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302 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
James Cook
081d5aaaba unzip: Patch for CVE-2014-81{39,40,41}.
(Cherry-picked from 173f41cf0bc618f0b2c313b1915fee8d8a6d0ee2.)
2015-01-08 11:39:37 -08:00
Vladimír Čunát
91e952ab1e qt48: bugfix update 4.8.5 -> .6
Some patches dropped, as they seemed included.

(cherry picked from commit 920a734a15)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2014-06-09 22:31:07 +02:00
Peter Simons
163da6c26a esniper: update to version 2.30.0
(cherry picked from commit 95aa6a9afa)
2014-05-23 21:56:46 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
a08c43c352 switch-to-configuration: Use old systemctl to stop units
Otherwise, when switching from systemd 203 to 212, you get errors like:

  Failed to stop remote-fs.target: Bad message
  Failed to stop systemd-udevd-control.socket: Bad message
  ...

(cherry picked from commit 56b4b841ae)
2014-05-06 12:58:10 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
4df1e5b0e4 switch-to-configuration: Use systemctl's --no-legend flag
(cherry picked from commit 37e6e08cde)
2014-05-06 12:58:10 +02:00
Domen Kožar
07d6a09e3d typo 2014-04-26 10:51:45 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
15586a1a0a setuid-wrapper: Fix broken string comparison
(cherry picked from commit fa1a46a01c)
2014-04-19 14:45:07 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
9f1843b28c setuid-wrapper.c: Remove tabs
(cherry picked from commit a8aa9f3fd4)
2014-04-19 14:45:07 +02:00
Rob Vermaas
7702bbb111 Add script to create and upload GCE image.
(cherry picked from commit 3f15f8b703)
2014-04-14 14:39:18 +02:00
Rob Vermaas
4a5ae5b531 Re-add phantomjs 1.9.2, as we cannot upgrade phantomjs-node package, due to some dependencies that are using git, which is not yet supported in the npm2nix of 13.10 branch. 2014-04-14 10:22:21 +02:00
Domen Kožar
61c4a7a7b8 Revert "Revert unintended change to minidlna."
This reverts commit 70b398dc68.
Fixes eval.
2014-04-13 19:53:48 +02:00
James Cook
f9cc680aee Patch python32 for CVE-2014-1912.
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2014-04-13 05:21:14 +02:00
James Cook
c60ae2141d Patch python27 for CVE-2014-1912.
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2014-04-13 05:21:14 +02:00
Domen Kožar
6d9e3d09c3 python2.7: 2.7.5 -> 2.7.6
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2014-04-13 05:21:14 +02:00
Rob Vermaas
70b398dc68 Revert unintended change to minidlna. 2014-04-10 13:44:24 +02:00
Rob Vermaas
2f2ec749c4 Add logstash-forwarder.
(cherry picked from commit c3c045c59d)

Conflicts:
	pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix
2014-04-10 13:33:06 +02:00
Rob Vermaas
b6eee2cbb2 Update dd-agent to 4.2.0
(cherry picked from commit a4ebaa61e4)

Conflicts:
	pkgs/tools/networking/dd-agent/default.nix
2014-04-09 11:59:29 +02:00
Domen Kožar
cc051089d1 nginx: 1.4.3 -> 1.4.7 2014-04-09 11:29:30 +02:00
Domen Kožar
ab163b1454 munin: 2.0.19 -> 2.0.20 2014-04-09 11:29:30 +02:00
Rok Garbas
43dfab18cd fixing munin (broken by latest version update) also switch to fetchgit
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>

Conflicts:
	pkgs/servers/monitoring/munin/default.nix
2014-04-09 11:29:30 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
ae71bb8e17 libarchive: *permanently* fix patch source and hash
Unfortunately github's *.patch URIs contain version of git generating them,
which changes from time to time. It seems that *.diff doesn't suffer from that.

(cherry picked from commit c814dab2ee)

Conflicts:
	pkgs/development/libraries/libarchive/default.nix
2014-04-08 23:30:23 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
15a465ce4c nixos-generate-config: Fix PCI/USB checks
As reported by Kirill Elagin, read_file doesn't chomp its output. So
the equality tests on PCI/USB vendor and device IDs were failing.

(cherry picked from commit caf98828bb)
2014-04-08 15:17:37 +02:00
Domen Kožar
d1f7cd9c34 openssl: 1.0.1f -> 1.0.1g
CVE-2014-0160, CVE-2014-0076

Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2014-04-07 20:34:09 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
3b1f989961 Apply patch for CVE-2014-0004 to udisks-1.0.4 2014-04-05 19:10:35 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
d7daf1a47f Revert "udisks1: bump to fix CVE-2014-0004"
This reverts commit 0194a44d63 because
it breaks udisks on 13.10 (e.g. running "udisks --enumerate" will
print "Unit udisks.service failed to load").
2014-04-05 18:56:45 +02:00
Peter Simons
14805c170b esniper: update to version 2.29.0 2014-04-02 17:45:36 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
a041073b4c libyaml: minor update to fix CVE-2014-2525
(cherry picked from commit 0fd5a3af0c)
2014-04-01 11:30:57 +02:00
Austin Seipp
9797a3a4b0 kernel: longterm updates
- longterm: 3.4 skipped due to iwlwifi
 - longterm: -> 3.10.35
 - longterm: -> 3.12.15
 - stable:   not present in release-13.10

Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
(cherry picked from commit 19bc051ca1)

Conflicts:
	pkgs/os-specific/linux/kernel/linux-3.10.nix
	pkgs/os-specific/linux/kernel/linux-3.12.nix
	pkgs/os-specific/linux/kernel/linux-3.4.nix
	pkgs/os-specific/linux/kernel/linux-3.9.nix
2014-04-01 11:21:43 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
a74081566b openssh: update, fix CVE-2014-2653 by a Debian patch
(cherry picked from commit e50a76a469)

I was lazy to do any backporting, so I took the expression from master.
It looked like there were some more CVEs fixed in between.

Conflicts:
	pkgs/tools/networking/openssh/default.nix
2014-03-29 22:21:21 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
53c07f1d52 Allow services to specify a pre-stop script
(cherry picked from commit 14cd8bc248)
2014-03-28 20:33:17 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
dcc18b24ed Allow overrides to work for unit options
(cherry picked from commit 8951be2d80)
2014-03-28 20:33:17 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
eac01d26b3 Use types.lines for script/preStart/postStart/postStop
(cherry picked from commit 33cb0bbb4b)
2014-03-28 20:33:17 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
b01b6bfb61 nscd: Fix LD_LIBRARY_PATH
This ensures that nscd can find the NSS modules.

Fixes #1248.

(cherry picked from commit 953f12995b)
2014-03-28 20:33:16 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
0ecdd05b02 Apply better type checking to unitConfig/serviceConfig/...
In particular, complain if two modules define the same systemd option.

(cherry picked from commit 5620e69b5d)
2014-03-28 20:33:16 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
f9faaf47ab file: update to fix CVE-2014-2270, CVE-2013-7345
(cherry picked from commit 58857096fb)

Conflicts (release contained even older version):
	pkgs/tools/misc/file/default.nix
2014-03-26 19:40:52 +01:00
Rob Vermaas
762b6343d0 Update docutils python package. 2014-03-24 18:45:17 +01:00
Shea Levy
f61905c926 Update awscli
(cherry picked from commit 271de86a94)
2014-03-24 18:43:57 +01:00
Rob Vermaas
a05e8da639 Add rsa python package. (Cherry-picked from 6a4e30d8d1) 2014-03-24 18:42:16 +01:00
Shea Levy
e39d174390 Update pythonPackages.jmespath
(cherry picked from commit 9332d9ed5c)
2014-03-24 18:38:38 +01:00
Shea Levy
5716d71ef5 Update pythonPackages.botocore
(cherry picked from commit 51d35d5028)
2014-03-24 18:38:11 +01:00
Shea Levy
2055a260c3 Add bcdoc pythonPackage
(cherry picked from commit ffc3091811)
2014-03-24 18:34:18 +01:00
Peter Simons
3da18389dc esniper: add patch to fix unrecognized e-bay log-in page 2014-03-23 22:31:22 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
7552196127 linux: Downgrade to 3.4.82
3.4.83 breaks iwlwifi, see https://lkml.org/lkml/2014/3/12/420.
2014-03-20 15:40:24 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
3bcfa7b4ba kdf: Disable parallel building
http://hydra.nixos.org/build/9595928
(cherry picked from commit 26a868139e)
2014-03-18 17:32:24 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
9951478c40 ffmpeg (0.10): update, probably fixing some CVEs 2014-03-17 22:53:08 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
43757c2b35 zabbix: Update from 2.2.1 to 2.2.2
Potentially fixes CVE-2012-0031, CVE-2012-0053, CVE-2012-0883,
CVE-2012-2687, CVE-2012-3499, CVE-2012-4558, CVE-2013-1862,
CVE-2013-1896, CVE-2013-2249, CVE-2013-1034, CVE-2013-5143.

(cherry picked from commit 2ea4ec798b)

Conflicts (auto-solved):
	pkgs/servers/monitoring/zabbix/2.2.nix
2014-03-17 22:52:15 +01:00
Peter Simons
140a7f6396 bind: update to version 9.9.5-W1 (fixes CVE-2013-6230 and CVE 2014-0591)
(cherry picked from commit b0c2354809)

Conflicts (more updates instead of just one):
	pkgs/servers/dns/bind/default.nix
2014-03-17 22:51:07 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
919d6e7d91 mupdf: fix CVE-2014-2013 by upstream patch
(cherry picked from commit be58c4f9e4)
2014-03-17 22:50:18 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
dc07ccb304 libav: minor updates of both branches
(cherry picked from commit 76822ea4d5)
2014-03-17 22:46:17 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
bc4fcd41f0 gnutls: disable tests (stopped working after last CVE)
I suppose it's better to have patched untested version than the other way.
2014-03-17 22:44:30 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
51b33065e8 gnutls on darwin: drop patch that is integrated now
(cherry picked from commit c2cd9852ac)
2014-03-17 22:34:22 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
734fbcaf1a gnutls: Update to 3.2.12, 3.1.22
CVE-2014-0092

Unfortunately, 3.2.12 doesn't pass the tests with Guile bindings
enabled, so I've turned them off in the default build.

(cherry picked from commit 738a5321bc)

Conflicts:
	pkgs/development/libraries/gnutls/3.2.nix
	pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix
2014-03-17 22:33:35 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
769dd688c6 libssh: update, incl. features and CVE-2014-0017 fix
Also add pkgconfig to inputs, as it was looked for by cmake.
Dependent packages seem to build fine.

(cherry picked from commit a13200352a)
2014-03-17 22:28:33 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
40e84741e0 ffmpeg_1: update, probably fixing some security issues 2014-03-17 22:28:06 +01:00
James Cook
b94bca8ee3 ImageMagick: update to 6.8.8-7
Fixes CVE-2014-{1947,1958,2030}.

(cherry picked from commit 5d14048867)
2014-03-17 11:40:27 +01:00
Evgeny Egorochkin
3ca9d4e033 udisks2: update from 2.1.1 to 2.1.3, potentially fixes CVE-2014-0004
(cherry picked from commit 0ffbfd38bf)
2014-03-17 11:40:06 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
0194a44d63 udisks1: bump to fix CVE-2014-0004
Also systemd unit is now installed.
Thanks to nixpkgs monitor again, as for all my CVE commits.

(cherry picked from commit 344f2e6518)
2014-03-17 11:39:03 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
bda0c0598e libpng: update 1.6.9 -> .10 to fix CVE-2014-0333
(cherry picked from commit f5464c2982)
2014-03-17 11:38:35 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
5f38f0fa39 switch-to-configuration: Don't try to start masked units
(cherry picked from commit 09c14cd8aa)
2014-03-17 11:36:58 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
35195ba686 flashplayer: Add license field
(cherry picked from commit 5a807eaedb)
2014-03-17 11:36:39 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
d717097855 linux: Update to 3.4.83
(cherry picked from commit c0f3f6e396)
2014-03-17 11:36:19 +01:00
Bjørn Forsman
599a567b17 lighttpd: bump 1.4.34 -> 1.4.35 (security fixes)
From http://www.lighttpd.net/:

  Important changes
  -----------------
  This release contains a lot of bug fixes, many detected by scan.coverity.com
  (and more to come). The main reason for the release is a fix for an SQL
  injection (and path traversal) bug triggered by specially crafted (and
  invalid) Host: headers.

  Security fixes
  --------------
  http://download.lighttpd.net/lighttpd/security/lighttpd_sa_2014_01.txt (no CVE yet)

NOTE: We (nixpkgs) currently don't build the mod_mysql_vhost module mentioned
above.

(cherry picked from commit 37ad2a7d28)
2014-03-12 22:52:22 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
f2b950f92d Don't depend on the text of disabled units
This prevents pulling in unnecessary dependencies.

(cherry picked from commit f198c40608)
2014-03-12 21:03:27 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
a92cc57b8f nixUnstable: Update to 1.7pre3522_f7e077a
(cherry picked from commit 5605b256a7)
2014-03-05 23:41:49 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
17fe14e72b nixUnstable: Update to 1.7pre3520_1017bd6
(cherry picked from commit 19350fac66)
2014-03-03 14:04:32 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
00081d1873 google-talk-plugin: Update to 5.1.5.0
(cherry picked from commit 34874dac7a)
2014-03-03 14:04:31 +01:00
Austin Seipp
bc3f4f3ce2 kernel: stable updates
- (3.13 branch omitted, not in release-13.10)
 - 3.12 stable:   3.12.11 -> 3.12.12
 - 3.10 longterm: 3.10.29 -> 3.10.31
 - 3.4  longterm: 3.4.79  -> 3.4.81

Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
(cherry picked from commit a1dc5ea707)

Conflicts:
	pkgs/os-specific/linux/kernel/linux-3.10.nix
	pkgs/os-specific/linux/kernel/linux-3.12.nix
	pkgs/os-specific/linux/kernel/linux-3.4.nix
	pkgs/os-specific/linux/kernel/linux-3.9.nix
2014-02-22 11:53:43 +01:00
Domen Kožar
0bb312d49e google_talk_plugin: 4.2.1.0 -> 5.1.4.0 2014-02-21 11:59:37 +01:00
William A. Kennington III
416e8d8a25 kernel: 3.12.10 -> 3.12.11 (close #1743)
(cherry picked from commit 52248aa7a2)

Conflicts (auto-solved):
	pkgs/os-specific/linux/kernel/linux-3.12.nix
2014-02-20 09:47:01 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
d2b3552ac2 fetchurl: Ensure that ‘urls’ is a list
(cherry picked from commit 83ca2c272a)
2014-02-19 14:00:29 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
f9ba9667ed Fix updating of the tarball mirror
(cherry picked from commit 7a51e17775)
2014-02-19 14:00:29 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
f1f5ac92f4 Fix broken fetchurl argument 2014-02-19 13:37:15 +01:00
Rok Garbas
66f51a9103 phantomjs: update to 1.9.7
(cherry picked from commit 8741ff387d)
2014-02-17 16:46:36 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
01873ffbd6 Add Template::Plugin::IO::All
(cherry picked from commit 42c083df41)
2014-02-14 10:58:37 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
d6a5ea6bea zabbix: Update from 1.8.19 to 1.8.20
(cherry picked from commit da60b53242)
2014-02-14 10:55:35 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
c13a13b2e5 Finance::Quote: Fix the Yahoo source
(cherry picked from commit ca5f99b9ea)
2014-02-14 10:54:54 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
6fbd9b3e23 gnucash: Enable support for Finance::Quote
(cherry picked from commit 8b7e33d1946e6fb6118f97681fe665b74570fe7e)
2014-02-14 10:54:54 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
5d674a4fbd Add Finance::Quote
(cherry picked from commit af8ae11319dbc7085e5aec0aa9c342dd44eb1e34)
2014-02-14 10:54:54 +01:00
Peter Simons
563c523848 gnucash: update to version 2.4.15
(cherry picked from commit 0a9e4d0ccc)
2014-02-14 10:54:54 +01:00
Shea Levy
66a52fe37c Revert "Add nixosSubmodule option type"
Moving recent types work to a separate branch for now

This reverts commit 2bf0067dad.
2014-02-13 12:10:33 -05:00
Shea Levy
83f6beb219 Revert "Add option type for a submodule with extra arguments"
Moving recent types work to a separate branch for now

This reverts commit 7b82c4805d.
2014-02-13 12:10:30 -05:00
Shea Levy
5ee8b59d99 Revert "Add heterogeneousAttrsOf option type"
Moving recent types work to a separate branch for now

This reverts commit 9f44491141.
2014-02-13 12:10:11 -05:00
Vladimír Čunát
8e8b35c910 libyaml: minor update 0.1.3 -> .5
The CVE patches are in the release now.

(cherry picked from commit 334a911ace)

Conflicts:
	pkgs/development/libraries/libyaml/default.nix
2014-02-12 12:41:03 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
232e637ac9 thunderbird: simple esr bump (Nov 2013), incl. CVE
I failed to make -26 build, so this will get security fixes at least.

(cherry picked from commit 3269027235)
2014-02-12 12:40:10 +01:00
Shea Levy
9f44491141 Add heterogeneousAttrsOf option type
It is parameterized by a function that takes a name and evaluates to the
option type for the attribute of that name. Together with
submoduleWithExtraArgs, this subsumes nixosSubmodule.

(cherry picked from commit 3f70dabad3)

Conflicts:
	nixos/modules/virtualisation/containers.nix
2014-02-11 15:01:14 -05:00
Shea Levy
7b82c4805d Add option type for a submodule with extra arguments
(cherry picked from commit 8764758044)
2014-02-11 14:41:17 -05:00
Shea Levy
2bf0067dad Add nixosSubmodule option type
Since NixOS modules expect special arguments, use a hack to provide them

(cherry picked from commit ca1c5cfa8f)

Conflicts:
	nixos/modules/virtualisation/containers.nix
2014-02-11 14:40:59 -05:00
Shea Levy
1ff3338025 Pass lib to modules
Since mkOption, types, etc. are defined there, lib is really part of the interface

(cherry picked from commit 2deb26bd4a)
2014-02-11 14:40:16 -05:00
Vladimír Čunát
0a6e2344a3 linux: minor updates 3.12.10, 3.10.29, 3.4.79
(cherry picked from commit 24029ec478)
2014-02-09 09:47:57 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
204011c187 kde410.kde_workspace: fix CVE-2013-4132 by upstream patch
(cherry picked from commit 9665c85f99)
2014-02-09 09:47:57 +01:00
Pascal Wittmann
817a49f322 andagii: fix fetch by providing a different user-agent
Close #1706.

(cherry picked from commit 0fa30be7a8)
2014-02-09 09:47:57 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
a31cfb0051 gnutls: disable tests on i686 (no idea what's the problem) 2014-02-08 18:32:27 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
c9f4f6d9ee spring: disable parallel building, as it breaks on Hydra
(cherry picked from commit e43018e019)
2014-02-08 09:16:37 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
23b7fa8cde gnutls2: fix build in chroot (/usr/bin/perl doc script)
I've got no idea how this could get triggered on Hydra, 97e7ce2 ?

(cherry picked from commit 6fa5612a46)
2014-02-08 08:13:19 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
92f362a7bb boost149: fix CVE-2013-0252 by upstream patch
Also have just one patch per line in the expression.

(cherry picked from commit 35c586e624)

Conflicts (there is&was one patch less than on master):
	pkgs/development/libraries/boost/1.49.nix
2014-02-08 08:12:35 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
ebf9b03879 libarchive: fix CVE-2013-0211 by upstream patch
(cherry picked from commit 72740390d7)
2014-02-08 08:08:16 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
99f8bd0edc hadoop: update, including fix for CVE-2013-2192
(cherry picked from commit 6e0cac6d6a)
2014-02-08 08:08:16 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
d409cb8e74 gnutls31: update 3.1.12 -> .20, including CVE fixes
CVE-2013-{4466,4487}

(cherry picked from commit 1c3950dc9d)
2014-02-08 08:07:27 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
608317a328 gnutls32: update 3.2.4 -> .10, including CVE fixes
Leave gnutls31 the default gnutls, despite the picked patch selecting gnutls32.
CVE-2013-{4466,4487}

(cherry picked from commit cb605c92d2)
2014-02-08 08:03:57 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
326a3eed01 gnutls2: fix CVE-2013-2116 by Debian patch
(cherry picked from commit 97e7ce2344)
2014-02-08 08:02:30 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
eb9084134b gnash: fix CVE-2012-1175 by upstream patch
(cherry picked from commit 11914108aa)
2014-02-08 08:02:29 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
55c26615ea socat-2.*: fix CVE-2014-0019
(cherry picked from commit 2dd13fcb0b)
2014-02-08 08:02:29 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
e54e8df0f6 kicad: disable parallel building, as it often fails
CC @viric.

(cherry picked from commit 5559d4d47e)
2014-02-08 08:02:29 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
4e4108f1a2 gegl: fix CVE-2012-4433 via an Arch patch
(cherry picked from commit c2c50db47d)
2014-02-06 18:28:10 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
329f4cdbcb curl: update 7.33 -> .35, including two security fixes
CVE-2013-4545
CVE-2014-0015

(cherry picked from commit befe6905e2)
2014-02-06 18:28:09 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
09f741f2fe nixos/mesa: don't create /run/opengl-driver-32 ...
... if on 64-bit and without 32-bit drivers.

(cherry picked from commit 4284694439)

Conflicts (still in xserver.nix on release):
	nixos/modules/services/x11/mesa.nix
2014-02-06 18:27:39 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
4734f04d70 fontconfig: stop using xml:space; vital for nixos+2.11
Since fontconfig-2.11 the xml:space attribute makes it reject
/etc/fonts/fonts.conf, so it renders garbage and eats lots of CPU.

To use anything linked to fontconfig-2.11 you need to have this patch
applied to your running NixOS. That's why I'm pushing it to master
before the fontconfig update (as soon as I found and tested the fix).

(cherry picked from commit ec985c8ffa)
2014-02-06 18:16:53 +01:00
James Cook
586cf4ee42 libyaml: Patch to fix CVE-2013-6393 (close #1658)
(cherry picked from commit 21a220900a)
2014-02-06 18:05:55 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
3e12dc8311 flashplayer: update, fixing many security CVEs
(cherry picked from commit edb9e50ef9)
2014-02-06 18:05:03 +01:00
Evgeny Egorochkin
661dbc3656 socat: update from 1.7.2.2 to 1.7.2.3, potentially fixes CVE-2014-0019
(cherry picked from commit 0c439c3a1a)
2014-02-06 18:04:54 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
d5ede6c5a2 ntpd: Don't answer status queries
Workaround for CVE-2013-5211:

http://support.ntp.org/bin/view/Main/SecurityNotice#DRDoS_Amplification_Attack_using
(cherry picked from commit 9e7fe29e41)
2014-02-06 18:03:11 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
44ac502f5e ntp: Update to 4.2.6p5
(cherry picked from commit d451d12128)
2014-02-06 18:03:11 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
2498080494 merge #1618: pull kernel module blacklists from Ubuntu
Ported from master.
2014-02-04 18:05:24 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
2cb0f61de8 kmod-blacklist-ubuntu: fix references to binaries 2014-02-04 18:04:17 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
ac5457f90e kmod-blacklist-ubuntu: fetch from tar.gz, not bazaar
Now the source is just a miniature archive.
2014-02-04 18:04:17 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
a60ec2d745 pull module blacklist from Ubuntu and use it by default
People often have serious problems due to bogus modules like *fb.
2014-02-04 18:04:17 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
3e03496dc8 libav: bugfix updates for both branches; maintain
(cherry picked from commit 3fe1656376)

Conflicts (0.8 skipped one update):
	pkgs/development/libraries/libav/default.nix
2014-02-04 17:51:33 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
ac8563f269 pidgin: bugfix 2.10.8 -> .9
Fixes connection to some servers broken by the previous update.

(cherry picked from commit 9dd9e52c0c)
2014-02-03 15:03:28 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
caefe5e006 pidgin: minor update 2.10.7 -> .8, including CVE-2013-6484
Also switch no newer libstartup-notification, add license and platforms.

(cherry picked from commit 5d2e884aa1)
2014-02-02 08:11:18 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
60b914f032 linux: Update to 3.4.78
(cherry picked from commit b913a2eb81)
2014-01-31 18:04:01 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
c707212230 linux kernel updates to 3.4.77, 3.10.28 and 3.12.9
I tested they still build on x86_64.

(cherry picked from commit a9caafa0ea)
2014-01-31 18:03:50 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
1e7192a134 nixUnstable: Update to 1.7pre3327_0e2ca26
Also fixes disappeared tarball.

(cherry picked from commit 8ad41b92cf)
Signed-off-by: Shea Levy <shea@shealevy.com>

Conflicts:
	pkgs/tools/package-management/nix/unstable.nix
2014-01-24 12:39:00 -05:00
Rob Vermaas
6d6b40ac6a Do not assume a .rev attribute in available in src in maven-build.nix
(cherry picked from commit 13e13f279b)
2014-01-24 15:53:13 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
37dbdc089b phonon_backend_vlc: fix build by adding pkgconfig
Commented on 86f7aec950 (commitcomment-5111284)

(cherry picked from commit 03c9791e0a)
2014-01-20 21:11:26 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
159814da97 poppler: bugfix update 0.24.4 -> .5
Also Qt4 binding bugfix.

(cherry picked from commit d37aec1ac4)
2014-01-19 10:47:39 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
c08926b966 wireshark: bugfix+CVE update to current old-stable
The old version also didn't build anymore on x-updates.

(cherry picked from commit 5fd97b7067)
2014-01-18 15:57:22 +01:00
zimbatm
1d27378365 Updates ruby 1.9.3 to patch-level 484. Fixes CVE-2013-4164
(cherry picked from commit 75a6ed8ddb)

Conflicts:
	pkgs/development/interpreters/ruby/ruby-19.nix
2014-01-18 15:54:09 +01:00
zimbatm
24d8467fe2 Updates ruby 2.0.0 to patch-level 353. Fixes CVE-2013-4164
(cherry picked from commit c8065de0af)

Conflicts:
	pkgs/development/interpreters/ruby/ruby-2.0.nix
2014-01-18 15:53:52 +01:00
zimbatm
8c02d9a541 Updates ruby 1.8.7 to the latest patch-level. WARNING: unsupported
ruby 1.8 should be phased out as it contains security issues and is
unsupported by the ruby core team. This is the last update available but it
doesn't fix all CVEs.

(cherry picked from commit b802a7be88)

Conflicts:
	pkgs/development/interpreters/ruby/ruby-18.nix
2014-01-18 15:53:35 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
5710527c1b clamav: update from 0.97.5 to 0.97.8, potentially fixes CVE-2013-2020, CVE-2013-2021
(cherry picked from commit d5c1d33a23)
2014-01-18 15:53:07 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
3c67ad6986 kde4.quasselDaemon: update from 0.9.0 to 0.9.2, potentially fixes CVE-2013-4422
(cherry picked from commit 78f33605e5)
2014-01-18 15:53:07 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
86a82ac797 privoxy: update from 3.0.12 to 3.0.21, potentially fixes CVE-2013-2503
(cherry picked from commit 3837210fed)
2014-01-18 15:53:07 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
b84ffbe185 torcs: update from 1.3.2 to 1.3.5, potentially fixes CVE-2012-1189
(cherry picked from commit ae7be783a2)
2014-01-18 15:53:07 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
29bed82861 varnish: update from 3.0.3 to 3.0.5, potentially fixes CVE-2013-4484
(cherry picked from commit 22bd6c8efd)

Conflicts:
	pkgs/servers/varnish/default.nix
2014-01-18 15:52:57 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
d766f1825c unixODBC: update from 2.3.1 to 2.3.2, potentially fixes CVE-2012-2657, CVE-2012-2658
(cherry picked from commit 407c0be935)
2014-01-18 15:51:59 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
a3e3bc2fcb squid: update from 3.1.15 to 3.1.23, potentially fixes CVE-2012-5643, CVE-2013-0189
(cherry picked from commit b296f02449)
2014-01-18 15:51:59 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
11024a7a8d rubygems: update from 1.8.17 to 1.8.25, potentially fixes CVE-2012-2125, CVE-2012-2126, CVE-2013-4287, CVE-2013-4363
(cherry picked from commit 56c9ae9b1d)
2014-01-18 15:51:54 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
841d43fcf6 mongodb: update from 2.4.5 to 2.4.8, potentially fixes CVE-2013-2132
(cherry picked from commit 03b15f9409)
2014-01-18 15:51:48 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
b66d30b086 libnetfilter_conntrack: update from 1.0.2 to 1.0.4, potentially fixes CVE-2012-2671
(cherry picked from commit d1fc8ec866)
2014-01-18 15:51:47 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
8589b341e6 graphicsmagick: update from 1.3.13 to 1.3.18, potentially fixes CVE-2013-4589
(cherry picked from commit 99bf1945d1)
2014-01-18 15:51:47 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
42852a7978 dropbear: update from 2013.58 to 2013.60, potentially fixes CVE-2013-4421, CVE-2013-4434
(cherry picked from commit 92de25cb55)
2014-01-18 15:51:47 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
19a3d6ac96 bogofilter: update from 1.1.6 to 1.1.7, potentially fixes CVE-2012-5468
(cherry picked from commit 090d51cb37)
2014-01-18 15:51:43 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
ef85a0db6b phonon_backend_vlc: update from 0.5.0 to 0.7.0, potentially fixes CVE-2012-1775, CVE-2012-1776, CVE-2012-3377
(cherry picked from commit 86f7aec950)
2014-01-18 15:51:43 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
0cb5423143 libproxy: update from 0.4.7 to 0.4.11, potentially fixes CVE-2012-4504
(cherry picked from commit 22eabfcc02)
2014-01-18 15:50:24 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
a8ddd17e03 smbldaptools: update from 0.9.7 to 0.9.10, potentially fixes CVE-2012-0961, CVE-2013-1051
(cherry picked from commit 36677bbe86)
2014-01-18 15:50:24 +01:00
Evgeny Egorochkin
39866806e0 pycrypto: remove version 2.5 since it's vulnerable to CVE-2012-2417, CVE-2013-1445
(cherry picked from commit c53d8c81f5)
2014-01-18 15:50:19 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
d4f35526ee ii: update from 1.6 to 1.7, potentially fixes CVE-2012-2187
(cherry picked from commit aa36ddc188)
2014-01-18 15:50:18 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
93f769a538 kde4.digikam: update from 3.2.0 to 3.5.0, potentially fixes CVE-2012-4514, CVE-2012-4514
(cherry picked from commit b92620f680)
2014-01-18 15:50:18 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
6cd601bb50 zabbix.agent: update from 1.8.18rc1 to 1.8.19, potentially fixes CVE-2013-6824
(cherry picked from commit 156ff88ed2)
2014-01-18 15:49:56 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
c3ca28a264 perlPackages.DevelSymdump: update from 2.08 to 2.11, potentially fixes CVE-2013-7069
(cherry picked from commit 7554c61e30)
2014-01-18 15:49:56 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
e300b69c56 gnumeric: update from 1.12.0 to 1.12.9, potentially fixes CVE-2013-6836
(cherry picked from commit 270acdc682)
2014-01-18 15:49:56 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
130168df28 squids.latest: update from 3.2.2 to 3.2.13, potentially fixes CVE-2012-5643, CVE-2013-0189, CVE-2013-1839, CVE-2013-4123
(cherry picked from commit 751e111a87)
2014-01-18 15:49:56 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
c8aca66826 samba: Update to 3.6.22
CVE-2012-6150, CVE-2013-4408.

(cherry picked from commit 9d3d42406b)
2014-01-18 15:49:55 +01:00
Rob Vermaas
d9b2792e10 Update libmicrohttpd to 0.9.33. CVE-2013-7038, CVE-2013-7039
(cherry picked from commit 0745e34ddf)
2014-01-18 15:49:55 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
426c62dfc4 libupnp: update from 1.6.6 to 1.6.19, potentially fixes CVE-2012-5958, CVE-2012-5959, CVE-2012-5960
(cherry picked from commit f85b57b2fc)
2014-01-18 15:49:55 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
498616b995 lighttpd: update from 1.4.33 to 1.4.34, potentially fixes CVE-2013-4508
(cherry picked from commit 0c6ebeb734)

Conflicts:
	pkgs/servers/http/lighttpd/default.nix
2014-01-18 15:49:27 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
8955a2c828 munin: update from 2.0.17 to 2.0.19, potentially fixes CVE-2013-6048, CVE-2013-6359
(cherry picked from commit 36c0702156)
2014-01-18 15:48:06 +01:00
Peter Simons
3b77a7a19b libtirpc: update from 0.2.3 to 0.2.4, potentially fixes CVE-2013-1950
(cherry picked from commit 5ea4b3f8e7)
2014-01-18 15:48:06 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
2819bf4798 gdal: add libtiff to buildInputs as well (fix build)
so that its private deps propagate.

(cherry picked from commit 2abbce201a)
2014-01-18 11:41:04 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
e65200fb5f fixup gtk c++ bindings (fix build, no major updates)
I re-checked the complete diff of my changes pushed recently to release,
so there are no more major updates (except for wayland/weston).

Also revert atkmm minor update, as it needed major glib update.
2014-01-18 10:27:40 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
658fc733b5 fixup: lipng_apng patch; in mesa no vdpau by default 2014-01-17 19:59:22 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
1ba21dbc00 dbus: minor update 1.6.14 -> .16 "fortify agility"
(cherry picked from commit 5ddbacecb5)
2014-01-16 22:45:53 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
009e9ff0a7 mesa: add GLES 1 and 2 support by default
The libs have just a few kilobytes and no additional deps.

(cherry picked from commit 9999ac6d89)
2014-01-16 22:45:53 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
7f4650308f perl: avoid --no-cpp-precomp on darwin, (close #1160)
Taken from https://trac.macports.org/ticket/38913
vcunat renamed the patch

Conflicts (trivial):
	pkgs/development/interpreters/perl/5.16/default.nix

(cherry picked from commit 0eeee298ef)
2014-01-16 22:45:42 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
a254f7e747 gtk2: minor update .20 -> .22
(cherry picked from commit 2a9bdac39a)
2014-01-16 22:45:42 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
4f36bb8347 pciutils: minor update to today's version
(cherry picked from commit d9f1ed063b)
2014-01-16 22:45:42 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
d1644c1748 libxml2: bump 2.9.0 -> 2.9.1 (CVE-2013-1969)
And drop patch that has been merged upstream.
Close #1199.
Hack around python install problems (the rest is from bjornfor).

(cherry picked from commit 85d21a6963)

Conflicts:
	pkgs/development/libraries/libxml2/default.nix
2014-01-16 22:45:36 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
6c5e7acfc0 upower: fix Xfce via --enable-deprecated
Also drop older libusb1 version which is no longer needed with newer upower.

(cherry picked from commit 91028bd151)

Conflicts (trivial):
	pkgs/os-specific/linux/upower/default.nix
2014-01-16 22:43:34 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
9f8cbef001 libxml2 on FreeBSD: disable impure python detection
This might be good for all platforms,
when we do some big rebuild again.

(cherry picked from commit 9220d5b002)
2014-01-16 22:42:47 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
44a7b2b08f vlc: minor update 2.1.0 -> .1
(cherry picked from commit ac6bc8c990)
2014-01-16 22:42:47 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
e58f4378bd Revert "new systemd can't inhibit lid switches"
This reverts commit f9fb7b7457.
Cf. https://github.com/jcumming/nixos/commit/da2c160471f73af

(cherry picked from commit 8e0d77632e)

Conflicts (take master):
	nixos/modules/services/x11/display-managers/default.nix
2014-01-16 22:42:38 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
6c99a00341 libvdpau: minor update 0.6 -> 0.7
(cherry picked from commit 9df6a053c3)
2014-01-16 22:42:00 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
1037cc6a55 libusb1: update 1.0.16 -> .17
(cherry picked from commit 08085aaf0a)
2014-01-16 22:42:00 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
92bb249d93 fixup: gtk+ typo, don't use non-existing osmesa in wine 2014-01-16 22:33:55 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
666205d07b libssh: bugfix update + CVE-2013-0176
It seems an old DoS-only problem.

(cherry picked from commit 1812522f2a)
2014-01-16 22:30:40 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
1b94984c1b libgsf: bugfix update 1.14.26 -> .28
(cherry picked from commit a44df6d289)
2014-01-16 22:30:40 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
6c22f50bb0 imagemagick: minor update to 6.8.7-6
(cherry picked from commit 85b6d28862)

Conflicts (take later = master):
	pkgs/applications/graphics/ImageMagick/default.nix
2014-01-16 22:30:18 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
9e8132f17d libunique: fix build, make the package unique
The one in gnome2 was failing to build,
but all there is likely in a desolate state anyway.

In gmpc it also seemed without any reason to have a duplicate.

(cherry picked from commit 747e757500)

Conflicts (take later = master):
	pkgs/desktops/gnome-2/default.nix
2014-01-16 22:29:12 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
937c5981ca shared_mime_info: update 1.1 -> 1.2
(cherry picked from commit aa3e96c3e0)
2014-01-16 22:28:48 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
4692fbae0a libnotify: minor update 0.7.5 -> .6
(cherry picked from commit 971c67a1ba)
2014-01-16 22:28:48 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
e5880ebb02 libcroco: minor update 0.6.6 -> .8
(cherry picked from commit 0bec9c1e4f)
2014-01-16 22:28:48 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
e228e4b2cc pixman: update to 0.32.4
(cherry picked from commit f7b39cce8c)

Conflicts (taken later = master):
	pkgs/development/libraries/pixman/default.nix
2014-01-16 22:28:24 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
f442a35ef7 xorg xf86-video-nv: fix build via an upstream patch
(cherry picked from commit 6e5c003f42)
2014-01-16 22:27:28 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
821cfa2c73 wayland, weston: update to 1.3.1, fix weston build
Also make Hydra build weston, so we can see the breakages in future.

(cherry picked from commit 30666ed5ad)

Conflicts (take later = master):
	pkgs/development/libraries/wayland/default.nix
2014-01-16 22:27:17 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
5982dc2728 poppler: bugfix update 0.24.3 -> .4
(cherry picked from commit 493eaf95dd)

Conflicts (take later = master):
	pkgs/development/libraries/poppler/default.nix
2014-01-16 22:26:30 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
0e0397ee6c libdrm: bump 2.4.50
Mainly, it fixes a critical bug for Radeon Southern Islands GPUs.

(cherry picked from commit 8dc05a8fc9)

Conflicts (take later = master):
	pkgs/development/libraries/libdrm/default.nix
2014-01-16 22:25:57 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
d75f05f915 gtk3: bugfix update to 3.8.8
(cherry picked from commit 7a3ae83a97)

Conflicts (stay on the same branch, master is 3.10):
	pkgs/development/libraries/gtk+/3.x.nix
2014-01-16 22:24:45 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
d85f0a19e0 fribid: fix build via using gtk2 instead of gtk3
This was caused by a gtk3 update.
I saw they depend on gtk2 instead in Arch and it fixes the build there.
CC @edwtjo

(cherry picked from commit 785befb6b2)
2014-01-16 22:22:13 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
2ed0a66fe2 libsigcxx: bugfix update 2.2.10 -> .11, enable tests
(cherry picked from commit f9f14be632)
2014-01-16 22:22:13 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
7142f90e6a pangomm: update, so we can drop older cairo
(cherry picked from commit 1e113b8284)
2014-01-16 22:22:13 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
ace1166a82 atkmm: maintenance update
(cherry picked from commit a5110391dd)
2014-01-16 22:22:13 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
3babd7a52b mu: fix build via disabling mug GUI by default
It seems it can't handle gtk-3.10.
CC @the-kenny

(cherry picked from commit 3c013cdec9)
2014-01-16 22:22:12 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
f9594dfb5d racket: fix build via forcing -lgcc_s
(cherry picked from commit 1d62c6445f)
2014-01-16 22:22:12 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
1461c26e1b dragonegg: fix build via update to 3.3
(cherry picked from commit 4855b0a22e)
2014-01-16 22:22:12 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
96f3936c44 mesa: move vdpau drivers so they are found
(cherry picked from commit 458f17ae26)
2014-01-16 22:19:06 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
dc604cead3 mesa: bugfix update 9.1.6 -> .7
(cherry picked from commit e8394e3f8c)

Conflicts (stay on 9.1 branch):
	pkgs/development/libraries/mesa/default.nix
2014-01-16 22:18:42 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
886be2307c libpng: minor update 1.6.7 -> .8
Fixes a potential segfault.

(cherry picked from commit f4782016ed)

Conflicts (take later = master):
	pkgs/development/libraries/libpng/default.nix
2014-01-16 22:15:28 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
d976f03c7f gdk_pixbuf: remain on the same major branch
(cherry picked from commit 51c83e927d)

Conflicts:
	pkgs/development/libraries/gdk-pixbuf/default.nix
2014-01-16 22:14:15 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
ff50440f2e libtiff: pull (mostly) security patches from Arch
Also enable lzma support and check phase.

(cherry picked from commit a1cfb23d73)
2014-01-16 22:09:22 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
275a81e250 qt4: fix CVE-2013-4549.patch
(cherry picked from commit a84d2267d1)
2014-01-16 22:09:22 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
d8e6714b5e libXtst: forgotten security update
(cherry picked from commit 4f8809a091)
2014-01-16 22:09:22 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
b97830ba4b libxslt: minor update to fix DOS security problem
(cherry picked from commit 91ead93811)
2014-01-16 22:09:22 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
a41c8a78e1 netpbm: fix build
(cherry picked from commit c744a7e106)
2014-01-16 22:09:21 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
6dc9713c36 netpbm: fix CVE-2005-2471
(cherry picked from commit 15a5894ab3)
2014-01-16 22:09:21 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
e814651b01 xfce4-terminal: bugfix update 0.6.2 -> .3
(cherry picked from commit 9020582fea)
2014-01-16 22:09:21 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
a8a2fce888 fftw: minor update and major refactoring
- Unify the "single" and "float" variants, which are the same thing.
- Enable threads and openmp wrapper by default (they are very small).
- Don't use sse on i686, as I'm quite sure we have no warrant for that.
  Cf. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pentium_Pro
- Disable static libs (big, no indication we need them).
- I tested most builds using fftw (they build OK).

(cherry picked from commit 506a304181)

Conflicts:
	pkgs/applications/graphics/gimp/plugins/default.nix
	pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix
2014-01-16 22:09:14 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
fa8985af3a xorg.libXfont: bugfix update, CVE-2013-6462
This lib is deprecated and almost unused, but still...

(cherry picked from commit e01af040ed)
2014-01-16 22:03:36 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
8a1d88bb89 wineStable: maintenance update 1.6.1 -> .2, use lcms2
lcms2 is now supported according to the announcement, so I switched to it.
Tested on a steam game ;-)

(cherry picked from commit a00e382e23)

Conflicts (master taken):
	pkgs/misc/emulators/wine/stable.nix
2014-01-16 22:03:24 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
66c89241f9 openssl: security update 1.0.1e -> f
It's supposed to fix CVE-2013-{4353,6449,6450}
http://www.openssl.org/news/openssl-1.0.1-notes.html

I just tested the build succeeds, the list of major changes seems safe.

(cherry picked from commit f1766c252f)
2014-01-16 22:02:50 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
2065290ca0 nix: Backport bug fix to check NAR integrity
(cherry picked from commit b9dbfe7feb)
2014-01-15 11:05:18 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
30315dc742 linux: Update to 3.4.76
(cherry picked from commit 03ad7a081c)
2014-01-15 11:04:22 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
93cc0ec009 nss: Update to 3.15.3.1
http://www.mozilla.org/security/announce/2013/mfsa2013-117.html
(cherry picked from commit 72feb8e011)
2014-01-15 10:53:09 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
f00b8ccbdd linux: Update to 3.4.75
(cherry picked from commit c3db56527d)
2014-01-15 10:53:09 +01:00
Shea Levy
face66737b boost: enable setting toolset
Contribution suggested/initially implemented by Martin Bravenboer

Signed-off-by: Shea Levy <shea@shealevy.com>
(cherry picked from commit cc26a4b803)
2014-01-14 07:27:09 -05:00
William A. Kennington III
acee5b6be0 apr-util: Cleanup
Add the required packages to buildInputs. Create a wrapper around
apr-1-config so that internal sed commands succeed.
2014-01-08 13:20:53 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
7a9271e98f aprutil: update from 1.5.2 to 1.5.3 2014-01-08 13:20:48 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
9f3dc64b90 apr: Update to 1.5.0 2014-01-08 13:20:34 +01:00
Peter Simons
80499c44e2 apache-httpd-2.4: revert "enable building the 'event'-based mpm worker"
Commit 0c3d910cd0 didn't have any effect.
The 'event' MPM module isn't built because our version of APR is too old.
2014-01-08 13:16:08 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
dd717f2a0a libestr: update from 0.1.4 to 0.1.9 2014-01-08 10:48:58 +01:00
Rob Vermaas
dbd6793536 mkStrict used mkOverride 0 before. 2014-01-08 10:44:55 +01:00
Rob Vermaas
0560682563 Add zabbix 2.2.1 2014-01-07 13:11:57 +01:00
Shea Levy
74ec7494ba bower2nix: Bump
Signed-off-by: Shea Levy <shea@shealevy.com>
2014-01-06 13:22:56 -05:00
Eelco Dolstra
4ea81af9d2 cacert: Update to 20131205
(cherry picked from commit 3f799e7233)
2014-01-06 14:47:44 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
9f22c446e9 postgresql: Update to 8.4.19, 9.0.15, 9.1.11, 9.2.6
This is a critical update fixing several data corruption issues:

  http://www.postgresql.org/about/news/1492/

(cherry picked from commit 0c93c758bf)
2014-01-06 14:47:44 +01:00
Shea Levy
ce9f682eb8 Update bower2nix
Signed-off-by: Shea Levy <shea@shealevy.com>
2014-01-06 08:45:13 -05:00
Shea Levy
c0127347fa Add fetchbower function to go along with bower2nix
(cherry picked from commit e6dae5d7f4)

Signed-off-by: Shea Levy <shea@shealevy.com>

Conflicts:
	pkgs/top-level/node-packages-generated.nix
	pkgs/top-level/node-packages.json
2014-01-06 08:37:43 -05:00
Karn Kallio
68e706f66a scala: add expression for scala 2.10.x branch.
(cherry picked from commit 1e80c57274)
2014-01-03 11:13:14 -05:00
Jaka Hudoklin
8d74173029 ati-drivers: fix download
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2014-01-03 12:45:23 +01:00
Peter Simons
290e160067 Update Haskell packages.
- abstract-par: update to version 0.3.3
 - accelerate-cuda: update to version 0.14.0.0
 - accelerate-examples: update to version 0.14.0.0
 - accelerate-fft: update to version 0.14.0.0
 - accelerate-io: update to version 0.14.0.0
 - accelerate: update to version 0.14.0.0
 - active: update to version 0.1.0.10
 - alsa-core: update to version 0.5.0.1
 - alsa-pcm: update to version 0.6
 - ansi-terminal: update to version 0.6.1
 - ansi-wl-pprint: update to version 0.6.7.1
 - asn1-types: update to version 0.2.3
 - async: update to version 2.0.1.4
 - authenticate-oauth: update to version 1.4.0.8
 - base-compat: update to version 0.3.0
 - bifunctors: update to version 4.1.1
 - blaze-builder: update to version 0.3.3.2
 - blaze-html: update to version 0.6.1.2
 - blaze-markup: update to version 0.5.1.6
 - cabal2nix: update to version 1.57
 - cairo: update to version 0.12.5.0
 - cereal-conduit: update to version 0.7.2
 - cereal: update to version 0.4.0.1
 - Chart-cairo: update to version 1.1
 - Chart-gtk: update to version 1.1
 - Chart: update to version 1.1
 - circle-packing: update to version 0.1.0.3
 - classy-prelude-conduit: update to version 0.7.0
 - classy-prelude: update to version 0.7.0
 - cmdargs: update to version 0.10.7
 - conduit: update to version 1.0.9.3
 - connection: update to version 0.1.3.1
 - cpu: update to version 0.1.2
 - crypto-numbers: update to version 0.2.3
 - crypto-pubkey-types: update to version 0.4.1
 - crypto-pubkey: update to version 0.2.4
 - cuda: update to version 0.5.1.1
 - cufft: update to version 0.1.0.3
 - data-memocombinators: update to version 0.5.1
 - data-pprint: update to version 0.2.3
 - DAV: update to version 0.6
 - dbus: update to version 0.10.5
 - diagrams-cairo: update to version 1.0
 - diagrams-contrib: update to version 1.0.0.1
 - diagrams-core: update to version 1.0.0.1
 - diagrams-lib: update to version 1.0.0.1
 - diagrams-svg: update to version 1.0
 - diagrams: update to version 1.0
 - digestive-functors-heist: update to version 0.8.4.0
 - digestive-functors-snap: update to version 0.6.0.1
 - digestive-functors: update to version 0.6.2.0
 - dimensional-tf: update to version 0.2.1
 - dimensional: update to version 0.12.2
 - dlist: update to version 0.6.0.1
 - doctest: update to version 0.9.10
 - DRBG: add version 0.5.1
 - dual-tree: update to version 0.2.0.1
 - either: update to version 4.1
 - Elm: update to version 0.10.1
 - errors: update to version 1.4.4
 - fast-logger: update to version 2.1.0
 - fclabels: update to version 2.0.1
 - file-embed: update to version 0.0.6
 - force-layout: update to version 0.2.0.1
 - free: update to version 4.2
 - ghc-head: update to version 7.7.20131202
 - ghc-mod: update to version 3.1.4
 - ghc-syb-utils: update to version 0.2.1.2
 - ghc-vis: update to version 0.7.2.1
 - gio: update to version 0.12.5.0
 - git-annex: update to version 5.20131221
 - github-backup: update to version 1.20131203
 - github: update to version 0.7.3
 - glade: update to version 0.12.5.0
 - glib: update to version 0.12.5.0
 - Glob: update to version 0.7.3
 - graphviz: update to version 2999.16.0.0
 - gtk2hs-buildtools: update to version 0.12.5.1
 - gtksourceview2: update to version 0.12.5.0
 - gtk: update to version 0.12.5.0
 - hakyll: update to version 4.4.2.0
 - hamlet: update to version 1.1.7.6
 - HaRe: update to version 0.7.0.9
 - haskeline: update to version 0.7.1.1
 - haskell-src-meta: update to version 0.6.0.5
 - haskell-src: update to version 1.0.1.5
 - HDBC-odbc: update to version 2.3.1.1
 - heist: update to version 0.13.0.3
 - hexpat: update to version 0.20.5
 - HFuse: update to version 0.2.4.1
 - highlighting-kate: update to version 0.5.5.1
 - hjsmin: update to version 0.1.4.4
 - hledger-irr: update to version 0.1.1.3
 - hledger-lib: update to version 0.22
 - hledger: update to version 0.22
 - hledger-web: update to version 0.22
 - hlint: update to version 1.8.55
 - HList: update to version 0.3.0.1
 - hmatrix: update to version 0.15.2.0
 - hoogle: update to version 4.2.26
 - hslua: update to version 0.3.9
 - HsOpenSSL: update to version 0.10.4
 - hspec-expectations: update to version 0.5.0.1
 - hspec-meta: update to version 1.8.1
 - hspec: update to version 1.8.1.1
 - HsSyck: update to version 0.51
 - hsyslog: update to version 1.6
 - html-conduit: update to version 1.1.0.1
 - http-conduit: update to version 2.0.0.3
 - http-reverse-proxy: update to version 0.3.0
 - http-types: update to version 0.8.3
 - hxt: update to version 9.3.1.2
 - idris: update to version 0.9.10.1
 - intervals: update to version 0.4
 - JuicyPixels: update to version 3.1.2
 - keter: update to version 1.1.0.1
 - LambdaHack: update to version 0.2.10.6
 - language-c-quote: update to version 0.7.6
 - language-ecmascript: update to version 0.15.4
 - language-java: update to version 0.2.6
 - lens: update to version 3.10.1
 - lifted-base: update to version 0.2.1.1
 - linear: update to version 1.3.1.1
 - ListLike: update to version 4.0.2
 - mainland-pretty: update to version 0.2.7
 - markdown-unlit: update to version 0.2.0.1
 - mersenne-random-pure64: update to version 0.2.0.4
 - mime-mail: update to version 0.4.3
 - minimorph: update to version 0.1.5.0
 - MonadCatchIO-transformers: update to version 0.3.1.0
 - monad-logger: update to version 0.3.4.0
 - mongoDB: update to version 1.4.4
 - monoid-extras: update to version 0.3.2.4
 - mono-traversable: update to version 0.2.0.0
 - netwire: update to version 5.0.0
 - OpenAL: update to version 1.6.0.0
 - pandoc-citeproc: update to version 0.2
 - pandoc: update to version 1.12.2.1
 - pango: update to version 0.12.5.0
 - parseargs: update to version 0.1.5.2
 - path-pieces: update to version 0.1.3.1
 - pem: update to version 0.2.1
 - persistent-postgresql: update to version 1.3.0
 - persistent-sqlite: update to version 1.3.0
 - persistent-template: update to version 1.3.0
 - persistent: update to version 1.3.0
 - pipes-bytestring: update to version 1.0.2
 - pipes-network: update to version 0.6.1
 - pipes-parse: update to version 2.0.2
 - pipes-safe: update to version 2.0.1
 - pipes: update to version 4.0.1
 - postgresql-libpq: update to version 0.8.2.6
 - postgresql-simple: update to version 0.4.0.1
 - profunctors: update to version 4.0.2
 - reducers: update to version 3.10.1.1
 - regex-tdfa: update to version 1.1.8
 - resourcet: update to version 0.4.10
 - RSA: update to version 2.0
 - scotty: update to version 0.6.2
 - semigroups: update to version 0.12.1
 - shakespeare-css: update to version 1.0.6.6
 - shakespeare-i18n: update to version 1.0.0.5
 - shakespeare-text: update to version 1.0.0.10
 - shakespeare: update to version 1.2.0.4
 - shake: update to version 0.10.10
 - shelly: update to version 1.3.2
 - smallcheck: update to version 1.1.1
 - snap-core: update to version 0.9.5.0
 - snaplet-acid-state: update to version 0.2.6
 - snap: update to version 0.13.1.2
 - statistics: update to version 0.10.5.2
 - stm-conduit: update to version 2.1.4
 - stringsearch: update to version 0.3.6.5
 - stylish-haskell: update to version 0.5.9.0
 - svgcairo: update to version 0.12.5.0
 - system-posix-redirect: update to version 1.1.0.1
 - tabular: update to version 0.2.2.5
 - tasty-hunit: update to version 0.4.1
 - tasty-smallcheck: update to version 0.2
 - tasty: update to version 0.7
 - temporary: update to version 1.2.0.1
 - terminfo: update to version 0.3.2.6
 - texmath: update to version 0.6.5.2
 - text-icu: update to version 0.6.3.7
 - th-lift: update to version 0.6
 - th-orphans: update to version 0.8
 - threads: update to version 0.5.0.3
 - thyme: update to version 0.3.1.0
 - timeplot: update to version 1.0.23
 - unix-process-conduit: update to version 0.2.2.2
 - unix-time: update to version 0.2.2
 - uuagc: update to version 0.9.50.2
 - uu-parsinglib: update to version 2.8.1.1
 - vault: update to version 0.3.0.3
 - vector-algorithms: update to version 0.6.0.1
 - vty-ui: update to version 1.6.1
 - wai-app-static: update to version 2.0.0.2
 - wai-extra: update to version 2.0.1.2
 - wai-handler-launch: update to version 2.0.0
 - wai-logger: update to version 2.1.0
 - wai-test: update to version 2.0.0.1
 - wai: update to version 2.0.0
 - warp-tls: update to version 2.0.0.1
 - warp: update to version 2.0.1
 - wl-pprint-extras: update to version 3.5
 - wl-pprint-terminfo: update to version 3.7
 - wl-pprint-text: update to version 1.1.0.1
 - wxc: update to version 0.90.0.4
 - xdot: update to version 0.2.4.2
 - xml-conduit: update to version 1.1.0.9
 - xml-hamlet: update to version 0.4.0.6
 - xmobar: update to version 0.19
 - xss-sanitize: update to version 0.3.4.1
 - yaml: update to version 0.8.5.2
 - yesod-auth: update to version 1.2.5.2
 - yesod-bin: update to version 1.2.5.5
 - yesod-core: update to version 1.2.6.4
 - yesod-form: update to version 1.3.4.2
 - yesod-persistent: update to version 1.2.2.1
 - yesod-platform: update to version 1.2.5.3
 - yesod-routes: update to version 1.2.0.5
 - yesod-static: update to version 1.2.2.1
 - yesod: update to version 1.2.4
 - zeromq3-haskell: update to version 0.5.1
 - zip-archive: update to version 0.2
2013-12-31 12:28:50 +01:00
Rob Vermaas
d3e42ed169 Oraclejdk7: Fix hash and extracted path for jce_policy.zip. Add extra rpath. 2013-12-30 12:39:19 +01:00
Peter Simons
0c3d910cd0 apache-httpd-2.4: enable building the 'event'-based mpm worker
Adding "LoadModule mpm_event_module modules/mod_mpm_event.so" to httpd.conf
enables that worker instead of the default choice.
2013-12-29 12:53:22 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
18ad5c3d74 initrd: Add the atkbd kernel module
Since Linux 3.4.74, atkbd gets built as a loadable module.  (Commit
315a93764c1fa8bdbe9ab867d896a0d9478b54ed, "Input: allow deselecting
serio drivers even without CONFIG_EXPERT".)  So because of this we
lost the keyboard in the initrd, which is annoying for LUKS users.

