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734 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Samuel Dionne-Riel
6a3f5bcb06 nixos/doc: Updates release date for 18.09
(cherry picked from commit 82d1bf9691)
2018-10-05 18:33:19 -04:00
Samuel Dionne-Riel
1863faca75 README: 18.03 -> 18.09
(cherry picked from commit 29b479eb72)
2018-10-05 18:25:14 -04:00
Samuel Dionne-Riel
0ea9623aa4 Updates 18.09 release notes for release.
(cherry picked from commit 6487a47996)
2018-10-05 18:19:39 -04:00
Andreas Rammhold
b0b0a6cf3b Merge pull request #47925 from edef1c/git-2.18.1
git: 2.18.0 -> 2.18.1 (CVE-2018-17456)
2018-10-05 22:12:29 +02:00
edef
def2618c09 git: 2.18.0 -> 2.18.1 (CVE-2018-17456) 2018-10-05 18:41:59 +00:00
Graham Christensen
d916a0f9ce docs: Delete assert functions since they don't exist in 18.09 2018-10-05 13:18:04 -04:00
Graham Christensen
3bf2c2f2d1 Generate links to function definitions
Hydra passes the full revision in to the input, which we pass through.

If we don't get this ,we try to get it from other sources, or default to
master which should have the definition in a close-ish location.

All published docs should have theURL resolve properly, only local
hackers will have the link break.

(cherry picked from commit 5daee73ce4)
2018-10-05 13:14:11 -04:00
Graham Christensen
09b8ed042a version.nix: extract revision-fetching function
(cherry picked from commit 4312cfdbda)
2018-10-05 13:14:07 -04:00
Samuel Dionne-Riel
9d5f0ba8e3 Merge pull request #47898 from peterhoeg/f/activation_1809
nixos system-activation: support activation scripts run in a user context
2018-10-05 12:26:32 -04:00
Graham Christensen
131cb302ab nixpkgs: Start documenting library functions in XML
Covers assert functions and about half of the attrsets functions.

Some internal consistency around IDs could be improved.

(cherry picked from commit f835f77e02)
2018-10-05 10:20:39 -04:00
Notkea
4e73b76ede matrix-synapse: 0.33.5 -> 0.33.6
(cherry picked from commit 570b9bab25)
Backport of #47880
2018-10-05 10:33:18 +02:00
Peter Hoeg
c8b3a26aec plasma5: run kbuildsycoca5 in the user context
(cherry picked from commit 4dada63a17)
2018-10-05 11:27:17 +08:00
Peter Hoeg
092f82b803 switch-to-configuration.pl: activate the nixos-activation.service user service
(cherry picked from commit 8118d6eb2e)
2018-10-05 11:27:03 +08:00
Peter Hoeg
c5b97d47b8 system-activation: support script fragments to run in a user context
(cherry picked from commit 1353ba2678)
2018-10-05 11:26:22 +08:00
Alex Leferry 2
b4d7324678 GRV: Fix typos in description
(cherry picked from commit 1bb4b16b3b)
2018-10-04 23:27:50 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
8dae912c28 Merge #47699: nixos on hyperv improvements 2018-10-05 00:11:57 +02:00
Michael Weiss
cb08cb4333 Merge pull request #47884 from primeos/security-backports-for-18.09
[18.09] gollum, jekyll (security backports)
2018-10-04 21:50:44 +02:00
Andreas Rammhold
7c3459b027 Merge pull request #47874 from andir/18.09/thunderbird
[18.09] thunderbird:  60.0 -> 60.2.1, thunderbird-bin: 60.0 -> 60.2.1
2018-10-04 21:43:55 +02:00
Michael Weiss
1f96d2f3e4 gollum: 4.1.3 -> 4.1.4 (security, CVE-2018-3740)
(cherry picked from commit 18b468ed81)
Reason: Security update: "Depend on new version of gollum-lib that
relies on a patched version of sanitize, which solves a vulnerability
(CVE-2018-3740). See https://github.com/gollum/gollum-lib/pull/296."
2018-10-04 21:15:38 +02:00
Michael Weiss
5ca268d7cf jekyll: 3.8.3 -> 3.8.4 (security)
(cherry picked from commit e8a35913e1)
Reason: Security update: "fix include bypass of EntryFilter#filter
symlink check".
2018-10-04 21:14:46 +02:00
Michael Weiss
69d32c2a33 gollum: 4.1.2 -> 4.1.3
(cherry picked from commit 265c5fc485)
Reason: Security update: "Solves a vulnerability in the File view and
All Pages view that would allow XSS."
2018-10-04 21:13:50 +02:00
zimbatm
5399898b86 elvish: provide the compiled version
Without this fix, `elvish -version` displays "unknown"

(cherry picked from commit 9d49cf1808)
2018-10-04 19:54:45 +01:00
taku0
20063233d6 thunderbird-bin: 60.0 -> 60.2.1
(cherry picked from commit d4de3b2d34)
2018-10-04 19:20:58 +02:00
taku0
5669552c91 thunderbird: 60.0 -> 60.2.1
(cherry picked from commit d802524def)
2018-10-04 19:20:29 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
c78e3b7cfb nixos-option: fix #47722 when missing ~/.nix-defexpr/channels
The problem was that the non-fatal warning was not omitted
from the output when constructing a nix expression.
Now it seems OK for me.  When return code is OK,
the warnings don't get passed anywhere, but I expect
that won't matter for this utility.  Fatal errors are still shown.

(cherry picked from commit de93b32f90)
2018-10-04 17:22:05 +02:00
Florian Klink
c02f213dfa terraform-providers.matchbox: init at 0.2.2 (#47863)
(cherry picked from commit e4f4e9fd1d)
2018-10-04 16:15:49 +02:00
Jörg Thalheim
be38959376 Merge pull request #47407 from kalbasit/nixpkgs_add-terraform-provider-nixos
terraform: update all providers and move nixos provider under terraform.withPlugins
(cherry picked from commit 5547a8b6a5)
2018-10-04 11:40:57 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
11ec1cd1a6 Merge branch 'staging-18.09' into release-18.09 2018-10-04 08:45:49 +02:00
Tim Steinbach
6cbd1ec4b0 linux: 4.18.11 -> 4.18.12
(cherry picked from commit 21db680d32522ece1cbb3999b8e468f2e8b57906)
2018-10-03 23:48:23 -04:00
Tim Steinbach
a4d4490254 linux: 4.14.73 -> 4.14.74
(cherry picked from commit 575c118a6469cd2148ed3092de90f0d8d3aaec53)
2018-10-03 23:48:16 -04:00
Tim Steinbach
e468090878 linux: 4.9.130 -> 4.9.131
(cherry picked from commit e6ff57b328e913ae656e038a819b12926eadd230)
2018-10-03 23:48:08 -04:00
Samuel Dionne-Riel
91c3bc1dfe doc: installing-usb: removes notes about unetbootin.
They are known to cause more issues than solving issues; futhermore
using `dd` should work everywhere without fail.

(cherry picked from commit 8467dc857b)
2018-10-03 22:57:04 -04:00
Samuel Dionne-Riel
9da278dc38 doc: Reviews partitioning instructions to use parted.
The tests in <nixos/tests/installer.nix> are using `parted`, so they are
bound to be better tested than `fdisk`.

This is brought on by a couple issues, plus reports on IRC that the
`fdisk` instructions didn't work as expected.

 * #39354
 * #46309
 * #39942
 * #45478

Care was taken so that the other documented steps did not need changes.

In all this kerfufle, a slight re-organization of the Chapter has been
made, allowing better deep linking.

(cherry picked from commit 6cfbf403ca)
2018-10-03 22:57:00 -04:00
Samuel Dionne-Riel
292d4fce90 nixos/doc: Adds sub-folder to input files.
(cherry picked from commit 2c0d56f007)
2018-10-03 22:56:54 -04:00
Samuel Dionne-Riel
59f5dea6bd doc: installing-usb make macOS note a note.
While it seemingly brings more attention to the macOS notes with the
default docbook template, it better represents which parts of the
section are about macOS, and which parts are simply in the flow of the
text; otherwise the last paragraph may be lost into the details for
macOS.

(cherry picked from commit 8192fcd0fd)
2018-10-03 22:56:33 -04:00
Graham Christensen
e13c208665 nixpkgs docs: format 2018-10-03 22:01:16 -04:00
Graham Christensen
4a0da7f3ac nixpkgs docs: Rebuild manual-full if nested XML docs change 2018-10-03 22:00:29 -04:00
Graham Christensen
ce5e6466b6 shell functions: rewrite as xml 2018-10-03 22:00:29 -04:00
Graham Christensen
5954454dd1 nixpkgs docs: move shell section to its own file 2018-10-03 22:00:28 -04:00
Graham Christensen
7413dce611 nixpkgs docs: move dockertool to its own file 2018-10-03 22:00:27 -04:00
Graham Christensen
191745989c nixpkgs docs: move fhs-environments to its own file 2018-10-03 21:58:37 -04:00
Graham Christensen
05519f21fc nixpkgs docs: move debug to its own file 2018-10-03 21:58:37 -04:00
Graham Christensen
b66df5c45d nixpkgs docs: move generators to its own file 2018-10-03 21:58:37 -04:00
Graham Christensen
3b739c0daf nixpkgs docs: move overrides to its own file 2018-10-03 21:57:26 -04:00
Jörg Thalheim
46069d481c Merge pull request #47709 from et4te/rustbuild-fix-staging
buildRustPackage: install binaries to bin and libraries to lib correctly
2018-10-04 00:03:15 +01:00
Jan Tojnar
d6ff529d05 Merge pull request #47515 from alexeymuranov/update-flatpak-on-18.09
[18.09] flatpak: 0.99.3 -> 1.0.2 (cherry-picked from master)
2018-10-03 21:05:19 +02:00
Matthew Bauer
c090089aad Merge pull request #47788 from prusnak/gcc-arm-embedded_update-18.09
gcc-arm-embedded: 6-2017-q2-update -> 7-2018-q2-update
2018-10-03 13:49:53 -05:00
Jörg Thalheim
e6a6523818 Merge pull request #47757 from nyanloutre/cherry-pick-jackett
[18.09] jackett: cherry-pick 0.10.250
2018-10-03 18:55:12 +01:00
Pavol Rusnak
9fc3dc917a gcc-arm-embedded: 6-2017-q2-update -> 7-2018-q2-update
+ update blackmagic to latest commit which includes gcc7 fixes

(cherry picked from commit b3531b9719)
2018-10-03 19:49:53 +02:00
Keshav Kini
536f6e86cf makeself: backport megastep/makeself#142
Currently, a self-extracting archive created by makeself will fail to
properly execute on NixOS because the boilerplate Bash code it uses to
clean up the temporary directory it extracted its contents into
assumes that the `rm` command is installed at `/bin/rm`, which is not
the case on NixOS.

This commit, a backport of a pull request I made to the upstream
repository at megastep/makeself#142, fixes the issue by causing the
boilerplate code to call `rm` without specifying an absolute path,
which allows the version of `rm` from one's current Nix environment to
be used instead.

(cherry picked from commit eb84586cad)
2018-10-03 18:38:48 +01:00
R. RyanTM
9a8c266656 libressl_2_8: 2.8.0 -> 2.8.1
Semi-automatic update generated by
https://github.com/ryantm/nixpkgs-update tools. This update was made
based on information from
https://repology.org/metapackage/libressl/versions

(cherry picked from commit 807d73c391)
Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
2018-10-03 11:59:21 -05:00
nyanloutre
4507f60278 jackett: 0.10.198 -> 0.10.250 2018-10-03 15:24:37 +02:00
R. RyanTM
b8e9aff1d7 jackett: 0.10.160 -> 0.10.198
Semi-automatic update generated by
https://github.com/ryantm/nixpkgs-update tools. This update was made
based on information from
https://repology.org/metapackage/jackett/versions
2018-10-03 15:24:36 +02:00
Paul TREHIOU
5a725dcbd0 jackett: 0.9.41 -> 0.10.160 (#46114)
* jackett: update mono to 5.8

Jackett needs mono version >= 5.8

https://github.com/Jackett/Jackett/blob/master/README.md#supported-systems

* jackett: 0.9.41 -> 0.10.160
2018-10-03 15:24:36 +02:00
taku0
04675c8aaa thunderbird: 60.0 -> 60.2.1
(cherry picked from commit d802524def)
2018-10-03 14:54:36 +02:00
taku0
964489f201 thunderbird-bin: 60.0 -> 60.2.1
(cherry picked from commit d4de3b2d34)
2018-10-03 14:54:14 +02:00
Márton Boros
1ae800be28 Fix systemd timer unit documentation
Fixes #36210

(cherry picked from commit d8a555d819)
2018-10-03 08:46:40 -04:00
zimbatm
6e0c9ffbd4 google-compute-engine: 20180510 -> 20180905
The list of corresponding NixOS services are also updated

(cherry picked from commit 9fb79868ab)
2018-10-03 14:11:36 +02:00
Periklis Tsirakidis
f12ea6195e kubectx: 0.5.1 -> 0.6.1
Also provides shell completions for zsh, bash and fish

(cherry picked from commit b9f9b05c37)
Backport of #47731
2018-10-03 13:19:50 +02:00
Maximilian Bosch
6e93cdfe35 nixos/activation: fix systemd-user daemon-reload in auto-upgrade service (#47695)
The autoupgrade service defined in `system.autoUpgrade`
(`nixos/modules/installer/tools/auto-upgrade.nix`) doesn't have `su` in
its path and thus yields a warning during the `daemon-reload`.

Specifying the absolute path fixes the issue.

Fixes #47648

(cherry picked from commit 7297cc5501 and
resolved conflict)
2018-10-03 12:43:20 +02:00
R. RyanTM
b7bfb4180e wireguard-tools: 0.0.20180918 -> 0.0.20180925
Semi-automatic update generated by
https://github.com/ryantm/nixpkgs-update tools. This update was made
based on information from
https://repology.org/metapackage/wireguard-tools/versions

(cherry picked from commit 1491848406)
2018-10-03 11:34:38 +01:00
Andreas Rammhold
1e81ff3244 Merge pull request #47714 from andir/18.09/firefox
[18.09] firefox{-bin,}: 62.0.2 -> 62.0.3, firefox-esr-60: 60.2.1 -> 60.2.2
2018-10-03 11:24:01 +02:00
Andreas Rammhold
f4b24ac5e4 firefox-esr-60: 60.2.1 -> 60.2.2 [critical security fixes]
This update bumps the package to the latest stable version containing a
few security fixes:

- CVE-2018-12386: Type confusion in JavaScript
  A vulnerability in register allocation in JavaScript can lead to type
  confusion, allowing for an arbitrary read and write. This leads to
  remote code execution inside the sandboxed content process when
  triggered.

- CVE-2018-12387
  A vulnerability where the JavaScript JIT compiler inlines
  Array.prototype.push with multiple arguments that results in the stack
  pointer being off by 8 bytes after a bailout. This leaks a memory
  address to the calling function which can be used as part of an
  exploit inside the sandboxed content process.

Source: https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/security/advisories/mfsa2018-24/
(cherry picked from commit 246d2848ff)
2018-10-03 09:54:47 +02:00
Andreas Rammhold
22502e78be firefox: 62.0.2 -> 62.0.3 [critical security fixes]
This update bumps the package to the latest stable version containing a
few security fixes:

- CVE-2018-12386: Type confusion in JavaScript
  A vulnerability in register allocation in JavaScript can lead to type
  confusion, allowing for an arbitrary read and write. This leads to
  remote code execution inside the sandboxed content process when
  triggered.

- CVE-2018-12387
  A vulnerability where the JavaScript JIT compiler inlines
  Array.prototype.push with multiple arguments that results in the stack
  pointer being off by 8 bytes after a bailout. This leaks a memory
  address to the calling function which can be used as part of an
  exploit inside the sandboxed content process.

Source: https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/security/advisories/mfsa2018-24/
(cherry picked from commit e7785f1148)
2018-10-03 09:54:41 +02:00
Andreas Rammhold
4663251636 firefox-bin: 62.0.2 -> 62.0.3 [critical security fixes]
This update bumps the package to the latest stable version containing a
few security fixes:

- CVE-2018-12386: Type confusion in JavaScript
  A vulnerability in register allocation in JavaScript can lead to type
  confusion, allowing for an arbitrary read and write. This leads to
  remote code execution inside the sandboxed content process when
  triggered.

- CVE-2018-12387
  A vulnerability where the JavaScript JIT compiler inlines
  Array.prototype.push with multiple arguments that results in the stack
  pointer being off by 8 bytes after a bailout. This leaks a memory
  address to the calling function which can be used as part of an
  exploit inside the sandboxed content process.

Source: https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/security/advisories/mfsa2018-24/
(cherry picked from commit 64d02660cb)
2018-10-03 09:54:35 +02:00
Edward Tate
c3f8368f97 Shortened rmdir, improved regex to support shared libs with multiple integers at the end. 2018-10-03 09:25:53 +02:00
Edward Tate
f08cebd8d2 Use regex instead of -name in find with -print0 and xargs -0. 2018-10-03 09:25:53 +02:00
Edward Tate
6f37fa7c99 buildRustPackage now correctly installs binaries to bin and libraries to lib. 2018-10-03 09:25:53 +02:00
Peter Hoeg
9ffdaa1f19 nixos on hyperv: hot-add CPU
(cherry picked from commit 6e3e136f77)
2018-10-03 11:46:48 +08:00
Peter Hoeg
18ae457bc7 nixos-installer: use the hyperv module on hyperv
(cherry picked from commit ca6d41ae65)
2018-10-03 11:46:42 +08:00
Peter Hoeg
42968c07c5 nixos on hyperv: load modules and set video mode
(cherry picked from commit 3a76bc7a79)
2018-10-03 11:46:36 +08:00
R. RyanTM
7f70ebf30b matomo: 3.5.1 -> 3.6.0 (#46242)
Semi-automatic update generated by
https://github.com/ryantm/nixpkgs-update tools. This update was made
based on information from
matomo

(cherry picked from commit c45dd04946)

backported for security updates
2018-10-02 22:47:39 +02:00
Matthew Bauer
79bbe4d543 haskell: fix x509-system on mojave
darwin.security_tool is currently broken in Mojave. See issue #45042
for more info. Our security_tool stuff comes from 10.9 so I suspect
that it needs an update.

Here I am putting in a hack to get things working again. This uses the
system provided security binary at /usr/bin/security to avoid the
issue in Haskell’s x509-system package. Unfortunately, this will break
with the sandbox. I am also working on a proper fix, but this requires
updating lots of Apple stuff (and also copumpkin’s new CF). You can
follow the progress on this branch:

  https://github.com/matthewbauer/nixpkgs/tree/xcode-security

This commit should be backported to release-18.03 and release-18.09.

/cc @copumpkin @lnl7 @pikajude
2018-10-02 15:20:55 -05:00
Philipp Middendorf
9934f413da jetbrains: add libnotify to wrapper to enable notifications
(cherry picked from commit 0b2f2f3d96)
2018-10-02 20:12:05 +01:00
Philipp Middendorf
0f51003a5b jshint: depend on phantomjs2
(cherry picked from commit 22e9c0a6fa)
2018-10-02 19:34:35 +01:00
R. RyanTM
3e44d2f2b5 verilator: 3.926 -> 4.002
Semi-automatic update generated by
https://github.com/ryantm/nixpkgs-update tools. This update was made
based on information from
https://repology.org/metapackage/verilator/versions

(cherry picked from commit 609f9198f2)
2018-10-02 09:58:38 -05:00
Léo Gaspard
18749a72b7 jetbrains.idea-community: add IntelliJ keyword to the longDescription (#47650)
This should make it easier to find the package under the name
IntelliJ in eg. [1]

[1] https://nixos.org/nixos/packages.html#intellij

(cherry picked from commit 5f5905e30e)
2018-10-02 16:03:42 +02:00
Josef Kemetmüller
0d8c62c15c libcanberra: fix darwin build (#47634)
(cherry picked from commit aeee761aba)
2018-10-02 12:56:34 +02:00
Matthew Pickering
0a198954be gdal: 2.3.1 -> 2.3.2
(cherry picked from commit f80730d903)
Backport of #47565
2018-10-02 09:09:54 +02:00
WilliButz
b8ef448e95 nvtop: use version-independent libnvidia-ml.so symlink
(cherry picked from commit 781206217e)
2018-10-02 08:42:57 +02:00
John Ericson
3e55299b41 Merge pull request #47646 from obsidiansystems/ghc-8.2.2-change-patch
ghc-8.2.2: Oops, added adjacent patch the one I wanted
2018-10-02 01:46:39 -04:00
John Ericson
0ce0851442 Merge pull request #47645 from obsidiansystems/ghc-8.2-hsc2hs
ghc-8.2.2: Fix which hsc2hs is installed on cross for 18.09
2018-10-02 01:10:51 -04:00
Austin Seipp
7b05874c1b perlPackages.Mojolicious: 8.0 -> 8.01
Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
(cherry picked from commit 5a179ffb01)
2018-10-01 23:26:47 -05:00
Austin Seipp
2e06ce8e98 perlPackages.MojoliciousPluginStatus: init at 1.0
Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
(cherry picked from commit 37ce9316bf)
2018-10-01 23:26:47 -05:00
Austin Seipp
56f5ff8a3c perlPackages: init Sereal package family at 4.005
Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
(cherry picked from commit 65923ede17)
2018-10-01 23:26:47 -05:00
Austin Seipp
029d9c8173 symbiyosys: 2018.07.26 -> 2018.09.12
Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
(cherry picked from commit 919a3b7f9c)
2018-10-01 23:26:47 -05:00
Austin Seipp
bcad3bb1e8 yosys: 2018.08.08 -> 2018.09.30
Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
(cherry picked from commit d7393024d1)
2018-10-01 23:26:47 -05:00
Austin Seipp
8edbdae43d arachne-pnr: 2018.05.13 -> 2018.09.08
Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
(cherry picked from commit 7b0b895053)
2018-10-01 23:26:47 -05:00
Austin Seipp
aa4177b408 icestorm: 2018.08.01 -> 2018.09.04
Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
(cherry picked from commit 1e9e3adfb1)
2018-10-01 23:26:47 -05:00
Franz Pletz
66fd61163a nixos/clamav: fix freshclam service if db up to date
(cherry picked from commit 11ba2f270f)
2018-10-02 00:27:24 +02:00
Franz Pletz
5fc5a4fb21 nixos/clamav: fix daemon/updater services toggling
(cherry picked from commit f8d681a91f)
2018-10-02 00:27:23 +02:00
Franz Pletz
b3038ade6f shairport-sync: fix pulseaudio support & default arguments
(cherry picked from commit e7ca9af4cc)
2018-10-02 00:27:23 +02:00
Uli Baum
f2faf3299e Merge branch 'release-18.09' into staging-18.09 2018-10-02 00:17:52 +02:00
Will Dietz
1f1c8079b3 lz4: 1.8.2 -> 1.8.3 (#47547)
(cherry picked from commit 55b6cad537)
2018-10-02 00:16:26 +02:00
John Ericson
d296abb484 Merge pull request #47627 from obsidiansystems/ghc-cross-fixes
ghc: Misc cross fixes for 18.09
2018-10-01 17:19:34 -04:00
Sarah Brofeldt
a54dadb950 nixos/tests/nix-ssh-serve.nix: Use stable nix (#47584)
(cherry picked from commit 358a1c8a28)
2018-10-01 23:02:10 +02:00
xeji
10eec00131 linux kernel: increase build timeout from 1hr to 4 hrs (#47564)
We've recently seen a lot of kernel build timeouts on hydra,
so let's increase the timeout.

(cherry picked from commit 83fd9785f6 and
resolved conflict)
2018-10-01 17:45:27 +02:00
Jörg Thalheim
ec3497a084 Merge pull request #47592 from Mic92/alacritty-backport
alacritty: 2018-08-30 -> 0.2.0 (backport)
2018-10-01 12:23:10 +01:00
Jörg Thalheim
57a4034bd0 alacritty: spell darwin platform correctly
(cherry picked from commit 13b2903169)
2018-10-01 12:09:21 +01:00
Jörg Thalheim
44125457d4 alacritty: restrict platforms to x86_64-{linux,darwin}
(cherry picked from commit 350c79f983)
2018-10-01 12:03:31 +01:00
Jörg Thalheim
2d84895618 alacritty: 2018-08-30 -> 0.2.0
Based on popular demand I decided to upgraded alacritty from my own fork.
We currently also have a version in staging that works without but we
cannot easily backport this one because it relies on some changes in the rust
build infrastructure

(cherry picked from commit cb6ccb6a7e)
2018-10-01 12:03:28 +01:00
Sarah Brofeldt
ff37ba7028 dockerTools: Use nix instead of nixUnstable
(cherry picked from commit b256df4937)
2018-10-01 10:05:50 +02:00
Florian Klink
b550b7d9e3 pythonPackages.pystemd: init at 0.5.0 (#47517)
(cherry picked from commit 2be514d5c3)
2018-10-01 07:36:56 +01:00
Josef Kemetmüller
0f1911eea2 pythonPackages.py-cpuinfo: Fix darwin build (#47558)
(cherry picked from commit 49dcf7be62)
2018-09-30 21:19:24 +02:00
volth
a3e5e6e792 language_subtag_registry: fix hash (#47555)
(cherry picked from commit 61007c0e96)
2018-09-30 21:15:36 +02:00
Josef Kemetmüller
f2a1d990ec pythonPackages.python-mapnik: Fix build
There were two things to fix:
- Boost started shipping libboost_python.so as libboost_python{Major}{Minor}
- Make sure that mapnik and boost link to the correct version of python.

(cherry picked from commit be6451e020)
2018-09-30 21:13:26 +02:00
Josef Kemetmüller
8b3bff1de7 mapnik: 3.0.13 -> 3.0.20
(cherry picked from commit b1857daa25)
2018-09-30 21:13:25 +02:00
Graham Christensen
26537f5379 docs: format 2018-09-29 20:49:27 -04:00
Graham Christensen
4867086bc7 Revert "Revert "doc: Update section about imperative containers""
I fixed the problem.

This reverts commit 29624f6bb2.
2018-09-29 20:47:03 -04:00
Will Dietz
4c3a0ae445 nix-daemon: only add channels dir to NIX_PATH if exists
Per reviewer comment (thanks!).

(cherry picked from commit 243e28bc96)
2018-09-29 20:34:13 -04:00
Tuomas Tynkkynen
aa0c7bd5ed nixos/kexec: Replace meta.available checks
This sort of code breaks config.{allowBroken, allowUnsupportedSystem} =
true by making them do unpredictable things.

[dezgeg: Also squash in the bugfix commit "nixos/kexec: Fix typo in meta.platforms" by aszlig]

(cherry picked from commit 599c4df46a)
(cherry picked from commit fd8bca45c9)
2018-09-30 03:09:46 +03:00
Tuomas Tynkkynen
5330abad53 ghc: Replace meta.available checks for enableIntegerSimple
This sort of code breaks config.{allowBroken, allowUnsupportedSystem} =
true by making them do unpredictable things.

(cherry picked from commit f4dd2fed7f)
2018-09-30 02:13:48 +03:00
Tuomas Tynkkynen
ae63055af9 treewide: Replace meta.available checks in shouldUsePackages copypasta
This reverts commit 79d8353b5e.

This sort of code breaks config.{allowBroken, allowUnsupportedSystem} =
true by making them do unpredictable things.

(cherry picked from commit 5e84926a66)
2018-09-30 02:13:48 +03:00
Tuomas Tynkkynen
2c3443e2d2 apparmor: Replace meta.available checks
This sort of code breaks config.{allowBroken, allowUnsupportedSystem} =
true by making them do unpredictable things.

(cherry picked from commit 50d0360888)
2018-09-30 02:13:47 +03:00
Tuomas Tynkkynen
50da319891 nix: Replace meta.available checks
This sort of code breaks config.{allowBroken, allowUnsupportedSystem} =
true by making them do unpredictable things.

(cherry picked from commit cdeafe7cdf)

Conflicts:
	pkgs/tools/package-management/nix/default.nix
2018-09-30 02:13:41 +03:00
Tuomas Tynkkynen
6b1ebeb5eb systemd: Replace meta.available checks
This sort of code breaks config.{allowBroken, allowUnsupportedSystem} =
true by making them do unpredictable things.

(cherry picked from commit fe7919f7a1)
2018-09-30 02:12:30 +03:00
Tuomas Tynkkynen
29624f6bb2 Revert "doc: Update section about imperative containers"
This reverts commit b72abcf861.

Breaks manual build:

https://nix-cache.s3.amazonaws.com/log/wnjcy6n5f871bpyy9nd06smiz1ggv99c-nixos-manual-combined.drv
2018-09-30 01:02:45 +03:00
Tim Steinbach
b7cab85b26 linux: 4.18.10 -> 4.18.11
(cherry picked from commit 5eefdebf49)
2018-09-29 17:55:08 -04:00
Tim Steinbach
99b696927a linux: 4.14.72 -> 4.14.73
(cherry picked from commit 00e57782bc)
2018-09-29 17:54:57 -04:00
Tim Steinbach
9bd9306c36 linux: 4.9.129 -> 4.9.130
(cherry picked from commit 74f56e14d9)
2018-09-29 17:54:46 -04:00
Tim Steinbach
c2e605e9d1 linux: 4.4.158 -> 4.4.159
(cherry picked from commit 7769fd6a80)
2018-09-29 17:54:36 -04:00
Tycho Grouwstra
1d5b7a7d42 gitkraken: 4.0.2 -> 4.0.5 (#47512)
Fixes #47498. Note that the releases have moved to a new URL; I'm not sure they still host the earlier versions.

(cherry picked from commit 9d727e0a91)

backported because previous source url returns 404.
2018-09-29 20:51:42 +02:00
Arian van Putten
b72abcf861 doc: Update section about imperative containers
Nix commands inside the container have been broken since 18.03,
and no fix is yet in sight.  Lets remove from the documentation
that this is a usecase that we support, as it doesn't seem
likely that this will be fixed before 18.09 either.

See #40355

(cherry picked from commit f309440ee3)
2018-09-29 19:18:54 +01:00
Jan Tojnar
0f9355abb2 flatpak-builder: add libyaml
(cherry picked from commit 7d2c8bbe9a)
2018-09-29 13:21:22 +02:00
Jan Tojnar
941941b151 xdg-dbus-proxy: init at 0.1.0
(cherry picked from commit 2d19ee6247)
2018-09-29 13:21:22 +02:00
Tor Hedin Brønner
7569e96508 ostree: 2018.6 -> 2018.8
(cherry picked from commit 87d11ae99c)
2018-09-29 13:21:22 +02:00
Tor Hedin Brønner
8063903183 xdg-desktop-portal-gtk: 0.99 -> 1.0.2
(cherry picked from commit b6c17cd46f)
2018-09-29 13:21:22 +02:00
Tor Hedin Brønner
3f0618a7ed flatpak: 0.99.3 -> 1.0.2
(cherry picked from commit 37a828ec27)
2018-09-29 13:21:22 +02:00
Tor Hedin Brønner
e80820d5b7 xdg-desktop-portal: 0.99 -> 1.0.2
(cherry picked from commit 0d994736a1)
2018-09-29 13:21:22 +02:00
Tor Hedin Brønner
727eb5ed78 pipewire: 0.1.9 -> 0.2.3
I also removed pipewire from mutter temporarily, since it is not compatible.

(cherry picked from commit c32b0409a9)
2018-09-29 13:21:21 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
c5668bd183 Merge branch 'staging-18.09' into release-18.09 2018-09-29 11:09:27 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
fe195c03ed Merge #45683: nvidia_x11: 390.77 -> 390.87
(cherry picked from commit d9f7d27ef5)
2018-09-29 11:09:16 +02:00
Tom Bereknyei
6c68068a52 gnuradio: 3.7.13.3 -> 3.7.13.4
(cherry picked from commit a054f269bf)
Backport of #47491
2018-09-29 10:57:01 +02:00
Wael M. Nasreddine
56591a244e browsh: 1.4.10 -> 1.4.13
(cherry picked from commit fa46ce3828)
Backport of #47501
2018-09-29 10:00:28 +02:00
symphorien
c922e20b5d exempi: patch CVE-2018-12648, enable tests on linux (#47496)
(cherry picked from commit e502c72773)
2018-09-29 00:16:18 +02:00
Daiderd Jordan
f5db056efd freedroidrpg: don't build on hydra
Similar to some other builds, sdl-config gets stuck and times out.

    checking for sdl-config... /nix/store/q2hm1ka0qxs2gv5bmrxj7j80lygk4b5z-SDL-1.2.15-dev/bin/sdl-config
    building of '/nix/store/m2d7v0n5hd2498vfxp18i37p7r1lf76p-freedroidrpg-0.16.1' timed out after 7200 seconds of silence

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit 9b99819283)
2018-09-28 22:33:32 +02:00
Daiderd Jordan
e087e20239 flpsed: mark linux only
Doesn't build on darwin and probably other platforms.

    GsWidget.H:26:3: error: 'Atom' does not name a type; did you mean 'tm'?
       Atom atoms[5];
       ^~~~
       tm
    GsWidget.cxx: In member function 'void GsWidget::setProps()':
    GsWidget.cxx:47:2: error: 'atoms' was not declared in this scope
      atoms[0] = XInternAtom(fl_display,"GHOSTVIEW" , false);
      ^~~~~

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit cd78d0cc3f)
2018-09-28 22:33:32 +02:00
Daiderd Jordan
c1f9ffc740 fox: mark broken on darwin
Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
      "_MPCreateSemaphore", referenced from:
          FX::FXSemaphore::FXSemaphore(int) in FXThread.o
          FX::FXSemaphore::FXSemaphore(int) in FXThread.o
      "_MPDeleteSemaphore", referenced from:
          FX::FXSemaphore::~FXSemaphore() in FXThread.o
          FX::FXSemaphore::~FXSemaphore() in FXThread.o
      "_MPSignalSemaphore", referenced from:
          FX::FXSemaphore::post() in FXThread.o
      "_MPWaitOnSemaphore", referenced from:
          FX::FXSemaphore::wait() in FXThread.o
          FX::FXSemaphore::trywait() in FXThread.o
    ld: symbol(s) not found for architecture x86_64

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit 6390b8b63e)
2018-09-28 22:33:31 +02:00
Brian Olsen
3108f741fe nixos/rspamd: Remove non-working socket activation
The socket activation I added to the rspamd module doesn't actually work
and can't be made to work without changes to rspamd.

See: #47421
See: rspamd/rspamd#2035
(cherry picked from commit 783a58f363)
2018-09-28 21:04:41 +02:00
John Ericson
aab182ebea Merge pull request #47488 from obsidiansystems/ghcjs-ghc-version
ghcjs-*: Expose the version of GHC used
2018-09-28 12:33:35 -04:00
Jörg Thalheim
1e9f50f156 systemd: don't restart user-runtime-dir@ on upgrades
Likewise logind we should not try to restart this service after upgrade,
the user's current session depends on it.

(cherry picked from commit aa69bb5743)
2018-09-28 12:10:36 +01:00
Orivej Desh
1e1821c166 retroshare: mark as broken (#47350)
Broken by libupnp: 1.6.21 -> 1.8.3 (#41684).

(cherry picked from commit eeac44c81a)
2018-09-28 11:57:57 +02:00
xeji
0c29a51467 linuxPackages.jool: 3.5.7 -> unstable-20180706 (#47284)
3.5.7 doesn't build with kernel 4.14.71.
Needs most recent upstream revision to build, which supports
kernels up to 4.17.

(cherry picked from commit f0e4b31eb2)
2018-09-28 11:55:12 +02:00
Tuomas Tynkkynen
a7fa8e1aa8 Add ssh backdoor to VM tests infrastructure.
Thanks to @dezgeg for prototype implementation, I've
cleaned it up and added documentation.

(cherry picked from commit d6e3db44cf)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2018-09-28 10:54:09 +01:00
Sarah Brofeldt
0e0cd2fc30 haskellPackages.term-rewriting: doJailbreak and dontCheck
(cherry picked from commit 5c45ca0943)
Backport of #47456
2018-09-28 10:48:19 +02:00
John Ericson
3768913cc9 Merge pull request #47445 from obsidiansystems/ghcjs-no-double-callPackage
ghcjs-{7.10, 8.0}: Improve overriding situation for 18.09
2018-09-27 19:11:52 -04:00
Brian Olsen
0f4e117054 nixos/rspamd: Preserve runtime directory when using socket activation
(cherry picked from commit 458bcc8f7a)
2018-09-27 14:09:54 +01:00
Jean-Philippe Cugnet
cdb33d1ddc erlangR19: 19.3.6.6 -> 19.3.6.11
(cherry picked from commit bf22712993)
Backport of #47367
2018-09-27 10:44:30 +02:00
Jean-Philippe Cugnet
d101614d71 erlangR20: 20.3.8 -> 20.3.8.9
(cherry picked from commit 6e5682ab41)
Backport #47369
2018-09-27 10:22:32 +02:00
Florian Klink
cf64adec53 golden-cheetah: add desktop item and icon
(cherry picked from commit bb51ba9bb8)
2018-09-27 09:54:37 +02:00
Austin Seipp
3c85e586b3 libiio: install python bindings
Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
(cherry picked from commit af48e5783a)
2018-09-26 19:40:41 -05:00
Corey O'Connor
d26e830997 vlc: 3.0.3 -> 3.0.4 (#47406)
(cherry picked from commit 26ce265258)

Didn't build, invalid url for vlc-qt5.11.patch.
2018-09-26 23:27:42 +02:00
John Ericson
8e2e8bb882 Merge remote-tracking branch 'upstream/release-18.09' into staging-18.09 2018-09-26 15:55:37 -04:00
John Ericson
3b5c708ac8 Merge pull request #47401 from obsidiansystems/paxctl-darwin-no-mass-rebuild
paxctl: Fix darwin and cross without mass-rebuild for 18.09
2018-09-26 15:52:44 -04:00
xeji
e5eabccb00 Merge pull request #47396 from rycee/backport/noti
Backport the noti package to 18.09
2018-09-26 19:31:44 +02:00
Mario Rodas
583a32148c noti: fix darwin build
(cherry picked from commit 4c56eb81e9)
2018-09-26 18:54:57 +02:00
stites
e835796a18 noti: init at 3.1.0
(cherry picked from commit f1c30cf772)
2018-09-26 18:54:56 +02:00
stites
e861f31344 add stites to maintainers list
(cherry picked from commit 82f980828d)
2018-09-26 18:54:56 +02:00
John Ericson
6bc58a9438 Merge branch 'release-18.09' into staging-18.09 2018-09-26 11:23:49 -04:00
John Ericson
e06de91855 Merge commit '607063f61be3b19a2da054776b360d9c5b03038a' into release-18.09
This gets the partial revert on the common ancestor of master and
release-18.09, easier further devlopment.
2018-09-26 11:22:28 -04:00
Tim Steinbach
a3b7cd1fa3 linux: 4.18.9 -> 4.18.10
(cherry picked from commit 24c31d43bb)
2018-09-26 08:02:35 -04:00
Tim Steinbach
74680cff73 linux: 4.14.71 -> 4.14.72
(cherry picked from commit 61452c82ae)
2018-09-26 08:02:29 -04:00
Tim Steinbach
1c7a4320e8 linux: 4.9.128 -> 4.9.129
(cherry picked from commit 8e4d980904)
2018-09-26 08:02:23 -04:00
Tim Steinbach
a4cedc0981 linux: 4.4.157 -> 4.4.158
(cherry picked from commit 656ca2296c)
2018-09-26 08:02:18 -04:00
Domen Kožar
29660a2085 postgresql: give postgres user a shell
(cherry picked from commit 82feb4b66e)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2018-09-26 12:12:29 +01:00
Matthew Bauer
f9c4075873 stdenv: partial revert of f2bb59e
/cc @Ericson2314

PR was https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/46857

This line broke MacOS cross compilation. paxctl cannot be built on
macOS. Maybe it can be fixed, but no reason to break things
unnecessarily.

Regardless, you definitely need to be more careful about backporting.
I think it’s fine to move fast and break things on master but
with release-18.09 we should be more careful. Something like more
automated testing for cross compilation would also be
helpful (hopefully even making it block).
2018-09-26 02:23:07 -05:00
Okina Matara
0b70148bd6 linux_testing_bcachefs: 4.18.2018.08.31 -> 4.18.2018.09.21
(cherry picked from commit d98b0805cc)
2018-09-26 08:49:53 +02:00
xeji
391bf82ca3 qboot: 20150603 -> 20170330, fix build (#47364)
Switch back to original upstream project which is more recent
than the fork we used.

(cherry picked from commit 4ad424fbd6)
2018-09-25 22:33:46 +02:00
John Ericson
372d0cc4f4 Merge pull request #47363 from obsidiansystems/ghc-sphinx
ghc: Sphinx is a build-time dependency
2018-09-25 16:31:27 -04:00
Luke Clifton
67e53e0c6d abduco: refactor (compile on darwin) (#47124)
(cherry picked from commit 3d8f6b6188)
2018-09-25 22:30:03 +02:00
Luke Clifton
b018ccca8f dvtm: refactor (fix on darwin) (#47103)
(cherry picked from commit 4eebe205fe)
2018-09-25 22:28:48 +02:00
Michael Roitzsch
0253b1e38f podofo: fix library linkage on Darwin (#47214)
* podofo: fix library linkage on Darwin

Because the library is not yet installed when the tools are build, it does not contain its final store path as its install name. Linking the tools picks up this incorrect install name and needs to be fixed after installing.

(cherry picked from commit 4b1ffa0b00)
2018-09-25 22:12:17 +02:00
gnidorah
f2210522d2 tdesktop: support opening urls under wayland
(cherry picked from commit e79ccc1100)
2018-09-25 21:10:33 +01:00
John Ericson
1d542e7e8f Merge pull request #47361 from obsidiansystems/python-format
python-*: Format `pythonPackages` bindings for 18.09
2018-09-25 15:40:01 -04:00
John Ericson
3252c48c29 Merge commit 'a70aeacbf770757212e1845b97ea7d561b5f7af4' into staging-18.09 2018-09-25 14:48:54 -04:00
John Ericson
a70aeacbf7 Merge remote-tracking branch 'upstream/release-18.09' 2018-09-25 14:48:31 -04:00
John Ericson
37a5fcb775 Merge pull request #47356 from obsidiansystems/numpy-fortran
numpy, scipy: Fix some nativeBuildInputs  for 18.09
2018-09-25 14:45:45 -04:00
John Ericson
b7dbd81c9c Merge remote-tracking branch 'upstream/release-18.09' into staging-18.09 2018-09-25 14:19:32 -04:00
zimbatm
35832681f1 firefox-bin: fix channel patching
The patchPhase wasn't being applied at all.

This patch re-enables that and also re-thinks the setting that we want
to have. Turning off the auto-update is more accurate and doesn't lose
information like it did before.

(cherry picked from commit 6060940c24)
2018-09-25 15:49:32 +01:00
Uli Baum
69514d78a6 herqq: mark broken
- build fails with qt511 and qt59
  (it used to build with qt510 which is not available anymore)
- no nixpkgs maintainer
- upstream repo looks inactive, last commit a year ago

(cherry picked from commit 9beaa6dcad)
2018-09-25 12:26:45 +02:00
Uli Baum
a7792ffa4f monodevelop: mark broken
build has failed since 2018-03-08
cc maintainer @obadz

(cherry picked from commit 6b4abb9fa7)
2018-09-25 12:26:45 +02:00
Uli Baum
da6b7f6d84 gtk-sharp-3_0: mark broken
build has failed since 2018-04-28
no maintainer

(cherry picked from commit 395a1528f0)
2018-09-25 12:26:45 +02:00
Uli Baum
294060d163 Revert "virtualization/qemu-vm: fix and improve virtio/scsi switching"
This reverts commit 174e19d1f6.

It broke nixos.ova and eval of some tests.
2018-09-25 11:05:31 +02:00
Notkea
52799425f8 matrix-synapse: 0.33.3.1 -> 0.33.5
Upgrade matrix-synapse to the latest version,
adding a new required dependency (treq)

(cherry picked from commit 4cd6502925)
2018-09-25 10:03:10 +01:00
Colin Rice
86406e24bb go: Remove pkg/obj directory from the build outputs.
This appears to be causing the go package to be roughly 900MB in size.

(cherry picked from commit cdeb26ee76)
2018-09-25 09:47:55 +01:00
Florian Klink
e2d0b3be8d pythonPackages.elasticsearch-dsl: 0.0.9 -> 6.2.1
(cherry picked from commit 18c7fbd78d)
2018-09-25 08:58:11 +01:00
William Casarin
3b175f5d2a clightning: 0.6.0 -> 0.6.1
Update to the latest release.

Highlights for c-lightning users
--------------------------------

  - Less stuck payments: Liveness ping test before locking up funds with peers.
  - Better routing: now considers size of channels.
  - Fewer spurious closes: fee estimate improvements, and new feerates command
  - Several annoying bugs fixed.

Highlights for the network
--------------------------

  - Gossipd now less spammy with channel_update.
  - option_data_loss_protect to protect peers against being out-of-date.
  - Payment errors now refer to the correct channel.

Internal Improvements
---------------------

  - Simplified client flow; after init message exchange by connectd, each is
    isolated in its own daemon.
  - JSON parameter handling vastly simplfied.
  - Python testing framework now uses proper fixtures, and split into separate
    files.
  - Many other cleanups and clarifications.
  - We keepachangelog.com!

Signed-off-by: William Casarin <jb55@jb55.com>

(cherry picked from commit 2aa0b85653)
Backport of #47286
2018-09-25 08:49:32 +02:00
Michael Raskin
2039adfb4c Merge pull request #47289 from 1000101/master
trezord: 2.0.14 -> 2.0.19 and nixos/trezord: revised and updated udev rules
(cherry picked from commit ce411911e8)
2018-09-25 08:38:34 +02:00
Matthew Bauer
633e7ee7fb emacsMacport: 7.1 → 7.2
Fixes a critical issue with macOS

[NEWS](https://bitbucket.org/mituharu/emacs-mac/raw/master/NEWS-mac)

* emacs-26.1-mac-7.2 (2018-09-09)

** Fixed bugs

*** Buffer contents are not displayed on macOS 10.14.
This is mainly because now NSViews are backed by Core Animation Layer
(layer-backed) by default and non-deferred drawing into views no
longer works.  Instead of switching to deferred drawing (i.e., draw
only inside -[NSView drawRect:]), we draw into our own backing bitmap
in a non-deferred way as before, and update the view contents with the
resulting image via -[NSView updateLayer].  This "application-side
double buffering" is also available on OS X 10.8 - macOS 10.13 if you
set the frame parameter `inhibit-double-buffering' to nil when
creating a frame.  Just like on macOS 10.14, such a frame does not do
LCD smoothing.

*** Screenshot grabbed via Services is displayed in wrong size when we
have display mirroring between Retina and non-Retina displays.

*** Cursor movement just after frame resize sometimes leaves garbage.

*** Crash by the Fall_threads call from the GUI thread at the select
emulation when there are multiple Lisp threads.

*** Info title has ASCII underline unlike other window systems.

*** Vertical scroll bar is created as horizontal if frame font height
is short.

** Improvements

*** macOS 10.14 adds property :appearance to (mac-application-state).
The value may be "NSAppearanceNameAqua" or "NSAppearanceNameDarkAqua".

*** Add new color format "mac:COLOR-LIST-NAME:COLOR-NAME" and
"mac:COLOR-NAME" (shorthand for "mac:System:COLOR-NAME").  The actual
color may be different depending on the global appearance setting on
macOS 10.14.  For example, "mac:textColor" is black on the Light Mode
but is white on the Dark Mode.

*** Default frame colors respect appearance setting on macOS 10.14.
Now the default frame foreground/background color is
"mac:textColor"/"mac:textBackgroundColor", respectively.  Changes of
the system setting of the global appearance are dynamically reflected.

*** New function `mac-color-list-alist' to get the available
combinations of COLOR-LIST-NAMEs and COLOR-NAMEs.  Note that this
value is dependent on user environment and OS version.  Also, some
combinations may represent image patterns rather than colors.  For the
former cases, `(color-values "mac:COLOR-LIST-NAME:COLOR-NAME")'
returns nil.
2018-09-24 21:40:01 -05:00
WilliButz
9684fc03bb nixos/gitlab: rebuild authorized_keys during preStart
This updates the path to the 'gitlab-shell' to the
correct store path when gitlab is restarted.

(cherry picked from commit 78ad8d4a62)
2018-09-25 03:54:51 +02:00
Robin Gloster
6c4993b4f6 gitlab module: workhorse may start before gitlab
(cherry picked from commit dc915565ba)
2018-09-25 03:54:50 +02:00
Robin Gloster
6fc98d4d98 gitlab: 11.2.3 -> 11.3.0
(cherry picked from commit ed85eb5433)
2018-09-25 03:54:50 +02:00
Robin Gloster
63e305ba8d gitaly: 0.117.2 -> 0.120.0
(cherry picked from commit cbc21b8b90)
2018-09-25 03:54:49 +02:00
Robin Gloster
7cd7f188bc gitlab-shell: 8.1.1 -> 8.3.3
(cherry picked from commit 545c07108f)
2018-09-25 03:54:49 +02:00
Robin Gloster
450f2f5e5b gitlab-workhorse: 6.0.0 -> 6.1.0
(cherry picked from commit 96c1765bac)
2018-09-25 03:54:49 +02:00
Kristoffer Thømt Ravneberg
2676927ffc nixos/gitlab: avoid creating recursive symlinks, add gitlab-rake deps
(cherry picked from commit f17f59ca8e)
2018-09-25 03:54:48 +02:00
Kristoffer Thømt Ravneberg
2b4a105b8d gitlab-ee: init at 11.2.3
(cherry picked from commit 6946d97ce4)
2018-09-25 03:54:48 +02:00
Kristoffer Thømt Ravneberg
b57d410e1b gitlab: 10.8.0 -> 11.2.3
(cherry picked from commit 51c1830147)
2018-09-25 03:54:47 +02:00
Kristoffer Thømt Ravneberg
c50434a505 gitlab-shell: 7.1.2 -> 8.1.1
(cherry picked from commit bfc8d80c6e)
2018-09-25 03:54:47 +02:00
Kristoffer Thømt Ravneberg
cdb7f84118 gitaly: 0.100.0 -> 0.117.2
(cherry picked from commit 949172f289)
2018-09-25 03:54:46 +02:00
Kristoffer Thømt Ravneberg
b3a1678ce4 gitlab-workhorse: 4.2.0 -> 6.0.0
(cherry picked from commit 45aa373fa9)
2018-09-25 03:54:46 +02:00
John Ericson
0cf38d9921 Merge pull request #47304 from obsidiansystems/haskell-no-rec-18.09
ghc, ghcjs: Get rid of extraneous alex, happy, and hscolour args for 18.09
2018-09-24 20:28:07 -04:00
John Ericson
d6e2a2c4da Merge remote-tracking branch 'upstream/release-18.09' into haskell-no-rec-18.09 2018-09-24 20:11:48 -04:00
John Ericson
5b6fc8f87d Merge remote-tracking branch 'upstream/release-18.09' into haskell-no-rec-18.09 2018-09-24 20:10:19 -04:00
John Ericson
da6e61fedd Merge pull request #47301 from obsidiansystems/haskell-no-rec
haskellPackages: Avoid outer `rec { .. }` for 18.09
2018-09-24 18:59:12 -04:00
Uli Baum
04b04e9745 Merge branch 'release-18.09' into staging-18.09 2018-09-25 00:07:47 +02:00
John Ericson
c896936cd1 Merge pull request #47299 from obsidiansystems/overrideScope-order
lib: Deprecate `overrideScope` in lieu of `overrideScope'` taking arguments in the conventional order for 18.09
2018-09-24 18:04:35 -04:00
Peter Simons
b719e29d95 ghc: add release version for 8.6.1
(cherry picked from commit 2ffcbeda13)
2018-09-24 18:03:16 -04:00
Austin Seipp
b0f8181432 nixos/chrony: clean up, rework to be a little closer to upstream
Most importantly, this sets PrivateTmp, ProtectHome, and ProtectSystem
so that Chrony flaws are mitigated, should they occur.

Moving to ProtectSystem=full however, requires moving the chrony key
files under /var/lib/chrony -- which should be fine, anyway.

This also ensures ConditionCapability=CAP_SYS_TIME is set, ensuring
that chronyd will only be launched in an environment where such a
capability can be granted.

Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
(cherry picked from commit 0ce90d58cc)
2018-09-24 15:43:23 -05:00
baracoder
f34ef9e746 dotnet-sdk: Reduce closure: Unpack to a subdirectory to prevent copying build files (#47269)
(cherry picked from commit 7f0865bac8)
2018-09-24 21:38:59 +01:00
Domen Kožar
31432d4b88 nixos tests: move common configuration into separate file
This allows tests outside nixos to use acme setup.

(cherry picked from commit 6eacc17157)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2018-09-24 20:09:32 +01:00
Andreas Rammhold
2373df6dcc Merge pull request #47277 from andir/18.09/firefox
[18.09] firefox, firefox-bin 61.0.2 -> 62.0.2, firefox-esr: 60.2.0esr -> 60.2.1esr [Moderate security fixes]
2018-09-24 20:46:38 +02:00
Lorenzo Manacorda
71fd97dd05 *: remove DappHub projects
DappHub maintains a separate overlay at
https://github.com/dapphub/dapptools/blob/master/overlay.nix

(cherry picked from commit 6017c6fa5b)
2018-09-24 18:49:45 +01:00
Maximilian Bosch
32af342e46 eztrace: 1.0.6 -> 1.1-7 (#47282)
See https://hydra.nixos.org/build/80721509
Addresses #45960

(cherry picked from commit 2babfb5a88)
2018-09-24 19:35:22 +02:00
Uli Baum
570ec19f39 nixos/tests/installer: stop udev queue before calling mdadm
In the swraid test, temporarily stop udev queue execution while
creating mdraid devices to prevent a race with udev, see
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/scylladb-dev/u87yHgo3ylU

(cherry picked from commit 7dd6a5192d)
2018-09-24 19:00:29 +02:00
Uli Baum
c2ab695557 nixos/tests/installer: use flock for all parted calls
to further reduce risk of race with udev, like util-linux
recommends for sfdisk:
https://github.com/karelzak/util-linux/blob/v2.32/disk-utils/sfdisk.8#L71

(cherry picked from commit c46677fec2)
2018-09-24 19:00:29 +02:00
Uli Baum
dc74ab0eac nixos/tests/installer: prevent race between parted and udev
by combining all parted commands into a single parted call.
This eliminates one cause of non-deterministic failure.

(cherry picked from commit a5183762c5)
2018-09-24 19:00:29 +02:00
Andrew Dunham
35271fdb2f boost: limit concurrent jobs to the maximum supported number (#47255)
(cherry picked from commit ba278c3b87)
2018-09-24 18:23:05 +02:00
Stefan Junker
174e19d1f6 virtualization/qemu-vm: fix and improve virtio/scsi switching
(cherry picked from commit f777d2b719)
2018-09-24 18:05:15 +02:00
taku0
02429f790b firefox-esr: 60.1.0esr -> 60.2.1esr
(cherry picked from commit e5778a9991)
2018-09-24 17:41:00 +02:00
taku0
53dee62105 firefox: 61.0.2 -> 62.0.2
(cherry picked from commit da9823672f)
2018-09-24 17:40:04 +02:00
taku0
10db65e530 firefox-bin: 61.0.2 -> 62.0.2
(cherry picked from commit 5b79f81a39)
2018-09-24 17:39:05 +02:00
xeji
4f4807ae66 nixos/tests/hound: fix non-deterministic failure (#47152)
The test failed on Hydra in one instance because a request to the
server was sent before indexing was finished.
Retry the request until it succeeds (or times out).

(cherry picked from commit c525111133)
2018-09-24 17:32:51 +02:00
Bas van Dijk
afe328bb5e opencv: 3.4.2 -> 3.4.3
(cherry picked from commit 252c0d4c82)
2018-09-24 16:02:10 +02:00
Maximilian Bosch
32a5d08507 python3Packages.google-compute-engine: fix build (#47267)
The dependency `distro` was missing.
See https://hydra.nixos.org/build/81330387

Addresses #45960

(cherry picked from commit baa7e52fe0)
2018-09-24 15:52:47 +02:00
Daiderd Jordan
3cee0ce5b8 eiskaltdcpp: mark linux only
The darwin build fails and other platforms will probably run into
similar issues.

    Determining if the Q_WS_QWS exist failed with the following output:
    Change Dir: /tmp/nix-build-eiskaltdcpp-2.2.10.drv-0/source/build/CMakeFiles/CMakeTmp

    Run Build Command:"/nix/store/qfag24z6xsr6jkyi8gb4cv62rp945rbk-gnumake-4.2.1/bin/make" "cmTC_14e67/fast"
    /nix/store/qfag24z6xsr6jkyi8gb4cv62rp945rbk-gnumake-4.2.1/bin/make -f CMakeFiles/cmTC_14e67.dir/build.make CMakeFiles/cmTC_14e67.dir/build
    make[1]: Entering directory '/private/tmp/nix-build-eiskaltdcpp-2.2.10.drv-0/source/build/CMakeFiles/CMakeTmp'
    Building CXX object CMakeFiles/cmTC_14e67.dir/CheckSymbolExists.cxx.o
    /nix/store/2gdwhdzhy4iwkp7fh8v6gy6nxj1zi9pv-clang-wrapper-5.0.2/bin/clang++   -I/nix/store/8dzqilmdr0p3qmmrxh51xk7wli6grm0i-qt-4.8.7/include -F/nix/store/8dzqilmdr0p3qmmrxh51xk7wli6grm0i-qt-4.8.7/lib  -std=c++0x -pipe -Wformat -Werror=format-security  -arch x86_64   -o CMakeFiles/cmTC_14e67.dir/CheckSymbolExists.cxx.o -c /tmp/nix-build-eiskaltdcpp-2.2.10.drv-0/source/build/CMakeFiles/CMakeTmp/CheckSymbolExists.cxx
    /tmp/nix-build-eiskaltdcpp-2.2.10.drv-0/source/build/CMakeFiles/CMakeTmp/CheckSymbolExists.cxx:8:19: error: use of undeclared identifier 'Q_WS_QWS'
      return ((int*)(&Q_WS_QWS))[argc];
                  ^

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit 52ad963b50)
2018-09-24 13:59:28 +01:00
Maximilian Bosch
20d144b58c python3Packages.py3exiv2: fix build
Recent boost versions name their `python3` shared objects
`boost_python3x` rather than `boost_python3`.

See https://hydra.nixos.org/build/80712295
Addresses #45960

(cherry picked from commit 50f23da8e6)
2018-09-24 13:53:14 +01:00
Jörg Thalheim
ea48d53c8c Merge pull request #47247 from danme/release-18.09
nvidia-x11: Fix vulkan VK_KHR_xcb_surface
2018-09-24 13:20:02 +01:00
Maximilian Bosch
34cafeee32 Revert "python: ldappool: 2.2.0 -> 2.3.0"
This reverts commit 29acc8339f.

(cherry picked from commit fbeb94dd46)
2018-09-24 13:17:54 +01:00
Florian Klink
7eb1fa2845 systemd: update to fix nspawn containers (#47264)
This fixes nspawn containers with older systemd inside currently failing
to start.

See:
https://github.com/NixOS/systemd/pull/23
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/10104
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/47253
(cherry picked from commit c3cc34f20a)
2018-09-24 10:03:16 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
e4966591ef Revert "nixos: set nixos in nixPath"
This reverts commit 67c8c49177.

'nix run nixos.firefox' is *not* supposed to work - the Nix 2.x
interface attempts to standardize on nixpkgs.*, to get rid of the
nixos/nixpkgs confusion that existed with the channels interface. So
let's not bring that confusion back.

(cherry picked from commit 9c53116d49)
2018-09-24 10:44:47 +02:00
Will Dietz
ee582a32d2 NIX_PATH: don't prepend $HOME-based value in session variable, set later
environment.sessionVariables cannot refer to the values of env vars,
and as a result this has caused problems in a variety of scenarios.

One use for these is that they're injected into /etc/profile,
elewhere these are used to populate an 'envfile' for pam
(`pam 5 pam_env.conf`) which mentions use of HOME being
potentially problematic.

Anyway if the goal is to make things easier for users,
simply do the NIX_PATH modification as extraInit.

This fixes the annoying problems generated by the current approach
(#40165 and others) while hopefully serving the original goal.

One way to check if things are borked is to try:

$ sudo env | grep NIX_PATH

Which (before this change) prints NIX_PATH variable with
an unexpanded $HOME in the value.

-------

This does mean the following won't contain user channels for 'will':
$ sudo -u will nix-instantiate --eval -E builtins.nixPath

However AFAICT currently they won't be present either,
due to unescaped $HOME.  Unsure if similar situation for other users
of sessionVariables (not sudo) work with current situation
(if they exist they will regress after this change AFAIK).

(cherry picked from commit fa67ca1543)
2018-09-23 20:08:33 -05:00
Alexander V. Nikolaev
4307b37781 rmilter: deprecation notice
(cherry picked from commit 868040ee22)
2018-09-24 01:41:27 +01:00
Alexander V. Nikolaev
1a159fe86b rmilter: move rmilter.sock out of /run/rmilter
/run/rmilter is set by systemd, and have root:root ownership, which
prevent pid file to write.

This fix suggested to be promoted to 18.09 branch.
(Although rmilter itself is deprecated, and I plan to remove it, after
18.09 would be released)

(cherry picked from commit 08f266490b)
2018-09-24 01:41:26 +01:00
Bas van Dijk
fa3e193e27 haskellPackages.haddock-api: fix build
Also remove haddock-library == 1.4.4 since it's not needed anymore

(cherry picked from commit 77c73cc8eb29da2154d2e9087d7efd7fd9af10f9)
2018-09-24 01:58:08 +02:00
Bas van Dijk
aeb114f7c9 haskellPackages.yi-core: use overrideScope instead of override
(cherry picked from commit 2de9705b9fcaa3650ea85a9f5e2aee834948fc8f)
2018-09-24 01:58:01 +02:00
Bas van Dijk
d99f352d1d haskellPackages.safe-money-*: use overrideScope instead of override
(cherry picked from commit 2481b366f6ea964889d1010e4159055cef7b5b95)
2018-09-24 01:57:55 +02:00
Bas van Dijk
21808eca2b haskellPackages.Frames: use overrideScope instead of override
(cherry picked from commit f1f2c2d3fc74d52f445f08f0f0410d1be586532b)
2018-09-24 01:57:49 +02:00
Matthew Bauer
9b696718bb nixos: make firefox default browser
Without this the graphical installer has no way to open the manual.
You can fix it yourself by installing any HTML browser but this might
be unfamiliar to users new to NixOS and without any other way to open
the manual. The downside is it will also increase download sizes.

Fixes #46537
2018-09-23 18:49:09 -05:00
Matthew Bauer
cb52ea4f19 kde: add kdoctools to default environment
khelpcenter needs meinproc5 to work properly. Hopefully doesn’t effect
closure sizes too much - kdoctools is rather small.

Fixes #46539

/cc @ttuegel
2018-09-23 18:48:53 -05:00
Matthew Bauer
95f31078f5 nixos: set nixos in nixPath
This makes using the nixos channel work out of the box with the new
Nix commands. For example:

$ nix run nixos.firefox -c firefox

Fixes #46536
2018-09-23 18:48:40 -05:00
Andrew Dunham
18a7c1df64 hdf4: fix build on aarch64-linux (#47209)
Pull in the Debian patches for AArch64 support, and a bonus patch for
reproducible builds while we're at it.

(cherry picked from commit 104014c6ba)
2018-09-23 23:57:59 +02:00
Bas van Dijk
9b4d87cec5 haskellPackages.Euterpea: fix build by using PortMidi == 0.2
(cherry picked from commit 9b67908e67)
2018-09-23 22:50:45 +02:00
Maximilian Bosch
c49fa222a7 pythonPackages.pyftgl: fix build (#47232)
See https://hydra.nixos.org/build/80705583

Recent `boost` versions with `python` enabled have changed their naming
scheme for `boost_python` shared objects which causes issues with the
proper linking when building `pyftgl`.

Previously the library was named `boost_python3`, no it's named
`boost_python36` for current python (3.6.x).

The same issue applies for the `python2`.

Addresses #45960

(cherry picked from commit 5ad7aedf63)
2018-09-23 22:39:44 +02:00
danme
3ab740ad40 nvidia-x11: Fix vulkan VK_KHR_xcb_surface
Fixes the issue: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/39149

Problem was that the Nvidia driver did not find the libxcb-glx at runtime.

(cherry picked from commit bda072cafc)
2018-09-23 22:18:17 +02:00
Bas van Dijk
ef9e8bd933 haskellPackages.Frames-beam: disable tests because it requires a running PostgreSQL server
(cherry picked from commit 73cf1c26d8)
2018-09-23 21:59:02 +02:00
Bas van Dijk
9e57b836ca haskellPackages.Frames: fix build by using vinyl-0.10.0
(cherry picked from commit ff6122c993)
2018-09-23 21:58:53 +02:00
Maximilian Bosch
19e8f7c977 tig: fix zsh completion
The ZSH completion script of `tig` basically imports the bash completion
script and uses it as completion approach. Unfortunately the script
takes several assumptions about the directory structure using
`$funcsourcetrace`[1] that don't apply on NixOS.

The easiest workaround is t opatch the completion script and import the
bash completion script from `$out`.

[1] http://zsh.sourceforge.net/Doc/Release/Zsh-Modules.html#index-funcsourcetrace
2018-09-23 19:21:58 +01:00
John Ericson
8b60c7d088 doc: Don't mention top-level {build, host, target}Platform
For technical reasons, we cannot easily add a warning to top-level
definitions, so 2a6e4ae49a and
e51f736076 reverted the deprecation. But
we can still remove mention of the would-be deprecated definitions to
steer people towards using the preferred alternatives.

(cherry picked from commit e39a73cc55)
2018-09-23 13:29:08 -04:00
John Ericson
7ca9ae5c2b top-level: system should still come from the host platform
2a6e4ae49a and
e51f736076 reverted a bit too much, and I
initially missed this when reviewing. The release notes already still
mention this change, too.

(cherry picked from commit 359d00f8b0)
2018-09-23 13:29:06 -04:00
Bas van Dijk
e611a82197 Revert "libtensorflow: 1.9.0 -> 1.10.0"
This reverts commit 713991132e.

libtensorflow is only used by the Haskell tensorflow packages and they
don't work with tensorflow-1.10 yet. So the easiest solution is to
just revert this commit and add it back when they do gain support.

(cherry picked from commit 6e14b9fc2d)
2018-09-23 19:17:12 +02:00
Bas van Dijk
b2c49a7750 Revert "libtensorflow: fix hashes for darwin and cuda downloads"
This reverts commit 93ed13f86b.

libtensorflow is only used by the Haskell tensorflow packages and they
don't work with tensorflow-1.10 yet. So the easiest solution is to
just revert this commit and add it back when they do gain support.

(cherry picked from commit 39d35e77ee)
2018-09-23 19:17:05 +02:00
John Ericson
9f4d633d93 Merge commit '84c8e397d234bcdbd7ee4a41bf6b705d1250250c' into release-18.09 2018-09-23 13:06:12 -04:00
volth
8b20d98e82 alternative for iproute module (#41801)
(cherry picked from commit 0fa04d646d)

It is unfortunate to cherry-pick something with release notes to the
release staging branch so close to the release. But the change is to a
new service so no one comming from 18.03 would be surprised to a
last-minute change in behavior. Furthermore, the change is a month old
and it appears it only wasn't cherry-picked already by mistake.
2018-09-23 12:24:08 -04:00
John Ericson
afa89e9408 Merge remote-tracking branch 'upstream/release-18.09' into staging-18.09 2018-09-23 12:17:37 -04:00
Florian Klink
5bb85cd45c php: set mysql socket path if mysql[i] or pdo_mysql support is enabled
PHP tries to discover the mysql default socket path during configure
phase by probing the file system:
cf3b852109/ext/mysqli/config.m4 (L4)

This obviously fails to discover /run/mysqld/mysqld.sock, which is being
used (hardcoded) across all MySQL flavours.

