363 ms: nlohmann::basic_json<>::parse<const char *> (21 times, avg 541 ms)
 10628 ms: nlohmann::basic_json<>::basic_json (109 times, avg 97 ms)
 10134 ms: std::__detail::_Compiler<std::regex_traits<char>>::_M_atom (28 times, avg 361 ms)

Back-end time before messing with the regex:
**** Function sets that took longest to compile / optimize:
  8076 ms: void boost::io::detail::put<$>(boost::io::detail::put_holder<$> cons... (177 times, avg 45 ms)
  4382 ms: std::_Rb_tree<$>::_M_erase(std::_Rb_tree_node<$>*) (1247 times, avg 3 ms)
  3137 ms: boost::stacktrace::detail::to_string_impl_base<boost::stacktrace::de... (137 times, avg 22 ms)
  2896 ms: void boost::io::detail::mk_str<$>(std::__cxx11::basic_string<$>&, ch... (177 times, avg 16 ms)
  2304 ms: std::_Rb_tree<$>::_M_get_insert_hint_unique_pos(std::_Rb_tree_const_... (210 times, avg 10 ms)
  2116 ms: bool std::__detail::_Compiler<$>::_M_expression_term<$>(std::__detai... (112 times, avg 18 ms)
  2051 ms: std::_Rb_tree_iterator<$> std::_Rb_tree<$>::_M_emplace_hint_unique<$... (244 times, avg 8 ms)
  2037 ms: toml::result<$> toml::detail::sequence<$>::invoke<$>(toml::detail::l... (93 times, avg 21 ms)
  1928 ms: std::__detail::_Compiler<$>::_M_quantifier() (28 times, avg 68 ms)
  1859 ms: nlohmann::json_abi_v3_11_3::detail::serializer<$>::dump(nlohmann::js... (41 times, avg 45 ms)
  1824 ms: std::_Function_handler<$>::_M_manager(std::_Any_data&, std::_Any_dat... (973 times, avg 1 ms)
  1810 ms: std::__detail::_BracketMatcher<$>::_BracketMatcher(std::__detail::_B... (112 times, avg 16 ms)
  1793 ms: nix::fetchers::GitInputScheme::fetch(nix::ref<$>, nix::fetchers::Inp... (1 times, avg 1793 ms)
  1759 ms: std::_Rb_tree<$>::_M_get_insert_unique_pos(std::__cxx11::basic_strin... (281 times, avg 6 ms)
  1722 ms: bool nlohmann::json_abi_v3_11_3::detail::parser<$>::sax_parse_intern... (19 times, avg 90 ms)
  1677 ms: boost::io::basic_altstringbuf<$>::overflow(int) (194 times, avg 8 ms)
  1674 ms: std::__cxx11::basic_string<$>::_M_mutate(unsigned long, unsigned lon... (249 times, avg 6 ms)
  1660 ms: std::_Rb_tree_node<$>* std::_Rb_tree<$>::_M_copy<$>(std::_Rb_tree_no... (304 times, avg 5 ms)
  1599 ms: bool nlohmann::json_abi_v3_11_3::detail::parser<$>::sax_parse_intern... (19 times, avg 84 ms)
  1568 ms: void std::__detail::_Compiler<$>::_M_insert_bracket_matcher<$>(bool) (112 times, avg 14 ms)
  1541 ms: std::__shared_ptr<$>::~__shared_ptr() (531 times, avg 2 ms)
  1539 ms: nlohmann::json_abi_v3_11_3::detail::serializer<$>::dump_escaped(std:... (41 times, avg 37 ms)
  1471 ms: void std::__detail::_Compiler<$>::_M_insert_character_class_matcher<... (112 times, avg 13 ms)

After messing with the regex (notice std::__detail::_Compiler vanishes
here, but I don't know why):

