doc: Write "Adding More Jobs".

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Ludovic Courtès 2011-10-12 14:54:20 +00:00
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commit ceb38a727a

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@ -413,6 +413,96 @@ in
<varname>tarball</varname> job, rebuilding it only if it needs to.
</para>
</section>
<section>
<title>Adding More Jobs</title>
<para>
<xref linkend='ex-hello' /> illustrates how to write the most
basic jobs, <varname>tarball</varname> and
<varname>build</varname>. In practice, much more can be done by
using features readily provided by Nixpkgs or by creating new jobs
as customizations of existing jobs.
</para>
<para>
For instance, test coverage report for projects compiled with GCC
can be automatically generated using the
<varname>coverageAnalysis</varname> function provided by Nixpkgs
instead of <varname>nixBuild</varname>. Back to our GNU Hello
example, we can define a <varname>coverage</varname> job that
produces an HTML code coverage report directly readable from the
corresponding Hydra build page:
<programlisting>
coverage =
{ tarball ? jobs.tarball {}
, system ? builtins.currentSystem
}:
let pkgs = import nixpkgs { inherit system; }; in
pkgs.releaseTools.coverageAnalysis {
name = "hello" ;
src = tarball;
configureFlags = [ "--disable-silent-rules" ];
}; </programlisting>
As can be seen, the only difference compared to
<varname>build</varname> is the use of
<varname>coverageAnalysis</varname>.
</para>
<para>
Nixpkgs provides many more build tools, including the ability to
run build in virtual machines, which can themselves run another
GNU/Linux distribution, which allows for the creation of packages
for these distributions. Please see <link
xlink:href="https://svn.nixos.org/repos/nix/nixpkgs/trunk/pkgs/build-support/release/">the
<filename>pkgs/build-support/release</filename> directory</link>
of Nixpkgs for more. The NixOS manual also contains information
about whole-system testing in virtual machine.
</para>
<para>
Now, assume we want to build Hello with an old version of GCC, and
with different <command>configure</command> flags. A new
<varname>build_exotic</varname> job can be written that simply
<emphasis>overrides</emphasis> the relevant arguments passed to
<varname>nixBuild</varname>:
<programlisting>
build_exotic =
{ tarball ? jobs.tarball {}
, system ? builtins.currentSystem
}:
let
pkgs = import nixpkgs { inherit system; };
build = jobs.build { inherit tarball system; };
in
pkgs.lib.overrideDerivation build (attrs: {
buildInputs = [ pkgs.gcc33 ];
preConfigure = "gcc --version";
configureFlags =
attrs.configureFlags ++ [ "--disable-nls" ];
}); </programlisting>
The <varname>build_exotic</varname> job reuses
<varname>build</varname> and overrides some of its arguments: it
adds a dependency on GCC 3.3, a pre-configure phase that runs
<command>gcc --version</command>, and adds the
<literal>--disable-nls</literal> configure flags.
</para>
<para>
This customization mechanism is very powerful. For instance, it
can be used to change the way Hello and <emphasis>all</emphasis>
its dependenciesincluding the C library and compiler used to
build itare built. See the Nixpkgs manual for more.
</para>
</section>
</chapter>