I started getting these warnings `warning: download buffer is full; consider increasing the 'download-buffer-size' setting` but the documentation does not make it obvious what unit of measurement it accepts.
1. Fix this eval error:
https://hydra.nixos.org/jobset/nix/master#tabs-errors
The dev package output (actually a separate derivation) needs to skip
this for cross just as the main package output does.
2. Deduplicate libs attrset and list.
3. Move `nix-functional-tests` to `checkInputs`.
With the Meson build system, we no longer need a `check` vs
`install-check` distinction, so it is simpler to just keeep
everything in one place.
This label will be useful for constructing queries to find backportable PRs.
Specifically, those should omit both automatic backports and
"backports reviewed" PRs.
This allows RemoteStore::addMultipleToStore() to free the Source
objects early (and in particular the associated sinkToSource()
buffers). This should fix#7359. For example, memory consumption of
nix copy --derivation --to ssh-ng://localhost?remote-store=/tmp/nix --derivation --no-check-sigs \
/nix/store/4p9xmfgnvclqpii8pxqcwcvl9bxqy2xf-nixos-system-...drv
went from 353 MB to 74 MB.
Fixes
$ nix copy --derivation --to /tmp/nix /nix/store/...
error: cannot enqueue a work item while the thread pool is shutting down
The ThreadPoolShutDown exception was hiding the reason for the thread
pool shut down, e.g.
error: cannot add path '/nix/store/03sl46khd8gmjpsad7223m32ma965vy9-fix-static.patch' because it lacks a signature by a trusted key
nix-env can read priorities from a derivations meta attributes, but this
only works when installing a nix expression.
nix-env can also install bare store paths, however meta attributes are
not readable in that case. This means that a store path can not be
installed with a specific priority.
Some cases where it is advantageous to install a store path: a remote
host following a `nix copy`, or any time you want to save some
evaluation time and happen to already know the store path.
This PR addresses this shortcoming by adding a --priority flag to
nix-env --install.
Since ff8e2fe84e, 'path:' URLs on the
CLI are interpreted as relative to the current directory of the user,
not the path of the flake we're overriding.
During garbage collection we cache several things -- a set of known-dead
paths, a set of known-alive paths, and a map of paths to their derivers.
Currently they use STL maps and sets, which are ordered structures that
typically are backed by binary trees. Since we are putting pseudorandom
paths into these and looking them up by exact key, we don't need the
ordering, and we're paying a nontrivial cost per insertion.
The existing maps require O(n log n) memory and have O(log n) insertion
and lookup time.
We could instead use unordered maps, which are typically backed by
hashmaps. These require O(n) memory and have O(1) insertion and lookup
time.
On my system this appears to result in a dramatic speedup -- prior to
this patch I was able to delete 400k paths out of 9.5 million over the
course of 34.5 hours. After this patch the same result took 89 minutes.
This result should NOT be taken at face value because the two runs
aren't really comparable; in particular the first started when I had 9.5
million store paths and the seconcd started with 7.8 million, so we are
deleting a different set of paths starting from a much cleaner
filesystem. But I do think it's indicative.
Related: https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/9581
This fixes segfaults with nix copy when there was an error processing
addMultipleToStore.
Running with ASAN/TSAN pointed at an use-after-free with threads from
the pool accessing the graph declared in processGraph after the function
was exiting and destructing the variables.
It turns out that if there is an error before pool.process() is called,
for example while we are still enqueuing tasks, then pool.process()
isn't called and threads are still left to run.
By creating the pool last we ensure that it is stopped first before
running other destructors even if an exception happens early.
[ lix porting note: nix does not name threads so the patch has been
adapted to not pass thread name ]
Link: https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/issues/618
Link: https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/2355
This allows writing lock files with dirty inputs, so long as they have
a NAR hash. (Currently they always have a NAR hash, but with lazy
trees that may not always be the case.)
Generally dirty locks are bad for reproducibility (we can detect if
the dirty input has changed, but we have no way to fetch it except
substitution). Hence we don't allow them by default.
Fixes#11181.
Commands like `nix flake metadata '.?submodules=1'` ignored the query
part of the URL, while `nix build '.?submodules=1#foo'` did work
correctly because of the presence of the fragment part.
The current instructions for building the Nix manual include a command that doesn't work as described. Specifically:
```
nix build .#nix^doc
```
Running this command results in the error:
```
error: derivation '/nix/store/hddqxzfqgx2fhj8q66ss3idym7pk7aj1-nix-2.26.0pre20250107_383ab87.drv' does not have wanted outputs 'doc'
```
However, this command works if you specify the Nix version explicitly, such as:
```
nix build nix/2.24.11#nix^doc
```
Additionally, these commands are run within the Nix root directory.
However, the nix build .#nix^doc command does work when run from the nixpkgs directory and generates the NixOS manual.
I'm not sure if I'm missing something. Is the `nix^doc` supposed to be added somehow to flake outputs?
The incremental build section does not work since as make has been decommissioned in favor of Meson. Should this be simply deleted?
I'd messed up a rebase in my previous iteration, causing `weakly_canonical` to reappear,
but not trigger a test failure.
These two functions behave similarly when the argument is a path that points to a broken
symlink. `weakly_canonical` would not resolve it because the target doesn't exist, and
`makeParentCanonical` would not resolve it, because it never resolves the final path
element.
This new test case now also tests a valid symlink, "differentiating" the two.
The experimental `nix eval` command already supports a `--raw` flag.
This commit implements the same flag for the stable nix-instantiate command.
Until now instructions and scripts that didn't want to rely on experimental
features had to use workarounds such as:
nix-instantiate --eval <something> | tr -d \"
(which also undesirably also removes double quotation marks within the string), or
nix-instantiate --eval <something> | jq -j
(which undesirably depends on another package).
Co-authored-by: Silvan Mosberger <silvan.mosberger@tweag.io>
Upstream change
bab1d75079
moved a few fields from `lowdown_opts` toa new `lowdown_opts_term`
struct. As a result the build started failing as:
nix-cmd> [2/17] Compiling C++ object libnixcmd.so.p/markdown.cc.o
nix-cmd> FAILED: libnixcmd.so.p/markdown.cc.o
nix-cmd> g++ -Ilibnixcmd.so.p -I. -I.. -I/nix/store/b0bnrk5lacxbpgxgnc28r8q3wcazrgxj-nix-util-2.26.0pre-dev/include/nix -I/nix/store/cxnynq9ykyj4xxv6wf6dw7r0aw5x6n9k-libarchive-3.7.7-dev/include -I/nix/store/bfgjwkcb8snkizx578rzdahi75m8zyh4-nlohmann_json-3.11.3/include -I/nix/store/3sx8bq3sip6j2nv1m5xx4gbdp33v7iy6-nix-store-2.26.0pre-dev/include/nix -I/nix/store/sih2dgqzvsbv7p510lkfmas7s7wbsl4j-nix-fetchers-2.26.0pre-dev/include/nix -I/nix/store/68p8s20fsiiakj7nys7grbaixfnhsdzs-nix-expr-2.26.0pre-dev/include/nix -I/nix/store/gw7wknhzhfzzj9zww2kyi5xrzgf1ndki-boehm-gc-8.2.8-dev/include -I/nix/store/3jwb9j4vnsk5saq3wfyyp9il3mhs41l9-nix-flake-2.26.0pre-dev/include/nix -I/nix/store/8nwjvmq7m48v8g646jrxkikv6x47bc3m-nix-main-2.26.0pre-dev/include/nix -I/nix/store/rb0hzsw5wc1a7daizhpj824mbxlvijrq-lowdown-1.4.0-dev/include -I/nix/store/m388ywpk53fsp8r98brfd7nf1f5sskv0-editline-1.17.1-dev/include -fdiagnostics-color=always -D_GLIBCXX_ASSERTIONS=1 -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 -Wall -Winvalid-pch -std=c++2a -include config-util.hh -include config-store.hh -include config-expr.hh -include config-main.hh -include config-cmd.hh -Wdeprecated-copy -Werror=suggest-override -Werror=switch -Werror=switch-enum -Werror=unused-result -Wignored-qualifiers -Wimplicit-fallthrough -Wno-deprecated-declarations -O3 -fPIC -pthread -std=c++2a -std=c++2a -std=c++2a -std=c++2a -std=c++2a -std=c++2a -MD -MQ libnixcmd.so.p/markdown.cc.o -MF libnixcmd.so.p/markdown.cc.o.d -o libnixcmd.so.p/markdown.cc.o -c ../markdown.cc
nix-cmd> ../markdown.cc: In function 'std::string nix::doRenderMarkdownToTerminal(std::string_view)':
nix-cmd> ../markdown.cc:28:5: error: 'lowdown_opts' has no non-static data member named 'cols'
nix-cmd> 28 | };
nix-cmd> | ^
The change adds version-based conditional to support both pre-1.4 and
1.4 forms of the initialization.
Closes: https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/12113
The primitive `readFileType p` has a list of acceptable types, and so does `readDir path`
This edit makes the formatting of the list consistent between themselves, and other parts of the documentation.
Paths are already quoted:
error:
… while fetching the input 'path:/nix/store/rs2s2ca7xs87v82aps54m1p3sqrfz6c8-source'
error: chmod '"/nix/store/rs2s2ca7xs87v82aps54m1p3sqrfz6c8-source"': Read-only file system
src/nix/flake.md describes the format of flake.lock files. Before this
change, it said that the original field was “The original input
specification from `flake.lock`[…]” The original input specification is
in flake.nix, not flake.lock.
When resolving indirect flake references like `nixpkgs` in `flake.nix`
files, Nix will no longer use the system and user flake registries. It
will only use the global flake registry and overrides given on the
command line via `--override-flake`.
Just now there is a dependency on cachix, which means we cannot test
the installer in CI if forks do not have the necessary secrets set up.
We replace this with a simple http server that serves the installer and
can be both used in CI and locally.
Commit cfe66dbec updated `nix upgrade-nix` to use
`ExecutablePath::load().find`, which broke the logic for finding the
profile associated with the nix executable. The error looks something
like:
```
$ sudo -i nix upgrade-nix --debug
found Nix in '"/nix/store/46p1z0w9ad605kky62dr53z4h24k2a5r-nix-2.25.2/bin/nix"'
found profile '/nix/store/46p1z0w9ad605kky62dr53z4h24k2a5r-nix-2.25.2/bin'
error: directory '"/nix/store/46p1z0w9ad605kky62dr53z4h24k2a5r-nix-2.25.2/bin/nix"' does not appear to be part of a Nix profile
```
This seems to happen for two reasons:
1. The original PATH search resulted in a directory, but `find` returns
the path to the executable. Fixed by getting the path's parent.
2. The profile symlink cannot be found because
`ExecutablePath::load().find` canonicalizes the executable path. I
updated find to normalize the path instead, which seems more in line
with how other programs resolve paths. I'm not sure if this affects
other callers though.
I manually tested this on macOS and Linux, and it seemed to fix
upgrading from 2.25.2 to 2.25.3.
- This speeds up macOS builds from 30 minutes to 11 minutes (3x faster).
- Also improve error reporting e.g. printing out what actually failed to build.
- As a result we also no longer need swap.
As far as I can tell, there's no real reason either of these need to
be 664. I'm willing to bet they were just a typo that has lasted for
7 years. While this shouldn't change anything, this is, IMHO, more
correct, so let's stop perpetuating the wrong mode!
We're not testing against these versions anymore.
If we bring that back (I would support that), we could do so in a clean
way, by making sure that the packaging we test against has a proper version
attribute.
Fix a footgun. In my case, I had a couple of build ("output")
directories sitting around.
rm -rf build-*
Was confused for a bit why a meson.build file was missing.
Probably also helps with autocompletion.
I tried meson-build-support first, but I had to add something like
a nix- prefix, in order to make meson happy. They've reserved the
meson- prefix.
I think I have failed to read the very long version-garbage-like
string for the second time now, leaving me oblivious to the crucial
info that a test failure happens in the context of an older daemon.
Before this change, expressions like:
with import <nixpkgs> {};
runCommand "foo" {} ''
echo '@nix {}' >&$NIX_LOG_FD
''
would result in Lix crashing, because accessing nonexistent fields of
a JSON object throws an exception.
Rather than handling each field individually, we just catch JSON
exceptions wholesale. Since these log messages are an unusual
circumstance, log a warning when this happens.
Fixes#544.
Change-Id: Idc2d8acf6e37046b3ec212f42e29269163dca893
(cherry picked from commit e55cd3beea710db727fd966f265a1b715b7285f3)
The Determinate Nix Installer has set nosuid and noatime in https://github.com/DeterminateSystems/nix-installer/pull/1338, and figured this perf and security improvement is worthy of upstreaming.
The /nix volume shouldn't have setuid binaries anyway, and filesystems seem to generally be noatime on macOS.
Further, the garbage collector doesn't use atime.
Instead of the unhelpful
warning: 'https://cache.flakehub.com' does not appear to be a binary cache
you now get
warning: unable to download 'https://cache.flakehub.com/nix-cache-info': HTTP error 401
response body:
{"code":401,"error":"Unauthorized","message":"Unauthorized."}
We *could* use a "native" manual instead - ie reusing a native
`nixpkgsFor.${buildPlatform}`, but this works, and also
works for possible cases where we have a custom or patched build tool.
Without the change `meson setup` fails on `Gentoo or Debian as those
don't use multicall binary:
$ meson setup ..
...
Executing subproject nix-functional-tests
...
../src/nix-functional-tests/meson.build:24:14: ERROR: Program 'coreutils' not found or not executable
The change always uses `ls` to look `coreutils` up.
Closes: https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/11975
Upstream `bzip2` does not provide `pkg-config` files. As a result an
attempt to build `nix` on some distributions like Gentoo failos the
configure as:
$ meson setup ..
...
Executing subproject perl
...
perl| Run-time dependency bzip2 found: NO (tried pkgconfig and cmake)
../src/perl/meson.build:68:12: ERROR: Dependency "bzip2" not found, tried pkgconfig and cmake
The change falls back to `bz2` library for such cases.
This prevents any potential cases of deletion through base pointer and its
non-virtual dtor, which might leak memory. Also gets rid of the warning:
/nix/store/fg7ass3a5m5pgl26qzfdniicbwbgzccy-gcc-13.2.0/include/c++/13.2.0/bits/stl_construct.h:88:2: warning: destructor called on non-final 'nix::flake::Settings' that has virtual functions but non-virtual destructor [-Wdelete-non-abstract-non-virtual-dtor]
88 | __location->~_Tp();
....
../src/libflake-c/nix_api_flake.cc:10:30: note: in instantiation of function template specialization 'nix::make_ref<nix::flake::Settings>' requested here
10 | auto settings = nix::make_ref<nix::flake::Settings>();
This gets rid of unnecessary copies in range-based-for loops and
local variables, when they are used solely as `const &`.
Also added a fixme comment about a suspicious move out of const,
which might not be intended.
This shuts up a 300-line warning that includes
/nix/store/fg7ass3a5m5pgl26qzfdniicbwbgzccy-gcc-13.2.0/include/c++/13.2.0/bits/stl_tree.h:182:25: warning: ‘*(std::_Rb_tree_header*)((char*)&<unnamed> + offsetof(nix::value_type, nix::DerivedPath::<unnamed>.std::variant<nix::DerivedPathOpaque, nix::DerivedPathBuilt>::<unnamed>.std::__detail::__variant::_Variant_base<nix::DerivedPathOpaque, nix::DerivedPathBuilt>::<unnamed>.std::__detail::__variant::_Move_assign_base<false, nix::DerivedPathOpaque, nix::DerivedPathBuilt>::<unnamed>.std::__detail::__variant::_Copy_assign_base<false, nix::DerivedPathOpaque, nix::DerivedPathBuilt>::<unnamed>.std::__detail::__variant::_Move_ctor_base<false, nix::DerivedPathOpaque, nix::DerivedPathBuilt>::<unnamed>.std::__detail::__variant::_Copy_ctor_base<false, nix::DerivedPathOpaque, nix::DerivedPathBuilt>::<unnamed>.std::__detail::__variant::_Variant_storage<false, nix::DerivedPathOpaque, nix::DerivedPathBuilt>::_M_u) + 24).std::_Rb_tree_header::_M_header.std::_Rb_tree_node_base::_M_parent’ may be used uninitialized [-Wmaybe-uninitialized]
182 | if (__x._M_header._M_parent != nullptr)
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~
Since lib{expr,store,util}-test-support subprojects define nix_api_* helpers
for testing nix c bindings, they need to publicly depend on -c counterparts.
This makes their headers self-sufficient and does not rely on the -tests to add
necessary dependencies.
Get rid of this fixme. This does not appear to be used anywhere in
the nix codebase itself. Not sure why the comment mentioned C++20 erase
member function with predicate, but iterator-based algorithms are also fine.
Looks like some cruft has been left over from previous refactorings.
This removes dead variables, which should not have side effects in their
constructors. In cases where the variable initialization has a purpose
[[maybe_unused]] is inserted to silence compiler warnings.
* doc: Clarify that nix-shell still uses shell from host environment
* doc: Fix NIX_BUILD_SHELL description
* doc: Add anchor and link to NIX_BUILD_SHELL
* doc: Add example of default shell trickiness
Co-authored-by: Valentin Gagarin <valentin@gagarin.work>
This reduces the amount of boilerplate. More importantly, it provides
a place to add compiler flags (such as -O3) without having to add it
to every subproject (and the risk of forgetting to include it).
Fixes
nix: ../src/libexpr/primops/fetchTree.cc:37: void nix::emitTreeAttrs(EvalState&, const StorePath&, const fetchers::Input&, Value&, bool, bool): Assertion `narHash' failed.
on a lock file with an input that doesn't have a narHash. This can
happen when using a lock file created by the lazy-trees branch.
Cherry-picked from lazy-trees.
When diagnosing infinite recursion references to nullptr `Env` can be formed.
This happens only with `ExprBlackHole` is evaluated, which always leads to
`InfiniteRecursionError`.
UBSAN log for one such case:
```
../src/libexpr/eval-inline.hh:94:31: runtime error: reference binding to null pointer of type 'Env'
SUMMARY: UndefinedBehaviorSanitizer: undefined-behavior ../src/libexpr/eval-inline.hh:94:31 in
```
First the motivation: I recently faced a bug that I assume is coming
from the topoSortPaths function where the GC was trying to delete a
path having some alive referrers. I resolved this by manually deleting
the faulty path referrers using nix-store --query --referrers. I sadly
did not manage to reproduce this bug.
This bug alone is not a big deal. However, this bug is
triggering a cascading failure: invalidatePathChecked is throwing a
PathInUse exception. This exception is not catched and fails the whole GC
run. From there, the machine (a builder machine) was unable to GC its
Nix store, which led to an almost full disk with no way to
automatically delete the dead Nix paths.
Instead, I think we should log the error for the specific store path
we're trying to delete, specifying we can't delete this path because
it still has referrers. Once we're done with logging that, the GC run
should continue to delete the dead store paths it can delete.
This is the first part of rewriteDerivation() factored out into its
own method. It's not used anywhere else at the moment, but it's useful
on lazy-trees for rewriting virtual paths.
It's not so common knowledge that forges also expose pull requests as
git refs. But it's actually a cool way of quickly testing someones
contribution, so I found it worth specifically mentioning it.
It seems that I copied the expression for baseDir thoughtlessly and
did not come back to it.
- `baseDir` was only used in the `fromArgs` branch.
- `fromArgs` is true when `packages` is true.
This interferes with the progress bar, resulting in output like
evaluating derivation 'git+file:///home/eelco/Dev/nix-master#packages.x86_64-linux.default'/nix/store/zz8v96j5md952x0mxfix12xqnvq5qv5x-nix-2.26.0pre20241114_a95f6ea.drv
This patch gets rid of UB when verbosity exceeds the maximum logging value of `lvlVomit = 7` and
reaches invalid values (e.g. 8). This is actually triggered in functional tests.
There are too many occurrences to list, but here's one from the UBSAN log:
../src/libstore/gc.cc:610:5: runtime error: load of value 8, which is not a valid value for type 'Verbosity'
This was first tagged as 2.15.0, 1½ years ago; plenty of time for
everyone to catch up.
By now, the warning is causing more confusion than that it is helpful,
because passing a `.drv` or `drvPath` has legitimate use cases.
The API docs build is extremely noisy (#11841) and probably not many
people care about it anyway. Also, they get rebuild on *every* ninja
invocation which is generally a waste of time.
Of course, you can still build the docs via `nix build
.#nix-{internal,external}-api-docs`, which is pretty fast.
The new package output attributes are somewhat experimental, and
provided for compatibility most of all.
We'll see how well this goes before the changes proposed in
https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/6507
Add options uid, gid, uname, and gname to docker.nix.
Setting these to e.g. 1000, 1000, "user", "user" will build an image
which runs and allows using Nix as that user.
In these trivial cases the final vector size (or lower bound on the size) is known,
so we can avoid some vector reallocations. This is not very important, but is just
good practice and general hygiene.
This is good practice to avoid pessimisations.
Left comments for the reasoning why ctors should be noexcept.
There are some tricky cases where we intentionally want throwing move ctors/assignments.
But those cases should really be reviewed, since some of those can be replaced
with more idiomatic copy/move-and-swap.
`auto &&` and `T &&` are forwarding references and can be
either lvalue or rvalue references. Moving from universal references
is incorrect and should not be done.
Moving from integral or floating-point values is pointless and just
worsens debug performance.
Naming class member variables the same as constructor arguments is a very
slippery slope because of how member variable names get resolved. Compiler
is not very helpful here and we need static analysis to forbid this kind of
stuff.
The following example illustrates the cause quite well:
```cpp
struct B {
B(int) {}
};
struct A {
A(int b): b([&](){
return b;
static_assert(std::is_same_v<decltype(b), int>);
}()) {
static_assert(std::is_same_v<decltype(b), int>);
}
void member() {
static_assert(std::is_same_v<decltype(b), B>);
}
B b;
};
int main() {
A(1).member();
}
```
From N4861 6.5.1 Unqualified name lookup:
> In all the cases listed in [basic.lookup.unqual], the scopes are searched
> for a declaration in the order listed in each of the respective categories;
> name lookup ends as soon as a declaration is found for the name.
> If no declaration is found, the program is ill-formed.
In the affected code there was a use-after-move for all accesses in the constructor
body, but this UB wasn't triggered.
These types of errors are trivial to catch via clang-tidy's [clang-analyzer-cplusplus.Move].
This was broken since a03bb4455c because
Nix 2.18 does not support broken $SHELL settings. So don't try a
broken $SHELL on old Nix versions. (It's a mystery though why
tests.remoteBuilds_local_nix_2_13 and tests.remoteBuilds_local_nix_2_3
didn't fail...)
https://hydra.nixos.org/build/277366807
This may occur when stderr is a tty but stdin is empty.
E.g.
$ nix build </dev/null
error: unexpected EOF reading a line
These stdio handles are how some non-interactive sandboxes behave,
including the Nix build sandbox and Hercules CI Effects.
Unfortunately `StringSource` class is very easy was very easy to misuse
because the ctor took a plain `std::string_view` which has a bad habit
of being implicitly convertible from an rvalue `std::string`. This lead
to unintentional use-after-free bugs.
This patch makes `StringSource` much harder to misuse by disabling the ctor
from a `std::string &&` (but `const std::string &` is ok).
Fix affected tests from libstore-tests.
Reformat those tests with clangd's range formatting since the diff is tiny
and it seems appropriate.
It had gotten rather big. Hopefully we'll eventually have some generic
infra for a "multi-package dev shell" and not need so much code for
this, but until then it's better in a separate file.
operators are an everyday thing in the Nix language, and this page will
hopefully be consulted by many users.
string contexts are quite exotic, and not linking to the detailed
explanation will require readers to figure out manually what this is
about, or worse, skim over and run into problems later.
* doc/manual: Add 'Debugging Nix' section
This commit adds a new 'Debugging Nix' section to the Nix manual. It provides instructions on how to build Nix with debug symbols and how to debug the Nix binary using debuggers like `lldb`.
Co-authored-by: Jörg Thalheim <Mic92@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Valentin Gagarin <valentin.gagarin@tweag.io>
We now just check that the fetcher doesn't change any attributes in
the input, and return all the original attributes (i.e. discarding any
new attributes and keeping any attributes that the fetcher didn't
keep).
This fixes the error
'{"__final":true,"lastModified":1686592866,"narHash":"sha256-riGg89eWhXJcPNrQGcSwTEEm7CGxWC06oSX44hajeMw","owner":"nixos","repo":"nixpkgs","rev":"0eeebd64de89e4163f4d3cf34ffe925a5cf67a05","type":"github"}' resulted in different input
'{"__final":true,"lastModified":1686592866,"narHash":"sha256-riGg89eWhXJcPNrQGcSwTEEm7CGxWC06oSX44hajeMw=","owner":"nixos","repo":"nixpkgs","rev":"0eeebd64de89e4163f4d3cf34ffe925a5cf67a05","type":"github"}'
in flake-regressions/tests/nix-community/patsh/0.2.1 (note the lack of
a trailing '=' in the NAR hash in the lock file).
OpenBSD doesn't support `lutimes`, but does support `utimensat` which
subsumes it. In fact, all the BSDs, Linux, and newer macOS all support
it. So lets make this our first choice for the implementation.
In addition, let's get rid of the `lutimes` `ENOSYS` special case. The
Linux manpage says
> ENOSYS
>
> The kernel does not support this call; Linux 2.6.22 or later is
> required.
which I think is the origin of this check, but that's a very old version
of Linux at this point. The code can be simplified a lot of we drop
support for it here (as we've done elsewhere, anyways).
Co-Authored-By: John Ericson <John.Ericson@Obsidian.Systems>
Backward-compatible schema changes (e.g. those that add tables or
nullable columns) now no longer need a change to the global schema
file (/nix/var/nix/db/schema). Thus, old Nix versions can continue to
access the database.