**** Function sets that took longest to compile / optimize:
  8054 ms: void boost::io::detail::put<$>(boost::io::detail::put_holder<$> cons... (177 times, avg 45 ms)
  4313 ms: std::_Rb_tree<$>::_M_erase(std::_Rb_tree_node<$>*) (1217 times, avg 3 ms)
  3259 ms: boost::stacktrace::detail::to_string_impl_base<boost::stacktrace::de... (137 times, avg 23 ms)
  3045 ms: void boost::io::detail::mk_str<$>(std::__cxx11::basic_string<$>&, ch... (177 times, avg 17 ms)
  2314 ms: std::_Rb_tree<$>::_M_get_insert_hint_unique_pos(std::_Rb_tree_const_... (207 times, avg 11 ms)
  1923 ms: std::_Rb_tree_iterator<$> std::_Rb_tree<$>::_M_emplace_hint_unique<$... (216 times, avg 8 ms)
  1817 ms: bool nlohmann::json_abi_v3_11_3::detail::parser<$>::sax_parse_intern... (18 times, avg 100 ms)
  1816 ms: toml::result<$> toml::detail::sequence<$>::invoke<$>(toml::detail::l... (93 times, avg 19 ms)
  1788 ms: nlohmann::json_abi_v3_11_3::detail::serializer<$>::dump(nlohmann::js... (40 times, avg 44 ms)
  1749 ms: std::_Rb_tree<$>::_M_get_insert_unique_pos(std::__cxx11::basic_strin... (278 times, avg 6 ms)
  1724 ms: std::__cxx11::basic_string<$>::_M_mutate(unsigned long, unsigned lon... (248 times, avg 6 ms)
  1697 ms: boost::io::basic_altstringbuf<$>::overflow(int) (194 times, avg 8 ms)
  1684 ms: nix::fetchers::GitInputScheme::fetch(nix::ref<$>, nix::fetchers::Inp... (1 times, avg 1684 ms)
  1680 ms: std::_Rb_tree_node<$>* std::_Rb_tree<$>::_M_copy<$>(std::_Rb_tree_no... (303 times, avg 5 ms)
  1589 ms: bool nlohmann::json_abi_v3_11_3::detail::parser<$>::sax_parse_intern... (18 times, avg 88 ms)
  1483 ms: non-virtual thunk to boost::wrapexcept<$>::~wrapexcept() (181 times, avg 8 ms)
  1447 ms: nlohmann::json_abi_v3_11_3::detail::serializer<$>::dump_escaped(std:... (40 times, avg 36 ms)
  1441 ms: std::__shared_ptr<$>::~__shared_ptr() (496 times, avg 2 ms)
  1420 ms: boost::stacktrace::basic_stacktrace<$>::init(unsigned long, unsigned... (137 times, avg 10 ms)
  1396 ms: boost::basic_format<$>::~basic_format() (194 times, avg 7 ms)
  1290 ms: std::__cxx11::basic_string<$>::_M_replace_cold(char*, unsigned long,... (231 times, avg 5 ms)
  1258 ms: std::vector<$>::~vector() (354 times, avg 3 ms)
  1222 ms: std::__cxx11::basic_string<$>::_M_replace(unsigned long, unsigned lo... (231 times, avg 5 ms)
  1194 ms: std::_Rb_tree<$>::_M_get_insert_hint_unique_pos(std::_Rb_tree_const_... (49 times, avg 24 ms)
  1186 ms: bool tao::pegtl::internal::sor<$>::match<$>(std::integer_sequence<$>... (1 times, avg 1186 ms)
  1149 ms: std::__detail::_Executor<$>::_M_dfs(std::__detail::_Executor<$>::_Ma... (70 times, avg 16 ms)
  1123 ms: toml::detail::sequence<$>::invoke(toml::detail::location&) (69 times, avg 16 ms)
  1110 ms: nlohmann::json_abi_v3_11_3::basic_json<$>::json_value::destroy(nlohm... (55 times, avg 20 ms)
  1079 ms: std::_Function_handler<$>::_M_manager(std::_Any_data&, std::_Any_dat... (541 times, avg 1 ms)
  1033 ms: nlohmann::json_abi_v3_11_3::detail::lexer<$>::scan_number() (20 times, avg 51 ms)

Change-Id: I10af282bcd4fc39c2d3caae3453e599e4639c70b
2024-08-28 09:55:05 -07:00
jade 0cc285f87b
treewide: fix a bunch of lints
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
2024-08-26 16:13:03 -07:00
Rebecca Turner 690f07272e
Support relative and ~/ paths in config settings
Change-Id: I5566a9858ba255f4ac5051d1368c7dfb24460f0a
2024-08-25 15:54:22 -07:00
Rebecca Turner 5fc6fcb310
Thread ApplyConfigOptions through config parsing
This makes no changes to logic but makes the `ApplyConfigOptions` value
available to consumers.

Change-Id: I88cf53d38faac8472c556aee55c13d0acbd1e5db
2024-08-25 15:54:22 -07:00
alois31 e3c289dbe9
libutil/config: unify path setting types
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
2024-08-21 17:57:23 +02:00
piegames 278fddc317 libexpr: Deprecate URL literals
Closes #437.

