this should be a link, not an anchor. it should also point to the
`gloss-store` element, not the `#gloss-store` element.
Change-Id: I1f2803093179549637e10f917ad73399a419131b
Instead of $sysconfdir.
Fixes#231, but there's more to do in following commits to make
Meson-built Lix actually look in /etc/nix.
Change-Id: Ia8d627070f405843add46e05cff5134b76b8eb48
This reverts commit 491caad6f62c21ffbcdebe662e63ec0f72e6f3a2.
this is not actually legal for nix! throwing exceptions in destructors
is fine, but the way nix is set up we'll end up throwing the exception
we received from the remote *twice* in some cases, and such cases will
cause an immediate terminate without active exception.
Change-Id: I74c46b9f26fd791086e4193ec60eb1deb9a5bb2a
setting this only on exceptions caused by actual fd access is not
sufficient to diagnose all errors (such as SerialisationError) in
some cases. this usually does not have any negative effects since
those errors will end up killing the process in another way. this
is not a reliable assumption though and we should be using proper
error handling (and closing connections more often, preferring to
close over keeping something open that might be in a weird state)
Change-Id: I1b792cd7ad8ba9ff0f6bd174945ab2575ff2208e
the duplication of exception handling was added without justification,
so we can only assume that it was done like this because Finally could
not throw exceptions safely. since this has now been rectified we will
deduplicate this handler code again.
Change-Id: I40721f3378c0fd9f34e2914a16d383f6e2713b40
usage of this flag previously kept connections open much longer than
necessary, and at the same time obscured that a connection was being
dropped when it *was* set. new variable names clarify this somewhat.
Change-Id: I11f6f08f37a5e4dc04ea6c6036ea589154b121c6
it was used incorrectly (not swapped on handle move), only used in one
place (that is now handled with exception handling detection in Handle
itself), and if ever reintroduced should be replaced with a different,
more understandable mechanism (like an explicit dropAsInvalid method).
Change-Id: Ie3e5d5cfa81d335429cb2ee5c3ad85c74a9df17b
this was never actually used, and bad design in the first place—why
should a bad resource be put back into the idle pool? just drop it.
Change-Id: Idab8774bee19dadae0209d404c4fb86dd4aeba1e
The big ones here are `trim-trailing-whitespace` and `end-of-file-fixer`
(which makes sure that every file ends with exactly one newline
character).
Change-Id: Idca73b640883188f068f9903e013cf0d82aa1123
This does involve making a large number of destructors able to throw,
because we had to change it high in the class hierarchy. Oh well.
Change-Id: Ib62d3d6895b755f20322bb8acc9bf43daf0174b2
* some things that can throw are marked noexcept
yet the linter seems to think not. Maybe they can't throw in practice.
I would rather not have the UB possibility in pretty obvious cold
paths.
* various default-case-missing complaints
* a fair pile of casts from integer to character, which are in fact
deliberate.
* an instance of <https://clang.llvm.org/extra/clang-tidy/checks/bugprone/move-forwarding-reference.html>
* bugprone-not-null-terminated-result on handing a string to curl in
chunks of bytes. our usage is fine.
* reassigning a unique_ptr by CRIMES instead of using release(), then
using release() and ignoring the result. wild. let's use release() for
its intended purpose.
Change-Id: Ic3e7affef12383576213a8a7c8145c27e662513d
the autoconf build system defaults to /nix/var, not /nix/var/nix. the
latter is only used in libstore, so we'll move the extra segment there.
Change-Id: Idfbc988ee302355982abdcd51d6d7b5d5d661c0d
Without this, the Meson setup won't bail out if nlohmann_json is
missing, leading to subpar DX (and maybe worse, but I'm not entirely
sure).
Change-Id: I5913111060226b540dcf003257c99a08e84da0de
one headers (args/root.hh) was simply missing, and the generated headers
were not installed. not all of them *should* be installed either, only a
select few (and sadly this needs a custom target for each one, it seems)
Change-Id: I37b25517895d0e5e521abc1202fa65624de57ed1
This was achieved by running maintainers/buildtime_report.sh on the
build directory of a meson build, then asking "why the heck is json
eating our build times", and strategically moving the json using bits
out of widely included headers.
