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541 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Eelco Dolstra
9c31c72caf Revert "nixos/fonts: Add unifont to list of default fonts."
This reverts commit 53746ff9d2 because
it increases default system closure size significantly. It's also
unnecessary - people can always add fonts themselves.
2015-09-30 21:46:06 +02:00
Domen Kožar
5af517518e typos
(cherry picked from commit aca373c6b2)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-30 21:27:37 +02:00
Nicolas B. Pierron
15760fbaba Add pkgs module argument documentation for #6794 incompatible change.
(cherry picked from commit 50146ce815)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-30 21:27:30 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
9cbf796fd2 Bump fallback Nix store paths
(cherry picked from commit 3231424c37)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-30 21:26:58 +02:00
aszlig
53746ff9d2 nixos/fonts: Add unifont to list of default fonts.
This fixes #10077 because after some debugging it turns out that by
default we don't have a font which is able to display Chinese symbols.

Thanks to @anderspapitto, @kmicu and hyper_ch on IRC to help debugging
this issue, see log at:

http://nixos.org/irc/logs/log.20150926 starting at 19:46

With unifont we have a reasonable fallback font to ensure that every
written language is rendered correctly and thus less surprise for new
users who keep their font settings at the default.

Reported-by: Anders Papitto <anderspapitto@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
(cherry picked from commit ebf1f51641)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-30 21:06:46 +02:00
Domen Kožar
e13b657670 update release notes for 15.09 2015-09-30 19:04:04 +02:00
Rickard Nilsson
8c35333e09 opentsdb nixos module: Add option for defining OpenTSDB's configuration
(cherry picked from commit c0a83cbc49)
2015-09-30 18:32:16 +02:00
Peter Simons
f9c5756d8f configuration-hackage2nix.yaml: update list of broken packages
(cherry picked from commit 67fb69c23b)
2015-09-30 17:34:14 +02:00
Peter Simons
1e4a50a176 hackage-packages.nix: update Haskell package set
This update was generated by hackage2nix v20150922-6-g5d5ccfe-dirty using the following inputs:

  - Nixpkgs: 7a2a9bbe15
  - Hackage: 82f4bbff1b
  - LTS Haskell: 831a37566b
  - Stackage Nightly: e7fd25c827

(cherry picked from commit 750e15fbd7)
2015-09-30 17:34:14 +02:00
Peter Simons
d011140520 configuration-hackage2nix.yaml: update list of broken packages
(cherry picked from commit 741437dffc)
2015-09-30 17:34:13 +02:00
Peter Simons
ea633c8d94 hackage-packages.nix: update Haskell package set
This update was generated by hackage2nix v20150922-6-g5d5ccfe using the following inputs:

  - Nixpkgs: d64ca94227
  - Hackage: 8f14dec431
  - LTS Haskell: 831a37566b
  - Stackage Nightly: e7fd25c827

(cherry picked from commit 96c1c16771)
2015-09-30 17:34:13 +02:00
Bjørn Forsman
97b00149e0 jenkins: 1.594 -> 1.631
(cherry picked from commit f35de8ea64)
2015-09-30 17:27:03 +02:00
Peter Simons
a06d46cd2d rl-1509.xml: update Haskell-related release notes
- Update the link to the manual to refer to the proper place.
 - Mention LTS Haskell and Stackage Nightly.
 - Minor cosmetic to improve readability.

(cherry picked from commit 8e00de424497d2cc6447c529785efa985bd3383c)
2015-09-30 16:16:45 +02:00
Rob Vermaas
0f2597ca1e Remove nixops unstable expression, until we reintroduce it again. Currently it is not referenced, as nixopsUnstable = nixops.
(cherry picked from commit df9fc0f8e0)
2015-09-30 12:49:39 +00:00
aszlig
1b1658f99b firefox: Drop crash_OTMC+GTK3.patch.
The patch only applies for Firefox versions between 37.0 and 40.1.

Because we're on version 41.0 the changes are already included upstream
and thus the patch doesn't apply and is even unnecessary.

As for version 38.3 for ESR, the patch doesn't apply as well if compiled
with enableGTK3. Of course, this is a bit unfortunate but I don't have
the time right now to properly rebase the patch on 38.3.

Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Reported-by: devhell <"^"@regexmail.net>
(cherry picked from commit 592f0f7ead)
2015-09-30 14:12:59 +02:00
Rickard Nilsson
60bc814f51 opentsdb: 2.1.0 -> 2.1.1
(cherry picked from commit 94eac9ccbd)
2015-09-30 13:01:34 +02:00
Tobias Geerinckx-Rice
da347ec20a {,pythonPackages.}libvirt: 1.2.18 -> 1.2.19
The previous bump erroneously said 1.2.19. Make it so.

(cherry picked from commit 8b29707592)
2015-09-30 13:01:11 +02:00
Tobias Geerinckx-Rice
7fbe0b7f82 {,pythonPackages.}libvirt: 1.2.17 -> 1.2.19
(cherry picked from commit 336b79e6e3)
2015-09-30 13:00:31 +02:00
Karn Kallio
b9beb0e5e5 texlive: Fix download file names to be current.
(cherry picked from commit 5ed03241be)
2015-09-30 09:23:15 +02:00
Rob Vermaas
a91d4f8a24 nixops: 1.2 -> 1.3 2015-09-29 19:53:19 +00:00
Marcus Crestani
d802492482 libxkbcommon: Remove --version-script on Darwin
Close #10094. Simplified by vcunat.
On 15.09 we have a different version, but still, the change shouldn't hurt.

(cherry picked from commit c6de42d4d4)
2015-09-29 15:32:30 +02:00
Gabriel Ebner
8aed85c40e qt5.multimedia: fix gstreamer support.
(cherry picked from commit 449b6028a6)

[Bjørn: Without this, one may get runtime errors like
  defaultServiceProvider::requestService(): no service found for - "org.qt-project.qt.camera"
or
  The camera service is missing
]
2015-09-29 15:13:34 +02:00
Peter Simons
eb382dc3b4 Remove the haskell.packages.ghc6104 package set.
It's broken, and no-one seems to care enough to fix it (which would be a
tricky endeavor, anyway).

(cherry picked from commit 391549c5f4)
2015-09-29 14:50:01 +02:00
Peter Simons
9f4caf9fe6 Fix nix-env -f "<nixpkgs>" -qaP -A haskell.packages.ghc6123.
(cherry picked from commit 664de99887)
2015-09-29 14:50:00 +02:00
Luca Bruno
5f8e6fb0cd heimdal: try disabling parallel builds due to hydra issues
cc @wkennington

(cherry picked from commit 51512d4c8f)
2015-09-29 10:52:03 +02:00
Luca Bruno
29a71c6a00 xulrunner: disable gconf
(cherry picked from commit b7f49e89af)
2015-09-29 10:31:35 +02:00
Peter Simons
972ddda147 Add LTS Haskell 3.7.
(cherry picked from commit e23d69c6f3)
2015-09-29 10:08:04 +02:00
Peter Simons
3e0b927057 Fix or disable broken Haskell builds.
(cherry picked from commit 5602d609c7)
2015-09-29 10:07:32 +02:00
Peter Simons
2b86307e06 haskell-pandoc-citeproc has spurious test suite failures.
(cherry picked from commit a14264db3e)
2015-09-29 10:07:32 +02:00
Peter Simons
35febcbd0b hackage-packages.nix: update Haskell package set
This update was generated by hackage2nix v20150922-6-g5d5ccfe using the following inputs:

  - Nixpkgs: f21f116631
  - Hackage: f8855b5494
  - LTS Haskell: 831a37566b
  - Stackage Nightly: 96ef887f31

(cherry picked from commit 0139c51f1b)
2015-09-29 10:07:31 +02:00
Peter Simons
ad65464e16 haskell-hpack: disable broken test suite
(cherry picked from commit 5c161d43ed)
2015-09-29 10:07:30 +02:00
Renzo Carbonara
f8144a03dd ghcjs packages: reflex, reflex-dom, dependent-sum_0_2_0_1, dependent-map_0_1_1_3, dependent-sum-template
(cherry picked from commit 431507d11a)
2015-09-29 10:07:30 +02:00
Renzo Carbonara
ccb983c753 bump ghcjs-dom
(cherry picked from commit f546d389b6)
2015-09-29 10:07:30 +02:00
Peter Simons
3e6cc32991 Drop obsolete Haskell overrides.
These overrides are now hard-coded directly in hackage2nix.

(cherry picked from commit d6805a820d)
2015-09-29 10:07:30 +02:00
Peter Simons
6edc6c3aa9 hackage-packages.nix: update Haskell package set
This update was generated by hackage2nix v20150922-6-g5d5ccfe using the following inputs:

  - Nixpkgs: eaa43c65b3
  - Hackage: c048a402d3
  - LTS Haskell: c7012a704b
  - Stackage Nightly: a74568b554

(cherry picked from commit dacc96be28)
2015-09-29 10:07:29 +02:00
Peter Simons
9c08a81dcd configuration-hackage2nix.yaml: fix evaluation errors on Darwin
(cherry picked from commit 69db836dbc)
2015-09-29 10:06:57 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
7adab119b3 wget: Reduce closure size
This reduces the wget closure from 377 MiB to 49 MiB, which is in
particular good for EC2 images, since they include wget. The main
changes:

* Disable libpsl - this isn't very big itself, but it pulls in libicu,
  which is 36 MiB. It also adds build-time dependencies on packages
  like gtk-doc, dblatex, tetex etc.

* Replace gnutls with openssl. The former pulls in runtime
  dependencies like guile, python, binutils, gcc, ncurses, etc.

(cherry picked from commit 9e38b81af8)
2015-09-28 22:51:53 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
373000cba6 Blacklist the xen_fbfront kernel module
This gets rid of a 30 second delay during boot. See e.g
https://github.com/coreos/bugs/issues/208.

(cherry picked from commit cab1483a95)
2015-09-28 22:51:49 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
6d0601d433 Wait for udev after resizing partitions
Otherwise the EC2 boot may panic.

(cherry picked from commit e866840a12)
2015-09-28 22:51:43 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
2214082073 Test whether EC2 root volume resizing works
(cherry picked from commit f125d194e8)
2015-09-28 22:51:36 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
323b0e77c7 Make EBS volumes much smaller
Since they're resized on first boot anyway, they don't need to be big.

(cherry picked from commit ab0ddac8f9)
2015-09-28 22:51:31 +02:00
obadz
47026669ba orpie: init at 1.5.2
[Bjørn: add meta.platforms]

(cherry picked from commit db31c1c438)
2015-09-28 21:06:00 +02:00
Bjørn Forsman
d54a77b2fb dbench: move loadfiles from $out/share/ to $out/share/loadfiles/
Seems cleaner.

Hm, there are also loadfiles in $out/share/doc/dbench/loadfiles/
(installed by the upstream build system), but there is no iscsi/
directory in there.

(cherry picked from commit 3f27be8e5d)
2015-09-28 19:09:31 +02:00
Bjørn Forsman
6e6d20f392 dbench: expression clean-up
Whitespace, ordering, add meta attributes.

(cherry picked from commit dc06278641)
2015-09-28 19:09:31 +02:00
Bjørn Forsman
7aa74290d0 dbench: 20101121 -> 2013-01-01 (latest)
This fixes the build (the old version has wrong hash now).

(cherry picked from commit 8e7ce3de00)
2015-09-28 19:09:31 +02:00
Bjørn Forsman
60cd04658d qt54: add missing mesa include dir
Try to build e.g. the Qt5 Camera Example[1] and see that qmake fails to
find <GL/gl.h>. This fixes it.

[1] http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qtmultimediawidgets-camera-example.html
(Although since nixpkgs qtcreator still lacks 'examples', we have to
download the sources manually and use "qmake && make".)

(cherry picked from commit 583845d00b)
2015-09-28 16:34:20 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
4e18cdda7f Shut up a KDE warning when a user first logs in
It was complaining about not having write permission to
$HOME/.local/share/user-places.xbel (because .local/share didn't exist
yet).

(cherry picked from commit 1b728846a8)
2015-09-28 15:29:04 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
724cf98bdf Fix Nix database in generated images
This prevents seeing lots of warnings about missing hashes/sizes in the
database when running "nix-store --verify --check-contents" for the
first time.

(cherry picked from commit 64aed5e78f)
2015-09-28 15:29:00 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
b5f8225c50 Use make-disk-image.nix for VirtualBox images
(cherry picked from commit b3347287be)
2015-09-28 15:28:55 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
9f7d8f2b01 Disable the ec2-config test
"amazon-init.nix" is not included in the default AMIs because it
unconditionally runs a nixos-rebuild. Also, the test has never worked
(http://hydra.nixos.org/job/nixos/trunk-combined/nixos.tests.ec2-config).

(cherry picked from commit f596f0323f)
2015-09-28 15:28:51 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
7df65ef2d1 Fix the EC2 test
(cherry picked from commit 412477e914)
2015-09-28 15:28:43 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
64e7656feb Fix GRUB syntax in EC2 HVM images
There is no "root" command in GRUB 2, and it's not needed anyway. This
command delayed HVM boots for a few seconds.

(cherry picked from commit 640dff2918)
2015-09-28 15:28:39 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
355b69ebbb ec2-data.nix: Remove superfluous check
(cherry picked from commit 7338f5ff46)
2015-09-28 15:28:34 +02:00
Rob Vermaas
7ef887a04c Revert "nixops: 1.2 -> 1.3."
This reverts commit fcaf96b8d4.
2015-09-28 11:41:26 +00:00
Rob Vermaas
fcaf96b8d4 nixops: 1.2 -> 1.3. 2015-09-28 11:33:26 +00:00
Eelco Dolstra
b9ecc096e1 texinfo: Disable tests
These appear to fail randomly:

  http://hydra.nixos.org/build/26194907/nixlog/325/raw

(cherry picked from commit e7631452e9)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-28 11:59:44 +02:00
Edward Tjörnhammar
92f2a1ca7e idea-{community,ultimate}: 14.1.4 -> 14.1.5 2015-09-28 07:25:40 +02:00
Enrico Fasoli
bfef25de61 ogre: replace broken hg clone url with http url (to speed up download)
Old package expression had two problems:

* source download link was broken
* when working, it downloaded almost 400 MB of data because it cloned
  the entire mercurial repo, via http it's only about 140 MB.

[Bjørn: extend commit message]

(cherry picked from commit fb6403aeaa)
2015-09-27 22:14:18 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
22d6cf3dbd Update AMI generator
The EBS and S3 (instance-store) AMIs are now created from the same
image. HVM instance-store AMIs are also generated.

Disk image generation has been factored out into a function
(nixos/lib/make-disk-image.nix) that can be used to build other kinds
of images.

(cherry picked from commit e018e10ba64e3277f11f4123bc46fc68def970dd)
2015-09-27 21:10:28 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
31425d8406 channel.nix: Fix broken flag to skip substitutes
(cherry picked from commit 95a8c49a15a774f64deee2532db3f87e8c8491c9)
2015-09-27 21:10:17 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
f28cb27fb1 Add filesystem option to automatically grow to the maximum size
This is primarily for EC2 and other cloud environments, where the disk
may be bigger than the original image.

(cherry picked from commit 9d92bd7845)
2015-09-27 21:09:00 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
1db8195d0c Remove relatime mount option
This has been the kernel default for a long time.

(cherry picked from commit f40c7ed143)
2015-09-27 21:08:55 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
2756c12cc0 haskell: make ghc, cabal-install, and stack visible
Thanks to @peti. Close #10035.

(cherry picked from commit 6070cd09fc)
2015-09-27 17:23:20 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
993b9a023c beets: fix tarball evaluation by asserting isLinux
/cc #10069.

(cherry picked from commit 1f73d482d6)
2015-09-27 07:55:18 +02:00
michael bishop
f203ea5011 bonnie++: init at 1.03e
[Bjørn: sort alphabetically in all-packages.nix, shorten
meta.description.]

(cherry picked from commit 569baff20d)
2015-09-26 21:48:10 +02:00
aszlig
c512b78f1f release-notes/15.09: Document changes for vboxsf.
Since 74209a4 we have initial support for the "vboxsf" (VirtualBox
shared folder) file system support. This will be cherry-picked to
release-15.09 so we need to notice people about the change.

Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
(cherry picked from commit 39a03b679a)
2015-09-26 11:08:35 +02:00
aszlig
b6d0e5abe5 release-notes/15.09: Use <option/> for options.
There were quite a few configuration options which were tagged via
<literal/>, so in order to keep consistency with other docbook manuals
in the source tree, let's use <option/> here.

Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
(cherry picked from commit 02c2500195)
2015-09-26 11:08:34 +02:00
aszlig
310c30089e nixos/tests/virtualbox: Don't parallelize VM boot.
I'm not quite sure why the official Hydra gets a kernel panic in one of
two VMs using the exact same kernels:

https://hydra.nixos.org/build/26339384

Because the kernel panic happens before stage 1, let's wait for the
first VM to boot up and after the bootup is done, start the second one
in hope that it won't trigger the panic.

Oddly enough, whenever I run the test on my own Hydra and on my local
machines, I don't get anything like that.

Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
(cherry picked from commit baf1d1dcd7)
2015-09-26 11:08:34 +02:00
aszlig
e1841ac3ec nixos/tests/virtualbox: Destroy detectvirt VM.
I forgot to do this in da0e642. It shouldn't be a big problem but it's
more clean to destroy the VM once we're done testing.

Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
(cherry picked from commit 764a767d5f)
2015-09-26 11:08:34 +02:00
aszlig
df5fe9b64b nixos/tests/virtualbox: Give VMs more memory.
We previously had 1024 MB of memory to fit a VirtualBox VM with 512 MB
plus the memory needed of the VirtualBox host VM. That obviously won't
work for two VirtualBox VMs, which are used for testing networking
between two VirtualBox guests.

Now, we have 2048 MB on the qemu guest (the VirtualBox host) and 768 MB
for each VirtualBox guest. That should be enough to fit in two
VirtualBox guests (I hope).

Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
(cherry picked from commit 3e6bb402b1)
2015-09-26 11:08:33 +02:00
aszlig
45be9edaee nixos/filesystems: Skip check for vboxsf.
We don't even have any means to check a VirtualBox shared folder, so
let's not even try to.

Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
(cherry picked from commit f9766f885d)
2015-09-26 11:08:33 +02:00
aszlig
b714bd7a1b nixos/filesystems: Improve vboxsf default options.
The default options for all file systems currently are
"defaults.relatime", which works well on file systems which support the
relatime option.

Unfortunately, this is not the case for the VirtualBox shared folder
filesystem, so until now, you need to set something like:

fileSystems."/foo" = {
  device = "foo";
  fsType = "vboxsf";
  options = "defaults";
};

Otherwise mounting the file system would fail.

Now, we provide only the "defaults" option to the "vboxsf" file system,
so something like this is enough:

fileSystems."/foo" = {
  device = "foo";
  fsType = "vboxsf";
};

An alternative to that could be to document that you need to set default
options, but we really should do what users expect instead of forcing
them to look up the documentation as to why this has failed.

Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
(cherry picked from commit cd4caed35a)
2015-09-26 11:08:33 +02:00
Jaka Hudoklin
32e768770b virtualbox service: add support for vboxsf guest filesystem
Closes #9358

Signed-off-by: Jaka Hudoklin <jakahudoklin@gmail.com>
Fix reference to bin/mount.vboxsf.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>

(cherry picked from commit 74209a4ca8)
2015-09-26 11:08:32 +02:00
aszlig
4da90c0dbe tests/virtualbox: Add a subtest for host USB.
Unfortunately, we can't test whether USB is really working, but we can
make sure that VirtualBox has access to the USB devices.

This is essentially testing #9736, which I haven't yet been able to
reproduce though, but it makes sense to test it so it won't happen in
future releases.

Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
(cherry picked from commit 9a39c2e943)
2015-09-26 11:08:32 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
60aa924d06 doc/release notes (15.09): mention texlive
(cherry picked from commit 48200a96e0)
2015-09-25 14:26:00 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
a8e91daaa7 pcre: Smaller patch for CVE-2015-3210, CVE-2015-5073
(cherry picked from commit 2896861c7e)
2015-09-25 12:00:28 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
c7a3b6da61 Revert "pcre: Updates to fix a number of vulnerabilities"
This reverts commit 3a472db679.
2015-09-25 12:00:08 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
efc0f6c3b4 vorbis-tools: security patches and fix meta
Patches: CVE-2014-9638, CVE-2014-9639, CVE-2015-6749, and some non-security.
Also drop glibc from buildInputs.

(cherry picked from commit 000a2108ba)
2015-09-25 11:49:30 +02:00
William A. Kennington III
bce799594c Merge pull request #10042 from dasjoe/release-15.09
zfs + zfs_git: 0.6.5 -> 0.6.5.1
2015-09-25 00:30:03 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
086cad92c4 zfs + zfs_git: 0.6.5 -> 0.6.5.1 2015-09-24 20:00:48 +02:00
Lluís Batlle i Rossell
fc80b21fd6 Fix my-env so it includes gcc, as it used to do.
This is a reaction to 1014620bce, that
moved some paths from nix source to the builder.sh of stdenv.

(cherry picked from commit 263c13481c)
2015-09-24 14:12:36 +00:00
Eelco Dolstra
f01ac81a8f ec2-api-tools: Update to 1.7.5.1
(cherry picked from commit 5ab7a37feb)
2015-09-24 15:30:43 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
f1f5181f4c ec2-ami-tools: Update to 1.5.7
(cherry picked from commit b3d4b1bef2)
2015-09-24 15:30:39 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
d398c6aa68 firefox-esr: Update to 38.3.0esr
(cherry picked from commit 4bcbfb33f8)
2015-09-24 15:30:27 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
7dfdf4dd59 ec2-data.nix: Print all SSH host keys
Also, don't barf if there is no DSA key.

(cherry picked from commit e73b19ae4e)
2015-09-24 15:30:19 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
fa274e36da ec2-data.nix: Support ed25519 host keys
(cherry picked from commit df665ded7e)
2015-09-24 15:30:17 +02:00
William A. Kennington III
3a472db679 pcre: Updates to fix a number of vulnerabilities
- CVE-2015-3210
  - CVE-2015-5073
  - http://seclists.org/oss-sec/2015/q3/295

(cherry picked from commit 453b986d2f)
2015-09-24 15:28:59 +02:00
Jan Malakhovski
71b93c799b nixos: show the manual in system's /share/doc (close #9928)
(cherry picked from commit 9cc7859b2e)
2015-09-24 12:32:51 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
dc18f39bfb firefox: Update to 41.0
(cherry picked from commit f46fe7b909)
2015-09-23 21:11:49 -07:00
Andreas Wagner
96a155bc8c urjtag: enable various features
[Bjørn: commit message: enabled -> enable]

(cherry picked from commit 23ed438d5a)
2015-09-23 21:18:37 +02:00
Andreas Wagner
4130b67d93 urjtag: path fixes, use svn to get version string
If built from svn:

  $ jtag --version
  UrJTAG 0.10 #2051

If built from git:
  $ jtag --version
  UrJTAG 0.10 #

Also, with svn we don't need to download the web/ subdirectory because
svn supports partial repository clones.

[Bjørn: extend commit message]

(cherry picked from commit 52379183e1)
2015-09-23 21:18:33 +02:00
Andreas Wagner
e1373e4b54 urjtag: init at 0.10
[Bjørn: make the function argument lines occupy less vertical space.]

(cherry picked from commit e7a024abc4)
2015-09-23 21:17:59 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
202747864f fix evaluation 2015-09-23 17:29:38 +02:00
Robert Helgesson
4c97e3e61e eclipse-plugin-scala: 4.1.1 -> 4.1.1.20150911
No URL change since the update, unfortunately, happens in-place.

(cherry picked from commit 17c468c9c7)
2015-09-23 17:27:28 +02:00
Jan Malakhovski
2e066350e1 doc: update haskell-users-guide.xml with ghcWithHoogle stuff
(cherry picked from commit 8358272046)
2015-09-23 17:05:34 +02:00
Nikolay Amiantov
c20724a350 lambdabot: rework custom modules and configuration
(cherry picked from commit 57c33c1c54)
2015-09-23 17:04:52 +02:00
Peter Simons
496a5e44c3 cabal2nix: update to version 20150922
(cherry picked from commit 5c1afdd5f6)
2015-09-23 17:04:52 +02:00
Renzo Carbonara
d4f4bed45f bump ghcjs, ghcjs-boot, ghcjs-shims
(cherry picked from commit 8ce1f6efcd)
2015-09-23 17:04:52 +02:00
Peter Simons
c821d78c03 Port the LTS Haskell feature into the release-15.09 branch.
The package set was generated by hackage2nix v20150922-4-g3df9130 using the following inputs:

  - Nixpkgs: 5eb46915ca
  - Hackage: 238be6f443
  - LTS Haskell: c7012a704b
  - Stackage Nightly: a46ea057c9
2015-09-23 17:04:51 +02:00
Peter Simons
3270939c2c haskell-generic-builder: drop "haskell-" prefix from interactive environment's names
(cherry picked from commit a3540d9bb7)
2015-09-23 17:00:02 +02:00
Allen Nelson
dbbab403b3 add shellHook argument so that users can pass in their own
(cherry picked from commit d2457ea991)
2015-09-23 17:00:02 +02:00
Peter Simons
e4adb2bcfd ghc: re-add version 7.8.3, which is required for LTS support
(cherry picked from commit 73d79ed945)
2015-09-23 16:08:44 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
62f68203cc separateDebugInfo: pick changes from master 2015-09-23 13:56:29 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
d3bdd8f461 jitsi: fix meta.license and refactor meta
And take the maintainer from master.

(cherry picked from commit 68bd8e4a9d)
2015-09-23 13:55:15 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
6b0a59c6a4 all-packages: rename remaining xlibs -> xorg 2015-09-23 13:34:30 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
1c681d21bf all-packages: don't recurse into aliased sets
So far nix-env -qP would prefer e.g. `xlibs.*` to `xorg.*`,
so we just disallow recursing into aliased sets
while keeping them available for explicit usage.

Consequently, `xlibs` references should get killed on the next
regeneration.

(cherry picked from commit c10f7050c5)
(also added 63f3fef08e and 1caa62ae42)
2015-09-23 13:29:36 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
178f4e7753 Merge: xlibs and x11 attribute cleanup
Frequently using multiple *almost* identical attributes is bad.

(cherry picked from commit 76ef7a93e3)
2015-09-23 13:03:12 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
9a6c99b95e hello/ex-2 -> hello
(cherry picked from commit 645441c207)
2015-09-23 12:11:05 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
fae61545e6 separateDebugInfo: Assert Linux
Also remove some unintended setting of separateDebugInfo.

(cherry picked from commit 2a28bc6691)
2015-09-23 12:11:01 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
1bcda85e8d swig2: Enable on Darwin
(cherry picked from commit fbaaa9cccc)

Conflicts:
	pkgs/development/tools/misc/swig/3.x.nix
2015-09-23 12:10:49 +02:00
Bjørn Forsman
52a88113a7 gitinspector: init at 0.4.1
(cherry picked from commit 452ebd1987)
2015-09-22 16:37:43 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
6176d03312 m2crypto: Use SWIG 2
Fixes "AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'PKCS5_SALT_LEN'".

Fixes #9457.

(cherry picked from commit 6d42b79b29)
2015-09-22 11:15:41 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
71c82e8cb1 Update 15.09 release notes
(cherry picked from commit ddb39be324)
2015-09-22 11:15:35 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
cda0dca254 gdb: Update to 7.10
(cherry picked from commit f81982e779)
2015-09-22 11:15:15 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
450db3136e gdb: Look for debug info in /run/current-system/sw/lib/debug
The previous default was $out/lib/debug, which wasn't very useful.

This ensures that you can do

  environment.systemPackages = [ pkgs.hello.debug ];

to install debug info.

(cherry picked from commit e636e0a532)
2015-09-22 11:15:10 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
26c5e9423e Enable separate debug info
You can now pass

  separateDebugInfo = true;

to mkDerivation. This causes debug info to be separated from ELF
binaries and stored in the "debug" output. The advantage is that it
enables installing lean binaries, while still having the ability to
make sense of core dumps, etc.

(cherry picked from commit ec5b66eb4a)
2015-09-22 11:15:05 +02:00
William A. Kennington III
7870f20941 btrfsProgs: 4.1.2 -> 4.2 (close #9975)
(cherry picked from commit e968dd9be5)
2015-09-21 08:57:45 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
ccaa370b54 Merge new texlive infrastructure, /CC #287
(cherry picked from commit 0fdb93864e)
2015-09-21 08:48:09 +02:00
宋文武
6999dfe5d6 farstream: use pythonPackages.gst-python
(cherry picked from commit 16e01531de)
2015-09-20 16:30:04 +02:00
宋文武
f2fb4d590e pitivi: 0.93 -> 0.94 (close #9894)
(cherry picked from commit d79463365a)
2015-09-20 16:30:04 +02:00
宋文武
db0a0cb1cc gst-python -> pythonPackages.gst-python
(cherry picked from commit 38812685ed)
2015-09-20 16:30:04 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
7d6868eaba beast: switch to a working src location, fixes #9936
It also needs an update, it seems, but I don't know this SW.

(cherry picked from commit ccce09a396)
2015-09-20 11:27:33 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
e8f9260e2e xgd-utils: update p7 -> p46 (close #9851)
This update probably contains a fix for CVE-2014-9622.
Thanks to @jb55 for the PR. We take even newer version.

(cherry picked from commit aaa985e317)
2015-09-20 10:04:25 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
16d4251cf5 djview: update 4.8 -> 4.10.3
Also kill tabs, remove unneeded (and failing) patch.
No qt5 yet, unfortunately.

(cherry picked from commit a4d721efd7)
2015-09-20 08:45:12 +02:00
Charles Strahan
8e92a8e1d2 broadcom-sta: fix build on kernel >= 4.2 (close #9953)
Also cherry-pick a licensing fix from torvalds/linux@7d3e2eb178
necessary for building broadcom-sta on kernel 4.2.

For more details, see:
https://github.com/longsleep/bcmwl-ubuntu/issues/6

Fixes #9948.

(cherry picked from commit f08fb6e6c7)
2015-09-20 08:02:27 +02:00
Domen Kožar
cef54e7d67 chromium: remove preferLocalBuild
It's another attempt to fix chromium builds.

See http://hydra.nixos.org/build/26086977/nixlog/4/raw

Unpacking sources is actually taking more than 2h so build fails.
Instead, rather build it remotely and then copy over the output as
we don't have limits for download time.

See 089bdce621 for reference

cc @aszlig
2015-09-20 01:17:49 +02:00
Thomas Tuegel
82a6dde6c4 julia03: add i686-linux to platforms
(cherry picked from 87e5b5c3ef)
2015-09-19 09:47:19 -05:00
Thomas Tuegel
dbb484f5ce julia03: re-enable tests
(cherry picked from 32b9ac5117)
2015-09-19 09:46:59 -05:00
Thomas Tuegel
7e36b26c5a julia03: re-enable tests
(cherry picked from 51bbf7f2a3)
2015-09-19 09:46:42 -05:00
Thomas Tuegel
bdd6248e1a julia03: use system LLVM
It should be safe to use the Nixpkgs LLVM again, now that the approriate
patches have been backported. Hopefully, this will also fix the i686
build.

(cherry picked from 1daa0b39f6)
2015-09-19 09:46:24 -05:00
Thomas Tuegel
ce6c83e38f llvm_33: backport patch from LLVM 3.5
This patch was backported from LLVM 3.5 by the Julia project.

(cherry picked from 4a8fbb789a)
2015-09-19 09:46:00 -05:00
Domen Kožar
9a401ca404 nixopsUnstable: bump 2015-09-19 16:36:59 +02:00
Thomas Tuegel
3741b81ee4 julia: re-enable tests
(cherry picked from 2948e85526)
2015-09-18 12:21:54 -05:00
Thomas Tuegel
5494101d26 julia: does not currently build on i686-linux
(cherry picked from 5428096873)
2015-09-18 12:21:29 -05:00
Thomas Tuegel
aba731285b Revert "julia: fix i686 build"
This reverts commit 02fc4551f5.

(cherry picked from 1c40404cb2)
2015-09-18 12:21:08 -05:00
Luca Bruno
5cd5fe376b Revert "spice-protocol: 0.12.7 -> 0.12.8"
This reverts commit cf63c0982a.

cc @wkennington breaks qemu build and all nixos tests

Can we stop breaking stuff for a couple of days please?
2015-09-18 10:39:30 +02:00
William A. Kennington III
47f64030ae chromium: Updates
- dev: 47.0.2503.0 -> 47.0.2508.0
  - beta: 46.0.2490.22 -> 46.0.2490.33
  - stable: 45.0.2454.85 -> 45.0.2454.93
2015-09-17 15:52:49 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
ec765da36f libs3: Only builds on linux 2015-09-17 15:47:04 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
f39594461e libressl: 2.2.2 -> 2.2.3 2015-09-17 15:46:58 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
2682544dc1 openldap: Fix CVE-2015-6908 2015-09-17 15:46:52 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
cf63c0982a spice-protocol: 0.12.7 -> 0.12.8 2015-09-17 15:46:44 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
ca46ff5e44 audit: 2.4.2 -> 2.4.4 2015-09-17 15:46:39 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
10a7fb5423 nftables: 0.4 -> 0.5 2015-09-17 15:46:34 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
85863443ab libnftnl: 1.0.3 -> 1.0.5 2015-09-17 15:46:26 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
c520bfcbc9 dhcp: 4.3.2 -> 4.3.3 2015-09-17 15:46:19 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
301536c37e bind: 9.10.2-P4 -> 9.10.3 2015-09-17 15:46:12 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
5f7d85d24a grsecurity: Update patches 2015-09-17 15:45:57 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
1fef429170 heimdal: 2015-06-17 -> 2015-09-13 2015-09-17 15:45:50 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
d1e4a98c8b libtasn1: 4.5 -> 4.7 2015-09-17 15:45:42 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
e6670c88de kernel: 4.1.6 -> 4.1.7 2015-09-17 15:45:36 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
a751fcda89 kernel: 3.14.51 -> 3.14.52 2015-09-17 15:45:27 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
1a0a1f0578 kernel: 3.10.87 -> 3.10.88 2015-09-17 15:45:21 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
ea826ddd84 chromiumBeta: Update 2015-09-17 15:44:44 -07:00
Rob Vermaas
d6a43e705e Update libcloud to 0.18.0. Needed for newer nixops.
(cherry picked from commit 7994c99d6f)
2015-09-17 19:23:05 +00:00
Vladimír Čunát
5d351183a2 oracle{jdk,jre}: add meta.platforms to fix #9786
It won't be built by Hydra anyway due to being unfree.

(cherry picked from commit e922b6b0a2)
2015-09-17 20:18:21 +02:00
aszlig
ccb77084aa systemd: Backport fix for detecting VirtualBox.
This is a backport of systemd/systemd@e32886e.

As noted by @ts468 in #9876, systemd-detect-virt will report KVM if
we're running inside VirtualBox 5.x. Instead of just disabling the
check, this essentially fixes systemd to be able to detect VirtualBox
again.

Tested this against nixos/tests/simple.nix (just to make sure systemd is
still working) and nixos/tests/virtualbox.nix (all tests succeed).

Thanks a lot to @ts468 for catching this and also to @domenkozar for
testing various things concerning that bug.

Fixes #9876.

Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
(cherry picked from commit 389e654e03)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-17 17:13:32 +02:00
aszlig
17485470cb tests/virtualbox: Add systemd-detect-virt subtest.
Addresses #9876 in the way that we want to make sure that VirtualBox 5.x
is going to be properly detected. Right now the result is "kvm", so the
subtest fails as expected with:

error: systemd-detect-virt returned "kvm" instead of "oracle" at (eval
       14) line 414, <__ANONIO__> line 92.

Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
(cherry picked from commit da0e642c2b)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-17 17:13:29 +02:00
aszlig
576a1cd792 nixos/virtualbox-image: Use 32MB of video memory.
Booting the demo/installer image won't work if the video memory is too
low. It boots into KDE, shows the background image and doesn't do
anything, according to @domenkozar.

