forked from lix-project/lix
use correct mdBook syntax for callouts
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@ -34,10 +34,9 @@ It is used to compose expressions which ultimately evaluate to self-contained *b
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The command line and Nix language are what users interact with most.
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::: {.note}
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The Nix language itself does not have a notion of *packages* or *configurations*.
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As far as we are concerned here, the inputs and results of a build plan are just data.
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:::
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> **Note**
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> The Nix language itself does not have a notion of *packages* or *configurations*.
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> As far as we are concerned here, the inputs and results of a build plan are just data.
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Underlying these is the [Nix store](./store/store.md), a mechanism to keep track of build plans, data, and references between them.
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It can also execute build plans to produce new data.
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@ -34,9 +34,8 @@ If the store has a [file system representation](./store.md#files-and-processes),
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This means a store path is not just derived from the referenced store object itself, but depends on the store the store object is in.
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::: {.note}
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The store directory defaults to `/nix/store`, but is in principle arbitrary.
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:::
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> **Note**
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> The store directory defaults to `/nix/store`, but is in principle arbitrary.
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It is important which store a given store object belongs to:
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Files in the store object can contain store paths, and processes may read these paths.
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@ -60,10 +59,9 @@ In a [store path](#store-path), the [digest][digest] is the output of a [cryptog
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Store objects are therefore said to be either [input-addressed](#input-addressing) or [content-addressed](#content-addressing).
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::: {.note}
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**Historical note**: The 20 byte restriction is because originally digests were [SHA-1][sha-1] hashes.
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Nix now uses [SHA-256][sha-256], and longer hashes are still reduced to 20 bytes for compatibility.
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:::
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> **Historical Note**
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> The 20 byte restriction is because originally digests were [SHA-1][sha-1] hashes.
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> Nix now uses [SHA-256][sha-256], and longer hashes are still reduced to 20 bytes for compatibility.
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[digest]: https://en.m.wiktionary.org/wiki/digest#Noun
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[hash]: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cryptographic_hash_function
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@ -80,12 +78,11 @@ Nix uses the [closure](store.md#closure) of build inputs to derive the list of a
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This way, scanning files captures run time dependencies without the user having to declare them explicitly.
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Doing it at build time and persisting references in the store object avoids repeating this time-consuming operation.
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::: {.note}
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In practice, it is sometimes still necessary for users to declare certain dependencies explicitly, if they are to be preserved in the build result's closure.
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> **Note**
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> In practice, it is sometimes still necessary for users to declare certain dependencies explicitly, if they are to be preserved in the build result's closure.
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This depends on the specifics of the software to build and run.
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For example, Java programs are compressed after compilation, which obfuscates any store paths they may refer to and prevents Nix from automatically detecting them.
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:::
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>
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> For example, Java programs are compressed after compilation, which obfuscates any store paths they may refer to and prevents Nix from automatically detecting them.
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## Input Addressing {#input-addressing}
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