It turns out that putting literally any metrics whatsoever into the
build had immediate and predictable results.
Results are 1382.5s frontend time -> 1175.4s frontend time, back end
time approximately invariant.
Related: lix-project/lix#159
Change-Id: I7edea95c8536203325c8bb4dae5f32d727a21b2d
Once this commit lands, we are even more visible in analytics FWIW.
Change-Id: Id7e0c162315d0f191edbea9cb5fb82ce363704b9
Signed-off-by: Raito Bezarius <raito@lix.systems>
protocol versions are sent as u64. on the peer we read them as uint64,
check that the upper half is 0, and throw an exception if not. we then
read an arbitrary amount of data from the peer and dump it to the user
terminal. this is a little bit ridiculous, can never happen in correct
implementation, and is severly untested. let us just drop it entirely.
Change-Id: Ibd2f53a765341ed6439d40d9d1eac11e79c6b5e3
If the state SQLite database is configured to use a write-ahead-log, it
creates WAL files in the state directory.
When the state SQLite database is closed by the `nix-daemon` after
builds, those files are removed.
When an unprivileged user would like to open _in read only_ that
database, they cannot do so because they would need to create those WAL
files and they do not have the permission to do so.
For this, SQLite offers a "persistent WAL" feature [1] to leave the WAL
files around, even after closing the database.
This CL enable the persistent WAL mode.
Fixes: https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/10300
[1]: https://www.sqlite.org/wal.html
Change-Id: Id8ae534d7d2290457af28782e5215222ae051fe5
Signed-off-by: Raito Bezarius <raito@lix.systems>
This commit adds several meson.build, which successfully build and
install Lix executables, libraries, and headers. Meson does not yet
build docs, Perl bindings, or run tests, which will be added in
following commits. As such, this commit does not remove the existing
build system, or make it the default, and also as such, this commit has
several FIXMEs and TODOs as notes for what should be done before the
existing autoconf + make buildsystem can be removed and Meson made the
default. This commit does not modify any source files.
A Meson-enabled build is also added as a Hydra job, and to
`nix flake check`.
Change-Id: I667c8685b13b7bab91e281053f807a11616ae3d4
within lix itself this problem is caught by the test suite. outside of
lix itself three cases can be had: either the problem is fully inside
lix libs, fully inside user code, or it exists at the boundary. the
first is caught by the test suite, the second isn't caught at all, and
the third is something lix should not be responsible for.
Change-Id: I95aa35d8cb6f0ef5816a2941c467bc0c15916063
* changes:
Release notes for builtins.nixVersion change
un-nixes ur lix, a little
issue importer: list issues that are *not* closed when finding existing issues
I didn't really go attack the docs because we need to pull a bunch of
PRs. I went looking for strings in the code that called lix nix.
Change-Id: I2138bb4dd239096bc530946b281db7f875195b39
add a reset() method to close the wrapped fd instead of assigning magic
constants. also make the from-fd constructor explicit so you can't
accidentally assign the *wrong* magic constant, or even an unrelated
integer that also just happens to be an fd by pure chance.
Change-Id: I51311b0f6e040240886b5103d39d1794a6acc325
These now have equivalents in the standard lib in C++20. This change was
performed with a custom clang-tidy check which I will submit later.
Executed like so:
ninja -C build && run-clang-tidy -checks='-*,nix-*' -load=build/libnix-clang-tidy.so -p .. -fix ../tests | tee -a clang-tidy-result
Change-Id: I62679e315ff9e7ce72a40b91b79c3e9fc01b27e9
It happens with some frequency that plugins that might be unimportant to
the evaluation at hand mismatch with the nix version, leading to
spurious load failures. Let's make these non fatal.
Change-Id: Iba10e951d171725ccf1a121bcd9be1e1d6ad69eb
While preparing PRs like #9753, I've had to change error messages in
dozens of code paths. It would be nice if instead of
EvalError("expected 'boolean' but found '%1%'", showType(v))
we could write
TypeError(v, "boolean")
or similar. Then, changing the error message could be a mechanical
refactor with the compiler pointing out places the constructor needs to
be changed, rather than the error-prone process of grepping through the
codebase. Structured errors would also help prevent the "same" error
from having multiple slightly different messages, and could be a first
step towards error codes / an error index.
