This commit adds the capability for building the Doxygen internal API
docs in the Meson buildsystem, and also makes doing so the default for
the internal-api-docs hydra job. Aside from the /nix-support directory,
which differed only by the hash part of a store path, the outputs of
hydraJobs.internal-api-docs before and after this commit were
bit-for-bit identical on my machine.
Change-Id: I98f0017891c25b06866c15f7652fe74f706ec8e1
Either the contents of `line` could cause format errors, or this usage
is Technically safe. However, I trust nothing, especially with
boost::format.
Change-Id: I07933b20bde3b305a6e5d61c2a7bab6ecb042ad9
Previously if isStorePath() was called on anything other than a
top-level /nix/store/some-path, it would throw a BadStorePath exception.
This commit duplicates the absolutely trivial check, into
maybeParseStorePath(), and leaves exception throwing to
parseStorePath(), the function that assumes you're already giving a
valid path instead of the one whose purpose is to check if its valid or
not...
Change-Id: I8dda548f0f88d14ca8c3ee927d64e0ec0681fc7b
Saves us a bunch of thinking about how to handle symlinks, and prevents
the DNS config from changing on the fly under the build, which may or may
not be a good thing?
Change-Id: I071e6ae7e220884690b788d94f480866f428db71
93cc06334 removed nss-cacert from the binary tarball, but they're
necessary for global compatibility (and for our installer). This is what
results in cacerts being in the default profile, so e.g. the daemon has
TLS certs without having to use the system ones.
There's a fallback behavior in the daemon script in case these wind up
missing from the profile, but we don't want to have to rely on that,
since the fallback fails if it doesn't recognize one of a handful of
distros.
Change-Id: I60d8e6f734469548e80d5f38113ef168f67cbf7d
* changes:
meson: fix log-dir
manual: build docs with dummy envs
libcmd: install generated headers as well
docs: redo content generation for mdbook and manual
this was previously used because the macOS docs build would otherwise
pull files out of the host nix store. or something. not sure about it
Change-Id: I76b51eac1ebc5de5f00e2e4be086dd8db3eeb8e6
manpages can be rendered using the markdown output of mdbook, the rest
of the manual can generated out of the main doc/manual source tree. we
still use lowdown to actually render manpages instead of eg mdbook-man
because lowdown does generate reasonably good manpages (though that is
also somewhat debatable, but they're a lot better than mdbook-man).
doing this not only lets us drastically simplify the lowdown pipeline,
but also remove all custom {{#include}} handling since now mdbook does
all of it, even for the manpage builds. even the lowdown wrapper isn't
entirely necessary because lowdown can take all wrapper arguments with
command line flags rather than bits of input file content.
This also implements running mdbook in Meson, in order to generate the
manpages. The mdbook outputs are also installed in the usual location.
Co-authored-by: Qyriad <qyriad@qyriad.me>
Change-Id: I60193f9fd0f15d48872f071af35855cda2a0f40b
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
Previously, errors while printing values in `nix repl` would be printed
in `«error: ...»` brackets rather than displayed normally:
```
nix-repl> legacyPackages.aarch64-darwin.pythonPackages.APScheduler
«error: Package ‘python-2.7.18.7’ in /nix/store/6s0m1qc31zw3l3kq0q4wd5cp3lqpkq0q-source/pkgs/development/interpreters/python/cpython/2.7/default.nix:335 is marked as insecure, refusing to evaluate.»
```
Now, errors will be displayed normally if they're emitted at the
top-level of an expression:
```
nix-repl> legacyPackages.aarch64-darwin.pythonPackages.APScheduler
error:
… in the condition of the assert statement
at /nix/store/6s0m1qc31zw3l3kq0q4wd5cp3lqpkq0q-source/lib/customisation.nix:268:17:
267| in commonAttrs // {
268| drvPath = assert condition; drv.drvPath;
| ^
269| outPath = assert condition; drv.outPath;
… in the left operand of the OR (||) operator
at /nix/store/6s0m1qc31zw3l3kq0q4wd5cp3lqpkq0q-source/pkgs/development/interpreters/python/passthrufun.nix:28:45:
27| if lib.isDerivation value then
28| lib.extendDerivation (valid value || throw "${name} should use `buildPythonPackage` or `toPythonModule` if it is to be part of the Python packages set.") {} value
| ^
29| else
(stack trace truncated; use '--show-trace' to show the full trace)
error: Package ‘python-2.7.18.7’ in /nix/store/6s0m1qc31zw3l3kq0q4wd5cp3lqpkq0q-source/pkgs/development/interpreters/python/cpython/2.7/default.nix:335 is marked as insecure, refusing to evaluate.
```
Errors emitted in nested structures (like e.g. when printing `nixpkgs`)
will still be printed in brackets.
Change-Id: I25aeddf08c017582718cb9772a677bf51b9fc2ad
The configured sysconfdir is used to look for nix.conf, so it needs
to be /etc, and not $out/etc, so we separate out the place where shell
profile files are installed, which is the only other place sysconfdir is
at all used.
See lix-project/lix#231 (comment)
for more info.
Change-Id: Idbed8ba82e711b8a9d6b6127904befa27d58e279
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
These scripts were originally written by horrors, and have since been
hacked up a lot by jade. We are putting them up as a CL since it is
better to have checked in benchmarking scripts than to not have
benchmarking scripts.
cc: lix-project/lix#23
Co-authored-by: eldritch horrors <pennae@lix.systems>
Change-Id: I95c2f9d24753ac468944c5781deec9508fd5cb8c
this isn't strictly necessary, but it'll make it a lot easier to put the
generated files used by the autoconf build system in this directory too.
doing this now already will make the meson transition a lot easier later
Change-Id: I5fb39eade2ff88b6093c9ee436c9e8db793e9448
this would make meson build compatibility unnecessarily hard and
the cli does not change often enough to justify this complexity.
Change-Id: I17b1870cdf8538feeaa01a9945db97af2175a642
not sure why this was done the way it was considering that includes are
a feature the doc toolchain had previously. let's just always have some
kind of entry for the upcoming release in the dev manual builds even if
that means having a completely empty release notes chapter.
the release notes generation script isn't entirely functional right now
due to pre-commit hooks, but it's good enough for time being. we need a
better release process for notes anyway.
Change-Id: Ifda6912cf5233db013f72a30247a62d6f22b1565
Change-Id: I9eb347ec4aabc5be2b816ff0fd3e4be45f93b934
mdbook already does include processing of its own, and the custom
processing code has always admitted as much. we don't need it for
the mdbook build at this point if we run our preprocessors in the
right order, and maybe we can even have mdbook to return complete
pages to us that we only have to pass to lowdown without any more
preprocessing of our own.
Change-Id: Icd978acbc3b1e215fee8f062c53ab2cb2a222ab1
for some reason these three were anchors, not links, but had they been
links they wouldn't've worked because they're not defined anywhere but
here. in the print version of the manual they're duplicated many times
over (creating id collisions), so we should better remove them anyway.
