Commit graph

11 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Maximilian Bosch bfdd908f7d structured attrs: improve support / usage of NIX_ATTRS_{SH,JSON}_FILE
In #4770 I implemented proper `nix-shell(1)` support for derivations
using `__structuredAttrs = true;`. Back then we decided to introduce two
new environment variables, `NIX_ATTRS_SH_FILE` for `.attrs.sh` and
`NIX_ATTRS_JSON_FILE` for `.attrs.json`. This was to avoid having to
copy these files to `$NIX_BUILD_TOP` in a `nix-shell(1)` session which
effectively meant copying these files to the project dir without
cleaning up afterwords[1].

On last NixCon I resumed hacking on `__structuredAttrs = true;` by
default for `nixpkgs` with a few other folks and getting back to it,
I identified a few problems with the how it's used in `nixpkgs`:

* A lot of builders in `nixpkgs` don't care about the env vars and
  assume that `.attrs.sh` and `.attrs.json` are in `$NIX_BUILD_TOP`.
  The sole reason why this works is that `nix-shell(1)` sources
  the contents of `.attrs.sh` and then sources `$stdenv/setup` if it
  exists. This may not be pretty, but it mostly works. One notable
  difference when using nixpkgs' stdenv as of now is however that
  `$__structuredAttrs` is set to `1` on regular builds, but set to
  an empty string in a shell session.

  Also, `.attrs.json` cannot be used in shell sessions because
  it can only be accessed by `$NIX_ATTRS_JSON_FILE` and not by
  `$NIX_BUILD_TOP/.attrs.json`.

  I considered changing Nix to be compatible with what nixpkgs
  effectively does, but then we'd have to either move $NIX_BUILD_TOP for
  shell sessions to a temporary location (and thus breaking a lot of
  assumptions) or we'd reintroduce all the problems we solved back then
  by using these two env vars.

  This is partly because I didn't document these variables back
  then (mea culpa), so I decided to drop all mentions of
  `.attrs.{json,sh}` in the  manual and only refer to `$NIX_ATTRS_SH_FILE`
  and `$NIX_ATTRS_JSON_FILE`. The same applies to all our integration tests.
  Theoretically we could deprecated using `"$NIX_BUILD_TOP"/.attrs.sh` in
  the future now.

* `nix develop` and `nix print-dev-env` don't support this environment
  variable at all even though they're supposed to be part of the replacement
  for `nix-shell` - for the drv debugging part to be precise.

  This isn't a big deal for the vast majority of derivations, i.e.
  derivations relying on nixpkgs' `stdenv` wiring things together
  properly. This is because `nix develop` effectively "clones" the
  derivation and replaces the builder with a script that dumps all of
  the environment, shell variables, functions etc, so the state of
  structured attrs being "sourced" is transmitted into the dev shell and
  most of the time you don't need to worry about `.attrs.sh` not
  existing because the shell is correctly configured and the

      if [ -e .attrs.sh ]; then source .attrs.sh; fi

  is simply omitted.

  However, this will break when having a derivation that reads e.g. from
  `.attrs.json` like

      with import <nixpkgs> {};
      runCommand "foo" { __structuredAttrs = true; foo.bar = 23; } ''
        cat $NIX_ATTRS_JSON_FILE # doesn't work because it points to /build/.attrs.json
      ''

  To work around this I employed a similar approach as it exists for
  `nix-shell`: the `NIX_ATTRS_{JSON,SH}_FILE` vars are replaced with
  temporary locations.

  The contents of `.attrs.sh` and `.attrs.json` are now written into the
  JSON by `get-env.sh`, the builder that `nix develop` injects into the
  derivation it's debugging. So finally the exact file contents are
  present and exported by `nix develop`.

  I also made `.attrs.json` a JSON string in the JSON printed by
  `get-env.sh` on purpose because then it's not necessary to serialize
  the object structure again. `nix develop` only needs the JSON
  as string because it's only written into the temporary file.

  I'm not entirely sure if it makes sense to also use a temporary
  location for `nix print-dev-env` (rather than just skipping the
  rewrite in there), but this would probably break certain cases where
  it's relied upon `$NIX_ATTRS_SH_FILE` to exist (prime example are the
  `nix print-dev-env` test-cases I wrote in this patch using
  `tests/shell.nix`, these would fail because the env var exists, but it
  cannot read from it).

[1] https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/4770#issuecomment-836799719
2023-10-01 13:22:48 +01:00
regnat 04b113f6cb Fix nix log with CA derivations
Fix #6209

When trying to run `nix log <installable>`, try first to resolve the derivation pointed to
by `<installable>` as it is the resolved one that holds the build log.

This has a couple of shortcomings:
1. It’s expensive as it requires re-reading the derivation
2. It’s brittle because if the derivation doesn’t exist anymore or can’t
   be resolved (which is the case if any one of its build inputs is missing),
   then we can’t access the log anymore

However, I don’t think we can do better (at least not right now).
The alternatives I see are:
1. Copy the build log for the un-resolved derivation. But that means a
   lot of duplication
2. Store the results of the resolving in the db. Which might be the best
   long-term solution, but leads to a whole new class of potential
   issues.
2022-12-08 16:03:20 -05:00
Maximilian Bosch 697d1dac01
tests: grep for string in nix log for remote-builds 2022-03-04 16:58:27 +01:00
Maximilian Bosch 287642f132
tests: implement test for nix log with ssh-ng:// builds
A few notes:

* The `echo hi` is needed to make sure that a file that can be read by
  `nix log` is properly created (i.e. some output is needed). This is
  known and to be fixed in #6051.
* We explicitly ignore the floating-CA case here: the `$out` of `input3`
  depends on `$out` of `input2`. This means that there are actually two
  derivations - I assume that this is because at eval time (i.e.
  `nix-instantiate -A`) the hash of `input2` isn't known yet and the
  other .drv is created as soon as `input2` was built. This is another
  issue on its own, so we ignore the case here explicitly.
2022-02-28 17:27:52 +01:00
John Ericson d2f2be0f70 Test RemoteStore::buildDerivation
Fix `wopNarFromPath` which needed a `toRealPath`.
2020-08-13 04:07:14 +00:00
John Ericson 4720853129 Make system-features a store setting
This seems more correct. It also means one can specify the features a
store should support with --store and remote-store=..., which is useful.
I use this to clean up the build remotes test.
2020-08-12 18:13:00 +00:00
Eelco Dolstra b7ccf7ae2a build-remote.sh: Test LegacySSHStore 2020-06-25 18:42:55 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra 5722f9690c tests/binary-cache.sh: Improve incomplete closure test
Issue #3373.
2020-05-12 13:56:00 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra 16535552ad
build-remote: Add a basic test
This only runs on Linux because it requires a diverted store (which
uses mount/user namespaces).
2017-05-02 15:46:10 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra f6a8e7f4c2 Fix test 2013-10-17 11:18:37 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra 51e7e32c3b * Refactoring: renamed *.nix.in to *.nix. 2009-03-17 17:11:55 +00:00