Change-Id: I9f67fc965bb4a7e7fd849e5067ac1cb3bab064cd
2024-08-17 20:31:57 +02:00
piegames 49d61b2e4b libexpr: Introduce Deprecated features
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
2024-08-17 19:47:51 +02:00
jade 757041c3e7 Merge changes I526cceed,Ia4e2f1fa,I22e66972,I9fbd55a9,Ifca22e44 into main
* 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
2024-08-08 22:43:10 +00:00
jade e34833c025 tree-wide: fix a pile of lints
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
2024-08-08 14:53:17 -07:00
jade 370ac940dd refactor: make HashType and Base enum classes for type safety
Change-Id: I9fbd55a9d50464a56fe11cb42a06a206914150d8
2024-08-08 14:53:17 -07:00
piegames 28ae24f3f7 libexpr: Add experimental pipe operator
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
2024-08-08 11:13:53 +02:00
piegames ec7552ff74 libexpr/parser: Test experimental features
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
2024-08-07 13:07:50 +00:00
jade ca9d3e6e00 tree-wide: fix various lint warnings
Change-Id: I0fc80718eb7e02d84cc4b5d5deec4c0f41116134
2024-08-04 20:55:45 -07:00
jade 19ae87e5ce tree-wide: add support for asan!
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
2024-07-31 14:13:39 -07:00
alois31 40c39aa5d2
libexpr/print: do not show elided nested items when there are none
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
2024-07-18 18:41:34 +02:00
alois31 b5da823138
libexpr/print: never show empty attrsets or derivations as «repeated»
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
2024-07-18 18:41:34 +02:00
eldritch horrors 6b4d46e9e0 libstore: remove WriteConn::sink fields
we no longer need these since we're no longer using sinks to serialize things.

Change-Id: Iffb1a3eab33c83f611c88fa4e8beaa8d5ffa079b
2024-07-16 00:57:42 +00:00
eldritch horrors a5d1f69841 libstore: generatorize protocol serializers
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
2024-07-16 00:57:42 +00:00
jade 917c9bdee7 language: cleanly ban integer overflows
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
2024-07-13 00:59:33 +02:00
jade f9641b9efd libutil: add checked arithmetic tools
This is in preparation for adding checked arithmetic to the evaluator.

Change-Id: I6e115ce8f5411feda1706624977a4dcd5efd4d13
2024-07-13 00:56:37 +02:00
eldritch horrors df8851f286 libutil: rewrite RewritingSink as source
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
2024-07-11 11:39:18 +00:00
eldritch horrors b51ea465de libutil: allow construction of sources from generators
Change-Id: I78ff8d0720f06bce731e26d5e1c53b1382bbd589
2024-07-05 22:28:16 +00:00
Qyriad 59bf6825ef add an impl of Expr::show for ExprInheritFrom that doesn't crash
ExprVar::show() assumes it has a name. dynamic inherits do not
necessarily (ever?) have a name.

Change-Id: If10893188e307431da17f0c1bd0787adc74f7141
2024-07-04 15:55:38 -06:00
eldritch horrors 5eec6418de libutil: begin porting serialization to generators
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
2024-07-03 11:46:53 +00:00
eldritch horrors 73ddc4540f libutil: generator type with on-yield value mapping
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
2024-07-03 11:46:53 +00:00
alois31 0dd1d8ca1c
tree-wide: unify progress bar inactive and paused states
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
2024-07-01 18:19:34 +02:00
eldritch horrors a9949f4760 libutil: add some serialize.hh serializer tests
Change-Id: I0116265a18bc44bba16c07bf419af70d5195f07d
2024-06-23 11:52:49 +00:00
Qyriad fd250c51ed add a basic libmain test for the progress bar rendering
Hooray for leaky abstraction allowing us to test this particular part of
the render pipeline.

Change-Id: Ie0f251ff874f63324e6a9c6388b84ec6507eeae2
2024-06-20 13:56:53 -06:00
Ilya K 7d52d74bbe BrotliDecompressionSource: don't bail out too early
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
2024-06-20 09:21:13 +03:00
eldritch horrors c55dcc6c13 filetransfer: return a Source from download()
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
2024-06-19 10:50:12 +00:00
eldritch horrors 67f778670c libutil: add makeDecompressionSource
Change-Id: Iac7f24d79e24417436b9b5cbefd6af051aeea0a6
2024-06-19 10:50:12 +00:00
eldritch horrors 0b9a72524a filetransfer: {up,down}load -> transfer
even the transfer function is not all that necessary since there aren't
that many users, but we'll keep it for now. we could've kept both names
but we also kind of want to use `download` for something else very soon