Change-Id: I8988a7c32c812dee0f0b6d4953faa7cd1255228d
Adds a `repl-overlays` option, which specifies files that can overlay
and modify the top-level bindings in `nix repl`. For example, with the
following contents in `~/.config/nix/repl.nix`:
info: final: prev: let
optionalAttrs = predicate: attrs:
if predicate
then attrs
else {};
in
optionalAttrs (prev ? legacyPackages && prev.legacyPackages ? ${info.currentSystem})
{
pkgs = prev.legacyPackages.${info.currentSystem};
}
We can run `nix repl` and use `pkgs` to refer to `legacyPackages.${currentSystem}`:
$ nix repl --repl-overlays ~/.config/nix/repl.nix nixpkgs
Lix 2.90.0
Type :? for help.
Loading installable 'flake:nixpkgs#'...
Added 5 variables.
Loading 'repl-overlays'...
Added 6 variables.
nix-repl> pkgs.bash
«derivation /nix/store/g08b5vkwwh0j8ic9rkmd8mpj878rk62z-bash-5.2p26.drv»
Change-Id: Ic12e0f2f210b2f46e920c33088dfe1083f42391a
This is in our style guide, we can cheaply enforce it, let's do it.
```
$ pre-commit
check-case-conflicts.....................................................Passed
check-executables-have-shebangs..........................................Passed
check-headers............................................................Failed
- hook id: check-headers
- exit code: 1
Missing pattern @file in file src/libexpr/value.hh
We found some header files that don't conform to the style guide.
The Lix style guide requests that header files:
- Begin with `#pragma once` so they only get parsed once
- Contain a doxygen comment (`/**` or `///`) containing `@file`, for
example, `///@file`, which will make doxygen generate docs for them.
When adding that, consider also adding a `@brief` with a sentence
explaining what the header is for.
For more details: https://wiki.lix.systems/link/3#bkmrk-header-files
check-merge-conflicts....................................................Passed
check-shebang-scripts-are-executable.....................................Passed
check-symlinks.......................................(no files to check)Skipped
end-of-file-fixer........................................................Passed
mixed-line-endings.......................................................Passed
no-commit-to-branch......................................................Passed
release-notes........................................(no files to check)Skipped
treefmt..................................................................Passed
trim-trailing-whitespace.................................................Passed
```
Fixes: lix-project/lix#233
Change-Id: I77150b9298c844ffedd0f85cc5250ae9208502e3
This probably snuck in in a refactor using truthiness or so. The
trustedness flag was having the optional fullness checked, rather than
the actual contained trust level.
Also adds some tests.
```
m1@6876551b-255d-4cb0-af02-8a4f17b27e2e ~ % nix store ping
warning: 'nix store ping' is a deprecated alias for 'nix store info'
Store URL: daemon
Version: 2.20.4
Trusted: 0
m1@6876551b-255d-4cb0-af02-8a4f17b27e2e ~ % nix doctor
warning: 'doctor' is a deprecated alias for 'config check'
[PASS] PATH contains only one nix version.
[PASS] All profiles are gcroots.
[PASS] Client protocol matches store protocol.
[INFO] You are trusted by store uri: daemon
```
Fixes: lix-project/lix#232
Change-Id: I21576e2a0a755036edf8814133345987617ba3d0
The flake for pre-commit-checks is rather questionable. We ignored
it so it uses our own nixpkgs and doesn't reimport nixpkgs. This should
save a couple of seconds of eval time!
Change-Id: I4584982beb32e0122f791fa29f6a544bdbb9e201
package.nix previously needed this callPackage'd externally, which
didn't make a lot of sense to us since this is an internal dependency.
Thus we changed it to make it more self contained.
Change-Id: I4935bc0bc80e1a132bc9b1519e917791da95037c
Some of this code existed for installer tests, and indeed its removal is
an indication that our daemon cross-compatibility tests were removed.
Although these are not like, super critical tests, we would like to
restore them.
See: lix-project/lix#33
Change-Id: I75c733b25c00eca3a9676d498703bbfc1d6ec21b
The following command is now sufficient to build Lix from outside of the
flake:
nix-build -E 'let pkgs = import <nixpkgs> { }; in pkgs.callPackage
./package.nix { build-release-notes = false; nix-doc = pkgs.callPackage
./nix-doc/package.nix { }; }'
Change-Id: Ie6b14b446480ac07c7266d4fba20042b04cc35b9
follow-up to 32eaa8a29[1] "flake: move release note checks to hydraJobs",
this commit fixes a load-bearing typo for`checks.rl-next` and
`checks.rl-next-dev`.
[1]: 32eaa8a2910793538deab31f85534faf7e722ef7
Change-Id: I9383ed21f7eccc337c0c2f65525418b735a94a1d
In our view it really doesn't make sense to not have this in in
package.nix in some way. These patches aren't just for performance or
something -- Lix flat out doesn't build without these patches.
(Arguably that makes them a buildsystem responsibility as well, but that
can wait for when we're ready to start adding subproject fallback
dependency resolution to Meson.)
This is a step towards making `package.nix` more self-sufficient and
`callPackage`able without excessive external logic.
With this change the following command is enough to build Lix from out
of the flake:
nix-build -E 'let pkgs = import <nixpkgs> { }; in pkgs.callPackage
./package.nix { build-release-notes = false; inherit (pkgs.lib) fileset;
nix-doc = pkgs.callPackage ./nix-doc/package.nix { }; }'
Change-Id: Ia37fe8171f87d3293033de8be07d9bab12716f1d
`nix eval --write-to` refuses to write to a directory that exists at
all, so now we generate in a temporary directory, and copy the generated
tree to the build directory. This is equivalent to what the Make
buildsystem did, actually, but hopefully more robust.
Future work: documenting the doc generation architecture in the
top-level meson.build outline comment.
Change-Id: Ic3eb6d26e3cc249a1c042fd3ced22d637ac66a69
code blocks, if not surrounded by empty lines, have the language
tags (in these cases, always `nix`) show up in the output of :doc.
for example:
nix-repl> :doc builtins.parseFlakeRef
Synopsis: builtins.parseFlakeRef flake-ref
Parse a flake reference, and return its exploded form.
For example: nix builtins.parseFlakeRef
"github:NixOS/nixpkgs/23.05?dir=lib" evaluates to: nix { dir =
"lib"; owner = "NixOS"; ref = "23.05"; repo = "nixpkgs"; type =
"github"; }
is now instead:
nix-repl> :doc builtins.parseFlakeRef
Synopsis: builtins.parseFlakeRef flake-ref
Parse a flake reference, and return its exploded form.