Thanks to @domenkozar for reporting and testing this with 32MB.

Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
(cherry picked from commit 03730319bd)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-17 17:13:25 +02:00
aszlig
c889294b24 nixos/virtualbox-image: Enable PAE on 32bit.
pkgs/os-specific/linux/kernel/common-config.nix defines HIGHMEM64G on
line 441 for 32bit systems, which implies PAE.

We now creating the OVA with PAE support enabled, which fixes bootup of
the image if people are just importing it without setting PAE
explicitly.

Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
(cherry picked from commit 4e23f1f908)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-17 17:13:22 +02:00
aszlig
6bdb6383e2 tests/virtualbox: Fix long line in guestAdditions.
This is essentially not only "wrapping" the line but refactoring into a
shorter name which is used in two places.

And yes, I know I'm very pedantic if it comes to whitespaces and line
lengths, but I made sure this doesn't change any functionality:

$ nix-instantiate nixos/tests/virtualbox.nix
...
/nix/store/cldxyrxqvwpqm02cd3lvknnmj4qmblyn-vm-test-run-virtualbox.drv
$ git stash pop
...
$ nix-instantiate nixos/tests/virtualbox.nix
...
/nix/store/cldxyrxqvwpqm02cd3lvknnmj4qmblyn-vm-test-run-virtualbox.drv
$

Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
(cherry picked from commit 17f58275a0)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-17 17:13:19 +02:00
aszlig
f63b79b055 tests/virtualbox: Allow to call it with debug attr.
Instead of manually setting debug to true or false, this should make it
possible to now run the test like this:

nix-build nixos/tests/virtualbox.nix --arg debug true

Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
(cherry picked from commit 8f98226f50)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-17 17:13:17 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
32a9989234 qemu: qemu-2.4.0-x86-only -> qemu-x86-only-2.4.0
(cherry picked from commit ab295420c5)
2015-09-17 12:49:43 +02:00
Bjørn Forsman
eece5c3ee6 opencv3: add enableContrib flag
If true, enable the repository of extra modules for OpenCV.
Build tested.

Based on patch from Bas van Dijk <v.dijk.bas@gmail.com>.

(cherry picked from commit d7a0becf37)
2015-09-17 12:23:32 +02:00
Bjørn Forsman
403dccbeee opencv3: add enableIpp flag
Intel Integrated Performance Primitives (IPP) speeds up parts of OpenCV
on Intel processors (and compatible). It increases the store path from
220 MiB to 300 MiB, so it defaults to off.

Original patch from Bas van Dijk <v.dijk.bas@gmail.com>.

I tried applying the same change to opencv(2.x). OpenCV 2.x didn't
automatically detect IPP, so I reverted the change.

(cherry picked from commit affcf2e030)
2015-09-17 12:23:23 +02:00
Bjørn Forsman
1a9d198bc4 lftp: 4.6.3a -> 4.6.4
Upstream says:

  2015-08-20: lftp-4.6.4 released. Some bugs fixed, minor features added.

(cherry picked from commit b0336c9854)
2015-09-17 12:21:48 +02:00
Thomas Tuegel
d3ff46f8f6 dropbox: 3.8.5 -> 3.8.9
(cherry picked from 3faf5b53a5)
2015-09-16 17:55:59 -05:00
Bjørn Forsman
7ea1ee02f4 duply: 1.9.1 -> 1.9.2
(cherry picked from commit c9a6b811d6)
2015-09-16 19:48:55 +02:00
Edward Tjörnhammar
d802a036d7 gitRepo: 1.21 -> 1.22 2015-09-16 19:22:44 +02:00
Bjørn Forsman
aa4d34082a wireshark: 1.12.5 -> 1.12.7
Build and run tested.

(cherry picked from commit b95bec7917)
2015-09-16 19:01:43 +02:00
aszlig
7df9d8d39a tests/virtualbox: Give test machines more memory.
Sometimes there are random kernel panics do to the lack of memory in the
qemu guests, but as we're setting the VirtualBox memory size relatively
low, 1024 MB should be enough for the qemu guests.

Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
(cherry picked from commit 0d4a3ce485)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-16 18:44:59 +02:00
aszlig
84bce4f3e1 tests/virtualbox: Start systemwide DBus in guests.
We want to check whether DBus functionality is working, so let's make
sure it is running in our mini-initrd.

DBus unfortunately requires to have users properly set up and another
configuration file other than in ${dbus.daemon}/etc/dbus-1/system.conf,
so we do provide that as well.

Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
(cherry picked from commit 7707c7df7f)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-16 18:44:54 +02:00
Tobias Geerinckx-Rice
ad9658c970 phc-intel: 0.4.0-rev{17 -> 18} for Linux 4.2
Fix build failure: http://hydra.nixos.org/build/25314451/nixlog/1

(cherry picked from commit d35d991028)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-16 18:44:23 +02:00
aszlig
6d2d7ddbfb virtualbox: Fix load of dbus library at runtime.
VirtualBox had support for DBUS even in version 4.x, but it appears that
nothing in our VM test triggered it to load, thus I didn't notice the
runtime error:

rtldrNativeLoad: dlopen('libdbus-1.so.3', RTLD_NOW | RTLD_LOCAL) failed:
                 libdbus-1.so.3: cannot open shared object file: No such
                 file or directory

The upstream commits I think are responsible for this to come to surface
are _probably_ (did I ever mention that I love SVN? *cough*) one of
these:

https://www.virtualbox.org/changeset/55664/vbox
https://www.virtualbox.org/changeset/55602/vbox

Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
(cherry picked from commit 89b6831ffd)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-16 18:44:23 +02:00
Nikolay Amiantov
7aeb6049e5 julia: 0.3.10 -> 0.3.11
(cherry picked from commit 1967d9135a)
2015-09-16 11:24:55 -05:00
Bjørn Forsman
73a236fac2 pidgin-sipe: 1.18.1 -> 1.20.0
Build and run tested (on release-15.09 branch).

(cherry picked from commit 0af5fccf2a)
2015-09-16 15:49:18 +02:00
Bjørn Forsman
4f97d13453 diffstat: 1.59 -> 1.60
2015/07/07 (diffstat 1.60)
	+ add configure option --with-man2html

	+ update configure macros

	+ update config.guess, config.sub

(cherry picked from commit b8e776bbe4)
2015-09-16 07:55:45 +02:00
Bjørn Forsman
d22e8532ba ascii: 3.14 -> 3.15
(cherry picked from commit a8b75d8777)
2015-09-16 07:51:49 +02:00
Bjørn Forsman
17eb818264 lighttpd: 1.4.35 -> 1.4.37
(cherry picked from commit 0b9d83737c)
2015-09-16 07:47:40 +02:00
Robert Helgesson
261909afa1 eclipse-plugin-bytecode-outline: init at 2.4.3
(cherry picked from commit d243a5d0c9)
2015-09-15 22:14:10 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
04607593fc ccl: fix fetchsvn hash (fixes #9746)
No idea what's changed.

(cherry picked from commit 83df5ae07b)
2015-09-15 21:55:46 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
6c81eb4260 mesa: maintenance update 10.6.6 -> 10.6.7
(cherry picked from commit baf20fbcab)
2015-09-15 15:52:06 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
0f095f3808 mesa: maintenance update 10.6.5 -> 10.6.6
(cherry picked from commit f67ddbaa6f)
2015-09-15 15:52:02 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
cf77c0c605 mass rewrite of find parameters to cross-platform style
Fixes #9044, close #9667. Thanks to @taku0 for suggesting this solution.
Now we have no modes starting with `/` or `+`.

Rewrite the `-perm` parameters of find:
 - completely safe: rewrite `/0100` and `+100` to `-0100`,
 - slightly semantics-changing: rewrite `+111` to `-0100`.
I cross-verified the `find` manual pages for Linux, Darwin, FreeBSD.

(cherry picked from commit 8f33b8cc93)
2015-09-15 15:51:02 +02:00
William A. Kennington III
4533bc896b bash4.3: p39 -> p42
(cherry picked from commit 461a9ee562)
2015-09-15 15:51:02 +02:00
William A. Kennington III
8962ce3b39 bash: Remove stale 4.1 patches
(cherry picked from commit 883fadf6d1)
2015-09-15 15:51:02 +02:00
William A. Kennington III
ccb43912f8 curl: 7.43.0 -> 7.44.0
(cherry picked from commit 86e53bdff3)
2015-09-15 15:51:02 +02:00
Jude Taylor
fada91036b darwin: use system dyld
see https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/9432

(cherry picked from commit 80e09678f7)
2015-09-15 15:51:02 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
9fd74a8e15 Make the jdk/jre attributes work on Darwin
(cherry picked from commit 4e1b21d133)
2015-09-15 12:07:11 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
c850712458 Make the "openjdk7" attribute work on Darwin
(cherry picked from commit ef490c6b14)
2015-09-15 12:07:06 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
a257690692 Fix Darwin eval
(cherry picked from commit acd97de64d)
2015-09-15 12:07:01 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
9092954483 Disambiguate openjdk/openjre
This makes "nix-env -i openjre" work again.

Also get rid of some unnecessary aliases.

(cherry picked from commit 77f3fe79b2)
2015-09-15 12:06:56 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
3ffd55da3d openjdk8: Add missing setup hooks
(cherry picked from commit b0fd35e174)
2015-09-15 12:06:51 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
83f162a6b1 Rename OpenJDK expressions
It's silly to have OpenJDK 7 in default.nix when it's not in fact the
default.

(cherry picked from commit 7a1aa50908)
2015-09-15 12:06:46 +02:00
Bjørn Forsman
56e7192f2a cudatoolkit: don't move $out/include to $out/usr_include
This effectively reverts 86c283824f
("If cuda headers are presented to nix [...]") and all the following
workarounds that was added due to that commit.

As far as I can tell[1] this hack isn't needed anymore. And moving
includes to $out/usr_include causes pain for cudatoolkit users, so
better get rid of it.

In patches that did more than the $out/usr_include workaround, I only
changed the line back to $out/include instead of re-generating the
patches and fully removing the changed line.

[1]: I build tested blender and caffe, and temporarily added
recurseIntoAttrs to rPackages and haskellPackages so that nox-review
could get proper coverage. However, many of the packages do not build
even before this patch. I also built CUDA samples with cudatoolkit7
that ran fine.

(cherry picked from commit 22321f2e58)
2015-09-15 08:16:09 +02:00
Domen Kožar
77f2309585 Merge pull request #9816 from ktosiek/stable-kernel-bump
linux: Add 4.2.0 (backport to release-15.09)
2015-09-15 06:11:24 +02:00
Tomasz Kontusz
1b83abb27b lttng-modules: 2.6.2-1-g7a88f8b -> 2.6.3
This also drops the assertion about kernel.version - we don't have
anything older than 3.4 in nixpkgs anyway.

(cherry picked from commit 135fc6a769)
2015-09-14 21:52:44 +02:00
Tomasz Kontusz
43899f4d2e openafs: patches for linux 4.2 2015-09-14 21:00:11 +02:00
William A. Kennington III
e82614d0d4 lxd: 2015-08-05 -> 0.17 2015-09-13 22:08:10 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
92294c93fd git: 2.5.0 -> 2.5.2 2015-09-13 20:10:15 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
5927cbb15f gnutls: 3.4.4 -> 3.4.5 2015-09-13 19:52:38 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
fda676d020 gnutls33: 3.3.17 -> 3.3.18 2015-09-13 19:52:38 -07:00
Domen Kožar
b02bbbc3b6 vboot_reference: whitespace change to restart the build.. 2015-09-13 19:41:17 +02:00
Mathnerd314
3c559278b4 kmod-debian-aliases: init at 21-1 (close #9669)
(cherry picked from commit 87012187b2)
2015-09-13 18:21:45 +02:00
Domen Kožar
83cc494542 disable chronos /cc @offlinehacker 2015-09-13 14:26:46 +02:00
Domen Kožar
66e6f99d40 libreoffice: 5.0.0.5 -> 5.0.1.2, refactor
I've extracted some of libraries and made expression simpler.
2015-09-13 14:25:19 +02:00
Tomasz Kontusz
a1734c3045 lttng-modules: 2.6.2-1-g7a88f8b -> 2.6.3
This also drops the assertion about kernel.version - we don't have
anything older than 3.4 in nixpkgs anyway.
2015-09-13 10:34:06 +02:00
Robert Helgesson
6b2ef7b068 pecita: update and download from difference source
Close #9806.
The upstream URL of the Pecita font is often changed in-place resulting
in frequent hash mismatches. With this commit an archived version of the
font is used instead.

(cherry picked from commit 667f26cabf)
2015-09-13 10:02:17 +02:00
Cillian de Róiste
9ec1ea4259 yoshimi: update from 1.3.5.1 to 1.3.5.2 2015-09-12 19:18:52 +02:00
Bryan Gardiner
8709dcd8b8 claws-mail: install the .desktop file
(cherry picked from commit ab206a0e9a)
2015-09-12 15:56:34 +02:00
Bryan Gardiner
75914cd06a claws-mail: add myself as maintainer
(cherry picked from commit 7d7e983393)
2015-09-12 15:56:25 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
c46c1c9941 virtualbox: Update to 5.0.4
(cherry picked from commit 972c0e5df4)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-12 13:19:20 +02:00
aszlig
4e530db022 virtualbox: Fix revision/hash for guest additions.
Regression introduced in 7ffb1f3bde.

Also added a small notice so that this hopefully won't happen with
future updates.

Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
(cherry picked from commit 8be8193bd5)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-12 13:19:14 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
b2e5f331bc virtualbox: Update to 5.0.2
(cherry picked from commit 7ffb1f3bde)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-12 13:19:09 +02:00
Domen Kožar
de1cce92c7 blcr: drop support for kernel 3.12
(cherry picked from commit 54e430a689)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-12 13:17:16 +02:00
Domen Kožar
8d9915c388 Revert "Revert "qemu: 2.2.1 -> 2.4.0""
This reverts commit 863c121c07.

Segfaults on build machines were not caused by qemu bump.
2015-09-12 12:55:48 +02:00
William A. Kennington III
5de569f742 zfs: Update to 0.6.5 2015-09-11 17:47:41 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
ec6dc1fcd3 spl: Update to 0.6.5 2015-09-11 17:47:10 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
57d766277a ceph-git: 2015-09-04 -> 2015-09-11 2015-09-11 16:21:29 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
0cac29ad5d ceph-dev: Fix for i686-linux 2015-09-11 16:21:29 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
8ca25a6d33 linux: Add 4.2.0 2015-09-11 21:56:39 +02:00
William A. Kennington III
90b5b768ca gpa: 0.9.7 -> 0.9.9 2015-09-11 12:42:21 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
6372df39be gnupg: 2.1.7 -> 2.1.8 2015-09-11 12:42:20 -07:00
Tobias Geerinckx-Rice
638a83c669 htop: fix version suffix
It may be an improvement, but it's still a downgrade.
2015-09-11 10:15:28 -07:00
Luca Bruno
07da766101 nixos containers: fix system path when reloading
(cherry picked from commit 682777ed24)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-11 18:42:46 +02:00
Tobias Geerinckx-Rice
5b9203fc03 htop: also touch headers in subdirectories
(cherry picked from commit 5d50acceeb)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-11 18:41:47 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
577b08b88a systemd: Backport some journalctl performance improvements
Before:

$ time journalctl > /dev/null

real    6m12.470s
user    5m51.439s
sys     0m19.265s

After:

real    0m40.067s
user    0m37.717s
sys     0m2.383s

Before:

$ time journalctl --since '2015-08-01' _TRANSPORT=kernel

real    1m9.817s
user    0m13.318s
sys     0m56.626s

After:

real    0m0.689s
user    0m0.521s
sys     0m0.221s

(cherry picked from commit c34953ed24)
2015-09-11 14:16:16 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
06a318a6ab php: Latest versions
(cherry picked from commit 0ea1169dae)
2015-09-11 14:16:16 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
4da70720a8 nixos-container: Fix show-host-key
We don't generate ecdsa keys by default anymore, so print ed25519
instead if available.

(cherry picked from commit c904dfa87c)
2015-09-11 14:16:16 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
5bbb8fbce3 upower: Update to 0.99.3
(cherry picked from commit af82c983fc)
2015-09-11 14:16:16 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
361d6cf566 upower: Remove unused dependencies
(cherry picked from commit a6a73a1429)
2015-09-11 14:16:16 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
7def439cda Remove upower-old
(cherry picked from commit 2a2cb8354e)
2015-09-11 14:16:16 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
469b79bcc7 Remove openjdk namespace pollution
Fixes #9743.

(cherry picked from commit ee83598688)
2015-09-11 14:16:16 +02:00
William A. Kennington III
afd73615d6 gnutls: Fix parallel build issue introduced in 3.4.x 2015-09-10 15:16:06 -07:00
aszlig
273472444f neko: Add patch fixing arg handling on 32bit.
The error was reported at HaxeFoundation/haxelib#152 and was fixed by
HaxeFoundation/neko#41 in HaxeFoundation/neko@ccc78c2, the latter being
fetchpatch'ed by us now.

This has caused the hxcpp build to fail on i686-linux with an "Invalid
array access" error.

Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
(cherry picked from commit 2cc8680b88)
2015-09-10 18:39:21 +02:00
Luca Bruno
84ceab0547 gcr: disable parallel builds
(cherry picked from commit fe25f52cce)
2015-09-10 12:59:05 +02:00
Peter Simons
f90b3095d0 doc: update haskell-users-guide.xml to reflect that we've update GHC 7.10.1 to 7.10.2
(cherry picked from commit d6396cc5d8)
2015-09-09 21:31:52 +02:00
Robert Helgesson
0641ccdcd3 eclipse-plugin-checkstyle: 6.5.0.201504121610 -> 6.9.0.201508291549
(cherry picked from commit 11693943de)
2015-09-09 09:48:45 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
b1c6d53731 tango-icon-theme: add cache file
After discussion at
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/commit/aae9e49cbc0c8#commitcomment-13041853

(cherry picked from commit 409f8515fd)
2015-09-09 09:27:47 +02:00
William A. Kennington III
7141227936 syncthing: 0.11.23 -> 0.11.24 2015-09-08 23:41:37 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
571a0a31db syncthing: Pin to go1.4 pending upstream go fixes and disable tests until fixed 2015-09-08 23:41:37 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
2f71a811c9 go: 1.5 -> 1.5.1 2015-09-08 23:41:37 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
be3c06f30f htop: 8f07868f -> 229d0058
This fixes sopme of the strange rendering issues as well as some
intermittent crashes.
2015-09-08 23:41:37 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
2694b75591 gnupg: 2.0.28 -> 2.0.29 2015-09-08 23:41:37 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
0094d74ca7 libgcrypt: 1.6.3 -> 1.6.4 2015-09-08 23:41:37 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
6787e2afb5 go-packages: Fix version string output 2015-09-08 23:41:37 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
582a312d3d chromium: Dev / Beta Updates 2015-09-08 23:41:37 -07:00
Rok Garbas
f9799e72d0 marking junit and dolphinEmu as broken 2015-09-08 14:03:51 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
71861c955c Remove references to /root/test-firmware
This is no longer supported by systemd.

(cherry picked from commit 3ebe5f802b)
2015-09-08 11:30:04 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
6d05583323 nix-repl: Update
Fixes #9710.

(cherry picked from commit a5ea7ddb08)
2015-09-08 11:29:58 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
7483622dc6 Nix: Update to 1.10
(cherry picked from commit 86eaeb4c0a)
2015-09-08 11:29:52 +02:00
Luca Bruno
2d300886dc popcorntime: fix sha of x86 build (ZHF) 2015-09-08 10:32:04 +02:00
William A. Kennington III
e7cf7f7f80 linux-firmware: 2015-07-23 -> 2015-09-07 2015-09-07 23:15:15 -07:00
Peter Simons
a584a6b9e7 cabal2nix: fix version number 20180903 to 20150903
Thanks to @drvink for pointing this out.

(cherry picked from commit ca9158fa82)
2015-09-07 23:38:49 +02:00
obadz
dd3b84561b nixos: environment.pathsToLink += some desktop dirs
Close #9622.
(adding common desktop locations and locations specified in
http://standards.freedesktop.org/menu-spec/1.1/)

(cherry picked from commit afdfe76bbd)
2015-09-07 21:17:42 +02:00
Peter Simons
1cf4a34515 cabal2nix: fix https://github.com/NixOS/cabal2nix/issues/203 some more
(cherry picked from commit 06a7b22985)
2015-09-07 17:35:18 +02:00
Peter Simons
4250b6f1da cabal2nix: re-generate the build files to make sure all dependencies are listed correctly
Fixes https://github.com/NixOS/cabal2nix/issues/203.

(cherry picked from commit d4f7bf9c29)
2015-09-07 16:04:42 +02:00
Bjørn Forsman
75639f54ec grabserial: drop pythonX.Y- name prefix
It's an application, not a library/module.

(cherry picked from commit afdbfd9552)
2015-09-07 15:54:58 +02:00
Domen Kožar
b01eebf021 nginx: include mimetypes mapping 2015-09-07 14:43:07 +02:00
Jaka Hudoklin
5a255bb501 kubernetes service: add a few options 2015-09-07 12:50:43 +02:00
Jaka Hudoklin
a8261794c3 openvswitch service: fix ipsec startup order 2015-09-07 12:50:22 +02:00
Domen Kožar
863c121c07 Revert "qemu: 2.2.1 -> 2.4.0"
This reverts commit 0e0e3c0c08.

I've been seeing quite some QEMU segfaults on Hydra,
hopefully reverting the bump will fix the issue.
2015-09-07 12:21:40 +02:00
Domen Kožar
072196adb0 atom: 1.0.0 -> 1.0.4 2015-09-07 12:21:40 +02:00
Jim Garrison
dcd301b4f8 vte (gtk2): apply change-scroll-region.patch (close #9688)
More info (including upstream fix):
cb07c67478/index.html (L754-L773)
Patch from: https://bug542087.bugzilla-attachments.gnome.org/attachment.cgi?id=176035

(cherry picked from commit 7a2c69c785)
2015-09-07 10:57:34 +02:00
Domen Kožar
03e06f2c52 perlPaclages.UnicodeICUCollator: mark as broken 2015-09-06 16:01:06 +02:00
Jaka Hudoklin
1cf322c9da logstash service: fix tests
(cherry picked from commit 93132d1717)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-06 15:59:56 +02:00
Jaka Hudoklin
fe10eaeef7 logstash service: fix startup
(cherry picked from commit 77356690fb)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-06 15:59:53 +02:00
Jaka Hudoklin
ade993815a logstash: fix description and make install process more compact
(cherry picked from commit f364702bb7)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-06 15:59:49 +02:00
Jaka Hudoklin
4ab9327fec etcd service: fix tests
(cherry picked from commit a79d732243)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-06 15:59:45 +02:00
Domen Kožar
cc06f9c0be cups: 2.0.3 -> 2.0.4, fix transient failure 2015-09-06 15:59:18 +02:00
Nikolay Amiantov
ccaeff0b65 julia: fix i686 build 2015-09-05 09:29:07 -05:00
Bob van der Linden
090363255d popcorntime: 0.3.7.2 -> 0.3.8-3
(cherry picked from commit e6e338401f)
2015-09-05 16:02:53 +02:00
Bob van der Linden
48ad172426 node-webkit: added nwjs 0.12.3
(cherry picked from commit b5da2e0237)
2015-09-05 16:02:52 +02:00
Rok Garbas
6b1585ba62 pythonPackages.cython: 0.22.1 -> 0.23.1 2015-09-05 15:00:12 +02:00
Rok Garbas
373c3f9575 pythonPackages.sipsimple: 2.5.0 -> 2.5.1 2015-09-05 15:00:12 +02:00
Rok Garbas
980312ff87 pycangjie: 1.0 -> (master)361bb413203fd43bab624d98edf6f7d20ce6bfd3 2015-09-05 15:00:12 +02:00
Rok Garbas
73d9902402 libcangjie: 1.1 -> (master)a73c1d8783f7b6526fd9b2cc44a669ffa5518d3d 2015-09-05 15:00:12 +02:00
Rok Garbas
747f36df2f blink: 1.4.0 -> 1.4.1 2015-09-05 15:00:11 +02:00
William A. Kennington III
2705e5804e goPackages: Make sure bin is the only output in all-packages 2015-09-05 02:35:04 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
b94b4bed87 goPackages: Cleanups and fixes 2015-09-05 02:32:44 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
a9febe1c8c pond: Fix x86_64 optimizations to be correctly applied to only x86_64 2015-09-05 01:42:14 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
896d62a7e5 drive: Migrate to go-packages 2015-09-05 01:42:14 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
fdb2bfe232 go-repo-root: Move to go-packages 2015-09-05 01:42:14 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
e85ef89c53 gotags: Move to go-packages 2015-09-05 01:42:14 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
27dbdcf380 goimports: Move to go-packages 2015-09-05 01:42:14 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
c13a1141f4 gocode: Move to go-packages 2015-09-05 01:42:13 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
dd858ba537 influxdb-backup: Move to go-packages 2015-09-05 01:42:13 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
bd7274a224 mesos-dns: Move to go-packages 2015-09-05 01:42:13 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
5d2d87265e skydns: Move to go-packages 2015-09-05 01:42:12 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
deea3309e1 bosun: Move to go-packages 2015-09-05 01:42:02 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
0d0cd64556 syncthing: Move to go-packages 2015-09-05 01:42:00 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
a61ab1a44a gpgme: 1.5.5 -> 1.6.0 2015-09-05 01:40:12 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
28a8d8f0b0 libassuan: 2.2.1 -> 2.3.0 2015-09-05 01:40:12 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
4f72a5a65a libgpg-error: 1.19 -> 1.20 2015-09-05 01:40:12 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
1fdbcdd1c5 libassuan2_1: remove
This library was orphaned and out of date so it is fit for removal.
2015-09-05 01:40:12 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
473ca8dc03 libevdev: 1.4.3 -> 1.4.4 2015-09-05 01:40:12 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
141525686c lxd: Don't build test binary 2015-09-04 20:29:32 -07:00
Rickard Nilsson
b05dcea92a bosun,scollector: Fix NixOS modules to use bin attr of go pkgs
(cherry picked from commit ed140ff927)
2015-09-04 21:46:43 +02:00
William A. Kennington III
3b222b449c ceph-git: 2015-08-29 -> 2015-09-04 2015-09-04 12:03:10 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
655d1253e7 ceph-dev: 9.0.2 -> 9.0.3 2015-09-04 12:03:09 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
0f0d286925 ceph-git: 2015-08-18 -> 2015-08-29 2015-09-04 12:03:09 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
1cd5bf00b4 ceph: 0.94.2 -> 0.94.3 2015-09-04 12:03:09 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
b3f29bda9c dhcpcd: 6.9.2 -> 6.9.3 2015-09-04 11:56:01 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
08bafb1a94 tinc_pre: 2015-07-17 -> 2015-07-22 2015-09-04 11:55:52 -07:00
Domen Kožar
3e7fd66ae4 Revert "Updated atom to 1.0.10"
This reverts commit 33a2b03d5f.
2015-09-04 20:15:49 +02:00
Domen Kožar
c8c1adb7bd Revert "accelio: enable tests"
This reverts commit 8b663509b1.

Fails to build kernel modules.

(cherry picked from commit 1819011291)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-04 18:48:12 +02:00
Domen Kožar
f7db087ae6 i3: 4.10.2 -> 4.10.3
(cherry picked from commit 950d9de3c9)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-04 18:48:12 +02:00
Domen Kožar
df7d3cdc6b Xorg: apply patch to fix X crashes
(cherry picked from commit dc0fe8ebf4)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
(cherry picked from commit 66214fba8d)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-04 18:48:12 +02:00
lethalman
ab063687c2 Merge pull request #9642 from Mathnerd314/power-fix
Remove desktopManagerHandlesLidAndPower
(cherry picked from commit 8bfacda44c)
2015-09-04 18:11:31 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
959f05dfbb Rename users.extraUsers -> users.users, users.extraGroup -> users.groups
The "extra" part hasn't made sense for years.

(cherry picked from commit 14321ae243)
2015-09-04 15:02:47 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
a54ce7fcd9 command-not-found: Fix nix-env invocation
(cherry picked from commit c090efb9d8)
2015-09-04 15:02:41 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
7a89feed0a command-not-found: Use attribute name
(cherry picked from commit 13532ee161)
2015-09-04 15:02:37 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
e248b37a18 Add firefox-esr
(cherry picked from commit a536eda82e)
2015-09-04 15:02:30 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
d01c55fccc Remove ad hoc README
It's unlikely that people will see this file, so it's kind of
pointless.

(cherry picked from commit 882b2465c2)
2015-09-04 15:02:10 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
92ee13ce54 Shorten inhibit message
This also makes it consistent with KDE's inhibit message.

(cherry picked from commit f223448d5d)
2015-09-04 15:02:06 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
8452d2a316 linux: Update to 3.18.21
(cherry picked from commit 90dc8da64d)
2015-09-04 15:01:54 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
ef04e87fc6 Remove Linux 4.0
It's EOL.

(cherry picked from commit 38a74e27de)
2015-09-04 15:01:50 +02:00
Peter Simons
aa6d17e920 emacs-ido-ubiquitous: add version 3.6-4-gb659bf8
(cherry picked from commit 398fc5d9fe)
2015-09-04 12:42:56 +02:00
Nikolay Amiantov
4a1460f6e7 Revert "bundler-HEAD: fix checksum"
This reverts commit 9cea5bcf2c.
See 9cea5bcf2c (commitcomment-13058505)

(cherry picked from commit c31a677482)
2015-09-04 12:19:14 +02:00
Domen Kožar
4ed27ba319 categories: mark as broken cc #9471 2015-09-04 10:43:12 +02:00
Daniel Fox Franke
ec602c08c3 accelio: enable tests
The patch committed with 88471b684e6544da7691937a9b68cefa49d260d5
makes them work again.

(cherry picked from commit 8b663509b1)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-04 10:00:16 +02:00
Daniel Fox Franke
0d41e2f23c accelio: fix i686-linux build
* Compile with gcc5 to avoid the compiler bug described in
  https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2014-05/msg02560.html

* Add a patch to fix the many incorrect printf format specifiers and
  other sloppy type conversions that gcc5 catches and warns on
  (erroring out due to -Werror).

(cherry picked from commit 3129142f80)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-04 10:00:05 +02:00
Ragnar Dahlén
c2d1617b91 docker: Minor improvements, fix failing test
- Replace usage of deprecated CLI flag `--daemon`
- Introduce `storageDriver` option for module
- Fix failing test by using `overlay` storage driver

(cherry picked from commit 9bfe92ecee)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-04 09:55:26 +02:00
Tuomas Tynkkynen
32f5fb74e3 linuxPackages_*.perf: Fix build after kernel 4.1
In 4.1, the build system changed, and it now wants to execute ld like this:

ld -r -o util/scripting-engines/libperf-in.o util/scripting-engines/trace-event-perl.o util/scripting-engines/trace-event-python.o

The actual problem seems to be that `buildInputs = [elfutils ...]`
causes 'ld' to point to elfutils in PATH instead of the usual binutils.

So remove elfutils from buildInputs and set NIX_CFLAGS_* manually. This
is a slight hack, but there is some precedent:
0761f81da7/pkgs/tools/package-management/rpm/default.nix (L13)

Fixes #9095.

(cherry picked from commit 710c4c3c9d)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-04 09:54:57 +02:00
Nikolay Amiantov
c3bb10dc34 julia03: use bundled llvm 2015-09-04 03:29:23 +03:00
Vladimír Čunát
8909f1ea21 hhvm: fixup build
(cherry picked from commit 4af33f24ac)
2015-09-03 22:11:13 +02:00
William A. Kennington III
4d0d7a9068 pond: Migrate to go-packages 2015-09-03 11:30:27 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
76b8513946 goPackages: Update appengine 2015-09-03 11:30:27 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
7061ec8b3f dclxvi: Init at 2013-01-27 2015-09-03 11:30:27 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
e91428717a bind: 9.10.2-P3 -> 9.10.2-P4 2015-09-03 11:30:27 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
8b36a0a1b4 nsq: Remove benchmark utilies as they are uneeded 2015-09-03 11:30:27 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
2067e6ecb3 goPackages: More cleanups 2015-09-03 11:30:26 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
c5849a3918 nsq: Move to go-packages and 0.2.28 -> 0.3.5 2015-09-03 11:30:26 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
d0179b917e serfdom: Migrate to go-packages 2015-09-03 11:30:26 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
a38aefb2d9 asciinema: Move to go-packages 2015-09-03 11:30:26 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
bac23af875 mtpfs: Fix accidental deletion 2015-09-03 11:30:26 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
6159dbc771 mtpfs: Update to 2015-08-01 and move to go-packages 2015-09-03 11:30:26 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
7b10d9c6db all-packages: goPackages Cleanups 2015-09-03 11:30:25 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
e5231900a4 fzf: Move to go-packages and 0.10.0 -> 0.10.4 2015-09-03 11:30:25 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
b4109214af ngrok: Move to go-packages 2015-09-03 11:30:25 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
0f4503f8d7 flannel: Migrate to go-packages 2015-09-03 11:30:25 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
3120b87aa5 rocksdb: 3.12.1 -> 3.13.1 2015-09-03 11:30:24 -07:00
William A. Kennington III
070765f17d chromium: Updates
This bumps the stable and dev track forward a version
2015-09-03 11:30:24 -07:00
Cillian de Róiste
231ff4730a jack2: apply patch to fix build with gcc5 2015-09-03 11:23:17 -07:00
Cillian de Róiste
70e89d8bb8 Revert "jack2: 1.9.10 -> 2015-06-02"
This reverts commit fd829968c7.
2015-09-03 11:23:16 -07:00
Artjom Vejsel
29294bab2f qtcreator: add missing QML modules (fixes #9629)
Fixes empty welcome screen because of missing QML modules.

(cherry picked from commit d169882bb2)
2015-09-03 19:26:46 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
538958bf17 Create /var/log/journal
Fixes #9614.

(cherry picked from commit 6ab7e0de29)
2015-09-03 18:04:26 +02:00
Peter Simons
8ce463948f cabal2nix: update to version 20180903
(cherry picked from commit 65a415a1b2)
2015-09-03 17:58:38 +02:00
Luca Bruno
e2ebe91991 ffmpeg-full: fix src
(cherry picked from commit e27c796b51)
2015-09-03 16:11:03 +02:00
Peter Simons
88119e0600 haskell-sophia: disable failing test suite 2015-09-03 15:35:56 +02:00
Peter Simons
96cd323239 haskell-base32-bytestring: disable failing test suite 2015-09-03 15:35:56 +02:00
Peter Simons
592626f723 hackage-packages.nix: update to d7dddc66da with hackage2nix v20150824-72-g87526c2 2015-09-03 15:35:56 +02:00
lethalman
854574d83c Merge pull request #9636 from ragnard/rkt-fix-build
rkt: Don't download stage1 image during build.
(cherry picked from commit 66429fa043)
2015-09-03 15:17:10 +02:00
RoboNickBot
a30ecea8f1 texlive-moderntimeline: 0.8 (broken) -> 0.9 (close #9612)
The v0.8 build was broken because the CTAN package updated to v0.9 and
CTAN doesn't keep old versions of packages.

Besides bumping the version, this commit changes the src url from the
unversioned CTAN link (which would break the derivation every time a new
version of the package released, as it did yesterday) to the versioned
Github release link.