This leads to PHP having no mysql socket path set for the mysql[i]
extensions, and `/tmp/mysql.sock` set for pdo_mysql,
meaning one currently has to manually configure and set it in php.ini.

Luckily, PHP supports setting that path via
`--with-mysql-sock=/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock` during configure phase,
so let's do this as soon as one of the three modules is enabled.

(cherry picked from commit baa04e4204)
2018-09-23 16:19:18 +01:00
John Ericson
a06d703851 Merge commit '45f40f5fe02d71f9863e54277a50fe7e1dc46afa' into release-18.09 2018-09-23 11:03:47 -04:00
Andrew Dunham
48625909dc erlangR18: apply upstream patches to fix nondeterministic build failures (#47202)
As per the following bug report, sometimes erts/start_scripts will fail
to compile because of a Makefile ordering issue. Apply the upstream
patches to fix this.
  https://bugs.erlang.org/browse/ERL-241

(cherry picked from commit c987ed0896)
2018-09-23 11:02:47 +02:00
xeji
2c83b339c6 nixos/tests/prosody: use sqlite database (#47185)
The test didn't catch an issue with luadbi because it used
internal storage only. Switch to sqlite to test sql access.

(cherry picked from commit 589b290b43)
2018-09-23 10:46:55 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
317ce1b622 Merge: nixos/weechat backports
Close #46861 - it's exactly the same commits, just with -x annotations.
2018-09-23 10:41:01 +02:00
adisbladis
e44b6cd961 weechat: Add version and meta to buildEnv package
Currently the output from `nix search` and similar tools are lacking
important meta data

(cherry picked from commit 230fd49738)
2018-09-23 10:39:19 +02:00
Maximilian Bosch
a1c48b9ea6 weechatScripts.weechat-matrix-bridge: don't export `olm.lua' as script (#46582)
Loading olm.lua as weechat script with `/script load olm.lua' causes
errors like this:

```
/nix/store/43jbh7yxh8j4gjfzbvpd9clncah5dip1-weechat-matrix-bridge-2018-05-29/lib/ffi.so: undefined symbol: lua_tointeger
```

As `olm.lua' is loaded by `matrix.lua' it doesn't need to be included
manually by the weechat configuration.

(cherry picked from commit 61a9463498)
2018-09-23 10:37:51 +02:00
Maximilian Bosch
9ceff9e3e5 weechat: fix quoting for ${} syntax
In my previous PR I missed that ${sec.foobar} (syntax to retrieve
secrets in a weechat runtime) breaks the shell evaluation.

Furthermore `;` shall be used rather than `\n` to concat scripts and the
init config.

(cherry picked from commit e2b4644f9c)
2018-09-23 10:37:27 +02:00
Maximilian Bosch
79b38a9795 weechatScripts.wee-slack: init at 2.1.1
(cherry picked from commit f5becfb5b0)
2018-09-23 10:34:59 +02:00
Maximilian Bosch
d74a291ea6 nixos/weechat: cleanup module, add module documentation
This adds several improvements the previously introduced
`services.weechat` module:

* Dropped `services.weechat.init` as the initialization script can now
  be done on package-level since 2af41719bc using the `configure`
  function.

* Added `sessionName` option to explicitly configure a name for the
  `screen` session (by default: weechat-screen).

* Added `binary` option to configure the binary name (e.g.
  `weechat-headless`).

* Added docs regarding `screen` session and `weechat.service`.

(cherry picked from commit 18d419141d)
2018-09-23 10:34:24 +02:00
Maximilian Bosch
27c2215684 weechat: 2.1 -> 2.2; improve package configuration
This aims to make the `weechat` package even more configurable. It
allows to specify scripts and commands using the `configure` function
inside a `weechat.override` expression.

The package can be configured like this:

```
with import <nixpkgs> { };
weechat.override {
  plugins = { availablePlugins, ... }: {
    plugins = builtins.attrValues availablePlugins;

    init = ''
      /set foo bar
      /server add freenode chat.freenode.org
    '';

    scripts = [ "/path/to/script.py" ];
  };
}
```

All commands are passed to `weechat --run-command "/set foo bar;/server ..."`.

The `plugins' attribute is not necessarily required anymore, if it's
sufficient to add `init' commands, the `plugins' will be
`builtins.attrValues availablePlugins' by default.

Additionally the result contains `weechat` and `weechat-headless`
(introduced in WeeChat 2.1) now.

(cherry picked from commit a8efe61412)
2018-09-23 10:33:56 +02:00
Yegor Timoshenko
b4f299eddb weechat: add NixOS module
(cherry picked from commit b54987715b)
2018-09-23 10:33:09 +02:00
Samuel Dionne-Riel
7c7f9623dc qesteidutil: Fixes build from Qt upgrade. (#46083)
(cherry picked from commit ef2b217812)
2018-09-23 10:15:18 +02:00
Andrew Dunham
0d7c472fd7 pythonPackages.flask_assets: fix tests (#47203)
(cherry picked from commit e141f7cd2f)
2018-09-23 10:03:35 +02:00
Andrew Dunham
233328cde5 xsecurelock: 1.0 -> 1.1
(cherry picked from commit da18ffac6b)
Backport of #47190
2018-09-23 09:56:59 +02:00
Uli Baum
73ceb7742c nixos/iso-image: fix 32bit UEFI boot
UEFI iso image for i686 didn't boot because the
default boot file was incorrectly named bootx32.efi.
The correct name is bootia32.efi.

(cherry picked from commit 845ae983f6)
2018-09-23 00:47:29 -04:00
Daiderd Jordan
1cae9ef0fd ffmpeg: don't use gcc on darwin (#47189)
This isn't necessary and causes build failures for certain versions.

    CC      libavfilter/libmpcodecs/vf_eq2.o
    CC      libavfilter/libmpcodecs/vf_fil.o
    CC      libavfilter/libmpcodecs/vf_fspp.o
    libavfilter/libmpcodecs/vf_fspp.c:939:18: error: unknown token in expression
            movq %mm2, 0*8+(%rsp)

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit 52a1179b6c)
2018-09-22 23:13:40 +02:00
Jörg Thalheim
2de47a73c8 luaPackages.luadbi: 0.5 -> 0.6 (#47156)
Switch to maintained fork that is compatible with lua5.2/lua5.3.
This package was tested with prosody.

(cherry picked from commit a8413d816a)

Backported because prosody database access is broken without it.
2018-09-22 22:30:02 +02:00
Uli Baum
10a9c597ad Merge branch 'release-18.09' into staging-18.09 2018-09-22 21:53:17 +02:00
Elis Hirwing
11aa1784b1 php: Refactor so we can upgrade PHP per platform (#47162)
This way we don't need to disable flags etc by platform and can still
backport new versions to stable for linux even if there's a bug or
something in the darwin build.

(cherry picked from commit 0b82fbc3af)
2018-09-22 20:27:44 +02:00
Elis Hirwing
e7ffc978c7 php71: 7.1.21 -> 7.1.22
Changelog: https://secure.php.net/ChangeLog-7.php#7.1.22
(cherry picked from commit 89b7ad263e)
2018-09-22 20:27:26 +02:00
Elis Hirwing
922f74af6d php: 7.2.8 -> 7.2.10
Changelog 7.2.9: http://php.net/ChangeLog-7.php#7.2.9
Changelog 7.2.10: http://php.net/ChangeLog-7.php#7.2.10

(cherry picked from commit 5a868df967)
2018-09-22 20:27:16 +02:00
Joachim Fasting
2625469949 tor-browser-bundle-bin: 8.0 -> 8.0.1
(cherry picked from commit f2ba1a4284)
2018-09-22 20:19:23 +02:00
Andrew Dunham
ad9e8ea664 libsndfile: Add patch for CVE-2018-13139 (#47160)
(cherry picked from commit fcde178ed5)
2018-09-22 19:34:30 +02:00
Christian Kauhaus
b831700b8f lua: 5.2.3 -> 5.2.4 (#47126)
Lua 5.2.4 is the EOL point release of the 5.2 series.

(cherry picked from commit 6adb944cb6)
2018-09-22 19:11:47 +02:00
xeji
9e4916b84d devpi-client: 3.1.0 -> 4.1.0, fix tests (#47142)
(cherry picked from commit c770699524)
2018-09-22 18:08:37 +02:00
Jean-Paul Calderone
8342f255e1 nixos/tor: Correct "transparent" typo
(cherry picked from commit 57834da7fc)
2018-09-22 15:46:45 +02:00
Joachim Fasting
d25ed2c9f7 electrum: 3.1.3 -> 3.2.3
(cherry picked from commit 1e379f29f7)
2018-09-22 15:46:45 +02:00
Joachim Fasting
2cbfd84d80 tor-browser-bundle-bin: stdenv.shell -> runtimeShell in wrapper
(cherry picked from commit aacf68a635)
2018-09-22 15:46:44 +02:00
Joachim Fasting
f683eaaedc tor-browser-bundle-bin: parameterize icon theme
(cherry picked from commit 546e511edc)
2018-09-22 15:46:43 +02:00
Joachim Fasting
9a7d79c221 tor-browser-bundle-bin: add gsettings-schemas
See https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/46587

(cherry picked from commit 5710ee3bef)
2018-09-22 15:46:42 +02:00
Joachim Fasting
95258ee051 tor-browser-bundle-bin: 7.5.6 -> 8.0
(cherry picked from commit ed5283fcf5)
2018-09-22 15:46:41 +02:00
Joachim Fasting
26152dfaa1 tor: 0.3.3.9 -> 0.3.4.8
(cherry picked from commit 48abf865bc)
2018-09-22 15:46:36 +02:00
Leo R. Lundgren
1e46ead867 open-vm-tools: 10.1.10 -> 10.3.0
(cherry picked from commit bbb30c320e)
2018-09-22 20:19:04 +08:00
xeji
4a620decd3 zathura: 0.4.0 -> 0.4.1 (#47140)
This fixes the synctex-related build failure with texlive 2018
(currently on 18.09).

(cherry picked from commit 9e87b56dd1)
2018-09-22 14:18:09 +02:00
John Ericson
409fd48e64 Merge pull request #47146 from obsidiansystems/fetchzip-cross
fetchzip: Use unzip from buildPackages
2018-09-21 14:52:21 -04:00
John Ericson
2ef1d084c5 Merge pull request #47144 from obsidiansystems/windows-libusb
libusb1: Build everywhere, since MinGW works, for 18.09
2018-09-21 14:28:40 -04:00
Daiderd Jordan
5165dfe9de docker-proxy: mark linux only
Unlike docker (cli only) this probably won't work on darwin.

    github.com/docker/libnetwork/networkdb
    can't load package: package github.com/docker/libnetwork/ns: build constraints exclude all Go files in /private/tmp/nix-build-docker-proxy-7b2b1feb1de4817d522cc372af149ff48d25028e.drv-0/go/src/github.com/docker/libnetwork/ns

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit 33f818198b)
2018-09-21 20:15:55 +02:00
Daiderd Jordan
61ce290c2b dico: mark linux only.
Never built successfully.

    Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
      "_rpl_strerror", referenced from:
          _default_print_diag in libgrecs.a(diag.o)
          _grecs_symtab_strerror in libgrecs.a(symtab.o)
          _parse_inet in libgrecs.a(sockaddr.o)
    ld: symbol(s) not found for architecture x86_64

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit 709a828e71)
2018-09-21 20:15:53 +02:00
Daiderd Jordan
488a45d7a2 dolphinEmuMaster: mark broken on darwin
The default version isn't enabled on darwin either, however it did work
at some point.

    /tmp/nix-build-dolphin-emu-2018-08-17.drv-0/source/Source/Core/Core/NetPlayServer.cpp:1180:26: error: unknown type name 'lzo_uint32_t'; did you mean 'lzo_uint32'?
      std::vector<u8> wrkmem(LZO1X_1_MEM_COMPRESS);

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit f6bc086b21)
2018-09-21 20:15:52 +02:00
Bas van Dijk
93506c3a0b haskellPackages.mandrill: fix build for ghc843
(cherry picked from commit 73862bf812)
2018-09-21 19:12:50 +02:00
Christoph Hrdinka
fc3cfe3af5 libretro.mame: 2017-03-02 -> 2018-09-13
Fixes build of the MAME libretro core.

Closes #47137.

Signed-off-by: Christoph Hrdinka <c.github@hrdinka.at>
2018-09-21 18:55:26 +02:00
José Romildo Malaquias
c16b9dacb4 ephoto: add dependency on mesa_noglu.dev (#47136)
(cherry picked from commit e372ab4626)
2018-09-21 18:26:18 +02:00
Michael Raskin
fd6930685c acl2: 8.1.post.2018.09.20 -> 8.1; turns out there is a release
(cherry picked from commit 60b6d5f8a8)
2018-09-21 18:08:05 +02:00
José Romildo Malaquias
edf5020042 rage: add dependency on mesa_noglu.dev (#47132)
(cherry picked from commit 7ac0ecc12b)
2018-09-21 17:41:54 +02:00
Michael Raskin
d10c5b88de acl2: 8.0 -> 8.0.post.2018.09.20; fixes build with fresher SBCL
(cherry picked from commit de764e65f0)
2018-09-21 12:13:49 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
7eec667f5b Merge branch 'staging-18.09' into release-18.09
The comparison seems very good on Hydra.
2018-09-21 12:02:35 +02:00
Uli Baum
793776b730 nixos/tests/ferm: disable dhcpcd
The test failed in one run on Hydra, logs look like
dhcpcd changed ipv6 routing at just the wrong time.
Disable dhcpcd. It's not needed, the test uses static IPs anyway.

(cherry picked from commit 5e7b7b805a)
2018-09-21 09:59:16 +01:00
Mario Rodas
c1328a1779 bat: install man page (#47099)
(cherry picked from commit ba33eac477)
2018-09-21 10:23:57 +02:00
Uli Baum
711ff4b687 nixos/tests/atd: wait for atd to start
The test failed non-deterministically when an at command was
issued before the atd daemon was running.

(cherry picked from commit 8ffd65b12e)
Backport to 18.09
2018-09-21 10:10:16 +02:00
John Ericson
ef450efb9d Merge pull request #47097 from obsidiansystems/fix-x509-system
haskellPackages.x509-system: Override based on the host, not target platform for 18.09
2018-09-20 21:55:29 -04:00
Graham Christensen
a84a302732 Clarfy the binary reproducibility problems of created=now with dockerTools.buildImage.
(cherry picked from commit 7736337916)
2018-09-20 20:31:52 -04:00
Graham Christensen
9eefd1e846 dockerTools.buildImage: test that created=now makes an unstable date
(cherry picked from commit aedc651903)
2018-09-20 20:31:52 -04:00
Graham Christensen
0fe015a70c dockerTools.buildImage: support impure dates
Because dates are an impurity, by default buildImage will use a static
date of one second past the UNIX Epoch. This can be a bit frustrating
when listing docker images in the CLI:

    $ docker image list
    REPOSITORY   TAG      IMAGE ID       CREATED        SIZE
    hello        latest   08c791c7846e   48 years ago   25.2MB

If you want to trade the purity for a better user experience, you can
set created to now.

    pkgs.dockerTools.buildImage {
      name = "hello";
      tag = "latest";
      created = "now";
      contents = pkgs.hello;

      config.Cmd = [ "/bin/hello" ];
    }

and now the Docker CLI will display a reasonable date and sort the
images as expected:

    $ docker image list
    REPOSITORY   TAG      IMAGE ID       CREATED              SIZE
    hello        latest   de2bf4786de6   About a minute ago   25.2MB

(cherry picked from commit a32d7e0c74)
2018-09-20 20:31:51 -04:00
Austin Seipp
f40d13666e perlPackages.MojoIOLoopForkCall: 0.19 -> 0.20
Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
(cherry picked from commit 0214f9e25e)
2018-09-20 18:40:58 -05:00
Austin Seipp
b59c61198a perlPackages.Mojolicious: 7.88 -> 8.0
Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
(cherry picked from commit 08815b9af8)
2018-09-20 18:40:47 -05:00
Austin Seipp
e4b0c7bbd2 libiio: init at 0.15
(cherry picked from commit 0f2b10d1ac)

Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
2018-09-20 18:39:17 -05:00
Nathan van Doorn
70ecb51beb haskellPackages.sbv: fix location of z3 executable
A lot of the functionality of the z3 library depends on it being able to
find the z3 executable on $PATH. Hard-coding it here means it will never
be unable to find it and z3 doesn't need to pollute $PATH.

(cherry picked from commit c8598daad4)

Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
2018-09-20 18:32:04 -05:00
roconnor
40d22a78b7 bitcoin: 0.16.2 -> 0.16.3 (#46891)
(cherry picked from commit fab901ddd3)

security: fixes CVE-2018-17144
2018-09-21 00:36:12 +02:00
xeji
a31fc1ca57 liquidwar: fix build (#47064)
- add missing dependencies readline and libtool that used to be
  propagated by guile but aren't anymore
- build with guile 2.0 instead of 1.8

(cherry picked from commit 2c5ae2ae61)
2018-09-21 00:21:31 +02:00
xeji
abdbf1ccd6 pythonPackages.circus: fix build, add meta (#47066)
(cherry picked from commit 9c02914b42)
2018-09-21 00:21:31 +02:00
xeji
af334fe875 nixos/tests/gdk-pixbuf: fix test on i686 (#46916)
Test didn't run because it tried to create a VM with 4096M RAM
but qemu-system-i386 has a hard 2047M memory limit.
- reduce memory to 2047M on i686.
- increase timeout 300s -> 1800s because the tests are much slower
  on i686 and timed out.

(cherry picked from commit e40d850fd1)
2018-09-20 21:30:06 +02:00
Vincent Laporte
355a0377b1 ocaml ≤ 4.05: mark as broken on Aarch64 (#47010)
(cherry picked from commit ce03af969e)
2018-09-20 21:19:00 +02:00
Tim Steinbach
6ec64973bc linux: 4.18.8 -> 4.18.9
(cherry picked from commit 3e4377cf15fb153010ff8d49dcaf131f1dfe0af9)
2018-09-20 09:53:19 -04:00
Tim Steinbach
3f2aa18db8 linux: 4.14.70 -> 4.14.71
(cherry picked from commit 1c620c669655c1aa7a101a7fafba7327a60293c1)
2018-09-20 09:53:13 -04:00
Tim Steinbach
e8f3acd155 linux: 4.9.127 -> 4.9.128
(cherry picked from commit 172e43335443b15ba25989759eb4085bed55542a)
2018-09-20 09:53:02 -04:00
Tim Steinbach
672b375dfc linux: 4.4.156 -> 4.4.157
(cherry picked from commit 9d678ecf88ee0691cd85d348a790802239faaa10)
2018-09-20 09:52:55 -04:00
xeji
d5cbdecd3b nixos/tests/networking.virtual: prevent non-deterministic failure (#46949)
The test failed non-deterministically on Hydra because interfaces
sometimes weren't yet fully cleaned up when the result was checked.

(cherry picked from commit 05659962cd)
2018-09-20 13:21:24 +02:00
Uli Baum
43809bd8d4 gitlab: add missing meta.platforms
(cherry picked from commit 8cd90e40be)
2018-09-20 12:57:46 +02:00
Maximilian Bosch
b89050daac nixos/yabar: fix module & test (#46954)
The `pkgs.yabar` package is relatively old (2016-04) and contains
several issues fixed on master. `yabar-unstable` containsa recent master
build with several fixes and a lot of new features (I use
`yabar-unstable` for some time now and had no issues with it).

In the upstream bugtracker some bugs could be fixed on ArchLinux by
simply installing `yabar-git` (an AUR package which builds a recent
master).

To stabilize the module, the option `programs.yabar.package` now
defaults to `pkgs.yabar-unstable` and yields a warning with several
linked issues that are known on `pkgs.yabar`.

The test has been refactored as well to ensure that `yabar` actually
starts (and avoid non-deterministic random success) and takes a
screenshot of a very minimalistic configuration on IceWM.

Fixes #46899

(cherry picked from commit 8b58a7187c)
2018-09-20 12:48:21 +02:00
R. RyanTM
d4e9c35441 wireguard-tools: 0.0.20180904 -> 0.0.20180918
Semi-automatic update generated by
https://github.com/ryantm/nixpkgs-update tools. This update was made
based on information from
https://repology.org/metapackage/wireguard-tools/versions

(cherry picked from commit 03d8620098)
2018-09-20 08:33:56 +01:00
xeji
175d49256f pythonPackages.nilearn: disable still failing tests (#46918)
A previous attempt to fix tests failing on some machines (#46850)
was unsuccessful, they still failed on Hydra sometimes while
succeeding locally. Revert #46850 and disable these tests instead.

(cherry picked from commit f3a0c8a3aa)
2018-09-19 23:50:53 +02:00
xeji
08c39f8d47 arelle: fix build, use current python3 (#46862)
It was pinned to python34, build failed in dependency
python34Packages.pytest. Use python3(6) instead.

(cherry picked from commit a0c5dd8a09)
2018-09-19 22:19:17 +02:00
Domen Kožar
b8f71e3c79 datadog-agent: remove privateTmp=true
This allows postgres integration to connect to socket in /tmp

(cherry picked from commit 5715aa1951)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2018-09-19 18:56:25 +01:00
John Ericson
90e9b8d0f9 Merge pull request #46904 from obsidiansystems/zlib-ios
zlib: Fix iOS cross build for 18.09
2018-09-19 12:49:14 -04:00
Edmund Wu
d3905a3ddf lightdm: fix tmpfiles path (#46886)
(cherry picked from commit 1a15b10ae3)
2018-09-19 16:54:40 +02:00
xeji
3af2eb2072 exempi: fix i686 build (#46884)
failed with `unknown symbol __divmoddi4`.
Standard fix is to use gcc6.

(cherry picked from commit d57c9ec407)
2018-09-19 16:20:35 +02:00
xeji
d5d36e5d2c nixos/tests/hibernate: prevent non-deterministic failure (#46882)
... that occurred mostly on i686. Improve timing.
With this, the failures are no longer reproducible on my machine.

(cherry picked from commit beb8ca2887)
2018-09-19 16:20:35 +02:00
xeji
842b9054e8 nixos/tests/containers-imperative: fix on i686 (#46874)
Test failed on i686 in a sandbox because some packages required
to build the nixos manual for the container were missing. Add them.

(cherry picked from commit daf40ab165)
2018-09-19 16:20:34 +02:00
xeji
2c43ad2498 openxpki: fix build, use current python3Packages (#46860)
Build used python34Packages and failed because python34Packages.pytest
didn't build anymore. Use python3Packages instead.

(cherry picked from commit 012682222f)
2018-09-19 16:17:27 +02:00
xeji
1bc047d46e czmq: 4.0.2 -> 4.1.1 (#46855)
(cherry picked from commit c9969162ab)
2018-09-19 16:17:27 +02:00
xeji
fd0c124cd6 pythonPackages.nilearn: fix test_signal tests (#46850)
These tests failed on some machines, probably due to lower arithmetic
presicion. Reduce required precision from 13 to 8 decimal digits.

(cherry picked from commit 970393c34a)
2018-09-19 16:17:27 +02:00
Jörg Thalheim
09d8df5b21 python3.pkgs.typeguard: fix builds by applying utf-8 locales
ZHF #45960

(cherry picked from commit b224eef108)
2018-09-19 15:14:15 +01:00
Pascal Wittmann
86f9a958cf homebank: 5.1.8 -> 5.2.1 2018-09-19 15:06:55 +02:00
aszlig
d07dbd4490 python/hetzner: 0.8.0 -> 0.8.1
This is only a minor bugfix release and updates the fallback CA root
certificates. For NixOS this is usually not required as the probe paths
will match there, but for non-NixOS users it might be helpful.

Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@nix.build>
(cherry picked from commit 48d1c50f7a)
Reason: This might be relevant for NixOps users on Mac OS X and the
        update won't break anything that wasn't broken before.
2018-09-19 14:32:20 +02:00
Jack Kelly
adb467eeaf dockerTools.pullImage: correct default arch
(cherry picked from commit af5eab6ea6)
2018-09-19 09:28:35 +02:00
John Ericson
b853e73d52 Merge pull request #46873 from obsidiansystems/cross-haskell-ar-flag
haskell infra: Also pass `--with-ar` in cross builds for 18.09
2018-09-18 19:14:17 -04:00
John Ericson
d29a153655 Merge remote-tracking branch 'upstream/release-18.09' into staging-18.09 2018-09-18 16:56:24 -04:00
John Ericson
5b053b4697 Merge pull request #46858 from obsidiansystems/darwin-to-linux-prep
misc pkgs: various cross fixes in preparation for darwin->linux for 18.09
2018-09-18 16:52:36 -04:00
Elis Hirwing
4c4aff3293 nixos/activation: Switch from bash to sh to avoid reading users bash config (#46851)
This fixes #46750. This should also work with non-POSIX shells like in #46042.

(cherry picked from commit 5664e64a01)
2018-09-18 21:48:02 +02:00
Domen Kožar
68c956914b datadog-integrtaions-core: 2018-05-27 -> 2018-09-18
(cherry picked from commit 943871a866)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2018-09-18 20:23:44 +01:00
xeji
bc7ec9b651 nixos/release.nix: disable tests.ec2-config (#46830)
This test doesn't work in a sandbox and never succeeded on Hydra.
It simulates an EC2 instance reconfiguring itself at runtime,
which needs network access.

(cherry picked from commit a83d61b708)
2018-09-18 19:27:57 +02:00
Graham Christensen
374d22d68d Merge pull request #46838 from grahamc/check-outputs-in-meta-18.09
stdenv: Validate meta.outputsToInstall
2018-09-18 12:45:01 -04:00
Uli Baum
3d949911c0 gtk-doc: don't build with dblatex by default
make it optional: withDblatex ? false
This removes the dependency of gtk-doc on texlive.

(cherry picked from commit d6ecbe1410)
2018-09-18 18:39:04 +02:00
Robin Gloster
69da311f79 texlive: fix missing synctex header
The automake file was patched but `automake` not run.
Also since the texk/web2c folder is not in autoconfig's
SUBDIRS the autoreconfHook has to be run in there.

Completely fixes #46376

(cherry picked from commit ce6e72a11c)
2018-09-18 18:34:54 +02:00
Graham Christensen
24ad8ada2e elf-header-real: fixup outputsToInstall
(cherry picked from commit 301109a2dd)
2018-09-18 12:28:23 -04:00
Graham Christensen
da5fd39d21 stdenv: Validate meta.outputsToInstall
If meta.outputsToInstall is set to include absent outputs, various
tools break including channel updates and nix-env.

    grahamc@Morbo> nix-env -i -f . -A elf-header-real
    installing 'elf-header'
    error: this derivation has bad 'meta.outputsToInstall'

This patch verifies each value in meta.outputsToInstall is a valid
output. It validates this condition only if checkMeta is true.

    grahamc@Morbo> nix-build . -A elf-header-real
    error: Package ‘elf-header’ in /home/grahamc/projects/nixpkgs/pkgs/development/libraries/elf-header/default.nix:36 has invalid meta.outputsToInstall, refusing to evaluate.

    The package elf-header has set meta.outputsToInstall to: bin

    however elf-header only has the outputs: out

    and is missing the following ouputs:

      - bin

    (use '--show-trace' to show detailed location information)

Note, now the nix-env experience is decidedly worse for users who have
checkMeta set to true:

    grahamc@Morbo> nix-env -i -f . -A elf-header-real; echo $?
    0

though since this is already an issue for unfree, broken, unsupported,
and insecure validity problems I'm not sure we should do something
different here.

(cherry picked from commit b80c9ce4a9)
2018-09-18 12:28:23 -04:00
WilliButz
6ffa699c86 prometheus-json-exporter: add patch to support bool parsing
(cherry picked from commit b59cd2bc17)
2018-09-18 18:22:47 +02:00
WilliButz
ef7921a342 prometheus-json-exporter: 2016-09-13 -> 2017-10-06
(cherry picked from commit b712736283)
2018-09-18 18:22:47 +02:00
Adam Finn Tulinius
81884ce1b4 OVMF: update homepage
Tianocore was apparently moved from SourceForge to GitHub.

(cherry picked from commit 8b8474b1b5)
2018-09-18 13:16:53 +01:00
Clemens Fruhwirth
f339ca57cc mpack: Invoke /run/wrappers/bin/sendmail via execvp
Calling /run/current-sw/bin/sendmail fails under postfix because
setgid bits are not set. Switching the hardcoded path to an invocation
via execvp should cover both cases, when the sendmail binary is
setgid-wrapped and when it is not.

(cherry picked from commit 6d97096d8b)
2018-09-18 10:01:56 +01:00
pacien
083237f061 exim: enable LMTP support
This makes the LMTP transport available by default.
No additional dependency is required.

(cherry picked from commit c3dd421a2e)
2018-09-18 09:51:28 +02:00
José Romildo Malaquias
e97e63bd63 efl: 1.21.0 -> 1.21.1
(cherry picked from commit 5f1c33efce)
2018-09-18 09:43:53 +02:00
John Ericson
4bd5b51c3a Merge pull request #46816 from obsidiansystems/darwin-android-ndk
androidndk: Add Darwin support for 18.09
2018-09-17 23:01:41 -04:00
Yegor Timoshenko
a001c45db2 Merge pull request #46803 from vaibhavsagar/bump-all-cabal-hashes-18.09
all-cabal-hashes: update snapshot to Hackage at 2018-09-12T08:26:27Z
2018-09-17 23:48:28 +00:00
Jörg Thalheim
0ad7d4feb7 heroku: fix homepage
(cherry picked from commit 11dcb770b9)
2018-09-17 22:39:50 +01:00
Bob van der Linden
4ba68be6d5 heroku: set HEROKU_DISABLE_AUTOUPDATE=1
(cherry picked from commit db571e9b78)
2018-09-17 22:39:50 +01:00
Bob van der Linden
c922f7b92a heroku: skip build phase
(cherry picked from commit 1f8dc21c94)
2018-09-17 22:39:49 +01:00
Bob van der Linden
1934cbb6a6 heroku: 5.6.32 -> 7.16.0
(cherry picked from commit 6ab1ee4951)
2018-09-17 22:39:49 +01:00
John Ericson
62dadfbd0e Merge pull request #46796 from obsidiansystems/late-bind-buildHaskellPackages
haskell infra: "late bind" `buildHaskellPackages` for 18.09
2018-09-17 16:21:01 -04:00
Peter Simons
fa90e003a3 all-cabal-hashes: update snapshot to Hackage at 2018-09-12T08:26:27Z
(cherry picked from commit ee6ecb0eaf)
2018-09-17 16:12:28 -04:00
Maximilian Bosch
ff791c8c1d pythonPackages.mahotas: skip test_moments.test_normalize and test_texture.test_haralick3d testcase (#46793)
As stated in #46368, this package seems to have issues with impure tests
(reported in https://github.com/luispedro/mahotas/issues/97).

Unfortunately the `release-18.09` job on Hydra fails at the attempt to
build this package since `test_moments.test_normalize1` and
`test_texture.test_haralick3d` breaks. Until
the root cause is identified, we skip the disabled tests to ensure that
the resulting package is not entirely broken (which can't be confirmed
with `doCheck = false`).

See https://hydra.nixos.org/job/nixos/release-18.09/nixpkgs.python27Packages.mahotas.x86_64-linux
See https://hydra.nixos.org/job/nixos/release-18.09/nixpkgs.python36Packages.mahotas.x86_64-linux
See https://logs.nix.ci/?key=nixos/nixpkgs.46793&attempt_id=b85a638d-dcb0-41d3-ab2a-9616a3bb0175

/cc @xeji @luispedro

(cherry picked from commit 5f2eacccf6)
2018-09-17 21:34:52 +02:00
Uli Baum
347723980a ipfs-migrator: update dependencies in deps.nix
Most dependencies are vendored in the upstream source anyway,
deps.nix just contains the few that are not.
Dependencies were updated manually because go2nix doesn't
work correctly for this package - it produces an empty deps.nix.

(cherry picked from commit f896867ae5)
2018-09-17 19:17:41 +02:00
Uli Baum
96859fd9eb ipfs-migrator: 6 -> 7
New version is required to migrate existing ipfs repos to repo v7.

(cherry picked from commit 6823fe9fb0)
2018-09-17 19:17:41 +02:00
Samuel Dionne-Riel
95b11f3cb9 nixos/tests/installer: grub1 needs /tmp to exist.
(cherry picked from commit b63c539bdc)
2018-09-17 19:13:49 +02:00
Samuel Dionne-Riel
7a811a3dbd grub: grub-0.97-patch-1.15 -> grub-0.97-73
Instead of using Gentoo's patchset, uses Debian's.

Gentoo's doesn't work anymore.

(cherry picked from commit 932c8f4c13)
2018-09-17 19:13:48 +02:00
Samuel Dionne-Riel
8174365dd1 grub: Use gcc6
GCC 7 wasn't kind to grub.

(cherry picked from commit ba09b05702)
2018-09-17 19:13:48 +02:00
aanderse
409abea609 php: add option to enable argon2
(cherry picked from commit e48811f83d)
2018-09-17 19:05:30 +02:00
Danylo Hlynskyi
9d77b35f68 zoom-us: 2.3.128305.0716 -> 2.4.129780.0915, QT downgrade (#46778)
Qt 5.11 was downgraded to 5.9 because of two issues:
- spawns errors like
```
qrc:/qml/SignInWaiting.qml:20:9: QML BusyIndicator: Detected anchors on an item that is managed by a layout. This is undefined behavior; use Layout.alignment instead.
qrc:/qml/SignInWaiting.qml:26:9: QML Text: Detected anchors on an item that is managed by a layout. This is undefined behavior; use Layout.alignment instead.
qrc:/qml/SignInWaiting.qml:20:9: QML BusyIndicator: Detected anchors on an item that is managed by a layout. This is undefined behavior; use Layout.alignment instead.
qrc:/qml/SignInWaiting.qml:26:9: QML Text: Detected anchors on an item that is managed by a layout. This is undefined behavior; use Layout.alignment instead.
qrc:/qml/SignInWaiting.qml:20:9: QML BusyIndicator: Detected anchors on an item that is managed by a layout. This is undefined behavior; use Layout.alignment instead.
qrc:/qml/SignInWaiting.qml:26:9: QML Text: Detected anchors on an item that is managed by a layout. This is undefined behavior; use Layout.alignment instead.
qrc:/qml/SignInWaiting.qml:20:9: QML BusyIndicator: Detected anchors on an item that is managed by a layout. This is undefined behavior; use Layout.alignment instead.
qrc:/qml/SignInWaiting.qml:26:9: QML Text: Detected anchors on an item that is managed by a layout. This is undefined behavior; use Layout.alignment instead.
qrc:/qml/SignInWaiting.qml:20:9: QML BusyIndicator: Detected anchors on an item that is managed by a layout. This is undefined behavior; use Layout.alignment instead.
qrc:/qml/SignInWaiting.qml:26:9: QML Text: Detected anchors on an item that is managed by a layout. This is undefined behavior; use Layout.alignment instead.
```
- Google login doesn't work. It just doesn't start embedded webbrowser

(cherry picked from commit 969a39bd09)
2018-09-17 16:10:10 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
8b04b63c76 Merge branch 'staging-18.09' into release-18.09 2018-09-17 12:55:39 +02:00
worldofpeace
03f1f355ad nixos/lightdm: use systemd.tmpfiles (#46734)
This also makes logs appear at /var/log/lightdm

(cherry picked from commit 67e9571ba4)
2018-09-17 11:03:20 +02:00
Notkea
48bdc51a72 exim: add optional support for PAM (#46744)
(cherry picked from commit f607f45f33)
2018-09-17 10:50:38 +02:00
Uli Baum
39c585aab1 ostree: fix tests
- Workarounds for https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/issues/1592
- Disable failing test-gpg-verify-result.test, see
  https://github.com/ostreedev/ostree/issues/1634

(cherry picked from commit d734328f5d)
2018-09-17 09:25:57 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
1c9013dd34 Merge branch 'release-18.09' into staging-18.09 2018-09-17 09:10:38 +02:00
pacien
026d0c8ae5 exim: parametrise package
This allows the definition of a custom derivation of Exim,
which can be used to enable custom features such as LDAP and PAM support.

The default behaviour remains unchanged (defaulting to pkgs.exim).

(cherry picked from commit d73ed4264f)
2018-09-17 00:42:45 +01:00
Uli Baum
3e10c3705f pythonPackages.dendropy: fix build
Build failed after update to 4.4.0 because the tests are incorrectly
packages in the pypi version.
Switch to upstream github repo, fix tests, disable failing test cases

(cherry picked from commit a66c00d780)
2018-09-16 22:26:14 +01:00
Jörg Thalheim
92f867daae Merge pull request #46525 from Chiiruno/dev/zeronet
nixos/zeronet: Fix TOR permissions, add torAlways option
2018-09-16 22:20:55 +01:00
Matthew Bauer
a86020b885 Revert "Merge pull request #46108 from obsidiansystems/cross-patch-shebangs"
This reverts commit 6877b4c13e, reversing
changes made to 69b6db0ec5.
2018-09-16 15:29:50 -05:00
Pascal Wittmann
50fa8ebf70 tmsu: 0.7.0 -> 0.7.1
(cherry picked from commit c314092164)
2018-09-16 19:21:35 +02:00
Matt McHenry
3c670aad43 elm: patch to widen dependency after hackage update 1b1cb6305c
works around missing dependency 'language-glsl >=0.0.2 && <0.3'

patch from https://github.com/elm/compiler/pull/1784

(cherry picked from commit e78f60475b)
2018-09-16 13:02:43 +02:00
Matt McHenry
9c4e77d4e1 elm: pick up some recent minor updates to 0.19.0
(cherry picked from commit 04d8e267b7)
2018-09-16 13:02:43 +02:00
Bob van der Linden
91792592f0 go: skip flaky os/exec TestExtraFiles
This seems to only happen on i686 on go 1.11. It also happens on
Debian. For more information:

https://github.com/golang/go/issues/25628
(cherry picked from commit 0bf6b440d9)
2018-09-16 11:09:49 +01:00
Vincent Laporte
deebbe43fb ocaml ≤ 4.05: mark as broken on Aarch64
(cherry picked from commit 4f3868b72d)
2018-09-16 09:29:42 +01:00
Vincent Laporte
8a26f19782 pythonPackages.libnacl: fix build on darwin
(cherry picked from commit 5b8b9a08e7)
2018-09-16 09:26:45 +01:00
Peter Simons
bb78d66906 haskell-stm: update overrides that use version 2.4.5.0 to version 2.4.5.1
(cherry picked from commit 53d34305f6)
2018-09-15 21:02:05 -04:00
xeji
a0ba8bba23 pythonPackages.pyodbc: fix build (#46703)
Build with unixODBC instead of libiodbc, see discussion in
https://github.com/mkleehammer/pyodbc/issues/444

(cherry picked from commit 13c500ae16)
2018-09-15 23:14:23 +02:00
John Ericson
ce1cc9dd81 Merge pull request #46713 from obsidiansystems/ios-depoy
ios-depoy: Add missing rsync dep
2018-09-15 15:09:18 -04:00
worldofpeace
3ac0a6c74a rust.section.md: remove nixcrate reference
nixcrate is deprecated

(cherry picked from commit 6dae5de436)
2018-09-15 19:46:35 +01:00
Sarah Brofeldt
a55a1363c3 darcs: unpin ghc (use 8.4.x) version
(cherry picked from commit 0fe0f481c7)
2018-09-15 19:15:00 +02:00
Bob van der Linden
f829dbfaaa Deedle: 1.2.0 -> 1.2.5 (#46702)
(cherry picked from commit 76001b8509)
2018-09-15 16:18:47 +02:00
Bob van der Linden
4aea85a89f Paket: 1.18.2 -> 5.179.1 (#46701)
(cherry picked from commit 6a4b9dfa2f)
2018-09-15 16:03:48 +02:00
Tim Steinbach
0d5e4c9dba sbt: 1.2.1 -> 1.2.3
(cherry picked from commit 795488491c)
2018-09-15 09:57:55 -04:00
Tim Steinbach
53c8df749a linux: 4.18.7 -> 4.18.8
(cherry picked from commit 2193518801)
2018-09-15 09:48:16 -04:00
Tim Steinbach
ed197e7ceb linux: 4.14.69 -> 4.14.70
(cherry picked from commit 1a13067273)
2018-09-15 09:48:07 -04:00
Tim Steinbach
580831c518 linux: 4.9.126 -> 4.9.127
(cherry picked from commit c1d7826a8a)
2018-09-15 09:47:56 -04:00
Tim Steinbach
f071d81afb linux: 4.4.155 -> 4.4.156
(cherry picked from commit b9ca4ac95c)
2018-09-15 09:47:48 -04:00
Jesper Geertsen Jonsson
d36f38a38c Fixes the lldpd service failing to start
Backports a patch that will be included in later upstream versions.
The patch removes a call to /bin/mkdir.

(cherry picked from commit 8a03ec0a32)
2018-09-15 15:38:06 +02:00
volth
38710e66cd libguestfs-appliance: do not build on Hydra
(cherry picked from commit ac52817bd9)
2018-09-15 15:37:16 +02:00
Franz Pletz
2aaebeecdd matrique: init at 250
(cherry picked from commit d79e201851)
2018-09-15 15:28:33 +02:00
Franz Pletz
4010c783ca nheko: 0.4.3 -> 0.5.5
(cherry picked from commit ff8fc5c46c)
2018-09-15 15:16:00 +02:00
Franz Pletz
8ee65ee040 spdlog_1: init 1.1.0
(cherry picked from commit 4d11a37c69)
2018-09-15 15:16:00 +02:00
Franz Pletz
fdd5647264 mtxclient: init at 0.1.0
(cherry picked from commit 8473168bef)
2018-09-15 15:16:00 +02:00
Ben Challenor
ba90765578 jenkins: 2.121.2 -> 2.138.1
(cherry picked from commit 16ce28ed72)
2018-09-15 15:10:44 +02:00
Maximilian Bode
14ccf337ba salt: fix darwin build by specifying dependency on tornado 4
/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit 2438ceb5b4)
2018-09-15 12:41:40 +02:00
Maximilian Bode
c96aee40b0 click: 0.3.1 -> 0.3.2
patch necessary to fix "error: the lock file needs to be updated but --frozen was passed to prevent this"

(cherry picked from commit 95c7d8300f)
2018-09-15 11:03:09 +01:00
Peter Simons
4e96a5fc5f cabal2nix: fix (and clean up)override for hpack dependency
(cherry picked from commit 1c5d7ad52e)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2018-09-15 10:33:30 +01:00
Peter Simons
52f36810cd haskell-Cabal: keep a copy of the 2.2.x version around in the package set
(cherry picked from commit 838b4fe552)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2018-09-15 10:33:29 +01:00
Peter Simons
1c02221724 haskell-cabal2nix: update override for hpack 0.31.0
* pkgs/development/haskell-modules/configuration-common.nix:

(cherry picked from commit e0c081c6ac)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2018-09-15 10:33:29 +01:00
Peter Simons
942e0be544 hackage-packages.nix: automatic Haskell package set update
This update was generated by hackage2nix v2.11-9-gb3613cb from Hackage revision
3869e8d541.

(cherry picked from commit 1b1cb6305c)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2018-09-15 10:33:29 +01:00
Peter Simons
84d9adf76c LTS Haskell 12.9
(cherry picked from commit 3c1af12544)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2018-09-15 10:33:11 +01:00
Will Dietz
373d615198 zsh: 5.6.1 -> 5.6.2
From upstream's NEWS:

> Changes from 5.6.1 to 5.6.2
> ---------------------------
>
> Fix another SIGTTOU case.
>
> Fix SIGWINCH being ignored when zsh is not in the foreground.
>
> The release tarballs are now compressed using xz(1), whereas previously
> both xz(1) and gzip(1) versions were available.  If this gets in your way,
> give us a shout.
>

(cherry picked from commit ef21db9bd3)
2018-09-15 10:54:38 +02:00
Will Dietz
420bfb1405 kmsxx: 2017-10-10 -> 2018-09-10
Various improvements -- if nothing else the 'kmstest'
utility now explains properly when permissions problem :).

(cherry picked from commit 4c1f27a4fc)
2018-09-15 10:53:23 +02:00
Will Dietz
b567484b16 kmscube: 2017-03-19 -> 2018-06-17 (and fix homepage!)
(cherry picked from commit 268d72ec5e)
2018-09-15 10:53:21 +02:00
John Ericson
d1593baffd Merge pull request #46684 from obsidiansystems/elf-header
elf-header: Init at <libc version> for 18.09
2018-09-15 02:01:01 -04:00
Bob van der Linden
b998319b6a Newtonsoft.Json: 6.0.8 -> 11.0.2 (#46679)
(cherry picked from commit fb11065050)
2018-09-15 01:50:27 +02:00
Clemens Fruhwirth
28f3ce334f spl/zfs: 0.7.10 -> 0.7.11
(cherry picked from commit 81082c6c60)
2018-09-15 01:24:43 +02:00
Uli Baum
47d922fc54 qt56.qtwebengine: mark as broken
- no successful build since 2018-04-25
- not used in nixpkgs anymore

(cherry picked from commit 83e5bbfb58)
2018-09-15 00:55:29 +02:00
Uli Baum
fc31a4b195 btanks: mark as broken
no successful hydra build since 2018-03-16, last upstream release 2009.

(cherry picked from commit ba757ffdc9)
2018-09-15 00:55:29 +02:00
Uli Baum
22e09e7007 leksah: mark as broken
no successful build since 2017-08-19

(cherry picked from commit ab5a8b69b0)
2018-09-15 00:55:29 +02:00
Uli Baum
1de40e2160 kippo: mark as broken
no successful hydra build since 2017-12-11

(cherry picked from commit 19d1daedd0)
2018-09-15 00:55:29 +02:00
Uli Baum
7d5f1dad42 frab: mark as broken
No successful hydra build since 2018-02-14.
The build fails in the ruby gem json-1.8.3, which we cannot
mark directly as broken in nixpkgs, so we mark this as broken.

(cherry picked from commit 15fedb51b3)
2018-09-15 00:55:28 +02:00
Uli Baum
380b44f4fe clasp-common-lisp: mark as broken
no successful hydra build since 2018-01-03

(cherry picked from commit 4c2388dee3)
2018-09-15 00:55:28 +02:00
Uli Baum
f04e126009 darwin.maloader: mark as broken
no successfull build in Hydra history back to 2017-08-21

(cherry picked from commit 4795c2a23a)
2018-09-15 00:55:28 +02:00
xeji
0da7a40fca geis: fix build (#46663)
disable format hardening, ignore some compiler warnings

(cherry picked from commit 57ee141696)
2018-09-14 23:59:32 +02:00
Maximilian Bode
b158a30bb1 gitAndTools.grv: fix darwin build by using go 1.9
cf. https://github.com/fsnotify/fsevents/issues/40

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit 6b7cefdc58)
2018-09-14 23:20:16 +02:00
brocking
9fa6a261fb scaleway-cli: 1.14 -> 1.17
(cherry picked from commit 10a6ab75a8)
2018-09-14 16:59:19 +01:00
Michael Raskin
7956bfb364 Merge pull request #46643 from taku0/flashplayer-31.0.0.108
flashplayer: 30.0.0.154 -> 31.0.0.108 [Important security fix]
(cherry picked from commit a9e50ec21a)
2018-09-14 14:34:53 +03:00
Uli Baum
5eb4258a9a pythonPackages.nilearn: fix tests
disable failing tests

(cherry picked from commit d9bdd64f04)
2018-09-14 10:58:22 +02:00
Uli Baum
297a082708 pythonPackages.wordfreq: 2.0 -> 2.2.0, fix build
Previous version didn't build (test failure).
Update to latest, tests use pytest now, disable failing tests.

(cherry picked from commit be12bb81aa)
2018-09-14 10:58:22 +02:00
Uli Baum
837e7c6925 pythonPackages.pytest-rerunfailures: fix build
some tests fail since pytest 3.7.2 -> 3.7.4 update, disable them

(cherry picked from commit 0bda601ee5)
2018-09-14 10:58:21 +02:00
Uli Baum
6678badb1b pythonPackages.flask-pymongo: fix build
add missing dependency: vcversioner

(cherry picked from commit 781eaa1377)
2018-09-14 10:58:21 +02:00
Uli Baum
25f3b47320 pythonPackages.eve: fix build, drop incorrect dependencies
Build failed because of dependency Flask-PyMongo, which actually
isn't a dependency of eve as they have their own flask_pymongo code.

- Drop incorrect dependency flask-pymongo
- Drop redunant dependencies already propageted by flask:
  itsdangerous, werkzeug, jinja2
- Drop dependency markupsafe, not required any more

(cherry picked from commit 9e4b0b795c)
2018-09-14 10:58:21 +02:00
Uli Baum
c2bb2fb269 pythonPackages.daphne: 2.1.0 -> 2.2.2
Update, re-enable all tests on linux, disable tests on darwin.
This fixes the build of pythonPackages.channels

(cherry picked from commit abe97e9446)
2018-09-14 10:58:21 +02:00
Daiderd Jordan
8a93d258cd cargo-web: mark broken on darwin
Looks CoreFoundation related.

    Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
      "_CFURLResourceIsReachable", referenced from:
          fsevent_sys::core_foundation::str_path_to_cfstring_ref::h0ea4bd94e2c613f2 in libfsevent_sys-ef30b6879660a6c1.rlib(fsevent_sys-ef30b6879660a6c1.fsevent_sys7-49ce33334334dd3a5c7883bf4070f954.rs.rcgu.o)
    ld: symbol(s) not found for architecture x86_64

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit 327edb4b1d)
2018-09-14 10:44:52 +02:00
Daiderd Jordan
3b0dddd940 csfml: mark linux only
While it's possible to build on darwin, we never had a successful build.

    Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
      "sf::microseconds(long long)", referenced from:
          _sfSleep in Sleep.cpp.o

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit 54b4000d54)
2018-09-14 10:44:51 +02:00
Daiderd Jordan
fffefe7901 cernlib: mark broken on darwin
Using gccStdenv makes the build go further, but then it fails with.

    kuipc /private/tmp/nix-build-cernlib-2006.drv-0/2006/src/packlib/kuip/code_kuip/kuipcdf.cdf kuipcdf.c
    Makefile:413: archive/kuipcdf.d: No such file or directory
    make[3]: *** [Makefile:473: kuipcdf.c] Abort trap: 6

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit 68f7e75517)
2018-09-14 10:44:51 +02:00
WilliButz
221ec615f8 prometheus-dovecot-exporter: 0.1.1 -> 0.1.3
(cherry picked from commit 21324ef0e4)
2018-09-14 03:59:38 +02:00
Daiderd Jordan
0b3e0cdab2 ceres-solver: fix darwin build (#46626)
The Basel BUILD file conflicts with the cmake build directory on
case-insensitive filesystems, eg. darwin.

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit 807b0105b4)
2018-09-13 23:44:27 +02:00
Daiderd Jordan
4199eb48fa calaos_installer: fix darwin install (#46629)
On darwin this builds an application instead of a binary.

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit 68956555c1)
2018-09-13 23:40:52 +02:00
Daiderd Jordan
ce1f20f43c cargo-update: fix darwin build (#46625)
On darwin libcurl is also needed.

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit d782c4eba5)
2018-09-13 23:36:54 +02:00
Daiderd Jordan
381c09b225 brlaser: cleanup and mark linux only (#46622)
The test binaries depend use open_memstream which isn't available on
darwin.

    error: use of undeclared identifier 'open_memstream'

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit 04cba83e7f)
2018-09-13 22:48:30 +02:00
R. RyanTM
4293f9f252 google-compute-engine: 20180129 -> 20180510 (#46278)
Semi-automatic update generated by
https://github.com/ryantm/nixpkgs-update tools. This update was made
based on information from
google-compute-engine

(cherry picked from commit 035b2f5250)
2018-09-13 20:09:47 +01:00
Simon Lackerbauer
8b5f311616 atlassian-jira: 7.12.0 -> 7.12.1
(cherry picked from commit a431f3e35d)
2018-09-13 19:59:24 +02:00
Simon Lackerbauer
8ade355e59 atlassian-crowd: 3.1.2 -> 3.2.5
(cherry picked from commit f05e51abed)
2018-09-13 19:59:24 +02:00
Simon Lackerbauer
00ba14dcb7 atlassian-confluence: 6.8.0 -> 6.11.1
(cherry picked from commit 4d962b6dcd)
2018-09-13 19:59:24 +02:00
WilliButz
214e4e57eb grafana: 5.2.3 -> 5.2.4
(cherry picked from commit 68b25008e2)
2018-09-13 19:56:54 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
51b62e6a8c Revert "aliases: add nixos-rebuild"
This reverts commit 0b124c1e91. We
should really stop adding things that are not packages to
all-packages.nix. For example, having nixos-rebuild.nix in
all-packages.nix causes 'nix-env -qa' to evaluate a NixOS
configuration, which obviously is not good for performance. (We should
probably also remove the 'nixos' attribute from all-packages.nix, but
at least that's a function so nix-env will ignore it.)

(cherry picked from commit f1c978aca0)
2018-09-13 18:27:36 +01:00
Samuel Dionne-Riel
43a15a7f55 Merge pull request #46598 from srhb/kube-1.11-backport-1809
18.09: kubernetes: 1.10.5 -> 1.11.3
2018-09-13 13:06:22 -04:00
Uli Baum
77d9ad1f26 pythonPackages.zodb: fix tests
Tests failed after `persistent` was updated to 4.4.
Apply an upstream patch to fix them.

(cherry picked from commit b54677969b)
2018-09-13 17:02:31 +01:00
Matthew Bauer
d9f1e37ec7 aliases: add nixos-rebuild
Fixes #44135

(cherry picked from commit 0b124c1e91)
2018-09-13 14:46:30 +01:00
Maximilian Bosch
3625ce7a44 tamarin-prover: fix ghc 8.4 build (#46597)
See https://hydra.nixos.org/build/81125645

`tamarin-prover' upstream has a patch to fix GHC 8.4 compilation (and
uses stack lts-12.1 now), but it's not released yet:

a08f6e4007

The build is divided in several derivations, therefore the patch had to
be splitted and rebased for `lib/term', `lib/theory' and `lib/utils' to
ensure that the patch applies properly during the `patchPhase'.

Addresses #45960

(cherry picked from commit 2cfc0bb7ee)
2018-09-13 14:11:52 +02:00
Matthias C. M. Troffaes
755710dbf5 wolfssl: enable all features
(cherry picked from commit 66e6ee73d4)
2018-09-13 12:06:05 +01:00
Jaakko Luttinen
1851422f61 syncthing: 0.14.48 -> 0.14.50
(cherry picked from commit 6400d4b4aa)
2018-09-13 11:47:26 +01:00
xeji
17f538bd06 leo-editor: 5.6 -> 5.7.3, fix build (#46589)
Previous version depended on qt56.qtwebengine which was broken.

(cherry picked from commit eb88142c4b)
2018-09-13 12:18:31 +02:00
Uli Baum
ae181c387a pythonPackages.restview: fix tests
Failed after readme_renderer was updated. Apply an upstream patch.

(cherry picked from commit 6dc57134da)
2018-09-13 11:41:32 +02:00
Uli Baum
c8b1f54b89 pythonPackages.pyfakefs: fix darwin build
One test failed on darwin due to case-insensitive file system,
disable it.

(cherry picked from commit bd02a1931a)
2018-09-13 11:41:32 +02:00
Uli Baum
7e47d1a020 pythonPackages.pydub: fix aarch64 build
one test failed due to rounding errors, disable it

(cherry picked from commit bc036397a3)
2018-09-13 11:41:31 +02:00
Uli Baum
38f6951e38 pythonPackages.pydub: remove obsolete patch
(cherry picked from commit 40c469e56b)
2018-09-13 11:41:31 +02:00
Uli Baum
671205b3e5 pythonPackages.pydub: fix build and tests
- remove obsolete patch that caused build failure
- no tests were run because required data files were missing in pypi
  version; use github version instead

(cherry picked from commit 80ecef8e4b)
2018-09-13 11:41:31 +02:00
Uli Baum
a700d468ba pythonPackages.pyfakefs: 3.4.1 -> 3.4.3, fix build
Update and disable some failing test cases

(cherry picked from commit d2a885a3b5)
2018-09-13 11:41:31 +02:00
Uli Baum
27159aee90 pythonPackages.readme_renderer: fix build
Disable one test case that has failed since last bleach update.

(cherry picked from commit bb1f3422e0)
2018-09-13 11:41:31 +02:00
Uli Baum
2880ca71fa pythonPackages.us: fix build
Required jellyfish==0.5.6 but we have 0.6.1. Loosen requirements.

(cherry picked from commit a7166cdc35)
2018-09-13 11:41:31 +02:00
Johan Thomsen
0c84b5cab7 kubernetes: 1.10.5 -> 1.11.3
Fixed minor issue where kube-addon manager complaints about
/opt/namespace.yaml missing.

Added release notes with reference to Kubernetes 1.11 release notes.

closes #43882

(cherry picked from commit a49f56c3b1)
2018-09-13 11:30:34 +02:00
Domen Kožar
cedae2bbec nixos: datadog-agent: fix systemd support
(cherry picked from commit 595ae18797)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2018-09-13 09:12:44 +01:00
Domen Kožar
160eea3602 datadog: add live process monitoring
(cherry picked from commit bef541c569)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2018-09-13 09:12:37 +01:00
Domen Kožar
4fce4287ff nixos: remove unneeded api_key from config
(cherry picked from commit 049b3a6cc2)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2018-09-13 09:12:30 +01:00
Jörg Thalheim
29f4541a82 pythonPackage.backports-shutil-which: enable tests
(cherry picked from commit 8d4afa5f2e)
2018-09-12 22:08:30 -04:00
Jaakko Luttinen
ed0fc7dc1d pythonPackages.libagent: fix propagatedBuildInputs
(cherry picked from commit d0ce8834ae)
2018-09-12 22:08:30 -04:00
Jaakko Luttinen
91f488c3bf pythonPackage.backports-shutil-which: init at 3.5.1
(cherry picked from commit 80b64a2e04)
2018-09-12 22:08:30 -04:00
Jaakko Luttinen
825f91bdcc pythonPackage.pymsgbox: init at 1.0.6
(cherry picked from commit c9bf7f67b9)
2018-09-12 22:08:30 -04:00
Jaakko Luttinen
ff6e4d0369 pythonPackages.ledgerblue: fix build inputs
(cherry picked from commit 5c9db2f02f)
2018-09-12 22:08:29 -04:00
Jaakko Luttinen
f8c8a23389 pythonPackages.python-u2flib-host: init at 3.0.3
(cherry picked from commit 38e86a8f1e)
2018-09-12 22:08:29 -04:00
Jaakko Luttinen
832dcfdb11 pythonPackages.rlp: fix build
(cherry picked from commit f053daf36c)
2018-09-12 22:08:29 -04:00
Jaakko Luttinen
d72f81ed5a pythonPackages.eth-utils: init at 1.2.0
(cherry picked from commit 9f8e6148c5)
2018-09-12 22:08:29 -04:00
Jaakko Luttinen
923a6b22e6 pythonPackages.eth-typing: init at 1.1.0
(cherry picked from commit 541a13ca0a)
2018-09-12 22:08:29 -04:00
Jaakko Luttinen
735b1e10b4 pythonPackages.eth-hash: init at 0.1.14
(cherry picked from commit c44504410b)
2018-09-12 22:08:29 -04:00
xeji
3e31aa326e pythonPackages.BTrees: fix build (#46588)
a test case failed since the update to 4.5.1, disable it

(cherry picked from commit 68b7de9e2e)
2018-09-13 02:33:04 +02:00
Uli Baum
b55e3054b9 mitmproxy: 3.0.4 -> 4.0.4, fix tests
- add missing checkInputs
- apply upstream patch to fix some tests that failed due to
  expired test ssl certs
- re-enable a previously disabled test case

(cherry picked from commit d225a91b7c)
2018-09-13 02:19:56 +02:00
Daiderd Jordan
9c9c04f918 asymptote: mark broken on darwin
It only builds with gc-7.6.0 on darwin for some reason.

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit 9fc6f1123d)
2018-09-13 00:07:09 +02:00
Daiderd Jordan
642d69b527 aws-okta: mark broken on darwin
Could be caused by our older 10.10.5 CoreFoundation.

    # github.com/segmentio/aws-okta/vendor/github.com/keybase/go-keychain
    go/src/github.com/segmentio/aws-okta/vendor/github.com/keybase/go-keychain/corefoundation_go110.go:35:33: cannot use nil as type _Ctype_CFAllocatorRef in argument to _Cfunc_CFDataCreate
    go/src/github.com/segmentio/aws-okta/vendor/github.com/keybase/go-keychain/corefoundation_go110.go:61: cannot use nil as type _Ctype_CFAllocatorRef in argument to func literal
    go/src/github.com/segmentio/aws-okta/vendor/github.com/keybase/go-keychain/corefoundation_go110.go:98:41: cannot use nil as type _Ctype_CFAllocatorRef in argument to _Cfunc_CFStringCreateWithBytes
    go/src/github.com/segmentio/aws-okta/vendor/github.com/keybase/go-keychain/corefoundation_go110.go:133: cannot use nil as type _Ctype_CFAllocatorRef in argument to func literal

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit b814881394)
2018-09-13 00:07:05 +02:00
Daiderd Jordan
91da313b87 litecoin: add missing framework and mark broken on darwin
In file included from qt/bitcoin.cpp:9:
    ./qt/bitcoingui.h:14:10: fatal error: 'QLabel' file not found
    #include <QLabel>
             ^~~~~~~~
    1 error generated.

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit 0dff3d5c73)
2018-09-13 00:07:01 +02:00
Daiderd Jordan
70f2abee3d ethsign: mark broken on darwin
Could be caused by our older 10.10.5 CoreFoundation.

    go/src/github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/vendor/github.com/rjeczalik/notify/watcher_fsevents_cgo.go:51:216:
    cannot use nil as type _Ctype_CFAllocatorRef in argument to func literal
    go/src/github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/vendor/github.com/rjeczalik/notify/watcher_fsevents_cgo.go:162:47:
    cannot use nil as type _Ctype_CFAllocatorRef in argument to
    _Cfunc_CFStringCreateWithCStringNoCopy
    go/src/github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/vendor/github.com/rjeczalik/notify/watcher_fsevents_cgo.go:163:225:
    cannot use nil as type _Ctype_CFAllocatorRef in argument to func literal

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit e7ecf593e2)
2018-09-13 00:06:57 +02:00
Daiderd Jordan
3c2e66d746 bitcoin-xt: mark broken on darwin
/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit 8f6ede967e)
2018-09-13 00:06:53 +02:00
Daiderd Jordan
72830db1a0 bitcoin-unlimited: mark broken on darwin
/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit eaff0b74c0)
2018-09-13 00:06:49 +02:00
Daiderd Jordan
509e79eec5 bitcoin-classic: mark broken on darwin
Last successful build https://hydra.nixos.org/build/74552951.

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit d990bae6ef)
2018-09-13 00:06:44 +02:00
Daiderd Jordan
a95c041252 bitcoin-abc: mark broken on darwin
Last successful build https://hydra.nixos.org/build/74552872.

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit cf9d1a6d30)
2018-09-13 00:06:41 +02:00
Daiderd Jordan
7b82c4f182 atlas: mark broken on darwin
Started to fail since 3.10.3.

    /private/tmp/nix-build-atlas-3.10.3.drv-0/ATLAS/build/bin/ATLrun.sh: line 4: 31119 Segmentation fault: 11  $atldir/$*
    make[3]: *** [Makefile:1695: ssanity_test] Error 139

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit f1542f612b)
2018-09-13 00:06:37 +02:00
Daiderd Jordan
93f4bb6a62 asio: mark broken on darwin
Started to fail since 1.12.1.

    Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
      "boost::chrono::steady_clock::now()", referenced from:
          pinger::start_send() in ping.o
          asio::detail::timer_queue<asio::detail::chrono_time_traits<boost::chrono::steady_clock, asio::wait_traits<boost::chrono::steady_clock> > >::wait_duration_msec(long) const in ping.o
          asio::detail::timer_queue<asio::detail::chrono_time_traits<boost::chrono::steady_clock, asio::wait_traits<boost::chrono::steady_clock> > >::wait_duration_usec(long) const in ping.o
          asio::detail::timer_queue<asio::detail::chrono_time_traits<boost::chrono::steady_clock, asio::wait_traits<boost::chrono::steady_clock> > >::get_ready_timers(asio::detail::op_queue<asio::detail::scheduler_operation>&) in ping.o
          pinger::handle_receive(unsigned long) in p

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit 80a4e48e45)
2018-09-13 00:06:34 +02:00
Daiderd Jordan
5bf79832e6 alock: mark linux only
The darwin build fails and it's probably not particularly useful there.

    utils.c:33:19: error: use of undeclared identifier 'CLOCK_MONOTONIC'
        clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC, &t);

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit 139eb11a6d)
2018-09-13 00:06:24 +02:00
Uli Baum
7d5b1d14c6 banshee: remove
- was broken since June 2016 because it depends on `boo`
- no visible attempts to fix in over 2 years

(cherry picked from commit 2953d4c994)
2018-09-12 23:26:23 +02:00
Uli Baum
e586eda60d nant: remove
- our version is from 2015
- it doesn't build
- upstream project is dead, last release 2012, last commit Oct 2016.
- used by only 1 nixpkgs package: `boo`, marked broken since 2016.

(cherry picked from commit dc84de59d1)
2018-09-12 23:26:23 +02:00
Uli Baum
18e9a5c8e4 boo: remove, broken since Jun 2016
marked broken in June 2016, no visible attempt to fix it,
so let's get rid of it

(cherry picked from commit 5a166ffd47)
2018-09-12 23:26:23 +02:00
zimbatm
770ee0b279 vault: 0.10.4 -> 0.11.1
changelog: https://github.com/hashicorp/vault/blob/v0.11.1/CHANGELOG.md
(cherry picked from commit 7880cd6752)
2018-09-12 23:12:34 +02:00
worldofpeace
362498c6fe eolie: 0.9.35 -> 0.9.36
(cherry picked from commit 508e353fd4)
2018-09-12 21:30:23 +01:00
Josef Kemetmüller
84361ab3e1 scs: Fix darwin build
Additionally we make the unit-test deterministic by specifying a seed
instead of using something random.

(cherry picked from commit d726c0ff1d)
2018-09-12 21:25:52 +02:00
Robin Gloster
088e1bdf7d grafana module: allow path for extraConfig vals
(cherry picked from commit 929f71d381)
2018-09-12 14:22:21 +02:00
Robin Gloster
1ffb47ad48 acme module: fix self-signed cert with openssl 1.1
(cherry picked from commit 515a7aa452)
2018-09-12 13:41:50 +02:00
Michael Raskin
32c008a946 lispPackages.quicklisp: 2018-04-30 -> 2018-08-31 ; regenerate packages
Added a wrapper package that creates symlinks to OpenSSL libraries with
the actual versions, because we have 1.0.2 with .so-suffix .1.0.0 and
cl-async-ssl is unhappy because of that.

I continue to dislike cl-postgres and simple-date upstream packaging.

This fixes cl-libuv and dependent packages.