For example:
| builtins.parseFlakeRef "github:NixOS/nixpkgs/23.05?dir=lib"
evaluates to:
| { dir = "lib"; owner = "NixOS"; ref = "23.05"; repo = "nixpkgs"; type = "github"; }
(closes#225)
Change-Id: I0741aeb1006a5376bb2f663d202c7a4da7e38cce
It is a little bit scuffed, but it seems to produce correct results. We
can run it at a later date when we want to explode every in-flight
commit in existence and then need to filter-branch them.
Fixes: lix-project/lix#188
Change-Id: Id97e4651f78804a941d941df02c7c1b21ce453b6
This is terrible UX, and frankly an eval failure should be a cache
invalidation anyway.
This removes the CachedEvalError type entirely.
Fixes#223.
Change-Id: I91f8003eabd0ea45003024e96d1de3c7ae8e49d8
Commit c21d11ac0 "docs: replace sed invocation with an mdbook
preprocessor for @docroot@" added a direct build dependency on Python.
This has been accidentally working so far because Python is already a
*transitive* dependency of Lix's derivation.
Change-Id: I32d6b4f2665dbbfad7014613457dd58aa4ec73da
* changes:
Revert "libutil: drop Pool resources on exceptional free"
Revert "libutil: remove Pool::Handle::bad"
Revert "libstore: remove one Resource::good flag"
Revert "libstore: using throwing finally in withFramedSink"
Revert "libutil: allow graceful dropping of Pool::Handle"
Revert "libutil: drop Fs{Source,Sink}::good"
libutil: guard Finally against invalid exception throws
- Use a recursive descent parser so that it's easy to extend.
- Add `@args` to enable customizing command-line arguments
- Add `@should-start` to enable `nix repl` tests that error before
entering the REPL
- Make sure to read all stdout output before comparing. This catches
some extra output we were tossing out before!
Change-Id: I5522555df4c313024ab15cd10f9f04e7293bda3a
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
throwing exceptions is fine, but throwing exceptions during exception
handling is hard enough to do correctly that we should just forbid it
entirely out of an overabundance of caution. in cases where terminate
is the correct answer the users of Finally must call it manually now.
Change-Id: Ia51a2cb4a0638500550bfabc89cf01a6d8098983
These were mistakenly labeled `eval-fail-*`.
Note that the `lang.sh` runner passes `parse-fail-*` tests on stdin, so
filenames are removed from error messages.
Change-Id: I7f3a0d78b6cfa87af29aaa1b7af19d5a57fd4ade
We're not entirely clear on why the links preprocessor has to be done
*before* rather than after, but we assume it is probably that as a
builtin preprocessor it does some processing on the raw book source,
and not just the JSON data.
Also a real use for Python pattern matching? I know I was surprised too.
Change-Id: Ibe8b59e7b5bd5f357a655d8b4c5f0b0f58a67d6b
This reverts commit 70954233743a233744787103d3211237a28ddbca.
This seems to have broken running ninja on warm build directories, which
is not what we want. Reverted until we figure out something better
Change-Id: I9623ae078917e7c59a930bf8044a216501d4bb20
This puts the generated files where they are for the make system.
This is in preparation for further meson-mdbook stuff.
Change-Id: I934df6854a80af5ccf381cf1da0bda0187a8bcfc
For a long time `nix repl` has supported displaying documentation set on
builtins, however, it has long been convention to use Markdown comments
on Nix functions themselves for documentation. This exposes that
information to `nix repl` users in a nice and formatted way.
NixOS/rfcs#145 doc-comments are primarily what this feature is intended
to consume, however, support for lambda documentation in the repl is
experimental. We do our best effort to support the RFC here.
These changes are based on [the nix-doc library](https://github.com/lf-/nix-doc) and
are licensed under the terms described in the relevant source files.
Change-Id: Ic6fe947d39a22540705d890737e336c4720b0a22
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
not needed yet, but returning a resource from the exception handling
path that has ownership of a handle is currently not well-supported.
we could also add a default constructor to Handle, but then we would
also need to change the pool reference to a pointer. eventually that
should be done since now resources can be swapped between pools with
clever moves, but since that's not a problem yet we won't do it now.
Change-Id: I26eb06581f7be34569e9e67a33da736128d167af
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
this is supposed to act like a finally block does in other languages. a
finally block should be able to throw exceptions of its own rather than
just crashing the entire program when it throws it own exceptions. even
in the rare case of a finally throwing an unexpected exception it might
be better to report the exception from Finally instead of the original,
at least that can keep our program running instead of letting it crash.
Change-Id: Id42011e46b1df369152b4564938c0e93fa1acf32
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
if a scope owning a resource does not gracefully drop that resource
while handling exceptions from deeper down the call stack we should
assume the resource is invalid state and drop it. currently it *is*
true that such cases do not cause resources to be freed, but thanks
to validator misuses this has so far not caused any larger problem.
Change-Id: Ie4f91bcd60a64d05c5ff9d22cc97954816d13b97
Perl has an env hook[1]. Passing the paths manually without putting them
in buildInputs is harder to understand, plays less nicely with dev
shells, and is less build-generic.
Produced identical output on my x86_64-linux machine, and on my
aarch64-darwin machine was identical save for the derivation output path
which gets embedded into the .dylib Mach-O.
Change-Id: Ib313caa5a6f0b0e3154ce6f05379033920d0d290
this notably does *not* install the `nix3-manpages` manpage the old
system generated, mostly because that page was empty and just a bug
with a coat of documentation paint.
Change-Id: I7a4248a72e7bb5e0cc925a6311a33b6b72589569
we'll want to use these for the meson builds, and probably eventually
rewrite them in something that isn't plain shell. diffoscope confirms
that out/share and doc/share are equal before and after these changes
Change-Id: I49aa418fc8615cad86d67328e08c28a7405ec952
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
This has not yet had all the warnings Obliterated, but it is a start and
is not *super* far away from being able to run the current configuration
in CI, which will catch some limited number of mistakes.
I tried the meson clang-tidy target and it seems to fail to find flags
for several files, which seems broken. Unsure what is up with that, but
we can use run-clang-tidy or other tooling instead.
We have an extremely annoying situation with the lexer table, which
means that the lexer probably must be moved to another directory with
its own .clang-tidy file to disable the lints in it, *or* write scuffed
code that prepends a disable comment to the top of the generated file.
None of the comment-based lint disabling features work since yacc dumps
a bunch of non compliant code at the top of the file before anything the
user can control.
Change-Id: I1d2aa6ec32deb1db1fbd581127334db1b972323c
* 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
We got confused what formals did and had to briefly figure it out. We
should just have docs, so these are some.
Change-Id: If3e794a401e69d022785cbfa0b0c2e2284f41f58
Since we don't have a ./configure checked in, it makes no sense to keep
any of these scripts since people are already going to be running
autoreconf anyway.
Plus they will be completely deletable when meson shows up.
This fixes `autoreconfPhase` causing git diffs.