(cherry picked from commit 126d8dba96)
2015-09-03 12:03:38 +02:00
Nikolay Amiantov
dae4dc0c6a bundler-HEAD: fix checksum
Related to #8567
2015-09-03 12:23:14 +03:00
Luca Bruno
742cfd37c7 wml: fix build and unbreak
(cherry picked from commit ad99ea6912)
2015-09-03 11:11:05 +02:00
Rok Garbas
15146015d9 dragonegg: does not build with gcc49
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=19847
(cherry picked from commit c7580cd175)
2015-09-03 11:04:13 +02:00
Nikolay Amiantov
28ab937f18 texLiveModerntimeline: fix sha256 checksum
Looks like an upstream update. cc @peti
2015-09-03 12:01:50 +03:00
Domen Kožar
bb776b6226 panamax_ui: fix libv8 pinpoint
(cherry picked from commit c0e97bb547)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-03 10:30:27 +02:00
Domen Kožar
2cfdef1edb redmine: shorten flags line to avoid yaml parsing bug 2015-09-03 10:11:29 +02:00
Bjørn Forsman
8c60418dd3 ffmpeg-full: align pkgname with attrname
Without this, users are presented with this endless loop:

  $ ffplay
  The program ‘ffplay’ is currently not installed. You can install it by
  typing:
    nix-env -i ffmpeg
  $ nix-env -i ffmpeg
  $ ffplay
  The program ‘ffplay’ is currently not installed. You can install it by
  typing:
    nix-env -i ffmpeg

(cherry picked from commit 6483cf1d91)
2015-09-03 09:34:28 +02:00
Rok Garbas
f9500fcaae zbar: typo in previous commit 2015-09-03 03:39:35 +02:00
Rok Garbas
bde0f2c062 zbar: ghostscript was missing for zbar 2015-09-03 03:38:44 +02:00
Cillian de Róiste
93a41c510c Remove tessel: too outdated, and broken
(cherry picked from commit 424ad5302e)
2015-09-02 22:14:20 +02:00
Domen Kožar
1a392bd62e racket: don't build docs as it causes failures sometimes 2015-09-02 21:16:00 +02:00
Domen Kožar
6cfbdda1e9 pcg-c: mark as broken on i686 2015-09-02 20:35:46 +02:00
Domen Kožar
36b406fd1b ocaml.asn1-combinators: mark broken on i686 2015-09-02 20:29:09 +02:00
Domen Kožar
dd3c176717 meshlab: broken on i686
(cherry picked from commit 0dfdb8938b)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-02 20:26:22 +02:00
Domen Kožar
57391b7322 qbittorrent: partial revert of 1d78f31b76
It still fails on 32bit:
http://hydra.nixos.org/build/25460116/nixlog/1/raw
2015-09-02 20:23:06 +02:00
Tobias Geerinckx-Rice
b3dd65100a cassandra: use mirrors
Upstream likes to move "old" releases to an archive mirror as soon as a
new one is released. This is now handled for free by mirrors.nix.

(No idea why cs.utah.edu was used to begin with; it's now added to
mirrors.nix. Note that it doesn't support SSL, but that applies to
several others so I don't see the harm.)

(cherry picked from commit 5385a0a82a)
2015-09-02 20:17:05 +02:00
Tobias Geerinckx-Rice
c75c6a95e2 cassandra: 2.1.8 -> 2.1.9
The 2.1.8 sources have been removed upstream.

(cherry picked from commit 6c377c864a)
2015-09-02 20:14:58 +02:00
Domen Kožar
6d928f4fcc rhpl: really remove 2015-09-02 19:25:53 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
2f2a4df986 Manual: Document system.autoUpgrade
(cherry picked from commit e70f8c58cc)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-02 19:23:23 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
9f79592562 If !cfg.mutableUsers, require a password or SSH authorized key
Fixes https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/7308

(cherry picked from commit 6e76765795)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-02 19:22:44 +02:00
Domen Kožar
cd0791f19e remove rhpl, unmaintained since 2009 2015-09-02 19:10:25 +02:00
Shaun Bruce
33a2b03d5f Updated atom to 1.0.10
(cherry picked from commit 6a974efdd2)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-09-02 19:06:58 +02:00
Peter Simons
34189216a6 emacs-haskell-mode: update to version 13.14-169-g0d3569d
(cherry picked from commit f33f8e1b34)
2015-09-02 17:52:59 +02:00
Peter Simons
19a3aa1c5a hoogle: use $NIX_BUILD_CORES to determine the proper level of parallelism for database creation
(cherry picked from commit 07542d12ea)
2015-09-02 17:51:44 +02:00
Peter Simons
f7713cb6b1 hackage-packages.nix: update to 23452bdddd with hackage2nix v20150824-68-ga8b9f17
(cherry picked from commit 7182ef35f4)
2015-09-02 17:51:21 +02:00
Peter Simons
db080e9cde cabal2nix: update to version 20150824-66-gd281a60
This patch fixes https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/9599.

(cherry picked from commit ada81b80fd)
2015-09-02 17:51:19 +02:00
Peter Simons
f6edea1f1c haskell-generic-builder: improve meta.platforms vs. meta.hydraPlatforms logic
hydraPlatforms now defaults to the value of meta.platforms rather than
defaulting to ghc.meta.hydraPlatforms. This solution is, in fact, still
sub-optimal. See https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/9608 for further
details.

(cherry picked from commit dc5bf39bfe)
2015-09-02 16:59:22 +02:00
Bjørn Forsman
ddc34382d2 nixos: document nvidia legacy driver options
(cherry picked from commit bd84ebaa1e)
2015-09-02 13:26:43 +02:00
Peter Simons
2c9596b8ed ikiwiki: use PerlMagick with imagemagickBig rather than the light version
Ikiwiki needs a version of PerlMagick that has ghostscript to fix
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/9473.

This patch is brought to you courtesy of the venerable @vcunat.
2015-09-02 12:57:07 +02:00
Peter Simons
3f79ef5fe9 all-packages.nix: instantiate 'perlPackages' with callPackage rather than import
This allows us to override the attributes passed to the package set, which is
needed to pass "imagemagickBig" to PerlMagic rather than the normal one (see
next commit).

This patch is brought to you courtesy of the venerable @vcunat.
2015-09-02 12:57:07 +02:00
Peter Simons
2352ef5223 hackage-packages.nix: update to 23452bdddd with hackage2nix v20150824-65-g80afb21 2015-09-02 12:45:12 +02:00
Peter Simons
34f347aae8 Disable test suites of Haskell packages RSA and kademlia.
Those test suites run for 2+ hours and thus fail with a timeout error.

(cherry picked from commit c456073e03)
2015-09-02 12:29:17 +02:00
Luca Bruno
60f22a2409 imagemagickBig: enable ghostscript
(cherry picked from commit 873a6ce9a8)
2015-09-02 11:48:01 +02:00
Rok Garbas
df0f7639fd pythonPackages.scikitlearn: fix for python2
test_standard_scaler_numerical_stability test fails on all i686 platforms
2015-09-02 10:37:19 +02:00
Bjørn Forsman
3a3e377cdc freenect: cosmetic (2 space indents)
(cherry picked from commit c54d939d6d)
2015-09-02 10:28:38 +02:00
Thomas Strobel
bb5c3029b5 xen: remove 4.4.1 + fixes compilation of 4.5.x, fixes #9572 2015-09-02 08:34:23 +02:00
Benjamin Staffin
95bcd9ae95 Add hydra links for upcoming 15.09 release
(cherry picked from commit 8ddc086c35)
2015-09-02 06:14:34 +02:00
Peter Jones
2cf6f7892d curaLulzbot: init at 15.02.1-1.03-5064
(cherry picked from commit 674d0a7992)
2015-09-02 06:14:12 +02:00
Kovacsics Robert (NixOS-SSD2)
12be2af723 txt2tags: init at 2.6
txt2tags is a KISS markup language

(cherry picked from commit 7234e89913)
2015-09-02 06:13:56 +02:00
Profpatsch
4ea3e12b1a desktopManagerHandlesLidAndPower default false`
Changes the option and explicitely sets it for each desktopManager.

Reasoning: Currently,
services.xserver.displayManager.desktopManagerHandlesLidAndPower is set
to true by default. This creates a problem for users without desktop
environments activated, since lid management simply doesn't work
(and they have to be lucky to find this option).

See issue #9671

(cherry picked from commit 44c12dc0ff)
2015-09-02 06:13:34 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
fadadfdb09 inotifyTools -> inotify-tools
Fixes #9456.

(cherry picked from commit 9013dc5826)
2015-09-02 06:13:17 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
efca1b8dcb Move some misplaced attributes
(cherry picked from commit 217fbea5f9)
2015-09-02 06:13:01 +02:00
Tobias Geerinckx-Rice
4f49c64675 yodl: Sourceforge -> (fetchFrom)GitHub
Cosmetic tweaks; maintain.

CC@ pSub

(cherry picked from commit cfe12c7edd)
2015-09-02 06:12:26 +02:00
Tobias Geerinckx-Rice
555705da6b icmake: Sourceforge -> (fetchFrom)GitHub
Also add myself as a maintainer.

CC@ pSub

(cherry picked from commit 687d60ec73)
2015-09-02 06:12:00 +02:00
rnhmjoj
199f3a9182 bdf2psf: init at 1.132
(cherry picked from commit d4b4647857)
2015-09-02 06:11:14 +02:00
Gabriel Ebner
3821cfa33c qalculate-gtk: init at 0.9.7
(cherry picked from commit 6b42cd852a)
2015-09-02 06:11:07 +02:00
Andrew Kelley
dbc05b1db2 ffmpeg: 2.7.1 -> 2.7.2
(cherry picked from commit 9dd6f4f6ce)
2015-09-02 06:09:32 +02:00
Kamil Chmielewski
8ca86055d5 bleujeans: fix hanging on connect screen
(cherry picked from commit 4b522294c8)
2015-09-02 06:08:13 +02:00
Nicolas Barbey
1b0f19eab4 fuseiso: init at 20070708
(cherry picked from commit b4215fdda5)
2015-09-02 06:07:56 +02:00
William A. Kennington III
55c0a2ec2b nvidia: 352.30 -> 352.41
(cherry picked from commit dc506110c1)
2015-09-02 06:07:15 +02:00
Nikolay Amiantov
f54020d9c6 wesnoth: 1.10.7 -> 1.12.4
(cherry picked from commit 1d78437848)
2015-09-02 06:06:18 +02:00
Bjørn Forsman
5d8d6fdb63 qt5: embed path to mesa (libGL) in Qt mkspecs file
Fixes this problem, when building apps in QtCreator:

  ...(compile output window)
  g++ -Wl,-rpath,/nix/store/1w7h7p6s2srfw2ady90k7072991lrnpp-qtbase-5.4.2/lib \
      -o qt-test3 main.o mainwindow.o moc_mainwindow.o \
      -L/nix/store/1w7h7p6s2srfw2ady90k7072991lrnpp-qtbase-5.4.2/lib \
      -lQt5Widgets -lQt5Gui -lQt5Core -lGL -lpthread
  /nix/store/b8qhjrwf8sf9ggkjxqqav7f1m6w83bh0-binutils-2.23.1/bin/ld: cannot find -lGL
  collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status

mesa is already in the closure of Qt, so there is no size increase.
The patch is copied into both qt-5.3 and qt-5.4 directories, like other
patches are.

Note that programs still can _run_ against a different libGL (e.g. one
provided by nvidia) by configuring the dynamic linker. For instance,
NixOS sets the LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable to
/run/opengl-driver/lib/, meaning that whatever libGL is found there
will be used instead of the default (mesa).

(cherry picked from commit 06ed82677a)
2015-09-02 06:05:54 +02:00
Daniel Fox Franke
42d3daeb2c cvs-fast-export: don't link against librt
It's superfluous on Linux, and it breaks the build on Darwin.

(cherry picked from commit 07903b1617)
2015-09-02 06:03:43 +02:00
Damien Cassou
f182e4ba7f Change my email address
(cherry picked from commit 41507ce415)
2015-09-02 06:01:30 +02:00
William A. Kennington III
16401f477b kernel: 3.12.46 -> 3.12.47
(cherry picked from commit 5a303519fa)
2015-09-02 06:01:09 +02:00
Enrico Fasoli
33e855b326 ne: init at 3.0.1
ne: building improvements
(cherry picked from commit 0f041e5487)
2015-09-02 06:01:09 +02:00
taku0
34e4caa5ec firefox-bin: 40.0.2 -> 40.0.3
(cherry picked from commit 3f14b5f226)
2015-09-02 06:01:08 +02:00
Benjamin Staffin
af903ecef6 vimproc: Fix when run on non-NixOS linux distros
Prior to this change, if there exists a /lib*/ld-linux*.so.2 on a
system, vimproc will try to load vimproc_linux64.so or
vimproc_linux32.so instead of vimproc_unix.so, which is what nix
actually builds.

(cherry picked from commit a166119486)
2015-09-02 06:00:07 +02:00
Alexander Lebedev
a016d1d8e6 qmidiroute: init at 0.3.0
(cherry picked from commit e96ee79006)
2015-09-02 05:59:42 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
426156be25 Revert "all-packages: warn when using deprecated attributes"
This reverts commit c53018c9a1. This
causes problems for "nix-env -qa", so we'll have to come up with a
clean solution first.

Issue #9456.

(cherry picked from commit 3ea329c6aa)
2015-09-02 05:58:53 +02:00
Cillian de Róiste
3ce61e11d1 Add artha 1.0.3: an offline thesaurus
(cherry picked from commit cef7bccbbf)
2015-09-02 05:53:17 +02:00
Daniel Fox Franke
d95518332f cvs-fast-export: patch shebangs in source tree
This allows unit tests to run successfully in chroot build
environments, which lack /usr/bin/env.

(cherry picked from commit 0912bdfa92)
2015-09-02 05:53:17 +02:00
Daniel Fox Franke
d77c70c72b cvs-fast-export: init at 1.32
(cherry picked from commit 2194295fff)
2015-09-02 05:53:17 +02:00
Daniel Fox Franke
1186b1216a reposurgeon: init at 3.28
(cherry picked from commit 686fec3ce7)
2015-09-02 05:50:26 +02:00
Jeffrey David Johnson
b284a78bf8 add bitcoin-xt as a separate package
(cherry picked from commit 17c0af24d2)
2015-09-02 05:50:26 +02:00
Kamil Chmielewski
2e67227b49 vimPlugins: add molokai
(cherry picked from commit 86b34e3a0d)
2015-09-02 05:50:26 +02:00
Raymond Gauthier
079632eaf2 libreoffice: improvements.
Icons no longer missing (fix #5509).

In `*.desktop` files:

 -  Replaced absolute path to the the store by the program name.

    This is so that files can be dragged elsewhere by the user
    (e.g.: desktop, bar) and still work after upgrade + garbage
    collection and can be shared between machines.

 -  Replace program name `soffice` by program name `libreoffice`
    so that we're sure the desktop file really refers to our
    package's binary and not start office or open office.

Add the possibility of building without the help. This build is
not modular and take a really long time to complete so I want
a mean of improving shortcuts without having to rebuild the
whole thing (see #899). A wrapper script is the next step.

Tested (build and ran the program) with `en_US` only and
without the help module.

(cherry picked from commit d12563475a)
2015-09-02 05:46:30 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
09b4a53025 libunwind: security fix for CVE-2015-3239
Thanks to the monitor. Low security and high rebuild impact, but still...

(cherry picked from commit 2dccca399c)
2015-09-02 05:28:31 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
ff4d55bc00 libevent: remove unused vulnerable 1.4.x version
(cherry picked from commit 0327ee3f8e)
2015-09-02 05:28:31 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
46bddaeede firefox-gtk3: fix crashes by a Fedora-backported patch
These might be the same crashes as with gtk2 and system cairo #9368.

(cherry picked from commit f2d25c5a4d)
2015-09-02 05:28:30 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
134b4b4365 firefox: fix argv0 with enableGTK3 (/cc #9562)
Also add a simple test detecting such problems.

(cherry picked from commit f65b692a07)
2015-09-02 05:28:30 +02:00
Thomas Tuegel
25a2acaab6 makeWrapper: accept --argv0 flag (/cc #9562)
By default `makeWrapper` will not set argv[0] (this is a reversion to
the old default behavior). Based on the breakage we have seen from
changing the default, this is what most people want. The `wrapProgram`
function will send `--argv0 '"$0"'` to `makeWrapper`, i.e. it will
continue to pass-through the argv[0] that the wrapper is called with.

(cherry picked from commit 61cad61ebf)
2015-09-02 05:28:30 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
e0ce2921ee nvidia-x11: don't install libvdpau* that we have already
Besides being redundant to inject libvdpau via LD_LIBRARY_PATH,
currently the drivers come with a vulnerable version.
https://devtalk.nvidia.com/default/topic/873035

(cherry picked from commit 1464a4de57)
2015-09-02 05:27:50 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
c992f44644 libvdpau: security update 1.1 -> 1.1.1
CVE-2015-{5198,5199,5200}

(cherry picked from commit 5d5c053f68)
2015-09-02 05:27:47 +02:00
Rommel M. Martinez
8c6d4588f7 doc/haskell: fix typos (close #9561)
(cherry picked from commit 23a00d212f)
2015-09-02 05:27:46 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
9213a2b435 nixos: kill services.virtualboxGuest to fix #9600
(cherry picked from commit 54c4aab662)
2015-09-02 04:55:48 +02:00
William A. Kennington III
02a7cb17e6 syncthing: Fix top-level expression 2015-09-01 19:28:13 -07:00
Bjørn Forsman
c228f1b559 opencv3: unbreak build (set "-DWITH_IPP=OFF")
OpenCV tries to download IPP itself at build time. That doesn't work
well with nix.

(cherry picked from commit fe85ba5806)
2015-09-01 22:26:08 +02:00
Carles Pagès
e3c57169d1 opencv: add version 3.0
Adding as a separate expression, as it is not api compatible with 2.x.

(cherry picked from commit b4ad13f667)
2015-09-01 22:26:05 +02:00
Rok Garbas
1de04e8d7c pythonPackages.scikitlearn: apply patch for doctests on i686 and skip one test
fixes #9472
related scikit-learn/scikit-learn/#5198, scikit-learn/scikit-learn/#5197
2015-09-01 21:44:11 +02:00
Peter Simons
0b57105c12 haskell-bloomfilter: patch to fix build on 32 bit platforms
(cherry picked from commit 2b71e4643e)
2015-09-01 18:03:30 +02:00
Peter Simons
115a19c3fc haskell-bloomfilter: re-enable 32-bit builds to verify whether the issue has in fact been fixed upstream
(cherry picked from commit 8c1c38ee27)
2015-09-01 17:56:27 +02:00
Peter Simons
602b15894c hackage-packages.nix: update to 53c766e346 with hackage2nix v20150824-62-gb54260a
(cherry picked from commit 64629ec611)
2015-09-01 17:56:21 +02:00
Luca Bruno
87adabe576 cromfs: use gcc 4.8 to fix build on i686 (ZHF)
(cherry picked from commit 561fecb239)
2015-09-01 17:39:20 +02:00
Peter Simons
228b7798b6 haskell-DSA fails its test suite.
(cherry picked from commit c7a9fa11c0)
2015-09-01 17:08:21 +02:00
Peter Simons
2c884f3e1e haskell-amazonka-core: test suite build failure has been fixed upstream
(cherry picked from commit 34687b53e6)
2015-09-01 17:08:09 +02:00
Peter Simons
f541f33fd9 haskell-MFlow: build fixed upstream
(cherry picked from commit 0059984294)
2015-09-01 17:08:00 +02:00
Daniel Fox Franke
c6674f84e2 haskell-comonad: re-enable tests
https://github.com/ekmett/comonad/issues/25 is fixed now and they
work again.

(cherry picked from commit 76a497c95e)
2015-09-01 17:07:49 +02:00
Daniel Fox Franke
b51d230229 haskell-lucid: disable tests
They buggily make assumptions about the order in which strings appear
in a hash table and thereby fail on i686-linux. See
http://hydra.nixos.org/build/25132604/log/raw and
https://github.com/chrisdone/lucid/issues/25

(cherry picked from commit cf3e2a5f5b)
2015-09-01 17:07:28 +02:00
Peter Simons
85113ef531 hackage-packages.nix: update to e6301b9ed8 with hackage2nix v20150824-58-g80c45f8
(cherry picked from commit c30410e2dc)
2015-09-01 17:05:45 +02:00
Kosyrev Serge
f8f2f399be ghcNokinds: 2015-07-18 -> 2015-08-26 2015-09-01 17:03:45 +02:00
Peter Simons
f2d10e2c21 ghc-head: update to current HEAD 2015-09-01 17:03:45 +02:00
Peter Simons
8011ceec44 haskell-generic-builder: stop pre-pending "haskell-" to package names
A derivation of the Hackage package "foo" is called "haskell-foo" if it is a
library, but only "foo" if it is an executable (without a library). This
distinction used to be fine when Haskell packages where visible to operations
like "nix-env -qa" or "nix-env -i", but after our switch to Haskell NG it has
no more purpose. Consequently, this patch removes the name prefix from all
Haskell packages -- every Haskell package is now called exactly like it's
called on Hackage.

Closes https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/9538.

(cherry picked from commit 4a8797d827)
2015-09-01 17:02:40 +02:00
Peter Simons
d690c8c2ea ghc-7.10.2: enable documentation builds by passing the required XML/XSLT toolchain
Closes https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/9265.

Also, pass a hscolour binary to get source code links in the generated Haddock
documentation: closes https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/2985.

(cherry picked from commit dea5d87e42)
2015-09-01 17:02:31 +02:00
Peter Simons
1375be2edd ghc: install bash completion shipped in version 7.10.x and later
Addresses one half of https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/9265.

(cherry picked from commit de2c043d5f)
2015-09-01 17:02:25 +02:00
Peter Simons
8a85d5c999 ghc: drop obsolete version 7.10.1
The new 7.10.2 version works fine.

(cherry picked from commit d7055b15b7)
2015-09-01 17:02:18 +02:00
Luca Bruno
e244cfeb35 rosegarden: disable parallel builds
(cherry picked from commit 65c1afd238)
2015-09-01 14:37:56 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
42b95b2a32 Doh
(cherry picked from commit 79a8a9327d)
2015-09-01 14:21:08 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
11761d2117 programs.ssh.knownHosts: Use attribute name
This allows writing:

  programs.ssh.knownHosts."10.1.2.3".publicKey = "bar";

instead of

  programs.ssh.knownHosts = [ { hostNames = [ "10.1.2.3" ]; publicKey = "bar"; } ];

(cherry picked from commit f6eece6f8f)
2015-09-01 14:19:33 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
b023d0dc2c programs.ssh.knownHosts: Use submodule
(cherry picked from commit 7c6ff6c1da)
2015-09-01 14:19:28 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
d6f69cb3d9 Rename services.openssh.knownHosts -> programs.ssh.knownHosts
This option configures the SSH client, not the server.

(cherry picked from commit 287c08d8a3)
2015-09-01 14:19:23 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
bdf6095a1d bibtex-tools: Mark as broken
Tarball is missing.

(cherry picked from commit 4725d21583)
2015-09-01 14:18:48 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
b68fc67f9d openvpn: Update to 2.3.7
(cherry picked from commit 9000ddce90)
2015-09-01 14:18:40 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
80548a869d Revert "openvpn: 2.3.6 -> 2.3.8"
This reverts commit f547eaab44 because
it breaks asking passphrased via systemd.

(cherry picked from commit a88b9bf19e)
2015-09-01 14:18:36 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
dc87ca0377 Make proxy test more robust
http://hydra.nixos.org/build/25322489
(cherry picked from commit c839c988f4)
2015-09-01 14:18:30 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
505fa35cad Mark some packages with undownloadable source as broken
(cherry picked from commit 8fc039188e)
2015-09-01 14:18:16 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
55fd40b6a3 praat: Update to 5417
Mostly because the old URL didn't work.

(cherry picked from commit 7f0c5a2c8f)
2015-09-01 14:18:12 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
b76c2cd198 vboot_reference: Fix Git URL
(cherry picked from commit 0f78de00b8)
2015-09-01 14:18:08 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
07c2ffa70d Fix NFSv4 test
http://hydra.nixos.org/build/25349071
(cherry picked from commit ea7b5bb8b0)
2015-09-01 14:18:01 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
a882eaa168 Fix tests that use the Valgrind docs
(cherry picked from commit 1852e65776)
2015-09-01 14:17:42 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
eff6424306 valgrind: Separate doc output
(cherry picked from commit 4e41b64511)
2015-09-01 14:17:25 +02:00
Luca Bruno
a2d110f41f lttng-modules: 2.6.0-5 -> 2.6.2-1, fixes build on kernel 3.18
(cherry picked from commit ffb8143cb1)
2015-09-01 14:11:29 +02:00
Cillian de Róiste
dd27ecff9d helmholtz: unset the curl user-agent to fix the download
I've checked this with the developer to ensure it isn't blocked
deliberately and she said it was just a problem with the hosting
provider, so it is fine to work around it.

(cherry picked from commit 3c7f1431c0)
2015-09-01 13:24:33 +02:00
Luca Bruno
76d7b9f24b ngrok: fix build
(cherry picked from commit 24ae56e7fe)
2015-09-01 11:59:14 +02:00
lethalman
5935245f67 Merge pull request #9589 from ragnard/rkt-fix-image-download
rkt: Don't download stage1 image during build (fixes hydra build).
(cherry picked from commit 81e47bce00)
2015-09-01 11:18:54 +02:00
Rok Garbas
2a0d180693 pythonPackages: fix pyutil on pypy platform 2015-09-01 11:10:52 +02:00
William A. Kennington III
2f989502ef go: Backport changes from master
This also includes a change to gnu parallel to support being used inside
of a nix builder.
2015-09-01 01:57:19 -07:00
Vladimír Čunát
95e761660b desktop and xmonad wrappers: preferLocalBuild
Also no substitution.

(cherry picked from commit b92c4a51e6)
2015-09-01 09:44:08 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
2a237e7ab3 root: fix build by -lX11
The pkgconfig change didn't help, but I'd leave it in.

(cherry picked from commit a839a48b0a)
2015-09-01 08:23:30 +02:00
Tobias Geerinckx-Rice
2d66fa679a fmit: qt53Full -> modular qt5 (currently 5.4)
See https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/9560.

"Native" Qt audio capture is now broken (patches/time welcome). ALSA
should work just as well and is now enabled by default until Qt is fixed.

(cherry picked from commit be91ec0fd7)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-08-31 19:58:55 +02:00
Luca Bruno
164f2da752 goPackages.image: update to fix build 2015-08-31 14:24:43 +02:00
Luca Bruno
8835e9b121 mongodb-tools: fix top-level definition 2015-08-31 14:19:07 +02:00
Luca Bruno
2ee89e421f mongo-tools: fix build and use go 1.5 2015-08-31 14:17:52 +02:00
Nikolay Amiantov
e87797893e deadbeef: fix patch checksum 2015-08-31 14:58:56 +03:00
Cillian de Róiste
0575243db2 mednafen: fix src url (sourceforge -> mednafen.fobby.net)
Also bump the minor version 0.9.38.5 -> 0.9.38.6

(cherry picked from commit 75f880b1d1)
2015-08-31 13:51:34 +02:00
Aycan iRiCAN
5fba4c5df2 cabal2nix: fixed sha256 hash
(cherry picked from commit 523cd395c7)
2015-08-31 13:20:03 +02:00
Hoang Xuan Phu
986bce5d83 add note about using profiledHaskellPackages
(cherry picked from commit 4f4bf1f79c)
2015-08-31 13:01:40 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
8e8e23de33 all-packages: warn when using deprecated attributes
The aliases are split into two groups, as mass-renaming is anticipated.
Also added fold markers as in the rest of file.
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/9456

(cherry picked from commit c53018c9a1)
2015-08-31 09:57:24 +02:00
Tuomas Tynkkynen
6300b4717b xrdb: Use mcpp as the preprocessor
Close #9501, fixes #9480.

By default, xrdb uses GCC as the preprocessor at runtime for X resource files.
However, gcc is a large dependency, so replace it with mcpp, a much smaller
preprocessor (currently under a megabyte on i686).

Arch Linux already does this as well, so this should be relatively safe:
https://projects.archlinux.org/svntogit/packages.git/tree/trunk/PKGBUILD?h=packages/xorg-xrdb

(cherry picked from commit 6b866a37fc)
2015-08-31 09:57:07 +02:00
Daniel Fox Franke
c6e2c62fe4 policycoreutils: fix i686-linux compilation error, closes #9544
This adds a patch to quiet a compiler warning which would be harmless
except that it breaks the build due to use of -Werror.
See http://hydra.nixos.org/build/25151888/nixlog/1
2015-08-31 09:39:54 +02:00
Daniel Fox Franke
9491dad2ea openafs-client: 1.6.9 -> 1.6.14, fix build
* Upgrade 1.6.9 -> 1.6.14
* Support all kernels
* Clean up nested smart-quotes that seemed to be causing a build failure
* Remove redundant `assert isLinux`: already checked by meta.platforms

(cherry picked from commit dbf8feb815)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-08-31 00:18:42 +02:00
Jaka Hudoklin
838034c637 docker: add blkid from utillinux to path
(cherry picked from commit ff0575a2f1)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-08-31 00:15:13 +02:00
Domen Kožar
b4b6b914c4 nettle27: remove uneeded package superseeded by 3.x 2015-08-31 00:07:36 +02:00
Frederik Rietdijk
2ea19c7241 scikit-learn: fix i686 build failures
Currently i686 builds fail because a couple of doctests fail.
The values are correct, but the dtype is missing.
This commit disables doctests.

(cherry picked from commit 46e51883d8)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-08-31 00:06:10 +02:00
Cillian de Róiste
8f826c395d calf: fix src URL (sourceforge->calf-studio-gear.org)
(cherry picked from commit 2c5e423a77)
2015-08-30 19:04:13 +02:00
Thomas Tuegel
7c37002c16 wrapFirefox: remove (broken) sed trick
This sed trick to set argv[0] is made obsolete by c234f37, which sets
argv[0] correctly anyway.
2015-08-30 09:22:37 -05:00
Peter Simons
e979c0f3a1 haskell-lib: make sdistTarball and buildStrictly functions fuzzier to cope with Hydra builds
In Hydra CI environments, the version strings we get from Hydra don't
necessarily match those hard-coded into the Cabal files. To make those builds
succeed anyway, we have to apply some pattern matching.

(cherry picked from commit 78f1720532)
2015-08-30 15:20:53 +02:00
Thomas Tuegel
8b4ab1a043 cantor: patch to fix filename string type 2015-08-30 07:24:41 -05:00
Peter Simons
8531cd862e cabal2nix: add myself as a maintainer
(cherry picked from commit b2c3c58476)
2015-08-30 12:50:59 +02:00
Thomas Tuegel
1a49b0b189 Merge branch 'qt-creator' into release-15.09
Backport some recent fixes for qt5Full and qtcreator to the stable
branch.
2015-08-29 18:15:18 -05:00
Thomas Tuegel
52761ad5b9 qt5Full: build from Qt 5.4 with qtEnv 2015-08-29 18:14:52 -05:00
Thomas Tuegel
101a31964b Add qtEnv 2015-08-29 18:14:43 -05:00
Thomas Tuegel
a27531323e Merge pull request #9343 from akaWolf/qtcreator
qtcreator: refactor for using qt54; qt4SDK, qt5SDK: commented
2015-08-29 18:14:10 -05:00
Benjamin Staffin
ead5cd80f9 consul: revert to stable 0.5.2 rather than a snapshot
Follup to #9515: It appears that Prometheus doesn't actually require an
unreleased version of Consul.
2015-08-29 23:28:11 +02:00
Rok Garbas
5e31bd3d40 pythonPackages.pycdio: applied patch since driver_id can be also long type 2015-08-29 22:04:11 +02:00
Rok Garbas
a902e70d5c pythonPackages.gcutil: fix pinning of google_apputils version
also added some more metadata to the package
2015-08-29 21:38:25 +02:00
Rok Garbas
30a342568c pythonPackages.qscintilla: dont build on py3 and pypy
because qscintilla is not a standard python package ``buildPythonPackage`` is
not used and ``disabled`` does do anything.

diff --git a/pkgs/top-level/python-packages.nix
b/pkgs/top-level/python-packages.nix index 93d40c3..925ceb0 100644 ---
a/pkgs/top-level/python-packages.nix +++ b/pkgs/top-level/python-packages.nix
@@ -11823,35 +11823,36 @@ let }; };

-  qscintilla = pkgs.stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
-    # TODO: Qt5 support
-    name = "qscintilla-${version}";
-    version = pkgs.qscintilla.version;
-    disabled = isPy3k || isPyPy;
-
-    src = pkgs.qscintilla.src;
-
-    buildInputs = with pkgs; [ xorg.lndir qt4 pyqt4 python ];
-
-    preConfigure = ''
-      mkdir -p $out
-      lndir ${pkgs.pyqt4} $out
-      cd Python
-      ${python.executable} ./configure-old.py \
-          --destdir $out/lib/${python.libPrefix}/site-packages/PyQt4 \
-          --apidir $out/api/${python.libPrefix} \
-          -n ${pkgs.qscintilla}/include \
-          -o ${pkgs.qscintilla}/lib \
-          --sipdir $out/share/sip
-    '';
+  qscintilla = if isPy3k || isPyPy
+    then throw "qscintilla-${pkgs.qscintilla.version} not supported for interpreter ${python.executable}"
+    else pkgs.stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
+      # TODO: Qt5 support
+      name = "qscintilla-${version}";
+      version = pkgs.qscintilla.version;
+
+      src = pkgs.qscintilla.src;
+
+      buildInputs = with pkgs; [ xorg.lndir qt4 pyqt4 python ];
+
+      preConfigure = ''
+        mkdir -p $out
+        lndir ${pkgs.pyqt4} $out
+        cd Python
+        ${python.executable} ./configure-old.py \
+            --destdir $out/lib/${python.libPrefix}/site-packages/PyQt4 \
+            --apidir $out/api/${python.libPrefix} \
+            -n ${pkgs.qscintilla}/include \
+            -o ${pkgs.qscintilla}/lib \
+            --sipdir $out/share/sip
+      '';

-    meta = with stdenv.lib; {
-      description = "A Python binding to QScintilla, Qt based text editing control";
-      license = licenses.lgpl21Plus;
-      maintainers = [ "abcz2.uprola@gmail.com" ];
-      platforms = platforms.linux;
+      meta = with stdenv.lib; {
+        description = "A Python binding to QScintilla, Qt based text editing control";
+        license = licenses.lgpl21Plus;
+        maintainers = [ "abcz2.uprola@gmail.com" ];
+        platforms = platforms.linux;
+      };
     };
-  };

   qserve = buildPythonPackage rec {
2015-08-29 21:26:54 +02:00
Peter Simons
c20433c779 haskell-MFlow: fix build
(cherry picked from commit 6b1bcc66ae)
2015-08-29 20:02:06 +02:00
Daniel Fox Franke
337c34c88a haskellPackages.tar: disable tests
They fail on i686-linux: http://hydra.nixos.org/build/25088435/nixlog/2

(cherry picked from commit 17667cd6ac)
2015-08-29 16:10:08 +02:00
Bjørn Forsman
c925898c7e calibre: 2.35.0 -> 2.36.0
Unbreaks build, as the 2.35.0 source URL returns HTTP error 404.

(cherry picked from commit f6135c9fba)
2015-08-29 16:00:16 +02:00
Peter Simons
9b22f386fa Revert "Added K Framework package."
This reverts commit de02110903. The package doesn't
compile: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/7419#issuecomment-135972366.

(cherry picked from commit 69b648ea95)
2015-08-29 15:39:22 +02:00
Joachim Fasting
3c53718204 fuppes: mark as broken
This package has been broken since 2014-01-20, according to Hydra [1]. I tried
various ad-hoc patching & adding missing dependencies, uncovering yet more
errors. Updating is also out of the question, as nixpkgs already contains the
latest version.

[1]: https://hydra.nixos.org/build/25188337

(cherry picked from commit 624eba1885)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-08-29 14:54:49 +02:00
Domen Kožar
dc8e1c199c petrifoo: fix build 2015-08-29 14:12:18 +02:00
Daniel Fox Franke
3490a95bca glob2: fix build failure
The same issue was reported here to Debian:
https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=746854

Apparently this failure only cropped up with g++-4.9, but looking at
the code I have no idea how it ever worked without this patch.