Progress on #45960

(cherry picked from commit 5048b0d1f9)
2018-09-12 11:59:56 +03:00
Christoph Hrdinka
8e20e5ee35 zsh: 5.6 -> 5.6.1
Signed-off-by: Christoph Hrdinka <c.github@hrdinka.at>
2018-09-12 09:35:55 +02:00
Elis Hirwing
8468a4bfc7 nano: 2.9.8 -> 3.0
Changelog: http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/info-nano/2018-09/msg00000.html

Also updated the nix highlighting for nano

(cherry picked from commit b47c5870f4)
2018-09-11 20:28:07 -04:00
Matthew Bauer
7bc168e4b5 Merge pull request #46518 from srhb/revert-build-host-target-platform-deprecation-1809
Revert build host target platform deprecation on release-18.09
2018-09-11 18:55:05 -05:00
Maximilian Bosch
f95ddad29f python3Packages.pyowm: fix python3 build (#46549)
See https://hydra.nixos.org/build/80714323

Version 2.9 requires `geojson==2.x'. To allow 2.4, the constraint
required some patching using `substituteInPlace'.

Addresses #45960

(cherry picked from commit a25dcb6607)
2018-09-12 01:24:15 +02:00
Daiderd Jordan
40e4aee577 aria2: fix darwin build (#46548)
Not released yet, see https://github.com/aria2/aria2/issues/1198

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit 2164e39eaa)
2018-09-12 00:11:53 +02:00
John Ericson
3ef52f02a9 Merge pull request #46546 from obsidiansystems/glibc-configureFlags-cleanup
glibc: Use lib.enableFeature and friends for 18.09
2018-09-11 17:51:08 -04:00
Maximilian Bosch
f0972029de pants: fix build (#46545)
See https://hydra.nixos.org/build/80727495

`pants' works with requests==2.19 to build successfully and `nixpkgs' currently uses `requests==2.19.1`.
Patching the version constraint in `setup.py' accordingly fixes the problem.

Addresses #45960

(cherry picked from commit 46d1166b80)
2018-09-11 23:22:50 +02:00
Florian Bruhin
23200f56e8 qutebrowser: Fix patching of standarddir.py
The original patch was broken since a85e19a5e1 because an `APPNAME` variable was introduced there.

(cherry picked from commit 84a0dc8191)
2018-09-11 23:09:56 +02:00
John Ericson
6877b4c13e Merge pull request #46108 from obsidiansystems/cross-patch-shebangs
patch-shebangs: respect cross compilation for 18.09
2018-09-11 16:41:04 -04:00
Matthew Bauer
e9b63007e5 patch-shebangs: respect cross compilation
This hopefully makes patchShebangs respect cross compilation. It
introduces the concept of the HOST_PATH. Nothing is ever executed on
it but instead used as a way to get the proper path using ‘command
-v’. Needs more testing.

/cc @ericson2314 @dtzwill

Fixes #33956
Fixes #21138

(Modified backport of f06942327a. See
previous commit to understand the differences between this and the
original.)
2018-09-11 16:16:09 -04:00
John Ericson
c72c865560 stdenv: Define HOST_PATH more loosely when strictDeps isn't set
This ensures this change is safe last minute for 18.09. Master won't
have this.
2018-09-11 16:15:19 -04:00
Daiderd Jordan
03c8cbe813 perl-TestRunCmdLine: disable tests on darwin
/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit f61279e45b)
2018-09-11 22:05:25 +02:00
Mario Rodas
81969394b4 nodejs-6_x: 6.14.3 -> 6.14.4
(cherry picked from commit bfdfb73ff1)
2018-09-11 14:26:31 -04:00
Mario Rodas
ad5046d8b8 nodejs: use https for downloading
(cherry picked from commit 36b5ffa40b)
2018-09-11 14:26:31 -04:00
Samuel Dionne-Riel
fce2d40051 qt5.qtwebkit: Fixes modules src being subtly broken.
b785d4813e introduced breakage in Qt
modules for 5.6 and 5.9, especially visible is Qt Webkit.

This was manifested by having a non-sensical build log where it is using
the top-level `src` attribute as source instead of Qt Webkit's own
source.

Were it not for the `src` top-level attribute (which is a legit
package), the error would have been made obvious by passing `null` to
`src`.

This partily reverts newly introduced way `src` can be passed to a
qtModule, instead relying on extending the `srcs` attrset.

For ZHF #45960

(cherry picked from commit cb380983ed)
2018-09-11 11:05:16 -04:00
Okina Matara
3091eb6537 nixos/zeronet: Fix TOR permissions, add torAlways option
(cherry picked from commit 9c97f37761)
Reason: Fixing an important zeronet feature for a new release.
2018-09-11 09:27:05 -05:00
Daiderd Jordan
bd1c922388 perl-Mouse: fix darwin build
/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit 5e8fd8792b)
2018-09-11 09:59:34 -04:00
Daiderd Jordan
676841e61d perl-Module-Build-XSUtil: fix darwin build
While building the tests LD gets called with -mmacosx-version-min=10.10
which is a CC flag, causing the build to fail with LD=ld.  This is
pretty common with perl packages.

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit dc6b36b994)
2018-09-11 09:59:31 -04:00
Sarah Brofeldt
bf7c2e35f1 nixos/doc: Add stable pre-release warning (#46473)
(cherry picked from commit 66f6105978)
2018-09-11 15:42:49 +02:00
Domen Kožar
1c852070e8 datadog-agent: 6.1.4 -> 6.4.2
(cherry picked from commit 2c18d48c0e)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2018-09-11 13:17:41 +01:00
Domen Kožar
d25939132f dep2nix: fix eval (no IFD)
(cherry picked from commit e8621a45a2)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2018-09-11 13:17:23 +01:00
Domen Kožar
b2fc0f0234 dep2nix: 0.0.1 -> 0.0.2
(cherry picked from commit 35df0f7f0c)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2018-09-11 13:17:10 +01:00
Sarah Brofeldt
ea4d36a2e5 Revert "top-level: Deprecate top-level {build,host,target}Platform"
This reverts commit e51f736076.
2018-09-11 12:07:22 +02:00
Erik Arvstedt
c1713a14db networking.hostId: fix cmd in description
1. Simplify the command by reading directly from /etc/machine-id which
is already a random, lower-case hex string
2. Previously, the command output could be too short because of missing
leading digits. This is now fixed.

(cherry picked from commit 7a42623c23)
2018-09-11 10:32:18 +01:00
Sarah Brofeldt
c36aedb1c8 Merge pull request #46503 from ento/aws-vault-4-3-0
aws-vault: 4.1.0 -> 4.3.0, pass linker flag for specifying app version
(cherry picked from commit 5984aae9a7)
2018-09-11 11:30:38 +02:00
Wael M. Nasreddine
f461c933a1 bazel: 0.16.0 -> 0.16.1
(cherry picked from commit d24f81b825)
2018-09-11 11:27:36 +02:00
xeji
dd13aedbdb pythonPackages.pytestflakes: fix build (#46500)
- disable a failing test case that looks broken
- remove pytestcache depencency that was dropped upstream

(cherry picked from commit f201f8c3fd)
2018-09-11 11:16:03 +02:00
Clemens Fruhwirth
766d15ddd9 spl/zfs: 0.7.9 -> 0.7.10
(cherry picked from commit 05f122c561)
2018-09-11 07:07:44 +02:00
José Romildo Malaquias
f02eb7d337 lxqt: mv contents of base, core and optional to parent directory (#46484)
(cherry picked from commit 2047e28c7f)

a noop change, backported for easier maintenance
2018-09-10 23:01:21 +02:00
Maximilian Bosch
7666310ebf pythonPackages.mahotas: fix build, move expression
See https://hydra.nixos.org/build/80828287

Moves `mahotas` out of `python-packages.nix` into its own file and fixes
broken test cases by skipping them using nosetest's `@nottest`
annotation.

These tests broke from time to time in a sandbox and are therefore
considered impure.

Addresses #45960

(cherry picked from commit ee897b64ff)
2018-09-10 22:59:10 +02:00
Maximilian Bosch
cde1edebd6 openbsm: fix linux build
See https://hydra.nixos.org/build/80705916

To fix the linux build the patch `bsm-add-audit_token_to_pid.patch`
mustn't be applied during Linux builds, only for Darwin as it's an
Apple-only fix.

The compiler failure occurred because `audit_token_t` is part of
`<mach/mach.h>` which is not available on Linux.

Addresses #45960

(cherry picked from commit 080b2fdd8c)
2018-09-10 22:58:46 +02:00
Michele Guerini Rocco
d164d7eb89 antimony: 0.9.3 -> 2018-10-17 (#46486)
(cherry picked from commit fd7e69be1c)
2018-09-10 22:17:36 +02:00
volth
1b0c262aad perlPackages: ZHF 18.09 (#46493)
(cherry picked from commit 50789a0b19)
2018-09-10 22:14:34 +02:00
Daiderd Jordan
a1f2a67850 bullet: fix darwin build
The examples fail with an opengl related issue:

    Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
      "SimpleOpenGL3App::SimpleOpenGL3App(char const*, int, int, bool)", referenced from:
          _main in main_opengl_single_example.o
      "_useShadowMap", referenced from:
          GL_ShapeDrawer::drawScene(btDiscreteDynamicsWorld const*, bool, int) in GL_ShapeDrawer.o
    ld: symbol(s) not found for architecture x86_64

And the tests need an extra dependencly, possibley related to
https://github.com/bulletphysics/bullet3/issues/819

    ld: library not found for -lBussIK

/cc ZHF #45961

(cherry picked from commit 939debc7a4)
2018-09-10 21:35:26 +02:00
zimbatm
57268a967f govendor: init at 1.0.9 (#46485)
(cherry picked from commit 404b224529)
2018-09-10 17:48:34 +01:00
Urban Skudnik
0be60455c8 hcloud: Add autocomplete support for bash and zsh
Currently one would need to manually run the command to generate
completion and insert it into `.bashrc`/`.zshrc` to get the
autocompletion to work. This patch will automatically generate
both docs and save them to correct position so it should continue
to work even if user changes the shell at a later stage.

(cherry picked from commit d23c357f1c)
2018-09-10 15:20:10 +01:00
Linus Heckemann
12703a0c06 earlyoom: fix version number (#46481)
earlyoom's Makefile attempts to detect the current version using git,
but we don't keep .git in its source, so this fails. We can however
set the VERSION environment variable to override this, as we now do.

(cherry picked from commit ac679e721f)
2018-09-10 13:23:28 +01:00
Arian van Putten
23bbe26bde safe-money: Fix dependencies for safe-money-*
They all depend on safe-money-0.7, but hackage2nix made them incorrectly
depend on safe-money-0.6

We should be able to remove this 'hack' as soon as the new Stackage LTS
comes out, as safe-money-0.7 will then be the default version.
2018-09-10 13:14:53 +01:00
Shea Levy
406e0a6dca Merge branch 'haskell-updates-18.09' into release-18.09 2018-09-10 07:48:30 -04:00
Maximilian Bosch
b7be61673c pythonmagick: fix build (#46469)
The original build broke with the following linker issue:

```
  CXXLD    _PythonMagick.la
/nix/store/h0lbngpv6ln56hjj59i6l77vxq25flbz-binutils-2.30/bin/ld: cannot find -l-L/nix/store/4gh6ynzsd5ndx37hmkl62xa8z30k43y1-imagemagick-6.9.9-34/lib
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
```

This happens since `BOOST_PYTHON_LIB` wasn't set properly, however
`_PythonMagick.la` was linked with `-l$(BOOST_PYTHON_LIB)
$(MAGICK_LIBS)`. With an empty `BOOST_PYTHON_LIB` the linker got
confused.

To work around this, the `boost` library directory needs to be specified
explicitly. To ensure that the changes take effect, the original
`configure` script shipped with `$src` needs to be removed and recreated
using the `autoreconfHook`.

Additionally the `imagemagick` license (https://spdx.org/licenses/ImageMagick.html)
needs to be added to `lib/licenses.nix` to document the proper license
of `pythonmagick` in the meta section.

(cherry picked from commit 6d6cbd316d)
2018-09-10 12:00:38 +02:00
Amine Chikhaoui
ee22050f05 ZHF 18.09: fix crypsetup build with python enabled. (#46468)
Fixes https://hydra.nixos.org/build/81028247.

(cherry picked from commit 00064c21cc)
2018-09-10 11:54:23 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
821c67d51b Merge pull request #46401 from matthewbauer/revert-nix-minver
[18.09] set min version back to 1.11
2018-09-10 09:50:17 +02:00
Will Dietz
93e78c721c busybox: 1.29.2 -> 1.29.3 (#46458)
(cherry picked from commit 30500d23bc)
2018-09-10 08:44:21 +02:00
Samuel Dionne-Riel
55c8b29523 dbeaver: 5.1.6 -> 5.2.0 (#46457)
(cherry picked from commit cf3795a25e)
2018-09-10 08:20:31 +02:00
Tim Steinbach
f7f88636a2 linux: 4.18.6 -> 4.18.7
(cherry picked from commit ea765b2e2b)
2018-09-09 19:35:03 -04:00
Tim Steinbach
caeb83bdd3 linux: 4.14.68 -> 4.14.69
(cherry picked from commit 276b2ab892)
2018-09-09 19:34:53 -04:00
Tim Steinbach
f4b248e4b0 linux: 4.9.125 -> 4.9.126
(cherry picked from commit d40f4159ed)
2018-09-09 19:34:41 -04:00
Tim Steinbach
db9849f1c3 linux: 4.4.154 -> 4.4.155
(cherry picked from commit 13728ed2b5)
2018-09-09 19:34:31 -04:00
Josef Kemetmüller
9cb6025551 pythonPackages.joblib: Disable flaky test (#46439)
The test `test_nested_parallelism_limit` fails on darwin.

(cherry picked from commit 6f891ff66e)
2018-09-09 22:42:34 +02:00
Josef Kemetmüller
3143d6bd2e pythonPackages.fiona: Fix darwin build (#46435)
(cherry picked from commit 5e0c468737)
2018-09-09 22:41:12 +02:00
Josef Kemetmüller
bbfa5d87dc pythonPackages.libusb1: Disable flaky test
(cherry picked from commit b633fc4fb4)
2018-09-09 22:25:31 +02:00
Josef Kemetmüller
43387f069a pythonPackages.libusb1: Fix darwin build
(cherry picked from commit 063aa389df)
2018-09-09 22:25:31 +02:00
Josef Kemetmüller
b682a408fd castxml: Fix build (#46442)
(cherry picked from commit 4ab5625c95)
2018-09-09 22:19:01 +02:00
Josef Kemetmüller
ff81358447 pythonPackages.flask_ldap_login: Disable on python3
(cherry picked from commit b667a76eac)
2018-09-09 22:01:40 +02:00
Josef Kemetmüller
6ef71d09b8 pythonPackages.flask_ldap_login: 0.3.0 -> 0.3.4
(cherry picked from commit 25f8753bf4)
2018-09-09 22:01:40 +02:00
Josef Kemetmüller
3925e7486f pythonPackages.flask_ldap_login: Fix build
(cherry picked from commit d4e89680d2)
2018-09-09 22:01:40 +02:00
Josef Kemetmüller
34059be473 pythonPackages.cozy: Disable on python2 (#46436)
Cozy does not support python2.

(cherry picked from commit a4b040e69f)
2018-09-09 21:34:20 +02:00
Janne Heß
a38d70855b treewide: Use http/https for homepages
(cherry picked from commit 9ef77854f7)
2018-09-09 15:51:08 +01:00
Tad Fisher
3dc8898536 vkquake: fix build
(cherry picked from commit b19cdc31c1)
2018-09-09 15:48:49 +01:00
Maximilian Bosch
5170f7219f pdf2htmlEX: mark as broken
See https://hydra.nixos.org/build/81003667

The build is currently broken on Hydra due to the following error:

```
CairoFontEngine.cc:681:17: error: 'void Object::free()' is private within this context
```

This issue is was also reported in AUR (https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/pdf2htmlex/)
and in the upstream issue tracker (https://github.com/coolwanglu/pdf2htmlEX/issues/753) with
no answer until now.

The current README.md states that the project is no longer under active
development and it seems as there are currently no active maintainers
who could fix this:

* 5d0a2239fc
* https://github.com/coolwanglu/pdf2htmlEX/issues/772

(cherry picked from commit de6544b50e)
2018-09-09 15:46:54 +01:00
José Romildo Malaquias
fa3cc6bf23 xsettingsd: git-2015-06-14 -> 1.0.0
- Update to version 1.0.0
- Install man pages
- Fix license
- Add maintainer

(cherry picked from commit 68102e793d)
2018-09-09 14:17:35 +01:00
Jörg Thalheim
7490ec9ed3 doc/vim: improve plugin documentation
(cherry picked from commit 97acac9a81)
2018-09-09 14:15:52 +01:00
zimbatm
6142a2ef4b strongswan: set the right dir for TLS CA cert
This fixes an issue where the strongswan NM client is not able to
connect to a VPN. By default it tries to load the trust CA from
/usr/share/ca-certificates which doesn't exist in NixOS and most modern
distros.

See debian-related issue:
  https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=835095

(cherry picked from commit 71e6dfdaea)
2018-09-09 14:14:29 +01:00
Sarah Brofeldt
0a46d6f6b9 Merge pull request #46419 from srhb/backport-nix21-perl-bindings
nix.perl-bindings: Fix build in 18.09
2018-09-09 14:59:23 +02:00
Daniël de Kok
7d404b9103 cgit: use full path of groff in man2html
groff may not be installed system-wide or may be outside cgit's path
(e.g. when running cgit using uwsgi). As a result, the man2html filter
fails. Replace groff by its full path in man2html.

(cherry picked from commit bbcf5eb130)
2018-09-09 13:56:44 +01:00
Daiderd Jordan
b68bfbceab altcoins.btc1: fix darwin build (#46398)
Only hexdump was needed from utillinux which is also available on darwin
through the unixtools meta package.

(cherry picked from commit 4e282e295f)
2018-09-09 14:54:42 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
ddd3d98ccc nix.perl-bindings: Fix build
(cherry picked from commit b06ad6199f)
2018-09-09 14:52:35 +02:00
Maximilian Bode
32a4cbc756 pythonPackages.tifffile: fix python 2 build (#46415)
(cherry picked from commit c020a59ccd)
2018-09-09 12:14:04 +02:00
Maximilian Bode
50bc216165 pythonPackages.CDDB: fix darwin build (#46412)
(cherry picked from commit 5b1b4adb2a)
2018-09-09 12:11:13 +02:00
Jan Malakhovski
69b6db0ec5 gpgme: use default texinfo
(cherry picked from commit 53c9efe9e5)
2018-09-09 12:05:37 +02:00
Jan Malakhovski
4ce4c247db git: use default texinfo
(cherry picked from commit 7705c76c49)
2018-09-09 12:05:37 +02:00
Samuel Dionne-Riel
97916acf08 texlive: Adds patch for missing synctex header. (#46376)
This seems like a known issue as other distributions (ArchLinux here)
have patches fixing the issue.

This hopefully fixes more than one dependant builds for ZHF 18.09.

(cherry picked from commit 1ac912bf1b)
2018-09-09 11:39:43 +02:00
Uli Baum
33e2a6dc9f Merge branch 'release-18.09' into staging-18.09 2018-09-09 11:39:09 +02:00
Maximilian Bode
17456d8082 pythonPackages.django-raster: fix build (#46413)
(cherry picked from commit dfcf07d9d3)
2018-09-09 11:35:29 +02:00
Yannik Sander
546fe710b1 build with pythonPackages
(cherry picked from commit 1245621497)
2018-09-08 18:18:31 -04:00
Matthew Bauer
d3a113eb3f rpcbind: remove placeholder 2018-09-08 17:03:49 -05:00
Matthew Bauer
ed948341ce Revert "Merge pull request #37693 from jtojnar/min-nix-two"
This reverts commit 4caab41c1b, reversing
changes made to 11dab7bd4a.
2018-09-08 17:02:10 -05:00
Matthew Bauer
f4bfc63727 Revert "nfs-utils: simplify code using placeholders"
This reverts commit 037d27ed00.
2018-09-08 17:00:33 -05:00
Matthew Bauer
02bb97e5bb Revert "nixos docs: add release notes for nix 2.0 requiremnt bump"
This reverts commit 18f9539655.
2018-09-08 16:57:46 -05:00
Matthew Bauer
891b025fc2 Revert "Nix minimal version: 1.11 -> 2.0"
This reverts commit 7d1968c0e3.
2018-09-08 16:56:57 -05:00
Matthew Bauer
01f75ae0fd xdg/mime.nix: ensure $out/share/mime/packages exists
For update-mime-database to work, you must have to have some mime
packages installed. In some DEs like XFCE this is not guaranteed to
happen. In that case just skip the update-mime-database call.

Fixes #46162
2018-09-08 16:55:48 -05:00
xeji
3ecacb1cb6 pythonPackages.persistent: fix build (#46364)
Documentation-related tests failed, the docs didn't build correctly
because of missing dependencies sphinx and manuel. Add them.

(cherry picked from commit 113f4d7b44)
2018-09-08 21:35:58 +02:00
Maximilian Bode
52a9286bcb pythonPackages.confluent-kafka: fix build (#46380)
cc #45960

(cherry picked from commit 73e75a7d16)
2018-09-08 21:32:36 +02:00
xeji
0817f94f76 cryptsetup: enable and fix tests (#46346)
Some tests use O_DIRECT which is filesystem dependent and fails in a
sandbox as well as on some filesystems without sandboxing.
Patch out O_DIRECT and disable the 4 test cases that still fail in a
sandbox. See discussion in #46151.

(cherry picked from commit 8c6cf3de3d)
2018-09-08 21:24:50 +02:00
Michael Raskin
f890192b9c Merge #46348: chromium: 68.0.3440.106 -> 69.0.3497.81
(cherry picked from commit 7c69ae6259)
2018-09-08 20:10:59 +02:00
Maximilian Bosch
a05c49a22f jbake: fix sandbox build (#46363)
See https://hydra.nixos.org/build/80999410

Without a sandbox the `checkPhase` breaks with the following error:

```
/nix/store/i6vl5lwlz5jbkg4r6p340dwmj6fha3xq-stdenv-linux/setup: bin/jbake: /usr/bin/env: bad interpreter: No such file or directory
jbake did not return correct version
```

Running `patchShebangs` before fixes the issue.

Addresses #45960

(cherry picked from commit 6960a96a0c)
2018-09-08 15:21:30 +02:00
Graham Christensen
07cfc2fa56 Merge pull request #46343 from obsidiansystems/fix-46320
nixpkgs module: Fix defaulting of `localSystem` and `system` for 18.09
2018-09-08 09:16:56 -04:00
Tad Fisher
43c9869dc5 nixos/networkmanager: fix VPN plugin service definition targets (#46201)
(cherry picked from commit 56b3c5b2dd)
2018-09-08 14:36:35 +02:00
Maximilian Bosch
3be4b8afc3 chessx: fix build (#46359)
See https://hydra.nixos.org/build/80998335.

Upstream doesn't support QT 5.11 ATM which broke compilation:

```
src/dialogs/savedialog.cpp: In constructor ‘SaveDialog::SaveDialog(QWidget*, Qt::WindowFlags)’:
src/dialogs/savedialog.cpp:37:34: error: invalid use of incomplete type ‘class QButtonGroup’
     group = new QButtonGroup(this);
```

The Arch community recommends to use an older QT version to fix
this (https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/chessx/).

Furthermore the `QT_PLUGIN_PATH` wasn't set properly which broke the
runtime since QT coudln't find the `xcb` plugin:

```
qt.qpa.plugin: Could not find the Qt platform plugin "xcb" in ""
This application failed to start because no Qt platform plugin could be initialized.
Reinstalling the application may fix this problem.
```

Finally, some minor style fixes were made for consistent indentation.

Addresses #45960

(cherry picked from commit 37032db583)
2018-09-08 14:20:01 +02:00
Samuel Dionne-Riel
5fa7404db9 yabause: 0.9.14 -> 0.9.15 (#46353)
+ fixes for Qt 5.11 build.

(cherry picked from commit 2c751dcdc9)
2018-09-08 13:59:29 +02:00
Maximilian Bosch
4eaa7ef159 pythonPackages.pycaption: fix build (#46356)
The `beaitufulsoup4` package distributed by `nixpkgs` is now at `4.6.3`.

Additionally it fixes `gnomecaption` which depends on the broken
`pycaption` package.

See https://hydra.nixos.org/build/81000247
See https://hydra.nixos.org/build/80723223

Addresses #45960

(cherry picked from commit a02002deba)
2018-09-08 12:10:47 +02:00
worldofpeace
26d65faa62 mono-addins: fix build (#46354)
(cherry picked from commit 2031c0ebfe)
2018-09-08 10:07:44 +02:00
Bastian Köcher
0df87918e5 kdecoration-viewer: Fixes build (#46339)
(cherry picked from commit 0f8c58afd2)
2018-09-08 01:40:05 +02:00
Maximilian Bosch
0842915312 pythonPackages.trio: fix build (#46342)
Fixes the build for `python3Packages.trio' for the next ZHF iteration.
Please refer to the Hydra build for further reference: https://hydra.nixos.org/build/80617356

`python3Packages.sniffio` is needed for the build, otherwise the build
aborts with an error like this:

```
  Could not find a version that satisfies the requirement sniffio (from trio==0.6.0) (from versions: )
No matching distribution found for sniffio (from trio==0.6.0)
```

See #45960

(cherry picked from commit 218ac50fd4)
2018-09-08 01:05:14 +02:00
Timo Kaufmann
cc05d938f9 youtube-dl: fix youtube video download
(cherry picked from commit 8ef940a038)
2018-09-07 21:24:07 +02:00
Timo Kaufmann
441226d374 youtube-dl: 2018.08.28 -> 2018.09.01
(cherry picked from commit fa76f75c7b)
2018-09-07 21:24:05 +02:00
Timo Kaufmann
97577f0057 sage: fix numpy and scipy integration
(cherry picked from commit 7521f2863d)
2018-09-07 18:56:17 +02:00
Chris Ostrouchov
17e17700e2 pythonPackages.ncclient: refactor
adding selectors2 as dependency of ncclient. Added recently 20 days
ago in August. 8ef20f2828

(cherry picked from commit a726956b42)
2018-09-07 17:34:52 +02:00
Chris Ostrouchov
010fc6b762 pythonPackages.selectors2: init at 2.0.1
Added package becuase now dependency of ncclient.

(cherry picked from commit 11c3fe2258)
2018-09-07 17:34:52 +02:00
Michael Raskin
4a62ef0800 julia: readd julia_06 name, make julia an alias that selects a version, as we usually do for incompatible versions
(cherry picked from commit 0e4197b34b)
2018-09-07 15:57:32 +01:00
Daniël de Kok
4f475fee74 python2Packages.spacy_models: update all models to version 2.0.0 (#46182)
Update the model list to those models that are compatibly with the
latest spaCy version:

https://github.com/explosion/spacy-models/blob/master/compatibility.json

The updated model file evaluates to the following packages:

python2Packages.spacy_models.de_core_news_sm
python2Packages.spacy_models.en_core_web_lg
python2Packages.spacy_models.en_core_web_md
python2Packages.spacy_models.en_core_web_sm
python2Packages.spacy_models.en_vectors_web_lg
python2Packages.spacy_models.es_core_news_md
python2Packages.spacy_models.es_core_news_sm
python2Packages.spacy_models.fr_core_news_md
python2Packages.spacy_models.fr_core_news_sm
python2Packages.spacy_models.it_core_news_sm
python2Packages.spacy_models.nl_core_news_sm
python2Packages.spacy_models.pt_core_news_sm
python2Packages.spacy_models.xx_ent_wiki_sm
python3Packages.spacy_models.de_core_news_sm
python3Packages.spacy_models.en_core_web_lg
python3Packages.spacy_models.en_core_web_md
python3Packages.spacy_models.en_core_web_sm
python3Packages.spacy_models.en_vectors_web_lg
python3Packages.spacy_models.es_core_news_md
python3Packages.spacy_models.es_core_news_sm
python3Packages.spacy_models.fr_core_news_md
python3Packages.spacy_models.fr_core_news_sm
python3Packages.spacy_models.it_core_news_sm
python3Packages.spacy_models.nl_core_news_sm
python3Packages.spacy_models.pt_core_news_sm
python3Packages.spacy_models.xx_ent_wiki_sm

(cherry picked from commit d261df5fc1)
2018-09-07 13:00:14 +02:00
Christopher Ostrouchov
5974311abe pythonPackages.kubernetes: add missing dependency (#46179)
fix build issue from missing dependency `adal`. This is due to `adal`
being added as a dependency in July
23rd. 9afec55f4a (diff-b4ef698db8ca845e5845c4618278f29a)

(cherry picked from commit 66e1288962)
2018-09-07 11:26:36 +02:00
Christopher Ostrouchov
a16ba12a82 pythonPackages.ordered-set: add missing dependency (#46183)
missing dependency for doing tests (pytestrunner) added three months
ago June c0b9308988.

(cherry picked from commit 427e4910ec)
2018-09-07 09:29:43 +02:00
Christopher Ostrouchov
53b906236e pythonPackages.phonopy: refactor (#46161)
Fixing phonopy not building. Tests were moved on Jul 30.

(cherry picked from commit 6586765a8f)
2018-09-07 08:41:50 +02:00
Christopher Ostrouchov
1857e03ed4 pythonPackages.locustio: 0.8.1 -> 0.9.0 (#46191)
Fixing build issue. Additionally fetching from github becuase pypi
packge does not come with README which is a buildtime dependency.

(cherry picked from commit b5b48c0a91)
2018-09-07 08:39:17 +02:00
Christopher Ostrouchov
796c736318 pythonPackages.pyslurm: 20180604 -> 20180811 (#46187)
Update version to support latest version of slurm. Fixes since
previously did not build.

(cherry picked from commit b1d6d159aa)
2018-09-07 08:29:11 +02:00
Bas van Dijk
415b1be6b6 Merge pull request #46212 from vaibhavsagar/bump-all-cabal-hashes-18.09
all-cabal-hashes: update snapshot to Hackage at 2018-09-04T11:59:40Z
2018-09-07 01:19:29 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
ef96e79597 Merge branch 'staging-18.09' into release-18.09 2018-09-07 00:50:42 +02:00
Vaibhav Sagar
a55b95691b all-cabal-hashes: update snapshot to Hackage at 2018-09-04T11:59:40Z
(cherry picked from commit d376ceb6ff)
2018-09-06 17:27:30 -04:00
Graham Christensen
3d83234c08 Merge pull request #46192 from grahamc/nix-2.1-on-18.09
Nix 2.1 on 18.09
2018-09-06 15:44:49 -04:00
Graham Christensen
16188edaff Revert "Revert "nix-plugins: 4.0.5 -> 5.0.0.""
This reverts commit 5acc35215f.
2018-09-06 15:31:15 -04:00
Graham Christensen
e52cd2e27f Revert "Revert "nix: 2.1 -> 2.1.1""
This reverts commit 1e2124583d.
2018-09-06 15:31:14 -04:00
Graham Christensen
a385819d8f Revert "Revert "nix: 2.0.4 -> 2.1""
This reverts commit 7fba61a49c.
2018-09-06 15:31:12 -04:00
Graham Christensen
7fba61a49c Revert "nix: 2.0.4 -> 2.1"
This reverts commit 95a907b72b.

Premature, doesn't evaluate.
2018-09-06 15:30:05 -04:00
Graham Christensen
1e2124583d Revert "nix: 2.1 -> 2.1.1"
This reverts commit 4d33c0eea8.

Premature, doesn't evaluate.
2018-09-06 15:29:51 -04:00
Graham Christensen
5acc35215f Revert "nix-plugins: 4.0.5 -> 5.0.0."
This reverts commit 91e057d1b7.

Premature. Doesn't evaluate.
2018-09-06 15:29:45 -04:00
Shea Levy
91e057d1b7 nix-plugins: 4.0.5 -> 5.0.0.
Fixes build against nix 2.1.

(cherry picked from commit 56a605c8b9)
2018-09-06 15:27:27 -04:00
Eelco Dolstra
4d33c0eea8 nix: 2.1 -> 2.1.1
(cherry picked from commit 1510f324a3)
2018-09-06 15:26:14 -04:00
Eelco Dolstra
95a907b72b nix: 2.0.4 -> 2.1
(cherry picked from commit 347638ccfe)
2018-09-06 15:26:10 -04:00
Christopher Ostrouchov
b871c68e4d pythonPackages.jupyterlab_launcher: refactor (#46178)
jupyterlab_launcher does not support python version < 3.5. Disabled
for older versions

(cherry picked from commit 7bcc2870c7)
2018-09-06 20:41:14 +02:00
Jan Malakhovski
23da995a02 nixos/shells: fix indent everywhere
to comply with `doc/coding-conventions.xml`

(cherry picked from commit 8952375b48)
2018-09-06 20:32:40 +02:00
Tor Hedin Brønner
0cf3e0ba00 nixos/shells: avoid overriding the environment for child shells
A shared exported guard `__NIXOS_SET_ENVIRONMENT_DONE` is introduced that can
be used to prevent child shells from sourcing `system.build.setEnvironment`
the second time.

This fixes e.g. `nix run derivation` when run from e.g. ZSH through the console or
ssh. Before this Bash would resource the common environment resetting the `PATH`
environment variable.

We also export `system.build.setEnvironment` to `/etc/set-environment` making it
easy to reset the common environment with `. /etc/set-environment` when
needed and to grep for environment variables in `/etc` (which was the
motivation of #30418).

This reverts changes made in b00a3fc6fd
(the original #30418).

(cherry picked from commit d273db48c6)
2018-09-06 20:32:40 +02:00
John Ericson
e981546ab7 doc: Add release notes for top-level {build,host,target}Platform deprecation
I forgot to do this in e51f736076.

(cherry picked from commit f66257cfce)
2018-09-06 14:28:26 -04:00
Matthieu Coudron
efa7ab7f7f python3Packages.genanki: init at 0.6.0
Library to generate anki flashcards.

(cherry picked from commit 13050ccc0b)
2018-09-06 18:52:43 +02:00
Chris Ostrouchov
8167419324 pythonPackages.geopandas: 0.3.0 -> 0.4.0
Additionally fix issue with tests failing for 18.09 release.

Tests required url fetch. Disabled with "not web".

(cherry picked from commit 1d6fd65957)
2018-09-06 18:50:46 +02:00
Shea Levy
7f345622bc haskell.compiler.ghc861: Apply fix to abi-hash with backpack.
See https://phabricator.haskell.org/D5123.

(cherry picked from commit 06a3db6e54)
2018-09-06 11:40:57 -04:00
Shea Levy
328fc49235 ghc: Apply fix to abi-hash with backpack.
See https://phabricator.haskell.org/D5123.

(cherry picked from commit cbf194384f)
2018-09-06 11:40:47 -04:00
Alexander Biehl
f3ced683ba More conservative SCC tagging for Haskell libraries
`all-functions` corresponds to `-fprof-auto` which places an SCC on every binding. It is well known that SCCs hinder GHC from doing its optimization magic and really slows down profiled code to a point where the profiling reports are completely skewed towards things that were completely optimized away in production settings. Concretely this shows up with things like lenses which do not carry runtime overhead when properly simplified.

`exported-functions` corresponds to GHCs `-fprof-auto-exported` which doesn't put SCCs on `INLINE`d code and in turn doesn't influence simplification of this basic but important stuff.

(cherry picked from commit 3c70c4c6af)
2018-09-06 11:40:31 -04:00
Alex Biehl
f071c8b135 Haskell builder: Use $abi/$libname as --libsubdir
(cherry picked from commit a7d8800b1e)
2018-09-06 11:40:05 -04:00
Michael Raskin
e0404ef024 matrix-synapse: 0.33.3 -> 0.33.3.1
(cherry picked from commit 6ea0c3e271)
2018-09-06 16:58:14 +02:00
Sebastien Maret
0ba0f158ef gildas: add alternative url for the source code (#46145)
For each new release, the upstream developers of Gildas move the
source code of the previous release to a different directory. Add this
directory to the list of url to avoid build failure at each new
release.

(cherry picked from commit 5b58c6ac76)
2018-09-06 15:11:20 +01:00
John Ericson
813ed8fade Merge pull request #46149 from obsidiansystems/plain-system-host
top-level, stdenv: Make `system` and `stdenv.system` describe the hostPlatform for 18.09
2018-09-06 09:37:51 -04:00
John Ericson
5e3f2d4a95 Merge pull request #46146 from obsidiansystems/deprecate-top-level-platform-aliases
top-level: Deprecate top-level `{build,host,target}Platform` for 18.09
2018-09-06 08:11:16 -04:00
Matthieu Coudron
77a56c9e56 pythonPackages.alot: install zsh completion
(cherry picked from commit 97816bed33)
2018-09-06 11:28:33 +01:00
Ashley Gillman
cec33e25d6 python.pkgs.nipype: Futures is python 2 only. Also fix building.
(cherry picked from commit 12c0dd5432)
2018-09-06 10:48:41 +01:00
Chris Ostrouchov
eedff96832 pythonPackages.pymatgen: 2018.8.10 -> 2018.9.1
Also 2018.8.10 does not build in previous state because auto updating
from pypi did not account for a new requirement `networkx`. This has
been added.

(cherry picked from commit 63cf879d6c)
2018-09-06 10:34:56 +01:00
Matthieu Coudron
caf9d779d7 khal: add zsh completion
(cherry picked from commit 61df695f65)
2018-09-06 09:50:57 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
5381f0c2f7 Merge branch 'release-18.09' into staging-18.09 2018-09-06 09:53:44 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
f03d1058d9 Merge #46075: texinfoInteractive: fix for new perl
(cherry picked from commit b5bd566172)
2018-09-06 09:16:48 +02:00
Tim Steinbach
6f3bd5db2f linux: Remove 4.17
(cherry picked from commit f89d6d92b7)
2018-09-05 21:03:18 -04:00
Uli Baum
5b82747057 gnu-smalltalk: fix build
disable format hardening

(cherry picked from commit e5d9c16f2a)
2018-09-05 23:47:05 +01:00
Jörg Thalheim
e207071779 iana-etc: 20180711 -> 20180905 2018-09-05 22:57:52 +01:00
Robert Schütz
76b654c4d5 python.pkgs.py3status: fix build
(cherry picked from commit 041043420f)
2018-09-05 23:36:57 +02:00
Maximilian Bosch
a015527b1b nixos/activation: fix activation script for non-POSIX shells (#46042)
This fixes an issue with shells like fish that are not fully POSIX
compliant. The syntax `ENV=val cmd' doesn't work properly in there.

This issue has been addressed in #45932 and #45945, however it has been
recommended to use a single shell (`stdenv.shell' which is either
`bash' or `sh') to significantly reduce the maintenance overload in the
future.

See https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/45897#issuecomment-417923464

Fixes #45897

/cc @FRidh @xaverdh @etu

(cherry picked from commit df05618f2a)
2018-09-05 22:50:03 +02:00
xeji
a6e2a55611 nixos/tests/opensmtpd: prevent non-deterministic failure (#46071)
A sporadic failure occured on Hydra because a request was sent
to smtpd after the systemd unit was started, but before the daemon
was actually listening. Fix by checking for open ports first.

(cherry picked from commit f70dc57ad3)
2018-09-05 22:36:38 +02:00
Jethro Kuan
c3796a7d1b pythonPackages.tflearn: 0.2.1 -> 0.3.2 (#46102)
(cherry picked from commit a9a380b259)
2018-09-05 17:39:17 +01:00
John Ericson
d3cc8c6b1d Merge pull request #46105 from obsidiansystems/trace-to-warn
stdenv, neovim: Use `lib.warn` for deprecation warnings for 18.09
2018-09-05 11:54:41 -04:00
Timo Kaufmann
79b736ef42 spotify: 1.0.88.353.g15c26ea1-14 -> 1.0.83.316.ge96b6e67-5
The recent update is broken. Playing a song causes spotify to segfault.
This is probably
https://community.spotify.com/t5/Desktop-Linux/Segfault-with-the-new-update/td-p/4554830#,
which was recognized by upstream and will hopefully be fixed soon.

(cherry picked from commit d89b1f0fbf)
2018-09-05 17:36:41 +02:00
Vladyslav Mykhailichenko
7357961cf4 wireguard: 0.0.20180809 -> 0.0.20180904
(cherry picked from commit 4cd94bb5b8)
2018-09-05 16:08:37 +01:00
xeji
3f70d89181 statsd: mark broken, disable nixos test (#46097)
It's broken with node v8 and the upstream project is dead
(last commit Nov. 2016), see #45946 and
https://github.com/etsy/statsd/issues/646

(cherry picked from commit ba52f4cb76)
2018-09-05 16:49:05 +02:00
Daniël de Kok
e36e682d08 pythonPackages.thinc: fix darwin build (#46092)
thinc uses Accelerate on macOS as a blas library. Add the necessary
dependencies to allow building on unsandboxed Darwin machines.

(cherry picked from commit 348a153781)
2018-09-05 16:23:26 +02:00
Daniël de Kok
dd6d9aecca python[23]Packages.mxnet: fix build
Relax graphviz, numpy, requests dependency version bounds.

(cherry picked from commit e57e92bfa2)
2018-09-05 16:10:54 +02:00
Daniël de Kok
81b8016e39 python[23]Packages.graphviz: 0.5.2 -> 0.9
(cherry picked from commit 19ac917707)
2018-09-05 16:10:54 +02:00
Daniël de Kok
e2baf6a7bb mxnet: fix library dependencies.
- mxnet now builds the open source MKL DNN library. However, this
  was not included with the build.
- mxnet builds its own OpenMP library, even when OpenMP is provided
  by the system. This leads to problems, so remove the included
  OpenMP implementation:

  https://github.com/apache/incubator-mxnet/pull/12160

(cherry picked from commit 590ce7d1ae)
2018-09-05 16:10:54 +02:00
Sebastien Maret
d23bc7fc56 gildas: ignore clang warnings for unused command line arguments
See #46044

(cherry picked from commit b76cf0b54c)
2018-09-05 16:04:47 +02:00
Sebastien Maret
38f590a034 gildas: fix makefile rule
(cherry picked from commit 3bc898035d)
2018-09-05 16:04:47 +02:00
Tim Steinbach
6f01302d9e linux: 4.18.5 -> 4.18.6
(cherry picked from commit 25cad43f85)
2018-09-05 08:24:17 -04:00
Tim Steinbach
b232cee0c3 linux: 4.14.67 -> 4.14.68
(cherry picked from commit de9a2fd061)
2018-09-05 08:24:17 -04:00
Tim Steinbach
2bb649fd65 linux: 4.9.124 -> 4.9.125
(cherry picked from commit 92010b7a88)
2018-09-05 08:24:17 -04:00
Tim Steinbach
6db1351f15 linux: 4.4.153 -> 4.4.154
(cherry picked from commit f685edba08)
2018-09-05 08:24:17 -04:00
Urban Skudnik
96ae9a3522 restic: Fix autocomplete for zsh
zsh requires for files to be prepended with underscore to be
recognized as widgets, see [1] for more details.

[1] https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/46001#issuecomment-418567160

(cherry picked from commit e9fe3a334b)
2018-09-05 10:42:46 +01:00
Daniël de Kok
e928fd9f33 spacy: relax dependency versions
(cherry picked from commit da8475736e)
2018-09-05 10:35:42 +01:00
Daniël de Kok
7888e2602e thinc: relax dependency version requirements
(cherry picked from commit ffb094f939)
2018-09-05 10:35:42 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
cba0654682 Merge #46047: ghostscript: 9.22 -> 9.24 (security)
(cherry picked from commit 281a629c2a)
2018-09-05 11:15:16 +02:00
Samuel Dionne-Riel
dea9a04ae6 qtkeychain: Fixes Qt4 build. (#46085)
(cherry picked from commit c59d9d371e)
2018-09-05 09:29:39 +02:00
Samuel Dionne-Riel
dd1afaab7d solarus-quest-editor: 1.4.5 -> 1.5.3
(cherry picked from commit 455f8151fd)
2018-09-05 08:54:42 +02:00
Samuel Dionne-Riel
508608d572 solarus: 1.4.5 -> 1.5.3
(cherry picked from commit 83a0d5d013)
2018-09-05 08:54:24 +02:00
Samuel Dionne-Riel
f8585bb4d5 qmapshack: 1.11.1 -> 1.12.0 (#46084)
(cherry picked from commit a394d08f11)
2018-09-05 08:39:57 +02:00
Samuel Dionne-Riel
85a10bcdd2 qtchan: Fixes build from Qt upgrade. (#46082)
Uses an upstream fix.

(cherry picked from commit 7ec9a333df)
2018-09-05 08:24:21 +02:00
Sarah Brofeldt
3e87977e38 go_1_11: Allow only one of GOARM={5,6,7}
(cherry picked from commit e153a988ec)
Backport of #46031 to release-18.09
2018-09-05 01:05:58 +02:00
Andreas Rammhold
2c844ce13a python.pkgs.pytest-fixture-config: disable tests (#46021)
Tests seem to fail on all recent versions even outside of our build
system. The upstream CI tests seem to somehow succeed but I wasn't able
to reproduce that locally. For not it is probably best to disable them.

(cherry picked from commit d814c98ec8)
2018-09-05 01:03:07 +02:00
Orivej Desh
b25eb04b03 swift-im: fix build with Qt 5.11 and split QtWebKit
(cherry picked from commit 205f3e941a)
2018-09-04 21:52:05 +00:00
Orivej Desh
ebaaaf693e psi-plus: 1.2.235 -> 1.3.410
(cherry picked from commit 6767396e38)
2018-09-04 21:51:56 +00:00
Orivej Desh
375234df52 libsignal-protocol-c: init at 2.3.2
(cherry picked from commit 2e0befd22e)
2018-09-04 21:51:45 +00:00
Orivej Desh
90d0fdaa4d psi: specify license (#43716)
(cherry picked from commit 0f1125975a)
2018-09-04 21:51:30 +00:00
worldofpeace
ac690fc18d dbus-sharp-2_0: fix build (#46060)
(cherry picked from commit 33fa23f6b3)
2018-09-04 23:38:37 +02:00
Will Dietz
6c449eb729 zsh: 5.5.1 -> 5.6 (#46052)
Security, see:

https://github.com/zsh-users/zsh/blob/zsh-5.6/NEWS#L7
(cherry picked from commit 59f5a65e72)

Backported because it contains a CVE fix
2018-09-04 23:33:29 +02:00
Uli Baum
1ee95ca8c9 nixos/tests/novacomd: prevent non-deterministic failure
A sporadic failure occured on Hydra because a request was sent
to the daemon after the systemd unit was started, but before the
daemon was actually listening. Fix by checking for open port first.

(cherry picked from commit 62086c6be6)
2018-09-04 23:20:56 +02:00
Tim Steinbach
d38c50caf4 oh-my-zsh: 2018-07-29 -> 2018-09-03
(cherry picked from commit 98ef33ec74)
2018-09-04 16:20:17 -04:00
symphorien
94b8a71dc3 sound-juicer: fix build (#46051)
(cherry picked from commit 16e776fde7)
2018-09-04 21:16:34 +02:00
Uli Baum
11c2595e40 boost: fix faulty cherry-pick in c70ff28
the change in c70ff28 accidentally ended up in the wrong line
2018-09-04 18:28:46 +02:00
Stephen
c70ff28968 boost: disable python explicitly in b2Args (#45679)
fixes the build of boost_162

(cherry picked from commit 775d1ecf57)
2018-09-04 18:23:33 +02:00
Uli Baum
8fb90de88c systemd: don't use options from fstab on remount
Include fix by @aszlig to fix remount with comment/application-specific
fstab options.

(cherry picked from commit 03c1f567d5)
2018-09-04 13:03:32 +02:00
Uli Baum
f3ed8122dc texlive: add IPFS URL for package source snapshot
(cherry picked from commit 20d88c1a4b)
2018-09-04 12:59:20 +02:00
Uli Baum
b9a33159b6 biber: 2.10 -> 2.11
2.11 is the version used in TexLive 2018

(cherry picked from commit 5c9ebf4fc7)
2018-09-04 12:59:20 +02:00
Uli Baum
6ce6f557ce texlive.bin.core-big: disable luatex53
build failed on Darwin
Patch by @veprbl

(cherry picked from commit 831551a9a1)
2018-09-04 12:59:20 +02:00
Uli Baum
1fab25f991 texlive.bin.core-big: remove unneeded compiler flags
(cherry picked from commit ac03d2e571)
2018-09-04 12:59:20 +02:00
Uli Baum
1ab0bd7190 texlive: add detailed upgrade instructions in separate file
(cherry picked from commit 2737f17d38)
2018-09-04 12:59:19 +02:00
Uli Baum
1bec29aec6 texlive-packages: snapshot 2017-final -> 20180827
and use fixed hashes

(cherry picked from commit f3961e5dae)
2018-09-04 12:59:19 +02:00
Uli Baum
292413f567 texlive: make packages fixed-output derivations
This reverts a part of the changes made in #40826.
Fixed-output derivations save time and space on rebuilds.

(cherry picked from commit 738bae4ec2)
2018-09-04 12:59:19 +02:00
Uli Baum
d2c300b757 texlive: update server URLs
(cherry picked from commit d5816c9bcb)
2018-09-04 12:59:19 +02:00
Uli Baum
0bf565747f texlive.bin: 20170524 -> 20180414
(cherry picked from commit 149b180f18)
2018-09-04 12:59:19 +02:00
Uli Baum
17bcaf17f7 poppler_min: 0.61 -> 0.67
currently only used for texlive

(cherry picked from commit c52174030e)
2018-09-04 12:59:18 +02:00
Timo Kaufmann
6f8e07ac0f Merge #46016: openblas: fix pkg-config alias name
(cherry picked from commit a774988e44)
2018-09-04 12:11:35 +02:00
Daniël de Kok
4b666f1118 mxnet: 1.1.0 -> 1.2.1 (#46026)
Update and fix the build:

- Perl is a build-time requirement.
- Fix hardcoded /bin/bash invocation.

(cherry picked from commit 93a5947158)
2018-09-04 11:38:35 +02:00
Daniël de Kok
b4479796e3 vowpalwabbit: mark broken on aarch64.
(cherry picked from commit 69d418aeac)
2018-09-04 08:59:28 +02:00
Daniël de Kok
07ec5b577b vowpal-wabbit: fix Darwin build.
- Follow the same logic for finding boost-python as for Linux.
- Set DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH so that ctypes find_library can find
  boost-python.
- Do not use '-mt' suffix when linking against boost-serialization
  and boost-program_options on Darwin.

(cherry picked from commit fe7e89ba3b)
2018-09-04 08:59:28 +02:00
Daniël de Kok
8f33594a10 vowpalwabbit: fix build against boost-python.
Patch setup.py to look for libboost_python{Major}{Minor}.

(cherry picked from commit 875bb6bcb9)
2018-09-04 08:59:28 +02:00
John Ericson
46f4a934dc Merge pull request #46024 from Ericson2314/fix-45993
mkDerivation: Fix cross compilation for 18.09
2018-09-04 01:29:10 -04:00
markuskowa
a2aacb218c gnss-sdr: set boost version to 1.66 (#46014)
(cherry picked from commit 7c915abd52)
2018-09-04 00:21:22 +02:00
Daniël de Kok
d0182e0917 magit-todos: fix build by providing git as input. (#45999)
magit-todos requires git during builds. Fixes #45868.

(cherry picked from commit 9d6ff38f70)
2018-09-03 23:43:17 +02:00
symphorien
f391f6fe73 gede: 2.6.1 -> 2.10.9 (#45995)
reverting to qt 5.9 fixed the build.

(cherry picked from commit 3549879b45)
2018-09-03 23:25:08 +02:00
Dmitry Kalinkin
6c988bce77 Revert "arrow-cpp: 0.9.0 -> 0.10.0" (#45991)
Hold off the upgrade until parquet 1.5.0 is released.

This reverts commit 72d630779d.

(cherry picked from commit 992d64bf3e)
2018-09-03 22:44:54 +02:00
Vladyslav M
05c52a7afb ion: broken on darwin (#46010)
(cherry picked from commit 8954c1f719)
2018-09-03 22:38:51 +02:00
aanderse
427ac1a21a kodi: fix nfs support (#46006)
libnfs is required to be in the LD_LIBRARY_PATH for kodi if you want nfs support 
see: https://www.reddit.com/r/NixOS/comments/9aiquo/how_to_enable_nfs_support_in_kodi/

(cherry picked from commit 435eccf15e)
2018-09-03 22:34:12 +02:00
worldofpeace
00a43c05d9 photoflow: mark broken for aarch64
(cherry picked from commit 507dfccdf8)
2018-09-03 22:29:53 +02:00
worldofpeace
d22277b59d sayonara: 1.0.0-git5-20180115 -> 1.1.1-git1-20180828
(cherry picked from commit 3149f84a92)
2018-09-03 22:29:52 +02:00
worldofpeace
2aab2027be photoflow: 2018-03-06 -> 2018-08-28
(cherry picked from commit a3db67282d)
2018-09-03 22:29:52 +02:00
worldofpeace
46733c68f9 imgcat: fix build
(cherry picked from commit 66385a66dc)
2018-09-03 22:29:52 +02:00
worldofpeace
c5c046907d amule: fix build
(cherry picked from commit 9069908680)
2018-09-03 22:29:52 +02:00
worldofpeace
e36aa2dd95 xfce4-mixer: fix build
(cherry picked from commit 6ed0823e15)
2018-09-03 22:29:51 +02:00
worldofpeace
74dfea0922 SkypeExport: fix build
(cherry picked from commit 451e04fb4d)
2018-09-03 22:29:51 +02:00
worldofpeace
2fd6a4a224 valadoc: fix build
(cherry picked from commit f828bb313b)
2018-09-03 22:29:51 +02:00
volth
f370254427 perlPackages.TestAggregate: broken with perl 5.26+ (#46003)
(cherry picked from commit c36bfa7211)
2018-09-03 22:05:18 +02:00
volth
414202cd18 perlPackages.UNIVERSALref: broken with perl 5.26+
(cherry picked from commit 9173c37e05)
2018-09-03 21:04:24 +01:00
Daniël de Kok
08a86afbb7 Keras: fix build by updating expected dependencies. (#45992)
Keras expects keras_preprocessing 1.0.2 and 1.0.4. 1.0.3 and 1.0.5
are respectively in nixpkgs.

ZHF #45960

(cherry picked from commit e33be2ab56)
2018-09-03 22:00:08 +02:00
Uli Baum
4c00a04f47 Revert "[cpan2nix] perlPackages.GetoptLongDescriptive: 0.102 -> 0.103"
It broke perlPackages.MouseXGetOpt

This reverts commit ad47c381bd.

(cherry picked from commit 9889c0f241)
2018-09-03 21:54:21 +02:00
Elis Hirwing
d7cd099d6f gitea: 1.5.0 -> 1.5.1 (#45968)
Changelog: https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/releases/tag/v1.5.1
(cherry picked from commit fcccb9e5ca)
2018-09-03 20:30:48 +02:00
Tim Steinbach
c0bde692f6 kernel: Remove Copperhead
The patches are unmaintained and suggest a false sense of security

(cherry picked from commit 5fccac2b8d)
2018-09-03 11:19:10 -04:00
Vladimír Čunát
e185954cf9 treewide: fix various links (homepage, src)
(cherry picked from commit 9b48a67731)
2018-09-03 16:55:08 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
ad8c446c20 aefs: fix meta.homepage
(cherry picked from commit 0d388e1bb6)
2018-09-03 16:30:35 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
347e4c26f0 Merge #45974: purple-matrix: 2016-07-11 -> 2018-08-02
(cherry picked from commit 956790acaf)
2018-09-03 16:16:01 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
2ba2f91a7f knot-dns: 2.7.1 -> 2.7.2
https://lists.nic.cz/pipermail/knot-dns-users/2018-August/001423.html
(cherry picked from commit 0a5b8ef8c4)
2018-09-03 14:41:00 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
efe9acb17f tarball job: more --show-trace
Without that I couldn't well do the parent commit.

(cherry picked from commit 8d7439eb19)
2018-09-03 14:29:16 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
102e0168dd lib/trivial.nix: fix missing parens
Broken in 62dca7c9a; the tricky thing is that it depends on nix version.

(cherry picked from commit 608730af44)
2018-09-03 14:29:12 +02:00
Domen Kožar
e62269f3c8 nix-prefetch-git: needs findutils as it depends on find/xargs
(cherry picked from commit 66d6e847bb)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2018-09-03 13:23:41 +01:00
Christian Kauhaus
1845c6e3f7 poppler 0.61: patch against CVE-2018-13988 (#45916)
Out of bounds vulnerability in versions up to 0.62.

Generally, we use a newer poppler version but some pkgs still depend on
0.61. Patch named in https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln/detail/CVE-2018-13988.

(cherry picked from commit 542a86037d)
2018-09-03 08:56:35 +02:00
Uli Baum
4d0a22db7f nixos/release.nix: fix eval of closures
missing parentheses

cc: @samueldr
2018-09-03 08:55:58 +02:00
Samuel Dionne-Riel
0d8c216dd2 nixos: Sets channel and version for 18.09 2018-09-02 21:58:13 -04:00
aszlig
ee2463cd71 nixos: Document option description changes
This adds a release notes entry to make users (and especially
developers) aware so they no longer need to use </para><para> in option
descriptions as this is now done automatically on every two consecutive
newlines.

More details can be found in the commit message of f865d0feab.

Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@nix.build>
(cherry picked from commit 4652f2f87e)
2018-09-03 01:15:18 +02:00
aszlig
0d3cfcb958 nixos: Split paras by \n\n in option descriptions
What annoyed me for a long time was the fact, that in order to break
into a new paragraph, you need to insert </para><para> in the
description attribute of an option.

Now we will automatically create <para/> elements for every block that
is separated by two consecutive newlines.

I first tried to do this within options-to-docbook.xsl, but it turns
out[1] that this isn't directly possible with XSLT 1.0, so I added
another XSLT file that postprocesses the option descriptions that are
now enclosed in <nixos:option-description/> by options-to-docbook.xsl.

The splitting itself is a bit more involved, because we can't simply
split on every \n\n because we'd also split text nodes of elements, for
example:

  <screen><![CDATA[

    one line

    another one

  ]]></screen>

This would create one <para/> element for "one line" and another for
"another line", which we obviously don't want because <screen/> is used
to display verbatim contents of what a user is seeing on the screen.