Change-Id: Ibb2aee422c562a23faadfdedb55b5c18c41a9420
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
sometimes these fail with timeouts on loaded machines. let's up the
timeouts until we can pull the tests apart to more reasonable sizes
Change-Id: I2dfff2183cc1f3ff5e6107f43748ac046fe00d05
- Enable parallel builds by default (and allow using environment
variables to override `make` variables)
- Hopefully we can get rid of this once we have Meson
- Set `GTEST_BRIEF=1`
- This only shows failed tests, instead of listing every test on its
own line.
```
$ GTEST_BRIEF=1 make check
[==========] 328 tests from 15 test suites ran. (37 ms total)
[ PASSED ] 328 tests.
```
Change-Id: Id8103a8f24a9681be2be87e1b4df6fd5fdd7e4fd
Functional tests can be run with
`meson test -C build --suite installcheck`.
Notably, functional tests must be run *after* running `meson install`
(Lix's derivation runs the installcheck suite in installCheckPhase so it
does this correctly), due to some quirks between Meson and the testing
system.
As far as I can tell the functional tests are meant to be run after
installing anyway, but unfortunately I can't transparently make
`meson test --suite installcheck` depend on the install targets.
The script that runs the functional tests, meson/run-test.py, checks
that `meson install` has happened and fails fast with a (hopefully)
helpful error message if any of the functional tests are run before
installing.
TODO: this change needs reflection in developer documentation
Change-Id: I8dcb5fdfc0b6cb17580973d24ad930abd57018f6
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
I didn't enable this by default for clang due to making the build time
10% worse or so. Unfortunate, but tbh devs for whom 10% of build time is
not *that* bad should probably simply enable this.
Change-Id: I8d1e5b6f3f76c649a4e2f115f534f7f97cee46e6
hacking changelog-d to support not just github but also forgejo and
gerrit is a lot more complicated than it's worth, even moreso since
the entire thing can just as well be done with ~60 lines of python.
this new script is also much cheaper to instantiate (being python),
so having it enabled in all shells is far less of a hassle.
we've also adjusted existing release notes that referenced a gerrit
cl to auto-link to the cl in question, making the diff a bit bigger
closes lix-project/lix#176
Change-Id: I8ba7dd0070aad9ba4474401731215fcf5d9d2130
Once this commit lands, we are even more visible in analytics FWIW.
Change-Id: Id7e0c162315d0f191edbea9cb5fb82ce363704b9
Signed-off-by: Raito Bezarius <raito@lix.systems>
HintFmt(string) invokes the HintFmt("%s", literal) constructor,
which is not what we want here. Add a constructor with a proper name
and call that.
Next step: rename all the other ones to HintFmt::literal(string).
Fixes: lix-project/lix#178
Change-Id: If52d2eb8864ceb8663e05992e9d1fffef573d6b8
Unit tests can be run with `meson test -C build --suite check`.
`--suite check` is optional, as right now that's the only test suite,
but when functional tests are added those will be in a separate suite.
Change-Id: I7f22f1cde4b489b3cdb5f9a36a544f0c409fcc1f
parallel meson builds need too much ram. linearize them for now, and
hopefully we can remove the make build system and this hack soonish.
Change-Id: I42c092db8b0c63680e77da2263cdfe9e7f6575be
`nix --version` doesn't require `nix-command` experimental feature to
run and we could all do with less nix-env
Change-Id: I90748d591c574d96eda46591e9f9ce828311da29
Committing a lock file using markFileChanged() required the input to
be writable by the caller in the local filesystem (using the path
returned by getSourcePath()). putFile() abstracts over this.
(cherry picked from commit 95d657c8b3)
Change-Id: Ie081c5d9eb4e923b229191c5e23ece85145557ff
As I complained in
https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/6784#issuecomment-1421777030 (a
comment on the wrong PR, sorry again!), #6693 introduced a second
completions mechanism to fix a bug. Having two completion mechanisms
isn't so nice.
As @thufschmitt also pointed out, it was a bummer to go from `FlakeRef`
to `std::string` when collecting flake refs. Now it is `FlakeRefs`
again.
The underlying issue that sought to work around was that completion of
arguments not at the end can still benefit from the information from
latter arguments.
To fix this better, we rip out that change and simply defer all
completion processing until after all the (regular, already-complete)
arguments have been passed.
In addition, I noticed the original completion logic used some global
variables. I do not like global variables, because even if they save
lines of code, they also obfuscate the architecture of the code.
I got rid of them moved them to a new `RootArgs` class, which now has
`parseCmdline` instead of `Args`. The idea is that we have many argument
parsers from subcommands and what-not, but only one root args that owns
the other per actual parsing invocation. The state that was global is
now part of the root args instead.
This did, admittedly, add a bunch of new code. And I do feel bad about
that. So I went and added a lot of API docs to try to at least make the
current state of things clear to the next person.
--
This is needed for RFC 134 (tracking issue #7868). It was very hard to
modularize `Installable` parsing when there were two completion
arguments. I wouldn't go as far as to say it is *easy* now, but at least
it is less hard (and the completions test finally passed).
Co-authored-by: Valentin Gagarin <valentin.gagarin@tweag.io>
Change-Id: If18cd5be78da4a70635e3fdcac6326dbfeea71a5
(cherry picked from commit 67eb37c1d0de28160cd25376e51d1ec1b1c8305b)
An attrPath prefix of "." indicates no need to try default attrPath prefixes. For example `nixpkgs#legacyPackages.x86_64-linux.ERROR` searches through
```
trying flake output attribute 'packages.x86_64-linux.legacyPackages.x86_64-linux.ERROR'
using cached attrset attribute ''
trying flake output attribute 'legacyPackages.x86_64-linux.legacyPackages.x86_64-linux.ERROR'
using cached attrset attribute 'legacyPackages.x86_64-linux'
trying flake output attribute 'legacyPackages.x86_64-linux.ERROR'
using cached attrset attribute 'legacyPackages.x86_64-linux'
```
And there is no way to specify that one does not want the automatic
search behavior. Now one can specify
`nixpkgs#.legacyPackages.x86_64-linux.ERROR` to only refer to the rooted
attribute path without any default injection of attribute search path or
system.
Change-Id: Iac1334e1470137b7ce11dcf845513810230638ec
(cherry picked from commit d4aed18883b361133607296fb6cd789c47427a38)
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
this is not needed and introduces a bunch of memset calls, making up for
3% of valgrind cycle estimation *alone*. real-world impact is a lot
lower on our test machine, but we suspect that less powerful machines
would see an impact from dropping this.