This is especially useful for schema changes required by experimental
features. In particular, it replaces the ad-hoc handling of the schema
changes for CA derivations (i.e. the file /nix/var/nix/db/ca-schema).
Schema versions 8 and 10 could have been handled by this mechanism in
a backward-compatible way as well.
OpenBSD dynamic libraries never link to libc directly.
Instead, they have undefined symbols for all libc functions they use
that ld.so resolves to the libc referred to in the main executable.
Thus, disallowing undefined symbols will always fail
the default int64_t max was still overflowing for me, when this was dumped as json (noticed during building the manual).
So making 0, the default and define it as "no warnings" fixes the situtation.
Also it's much more human-readable in documentation.
This works because the `builder` and `args` variables are only used
in the non-builtin code path.
Co-Authored-By: Théophane Hufschmitt <theophane.hufschmitt@tweag.io>
tests/functional/help.sh calls nix-* commands with option --help
if nix is built without documentation the option --help throws an error
because the man page it wants to display is missing
This overall seems like insecure tmp file handling to me. Because other
users could replace files in /tmp with a symlink and make the nix-shell
override other files.
fixes https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/11470
Introduced in 8f6b347abd without explanation.
Throwing anything that's not that is a programming mistake that we don't want
to ignore silently. A crash would be ok, because that means we/they can fix
the offending throw.
Otherwise, if checkInterrupt() in any of the supported store operations
would catch onto a user interrupt, the exception would bubble to the thread
start and be handled by std::terminate(): a crash.
We haven't added the narHash attribute yet at that point. And if the
caller uses getAccesor() instead of fetchToStore() (e.g. in `nix
registry pin`), the narHash attribute will never be added. This could
lead to a mismatch.
The ability to substitute inputs was removed in #10612 because it was
broken: with user-specified inputs containing a `narHash` attribute,
substitution resulted in an input that lacked the attributes returned
by the real fetcher (such as `lastModified`).
To fix this, we introduce a new input attribute `final`. If `final =
true`, fetching the input cannot add or change any attributes.
We only attempt to substitute inputs that have `final = true`. This is
implied by lock file entries; we only write a lock file if all its
entries are "final".
The user can specified `final = true` in `fetchTree`, in which case it
is their responsibility to ensure that all attributes returned by the
fetcher are included in the `fetchTree` call. For example,
nix eval --impure --expr 'builtins.fetchTree { type = "github"; owner = "NixOS"; repo = "patchelf"; final = true; narHash = "sha256-FSoxTcRZMGHNJh8dNtKOkcUtjhmhU6yQXcZZfUPLhQM="; }'
succeeds in a store path with the specified NAR hash exists or is
substitutable, but fails with
error: fetching final input '{"final":true,"narHash":"sha256-FSoxTcRZMGHNJh8dNtKOkcUtjhmhU6yQXcZZfUPLhQM=","owner":"NixOS","repo":"patchelf","type":"github"}' resulted in different input '{"final":true,"lastModified":1718457448,"narHash":"sha256-FSoxTcRZMGHNJh8dNtKOkcUtjhmhU6yQXcZZfUPLhQM=","owner":"NixOS","repo":"patchelf","rev":"a0f54334df36770b335c051e540ba40afcbf8378","type":"github"}'
... and remove a few unused arguments.
This adds pkg-config to a two or three packages that don't use it,
but we shouldn't let that bother us. It's like our personal stdenv.
If you have the Nix store mounted from a nonlocal filesystem whose
exporter is not running as root, making the directory mode 000 makes it
inaccessible to that remote unprivileged user and therefore breaks the
build. (Specifically, I am running into this with a virtiofs mount using
Apple Virtualization.framework as a non-root user, but I expect the
same thing would happen with virtiofs in qemu on Linux as a non-root
user or with various userspace network file servers.)
Make the directory mode 500 (dr-x------) to make the sandbox work in
this use case, which explicitly conveys our intention to read and search
the directory. The code only works because root can already bypass
directory checks, so this does not actually grant more permissions to
the directory owner / does not make the sandbox less secure.
This allows `nix copy` to atomically copy a store path and point a
profile to it, without the risk that the store path might be GC'ed in
between. This is useful for instance when deploying a new NixOS system
profile from a remote store.
This caused nlohmann/json.hpp to leak into a lot of compilation units,
which is slow (when not using precompiled headers).
Cuts build time from 46m24s to 42m5s (real time with -j24: 2m42s to
2m24s).
These versions are more than 3 years old and were very early in the
existence of CA derivations support (which was and is experimental),
so they're unlikely to still exist in the real world. So let's get rid
of support for them.
The previous documentation was inaccurate, stating that it would not update existing inputs. However these inputs will be updated if they are outdated (for example the version of an existing input has been changed). The new text properly reflects this behaviour.
A test added recently checks that when trying to deserialize a NAR with
two files that Unicode-normalize to the same result either succeeds on
Linux, or fails with an "already exists" error on Darwin. However,
failing with an "already exists" error can in fact also happen on Linux,
when using ZFS with the proper utf8 and Unicode normalization options
set.
This commit fixes the issue by not assuming the behavior from the
current system, but just by blindly checking that either one of the two
aforementioned possibilities happen, whether on Darwin or on Linux.
Additionally, we check that the Unicode normalization behaviour of
nix-store is the same as the host file system.
This leads to confusion about what the command does.
E.g. https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/9359
- Move the description up
- Remove details about the individual formatters
This patch has been manually adapted from
14dc84ed03
Tested with:
$ NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE=$(nix-build '<nixpkgs>' -A cacert)/etc/ssl/certs/ca-bundle.crt nix-build --store $(mktemp -d) -E 'import <nix/fetchurl.nix> { url = https://google.com; }'
Finished at 16:57:50 after 1s
warning: found empty hash, assuming 'sha256-AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA='
this derivation will be built:
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
/nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
google.com> building '/nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv'
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
google.com> error:
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
google.com> … writing file '/nix/store/0zynn4n8yx59bczy1mgh1lq2rnprvvrc-google.com'
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
google.com>
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
google.com> error: unable to download 'https://google.com': Problem with the SSL CA cert (path? access rights?) (77) error setting certificate file: /nix/store/nlgbippbbgn38hynjkp1ghiybcq1dqhx-nss-cacert-3.101.1/etc/ssl/certs/ca-bundle.crt
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
error: builder for '/nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv' failed with exit code 1
Now returns:
nix-env % NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE=$(nix-build '<nixpkgs>' -A cacert)/etc/ssl/certs/ca-bundle.crt nix-build --store $(mktemp -d) -E 'import <nix/fetchurl.nix> { url = https://google.com; }'
Finished at 17:05:48 after 0s
warning: found empty hash, assuming 'sha256-AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA='
this derivation will be built:
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
/nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
google.com> building '/nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv'
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
error: hash mismatch in fixed-output derivation '/nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv':
specified: sha256-AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA=
This method is marked as `noexcept`, but `enqueueFileTransfer()` can
throw `Interrupted` if the user has hit Ctrl-C or if the `ThreadPool`
that the thread is a part of is shutting down.
When working on speeding up the CI,
I triggered a race condition in the creation of the tarball cache.
This code now instead will ensure that half-initialized repositories
are no longer visible to any other nix process.
This is the error message that I got before:
error: opening Git repository '"/Users/runner/.cache/nix/tarball-cache"': could not find repository at '/Users/runner/.cache/nix/tarball-cache'
* docs: specify that flake.lock files are JSON
Recently, I decided that I was going to write some code that would parse
flake.lock files. I went to the Nix Reference Manual in order to look up
information on the format of flake.lock files, and I realized that a key
detail was missing from the Nix Reference Manual: it never says that
flake.lock files are JSON files. This commit fixes that issue.
This commit makes sure to specify that flake.lock files are encoded in
UTF-8. Confusingly, there’s multiple different JSON standards. Neither
ECMA-404, 2nd Edition [1] nor ISO/IEC 21778:2017 [2] mention UTF-8. RFC
8259 requires UTF-8, but only sometimes [3]. I chose to explicitly
specify that flake.lock files are UTF-8 in order to avoid any possible
ambiguities from the JSON standards.
[1]: <https://ecma-international.org/publications-and-standards/standards/ecma-404>
[2]: <https://www.iso.org/standard/71616.html>
[3]: <https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc8259.html#section-8.1>
Most of the time people run single tests for debugging reason,
so it's a sane default to have them see all the console output.
This commit still retains the section about running tests directly with
meson, because in some debugging cases it's just nice to have less
abstractions i.e. when using strace.
Since #8766, invalid base64 is rendered in errors, but we don't actually
want to show this in the case of an invalid private keys.
Co-Authored-By: Eelco Dolstra <edolstra@gmail.com>
This is better for privacy and to avoid leaking netrc credentials in a
MITM attack, but also the assumption that we check the hash no longer
holds in some cases (in particular for impure derivations).
Partially reverts 5db358d4d7.
As a prelude to making "or" work like a normal variable, emit a warning
any time the "fn or" production is used in a context that will change
how it is parsed when that production is refactored.
In detail: in the future, OR_KW will be moved to expr_simple, and the
cursed ExprCall production that is currently part of the expr_select
nonterminal will be generated "normally" in expr_app instead. Any
productions that accept an expr_select will be affected, except for the
expr_app nonterminal itself (because, while expr_app has a production
accepting a bare expr_select, its other production will continue to
accept "fn or" expressions). So all we need to do is emit an appropriate
warning when an expr_simple representing a cursed ExprCall is accepted
in one of those productions without first going through expr_app.
As the warning message describes, users can suppress the warning by
wrapping their problematic "fn or" expressions in parentheses. For
example, "f g or" can be made future-proof by rewriting it as
"f (g or)"; similarly "[ x y or ]" can be rewritten as "[ x (y or) ]",
etc. The parentheses preserve the current grouping behavior, as in the
future "f g or" will be parsed as "(f g) or", just like
"f g anything-else" is grouped. (Mechanically, this suppresses the
warning because the problem ExprCalls go through the
"expr_app : expr_select" production, which resets the cursed status on
the ExprCall.)
My SNAFU was that I assumed that all the `Value *`s we put in
`attrsSeen` are already reachable (which they are), but I forgot about
the `elems` pointer in `ListBuilder`.
Fixes#11547.
Because of an objc quirk[1], calling curl_global_init for the first time
after fork() will always result in a crash.
Up until now the solution has been to set
OBJC_DISABLE_INITIALIZE_FORK_SAFETY for every nix process to ignore
that error.
This is less than ideal because we were setting it in package.nix,
which meant that running nix tests locally would fail because
that variable was not set.
Instead of working around that error we address it at the core -
by calling curl_global_init inside initLibStore, which should mean
curl will already have been initialized by the time we try to do so in
a forked process.
[1] 01edf1705f/runtime/objc-initialize.mm (L614-L636)
(cherry-picked and adapted from c7d97802e4)
Note: in general, we rely on the OS to tell us if a name is invalid or
if two names normalize in the same way. But for security, we do want
to make sure that we catch '.', '..', slashes and NUL characters. (NUL
characters aren't really a security issue, but since they would be
truncated when we pass them to the OS, it would be canonicity problem.)
Relative path flakes ("subflakes") are basically fundamentally
broken, since they produce lock file entries like
"locked": {
"lastModified": 1,
"narHash": "sha256-/2tW9SKjQbRLzfcJs5SHijli6l3+iPr1235zylGynK8=",
"path": "./flakeC",
"type": "path"
},
that don't specify what "./flakeC" is relative to. They *sometimes*
worked by accident because the `narHash` field allowed
`fetchToStore()` to get the store path of the subflake *if* it
happened to exist in the local store or in a substituter.
Subflakes are properly fixed in #10089 (which adds a "parent" field to
the lock file). Rather than come up with some crazy hack to make them
work in the interim, let's just disable the only test that depends on
the broken behaviour for now.
The impending release of macOS 15 Sequoia will break many existing nix
installs on macOS, which may lead to an increased number of people who
are looking to try to reinstall Nix without noticing the open/pinned
issue (#10892) that explains the problem and outlines how to migrate
existing installs.
These admonitions are a short-term measure until we are over the hump
and support volumes dwindle.
Was hoping to leave this enabled for a little while as core community
members test this script out, but Apple's aggressive release timeline
for macOS 15 Sequoia has caught us off-guard here.
It's probably not ideal for a general audience if the script spews all
of this output--and people can still force bash to run in trace mode
if we really need to debug a problem.
Caused by 1d3696f0fb
Without this fix the kept build directory is readable only by root
```
$ sudo ls -ld /comp-temp/nix-build-openssh-static-x86_64-unknown-linux-musl-9.8p1.drv-5
drwx------ root root 60 B Wed Sep 11 00:09:48 2024 /comp-temp/nix-build-openssh-static-x86_64-unknown-linux-musl-9.8p1.drv-5/
$ sudo ls -ld /comp-temp/nix-build-openssh-static-x86_64-unknown-linux-musl-9.8p1.drv-5/build
drwxr-xr-x nixbld1 nixbld 80 B Wed Sep 11 00:09:58 2024 /comp-temp/nix-build-openssh-static-x86_64-unknown-linux-musl-9.8p1.drv-5/build/
```
When `nix fmt` is called without an argument, Nix appends the "." argument before calling the formatter. The comment in the code is:
> Format the current flake out of the box
This also happens when formatting sub-folders.
This means that the formatter is now unable to distinguish, as an interface, whether the "." argument is coming from the flake or the user's intent to format the current folder. This decision should be up to the formatter.
Treefmt, for example, will automatically look up the project's root and format all the files. This is the desired behaviour. But because the "." argument is passed, it cannot function as expected.
As a hacker, I should be able to checkout the repo, and find relevant
information on how to develop in the project somewhere in the top-level.
Either in the README.md, or CONTRIBUTING.md or HACKING.md files.
This PR symlinks the HACKING.md into the right place in the manual.
This fixes the warning
$ nix eval --store /tmp/nix --expr 'builtins.fetchTree { type = "git"; url = "https://github.com/DeterminateSystems/attic"; ref = "fixups-for-magic-nix-cache"; rev = "635753a2069d4b8228e846dc5c09ad361c75cd1a"; }'
warning: could not update mtime for file '/home/eelco/.cache/nix/gitv3/09788h9zgba5lbfkaa6ija2dvi004jwsqjf5ln21i2njs07cz766/refs/heads/fixups-for-magic-nix-cache': error: changing modification time of '"/home/eelco/.cache/nix/gitv3/09788h9zgba5lbfkaa6ija2dvi004jwsqjf5ln21i2njs07cz766/refs/heads/fixups-for-magic-nix-cache"': No such file or directory
When we're fetching by rev, that file doesn't necessarily exist, and we
don't care about it anyway.
Fixes
$ nix flake metadata --store /tmp/nix nixpkgs
error: path '/tmp/nix/nix/store/65xpqkz92d9j7k5ric4z8lzhiigxsfbg-source/flake.nix' is not in the Nix store
This has been broken since 598deb2b23.
On macOS, `mkdir("x/')` behaves differently than `mkdir("x")` if `x` is
a dangling symlink (the formed succeed while the latter fails). So make
sure we always strip the trailing slash.
/tmp/ecstatic-euler-mAFGV7
% /home/joerg/git/nix/build/subprojects/nix/nix repl
Nix 2.25.0
Type :? for help.
after doing rm /tmp/ecstatic-euler-mAFGV7 this will result in:
nix-repl> :lf .
error: cannot determine current working directory: No such file or directory
Before it would make the repl crash
/tmp/clever-hermann-MCm7A9
% /home/joerg/git/nix/build/subprojects/nix/nix repl
Nix 2.25.0
Type :? for help.
nix-repl> :lf .
error: filesystem error: cannot get current path: No such file or directory
Before:
nix-env % ./src/nix/nix eval --impure --expr 'let f = builtins.readDir "/nix/store/hs3yxdq9knimwdm51gvbs4dvncz46f9d-hello-2.12.1/foo"; in f' --show-trace
error: filesystem error: directory iterator cannot open directory: No such file or directory [/nix/store/hs3yxdq9knimwdm51gvbs4dvncz46f9d-hello-2.12.1/foo]
After:
error:
… while calling the 'readDir' builtin
at «string»:1:9:
1| let f = builtins.readDir "/nix/store/hs3yxdq9knimwdm51gvbs4dvncz46f9d-hello-2.12.1/foo"; in f
| ^
error: reading directory '/nix/store/hs3yxdq9knimwdm51gvbs4dvncz46f9d-hello-2.12.1/foo': No such file or directory
this should make it more obvious how things are related to each other, and also
hopefully expose the historical context without having to say on every
corner that these details are accounting for legacy decisions.
Prior to this commit, the unit contained this line:
ExecStart=@share/nix-daemon nix-daemon --daemon
which caused systemd to complain:
Failed to restart nix-daemon.service: Unit nix-daemon.service has a bad unit file setting.
See system logs and 'systemctl status nix-daemon.service' for details.
and had this in the unit output:
Sep 03 13:34:59 scadrial systemd[1]: /etc/systemd/system/nix-daemon.service:10: Neither a valid executable name nor an absolute path: share/nix-daemon
Sep 03 13:34:59 scadrial systemd[1]: nix-daemon.service: Unit configuration has fatal error, unit will not be started.
(Notice how it's trying to execute `share/nix-daemon`, which is unlikely
to exist.)
Now with this commit, the path to the daemon binary is properly set:
ExecStart=@/nix/store/lcbx6d8gzznf3z3c8lsv9jy3j6c67x6r-nix-2.25.0pre20240903_dirty/bin/nix-daemon nix-daemon --daemon
The daemon process is now moved into a new sub-cgroup called nix-daemon when the
daemon starts. This is necessary to abide by the no-processes-in-inner-nodes
rule, because the service cgroup becomes an inner node when the child cgroups
for the build are created (see LocalDerivationGoal::startBuilder()).
See #9675
This broke in #11005. Any number of PathSubstitutionGoals would
be woken up by a single build slot becoming available. If there
are a lot of substitution goals active, this could lead to us
running out of file descriptors (especially on macOS where the
default limit is 256).
libgit2 didn't write thin ones, hence the patch.
This should improve performance on systems with weak I/O in ~/.cache,
especially in terms of operations per second, or where system calls
are slower. (macOS, VMs?)
Meson-ify a few things, scripts, completions, etc. Should make our Meson
build complete except for docs.
Co-Authored-By: Qyriad <qyriad@qyriad.me>
Co-Authored-By: eldritch horrors <pennae@lix.systems>
We're not replacing `Path` in exposed definitions in many cases, but
just adding alternatives. This will allow us to "top down" change `Path`
to `std::fileysystem::path`, and then we can remove the `Path`-using
utilities which will become unused.
Also add some test files which we forgot to include in the libutil unit
tests `meson.build`.
Co-Authored-By: siddhantCodes <siddhantk232@gmail.com>
This reverts commit 43e82c9446, reversing
changes made to d79b9bdec0.
Since /proc/homeless-shelter returns a different errno than /homeless-shelter (ENOENT vs EACCES), we need to revert this change.
Software depends on this error code i.e. cargo and therefore breaks.
The `Test` workflow was renamed to `CI` in
9aa486c4be.
It still seems to be showing the status it was last running on the
master branch. This information is misleading and should be corrected.
We are currently building Nix twice in the main GHA CI job, which is
frequently timing out. Obviously, we want this to be fast, so only do
the main build for now.
this is only used to close non-stdio files in derivation sandboxes. we
may as well encode that in its name, drop the unnecessary integer set,
and use close_range to deal with the actual closing of files. not only
is this clearer, it also makes sandbox setup on linux fast by 1ms each
(cherry-picked and adapted from
c7d97802e4)
Co-authored-by: Eelco Dolstra <edolstra@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Cole Helbling <cole.e.helbling@outlook.com>
Co-authored-by: John Ericson <git@JohnEricson.me>
Starting in macOS 15 Sequoia, macOS daemon UIDs are encroaching on our
default UIDs of 301-332. This commit relocates our range up to avoid
clashing with the current UIDs of 301-304 and buy us a little time
while still leaving headroom for people installing more than 32 users.
Since withFramedSink() is now used a lot more than in the past (for
every addToStore() variant), we were creating a lot of threads, e.g.
nix flake show --no-eval-cache --all-systems github:NixOS/nix/afdd12be5e19c0001ff3297dea544301108d298
would create 46418 threads. While threads on Linux are cheap, this is
still substantial overhead.
So instead, just poll from FramedSink before every write whether there
are pending messages from the daemon. This could slightly increase the
latency on log messages from the daemon, but not on exceptions (which
were only synchronously checked from FramedSink anyway).
This speeds up the command above from 19.2s to 17.5s on my machine (a
9% speedup).
Fixes
```
umount: /tmp/nix-shell.i3xRwX/nix-test/local-overlay-store/delete-refs/stores/merged-store/nix/store: filesystem was unmounted, but failed to update userspace mount table.
make: *** [mk/lib.mk:93: tests/functional/local-overlay-store/delete-refs.sh.test] Error 16
```
in a dev shell.
Note: this previously worked before we didn't have umount in the dev
shell, so we got /run/wrappers/bin/umount.
Incorrectly high expectations lead to frustration for users who
stick around to experience how useless it is for e.g. a devShell
https://functional.cafe/@arianvp/112976284363120036:
> Flakes doesn't have eval caching. It has command line argument
> caching. It literally just stores the cli argument you passed
> in a sqlite database and yes that's as useless as it sounds
> When I discovered flakes had no expression level caching whatsoever
> I kind of felt lied to and betrayed.
Fixes
```
GEN /home/eelco/Dev/nix-master/outputs/out/share/doc/nix/manual/index.html
error: File not found: ../store/types/
┌─ release-notes/rl-next.md:60:197
│
60 │ The build hook protocol did in principle support custom ways of remote building, but that can also be accomplished with a custom service for the ssh or daemon/ssh-ng protocols, or with a custom [store type](../store/types/) i.e. `Store` subclass. <!-- we normally don't mention classes, but consider that this release note is about a library use case -->
│ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ File not found: ../store/types/
Error: One or more incorrect links
2024-08-19 16:47:57 [ERROR] (mdbook::renderer): Renderer exited with non-zero return code.
2024-08-19 16:47:57 [ERROR] (mdbook::utils): Error: Rendering failed
2024-08-19 16:47:57 [ERROR] (mdbook::utils): Caused By: The "linkcheck" renderer failed
```
`make check` was reverted too soon. The hacking guide wasn't brought
up to date with the new workflow, and it's not clear how to use
meson for everything.
This reverts commit 6f3045c2a2.
The current backport action cannot automerge because
the github action bot does not trigger github CI actions.
Mergify instead does not have this limitation and can also
use a merge queue.
On top we have now a declarative configuration to allow
contributers to add new tests to required without having access
to the github org.
An example pull request and backport can be seen here:
https://github.com/Mic92/nix-1/pull/4
and here:
https://github.com/Mic92/nix-1/pull/5
To complete the setup the mergify app must be enabled for this repository.
It's already installed in the nixos organization for nixos-hardware and
other repositories.
This wasn't the default behaviour because:
> We don't enable this by default to avoid the mostly unnecessary work of
> performing an additional build of the package in cases where we build
> the package normally anyway, such as in our pre-merge CI.
Since we have a componentized build, we've solved the duplication.
In the new situation, building both with and without unit tests
isn't any slow than just a build with unit tests, so there's no
point in using the unit-tested build anymore.
By using the otherwise untested build, we reduce the minimum build
time towards the NixOS test, at no cost.
If you want to run all tests, build all attributes.
Setting it to /bin/sh will make it more predictable when users have
their favorite shell in SHELL, which might not behave as expected.
For instance, a bad rc file could send something to stdout before
our LocalCommand gets to write "started".
This may help https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/11010
While we don't have any easy way to forcibly notify everyone about the
impending breakage (or forcibly migrate the users on their system),
this script enables those who do hear about the problem to migrate
their systems before they take the macOS update.
It should also enable people who only discover it after the update
when a build fails to ~fix their installs without a full reinstall.
This ensures just `nix build`-ing the flake doesn't forget to run all
tests. One can still specifiy specific attributes to just build one
thing.
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
Now that we can run all tests with Meson, we want developers making code
changes to use it.
(Only the manual needs to be built with the build system, and that will
change shortly.)
This reverts commit b0bc2a97bf.
As discussed in our meeting, we should use a simplified version for the
libraries without the date or commit hash. This will make rebuilding a
lot faster in many cases.
Progress on #10379
Co-Authored-By: Robert Hensing <robert@roberthensing.nl>
* add cross-references to `nix-path` overriding
while this information is already present in the settings, it's more
likely to be first accessed through the "lookup path" page, which
currently requires following two links to get to the practically
important bits.
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
This is because with the split packages of the Meson build, we simply
have no idea what directory the binaries will be installed in when we
build the library.
In the process of doing so, consolidate and make more sophisticated the
logic to cope with a few corner cases (e.g. `NIX_BIN_DIR` exists, but no
binaries are inside it).
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
In d60c3f7f7c, this was changed to close a
hole in the sandbox. Unfortunately, this was too restrictive such that it
made local port binding fail, thus making derivations that needed
`__darwinAllowLocalNetworking` gain nearly nothing, and thus largely
fail (as the primary use for it is to enable port binding).
This unfortunately does mean that a sandboxed build process can, in
coordination with an actor outside the sandbox, escape the sandbox by
binding a port and connecting to it externally to send data. I do not
see a way around this with my experimentation and understanding of the
(quite undocumented) macOS sandbox profile API. Notably it seems not
possible to use the sandbox to do any of:
- Restrict the remote IP of inbound network requests
- Restrict the address being bound to
As such, the `(local ip "*:*")` here appears to be functionally no
different than `(local ip "localhost:*")` (however it *should* be
different than removing the filter entirely, as that would make it also
apply to non-IP networking). Doing `(allow network-inbound (require-all
(local ip "localhost:*") (remote ip "localhost:*")))` causes listening
to fail.