(cherry picked from commit 7f26d95dcf)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-08-29 14:05:54 +02:00
Benjamin Staffin
1b89ad283f prometheus: 0.14.0 -> 0.15.1 2015-08-29 14:02:27 +02:00
Benjamin Staffin
be47fc4672 goPackages: update various Prometheus dependencies
Improving style and adding dates along the dependency tree.
2015-08-29 14:02:27 +02:00
Domen Kožar
172d2793b9 pythonPackages.protobuf: disable on pypy 2015-08-29 13:16:22 +02:00
Frederik Rietdijk
6ad387b378 importlib: disable for Python>2.6 and PyPy
importlib is part of the standard library for Python > 2.6 and PyPy.

Tested with nix-shell for all *Packages.importlib versions.

(cherry picked from commit 50aed1ee10)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-08-29 13:13:18 +02:00
Frederik Rietdijk
9bb81411a9 nibabel: remove failing test
One of the tests explicitly calls python, which will fail with python3.
The issue has been reported upstream,
https://github.com/nipy/nibabel/issues/341
For now, remove the test.

Fix also the license type.

(cherry picked from commit 2927f1a883)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-08-29 13:11:10 +02:00
Frederik Rietdijk
2b689c9a51 pyfribidi: disable for pypy
Extension module. pypy is unsupported.

(cherry picked from commit 15aa28f71b)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-08-29 13:11:01 +02:00
Sibi
113d702d13 Add myself as maintainer (close #9495).
Related to https://github.com/NixOS/cabal2nix/pull/196

(cherry picked from commit 89cec3c895)
2015-08-29 10:38:10 +02:00
Peter Simons
a9fbc485ae doc: add "other resources" section to haskell-users-guide.xml
(cherry picked from commit ab37ad22f7)
2015-08-28 23:00:17 +02:00
Peter Simons
27858fde0f haskell-modules: synchronize overrides with "master" at d34f7ded49
This should reduce the number of Haskell related build errors to zero on
Linux/x86_64 and (hopefully) on Linux/i686, too. Further efforts are necessary
to achieve the same on Darwin.

This patches is related to https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/9471.
2015-08-28 22:31:25 +02:00
Peter Simons
c43e9a5e7b hackage-packages.nix: update to ca23e76c2e with hackage2nix v20150824-45-g9a3a80d 2015-08-28 22:29:50 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
4a63983ba3 Don't barf JSON at users in error messages
(cherry picked from commit f15270833a)
2015-08-28 20:55:39 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
13715ccddb Revert "Apache service module: allow compression"
This reverts commit 164f6ff2a8 per
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/9407#issuecomment-134523359
(it's too site-specific). Furthermore this should be an option at the
virtual host level.

(cherry picked from commit 9d82f7e53e)
2015-08-28 20:55:20 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
7e3a8b382a Rename rl-unstable.xml -> rl-1509.xml
(cherry picked from commit d4ccd68648)
2015-08-28 20:54:35 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
33d3fe8a08 firefox: Update to 40.0.3
(cherry picked from commit 0619a23236)
2015-08-28 20:54:10 +02:00
Domen Kožar
ca93c2592d hedgewars: add missing patch
(cherry picked from commit 93e8a121c8)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-08-28 17:09:53 +02:00
Luca Bruno
68a4111111 gcloud-golang: mark as broken
(cherry picked from commit 01a874b3cf)
2015-08-28 15:19:42 +02:00
Domen Kožar
d48f46c1f4 hedgewars: 0.9.20.5 -> 0.9.21, fix build 2015-08-28 13:59:57 +02:00
Luca Bruno
9be7d99671 gcr: 3.14.0 -> 3.16.0, should fix race condition during build
(cherry picked from commit 77354ebacd)
2015-08-28 11:35:41 +02:00
Frederik Rietdijk
7d1a63d173 gmpy/gmpy2 disable for PyPy
gmpy and gmpy2 are both extension modules that cannot be used with PyPy.

(cherry picked from commit 6ec74dfdef)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-08-28 10:28:20 +02:00
Domen Kožar
43b3f6e59d setuptools: 18.0.1 -> 18.2 2015-08-27 18:45:48 +02:00
Domen Kožar
6339f48dfb Revert "vagrant: use ruby 2.2"
This reverts commit c00405d8d9.
2015-08-27 13:41:55 +02:00
Domen Kožar
59e02e5d61 docker: fix build on i686
(cherry picked from commit e65fce3af6)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-08-27 13:22:54 +02:00
Domen Kožar
959ab2ebcc fix python_fedora build 2015-08-27 12:52:23 +02:00
Luca Bruno
ec9ccc6865 pidginsipe: add nss and nspr (ZHF)
(cherry picked from commit c91d360cec)
2015-08-27 12:30:04 +02:00
Luca Bruno
4a1c7fdaac freeswitch: use gcc 4.8 to fix build (ZHF)
(cherry picked from commit 591d43ec91)
2015-08-27 12:00:42 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
a905765f1b firefox: Build with internal cairo
This might fix the recent segfaults, according to
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1253086.

Fixes #9368.

(cherry picked from commit 320f963e16)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-08-27 11:34:39 +02:00
Domen Kožar
434a06532d mongodb-tools, drive, bosun, scollector: use Go 1.4
(cherry picked from commit 9855a8fcc0)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-08-27 11:34:00 +02:00
Domen Kožar
5384c08ea6 upgrade python-fedora, taskw 2015-08-27 11:16:04 +02:00
Bjørn Forsman
1af712b95c opencv: remove duplicated -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release flag
The standard builder already does this.

(cherry picked from commit ac613f0748)
2015-08-27 10:54:50 +02:00
Domen Kožar
c00405d8d9 vagrant: use ruby 2.2 2015-08-27 10:51:37 +02:00
Jascha Geerds
db542ceecf cups: Fix printing test
(cherry picked from commit ab70c601b6)
Signed-off-by: Domen Kožar <domen@dev.si>
2015-08-27 09:37:31 +02:00
Domen Kožar
7ea892d49e Get rid of newline in .version 2015-08-27 00:33:49 +02:00
Domen Kožar
f8785253d7 set the channel and commit count in the release 2015-08-27 00:25:31 +02:00
Domen Kožar
423f7ad646 15.08 -> 15.09 2015-08-27 00:12:40 +02:00
20006 changed files with 913806 additions and 1346497 deletions

View File

@@ -1,28 +0,0 @@
# EditorConfig configuration for nixpkgs
# http://EditorConfig.org
# Top-most EditorConfig file
root = true
# Unix-style newlines with a newline ending every file, utf-8 charset
[*]
end_of_line = lf
insert_final_newline = true
trim_trailing_whitespace = true
charset = utf-8
# see https://nixos.org/nixpkgs/manual/#chap-conventions
# Match nix/ruby/docbook files, set indent to spaces with width of two
[*.{nix,rb,xml}]
indent_style = space
indent_size = 2
# Match shell/python/perl scripts, set indent to spaces with width of four
[*.{sh,py,pl}]
indent_style = space
indent_size = 4
# Match diffs, avoid to trim trailing whitespace
[*.{diff,patch}]
trim_trailing_whitespace = false

16
.gitattributes vendored
View File

@@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
**/deps.nix linguist-generated
**/node-packages.nix linguist-generated
pkgs/applications/editors/emacs-modes/*-generated.nix linguist-generated
pkgs/development/r-modules/*-packages.nix linguist-generated
pkgs/development/haskell-modules/hackage-packages.nix linguist-generated
pkgs/development/beam-modules/hex-packages.nix linguist-generated
doc/** linguist-documentation
doc/default.nix linguist-documentation=false
nixos/doc/** linguist-documentation
nixos/doc/default.nix linguist-documentation=false
nixos/modules/module-list.nix merge=union
# pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix merge=union

133
.github/CODEOWNERS vendored
View File

@@ -1,133 +0,0 @@
# CODEOWNERS file
#
# This file is used to describe who owns what in this repository. This file does not
# replace `meta.maintainers` but is instead used for other things than derivations
# and modules, like documentation, package sets, and other assets.
#
# For documentation on this file, see https://help.github.com/articles/about-codeowners/
# Mentioned users will get code review requests.
# This file
/.github/CODEOWNERS @edolstra
# Libraries
/lib @edolstra @nbp
/lib/systems @nbp @ericson2314 @matthewbauer
/lib/generators.nix @edolstra @nbp @Profpatsch
/lib/debug.nix @edolstra @nbp @Profpatsch
# Nixpkgs Internals
/default.nix @nbp
/pkgs/top-level/default.nix @nbp @Ericson2314
/pkgs/top-level/impure.nix @nbp @Ericson2314
/pkgs/top-level/stage.nix @nbp @Ericson2314 @matthewbauer
/pkgs/top-level/splice.nix @Ericson2314 @matthewbauer
/pkgs/top-level/release-cross.nix @Ericson2314 @matthewbauer
/pkgs/stdenv/generic @Ericson2314 @matthewbauer
/pkgs/stdenv/cross @Ericson2314 @matthewbauer
/pkgs/build-support/cc-wrapper @Ericson2314 @orivej
/pkgs/build-support/bintools-wrapper @Ericson2314 @orivej
/pkgs/build-support/setup-hooks @Ericson2314
# NixOS Internals
/nixos/default.nix @nbp
/nixos/lib/from-env.nix @nbp
/nixos/lib/eval-config.nix @nbp
/nixos/doc/manual/configuration/abstractions.xml @nbp
/nixos/doc/manual/configuration/config-file.xml @nbp
/nixos/doc/manual/configuration/config-syntax.xml @nbp
/nixos/doc/manual/configuration/modularity.xml @nbp
/nixos/doc/manual/development/assertions.xml @nbp
/nixos/doc/manual/development/meta-attributes.xml @nbp
/nixos/doc/manual/development/option-declarations.xml @nbp
/nixos/doc/manual/development/option-def.xml @nbp
/nixos/doc/manual/development/option-types.xml @nbp
/nixos/doc/manual/development/replace-modules.xml @nbp
/nixos/doc/manual/development/writing-modules.xml @nbp
/nixos/doc/manual/man-nixos-option.xml @nbp
/nixos/modules/installer/tools/nixos-option.sh @nbp
# NixOS modules
/nixos/modules @Infinisil
# Python-related code and docs
/maintainers/scripts/update-python-libraries @FRidh
/pkgs/top-level/python-packages.nix @FRidh
/pkgs/development/interpreters/python @FRidh
/pkgs/development/python-modules @FRidh
/doc/languages-frameworks/python.section.md @FRidh
# Haskell
/pkgs/development/compilers/ghc @peti @ryantm @basvandijk
/pkgs/development/haskell-modules @peti @ryantm @basvandijk
/pkgs/development/haskell-modules/default.nix @peti @ryantm @basvandijk
/pkgs/development/haskell-modules/generic-builder.nix @peti @ryantm @basvandijk
/pkgs/development/haskell-modules/hoogle.nix @peti @ryantm @basvandijk
# Perl
/pkgs/development/interpreters/perl @volth
/pkgs/top-level/perl-packages.nix @volth
/pkgs/development/perl-modules @volth
# R
/pkgs/applications/science/math/R @peti
/pkgs/development/r-modules @peti
# Ruby
/pkgs/development/interpreters/ruby @alyssais @zimbatm
/pkgs/development/ruby-modules @alyssais @zimbatm
# Rust
/pkgs/development/compilers/rust @Mic92 @LnL7
# Darwin-related
/pkgs/stdenv/darwin @NixOS/darwin-maintainers
/pkgs/os-specific/darwin @NixOS/darwin-maintainers
# C compilers
/pkgs/development/compilers/gcc @matthewbauer
/pkgs/development/compilers/llvm @matthewbauer
# Compatibility stuff
/pkgs/top-level/unix-tools.nix @matthewbauer
/pkgs/development/tools/xcbuild @matthewbauer
# Beam-related (Erlang, Elixir, LFE, etc)
/pkgs/development/beam-modules @gleber
/pkgs/development/interpreters/erlang @gleber
/pkgs/development/interpreters/lfe @gleber
/pkgs/development/interpreters/elixir @gleber
/pkgs/development/tools/build-managers/rebar @gleber
/pkgs/development/tools/build-managers/rebar3 @gleber
/pkgs/development/tools/erlang @gleber
# Jetbrains
/pkgs/applications/editors/jetbrains @edwtjo
# Eclipse
/pkgs/applications/editors/eclipse @rycee
# https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/31401
/lib/licenses.nix @ghost
# Qt / KDE
/pkgs/applications/kde @ttuegel
/pkgs/desktops/plasma-5 @ttuegel
/pkgs/development/libraries/kde-frameworks @ttuegel
/pkgs/development/libraries/qt-5 @ttuegel
# PostgreSQL and related stuff
/pkgs/servers/sql/postgresql @thoughtpolice
/nixos/modules/services/databases/postgresql.xml @thoughtpolice
/nixos/modules/services/databases/postgresql.nix @thoughtpolice
/nixos/tests/postgresql.nix @thoughtpolice
# Dhall
/pkgs/development/dhall-modules @Gabriel439 @Profpatsch
/pkgs/development/interpreters/dhall @Gabriel439 @Profpatsch
# Idris
/pkgs/development/idris-modules @Infinisil
# Bazel
/pkgs/development/tools/build-managers/bazel @mboes @Profpatsch

View File

@@ -1,54 +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 commit messages in the following way:
```
(pkg-name | nixos/<module>): (from -> to | init at version | refactor | etc)
(Motivation for change. Additional information.)
```
For consistency, there should not be a period at the end of the commit message's summary line (the first line of the commit message).
Examples:
* nginx: init at 2.0.1
* firefox: 54.0.1 -> 55.0
* nixos/hydra: add bazBaz option
Dual baz behavior is needed to do foo.
* nixos/nginx: refactor config generation
The old config generation system used impure shell scripts and could break in specific circumstances (see #1234).
* `meta.description` should:
* Be capitalized.
* Not start with the package name.
* Not have a period at the end.
* `meta.license` must be set and fit the upstream license.
* If there is no upstream license, `meta.license` should default to `stdenv.lib.licenses.unfree`.
* `meta.maintainers` must be set.
See the nixpkgs manual for more details on [standard meta-attributes](https://nixos.org/nixpkgs/manual/#sec-standard-meta-attributes) and on how to [submit changes to nixpkgs](https://nixos.org/nixpkgs/manual/#chap-submitting-changes).
## Writing good commit messages
In addition to writing properly formatted commit messages, it's important to include relevant information so other developers can later understand *why* a change was made. While this information usually can be found by digging code, mailing list/Discourse archives, pull request discussions or upstream changes, it may require a lot of work.
For package version upgrades and such a one-line commit message is usually sufficient.
## Reviewing contributions
See the nixpkgs manual for more details on how to [Review contributions](https://nixos.org/nixpkgs/manual/#sec-reviewing-contributions).

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@@ -1,12 +0,0 @@
## Issue description
### Steps to reproduce
## Technical details
Please run `nix-shell -p nix-info --run "nix-info -m"` and paste the
results.

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@@ -1,21 +0,0 @@
###### Motivation for this change
###### Things done
<!-- Please check what applies. Note that these are not hard requirements but merely serve as information for reviewers. -->
- [ ] Tested using sandboxing ([nix.useSandbox](http://nixos.org/nixos/manual/options.html#opt-nix.useSandbox) on NixOS, or option `sandbox` in [`nix.conf`](http://nixos.org/nix/manual/#sec-conf-file) on non-NixOS)
- Built on platform(s)
- [ ] NixOS
- [ ] macOS
- [ ] other Linux distributions
- [ ] Tested via one or more NixOS test(s) if existing and applicable for the change (look inside [nixos/tests](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/nixos/tests))
- [ ] Tested compilation of all pkgs that depend on this change using `nix-shell -p nox --run "nox-review wip"`
- [ ] Tested execution of all binary files (usually in `./result/bin/`)
- [ ] Determined the impact on package closure size (by running `nix path-info -S` before and after)
- [ ] Assured whether relevant documentation is up to date
- [ ] Fits [CONTRIBUTING.md](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/.github/CONTRIBUTING.md).
---

5
.gitignore vendored
View File

@@ -12,6 +12,7 @@ result-*
.DS_Store
/pkgs/applications/kde-apps-*/tmp/
/pkgs/development/libraries/kde-frameworks-*/tmp/
/pkgs/development/libraries/qt-5/*/tmp/
/pkgs/desktops/kde-5/*/tmp/
/pkgs/development/mobile/androidenv/xml/*
/pkgs/desktops/plasma-*/tmp/

6
.travis.yml Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,6 @@
language: python
python: "3.4"
sudo: required
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 @@
19.03
15.09

12
CONTRIBUTING.md Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,12 @@
# How to contribute
## 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
See the nixpkgs manual for 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).

13
COPYING
View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
Copyright (c) 2003-2019 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
@@ -18,3 +18,14 @@ NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE
LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION
OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION
WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
======================================================================
Note: the license above does not apply to the packages built by the
Nix Packages collection, merely to the package descriptions (i.e., Nix
expressions, build scripts, etc.). Also, the license does not apply
to some of the binaries used for bootstrapping Nixpkgs (e.g.,
pkgs/stdenv/linux/tools/bash). It also might not apply to patches
included in Nixpkgs, which may be derivative works of the packages to
which they apply. The aforementioned artifacts are all covered by the
licenses of the respective packages.

View File

@@ -1,47 +1,44 @@
[<img src="https://nixos.org/logo/nixos-hires.png" width="500px" alt="logo" />](https://nixos.org/nixos)
[<img src="http://nixos.org/logo/nixos-hires.png" width="500px" alt="logo" />](https://nixos.org/nixos)
[![Code Triagers Badge](https://www.codetriage.com/nixos/nixpkgs/badges/users.svg)](https://www.codetriage.com/nixos/nixpkgs)
[![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)](http://www.issuestats.com/github/nixos/nixpkgs)
[![Issue Stats](http://www.issuestats.com/github/nixos/nixpkgs/badge/issue)](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](https://hydra.nixos.org/)
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 https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs-channels.git
% 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-19.03` for the latest
custom changes on top of one of the channels, e.g. `nixos-14.12` for the latest
release and `nixos-unstable` for the latest successful build of master:
```
% git remote update channels
% git rebase channels/nixos-19.03
% git rebase channels/nixos-14.12
```
For pull requests, please rebase onto nixpkgs `master`.
For pull-requests, please rebase onto nixpkgs `master`.
[NixOS](https://nixos.org/nixos/) Linux distribution source code is located inside
[NixOS](https://nixos.org/nixos/) linux distribution source code is located inside
`nixos/` folder.
* [NixOS installation instructions](https://nixos.org/nixos/manual/#ch-installation)
* [Documentation (Nix Expression Language chapter)](https://nixos.org/nix/manual/#ch-expression-language)
* [Manual (How to write packages for Nix)](https://nixos.org/nixpkgs/manual/)
* [Manual (NixOS)](https://nixos.org/nixos/manual/)
* [Community maintained wiki](https://nixos.wiki/)
* [Continuous package builds for unstable/master](https://hydra.nixos.org/jobset/nixos/trunk-combined)
* [Continuous package builds for 19.03 release](https://hydra.nixos.org/jobset/nixos/release-19.03)
* [Continuous package builds for 14.12 release](https://hydra.nixos.org/jobset/nixos/release-14.12)
* [Continuous package builds for 15.09 release](https://hydra.nixos.org/jobset/nixos/release-15.09)
* [Tests for unstable/master](https://hydra.nixos.org/job/nixos/trunk-combined/tested#tabs-constituents)
* [Tests for 19.03 release](https://hydra.nixos.org/job/nixos/release-19.03/tested#tabs-constituents)
* [Tests for 14.12 release](https://hydra.nixos.org/job/nixos/release-14.12/tested#tabs-constituents)
* [Tests for 15.09 release](https://hydra.nixos.org/job/nixos/release-15.09/tested#tabs-constituents)
Communication:
* [Discourse Forum](https://discourse.nixos.org/)
* [Mailing list](http://lists.science.uu.nl/mailman/listinfo/nix-dev)
* [IRC - #nixos on freenode.net](irc://irc.freenode.net/#nixos)
Note: MIT license does not apply to the packages built by Nixpkgs, merely to
the package descriptions (Nix expressions, build scripts, and so on). It also
might not apply to patches included in Nixpkgs, which may be derivative works
of the packages to which they apply. The aforementioned artifacts are all
covered by the licenses of the respective packages.

View File

@@ -1,28 +1,7 @@
let requiredVersion = import ./lib/minver.nix; in
if ! builtins ? nixVersion || builtins.compareVersions "1.8" builtins.nixVersion == 1 then
if ! builtins ? nixVersion || builtins.compareVersions requiredVersion builtins.nixVersion == 1 then
abort ''
This version of Nixpkgs requires Nix >= ${requiredVersion}, please upgrade:
- If you are running NixOS, `nixos-rebuild' can be used to upgrade your system.
- Alternatively, with Nix > 2.0 `nix upgrade-nix' can be used to imperatively
upgrade Nix. You may use `nix-env --version' to check which version you have.
- If you installed Nix using the install script (https://nixos.org/nix/install),
it is safe to upgrade by running it again:
curl https://nixos.org/nix/install | sh
For more information, please see the NixOS release notes at
https://nixos.org/nixos/manual or locally at
${toString ./nixos/doc/manual/release-notes}.
If you need further help, see https://nixos.org/nixos/support.html
''
abort "This version of Nixpkgs requires Nix >= 1.8, please upgrade! See https://nixos.org/wiki/How_to_update_when_nix_is_too_old_to_evaluate_nixpkgs"
else
import ./pkgs/top-level/impure.nix
import ./pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix

7
doc/.gitignore vendored
View File

@@ -1,7 +0,0 @@
*.chapter.xml
*.section.xml
.version
out
manual-full.xml
highlightjs
functions/library/locations.xml

View File

@@ -1,112 +0,0 @@
MD_TARGETS=$(addsuffix .xml, $(basename $(wildcard ./*.md ./**/*.md)))
.PHONY: all
all: validate format out/html/index.html out/epub/manual.epub
.PHONY: debug
debug:
nix-shell --run "xmloscopy --docbook5 ./manual.xml ./manual-full.xml"
.PHONY: format
format:
find . -iname '*.xml' -type f | while read f; do \
echo $$f ;\
xmlformat --config-file "$$XMLFORMAT_CONFIG" -i $$f ;\
done
.PHONY: fix-misc-xml
fix-misc-xml:
find . -iname '*.xml' -type f \
-exec ../nixos/doc/varlistentry-fixer.rb {} ';'
.PHONY: clean
clean:
rm -f ${MD_TARGETS} .version manual-full.xml functions/library/locations.xml functions/library/generated
rm -rf ./out/ ./highlightjs
.PHONY: validate
validate: manual-full.xml
jing "$$RNG" manual-full.xml
out/html/index.html: manual-full.xml style.css highlightjs
mkdir -p out/html
xsltproc ${xsltFlags} \
--nonet --xinclude \
--output $@ \
"$$XSL/docbook/xhtml/docbook.xsl" \
./manual-full.xml
mkdir -p out/html/highlightjs/
cp -r highlightjs out/html/
cp ./overrides.css out/html/
cp ./style.css out/html/style.css
mkdir -p out/html/images/callouts
cp "$$XSL/docbook/images/callouts/"*.svg out/html/images/callouts/
chmod u+w -R out/html/
out/epub/manual.epub: manual-full.xml
mkdir -p out/epub/scratch
xsltproc ${xsltFlags} --nonet \
--output out/epub/scratch/ \
"$$XSL/docbook/epub/docbook.xsl" \
./manual-full.xml
cp ./overrides.css out/epub/scratch/OEBPS
cp ./style.css out/epub/scratch/OEBPS
mkdir -p out/epub/scratch/OEBPS/images/callouts/
cp "$$XSL/docbook/images/callouts/"*.svg out/epub/scratch/OEBPS/images/callouts/
echo "application/epub+zip" > mimetype
zip -0Xq "out/epub/manual.epub" mimetype
rm mimetype
cd "out/epub/scratch/" && zip -Xr9D "../manual.epub" *
rm -rf "out/epub/scratch/"
highlightjs:
mkdir -p highlightjs
cp -r "$$HIGHLIGHTJS/highlight.pack.js" highlightjs/
cp -r "$$HIGHLIGHTJS/LICENSE" highlightjs/
cp -r "$$HIGHLIGHTJS/mono-blue.css" highlightjs/
cp -r "$$HIGHLIGHTJS/loader.js" highlightjs/
manual-full.xml: ${MD_TARGETS} .version functions/library/locations.xml functions/library/generated *.xml **/*.xml **/**/*.xml
xmllint --nonet --xinclude --noxincludenode manual.xml --output manual-full.xml
.version:
nix-instantiate --eval \
-E '(import ../lib).version' > .version
function_locations := $(shell nix-build --no-out-link ./lib-function-locations.nix)
functions/library/locations.xml:
ln -s $(function_locations) ./functions/library/locations.xml
functions/library/generated:
nix-build ./lib-function-docs.nix \
--arg locationsXml $(function_locations)\
--out-link ./functions/library/generated
%.section.xml: %.section.md
pandoc $^ -w docbook+smart \
-f markdown+smart \
| sed -e 's|<ulink url=|<link xlink:href=|' \
-e 's|</ulink>|</link>|' \
-e 's|<sect. id=|<section xml:id=|' \
-e 's|</sect[0-9]>|</section>|' \
-e '1s| id=| xml:id=|' \
-e '1s|\(<[^ ]* \)|\1xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" |' \
| cat > $@
%.chapter.xml: %.chapter.md
pandoc $^ -w docbook+smart \
--top-level-division=chapter \
-f markdown+smart \
| sed -e 's|<ulink url=|<link xlink:href=|' \
-e 's|</ulink>|</link>|' \
-e 's|<sect. id=|<section xml:id=|' \
-e 's|</sect[0-9]>|</section>|' \
-e '1s| id=| xml:id=|' \
-e '1s|\(<[^ ]* \)|\1|' \
| cat > $@

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

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@@ -1,546 +0,0 @@
<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="chap-packageconfig">
<title>Global configuration</title>
<para>
Nix comes with certain defaults about what packages can and cannot be
installed, based on a package's metadata. By default, Nix will prevent
installation if any of the following criteria are true:
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
The package is thought to be broken, and has had its
<literal>meta.broken</literal> set to <literal>true</literal>.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
The package isn't intended to run on the given system, as none of its
<literal>meta.platforms</literal> match the given system.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
The package's <literal>meta.license</literal> is set to a license which is
considered to be unfree.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
The package has known security vulnerabilities but has not or can not be
updated for some reason, and a list of issues has been entered in to the
package's <literal>meta.knownVulnerabilities</literal>.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
<para>
Note that all this is checked during evaluation already, and the check
includes any package that is evaluated. In particular, all build-time
dependencies are checked. <literal>nix-env -qa</literal> will (attempt to)
hide any packages that would be refused.
</para>
<para>
Each of these criteria can be altered in the nixpkgs configuration.
</para>
<para>
The nixpkgs configuration for a NixOS system is set in the
<literal>configuration.nix</literal>, as in the following example:
<programlisting>
{
nixpkgs.config = {
allowUnfree = true;
};
}
</programlisting>
However, this does not allow unfree software for individual users. Their
configurations are managed separately.
</para>
<para>
A user's of nixpkgs configuration is stored in a user-specific configuration
file located at <filename>~/.config/nixpkgs/config.nix</filename>. For
example:
<programlisting>
{
allowUnfree = true;
}
</programlisting>
</para>
<para>
Note that we are not able to test or build unfree software on Hydra due to
policy. Most unfree licenses prohibit us from either executing or
distributing the software.
</para>
<section xml:id="sec-allow-broken">
<title>Installing broken packages</title>
<para>
There are two ways to try compiling a package which has been marked as
broken.
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
For allowing the build of a broken package once, you can use an
environment variable for a single invocation of the nix tools:
<programlisting>$ export NIXPKGS_ALLOW_BROKEN=1</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
For permanently allowing broken packages to be built, you may add
<literal>allowBroken = true;</literal> to your user's configuration file,
like this:
<programlisting>
{
allowBroken = true;
}
</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-allow-unsupported-system">
<title>Installing packages on unsupported systems</title>
<para>
There are also two ways to try compiling a package which has been marked as
unsuported for the given system.
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
For allowing the build of a broken package once, you can use an
environment variable for a single invocation of the nix tools:
<programlisting>$ export NIXPKGS_ALLOW_UNSUPPORTED_SYSTEM=1</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
For permanently allowing broken packages to be built, you may add
<literal>allowUnsupportedSystem = true;</literal> to your user's
configuration file, like this:
<programlisting>
{
allowUnsupportedSystem = true;
}
</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
<para>
The difference between a package being unsupported on some system and
being broken is admittedly a bit fuzzy. If a program
<emphasis>ought</emphasis> to work on a certain platform, but doesn't, the
platform should be included in <literal>meta.platforms</literal>, but marked
as broken with e.g. <literal>meta.broken =
!hostPlatform.isWindows</literal>. Of course, this begs the question of what
"ought" means exactly. That is left to the package maintainer.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-allow-unfree">
<title>Installing unfree packages</title>
<para>
There are several ways to tweak how Nix handles a package which has been
marked as unfree.
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
To temporarily allow all unfree packages, you can use an environment
variable for a single invocation of the nix tools:
<programlisting>$ export NIXPKGS_ALLOW_UNFREE=1</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
It is possible to permanently allow individual unfree packages, while
still blocking unfree packages by default using the
<literal>allowUnfreePredicate</literal> configuration option in the user
configuration file.
</para>
<para>
This option is a function which accepts a package as a parameter, and
returns a boolean. The following example configuration accepts a package
and always returns false:
<programlisting>
{
allowUnfreePredicate = (pkg: false);
}
</programlisting>
</para>
<para>
For a more useful example, try the following. This configuration
only allows unfree packages named flash player and visual studio
code:
<programlisting>
{
allowUnfreePredicate = (pkg: builtins.elem
(builtins.parseDrvName pkg.name).name [
"flashplayer"
"vscode"
]);
}
</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
It is also possible to whitelist and blacklist licenses that are
specifically acceptable or not acceptable, using
<literal>whitelistedLicenses</literal> and
<literal>blacklistedLicenses</literal>, respectively.
</para>
<para>
The following example configuration whitelists the licenses
<literal>amd</literal> and <literal>wtfpl</literal>:
<programlisting>
{
whitelistedLicenses = with stdenv.lib.licenses; [ amd wtfpl ];
}
</programlisting>
</para>
<para>
The following example configuration blacklists the <literal>gpl3</literal>
and <literal>agpl3</literal> licenses:
<programlisting>
{
blacklistedLicenses = with stdenv.lib.licenses; [ agpl3 gpl3 ];
}
</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
<para>
A complete list of licenses can be found in the file
<filename>lib/licenses.nix</filename> of the nixpkgs tree.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-allow-insecure">
<title>Installing insecure packages</title>
<para>
There are several ways to tweak how Nix handles a package which has been
marked as insecure.
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
To temporarily allow all insecure packages, you can use an environment
variable for a single invocation of the nix tools:
<programlisting>$ export NIXPKGS_ALLOW_INSECURE=1</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
It is possible to permanently allow individual insecure packages, while
still blocking other insecure packages by default using the
<literal>permittedInsecurePackages</literal> configuration option in the
user configuration file.
</para>
<para>
The following example configuration permits the installation of the
hypothetically insecure package <literal>hello</literal>, version
<literal>1.2.3</literal>:
<programlisting>
{
permittedInsecurePackages = [
"hello-1.2.3"
];
}
</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
It is also possible to create a custom policy around which insecure
packages to allow and deny, by overriding the
<literal>allowInsecurePredicate</literal> configuration option.
</para>
<para>
The <literal>allowInsecurePredicate</literal> option is a function which
accepts a package and returns a boolean, much like
<literal>allowUnfreePredicate</literal>.
</para>
<para>
The following configuration example only allows insecure packages with
very short names:
<programlisting>
{
allowInsecurePredicate = (pkg: (builtins.stringLength (builtins.parseDrvName pkg.name).name) &lt;= 5);
}
</programlisting>
</para>
<para>
Note that <literal>permittedInsecurePackages</literal> is only checked if
<literal>allowInsecurePredicate</literal> is not specified.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</section>
<!--============================================================-->
<section xml:id="sec-modify-via-packageOverrides">
<title>Modify packages via <literal>packageOverrides</literal></title>
<para>
You can define a function called <varname>packageOverrides</varname> in your
local <filename>~/.config/nixpkgs/config.nix</filename> to override Nix
packages. It must be a function that takes pkgs as an argument and returns a
modified set of packages.
<programlisting>
{
packageOverrides = pkgs: rec {
foo = pkgs.foo.override { ... };
};
}
</programlisting>
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-declarative-package-management">
<title>Declarative Package Management</title>
<section xml:id="sec-building-environment">
<title>Build an environment</title>
<para>
Using <literal>packageOverrides</literal>, it is possible to manage
packages declaratively. This means that we can list all of our desired
packages within a declarative Nix expression. For example, to have
<literal>aspell</literal>, <literal>bc</literal>,
<literal>ffmpeg</literal>, <literal>coreutils</literal>,
<literal>gdb</literal>, <literal>nixUnstable</literal>,
<literal>emscripten</literal>, <literal>jq</literal>,
<literal>nox</literal>, and <literal>silver-searcher</literal>, we could
use the following in <filename>~/.config/nixpkgs/config.nix</filename>:
</para>
<screen>
{
packageOverrides = pkgs: with pkgs; {
myPackages = pkgs.buildEnv {
name = "my-packages";
paths = [
aspell
bc
coreutils
gdb
ffmpeg
nixUnstable
emscripten
jq
nox
silver-searcher
];
};
};
}
</screen>
<para>
To install it into our environment, you can just run <literal>nix-env -iA
nixpkgs.myPackages</literal>. If you want to load the packages to be built
from a working copy of <literal>nixpkgs</literal> you just run
<literal>nix-env -f. -iA myPackages</literal>. To explore what's been
installed, just look through <filename>~/.nix-profile/</filename>. You can
see that a lot of stuff has been installed. Some of this stuff is useful
some of it isn't. Let's tell Nixpkgs to only link the stuff that we want:
</para>
<screen>
{
packageOverrides = pkgs: with pkgs; {
myPackages = pkgs.buildEnv {
name = "my-packages";
paths = [
aspell
bc
coreutils
gdb
ffmpeg
nixUnstable
emscripten
jq
nox
silver-searcher
];
pathsToLink = [ "/share" "/bin" ];
};
};
}
</screen>
<para>
<literal>pathsToLink</literal> tells Nixpkgs to only link the paths listed
which gets rid of the extra stuff in the profile. <filename>/bin</filename>
and <filename>/share</filename> are good defaults for a user environment,
getting rid of the clutter. If you are running on Nix on MacOS, you may
want to add another path as well, <filename>/Applications</filename>, that
makes GUI apps available.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-getting-documentation">
<title>Getting documentation</title>
<para>
After building that new environment, look through
<filename>~/.nix-profile</filename> to make sure everything is there that
we wanted. Discerning readers will note that some files are missing. Look
inside <filename>~/.nix-profile/share/man/man1/</filename> to verify this.
There are no man pages for any of the Nix tools! This is because some
packages like Nix have multiple outputs for things like documentation (see
section 4). Let's make Nix install those as well.
</para>
<screen>
{
packageOverrides = pkgs: with pkgs; {
myPackages = pkgs.buildEnv {
name = "my-packages";
paths = [
aspell
bc
coreutils
ffmpeg
nixUnstable
emscripten
jq
nox
silver-searcher
];
pathsToLink = [ "/share/man" "/share/doc" "/bin" ];
extraOutputsToInstall = [ "man" "doc" ];
};
};
}
</screen>
<para>
This provides us with some useful documentation for using our packages.
However, if we actually want those manpages to be detected by man, we need
to set up our environment. This can also be managed within Nix expressions.
</para>
<screen>
{
packageOverrides = pkgs: with pkgs; rec {
myProfile = writeText "my-profile" ''
export PATH=$HOME/.nix-profile/bin:/nix/var/nix/profiles/default/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin
export MANPATH=$HOME/.nix-profile/share/man:/nix/var/nix/profiles/default/share/man:/usr/share/man
'';
myPackages = pkgs.buildEnv {
name = "my-packages";
paths = [
(runCommand "profile" {} ''
mkdir -p $out/etc/profile.d
cp ${myProfile} $out/etc/profile.d/my-profile.sh
'')
aspell
bc
coreutils
ffmpeg
man
nixUnstable
emscripten
jq
nox
silver-searcher
];
pathsToLink = [ "/share/man" "/share/doc" "/bin" "/etc" ];
extraOutputsToInstall = [ "man" "doc" ];
};
};
}
</screen>
<para>
For this to work fully, you must also have this script sourced when you are
logged in. Try adding something like this to your
<filename>~/.profile</filename> file:
</para>
<screen>
#!/bin/sh
if [ -d $HOME/.nix-profile/etc/profile.d ]; then
for i in $HOME/.nix-profile/etc/profile.d/*.sh; do
if [ -r $i ]; then
. $i
fi
done
fi
</screen>
<para>
Now just run <literal>source $HOME/.profile</literal> and you can starting
loading man pages from your environent.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-gnu-info-setup">
<title>GNU info setup</title>
<para>
Configuring GNU info is a little bit trickier than man pages. To work
correctly, info needs a database to be generated. This can be done with
some small modifications to our environment scripts.
</para>
<screen>
{
packageOverrides = pkgs: with pkgs; rec {
myProfile = writeText "my-profile" ''
export PATH=$HOME/.nix-profile/bin:/nix/var/nix/profiles/default/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin
export MANPATH=$HOME/.nix-profile/share/man:/nix/var/nix/profiles/default/share/man:/usr/share/man
export INFOPATH=$HOME/.nix-profile/share/info:/nix/var/nix/profiles/default/share/info:/usr/share/info
'';
myPackages = pkgs.buildEnv {
name = "my-packages";
paths = [
(runCommand "profile" {} ''
mkdir -p $out/etc/profile.d
cp ${myProfile} $out/etc/profile.d/my-profile.sh
'')
aspell
bc
coreutils
ffmpeg
man
nixUnstable
emscripten
jq
nox
silver-searcher
texinfoInteractive
];
pathsToLink = [ "/share/man" "/share/doc" "/share/info" "/bin" "/etc" ];
extraOutputsToInstall = [ "man" "doc" "info" ];
postBuild = ''
if [ -x $out/bin/install-info -a -w $out/share/info ]; then
shopt -s nullglob
for i in $out/share/info/*.info $out/share/info/*.info.gz; do
$out/bin/install-info $i $out/share/info/dir
done
fi
'';
};
};
}
</screen>
<para>
<literal>postBuild</literal> tells Nixpkgs to run a command after building
the environment. In this case, <literal>install-info</literal> adds the
installed info pages to <literal>dir</literal> which is GNU info's default
root node. Note that <literal>texinfoInteractive</literal> is added to the
environment to give the <literal>install-info</literal> command.
</para>
</section>
</section>
</chapter>