Issue #1405.
2013-12-26 11:54:22 +01:00
Shea Levy
60b046784e node-packages.nix: Use more complete patching function from master
Signed-off-by: Shea Levy <shea@shealevy.com>
2013-12-24 18:43:43 -05:00
Shea Levy
4b02ef4a7f Another npm2nix bugfix
Signed-off-by: Shea Levy <shea@shealevy.com>
2013-12-24 18:43:07 -05:00
Shea Levy
a0fe40fbe8 npm2nix bugfix update
Signed-off-by: Shea Levy <shea@shealevy.com>
2013-12-24 18:19:27 -05:00
Rob Vermaas
b054b8f025 Build x11vnc on linux 2013-12-24 10:49:06 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
a133479f93 Only run systemd-inhibit for local X11 sessions 2013-12-24 10:38:43 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
c39dd85984 Update the X11 terminal server module for systemd
Yay, we no longer need inetd!
2013-12-24 10:27:09 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
f7e3a46478 mediawiki: Update to 1.20.8
CVE-2013-4567, CVE-2013-4568

(cherry picked from commit f5844f98ac)
2013-12-20 14:49:05 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
3841ada865 Revert "Cache::Memory: Disable tests"
This reverts commit 2448d65cc9.

Applied to the wrong branch...
2013-12-20 14:45:40 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
6334ee738d Revert "ncurses: Remove version 5.4"
This reverts commit 064aabe995.

Applied to the wrong branch...
2013-12-20 14:45:28 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
2448d65cc9 Cache::Memory: Disable tests
These can time out under load.

http://hydra.nixos.org/build/7214262
2013-12-20 11:15:51 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
064aabe995 ncurses: Remove version 5.4
It's not used anywhere, and doesn't build:

http://hydra.nixos.org/build/7204910
2013-12-20 11:14:15 +01:00
Domen Kožar
9c7c51c193 curl: 7.30.0 -> 7.33.0 (CVE-2013-4545)
(cherry picked from commit f770739290)
2013-12-19 16:52:39 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
9a0a6892e3 tomcat6: update from 6.0.32 to 6.0.37, potentially fixes CVE-2012-0022, CVE-2012-2733, CVE-2012-3544, CVE-2012-3546, CVE-2012-4431, CVE-2012-4534, CVE-2012-5568, CVE-2012-5885, CVE-2012-5886, CVE-2012-5887, CVE-2013-2067
(cherry picked from commit e72352761c)
2013-12-19 16:51:30 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
104f0fc28a python33Packages.pycrypto: update from 2.6 to 2.6.1, potentially fixes CVE-2013-1445
(cherry picked from commit e3f69c5dcc)
2013-12-19 16:50:11 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
b577f6eef6 pyopenssl: update from 0.13 to 0.13.1, potentially fixes CVE-2013-4314
(cherry picked from commit a830c0eb9d)
2013-12-19 16:50:05 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
bf13893ac5 chrony: update from 1.27 to 1.29, potentially fixes CVE-2012-4502, CVE-2012-4503
(cherry picked from commit 1db5dd4ffb)
2013-12-19 16:49:35 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
e21fad62bc perlPackages.HTTPBody: update from 1.17 to 1.19, potentially fixes CVE-2013-4407
(cherry picked from commit 8264cb98ae)
2013-12-19 16:48:52 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
87936b9e16 libxml2: bump 2.9.0 -> 2.9.1 (CVE-2013-1969)
And drop patch that has been merged upstream.
Close #1199.
Hack around python install problems (the rest is from bjornfor).

(cherry picked from commit 85d21a6963)
2013-12-19 16:47:14 +01:00
Bjørn Forsman
793197521f samba: bump 3.6.18 -> 3.6.20 (security fixes)
3.6.20 is a security release in order to address CVE-2013-4475 (ACLs are
not checked on opening an alternate data stream on a file or directory)
and CVE-2013-4476 (Private key in key.pem world readable).

And 3.6.19 had some bug fixes:
http://www.samba.org/samba/history/samba-3.6.19.html

(cherry picked from commit 6c2ee56e4b)
2013-12-19 16:46:44 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
86cd523a5e rsyslog: update from 7.2.6 to 7.2.7, potentially fixes CVE-2013-4758
(cherry picked from commit 5677898e9d)
2013-12-19 16:45:56 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
8c3662c82f libzip: update from 0.10 to 0.11.1, potentially fixes CVE-2012-1162, CVE-2012-1163
(cherry picked from commit dbfeebeef7)
2013-12-19 16:45:14 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
a5c92cb54c libgcrypt: update from 1.5.2 to 1.5.3, potentially fixes CVE-2013-4242
(cherry picked from commit 22840f8048)
2013-12-19 16:43:23 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
596180ae23 php: Update to 5.4.23, 5.3.28
CVE-2013-4073, CVE-2013-6420

(cherry picked from commit a2b45034b3)
2013-12-19 16:41:44 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
91e6c52485 subversionClient: update from 1.7.13 to 1.7.14, potentially fixes CVE-2013-4558
(cherry picked from commit ec83369639)
2013-12-19 16:41:21 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
3b507dd041 linux: Fix hash
(cherry picked from commit 82f39bd19e)
2013-12-17 13:28:11 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
fbea189ddd linux: Update to 3.4.74
(cherry picked from commit acac786868)
2013-12-16 14:48:42 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
b7e344a63e fail2ban: Fix preStart action
Creating /run/fail2ban didn't work since it didn't have write
permission to /run.  Now it does.

Reported by Thomas Bereknyei.

(cherry picked from commit 14018c2de1)
2013-12-16 14:48:15 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
2ddc85fa93 linux: Update to 3.4.73
(cherry picked from commit f74ca42ba6)
2013-12-16 14:48:15 +01:00
Shea Levy
3eea240a34 Simplify crossLists
(cherry picked from commit 3c5971692a)

Signed-off-by: Shea Levy <shea@shealevy.com>
2013-12-12 14:02:35 -05:00
Shea Levy
a146503d61 Add function to call a function with a cross-product of lists of arguments
(cherry picked from commit a42508a8ba)

Signed-off-by: Shea Levy <shea@shealevy.com>

Conflicts:
	lib/lists.nix
2013-12-12 13:11:48 -05:00
Eelco Dolstra
ae679d44a1 Revert "nvidia: Update to version 331.20"
This reverts commit 42a2b93336.  It
causes Firefox to crash.
2013-12-11 14:24:15 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
006a11d26e apacheHttpd_2_4: update from 2.4.6 to 2.4.7
(cherry picked from commit 6996067dcf)
2013-12-10 13:00:15 +01:00
Nixpkgs Monitor
b20e65ffcf apacheHttpd: update from 2.2.25 to 2.2.26
(cherry picked from commit e523fdfc47)
2013-12-10 12:54:38 +01:00
Shea Levy
f9c798b79d Unpacking jce requires zip
(cherry picked from commit ac21aa9a82)

Signed-off-by: Shea Levy <shea@shealevy.com>
2013-12-09 13:26:08 -05:00
Shea Levy
30dc8bfe4f Add oracle jdk 7
(cherry picked from commit 088f472fe5)

Signed-off-by: Shea Levy <shea@shealevy.com>
2013-12-09 11:47:59 -05:00
Eelco Dolstra
b44ee4f862 postgresql: Fix shutdown
Postgres was taking a long time to shutdown.  This is because we were
sending SIGINT to all processes, apparently confusing the autovacuum
launcher.  Instead it should only be sent to the main process (which
takes care of shutting down the others).

The downside is that systemd will also send the final SIGKILL only to
the main process, so other processes in the cgroup may be left behind.
There should be an option for this...

(cherry picked from commit 7809134e29)
2013-12-05 14:27:44 -05:00
William A. Kennington III
42a2b93336 nvidia: Update to version 331.20
We no longer need the patches applied for the previous version so they
are removed.

(cherry picked from commit 0eeb78d74c)

Conflicts:
	pkgs/os-specific/linux/nvidia-x11/default.nix
2013-12-02 09:26:06 -05:00
Eelco Dolstra
9ade293be3 linux: Update to 3.4.71
(cherry picked from commit 3b94410d86)
2013-12-02 08:52:35 -05:00
Eelco Dolstra
041cd5ce38 cups: Allow users in the wheel group to do admin actions
(cherry picked from commit 2cb492a847)
2013-12-02 08:52:35 -05:00
Eelco Dolstra
f758aa18df postgresql: Fix the port option
Also clarify the description of the enableTCPIP option.

(cherry picked from commit c6529ac9eb)
2013-12-02 08:52:35 -05:00
Eelco Dolstra
ad14deacc9 linux: Update to 3.4.70
(cherry picked from commit 139c5b5069)
2013-11-26 11:50:40 +01:00
Peter Simons
9a45b1b284 Merge pull request #1186 from wizeman/flashplayer
flashplayer: Update to 11.2.202.310 (fixes 4 critical security vulnerabi...
2013-11-25 22:01:05 +01:00
Shea Levy
45219b910f nss: Bump
Signed-off-by: Shea Levy <shea@shealevy.com>
(cherry picked from commit 2909634cac)
2013-11-19 15:04:05 +01:00
Shea Levy
23d475c691 nspr: Bump to 4.10.2
Signed-off-by: Shea Levy <shea@shealevy.com>
(cherry picked from commit b09f8110db)

Conflicts:
	pkgs/development/interpreters/python/wrapper.nix
2013-11-19 15:03:26 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
a87c3a09bc firefox: Update to 25.0.1
(cherry picked from commit 678bcc6d4d)
2013-11-19 15:00:57 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
447fce7fd5 Fix broken Conflicts options
(cherry picked from commit f8a034172a)
2013-11-19 15:00:57 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
a06891f096 git: Update to 1.8.4.3
(cherry picked from commit e597d102d8)
2013-11-19 15:00:57 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
912f584e37 linux: Update to 3.4.69
(cherry picked from commit 45462d0bc479a970061eb763c57a704f48c24bf1)
2013-11-13 11:21:06 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
3b0b5494fd php: Update to 5.4.21
(cherry picked from commit 3d6728a1227f6a2c846b868ede8ebe542826f95d)
2013-11-13 11:13:21 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
7d7a668e92 mediawiki: Update to 1.20.7
(cherry picked from commit 81a9f72d7c4e95d79a928e856cbd2179485a1502)
2013-11-13 11:09:50 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
843780fcbc Properly handle unit names with dashes in them
We ended up with files in /etc/systemd/system called
"bigx2ddata.mount.wants" rather than "big\x2ddata.mount.wants".

(cherry picked from commit 4cada34b7f)
2013-11-12 17:00:47 +01:00
Sander van der Burg
0cc4242375 Bump disnix to latest development version 2013-11-11 11:03:25 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
be4e850c4d openssh: Security fix
CVE-2013-4548

(cherry picked from commit 52ad0eaca5)
2013-11-08 16:43:37 +01:00
Rob Vermaas
284772cb00 Adapt S3 ami creation script to new nixpkgs structure 2013-11-08 11:40:58 +00:00
Rob Vermaas
434c0ce40b Updating EC2 EBS HVM creation script.
* Use smaller instances to generate HVM images
* Use HVM base image that has 4 ephemeral disks in device mapping
* As grub is not on the base images anymore, install it first before copying parts of its contents
2013-11-08 11:37:38 +00:00
Rob Vermaas
b77a2cd2d2 Fix test deployment in EC2 creation script 2013-11-07 16:49:17 +01:00
Rob Vermaas
361eb3a5f5 Fix EC2 creation script for latest nixops 2013-11-07 14:42:44 +00:00
Rob Vermaas
c93f57ba1c Re-introduce mkStrict function in stable branch, as some packages might still be dependent on it (e.g. nixops). Added a warning that the function is obsolete. 2013-11-07 12:32:12 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
6249f675fb screen: Only depend on PAM on Linux
(cherry picked from commit 25ca1c30e2)
2013-11-07 12:01:17 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
18d6725ba7 linux: Update to 3.10.18
(cherry picked from commit 5098d53db1)
2013-11-07 12:01:17 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
30abda84a0 linux: Update to 3.4.68
(cherry picked from commit 07ccfe6af8)
2013-11-07 12:01:17 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
c53c80595c apache-httpd: Update to 2.4.6
(cherry picked from commit 798ce14839)
2013-11-07 12:01:17 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
af0821c20a socate: Update to 1.7.2.2, 2.0.0-b6
CVE-2013-3571

(cherry picked from commit 59cad4dc07)
2013-11-07 12:01:17 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
43627e3354 adobe-reader: Update to 9.5.5
(cherry picked from commit b232825c07)
2013-11-07 12:01:16 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
472180240e venus.nix: Fix broken startAt option
(cherry picked from commit 658e830674259621ae4dcba25e26c618c27eb4e0)
2013-11-02 20:43:34 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
a6cc1e4422 Include the NixOS version in the manual
In particular, this will make it clear what version of the manual is
shown at http://nixos.org/nixos/manual/.

(cherry picked from commit 9ef07d859b)
2013-11-01 16:50:01 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
902d0e438d Print a reminder to users to set or disable the root password
(cherry picked from commit 20093751ec)
2013-11-01 16:50:01 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
1668c35d33 Don't set an initial null root password for Amazon / VirtualBox images
A null password allows logging into local PAM services such as "login"
(agetty) and KDM.  That's not actually a security problem for EC2
machines, since they do not have "local" logins; for VirtualBox
machines, if you local access, you can do anything anyway.  But it's
better to be on the safe side and disable password-based logins for
root.

(cherry picked from commit 4ba7dfde5b)
2013-11-01 16:50:01 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
6bbe59e09b Mark the value for nixpkgs.system as a default
(cherry picked from commit 9668294eeb)
2013-11-01 16:50:01 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
a6474f9022 Loosen the type of SSH key files
(cherry picked from commit 444a4fb793)
2013-11-01 16:50:01 +01:00
11875 changed files with 177085 additions and 1737635 deletions

View File

@@ -1,32 +0,0 @@
# How to contribute
Note: contributing implies licensing those contributions
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)
* [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
* Format the commits in the following way:
`(pkg-name | service-name): (from -> to | init at version | refactor | etc)`
Examples:
* nginx: init at 2.0.1
* firefox: 3.0 -> 3.1.1
* hydra service: add bazBaz option
* nginx service: refactor config generation
* `meta.description` should:
* Be capitalized
* Not start with the package name
* Not have a dot at the end
See the nixpkgs manual for more details on how to [Submit changes to nixpkgs](http://hydra.nixos.org/job/nixpkgs/trunk/manual/latest/download-by-type/doc/manual#chap-submitting-changes).

View File

@@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
## Issue description
### Steps to reproduce
## Technical details
* System: (NixOS: `nixos-version`, Ubuntu/Fedora: `lsb_release -a`, ...)
* Nix version: (run `nix-env --version`)
* Nixpkgs version: (run `nix-instantiate --eval '<nixpkgs>' -A lib.nixpkgsVersion`)

View File

@@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
###### Things done
- [ ] Tested using sandboxing
([nix.useSandbox](http://nixos.org/nixos/manual/options.html#opt-nix.useSandbox) on NixOS,
or option `build-use-sandbox` in [`nix.conf`](http://nixos.org/nix/manual/#sec-conf-file)
on non-NixOS)
- Built on platform(s)
- [ ] NixOS
- [ ] OS X
- [ ] Linux
- [ ] 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/`)
- [ ] Fits [CONTRIBUTING.md](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/.github/CONTRIBUTING.md).
---

14
.gitignore vendored
View File

@@ -3,14 +3,8 @@
.*.swp
.*.swo
result
result-*
/doc/NEWS.html
/doc/NEWS.txt
/doc/manual.html
/doc/manual.pdf
doc/NEWS.html
doc/NEWS.txt
doc/manual.html
doc/manual.pdf
.version-suffix
.DS_Store
/pkgs/development/libraries/qt-5/*/tmp/
/pkgs/desktops/kde-5/*/tmp/

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@@ -1,6 +0,0 @@
{
"userBlacklist": [
"civodul",
"jhasse"
]
}

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@@ -1,7 +0,0 @@
language: python
python: "3.4"
sudo: required
dist: trusty
before_install: ./maintainers/scripts/travis-nox-review-pr.sh nix
install: ./maintainers/scripts/travis-nox-review-pr.sh nox
script: ./maintainers/scripts/travis-nox-review-pr.sh build

View File

@@ -1 +1 @@
16.09
13.10

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@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
Copyright (c) 2003-2016 Eelco Dolstra and the Nixpkgs/NixOS contributors
Copyright (c) 2003-2006 Eelco Dolstra
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining
a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the

View File

@@ -1,43 +0,0 @@
[<img src="http://nixos.org/logo/nixos-hires.png" width="500px" alt="logo" />](https://nixos.org/nixos)
[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/NixOS/nixpkgs.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/NixOS/nixpkgs)
[![Issue Stats](http://www.issuestats.com/github/nixos/nixpkgs/badge/pr?style=flat)](http://www.issuestats.com/github/nixos/nixpkgs)
[![Issue Stats](http://www.issuestats.com/github/nixos/nixpkgs/badge/issue?style=flat)](http://www.issuestats.com/github/nixos/nixpkgs)
Nixpkgs is a collection of packages for the [Nix](https://nixos.org/nix/) package
manager. It is periodically built and tested by the [hydra](http://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:
```
% git remote add channels git://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs-channels.git
```
For stability and maximum binary package support, it is recommended to maintain
custom changes on top of one of the channels, e.g. `nixos-16.03` for the latest
release and `nixos-unstable` for the latest successful build of master:
```
% git remote update channels
% git rebase channels/nixos-16.03
```
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/)
* [Nix Wiki](https://nixos.org/wiki/)
* [Continuous package builds for unstable/master](https://hydra.nixos.org/jobset/nixos/trunk-combined)
* [Continuous package builds for 16.03 release](https://hydra.nixos.org/jobset/nixos/release-16.03)
* [Tests for unstable/master](https://hydra.nixos.org/job/nixos/trunk-combined/tested#tabs-constituents)
* [Tests for 16.03 release](https://hydra.nixos.org/job/nixos/release-16.03/tested#tabs-constituents)
Communication:
* [Mailing list](http://lists.science.uu.nl/mailman/listinfo/nix-dev)
* [IRC - #nixos on freenode.net](irc://irc.freenode.net/#nixos)

View File

@@ -1,9 +1 @@
let requiredVersion = import ./lib/minver.nix; in
if ! builtins ? nixVersion || builtins.compareVersions requiredVersion builtins.nixVersion == 1 then
abort "This version of Nixpkgs requires Nix >= ${requiredVersion}, please upgrade! See https://nixos.org/wiki/How_to_update_when_Nix_is_too_old_to_evaluate_Nixpkgs"
else
import ./pkgs/top-level
import ./pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix

41
doc/Makefile Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,41 @@
# You may need to override this.
docbookxsl = $(HOME)/.nix-profile/xml/xsl/docbook
dblatex = dblatex
XMLLINT = xmllint --catalogs
XSLTPROC = xsltproc --catalogs \
--param section.autolabel 1 \
--param section.label.includes.component.label 1 \
--param html.stylesheet \'style.css\' \
--param xref.with.number.and.title 1 \
--param toc.section.depth 3 \
--param admon.style \'\' \
--param callout.graphics.extension \'.gif\'
NEWS_OPTS = \
--stringparam generate.toc "article nop" \
--stringparam section.autolabel.max.depth 0 \
--stringparam header.rule 0
all: NEWS.html NEWS.txt manual.html manual.pdf
NEWS.html: release-notes.xml
$(XSLTPROC) --nonet --xinclude --output $@ $(NEWS_OPTS) \
$(docbookxsl)/html/docbook.xsl release-notes.xml
NEWS.txt: release-notes.xml
$(XSLTPROC) --nonet --xinclude quote-literals.xsl release-notes.xml | \
$(XSLTPROC) --nonet --output $@.tmp.html $(NEWS_OPTS) \
$(docbookxsl)/html/docbook.xsl -
LANG=en_US w3m -dump $@.tmp.html > $@
rm $@.tmp.html
manual.html: *.xml
$(XSLTPROC) --nonet --xinclude --output manual.html \
$(docbookxsl)/html/docbook.xsl manual.xml
manual.pdf: *.xml
$(dblatex) \
-P doc.collab.show=0 \
-P latex.output.revhistory=0 \
manual.xml

View File

@@ -1,376 +0,0 @@
<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="users-guide-to-the-erlang-infrastructure">
<title>User's Guide to the Beam Infrastructure</title>
<section xml:id="beam-introduction">
<title>Beam Languages (Erlang &amp; Elixir) on Nix</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 Virtial Machine and, as far as we know,
from a packaging perspective all languages that run on Beam are
interchangable. The things that do change, like the build
system, are transperant to the users of the package. So we make
no distinction.
</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 it's own dependencies. In the
normal non-Nix, this is perfectly acceptable. In the Nix world it
is not. To support this we have created two versions of rebar3,
<literal>rebar3</literal> and <literal>rebar3-open</literal>. The
<literal>rebar3</literal> version has been patched to remove the
ability to download anything from it. If you are not running it a
nix-shell or a nix-build then its probably not going to work for
you. <literal>rebar3-open</literal> is the normal, un-modified
rebar3. It should work exactly as would any other version of
rebar3. Any Erlang package should rely on
<literal>rebar3</literal> and thats really what you should be
using too.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="build-tools-other">
<title>Mix &amp; Erlang.mk</title>
<para>
Both Mix and Erlang.mk work exactly as you would expect. There
is a bootstrap process that needs to be run for both of
them. However, that is supported by the
<literal>buildMix</literal> and <literal>buildErlangMk</literal> derivations.
</para>
</section>
</section>
<section xml:id="how-to-install-beam-packages">
<title>How to install Beam packages</title>
<para>
Beam packages are not registered in the top level simply because
they are not relevant to the vast majority of Nix users. They are
installable using the <literal>beamPackages</literal> attribute
set.
You can list the avialable packages in the
<literal>beamPackages</literal> with 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 packages corresponds to the name
of that particular package in Hex 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>
There is a Nix functional called
<literal>buildRebar3</literal>. We use this function to make a
derivation that understands how to build the rebar3 project. For
example, the epression we use to build the <link
xlink:href="https://github.com/erlang-nix/hex2nix">hex2nix</link>
project 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>
The only visible difference between this derivation and
something like <literal>stdenv.mkDerivation</literal> is that we
have added <literal>erlangDeps</literal> to the derivation. If
you add your Beam dependencies here they will be correctly
handled by the system.
</para>
<para>
If your package needs to compile native code via Rebar's port
compilation mechenism. You should 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 almost identically to Rebar. The only real
difference is that <literal>buildErlangMk</literal> is called
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 almost identically to Rebar. The only real
difference is that <literal>buildMix</literal> is called
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>
</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, all you want to do is be able to access a valid
environment that contains a specific package and its
dependencies. we can do that with the <literal>env</literal>
part of a derivation. For example, lets say we want to access an
erlang repl with ibrowse loaded up. We could do the following.
</para>
<programlisting>
~/w/nixpkgs 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. Many times we need to create a
<literal>shell.nix</literal> file and do our development inside
of the environment specified by that file. This file looks a lot
like the packageing described above. The main difference is that
<literal>src</literal> points to 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 = ./.;
erlangDeps = [ ibrowse jsx erlware_commons ];
};
drv = beamPackages.callPackage f {};
in
drv
</programlisting>
<section xml:id="building-in-a-shell">
<title>Building in a shell</title>
<para>
We can leveral the support of the Derivation, regardless of
which build Derivation is called by calling the commands themselv.s
</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>
If you add the <literal>shell.nix</literal> as described and
user rebar as follows things should simply work. Aside from the
<literal>test</literal>, <literal>plt</literal>, and
<literal>analyze</literal> the talks 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 Hex2Nix</title>
<para>
Updating the Hex packages requires the use of the
<literal>hex2nix</literal> tool. Given the path to the Erlang
modules (usually
<literal>pkgs/development/erlang-modules</literal>). It will
happily dump a file called
<literal>hex-packages.nix</literal>. That file will contain all
the packages that use a recognized build system in Hex. However,
it can't know whether or not all those packages are buildable.
</para>
<para>
To make life easier for our users, it makes good sense to go
ahead and attempt to build all those packages and remove the
ones that don't build. To do that, simply run the command (in
the root of your <literal>nixpkgs</literal> repository). that follows.
</para>
<programlisting>
$ nix-build -A beamPackages
</programlisting>
<para>
That will build every package in
<literal>beamPackages</literal>. Then you can go through and
manually remove the ones that fail. Hopefully, someone will
improve <literal>hex2nix</literal> in the future to automate
that.
</para>
</section>
</chapter>

View File

@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@
<title>Coding conventions</title>
<section xml:id="sec-syntax"><title>Syntax</title>
<section><title>Syntax</title>
<itemizedlist>
@@ -169,8 +169,8 @@ stdenv.mkDerivation { ...
args: with args; <replaceable>...</replaceable>
</programlisting>
or
or
<programlisting>
{ stdenv, fetchurl, perl, ... }: <replaceable>...</replaceable>
</programlisting>
@@ -207,7 +207,7 @@ args.stdenv.mkDerivation (args // {
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-package-naming"><title>Package naming</title>
<section><title>Package naming</title>
<para>In Nixpkgs, there are generally three different names associated with a package:
@@ -235,7 +235,12 @@ Most of the time, these are the same. For instance, the package
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>
However, identifiers in the Nix language dont allow certain
characters (e.g. dashes), so sometimes a different variable name
should be used. For instance, the
<literal>module-init-tools</literal> package is bound to the
<literal>module_init_tools</literal> variable in
<filename>all-packages.nix</filename>.</para>
<para>There are a few naming guidelines:
@@ -256,26 +261,17 @@ bound to the variable name <varname>e2fsprogs</varname> in
a package named <literal>hello-svn</literal> by
<command>nix-env</command>.</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>If package is fetched from git's commit 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 add <literal>"git"</literal> to the name - e.g.,
<literal>"pkgname-git-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
(which was convention up to around 2013 and most names
still have underscores instead of dashes) — e.g.,
<varname>http-parser</varname> instead of
<varname>http_parser</varname>.</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>Dashes in the package name should be changed to
underscores in variable names, rather than to camel case — e.g.,
<varname>module_init_tools</varname> instead of
<varname>moduleInitTools</varname>.</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>.
e.g. <varname>hello_0_3</varname> and <varname>hello_0_4</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>
<literal>hello = hello_0_4;</literal>.</para></listitem>
</itemizedlist>
@@ -292,7 +288,7 @@ dashes between words — not in camel case. For instance, it should be
<filename>allPackages.nix</filename> or
<filename>AllPackages.nix</filename>.</para>
<section xml:id="sec-hierarchy"><title>Hierarchy</title>
<section><title>Hierachy</title>
<para>Each package should be stored in its own directory somewhere in
the <filename>pkgs/</filename> tree, i.e. in
@@ -451,17 +447,12 @@ splitting up an existing category.</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>If its a <emphasis>desktop environment</emphasis>:</term>
<term>If its a <emphasis>desktop environment</emphasis>
(including <emphasis>window managers</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>compiz</filename>, <filename>stumpwm</filename>)</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>If its an <emphasis>application</emphasis>:</term>
<listitem>
@@ -576,7 +567,7 @@ splitting up an existing category.</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-versioning"><title>Versioning</title>
<section><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
@@ -609,57 +600,6 @@ 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 guidline 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>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>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>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>
</chapter>

View File

@@ -1,109 +0,0 @@
<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="chap-packageconfig">
<title><filename>~/.nixpkgs/config.nix</filename>: global configuration</title>
<para>Nix packages can be configured to allow or deny certain options.</para>
<para>To apply the configuration edit
<filename>~/.nixpkgs/config.nix</filename> and set it like
<programlisting>
{
allowUnfree = true;
}
</programlisting>
and will allow the Nix package manager to install unfree licensed packages.</para>
<para>The configuration as listed also applies to NixOS under
<option>nixpkgs.config</option> set.</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>Allow installing of packages that are distributed under
unfree license by setting <programlisting>allowUnfree =
true;</programlisting> or deny them by setting it to
<literal>false</literal>.</para>
<para>Same can be achieved by setting the environment variable:
<programlisting>
$ export NIXPKGS_ALLOW_UNFREE=1
</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Whenever unfree packages are not allowed, single packages
can still be allowed by a predicate function that accepts package
as an argument and should return a boolean:
<programlisting>
allowUnfreePredicate = (pkg: ...);
</programlisting>
Example to allow flash player only:
<programlisting>
allowUnfreePredicate = (pkg: pkgs.lib.hasPrefix "flashplayer-" pkg.name);
</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Whenever unfree packages are not allowed, packages can still
be whitelisted by their license:
<programlisting>
whitelistedLicenses = with stdenv.lib.licenses; [ amd wtfpl ];
</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>In addition to whitelisting licenses which are denied by the
<literal>allowUnfree</literal> setting, you can also explicitely
deny installation of packages which have a certain license:
<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 nix package tree.</para>
<!--============================================================-->
<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>~/.nixpkgs/config.nix</filename> to overide 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>
</chapter>

View File

@@ -1,20 +0,0 @@
<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. If you make modifications to
the manual, it's important to build it before committing. You can do that as follows:
<screen>
$ cd /path/to/nixpkgs
$ nix-build doc
</screen>
If the build succeeds, the manual will be in
<filename>./result/share/doc/nixpkgs/manual.html</filename>.</para>
</chapter>

View File

@@ -1,89 +0,0 @@
with import ./.. { };
with lib;
let
sources = sourceFilesBySuffices ./. [".xml"];
sources-langs = ./languages-frameworks;
in
stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "nixpkgs-manual";
buildInputs = [ pandoc libxml2 libxslt ];
xsltFlags = ''
--param section.autolabel 1
--param section.label.includes.component.label 1
--param html.stylesheet 'style.css'
--param xref.with.number.and.title 1
--param toc.section.depth 3
--param admon.style '''
--param callout.graphics.extension '.gif'
'';
buildCommand = let toDocbook = { useChapters ? false, inputFile, outputFile }:
let
extraHeader = ''xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" '';
in ''
{
pandoc '${inputFile}' -w docbook ${optionalString useChapters "--chapters"} \
| 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${extraHeader}|'
} > '${outputFile}'
'';
in
''
ln -s '${sources}/'*.xml .
mkdir ./languages-frameworks
cp -s '${sources-langs}'/* ./languages-frameworks
''
+ toDocbook {
inputFile = ./introduction.md;
outputFile = "introduction.xml";
useChapters = true;
}
+ toDocbook {
inputFile = ./languages-frameworks/python.md;
outputFile = "./languages-frameworks/python.xml";
}
+ toDocbook {
inputFile = ./haskell-users-guide.md;
outputFile = "haskell-users-guide.xml";
useChapters = true;
}
+ toDocbook {
inputFile = ./../pkgs/development/idris-modules/README.md;
outputFile = "languages-frameworks/idris.xml";
}
+ toDocbook {
inputFile = ./../pkgs/development/r-modules/README.md;
outputFile = "languages-frameworks/r.xml";
}
+ ''
echo ${nixpkgsVersion} > .version
# validate against relaxng schema
xmllint --nonet --xinclude --noxincludenode manual.xml --output manual-full.xml
${jing}/bin/jing ${docbook5}/xml/rng/docbook/docbook.rng manual-full.xml
dst=$out/share/doc/nixpkgs
mkdir -p $dst
xsltproc $xsltFlags --nonet --xinclude \
--output $dst/manual.html \
${docbook5_xsl}/xml/xsl/docbook/xhtml/docbook.xsl \
./manual.xml
cp ${./style.css} $dst/style.css
mkdir -p $dst/images/callouts
cp "${docbook5_xsl}/xml/xsl/docbook/images/callouts/"*.gif $dst/images/callouts/
mkdir -p $out/nix-support
echo "doc manual $dst manual.html" >> $out/nix-support/hydra-build-products
'';
}

View File

@@ -1,629 +0,0 @@
<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="chap-functions">
<title>Functions reference</title>
<para>
The nixpkgs repository has several utility functions to manipulate Nix expressions.
</para>
<section xml:id="sec-pkgs-overridePackages">
<title>pkgs.overridePackages</title>
<para>
This function inside the nixpkgs expression (<varname>pkgs</varname>)
can be used to override the set of packages itself.
</para>
<para>
Warning: this function is expensive and must not be used from within
the nixpkgs repository.
</para>
<para>
Example usage:
<programlisting>let
pkgs = import &lt;nixpkgs&gt; {};
newpkgs = pkgs.overridePackages (self: super: {
foo = super.foo.override { ... };
};
in ...</programlisting>
</para>
<para>
The resulting <varname>newpkgs</varname> will have the new <varname>foo</varname>
expression, and all other expressions depending on <varname>foo</varname> will also
use the new <varname>foo</varname> expression.
</para>
<para>
The behavior of this function is similar to <link
linkend="sec-modify-via-packageOverrides">config.packageOverrides</link>.
</para>
<para>
The <varname>self</varname> parameter refers to the final package set with the
applied overrides. Using this parameter may lead to infinite recursion if not
used consciously.
</para>
<para>
The <varname>super</varname> parameter refers to the old package set.
It's equivalent to <varname>pkgs</varname> in the above example.
</para>
</section>
<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>pkgs.overridePackages (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-overrideDerivation">
<title>&lt;pkg&gt;.overrideDerivation</title>
<warning>
<para>Do not use this function in Nixpkgs. Because it breaks
package abstraction and doesnt provide error checking for
function arguments, it is only intended for ad-hoc customisation
(such as in <filename>~/.nixpkgs/config.nix</filename>).</para>
</warning>
<para>
The function <varname>overrideDerivation</varname> is usually available for all the
derivations in the nixpkgs expression (<varname>pkgs</varname>).
</para>
<para>
It is used to create a new derivation by overriding the attributes of
the original derivation according to the given 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 name, src and patches 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>
</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 xml:id="sec-fhs-environments">
<title>buildFHSChrootEnv/buildFHSUserEnv</title>
<para>
<function>buildFHSChrootEnv</function> and
<function>buildFHSUserEnv</function> provide a way to build and run
FHS-compatible lightweight sandboxes. They get their own isolated root with
binded <filename>/nix/store</filename>, so their 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.
</para>
<para>
<function>buildFHSChrootEnv</function> allows to create persistent
environments, which can be constructed, deconstructed and entered by
multiple users at once. A downside is that it requires
<literal>root</literal> access for both those who create and destroy and
those who enter it. It can be useful to create environments for daemons that
one can enter and observe.
</para>
<para>
<function>buildFHSUserEnv</function> uses Linux namespaces feature to create
temporary lightweight environments which are destroyed after all child
processes exit. It does not require root access, and can be useful to create
sandboxes and wrap applications.
</para>
<para>
Those functions both rely on <function>buildFHSEnv</function>, which creates
an actual directory structure given a list of necessary packages and extra
build commands.
<function>buildFHSChrootEnv</function> and <function>buildFHSUserEnv</function>
both accept those arguments which are passed to
<function>buildFHSEnv</function>:
</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).</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).</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>extraBuildCommandsMulti</literal>, but
executed only on multilib architectures.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
<para>
Additionally, <function>buildFHSUserEnv</function> accepts
<literal>runScript</literal> parameter, which is a command that would be
executed inside the sandbox and passed all the command line arguments. It
default to <literal>bash</literal>.
</para>
<para>
It also uses <literal>CHROOTENV_EXTRA_BINDS</literal> environment variable
for binding extra directories in the sandbox to outside places. The format of
the variable is <literal>/mnt=test-mnt:/data</literal>, where
<literal>/mnt</literal> would be mounted as <literal>/test-mnt</literal>
and <literal>/data</literal> would be mounted as <literal>/data</literal>.
<literal>extraBindMounts</literal> array argument to
<function>buildFHSUserEnv</function> function is prepended to this variable.
Latter entries take priority if defined several times -- i.e. in case of
<literal>/data=data1:/data=data2</literal> the actual bind path would be
<literal>/data2</literal>.
</para>
<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>
<section 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/docker/docker/blob/master/image/spec/v1.md#docker-image-specification-v100">
Docker Image Specification v1.0.0
</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>latest</literal>.
</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/docker/docker/blob/master/image/spec/v1.md#container-runconfig-field-descriptions">
Docker Image Specification v1.0.0
</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>
</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 fetch a Docker image from a Docker registry.
Currently only registry <literal>v1</literal> is supported.
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 = "debian"; <co xml:id='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-1' />
imageTag = "jessie"; <co xml:id='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-2' />
imageId = null; <co xml:id='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-3' />
sha256 = "1bhw5hkz6chrnrih0ymjbmn69hyfriza2lr550xyvpdrnbzr4gk2"; <co xml:id='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-4' />
indexUrl = "https://index.docker.io"; <co xml:id='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-5' />
registryVersion = "v1";
}
</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>library/debian</literal>).
This argument is required.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-2'>
<para>
<varname>imageTag</varname> specifies the tag of the image to be downloaded.
By default it's <literal>latest</literal>.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-3'>
<para>
<varname>imageId</varname>, if specified this exact image will be fetched, instead
of <varname>imageName/imageTag</varname>. However, the resulting repository
will still be named <varname>imageName/imageTag</varname>.
By default it's <literal>null</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>
<note>
<para>The checksum is computed on the unpacked directory, not on the final tarball.</para>
</note>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-5'>
<para>
In the above example the default values are shown for the variables
<varname>indexUrl</varname> and <varname>registryVersion</varname>.
Hence by default the Docker.io registry is used to pull the images.
</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>
</chapter>

View File

@@ -1,808 +0,0 @@
---
title: User's Guide for Haskell in Nixpkgs
author: Peter Simons
date: 2015-06-01
---
# User's Guide to the Haskell Infrastructure
## How to install Haskell packages
Nixpkgs distributes build instructions for all Haskell packages registered on
[Hackage](http://hackage.haskell.org/), but strangely enough normal Nix package
lookups don't seem to discover any of them, except for the default version of ghc, cabal-install, and stack:
$ nix-env -i alex
error: selector alex matches no derivations
$ nix-env -qa ghc
ghc-7.10.2
The Haskell package set is not registered in the top-level namespace because it
is *huge*. If all Haskell packages were visible to these commands, then
name-based search/install operations would be much slower than they are now. We
avoided that by keeping all Haskell-related packages in a separate attribute
set called `haskellPackages`, which the following command will list:
$ nix-env -f "<nixpkgs>" -qaP -A haskellPackages
haskellPackages.a50 a50-0.5
haskellPackages.abacate haskell-abacate-0.0.0.0
haskellPackages.abcBridge haskell-abcBridge-0.12
haskellPackages.afv afv-0.1.1
haskellPackages.alex alex-3.1.4
haskellPackages.Allure Allure-0.4.101.1
haskellPackages.alms alms-0.6.7
[... some 8000 entries omitted ...]
To install any of those packages into your profile, refer to them by their
attribute path (first column):
$ nix-env -f "<nixpkgs>" -iA haskellPackages.Allure ...
The attribute path of any Haskell packages corresponds to the name of that
particular package on Hackage: the package `cabal-install` has the attribute
`haskellPackages.cabal-install`, and so on. (Actually, this convention causes
trouble with packages like `3dmodels` and `4Blocks`, because these names are
invalid identifiers in the Nix language. The issue of how to deal with these
rare corner cases is currently unresolved.)
Haskell packages who's Nix name (second column) begins with a `haskell-` prefix
are packages that provide a library whereas packages without that prefix
provide just executables. Libraries may provide executables too, though: the
package `haskell-pandoc`, for example, installs both a library and an
application. You can install and use Haskell executables just like any other
program in Nixpkgs, but using Haskell libraries for development is a bit
trickier and we'll address that subject in great detail in section [How to
create a development environment].
Attribute paths are deterministic inside of Nixpkgs, but the path necessary to
reach Nixpkgs varies from system to system. We dodged that problem by giving
`nix-env` an explicit `-f "<nixpkgs>"` parameter, but if you call `nix-env`
without that flag, then chances are the invocation fails:
$ nix-env -iA haskellPackages.cabal-install
error: attribute haskellPackages in selection path
haskellPackages.cabal-install not found
On NixOS, for example, Nixpkgs does *not* exist in the top-level namespace by
default. To figure out the proper attribute path, it's easiest to query for the
path of a well-known Nixpkgs package, i.e.:
$ nix-env -qaP coreutils
nixos.coreutils coreutils-8.23
If your system responds like that (most NixOS installations will), then the
attribute path to `haskellPackages` is `nixos.haskellPackages`. Thus, if you
want to use `nix-env` without giving an explicit `-f` flag, then that's the way
to do it:
$ nix-env -qaP -A nixos.haskellPackages
$ nix-env -iA nixos.haskellPackages.cabal-install
Our current default compiler is GHC 7.10.x and the `haskellPackages` set
contains packages built with that particular version. Nixpkgs contains the
latest major release of every GHC since 6.10.4, however, and there is a whole
family of package sets available that defines Hackage packages built with each
of those compilers, too:
$ nix-env -f "<nixpkgs>" -qaP -A haskell.packages.ghc6123
$ nix-env -f "<nixpkgs>" -qaP -A haskell.packages.ghc763
The name `haskellPackages` is really just a synonym for
`haskell.packages.ghc7102`, because we prefer that package set internally and
recommend it to our users as their default choice, but ultimately you are free
to compile your Haskell packages with any GHC version you please. The following
command displays the complete list of available compilers:
$ nix-env -f "<nixpkgs>" -qaP -A haskell.compiler
haskell.compiler.ghc6104 ghc-6.10.4
haskell.compiler.ghc6123 ghc-6.12.3
haskell.compiler.ghc704 ghc-7.0.4
haskell.compiler.ghc722 ghc-7.2.2
haskell.compiler.ghc742 ghc-7.4.2
haskell.compiler.ghc763 ghc-7.6.3
haskell.compiler.ghc784 ghc-7.8.4
haskell.compiler.ghc7102 ghc-7.10.2
haskell.compiler.ghcHEAD ghc-7.11.20150402
haskell.compiler.ghcNokinds ghc-nokinds-7.11.20150704
haskell.compiler.ghcjs ghcjs-0.1.0
haskell.compiler.jhc jhc-0.8.2
haskell.compiler.uhc uhc-1.1.9.0
We have no package sets for `jhc` or `uhc` yet, unfortunately, but for every
version of GHC listed above, there exists a package set based on that compiler.
Also, the attributes `haskell.compiler.ghcXYC` and
`haskell.packages.ghcXYC.ghc` are synonymous for the sake of convenience.
## How to create a development environment
### How to install a compiler
A simple development environment consists of a Haskell compiler and one or both
of the tools `cabal-install` and `stack`. We saw in section
[How to install Haskell packages] how you can install those programs into your
user profile:
$ nix-env -f "<nixpkgs>" -iA haskellPackages.ghc haskellPackages.cabal-install
Instead of the default package set `haskellPackages`, you can also use the more
precise name `haskell.compiler.ghc7102`, which has the advantage that it refers
to the same GHC version regardless of what Nixpkgs considers "default" at any
given time.
Once you've made those tools available in `$PATH`, it's possible to build
Hackage packages the same way people without access to Nix do it all the time:
$ cabal get lens-4.11 && cd lens-4.11
$ cabal install -j --dependencies-only
$ cabal configure
$ cabal build
If you enjoy working with Cabal sandboxes, then that's entirely possible too:
just execute the command
$ cabal sandbox init
before installing the required dependencies.
The `nix-shell` utility makes it easy to switch to a different compiler
version; just enter the Nix shell environment with the command
$ nix-shell -p haskell.compiler.ghc784
to bring GHC 7.8.4 into `$PATH`. Alternatively, you can use Stack instead of
`nix-shell` directly to select compiler versions and other build tools
per-project. It uses `nix-shell` under the hood when Nix support is turned on.
See [How to build a Haskell project using Stack].
If you're using `cabal-install`, re-running `cabal configure` inside the spawned
shell switches your build to use that compiler instead. If you're working on
a project that doesn't depend on any additional system libraries outside of GHC,
then it's even sufficient to just run the `cabal configure` command inside of
the shell:
$ nix-shell -p haskell.compiler.ghc784 --command "cabal configure"
Afterwards, all other commands like `cabal build` work just fine in any shell
environment, because the configure phase recorded the absolute paths to all
required tools like GHC in its build configuration inside of the `dist/`
directory. Please note, however, that `nix-collect-garbage` can break such an
environment because the Nix store paths created by `nix-shell` aren't "alive"
anymore once `nix-shell` has terminated. If you find that your Haskell builds
no longer work after garbage collection, then you'll have to re-run `cabal
configure` inside of a new `nix-shell` environment.
### How to install a compiler with libraries
GHC expects to find all installed libraries inside of its own `lib` directory.
This approach works fine on traditional Unix systems, but it doesn't work for
Nix, because GHC's store path is immutable once it's built. We cannot install
additional libraries into that location. As a consequence, our copies of GHC
don't know any packages except their own core libraries, like `base`,
`containers`, `Cabal`, etc.
We can register additional libraries to GHC, however, using a special build
function called `ghcWithPackages`. That function expects one argument: a
function that maps from an attribute set of Haskell packages to a list of
packages, which determines the libraries known to that particular version of
GHC. For example, the Nix expression `ghcWithPackages (pkgs: [pkgs.mtl])`
generates a copy of GHC that has the `mtl` library registered in addition to
its normal core packages:
$ nix-shell -p "haskellPackages.ghcWithPackages (pkgs: [pkgs.mtl])"
[nix-shell:~]$ ghc-pkg list mtl
/nix/store/zy79...-ghc-7.10.2/lib/ghc-7.10.2/package.conf.d:
mtl-2.2.1
This function allows users to define their own development environment by means
of an override. After adding the following snippet to `~/.nixpkgs/config.nix`,
{
packageOverrides = super: let self = super.pkgs; in
{
myHaskellEnv = self.haskell.packages.ghc7102.ghcWithPackages
(haskellPackages: with haskellPackages; [
# libraries
arrows async cgi criterion
# tools
cabal-install haskintex
]);
};
}
it's possible to install that compiler with `nix-env -f "<nixpkgs>" -iA
myHaskellEnv`. If you'd like to switch that development environment to a
different version of GHC, just replace the `ghc7102` bit in the previous
definition with the appropriate name. Of course, it's also possible to define
any number of these development environments! (You can't install two of them
into the same profile at the same time, though, because that would result in
file conflicts.)
The generated `ghc` program is a wrapper script that re-directs the real
GHC executable to use a new `lib` directory --- one that we specifically
constructed to contain all those packages the user requested:
$ cat $(type -p ghc)
#! /nix/store/xlxj...-bash-4.3-p33/bin/bash -e
export NIX_GHC=/nix/store/19sm...-ghc-7.10.2/bin/ghc
export NIX_GHCPKG=/nix/store/19sm...-ghc-7.10.2/bin/ghc-pkg
export NIX_GHC_DOCDIR=/nix/store/19sm...-ghc-7.10.2/share/doc/ghc/html
export NIX_GHC_LIBDIR=/nix/store/19sm...-ghc-7.10.2/lib/ghc-7.10.2
exec /nix/store/j50p...-ghc-7.10.2/bin/ghc "-B$NIX_GHC_LIBDIR" "$@"
The variables `$NIX_GHC`, `$NIX_GHCPKG`, etc. point to the *new* store path
`ghcWithPackages` constructed specifically for this environment. The last line
of the wrapper script then executes the real `ghc`, but passes the path to the
new `lib` directory using GHC's `-B` flag.
The purpose of those environment variables is to work around an impurity in the
popular [ghc-paths](http://hackage.haskell.org/package/ghc-paths) library. That
library promises to give its users access to GHC's installation paths. Only,
the library can't possible know that path when it's compiled, because the path
GHC considers its own is determined only much later, when the user configures
it through `ghcWithPackages`. So we [patched
ghc-paths](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/development/haskell-modules/patches/ghc-paths-nix.patch)
to return the paths found in those environment variables at run-time rather
than trying to guess them at compile-time.
To make sure that mechanism works properly all the time, we recommend that you
set those variables to meaningful values in your shell environment, too, i.e.
by adding the following code to your `~/.bashrc`:
if type >/dev/null 2>&1 -p ghc; then
eval "$(egrep ^export "$(type -p ghc)")"
fi
If you are certain that you'll use only one GHC environment which is located in
your user profile, then you can use the following code, too, which has the
advantage that it doesn't contain any paths from the Nix store, i.e. those
settings always remain valid even if a `nix-env -u` operation updates the GHC
environment in your profile:
if [ -e ~/.nix-profile/bin/ghc ]; then
export NIX_GHC="$HOME/.nix-profile/bin/ghc"
export NIX_GHCPKG="$HOME/.nix-profile/bin/ghc-pkg"
export NIX_GHC_DOCDIR="$HOME/.nix-profile/share/doc/ghc/html"
export NIX_GHC_LIBDIR="$HOME/.nix-profile/lib/ghc-$($NIX_GHC --numeric-version)"
fi
### How to install a compiler with libraries, hoogle and documentation indexes
If you plan to use your environment for interactive programming, not just
compiling random Haskell code, you might want to replace `ghcWithPackages` in
all the listings above with `ghcWithHoogle`.
This environment generator not only produces an environment with GHC and all
the specified libraries, but also generates a `hoogle` and `haddock` indexes
for all the packages, and provides a wrapper script around `hoogle` binary that
uses all those things. A precise name for this thing would be
"`ghcWithPackagesAndHoogleAndDocumentationIndexes`", which is, regrettably, too
long and scary.
For example, installing the following environment
{
packageOverrides = super: let self = super.pkgs; in
{
myHaskellEnv = self.haskellPackages.ghcWithHoogle
(haskellPackages: with haskellPackages; [
# libraries
arrows async cgi criterion
# tools
cabal-install haskintex
]);
};
}
allows one to browse module documentation index [not too dissimilar to
this](https://downloads.haskell.org/~ghc/latest/docs/html/libraries/index.html)
for all the specified packages and their dependencies by directing a browser of
choice to `~/.nix-profiles/share/doc/hoogle/index.html` (or
`/run/current-system/sw/share/doc/hoogle/index.html` in case you put it in
`environment.systemPackages` in NixOS).
After you've marveled enough at that try adding the following to your
`~/.ghc/ghci.conf`
:def hoogle \s -> return $ ":! hoogle search -cl --count=15 \"" ++ s ++ "\""
:def doc \s -> return $ ":! hoogle search -cl --info \"" ++ s ++ "\""
and test it by typing into `ghci`:
:hoogle a -> a
:doc a -> a
Be sure to note the links to `haddock` files in the output. With any modern and
properly configured terminal emulator you can just click those links to
navigate there.
Finally, you can run
hoogle server -p 8080
and navigate to http://localhost:8080/ for your own local
[Hoogle](https://www.haskell.org/hoogle/). Note, however, that Firefox and
possibly other browsers disallow navigation from `http:` to `file:` URIs for
security reasons, which might be quite an inconvenience. See [this
page](http://kb.mozillazine.org/Links_to_local_pages_do_not_work) for
workarounds.
### How to build a Haskell project using Stack
[Stack][http://haskellstack.org] is a popular build tool for Haskell projects.
It has first-class support for Nix. Stack can optionally use Nix to
automatically select the right version of GHC and other build tools to build,
test and execute apps in an existing project downloaded from somewhere on the
Internet. Pass the `--nix` flag to any `stack` command to do so, e.g.
$ git clone --recursive http://github.com/yesodweb/wai
$ cd wai
$ stack --nix build
If you want `stack` to use Nix by default, you can add a `nix` section to the
`stack.yaml` file, as explained in the [Stack documentation][stack-nix-doc]. For
example:
nix:
enable: true
packages: [pkgconfig zeromq zlib]
The example configuration snippet above tells Stack to create an ad hoc
environment for `nix-shell` as in the below section, in which the `pkgconfig`,
`zeromq` and `zlib` packages from Nixpkgs are available. All `stack` commands
will implicitly be executed inside this ad hoc environment.
Some projects have more sophisticated needs. For examples, some ad hoc
environments might need to expose Nixpkgs packages compiled in a certain way, or
with extra environment variables. In these cases, you'll need a `shell` field
instead of `packages`:
nix:
enable: true
shell-file: shell.nix
For more on how to write a `shell.nix` file see the below section. You'll need
to express a derivation. Note that Nixpkgs ships with a convenience wrapper
function around `mkDerivation` called `haskell.lib.buildStackProject` to help you
create this derivation in exactly the way Stack expects. All of the same inputs
as `mkDerivation` can be provided. For example, to build a Stack project that
including packages that link against a version of the R library compiled with
special options turned on:
with (import <nixpkgs> { });
let R = pkgs.R.override { enableStrictBarrier = true; };
in
haskell.lib.buildStackProject {
name = "HaskellR";
buildInputs = [ R zeromq zlib ];
}
[stack-nix-doc]: http://docs.haskellstack.org/en/stable/nix_integration.html
### How to create ad hoc environments for `nix-shell`
The easiest way to create an ad hoc development environment is to run
`nix-shell` with the appropriate GHC environment given on the command-line:
nix-shell -p "haskellPackages.ghcWithPackages (pkgs: with pkgs; [mtl pandoc])"
For more sophisticated use-cases, however, it's more convenient to save the
desired configuration in a file called `shell.nix` that looks like this:
{ nixpkgs ? import <nixpkgs> {}, compiler ? "ghc7102" }:
let
inherit (nixpkgs) pkgs;
ghc = pkgs.haskell.packages.${compiler}.ghcWithPackages (ps: with ps; [
monad-par mtl
]);
in
pkgs.stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "my-haskell-env-0";
buildInputs = [ ghc ];
shellHook = "eval $(egrep ^export ${ghc}/bin/ghc)";
}
Now run `nix-shell` --- or even `nix-shell --pure` --- to enter a shell
environment that has the appropriate compiler in `$PATH`. If you use `--pure`,
then add all other packages that your development environment needs into the
`buildInputs` attribute. If you'd like to switch to a different compiler
version, then pass an appropriate `compiler` argument to the expression, i.e.
`nix-shell --argstr compiler ghc784`.
If you need such an environment because you'd like to compile a Hackage package
outside of Nix --- i.e. because you're hacking on the latest version from Git
---, then the package set provides suitable nix-shell environments for you
already! Every Haskell package has an `env` attribute that provides a shell
environment suitable for compiling that particular package. If you'd like to
hack the `lens` library, for example, then you just have to check out the
source code and enter the appropriate environment:
$ cabal get lens-4.11 && cd lens-4.11
Downloading lens-4.11...
Unpacking to lens-4.11/
$ nix-shell "<nixpkgs>" -A haskellPackages.lens.env
[nix-shell:/tmp/lens-4.11]$
At point, you can run `cabal configure`, `cabal build`, and all the other
development commands. Note that you need `cabal-install` installed in your
`$PATH` already to use it here --- the `nix-shell` environment does not provide
it.
## How to create Nix builds for your own private Haskell packages
If your own Haskell packages have build instructions for Cabal, then you can
convert those automatically into build instructions for Nix using the
`cabal2nix` utility, which you can install into your profile by running
`nix-env -i cabal2nix`.
### How to build a stand-alone project
For example, let's assume that you're working on a private project called
`foo`. To generate a Nix build expression for it, change into the project's
top-level directory and run the command:
$ cabal2nix . >foo.nix
Then write the following snippet into a file called `default.nix`:
{ nixpkgs ? import <nixpkgs> {}, compiler ? "ghc7102" }:
nixpkgs.pkgs.haskell.packages.${compiler}.callPackage ./foo.nix { }
Finally, store the following code in a file called `shell.nix`:
{ nixpkgs ? import <nixpkgs> {}, compiler ? "ghc7102" }:
(import ./default.nix { inherit nixpkgs compiler; }).env
At this point, you can run `nix-build` to have Nix compile your project and
install it into a Nix store path. The local directory will contain a symlink
called `result` after `nix-build` returns that points into that location. Of
course, passing the flag `--argstr compiler ghc763` allows switching the build
to any version of GHC currently supported.
Furthermore, you can call `nix-shell` to enter an interactive development
environment in which you can use `cabal configure` and `cabal build` to develop
your code. That environment will automatically contain a proper GHC derivation
with all the required libraries registered as well as all the system-level
libraries your package might need.
If your package does not depend on any system-level libraries, then it's
sufficient to run
$ nix-shell --command "cabal configure"
once to set up your build. `cabal-install` determines the absolute paths to all
resources required for the build and writes them into a config file in the
`dist/` directory. Once that's done, you can run `cabal build` and any other
command for that project even outside of the `nix-shell` environment. This
feature is particularly nice for those of us who like to edit their code with
an IDE, like Emacs' `haskell-mode`, because it's not necessary to start Emacs
inside of nix-shell just to make it find out the necessary settings for
building the project; `cabal-install` has already done that for us.
If you want to do some quick-and-dirty hacking and don't want to bother setting
up a `default.nix` and `shell.nix` file manually, then you can use the
`--shell` flag offered by `cabal2nix` to have it generate a stand-alone
`nix-shell` environment for you. With that feature, running
$ cabal2nix --shell . >shell.nix
$ nix-shell --command "cabal configure"
is usually enough to set up a build environment for any given Haskell package.
You can even use that generated file to run `nix-build`, too:
$ nix-build shell.nix
### How to build projects that depend on each other
If you have multiple private Haskell packages that depend on each other, then
you'll have to register those packages in the Nixpkgs set to make them visible
for the dependency resolution performed by `callPackage`. First of all, change
into each of your projects top-level directories and generate a `default.nix`
file with `cabal2nix`:
$ cd ~/src/foo && cabal2nix . >default.nix
$ cd ~/src/bar && cabal2nix . >default.nix
Then edit your `~/.nixpkgs/config.nix` file to register those builds in the
default Haskell package set:
{
packageOverrides = super: let self = super.pkgs; in
{
haskellPackages = super.haskellPackages.override {
overrides = self: super: {
foo = self.callPackage ../src/foo {};
bar = self.callPackage ../src/bar {};
};
};
};
}
Once that's accomplished, `nix-env -f "<nixpkgs>" -qA haskellPackages` will
show your packages like any other package from Hackage, and you can build them
$ nix-build "<nixpkgs>" -A haskellPackages.foo
or enter an interactive shell environment suitable for building them:
$ nix-shell "<nixpkgs>" -A haskellPackages.bar.env
## Miscellaneous Topics
### How to build with profiling enabled
Every Haskell package set takes a function called `overrides` that you can use
to manipulate the package as much as you please. One useful application of this
feature is to replace the default `mkDerivation` function with one that enables
library profiling for all packages. To accomplish that, add configure the
following snippet in your `~/.nixpkgs/config.nix` file:
{
packageOverrides = super: let self = super.pkgs; in
{
profiledHaskellPackages = self.haskellPackages.override {
overrides = self: super: {
mkDerivation = args: super.mkDerivation (args // {
enableLibraryProfiling = true;
});
};
};
};
}
Then, replace instances of `haskellPackages` in the `cabal2nix`-generated
`default.nix` or `shell.nix` files with `profiledHaskellPackages`.
### How to override package versions in a compiler-specific package set
Nixpkgs provides the latest version of
[`ghc-events`](http://hackage.haskell.org/package/ghc-events), which is 0.4.4.0
at the time of this writing. This is fine for users of GHC 7.10.x, but GHC
7.8.4 cannot compile that binary. Now, one way to solve that problem is to
register an older version of `ghc-events` in the 7.8.x-specific package set.
The first step is to generate Nix build instructions with `cabal2nix`:
$ cabal2nix cabal://ghc-events-0.4.3.0 >~/.nixpkgs/ghc-events-0.4.3.0.nix
Then add the override in `~/.nixpkgs/config.nix`:
{
packageOverrides = super: let self = super.pkgs; in
{
haskell = super.haskell // {
packages = super.haskell.packages // {
ghc784 = super.haskell.packages.ghc784.override {
overrides = self: super: {
ghc-events = self.callPackage ./ghc-events-0.4.3.0.nix {};
};
};
};
};
};
}
This code is a little crazy, no doubt, but it's necessary because the intuitive
version
haskell.packages.ghc784 = super.haskell.packages.ghc784.override {
overrides = self: super: {
ghc-events = self.callPackage ./ghc-events-0.4.3.0.nix {};
};
};
doesn't do what we want it to: that code replaces the `haskell` package set in
Nixpkgs with one that contains only one entry,`packages`, which contains only
one entry `ghc784`. This override loses the `haskell.compiler` set, and it
loses the `haskell.packages.ghcXYZ` sets for all compilers but GHC 7.8.4. To
avoid that problem, we have to perform the convoluted little dance from above,
iterating over each step in hierarchy.
Once it's accomplished, however, we can install a variant of `ghc-events`
that's compiled with GHC 7.8.4:
nix-env -f "<nixpkgs>" -iA haskell.packages.ghc784.ghc-events
Unfortunately, it turns out that this build fails again while executing the
test suite! Apparently, the release archive on Hackage is missing some data
files that the test suite requires, so we cannot run it. We accomplish that by
re-generating the Nix expression with the `--no-check` flag:
$ cabal2nix --no-check cabal://ghc-events-0.4.3.0 >~/.nixpkgs/ghc-events-0.4.3.0.nix
Now the builds succeeds.
Of course, in the concrete example of `ghc-events` this whole exercise is not
an ideal solution, because `ghc-events` can analyze the output emitted by any
version of GHC later than 6.12 regardless of the compiler version that was used
to build the `ghc-events' executable, so strictly speaking there's no reason to
prefer one built with GHC 7.8.x in the first place. However, for users who
cannot use GHC 7.10.x at all for some reason, the approach of downgrading to an
older version might be useful.
### How to recover from GHC's infamous non-deterministic library ID bug
GHC and distributed build farms don't get along well:
https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/4012
When you see an error like this one
package foo-0.7.1.0 is broken due to missing package
text-1.2.0.4-98506efb1b9ada233bb5c2b2db516d91
then you have to download and re-install `foo` and all its dependents from
scratch:
# nix-store -q --referrers /nix/store/*-haskell-text-1.2.0.4 \
| xargs -L 1 nix-store --repair-path --option binary-caches http://hydra.nixos.org
If you're using additional Hydra servers other than `hydra.nixos.org`, then it
might be necessary to purge the local caches that store data from those
machines to disable these binary channels for the duration of the previous
command, i.e. by running:
rm /nix/var/nix/binary-cache-v3.sqlite
rm /nix/var/nix/manifests/*
rm /nix/var/nix/channel-cache/*
### How to use the Haste Haskell-to-Javascript transpiler
Open a shell with `haste-compiler` and `haste-cabal-install` (you don't actually need
`node`, but it can be useful to test stuff):
$ nix-shell -p "haskellPackages.ghcWithPackages (self: with self; [haste-cabal-install haste-compiler])" -p nodejs
You may not need the following step but if `haste-boot` fails to compile all the
packages it needs, this might do the trick
$ haste-cabal update
`haste-boot` builds a set of core libraries so that they can be used from Javascript
transpiled programs:
$ haste-boot
Transpile and run a "Hello world" program:
$ echo 'module Main where main = putStrLn "Hello world"' > hello-world.hs
$ hastec --onexec hello-world.hs
$ node hello-world.js
Hello world
### Builds on Darwin fail with `math.h` not found
Users of GHC on Darwin have occasionally reported that builds fail, because the
compiler complains about a missing include file:
fatal error: 'math.h' file not found
The issue has been discussed at length in [ticket
6390](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/6390), and so far no good
solution has been proposed. As a work-around, users who run into this problem
can configure the environment variables
export NIX_CFLAGS_COMPILE="-idirafter /usr/include"
export NIX_CFLAGS_LINK="-L/usr/lib"
in their `~/.bashrc` file to avoid the compiler error.
### Builds using Stack complain about missing system libraries
-- While building package zlib-0.5.4.2 using:
runhaskell -package=Cabal-1.22.4.0 -clear-package-db [... lots of flags ...]
Process exited with code: ExitFailure 1
Logs have been written to: /home/foo/src/stack-ide/.stack-work/logs/zlib-0.5.4.2.log
Configuring zlib-0.5.4.2...
Setup.hs: Missing dependency on a foreign library:
* Missing (or bad) header file: zlib.h
This problem can usually be solved by installing the system package that
provides this library (you may need the "-dev" version). If the library is
already installed but in a non-standard location then you can use the flags
--extra-include-dirs= and --extra-lib-dirs= to specify where it is.
If the header file does exist, it may contain errors that are caught by the C
compiler at the preprocessing stage. In this case you can re-run configure
with the verbosity flag -v3 to see the error messages.
When you run the build inside of the nix-shell environment, the system
is configured to find libz.so without any special flags -- the compiler
and linker "just know" how to find it. Consequently, Cabal won't record
any search paths for libz.so in the package description, which means
that the package works fine inside of nix-shell, but once you leave the
shell the shared object can no longer be found. That issue is by no
means specific to Stack: you'll have that problem with any other
Haskell package that's built inside of nix-shell but run outside of that
environment.
You can remedy this issue in several ways. The easiest is to add a `nix` section
to the `stack.yaml` like the following:
nix:
enable: true
packages: [ zlib ]
Stack's Nix support knows to add `${zlib}/lib` and `${zlib}/include` as an
`--extra-lib-dirs` and `extra-include-dirs`, respectively. Alternatively, you
can achieve the same effect by hand. First of all, run
$ nix-build --no-out-link "<nixpkgs>" -A zlib
/nix/store/alsvwzkiw4b7ip38l4nlfjijdvg3fvzn-zlib-1.2.8
to find out the store path of the system's zlib library. Now, you can
1) add that path (plus a "/lib" suffix) to your $LD_LIBRARY_PATH
environment variable to make sure your system linker finds libz.so
automatically. It's no pretty solution, but it will work.
2) As a variant of (1), you can also install any number of system
libraries into your user's profile (or some other profile) and point
$LD_LIBRARY_PATH to that profile instead, so that you don't have to
list dozens of those store paths all over the place.
3) The solution I prefer is to call stack with an appropriate
--extra-lib-dirs flag like so:
$ stack --extra-lib-dirs=/nix/store/alsvwzkiw4b7ip38l4nlfjijdvg3fvzn-zlib-1.2.8/lib build
Typically, you'll need --extra-include-dirs as well. It's possible
to add those flag to the project's "stack.yaml" or your user's
global "~/.stack/global/stack.yaml" file so that you don't have to
specify them manually every time. But again, you're likely better off using
Stack's Nix support instead.
The same thing applies to `cabal configure`, of course, if you're
building with `cabal-install` instead of Stack.
### Creating statically linked binaries
There are two levels of static linking. The first option is to configure the
build with the Cabal flag `--disable-executable-dynamic`. In Nix expressions,
this can be achieved by setting the attribute:
enableSharedExecutables = false;
That gives you a binary with statically linked Haskell libraries and
dynamically linked system libraries.
To link both Haskell libraries and system libraries statically, the additional
flags `--ghc-option=-optl=-static --ghc-option=-optl=-pthread` need to be used.
In Nix, this is accomplished with:
configureFlags = [ "--ghc-option=-optl=-static" "--ghc-option=-optl=-pthread" ];
It's important to realize, however, that most system libraries in Nix are built
as shared libraries only, i.e. there is just no static library available that
Cabal could link!
## Other resources
- The Youtube video [Nix Loves Haskell](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BsBhi_r-OeE)
provides an introduction into Haskell NG aimed at beginners. The slides are
available at http://cryp.to/nixos-meetup-3-slides.pdf and also -- in a form
ready for cut & paste -- at
https://github.com/NixOS/cabal2nix/blob/master/doc/nixos-meetup-3-slides.md.
- Another Youtube video is [Escaping Cabal Hell with Nix](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mQd3s57n_2Y),
which discusses the subject of Haskell development with Nix but also provides
a basic introduction to Nix as well, i.e. it's suitable for viewers with
almost no prior Nix experience.
- Oliver Charles wrote a very nice [Tutorial how to develop Haskell packages with Nix](http://wiki.ocharles.org.uk/Nix).
- The *Journey into the Haskell NG infrastructure* series of postings
describe the new Haskell infrastructure in great detail:
- [Part 1](http://lists.science.uu.nl/pipermail/nix-dev/2015-January/015591.html)
explains the differences between the old and the new code and gives
instructions how to migrate to the new setup.
- [Part 2](http://lists.science.uu.nl/pipermail/nix-dev/2015-January/015608.html)
looks in-depth at how to tweak and configure your setup by means of
overrides.
- [Part 3](http://lists.science.uu.nl/pipermail/nix-dev/2015-April/016912.html)
describes the infrastructure that keeps the Haskell package set in Nixpkgs
up-to-date.