Note that `network-inbound` implies `network-bind`.
This ended up motivating a good deal of other infra improvements in
order to get Windows right:
- `OsString` to complement `std::filesystem::path`
- env var code for working with the underlying `OsString`s
- Rename `PATHNG_LITERAL` to `OS_STR`
- `NativePathTrait` renamed to `OsPathTrait`, given a character template
parameter until #9205 is complete.
Split `tests.cc` matching split of `util.{cc,hh}` last year.
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
The test split matches PR #8920, so the utility files and tests files
are once again to 1-1. The string changes continues what was started in
PR #11093.
In the FFI world we have many tools that are not gcc/clang and therefore
not always support the latest C standard. This fixes support with cffi
i.e. used in https://github.com/tweag/python-nix
It was failing with:
error: AWS error fetching 'nix-cache-info': The specified bucket does not exist
because `S3BinaryCacheStoreImpl` had a `bucketName` field that
shadowed the inherited `bucketName from `S3BinaryCacheStoreConfig`.
We didn't even realize you *could* use this syntax with -E and -f, much
less that the attribute path could be *empty*.
Change-Id: Id1a6715609f3a76a5ce477bd43a7832effbbe07b
* docs: unify documentation on search paths
- put all the information on search path semantics into `builtins.findFile`
- put all the information on determining the value of `builtins.nixPath` into the
`nix-path` setting
maybe `builtins.nixPath` is a better place for this, but those bits
can still be moved around now that it's all next to each other.
- link to the syntax page for lookup paths from all places that are
concerned with it
- add or clarify examples
- add a test verifying a claim from documentation
This also bans various sneaking of negative numbers from the language
into unsuspecting builtins as was exposed while auditing the
consequences of changing the Nix language integer type to a newtype.
It's unlikely that this change comprehensively ensures correctness when
passing integers out of the Nix language and we should probably add a
checked-narrowing function or something similar, but that's out of scope
for the immediate change.
During the development of this I found a few fun facts about the
language:
- You could overflow integers by converting from unsigned JSON values.
- You could overflow unsigned integers by converting negative numbers
into them when going into Nix config, into fetchTree, and into flake
inputs.
The flake inputs and Nix config cannot actually be tested properly
since they both ban thunks, however, we put in checks anyway because
it's possible these could somehow be used to do such shenanigans some
other way.
Note that Lix has banned Nix language integer overflows since the very
first public beta, but threw a SIGILL about them because we run with
-fsanitize=signed-overflow -fsanitize-undefined-trap-on-error in
production builds. Since the Nix language uses signed integers, overflow
was simply undefined behaviour, and since we defined that to trap, it
did.
Trapping on it was a bad UX, but we didn't even entirely notice
that we had done this at all until it was reported as a bug a couple of
months later (which is, to be fair, that flag working as intended), and
it's got enough production time that, aside from code that is IMHO buggy
(and which is, in any case, not in nixpkgs) such as
https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/issues/445, we don't think
anyone doing anything reasonable actually depends on wrapping overflow.
Even for weird use cases such as doing funny bit crimes, it doesn't make
sense IMO to have wrapping behaviour, since two's complement arithmetic
overflow behaviour is so *aggressively* not what you want for *any* kind
of mathematics/algorithms. The Nix language exists for package
management, a domain where bit crimes are already only dubiously in
scope to begin with, and it makes a lot more sense for that domain for
the integers to never lose precision, either by throwing errors if they
would, or by being arbitrary-precision.
Fixes: https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/10968
Original-CL: https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1596
Change-Id: I51f253840c4af2ea5422b8a420aa5fafbf8fae75
The actual motive here is the avoidance of integer overflow if we were
to make these use checked NixInts and retain the subtraction.
However, the actual *intent* of this code is a three-way comparison,
which can be done with operator<=>, so we should just do *that* instead.
Change-Id: I7f9a7da1f3176424b528af6d1b4f1591e4ab26bf
Few filesystem-related tests rely on PATH_MAX for buffers, and PATH_MAX
is optional in POSIX (and not available on the Hurd). To make them build
and pass, provide a fallback definition of PATH_MAX in case not
available.
Ideally speaking, the tests ought to not unconditionally rely on
PATH_MAX, do alternative strategies (e.g. dynamically allocate buffers,
expand them as needed, etc); OTOH this is test code, so it would be more
work that what it would be worth, so IMHO the define fallback is good
enough.
Set HOST_HURD & HOST_UNIX for GNU/Hurd in the makefile-based build
system; the latter variable is important as it will include all the
commit Unix bits.
- move <sys/resource.h> from a __linux__ block to a !_WIN32 block: this
matches what the actual code does, using getrlimit() & setrlimit() in
!_WIN32 blocks
- drop <sys/mount.h>, which is not portable, and it is not used
This is not allowed in C++20, and GCC 14 warns about it:
../src/libutil/ref.hh:26:20: warning: template-id not allowed for constructor in C++20 [-Wtemplate-id-cdtor]
26 | explicit ref<T>(const std::shared_ptr<T> & p)
| ^
../src/libutil/ref.hh:26:20: note: remove the '< >'
../src/libutil/ref.hh:33:21: warning: template-id not allowed for constructor in C++20 [-Wtemplate-id-cdtor]
33 | explicit ref<T>(T * p)
| ^
../src/libutil/ref.hh:33:21: note: remove the '< >'
This change updates the seccomp profile to return ENOTSUP for getxattr
functions family. This reflects the behavior of filesystems that don’t
support extended attributes (or have an option to disable them), e.g.
ext2.
The current behavior is confusing for some programs because we can read
extended attributes, but only get to know that they are not supported
when setting them. In addition to that, ACLs on Linux are implemented
via extended attributes internally and if we don’t return ENOTSUP, acl
library converts file mode to ACL.
https://git.savannah.nongnu.org/cgit/acl.git/tree/libacl/acl_get_file.c?id=d9bb1759d4dad2f28a6dcc8c1742ff75d16dd10d#n69
The internal "completionCallback" and "listPossibleCallback" helpers
are used only when building with editline; hence, do not build then
when using readline, matching their usage in
"ReadlineLikeInteracter::init()".
This seems to have been the intent all along.
The odd combination of unit tests, but no functional tests caused a
build error where some data for the unit test was source-filtered out.
Apparently. It's unclear to me why that happened, so I'm proposing this
alternate "fix" to get the buildNoTests to pass.
It would be nice to test more configurations, but this mode of building
is on the way out anyway, so let's just make it pass and see what
configurations make sense to test as part of the meson migration.
This should make the test more robust, considering the strange hang
in https://hydra.nixos.org/build/267517233/nixlog/8
`builder` seems to have reached `multi-user.target` before the
SSH connection was established, but this seems to be coincidental.
This does tell us that enforcing this has a minimal cost in terms
of runtime.
Waiting for `multi-user.target` on the client is honestly paranoid,
but flaky tests are very bad for productivity.
Trying to learn more about enigmatic spurious hang at
https://hydra.nixos.org/build/267517233/nixlog/8
- builder1 seems to have started properly
- ssh connection and session are established
- ssh client doesn't exit or client.succeed does not return
for some reason.
Seeing the stdout on the console might give a tiny bit more info.
By syncing with Nixpkgs, we reuse the same derivation, which is
generally a good idea, and has the benefit that it is transitively
a channel blocker.
Changes:
- https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/163313 (SuperSandro2000)
> nix: disable big-parallel for aws-sdk-cpp
> aws-sdk-cpp only takes ~1m52s on a 4 core machine under 50% load
> which does not justify the requirement on big parallel.
> Tested with `nix-build -A nixVersions.nix_2_6.aws-sdk-cpp`.
> I can finally build nix without requiring a big-parallel machine.
- https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/227506 (Artturin)
> nix: use [ ] instead null to empty requiredSystemFeatures
> fixes 'error: value is null while a list was expected' with 'nixpkgs.hostPlatform.gcc.arch = "x86_64";'
This was done originally because std::smatch does not accept `const char
*` as iterators. However, this was because we should have been using
std::cmatch instead.
(cherry picked from commit 12a5838d11)
Found by looking for interesting asan reports from the test suite.
What happened here is that name got overwritten, but it was what
actually held the backing memory for the thing it got overwritten by,
which was a by-reference value coming out of std::regex.
Due to absurd reasons I cannot seem to use a string_view iterator here,
so I just copy the string with a longer lifetime instead. idk lol
==3796364==ERROR: AddressSanitizer: heap-use-after-free on address 0x503000014c61 at pc 0x74843523bf1d bp 0x7ffc68351330 sp 0x7ffc68350af0
READ of size 3 at 0x503000014c61 thread T0
0 0x74843523bf1c in __asan_memcpy (/nix/store/mzhqknx2mc94jdz4n320hn1lml86398y-clang-wrapper-17.0.6/resource-root/lib/linux/libclang_rt.asan-x86_64.so+0x159f1c)
1 0x6403cf6cbff4 in std::char_traits<char>::copy(char*, char const*, unsigned long) /nix/store/14c6s4xzhy14i2b05s00rjns2j93gzz4-gcc-13.2.0/include/c++/13.2.0/bits/char_traits.h:445:33
<...>
7 0x6403cf6cbff4 in std::__cxx11::sub_match<__gnu_cxx::__normal_iterator<char const*, std::__cxx11::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char>>>>::str() const /nix/store/14c6s4xzhy14i2b05s00rjns2j93gzz4-gcc-13.2.0/include/c++/13.2.0/bits/regex.h:966:6
8 0x6403cf6cbff4 in std::__cxx11::sub_match<__gnu_cxx::__normal_iterator<char const*, std::__cxx11::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char>>>>::operator std::__cxx11::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char>>() const /nix/store/14c6s4xzhy14i2b05s00rjns2j93gzz4-gcc-13.2.0/include/c++/13.2.0/bits/regex.h:955:16
9 0x6403cf6cbff4 in nix::getClosureInfo[abi:cxx11](nix::ref<nix::Store>, nix::StorePath const&) /home/jade/lix/lix2/build/src/nix/diff-closures.cc:37:26
10 0x6403cf6cd70c in nix::printClosureDiff(nix::ref<nix::Store>, nix::StorePath const&, nix::StorePath const&, std::basic_string_view<char, std::char_traits<char>>) /home/jade/lix/lix2/build/src/nix/diff-closures.cc:54:25
11 0x6403cf873331 in CmdProfileDiffClosures::run(nix::ref<nix::Store>) /home/jade/lix/lix2/build/src/nix/profile.cc:479:17
<...>
0x503000014c61 is located 17 bytes inside of 21-byte region [0x503000014c50,0x503000014c65)
freed by thread T0 here:
0 0x748435250470 in operator delete(void*) (/nix/store/mzhqknx2mc94jdz4n320hn1lml86398y-clang-wrapper-17.0.6/resource-root/lib/linux/libclang_rt.asan-x86_64.so+0x16e470)
<...>
6 0x6403cf6cbda2 in std::__cxx11::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char>>::~basic_string() /nix/store/14c6s4xzhy14i2b05s00rjns2j93gzz4-gcc-13.2.0/include/c++/13.2.0/bits/basic_string.h:792:9
7 0x6403cf6cbda2 in nix::getClosureInfo[abi:cxx11](nix::ref<nix::Store>, nix::StorePath const&) /home/jade/lix/lix2/build/src/nix/diff-closures.cc:36:13
8 0x6403cf6cd70c in nix::printClosureDiff(nix::ref<nix::Store>, nix::StorePath const&, nix::StorePath const&, std::basic_string_view<char, std::char_traits<char>>) /home/jade/lix/lix2/build/src/nix/diff-closures.cc:54:25
<...>
previously allocated by thread T0 here:
0 0x74843524fa38 in operator new(unsigned long) (/nix/store/mzhqknx2mc94jdz4n320hn1lml86398y-clang-wrapper-17.0.6/resource-root/lib/linux/libclang_rt.asan-x86_64.so+0x16da38)
<...>
9 0x6403cf6cb68c in std::__cxx11::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char>>::basic_string<std::basic_string_view<char, std::char_traits<char>>, void>(std::basic_string_view<char, std::char_traits<char>> const&, std::allocator<char> const&) /nix/store/14c6s4xzhy14i2b05s00rjns2j93gzz4-gcc-13.2.0/include/c++/13.2.0/bits/basic_string.h:784:4
10 0x6403cf6cb68c in nix::getClosureInfo[abi:cxx11](nix::ref<nix::Store>, nix::StorePath const&) /home/jade/lix/lix2/build/src/nix/diff-closures.cc:33:21
11 0x6403cf6cd70c in nix::printClosureDiff(nix::ref<nix::Store>, nix::StorePath const&, nix::StorePath const&, std::basic_string_view<char, std::char_traits<char>>) /home/jade/lix/lix2/build/src/nix/diff-closures.cc:54:25
12 0x6403cf873331 in CmdProfileDiffClosures::run(nix::ref<nix::Store>) /home/jade/lix/lix2/build/src/nix/profile.cc:479:17
<...>
(cherry-picked from b9b1bbd22f)
We should use a metric that weighs the related issues.
Counterbalancing time doesn't make much sense to me.
If it's around for longer, the fix will be relevant to more people.
* manual: Contributing -> Development, Hacking -> Building
what's currently called "hacking" are really instructions for setting up
a development environment and compiling from source. we have
a contribution guide in the repo (which rightly focuses on GitHub
workflows), and the material in the manual is more about working
on the code itself.
since we'd otherwise have three headings that amount to "Building Nix",
this change also moves the "classic Nix" instructions to the top.
we may want to reorganise this in the future, and bring
contributor-oriented information closer to the code, but for now let's
stick to more accurate names to ease navigation.
Meson uses a venerable GNU convention described in
https://www.gnu.org/software/automake/manual/html_node/Scripts_002dbased-Testsuites.html
in which:
> When no test protocol is in use, an exit status of 0 from a test
> script will denote a success, an exit status of 77 a skipped test, an
> exit status of 99 a hard error, and any other exit status will denote
> a failure.
77 is thus what we want, not 99.
* fix NIX_PATH overriding
- test restricted evaluation
- test precedence for setting the search path
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <robert@roberthensing.nl>
Co-authored-by: John Ericson <git@JohnEricson.me>
We are piping curl downloads into `unpackTarfileToSink()`, but the
latter is typically slower than the former if you're on a fast
connection. So the download could appear unnecessarily slow. (There is
even a risk that if the Git import is *really* slow for whatever
reason, the TCP connection could time out.)
So let's make the download buffer bigger by default - 64 MiB is big
enough for the Nixpkgs tarball. Perhaps in the future, we could have
an unlimited buffer that spills data to disk beyond a certain
threshold, but that's probably overkill.
Currently, the worker protocol has a version number that we increment
whenever we change something in the protocol. However, this can cause
a collision between Nix PRs / forks that make protocol changes
(e.g. PR #9857 increments the version, which could collide with
another PR). So instead, the client and daemon now exchange a set of
protocol features (such as `auth-forwarding`). They will use the
intersection of the sets of features, i.e. the features they both
support.
Note that protocol features are completely distinct from
`ExperimentalFeature`s.
This is in accordance with ARM's naming convention.
"Low" is confusing, because it could refer to either the cold end
of the stack as an abstract data type, or a low address.
These are different places, because the stack grows down through
the address space.
... as well as match buildReadlineNoMarkdown.
Unfortunately it doesn't support long inputs or multiline inputs
for now.
This needs to make better use of the interacter interface.
In addition to adding the missing thread deps in the last commit, we
also appear to need to skip `-Wl,--as-needed` flags that Meson wants to
use, but doesn't work with our *BSD toolchains.
See https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/3593
This avoids the double warning
warning: 'ping-store' is a deprecated alias for 'store ping'
warning: 'nix store ping' is a deprecated alias for 'nix store info'
* Only build perl subproject on Linux
* Fix various Windows regressions
* Don't put the emulator hook in test builds
We run the tests in a separate derivation. Only need it for the dev shell.
* Fix native dev shells
* Fix cross dev shells we don't know how to emulate
Co-authored-by: PoweredByPie <poweredbypie@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Joachim Schiele <js@lastlog.de>
Co-authored-by: John Ericson <John.Ericson@Obsidian.Systems>
In _very_ rare cases (I had about 7 cases out of 32200 files!),
the order of how inherit-from bindings are printed when using
`nix-instantiate --parse` gets messed up.
The cause of this seems to be because the std::map the bindings are
placed in is keyed on a _pointer_, which then uses an
[implementation-defined strict total order](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/operator_comparison#Pointer_total_order).
The fix here is to key the bindings on their displacement instead,
which maintains the same order as they appear in the file.
Unfortunately I wasn't able to make a reproducible test for this in the
source, there's something about the local environment that makes it
unreproducible for me.
However I was able to make a reproducible test in a Nix build on a Nix
version from a very recent master:
nix build github:infinisil/non-det-nix-parsing-repro
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
Following what is outlined in #10766 refactor the uds-remote-store such
that the member variables (state) don't live in the store itself but in
the config object.
Additionally, the config object includes a new necessary constructor
that takes a scheme & authority.
Tests are commented out because of linking errors with the current config system.
When there is a new config system we can reenable them.
Co-authored-by: John Ericson <John.Ericson@Obsidian.Systems>
This generally gives a better experience with bindings generators,
possibly other tooling.
A possible risk is that some generators may not represent unknown
codes correctly.
Rust bindgen by default generates suitable code:
* a type alias nix_err = c_int
* individual constants for the known enum values
It does _not_ generate a closed type that can only hold the values
that were known at code generation time.
If this proves to be a problem, we could instead split the type:
`typedef int nix_err;` for return values
`enum nix_known_err` for code generation.
This would complicate the interface, so let's not do it unless it
is shown to be needed.
This was accidentally introduced
in f71b4da0b3. We didn't notice this
because the version got interpreted by the daemon as the obsolete "CPU
affinity will follow" field, and being non-zero, it would then read
another integer for the ignored CPU affinity.
The default value for the setting was evaluated by
calling a method on the object _being currently constructed_,
so we were using it before all fields were initialized.
This has been fixed by making the called method static,
and not using the previously used fields at all.
But functionality hasn't changed!
The fields were usually always zero (by chance?) anyway,
meaning the conditional path was always taken.
Thus the current logic has been kept, the code simplified,
and UB removed.
This was found with the helper of UBSan.
Splitting it out immediately answers questions like [this],
without increasing the number of compilation units.
I did consider using boost::hash_combine instead, but it doesn't seem
to be quite as capable, accepting only two arguments.
[this]: https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/11113#discussion_r1679991573
Progress towards #10766
I thought that #10768 achieved, but when I went to use this stuff (in
Hydra), turns out it did not. (Those `using FooConfig;` lines were not
working --- they are so finicky!) This PR gets the job done, and adds
some trivial unit tests to make sure I did what I intended.
I had to add add a header to expose `SSHStoreConfig`, after which the
preexisting `ssh-store-config.*` were very confusingly named files, so I
renamed them to `common-ssh-store-config.hh` to match the type defined
therein.
They are not actually part of the store layer, but instead part of the
Nix executable infra (libraries don't need plugins, executables do).
This is part of a larger project of moving all of our legacy settings
infra to libmain, and having the underlying libraries just have plain
configuration structs detached from any settings infra / UI layer.
Progress on #5638
Previous test implementation assumed that grep supports newlines
in patterns. It doesn't, so tests spuriously passed, even though
some tests outputs were broken.
This patches output (and expected output) before grepping,
so there're no newlines in pattern.
This makes it possible to certain discern failures from empty
snippets, which I think is an ok review comment.
Maybe it should do so for swapped column indexes too, but I'm not
sure.
I don't think it matters in the grand scheme. We don't even have
a real use case for `nullopt` now anyway.
Since we don't have a use case, I'm not applying this logic to
higher level functions yet.
Unfortunately these don't render correctly, because they go into the
markdown renderer, instead of the terminal.
```
nix-repl> :doc lib.version
Attribute '[35;1mversion[0m'
… defined at [35;1m/home/user/h/nixpkgs/lib/default.nix:73:40[0m
```
We could switch that to go direct to the terminal, but then we should
do the same for the primops, to get a consistent look.
Reverting for now.
This reverts commit 3413e0338cbee1c7734d5cb614b5325e51815cde.
Got shellcheck passing for misc/systemv/nix-daemon
Not sure how to test this since it's not running on my NixOS machine and
I see no references to it in the directory otherwise.
See #10795
fetchurl can be given a name and url aside from just the url.
Giving a name can be useful if the url has invalid characters such as
tilde for the store.
... at call sites that are may be in the hot path.
I do not know how clever the compiler gets at these sites.
My primary concern is to not regress performance and I am confident
that this achieves it the easy way.
When the separator is empty, no difference is observable.
Note that concatStringsSep has centralized definitions. This adds the
required definitions. Alternatively, `strings-inline.hh` could be
included at call sites.
Considering that `value` was probably parsed with tokenizeString
prior, it's unlikely to contain empty strings, and we have no
reason to remove them either.
Empty attributes are probably not well supported, but the least we
could do is leave a hint.
Attribute path rendering and parsing should be done according to
Nix expression syntax in my opinion.
(System) features are unlikely to be empty strings, but when they
come in through structuredAttrs, they probably can.
I don't think this means we should drop them, but most likely they
will be dropped after this because next time they'll be parsed with
tokenizeString.
TODO: We should forbid empty features.
I don't think it's completely impossible, but I can't construct
one easily as derivationStrict seems to (re)tokenize the outputs
attribute, dropping the empty output.
It's not a scenario we have to account for here.
Bug not reported in 6 years, but here you go.
Also it is safe to switch to normal concatStringsSep behavior
because tokenizeString does not produce empty items.
The empty attribute name should not be dropped from attribute paths.
Rendering attribute paths with concatStringsSep is lossy and wrong,
but this is just a first improvement while dealing with the
dropEmptyInitThenConcatStringsSep problem.
Known behavior changes:
- `MemorySourceAccessor`'s comparison operators no longer forget to
compare the `SourceAccessor` base class.
Progress on #10832
What remains for that issue is hopefully much easier!
- Fix eval cache not being persisted in `nix develop` (since #10570)
- Don't attempt to commit cache transaction if there is no active transaction, which will spew errors in edge cases
- Drive-by: trivial typo fix
On some systems, previous usage of `match` may cause a stackoverflow
(presumably due to the large size of the match result). Avoid this by
(ab)using `replaceStrings` to test for containment without using
regexes, thereby avoiding the issue. The causal configuration seems to
be the stack size hard limit, which e.g. Amazon Linux sets, whereas most
Linux distros leave unlimited.
Match the fn name to similar fn in nixpkgs.lib, but different
implementation that does not use `match`. This impl gives perhaps
unexpected results when the needle is `""`, but the scope of this is
narrow and that case is a bit odd anyway.
This makes for some duplication-of-work as we do a different
`replaceStrings` if this one is true, but this only runs during doc
generation at build time so has no runtime impact.
See https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/11085 for details.
Progress on #5638
There are still a global fetcher and eval settings, but they are pushed
down into `libnixcmd`, which is a lot less bad a place for this sort of
thing.
Continuing process pioneered in
52bfccf8d8.
The move assignment was implicitly generated and used in
src/libstore/build/goal.cc:90:22:
90 | this->ex = std::move(*ex);
Clang warns about this generated method being deprecated, so making
them explicit fixes the warning.
It is unclear to me why this worked when not in a VM test, but the
explanation would be in the part of nix-shell we're getting rid of
with the devShell attribute.
When --unpack was used the nix would add the current directory to the
nix store instead of the content of unpacked.
The reason for this is that std::distance already consumes the iterator.
To fix this we re-instantiate the directory iterator in case the
directory only contains a single entry.
This improves the error message of nix-env -qa, among others, which
is crucial for understanding some ofborg eval error reports, such as
https://gist.github.com/GrahamcOfBorg/89101ca9c2c855d288178f1d3c78efef
After this change, it will report the same trace, but also start with
```
error:
… while evaluating the attribute 'devShellTools'
… while evaluating the attribute 'nixos'
… while evaluating the attribute 'docker-tools-nix-shell'
… while evaluating the attribute 'aarch64-darwin'
… from call site
at /home/user/h/nixpkgs/outpaths.nix:48:6:
47| tweak = lib.mapAttrs
48| (name: val:
| ^
49| if name == "recurseForDerivations" then true
<same>
```
The recent fix for CVE-2024-38531 broke the sandbox on macOS
completely. As it’s not practical to use `chroot(2)` on
macOS, the build takes place in the main filesystem tree, and the
world‐unreadable wrapper directory prevents the build from accessing
its `$TMPDIR` at all.
The macOS sandbox probably shouldn’t be treated as any kind of a
security boundary in its current state, but this specific vulnerability
wasn’t possible to exploit on macOS anyway, as creating `set{u,g}id`
binaries is blocked by sandbox policy.
Locking down the build sandbox further may be a good idea in future,
but it already has significant compatibility issues. For now, restore
the previous status quo on macOS.
Thanks to @alois31 for helping me come to a better understanding of
the vulnerability.
Fixes: 1d3696f0fbCloses: #11002
- use the iterator in `CanonPath` to count `level`
- use the `CanonPath::basename` method
- use `CanonPath::root` instead of `CanonPath{""}`
- remove `Path` and `PathView`, use `std::filesystem::path` directly
move together all syntactic and semantic information into one
page, and add a page on data types, which in turn links to the syntax and
semantics.
also split out the note on scoping rules into its own page.
Co-authored-by: Ryan Hendrickson <ryan.hendrickson@alum.mit.edu>
Inspired by
010ff57ebb
From the original PR:
> We do not have any of these warnings appearing at the moment, but
> it seems like a good idea to enable [[nodiscard]] checking anyway.