View File

@@ -1,35 +1,20 @@
<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
<title>Contributing to this documentation</title>
<para>The DocBook sources of the Nixpkgs manual are in the <filename
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/tree/master/doc">doc</filename>
subdirectory of the Nixpkgs repository.
</para>
<para>
You can quickly check your edits with <command>make</command>:
</para>
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/doc
$ nix-shell
[nix-shell]$ make
$ cd /path/to/nixpkgs
$ nix-build doc
</screen>
<para>
If you experience problems, run <command>make debug</command> to help
understand the docbook errors.
</para>
<para>
After making modifications to the manual, it's important to build it before
committing. You can do that as follows:
<screen>
$ cd /path/to/nixpkgs/doc
$ nix-shell
[nix-shell]$ make clean
[nix-shell]$ nix-build .
</screen>
If the build succeeds, the manual will be in
<filename>./result/share/doc/nixpkgs/manual.html</filename>.
</para>
If the build succeeds, the manual will be in
<filename>./result/share/doc/nixpkgs/manual.html</filename>.</para>
</chapter>

View File

@@ -1,468 +0,0 @@
<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="chap-cross">
<title>Cross-compilation</title>
<section xml:id="sec-cross-intro">
<title>Introduction</title>
<para>
"Cross-compilation" means compiling a program on one machine for another type
of machine. For example, a typical use of cross-compilation is to compile
programs for embedded devices. These devices often don't have the computing
power and memory to compile their own programs. One might think that
cross-compilation is a fairly niche concern. However, there are significant
advantages to rigorously distinguishing between build-time and run-time
environments! This applies even when one is developing and deploying on the
same machine. Nixpkgs is increasingly adopting the opinion that packages
should be written with cross-compilation in mind, and nixpkgs should evaluate
in a similar way (by minimizing cross-compilation-specific special cases)
whether or not one is cross-compiling.
</para>
<para>
This chapter will be organized in three parts. First, it will describe the
basics of how to package software in a way that supports cross-compilation.
Second, it will describe how to use Nixpkgs when cross-compiling. Third, it
will describe the internal infrastructure supporting cross-compilation.
</para>
</section>
<!--============================================================-->
<section xml:id="sec-cross-packaging">
<title>Packaging in a cross-friendly manner</title>
<section xml:id="sec-cross-platform-parameters">
<title>Platform parameters</title>
<para>
Nixpkgs follows the <link
xlink:href="https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gccint/Configure-Terms.html">conventions
of GNU autoconf</link>. We distinguish between 3 types of platforms when
building a derivation: <wordasword>build</wordasword>,
<wordasword>host</wordasword>, and <wordasword>target</wordasword>. In
summary, <wordasword>build</wordasword> is the platform on which a package
is being built, <wordasword>host</wordasword> is the platform on which it
will run. The third attribute, <wordasword>target</wordasword>, is relevant
only for certain specific compilers and build tools.
</para>
<para>
In Nixpkgs, these three platforms are defined as attribute sets under the
names <literal>buildPlatform</literal>, <literal>hostPlatform</literal>,
and <literal>targetPlatform</literal>. They are always defined as
attributes in the standard environment. That means one can access them
like:
<programlisting>{ stdenv, fooDep, barDep, .. }: ...stdenv.buildPlatform...</programlisting>
.
</para>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>buildPlatform</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
The "build platform" is the platform on which a package is built. Once
someone has a built package, or pre-built binary package, the build
platform should not matter and can be ignored.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>hostPlatform</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
The "host platform" is the platform on which a package will be run. This
is the simplest platform to understand, but also the one with the worst
name.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>targetPlatform</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
The "target platform" attribute is, unlike the other two attributes, not
actually fundamental to the process of building software. Instead, it is
only relevant for compatibility with building certain specific compilers
and build tools. It can be safely ignored for all other packages.
</para>
<para>
The build process of certain compilers is written in such a way that the
compiler resulting from a single build can itself only produce binaries
for a single platform. The task of specifying this single "target
platform" is thus pushed to build time of the compiler. The root cause of
this that the compiler (which will be run on the host) and the standard
library/runtime (which will be run on the target) are built by a single
build process.
</para>
<para>
There is no fundamental need to think about a single target ahead of
time like this. If the tool supports modular or pluggable backends, both
the need to specify the target at build time and the constraint of
having only a single target disappear. An example of such a tool is
LLVM.
</para>
<para>
Although the existence of a "target platfom" is arguably a historical
mistake, it is a common one: examples of tools that suffer from it are
GCC, Binutils, GHC and Autoconf. Nixpkgs tries to avoid sharing in the
mistake where possible. Still, because the concept of a target platform
is so ingrained, it is best to support it as is.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
<para>
The exact schema these fields follow is a bit ill-defined due to a long and
convoluted evolution, but this is slowly being cleaned up. You can see
examples of ones used in practice in
<literal>lib.systems.examples</literal>; note how they are not all very
consistent. For now, here are few fields can count on them containing:
</para>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>system</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
This is a two-component shorthand for the platform. Examples of this
would be "x86_64-darwin" and "i686-linux"; see
<literal>lib.systems.doubles</literal> for more. The first component
corresponds to the CPU architecture of the platform and the second to the
operating system of the platform (<literal>[cpu]-[os]</literal>). This
format has built-in support in Nix, such as the
<varname>builtins.currentSystem</varname> impure string.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>config</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
This is a 3- or 4- component shorthand for the platform. Examples of this
would be <literal>x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu</literal> and
<literal>aarch64-apple-darwin14</literal>. This is a standard format
called the "LLVM target triple", as they are pioneered by LLVM. In the
4-part form, this corresponds to
<literal>[cpu]-[vendor]-[os]-[abi]</literal>. This format is strictly
more informative than the "Nix host double", as the previous format could
analogously be termed. This needs a better name than
<varname>config</varname>!
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>parsed</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
This is a Nix representation of a parsed LLVM target triple
with white-listed components. This can be specified directly,
or actually parsed from the <varname>config</varname>. See
<literal>lib.systems.parse</literal> for the exact
representation.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>libc</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
This is a string identifying the standard C library used. Valid
identifiers include "glibc" for GNU libc, "libSystem" for Darwin's
Libsystem, and "uclibc" for µClibc. It should probably be refactored to
use the module system, like <varname>parse</varname>.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>is*</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
These predicates are defined in <literal>lib.systems.inspect</literal>,
and slapped onto every platform. They are superior to the ones in
<varname>stdenv</varname> as they force the user to be explicit about
which platform they are inspecting. Please use these instead of those.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>platform</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
This is, quite frankly, a dumping ground of ad-hoc settings (it's an
attribute set). See <literal>lib.systems.platforms</literal> for
examples—there's hopefully one in there that will work verbatim for
each platform that is working. Please help us triage these flags and
give them better homes!
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-cross-specifying-dependencies">
<title>Specifying Dependencies</title>
<para>
In this section we explore the relationship between both runtime and
build-time dependencies and the 3 Autoconf platforms.
</para>
<para>
A runtime dependency between 2 packages implies that between them both the
host and target platforms match. This is directly implied by the meaning of
"host platform" and "runtime dependency": The package dependency exists
while both packages are running on a single host platform.
</para>
<para>
A build time dependency, however, implies a shift in platforms between the
depending package and the depended-on package. The meaning of a build time
dependency is that to build the depending package we need to be able to run
the depended-on's package. The depending package's build platform is
therefore equal to the depended-on package's host platform. Analogously,
the depending package's host platform is equal to the depended-on package's
target platform.
</para>
<para>
In this manner, given the 3 platforms for one package, we can determine the
three platforms for all its transitive dependencies. This is the most
important guiding principle behind cross-compilation with Nixpkgs, and will
be called the <wordasword>sliding window principle</wordasword>.
</para>
<para>
Some examples will make this clearer. If a package is being built with a
<literal>(build, host, target)</literal> platform triple of <literal>(foo,
bar, bar)</literal>, then its build-time dependencies would have a triple of
<literal>(foo, foo, bar)</literal>, and <emphasis>those packages'</emphasis>
build-time dependencies would have a triple of <literal>(foo, foo,
foo)</literal>. In other words, it should take two "rounds" of following
build-time dependency edges before one reaches a fixed point where, by the
sliding window principle, the platform triple no longer changes. Indeed,
this happens with cross-compilation, where only rounds of native
dependencies starting with the second necessarily coincide with native
packages.
</para>
<note>
<para>
The depending package's target platform is unconstrained by the sliding
window principle, which makes sense in that one can in principle build
cross compilers targeting arbitrary platforms.
</para>
</note>
<para>
How does this work in practice? Nixpkgs is now structured so that build-time
dependencies are taken from <varname>buildPackages</varname>, whereas
run-time dependencies are taken from the top level attribute set. For
example, <varname>buildPackages.gcc</varname> should be used at build-time,
while <varname>gcc</varname> should be used at run-time. Now, for most of
Nixpkgs's history, there was no <varname>buildPackages</varname>, and most
packages have not been refactored to use it explicitly. Instead, one can use
the six (<emphasis>gasp</emphasis>) attributes used for specifying
dependencies as documented in <xref linkend="ssec-stdenv-dependencies"/>. We
"splice" together the run-time and build-time package sets with
<varname>callPackage</varname>, and then <varname>mkDerivation</varname> for
each of four attributes pulls the right derivation out. This splicing can be
skipped when not cross-compiling as the package sets are the same, but is a
bit slow for cross-compiling. Because of this, a best-of-both-worlds
solution is in the works with no splicing or explicit access of
<varname>buildPackages</varname> needed. For now, feel free to use either
method.
</para>
<note>
<para>
There is also a "backlink" <varname>targetPackages</varname>, yielding a
package set whose <varname>buildPackages</varname> is the current package
set. This is a hack, though, to accommodate compilers with lousy build
systems. Please do not use this unless you are absolutely sure you are
packaging such a compiler and there is no other way.
</para>
</note>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-cross-cookbook">
<title>Cross packaging cookbook</title>
<para>
Some frequently encountered problems when packaging for cross-compilation
should be answered here. Ideally, the information above is exhaustive, so
this section cannot provide any new information, but it is ludicrous and
cruel to expect everyone to spend effort working through the interaction of
many features just to figure out the same answer to the same common problem.
Feel free to add to this list!
</para>
<qandaset>
<qandaentry xml:id="cross-qa-build-c-program-in-build-environment">
<question>
<para>
What if my package's build system needs to build a C program to be run
under the build environment?
</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>
<programlisting>depsBuildBuild = [ buildPackages.stdenv.cc ];</programlisting>
Add it to your <function>mkDerivation</function> invocation.
</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry xml:id="cross-qa-fails-to-find-ar">
<question>
<para>
My package fails to find <command>ar</command>.
</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>
Many packages assume that an unprefixed <command>ar</command> is
available, but Nix doesn't provide one. It only provides a prefixed one,
just as it only does for all the other binutils programs. It may be
necessary to patch the package to fix the build system to use a prefixed
`ar`.
</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry xml:id="cross-testsuite-runs-host-code">
<question>
<para>
My package's testsuite needs to run host platform code.
</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>
<programlisting>doCheck = stdenv.hostPlatform != stdenv.buildPlatfrom;</programlisting>
Add it to your <function>mkDerivation</function> invocation.
</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
</qandaset>
</section>
</section>
<!--============================================================-->
<section xml:id="sec-cross-usage">
<title>Cross-building packages</title>
<para>
Nixpkgs can be instantiated with <varname>localSystem</varname> alone, in
which case there is no cross-compiling and everything is built by and for
that system, or also with <varname>crossSystem</varname>, in which case
packages run on the latter, but all building happens on the former. Both
parameters take the same schema as the 3 (build, host, and target) platforms
defined in the previous section. As mentioned above,
<literal>lib.systems.examples</literal> has some platforms which are used as
arguments for these parameters in practice. You can use them
programmatically, or on the command line:
<programlisting>
nix-build &lt;nixpkgs&gt; --arg crossSystem '(import &lt;nixpkgs/lib&gt;).systems.examples.fooBarBaz' -A whatever</programlisting>
</para>
<note>
<para>
Eventually we would like to make these platform examples an unnecessary
convenience so that
<programlisting>
nix-build &lt;nixpkgs&gt; --arg crossSystem '{ config = "&lt;arch&gt;-&lt;os&gt;-&lt;vendor&gt;-&lt;abi&gt;"; }' -A whatever</programlisting>
works in the vast majority of cases. The problem today is dependencies on
other sorts of configuration which aren't given proper defaults. We rely on
the examples to crudely to set those configuration parameters in some
vaguely sane manner on the users behalf. Issue
<link xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/34274">#34274</link>
tracks this inconvenience along with its root cause in crufty configuration
options.
</para>
</note>
<para>
While one is free to pass both parameters in full, there's a lot of logic to
fill in missing fields. As discussed in the previous section, only one of
<varname>system</varname>, <varname>config</varname>, and
<varname>parsed</varname> is needed to infer the other two. Additionally,
<varname>libc</varname> will be inferred from <varname>parse</varname>.
Finally, <literal>localSystem.system</literal> is also
<emphasis>impurely</emphasis> inferred based on the platform evaluation
occurs. This means it is often not necessary to pass
<varname>localSystem</varname> at all, as in the command-line example in the
previous paragraph.
</para>
<note>
<para>
Many sources (manual, wiki, etc) probably mention passing
<varname>system</varname>, <varname>platform</varname>, along with the
optional <varname>crossSystem</varname> to nixpkgs: <literal>import
&lt;nixpkgs&gt; { system = ..; platform = ..; crossSystem = ..;
}</literal>. Passing those two instead of <varname>localSystem</varname> is
still supported for compatibility, but is discouraged. Indeed, much of the
inference we do for these parameters is motivated by compatibility as much
as convenience.
</para>
</note>
<para>
One would think that <varname>localSystem</varname> and
<varname>crossSystem</varname> overlap horribly with the three
<varname>*Platforms</varname> (<varname>buildPlatform</varname>,
<varname>hostPlatform,</varname> and <varname>targetPlatform</varname>; see
<varname>stage.nix</varname> or the manual). Actually, those identifiers are
purposefully not used here to draw a subtle but important distinction: While
the granularity of having 3 platforms is necessary to properly *build*
packages, it is overkill for specifying the user's *intent* when making a
build plan or package set. A simple "build vs deploy" dichotomy is adequate:
the sliding window principle described in the previous section shows how to
interpolate between the these two "end points" to get the 3 platform triple
for each bootstrapping stage. That means for any package a given package set,
even those not bound on the top level but only reachable via dependencies or
<varname>buildPackages</varname>, the three platforms will be defined as one
of <varname>localSystem</varname> or <varname>crossSystem</varname>, with the
former replacing the latter as one traverses build-time dependencies. A last
simple difference is that <varname>crossSystem</varname> should be null when
one doesn't want to cross-compile, while the <varname>*Platform</varname>s
are always non-null. <varname>localSystem</varname> is always non-null.
</para>
</section>
<!--============================================================-->
<section xml:id="sec-cross-infra">
<title>Cross-compilation infrastructure</title>
<para>
To be written.
</para>
<note>
<para>
If one explores Nixpkgs, they will see derivations with names like
<literal>gccCross</literal>. Such <literal>*Cross</literal> derivations is a
holdover from before we properly distinguished between the host and target
platforms—the derivation with "Cross" in the name covered the <literal>build
= host != target</literal> case, while the other covered the <literal>host =
target</literal>, with build platform the same or not based on whether one
was using its <literal>.nativeDrv</literal> or <literal>.crossDrv</literal>.
This ugliness will disappear soon.
</para>
</note>
</section>
</chapter>

View File

@@ -1,51 +1,45 @@
{ pkgs ? (import ./.. { }), nixpkgs ? { }}:
let
lib = pkgs.lib;
locationsXml = import ./lib-function-locations.nix { inherit pkgs nixpkgs; };
functionDocs = import ./lib-function-docs.nix { inherit locationsXml pkgs; };
in pkgs.stdenv.mkDerivation {
with import ./.. { };
with lib;
stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "nixpkgs-manual";
buildInputs = with pkgs; [ pandoc libxml2 libxslt zip jing xmlformat ];
sources = sourceFilesBySuffices ./. [".xml"];
src = ./.;
buildInputs = [ libxml2 libxslt ];
# Hacking on these variables? Make sure to close and open
# nix-shell between each test, maybe even:
# $ nix-shell --run "make clean all"
# otherwise they won't reapply :)
HIGHLIGHTJS = pkgs.documentation-highlighter;
XSL = "${pkgs.docbook_xsl_ns}/xml/xsl";
RNG = "${pkgs.docbook5}/xml/rng/docbook/docbook.rng";
XMLFORMAT_CONFIG = ../nixos/doc/xmlformat.conf;
xsltFlags = lib.concatStringsSep " " [
"--param section.autolabel 1"
"--param section.label.includes.component.label 1"
"--stringparam html.stylesheet 'style.css overrides.css highlightjs/mono-blue.css'"
"--stringparam html.script './highlightjs/highlight.pack.js ./highlightjs/loader.js'"
"--param xref.with.number.and.title 1"
"--param toc.section.depth 3"
"--stringparam admon.style ''"
"--stringparam callout.graphics.extension .svg"
];
postPatch = ''
rm -rf ./functions/library/locations.xml
ln -s ${locationsXml} ./functions/library/locations.xml
ln -s ${functionDocs} ./functions/library/generated
echo ${lib.version} > .version
xsltFlags = ''
--param section.autolabel 1
--param section.label.includes.component.label 1
--param html.stylesheet 'style.css'
--param xref.with.number.and.title 1
--param toc.section.depth 3
--param admon.style '''
--param callout.graphics.extension '.gif'
'';
installPhase = ''
dest="$out/share/doc/nixpkgs"
mkdir -p "$(dirname "$dest")"
mv out/html "$dest"
mv "$dest/index.html" "$dest/manual.html"
buildCommand = ''
ln -s $sources/*.xml . # */
mv out/epub/manual.epub "$dest/nixpkgs-manual.epub"
echo ${nixpkgsVersion} > .version
mkdir -p $out/nix-support/
echo "doc manual $dest manual.html" >> $out/nix-support/hydra-build-products
echo "doc manual $dest nixpkgs-manual.epub" >> $out/nix-support/hydra-build-products
xmllint --noout --nonet --xinclude --noxincludenode \
--relaxng ${docbook5}/xml/rng/docbook/docbook.rng \
manual.xml
dst=$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

@@ -1,22 +1,273 @@
<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
xml:id="chap-functions">
<title>Functions reference</title>
<para>
The nixpkgs repository has several utility functions to manipulate Nix
expressions.
</para>
<xi:include href="functions/library.xml" />
<xi:include href="functions/overrides.xml" />
<xi:include href="functions/generators.xml" />
<xi:include href="functions/debug.xml" />
<xi:include href="functions/fetchers.xml" />
<xi:include href="functions/trivial-builders.xml" />
<xi:include href="functions/fhs-environments.xml" />
<xi:include href="functions/shell.xml" />
<xi:include href="functions/dockertools.xml" />
<xi:include href="functions/appimagetools.xml" />
<xi:include href="functions/prefer-remote-fetch.xml" />
<xi:include href="functions/nix-gitignore.xml" />
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>
<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 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>.
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
]) ++ (with [];
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>
</chapter>

View File

@@ -1,121 +0,0 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
xml:id="sec-pkgs-appimageTools">
<title>pkgs.appimageTools</title>
<para>
<varname>pkgs.appimageTools</varname> is a set of functions for extracting and wrapping
<link xlink:href="https://appimage.org/">AppImage</link> files.
They are meant to be used if traditional packaging from source is infeasible, or it would take too long.
To quickly run an AppImage file, <literal>pkgs.appimage-run</literal> can be used as well.
</para>
<warning>
<para>
The <varname>appimageTools</varname> API is unstable and may be subject to
backwards-incompatible changes in the future.
</para>
</warning>
<section xml:id="ssec-pkgs-appimageTools-formats">
<title>AppImage formats</title>
<para>
There are different formats for AppImages, see
<link xlink:href="https://github.com/AppImage/AppImageSpec/blob/74ad9ca2f94bf864a4a0dac1f369dd4f00bd1c28/draft.md#image-format">the specification</link> for details.
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
Type 1 images are ISO 9660 files that are also ELF executables.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Type 2 images are ELF executables with an appended filesystem.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
<para>
They can be told apart with <command>file -k</command>:
</para>
<screen>
<prompt>$ </prompt>file -k type1.AppImage
type1.AppImage: ELF 64-bit LSB executable, x86-64, version 1 (SYSV) ISO 9660 CD-ROM filesystem data 'AppImage' (Lepton 3.x), scale 0-0,
spot sensor temperature 0.000000, unit celsius, color scheme 0, calibration: offset 0.000000, slope 0.000000, dynamically linked, interpreter /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2, for GNU/Linux 2.6.18, BuildID[sha1]=d629f6099d2344ad82818172add1d38c5e11bc6d, stripped\012- data
<prompt>$ </prompt>file -k type2.AppImage
type2.AppImage: ELF 64-bit LSB executable, x86-64, version 1 (SYSV) (Lepton 3.x), scale 232-60668, spot sensor temperature -4.187500, color scheme 15, show scale bar, calibration: offset -0.000000, slope 0.000000 (Lepton 2.x), scale 4111-45000, spot sensor temperature 412442.250000, color scheme 3, minimum point enabled, calibration: offset -75402534979642766821519867692934234112.000000, slope 5815371847733706829839455140374904832.000000, dynamically linked, interpreter /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2, for GNU/Linux 2.6.18, BuildID[sha1]=79dcc4e55a61c293c5e19edbd8d65b202842579f, stripped\012- data
</screen>
<para>
Note how the type 1 AppImage is described as an <literal>ISO 9660 CD-ROM filesystem</literal>, and the type 2 AppImage is not.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="ssec-pkgs-appimageTools-wrapping">
<title>Wrapping</title>
<para>
Depending on the type of AppImage you're wrapping, you'll have to use
<varname>wrapType1</varname> or <varname>wrapType2</varname>.
</para>
<programlisting>
appimageTools.wrapType2 { # or wrapType1
name = "patchwork"; <co xml:id='ex-appimageTools-wrapping-1' />
src = fetchurl { <co xml:id='ex-appimageTools-wrapping-2' />
url = https://github.com/ssbc/patchwork/releases/download/v3.11.4/Patchwork-3.11.4-linux-x86_64.AppImage;
sha256 = "1blsprpkvm0ws9b96gb36f0rbf8f5jgmw4x6dsb1kswr4ysf591s";
};
extraPkgs = pkgs: with pkgs; [ ]; <co xml:id='ex-appimageTools-wrapping-3' />
}</programlisting>
<calloutlist>
<callout arearefs='ex-appimageTools-wrapping-1'>
<para>
<varname>name</varname> specifies the name of the resulting image.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-appimageTools-wrapping-2'>
<para>
<varname>src</varname> specifies the AppImage file to extract.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-appimageTools-wrapping-2'>
<para>
<varname>extraPkgs</varname> allows you to pass a function to include additional packages
inside the FHS environment your AppImage is going to run in.
There are a few ways to learn which dependencies an application needs:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
Looking through the extracted AppImage files, reading its scripts and running <command>patchelf</command> and <command>ldd</command> on its executables.
This can also be done in <command>appimage-run</command>, by setting <command>APPIMAGE_DEBUG_EXEC=bash</command>.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Running <command>strace -vfefile</command> on the wrapped executable, looking for libraries that can't be found.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
</callout>
</calloutlist>
</section>
</section>

View File

@@ -1,21 +0,0 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
xml:id="sec-debug">
<title>Debugging Nix Expressions</title>
<para>
Nix is a unityped, dynamic language, this means every value can potentially
appear anywhere. Since it is also non-strict, evaluation order and what
ultimately is evaluated might surprise you. Therefore it is important to be
able to debug nix expressions.
</para>
<para>
In the <literal>lib/debug.nix</literal> file you will find a number of
functions that help (pretty-)printing values while evaluation is runnnig. You
can even specify how deep these values should be printed recursively, and
transform them on the fly. Please consult the docstrings in
<literal>lib/debug.nix</literal> for usage information.
</para>
</section>

View File

@@ -1,564 +0,0 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
xml:id="sec-pkgs-dockerTools">
<title>pkgs.dockerTools</title>
<para>
<varname>pkgs.dockerTools</varname> is a set of functions for creating and
manipulating Docker images according to the
<link xlink:href="https://github.com/moby/moby/blob/master/image/spec/v1.2.md#docker-image-specification-v120">
Docker Image Specification v1.2.0 </link>. Docker itself is not used to
perform any of the operations done by these functions.
</para>
<warning>
<para>
The <varname>dockerTools</varname> API is unstable and may be subject to
backwards-incompatible changes in the future.
</para>
</warning>
<section xml:id="ssec-pkgs-dockerTools-buildImage">
<title>buildImage</title>
<para>
This function is analogous to the <command>docker build</command> command,
in that it can be used to build a Docker-compatible repository tarball containing
a single image with one or multiple layers. As such, the result is suitable
for being loaded in Docker with <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' />
#!${pkgs.runtimeShell}
mkdir -p /data
'';
config = { <co xml:id='ex-dockerTools-buildImage-8' />
Cmd = [ "/bin/redis-server" ];
WorkingDir = "/data";
Volumes = {
"/data" = {};
};
};
}
</programlisting>
</example>
<para>
The above example will build a Docker image <literal>redis/latest</literal>
from the given base image. Loading and running this image in Docker results
in <literal>redis-server</literal> being started automatically.
</para>
<calloutlist>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-buildImage-1'>
<para>
<varname>name</varname> specifies the name of the resulting image. This is
the only required argument for <varname>buildImage</varname>.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-buildImage-2'>
<para>
<varname>tag</varname> specifies the tag of the resulting image. By
default it's <literal>null</literal>, which indicates that the nix output
hash will be used as tag.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-buildImage-3'>
<para>
<varname>fromImage</varname> is the repository tarball containing the base
image. It must be a valid Docker image, such as exported by
<command>docker save</command>. By default it's <literal>null</literal>,
which can be seen as equivalent to <literal>FROM scratch</literal> of a
<filename>Dockerfile</filename>.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-buildImage-4'>
<para>
<varname>fromImageName</varname> can be used to further specify the base
image within the repository, in case it contains multiple images. By
default it's <literal>null</literal>, in which case
<varname>buildImage</varname> will peek the first image available in the
repository.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-buildImage-5'>
<para>
<varname>fromImageTag</varname> can be used to further specify the tag of
the base image within the repository, in case an image contains multiple
tags. By default it's <literal>null</literal>, in which case
<varname>buildImage</varname> will peek the first tag available for the
base image.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-buildImage-6'>
<para>
<varname>contents</varname> is a derivation that will be copied in the new
layer of the resulting image. This can be similarly seen as <command>ADD
contents/ /</command> in a <filename>Dockerfile</filename>. By default
it's <literal>null</literal>.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-buildImage-runAsRoot'>
<para>
<varname>runAsRoot</varname> is a bash script that will run as root in an
environment that overlays the existing layers of the base image with the
new resulting layer, including the previously copied
<varname>contents</varname> derivation. This can be similarly seen as
<command>RUN ...</command> in a <filename>Dockerfile</filename>.
<note>
<para>
Using this parameter requires the <literal>kvm</literal> device to be
available.
</para>
</note>
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-buildImage-8'>
<para>
<varname>config</varname> is used to specify the configuration of the
containers that will be started off the built image in Docker. The
available options are listed in the
<link xlink:href="https://github.com/moby/moby/blob/master/image/spec/v1.2.md#image-json-field-descriptions">
Docker Image Specification v1.2.0 </link>.
</para>
</callout>
</calloutlist>
<para>
After the new layer has been created, its closure (to which
<varname>contents</varname>, <varname>config</varname> and
<varname>runAsRoot</varname> contribute) will be copied in the layer itself.
Only new dependencies that are not already in the existing layers will be
copied.
</para>
<para>
At the end of the process, only one new single layer will be produced and
added to the resulting image.
</para>
<para>
The resulting repository will only list the single image
<varname>image/tag</varname>. In the case of
<xref linkend='ex-dockerTools-buildImage'/> it would be
<varname>redis/latest</varname>.
</para>
<para>
It is possible to inspect the arguments with which an image was built using
its <varname>buildArgs</varname> attribute.
</para>
<note>
<para>
If you see errors similar to <literal>getProtocolByName: does not exist (no
such protocol name: tcp)</literal> you may need to add
<literal>pkgs.iana-etc</literal> to <varname>contents</varname>.
</para>
</note>
<note>
<para>
If you see errors similar to <literal>Error_Protocol ("certificate has
unknown CA",True,UnknownCa)</literal> you may need to add
<literal>pkgs.cacert</literal> to <varname>contents</varname>.
</para>
</note>
<example xml:id="example-pkgs-dockerTools-buildImage-creation-date">
<title>Impurely Defining a Docker Layer's Creation Date</title>
<para>
By default <function>buildImage</function> will use a static date of one
second past the UNIX Epoch. This allows <function>buildImage</function> to
produce binary reproducible images. When listing images with
<command>docker images</command>, the newly created images will be
listed like this:
</para>
<screen><![CDATA[
$ docker images
REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE
hello latest 08c791c7846e 48 years ago 25.2MB
]]></screen>
<para>
You can break binary reproducibility but have a sorted, meaningful
<literal>CREATED</literal> column by setting <literal>created</literal> to
<literal>now</literal>.
</para>
<programlisting><![CDATA[
pkgs.dockerTools.buildImage {
name = "hello";
tag = "latest";
created = "now";
contents = pkgs.hello;
config.Cmd = [ "/bin/hello" ];
}
]]></programlisting>
<para>
and now the Docker CLI will display a reasonable date and sort the images
as expected:
<screen><![CDATA[
$ docker images
REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE
hello latest de2bf4786de6 About a minute ago 25.2MB
]]></screen>
however, the produced images will not be binary reproducible.
</para>
</example>
</section>
<section xml:id="ssec-pkgs-dockerTools-buildLayeredImage">
<title>buildLayeredImage</title>
<para>
Create a Docker image with many of the store paths being on their own layer
to improve sharing between images.
</para>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>name</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
The name of the resulting image.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>tag</varname> <emphasis>optional</emphasis>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
Tag of the generated image.
</para>
<para>
<emphasis>Default:</emphasis> the output path's hash
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>contents</varname> <emphasis>optional</emphasis>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
Top level paths in the container. Either a single derivation, or a list
of derivations.
</para>
<para>
<emphasis>Default:</emphasis> <literal>[]</literal>
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>config</varname> <emphasis>optional</emphasis>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
Run-time configuration of the container. A full list of the options are
available at in the
<link xlink:href="https://github.com/moby/moby/blob/master/image/spec/v1.2.md#image-json-field-descriptions">
Docker Image Specification v1.2.0 </link>.
</para>
<para>
<emphasis>Default:</emphasis> <literal>{}</literal>
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>created</varname> <emphasis>optional</emphasis>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
Date and time the layers were created. Follows the same
<literal>now</literal> exception supported by
<literal>buildImage</literal>.
</para>
<para>
<emphasis>Default:</emphasis> <literal>1970-01-01T00:00:01Z</literal>
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>maxLayers</varname> <emphasis>optional</emphasis>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
Maximum number of layers to create.
</para>
<para>
<emphasis>Default:</emphasis> <literal>24</literal>
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
<section xml:id="dockerTools-buildLayeredImage-arg-contents">
<title>Behavior of <varname>contents</varname> in the final image</title>
<para>
Each path directly listed in <varname>contents</varname> will have a
symlink in the root of the image.
</para>
<para>
For example:
<programlisting><![CDATA[
pkgs.dockerTools.buildLayeredImage {
name = "hello";
contents = [ pkgs.hello ];
}
]]></programlisting>
will create symlinks for all the paths in the <literal>hello</literal>
package:
<screen><![CDATA[
/bin/hello -> /nix/store/h1zb1padqbbb7jicsvkmrym3r6snphxg-hello-2.10/bin/hello
/share/info/hello.info -> /nix/store/h1zb1padqbbb7jicsvkmrym3r6snphxg-hello-2.10/share/info/hello.info
/share/locale/bg/LC_MESSAGES/hello.mo -> /nix/store/h1zb1padqbbb7jicsvkmrym3r6snphxg-hello-2.10/share/locale/bg/LC_MESSAGES/hello.mo
]]></screen>
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="dockerTools-buildLayeredImage-arg-config">
<title>Automatic inclusion of <varname>config</varname> references</title>
<para>
The closure of <varname>config</varname> is automatically included in the
closure of the final image.
</para>
<para>
This allows you to make very simple Docker images with very little code.
This container will start up and run <command>hello</command>:
<programlisting><![CDATA[
pkgs.dockerTools.buildLayeredImage {
name = "hello";
config.Cmd = [ "${pkgs.hello}/bin/hello" ];
}
]]></programlisting>
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="dockerTools-buildLayeredImage-arg-maxLayers">
<title>Adjusting <varname>maxLayers</varname></title>
<para>
Increasing the <varname>maxLayers</varname> increases the number of layers
which have a chance to be shared between different images.
</para>
<para>
Modern Docker installations support up to 128 layers, however older
versions support as few as 42.
</para>
<para>
If the produced image will not be extended by other Docker builds, it is
safe to set <varname>maxLayers</varname> to <literal>128</literal>. However
it will be impossible to extend the image further.
</para>
<para>
The first (<literal>maxLayers-2</literal>) most "popular" paths will have
their own individual layers, then layer #<literal>maxLayers-1</literal>
will contain all the remaining "unpopular" paths, and finally layer
#<literal>maxLayers</literal> will contain the Image configuration.
</para>
<para>
Docker's Layers are not inherently ordered, they are content-addressable
and are not explicitly layered until they are composed in to an Image.
</para>
</section>
</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 it can be used to pull a Docker image from a Docker registry. By default
<link xlink:href="https://hub.docker.com/">Docker Hub</link> is used to pull
images.
</para>
<para>
Its parameters are described in the example below:
</para>
<example xml:id='ex-dockerTools-pullImage'>
<title>Docker pull</title>
<programlisting>
pullImage {
imageName = "nixos/nix"; <co xml:id='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-1' />
imageDigest = "sha256:20d9485b25ecfd89204e843a962c1bd70e9cc6858d65d7f5fadc340246e2116b"; <co xml:id='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-2' />
finalImageTag = "1.11"; <co xml:id='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-3' />
sha256 = "0mqjy3zq2v6rrhizgb9nvhczl87lcfphq9601wcprdika2jz7qh8"; <co xml:id='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-4' />
os = "linux"; <co xml:id='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-5' />
arch = "x86_64"; <co xml:id='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-6' />
}
</programlisting>
</example>
<calloutlist>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-1'>
<para>
<varname>imageName</varname> specifies the name of the image to be
downloaded, which can also include the registry namespace (e.g.
<literal>nixos</literal>). This argument is required.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-2'>
<para>
<varname>imageDigest</varname> specifies the digest of the image to be
downloaded. Skopeo can be used to get the digest of an image, with its
<varname>inspect</varname> subcommand. Since a given
<varname>imageName</varname> may transparently refer to a manifest list of
images which support multiple architectures and/or operating systems,
supply the `--override-os` and `--override-arch` arguments to specify
exactly which image you want. By default it will match the OS and
architecture of the host the command is run on.
<programlisting>
$ nix-shell --packages skopeo jq --command "skopeo --override-os linux --override-arch x86_64 inspect docker://docker.io/nixos/nix:1.11 | jq -r '.Digest'"
sha256:20d9485b25ecfd89204e843a962c1bd70e9cc6858d65d7f5fadc340246e2116b
</programlisting>
This argument is required.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-3'>
<para>
<varname>finalImageTag</varname>, if specified, this is the tag of the
image to be created. Note it is never used to fetch the image since we
prefer to rely on the immutable digest ID. By default it's
<literal>latest</literal>.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-4'>
<para>
<varname>sha256</varname> is the checksum of the whole fetched image. This
argument is required.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-5'>
<para>
<varname>os</varname>, if specified, is the operating system of the
fetched image. By default it's <literal>linux</literal>.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-dockerTools-pullImage-6'>
<para>
<varname>arch</varname>, if specified, is the cpu architecture of the
fetched image. By default it's <literal>x86_64</literal>.
</para>
</callout>
</calloutlist>
</section>
<section xml:id="ssec-pkgs-dockerTools-exportImage">
<title>exportImage</title>
<para>
This function is analogous to the <command>docker export</command> command,
in that it can be used to flatten a Docker image that contains multiple layers. It
is in fact the result of the merge of all the layers of the image. As such,
the result is suitable for being imported in Docker with <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 = ''
#!${pkgs.runtimeShell}
${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> is necessary for shadow-utils to
manipulate users and groups.
</para>
</section>
</section>