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@@ -1,53 +0,0 @@
---
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. The purpose of 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. There is also the
[Nixpkgs Monitor](http://monitor.nixos.org) which keeps track of updates
and security vulnerabilities.

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@@ -0,0 +1,21 @@
<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="chap-introduction">
<title>Introduction</title>
<para>This manual tells you how to write packages for the Nix Packages
collection (Nixpkgs). Thus its for packagers and developers who want
to add packages to Nixpkgs. End users are kindly referred to the
<link xlink:href="http://hydra.nixos.org/job/nix/trunk/tarball/latest/download-by-type/doc/manual">Nix
manual</link>.</para>
<para>This manual does not describe the syntax and semantics of the
Nix expression language, which are given in the Nix manual in the
<link
xlink:href="http://hydra.nixos.org/job/nix/trunk/tarball/latest/download-by-type/doc/manual/#chap-writing-nix-expressions">chapter
on writing Nix expressions</link>. It only describes the facilities
provided by Nixpkgs to make writing packages easier, such as the
standard build environment (<literal>stdenv</literal>).</para>
</chapter>

260
doc/language-support.xml Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,260 @@
<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="chap-language-support">
<title>Support for specific programming languages</title>
<para>The <link linkend="chap-stdenv">standard build
environment</link> makes it easy to build typical Autotools-based
packages with very little code. Any other kind of package can be
accomodated by overriding the appropriate phases of
<literal>stdenv</literal>. However, there are specialised functions
in Nixpkgs to easily build packages for other programming languages,
such as Perl or Haskell. These are described in this chapter.</para>
<section xml:id="ssec-language-perl"><title>Perl</title>
<para>Nixpkgs provides a function <varname>buildPerlPackage</varname>,
a generic package builder function for any Perl package that has a
standard <varname>Makefile.PL</varname>. Its implemented in <link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/development/perl-modules/generic"><filename>pkgs/development/perl-modules/generic</filename></link>.</para>
<para>Perl packages from CPAN are defined in <link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/top-level/perl-packages.nix"><filename>pkgs/top-level/perl-packages.nix</filename></link>,
rather than <filename>pkgs/all-packages.nix</filename>. Most Perl
packages are so straight-forward to build that they are defined here
directly, rather than having a separate function for each package
called from <filename>perl-packages.nix</filename>. However, more
complicated packages should be put in a separate file, typically in
<filename>pkgs/development/perl-modules</filename>. Here is an
example of the former:
<programlisting>
ClassC3 = buildPerlPackage rec {
name = "Class-C3-0.21";
src = fetchurl {
url = "mirror://cpan/authors/id/F/FL/FLORA/${name}.tar.gz";
sha256 = "1bl8z095y4js66pwxnm7s853pi9czala4sqc743fdlnk27kq94gz";
};
};
</programlisting>
Note the use of <literal>mirror://cpan/</literal>, and the
<literal>${name}</literal> in the URL definition to ensure that the
name attribute is consistent with the source that were actually
downloading. Perl packages are made available in
<filename>all-packages.nix</filename> through the variable
<varname>perlPackages</varname>. For instance, if you have a package
that needs <varname>ClassC3</varname>, you would typically write
<programlisting>
foo = import ../path/to/foo.nix {
inherit stdenv fetchurl ...;
inherit (perlPackages) ClassC3;
};
</programlisting>
in <filename>all-packages.nix</filename>. You can test building a
Perl package as follows:
<screen>
$ nix-build -A perlPackages.ClassC3
</screen>
<varname>buildPerlPackage</varname> adds <literal>perl-</literal> to
the start of the name attribute, so the package above is actually
called <literal>perl-Class-C3-0.21</literal>. So to install it, you
can say:
<screen>
$ nix-env -i perl-Class-C3
</screen>
(Of course you can also install using the attribute name:
<literal>nix-env -i -A perlPackages.ClassC3</literal>.)</para>
<para>So what does <varname>buildPerlPackage</varname> do? It does
the following:
<orderedlist>
<listitem><para>In the configure phase, it calls <literal>perl
Makefile.PL</literal> to generate a Makefile. You can set the
variable <varname>makeMakerFlags</varname> to pass flags to
<filename>Makefile.PL</filename></para></listitem>
<listitem><para>It adds the contents of the <envar>PERL5LIB</envar>
environment variable to <literal>#! .../bin/perl</literal> line of
Perl scripts as <literal>-I<replaceable>dir</replaceable></literal>
flags. This ensures that a script can find its
dependencies.</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>In the fixup phase, it writes the propagated build
inputs (<varname>propagatedBuildInputs</varname>) to the file
<filename>$out/nix-support/propagated-user-env-packages</filename>.
<command>nix-env</command> recursively installs all packages listed
in this file when you install a package that has it. This ensures
that a Perl package can find its dependencies.</para></listitem>
</orderedlist>
</para>
<para><varname>buildPerlPackage</varname> is built on top of
<varname>stdenv</varname>, so everything can be customised in the
usual way. For instance, the <literal>BerkeleyDB</literal> module has
a <varname>preConfigure</varname> hook to generate a configuration
file used by <filename>Makefile.PL</filename>:
<programlisting>
{buildPerlPackage, fetchurl, db4}:
buildPerlPackage rec {
name = "BerkeleyDB-0.36";
src = fetchurl {
url = "mirror://cpan/authors/id/P/PM/PMQS/${name}.tar.gz";
sha256 = "07xf50riarb60l1h6m2dqmql8q5dij619712fsgw7ach04d8g3z1";
};
preConfigure = ''
echo "LIB = ${db4}/lib" > config.in
echo "INCLUDE = ${db4}/include" >> config.in
'';
}
</programlisting>
</para>
<para>Dependencies on other Perl packages can be specified in the
<varname>buildInputs</varname> and
<varname>propagatedBuildInputs</varname> attributes. If something is
exclusively a build-time dependency, use
<varname>buildInputs</varname>; if its (also) a runtime dependency,
use <varname>propagatedBuildInputs</varname>. For instance, this
builds a Perl module that has runtime dependencies on a bunch of other
modules:
<programlisting>
ClassC3Componentised = buildPerlPackage rec {
name = "Class-C3-Componentised-1.0004";
src = fetchurl {
url = "mirror://cpan/authors/id/A/AS/ASH/${name}.tar.gz";
sha256 = "0xql73jkcdbq4q9m0b0rnca6nrlvf5hyzy8is0crdk65bynvs8q1";
};
propagatedBuildInputs = [
ClassC3 ClassInspector TestException MROCompat
];
};
</programlisting>
</para>
<section><title>Generation from CPAN</title>
<para>Nix expressions for Perl packages can be generated (almost)
automatically from CPAN. This is done by the program
<command>nix-generate-from-cpan</command>, which can be installed
as follows:</para>
<screen>
$ nix-env -i nix-generate-from-cpan
</screen>
<para>This program takes a Perl module name, looks it up on CPAN,
fetches and unpacks the corresponding package, and prints a Nix
expression on standard output. For example:
<screen>
$ nix-generate-from-cpan XML::Simple
XMLSimple = buildPerlPackage {
name = "XML-Simple-2.20";
src = fetchurl {
url = mirror://cpan/authors/id/G/GR/GRANTM/XML-Simple-2.20.tar.gz;
sha256 = "5cff13d0802792da1eb45895ce1be461903d98ec97c9c953bc8406af7294434a";
};
propagatedBuildInputs = [ XMLNamespaceSupport XMLSAX XMLSAXExpat ];
meta = {
description = "Easily read/write XML (esp config files)";
license = "perl";
};
};
</screen>
The output can be pasted into
<filename>pkgs/top-level/perl-packages.nix</filename> or wherever else
you need it.</para>
</section>
</section>
<section><title>Python</title>
<para>
Python packages that
use <link xlink:href="http://pypi.python.org/pypi/setuptools/"><literal>setuptools</literal></link>,
which many Python packages do nowadays, can be built very simply using
the <varname>buildPythonPackage</varname> function. This function is
implemented
in <link xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/development/python-modules/generic/default.nix"><filename>pkgs/development/python-modules/generic/default.nix</filename></link>
and works similarly to <varname>buildPerlPackage</varname>. (See
<xref linkend="ssec-language-perl"/> for details.)
</para>
<para>
Python packages that use <varname>buildPythonPackage</varname> are
defined
in <link xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/top-level/python-packages.nix"><filename>pkgs/top-level/python-packages.nix</filename></link>.
Most of them are simple. For example:
<programlisting>
twisted = buildPythonPackage {
name = "twisted-8.1.0";
src = fetchurl {
url = http://tmrc.mit.edu/mirror/twisted/Twisted/8.1/Twisted-8.1.0.tar.bz2;
sha256 = "0q25zbr4xzknaghha72mq57kh53qw1bf8csgp63pm9sfi72qhirl";
};
propagatedBuildInputs = [ pkgs.ZopeInterface ];
meta = {
homepage = http://twistedmatrix.com/;
description = "Twisted, an event-driven networking engine written in Python";
license = "MIT";
};
};
</programlisting>
</para>
</section>
<section><title>Java</title>
<para>Java packages should install JAR files in
<filename>$out/lib/java</filename>.</para>
</section>
<!--
<section><title>Haskell</title>
<para>TODO</para>
</section>
<section><title>TeX / LaTeX</title>
<para>* Special support for building TeX documents</para>
</section>
-->
</chapter>

View File

@@ -1,244 +0,0 @@
<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>

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@@ -1,41 +0,0 @@
<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>$COQPATH</literal> environment variable by the hook defined
in the Coq derivation.
</para>
<para>
Some libraries require OCaml and sometimes also Camlp5. The exact
versions that were used to build Coq are saved in the
<literal>coq.ocaml</literal> and <literal>coq.camlp5</literal>
attributes.
</para>
<para>
Here is a simple package example. It is a pure Coq library, thus it
only depends on Coq. Its <literal>makefile</literal> has been
generated using <literal>coq_makefile</literal> so we only have to
set the <literal>$COQLIB</literal> variable at install time.
</para>
<programlisting>
{stdenv, fetchurl, coq}:
stdenv.mkDerivation {
src = fetchurl {
url = http://coq.inria.fr/pylons/contribs/files/Karatsuba/v8.4/Karatsuba.tar.gz;
sha256 = "0ymfpv4v49k4fm63nq6gcl1hbnnxrvjjp7yzc4973n49b853c5b1";
};
name = "coq-karatsuba";
buildInputs = [ coq ];
installFlags = "COQLIB=$(out)/lib/coq/${coq.coq-version}/";
}
</programlisting>
</section>

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@@ -1,124 +0,0 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="sec-language-go">
<title>Go</title>
<para>The function <varname>buildGoPackage</varname> builds
standard Go packages.
</para>
<example xml:id='ex-buildGoPackage'><title>buildGoPackage</title>
<programlisting>
net = buildGoPackage rec {
name = "go.net-${rev}";
goPackagePath = "golang.org/x/net"; <co xml:id='ex-buildGoPackage-1' />
subPackages = [ "ipv4" "ipv6" ]; <co xml:id='ex-buildGoPackage-2' />
rev = "e0403b4e005";
src = fetchFromGitHub {
inherit rev;
owner = "golang";
repo = "net";
sha256 = "1g7cjzw4g4301a3yqpbk8n1d4s97sfby2aysl275x04g0zh8jxqp";
};
goPackageAliases = [ "code.google.com/p/go.net" ]; <co xml:id='ex-buildGoPackage-3' />
propagatedBuildInputs = [ goPackages.text ]; <co xml:id='ex-buildGoPackage-4' />
buildFlags = "--tags release"; <co xml:id='ex-buildGoPackage-5' />
disabled = isGo13;<co xml:id='ex-buildGoPackage-6' />
};
</programlisting>
</example>
<para><xref linkend='ex-buildGoPackage'/> is an example expression using buildGoPackage,
the following arguments are of special significance to the function:
<calloutlist>
<callout arearefs='ex-buildGoPackage-1'>
<para>
<varname>goPackagePath</varname> specifies the package's canonical Go import path.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-buildGoPackage-2'>
<para>
<varname>subPackages</varname> limits the builder from building child packages that
have not been listed. If <varname>subPackages</varname> is not specified, all child
packages will be built.
</para>
<para>
In this example only <literal>code.google.com/p/go.net/ipv4</literal> and
<literal>code.google.com/p/go.net/ipv6</literal> will be built.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-buildGoPackage-3'>
<para>
<varname>goPackageAliases</varname> is a list of alternative import paths
that are valid for this library.
Packages that depend on this library will automatically rename
import paths that match any of the aliases to <literal>goPackagePath</literal>.
</para>
<para>
In this example imports will be renamed from
<literal>code.google.com/p/go.net</literal> to
<literal>golang.org/x/net</literal> in every package that depend on the
<literal>go.net</literal> library.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-buildGoPackage-4'>
<para>
<varname>propagatedBuildInputs</varname> is where the dependencies of a Go library are
listed. Only libraries should list <varname>propagatedBuildInputs</varname>. If a standalone
program is being built instead, use <varname>buildInputs</varname>. If a library's tests require
additional dependencies that are not propagated, they should be listed in <varname>buildInputs</varname>.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-buildGoPackage-5'>
<para>
<varname>buildFlags</varname> is a list of flags passed to the go build command.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-buildGoPackage-6'>
<para>
If <varname>disabled</varname> is <literal>true</literal>,
nix will refuse to build this package.
</para>
<para>
In this example the package will not be built for go 1.3. The <literal>isGo13</literal>
is an utility function that returns <literal>true</literal> if go used to build the
package has version 1.3.x.
</para>
</callout>
</calloutlist>
</para>
<para>
Reusable Go libraries may be found in the <varname>goPackages</varname> set. You can test
build a Go package as follows:
<screen>
$ nix-build -A goPackages.net
</screen>
</para>
<para>
You may use Go packages installed into the active Nix profiles by adding
the following to your ~/.bashrc:
<screen>
for p in $NIX_PROFILES; do
GOPATH="$p/share/go:$GOPATH"
done
</screen>
</para>
<para>To extract dependency information from a Go package in automated way use <link xlink:href="https://github.com/kamilchm/go2nix">go2nix</link>.</para>
</section>

View File

@@ -1,31 +0,0 @@
<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
xml:id="chap-language-support">
<title>Support for specific programming languages and frameworks</title>
<para>The <link linkend="chap-stdenv">standard build
environment</link> makes it easy to build typical Autotools-based
packages with very little code. Any other kind of package can be
accomodated by overriding the appropriate phases of
<literal>stdenv</literal>. However, there are specialised functions
in Nixpkgs to easily build packages for other programming languages,
such as Perl or Haskell. These are described in this chapter.</para>
<xi:include href="perl.xml" />
<xi:include href="python.xml" />
<xi:include href="ruby.xml" />
<xi:include href="go.xml" />
<xi:include href="java.xml" />
<xi:include href="lua.xml" />
<xi:include href="coq.xml" />
<xi:include href="idris.xml" /> <!-- generated from ../../pkgs/development/idris-modules/README.md -->
<xi:include href="r.xml" /> <!-- generated from ../../pkgs/development/r-modules/README.md -->
<xi:include href="qt.xml" />
<xi:include href="texlive.xml" />
<xi:include href="bower.xml" />
</chapter>

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@@ -1,84 +0,0 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="sec-language-java">
<title>Java</title>
<para>Ant-based Java packages are typically built from source as follows:
<programlisting>
stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "...";
src = fetchurl { ... };
buildInputs = [ jdk ant ];
buildPhase = "ant";
}
</programlisting>
Note that <varname>jdk</varname> is an alias for the OpenJDK.</para>
<para>JAR files that are intended to be used by other packages should
be installed in <filename>$out/share/java</filename>. The OpenJDK has
a stdenv setup hook that adds any JARs in the
<filename>share/java</filename> directories of the build inputs to the
<envar>CLASSPATH</envar> environment variable. For instance, if the
package <literal>libfoo</literal> installs a JAR named
<filename>foo.jar</filename> in its <filename>share/java</filename>
directory, and another package declares the attribute
<programlisting>
buildInputs = [ jdk libfoo ];
</programlisting>
then <envar>CLASSPATH</envar> will be set to
<filename>/nix/store/...-libfoo/share/java/foo.jar</filename>.</para>
<para>Private JARs
should be installed in a location like
<filename>$out/share/<replaceable>package-name</replaceable></filename>.</para>
<para>If your Java package provides a program, you need to generate a
wrapper script to run it using the OpenJRE. You can use
<literal>makeWrapper</literal> for this:
<programlisting>
buildInputs = [ makeWrapper ];
installPhase =
''
mkdir -p $out/bin
makeWrapper ${jre}/bin/java $out/bin/foo \
--add-flags "-cp $out/share/java/foo.jar org.foo.Main"
'';
</programlisting>
Note the use of <literal>jre</literal>, which is the part of the
OpenJDK package that contains the Java Runtime Environment. By using
<literal>${jre}/bin/java</literal> instead of
<literal>${jdk}/bin/java</literal>, you prevent your package from
depending on the JDK at runtime.</para>
<para>It is possible to use a different Java compiler than
<command>javac</command> from the OpenJDK. For instance, to use the
Eclipse Java Compiler:
<programlisting>
buildInputs = [ jre ant ecj ];
</programlisting>
(Note that here you dont need the full JDK as an input, but just the
JRE.) The ECJ has a stdenv setup hook that sets some environment
variables to cause Ant to use ECJ, but this doesnt work with all Ant
files. Similarly, you can use the GNU Java Compiler:
<programlisting>
buildInputs = [ gcj ant ];
</programlisting>
Here, Ant will automatically use <command>gij</command> (the GNU Java
Runtime) instead of the OpenJRE.</para>
</section>

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@@ -1,51 +0,0 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="sec-language-lua">
<title>Lua</title>
<para>
Lua packages are built by the <varname>buildLuaPackage</varname> function. This function is
implemented
in <link xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/development/lua-modules/generic/default.nix">
<filename>pkgs/development/lua-modules/generic/default.nix</filename></link>
and works similarly to <varname>buildPerlPackage</varname>. (See
<xref linkend="sec-language-perl"/> for details.)
</para>
<para>
Lua packages are defined
in <link xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/top-level/lua-packages.nix"><filename>pkgs/top-level/lua-packages.nix</filename></link>.
Most of them are simple. For example:
<programlisting>
fileSystem = buildLuaPackage {
name = "filesystem-1.6.2";
src = fetchurl {
url = "https://github.com/keplerproject/luafilesystem/archive/v1_6_2.tar.gz";
sha256 = "1n8qdwa20ypbrny99vhkmx8q04zd2jjycdb5196xdhgvqzk10abz";
};
meta = {
homepage = "https://github.com/keplerproject/luafilesystem";
hydraPlatforms = stdenv.lib.platforms.linux;
maintainers = with maintainers; [ flosse ];
};
};
</programlisting>
</para>
<para>
Though, more complicated package should be placed in a seperate file in
<link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/development/lua-modules"><filename>pkgs/development/lua-modules</filename></link>.
</para>
<para>
Lua packages accept additional parameter <varname>disabled</varname>, which defines
the condition of disabling package from luaPackages. For example, if package has
<varname>disabled</varname> assigned to <literal>lua.luaversion != "5.1"</literal>,
it will not be included in any luaPackages except lua51Packages, making it
only be built for lua 5.1.
</para>
</section>

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@@ -1,181 +0,0 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="sec-language-perl">
<title>Perl</title>
<para>Nixpkgs provides a function <varname>buildPerlPackage</varname>,
a generic package builder function for any Perl package that has a
standard <varname>Makefile.PL</varname>. Its implemented in <link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/development/perl-modules/generic"><filename>pkgs/development/perl-modules/generic</filename></link>.</para>
<para>Perl packages from CPAN are defined in <link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/top-level/perl-packages.nix"><filename>pkgs/top-level/perl-packages.nix</filename></link>,
rather than <filename>pkgs/all-packages.nix</filename>. Most Perl
packages are so straight-forward to build that they are defined here
directly, rather than having a separate function for each package
called from <filename>perl-packages.nix</filename>. However, more
complicated packages should be put in a separate file, typically in
<filename>pkgs/development/perl-modules</filename>. Here is an
example of the former:
<programlisting>
ClassC3 = buildPerlPackage rec {
name = "Class-C3-0.21";
src = fetchurl {
url = "mirror://cpan/authors/id/F/FL/FLORA/${name}.tar.gz";
sha256 = "1bl8z095y4js66pwxnm7s853pi9czala4sqc743fdlnk27kq94gz";
};
};
</programlisting>
Note the use of <literal>mirror://cpan/</literal>, and the
<literal>${name}</literal> in the URL definition to ensure that the
name attribute is consistent with the source that were actually
downloading. Perl packages are made available in
<filename>all-packages.nix</filename> through the variable
<varname>perlPackages</varname>. For instance, if you have a package
that needs <varname>ClassC3</varname>, you would typically write
<programlisting>
foo = import ../path/to/foo.nix {
inherit stdenv fetchurl ...;
inherit (perlPackages) ClassC3;
};
</programlisting>
in <filename>all-packages.nix</filename>. You can test building a
Perl package as follows:
<screen>
$ nix-build -A perlPackages.ClassC3
</screen>
<varname>buildPerlPackage</varname> adds <literal>perl-</literal> to
the start of the name attribute, so the package above is actually
called <literal>perl-Class-C3-0.21</literal>. So to install it, you
can say:
<screen>
$ nix-env -i perl-Class-C3
</screen>
(Of course you can also install using the attribute name:
<literal>nix-env -i -A perlPackages.ClassC3</literal>.)</para>
<para>So what does <varname>buildPerlPackage</varname> do? It does
the following:
<orderedlist>
<listitem><para>In the configure phase, it calls <literal>perl
Makefile.PL</literal> to generate a Makefile. You can set the
variable <varname>makeMakerFlags</varname> to pass flags to
<filename>Makefile.PL</filename></para></listitem>
<listitem><para>It adds the contents of the <envar>PERL5LIB</envar>
environment variable to <literal>#! .../bin/perl</literal> line of
Perl scripts as <literal>-I<replaceable>dir</replaceable></literal>
flags. This ensures that a script can find its
dependencies.</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>In the fixup phase, it writes the propagated build
inputs (<varname>propagatedBuildInputs</varname>) to the file
<filename>$out/nix-support/propagated-user-env-packages</filename>.
<command>nix-env</command> recursively installs all packages listed
in this file when you install a package that has it. This ensures
that a Perl package can find its dependencies.</para></listitem>
</orderedlist>
</para>
<para><varname>buildPerlPackage</varname> is built on top of
<varname>stdenv</varname>, so everything can be customised in the
usual way. For instance, the <literal>BerkeleyDB</literal> module has
a <varname>preConfigure</varname> hook to generate a configuration
file used by <filename>Makefile.PL</filename>:
<programlisting>
{ buildPerlPackage, fetchurl, db }:
buildPerlPackage rec {
name = "BerkeleyDB-0.36";
src = fetchurl {
url = "mirror://cpan/authors/id/P/PM/PMQS/${name}.tar.gz";
sha256 = "07xf50riarb60l1h6m2dqmql8q5dij619712fsgw7ach04d8g3z1";
};
preConfigure = ''
echo "LIB = ${db}/lib" > config.in
echo "INCLUDE = ${db}/include" >> config.in
'';
}
</programlisting>
</para>
<para>Dependencies on other Perl packages can be specified in the
<varname>buildInputs</varname> and
<varname>propagatedBuildInputs</varname> attributes. If something is
exclusively a build-time dependency, use
<varname>buildInputs</varname>; if its (also) a runtime dependency,
use <varname>propagatedBuildInputs</varname>. For instance, this
builds a Perl module that has runtime dependencies on a bunch of other
modules:
<programlisting>
ClassC3Componentised = buildPerlPackage rec {
name = "Class-C3-Componentised-1.0004";
src = fetchurl {
url = "mirror://cpan/authors/id/A/AS/ASH/${name}.tar.gz";
sha256 = "0xql73jkcdbq4q9m0b0rnca6nrlvf5hyzy8is0crdk65bynvs8q1";
};
propagatedBuildInputs = [
ClassC3 ClassInspector TestException MROCompat
];
};
</programlisting>
</para>
<section xml:id="ssec-generation-from-CPAN"><title>Generation from CPAN</title>
<para>Nix expressions for Perl packages can be generated (almost)
automatically from CPAN. This is done by the program
<command>nix-generate-from-cpan</command>, which can be installed
as follows:</para>
<screen>
$ nix-env -i nix-generate-from-cpan
</screen>
<para>This program takes a Perl module name, looks it up on CPAN,
fetches and unpacks the corresponding package, and prints a Nix
expression on standard output. For example:
<screen>
$ nix-generate-from-cpan XML::Simple
XMLSimple = buildPerlPackage {
name = "XML-Simple-2.20";
src = fetchurl {
url = mirror://cpan/authors/id/G/GR/GRANTM/XML-Simple-2.20.tar.gz;
sha256 = "5cff13d0802792da1eb45895ce1be461903d98ec97c9c953bc8406af7294434a";
};
propagatedBuildInputs = [ XMLNamespaceSupport XMLSAX XMLSAXExpat ];
meta = {
description = "Easily read/write XML (esp config files)";
license = "perl";
};
};
</screen>
The output can be pasted into
<filename>pkgs/top-level/perl-packages.nix</filename> or wherever else
you need it.</para>
</section>
</section>

View File

@@ -1,715 +0,0 @@
# Python
## User Guide
Several versions of Python are available on Nix as well as a high amount of
packages. The default interpreter is CPython 2.7.
### Using Python
#### Installing Python and packages
It is important to make a distinction between Python packages that are
used as libraries, and applications that are written in Python.
Applications on Nix are installed typically into your user
profile imperatively using `nix-env -i`, and on NixOS declaratively by adding the
package name to `environment.systemPackages` in `/etc/nixos/configuration.nix`.
Dependencies such as libraries are automatically installed and should not be
installed explicitly.
The same goes for Python applications and libraries. Python applications can be
installed in your profile, but Python libraries you would like to use to develop
cannot. If you do install libraries in your profile, then you will end up with
import errors.
#### Python environments using `nix-shell`
The recommended method for creating Python environments for development is with
`nix-shell`. Executing
```sh
$ nix-shell -p python35Packages.numpy python35Packages.toolz
```
opens a Nix shell which has available the requested packages and dependencies.
Now you can launch the Python interpreter (which is itself a dependency)
```sh
[nix-shell:~] python3
```
If the packages were not available yet in the Nix store, Nix would download or
build them automatically. A convenient option with `nix-shell` is the `--run`
option, with which you can execute a command in the `nix-shell`. Let's say we
want the above environment and directly run the Python interpreter
```sh
$ nix-shell -p python35Packages.numpy python35Packages.toolz --run "python3"
```
This way you can use the `--run` option also to directly run a script
```sh
$ nix-shell -p python35Packages.numpy python35Packages.toolz --run "python3 myscript.py"
```
In fact, for this specific use case there is a more convenient method. You can
add a [shebang](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shebang_(Unix)) to your script
specifying which dependencies Nix shell needs. With the following shebang, you
can use `nix-shell myscript.py` and it will make available all dependencies and
run the script in the `python3` shell.
```py
#! /usr/bin/env nix-shell
#! nix-shell -i python3 -p python3Packages.numpy
import numpy
print(numpy.__version__)
```
Likely you do not want to type your dependencies each and every time. What you
can do is write a simple Nix expression which sets up an environment for you,
requiring you only to type `nix-shell`. Say we want to have Python 3.5, `numpy`
and `toolz`, like before, in an environment. With a `shell.nix` file
containing
```nix
with import <nixpkgs> {};
(pkgs.python35.buildEnv.override {
extraLibs = with pkgs.python35Packages; [ numpy toolz ];
}).env
```
executing `nix-shell` gives you again a Nix shell from which you can run Python.
What's happening here?
1. We begin with importing the Nix Packages collections. `import <nixpkgs>` import the `<nixpkgs>` function, `{}` calls it and the `with` statement brings all attributes of `nixpkgs` in the local scope. Therefore we can now use `pkgs`.
2. Then we create a Python 3.5 environment with `pkgs.buildEnv`. Because we want to use it with a custom set of Python packages, we override it.
3. The `extraLibs` argument of the original `buildEnv` function can be used to specify which packages should be included. We want `numpy` and `toolz`. Again, we use the `with` statement to bring a set of attributes into the local scope.
4. And finally, for in interactive use we return the environment.
### Developing with Python
Now that you know how to get a working Python environment on Nix, it is time to go forward and start actually developing with Python.
We will first have a look at how Python packages are packaged on Nix. Then, we will look how you can use development mode with your code.
#### Python packaging on Nix
On Nix all packages are built by functions. The main function in Nix for building Python packages is [`buildPythonPackage`](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/development/python-modules/generic/default.nix).
Let's see how we would build the `toolz` package. According to [`python-packages.nix`](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/master/pkgs/top-level/python-packages.nix) `toolz` is build using
```nix
toolz = buildPythonPackage rec{
name = "toolz-${version}";
version = "0.7.4";
src = pkgs.fetchurl{
url = "mirror://pypi/t/toolz/toolz-${version}.tar.gz";
sha256 = "43c2c9e5e7a16b6c88ba3088a9bfc82f7db8e13378be7c78d6c14a5f8ed05afd";
};
meta = {
homepage = "http://github.com/pytoolz/toolz/";
description = "List processing tools and functional utilities";
license = licenses.bsd3;
maintainers = with maintainers; [ fridh ];
};
};
```
What happens here? The function `buildPythonPackage` is called and as argument
it accepts a set. In this case the set is a recursive set ([`rec`](http://nixos.org/nix/manual/#sec-constructs)).
One of the arguments is the name of the package, which consists of a basename
(generally following the name on PyPi) and a version. Another argument, `src`
specifies the source, which in this case is fetched from an url. `fetchurl` not
only downloads the target file, but also validates its hash. Furthermore, we
specify some (optional) [meta information](http://nixos.org/nixpkgs/manual/#chap-meta).
The output of the function is a derivation, which is an attribute with the name
`toolz` of the set `pythonPackages`. Actually, sets are created for all interpreter versions,
so `python27Packages`, `python34Packages`, `python35Packages` and `pypyPackages`.
The above example works when you're directly working on
`pkgs/top-level/python-packages.nix` in the Nixpkgs repository. Often though,
you will want to test a Nix expression outside of the Nixpkgs tree. If you
create a `shell.nix` file with the following contents
```nix
with import <nixpkgs> {};
pkgs.python35Packages.buildPythonPackage rec {
name = "toolz-${version}";
version = "0.7.4";
src = pkgs.fetchurl{
url = "mirror://pypi/t/toolz/toolz-${version}.tar.gz";
sha256 = "43c2c9e5e7a16b6c88ba3088a9bfc82f7db8e13378be7c78d6c14a5f8ed05afd";
};
meta = {
homepage = "http://github.com/pytoolz/toolz/";
description = "List processing tools and functional utilities";
license = licenses.bsd3;
maintainers = with maintainers; [ fridh ];
};
}
```
and then execute `nix-shell` will result in an environment in which you can use
Python 3.5 and the `toolz` package. As you can see we had to explicitly mention
for which Python version we want to build a package.
The above example considered only a single package. Generally you will want to use multiple packages.
If we create a `shell.nix` file with the following contents
```nix
with import <nixpkgs> {};
( let
toolz = pkgs.python35Packages.buildPythonPackage rec {
name = "toolz-${version}";
version = "0.7.4";
src = pkgs.fetchurl{
url = "mirror://pypi/t/toolz/toolz-${version}.tar.gz";
sha256 = "43c2c9e5e7a16b6c88ba3088a9bfc82f7db8e13378be7c78d6c14a5f8ed05afd";
};
meta = {
homepage = "http://github.com/pytoolz/toolz/";
description = "List processing tools and functional utilities";
license = licenses.bsd3;
maintainers = with maintainers; [ fridh ];
};
};
in pkgs.python35.buildEnv.override rec {
extraLibs = [ pkgs.python35Packages.numpy toolz ];
}
).env
```
and again execute `nix-shell`, then we get a Python 3.5 environment with our
locally defined package as well as `numpy` which is build according to the
definition in Nixpkgs. What did we do here? Well, we took the Nix expression
that we used earlier to build a Python environment, and said that we wanted to
include our own version of `toolz`. To introduce our own package in the scope of
`buildEnv.override` we used a
[`let`](http://nixos.org/nix/manual/#sec-constructs) expression.
### Handling dependencies
Our example, `toolz`, doesn't have any dependencies on other Python
packages or system libraries. According to the manual, `buildPythonPackage`
uses the arguments `buildInputs` and `propagatedBuildInputs` to specify dependencies. If something is
exclusively a build-time dependency, then the dependency should be included as a
`buildInput`, but if it is (also) a runtime dependency, then it should be added
to `propagatedBuildInputs`. Test dependencies are considered build-time dependencies.
The following example shows which arguments are given to `buildPythonPackage` in
order to build [`datashape`](https://github.com/blaze/datashape).
```nix
datashape = buildPythonPackage rec {
name = "datashape-${version}";
version = "0.4.7";
src = pkgs.fetchurl {
url = "mirror://pypi/D/DataShape/${name}.tar.gz";
sha256 = "14b2ef766d4c9652ab813182e866f493475e65e558bed0822e38bf07bba1a278";
};
buildInputs = with self; [ pytest ];
propagatedBuildInputs = with self; [ numpy multipledispatch dateutil ];
meta = {
homepage = https://github.com/ContinuumIO/datashape;
description = "A data description language";
license = licenses.bsd2;
maintainers = with maintainers; [ fridh ];
};
};
```
We can see several runtime dependencies, `numpy`, `multipledispatch`, and
`dateutil`. Furthermore, we have one `buildInput`, i.e. `pytest`. `pytest` is a
test runner and is only used during the `checkPhase` and is therefore not added
to `propagatedBuildInputs`.
In the previous case we had only dependencies on other Python packages to consider.
Occasionally you have also system libraries to consider. E.g., `lxml` provides
Python bindings to `libxml2` and `libxslt`. These libraries are only required
when building the bindings and are therefore added as `buildInputs`.
```nix
lxml = buildPythonPackage rec {
name = "lxml-3.4.4";
src = pkgs.fetchurl {
url = "mirror://pypi/l/lxml/${name}.tar.gz";
sha256 = "16a0fa97hym9ysdk3rmqz32xdjqmy4w34ld3rm3jf5viqjx65lxk";
};
buildInputs = with self; [ pkgs.libxml2 pkgs.libxslt ];
meta = {
description = "Pythonic binding for the libxml2 and libxslt libraries";
homepage = http://lxml.de;
license = licenses.bsd3;
maintainers = with maintainers; [ sjourdois ];
};
};
```
In this example `lxml` and Nix are able to work out exactly where the relevant
files of the dependencies are. This is not always the case.
The example below shows bindings to The Fastest Fourier Transform in the West, commonly known as
FFTW. On Nix we have separate packages of FFTW for the different types of floats
(`"single"`, `"double"`, `"long-double"`). The bindings need all three types,
and therefore we add all three as `buildInputs`. The bindings don't expect to
find each of them in a different folder, and therefore we have to set `LDFLAGS`
and `CFLAGS`.
```nix
pyfftw = buildPythonPackage rec {
name = "pyfftw-${version}";
version = "0.9.2";
src = pkgs.fetchurl {
url = "mirror://pypi/p/pyFFTW/pyFFTW-${version}.tar.gz";
sha256 = "f6bbb6afa93085409ab24885a1a3cdb8909f095a142f4d49e346f2bd1b789074";
};
buildInputs = [ pkgs.fftw pkgs.fftwFloat pkgs.fftwLongDouble];
propagatedBuildInputs = with self; [ numpy scipy ];
# Tests cannot import pyfftw. pyfftw works fine though.
doCheck = false;
LDFLAGS="-L${pkgs.fftw}/lib -L${pkgs.fftwFloat}/lib -L${pkgs.fftwLongDouble}/lib"
CFLAGS="-I${pkgs.fftw}/include -I${pkgs.fftwFloat}/include -I${pkgs.fftwLongDouble}/include"
'';
meta = {
description = "A pythonic wrapper around FFTW, the FFT library, presenting a unified interface for all the supported transforms";
homepage = http://hgomersall.github.com/pyFFTW/;
license = with licenses; [ bsd2 bsd3 ];
maintainer = with maintainers; [ fridh ];
};
};
```
Note also the line `doCheck = false;`, we explicitly disabled running the test-suite.
#### Develop local package
As a Python developer you're likely aware of [development mode](http://pythonhosted.org/setuptools/setuptools.html#development-mode) (`python setup.py develop`);
instead of installing the package this command creates a special link to the project code.
That way, you can run updated code without having to reinstall after each and every change you make.
Development mode is also available on Nix as [explained](http://nixos.org/nixpkgs/manual/#ssec-python-development) in the Nixpkgs manual.
Let's see how you can use it.
In the previous Nix expression the source was fetched from an url. We can also refer to a local source instead using
```nix
src = ./path/to/source/tree;
```
If we create a `shell.nix` file which calls `buildPythonPackage`, and if `src`
is a local source, and if the local source has a `setup.py`, then development
mode is activated.
In the following example we create a simple environment that
has a Python 3.5 version of our package in it, as well as its dependencies and
other packages we like to have in the environment, all specified with `propagatedBuildInputs`.
Indeed, we can just add any package we like to have in our environment to `propagatedBuildInputs`.
```nix
with import <nixpkgs>;
with pkgs.python35Packages;
buildPythonPackage rec {
name = "mypackage";
src = ./path/to/package/source;
propagatedBuildInputs = [ pytest numpy pkgs.libsndfile ];
};
```
It is important to note that due to how development mode is implemented on Nix it is not possible to have multiple packages simultaneously in development mode.
### Organising your packages
So far we discussed how you can use Python on Nix, and how you can develop with
it. We've looked at how you write expressions to package Python packages, and we
looked at how you can create environments in which specified packages are
available.
At some point you'll likely have multiple packages which you would
like to be able to use in different projects. In order to minimise unnecessary
duplication we now look at how you can maintain yourself a repository with your
own packages. The important functions here are `import` and `callPackage`.
### Including a derivation using `callPackage`
Earlier we created a Python environment using `buildEnv`, and included the
`toolz` package via a `let` expression.
Let's split the package definition from the environment definition.
We first create a function that builds `toolz` in `~/path/to/toolz/release.nix`
```nix
{ pkgs, buildPythonPackage }:
buildPythonPackage rec {
name = "toolz-${version}";
version = "0.7.4";
src = pkgs.fetchurl{
url = "mirror://pypi/t/toolz/toolz-${version}.tar.gz";
sha256 = "43c2c9e5e7a16b6c88ba3088a9bfc82f7db8e13378be7c78d6c14a5f8ed05afd";
};
meta = {
homepage = "http://github.com/pytoolz/toolz/";
description = "List processing tools and functional utilities";
license = licenses.bsd3;
maintainers = with maintainers; [ fridh ];
};
};
```
It takes two arguments, `pkgs` and `buildPythonPackage`.
We now call this function using `callPackage` in the definition of our environment
```nix
with import <nixpkgs> {};
( let
toolz = pkgs.callPackage ~/path/to/toolz/release.nix { pkgs=pkgs; buildPythonPackage=pkgs.python35Packages.buildPythonPackage; };
in pkgs.python35.buildEnv.override rec {
extraLibs = [ pkgs.python35Packages.numpy toolz ];
}
).env
```
Important to remember is that the Python version for which the package is made
depends on the `python` derivation that is passed to `buildPythonPackage`. Nix
tries to automatically pass arguments when possible, which is why generally you
don't explicitly define which `python` derivation should be used. In the above
example we use `buildPythonPackage` that is part of the set `python35Packages`,
and in this case the `python35` interpreter is automatically used.
## Reference
### Interpreters
Versions 2.6, 2.7, 3.3, 3.4 and 3.5 of the CPython interpreter are available on
Nix and are available as `python26`, `python27`, `python33`, `python34` and
`python35`. The PyPy interpreter is also available as `pypy`. Currently, the
aliases `python` and `python3` correspond to respectively `python27` and
`python35`. The Nix expressions for the interpreters can be found in
`pkgs/development/interpreters/python`.
#### Missing modules standard library
The interpreters `python26` and `python27` do not include modules that
require external dependencies. This is done in order to reduce the closure size.
The following modules need to be added as `buildInput` explicitly:
* `python.modules.bsddb`
* `python.modules.curses`
* `python.modules.curses_panel`
* `python.modules.crypt`
* `python.modules.gdbm`
* `python.modules.sqlite3`
* `python.modules.tkinter`
* `python.modules.readline`
For convenience `python27Full` and `python26Full` are provided with all
modules included.
All packages depending on any Python interpreter get appended
`out/{python.sitePackages}` to `$PYTHONPATH` if such directory
exists.
#### Attributes on interpreters packages
Each interpreter has the following attributes:
- `libPrefix`. Name of the folder in `${python}/lib/` for corresponding interpreter.
- `interpreter`. Alias for `${python}/bin/${executable}`.
- `buildEnv`. Function to build python interpreter environments with extra packages bundled together. See section *python.buildEnv function* for usage and documentation.
- `sitePackages`. Alias for `lib/${libPrefix}/site-packages`.
- `executable`. Name of the interpreter executable, ie `python3.4`.
### Building packages and applications
Python packages (libraries) and applications that use `setuptools` or
`distutils` are typically built with respectively the `buildPythonPackage` and
`buildPythonApplication` functions.
All Python packages reside in `pkgs/top-level/python-packages.nix` and all
applications elsewhere. Some packages are also defined in
`pkgs/development/python-modules`. It is important that these packages are
called in `pkgs/top-level/python-packages.nix` and not elsewhere, to guarantee
the right version of the package is built.
Based on the packages defined in `pkgs/top-level/python-packages.nix` an
attribute set is created for each available Python interpreter. The available
sets are
* `pkgs.python26Packages`
* `pkgs.python27Packages`
* `pkgs.python33Packages`
* `pkgs.python34Packages`
* `pkgs.python35Packages`
* `pkgs.pypyPackages`
and the aliases
* `pkgs.pythonPackages` pointing to `pkgs.python27Packages`
* `pkgs.python3Packages` pointing to `pkgs.python35Packages`
#### `buildPythonPackage` function
The `buildPythonPackage` function is implemented in
`pkgs/development/python-modules/generic/default.nix`
and can be used as:
twisted = buildPythonPackage {
name = "twisted-8.1.0";
src = pkgs.fetchurl {
url = http://tmrc.mit.edu/mirror/twisted/Twisted/8.1/Twisted-8.1.0.tar.bz2;
sha256 = "0q25zbr4xzknaghha72mq57kh53qw1bf8csgp63pm9sfi72qhirl";
};
propagatedBuildInputs = [ self.ZopeInterface ];
meta = {
homepage = http://twistedmatrix.com/;
description = "Twisted, an event-driven networking engine written in Python";
license = stdenv.lib.licenses.mit; };
};
The `buildPythonPackage` mainly does four things:
* In the `buildPhase`, it calls `${python.interpreter} setup.py bdist_wheel` to build a wheel binary zipfile.
* In the `installPhase`, it installs the wheel file using `pip install *.whl`.
* In the `postFixup` phase, the `wrapPythonPrograms` bash function is called to wrap all programs in the `$out/bin/*` directory to include `$PYTHONPATH` and `$PATH` environment variables.
* In the `installCheck` phase, `${python.interpreter} setup.py test` is ran.
As in Perl, dependencies on other Python packages can be specified in the
`buildInputs` and `propagatedBuildInputs` attributes. If something is
exclusively a build-time dependency, use `buildInputs`; if its (also) a runtime
dependency, use `propagatedBuildInputs`.
By default tests are run because `doCheck = true`. Test dependencies, like
e.g. the test runner, should be added to `buildInputs`.
By default `meta.platforms` is set to the same value
as the interpreter unless overriden otherwise.
##### `buildPythonPackage` parameters
All parameters from `mkDerivation` function are still supported.
* `namePrefix`: Prepended text to `${name}` parameter. Defaults to `"python3.3-"` for Python 3.3, etc. Set it to `""` if you're packaging an application or a command line tool.
* `disabled`: If `true`, package is not build for particular python interpreter version. Grep around `pkgs/top-level/python-packages.nix` for examples.
* `setupPyBuildFlags`: List of flags passed to `setup.py build_ext` command.
* `pythonPath`: List of packages to be added into `$PYTHONPATH`. Packages in `pythonPath` are not propagated (contrary to `propagatedBuildInputs`).
* `preShellHook`: Hook to execute commands before `shellHook`.
* `postShellHook`: Hook to execute commands after `shellHook`.
* `makeWrapperArgs`: A list of strings. Arguments to be passed to `makeWrapper`, which wraps generated binaries. By default, the arguments to `makeWrapper` set `PATH` and `PYTHONPATH` environment variables before calling the binary. Additional arguments here can allow a developer to set environment variables which will be available when the binary is run. For example, `makeWrapperArgs = ["--set FOO BAR" "--set BAZ QUX"]`.
* `installFlags`: A list of strings. Arguments to be passed to `pip install`. To pass options to `python setup.py install`, use `--install-option`. E.g., `installFlags=["--install-option='--cpp_implementation'"].
* `format`: Format of the source. Options are `setup` for when the source has a `setup.py` and `setuptools` is used to build a wheel, and `wheel` in case the source is already a binary wheel. The default value is `setup`.
#### `buildPythonApplication` function
The `buildPythonApplication` function is practically the same as `buildPythonPackage`.
The difference is that `buildPythonPackage` by default prefixes the names of the packages with the version of the interpreter.
Because with an application we're not interested in multiple version the prefix is dropped.
#### python.buildEnv function
Python environments can be created using the low-level `pkgs.buildEnv` function.
This example shows how to create an environment that has the Pyramid Web Framework.
Saving the following as `default.nix`
with import {};
python.buildEnv.override {
extraLibs = [ pkgs.pythonPackages.pyramid ];
ignoreCollisions = true;
}
and running `nix-build` will create
/nix/store/cf1xhjwzmdki7fasgr4kz6di72ykicl5-python-2.7.8-env
with wrapped binaries in `bin/`.
You can also use the `env` attribute to create local environments with needed
packages installed. This is somewhat comparable to `virtualenv`. For example,
running `nix-shell` with the following `shell.nix`
with import {};
(python3.buildEnv.override {
extraLibs = with python3Packages; [ numpy requests ];
}).env
will drop you into a shell where Python will have the
specified packages in its path.
##### `python.buildEnv` arguments
* `extraLibs`: List of packages installed inside the environment.
* `postBuild`: Shell command executed after the build of environment.
* `ignoreCollisions`: Ignore file collisions inside the environment (default is `false`).
### Development mode
Development or editable mode is supported. To develop Python packages
`buildPythonPackage` has additional logic inside `shellPhase` to run `pip
install -e . --prefix $TMPDIR/`for the package.
Warning: `shellPhase` is executed only if `setup.py` exists.
Given a `default.nix`:
with import {};
buildPythonPackage { name = "myproject";
buildInputs = with pkgs.pythonPackages; [ pyramid ];
src = ./.; }
Running `nix-shell` with no arguments should give you
the environment in which the package would be build with
`nix-build`.
Shortcut to setup environments with C headers/libraries and python packages:
$ nix-shell -p pythonPackages.pyramid zlib libjpeg git
Note: There is a boolean value `lib.inNixShell` set to `true` if nix-shell is invoked.
### Tools
Packages inside nixpkgs are written by hand. However many tools exist in
community to help save time. No tool is preferred at the moment.
- [python2nix](https://github.com/proger/python2nix) by Vladimir Kirillov
- [pypi2nix](https://github.com/garbas/pypi2nix) by Rok Garbas
- [pypi2nix](https://github.com/offlinehacker/pypi2nix) by Jaka Hudoklin
## FAQ
### How to solve circular dependencies?
Consider the packages `A` and `B` that depend on each other. When packaging `B`,
a solution is to override package `A` not to depend on `B` as an input. The same
should also be done when packaging `A`.
### How to override a Python package?
Recursively updating a package can be done with `pkgs.overridePackages` as explained in the Nixpkgs manual.
Python attribute sets are created for each interpreter version. We will therefore override the attribute set for the interpreter version we're interested.
In the following example we change the name of the package `pandas` to `foo`.
```
newpkgs = pkgs.overridePackages(self: super: rec {
python35Packages = super.python35Packages.override {
self = python35Packages // { pandas = python35Packages.pandas.override{name="foo";};};
};
});
```
This can be tested with
```
with import <nixpkgs> {};
(let
newpkgs = pkgs.overridePackages(self: super: rec {
python35Packages = super.python35Packages.override {
self = python35Packages // { pandas = python35Packages.pandas.override{name="foo";};};
};
});
in newpkgs.python35.buildEnv.override{
extraLibs = [newpkgs.python35Packages.blaze ];
}).env
```
A typical use case is to switch to another version of a certain package. For example, in the Nixpkgs repository we have multiple versions of `django` and `scipy`.
In the following example we use a different version of `scipy`. All packages in `newpkgs` will now use the updated `scipy` version.
```
with import <nixpkgs> {};
(let
newpkgs = pkgs.overridePackages(self: super: rec {
python35Packages = super.python35Packages.override {
self = python35Packages // { scipy = python35Packages.scipy_0_16;};
};
});
in pkgs.python35.buildEnv.override{
extraLibs = [newpkgs.python35Packages.blaze ];
}).env
```
The requested package `blaze` depends upon `pandas` which itself depends on `scipy`.
### `install_data` / `data_files` problems
If you get the following error:
could not create '/nix/store/6l1bvljpy8gazlsw2aw9skwwp4pmvyxw-python-2.7.8/etc':
Permission denied
This is a [known bug](https://bitbucket.org/pypa/setuptools/issue/130/install_data-doesnt-respect-prefix) in setuptools.
Setuptools `install_data` does not respect `--prefix`. An example of such package using the feature is `pkgs/tools/X11/xpra/default.nix`.
As workaround install it as an extra `preInstall` step:
${python.interpreter} setup.py install_data --install-dir=$out --root=$out
sed -i '/ = data\_files/d' setup.py
### Rationale of non-existent global site-packages
On most operating systems a global `site-packages` is maintained. This however
becomes problematic if you want to run multiple Python versions or have multiple
versions of certain libraries for your projects. Generally, you would solve such
issues by creating virtual environments using `virtualenv`.
On Nix each package has an isolated dependency tree which, in the case of
Python, guarantees the right versions of the interpreter and libraries or
packages are available. There is therefore no need to maintain a global `site-packages`.
If you want to create a Python environment for development, then the recommended
method is to use `nix-shell`, either with or without the `python.buildEnv`
function.
## Contributing
### Contributing guidelines
Following rules are desired to be respected:
* Make sure package builds for all python interpreters. Use `disabled` argument to `buildPythonPackage` to set unsupported interpreters.
* If tests need to be disabled for a package, make sure you leave a comment about reasoning.
* Packages in `pkgs/top-level/python-packages.nix` are sorted quasi-alphabetically to avoid merge conflicts.
* Python libraries are supposed to be in `python-packages.nix` and packaged with `buildPythonPackage`. Python applications live outside of `python-packages.nix` and are packaged with `buildPythonApplication`.