> Once we start introducing more functions with must-use conditions we will
> need such checking, and the rust stdlib has proven them very useful.
GitHub Actions seems to have magically switched architectures
without changing their identifiers.
See 2813ee66cb/README.md (available-images)
Maybe they have more complete documentation elsewhere, but it
seems to be incapable of selecting a runner based on architecture.
* doc: fix `directory` definition in nix-archive.md
Before the change the document implied that directory of a single entry
contained entry:
"type" "directory" "type" directory" "entry" ...
After the change document should expand into:
"type" "directory" "entry" ...
Co-authored-by: John Ericson <git@JohnEricson.me>
The code that counts the number of elided attrs incorrectly used the
per-printer "global" attribute counter instead of a counter that
was relevant only to the current attribute set.
This bug flew under the radar because often the attribute sets aren't
nested, not big enough, or we wouldn't pay attention to the numbers.
I've noticed the issue because the difference underflowed.
Although this behavior is tested by the functional test
lang/eval-fail-bad-string-interpolation-4.nix, the underflow slipped
through review. A simpler reproducer would be as follows, but I
haven't added it to the test suite to keep it simple and marginally
faster.
```
$ nix run nix/2.23.1 -- eval --expr '"" + (let v = { a = { a = 1; b = 2; c = 1; d = 1; e = 1; f = 1; g = 1; h = 1; }; b = { a = 1; b = 1; c = 1; }; }; in builtins.deepSeq v v)'
error:
… while evaluating a path segment
at «string»:1:6:
1| "" + (let v = { a = { a = 1; b = 2; c = 1; d = 1; e = 1; f = 1; g = 1; h = 1; }; b = { a = 1; b = 1; c = 1; }; }; in builtins.deepSeq v v)
| ^
error: cannot coerce a set to a string: { a = { a = 1; b = 2; c = 1; d = 1; e = 1; f = 1; g = 1; h = 1; }; b = { a = 1; «4294967289 attributes elided» }; }
```
* string interpolation escape example
Make it easier to find the documentation, and the example might be enough for most cases.
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Valentin Gagarin <valentin.gagarin@tweag.io>
We don't apply any patches to it, and vendoring it locks users into
bugs (it hasn't been updated since its introduction in late 2021).
Closes https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/issues/164
Change-Id: Ied071c841fc30b0dfb575151afd1e7f66970fdb9
(cherry picked from commit 80405d06264f0de1c16ee2646388ab501df20628)
On one hand, new things should be formatted. On the other, we just
bacported this file to many prior branches, and if we need to make
changes to it and backport them also, formatting the file on master but
not the release branches would cause issues.
We're building a bit of Darwin meson indirectly through `checks`,
but it'd be annoying to encounter broken un-`check`-ed stuff
during the porting process, so let's just do the right thing now.
This avoids polluting nixComponents with things that aren't our
components.
Fixes the extraction of passthru tests, which failed for boehmgc
which had many irrelevant ones anyway.
flatMapAttrs is easier to read because it introduces the values
before using them, kind of like a `let` bindings with multiple
values.
The repeated comments remind the reader of the purpose of the
innermost attrsets, which is actually very simple.
Knowing that they go right into the result should help a lot
with building a mental model for this pattern.
It was added above this conditional
Worker::Worker(LocalStore & store)
: store(store)
{
/* Debugging: prevent recursive workers. */
if (working) abort();
working = true;
However, `working` has since been removed.
Source: 7f8e805c8e/src/libstore/build.cc (L2617)
The old `std::variant` is bad because we aren't adding a new case to
`FileIngestionMethod` so much as we are defining a separate concept ---
store object content addressing rather than file system object content
addressing. As such, it is more correct to just create a fresh
enumeration.
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
This tests the parser and JSON format using the DRV files from the tests
added in the previous commit.
Co-Authored-By: John Ericson <John.Ericson@Obsidian.Systems>
This tests the Nix language side of things.
We are purposely skipping most of `common.sh` because it is overkill for
this test: we don't want to have an "overfit" test environment.
Co-Authored-By: John Ericson <John.Ericson@Obsidian.Systems>
Previously, the .chroot directory had permission 750 or 755 (depending
on the uid-range system feature) and was owned by root/nixbld. This
makes it possible for any nixbld user (if uid-range is disabled) or
any user (if uid-range is enabled) to inspect the contents of the
chroot of an active build and maybe interfere with it (e.g. via /tmp
in the chroot, which has 1777 permission).
To prevent this, the root is now a subdirectory of .chroot, which has
permission 700 and is owned by root/root.
Instead of running the builds under
`$TMPDIR/{unique-build-directory-owned-by-the-build-user}`, run them
under `$TMPDIR/{unique-build-directory-owned-by-the-daemon}/{subdir-owned-by-the-build-user}`
where the build directory is only readable and traversable by the daemon user.
This achieves two things:
1. It prevents builders from making their build directory world-readable
(or even writeable), which would allow the outside world to interact
with them.
2. It prevents external processes running as the build user (either
because that somehow leaked, maybe as a consequence of 1., or because
`build-users` isn't in use) from gaining access to the build
directory.
the `std::filesystem::create_directories` can fail due to insufficient
permissions. We convert this error into a `SysError` and catch it
wherever required.
#2230 broadened the scope of macOS hardlink exclusion but did not change the comments. This was a little confusing for me, so I figured the comments should be updated.
This will avoid some out-of-memory issues in GitHub actions that result
from num jobs > 1 and num cores = 4. Once we only have the Meson build
system, this problem should go away, and we can reenable these jobs.
The documentation is clear about the supported formats (with at least
`builtins.fetchTarball`). The way the code was written previously it
supported all the formats that libarchive supported. That is a
surprisingly large amount of formats that are likely not on the radar
of the Nix developers and users. Before people end up relying on
this (or if they do) it is better to break it now before it becomes a
widespread "feature".
Zip file support has been retained as (at least to my knowledge)
historically that has been used to fetch nixpkgs in some shell
expressions *many* years back.
Fixes https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/10917
The documentation "solved" this by specifying a precondition, but
let's just make it more robust, and not leak irrelevant messages
that might linger.
We don't clear the message when clearing the status, in order to
keep clearing fast; see last_err field doc.
I hope this will make it easier to maintain, and also make it easier for
others to assist with porting the rest of the build system to Meson.
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
Previously (in cfc18a7739), we forgot to
compare the algo at all. This means we keep the same ordering as before
by making the stuff we always have compared take priority.
The idea is two-fold:
- Replace autotools with Meson
- Build each library in its own derivation
The interaction of these two features is that Meson's "subprojects"
feature (https://mesonbuild.com/Subprojects) allows us to have single
dev shell for building all libraries still, while also building things
separately. This allows us to break up the build without a huge
productivity lost.
I tested the Linux native build, and NetBSD and Windows cross builds.
Also do some clean ups of the Flake in the process of supporting new
jobs.
Special thanks to everyone that has worked on a Meson port so far,
@p01arst0rm and @Qyriad in particular.
Co-Authored-By: p01arst0rm <polar@ever3st.com>
Co-Authored-By: Artemis Tosini <lix@artem.ist>
Co-Authored-By: Artemis Tosini <me@artem.ist>
Co-Authored-By: Felix Uhl <felix.uhl@outlook.com>
Co-Authored-By: Jade Lovelace <lix@jade.fyi>
Co-Authored-By: Lunaphied <lunaphied@lunaphied.me>
Co-Authored-By: Maximilian Bosch <maximilian@mbosch.me>
Co-Authored-By: Pierre Bourdon <delroth@gmail.com>
Co-Authored-By: Qyriad <qyriad@qyriad.me>
Co-Authored-By: Rebecca Turner <rbt@sent.as>
Co-Authored-By: Winter <winter@winter.cafe>
Co-Authored-By: eldritch horrors <pennae@lix.systems>
Co-Authored-By: jade <lix@jade.fyi>
Co-Authored-By: julia <midnight@trainwit.ch>
Co-Authored-By: rebecca “wiggles” turner <rbt@sent.as>
Co-Authored-By: wiggles dog <rbt@sent.as>
Co-Authored-By: fricklerhandwerk <valentin@fricklerhandwerk.de>
Co-authored-By: Eli Schwartz <eschwartz93@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
This is not really part of the evaluator: it is just an integration
between Boehm GC and Boost coroutines usable for any purpose. The
evaluator (merely) optionally uses it.
Since 24.05 (I think) we need to pass `-c` or Clang thinks we want to
compile *both* a final executable and precompiled header file, and
complains that we cannot use `-o` with multiple outputs. `-c` seems fine
with GCC too, so I just put it in there conditionally.
the thesis is still the defining document with all the motivation and
explanations.
adding it here for greater visibility.
also more emphasis and clarity around the community aspect.
the hydra build job seems a bit arbitrary right there. may be better for
the contributing guide.
The implementation of `nix::createDirs` allows it to be a simple wrapper
around `std::filesystem::create_directories` as its return value is not
used anywhere.
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.
Source: 6c777476c9
In most real world cases, the Link header is set on the redirect, not on
the final file. This regressed in Lix earlier and while new unit tests
were added to cover it, this integration test should probably have also
caught it.
Source: a3256a9375
* docs: fix python nix-shell example
This Python code snippet depended on Python 2 which has been marked as insecure in 24.05.
I modernized the example so new users will not be surprised upon copying and pasting the snippet for exploration.
Co-authored-by: John Ericson <git@JohnEricson.me>
Before, `-lnixutil` was just stuck in `nix-store.pc`, but that doesn't
seem so nice.
This prepares us to distribute `libnixutil` in a separate package if we
want, but it should be a good change either way. I suspect it wasn't
done before because libutil was an extra unstable interface, but I don't
think we need worry about that. *All* the C++ is less stable than the C
(or that's the goal at least).
For what it's worth, Lix also created this pkg-config file *en passant*
during their rename:
c97e17144e (diff-3c4f60cc44a0e35444c7f45331cfa50f76637118)
This re-enables support for older bwdgc versions without complicating
the code too much.
Coroutines generally only interfere with GC during source filtering,
so it's not too bad of a regression on older bdwgc.
This seems preferable over conditional compilation to enable the patch
etc; we've already spent a lot of complexity budget on this GC-coroutine
interaction...
Manually tested by printing to stderr in both branches (sp in os
stack, or not), and triggering a GC in a filterSource function,
e.g.:
let
generateTree = n: if n == 0 then "ha" else { left = generateTree (n - 1); right = generateTree (n - 1); };
in
builtins.deepSeq (generateTree 18) ...
Note that the darwin still uses the strategy of disabling GC, despite
having an implementation that compiles. The proper solution will be
enabled and tested later.
... so that we may perhaps later extend the interface.
Note that Nixpkgs' lib.warn already requires a string coercible
argument, so this is reasonable. Also note that string coercible
values aren't all strings, but in practice, for warn, they are.
Progress on #10832
This doesn't switch to auto-deriving the fields, but by defining `<=>`
we allow deriving `<=>` in downstream types where `Hash` is used.
Fixes assertion failure if outputsToInstall is empty by defaulting to the "out"
output. That is, behavior between the following commands should be consistent:
$ nix build --no-link --json .#nothing-to-install-no-out
error: derivation '/nix/store/eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee-nothing-to-install-no-out.drv' does not have wanted outputs 'out'
$ nix build --no-link --file default.nix --json nothing-to-install-no-out
error: derivation '/nix/store/eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee-nothing-to-install-no-out.drv' does not have wanted outputs 'out'
Real-world example of this issue:
$ nix build --json .#.legacyPackages.aarch64-linux.texlive.pkgs.iwona
error: derivation '/nix/store/dj0h6b0pnlnan5nidnhqa0bmzq4rv6sx-iwona-0.995b.drv' does not have wanted outputs 'out'
$ git rev-parse HEAD
eee33247cf6941daea8398c976bd2dda7962b125
$ nix build --json --file . texlive.pkgs.iwona
nix: src/libstore/outputs-spec.hh:46: nix::OutputsSpec::Names::Names(std::set<std::__cxx11::basic_string<char> >&&): Assertion `!empty()' failed.
Aborted (core dumped)
1. Fix build by making the legacy SSH Storey's secret `logFD` setting
not a setting on Windows. (It doesn't make sense to specify `void *`
handles by integer cross-proccess, I don't think.)
2. Move some files that don't need to be Unix-only anymore back to their
original locations.
Before:
$ nix flake lock --override-input nixpkgs gitlab:simple-nixos-mailserver/nixos-mailserver/nonexistent
fetching git input 'git+file:///home/linus/projects/lix'
fetching gitlab input 'gitlab:simple-nixos-mailserver/nixos-mailserver/nonexistent'
error: [json.exception.type_error.302] type must be string, but is null
After:
/tmp/inst/bin/nix flake lock --override-input nixpkgs gitlab:simple-nixos-mailserver/nixos-mailserver/nonexistent
warning: unknown experimental feature 'repl-flake'
error:
… while updating the lock file of flake 'git+file:///home/joerg/git/nix?ref=refs/heads/master&rev=62693c2c37c8edd92f95114eb1387b461fc671df'
… while updating the flake input 'nixpkgs'
… while fetching the input 'gitlab:simple-nixos-mailserver/nixos-mailserver/nonexistent'
error: No commits returned by GitLab API -- does the git ref really exist?
Adapted from: 3df013597d
This turns errors like:
error: flake output attribute 'hydraJobs' is not a derivation or path
into errors like:
error: expected flake output attribute 'hydraJobs' to be a derivation or
path but found a set: { binaryTarball = «thunk»; build = «thunk»; etc> }
This change affects all InstallableFlake commands.
Source: 20981461d4
Signed-off-by: Jörg Thalheim <joerg@thalheim.io>
* docs: mention importNative/exec in allow-unsafe-native-code-during-evaluation
Both of these still needs their own actual documentation, but they are
at least now mentioned that they exist and what they're enabled by.
Co-authored-by: Qyriad <qyriad@qyriad.me>
Co-authored-by: Valentin Gagarin <valentin.gagarin@tweag.io>
- Get a rump derivation goal: hook instance will come later, local
derivation goal will come after that.
- Start cleaning up the channel / waiting code with an abstraction.
By moving `host` to the config, we can do a lot further cleanups and
dedups. This anticipates a world where we always go `StoreReference` ->
`*StoreConfig` -> `Store*` rather than skipping the middle step too.
Progress on #10766
Progress on https://github.com/NixOS/hydra/issues/1164
This increases test coverage, and gets the worker protocol ready to be
used by Hydra.
Why don't we just try to use the store interface in Hydra? Well, the
problem is that the store interface works on connection pools, with each
opreation getting potentially a different connection, but the way temp
roots work requires that we keep one logical "transaction" (temp root
session) using the same connection.
The longer-term solution probably is making connections themselves
implement the store interface, but that is something that builds on
this, so I feel OK that this is not churn in the wrong direction.
Fixes#9584
We don't want to rely on how C assigns numbers for enums in the wire
format. Sure, this is totally determined by the ABI, but it obscures the
code and makes it harder to safely change the enum definition (should we
need to) without accidentally breaking the wire format.
Do this instead of an unchecked cast
I redid this to use the serialisation framework (including a unit test),
but I am keeping the reference to credit Jade for spotting the issue.
Change-Id: Icf6af7935e8f139bef36b40ad475e973aa48855c
(adapted from commit 2a7a824d83dc5fb33326b8b89625685f283a743b)
Co-Authored-By: Jade Lovelace <lix@jade.fyi>
File not found while importing is not currently caught by the tab-completion handler.
Original bug report: https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/issues/340
Fix has been adapted from https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1189
Example crash:
$ cat /tmp/foo.nix
{
someImport = import ./this_file_does_not_exist;
}
$ ./src/nix/nix repl --file /tmp/foo.nix
warning: unknown experimental feature 'repl-flake'
Nix 2.23.0pre20240517_dirty
Type :? for help.
Loading installable ''...
Added 1 variables.
nix-repl> someImport.<TAB>
This way we can commit the same amount of stack size (64 MB) without a conditional.
Includes nix, libnixexpr-tests, libnixfetchers-tests, libnixstore-tests, libnixutil-tests.
https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/10555 added a check requiring
that output parameters always have an uninitialized Value as argument.
Unfortunately the output parameter of the primop callback received
a thunk instead.
See the comment for implementation considerations.
This was accidentally removed in
e989c83b44. I restored it and also did a
few other cleanups:
- Make a static method for namespacing purposes
- Put the test files in the data dir with the other test data
- Avoid mutating globals in the machine config tests
This will be used by Hydra.
* reword documentation on `nix-copy-closure`
- one sentence per line
- be more precise with respect to which Nix stores are being accessed
- make a clear distinction between store paths and store objects
- add links to definitions of terms
- clarify which machine is which
- --to and --from don't take arguments
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
In particular `local://<path>` and `unix://` (without any path) now
work, and mean the same things as `local` and `daemon`, respectively. We
thus now have the opportunity to desguar `local` and `daemon` early.
This will allow me to make a change to
https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/9839 requested during review to
desugar those earlier.
Co-authored-by: Théophane Hufschmitt <7226587+thufschmitt@users.noreply.github.com>
1. Hydra currently queries for multiple path infos at once, so let us
make a connection item for that.
2. The minimum of the two versions should always be used, see #9584.
(The issue remains open because the daemon protocol needs to be
likewise updated.)
The JSON format no longer uses the legacy ATerm `r:` prefixing nonsese,
but separate fields.
Progress on #9866
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
- add links to definitions of terms
- one sentence per line
- be more specific about which store is used for the import
- clearly distinguish store paths and store objects
- make a recommendation to use `nix-copy-closure` for efficient SSH transfers
Basically I'd expect the same behavior as with `nix-build`, i.e.
with `--keep-going` the hash-mismatch error of each failing
fixed-output derivation is shown.
The approach is derived from `Store::buildPaths` (`entry-point.cc`):
instead of throwing the first build-result, check if there are any build
errors and if so, display all of them and throw after that.
Unfortunately, the BuildResult struct doesn't have an `ErrorInfo`
(there's a FIXME for that at least), so I have to construct my own here.
This is a rather cheap bugfix and I decided against touching too many
parts of libstore for that (also I don't know if that's in line with the
ongoing refactoring work).
Closes https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/issues/302
Change-Id: I378ab984fa271e6808c6897c45e0f070eb4c6fac
Signed-off-by: Jörg Thalheim <joerg@thalheim.io>
On several occasions I've found myself confused when trying to delete
a store path, because I am told it's still alive, but
nix-store --query --roots doesn't show anything. Let's save future
users this confusion by mentioning that a path might be alive due to
having referrers, not just roots.
given `nix-copy-closure` exists, it doesn't make much sense to do
nix-store --export $paths | nix-store --import --store ssh://foo@bar
since that dumps everything rather than granularly transferring store
objects as needed.
therefore, pick an example where dumping the entire closure into a file
actually makes a difference, such as when deploying to airgapped systems.
In addition:
- Take the opportunity to add a bunch more missing hyperlinks, too.
- Remove some glossary entries that are now subsumed by dedicated pages.
We used to not be able to do this without breaking link fragments, but
now we can, so pick up where we left off.
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
Subflakes are flakes in the same tree, accessed in flake inputs via
relative paths (e.g. `inputs.foo.url = "path:./subdir"`). Previously
these didn't work very well because they would be separately copied to
the store, which is inefficient and makes references to parent
directories tricky or impossible. Furthermore, they had their own NAR
hash in the lock file, which is superfluous since the parent is
already locked.
Now subflakes are accessed via the accessor of the calling flake. This
avoids the unnecessary copy and makes it possible for subflakes to
depend on flakes in a parent directory (so long as they're in the same
tree).
Lock file nodes for relative flake inputs now have a new `parent` field:
{
"locked": {
"path": "./subdir",
"type": "path"
},
"original": {
"path": "./subdir",
"type": "path"
},
"parent": [
"foo",
"bar"
]
}
which denotes that `./subdir` is to be interpreted relative to the
directory of the `bar` input of the `foo` input of the root flake.
Extracted from the lazy-trees branch.
- add links to definitions of terms
- one sentence per line
- be more specific about which store is used for the import
- clearly distinguish store paths and store objects
- make a recommendation to use `nix-copy-closure` for efficient SSH transfers
the individual commands' documentation should provide enough examples to
make sense of the options and judge what to use and when. proper guides,
which would require a more elaborate setup to show off Nix's
capabilities are out of scope for the reference manual.
* doc: convention improvements for copying closure
use -P, which only considers executables but not shell builtins
Co-authored-by: Valentin Gagarin <valentin.gagarin@tweag.io>
previously the test directory could have been left untouched before executing
a test when `init.sh` was not run - and sometimes it isn't
supposed to be run - which made the test suite highly stateful and thus
behaving surprisingly on multiple runs.
pararameterisation is not actually needed the way things are currently
set up, and it confused me when trying to understand what the code does.
all but one test sources vars-and-functions.sh, which nominally only
defines variables, but in practice is always coupled with the actual
initialisation. while the cleaner way of making this more legible would
be to source variables and initialisation separately, this would produce
a huge diff.
the change requires a few small fixes to keep the tests working:
- only create test home directory during initialisation
that vars-and-functions.sh wrote to the file system seems not write
- fix creation of the test directory
due to statefulness, the test home directory was implicitly creating
the test root, too. decoupling that made it apparent that this was
probably not intentional, and certainly confusing.
- only source vars-and-functions.sh if init.sh is not needed
there is one test case that only needs a helper function but no
initialisation side effects
- remove some unnecessary cleanups and split parts of re-used test code
there were confusing bits in how initialisation code was repurposed,
which break if trying to refactor the outer layers naively...
This is useful for diagnosing whether an evaluation is copying large
paths to the store. Example:
$ nix build .#packages.x86_64-linux.default --large-path-warning-threshold 1000000
warning: copied large path '/home/eelco/Dev/nix-master/' to the store (6271792 bytes)
warning: copied large path '«github:NixOS/nixpkgs/b550fe4b4776908ac2a861124307045f8e717c8e?narHash=sha256-7kkJQd4rZ%2BvFrzWu8sTRtta5D1kBG0LSRYAfhtmMlSo%3D»/' to the store (155263768 bytes)
warning: copied large path '«github:libgit2/libgit2/45fd9ed7ae1a9b74b957ef4f337bc3c8b3df01b5?narHash=sha256-oX4Z3S9WtJlwvj0uH9HlYcWv%2Bx1hqp8mhXl7HsLu2f0%3D»/' to the store (22175416 bytes)
warning: copied large path '/nix/store/z985088mcd6w23qwdlirsinnyzayagki-source' to the store (5885872 bytes)
This fixes https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/290775 by not expanding aliases
when sourcing the stdenv setup script. The way bash handles aliases is to expand
them when a function is defined, not when it is used. I.e.:
$ alias echo="echo bar "
$ echo foo
bar foo
$ xyzzy() { echo foo; }
$ shopt -u expand_aliases
$ xyzzy
bar foo
$ xyzzy2() { echo foo; }
$ xyzzy2
foo
The problem is that ~/.bashrc is sourced before the stdenv setup, and bashrc
commonly sets aliases for ‘cp’, ‘mv’ and ‘rm’ which you don’t want to take
effect in the stdenv derivation builders. The original commit introducing this
feature (5fd8cf7667) even mentioned this very
alias.
The only way to avoid this is to disable aliases entirely while sourcing the
stdenv setup, and reenable them afterwards.
Passing the commit message as an argument causes update failures on repositories with lots of flake inputs. In some cases, the commit message is over 250,000 bytes.
the old `copyFile` was just a wrapper that was calling the `copy`
function. This wrapper function is removed and the `copy` function is
renamed to `copyFile`.
Building derivations is a lot harder, but the downloading goals is
portable enough.
The "common channel" code is due to Volth. I wonder if there is a way we
can factor it out into separate functions / files to avoid some
within-function CPP.
Co-authored-by: volth <volth@volth.com>
The warning was done to handle older Nix releases that didn't have
Docker images (091f232896), but this was
a bad idea because it causes us to silently skip uploading Docker
images if e.g. Hydra hasn't finished building them yet.
Issue #10648.
In streaming mode, libarchive doesn't handle symlinks in zip files
correctly. So write the entire file to disk so libarchive can access
it in random-access mode.
Fixes#10649. This was broken in cabee98152.
builtins.strictDerivation returns an attribute set with drvPath and
output paths. For some reason, current implementation forbids drv
instead of drvPath.
Remove `isLink` in favor of `std::filesystem::is_link`
This is one step closer to eventually getting rid of most of our file system utils (in `file-system.cc`) in favor of the `std::filesystem`.
- specify meeting times in terms of a time zone rather than standard
time (the first encompasses standard time changes)
- add information on who can participate and how
- unrelated but still important: add GitHub handle to contact the team
Sometimes we read a directory with children we cannot stat. It's a pitty
we even try to stat at all (wasteful) in the `DT_UNKNOWN` case, but at
least this should get rid of the failure.
This was changed in #10611, which caused the derivation paths of
anything using builtin:fetchurl to change (i.e. all of
Nixpkgs). However, impureEnvVars doesn't actually do anything for
builtin:fetchurl, so we can just set it to its historical value.
This makes for shorter and more portable code.
The only tricky part is catching exceptions: I just searched for near by
`catch (Error &)` or `catch (SysError &)` and adjusted them to `catch
(std::filesystem::filesystem_error &)` according to my human judgement.
Good for windows portability; will help @siddhantk232 with his GSOC
project.
Different parts of the project honor different sets of proxy environment
variables. With this commit all parts of the project will honor the same
set of proxy environment variables.
---------
Co-authored-by: Your Name <you@example.com>
Co-authored-by: John Ericson <John.Ericson@Obsidian.Systems>
Now that SourcePath uses a SourceAccessor instead of an InputAccessor,
we can use it in function signatures instead of passing a
SourceAccessor and CanonPath separately.