So what we do instead is splitting *only* the top-level text nodes
within the outermost <para/> and leave all elements as-is. If there are
more than one <para/> elements at the top-level, we simply don't process
it at all, because the description then already contains </para><para>.

https://www.mhonarc.org/archive/html/xsl-list/2012-09/msg00319.html

Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@nix.build>
Cc: @edolstra, @domenkozar
(cherry picked from commit f865d0feab)
2018-09-02 18:31:36 -04:00
27130 changed files with 739073 additions and 1703370 deletions

8
.dir-locals.el Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
;;; Directory Local Variables
;;; For more information see (info "(emacs) Directory Variables")
((nil
(bug-reference-bug-regexp . "\\(\\(?:[Ii]ssue \\|[Ff]ixe[ds] \\|[Rr]esolve[ds]? \\|[Cc]lose[ds]? \\|[Pp]\\(?:ull [Rr]equest\\|[Rr]\\) \\|(\\)#\\([0-9]+\\))?\\)")
(bug-reference-url-format . "https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/%s"))
(nix-mode
(tab-width . 2)))

View File

@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
# EditorConfig configuration for nixpkgs
# https://EditorConfig.org
# http://EditorConfig.org
# Top-most EditorConfig file
root = true
@@ -11,86 +11,18 @@ insert_final_newline = true
trim_trailing_whitespace = true
charset = utf-8
# Ignore diffs/patches
[*.{diff,patch}]
end_of_line = unset
insert_final_newline = unset
trim_trailing_whitespace = unset
# see https://nixos.org/nixpkgs/manual/#chap-conventions
# Match json/lockfiles/markdown/nix/perl/python/ruby/shell/docbook files, set indent to spaces
[*.{json,lock,md,nix,pl,pm,py,rb,sh,xml}]
# Match nix/ruby/docbook files, set indent to spaces with width of two
[*.{nix,rb,xml}]
indent_style = space
# Match docbook files, set indent width of one
[*.xml]
indent_size = 1
# Match json/lockfiles/markdown/nix/ruby files, set indent width of two
[*.{json,lock,md,nix,rb}]
indent_size = 2
# Match perl/python/shell scripts, set indent width of four
[*.{pl,pm,py,sh}]
# Match shell/python/perl scripts, set indent to spaces with width of four
[*.{sh,py,pl}]
indent_style = space
indent_size = 4
# Match gemfiles, set indent to spaces with width of two
[Gemfile]
indent_size = 2
indent_style = space
# Disable file types or individual files
# some of these files may be auto-generated and/or require significant changes
[*.{c,h}]
insert_final_newline = unset
trim_trailing_whitespace = unset
[*.{asc,key,ovpn}]
insert_final_newline = unset
end_of_line = unset
trim_trailing_whitespace = unset
[*.lock]
indent_size = unset
[eggs.nix]
trim_trailing_whitespace = unset
[nixos/modules/services/networking/ircd-hybrid/*.{conf,in}]
trim_trailing_whitespace = unset
[nixos/tests/systemd-networkd-vrf.nix]
trim_trailing_whitespace = unset
[pkgs/build-support/dotnetenv/Wrapper/**]
end_of_line = unset
indent_style = unset
insert_final_newline = unset
trim_trailing_whitespace = unset
[pkgs/build-support/upstream-updater/**]
indent_style = unset
trim_trailing_whitespace = unset
[pkgs/development/compilers/elm/registry.dat]
end_of_line = unset
insert_final_newline = unset
[pkgs/development/haskell-modules/hackage-packages.nix]
indent_style = unset
trim_trailing_whitespace = unset
[pkgs/servers/dict/wordnet_structures.py]
trim_trailing_whitespace = unset
[pkgs/tools/misc/timidity/timidity.cfg]
trim_trailing_whitespace = unset
[pkgs/tools/security/enpass/data.json]
insert_final_newline = unset
trim_trailing_whitespace = unset
[pkgs/top-level/emscripten-packages.nix]
trim_trailing_whitespace = unset
# Match diffs, avoid to trim trailing whitespace
[*.{diff,patch}]
trim_trailing_whitespace = false

187
.github/CODEOWNERS vendored
View File

@@ -10,42 +10,27 @@
# This file
/.github/CODEOWNERS @edolstra
# GitHub actions
/.github/workflows @NixOS/Security @Mic92 @zowoq
/.github/workflows/merge-staging @FRidh
# EditorConfig
/.editorconfig @Mic92 @zowoq
# Libraries
/lib @edolstra @nbp @infinisil
/lib/systems @nbp @ericson2314 @matthewbauer
/lib @edolstra @nbp
/lib/systems @nbp @ericson2314
/lib/generators.nix @edolstra @nbp @Profpatsch
/lib/cli.nix @edolstra @nbp @Profpatsch
/lib/debug.nix @edolstra @nbp @Profpatsch
/lib/asserts.nix @edolstra @nbp @Profpatsch
# Nixpkgs Internals
/default.nix @nbp
/pkgs/top-level/default.nix @nbp @Ericson2314
/pkgs/top-level/impure.nix @nbp @Ericson2314
/pkgs/top-level/stage.nix @nbp @Ericson2314 @matthewbauer
/pkgs/top-level/splice.nix @Ericson2314 @matthewbauer
/pkgs/top-level/release-cross.nix @Ericson2314 @matthewbauer
/pkgs/stdenv/generic @Ericson2314 @matthewbauer
/pkgs/stdenv/cross @Ericson2314 @matthewbauer
/pkgs/build-support/cc-wrapper @Ericson2314 @orivej
/pkgs/build-support/bintools-wrapper @Ericson2314 @orivej
/pkgs/build-support/setup-hooks @Ericson2314
/pkgs/build-support/setup-hooks/auto-patchelf.sh @aszlig
# Nixpkgs build-support
/pkgs/build-support/writers @lassulus @Profpatsch
/default.nix @nbp
/pkgs/top-level/default.nix @nbp @Ericson2314
/pkgs/top-level/impure.nix @nbp @Ericson2314
/pkgs/top-level/stage.nix @nbp @Ericson2314
/pkgs/stdenv/generic @Ericson2314
/pkgs/stdenv/cross @Ericson2314
/pkgs/build-support/cc-wrapper @Ericson2314 @orivej
/pkgs/build-support/bintools-wrapper @Ericson2314 @orivej
/pkgs/build-support/setup-hooks @Ericson2314
# NixOS Internals
/nixos/default.nix @nbp @infinisil
/nixos/lib/from-env.nix @nbp @infinisil
/nixos/lib/eval-config.nix @nbp @infinisil
/nixos/default.nix @nbp
/nixos/lib/from-env.nix @nbp
/nixos/lib/eval-config.nix @nbp
/nixos/doc/manual/configuration/abstractions.xml @nbp
/nixos/doc/manual/configuration/config-file.xml @nbp
/nixos/doc/manual/configuration/config-syntax.xml @nbp
@@ -60,62 +45,35 @@
/nixos/doc/manual/man-nixos-option.xml @nbp
/nixos/modules/installer/tools/nixos-option.sh @nbp
# NixOS integration test driver
/nixos/lib/test-driver @tfc
# Updaters
## update.nix
/maintainers/scripts/update.nix @jtojnar
/maintainers/scripts/update.py @jtojnar
## common-updater-scripts
/pkgs/common-updater/scripts/update-source-version @jtojnar
# Python-related code and docs
/maintainers/scripts/update-python-libraries @FRidh
/pkgs/top-level/python-packages.nix @FRidh @jonringer
/pkgs/top-level/python-packages.nix @FRidh
/pkgs/development/interpreters/python @FRidh
/pkgs/development/python-modules @FRidh @jonringer
/doc/languages-frameworks/python.section.md @FRidh
/pkgs/development/tools/poetry2nix @adisbladis
/pkgs/development/python-modules @FRidh
/doc/languages-frameworks/python.md @FRidh
# Haskell
/doc/languages-frameworks/haskell.section.md @cdepillabout @sternenseemann @maralorn
/maintainers/scripts/haskell @cdepillabout @sternenseemann @maralorn
/pkgs/development/compilers/ghc @cdepillabout @sternenseemann @maralorn
/pkgs/development/haskell-modules @cdepillabout @sternenseemann @maralorn
/pkgs/test/haskell @cdepillabout @sternenseemann @maralorn
/pkgs/top-level/release-haskell.nix @cdepillabout @sternenseemann @maralorn
/pkgs/top-level/haskell-packages.nix @cdepillabout @sternenseemann @maralorn
# Perl
/pkgs/development/interpreters/perl @volth @stigtsp
/pkgs/top-level/perl-packages.nix @volth @stigtsp
/pkgs/development/perl-modules @volth @stigtsp
/pkgs/development/compilers/ghc @peti @ryantm @basvandijk
/pkgs/development/haskell-modules @peti @ryantm @basvandijk
/pkgs/development/haskell-modules/default.nix @peti @ryantm @basvandijk
/pkgs/development/haskell-modules/generic-builder.nix @peti @ryantm @basvandijk
/pkgs/development/haskell-modules/hoogle.nix @peti @ryantm @basvandijk
# R
/pkgs/applications/science/math/R @peti
/pkgs/development/r-modules @peti
# Ruby
/pkgs/development/interpreters/ruby @marsam
/pkgs/development/ruby-modules @marsam
/pkgs/development/interpreters/ruby @zimbatm
/pkgs/development/ruby-modules @zimbatm
# Rust
/pkgs/development/compilers/rust @Mic92 @LnL7 @zowoq
/pkgs/build-support/rust @andir @danieldk @zowoq
/pkgs/development/compilers/rust @Mic92 @LnL7
# Darwin-related
/pkgs/stdenv/darwin @NixOS/darwin-maintainers
/pkgs/os-specific/darwin @NixOS/darwin-maintainers
# C compilers
/pkgs/development/compilers/gcc @matthewbauer
/pkgs/development/compilers/llvm @matthewbauer
# Compatibility stuff
/pkgs/top-level/unix-tools.nix @matthewbauer
/pkgs/development/tools/xcbuild @matthewbauer
# Beam-related (Erlang, Elixir, LFE, etc)
/pkgs/development/beam-modules @gleber
/pkgs/development/interpreters/erlang @gleber
@@ -128,99 +86,14 @@
# Jetbrains
/pkgs/applications/editors/jetbrains @edwtjo
# Licenses
/lib/licenses.nix @alyssais
# Eclipse
/pkgs/applications/editors/eclipse @rycee
# https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/31401
/lib/licenses.nix @ghost
# Qt / KDE
/pkgs/applications/kde @ttuegel
/pkgs/desktops/plasma-5 @ttuegel
/pkgs/development/libraries/kde-frameworks @ttuegel
/pkgs/development/libraries/qt-5 @ttuegel
# PostgreSQL and related stuff
/pkgs/servers/sql/postgresql @thoughtpolice @marsam
/nixos/modules/services/databases/postgresql.xml @thoughtpolice
/nixos/modules/services/databases/postgresql.nix @thoughtpolice
/nixos/tests/postgresql.nix @thoughtpolice
# Hardened profile & related modules
/nixos/modules/profiles/hardened.nix @joachifm
/nixos/modules/security/hidepid.nix @joachifm
/nixos/modules/security/lock-kernel-modules.nix @joachifm
/nixos/modules/security/misc.nix @joachifm
/nixos/tests/hardened.nix @joachifm
/pkgs/os-specific/linux/kernel/hardened-config.nix @joachifm
# Network Time Daemons
/pkgs/tools/networking/chrony @thoughtpolice
/pkgs/tools/networking/ntp @thoughtpolice
/pkgs/tools/networking/openntpd @thoughtpolice
/nixos/modules/services/networking/ntp @thoughtpolice
# Dhall
/pkgs/development/dhall-modules @Gabriel439 @Profpatsch @ehmry
/pkgs/development/interpreters/dhall @Gabriel439 @Profpatsch @ehmry
# Idris
/pkgs/development/idris-modules @Infinisil
# Bazel
/pkgs/development/tools/build-managers/bazel @mboes @Profpatsch
# NixOS modules for e-mail and dns services
/nixos/modules/services/mail/mailman.nix @peti
/nixos/modules/services/mail/postfix.nix @peti
/nixos/modules/services/networking/bind.nix @peti
/nixos/modules/services/mail/rspamd.nix @peti
# Emacs
/pkgs/applications/editors/emacs-modes @adisbladis
/pkgs/applications/editors/emacs @adisbladis
/pkgs/top-level/emacs-packages.nix @adisbladis
# Neovim
/pkgs/applications/editors/neovim @jonringer
/pkgs/applications/editors/neovim @teto
# VimPlugins
/pkgs/misc/vim-plugins @jonringer @softinio
# VsCode Extensions
/pkgs/misc/vscode-extensions @jonringer
# Prometheus exporter modules and tests
/nixos/modules/services/monitoring/prometheus/exporters.nix @WilliButz
/nixos/modules/services/monitoring/prometheus/exporters.xml @WilliButz
/nixos/tests/prometheus-exporters.nix @WilliButz
# PHP interpreter, packages, extensions, tests and documentation
/doc/languages-frameworks/php.section.md @NixOS/php
/nixos/tests/php @NixOS/php
/pkgs/build-support/build-pecl.nix @NixOS/php
/pkgs/development/interpreters/php @NixOS/php
/pkgs/development/php-packages @NixOS/php
/pkgs/top-level/php-packages.nix @NixOS/php
# Podman, CRI-O modules and related
/nixos/modules/virtualisation/containers.nix @NixOS/podman @zowoq
/nixos/modules/virtualisation/cri-o.nix @NixOS/podman @zowoq
/nixos/modules/virtualisation/podman.nix @NixOS/podman @zowoq
/nixos/tests/cri-o.nix @NixOS/podman @zowoq
/nixos/tests/podman.nix @NixOS/podman @zowoq
# Docker tools
/pkgs/build-support/docker @roberth @utdemir
/nixos/tests/docker-tools-overlay.nix @roberth
/nixos/tests/docker-tools.nix @roberth
/doc/builders/images/dockertools.xml @roberth
# Blockchains
/pkgs/applications/blockchains @mmahut @RaghavSood
# Go
/pkgs/development/compilers/go @kalbasit @Mic92 @zowoq
/pkgs/development/go-modules @kalbasit @Mic92 @zowoq
/pkgs/development/go-packages @kalbasit @Mic92 @zowoq
# Cinnamon
/pkgs/desktops/cinnamon @mkg20001