This PR reworks the exception infrastructure in `libexpr` to
support exception types with different constructor signatures than
`BaseError`. Actually refactoring the exceptions to use structured data
will come in a future PR (this one is big enough already, as it has to
touch every exception in `libexpr`).
The core design is in `eval-error.hh`. Generally, errors like this:
state.error("'%s' is not a string", getAttrPathStr())
.debugThrow<TypeError>()
are transformed like this:
state.error<TypeError>("'%s' is not a string", getAttrPathStr())
.debugThrow()
The type annotation has moved from `ErrorBuilder::debugThrow` to
`EvalState::error`.
(cherry picked from commit c6a89c1a1659b31694c0fbcd21d78a6dd521c732)
Change-Id: Iced91ba4e00ca9e801518071fb43798936cbd05a
Factor out `ServeProto::Serialiser<UnkeyedValidPathInfo>` and test
(cherry picked from commit 139982997eec493a0f74105c427953f6be77da6d)
Change-Id: I28e4ba5a681a90d81915a56e6dbaa5456d64f96d
Include phase reporting in log file for ssh-ng builds
(cherry picked from commit b1e7d7cad625095656fff05ac4aedeb12135110a)
Change-Id: I4076669b0ba160412f7c628ca9113f9abbc8c303
It is possible to exfiltrate a file descriptor out of the build sandbox
of FODs, and use it to modify the store path after it has been
registered. To avoid that issue, don't register the output of the build,
but a copy of it (that will be free of any leaked file descriptor).
Test that we can't leverage abstract unix domain sockets to leak file
descriptors out of the sandbox and modify the path after it has been
registered.
(cherry picked from commit 2dadfeb690e7f4b8f97298e29791d202fdba5ca6)
(tests cherry picked from commit c854ae5b3078ac5d99fa75fe148005044809e18c)
Co-authored-by: Valentin Gagarin <valentin.gagarin@tweag.io>
Co-authored-by: Theophane Hufschmitt <theophane.hufschmitt@tweag.io>
Co-authored-by: Tom Bereknyei <tomberek@gmail.com>
Change-Id: I87cd58f1c0a4f7b7a610d354206b33301e47b1a4
Combine `AbstractPos`, `PosAdapter`, and `Pos`
(cherry picked from commit 113499d16fc87d53b73fb62fe6242154909756ed)
===
this is a bit cursed because originally it was based on InputAccessor
code that we don't have and moved/patched features we likewise don't
have (fetchToStore caching, all the individual accessors,
ContentAddressMethod). the commit is adjusted accordingly to
match (remove caching, ignore accessors, use FileIngestionMethod).
note that `state.rootPath . CanonPath == abs` and
computeStorePathForPath works relative to cwd, so the slight rewrite in
the moved fetchToStore is legal.
Change-Id: I05fd340c273f0bcc8ffabfebdc4a88b98083bce5
Make `StoreConfig::getDefaultSystemFeatures` a static method
(cherry picked from commit 5a9513cdbae31ea5e6f6e7afa7b3c2e3a9a26474)
Change-Id: Ia9c0ae2b7de419bd60aea8bf905154b96c428276
Convert `Machine::speedFactor` from a non-neg int to a non-neg float
(cherry picked from commit 69d0ae27e376e7c7c4f237716b0149223b8a805a)
Change-Id: I2afb5cf9e4fe1384985c58353946135c3d102b42
Make `Machine::systemTypes` a set not vector
(cherry picked from commit f1b030415376e81c5804647c055d71eaba4aa725)
Change-Id: I6d4f5c0bfc226e9bd66c58c360cd99e3fac9a129
Fix crash when NAR is missing from binary cache
(cherry picked from commit 3b20cca9625a1701a10a883735e7315185629563)
Change-Id: I50ff18f4a6de69c323473b4a8e3e098d1f365145
Print a more helpful message if the daemon crashes
(cherry picked from commit 32706b14a7531c2c21b9f96da083a540a0031ec4)
Change-Id: Ief7c465bca7666e2b7e7c9d1dd0c01c5f9014146
Store: :buildPaths(): Fix display of store paths
(cherry picked from commit b5ed36e6633cac844fe4388dcc0cc8055a18ef9e)
Change-Id: Ic6008491088dc6febd4a1e44dc2dbb96c47661f4
Improve error message for fixed-outputs with references.