Change-Id: Iad10e9d556e64fdeb0bee0059a4e52520058d11e
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
this was mostly an inconvenience for error reporting, but fully broke
the debugger (because the debugger does *a lot* of eager position
resolution). copying the line offsets into a local and filling that
local when empty without also storing the calculated offsets back does
kind of ... not cache anything.
fixes lix-project/lix#165
Change-Id: Iccb0ba193ce2f15c832978daecf7b9bebbbe8585
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
static env association is from expr to its enclosing scope, but let
exprs set their association to their *inner* scope. this skips one level
of envs and will cause segfaults if the parent is a with expr.
fixes#145
Change-Id: I1d22146110f071ede21b4eed7ed34b5850ef2ef3
not doing this exposes the binding name order to the annoying
interference of parse order on symbol order, which wouldn't be so bad if
it didn't make the tests less reliable and, importantly, dependent on
linker behavior (due to primop initialization being done in static
initializer, and the order of static initializers being defined only
within a single translation unit).
fixes#143
Change-Id: I3cf417893fbcf19e9ad3ff8986deb7cbcf3ca511
we now keep not a table of all positions, but a table of all origins and
their sizes. position indices are now direct pointers into the virtual
concatenation of all parsed contents. this slightly reduces memory usage
and time spent in the parser, at the cost of not being able to report
positions if the total input size exceeds 4GiB. this limit is not unique
to nix though, rustc and clang also limit their input to 4GiB (although
at least clang refuses to process inputs that are larger, we will not).
this new 4GiB limit probably will not cause any problems for quite a
while, all of nixpkgs together is less than 100MiB in size and already
needs over 700MiB of memory and multiple seconds just to parse. 4GiB
worth of input will easily take multiple minutes and over 30GiB of
memory without even evaluating anything. if problems *do* arise we can
probably recover the old table-based system by adding some tracking to
Pos::Origin (or increasing the size of PosIdx outright), but for time
being this looks like more complexity than it's worth.
since we now need to read the entire input again to determine the
line/column of a position we'll make unsafeGetAttrPos slightly lazy:
mostly the set it returns is only used to determine the file of origin
of an attribute, not its exact location. the thunks do not add
measurable runtime overhead.
notably this change is necessary to allow changing the parser since
apparently nothing supports nix's very idiosyncratic line ending choice
of "anything goes", making it very hard to calculate line/column
positions in the parser (while byte offsets are very easy).
(cherry picked from commit 5d9fdab3de0ee17c71369ad05806b9ea06dfceda)
Change-Id: Ie0b2430cb120c09097afa8c0101884d94f4bbf34
this needs a string comparison because there seems to be no other way to
get that information out of bison. usually the location info is going to
be correct (pointing at a bad token), but since EOF isn't a token as
such it'll be wrong in that this case.
this hasn't shown up much so far because a single line ending *is* a
token, so any file formatted in the usual manner (ie, ending in a line
ending) would have its EOF position reported correctly.
(cherry picked from commit 855fd5a1bb781e4f722c1d757ba43e866d370132)
Change-Id: I120c56a962f4286b1ae3b71da7b71ce8ec3e0535
the parser treats a plain \r as a newline, error reports do not. this
can lead to interesting divergences if anything makes use of this
feature, with error reports pointing to wrong locations in the input (or
even outside the input altogether).
(cherry picked from commit 2be6b143289e5479cc4a2667bb84e879116c2447)
Change-Id: Ieb7f7655bac8cb0cf5734c60bd41723388f2973c
previously we reported the error at the beginning of the binding
block (for plain inherits) or the beginning of the attr list (for
inherit-from), effectively hiding where exactly the error happened.
this also carries over to runtime positions of attributes in sets as
reported by unsafeGetAttrPos. we're not worried about this changing
observable eval behavior because it *is* marked unsafe, and the new
behavior is much more useful.
(cherry picked from commit 1edd6fada53553b89847ac3981ac28025857ca02)
Change-Id: I2f50eb9f3dc3977db4eb3e3da96f1cb37ccd5174
we already normalize attr order to lexicographic, doing the same for
formals makes sense. doubly so because the order of formals would
otherwise depend on the context of the expression, which is not quite as
useful as one might expect.
(cherry picked from commit 4147ecfb1c51f3fe3b4adcbd4e753fd487dab645)
Change-Id: I3fd0dbdef3ac7447a3a03ff20bb514a0d0f23fb1
the parser modifies its inputs, which means that sharing them between
the error context reporting system and the parser itself can confuse the
reporting system. usually this led to early truncation of error context
reports which, while not dangerous, can be quite confusing.
(cherry picked from commit d384ecd553aa997270b79ee98d02f7cf7e1849e6)
Change-Id: I677646b5675b12b2faa787943646aa36dc6e6ee3
vfork confers a large performance advantage over fork, measured locally
at 16µs per vfork agains 90µs per fork. however nix *almost always*
follows a vfork up with an execve-family call, melting the performance
advantage from 6x to only 15%. in most of those cases it's doing things
that are undefined behavior (like manipulating the heap, or even
throwing exceptions and trashing the parent process stack).
most notably the one place that could benefit from the vfork performance
improvement is linux derivation sandbox setup—which doesn't use vfork.
Change-Id: I2037b7384d5a4ca24da219a569e1b1f39531410e
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
This builtin is only going to cause us problems because we are not Nix,
so let's just falsify being in the 2.18 series, since that is the
closest target that has any meaning.
In future we might want to have a better feature detection mechanism,
for when we actually add stuff to some builtin's attr set argument. But
builtins.nixVersion is just going to be hopelessly broken and it should
be stubbed out.
Fixes lix-project/lix#144
Change-Id: Id7390b32a29c6147f2977737d81846320de5d67e
diagnose attr duplication at the path the duplication was detected, not
at the path the current attribute wanted to place. doing the latter is
only correct if a leaf attribute was duplicated, not if an attrpath was
set to a non-attrset in one binding and a (potentially implied) attrset
in another binding.
fixes#124
Change-Id: Ic4aa9cc12a9874d4e7897c6f64408f10aa36fc82
-O3 does not measurably improve performance of the resulting binaries,
neither with lto enabled nor with lto disabled. what it does to however
is cause gcc warning spew in libstdc++ that we can't do anything
about (and that upon inspection of libstdc++ source looks like a gcc
bug).