Make sure that `extraSandboxProfile` is set before we check whether it's
empty or not (in the `sandbox=true` case).
Also adds a test case for this.
Co-Authored-By: Artemis Tosini <lix@artem.ist>
Co-Authored-By: Eelco Dolstra <edolstra@gmail.com>
After the removal of the InputAccessor::fetchToStore() method, the
only remaining functionality in InputAccessor was `fingerprint` and
`getLastModified()`, and there is no reason to keep those in a
separate class.
Fix formatting violations, update blacklist to reflect moved files.
PR #10556 passed CI before the new formating rules were added, and our
CI has the race condition of allowing old results, resulting in master
getting broken.
This missing GC root wasn't much of a problem before, because the
heap would end up with a reference to the `baseEnv` pretty soon,
but when unit testing, the construction of `EvalState` doesn't
necessarily happen well before GC runs for the first time.
Found while unit testing the Rust bindings that currently reside
at https://github.com/nixops4/nixops4/tree/main/rust
When trying the „nix-store info“ commands on this page I received the error "error: 'info' is not a recognised command". According to https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/9349 info seems to have been an alias for ping. So why not just replace info with ping?
Having a narHash doesn't mean that we have the other attributes
returned by the fetcher (such as lastModified or rev). For instance,
$ nix flake metadata github:NixOS/patchelf/7c2f768bf9601268a4e71c2ebe91e2011918a70f
Last modified: 2024-01-15 10:51:22
but
$ nix flake metadata github:NixOS/patchelf/7c2f768bf9601268a4e71c2ebe91e2011918a70f?narHash=sha256-PPXqKY2hJng4DBVE0I4xshv/vGLUskL7jl53roB8UdU%3D
(does not print a "Last modified")
The latter only happens if the store path already exists or is
substitutable, which made this impure behaviour unpredictable.
Fixes#10601.
This makes it match the current pattern:
- `package.nix` assumes deps are right version
- Overlay in `flake.nix` creates `*-nix` package variations
- Overlay manually passes in those packages to `package.nix`
* move single-user uninstall to the end
this is not the default method of installation, and therefore irrelevant
for most users.
* move the backup restore instructions to the first step
for most users we can expect that the system-wide shell init files were
not ever touched, so we can as well tell them to do the most likely
thing.
from experience, while it's not necessarily safe to just mess with these
files, most people are simply confused by the complexity of
instructions.
* provide more detailed instructions for using `sudo vifs`
we can expect most beginners not to ever have used `vi`, and they will
probably need some hand-holding.
* express instructions as a script
Co-authored-by: wamirez <wamirez@protonmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
Closes#10585
As it turns out, libseccomp maintains an internal syscall table and
validates each rule against it. This means that when using libseccomp
2.5.4 or older, one may pass `452` as syscall number against it, but
since it doesn't exist in the internal structure, `libseccomp` will refuse
to create a filter for that. This happens with nixpkgs-23.11, i.e. on
stable NixOS and when building Nix against the project's flake.
To work around that
* a backport of libseccomp 2.5.5 on upstream nixpkgs has been
scheduled[1].
* the package now uses libseccomp 2.5.5 on its own already. This is to
provide a quick fix since the correct fix for 23.11 is still a staging cycle
away.
It must not be possible to build a Nix with an incompatible libseccomp
version (nothing can be built in a sandbox on Linux!), so configure.ac
rejects libseccomp if `__SNR_fchmodat2` is not defined.
We still need the compat header though since `SCMP_SYS(fchmodat2)`
internally transforms this into `__SNR_fchmodat2` which points to
`__NR_fchmodat2` from glibc 2.39, so it wouldn't build on glibc 2.38.
The updated syscall table from libseccomp 2.5.5 is NOT used for that
step, but used later, so we need both, our compat header and their
syscall table 🤷
[1] https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/306070
Add a method to check if a value has been initialized. This helps avoid
segfaults when calling `type()`.
Useful in the context of the new C API.
Closes#10524
I've added the new local.mk to the package sources. While this
should not be needed for the build, it is the simplest solution,
and won't cause many extra rebuilds, because the file won't change
very often.
This reverts commit 62feb5ca09263c78ddb692836228223e5b58d3ae.
It runs as part of the functional tests, which control the environment,
solving some of the problems a default config has when run in the
sandbox.
Windows now has some basic Unix Domain Socket support, see
https://devblogs.microsoft.com/commandline/af_unix-comes-to-windows/
Building `nix daemon` on Windows I've left for later, because the daemon
currently forks per connection but this is not an option on Windows. But
we can get the client part working right away.
With Linux kernel >=6.6 & glibc 2.39 a `fchmodat2(2)` is available that
isn't filtered away by the libseccomp sandbox.
Being able to use this to bypass that restriction has surprising results
for some builds such as lxc[1]:
> With kernel ≥6.6 and glibc 2.39, lxc's install phase uses fchmodat2,
> which slips through 9b88e52846/src/libstore/build/local-derivation-goal.cc (L1650-L1663).
> The fixupPhase then uses fchmodat, which fails.
> With older kernel or glibc, setting the suid bit fails in the
> install phase, which is not treated as fatal, and then the
> fixup phase does not try to set it again.
Please note that there are still ways to bypass this sandbox[2] and this is
mostly a fix for the breaking builds.
This change works by creating a syscall filter for the `fchmodat2`
syscall (number 452 on most systems). The problem is that glibc 2.39
and seccomp 2.5.5 are needed to have the correct syscall number available
via `__NR_fchmodat2` / `__SNR_fchmodat2`, but this flake is still on
nixpkgs 23.11. To have this change everywhere and not dependent on the
glibc this package is built against, I added a header
"fchmodat2-compat.hh" that sets the syscall number based on the
architecture. On most platforms its 452 according to glibc with a few
exceptions:
$ rg --pcre2 'define __NR_fchmodat2 (?!452)'
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/x32/arch-syscall.h
58:#define __NR_fchmodat2 1073742276
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/mips64/n32/arch-syscall.h
67:#define __NR_fchmodat2 6452
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/mips64/n64/arch-syscall.h
62:#define __NR_fchmodat2 5452
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/mips/mips32/arch-syscall.h
70:#define __NR_fchmodat2 4452
sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/alpha/arch-syscall.h
59:#define __NR_fchmodat2 562
I tested the change by adding the diff below as patch to
`pkgs/tools/package-management/nix/common.nix` & then built a VM from
the following config using my dirty nixpkgs master:
{
vm = { pkgs, ... }: {
virtualisation.writableStore = true;
virtualisation.memorySize = 8192;
virtualisation.diskSize = 12 * 1024;
nix.package = pkgs.nixVersions.nix_2_21;
};
}
The original issue can be triggered via
nix build -L github:nixos/nixpkgs/d6dc19adbda4fd92fe9a332327a8113eaa843894#lxc \
--extra-experimental-features 'nix-command flakes'
however the problem disappears with this patch applied.
Closes#10424
[1] https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/300635#issuecomment-2031073804
[2] https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/300635#issuecomment-2030844251
With Nix 2.3, it was possible to pass a subpath of a store path to
exportReferencesGraph:
with import <nixpkgs> {};
let
hello = writeShellScriptBin "hello" ''
echo ${toString builtins.currentTime}
'';
in
writeClosure [ "${hello}/bin/hello" ]
This regressed with Nix 2.4, with a very confusing error message, that
presumably indicates it was unintentional:
error: path '/nix/store/3gl7kgjr4pwf03f0x70dgx9ln3bhl7zc-hello/bin/hello' is not in the Nix store
At this point many features are stripped out, but this works:
- Can run libnix{util,store,expr} unit tests
- Can run some Nix commands
Co-Authored-By volth <volth@volth.com>
Co-Authored-By Brian McKenna <brian@brianmckenna.org>
local.mk:5: warning: overriding recipe for target 'outputs/dev/include/nix/nix_api_expr.h'
local.mk:5: warning: ignoring old recipe for target 'outputs/dev/include/nix/nix_api_expr.h'
local.mk:5: warning: overriding recipe for target 'outputs/dev/include/nix/nix_api_external.h'
local.mk:5: warning: ignoring old recipe for target 'outputs/dev/include/nix/nix_api_external.h'
local.mk:5: warning: overriding recipe for target 'outputs/dev/include/nix/nix_api_value.h'
local.mk:5: warning: ignoring old recipe for target 'outputs/dev/include/nix/nix_api_value.h'
local.mk:5: warning: overriding recipe for target 'outputs/dev/include/nix/nix_api_store.h'
local.mk:5: warning: ignoring old recipe for target 'outputs/dev/include/nix/nix_api_store.h'
local.mk:5: warning: overriding recipe for target 'outputs/dev/include/nix/nix_api_util.h'
local.mk:5: warning: ignoring old recipe for target 'outputs/dev/include/nix/nix_api_util.h'
This also reworks the Mercurial fetcher (which was still using the
old cache interface) to have two distinct cache mappings:
* A ref-to-rev mapping, which is store-independent.
* A rev-to-store-path mapping.
Code operating on store objects (including creating them) should, in
general, use `ContentAddressMethod` rather than `FileIngestionMethod`.
See also dfc876531f which included some
similar refactors.
See https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/8699#discussion_r1554312181
Casting a function pointer to `void*` is undefined behavior in the C
spec, since there are platforms with different sizes for these two kinds
of pointers. A safe alternative might be `void (*callback)()`
https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/10456 fixed the addition of symlink
store paths to the sandbox, but also made it so that the hardcoded
sandbox paths (like `/etc/hosts`) were now bind-mounted without
following the possible symlinks. This made these files unreadable if
there were symlinks (because the sandbox would now contain a symlink to
an unreachable file rather than the underlying file).
In particular, this broke FOD derivations on NixOS as `/etc/hosts` is a
symlink there.
Fix that by canonicalizing all these hardcoded sandbox paths before
adding them to the sandbox.
Like always declining; local builds only, as can be inferred from the
docs. (Not worth spending too many words on this pretty obvious
behavior, I think. Also, plans to remove it? https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/1221)
This requires moving resolveSymlinks() into SourceAccessor. Also, it
requires LocalStoreAccessor::maybeLstat() to work on parents of the
store (to avoid an error like "/nix is not in the store").
Fixes#10375.
Instead of relying on setup script to set output variables when
structured attributes are enabled, iterate over the values of an
outputs associative array.
See also
374fa3532e/pkgs/stdenv/generic/setup.sh (L23-L26)
Bind-mounting symlinks is apparently not possible, which is why the
thing was failing.
Fortunately, symlinks are small, so we can fallback to copy them at no cost.
Fix https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/9579
Co-authored-by: Artturin <Artturin@artturin.com>
Now that we have a few things identifying content address methods by
name, we should be consistent about it.
Move up the `parseHashAlgoOpt` for tidiness too.
Discussed this change for consistency's sake as part of #8876
Co-authored-by: Eelco Dolstra <edolstra@gmail.com>
This requires `--substitute-on-destination` if you want the remote side
to substitute instead of copying if possible.
For completeness sake, document it here.
Also, the stable Nix from nixpkgs is still 2.18, so more folks may
stumble upon this when this is bumped, so I'd expect this to be actually
useful.
Closes#10182
This was used in only one place, namely builtins.fetchurl with an
expected hash. Since this can cause similar issues as described
in #9814 and #9905 with the "locked" flag for fetchTarball and fetchTree,
let's just remove it.
Note that if an expected hash is given and the hash algorithm is
SHA-256, then we will never do a download anyway if the resulting
store path already exists. So removing the "locked" flag will only
cause potentially unnecessary HTTP requests (subject to the tarball
TTL) for non-SHA-256 hashes.
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
```
The script at `/nix/store/...-nix-2.21.0/etc/profile.d/nix-daemon.sh` was leaving behind a variable, which was visible in the user's shell environment, but not used outside the script.
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"; }
When querying all paths in a binary cache store, the path's representation
is `<hash>-x` (where `x` is the value of `MissingName`) because the .narinfo
filenames only contain the hash.
Before cc46ea1630 this worked correctly,
because the entire path info was read and the path from this
representation was printed, i.e. in the form `<hash>-<name>`. Since then
however, the direct result from `queryAllValidPaths()` was used as `path`.
Added a regression test to make sure the behavior remains correct.
This was part of approved PR #10021. Unfortunately that one is stalled
on a peculiar Linux test timeout, so trying to get bits of it merged
first to bisect failure.
Forcing a conditional include, vs making the headers content
conditional, I think is more maintainable.
It is also how the other platform-specific headers (like
`namespaces.hh`) have been adapted.
A possible use of them might have been to figure out the paths
(which can now be retrieved with maybePathsOut), but I have
not found evidence that it was used this way, and it would have
been broken, because non-CA outputs weren't recorded in the map.
It's a little weird we don't check the return status for these, but
changing that would introduce risk so I did not.
Co-authored-by: Théophane Hufschmitt <7226587+thufschmitt@users.noreply.github.com>
This introduces new utility functions to get elements from JSON — in an ergonomic way and with nice error messages if the expected type does not match.
Co-authored-by: John Ericson <John.Ericson@Obsidian.Systems>
* show Nix logo in the manual
the location of files is hard-coded by mdBook.
there is also seems to be no way to define custom templates, therefore
all styling has to be done in the CSS override.
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
This splits files and adds new identifiers in preperation for supporting
windows, but no Windows-specific code is actually added yet.
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
This patch makes `makeDecompressionSink` strip only a single layer
of compression specified via method. This fixes erroneous decompression
of doubly-compressed NARs fetched with curl.
This function is nice for more than `PosixSourceAccessor`. We can make a
few things simpler with it.
Note that the error logic slightly changes in some of the call sites, in
that we also count `ENOTDIR` and not just `ENOENT` as not having the
file, but that should be fine.
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 https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/10238
Thunks are now overwritten by a helper function
`Value::finishValue(newType, payload)` (where `payload` is the
original anonymous union inside `Value`). This helps to ensure we
never update a value elsewhere, since that would be incompatible with
parallel evaluation (i.e. after a value has transitioned from being a
thunk to being a non-thunk, it should be immutable).
There were two places where this happened: `Value::mkString()` and
`ExprAttrs::eval()`.
This PR also adds a bunch of accessor functions for value contents,
like `Value::integer()` to access the integer field in the union.
I realized it was checking NAR hashes before of added objects, which
makes little sense --- we don't really care about ancillary NAR hashes.
Now, the bottom `nix store add` tests compare the CA field with a git
hash to hashes calculated by Git. This matches top `nix hash path` ones
in using git as a source of truth.
Fixes an instance of
nix: src/libutil/util.cc:139: nix::Path nix::canonPath(PathView, bool): Assertion `path != ""' failed.
... which I've been getting in one of my shells for some reason.
I have yet to find out why TMPDIR was empty, but it's no reason for
Nix to break.
I was using by mistake the .#nix-clangStdenv shell to retrieve clangd.
This clangd is unusable with the project and constantly segfaults.
Let's explicitly state which shell the user should use in the docs.
I don't really understand the source of this segfault. I assume it's
related to a clang version incompatibility. (16.0.6 for
.#nix-clangStdenv 14.0.6 for .#native-clangStdenvPackages)
Fixes
terminate called after throwing an instance of 'boost::wrapexcept<boost::io::too_few_args>'
what(): boost::too_few_args: format-string referred to more arguments than were passed
Aborted (core dumped)
for type errors in AttrCursor.
- Align the “frequent” release cycle with the calendar
- The 6-month release cycle is hard to keep track of. A monthly
release will make it much easier to remember the release date.
- Officialise the support for a stable version maintained for as long as NixOS stable
- This is already the case in practice, it just happens that the
“stable” Nixpkgs version is whichever version was deemed
stable-enough at the time of the NixOS release.
Officialise that by cutting a new major release alongside each NixOS one.
Note that this breaks whatever semver compatibility Nix might pretend to
have, but I don't think it makes sense any way.
In a daemon-based Nix setup, some options cannot be overridden by a
client unless the client's user is considered trusted.
Currently, if an untrusted user tries to override one of those
options, we are silently ignoring it.
This can be pretty confusing in certain situations.
e.g. a user thinks he disabled the sandbox when in reality he did not.
We are now sending a warning message letting know the user some options
have been ignored.
Related to #1761.
This is a cherry-pick of 9e0f5f803f.
The above commit has been reverted by
a59e77d9e5 to prevent spamming warnings
with experimental features, but these are now totally ignored on the
daemon side, so there's no reason for the revert any more.
Previously, `state.mkList()` would set the type of the value to tList
and allocate the list vector, but it would not initialize the values
in the list. This has two problems:
* If an exception occurs, the list is left in an undefined state.
* More importantly, for multithreaded evaluation, if a value
transitions from thunk to non-thunk, it should be final (i.e. other
threads should be able to access the value safely).
To address this, there now is a `ListBuilder` class (analogous to
`BindingsBuilder`) to build the list vector prior to the call to
`Value::mkList()`. Typical usage:
auto list = state.buildList(size);
for (auto & v : list)
v = ... set value ...;
vRes.mkList(list);
* Add regression test
* Fix 'no repo' test so it doesn't succeed if the data is still in cache
* Use git_revparse_single inside git-utils instead of reimplementing the same logic.
Add `runHook preInstallCheck` to the overriden `installCheckPhase` used
for the non-build case.
In particular, this allow the fix from 2a34510776
to also apply there.
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.
Strings are now printed directly when evaluated by `:print`, rather than
escaped. This makes it easier to debug multi-line strings or strings
containing quotes, like the results of `builtins.readFile`,
`lib.toShellArg`, and so on.
```
nix-repl> "cuppy\ndog\ncity"
"cuppy\ndog\ncity"
nix-repl> :p "cuppy\ndog\ncity"
cuppy
dog
city
```
Fixes this very long warning, which I'll only include the first line of:
/nix/store/8wrjhrycpshhc3b41xmjwvgqr2m3yajq-libcxx-16.0.6-dev/include/c++/v1/__memory/construct_at.h:66:5: warning: destructor called on non-final 'RegexMatcher' that has virtual functions but non-virtual destructor [-Wdelete-non-abstract-non-virtual-dtor]
__loc->~_Tp();
`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.
`nix-env -qaP`'s output has changed a bit because of https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/10132.
Although that's a bit annoying, it isn't nearly as problematic as the
evaluation changes that this test is supposed to catch. So it's find to
just update the hash for the time being and fix the issue later
(properly fixing the issue will very likely change the hash any way).
Currently there isn't a convenient way to check for multiline output. In
addition, these outputs will easily change and having a diff between the
expected an the actual output upon failures is convenient.
This wasn't caught by CI because #10149 and #10152 pass
individually... It doesn't happen on lazy-trees either because we
never try to fetch relative path flakes (#10089).
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).
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.
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).
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.
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.
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.
* Convert all InputScheme::fetch() methods to getAccessor().
* Add checkLocks() method for checking lock attributes.
* Rename fetch() to fetchToStore().
This is the case for e.g. dirty Git workdirs, where we would get
$ nix flake metadata
Resolved URL: git+file:///home/eelco/Dev/nix-master
Locked URL: git+file:///home/eelco/Dev/nix-master
The "lockedRef" field is a misnomer, since it can be unlocked
(e.g. for a dirty Git workdir). In that case, `nix profile upgrade`
needs to assume that the package can have changed, and perform an
upgrade.
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.
Directly fail if a flakeref points to something that isn't a directory
instead of falling back to the logic of trying to look up the hierarchy
to find a valid flake root.
Fix https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/9868
After https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/10071, the CI was trying to push
ghcr.io/nixos/nix:master for backwards-compatibility, but the image was
not tagged as such, causing the job to fail.
Fix this.
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).
`NIX_HARDENING_ENABLE` causes `_FORTIFY_SOURCE` to be defined.
This isn't compatible with `-O0`, and the compiler will happily remind
us about it at every call, spamming the terminal with warnings and stack
traces.
We don't really care hardening in that case, so just disable it if we
pass `OPTIMIZE=0`.
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`.
Instead, serialize as NAR and send that over, then rehash sever side.
This is alorithmically simpler, but comes at the cost of a newer
parameter to `Store::addToStoreFromDump`.
Co-authored-by: Eelco Dolstra <edolstra@gmail.com>
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).
Flakes still reside in the Nix store (so there shouldn't be any change
in behaviour), but they are now accessed via the rootFS
accessor. Since rootFS implements access checks, we no longer have to
worry about flake.{nix,lock} or their parents being symlinks that
escape from the flake.
Extracted from the lazy-trees branch.
"hash type" -> "hash algorithm" in all comments, documentation, and
messages.
ht -> ha, [Hh]ashType -> [HhashAlgo] for all local variables and
function arguments. No API change is made.
Continuation of 5334c9c792 and 837b889c41.
After commit 91b6833686 (" Move tests to separate directories, and
document"), previously-built test executables are now tracked by Git,
which is annoying for developers.
This patch add .gitignore rules to ignore the obsolete test directories
to solve such problem and enhance developer experience.
The sandbox rule `(allow network* (local ip))` doesn't do what it
implies. Adding this rule permits all network traffic. We should be
matching on (remote ip "localhost:*")` instead.
This seems to have found one actual bug in fs-sink.cc: the symlink case
was falling into the regular file case, which can't possibly be
intentional, right?
Docker uses "latest" as the default label instead of "master".
This change will allow to docker run ghcr.io/nixos/nix without having to
specify the label.
It keeps the :master label on docker hub for back-compat.
When a file conflict arises during a package install a suggestion is
made to remove the old entry. This was previously done using the
installable URLs of the old entry. These URLs are quite verbose and
often do not equal the URL of the existing entry.
This change uses the recently introduced profile entry name for the
suggestion, resulting in a simpler output.
The improvement is easily seen in the change to the functional test.
- `nix store add` supports text hashing
With functional test ensuring it matches `builtins.toFile`.
- Factored-out flags for both commands
- Move all common reusable flags to `libcmd`
- They are not part of the *definition* of the CLI infra, just a usag
of it.
- The `libstore` flag couldn't go in `args.hh` in libutil anyways,
would be awkward for it to live alone
- Shuffle around `Cmd*` hierarchy so flags for deprecated commands don't
end up on the new ones
This PR reduces the creation of short-lived basic_json objects while
parsing flake.lock files. For large flake.lock files (~1.5MB) I was
observing ~60s being spent for trivial nix build operations while
after this change it is now taking ~1.6s.
It's better to just check whether the input has all the attributes
needed to consider itself locked (e.g. whether a Git input has an
'rev' attribute).
Also, the 'locked' field was actually incorrect for Git inputs: it
would be set to true even for dirty worktrees. As a result, we got
away with using fetchTree() internally even though fetchTree()
requires a locked input in pure mode. In particular, this allowed
'--override-input' to work by accident.
The fix is to pass a set of "overrides" to call-flake.nix for all the
unlocked inputs (i.e. the top-level flake and any --override-inputs).
This fixes warnings like
warning: Ignoring setting 'auto-allocate-uids' because experimental feature 'auto-allocate-uids' is not enabled
warning: Ignoring setting 'impure-env' because experimental feature 'configurable-impure-env' is not enabled
when using the daemon and the user didn't actually set those settings.
Note: this also hides those settings from `nix config show`, but that
seems a good thing.
`canonPath` and `absPath` work on native paths, and so should switch
between supporting Unix paths and Windows paths accordingly.
The templating is because `CanonPath`, which shares the implementation,
should always be Unix style. It is the pure "nix-native" path type for
virtual file operations --- it is part of Nix's "business logic", and
should not vary with the host OS accordingly.
The core `CanonPath` constructors were using `absPath`, but `absPath` in
some situations does IO which is not appropriate. It turns out that
these constructors avoided those situations, and thus were pure, but it
was far from obvious this was the case.
To remedy the situation, abstract the core algorithm from `canonPath` to
use separately in `CanonPath` without any IO. No we know by-construction
that those constructors are pure.
That leaves `CanonPath::fromCWD` as the only operation which uses IO /
is impure. Add docs on it, and `CanonPath` as a whole, explaining the
situation.
This is also necessary to support Windows paths on windows without
messing up `CanonPath`. But, I think it is good even without that.
Co-authored-by: Eelco Dolstra <edolstra@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
There is no longer an `importTarball` method. Instead, there is a
`unpackTarfileToSink` function (back in libutil). The caller can use
thisw with the `getParseSink` method we added in the last commit easily
enough.
In addition, tarball cache functionality is separated from `git-utils`
and moved into `tarball-cache`. This ensures we are separating mechanism
and policy.
There is now a separation of:
1. A `FileSystemObjectSink` for writing to git repos
2. Adapting libarchive to use that parse sink.
The prepares a proper separation of concerns.
A command like
rm -rf ~/.cache/nix/tarball-cache/ ~/.cache/nix/fetcher-cache-v1.sqlite*; nix flake metadata 'git+file:///home/eelco/Dev/nixpkgs?rev=9463103069725474698139ab10f17a9d125da859'
was spending about 84% of its runtime in lookup(), specifically in
git_tree_entry_bypath(). (The reading of blobs is less than 3%.)
It appears libgit2 doesn't do a lot of caching of trees, so we now
make sure that when we look up a path, we add all its parents, and all
the immediate children of the parents (since we have them in memory
anyway), to our own cache.
This speed up the command above from 17.2s to 7.8s on my machine.
Fixes (or at least should improve a lot) #9684.
Commit 83c067c0fa changed `builtins.pathExists`
to resolve symlinks before checking for existence. Consequently, if the path
refers to a symlink itself, existence of the target of the symlink (instead of
the symlink itself) was checked. Restore the previous behavior by skipping
symlink resolution in the last component.
No outward facing behavior is changed.
Older methods with same names that operate on on method + algo pair (for
old-style `<method>:algo`) are renamed to `*WithAlgo`.)
The functions are unit-tested in the same way the names for the hash
algorithms are tested.