View File

@@ -6,8 +6,9 @@ under the terms of [COPYING](../COPYING), which is an MIT-like license.
## Opening issues
* Make sure you have a [GitHub account](https://github.com/signup/free)
* Make sure there is no open issue on the topic
* [Submit a new issue](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/new/choose) by choosing the kind of topic and fill out the template
* [Submit an issue](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues) - assuming one does not already exist.
* Clearly describe the issue including steps to reproduce when it is a bug.
* Include information what version of nixpkgs and Nix are you using (nixos-version or git revision).
## Submitting changes
@@ -19,8 +20,6 @@ under the terms of [COPYING](../COPYING), which is an MIT-like license.
(Motivation for change. Additional information.)
```
For consistency, there should not be a period at the end of the commit message's summary line (the first line of the commit message).
Examples:
* nginx: init at 2.0.1
@@ -37,7 +36,7 @@ under the terms of [COPYING](../COPYING), which is an MIT-like license.
* Not start with the package name.
* Not have a period at the end.
* `meta.license` must be set and fit the upstream license.
* If there is no upstream license, `meta.license` should default to `lib.licenses.unfree`.
* If there is no upstream license, `meta.license` should default to `stdenv.lib.licenses.unfree`.
* `meta.maintainers` must be set.
See the nixpkgs manual for more details on [standard meta-attributes](https://nixos.org/nixpkgs/manual/#sec-standard-meta-attributes) and on how to [submit changes to nixpkgs](https://nixos.org/nixpkgs/manual/#chap-submitting-changes).
@@ -48,17 +47,6 @@ In addition to writing properly formatted commit messages, it's important to inc
For package version upgrades and such a one-line commit message is usually sufficient.
## Backporting changes
Follow these steps to backport a change into a release branch in compliance with the [commit policy](https://nixos.org/nixpkgs/manual/#submitting-changes-stable-release-branches).
1. Take note of the commits in which the change was introduced into `master` branch.
2. Check out the target _release branch_, e.g. `release-20.09`. Do not use a _channel branch_ like `nixos-20.09` or `nixpkgs-20.09`.
3. Create a branch for your change, e.g. `git checkout -b backport`.
4. When the reason to backport is not obvious from the original commit message, use `git cherry-pick -xe <original commit>` and add a reason. Otherwise use `git cherry-pick -x <original commit>`. That's fine for minor version updates that only include security and bug fixes, commits that fixes an otherwise broken package or similar. Please also ensure the commits exists on the master branch; in the case of squashed or rebased merges, the commit hash will change and the new commits can be found in the merge message at the bottom of the master pull request.
5. Push to GitHub and open a backport pull request. Make sure to select the release branch (e.g. `release-20.09`) as the target branch of the pull request, and link to the pull request in which the original change was comitted to `master`. The pull request title should be the commit title with the release version as prefix, e.g. `[20.09]`.
6. When the backport pull request is merged and you have the necessary privileges you can also replace the label `9.needs: port to stable` with `8.has: port to stable` on the original pull request. This way maintainers can keep track of missing backports easier.
## Reviewing contributions
See the nixpkgs manual for more details on how to [Review contributions](https://nixos.org/nixpkgs/manual/#chap-reviewing-contributions).
See the nixpkgs manual for more details on how to [Review contributions](https://nixos.org/nixpkgs/manual/#sec-reviewing-contributions).

View File

@@ -8,4 +8,5 @@
## Technical details
Please run `nix-shell -p nix-info --run "nix-info -m"` and paste the result.
Please run `nix-shell -p nix-info --run "nix-info -m"` and paste the
results.

View File

@@ -1,43 +0,0 @@
---
name: Bug report
about: Create a report to help us improve
title: ''
labels: '0.kind: bug'
assignees: ''
---
**Describe the bug**
A clear and concise description of what the bug is.
**To Reproduce**
Steps to reproduce the behavior:
1. ...
2. ...
3. ...
**Expected behavior**
A clear and concise description of what you expected to happen.
**Screenshots**
If applicable, add screenshots to help explain your problem.
**Additional context**
Add any other context about the problem here.
**Notify maintainers**
<!--
Please @ people who are in the `meta.maintainers` list of the offending package or module.
If in doubt, check `git blame` for whoever last touched something.
-->
**Metadata**
Please run `nix-shell -p nix-info --run "nix-info -m"` and paste the result.
Maintainer information:
```yaml
# a list of nixpkgs attributes affected by the problem
attribute:
# a list of nixos modules affected by the problem
module:
```

View File

@@ -1,48 +0,0 @@
---
name: Out-of-date package reports
about: For packages that are out-of-date
title: ''
labels: '9.needs: package (update)'
assignees: ''
---
###### Checklist
<!-- Note that these are hard requirements -->
<!--
You can use the "Go to file" functionality on github to find the package
Then you can go to the history for this package
Find the latest "package_name: old_version -> new_version" commit
The "new_version" is the the current version of the package
-->
- [ ] Checked the [nixpkgs master branch](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs)
<!--
Type the name of your package and try to find an open pull request for the package
If you find an open pull request, you can review it!
There's a high chance that you'll have the new version right away while helping the community!
-->
- [ ] Checked the [nixpkgs pull requests](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pulls)
###### Project name
`nix search` name:
<!--
The current version can be found easily with the same process than above for checking the master branch
If an open PR is present for the package, take this version as the current one and link to the PR
-->
current version:
desired version:
###### Notify maintainers
<!--
Search your package here: https://search.nixos.org/packages?channel=unstable
If no maintainer is listed for your package, tag the person that last updated the package
-->
maintainers:
###### Note for maintainers
Please tag this issue in your PR.

View File

@@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
---
name: Packaging requests
about: For packages that are missing
title: ''
labels: '0.kind: packaging request'
assignees: ''
---
**Project description**
_describe the project a little_
**Metadata**
* homepage URL:
* source URL:
* license: mit, bsd, gpl2+ , ...
* platforms: unix, linux, darwin, ...

View File

@@ -1,13 +1,3 @@
<!--
To help with the large amounts of pull requests, we would appreciate your
reviews of other pull requests, especially simple package updates. Just leave a
comment describing what you have tested in the relevant package/service.
Reviewing helps to reduce the average time-to-merge for everyone.
Thanks a lot if you do!
List of open PRs: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pulls
Reviewing guidelines: https://nixos.org/manual/nixpkgs/unstable/#chap-reviewing-contributions
-->
###### Motivation for this change
@@ -15,13 +5,16 @@ Reviewing guidelines: https://nixos.org/manual/nixpkgs/unstable/#chap-reviewing-
<!-- Please check what applies. Note that these are not hard requirements but merely serve as information for reviewers. -->
- [ ] Tested using sandboxing ([nix.useSandbox](https://nixos.org/nixos/manual/options.html#opt-nix.useSandbox) on NixOS, or option `sandbox` in [`nix.conf`](https://nixos.org/nix/manual/#sec-conf-file) on non-NixOS linux)
- [ ] Tested using sandboxing ([nix.useSandbox](http://nixos.org/nixos/manual/options.html#opt-nix.useSandbox) on NixOS, or option `sandbox` in [`nix.conf`](http://nixos.org/nix/manual/#sec-conf-file) on non-NixOS)
- Built on platform(s)
- [ ] NixOS
- [ ] macOS
- [ ] other Linux distributions
- [ ] Tested via one or more NixOS test(s) if existing and applicable for the change (look inside [nixos/tests](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/nixos/tests))
- [ ] Tested compilation of all pkgs that depend on this change using `nix-shell -p nixpkgs-review --run "nixpkgs-review wip"`
- [ ] Tested compilation of all pkgs that depend on this change using `nix-shell -p nox --run "nox-review wip"`
- [ ] Tested execution of all binary files (usually in `./result/bin/`)
- [ ] Added a release notes entry if the change is major or breaking
- [ ] Determined the impact on package closure size (by running `nix path-info -S` before and after)
- [ ] Fits [CONTRIBUTING.md](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/.github/CONTRIBUTING.md).
---

35
.github/STALE-BOT.md vendored
View File

@@ -1,35 +0,0 @@
# Stale bot information
- Thanks for your contribution!
- To remove the stale label, just leave a new comment.
- _How to find the right people to ping?_ &rarr; [`git blame`](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-blame) to the rescue! (or GitHub's history and blame buttons.)
- You can always ask for help on [our Discourse Forum](https://discourse.nixos.org/) or on the [#nixos IRC channel](https://webchat.freenode.net/#nixos).
## Suggestions for PRs
1. GitHub sometimes doesn't notify people who commented / reviewed a PR previously, when you (force) push commits. If you have addressed the reviews you can [officially ask for a review](https://docs.github.com/en/free-pro-team@latest/github/collaborating-with-issues-and-pull-requests/requesting-a-pull-request-review) from those who commented to you or anyone else.
2. If it is unfinished but you plan to finish it, please mark it as a draft.
3. If you don't expect to work on it any time soon, closing it with a short comment may encourage someone else to pick up your work.
4. To get things rolling again, rebase the PR against the target branch and address valid comments.
5. If you need a review to move forward, ask in [the Discourse thread for PRs that need help](https://discourse.nixos.org/t/prs-in-distress/3604).
6. If all you need is a merge, check the git history to find and [request reviews](https://docs.github.com/en/github/collaborating-with-issues-and-pull-requests/requesting-a-pull-request-review) from people who usually merge related contributions.
## Suggestions for issues
1. If it is resolved (either for you personally, or in general), please consider closing it.
2. If this might still be an issue, but you are not interested in promoting its resolution, please consider closing it while encouraging others to take over and reopen an issue if they care enough.
3. If you still have interest in resolving it, try to ping somebody who you believe might have an interest in the topic. Consider discussing the problem in [our Discourse Forum](https://discourse.nixos.org/).
4. As with all open source projects, your best option is to submit a Pull Request that addresses this issue. We :heart: this attitude!
**Memorandum on closing issues**
Don't be afraid to close an issue that holds valuable information. Closed issues stay in the system for people to search, read, cross-reference, or even reopen--nothing is lost! Closing obsolete issues is an important way to help maintainers focus their time and effort.
## Useful GitHub search queries
- [Open PRs with any stale-bot interaction](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pulls?q=is%3Apr+is%3Aopen+commenter%3Aapp%2Fstale+)
- [Open PRs with any stale-bot interaction and `2.status: stale`](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pulls?q=is%3Apr+is%3Aopen+commenter%3Aapp%2Fstale+label%3A%222.status%3A+stale%22)
- [Open PRs with any stale-bot interaction and NOT `2.status: stale`](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pulls?q=is%3Apr+is%3Aopen+commenter%3Aapp%2Fstale+-label%3A%222.status%3A+stale%22+)
- [Open Issues with any stale-bot interaction](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues?q=is%3Aissue+is%3Aopen+commenter%3Aapp%2Fstale+)
- [Open Issues with any stale-bot interaction and `2.status: stale`](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues?q=is%3Aissue+is%3Aopen+commenter%3Aapp%2Fstale+label%3A%222.status%3A+stale%22+)
- [Open Issues with any stale-bot interaction and NOT `2.status: stale`](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues?q=is%3Aissue+is%3Aopen+commenter%3Aapp%2Fstale+-label%3A%222.status%3A+stale%22+)

154
.github/labeler.yml vendored
View File

@@ -1,154 +0,0 @@
"6.topic: agda":
- doc/languages-frameworks/agda.section.md
- nixos/tests/agda.nix
- pkgs/build-support/agda/**/*
- pkgs/development/libraries/agda/**/*
- pkgs/top-level/agda-packages.nix
"6.topic: bsd":
- pkgs/os-specific/bsd/**/*
- pkgs/stdenv/freebsd/**/*
"6.topic: cinnamon":
- pkgs/desktops/cinnamon/**/*
"6.topic: emacs":
- nixos/modules/services/editors/emacs.nix
- nixos/modules/services/editors/emacs.xml
- nixos/tests/emacs-daemon.nix
- pkgs/applications/editors/emacs-modes/**/*
- pkgs/applications/editors/emacs/**/*
- pkgs/build-support/emacs/**/*
- pkgs/top-level/emacs-packages.nix
"6.topic: erlang":
- doc/languages-frameworks/beam.section.md
- pkgs/development/beam-modules/**/*
- pkgs/development/interpreters/elixir/**/*
- pkgs/development/interpreters/erlang/**/*
- pkgs/development/tools/build-managers/rebar/**/*
- pkgs/development/tools/build-managers/rebar3/**/*
- pkgs/development/tools/erlang/**/*
- pkgs/top-level/beam-packages.nix
"6.topic: fetch":
- pkgs/build-support/fetch*/**/*
"6.topic: GNOME":
- doc/languages-frameworks/gnome.section.md
- nixos/modules/services/desktops/gnome/**/*
- nixos/modules/services/x11/desktop-managers/gnome.nix
- nixos/tests/gnome-xorg.nix
- nixos/tests/gnome.nix
- pkgs/desktops/gnome/**/*
"6.topic: golang":
- doc/languages-frameworks/go.section.md
- pkgs/development/compilers/go/**/*
- pkgs/development/go-modules/**/*
- pkgs/development/go-packages/**/*
"6.topic: haskell":
- doc/languages-frameworks/haskell.section.md
- maintainers/scripts/haskell/**/*
- pkgs/development/compilers/ghc/**/*
- pkgs/development/haskell-modules/**/*
- pkgs/development/tools/haskell/**/*
- pkgs/test/haskell/**/*
- pkgs/top-level/haskell-packages.nix
- pkgs/top-level/release-haskell.nix
"6.topic: kernel":
- pkgs/build-support/kernel/**/*
- pkgs/os-specific/linux/kernel/**/*
"6.topic: lua":
- pkgs/development/interpreters/lua-5/**/*
- pkgs/development/interpreters/luajit/**/*
- pkgs/development/lua-modules/**/*
- pkgs/top-level/lua-packages.nix
"6.topic: nixos":
- nixos/**/*
"6.topic: ocaml":
- doc/languages-frameworks/ocaml.section.md
- pkgs/development/compilers/ocaml/**/*
- pkgs/development/compilers/reason/**/*
- pkgs/development/ocaml-modules/**/*
- pkgs/development/tools/ocaml/**/*
- pkgs/top-level/ocaml-packages.nix
"6.topic: pantheon":
- nixos/modules/services/desktops/pantheon/**/*
- nixos/modules/services/x11/desktop-managers/pantheon.nix
- nixos/modules/services/x11/display-managers/lightdm-greeters/pantheon.nix
- nixos/tests/pantheon.nix
- pkgs/desktops/pantheon/**/*
"6.topic: policy discussion":
- .github/**/*
"6.topic: printing":
- nixos/modules/services/printing/cupsd.nix
- pkgs/misc/cups/**/*
"6.topic: python":
- doc/languages-frameworks/python.section.md
- pkgs/development/interpreters/python/**/*
- pkgs/development/python-modules/**/*
- pkgs/top-level/python-packages.nix
"6.topic: qt/kde":
- doc/languages-frameworks/qt.section.md
- nixos/modules/services/x11/desktop-managers/plasma5.nix
- nixos/tests/plasma5.nix
- pkgs/applications/kde/**/*
- pkgs/desktops/plasma-5/**/*
- pkgs/development/libraries/kde-frameworks/**/*
- pkgs/development/libraries/qt-5/**/*
"6.topic: ruby":
- doc/languages-frameworks/ruby.section.md
- pkgs/development/interpreters/ruby/**/*
- pkgs/development/ruby-modules/**/*
"6.topic: rust":
- doc/languages-frameworks/rust.section.md
- pkgs/build-support/rust/**/*
- pkgs/development/compilers/rust/**/*
"6.topic: stdenv":
- pkgs/stdenv/**/*
"6.topic: steam":
- pkgs/games/steam/**/*
"6.topic: systemd":
- pkgs/os-specific/linux/systemd/**/*
- nixos/modules/system/boot/systemd*/**/*
"6.topic: TeX":
- doc/languages-frameworks/texlive.section.md
- pkgs/tools/typesetting/tex/**/*
"6.topic: vim":
- doc/languages-frameworks/vim.section.md
- pkgs/applications/editors/vim/**/*
- pkgs/misc/vim-plugins/**/*
"6.topic: xfce":
- nixos/doc/manual/configuration/xfce.xml
- nixos/modules/services/x11/desktop-managers/xfce.nix
- nixos/tests/xfce.nix
- pkgs/desktops/xfce/**/*
"8.has: changelog":
- nixos/doc/manual/release-notes/**/*
"8.has: documentation":
- doc/**/*
- nixos/doc/**/*
"8.has: module (update)":
- nixos/modules/**/*

10
.github/stale.yml vendored
View File

@@ -1,10 +0,0 @@
# Configuration for probot-stale - https://github.com/probot/stale
daysUntilStale: 180
daysUntilClose: false
exemptLabels:
- "1.severity: security"
- "2.status: never-stale"
staleLabel: "2.status: stale"
markComment: |
I marked this as stale due to inactivity. &rarr; [More info](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/.github/STALE-BOT.md)
closeComment: false

View File

@@ -1,29 +0,0 @@
name: "Direct Push Warning"
on:
push:
branches:
- master
- release-**
jobs:
build:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
if: github.repository_owner == 'NixOS'
env:
GITHUB_SHA: ${{ github.sha }}
GITHUB_REPOSITORY: ${{ github.repository }}
steps:
- name: Check if commit is a merge commit
id: ismerge
run: |
ISMERGE=$(curl -H 'Accept: application/vnd.github.groot-preview+json' -H "authorization: Bearer ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}" https://api.github.com/repos/${{ env.GITHUB_REPOSITORY }}/commits/${{ env.GITHUB_SHA }}/pulls | jq -r '.[] | select(.merge_commit_sha == "${{ env.GITHUB_SHA }}") | any')
echo "::set-output name=ismerge::$ISMERGE"
- name: Warn if the commit was a direct push
if: steps.ismerge.outputs.ismerge != 'true'
uses: peter-evans/commit-comment@v1
with:
body: |
@${{ github.actor }}, you pushed a commit directly to master/release branch
instead of going through a Pull Request.
That's highly discouraged beyond the few exceptions listed
on https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/118661

View File

@@ -1,46 +0,0 @@
name: "Checking EditorConfig"
permissions: read-all
on:
# avoids approving first time contributors
pull_request_target:
branches-ignore:
- 'release-**'
jobs:
tests:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
if: github.repository_owner == 'NixOS'
steps:
- name: Get list of changed files from PR
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
run: |
echo 'PR_DIFF<<EOF' >> $GITHUB_ENV
gh api \
repos/NixOS/nixpkgs/pulls/${{github.event.number}}/files --paginate \
| jq '.[] | select(.status != "removed") | .filename' \
>> $GITHUB_ENV
echo 'EOF' >> $GITHUB_ENV
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
with:
# pull_request_target checks out the base branch by default
ref: refs/pull/${{ github.event.pull_request.number }}/merge
if: env.PR_DIFF
- uses: cachix/install-nix-action@v13
if: env.PR_DIFF
with:
# nixpkgs commit is pinned so that it doesn't break
nix_path: nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/f93ecc4f6bc60414d8b73dbdf615ceb6a2c604df.tar.gz
- name: install editorconfig-checker
run: nix-env -iA editorconfig-checker -f '<nixpkgs>'
if: env.PR_DIFF
- name: Checking EditorConfig
if: env.PR_DIFF
run: |
echo "$PR_DIFF" | xargs editorconfig-checker -disable-indent-size
- if: ${{ failure() }}
run: |
echo "::error :: Hey! It looks like your changes don't follow our editorconfig settings. Read https://editorconfig.org/#download to configure your editor so you never see this error again."

View File

@@ -1,19 +0,0 @@
name: "Label PR"
on:
pull_request_target:
types: [edited, opened, synchronize, reopened]
permissions:
contents: read
pull-requests: write
jobs:
labels:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
if: github.repository_owner == 'NixOS'
steps:
- uses: actions/labeler@v3
with:
repo-token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
sync-labels: true

View File

@@ -1,30 +0,0 @@
name: "Build NixOS manual"
permissions: read-all
on:
pull_request_target:
branches:
- master
paths:
- 'nixos/**'
jobs:
nixos:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
with:
# pull_request_target checks out the base branch by default
ref: refs/pull/${{ github.event.pull_request.number }}/merge
- uses: cachix/install-nix-action@v13
with:
# explicitly enable sandbox
extra_nix_config: sandbox = true
- uses: cachix/cachix-action@v9
with:
# This cache is for the nixos/nixpkgs manual builds and should not be trusted or used elsewhere.
name: nixpkgs-ci
signingKey: '${{ secrets.CACHIX_SIGNING_KEY }}'
- name: Building NixOS manual
run: NIX_PATH=nixpkgs=$(pwd) nix-build --option restrict-eval true nixos/release.nix -A manual.x86_64-linux

View File

@@ -1,30 +0,0 @@
name: "Build Nixpkgs manual"
permissions: read-all
on:
pull_request_target:
branches:
- master
paths:
- 'doc/**'
jobs:
nixpkgs:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
with:
# pull_request_target checks out the base branch by default
ref: refs/pull/${{ github.event.pull_request.number }}/merge
- uses: cachix/install-nix-action@v13
with:
# explicitly enable sandbox
extra_nix_config: sandbox = true
- uses: cachix/cachix-action@v9
with:
# This cache is for the nixos/nixpkgs manual builds and should not be trusted or used elsewhere.
name: nixpkgs-ci
signingKey: '${{ secrets.CACHIX_SIGNING_KEY }}'
- name: Building Nixpkgs manual
run: NIX_PATH=nixpkgs=$(pwd) nix-build --option restrict-eval true pkgs/top-level/release.nix -A manual

View File

@@ -1,41 +0,0 @@
name: "merge staging(-next)"
on:
schedule:
# * is a special character in YAML so you have to quote this string
# Merge every 6 hours
- cron: '0 */6 * * *'
jobs:
sync-branch:
if: github.repository == 'NixOS/nixpkgs'
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: Merge master into staging-next
id: staging_next
uses: devmasx/merge-branch@v1.3.1
with:
type: now
from_branch: master
target_branch: staging-next
github_token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
- name: Merge staging-next into staging
id: staging
uses: devmasx/merge-branch@v1.3.1
with:
type: now
from_branch: staging-next
target_branch: staging
github_token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
- name: Comment on failure
uses: peter-evans/create-or-update-comment@v1
if: ${{ failure() }}
with:
issue-number: 105153
body: |
An automatic merge${{ (steps.staging_next.outcome == 'failure' && ' from master to staging-next') || ((steps.staging.outcome == 'failure' && ' from staging-next to staging') || '') }} [failed](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/actions/runs/${{ github.run_id }}).

View File

@@ -1,21 +0,0 @@
name: "clear pending status"
on:
check_suite:
types: [ completed ]
jobs:
action:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: clear pending status
if: github.repository_owner == 'NixOS' && github.event.check_suite.app.name == 'OfBorg'
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
run: |
curl \
-X POST \
-H "Accept: application/vnd.github.v3+json" \
-H "Authorization: token $GITHUB_TOKEN" \
-d '{"state": "success", "target_url": " ", "description": " ", "context": "Wait for ofborg"}' \
"https://api.github.com/repos/NixOS/nixpkgs/statuses/${{ github.event.check_suite.head_sha }}"

View File

@@ -1,20 +0,0 @@
name: "set pending status"
on:
pull_request_target:
jobs:
action:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: set pending status
if: github.repository_owner == 'NixOS'
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
run: |
curl \
-X POST \
-H "Accept: application/vnd.github.v3+json" \
-H "Authorization: token $GITHUB_TOKEN" \
-d '{"state": "pending", "target_url": " ", "description": "This pending status will be cleared when ofborg starts eval.", "context": "Wait for ofborg"}' \
"https://api.github.com/repos/NixOS/nixpkgs/statuses/${{ github.event.pull_request.head.sha }}"

View File

@@ -1,134 +0,0 @@
on:
issue_comment:
types:
- created
# This action allows people with write access to the repo to rebase a PRs base branch
# by commenting `/rebase ${branch}` on the PR while avoiding CODEOWNER notifications.
jobs:
rebase:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
if: github.repository_owner == 'NixOS' && github.event.issue.pull_request != '' && contains(github.event.comment.body, '/rebase')
steps:
- uses: peter-evans/create-or-update-comment@v1
with:
comment-id: ${{ github.event.comment.id }}
reactions: eyes
- uses: scherermichael-oss/action-has-permission@1.0.6
id: check-write-access
with:
required-permission: write
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
- name: check permissions
run: |
echo "Commenter doesn't have write access to the repo"
exit 1
if: "! steps.check-write-access.outputs.has-permission"
- name: setup
run: |
curl "https://api.github.com/repos/${{ github.repository }}/pulls/${{ github.event.issue.number }}" 2>/dev/null >pr.json
cat <<EOF >>"$GITHUB_ENV"
CAN_MODIFY=$(jq -r '.maintainer_can_modify' pr.json)
COMMITS=$(jq -r '.commits' pr.json)
CURRENT_BASE=$(jq -r '.base.ref' pr.json)
PR_BRANCH=$(jq -r '.head.ref' pr.json)
COMMENT_BRANCH=$(echo ${{ github.event.comment.body }} | awk "/^\/rebase / {print \$2}")
PULL_REQUEST=${{ github.event.issue.number }}
EOF
rm pr.json
- name: check branch
env:
PERMANENT_BRANCHES: "haskell-updates|master|nixos|nixpkgs|python-unstable|release|staging"
VALID_BRANCHES: "haskell-updates|master|python-unstable|release-20.09|staging|staging-20.09|staging-next"
run: |
message() {
cat <<EOF
Can't rebase $PR_BRANCH from $CURRENT_BASE onto $COMMENT_BRANCH (PR:$PULL_REQUEST COMMITS:$COMMITS)
EOF
}
if ! [[ "$COMMENT_BRANCH" =~ ^($VALID_BRANCHES)$ ]]; then
cat <<EOF
Check that the branch from the comment is valid:
$(message)
This action can only rebase onto these branches:
$VALID_BRANCHES
\`/rebase \${branch}\` must be at the start of the line
EOF
exit 1
fi
if [[ "$COMMENT_BRANCH" == "$CURRENT_BASE" ]]; then
cat <<EOF
Check that the branch from the comment isn't the current base branch:
$(message)
EOF
exit 1
fi
if [[ "$COMMENT_BRANCH" == "$PR_BRANCH" ]]; then
cat <<EOF
Check that the branch from the comment isn't the current branch:
$(message)
EOF
exit 1
fi
if [[ "$PR_BRANCH" =~ ^($PERMANENT_BRANCHES) ]]; then
cat <<EOF
Check that the PR branch isn't a permanent branch:
$(message)
EOF
exit 1
fi
if [[ "$CAN_MODIFY" != "true" ]]; then
cat <<EOF
Check that maintainers can edit the PR branch:
$(message)
EOF
exit 1
fi
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
with:
fetch-depth: 0
- name: rebase pull request
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
run: |
git config --global user.email "41898282+github-actions[bot]@users.noreply.github.com"
git config --global user.name "github-actions[bot]"
git fetch origin
gh pr checkout "$PULL_REQUEST"
git rebase \
--onto="$(git merge-base origin/"$CURRENT_BASE" origin/"$COMMENT_BRANCH")" \
"HEAD~$COMMITS"
git push --force
curl \
-X POST \
-H "Accept: application/vnd.github.v3+json" \
-H "Authorization: token $GITHUB_TOKEN" \
-d "{ \"base\": \"$COMMENT_BRANCH\" }" \
"https://api.github.com/repos/${{ github.repository }}/pulls/$PULL_REQUEST"
curl \
-X PATCH \
-H "Accept: application/vnd.github.v3+json" \
-H "Authorization: token $GITHUB_TOKEN" \
-d '{ "state": "closed" }' \
"https://api.github.com/repos/${{ github.repository }}/pulls/$PULL_REQUEST"
- uses: peter-evans/create-or-update-comment@v1
with:
issue-number: ${{ github.event.issue.number }}
body: |
Rebased, please reopen the pull request to restart CI
- uses: peter-evans/create-or-update-comment@v1
if: failure()
with:
issue-number: ${{ github.event.issue.number }}
body: |
[Failed to rebase](https://github.com/${{ github.repository }}/actions/runs/${{ github.run_id }})

8
.gitignore vendored
View File

@@ -11,12 +11,6 @@ result-*
.version-suffix
.DS_Store
.mypy_cache
__pycache__
/pkgs/development/libraries/qt-5/*/tmp/
/pkgs/desktops/kde-5/*/tmp/
/pkgs/development/mobile/androidenv/xml/*
# generated by pkgs/common-updater/update-script.nix
update-git-commits.txt
/pkgs/desktops/kde-5/*/tmp/

View File

@@ -1 +1 @@
21.05
18.09

11
COPYING
View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
Copyright (c) 2003-2021 Eelco Dolstra and the Nixpkgs/NixOS contributors
Copyright (c) 2003-2018 Eelco Dolstra and the Nixpkgs/NixOS contributors
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining
a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
@@ -18,3 +18,12 @@ NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE
LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION
OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION
WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
======================================================================
Note: the license above does not apply to the packages built by the
Nix Packages collection, merely to the package descriptions (i.e., Nix
expressions, build scripts, etc.). It also might not apply to patches
included in Nixpkgs, which may be derivative works of the packages to
which they apply. The aforementioned artifacts are all covered by the
licenses of the respective packages.

138
README.md
View File

@@ -1,113 +1,41 @@
<p align="center">
<a href="https://nixos.org/nixos"><img src="https://nixos.org/logo/nixos-hires.png" width="500px" alt="NixOS logo" /></a>
</p>
[<img src="https://nixos.org/logo/nixos-hires.png" width="500px" alt="logo" />](https://nixos.org/nixos)
<p align="center">
<a href="https://www.codetriage.com/nixos/nixpkgs"><img src="https://www.codetriage.com/nixos/nixpkgs/badges/users.svg" alt="Code Triagers badge" /></a>
<a href="https://opencollective.com/nixos"><img src="https://opencollective.com/nixos/tiers/supporter/badge.svg?label=Supporter&color=brightgreen" alt="Open Collective supporters" /></a>
</p>
[![Code Triagers Badge](https://www.codetriage.com/nixos/nixpkgs/badges/users.svg)](https://www.codetriage.com/nixos/nixpkgs)
[Nixpkgs](https://github.com/nixos/nixpkgs) is a collection of over
60,000 software packages that can be installed with the
[Nix](https://nixos.org/nix/) package manager. It also implements
[NixOS](https://nixos.org/nixos/), a purely-functional Linux distribution.
Nixpkgs is a collection of packages for the [Nix](https://nixos.org/nix/) package
manager. It is periodically built and tested by the [Hydra](https://hydra.nixos.org/)
build daemon as so-called channels. To get channel information via git, add
[nixpkgs-channels](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs-channels.git) as a remote:
# Manuals
```
% git remote add channels https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs-channels.git
```
* [NixOS Manual](https://nixos.org/nixos/manual) - how to install, configure, and maintain a purely-functional Linux distribution
* [Nixpkgs Manual](https://nixos.org/nixpkgs/manual/) - contributing to Nixpkgs and using programming-language-specific Nix expressions
* [Nix Package Manager Manual](https://nixos.org/nix/manual) - how to write Nix expressions (programs), and how to use Nix command line tools
For stability and maximum binary package support, it is recommended to maintain
custom changes on top of one of the channels, e.g. `nixos-18.09` for the latest
release and `nixos-unstable` for the latest successful build of master:
# Community
```
% git remote update channels
% git rebase channels/nixos-18.09
```
For pull-requests, please rebase onto nixpkgs `master`.
[NixOS](https://nixos.org/nixos/) Linux distribution source code is located inside
`nixos/` folder.
* [NixOS installation instructions](https://nixos.org/nixos/manual/#ch-installation)
* [Documentation (Nix Expression Language chapter)](https://nixos.org/nix/manual/#ch-expression-language)
* [Manual (How to write packages for Nix)](https://nixos.org/nixpkgs/manual/)
* [Manual (NixOS)](https://nixos.org/nixos/manual/)
* [Community maintained wiki](https://nixos.wiki/)
* [Continuous package builds for unstable/master](https://hydra.nixos.org/jobset/nixos/trunk-combined)
* [Continuous package builds for 18.09 release](https://hydra.nixos.org/jobset/nixos/release-18.09)
* [Tests for unstable/master](https://hydra.nixos.org/job/nixos/trunk-combined/tested#tabs-constituents)
* [Tests for 18.09 release](https://hydra.nixos.org/job/nixos/release-18.09/tested#tabs-constituents)
Communication:
* [Discourse Forum](https://discourse.nixos.org/)
* [IRC - #nixos on freenode.net](irc://irc.freenode.net/#nixos)
* [NixOS Weekly](https://weekly.nixos.org/)
* [Community-maintained wiki](https://nixos.wiki/)
* [Community-maintained list of ways to get in touch](https://nixos.wiki/wiki/Get_In_Touch#Chat) (Discord, Matrix, Telegram, other IRC channels, etc.)
# Other Project Repositories
The sources of all official Nix-related projects are in the [NixOS
organization on GitHub](https://github.com/NixOS/). Here are some of
the main ones:
* [Nix](https://github.com/NixOS/nix) - the purely functional package manager
* [NixOps](https://github.com/NixOS/nixops) - the tool to remotely deploy NixOS machines
* [nixos-hardware](https://github.com/NixOS/nixos-hardware) - NixOS profiles to optimize settings for different hardware
* [Nix RFCs](https://github.com/NixOS/rfcs) - the formal process for making substantial changes to the community
* [NixOS homepage](https://github.com/NixOS/nixos-homepage) - the [NixOS.org](https://nixos.org) website
* [hydra](https://github.com/NixOS/hydra) - our continuous integration system
* [NixOS Artwork](https://github.com/NixOS/nixos-artwork) - NixOS artwork
# Continuous Integration and Distribution
Nixpkgs and NixOS are built and tested by our continuous integration
system, [Hydra](https://hydra.nixos.org/).
* [Continuous package builds for unstable/master](https://hydra.nixos.org/jobset/nixos/trunk-combined)
* [Continuous package builds for the NixOS 20.09 release](https://hydra.nixos.org/jobset/nixos/release-20.09)
* [Tests for unstable/master](https://hydra.nixos.org/job/nixos/trunk-combined/tested#tabs-constituents)
* [Tests for the NixOS 20.09 release](https://hydra.nixos.org/job/nixos/release-20.09/tested#tabs-constituents)
Artifacts successfully built with Hydra are published to cache at
https://cache.nixos.org/. When successful build and test criteria are
met, the Nixpkgs expressions are distributed via [Nix
channels](https://nixos.org/nix/manual/#sec-channels).
# Contributing
Nixpkgs is among the most active projects on GitHub. While thousands
of open issues and pull requests might seem a lot at first, it helps
consider it in the context of the scope of the project. Nixpkgs
describes how to build tens of thousands of pieces of software and implements a
Linux distribution. The [GitHub Insights](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pulse)
page gives a sense of the project activity.
Community contributions are always welcome through GitHub Issues and
Pull Requests. When pull requests are made, our tooling automation bot,
[OfBorg](https://github.com/NixOS/ofborg) will perform various checks
to help ensure expression quality.
The *Nixpkgs maintainers* are people who have assigned themselves to
maintain specific individual packages. We encourage people who care
about a package to assign themselves as a maintainer. When a pull
request is made against a package, OfBorg will notify the appropriate
maintainer(s). The *Nixpkgs committers* are people who have been given
permission to merge.
Most contributions are based on and merged into these branches:
* `master` is the main branch where all small contributions go
* `staging` is branched from master, changes that have a big impact on
Hydra builds go to this branch
* `staging-next` is branched from staging and only fixes to stabilize
and security fixes with a big impact on Hydra builds should be
contributed to this branch. This branch is merged into master when
deemed of sufficiently high quality
For more information about contributing to the project, please visit
the [contributing page](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/.github/CONTRIBUTING.md).
# Donations
The infrastructure for NixOS and related projects is maintained by a
nonprofit organization, the [NixOS
Foundation](https://nixos.org/nixos/foundation.html). To ensure the
continuity and expansion of the NixOS infrastructure, we are looking
for donations to our organization.
You can donate to the NixOS foundation by using Open Collective:
<a href="https://opencollective.com/nixos#support"><img src="https://opencollective.com/nixos/tiers/supporter.svg?width=890" /></a>
# License
Nixpkgs is licensed under the [MIT License](COPYING).
Note: MIT license does not apply to the packages built by Nixpkgs,
merely to the files in this repository (the Nix expressions, build
scripts, NixOS modules, etc.). It also might not apply to patches
included in Nixpkgs, which may be derivative works of the packages to
which they apply. The aforementioned artifacts are all covered by the
licenses of the respective packages.

View File

@@ -14,11 +14,11 @@ if ! builtins ? nixVersion || builtins.compareVersions requiredVersion builtins.
- If you installed Nix using the install script (https://nixos.org/nix/install),
it is safe to upgrade by running it again:
curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install | sh
curl https://nixos.org/nix/install | sh
For more information, please see the NixOS release notes at
https://nixos.org/nixos/manual or locally at
${toString ./nixos/doc/manual/release-notes}.
${toString ./doc/manual/release-notes}.
If you need further help, see https://nixos.org/nixos/support.html
''

7
doc/.gitignore vendored
View File

@@ -1,8 +1,7 @@
*.chapter.xml
*.section.xml
.version
functions/library/generated
functions/library/locations.xml
highlightjs
manual-full.xml
out
manual-full.xml
highlightjs
functions/library/locations.xml

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
MD_TARGETS=$(addsuffix .xml, $(basename $(shell find . -type f -regex '.*\.md$$' -not -name README.md)))
MD_TARGETS=$(addsuffix .xml, $(basename $(wildcard ./*.md ./**/*.md)))
.PHONY: all
all: validate format out/html/index.html out/epub/manual.epub
@@ -8,11 +8,9 @@ debug:
nix-shell --run "xmloscopy --docbook5 ./manual.xml ./manual-full.xml"
.PHONY: format
format: doc-support/result
find . -iname '*.xml' -type f | while read f; do \
echo $$f ;\
xmlformat --config-file "doc-support/result/xmlformat.conf" -i $$f ;\
done
format:
find . -iname '*.xml' -type f -print0 | xargs -0 -I{} -n1 \
xmlformat --config-file "$$XMLFORMAT_CONFIG" -i {}
.PHONY: fix-misc-xml
fix-misc-xml:
@@ -21,84 +19,86 @@ fix-misc-xml:
.PHONY: clean
clean:
rm -f ${MD_TARGETS} doc-support/result .version manual-full.xml functions/library/locations.xml functions/library/generated
rm -f ${MD_TARGETS} .version manual-full.xml functions/library/locations.xml
rm -rf ./out/ ./highlightjs
.PHONY: validate
validate: manual-full.xml doc-support/result
jing doc-support/result/docbook.rng manual-full.xml
validate: manual-full.xml
jing "$$RNG" manual-full.xml
out/html/index.html: doc-support/result manual-full.xml style.css highlightjs
out/html/index.html: manual-full.xml style.css highlightjs
mkdir -p out/html
xsltproc \
xsltproc ${xsltFlags} \
--nonet --xinclude \
--output $@ \
doc-support/result/xhtml.xsl \
"$$XSL/docbook/xhtml/docbook.xsl" \
./manual-full.xml
mkdir -p out/html/highlightjs/
cp -r highlightjs out/html/
cp -r media out/html/
cp ./overrides.css out/html/
cp ./style.css out/html/style.css
mkdir -p out/html/images/callouts
cp doc-support/result/xsl/docbook/images/callouts/*.svg out/html/images/callouts/
cp "$$XSL/docbook/images/callouts/"*.svg out/html/images/callouts/
chmod u+w -R out/html/
out/epub/manual.epub: manual-full.xml
mkdir -p out/epub/scratch
xsltproc --nonet \
xsltproc ${xsltFlags} --nonet \
--output out/epub/scratch/ \
doc-support/result/epub.xsl \
"$$XSL/docbook/epub/docbook.xsl" \
./manual-full.xml
cp -r media out/epub/scratch/OEBPS
cp ./overrides.css out/epub/scratch/OEBPS
cp ./style.css out/epub/scratch/OEBPS
mkdir -p out/epub/scratch/OEBPS/images/callouts/
cp doc-support/result/xsl/docbook/images/callouts/*.svg out/epub/scratch/OEBPS/images/callouts/
cp "$$XSL/docbook/images/callouts/"*.svg out/epub/scratch/OEBPS/images/callouts/
echo "application/epub+zip" > mimetype
zip -0Xq "out/epub/manual.epub" mimetype
rm mimetype
cd "out/epub/scratch/" && zip -Xr9D "../manual.epub" *
rm -rf "out/epub/scratch/"
highlightjs: doc-support/result
highlightjs:
mkdir -p highlightjs
cp -r doc-support/result/highlightjs/highlight.pack.js highlightjs/
cp -r doc-support/result/highlightjs/LICENSE highlightjs/
cp -r doc-support/result/highlightjs/mono-blue.css highlightjs/
cp -r doc-support/result/highlightjs/loader.js highlightjs/
cp -r "$$HIGHLIGHTJS/highlight.pack.js" highlightjs/
cp -r "$$HIGHLIGHTJS/LICENSE" highlightjs/
cp -r "$$HIGHLIGHTJS/mono-blue.css" highlightjs/
cp -r "$$HIGHLIGHTJS/loader.js" highlightjs/
manual-full.xml: ${MD_TARGETS} .version functions/library/locations.xml functions/library/generated *.xml **/*.xml **/**/*.xml
manual-full.xml: ${MD_TARGETS} .version functions/library/locations.xml *.xml **/*.xml **/**/*.xml
xmllint --nonet --xinclude --noxincludenode manual.xml --output manual-full.xml
.version: doc-support/result
ln -rfs ./doc-support/result/version .version
.version:
nix-instantiate --eval \
-E '(import ../lib).version' > .version
doc-support/result: doc-support/default.nix
(cd doc-support; nix-build)
functions/library/locations.xml: doc-support/result
ln -rfs ./doc-support/result/function-locations.xml functions/library/locations.xml
functions/library/generated: doc-support/result
ln -rfs ./doc-support/result/function-docs functions/library/generated
functions/library/locations.xml:
nix-build ./lib-function-locations.nix \
--out-link ./functions/library/locations.xml
%.section.xml: %.section.md
pandoc $^ -t docbook \
--extract-media=media \
--lua-filter=$(PANDOC_LUA_FILTERS_DIR)/diagram-generator.lua \
pandoc $^ -w docbook+smart \
-f markdown+smart \
| sed -e 's|<ulink url=|<link xlink:href=|' \
-e 's|</ulink>|</link>|' \
-e 's|<sect. id=|<section xml:id=|' \
-e 's|</sect[0-9]>|</section>|' \
-e '1s| id=| xml:id=|' \
-e '1s|\(<[^ ]* \)|\1xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" |' \
| cat > $@
%.chapter.xml: %.chapter.md
pandoc $^ -t docbook \
pandoc $^ -w docbook+smart \
--top-level-division=chapter \
--extract-media=media \
--lua-filter=$(PANDOC_LUA_FILTERS_DIR)/diagram-generator.lua \
-f markdown+smart \
| sed -e 's|<ulink url=|<link xlink:href=|' \
-e 's|</ulink>|</link>|' \
-e 's|<sect. id=|<section xml:id=|' \
-e 's|</sect[0-9]>|</section>|' \
-e '1s| id=| xml:id=|' \
-e '1s|\(<[^ ]* \)|\1|' \
| cat > $@

View File

@@ -1,12 +0,0 @@
# Nixpkgs/doc
This directory houses the sources files for the Nixpkgs manual.
You can find the [rendered documentation for Nixpkgs `unstable` on nixos.org](https://nixos.org/manual/nixpkgs/unstable/).
[Docs for Nixpkgs stable](https://nixos.org/manual/nixpkgs/stable/) are also available.
If you want to contribute to the documentation, [here's how to do it](https://nixos.org/manual/nixpkgs/unstable/#chap-contributing).
If you're only getting started with Nix, go to [nixos.org/learn](https://nixos.org/learn).

View File

@@ -1,78 +0,0 @@
# Fetchers {#chap-pkgs-fetchers}
When using Nix, you will frequently need to download source code and other files from the internet. Nixpkgs comes with a few helper functions that allow you to fetch fixed-output derivations in a structured way.
The two fetcher primitives are `fetchurl` and `fetchzip`. Both of these have two required arguments, a URL and a hash. The hash is typically `sha256`, although many more hash algorithms are supported. Nixpkgs contributors are currently recommended to use `sha256`. This hash will be used by Nix to identify your source. A typical usage of fetchurl is provided below.
```nix
{ stdenv, fetchurl }:
stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "hello";
src = fetchurl {
url = "http://www.example.org/hello.tar.gz";
sha256 = "1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111";
};
}
```
The main difference between `fetchurl` and `fetchzip` is in how they store the contents. `fetchurl` will store the unaltered contents of the URL within the Nix store. `fetchzip` on the other hand will decompress the archive for you, making files and directories directly accessible in the future. `fetchzip` can only be used with archives. Despite the name, `fetchzip` is not limited to .zip files and can also be used with any tarball.
`fetchpatch` works very similarly to `fetchurl` with the same arguments expected. It expects patch files as a source and performs normalization on them before computing the checksum. For example it will remove comments or other unstable parts that are sometimes added by version control systems and can change over time.
Other fetcher functions allow you to add source code directly from a VCS such as subversion or git. These are mostly straightforward nambes based on the name of the command used with the VCS system. Because they give you a working repository, they act most like `fetchzip`.
## `fetchsvn`
Used with Subversion. Expects `url` to a Subversion directory, `rev`, and `sha256`.
## `fetchgit`
Used with Git. Expects `url` to a Git repo, `rev`, and `sha256`. `rev` in this case can be full the git commit id (SHA1 hash) or a tag name like `refs/tags/v1.0`.
Additionally the following optional arguments can be given: `fetchSubmodules = true` makes `fetchgit` also fetch the submodules of a repository. If `deepClone` is set to true, the entire repository is cloned as opposing to just creating a shallow clone. `deepClone = true` also implies `leaveDotGit = true` which means that the `.git` directory of the clone won't be removed after checkout.
## `fetchfossil`
Used with Fossil. Expects `url` to a Fossil archive, `rev`, and `sha256`.
## `fetchcvs`
Used with CVS. Expects `cvsRoot`, `tag`, and `sha256`.
## `fetchhg`
Used with Mercurial. Expects `url`, `rev`, and `sha256`.
A number of fetcher functions wrap part of `fetchurl` and `fetchzip`. They are mainly convenience functions intended for commonly used destinations of source code in Nixpkgs. These wrapper fetchers are listed below.
## `fetchFromGitHub`
`fetchFromGitHub` expects four arguments. `owner` is a string corresponding to the GitHub user or organization that controls this repository. `repo` corresponds to the name of the software repository. These are located at the top of every GitHub HTML page as `owner`/`repo`. `rev` corresponds to the Git commit hash or tag (e.g `v1.0`) that will be downloaded from Git. Finally, `sha256` corresponds to the hash of the extracted directory. Again, other hash algorithms are also available but `sha256` is currently preferred.
`fetchFromGitHub` uses `fetchzip` to download the source archive generated by GitHub for the specified revision. If `leaveDotGit`, `deepClone` or `fetchSubmodules` are set to `true`, `fetchFromGitHub` will use `fetchgit` instead. Refer to its section for documentation of these options.
## `fetchFromGitLab`
This is used with GitLab repositories. The arguments expected are very similar to fetchFromGitHub above.
## `fetchFromGitiles`
This is used with Gitiles repositories. The arguments expected are similar to fetchgit.
## `fetchFromBitbucket`
This is used with BitBucket repositories. The arguments expected are very similar to fetchFromGitHub above.
## `fetchFromSavannah`
This is used with Savannah repositories. The arguments expected are very similar to fetchFromGitHub above.
## `fetchFromRepoOrCz`
This is used with repo.or.cz repositories. The arguments expected are very similar to fetchFromGitHub above.
## `fetchFromSourcehut`
This is used with sourcehut repositories. The arguments expected are very similar to fetchFromGitHub above. Don't forget the tilde (~) in front of the user name!

View File

@@ -1,12 +0,0 @@
<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
xml:id="chap-images">
<title>Images</title>
<para>
This chapter describes tools for creating various types of images.
</para>
<xi:include href="images/appimagetools.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="images/dockertools.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="images/ocitools.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="images/snaptools.section.xml" />
</chapter>

View File

@@ -1,48 +0,0 @@
# pkgs.appimageTools {#sec-pkgs-appimageTools}
`pkgs.appimageTools` is a set of functions for extracting and wrapping [AppImage](https://appimage.org/) files. They are meant to be used if traditional packaging from source is infeasible, or it would take too long. To quickly run an AppImage file, `pkgs.appimage-run` can be used as well.
::: warning
The `appimageTools` API is unstable and may be subject to backwards-incompatible changes in the future.
:::
## AppImage formats {#ssec-pkgs-appimageTools-formats}
There are different formats for AppImages, see [the specification](https://github.com/AppImage/AppImageSpec/blob/74ad9ca2f94bf864a4a0dac1f369dd4f00bd1c28/draft.md#image-format) for details.
- Type 1 images are ISO 9660 files that are also ELF executables.
- Type 2 images are ELF executables with an appended filesystem.
They can be told apart with `file -k`:
```ShellSession
$ file -k type1.AppImage
type1.AppImage: ELF 64-bit LSB executable, x86-64, version 1 (SYSV) ISO 9660 CD-ROM filesystem data 'AppImage' (Lepton 3.x), scale 0-0,
spot sensor temperature 0.000000, unit celsius, color scheme 0, calibration: offset 0.000000, slope 0.000000, dynamically linked, interpreter /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2, for GNU/Linux 2.6.18, BuildID[sha1]=d629f6099d2344ad82818172add1d38c5e11bc6d, stripped\012- data
$ file -k type2.AppImage
type2.AppImage: ELF 64-bit LSB executable, x86-64, version 1 (SYSV) (Lepton 3.x), scale 232-60668, spot sensor temperature -4.187500, color scheme 15, show scale bar, calibration: offset -0.000000, slope 0.000000 (Lepton 2.x), scale 4111-45000, spot sensor temperature 412442.250000, color scheme 3, minimum point enabled, calibration: offset -75402534979642766821519867692934234112.000000, slope 5815371847733706829839455140374904832.000000, dynamically linked, interpreter /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2, for GNU/Linux 2.6.18, BuildID[sha1]=79dcc4e55a61c293c5e19edbd8d65b202842579f, stripped\012- data
```
Note how the type 1 AppImage is described as an `ISO 9660 CD-ROM filesystem`, and the type 2 AppImage is not.
## Wrapping {#ssec-pkgs-appimageTools-wrapping}
Depending on the type of AppImage you're wrapping, you'll have to use `wrapType1` or `wrapType2`.
```nix
appimageTools.wrapType2 { # or wrapType1
name = "patchwork";
src = fetchurl {
url = "https://github.com/ssbc/patchwork/releases/download/v3.11.4/Patchwork-3.11.4-linux-x86_64.AppImage";
sha256 = "1blsprpkvm0ws9b96gb36f0rbf8f5jgmw4x6dsb1kswr4ysf591s";
};
extraPkgs = pkgs: with pkgs; [ ];
}
```
- `name` specifies the name of the resulting image.
- `src` specifies the AppImage file to extract.
- `extraPkgs` allows you to pass a function to include additional packages inside the FHS environment your AppImage is going to run in. There are a few ways to learn which dependencies an application needs:
- Looking through the extracted AppImage files, reading its scripts and running `patchelf` and `ldd` on its executables. This can also be done in `appimage-run`, by setting `APPIMAGE_DEBUG_EXEC=bash`.
- Running `strace -vfefile` on the wrapped executable, looking for libraries that can't be found.

View File

@@ -1,308 +0,0 @@
# pkgs.dockerTools {#sec-pkgs-dockerTools}
`pkgs.dockerTools` is a set of functions for creating and manipulating Docker images according to the [ Docker Image Specification v1.2.0 ](https://github.com/moby/moby/blob/master/image/spec/v1.2.md#docker-image-specification-v120). Docker itself is not used to perform any of the operations done by these functions.
## buildImage {#ssec-pkgs-dockerTools-buildImage}
This function is analogous to the `docker build` command, in that it can be used to build a Docker-compatible repository tarball containing a single image with one or multiple layers. As such, the result is suitable for being loaded in Docker with `docker load`.
The parameters of `buildImage` with relative example values are described below:
[]{#ex-dockerTools-buildImage}
[]{#ex-dockerTools-buildImage-runAsRoot}
```nix
buildImage {
name = "redis";
tag = "latest";
fromImage = someBaseImage;
fromImageName = null;
fromImageTag = "latest";
contents = pkgs.redis;
runAsRoot = ''
#!${pkgs.runtimeShell}
mkdir -p /data
'';
config = {
Cmd = [ "/bin/redis-server" ];
WorkingDir = "/data";
Volumes = { "/data" = { }; };
};
}
```
The above example will build a Docker image `redis/latest` from the given base image. Loading and running this image in Docker results in `redis-server` being started automatically.
- `name` specifies the name of the resulting image. This is the only required argument for `buildImage`.
- `tag` specifies the tag of the resulting image. By default it's `null`, which indicates that the nix output hash will be used as tag.
- `fromImage` is the repository tarball containing the base image. It must be a valid Docker image, such as exported by `docker save`. By default it's `null`, which can be seen as equivalent to `FROM scratch` of a `Dockerfile`.
- `fromImageName` can be used to further specify the base image within the repository, in case it contains multiple images. By default it's `null`, in which case `buildImage` will peek the first image available in the repository.
- `fromImageTag` can be used to further specify the tag of the base image within the repository, in case an image contains multiple tags. By default it's `null`, in which case `buildImage` will peek the first tag available for the base image.
- `contents` is a derivation that will be copied in the new layer of the resulting image. This can be similarly seen as `ADD contents/ /` in a `Dockerfile`. By default it's `null`.
- `runAsRoot` is a bash script that will run as root in an environment that overlays the existing layers of the base image with the new resulting layer, including the previously copied `contents` derivation. This can be similarly seen as `RUN ...` in a `Dockerfile`.
> **_NOTE:_** Using this parameter requires the `kvm` device to be available.
- `config` is used to specify the configuration of the containers that will be started off the built image in Docker. The available options are listed in the [ Docker Image Specification v1.2.0 ](https://github.com/moby/moby/blob/master/image/spec/v1.2.md#image-json-field-descriptions).
After the new layer has been created, its closure (to which `contents`, `config` and `runAsRoot` contribute) will be copied in the layer itself. Only new dependencies that are not already in the existing layers will be copied.
At the end of the process, only one new single layer will be produced and added to the resulting image.
The resulting repository will only list the single image `image/tag`. In the case of [the `buildImage` example](#ex-dockerTools-buildImage) it would be `redis/latest`.
It is possible to inspect the arguments with which an image was built using its `buildArgs` attribute.
> **_NOTE:_** If you see errors similar to `getProtocolByName: does not exist (no such protocol name: tcp)` you may need to add `pkgs.iana-etc` to `contents`.
> **_NOTE:_** If you see errors similar to `Error_Protocol ("certificate has unknown CA",True,UnknownCa)` you may need to add `pkgs.cacert` to `contents`.
By default `buildImage` will use a static date of one second past the UNIX Epoch. This allows `buildImage` to produce binary reproducible images. When listing images with `docker images`, the newly created images will be listed like this:
```ShellSession
$ docker images
REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE
hello latest 08c791c7846e 48 years ago 25.2MB
```
You can break binary reproducibility but have a sorted, meaningful `CREATED` column by setting `created` to `now`.
```nix
pkgs.dockerTools.buildImage {
name = "hello";
tag = "latest";
created = "now";
contents = pkgs.hello;
config.Cmd = [ "/bin/hello" ];
}
```
and now the Docker CLI will display a reasonable date and sort the images as expected:
```ShellSession
$ docker images
REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE
hello latest de2bf4786de6 About a minute ago 25.2MB
```
however, the produced images will not be binary reproducible.
## buildLayeredImage {#ssec-pkgs-dockerTools-buildLayeredImage}
Create a Docker image with many of the store paths being on their own layer to improve sharing between images. The image is realized into the Nix store as a gzipped tarball. Depending on the intended usage, many users might prefer to use `streamLayeredImage` instead, which this function uses internally.
`name`
: The name of the resulting image.
`tag` _optional_
: Tag of the generated image.
*Default:* the output path's hash
`fromImage` _optional_
: The repository tarball containing the base image. It must be a valid Docker image, such as one exported by `docker save`.
*Default:* `null`, which can be seen as equivalent to `FROM scratch` of a `Dockerfile`.
`contents` _optional_
: Top level paths in the container. Either a single derivation, or a list of derivations.
*Default:* `[]`
`config` _optional_
: Run-time configuration of the container. A full list of the options are available at in the [ Docker Image Specification v1.2.0 ](https://github.com/moby/moby/blob/master/image/spec/v1.2.md#image-json-field-descriptions).
*Default:* `{}`
`created` _optional_
: Date and time the layers were created. Follows the same `now` exception supported by `buildImage`.
*Default:* `1970-01-01T00:00:01Z`
`maxLayers` _optional_
: Maximum number of layers to create.
*Default:* `100`
*Maximum:* `125`
`extraCommands` _optional_
: Shell commands to run while building the final layer, without access to most of the layer contents. Changes to this layer are "on top" of all the other layers, so can create additional directories and files.
`fakeRootCommands` _optional_
: Shell commands to run while creating the archive for the final layer in a fakeroot environment. Unlike `extraCommands`, you can run `chown` to change the owners of the files in the archive, changing fakeroot's state instead of the real filesystem. The latter would require privileges that the build user does not have. Static binaries do not interact with the fakeroot environment. By default all files in the archive will be owned by root.
### Behavior of `contents` in the final image {#dockerTools-buildLayeredImage-arg-contents}
Each path directly listed in `contents` will have a symlink in the root of the image.
For example:
```nix
pkgs.dockerTools.buildLayeredImage {
name = "hello";
contents = [ pkgs.hello ];
}
```
will create symlinks for all the paths in the `hello` package:
```ShellSession
/bin/hello -> /nix/store/h1zb1padqbbb7jicsvkmrym3r6snphxg-hello-2.10/bin/hello
/share/info/hello.info -> /nix/store/h1zb1padqbbb7jicsvkmrym3r6snphxg-hello-2.10/share/info/hello.info
/share/locale/bg/LC_MESSAGES/hello.mo -> /nix/store/h1zb1padqbbb7jicsvkmrym3r6snphxg-hello-2.10/share/locale/bg/LC_MESSAGES/hello.mo
```
### Automatic inclusion of `config` references {#dockerTools-buildLayeredImage-arg-config}
The closure of `config` is automatically included in the closure of the final image.
This allows you to make very simple Docker images with very little code. This container will start up and run `hello`:
```nix
pkgs.dockerTools.buildLayeredImage {
name = "hello";
config.Cmd = [ "${pkgs.hello}/bin/hello" ];
}
```
### Adjusting `maxLayers` {#dockerTools-buildLayeredImage-arg-maxLayers}
Increasing the `maxLayers` increases the number of layers which have a chance to be shared between different images.
Modern Docker installations support up to 128 layers, however older versions support as few as 42.
If the produced image will not be extended by other Docker builds, it is safe to set `maxLayers` to `128`. However it will be impossible to extend the image further.
The first (`maxLayers-2`) most "popular" paths will have their own individual layers, then layer \#`maxLayers-1` will contain all the remaining "unpopular" paths, and finally layer \#`maxLayers` will contain the Image configuration.
Docker's Layers are not inherently ordered, they are content-addressable and are not explicitly layered until they are composed in to an Image.
## streamLayeredImage {#ssec-pkgs-dockerTools-streamLayeredImage}
Builds a script which, when run, will stream an uncompressed tarball of a Docker image to stdout. The arguments to this function are as for `buildLayeredImage`. This method of constructing an image does not realize the image into the Nix store, so it saves on IO and disk/cache space, particularly with large images.
The image produced by running the output script can be piped directly into `docker load`, to load it into the local docker daemon:
```ShellSession
$(nix-build) | docker load
```
Alternatively, the image be piped via `gzip` into `skopeo`, e.g. to copy it into a registry:
```ShellSession
$(nix-build) | gzip --fast | skopeo copy docker-archive:/dev/stdin docker://some_docker_registry/myimage:tag
```
## pullImage {#ssec-pkgs-dockerTools-fetchFromRegistry}
This function is analogous to the `docker pull` command, in that it can be used to pull a Docker image from a Docker registry. By default [Docker Hub](https://hub.docker.com/) is used to pull images.
Its parameters are described in the example below:
```nix
pullImage {
imageName = "nixos/nix";
imageDigest =
"sha256:20d9485b25ecfd89204e843a962c1bd70e9cc6858d65d7f5fadc340246e2116b";
finalImageName = "nix";
finalImageTag = "1.11";
sha256 = "0mqjy3zq2v6rrhizgb9nvhczl87lcfphq9601wcprdika2jz7qh8";
os = "linux";
arch = "x86_64";
}
```
- `imageName` specifies the name of the image to be downloaded, which can also include the registry namespace (e.g. `nixos`). This argument is required.
- `imageDigest` specifies the digest of the image to be downloaded. This argument is required.
- `finalImageName`, if specified, this is the name of the image to be created. Note it is never used to fetch the image since we prefer to rely on the immutable digest ID. By default it's equal to `imageName`.
- `finalImageTag`, if specified, this is the tag of the image to be created. Note it is never used to fetch the image since we prefer to rely on the immutable digest ID. By default it's `latest`.
- `sha256` is the checksum of the whole fetched image. This argument is required.
- `os`, if specified, is the operating system of the fetched image. By default it's `linux`.
- `arch`, if specified, is the cpu architecture of the fetched image. By default it's `x86_64`.
`nix-prefetch-docker` command can be used to get required image parameters:
```ShellSession
$ nix run nixpkgs.nix-prefetch-docker -c nix-prefetch-docker --image-name mysql --image-tag 5
```
Since a given `imageName` may transparently refer to a manifest list of images which support multiple architectures and/or operating systems, you can supply the `--os` and `--arch` arguments to specify exactly which image you want. By default it will match the OS and architecture of the host the command is run on.
```ShellSession
$ nix-prefetch-docker --image-name mysql --image-tag 5 --arch x86_64 --os linux
```
Desired image name and tag can be set using `--final-image-name` and `--final-image-tag` arguments:
```ShellSession
$ nix-prefetch-docker --image-name mysql --image-tag 5 --final-image-name eu.gcr.io/my-project/mysql --final-image-tag prod
```
## exportImage {#ssec-pkgs-dockerTools-exportImage}
This function is analogous to the `docker export` command, in that it can be used to flatten a Docker image that contains multiple layers. It is in fact the result of the merge of all the layers of the image. As such, the result is suitable for being imported in Docker with `docker import`.
> **_NOTE:_** Using this function requires the `kvm` device to be available.
The parameters of `exportImage` are the following:
```nix
exportImage {
fromImage = someLayeredImage;
fromImageName = null;
fromImageTag = null;
name = someLayeredImage.name;
}
```
The parameters relative to the base image have the same synopsis as described in [buildImage](#ssec-pkgs-dockerTools-buildImage), except that `fromImage` is the only required argument in this case.
The `name` argument is the name of the derivation output, which defaults to `fromImage.name`.
## shadowSetup {#ssec-pkgs-dockerTools-shadowSetup}
This constant string is a helper for setting up the base files for managing users and groups, only if such files don't exist already. It is suitable for being used in a [`buildImage` `runAsRoot`](#ex-dockerTools-buildImage-runAsRoot) script for cases like in the example below:
```nix
buildImage {
name = "shadow-basic";
runAsRoot = ''
#!${pkgs.runtimeShell}
${shadowSetup}
groupadd -r redis
useradd -r -g redis redis
mkdir /data
chown redis:redis /data
'';
}
```
Creating base files like `/etc/passwd` or `/etc/login.defs` is necessary for shadow-utils to manipulate users and groups.

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# pkgs.ociTools {#sec-pkgs-ociTools}
`pkgs.ociTools` is a set of functions for creating containers according to the [OCI container specification v1.0.0](https://github.com/opencontainers/runtime-spec). Beyond that it makes no assumptions about the container runner you choose to use to run the created container.
## buildContainer {#ssec-pkgs-ociTools-buildContainer}
This function creates a simple OCI container that runs a single command inside of it. An OCI container consists of a `config.json` and a rootfs directory.The nix store of the container will contain all referenced dependencies of the given command.
The parameters of `buildContainer` with an example value are described below:
```nix
buildContainer {
args = [
(with pkgs;
writeScript "run.sh" ''
#!${bash}/bin/bash
exec ${bash}/bin/bash
'').outPath
];
mounts = {
"/data" = {
type = "none";
source = "/var/lib/mydata";
options = [ "bind" ];
};
};
readonly = false;
}
```
- `args` specifies a set of arguments to run inside the container. This is the only required argument for `buildContainer`. All referenced packages inside the derivation will be made available inside the container
- `mounts` specifies additional mount points chosen by the user. By default only a minimal set of necessary filesystems are mounted into the container (e.g procfs, cgroupfs)
- `readonly` makes the container\'s rootfs read-only if it is set to true. The default value is false `false`.

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@@ -1,71 +0,0 @@
# pkgs.snapTools {#sec-pkgs-snapTools}
`pkgs.snapTools` is a set of functions for creating Snapcraft images. Snap and Snapcraft is not used to perform these operations.
## The makeSnap Function {#ssec-pkgs-snapTools-makeSnap-signature}
`makeSnap` takes a single named argument, `meta`. This argument mirrors [the upstream `snap.yaml` format](https://docs.snapcraft.io/snap-format) exactly.
The `base` should not be specified, as `makeSnap` will force set it.
Currently, `makeSnap` does not support creating GUI stubs.
## Build a Hello World Snap {#ssec-pkgs-snapTools-build-a-snap-hello}
The following expression packages GNU Hello as a Snapcraft snap.
```{#ex-snapTools-buildSnap-hello .nix}
let
inherit (import <nixpkgs> { }) snapTools hello;
in snapTools.makeSnap {
meta = {
name = "hello";
summary = hello.meta.description;
description = hello.meta.longDescription;
architectures = [ "amd64" ];
confinement = "strict";
apps.hello.command = "${hello}/bin/hello";
};
}
```
`nix-build` this expression and install it with `snap install ./result --dangerous`. `hello` will now be the Snapcraft version of the package.
## Build a Graphical Snap {#ssec-pkgs-snapTools-build-a-snap-firefox}
Graphical programs require many more integrations with the host. This example uses Firefox as an example, because it is one of the most complicated programs we could package.
```{#ex-snapTools-buildSnap-firefox .nix}
let
inherit (import <nixpkgs> { }) snapTools firefox;
in snapTools.makeSnap {
meta = {
name = "nix-example-firefox";
summary = firefox.meta.description;
architectures = [ "amd64" ];
apps.nix-example-firefox = {
command = "${firefox}/bin/firefox";
plugs = [
"pulseaudio"
"camera"
"browser-support"
"avahi-observe"
"cups-control"
"desktop"
"desktop-legacy"
"gsettings"
"home"
"network"
"mount-observe"
"removable-media"
"x11"
];
};
confinement = "strict";
};
}
```
`nix-build` this expression and install it with `snap install ./result --dangerous`. `nix-example-firefox` will now be the Snapcraft version of the Firefox package.
The specific meaning behind plugs can be looked up in the [Snapcraft interface documentation](https://docs.snapcraft.io/supported-interfaces).

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@@ -1,129 +0,0 @@
# Cataclysm: Dark Days Ahead {#cataclysm-dark-days-ahead}
## How to install Cataclysm DDA
To install the latest stable release of Cataclysm DDA to your profile, execute
`nix-env -f "<nixpkgs>" -iA cataclysm-dda`. For the curses build (build
without tiles), install `cataclysmDDA.stable.curses`. Note: `cataclysm-dda` is
an alias to `cataclysmDDA.stable.tiles`.
If you like access to a development build of your favorite git revision,
override `cataclysm-dda-git` (or `cataclysmDDA.git.curses` if you like curses
build):
```nix
cataclysm-dda-git.override {
version = "YYYY-MM-DD";
rev = "YOUR_FAVORITE_REVISION";
sha256 = "CHECKSUM_OF_THE_REVISION";
}
```
The sha256 checksum can be obtained by
```sh
nix-prefetch-url --unpack "https://github.com/CleverRaven/Cataclysm-DDA/archive/${YOUR_FAVORITE_REVISION}.tar.gz"
```
The default configuration directory is `~/.cataclysm-dda`. If you prefer
`$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/cataclysm-dda`, override the derivation:
```nix
cataclysm-dda.override {
useXdgDir = true;
}
```
## Important note for overriding packages
After applying `overrideAttrs`, you need to fix `passthru.pkgs` and
`passthru.withMods` attributes either manually or by using `attachPkgs`:
```nix
let
# You enabled parallel building.
myCDDA = cataclysm-dda-git.overrideAttrs (_: {
enableParallelBuilding = true;
});
# Unfortunately, this refers to the package before overriding and
# parallel building is still disabled.
badExample = myCDDA.withMods (_: []);
inherit (cataclysmDDA) attachPkgs pkgs wrapCDDA;
# You can fix it by hand
goodExample1 = myCDDA.overrideAttrs (old: {
passthru = old.passthru // {
pkgs = pkgs.override { build = goodExample1; };
withMods = wrapCDDA goodExample1;
};
});
# or by using a helper function `attachPkgs`.
goodExample2 = attachPkgs pkgs myCDDA;
in
# badExample # parallel building disabled
# goodExample1.withMods (_: []) # parallel building enabled
goodExample2.withMods (_: []) # parallel building enabled
```
## Customizing with mods
To install Cataclysm DDA with mods of your choice, you can use `withMods`
attribute:
```nix
cataclysm-dda.withMods (mods: with mods; [
tileset.UndeadPeople
])
```
All mods, soundpacks, and tilesets available in nixpkgs are found in
`cataclysmDDA.pkgs`.
Here is an example to modify existing mods and/or add more mods not available
in nixpkgs:
```nix
let
customMods = self: super: lib.recursiveUpdate super {
# Modify existing mod
tileset.UndeadPeople = super.tileset.UndeadPeople.overrideAttrs (old: {
# If you like to apply a patch to the tileset for example
patches = [ ./path/to/your.patch ];
});
# Add another mod
mod.Awesome = cataclysmDDA.buildMod {
modName = "Awesome";
version = "0.x";
src = fetchFromGitHub {
owner = "Someone";
repo = "AwesomeMod";
rev = "...";
sha256 = "...";
};
# Path to be installed in the unpacked source (default: ".")
modRoot = "contents/under/this/path/will/be/installed";
};
# Add another soundpack
soundpack.Fantastic = cataclysmDDA.buildSoundPack {
# ditto
};
# Add another tileset
tileset.SuperDuper = cataclysmDDA.buildTileSet {
# ditto
};
};
in
cataclysm-dda.withMods (mods: with mods.extend customMods; [
tileset.UndeadPeople
mod.Awesome
soundpack.Fantastic
tileset.SuperDuper
])
```

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@@ -1,32 +0,0 @@
# Citrix Workspace {#sec-citrix}
The [Citrix Workspace App](https://www.citrix.com/products/workspace-app/) is a remote desktop viewer which provides access to [XenDesktop](https://www.citrix.com/products/xenapp-xendesktop/) installations.
## Basic usage {#sec-citrix-base}
The tarball archive needs to be downloaded manually as the license agreements of the vendor for [Citrix Workspace](https://www.citrix.de/downloads/workspace-app/linux/workspace-app-for-linux-latest.html) needs to be accepted first. Then run `nix-prefetch-url file://$PWD/linuxx64-$version.tar.gz`. With the archive available in the store the package can be built and installed with Nix.
## Citrix Selfservice {#sec-citrix-selfservice}
The [selfservice](https://support.citrix.com/article/CTX200337) is an application managing Citrix desktops and applications. Please note that this feature only works with at least citrix_workspace_20_06_0 and later versions.
In order to set this up, you first have to [download the `.cr` file from the Netscaler Gateway](https://its.uiowa.edu/support/article/102186). After that you can configure the `selfservice` like this:
```ShellSession
$ storebrowse -C ~/Downloads/receiverconfig.cr
$ selfservice
```
## Custom certificates {#sec-citrix-custom-certs}
The `Citrix Workspace App` in `nixpkgs` trusts several certificates [from the Mozilla database](https://curl.haxx.se/docs/caextract.html) by default. However several companies using Citrix might require their own corporate certificate. On distros with imperative packaging these certs can be stored easily in [`$ICAROOT`](https://developer-docs.citrix.com/projects/receiver-for-linux-command-reference/en/13.7/), however this directory is a store path in `nixpkgs`. In order to work around this issue the package provides a simple mechanism to add custom certificates without rebuilding the entire package using `symlinkJoin`:
```nix
with import <nixpkgs> { config.allowUnfree = true; };
let
extraCerts = [
./custom-cert-1.pem
./custom-cert-2.pem # ...
];
in citrix_workspace.override { inherit extraCerts; }
```

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@@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
# DLib {#dlib}
[DLib](http://dlib.net/) is a modern, C++-based toolkit which provides several machine learning algorithms.
## Compiling without AVX support {#compiling-without-avx-support}
Especially older CPUs don\'t support [AVX](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advanced_Vector_Extensions) (Advanced Vector Extensions) instructions that are used by DLib to optimize their algorithms.
On the affected hardware errors like `Illegal instruction` will occur. In those cases AVX support needs to be disabled:
```nix
self: super: { dlib = super.dlib.override { avxSupport = false; }; }
```

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@@ -1,64 +0,0 @@
# Eclipse {#sec-eclipse}
The Nix expressions related to the Eclipse platform and IDE are in [`pkgs/applications/editors/eclipse`](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/applications/editors/eclipse).
Nixpkgs provides a number of packages that will install Eclipse in its various forms. These range from the bare-bones Eclipse Platform to the more fully featured Eclipse SDK or Scala-IDE packages and multiple version are often available. It is possible to list available Eclipse packages by issuing the command:
```ShellSession
$ nix-env -f '<nixpkgs>' -qaP -A eclipses --description
```
Once an Eclipse variant is installed it can be run using the `eclipse` command, as expected. From within Eclipse it is then possible to install plugins in the usual manner by either manually specifying an Eclipse update site or by installing the Marketplace Client plugin and using it to discover and install other plugins. This installation method provides an Eclipse installation that closely resemble a manually installed Eclipse.
If you prefer to install plugins in a more declarative manner then Nixpkgs also offer a number of Eclipse plugins that can be installed in an _Eclipse environment_. This type of environment is created using the function `eclipseWithPlugins` found inside the `nixpkgs.eclipses` attribute set. This function takes as argument `{ eclipse, plugins ? [], jvmArgs ? [] }` where `eclipse` is a one of the Eclipse packages described above, `plugins` is a list of plugin derivations, and `jvmArgs` is a list of arguments given to the JVM running the Eclipse. For example, say you wish to install the latest Eclipse Platform with the popular Eclipse Color Theme plugin and also allow Eclipse to use more RAM. You could then add
```nix
packageOverrides = pkgs: {
myEclipse = with pkgs.eclipses; eclipseWithPlugins {
eclipse = eclipse-platform;
jvmArgs = [ "-Xmx2048m" ];
plugins = [ plugins.color-theme ];
};
}
```
to your Nixpkgs configuration (`~/.config/nixpkgs/config.nix`) and install it by running `nix-env -f '<nixpkgs>' -iA myEclipse` and afterward run Eclipse as usual. It is possible to find out which plugins are available for installation using `eclipseWithPlugins` by running
```ShellSession
$ nix-env -f '<nixpkgs>' -qaP -A eclipses.plugins --description
```
If there is a need to install plugins that are not available in Nixpkgs then it may be possible to define these plugins outside Nixpkgs using the `buildEclipseUpdateSite` and `buildEclipsePlugin` functions found in the `nixpkgs.eclipses.plugins` attribute set. Use the `buildEclipseUpdateSite` function to install a plugin distributed as an Eclipse update site. This function takes `{ name, src }` as argument where `src` indicates the Eclipse update site archive. All Eclipse features and plugins within the downloaded update site will be installed. When an update site archive is not available then the `buildEclipsePlugin` function can be used to install a plugin that consists of a pair of feature and plugin JARs. This function takes an argument `{ name, srcFeature, srcPlugin }` where `srcFeature` and `srcPlugin` are the feature and plugin JARs, respectively.
Expanding the previous example with two plugins using the above functions we have
```nix
packageOverrides = pkgs: {
myEclipse = with pkgs.eclipses; eclipseWithPlugins {
eclipse = eclipse-platform;
jvmArgs = [ "-Xmx2048m" ];
plugins = [
plugins.color-theme
(plugins.buildEclipsePlugin {
name = "myplugin1-1.0";
srcFeature = fetchurl {
url = "http:///features/myplugin1.jar";
sha256 = "123";
};
srcPlugin = fetchurl {
url = "http:///plugins/myplugin1.jar";
sha256 = "123";
};
});
(plugins.buildEclipseUpdateSite {
name = "myplugin2-1.0";
src = fetchurl {
stripRoot = false;
url = "http:///myplugin2.zip";
sha256 = "123";
};
});
];
};
}
```

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@@ -1,11 +0,0 @@
# Elm {#sec-elm}
To start a development environment do
```ShellSession
nix-shell -p elmPackages.elm elmPackages.elm-format
```
To update the Elm compiler, see <filename>nixpkgs/pkgs/development/compilers/elm/README.md</filename>.
To package Elm applications, [read about elm2nix](https://github.com/hercules-ci/elm2nix#elm2nix).

View File

@@ -1,119 +0,0 @@
# Emacs {#sec-emacs}
## Configuring Emacs {#sec-emacs-config}
The Emacs package comes with some extra helpers to make it easier to configure. `emacs.pkgs.withPackages` allows you to manage packages from ELPA. This means that you will not have to install that packages from within Emacs. For instance, if you wanted to use `company` `counsel`, `flycheck`, `ivy`, `magit`, `projectile`, and `use-package` you could use this as a `~/.config/nixpkgs/config.nix` override:
```nix
{
packageOverrides = pkgs: with pkgs; {
myEmacs = emacs.pkgs.withPackages (epkgs: (with epkgs.melpaStablePackages; [
company
counsel
flycheck
ivy
magit
projectile
use-package
]));
}
}
```
You can install it like any other packages via `nix-env -iA myEmacs`. However, this will only install those packages. It will not `configure` them for us. To do this, we need to provide a configuration file. Luckily, it is possible to do this from within Nix! By modifying the above example, we can make Emacs load a custom config file. The key is to create a package that provide a `default.el` file in `/share/emacs/site-start/`. Emacs knows to load this file automatically when it starts.
```nix
{
packageOverrides = pkgs: with pkgs; rec {
myEmacsConfig = writeText "default.el" ''
;; initialize package
(require 'package)
(package-initialize 'noactivate)
(eval-when-compile
(require 'use-package))
;; load some packages
(use-package company
:bind ("<C-tab>" . company-complete)
:diminish company-mode
:commands (company-mode global-company-mode)
:defer 1
:config
(global-company-mode))
(use-package counsel
:commands (counsel-descbinds)
:bind (([remap execute-extended-command] . counsel-M-x)
("C-x C-f" . counsel-find-file)
("C-c g" . counsel-git)
("C-c j" . counsel-git-grep)
("C-c k" . counsel-ag)
("C-x l" . counsel-locate)
("M-y" . counsel-yank-pop)))
(use-package flycheck
:defer 2
:config (global-flycheck-mode))
(use-package ivy
:defer 1
:bind (("C-c C-r" . ivy-resume)
("C-x C-b" . ivy-switch-buffer)
:map ivy-minibuffer-map
("C-j" . ivy-call))
:diminish ivy-mode
:commands ivy-mode
:config
(ivy-mode 1))
(use-package magit
:defer
:if (executable-find "git")
:bind (("C-x g" . magit-status)
("C-x G" . magit-dispatch-popup))
:init
(setq magit-completing-read-function 'ivy-completing-read))
(use-package projectile
:commands projectile-mode
:bind-keymap ("C-c p" . projectile-command-map)
:defer 5
:config
(projectile-global-mode))
'';
myEmacs = emacs.pkgs.withPackages (epkgs: (with epkgs.melpaStablePackages; [
(runCommand "default.el" {} ''
mkdir -p $out/share/emacs/site-lisp
cp ${myEmacsConfig} $out/share/emacs/site-lisp/default.el
'')
company
counsel
flycheck
ivy
magit
projectile
use-package
]));
};
}
```
This provides a fairly full Emacs start file. It will load in addition to the user's presonal config. You can always disable it by passing `-q` to the Emacs command.
Sometimes `emacs.pkgs.withPackages` is not enough, as this package set has some priorities imposed on packages (with the lowest priority assigned to Melpa Unstable, and the highest for packages manually defined in `pkgs/top-level/emacs-packages.nix`). But you can't control this priorities when some package is installed as a dependency. You can override it on per-package-basis, providing all the required dependencies manually - but it's tedious and there is always a possibility that an unwanted dependency will sneak in through some other package. To completely override such a package you can use `overrideScope'`.
```nix
overrides = self: super: rec {
haskell-mode = self.melpaPackages.haskell-mode;
...
};
((emacsPackagesFor emacs).overrideScope' overrides).emacs.pkgs.withPackages
(p: with p; [
# here both these package will use haskell-mode of our own choice
ghc-mod
dante
])
```

View File

@@ -1,49 +0,0 @@
# Firefox {#sec-firefox}
## Build wrapped Firefox with extensions and policies
The `wrapFirefox` function allows to pass policies, preferences and extension that are available to firefox. With the help of `fetchFirefoxAddon` this allows build a firefox version that already comes with addons pre-installed:
```nix
{
myFirefox = wrapFirefox firefox-unwrapped {
nixExtensions = [
(fetchFirefoxAddon {
name = "ublock"; # Has to be unique!
url = "https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/downloads/file/3679754/ublock_origin-1.31.0-an+fx.xpi";
sha256 = "1h768ljlh3pi23l27qp961v1hd0nbj2vasgy11bmcrlqp40zgvnr";
})
];
extraPolicies = {
CaptivePortal = false;
DisableFirefoxStudies = true;
DisablePocket = true;
DisableTelemetry = true;
DisableFirefoxAccounts = true;
FirefoxHome = {
Pocket = false;
Snippets = false;
};
UserMessaging = {
ExtensionRecommendations = false;
SkipOnboarding = true;
};
};
extraPrefs = ''
// Show more ssl cert infos
lockPref("security.identityblock.show_extended_validation", true);
'';
};
}
```
If `nixExtensions != null` then all manually installed addons will be uninstalled from your browser profile.
To view available enterprise policies visit [enterprise policies](https://github.com/mozilla/policy-templates#enterprisepoliciesenabled)
or type into the Firefox url bar: `about:policies#documentation`.
Nix installed addons do not have a valid signature, which is why signature verification is disabled. This does not compromise security because downloaded addons are checksumed and manual addons can't be installed. Also make sure that the `name` field of fetchFirefoxAddon is unique. If you remove an addon from the nixExtensions array, rebuild and start Firefox the removed addon will be completly removed with all of its settings.
## Troubleshooting {#sec-firefox-troubleshooting}
If addons do not appear installed although they have been defined in your nix configuration file reset the local addon state of your Firefox profile by clicking `help -> restart with addons disabled -> restart -> refresh firefox`. This can happen if you switch from manual addon mode to nix addon mode and then back to manual mode and then again to nix addon mode.

View File

@@ -1,50 +0,0 @@
# Fish {#sec-fish}
Fish is a "smart and user-friendly command line shell" with support for plugins.
## Vendor Fish scripts {#sec-fish-vendor}
Any package may ship its own Fish completions, configuration snippets, and
functions. Those should be installed to
`$out/share/fish/vendor_{completions,conf,functions}.d` respectively.
When the `programs.fish.enable` and
`programs.fish.vendor.{completions,config,functions}.enable` options from the
NixOS Fish module are set to true, those paths are symlinked in the current
system environment and automatically loaded by Fish.
## Packaging Fish plugins {#sec-fish-plugins-pkg}
While packages providing standalone executables belong to the top level,
packages which have the sole purpose of extending Fish belong to the
`fishPlugins` scope and should be registered in
`pkgs/shells/fish/plugins/default.nix`.
The `buildFishPlugin` utility function can be used to automatically copy Fish
scripts from `$src/{completions,conf,conf.d,functions}` to the standard vendor
installation paths. It also sets up the test environment so that the optional
`checkPhase` is executed in a Fish shell with other already packaged plugins
and package-local Fish functions specified in `checkPlugins` and
`checkFunctionDirs` respectively.
See `pkgs/shells/fish/plugins/pure.nix` for an example of Fish plugin package
using `buildFishPlugin` and running unit tests with the `fishtape` test runner.
## Fish wrapper {#sec-fish-wrapper}
The `wrapFish` package is a wrapper around Fish which can be used to create
Fish shells initialised with some plugins as well as completions, configuration
snippets and functions sourced from the given paths. This provides a convenient
way to test Fish plugins and scripts without having to alter the environment.
```nix
wrapFish {
pluginPkgs = with fishPlugins; [ pure foreign-env ];
completionDirs = [];
functionDirs = [];
confDirs = [ "/path/to/some/fish/init/dir/" ];
}
```

View File

@@ -1,45 +0,0 @@
# FUSE {#sec-fuse}
Some packages rely on
[FUSE](https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/filesystems/fuse.html) to provide
support for additional filesystems not supported by the kernel.
In general, FUSE software are primarily developed for Linux but many of them can
also run on macOS. Nixpkgs supports FUSE packages on macOS, but it requires
[macFUSE](https://osxfuse.github.io) to be installed outside of Nix. macFUSE
currently isn't packaged in Nixpkgs mainly because it includes a kernel
extension, which isn't supported by Nix outside of NixOS.
If a package fails to run on macOS with an error message similar to the
following, it's a likely sign that you need to have macFUSE installed.
dyld: Library not loaded: /usr/local/lib/libfuse.2.dylib
Referenced from: /nix/store/w8bi72bssv0bnxhwfw3xr1mvn7myf37x-sshfs-fuse-2.10/bin/sshfs
Reason: image not found
[1] 92299 abort /nix/store/w8bi72bssv0bnxhwfw3xr1mvn7myf37x-sshfs-fuse-2.10/bin/sshfs
Package maintainers may often encounter the following error when building FUSE
packages on macOS:
checking for fuse.h... no
configure: error: No fuse.h found.
This happens on autoconf based projects that uses `AC_CHECK_HEADERS` or
`AC_CHECK_LIBS` to detect libfuse, and will occur even when the `fuse` package
is included in `buildInputs`. It happens because libfuse headers throw an error
on macOS if the `FUSE_USE_VERSION` macro is undefined. Many proejcts do define
`FUSE_USE_VERSION`, but only inside C source files. This results in the above
error at configure time because the configure script would attempt to compile
sample FUSE programs without defining `FUSE_USE_VERSION`.
There are two possible solutions for this problem in Nixpkgs:
1. Pass `FUSE_USE_VERSION` to the configure script by adding
`CFLAGS=-DFUSE_USE_VERSION=25` in `configureFlags`. The actual value would
have to match the definition used in the upstream source code.
2. Remove `AC_CHECK_HEADERS` / `AC_CHECK_LIBS` for libfuse.
However, a better solution might be to fix the build script upstream to use
`PKG_CHECK_MODULES` instead. This approach wouldn't suffer from the problem that
`AC_CHECK_HEADERS`/`AC_CHECK_LIBS` has at the price of introducing a dependency
on pkg-config.

View File

@@ -1,38 +0,0 @@
# ibus-engines.typing-booster {#sec-ibus-typing-booster}
This package is an ibus-based completion method to speed up typing.
## Activating the engine {#sec-ibus-typing-booster-activate}
IBus needs to be configured accordingly to activate `typing-booster`. The configuration depends on the desktop manager in use. For detailed instructions, please refer to the [upstream docs](https://mike-fabian.github.io/ibus-typing-booster/documentation.html).
On NixOS you need to explicitly enable `ibus` with given engines before customizing your desktop to use `typing-booster`. This can be achieved using the `ibus` module:
```nix
{ pkgs, ... }: {
i18n.inputMethod = {
enabled = "ibus";
ibus.engines = with pkgs.ibus-engines; [ typing-booster ];
};
}
```
## Using custom hunspell dictionaries {#sec-ibus-typing-booster-customize-hunspell}
The IBus engine is based on `hunspell` to support completion in many languages. By default the dictionaries `de-de`, `en-us`, `fr-moderne` `es-es`, `it-it`, `sv-se` and `sv-fi` are in use. To add another dictionary, the package can be overridden like this:
```nix
ibus-engines.typing-booster.override { langs = [ "de-at" "en-gb" ]; }
```
_Note: each language passed to `langs` must be an attribute name in `pkgs.hunspellDicts`._
## Built-in emoji picker {#sec-ibus-typing-booster-emoji-picker}
The `ibus-engines.typing-booster` package contains a program named `emoji-picker`. To display all emojis correctly, a special font such as `noto-fonts-emoji` is needed:
On NixOS it can be installed using the following expression:
```nix
{ pkgs, ... }: { fonts.fonts = with pkgs; [ noto-fonts-emoji ]; }
```

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@@ -1,28 +0,0 @@
<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
xml:id="chap-packages">
<title>Packages</title>
<para>
This chapter contains information about how to use and maintain the Nix expressions for a number of specific packages, such as the Linux kernel or X.org.
</para>
<xi:include href="citrix.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="dlib.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="eclipse.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="elm.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="emacs.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="firefox.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="fish.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="fuse.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="ibus.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="kakoune.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="linux.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="locales.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="nginx.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="opengl.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="shell-helpers.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="steam.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="cataclysm-dda.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="urxvt.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="weechat.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="xorg.section.xml" />
</chapter>

View File

@@ -1,9 +0,0 @@
# Kakoune {#sec-kakoune}
Kakoune can be built to autoload plugins:
```nix
(kakoune.override {
plugins = with pkgs.kakounePlugins; [ parinfer-rust ];
})
```

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@@ -1,41 +0,0 @@
# Linux kernel {#sec-linux-kernel}
The Nix expressions to build the Linux kernel are in [`pkgs/os-specific/linux/kernel`](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/os-specific/linux/kernel).
The function that builds the kernel has an argument `kernelPatches` which should be a list of `{name, patch, extraConfig}` attribute sets, where `name` is the name of the patch (which is included in the kernels `meta.description` attribute), `patch` is the patch itself (possibly compressed), and `extraConfig` (optional) is a string specifying extra options to be concatenated to the kernel configuration file (`.config`).
The kernel derivation exports an attribute `features` specifying whether optional functionality is or isnt enabled. This is used in NixOS to implement kernel-specific behaviour. For instance, if the kernel has the `iwlwifi` feature (i.e. has built-in support for Intel wireless chipsets), then NixOS doesnt have to build the external `iwlwifi` package:
```nix
modulesTree = [kernel]
++ pkgs.lib.optional (!kernel.features ? iwlwifi) kernelPackages.iwlwifi
++ ...;
```
How to add a new (major) version of the Linux kernel to Nixpkgs:
1. Copy the old Nix expression (e.g. `linux-2.6.21.nix`) to the new one (e.g. `linux-2.6.22.nix`) and update it.
2. Add the new kernel to `all-packages.nix` (e.g., create an attribute `kernel_2_6_22`).
3. Now were going to update the kernel configuration. First unpack the kernel. Then for each supported platform (`i686`, `x86_64`, `uml`) do the following:
1. Make an copy from the old config (e.g. `config-2.6.21-i686-smp`) to the new one (e.g. `config-2.6.22-i686-smp`).
2. Copy the config file for this platform (e.g. `config-2.6.22-i686-smp`) to `.config` in the kernel source tree.
3. Run `make oldconfig ARCH={i386,x86_64,um}` and answer all questions. (For the uml configuration, also add `SHELL=bash`.) Make sure to keep the configuration consistent between platforms (i.e. dont enable some feature on `i686` and disable it on `x86_64`).
4. If needed you can also run `make menuconfig`:
```ShellSession
$ nix-env -i ncurses
$ export NIX_CFLAGS_LINK=-lncurses
$ make menuconfig ARCH=arch
```
5. Copy `.config` over the new config file (e.g. `config-2.6.22-i686-smp`).
4. Test building the kernel: `nix-build -A kernel_2_6_22`. If it compiles, ship it! For extra credit, try booting NixOS with it.
5. It may be that the new kernel requires updating the external kernel modules and kernel-dependent packages listed in the `linuxPackagesFor` function in `all-packages.nix` (such as the NVIDIA drivers, AUFS, etc.). If the updated packages arent backwards compatible with older kernels, you may need to keep the older versions around.

View File

@@ -1,5 +0,0 @@
# Locales {#locales}
To allow simultaneous use of packages linked against different versions of `glibc` with different locale archive formats Nixpkgs patches `glibc` to rely on `LOCALE_ARCHIVE` environment variable.
On non-NixOS distributions this variable is obviously not set. This can cause regressions in language support or even crashes in some Nixpkgs-provided programs. The simplest way to mitigate this problem is exporting the `LOCALE_ARCHIVE` variable pointing to `${glibcLocales}/lib/locale/locale-archive`. The drawback (and the reason this is not the default) is the relatively large (a hundred MiB) size of the full set of locales. It is possible to build a custom set of locales by overriding parameters `allLocales` and `locales` of the package.

View File

@@ -1,11 +0,0 @@
# Nginx {#sec-nginx}
[Nginx](https://nginx.org) is a reverse proxy and lightweight webserver.
## ETags on static files served from the Nix store {#sec-nginx-etag}
HTTP has a couple different mechanisms for caching to prevent clients from having to download the same content repeatedly if a resource has not changed since the last time it was requested. When nginx is used as a server for static files, it implements the caching mechanism based on the [`Last-Modified`](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Headers/Last-Modified) response header automatically; unfortunately, it works by using filesystem timestamps to determine the value of the `Last-Modified` header. This doesn't give the desired behavior when the file is in the Nix store, because all file timestamps are set to 0 (for reasons related to build reproducibility).
Fortunately, HTTP supports an alternative (and more effective) caching mechanism: the [`ETag`](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Headers/ETag) response header. The value of the `ETag` header specifies some identifier for the particular content that the server is sending (e.g. a hash). When a client makes a second request for the same resource, it sends that value back in an `If-None-Match` header. If the ETag value is unchanged, then the server does not need to resend the content.
As of NixOS 19.09, the nginx package in Nixpkgs is patched such that when nginx serves a file out of `/nix/store`, the hash in the store path is used as the `ETag` header in the HTTP response, thus providing proper caching functionality. This happens automatically; you do not need to do modify any configuration to get this behavior.

View File

@@ -1,15 +0,0 @@
# OpenGL {#sec-opengl}
OpenGL support varies depending on which hardware is used and which drivers are available and loaded.
Broadly, we support both GL vendors: Mesa and NVIDIA.
## NixOS Desktop
The NixOS desktop or other non-headless configurations are the primary target for OpenGL libraries and applications. The current solution for discovering which drivers are available is based on [libglvnd](https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/glvnd/libglvnd). `libglvnd` performs "vendor-neutral dispatch", trying a variety of techniques to find the system's GL implementation. In practice, this will be either via standard GLX for X11 users or EGL for Wayland users, and supporting either NVIDIA or Mesa extensions.
## Nix on GNU/Linux
If you are using a non-NixOS GNU/Linux/X11 desktop with free software video drivers, consider launching OpenGL-dependent programs from Nixpkgs with Nixpkgs versions of `libglvnd` and `mesa.drivers` in `LD_LIBRARY_PATH`. For Mesa drivers, the Linux kernel version doesn't have to match nixpkgs.
For proprietary video drivers you might have luck with also adding the corresponding video driver package.

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@@ -1,12 +0,0 @@
# Interactive shell helpers {#sec-shell-helpers}
Some packages provide the shell integration to be more useful. But unlike other systems, nix doesn't have a standard `share` directory location. This is why a bunch `PACKAGE-share` scripts are shipped that print the location of the corresponding shared folder. Current list of such packages is as following:
- `fzf` : `fzf-share`
E.g. `fzf` can then used in the `.bashrc` like this:
```bash
source "$(fzf-share)/completion.bash"
source "$(fzf-share)/key-bindings.bash"
```

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@@ -1,69 +0,0 @@
# Steam {#sec-steam}
## Steam in Nix {#sec-steam-nix}
Steam is distributed as a `.deb` file, for now only as an i686 package (the amd64 package only has documentation). When unpacked, it has a script called `steam` that in Ubuntu (their target distro) would go to `/usr/bin`. When run for the first time, this script copies some files to the user's home, which include another script that is the ultimate responsible for launching the steam binary, which is also in \$HOME.
Nix problems and constraints:
- We don't have `/bin/bash` and many scripts point there. Similarly for `/usr/bin/python`.
- We don't have the dynamic loader in `/lib`.
- The `steam.sh` script in \$HOME can not be patched, as it is checked and rewritten by steam.
- The steam binary cannot be patched, it's also checked.
The current approach to deploy Steam in NixOS is composing a FHS-compatible chroot environment, as documented [here](http://sandervanderburg.blogspot.nl/2013/09/composing-fhs-compatible-chroot.html). This allows us to have binaries in the expected paths without disrupting the system, and to avoid patching them to work in a non FHS environment.
## How to play {#sec-steam-play}
Use `programs.steam.enable = true;` if you want to add steam to systemPackages and also enable a few workarrounds aswell as Steam controller support or other Steam supported controllers such as the DualShock 4 or Nintendo Switch Pr.
## Troubleshooting {#sec-steam-troub}
- **Steam fails to start. What do I do?**
Try to run
```ShellSession
strace steam
```
to see what is causing steam to fail.
- **Using the FOSS Radeon or nouveau (nvidia) drivers**
- The `newStdcpp` parameter was removed since NixOS 17.09 and should not be needed anymore.
- Steam ships statically linked with a version of libcrypto that conflics with the one dynamically loaded by radeonsi_dri.so. If you get the error
```
steam.sh: line 713: 7842 Segmentation fault (core dumped)
```
have a look at [this pull request](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/20269).
- **Java**
1. There is no java in steam chrootenv by default. If you get a message like
```
/home/foo/.local/share/Steam/SteamApps/common/towns/towns.sh: line 1: java: command not found
```
You need to add
```nix
steam.override { withJava = true; };
```
## steam-run {#sec-steam-run}
The FHS-compatible chroot used for steam can also be used to run other linux games that expect a FHS environment. To do it, add
```nix
pkgs.steam.override ({
nativeOnly = true;
newStdcpp = true;
}).run
```
to your configuration, rebuild, and run the game with
```
steam-run ./foo
```

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@@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="unfree-software">
<title>Unfree software</title>
<para>
All users of Nixpkgs are free software users, and many users (and developers) of Nixpkgs want to limit and tightly control their exposure to unfree software. At the same time, many users need (or want) to run some specific pieces of proprietary software. Nixpkgs includes some expressions for unfree software packages. By default unfree software cannot be installed and doesnt show up in searches. To allow installing unfree software in a single Nix invocation one can export <literal>NIXPKGS_ALLOW_UNFREE=1</literal>. For a persistent solution, users can set <literal>allowUnfree</literal> in the Nixpkgs configuration.
</para>
<para>
Fine-grained control is possible by defining <literal>allowUnfreePredicate</literal> function in config; it takes the <literal>mkDerivation</literal> parameter attrset and returns <literal>true</literal> for unfree packages that should be allowed.
</para>
</section>

View File

@@ -1,71 +0,0 @@
# Urxvt {#sec-urxvt}
Urxvt, also known as rxvt-unicode, is a highly customizable terminal emulator.
## Configuring urxvt {#sec-urxvt-conf}
In `nixpkgs`, urxvt is provided by the package `rxvt-unicode`. It can be configured to include your choice of plugins, reducing its closure size from the default configuration which includes all available plugins. To make use of this functionality, use an overlay or directly install an expression that overrides its configuration, such as
```nix
rxvt-unicode.override {
configure = { availablePlugins, ... }: {
plugins = with availablePlugins; [ perls resize-font vtwheel ];
};
}
```
If the `configure` function returns an attrset without the `plugins` attribute, `availablePlugins` will be used automatically.
In order to add plugins but also keep all default plugins installed, it is possible to use the following method:
```nix
rxvt-unicode.override {
configure = { availablePlugins, ... }: {
plugins = (builtins.attrValues availablePlugins) ++ [ custom-plugin ];
};
}
```
To get a list of all the plugins available, open the Nix REPL and run
```ShellSession
$ nix repl
:l <nixpkgs>
map (p: p.name) pkgs.rxvt-unicode.plugins
```
Alternatively, if your shell is bash or zsh and have completion enabled, simply type `nixpkgs.rxvt-unicode.plugins.<tab>`.
In addition to `plugins` the options `extraDeps` and `perlDeps` can be used to install extra packages. `extraDeps` can be used, for example, to provide `xsel` (a clipboard manager) to the clipboard plugin, without installing it globally:
```nix
rxvt-unicode.override {
configure = { availablePlugins, ... }: {
pluginsDeps = [ xsel ];
};
}
```
`perlDeps` is a handy way to provide Perl packages to your custom plugins (in `$HOME/.urxvt/ext`). For example, if you need `AnyEvent` you can do:
```nix
rxvt-unicode.override {
configure = { availablePlugins, ... }: {
perlDeps = with perlPackages; [ AnyEvent ];
};
}
```
## Packaging urxvt plugins {#sec-urxvt-pkg}
Urxvt plugins resides in `pkgs/applications/misc/rxvt-unicode-plugins`. To add a new plugin create an expression in a subdirectory and add the package to the set in `pkgs/applications/misc/rxvt-unicode-plugins/default.nix`.
A plugin can be any kind of derivation, the only requirement is that it should always install perl scripts in `$out/lib/urxvt/perl`. Look for existing plugins for examples.
If the plugin is itself a perl package that needs to be imported from other plugins or scripts, add the following passthrough:
```nix
passthru.perlPackages = [ "self" ];
```
This will make the urxvt wrapper pick up the dependency and set up the perl path accordingly.

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@@ -1,85 +0,0 @@
# Weechat {#sec-weechat}
Weechat can be configured to include your choice of plugins, reducing its closure size from the default configuration which includes all available plugins. To make use of this functionality, install an expression that overrides its configuration such as
```nix
weechat.override {configure = {availablePlugins, ...}: {
plugins = with availablePlugins; [ python perl ];
}
}
```
If the `configure` function returns an attrset without the `plugins` attribute, `availablePlugins` will be used automatically.
The plugins currently available are `python`, `perl`, `ruby`, `guile`, `tcl` and `lua`.
The python and perl plugins allows the addition of extra libraries. For instance, the `inotify.py` script in `weechat-scripts` requires D-Bus or libnotify, and the `fish.py` script requires `pycrypto`. To use these scripts, use the plugin's `withPackages` attribute:
```nix
weechat.override { configure = {availablePlugins, ...}: {
plugins = with availablePlugins; [
(python.withPackages (ps: with ps; [ pycrypto python-dbus ]))
];
};
}
```
In order to also keep all default plugins installed, it is possible to use the following method:
```nix
weechat.override { configure = { availablePlugins, ... }: {
plugins = builtins.attrValues (availablePlugins // {
python = availablePlugins.python.withPackages (ps: with ps; [ pycrypto python-dbus ]);
});
}; }
```
WeeChat allows to set defaults on startup using the `--run-command`. The `configure` method can be used to pass commands to the program:
```nix
weechat.override {
configure = { availablePlugins, ... }: {
init = ''
/set foo bar
/server add freenode chat.freenode.org
'';
};
}
```
Further values can be added to the list of commands when running `weechat --run-command "your-commands"`.
Additionally it's possible to specify scripts to be loaded when starting `weechat`. These will be loaded before the commands from `init`:
```nix
weechat.override {
configure = { availablePlugins, ... }: {
scripts = with pkgs.weechatScripts; [
weechat-xmpp weechat-matrix-bridge wee-slack
];
init = ''
/set plugins.var.python.jabber.key "val"
'':
};
}
```
In `nixpkgs` there's a subpackage which contains derivations for WeeChat scripts. Such derivations expect a `passthru.scripts` attribute which contains a list of all scripts inside the store path. Furthermore all scripts have to live in `$out/share`. An exemplary derivation looks like this:
```nix
{ stdenv, fetchurl }:
stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "exemplary-weechat-script";
src = fetchurl {
url = "https://scripts.tld/your-scripts.tar.gz";
sha256 = "...";
};
passthru.scripts = [ "foo.py" "bar.lua" ];
installPhase = ''
mkdir $out/share
cp foo.py $out/share
cp bar.lua $out/share
'';
}
```

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@@ -1,34 +0,0 @@
# X.org {#sec-xorg}
The Nix expressions for the X.org packages reside in `pkgs/servers/x11/xorg/default.nix`. This file is automatically generated from lists of tarballs in an X.org release. As such it should not be modified directly; rather, you should modify the lists, the generator script or the file `pkgs/servers/x11/xorg/overrides.nix`, in which you can override or add to the derivations produced by the generator.
## Katamari Tarballs
X.org upstream releases used to include [katamari](https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/%E3%81%8B%E3%81%9F%E3%81%BE%E3%82%8A) releases, which included a holistic recommended version for each tarball, up until 7.7. To create a list of tarballs in a katamari release:
```ShellSession
export release="X11R7.7"
export url="mirror://xorg/$release/src/everything/"
cat $(PRINT_PATH=1 nix-prefetch-url $url | tail -n 1) \
| perl -e 'while (<>) { if (/(href|HREF)="([^"]*.bz2)"/) { print "$ENV{'url'}$2\n"; }; }' \
| sort > "tarballs-$release.list"
```
## Individual Tarballs
The upstream release process for [X11R7.8](https://x.org/wiki/Releases/7.8/) does not include a planned katamari. Instead, each component of X.org is released as its own tarball. We maintain `pkgs/servers/x11/xorg/tarballs.list` as a list of tarballs for each individual package. This list includes X.org core libraries and protocol descriptions, extra newer X11 interface libraries, like `xorg.libxcb`, and classic utilities which are largely unused but still available if needed, like `xorg.imake`.
## Generating Nix Expressions
The generator is invoked as follows:
```ShellSession
cd pkgs/servers/x11/xorg
<tarballs.list perl ./generate-expr-from-tarballs.pl
```
For each of the tarballs in the `.list` files, the script downloads it, unpacks it, and searches its `configure.ac` and `*.pc.in` files for dependencies. This information is used to generate `default.nix`. The generator caches downloaded tarballs between runs. Pay close attention to the `NOT FOUND: $NAME` messages at the end of the run, since they may indicate missing dependencies. (Some might be optional dependencies, however.)
## Overriding the Generator
If the expression for a package requires derivation attributes that the generator cannot figure out automatically (say, `patches` or a `postInstall` hook), you should modify `pkgs/servers/x11/xorg/overrides.nix`.

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@@ -1,10 +0,0 @@
<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
xml:id="chap-special">
<title>Special builders</title>
<para>
This chapter describes several special builders.
</para>
<xi:include href="special/fhs-environments.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="special/mkshell.section.xml" />
</chapter>

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@@ -1,45 +0,0 @@
# buildFHSUserEnv {#sec-fhs-environments}
`buildFHSUserEnv` provides a way to build and run FHS-compatible lightweight sandboxes. It creates an isolated root with bound `/nix/store`, so its footprint in terms of disk space needed is quite small. This allows one to run software which is hard or unfeasible to patch for NixOS -- 3rd-party source trees with FHS assumptions, games distributed as tarballs, software with integrity checking and/or external self-updated binaries. It uses Linux namespaces feature to create temporary lightweight environments which are destroyed after all child processes exit, without root user rights requirement. Accepted arguments are:
- `name`
Environment name.
- `targetPkgs`
Packages to be installed for the main host's architecture (i.e. x86_64 on x86_64 installations). Along with libraries binaries are also installed.
- `multiPkgs`
Packages to be installed for all architectures supported by a host (i.e. i686 and x86_64 on x86_64 installations). Only libraries are installed by default.
- `extraBuildCommands`
Additional commands to be executed for finalizing the directory structure.
- `extraBuildCommandsMulti`
Like `extraBuildCommands`, but executed only on multilib architectures.
- `extraOutputsToInstall`
Additional derivation outputs to be linked for both target and multi-architecture packages.
- `extraInstallCommands`
Additional commands to be executed for finalizing the derivation with runner script.
- `runScript`
A command that would be executed inside the sandbox and passed all the command line arguments. It defaults to `bash`.
One can create a simple environment using a `shell.nix` like that:
```nix
{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> {} }:
(pkgs.buildFHSUserEnv {
name = "simple-x11-env";
targetPkgs = pkgs: (with pkgs;
[ udev
alsaLib
]) ++ (with pkgs.xorg;
[ libX11
libXcursor
libXrandr
]);
multiPkgs = pkgs: (with pkgs;
[ udev
alsaLib
]);
runScript = "bash";
}).env
```
Running `nix-shell` would then drop you into a shell with these libraries and binaries available. You can use this to run closed-source applications which expect FHS structure without hassles: simply change `runScript` to the application path, e.g. `./bin/start.sh` -- relative paths are supported.

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@@ -1,17 +0,0 @@
# pkgs.mkShell {#sec-pkgs-mkShell}
`pkgs.mkShell` is a special kind of derivation that is only useful when using
it combined with `nix-shell`. It will in fact fail to instantiate when invoked
with `nix-build`.
## Usage {#sec-pkgs-mkShell-usage}
```nix
{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> {} }:
pkgs.mkShell {
# specify which packages to add to the shell environment
packages = [ pkgs.gnumake ];
# add all the dependencies, of the given packages, to the shell environment
inputsFrom = with pkgs; [ hello gnutar ];
}
```

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@@ -1,99 +0,0 @@
# Trivial builders {#chap-trivial-builders}
Nixpkgs provides a couple of functions that help with building derivations. The most important one, `stdenv.mkDerivation`, has already been documented above. The following functions wrap `stdenv.mkDerivation`, making it easier to use in certain cases.
## `runCommand` {#trivial-builder-runCommand}
This takes three arguments, `name`, `env`, and `buildCommand`. `name` is just the name that Nix will append to the store path in the same way that `stdenv.mkDerivation` uses its `name` attribute. `env` is an attribute set specifying environment variables that will be set for this derivation. These attributes are then passed to the wrapped `stdenv.mkDerivation`. `buildCommand` specifies the commands that will be run to create this derivation. Note that you will need to create `$out` for Nix to register the command as successful.
An example of using `runCommand` is provided below.
```nix
(import <nixpkgs> {}).runCommand "my-example" {} ''
echo My example command is running
mkdir $out
echo I can write data to the Nix store > $out/message
echo I can also run basic commands like:
echo ls
ls
echo whoami
whoami
echo date
date
''
```
## `runCommandCC` {#trivial-builder-runCommandCC}
This works just like `runCommand`. The only difference is that it also provides a C compiler in `buildCommand`'s environment. To minimize your dependencies, you should only use this if you are sure you will need a C compiler as part of running your command.
## `runCommandLocal` {#trivial-builder-runCommandLocal}
Variant of `runCommand` that forces the derivation to be built locally, it is not substituted. This is intended for very cheap commands (<1s execution time). It saves on the network roundrip and can speed up a build.
::: note
This sets [`allowSubstitutes` to `false`](https://nixos.org/nix/manual/#adv-attr-allowSubstitutes), so only use `runCommandLocal` if you are certain the user will always have a builder for the `system` of the derivation. This should be true for most trivial use cases (e.g. just copying some files to a different location or adding symlinks), because there the `system` is usually the same as `builtins.currentSystem`.
:::
## `writeTextFile`, `writeText`, `writeTextDir`, `writeScript`, `writeScriptBin` {#trivial-builder-writeText}
These functions write `text` to the Nix store. This is useful for creating scripts from Nix expressions. `writeTextFile` takes an attribute set and expects two arguments, `name` and `text`. `name` corresponds to the name used in the Nix store path. `text` will be the contents of the file. You can also set `executable` to true to make this file have the executable bit set.
Many more commands wrap `writeTextFile` including `writeText`, `writeTextDir`, `writeScript`, and `writeScriptBin`. These are convenience functions over `writeTextFile`.
## `symlinkJoin` {#trivial-builder-symlinkJoin}
This can be used to put many derivations into the same directory structure. It works by creating a new derivation and adding symlinks to each of the paths listed. It expects two arguments, `name`, and `paths`. `name` is the name used in the Nix store path for the created derivation. `paths` is a list of paths that will be symlinked. These paths can be to Nix store derivations or any other subdirectory contained within.
## `writeReferencesToFile` {#trivial-builder-writeReferencesToFile}
Writes the closure of transitive dependencies to a file.
This produces the equivalent of `nix-store -q --requisites`.
For example,
```nix
writeReferencesToFile (writeScriptBin "hi" ''${hello}/bin/hello'')
```
produces an output path `/nix/store/<hash>-runtime-deps` containing
```nix
/nix/store/<hash>-hello-2.10
/nix/store/<hash>-hi
/nix/store/<hash>-libidn2-2.3.0
/nix/store/<hash>-libunistring-0.9.10
/nix/store/<hash>-glibc-2.32-40
```
You can see that this includes `hi`, the original input path,
`hello`, which is a direct reference, but also
the other paths that are indirectly required to run `hello`.
## `writeDirectReferencesToFile` {#trivial-builder-writeDirectReferencesToFile}
Writes the set of references to the output file, that is, their immediate dependencies.
This produces the equivalent of `nix-store -q --references`.
For example,
```nix
writeDirectReferencesToFile (writeScriptBin "hi" ''${hello}/bin/hello'')
```
produces an output path `/nix/store/<hash>-runtime-references` containing
```nix
/nix/store/<hash>-hello-2.10
```
but none of `hello`'s dependencies, because those are not referenced directly
by `hi`'s output.

922
doc/coding-conventions.xml Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,922 @@
<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="chap-conventions">
<title>Coding conventions</title>
<section xml:id="sec-syntax">
<title>Syntax</title>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
Use 2 spaces of indentation per indentation level in Nix expressions, 4
spaces in shell scripts.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Do not use tab characters, i.e. configure your editor to use soft tabs.
For instance, use <literal>(setq-default indent-tabs-mode nil)</literal>
in Emacs. Everybody has different tab settings so its asking for
trouble.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Use <literal>lowerCamelCase</literal> for variable names, not
<literal>UpperCamelCase</literal>. Note, this rule does not apply to
package attribute names, which instead follow the rules in
<xref linkend="sec-package-naming"/>.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Function calls with attribute set arguments are written as
<programlisting>
foo {
arg = ...;
}
</programlisting>
not
<programlisting>
foo
{
arg = ...;
}
</programlisting>
Also fine is
<programlisting>
foo { arg = ...; }
</programlisting>
if it's a short call.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
In attribute sets or lists that span multiple lines, the attribute names
or list elements should be aligned:
<programlisting>
# A long list.
list =
[ elem1
elem2
elem3
];
# A long attribute set.
attrs =
{ attr1 = short_expr;
attr2 =
if true then big_expr else big_expr;
};
# Alternatively:
attrs = {
attr1 = short_expr;
attr2 =
if true then big_expr else big_expr;
};
</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Short lists or attribute sets can be written on one line:
<programlisting>
# A short list.
list = [ elem1 elem2 elem3 ];
# A short set.
attrs = { x = 1280; y = 1024; };
</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Breaking in the middle of a function argument can give hard-to-read code,
like
<programlisting>
someFunction { x = 1280;
y = 1024; } otherArg
yetAnotherArg
</programlisting>
(especially if the argument is very large, spanning multiple lines).
</para>
<para>
Better:
<programlisting>
someFunction
{ x = 1280; y = 1024; }
otherArg
yetAnotherArg
</programlisting>
or
<programlisting>
let res = { x = 1280; y = 1024; };
in someFunction res otherArg yetAnotherArg
</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
The bodies of functions, asserts, and withs are not indented to prevent a
lot of superfluous indentation levels, i.e.
<programlisting>
{ arg1, arg2 }:
assert system == "i686-linux";
stdenv.mkDerivation { ...
</programlisting>
not
<programlisting>
{ arg1, arg2 }:
assert system == "i686-linux";
stdenv.mkDerivation { ...
</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Function formal arguments are written as:
<programlisting>
{ arg1, arg2, arg3 }:
</programlisting>
but if they don't fit on one line they're written as:
<programlisting>
{ arg1, arg2, arg3
, arg4, ...
, # Some comment...
argN
}:
</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Functions should list their expected arguments as precisely as possible.
That is, write
<programlisting>
{ stdenv, fetchurl, perl }: <replaceable>...</replaceable>
</programlisting>
instead of
<programlisting>
args: with args; <replaceable>...</replaceable>
</programlisting>
or
<programlisting>
{ stdenv, fetchurl, perl, ... }: <replaceable>...</replaceable>
</programlisting>
</para>
<para>
For functions that are truly generic in the number of arguments (such as
wrappers around <varname>mkDerivation</varname>) that have some required
arguments, you should write them using an <literal>@</literal>-pattern:
<programlisting>
{ stdenv, doCoverageAnalysis ? false, ... } @ args:
stdenv.mkDerivation (args // {
<replaceable>...</replaceable> if doCoverageAnalysis then "bla" else "" <replaceable>...</replaceable>
})
</programlisting>
instead of
<programlisting>
args:
args.stdenv.mkDerivation (args // {
<replaceable>...</replaceable> if args ? doCoverageAnalysis &amp;&amp; args.doCoverageAnalysis then "bla" else "" <replaceable>...</replaceable>
})
</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-package-naming">
<title>Package naming</title>
<para>
In Nixpkgs, there are generally three different names associated with a
package:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
The <varname>name</varname> attribute of the derivation (excluding the
version part). This is what most users see, in particular when using
<command>nix-env</command>.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
The variable name used for the instantiated package in
<filename>all-packages.nix</filename>, and when passing it as a
dependency to other functions. Typically this is called the
<emphasis>package attribute name</emphasis>. This is what Nix expression
authors see. It can also be used when installing using <command>nix-env
-iA</command>.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
The filename for (the directory containing) the Nix expression.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
Most of the time, these are the same. For instance, the package
<literal>e2fsprogs</literal> has a <varname>name</varname> attribute
<literal>"e2fsprogs-<replaceable>version</replaceable>"</literal>, is bound
to the variable name <varname>e2fsprogs</varname> in
<filename>all-packages.nix</filename>, and the Nix expression is in
<filename>pkgs/os-specific/linux/e2fsprogs/default.nix</filename>.
</para>
<para>
There are a few naming guidelines:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
Generally, try to stick to the upstream package name.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Dont use uppercase letters in the <literal>name</literal> attribute
— e.g., <literal>"mplayer-1.0rc2"</literal> instead of
<literal>"MPlayer-1.0rc2"</literal>.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
The version part of the <literal>name</literal> attribute
<emphasis>must</emphasis> start with a digit (following a dash) — e.g.,
<literal>"hello-0.3.1rc2"</literal>.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
If a package is not a release but a commit from a repository, then the
version part of the name <emphasis>must</emphasis> be the date of that
(fetched) commit. The date must be in <literal>"YYYY-MM-DD"</literal>
format. Also append <literal>"unstable"</literal> to the name - e.g.,
<literal>"pkgname-unstable-2014-09-23"</literal>.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Dashes in the package name should be preserved in new variable names,
rather than converted to underscores or camel cased — e.g.,
<varname>http-parser</varname> instead of <varname>http_parser</varname>
or <varname>httpParser</varname>. The hyphenated style is preferred in
all three package names.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
If there are multiple versions of a package, this should be reflected in
the variable names in <filename>all-packages.nix</filename>, e.g.
<varname>json-c-0-9</varname> and <varname>json-c-0-11</varname>. If
there is an obvious “default” version, make an attribute like
<literal>json-c = json-c-0-9;</literal>. See also
<xref linkend="sec-versioning" />
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-organisation">
<title>File naming and organisation</title>
<para>
Names of files and directories should be in lowercase, with dashes between
words — not in camel case. For instance, it should be
<filename>all-packages.nix</filename>, not
<filename>allPackages.nix</filename> or
<filename>AllPackages.nix</filename>.
</para>
<section xml:id="sec-hierarchy">
<title>Hierarchy</title>
<para>
Each package should be stored in its own directory somewhere in the
<filename>pkgs/</filename> tree, i.e. in
<filename>pkgs/<replaceable>category</replaceable>/<replaceable>subcategory</replaceable>/<replaceable>...</replaceable>/<replaceable>pkgname</replaceable></filename>.
Below are some rules for picking the right category for a package. Many
packages fall under several categories; what matters is the
<emphasis>primary</emphasis> purpose of a package. For example, the
<literal>libxml2</literal> package builds both a library and some tools;
but its a library foremost, so it goes under
<filename>pkgs/development/libraries</filename>.
</para>
<para>
When in doubt, consider refactoring the <filename>pkgs/</filename> tree,
e.g. creating new categories or splitting up an existing category.
</para>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its used to support <emphasis>software development</emphasis>:
</term>
<listitem>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its a <emphasis>library</emphasis> used by other packages:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>development/libraries</filename> (e.g.
<filename>libxml2</filename>)
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its a <emphasis>compiler</emphasis>:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>development/compilers</filename> (e.g.
<filename>gcc</filename>)
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its an <emphasis>interpreter</emphasis>:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>development/interpreters</filename> (e.g.
<filename>guile</filename>)
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its a (set of) development <emphasis>tool(s)</emphasis>:
</term>
<listitem>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its a <emphasis>parser generator</emphasis> (including lexers):
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>development/tools/parsing</filename> (e.g.
<filename>bison</filename>, <filename>flex</filename>)
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its a <emphasis>build manager</emphasis>:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>development/tools/build-managers</filename> (e.g.
<filename>gnumake</filename>)
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
Else:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>development/tools/misc</filename> (e.g.
<filename>binutils</filename>)
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
Else:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>development/misc</filename>
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its a (set of) <emphasis>tool(s)</emphasis>:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
(A tool is a relatively small program, especially one intended to be
used non-interactively.)
</para>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its for <emphasis>networking</emphasis>:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>tools/networking</filename> (e.g.
<filename>wget</filename>)
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its for <emphasis>text processing</emphasis>:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>tools/text</filename> (e.g. <filename>diffutils</filename>)
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its a <emphasis>system utility</emphasis>, i.e., something related or essential to the operation of a system:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>tools/system</filename> (e.g. <filename>cron</filename>)
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its an <emphasis>archiver</emphasis> (which may include a compression function):
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>tools/archivers</filename> (e.g. <filename>zip</filename>,
<filename>tar</filename>)
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its a <emphasis>compression</emphasis> program:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>tools/compression</filename> (e.g.
<filename>gzip</filename>, <filename>bzip2</filename>)
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its a <emphasis>security</emphasis>-related program:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>tools/security</filename> (e.g. <filename>nmap</filename>,
<filename>gnupg</filename>)
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
Else:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>tools/misc</filename>
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its a <emphasis>shell</emphasis>:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>shells</filename> (e.g. <filename>bash</filename>)
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its a <emphasis>server</emphasis>:
</term>
<listitem>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its a web server:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>servers/http</filename> (e.g.
<filename>apache-httpd</filename>)
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its an implementation of the X Windowing System:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>servers/x11</filename> (e.g. <filename>xorg</filename>
this includes the client libraries and programs)
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
Else:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>servers/misc</filename>
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its a <emphasis>desktop environment</emphasis>:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>desktops</filename> (e.g. <filename>kde</filename>,
<filename>gnome</filename>, <filename>enlightenment</filename>)
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its a <emphasis>window manager</emphasis>:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>applications/window-managers</filename> (e.g.
<filename>awesome</filename>, <filename>stumpwm</filename>)
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its an <emphasis>application</emphasis>:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
A (typically large) program with a distinct user interface, primarily
used interactively.
</para>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its a <emphasis>version management system</emphasis>:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>applications/version-management</filename> (e.g.
<filename>subversion</filename>)
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its for <emphasis>video playback / editing</emphasis>:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>applications/video</filename> (e.g.
<filename>vlc</filename>)
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its for <emphasis>graphics viewing / editing</emphasis>:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>applications/graphics</filename> (e.g.
<filename>gimp</filename>)
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its for <emphasis>networking</emphasis>:
</term>
<listitem>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its a <emphasis>mailreader</emphasis>:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>applications/networking/mailreaders</filename> (e.g.
<filename>thunderbird</filename>)
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its a <emphasis>newsreader</emphasis>:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>applications/networking/newsreaders</filename> (e.g.
<filename>pan</filename>)
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its a <emphasis>web browser</emphasis>:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>applications/networking/browsers</filename> (e.g.
<filename>firefox</filename>)
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
Else:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>applications/networking/misc</filename>
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
Else:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>applications/misc</filename>
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its <emphasis>data</emphasis> (i.e., does not have a straight-forward executable semantics):
</term>
<listitem>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its a <emphasis>font</emphasis>:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>data/fonts</filename>
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its related to <emphasis>SGML/XML processing</emphasis>:
</term>
<listitem>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its an <emphasis>XML DTD</emphasis>:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>data/sgml+xml/schemas/xml-dtd</filename> (e.g.
<filename>docbook</filename>)
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its an <emphasis>XSLT stylesheet</emphasis>:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
(Okay, these are executable...)
</para>
<para>
<filename>data/sgml+xml/stylesheets/xslt</filename> (e.g.
<filename>docbook-xsl</filename>)
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
If its a <emphasis>game</emphasis>:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>games</filename>
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
Else:
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<filename>misc</filename>
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-versioning">
<title>Versioning</title>
<para>
Because every version of a package in Nixpkgs creates a potential
maintenance burden, old versions of a package should not be kept unless
there is a good reason to do so. For instance, Nixpkgs contains several
versions of GCC because other packages dont build with the latest
version of GCC. Other examples are having both the latest stable and latest
pre-release version of a package, or to keep several major releases of an
application that differ significantly in functionality.
</para>
<para>
If there is only one version of a package, its Nix expression should be
named <filename>e2fsprogs/default.nix</filename>. If there are multiple
versions, this should be reflected in the filename, e.g.
<filename>e2fsprogs/1.41.8.nix</filename> and
<filename>e2fsprogs/1.41.9.nix</filename>. The version in the filename
should leave out unnecessary detail. For instance, if we keep the latest
Firefox 2.0.x and 3.5.x versions in Nixpkgs, they should be named
<filename>firefox/2.0.nix</filename> and
<filename>firefox/3.5.nix</filename>, respectively (which, at a given
point, might contain versions <literal>2.0.0.20</literal> and
<literal>3.5.4</literal>). If a version requires many auxiliary files, you
can use a subdirectory for each version, e.g.
<filename>firefox/2.0/default.nix</filename> and
<filename>firefox/3.5/default.nix</filename>.
</para>
<para>
All versions of a package <emphasis>must</emphasis> be included in
<filename>all-packages.nix</filename> to make sure that they evaluate
correctly.
</para>
</section>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-sources">
<title>Fetching Sources</title>
<para>
There are multiple ways to fetch a package source in nixpkgs. The general
guideline is that you should package sources with a high degree of
availability. Right now there is only one fetcher which has mirroring
support and that is <literal>fetchurl</literal>. Note that you should also
prefer protocols which have a corresponding proxy environment variable.
</para>
<para>
You can find many source fetch helpers in
<literal>pkgs/build-support/fetch*</literal>.
</para>
<para>
In the file <literal>pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix</literal> you can find
fetch helpers, these have names on the form <literal>fetchFrom*</literal>.
The intention of these are to provide snapshot fetches but using the same
api as some of the version controlled fetchers from
<literal>pkgs/build-support/</literal>. As an example going from bad to
good:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
Bad: Uses <literal>git://</literal> which won't be proxied.
<programlisting>
src = fetchgit {
url = "git://github.com/NixOS/nix.git";
rev = "1f795f9f44607cc5bec70d1300150bfefcef2aae";
sha256 = "1cw5fszffl5pkpa6s6wjnkiv6lm5k618s32sp60kvmvpy7a2v9kg";
}
</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Better: This is ok, but an archive fetch will still be faster.
<programlisting>
src = fetchgit {
url = "https://github.com/NixOS/nix.git";
rev = "1f795f9f44607cc5bec70d1300150bfefcef2aae";
sha256 = "1cw5fszffl5pkpa6s6wjnkiv6lm5k618s32sp60kvmvpy7a2v9kg";
}
</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Best: Fetches a snapshot archive and you get the rev you want.
<programlisting>
src = fetchFromGitHub {
owner = "NixOS";
repo = "nix";
rev = "1f795f9f44607cc5bec70d1300150bfefcef2aae";
sha256 = "04yri911rj9j19qqqn6m82266fl05pz98inasni0vxr1cf1gdgv9";
}
</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-patches">
<title>Patches</title>
<para>
Patches available online should be retrieved using
<literal>fetchpatch</literal>.
</para>
<para>
<programlisting>
patches = [
(fetchpatch {
name = "fix-check-for-using-shared-freetype-lib.patch";
url = "http://git.ghostscript.com/?p=ghostpdl.git;a=patch;h=8f5d285";
sha256 = "1f0k043rng7f0rfl9hhb89qzvvksqmkrikmm38p61yfx51l325xr";
})
];
</programlisting>
</para>
<para>
Otherwise, you can add a <literal>.patch</literal> file to the
<literal>nixpkgs</literal> repository. In the interest of keeping our
maintenance burden to a minimum, only patches that are unique to
<literal>nixpkgs</literal> should be added in this way.
</para>
<para>
<programlisting>
patches = [ ./0001-changes.patch ];
</programlisting>
</para>
<para>
If you do need to do create this sort of patch file, one way to do so is
with git:
<orderedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
Move to the root directory of the source code you're patching.
<screen>
$ cd the/program/source</screen>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
If a git repository is not already present, create one and stage all of
the source files.
<screen>
$ git init
$ git add .</screen>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Edit some files to make whatever changes need to be included in the
patch.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Use git to create a diff, and pipe the output to a patch file:
<screen>
$ git diff > nixpkgs/pkgs/the/package/0001-changes.patch</screen>
</para>
</listitem>
</orderedlist>
</para>
</section>
</chapter>

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<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="chap-packageconfig">
<title>Global configuration</title>
<para>
Nix comes with certain defaults about what packages can and cannot be
installed, based on a package's metadata. By default, Nix will prevent
installation if any of the following criteria are true:
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
The package is thought to be broken, and has had its
<literal>meta.broken</literal> set to <literal>true</literal>.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
The package isn't intended to run on the given system, as none of its
<literal>meta.platforms</literal> match the given system.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
The package's <literal>meta.license</literal> is set to a license which is
considered to be unfree.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
The package has known security vulnerabilities but has not or can not be
updated for some reason, and a list of issues has been entered in to the
package's <literal>meta.knownVulnerabilities</literal>.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
<para>
Note that all this is checked during evaluation already, and the check
includes any package that is evaluated. In particular, all build-time
dependencies are checked. <literal>nix-env -qa</literal> will (attempt to)
hide any packages that would be refused.
</para>
<para>
Each of these criteria can be altered in the nixpkgs configuration.
</para>
<para>
The nixpkgs configuration for a NixOS system is set in the
<literal>configuration.nix</literal>, as in the following example:
<programlisting>
{
nixpkgs.config = {
allowUnfree = true;
};
}
</programlisting>
However, this does not allow unfree software for individual users. Their
configurations are managed separately.
</para>
<para>
A user's of nixpkgs configuration is stored in a user-specific configuration
file located at <filename>~/.config/nixpkgs/config.nix</filename>. For
example:
<programlisting>
{
allowUnfree = true;
}
</programlisting>
</para>
<para>
Note that we are not able to test or build unfree software on Hydra due to
policy. Most unfree licenses prohibit us from either executing or
distributing the software.
</para>
<section xml:id="sec-allow-broken">
<title>Installing broken packages</title>
<para>
There are two ways to try compiling a package which has been marked as
broken.
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
For allowing the build of a broken package once, you can use an
environment variable for a single invocation of the nix tools:
<programlisting>$ export NIXPKGS_ALLOW_BROKEN=1</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
For permanently allowing broken packages to be built, you may add
<literal>allowBroken = true;</literal> to your user's configuration file,
like this:
<programlisting>
{
allowBroken = true;
}
</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-allow-unsupported-system">
<title>Installing packages on unsupported systems</title>
<para>
There are also two ways to try compiling a package which has been marked as
unsuported for the given system.
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
For allowing the build of a broken package once, you can use an
environment variable for a single invocation of the nix tools:
<programlisting>$ export NIXPKGS_ALLOW_UNSUPPORTED_SYSTEM=1</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
For permanently allowing broken packages to be built, you may add
<literal>allowUnsupportedSystem = true;</literal> to your user's
configuration file, like this:
<programlisting>
{
allowUnsupportedSystem = true;
}
</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
<para>
The difference between an a package being unsupported on some system and
being broken is admittedly a bit fuzzy. If a program
<emphasis>ought</emphasis> to work on a certain platform, but doesn't, the
platform should be included in <literal>meta.platforms</literal>, but marked
as broken with e.g. <literal>meta.broken =
!hostPlatform.isWindows</literal>. Of course, this begs the question of what
"ought" means exactly. That is left to the package maintainer.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-allow-unfree">
<title>Installing unfree packages</title>
<para>
There are several ways to tweak how Nix handles a package which has been
marked as unfree.
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
To temporarily allow all unfree packages, you can use an environment
variable for a single invocation of the nix tools:
<programlisting>$ export NIXPKGS_ALLOW_UNFREE=1</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
It is possible to permanently allow individual unfree packages, while
still blocking unfree packages by default using the
<literal>allowUnfreePredicate</literal> configuration option in the user
configuration file.
</para>
<para>
This option is a function which accepts a package as a parameter, and
returns a boolean. The following example configuration accepts a package
and always returns false:
<programlisting>
{
allowUnfreePredicate = (pkg: false);
}
</programlisting>
</para>
<para>
A more useful example, the following configuration allows only allows
flash player and visual studio code:
<programlisting>
{
allowUnfreePredicate = (pkg: elem (builtins.parseDrvName pkg.name).name [ "flashplayer" "vscode" ]);
}
</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
It is also possible to whitelist and blacklist licenses that are
specifically acceptable or not acceptable, using
<literal>whitelistedLicenses</literal> and
<literal>blacklistedLicenses</literal>, respectively.
</para>
<para>
The following example configuration whitelists the licenses
<literal>amd</literal> and <literal>wtfpl</literal>:
<programlisting>
{
whitelistedLicenses = with stdenv.lib.licenses; [ amd wtfpl ];
}
</programlisting>
</para>
<para>
The following example configuration blacklists the <literal>gpl3</literal>
and <literal>agpl3</literal> licenses:
<programlisting>
{
blacklistedLicenses = with stdenv.lib.licenses; [ agpl3 gpl3 ];
}
</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
<para>
A complete list of licenses can be found in the file
<filename>lib/licenses.nix</filename> of the nixpkgs tree.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-allow-insecure">
<title>Installing insecure packages</title>
<para>
There are several ways to tweak how Nix handles a package which has been
marked as insecure.
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
To temporarily allow all insecure packages, you can use an environment
variable for a single invocation of the nix tools:
<programlisting>$ export NIXPKGS_ALLOW_INSECURE=1</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
It is possible to permanently allow individual insecure packages, while
still blocking other insecure packages by default using the
<literal>permittedInsecurePackages</literal> configuration option in the
user configuration file.
</para>
<para>
The following example configuration permits the installation of the
hypothetically insecure package <literal>hello</literal>, version
<literal>1.2.3</literal>:
<programlisting>
{
permittedInsecurePackages = [
"hello-1.2.3"
];
}
</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
It is also possible to create a custom policy around which insecure
packages to allow and deny, by overriding the
<literal>allowInsecurePredicate</literal> configuration option.
</para>
<para>
The <literal>allowInsecurePredicate</literal> option is a function which
accepts a package and returns a boolean, much like
<literal>allowUnfreePredicate</literal>.
</para>
<para>
The following configuration example only allows insecure packages with
very short names:
<programlisting>
{
allowInsecurePredicate = (pkg: (builtins.stringLength (builtins.parseDrvName pkg.name).name) &lt;= 5);
}
</programlisting>
</para>
<para>
Note that <literal>permittedInsecurePackages</literal> is only checked if
<literal>allowInsecurePredicate</literal> is not specified.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</section>
<!--============================================================-->
<section xml:id="sec-modify-via-packageOverrides">
<title>Modify packages via <literal>packageOverrides</literal></title>
<para>
You can define a function called <varname>packageOverrides</varname> in your
local <filename>~/.config/nixpkgs/config.nix</filename> to override nix
packages. It must be a function that takes pkgs as an argument and return
modified set of packages.
<programlisting>
{
packageOverrides = pkgs: rec {
foo = pkgs.foo.override { ... };
};
}
</programlisting>
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-declarative-package-management">
<title>Declarative Package Management</title>
<section xml:id="sec-building-environment">
<title>Build an environment</title>
<para>
Using <literal>packageOverrides</literal>, it is possible to manage
packages declaratively. This means that we can list all of our desired
packages within a declarative Nix expression. For example, to have
<literal>aspell</literal>, <literal>bc</literal>,
<literal>ffmpeg</literal>, <literal>coreutils</literal>,
<literal>gdb</literal>, <literal>nixUnstable</literal>,
<literal>emscripten</literal>, <literal>jq</literal>,
<literal>nox</literal>, and <literal>silver-searcher</literal>, we could
use the following in <filename>~/.config/nixpkgs/config.nix</filename>:
</para>
<screen>
{
packageOverrides = pkgs: with pkgs; {
myPackages = pkgs.buildEnv {
name = "my-packages";
paths = [ aspell bc coreutils gdb ffmpeg nixUnstable emscripten jq nox silver-searcher ];
};
};
}
</screen>
<para>
To install it into our environment, you can just run <literal>nix-env -iA
nixpkgs.myPackages</literal>. If you want to load the packages to be built
from a working copy of <literal>nixpkgs</literal> you just run
<literal>nix-env -f. -iA myPackages</literal>. To explore what's been
installed, just look through <filename>~/.nix-profile/</filename>. You can
see that a lot of stuff has been installed. Some of this stuff is useful
some of it isn't. Let's tell Nixpkgs to only link the stuff that we want:
</para>
<screen>
{
packageOverrides = pkgs: with pkgs; {
myPackages = pkgs.buildEnv {
name = "my-packages";
paths = [ aspell bc coreutils gdb ffmpeg nixUnstable emscripten jq nox silver-searcher ];
pathsToLink = [ "/share" "/bin" ];
};
};
}
</screen>
<para>
<literal>pathsToLink</literal> tells Nixpkgs to only link the paths listed
which gets rid of the extra stuff in the profile. <filename>/bin</filename>
and <filename>/share</filename> are good defaults for a user environment,
getting rid of the clutter. If you are running on Nix on MacOS, you may
want to add another path as well, <filename>/Applications</filename>, that
makes GUI apps available.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-getting-documentation">
<title>Getting documentation</title>
<para>
After building that new environment, look through
<filename>~/.nix-profile</filename> to make sure everything is there that
we wanted. Discerning readers will note that some files are missing. Look
inside <filename>~/.nix-profile/share/man/man1/</filename> to verify this.
There are no man pages for any of the Nix tools! This is because some
packages like Nix have multiple outputs for things like documentation (see
section 4). Let's make Nix install those as well.
</para>
<screen>
{
packageOverrides = pkgs: with pkgs; {
myPackages = pkgs.buildEnv {
name = "my-packages";
paths = [ aspell bc coreutils ffmpeg nixUnstable emscripten jq nox silver-searcher ];
pathsToLink = [ "/share/man" "/share/doc" "/bin" ];
extraOutputsToInstall = [ "man" "doc" ];
};
};
}
</screen>
<para>
This provides us with some useful documentation for using our packages.
However, if we actually want those manpages to be detected by man, we need
to set up our environment. This can also be managed within Nix expressions.
</para>
<screen>
{
packageOverrides = pkgs: with pkgs; rec {
myProfile = writeText "my-profile" ''
export PATH=$HOME/.nix-profile/bin:/nix/var/nix/profiles/default/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin
export MANPATH=$HOME/.nix-profile/share/man:/nix/var/nix/profiles/default/share/man:/usr/share/man
'';
myPackages = pkgs.buildEnv {
name = "my-packages";
paths = [
(runCommand "profile" {} ''
mkdir -p $out/etc/profile.d
cp ${myProfile} $out/etc/profile.d/my-profile.sh
'')
aspell
bc
coreutils
ffmpeg
man
nixUnstable
emscripten
jq
nox
silver-searcher
];
pathsToLink = [ "/share/man" "/share/doc" "/bin" "/etc" ];
extraOutputsToInstall = [ "man" "doc" ];
};
};
}
</screen>
<para>
For this to work fully, you must also have this script sourced when you are
logged in. Try adding something like this to your
<filename>~/.profile</filename> file:
</para>
<screen>
#!/bin/sh
if [ -d $HOME/.nix-profile/etc/profile.d ]; then
for i in $HOME/.nix-profile/etc/profile.d/*.sh; do
if [ -r $i ]; then
. $i
fi
done
fi
</screen>
<para>
Now just run <literal>source $HOME/.profile</literal> and you can starting
loading man pages from your environent.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-gnu-info-setup">
<title>GNU info setup</title>
<para>
Configuring GNU info is a little bit trickier than man pages. To work
correctly, info needs a database to be generated. This can be done with
some small modifications to our environment scripts.
</para>
<screen>
{
packageOverrides = pkgs: with pkgs; rec {
myProfile = writeText "my-profile" ''
export PATH=$HOME/.nix-profile/bin:/nix/var/nix/profiles/default/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin
export MANPATH=$HOME/.nix-profile/share/man:/nix/var/nix/profiles/default/share/man:/usr/share/man
export INFOPATH=$HOME/.nix-profile/share/info:/nix/var/nix/profiles/default/share/info:/usr/share/info
'';
myPackages = pkgs.buildEnv {
name = "my-packages";
paths = [
(runCommand "profile" {} ''
mkdir -p $out/etc/profile.d
cp ${myProfile} $out/etc/profile.d/my-profile.sh
'')
aspell
bc
coreutils
ffmpeg
man
nixUnstable
emscripten
jq
nox
silver-searcher
texinfoInteractive
];
pathsToLink = [ "/share/man" "/share/doc" "/share/info" "/bin" "/etc" ];
extraOutputsToInstall = [ "man" "doc" "info" ];
postBuild = ''
if [ -x $out/bin/install-info -a -w $out/share/info ]; then
shopt -s nullglob
for i in $out/share/info/*.info $out/share/info/*.info.gz; do
$out/bin/install-info $i $out/share/info/dir
done
fi
'';
};
};
}
</screen>
<para>
<literal>postBuild</literal> tells Nixpkgs to run a command after building
the environment. In this case, <literal>install-info</literal> adds the
installed info pages to <literal>dir</literal> which is GNU info's default
root node. Note that <literal>texinfoInteractive</literal> is added to the
environment to give the <literal>install-info</literal> command.
</para>
</section>
</section>
</chapter>

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@@ -0,0 +1,35 @@
<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="chap-contributing">
<title>Contributing to this documentation</title>
<para>
The DocBook sources of the Nixpkgs manual are in the
<filename
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/tree/master/doc">doc</filename>
subdirectory of the Nixpkgs repository.
</para>
<para>
You can quickly check your edits with <command>make</command>:
</para>
<screen>
$ cd /path/to/nixpkgs/doc
$ nix-shell
[nix-shell]$ make
</screen>
<para>
If you experience problems, run <command>make debug</command> to help
understand the docbook errors.
</para>
<para>
After making modifications to the manual, it's important to build it before
committing. You can do that as follows:
<screen>
$ cd /path/to/nixpkgs/doc
$ nix-shell
[nix-shell]$ make clean
[nix-shell]$ nix-build .
</screen>
If the build succeeds, the manual will be in
<filename>./result/share/doc/nixpkgs/manual.html</filename>.
</para>
</chapter>

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@@ -1,597 +0,0 @@
# Coding conventions {#chap-conventions}
## Syntax {#sec-syntax}
- Use 2 spaces of indentation per indentation level in Nix expressions, 4 spaces in shell scripts.
- Do not use tab characters, i.e. configure your editor to use soft tabs. For instance, use `(setq-default indent-tabs-mode nil)` in Emacs. Everybody has different tab settings so its asking for trouble.
- Use `lowerCamelCase` for variable names, not `UpperCamelCase`. Note, this rule does not apply to package attribute names, which instead follow the rules in <xref linkend="sec-package-naming"/>.
- Function calls with attribute set arguments are written as
```nix
foo {
arg = ...;
}
```
not
```nix
foo
{
arg = ...;
}
```
Also fine is
```nix
foo { arg = ...; }
```
if it's a short call.
- In attribute sets or lists that span multiple lines, the attribute names or list elements should be aligned:
```nix
# A long list.
list = [
elem1
elem2
elem3
];
# A long attribute set.
attrs = {
attr1 = short_expr;
attr2 =
if true then big_expr else big_expr;
};
# Combined
listOfAttrs = [
{
attr1 = 3;
attr2 = "fff";
}
{
attr1 = 5;
attr2 = "ggg";
}
];
```
- Short lists or attribute sets can be written on one line:
```nix
# A short list.
list = [ elem1 elem2 elem3 ];
# A short set.
attrs = { x = 1280; y = 1024; };
```
- Breaking in the middle of a function argument can give hard-to-read code, like
```nix
someFunction { x = 1280;
y = 1024; } otherArg
yetAnotherArg
```
(especially if the argument is very large, spanning multiple lines).
Better:
```nix
someFunction
{ x = 1280; y = 1024; }
otherArg
yetAnotherArg
```
or
```nix
let res = { x = 1280; y = 1024; };
in someFunction res otherArg yetAnotherArg
```
- The bodies of functions, asserts, and withs are not indented to prevent a lot of superfluous indentation levels, i.e.
```nix
{ arg1, arg2 }:
assert system == "i686-linux";
stdenv.mkDerivation { ...
```
not
```nix
{ arg1, arg2 }:
assert system == "i686-linux";
stdenv.mkDerivation { ...
```
- Function formal arguments are written as:
```nix
{ arg1, arg2, arg3 }:
```
but if they don't fit on one line they're written as:
```nix
{ arg1, arg2, arg3
, arg4, ...
, # Some comment...
argN
}:
```
- Functions should list their expected arguments as precisely as possible. That is, write
```nix
{ stdenv, fetchurl, perl }: ...
```
instead of
```nix
args: with args; ...
```
or
```nix
{ stdenv, fetchurl, perl, ... }: ...
```
For functions that are truly generic in the number of arguments (such as wrappers around `mkDerivation`) that have some required arguments, you should write them using an `@`-pattern:
```nix
{ stdenv, doCoverageAnalysis ? false, ... } @ args:
stdenv.mkDerivation (args // {
... if doCoverageAnalysis then "bla" else "" ...
})
```
instead of
```nix
args:
args.stdenv.mkDerivation (args // {
... if args ? doCoverageAnalysis && args.doCoverageAnalysis then "bla" else "" ...
})
```
- Unnecessary string conversions should be avoided. Do
```nix
rev = version;
```
instead of
```nix
rev = "${version}";
```
- Arguments should be listed in the order they are used, with the exception of `lib`, which always goes first.
- The top-level `lib` must be used in the master and 21.05 branch over its alias `stdenv.lib` as it now causes evaluation errors when aliases are disabled which is the case for ofborg.
`lib` is unrelated to `stdenv`, and so `stdenv.lib` should only be used as a convenience alias when developing locally to avoid having to modify the function inputs just to test something out.
## Package naming {#sec-package-naming}
The key words _must_, _must not_, _required_, _shall_, _shall not_, _should_, _should not_, _recommended_, _may_, and _optional_ in this section are to be interpreted as described in [RFC 2119](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2119). Only _emphasized_ words are to be interpreted in this way.
In Nixpkgs, there are generally three different names associated with a package:
- The `name` attribute of the derivation (excluding the version part). This is what most users see, in particular when using `nix-env`.
- The variable name used for the instantiated package in `all-packages.nix`, and when passing it as a dependency to other functions. Typically this is called the _package attribute name_. This is what Nix expression authors see. It can also be used when installing using `nix-env -iA`.
- The filename for (the directory containing) the Nix expression.
Most of the time, these are the same. For instance, the package `e2fsprogs` has a `name` attribute `"e2fsprogs-version"`, is bound to the variable name `e2fsprogs` in `all-packages.nix`, and the Nix expression is in `pkgs/os-specific/linux/e2fsprogs/default.nix`.
There are a few naming guidelines:
- The `name` attribute _should_ be identical to the upstream package name.
- The `name` attribute _must not_ contain uppercase letters — e.g., `"mplayer-1.0rc2"` instead of `"MPlayer-1.0rc2"`.
- The version part of the `name` attribute _must_ start with a digit (following a dash) — e.g., `"hello-0.3.1rc2"`.
- If a package is not a release but a commit from a repository, then the version part of the name _must_ be the date of that (fetched) commit. The date _must_ be in `"YYYY-MM-DD"` format. Also append `"unstable"` to the name - e.g., `"pkgname-unstable-2014-09-23"`.
- Dashes in the package name _should_ be preserved in new variable names, rather than converted to underscores or camel cased — e.g., `http-parser` instead of `http_parser` or `httpParser`. The hyphenated style is preferred in all three package names.
- If there are multiple versions of a package, this _should_ be reflected in the variable names in `all-packages.nix`, e.g. `json-c-0-9` and `json-c-0-11`. If there is an obvious “default” version, make an attribute like `json-c = json-c-0-9;`. See also <xref linkend="sec-versioning" />
## File naming and organisation {#sec-organisation}
Names of files and directories should be in lowercase, with dashes between words — not in camel case. For instance, it should be `all-packages.nix`, not `allPackages.nix` or `AllPackages.nix`.
### Hierarchy {#sec-hierarchy}
Each package should be stored in its own directory somewhere in the `pkgs/` tree, i.e. in `pkgs/category/subcategory/.../pkgname`. Below are some rules for picking the right category for a package. Many packages fall under several categories; what matters is the _primary_ purpose of a package. For example, the `libxml2` package builds both a library and some tools; but its a library foremost, so it goes under `pkgs/development/libraries`.
When in doubt, consider refactoring the `pkgs/` tree, e.g. creating new categories or splitting up an existing category.
**If its used to support _software development_:**
- **If its a _library_ used by other packages:**
- `development/libraries` (e.g. `libxml2`)
- **If its a _compiler_:**
- `development/compilers` (e.g. `gcc`)
- **If its an _interpreter_:**
- `development/interpreters` (e.g. `guile`)
- **If its a (set of) development _tool(s)_:**
- **If its a _parser generator_ (including lexers):**
- `development/tools/parsing` (e.g. `bison`, `flex`)
- **If its a _build manager_:**
- `development/tools/build-managers` (e.g. `gnumake`)
- **Else:**
- `development/tools/misc` (e.g. `binutils`)
- **Else:**
- `development/misc`
**If its a (set of) _tool(s)_:**
(A tool is a relatively small program, especially one intended to be used non-interactively.)
- **If its for _networking_:**
- `tools/networking` (e.g. `wget`)
- **If its for _text processing_:**
- `tools/text` (e.g. `diffutils`)
- **If its a _system utility_, i.e., something related or essential to the operation of a system:**
- `tools/system` (e.g. `cron`)
- **If its an _archiver_ (which may include a compression function):**
- `tools/archivers` (e.g. `zip`, `tar`)
- **If its a _compression_ program:**
- `tools/compression` (e.g. `gzip`, `bzip2`)
- **If its a _security_-related program:**
- `tools/security` (e.g. `nmap`, `gnupg`)
- **Else:**
- `tools/misc`
**If its a _shell_:**
- `shells` (e.g. `bash`)
**If its a _server_:**
- **If its a web server:**
- `servers/http` (e.g. `apache-httpd`)
- **If its an implementation of the X Windowing System:**
- `servers/x11` (e.g. `xorg` — this includes the client libraries and programs)
- **Else:**
- `servers/misc`
**If its a _desktop environment_:**
- `desktops` (e.g. `kde`, `gnome`, `enlightenment`)
**If its a _window manager_:**
- `applications/window-managers` (e.g. `awesome`, `stumpwm`)
**If its an _application_:**
A (typically large) program with a distinct user interface, primarily used interactively.
- **If its a _version management system_:**
- `applications/version-management` (e.g. `subversion`)
- **If its a _terminal emulator_:**
- `applications/terminal-emulators` (e.g. `alacritty` or `rxvt` or `termite`)
- **If its for _video playback / editing_:**
- `applications/video` (e.g. `vlc`)
- **If its for _graphics viewing / editing_:**
- `applications/graphics` (e.g. `gimp`)
- **If its for _networking_:**
- **If its a _mailreader_:**
- `applications/networking/mailreaders` (e.g. `thunderbird`)
- **If its a _newsreader_:**
- `applications/networking/newsreaders` (e.g. `pan`)
- **If its a _web browser_:**
- `applications/networking/browsers` (e.g. `firefox`)
- **Else:**
- `applications/networking/misc`
- **Else:**
- `applications/misc`
**If its _data_ (i.e., does not have a straight-forward executable semantics):**
- **If its a _font_:**
- `data/fonts`
- **If its an _icon theme_:**
- `data/icons`
- **If its related to _SGML/XML processing_:**
- **If its an _XML DTD_:**
- `data/sgml+xml/schemas/xml-dtd` (e.g. `docbook`)
- **If its an _XSLT stylesheet_:**
(Okay, these are executable...)
- `data/sgml+xml/stylesheets/xslt` (e.g. `docbook-xsl`)
- **If its a _theme_ for a _desktop environment_, a _window manager_ or a _display manager_:**
- `data/themes`
**If its a _game_:**
- `games`
**Else:**
- `misc`
### Versioning {#sec-versioning}
Because every version of a package in Nixpkgs creates a potential maintenance burden, old versions of a package should not be kept unless there is a good reason to do so. For instance, Nixpkgs contains several versions of GCC because other packages dont build with the latest version of GCC. Other examples are having both the latest stable and latest pre-release version of a package, or to keep several major releases of an application that differ significantly in functionality.
If there is only one version of a package, its Nix expression should be named `e2fsprogs/default.nix`. If there are multiple versions, this should be reflected in the filename, e.g. `e2fsprogs/1.41.8.nix` and `e2fsprogs/1.41.9.nix`. The version in the filename should leave out unnecessary detail. For instance, if we keep the latest Firefox 2.0.x and 3.5.x versions in Nixpkgs, they should be named `firefox/2.0.nix` and `firefox/3.5.nix`, respectively (which, at a given point, might contain versions `2.0.0.20` and `3.5.4`). If a version requires many auxiliary files, you can use a subdirectory for each version, e.g. `firefox/2.0/default.nix` and `firefox/3.5/default.nix`.
All versions of a package _must_ be included in `all-packages.nix` to make sure that they evaluate correctly.
## Fetching Sources {#sec-sources}
There are multiple ways to fetch a package source in nixpkgs. The general guideline is that you should package reproducible sources with a high degree of availability. Right now there is only one fetcher which has mirroring support and that is `fetchurl`. Note that you should also prefer protocols which have a corresponding proxy environment variable.
You can find many source fetch helpers in `pkgs/build-support/fetch*`.
In the file `pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix` you can find fetch helpers, these have names on the form `fetchFrom*`. The intention of these are to provide snapshot fetches but using the same api as some of the version controlled fetchers from `pkgs/build-support/`. As an example going from bad to good:
- Bad: Uses `git://` which won't be proxied.
```nix
src = fetchgit {
url = "git://github.com/NixOS/nix.git";
rev = "1f795f9f44607cc5bec70d1300150bfefcef2aae";
sha256 = "1cw5fszffl5pkpa6s6wjnkiv6lm5k618s32sp60kvmvpy7a2v9kg";
}
```
- Better: This is ok, but an archive fetch will still be faster.
```nix
src = fetchgit {
url = "https://github.com/NixOS/nix.git";
rev = "1f795f9f44607cc5bec70d1300150bfefcef2aae";
sha256 = "1cw5fszffl5pkpa6s6wjnkiv6lm5k618s32sp60kvmvpy7a2v9kg";
}
```
- Best: Fetches a snapshot archive and you get the rev you want.
```nix
src = fetchFromGitHub {
owner = "NixOS";
repo = "nix";
rev = "1f795f9f44607cc5bec70d1300150bfefcef2aae";
sha256 = "1i2yxndxb6yc9l6c99pypbd92lfq5aac4klq7y2v93c9qvx2cgpc";
}
```
Find the value to put as `sha256` by running `nix run -f '<nixpkgs>' nix-prefetch-github -c nix-prefetch-github --rev 1f795f9f44607cc5bec70d1300150bfefcef2aae NixOS nix` or `nix-prefetch-url --unpack https://github.com/NixOS/nix/archive/1f795f9f44607cc5bec70d1300150bfefcef2aae.tar.gz`.
## Obtaining source hash {#sec-source-hashes}
Preferred source hash type is sha256. There are several ways to get it.
1. Prefetch URL (with `nix-prefetch-XXX URL`, where `XXX` is one of `url`, `git`, `hg`, `cvs`, `bzr`, `svn`). Hash is printed to stdout.
2. Prefetch by package source (with `nix-prefetch-url '<nixpkgs>' -A PACKAGE.src`, where `PACKAGE` is package attribute name). Hash is printed to stdout.
This works well when you've upgraded existing package version and want to find out new hash, but is useless if package can't be accessed by attribute or package has multiple sources (`.srcs`, architecture-dependent sources, etc).
3. Upstream provided hash: use it when upstream provides `sha256` or `sha512` (when upstream provides `md5`, don't use it, compute `sha256` instead).
A little nuance is that `nix-prefetch-*` tools produce hash encoded with `base32`, but upstream usually provides hexadecimal (`base16`) encoding. Fetchers understand both formats. Nixpkgs does not standardize on any one format.
You can convert between formats with nix-hash, for example:
```ShellSession
$ nix-hash --type sha256 --to-base32 HASH
```
4. Extracting hash from local source tarball can be done with `sha256sum`. Use `nix-prefetch-url file:///path/to/tarball` if you want base32 hash.
5. Fake hash: set fake hash in package expression, perform build and extract correct hash from error Nix prints.
For package updates it is enough to change one symbol to make hash fake. For new packages, you can use `lib.fakeSha256`, `lib.fakeSha512` or any other fake hash.
This is last resort method when reconstructing source URL is non-trivial and `nix-prefetch-url -A` isn't applicable (for example, [one of `kodi` dependencies](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/d2ab091dd308b99e4912b805a5eb088dd536adb9/pkgs/applications/video/kodi/default.nix#L73")). The easiest way then would be replace hash with a fake one and rebuild. Nix build will fail and error message will contain desired hash.
::: warning
This method has security problems. Check below for details.
:::
### Obtaining hashes securely {#sec-source-hashes-security}
Let's say Man-in-the-Middle (MITM) sits close to your network. Then instead of fetching source you can fetch malware, and instead of source hash you get hash of malware. Here are security considerations for this scenario:
- `http://` URLs are not secure to prefetch hash from;
- hashes from upstream (in method 3) should be obtained via secure protocol;
- `https://` URLs are secure in methods 1, 2, 3;
- `https://` URLs are not secure in method 5. When obtaining hashes with fake hash method, TLS checks are disabled. So refetch source hash from several different networks to exclude MITM scenario. Alternatively, use fake hash method to make Nix error, but instead of extracting hash from error, extract `https://` URL and prefetch it with method 1.
## Patches {#sec-patches}
Patches available online should be retrieved using `fetchpatch`.
```nix
patches = [
(fetchpatch {
name = "fix-check-for-using-shared-freetype-lib.patch";
url = "http://git.ghostscript.com/?p=ghostpdl.git;a=patch;h=8f5d285";
sha256 = "1f0k043rng7f0rfl9hhb89qzvvksqmkrikmm38p61yfx51l325xr";
})
];
```
Otherwise, you can add a `.patch` file to the `nixpkgs` repository. In the interest of keeping our maintenance burden to a minimum, only patches that are unique to `nixpkgs` should be added in this way.
```nix
patches = [ ./0001-changes.patch ];
```
If you do need to do create this sort of patch file, one way to do so is with git:
1. Move to the root directory of the source code you're patching.
```ShellSession
$ cd the/program/source
```
2. If a git repository is not already present, create one and stage all of the source files.
```ShellSession
$ git init
$ git add .
```
3. Edit some files to make whatever changes need to be included in the patch.
4. Use git to create a diff, and pipe the output to a patch file:
```ShellSession
$ git diff > nixpkgs/pkgs/the/package/0001-changes.patch
```
## Package tests {#sec-package-tests}
Tests are important to ensure quality and make reviews and automatic updates easy.
Nix package tests are a lightweight alternative to [NixOS module tests](https://nixos.org/manual/nixos/stable/#sec-nixos-tests). They can be used to create simple integration tests for packages while the module tests are used to test services or programs with a graphical user interface on a NixOS VM. Unittests that are included in the source code of a package should be executed in the `checkPhase`.
### Writing package tests {#ssec-package-tests-writing}
This is an example using the `phoronix-test-suite` package with the current best practices.
Add the tests in `passthru.tests` to the package definition like this:
```nix
{ stdenv, lib, fetchurl, callPackage }:
stdenv.mkDerivation {
passthru.tests = {
simple-execution = callPackage ./tests.nix { };
};
meta = { … };
}
```
Create `tests.nix` in the package directory:
```nix
{ runCommand, phoronix-test-suite }:
let
inherit (phoronix-test-suite) pname version;
in
runCommand "${pname}-tests" { meta.timeout = 3; }
''
# automatic initial setup to prevent interactive questions
${phoronix-test-suite}/bin/phoronix-test-suite enterprise-setup >/dev/null
# get version of installed program and compare with package version
if [[ `${phoronix-test-suite}/bin/phoronix-test-suite version` != *"${version}"* ]]; then
echo "Error: program version does not match package version"
exit 1
fi
# run dummy command
${phoronix-test-suite}/bin/phoronix-test-suite dummy_module.dummy-command >/dev/null
# needed for Nix to register the command as successful
touch $out
''
```
### Running package tests {#ssec-package-tests-running}
You can run these tests with:
```ShellSession
$ cd path/to/nixpkgs
$ nix-build -A phoronix-test-suite.tests
```
### Examples of package tests {#ssec-package-tests-examples}
Here are examples of package tests:
- [Jasmin compile test](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/development/compilers/jasmin/test-assemble-hello-world/default.nix)
- [Lobster compile test](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/development/compilers/lobster/test-can-run-hello-world.nix)
- [Spacy annotation test](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/development/python-modules/spacy/annotation-test/default.nix)
- [Libtorch test](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/development/libraries/science/math/libtorch/test/default.nix)
- [Multiple tests for nanopb](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/development/libraries/nanopb/default.nix)

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# Contributing to this documentation {#chap-contributing}
The DocBook sources of the Nixpkgs manual are in the [doc](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/tree/master/doc) subdirectory of the Nixpkgs repository.
You can quickly check your edits with `make`:
```ShellSession
$ cd /path/to/nixpkgs/doc
$ nix-shell
[nix-shell]$ make $makeFlags
```
If you experience problems, run `make debug` to help understand the docbook errors.
After making modifications to the manual, it's important to build it before committing. You can do that as follows:
```ShellSession
$ cd /path/to/nixpkgs/doc
$ nix-shell
[nix-shell]$ make clean
[nix-shell]$ nix-build .
```
If the build succeeds, the manual will be in `./result/share/doc/nixpkgs/manual.html`.

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@@ -1,77 +0,0 @@
# Quick Start to Adding a Package {#chap-quick-start}
To add a package to Nixpkgs:
1. Checkout the Nixpkgs source tree:
```ShellSession
$ git clone https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs
$ cd nixpkgs
```
2. Find a good place in the Nixpkgs tree to add the Nix expression for your package. For instance, a library package typically goes into `pkgs/development/libraries/pkgname`, while a web browser goes into `pkgs/applications/networking/browsers/pkgname`. See <xref linkend="sec-organisation" /> for some hints on the tree organisation. Create a directory for your package, e.g.
```ShellSession
$ mkdir pkgs/development/libraries/libfoo
```
3. In the package directory, create a Nix expression — a piece of code that describes how to build the package. In this case, it should be a _function_ that is called with the package dependencies as arguments, and returns a build of the package in the Nix store. The expression should usually be called `default.nix`.
```ShellSession
$ emacs pkgs/development/libraries/libfoo/default.nix
$ git add pkgs/development/libraries/libfoo/default.nix
```
You can have a look at the existing Nix expressions under `pkgs/` to see how its done. Here are some good ones:
- GNU Hello: [`pkgs/applications/misc/hello/default.nix`](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/applications/misc/hello/default.nix). Trivial package, which specifies some `meta` attributes which is good practice.
- GNU cpio: [`pkgs/tools/archivers/cpio/default.nix`](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/tools/archivers/cpio/default.nix). Also a simple package. The generic builder in `stdenv` does everything for you. It has no dependencies beyond `stdenv`.
- GNU Multiple Precision arithmetic library (GMP): [`pkgs/development/libraries/gmp/5.1.x.nix`](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/development/libraries/gmp/5.1.x.nix). Also done by the generic builder, but has a dependency on `m4`.
- Pan, a GTK-based newsreader: [`pkgs/applications/networking/newsreaders/pan/default.nix`](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/applications/networking/newsreaders/pan/default.nix). Has an optional dependency on `gtkspell`, which is only built if `spellCheck` is `true`.
- Apache HTTPD: [`pkgs/servers/http/apache-httpd/2.4.nix`](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/servers/http/apache-httpd/2.4.nix). A bunch of optional features, variable substitutions in the configure flags, a post-install hook, and miscellaneous hackery.
- Thunderbird: [`pkgs/applications/networking/mailreaders/thunderbird/default.nix`](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/applications/networking/mailreaders/thunderbird/default.nix). Lots of dependencies.
- JDiskReport, a Java utility: [`pkgs/tools/misc/jdiskreport/default.nix`](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/tools/misc/jdiskreport/default.nix). Nixpkgs doesnt have a decent `stdenv` for Java yet so this is pretty ad-hoc.
- XML::Simple, a Perl module: [`pkgs/top-level/perl-packages.nix`](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/top-level/perl-packages.nix) (search for the `XMLSimple` attribute). Most Perl modules are so simple to build that they are defined directly in `perl-packages.nix`; no need to make a separate file for them.
