It's in the security section, and it was totally outdated anyway.
I took the opportunity to write down the stuff we already believed.
Change-Id: I73e62ae85a82dad13ef846e31f377c3efce13cb0
22 KiB
R""(
Description
nix flake
provides subcommands for creating, modifying and querying
Nix flakes. Flakes are the unit for packaging Nix code in a
reproducible and discoverable way. They can have dependencies on other
flakes, making it possible to have multi-repository Nix projects.
A flake is a filesystem tree (typically fetched from a Git repository
or a tarball) that contains a file named flake.nix
in the root
directory. flake.nix
specifies some metadata about the flake such as
dependencies (called inputs), as well as its outputs (the Nix
values such as packages or NixOS modules provided by the flake).
Flake references
Flake references (flakerefs) are a way to specify the location of a flake. These have two different forms:
Attribute set representation
Example:
{
type = "github";
owner = "NixOS";
repo = "nixpkgs";
}
The only required attribute is type
. The supported types are
listed below.
URL-like syntax
Example:
github:NixOS/nixpkgs
These are used on the command line as a more convenient alternative to the attribute set representation. For instance, in the command
# nix build github:NixOS/nixpkgs#hello
github:NixOS/nixpkgs
is a flake reference (while hello
is an
output attribute). They are also allowed in the inputs
attribute
of a flake, e.g.
inputs.nixpkgs.url = "github:NixOS/nixpkgs";
is equivalent to
inputs.nixpkgs = {
type = "github";
owner = "NixOS";
repo = "nixpkgs";
};
Examples
Here are some examples of flake references in their URL-like representation:
nixpkgs
: Thenixpkgs
entry in the flake registry.nixpkgs/a3a3dda3bacf61e8a39258a0ed9c924eeca8e293
: Thenixpkgs
entry in the flake registry, with its Git revision overridden to a specific value.github:NixOS/nixpkgs
: Themaster
branch of theNixOS/nixpkgs
repository on GitHub.github:NixOS/nixpkgs/nixos-20.09
: Thenixos-20.09
branch of thenixpkgs
repository.github:NixOS/nixpkgs/a3a3dda3bacf61e8a39258a0ed9c924eeca8e293
: A specific revision of thenixpkgs
repository.github:edolstra/nix-warez?dir=blender
: A flake in a subdirectory of a GitHub repository.git+https://github.com/NixOS/patchelf
: A Git repository.git+https://github.com/NixOS/patchelf?ref=master
: A specific branch of a Git repository.git+https://github.com/NixOS/patchelf?ref=master&rev=f34751b88bd07d7f44f5cd3200fb4122bf916c7e
: A specific branch and revision of a Git repository.https://github.com/NixOS/patchelf/archive/master.tar.gz
: A tarball flake.
Path-like syntax
Flakes corresponding to a local path can also be referred to by a direct path reference, either /absolute/path/to/the/flake
or ./relative/path/to/the/flake
(note that the leading ./
is mandatory for relative paths to avoid any ambiguity).
The semantic of such a path is as follows:
- If the directory is part of a Git repository, then the input will be treated as a
git+file:
URL, otherwise it will be treated as apath:
url; - If the directory doesn't contain a
flake.nix
file, then Lix will search for such a file upwards in the file system hierarchy until it finds any of:- The Git repository root, or
- The filesystem root (/), or
- A folder on a different mount point.
Examples
.
: The flake to which the current directory belongs to./home/alice/src/patchelf
: A flake in some other directory.
Flake reference attributes
The following generic flake reference attributes are supported:
-
dir
: The subdirectory of the flake in whichflake.nix
is located. This parameter enables having multiple flakes in a repository or tarball. The default is the root directory of the flake. -
narHash
: The hash of the NAR serialisation (in SRI format) of the contents of the flake. This is useful for flake types such as tarballs that lack a unique content identifier such as a Git commit hash.
In addition, the following attributes are common to several flake reference types:
-
rev
: A Git or Mercurial commit hash. -
ref
: A Git or Mercurial branch or tag name.