Change-Id: I005e403ee59de433e139e37aa2045c26a523ccbf
2024-06-18 23:58:25 +00:00
jade ce2b48aa41 Merge changes from topic "protocol" into main
* changes:
  libstore client: remove remaining dead code
  libstore: refuse to serialise ancient protocols
  libstore client: remove support for <2.3 clients
  libstore daemon: remove very old protocol support (<2.3)
  Delete old ValidPathInfo test, fix UnkeyedValidPathInfo
  Set up minimum protocol version
2024-06-17 22:08:48 +00:00
eldritch horrors bcb774688f libexpr: add expr memory management
with the prepatory work done this mostly means turning plain pointers
into unique_ptrs, with all the associated churn that necessitates. we
might want to change some of these to box_ptrs at some point as well,
but that would be a semantic change that isn't fully appropriate yet.

Change-Id: I0c238c118617420650432f4ed45569baa3e3f413
2024-06-17 19:46:44 +00:00
eldritch horrors ad5366c2ad libexpr: pass Exprs as references, not pointers
almost all places where Exprs are passed as pointers expect the pointers
to be non-null. pass them as references to encode this constraint in the
type system as well (and also communicate that Exprs must not be freed).

Change-Id: Ia98f166fec3c23151f906e13acb4a0954a5980a2
2024-06-17 19:46:44 +00:00
jade c22a7f50cb libstore: refuse to serialise ancient protocols
We don't want to deal with these at all, let's stop doing so.

(marking this one as the fix commit since its immediate predecessors
aren't the complete fix)
Fixes: lix-project/lix#325

Change-Id: Ieea1b0b8ac0f903d1e24e5b3e63cfe12eeec119d
2024-06-16 19:15:08 -07:00
jade 24255748b4 Delete old ValidPathInfo test, fix UnkeyedValidPathInfo
The UnkeyedValidPathInfo test was testing an ancient version but not the
current version. Doesn't make much sense to me.

Change-Id: Ib476a4297d9075f2dcd31a073b3e7b149b2189af
2024-06-16 19:13:51 -07:00
alois31 3c0434999e tests/libcmd: set HOME to a temporary directory
The libcmd unit test creates files (more specifically, the fetcher cache) in
its home directory. In the single-user sandbox, this leads to the creation of
/homeless-shelter, since this is the default HOME and the root is writable.
Unfortunately, this conflicts with the assumption of the functional tests that
this directory does not exist. Use a different home directory to prevent these
test failures, and thus restore the ability to build inside the single-user
sandbox.

Fixes: lix-project/lix#365
Change-Id: I4df8c53d043234b95a7c0ac45fc5ee89e8d46aff
2024-06-12 22:13:55 +00:00
Qyriad 06e65e537b build: expose option to enable or disable precompiled std headers
They are enabled by default, and Meson will also prints whether or not
they're enabled at the bottom at the end of configuration.

Change-Id: I48db238510bf9e74340b86f243f4bbe360794281
2024-06-06 12:46:26 -06:00
Qyriad e54d4c9381 build: fix static linking with a hack
This causes libstore, libexpr, libfetchers, and libutil to be linked
with -Wl,--whole-archive to executables, when building statically.

libstore for the store backends, libexpr for the primops, libfetchers
for the fetcher backends I assume(?), and libutil for the nix::logger
initializer (which notably shows in pre-main constructors when HOME is
not owned by the user. cursed.).

This workaround should be removed when #359 is fixed.

Fixes #306.

Change-Id: Ie9ef0154e09a6ed97920ee8ab23810ca5e2de84c
2024-05-31 21:47:16 -06:00
jade 0f99ed43f1 build-time: remove 20% more by PCH'ing C++ stdlib
It seems like someone implemented precompiled headers a long time ago
and then it never got ported to meson or maybe didn't work at all.

This is, however, blessedly easy to simply implement. I went looking for
`#define` that could affect the result of precompiling the headers, and
as far as I can tell we aren't doing any of that, so this should truly
just be free build time savings.

Previous state:
Compilation (551 times):
  Parsing (frontend):         1302.1 s
  Codegen & opts (backend):    956.3 s

New state:
**** Time summary:
Compilation (567 times):
  Parsing (frontend):         1123.0 s
  Codegen & opts (backend):   1078.1 s

I wonder if the "regression" in codegen time is just doing the PCH
operation a few times, because meson does it per-target.

Change-Id: I664366b8069bab4851308b3a7571bea97ac64022
2024-05-30 21:54:21 +00:00