- Adobe Reader: [`pkgs/applications/misc/adobe-reader/default.nix`](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/applications/misc/adobe-reader/default.nix). Shows how binary-only packages can be supported. In particular the [builder](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/applications/misc/adobe-reader/builder.sh) uses `patchelf` to set the RUNPATH and ELF interpreter of the executables so that the right libraries are found at runtime.
Some notes:
- All [`meta`](#chap-meta) attributes are optional, but its still a good idea to provide at least the `description`, `homepage` and [`license`](#sec-meta-license).
- You can use `nix-prefetch-url url` to get the SHA-256 hash of source distributions. There are similar commands as `nix-prefetch-git` and `nix-prefetch-hg` available in `nix-prefetch-scripts` package.
- A list of schemes for `mirror://` URLs can be found in [`pkgs/build-support/fetchurl/mirrors.nix`](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/build-support/fetchurl/mirrors.nix).
The exact syntax and semantics of the Nix expression language, including the built-in function, are described in the Nix manual in the [chapter on writing Nix expressions](https://hydra.nixos.org/job/nix/trunk/tarball/latest/download-by-type/doc/manual/#chap-writing-nix-expressions).
4. Add a call to the function defined in the previous step to [`pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix`](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix) with some descriptive name for the variable, e.g. `libfoo`.
```ShellSession
$ emacs pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix
```
The attributes in that file are sorted by category (like “Development / Libraries”) that more-or-less correspond to the directory structure of Nixpkgs, and then by attribute name.
5. To test whether the package builds, run the following command from the root of the nixpkgs source tree:
```ShellSession
$ nix-build -A libfoo
```
where `libfoo` should be the variable name defined in the previous step. You may want to add the flag `-K` to keep the temporary build directory in case something fails. If the build succeeds, a symlink `./result` to the package in the Nix store is created.
6. If you want to install the package into your profile (optional), do
```ShellSession
$ nix-env -f . -iA libfoo
```
7. Optionally commit the new package and open a pull request [to nixpkgs](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pulls), or use [the Patches category](https://discourse.nixos.org/t/about-the-patches-category/477) on Discourse for sending a patch without a GitHub account.

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@@ -1,204 +0,0 @@
# Reviewing contributions {#chap-reviewing-contributions}
::: warning
The following section is a draft, and the policy for reviewing is still being discussed in issues such as [#11166](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/11166) and [#20836](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/20836).
:::
The Nixpkgs project receives a fairly high number of contributions via GitHub pull requests. Reviewing and approving these is an important task and a way to contribute to the project.
The high change rate of Nixpkgs makes any pull request that remains open for too long subject to conflicts that will require extra work from the submitter or the merger. Reviewing pull requests in a timely manner and being responsive to the comments is the key to avoid this issue. GitHub provides sort filters that can be used to see the [most recently](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pulls?q=is%3Apr+is%3Aopen+sort%3Aupdated-desc) and the [least recently](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pulls?q=is%3Apr+is%3Aopen+sort%3Aupdated-asc) updated pull requests. We highly encourage looking at [this list of ready to merge, unreviewed pull requests](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pulls?q=is%3Apr+is%3Aopen+review%3Anone+status%3Asuccess+-label%3A%222.status%3A+work-in-progress%22+no%3Aproject+no%3Aassignee+no%3Amilestone).
When reviewing a pull request, please always be nice and polite. Controversial changes can lead to controversial opinions, but it is important to respect every community member and their work.
GitHub provides reactions as a simple and quick way to provide feedback to pull requests or any comments. The thumb-down reaction should be used with care and if possible accompanied with some explanation so the submitter has directions to improve their contribution.
pull request reviews should include a list of what has been reviewed in a comment, so other reviewers and mergers can know the state of the review.
All the review template samples provided in this section are generic and meant as examples. Their usage is optional and the reviewer is free to adapt them to their liking.
## Package updates {#reviewing-contributions-package-updates}
A package update is the most trivial and common type of pull request. These pull requests mainly consist of updating the version part of the package name and the source hash.
It can happen that non-trivial updates include patches or more complex changes.
Reviewing process:
- Ensure that the package versioning fits the guidelines.
- Ensure that the commit text fits the guidelines.
- Ensure that the package maintainers are notified.
- [CODEOWNERS](https://help.github.com/articles/about-codeowners) will make GitHub notify users based on the submitted changes, but it can happen that it misses some of the package maintainers.
- Ensure that the meta field information is correct.
- License can change with version updates, so it should be checked to match the upstream license.
- If the package has no maintainer, a maintainer must be set. This can be the update submitter or a community member that accepts to take maintainership of the package.
- Ensure that the code contains no typos.
- Building the package locally.
- pull requests are often targeted to the master or staging branch, and building the pull request locally when it is submitted can trigger many source builds.
- It is possible to rebase the changes on nixos-unstable or nixpkgs-unstable for easier review by running the following commands from a nixpkgs clone.
```ShellSession
$ git fetch origin nixos-unstable
$ git fetch origin pull/PRNUMBER/head
$ git rebase --onto nixos-unstable BASEBRANCH FETCH_HEAD
```
- The first command fetches the nixos-unstable branch.
- The second command fetches the pull request changes, `PRNUMBER` is the number at the end of the pull request title and `BASEBRANCH` the base branch of the pull request.
- The third command rebases the pull request changes to the nixos-unstable branch.
- The [nixpkgs-review](https://github.com/Mic92/nixpkgs-review) tool can be used to review a pull request content in a single command. `PRNUMBER` should be replaced by the number at the end of the pull request title. You can also provide the full github pull request url.
```ShellSession
$ nix-shell -p nixpkgs-review --run "nixpkgs-review pr PRNUMBER"
```
- Running every binary.
Sample template for a package update review is provided below.
```markdown
##### Reviewed points
- [ ] package name fits guidelines
- [ ] package version fits guidelines
- [ ] package build on ARCHITECTURE
- [ ] executables tested on ARCHITECTURE
- [ ] all depending packages build
##### Possible improvements
##### Comments
```
## New packages {#reviewing-contributions-new-packages}
New packages are a common type of pull requests. These pull requests consists in adding a new nix-expression for a package.
Review process:
- Ensure that the package versioning fits the guidelines.
- Ensure that the commit name fits the guidelines.
- Ensure that the meta fields contain correct information.
- License must match the upstream license.
- Platforms should be set (or the package will not get binary substitutes).
- Maintainers must be set. This can be the package submitter or a community member that accepts taking up maintainership of the package.
- Report detected typos.
- Ensure the package source:
- Uses mirror URLs when available.
- Uses the most appropriate functions (e.g. packages from GitHub should use `fetchFromGitHub`).
- Building the package locally.
- Running every binary.
Sample template for a new package review is provided below.
```markdown
##### Reviewed points
- [ ] package path fits guidelines
- [ ] package name fits guidelines
- [ ] package version fits guidelines
- [ ] package build on ARCHITECTURE
- [ ] executables tested on ARCHITECTURE
- [ ] `meta.description` is set and fits guidelines
- [ ] `meta.license` fits upstream license
- [ ] `meta.platforms` is set
- [ ] `meta.maintainers` is set
- [ ] build time only dependencies are declared in `nativeBuildInputs`
- [ ] source is fetched using the appropriate function
- [ ] phases are respected
- [ ] patches that are remotely available are fetched with `fetchpatch`
##### Possible improvements
##### Comments
```
## Module updates {#reviewing-contributions-module-updates}
Module updates are submissions changing modules in some ways. These often contains changes to the options or introduce new options.
Reviewing process:
- Ensure that the module maintainers are notified.
- [CODEOWNERS](https://help.github.com/articles/about-codeowners/) will make GitHub notify users based on the submitted changes, but it can happen that it misses some of the package maintainers.
- Ensure that the module tests, if any, are succeeding.
- Ensure that the introduced options are correct.
- Type should be appropriate (string related types differs in their merging capabilities, `optionSet` and `string` types are deprecated).
- Description, default and example should be provided.
- Ensure that option changes are backward compatible.
- `mkRenamedOptionModule` and `mkAliasOptionModule` functions provide way to make option changes backward compatible.
- Ensure that removed options are declared with `mkRemovedOptionModule`
- Ensure that changes that are not backward compatible are mentioned in release notes.
- Ensure that documentations affected by the change is updated.
Sample template for a module update review is provided below.
```markdown
##### Reviewed points
- [ ] changes are backward compatible
- [ ] removed options are declared with `mkRemovedOptionModule`
- [ ] changes that are not backward compatible are documented in release notes
- [ ] module tests succeed on ARCHITECTURE
- [ ] options types are appropriate
- [ ] options description is set
- [ ] options example is provided
- [ ] documentation affected by the changes is updated
##### Possible improvements
##### Comments
```
## New modules {#reviewing-contributions-new-modules}
New modules submissions introduce a new module to NixOS.
Reviewing process:
- Ensure that the module tests, if any, are succeeding.
- Ensure that the introduced options are correct.
- Type should be appropriate (string related types differs in their merging capabilities, `optionSet` and `string` types are deprecated).
- Description, default and example should be provided.
- Ensure that module `meta` field is present
- Maintainers should be declared in `meta.maintainers`.
- Module documentation should be declared with `meta.doc`.
- Ensure that the module respect other modules functionality.
- For example, enabling a module should not open firewall ports by default.
Sample template for a new module review is provided below.
```markdown
##### Reviewed points
- [ ] module path fits the guidelines
- [ ] module tests succeed on ARCHITECTURE
- [ ] options have appropriate types
- [ ] options have default
- [ ] options have example
- [ ] options have descriptions
- [ ] No unneeded package is added to environment.systemPackages
- [ ] meta.maintainers is set
- [ ] module documentation is declared in meta.doc
##### Possible improvements
##### Comments
```
## Other submissions {#reviewing-contributions-other-submissions}
Other type of submissions requires different reviewing steps.
If you consider having enough knowledge and experience in a topic and would like to be a long-term reviewer for related submissions, please contact the current reviewers for that topic. They will give you information about the reviewing process. The main reviewers for a topic can be hard to find as there is no list, but checking past pull requests to see who reviewed or git-blaming the code to see who committed to that topic can give some hints.
Container system, boot system and library changes are some examples of the pull requests fitting this category.
## Merging pull requests {#reviewing-contributions--merging-pull-requests}
It is possible for community members that have enough knowledge and experience on a special topic to contribute by merging pull requests.
<!--
The following paragraphs about how to deal with unactive contributors is just a proposition and should be modified to what the community agrees to be the right policy.
Please note that contributors with commit rights unactive for more than three months will have their commit rights revoked.
-->
Please see the discussion in [GitHub nixpkgs issue #50105](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/50105) for information on how to proceed to be granted this level of access.
In a case a contributor definitively leaves the Nix community, they should create an issue or post on [Discourse](https://discourse.nixos.org) with references of packages and modules they maintain so the maintainership can be taken over by other contributors.

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@@ -1,267 +0,0 @@
# Submitting changes {#chap-submitting-changes}
## Making patches {#submitting-changes-making-patches}
- Read [Manual (How to write packages for Nix)](https://nixos.org/nixpkgs/manual/).
- Fork [the Nixpkgs repository](https://github.com/nixos/nixpkgs/) on GitHub.
- Create a branch for your future fix.
- You can make branch from a commit of your local `nixos-version`. That will help you to avoid additional local compilations. Because you will receive packages from binary cache. For example
```ShellSession
$ nixos-version --hash
0998212
$ git checkout 0998212
$ git checkout -b 'fix/pkg-name-update'
```
- Please avoid working directly on the `master` branch.
- Make commits of logical units.
- If you removed pkgs or made some major NixOS changes, write about it in the release notes for the next stable release. For example `nixos/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-2003.xml`.
- Check for unnecessary whitespace with `git diff --check` before committing.
- Format the commit in a following way:
```
(pkg-name | nixos/<module>): (from -> to | init at version | refactor | etc)
Additional information.
```
- Examples:
- `nginx: init at 2.0.1`
- `firefox: 54.0.1 -> 55.0`
- `nixos/hydra: add bazBaz option`
- `nixos/nginx: refactor config generation`
- Test your changes. If you work with
- nixpkgs:
- update pkg
- `nix-env -i pkg-name -f <path to your local nixpkgs folder>`
- add pkg
- Make sure its in `pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix`
- `nix-env -i pkg-name -f <path to your local nixpkgs folder>`
- _If you dont want to install pkg in you profile_.
- `nix-build -A pkg-attribute-name <path to your local nixpkgs folder>/default.nix` and check results in the folder `result`. It will appear in the same directory where you did `nix-build`.
- If you did `nix-env -i pkg-name` you can do `nix-env -e pkg-name` to uninstall it from your system.
- NixOS and its modules:
- You can add new module to your NixOS configuration file (usually its `/etc/nixos/configuration.nix`). And do `sudo nixos-rebuild test -I nixpkgs=<path to your local nixpkgs folder> --fast`.
- If you have commits `pkg-name: oh, forgot to insert whitespace`: squash commits in this case. Use `git rebase -i`.
- [Rebase](https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Branching-Rebasing) your branch against current `master`.
## Submitting changes {#submitting-changes-submitting-changes}
- Push your changes to your fork of nixpkgs.
- Create the pull request
- Follow [the contribution guidelines](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/.github/CONTRIBUTING.md#submitting-changes).
## Submitting security fixes {#submitting-changes-submitting-security-fixes}
Security fixes are submitted in the same way as other changes and thus the same guidelines apply.
- If a new version fixing the vulnerability has been released, update the package;
- If the security fix comes in the form of a patch and a CVE is available, then add the patch to the Nixpkgs tree, and apply it to the package.
The name of the patch should be the CVE identifier, so e.g. `CVE-2019-13636.patch`; If a patch is fetched the name needs to be set as well, e.g.:
```nix
(fetchpatch {
name = "CVE-2019-11068.patch";
url = "https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/libxslt/commit/e03553605b45c88f0b4b2980adfbbb8f6fca2fd6.patch";
sha256 = "0pkpb4837km15zgg6h57bncp66d5lwrlvkr73h0lanywq7zrwhj8";
})
```
If a security fix applies to both master and a stable release then, similar to regular changes, they are preferably delivered via master first and cherry-picked to the release branch.
Critical security fixes may by-pass the staging branches and be delivered directly to release branches such as `master` and `release-*`.
## Deprecating/removing packages {#submitting-changes-deprecating-packages}
There is currently no policy when to remove a package.
Before removing a package, one should try to find a new maintainer or fix smaller issues first.
### Steps to remove a package from Nixpkgs
We use jbidwatcher as an example for a discontinued project here.
1. Have Nixpkgs checked out locally and up to date.
1. Create a new branch for your change, e.g. `git checkout -b jbidwatcher`
1. Remove the actual package including its directory, e.g. `rm -rf pkgs/applications/misc/jbidwatcher`
1. Remove the package from the list of all packages (`pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix`).
1. Add an alias for the package name in `pkgs/top-level/aliases.nix` (There is also `pkgs/misc/vim-plugins/aliases.nix`. Package sets typically do not have aliases, so we can't add them there.)
For example in this case:
```
jbidwatcher = throw "jbidwatcher was discontinued in march 2021"; # added 2021-03-15
```
The throw message should explain in short why the package was removed for users that still have it installed.
1. Test if the changes introduced any issues by running `nix-env -qaP -f . --show-trace`. It should show the list of packages without errors.
1. Commit the changes. Explain again why the package was removed. If it was declared discontinued upstream, add a link to the source.
```ShellSession
$ git add pkgs/applications/misc/jbidwatcher/default.nix pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix pkgs/top-level/aliases.nix
$ git commit
```
Example commit message:
```
jbidwatcher: remove
project was discontinued in march 2021. the program does not work anymore because ebay changed the login.
https://web.archive.org/web/20210315205723/http://www.jbidwatcher.com/
```
1. Push changes to your GitHub fork with `git push`
1. Create a pull request against Nixpkgs. Mention the package maintainer.
This is how the pull request looks like in this case: [https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/116470](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/116470)
## Pull Request Template {#submitting-changes-pull-request-template}
The pull request template helps determine what steps have been made for a contribution so far, and will help guide maintainers on the status of a change. The motivation section of the PR should include any extra details the title does not address and link any existing issues related to the pull request.
When a PR is created, it will be pre-populated with some checkboxes detailed below:
### Tested using sandboxing {#submitting-changes-tested-with-sandbox}
When sandbox builds are enabled, Nix will setup an isolated environment for each build process. It is used to remove further hidden dependencies set by the build environment to improve reproducibility. This includes access to the network during the build outside of `fetch*` functions and files outside the Nix store. Depending on the operating system access to other resources are blocked as well (ex. inter process communication is isolated on Linux); see [sandbox](https://nixos.org/nix/manual/#conf-sandbox) in Nix manual for details.
Sandboxing is not enabled by default in Nix due to a small performance hit on each build. In pull requests for [nixpkgs](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/) people are asked to test builds with sandboxing enabled (see `Tested using sandboxing` in the pull request template) because in<https://nixos.org/hydra/> sandboxing is also used.
Depending if you use NixOS or other platforms you can use one of the following methods to enable sandboxing **before** building the package:
- **Globally enable sandboxing on NixOS**: add the following to `configuration.nix`
```nix
nix.useSandbox = true;
```
- **Globally enable sandboxing on non-NixOS platforms**: add the following to: `/etc/nix/nix.conf`
```ini
sandbox = true
```
### Built on platform(s) {#submitting-changes-platform-diversity}
Many Nix packages are designed to run on multiple platforms. As such, its important to let the maintainer know which platforms your changes have been tested on. Its not always practical to test a change on all platforms, and is not required for a pull request to be merged. Only check the systems you tested the build on in this section.
### Tested via one or more NixOS test(s) if existing and applicable for the change (look inside nixos/tests) {#submitting-changes-nixos-tests}
Packages with automated tests are much more likely to be merged in a timely fashion because it doesnt require as much manual testing by the maintainer to verify the functionality of the package. If there are existing tests for the package, they should be run to verify your changes do not break the tests. Tests can only be run on Linux. For more details on writing and running tests, see the [section in the NixOS manual](https://nixos.org/nixos/manual/index.html#sec-nixos-tests).
### Tested compilation of all pkgs that depend on this change using `nixpkgs-review` {#submitting-changes-tested-compilation}
If you are updating a packages version, you can use nixpkgs-review to make sure all packages that depend on the updated package still compile correctly. The `nixpkgs-review` utility can look for and build all dependencies either based on uncommited changes with the `wip` option or specifying a github pull request number.
review changes from pull request number 12345:
```ShellSession
nix run nixpkgs.nixpkgs-review -c nixpkgs-review pr 12345
```
review uncommitted changes:
```ShellSession
nix run nixpkgs.nixpkgs-review -c nixpkgs-review wip
```
review changes from last commit:
```ShellSession
nix run nixpkgs.nixpkgs-review -c nixpkgs-review rev HEAD
```
### Tested execution of all binary files (usually in `./result/bin/`) {#submitting-changes-tested-execution}
Its important to test any executables generated by a build when you change or create a package in nixpkgs. This can be done by looking in `./result/bin` and running any files in there, or at a minimum, the main executable for the package. For example, if you make a change to texlive, you probably would only check the binaries associated with the change you made rather than testing all of them.
### Meets Nixpkgs contribution standards {#submitting-changes-contribution-standards}
The last checkbox is fits [CONTRIBUTING.md](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/.github/CONTRIBUTING.md). The contributing document has detailed information on standards the Nix community has for commit messages, reviews, licensing of contributions you make to the project, etc\... Everyone should read and understand the standards the community has for contributing before submitting a pull request.
## Hotfixing pull requests {#submitting-changes-hotfixing-pull-requests}
- Make the appropriate changes in you branch.
- Dont create additional commits, do
- `git rebase -i`
- `git push --force` to your branch.
## Commit policy {#submitting-changes-commit-policy}
- Commits must be sufficiently tested before being merged, both for the master and staging branches.
- Hydra builds for master and staging should not be used as testing platform, its a build farm for changes that have been already tested.
- When changing the bootloader installation process, extra care must be taken. Grub installations cannot be rolled back, hence changes may break peoples installations forever. For any non-trivial change to the bootloader please file a PR asking for review, especially from \@edolstra.
```{.graphviz caption="Staging workflow"}
digraph {
"small changes" [shape=none]
"mass-rebuilds and other large changes" [shape=none]
"critical security fixes" [shape=none]
"broken staging-next fixes" [shape=none]
"small changes" -> master
"mass-rebuilds and other large changes" -> staging
"critical security fixes" -> master
"broken staging-next fixes" -> "staging-next"
"staging-next" -> master [color="#E85EB0"] [label="stabilization ends"] [fontcolor="#E85EB0"]
"staging" -> "staging-next" [color="#E85EB0"] [label="stabilization starts"] [fontcolor="#E85EB0"]
master -> "staging-next" -> staging [color="#5F5EE8"] [label="every six hours (GitHub Action)"] [fontcolor="#5F5EE8"]
}
```
[This GitHub Action](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/.github/workflows/merge-staging.yml) brings changes from `master` to `staging-next` and from `staging-next` to `staging` every 6 hours.
### Master branch {#submitting-changes-master-branch}
The `master` branch is the main development branch. It should only see non-breaking commits that do not cause mass rebuilds.
### Staging branch {#submitting-changes-staging-branch}
The `staging` branch is a development branch where mass-rebuilds go. It should only see non-breaking mass-rebuild commits. That means it is not to be used for testing, and changes must have been well tested already. If the branch is already in a broken state, please refrain from adding extra new breakages.
### Staging-next branch {#submitting-changes-staging-next-branch}
The `staging-next` branch is for stabilizing mass-rebuilds submitted to the `staging` branch prior to merging them into `master`. Mass-rebuilds should go via the `staging` branch. It should only see non-breaking commits that are fixing issues blocking it from being merged into the `master ` branch.
If the branch is already in a broken state, please refrain from adding extra new breakages. Stabilize it for a few days and then merge into master.
### Stable release branches {#submitting-changes-stable-release-branches}
For cherry-picking a commit to a stable release branch (“backporting”), use `git cherry-pick -x <original commit>` so that the original commit id is included in the commit.
Add a reason for the backport by using `git cherry-pick -xe <original commit>` instead when it is not obvious from the original commit message. It is not needed when it's a minor version update that includes security and bug fixes but don't add new features or when the commit fixes an otherwise broken package.
Here is an example of a cherry-picked commit message with good reason description:
```
zfs: Keep trying root import until it works
Works around #11003.
(cherry picked from commit 98b213a11041af39b39473906b595290e2a4e2f9)
Reason: several people cannot boot with ZFS on NVMe
```
Other examples of reasons are:
- Previously the build would fail due to, e.g., `getaddrinfo` not being defined
- The previous download links were all broken
- Crash when starting on some X11 systems

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@@ -1,45 +0,0 @@
# Vulnerability Roundup {#chap-vulnerability-roundup}
## Issues {#vulnerability-roundup-issues}
Vulnerable packages in Nixpkgs are managed using issues.
Currently opened ones can be found using the following:
[github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues?q=is:issue+is:open+"Vulnerability+roundup"](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues?q=is%3Aissue+is%3Aopen+%22Vulnerability+roundup%22)
Each issue correspond to a vulnerable version of a package; As a consequence:
- One issue can contain several CVEs;
- One CVE can be shared across several issues;
- A single package can be concerned by several issues.
A "Vulnerability roundup" issue usually respects the following format:
```txt
<link to relevant package search on search.nix.gsc.io>, <link to relevant files in Nixpkgs on GitHub>
<list of related CVEs, their CVSS score, and the impacted NixOS version>
<list of the scanned Nixpkgs versions>
<list of relevant contributors>
```
Note that there can be an extra comment containing links to previously reported (and still open) issues for the same package.
## Triaging and Fixing {#vulnerability-roundup-triaging-and-fixing}
**Note**: An issue can be a "false positive" (i.e. automatically opened, but without the package it refers to being actually vulnerable).
If you find such a "false positive", comment on the issue an explanation of why it falls into this category, linking as much information as the necessary to help maintainers double check.
If you are investigating a "true positive":
- Find the earliest patched version or a code patch in the CVE details;
- Is the issue already patched (version up-to-date or patch applied manually) in Nixpkgs's `master` branch?
- **No**:
- [Submit a security fix](#submitting-changes-submitting-security-fixes);
- Once the fix is merged into `master`, [submit the change to the vulnerable release branch(es)](https://nixos.org/manual/nixpkgs/stable/#submitting-changes-stable-release-branches);
- **Yes**: [Backport the change to the vulnerable release branch(es)](https://nixos.org/manual/nixpkgs/stable/#submitting-changes-stable-release-branches).
- When the patch has made it into all the relevant branches (`master`, and the vulnerable releases), close the relevant issue(s).

475
doc/cross-compilation.xml Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,475 @@
<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="chap-cross">
<title>Cross-compilation</title>
<section xml:id="sec-cross-intro">
<title>Introduction</title>
<para>
"Cross-compilation" means compiling a program on one machine for another
type of machine. For example, a typical use of cross compilation is to
compile programs for embedded devices. These devices often don't have the
computing power and memory to compile their own programs. One might think
that cross-compilation is a fairly niche concern, but there are advantages
to being rigorous about distinguishing build-time vs run-time environments
even when one is developing and deploying on the same machine. Nixpkgs is
increasingly adopting the opinion that packages should be written with
cross-compilation in mind, and nixpkgs should evaluate in a similar way (by
minimizing cross-compilation-specific special cases) whether or not one is
cross-compiling.
</para>
<para>
This chapter will be organized in three parts. First, it will describe the
basics of how to package software in a way that supports cross-compilation.
Second, it will describe how to use Nixpkgs when cross-compiling. Third, it
will describe the internal infrastructure supporting cross-compilation.
</para>
</section>
<!--============================================================-->
<section xml:id="sec-cross-packaging">
<title>Packaging in a cross-friendly manner</title>
<section xml:id="sec-cross-platform-parameters">
<title>Platform parameters</title>
<para>
Nixpkgs follows the
<link xlink:href="https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gccint/Configure-Terms.html">common
historical convention of GNU autoconf</link> of distinguishing between 3
types of platform: <wordasword>build</wordasword>,
<wordasword>host</wordasword>, and <wordasword>target</wordasword>. In
summary, <wordasword>build</wordasword> is the platform on which a package
is being built, <wordasword>host</wordasword> is the platform on which it
is to run. The third attribute, <wordasword>target</wordasword>, is
relevant only for certain specific compilers and build tools.
</para>
<para>
In Nixpkgs, these three platforms are defined as attribute sets under the
names <literal>buildPlatform</literal>, <literal>hostPlatform</literal>,
and <literal>targetPlatform</literal>. They are always defined as
attributes in the standard environment. That means one can access them
like:
<programlisting>{ stdenv, fooDep, barDep, .. }: ...stdenv.buildPlatform...</programlisting>
.
</para>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>buildPlatform</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
The "build platform" is the platform on which a package is built. Once
someone has a built package, or pre-built binary package, the build
platform should not matter and be safe to ignore.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>hostPlatform</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
The "host platform" is the platform on which a package will be run. This
is the simplest platform to understand, but also the one with the worst
name.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>targetPlatform</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
The "target platform" attribute is, unlike the other two attributes, not
actually fundamental to the process of building software. Instead, it is
only relevant for compatibility with building certain specific compilers
and build tools. It can be safely ignored for all other packages.
</para>
<para>
The build process of certain compilers is written in such a way that the
compiler resulting from a single build can itself only produce binaries
for a single platform. The task specifying this single "target platform"
is thus pushed to build time of the compiler. The root cause of this
mistake is often that the compiler (which will be run on the host) and
the the standard library/runtime (which will be run on the target) are
built by a single build process.
</para>
<para>
There is no fundamental need to think about a single target ahead of
time like this. If the tool supports modular or pluggable backends, both
the need to specify the target at build time and the constraint of
having only a single target disappear. An example of such a tool is
LLVM.
</para>
<para>
Although the existence of a "target platfom" is arguably a historical
mistake, it is a common one: examples of tools that suffer from it are
GCC, Binutils, GHC and Autoconf. Nixpkgs tries to avoid sharing in the
mistake where possible. Still, because the concept of a target platform
is so ingrained, it is best to support it as is.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
<para>
The exact schema these fields follow is a bit ill-defined due to a long and
convoluted evolution, but this is slowly being cleaned up. You can see
examples of ones used in practice in
<literal>lib.systems.examples</literal>; note how they are not all very
consistent. For now, here are few fields can count on them containing:
</para>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>system</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
This is a two-component shorthand for the platform. Examples of this
would be "x86_64-darwin" and "i686-linux"; see
<literal>lib.systems.doubles</literal> for more. This format isn't very
standard, but has built-in support in Nix, such as the
<varname>builtins.currentSystem</varname> impure string.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>config</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
This is a 3- or 4- component shorthand for the platform. Examples of
this would be "x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu" and "aarch64-apple-darwin14".
This is a standard format called the "LLVM target triple", as they are
pioneered by LLVM and traditionally just used for the
<varname>targetPlatform</varname>. This format is strictly more
informative than the "Nix host double", as the previous format could
analogously be termed. This needs a better name than
<varname>config</varname>!
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>parsed</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
This is a nix representation of a parsed LLVM target triple with
white-listed components. This can be specified directly, or actually
parsed from the <varname>config</varname>. [Technically, only one need
be specified and the others can be inferred, though the precision of
inference may not be very good.] See
<literal>lib.systems.parse</literal> for the exact representation.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>libc</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
This is a string identifying the standard C library used. Valid
identifiers include "glibc" for GNU libc, "libSystem" for Darwin's
Libsystem, and "uclibc" for µClibc. It should probably be refactored to
use the module system, like <varname>parse</varname>.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>is*</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
These predicates are defined in <literal>lib.systems.inspect</literal>,
and slapped on every platform. They are superior to the ones in
<varname>stdenv</varname> as they force the user to be explicit about
which platform they are inspecting. Please use these instead of those.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>platform</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
This is, quite frankly, a dumping ground of ad-hoc settings (it's an
attribute set). See <literal>lib.systems.platforms</literal> for
examples—there's hopefully one in there that will work verbatim for
each platform that is working. Please help us triage these flags and
give them better homes!
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-cross-specifying-dependencies">
<title>Specifying Dependencies</title>
<para>
In this section we explore the relationship between both runtime and
buildtime dependencies and the 3 Autoconf platforms.
</para>
<para>
A runtime dependency between 2 packages implies that between them both the
host and target platforms match. This is directly implied by the meaning of
"host platform" and "runtime dependency": The package dependency exists
while both packages are running on a single host platform.
</para>
<para>
A build time dependency, however, implies a shift in platforms between the
depending package and the depended-on package. The meaning of a build time
dependency is that to build the depending package we need to be able to run
the depended-on's package. The depending package's build platform is
therefore equal to the depended-on package's host platform. Analogously,
the depending package's host platform is equal to the depended-on package's
target platform.
</para>
<para>
In this manner, given the 3 platforms for one package, we can determine the
three platforms for all its transitive dependencies. This is the most
important guiding principle behind cross-compilation with Nixpkgs, and will
be called the <wordasword>sliding window principle</wordasword>.
</para>
<para>
Some examples will probably make this clearer. If a package is being built
with a <literal>(build, host, target)</literal> platform triple of
<literal>(foo, bar, bar)</literal>, then its build-time dependencies would
have a triple of <literal>(foo, foo, bar)</literal>, and <emphasis>those
packages'</emphasis> build-time dependencies would have triple of
<literal>(foo, foo, foo)</literal>. In other words, it should take two
"rounds" of following build-time dependency edges before one reaches a
fixed point where, by the sliding window principle, the platform triple no
longer changes. Indeed, this happens with cross compilation, where only
rounds of native dependencies starting with the second necessarily coincide
with native packages.
</para>
<note>
<para>
The depending package's target platform is unconstrained by the sliding
window principle, which makes sense in that one can in principle build
cross compilers targeting arbitrary platforms.
</para>
</note>
<para>
How does this work in practice? Nixpkgs is now structured so that
build-time dependencies are taken from <varname>buildPackages</varname>,
whereas run-time dependencies are taken from the top level attribute set.
For example, <varname>buildPackages.gcc</varname> should be used at build
time, while <varname>gcc</varname> should be used at run time. Now, for
most of Nixpkgs's history, there was no <varname>buildPackages</varname>,
and most packages have not been refactored to use it explicitly. Instead,
one can use the six (<emphasis>gasp</emphasis>) attributes used for
specifying dependencies as documented in
<xref linkend="ssec-stdenv-dependencies"/>. We "splice" together the
run-time and build-time package sets with <varname>callPackage</varname>,
and then <varname>mkDerivation</varname> for each of four attributes pulls
the right derivation out. This splicing can be skipped when not cross
compiling as the package sets are the same, but is a bit slow for cross
compiling. Because of this, a best-of-both-worlds solution is in the works
with no splicing or explicit access of <varname>buildPackages</varname>
needed. For now, feel free to use either method.
</para>
<note>
<para>
There is also a "backlink" <varname>targetPackages</varname>, yielding a
package set whose <varname>buildPackages</varname> is the current package
set. This is a hack, though, to accommodate compilers with lousy build
systems. Please do not use this unless you are absolutely sure you are
packaging such a compiler and there is no other way.
</para>
</note>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-cross-cookbook">
<title>Cross packaging cookbook</title>
<para>
Some frequently problems when packaging for cross compilation are good to
just spell and answer. Ideally the information above is exhaustive, so this
section cannot provide any new information, but its ludicrous and cruel to
expect everyone to spend effort working through the interaction of many
features just to figure out the same answer to the same common problem.
Feel free to add to this list!
</para>
<qandaset>
<qandaentry xml:id="cross-qa-build-c-program-in-build-environment">
<question>
<para>
What if my package's build system needs to build a C program to be run
under the build environment?
</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>
<programlisting>depsBuildBuild = [ buildPackages.stdenv.cc ];</programlisting>
Add it to your <function>mkDerivation</function> invocation.
</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry xml:id="cross-qa-fails-to-find-ar">
<question>
<para>
My package fails to find <command>ar</command>.
</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>
Many packages assume that an unprefixed <command>ar</command> is
available, but Nix doesn't provide one. It only provides a prefixed one,
just as it only does for all the other binutils programs. It may be
necessary to patch the package to fix the build system to use a prefixed
`ar`.
</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry xml:id="cross-testsuite-runs-host-code">
<question>
<para>
My package's testsuite needs to run host platform code.
</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>
<programlisting>doCheck = stdenv.hostPlatform != stdenv.buildPlatfrom;</programlisting>
Add it to your <function>mkDerivation</function> invocation.
</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
</qandaset>
</section>
</section>
<!--============================================================-->
<section xml:id="sec-cross-usage">
<title>Cross-building packages</title>
<note>
<para>
More information needs to moved from the old wiki, especially
<link xlink:href="https://nixos.org/wiki/CrossCompiling" />, for this
section.
</para>
</note>
<para>
Nixpkgs can be instantiated with <varname>localSystem</varname> alone, in
which case there is no cross compiling and everything is built by and for
that system, or also with <varname>crossSystem</varname>, in which case
packages run on the latter, but all building happens on the former. Both
parameters take the same schema as the 3 (build, host, and target) platforms
defined in the previous section. As mentioned above,
<literal>lib.systems.examples</literal> has some platforms which are used as
arguments for these parameters in practice. You can use them
programmatically, or on the command line:
<programlisting>
nix-build &lt;nixpkgs&gt; --arg crossSystem '(import &lt;nixpkgs/lib&gt;).systems.examples.fooBarBaz' -A whatever</programlisting>
</para>
<note>
<para>
Eventually we would like to make these platform examples an unnecessary
convenience so that
<programlisting>
nix-build &lt;nixpkgs&gt; --arg crossSystem.config '&lt;arch&gt;-&lt;os&gt;-&lt;vendor&gt;-&lt;abi&gt;' -A whatever</programlisting>
works in the vast majority of cases. The problem today is dependencies on
other sorts of configuration which aren't given proper defaults. We rely on
the examples to crudely to set those configuration parameters in some
vaguely sane manner on the users behalf. Issue
<link xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/34274">#34274</link>
tracks this inconvenience along with its root cause in crufty configuration
options.
</para>
</note>
<para>
While one is free to pass both parameters in full, there's a lot of logic to
fill in missing fields. As discussed in the previous section, only one of
<varname>system</varname>, <varname>config</varname>, and
<varname>parsed</varname> is needed to infer the other two. Additionally,
<varname>libc</varname> will be inferred from <varname>parse</varname>.
Finally, <literal>localSystem.system</literal> is also
<emphasis>impurely</emphasis> inferred based on the platform evaluation
occurs. This means it is often not necessary to pass
<varname>localSystem</varname> at all, as in the command-line example in the
previous paragraph.
</para>
<note>
<para>
Many sources (manual, wiki, etc) probably mention passing
<varname>system</varname>, <varname>platform</varname>, along with the
optional <varname>crossSystem</varname> to nixpkgs: <literal>import
&lt;nixpkgs&gt; { system = ..; platform = ..; crossSystem = ..;
}</literal>. Passing those two instead of <varname>localSystem</varname> is
still supported for compatibility, but is discouraged. Indeed, much of the
inference we do for these parameters is motivated by compatibility as much
as convenience.
</para>
</note>
<para>
One would think that <varname>localSystem</varname> and
<varname>crossSystem</varname> overlap horribly with the three
<varname>*Platforms</varname> (<varname>buildPlatform</varname>,
<varname>hostPlatform,</varname> and <varname>targetPlatform</varname>; see
<varname>stage.nix</varname> or the manual). Actually, those identifiers are
purposefully not used here to draw a subtle but important distinction: While
the granularity of having 3 platforms is necessary to properly *build*
packages, it is overkill for specifying the user's *intent* when making a
build plan or package set. A simple "build vs deploy" dichotomy is adequate:
the sliding window principle described in the previous section shows how to
interpolate between the these two "end points" to get the 3 platform triple
for each bootstrapping stage. That means for any package a given package
set, even those not bound on the top level but only reachable via
dependencies or <varname>buildPackages</varname>, the three platforms will
be defined as one of <varname>localSystem</varname> or
<varname>crossSystem</varname>, with the former replacing the latter as one
traverses build-time dependencies. A last simple difference then is
<varname>crossSystem</varname> should be null when one doesn't want to
cross-compile, while the <varname>*Platform</varname>s are always non-null.
<varname>localSystem</varname> is always non-null.
</para>
</section>
<!--============================================================-->
<section xml:id="sec-cross-infra">
<title>Cross-compilation infrastructure</title>
<para>
To be written.
</para>
<note>
<para>
If one explores nixpkgs, they will see derivations with names like
<literal>gccCross</literal>. Such <literal>*Cross</literal> derivations is
a holdover from before we properly distinguished between the host and
target platforms —the derivation with "Cross" in the name covered the
<literal>build = host != target</literal> case, while the other covered the
<literal>host = target</literal>, with build platform the same or not based
on whether one was using its <literal>.nativeDrv</literal> or
<literal>.crossDrv</literal>. This ugliness will disappear soon.
</para>
</note>
</section>
</chapter>

View File

@@ -1,28 +1,38 @@
{ pkgs ? (import ./.. { }), nixpkgs ? { }}:
let
lib = pkgs.lib;
doc-support = import ./doc-support { inherit pkgs nixpkgs; };
in pkgs.stdenv.mkDerivation {
locationsXml = import ./lib-function-locations.nix { inherit pkgs nixpkgs; };
in
pkgs.stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "nixpkgs-manual";
nativeBuildInputs = with pkgs; [
pandoc
graphviz
libxml2
libxslt
zip
jing
xmlformat
];
buildInputs = with pkgs; [ pandoc libxml2 libxslt zip jing xmlformat ];
src = lib.cleanSource ./.;
src = ./.;
makeFlags = [
"PANDOC_LUA_FILTERS_DIR=${pkgs.pandoc-lua-filters}/share/pandoc/filters"
# Hacking on these variables? Make sure to close and open
# nix-shell between each test, maybe even:
# $ nix-shell --run "make clean all"
# otherwise they won't reapply :)
HIGHLIGHTJS = pkgs.documentation-highlighter;
XSL = "${pkgs.docbook_xsl_ns}/xml/xsl";
RNG = "${pkgs.docbook5}/xml/rng/docbook/docbook.rng";
XMLFORMAT_CONFIG = ../nixos/doc/xmlformat.conf;
xsltFlags = lib.concatStringsSep " " [
"--param section.autolabel 1"
"--param section.label.includes.component.label 1"
"--stringparam html.stylesheet 'style.css overrides.css highlightjs/mono-blue.css'"
"--stringparam html.script './highlightjs/highlight.pack.js ./highlightjs/loader.js'"
"--param xref.with.number.and.title 1"
"--param toc.section.depth 3"
"--stringparam admon.style ''"
"--stringparam callout.graphics.extension .svg"
];
postPatch = ''
ln -s ${doc-support} ./doc-support/result
rm -rf ./functions/library/locations.xml
ln -s ${locationsXml} ./functions/library/locations.xml
echo ${lib.version} > .version
'';
installPhase = ''

View File

@@ -1,45 +0,0 @@
{ pkgs ? (import ../.. {}), nixpkgs ? { }}:
let
locationsXml = import ./lib-function-locations.nix { inherit pkgs nixpkgs; };
functionDocs = import ./lib-function-docs.nix { inherit locationsXml pkgs; };
version = pkgs.lib.version;
epub-xsl = pkgs.writeText "epub.xsl" ''
<?xml version='1.0'?>
<xsl:stylesheet
xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform"
version="1.0">
<xsl:import href="${pkgs.docbook_xsl_ns}/xml/xsl/docbook/epub/docbook.xsl" />
<xsl:import href="${./parameters.xml}"/>
</xsl:stylesheet>
'';
xhtml-xsl = pkgs.writeText "xhtml.xsl" ''
<?xml version='1.0'?>
<xsl:stylesheet
xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform"
version="1.0">
<xsl:import href="${pkgs.docbook_xsl_ns}/xml/xsl/docbook/xhtml/docbook.xsl" />
<xsl:import href="${./parameters.xml}"/>
</xsl:stylesheet>
'';
in pkgs.runCommand "doc-support" {}
''
mkdir result
(
cd result
ln -s ${locationsXml} ./function-locations.xml
ln -s ${functionDocs} ./function-docs
ln -s ${pkgs.docbook5}/xml/rng/docbook/docbook.rng ./docbook.rng
ln -s ${pkgs.docbook_xsl_ns}/xml/xsl ./xsl
ln -s ${epub-xsl} ./epub.xsl
ln -s ${xhtml-xsl} ./xhtml.xsl
ln -s ${../../nixos/doc/xmlformat.conf} ./xmlformat.conf
ln -s ${pkgs.documentation-highlighter} ./highlightjs
echo -n "${version}" > ./version
)
mv result $out
''

View File

@@ -1,26 +0,0 @@
# Generates the documentation for library functons via nixdoc. To add
# another library function file to this list, the include list in the
# file `doc/functions/library.xml` must also be updated.
{ pkgs ? import ./.. {}, locationsXml }:
with pkgs; stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "nixpkgs-lib-docs";
src = ./../../lib;
buildInputs = [ nixdoc ];
installPhase = ''
function docgen {
nixdoc -c "$1" -d "$2" -f "../lib/$1.nix" > "$out/$1.xml"
}
mkdir -p $out
ln -s ${locationsXml} $out/locations.xml
docgen strings 'String manipulation functions'
docgen trivial 'Miscellaneous functions'
docgen lists 'List manipulation functions'
docgen debug 'Debugging functions'
docgen options 'NixOS / nixpkgs option handling'
'';
}

View File

@@ -1,14 +0,0 @@
<?xml version='1.0'?>
<xsl:stylesheet
xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform"
version="1.0">
<xsl:param name="section.autolabel" select="1" />
<xsl:param name="section.label.includes.component.label" select="1" />
<xsl:param name="html.stylesheet" select="'style.css overrides.css highlightjs/mono-blue.css'" />
<xsl:param name="html.script" select="'./highlightjs/highlight.pack.js ./highlightjs/loader.js'" />
<xsl:param name="xref.with.number.and.title" select="1" />
<xsl:param name="use.id.as.filename" select="1" />
<xsl:param name="toc.section.depth" select="0" />
<xsl:param name="admon.style" select="''" />
<xsl:param name="callout.graphics.extension" select="'.svg'" />
</xsl:stylesheet>

View File

@@ -1,14 +1,18 @@
<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
xml:id="chap-functions">
xml:id="chap-functions">
<title>Functions reference</title>
<para>
The nixpkgs repository has several utility functions to manipulate Nix expressions.
The nixpkgs repository has several utility functions to manipulate Nix
expressions.
</para>
<xi:include href="functions/library.xml" />
<xi:include href="functions/overrides.xml" />
<xi:include href="functions/generators.xml" />
<xi:include href="functions/debug.xml" />
<xi:include href="functions/prefer-remote-fetch.xml" />
<xi:include href="functions/nix-gitignore.xml" />
<xi:include href="functions/fhs-environments.xml" />
<xi:include href="functions/shell.xml" />
<xi:include href="functions/dockertools.xml" />
</chapter>

View File

@@ -5,10 +5,17 @@
<title>Debugging Nix Expressions</title>
<para>
Nix is a unityped, dynamic language, this means every value can potentially appear anywhere. Since it is also non-strict, evaluation order and what ultimately is evaluated might surprise you. Therefore it is important to be able to debug nix expressions.
Nix is a unityped, dynamic language, this means every value can potentially
appear anywhere. Since it is also non-strict, evaluation order and what
ultimately is evaluated might surprise you. Therefore it is important to be
able to debug nix expressions.
</para>
<para>
In the <literal>lib/debug.nix</literal> file you will find a number of functions that help (pretty-)printing values while evaluation is runnnig. You can even specify how deep these values should be printed recursively, and transform them on the fly. Please consult the docstrings in <literal>lib/debug.nix</literal> for usage information.
In the <literal>lib/debug.nix</literal> file you will find a number of
functions that help (pretty-)printing values while evaluation is runnnig. You
can even specify how deep these values should be printed recursively, and
transform them on the fly. Please consult the docstrings in
<literal>lib/debug.nix</literal> for usage information.
</para>
</section>

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,393 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
xml:id="sec-pkgs-dockerTools">
<title>pkgs.dockerTools</title>
<para>
<varname>pkgs.dockerTools</varname> is a set of functions for creating and
manipulating Docker images according to the
<link xlink:href="https://github.com/moby/moby/blob/master/image/spec/v1.2.md#docker-image-specification-v120">
Docker Image Specification v1.2.0 </link>. Docker itself is not used to
perform any of the operations done by these functions.
</para>
<warning>
<para>
The <varname>dockerTools</varname> API is unstable and may be subject to
backwards-incompatible changes in the future.
</para>
</warning>
<section xml:id="ssec-pkgs-dockerTools-buildImage">
<title>buildImage</title>
<para>
This function is analogous to the <command>docker build</command> command,
in that can used to build a Docker-compatible repository tarball containing
a single image with one or multiple layers. As such, the result is suitable
for being loaded in Docker with <command>docker load</command>.
</para>
<para>
The parameters of <varname>buildImage</varname> with relative example values
are described below:
</para>
<example xml:id='ex-dockerTools-buildImage'>
<title>Docker build</title>
<programlisting>
buildImage {
name = "redis"; <co xml:id='ex-dockerTools-buildImage-1' />
tag = "latest"; <co xml:id='ex-dockerTools-buildImage-2' />
fromImage = someBaseImage; <co xml:id='ex-dockerTools-buildImage-3' />
fromImageName = null; <co xml:id='ex-dockerTools-buildImage-4' />
fromImageTag = "latest"; <co xml:id='ex-dockerTools-buildImage-5' />
contents = pkgs.redis; <co xml:id='ex-dockerTools-buildImage-6' />
runAsRoot = '' <co xml:id='ex-dockerTools-buildImage-runAsRoot' />
#!${stdenv.shell}
mkdir -p /data
'';
config = { <co xml:id='ex-dockerTools-buildImage-8' />
Cmd = [ "/bin/redis-server" ];
WorkingDir = "/data";
Volumes = {
"/data" = {};
};
};
}
</programlisting>
</example>
<para>
The above example will build a Docker image <literal>redis/latest</literal>
from the given base image. Loading and running this image in Docker results
in <literal>redis-server</literal> being started automatically.
</para>
<calloutlist>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-buildImage-1'>
<para>
<varname>name</varname> specifies the name of the resulting image. This is
the only required argument for <varname>buildImage</varname>.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-buildImage-2'>
<para>
<varname>tag</varname> specifies the tag of the resulting image. By
default it's <literal>null</literal>, which indicates that the nix output
hash will be used as tag.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-buildImage-3'>
<para>
<varname>fromImage</varname> is the repository tarball containing the base
image. It must be a valid Docker image, such as exported by
<command>docker save</command>. By default it's <literal>null</literal>,
which can be seen as equivalent to <literal>FROM scratch</literal> of a
<filename>Dockerfile</filename>.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-buildImage-4'>
<para>
<varname>fromImageName</varname> can be used to further specify the base
image within the repository, in case it contains multiple images. By
default it's <literal>null</literal>, in which case
<varname>buildImage</varname> will peek the first image available in the
repository.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-buildImage-5'>
<para>
<varname>fromImageTag</varname> can be used to further specify the tag of
the base image within the repository, in case an image contains multiple
tags. By default it's <literal>null</literal>, in which case
<varname>buildImage</varname> will peek the first tag available for the
base image.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-buildImage-6'>
<para>
<varname>contents</varname> is a derivation that will be copied in the new
layer of the resulting image. This can be similarly seen as <command>ADD
contents/ /</command> in a <filename>Dockerfile</filename>. By default
it's <literal>null</literal>.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-buildImage-runAsRoot'>
<para>
<varname>runAsRoot</varname> is a bash script that will run as root in an
environment that overlays the existing layers of the base image with the
new resulting layer, including the previously copied
<varname>contents</varname> derivation. This can be similarly seen as
<command>RUN ...</command> in a <filename>Dockerfile</filename>.
<note>
<para>
Using this parameter requires the <literal>kvm</literal> device to be
available.
</para>
</note>
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-buildImage-8'>
<para>
<varname>config</varname> is used to specify the configuration of the
containers that will be started off the built image in Docker. The
available options are listed in the
<link xlink:href="https://github.com/moby/moby/blob/master/image/spec/v1.2.md#image-json-field-descriptions">
Docker Image Specification v1.2.0 </link>.
</para>
</callout>
</calloutlist>
<para>
After the new layer has been created, its closure (to which
<varname>contents</varname>, <varname>config</varname> and
<varname>runAsRoot</varname> contribute) will be copied in the layer itself.
Only new dependencies that are not already in the existing layers will be
copied.
</para>
<para>
At the end of the process, only one new single layer will be produced and
added to the resulting image.
</para>
<para>
The resulting repository will only list the single image
<varname>image/tag</varname>. In the case of
<xref linkend='ex-dockerTools-buildImage'/> it would be
<varname>redis/latest</varname>.
</para>
<para>
It is possible to inspect the arguments with which an image was built using
its <varname>buildArgs</varname> attribute.
</para>
<note>
<para>
If you see errors similar to <literal>getProtocolByName: does not exist (no
such protocol name: tcp)</literal> you may need to add
<literal>pkgs.iana-etc</literal> to <varname>contents</varname>.
</para>
</note>
<note>
<para>
If you see errors similar to <literal>Error_Protocol ("certificate has
unknown CA",True,UnknownCa)</literal> you may need to add
<literal>pkgs.cacert</literal> to <varname>contents</varname>.
</para>
</note>
<example xml:id="example-pkgs-dockerTools-buildImage-creation-date">
<title>Impurely Defining a Docker Layer's Creation Date</title>
<para>
By default <function>buildImage</function> will use a static date of one
second past the UNIX Epoch. This allows <function>buildImage</function> to
produce binary reproducible images. When listing images with
<command>docker list images</command>, the newly created images will be
listed like this:
</para>
<screen><![CDATA[
$ docker image list
REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE
hello latest 08c791c7846e 48 years ago 25.2MB
]]></screen>
<para>
You can break binary reproducibility but have a sorted, meaningful
<literal>CREATED</literal> column by setting <literal>created</literal> to
<literal>now</literal>.
</para>
<programlisting><![CDATA[
pkgs.dockerTools.buildImage {
name = "hello";
tag = "latest";
created = "now";
contents = pkgs.hello;
config.Cmd = [ "/bin/hello" ];
}
]]></programlisting>
<para>
and now the Docker CLI will display a reasonable date and sort the images
as expected:
<screen><![CDATA[
$ docker image list
REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE
hello latest de2bf4786de6 About a minute ago 25.2MB
]]></screen>
however, the produced images will not be binary reproducible.
</para>
</example>
</section>
<section xml:id="ssec-pkgs-dockerTools-fetchFromRegistry">
<title>pullImage</title>
<para>
This function is analogous to the <command>docker pull</command> command, in
that can be used to pull a Docker image from a Docker registry. By default
<link xlink:href="https://hub.docker.com/">Docker Hub</link> is used to pull
images.
</para>
<para>
Its parameters are described in the example below:
</para>
<example xml:id='ex-dockerTools-pullImage'>
<title>Docker pull</title>
<programlisting>
pullImage {
imageName = "nixos/nix"; <co xml:id='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-1' />
imageDigest = "sha256:20d9485b25ecfd89204e843a962c1bd70e9cc6858d65d7f5fadc340246e2116b"; <co xml:id='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-2' />
finalImageTag = "1.11"; <co xml:id='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-3' />
sha256 = "0mqjy3zq2v6rrhizgb9nvhczl87lcfphq9601wcprdika2jz7qh8"; <co xml:id='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-4' />
os = "linux"; <co xml:id='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-5' />
arch = "x86_64"; <co xml:id='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-6' />
}
</programlisting>
</example>
<calloutlist>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-1'>
<para>
<varname>imageName</varname> specifies the name of the image to be
downloaded, which can also include the registry namespace (e.g.
<literal>nixos</literal>). This argument is required.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-2'>
<para>
<varname>imageDigest</varname> specifies the digest of the image to be
downloaded. Skopeo can be used to get the digest of an image, with its
<varname>inspect</varname> subcommand. Since a given
<varname>imageName</varname> may transparently refer to a manifest list of
images which support multiple architectures and/or operating systems,
supply the `--override-os` and `--override-arch` arguments to specify
exactly which image you want. By default it will match the OS and
architecture of the host the command is run on.
<programlisting>
$ nix-shell --packages skopeo jq --command "skopeo --override-os linux --override-arch x86_64 inspect docker://docker.io/nixos/nix:1.11 | jq -r '.Digest'"
sha256:20d9485b25ecfd89204e843a962c1bd70e9cc6858d65d7f5fadc340246e2116b
</programlisting>
This argument is required.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-3'>
<para>
<varname>finalImageTag</varname>, if specified, this is the tag of the
image to be created. Note it is never used to fetch the image since we
prefer to rely on the immutable digest ID. By default it's
<literal>latest</literal>.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-4'>
<para>
<varname>sha256</varname> is the checksum of the whole fetched image. This
argument is required.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-5'>
<para>
<varname>os</varname>, if specified, is the operating system of the
fetched image. By default it's <literal>linux</literal>.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-6'>
<para>
<varname>arch</varname>, if specified, is the cpu architecture of the
fetched image. By default it's <literal>x86_64</literal>.
</para>
</callout>
</calloutlist>
</section>
<section xml:id="ssec-pkgs-dockerTools-exportImage">
<title>exportImage</title>
<para>
This function is analogous to the <command>docker export</command> command,
in that can used to flatten a Docker image that contains multiple layers. It
is in fact the result of the merge of all the layers of the image. As such,
the result is suitable for being imported in Docker with <command>docker
import</command>.
</para>
<note>
<para>
Using this function requires the <literal>kvm</literal> device to be
available.
</para>
</note>
<para>
The parameters of <varname>exportImage</varname> are the following:
</para>
<example xml:id='ex-dockerTools-exportImage'>
<title>Docker export</title>
<programlisting>
exportImage {
fromImage = someLayeredImage;
fromImageName = null;
fromImageTag = null;
name = someLayeredImage.name;
}
</programlisting>
</example>
<para>
The parameters relative to the base image have the same synopsis as
described in <xref linkend='ssec-pkgs-dockerTools-buildImage'/>, except that
<varname>fromImage</varname> is the only required argument in this case.
</para>
<para>
The <varname>name</varname> argument is the name of the derivation output,
which defaults to <varname>fromImage.name</varname>.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="ssec-pkgs-dockerTools-shadowSetup">
<title>shadowSetup</title>
<para>
This constant string is a helper for setting up the base files for managing
users and groups, only if such files don't exist already. It is suitable for
being used in a <varname>runAsRoot</varname>
<xref linkend='ex-dockerTools-buildImage-runAsRoot'/> script for cases like
in the example below:
</para>
<example xml:id='ex-dockerTools-shadowSetup'>
<title>Shadow base files</title>
<programlisting>
buildImage {
name = "shadow-basic";
runAsRoot = ''
#!${stdenv.shell}
${shadowSetup}
groupadd -r redis
useradd -r -g redis redis
mkdir /data
chown redis:redis /data
'';
}
</programlisting>
</example>
<para>
Creating base files like <literal>/etc/passwd</literal> or
<literal>/etc/login.defs</literal> are necessary for shadow-utils to
manipulate users and groups.
</para>
</section>
</section>

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,142 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
xml:id="sec-fhs-environments">
<title>buildFHSUserEnv</title>
<para>
<function>buildFHSUserEnv</function> provides a way to build and run
FHS-compatible lightweight sandboxes. It creates an isolated root with bound
<filename>/nix/store</filename>, so its footprint in terms of disk space
needed is quite small. This allows one to run software which is hard or
unfeasible to patch for NixOS -- 3rd-party source trees with FHS assumptions,
games distributed as tarballs, software with integrity checking and/or
external self-updated binaries. It uses Linux namespaces feature to create
temporary lightweight environments which are destroyed after all child
processes exit, without root user rights requirement. Accepted arguments are:
</para>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<literal>name</literal>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
Environment name.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<literal>targetPkgs</literal>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
Packages to be installed for the main host's architecture (i.e. x86_64 on
x86_64 installations). Along with libraries binaries are also installed.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<literal>multiPkgs</literal>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
Packages to be installed for all architectures supported by a host (i.e.
i686 and x86_64 on x86_64 installations). Only libraries are installed by
default.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<literal>extraBuildCommands</literal>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
Additional commands to be executed for finalizing the directory structure.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<literal>extraBuildCommandsMulti</literal>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
Like <literal>extraBuildCommands</literal>, but executed only on multilib
architectures.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<literal>extraOutputsToInstall</literal>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
Additional derivation outputs to be linked for both target and
multi-architecture packages.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<literal>extraInstallCommands</literal>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
Additional commands to be executed for finalizing the derivation with
runner script.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<literal>runScript</literal>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
A command that would be executed inside the sandbox and passed all the
command line arguments. It defaults to <literal>bash</literal>.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
<para>
One can create a simple environment using a <literal>shell.nix</literal> like
that:
</para>
<programlisting><![CDATA[
{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> {} }:
(pkgs.buildFHSUserEnv {
name = "simple-x11-env";
targetPkgs = pkgs: (with pkgs;
[ udev
alsaLib
]) ++ (with pkgs.xorg;
[ libX11
libXcursor
libXrandr
]);
multiPkgs = pkgs: (with pkgs;
[ udev
alsaLib
]);
runScript = "bash";
}).env
]]></programlisting>
<para>
Running <literal>nix-shell</literal> would then drop you into a shell with
these libraries and binaries available. You can use this to run closed-source
applications which expect FHS structure without hassles: simply change
<literal>runScript</literal> to the application path, e.g.
<filename>./bin/start.sh</filename> -- relative paths are supported.
</para>
</section>

View File

@@ -5,15 +5,28 @@
<title>Generators</title>
<para>
Generators are functions that create file formats from nix data structures, e.g. for configuration files. There are generators available for: <literal>INI</literal>, <literal>JSON</literal> and <literal>YAML</literal>
Generators are functions that create file formats from nix data structures,
e.g. for configuration files. There are generators available for:
<literal>INI</literal>, <literal>JSON</literal> and <literal>YAML</literal>
</para>
<para>
All generators follow a similar call interface: <code>generatorName configFunctions data</code>, where <literal>configFunctions</literal> is an attrset of user-defined functions that format nested parts of the content. They each have common defaults, so often they do not need to be set manually. An example is <code>mkSectionName ? (name: libStr.escape [ "[" "]" ] name)</code> from the <literal>INI</literal> generator. It receives the name of a section and sanitizes it. The default <literal>mkSectionName</literal> escapes <literal>[</literal> and <literal>]</literal> with a backslash.
All generators follow a similar call interface: <code>generatorName
configFunctions data</code>, where <literal>configFunctions</literal> is an
attrset of user-defined functions that format nested parts of the content.
They each have common defaults, so often they do not need to be set manually.
An example is <code>mkSectionName ? (name: libStr.escape [ "[" "]" ]
name)</code> from the <literal>INI</literal> generator. It receives the name
of a section and sanitizes it. The default <literal>mkSectionName</literal>
escapes <literal>[</literal> and <literal>]</literal> with a backslash.
</para>
<para>
Generators can be fine-tuned to produce exactly the file format required by your application/service. One example is an INI-file format which uses <literal>: </literal> as separator, the strings <literal>"yes"</literal>/<literal>"no"</literal> as boolean values and requires all string values to be quoted:
Generators can be fine-tuned to produce exactly the file format required by
your application/service. One example is an INI-file format which uses
<literal>: </literal> as separator, the strings
<literal>"yes"</literal>/<literal>"no"</literal> as boolean values and
requires all string values to be quoted:
</para>
<programlisting>
@@ -64,11 +77,13 @@ merge:"diff3"
<note>
<para>
Nix store paths can be converted to strings by enclosing a derivation attribute like so: <code>"${drv}"</code>.
Nix store paths can be converted to strings by enclosing a derivation
attribute like so: <code>"${drv}"</code>.
</para>
</note>
<para>
Detailed documentation for each generator can be found in <literal>lib/generators.nix</literal>.
Detailed documentation for each generator can be found in
<literal>lib/generators.nix</literal>.
</para>
</section>

View File

@@ -5,24 +5,9 @@
<title>Nixpkgs Library Functions</title>
<para>
Nixpkgs provides a standard library at <varname>pkgs.lib</varname>, or through <code>import &lt;nixpkgs/lib&gt;</code>.
Nixpkgs provides a standard library at <varname>pkgs.lib</varname>, or
through <code>import &lt;nixpkgs/lib&gt;</code>.
</para>
<xi:include href="./library/asserts.xml" />
<xi:include href="./library/attrsets.xml" />
<!-- These docs are generated via nixdoc. To add another generated
library function file to this list, the file
`lib-function-docs.nix` must also be updated. -->
<xi:include href="./library/generated/strings.xml" />
<xi:include href="./library/generated/trivial.xml" />
<xi:include href="./library/generated/lists.xml" />
<xi:include href="./library/generated/debug.xml" />
<xi:include href="./library/generated/options.xml" />
</section>

View File

@@ -1,112 +0,0 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
xml:id="sec-functions-library-asserts">
<title>Assert functions</title>
<section xml:id="function-library-lib.asserts.assertMsg">
<title><function>lib.asserts.assertMsg</function></title>
<subtitle><literal>assertMsg :: Bool -> String -> Bool</literal>
</subtitle>
<xi:include href="./locations.xml" xpointer="lib.asserts.assertMsg" />
<para>
Print a trace message if <literal>pred</literal> is false.
</para>
<para>
Intended to be used to augment asserts with helpful error messages.
</para>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>pred</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
Condition under which the <varname>msg</varname> should <emphasis>not</emphasis> be printed.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>msg</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
Message to print.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
<example xml:id="function-library-lib.asserts.assertMsg-example-false">
<title>Printing when the predicate is false</title>
<programlisting><![CDATA[
assert lib.asserts.assertMsg ("foo" == "bar") "foo is not bar, silly"
stderr> trace: foo is not bar, silly
stderr> assert failed
]]></programlisting>
</example>
</section>
<section xml:id="function-library-lib.asserts.assertOneOf">
<title><function>lib.asserts.assertOneOf</function></title>
<subtitle><literal>assertOneOf :: String -> String ->
StringList -> Bool</literal>
</subtitle>
<xi:include href="./locations.xml" xpointer="lib.asserts.assertOneOf" />
<para>
Specialized <function>asserts.assertMsg</function> for checking if <varname>val</varname> is one of the elements of <varname>xs</varname>. Useful for checking enums.
</para>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>name</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
The name of the variable the user entered <varname>val</varname> into, for inclusion in the error message.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>val</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
The value of what the user provided, to be compared against the values in <varname>xs</varname>.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>xs</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
The list of valid values.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
<example xml:id="function-library-lib.asserts.assertOneOf-example">
<title>Ensuring a user provided a possible value</title>
<programlisting><![CDATA[
let sslLibrary = "bearssl";
in lib.asserts.assertOneOf "sslLibrary" sslLibrary [ "openssl" "libressl" ];
=> false
stderr> trace: sslLibrary must be one of "openssl", "libressl", but is: "bearssl"
]]></programlisting>
</example>
</section>
</section>

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

View File

@@ -1,70 +0,0 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
xml:id="sec-pkgs-nix-gitignore">
<title>pkgs.nix-gitignore</title>
<para>
<function>pkgs.nix-gitignore</function> is a function that acts similarly to <literal>builtins.filterSource</literal> but also allows filtering with the help of the gitignore format.
</para>
<section xml:id="sec-pkgs-nix-gitignore-usage">
<title>Usage</title>
<para>
<literal>pkgs.nix-gitignore</literal> exports a number of functions, but you'll most likely need either <literal>gitignoreSource</literal> or <literal>gitignoreSourcePure</literal>. As their first argument, they both accept either 1. a file with gitignore lines or 2. a string with gitignore lines, or 3. a list of either of the two. They will be concatenated into a single big string.
</para>
<programlisting><![CDATA[
{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> {} }:
nix-gitignore.gitignoreSource [] ./source
# Simplest version
nix-gitignore.gitignoreSource "supplemental-ignores\n" ./source
# This one reads the ./source/.gitignore and concats the auxiliary ignores
nix-gitignore.gitignoreSourcePure "ignore-this\nignore-that\n" ./source
# Use this string as gitignore, don't read ./source/.gitignore.
nix-gitignore.gitignoreSourcePure ["ignore-this\nignore-that\n", ~/.gitignore] ./source
# It also accepts a list (of strings and paths) that will be concatenated
# once the paths are turned to strings via readFile.
]]></programlisting>
<para>
These functions are derived from the <literal>Filter</literal> functions by setting the first filter argument to <literal>(_: _: true)</literal>:
</para>
<programlisting><![CDATA[
gitignoreSourcePure = gitignoreFilterSourcePure (_: _: true);
gitignoreSource = gitignoreFilterSource (_: _: true);
]]></programlisting>
<para>
Those filter functions accept the same arguments the <literal>builtins.filterSource</literal> function would pass to its filters, thus <literal>fn: gitignoreFilterSourcePure fn ""</literal> should be extensionally equivalent to <literal>filterSource</literal>. The file is blacklisted iff it's blacklisted by either your filter or the gitignoreFilter.
</para>
<para>
If you want to make your own filter from scratch, you may use
</para>
<programlisting><![CDATA[
gitignoreFilter = ign: root: filterPattern (gitignoreToPatterns ign) root;
]]></programlisting>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-pkgs-nix-gitignore-usage-recursive">
<title>gitignore files in subdirectories</title>
<para>
If you wish to use a filter that would search for .gitignore files in subdirectories, just like git does by default, use this function:
</para>
<programlisting><![CDATA[
gitignoreFilterRecursiveSource = filter: patterns: root:
# OR
gitignoreRecursiveSource = gitignoreFilterSourcePure (_: _: true);
]]></programlisting>
</section>
</section>

193
doc/functions/overrides.xml Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,193 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
xml:id="sec-overrides">
<title>Overriding</title>
<para>
Sometimes one wants to override parts of <literal>nixpkgs</literal>, e.g.
derivation attributes, the results of derivations or even the whole package
set.
</para>
<section xml:id="sec-pkg-override">
<title>&lt;pkg&gt;.override</title>
<para>
The function <varname>override</varname> is usually available for all the
derivations in the nixpkgs expression (<varname>pkgs</varname>).
</para>
<para>
It is used to override the arguments passed to a function.
</para>
<para>
Example usages:
<programlisting>pkgs.foo.override { arg1 = val1; arg2 = val2; ... }</programlisting>
<programlisting>import pkgs.path { overlays = [ (self: super: {
foo = super.foo.override { barSupport = true ; };
})]};</programlisting>
<programlisting>mypkg = pkgs.callPackage ./mypkg.nix {
mydep = pkgs.mydep.override { ... };
}</programlisting>
</para>
<para>
In the first example, <varname>pkgs.foo</varname> is the result of a
function call with some default arguments, usually a derivation. Using
<varname>pkgs.foo.override</varname> will call the same function with the
given new arguments.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-pkg-overrideAttrs">
<title>&lt;pkg&gt;.overrideAttrs</title>
<para>
The function <varname>overrideAttrs</varname> allows overriding the
attribute set passed to a <varname>stdenv.mkDerivation</varname> call,
producing a new derivation based on the original one. This function is
available on all derivations produced by the
<varname>stdenv.mkDerivation</varname> function, which is most packages in
the nixpkgs expression <varname>pkgs</varname>.
</para>
<para>
Example usage:
<programlisting>helloWithDebug = pkgs.hello.overrideAttrs (oldAttrs: rec {
separateDebugInfo = true;
});</programlisting>
</para>
<para>
In the above example, the <varname>separateDebugInfo</varname> attribute is
overridden to be true, thus building debug info for
<varname>helloWithDebug</varname>, while all other attributes will be
retained from the original <varname>hello</varname> package.
</para>
<para>
The argument <varname>oldAttrs</varname> is conventionally used to refer to
the attr set originally passed to <varname>stdenv.mkDerivation</varname>.
</para>
<note>
<para>
Note that <varname>separateDebugInfo</varname> is processed only by the
<varname>stdenv.mkDerivation</varname> function, not the generated, raw Nix
derivation. Thus, using <varname>overrideDerivation</varname> will not work
in this case, as it overrides only the attributes of the final derivation.
It is for this reason that <varname>overrideAttrs</varname> should be
preferred in (almost) all cases to <varname>overrideDerivation</varname>,
i.e. to allow using <varname>sdenv.mkDerivation</varname> to process input
arguments, as well as the fact that it is easier to use (you can use the
same attribute names you see in your Nix code, instead of the ones
generated (e.g. <varname>buildInputs</varname> vs
<varname>nativeBuildInputs</varname>, and involves less typing.
</para>
</note>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-pkg-overrideDerivation">
<title>&lt;pkg&gt;.overrideDerivation</title>
<warning>
<para>
You should prefer <varname>overrideAttrs</varname> in almost all cases, see
its documentation for the reasons why.
<varname>overrideDerivation</varname> is not deprecated and will continue
to work, but is less nice to use and does not have as many abilities as
<varname>overrideAttrs</varname>.
</para>
</warning>
<warning>
<para>
Do not use this function in Nixpkgs as it evaluates a Derivation before
modifying it, which breaks package abstraction and removes error-checking
of function arguments. In addition, this evaluation-per-function
application incurs a performance penalty, which can become a problem if
many overrides are used. It is only intended for ad-hoc customisation, such
as in <filename>~/.config/nixpkgs/config.nix</filename>.
</para>
</warning>
<para>
The function <varname>overrideDerivation</varname> creates a new derivation
based on an existing one by overriding the original's attributes with the
attribute set produced by the specified function. This function is available
on all derivations defined using the <varname>makeOverridable</varname>
function. Most standard derivation-producing functions, such as
<varname>stdenv.mkDerivation</varname>, are defined using this function,
which means most packages in the nixpkgs expression,
<varname>pkgs</varname>, have this function.
</para>
<para>
Example usage:
<programlisting>mySed = pkgs.gnused.overrideDerivation (oldAttrs: {
name = "sed-4.2.2-pre";
src = fetchurl {
url = ftp://alpha.gnu.org/gnu/sed/sed-4.2.2-pre.tar.bz2;
sha256 = "11nq06d131y4wmf3drm0yk502d2xc6n5qy82cg88rb9nqd2lj41k";
};
patches = [];
});</programlisting>
</para>
<para>
In the above example, the <varname>name</varname>, <varname>src</varname>,
and <varname>patches</varname> of the derivation will be overridden, while
all other attributes will be retained from the original derivation.
</para>
<para>
The argument <varname>oldAttrs</varname> is used to refer to the attribute
set of the original derivation.
</para>
<note>
<para>
A package's attributes are evaluated *before* being modified by the
<varname>overrideDerivation</varname> function. For example, the
<varname>name</varname> attribute reference in <varname>url =
"mirror://gnu/hello/${name}.tar.gz";</varname> is filled-in *before* the
<varname>overrideDerivation</varname> function modifies the attribute set.
This means that overriding the <varname>name</varname> attribute, in this
example, *will not* change the value of the <varname>url</varname>
attribute. Instead, we need to override both the <varname>name</varname>
*and* <varname>url</varname> attributes.
</para>
</note>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-lib-makeOverridable">
<title>lib.makeOverridable</title>
<para>
The function <varname>lib.makeOverridable</varname> is used to make the
result of a function easily customizable. This utility only makes sense for
functions that accept an argument set and return an attribute set.
</para>
<para>
Example usage:
<programlisting>f = { a, b }: { result = a+b; }
c = lib.makeOverridable f { a = 1; b = 2; }</programlisting>
</para>
<para>
The variable <varname>c</varname> is the value of the <varname>f</varname>
function applied with some default arguments. Hence the value of
<varname>c.result</varname> is <literal>3</literal>, in this example.
</para>
<para>
The variable <varname>c</varname> however also has some additional
functions, like <link linkend="sec-pkg-override">c.override</link> which can
be used to override the default arguments. In this example the value of
<varname>(c.override { a = 4; }).result</varname> is 6.
</para>
</section>
</section>

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@@ -1,21 +0,0 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/xinclude"
xml:id="sec-prefer-remote-fetch">
<title>prefer-remote-fetch overlay</title>
<para>
<function>prefer-remote-fetch</function> is an overlay that download sources on remote builder. This is useful when the evaluating machine has a slow upload while the builder can fetch faster directly from the source. To use it, put the following snippet as a new overlay:
<programlisting>
self: super:
(super.prefer-remote-fetch self super)
</programlisting>
A full configuration example for that sets the overlay up for your own account, could look like this
<screen>
<prompt>$ </prompt>mkdir ~/.config/nixpkgs/overlays/
<prompt>$ </prompt>cat &gt; ~/.config/nixpkgs/overlays/prefer-remote-fetch.nix &lt;&lt;EOF
self: super: super.prefer-remote-fetch self super
EOF
</screen>
</para>
</section>

26
doc/functions/shell.xml Normal file
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<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
xml:id="sec-pkgs-mkShell">
<title>pkgs.mkShell</title>
<para>
<function>pkgs.mkShell</function> is a special kind of derivation that is
only useful when using it combined with <command>nix-shell</command>. It will
in fact fail to instantiate when invoked with <command>nix-build</command>.
</para>
<section xml:id="sec-pkgs-mkShell-usage">
<title>Usage</title>
<programlisting><![CDATA[
{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> {} }:
pkgs.mkShell {
# this will make all the build inputs from hello and gnutar
# available to the shell environment
inputsFrom = with pkgs; [ hello gnutar ];
buildInputs = [ pkgs.gnumake ];
}
]]></programlisting>
</section>
</section>

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@@ -0,0 +1,51 @@
---
title: Introduction
author: Frederik Rietdijk
date: 2015-11-25
---
# Introduction
The Nix Packages collection (Nixpkgs) is a set of thousands of packages for the
[Nix package manager](http://nixos.org/nix/), released under a
[permissive MIT/X11 license](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/COPYING).
Packages are available for several platforms, and can be used with the Nix
package manager on most GNU/Linux distributions as well as NixOS.
This manual primarily describes how to write packages for the Nix Packages collection
(Nixpkgs). Thus its mainly for packagers and developers who want to add packages to
Nixpkgs. If you like to learn more about the Nix package manager and the Nix
expression language, then you are kindly referred to the [Nix manual](http://nixos.org/nix/manual/).