Finally, some attribute are typically not specified by the user, but can occur in locked flake references and are available to Nix code:
-
revCount
: The number of ancestors of the commitrev
. -
lastModified
: The timestamp (in seconds since the Unix epoch) of the last modification of this version of the flake. For Git/Mercurial flakes, this is the commit time of commit rev, while for tarball flakes, it's the most recent timestamp of any file inside the tarball.
Types
Currently the type
attribute can be one of the following:
-
path
: arbitrary local directories, or local Git trees. The required attributepath
specifies the path of the flake. The URL form is[path:]<path>(\?<params)?
where path is an absolute path.
path must be a directory in the file system containing a file named
flake.nix
.path generally must be an absolute path. However, on the command line, it can be a relative path (e.g.
.
or./foo
) which is interpreted as relative to the current directory. In this case, it must start with.
to avoid ambiguity with registry lookups (e.g.nixpkgs
is a registry lookup;./nixpkgs
is a relative path). -
git
: Git repositories. The location of the repository is specified by the attributeurl
.They have the URL form
git(+http|+https|+ssh|+git|+file|):(//<server>)?<path>(\?<params>)?
The
ref
attribute defaults to resolving theHEAD
reference.The
rev
attribute must denote a commit that exists in the branch or tag specified by theref
attribute, since Lix doesn't do a full clone of the remote repository by default (and the Git protocol doesn't allow fetching arev
without a knownref
). The default is the commit currently pointed to byref
.When
git+file
is used without specifyingref
orrev
, files are fetched directly from the localpath
as long as they have been added to the Git repository. If there are uncommitted changes, the reference is treated as dirty and a warning is printed.For example, the following are valid Git flake references:
git+https://example.org/my/repo
git+https://example.org/my/repo?dir=flake1
git+ssh://git@github.com/NixOS/nix?ref=v1.2.3
git://github.com/edolstra/dwarffs?ref=unstable&rev=e486d8d40e626a20e06d792db8cc5ac5aba9a5b4
git+file:///home/my-user/some-repo/some-repo
-
mercurial
: Mercurial repositories. The URL form is similar to thegit
type, except that the URL schema must be one ofhg+http
,hg+https
,hg+ssh
orhg+file
. -
tarball
: Tarballs. The location of the tarball is specified by the attributeurl
.In URL form, the schema must be
tarball+http://
,tarball+https://
ortarball+file://
. If the extension corresponds to a known archive format (.zip
,.tar
,.tgz
,.tar.gz
,.tar.xz
,.tar.bz2
or.tar.zst
), then thetarball+
can be dropped. -
file
: Plain files or directory tarballs, either over http(s) or from the local disk.In URL form, the schema must be
file+http://
,file+https://
orfile+file://
. If the extension doesn’t correspond to a known archive format (as defined by thetarball
fetcher), then thefile+
prefix can be dropped. -
github
: A more efficient way to fetch repositories from GitHub. The following attributes are required:-
owner
: The owner of the repository. -
repo
: The name of the repository.
These are downloaded as tarball archives, rather than through Git. This is often much faster and uses less disk space since it doesn't require fetching the entire history of the repository. On the other hand, it doesn't allow incremental fetching (but full downloads are often faster than incremental fetches!).
The URL syntax for
github
flakes is:github:<owner>/<repo>(/<rev-or-ref>)?(\?<params>)?
<rev-or-ref>
specifies the name of a branch or tag (ref
), or a commit hash (rev
). Note that unlike Git, GitHub allows fetching by commit hash without specifying a branch or tag.You can also specify
host
as a parameter, to point to a custom GitHub Enterprise server.Some examples:
github:edolstra/dwarffs
github:edolstra/dwarffs/unstable
github:edolstra/dwarffs/d3f2baba8f425779026c6ec04021b2e927f61e31
github:internal/project?host=company-github.example.org
-
-
gitlab
: Similar togithub
, is a more efficient way to fetch GitLab repositories. The following attributes are required:-
owner
: The owner of the repository. -
repo
: The name of the repository.
Like
github
, these are downloaded as tarball archives.The URL syntax for
gitlab
flakes is:gitlab:<owner>/<repo>(/<rev-or-ref>)?(\?<params>)?