with lto, -O3:
Benchmark 1: GC_INITIAL_HEAP_SIZE=10g nix eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'
Time (mean ± σ): 4.608 s ± 0.027 s [User: 3.866 s, System: 0.522 s]
Range (min … max): 4.579 s … 4.640 s 10 runs
Benchmark 2: nix eval -f <nixpkgs/pkgs/development/haskell-modules/hackage-packages.nix>
Time (mean ± σ): 408.1 ms ± 25.5 ms [User: 360.0 ms, System: 28.1 ms]
Range (min … max): 387.6 ms … 439.0 ms 10 runs
with lto, -O2:
Benchmark 1: GC_INITIAL_HEAP_SIZE=10g nix eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'
Time (mean ± σ): 4.632 s ± 0.044 s [User: 3.874 s, System: 0.544 s]
Range (min … max): 4.563 s … 4.673 s 10 runs
Benchmark 2: nix eval -f <nixpkgs/pkgs/development/haskell-modules/hackage-packages.nix>
Time (mean ± σ): 394.0 ms ± 23.9 ms [User: 351.2 ms, System: 27.6 ms]
Range (min … max): 377.8 ms … 429.3 ms 10 runs
without lto, -O3:
Benchmark 1: GC_INITIAL_HEAP_SIZE=10g nix eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'
Time (mean ± σ): 4.700 s ± 0.024 s [User: 3.906 s, System: 0.559 s]
Range (min … max): 4.663 s … 4.717 s 10 runs
Benchmark 2: nix eval -f <nixpkgs/pkgs/development/haskell-modules/hackage-packages.nix>
Time (mean ± σ): 400.4 ms ± 25.6 ms [User: 353.7 ms, System: 26.8 ms]
Range (min … max): 379.8 ms … 430.6 ms 10 runs
without lto, -O2:
Benchmark 1: GC_INITIAL_HEAP_SIZE=10g nix eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'
Time (mean ± σ): 4.724 s ± 0.030 s [User: 3.924 s, System: 0.570 s]
Range (min … max): 4.687 s … 4.749 s 10 runs
Benchmark 2: nix eval -f <nixpkgs/pkgs/development/haskell-modules/hackage-packages.nix>
Time (mean ± σ): 392.4 ms ± 24.3 ms [User: 350.9 ms, System: 26.4 ms]
Range (min … max): 376.9 ms … 428.0 ms 10 runs
fixes#46
Change-Id: Ib8afad8a07c278f57f2e3317d00cce4f9ec0f338
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
This is because they are unrepresentable in the source files with
commentary but not in the output, so we should just eat them in
normalization. It's ok.
Change-Id: I2cb7e8b3fc7b00874885bb287cbaa200b41cb16b
`macOS` does not have `glibcLocales`:
error:
… while calling the 'derivationStrict' builtin
at /derivation-internal.nix:9:12:
8|
9| strict = derivationStrict drvAttrs;
| ^
10|
… while evaluating derivation 'nix-2.90.0'
whose name attribute is located at /nix/store/y0c95bwyvs80pm69hdd4b11pyq2ghiwh-source
/pkgs/stdenv/generic/make-derivation.nix:348:7
… while evaluating attribute 'LOCALE_ARCHIVE' of derivation 'nix-2.90.0'
at /nix/store/ng5qzbyv4902b4pw7g35caqw5cnmryf9-source/flake.nix:331:15:
330| # Required to make non-NixOS Linux not complain about missing loc
Change-Id: I4464484a0eca12b5e073d49d900b6f25886245c1
using the total-attrs-printed and total-list-items-printed counters to
calculate how many attrs were elided only works properly if no nesting
is involved. once things do nest the global counter can exceed the size
of the currently printed object, leading to unsigned wrapping and great
overestimation of elided counts. counting locally in addition to global
counts fixes this.
these are functional tests because creating these objects requires the
evaluator to not be a huge amount of code, and we also want defaults to
be tested for cli usage.
fixes#14
Change-Id: Icb9a0cb21b2f4bacbc5e9dcdd8c0b9055b4088a7
this lets us set per-test-program environment variables rather than only
a single, global default. this was supported in nix originally but
might've gone partially missing in the upstream backports process?
Change-Id: Iad0919841b1b6d11e0b7ebd3920449a62f544e77
This has some Flaws for sure (like, it is going to be a bit stretched to
use for repl characterization), but it is a start.
Change-Id: I258c8beb3aee236f45818a03be83bcda858120c9
This is definitely not a stable thing, but it does feel slightly crimes
to put it as an experimental feature. Shrug, up for bikeshedding.
Change-Id: I6ef176e3dee6fb1cac9c0a7a60d553a2c63ea728
* changes:
package: cleanup of all intermediaries
package: migrate devShells
package: migrate internal-api-docs
package: migrate testNixVersions
package: use pname, version, and dontBuild (first change with diff hash)
package: refactor Nix out of flake.nix and into package.nix
The src fileset, preConfigure, and separateDebugInfo also respond to doBuild if its overridden
This commit is logically just a continuation of the previous commit's
refactor, but exists separately to delineate when the core Nix
derivation hash changed (this commit).
Change-Id: I67a61bc9608d91b6a833ebc5c3894b2d2e694050
This series takes a somewhat different approach from the flake rework
done in NixOS/nix. The package.nix here does not provide callPackage
options for all the various settings in the build, and instead the other
places Nix derivations are used (like internal-api-docs) will .overrideAttrs
the normal Nix package derivation. This more closely matches how these
things were structured originally, and results in less churn and more
atomicity in these changes.
In the future, package.nix likely will migrate to have more build
options in the callPackage arguments, but we are also planning to
rewrite the build system anyway.
Change-Id: I170c4e5a4184bab62e1fd75e56db876d4ff116cf
This solves the problem of collections of boxed subclasses with virtual
dispatch, which should still be treated as values, since the
indirection is only there due to the virtual dispatch.
Change-Id: I368daedd3f31298e99c6e56a15606337a55494c6
it's no longer widely used and has a rather confusing meaning now that
inherit-from is handled very differently.
(cherry picked from commit 1cd87b7042d14aae1fafa47b1c28db4c5bd20de7)
Change-Id: I90bbebddf06762960d8ca4f621cf042ce8ae83f9
desugaring inherit-from to syntactic duplication of the source expr also
duplicates side effects of the source expr (such as trace calls) and
expensive computations (such as derivationStrict).
(cherry picked from commit cefd0302b55b3360dbca59cfcb4bf6a750d6cdcf)
Change-Id: Iff519f991adef2e51683ba2c552d37a3df7a179e
deduplication does not currently work fully, showing derivations
multiple times if they have different underlying values. this can happen
by selecting the same derivation twice for two different attributes of a
set, using inherit-from (which reduces to the previous), importing
nixpkgs twice, or any other number of things.
since users already have to deal with duplicates for this reason it
won't hurt to add *more* duplicates. the alternative would be to
deduplicate fully, which would drop derivations that are currently
returned and those pose a regression risk.
Change-Id: I64b397351237e10375d270f1bddecb71f62aa131
for plain inherits this is really just a stylistic choice, but for
inherit-from it actually fixes an exponential size increase problem
during expr printing (as may happen during assertion failure reporting,
on during duplicate attr detection in the parser)
(cherry picked from commit ecf8b12d60)
Change-Id: Ie55f0cb01a37e766414c31f8d40f51c2c7d106b0
this also has the effect of sorting let bindings lexicographically
rather than by symbol creation order as was previously done, giving a
better canonicalization in the process.
(cherry picked from commit 6c08fba533)
Change-Id: Ia887f629305645bb8a165fbbc0d32e620912595a
in place of inherited() — not quite useful yet since we don't
distinguish plain and inheritFrom attr kinds so far.