View File

@@ -1,70 +0,0 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="sec-language-qt">
<title>Qt</title>
<para>The information in this section applies to Qt 5.5 and later.</para>
<para>Qt is an application development toolkit for C++. Although it is
not a distinct programming language, there are special considerations
for packaging Qt-based programs and libraries. A small set of tools
and conventions has grown out of these considerations.</para>
<section xml:id="ssec-qt-libraries"><title>Libraries</title>
<para>Packages that provide libraries should be listed in
<varname>qt5LibsFun</varname> so that the library is built with each
Qt version. A set of packages is provided for each version of Qt; for
example, <varname>qt5Libs</varname> always provides libraries built
with the latest version, <varname>qt55Libs</varname> provides
libraries built with Qt 5.5, and so on. To avoid version conflicts, no
top-level attributes are created for these packages.</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="ssec-qt-programs"><title>Programs</title>
<para>Application packages do not need to be built with every Qt
version. To ensure consistency between the package's dependencies,
call the package with <literal>qt5Libs.callPackage</literal> instead
of the usual <literal>callPackage</literal>. An older version may be
selected in case of incompatibility. For example, to build with Qt
5.5, call the package with
<literal>qt55Libs.callPackage</literal>.</para>
<para>Several environment variables must be set at runtime for Qt
applications to function correctly, including:</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem><para><envar>QT_PLUGIN_PATH</envar></para></listitem>
<listitem><para><envar>QML_IMPORT_PATH</envar></para></listitem>
<listitem><para><envar>QML2_IMPORT_PATH</envar></para></listitem>
<listitem><para><envar>XDG_DATA_DIRS</envar></para></listitem>
</itemizedlist>
<para>To ensure that these are set correctly, the program must be wrapped by
invoking <literal>wrapQtProgram <replaceable>program</replaceable></literal>
during installation (for example, during
<literal>fixupPhase</literal>). <literal>wrapQtProgram</literal>
accepts the same options as <literal>makeWrapper</literal>.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="ssec-qt-kde"><title>KDE</title>
<para>Many of the considerations above also apply to KDE packages,
especially the need to set the correct environment variables at
runtime. To ensure that this is done, invoke <literal>wrapKDEProgram
<replaceable>program</replaceable></literal> during
installation. <literal>wrapKDEProgram</literal> also generates a
<literal>ksycoca</literal> database so that required data and services
can be found. Like its Qt counterpart,
<literal>wrapKDEProgram</literal> accepts the same options as
<literal>makeWrapper</literal>.</para>
</section>
</section>

View File

@@ -1,79 +0,0 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="sec-language-ruby">
<title>Ruby</title>
<para>There currently is support to bundle applications that are packaged as Ruby gems. The utility "bundix" allows you to write a <filename>Gemfile</filename>, let bundler create a <filename>Gemfile.lock</filename>, and then convert
this into a nix expression that contains all Gem dependencies automatically.</para>
<para>For example, to package sensu, we did:</para>
<screen>
<![CDATA[$ cd pkgs/servers/monitoring
$ mkdir sensu
$ cd sensu
$ cat > Gemfile
source 'https://rubygems.org'
gem 'sensu'
$ nix-shell -p bundler --command "bundler package --path /tmp/vendor/bundle"
$ $(nix-build '<nixpkgs>' -A bundix)/bin/bundix
$ cat > default.nix
{ lib, bundlerEnv, ruby }:
bundlerEnv rec {
name = "sensu-${version}";
version = (import gemset).sensu.version;
inherit ruby;
gemfile = ./Gemfile;
lockfile = ./Gemfile.lock;
gemset = ./gemset.nix;
meta = with lib; {
description = "A monitoring framework that aims to be simple, malleable, and scalable";
homepage = http://sensuapp.org/;
license = with licenses; mit;
maintainers = with maintainers; [ theuni ];
platforms = platforms.unix;
};
}]]>
</screen>
<para>Please check in the <filename>Gemfile</filename>, <filename>Gemfile.lock</filename> and the <filename>gemset.nix</filename> so future updates can be run easily.
</para>
<para>Resulting derivations also have two helpful items, <literal>env</literal> and <literal>wrapper</literal>. The first one allows one to quickly drop into
<command>nix-shell</command> with the specified environment present. E.g. <command>nix-shell -A sensu.env</command> would give you an environment with Ruby preset
so it has all the libraries necessary for <literal>sensu</literal> in its paths. The second one can be used to make derivations from custom Ruby scripts which have
<filename>Gemfile</filename>s with their dependencies specified. It is a derivation with <command>ruby</command> wrapped so it can find all the needed dependencies.
For example, to make a derivation <literal>my-script</literal> for a <filename>my-script.rb</filename> (which should be placed in <filename>bin</filename>) you should
run <command>bundix</command> as specified above and then use <literal>bundlerEnv</literal> lile this:</para>
<programlisting>
<![CDATA[let env = bundlerEnv {
name = "my-script-env";
inherit ruby;
gemfile = ./Gemfile;
lockfile = ./Gemfile.lock;
gemset = ./gemset.nix;
};
in stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "my-script";
buildInputs = [ env.wrapper ];
script = ./my-script.rb;
buildCommand = ''
mkdir -p $out/bin
install -D -m755 $script $out/bin/my-script
patchShebangs $out/bin/my-script
'';
}]]>
</programlisting>
</section>

View File

@@ -1,59 +0,0 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="sec-language-texlive">
<title>TeX Live</title>
<para>Since release 15.09 there is a new TeX Live packaging that lives entirely under attribute <varname>texlive</varname>.</para>
<section><title>User's guide</title>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem><para>
For basic usage just pull <varname>texlive.combined.scheme-basic</varname> for an environment with basic LaTeX support.</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>
It typically won't work to use separately installed packages together.
Instead, you can build a custom set of packages like this:
<programlisting>
texlive.combine {
inherit (texlive) scheme-small collection-langkorean algorithms cm-super;
}
</programlisting>
There are all the schemes, collections and a few thousand packages, as defined upstream (perhaps with tiny differences).
</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>
By default you only get executables and files needed during runtime, and a little documentation for the core packages. To change that, you need to add <varname>pkgFilter</varname> function to <varname>combine</varname>.
<programlisting>
texlive.combine {
# inherit (texlive) whatever-you-want;
pkgFilter = pkg:
pkg.tlType == "run" || pkg.tlType == "bin" || pkg.pname == "cm-super";
# elem tlType [ "run" "bin" "doc" "source" ]
# there are also other attributes: version, name
}
</programlisting>
</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>
You can list packages e.g. by <command>nix-repl</command>.
<programlisting>
$ nix-repl
nix-repl> texlive.collection-&lt;TAB>
</programlisting>
</para></listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</section>
<section><title>Known problems</title>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem><para>
Some tools are still missing, e.g. luajittex;</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>
some apps aren't packaged/tested yet (asymptote, biber, etc.);</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>
feature/bug: when a package is rejected by <varname>pkgFilter</varname>, its dependencies are still propagated;</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>
in case of any bugs or feature requests, file a github issue or better a pull request and /cc @vcunat.</para></listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</section>
</section>

View File

@@ -3,25 +3,35 @@
<info>
<title>Nixpkgs Contributors Guide</title>
<title>Nixpkgs Manual</title>
<subtitle>Version <xi:include href=".version" parse="text" /></subtitle>
<subtitle>Draft (Version <xi:include href="../.version"
parse="text" />)</subtitle>
<author>
<personname>
<firstname>Eelco</firstname>
<surname>Dolstra</surname>
</personname>
<affiliation>
<orgname>LogicBlox</orgname>
</affiliation>
</author>
<copyright>
<year>2008-2012</year>
<holder>Eelco Dolstra</holder>
</copyright>
</info>
<xi:include href="introduction.xml" />
<xi:include href="quick-start.xml" />
<xi:include href="stdenv.xml" />
<xi:include href="multiple-output.xml" />
<xi:include href="configuration.xml" />
<xi:include href="functions.xml" />
<xi:include href="meta.xml" />
<xi:include href="languages-frameworks/index.xml" />
<xi:include href="language-support.xml" />
<xi:include href="package-notes.xml" />
<xi:include href="coding-conventions.xml" />
<xi:include href="submitting-changes.xml" />
<xi:include href="haskell-users-guide.xml" />
<xi:include href="beam-users-guide.xml" />
<xi:include href="contributing.xml" />
</book>

View File

@@ -17,9 +17,7 @@ meta = {
It is fully customizable.
'';
homepage = http://www.gnu.org/software/hello/manual/;
license = stdenv.lib.licenses.gpl3Plus;
maintainers = [ stdenv.lib.maintainers.eelco ];
platforms = stdenv.lib.platforms.all;
license = "GPLv3+";
};
</programlisting>
@@ -27,48 +25,22 @@ meta = {
<para>Meta-attributes are not passed to the builder of the package.
Thus, a change to a meta-attribute doesnt trigger a recompilation of
the package. The value of a meta-attribute must be a string.</para>
the package. The value of a meta-attribute must a string.</para>
<para>The meta-attributes of a package can be queried from the
command-line using <command>nix-env</command>:
<screen>
$ nix-env -qa hello --json
{
"hello": {
"meta": {
"description": "A program that produces a familiar, friendly greeting",
"homepage": "http://www.gnu.org/software/hello/manual/",
"license": {
"fullName": "GNU General Public License version 3 or later",
"shortName": "GPLv3+",
"url": "http://www.fsf.org/licensing/licenses/gpl.html"
},
"longDescription": "GNU Hello is a program that prints \"Hello, world!\" when you run it.\nIt is fully customizable.\n",
"maintainers": [
"Ludovic Court\u00e8s &lt;ludo@gnu.org>"
],
"platforms": [
"i686-linux",
"x86_64-linux",
"armv5tel-linux",
"armv7l-linux",
"mips64el-linux",
"x86_64-darwin",
"i686-cygwin",
"i686-freebsd",
"x86_64-freebsd",
"i686-openbsd",
"x86_64-openbsd"
],
"position": "/home/user/dev/nixpkgs/pkgs/applications/misc/hello/default.nix:14"
},
"name": "hello-2.9",
"system": "x86_64-linux"
}
}
$ nix-env -qa hello --meta --xml
&lt;?xml version='1.0' encoding='utf-8'?>
&lt;items>
&lt;item attrPath="hello" name="hello-2.3" system="i686-linux">
&lt;meta name="description" value="A program that produces a familiar, friendly greeting" />
&lt;meta name="homepage" value="http://www.gnu.org/software/hello/manual/" />
&lt;meta name="license" value="GPLv3+" />
&lt;meta name="longDescription" value="GNU Hello is a program that prints &amp;quot;Hello, world!&amp;quot; when you run it.&amp;#xA;It is fully customizable.&amp;#xA;" />
&lt;/item>
&lt;/items>
</screen>
<command>nix-env</command> knows about the
@@ -82,10 +54,10 @@ hello-2.3 A program that produces a familiar, friendly greeting
</para>
<section xml:id="sec-standard-meta-attributes"><title>Standard
meta-attributes</title>
<section><title>Standard meta-attributes</title>
<para>It is expected that each meta-attribute is one of the following:</para>
<para>The following meta-attributes have a standard
interpretation:</para>
<variablelist>
@@ -112,71 +84,28 @@ meta-attributes</title>
package.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>branch</varname></term>
<listitem><para>Release branch. Used to specify that a package is not
going to receive updates that are not in this branch; for example, Linux
kernel 3.0 is supposed to be updated to 3.0.X, not 3.1.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>homepage</varname></term>
<listitem><para>The packages homepage. Example:
<literal>http://www.gnu.org/software/hello/manual/</literal></para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>downloadPage</varname></term>
<listitem><para>The page where a link to the current version can be found. Example:
<literal>http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/hello/</literal></para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>license</varname></term>
<listitem>
<para>
The license, or licenses, for the package. One from the attribute set
defined in <link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/lib/licenses.nix">
<filename>nixpkgs/lib/licenses.nix</filename></link>. At this moment
using both a list of licenses and a single license is valid. If the
license field is in the form of a list representation, then it means
that parts of the package are licensed differently. Each license
should preferably be referenced by their attribute. The non-list
attribute value can also be a space delimited string representation of
the contained attribute shortNames or spdxIds. The following are all valid
examples:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem><para>Single license referenced by attribute (preferred)
<literal>stdenv.lib.licenses.gpl3</literal>.
</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>Single license referenced by its attribute shortName (frowned upon)
<literal>"gpl3"</literal>.
</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>Single license referenced by its attribute spdxId (frowned upon)
<literal>"GPL-3.0"</literal>.
</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>Multiple licenses referenced by attribute (preferred)
<literal>with stdenv.lib.licenses; [ asl20 free ofl ]</literal>.
</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>Multiple licenses referenced as a space delimited string of attribute shortNames (frowned upon)
<literal>"asl20 free ofl"</literal>.
</para></listitem>
</itemizedlist>
For details, see <xref linkend='sec-meta-license'/>.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem><para>The license for the package. See below for the
allowed values.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>maintainers</varname></term>
<listitem><para>A list of names and e-mail addresses of the
maintainers of this Nix expression. If
you would like to be a maintainer of a package, you may want to add
maintainers of this Nix expression, e.g. <literal>["Alice
&lt;alice@example.org>" "Bob &lt;bob@example.com>"]</literal>. If
you are the maintainer of multiple packages, you may want to add
yourself to <link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/lib/maintainers.nix"><filename>nixpkgs/lib/maintainers.nix</filename></link>
and write something like <literal>[ stdenv.lib.maintainers.alice
stdenv.lib.maintainers.bob ]</literal>.</para></listitem>
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/lib/maintainers.nix"><filename>pkgs/lib/maintainers.nix</filename></link>
and write something like <literal>[stdenv.lib.maintainers.alice
stdenv.lib.maintainers.bob]</literal>.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
@@ -189,62 +118,6 @@ meta-attributes</title>
package).</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>platforms</varname></term>
<listitem><para>The list of Nix platform types on which the
package is supported. Hydra builds packages according to the
platform specified. If no platform is specified, the package does
not have prebuilt binaries. An example is:
<programlisting>
meta.platforms = stdenv.lib.platforms.linux;
</programlisting>
Attribute Set <varname>stdenv.lib.platforms</varname> in
<link xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/lib/platforms.nix">
<filename>nixpkgs/lib/platforms.nix</filename></link> defines various common
lists of platforms types.
</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>hydraPlatforms</varname></term>
<listitem><para>The list of Nix platform types for which the Hydra
instance at <literal>hydra.nixos.org</literal> will build the
package. (Hydra is the Nix-based continuous build system.) It
defaults to the value of <varname>meta.platforms</varname>. Thus,
the only reason to set <varname>meta.hydraPlatforms</varname> is
if you want <literal>hydra.nixos.org</literal> to build the
package on a subset of <varname>meta.platforms</varname>, or not
at all, e.g.
<programlisting>
meta.platforms = stdenv.lib.platforms.linux;
meta.hydraPlatforms = [];
</programlisting>
</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>broken</varname></term>
<listitem><para>If set to <literal>true</literal>, the package is
marked as “broken”, meaning that it wont show up in
<literal>nix-env -qa</literal>, and cannot be built or installed.
Such packages should be removed from Nixpkgs eventually unless
they are fixed.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>updateWalker</varname></term>
<listitem><para>If set to <literal>true</literal>, the package is
tested to be updated correctly by the <literal>update-walker.sh</literal>
script without additional settings. Such packages have
<varname>meta.version</varname> set and their homepage (or
the page specified by <varname>meta.downloadPage</varname>) contains
a direct link to the package tarball.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
@@ -253,59 +126,107 @@ meta.hydraPlatforms = [];
<section xml:id="sec-meta-license"><title>Licenses</title>
<para>The <varname>meta.license</varname> attribute should preferrably contain
a value from <varname>stdenv.lib.licenses</varname> defined in
<link xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/lib/licenses.nix">
<filename>nixpkgs/lib/licenses.nix</filename></link>,
or in-place license description of the same format if the license is
unlikely to be useful in another expression.</para>
<note><para>This is just a first attempt at standardising the license
attribute.</para></note>
<para>Although it's typically better to indicate the specific license,
a few generic options are available:
<para>The <varname>meta.license</varname> attribute must be one of the
following:
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>stdenv.lib.licenses.free</varname>,
<varname>"free"</varname></term>
<term><varname>GPL</varname></term>
<listitem><para>GNU General Public License; version not
specified.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>GPLv2</varname></term>
<listitem><para>GNU General Public License, version
2.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>GPLv2+</varname></term>
<listitem><para>GNU General Public License, version
2 or higher.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>GPLv3</varname></term>
<listitem><para>GNU General Public License, version
3.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>GPLv3+</varname></term>
<listitem><para>GNU General Public License, version
3 or higher.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>bsd</varname></term>
<listitem><para>Catch-all for licenses that are essentially
similar to <link
xlink:href="http://www.gnu.org/licenses/license-list.html#ModifiedBSD">the
original BSD license with the advertising clause removed</link>,
i.e. permissive non-copyleft free software licenses. This
includes the <link
xlink:href="http://www.gnu.org/licenses/license-list.html#X11License">X11
(“MIT”) License</link>.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>perl5</varname></term>
<listitem><para>The Perl 5 license (Artistic License, version 1
and GPL, version 1 or later).</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>free</varname></term>
<listitem><para>Catch-all for free software licenses not listed
above.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>stdenv.lib.licenses.unfreeRedistributable</varname>,
<varname>"unfree-redistributable"</varname></term>
<term><varname>free-copyleft</varname></term>
<listitem><para>Catch-all for free, copyleft software licenses not
listed above.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>free-non-copyleft</varname></term>
<listitem><para>Catch-all for free, non-copyleft software licenses
not listed above.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>unfree-redistributable</varname></term>
<listitem><para>Unfree package that can be redistributed in binary
form. That is, its legal to redistribute the
form. That is, its legal to redistribute the
<emphasis>output</emphasis> of the derivation. This means that
the package can be included in the Nixpkgs
channel.</para>
<para>Sometimes proprietary software can only be redistributed
unmodified. Make sure the builder doesnt actually modify the
unmodified. Make sure the builder doesnt actually modify the
original binaries; otherwise were breaking the license. For
instance, the NVIDIA X11 drivers can be redistributed unmodified,
but our builder applies <command>patchelf</command> to make them
work. Thus, its license is <varname>"unfree"</varname> and it
work. Thus, its license is <varname>unfree</varname> and it
cannot be included in the Nixpkgs channel.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>stdenv.lib.licenses.unfree</varname>,
<varname>"unfree"</varname></term>
<listitem><para>Unfree package that cannot be redistributed. You
<term><varname>unfree</varname></term>
<listitem><para>Unfree package that cannot be redistributed. You
can build it yourself, but you cannot redistribute the output of
the derivation. Thus it cannot be included in the Nixpkgs
the derivation. Thus it cannot be included in the Nixpkgs
channel.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>stdenv.lib.licenses.unfreeRedistributableFirmware</varname>,
<varname>"unfree-redistributable-firmware"</varname></term>
<term><varname>unfree-redistributable-firmware</varname></term>
<listitem><para>This package supplies unfree, redistributable
firmware. This is a separate value from
<varname>unfree-redistributable</varname> because not everybody
@@ -315,9 +236,9 @@ a few generic options are available:
</variablelist>
</para>
</section>
</chapter>

View File

@@ -1,91 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE chapter [
<!ENTITY ndash "&#x2013;"> <!-- @vcunat likes to use this one ;-) -->
]>
<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="chap-multiple-output">
<title>Multiple-output packages</title>
<section><title>Introduction</title>
<para>The Nix language allows a derivation to produce multiple outputs, which is similar to what is utilized by other Linux distribution packaging systems. The outputs reside in separate nix store paths, so they can be mostly handled independently of each other, including passing to build inputs, garbage collection or binary substitution. The exception is that building from source always produces all the outputs.</para>
<para>The main motivation is to save disk space by reducing runtime closure sizes; consequently also sizes of substituted binaries get reduced. Splitting can be used to have more granular runtime dependencies, for example the typical reduction is to split away development-only files, as those are typically not needed during runtime. As a result, closure sizes of many packages can get reduced to a half or even much less.</para>
<note><para>The reduction effects could be instead achieved by building the parts in completely separate derivations. That would often additionally reduce build-time closures, but it tends to be much harder to write such derivations, as build systems typically assume all parts are being built at once. This compromise approach of single source package producing multiple binary packages is also utilized often by rpm and deb.</para></note>
</section>
<section><title>Installing a split package</title>
<para>When installing a package via <varname>systemPackages</varname> or <command>nix-env</command> you have several options:</para>
<warning><para>Currently <command>nix-env</command> almost always installs all outputs until https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/815 gets merged.</para></warning>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem><para>You can install particular outputs explicitly, as each is available in the Nix language as an attribute of the package. The <varname>outputs</varname> attribute contains a list of output names.</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>You can let it use the default outputs. These are handled by <varname>meta.outputsToInstall</varname> attribute that contains a list of output names.</para>
<para>TODO: more about tweaking the attribute, etc.</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>NixOS provides configuration option <varname>environment.extraOutputsToInstall</varname> that allows adding extra outputs of <varname>environment.systemPackages</varname> atop the default ones. It's mainly meant for documentation and debug symbols, and it's also modified by specific options.</para>
<note><para>At this moment there is no similar configurability for packages installed by <command>nix-env</command>. You can still use approach from <xref linkend="sec-modify-via-packageOverrides" /> to override <varname>meta.outputsToInstall</varname> attributes, but that's a rather inconvenient way.</para></note>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</section>
<section><title>Using a split package</title>
<para>In the Nix language the individual outputs can be reached explicitly as attributes, e.g. <varname>coreutils.info</varname>, but the typical case is just using packages as build inputs.</para>
<para>When a multiple-output derivation gets into a build input of another derivation, the first output is added (<varname>.dev</varname> by convention) and also <varname>propagatedBuildOutputs</varname> of that package which by default contain <varname>$outputBin</varname> and <varname>$outputLib</varname>. (See <xref linkend="multiple-output-file-type-groups" />.)</para>
</section>
<section><title>Writing a split derivation</title>
<para>Here you find how to write a derivation that produces multiple outputs.</para>
<para>In nixpkgs there is a framework supporting multiple-output derivations. It tries to cover most cases by default behavior. You can find the source separated in &lt;<filename>nixpkgs/pkgs/build-support/setup-hooks/multiple-outputs.sh</filename>&gt;; it's relatively well-readable. The whole machinery is triggered by defining the <varname>outputs</varname> attribute to contain the list of desired output names (strings).</para>
<programlisting>outputs = [ "dev" "out" "bin" "doc" ];</programlisting>
<para>Often such a single line is enough. For each output an equally named environment variable is passed to the builder and contains the path in nix store for that output. By convention, the first output should usually be <varname>dev</varname>; typically you also want to have the main <varname>out</varname> output, as it catches any files that didn't get elsewhere.</para>
<note><para>There is a special handling of the <varname>debug</varname> output, described at <xref linkend="stdenv-separateDebugInfo" />.</para></note>
<section xml:id="multiple-output-file-type-groups">
<title>File type groups</title>
<para>The support code currently recognizes some particular kinds of outputs and either instructs the build system of the package to put files into their desired outputs or it moves the files during the fixup phase. Each group of file types has an <varname>outputFoo</varname> variable specifying the output name where they should go. If that variable isn't defined by the derivation writer, it is guessed &ndash; a default output name is defined, falling back to other possibilities if the output isn't defined.</para>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry><term><varname>
$outputDev</varname></term><listitem><para>
is for development-only files. These include C(++) headers, pkg-config, cmake and aclocal files. They go to <varname>dev</varname> or <varname>out</varname> by default.
</para></listitem></varlistentry>
<varlistentry><term><varname>
$outputBin</varname></term><listitem><para>
is meant for user-facing binaries, typically residing in bin/. They go to <varname>bin</varname> or <varname>out</varname> by default.
</para></listitem></varlistentry>
<varlistentry><term><varname>
$outputLib</varname></term><listitem><para>
is meant for libraries, typically residing in <filename>lib/</filename> and <filename>libexec/</filename>. They go to <varname>lib</varname> or <varname>out</varname> by default.
</para></listitem></varlistentry>
<varlistentry><term><varname>
$outputDoc</varname></term><listitem><para>
is for user documentation, typically residing in <filename>share/doc/</filename>. It goes to <varname>doc</varname> or <varname>out</varname> by default.
</para></listitem></varlistentry>
<varlistentry><term><varname>
$outputDocdev</varname></term><listitem><para>
is for <emphasis>developer</emphasis> documentation. Currently we count gtk-doc and man3 pages in there. It goes to <varname>docdev</varname> or is removed (!) by default. This is because e.g. gtk-doc tends to be rather large and completely unused by nixpkgs users.
</para></listitem></varlistentry>
<varlistentry><term><varname>
$outputMan</varname></term><listitem><para>
is for man pages (except for section 3). They go to <varname>man</varname> or <varname>doc</varname> or <varname>$outputBin</varname> by default.
</para></listitem></varlistentry>
<varlistentry><term><varname>
$outputInfo</varname></term><listitem><para>
is for info pages. They go to <varname>info</varname> or <varname>doc</varname> or <varname>$outputMan</varname> by default.
</para></listitem></varlistentry>
</variablelist>
</section>
<section><title>Common caveats</title>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem><para>Some configure scripts don't like some of the parameters passed by default by the framework, e.g. <literal>--docdir=/foo/bar</literal>. You can disable this by setting <literal>setOutputFlags = false;</literal>.</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>The outputs of a single derivation can retain references to each other, but note that circular references are not allowed. (And each strongly-connected component would act as a single output anyway.)</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>Most of split packages contain their core functionality in libraries. These libraries tend to refer to various kind of data that typically gets into <varname>out</varname>, e.g. locale strings, so there is often no advantage in separating the libraries into <varname>lib</varname>, as keeping them in <varname>out</varname> is easier.</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>Some packages have hidden assumptions on install paths, which complicates splitting.</para></listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</section>
</section><!--Writing a split derivation-->
</chapter>

View File

@@ -184,10 +184,10 @@ if test "$noSysDirs" = "1"; then
if test "$noSysDirs" = "1"; then
# Figure out what extra flags to pass to the gcc compilers
# being generated to make sure that they use our glibc.
if test -e $NIX_CC/nix-support/orig-glibc; then
glibc=$(cat $NIX_CC/nix-support/orig-glibc)
if test -e $NIX_GCC/nix-support/orig-glibc; then
glibc=$(cat $NIX_GCC/nix-support/orig-glibc)
# Ugh. Copied from gcc-wrapper/builder.sh. We can't just
# source in $NIX_CC/nix-support/add-flags, since that
# source in $NIX_GCC/nix-support/add-flags, since that
# would cause *this* GCC to be linked against the
# *previous* GCC. Need some more modularity there.
extraCFlags="-B$glibc/lib -isystem $glibc/include"

158
doc/outline.txt Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,158 @@
- The standard environment
(Some of this can be moved from the Nix manual)
- Special attributes
- Generic builder
- Helper functions
- GCC / ld wrapper (+ env vars)
- Phases (+ how to add phases) and hooks
- Override functions for stdenv
- Overriding GCC
- Overriding the setup script
- Predefined override functions in all-packages.nix: static binary
stdenv, dietlibc stdenv
- Stdenv bootstrap; how to update the Linux bootstrap binaries
- Specific platform notes (Linux, Native, Cygwin, Mingw)
- Support for specific languages
- Perl
- Generic Perl builder
- Python
- Wrapper generation
- Haskell
- TODO
- Java
- TODO; Java needs lots of improvement
- TeX/LaTeX
- Special support for building TeX documents
- Special kinds of applications
- OpenGL apps
- Binary-only apps
- Linux kernel modules
- Mozilla plugins/extensions
- X apps
- KDE apps
- GConf-based apps
- Programs that need wrappers
- makeWrapper etc.
- Initial ramdisks
- Library functions
- i.e. in lib/default.nix
- Specific package notes
- Linux kernel; how to update; feature tests
- X.org; how to update
- Gnome; how to update
- GCC?
- GHC?
- ...
- Meta attributes
- License attr; possible values
- Virtual machine support (for the build farm)
- vmtools
- KVM notes
- Performing a build in a VM
- In the host FS
- In a disk image
- RPM builds
- RPM image creation
- Deb builds
- Deb image creation
- Debugging VM builds
- Guidelines for Nixpkgs contributions
- File naming conventions
- Versioning of packages
- Tree organisation
- Variable naming
- Layout / indentations style
- Output FS hierarchy (e.g. $out/share/man instead of $out/man)
- Misc
- Building outside of the Nixpkgs tree
- Config options
- Downloading stuff
- fetchurl
- mirror:// scheme
- fetchsvn
- fetchcvs
- fetchdarcs
- Appendix: Nixpkgs config options

View File

@@ -125,7 +125,7 @@ $ make menuconfig ARCH=<replaceable>arch</replaceable></screen>
<listitem>
<para>It may be that the new kernel requires updating the external
kernel modules and kernel-dependent packages listed in the
<varname>linuxPackagesFor</varname> function in
<varname>kernelPackagesFor</varname> function in
<filename>all-packages.nix</filename> (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
@@ -141,7 +141,7 @@ $ make menuconfig ARCH=<replaceable>arch</replaceable></screen>
<!--============================================================-->
<section xml:id="sec-xorg">
<section>
<title>X.org</title>
@@ -219,167 +219,5 @@ you should modify
</section>
-->
<!--============================================================-->
<section xml:id="sec-eclipse">
<title>Eclipse</title>
<para>
The Nix expressions related to the Eclipse platform and IDE are in
<link xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/applications/editors/eclipse"><filename>pkgs/applications/editors/eclipse</filename></link>.
</para>
<para>
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:
<screen>
$ nix-env -f '&lt;nixpkgs&gt;' -qaP -A eclipses --description
</screen>
Once an Eclipse variant is installed it can be run using the
<command>eclipse</command> 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.
</para>
<para>
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 <emphasis>Eclipse environment</emphasis>. This
type of environment is created using the function
<varname>eclipseWithPlugins</varname> found inside the
<varname>nixpkgs.eclipses</varname> attribute set. This function
takes as argument <literal>{ eclipse, plugins ? [], jvmArgs ? []
}</literal> where <varname>eclipse</varname> is a one of the
Eclipse packages described above, <varname>plugins</varname> is a
list of plugin derivations, and <varname>jvmArgs</varname> 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
<screen>
packageOverrides = pkgs: {
myEclipse = with pkgs.eclipses; eclipseWithPlugins {
eclipse = eclipse-platform;
jvmArgs = [ "-Xmx2048m" ];
plugins = [ plugins.color-theme ];
};
}
</screen>
to your Nixpkgs configuration
(<filename>~/.nixpkgs/config.nix</filename>) and install it by
running <command>nix-env -f '&lt;nixpkgs&gt;' -iA
myEclipse</command> and afterward run Eclipse as usual. It is
possible to find out which plugins are available for installation
using <varname>eclipseWithPlugins</varname> by running
<screen>
$ nix-env -f '&lt;nixpkgs&gt;' -qaP -A eclipses.plugins --description
</screen>
</para>
<para>
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 <varname>buildEclipseUpdateSite</varname> and
<varname>buildEclipsePlugin</varname> functions found in the
<varname>nixpkgs.eclipses.plugins</varname> attribute set. Use the
<varname>buildEclipseUpdateSite</varname> function to install a
plugin distributed as an Eclipse update site. This function takes
<literal>{ name, src }</literal> as argument where
<literal>src</literal> 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 <varname>buildEclipsePlugin</varname> function can be
used to install a plugin that consists of a pair of feature and
plugin JARs. This function takes an argument <literal>{ name,
srcFeature, srcPlugin }</literal> where
<literal>srcFeature</literal> and <literal>srcPlugin</literal> are
the feature and plugin JARs, respectively.
</para>
<para>
Expanding the previous example with two plugins using the above
functions we have
<screen>
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…";
};
});
];
};
}
</screen>
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-elm">
<title>Elm</title>
<para>
The Nix expressions for Elm reside in
<filename>pkgs/development/compilers/elm</filename>. They are generated
automatically by <command>update-elm.rb</command> script. One should
specify versions of Elm packages inside the script, clear the
<filename>packages</filename> directory and run the script from inside it.
<literal>elm-reactor</literal> is special because it also has Elm package
dependencies. The process is not automated very much for now -- you should
get the <literal>elm-reactor</literal> source tree (e.g. with
<command>nix-shell</command>) and run <command>elm2nix.rb</command> inside
it. Place the resulting <filename>package.nix</filename> file into
<filename>packages/elm-reactor-elm.nix</filename>.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-autojump">
<title>Autojump</title>
<para>
autojump needs the shell integration to be useful but unlike other systems,
nix doesn't have a standard share directory location. This is why a
<command>autojump-share</command> script is shipped that prints the location
of the shared folder. This can then be used in the .bashrc like this:
<screen>
source "$(autojump-share)/autojump.bash"
</screen>
</para>
</section>
</chapter>

View File

@@ -54,24 +54,24 @@ $ git add pkgs/development/libraries/libfoo/default.nix</screen>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>GNU Hello: <link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/applications/misc/hello/default.nix"><filename>pkgs/applications/misc/hello/default.nix</filename></link>.
Trivial package, which specifies some <varname>meta</varname>
attributes which is good practice.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>GNU cpio: <link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/tools/archivers/cpio/default.nix"><filename>pkgs/tools/archivers/cpio/default.nix</filename></link>.
Also a simple package. The generic builder in
<varname>stdenv</varname> does everything for you. It has
The simplest possible package. The generic builder in
<varname>stdenv</varname> does everything for you. It has
no dependencies beyond <varname>stdenv</varname>.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>GNU Hello: <link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/applications/misc/hello/ex-2/default.nix"><filename>pkgs/applications/misc/hello/ex-2/default.nix</filename></link>.
Also trivial, but it specifies some <varname>meta</varname>
attributes which is good practice.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>GNU Multiple Precision arithmetic library (GMP): <link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/development/libraries/gmp/5.1.x.nix"><filename>pkgs/development/libraries/gmp/5.1.x.nix</filename></link>.
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/development/libraries/gmp/5.1.1.nix"><filename>pkgs/development/libraries/gmp/5.1.1.nix</filename></link>.
Also done by the generic builder, but has a dependency on
<varname>m4</varname>.</para>
</listitem>
@@ -92,6 +92,17 @@ $ git add pkgs/development/libraries/libfoo/default.nix</screen>
hackery.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>BitTorrent (wxPython-based): <link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/tools/networking/p2p/bittorrent/default.nix"><filename>pkgs/tools/networking/p2p/bittorrent/default.nix</filename></link>.
Uses an external <link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/tools/networking/p2p/bittorrent/builder.sh">build
script</link>, which can be useful if you have lots of code
that you dont want cluttering up the Nix expression. But
external builders are mostly obsolete.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Thunderbird: <link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/applications/networking/mailreaders/thunderbird/default.nix"><filename>pkgs/applications/networking/mailreaders/thunderbird/default.nix</filename></link>.
@@ -144,10 +155,9 @@ $ git add pkgs/development/libraries/libfoo/default.nix</screen>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>You can use <command>nix-prefetch-url</command> (or similar nix-prefetch-git, etc)
<para>You can use <command>nix-prefetch-url</command>
<replaceable>url</replaceable> to get the SHA-256 hash of
source distributions. There are similar commands as <command>nix-prefetch-git</command> and
<command>nix-prefetch-hg</command> available in <literal>nix-prefetch-scripts</literal> package.</para>
source distributions.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
@@ -186,8 +196,7 @@ $ emacs pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix</screen>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>To test whether the package builds, run the following command
from the root of the nixpkgs source tree:
<para>Test whether the package builds:
<screen>
$ nix-build -A libfoo</screen>
@@ -211,10 +220,17 @@ $ nix-env -f . -iA libfoo</screen>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Optionally commit the new package and open a pull request, or send a patch to
<para>Optionally commit the new package, or send a patch to
<literal>nix-dev@cs.uu.nl</literal>.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>If you want the TU Delft build farm to build binaries of the
package and make them available in the <link
xlink:href="http://nixos.org/releases/nixpkgs/channels/nixpkgs-unstable/"><literal>nixpkgs</literal>
channel</link>, add it to <link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/top-level/release.nix"><filename>pkgs/top-level/release.nix</filename></link>.</para>
</listitem>
</orderedlist>

44
doc/quote-literals.xsl Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,44 @@
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<xsl:stylesheet
version="1.0"
xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform"
xmlns:str="http://exslt.org/strings"
extension-element-prefixes="str">
<xsl:output method="xml"/>
<xsl:template match="function|command|literal|varname|filename|option|quote">`<xsl:apply-templates/>'</xsl:template>
<xsl:template match="token"><xsl:text> </xsl:text><xsl:apply-templates /><xsl:text>
</xsl:text></xsl:template>
<xsl:template match="screen|programlisting">
<screen><xsl:apply-templates select="str:split(., '&#xA;')" /></screen>
</xsl:template>
<xsl:template match="section[following::section]">
<section>
<xsl:apply-templates />
<screen><xsl:text>
</xsl:text></screen>
</section>
</xsl:template>
<xsl:template match="*">
<xsl:element name="{name(.)}" namespace="{namespace-uri(.)}">
<xsl:copy-of select="namespace::*" />
<xsl:for-each select="@*">
<xsl:attribute name="{name(.)}" namespace="{namespace-uri(.)}">
<xsl:value-of select="."/>
</xsl:attribute>
</xsl:for-each>
<xsl:apply-templates/>
</xsl:element>
</xsl:template>
<xsl:template match="text()">
<xsl:value-of select="translate(., '‘’“”—', concat(&quot;`'&quot;, '&quot;&quot;-'))" />
</xsl:template>
</xsl:stylesheet>

View File

@@ -446,7 +446,7 @@ xlink:href='http://nixos.org/releases/nix/nix-0.10/'>Nix
<literal>stdenv</literal>; the formed changes the C compiler, and
the latter adds additional packages to the front of
<literal>stdenv</literal>s initial <envar>PATH</envar>, allowing
tools to be overridden.</para>
tools to be overriden.</para>
<para>For instance, the package <varname>strategoxt</varname>
doesnt build with the GNU Make in <literal>stdenv</literal>

View File

@@ -15,8 +15,7 @@ environment does everything automatically. If
can easily customise or override the various build phases.</para>
<section xml:id="sec-using-stdenv"><title>Using
<literal>stdenv</literal></title>
<section><title>Using <literal>stdenv</literal></title>
<para>To build a package with the standard environment, you use the
function <varname>stdenv.mkDerivation</varname>, instead of the
@@ -57,9 +56,9 @@ details.)</para>
<para>Often it is necessary to override or modify some aspect of the
build. To make this easier, the standard environment breaks the
package build into a number of <emphasis>phases</emphasis>, all of
which can be overridden or modified individually: unpacking the
which can be overriden or modified individually: unpacking the
sources, applying patches, configuring, building, and installing.
(There are some others; see <xref linkend="sec-stdenv-phases"/>.)
(There are some others; see <xref linkend="ssec-stdenv-phases"/>.)
For instance, a package that doesnt supply a makefile but instead has
to be compiled “manually” could be handled like this:
@@ -125,8 +124,7 @@ genericBuild
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-tools-of-stdenv"><title>Tools provided by
<literal>stdenv</literal></title>
<section><title>Tools provided by <literal>stdenv</literal></title>
<para>The standard environment provides the following packages:
@@ -152,8 +150,8 @@ genericBuild
<listitem><para>GNU <command>tar</command>.</para></listitem>
<listitem><para><command>gzip</command>, <command>bzip2</command>
and <command>xz</command>.</para></listitem>
<listitem><para><command>gzip</command> and
<command>bzip2</command>.</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>GNU Make. It has been patched to provide
<quote>nested</quote> output that can be fed into the
@@ -224,67 +222,10 @@ genericBuild
</variablelist>
<variablelist>
<title>Variables affecting build properties</title>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>enableParallelBuilding</varname></term>
<listitem><para>If set, <literal>stdenv</literal> will pass specific
flags to <literal>make</literal> and other build tools to enable
parallel building with up to <literal>build-cores</literal>
workers.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>preferLocalBuild</varname></term>
<listitem><para>If set, specifies that the package is so lightweight
in terms of build operations (e.g. write a text file from a Nix string
to the store) that there's no need to look for it in binary caches --
it's faster to just build it locally. It also tells Hydra and other
facilities that this package doesn't need to be exported in binary
caches (noone would use it, after all).</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
<variablelist>
<title>Special variables</title>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>passthru</varname></term>
<listitem><para>This is an attribute set which can be filled with arbitrary
values. For example:
<programlisting>
passthru = {
foo = "bar";
baz = {
value1 = 4;
value2 = 5;
};
}
</programlisting>
</para>
<para>Values inside it are not passed to the builder, so you can change
them without triggering a rebuild. However, they can be accessed outside of a
derivation directly, as if they were set inside a derivation itself, e.g.
<literal>hello.baz.value1</literal>. We don't specify any usage or
schema of <literal>passthru</literal> - it is meant for values that would be
useful outside the derivation in other parts of a Nix expression (e.g. in other
derivations). An example would be to convey some specific dependency of your
derivation which contains a program with plugins support. Later, others who
make derivations with plugins can use passed-through dependency to ensure that
their plugin would be binary-compatible with built program.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-stdenv-phases"><title>Phases</title>
<section xml:id="ssec-stdenv-phases"><title>Phases</title>
<para>The generic builder has a number of <emphasis>phases</emphasis>.
Package builds are split into phases to make it easier to override
@@ -292,7 +233,7 @@ specific parts of the build (e.g., unpacking the sources or installing
the binaries). Furthermore, it allows a nicer presentation of build
logs in the Nix build farm.</para>
<para>Each phase can be overridden in its entirety either by setting
<para>Each phase can be overriden in its entirety either by setting
the environment variable
<varname><replaceable>name</replaceable>Phase</varname> to a string
containing some shell commands to be executed, or by redefining the
@@ -302,8 +243,7 @@ is convenient to override a phase from the derivation, while the
latter is convenient from a build script.</para>
<section xml:id="ssec-controlling-phases"><title>Controlling
phases</title>
<section><title>Controlling phases</title>
<para>There are a number of variables that control what phases are
executed and in what order:
@@ -358,13 +298,6 @@ executed and in what order:
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>preFixupPhases</varname></term>
<listitem>
<para>Additional phases executed just before the fixup phase.</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>preDistPhases</varname></term>
<listitem>
@@ -387,7 +320,7 @@ executed and in what order:
</section>
<section xml:id="ssec-unpack-phase"><title>The unpack phase</title>
<section><title>The unpack phase</title>
<para>The unpack phase is responsible for unpacking the source code of
the package. The default implementation of
@@ -401,11 +334,9 @@ It supports the following files by default:
<term>Tar files</term>
<listitem><para>These can optionally be compressed using
<command>gzip</command> (<filename>.tar.gz</filename>,
<filename>.tgz</filename> or <filename>.tar.Z</filename>),
<filename>.tgz</filename> or <filename>.tar.Z</filename>) or
<command>bzip2</command> (<filename>.tar.bz2</filename> or
<filename>.tbz2</filename>) or <command>xz</command>
(<filename>.tar.xz</filename> or
<filename>.tar.lzma</filename>).</para></listitem>
<filename>.tbz2</filename>).</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
@@ -494,7 +425,7 @@ Additional file types can be supported by setting the
</section>
<section xml:id="ssec-patch-phase"><title>The patch phase</title>
<section><title>The patch phase</title>
<para>The patch phase applies the list of patches defined in the
<varname>patches</varname> variable.</para>
@@ -507,10 +438,9 @@ Additional file types can be supported by setting the
<listitem><para>The list of patches. They must be in the format
accepted by the <command>patch</command> command, and may
optionally be compressed using <command>gzip</command>
(<filename>.gz</filename>), <command>bzip2</command>
(<filename>.bz2</filename>) or <command>xz</command>
(<filename>.xz</filename>).</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
(<filename>.gz</filename>) or <command>bzip2</command>
(<filename>.bz2</filename>).</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>patchFlags</varname></term>
@@ -537,7 +467,7 @@ Additional file types can be supported by setting the
</section>
<section xml:id="ssec-configure-phase"><title>The configure phase</title>
<section><title>The configure phase</title>
<para>The configure phase prepares the source tree for building. The
default <function>configurePhase</function> runs
@@ -573,8 +503,8 @@ script) if it exists.</para>
<term><varname>dontAddPrefix</varname></term>
<listitem><para>By default, the flag
<literal>--prefix=$prefix</literal> is added to the configure
flags. If this is undesirable, set this variable to
true.</para></listitem>
flags. If this is undesirable, set this variable to a non-empty
value.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
@@ -590,7 +520,8 @@ script) if it exists.</para>
<listitem><para>By default, the flag
<literal>--disable-dependency-tracking</literal> is added to the
configure flags to speed up Automake-based builds. If this is
undesirable, set this variable to true.</para></listitem>
undesirable, set this variable to a non-empty
value.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
@@ -603,16 +534,7 @@ script) if it exists.</para>
variables in the Libtool script to prevent Libtool from using
libraries in <filename>/usr/lib</filename> and
such.</para></footnote>. If this is undesirable, set this
variable to true.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>dontDisableStatic</varname></term>
<listitem><para>By default, when the configure script has
<option>--enable-static</option>, the option
<option>--disable-static</option> is added to the configure flags.</para>
<para>If this is undesirable, set this variable to
true.</para></listitem>
variable to a non-empty value.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
@@ -633,7 +555,7 @@ script) if it exists.</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="build-phase"><title>The build phase</title>
<section><title>The build phase</title>
<para>The build phase is responsible for actually building the package
(e.g. compiling it). The default <function>buildPhase</function>
@@ -717,7 +639,7 @@ called, respectively.</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="ssec-check-phase"><title>The check phase</title>
<section><title>The check phase</title>
<para>The check phase checks whether the package was built correctly
by running its test suite. The default
@@ -777,7 +699,7 @@ doCheck = true;</programlisting>
</section>
<section xml:id="ssec-install-phase"><title>The install phase</title>
<section><title>The install phase</title>
<para>The install phase is responsible for installing the package in
the Nix store under <envar>out</envar>. The default
@@ -786,7 +708,7 @@ the Nix store under <envar>out</envar>. The default
install</command>.</para>
<variablelist>
<title>Variables controlling the install phase</title>
<title>Variables controlling the check phase</title>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>makeFlags</varname> /
@@ -832,7 +754,7 @@ installTargets = "install-bin install-doc";</programlisting>
</section>
<section xml:id="ssec-fixup-phase"><title>The fixup phase</title>
<section><title>The fixup phase</title>
<para>The fixup phase performs some (Nix-specific) post-processing
actions on the files installed under <filename>$out</filename> by the
@@ -865,7 +787,7 @@ following:
</para>
<variablelist>
<title>Variables controlling the fixup phase</title>
<title>Variables controlling the check phase</title>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>dontStrip</varname></term>
@@ -873,12 +795,6 @@ following:
stripped. By default, they are.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>dontMoveSbin</varname></term>
<listitem><para>If set, files in <filename>$out/sbin</filename> are not moved
to <filename>$out/bin</filename>. By default, they are.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>stripAllList</varname></term>
<listitem><para>List of directories to search for libraries and
@@ -956,41 +872,12 @@ following:
phase.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry xml:id="stdenv-separateDebugInfo">
<term><varname>separateDebugInfo</varname></term>
<listitem><para>If set to <literal>true</literal>, the standard
environment will enable debug information in C/C++ builds. After
installation, the debug information will be separated from the
executables and stored in the output named
<literal>debug</literal>. (This output is enabled automatically;
you dont need to set the <varname>outputs</varname> attribute
explicitly.) To be precise, the debug information is stored in
<filename><replaceable>debug</replaceable>/lib/debug/.build-id/<replaceable>XX</replaceable>/<replaceable>YYYY…</replaceable></filename>,
where <replaceable>XXYYYY…</replaceable> is the <replaceable>build
ID</replaceable> of the binary — a SHA-1 hash of the contents of
the binary. Debuggers like GDB use the build ID to look up the
separated debug information.</para>
<para>For example, with GDB, you can add
<programlisting>
set debug-file-directory ~/.nix-profile/lib/debug
</programlisting>
to <filename>~/.gdbinit</filename>. GDB will then be able to find
debug information installed via <literal>nix-env
-i</literal>.</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
</section>
<section xml:id="ssec-distribution-phase"><title>The distribution
phase</title>
<section><title>The distribution phase</title>
<para>The distribution phase is intended to produce a source
distribution of the package. The default
@@ -1169,17 +1056,7 @@ PATH=/nix/store/68afga4khv0w...-coreutils-6.12/bin
echo @foo@
</programlisting>
That is, no substitution is performed for undefined variables.</para>
<para>Environment variables that start with an uppercase letter or an
underscore are filtered out,
to prevent global variables (like <literal>HOME</literal>) or private
variables (like <literal>__ETC_PROFILE_DONE</literal>) from accidentally
getting substituted.
The variables also have to be valid bash “names”, as
defined in the bash manpage (alphanumeric or <literal>_</literal>,
must not start with a number).</para>
</listitem>
That is, no substitution is performed for undefined variables.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
@@ -1233,9 +1110,12 @@ echo @foo@
<varlistentry>
<term>Python</term>
<listitem><para>Adds the
<filename>lib/${python.libPrefix}/site-packages</filename> subdirectory of
<filename>lib/python2.5/site-packages</filename> subdirectory of
each build input to the <envar>PYTHONPATH</envar> environment
variable.</para></listitem>
variable.</para>
<note><para>This should be generalised: the Python version
shouldnt be hard-coded.</para></note></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
@@ -1253,14 +1133,6 @@ echo @foo@
environment variable.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>Autoconf</term>
<listitem><para>The <varname>autoreconfHook</varname> derivation adds
<varname>autoreconfPhase</varname>, which runs autoreconf, libtoolize and
automake, essentially preparing the configure script in autotools-based
builds.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>libxml2</term>
<listitem><para>Adds every file named
@@ -1279,32 +1151,17 @@ echo @foo@
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>Qt 4</term>
<term>Qt</term>
<listitem><para>Sets the <envar>QTDIR</envar> environment variable
to Qts path.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>gdk-pixbuf</term>
<listitem><para>Exports <envar>GDK_PIXBUF_MODULE_FILE</envar>
environment variable the the builder. Add librsvg package
to <varname>buildInputs</varname> to get svg support.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>GHC</term>
<listitem><para>Creates a temporary package database and registers
every Haskell build input in it (TODO: how?).</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>GStreamer</term>
<listitem><para>Adds the
GStreamer plugins subdirectory of
each build input to the <envar>GST_PLUGIN_SYSTEM_PATH_1_0</envar> or
<envar>GST_PLUGIN_SYSTEM_PATH</envar> environment variable.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
</para>
@@ -1312,7 +1169,7 @@ echo @foo@
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-purity-in-nixpkgs"><title>Purity in Nixpkgs</title>
<section><title>Purity in Nixpkgs</title>
<para>[measures taken to prevent dependencies on packages outside the
store, and what you can do to prevent them]</para>