<rev-or-ref>
works the same asgithub
. Either a branch or tag name (ref
), or a commit hash (rev
) can be specified.Since GitLab allows for self-hosting, you can specify
host
as a parameter, to point to any instances other thangitlab.com
.Some examples:
gitlab:veloren/veloren
gitlab:veloren/veloren/master
gitlab:veloren/veloren/80a4d7f13492d916e47d6195be23acae8001985a
gitlab:openldap/openldap?host=git.openldap.org
When accessing a project in a (nested) subgroup, make sure to URL-encode any slashes, i.e. replace
/
with%2F
:gitlab:veloren%2Fdev/rfcs
-
-
sourcehut
: Similar togithub
, is a more efficient way to fetch SourceHut repositories. The following attributes are required:-
owner
: The owner of the repository (including leading~
). -
repo
: The name of the repository.
Like
github
, these are downloaded as tarball archives.The URL syntax for
sourcehut
flakes is:sourcehut:<owner>/<repo>(/<rev-or-ref>)?(\?<params>)?
<rev-or-ref>
works the same asgithub
. Either a branch or tag name (ref
), or a commit hash (rev
) can be specified.Since SourceHut allows for self-hosting, you can specify
host
as a parameter, to point to any instances other thangit.sr.ht
.Currently,
ref
name resolution only works for Git repositories. You can refer to Mercurial repositories by simply changinghost
tohg.sr.ht
(or any other Mercurial instance). With the caveat that you must explicitly specify a commit hash (rev
).Some examples:
sourcehut:~misterio/nix-colors
sourcehut:~misterio/nix-colors/main
sourcehut:~misterio/nix-colors?host=git.example.org
sourcehut:~misterio/nix-colors/182b4b8709b8ffe4e9774a4c5d6877bf6bb9a21c
sourcehut:~misterio/nix-colors/21c1a380a6915d890d408e9f22203436a35bb2de?host=hg.sr.ht
-
-
indirect
: Indirections through the flake registry. These have the form[flake:]<flake-id>(/<rev-or-ref>(/rev)?)?
These perform a lookup of
<flake-id>
in the flake registry. For example,nixpkgs
andnixpkgs/release-20.09
are indirect flake references. The specifiedrev
and/orref
are merged with the entry in the registry; see nix registry for details.
Flake format
As an example, here is a simple flake.nix
that depends on the
Nixpkgs flake and provides a single package (i.e. an
installable derivation):
{
description = "A flake for building Hello World";
inputs.nixpkgs.url = "github:NixOS/nixpkgs/nixos-20.03";
outputs = { self, nixpkgs }: {
packages.x86_64-linux.default =
# Notice the reference to nixpkgs here.
with import nixpkgs { system = "x86_64-linux"; };
stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "hello";
src = self;
buildPhase = "gcc -o hello ./hello.c";
installPhase = "mkdir -p $out/bin; install -t $out/bin hello";
};
};
}
The following attributes are supported in flake.nix
:
-
description
: A short, one-line description of the flake. -
inputs
: An attrset specifying the dependencies of the flake (described below). -
outputs
: A function that, given an attribute set containing the outputs of each of the input flakes keyed by their identifier, yields the Nix values provided by this flake. Thus, in the example above,inputs.nixpkgs
contains the result of the call to theoutputs
function of thenixpkgs
flake.In addition to the outputs of each input, each input in
inputs
also contains some metadata about the inputs. These are:-
outPath
: The path in the Nix store of the flake's source tree. This way, the attribute set can be passed toimport
as if it was a path, as in the example above (import nixpkgs
). -
rev
: The commit hash of the flake's repository, if applicable. -
revCount
: The number of ancestors of the revisionrev
. This is not available forgithub
repositories, since they're fetched as tarballs rather than as Git repositories. -
lastModifiedDate
: The commit time of the revisionrev
, in the format%Y%m%d%H%M%S
(e.g.20181231100934
). UnlikerevCount
, this is available for both Git and GitHub repositories, so it's useful for generating (hopefully) monotonically increasing version strings. -
lastModified
: The commit time of the revisionrev
as an integer denoting the number of seconds since 1970. -
narHash
: The SHA-256 (in SRI format) of the NAR serialization of the flake's source tree.