(cherry picked from commit ff6de4a9ee6c3862db9ee5f09ff9c3f43ae7a088)
Change-Id: I733c49760b9a3f1b76a6bece3b250b8579cd6cac
withFramedSink(): Receive interrupts on the stderr thread
(cherry picked from commit 965cfe96886c988c3aa94bfc7fefdd37325f4536)
Change-Id: I8320a96957c01ec0e3450d1b3ae38a3baff78d49
Allow access to /dev/stderr in Darwin sandbox
(cherry picked from commit c6d7013583c568590aff285fb7414d1675a745f4)
Change-Id: I5657f6f4ee9dad8c978bad0d71f5cac51584e4f2
Fix building CA derivations with and eval store
(cherry picked from commit dfc0cee7024a082d90a4f68296f55a82dfd52126)
Change-Id: I28feb5a36d4fe75f0ed3e3e2db6eb56b67d0f371
Give `Store::queryDerivationOutputMap` and `evalStore` argument
(cherry picked from commit 8cddda4f892cb42be43e9bd87aa0111572617e78)
Change-Id: I394e7e11c3f2e0cd3dbe0f48d757c14c09835e44
libstore/daemon.cc: note trust model difference in readDerivation()s
(cherry picked from commit 5c917c32048ef185ea0eec352c3505485aa3212c)
Change-Id: I9945bc84e9529b005eafdc5c08b5bf1553335340
Give `Derivation::tryResolve` an `evalStore` argument
(cherry picked from commit 36ca6adc60511dc822870f2df43c0a578e481925)
Change-Id: If76b185a01ffa982e4c49cf333a9b5fbf9edebfe
config: add included files into parsedContents before applying
(cherry picked from commit 82359eba6b692691ef08a71196ef25a61bc4d3d3)
Change-Id: Idde3177010fec7b8bafe6088c3c23d5caf491845
Unlock output paths when a derivation is already built
(cherry picked from commit 7ba4e073e8622ca86b52e03d68476e80250ab62f)
Change-Id: I9de077679290d5141a610ac43d99d3a43acff87c
fix: gcc complains about if which doesn't guard the indented statement
(cherry picked from commit 8d663462938a333a4e81cce1005437f141cd11fa)
Change-Id: Ifa2e65502de4000935549dde82ab1b5867e2f0ed
Bindmount files instead of hardlinking or copying to chroot
(cherry picked from commit 622191c2b53882a1675fed5066ff8090b4f01827)
Change-Id: I278ec1baacdfa9044992b58fdec8f14d6d7d09ce
Give `nix daemon` and `nix-store --serve` protocols separate serializers with version info
(cherry picked from commit 8b68bbb77745fda0d14939b6c23d31cc89da41ce)
Change-Id: Ia3d3b9fbaf9f0ae62ab225020b7d14790e793655
Factor out bits of the worker protocol to use elsewhere
(cherry picked from commit 4b1a97338f517f45e6169d3d8845c5caa5724e97)
Change-Id: If93afa0f8b1cf9b0e705b34fa71e6fd708752758
Test the rest of the worker protocol serializers
(cherry picked from commit 2f1c16dfa2378fd8616bff1b9b7cd0b4d42af69b)
Change-Id: Idfd72d32b21d14a260e02f65531d287cef7464d2
Unit test some worker protocol serializers
(cherry picked from commit c6faef61a6f31c71146aee5d88168e861df9a22a)
Change-Id: I99e36f5f17eb7642211a4e42a16b143424f164b4
Today, with the tests inside a `tests` intermingled with the
corresponding library's source code, we have a few problems:
- We have to be careful that wildcards don't end up with tests being
built as part of Nix proper, or test headers being installed as part
of Nix proper.
- Tests in libraries but not executables is not right:
- It means each executable runs the previous unit tests again, because
it needs the libraries.
- It doesn't work right on Windows, which doesn't want you to load a
DLL just for the side global variable . It could be made to work
with the dlopen equivalent, but that's gross!
This reorg solves these problems.