View File

@@ -1,332 +0,0 @@
<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="chap-submitting-changes">
<title>Submitting changes</title>
<section>
<title>Making patches</title>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>Read <link xlink:href="https://nixos.org/nixpkgs/manual/">Manual (How to write packages for Nix)</link>.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Fork the repository on GitHub.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Create a branch for your future fix.
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>You can make branch from a commit of your local <command>nixos-version</command>. That will help you to avoid additional local compilations. Because you will receive packages from binary cache.
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>For example: <command>nixos-version</command> returns <command>15.05.git.0998212 (Dingo)</command>. So you can do:</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
<screen>
$ git checkout 0998212
$ git checkout -b 'fix/pkg-name-update'
</screen>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Please avoid working directly on the <command>master</command> branch.</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Make commits of logical units.
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>If you removed pkgs, made some major NixOS changes etc., write about them in <command>nixos/doc/manual/release-notes/rl-unstable.xml</command>.</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Check for unnecessary whitespace with <command>git diff --check</command> before committing.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Format the commit in a following way:</para>
<programlisting>
(pkg-name | service-name): (from -> to | init at version | refactor | etc)
Additional information.
</programlisting>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>Examples:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
<command>nginx: init at 2.0.1</command>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
<command>firefox: 3.0 -> 3.1.1</command>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
<command>hydra service: add bazBaz option</command>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
<command>nginx service: refactor config generation</command>
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Test your changes. If you work with
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>nixpkgs:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>update pkg ->
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
<command>nix-env -i pkg-name -f &lt;path to your local nixpkgs folder&gt;</command>
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>add pkg ->
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>Make sure it's in <command>pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix</command>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
<command>nix-env -i pkg-name -f &lt;path to your local nixpkgs folder&gt;</command>
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
<emphasis>If you don't want to install pkg in you profile</emphasis>.
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
<command>nix-build -A pkg-attribute-name &lt;path to your local nixpkgs folder&gt;/default.nix</command> and check results in the folder <command>result</command>. It will appear in the same directory where you did <command>nix-build</command>.</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>If you did <command>nix-env -i pkg-name</command> you can do <command>nix-env -e pkg-name</command> to uninstall it from your system.</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>NixOS and its modules:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>You can add new module to your NixOS configuration file (usually it's <command>/etc/nixos/configuration.nix</command>).
And do <command>sudo nixos-rebuild test -I nixpkgs=&lt;path to your local nixpkgs folder&gt; --fast</command>.</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>If you have commits <command>pkg-name: oh, forgot to insert whitespace</command>: squash commits in this case. Use <command>git rebase -i</command>.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Rebase you branch against current <command>master</command>.</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</section>
<section>
<title>Submitting changes</title>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>Push your changes to your fork of nixpkgs.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Create pull request:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>Write the title in format <command>(pkg-name | service): improvement</command>.
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>If you update the pkg, write versions <command>from -> to</command>.</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Write in comment if you have tested your patch. Do not rely much on <command>TravisCI</command>.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>If you make an improvement, write about your motivation.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Notify maintainers of the package. For example add to the message: <command>cc @jagajaga @domenkozar</command>.</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</section>
<section>
<title>Hotfixing pull requests</title>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>Make the appropriate changes in you branch.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Don't create additional commits, do
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para><command>git rebase -i</command></para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
<command>git push --force</command> to your branch.</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</section>
<section>
<title>Commit policy</title>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>Commits must be sufficiently tested before being merged, both for the master and staging branches.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Hydra builds for master and staging should not be used as testing platform, it's a build farm for changes that have been already tested.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>When changing the bootloader installation process, extra care must be taken. Grub installations cannot be rolled back, hence changes may break people's installations forever. For any non-trivial change to the bootloader please file a PR asking for review, especially from @edolstra.</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
<section>
<title>Master branch</title>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
It should only see non-breaking commits that do not cause mass rebuilds.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</section>
<section>
<title>Staging branch</title>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
It's only for non-breaking mass-rebuild commits. That means it's not to
be used for testing, and changes must have been well tested already.
<link xlink:href="http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.linux.distributions.nixos/13447">Read policy here</link>.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
If the branch is already in a broken state, please refrain from adding
extra new breakages. Stabilize it for a few days, merge into master,
then resume development on staging.
<link xlink:href="http://hydra.nixos.org/jobset/nixpkgs/staging#tabs-evaluations">Keep an eye on the staging evaluations here</link>.
If any fixes for staging happen to be already in master, then master can
be merged into staging.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</section>
<section>
<title>Stable release branches</title>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
If you're cherry-picking a commit to a stable release branch, always use
<command>git cherry-pick -xe</command> and ensure the message contains a
clear description about why this needs to be included in the stable
branch.
</para>
<para>An example of a cherry-picked commit would look like this:</para>
<screen>
nixos: Refactor the world.
The original commit message describing the reason why the world was torn apart.
(cherry picked from commit abcdef)
Reason: I just had a gut feeling that this would also be wanted by people from
the stone age.
</screen>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</section>
</section>
</chapter>

View File

@@ -1,75 +1,38 @@
# Operations on attribute sets.
with {
inherit (builtins) head tail length;
inherit (builtins) head tail isString;
inherit (import ./trivial.nix) or;
inherit (import ./default.nix) fold;
inherit (import ./strings.nix) concatStringsSep;
inherit (import ./lists.nix) concatMap concatLists all deepSeqList;
inherit (import ./misc.nix) maybeAttr;
};
rec {
inherit (builtins) attrNames listToAttrs hasAttr isAttrs getAttr;
/* Return an attribute from nested attribute sets.
Example:
x = { a = { b = 3; }; }
attrByPath ["a" "b"] 6 x
=> 3
attrByPath ["z" "z"] 6 x
=> 6
*/
/* Return an attribute from nested attribute sets. For instance
["x" "y"] applied to some set e returns e.x.y, if it exists. The
default value is returned otherwise. */
attrByPath = attrPath: default: e:
let attr = head attrPath;
in
if attrPath == [] then e
else if e ? ${attr}
then attrByPath (tail attrPath) default e.${attr}
else if builtins ? hasAttr && hasAttr attr e
then attrByPath (tail attrPath) default (getAttr attr e)
else default;
/* Return if an attribute from nested attribute set exists.
Example:
x = { a = { b = 3; }; }
hasAttrByPath ["a" "b"] x
=> true
hasAttrByPath ["z" "z"] x
=> false
*/
hasAttrByPath = attrPath: e:
let attr = head attrPath;
in
if attrPath == [] then true
else if e ? ${attr}
then hasAttrByPath (tail attrPath) e.${attr}
else false;
/* Return nested attribute set in which an attribute is set.
Example:
setAttrByPath ["a" "b"] 3
=> { a = { b = 3; }; }
*/
/* Return nested attribute set in which an attribute is set. For instance
["x" "y"] applied with some value v returns `x.y = v;' */
setAttrByPath = attrPath: value:
if attrPath == [] then value
else listToAttrs
[ { name = head attrPath; value = setAttrByPath (tail attrPath) value; } ];
/* Like `getAttrPath' without a default value. If it doesn't find the
path it will throw.
Example:
x = { a = { b = 3; }; }
getAttrFromPath ["a" "b"] x
=> 3
getAttrFromPath ["z" "z"] x
=> error: cannot find attribute `z.z'
*/
getAttrFromPath = attrPath: set:
let errorMsg = "cannot find attribute `" + concatStringsSep "." attrPath + "'";
in attrByPath attrPath (abort errorMsg) set;
@@ -81,7 +44,8 @@ rec {
attrVals ["a" "b" "c"] as
=> [as.a as.b as.c]
*/
attrVals = nameList: set: map (x: set.${x}) nameList;
attrVals = nameList: set:
map (x: getAttr x set) nameList;
/* Return the values of all attributes in the given set, sorted by
@@ -91,7 +55,7 @@ rec {
attrValues {c = 3; a = 1; b = 2;}
=> [1 2 3]
*/
attrValues = builtins.attrValues or (attrs: attrVals (attrNames attrs) attrs);
attrValues = attrs: attrVals (attrNames attrs) attrs;
/* Collect each attribute named `attr' from a list of attribute
@@ -101,8 +65,7 @@ rec {
catAttrs "a" [{a = 1;} {b = 0;} {a = 2;}]
=> [1 2]
*/
catAttrs = builtins.catAttrs or
(attr: l: concatLists (map (s: if s ? ${attr} then [s.${attr}] else []) l));
catAttrs = attr: l: concatLists (map (s: if hasAttr attr s then [(getAttr attr s)] else []) l);
/* Filter an attribute set by removing all attributes for which the
@@ -113,39 +76,17 @@ rec {
=> { foo = 1; }
*/
filterAttrs = pred: set:
listToAttrs (concatMap (name: let v = set.${name}; in if pred name v then [(nameValuePair name v)] else []) (attrNames set));
listToAttrs (fold (n: ys: let v = getAttr n set; in if pred n v then [(nameValuePair n v)] ++ ys else ys) [] (attrNames set));
/* Filter an attribute set recursivelly by removing all attributes for
which the given predicate return false.
Example:
filterAttrsRecursive (n: v: v != null) { foo = { bar = null; }; }
=> { foo = {}; }
*/
filterAttrsRecursive = pred: set:
listToAttrs (
concatMap (name:
let v = set.${name}; in
if pred name v then [
(nameValuePair name (
if isAttrs v then filterAttrsRecursive pred v
else v
))
] else []
) (attrNames set)
);
/* Apply fold functions to values grouped by key.
Example:
foldAttrs (n: a: [n] ++ a) [] [{ a = 2; } { a = 3; }]
=> { a = [ 2 3 ]; }
/* foldAttrs: apply fold functions to values grouped by key. Eg accumulate values as list:
foldAttrs (n: a: [n] ++ a) [] [{ a = 2; } { a = 3; }]
=> { a = [ 2 3 ]; }
*/
foldAttrs = op: nul: list_of_attrs:
fold (n: a:
fold (name: o:
o // (listToAttrs [{inherit name; value = op n.${name} (a.${name} or nul); }])
o // (listToAttrs [{inherit name; value = op (getAttr name n) (maybeAttr name nul a); }])
) a (attrNames n)
) {} list_of_attrs;
@@ -156,10 +97,10 @@ rec {
Type:
collect ::
(AttrSet -> Bool) -> AttrSet -> [x]
(AttrSet -> Bool) -> AttrSet -> AttrSet
Example:
collect isList { a = { b = ["b"]; }; c = [1]; }
collect builtins.isList { a = { b = ["b"]; }; c = [1]; }
=> [["b"] [1]]
collect (x: x ? outPath)
@@ -169,19 +110,14 @@ rec {
collect = pred: attrs:
if pred attrs then
[ attrs ]
else if isAttrs attrs then
else if builtins.isAttrs attrs then
concatMap (collect pred) (attrValues attrs)
else
[];
/* Utility function that creates a {name, value} pair as expected by
builtins.listToAttrs.
Example:
nameValuePair "some" 6
=> { name = "some"; value = 6; }
*/
builtins.listToAttrs. */
nameValuePair = name: value: { inherit name value; };
@@ -196,7 +132,7 @@ rec {
=> { x = "x-foo"; y = "y-bar"; }
*/
mapAttrs = f: set:
listToAttrs (map (attr: { name = attr; value = f attr set.${attr}; }) (attrNames set));
listToAttrs (map (attr: { name = attr; value = f attr (getAttr attr set); }) (attrNames set));
/* Like `mapAttrs', but allows the name of each attribute to be
@@ -209,7 +145,7 @@ rec {
=> { foo_x = "bar-a"; foo_y = "bar-b"; }
*/
mapAttrs' = f: set:
listToAttrs (map (attr: f attr set.${attr}) (attrNames set));
listToAttrs (map (attr: f attr (getAttr attr set)) (attrNames set));
/* Call a function for each attribute in the given set and return
@@ -221,7 +157,7 @@ rec {
=> [ "xa" "yb" ]
*/
mapAttrsToList = f: attrs:
map (name: f name attrs.${name}) (attrNames attrs);
map (name: f name (getAttr name attrs)) (attrNames attrs);
/* Like `mapAttrs', except that it recursively applies itself to
@@ -282,71 +218,36 @@ rec {
listToAttrs (map (n: nameValuePair n (f n)) names);
/* Check whether the argument is a derivation. Any set with
{ type = "derivation"; } counts as a derivation.
Example:
nixpkgs = import <nixpkgs> {}
isDerivation nixpkgs.ruby
=> true
isDerivation "foobar"
=> false
*/
/* Check whether the argument is a derivation. */
isDerivation = x: isAttrs x && x ? type && x.type == "derivation";
/* Converts a store path to a fake derivation. */
toDerivation = path:
let path' = builtins.storePath path; in
{ type = "derivation";
name = builtins.unsafeDiscardStringContext (builtins.substring 33 (-1) (baseNameOf path'));
outPath = path';
outputs = [ "out" ];
};
/* If `cond' is true, return the attribute set `as',
otherwise an empty attribute set.
Example:
optionalAttrs (true) { my = "set"; }
=> { my = "set"; }
optionalAttrs (false) { my = "set"; }
=> { }
*/
/* If the Boolean `cond' is true, return the attribute set `as',
otherwise an empty attribute set. */
optionalAttrs = cond: as: if cond then as else {};
/* Merge sets of attributes and use the function f to merge attributes
values.
Example:
zipAttrsWithNames ["a"] (name: vs: vs) [{a = "x";} {a = "y"; b = "z";}]
=> { a = ["x" "y"]; }
*/
values. */
zipAttrsWithNames = names: f: sets:
listToAttrs (map (name: {
inherit name;
value = f name (catAttrs name sets);
}) names);
/* Implentation note: Common names appear multiple times in the list of
names, hopefully this does not affect the system because the maximal
laziness avoid computing twice the same expression and listToAttrs does
not care about duplicated attribute names.
Example:
zipAttrsWith (name: values: values) [{a = "x";} {a = "y"; b = "z";}]
=> { a = ["x" "y"]; b = ["z"] }
*/
# implentation note: Common names appear multiple times in the list of
# names, hopefully this does not affect the system because the maximal
# laziness avoid computing twice the same expression and listToAttrs does
# not care about duplicated attribute names.
zipAttrsWith = f: sets: zipAttrsWithNames (concatMap attrNames sets) f sets;
/* Like `zipAttrsWith' with `(name: values: value)' as the function.
Example:
zipAttrs [{a = "x";} {a = "y"; b = "z";}]
=> { a = ["x" "y"]; b = ["z"] }
*/
zipAttrs = zipAttrsWith (name: values: values);
/* backward compatibility */
zipWithNames = zipAttrsWithNames;
zip = builtins.trace "lib.zip is deprecated, use lib.zipAttrsWith instead" zipAttrsWith;
/* Does the same as the update operator '//' except that attributes are
merged until the given pedicate is verified. The predicate should
accept 3 arguments which are the path to reach the attribute, a part of
@@ -410,15 +311,6 @@ rec {
!(isAttrs lhs && isAttrs rhs)
) lhs rhs;
/* Returns true if the pattern is contained in the set. False otherwise.
FIXME(zimbatm): this example doesn't work !!!
Example:
sys = mkSystem { }
matchAttrs { cpu = { bits = 64; }; } sys
=> true
*/
matchAttrs = pattern: attrs:
fold or false (attrValues (zipAttrsWithNames (attrNames pattern) (n: values:
let pat = head values; val = head (tail values); in
@@ -427,41 +319,10 @@ rec {
else pat == val
) [pattern attrs]));
/* Override only the attributes that are already present in the old set
useful for deep-overriding.
Example:
x = { a = { b = 4; c = 3; }; }
overrideExisting x { a = { b = 6; d = 2; }; }
=> { a = { b = 6; d = 2; }; }
*/
# override only the attributes that are already present in the old set
# useful for deep-overriding
overrideExisting = old: new:
old // listToAttrs (map (attr: nameValuePair attr (attrByPath [attr] old.${attr} new)) (attrNames old));
/* Try given attributes in order. If no attributes are found, return
attribute list itself.
Example:
tryAttrs ["a" "b"] { a = 1; b = 2; }
=> 1
tryAttrs ["a" "b"] { c = 3; }
=> { c = 3; }
*/
tryAttrs = allAttrs: set:
let tryAttrs_ = attrs:
if attrs == [] then set
else
(let h = head attrs; in
if hasAttr h set then getAttr h set
else tryAttrs_ (tail attrs));
in tryAttrs_ allAttrs;
/*** deprecated stuff ***/
deepSeqAttrs = throw "removed 2016-02-29 because unused and broken";
zipWithNames = zipAttrsWithNames;
zip = builtins.trace
"lib.zip is deprecated, use lib.zipAttrsWith instead" zipAttrsWith;
old // listToAttrs (map (attr: nameValuePair attr (attrByPath [attr] (getAttr attr old) new)) (attrNames old));
deepSeqAttrs = x: y: deepSeqList (attrValues x) y;
}

View File

@@ -1,74 +1,15 @@
{lib, pkgs} :
let inherit (lib) nv nvs; in
{
# composableDerivation basically mixes these features:
# - fix function
# - mergeAttrBy
# - provides shortcuts for "options" such as "--enable-foo" and adding
# buildInputs, see php example
# see for example:
# - development/interpreters/php_configurable/default.nix
# - .. search composableDerivation in all-packages.nix ..
#
# It predates styles which are common today, such as
# * the config attr
# * mkDerivation.override feature
# * overrideDerivation (lib/customization.nix)
#
# Some of the most more important usage examples (which could be rewritten if it was important):
# * php
# * postgis
# * vim_configurable
#
# A minimal example illustrating most features would look like this:
# let base = composableDerivation { (fixed : let inherit (fixed.fixed) name in {
# src = fetchurl {
# }
# buildInputs = [A];
# preConfigre = "echo ${name}";
# # attention, "name" attr is missing, thus you cannot instantiate "base".
# }
# in {
# # These all add name attribute, thus you can instantiate those:
# v1 = base.merge ({ name = "foo-add-B"; buildInputs = [B]; }); // B gets merged into buildInputs
# v2 = base.merge ({ name = "mix-in-pre-configure-lines" preConfigre = ""; });
# v3 = base.replace ({ name = "foo-no-A-only-B;" buildInputs = [B]; });
# }
#
# So yes, you can think about it being something like nixos modules, and
# you'd be merging "features" in one at a time using .merge or .replace
# Thanks Shea for telling me that I rethink the documentation ..
#
# issues:
# * its complicated to understand
# * some "features" such as exact merge behaviour are burried in mergeAttrBy
# and defaultOverridableDelayableArgs assuming the default behaviour does
# the right thing in the common case
# * Eelco once said using such fix style functions are slow to evaluate
# * Too quick & dirty. Hard to understand for others. The benefit was that
# you were able to create a kernel builder like base derivation and replace
# / add patches the way you want without having to declare function arguments
#
# nice features:
# declaring "optional featuers" is modular. For instance:
# flags.curl = {
# configureFlags = ["--with-curl=${curl}" "--with-curlwrappers"];
# buildInputs = [curl openssl];
# };
# flags.other = { .. }
# (Example taken from PHP)
#
# alternative styles / related features:
# * Eg see function supporting building the kernel
# * versionedDerivation (discussion about this is still going on - or ended)
# * composedArgsAndFun
# * mkDerivation.override
# * overrideDerivation
# * using { .., *Support ? false }: like configurable options.
# To find those examples use grep
#
# To sum up: It exists for historical reasons - and for most commonly used
# tasks the alternatives should be used
#
# If you have questions about this code ping Marc Weber.
# You should be able to override anything you like easily
# grep the mailinglist by title "python proposal" (dec 08)
# -> http://mail.cs.uu.nl/pipermail/nix-dev/2008-December/001571.html
# to see why this got complicated when using all its features
# TODO add newer example using new syntax (kernel derivation proposal -> mailinglist)
composableDerivation = {
mkDerivation ? pkgs.stdenv.mkDerivation,

View File

@@ -1,7 +1,5 @@
let
lib = import ./default.nix;
inherit (builtins) attrNames isFunction;
let lib = import ./default.nix;
inherit (builtins) getAttr attrNames isFunction;
in
@@ -31,8 +29,8 @@ rec {
For another application, see build-support/vm, where this
function is used to build arbitrary derivations inside a QEMU
virtual machine.
*/
virtual machine. */
overrideDerivation = drv: f:
let
newDrv = derivation (drv.drvAttrs // (f drv));
@@ -51,23 +49,27 @@ rec {
else { }));
# usage: (you can use override multiple times)
# let d = makeOverridable stdenv.mkDerivation { name = ..; buildInputs; }
# noBuildInputs = d.override { buildInputs = []; }
# additionalBuildInputs = d.override ( args : args // { buildInputs = args.buildInputs ++ [ additional ]; } )
makeOverridable = f: origArgs:
let
ff = f origArgs;
overrideWith = newArgs: origArgs // (if builtins.isFunction newArgs then newArgs origArgs else newArgs);
in
if builtins.isAttrs ff then (ff //
{ override = newArgs: makeOverridable f (overrideWith newArgs);
overrideDerivation = fdrv:
makeOverridable (args: overrideDerivation (f args) fdrv) origArgs;
{ override = newArgs:
makeOverridable f (origArgs // (if builtins.isFunction newArgs then newArgs origArgs else newArgs));
deepOverride = newArgs:
makeOverridable f (lib.overrideExisting (lib.mapAttrs (deepOverrider newArgs) origArgs) newArgs);
})
else if builtins.isFunction ff then
{ override = newArgs: makeOverridable f (overrideWith newArgs);
__functor = self: ff;
overrideDerivation = throw "overrideDerivation not yet supported for functors";
}
else ff;
deepOverrider = newArgs: name: x: if builtins.isAttrs x then (
if x ? deepOverride then (x.deepOverride newArgs) else
if x ? override then (x.override newArgs) else
x) else x;
/* Call the package function in the file `fn' with the required
arguments automatically. The function is called with the
@@ -91,29 +93,10 @@ rec {
};
*/
callPackageWith = autoArgs: fn: args:
let
f = if builtins.isFunction fn then fn else import fn;
auto = builtins.intersectAttrs (builtins.functionArgs f) autoArgs;
in makeOverridable f (auto // args);
let f = if builtins.isFunction fn then fn else import fn; in
makeOverridable f ((builtins.intersectAttrs (builtins.functionArgs f) autoArgs) // args);
/* Like callPackage, but for a function that returns an attribute
set of derivations. The override function is added to the
individual attributes. */
callPackagesWith = autoArgs: fn: args:
let
f = if builtins.isFunction fn then fn else import fn;
auto = builtins.intersectAttrs (builtins.functionArgs f) autoArgs;
finalArgs = auto // args;
pkgs = f finalArgs;
mkAttrOverridable = name: pkg: pkg // {
override = newArgs: mkAttrOverridable name (f (finalArgs // newArgs)).${name};
};
in lib.mapAttrs mkAttrOverridable pkgs;
/* Add attributes to each output of a derivation without changing
the derivation itself. */
/* Add attributes to each output of a derivation without changing the derivation itself */
addPassthru = drv: passthru:
let
outputs = drv.outputs or [ "out" ];
@@ -124,63 +107,10 @@ rec {
outputToAttrListElement = outputName:
{ name = outputName;
value = commonAttrs // {
inherit (drv.${outputName}) outPath drvPath type outputName;
inherit (builtins.getAttr outputName drv) outPath drvPath type outputName;
};
};
outputsList = map outputToAttrListElement outputs;
in commonAttrs // { outputUnspecified = true; };
/* Strip a derivation of all non-essential attributes, returning
only those needed by hydra-eval-jobs. Also strictly evaluate the
result to ensure that there are no thunks kept alive to prevent
garbage collection. */
hydraJob = drv:
let
outputs = drv.outputs or ["out"];
commonAttrs =
{ inherit (drv) name system meta; inherit outputs; }
// lib.optionalAttrs (drv._hydraAggregate or false) {
_hydraAggregate = true;
constituents = map hydraJob (lib.flatten drv.constituents);
}
// (lib.listToAttrs outputsList);
makeOutput = outputName:
let output = drv.${outputName}; in
{ name = outputName;
value = commonAttrs // {
outPath = output.outPath;
drvPath = output.drvPath;
type = "derivation";
inherit outputName;
};
};
outputsList = map makeOutput outputs;
drv' = (lib.head outputsList).value;
in lib.deepSeq drv' drv';
/* Make a set of packages with a common scope. All packages called
with the provided `callPackage' will be evaluated with the same
arguments. Any package in the set may depend on any other. The
`override' function allows subsequent modification of the package
set in a consistent way, i.e. all packages in the set will be
called with the overridden packages. The package sets may be
hierarchical: the packages in the set are called with the scope
provided by `newScope' and the set provides a `newScope' attribute
which can form the parent scope for later package sets. */
makeScope = newScope: f:
let self = f self // {
newScope = scope: newScope (self // scope);
callPackage = self.newScope {};
override = g: makeScope newScope (self_:
let super = f self_;
in super // g super self_);
};
in self;
in builtins.getAttr drv.outputName commonAttrs;
}

View File

@@ -9,16 +9,23 @@ in
rec {
inherit (builtins) addErrorContext;
addErrorContextToAttrs = lib.mapAttrs (a: v: lib.addErrorContext "while evaluating ${a}" v);
# Wrapper aroung the primop `addErrorContext', which shouldn't used
# directly. It evaluates and returns `val', but if an evaluation
# error occurs, the text in `msg' is added to the error context
# (stack trace) printed by Nix.
addErrorContext =
if builtins ? addErrorContext
then builtins.addErrorContext
else msg: val: val;
traceIf = p: msg: x: if p then trace msg x else x;
traceVal = x: trace x x;
traceXMLVal = x: trace (builtins.toXML x) x;
traceXMLValMarked = str: x: trace (str + builtins.toXML x) x;
addErrorContextToAttrs = lib.mapAttrs (a : v : lib.addErrorContext "while evaluating ${a}" v);
traceVal = if builtins ? trace then x: (builtins.trace x x) else x: x;
traceXMLVal = if builtins ? trace then x: (builtins.trace (builtins.toXML x) x) else x: x;
traceXMLValMarked = str: if builtins ? trace then x: (builtins.trace ( str + builtins.toXML x) x) else x: x;
# this can help debug your code as well - designed to not produce thousands of lines
traceShowVal = x : trace (showVal x) x;
traceShowValMarked = str: x: trace (str + showVal x) x;
@@ -37,13 +44,12 @@ rec {
else if isString x then "x is a string `${substring 0 50 x}...'"
else "x is probably a path `${substring 0 50 (toString x)}...'";
# trace the arguments passed to function and its result
# trace the arguments passed to function and its result
# maybe rewrite these functions in a traceCallXml like style. Then one function is enough
traceCall = n : f : a : let t = n2 : x : traceShowValMarked "${n} ${n2}:" x; in t "result" (f (t "arg 1" a));
traceCall2 = n : f : a : b : let t = n2 : x : traceShowValMarked "${n} ${n2}:" x; in t "result" (f (t "arg 1" a) (t "arg 2" b));
traceCall3 = n : f : a : b : c : let t = n2 : x : traceShowValMarked "${n} ${n2}:" x; in t "result" (f (t "arg 1" a) (t "arg 2" b) (t "arg 3" c));
# FIXME: rename this?
traceValIfNot = c: x:
if c x then true else trace (showVal x) false;
@@ -64,7 +70,7 @@ rec {
then [ { inherit name; expected = test.expected; result = test.expr; } ]
else [] ) tests));
# create a test assuming that list elements are true
# usage: { testX = allTrue [ true ]; }
testAllTrue = expr : { inherit expr; expected = map (x: true) expr; };
@@ -103,11 +109,11 @@ rec {
let nr = a;
in (str: expr:
if isFunction expr then
(arg:
(arg:
traceCallXml (builtins.add 1 nr) "${str}\n arg ${builtins.toString nr} is \n ${builtins.toXML (strict arg)}" (expr arg)
)
else
else
let r = strict expr;
in trace "${str}\n result:\n${builtins.toXML r}" r
in builtins.trace "${str}\n result:\n${builtins.toXML r}" r
);
}

View File

@@ -11,17 +11,18 @@ let
types = import ./types.nix;
meta = import ./meta.nix;
debug = import ./debug.nix;
misc = import ./deprecated.nix;
misc = import ./misc.nix;
maintainers = import ./maintainers.nix;
platforms = import ./platforms.nix;
systems = import ./systems.nix;
customisation = import ./customisation.nix;
licenses = import ./licenses.nix;
sandbox = import ./sandbox.nix;
in
{ inherit trivial lists strings stringsWithDeps attrsets sources options
modules types meta debug maintainers licenses platforms systems sandbox;
modules types meta debug maintainers licenses platforms systems;
# Pull in some builtins not included elsewhere.
inherit (builtins) pathExists readFile;
}
# !!! don't include everything at top-level; perhaps only the most
# commonly used functions.

View File

@@ -1,423 +0,0 @@
let lib = import ./default.nix;
inherit (builtins) isFunction head tail isList isAttrs isInt attrNames;
in
with import ./lists.nix;
with import ./attrsets.nix;
with import ./strings.nix;
rec {
# returns default if env var is not set
maybeEnv = name: default:
let value = builtins.getEnv name; in
if value == "" then default else value;
defaultMergeArg = x : y: if builtins.isAttrs y then
y
else
(y x);
defaultMerge = x: y: x // (defaultMergeArg x y);
foldArgs = merger: f: init: x:
let arg=(merger init (defaultMergeArg init x));
# now add the function with composed args already applied to the final attrs
base = (setAttrMerge "passthru" {} (f arg)
( z : z // rec {
function = foldArgs merger f arg;
args = (lib.attrByPath ["passthru" "args"] {} z) // x;
} ));
withStdOverrides = base // {
override = base.passthru.function;
} ;
in
withStdOverrides;
# predecessors: proposed replacement for applyAndFun (which has a bug cause it merges twice)
# the naming "overridableDelayableArgs" tries to express that you can
# - override attr values which have been supplied earlier
# - use attr values before they have been supplied by accessing the fix point
# name "fixed"
# f: the (delayed overridden) arguments are applied to this
#
# initial: initial attrs arguments and settings. see defaultOverridableDelayableArgs
#
# returns: f applied to the arguments // special attributes attrs
# a) merge: merge applied args with new args. Wether an argument is overridden depends on the merge settings
# b) replace: this let's you replace and remove names no matter which merge function has been set
#
# examples: see test cases "res" below;
overridableDelayableArgs =
f : # the function applied to the arguments
initial : # you pass attrs, the functions below are passing a function taking the fix argument
let
takeFixed = if isFunction initial then initial else (fixed : initial); # transform initial to an expression always taking the fixed argument
tidy = args :
let # apply all functions given in "applyPreTidy" in sequence
applyPreTidyFun = fold ( n : a : x : n ( a x ) ) lib.id (maybeAttr "applyPreTidy" [] args);
in removeAttrs (applyPreTidyFun args) ( ["applyPreTidy"] ++ (maybeAttr "removeAttrs" [] args) ); # tidy up args before applying them
fun = n : x :
let newArgs = fixed :
let args = takeFixed fixed;
mergeFun = args.${n};
in if isAttrs x then (mergeFun args x)
else assert isFunction x;
mergeFun args (x ( args // { inherit fixed; }));
in overridableDelayableArgs f newArgs;
in
(f (tidy (lib.fix takeFixed))) // {
merge = fun "mergeFun";
replace = fun "keepFun";
};
defaultOverridableDelayableArgs = f :
let defaults = {
mergeFun = mergeAttrByFunc; # default merge function. merge strategie (concatenate lists, strings) is given by mergeAttrBy
keepFun = a : b : { inherit (a) removeAttrs mergeFun keepFun mergeAttrBy; } // b; # even when using replace preserve these values
applyPreTidy = []; # list of functions applied to args before args are tidied up (usage case : prepareDerivationArgs)
mergeAttrBy = mergeAttrBy // {
applyPreTidy = a : b : a ++ b;
removeAttrs = a : b: a ++ b;
};
removeAttrs = ["mergeFun" "keepFun" "mergeAttrBy" "removeAttrs" "fixed" ]; # before applying the arguments to the function make sure these names are gone
};
in (overridableDelayableArgs f defaults).merge;
# rec { # an example of how composedArgsAndFun can be used
# a = composedArgsAndFun (x : x) { a = ["2"]; meta = { d = "bar";}; };
# # meta.d will be lost ! It's your task to preserve it (eg using a merge function)
# b = a.passthru.function { a = [ "3" ]; meta = { d2 = "bar2";}; };
# # instead of passing/ overriding values you can use a merge function:
# c = b.passthru.function ( x: { a = x.a ++ ["4"]; }); # consider using (maybeAttr "a" [] x)
# }
# result:
# {
# a = { a = ["2"]; meta = { d = "bar"; }; passthru = { function = .. }; };
# b = { a = ["3"]; meta = { d2 = "bar2"; }; passthru = { function = .. }; };
# c = { a = ["3" "4"]; meta = { d2 = "bar2"; }; passthru = { function = .. }; };
# # c2 is equal to c
# }
composedArgsAndFun = f: foldArgs defaultMerge f {};
# shortcut for attrByPath ["name"] default attrs
maybeAttrNullable = maybeAttr;
# shortcut for attrByPath ["name"] default attrs
maybeAttr = name: default: attrs: attrs.${name} or default;
# Return the second argument if the first one is true or the empty version
# of the second argument.
ifEnable = cond: val:
if cond then val
else if builtins.isList val then []
else if builtins.isAttrs val then {}
# else if builtins.isString val then ""
else if val == true || val == false then false
else null;
# Return true only if there is an attribute and it is true.
checkFlag = attrSet: name:
if name == "true" then true else
if name == "false" then false else
if (elem name (attrByPath ["flags"] [] attrSet)) then true else
attrByPath [name] false attrSet ;
# Input : attrSet, [ [name default] ... ], name
# Output : its value or default.
getValue = attrSet: argList: name:
( attrByPath [name] (if checkFlag attrSet name then true else
if argList == [] then null else
let x = builtins.head argList; in
if (head x) == name then
(head (tail x))
else (getValue attrSet
(tail argList) name)) attrSet );
# Input : attrSet, [[name default] ...], [ [flagname reqs..] ... ]
# Output : are reqs satisfied? It's asserted.
checkReqs = attrSet : argList : condList :
(
fold lib.and true
(map (x: let name = (head x) ; in
((checkFlag attrSet name) ->
(fold lib.and true
(map (y: let val=(getValue attrSet argList y); in
(val!=null) && (val!=false))
(tail x))))) condList)) ;
# This function has O(n^2) performance.
uniqList = {inputList, acc ? []} :
let go = xs : acc :
if xs == []
then []
else let x = head xs;
y = if elem x acc then [] else [x];
in y ++ go (tail xs) (y ++ acc);
in go inputList acc;
uniqListExt = {inputList, outputList ? [],
getter ? (x : x), compare ? (x: y: x==y)}:
if inputList == [] then outputList else
let x=head inputList;
isX = y: (compare (getter y) (getter x));
newOutputList = outputList ++
(if any isX outputList then [] else [x]);
in uniqListExt {outputList=newOutputList;
inputList = (tail inputList);
inherit getter compare;
};
condConcat = name: list: checker:
if list == [] then name else
if checker (head list) then
condConcat
(name + (head (tail list)))
(tail (tail list))
checker
else condConcat
name (tail (tail list)) checker;
lazyGenericClosure = {startSet, operator}:
let
work = list: doneKeys: result:
if list == [] then
result
else
let x = head list; key = x.key; in
if elem key doneKeys then
work (tail list) doneKeys result
else
work (tail list ++ operator x) ([key] ++ doneKeys) ([x] ++ result);
in
work startSet [] [];
innerModifySumArgs = f: x: a: b: if b == null then (f a b) // x else
innerModifySumArgs f x (a // b);
modifySumArgs = f: x: innerModifySumArgs f x {};
innerClosePropagation = acc : xs :
if xs == []
then acc
else let y = head xs;
ys = tail xs;
in if ! isAttrs y
then innerClosePropagation acc ys
else let acc' = [y] ++ acc;
in innerClosePropagation
acc'
(uniqList { inputList = (maybeAttrNullable "propagatedBuildInputs" [] y)
++ (maybeAttrNullable "propagatedNativeBuildInputs" [] y)
++ ys;
acc = acc';
}
);
closePropagation = list: (uniqList {inputList = (innerClosePropagation [] list);});
# calls a function (f attr value ) for each record item. returns a list
mapAttrsFlatten = f : r : map (attr: f attr r.${attr}) (attrNames r);
# attribute set containing one attribute
nvs = name : value : listToAttrs [ (nameValuePair name value) ];
# adds / replaces an attribute of an attribute set
setAttr = set : name : v : set // (nvs name v);
# setAttrMerge (similar to mergeAttrsWithFunc but only merges the values of a particular name)
# setAttrMerge "a" [] { a = [2];} (x : x ++ [3]) -> { a = [2 3]; }
# setAttrMerge "a" [] { } (x : x ++ [3]) -> { a = [ 3]; }
setAttrMerge = name : default : attrs : f :
setAttr attrs name (f (maybeAttr name default attrs));
# Using f = a : b = b the result is similar to //
# merge attributes with custom function handling the case that the attribute
# exists in both sets
mergeAttrsWithFunc = f : set1 : set2 :
fold (n: set : if set ? ${n}
then setAttr set n (f set.${n} set2.${n})
else set )
(set2 // set1) (attrNames set2);
# merging two attribute set concatenating the values of same attribute names
# eg { a = 7; } { a = [ 2 3 ]; } becomes { a = [ 7 2 3 ]; }
mergeAttrsConcatenateValues = mergeAttrsWithFunc ( a : b : (toList a) ++ (toList b) );
# merges attributes using //, if a name exisits in both attributes
# an error will be triggered unless its listed in mergeLists
# so you can mergeAttrsNoOverride { buildInputs = [a]; } { buildInputs = [a]; } {} to get
# { buildInputs = [a b]; }
# merging buildPhase does'nt really make sense. The cases will be rare where appending /prefixing will fit your needs?
# in these cases the first buildPhase will override the second one
# ! deprecated, use mergeAttrByFunc instead
mergeAttrsNoOverride = { mergeLists ? ["buildInputs" "propagatedBuildInputs"],
overrideSnd ? [ "buildPhase" ]
} : attrs1 : attrs2 :
fold (n: set :
setAttr set n ( if set ? ${n}
then # merge
if elem n mergeLists # attribute contains list, merge them by concatenating
then attrs2.${n} ++ attrs1.${n}
else if elem n overrideSnd
then attrs1.${n}
else throw "error mergeAttrsNoOverride, attribute ${n} given in both attributes - no merge func defined"
else attrs2.${n} # add attribute not existing in attr1
)) attrs1 (attrNames attrs2);
# example usage:
# mergeAttrByFunc {
# inherit mergeAttrBy; # defined below
# buildInputs = [ a b ];
# } {
# buildInputs = [ c d ];
# };
# will result in
# { mergeAttrsBy = [...]; buildInputs = [ a b c d ]; }
# is used by prepareDerivationArgs, defaultOverridableDelayableArgs and can be used when composing using
# foldArgs, composedArgsAndFun or applyAndFun. Example: composableDerivation in all-packages.nix
mergeAttrByFunc = x : y :
let
mergeAttrBy2 = { mergeAttrBy=lib.mergeAttrs; }
// (maybeAttr "mergeAttrBy" {} x)
// (maybeAttr "mergeAttrBy" {} y); in
fold lib.mergeAttrs {} [
x y
(mapAttrs ( a : v : # merge special names using given functions
if x ? ${a}
then if y ? ${a}
then v x.${a} y.${a} # both have attr, use merge func
else x.${a} # only x has attr
else y.${a} # only y has attr)
) (removeAttrs mergeAttrBy2
# don't merge attrs which are neither in x nor y
(filter (a: ! x ? ${a} && ! y ? ${a})
(attrNames mergeAttrBy2))
)
)
];
mergeAttrsByFuncDefaults = foldl mergeAttrByFunc { inherit mergeAttrBy; };
mergeAttrsByFuncDefaultsClean = list: removeAttrs (mergeAttrsByFuncDefaults list) ["mergeAttrBy"];
# merge attrs based on version key into mkDerivation args, see mergeAttrBy to learn about smart merge defaults
#
# This function is best explained by an example:
#
# {version ? "2.x"} :
#
# mkDerivation (mergeAttrsByVersion "package-name" version
# { # version specific settings
# "git" = { src = ..; preConfigre = "autogen.sh"; buildInputs = [automake autoconf libtool]; };
# "2.x" = { src = ..; };
# }
# { // shared settings
# buildInputs = [ common build inputs ];
# meta = { .. }
# }
# )
#
# Please note that e.g. Eelco Dolstra usually prefers having one file for
# each version. On the other hand there are valuable additional design goals
# - readability
# - do it once only
# - try to avoid duplication
#
# Marc Weber and Michael Raskin sometimes prefer keeping older
# versions around for testing and regression tests - as long as its cheap to
# do so.
#
# Very often it just happens that the "shared" code is the bigger part.
# Then using this function might be appropriate.
#
# Be aware that its easy to cause recompilations in all versions when using
# this function - also if derivations get too complex splitting into multiple
# files is the way to go.
#
# See misc.nix -> versionedDerivation
# discussion: nixpkgs: pull/310
mergeAttrsByVersion = name: version: attrsByVersion: base:
mergeAttrsByFuncDefaultsClean [ { name = "${name}-${version}"; } base (maybeAttr version (throw "bad version ${version} for ${name}") attrsByVersion)];
# sane defaults (same name as attr name so that inherit can be used)
mergeAttrBy = # { buildInputs = concatList; [...]; passthru = mergeAttr; [..]; }
listToAttrs (map (n : nameValuePair n lib.concat)
[ "nativeBuildInputs" "buildInputs" "propagatedBuildInputs" "configureFlags" "prePhases" "postAll" "patches" ])
// listToAttrs (map (n : nameValuePair n lib.mergeAttrs) [ "passthru" "meta" "cfg" "flags" ])
// listToAttrs (map (n : nameValuePair n (a: b: "${a}\n${b}") ) [ "preConfigure" "postInstall" ])
;
# prepareDerivationArgs tries to make writing configurable derivations easier
# example:
# prepareDerivationArgs {
# mergeAttrBy = {
# myScript = x : y : x ++ "\n" ++ y;
# };
# cfg = {
# readlineSupport = true;
# };
# flags = {
# readline = {
# set = {
# configureFlags = [ "--with-compiler=${compiler}" ];
# buildInputs = [ compiler ];
# pass = { inherit compiler; READLINE=1; };
# assertion = compiler.dllSupport;
# myScript = "foo";
# };
# unset = { configureFlags = ["--without-compiler"]; };
# };
# };
# src = ...
# buildPhase = '' ... '';
# name = ...
# myScript = "bar";
# };
# if you don't have need for unset you can omit the surrounding set = { .. } attr
# all attrs except flags cfg and mergeAttrBy will be merged with the
# additional data from flags depending on config settings
# It's used in composableDerivation in all-packages.nix. It's also used
# heavily in the new python and libs implementation
#
# should we check for misspelled cfg options?
# TODO use args.mergeFun here as well?
prepareDerivationArgs = args:
let args2 = { cfg = {}; flags = {}; } // args;
flagName = name : "${name}Support";
cfgWithDefaults = (listToAttrs (map (n : nameValuePair (flagName n) false) (attrNames args2.flags)))
// args2.cfg;
opts = attrValues (mapAttrs (a : v :
let v2 = if v ? set || v ? unset then v else { set = v; };
n = if cfgWithDefaults.${flagName a} then "set" else "unset";
attr = maybeAttr n {} v2; in
if (maybeAttr "assertion" true attr)
then attr
else throw "assertion of flag ${a} of derivation ${args.name} failed"
) args2.flags );
in removeAttrs
(mergeAttrsByFuncDefaults ([args] ++ opts ++ [{ passthru = cfgWithDefaults; }]))
["flags" "cfg" "mergeAttrBy" ];
nixType = x:
if isAttrs x then
if x ? outPath then "derivation"
else "attrs"
else if isFunction x then "function"
else if isList x then "list"
else if x == true then "bool"
else if x == false then "bool"
else if x == null then "null"
else if isInt x then "int"
else "string";
}