The value returned by the
outputs
function must be an attribute set. The attributes can have arbitrary values; however, variousnix
subcommands require specific attributes to have a specific value (e.g.packages.x86_64-linux
must be an attribute set of derivations built for thex86_64-linux
platform). -
-
nixConfig
: a set ofnix.conf
options to be set when evaluating any part of a flake. This attribute is only considered if the flake is at top-level (i.e. if it is passed directly tonix build
,nix run
, etc, rather than as an input of another flake). In the interests of security, only a small set of set of options is allowed to be set without confirmation so long asaccept-flake-config
is not enabled in the global configuration:For the avoidance of doubt, setting
accept-flake-config
innix.conf
or passing--accept-flake-config
allows root access to your machine if you are running as a trusted user and don't readnixConfig
in every flake you build.
Flake inputs
The attribute inputs
specifies the dependencies of a flake, as an
attrset mapping input names to flake references. For example, the
following specifies a dependency on the nixpkgs
and import-cargo
repositories:
# A GitHub repository.
inputs.import-cargo = {
type = "github";
owner = "edolstra";
repo = "import-cargo";
};
# An indirection through the flake registry.
inputs.nixpkgs = {
type = "indirect";
id = "nixpkgs";
};
Alternatively, you can use the URL-like syntax:
inputs.import-cargo.url = "github:edolstra/import-cargo";
inputs.nixpkgs.url = "nixpkgs";
Each input is fetched, evaluated and passed to the outputs
function
as a set of attributes with the same name as the corresponding
input. The special input named self
refers to the outputs and source
tree of this flake. Thus, a typical outputs
function looks like
this:
outputs = { self, nixpkgs, import-cargo }: {
... outputs ...
};
It is also possible to omit an input entirely and only list it as
expected function argument to outputs
. Thus,
outputs = { self, nixpkgs }: ...;
without an inputs.nixpkgs
attribute is equivalent to
inputs.nixpkgs = {
type = "indirect";
id = "nixpkgs";
};
Repositories that don't contain a flake.nix
can also be used as
inputs, by setting the input's flake
attribute to false
:
inputs.grcov = {
type = "github";
owner = "mozilla";
repo = "grcov";
flake = false;
};
outputs = { self, nixpkgs, grcov }: {
packages.x86_64-linux.grcov = stdenv.mkDerivation {
src = grcov;
...
};
};
Transitive inputs can be overridden from a flake.nix
file. For
example, the following overrides the nixpkgs
input of the nixops
input:
inputs.nixops.inputs.nixpkgs = {
type = "github";
owner = "my-org";
repo = "nixpkgs";
};
It is also possible to "inherit" an input from another input. This is
useful to minimize flake dependencies. For example, the following sets
the nixpkgs
input of the top-level flake to be equal to the
nixpkgs
input of the dwarffs
input of the top-level flake:
inputs.nixpkgs.follows = "dwarffs/nixpkgs";
The value of the follows
attribute is a /
-separated sequence of
input names denoting the path of inputs to be followed from the root
flake.
Overrides and follows
can be combined, e.g.
inputs.nixops.inputs.nixpkgs.follows = "dwarffs/nixpkgs";
sets the nixpkgs
input of nixops
to be the same as the nixpkgs
input of dwarffs
. It is worth noting, however, that it is generally
not useful to eliminate transitive nixpkgs
flake inputs in this
way. Most flakes provide their functionality through Nixpkgs overlays
or NixOS modules, which are composed into the top-level flake's
nixpkgs
input; so their own nixpkgs
input is usually irrelevant.
Lock files
Inputs specified in flake.nix
are typically "unlocked" in the sense
that they don't specify an exact revision. To ensure reproducibility,
Nix will automatically generate and use a lock file called
flake.lock
in the flake's directory. The lock file contains a graph
structure isomorphic to the graph of dependencies of the root
flake. Each node in the graph (except the root node) maps the
(usually) unlocked input specifications in flake.nix
to locked input
specifications. Each node also contains some metadata, such as the
dependencies (outgoing edges) of the node.