(cherry picked from commit 1f542adb3e)
Change-Id: If948c9d43e875de18f213a73a06a36f7c335b536
without these changes the tests will very repeatably (although not very
reliably) wedge in our runs. the ssh command starts, opens a sessions,
does something, the session closes again, but the test does not move on.
adding *just* the redirect and not the unit waits is not sufficient
either, it needs both. this feels like a bug in the nixos testing
framework somewhere, but digging that far is not in the cards right now.
Change-Id: Idab577b83a36cc4899bb5ffbb3d9adc04e83e51c
Do not skip any stack frames when `--show-trace` is given
(cherry picked from commit 0b47783d0a879875d558f0b56e49584f25ceb2d0)
Change-Id: Ia0f18266dbcf97543110110c655c219c7a3e3270
Enter debugger on `builtins.trace` with an option
(cherry picked from commit 774e7ca5847ebc392eac2a124a8f12b24da4f65a)
Change-Id: If01e2110b3a128e639b05143227e365227d149f1
Pretty-print values in the REPL by printing each item in a list or
attrset on a separate line. When possible, single-item lists and
attrsets are printed on one line, as long as they don't contain a nested
list, attrset, or thunk.
Before:
```
{ attrs = { a = { b = { c = { }; }; }; }; list = [ 1 ]; list' = [ 1 2 3 ]; }
```
After:
```
{
attrs = {
a = {
b = {
c = { };
};
};
};
list = [ 1 ];
list' = [
1
2
3
];
}
```
(cherry picked from commit c0a15fb7d03dfb8f53bc6726c414bc88aa362592)
Change-Id: Ia2b41849165a5ddb63f7a8c272a2476b3e4292df
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 c6a89c1a16)
Change-Id: Iced91ba4e00ca9e801518071fb43798936cbd05a
Catch `Error`, not `BaseError` in `ValuePrinter`
BaseError includes Interrupt. We probably don't want the value printer to tell you Ctrl-C was pressed while it was printing.
(cherry picked from commit c291d2d8dd)
Change-Id: I70b105bfb2f52a8f345ae0281d12f022aa36b14e
`nix eval` forces values and prints derivations as attribute sets, so
commands that print derivations (e.g. `nix eval nixpkgs#bash`) will
infinitely loop and segfault.
Printing derivations as `.drv` paths makes `nix eval` complete as
expected. Further work is needed, but this is better than a segfault.
(cherry picked from commit 4910d74086a85876e093136a0e8ebc547b467af7)
Change-Id: I8e1cb39c05db812080759ec183ee7a131760e6ea
these symbols are used a *lot*, so it makes sense to cache them. this
mostly increases clarity of the code (however clear one may wish to call
the parser desugaring here), but it also provides a small performance
benefit.
(cherry picked from commit 09a1128d9e)
Change-Id: I73d9f66be4555168e048cb2d542277251580c2d1
there's no reason the parser itself should be doing semantic analysis
like bindVars. split this bit apart (retaining the previous name in
EvalState) and have the parser really do *only* parsing, decoupled from
EvalState.
(cherry picked from commit b596cc9e79)
Change-Id: I481a7623afc783e9d28a6eb4627552cf8a780986
most EvalState and Expr members defined here could be elsewhere, where
they'd be easier to maintain (not being embedded in a file with arcane
syntax) and *somewhat* more faithfully placed according to the path of
the file they're defined in.
(cherry picked from commit e1aa585964)
Change-Id: Ibc704567462bb40f37cda05d8fadd465519db5f5
most instances of this being used do not refer to the "current"
position, sometimes not even to one reasonably close by. it could also
be called `makePos` instead, but `at` seems clear in context.
(cherry picked from commit 835a6c7bcf)
Change-Id: I17cab8a6cc14cac5b64624431957bfcf04140809
ParserState better describes what this struct really is. the parser
really does modify its state (most notably position and symbol tables),
so calling it that rather than obliquely "data" (which implies being
input only) makes sense.
(cherry picked from commit 0076056164)
Change-Id: I92feaec796530e1d4d0f7d4fba924229591cea95
since nix doesn't use the bison `error` terminal anywhere any invocation
of yyerror will immediately cause a failure. since we're *already*
leaking tons of memory whatever little bit bison allocates internally
doesn't much matter any more, and we'll be replacing the parser soon anyway.
coincidentally this now also matches the error behavior of URIs when
they are disabled or ~/ paths in pure eval mode, duplicate attr
detection etc.
(cherry picked from commit e8d9de967f)
Change-Id: I560c50d11dceddc2d7cf9ed2c6c631a309ce574e
Print the value in `error: cannot coerce` messages
(cherry picked from commit 5b7bfd2d6b)
===
test taken from 6e8d5983143ae576e3f4b1d2954a5267f2943a49; it was added
previously (and not backported because its pr was a mostly-revert), but
it's useful to have around.
Change-Id: Icbd14b55e3610ce7b774667bf14b82e6dc717982
Just `stdenv.isDarwin` isn't enough because it doesn't apply to the
build platform, which mean that cross packages building from darwin to
another platform will have `isDarwin` set to false.
Replace it by `stdenv.buildPlatform.isDarwin`.
(cherry picked from commit a0cb75d96f76a3be48b9319e26d8ad78ef4e4525)
(h/t jade for finding this one)
Change-Id: If3cb74e6feaa5d51de550d9a140c71683c2214cd
Previously, there were two mostly-identical value printers -- one in
`libexpr/eval.cc` (which didn't force values) and one in
`libcmd/repl.cc` (which did force values and also printed ANSI color
codes).
This PR unifies both of these printers into `print.cc` and provides a
`PrintOptions` struct for controlling the output, which allows for
toggling whether values are forced, whether repeated values are tracked,
and whether ANSI color codes are displayed.
Additionally, `PrintOptions` allows tuning the maximum number of
attributes, list items, and bytes in a string that will be displayed;
this makes it ideal for contexts where printing too much output (e.g.
all of Nixpkgs) is distracting. (As requested by @roberth in
https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/9554#issuecomment-1845095735)
Please read the tests for example output.
Future work:
- It would be nice to provide this function as a builtin, perhaps
`builtins.toStringDebug` -- a printing function that never fails would
be useful when debugging Nix code.
- It would be nice to support customizing `PrintOptions` members on the
command line, e.g. `--option to-string-max-attrs 1000`.
(cherry picked from commit 0fa08b4516, )
===
Restore ambiguous value printer for `nix-instantiate`
The Nix team has requested that this output format remain unchanged.
I've added a warning to the man page explaining that `nix-instantiate
--eval` output will not parse correctly in many situations.
(cherry picked from commit df84dd4d8d)
Change-Id: I7cca6b4b53cd0642f2d49af657d5676a8554c9f8
(cherry picked from commit 561a56cd13)
===
Modified the release notes' synopsis to make it match its contents,
probably a copy-paste.