View File

@@ -1,502 +1,241 @@
let
lib = import ./default.nix;
spdx = lic: lic // {
url = "http://spdx.org/licenses/${lic.spdxId}";
};
in
lib.mapAttrs (n: v: v // { shortName = n; }) rec {
/* License identifiers from spdx.org where possible.
{
/* License identifiers loosely based on: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Licensing
* If you cannot find your license here, then look for a similar license or
* add it to this list. The URL mentioned above is a good source for inspiration.
*/
afl21 = spdx {
spdxId = "AFL-2.1";
fullName = "Academic Free License";
artistic2 = {
shortName = "Artistic 2.0";
fullName = "Artistic 2.0";
url = "http://opensource.org/licenses/artistic-license-2.0.php";
};
agpl3 = spdx {
spdxId = "AGPL-3.0";
fullName = "GNU Affero General Public License v3.0";
agpl3 = {
shortName = "AGPLv3";
fullName = "GNU Affero General Public License version 3 only";
url = https://www.gnu.org/licenses/agpl.html;
};
agpl3Plus = {
fullName = "GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 or later";
inherit (agpl3) url;
};
amazonsl = {
fullName = "Amazon Software License";
url = http://aws.amazon.com/asl/;
free = false;
shortName = "AGPLv3+";
fullName = "GNU Affero General Public License version 3 or later";
url = https://www.gnu.org/licenses/agpl.html;
};
amd = {
shortName = "amd";
fullName = "AMD License Agreement";
url = http://developer.amd.com/amd-license-agreement/;
url = "http://developer.amd.com/amd-license-agreement/";
};
apsl20 = spdx {
spdxId = "APSL-2.0";
fullName = "Apple Public Source License 2.0";
amdadl = {
shortName = "amd-adl";
fullName = "amd-adl license";
url = "http://sources.gentoo.org/cgi-bin/viewvc.cgi/gentoo-x86/licenses/AMD-ADL?revision=1.1";
};
artistic1 = spdx {
spdxId = "Artistic-1.0";
fullName = "Artistic License 1.0";
# Apple Public Source License 2.0;
# http://opensource.org/licenses/APSL-2.0
apsl20 = "APSL 2.0";
asl20 = {
shortName = "ASL2.0";
fullName = "Apache Software License 2.0";
url = http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0;
};
artistic2 = spdx {
spdxId = "Artistic-2.0";
fullName = "Artistic License 2.0";
boost = {
shortName = "boost";
fullName = "Boost Software License";
url = http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt;
};
asl20 = spdx {
spdxId = "Apache-2.0";
fullName = "Apache License 2.0";
bsd2 = {
shortName = "BSD-2";
fullName = "BSD license (2 clause)";
url = http://opensource.org/licenses/BSD-2-Clause;
};
boost = spdx {
spdxId = "BSL-1.0";
fullName = "Boost Software License 1.0";
bsd3 = {
shortName = "BSD-3";
fullName = "BSD license (3 clause)";
url = http://opensource.org/licenses/BSD-3-Clause;
};
bsd2 = spdx {
spdxId = "BSD-2-Clause";
fullName = ''BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License'';
bsdOriginal = {
shortName = "BSD-original";
fullName = "Original BSD license with advertising clause";
url = https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Licensing/BSD;
};
bsd3 = spdx {
spdxId = "BSD-3-Clause";
fullName = ''BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License'';
cddl = {
shortName = "CDDL";
fullName = "Common Development Distribution License ";
url = http://www.opensolaris.org/os/licensing/cddllicense.txt;
};
bsdOriginal = spdx {
spdxId = "BSD-4-Clause";
fullName = ''BSD 4-clause "Original" or "Old" License'';
cpl10 = {
shortName = "CPL 1.0";
fullName = "Common Public License version 1.0";
url = http://www.eclipse.org/legal/cpl-v10.html;
};
cc0 = spdx {
spdxId = "CC0-1.0";
fullName = "Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal";
epl10 = {
shortName = "EPL 1.0";
fullName = "Eclipse Public License version 1.0";
url = http://www.eclipse.org/legal/epl-v10.html;
};
cc-by-nc-sa-20 = spdx {
spdxId = "CC-BY-NC-SA-2.0";
fullName = "Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial Share Alike 2.0";
};
cc-by-nc-sa-25 = spdx {
spdxId = "CC-BY-NC-SA-2.5";
fullName = "Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial Share Alike 2.5";
};
cc-by-nc-sa-30 = spdx {
spdxId = "CC-BY-NC-SA-3.0";
fullName = "Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial Share Alike 3.0";
};
cc-by-nc-sa-40 = spdx {
spdxId = "CC-BY-NC-SA-4.0";
fullName = "Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial Share Alike 4.0";
};
cc-by-sa-25 = spdx {
spdxId = "CC-BY-SA-2.5";
fullName = "Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 2.5";
};
cc-by-30 = spdx {
spdxId = "CC-BY-3.0";
fullName = "Creative Commons Attribution 3.0";
};
cc-by-sa-30 = spdx {
spdxId = "CC-BY-SA-3.0";
fullName = "Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 3.0";
};
cc-by-40 = spdx {
spdxId = "CC-BY-4.0";
fullName = "Creative Commons Attribution 4.0";
};
cc-by-sa-40 = spdx {
spdxId = "CC-BY-SA-4.0";
fullName = "Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 4.0";
};
cddl = spdx {
spdxId = "CDDL-1.0";
fullName = "Common Development and Distribution License 1.0";
};
cecill20 = spdx {
spdxId = "CECILL-2.0";
fullName = "CeCILL Free Software License Agreement v2.0";
};
cecill-b = spdx {
spdxId = "CECILL-B";
fullName = "CeCILL-B Free Software License Agreement";
};
cecill-c = spdx {
spdxId = "CECILL-C";
fullName = "CeCILL-C Free Software License Agreement";
};
cpl10 = spdx {
spdxId = "CPL-1.0";
fullName = "Common Public License 1.0";
};
doc = spdx {
spdxId = "DOC";
fullName = "DOC License";
};
efl10 = spdx {
spdxId = "EFL-1.0";
fullName = "Eiffel Forum License v1.0";
};
efl20 = spdx {
spdxId = "EFL-2.0";
fullName = "Eiffel Forum License v2.0";
};
epl10 = spdx {
spdxId = "EPL-1.0";
fullName = "Eclipse Public License 1.0";
};
epson = {
fullName = "Seiko Epson Corporation Software License Agreement for Linux";
url = https://download.ebz.epson.net/dsc/du/02/eula/global/LINUX_EN.html;
free = false;
};
fdl12 = spdx {
spdxId = "GFDL-1.2";
fullName = "GNU Free Documentation License v1.2";
};
fdl13 = spdx {
spdxId = "GFDL-1.3";
fullName = "GNU Free Documentation License v1.2";
};
free = {
fullName = "Unspecified free software license";
};
gpl1 = spdx {
spdxId = "GPL-1.0";
fullName = "GNU General Public License v1.0 only";
};
gpl1Plus = spdx {
spdxId = "GPL-1.0+";
fullName = "GNU General Public License v1.0 or later";
};
gpl2 = spdx {
spdxId = "GPL-2.0";
fullName = "GNU General Public License v2.0 only";
};
gpl2ClasspathPlus = {
fullName = "GNU General Public License v2.0 or later (with Classpath exception)";
url = https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Licensing/GPL_Classpath_Exception;
};
gpl2 = "GPLv2";
gpl2Oss = {
shortName = "GPLv2+OSS";
fullName = "GNU General Public License version 2 only (with OSI approved licenses linking exception)";
url = http://www.mysql.com/about/legal/licensing/foss-exception;
};
gpl2Plus = spdx {
spdxId = "GPL-2.0+";
fullName = "GNU General Public License v2.0 or later";
# GNU General Public License version 2 or later;
# http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/gpl-2.0.html
gpl2Plus = "GPLv2+";
gpl3 = {
shortName = "GPLv3";
fullName = "GNU General Public License version 3 only";
url = http://www.fsf.org/licensing/licenses/gpl.html;
};
gpl3 = spdx {
spdxId = "GPL-3.0";
fullName = "GNU General Public License v3.0 only";
};
gpl3Plus = spdx {
spdxId = "GPL-3.0+";
fullName = "GNU General Public License v3.0 or later";
gpl3Plus = {
shortName = "GPLv3+";
fullName = "GNU General Public License version 3 or later";
url = http://www.fsf.org/licensing/licenses/gpl.html;
};
gpl3ClasspathPlus = {
fullName = "GNU General Public License v3.0 or later (with Classpath exception)";
shortName = "GPLv3+classpath+";
fullName = "GNU General Public License version 3 or later (with Classpath exception)";
url = https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Licensing/GPL_Classpath_Exception;
};
# Intel's license, seems free
iasl = {
fullName = "iASL";
url = http://www.calculate-linux.org/packages/licenses/iASL;
isc = {
shortName = "ISC";
fullName = "Internet Systems Consortium License";
url = http://www.opensource.org/licenses/ISC;
};
ijg = spdx {
spdxId = "IJG";
ipl10 = {
shortName = "IPL 1.0";
fullName = "IBM Public License Version 1.0";
url = http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/opensource/library/os-i18n2/os-ipl.html;
};
ijg = {
shortName = "IJG";
fullName = "Independent JPEG Group License";
url = https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Licensing/IJG;
};
inria = {
fullName = "INRIA Non-Commercial License Agreement";
url = "http://compcert.inria.fr/doc/LICENSE";
libtiff = {
shortName = "libtiff";
fullName = "libtiff license";
url = https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Licensing/libtiff;
};
ipa = spdx {
spdxId = "IPA";
fullName = "IPA Font License";
lgpl2 = "LGPLv2";
lgpl2Plus = {
shortName = "LGPLv2+";
fullName = "GNU Library General Public License version 2 or later";
url = http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/lgpl-2.0.html;
};
ipl10 = spdx {
spdxId = "IPL-1.0";
fullName = "IBM Public License v1.0";
};
lgpl21 = "LGPLv2.1";
isc = spdx {
spdxId = "ISC";
fullName = "ISC License";
};
lgpl2 = spdx {
spdxId = "LGPL-2.0";
fullName = "GNU Library General Public License v2 only";
};
lgpl2Plus = spdx {
spdxId = "LGPL-2.0+";
fullName = "GNU Library General Public License v2 or later";
};
lgpl21 = spdx {
spdxId = "LGPL-2.1";
fullName = "GNU Library General Public License v2.1 only";
};
lgpl21Plus = spdx {
spdxId = "LGPL-2.1+";
fullName = "GNU Library General Public License v2.1 or later";
};
lgpl3 = spdx {
spdxId = "LGPL-3.0";
fullName = "GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0 only";
};
lgpl3Plus = spdx {
spdxId = "LGPL-3.0+";
fullName = "GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0 or later";
};
libpng = spdx {
spdxId = "Libpng";
fullName = "libpng License";
};
libtiff = spdx {
spdxId = "libtiff";
fullName = "libtiff License";
lgpl21Plus = {
shortName = "LGPLv2.1+";
fullName = "GNU Lesser General Public License version 2.1 or later";
url = http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/lgpl-2.1.html;
};
llgpl21 = {
shortName = "LLGPLv2.1";
fullName = "Lisp LGPL; GNU Lesser General Public License version 2.1 with Franz Inc. preamble for clarification of LGPL terms in context of Lisp";
url = http://opensource.franz.com/preamble.html;
};
lppl12 = spdx {
spdxId = "LPPL-1.2";
fullName = "LaTeX Project Public License v1.2";
lgpl3 = {
shortName = "LGPLv3";
fullName = "GNU Lesser General Public License version 3 only";
url = http://www.fsf.org/licensing/licenses/lgpl.html;
};
lppl13c = spdx {
spdxId = "LPPL-1.3c";
fullName = "LaTeX Project Public License v1.3c";
lgpl3Plus = {
shortName = "LGPLv3+";
fullName = "GNU Lesser General Public License version 3 or later";
url = http://www.fsf.org/licensing/licenses/lgpl.html;
};
lpl-102 = spdx {
spdxId = "LPL-1.02";
fullName = "Lucent Public License v1.02";
mit = {
shortName = "MIT";
fullName = "MIT/X11 license";
url = http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php;
};
# spdx.org does not (yet) differentiate between the X11 and Expat versions
# for details see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MIT_License#Various_versions
mit = spdx {
spdxId = "MIT";
fullName = "MIT License";
mpl11 = {
shortName = "MPL1.1";
fullName = "Mozilla Public License version 1.1";
url = http://www.mozilla.org/MPL/MPL-1.1.html;
};
mpl10 = spdx {
spdxId = "MPL-1.0";
fullName = "Mozilla Public License 1.0";
mpl20 = {
shortName = "MPL2.0";
fullName = "Mozilla Public License version 2.0";
url = https://www.mozilla.org/MPL/2.0;
};
mpl11 = spdx {
spdxId = "MPL-1.1";
fullName = "Mozilla Public License 1.1";
};
mpl20 = spdx {
spdxId = "MPL-2.0";
fullName = "Mozilla Public License 2.0";
};
msrla = {
fullName = "Microsoft Research License Agreement";
url = "http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/projects/pex/msr-la.txt";
};
ncsa = spdx {
spdxId = "NCSA";
fullName = "University of Illinois/NCSA Open Source License";
};
notion_lgpl = {
url = "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/raboof/notion/master/LICENSE";
fullName = "Notion modified LGPL";
};
ofl = spdx {
spdxId = "OFL-1.1";
fullName = "SIL Open Font License 1.1";
};
openldap = spdx {
spdxId = "OLDAP-2.8";
fullName = "Open LDAP Public License v2.8";
};
openssl = spdx {
spdxId = "OpenSSL";
fullName = "OpenSSL License";
};
php301 = spdx {
spdxId = "PHP-3.01";
fullName = "PHP License v3.01";
};
postgresql = spdx {
spdxId = "PostgreSQL";
fullName = "PostgreSQL License";
};
psfl = spdx {
spdxId = "Python-2.0";
fullName = "Python Software Foundation License version 2";
#url = http://docs.python.org/license.html;
openssl = {
shortName = "openssl";
fullName = "OpenSSL license";
url = http://www.openssl.org/source/license.html;
};
publicDomain = {
fullName = "Public Domain";
shortName = "Public Domain";
fullname = "Public Domain";
};
qpl = spdx {
spdxId = "QPL-1.0";
fullName = "Q Public License 1.0";
psfl = {
shortName = "PSFL";
fullName = "Python Software Foundation License";
url = http://docs.python.org/license.html;
};
qwt = {
fullName = "Qwt License, Version 1.0";
url = http://qwt.sourceforge.net/qwtlicense.html;
tcltk = {
shortName = "Tcl/Tk";
fullName = "Tcl/Tk license";
url = http://www.tcl.tk/software/tcltk/license.html;
};
ruby = spdx {
spdxId = "Ruby";
fullName = "Ruby License";
unfree = "unfree";
unfreeRedistributable = "unfree-redistributable";
unfreeRedistributableFirmware = "unfree-redistributable-firmware";
zlib = {
shortName = "zlib";
fullName = "zlib license";
url = http://www.gzip.org/zlib/zlib_license.html;
};
sgi-b-20 = spdx {
spdxId = "SGI-B-2.0";
fullName = "SGI Free Software License B v2.0";
};
sleepycat = spdx {
spdxId = "Sleepycat";
fullName = "Sleepycat License";
};
tcltk = spdx {
spdxId = "TCL";
fullName = "TCL/TK License";
};
ufl = {
fullName = "Ubuntu Font License 1.0";
url = http://font.ubuntu.com/ufl/ubuntu-font-licence-1.0.txt;
};
unfree = {
fullName = "Unfree";
free = false;
};
unfreeRedistributable = {
fullName = "Unfree redistributable";
free = false;
};
unfreeRedistributableFirmware = {
fullName = "Unfree redistributable firmware";
# Note: we currently consider these "free" for inclusion in the
# channel and NixOS images.
};
unlicense = spdx {
spdxId = "Unlicense";
fullName = "The Unlicense";
};
vim = spdx {
spdxId = "Vim";
fullName = "Vim License";
};
vsl10 = spdx {
spdxId = "VSL-1.0";
fullName = "Vovida Software License v1.0";
};
w3c = spdx {
spdxId = "W3C";
fullName = "W3C Software Notice and License";
};
wadalab = {
fullName = "Wadalab Font License";
url = https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Licensing:Wadalab?rd=Licensing/Wadalab;
};
wtfpl = spdx {
spdxId = "WTFPL";
fullName = "Do What The F*ck You Want To Public License";
};
zlib = spdx {
spdxId = "Zlib";
fullName = "zlib License";
};
zpt20 = spdx { # FIXME: why zpt* instead of zpl*
spdxId = "ZPL-2.0";
zpt20 = {
shortName = "ZPT2.0";
fullName = "Zope Public License 2.0";
url = "http://old.zope.org/Resources/License/ZPL-2.0";
};
zpt21 = spdx {
spdxId = "ZPL-2.1";
zpt21 = {
shortName = "ZPT2.1";
fullName = "Zope Public License 2.1";
url = "http://old.zope.org/Resources/License/ZPL-2.1";
};
}

View File

@@ -1,240 +1,153 @@
# General list operations.
let
with import ./trivial.nix;
inherit (import ./trivial.nix) deepSeq;
rec {
inc = builtins.add 1;
inherit (builtins) head tail length isList elemAt concatLists filter elem genList;
dec = n: builtins.sub n 1;
/* Create a list consisting of a single element. `singleton x' is
sometimes more convenient with respect to indentation than `[x]'
when x spans multiple lines.
in rec {
inherit (builtins) head tail length isList add sub lessThan elemAt;
Example:
singleton "foo"
=> [ "foo" ]
*/
# Create a list consisting of a single element. `singleton x' is
# sometimes more convenient with respect to indentation than `[x]'
# when x spans multiple lines.
singleton = x: [x];
/* "Fold" a binary function `op' between successive elements of
`list' with `nul' as the starting value, i.e., `fold op nul [x_1
x_2 ... x_n] == op x_1 (op x_2 ... (op x_n nul))'. (This is
Haskell's foldr).
Example:
concat = fold (a: b: a + b) "z"
concat [ "a" "b" "c" ]
=> "abcnul"
*/
# "Fold" a binary function `op' between successive elements of
# `list' with `nul' as the starting value, i.e., `fold op nul [x_1
# x_2 ... x_n] == op x_1 (op x_2 ... (op x_n nul))'. (This is
# Haskell's foldr).
fold = op: nul: list:
let
len = length list;
fold' = n:
if n == len
then nul
else op (elemAt list n) (fold' (n + 1));
else op (elemAt list n) (fold' (inc n));
in fold' 0;
/* Left fold: `fold op nul [x_1 x_2 ... x_n] == op (... (op (op nul
x_1) x_2) ... x_n)'.
Example:
lconcat = foldl (a: b: a + b) "z"
lconcat [ "a" "b" "c" ]
=> "zabc"
*/
# Left fold: `fold op nul [x_1 x_2 ... x_n] == op (... (op (op nul
# x_1) x_2) ... x_n)'.
foldl = op: nul: list:
let
len = length list;
foldl' = n:
if n == -1
if n == minus1
then nul
else op (foldl' (n - 1)) (elemAt list n);
in foldl' (length list - 1);
else op (foldl' (dec n)) (elemAt list n);
in foldl' (dec (length list));
/* Strict version of foldl.
minus1 = dec 0;
The difference is that evaluation is forced upon access. Usually used
with small whole results (in contract with lazily-generated list or large
lists where only a part is consumed.)
*/
foldl' = builtins.foldl' or foldl;
/* Map with index
# map with index: `imap (i: v: "${v}-${toString i}") ["a" "b"] ==
# ["a-1" "b-2"]'
imap = f: list:
let
len = length list;
imap' = n:
if n == len
then []
else [ (f (inc n) (elemAt list n)) ] ++ imap' (inc n);
in imap' 0;
FIXME(zimbatm): why does this start to count at 1?
# Concatenate a list of lists.
concatLists = builtins.concatLists or (fold (x: y: x ++ y) []);
Example:
imap (i: v: "${v}-${toString i}") ["a" "b"]
=> [ "a-1" "b-2" ]
*/
imap =
if builtins ? genList then
f: list: genList (n: f (n + 1) (elemAt list n)) (length list)
else
f: list:
let
len = length list;
imap' = n:
if n == len
then []
else [ (f (n + 1) (elemAt list n)) ] ++ imap' (n + 1);
in imap' 0;
/* Map and concatenate the result.
Example:
concatMap (x: [x] ++ ["z"]) ["a" "b"]
=> [ "a" "z" "b" "z" ]
*/
# Map and concatenate the result.
concatMap = f: list: concatLists (map f list);
/* Flatten the argument into a single list; that is, nested lists are
spliced into the top-level lists.
Example:
flatten [1 [2 [3] 4] 5]
=> [1 2 3 4 5]
flatten 1
=> [1]
*/
# Flatten the argument into a single list; that is, nested lists are
# spliced into the top-level lists. E.g., `flatten [1 [2 [3] 4] 5]
# == [1 2 3 4 5]' and `flatten 1 == [1]'.
flatten = x:
if isList x
then foldl' (x: y: x ++ (flatten y)) [] x
then fold (x: y: (flatten x) ++ y) [] x
else [x];
/* Remove elements equal to 'e' from a list. Useful for buildInputs.
# Filter a list using a predicate; that is, return a list containing
# every element from `list' for which `pred' returns true.
filter =
builtins.filter or
(pred: list:
fold (x: y: if pred x then [x] ++ y else y) [] list);
Example:
remove 3 [ 1 3 4 3 ]
=> [ 1 4 ]
*/
# Remove elements equal to 'e' from a list. Useful for buildInputs.
remove = e: filter (x: x != e);
/* Find the sole element in the list matching the specified
predicate, returns `default' if no such element exists, or
`multiple' if there are multiple matching elements.
# Return true if `list' has an element `x'.
elem =
builtins.elem or
(x: list: fold (a: bs: x == a || bs) false list);
Example:
findSingle (x: x == 3) "none" "multiple" [ 1 3 3 ]
=> "multiple"
findSingle (x: x == 3) "none" "multiple" [ 1 3 ]
=> 3
findSingle (x: x == 3) "none" "multiple" [ 1 9 ]
=> "none"
*/
# Find the sole element in the list matching the specified
# predicate, returns `default' if no such element exists, or
# `multiple' if there are multiple matching elements.
findSingle = pred: default: multiple: list:
let found = filter pred list; len = length found;
in if len == 0 then default
else if len != 1 then multiple
else head found;
/* Find the first element in the list matching the specified
predicate or returns `default' if no such element exists.
Example:
findFirst (x: x > 3) 7 [ 1 6 4 ]
=> 6
findFirst (x: x > 9) 7 [ 1 6 4 ]
=> 7
*/
# Find the first element in the list matching the specified
# predicate or returns `default' if no such element exists.
findFirst = pred: default: list:
let found = filter pred list;
in if found == [] then default else head found;
/* Return true iff function `pred' returns true for at least element
of `list'.
# Return true iff function `pred' returns true for at least element
# of `list'.
any = pred: fold (x: y: if pred x then true else y) false;
Example:
any isString [ 1 "a" { } ]
=> true
any isString [ 1 { } ]
=> false
*/
any = builtins.any or (pred: fold (x: y: if pred x then true else y) false);
/* Return true iff function `pred' returns true for all elements of
`list'.
# Return true iff function `pred' returns true for all elements of
# `list'.
all = pred: fold (x: y: if pred x then y else false) true;
Example:
all (x: x < 3) [ 1 2 ]
=> true
all (x: x < 3) [ 1 2 3 ]
=> false
*/
all = builtins.all or (pred: fold (x: y: if pred x then y else false) true);
/* Count how many times function `pred' returns true for the elements
of `list'.
# Count how many times function `pred' returns true for the elements
# of `list'.
count = pred: fold (x: c: if pred x then inc c else c) 0;
Example:
count (x: x == 3) [ 3 2 3 4 6 ]
=> 2
*/
count = pred: foldl' (c: x: if pred x then c + 1 else c) 0;
/* Return a singleton list or an empty list, depending on a boolean
value. Useful when building lists with optional elements
(e.g. `++ optional (system == "i686-linux") flashplayer').
Example:
optional true "foo"
=> [ "foo" ]
optional false "foo"
=> [ ]
*/
# Return a singleton list or an empty list, depending on a boolean
# value. Useful when building lists with optional elements
# (e.g. `++ optional (system == "i686-linux") flashplayer').
optional = cond: elem: if cond then [elem] else [];
/* Return a list or an empty list, dependening on a boolean value.
Example:
optionals true [ 2 3 ]
=> [ 2 3 ]
optionals false [ 2 3 ]
=> [ ]
*/
# Return a list or an empty list, dependening on a boolean value.
optionals = cond: elems: if cond then elems else [];
/* If argument is a list, return it; else, wrap it in a singleton
list. If you're using this, you should almost certainly
reconsider if there isn't a more "well-typed" approach.
# If argument is a list, return it; else, wrap it in a singleton
# list. If you're using this, you should almost certainly
# reconsider if there isn't a more "well-typed" approach.
toList = x: if builtins.isList x then x else [x];
Example:
toList [ 1 2 ]
=> [ 1 2 ]
toList "hi"
=> [ "hi "]
*/
toList = x: if isList x then x else [x];
# Return a list of integers from `first' up to and including `last'.
range = first: last:
if builtins.lessThan last first
then []
else [first] ++ range (builtins.add first 1) last;
/* Return a list of integers from `first' up to and including `last'.
Example:
range 2 4
=> [ 2 3 4 ]
range 3 2
=> [ ]
*/
range =
if builtins ? genList then
first: last:
if first > last
then []
else genList (n: first + n) (last - first + 1)
else
first: last:
if last < first
then []
else [first] ++ range (first + 1) last;
/* Splits the elements of a list in two lists, `right' and
`wrong', depending on the evaluation of a predicate.
Example:
partition (x: x > 2) [ 5 1 2 3 4 ]
=> { right = [ 5 3 4 ]; wrong = [ 1 2 ]; }
*/
# Partition the elements of a list in two lists, `right' and
# `wrong', depending on the evaluation of a predicate.
partition = pred:
fold (h: t:
if pred h
@@ -242,65 +155,35 @@ rec {
else { right = t.right; wrong = [h] ++ t.wrong; }
) { right = []; wrong = []; };
/* Merges two lists of the same size together. If the sizes aren't the same
the merging stops at the shortest. How both lists are merged is defined
by the first argument.
Example:
zipListsWith (a: b: a + b) ["h" "l"] ["e" "o"]
=> ["he" "lo"]
*/
zipListsWith =
if builtins ? genList then
f: fst: snd: genList (n: f (elemAt fst n) (elemAt snd n)) (min (length fst) (length snd))
else
f: fst: snd:
let
len = min (length fst) (length snd);
zipListsWith' = n:
if n != len then
[ (f (elemAt fst n) (elemAt snd n)) ]
++ zipListsWith' (n + 1)
else [];
in zipListsWith' 0;
zipListsWith = f: fst: snd:
let
len1 = length fst;
len2 = length snd;
len = if builtins.lessThan len1 len2 then len1 else len2;
zipListsWith' = n:
if n != len then
[ (f (elemAt fst n) (elemAt snd n)) ]
++ zipListsWith' (inc n)
else [];
in zipListsWith' 0;
/* Merges two lists of the same size together. If the sizes aren't the same
the merging stops at the shortest.
Example:
zipLists [ 1 2 ] [ "a" "b" ]
=> [ { fst = 1; snd = "a"; } { fst = 2; snd = "b"; } ]
*/
zipLists = zipListsWith (fst: snd: { inherit fst snd; });
/* Reverse the order of the elements of a list.
Example:
# Reverse the order of the elements of a list. FIXME: O(n^2)!
reverseList = fold (e: acc: acc ++ [ e ]) [];
reverseList [ "b" "o" "j" ]
=> [ "j" "o" "b" ]
*/
reverseList =
if builtins ? genList then
xs: let l = length xs; in genList (n: elemAt xs (l - n - 1)) l
else
fold (e: acc: acc ++ [ e ]) [];
/* Sort a list based on a comparator function which compares two
elements and returns true if the first argument is strictly below
the second argument. The returned list is sorted in an increasing
order. The implementation does a quick-sort.
Example:
sort (a: b: a < b) [ 5 3 7 ]
=> [ 3 5 7 ]
*/
sort = builtins.sort or (
strictLess: list:
# Sort a list based on a comparator function which compares two
# elements and returns true if the first argument is strictly below
# the second argument. The returned list is sorted in an increasing
# order. The implementation does a quick-sort.
sort = strictLess: list:
let
len = length list;
first = head list;
pivot' = n: acc@{ left, right }: let el = elemAt list n; next = pivot' (n + 1); in
pivot' = n: acc@{ left, right }: let el = elemAt list n; next = pivot' (inc n); in
if n == len
then acc
else if strictLess first el
@@ -309,127 +192,52 @@ rec {
next { left = [ el ] ++ left; inherit right; };
pivot = pivot' 1 { left = []; right = []; };
in
if len < 2 then list
else (sort strictLess pivot.left) ++ [ first ] ++ (sort strictLess pivot.right));
if lessThan len 2 then list
else (sort strictLess pivot.left) ++ [ first ] ++ (sort strictLess pivot.right);
/* Return the first (at most) N elements of a list.
Example:
take 2 [ "a" "b" "c" "d" ]
=> [ "a" "b" ]
take 2 [ ]
=> [ ]
*/
take =
if builtins ? genList then
count: sublist 0 count
else
count: list:
let
len = length list;
take' = n:
if n == len || n == count
then []
else
[ (elemAt list n) ] ++ take' (n + 1);
in take' 0;
# Return the first (at most) N elements of a list.
take = count: list:
let
len = length list;
take' = n:
if n == len || n == count
then []
else
[ (elemAt list n) ] ++ take' (inc n);
in take' 0;
/* Remove the first (at most) N elements of a list.
# Remove the first (at most) N elements of a list.
drop = count: list:
let
len = length list;
drop' = n:
if n == minus1 || lessThan n count
then []
else
drop' (dec n) ++ [ (elemAt list n) ];
in drop' (dec len);
Example:
drop 2 [ "a" "b" "c" "d" ]
=> [ "c" "d" ]
drop 2 [ ]
=> [ ]
*/
drop =
if builtins ? genList then
count: list: sublist count (length list) list
else
count: list:
let
len = length list;
drop' = n:
if n == -1 || n < count
then []
else
drop' (n - 1) ++ [ (elemAt list n) ];
in drop' (len - 1);
/* Return a list consisting of at most count elements of list,
starting at index start.
Example:
sublist 1 3 [ "a" "b" "c" "d" "e" ]
=> [ "b" "c" "d" ]
sublist 1 3 [ ]
=> [ ]
*/
sublist = start: count: list:
let len = length list; in
genList
(n: elemAt list (n + start))
(if start >= len then 0
else if start + count > len then len - start
else count);
/* Return the last element of a list.
Example:
last [ 1 2 3 ]
=> 3
*/
last = list:
assert list != []; elemAt list (length list - 1);
/* Return all elements but the last
Example:
init [ 1 2 3 ]
=> [ 1 2 ]
*/
init = list: assert list != []; take (length list - 1) list;
assert list != []; elemAt list (dec (length list));
/* FIXME(zimbatm) Not used anywhere
*/
# Zip two lists together.
zipTwoLists = xs: ys:
let
len1 = length xs;
len2 = length ys;
len = if lessThan len1 len2 then len1 else len2;
zipTwoLists' = n:
if n != len then
[ { first = elemAt xs n; second = elemAt ys n; } ]
++ zipTwoLists' (inc n)
else [];
in zipTwoLists' 0;
deepSeqList = xs: y: if any (x: deepSeq x false) xs then y else y;
crossLists = f: foldl (fs: args: concatMap (f: map f args) fs) [f];
/* Remove duplicate elements from the list. O(n^2) complexity.
Example:
unique [ 3 2 3 4 ]
=> [ 3 2 4 ]
*/
unique = list:
if list == [] then
[]
else
let
x = head list;
xs = unique (drop 1 list);
in [x] ++ remove x xs;
/* Intersects list 'e' and another list. O(nm) complexity.
Example:
intersectLists [ 1 2 3 ] [ 6 3 2 ]
=> [ 3 2 ]
*/
intersectLists = e: filter (x: elem x e);
/* Subtracts list 'e' from another list. O(nm) complexity.
Example:
subtractLists [ 3 2 ] [ 1 2 3 4 5 3 ]
=> [ 1 4 5 ]
*/
subtractLists = e: filter (x: !(elem x e));
/*** deprecated stuff ***/
deepSeqList = throw "removed 2016-02-29 because unused and broken";
}

View File

@@ -1,406 +1,66 @@
/* List of NixOS maintainers. The format is:
/* -*- coding: utf-8; -*- */
handle = "Real Name <address@example.org>";
where <handle> is preferred to be your GitHub username (so it's easy
to ping a package @<handle>), and <Real Name> is your real name, not
a pseudonym. Please keep the list alphabetically sorted. */
{
a1russell = "Adam Russell <adamlr6+pub@gmail.com>";
aaronschif = "Aaron Schif <aaronschif@gmail.com>";
abaldeau = "Andreas Baldeau <andreas@baldeau.net>";
abbradar = "Nikolay Amiantov <ab@fmap.me>";
aboseley = "Adam Boseley <adam.boseley@gmail.com>";
adev = "Adrien Devresse <adev@adev.name>";
Adjective-Object = "Maxwell Huang-Hobbs <mhuan13@gmail.com>";
aespinosa = "Allan Espinosa <allan.espinosa@outlook.com>";
adnelson = "Allen Nelson <ithinkican@gmail.com>";
aflatter = "Alexander Flatter <flatter@fastmail.fm>";
/* Add your name and email address here. Keep the list
alphabetically sorted. */
aforemny = "Alexander Foremny <alexanderforemny@googlemail.com>";
afranchuk = "Alex Franchuk <alex.franchuk@gmail.com>";
aherrmann = "Andreas Herrmann <andreash87@gmx.ch>";
ak = "Alexander Kjeldaas <ak@formalprivacy.com>";
akaWolf = "Artjom Vejsel <akawolf0@gmail.com>";
akc = "Anders Claesson <akc@akc.is>";
algorith = "Dries Van Daele <dries_van_daele@telenet.be>";
all = "Nix Committers <nix-commits@lists.science.uu.nl>";
ambrop72 = "Ambroz Bizjak <ambrop7@gmail.com>";
amiddelk = "Arie Middelkoop <amiddelk@gmail.com>";
amorsillo = "Andrew Morsillo <andrew.morsillo@gmail.com>";
AndersonTorres = "Anderson Torres <torres.anderson.85@gmail.com>";
anderspapitto = "Anders Papitto <anderspapitto@gmail.com>";
andres = "Andres Loeh <ksnixos@andres-loeh.de>";
andrewrk = "Andrew Kelley <superjoe30@gmail.com>";
aneeshusa = "Aneesh Agrawal <aneeshusa@gmail.com>";
antono = "Antono Vasiljev <self@antono.info>";
ardumont = "Antoine R. Dumont <eniotna.t@gmail.com>";
aristid = "Aristid Breitkreuz <aristidb@gmail.com>";
arobyn = "Alexei Robyn <shados@shados.net>";
artuuge = "Artur E. Ruuge <artuuge@gmail.com>";
asppsa = "Alastair Pharo <asppsa@gmail.com>";
astsmtl = "Alexander Tsamutali <astsmtl@yandex.ru>";
aszlig = "aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>";
auntie = "Jonathan Glines <auntieNeo@gmail.com>";
avnik = "Alexander V. Nikolaev <avn@avnik.info>";
aycanirican = "Aycan iRiCAN <iricanaycan@gmail.com>";
badi = "Badi' Abdul-Wahid <abdulwahidc@gmail.com>";
balajisivaraman = "Balaji Sivaraman<sivaraman.balaji@gmail.com>";
Baughn = "Svein Ove Aas <sveina@gmail.com>";
bbenoist = "Baptist BENOIST <return_0@live.com>";
bcarrell = "Brandon Carrell <brandoncarrell@gmail.com>";
bcdarwin = "Ben Darwin <bcdarwin@gmail.com>";
bdimcheff = "Brandon Dimcheff <brandon@dimcheff.com>";
benley = "Benjamin Staffin <benley@gmail.com>";
bennofs = "Benno Fünfstück <benno.fuenfstueck@gmail.com>";
benwbooth = "Ben Booth <benwbooth@gmail.com>";
berdario = "Dario Bertini <berdario@gmail.com>";
bergey = "Daniel Bergey <bergey@teallabs.org>";
bjg = "Brian Gough <bjg@gnu.org>";
bjornfor = "Bjørn Forsman <bjorn.forsman@gmail.com>";
bluescreen303 = "Mathijs Kwik <mathijs@bluescreen303.nl>";
bobvanderlinden = "Bob van der Linden <bobvanderlinden@gmail.com>";
bodil = "Bodil Stokke <nix@bodil.org>";
boothead = "Ben Ford <ben@perurbis.com>";
bosu = "Boris Sukholitko <boriss@gmail.com>";
bradediger = "Brad Ediger <brad@bradediger.com>";
bramd = "Bram Duvigneau <bram@bramd.nl>";
bstrik = "Berno Strik <dutchman55@gmx.com>";
bzizou = "Bruno Bzeznik <Bruno@bzizou.net>";
c0dehero = "CodeHero <codehero@nerdpol.ch>";
calrama = "Moritz Maxeiner <moritz@ucworks.org>";
campadrenalin = "Philip Horger <campadrenalin@gmail.com>";
cdepillabout = "Dennis Gosnell <cdep.illabout@gmail.com>";
cfouche = "Chaddaï Fouché <chaddai.fouche@gmail.com>";
chaoflow = "Florian Friesdorf <flo@chaoflow.net>";
chattered = "Phil Scott <me@philscotted.com>";
choochootrain = "Hurshal Patel <hurshal@imap.cc>";
christopherpoole = "Christopher Mark Poole <mail@christopherpoole.net>";
cleverca22 = "Michael Bishop <cleverca22@gmail.com>";
coconnor = "Corey O'Connor <coreyoconnor@gmail.com>";
codsl = "codsl <codsl@riseup.net>";
codyopel = "Cody Opel <codyopel@gmail.com>";
colemickens = "Cole Mickens <cole.mickens@gmail.com>";
copumpkin = "Dan Peebles <pumpkingod@gmail.com>";
coroa = "Jonas Hörsch <jonas@chaoflow.net>";
couchemar = "Andrey Pavlov <couchemar@yandex.ru>";
cransom = "Casey Ransom <cransom@hubns.net>";
CrystalGamma = "Jona Stubbe <nixos@crystalgamma.de>";
cstrahan = "Charles Strahan <charles.c.strahan@gmail.com>";
cwoac = "Oliver Matthews <oliver@codersoffortune.net>";
DamienCassou = "Damien Cassou <damien@cassou.me>";
dasuxullebt = "Christoph-Simon Senjak <christoph.senjak@googlemail.com>";
davidak = "David Kleuker <post@davidak.de>";
davidrusu = "David Rusu <davidrusu.me@gmail.com>";
dbohdan = "Danyil Bohdan <danyil.bohdan@gmail.com>";
deepfire = "Kosyrev Serge <_deepfire@feelingofgreen.ru>";
demin-dmitriy = "Dmitriy Demin <demindf@gmail.com>";
DerGuteMoritz = "Moritz Heidkamp <moritz@twoticketsplease.de>";
desiderius = "Didier J. Devroye <didier@devroye.name>";
devhell = "devhell <\"^\"@regexmail.net>";
dezgeg = "Tuomas Tynkkynen <tuomas.tynkkynen@iki.fi>";
dfoxfranke = "Daniel Fox Franke <dfoxfranke@gmail.com>";
dgonyeo = "Derek Gonyeo <derek@gonyeo.com>";
dmalikov = "Dmitry Malikov <malikov.d.y@gmail.com>";
dochang = "Desmond O. Chang <dochang@gmail.com>";
doublec = "Chris Double <chris.double@double.co.nz>";
drewkett = "Andrew Burkett <burkett.andrew@gmail.com>";
ebzzry = "Rommel Martinez <ebzzry@gmail.com>";
ederoyd46 = "Matthew Brown <matt@ederoyd.co.uk>";
eduarrrd = "Eduard Bachmakov <e.bachmakov@gmail.com>";
edwtjo = "Edward Tjörnhammar <ed@cflags.cc>";
eelco = "Eelco Dolstra <eelco.dolstra@logicblox.com>";
ehegnes = "Eric Hegnes <eric.hegnes@gmail.com>";
ehmry = "Emery Hemingway <emery@vfemail.net>";
eikek = "Eike Kettner <eike.kettner@posteo.de>";
elasticdog = "Aaron Bull Schaefer <aaron@elasticdog.com>";
elitak = "Eric Litak <elitak@gmail.com>";
ellis = "Ellis Whitehead <nixos@ellisw.net>";
epitrochoid = "Mabry Cervin <mpcervin@uncg.edu>";
ericbmerritt = "Eric Merritt <eric@afiniate.com>";
ericsagnes = "Eric Sagnes <eric.sagnes@gmail.com>";
erikryb = "Erik Rybakken <erik.rybakken@math.ntnu.no>";
ertes = "Ertugrul Söylemez <ertesx@gmx.de>";
exi = "Reno Reckling <nixos@reckling.org>";
exlevan = "Alexey Levan <exlevan@gmail.com>";
expipiplus1 = "Joe Hermaszewski <nix@monoid.al>";
fadenb = "Tristan Helmich <tristan.helmich+nixos@gmail.com>";
falsifian = "James Cook <james.cook@utoronto.ca>";
flosse = "Markus Kohlhase <mail@markus-kohlhase.de>";
fluffynukeit = "Daniel Austin <dan@fluffynukeit.com>";
forkk = "Andrew Okin <forkk@forkk.net>";
fornever = "Friedrich von Never <friedrich@fornever.me>";
fpletz = "Franz Pletz <fpletz@fnordicwalking.de>";
fps = "Florian Paul Schmidt <mista.tapas@gmx.net>";
fridh = "Frederik Rietdijk <fridh@fridh.nl>";
frlan = "Frank Lanitz <frank@frank.uvena.de>";
fro_ozen = "fro_ozen <fro_ozen@gmx.de>";
ftrvxmtrx = "Siarhei Zirukin <ftrvxmtrx@gmail.com>";
funfunctor = "Edward O'Callaghan <eocallaghan@alterapraxis.com>";
fuuzetsu = "Mateusz Kowalczyk <fuuzetsu@fuuzetsu.co.uk>";
fxfactorial = "Edgar Aroutiounian <edgar.factorial@gmail.com>";
gal_bolle = "Florent Becker <florent.becker@ens-lyon.org>";
ertes = "Ertugrul Söylemez <es@ertes.de>";
garbas = "Rok Garbas <rok@garbas.si>";
garrison = "Jim Garrison <jim@garrison.cc>";
gavin = "Gavin Rogers <gavin@praxeology.co.uk>";
gebner = "Gabriel Ebner <gebner@gebner.org>";
gilligan = "Tobias Pflug <tobias.pflug@gmail.com>";
giogadi = "Luis G. Torres <lgtorres42@gmail.com>";
gleber = "Gleb Peregud <gleber.p@gmail.com>";
globin = "Robin Gloster <mail@glob.in>";
gpyh = "Yacine Hmito <yacine.hmito@gmail.com>";
goibhniu = "Cillian de Róiste <cillian.deroiste@gmail.com>";
Gonzih = "Max Gonzih <gonzih@gmail.com>";
gridaphobe = "Eric Seidel <eric@seidel.io>";
guibert = "David Guibert <david.guibert@gmail.com>";
havvy = "Ryan Scheel <ryan.havvy@gmail.com>";
hbunke = "Hendrik Bunke <bunke.hendrik@gmail.com>";
henrytill = "Henry Till <henrytill@gmail.com>";
hiberno = "Christian Lask <hiberno@hiberno.net>";
hinton = "Tom Hinton <t@larkery.com>";
hrdinka = "Christoph Hrdinka <c.nix@hrdinka.at>";
iand675 = "Ian Duncan <ian@iankduncan.com>";
ianwookim = "Ian-Woo Kim <ianwookim@gmail.com>";
iElectric = "Domen Kozar <domen@dev.si>";
igsha = "Igor Sharonov <igor.sharonov@gmail.com>";
ikervagyok = "Balázs Lengyel <ikervagyok@gmail.com>";
j-keck = "Jürgen Keck <jhyphenkeck@gmail.com>";
jagajaga = "Arseniy Seroka <ars.seroka@gmail.com>";
javaguirre = "Javier Aguirre <contacto@javaguirre.net>";
jb55 = "William Casarin <bill@casarin.me>";
iyzsong = "Song Wenwu <iyzsong@gmail.com>";
jcumming = "Jack Cummings <jack@mudshark.org>";
jefdaj = "Jeffrey David Johnson <jefdaj@gmail.com>";
jfb = "James Felix Black <james@yamtime.com>";
jgeerds = "Jascha Geerds <jascha@jgeerds.name>";
jgillich = "Jakob Gillich <jakob@gillich.me>";
jirkamarsik = "Jirka Marsik <jiri.marsik89@gmail.com>";
joachifm = "Joachim Fasting <joachifm@fastmail.fm>";
joamaki = "Jussi Maki <joamaki@gmail.com>";
joelmo = "Joel Moberg <joel.moberg@gmail.com>";
joelteon = "Joel Taylor <me@joelt.io>";
jpbernardy = "Jean-Philippe Bernardy <jeanphilippe.bernardy@gmail.com>";
jraygauthier = "Raymond Gauthier <jraygauthier@gmail.com>";
jwiegley = "John Wiegley <johnw@newartisans.com>";
jwilberding = "Jordan Wilberding <jwilberding@afiniate.com>";
jzellner = "Jeff Zellner <jeffz@eml.cc>";
kamilchm = "Kamil Chmielewski <kamil.chm@gmail.com>";
kampfschlaefer = "Arnold Krille <arnold@arnoldarts.de>";
kevincox = "Kevin Cox <kevincox@kevincox.ca>";
khumba = "Bryan Gardiner <bog@khumba.net>";
kkallio = "Karn Kallio <tierpluspluslists@gmail.com>";
koral = "Koral <koral@mailoo.org>";
kovirobi = "Kovacsics Robert <kovirobi@gmail.com>";
kragniz = "Louis Taylor <louis@kragniz.eu>";
ktosiek = "Tomasz Kontusz <tomasz.kontusz@gmail.com>";
lassulus = "Lassulus <lassulus@gmail.com>";
layus = "Guillaume Maudoux <layus.on@gmail.com>";
ldesgoui = "Lucas Desgouilles <ldesgoui@gmail.com>";
lebastr = "Alexander Lebedev <lebastr@gmail.com>";
leenaars = "Michiel Leenaars <ml.software@leenaa.rs>";
leonardoce = "Leonardo Cecchi <leonardo.cecchi@gmail.com>";
lethalman = "Luca Bruno <lucabru@src.gnome.org>";
lewo = "Antoine Eiche <lewo@abesis.fr>";
lhvwb = "Nathaniel Baxter <nathaniel.baxter@gmail.com>";
lihop = "Leroy Hopson <nixos@leroy.geek.nz>";
linquize = "Linquize <linquize@yahoo.com.hk>";
linus = "Linus Arver <linusarver@gmail.com>";
lnl7 = "Daiderd Jordan <daiderd@gmail.com>";
lovek323 = "Jason O'Conal <jason@oconal.id.au>";
lowfatcomputing = "Andreas Wagner <andreas.wagner@lowfatcomputing.org>";
lsix = "Lancelot SIX <lsix@lancelotsix.com>";
ludo = "Ludovic Courtès <ludo@gnu.org>";
luispedro = "Luis Pedro Coelho <luis@luispedro.org>";
lukasepple = "Lukas Epple <post@lukasepple.de>";
lukego = "Luke Gorrie <luke@snabb.co>";
lw = "Sergey Sofeychuk <lw@fmap.me>";
madjar = "Georges Dubus <georges.dubus@compiletoi.net>";
magnetophon = "Bart Brouns <bart@magnetophon.nl>";
mahe = "Matthias Herrmann <matthias.mh.herrmann@gmail.com>";
makefu = "Felix Richter <makefu@syntax-fehler.de>";
malyn = "Michael Alyn Miller <malyn@strangeGizmo.com>";
manveru = "Michael Fellinger <m.fellinger@gmail.com>";
marcweber = "Marc Weber <marco-oweber@gmx.de>";
markus1189 = "Markus Hauck <markus1189@gmail.com>";
markWot = "Markus Wotringer <markus@wotringer.de>";
martijnvermaat = "Martijn Vermaat <martijn@vermaat.name>";
matejc = "Matej Cotman <cotman.matej@gmail.com>";
mathnerd314 = "Mathnerd314 <mathnerd314.gph+hs@gmail.com>";
matthiasbeyer = "Matthias Beyer <mail@beyermatthias.de>";
mbauer = "Matthew Bauer <mjbauer95@gmail.com>";
maurer = "Matthew Maurer <matthew.r.maurer+nix@gmail.com>";
mbakke = "Marius Bakke <ymse@tuta.io>";
mbe = "Brandon Edens <brandonedens@gmail.com>";
mboes = "Mathieu Boespflug <mboes@tweag.net>";
mcmtroffaes = "Matthias C. M. Troffaes <matthias.troffaes@gmail.com>";
meditans = "Carlo Nucera <meditans@gmail.com>";
meisternu = "Matt Miemiec <meister@krutt.org>";
michaelpj = "Michael Peyton Jones <michaelpj@gmail.com>";
michelk = "Michel Kuhlmann <michel@kuhlmanns.info>";
mingchuan = "Ming Chuan <ming@culpring.com>";
mirdhyn = "Merlin Gaillard <mirdhyn@gmail.com>";
mirrexagon = "Andrew Abbott <mirrexagon@mirrexagon.com>";
modulistic = "Pablo Costa <modulistic@gmail.com>";
mog = "Matthew O'Gorman <mog-lists@rldn.net>";
moosingin3space = "Nathan Moos <moosingin3space@gmail.com>";
moretea = "Maarten Hoogendoorn <maarten@moretea.nl>";
mornfall = "Petr Ročkai <me@mornfall.net>";
MostAwesomeDude = "Corbin Simpson <cds@corbinsimpson.com>";
MP2E = "Cray Elliott <MP2E@archlinux.us>";
msackman = "Matthew Sackman <matthew@wellquite.org>";
mschristiansen = "Mikkel Christiansen <mikkel@rheosystems.com>";
msteen = "Matthijs Steen <emailmatthijs@gmail.com>";
mtreskin = "Max Treskin <zerthurd@gmail.com>";
mudri = "James Wood <lamudri@gmail.com>";
muflax = "Stefan Dorn <mail@muflax.com>";
myrl = "Myrl Hex <myrl.0xf@gmail.com>";
nathan-gs = "Nathan Bijnens <nathan@nathan.gs>";
nckx = "Tobias Geerinckx-Rice <tobias.geerinckx.rice@gmail.com>";
nequissimus = "Tim Steinbach <tim@nequissimus.com>";
nfjinjing = "Jinjing Wang <nfjinjing@gmail.com>";
nico202 = "Nicolò Balzarotti <anothersms@gmail.com>";
notthemessiah = "Brian Cohen <brian.cohen.88@gmail.com>";
np = "Nicolas Pouillard <np.nix@nicolaspouillard.fr>";
nslqqq = "Nikita Mikhailov <nslqqq@gmail.com>";
obadz = "obadz <nixos@obadz.com>";
ocharles = "Oliver Charles <ollie@ocharles.org.uk>";
odi = "Oliver Dunkl <oliver.dunkl@gmail.com>";
offline = "Jaka Hudoklin <jakahudoklin@gmail.com>";
olcai = "Erik Timan <dev@timan.info>";
orbitz = "Malcolm Matalka <mmatalka@gmail.com>";
osener = "Ozan Sener <ozan@ozansener.com>";
otwieracz = "Slawomir Gonet <slawek@otwiera.cz>";
oxij = "Jan Malakhovski <oxij@oxij.org>";
page = "Carles Pagès <page@cubata.homelinux.net>";
paholg = "Paho Lurie-Gregg <paho@paholg.com>";
pakhfn = "Fedor Pakhomov <pakhfn@gmail.com>";
palo = "Ingolf Wanger <palipalo9@googlemail.com>";
pashev = "Igor Pashev <pashev.igor@gmail.com>";
pesterhazy = "Paulus Esterhazy <pesterhazy@gmail.com>";
peterhoeg = "Peter Hoeg <peter@hoeg.com>";
philandstuff = "Philip Potter <philip.g.potter@gmail.com>";
phile314 = "Philipp Hausmann <nix@314.ch>";
Phlogistique = "Noé Rubinstein <noe.rubinstein@gmail.com>";
phreedom = "Evgeny Egorochkin <phreedom@yandex.ru>";
phunehehe = "Hoang Xuan Phu <phunehehe@gmail.com>";
pierron = "Nicolas B. Pierron <nixos@nbp.name>";
piotr = "Piotr Pietraszkiewicz <ppietrasa@gmail.com>";
pjbarnoy = "Perry Barnoy <pjbarnoy@gmail.com>";
pjones = "Peter Jones <pjones@devalot.com>";
pkmx = "Chih-Mao Chen <pkmx.tw@gmail.com>";
plcplc = "Philip Lykke Carlsen <plcplc@gmail.com>";
pmahoney = "Patrick Mahoney <pat@polycrystal.org>";
pmiddend = "Philipp Middendorf <pmidden@secure.mailbox.org>";
prikhi = "Pavan Rikhi <pavan.rikhi@gmail.com>";
profpatsch = "Profpatsch <mail@profpatsch.de>";
psibi = "Sibi <sibi@psibi.in>";
pSub = "Pascal Wittmann <mail@pascal-wittmann.de>";
puffnfresh = "Brian McKenna <brian@brianmckenna.org>";
pxc = "Patrick Callahan <patrick.callahan@latitudeengineering.com>";
qknight = "Joachim Schiele <js@lastlog.de>";
ragge = "Ragnar Dahlen <r.dahlen@gmail.com>";
rardiol = "Ricardo Ardissone <ricardo.ardissone@gmail.com>";
rasendubi = "Alexey Shmalko <rasen.dubi@gmail.com>";
raskin = "Michael Raskin <7c6f434c@mail.ru>";
redbaron = "Maxim Ivanov <ivanov.maxim@gmail.com>";
refnil = "Martin Lavoie <broemartino@gmail.com>";
relrod = "Ricky Elrod <ricky@elrod.me>";
renzo = "Renzo Carbonara <renzocarbonara@gmail.com>";
retrry = "Tadas Barzdžius <retrry@gmail.com>";
rick68 = "Wei-Ming Yang <rick68@gmail.com>";
rickynils = "Rickard Nilsson <rickynils@gmail.com>";
rnhmjoj = "Michele Guerini Rocco <micheleguerinirocco@me.com>";
rob = "Rob Vermaas <rob.vermaas@gmail.com>";
robberer = "Longrin Wischnewski <robberer@freakmail.de>";
robbinch = "Robbin C. <robbinch33@gmail.com>";
robgssp = "Rob Glossop <robgssp@gmail.com>";
roconnor = "Russell O'Connor <roconnor@theorem.ca>";
romildo = "José Romildo Malaquias <malaquias@gmail.com>";
rszibele = "Richard Szibele <richard_szibele@hotmail.com>";
rushmorem = "Rushmore Mushambi <rushmore@webenchanter.com>";
rvl = "Rodney Lorrimar <dev+nix@rodney.id.au>";
rvlander = "Gaëtan André <rvlander@gaetanandre.eu>";
ryanartecona = "Ryan Artecona <ryanartecona@gmail.com>";
ryantm = "Ryan Mulligan <ryan@ryantm.com>";
rycee = "Robert Helgesson <robert@rycee.net>";
ryneeverett = "Ryne Everett <ryneeverett@gmail.com>";
samuelrivas = "Samuel Rivas <samuelrivas@gmail.com>";
sander = "Sander van der Burg <s.vanderburg@tudelft.nl>";
schmitthenner = "Fabian Schmitthenner <development@schmitthenner.eu>";
schristo = "Scott Christopher <schristopher@konputa.com>";
scolobb = "Sergiu Ivanov <sivanov@colimite.fr>";
sepi = "Raffael Mancini <raffael@mancini.lu>";
sheenobu = "Sheena Artrip <sheena.artrip@gmail.com>";
sheganinans = "Aistis Raulinaitis <sheganinans@gmail.com>";
shell = "Shell Turner <cam.turn@gmail.com>";
shlevy = "Shea Levy <shea@shealevy.com>";
simons = "Peter Simons <simons@cryp.to>";
simonvandel = "Simon Vandel Sillesen <simon.vandel@gmail.com>";
sjagoe = "Simon Jagoe <simon@simonjagoe.com>";
sjmackenzie = "Stewart Mackenzie <setori88@gmail.com>";
sjourdois = "Stéphane kwisatz Jourdois <sjourdois@gmail.com>";
skeidel = "Sven Keidel <svenkeidel@gmail.com>";
skrzyp = "Jakub Skrzypnik <jot.skrzyp@gmail.com>";
sleexyz = "Sean Lee <freshdried@gmail.com>";
smironov = "Sergey Mironov <ierton@gmail.com>";
spacefrogg = "Michael Raitza <spacefrogg-nixos@meterriblecrew.net>";
spencerjanssen = "Spencer Janssen <spencerjanssen@gmail.com>";
spinus = "Tomasz Czyż <tomasz.czyz@gmail.com>";
sprock = "Roger Mason <rmason@mun.ca>";
spwhitt = "Spencer Whitt <sw@swhitt.me>";
stephenmw = "Stephen Weinberg <stephen@q5comm.com>";
steveej = "Stefan Junker <mail@stefanjunker.de>";
swistak35 = "Rafał Łasocha <me@swistak35.com>";
szczyp = "Szczyp <qb@szczyp.com>";
sztupi = "Attila Sztupak <attila.sztupak@gmail.com>";
taeer = "Taeer Bar-Yam <taeer@necsi.edu>";
tailhook = "Paul Colomiets <paul@colomiets.name>";
taktoa = "Remy Goldschmidt <taktoa@gmail.com>";
tavyc = "Octavian Cerna <octavian.cerna@gmail.com>";
telotortium = "Robert Irelan <rirelan@gmail.com>";
thall = "Niclas Thall <niclas.thall@gmail.com>";
thammers = "Tobias Hammerschmidt <jawr@gmx.de>";
the-kenny = "Moritz Ulrich <moritz@tarn-vedra.de>";
theuni = "Christian Theune <ct@flyingcircus.io>";
thoughtpolice = "Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>";
timbertson = "Tim Cuthbertson <tim@gfxmonk.net>";
titanous = "Jonathan Rudenberg <jonathan@titanous.com>";
tohl = "Tomas Hlavaty <tom@logand.com>";
tokudan = "Daniel Frank <git@danielfrank.net>";
tomberek = "Thomas Bereknyei <tomberek@gmail.com>";
travisbhartwell = "Travis B. Hartwell <nafai@travishartwell.net>";
trino = "Hubert Mühlhans <muehlhans.hubert@ekodia.de>";
tstrobel = "Thomas Strobel <4ZKTUB6TEP74PYJOPWIR013S2AV29YUBW5F9ZH2F4D5UMJUJ6S@hash.domains>";
ttuegel = "Thomas Tuegel <ttuegel@gmail.com>";
tv = "Tomislav Viljetić <tv@shackspace.de>";
tvestelind = "Tomas Vestelind <tomas.vestelind@fripost.org>";
twey = "James Twey Kay <twey@twey.co.uk>";
uralbash = "Svintsov Dmitry <root@uralbash.ru>";
urkud = "Yury G. Kudryashov <urkud+nix@ya.ru>";
vandenoever = "Jos van den Oever <jos@vandenoever.info>";
vanzef = "Ivan Solyankin <vanzef@gmail.com>";
vbgl = "Vincent Laporte <Vincent.Laporte@gmail.com>";
vbmithr = "Vincent Bernardoff <vb@luminar.eu.org>";
vcunat = "Vladimír Čunát <vcunat@gmail.com>";
viric = "Lluís Batlle i Rossell <viric@viric.name>";
vizanto = "Danny Wilson <danny@prime.vc>";
vlstill = "Vladimír Štill <xstill@fi.muni.cz>";
vmandela = "Venkateswara Rao Mandela <venkat.mandela@gmail.com>";
vozz = "Oliver Hunt <oliver.huntuk@gmail.com>";
vrthra = "Rahul Gopinath <rahul@gopinath.org>";
wedens = "wedens <kirill.wedens@gmail.com>";
willtim = "Tim Philip Williams <tim.williams.public@gmail.com>";
winden = "Antonio Vargas Gonzalez <windenntw@gmail.com>";
wizeman = "Ricardo M. Correia <rcorreia@wizy.org>";
wjlroe = "William Roe <willroe@gmail.com>";
wkennington = "William A. Kennington III <william@wkennington.com>";
wmertens = "Wout Mertens <Wout.Mertens@gmail.com>";
womfoo = "Kranium Gikos Mendoza <kranium@gikos.net>";
wscott = "Wayne Scott <wsc9tt@gmail.com>";
wyvie = "Elijah Rum <elijahrum@gmail.com>";
yarr = "Dmitry V. <savraz@gmail.com>";
z77z = "Marco Maggesi <maggesi@math.unifi.it>";
zagy = "Christian Zagrodnick <cz@flyingcircus.io>";
zef = "Zef Hemel <zef@zef.me>";
zimbatm = "zimbatm <zimbatm@zimbatm.com>";
zohl = "Al Zohali <zohl@fmap.me>";
zoomulator = "Kim Simmons <zoomulator@gmail.com>";
}