For example, if flake.nix
has the inputs in the example above, then
the resulting lock file might be:
{
"version": 7,
"root": "n1",
"nodes": {
"n1": {
"inputs": {
"nixpkgs": "n2",
"import-cargo": "n3",
"grcov": "n4"
}
},
"n2": {
"inputs": {},
"locked": {
"owner": "edolstra",
"repo": "nixpkgs",
"rev": "7f8d4b088e2df7fdb6b513bc2d6941f1d422a013",
"type": "github",
"lastModified": 1580555482,
"narHash": "sha256-OnpEWzNxF/AU4KlqBXM2s5PWvfI5/BS6xQrPvkF5tO8="
},
"original": {
"id": "nixpkgs",
"type": "indirect"
}
},
"n3": {
"inputs": {},
"locked": {
"owner": "edolstra",
"repo": "import-cargo",
"rev": "8abf7b3a8cbe1c8a885391f826357a74d382a422",
"type": "github",
"lastModified": 1567183309,
"narHash": "sha256-wIXWOpX9rRjK5NDsL6WzuuBJl2R0kUCnlpZUrASykSc="
},
"original": {
"owner": "edolstra",
"repo": "import-cargo",
"type": "github"
}
},
"n4": {
"inputs": {},
"locked": {
"owner": "mozilla",
"repo": "grcov",
"rev": "989a84bb29e95e392589c4e73c29189fd69a1d4e",
"type": "github",
"lastModified": 1580729070,
"narHash": "sha256-235uMxYlHxJ5y92EXZWAYEsEb6mm+b069GAd+BOIOxI="
},
"original": {
"owner": "mozilla",
"repo": "grcov",
"type": "github"
},
"flake": false
}
}
}
This graph has 4 nodes: the root flake, and its 3 dependencies. The
nodes have arbitrary labels (e.g. n1
). The label of the root node of
the graph is specified by the root
attribute. Nodes contain the
following fields:
-
inputs
: The dependencies of this node, as a mapping from input names (e.g.nixpkgs
) to node labels (e.g.n2
). -
original
: The original input specification fromflake.lock
, as a set ofbuiltins.fetchTree
arguments. -
locked
: The locked input specification, as a set ofbuiltins.fetchTree
arguments. Thus, in the example above, when we build this flake, the inputnixpkgs
is mapped to revision7f8d4b088e2df7fdb6b513bc2d6941f1d422a013
of theedolstra/nixpkgs
repository on GitHub.It also includes the attribute
narHash
, specifying the expected contents of the tree in the Nix store (as computed bynix hash-path
), and may include input-type-specific attributes such as thelastModified
orrevCount
. The main reason for these attributes is to allow flake inputs to be substituted from a binary cache:narHash
allows the store path to be computed, while the other attributes are necessary because they provide information not stored in the store path. -
flake
: A Boolean denoting whether this is a flake or non-flake dependency. Corresponds to theflake
attribute in theinputs
attribute inflake.nix
.
The original
and locked
attributes are omitted for the root
node. This is because we cannot record the commit hash or content hash
of the root flake, since modifying flake.lock
will invalidate these.
The graph representation of lock files allows circular dependencies between flakes. For example, here are two flakes that reference each other:
{
inputs.b = ... location of flake B ...;
# Tell the 'b' flake not to fetch 'a' again, to ensure its 'a' is
# *this* 'a'.
inputs.b.inputs.a.follows = "";
outputs = { self, b }: {
foo = 123 + b.bar;
xyzzy = 1000;
};
}
and
{
inputs.a = ... location of flake A ...;
inputs.a.inputs.b.follows = "";
outputs = { self, a }: {
bar = 456 + a.xyzzy;
};
}
Lock files transitively lock direct as well as indirect dependencies. That is, if a lock file exists and is up to date, Nix will not look at the lock files of dependencies. However, lock file generation itself does use the lock files of dependencies by default.
)""