View File

@@ -1,206 +0,0 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
xml:id="sec-pkgs-fetchers">
<title>Fetcher functions</title>
<para>
When using Nix, you will frequently need to download source code
and other files from the internet. Nixpkgs comes with a few helper
functions that allow you to fetch fixed-output derivations in a
structured way.
</para>
<para>
The two fetcher primitives are <function>fetchurl</function> and
<function>fetchzip</function>. Both of these have two required
arguments, a URL and a hash. The hash is typically
<literal>sha256</literal>, although many more hash algorithms are
supported. Nixpkgs contributors are currently recommended to use
<literal>sha256</literal>. This hash will be used by Nix to
identify your source. A typical usage of fetchurl is provided
below.
</para>
<programlisting><![CDATA[
{ stdenv, fetchurl }:
stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "hello";
src = fetchurl {
url = "http://www.example.org/hello.tar.gz";
sha256 = "1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111";
};
}
]]></programlisting>
<para>
The main difference between <function>fetchurl</function> and
<function>fetchzip</function> is in how they store the contents.
<function>fetchurl</function> will store the unaltered contents of
the URL within the Nix store. <function>fetchzip</function> on the
other hand will decompress the archive for you, making files and
directories directly accessible in the future.
<function>fetchzip</function> can only be used with archives.
Despite the name, <function>fetchzip</function> is not limited to
.zip files and can also be used with any tarball.
</para>
<para>
<function>fetchpatch</function> works very similarly to
<function>fetchurl</function> with the same arguments expected. It
expects patch files as a source and and performs normalization on
them before computing the checksum. For example it will remove
comments or other unstable parts that are sometimes added by
version control systems and can change over time.
</para>
<para>
Other fetcher functions allow you to add source code directly from
a VCS such as subversion or git. These are mostly straightforward
names based on the name of the command used with the VCS system.
Because they give you a working repository, they act most like
<function>fetchzip</function>.
</para>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<literal>fetchsvn</literal>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
Used with Subversion. Expects <literal>url</literal> to a
Subversion directory, <literal>rev</literal>, and
<literal>sha256</literal>.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<literal>fetchgit</literal>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
Used with Git. Expects <literal>url</literal> to a Git repo,
<literal>rev</literal>, and <literal>sha256</literal>.
<literal>rev</literal> in this case can be full the git commit
id (SHA1 hash) or a tag name like
<literal>refs/tags/v1.0</literal>.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<literal>fetchfossil</literal>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
Used with Fossil. Expects <literal>url</literal> to a Fossil
archive, <literal>rev</literal>, and <literal>sha256</literal>.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<literal>fetchcvs</literal>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
Used with CVS. Expects <literal>cvsRoot</literal>,
<literal>tag</literal>, and <literal>sha256</literal>.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<literal>fetchhg</literal>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
Used with Mercurial. Expects <literal>url</literal>,
<literal>rev</literal>, and <literal>sha256</literal>.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
<para>
A number of fetcher functions wrap part of
<function>fetchurl</function> and <function>fetchzip</function>.
They are mainly convenience functions intended for commonly used
destinations of source code in Nixpkgs. These wrapper fetchers are
listed below.
</para>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<literal>fetchFromGitHub</literal>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
<function>fetchFromGitHub</function> expects four arguments.
<literal>owner</literal> is a string corresponding to the
GitHub user or organization that controls this repository.
<literal>repo</literal> corresponds to the name of the
software repository. These are located at the top of every
GitHub HTML page as
<literal>owner</literal>/<literal>repo</literal>.
<literal>rev</literal> corresponds to the Git commit hash or
tag (e.g <literal>v1.0</literal>) that will be downloaded from
Git. Finally, <literal>sha256</literal> corresponds to the
hash of the extracted directory. Again, other hash algorithms
are also available but <literal>sha256</literal> is currently
preferred.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<literal>fetchFromGitLab</literal>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
This is used with GitLab repositories. The arguments expected
are very similar to fetchFromGitHub above.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<literal>fetchFromBitbucket</literal>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
This is used with BitBucket repositories. The arguments expected
are very similar to fetchFromGitHub above.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<literal>fetchFromSavannah</literal>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
This is used with Savannah repositories. The arguments expected
are very similar to fetchFromGitHub above.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<literal>fetchFromRepoOrCz</literal>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
This is used with repo.or.cz repositories. The arguments
expected are very similar to fetchFromGitHub above.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
</section>

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

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@@ -1,89 +0,0 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
xml:id="sec-generators">
<title>Generators</title>
<para>
Generators are functions that create file formats from nix data structures,
e.g. for configuration files. There are generators available for:
<literal>INI</literal>, <literal>JSON</literal> and <literal>YAML</literal>
</para>
<para>
All generators follow a similar call interface: <code>generatorName
configFunctions data</code>, where <literal>configFunctions</literal> is an
attrset of user-defined functions that format nested parts of the content.
They each have common defaults, so often they do not need to be set manually.
An example is <code>mkSectionName ? (name: libStr.escape [ "[" "]" ]
name)</code> from the <literal>INI</literal> generator. It receives the name
of a section and sanitizes it. The default <literal>mkSectionName</literal>
escapes <literal>[</literal> and <literal>]</literal> with a backslash.
</para>
<para>
Generators can be fine-tuned to produce exactly the file format required by
your application/service. One example is an INI-file format which uses
<literal>: </literal> as separator, the strings
<literal>"yes"</literal>/<literal>"no"</literal> as boolean values and
requires all string values to be quoted:
</para>
<programlisting>
with lib;
let
customToINI = generators.toINI {
# specifies how to format a key/value pair
mkKeyValue = generators.mkKeyValueDefault {
# specifies the generated string for a subset of nix values
mkValueString = v:
if v == true then ''"yes"''
else if v == false then ''"no"''
else if isString v then ''"${v}"''
# and delegats all other values to the default generator
else generators.mkValueStringDefault {} v;
} ":";
};
# the INI file can now be given as plain old nix values
in customToINI {
main = {
pushinfo = true;
autopush = false;
host = "localhost";
port = 42;
};
mergetool = {
merge = "diff3";
};
}
</programlisting>
<para>
This will produce the following INI file as nix string:
</para>
<programlisting>
[main]
autopush:"no"
host:"localhost"
port:42
pushinfo:"yes"
str\:ange:"very::strange"
[mergetool]
merge:"diff3"
</programlisting>
<note>
<para>
Nix store paths can be converted to strings by enclosing a derivation
attribute like so: <code>"${drv}"</code>.
</para>
</note>
<para>
Detailed documentation for each generator can be found in
<literal>lib/generators.nix</literal>.
</para>
</section>

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@@ -1,24 +0,0 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
xml:id="sec-functions-library">
<title>Nixpkgs Library Functions</title>
<para>
Nixpkgs provides a standard library at <varname>pkgs.lib</varname>, or
through <code>import &lt;nixpkgs/lib&gt;</code>.
</para>
<xi:include href="./library/asserts.xml" />
<xi:include href="./library/attrsets.xml" />
<!-- These docs are generated via nixdoc. To add another generated
library function file to this list, the file
`lib-function-docs.nix` must also be updated. -->
<xi:include href="./library/generated/strings.xml" />
<xi:include href="./library/generated/trivial.xml" />
<xi:include href="./library/generated/lists.xml" />
<xi:include href="./library/generated/debug.xml" />
<xi:include href="./library/generated/options.xml" />
</section>

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@@ -1,117 +0,0 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
xml:id="sec-functions-library-asserts">
<title>Assert functions</title>
<section xml:id="function-library-lib.asserts.assertMsg">
<title><function>lib.asserts.assertMsg</function></title>
<subtitle><literal>assertMsg :: Bool -> String -> Bool</literal>
</subtitle>
<xi:include href="./locations.xml" xpointer="lib.asserts.assertMsg" />
<para>
Print a trace message if <literal>pred</literal> is false.
</para>
<para>
Intended to be used to augment asserts with helpful error messages.
</para>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>pred</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
Condition under which the <varname>msg</varname> should
<emphasis>not</emphasis> be printed.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>msg</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
Message to print.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
<example xml:id="function-library-lib.asserts.assertMsg-example-false">
<title>Printing when the predicate is false</title>
<programlisting><![CDATA[
assert lib.asserts.assertMsg ("foo" == "bar") "foo is not bar, silly"
stderr> trace: foo is not bar, silly
stderr> assert failed
]]></programlisting>
</example>
</section>
<section xml:id="function-library-lib.asserts.assertOneOf">
<title><function>lib.asserts.assertOneOf</function></title>
<subtitle><literal>assertOneOf :: String -> String ->
StringList -> Bool</literal>
</subtitle>
<xi:include href="./locations.xml" xpointer="lib.asserts.assertOneOf" />
<para>
Specialized <function>asserts.assertMsg</function> for checking if
<varname>val</varname> is one of the elements of <varname>xs</varname>.
Useful for checking enums.
</para>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>name</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
The name of the variable the user entered <varname>val</varname> into,
for inclusion in the error message.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>val</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
The value of what the user provided, to be compared against the values in
<varname>xs</varname>.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>xs</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
The list of valid values.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
<example xml:id="function-library-lib.asserts.assertOneOf-example">
<title>Ensuring a user provided a possible value</title>
<programlisting><![CDATA[
let sslLibrary = "bearssl";
in lib.asserts.assertOneOf "sslLibrary" sslLibrary [ "openssl" "bearssl" ];
=> false
stderr> trace: sslLibrary must be one of "openssl", "libressl", but is: "bearssl"
]]></programlisting>
</example>
</section>
</section>

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@@ -1,78 +0,0 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
xml:id="sec-pkgs-nix-gitignore">
<title>pkgs.nix-gitignore</title>
<para>
<function>pkgs.nix-gitignore</function> is a function that acts similarly to
<literal>builtins.filterSource</literal> but also allows filtering with the
help of the gitignore format.
</para>
<section xml:id="sec-pkgs-nix-gitignore-usage">
<title>Usage</title>
<para>
<literal>pkgs.nix-gitignore</literal> exports a number of functions, but
you'll most likely need either <literal>gitignoreSource</literal> or
<literal>gitignoreSourcePure</literal>. As their first argument, they both
accept either 1. a file with gitignore lines or 2. a string
with gitignore lines, or 3. a list of either of the two. They will be
concatenated into a single big string.
</para>
<programlisting><![CDATA[
{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> {} }:
nix-gitignore.gitignoreSource [] ./source
# Simplest version
nix-gitignore.gitignoreSource "supplemental-ignores\n" ./source
# This one reads the ./source/.gitignore and concats the auxiliary ignores
nix-gitignore.gitignoreSourcePure "ignore-this\nignore-that\n" ./source
# Use this string as gitignore, don't read ./source/.gitignore.
nix-gitignore.gitignoreSourcePure ["ignore-this\nignore-that\n", ~/.gitignore] ./source
# It also accepts a list (of strings and paths) that will be concatenated
# once the paths are turned to strings via readFile.
]]></programlisting>
<para>
These functions are derived from the <literal>Filter</literal> functions
by setting the first filter argument to <literal>(_: _: true)</literal>:
</para>
<programlisting><![CDATA[
gitignoreSourcePure = gitignoreFilterSourcePure (_: _: true);
gitignoreSource = gitignoreFilterSource (_: _: true);
]]></programlisting>
<para>
Those filter functions accept the same arguments the <literal>builtins.filterSource</literal> function would pass to its filters, thus <literal>fn: gitignoreFilterSourcePure fn ""</literal> should be extensionally equivalent to <literal>filterSource</literal>. The file is blacklisted iff it's blacklisted by either your filter or the gitignoreFilter.
</para>
<para>
If you want to make your own filter from scratch, you may use
</para>
<programlisting><![CDATA[
gitignoreFilter = ign: root: filterPattern (gitignoreToPatterns ign) root;
]]></programlisting>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-pkgs-nix-gitignore-usage-recursive">
<title>gitignore files in subdirectories</title>
<para>
If you wish to use a filter that would search for .gitignore files in subdirectories, just like git does by default, use this function:
</para>
<programlisting><![CDATA[
gitignoreFilterRecursiveSource = filter: patterns: root:
# OR
gitignoreRecursiveSource = gitignoreFilterSourcePure (_: _: true);
]]></programlisting>
</section>
</section>

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@@ -1,212 +0,0 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
xml:id="sec-overrides">
<title>Overriding</title>
<para>
Sometimes one wants to override parts of <literal>nixpkgs</literal>, e.g.
derivation attributes, the results of derivations.
</para>
<para>
These functions are used to make changes to packages, returning only single
packages. <link xlink:href="#chap-overlays">Overlays</link>, on the other
hand, can be used to combine the overridden packages across the entire
package set of Nixpkgs.
</para>
<section xml:id="sec-pkg-override">
<title>&lt;pkg&gt;.override</title>
<para>
The function <varname>override</varname> is usually available for all the
derivations in the nixpkgs expression (<varname>pkgs</varname>).
</para>
<para>
It is used to override the arguments passed to a function.
</para>
<para>
Example usages:
<programlisting>pkgs.foo.override { arg1 = val1; arg2 = val2; ... }</programlisting>
<!-- TODO: move below programlisting to a new section about extending and overlays
and reference it
-->
<programlisting>
import pkgs.path { overlays = [ (self: super: {
foo = super.foo.override { barSupport = true ; };
})]};
</programlisting>
<programlisting>
mypkg = pkgs.callPackage ./mypkg.nix {
mydep = pkgs.mydep.override { ... };
}
</programlisting>
</para>
<para>
In the first example, <varname>pkgs.foo</varname> is the result of a
function call with some default arguments, usually a derivation. Using
<varname>pkgs.foo.override</varname> will call the same function with the
given new arguments.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-pkg-overrideAttrs">
<title>&lt;pkg&gt;.overrideAttrs</title>
<para>
The function <varname>overrideAttrs</varname> allows overriding the
attribute set passed to a <varname>stdenv.mkDerivation</varname> call,
producing a new derivation based on the original one. This function is
available on all derivations produced by the
<varname>stdenv.mkDerivation</varname> function, which is most packages in
the nixpkgs expression <varname>pkgs</varname>.
</para>
<para>
Example usage:
<programlisting>
helloWithDebug = pkgs.hello.overrideAttrs (oldAttrs: rec {
separateDebugInfo = true;
});
</programlisting>
</para>
<para>
In the above example, the <varname>separateDebugInfo</varname> attribute is
overridden to be true, thus building debug info for
<varname>helloWithDebug</varname>, while all other attributes will be
retained from the original <varname>hello</varname> package.
</para>
<para>
The argument <varname>oldAttrs</varname> is conventionally used to refer to
the attr set originally passed to <varname>stdenv.mkDerivation</varname>.
</para>
<note>
<para>
Note that <varname>separateDebugInfo</varname> is processed only by the
<varname>stdenv.mkDerivation</varname> function, not the generated, raw Nix
derivation. Thus, using <varname>overrideDerivation</varname> will not work
in this case, as it overrides only the attributes of the final derivation.
It is for this reason that <varname>overrideAttrs</varname> should be
preferred in (almost) all cases to <varname>overrideDerivation</varname>,
i.e. to allow using <varname>stdenv.mkDerivation</varname> to process input
arguments, as well as the fact that it is easier to use (you can use the
same attribute names you see in your Nix code, instead of the ones
generated (e.g. <varname>buildInputs</varname> vs
<varname>nativeBuildInputs</varname>), and it involves less typing).
</para>
</note>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-pkg-overrideDerivation">
<title>&lt;pkg&gt;.overrideDerivation</title>
<warning>
<para>
You should prefer <varname>overrideAttrs</varname> in almost all cases, see
its documentation for the reasons why.
<varname>overrideDerivation</varname> is not deprecated and will continue
to work, but is less nice to use and does not have as many abilities as
<varname>overrideAttrs</varname>.
</para>
</warning>
<warning>
<para>
Do not use this function in Nixpkgs as it evaluates a Derivation before
modifying it, which breaks package abstraction and removes error-checking
of function arguments. In addition, this evaluation-per-function
application incurs a performance penalty, which can become a problem if
many overrides are used. It is only intended for ad-hoc customisation, such
as in <filename>~/.config/nixpkgs/config.nix</filename>.
</para>
</warning>
<para>
The function <varname>overrideDerivation</varname> creates a new derivation
based on an existing one by overriding the original's attributes with the
attribute set produced by the specified function. This function is available
on all derivations defined using the <varname>makeOverridable</varname>
function. Most standard derivation-producing functions, such as
<varname>stdenv.mkDerivation</varname>, are defined using this function,
which means most packages in the nixpkgs expression,
<varname>pkgs</varname>, have this function.
</para>
<para>
Example usage:
<programlisting>
mySed = pkgs.gnused.overrideDerivation (oldAttrs: {
name = "sed-4.2.2-pre";
src = fetchurl {
url = ftp://alpha.gnu.org/gnu/sed/sed-4.2.2-pre.tar.bz2;
sha256 = "11nq06d131y4wmf3drm0yk502d2xc6n5qy82cg88rb9nqd2lj41k";
};
patches = [];
});
</programlisting>
</para>
<para>
In the above example, the <varname>name</varname>, <varname>src</varname>,
and <varname>patches</varname> of the derivation will be overridden, while
all other attributes will be retained from the original derivation.
</para>
<para>
The argument <varname>oldAttrs</varname> is used to refer to the attribute
set of the original derivation.
</para>
<note>
<para>
A package's attributes are evaluated *before* being modified by the
<varname>overrideDerivation</varname> function. For example, the
<varname>name</varname> attribute reference in <varname>url =
"mirror://gnu/hello/${name}.tar.gz";</varname> is filled-in *before* the
<varname>overrideDerivation</varname> function modifies the attribute set.
This means that overriding the <varname>name</varname> attribute, in this
example, *will not* change the value of the <varname>url</varname>
attribute. Instead, we need to override both the <varname>name</varname>
*and* <varname>url</varname> attributes.
</para>
</note>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-lib-makeOverridable">
<title>lib.makeOverridable</title>
<para>
The function <varname>lib.makeOverridable</varname> is used to make the
result of a function easily customizable. This utility only makes sense for
functions that accept an argument set and return an attribute set.
</para>
<para>
Example usage:
<programlisting>
f = { a, b }: { result = a+b; };
c = lib.makeOverridable f { a = 1; b = 2; };
</programlisting>
</para>
<para>
The variable <varname>c</varname> is the value of the <varname>f</varname>
function applied with some default arguments. Hence the value of
<varname>c.result</varname> is <literal>3</literal>, in this example.
</para>
<para>
The variable <varname>c</varname> however also has some additional
functions, like <link linkend="sec-pkg-override">c.override</link> which can
be used to override the default arguments. In this example the value of
<varname>(c.override { a = 4; }).result</varname> is 6.
</para>
</section>
</section>

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@@ -1,27 +0,0 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/xinclude"
xml:id="sec-prefer-remote-fetch">
<title>prefer-remote-fetch overlay</title>
<para>
<function>prefer-remote-fetch</function> is an overlay that download sources
on remote builder. This is useful when the evaluating machine has a slow
upload while the builder can fetch faster directly from the source.
To use it, put the following snippet as a new overlay:
<programlisting>
self: super:
(super.prefer-remote-fetch self super)
</programlisting>
A full configuration example for that sets the overlay up for your own account,
could look like this
<programlisting>
$ mkdir ~/.config/nixpkgs/overlays/
$ cat &gt; ~/.config/nixpkgs/overlays/prefer-remote-fetch.nix &lt;&lt;EOF
self: super: super.prefer-remote-fetch self super
EOF
</programlisting>
</para>
</section>

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@@ -1,26 +0,0 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
xml:id="sec-pkgs-mkShell">
<title>pkgs.mkShell</title>
<para>
<function>pkgs.mkShell</function> is a special kind of derivation that is
only useful when using it combined with <command>nix-shell</command>. It will
in fact fail to instantiate when invoked with <command>nix-build</command>.
</para>
<section xml:id="sec-pkgs-mkShell-usage">
<title>Usage</title>
<programlisting><![CDATA[
{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> {} }:
pkgs.mkShell {
# this will make all the build inputs from hello and gnutar
# available to the shell environment
inputsFrom = with pkgs; [ hello gnutar ];
buildInputs = [ pkgs.gnumake ];
}
]]></programlisting>
</section>
</section>

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@@ -1,124 +0,0 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
xml:id="sec-trivial-builders">
<title>Trivial builders</title>
<para>
Nixpkgs provides a couple of functions that help with building
derivations. The most important one,
<function>stdenv.mkDerivation</function>, has already been
documented above. The following functions wrap
<function>stdenv.mkDerivation</function>, making it easier to use
in certain cases.
</para>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<literal>runCommand</literal>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
This takes three arguments, <literal>name</literal>,
<literal>env</literal>, and <literal>buildCommand</literal>.
<literal>name</literal> is just the name that Nix will append
to the store path in the same way that
<literal>stdenv.mkDerivation</literal> uses its
<literal>name</literal> attribute. <literal>env</literal> is an
attribute set specifying environment variables that will be set
for this derivation. These attributes are then passed to the
wrapped <literal>stdenv.mkDerivation</literal>.
<literal>buildCommand</literal> specifies the commands that
will be run to create this derivation. Note that you will need
to create <literal>$out</literal> for Nix to register the
command as successful.
</para>
<para>
An example of using <literal>runCommand</literal> is provided
below.
</para>
<programlisting>
(import &lt;nixpkgs&gt; {}).runCommand "my-example" {} ''
echo My example command is running
mkdir $out
echo I can write data to the Nix store > $out/message
echo I can also run basic commands like:
echo ls
ls
echo whoami
whoami
echo date
date
''
</programlisting>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<literal>runCommandCC</literal>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
This works just like <literal>runCommand</literal>. The only
difference is that it also provides a C compiler in
<literal>buildCommand</literal>s environment. To minimize your
dependencies, you should only use this if you are sure you will
need a C compiler as part of running your command.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<literal>writeTextFile</literal>, <literal>writeText</literal>,
<literal>writeTextDir</literal>, <literal>writeScript</literal>,
<literal>writeScriptBin</literal>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
These functions write <literal>text</literal> to the Nix store.
This is useful for creating scripts from Nix expressions.
<literal>writeTextFile</literal> takes an attribute set and
expects two arguments, <literal>name</literal> and
<literal>text</literal>. <literal>name</literal> corresponds to
the name used in the Nix store path. <literal>text</literal>
will be the contents of the file. You can also set
<literal>executable</literal> to true to make this file have
the executable bit set.
</para>
<para>
Many more commands wrap <literal>writeTextFile</literal>
including <literal>writeText</literal>,
<literal>writeTextDir</literal>,
<literal>writeScript</literal>, and
<literal>writeScriptBin</literal>. These are convenience
functions over <literal>writeTextFile</literal>.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<literal>symlinkJoin</literal>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
This can be used to put many derivations into the same directory
structure. It works by creating a new derivation and adding
symlinks to each of the paths listed. It expects two arguments,
<literal>name</literal>, and <literal>paths</literal>.
<literal>name</literal> is the name used in the Nix store path
for the created derivation. <literal>paths</literal> is a list of
paths that will be symlinked. These paths can be to Nix store
derivations or any other subdirectory contained within.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
</section>