View File

@@ -1,9 +1,6 @@
/* Some functions for manipulating meta attributes, as well as the
name attribute. */
let lib = import ./default.nix;
in
rec {
@@ -14,7 +11,7 @@ rec {
addMetaAttrs {description = "Bla blah";} somePkg
*/
addMetaAttrs = newAttrs: drv:
drv // { meta = (drv.meta or {}) // newAttrs; };
drv // { meta = (if drv ? meta then drv.meta else {}) // newAttrs; };
/* Change the symbolic name of a package for presentation purposes
@@ -31,15 +28,11 @@ rec {
updateName = updater: drv: drv // {name = updater (drv.name);};
/* Append a suffix to the name of a package (before the version
part). */
appendToName = suffix: updateName (name:
let x = builtins.parseDrvName name; in "${x.name}-${suffix}-${x.version}");
/* Apply a function to each derivation and only to derivations in an attrset
/* Append a suffix to the name of a package. !!! the suffix should
really be appended *before* the version, at least most of the
time.
*/
mapDerivationAttrset = f: set: lib.mapAttrs (name: pkg: if lib.isDerivation pkg then (f pkg) else pkg) set;
appendToName = suffix: updateName (name: "${name}-${suffix}");
/* Decrease the nix-env priority of the package, i.e., other
@@ -47,20 +40,9 @@ rec {
*/
lowPrio = drv: addMetaAttrs { priority = "10"; } drv;
/* Apply lowPrio to an attrset with derivations
*/
lowPrioSet = set: mapDerivationAttrset lowPrio set;
/* Increase the nix-env priority of the package, i.e., this
version/variant of the package will be preferred.
*/
hiPrio = drv: addMetaAttrs { priority = "-10"; } drv;
/* Apply hiPrio to an attrset with derivations
*/
hiPrioSet = set: mapDerivationAttrset hiPrio set;
}

View File

@@ -1,2 +0,0 @@
# Expose the minimum required version for evaluating Nixpkgs
"1.10"

429
lib/misc.nix Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,429 @@
let lib = import ./default.nix;
inherit (builtins) isFunction hasAttr getAttr head tail isList isAttrs isInt attrNames;
in
with import ./lists.nix;
with import ./attrsets.nix;
with import ./strings.nix;
rec {
# returns default if env var is not set
maybeEnv = name: default:
let value = builtins.getEnv name; in
if value == "" then default else value;
defaultMergeArg = x : y: if builtins.isAttrs y then
y
else
(y x);
defaultMerge = x: y: x // (defaultMergeArg x y);
foldArgs = merger: f: init: x:
let arg=(merger init (defaultMergeArg init x));
# now add the function with composed args already applied to the final attrs
base = (setAttrMerge "passthru" {} (f arg)
( z : z // rec {
function = foldArgs merger f arg;
args = (lib.attrByPath ["passthru" "args"] {} z) // x;
} ));
withStdOverrides = base // {
override = base.passthru.function;
deepOverride = a : (base.passthru.function ((lib.mapAttrs (lib.deepOverrider a) base.passthru.args) // a));
} ;
in
withStdOverrides;
# predecessors: proposed replacement for applyAndFun (which has a bug cause it merges twice)
# the naming "overridableDelayableArgs" tries to express that you can
# - override attr values which have been supplied earlier
# - use attr values before they have been supplied by accessing the fix point
# name "fixed"
# f: the (delayed overridden) arguments are applied to this
#
# initial: initial attrs arguments and settings. see defaultOverridableDelayableArgs
#
# returns: f applied to the arguments // special attributes attrs
# a) merge: merge applied args with new args. Wether an argument is overridden depends on the merge settings
# b) replace: this let's you replace and remove names no matter which merge function has been set
#
# examples: see test cases "res" below;
overridableDelayableArgs =
f : # the function applied to the arguments
initial : # you pass attrs, the functions below are passing a function taking the fix argument
let
takeFixed = if isFunction initial then initial else (fixed : initial); # transform initial to an expression always taking the fixed argument
tidy = args :
let # apply all functions given in "applyPreTidy" in sequence
applyPreTidyFun = fold ( n : a : x : n ( a x ) ) lib.id (maybeAttr "applyPreTidy" [] args);
in removeAttrs (applyPreTidyFun args) ( ["applyPreTidy"] ++ (maybeAttr "removeAttrs" [] args) ); # tidy up args before applying them
fun = n : x :
let newArgs = fixed :
let args = takeFixed fixed;
mergeFun = getAttr n args;
in if isAttrs x then (mergeFun args x)
else assert isFunction x;
mergeFun args (x ( args // { inherit fixed; }));
in overridableDelayableArgs f newArgs;
in
(f (tidy (lib.fix takeFixed))) // {
merge = fun "mergeFun";
replace = fun "keepFun";
};
defaultOverridableDelayableArgs = f :
let defaults = {
mergeFun = mergeAttrByFunc; # default merge function. merge strategie (concatenate lists, strings) is given by mergeAttrBy
keepFun = a : b : { inherit (a) removeAttrs mergeFun keepFun mergeAttrBy; } // b; # even when using replace preserve these values
applyPreTidy = []; # list of functions applied to args before args are tidied up (usage case : prepareDerivationArgs)
mergeAttrBy = mergeAttrBy // {
applyPreTidy = a : b : a ++ b;
removeAttrs = a : b: a ++ b;
};
removeAttrs = ["mergeFun" "keepFun" "mergeAttrBy" "removeAttrs" "fixed" ]; # before applying the arguments to the function make sure these names are gone
};
in (overridableDelayableArgs f defaults).merge;
# rec { # an example of how composedArgsAndFun can be used
# a = composedArgsAndFun (x : x) { a = ["2"]; meta = { d = "bar";}; };
# # meta.d will be lost ! It's your task to preserve it (eg using a merge function)
# b = a.passthru.function { a = [ "3" ]; meta = { d2 = "bar2";}; };
# # instead of passing/ overriding values you can use a merge function:
# c = b.passthru.function ( x: { a = x.a ++ ["4"]; }); # consider using (maybeAttr "a" [] x)
# }
# result:
# {
# a = { a = ["2"]; meta = { d = "bar"; }; passthru = { function = .. }; };
# b = { a = ["3"]; meta = { d2 = "bar2"; }; passthru = { function = .. }; };
# c = { a = ["3" "4"]; meta = { d2 = "bar2"; }; passthru = { function = .. }; };
# # c2 is equal to c
# }
composedArgsAndFun = f: foldArgs defaultMerge f {};
# shortcut for attrByPath ["name"] default attrs
maybeAttrNullable = name: default: attrs:
if attrs == null then default else
if __hasAttr name attrs then (__getAttr name attrs) else default;
# shortcut for attrByPath ["name"] default attrs
maybeAttr = name: default: attrs:
if __hasAttr name attrs then (__getAttr name attrs) else default;
# Return the second argument if the first one is true or the empty version
# of the second argument.
ifEnable = cond: val:
if cond then val
else if builtins.isList val then []
else if builtins.isAttrs val then {}
# else if builtins.isString val then ""
else if val == true || val == false then false
else null;
# Return true only if there is an attribute and it is true.
checkFlag = attrSet: name:
if name == "true" then true else
if name == "false" then false else
if (elem name (attrByPath ["flags"] [] attrSet)) then true else
attrByPath [name] false attrSet ;
# Input : attrSet, [ [name default] ... ], name
# Output : its value or default.
getValue = attrSet: argList: name:
( attrByPath [name] (if checkFlag attrSet name then true else
if argList == [] then null else
let x = builtins.head argList; in
if (head x) == name then
(head (tail x))
else (getValue attrSet
(tail argList) name)) attrSet );
# Input : attrSet, [[name default] ...], [ [flagname reqs..] ... ]
# Output : are reqs satisfied? It's asserted.
checkReqs = attrSet : argList : condList :
(
fold lib.and true
(map (x: let name = (head x) ; in
((checkFlag attrSet name) ->
(fold lib.and true
(map (y: let val=(getValue attrSet argList y); in
(val!=null) && (val!=false))
(tail x))))) condList)) ;
# This function has O(n^2) performance.
uniqList = {inputList, acc ? []} :
let go = xs : acc :
if xs == []
then []
else let x = head xs;
y = if elem x acc then [] else [x];
in y ++ go (tail xs) (y ++ acc);
in go inputList acc;
uniqListExt = {inputList, outputList ? [],
getter ? (x : x), compare ? (x: y: x==y)}:
if inputList == [] then outputList else
let x=head inputList;
isX = y: (compare (getter y) (getter x));
newOutputList = outputList ++
(if any isX outputList then [] else [x]);
in uniqListExt {outputList=newOutputList;
inputList = (tail inputList);
inherit getter compare;
};
condConcat = name: list: checker:
if list == [] then name else
if checker (head list) then
condConcat
(name + (head (tail list)))
(tail (tail list))
checker
else condConcat
name (tail (tail list)) checker;
lazyGenericClosure = {startSet, operator}:
let
work = list: doneKeys: result:
if list == [] then
result
else
let x = head list; key = x.key; in
if elem key doneKeys then
work (tail list) doneKeys result
else
work (tail list ++ operator x) ([key] ++ doneKeys) ([x] ++ result);
in
work startSet [] [];
genericClosure = builtins.genericClosure or lazyGenericClosure;
innerModifySumArgs = f: x: a: b: if b == null then (f a b) // x else
innerModifySumArgs f x (a // b);
modifySumArgs = f: x: innerModifySumArgs f x {};
innerClosePropagation = acc : xs :
if xs == []
then acc
else let y = head xs;
ys = tail xs;
in if ! isAttrs y
then innerClosePropagation acc ys
else let acc' = [y] ++ acc;
in innerClosePropagation
acc'
(uniqList { inputList = (maybeAttrNullable "propagatedBuildInputs" [] y)
++ (maybeAttrNullable "propagatedNativeBuildInputs" [] y)
++ ys;
acc = acc';
}
);
closePropagation = list: (uniqList {inputList = (innerClosePropagation [] list);});
# calls a function (f attr value ) for each record item. returns a list
mapAttrsFlatten = f : r : map (attr: f attr (builtins.getAttr attr r) ) (attrNames r);
# attribute set containing one attribute
nvs = name : value : listToAttrs [ (nameValuePair name value) ];
# adds / replaces an attribute of an attribute set
setAttr = set : name : v : set // (nvs name v);
# setAttrMerge (similar to mergeAttrsWithFunc but only merges the values of a particular name)
# setAttrMerge "a" [] { a = [2];} (x : x ++ [3]) -> { a = [2 3]; }
# setAttrMerge "a" [] { } (x : x ++ [3]) -> { a = [ 3]; }
setAttrMerge = name : default : attrs : f :
setAttr attrs name (f (maybeAttr name default attrs));
# Using f = a : b = b the result is similar to //
# merge attributes with custom function handling the case that the attribute
# exists in both sets
mergeAttrsWithFunc = f : set1 : set2 :
fold (n: set : if (__hasAttr n set)
then setAttr set n (f (__getAttr n set) (__getAttr n set2))
else set )
(set2 // set1) (__attrNames set2);
# merging two attribute set concatenating the values of same attribute names
# eg { a = 7; } { a = [ 2 3 ]; } becomes { a = [ 7 2 3 ]; }
mergeAttrsConcatenateValues = mergeAttrsWithFunc ( a : b : (toList a) ++ (toList b) );
# merges attributes using //, if a name exisits in both attributes
# an error will be triggered unless its listed in mergeLists
# so you can mergeAttrsNoOverride { buildInputs = [a]; } { buildInputs = [a]; } {} to get
# { buildInputs = [a b]; }
# merging buildPhase does'nt really make sense. The cases will be rare where appending /prefixing will fit your needs?
# in these cases the first buildPhase will override the second one
# ! deprecated, use mergeAttrByFunc instead
mergeAttrsNoOverride = { mergeLists ? ["buildInputs" "propagatedBuildInputs"],
overrideSnd ? [ "buildPhase" ]
} : attrs1 : attrs2 :
fold (n: set :
setAttr set n ( if (__hasAttr n set)
then # merge
if elem n mergeLists # attribute contains list, merge them by concatenating
then (__getAttr n attrs2) ++ (__getAttr n attrs1)
else if elem n overrideSnd
then __getAttr n attrs1
else throw "error mergeAttrsNoOverride, attribute ${n} given in both attributes - no merge func defined"
else __getAttr n attrs2 # add attribute not existing in attr1
)) attrs1 (__attrNames attrs2);
# example usage:
# mergeAttrByFunc {
# inherit mergeAttrBy; # defined below
# buildInputs = [ a b ];
# } {
# buildInputs = [ c d ];
# };
# will result in
# { mergeAttrsBy = [...]; buildInputs = [ a b c d ]; }
# is used by prepareDerivationArgs, defaultOverridableDelayableArgs and can be used when composing using
# foldArgs, composedArgsAndFun or applyAndFun. Example: composableDerivation in all-packages.nix
mergeAttrByFunc = x : y :
let
mergeAttrBy2 = { mergeAttrBy=lib.mergeAttrs; }
// (maybeAttr "mergeAttrBy" {} x)
// (maybeAttr "mergeAttrBy" {} y); in
fold lib.mergeAttrs {} [
x y
(mapAttrs ( a : v : # merge special names using given functions
if (hasAttr a x)
then if (hasAttr a y)
then v (getAttr a x) (getAttr a y) # both have attr, use merge func
else (getAttr a x) # only x has attr
else (getAttr a y) # only y has attr)
) (removeAttrs mergeAttrBy2
# don't merge attrs which are neither in x nor y
(filter (a : (! hasAttr a x) && (! hasAttr a y) )
(attrNames mergeAttrBy2))
)
)
];
mergeAttrsByFuncDefaults = foldl mergeAttrByFunc { inherit mergeAttrBy; };
mergeAttrsByFuncDefaultsClean = list: removeAttrs (mergeAttrsByFuncDefaults list) ["mergeAttrBy"];
# merge attrs based on version key into mkDerivation args, see mergeAttrBy to learn about smart merge defaults
#
# This function is best explained by an example:
#
# {version ? "2.x"} :
#
# mkDerivation (mergeAttrsByVersion "package-name" version
# { # version specific settings
# "git" = { src = ..; preConfigre = "autogen.sh"; buildInputs = [automake autoconf libtool]; };
# "2.x" = { src = ..; };
# }
# { // shared settings
# buildInputs = [ common build inputs ];
# meta = { .. }
# }
# )
#
# Please note that e.g. Eelco Dolstra usually prefers having one file for
# each version. On the other hand there are valuable additional design goals
# - readability
# - do it once only
# - try to avoid duplication
#
# Marc Weber and Michael Raskin sometimes prefer keeping older
# versions around for testing and regression tests - as long as its cheap to
# do so.
#
# Very often it just happens that the "shared" code is the bigger part.
# Then using this function might be appropriate.
#
# Be aware that its easy to cause recompilations in all versions when using
# this function - also if derivations get too complex splitting into multiple
# files is the way to go.
#
# See misc.nix -> versionedDerivation
# discussion: nixpkgs: pull/310
mergeAttrsByVersion = name: version: attrsByVersion: base:
mergeAttrsByFuncDefaultsClean [ { name = "${name}-${version}"; } base (maybeAttr version (throw "bad version ${version} for ${name}") attrsByVersion)];
# sane defaults (same name as attr name so that inherit can be used)
mergeAttrBy = # { buildInputs = concatList; [...]; passthru = mergeAttr; [..]; }
listToAttrs (map (n : nameValuePair n lib.concat)
[ "nativeBuildInputs" "buildInputs" "propagatedBuildInputs" "configureFlags" "prePhases" "postAll" "patches" ])
// listToAttrs (map (n : nameValuePair n lib.mergeAttrs) [ "passthru" "meta" "cfg" "flags" ])
// listToAttrs (map (n : nameValuePair n (a: b: "${a}\n${b}") ) [ "preConfigure" "postInstall" ])
;
# prepareDerivationArgs tries to make writing configurable derivations easier
# example:
# prepareDerivationArgs {
# mergeAttrBy = {
# myScript = x : y : x ++ "\n" ++ y;
# };
# cfg = {
# readlineSupport = true;
# };
# flags = {
# readline = {
# set = {
# configureFlags = [ "--with-compiler=${compiler}" ];
# buildInputs = [ compiler ];
# pass = { inherit compiler; READLINE=1; };
# assertion = compiler.dllSupport;
# myScript = "foo";
# };
# unset = { configureFlags = ["--without-compiler"]; };
# };
# };
# src = ...
# buildPhase = '' ... '';
# name = ...
# myScript = "bar";
# };
# if you don't have need for unset you can omit the surrounding set = { .. } attr
# all attrs except flags cfg and mergeAttrBy will be merged with the
# additional data from flags depending on config settings
# It's used in composableDerivation in all-packages.nix. It's also used
# heavily in the new python and libs implementation
#
# should we check for misspelled cfg options?
# TODO use args.mergeFun here as well?
prepareDerivationArgs = args:
let args2 = { cfg = {}; flags = {}; } // args;
flagName = name : "${name}Support";
cfgWithDefaults = (listToAttrs (map (n : nameValuePair (flagName n) false) (attrNames args2.flags)))
// args2.cfg;
opts = attrValues (mapAttrs (a : v :
let v2 = if v ? set || v ? unset then v else { set = v; };
n = if (getAttr (flagName a) cfgWithDefaults) then "set" else "unset";
attr = maybeAttr n {} v2; in
if (maybeAttr "assertion" true attr)
then attr
else throw "assertion of flag ${a} of derivation ${args.name} failed"
) args2.flags );
in removeAttrs
(mergeAttrsByFuncDefaults ([args] ++ opts ++ [{ passthru = cfgWithDefaults; }]))
["flags" "cfg" "mergeAttrBy" ];
nixType = x:
if isAttrs x then
if x ? outPath then "derivation"
else "aattrs"
else if isFunction x then "function"
else if isList x then "list"
else if x == true then "bool"
else if x == false then "bool"
else if x == null then "null"
else if isInt x then "int"
else "string";
}

View File

@@ -9,76 +9,28 @@ rec {
/* Evaluate a set of modules. The result is a set of two
attributes: options: the nested set of all option declarations,
and config: the nested set of all option values.
!!! Please think twice before adding to this argument list! The more
that is specified here instead of in the modules themselves the harder
it is to transparently move a set of modules to be a submodule of another
config (as the proper arguments need to be replicated at each call to
evalModules) and the less declarative the module set is. */
evalModules = { modules
, prefix ? []
, # This should only be used for special arguments that need to be evaluated
# when resolving module structure (like in imports). For everything else,
# there's _module.args.
specialArgs ? {}
, # This would be remove in the future, Prefer _module.args option instead.
args ? {}
, # This would be remove in the future, Prefer _module.check option instead.
check ? true
}:
and config: the nested set of all option values. */
evalModules = { modules, prefix ? [], args ? {}, check ? true }:
let
# This internal module declare internal options under the `_module'
# attribute. These options are fragile, as they are used by the
# module system to change the interpretation of modules.
internalModule = rec {
_file = ./modules.nix;
key = _file;
options = {
_module.args = mkOption {
type = types.attrsOf types.unspecified;
internal = true;
description = "Arguments passed to each module.";
};
_module.check = mkOption {
type = types.bool;
internal = true;
default = check;
description = "Whether to check whether all option definitions have matching declarations.";
};
};
config = {
_module.args = args;
};
};
closed = closeModules (modules ++ [ internalModule ]) ({ inherit config options; lib = import ./.; } // specialArgs);
args' = args // { lib = import ./.; } // result;
closed = closeModules modules args';
# Note: the list of modules is reversed to maintain backward
# compatibility with the old module system. Not sure if this is
# the most sensible policy.
options = mergeModules prefix (reverseList closed);
# Traverse options and extract the option values into the final
# config set. At the same time, check whether all option
# definitions have matching declarations.
# !!! _module.check's value can't depend on any other config values
# without an infinite recursion. One way around this is to make the
# 'config' passed around to the modules be unconditionally unchecked,
# and only do the check in 'result'.
config = yieldConfig prefix options;
yieldConfig = prefix: set:
let res = removeAttrs (mapAttrs (n: v:
if isOption v then v.value
else yieldConfig (prefix ++ [n]) v) set) ["_definedNames"];
in
if options._module.check.value && set ? _definedNames then
foldl' (res: m:
foldl' (res: name:
if set ? ${name} then res else throw "The option `${showOption (prefix ++ [name])}' defined in `${m.file}' does not exist.")
if check && set ? _definedNames then
fold (m: res:
fold (name: res:
if hasAttr name set then res else throw "The option `${showOption (prefix ++ [name])}' defined in `${m.file}' does not exist.")
res m.names)
res set._definedNames
else
@@ -90,12 +42,10 @@ rec {
closeModules = modules: args:
let
toClosureList = file: parentKey: imap (n: x:
if isAttrs x || isFunction x then
let key = "${parentKey}:anon-${toString n}"; in
unifyModuleSyntax file key (unpackSubmodule (applyIfFunction key) x args)
if isAttrs x || builtins.isFunction x then
unifyModuleSyntax file "${parentKey}:anon-${toString n}" (applyIfFunction x args)
else
let file = toString x; key = toString x; in
unifyModuleSyntax file key (applyIfFunction key (import x) args));
unifyModuleSyntax (toString x) (toString x) (applyIfFunction (import x) args));
in
builtins.genericClosure {
startSet = toClosureList unknownModule "" modules;
@@ -108,7 +58,7 @@ rec {
if m ? config || m ? options then
let badAttrs = removeAttrs m ["imports" "options" "config" "key" "_file"]; in
if badAttrs != {} then
throw "Module `${key}' has an unsupported attribute `${head (attrNames badAttrs)}'. This is caused by assignments to the top-level attributes `config' or `options'."
throw "Module `${key}' has an unsupported attribute `${head (attrNames badAttrs)}'."
else
{ file = m._file or file;
key = toString m.key or key;
@@ -124,46 +74,7 @@ rec {
config = removeAttrs m ["key" "_file" "require" "imports"];
};
applyIfFunction = key: f: args@{ config, options, lib, ... }: if isFunction f then
let
# Module arguments are resolved in a strict manner when attribute set
# deconstruction is used. As the arguments are now defined with the
# config._module.args option, the strictness used on the attribute
# set argument would cause an infinite loop, if the result of the
# option is given as argument.
#
# To work-around the strictness issue on the deconstruction of the
# attributes set argument, we create a new attribute set which is
# constructed to satisfy the expected set of attributes. Thus calling
# a module will resolve strictly the attributes used as argument but
# not their values. The values are forwarding the result of the
# evaluation of the option.
requiredArgs = builtins.attrNames (builtins.functionArgs f);
context = name: ''while evaluating the module argument `${name}' in "${key}":'';
extraArgs = builtins.listToAttrs (map (name: {
inherit name;
value = addErrorContext (context name)
(args.${name} or config._module.args.${name});
}) requiredArgs);
# Note: we append in the opposite order such that we can add an error
# context on the explicited arguments of "args" too. This update
# operator is used to make the "args@{ ... }: with args.lib;" notation
# works.
in f (args // extraArgs)
else
f;
/* We have to pack and unpack submodules. We cannot wrap the expected
result of the function as we would no longer be able to list the arguments
of the submodule. (see applyIfFunction) */
unpackSubmodule = unpack: m: args:
if isType "submodule" m then
{ _file = m.file; } // (unpack m.submodule args)
else unpack m args;
packSubmodule = file: m:
{ _type = "submodule"; file = file; submodule = m; };
applyIfFunction = f: arg: if builtins.isFunction f then f arg else f;
/* Merge a list of modules. This will recurse over the option
declarations in all modules, combining them into a single set.
@@ -182,22 +93,25 @@ rec {
let
loc = prefix ++ [name];
# Get all submodules that declare name.
decls = concatMap (m:
if m.options ? ${name}
then [ { inherit (m) file; options = m.options.${name}; } ]
decls = concatLists (map (m:
if hasAttr name m.options
then [ { inherit (m) file; options = getAttr name m.options; } ]
else []
) options;
) options);
# Get all submodules that define name.
defns = concatMap (m:
if m.config ? ${name}
defns = concatLists (map (m:
if hasAttr name m.config
then map (config: { inherit (m) file; inherit config; })
(pushDownProperties m.config.${name})
(pushDownProperties (getAttr name m.config))
else []
) configs);
nrOptions = count (m: isOption m.options) decls;
# Process mkMerge and mkIf properties.
defns' = concatMap (m:
if hasAttr name m.config
then map (m': { inherit (m) file; value = m'; }) (dischargeProperties (getAttr name m.config))
else []
) configs;
nrOptions = count (m: isOption m.options) decls;
# Extract the definitions for this loc
defns' = map (m: { inherit (m) file; value = m.config.${name}; })
(filter (m: m.config ? ${name}) configs);
in
if nrOptions == length decls then
let opt = fixupOptionType loc (mergeOptionDecls loc decls);
@@ -218,41 +132,20 @@ rec {
The exception is the options attribute, which specifies
sub-options. These can be specified multiple times to allow one
module to add sub-options to an option declared somewhere else
(e.g. multiple modules define sub-options for fileSystems).
'loc' is the list of attribute names where the option is located.
'opts' is a list of modules. Each module has an options attribute which
correspond to the definition of 'loc' in 'opt.file'. */
(e.g. multiple modules define sub-options for fileSystems). */
mergeOptionDecls = loc: opts:
foldl' (res: opt:
fold (opt: res:
if opt.options ? default && res ? default ||
opt.options ? example && res ? example ||
opt.options ? description && res ? description ||
opt.options ? apply && res ? apply ||
# Accept to merge options which have identical types.
opt.options ? type && res ? type && opt.options.type.name != res.type.name
opt.options ? type && res ? type
then
throw "The option `${showOption loc}' in `${opt.file}' is already declared in ${showFiles res.declarations}."
else
let
/* Add the modules of the current option to the list of modules
already collected. The options attribute except either a list of
submodules or a submodule. For each submodule, we add the file of the
current option declaration as the file use for the submodule. If the
submodule defines any filename, then we ignore the enclosing option file. */
options' = toList opt.options.options;
coerceOption = file: opt:
if isFunction opt then packSubmodule file opt
else packSubmodule file { options = opt; };
getSubModules = opt.options.type.getSubModules or null;
submodules =
if getSubModules != null then map (packSubmodule opt.file) getSubModules ++ res.options
else if opt.options ? options then map (coerceOption opt.file) options' ++ res.options
else res.options;
in opt.options // res //
{ declarations = res.declarations ++ [opt.file];
options = submodules;
opt.options // res //
{ declarations = [opt.file] ++ res.declarations;
options = if opt.options ? options then [(toList opt.options.options ++ res.options)] else [];
}
) { inherit loc; declarations = []; options = []; } opts;
@@ -260,71 +153,34 @@ rec {
config value. */
evalOptionValue = loc: opt: defs:
let
# Add in the default value for this option, if any.
defs' =
(optional (opt ? default)
{ file = head opt.declarations; value = mkOptionDefault opt.default; }) ++ defs;
# Handle properties, check types, and merge everything together.
res =
if opt.readOnly or false && length defs' > 1 then
throw "The option `${showOption loc}' is read-only, but it's set multiple times."
else
mergeDefinitions loc opt.type defs';
# Check whether the option is defined, and apply the apply
# function to the merged value. This allows options to yield a
# value computed from the definitions.
value =
if !res.isDefined then
# Process mkOverride properties, adding in the default
# value specified in the option declaration (if any).
defsFinal = filterOverrides
((if opt ? default then [{ file = head opt.declarations; value = mkOptionDefault opt.default; }] else []) ++ defs);
files = map (def: def.file) defsFinal;
# Type-check the remaining definitions, and merge them if
# possible.
merged =
if defsFinal == [] then
throw "The option `${showOption loc}' is used but not defined."
else if opt ? apply then
opt.apply res.mergedValue
else
res.mergedValue;
fold (def: res:
if opt.type.check def.value then res
else throw "The option value `${showOption loc}' in `${def.file}' is not a ${opt.type.name}.")
(opt.type.merge loc defsFinal) defsFinal;
# Finally, apply the apply function to the merged
# value. This allows options to yield a value computed
# from the definitions.
value = (opt.apply or id) merged;
in opt //
{ value = addErrorContext "while evaluating the option `${showOption loc}':" value;
definitions = map (def: def.value) res.defsFinal;
files = map (def: def.file) res.defsFinal;
inherit (res) isDefined;
definitions = map (def: def.value) defsFinal;
isDefined = defsFinal != [];
inherit files;
};
# Merge definitions of a value of a given type.
mergeDefinitions = loc: type: defs: rec {
defsFinal =
let
# Process mkMerge and mkIf properties.
defs' = concatMap (m:
map (value: { inherit (m) file; inherit value; }) (dischargeProperties m.value)
) defs;
# Process mkOverride properties.
defs'' = filterOverrides defs';
# Sort mkOrder properties.
defs''' =
# Avoid sorting if we don't have to.
if any (def: def.value._type or "" == "order") defs''
then sortProperties defs''
else defs'';
in defs''';
# Type-check the remaining definitions, and merge them.
mergedValue = foldl' (res: def:
if type.check def.value then res
else throw "The option value `${showOption loc}' in `${def.file}' is not a ${type.name}.")
(type.merge loc defsFinal) defsFinal;
isDefined = defsFinal != [];
optionalValue =
if isDefined then { value = mergedValue; }
else {};
};
/* Given a config set, expand mkMerge properties, and push down the
other properties into the children. The result is a list of
mkIf properties into the children. The result is a list of
config sets that do not have properties at top-level. For
example,
@@ -332,7 +188,7 @@ rec {
is transformed into
[ { boot = set1; } { boot = mkIf cond set2; services = mkIf cond set3; } ].
[ { boot = set1; } { boot = mkIf cond set2; services mkIf cond set3; } ].
This transform is the critical step that allows mkIf conditions
to refer to the full configuration without creating an infinite
@@ -345,7 +201,7 @@ rec {
map (mapAttrs (n: v: mkIf cfg.condition v)) (pushDownProperties cfg.content)
else if cfg._type or "" == "override" then
map (mapAttrs (n: v: mkOverride cfg.priority v)) (pushDownProperties cfg.content)
else # FIXME: handle mkOrder?
else
[ cfg ];
/* Given a config value, expand mkMerge properties, and discharge
@@ -392,42 +248,29 @@ rec {
let
defaultPrio = 100;
getPrio = def: if def.value._type or "" == "override" then def.value.priority else defaultPrio;
highestPrio = foldl' (prio: def: min (getPrio def) prio) 9999 defs;
min = x: y: if builtins.lessThan x y then x else y;
highestPrio = fold (def: prio: min (getPrio def) prio) 9999 defs;
strip = def: if def.value._type or "" == "override" then def // { value = def.value.content; } else def;
in concatMap (def: if getPrio def == highestPrio then [(strip def)] else []) defs;
/* Sort a list of properties. The sort priority of a property is
1000 by default, but can be overriden by wrapping the property
using mkOrder. */
sortProperties = defs:
let
strip = def:
if def.value._type or "" == "order"
then def // { value = def.value.content; inherit (def.value) priority; }
else def;
defs' = map strip defs;
compare = a: b: (a.priority or 1000) < (b.priority or 1000);
in sort compare defs';
/* Hack for backward compatibility: convert options of type
optionSet to options of type submodule. FIXME: remove
eventually. */
optionSet to configOf. FIXME: remove eventually. */
fixupOptionType = loc: opt:
let
options = opt.options or
(throw "Option `${showOption loc'}' has type optionSet but has no option attribute, in ${showFiles opt.declarations}.");
options' = opt.options or
(throw "Option `${showOption loc'}' has type optionSet but has no option attribute.");
coerce = x:
if builtins.isFunction x then x
else { config, ... }: { options = x; };
options = map coerce (flatten options');
f = tp:
if tp.name == "option set" || tp.name == "submodule" then
throw "The option ${showOption loc} uses submodules without a wrapping type, in ${showFiles opt.declarations}."
if tp.name == "option set" then types.submodule options
else if tp.name == "attribute set of option sets" then types.attrsOf (types.submodule options)
else if tp.name == "list or attribute set of option sets" then types.loaOf (types.submodule options)
else if tp.name == "list of option sets" then types.listOf (types.submodule options)
else if tp.name == "null or option set" then types.nullOr (types.submodule options)
else tp;
in
if opt.type.getSubModules or null == null
then opt // { type = f (opt.type or types.unspecified); }
else opt // { type = opt.type.substSubModules opt.options; options = []; };
in opt // { type = f (opt.type or types.unspecified); };
/* Properties. */
@@ -461,106 +304,11 @@ rec {
mkFixStrictness = id; # obsolete, no-op
mkOrder = priority: content:
{ _type = "order";
inherit priority content;
};
mkBefore = mkOrder 500;
mkAfter = mkOrder 1500;
# Convenient property used to transfer all definitions and their
# properties from one option to another. This property is useful for
# renaming options, and also for including properties from another module
# system, including sub-modules.
#
# { config, options, ... }:
#
# {
# # 'bar' might not always be defined in the current module-set.
# config.foo.enable = mkAliasDefinitions (options.bar.enable or {});
#
# # 'barbaz' has to be defined in the current module-set.
# config.foobar.paths = mkAliasDefinitions options.barbaz.paths;
# }
#
# Note, this is different than taking the value of the option and using it
# as a definition, as the new definition will not keep the mkOverride /
# mkDefault properties of the previous option.
#
mkAliasDefinitions = mkAliasAndWrapDefinitions id;
mkAliasAndWrapDefinitions = wrap: option:
mkMerge
(optional (isOption option && option.isDefined)
(wrap (mkMerge option.definitions)));
# FIXME: Add mkOrder back in. It's not currently used anywhere in
# NixOS, but it should be useful.
/* Compatibility. */
fixMergeModules = modules: args: evalModules { inherit modules args; check = false; };
/* Return a module that causes a warning to be shown if the
specified option is defined. For example,
mkRemovedOptionModule [ "boot" "loader" "grub" "bootDevice" ]
causes a warning if the user defines boot.loader.grub.bootDevice.
*/
mkRemovedOptionModule = optionName:
{ options, ... }:
{ options = setAttrByPath optionName (mkOption {
visible = false;
});
config.warnings =
let opt = getAttrFromPath optionName options; in
optional opt.isDefined
"The option definition `${showOption optionName}' in ${showFiles opt.files} no longer has any effect; please remove it.";
};
/* Return a module that causes a warning to be shown if the
specified "from" option is defined; the defined value is however
forwarded to the "to" option. This can be used to rename options
while providing backward compatibility. For example,
mkRenamedOptionModule [ "boot" "copyKernels" ] [ "boot" "loader" "grub" "copyKernels" ]
forwards any definitions of boot.copyKernels to
boot.loader.grub.copyKernels while printing a warning.
*/
mkRenamedOptionModule = from: to: doRename {
inherit from to;
visible = false;
warn = true;
use = builtins.trace "Obsolete option `${showOption from}' is used. It was renamed to `${showOption to}'.";
};
/* Like mkRenamedOptionModule, but doesn't show a warning. */
mkAliasOptionModule = from: to: doRename {
inherit from to;
visible = true;
warn = false;
use = id;
};
doRename = { from, to, visible, warn, use }:
let
toOf = attrByPath to
(abort "Renaming error: option `${showOption to}' does not exists.");
in
{ config, options, ... }:
{ options = setAttrByPath from (mkOption {
description = "Alias of <option>${showOption to}</option>.";
apply = x: use (toOf config);
});
config = {
/*
warnings =
let opt = getAttrFromPath from options; in
optional (warn && opt.isDefined)
"The option `${showOption from}' defined in ${showFiles opt.files} has been renamed to `${showOption to}'.";
*/
} // setAttrByPath to (mkAliasDefinitions (getAttrFromPath from options));
};
}

View File

@@ -4,6 +4,7 @@ let lib = import ./default.nix; in
with import ./trivial.nix;
with import ./lists.nix;
with import ./misc.nix;
with import ./attrsets.nix;
with import ./strings.nix;
@@ -19,7 +20,6 @@ rec {
, apply ? null # Function that converts the option value to something else.
, internal ? null # Whether the option is for NixOS developers only.
, visible ? null # Whether the option shows up in the manual.
, readOnly ? null # Whether the option can be set only once
, options ? null # Obsolete, used by types.optionSet.
} @ attrs:
attrs // { _type = "option"; };
@@ -31,49 +31,37 @@ rec {
type = lib.types.bool;
};
# This option accept anything, but it does not produce any result. This
# is useful for sharing a module across different module sets without
# having to implement similar features as long as the value of the options
# are not expected.
mkSinkUndeclaredOptions = attrs: mkOption ({
internal = true;
visible = false;
default = false;
description = "Sink for option definitions.";
type = mkOptionType {
name = "sink";
check = x: true;
merge = loc: defs: false;
};
apply = x: throw "Option value is not readable because the option is not declared.";
} // attrs);
mergeDefaultOption = loc: defs:
let list = getValues defs; in
if length list == 1 then head list
else if all isFunction list then x: mergeDefaultOption loc (map (f: f x) list)
else if all builtins.isFunction list then x: mergeDefaultOption loc (map (f: f x) list)
else if all isList list then concatLists list
else if all isAttrs list then foldl' lib.mergeAttrs {} list
else if all isBool list then foldl' lib.or false list
else if all isString list then lib.concatStrings list
else if all isInt list && all (x: x == head list) list then head list
else if all isAttrs list then fold lib.mergeAttrs {} list
else if all builtins.isBool list then fold lib.or false list
else if all builtins.isString list then lib.concatStrings list
else if all builtins.isInt list && all (x: x == head list) list then head list
else throw "Cannot merge definitions of `${showOption loc}' given in ${showFiles (getFiles defs)}.";
/* Obsolete, will remove soon. Specify an option type or apply
function instead. */
mergeTypedOption = typeName: predicate: merge: loc: list:
let list' = map (x: x.value) list; in
if all predicate list then merge list'
else throw "Expected a ${typeName}.";
mergeEnableOption = mergeTypedOption "boolean"
(x: true == x || false == x) (fold lib.or false);
mergeListOption = mergeTypedOption "list" isList concatLists;
mergeStringOption = mergeTypedOption "string" builtins.isString lib.concatStrings;
mergeOneOption = loc: defs:
if defs == [] then abort "This case should never happen."
else if length defs != 1 then
throw "The unique option `${showOption loc}' is defined multiple times, in ${showFiles (getFiles defs)}."
else (head defs).value;
/* "Merge" option definitions by checking that they all have the same value. */
mergeEqualOption = loc: defs:
if defs == [] then abort "This case should never happen."
else foldl' (val: def:
if def.value != val then
throw "The option `${showOption loc}' has conflicting definitions, in ${showFiles (getFiles defs)}."
else
val) (head defs).value defs;
getValues = map (x: x.value);
getFiles = map (x: x.file);
@@ -83,7 +71,7 @@ rec {
optionAttrSetToDocList = optionAttrSetToDocList' [];
optionAttrSetToDocList' = prefix: options:
concatMap (opt:
fold (opt: rest:
let
docOption = rec {
name = showOption opt.loc;
@@ -91,18 +79,17 @@ rec {
declarations = filter (x: x != unknownModule) opt.declarations;
internal = opt.internal or false;
visible = opt.visible or true;
readOnly = opt.readOnly or false;
type = opt.type.name or null;
}
// (if opt ? example then { example = scrubOptionValue opt.example; } else {})
// (if opt ? default then { default = scrubOptionValue opt.default; } else {})
// (if opt ? defaultText then { default = opt.defaultText; } else {});
// optionalAttrs (opt ? example) { example = scrubOptionValue opt.example; }
// optionalAttrs (opt ? default) { default = scrubOptionValue opt.default; }
// optionalAttrs (opt ? defaultText) { default = opt.defaultText; };
subOptions =
let ss = opt.type.getSubOptions opt.loc;
in if ss != {} then optionAttrSetToDocList' opt.loc ss else [];
in
[ docOption ] ++ subOptions) (collect isOption options);
# FIXME: expensive, O(n^2)
[ docOption ] ++ subOptions ++ rest) [] (collect isOption options);
/* This function recursively removes all derivation attributes from

View File

@@ -1,24 +1,16 @@
let lists = import ./lists.nix; in
rec {
all = linux ++ darwin ++ cygwin ++ freebsd ++ openbsd ++ netbsd ++ illumos;
allBut = platforms: lists.filter (x: !(builtins.elem x platforms)) all;
none = [];
arm = ["armv5tel-linux" "armv6l-linux" "armv7l-linux" ];
i686 = ["i686-linux" "i686-freebsd" "i686-netbsd" "i686-cygwin"];
mips = [ "mips64el-linux" ];
x86_64 = ["x86_64-linux" "x86_64-darwin" "x86_64-freebsd" "x86_64-openbsd" "x86_64-netbsd" "x86_64-cygwin"];
cygwin = ["i686-cygwin" "x86_64-cygwin"];
darwin = ["x86_64-darwin"];
freebsd = ["i686-freebsd" "x86_64-freebsd"];
gnu = linux; /* ++ hurd ++ kfreebsd ++ ... */
illumos = ["x86_64-solaris"];
linux = ["i686-linux" "x86_64-linux" "armv5tel-linux" "armv6l-linux" "armv7l-linux" "mips64el-linux"];
netbsd = ["i686-netbsd" "x86_64-netbsd"];
linux = ["i686-linux" "x86_64-linux" "powerpc-linux" "armv5tel-linux" "armv7l-linux" "mips64el-linux"];
darwin = ["x86_64-darwin"];
freebsd = ["i686-freebsd" "x86_64-freebsd" "powerpc-freebsd"];
openbsd = ["i686-openbsd" "x86_64-openbsd"];
unix = linux ++ darwin ++ freebsd ++ openbsd ++ netbsd ++ illumos;
mesaPlatforms = ["i686-linux" "x86_64-linux" "x86_64-darwin" "armv5tel-linux" "armv6l-linux" "armv7l-linux"];
netbsd = ["i686-netbsd" "x86_64-netbsd"];
cygwin = ["i686-cygwin"];
unix = linux ++ darwin ++ freebsd ++ openbsd;
all = linux ++ darwin ++ cygwin ++ freebsd ++ openbsd;
none = [];
allBut = platform: lists.filter (x: platform != x) all;
mesaPlatforms = ["i686-linux" "x86_64-linux" "x86_64-darwin" "armv5tel-linux" "armv6l-linux"];
}

View File

@@ -1,47 +0,0 @@
with import ./strings.nix;
/* Helpers for creating lisp S-exprs for the Apple sandbox
lib.sandbox.allowFileRead [ "/usr/bin/file" ];
# => "(allow file-read* (literal \"/usr/bin/file\"))";
lib.sandbox.allowFileRead {
literal = [ "/usr/bin/file" ];
subpath = [ "/usr/lib/system" ];
}
# => "(allow file-read* (literal \"/usr/bin/file\") (subpath \"/usr/lib/system\"))"
*/
let
sexp = tokens: "(" + builtins.concatStringsSep " " tokens + ")";
generateFileList = files:
if builtins.isList files
then concatMapStringsSep " " (x: sexp [ "literal" ''"${x}"'' ]) files
else if builtins.isString files
then generateFileList [ files ]
else concatStringsSep " " (
(map (x: sexp [ "literal" ''"${x}"'' ]) (files.literal or [])) ++
(map (x: sexp [ "subpath" ''"${x}"'' ]) (files.subpath or []))
);
applyToFiles = f: act: files: f "${act} ${generateFileList files}";
genActions = actionName: let
action = feature: sexp [ actionName feature ];
self = {
"${actionName}" = action;
"${actionName}File" = applyToFiles action "file*";
"${actionName}FileRead" = applyToFiles action "file-read*";
"${actionName}FileReadMetadata" = applyToFiles action "file-read-metadata";
"${actionName}DirectoryList" = self."${actionName}FileReadMetadata";
"${actionName}FileWrite" = applyToFiles action "file-write*";
"${actionName}FileWriteMetadata" = applyToFiles action "file-write-metadata";
};
in self;
in
genActions "allow" // genActions "deny" // {
importProfile = derivation: ''
(import "${derivation}")
'';
}

View File

@@ -10,23 +10,20 @@ rec {
cleanSource =
let filter = name: type: let baseName = baseNameOf (toString name); in ! (
# Filter out Subversion and CVS directories.
(type == "directory" && (baseName == ".git" || baseName == ".svn" || baseName == "CVS" || baseName == ".hg")) ||
(type == "directory" && (baseName == ".git" || baseName == ".svn" || baseName == "CVS")) ||
# Filter out backup files.
lib.hasSuffix "~" baseName ||
# Filter out generates files.
lib.hasSuffix ".o" baseName ||
lib.hasSuffix ".so" baseName
(lib.hasSuffix "~" baseName)
);
in src: builtins.filterSource filter src;
# Get all files ending with the specified suffices from the given
# directory or its descendants. E.g. `sourceFilesBySuffices ./dir
# [".xml" ".c"]'.
# directory. E.g. `sourceFilesBySuffices ./dir [".xml" ".c"]'.
sourceFilesBySuffices = path: exts:
let filter = name: type:
let base = baseNameOf (toString name);
in type == "directory" || lib.any (ext: lib.hasSuffix ext base) exts;
in type != "directory" && lib.any (ext: lib.hasSuffix ext base) exts;
in builtins.filterSource filter path;
}

View File

@@ -15,7 +15,7 @@ Usage:
Attention:
let
pkgs = (import <nixpkgs>) {};
pkgs = (import /etc/nixos/nixpkgs/pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix) {};
in let
inherit (pkgs.stringsWithDeps) fullDepEntry packEntry noDepEntry textClosureMap;
inherit (pkgs.lib) id;
@@ -62,8 +62,8 @@ rec {
in { result = x.result ++ [entry.text] ++ y.result;
done = y.done;
}
else if done ? ${entry} then f done (tail todo)
else f (done // listToAttrs [{name = entry; value = 1;}]) ([predefined.${entry}] ++ tail todo);
else if hasAttr entry done then f done (tail todo)
else f (done // listToAttrs [{name = entry; value = 1;}]) ([(builtins.getAttr entry predefined)] ++ tail todo);
in (f {} arg).result;
textClosureMap = f: predefined: names:

View File

@@ -2,482 +2,189 @@
let lib = import ./default.nix;
inherit (builtins) length;
inherit (builtins) add sub lessThan length;
in
rec {
inherit (builtins) stringLength substring head tail;
inherit (builtins) stringLength substring head tail isString replaceStrings;
/* Concatenate a list of strings.
# Concatenate a list of strings.
concatStrings = lib.fold (x: y: x + y) "";
Example:
concatStrings ["foo" "bar"]
=> "foobar"
*/
concatStrings =
if builtins ? concatStringsSep then
builtins.concatStringsSep ""
else
lib.foldl' (x: y: x + y) "";
/* Map a function over a list and concatenate the resulting strings.
Example:
concatMapStrings (x: "a" + x) ["foo" "bar"]
=> "afooabar"
*/
# Map a function over a list and concatenate the resulting strings.
concatMapStrings = f: list: concatStrings (map f list);
/* Like `concatMapStrings' except that the f functions also gets the
position as a parameter.
Example:
concatImapStrings (pos: x: "${toString pos}-${x}") ["foo" "bar"]
=> "1-foo2-bar"
*/
concatImapStrings = f: list: concatStrings (lib.imap f list);
/* Place an element between each element of a list
Example:
intersperse "/" ["usr" "local" "bin"]
=> ["usr" "/" "local" "/" "bin"].
*/
# Place an element between each element of a list, e.g.,
# `intersperse "," ["a" "b" "c"]' returns ["a" "," "b" "," "c"].
intersperse = separator: list:
if list == [] || length list == 1
then list
else tail (lib.concatMap (x: [separator x]) list);
else [(head list) separator]
++ (intersperse separator (tail list));
/* Concatenate a list of strings with a separator between each element
Example:
concatStringsSep "/" ["usr" "local" "bin"]
=> "usr/local/bin"
*/
concatStringsSep = builtins.concatStringsSep or (separator: list:
concatStrings (intersperse separator list));
# Concatenate a list of strings with a separator between each element, e.g.
# concatStringsSep " " ["foo" "bar" "xyzzy"] == "foo bar xyzzy"
concatStringsSep = separator: list:
concatStrings (intersperse separator list);
/* First maps over the list and then concatenates it.
Example:
concatMapStringsSep "-" (x: toUpper x) ["foo" "bar" "baz"]
=> "FOO-BAR-BAZ"
*/
concatMapStringsSep = sep: f: list: concatStringsSep sep (map f list);
/* First imaps over the list and then concatenates it.
Example:
concatImapStringsSep "-" (pos: x: toString (x / pos)) [ 6 6 6 ]
=> "6-3-2"
*/
concatImapStringsSep = sep: f: list: concatStringsSep sep (lib.imap f list);
/* Construct a Unix-style search path consisting of each `subDir"
directory of the given list of packages.
Example:
makeSearchPath "bin" ["/root" "/usr" "/usr/local"]
=> "/root/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/bin"
makeSearchPath "bin" ["/"]
=> "//bin"
*/
# Construct a Unix-style search path consisting of each `subDir"
# directory of the given list of packages. For example,
# `makeSearchPath "bin" ["x" "y" "z"]' returns "x/bin:y/bin:z/bin".
makeSearchPath = subDir: packages:
concatStringsSep ":" (map (path: path + "/" + subDir) packages);
/* Construct a Unix-style search path, given trying outputs in order.
If no output is found, fallback to `.out` and then to the default.
Example:
makeSearchPathOutputs "bin" ["bin"] [ pkgs.openssl pkgs.zlib ]
=> "/nix/store/9rz8gxhzf8sw4kf2j2f1grr49w8zx5vj-openssl-1.0.1r-bin/bin:/nix/store/wwh7mhwh269sfjkm6k5665b5kgp7jrk2-zlib-1.2.8/bin"
*/
makeSearchPathOutputs = subDir: outputs: pkgs:
makeSearchPath subDir (map (pkg: if pkg.outputUnspecified or false then lib.tryAttrs (outputs ++ ["out"]) pkg else pkg) pkgs);
/* Construct a library search path (such as RPATH) containing the
libraries for a set of packages
Example:
makeLibraryPath [ "/usr" "/usr/local" ]
=> "/usr/lib:/usr/local/lib"
pkgs = import <nixpkgs> { }
makeLibraryPath [ pkgs.openssl pkgs.zlib ]
=> "/nix/store/9rz8gxhzf8sw4kf2j2f1grr49w8zx5vj-openssl-1.0.1r/lib:/nix/store/wwh7mhwh269sfjkm6k5665b5kgp7jrk2-zlib-1.2.8/lib"
*/
makeLibraryPath = pkgs: makeSearchPath "lib"
# try to guess the right output of each pkg
(map (pkg: if pkg.outputUnspecified or false then pkg.lib or (pkg.out or pkg) else pkg) pkgs);
/* Construct a binary search path (such as $PATH) containing the
binaries for a set of packages.
Example:
makeBinPath ["/root" "/usr" "/usr/local"]
=> "/root/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/bin"
*/
makeBinPath = pkgs: makeSearchPath "bin"
(map (pkg: if pkg.outputUnspecified or false then pkg.bin or (pkg.out or pkg) else pkg) pkgs);
# Construct a library search path (such as RPATH) containing the
# libraries for a set of packages, e.g. "${pkg1}/lib:${pkg2}/lib:...".
makeLibraryPath = makeSearchPath "lib";
/* Construct a perl search path (such as $PERL5LIB)
# Idem for Perl search paths.
makePerlPath = makeSearchPath "lib/perl5/site_perl";
FIXME(zimbatm): this should be moved in perl-specific code
Example:
pkgs = import <nixpkgs> { }
makePerlPath [ pkgs.perlPackages.NetSMTP ]
=> "/nix/store/n0m1fk9c960d8wlrs62sncnadygqqc6y-perl-Net-SMTP-1.25/lib/perl5/site_perl"
*/
makePerlPath = pkgs: makeSearchPath "lib/perl5/site_perl"
(map (pkg: if pkg.outputUnspecified or false then pkg.lib or (pkg.out or pkg) else pkg) pkgs);
/* Dependening on the boolean `cond', return either the given string
or the empty string. Useful to contatenate against a bigger string.
Example:
optionalString true "some-string"
=> "some-string"
optionalString false "some-string"
=> ""
*/
# Dependening on the boolean `cond', return either the given string
# or the empty string.
optionalString = cond: string: if cond then string else "";
/* Determine whether a string has given prefix.
Example:
hasPrefix "foo" "foobar"
=> true
hasPrefix "foo" "barfoo"
=> false
*/
hasPrefix = pref: str:
substring 0 (stringLength pref) str == pref;
# Determine whether a filename ends in the given suffix.
hasSuffix = ext: fileName:
let lenFileName = stringLength fileName;
lenExt = stringLength ext;
in !(lessThan lenFileName lenExt) &&
substring (sub lenFileName lenExt) lenFileName fileName == ext;
/* Determine whether a string has given suffix.
Example:
hasSuffix "foo" "foobar"
=> false
hasSuffix "foo" "barfoo"
=> true
*/
hasSuffix = suff: str:
let
lenStr = stringLength str;
lenSuff = stringLength suff;
in lenStr >= lenSuff &&
substring (lenStr - lenSuff) lenStr str == suff;
# Convert a string to a list of characters (i.e. singleton strings).
# For instance, "abc" becomes ["a" "b" "c"]. This allows you to,
# e.g., map a function over each character. However, note that this
# will likely be horribly inefficient; Nix is not a general purpose
# programming language. Complex string manipulations should, if
# appropriate, be done in a derivation.
stringToCharacters = s: let l = stringLength s; in
if l == 0
then []
else map (p: substring p 1 s) (lib.range 0 (sub l 1));
/* Convert a string to a list of characters (i.e. singleton strings).
This allows you to, e.g., map a function over each character. However,
note that this will likely be horribly inefficient; Nix is not a
general purpose programming language. Complex string manipulations
should, if appropriate, be done in a derivation.
Also note that Nix treats strings as a list of bytes and thus doesn't
handle unicode.
Example:
stringToCharacters ""
=> [ ]
stringToCharacters "abc"
=> [ "a" "b" "c" ]
stringToCharacters "💩"
=> [ "<EFBFBD>" "<EFBFBD>" "<EFBFBD>" "<EFBFBD>" ]
*/
stringToCharacters = s:
map (p: substring p 1 s) (lib.range 0 (stringLength s - 1));
/* Manipulate a string character by character and replace them by
strings before concatenating the results.
Example:
stringAsChars (x: if x == "a" then "i" else x) "nax"
=> "nix"
*/
# Manipulate a string charcater by character and replace them by strings
# before concatenating the results.
stringAsChars = f: s:
concatStrings (
map f (stringToCharacters s)
);
/* Escape occurrence of the elements of list in string by
prefixing it with a backslash.
Example:
escape ["(" ")"] "(foo)"
=> "\\(foo\\)"
*/
escape = list: replaceChars list (map (c: "\\${c}") list);
# same as vim escape function.
# Each character contained in list is prefixed by "\"
escape = list : string :
stringAsChars (c: if lib.elem c list then "\\${c}" else c) string;
/* Escape all characters that have special meaning in the Bourne shell.
Example:
escapeShellArg "so([<>])me"
=> "so\\(\\[\\<\\>\\]\\)me"
*/
# still ugly slow. But more correct now
# [] for zsh
escapeShellArg = lib.escape (stringToCharacters "\\ ';$`()|<>\t*[]");
/* Obsolete - use replaceStrings instead. */
replaceChars = builtins.replaceStrings or (
del: new: s:
let
substList = lib.zipLists del new;
subst = c:
let found = lib.findFirst (sub: sub.fst == c) null substList; in
if found == null then
c
else
found.snd;
in
stringAsChars subst s);
# Case conversion utilities.
# replace characters by their substitutes. This function is equivalent to
# the `tr' command except that one character can be replace by multiple
# ones. e.g.,
# replaceChars ["<" ">"] ["&lt;" "&gt;"] "<foo>" returns "&lt;foo&gt;".
replaceChars = del: new: s:
let
subst = c:
(lib.fold
(sub: res: if sub.fst == c then sub else res)
{fst = c; snd = c;} (lib.zipLists del new)
).snd;
in
stringAsChars subst s;
# Case conversion utilities
lowerChars = stringToCharacters "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz";
upperChars = stringToCharacters "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ";
/* Converts an ASCII string to lower-case.
Example:
toLower "HOME"
=> "home"
*/
toLower = replaceChars upperChars lowerChars;
/* Converts an ASCII string to upper-case.
Example:
toLower "home"
=> "HOME"
*/
toUpper = replaceChars lowerChars upperChars;
/* Appends string context from another string. This is an implementation
detail of Nix.
Strings in Nix carry an invisible `context' which is a list of strings
representing store paths. If the string is later used in a derivation
attribute, the derivation will properly populate the inputDrvs and
inputSrcs.
# Compares strings not requiring context equality
# Obviously, a workaround but works on all Nix versions
eqStrings = a: b: (a+(substring 0 0 b)) == ((substring 0 0 a)+b);
Example:
pkgs = import <nixpkgs> { };
addContextFrom pkgs.coreutils "bar"
=> "bar"
*/
addContextFrom = a: b: substring 0 0 a + b;
/* Cut a string with a separator and produces a list of strings which
were separated by this separator.
NOTE: this function is not performant and should never be used.
Example:
splitString "." "foo.bar.baz"
=> [ "foo" "bar" "baz" ]
splitString "/" "/usr/local/bin"
=> [ "" "usr" "local" "bin" ]
*/
splitString = _sep: _s:
# Cut a string with a separator and produces a list of strings which were
# separated by this separator. e.g.,
# `splitString "." "foo.bar.baz"' returns ["foo" "bar" "baz"].
splitString = sep: s:
let
sep = addContextFrom _s _sep;
s = addContextFrom _sep _s;
sepLen = stringLength sep;
sLen = stringLength s;
lastSearch = sLen - sepLen;
lastSearch = sub sLen sepLen;
startWithSep = startAt:
substring startAt sepLen s == sep;
recurse = index: startAt:
let cutUntil = i: [(substring startAt (i - startAt) s)]; in
if index < lastSearch then
let cutUntil = i: [(substring startAt (sub i startAt) s)]; in
if lessThan index lastSearch then
if startWithSep index then
let restartAt = index + sepLen; in
let restartAt = add index sepLen; in
cutUntil index ++ recurse restartAt restartAt
else
recurse (index + 1) startAt
recurse (add index 1) startAt
else
cutUntil sLen;
in
recurse 0 0;
/* Return the suffix of the second argument if the first argument matches
its prefix.
Example:
removePrefix "foo." "foo.bar.baz"
=> "bar.baz"
removePrefix "xxx" "foo.bar.baz"
=> "foo.bar.baz"
*/
# return the suffix of the second argument if the first argument match its
# prefix. e.g.,
# `removePrefix "foo." "foo.bar.baz"' returns "bar.baz".
removePrefix = pre: s:
let
preLen = stringLength pre;
sLen = stringLength s;
in
if hasPrefix pre s then
substring preLen (sLen - preLen) s
if pre == substring 0 preLen s then
substring preLen (sub sLen preLen) s
else
s;
/* Return the prefix of the second argument if the first argument matches
its suffix.
Example:
removeSuffix "front" "homefront"
=> "home"
removeSuffix "xxx" "homefront"
=> "homefront"
*/
removeSuffix = suf: s:
let
sufLen = stringLength suf;
sLen = stringLength s;
in
if sufLen <= sLen && suf == substring (sLen - sufLen) sufLen s then
substring 0 (sLen - sufLen) s
else
s;
/* Return true iff string v1 denotes a version older than v2.
Example:
versionOlder "1.1" "1.2"
=> true
versionOlder "1.1" "1.1"
=> false
*/
# Return true iff string v1 denotes a version older than v2.
versionOlder = v1: v2: builtins.compareVersions v2 v1 == 1;
/* Return true iff string v1 denotes a version equal to or newer than v2.
Example:
versionAtLeast "1.1" "1.0"
=> true
versionAtLeast "1.1" "1.1"
=> true
versionAtLeast "1.1" "1.2"
=> false
*/
# Return true iff string v1 denotes a version equal to or newer than v2.
versionAtLeast = v1: v2: !versionOlder v1 v2;
/* This function takes an argument that's either a derivation or a
derivation's "name" attribute and extracts the version part from that
argument.
Example:
getVersion "youtube-dl-2016.01.01"
=> "2016.01.01"
getVersion pkgs.youtube-dl
=> "2016.01.01"
*/
getVersion = x: (builtins.parseDrvName (x.name or x)).version;
# Get the version of the specified derivation, as specified in its
# name attribute.
getVersion = drv: (builtins.parseDrvName drv.name).version;
/* Extract name with version from URL. Ask for separator which is
supposed to start extension.
Example:
nameFromURL "https://nixos.org/releases/nix/nix-1.7/nix-1.7-x86_64-linux.tar.bz2" "-"
=> "nix"
nameFromURL "https://nixos.org/releases/nix/nix-1.7/nix-1.7-x86_64-linux.tar.bz2" "_"
=> "nix-1.7-x86"
*/
nameFromURL = url: sep:
let
components = splitString "/" url;
filename = lib.last components;
name = builtins.head (splitString sep filename);
in assert name != filename; name;
# Extract name with version from URL. Ask for separator which is
# supposed to start extension
nameFromURL = url: sep: let
components = splitString "/" url;
filename = lib.last components;
name = builtins.head (splitString sep filename);
in
assert ! eqStrings name filename;
name;
/* Create an --{enable,disable}-<feat> string that can be passed to
standard GNU Autoconf scripts.
Example:
enableFeature true "shared"
=> "--enable-shared"
enableFeature false "shared"
=> "--disable-shared"
*/
# Create an --{enable,disable}-<feat> string that can be passed to
# standard GNU Autoconf scripts.
enableFeature = enable: feat: "--${if enable then "enable" else "disable"}-${feat}";
/* Create a fixed width string with additional prefix to match
required width.
Example:
fixedWidthString 5 "0" (toString 15)
=> "00015"
*/
fixedWidthString = width: filler: str:
let
strw = lib.stringLength str;
reqWidth = width - (lib.stringLength filler);
in
assert strw <= width;
if strw == width then str else filler + fixedWidthString reqWidth filler str;
/* Format a number adding leading zeroes up to fixed width.
Example:
fixedWidthNumber 5 15
=> "00015"
*/
fixedWidthNumber = width: n: fixedWidthString width "0" (toString n);
/* Check whether a value is a store path.
Example:
isStorePath "/nix/store/d945ibfx9x185xf04b890y4f9g3cbb63-python-2.7.11/bin/python"
=> false
isStorePath "/nix/store/d945ibfx9x185xf04b890y4f9g3cbb63-python-2.7.11/"
=> true
isStorePath pkgs.python
=> true
*/
isStorePath = x: builtins.substring 0 1 (toString x) == "/" && dirOf (builtins.toPath x) == builtins.storeDir;
/* Convert string to int
Obviously, it is a bit hacky to use fromJSON that way.
Example:
toInt "1337"
=> 1337
toInt "-4"
=> -4
toInt "3.14"
=> error: floating point JSON numbers are not supported
*/
toInt = str:
let may_be_int = builtins.fromJSON str; in
if builtins.isInt may_be_int
then may_be_int
else throw "Could not convert ${str} to int.";
/* Read a list of paths from `file', relative to the `rootPath'. Lines
beginning with `#' are treated as comments and ignored. Whitespace
is significant.
NOTE: this function is not performant and should be avoided
Example:
readPathsFromFile /prefix
./pkgs/development/libraries/qt-5/5.4/qtbase/series
=> [ "/prefix/dlopen-resolv.patch" "/prefix/tzdir.patch"
"/prefix/dlopen-libXcursor.patch" "/prefix/dlopen-openssl.patch"
"/prefix/dlopen-dbus.patch" "/prefix/xdg-config-dirs.patch"
"/prefix/nix-profiles-library-paths.patch"
"/prefix/compose-search-path.patch" ]
*/
readPathsFromFile = rootPath: file:
let
root = toString rootPath;
lines =
builtins.map (lib.removeSuffix "\n")
(lib.splitString "\n" (builtins.readFile file));
removeComments = lib.filter (line: !(lib.hasPrefix "#" line));
relativePaths = removeComments lines;
absolutePaths = builtins.map (path: builtins.toPath (root + "/" + path)) relativePaths;
in
absolutePaths;
}

View File

@@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ rec {
isCpuType = x: isType "cpu-type" x
&& elem x.bits [8 16 32 64 128]
&& (8 < x.bits -> isSignificantByte x.significantByte);
&& (builtins.lessThan 8 x.bits -> isSignificantByte x.significantByte);
cpuTypes = with significantBytes;
setTypes "cpu-type" {
@@ -84,10 +84,10 @@ rec {
};
is64Bit = matchAttrs { cpu = { bits = 64; }; };
isDarwin = matchAttrs { kernel = kernels.darwin; };
isi686 = matchAttrs { cpu = cpuTypes.i686; };
isLinux = matchAttrs { kernel = kernels.linux; };
isi686 = matchAttrs { cpu = cpuTypes.i686; };
is64Bit = matchAttrs { cpu = { bits = 64; }; };
# This should revert the job done by config.guess from the gcc compiler.

View File

@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ runTests {
expr = id 1;
expected = 1;
};
testConst = {
expr = const 2 3;
expected = 2;
@@ -19,12 +19,12 @@ runTests {
expected = true;
};
*/
testAnd = {
expr = and true false;
expected = false;
};
testFix = {
expr = fix (x: {a = if x ? a then "a" else "b";});
expected = {a = "a";};
@@ -67,7 +67,7 @@ runTests {
};
testOverridableDelayableArgsTest = {
expr =
expr =
let res1 = defaultOverridableDelayableArgs id {};
res2 = defaultOverridableDelayableArgs id { a = 7; };
res3 = let x = defaultOverridableDelayableArgs id { a = 7; };
@@ -87,7 +87,7 @@ runTests {
in (x2.replace) { a = 10; }; # and override the value by 10
# fixed tests (delayed args): (when using them add some comments, please)
resFixed1 =
resFixed1 =
let x = defaultOverridableDelayableArgs id ( x : { a = 7; c = x.fixed.b; });
y = x.merge (x : { name = "name-${builtins.toString x.fixed.c}"; });
in (y.merge) { b = 10; };
@@ -109,25 +109,5 @@ runTests {
expr = sort builtins.lessThan [ 40 2 30 42 ];
expected = [2 30 40 42];
};
testToIntShouldConvertStringToInt = {
expr = toInt "27";
expected = 27;
};
testToIntShouldThrowErrorIfItCouldNotConvertToInt = {
expr = builtins.tryEval (toInt "\"foo\"");
expected = { success = false; value = false; };
};
testHasAttrByPathTrue = {
expr = hasAttrByPath ["a" "b"] { a = { b = "yey"; }; };
expected = true;
};
testHasAttrByPathFalse = {
expr = hasAttrByPath ["a" "b"] { a = { c = "yey"; }; };
expected = false;
};
}

View File

@@ -1,127 +0,0 @@
#!/bin/sh
#
# This script is used to test that the module system is working as expected.
# By default it test the version of nixpkgs which is defined in the NIX_PATH.
cd ./modules
pass=0
fail=0
evalConfig() {
local attr=$1
shift;
local script="import ./default.nix { modules = [ $@ ];}"
nix-instantiate --timeout 1 -E "$script" -A "$attr" --eval-only --show-trace
}
reportFailure() {
local attr=$1
shift;
local script="import ./default.nix { modules = [ $@ ];}"
echo 2>&1 "$ nix-instantiate -E '$script' -A '$attr' --eval-only"
evalConfig "$attr" "$@"
fail=$((fail + 1))
}
checkConfigOutput() {
local outputContains=$1
shift;
if evalConfig "$@" 2>/dev/null | grep --silent "$outputContains" ; then
pass=$((pass + 1))
return 0;
else
echo 2>&1 "error: Expected result matching '$outputContains', while evaluating"
reportFailure "$@"
return 1
fi
}
checkConfigError() {
local errorContains=$1
local err=""
shift;
if err==$(evalConfig "$@" 2>&1 >/dev/null); then
echo 2>&1 "error: Expected error code, got exit code 0, while evaluating"
reportFailure "$@"
return 1
else
if echo "$err" | grep --silent "$errorContains" ; then
pass=$((pass + 1))
return 0;
else
echo 2>&1 "error: Expected error matching '$errorContains', while evaluating"
reportFailure "$@"
return 1
fi
fi
}
# Check boolean option.
checkConfigOutput "false" config.enable ./declare-enable.nix
checkConfigError 'The option .* defined in .* does not exist.' config.enable ./define-enable.nix
# Check mkForce without submodules.
set -- config.enable ./declare-enable.nix ./define-enable.nix
checkConfigOutput "true" "$@"
checkConfigOutput "false" "$@" ./define-force-enable.nix
checkConfigOutput "false" "$@" ./define-enable-force.nix
# Check mkForce with option and submodules.
checkConfigError 'attribute .*foo.* .* not found' config.loaOfSub.foo.enable ./declare-loaOfSub-any-enable.nix
checkConfigOutput 'false' config.loaOfSub.foo.enable ./declare-loaOfSub-any-enable.nix ./define-loaOfSub-foo.nix
set -- config.loaOfSub.foo.enable ./declare-loaOfSub-any-enable.nix ./define-loaOfSub-foo-enable.nix
checkConfigOutput 'true' "$@"
checkConfigOutput 'false' "$@" ./define-force-loaOfSub-foo-enable.nix
checkConfigOutput 'false' "$@" ./define-loaOfSub-force-foo-enable.nix
checkConfigOutput 'false' "$@" ./define-loaOfSub-foo-force-enable.nix
checkConfigOutput 'false' "$@" ./define-loaOfSub-foo-enable-force.nix
# Check overriding effect of mkForce on submodule definitions.
checkConfigError 'attribute .*bar.* .* not found' config.loaOfSub.bar.enable ./declare-loaOfSub-any-enable.nix ./define-loaOfSub-foo.nix
checkConfigOutput 'false' config.loaOfSub.bar.enable ./declare-loaOfSub-any-enable.nix ./define-loaOfSub-foo.nix ./define-loaOfSub-bar.nix
set -- config.loaOfSub.bar.enable ./declare-loaOfSub-any-enable.nix ./define-loaOfSub-foo.nix ./define-loaOfSub-bar-enable.nix
checkConfigOutput 'true' "$@"
checkConfigError 'attribute .*bar.* .* not found' "$@" ./define-force-loaOfSub-foo-enable.nix
checkConfigError 'attribute .*bar.* .* not found' "$@" ./define-loaOfSub-force-foo-enable.nix
checkConfigOutput 'true' "$@" ./define-loaOfSub-foo-force-enable.nix
checkConfigOutput 'true' "$@" ./define-loaOfSub-foo-enable-force.nix
# Check mkIf with submodules.
checkConfigError 'attribute .*foo.* .* not found' config.loaOfSub.foo.enable ./declare-enable.nix ./declare-loaOfSub-any-enable.nix
set -- config.loaOfSub.foo.enable ./declare-enable.nix ./declare-loaOfSub-any-enable.nix
checkConfigError 'attribute .*foo.* .* not found' "$@" ./define-if-loaOfSub-foo-enable.nix
checkConfigError 'attribute .*foo.* .* not found' "$@" ./define-loaOfSub-if-foo-enable.nix
checkConfigError 'attribute .*foo.* .* not found' "$@" ./define-loaOfSub-foo-if-enable.nix
checkConfigOutput 'false' "$@" ./define-loaOfSub-foo-enable-if.nix
checkConfigOutput 'true' "$@" ./define-enable.nix ./define-if-loaOfSub-foo-enable.nix
checkConfigOutput 'true' "$@" ./define-enable.nix ./define-loaOfSub-if-foo-enable.nix
checkConfigOutput 'true' "$@" ./define-enable.nix ./define-loaOfSub-foo-if-enable.nix
checkConfigOutput 'true' "$@" ./define-enable.nix ./define-loaOfSub-foo-enable-if.nix
# Check _module.args.
set -- config.enable ./declare-enable.nix ./define-enable-with-custom-arg.nix
checkConfigError 'while evaluating the module argument .*custom.* in .*define-enable-with-custom-arg.nix.*:' "$@"
checkConfigOutput "true" "$@" ./define-_module-args-custom.nix
# Check that using _module.args on imports cause infinite recursions, with
# the proper error context.
set -- "$@" ./define-_module-args-custom.nix ./import-custom-arg.nix
checkConfigError 'while evaluating the module argument .*custom.* in .*import-custom-arg.nix.*:' "$@"
checkConfigError 'infinite recursion encountered' "$@"
# Check _module.check.
set -- config.enable ./declare-enable.nix ./define-enable.nix ./define-loaOfSub-foo.nix
checkConfigError 'The option .* defined in .* does not exist.' "$@"
checkConfigOutput "true" "$@" ./define-module-check.nix
cat <<EOF
====== module tests ======
$pass Pass
$fail Fail
EOF
if test $fail -ne 0; then
exit 1
fi
exit 0

View File

@@ -1,14 +0,0 @@
{ lib, ... }:
{
options = {
enable = lib.mkOption {
default = false;
example = true;
type = lib.types.bool;
description = ''
Some descriptive text
'';
};
};
}

View File

@@ -1,29 +0,0 @@
{ lib, ... }:
let
submod = { ... }: {
options = {
enable = lib.mkOption {
default = false;
example = true;
type = lib.types.bool;
description = ''
Some descriptive text
'';
};
};
};
in
{
options = {
loaOfSub = lib.mkOption {
default = {};
example = {};
type = lib.types.loaOf (lib.types.submodule [ submod ]);
description = ''
Some descriptive text
'';
};
};
}

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@@ -1,7 +0,0 @@
{ lib ? import <nixpkgs/lib>, modules ? [] }:
{
inherit (lib.evalModules {
inherit modules;
}) config options;
}

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@@ -1,7 +0,0 @@
{ lib, ... }:
{
config = {
_module.args.custom = true;
};
}

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@@ -1,5 +0,0 @@
{ lib, ... }:
{
enable = lib.mkForce false;
}

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@@ -1,7 +0,0 @@
{ lib, custom, ... }:
{
config = {
enable = custom;
};
}

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@@ -1,3 +0,0 @@
{
enable = true;
}

View File

@@ -1,5 +0,0 @@
{ lib, ... }:
lib.mkForce {
enable = false;
}

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@@ -1,5 +0,0 @@
{ lib, ... }:
lib.mkForce {
loaOfSub.foo.enable = false;
}

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@@ -1,5 +0,0 @@
{ config, lib, ... }:
lib.mkIf config.enable {
loaOfSub.foo.enable = true;
}

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@@ -1,3 +0,0 @@
{
loaOfSub.bar.enable = true;
}

View File

@@ -1,3 +0,0 @@
{
loaOfSub.bar = {};
}

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@@ -1,5 +0,0 @@
{ lib, ... }:
{
loaOfSub.foo.enable = lib.mkForce false;
}

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@@ -1,5 +0,0 @@
{ config, lib, ... }:
{
loaOfSub.foo.enable = lib.mkIf config.enable true;
}

View File

@@ -1,3 +0,0 @@
{
loaOfSub.foo.enable = true;
}

View File

@@ -1,7 +0,0 @@
{ lib, ... }:
{
loaOfSub.foo = lib.mkForce {
enable = false;
};
}

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@@ -1,7 +0,0 @@
{ config, lib, ... }:
{
loaOfSub.foo = lib.mkIf config.enable {
enable = true;
};
}

View File

@@ -1,3 +0,0 @@
{
loaOfSub.foo = {};
}

View File

@@ -1,7 +0,0 @@
{ lib, ... }:
{
loaOfSub = lib.mkForce {
foo.enable = false;
};
}

View File

@@ -1,7 +0,0 @@
{ config, lib, ... }:
{
loaOfSub = lib.mkIf config.enable {
foo.enable = true;
};
}

View File

@@ -1,3 +0,0 @@
{
_module.check = false;
}

View File

@@ -1,6 +0,0 @@
{ lib, custom, ... }:
{
imports = []
++ lib.optional custom ./define-enable-force.nix;
}

View File

@@ -1,31 +0,0 @@
{ nixpkgs }:
with import ./../.. { };
with lib;
stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "nixpkgs-lib-tests";
buildInputs = [ nix ];
NIX_PATH="nixpkgs=${nixpkgs}";
buildCommand = ''
datadir="${nix}/share"
export TEST_ROOT=$(pwd)/test-tmp
export NIX_BUILD_HOOK=
export NIX_CONF_DIR=$TEST_ROOT/etc
export NIX_DB_DIR=$TEST_ROOT/db
export NIX_LOCALSTATE_DIR=$TEST_ROOT/var
export NIX_LOG_DIR=$TEST_ROOT/var/log/nix
export NIX_MANIFESTS_DIR=$TEST_ROOT/var/nix/manifests
export NIX_STATE_DIR=$TEST_ROOT/var/nix
export NIX_STORE_DIR=$TEST_ROOT/store
export PAGER=cat
cacheDir=$TEST_ROOT/binary-cache
nix-store --init
cd ${nixpkgs}/lib/tests
./modules.sh
touch $out
'';
}

View File

@@ -1,3 +1,8 @@
with {
inherit (import ./lists.nix) deepSeqList;
inherit (import ./attrsets.nix) deepSeqAttrs;
};
rec {
# Identity function.
@@ -11,89 +16,23 @@ rec {
or = x: y: x || y;
and = x: y: x && y;
mergeAttrs = x: y: x // y;
# Compute the fixed point of the given function `f`, which is usually an
# attribute set that expects its final, non-recursive representation as an
# argument:
#
# f = self: { foo = "foo"; bar = "bar"; foobar = self.foo + self.bar; }
#
# Nix evaluates this recursion until all references to `self` have been
# resolved. At that point, the final result is returned and `f x = x` holds:
#
# nix-repl> fix f
# { bar = "bar"; foo = "foo"; foobar = "foobar"; }
#
# See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fixed-point_combinator for further
# details.
fix = f: let x = f x; in x;
# A variant of `fix` that records the original recursive attribute set in the
# result. This is useful in combination with the `extends` function to
# implement deep overriding. See pkgs/development/haskell-modules/default.nix
# for a concrete example.
fix' = f: let x = f x // { __unfix__ = f; }; in x;
# Modify the contents of an explicitly recursive attribute set in a way that
# honors `self`-references. This is accomplished with a function
#
# g = self: super: { foo = super.foo + " + "; }
#
# that has access to the unmodified input (`super`) as well as the final
# non-recursive representation of the attribute set (`self`). `extends`
# differs from the native `//` operator insofar as that it's applied *before*
# references to `self` are resolved:
#
# nix-repl> fix (extends g f)
# { bar = "bar"; foo = "foo + "; foobar = "foo + bar"; }
#
# The name of the function is inspired by object-oriented inheritance, i.e.
# think of it as an infix operator `g extends f` that mimics the syntax from
# Java. It may seem counter-intuitive to have the "base class" as the second
# argument, but it's nice this way if several uses of `extends` are cascaded.
extends = f: rattrs: self: let super = rattrs self; in super // f self super;
# Take a function and evaluate it with its own returned value.
fix = f: let result = f result; in result;
# Flip the order of the arguments of a binary function.
flip = f: a: b: f b a;
# Pull in some builtins not included elsewhere.
inherit (builtins)
pathExists readFile isBool isFunction
isInt add sub lessThan
seq deepSeq genericClosure;
# Return the Nixpkgs version number.
nixpkgsVersion =
let suffixFile = ../.version-suffix; in
readFile ../.version
+ (if pathExists suffixFile then readFile suffixFile else "pre-git");
# Whether we're being called by nix-shell.
inNixShell = builtins.getEnv "IN_NIX_SHELL" == "1";
# Return minimum/maximum of two numbers.
min = x: y: if x < y then x else y;
max = x: y: if x > y then x else y;
/* Reads a JSON file. It is useful to import pure data into other nix
expressions.
Example:
mkDerivation {
src = fetchgit (importJSON ./repo.json)
#...
}
where repo.json contains:
{
"url": "git://some-domain/some/repo",
"rev": "265de7283488964f44f0257a8b4a055ad8af984d",
"sha256": "0sb3h3067pzf3a7mlxn1hikpcjrsvycjcnj9hl9b1c3ykcgvps7h"
}
*/
importJSON = path:
builtins.fromJSON (builtins.readFile path);
# `seq x y' evaluates x, then returns y. That is, it forces strict
# evaluation of its first argument.
seq = x: y: if x == null then y else y;
# Like `seq', but recurses into lists and attribute sets to force evaluation
# of all list elements/attributes.
deepSeq = x: y:
if builtins.isList x
then deepSeqList x y
else if builtins.isAttrs x
then deepSeqAttrs x y
else seq x y;
}

View File

@@ -6,11 +6,11 @@ with import ./attrsets.nix;
with import ./options.nix;
with import ./trivial.nix;
with import ./strings.nix;
with {inherit (import ./modules.nix) mergeDefinitions filterOverrides; };
rec {
isType = type: x: (x._type or "") == type;
typeOf = x: x._type or "";
setType = typeName: value: value // {
_type = typeName;
@@ -34,14 +34,9 @@ rec {
, # Return a flat list of sub-options. Used to generate
# documentation.
getSubOptions ? prefix: {}
, # List of modules if any, or null if none.
getSubModules ? null
, # Function for building the same option type with a different list of
# modules.
substSubModules ? m: null
}:
{ _type = "option-type";
inherit name check merge getSubOptions getSubModules substSubModules;
inherit name check merge getSubOptions;
};
@@ -53,19 +48,19 @@ rec {
bool = mkOptionType {
name = "boolean";
check = isBool;
merge = mergeEqualOption;
check = builtins.isBool;
merge = loc: fold (x: y: x.value || y) false;
};
int = mkOptionType {
name = "integer";
check = isInt;
check = builtins.isInt;
merge = mergeOneOption;
};
str = mkOptionType {
name = "string";
check = isString;
check = builtins.isString;
merge = mergeOneOption;
};
@@ -73,7 +68,7 @@ rec {
# separator between the values).
separatedString = sep: mkOptionType {
name = "string";
check = isString;
check = builtins.isString;
merge = loc: defs: concatStringsSep sep (getValues defs);
};
@@ -88,22 +83,20 @@ rec {
attrs = mkOptionType {
name = "attribute set";
check = isAttrs;
merge = loc: foldl' (res: def: mergeAttrs res def.value) {};
merge = loc: fold (def: mergeAttrs def.value) {};
};
# derivation is a reserved keyword.
package = mkOptionType {
name = "package";
check = x: isDerivation x || isStorePath x;
merge = loc: defs:
let res = mergeOneOption loc defs;
in if isDerivation res then res else toDerivation res;
name = "derivation";
check = isDerivation;
merge = mergeOneOption;
};
path = mkOptionType {
name = "path";
# Hacky: there is no isPath primop.
check = x: builtins.substring 0 1 (toString x) == "/";
check = x: builtins.unsafeDiscardStringContext (builtins.substring 0 1 (toString x)) == "/";
merge = mergeOneOption;
};
@@ -112,33 +105,23 @@ rec {
listOf = elemType: mkOptionType {
name = "list of ${elemType.name}s";
check = isList;
check = value: isList value && all elemType.check value;
merge = loc: defs:
map (x: x.value) (filter (x: x ? value) (concatLists (imap (n: def: imap (m: def':
(mergeDefinitions
(loc ++ ["[definition ${toString n}-entry ${toString m}]"])
elemType
[{ inherit (def) file; value = def'; }]
).optionalValue
) def.value) defs)));
concatLists (imap (n: def: imap (m: def':
elemType.merge (loc ++ ["[${toString n}-${toString m}]"])
[{ inherit (def) file; value = def'; }]) def.value) defs);
getSubOptions = prefix: elemType.getSubOptions (prefix ++ ["*"]);
getSubModules = elemType.getSubModules;
substSubModules = m: listOf (elemType.substSubModules m);
};
attrsOf = elemType: mkOptionType {
name = "attribute set of ${elemType.name}s";
check = isAttrs;
check = x: isAttrs x && all elemType.check (attrValues x);
merge = loc: defs:
mapAttrs (n: v: v.value) (filterAttrs (n: v: v ? value) (zipAttrsWith (name: defs:
(mergeDefinitions (loc ++ [name]) elemType defs).optionalValue
)
zipAttrsWith (name: elemType.merge (loc ++ [name]))
# Push down position info.
(map (def: listToAttrs (mapAttrsToList (n: def':
{ name = n; value = { inherit (def) file; value = def'; }; }) def.value)) defs)));
{ name = n; value = { inherit (def) file; value = def'; }; }) def.value)) defs);
getSubOptions = prefix: elemType.getSubOptions (prefix ++ ["<name>"]);
getSubModules = elemType.getSubModules;
substSubModules = m: attrsOf (elemType.substSubModules m);
};
# List or attribute set of ...
@@ -149,7 +132,7 @@ rec {
{ inherit (def) file;
value = listToAttrs (
imap (elemIdx: elem:
{ name = elem.name or "unnamed-${toString defIdx}.${toString elemIdx}";
{ name = "unnamed-${toString defIdx}.${toString elemIdx}";
value = elem;
}) def.value);
}
@@ -159,50 +142,38 @@ rec {
attrOnly = attrsOf elemType;
in mkOptionType {
name = "list or attribute set of ${elemType.name}s";
check = x: isList x || isAttrs x;
check = x:
if isList x then listOnly.check x
else if isAttrs x then attrOnly.check x
else false;
merge = loc: defs: attrOnly.merge loc (imap convertIfList defs);
getSubOptions = prefix: elemType.getSubOptions (prefix ++ ["<name?>"]);
getSubModules = elemType.getSubModules;
substSubModules = m: loaOf (elemType.substSubModules m);
};
# List or element of ...
loeOf = elemType: mkOptionType {
name = "element or list of ${elemType.name}s";
check = x: isList x || elemType.check x;
merge = loc: defs:
let
defs' = filterOverrides defs;
res = (head defs').value;
in
if isList res then concatLists (getValues defs')
else if lessThan 1 (length defs') then
throw "The option `${showOption loc}' is defined multiple times, in ${showFiles (getFiles defs)}."
else if !isString res then
throw "The option `${showOption loc}' does not have a string value, in ${showFiles (getFiles defs)}."
else res;
};
uniq = elemType: mkOptionType {
inherit (elemType) name check;
merge = mergeOneOption;
getSubOptions = elemType.getSubOptions;
getSubModules = elemType.getSubModules;
substSubModules = m: uniq (elemType.substSubModules m);
};
nullOr = elemType: mkOptionType {
name = "null or ${elemType.name}";
check = x: x == null || elemType.check x;
check = x: builtins.isNull x || elemType.check x;
merge = loc: defs:
let nrNulls = count (def: def.value == null) defs; in
let nrNulls = count (def: isNull def.value) defs; in
if nrNulls == length defs then null
else if nrNulls != 0 then
throw "The option `${showOption loc}' is defined both null and not null, in ${showFiles (getFiles defs)}."
else elemType.merge loc defs;
getSubOptions = elemType.getSubOptions;
getSubModules = elemType.getSubModules;
substSubModules = m: nullOr (elemType.substSubModules m);
};
functionTo = elemType: mkOptionType {
name = "function that evaluates to a(n) ${elemType.name}";
check = builtins.isFunction;
merge = loc: defs:
fnArgs: elemType.merge loc (map (fn: { inherit (fn) file; value = fn.value fnArgs; }) defs);
getSubOptions = elemType.getSubOptions;
};
submodule = opts:
@@ -212,43 +183,18 @@ rec {
in
mkOptionType rec {
name = "submodule";
check = x: isAttrs x || isFunction x;
check = x: isAttrs x || builtins.isFunction x;
merge = loc: defs:
let
coerce = def: if isFunction def then def else { config = def; };
coerce = def: if builtins.isFunction def then def else { config = def; };
modules = opts' ++ map (def: { _file = def.file; imports = [(coerce def.value)]; }) defs;
in (evalModules {
inherit modules;
args.name = last loc;
prefix = loc;
}).config;
in (evalModules { inherit modules; args.name = last loc; prefix = loc; }).config;
getSubOptions = prefix: (evalModules
{ modules = opts'; inherit prefix;
# FIXME: hack to get shit to evaluate.
args = { name = ""; }; }).options;
getSubModules = opts';
substSubModules = m: submodule m;
};
enum = values:
let
show = v:
if builtins.isString v then ''"${v}"''
else if builtins.isInt v then builtins.toString v
else ''<${builtins.typeOf v}>'';
in
mkOptionType {
name = "one of ${concatMapStringsSep ", " show values}";
check = flip elem values;
merge = mergeOneOption;
};
either = t1: t2: mkOptionType {
name = "${t1.name} or ${t2.name}";
check = x: t1.check x || t2.check x;
merge = mergeOneOption;
};
# Obsolete alternative to configOf. It takes its option
# declarations from the options attribute of containing option
# declaration.

View File

@@ -1,14 +0,0 @@
*~
,*
.*.swp
.*.swo
result
result-*
/doc/NEWS.html
/doc/NEWS.txt
/doc/manual.html
/doc/manual.pdf
.version-suffix
.DS_Store
.git

View File

@@ -1,12 +0,0 @@
FROM busybox
RUN dir=`mktemp -d` && trap 'rm -rf "$dir"' EXIT && \
wget -O- https://nixos.org/releases/nix/nix-1.7/nix-1.7-x86_64-linux.tar.bz2 | bzcat | tar x -C $dir && \
mkdir -m 0755 /nix && USER=root sh $dir/*/install && \
echo ". /root/.nix-profile/etc/profile.d/nix.sh" >> /etc/profile
ADD . /root/nix/nixpkgs
ONBUILD ENV NIX_PATH nixpkgs=/root/nix/nixpkgs:nixos=/root/nix/nixpkgs/nixos
ONBUILD ENV PATH /root/.nix-profile/bin:/root/.nix-profile/sbin:/bin:/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin
ONBUILD ENV ENV /etc/profile
ENV ENV /etc/profile

View File

@@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
/* Helper expression for copy-tarballs. This returns (nearly) all
tarballs used the free packages in Nixpkgs.
Typical usage:
$ copy-tarballs.pl --expr 'import <nixpkgs/maintainers/scripts/all-tarballs.nix>'
*/
removeAttrs (import ../../pkgs/top-level/release.nix
{ # Don't apply hydraJob to jobs, because then we can't get to the
# dependency graph.
scrubJobs = false;
# No need to evaluate on i686.
supportedSystems = [ "x86_64-linux" ];
})
[ # Remove jobs whose evaluation depends on a writable Nix store.
"tarball" "unstable"
]

View File

@@ -1,219 +1,95 @@
#! /usr/bin/env nix-shell
#! nix-shell -i perl -p perl perlPackages.NetAmazonS3 perlPackages.FileSlurp nixUnstable
# This command uploads tarballs to tarballs.nixos.org, the
# content-addressed cache used by fetchurl as a fallback for when
# upstream tarballs disappear or change. Usage:
#
# 1) To upload one or more files:
#
# $ copy-tarballs.pl --file /path/to/tarball.tar.gz
#
# 2) To upload all files obtained via calls to fetchurl in a Nix derivation:
#
# $ copy-tarballs.pl --expr '(import <nixpkgs> {}).hello'
#! /run/current-system/sw/bin/perl -w
use strict;
use warnings;
use XML::Simple;
use File::Basename;
use File::Path;
use File::Slurp;
use JSON;
use Net::Amazon::S3;
use File::Copy 'cp';
use IPC::Open2;
use Nix::Store;
isValidPath("/nix/store/aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa-foo"); # FIXME: forces Nix::Store initialisation
my $myDir = dirname($0);
sub usage {
die "Syntax: $0 [--dry-run] [--exclude REGEXP] [--expr EXPR | --file FILES...]\n";
}
my $tarballsCache = $ENV{'NIX_TARBALLS_CACHE'} // "/tarballs";
my $dryRun = 0;
my $expr;
my @fileNames;
my $exclude;
my $xml = `nix-instantiate --eval-only --xml --strict '<nixpkgs/maintainers/scripts/find-tarballs.nix>'`;
die "$0: evaluation failed\n" if $? != 0;
while (@ARGV) {
my $flag = shift @ARGV;
my $data = XMLin($xml) or die;
if ($flag eq "--expr") {
$expr = shift @ARGV or die "--expr requires an argument";
} elsif ($flag eq "--file") {
@fileNames = @ARGV;
last;
} elsif ($flag eq "--dry-run") {
$dryRun = 1;
} elsif ($flag eq "--exclude") {
$exclude = shift @ARGV or die "--exclude requires an argument";
} else {
usage();
}
}
mkpath($tarballsCache);
mkpath("$tarballsCache/md5");
mkpath("$tarballsCache/sha1");
mkpath("$tarballsCache/sha256");
foreach my $file (@{$data->{list}->{attrs}}) {
my $url = $file->{attr}->{url}->{string}->{value};
my $algo = $file->{attr}->{type}->{string}->{value};
my $hash = $file->{attr}->{hash}->{string}->{value};
# S3 setup.
my $aws_access_key_id = $ENV{'AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID'} or die "AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID not set\n";
my $aws_secret_access_key = $ENV{'AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY'} or die "AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY not set\n";
my $s3 = Net::Amazon::S3->new(
{ aws_access_key_id => $aws_access_key_id,
aws_secret_access_key => $aws_secret_access_key,
retry => 1,
});
my $bucket = $s3->bucket("nixpkgs-tarballs") or die;
my $doWrite = 0;
my $cacheFile = ($ENV{"HOME"} or die "\$HOME is not set") . "/.cache/nix/copy-tarballs";
my %cache;
$cache{$_} = 1 foreach read_file($cacheFile, err_mode => 'quiet', chomp => 1);
$doWrite = 1;
END() {
File::Path::mkpath(dirname($cacheFile), 0, 0755);
write_file($cacheFile, map { "$_\n" } keys %cache) if $doWrite;
}
sub alreadyMirrored {
my ($algo, $hash) = @_;
my $key = "$algo/$hash";
return 1 if defined $cache{$key};
my $res = defined $bucket->get_key($key);
$cache{$key} = 1 if $res;
return $res;
}
sub uploadFile {
my ($fn, $name) = @_;
my $md5_16 = hashFile("md5", 0, $fn) or die;
my $sha1_16 = hashFile("sha1", 0, $fn) or die;
my $sha256_32 = hashFile("sha256", 1, $fn) or die;
my $sha256_16 = hashFile("sha256", 0, $fn) or die;
my $sha512_32 = hashFile("sha512", 1, $fn) or die;
my $sha512_16 = hashFile("sha512", 0, $fn) or die;
my $mainKey = "sha512/$sha512_16";
# Create redirects from the other hash types.
sub redirect {
my ($name, $dest) = @_;
#print STDERR "linking $name to $dest...\n";
$bucket->add_key($name, "", { 'x-amz-website-redirect-location' => "/" . $dest })
or die "failed to create redirect from $name to $dest\n";
$cache{$name} = 1;
}
redirect "md5/$md5_16", $mainKey;
redirect "sha1/$sha1_16", $mainKey;
redirect "sha256/$sha256_32", $mainKey;
redirect "sha256/$sha256_16", $mainKey;
redirect "sha512/$sha512_32", $mainKey;
# Upload the file as sha512/<hash-in-base-16>.
print STDERR "uploading $fn to $mainKey...\n";
$bucket->add_key_filename($mainKey, $fn, { 'x-amz-meta-original-name' => $name })
or die "failed to upload $fn to $mainKey\n";
$cache{$mainKey} = 1;
}
if (scalar @fileNames) {
my $res = 0;
foreach my $fn (@fileNames) {
eval {
if (alreadyMirrored("sha512", hashFile("sha512", 0, $fn))) {
print STDERR "$fn is already mirrored\n";
} else {
uploadFile($fn, basename $fn);
}
};
if ($@) {
warn "$@";
$res = 1;
}
}
exit $res;
}
elsif (defined $expr) {
# Evaluate find-tarballs.nix.
my $pid = open(JSON, "-|", "nix-instantiate", "--eval", "--json", "--strict",
"<nixpkgs/maintainers/scripts/find-tarballs.nix>",
"--arg", "expr", $expr);
my $stdout = <JSON>;
waitpid($pid, 0);
die "$0: evaluation failed\n" if $?;
close JSON;
my $fetches = decode_json($stdout);
print STDERR "evaluation returned ", scalar(@{$fetches}), " tarballs\n";
# Check every fetchurl call discovered by find-tarballs.nix.
my $mirrored = 0;
my $have = 0;
foreach my $fetch (sort { $a->{url} cmp $b->{url} } @{$fetches}) {
my $url = $fetch->{url};
my $algo = $fetch->{type};
my $hash = $fetch->{hash};
my $name = $fetch->{name};
if (defined $ENV{DEBUG}) {
print "$url $algo $hash\n";
next;
}
if ($url !~ /^http:/ && $url !~ /^https:/ && $url !~ /^ftp:/ && $url !~ /^mirror:/) {
print STDERR "skipping $url (unsupported scheme)\n";
next;
}
next if defined $exclude && $url =~ /$exclude/;
if (alreadyMirrored($algo, $hash)) {
$have++;
next;
}
my $storePath = makeFixedOutputPath(0, $algo, $hash, $name);
print STDERR "mirroring $url ($storePath)...\n";
if ($dryRun) {
$mirrored++;
next;
}
# Substitute the output.
if (!isValidPath($storePath)) {
system("nix-store", "-r", $storePath);
}
# Otherwise download the file using nix-prefetch-url.
if (!isValidPath($storePath)) {
$ENV{QUIET} = 1;
$ENV{PRINT_PATH} = 1;
my $fh;
my $pid = open($fh, "-|", "nix-prefetch-url", "--type", $algo, $url, $hash) or die;
waitpid($pid, 0) or die;
if ($? != 0) {
print STDERR "failed to fetch $url: $?\n";
next;
}
<$fh>; my $storePath2 = <$fh>; chomp $storePath2;
if ($storePath ne $storePath2) {
warn "strange: $storePath != $storePath2\n";
next;
}
}
uploadFile($storePath, $url);
$mirrored++;
if ($url !~ /^http:/ && $url !~ /^https:/ && $url !~ /^ftp:/ && $url !~ /^mirror:/) {
print STDERR "skipping $url (unsupported scheme)\n";
next;
}
print STDERR "mirrored $mirrored files, already have $have files\n";
}
$url =~ /([^\/]+)$/;
my $fn = $1;
else {
usage();
if (!defined $fn) {
print STDERR "skipping $url (no file name)\n";
next;
}
if ($fn =~ /[&?=%]/ || $fn =~ /^\./) {
print STDERR "skipping $url (bad character in file name)\n";
next;
}
if ($fn !~ /[a-zA-Z]/) {
print STDERR "skipping $url (no letter in file name)\n";
next;
}
if ($fn !~ /[0-9]/) {
print STDERR "skipping $url (no digit in file name)\n";
next;
}
if ($fn !~ /[-_\.]/) {
print STDERR "skipping $url (no dash/dot/underscore in file name)\n";
next;
}
my $dstPath = "$tarballsCache/$fn";
next if -e $dstPath;
print "downloading $url to $dstPath...\n";
next if $ENV{DRY_RUN};
$ENV{QUIET} = 1;
$ENV{PRINT_PATH} = 1;
my $fh;
my $pid = open($fh, "-|", "nix-prefetch-url", "--type", $algo, $url, $hash) or die;
waitpid($pid, 0) or die;
if ($? != 0) {
print STDERR "failed to fetch $url: $?\n";
last if $? >> 8 == 255;
next;
}
<$fh>; my $storePath = <$fh>; chomp $storePath;
die unless -e $storePath;
cp($storePath, $dstPath) or die;
my $md5 = hashFile("md5", 0, $storePath) or die;
symlink("../$fn", "$tarballsCache/md5/$md5");
my $sha1 = hashFile("sha1", 0, $storePath) or die;
symlink("../$fn", "$tarballsCache/sha1/$sha1");
my $sha256 = hashFile("sha256", 0, $storePath) or die;
symlink("../$fn", "$tarballsCache/sha256/$sha256");
}

View File

@@ -17,7 +17,7 @@ trap "exitHandler" EXIT
# fetch the trace and the drvPath of the attribute.
nix-instantiate $NIXPKGS -A $attr --show-trace > "$tmp/drvPath" 2> "$tmp/trace" || {
cat 1>&2 - "$tmp/trace" <<EOF
An error occurred while evaluating $attr.
An error occured while evaluating $attr.
EOF
exit 1
}

View File

@@ -1,26 +1,21 @@
# This expression returns a list of all fetchurl calls used by expr.
# This expression returns a list of all fetchurl calls used by all
# packages reachable from release.nix.
with import ../.. { };
with lib;
{ expr }:
let
root = expr;
root = removeAttrs (import ../../pkgs/top-level/release.nix { }) [ "tarball" "unstable" ];
uniqueUrls = map (x: x.file) (genericClosure {
startSet = map (file: { key = file.url; inherit file; }) urls;
operator = const [ ];
});
urls = map (drv: { url = head (drv.urls or [ drv.url ]); hash = drv.outputHash; type = drv.outputHashAlgo; name = drv.name; }) fetchurlDependencies;
urls = map (drv: { url = head drv.urls; hash = drv.outputHash; type = drv.outputHashAlgo; }) fetchurlDependencies;
fetchurlDependencies =
filter
(drv: drv.outputHash or "" != "" && drv.outputHashMode or "flat" == "flat"
&& drv.postFetch or "" == "" && (drv ? url || drv ? urls))
dependencies;
fetchurlDependencies = filter (drv: drv.outputHash or "" != "" && drv ? urls) dependencies;
dependencies = map (x: x.value) (genericClosure {
startSet = map keyDrv (derivationsIn' root);

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,95 @@
#!/bin/sh
GNOME_FTP="ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/sources"
project=$1
if [ "$project" == "--help" ]; then
echo "Usage: $0 project [major.minor]"
exit 0
fi
baseVersion=$2
if [ -z "$project" ]; then
echo "No project specified, exiting"
exit 1
fi
# curl -l ftp://... doesn't work from my office in HSE, and I don't want to have
# any conversations with sysadmin. Somehow lftp works.
if [ "$FTP_CLIENT" = "lftp" ]; then
ls_ftp() {
lftp -c "open $1; cls"
}
else
ls_ftp() {
curl -l "$1"/
}
fi
if [ -z "$baseVersion" ]; then
echo "Looking for available versions..." >&2
available_baseversions=( `ls_ftp ftp://${GNOME_FTP}/${project} | grep '[0-9]\.[0-9]' | sort -t. -k1,1n -k 2,2n` )
echo -e "The following versions are available:\n ${available_baseversions[@]}" >&2
echo -en "Choose one of them: " >&2
read baseVersion
fi
FTPDIR="${GNOME_FTP}/${project}/${baseVersion}"
#version=`curl -l ${FTPDIR}/ 2>/dev/null | grep LATEST-IS | sed -e s/LATEST-IS-//`
# gnome's LATEST-IS is broken. Do not trust it.
files=$(ls_ftp "${FTPDIR}")
declare -A versions
for f in $files; do
case $f in
(LATEST-IS-*|*.news|*.changes|*.sha256sum|*.diff*):
;;
($project-*.*.9*.tar.*):
tmp=${f#$project-}
tmp=${tmp%.tar*}
echo "Ignored unstable version ${tmp}" >&2
;;
($project-*.tar.*):
tmp=${f#$project-}
tmp=${tmp%.tar*}
versions[${tmp}]=1
;;
(*):
echo "UNKNOWN FILE $f"
;;
esac
done
echo "Found versions ${!versions[@]}" >&2
version=`echo ${!versions[@]} | sed -e 's/ /\n/g' | sort -t. -k1,1n -k 2,2n -k 3,3n | tail -n1`
echo "Latest version is: ${version}" >&2
name=${project}-${version}
echo "Fetching .sha256 file" >&2
curl -O http://${FTPDIR}/${name}.sha256sum
extensions=( "xz" "bz2" "gz" )
echo "Choosing archive extension (known are ${extensions[@]})..." >&2
for ext in ${extensions[@]}; do
if grep "\\.tar\\.${ext}$" ${name}.sha256sum >& /dev/null; then
ext_pref=$ext
sha256=$(grep "\\.tar\\.${ext}$" ${name}.sha256sum | cut -f1 -d\ )
break
fi
done
sha256=`nix-hash --to-base32 --type sha256 $sha256`
echo "Chosen ${ext_pref}, hash is ${sha256}" >&2
cat <<EOF
name = "${project}-${version}";
src = fetchurl {
url = mirror://gnome/sources/${project}/${baseVersion}/${project}-${version}.tar.${ext_pref};
sha256 = "${sha256}";
};
EOF
rm -v ${name}.sha256sum >&2

View File

@@ -1,194 +0,0 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -o pipefail
GNOME_FTP="ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/sources"
# projects that don't follow the GNOME major versioning, or that we don't want to
# programmatically update
NO_GNOME_MAJOR="gtkhtml gdm"
usage() {
echo "Usage: $0 gnome_dir <show project>|<update project>|<update-all> [major.minor]" >&2
echo "gnome_dir is for example pkgs/desktops/gnome-3/3.18" >&2
exit 0
}
if [ "$#" -lt 2 ]; then
usage
fi
GNOME_TOP="$1"
shift
action="$1"
# curl -l ftp://... doesn't work from my office in HSE, and I don't want to have
# any conversations with sysadmin. Somehow lftp works.
if [ "$FTP_CLIENT" = "lftp" ]; then
ls_ftp() {
lftp -c "open $1; cls"
}
else
ls_ftp() {
curl -s -l "$1"/
}
fi
find_project() {
exec find "$GNOME_TOP" -mindepth 2 -maxdepth 2 -type d $@
}
show_project() {
local project="$1"
local majorVersion="$2"
local version=""
if [ -z "$majorVersion" ]; then
echo "Looking for available versions..." >&2
local available_baseversions=( `ls_ftp ftp://${GNOME_FTP}/${project} | grep '[0-9]\.[0-9]' | sort -t. -k1,1n -k 2,2n` )
if [ "$?" -ne "0" ]; then
echo "Project $project not found" >&2
return 1
fi
echo -e "The following versions are available:\n ${available_baseversions[@]}" >&2
echo -en "Choose one of them: " >&2
read majorVersion
fi
if echo "$majorVersion" | grep -q "[0-9]\+\.[0-9]\+\.[0-9]\+"; then
# not a major version
version="$majorVersion"
majorVersion=$(echo "$majorVersion" | cut -d '.' -f 1,2)
fi
local FTPDIR="${GNOME_FTP}/${project}/${majorVersion}"
#version=`curl -l ${FTPDIR}/ 2>/dev/null | grep LATEST-IS | sed -e s/LATEST-IS-//`
# gnome's LATEST-IS is broken. Do not trust it.
if [ -z "$version" ]; then
local files=$(ls_ftp "${FTPDIR}")
declare -A versions
for f in $files; do
case $f in
(LATEST-IS-*|*.news|*.changes|*.sha256sum|*.diff*):
;;
($project-*.*.9*.tar.*):
tmp=${f#$project-}
tmp=${tmp%.tar*}
echo "Ignored unstable version ${tmp}" >&2
;;
($project-*.tar.*):
tmp=${f#$project-}
tmp=${tmp%.tar*}
versions[${tmp}]=1
;;
(*):
echo "UNKNOWN FILE $f" >&2
;;
esac
done
echo "Found versions ${!versions[@]}" >&2
version=`echo ${!versions[@]} | sed -e 's/ /\n/g' | sort -t. -k1,1n -k 2,2n -k 3,3n | tail -n1`
if [ -z "$version" ]; then
echo "No version available for major $majorVersion" >&2
return 1
fi
echo "Latest version is: ${version}" >&2
fi
local name=${project}-${version}
echo "Fetching .sha256 file" >&2
local sha256out=$(curl -s -f http://${FTPDIR}/${name}.sha256sum)
if [ "$?" -ne "0" ]; then
echo "Version not found" >&2
return 1
fi
extensions=( "xz" "bz2" "gz" )
echo "Choosing archive extension (known are ${extensions[@]})..." >&2
for ext in ${extensions[@]}; do
if echo -e "$sha256out" | grep -q "\\.tar\\.${ext}$"; then
ext_pref=$ext
sha256=$(echo -e "$sha256out" | grep "\\.tar\\.${ext}$" | cut -f1 -d\ )
break
fi
done
echo "Chosen ${ext_pref}, hash is ${sha256}" >&2
echo "# Autogenerated by maintainers/scripts/gnome.sh update
fetchurl: {
name = \"${project}-${version}\";
src = fetchurl {
url = mirror://gnome/sources/${project}/${majorVersion}/${project}-${version}.tar.${ext_pref};
sha256 = \"${sha256}\";
};
}"
return 0
}
update_project() {
local project="$1"
local majorVersion="$2"
# find project in nixpkgs tree
projectPath=$(find_project -name "$project" -print)
if [ -z "$projectPath" ]; then
echo "Project $project not found under $GNOME_TOP"
exit 1
fi
src=$(show_project "$project" "$majorVersion")
if [ "$?" -eq "0" ]; then
echo "Updating $projectPath/src.nix" >&2
echo -e "$src" > "$projectPath/src.nix"
fi
return 0
}
if [ "$action" == "update-all" ]; then
majorVersion="$2"
if [ -z "$majorVersion" ]; then
echo "No major version specified" >&2
usage
fi
# find projects
projects=$(find_project -exec basename '{}' \;)
for project in $projects; do
if echo "$NO_GNOME_MAJOR"|grep -q $project; then
echo "Skipping $project"
else
echo "= Updating $project to $majorVersion" >&2
update_project $project $majorVersion
echo >&2
fi
done
else
project="$2"
majorVersion="$3"
if [ -z "$project" ]; then
echo "No project specified, exiting" >&2
usage
fi
if [ "$action" == "show" ]; then
show_project $project $majorVersion
elif [ "$action" == "update" ]; then
update_project $project $majorVersion
else
echo "Unknown action $action" >&2
usage
fi
fi

1122
maintainers/scripts/gnu/gnupdate Executable file

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

View File

@@ -6,7 +6,6 @@ hydra_eval_jobs \
--argstr system i686-linux \
--argstr system x86_64-darwin \
--argstr system i686-cygwin \
--argstr system x86_64-cygwin \
--argstr system i686-freebsd \
--arg officialRelease false \
--arg nixpkgs "{ outPath = builtins.storePath ./. ; rev = 1234; }" \

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