* reword description of the `cores` setting
- be precise about the `builder` executable
- clearly distinguish between `builder` and job parallelism
- clarify the role of `mkDerivation` in the example
- remove prose for the default, it's shown programmatically
- mention relation to `max-jobs`
- move all reference documentation to the `builders` configuration setting
- reword documentation on machine specification, add examples
- disable showing the default value, as it rendered as `@/dummy/machines`, which is wrong
- highlight the examples
- link to the configuration docs for distributed builds
- builder -> build machine
Co-authored-by: Janik H <janik@aq0.de>
the interesting information is on the proper pages, and is now presented
a bit more prominently.
the paragraph was a bit confusing to read, also because an anchor link
to an inline definition was in the middle of the sentence. "local store"
now has its own glossary entry.
The symbolic form in use here doesn't seem to have an effect
in either the BSD or coreutils install commands, leaving the
daemon plist with empty permissions. This seems to cause its
own problems.
I think I've got the right symbolic syntax now :)
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)
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.
There's probably more that can be said, but I thought it might be helpful to put something here about how to access elements of a list for folks coming from more or less any other programming language. If this is rarely used, it might be nice to add to the documentation something about why it's rarely used.
Commit d536c57e87 inadvertedly broke build and
installation of all non-autogenerated manual pages (in particular, all the ones
documenting the stable CLI), by moving the definition of the man-pages variable
in doc/manual/local.mk after its usage in mk/lib.mk. Move including the former
earlier so that the correct order is restored.
how the different invocations relate to each other seems be
confusing, which is relatable because one has to wire it up in your head
while reading. an explicit reference should make it unambiguous and
easier to notice due to links being highlighted.
autoconf authors apparently decided that setting `-O2` by default was a good idea. I disagree, and Nix has its own way of deciding that (with `OPTIMIZE={0,1}`). Explicitly set `CFLAGS` and `CXXFLAGS` in the configure script to disable that behaviour.
Fix#9965
When I started contributing to Nix, I found the mix of definitions and
names in `fmt.hh` to be rather confusing, especially the small
difference between `hintfmt` and `hintformat`. I've renamed many classes
and added documentation to most definitions.
- `formatHelper` is no longer exported.
- `fmt`'s documentation is now with `fmt` rather than (misleadingly)
above `formatHelper`.
- `yellowtxt` is renamed to `Magenta`.
`yellowtxt` wraps its value with `ANSI_WARNING`, but `ANSI_WARNING`
has been equal to `ANSI_MAGENTA` for a long time. Now the name is
updated.
- `normaltxt` is renamed to `Uncolored`.
- `hintfmt` has been merged into `hintformat` as extra constructor
functions.
- `hintformat` has been renamed to `hintfmt`.
- The single-argument `hintformat(std::string)` constructor has been
renamed to a static member `hintformat::interpolate` to avoid pitfalls
with using user-generated strings as format strings.
As discussed in the last Nix team meeting (2024-02-95), this method
doesn't belong because `CanonPath` is a virtual/ideal absolute path
format, not used in file systems beyond the native OS format for which a
"current working directory" is defined.
Progress towards #9205
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
];
}
```
Some tools which consume the "nix print-dev-env" rc script (such as
"nix-direnv") are sensitive to the use of unbound variables. They use
"set -u".
The "nix print-dev-env" rc script initially unsets "shellHook", then
loads variables from the derivation, and then evaluates "shellHook".
However, most derivations don't have a "shellHook" attribute.
So users get the error "shellHook: unbound variable". This can be
demonstrated with the command:
nix print-dev-env nixpkgs#hello | bash -u
This commit changes the rc script to provide an empty fallback value
for the "shellHook" variable.
Closes: #7951#8253
It is entirely possible for the path to be an empty string and many
unit tests actually pass it as an empty string (e.g. both_roundrip or
turnsEmptyPathIntoCWD). In this case, without this patch, absPath will
perform a one-byte out-of-bounds access.
This was discovered while enabling the nix test suite on Alpine where
we compile all software with `-D_GLIBCXX_ASSERTIONS=1`, thus resulting
in a test failure on Alpine.
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`.
Previously, the "file:./" prefix was not correctly recognized in
fixGitURL; instead, it was mistaken as a file path, which resulted in a
parsed url of the form "file://file:./".
This commit fixes the issue by properly detecting the "file:" prefix.
Note, however, that unlike "file://", the "file:./" URI is _not_
standardized, but has been widely used to referred to relative file
paths. In particular, the "git+file:./" did work for nix<=2.18, and was
broken since nix 2.19.0.
Finally, this commit fixes the issue completely for the 2.19 series, but
is still inadequate for the 2.20 series due to new behaviors from the
switch to libgit2. However, it does improve the correctness of parsing
even though it is not yet a complete solution.
As discussed in the maintainer meeting on 2024-01-29.
Mainly this is to avoid a situation where the name is parsed and
treated as a file name, mostly to protect users.
.-* and ..-* are also considered invalid because they might strip
on that separator to remove versions. Doesn't really work, but that's
what we decided, and I won't argue with it, because .-* probably
doesn't seem to have a real world application anyway.
We do still permit a 1-character name that's just "-", which still
poses a similar risk in such a situation. We can't start disallowing
trailing -, because a non-zero number of users will need it and we've
seen how annoying and painful such a change is.
What matters most is preventing a situation where . or .. can be
injected, and to just get this done.
To quote the method doc:
Non-impure derivations can still behave impurely, to the degree permitted
by the sandbox. Hence why this method isn't `isPure`: impure derivations
are not the negation of pure derivations. Purity can not be ascertained
except by rather heavy tools.
Use `diff --color=always` to print colored output for language test
failures. I've also flipped the arguments so that expected lines missing
from the actual output will be marked with a red `-` and additional
lines found in the actual output will be marked with a green `+`.
Previously it was the other way around, which was very confusing.
The code works fine on macOS, but the default stack size we attempt to
set is larger than what my system will allow (Nix attempts to set the
stack size to 67108864, but the maximum allowed is 67092480), so I've
instead used the requested stack size or the maximum allowed, whichever
is smaller.
I've also added an error message if setting the stack size fails. It
looks like this:
> Failed to increase stack size from 8372224 to 67108864 (maximum
> allowed stack size: 67092480): Invalid argument
This extends the `error: cannot coerce a TYPE to a string` message
to print the value that could not be coerced. This helps with debugging
by making it easier to track down where the value is being produced
from, especially in errors with deep or unhelpful stack traces.
This is more conceptually correct (the order does not matter), and also
matches what Hydra already does.
(Nix and Hydra matching is needed for dedup
https://github.com/NixOS/hydra/issues/1164)
More invariants are enforced in the type, and less state needs to be
stored in the main sink itself. The method here is roughly that known as
"session types".
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
This avoids split-on-whitespace errors:
- No more `bash -c` needed
- No more `shellEscape` needed
- `remote-program` ssh store setting also cleanly supports args (e.g.
`nix daemon`)
- `ssh` uses `--` to separate args for SSH from args for the command to
run.
and will help with Hydra dedup.
Some code taken from #6628.
Co-Authored-By: Alexander Bantyev <balsoft@balsoft.ru>
Low-hanging fruit in the spirit of #9753 and #9754 (means 9999years did
all the hard work already).
This basically prints out what was attempted to be called as function,
i.e.
map (import <nixpkgs> {}) [ 1 2 3 ]
now gives the following error message:
error:
… while calling the 'map' builtin
at «string»:1:1:
1| map (import <nixpkgs> {}) [ 1 2 3 ]
| ^
… while evaluating the first argument passed to builtins.map
error: expected a function but found a set: { _type = "pkgs"; AAAAAASomeThingsFailToEvaluate = «thunk»; AMB-plugins = «thunk»; ArchiSteamFarm = «thunk»; BeatSaberModManager = «thunk»; CHOWTapeModel = «thunk»; ChowCentaur = «thunk»; ChowKick = «thunk»; ChowPhaser = «thunk»; CoinMP = «thunk»; «18783 attributes elided»}
Factor out `ServeProto::BasicClientConnection` for Hydra to share
- `queryValidPaths`: Hydra uses the lock argument differently than Nix,
so we un-hard-code it.
- `buildDerivationRequest`: Just the request half, as Hydra does some
things between requesting and responding.
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
Do this if we want to do `--hash-algo` everywhere, and not `--algo` for
hash commands.
The new `nix hash convert` is updated. Deprecated new CLI commands are
left as-is (`nix hash path` needs to be redone and is also left as-is).
Good to document these formats separately from commands that happen to
use them.
Eventually I would like this and `builtins.derivation` to refer to a
store section on derivations that is authoritative, but that doesn't yet
exist, and will take some time to make. So I think we're just best off
merging this now as is.
Co-authored-by: Valentin Gagarin <valentin.gagarin@tweag.io>
Return a value instead of throwing.
Rather than the more trivial refactor of wrapping the return value in
another std::optional, we retain the meaning of the outer optional:
"we know at least something."
So we have changed:
return nullopt -> return nullopt
throw InvalidPath -> return make_optional(nullptr)
return vpi -> return make_optional(vpi)
Add several tests for git fetching:
- shallow-cache-separation: can fetch the same repo shallowly and non-shallowly
- shallow-ignore-ref: ensure that ref gets ignored when shallow=true is set
- ssh-shallow: can fetch a git repo via ssh using shallow=1
libgit2 is not capable of using git-credentials helpers yet.
This prevents private repositories from being used.
Based on code that was replaced in https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/9240
(Introduce libgit2); hence:
Co-authored-by: Eelco Dolstra <edolstra@gmail.com>
In rare cases (e.g. when using allowSubstitutes = false), it's
possible that we simultaneously have a DerivationGoal *and* a
SubstitutionGoal building the same path. So if a DerivationGoal
already built the path while the SubstitutionGoal was waiting for a
download slot, it saves us a superfluous download to exit early.
In the "discard" case (i.e. when the store path already exists
locally), when we call parseDump() from a Finally and it throws an
exception (e.g. if the download of the NAR fails), Nix crashes:
terminate called after throwing an instance of 'nix::SubstituteGone'
what(): error: file 'nar/06br3254rx4gz4cvjzxlv028jrx80zg5i4jr62vjmn416dqihgr7.nar.xz' does not exist in binary cache 'http://localhost'
Aborted (core dumped)
Instead of having it be the default method in `Store` itself, have it be
the implementation in `DummyStore` and `LegacySSHStore`. Then just the
implementations which fail to provide the method pay the "penalty" of
dealing with the icky `unimplemented` function for non-compliance.
Picks up where #8217. Getting close to no `unsupported` in the `Store`
interface itself!
More progress on issue #5729.
It is good to propagate the underlying error so whether or not we use a
process to deal with path length issues is not observable.
Also, as these wrapper functions got more and more complex, the code
duplication got worse and worse. The new `bindConnectProcHelper`
function deduplicates them.
This is useful for determining quickly which substituters to query.
An alternative would be for users to invoke the narinfo cache db directly,
so why do we need this change?
- It is easier to use. I believe Nix itself should also use it.
- This way, the narinfo cache db remains an implementation detail.
- Callers get to use the in-memory cache as well.
This does not yet resolve the coupling between packages and
derivations, but it makes the code more consistent with the
terminology, and it accentuates places where the coupling is
obvious, such as
auto drvPath = packageInfo.queryDrvPath();
if (!drvPath)
throw Error("'%s' is not a derivation", what());
... which isn't wrong, and in my opinion, doesn't even look
wrong, because it just reflects the current logic.
However, I do like that we can now start to see in the code that
this coupling is perhaps a bit arbitrary.
After this rename, we can bring the DerivingPath concept into type
and start to lift this limitation.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Otherwise we get a stray `tests/functional/result`, which can cause
spurious failures later.
(I got a failure because the test temp dir effecting the store dir
changed. This caused a test later because Nix didn't want to remove the
old `result` because it wasn't pointing inside the new Nix store.)
The data was (accidentally?) copied into a std::string,
even though the string is immediately converted into a std::string_view.
The code has been changed to construct a std::string_view directly,
such that one copy less happens.
A small step towards https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/6507
I believe this incomplete definition is one that can be agreed on.
It would be nice to define more, but considering that the issue
also proposes changes to the design, I believe we should hold off
on those.
As for the wording, we're dealing with some very general and vague
terms, that have to be treated with exactly the right amount of
vagueness to be effective.
I start out with a fairly abstract definition of package.
1. to establish a baseline so we know what we're talking about
2. so that we can go in and clarify that we have an extra, Nix-specific
definition.
"Software" is notoriously ill-defined, so it makes a great qualifier
for package, which we don't really want to pin down either, because
that would just get us lost in discussion.
We can come back to this after we've done 6057 and a few years in a
desert cave.
Then comes the "package attribute set" definition.
I can already hear Valentin say "That's not even Nix's responsibility!"
and on some days I might even agree.
However, in our current reality, we have `nix-env`, `nix-build` and
`nix profile`, which query the `outputName` attribute - among others -
which just don't exist in the derivation.
For those who can't believe what they're reading:
$ nix-build --expr 'with import ./. {}; bind // {outputName = "lib";}' --no-out-link
this path will be fetched (1.16 MiB download, 3.72 MiB unpacked):
/nix/store/rfk6klfx3z972gavxlw6iypnj6j806ma-bind-9.18.21-lib
copying path '/nix/store/rfk6klfx3z972gavxlw6iypnj6j806ma-bind-9.18.21-lib' from 'https://cache.nixos.org'...
/nix/store/rfk6klfx3z972gavxlw6iypnj6j806ma-bind-9.18.21-lib
and let me tell you that bind is not a library.
So anyway, that's also proof of why calling this a "derivation attrset" would be wrong, despite the type attribute.
`FLOAT`, `INT`, and `IN` are identifers taken by macros.
The name `IN_KW` is chosen to match `OR_KW`, which is presumably named
that way for the same reason of dodging macros.
Now `nix repl` an, in principle, work on that platform too.
Flake lock file updates:
• Updated input 'nixpkgs':
'github:NixOS/nixpkgs/2c9c58e98243930f8cb70387934daa4bc8b00373' (2023-12-31)
→ 'github:NixOS/nixpkgs/86501af7f1d51915e6c335f90f2cab73d7704ef3' (2024-01-11)
Most of this is a `catch SysError` -> `catch SystemError` sed. This
is a rather pure-churn change I would like to get out of the way. **The
intersting part is `src/libutil/error.hh`.**
On Unix, we will only throw the `SysError` concrete class, which has
the same constructors that `SystemError` used to have.
On Windows, we will throw `WinError` *and* `SysError`. `WinError`
(which will be created in a later PR), will use a `DWORD` instead of
`int` error value, and `GetLastError()`, which is the Windows equivalent
of the `errno` machinery. Windows will *also* use `SysError` because
Window's "libc" (MSVCRT) implements the POSIX interface, and we use it
too.
As the docs describe, while we *throw* one of the 3 choices above (2
concrete classes or the alias), we should always *catch* `SystemError`.
This ensures no matter how the implementation changes for Windows (e.g.
between `SysError` and `WinError`) the catching logic stays the same
and stays correct.
Co-Authored-By volth <volth@volth.com>
Co-Authored-By Eugene Butler <eugene@eugene4.com>
When returning a 0-length substring, avoid calling coerceToString,
since it returns a string_view with the string's length, which is
expensive to compute for large strings.
Also fingerprint and some preparatory improvements.
Testing is still not up to scratch because lots of logic is duplicated
between the workdir and commit cases.
Enabled for fetchGit, which historically had this behavior,
among other behaviors we do not want in fetchGit.
fetchTree disables this parameter by default. It can choose the
simpler behavior, as it is still experimental.
I am not confident that the filtering implementation is future
proof. It should reuse a source filtering wrapper, which I believe
Eelco has already written, but not merged yet.
This is not the most elegant, but will match the SOs in exporting
everything for now. Later we can refine what is public/private to clean
up the interface.
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.
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`.
solves #9388
This utilizes nixos vm tests to allow:
- writing tests for fetchTree and fetchGit involving actual networking.
- writing small independent test cases by automating local and remote repository setup per test case.
This adds:
- a gitea module setting up a gitea server
- a setup module that simplifies writing test cases by automating the repo setup.
- a simple git http test case
Other improvements:
For all nixos tests, add capability of overriding the nix version to test against.
This should make it easier to prevent regressions. If a new test is added it can simply be ran against any older nix version without having to backport the test.
For example, for running the container tests against nix 2.12.0:
`nix build "$(nix eval --raw .#hydraJobs.tests.containers --impure --apply 't: (t.forNix "2.12.0").drvPath')^*" -L`
We don't just want to pass `--enable-gc=no`; we also want to make sure
boehmgc is not a dependency. Creating a nix-level configuration option
to do both, and then using that for the CI job, is more robust.
Changes:
- CPP variable is now `USE_READLINE` not `READLINE`
- `configure.ac` supports with new CLI flag
- `package.nix` supports with new configuration option
- `flake.nix` CIs this (along with no markdown)
Remove old Ubuntu 16.04 stop-gap too, as that is now quite old.
Motivation:
- editline does not build for Windows, but readline *should*. (I am
still working on this in Nixpkgs at this time, however. So there will
be a follow-up Nix PR removing the windows-only skipping of the
readline library once I am done.)
- Per
https://salsa.debian.org/debian/nix/-/blob/master/debian/rules?ref_type=heads#L27
and #2551, Debian builds Nix with readline. Now we better support and
CI that build configuration.
This is picking up where #2551 left off, ensuring we test a few more
things not merely have CPP for them.
Co-authored-by: Weijia Wang <9713184+wegank@users.noreply.github.com>
Also move `SourcePath` into `libutil`.
These changes allow `error.hh` and `error.cc` to access source path and
position information, which we can use to produce better error messages
(for example, we could consider omitting filenames when two or more
consecutive stack frames originate from the same file).
channels make everything more stateful, and therefore more complicated
and potentially confusing, but aren't needed for this task, so don't encourage their use.
* deduplicate installation instructions
- reorder sections to present pinned installation more prominently
- remove outdated notes on the macOS installer rework
- update instructions to handle the installer tarball
Co-authored-by: Travis A. Everett <travis.a.everett@gmail.com>
This sets up infrastructure in libutil to allow for signing other than
by a secret key in memory. #9076 uses this to implement remote signing.
(Split from that PR to allow reviewing in smaller chunks.)
Co-Authored-By: Raito Bezarius <masterancpp@gmail.com>
The thing we wanted to test was that building Nix without building or
running tests, and without depending on libraries only needed by tests,
works.
But since 6c8f4ef350, we can also install
unit tests, and during the conversion to using `package.nix` this
started happening more often (they go to a separate output though, so
this should be fine).
This adds more `... = false` to restore the original intent: don't run
unit test or functional tests, and don't install unit tests.
This avoids a Value allocation for empty list constants. During a `nix
search nixpkgs`, about 82% of all thunked lists are empty, so this
removes about 3 million Value allocations.
Performance comparison on `nix search github:NixOS/nixpkgs/e1fa12d4f6c6fe19ccb59cac54b5b3f25e160870 --no-eval-cache`:
maximum RSS: median = 3845432.0000 mean = 3845432.0000 stddev = 0.0000 min = 3845432.0000 max = 3845432.0000 [rejected?, p=0.00000, Δ=-70084.00000±0.00000]
soft page faults: median = 965395.0000 mean = 965394.6667 stddev = 1.1181 min = 965392.0000 max = 965396.0000 [rejected?, p=0.00000, Δ=-17929.77778±38.59610]
system CPU time: median = 1.8029 mean = 1.7702 stddev = 0.0621 min = 1.6749 max = 1.8417 [rejected, p=0.00064, Δ=-0.12873±0.09905]
user CPU time: median = 14.1022 mean = 14.0633 stddev = 0.1869 min = 13.8118 max = 14.3190 [not rejected, p=0.03006, Δ=-0.18248±0.24928]
elapsed time: median = 15.8205 mean = 15.8618 stddev = 0.2312 min = 15.5033 max = 16.1670 [not rejected, p=0.00558, Δ=-0.28963±0.29434]
since `up` and `values` are both pointer-aligned the type field will
also be pointer-aligned, wasting 48 bits of space on most machines. we
can get away with removing the type field altogether by encoding some
information into the `with` expr that created the env to begin with,
reducing the GC load for the absolutely massive amount of single-entry
envs we create for lambdas. this reduces memory usage of system eval by
quite a bit (reducing heap size of our system eval from 8.4GB to 8.23GB)
and gives similar savings in eval time.
running `nix eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'`
before:
Time (mean ± σ): 5.576 s ± 0.003 s [User: 5.197 s, System: 0.378 s]
Range (min … max): 5.572 s … 5.581 s 10 runs
after:
Time (mean ± σ): 5.408 s ± 0.002 s [User: 5.019 s, System: 0.388 s]
Range (min … max): 5.405 s … 5.411 s 10 runs
many paths need not be heap-allocated, and derivation env name/valye
pairs can be moved into the map.
before:
Benchmark 1: nix eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'
Time (mean ± σ): 6.883 s ± 0.016 s [User: 5.250 s, System: 1.424 s]
Range (min … max): 6.860 s … 6.905 s 10 runs
after:
Benchmark 1: nix eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'
Time (mean ± σ): 6.868 s ± 0.027 s [User: 5.194 s, System: 1.466 s]
Range (min … max): 6.828 s … 6.913 s 10 runs
the table is very small compared to cache sizes and a single indexed
load is faster than three comparisons.
before:
Benchmark 1: nix eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'
Time (mean ± σ): 6.907 s ± 0.012 s [User: 5.272 s, System: 1.429 s]
Range (min … max): 6.893 s … 6.926 s 10 runs
after:
Benchmark 1: nix eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'
Time (mean ± σ): 6.883 s ± 0.016 s [User: 5.250 s, System: 1.424 s]
Range (min … max): 6.860 s … 6.905 s 10 runs
a bunch of derivation strings contain no escape sequences. we can
optimize for this fact by first scanning for the end of a derivation
string and simply returning the contents unmodified if no escape
sequences were found. to make this even more efficient we can also use
BackedStringViews to avoid copies, avoiding heap allocations for
transient data.
before:
Benchmark 1: nix eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'
Time (mean ± σ): 6.952 s ± 0.015 s [User: 5.294 s, System: 1.452 s]
Range (min … max): 6.926 s … 6.974 s 10 runs
after:
Benchmark 1: nix eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'
Time (mean ± σ): 6.907 s ± 0.012 s [User: 5.272 s, System: 1.429 s]
Range (min … max): 6.893 s … 6.926 s 10 runs
This fixes a segfault on infinite function call recursion (rather than
infinite thunk recursion) by tracking the function call depth in
`EvalState`.
Additionally, to avoid printing extremely long stack traces, stack
frames are now deduplicated, with a `(19997 duplicate traces omitted)`
message. This should only really be triggered in infinite recursion
scenarios.
Before:
$ nix-instantiate --eval --expr '(x: x x) (x: x x)'
Segmentation fault: 11
After:
$ nix-instantiate --eval --expr '(x: x x) (x: x x)'
error: stack overflow
at «string»:1:14:
1| (x: x x) (x: x x)
| ^
$ nix-instantiate --eval --expr '(x: x x) (x: x x)' --show-trace
error:
… from call site
at «string»:1:1:
1| (x: x x) (x: x x)
| ^
… while calling anonymous lambda
at «string»:1:2:
1| (x: x x) (x: x x)
| ^
… from call site
at «string»:1:5:
1| (x: x x) (x: x x)
| ^
… while calling anonymous lambda
at «string»:1:11:
1| (x: x x) (x: x x)
| ^
… from call site
at «string»:1:14:
1| (x: x x) (x: x x)
| ^
(19997 duplicate traces omitted)
error: stack overflow
at «string»:1:14:
1| (x: x x) (x: x x)
| ^
more buffers that can be uninitialized and on the stack. small
difference, but still worth doing.
before:
Benchmark 1: nix eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'
Time (mean ± σ): 6.963 s ± 0.011 s [User: 5.330 s, System: 1.421 s]
Range (min … max): 6.943 s … 6.974 s 10 runs
after:
Benchmark 1: nix eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'
Time (mean ± σ): 6.952 s ± 0.015 s [User: 5.294 s, System: 1.452 s]
Range (min … max): 6.926 s … 6.974 s 10 runs
istream sentry objects are very expensive for single-character
operations, and since we don't configure exception masks for the
istreams used here they don't even do anything. all we need is
end-of-string checks and an advancing position in an immutable memory
buffer, both of which can be had for much cheaper than istreams allow.
the effect of this change is most apparent on empty stores.
before:
Benchmark 1: nix eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'
Time (mean ± σ): 7.167 s ± 0.013 s [User: 5.528 s, System: 1.431 s]
Range (min … max): 7.147 s … 7.182 s 10 runs
after:
Benchmark 1: nix eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'
Time (mean ± σ): 6.963 s ± 0.011 s [User: 5.330 s, System: 1.421 s]
Range (min … max): 6.943 s … 6.974 s 10 runs
Previously, IFDs would be built within the eval store, even though one
is typically using `--eval-store` precisely to *avoid* local builds.
Because the resulting Nix expression must be copied back to the eval
store in order to be imported, this requires the eval store to trust
the build store's signatures.
The profile manifest is now an object keyed on the name returned by
getNameFromURL() at installation time, instead of an array. This
ensures that the names of profile elements don't change when other
elements are added/removed.
Prior to this change, Nix would prepend every installable to the PATH
list in order to ensure that installables appeared before the current
PATH from the ambient environment.
With this change, all the installables are still prepended to the PATH,
but in the same order as they appear on the command line. This means
that the first of two packages that expose an executable `hello` would
appear in the PATH first, and thus be executed first.
See the test in the prior commit for a more concrete example.
There's no good reason to deprecate it:
- For consistency reasons it should continue to exist, such that all
primitive types have a corresponding `builtins.is*` primop.