There is a remaining problem which is that sibbling headers (like
`hash.hh` the test header vs `hash.hh` the main `libnixutil` header) end
up shadowing each other. This PR doesn't solve that. That is left as
future work for a future PR.
Co-authored-by: Valentin Gagarin <valentin.gagarin@tweag.io>
(cherry picked from commit 91b6833686a6a6d9eac7f3f66393ec89ef1d3b57)
(cherry picked from commit a61e42adb528b3d40ce43e07c79368d779a8b624)
I think it is bad for these reasons when `tests/` contains a mix of
functional and integration tests
- Concepts is harder to understand, the documentation makes a good
unit vs functional vs integration distinction, but when the
integration tests are just two subdirs within `tests/` this is not
clear.
- Source filtering in the `flake.nix` is more complex. We need to
filter out some of the dirs from `tests/`, rather than simply pick
the dirs we want and take all of them. This is a good sign the
structure of what we are trying to do is not matching the structure
of the files.
With this change we have a clean:
```shell-session
$ git show 'HEAD:tests'
tree HEAD:tests
functional/
installer/
nixos/
```
(cherry picked from commit 68c81c737571794f7246db53fb4774e94fcf4b7e)
I'm sure that we'll adjust the implementation over time, but this
at least discerns between an apple silicon bare metal machine and
a tart VM.
(cherry picked from commit 9277eb276bf0a942e88fcf499f6a6b9c262be853)
This has been the behaviour before Nix 2.4. It was dropped in a rewrite
in 759947bf72, allowing the creation of
store paths that aren't considered valid by older Nix versions or other
Nix tooling.
Nix 2.4 didn't ship in NixOS until 22.05, and stdenv.mkDerivation in
nixpkgs drops leading periods since April 2022, so it's unlikely anyone
is relying on the current lax behaviour.
Closes#9091.
Change-Id: I4a57bd9899e1b0dba56870ae5a1b680918a18ce9
(cherry picked from commit 24bda0c7b381e1a017023c6f7cb9661fae8560bd)
This reverts commit 5e3986f59c. This
un-implements RFC 92 but fixes the critical bug #9052 which many people
are hitting. This is a decent stop-gap until a minimal reproduction of
that bug is found and a proper fix can be made.
Mostly fixed#9052, but I would like to leave that issue open until we
have a regression test, so I can then properly fix the bug (unbreaking
RFC 92) later.
(cherry picked from commit 8440afbed756254784d9fea3eaab06649dffd390)
The Derivation parser and old ATerm unfortunately leaves few ways to get
nice errors when an old version of Nix encounters a new version of the
format. The most likely scenario for this to occur is with a new client
making a derivation that the old daemon it is communicating with cannot
understand.
The extensions we just created for dynamic derivation deps will add a
version field, solving the problem going forward, but there is still the
issue of what to do about old versions of Nix up to now.
The solution here is to carefully catch the bad error from the daemon
that is likely to indicate this problem, and add some extra context to
it.
There is another "Ugly backwards compatibility hack" in
`remote-store.cc` that also works by transforming an error.
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
We use the same nested map representation we used for goals, again in
order to save space. We might someday want to combine with `inputDrvs`,
by doing `V = bool` instead of `V = std::set<OutputName>`, but we are
not doing that yet for sake of a smaller diff.
The ATerm format for Derivations also needs to be extended, in addition
to the in-memory format. To accomodate this, we added a new basic
versioning scheme, so old versions of Nix will get nice errors. (And
going forward, if the ATerm format changes again the errors will be even
better.)
`parsedStrings`, an internal function used as part of parsing
derivations in A-Term format, used to consume the final `]` but expect
the initial `[` to already be consumed. This made for what looked like
unbalanced brackets at callsites, which was confusing. Now it consumes
both which is hopefully less confusing.
As part of testing, we also created a unit test for the A-Term format for
regular non-experimental derivations too.
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Valentin Gagarin <valentin.gagarin@tweag.io>
Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
- Don't assert: Derivation ATerms are not necessarily produced by Nix,
and parsers should always throw graceful errors
- Improve error message from `static void except(..)`, shows both what
we expected and what we actually got.
The intention is that we backport it, and then hopefully a few people
might get slightly better errors if they try out new experimental drv
files (for RFC 92) with an old version of Nix.