Co-authored-by: Raito Bezarius <raito@lix.systems>
Change-Id: I03bbff940b93e7df4b6c2fe9159c49a59ed47b55
Don't attempt to `git add` ignored files
(cherry picked from commit 359990dfdc)
===
also added a regression test that isn't upstream to be sure we're
actually fixing the bug.
Change-Id: I8267a3d0ece9909d8008b7435b90e7b3eee366f6
Restore `builtins.pathExists` behavior on broken symlinks
(cherry picked from commit d53c8901ef7f2033855dd99063522e3d56a19dab)
===
note that this variant differs markedly from the source commit because
we haven't endured quite as much lazy trees.
Change-Id: I0facf282f21fe0db4134be5c65a8368c1b3a06fc
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 113499d16f)
===
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
Docs build: depend on locally built nix executable and not installed one
(cherry picked from commit ca72e3e7e8)
===
includes changes from (because not doing so removes manpages):
Merge pull request #9976 from alois31/restore-manual-pages
Restore manual pages
(cherry picked from commit d3c1997127e0fc08576e842b2bfe046d8a28d2f4)
Change-Id: I685ff16163ac552a1754570c03c992c63a461d50
Add position information to `while evaluating the attribute` errors in the debugger
(cherry picked from commit ffe67c86a8ef3695e5c8b9c9800c192ac633dded)
Change-Id: I177ea5ec60898abe09fb9d80d9602b2a32ff8f44
Fix "Failed tcsetattr(TCSADRAIN)" when `nix repl` is not a TTY
(cherry picked from commit 864fc85fc88ff092725ba99907611b2b8d2205fb)
Change-Id: I8198674b935fabd741a349cc74544e61c53ea7b3
`nix`: Fix `haveInternet` to check for proxy
(cherry picked from commit accae60e7710a18f6f2bd7d2f4cd836bcd76b684)
Change-Id: I996dafdcd266f4bc5806386c86b19040120842bf
Say how many channels were unpacked in nix-channel
(cherry picked from commit 9ae665b9e1dc64c507ab6002fc5d7824208f3777)
Change-Id: Ie0950cf32123b550c5b83981a020e513f72a9b7c
When reviewing old PRs, I found that #9997 adds some code to ensure one
particular assert is always present. But, removing asserts isn't
something we do in our own release builds either in the flake here or in
nixpkgs, and is plainly a bad idea that increases support burden,
especially if other distros make bad choices of build flags in their Nix
packaging.
For context, the assert macro in the C standard is defined to do nothing
if NDEBUG is set.
There is no way in our build system to set -DNDEBUG without manually
adding it to CFLAGS, so this is simply a configuration we do not use.
Let's ban it at compile time.
I put this preprocessor directive in src/libutil.cc because it is not
obvious where else to put it, and it seems like the most logical file
since you are not getting a usable nix without it.
Upstream-PR: https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/10126
Original-Change-Id: I513cceaac1371decb3d96231e6ef9181c910c218
Change-Id: I531a51f6348a746e8e41d88203b08f614898356c
This allows templates such as `NLOHMANN_DEFINE_TYPE_*` templates and other generators with things like `std::vector<std::optional<T>>`.
Co-authored-by: John Ericson <John.Ericson@Obsidian.Systems>
(cherry picked from commit 02bd821f2e)
Change-Id: I8b0ebcf2af4226610dadd565962f2d2327415a03
* Fix boost::bad_format_string exception in builtins.addErrorContext
The message passed to addTrace was incorrectly being used as a format
string and this this would cause an exception when the string contained
a '%', which can be hit in places where arbitrary file paths are
interpolated.
* add test
(cherry picked from commit 61d6fe059e)
Change-Id: Idd671127a9c1ccc8b94e58e727632fcc064f3cbe
Thisfunctionisonlyavailableifthe[${experimental-feature}](@docroot@/contributing/experimental-features.md#xp-feature-${experimental-feature}) experimental feature is enabled.
Previously a `.drv` that was truncated in the middle of a string would case nix to enter an infinite loop, eventually exhausting all memory and crashing.
synopsis: Duplicate attribute reports are more accurate
cls: 557
---
Duplicate attribute errors are now more accurate, showing the path at which an error was detected rather than the full, possibly longer, path that caused the error.
Error reports are now
```ShellSession
$ nix eval --expr '{ a.b = 1; a.b.c.d = 1; }'
error: attribute 'a.b' already defined at «string»:1:3
at «string»:1:12:
1| { a.b = 1; a.b.c.d = 1;
| ^
```
instead of
```ShellSession
$ nix eval --expr '{ a.b = 1; a.b.c.d = 1; }'
error: attribute 'a.b.c.d' already defined at «string»:1:3
synopsis: fix duplicate attribute error positions for `inherit`
prs: 9874
---
When an inherit caused a duplicate attribute error the position of the error was not reported correctly, placing the error with the inherit itself or at the start of the bindings block instead of the offending attribute name.
synopsis: "`inherit (x) ...` evaluates `x` only once"
prs: 9847
---
`inherit (x) a b ...` now evaluates the expression `x` only once for all inherited attributes rather than once for each inherited attribute.
This does not usually have a measurable impact, but side-effects (such as `builtins.trace`) would be duplicated and expensive expressions (such as derivations) could cause a measurable slowdown.
synopsis: Experimental REPL support for documentation comments using `:doc`
cls: 564
---
Using `:doc` in the REPL now supports showing documentation comments when defined on a function.
Previously this was only able to document builtins, however it now will show comments defined on a lambda as well.
This support is experimental and relies on an embedded version of [nix-doc](https://github.com/lf-/nix-doc).
The logic also supports limited Markdown formatting of doccomments and should easily support any [RFC 145](https://github.com/NixOS/rfcs/blob/master/rfcs/0145-doc-strings.md)
compatible documentation comments in addition to simple commented documentation.
@ -17,7 +17,7 @@ By default Nix reads settings from the following places, in that order:
1. If [`NIX_USER_CONF_FILES`](./env-common.md#env-NIX_USER_CONF_FILES) is set, then each path separated by `:` will be loaded in reverse order.
Otherwise it will look for `nix/nix.conf` files in `XDG_CONFIG_DIRS` and [`XDG_CONFIG_HOME`](./env-common.md#env-XDG_CONFIG_HOME).
Otherwise it will look for `nix/nix.conf` files in `XDG_CONFIG_DIRS` and `XDG_CONFIG_HOME`.
If unset, `XDG_CONFIG_DIRS` defaults to `/etc/xdg`, and `XDG_CONFIG_HOME` defaults to `$HOME/.config` as per [XDG Base Directory Specification](https://specifications.freedesktop.org/basedir-spec/basedir-spec-latest.html).
1. If [`NIX_CONFIG`](./env-common.md#env-NIX_CONFIG) is set, its contents are treated as the contents of a configuration file.
@ -68,3 +68,4 @@ The `extra-` prefix is supported for settings that take a list of items (e.g. `-