912
doc/haskell-users-guide.xml Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,912 @@
<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="users-guide-to-the-haskell-infrastructure">
<title>User's Guide to the Haskell Infrastructure</title>
<section xml:id="how-to-install-haskell-packages">
<title>How to install Haskell packages</title>
<para>
Nixpkgs distributes build instructions for all Haskell packages
registered on
<link xlink:href="http://hackage.haskell.org/">Hackage</link>, 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:
</para>
<programlisting>
$ nix-env -i alex
error: selector alex matches no derivations
$ nix-env -qa ghc
ghc-7.10.2
</programlisting>
<para>
The Haskell package set is not registered in the top-level namespace
because it is <emphasis>huge</emphasis>. 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 <literal>haskellPackages</literal>, which the following
command will list:
</para>
<programlisting>
$ nix-env -f &quot;&lt;nixpkgs&gt;&quot; -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 ...]
</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 haskellPackages.Allure ...
</programlisting>
<para>
The attribute path of any Haskell packages corresponds to the name
of that particular package on Hackage: the package
<literal>cabal-install</literal> has the attribute
<literal>haskellPackages.cabal-install</literal>, and so on.
(Actually, this convention causes trouble with packages like
<literal>3dmodels</literal> and <literal>4Blocks</literal>, because
these names are invalid identifiers in the Nix language. The issue
of how to deal with these rare corner cases is currently
unresolved.)
</para>
<para>
Haskell packages who's Nix name (second column) begins with a
<literal>haskell-</literal> prefix are packages that provide a
library whereas packages without that prefix provide just
executables. Libraries may provide executables too, though: the
package <literal>haskell-pandoc</literal>, 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
<link linkend="how-to-create-a-development-environment">How to
create a development environment</link>.
</para>
<para>
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 <literal>nix-env</literal> an explicit
<literal>-f &quot;&lt;nixpkgs&gt;&quot;</literal> parameter, but if
you call <literal>nix-env</literal> without that flag, then chances
are the invocation fails:
</para>
<programlisting>
$ nix-env -iA haskellPackages.cabal-install
error: attribute haskellPackages in selection path
haskellPackages.cabal-install not found
</programlisting>
<para>
On NixOS, for example, Nixpkgs does <emphasis>not</emphasis> 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.:
</para>
<programlisting>
$ nix-env -qaP coreutils
nixos.coreutils coreutils-8.23
</programlisting>
<para>
If your system responds like that (most NixOS installations will),
then the attribute path to <literal>haskellPackages</literal> is
<literal>nixos.haskellPackages</literal>. Thus, if you want to
use <literal>nix-env</literal> without giving an explicit
<literal>-f</literal> flag, then that's the way to do it:
</para>
<programlisting>
$ nix-env -qaP -A nixos.haskellPackages
$ nix-env -iA nixos.haskellPackages.cabal-install
</programlisting>
<para>
Our current default compiler is GHC 7.10.x and the
<literal>haskellPackages</literal> 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:
</para>
<programlisting>
$ nix-env -f &quot;&lt;nixpkgs&gt;&quot; -qaP -A haskell.packages.ghc6123
$ nix-env -f &quot;&lt;nixpkgs&gt;&quot; -qaP -A haskell.packages.ghc763
</programlisting>
<para>
The name <literal>haskellPackages</literal> is really just a synonym
for <literal>haskell.packages.ghc7102</literal>, 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:
</para>
<programlisting>
$ nix-env -f &quot;&lt;nixpkgs&gt;&quot; -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
</programlisting>
<para>
We have no package sets for <literal>jhc</literal> or
<literal>uhc</literal> yet, unfortunately, but for every version of
GHC listed above, there exists a package set based on that compiler.
Also, the attributes <literal>haskell.compiler.ghcXYC</literal> and
<literal>haskell.packages.ghcXYC.ghc</literal> are synonymous for
the sake of convenience.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="how-to-create-a-development-environment">
<title>How to create a development environment</title>
<section xml:id="how-to-install-a-compiler">
<title>How to install a compiler</title>
<para>
A simple development environment consists of a Haskell compiler
and the tool <literal>cabal-install</literal>, and we saw in
section <link linkend="how-to-install-haskell-packages">How to
install Haskell packages</link> how you can install those programs
into your user profile:
</para>
<programlisting>
$ nix-env -f &quot;&lt;nixpkgs&gt;&quot; -iA haskellPackages.ghc haskellPackages.cabal-install
</programlisting>
<para>
Instead of the default package set
<literal>haskellPackages</literal>, you can also use the more
precise name <literal>haskell.compiler.ghc7102</literal>, which
has the advantage that it refers to the same GHC version
regardless of what Nixpkgs considers &quot;default&quot; at any
given time.
</para>
<para>
Once you've made those tools available in
<literal>$PATH</literal>, it's possible to build Hackage packages
the same way people without access to Nix do it all the time:
</para>
<programlisting>
$ cabal get lens-4.11 &amp;&amp; cd lens-4.11
$ cabal install -j --dependencies-only
$ cabal configure
$ cabal build
</programlisting>
<para>
If you enjoy working with Cabal sandboxes, then that's entirely
possible too: just execute the command
</para>
<programlisting>
$ cabal sandbox init
</programlisting>
<para>
before installing the required dependencies.
</para>
<para>
The <literal>nix-shell</literal> utility makes it easy to switch
to a different compiler version; just enter the Nix shell
environment with the command
</para>
<programlisting>
$ nix-shell -p haskell.compiler.ghc784
</programlisting>
<para>
to bring GHC 7.8.4 into <literal>$PATH</literal>. Re-running
<literal>cabal configure</literal> 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 sufficient even to run the <literal>cabal configure</literal>
command inside of the shell:
</para>
<programlisting>
$ nix-shell -p haskell.compiler.ghc784 --command &quot;cabal configure&quot;
</programlisting>
<para>
Afterwards, all other commands like <literal>cabal build</literal>
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 <literal>dist/</literal>
directory. Please note, however, that
<literal>nix-collect-garbage</literal> can break such an
environment because the Nix store paths created by
<literal>nix-shell</literal> aren't &quot;alive&quot; anymore once
<literal>nix-shell</literal> has terminated. If you find that your
Haskell builds no longer work after garbage collection, then
you'll have to re-run <literal>cabal configure</literal> inside of
a new <literal>nix-shell</literal> environment.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="how-to-install-a-compiler-with-libraries">
<title>How to install a compiler with libraries</title>
<para>
GHC expects to find all installed libraries inside of its own
<literal>lib</literal> 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 <literal>base</literal>,
<literal>containers</literal>, <literal>Cabal</literal>, etc.
</para>
<para>
We can register additional libraries to GHC, however, using a
special build function called <literal>ghcWithPackages</literal>.
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
<literal>ghcWithPackages (pkgs: [pkgs.mtl])</literal> generates a
copy of GHC that has the <literal>mtl</literal> library registered
in addition to its normal core packages:
</para>
<programlisting>
$ nix-shell -p &quot;haskellPackages.ghcWithPackages (pkgs: [pkgs.mtl])&quot;
[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
</programlisting>
<para>
This function allows users to define their own development
environment by means of an override. After adding the following
snippet to <literal>~/.nixpkgs/config.nix</literal>,
</para>
<programlisting>
{
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
]);
};
}
</programlisting>
<para>
it's possible to install that compiler with
<literal>nix-env -f &quot;&lt;nixpkgs&gt;&quot; -iA myHaskellEnv</literal>.
If you'd like to switch that development environment to a
different version of GHC, just replace the
<literal>ghc7102</literal> 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.)
</para>
<para>
The generated <literal>ghc</literal> program is a wrapper script
that re-directs the real GHC executable to use a new
<literal>lib</literal> directory --- one that we specifically
constructed to contain all those packages the user requested:
</para>
<programlisting>
$ cat $(type -p ghc)
#! /nix/store/xlxj...-bash-4.3-p33/bin/bash -e
export NIX_GHC=/nix/store/19sm...-ghc-7.10.2/bin/ghc
export NIX_GHCPKG=/nix/store/19sm...-ghc-7.10.2/bin/ghc-pkg
export NIX_GHC_DOCDIR=/nix/store/19sm...-ghc-7.10.2/share/doc/ghc/html
export NIX_GHC_LIBDIR=/nix/store/19sm...-ghc-7.10.2/lib/ghc-7.10.2
exec /nix/store/j50p...-ghc-7.10.2/bin/ghc &quot;-B$NIX_GHC_LIBDIR&quot; &quot;$@&quot;
</programlisting>
<para>
The variables <literal>$NIX_GHC</literal>,
<literal>$NIX_GHCPKG</literal>, etc. point to the
<emphasis>new</emphasis> store path
<literal>ghcWithPackages</literal> constructed specifically for
this environment. The last line of the wrapper script then
executes the real <literal>ghc</literal>, but passes the path to
the new <literal>lib</literal> directory using GHC's
<literal>-B</literal> flag.
</para>
<para>
The purpose of those environment variables is to work around an
impurity in the popular
<link xlink:href="http://hackage.haskell.org/package/ghc-paths">ghc-paths</link>
library. That library promises to give its users access to GHC's
installation paths. Only, the library can't possible know that
path when it's compiled, because the path GHC considers its own is
determined only much later, when the user configures it through
<literal>ghcWithPackages</literal>. So we
<link xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/development/haskell-modules/ghc-paths-nix.patch">patched
ghc-paths</link> to return the paths found in those environment
variables at run-time rather than trying to guess them at
compile-time.
</para>
<para>
To make sure that mechanism works properly all the time, we
recommend that you set those variables to meaningful values in
your shell environment, too, i.e. by adding the following code to
your <literal>~/.bashrc</literal>:
</para>
<programlisting>
if type &gt;/dev/null 2&gt;&amp;1 -p ghc; then
eval &quot;$(egrep ^export &quot;$(type -p ghc)&quot;)&quot;
fi
</programlisting>
<para>
If you are certain that you'll use only one GHC environment which
is located in your user profile, then you can use the following
code, too, which has the advantage that it doesn't contain any
paths from the Nix store, i.e. those settings always remain valid
even if a <literal>nix-env -u</literal> operation updates the GHC
environment in your profile:
</para>
<programlisting>
if [ -e ~/.nix-profile/bin/ghc ]; then
export NIX_GHC=&quot;$HOME/.nix-profile/bin/ghc&quot;
export NIX_GHCPKG=&quot;$HOME/.nix-profile/bin/ghc-pkg&quot;
export NIX_GHC_DOCDIR=&quot;$HOME/.nix-profile/share/doc/ghc/html&quot;
export NIX_GHC_LIBDIR=&quot;$HOME/.nix-profile/lib/ghc-$($NIX_GHC --numeric-version)&quot;
fi
</programlisting>
</section>
<section xml:id="how-to-install-a-compiler-with-indexes">
<title>How to install a compiler with libraries, hoogle and documentation indexes</title>
<para>
If you plan to use your environment for interactive programming,
not just compiling random Haskell code, you might want to
replace <literal>ghcWithPackages</literal> in all the listings
above with <literal>ghcWithHoogle</literal>.
</para>
<para>
This environment generator not only produces an environment with
GHC and all the specified libraries, but also generates a
<literal>hoogle</literal> and <literal>haddock</literal> indexes
for all the packages, and provides a wrapper script around
<literal>hoogle</literal> binary that uses all those things. A
precise name for this thing would be
"<literal>ghcWithPackagesAndHoogleAndDocumentationIndexes</literal>",
which is, regrettably, too long and scary.
</para>
<para>
For example, installing the following environment
</para>
<programlisting>
{
packageOverrides = super: let self = super.pkgs; in
{
myHaskellEnv = self.haskellPackages.ghcWithHoogle
(haskellPackages: with haskellPackages; [
# libraries
arrows async cgi criterion
# tools
cabal-install haskintex
]);
};
}
</programlisting>
<para>
allows one to browse module documentation index <link
xlink:href="https://downloads.haskell.org/~ghc/latest/docs/html/libraries/index.html">not
too dissimilar to this</link> for all the specified packages and
their dependencies by directing a browser of choice to
<literal>~/.nix-profiles/share/doc/hoogle/index.html</literal>
(or
<literal>/run/current-system/sw/share/doc/hoogle/index.html</literal>
in case you put it in
<literal>environment.systemPackages</literal> in NixOS).
</para>
<para>
After you've marveled enough at that try adding the following to
your <literal>~/.ghc/ghci.conf</literal>
</para>
<programlisting>
:def hoogle \s -> return $ ":! hoogle search -cl --count=15 \"" ++ s ++ "\""
:def doc \s -> return $ ":! hoogle search -cl --info \"" ++ s ++ "\""
</programlisting>
<para>
and test it by typing into <literal>ghci</literal>:
</para>
<programlisting>
:hoogle a -> a
:doc a -> a
</programlisting>
<para>
Be sure to note the links to <literal>haddock</literal> files in
the output. With any modern and properly configured terminal
emulator you can just click those links to navigate there.
</para>
<para>
Finally, you can run
</para>
<programlisting>
hoogle server -p 8080
</programlisting>
<para>
and navigate to <link xlink:href="http://localhost:8080/"/> for
your own local <link
xlink:href="https://www.haskell.org/hoogle/">Hoogle</link>.
Note, however, that Firefox and possibly other browsers disallow
navigation from <literal>http:</literal> to
<literal>file:</literal> URIs for security reasons, which might
be quite an inconvenience. See <link
xlink:href="http://kb.mozillazine.org/Links_to_local_pages_do_not_work">this
page</link> for workarounds.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="how-to-create-ad-hoc-environments-for-nix-shell">
<title>How to create ad hoc environments for
<literal>nix-shell</literal></title>
<para>
The easiest way to create an ad hoc development environment is to
run <literal>nix-shell</literal> with the appropriate GHC
environment given on the command-line:
</para>
<programlisting>
nix-shell -p &quot;haskellPackages.ghcWithPackages (pkgs: with pkgs; [mtl pandoc])&quot;
</programlisting>
<para>
For more sophisticated use-cases, however, it's more convenient to
save the desired configuration in a file called
<literal>shell.nix</literal> that looks like this:
</para>
<programlisting>
{ nixpkgs ? import &lt;nixpkgs&gt; {}, compiler ? &quot;ghc7102&quot; }:
let
inherit (nixpkgs) pkgs;
ghc = pkgs.haskell.packages.${compiler}.ghcWithPackages (ps: with ps; [
monad-par mtl
]);
in
pkgs.stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = &quot;my-haskell-env-0&quot;;
buildInputs = [ ghc ];
shellHook = &quot;eval $(egrep ^export ${ghc}/bin/ghc)&quot;;
}
</programlisting>
<para>
Now run <literal>nix-shell</literal> --- or even
<literal>nix-shell --pure</literal> --- to enter a shell
environment that has the appropriate compiler in
<literal>$PATH</literal>. If you use <literal>--pure</literal>,
then add all other packages that your development environment
needs into the <literal>buildInputs</literal> attribute. If you'd
like to switch to a different compiler version, then pass an
appropriate <literal>compiler</literal> argument to the
expression, i.e.
<literal>nix-shell --argstr compiler ghc784</literal>.
</para>
<para>
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 <literal>env</literal> attribute that provides a
shell environment suitable for compiling that particular package.
If you'd like to hack the <literal>lens</literal> library, for
example, then you just have to check out the source code and enter
the appropriate environment:
</para>
<programlisting>
$ cabal get lens-4.11 &amp;&amp; cd lens-4.11
Downloading lens-4.11...
Unpacking to lens-4.11/
$ nix-shell &quot;&lt;nixpkgs&gt;&quot; -A haskellPackages.lens.env
[nix-shell:/tmp/lens-4.11]$
</programlisting>
<para>
At point, you can run <literal>cabal configure</literal>,
<literal>cabal build</literal>, and all the other development
commands. Note that you need <literal>cabal-install</literal>
installed in your <literal>$PATH</literal> already to use it here
--- the <literal>nix-shell</literal> environment does not provide
it.
</para>
</section>
</section>
<section xml:id="how-to-create-nix-builds-for-your-own-private-haskell-packages">
<title>How to create Nix builds for your own private Haskell
packages</title>
<para>
If your own Haskell packages have build instructions for Cabal, then
you can convert those automatically into build instructions for Nix
using the <literal>cabal2nix</literal> utility, which you can
install into your profile by running
<literal>nix-env -i cabal2nix</literal>.
</para>
<section xml:id="how-to-build-a-stand-alone-project">
<title>How to build a stand-alone project</title>
<para>
For example, let's assume that you're working on a private project
called <literal>foo</literal>. To generate a Nix build expression
for it, change into the project's top-level directory and run the
command:
</para>
<programlisting>
$ cabal2nix . &gt;foo.nix
</programlisting>
<para>
Then write the following snippet into a file called
<literal>default.nix</literal>:
</para>
<programlisting>
{ nixpkgs ? import &lt;nixpkgs&gt; {}, compiler ? &quot;ghc7102&quot; }:
nixpkgs.pkgs.haskell.packages.${compiler}.callPackage ./foo.nix { }
</programlisting>
<para>
Finally, store the following code in a file called
<literal>shell.nix</literal>:
</para>
<programlisting>
{ nixpkgs ? import &lt;nixpkgs&gt; {}, compiler ? &quot;ghc7102&quot; }:
(import ./default.nix { inherit nixpkgs compiler; }).env
</programlisting>
<para>
At this point, you can run <literal>nix-build</literal> to have
Nix compile your project and install it into a Nix store path. The
local directory will contain a symlink called
<literal>result</literal> after <literal>nix-build</literal>
returns that points into that location. Of course, passing the
flag <literal>--argstr compiler ghc763</literal> allows switching
the build to any version of GHC currently supported.
</para>
<para>
Furthermore, you can call <literal>nix-shell</literal> to enter an
interactive development environment in which you can use
<literal>cabal configure</literal> and
<literal>cabal build</literal> 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.
</para>
<para>
If your package does not depend on any system-level libraries,
then it's sufficient to run
</para>
<programlisting>
$ nix-shell --command &quot;cabal configure&quot;
</programlisting>
<para>
once to set up your build. <literal>cabal-install</literal>
determines the absolute paths to all resources required for the
build and writes them into a config file in the
<literal>dist/</literal> directory. Once that's done, you can run
<literal>cabal build</literal> and any other command for that
project even outside of the <literal>nix-shell</literal>
environment. This feature is particularly nice for those of us who
like to edit their code with an IDE, like Emacs'
<literal>haskell-mode</literal>, 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;
<literal>cabal-install</literal> has already done that for us.
</para>
<para>
If you want to do some quick-and-dirty hacking and don't want to
bother setting up a <literal>default.nix</literal> and
<literal>shell.nix</literal> file manually, then you can use the
<literal>--shell</literal> flag offered by
<literal>cabal2nix</literal> to have it generate a stand-alone
<literal>nix-shell</literal> environment for you. With that
feature, running
</para>
<programlisting>
$ cabal2nix --shell . &gt;shell.nix
$ nix-shell --command &quot;cabal configure&quot;
</programlisting>
<para>
is usually enough to set up a build environment for any given
Haskell package. You can even use that generated file to run
<literal>nix-build</literal>, too:
</para>
<programlisting>
$ nix-build shell.nix
</programlisting>
</section>
<section xml:id="how-to-build-projects-that-depend-on-each-other">
<title>How to build projects that depend on each other</title>
<para>
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 <literal>callPackage</literal>. First of all, change into each
of your projects top-level directories and generate a
<literal>default.nix</literal> file with
<literal>cabal2nix</literal>:
</para>
<programlisting>
$ cd ~/src/foo &amp;&amp; cabal2nix . &gt;default.nix
$ cd ~/src/bar &amp;&amp; cabal2nix . &gt;default.nix
</programlisting>
<para>
Then edit your <literal>~/.nixpkgs/config.nix</literal> file to
register those builds in the default Haskell package set:
</para>
<programlisting>
{
packageOverrides = super: let self = super.pkgs; in
{
haskellPackages = super.haskellPackages.override {
overrides = self: super: {
foo = self.callPackage ../src/foo {};
bar = self.callPackage ../src/bar {};
};
};
};
}
</programlisting>
<para>
Once that's accomplished,
<literal>nix-env -f &quot;&lt;nixpkgs&gt;&quot; -qA haskellPackages</literal>
will show your packages like any other package from Hackage, and
you can build them
</para>
<programlisting>
$ nix-build &quot;&lt;nixpkgs&gt;&quot; -A haskellPackages.foo
</programlisting>
<para>
or enter an interactive shell environment suitable for building
them:
</para>
<programlisting>
$ nix-shell &quot;&lt;nixpkgs&gt;&quot; -A haskellPackages.bar.env
</programlisting>
</section>
</section>
<section xml:id="miscellaneous-topics">
<title>Miscellaneous Topics</title>
<section xml:id="how-to-build-with-profiling-enabled">
<title>How to build with profiling enabled</title>
<para>
Every Haskell package set takes a function called
<literal>overrides</literal> that you can use to manipulate the
package as much as you please. One useful application of this
feature is to replace the default <literal>mkDerivation</literal>
function with one that enables library profiling for all packages.
To accomplish that, add configure the following snippet in your
<literal>~/.nixpkgs/config.nix</literal> file:
</para>
<programlisting>
{
packageOverrides = super: let self = super.pkgs; in
{
profiledHaskellPackages = self.haskellPackages.override {
overrides = self: super: {
mkDerivation = args: super.mkDerivation (args // {
enableLibraryProfiling = true;
});
};
};
};
}
</programlisting>
<para>
Then, replace instances of <literal>haskellPackages</literal> in the
<literal>cabal2nix</literal>-generated <literal>default.nix</literal>
or <literal>shell.nix</literal> files with
<literal>profiledHaskellPackages</literal>.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="how-to-override-package-versions-in-a-compiler-specific-package-set">
<title>How to override package versions in a compiler-specific
package set</title>
<para>
Nixpkgs provides the latest version of
<link xlink:href="http://hackage.haskell.org/package/ghc-events"><literal>ghc-events</literal></link>,
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 <literal>ghc-events</literal> in the 7.8.x-specific package
set. The first step is to generate Nix build instructions with
<literal>cabal2nix</literal>:
</para>
<programlisting>
$ cabal2nix cabal://ghc-events-0.4.3.0 &gt;~/.nixpkgs/ghc-events-0.4.3.0.nix
</programlisting>
<para>
Then add the override in <literal>~/.nixpkgs/config.nix</literal>:
</para>
<programlisting>
{
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 {};
};
};
};
};
};
}
</programlisting>
<para>
This code is a little crazy, no doubt, but it's necessary because
the intuitive version
</para>
<programlisting>
haskell.packages.ghc784 = super.haskell.packages.ghc784.override {
overrides = self: super: {
ghc-events = self.callPackage ./ghc-events-0.4.3.0.nix {};
};
};
</programlisting>
<para>
doesn't do what we want it to: that code replaces the
<literal>haskell</literal> package set in Nixpkgs with one that
contains only one entry,<literal>packages</literal>, which
contains only one entry <literal>ghc784</literal>. This override
loses the <literal>haskell.compiler</literal> set, and it loses
the <literal>haskell.packages.ghcXYZ</literal> 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.
</para>
<para>
Once it's accomplished, however, we can install a variant of
<literal>ghc-events</literal> that's compiled with GHC 7.8.4:
</para>
<programlisting>
nix-env -f &quot;&lt;nixpkgs&gt;&quot; -iA haskell.packages.ghc784.ghc-events
</programlisting>
<para>
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 <literal>--no-check</literal> flag:
</para>
<programlisting>
$ cabal2nix --no-check cabal://ghc-events-0.4.3.0 &gt;~/.nixpkgs/ghc-events-0.4.3.0.nix
</programlisting>
<para>
Now the builds succeeds.
</para>
<para>
Of course, in the concrete example of
<literal>ghc-events</literal> this whole exercise is not an ideal
solution, because <literal>ghc-events</literal> 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.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="how-to-recover-from-ghcs-infamous-non-deterministic-library-id-bug">
<title>How to recover from GHC's infamous non-deterministic library
ID bug</title>
<para>
GHC and distributed build farms don't get along well:
</para>
<programlisting>
https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/4012
</programlisting>
<para>
When you see an error like this one
</para>
<programlisting>
package foo-0.7.1.0 is broken due to missing package
text-1.2.0.4-98506efb1b9ada233bb5c2b2db516d91
</programlisting>
<para>
then you have to download and re-install <literal>foo</literal>
and all its dependents from scratch:
</para>
<programlisting>
# 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
</programlisting>
<para>
If you're using additional Hydra servers other than
<literal>hydra.nixos.org</literal>, 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:
</para>
<programlisting>
rm /nix/var/nix/binary-cache-v3.sqlite
rm /nix/var/nix/manifests/*
rm /nix/var/nix/channel-cache/*
</programlisting>
</section>
<section xml:id="builds-on-darwin-fail-with-math.h-not-found">
<title>Builds on Darwin fail with <literal>math.h</literal> not
found</title>
<para>
Users of GHC on Darwin have occasionally reported that builds
fail, because the compiler complains about a missing include file:
</para>
<programlisting>
fatal error: 'math.h' file not found
</programlisting>
<para>
The issue has been discussed at length in
<link xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/6390">ticket
6390</link>, and so far no good solution has been proposed. As a
work-around, users who run into this problem can configure the
environment variables
</para>
<programlisting>
export NIX_CFLAGS_COMPILE=&quot;-idirafter /usr/include&quot;
export NIX_CFLAGS_LINK=&quot;-L/usr/lib&quot;
</programlisting>
<para>
in their <literal>~/.bashrc</literal> file to avoid the compiler
error.
</para>
</section>
</section>
<section xml:id="other-resources">
<title>Other resources</title>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
The Youtube video
<link xlink:href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BsBhi_r-OeE">Nix
Loves Haskell</link> 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 &amp; paste -- at
https://github.com/NixOS/cabal2nix/blob/master/doc/nixos-meetup-3-slides.md.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Another Youtube video is
<link xlink:href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mQd3s57n_2Y">Escaping
Cabal Hell with Nix</link>, 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.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Oliver Charles wrote a very nice
<link xlink:href="http://wiki.ocharles.org.uk/Nix">Tutorial how to
develop Haskell packages with Nix</link>.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
The <emphasis>Journey into the Haskell NG
infrastructure</emphasis> series of postings describe the new
Haskell infrastructure in great detail:
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
<link xlink:href="http://lists.science.uu.nl/pipermail/nix-dev/2015-January/015591.html">Part
1</link> explains the differences between the old and the
new code and gives instructions how to migrate to the new
setup.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
<link xlink:href="http://lists.science.uu.nl/pipermail/nix-dev/2015-January/015608.html">Part
2</link> looks in-depth at how to tweak and configure your
setup by means of overrides.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
<link xlink:href="http://lists.science.uu.nl/pipermail/nix-dev/2015-April/016912.html">Part
3</link> describes the infrastructure that keeps the
Haskell package set in Nixpkgs up-to-date.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</section>
</chapter>

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@@ -1,51 +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. 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.

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<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>

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---
title: Android
author: Sander van der Burg
date: 2018-11-18
---
# Android
The Android build environment provides three major features and a number of
supporting features.
Deploying an Android SDK installation with plugins
--------------------------------------------------
The first use case is deploying the SDK with a desired set of plugins or subsets
of an SDK.
```nix
with import <nixpkgs> {};
let
androidComposition = androidenv.composeAndroidPackages {
toolsVersion = "25.2.5";
platformToolsVersion = "27.0.1";
buildToolsVersions = [ "27.0.3" ];
includeEmulator = false;
emulatorVersion = "27.2.0";
platformVersions = [ "24" ];
includeSources = false;
includeDocs = false;
includeSystemImages = false;
systemImageTypes = [ "default" ];
abiVersions = [ "armeabi-v7a" ];
lldbVersions = [ "2.0.2558144" ];
cmakeVersions = [ "3.6.4111459" ];
includeNDK = false;
ndkVersion = "16.1.4479499";
useGoogleAPIs = false;
useGoogleTVAddOns = false;
includeExtras = [
"extras;google;gcm"
];
};
in
androidComposition.androidsdk
```
The above function invocation states that we want an Android SDK with the above
specified plugin versions. By default, most plugins are disabled. Notable
exceptions are the tools, platform-tools and build-tools sub packages.
The following parameters are supported:
* `toolsVersion`, specifies the version of the tools package to use
* `platformsToolsVersion` specifies the version of the `platform-tools` plugin
* `buildToolsVersion` specifies the versions of the `build-tools` plugins to
use.
* `includeEmulator` specifies whether to deploy the emulator package (`false`
by default). When enabled, the version of the emulator to deploy can be
specified by setting the `emulatorVersion` parameter.
* `includeDocs` specifies whether the documentation catalog should be included.
* `lldbVersions` specifies what LLDB versions should be deployed.
* `cmakeVersions` specifies which CMake versions should be deployed.
* `includeNDK` specifies that the Android NDK bundle should be included.
Defaults to: `false`.
* `ndkVersion` specifies the NDK version that we want to use.
* `includeExtras` is an array of identifier strings referring to arbitrary
add-on packages that should be installed.
* `platformVersions` specifies which platform SDK versions should be included.
For each platform version that has been specified, we can apply the following
options:
* `includeSystemImages` specifies whether a system image for each platform SDK
should be included.
* `includeSources` specifies whether the sources for each SDK version should be
included.
* `useGoogleAPIs` specifies that for each selected platform version the
Google API should be included.
* `useGoogleTVAddOns` specifies that for each selected platform version the
Google TV add-on should be included.
For each requested system image we can specify the following options:
* `systemImageTypes` specifies what kind of system images should be included.
Defaults to: `default`.
* `abiVersions` specifies what kind of ABI version of each system image should
be included. Defaults to: `armeabi-v7a`.
Most of the function arguments have reasonable default settings.
When building the above expression with:
```bash
$ nix-build
```
The Android SDK gets deployed with all desired plugin versions.
We can also deploy subsets of the Android SDK. For example, to only the the
`platform-tools` package, you can evaluate the following expression:
```nix
with import <nixpkgs> {};
let
androidComposition = androidenv.composeAndroidPackages {
# ...
};
in
androidComposition.platform-tools
```
Using predefine Android package compositions
--------------------------------------------
In addition to composing an Android package set manually, it is also possible
to use a predefined composition that contains all basic packages for a specific
Android version, such as version 9.0 (API-level 28).
The following Nix expression can be used to deploy the entire SDK with all basic
plugins:
```nix
with import <nixpkgs> {};
androidenv.androidPkgs_9_0.androidsdk
```
It is also possible to use one plugin only:
```nix
with import <nixpkgs> {};
androidenv.androidPkgs_9_0.platform-tools
```
Building an Android application
-------------------------------
In addition to the SDK, it is also possible to build an Ant-based Android
project and automatically deploy all the Android plugins that a project
requires.
```nix
with import <nixpkgs> {};
androidenv.buildApp {
name = "MyAndroidApp";
src = ./myappsources;
release = true;
# If release is set to true, you need to specify the following parameters
keyStore = ./keystore;
keyAlias = "myfirstapp";
keyStorePassword = "mykeystore";
keyAliasPassword = "myfirstapp";
# Any Android SDK parameters that install all the relevant plugins that a
# build requires
platformVersions = [ "24" ];
# When we include the NDK, then ndk-build is invoked before Ant gets invoked
includeNDK = true;
}
```
Aside from the app-specific build parameters (`name`, `src`, `release` and
keystore parameters), the `buildApp {}` function supports all the function
parameters that the SDK composition function (the function shown in the
previous section) supports.
This build function is particularly useful when it is desired to use
[Hydra](http://nixos.org/hydra): the Nix-based continuous integration solution
to build Android apps. An Android APK gets exposed as a build product and can be
installed on any Android device with a web browser by navigating to the build
result page.
Spawning emulator instances
---------------------------
For testing purposes, it can also be quite convenient to automatically generate
scripts that spawn emulator instances with all desired configuration settings.
An emulator spawn script can be configured by invoking the `emulateApp {}`
function:
```nix
with import <nixpkgs> {};
androidenv.emulateApp {
name = "emulate-MyAndroidApp";
platformVersion = "24";
abiVersion = "armeabi-v7a"; # mips, x86 or x86_64
systemImageType = "default";
useGoogleAPIs = false;
}
```
It is also possible to specify an APK to deploy inside the emulator
and the package and activity names to launch it:
```nix
with import <nixpkgs> {};
androidenv.emulateApp {
name = "emulate-MyAndroidApp";
platformVersion = "24";
abiVersion = "armeabi-v7a"; # mips, x86 or x86_64
systemImageType = "default";
useGoogleAPIs = false;
app = ./MyApp.apk;
package = "MyApp";
activity = "MainActivity";
}
```
In addition to prebuilt APKs, you can also bind the APK parameter to a
`buildApp {}` function invocation shown in the previous example.
Querying the available versions of each plugin
----------------------------------------------
When using any of the previously shown functions, it may be a bit inconvenient
to find out what options are supported, since the Android SDK provides many
plugins.
A shell script in the `pkgs/development/mobile/androidenv/` sub directory can be used to retrieve all
possible options:
```bash
sh ./querypackages.sh packages build-tools
```
The above command-line instruction queries all build-tools versions in the
generated `packages.nix` expression.
Updating the generated expressions
----------------------------------
Most of the Nix expressions are generated from XML files that the Android
package manager uses. To update the expressions run the `generate.sh` script
that is stored in the `pkgs/development/mobile/androidenv/` sub directory:
```bash
sh ./generate.sh
```

View File

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

View File

@@ -1,229 +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>

View File

@@ -1,64 +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>$COQPATH</literal>
environment variable by the hook defined in the Coq derivation.
</para>
<para>
Some extensions (plugins) might require OCaml and sometimes other OCaml
packages. The <literal>coq.ocamlPackages</literal> attribute can be used to
depend on the same package set Coq was built against.
</para>
<para>
Coq libraries may be compatible with some specific versions of Coq only. The
<literal>compatibleCoqVersions</literal> attribute is used to precisely
select those versions of Coq that are compatible with this derivation.
</para>
<para>
Here is a simple package example. It is a pure Coq library, thus it depends
on Coq. It builds on the Mathematical Components library, thus it also takes
<literal>mathcomp</literal> as <literal>buildInputs</literal>. Its
<literal>Makefile</literal> has been generated using
<literal>coq_makefile</literal> so we only have to set the
<literal>$COQLIB</literal> variable at install time.
</para>
<programlisting>
{ stdenv, fetchFromGitHub, coq, mathcomp }:
stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
name = "coq${coq.coq-version}-multinomials-${version}";
version = "1.0";
src = fetchFromGitHub {
owner = "math-comp";
repo = "multinomials";
rev = version;
sha256 = "1qmbxp1h81cy3imh627pznmng0kvv37k4hrwi2faa101s6bcx55m";
};
buildInputs = [ coq ];
propagatedBuildInputs = [ mathcomp ];
installFlags = "COQLIB=$(out)/lib/coq/${coq.coq-version}/";
meta = {
description = "A Coq/SSReflect Library for Monoidal Rings and Multinomials";
inherit (src.meta) homepage;
license = stdenv.lib.licenses.cecill-b;
inherit (coq.meta) platforms;
};
passthru = {
compatibleCoqVersions = v: builtins.elem v [ "8.5" "8.6" "8.7" ];
};
}
</programlisting>
</section>

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@@ -1,185 +0,0 @@
# User's Guide to Emscripten in Nixpkgs
[Emscripten](https://github.com/kripken/emscripten): An LLVM-to-JavaScript Compiler
This section of the manual covers how to use `emscripten` in nixpkgs.
Minimal requirements:
* nix
* nixpkgs
Modes of use of `emscripten`:
* **Imperative usage** (on the command line):
If you want to work with `emcc`, `emconfigure` and `emmake` as you are used to from Ubuntu and similar distributions you can use these commands:
* `nix-env -i emscripten`
* `nix-shell -p emscripten`
* **Declarative usage**:
This mode is far more power full since this makes use of `nix` for dependency management of emscripten libraries and targets by using the `mkDerivation` which is implemented by `pkgs.emscriptenStdenv` and `pkgs.buildEmscriptenPackage`. The source for the packages is in `pkgs/top-level/emscripten-packages.nix` and the abstraction behind it in `pkgs/development/em-modules/generic/default.nix`.
* build and install all packages:
* `nix-env -iA emscriptenPackages`
* dev-shell for zlib implementation hacking:
* `nix-shell -A emscriptenPackages.zlib`
## Imperative usage
A few things to note:
* `export EMCC_DEBUG=2` is nice for debugging
* `~/.emscripten`, the build artifact cache sometimes creates issues and needs to be removed from time to time
## Declarative usage
Let's see two different examples from `pkgs/top-level/emscripten-packages.nix`:
* `pkgs.zlib.override`
* `pkgs.buildEmscriptenPackage`
Both are interesting concepts.
A special requirement of the `pkgs.buildEmscriptenPackage` is the `doCheck = true` is a default meaning that each emscriptenPackage requires a `checkPhase` implemented.
* Use `export EMCC_DEBUG=2` from within a emscriptenPackage's `phase` to get more detailed debug output what is going wrong.
* ~/.emscripten cache is requiring us to set `HOME=$TMPDIR` in individual phases. This makes compilation slower but also makes it more deterministic.
### Usage 1: pkgs.zlib.override
This example uses `zlib` from nixpkgs but instead of compiling **C** to **ELF** it compiles **C** to **JS** since we were using `pkgs.zlib.override` and changed stdenv to `pkgs.emscriptenStdenv`. A few adaptions and hacks were set in place to make it working. One advantage is that when `pkgs.zlib` is updated, it will automatically update this package as well. However, this can also be the downside...
See the `zlib` example:
zlib = (pkgs.zlib.override {
stdenv = pkgs.emscriptenStdenv;
}).overrideDerivation
(old: rec {
buildInputs = old.buildInputs ++ [ pkgconfig ];
# we need to reset this setting!
NIX_CFLAGS_COMPILE="";
configurePhase = ''
# FIXME: Some tests require writing at $HOME
HOME=$TMPDIR
runHook preConfigure
#export EMCC_DEBUG=2
emconfigure ./configure --prefix=$out --shared
runHook postConfigure
'';
dontStrip = true;
outputs = [ "out" ];
buildPhase = ''
emmake make
'';
installPhase = ''
emmake make install
'';
checkPhase = ''
echo "================= testing zlib using node ================="
echo "Compiling a custom test"
set -x
emcc -O2 -s EMULATE_FUNCTION_POINTER_CASTS=1 test/example.c -DZ_SOLO \
libz.so.${old.version} -I . -o example.js
echo "Using node to execute the test"
${pkgs.nodejs}/bin/node ./example.js
set +x
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
echo "test failed for some reason"
exit 1;
else
echo "it seems to work! very good."
fi
echo "================= /testing zlib using node ================="
'';
postPatch = pkgs.stdenv.lib.optionalString pkgs.stdenv.isDarwin ''
substituteInPlace configure \
--replace '/usr/bin/libtool' 'ar' \
--replace 'AR="libtool"' 'AR="ar"' \
--replace 'ARFLAGS="-o"' 'ARFLAGS="-r"'
'';
});
### Usage 2: pkgs.buildEmscriptenPackage
This `xmlmirror` example features a emscriptenPackage which is defined completely from this context and no `pkgs.zlib.override` is used.
xmlmirror = pkgs.buildEmscriptenPackage rec {
name = "xmlmirror";
buildInputs = [ pkgconfig autoconf automake libtool gnumake libxml2 nodejs openjdk json_c ];
nativeBuildInputs = [ pkgconfig zlib ];
src = pkgs.fetchgit {
url = "https://gitlab.com/odfplugfest/xmlmirror.git";
rev = "4fd7e86f7c9526b8f4c1733e5c8b45175860a8fd";
sha256 = "1jasdqnbdnb83wbcnyrp32f36w3xwhwp0wq8lwwmhqagxrij1r4b";
};
configurePhase = ''
rm -f fastXmlLint.js*
# a fix for ERROR:root:For asm.js, TOTAL_MEMORY must be a multiple of 16MB, was 234217728
# https://gitlab.com/odfplugfest/xmlmirror/issues/8
sed -e "s/TOTAL_MEMORY=234217728/TOTAL_MEMORY=268435456/g" -i Makefile.emEnv
# https://github.com/kripken/emscripten/issues/6344
# https://gitlab.com/odfplugfest/xmlmirror/issues/9
sed -e "s/\$(JSONC_LDFLAGS) \$(ZLIB_LDFLAGS) \$(LIBXML20_LDFLAGS)/\$(JSONC_LDFLAGS) \$(LIBXML20_LDFLAGS) \$(ZLIB_LDFLAGS) /g" -i Makefile.emEnv
# https://gitlab.com/odfplugfest/xmlmirror/issues/11
sed -e "s/-o fastXmlLint.js/-s EXTRA_EXPORTED_RUNTIME_METHODS='[\"ccall\", \"cwrap\"]' -o fastXmlLint.js/g" -i Makefile.emEnv
'';
buildPhase = ''
HOME=$TMPDIR
make -f Makefile.emEnv
'';
outputs = [ "out" "doc" ];
installPhase = ''
mkdir -p $out/share
mkdir -p $doc/share/${name}
cp Demo* $out/share
cp -R codemirror-5.12 $out/share
cp fastXmlLint.js* $out/share
cp *.xsd $out/share
cp *.js $out/share
cp *.xhtml $out/share
cp *.html $out/share
cp *.json $out/share
cp *.rng $out/share
cp README.md $doc/share/${name}
'';
checkPhase = ''
'';
};
### Declarative debugging
Use `nix-shell -I nixpkgs=/some/dir/nixpkgs -A emscriptenPackages.libz` and from there you can go trough the individual steps. This makes it easy to build a good `unit test` or list the files of the project.
1. `nix-shell -I nixpkgs=/some/dir/nixpkgs -A emscriptenPackages.libz`
2. `cd /tmp/`
3. `unpackPhase`
4. cd libz-1.2.3
5. `configurePhase`
6. `buildPhase`
7. ... happy hacking...
## Summary
Using this toolchain makes it easy to leverage `nix` from NixOS, MacOSX or even Windows (WSL+ubuntu+nix). This toolchain is reproducible, behaves like the rest of the packages from nixpkgs and contains a set of well working examples to learn and adapt from.
If in trouble, ask the maintainers.