- There's no implementation cost to continuing to have this function
- It costs users time to try to migrate away from it, e.g.
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/219747 and https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/275548
- Using it can give easier-to-read code like `all isNull list`
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
this also reduces forceValue code size and removes the need for
hideInDiagnostics. coopting thunk forcing like this has the additional
benefit of clarifying how these errors can happen in the first place.
forceValue is extremely hot. interestingly adding likeliness annotations
to the branches does not seem to make a difference.
before:
Time (mean ± σ): 4.224 s ± 0.005 s [User: 3.711 s, System: 0.512 s]
Range (min … max): 4.218 s … 4.234 s 10 runs
after:
Time (mean ± σ): 4.140 s ± 0.009 s [User: 3.647 s, System: 0.492 s]
Range (min … max): 4.130 s … 4.152 s 10 runs
almost all uses of this are interactive, except for deepSeq. deepSeq is
going to be expensive and rare enough to not care much about, and
Value::determinePos should usually be cheap enough to not be too much of
a burden in any case.
~1% parser speedup from not using TLS indirections, less on system eval.
this could have also gone in flex yyextra data, but that's significantly
slower for some reason (albeit still faster than thread locals).
before:
Time (mean ± σ): 4.231 s ± 0.004 s [User: 3.725 s, System: 0.504 s]
Range (min … max): 4.226 s … 4.240 s 10 runs
after:
Time (mean ± σ): 4.224 s ± 0.005 s [User: 3.711 s, System: 0.512 s]
Range (min … max): 4.218 s … 4.234 s 10 runs
~2% speedup on parsing without eval, less (but still significant) on
system eval. having flex generate faster parsers leads to very strange
misparses. maybe re2c is worth investigating.
before:
Time (mean ± σ): 4.260 s ± 0.003 s [User: 3.754 s, System: 0.505 s]
Range (min … max): 4.257 s … 4.266 s 10 runs
after:
Time (mean ± σ): 4.231 s ± 0.004 s [User: 3.725 s, System: 0.504 s]
Range (min … max): 4.226 s … 4.240 s 10 runs
as written the comparisons generate copies, even though it looks as
though they shouldn't.
before:
Time (mean ± σ): 4.396 s ± 0.002 s [User: 3.894 s, System: 0.501 s]
Range (min … max): 4.393 s … 4.399 s 10 runs
after:
Time (mean ± σ): 4.260 s ± 0.003 s [User: 3.754 s, System: 0.505 s]
Range (min … max): 4.257 s … 4.266 s 10 runs
checking for isBlackhole in the forceValue hot path is rather more
expensive than necessary, and with a little bit of trickery we can move
such handling into the isApp case. small performance benefit, but under
some circumstances we've seen 2% improvement as well.
〉 nix eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'
before:
Time (mean ± σ): 4.429 s ± 0.002 s [User: 3.929 s, System: 0.500 s]
Range (min … max): 4.427 s … 4.433 s 10 runs
after:
Time (mean ± σ): 4.396 s ± 0.002 s [User: 3.894 s, System: 0.501 s]
Range (min … max): 4.393 s … 4.399 s 10 runs
resizing a std::string clears the newly added bytes, which is not
necessary here and comes with a ~1.4% slowdown on our test nixos config.
〉 nix eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'
before:
Time (mean ± σ): 4.486 s ± 0.003 s [User: 3.978 s, System: 0.507 s]
Range (min … max): 4.482 s … 4.492 s 10 runs
after:
Time (mean ± σ): 4.429 s ± 0.002 s [User: 3.929 s, System: 0.500 s]
Range (min … max): 4.427 s … 4.433 s 10 runs
On macOS in the `nix develop` shell, `make
tests/functional/logging.sh.test` errors:
++(logging.sh:18) mktemp
+(logging.sh:18) builder=/var/folders/z5/fclwwdms3r1gq4k4p3pkvvc00000gn/T/tmp.StuabKUhMh
+(logging.sh:19) echo -e '#!/bin/sh\nmkdir $out'
+++(logging.sh:22) mktemp -d
++(logging.sh:22) nix-build -E 'with import ./config.nix; mkDerivation { name = "fnord"; builder = /var/folders/z5/fclwwdms3r1gq4k4p3pkvvc00000gn/T/tmp.StuabKUhMh; }' --out-link /var/folders/z5/fclwwdms3r1gq4k4p3pkvvc00000gn/T/tmp.oaKcy0NXqC/result
error:
… while calling the 'derivationStrict' builtin
at <nix/derivation-internal.nix>:9:12:
8|
9| strict = derivationStrict drvAttrs;
| ^
10|
… while evaluating derivation 'fnord'
whose name attribute is located at «string»:1:42
… while evaluating attribute 'args' of derivation 'fnord'
at /Users/wiggles/nix/tests/functional/config.nix:23:7:
22| builder = shell;
23| args = ["-e" args.builder or (builtins.toFile "builder-${args.name}.sh" ''
| ^
24| if [ -e "$NIX_ATTRS_SH_FILE" ]; then source $NIX_ATTRS_SH_FILE; fi;
error: path '/var' is a symlink
+(logging.sh:22) outp=
++(logging.sh:22) onError
++(/Users/wiggles/nix/tests/functional/common/vars-and-functions.sh:237) set +x
logging.sh: test failed at:
main in logging.sh:22
This is because `mktemp` returns a path like
`/var/folders/z5/fclwwdms3r1gq4k4p3pkvvc00000gn/T/tmp.qDY24l6bIM`,
where `/var` is a symlink to `/private/var`.
Then, we attempt to use that path as a `builder`, which errors because
symlinks are impure or whatever.
Anyways, we can fix this by using `realpath "$(mktemp)"` instead of
`mktemp` directly.
NB: This error doesn't seem to happen when I run the tests through `nix
flake check`. I'm not sure if Nix does something to `TMP` in that case.
As part of the CLI stabilization effort, the last remaining checkbox (at
the moment) for `nix daemon` is that it "needs testing". This implements
the proposal of using `nix daemon` in place of `nix-daemon` in the test
suite.
`nix flake check` had these warnings:
trace: warning: Module argument `nodes.client.config` is deprecated. Use `nodes.client` instead.
trace: warning: Module argument `nodes.client.config` is deprecated. Use `nodes.client` instead.
trace: warning: The option `services.openssh.permitRootLogin' defined in `/nix/store/3m3hfpmbjdf4w39qfjami7ljhvhczay1-source/tests/nixos/nix-copy.nix' has been renamed to `services.openssh.settings.PermitRootLogin'.
trace: warning: Module argument `nodes.http_dns.config` is deprecated. Use `nodes.http_dns` instead.
trace: warning: Module argument `nodes.github.config` is deprecated. Use `nodes.github` instead.
trace: warning: Module argument `nodes.sourcehut.config` is deprecated. Use `nodes.sourcehut` instead.
It might seem obnoxious to have yet more configure flags, but I found
controlling both the unit and functional tests with one flag was quite
confusing because they are so different:
- unit tests depending on building, functional tests don't (e.g. when
we test already-built Nix)
- unit tests can be installed, functional tests cannot
- unit tests neeed extra libraries (GTest, RapidCheck), functional
tests need extra executables (jq).
- unit tests are run by `make check`, functional tests are run by `make
installcheck`
Really on a technical level, they seem wholly independent. Only on a
human level ("they are both are tests") do they have anything in common.
I had messed up the logic in cross builds because of this. Now I
split the flag in two (and cleaned up a few other inconsistencies), and
the logic fixed itself.
Co-Authored-By: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
* docs: add link to project board to PRs
* Update .github/PULL_REQUEST_TEMPLATE.md
Co-authored-by: Valentin Gagarin <valentin.gagarin@tweag.io>
* fix wording
* add note on the process
---------
Co-authored-by: Valentin Gagarin <valentin.gagarin@tweag.io>
This keeps hint messages, source location information, and source code
snippets grouped together, while making stack traces shorter (so that
more stack frames can be viewed on the same terminal).
Before:
error:
… while evaluating the attribute 'body'
at /Users/wiggles/nix/tests/functional/lang/eval-fail-assert.nix:4:3:
3|
4| body = x "x";
| ^
5| }
… from call site
at /Users/wiggles/nix/tests/functional/lang/eval-fail-assert.nix:4:10:
3|
4| body = x "x";
| ^
5| }
… while calling 'x'
at /Users/wiggles/nix/tests/functional/lang/eval-fail-assert.nix:2:7:
1| let {
2| x = arg: assert arg == "y"; 123;
| ^
3|
error: assertion '(arg == "y")' failed
at /Users/wiggles/nix/tests/functional/lang/eval-fail-assert.nix:2:12:
1| let {
2| x = arg: assert arg == "y"; 123;
| ^
3|
After:
error:
… while evaluating the attribute 'body'
at /Users/wiggles/nix/tests/functional/lang/eval-fail-assert.nix:4:3:
3|
4| body = x "x";
| ^
5| }
… from call site
at /Users/wiggles/nix/tests/functional/lang/eval-fail-assert.nix:4:10:
3|
4| body = x "x";
| ^
5| }
… while calling 'x'
at /Users/wiggles/nix/tests/functional/lang/eval-fail-assert.nix:2:7:
1| let {
2| x = arg: assert arg == "y"; 123;
| ^
3|
error: assertion '(arg == "y")' failed
at /Users/wiggles/nix/tests/functional/lang/eval-fail-assert.nix:2:12:
1| let {
2| x = arg: assert arg == "y"; 123;
| ^
3|
`eval-system` option overrides just the value of `builtins.currentSystem`.
This is more useful than overriding `system` since you can build these
derivations on remote builders which can work on the given system.
Co-authored-by: John Ericson <John.Ericson@Obsidian.Systems>
Co-authored-by: Valentin Gagarin <valentin.gagarin@tweag.io>
I wrote the `configure.ac` wrong, and so we just got no builds
supporting ACLs.
Also, it needs to be more precise because Darwin puts other stuff in
that same header, evidently.
`configureFlags` only included `--with-boost` on Linux, which makes
local builds as outlined in `doc/manual/src/contributing/hacking.md`
fail when performed on macOS.
This was last upgraded in 788008385e, but
the version in Nixpkgs is a now a lot newer. I think the custom was
added to get ahead of Nixpkgs before, and so now that we are in fact
behind, it is no longer needed.
It works with both `ssh://` and `ssh-ng://` now since #9600 (and
`ssh-ng:// didn't work before that).
Also, by making the two tests share code, we nudge ourselves towards
making sure there is feature parity.
I don't love the way this code looks. There are two larger problems:
- eval, build/scratch, destination stores (#5025) should have different
types to reflect the fact that they are used for different purposes
and those purposes correspond to different operations. It should be
impossible to "use the wrong store" in my cases.
- Since drvs can end up in both the eval and build/scratch store, we
should have some sort of union/layered store (not on the file sytem
level, just conceptual level) that allows accessing both. This would
get rid of the ugly "check both" boilerplate in this PR.
Still, it might be better to land this now / soon after minimal cleanup,
so we have a concrete idea of what problem better abstractions are
supposed to solve.
Below the comment added by this commit is a much longer comment
followed by a trust check, both of which have confused me on at
least two occasions. I figured it out once, forgot it, then had to
ask @Ericson2314 to explain it, at which point I understood it
again. I think this might confuse other people too, or maybe I will
just forget it a third time. So let's add a comment.
Farther down in the function is the following check:
```
if (!(drvType.isCA() || trusted))
throw Error("you are not privileged to build input-addressed derivations");
```
This seems really strange at first. A key property of Nix is that
you can compute the outpath of a derivation using the derivation
(and its references-closure) without trusting anybody!
The missing insight is that at this point in the code the builder
doesn't necessarily have the references-closure of the derivation
being built, and therefore needs to trust that the derivation's
outPath is honest. It's incredibly easy to overlook this, because
the only difference between these two cases is which of these
identically-named functions we used:
- `readDerivation(Source,Store)`
- `Store::readDerivation()`
These functions have different trust models (except in the special
case where the first function is used on the local store). We
should call the reader's attention to this fact.
Co-authored-by: Cole Helbling <cole.e.helbling@outlook.com>
In https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/6134#issuecomment-1079199888,
@thuffschmitt proposed exposing `LegacySSHStore` in Nix for
deduplication with Hydra, at least temporarily. I think that is a good
idea.
Note that the diff will look bad unless one ignores whitespace! Also try
this locally:
```shell-session
git diff --ignore-all-space HEAD^:src/libstore/legacy-ssh-store.cc HEAD:src/libstore/legacy-ssh-store.cc
git diff --ignore-all-space HEAD^:src/libstore/legacy-ssh-store.cc HEAD:src/libstore/legacy-ssh-store.hh
```
* document `fetchTree`
* display experimental feature note at the top
we have to enable the new `fetchTree` experimental feature to render it
at all. this was a bug introduced when adding that new feature flag.
Co-authored-by: tomberek <tomberek@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Silvan Mosberger <github@infinisil.com>
The code has already been fixed (yay!) so what is left of this commit is
just updating the API docs.
Co-authored-by: Cole Helbling <cole.e.helbling@outlook.com>
According https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/io/strstream, it has been
deprecated since C++98! The Clang + Linux build systems to not have it
at all, or at least be hiding it.
We can just use `std::stringstream` instead, I think.
* Print the value in `error: cannot coerce` messages
This extends the `error: cannot coerce a TYPE to a string` message
to print the value that could not be coerced. This helps with debugging
by making it easier to track down where the value is being produced
from, especially in errors with deep or unhelpful stack traces.
Co-authored-by: Valentin Gagarin <valentin.gagarin@tweag.io>
This is needed for building CA deriations with a src store / dest store
split. In particular it is needed for Hydra.
https://github.com/NixOS/hydra/issues/838 currently puts realizations,
and thus build outputs, in the local store, but it should not.
This includes position information in more places, making debugging
easier.
Before:
```
$ nix-instantiate --show-trace --eval tests/functional/lang/eval-fail-using-set-as-attr-name.nix
error:
… while evaluating an attribute name
at «none»:0: (source not available)
error: value is a set while a string was expected
```
After:
```
error:
… while evaluating an attribute name
at /pwd/lang/eval-fail-using-set-as-attr-name.nix:5:10:
4| in
5| attr.${key}
| ^
6|
error: value is a set while a string was expected
```
In the process, partially undo e89b5bd0bf
in that the ancient < 2.4 version is now supported again by the
serializer again. `LegacySSHStore`, instead of also asserting that the
version is at least 4, just checks that `narHash` is set.
This allows us to better test the serializer in isolation for both
versions (< 4 and >= 4).
AppleDouble files were extracted differently on macOS machines than on other
UNIX's.
Setting `archive_read_set_format_option(this->archive, NULL ,"mac-ext",NULL)`
fixes this problem, since it just ignores the AppleDouble file and treats it as
a normal one.
This was a problem since it caused source archives to be different between macOS
and Linux.
Ref: nixos/nix#9290
* Factor out the default `MultiCommand` behavior
All the `MultiCommand`s had (nearly) the same behavior when called
without a subcommand.
Factor out this behavior into the `NixMultiCommand` class.
* Display the list of available subcommands when none is specified
Whenever a user runs a command that excepts a subcommand, add the list
of available subcommands to the error message.
* Print the multi-command lists as Markdown lists
This takes more screen real estate, but is also much more readable than
a comma-separated list
Per the instruction in the manual, we want to run configure in a
different directory so that we can configure + build for multiple
platforms. That means `config.h` will be in the build directory. This is
just like `Makefile.config`, which already is used with
`$(buildprefix)`.
without knowing a lot of context, it's not clear who "we" are in that
text. I'm also strongly opposed to adding procedural notes into
a reference manual; it just won't age well.
this change leaves a factual description of the experimental feature and
its purpose.
The Perl bindings are not part of Nix, but a downstream package, so they
don't belong in `package.nix`.
They don't really belong as an attribute on `nix` either, but we can
just leave that interface as is for now.
- remove prose for the default value, which is shown programmatically
- add note on how this relates to `cores`
- add link to mentioned derivation attribute
The problem was since switching to use libgit2, we had a package in our
closure (`http-parser`) that was always trying to build as a shared
object.
Underlying Nixpkgs PR (a 23.05 backport)
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/271202
Flake lock file updates:
• Updated input 'nixpkgs':
'github:NixOS/nixpkgs/9ba29e2346bc542e9909d1021e8fd7d4b3f64db0' (2023-11-13)
→ 'github:NixOS/nixpkgs/36c4ac09e9bebcec1fa7b7539cddb0c9e837409c' (2023-11-30)
Today, with the tests inside a `tests` intermingled with the
corresponding library's source code, we have a few problems:
- We have to be careful that wildcards don't end up with tests being
built as part of Nix proper, or test headers being installed as part
of Nix proper.
- Tests in libraries but not executables is not right:
- It means each executable runs the previous unit tests again, because
it needs the libraries.
- It doesn't work right on Windows, which doesn't want you to load a
DLL just for the side global variable . It could be made to work
with the dlopen equivalent, but that's gross!
This reorg solves these problems.
There is a remaining problem which is that sibbling headers (like
`hash.hh` the test header vs `hash.hh` the main `libnixutil` header) end
up shadowing each other. This PR doesn't solve that. That is left as
future work for a future PR.
Co-authored-by: Valentin Gagarin <valentin.gagarin@tweag.io>
This makes for more useful manual table of contents, that displays the
information at a glance.
The `nix help-stores` command is kept as-is, even though it will show up
in the manual with the same information as these pages due to the way it
is written as a "`--help`-style" command. Deciding what to do with that
command is left for a later PR.
This change also lists all store types at the top of the respective overview page.
Co-authored-by: John Ericson <John.Ericson@Obsidian.Systems
this focuses on `nix-shell -p` and refers to search.nixos.org for
package search, which is currently the easiest and most effective way to
find program names.
- put the highlight box around all the relevant instructions
- simplify the wording
- make the link more prominent by using the whole phrase for the link text
- helps navigating the code as it highlights which files are generated
- makes it less error prone when working incrementally
(although this should be just fixed by building out of tree)
This uses `git check-ignore` to determine if files are ignored before
attempting to add them in `putFile`.
We also add a condition to the `fetchFromWorkdir` filter to always add
the `flake.lock` file, even if it's not tracked. This is necessary to
resolve inputs.
This fixes#8854 without `git add --force`.
Previously many of the documentation targets were depending on
`$(bindir)/nix` which is the installed version. This meant that its
install rules would be triggered (which in chain would also trigger the
install of libraries, as reported in #5140). Therefore a build of the
documentation without an installation would not be possible (which apart
from doing unwanted operations it may also generate permission problems
for example).
The fix makes the rules depend on `$(nix_PATH)` instead, which is the
executable in the build tree.
The problem was that f880469173 forgot
that the `#include <sys/xattr.h>` was guarded by an `#ifdef __linux__`.
However, the build failure was only on FreeBSD --- turns out other
platforms have this header too!
The fix therefore uses a new configure check so we properly clear ACLs
on more platforms.
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>
`installcheck` doesn't yet work, but the rest of the build can now
happen mostly inside a separate build directory.
Progress on #9342
Co-authored-by: Valentin Gagarin <valentin.gagarin@tweag.io>
GitArchiveInputScheme now streams tarballs into a Git repository. This
deduplicates data a lot, e.g. when you're fetching different revisions
of the Nixpkgs repo. It also warns if the tree hash returned by GitHub
doesn't match the tree hash of the imported tarball.
When writing a shebang script, you expect your path to be relative to
the script, not the cwd. We previously handled this correctly for
relative file paths, but not for expressions.
This handles both -p & -E args. My understanding is this should be
what we want in any cases I can think of - people run scripts from
many different working directories. @edolstra is there any reason to
handle -p args differently in this case?
Fixes#4232
In commit 0d2163c6dc, the progress bar was hidden
in nix repl because of a regression that caused it to interfere with user
input. Several users like(d) seeing the progress bar in the repl during builds.
Only hiding it while waiting for user input gives us the best of both worlds,
so do just that.
Without the change build for `eval.o` fails occasionally as:
$ make src/libexpr/eval.o
GEN Makefile.config
GEN src/libexpr/primops/derivation.nix.gen.hh
GEN src/libexpr/fetchurl.nix.gen.hh
GEN src/libexpr/parser-tab.cc
GEN src/libexpr/lexer-tab.cc
src/libexpr/lexer.l:314: warning, -s option given but default rule can be matched
CXX src/libexpr/eval.o
src/libexpr/eval.cc:519:18: fatal error: flake/call-flake.nix.gen.hh: No such file or directory
519 | #include "flake/call-flake.nix.gen.hh"
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
compilation terminated.
make: *** [mk/patterns.mk:3: src/libexpr/eval.o] Error 1
Noticed in https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/269439
This builds on #8817, to add additional UX help for people with existing
muscle memory (or shell history) with --update-input and tries to gently
guide them towards the newly evolved CLI UI.
Co-authored-by: Cole Helbling <cole.e.helbling@outlook.com>
up to now, those were managed outside of this repo, which as
unsurprisingly a real hassle to deal with if one wanted to prevent URLs
from breaking when moving pages around. this change removes a large part
of the friction involved in moving content in the Nix manual.
possible next steps for further automation:
- check for content that moved and warn if it's not reachable from
links that were valid prior to a change
- create redirect rules automatically based on this information
We occasionnally commit to git repositories (like with `nix flake update --commit-lock-file`).
This shells out to `git commit`, which might wait for user input (for a signing key passphrase for instance).
Disable the progress bar while this is running to make sure that the
user can enter it.
* doc: primops: add more info for foldl
From the existing doc it is not obvious whether the first or the
second argument is the accumulator. This is however relevant to
know, as for certain scenarios, this might change the behavior.
Co-authored-by: Valentin Gagarin <valentin.gagarin@tweag.io>
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/269064 makes rapidcheck be build
as a shared lib, but that broke Nix because the `-lrapidcheck` was
missing. This fixes that (and doesn't break Nix what the library is a
static archive as today).
It is not inherently tied to `LocalStore`, it could probably even go in
`libnixutil`. Functions not attached to `LocalStore` should not be
declared in `local-store.hh`.
I am moving it to facilitate experimenting for #9344. If
canonicalisation should be done client-side in client-side builds, there
wouldn't be a `LocalStore` at all so having to include that header to
get this freestanding function is cumbersome and wrong.
Perhaps canonicalisation should still be done server-side for security
reasons --- I don't mean to make that judgement call now --- but even if
so, this freestanding function still isn't connected to `LocalStore` so
while less urgent it is still better to move out of this header.
This avoids repeated copying of the same source tree between Nix
invocations. It requires the accessor to have a "fingerprint" (e.g. a
Git revision) that uniquely determines its contents.
getFlake currently calls lstat (via isLink via canonPath) before it
performs the sanity check that a flake.nix exists in the first place.
This commit moves the check to before path canonicalization, so that
failed symlink check operations don't throw before the check does.
SHELL was inherited from the system environment. This resulted in a new
shell being started, but with SHELL still referring to the system shell
and not the one used by nix-develop.
Applications like make, use SHELL to run commands, which meant that
top-level commands are run inside the nix-develop-shell, but
sub-commands are ran inside the system shell.
This setenv forces SHELL to always be set to the shell used by
nix-develop.
Users may select specific outputs using the ^output syntax or selecting
any output using ^*.
URL parsing currently doesn't support these kinds of output references:
parsing will fail.
Currently `queryRegex` was reused for URL fragments, which didn't
include support for ^. Now queryRegex has been split from fragmentRegex,
where only the fragmentRegex supports ^.
Instead of making a complete copy of the repo, fetching the
submodules, and writing the result to the store (which is all
superexpensive), we now fetch the submodules recursively using the Git
fetcher, and return a union accessor that "mounts" the accessors for
the submodules on top of the root accessor.
These docs explain the implementation relative to the local store
originals. The original declaration of virtual methods can still be
consulted for proper interface-level documentation.
As an optimisation for LocalStore, we read all the store directory entries into
a set. Checking for membership of this set is much faster than a stat syscall.
However for LocalOverlayStore, the lower store directory is expected to contain
a vast number of entries and reading them all can take a very long time.
So instead of enumerating them all upfront, we call pathExists as needed. This
means making stat syscalls for each store path, but the upper layer is expected
to be relatively small compared to the lower store so that should be okay.
Grouping our tests should make it easier to understand the intent than
one long poorly-arranged list. It also is convenient for running just
the tests for a specific component when working on that component.
We need at least one test group so this isn't dead code; I decided to
collect the tests for the `ca-derivations` and `dynamic-derivations`
experimental features in groups. Do
```bash
make ca.test-group -jN
```
and
```bash
make dyn-drv.test-group -jN
```
to try running just them.
I originally did this as part of #8397 for being able to just the local
overlay store alone. I am PRing it separately now so we can separate
general infra from new features.
If the garbage collector has acquired the global GC lock, but hasn't
created the GC socket yet, then a client attempting to connect would
get ENOENT. Note that this only happens when the GC runs for the first
time on a machine. Subsequently clients will get ECONNREFUSED which
was already handled.
Fixes#7370.
This requires switching on SQLITE_OPEN_URI because there is no open flag to
make the database immutable. Without immutable, sqlite will still attempt to
create journal and wal files, even when the database is opened read-only.
https://www.sqlite.org/c3ref/open.html
The immutable parameter is a boolean query parameter that indicates that the
database file is stored on read-only media. When immutable is set, SQLite
assumes that the database file cannot be changed, even by a process with higher
privilege, and so the database is opened read-only and all locking and change
detection is disabled.
Nix does not manage the overlayfs mount point itself, but the correct
functioning of the overlay store does depend on this mount point being set up
correctly. Rather than just assume this is the case, check that the lowerdir
and upperdir options are what we expect them to be. This check is on by
default, but can be disabled if needed.