## Overview of Nixpkgs
Nix expressions describe how to build packages from source and are collected in
the [nixpkgs repository](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs). Also included in the
collection are Nix expressions for
[NixOS modules](http://nixos.org/nixos/manual/index.html#sec-writing-modules).
With these expressions the Nix package manager can build binary packages.
Packages, including the Nix packages collection, are distributed through
[channels](http://nixos.org/nix/manual/#sec-channels). The collection is
distributed for users of Nix on non-NixOS distributions through the channel
`nixpkgs`. Users of NixOS generally use one of the `nixos-*` channels, e.g.
`nixos-16.03`, which includes all packages and modules for the stable NixOS
16.03. Stable NixOS releases are generally only given
security updates. More up to date packages and modules are available via the
`nixos-unstable` channel.
Both `nixos-unstable` and `nixpkgs` follow the `master` branch of the Nixpkgs
repository, although both do lag the `master` branch by generally
[a couple of days](http://howoldis.herokuapp.com/). Updates to a channel are
distributed as soon as all tests for that channel pass, e.g.
[this table](http://hydra.nixos.org/job/nixpkgs/trunk/unstable#tabs-constituents)
shows the status of tests for the `nixpkgs` channel.
The tests are conducted by a cluster called [Hydra](http://nixos.org/hydra/),
which also builds binary packages from the Nix expressions in Nixpkgs for
`x86_64-linux`, `i686-linux` and `x86_64-darwin`.
The binaries are made available via a [binary cache](https://cache.nixos.org).
The current Nix expressions of the channels are available in the
[`nixpkgs-channels`](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs-channels) repository,
which has branches corresponding to the available channels.

View File

@@ -1,187 +0,0 @@
# Agda {#agda}
## How to use Agda
Agda is available as the [agda](https://search.nixos.org/packages?channel=unstable&show=agda&from=0&size=30&sort=relevance&query=agda)
package.
The `agda` package installs an Agda-wrapper, which calls `agda` with `--library-file`
set to a generated library-file within the nix store, this means your library-file in
`$HOME/.agda/libraries` will be ignored. By default the agda package installs Agda
with no libraries, i.e. the generated library-file is empty. To use Agda with libraries,
the `agda.withPackages` function can be used. This function either takes:
* A list of packages,
* or a function which returns a list of packages when given the `agdaPackages` attribute set,
* or an attribute set containing a list of packages and a GHC derivation for compilation (see below).
* or an attribute set containing a function which returns a list of packages when given the `agdaPackages` attribute set and a GHC derivation for compilation (see below).
For example, suppose we wanted a version of Agda which has access to the standard library. This can be obtained with the expressions:
```nix
agda.withPackages [ agdaPackages.standard-library ]
```
or
```nix
agda.withPackages (p: [ p.standard-library ])
```
or can be called as in the [Compiling Agda](#compiling-agda) section.
If you want to use a different version of a library (for instance a development version)
override the `src` attribute of the package to point to your local repository
```nix
agda.withPackages (p: [
(p.standard-library.overrideAttrs (oldAttrs: {
version = "local version";
src = /path/to/local/repo/agda-stdlib;
}))
])
```
You can also reference a GitHub repository
```nix
agda.withPackages (p: [
(p.standard-library.overrideAttrs (oldAttrs: {
version = "1.5";
src = fetchFromGitHub {
repo = "agda-stdlib";
owner = "agda";
rev = "v1.5";
sha256 = "16fcb7ssj6kj687a042afaa2gq48rc8abihpm14k684ncihb2k4w";
};
}))
])
```
If you want to use a library not added to Nixpkgs, you can add a
dependency to a local library by calling `agdaPackages.mkDerivation`.
```nix
agda.withPackages (p: [
(p.mkDerivation {
pname = "your-agda-lib";
version = "1.0.0";
src = /path/to/your-agda-lib;
})
])
```
Again you can reference GitHub
```nix
agda.withPackages (p: [
(p.mkDerivation {
pname = "your-agda-lib";
version = "1.0.0";
src = fetchFromGitHub {
repo = "repo";
owner = "owner";
version = "...";
rev = "...";
sha256 = "...";
};
})
])
```
See [Building Agda Packages](#building-agda-packages) for more information on `mkDerivation`.
Agda will not by default use these libraries. To tell Agda to use a library we have some options:
* Call `agda` with the library flag:
```ShellSession
$ agda -l standard-library -i . MyFile.agda
```
* Write a `my-library.agda-lib` file for the project you are working on which may look like:
```
name: my-library
include: .
depend: standard-library
```
* Create the file `~/.agda/defaults` and add any libraries you want to use by default.
More information can be found in the [official Agda documentation on library management](https://agda.readthedocs.io/en/v2.6.1/tools/package-system.html).
## Compiling Agda
Agda modules can be compiled using the GHC backend with the `--compile` flag. A version of `ghc` with `ieee754` is made available to the Agda program via the `--with-compiler` flag.
This can be overridden by a different version of `ghc` as follows:
```nix
agda.withPackages {
pkgs = [ ... ];
ghc = haskell.compiler.ghcHEAD;
}
```
## Writing Agda packages
To write a nix derivation for an Agda library, first check that the library has a `*.agda-lib` file.
A derivation can then be written using `agdaPackages.mkDerivation`. This has similar arguments to `stdenv.mkDerivation` with the following additions:
* `everythingFile` can be used to specify the location of the `Everything.agda` file, defaulting to `./Everything.agda`. If this file does not exist then either it should be patched in or the `buildPhase` should be overridden (see below).
* `libraryName` should be the name that appears in the `*.agda-lib` file, defaulting to `pname`.
* `libraryFile` should be the file name of the `*.agda-lib` file, defaulting to `${libraryName}.agda-lib`.
Here is an example `default.nix`
```nix
{ nixpkgs ? <nixpkgs> }:
with (import nixpkgs {});
agdaPackages.mkDerivation {
version = "1.0";
pname = "my-agda-lib";
src = ./.;
buildInputs = [
agdaPackages.standard-library
];
}
```
### Building Agda packages
The default build phase for `agdaPackages.mkDerivation` simply runs `agda` on the `Everything.agda` file.
If something else is needed to build the package (e.g. `make`) then the `buildPhase` should be overridden.
Additionally, a `preBuild` or `configurePhase` can be used if there are steps that need to be done prior to checking the `Everything.agda` file.
`agda` and the Agda libraries contained in `buildInputs` are made available during the build phase.
### Installing Agda packages
The default install phase copies Agda source files, Agda interface files (`*.agdai`) and `*.agda-lib` files to the output directory.
This can be overridden.
By default, Agda sources are files ending on `.agda`, or literate Agda files ending on `.lagda`, `.lagda.tex`, `.lagda.org`, `.lagda.md`, `.lagda.rst`. The list of recognised Agda source extensions can be extended by setting the `extraExtensions` config variable.
## Adding Agda packages to Nixpkgs
To add an Agda package to `nixpkgs`, the derivation should be written to `pkgs/development/libraries/agda/${library-name}/` and an entry should be added to `pkgs/top-level/agda-packages.nix`. Here it is called in a scope with access to all other Agda libraries, so the top line of the `default.nix` can look like:
```nix
{ mkDerivation, standard-library, fetchFromGitHub }:
```
Note that the derivation function is called with `mkDerivation` set to `agdaPackages.mkDerivation`, therefore you
could use a similar set as in your `default.nix` from [Writing Agda Packages](#writing-agda-packages) with
`agdaPackages.mkDerivation` replaced with `mkDerivation`.
Here is an example skeleton derivation for iowa-stdlib:
```nix
mkDerivation {
version = "1.5.0";
pname = "iowa-stdlib";
src = ...
libraryFile = "";
libraryName = "IAL-1.3";
buildPhase = ''
patchShebangs find-deps.sh
make
'';
}
```
This library has a file called `.agda-lib`, and so we give an empty string to `libraryFile` as nothing precedes `.agda-lib` in the filename. This file contains `name: IAL-1.3`, and so we let `libraryName = "IAL-1.3"`. This library does not use an `Everything.agda` file and instead has a Makefile, so there is no need to set `everythingFile` and we set a custom `buildPhase`.
When writing an Agda package it is essential to make sure that no `.agda-lib` file gets added to the store as a single file (for example by using `writeText`). This causes Agda to think that the nix store is a Agda library and it will attempt to write to it whenever it typechecks something. See [https://github.com/agda/agda/issues/4613](https://github.com/agda/agda/issues/4613).

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@@ -1,345 +0,0 @@
# Android {#android}
The Android build environment provides three major features and a number of
supporting features.
Deploying an Android SDK installation with plugins
--------------------------------------------------
The first use case is deploying the SDK with a desired set of plugins or subsets
of an SDK.
```nix
with import <nixpkgs> {};
let
androidComposition = androidenv.composeAndroidPackages {
toolsVersion = "26.1.1";
platformToolsVersion = "30.0.5";
buildToolsVersions = [ "30.0.3" ];
includeEmulator = false;
emulatorVersion = "30.3.4";
platformVersions = [ "28" "29" "30" ];
includeSources = false;
includeSystemImages = false;
systemImageTypes = [ "google_apis_playstore" ];
abiVersions = [ "armeabi-v7a" "arm64-v8a" ];
cmakeVersions = [ "3.10.2" ];
includeNDK = true;
ndkVersions = ["22.0.7026061"];
useGoogleAPIs = false;
useGoogleTVAddOns = false;
includeExtras = [
"extras;google;gcm"
];
};
in
androidComposition.androidsdk
```
The above function invocation states that we want an Android SDK with the above
specified plugin versions. By default, most plugins are disabled. Notable
exceptions are the tools, platform-tools and build-tools sub packages.
The following parameters are supported:
* `toolsVersion`, specifies the version of the tools package to use
* `platformsToolsVersion` specifies the version of the `platform-tools` plugin
* `buildToolsVersions` specifies the versions of the `build-tools` plugins to
use.
* `includeEmulator` specifies whether to deploy the emulator package (`false`
by default). When enabled, the version of the emulator to deploy can be
specified by setting the `emulatorVersion` parameter.
* `cmakeVersions` specifies which CMake versions should be deployed.
* `includeNDK` specifies that the Android NDK bundle should be included.
Defaults to: `false`.
* `ndkVersions` specifies the NDK versions that we want to use. These are linked
under the `ndk` directory of the SDK root, and the first is linked under the
`ndk-bundle` directory.
* `ndkVersion` is equivalent to specifying one entry in `ndkVersions`, and
`ndkVersions` overrides this parameter if provided.
* `includeExtras` is an array of identifier strings referring to arbitrary
add-on packages that should be installed.
* `platformVersions` specifies which platform SDK versions should be included.
For each platform version that has been specified, we can apply the following
options:
* `includeSystemImages` specifies whether a system image for each platform SDK
should be included.
* `includeSources` specifies whether the sources for each SDK version should be
included.
* `useGoogleAPIs` specifies that for each selected platform version the
Google API should be included.
* `useGoogleTVAddOns` specifies that for each selected platform version the
Google TV add-on should be included.
For each requested system image we can specify the following options:
* `systemImageTypes` specifies what kind of system images should be included.
Defaults to: `default`.
* `abiVersions` specifies what kind of ABI version of each system image should
be included. Defaults to: `armeabi-v7a`.
Most of the function arguments have reasonable default settings.
You can specify license names:
* `extraLicenses` is a list of license names.
You can get these names from repo.json or `querypackages.sh licenses`. The SDK
license (`android-sdk-license`) is accepted for you if you set accept_license
to true. If you are doing something like working with preview SDKs, you will
want to add `android-sdk-preview-license` or whichever license applies here.
Additionally, you can override the repositories that composeAndroidPackages will
pull from:
* `repoJson` specifies a path to a generated repo.json file. You can generate this
by running `generate.sh`, which in turn will call into `mkrepo.rb`.
* `repoXmls` is an attribute set containing paths to repo XML files. If specified,
it takes priority over `repoJson`, and will trigger a local build writing out a
repo.json to the Nix store based on the given repository XMLs.
```nix
repoXmls = {
packages = [ ./xml/repository2-1.xml ];
images = [
./xml/android-sys-img2-1.xml
./xml/android-tv-sys-img2-1.xml
./xml/android-wear-sys-img2-1.xml
./xml/android-wear-cn-sys-img2-1.xml
./xml/google_apis-sys-img2-1.xml
./xml/google_apis_playstore-sys-img2-1.xml
];
addons = [ ./xml/addon2-1.xml ];
};
```
When building the above expression with:
```bash
$ nix-build
```
The Android SDK gets deployed with all desired plugin versions.
We can also deploy subsets of the Android SDK. For example, to only the
`platform-tools` package, you can evaluate the following expression:
```nix
with import <nixpkgs> {};
let
androidComposition = androidenv.composeAndroidPackages {
# ...
};
in
androidComposition.platform-tools
```
Using predefined Android package compositions
---------------------------------------------
In addition to composing an Android package set manually, it is also possible
to use a predefined composition that contains all basic packages for a specific
Android version, such as version 9.0 (API-level 28).
The following Nix expression can be used to deploy the entire SDK with all basic
plugins:
```nix
with import <nixpkgs> {};
androidenv.androidPkgs_9_0.androidsdk
```
It is also possible to use one plugin only:
```nix
with import <nixpkgs> {};
androidenv.androidPkgs_9_0.platform-tools
```
Building an Android application
-------------------------------
In addition to the SDK, it is also possible to build an Ant-based Android
project and automatically deploy all the Android plugins that a project
requires.
```nix
with import <nixpkgs> {};
androidenv.buildApp {
name = "MyAndroidApp";
src = ./myappsources;
release = true;
# If release is set to true, you need to specify the following parameters
keyStore = ./keystore;
keyAlias = "myfirstapp";
keyStorePassword = "mykeystore";
keyAliasPassword = "myfirstapp";
# Any Android SDK parameters that install all the relevant plugins that a
# build requires
platformVersions = [ "24" ];
# When we include the NDK, then ndk-build is invoked before Ant gets invoked
includeNDK = true;
}
```
Aside from the app-specific build parameters (`name`, `src`, `release` and
keystore parameters), the `buildApp {}` function supports all the function
parameters that the SDK composition function (the function shown in the
previous section) supports.
This build function is particularly useful when it is desired to use
[Hydra](https://nixos.org/hydra): the Nix-based continuous integration solution
to build Android apps. An Android APK gets exposed as a build product and can be
installed on any Android device with a web browser by navigating to the build
result page.
Spawning emulator instances
---------------------------
For testing purposes, it can also be quite convenient to automatically generate
scripts that spawn emulator instances with all desired configuration settings.
An emulator spawn script can be configured by invoking the `emulateApp {}`
function:
```nix
with import <nixpkgs> {};
androidenv.emulateApp {
name = "emulate-MyAndroidApp";
platformVersion = "28";
abiVersion = "x86"; # armeabi-v7a, mips, x86_64
systemImageType = "google_apis_playstore";
}
```
Additional flags may be applied to the Android SDK's emulator through the runtime environment variable `$NIX_ANDROID_EMULATOR_FLAGS`.
It is also possible to specify an APK to deploy inside the emulator
and the package and activity names to launch it:
```nix
with import <nixpkgs> {};
androidenv.emulateApp {
name = "emulate-MyAndroidApp";
platformVersion = "24";
abiVersion = "armeabi-v7a"; # mips, x86, x86_64
systemImageType = "default";
useGoogleAPIs = false;
app = ./MyApp.apk;
package = "MyApp";
activity = "MainActivity";
}
```
In addition to prebuilt APKs, you can also bind the APK parameter to a
`buildApp {}` function invocation shown in the previous example.
Notes on environment variables in Android projects
--------------------------------------------------
* `ANDROID_SDK_ROOT` should point to the Android SDK. In your Nix expressions, this should be
`${androidComposition.androidsdk}/libexec/android-sdk`. Note that `ANDROID_HOME` is deprecated,
but if you rely on tools that need it, you can export it too.
* `ANDROID_NDK_ROOT` should point to the Android NDK, if you're doing NDK development.
In your Nix expressions, this should be `${ANDROID_SDK_ROOT}/ndk-bundle`.
If you are running the Android Gradle plugin, you need to export GRADLE_OPTS to override aapt2
to point to the aapt2 binary in the Nix store as well, or use a FHS environment so the packaged
aapt2 can run. If you don't want to use a FHS environment, something like this should work:
```nix
let
buildToolsVersion = "30.0.3";
# Use buildToolsVersion when you define androidComposition
androidComposition = <...>;
in
pkgs.mkShell rec {
ANDROID_SDK_ROOT = "${androidComposition.androidsdk}/libexec/android-sdk";
ANDROID_NDK_ROOT = "${ANDROID_SDK_ROOT}/ndk-bundle";
# Use the same buildToolsVersion here
GRADLE_OPTS = "-Dorg.gradle.project.android.aapt2FromMavenOverride=${ANDROID_SDK_ROOT}/build-tools/${buildToolsVersion}/aapt2";
}
```
If you are using cmake, you need to add it to PATH in a shell hook or FHS env profile.
The path is suffixed with a build number, but properly prefixed with the version.
So, something like this should suffice:
```nix
let
cmakeVersion = "3.10.2";
# Use cmakeVersion when you define androidComposition
androidComposition = <...>;
in
pkgs.mkShell rec {
ANDROID_SDK_ROOT = "${androidComposition.androidsdk}/libexec/android-sdk";
ANDROID_NDK_ROOT = "${ANDROID_SDK_ROOT}/ndk-bundle";
# Use the same cmakeVersion here
shellHook = ''
export PATH="$(echo "$ANDROID_SDK_ROOT/cmake/${cmakeVersion}".*/bin):$PATH"
'';
}
```
Note that running Android Studio with ANDROID_SDK_ROOT set will automatically write a
`local.properties` file with `sdk.dir` set to $ANDROID_SDK_ROOT if one does not already
exist. If you are using the NDK as well, you may have to add `ndk.dir` to this file.
An example shell.nix that does all this for you is provided in examples/shell.nix.
This shell.nix includes a shell hook that overwrites local.properties with the correct
sdk.dir and ndk.dir values. This will ensure that the SDK and NDK directories will
both be correct when you run Android Studio inside nix-shell.
Notes on improving build.gradle compatibility
---------------------------------------------
Ensure that your buildToolsVersion and ndkVersion match what is declared in androidenv.
If you are using cmake, make sure its declared version is correct too.
Otherwise, you may get cryptic errors from aapt2 and the Android Gradle plugin warning
that it cannot install the build tools because the SDK directory is not writeable.
```gradle
android {
buildToolsVersion "30.0.3"
ndkVersion = "22.0.7026061"
externalNativeBuild {
cmake {
version "3.10.2"
}
}
}
```
Querying the available versions of each plugin
----------------------------------------------
repo.json provides all the options in one file now.
A shell script in the `pkgs/development/mobile/androidenv/` subdirectory can be used to retrieve all
possible options:
```bash
./querypackages.sh packages
```
The above command-line instruction queries all package versions in repo.json.
Updating the generated expressions
----------------------------------
repo.json is generated from XML files that the Android Studio package manager uses.
To update the expressions run the `generate.sh` script that is stored in the
`pkgs/development/mobile/androidenv/` subdirectory:
```bash
./generate.sh
```

View File

@@ -1,289 +0,0 @@
# BEAM Languages (Erlang, Elixir & LFE) {#sec-beam}
## Introduction {#beam-introduction}
In this document and related Nix expressions, we use the term, _BEAM_, to describe the environment. BEAM is the name of the Erlang Virtual Machine and, as far as we're concerned, from a packaging perspective, all languages that run on the BEAM are interchangeable. That which varies, like the build system, is transparent to users of any given BEAM package, so we make no distinction.
## Structure {#beam-structure}
All BEAM-related expressions are available via the top-level `beam` attribute, which includes:
- `interpreters`: a set of compilers running on the BEAM, including multiple Erlang/OTP versions (`beam.interpreters.erlangR19`, etc), Elixir (`beam.interpreters.elixir`) and LFE (Lisp Flavoured Erlang) (`beam.interpreters.lfe`).
- `packages`: a set of package builders (Mix and rebar3), each compiled with a specific Erlang/OTP version, e.g. `beam.packages.erlangR19`.
The default Erlang compiler, defined by `beam.interpreters.erlang`, is aliased as `erlang`. The default BEAM package set is defined by `beam.packages.erlang` and aliased at the top level as `beamPackages`.
To create a package builder built with a custom Erlang version, use the lambda, `beam.packagesWith`, which accepts an Erlang/OTP derivation and produces a package builder similar to `beam.packages.erlang`.
Many Erlang/OTP distributions available in `beam.interpreters` have versions with ODBC and/or Java enabled or without wx (no observer support). For example, there's `beam.interpreters.erlangR22_odbc_javac`, which corresponds to `beam.interpreters.erlangR22` and `beam.interpreters.erlangR22_nox`, which corresponds to `beam.interpreters.erlangR22`.
## Build Tools {#build-tools}
### Rebar3 {#build-tools-rebar3}
We provide a version of Rebar3, under `rebar3`. We also provide a helper to fetch Rebar3 dependencies from a lockfile under `fetchRebar3Deps`.
We also provide a version on Rebar3 with plugins included, under `rebar3WithPlugins`. This package is a function which takes two arguments: `plugins`, a list of nix derivations to include as plugins (loaded only when specified in `rebar.config`), and `globalPlugins`, which should always be loaded by rebar3. Example: `rebar3WithPlugins { globalPlugins = [beamPackages.pc]; }`.
When adding a new plugin it is important that the `packageName` attribute is the same as the atom used by rebar3 to refer to the plugin.
### Mix & Erlang.mk {#build-tools-other}
Erlang.mk works exactly as expected. There is a bootstrap process that needs to be run, which is supported by the `buildErlangMk` derivation.
For Elixir applications use `mixRelease` to make a release. See examples for more details.
There is also a `buildMix` helper, whose behavior is closer to that of `buildErlangMk` and `buildRebar3`. The primary difference is that mixRelease makes a release, while buildMix only builds the package, making it useful for libraries and other dependencies.
## How to Install BEAM Packages {#how-to-install-beam-packages}
BEAM builders are not registered at the top level, simply because they are not relevant to the vast majority of Nix users. To install any of those builders into your profile, refer to them by their attribute path `beamPackages.rebar3`:
```ShellSession
$ nix-env -f "<nixpkgs>" -iA beamPackages.rebar3
```
## Packaging BEAM Applications {#packaging-beam-applications}
### Erlang Applications {#packaging-erlang-applications}
#### Rebar3 Packages {#rebar3-packages}
The Nix function, `buildRebar3`, defined in `beam.packages.erlang.buildRebar3` and aliased at the top level, can be used to build a derivation that understands how to build a Rebar3 project.
If a package needs to compile native code via Rebar3's port compilation mechanism, add `compilePort = true;` to the derivation.
#### Erlang.mk Packages {#erlang-mk-packages}
Erlang.mk functions similarly to Rebar3, except we use `buildErlangMk` instead of `buildRebar3`.
#### Mix Packages {#mix-packages}
`mixRelease` is used to make a release in the mix sense. Dependencies will need to be fetched with `fetchMixDeps` and passed to it.
#### mixRelease - Elixir Phoenix example
Here is how your `default.nix` file would look.
```nix
with import <nixpkgs> { };
let
packages = beam.packagesWith beam.interpreters.erlang;
src = builtins.fetchgit {
url = "ssh://git@github.com/your_id/your_repo";
rev = "replace_with_your_commit";
};
pname = "your_project";
version = "0.0.1";
mixEnv = "prod";
mixDeps = packages.fetchMixDeps {
pname = "mix-deps-${pname}";
inherit src mixEnv version;
# nix will complain and tell you the right value to replace this with
sha256 = lib.fakeSha256;
# if you have build time environment variables add them here
MY_ENV_VAR="my_value";
};
nodeDependencies = (pkgs.callPackage ./assets/default.nix { }).shell.nodeDependencies;
frontEndFiles = stdenvNoCC.mkDerivation {
pname = "frontend-${pname}";
nativeBuildInputs = [ nodejs ];
inherit version src;
buildPhase = ''
cp -r ./assets $TEMPDIR
mkdir -p $TEMPDIR/assets/node_modules/.cache
cp -r ${nodeDependencies}/lib/node_modules $TEMPDIR/assets
export PATH="${nodeDependencies}/bin:$PATH"
cd $TEMPDIR/assets
webpack --config ./webpack.config.js
cd ..
'';
installPhase = ''
cp -r ./priv/static $out/
'';
outputHashAlgo = "sha256";
outputHashMode = "recursive";
# nix will complain and tell you the right value to replace this with
outputHash = lib.fakeSha256;
impureEnvVars = lib.fetchers.proxyImpureEnvVars;
};
in packages.mixRelease {
inherit src pname version mixEnv mixDeps;
# if you have build time environment variables add them here
MY_ENV_VAR="my_value";
preInstall = ''
mkdir -p ./priv/static
cp -r ${frontEndFiles} ./priv/static
'';
}
```
Setup will require the following steps:
- Move your secrets to runtime environment variables. For more information refer to the [runtime.exs docs](https://hexdocs.pm/mix/Mix.Tasks.Release.html#module-runtime-configuration). On a fresh Phoenix build that would mean that both `DATABASE_URL` and `SECRET_KEY` need to be moved to `runtime.exs`.
- `cd assets` and `nix-shell -p node2nix --run node2nix --development` will generate a Nix expression containing your frontend dependencies
- commit and push those changes
- you can now `nix-build .`
- To run the release, set the `RELEASE_TMP` environment variable to a directory that your program has write access to. It will be used to store the BEAM settings.
#### Example of creating a service for an Elixir - Phoenix project
In order to create a service with your release, you could add a `service.nix`
in your project with the following
```nix
{config, pkgs, lib, ...}:
let
release = pkgs.callPackage ./default.nix;
release_name = "app";
working_directory = "/home/app";
in
{
systemd.services.${release_name} = {
wantedBy = [ "multi-user.target" ];
after = [ "network.target" "postgresql.service" ];
requires = [ "network-online.target" "postgresql.service" ];
description = "my app";
environment = {
# RELEASE_TMP is used to write the state of the
# VM configuration when the system is running
# it needs to be a writable directory
RELEASE_TMP = working_directory;
# can be generated in an elixir console with
# Base.encode32(:crypto.strong_rand_bytes(32))
RELEASE_COOKIE = "my_cookie";
MY_VAR = "my_var";
};
serviceConfig = {
Type = "exec";
DynamicUser = true;
WorkingDirectory = working_directory;
# Implied by DynamicUser, but just to emphasize due to RELEASE_TMP
PrivateTmp = true;
ExecStart = ''
${release}/bin/${release_name} start
'';
ExecStop = ''
${release}/bin/${release_name} stop
'';
ExecReload = ''
${release}/bin/${release_name} restart
'';
Restart = "on-failure";
RestartSec = 5;
StartLimitBurst = 3;
StartLimitInterval = 10;
};
# disksup requires bash
path = [ pkgs.bash ];
};
environment.systemPackages = [ release ];
}
```
## How to Develop {#how-to-develop}
### Creating a Shell {#creating-a-shell}
Usually, we need to create a `shell.nix` file and do our development inside of the environment specified therein. Just install your version of Erlang and any other interpreters, and then use your normal build tools. As an example with Elixir:
```nix
{ pkgs ? import "<nixpkgs"> {} }:
with pkgs;
let
elixir = beam.packages.erlangR22.elixir_1_9;
in
mkShell {
buildInputs = [ elixir ];
ERL_INCLUDE_PATH="${erlang}/lib/erlang/usr/include";
}
```
#### Elixir - Phoenix project
Here is an example `shell.nix`.
```nix
with import <nixpkgs> { };
let
# define packages to install
basePackages = [
git
# replace with beam.packages.erlang.elixir_1_11 if you need
beam.packages.erlang.elixir
nodejs-15_x
postgresql_13
# only used for frontend dependencies
# you are free to use yarn2nix as well
nodePackages.node2nix
# formatting js file
nodePackages.prettier
];
inputs = basePackages ++ lib.optionals stdenv.isLinux [ inotify-tools ]
++ lib.optionals stdenv.isDarwin
(with darwin.apple_sdk.frameworks; [ CoreFoundation CoreServices ]);
# define shell startup command
hooks = ''
# this allows mix to work on the local directory
mkdir -p .nix-mix .nix-hex
export MIX_HOME=$PWD/.nix-mix
export HEX_HOME=$PWD/.nix-mix
export PATH=$MIX_HOME/bin:$HEX_HOME/bin:$PATH
# TODO: not sure how to make hex available without installing it afterwards.
mix local.hex --if-missing
export LANG=en_US.UTF-8
export ERL_AFLAGS="-kernel shell_history enabled"
# postges related
# keep all your db data in a folder inside the project
export PGDATA="$PWD/db"
# phoenix related env vars
export POOL_SIZE=15
export DB_URL="postgresql://postgres:postgres@localhost:5432/db"
export PORT=4000
export MIX_ENV=dev
# add your project env vars here, word readable in the nix store.
export ENV_VAR="your_env_var"
'';
in mkShell {
buildInputs = inputs;
shellHook = hooks;
}
```
Initializing the project will require the following steps:
- create the db directory `initdb ./db` (inside your mix project folder)
- create the postgres user `createuser postgres -ds`
- create the db `createdb db`
- start the postgres instance `pg_ctl -l "$PGDATA/server.log" start`
- add the `/db` folder to your `.gitignore`
- you can start your phoenix server and get a shell with `iex -S mix phx.server`

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@@ -0,0 +1,528 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="sec-beam">
<title>BEAM Languages (Erlang, Elixir &amp; LFE)</title>
<section xml:id="beam-introduction">
<title>Introduction</title>
<para>
In this document and related Nix expressions, we use the term,
<emphasis>BEAM</emphasis>, to describe the environment. BEAM is the name of
the Erlang Virtual Machine and, as far as we're concerned, from a packaging
perspective, all languages that run on the BEAM are interchangeable. That
which varies, like the build system, is transparent to users of any given
BEAM package, so we make no distinction.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="beam-structure">
<title>Structure</title>
<para>
All BEAM-related expressions are available via the top-level
<literal>beam</literal> attribute, which includes:
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
<literal>interpreters</literal>: a set of compilers running on the BEAM,
including multiple Erlang/OTP versions
(<literal>beam.interpreters.erlangR19</literal>, etc), Elixir
(<literal>beam.interpreters.elixir</literal>) and LFE
(<literal>beam.interpreters.lfe</literal>).
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
<literal>packages</literal>: a set of package sets, each compiled with a
specific Erlang/OTP version, e.g.
<literal>beam.packages.erlangR19</literal>.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
<para>
The default Erlang compiler, defined by
<literal>beam.interpreters.erlang</literal>, is aliased as
<literal>erlang</literal>. The default BEAM package set is defined by
<literal>beam.packages.erlang</literal> and aliased at the top level as
<literal>beamPackages</literal>.
</para>
<para>
To create a package set built with a custom Erlang version, use the lambda,
<literal>beam.packagesWith</literal>, which accepts an Erlang/OTP derivation
and produces a package set similar to
<literal>beam.packages.erlang</literal>.
</para>
<para>
Many Erlang/OTP distributions available in
<literal>beam.interpreters</literal> have versions with ODBC and/or Java
enabled. For example, there's
<literal>beam.interpreters.erlangR19_odbc_javac</literal>, which corresponds
to <literal>beam.interpreters.erlangR19</literal>.
</para>
<para xml:id="erlang-call-package">
We also provide the lambda,
<literal>beam.packages.erlang.callPackage</literal>, which simplifies
writing BEAM package definitions by injecting all packages from
<literal>beam.packages.erlang</literal> into the top-level context.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="build-tools">
<title>Build Tools</title>
<section xml:id="build-tools-rebar3">
<title>Rebar3</title>
<para>
By default, Rebar3 wants to manage its own dependencies. This is perfectly
acceptable in the normal, non-Nix setup, but in the Nix world, it is not.
To rectify this, we provide two versions of Rebar3:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
<literal>rebar3</literal>: patched to remove the ability to download
anything. When not running it via <literal>nix-shell</literal> or
<literal>nix-build</literal>, it's probably not going to work as
desired.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
<literal>rebar3-open</literal>: the normal, unmodified Rebar3. It should
work exactly as would any other version of Rebar3. Any Erlang package
should rely on <literal>rebar3</literal> instead. See
<xref
linkend="rebar3-packages"/>.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="build-tools-other">
<title>Mix &amp; Erlang.mk</title>
<para>
Both Mix and Erlang.mk work exactly as expected. There is a bootstrap
process that needs to be run for both, however, which is supported by the
<literal>buildMix</literal> and <literal>buildErlangMk</literal>
derivations, respectively.
</para>
</section>
</section>
<section xml:id="how-to-install-beam-packages">
<title>How to Install BEAM Packages</title>
<para>
BEAM packages are not registered at the top level, simply because they are
not relevant to the vast majority of Nix users. They are installable using
the <literal>beam.packages.erlang</literal> attribute set (aliased as
<literal>beamPackages</literal>), which points to packages built by the
default Erlang/OTP version in Nixpkgs, as defined by
<literal>beam.interpreters.erlang</literal>. To list the available packages
in <literal>beamPackages</literal>, use the following command:
</para>
<programlisting>
$ nix-env -f &quot;&lt;nixpkgs&gt;&quot; -qaP -A beamPackages
beamPackages.esqlite esqlite-0.2.1
beamPackages.goldrush goldrush-0.1.7
beamPackages.ibrowse ibrowse-4.2.2
beamPackages.jiffy jiffy-0.14.5
beamPackages.lager lager-3.0.2
beamPackages.meck meck-0.8.3
beamPackages.rebar3-pc pc-1.1.0
</programlisting>
<para>
To install any of those packages into your profile, refer to them by their
attribute path (first column):
</para>
<programlisting>
$ nix-env -f &quot;&lt;nixpkgs&gt;&quot; -iA beamPackages.ibrowse
</programlisting>
<para>
The attribute path of any BEAM package corresponds to the name of that
particular package in <link xlink:href="https://hex.pm">Hex</link> or its
OTP Application/Release name.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="packaging-beam-applications">
<title>Packaging BEAM Applications</title>
<section xml:id="packaging-erlang-applications">
<title>Erlang Applications</title>
<section xml:id="rebar3-packages">
<title>Rebar3 Packages</title>
<para>
The Nix function, <literal>buildRebar3</literal>, defined in
<literal>beam.packages.erlang.buildRebar3</literal> and aliased at the top
level, can be used to build a derivation that understands how to build a
Rebar3 project. For example, we can build
<link
xlink:href="https://github.com/erlang-nix/hex2nix">hex2nix</link>
as follows:
</para>
<programlisting>
{ stdenv, fetchFromGitHub, buildRebar3, ibrowse, jsx, erlware_commons }:
buildRebar3 rec {
name = "hex2nix";
version = "0.0.1";
src = fetchFromGitHub {
owner = "ericbmerritt";
repo = "hex2nix";
rev = "${version}";
sha256 = "1w7xjidz1l5yjmhlplfx7kphmnpvqm67w99hd2m7kdixwdxq0zqg";
};
beamDeps = [ ibrowse jsx erlware_commons ];
}
</programlisting>
<para>
Such derivations are callable with
<literal>beam.packages.erlang.callPackage</literal> (see
<xref
linkend="erlang-call-package"/>). To call this package using
the normal <literal>callPackage</literal>, refer to dependency packages
via <literal>beamPackages</literal>, e.g.
<literal>beamPackages.ibrowse</literal>.
</para>
<para>
Notably, <literal>buildRebar3</literal> includes
<literal>beamDeps</literal>, while <literal>stdenv.mkDerivation</literal>
does not. BEAM dependencies added there will be correctly handled by the
system.
</para>
<para>
If a package needs to compile native code via Rebar3's port compilation
mechanism, add <literal>compilePort = true;</literal> to the derivation.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="erlang-mk-packages">
<title>Erlang.mk Packages</title>
<para>
Erlang.mk functions similarly to Rebar3, except we use
<literal>buildErlangMk</literal> instead of
<literal>buildRebar3</literal>.
</para>
<programlisting>
{ buildErlangMk, fetchHex, cowlib, ranch }:
buildErlangMk {
name = "cowboy";
version = "1.0.4";
src = fetchHex {
pkg = "cowboy";
version = "1.0.4";
sha256 = "6a0edee96885fae3a8dd0ac1f333538a42e807db638a9453064ccfdaa6b9fdac";
};
beamDeps = [ cowlib ranch ];
meta = {
description = ''
Small, fast, modular HTTP server written in Erlang
'';
license = stdenv.lib.licenses.isc;
homepage = https://github.com/ninenines/cowboy;
};
}
</programlisting>
</section>
<section xml:id="mix-packages">
<title>Mix Packages</title>
<para>
Mix functions similarly to Rebar3, except we use
<literal>buildMix</literal> instead of <literal>buildRebar3</literal>.
</para>
<programlisting>
{ buildMix, fetchHex, plug, absinthe }:
buildMix {
name = "absinthe_plug";
version = "1.0.0";
src = fetchHex {
pkg = "absinthe_plug";
version = "1.0.0";
sha256 = "08459823fe1fd4f0325a8bf0c937a4520583a5a26d73b193040ab30a1dfc0b33";
};
beamDeps = [ plug absinthe ];
meta = {
description = ''
A plug for Absinthe, an experimental GraphQL toolkit
'';
license = stdenv.lib.licenses.bsd3;
homepage = https://github.com/CargoSense/absinthe_plug;
};
}
</programlisting>
<para>
Alternatively, we can use <literal>buildHex</literal> as a shortcut:
</para>
<programlisting>
{ buildHex, buildMix, plug, absinthe }:
buildHex {
name = "absinthe_plug";
version = "1.0.0";
sha256 = "08459823fe1fd4f0325a8bf0c937a4520583a5a26d73b193040ab30a1dfc0b33";
builder = buildMix;
beamDeps = [ plug absinthe ];
meta = {
description = ''
A plug for Absinthe, an experimental GraphQL toolkit
'';
license = stdenv.lib.licenses.bsd3;
homepage = https://github.com/CargoSense/absinthe_plug;
};
}
</programlisting>
</section>
</section>
</section>
<section xml:id="how-to-develop">
<title>How to Develop</title>
<section xml:id="accessing-an-environment">
<title>Accessing an Environment</title>
<para>
Often, we simply want to access a valid environment that contains a
specific package and its dependencies. We can accomplish that with the
<literal>env</literal> attribute of a derivation. For example, let's say we
want to access an Erlang REPL with <literal>ibrowse</literal> loaded up. We
could do the following:
</para>
<programlisting>
$ nix-shell -A beamPackages.ibrowse.env --run "erl"
Erlang/OTP 18 [erts-7.0] [source] [64-bit] [smp:4:4] [async-threads:10] [hipe] [kernel-poll:false]
Eshell V7.0 (abort with ^G)
1> m(ibrowse).
Module: ibrowse
MD5: 3b3e0137d0cbb28070146978a3392945
Compiled: January 10 2016, 23:34
Object file: /nix/store/g1rlf65rdgjs4abbyj4grp37ry7ywivj-ibrowse-4.2.2/lib/erlang/lib/ibrowse-4.2.2/ebin/ibrowse.beam
Compiler options: [{outdir,"/tmp/nix-build-ibrowse-4.2.2.drv-0/hex-source-ibrowse-4.2.2/_build/default/lib/ibrowse/ebin"},
debug_info,debug_info,nowarn_shadow_vars,
warn_unused_import,warn_unused_vars,warnings_as_errors,
{i,"/tmp/nix-build-ibrowse-4.2.2.drv-0/hex-source-ibrowse-4.2.2/_build/default/lib/ibrowse/include"}]
Exports:
add_config/1 send_req_direct/7
all_trace_off/0 set_dest/3
code_change/3 set_max_attempts/3
get_config_value/1 set_max_pipeline_size/3
get_config_value/2 set_max_sessions/3
get_metrics/0 show_dest_status/0
get_metrics/2 show_dest_status/1
handle_call/3 show_dest_status/2
handle_cast/2 spawn_link_worker_process/1
handle_info/2 spawn_link_worker_process/2
init/1 spawn_worker_process/1
module_info/0 spawn_worker_process/2
module_info/1 start/0
rescan_config/0 start_link/0
rescan_config/1 stop/0
send_req/3 stop_worker_process/1
send_req/4 stream_close/1
send_req/5 stream_next/1
send_req/6 terminate/2
send_req_direct/4 trace_off/0
send_req_direct/5 trace_off/2
send_req_direct/6 trace_on/0
trace_on/2
ok
2>
</programlisting>
<para>
Notice the <literal>-A beamPackages.ibrowse.env</literal>. That is the key
to this functionality.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="creating-a-shell">
<title>Creating a Shell</title>
<para>
Getting access to an environment often isn't enough to do real development.
Usually, we need to create a <literal>shell.nix</literal> file and do our
development inside of the environment specified therein. This file looks a
lot like the packaging described above, except that <literal>src</literal>
points to the project root and we call the package directly.
</para>
<programlisting>
{ pkgs ? import &quot;&lt;nixpkgs&quot;&gt; {} }:
with pkgs;
let
f = { buildRebar3, ibrowse, jsx, erlware_commons }:
buildRebar3 {
name = "hex2nix";
version = "0.1.0";
src = ./.;
beamDeps = [ ibrowse jsx erlware_commons ];
};
drv = beamPackages.callPackage f {};
in
drv
</programlisting>
<section xml:id="building-in-a-shell">
<title>Building in a Shell (for Mix Projects)</title>
<para>
We can leverage the support of the derivation, irrespective of the build
derivation, by calling the commands themselves.
</para>
<programlisting>
# =============================================================================
# Variables
# =============================================================================
NIX_TEMPLATES := "$(CURDIR)/nix-templates"
TARGET := "$(PREFIX)"
PROJECT_NAME := thorndyke
NIXPKGS=../nixpkgs
NIX_PATH=nixpkgs=$(NIXPKGS)
NIX_SHELL=nix-shell -I "$(NIX_PATH)" --pure
# =============================================================================
# Rules
# =============================================================================
.PHONY= all test clean repl shell build test analyze configure install \
test-nix-install publish plt analyze
all: build
guard-%:
@ if [ "${${*}}" == "" ]; then \
echo "Environment variable $* not set"; \
exit 1; \
fi
clean:
rm -rf _build
rm -rf .cache
repl:
$(NIX_SHELL) --run "iex -pa './_build/prod/lib/*/ebin'"
shell:
$(NIX_SHELL)
configure:
$(NIX_SHELL) --command 'eval "$$configurePhase"'
build: configure
$(NIX_SHELL) --command 'eval "$$buildPhase"'
install:
$(NIX_SHELL) --command 'eval "$$installPhase"'
test:
$(NIX_SHELL) --command 'mix test --no-start --no-deps-check'
plt:
$(NIX_SHELL) --run "mix dialyzer.plt --no-deps-check"
analyze: build plt
$(NIX_SHELL) --run "mix dialyzer --no-compile"
</programlisting>
<para>
Using a <literal>shell.nix</literal> as described (see
<xref
linkend="creating-a-shell"/>) should just work. Aside from
<literal>test</literal>, <literal>plt</literal>, and
<literal>analyze</literal>, the Make targets work just fine for all of the
build derivations.
</para>
</section>
</section>
</section>
<section xml:id="generating-packages-from-hex-with-hex2nix">
<title>Generating Packages from Hex with <literal>hex2nix</literal></title>
<para>
Updating the <link xlink:href="https://hex.pm">Hex</link> package set
requires
<link
xlink:href="https://github.com/erlang-nix/hex2nix">hex2nix</link>.
Given the path to the Erlang modules (usually
<literal>pkgs/development/erlang-modules</literal>), it will dump a file
called <literal>hex-packages.nix</literal>, containing all the packages that
use a recognized build system in
<link
xlink:href="https://hex.pm">Hex</link>. It can't be determined,
however, whether every package is buildable.
</para>
<para>
To make life easier for our users, try to build every
<link
xlink:href="https://hex.pm">Hex</link> package and remove those
that fail. To do that, simply run the following command in the root of your
<literal>nixpkgs</literal> repository:
</para>
<programlisting>
$ nix-build -A beamPackages
</programlisting>
<para>
That will attempt to build every package in <literal>beamPackages</literal>.
Then manually remove those that fail. Hopefully, someone will improve
<link
xlink:href="https://github.com/erlang-nix/hex2nix">hex2nix</link>
in the future to automate the process.
</para>
</section>
</section>

View File

@@ -1,158 +0,0 @@
# Bower {#sec-bower}
[Bower](https://bower.io) is a package manager for web site front-end components. Bower packages (comprising of build artefacts and sometimes sources) are stored in `git` repositories, typically on Github. The package registry is run by the Bower team with package metadata coming from the `bower.json` file within each package.
The end result of running Bower is a `bower_components` directory which can be included in the web app's build process.
Bower can be run interactively, by installing `nodePackages.bower`. More interestingly, the Bower components can be declared in a Nix derivation, with the help of `nodePackages.bower2nix`.
## bower2nix usage {#ssec-bower2nix-usage}
Suppose you have a `bower.json` with the following contents:
### Example bower.json {#ex-bowerJson}
```json
"name": "my-web-app",
"dependencies": {
"angular": "~1.5.0",
"bootstrap": "~3.3.6"
}
```
Running `bower2nix` will produce something like the following output:
```nix
{ fetchbower, buildEnv }:
buildEnv { name = "bower-env"; ignoreCollisions = true; paths = [
(fetchbower "angular" "1.5.3" "~1.5.0" "1749xb0firxdra4rzadm4q9x90v6pzkbd7xmcyjk6qfza09ykk9y")
(fetchbower "bootstrap" "3.3.6" "~3.3.6" "1vvqlpbfcy0k5pncfjaiskj3y6scwifxygfqnw393sjfxiviwmbv")
(fetchbower "jquery" "2.2.2" "1.9.1 - 2" "10sp5h98sqwk90y4k6hbdviwqzvzwqf47r3r51pakch5ii2y7js1")
];
```
Using the `bower2nix` command line arguments, the output can be redirected to a file. A name like `bower-packages.nix` would be fine.
The resulting derivation is a union of all the downloaded Bower packages (and their dependencies). To use it, they still need to be linked together by Bower, which is where `buildBowerComponents` is useful.
## buildBowerComponents function {#ssec-build-bower-components}
The function is implemented in [pkgs/development/bower-modules/generic/default.nix](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/development/bower-modules/generic/default.nix).
### Example buildBowerComponents {#ex-buildBowerComponents}
```{=docbook}
<programlisting language="nix">
bowerComponents = buildBowerComponents {
name = "my-web-app";
generated = ./bower-packages.nix; <co xml:id="ex-buildBowerComponents-1" />
src = myWebApp; <co xml:id="ex-buildBowerComponents-2" />
};
</programlisting>
```
In ["buildBowerComponents" example](#ex-buildBowerComponents) the following arguments are of special significance to the function:
```{=docbook}
<calloutlist>
<callout arearefs="ex-buildBowerComponents-1">
<para>
<varname>generated</varname> specifies the file which was created by <command>bower2nix</command>.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs="ex-buildBowerComponents-2">
<para>
<varname>src</varname> is your project's sources. It needs to contain a <filename>bower.json</filename> file.
</para>
</callout>
</calloutlist>
```
`buildBowerComponents` will run Bower to link together the output of `bower2nix`, resulting in a `bower_components` directory which can be used.
Here is an example of a web frontend build process using `gulp`. You might use `grunt`, or anything else.
### Example build script (gulpfile.js) {#ex-bowerGulpFile}
```javascript
var gulp = require('gulp');
gulp.task('default', [], function () {
gulp.start('build');
});
gulp.task('build', [], function () {
console.log("Just a dummy gulp build");
gulp
.src(["./bower_components/**/*"])
.pipe(gulp.dest("./gulpdist/"));
});
```
### Example Full example — default.nix {#ex-buildBowerComponentsDefaultNix}
```{=docbook}
<programlisting language="nix">
{ myWebApp ? { outPath = ./.; name = "myWebApp"; }
, pkgs ? import &lt;nixpkgs&gt; {}
}:
pkgs.stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "my-web-app-frontend";
src = myWebApp;
buildInputs = [ pkgs.nodePackages.gulp ];
bowerComponents = pkgs.buildBowerComponents { <co xml:id="ex-buildBowerComponentsDefault-1" />
name = "my-web-app";
generated = ./bower-packages.nix;
src = myWebApp;
};
buildPhase = ''
cp --reflink=auto --no-preserve=mode -R $bowerComponents/bower_components . <co xml:id="ex-buildBowerComponentsDefault-2" />
export HOME=$PWD <co xml:id="ex-buildBowerComponentsDefault-3" />
${pkgs.nodePackages.gulp}/bin/gulp build <co xml:id="ex-buildBowerComponentsDefault-4" />
'';
installPhase = "mv gulpdist $out";
}
</programlisting>
```
A few notes about [Full example — `default.nix`](#ex-buildBowerComponentsDefaultNix):
```{=docbook}
<calloutlist>
<callout arearefs="ex-buildBowerComponentsDefault-1">
<para>
The result of <varname>buildBowerComponents</varname> is an input to the frontend build.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs="ex-buildBowerComponentsDefault-2">
<para>
Whether to symlink or copy the <filename>bower_components</filename> directory depends on the build tool in use. In this case a copy is used to avoid <command>gulp</command> silliness with permissions.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs="ex-buildBowerComponentsDefault-3">
<para>
<command>gulp</command> requires <varname>HOME</varname> to refer to a writeable directory.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs="ex-buildBowerComponentsDefault-4">
<para>
The actual build command. Other tools could be used.
</para>
</callout>
</calloutlist>
```
## Troubleshooting {#ssec-bower2nix-troubleshooting}
### ENOCACHE errors from buildBowerComponents
This means that Bower was looking for a package version which doesn't exist in the generated `bower-packages.nix`.
If `bower.json` has been updated, then run `bower2nix` again.
It could also be a bug in `bower2nix` or `fetchbower`. If possible, try reformulating the version specification in `bower.json`.

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,229 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="sec-bower">
<title>Bower</title>
<para>
<link xlink:href="http://bower.io">Bower</link> is a package manager for web
site front-end components. Bower packages (comprising of build artefacts and
sometimes sources) are stored in <command>git</command> repositories,
typically on Github. The package registry is run by the Bower team with
package metadata coming from the <filename>bower.json</filename> file within
each package.
</para>
<para>
The end result of running Bower is a <filename>bower_components</filename>
directory which can be included in the web app's build process.
</para>
<para>
Bower can be run interactively, by installing
<varname>nodePackages.bower</varname>. More interestingly, the Bower
components can be declared in a Nix derivation, with the help of
<varname>nodePackages.bower2nix</varname>.
</para>
<section xml:id="ssec-bower2nix-usage">
<title><command>bower2nix</command> usage</title>
<para>
Suppose you have a <filename>bower.json</filename> with the following
contents:
<example xml:id="ex-bowerJson">
<title><filename>bower.json</filename></title>
<programlisting language="json">
<![CDATA[{
"name": "my-web-app",
"dependencies": {
"angular": "~1.5.0",
"bootstrap": "~3.3.6"
}
}]]>
</programlisting>
</example>
</para>
<para>
Running <command>bower2nix</command> will produce something like the
following output:
<programlisting language="nix">
<![CDATA[{ fetchbower, buildEnv }:
buildEnv { name = "bower-env"; ignoreCollisions = true; paths = [
(fetchbower "angular" "1.5.3" "~1.5.0" "1749xb0firxdra4rzadm4q9x90v6pzkbd7xmcyjk6qfza09ykk9y")
(fetchbower "bootstrap" "3.3.6" "~3.3.6" "1vvqlpbfcy0k5pncfjaiskj3y6scwifxygfqnw393sjfxiviwmbv")
(fetchbower "jquery" "2.2.2" "1.9.1 - 2" "10sp5h98sqwk90y4k6hbdviwqzvzwqf47r3r51pakch5ii2y7js1")
]; }]]>
</programlisting>
</para>
<para>
Using the <command>bower2nix</command> command line arguments, the output
can be redirected to a file. A name like
<filename>bower-packages.nix</filename> would be fine.
</para>
<para>
The resulting derivation is a union of all the downloaded Bower packages
(and their dependencies). To use it, they still need to be linked together
by Bower, which is where <varname>buildBowerComponents</varname> is useful.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="ssec-build-bower-components">
<title><varname>buildBowerComponents</varname> function</title>
<para>
The function is implemented in
<link xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/development/bower-modules/generic/default.nix">
<filename>pkgs/development/bower-modules/generic/default.nix</filename></link>.
Example usage:
<example xml:id="ex-buildBowerComponents">
<title>buildBowerComponents</title>
<programlisting language="nix">
bowerComponents = buildBowerComponents {
name = "my-web-app";
generated = ./bower-packages.nix; <co xml:id="ex-buildBowerComponents-1" />
src = myWebApp; <co xml:id="ex-buildBowerComponents-2" />
};
</programlisting>
</example>
</para>
<para>
In <xref linkend="ex-buildBowerComponents" />, the following arguments are
of special significance to the function:
<calloutlist>
<callout arearefs="ex-buildBowerComponents-1">
<para>
<varname>generated</varname> specifies the file which was created by
<command>bower2nix</command>.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs="ex-buildBowerComponents-2">
<para>
<varname>src</varname> is your project's sources. It needs to contain a
<filename>bower.json</filename> file.
</para>
</callout>
</calloutlist>
</para>
<para>
<varname>buildBowerComponents</varname> will run Bower to link together the
output of <command>bower2nix</command>, resulting in a
<filename>bower_components</filename> directory which can be used.
</para>
<para>
Here is an example of a web frontend build process using
<command>gulp</command>. You might use <command>grunt</command>, or anything
else.
</para>
<example xml:id="ex-bowerGulpFile">
<title>Example build script (<filename>gulpfile.js</filename>)</title>
<programlisting language="javascript">
<![CDATA[var gulp = require('gulp');
gulp.task('default', [], function () {
gulp.start('build');
});
gulp.task('build', [], function () {
console.log("Just a dummy gulp build");
gulp
.src(["./bower_components/**/*"])
.pipe(gulp.dest("./gulpdist/"));
});]]>
</programlisting>
</example>
<example xml:id="ex-buildBowerComponentsDefaultNix">
<title>Full example — <filename>default.nix</filename></title>
<programlisting language="nix">
{ myWebApp ? { outPath = ./.; name = "myWebApp"; }
, pkgs ? import &lt;nixpkgs&gt; {}
}:
pkgs.stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "my-web-app-frontend";
src = myWebApp;
buildInputs = [ pkgs.nodePackages.gulp ];
bowerComponents = pkgs.buildBowerComponents { <co xml:id="ex-buildBowerComponentsDefault-1" />
name = "my-web-app";
generated = ./bower-packages.nix;
src = myWebApp;
};
buildPhase = ''
cp --reflink=auto --no-preserve=mode -R $bowerComponents/bower_components . <co xml:id="ex-buildBowerComponentsDefault-2" />
export HOME=$PWD <co xml:id="ex-buildBowerComponentsDefault-3" />
${pkgs.nodePackages.gulp}/bin/gulp build <co xml:id="ex-buildBowerComponentsDefault-4" />
'';
installPhase = "mv gulpdist $out";
}
</programlisting>
</example>
<para>
A few notes about <xref linkend="ex-buildBowerComponentsDefaultNix" />:
<calloutlist>
<callout arearefs="ex-buildBowerComponentsDefault-1">
<para>
The result of <varname>buildBowerComponents</varname> is an input to the
frontend build.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs="ex-buildBowerComponentsDefault-2">
<para>
Whether to symlink or copy the <filename>bower_components</filename>
directory depends on the build tool in use. In this case a copy is used
to avoid <command>gulp</command> silliness with permissions.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs="ex-buildBowerComponentsDefault-3">
<para>
<command>gulp</command> requires <varname>HOME</varname> to refer to a
writeable directory.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs="ex-buildBowerComponentsDefault-4">
<para>
The actual build command. Other tools could be used.
</para>
</callout>
</calloutlist>
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="ssec-bower2nix-troubleshooting">
<title>Troubleshooting</title>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<literal>ENOCACHE</literal> errors from <varname>buildBowerComponents</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
This means that Bower was looking for a package version which doesn't
exist in the generated <filename>bower-packages.nix</filename>.
</para>
<para>
If <filename>bower.json</filename> has been updated, then run
<command>bower2nix</command> again.
</para>
<para>
It could also be a bug in <command>bower2nix</command> or
<command>fetchbower</command>. If possible, try reformulating the version
specification in <filename>bower.json</filename>.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
</section>
</section>

View File

@@ -1,81 +0,0 @@
# Coq and coq packages {#sec-language-coq}
## Coq derivation: `coq`
The Coq derivation is overridable through the `coq.override overrides`, where overrides is an attribute set which contains the arguments to override. We recommend overriding either of the following
* `version` (optional, defaults to the latest version of Coq selected for nixpkgs, see `pkgs/top-level/coq-packages` to witness this choice), which follows the conventions explained in the `coqPackages` section below,
* `customOCamlPackage` (optional, defaults to `null`, which lets Coq choose a version automatically), which can be set to any of the ocaml packages attribute of `ocaml-ng` (such as `ocaml-ng.ocamlPackages_4_10` which is the default for Coq 8.11 for example).
* `coq-version` (optional, defaults to the short version e.g. "8.10"), is a version number of the form "x.y" that indicates which Coq's version build behavior to mimic when using a source which is not a release. E.g. `coq.override { version = "d370a9d1328a4e1cdb9d02ee032f605a9d94ec7a"; coq-version = "8.10"; }`.
## Coq packages attribute sets: `coqPackages`
The recommended way of defining a derivation for a Coq library, is to use the `coqPackages.mkCoqDerivation` function, which is essentially a specialization of `mkDerivation` taking into account most of the specifics of Coq libraries. The following attributes are supported:
* `pname` (required) is the name of the package,
* `version` (optional, defaults to `null`), is the version to fetch and build,
this attribute is interpreted in several ways depending on its type and pattern:
* if it is a known released version string, i.e. from the `release` attribute below, the according release is picked, and the `version` attribute of the resulting derivation is set to this release string,
* if it is a majorMinor `"x.y"` prefix of a known released version (as defined above), then the latest `"x.y.z"` known released version is selected (for the ordering given by `versionAtLeast`),
* if it is a path or a string representing an absolute path (i.e. starting with `"/"`), the provided path is selected as a source, and the `version` attribute of the resulting derivation is set to `"dev"`,
* if it is a string of the form `owner:branch` then it tries to download the `branch` of owner `owner` for a project of the same name using the same vcs, and the `version` attribute of the resulting derivation is set to `"dev"`, additionally if the owner is not provided (i.e. if the `owner:` prefix is missing), it defaults to the original owner of the package (see below),
* if it is a string of the form `"#N"`, and the domain is github, then it tries to download the current head of the pull request `#N` from github,
* `defaultVersion` (optional). Coq libraries may be compatible with some specific versions of Coq only. The `defaultVersion` attribute is used when no `version` is provided (or if `version = null`) to select the version of the library to use by default, depending on the context. This selection will mainly depend on a `coq` version number but also possibly on other packages versions (e.g. `mathcomp`). If its value ends up to be `null`, the package is marked for removal in end-user `coqPackages` attribute set.
* `release` (optional, defaults to `{}`), lists all the known releases of the library and for each of them provides an attribute set with at least a `sha256` attribute (you may put the empty string `""` in order to automatically insert a fake sha256, this will trigger an error which will allow you to find the correct sha256), each attribute set of the list of releases also takes optional overloading arguments for the fetcher as below (i.e.`domain`, `owner`, `repo`, `rev` assuming the default fetcher is used) and optional overrides for the result of the fetcher (i.e. `version` and `src`).
* `fetcher` (optional, defaults to a generic fetching mechanism supporting github or gitlab based infrastructures), is a function that takes at least an `owner`, a `repo`, a `rev`, and a `sha256` and returns an attribute set with a `version` and `src`.
* `repo` (optional, defaults to the value of `pname`),
* `owner` (optional, defaults to `"coq-community"`).
* `domain` (optional, defaults to `"github.com"`), domains including the strings `"github"` or `"gitlab"` in their names are automatically supported, otherwise, one must change the `fetcher` argument to support them (cf `pkgs/development/coq-modules/heq/default.nix` for an example),
* `releaseRev` (optional, defaults to `(v: v)`), provides a default mapping from release names to revision hashes/branch names/tags,
* `displayVersion` (optional), provides a way to alter the computation of `name` from `pname`, by explaining how to display version numbers,
* `namePrefix` (optional), provides a way to alter the computation of `name` from `pname`, by explaining which dependencies must occur in `name`,
* `extraBuildInputs` (optional), by default `buildInputs` just contains `coq`, this allows to add more build inputs,
* `mlPlugin` (optional, defaults to `false`). Some extensions (plugins) might require OCaml and sometimes other OCaml packages. Standard dependencies can be added by setting the current option to `true`. For a finer grain control, the `coq.ocamlPackages` attribute can be used in `extraBuildInputs` to depend on the same package set Coq was built against.
* `useDune2ifVersion` (optional, default to `(x: false)` uses Dune2 to build the package if the provided predicate evaluates to true on the version, e.g. `useDune2if = versions.isGe "1.1"` will use dune if the version of the package is greater or equal to `"1.1"`,
* `useDune2` (optional, defaults to `false`) uses Dune2 to build the package if set to true, the presence of this attribute overrides the behavior of the previous one.
* `enableParallelBuilding` (optional, defaults to `true`), since it is activated by default, we provide a way to disable it.
* `extraInstallFlags` (optional), allows to extend `installFlags` which initializes the variable `COQMF_COQLIB` so as to install in the proper subdirectory. Indeed Coq libraries should be installed in `$(out)/lib/coq/${coq.coq-version}/user-contrib/`. Such directories are automatically added to the `$COQPATH` environment variable by the hook defined in the Coq derivation.
* `setCOQBIN` (optional, defaults to `true`), by default, the environment variable `$COQBIN` is set to the current Coq's binary, but one can disable this behavior by setting it to `false`,
* `useMelquiondRemake` (optional, default to `null`) is an attribute set, which, if given, overloads the `preConfigurePhases`, `configureFlags`, `buildPhase`, and `installPhase` attributes of the derivation for a specific use in libraries using `remake` as set up by Guillaume Melquiond for `flocq`, `gappalib`, `interval`, and `coquelicot` (see the corresponding derivation for concrete examples of use of this option). For backward compatibility, the attribute `useMelquiondRemake.logpath` must be set to the logical root of the library (otherwise, one can pass `useMelquiondRemake = {}` to activate this without backward compatibility).
* `dropAttrs`, `keepAttrs`, `dropDerivationAttrs` are all optional and allow to tune which attribute is added or removed from the final call to `mkDerivation`.
It also takes other standard `mkDerivation` attributes, they are added as such, except for `meta` which extends an automatically computed `meta` (where the `platform` is the same as `coq` and the homepage is automatically computed).
Here is a simple package example. It is a pure Coq library, thus it depends on Coq. It builds on the Mathematical Components library, thus it also takes some `mathcomp` derivations as `extraBuildInputs`.
```nix
{ lib, mkCoqDerivation, version ? null
, coq, mathcomp, mathcomp-finmap, mathcomp-bigenough }:
with lib; mkCoqDerivation {
/* namePrefix leads to e.g. `name = coq8.11-mathcomp1.11-multinomials-1.5.2` */
namePrefix = [ "coq" "mathcomp" ];
pname = "multinomials";
owner = "math-comp";
inherit version;
defaultVersion = with versions; switch [ coq.version mathcomp.version ] [
{ cases = [ (range "8.7" "8.12") "1.11.0" ]; out = "1.5.2"; }
{ cases = [ (range "8.7" "8.11") (range "1.8" "1.10") ]; out = "1.5.0"; }
{ cases = [ (range "8.7" "8.10") (range "1.8" "1.10") ]; out = "1.4"; }
{ cases = [ "8.6" (range "1.6" "1.7") ]; out = "1.1"; }
] null;
release = {
"1.5.2".sha256 = "15aspf3jfykp1xgsxf8knqkxv8aav2p39c2fyirw7pwsfbsv2c4s";
"1.5.1".sha256 = "13nlfm2wqripaq671gakz5mn4r0xwm0646araxv0nh455p9ndjs3";
"1.5.0".sha256 = "064rvc0x5g7y1a0nip6ic91vzmq52alf6in2bc2dmss6dmzv90hw";
"1.5.0".rev = "1.5";
"1.4".sha256 = "0vnkirs8iqsv8s59yx1fvg1nkwnzydl42z3scya1xp1b48qkgn0p";
"1.3".sha256 = "0l3vi5n094nx3qmy66hsv867fnqm196r8v605kpk24gl0aa57wh4";
"1.2".sha256 = "1mh1w339dslgv4f810xr1b8v2w7rpx6fgk9pz96q0fyq49fw2xcq";
"1.1".sha256 = "1q8alsm89wkc0lhcvxlyn0pd8rbl2nnxg81zyrabpz610qqjqc3s";
"1.0".sha256 = "1qmbxp1h81cy3imh627pznmng0kvv37k4hrwi2faa101s6bcx55m";
};
propagatedBuildInputs =
[ mathcomp.ssreflect mathcomp.algebra mathcomp-finmap mathcomp-bigenough ];
meta = {
description = "A Coq/SSReflect Library for Monoidal Rings and Multinomials";
license = licenses.cecill-c;
};
}
```

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@@ -0,0 +1,65 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="sec-language-coq">
<title>Coq</title>
<para>
Coq libraries should be installed in
<literal>$(out)/lib/coq/${coq.coq-version}/user-contrib/</literal>. Such
directories are automatically added to the <literal>$COQPATH</literal>
environment variable by the hook defined in the Coq derivation.
</para>
<para>
Some libraries require OCaml and sometimes also Camlp5 or findlib. The exact
versions that were used to build Coq are saved in the
<literal>coq.ocaml</literal> and <literal>coq.camlp5</literal> and
<literal>coq.findlib</literal> attributes.
</para>
<para>
Coq libraries may be compatible with some specific versions of Coq only. The
<literal>compatibleCoqVersions</literal> attribute is used to precisely
select those versions of Coq that are compatible with this derivation.
</para>
<para>
Here is a simple package example. It is a pure Coq library, thus it depends
on Coq. It builds on the Mathematical Components library, thus it also takes
<literal>mathcomp</literal> as <literal>buildInputs</literal>. Its
<literal>Makefile</literal> has been generated using
<literal>coq_makefile</literal> so we only have to set the
<literal>$COQLIB</literal> variable at install time.
</para>
<programlisting>
{ stdenv, fetchFromGitHub, coq, mathcomp }:
stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
name = "coq${coq.coq-version}-multinomials-${version}";
version = "1.0";
src = fetchFromGitHub {
owner = "math-comp";
repo = "multinomials";
rev = version;
sha256 = "1qmbxp1h81cy3imh627pznmng0kvv37k4hrwi2faa101s6bcx55m";
};
buildInputs = [ coq ];
propagatedBuildInputs = [ mathcomp ];
installFlags = "COQLIB=$(out)/lib/coq/${coq.coq-version}/";
meta = {
description = "A Coq/SSReflect Library for Monoidal Rings and Multinomials";
inherit (src.meta) homepage;
license = stdenv.lib.licenses.cecill-b;
inherit (coq.meta) platforms;
};
passthru = {
compatibleCoqVersions = v: builtins.elem v [ "8.5" "8.6" "8.7" ];
};
}
</programlisting>
</section>

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@@ -1,71 +0,0 @@
# Crystal {#crystal}
## Building a Crystal package
This section uses [Mint](https://github.com/mint-lang/mint) as an example for how to build a Crystal package.
If the Crystal project has any dependencies, the first step is to get a `shards.nix` file encoding those. Get a copy of the project and go to its root directory such that its `shard.lock` file is in the current directory, then run `crystal2nix` in it
```bash
$ git clone https://github.com/mint-lang/mint
$ cd mint
$ git checkout 0.5.0
$ nix-shell -p crystal2nix --run crystal2nix
```
This should have generated a `shards.nix` file.
Next create a Nix file for your derivation and use `pkgs.crystal.buildCrystalPackage` as follows:
```nix
with import <nixpkgs> {};
crystal.buildCrystalPackage rec {
pname = "mint";
version = "0.5.0";
src = fetchFromGitHub {
owner = "mint-lang";
repo = "mint";
rev = version;
sha256 = "0vxbx38c390rd2ysvbwgh89v2232sh5rbsp3nk9wzb70jybpslvl";
};
# Insert the path to your shards.nix file here
shardsFile = ./shards.nix;
...
}
```
This won't build anything yet, because we haven't told it what files build. We can specify a mapping from binary names to source files with the `crystalBinaries` attribute. The project's compilation instructions should show this. For Mint, the binary is called "mint", which is compiled from the source file `src/mint.cr`, so we'll specify this as follows:
```nix
crystalBinaries.mint.src = "src/mint.cr";
# ...
```
Additionally you can override the default `crystal build` options (which are currently `--release --progress --no-debug --verbose`) with
```nix
crystalBinaries.mint.options = [ "--release" "--verbose" ];
```
Depending on the project, you might need additional steps to get it to compile successfully. In Mint's case, we need to link against openssl, so in the end the Nix file looks as follows:
```nix
with import <nixpkgs> {};
crystal.buildCrystalPackage rec {
version = "0.5.0";
pname = "mint";
src = fetchFromGitHub {
owner = "mint-lang";
repo = "mint";
rev = version;
sha256 = "0vxbx38c390rd2ysvbwgh89v2232sh5rbsp3nk9wzb70jybpslvl";
};
shardsFile = ./shards.nix;
crystalBinaries.mint.src = "src/mint.cr";
buildInputs = [ openssl ];
}
```

View File

@@ -1,432 +0,0 @@
# Dhall {#sec-language-dhall}
The Nixpkgs support for Dhall assumes some familiarity with Dhall's language
support for importing Dhall expressions, which is documented here:
* [`dhall-lang.org` - Installing packages](https://docs.dhall-lang.org/tutorials/Language-Tour.html#installing-packages)
## Remote imports {#ssec-dhall-remote-imports}
Nixpkgs bypasses Dhall's support for remote imports using Dhall's
semantic integrity checks. Specifically, any Dhall import can be protected by
an integrity check like:
```dhall
https://prelude.dhall-lang.org/v20.1.0/package.dhall
sha256:26b0ef498663d269e4dc6a82b0ee289ec565d683ef4c00d0ebdd25333a5a3c98
```
… and if the import is cached then the interpreter will load the import from
cache instead of fetching the URL.
Nixpkgs uses this trick to add all of a Dhall expression's dependencies into the
cache so that the Dhall interpreter never needs to resolve any remote URLs. In
fact, Nixpkgs uses a Dhall interpreter with remote imports disabled when
packaging Dhall expressions to enforce that the interpreter never resolves a
remote import. This means that Nixpkgs only supports building Dhall expressions
if all of their remote imports are protected by semantic integrity checks.
Instead of remote imports, Nixpkgs uses Nix to fetch remote Dhall code. For
example, the Prelude Dhall package uses `pkgs.fetchFromGitHub` to fetch the
`dhall-lang` repository containing the Prelude. Relying exclusively on Nix
to fetch Dhall code ensures that Dhall packages built using Nix remain pure and
also behave well when built within a sandbox.
## Packaging a Dhall expression from scratch {#ssec-dhall-packaging-expression}
We can illustrate how Nixpkgs integrates Dhall by beginning from the following
trivial Dhall expression with one dependency (the Prelude):
```dhall
-- ./true.dhall
let Prelude = https://prelude.dhall-lang.org/v20.1.0/package.dhall
in Prelude.Bool.not False
```
As written, this expression cannot be built using Nixpkgs because the
expression does not protect the Prelude import with a semantic integrity
check, so the first step is to freeze the expression using `dhall freeze`,
like this:
```bash
$ dhall freeze --inplace ./true.dhall
```
… which gives us:
```dhall
-- ./true.dhall
let Prelude =
https://prelude.dhall-lang.org/v20.1.0/package.dhall
sha256:26b0ef498663d269e4dc6a82b0ee289ec565d683ef4c00d0ebdd25333a5a3c98
in Prelude.Bool.not False
```
To package that expression, we create a `./true.nix` file containing the
following specification for the Dhall package:
```nix
# ./true.nix
{ buildDhallPackage, Prelude }:
buildDhallPackage {
name = "true";
code = ./true.dhall;
dependencies = [ Prelude ];
source = true;
}
```
… and we complete the build by incorporating that Dhall package into the
`pkgs.dhallPackages` hierarchy using an overlay, like this:
```nix
# ./example.nix
let
nixpkgs = builtins.fetchTarball {
url = "https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/94b2848559b12a8ed1fe433084686b2a81123c99.tar.gz";
sha256 = "1pbl4c2dsaz2lximgd31m96jwbps6apn3anx8cvvhk1gl9rkg107";
};
dhallOverlay = self: super: {
true = self.callPackage ./true.nix { };
};
overlay = self: super: {
dhallPackages = super.dhallPackages.override (old: {
overrides =
self.lib.composeExtensions (old.overrides or (_: _: {})) dhallOverlay;
});
};
pkgs = import nixpkgs { config = {}; overlays = [ overlay ]; };
in
pkgs
```
… which we can then build using this command:
```bash
$ nix build --file ./example.nix dhallPackages.true
```
## Contents of a Dhall package {#ssec-dhall-package-contents}
The above package produces the following directory tree:
```bash
$ tree -a ./result
result
├── .cache
│   └── dhall
│   └── 122027abdeddfe8503496adeb623466caa47da5f63abd2bc6fa19f6cfcb73ecfed70
├── binary.dhall
└── source.dhall
```
… where:
* `source.dhall` contains the result of interpreting our Dhall package:
```bash
$ cat ./result/source.dhall
True
```
* The `.cache` subdirectory contains one binary cache product encoding the
same result as `source.dhall`:
```bash
$ dhall decode < ./result/.cache/dhall/122027abdeddfe8503496adeb623466caa47da5f63abd2bc6fa19f6cfcb73ecfed70
True
```
* `binary.dhall` contains a Dhall expression which handles fetching and decoding
the same cache product:
```bash
$ cat ./result/binary.dhall
missing sha256:27abdeddfe8503496adeb623466caa47da5f63abd2bc6fa19f6cfcb73ecfed70
$ cp -r ./result/.cache .cache
$ chmod -R u+w .cache
$ XDG_CACHE_HOME=.cache dhall --file ./result/binary.dhall
True
```
The `source.dhall` file is only present for packages that specify
`source = true;`. By default, Dhall packages omit the `source.dhall` in order
to conserve disk space when they are used exclusively as dependencies. For
example, if we build the Prelude package it will only contain the binary
encoding of the expression:
```bash
$ nix build --file ./example.nix dhallPackages.Prelude
$ tree -a result
result
├── .cache
│   └── dhall
│   └── 122026b0ef498663d269e4dc6a82b0ee289ec565d683ef4c00d0ebdd25333a5a3c98
└── binary.dhall
2 directories, 2 files
```
Typically, you only specify `source = true;` for the top-level Dhall expression
of interest (such as our example `true.nix` Dhall package). However, if you
wish to specify `source = true` for all Dhall packages, then you can amend the
Dhall overlay like this:
```nix
dhallOverrides = self: super: {
# Enable source for all Dhall packages
buildDhallPackage =
args: super.buildDhallPackage (args // { source = true; });
true = self.callPackage ./true.nix { };
};
```
… and now the Prelude will contain the fully decoded result of interpreting
the Prelude:
```bash
$ nix build --file ./example.nix dhallPackages.Prelude
$ tree -a result
result
├── .cache
│   └── dhall
│   └── 122026b0ef498663d269e4dc6a82b0ee289ec565d683ef4c00d0ebdd25333a5a3c98
├── binary.dhall
└── source.dhall
$ cat ./result/source.dhall
{ Bool =
{ and =
\(_ : List Bool) ->
List/fold Bool _ Bool (\(_ : Bool) -> \(_ : Bool) -> _@1 && _) True
, build = \(_ : Type -> _ -> _@1 -> _@2) -> _ Bool True False
, even =
\(_ : List Bool) ->
List/fold Bool _ Bool (\(_ : Bool) -> \(_ : Bool) -> _@1 == _) True
, fold =
\(_ : Bool) ->
```
## Packaging functions {#ssec-dhall-packaging-functions}
We already saw an example of using `buildDhallPackage` to create a Dhall
package from a single file, but most Dhall packages consist of more than one
file and there are two derived utilities that you may find more useful when
packaging multiple files:
* `buildDhallDirectoryPackage` - build a Dhall package from a local directory
* `buildDhallGitHubPackage` - build a Dhall package from a GitHub repository
The `buildDhallPackage` is the lowest-level function and accepts the following
arguments:
* `name`: The name of the derivation
* `dependencies`: Dhall dependencies to build and cache ahead of time
* `code`: The top-level expression to build for this package
Note that the `code` field accepts an arbitrary Dhall expression. You're
not limited to just a file.
* `source`: Set to `true` to include the decoded result as `source.dhall` in the
build product, at the expense of requiring more disk space
* `documentationRoot`: Set to the root directory of the package if you want
`dhall-docs` to generate documentation underneath the `docs` subdirectory of
the build product
The `buildDhallDirectoryPackage` is a higher-level function implemented in terms
of `buildDhallPackage` that accepts the following arguments:
* `name`: Same as `buildDhallPackage`
* `dependencies`: Same as `buildDhallPackage`
* `source`: Same as `buildDhallPackage`
* `src`: The directory containing Dhall code that you want to turn into a Dhall
package
* `file`: The top-level file (`package.dhall` by default) that is the entrypoint
to the rest of the package
* `document`: Set to `true` to generate documentation for the package
The `buildDhallGitHubPackage` is another higher-level function implemented in
terms of `buildDhallPackage` that accepts the following arguments:
* `name`: Same as `buildDhallPackage`
* `dependencies`: Same as `buildDhallPackage`
* `source`: Same as `buildDhallPackage`
* `owner`: The owner of the repository
* `repo`: The repository name
* `rev`: The desired revision (or branch, or tag)
* `directory`: The subdirectory of the Git repository to package (if a
directory other than the root of the repository)
* `file`: The top-level file (`${directory}/package.dhall` by default) that is
the entrypoint to the rest of the package
* `document`: Set to `true` to generate documentation for the package
Additionally, `buildDhallGitHubPackage` accepts the same arguments as
`fetchFromGitHub`, such as `sha256` or `fetchSubmodules`.
## `dhall-to-nixpkgs` {#ssec-dhall-dhall-to-nixpkgs}
You can use the `dhall-to-nixpkgs` command-line utility to automate
packaging Dhall code. For example:
```bash
$ nix-env --install --attr haskellPackages.dhall-nixpkgs
$ nix-env --install --attr nix-prefetch-git # Used by dhall-to-nixpkgs
$ dhall-to-nixpkgs github https://github.com/Gabriel439/dhall-semver.git
{ buildDhallGitHubPackage, Prelude }:
buildDhallGitHubPackage {
name = "dhall-semver";
githubBase = "github.com";
owner = "Gabriel439";
repo = "dhall-semver";
rev = "2d44ae605302ce5dc6c657a1216887fbb96392a4";
fetchSubmodules = false;
sha256 = "0y8shvp8srzbjjpmnsvz9c12ciihnx1szs0yzyi9ashmrjvd0jcz";
directory = "";
file = "package.dhall";
source = false;
document = false;
dependencies = [ (Prelude.overridePackage { file = "package.dhall"; }) ];
}
```
The utility takes care of automatically detecting remote imports and converting
them to package dependencies. You can also use the utility on local
Dhall directories, too:
```bash
$ dhall-to-nixpkgs directory ~/proj/dhall-semver
{ buildDhallDirectoryPackage, Prelude }:
buildDhallDirectoryPackage {
name = "proj";
src = /Users/gabriel/proj/dhall-semver;
file = "package.dhall";
source = false;
document = false;
dependencies = [ (Prelude.overridePackage { file = "package.dhall"; }) ];
}
```
## Overriding dependency versions {#ssec-dhall-overriding-dependency-versions}
Suppose that we change our `true.dhall` example expression to depend on an older
version of the Prelude (19.0.0):
```dhall
-- ./true.dhall
let Prelude =
https://prelude.dhall-lang.org/v19.0.0/package.dhall
sha256:eb693342eb769f782174157eba9b5924cf8ac6793897fc36a31ccbd6f56dafe2
in Prelude.Bool.not False
```
If we try to rebuild that expression the build will fail:
```
$ nix build --file ./example.nix dhallPackages.true
builder for '/nix/store/0f1hla7ff1wiaqyk1r2ky4wnhnw114fi-true.drv' failed with exit code 1; last 10 log lines:
Dhall was compiled without the 'with-http' flag.
The requested URL was: https://prelude.dhall-lang.org/v19.0.0/package.dhall
4│ https://prelude.dhall-lang.org/v19.0.0/package.dhall
5│ sha256:eb693342eb769f782174157eba9b5924cf8ac6793897fc36a31ccbd6f56dafe2
/nix/store/rsab4y99h14912h4zplqx2iizr5n4rc2-true.dhall:4:7
[1 built (1 failed), 0.0 MiB DL]
error: build of '/nix/store/0f1hla7ff1wiaqyk1r2ky4wnhnw114fi-true.drv' failed
```
… because the default Prelude selected by Nixpkgs revision
`94b2848559b12a8ed1fe433084686b2a81123c99is` is version 20.1.0, which doesn't
have the same integrity check as version 19.0.0. This means that version
19.0.0 is not cached and the interpreter is not allowed to fall back to
importing the URL.
However, we can override the default Prelude version by using `dhall-to-nixpkgs`
to create a Dhall package for our desired Prelude:
```bash
$ dhall-to-nixpkgs github https://github.com/dhall-lang/dhall-lang.git \
--name Prelude \
--directory Prelude \
--rev v19.0.0 \
> Prelude.nix
```
… and then referencing that package in our Dhall overlay, by either overriding
the Prelude globally for all packages, like this:
```bash
dhallOverrides = self: super: {
true = self.callPackage ./true.nix { };
Prelude = self.callPackage ./Prelude.nix { };
};
```
… or selectively overriding the Prelude dependency for just the `true` package,
like this:
```bash
dhallOverrides = self: super: {
true = self.callPackage ./true.nix {
Prelude = self.callPackage ./Prelude.nix { };
};
};
```
## Overrides {#ssec-dhall-overrides}
You can override any of the arguments to `buildDhallGitHubPackage` or
`buildDhallDirectoryPackage` using the `overridePackage` attribute of a package.
For example, suppose we wanted to selectively enable `source = true` just for the Prelude. We can do that like this:
```nix
dhallOverrides = self: super: {
Prelude = super.Prelude.overridePackage { source = true; };
};
```
[semantic-integrity-checks]: https://docs.dhall-lang.org/tutorials/Language-Tour.html#installing-packages

View File

@@ -1,75 +0,0 @@
# Dotnet
## Local Development Workflow
For local development, it's recommended to use nix-shell to create a dotnet environment:
```nix
# shell.nix
with import <nixpkgs> {};
mkShell {
name = "dotnet-env";
packages = [
dotnet-sdk_3
];
}
```
### Using many sdks in a workflow
It's very likely that more than one sdk will be needed on a given project. Dotnet provides several different frameworks (E.g dotnetcore, aspnetcore, etc.) as well as many versions for a given framework. Normally, dotnet is able to fetch a framework and install it relative to the executable. However, this would mean writing to the nix store in nixpkgs, which is read-only. To support the many-sdk use case, one can compose an environment using `dotnetCorePackages.combinePackages`:
```nix
with import <nixpkgs> {};
mkShell {
name = "dotnet-env";
packages = [
(with dotnetCorePackages; combinePackages [
sdk_3_1
sdk_3_0
sdk_2_1
])
];
}
```
This will produce a dotnet installation that has the dotnet 3.1, 3.0, and 2.1 sdk. The first sdk listed will have it's cli utility present in the resulting environment. Example info output:
```ShellSesssion
$ dotnet --info
.NET Core SDK (reflecting any global.json):
Version: 3.1.101
Commit: b377529961
...
.NET Core SDKs installed:
2.1.803 [/nix/store/iiv98i2jdi226dgh4jzkkj2ww7f8jgpd-dotnet-core-combined/sdk]
3.0.102 [/nix/store/iiv98i2jdi226dgh4jzkkj2ww7f8jgpd-dotnet-core-combined/sdk]
3.1.101 [/nix/store/iiv98i2jdi226dgh4jzkkj2ww7f8jgpd-dotnet-core-combined/sdk]
.NET Core runtimes installed:
Microsoft.AspNetCore.All 2.1.15 [/nix/store/iiv98i2jdi226dgh4jzkkj2ww7f8jgpd-dotnet-core-combined/shared/Microsoft.AspNetCore.All]
Microsoft.AspNetCore.App 2.1.15 [/nix/store/iiv98i2jdi226dgh4jzkkj2ww7f8jgpd-dotnet-core-combined/shared/Microsoft.AspNetCore.App]
Microsoft.AspNetCore.App 3.0.2 [/nix/store/iiv98i2jdi226dgh4jzkkj2ww7f8jgpd-dotnet-core-combined/shared/Microsoft.AspNetCore.App]
Microsoft.AspNetCore.App 3.1.1 [/nix/store/iiv98i2jdi226dgh4jzkkj2ww7f8jgpd-dotnet-core-combined/shared/Microsoft.AspNetCore.App]
Microsoft.NETCore.App 2.1.15 [/nix/store/iiv98i2jdi226dgh4jzkkj2ww7f8jgpd-dotnet-core-combined/shared/Microsoft.NETCore.App]
Microsoft.NETCore.App 3.0.2 [/nix/store/iiv98i2jdi226dgh4jzkkj2ww7f8jgpd-dotnet-core-combined/shared/Microsoft.NETCore.App]
Microsoft.NETCore.App 3.1.1 [/nix/store/iiv98i2jdi226dgh4jzkkj2ww7f8jgpd-dotnet-core-combined/shared/Microsoft.NETCore.App]
```
## dotnet-sdk vs dotnetCorePackages.sdk
The `dotnetCorePackages.sdk_X_Y` is preferred over the old dotnet-sdk as both major and minor version are very important for a dotnet environment. If a given minor version isn't present (or was changed), then this will likely break your ability to build a project.
## dotnetCorePackages.sdk vs dotnetCorePackages.net vs dotnetCorePackages.netcore vs dotnetCorePackages.aspnetcore
The `dotnetCorePackages.sdk` contains both a runtime and the full sdk of a given version. The `net`, `netcore` and `aspnetcore` packages are meant to serve as minimal runtimes to deploy alongside already built applications. For runtime versions >= .NET 5 `net` is used while `netcore` is used for older .NET Core runtime version.
## Packaging a Dotnet Application
Ideally, we would like to build against the sdk, then only have the dotnet runtime available in the runtime closure.
TODO: Create closure-friendly way to package dotnet applications

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
# Emscripten {#emscripten}
# User's Guide to Emscripten in Nixpkgs
[Emscripten](https://github.com/kripken/emscripten): An LLVM-to-JavaScript Compiler
@@ -21,11 +21,11 @@ Modes of use of `emscripten`:
* **Declarative usage**:
This mode is far more power full since this makes use of `nix` for dependency management of emscripten libraries and targets by using the `mkDerivation` which is implemented by `pkgs.emscriptenStdenv` and `pkgs.buildEmscriptenPackage`. The source for the packages is in `pkgs/top-level/emscripten-packages.nix` and the abstraction behind it in `pkgs/development/em-modules/generic/default.nix`.
* build and install all packages:
* `nix-env -iA emscriptenPackages`
* dev-shell for zlib implementation hacking:
* `nix-shell -A emscriptenPackages.zlib`
* build and install all packages:
* `nix-env -iA emscriptenPackages`
* dev-shell for zlib implementation hacking:
* `nix-shell -A emscriptenPackages.zlib`
## Imperative usage
@@ -60,7 +60,7 @@ See the `zlib` example:
stdenv = pkgs.emscriptenStdenv;
}).overrideDerivation
(old: rec {
buildInputs = old.buildInputs ++ [ pkg-config ];
buildInputs = old.buildInputs ++ [ pkgconfig ];
# we need to reset this setting!
NIX_CFLAGS_COMPILE="";
configurePhase = ''
@@ -90,7 +90,7 @@ See the `zlib` example:
libz.so.${old.version} -I . -o example.js
echo "Using node to execute the test"
${pkgs.nodejs}/bin/node ./example.js
${pkgs.nodejs}/bin/node ./example.js
set +x
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
@@ -102,7 +102,7 @@ See the `zlib` example:
echo "================= /testing zlib using node ================="
'';
postPatch = pkgs.lib.optionalString pkgs.stdenv.isDarwin ''
postPatch = pkgs.stdenv.lib.optionalString pkgs.stdenv.isDarwin ''
substituteInPlace configure \
--replace '/usr/bin/libtool' 'ar' \
--replace 'AR="libtool"' 'AR="ar"' \
@@ -112,13 +112,13 @@ See the `zlib` example:
### Usage 2: pkgs.buildEmscriptenPackage
This `xmlmirror` example features a emscriptenPackage which is defined completely from this context and no `pkgs.zlib.override` is used.
This `xmlmirror` example features a emscriptenPackage which is defined completely from this context and no `pkgs.zlib.override` is used.
xmlmirror = pkgs.buildEmscriptenPackage rec {
name = "xmlmirror";
buildInputs = [ pkg-config autoconf automake libtool gnumake libxml2 nodejs openjdk json_c ];
nativeBuildInputs = [ pkg-config zlib ];
buildInputs = [ pkgconfig autoconf automake libtool gnumake libxml2 nodejs openjdk json_c ];
nativeBuildInputs = [ pkgconfig zlib ];
src = pkgs.fetchgit {
url = "https://gitlab.com/odfplugfest/xmlmirror.git";
@@ -163,7 +163,7 @@ This `xmlmirror` example features a emscriptenPackage which is defined completel
checkPhase = ''
'';
};
};
### Declarative debugging
@@ -182,3 +182,4 @@ Use `nix-shell -I nixpkgs=/some/dir/nixpkgs -A emscriptenPackages.libz` and from
Using this toolchain makes it easy to leverage `nix` from NixOS, MacOSX or even Windows (WSL+ubuntu+nix). This toolchain is reproducible, behaves like the rest of the packages from nixpkgs and contains a set of well working examples to learn and adapt from.
If in trouble, ask the maintainers.

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