- Add recursiveSync function to flush a directory tree to disk
- Add AutoCloseFD::startFsync to initiate an asynchronous fsync
without waiting for the result
- Initiate an asynchronous fsync while extracting NAR files
- Implement the fsync-store-paths option in LocalStore
2022-12-20 12:03:35 -08:00
1782 changed files with 72487 additions and 44244 deletions
Even if you've contributed to open source before, take a moment to read it,
so you understand the process and the expectations.
- what information to include in commit messages
- proper attribution
- volunteering contributions effectively
- how to get help and our review process.
-->
## Motivation
<!-- Briefly explain what the change is about and why it is desirable. -->
# Context
## Context
<!-- Provide context. Reference open issues if available. -->
<!-- Non-trivial change: Briefly outline the implementation strategy. -->
@@ -10,6 +31,8 @@
<!-- Large change: Provide instructions to reviewers how to read the diff. -->
# Priorities
---
Add :+1: to [pull requests you find important](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pulls?q=is%3Aopen+sort%3Areactions-%2B1-desc).
The Nix maintainer team uses a [GitHub project board](https://github.com/orgs/NixOS/projects/19) to [schedule and track reviews](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/tree/master/maintainers#project-board-protocol).
# 2. Store your dockerhub username as DOCKERHUB_USERNAME in "Repository secrets" of your fork repository settings (https://github.com/$githubuser/nix/settings/secrets/actions)
# 3. Create an access token in https://hub.docker.com/settings/security and store it as DOCKERHUB_TOKEN in "Repository secrets" of your fork
check_secrets:
permissions:
contents:none
name:Check Docker secrets present for installer tests
@@ -27,6 +27,8 @@ Check out the [security policy](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/security/policy).
1. Search for related issues that cover what you're going to work on.
It could help to mention there that you will work on the issue.
We strongly recommend first-time contributors not to propose new features but rather fix tightly-scoped problems in order to build trust and a working relationship with maintainers.
Issues labeled [good first issue](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/labels/good%20first%20issue) should be relatively easy to fix and are likely to get merged quickly.
Pull requests addressing issues labeled [idea approved](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/labels/idea%20approved) or [RFC](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/labels/RFC) are especially welcomed by maintainers and will receive prioritised review.
@@ -39,9 +41,9 @@ Check out the [security policy](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/security/policy).
There are many open pull requests that might already do what you intend to work on.
You can use [labels](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/labels) to filter for relevant topics.
3. Check the [Nix reference manual](https://nixos.org/manual/nix/unstable/contributing/hacking.html) for information on building Nix and running its tests.
3. Check the [Nix reference manual](https://nix.dev/manual/nix/development/development/building.html) for information on building Nix and running its tests.
For contributions to the command line interface, please check the [CLI guidelines](https://nixos.org/manual/nix/unstable/contributing/cli-guideline.html).
For contributions to the command line interface, please check the [CLI guidelines](https://nix.dev/manual/nix/development/development/cli-guideline.html).
4. Make your change!
@@ -50,6 +52,20 @@ Check out the [security policy](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/security/policy).
Link related issues to inform interested parties and future contributors about your change.
If your pull request closes one or multiple issues, mention that in the description using `Closes: #<number>`, as it will then happen automatically when your change is merged.
* Credit original authors when you're reusing or building on their work.
* Link to relevant changes in other projects, so that others can understand the full context of the change in the future when you or someone else will change or troubleshoot the code.
This is especially important when your change is based on work done in other repositories.
Example:
```
This is based on the work of @user in <url>.
This solution took inspiration from <url>.
Co-authored-by: User Name <user@example.com>
```
When cherry-picking from a different repository, use the `-x` flag, and then amend the commits to turn the hashes into URLs.
* Make sure to have [a clean history of commits on your branch by using rebase](https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-rebase-and-update-a-pull-request).
* [Mark the pull request as draft](https://docs.github.com/en/pull-requests/collaborating-with-pull-requests/proposing-changes-to-your-work-with-pull-requests/changing-the-stage-of-a-pull-request) if you're not done with the changes.
@@ -63,22 +79,22 @@ Check out the [security policy](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/security/policy).
- [ ] User documentation in the [manual](..doc/manual/src)
- [ ] User documentation in the [manual](./doc/manual/source)
- [ ] API documentation in header files
- [ ] Code and comments are self-explanatory
- [ ] Commit message explains **why** the change was made
- [ ] New feature or incompatible change: updated [release notes](./doc/manual/src/release-notes/rl-next.md)
- [ ] New feature or incompatible change: [add a release note](https://nix.dev/manual/nix/development/development/contributing.html#add-a-release-note)
7. If you need additional feedback or help to getting pull request into shape, ask other contributors using [@mentions](https://docs.github.com/en/get-started/writing-on-github/getting-started-with-writing-and-formatting-on-github/basic-writing-and-formatting-syntax#mentioning-people-and-teams).
## Making changes to the Nix manual
The Nix reference manual is hosted on https://nixos.org/manual/nix.
The underlying source files are located in [`doc/manual/src`](./doc/manual/src).
The underlying source files are located in [`doc/manual/source`](./doc/manual/source).
For small changes you can [use GitHub to edit these files](https://docs.github.com/en/repositories/working-with-files/managing-files/editing-files)
For larger changes see the [Nix reference manual](https://nixos.org/manual/nix/unstable/contributing/hacking.html).
For larger changes see the [Nix reference manual](https://nix.dev/manual/nix/development/development/contributing.html).
## Getting help
Whenever you're stuck or do not know how to proceed, you can always ask for help.
The appropriate channels to do so can be found on the [NixOS Community](https://nixos.org/community/) page.
We invite you to use our [Matrix room](https://matrix.to/#/#nix-dev:nixos.org) to ask questions.
Nix is a powerful package manager for Linux and other Unix systems that makes package
management reliable and reproducible. Please refer to the [Nix manual](https://nixos.org/nix/manual)
management reliable and reproducible. Please refer to the [Nix manual](https://nix.dev/reference/nix-manual)
for more details.
## Installation and first steps
Visit [nix.dev](https://nix.dev) for [installation instructions](https://nix.dev/tutorials/install-nix) and [beginner tutorials](https://nix.dev/tutorials/first-steps).
Full reference documentation can be found in the [Nix manual](https://nixos.org/nix/manual).
Full reference documentation can be found in the [Nix manual](https://nix.dev/reference/nix-manual).
## Building And Developing
## Building and developing
See our [Hacking guide](https://nixos.org/manual/nix/unstable/contributing/hacking.html) in our manual for instruction on how to
set up a development environment and build Nix from source.
Follow instructions in the Nix reference manual to [set up a development environment and build Nix from source](https://nix.dev/manual/nix/development/development/building.html).
## Contributing
Check the [contributing guide](./CONTRIBUTING.md) if you want to get involved with developing Nix.
## Additional Resources
## Additional resources
- [Nix manual](https://nixos.org/nix/manual)
- [Nix jobsets on hydra.nixos.org](https://hydra.nixos.org/project/nix)
Nix was created by Eelco Dolstra and developed as the subject of his PhD thesis [The Purely Functional Software Deployment Model](https://edolstra.github.io/pubs/phd-thesis.pdf), published 2006.
Today, a world-wide developer community contributes to Nix and the ecosystem that has grown around it.
- [The Nix, Nixpkgs, NixOS Community on nixos.org](https://nixos.org/)
- [Official documentation on nix.dev](https://nix.dev)
- [Nixpkgs](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs) is [the largest, most up-to-date free software repository in the world](https://repology.org/repositories/graphs)
- [NixOS](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/tree/master/nixos) is a Linux distribution that can be configured fully declaratively
[AC_MSG_ERROR([Nix requires libeditline; it was not found via pkg-config, but via its header, but required functions do not work. Maybe it is too old? >= 1.14 is required.])])
AS_HELP_STRING([--disable-cpuid], [Do not determine microarchitecture levels with libcpuid (relevant to x86_64 only)]))
if test "x$enable_cpuid" != "xno"; then
PKG_CHECK_MODULES([LIBCPUID], [libcpuid],
[CXXFLAGS="$LIBCPUID_CFLAGS $CXXFLAGS"
have_libcpuid=1
AC_DEFINE([HAVE_LIBCPUID], [1], [Use libcpuid])]
)
fi
fi
AC_SUBST(HAVE_LIBCPUID, [$have_libcpuid])
# Look for libseccomp, required for Linux sandboxing.
case "$host_os" in
linux*)
AC_ARG_ENABLE([seccomp-sandboxing],
AS_HELP_STRING([--disable-seccomp-sandboxing],[Don't build support for seccomp sandboxing (only recommended if your arch doesn't support libseccomp yet!)
]))
if test "x$enable_seccomp_sandboxing" != "xno"; then
PKG_CHECK_MODULES([LIBSECCOMP], [libseccomp],
[CXXFLAGS="$LIBSECCOMP_CFLAGS $CXXFLAGS"])
have_seccomp=1
AC_DEFINE([HAVE_SECCOMP], [1], [Whether seccomp is available and should be used for sandboxing.])
else
have_seccomp=
fi
;;
*)
have_seccomp=
;;
esac
AC_SUBST(HAVE_SECCOMP, [$have_seccomp])
# Look for aws-cpp-sdk-s3.
AC_LANG_PUSH(C++)
AC_CHECK_HEADERS([aws/s3/S3Client.h],
[AC_DEFINE([ENABLE_S3], [1], [Whether to enable S3 support via aws-sdk-cpp.]) enable_s3=1],
[AC_DEFINE([ENABLE_S3], [0], [Whether to enable S3 support via aws-sdk-cpp.]) enable_s3=])
A local Nix installation can forward Nix builds to other machines,
this allows multiple builds to be performed in parallel.
Remote builds also allow Nix to perform multi-platform builds in a
semi-transparent way. For example, if you perform a build for a
`x86_64-darwin` on an `i686-linux` machine, Nix can automatically
forward the build to a `x86_64-darwin` machine, if one is available.
## Requirements
For a local machine to forward a build to a remote machine, the remote machine must:
- Have Nix installed
- Be running an SSH server, e.g. `sshd`
- Be accessible via SSH from the local machine over the network
- Have the local machine's public SSH key in `/etc/ssh/authorized_keys.d/<username>`
- Have the username of the SSH user in the `trusted-users` setting in `nix.conf`
## Testing
To test connecting to a remote Nix instance (in this case `mac`), run:
```console
nix store info --store ssh://username@mac
```
To specify an SSH identity file as part of the remote store URI add a
query paramater, e.g.
```console
nix store info --store ssh://username@mac?ssh-key=/home/alice/my-key
```
Since builds should be non-interactive, the key should not have a
passphrase. Alternatively, you can load identities ahead of time into
`ssh-agent` or `gpg-agent`.
In a multi-user installation (default), builds are executed by the Nix
Daemon. The Nix Daemon cannot prompt for a passphrase via the terminal
or `ssh-agent`, so the SSH key must not have a passphrase.
In addition, the Nix Daemon's user (typically root) needs to have SSH
access to the remote builder.
Access can be verified by running `sudo su`, and then validating SSH
access, e.g. by running `ssh mac`. SSH identity files for root users
are usually stored in `/root/.ssh/` (Linux) or `/var/root/.ssh` (MacOS).
If you get the error
```console
bash: nix: command not found
error: cannot connect to 'mac'
```
then you need to ensure that the `PATH` of non-interactive login shells
contains Nix.
The [list of remote build machines](@docroot@/command-ref/conf-file.md#conf-builders) can be specified on the command line or in the Nix configuration file.
For example, the following command allows you to build a derivation for `x86_64-darwin` on a Linux machine:
@@ -52,7 +52,7 @@ The following [concept map] shows its main components (rectangles), the objects
'---------------'
```
At the top is the [command line interface](../command-ref/command-ref.md) that drives the underlying layers.
At the top is the [command line interface](../command-ref/index.md) that drives the underlying layers.
The [Nix language](../language/index.md) evaluator transforms Nix expressions into self-contained *build plans*, which are used to derive *build results* from referenced *build inputs*.
@@ -69,7 +69,7 @@ It can also execute build plans to produce new data, which are made available to
A build plan itself is a series of *build tasks*, together with their build inputs.
> **Important**
> A build task in Nix is called [derivation](../glossary.md#gloss-derivation).
> A build task in Nix is called [derivation](@docroot@/glossary.md#gloss-derivation).
Each build task has a special build input executed as *build instructions* in order to perform the build.
The result of a build task can be input to another build task.
A colon-separated list of search path entries used to resolve [lookup paths](@docroot@/language/constructs/lookup-path.md).
If `NIX_PATH` is not set at all, Nix will fall back to the following list in [impure](@docroot@/command-ref/conf-file.md#conf-pure-eval) and [unrestricted](@docroot@/command-ref/conf-file.md#conf-restrict-eval) evaluation mode:
This environment variable overrides the value of the [`nix-path` configuration setting](@docroot@/command-ref/conf-file.md#conf-nix-path).
The source for the default [Nix expressions](@docroot@/language/index.md) used by [`nix-env`]:
The source for the [Nix expressions](@docroot@/glossary.md#gloss-nix-expression) used by [`nix-env`] by default:
- `~/.nix-defexpr`
- `$XDG_STATE_HOME/nix/defexpr` if [`use-xdg-base-directories`] is set to `true`.
@@ -18,24 +18,25 @@ Then, the resulting expression is interpreted like this:
- If the expression is an attribute set, it is used as the default Nix expression.
- If the expression is a function, an empty set is passed as argument and the return value is used as the default Nix expression.
For example, if the default expression contains two files, `foo.nix` and `bar.nix`, then the default Nix expression will be equivalent to
```nix
{
foo = import ~/.nix-defexpr/foo.nix;
bar = import ~/.nix-defexpr/bar.nix;
}
```
> **Example**
>
> If the default expression contains two files, `foo.nix` and `bar.nix`, then the default Nix expression will be equivalent to
>
> ```nix
> {
> foo = import ~/.nix-defexpr/foo.nix;
> bar = import ~/.nix-defexpr/bar.nix;
> }
> ```
The file [`manifest.nix`](@docroot@/command-ref/files/manifest.nix.md) is always ignored.
The command [`nix-channel`] places a symlink to the user's current [channels profile](@docroot@/command-ref/files/channels.md) in this directory.
The command [`nix-channel`] places a symlink to the current user's [channels] in this directory, the [user channel link](#user-channel-link).
This makes all subscribed channels available as attributes in the default expression.
## User channel link
A symlink that ensures that [`nix-env`] can find your channels:
A symlink that ensures that [`nix-env`] can find the current user's [channels]:
- `~/.nix-defexpr/channels`
- `$XDG_STATE_HOME/defexpr/channels` if [`use-xdg-base-directories`] is set to `true`.
@@ -45,8 +46,9 @@ This symlink points to:
- `$XDG_STATE_HOME/profiles/channels` for regular users
- `$NIX_STATE_DIR/profiles/per-user/root/channels` for `root`
In a multi-user installation, you may also have `~/.nix-defexpr/channels_root`, which links to the channels of the root user.[`nix-env`]: ../nix-env.md
In a multi-user installation, you may also have `~/.nix-defexpr/channels_root`, which links to the channels of the root user.
This is the equivalent of invoking `nix-env --delete-generations old` on each found profile.
This is the equivalent of invoking [`nix-env --delete-generations old`](@docroot@/command-ref/nix-env/delete-generations.md#generations-old) on each found profile.
Delete all generations of profiles older than the specified amount (except for the generations that were active at that point in time).
*period* is a value such as `30d`, which would mean 30 days.
This is the equivalent of invoking [`nix-env --delete-generations <period>`](@docroot@/command-ref/nix-env/delete-generations.md#generations-time) on each found profile.
See the documentation of that command for additional information about the *period* argument.
<!-- duplication from https://github.com/NixOS/nix/blob/442a2623e48357ff72c77bb11cf2cf06d94d2f90/doc/manual/source/command-ref/nix-store/gc.md?plain=1#L39-L44 -->
Keep deleting paths until at least *bytes* bytes have been deleted,
then stop. The argument *bytes* can be followed by the
`nix-copy-closure` - copy store objects to or from a remote machine via SSH
# Synopsis
`nix-copy-closure`
[`--to` | `--from` ]
[`--gzip`]
[`--include-outputs`]
[`--use-substitutes` | `-s`]
[`-v`]
[_user_@]_machine_[:_port_] _paths_
# Description
Given _paths_ from one machine, `nix-copy-closure` computes the [closure](@docroot@/glossary.md#gloss-closure) of those paths (i.e. all their dependencies in the Nix store), and copies [store objects](@docroot@/glossary.md#gloss-store-object) in that closure to another machine via SSH.
It doesn’t copy store objects that are already present on the other machine.
> **Note**
>
> While the Nix store to use on the local machine can be specified on the command line with the [`--store`](@docroot@/command-ref/conf-file.md#conf-store) option, the Nix store to be accessed on the remote machine can only be [configured statically](@docroot@/command-ref/conf-file.md#configuration-file) on that remote machine.
Since `nix-copy-closure` calls `ssh`, you may need to authenticate with the remote machine.
In fact, you may be asked for authentication _twice_ because `nix-copy-closure` currently connects twice to the remote machine: first to get the set of paths missing on the target machine, and second to send the dump of those paths.
When using public key authentication, you can avoid typing the passphrase with `ssh-agent`.
# Options
-`--to`
Copy the closure of _paths_ from a Nix store accessible from the local machine to the Nix store on the remote _machine_.
This is the default behavior.
-`--from`
Copy the closure of _paths_ from the Nix store on the remote _machine_ to the local machine's specified Nix store.
-`--gzip`
Enable compression of the SSH connection.
-`--include-outputs`
Also copy the outputs of [store derivation]s included in the closure.
Attempt to download missing store objects on the target from [substituters](@docroot@/command-ref/conf-file.md#conf-substituters).
Any store objects that cannot be substituted on the target are still copied normally from the source.
This is useful, for instance, if the connection between the source and target machine is slow, but the connection between the target machine and `cache.nixos.org` (the default binary cache server) is fast.
{{#include ./opt-common.md}}
# Environment variables
-`NIX_SSHOPTS`
Additional options to be passed to `ssh` on the command line.
{{#include ./env-common.md}}
# Examples
> **Example**
>
> Copy GNU Hello with all its dependencies to a remote machine:
>
> ```shell-session
> $ storePath="$(nix-build '<nixpkgs>' -I nixpkgs=channel:nixpkgs-unstable -A hello --no-out-link)"
`nix-env` can obtain packages from multiple sources:
- An attribute set of derivations from:
- The [default Nix expression](@docroot@/command-ref/files/default-nix-expression.md) (by default)
- A Nix file, specified via `--file`
- A [profile](@docroot@/command-ref/files/profiles.md), specified via `--from-profile`
- A Nix expression that is a function which takes default expression as argument, specified via `--from-expression`
- A [store path](@docroot@/store/store-path.md)
# Selectors
Several operations, such as [`nix-env --query`](./nix-env/query.md) and [`nix-env --install`](./nix-env/install.md), take a list of *arguments* that specify the packages on which to operate.
Packages are identified based on a `name` part and a `version` part of a [symbolic derivation name](@docroot@/language/derivations.md#attr-name):
-`name`: Everything up to but not including the first dash (`-`) that is *not* followed by a letter.
-`version`: The rest, excluding the separating dash.
> **Example**
>
> `nix-env` parses the symbolic derivation name `apache-httpd-2.0.48` as:
>
> ```json
> {
> "name": "apache-httpd",
> "version": "2.0.48"
> }
> ```
> **Example**
>
> `nix-env` parses the symbolic derivation name `firefox.*` as:
>
> ```json
> {
> "name": "firefox.*",
> "version": ""
> }
> ```
The `name` parts of the *arguments* to `nix-env` are treated as extended regular expressions and matched against the `name` parts of derivation names in the package source.
The match is case-sensitive.
The regular expression can optionally be followed by a dash (`-`) and a version number; if omitted, any version of the package will match.
For details on regular expressions, see [**regex**(7)](https://linux.die.net/man/7/regex).
> **Example**
>
> Common patterns for finding package names with `nix-env`:
>
> - `firefox`
>
> Matches the package name `firefox` and any version.
>
> - `firefox-32.0`
>
> Matches the package name `firefox` and version `32.0`.
>
> - `gtk\\+`
>
> Matches the package name `gtk+`.
> The `+` character must be escaped using a backslash (`\`) to prevent it from being interpreted as a quantifier, and the backslash must be escaped in turn with another backslash to ensure that the shell passes it on.
>
> - `.\*`
>
> Matches any package name.
> This is the default for most commands.
>
> - `'.*zip.*'`
>
> Matches any package name containing the string `zip`.
> Note the dots: `'*zip*'` does not work, because in a regular expression, the character `*` is interpreted as a quantifier.
>
> - `'.*(firefox|chromium).*'`
>
> Matches any package name containing the strings `firefox` or `chromium`.
`nix-env --install` - add packages to user environment
# Synopsis
`nix-env` {`--install` | `-i`} *args…*
[{`--prebuilt-only` | `-b`}]
[{`--attr` | `-A`}]
[`--from-expression`] [`-E`]
[`--from-profile`*path*]
[`--preserve-installed` | `-P`]
[`--remove-all` | `-r`]
[`--priority`*priority*]
# Description
The `--install` operation creates a new user environment.
It is based on the current generation of the active [profile](@docroot@/command-ref/files/profiles.md), to which a set of [store paths] described by *args* is added.
[store paths]: @docroot@/store/store-path.md
The arguments *args* map to store paths in a number of possible ways:
- By default, *args* is a set of [derivation] names denoting derivations in the [default Nix expression].
These are [realised], and the resulting output paths are installed.
Currently installed derivations with a name equal to the name of a derivation being added are removed unless the option `--preserve-installed` is specified.
If there are multiple derivations matching a name in *args* that
have the same name (e.g., `gcc-3.3.6` and `gcc-4.1.1`), then the
derivation with the highest *priority* is used. A derivation can
define a priority by declaring the `meta.priority` attribute. This
attribute should be a number, with a higher value denoting a lower
priority. The default priority is `5`.
If there are multiple matching derivations with the same priority,
then the derivation with the highest version will be installed.
You can force the installation of multiple derivations with the same
name by being specific about the versions. For instance, `nix-env --install
gcc-3.3.6 gcc-4.1.1` will install both version of GCC (and will
probably cause a user environment conflict\!).
- If [`--attr`](#opt-attr) / `-A` is specified, the arguments are *attribute paths* that select attributes from the [default Nix expression].
This is faster than using derivation names and unambiguous.
Show the attribute paths of available packages with [`nix-env --query`](./query.md):
```console
nix-env --query --available --attr-path
```
- If `--from-profile` *path* is given, *args* is a set of names
denoting installed [store paths] in the profile *path*. This is an
easy way to copy user environment elements from one profile to
another.
- If `--from-expression` is given, *args* are [Nix language functions](@docroot@/language/syntax.md#functions) that are called with the [default Nix expression] as their single argument.
The derivations returned by those function calls are installed.
This allows derivations to be specified in an unambiguous way, which is necessary if there are multiple derivations with the same name.
- If `--priority` *priority* is given, the priority of the derivations being installed is set to *priority*.
This can be used to override the priority of the derivations being installed.
This is useful if *args* are [store paths], which don't have any priority information.
- If *args* are [store derivations](@docroot@/glossary.md#gloss-store-derivation), then these are [realised], and the resulting output paths are installed.
- If *args* are [store paths] that are not store derivations, then these are [realised] and installed.
- By default all [outputs](@docroot@/language/derivations.md#attr-outputs) are installed for each [derivation].
This can be overridden by adding a `meta.outputsToInstall` attribute on the derivation listing a subset of the output names.
Example:
The file `example.nix` defines a derivation with two outputs `foo` and `bar`, each containing a file.
```nix
# example.nix
let
pkgs = import <nixpkgs> {};
command = ''
${pkgs.coreutils}/bin/mkdir -p $foo $bar
echo foo > $foo/foo-file
echo bar > $bar/bar-file
'';
in
derivation {
name = "example";
builder = "${pkgs.bash}/bin/bash";
args = [ "-c" command ];
outputs = [ "foo" "bar" ];
system = builtins.currentSystem;
}
```
Installing from this Nix expression will make files from both outputs appear in the current profile.
```console
$ nix-env --install --file example.nix
installing 'example'
$ ls ~/.nix-profile
foo-file
bar-file
manifest.nix
```
Adding `meta.outputsToInstall` to that derivation will make `nix-env` only install files from the specified outputs.
The script's file name is passed as the first argument to the interpreter specified by the `-i` flag.
Aside from the very first line, which is a directive to the operating system, the additional `#! nix-shell` lines do not need to be at the beginning of the file.
This allows wrapping them in block comments for languages where `#` does not start a comment, such as ECMAScript, Erlang, PHP, or Ruby.
`nix-store --export` - export store paths to a [Nix Archive]
## Synopsis
`nix-store``--export`*paths…*
## Description
The operation `--export` writes a serialisation of the given [store objects](@docroot@/glossary.md#gloss-store-object) to standard output in a format that can be imported into another [Nix store](@docroot@/store/index.md) with [`nix-store --import`](./import.md).
> **Warning**
>
> This command *does not* produce a [closure](@docroot@/glossary.md#gloss-closure) of the specified store paths.
> Trying to import a store object that refers to store paths not available in the target Nix store will fail.
>
> Use [`nix-store --query`](@docroot@/command-ref/nix-store/query.md) to obtain the closure of a store path.
This command is different from [`nix-store --dump`](./dump.md), which produces a [Nix archive](@docroot@/glossary.md#gloss-nar) that *does not* contain the set of [references](@docroot@/glossary.md#gloss-reference) of a given store path.
> **Note**
>
> For efficient transfer of closures to remote machines over SSH, use [`nix-copy-closure`](@docroot@/command-ref/nix-copy-closure.md).
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