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@@ -1,241 +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>
<section xml:id="ssec-go-modules">
<title>Go modules</title>
<para>
The function <varname> buildGoModule </varname> builds Go programs managed
with Go modules. It builds a
<link xlink:href="https://github.com/golang/go/wiki/Modules">Go
modules</link> through a two phase build:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
An intermediate fetcher derivation. This derivation will be used to fetch
all of the dependencies of the Go module.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
A final derivation will use the output of the intermediate derivation to
build the binaries and produce the final output.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
<example xml:id='ex-buildGoModule'>
<title>buildGoModule</title>
<programlisting>
pet = buildGoModule rec {
name = "pet-${version}";
version = "0.3.4";
src = fetchFromGitHub {
owner = "knqyf263";
repo = "pet";
rev = "v${version}";
sha256 = "0m2fzpqxk7hrbxsgqplkg7h2p7gv6s1miymv3gvw0cz039skag0s";
};
modSha256 = "1879j77k96684wi554rkjxydrj8g3hpp0kvxz03sd8dmwr3lh83j"; <co xml:id='ex-buildGoModule-1' />
subPackages = [ "." ]; <co xml:id='ex-buildGoModule-2' />
meta = with lib; {
description = "Simple command-line snippet manager, written in Go";
homepage = https://github.com/knqyf263/pet;
license = licenses.mit;
maintainers = with maintainers; [ kalbasit ];
platforms = platforms.linux ++ platforms.darwin;
};
}
</programlisting>
</example>
<para>
<xref linkend='ex-buildGoModule'/> is an example expression using
buildGoModule, the following arguments are of special significance to the
function:
<calloutlist>
<callout arearefs='ex-buildGoModule-1'>
<para>
<varname>modSha256</varname> is the hash of the output of the
intermediate fetcher derivation.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-buildGoModule-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>
</callout>
</calloutlist>
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="ssec-go-legacy">
<title>Go legacy</title>
<para>
The function <varname> buildGoPackage </varname> builds legacy Go programs,
not supporting Go modules.
</para>
<example xml:id='ex-buildGoPackage'>
<title>buildGoPackage</title>
<programlisting>
deis = buildGoPackage rec {
name = "deis-${version}";
version = "1.13.0";
goPackagePath = "github.com/deis/deis"; <co xml:id='ex-buildGoPackage-1' />
subPackages = [ "client" ]; <co xml:id='ex-buildGoPackage-2' />
src = fetchFromGitHub {
owner = "deis";
repo = "deis";
rev = "v${version}";
sha256 = "1qv9lxqx7m18029lj8cw3k7jngvxs4iciwrypdy0gd2nnghc68sw";
};
goDeps = ./deps.nix; <co xml:id='ex-buildGoPackage-3' />
buildFlags = "--tags release"; <co xml:id='ex-buildGoPackage-4' />
}
</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>github.com/deis/deis/client</literal> will
be built.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-buildGoPackage-3'>
<para>
<varname>goDeps</varname> is where the Go dependencies of a Go program
are listed as a list of package source identified by Go import path. It
could be imported as a separate <varname>deps.nix</varname> file for
readability. The dependency data structure is described below.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-buildGoPackage-4'>
<para>
<varname>buildFlags</varname> is a list of flags passed to the go build
command.
</para>
</callout>
</calloutlist>
</para>
<para>
The <varname>goDeps</varname> attribute can be imported from a separate
<varname>nix</varname> file that defines which Go libraries are needed and
should be included in <varname>GOPATH</varname> for
<varname>buildPhase</varname>.
</para>
<example xml:id='ex-goDeps'>
<title>deps.nix</title>
<programlisting>
[ <co xml:id='ex-goDeps-1' />
{
goPackagePath = "gopkg.in/yaml.v2"; <co xml:id='ex-goDeps-2' />
fetch = {
type = "git"; <co xml:id='ex-goDeps-3' />
url = "https://gopkg.in/yaml.v2";
rev = "a83829b6f1293c91addabc89d0571c246397bbf4";
sha256 = "1m4dsmk90sbi17571h6pld44zxz7jc4lrnl4f27dpd1l8g5xvjhh";
};
}
{
goPackagePath = "github.com/docopt/docopt-go";
fetch = {
type = "git";
url = "https://github.com/docopt/docopt-go";
rev = "784ddc588536785e7299f7272f39101f7faccc3f";
sha256 = "0wwz48jl9fvl1iknvn9dqr4gfy1qs03gxaikrxxp9gry6773v3sj";
};
}
]
</programlisting>
</example>
<para>
<calloutlist>
<callout arearefs='ex-goDeps-1'>
<para>
<varname>goDeps</varname> is a list of Go dependencies.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-goDeps-2'>
<para>
<varname>goPackagePath</varname> specifies Go package import path.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='ex-goDeps-3'>
<para>
<varname>fetch type</varname> that needs to be used to get package
source. If <varname>git</varname> is used there should be
<varname>url</varname>, <varname>rev</varname> and
<varname>sha256</varname> defined next to it.
</para>
</callout>
</calloutlist>
</para>
<para>
To extract dependency information from a Go package in automated way use
<link xlink:href="https://github.com/kamilchm/go2nix">go2nix</link>. It can
produce complete derivation and <varname>goDeps</varname> file for Go
programs.
</para>
<para>
<varname>buildGoPackage</varname> produces
<xref linkend='chap-multiple-output' xrefstyle="select: title" /> where
<varname>bin</varname> includes program binaries. You can test build a Go
binary as follows:
<screen>
$ nix-build -A deis.bin
</screen>
or build all outputs with:
<screen>
$ nix-build -A deis.all
</screen>
<varname>bin</varname> output will be installed by default with
<varname>nix-env -i</varname> or <varname>systemPackages</varname>.
</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>
</section>
</section>

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@@ -1,115 +0,0 @@
# Idris packages
## Installing Idris
The easiest way to get a working idris version is to install the `idris` attribute:
```
$ # On NixOS
$ nix-env -i nixos.idris
$ # On non-NixOS
$ nix-env -i nixpkgs.idris
```
This however only provides the `prelude` and `base` libraries. To install additional libraries:
```
$ nix-env -iE 'pkgs: pkgs.idrisPackages.with-packages (with pkgs.idrisPackages; [ contrib pruviloj ])'
```
To see all available Idris packages:
```
$ # On NixOS
$ nix-env -qaPA nixos.idrisPackages
$ # On non-NixOS
$ nix-env -qaPA nixpkgs.idrisPackages
```
Similarly, entering a `nix-shell`:
```
$ nix-shell -p 'idrisPackages.with-packages (with idrisPackages; [ contrib pruviloj ])'
```
## Starting Idris with library support
To have access to these libraries in idris, call it with an argument `-p <library name>` for each library:
```
$ nix-shell -p 'idrisPackages.with-packages (with idrisPackages; [ contrib pruviloj ])'
[nix-shell:~]$ idris -p contrib -p pruviloj
```
A listing of all available packages the Idris binary has access to is available via `--listlibs`:
```
$ idris --listlibs
00prelude-idx.ibc
pruviloj
base
contrib
prelude
00pruviloj-idx.ibc
00base-idx.ibc
00contrib-idx.ibc
```
## Building an Idris project with Nix
As an example of how a Nix expression for an Idris package can be created, here is the one for `idrisPackages.yaml`:
```nix
{ build-idris-package
, fetchFromGitHub
, contrib
, lightyear
, lib
}:
build-idris-package {
name = "yaml";
version = "2018-01-25";
# This is the .ipkg file that should be built, defaults to the package name
# In this case it should build `Yaml.ipkg` instead of `yaml.ipkg`
# This is only necessary because the yaml packages ipkg file is
# different from its package name here.
ipkgName = "Yaml";
# Idris dependencies to provide for the build
idrisDeps = [ contrib lightyear ];
src = fetchFromGitHub {
owner = "Heather";
repo = "Idris.Yaml";
rev = "5afa51ffc839844862b8316faba3bafa15656db4";
sha256 = "1g4pi0swmg214kndj85hj50ccmckni7piprsxfdzdfhg87s0avw7";
};
meta = {
description = "Idris YAML lib";
homepage = https://github.com/Heather/Idris.Yaml;
license = lib.licenses.mit;
maintainers = [ lib.maintainers.brainrape ];
};
}
```
Assuming this file is saved as `yaml.nix`, it's buildable using
```
$ nix-build -E '(import <nixpkgs> {}).idrisPackages.callPackage ./yaml.nix {}'
```
Or it's possible to use
```nix
with import <nixpkgs> {};
{
yaml = idrisPackages.callPackage ./yaml.nix {};
}
```
in another file (say `default.nix`) to be able to build it with
```
$ nix-build -A yaml
```

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@@ -1,35 +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="android.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="beam.xml" />
<xi:include href="bower.xml" />
<xi:include href="coq.xml" />
<xi:include href="go.xml" />
<xi:include href="haskell.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="idris.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="ios.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="java.xml" />
<xi:include href="lua.xml" />
<xi:include href="node.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="ocaml.xml" />
<xi:include href="perl.xml" />
<xi:include href="python.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="qt.xml" />
<xi:include href="r.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="ruby.xml" />
<xi:include href="rust.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="texlive.xml" />
<xi:include href="titanium.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="vim.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="emscripten.section.xml" />
</chapter>

View File

@@ -1,219 +0,0 @@
---
title: iOS
author: Sander van der Burg
date: 2018-11-18
---
# iOS
This component is basically a wrapper/workaround that makes it possible to
expose an Xcode installation as a Nix package by means of symlinking to the
relevant executables on the host system.
Since Xcode can't be packaged with Nix, nor we can publish it as a Nix package
(because of its license) this is basically the only integration strategy
making it possible to do iOS application builds that integrate with other
components of the Nix ecosystem
The primary objective of this project is to use the Nix expression language to
specify how iOS apps can be built from source code, and to automatically spawn
iOS simulator instances for testing.
This component also makes it possible to use [Hydra](http://nixos.org/hydra),
the Nix-based continuous integration server to regularly build iOS apps and to
do wireless ad-hoc installations of enterprise IPAs on iOS devices through
Hydra.
The Xcode build environment implements a number of features.
Deploying a proxy component wrapper exposing Xcode
--------------------------------------------------
The first use case is deploying a Nix package that provides symlinks to the Xcode
installation on the host system. This package can be used as a build input to
any build function implemented in the Nix expression language that requires
Xcode.
```nix
let
pkgs = import <nixpkgs> {};
xcodeenv = import ./xcodeenv {
inherit (pkgs) stdenv;
};
in
xcodeenv.composeXcodeWrapper {
version = "9.2";
xcodeBaseDir = "/Applications/Xcode.app";
}
```
By deploying the above expression with `nix-build` and inspecting its content
you will notice that several Xcode-related executables are exposed as a Nix
package:
```bash
$ ls result/bin
lrwxr-xr-x 1 sander staff 94 1 jan 1970 Simulator -> /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Applications/Simulator.app/Contents/MacOS/Simulator
lrwxr-xr-x 1 sander staff 17 1 jan 1970 codesign -> /usr/bin/codesign
lrwxr-xr-x 1 sander staff 17 1 jan 1970 security -> /usr/bin/security
lrwxr-xr-x 1 sander staff 21 1 jan 1970 xcode-select -> /usr/bin/xcode-select
lrwxr-xr-x 1 sander staff 61 1 jan 1970 xcodebuild -> /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/usr/bin/xcodebuild
lrwxr-xr-x 1 sander staff 14 1 jan 1970 xcrun -> /usr/bin/xcrun
```
Building an iOS application
---------------------------
We can build an iOS app executable for the simulator, or an IPA/xcarchive file
for release purposes, e.g. ad-hoc, enterprise or store installations, by
executing the `xcodeenv.buildApp {}` function:
```nix
let
pkgs = import <nixpkgs> {};
xcodeenv = import ./xcodeenv {
inherit (pkgs) stdenv;
};
in
xcodeenv.buildApp {
name = "MyApp";
src = ./myappsources;
sdkVersion = "11.2";
target = null; # Corresponds to the name of the app by default
configuration = null; # Release for release builds, Debug for debug builds
scheme = null; # -scheme will correspond to the app name by default
sdk = null; # null will set it to 'iphonesimulator` for simulator builds or `iphoneos` to real builds
xcodeFlags = "";
release = true;
certificateFile = ./mycertificate.p12;
certificatePassword = "secret";
provisioningProfile = ./myprovisioning.profile;
signMethod = "ad-hoc"; # 'enterprise' or 'store'
generateIPA = true;
generateXCArchive = false;
enableWirelessDistribution = true;
installURL = "/installipa.php";
bundleId = "mycompany.myapp";
appVersion = "1.0";
# Supports all xcodewrapper parameters as well
xcodeBaseDir = "/Applications/Xcode.app";
}
```
The above function takes a variety of parameters:
* The `name` and `src` parameters are mandatory and specify the name of the app
and the location where the source code resides
* `sdkVersion` specifies which version of the iOS SDK to use.
It also possile to adjust the `xcodebuild` parameters. This is only needed in
rare circumstances. In most cases the default values should suffice:
* Specifies which `xcodebuild` target to build. By default it takes the target
that has the same name as the app.
* The `configuration` parameter can be overridden if desired. By default, it
will do a debug build for the simulator and a release build for real devices.
* The `scheme` parameter specifies which `-scheme` parameter to propagate to
`xcodebuild`. By default, it corresponds to the app name.
* The `sdk` parameter specifies which SDK to use. By default, it picks
`iphonesimulator` for simulator builds and `iphoneos` for release builds.
* The `xcodeFlags` parameter specifies arbitrary command line parameters that
should be propagated to `xcodebuild`.
By default, builds are carried out for the iOS simulator. To do release builds
(builds for real iOS devices), you must set the `release` parameter to `true`.
In addition, you need to set the following parameters:
* `certificateFile` refers to a P12 certificate file.
* `certificatePassword` specifies the password of the P12 certificate.
* `provisioningProfile` refers to the provision profile needed to sign the app
* `signMethod` should refer to `ad-hoc` for signing the app with an ad-hoc
certificate, `enterprise` for enterprise certificates and `app-store` for App
store certificates.
* `generateIPA` specifies that we want to produce an IPA file (this is probably
what you want)
* `generateXCArchive` specifies thet we want to produce an xcarchive file.
When building IPA files on Hydra and when it is desired to allow iOS devices to
install IPAs by browsing to the Hydra build products page, you can enable the
`enableWirelessDistribution` parameter.
When enabled, you need to configure the following options:
* The `installURL` parameter refers to the URL of a PHP script that composes the
`itms-services://` URL allowing iOS devices to install the IPA file.
* `bundleId` refers to the bundle ID value of the app
* `appVersion` refers to the app's version number
To use wireless adhoc distributions, you must also install the corresponding
PHP script on a web server (see section: 'Installing the PHP script for wireless
ad hoc installations from Hydra' for more information).
In addition to the build parameters, you can also specify any parameters that
the `xcodeenv.composeXcodeWrapper {}` function takes. For example, the
`xcodeBaseDir` parameter can be overridden to refer to a different Xcode
version.
Spawning simulator instances
----------------------------
In addition to building iOS apps, we can also automatically spawn simulator
instances:
```nix
let
pkgs = import <nixpkgs> {};
xcodeenv = import ./xcodeenv {
inherit (pkgs) stdenv;
};
in
xcode.simulateApp {
name = "simulate";
# Supports all xcodewrapper parameters as well
xcodeBaseDir = "/Applications/Xcode.app";
}
```
The above expression produces a script that starts the simulator from the
provided Xcode installation. The script can be started as follows:
```bash
./result/bin/run-test-simulator
```
By default, the script will show an overview of UDID for all available simulator
instances and asks you to pick one. You can also provide a UDID as a
command-line parameter to launch an instance automatically:
```bash
./result/bin/run-test-simulator 5C93129D-CF39-4B1A-955F-15180C3BD4B8
```
You can also extend the simulator script to automatically deploy and launch an
app in the requested simulator instance:
```nix
let
pkgs = import <nixpkgs> {};
xcodeenv = import ./xcodeenv {
inherit (pkgs) stdenv;
};
in
xcode.simulateApp {
name = "simulate";
bundleId = "mycompany.myapp";
app = xcode.buildApp {
# ...
};
# Supports all xcodewrapper parameters as well
xcodeBaseDir = "/Applications/Xcode.app";
}
```
By providing the result of an `xcode.buildApp {}` function and configuring the
app bundle id, the app gets deployed automatically and started.

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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 (self-built
where available, or pre-built via Zulu). Platforms with OpenJDK not (yet) in
Nixpkgs (<literal>Aarch32</literal>, <literal>Aarch64</literal>) point to the
(unfree) <literal>oraclejdk</literal>.
</para>
<para>
JAR files that are intended to be used by other packages should be installed
in <filename>$out/share/java</filename>. JDKs have a stdenv setup hook that
add any JARs in the <filename>share/java</filename> directories of the build
inputs to the <envar>CLASSPATH</envar> environment variable. For instance, if
the package <literal>libfoo</literal> installs a JAR named
<filename>foo.jar</filename> in its <filename>share/java</filename>
directory, and another package declares the attribute
<programlisting>
buildInputs = [ jdk libfoo ];
</programlisting>
then <envar>CLASSPATH</envar> will be set to
<filename>/nix/store/...-libfoo/share/java/foo.jar</filename>.
</para>
<para>
Private JARs should be installed in a location like
<filename>$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>
Note all JDKs passthru <literal>home</literal>, so if your application
requires environment variables like <envar>JAVA_HOME</envar> being set, that
can be done in a generic fashion with the <literal>--set</literal> argument
of <literal>makeWrapper</literal>:
<programlisting>
--set JAVA_HOME ${jdk.home}
</programlisting>
</para>
<para>
It is possible to use a different Java compiler than <command>javac</command>
from the OpenJDK. For instance, to 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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@@ -1,48 +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>

View File

@@ -1,51 +0,0 @@
Node.js packages
================
The `pkgs/development/node-packages` folder contains a generated collection of
[NPM packages](https://npmjs.com/) that can be installed with the Nix package
manager.
As a rule of thumb, the package set should only provide *end user* software
packages, such as command-line utilities. Libraries should only be added to the
package set if there is a non-NPM package that requires it.
When it is desired to use NPM libraries in a development project, use the
`node2nix` generator directly on the `package.json` configuration file of the
project.
The package set also provides support for multiple Node.js versions. The policy
is that a new package should be added to the collection for the latest stable LTS
release (which is currently 10.x), unless there is an explicit reason to support
a different release.
If your package uses native addons, you need to examine what kind of native
build system it uses. Here are some examples:
* `node-gyp`
* `node-gyp-builder`
* `node-pre-gyp`
After you have identified the correct system, you need to override your package
expression while adding in build system as a build input. For example, `dat`
requires `node-gyp-build`, so we override its expression in `default-v10.nix`:
```nix
dat = nodePackages.dat.override (oldAttrs: {
buildInputs = oldAttrs.buildInputs ++ [ nodePackages.node-gyp-build ];
});
```
To add a package from NPM to nixpkgs:
1. Modify `pkgs/development/node-packages/node-packages-v10.json` to add, update
or remove package entries. (Or `pkgs/development/node-packages/node-packages-v8.json`
for packages depending on Node.js 8.x)
2. Run the script: `(cd pkgs/development/node-packages && ./generate.sh)`.
3. Build your new package to test your changes:
`cd /path/to/nixpkgs && nix-build -A nodePackages.<new-or-updated-package>`.
To build against a specific Node.js version (e.g. 10.x):
`nix-build -A nodePackages_10_x.<new-or-updated-package>`
4. Add and commit all modified and generated files.
For more information about the generation process, consult the
[README.md](https://github.com/svanderburg/node2nix) file of the `node2nix`
tool.

View File

@@ -1,99 +0,0 @@
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="sec-language-ocaml">
<title>OCaml</title>
<para>
OCaml libraries should be installed in
<literal>$(out)/lib/ocaml/${ocaml.version}/site-lib/</literal>. Such
directories are automatically added to the <literal>$OCAMLPATH</literal>
environment variable when building another package that depends on them
or when opening a <literal>nix-shell</literal>.
</para>
<para>
Given that most of the OCaml ecosystem is now built with dune,
nixpkgs includes a convenience build support function called
<literal>buildDunePackage</literal> that will build an OCaml package
using dune, OCaml and findlib and any additional dependencies provided
as <literal>buildInputs</literal> or <literal>propagatedBuildInputs</literal>.
</para>
<para>
Here is a simple package example. It defines an (optional) attribute
<literal>minimumOCamlVersion</literal> that will be used to throw a
descriptive evaluation error if building with an older OCaml is attempted.
It uses the <literal>fetchFromGitHub</literal> fetcher to get its source.
It sets the <literal>doCheck</literal> (optional) attribute to
<literal>true</literal> which means that tests will be run with
<literal>dune runtest -p angstrom</literal> after the build
(<literal>dune build -p angstrom</literal>) is complete.
It uses <literal>alcotest</literal> as a build input (because it is needed
to run the tests) and <literal>bigstringaf</literal> and
<literal>result</literal> as propagated build inputs (thus they will also
be available to libraries depending on this library).
The library will be installed using the <literal>angstrom.install</literal>
file that dune generates.
</para>
<programlisting>
{ stdenv, fetchFromGitHub, buildDunePackage, alcotest, result, bigstringaf }:
buildDunePackage rec {
pname = "angstrom";
version = "0.10.0";
minimumOCamlVersion = "4.03";
src = fetchFromGitHub {
owner = "inhabitedtype";
repo = pname;
rev = version;
sha256 = "0lh6024yf9ds0nh9i93r9m6p5psi8nvrqxl5x7jwl13zb0r9xfpw";
};
buildInputs = [ alcotest ];
propagatedBuildInputs = [ bigstringaf result ];
doCheck = true;
meta = {
homepage = https://github.com/inhabitedtype/angstrom;
description = "OCaml parser combinators built for speed and memory efficiency";
license = stdenv.lib.licenses.bsd3;
maintainers = with stdenv.lib.maintainers; [ sternenseemann ];
};
}
</programlisting>
<para>
Here is a second example, this time using a source archive generated with
<literal>dune-release</literal>. It is a good idea to use this archive when
it is available as it will usually contain substituted variables such as a
<literal>%%VERSION%%</literal> field. This library does not depend
on any other OCaml library and no tests are run after building it.
</para>
<programlisting>
{ stdenv, fetchurl, buildDunePackage }:
buildDunePackage rec {
pname = "wtf8";
version = "1.0.1";
minimumOCamlVersion = "4.01";
src = fetchurl {
url = "https://github.com/flowtype/ocaml-${pname}/releases/download/v${version}/${pname}-${version}.tbz";
sha256 = "1msg3vycd3k8qqj61sc23qks541cxpb97vrnrvrhjnqxsqnh6ygq";
};
meta = with stdenv.lib; {
homepage = https://github.com/flowtype/ocaml-wtf8;
description = "WTF-8 is a superset of UTF-8 that allows unpaired surrogates.";
license = licenses.mit;
maintainers = [ maintainers.eqyiel ];
};
}
</programlisting>
</section>

View File

@@ -1,192 +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.out}/lib" > config.in
echo "INCLUDE = ${db.dev}/include" >> config.in
'';
}
</programlisting>
</para>
<para>
Dependencies on other Perl packages can be specified in the
<varname>buildInputs</varname> and <varname>propagatedBuildInputs</varname>
attributes. If something is exclusively a build-time dependency, use
<varname>buildInputs</varname>; if its (also) a runtime dependency, use
<varname>propagatedBuildInputs</varname>. For instance, this builds a Perl
module that has runtime dependencies on a bunch of other modules:
<programlisting>
ClassC3Componentised = buildPerlPackage rec {
name = "Class-C3-Componentised-1.0004";
src = fetchurl {
url = "mirror://cpan/authors/id/A/AS/ASH/${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 rec {
name = "XML-Simple-2.22";
src = fetchurl {
url = "mirror://cpan/authors/id/G/GR/GRANTM/${name}.tar.gz";
sha256 = "b9450ef22ea9644ae5d6ada086dc4300fa105be050a2030ebd4efd28c198eb49";
};
propagatedBuildInputs = [ XMLNamespaceSupport XMLSAX XMLSAXExpat ];
meta = {
description = "An API for simple XML files";
license = with stdenv.lib.licenses; [ artistic1 gpl1Plus ];
};
};
</screen>
The output can be pasted into
<filename>pkgs/top-level/perl-packages.nix</filename> or wherever else you
need it.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="ssec-perl-cross-compilation">
<title>Cross-compiling modules</title>
<para>
Nixpkgs has experimental support for cross-compiling Perl modules. In many
cases, it will just work out of the box, even for modules with native
extensions. Sometimes, however, the Makefile.PL for a module may
(indirectly) import a native module. In that case, you will need to make a
stub for that module that will satisfy the Makefile.PL and install it into
<filename>lib/perl5/site_perl/cross_perl/${perl.version}</filename>. See the
<varname>postInstall</varname> for <varname>DBI</varname> for an example.
</para>
</section>
</section>

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@@ -1,74 +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>
Qt is a comprehensive desktop and mobile application development toolkit for
C++. Legacy support is available for Qt 3 and Qt 4, but all current
development uses Qt 5. The Qt 5 packages in Nixpkgs are updated frequently to
take advantage of new features, but older versions are typically retained
until their support window ends. The most important consideration in
packaging Qt-based software is ensuring that each package and all its
dependencies use the same version of Qt 5; this consideration motivates most
of the tools described below.
</para>
<section xml:id="ssec-qt-libraries">
<title>Packaging Libraries for Nixpkgs</title>
<para>
Whenever possible, libraries that use Qt 5 should be built with each
available version. Packages providing libraries should be added to the
top-level function <varname>mkLibsForQt5</varname>, which is used to build a
set of libraries for every Qt 5 version. A special
<varname>callPackage</varname> function is used in this scope to ensure that
the entire dependency tree uses the same Qt 5 version. Import dependencies
unqualified, i.e., <literal>qtbase</literal> not
<literal>qt5.qtbase</literal>. <emphasis>Do not</emphasis> import a package
set such as <literal>qt5</literal> or <literal>libsForQt5</literal>.
</para>
<para>
If a library does not support a particular version of Qt 5, it is best to
mark it as broken by setting its <literal>meta.broken</literal> attribute. A
package may be marked broken for certain versions by testing the
<literal>qtbase.version</literal> attribute, which will always give the
current Qt 5 version.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="ssec-qt-applications">
<title>Packaging Applications for Nixpkgs</title>
<para>
Call your application expression using
<literal>libsForQt5.callPackage</literal> instead of
<literal>callPackage</literal>. Import dependencies unqualified, i.e.,
<literal>qtbase</literal> not <literal>qt5.qtbase</literal>. <emphasis>Do
not</emphasis> import a package set such as <literal>qt5</literal> or
<literal>libsForQt5</literal>.
</para>
<para>
Qt 5 maintains strict backward compatibility, so it is generally best to
build an application package against the latest version using the
<varname>libsForQt5</varname> library set. In case a package does not build
with the latest Qt version, it is possible to pick a set pinned to a
particular version, e.g. <varname>libsForQt55</varname> for Qt 5.5, if that
is the latest version the package supports. If a package must be pinned to
an older Qt version, be sure to file a bug upstream; because Qt is strictly
backwards-compatible, any incompatibility is by definition a bug in the
application.
</para>
<para>
When testing applications in Nixpkgs, it is a common practice to build the
package with <literal>nix-build</literal> and run it using the created
symbolic link. This will not work with Qt applications, however, because
they have many hard runtime requirements that can only be guaranteed if the
package is actually installed. To test a Qt application, install it with
<literal>nix-env</literal> or run it inside <literal>nix-shell</literal>.
</para>
</section>
</section>

View File

@@ -1,120 +0,0 @@
R packages
==========
## Installation
Define an environment for R that contains all the libraries that you'd like to
use by adding the following snippet to your $HOME/.config/nixpkgs/config.nix file:
```nix
{
packageOverrides = super: let self = super.pkgs; in
{
rEnv = super.rWrapper.override {
packages = with self.rPackages; [
devtools
ggplot2
reshape2
yaml
optparse
];
};
};
}
```
Then you can use `nix-env -f "<nixpkgs>" -iA rEnv` to install it into your user
profile. The set of available libraries can be discovered by running the
command `nix-env -f "<nixpkgs>" -qaP -A rPackages`. The first column from that
output is the name that has to be passed to rWrapper in the code snipped above.
However, if you'd like to add a file to your project source to make the
environment available for other contributors, you can create a `default.nix`
file like so:
```nix
let
pkgs = import <nixpkgs> {};
stdenv = pkgs.stdenv;
in with pkgs; {
myProject = stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "myProject";
version = "1";
src = if pkgs.lib.inNixShell then null else nix;
buildInputs = with rPackages; [
R
ggplot2
knitr
];
};
}
```
and then run `nix-shell .` to be dropped into a shell with those packages
available.
## RStudio
RStudio uses a standard set of packages and ignores any custom R
environments or installed packages you may have. To create a custom
environment, see `rstudioWrapper`, which functions similarly to
`rWrapper`:
```nix
{
packageOverrides = super: let self = super.pkgs; in
{
rstudioEnv = super.rstudioWrapper.override {
packages = with self.rPackages; [
dplyr
ggplot2
reshape2
];
};
};
}
```
Then like above, `nix-env -f "<nixpkgs>" -iA rstudioEnv` will install
this into your user profile.
Alternatively, you can create a self-contained `shell.nix` without the need to
modify any configuration files:
```nix
{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> {}
}:
pkgs.rstudioWrapper.override {
packages = with pkgs.rPackages; [ dplyr ggplot2 reshape2 ];
}
```
Executing `nix-shell` will then drop you into an environment equivalent to the
one above. If you need additional packages just add them to the list and
re-enter the shell.
## Updating the package set
```bash
nix-shell generate-shell.nix
Rscript generate-r-packages.R cran > cran-packages.nix.new
mv cran-packages.nix.new cran-packages.nix
Rscript generate-r-packages.R bioc > bioc-packages.nix.new
mv bioc-packages.nix.new bioc-packages.nix
```
`generate-r-packages.R <repo>` reads `<repo>-packages.nix`, therefor the renaming.
## Testing if the Nix-expression could be evaluated
```bash
nix-build test-evaluation.nix --dry-run
```
If this exits fine, the expression is ok. If not, you have to edit `default.nix`

View File

@@ -1,135 +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-build '<nixpkgs>' -A bundix --no-out-link)/bin/bundix --magic
$ cat > default.nix
{ lib, bundlerEnv, ruby }:
bundlerEnv rec {
name = "sensu-${version}";
version = (import gemset).sensu.version;
inherit ruby;
# expects Gemfile, Gemfile.lock and gemset.nix in the same directory
gemdir = ./.;
meta = with lib; {
description = "A monitoring framework that aims to be simple, malleable, and scalable";
homepage = http://sensuapp.org/;
license = with licenses; mit;
maintainers = with maintainers; [ theuni ];
platforms = platforms.unix;
};
}]]>
</screen>
<para>
Please check in the <filename>Gemfile</filename>,
<filename>Gemfile.lock</filename> and the <filename>gemset.nix</filename> so
future updates can be run easily.
</para>
<para>
Updating Ruby packages can then be done like this:
</para>
<screen>
<![CDATA[$ cd pkgs/servers/monitoring/sensu
$ nix-shell -p bundler --run 'bundle lock --update'
$ nix-shell -p bundix --run 'bundix'
]]>
</screen>
<para>
For tools written in Ruby - i.e. where the desire is to install a package and
then execute e.g. <command>rake</command> at the command line, there is an
alternative builder called <literal>bundlerApp</literal>. Set up the
<filename>gemset.nix</filename> the same way, and then, for example:
</para>
<screen>
<![CDATA[{ lib, bundlerApp }:
bundlerApp {
pname = "corundum";
gemdir = ./.;
exes = [ "corundum-skel" ];
meta = with lib; {
description = "Tool and libraries for maintaining Ruby gems.";
homepage = https://github.com/nyarly/corundum;
license = licenses.mit;
maintainers = [ maintainers.nyarly ];
platforms = platforms.unix;
};
}]]>
</screen>
<para>
The chief advantage of <literal>bundlerApp</literal> over
<literal>bundlerEnv</literal> is the executables introduced in the
environment are precisely those selected in the <literal>exes</literal> list,
as opposed to <literal>bundlerEnv</literal> which adds all the executables
made available by gems in the gemset, which can mean e.g.
<command>rspec</command> or <command>rake</command> in unpredictable versions
available from various packages.
</para>
<para>
Resulting derivations for both builders also have two helpful attributes,
<literal>env</literal> and <literal>wrappedRuby</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> like 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.wrappedRuby ];
script = ./my-script.rb;
buildCommand = ''
install -D -m755 $script $out/bin/my-script
patchShebangs $out/bin/my-script
'';
}]]>
</programlisting>
</section>

View File

@@ -1,399 +0,0 @@
---
title: Rust
author: Matthias Beyer
date: 2017-03-05
---
# User's Guide to the Rust Infrastructure
To install the rust compiler and cargo put
```
rustc
cargo
```
into the `environment.systemPackages` or bring them into
scope with `nix-shell -p rustc cargo`.
> If you are using NixOS and you want to use rust without a nix expression you
> probably want to add the following in your `configuration.nix` to build
> crates with C dependencies.
>
> environment.systemPackages = [binutils gcc gnumake openssl pkgconfig]
For daily builds (beta and nightly) use either rustup from
nixpkgs or use the [Rust nightlies
overlay](#using-the-rust-nightlies-overlay).
## Compiling Rust applications with Cargo
Rust applications are packaged by using the `buildRustPackage` helper from `rustPlatform`:
```
rustPlatform.buildRustPackage rec {
name = "ripgrep-${version}";
version = "0.4.0";
src = fetchFromGitHub {
owner = "BurntSushi";
repo = "ripgrep";
rev = "${version}";
sha256 = "0y5d1n6hkw85jb3rblcxqas2fp82h3nghssa4xqrhqnz25l799pj";
};
cargoSha256 = "0q68qyl2h6i0qsz82z840myxlnjay8p1w5z7hfyr8fqp7wgwa9cx";
meta = with stdenv.lib; {
description = "A fast line-oriented regex search tool, similar to ag and ack";
homepage = https://github.com/BurntSushi/ripgrep;
license = licenses.unlicense;
maintainers = [ maintainers.tailhook ];
platforms = platforms.all;
};
}
```
`buildRustPackage` requires a `cargoSha256` attribute which is computed over
all crate sources of this package. Currently it is obtained by inserting a
fake checksum into the expression and building the package once. The correct
checksum can be then take from the failed build.
When the `Cargo.lock`, provided by upstream, is not in sync with the
`Cargo.toml`, it is possible to use `cargoPatches` to update it. All patches
added in `cargoPatches` will also be prepended to the patches in `patches` at
build-time.
## Compiling Rust crates using Nix instead of Cargo
### Simple operation
When run, `cargo build` produces a file called `Cargo.lock`,
containing pinned versions of all dependencies. Nixpkgs contains a
tool called `carnix` (`nix-env -iA nixos.carnix`), which can be used
to turn a `Cargo.lock` into a Nix expression.
That Nix expression calls `rustc` directly (hence bypassing Cargo),
and can be used to compile a crate and all its dependencies. Here is
an example for a minimal `hello` crate:
$ cargo new hello
$ cd hello
$ cargo build
Compiling hello v0.1.0 (file:///tmp/hello)
Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.20 secs
$ carnix -o hello.nix --src ./. Cargo.lock --standalone
$ nix-build hello.nix -A hello_0_1_0
Now, the file produced by the call to `carnix`, called `hello.nix`, looks like:
```
# Generated by carnix 0.6.5: carnix -o hello.nix --src ./. Cargo.lock --standalone
{ lib, stdenv, buildRustCrate, fetchgit }:
let kernel = stdenv.buildPlatform.parsed.kernel.name;
# ... (content skipped)
in
rec {
hello = f: hello_0_1_0 { features = hello_0_1_0_features { hello_0_1_0 = f; }; };
hello_0_1_0_ = { dependencies?[], buildDependencies?[], features?[] }: buildRustCrate {
crateName = "hello";
version = "0.1.0";
authors = [ "pe@pijul.org <pe@pijul.org>" ];
src = ./.;
inherit dependencies buildDependencies features;
};
hello_0_1_0 = { features?(hello_0_1_0_features {}) }: hello_0_1_0_ {};
hello_0_1_0_features = f: updateFeatures f (rec {
hello_0_1_0.default = (f.hello_0_1_0.default or true);
}) [ ];
}
```
In particular, note that the argument given as `--src` is copied
verbatim to the source. If we look at a more complicated
dependencies, for instance by adding a single line `libc="*"` to our
`Cargo.toml`, we first need to run `cargo build` to update the
`Cargo.lock`. Then, `carnix` needs to be run again, and produces the
following nix file:
```
# Generated by carnix 0.6.5: carnix -o hello.nix --src ./. Cargo.lock --standalone
{ lib, stdenv, buildRustCrate, fetchgit }:
let kernel = stdenv.buildPlatform.parsed.kernel.name;
# ... (content skipped)
in
rec {
hello = f: hello_0_1_0 { features = hello_0_1_0_features { hello_0_1_0 = f; }; };
hello_0_1_0_ = { dependencies?[], buildDependencies?[], features?[] }: buildRustCrate {
crateName = "hello";
version = "0.1.0";
authors = [ "pe@pijul.org <pe@pijul.org>" ];
src = ./.;
inherit dependencies buildDependencies features;
};
libc_0_2_36_ = { dependencies?[], buildDependencies?[], features?[] }: buildRustCrate {
crateName = "libc";
version = "0.2.36";
authors = [ "The Rust Project Developers" ];
sha256 = "01633h4yfqm0s302fm0dlba469bx8y6cs4nqc8bqrmjqxfxn515l";
inherit dependencies buildDependencies features;
};
hello_0_1_0 = { features?(hello_0_1_0_features {}) }: hello_0_1_0_ {
dependencies = mapFeatures features ([ libc_0_2_36 ]);
};
hello_0_1_0_features = f: updateFeatures f (rec {
hello_0_1_0.default = (f.hello_0_1_0.default or true);
libc_0_2_36.default = true;
}) [ libc_0_2_36_features ];
libc_0_2_36 = { features?(libc_0_2_36_features {}) }: libc_0_2_36_ {
features = mkFeatures (features.libc_0_2_36 or {});
};
libc_0_2_36_features = f: updateFeatures f (rec {
libc_0_2_36.default = (f.libc_0_2_36.default or true);
libc_0_2_36.use_std =
(f.libc_0_2_36.use_std or false) ||
(f.libc_0_2_36.default or false) ||
(libc_0_2_36.default or false);
}) [];
}
```
Here, the `libc` crate has no `src` attribute, so `buildRustCrate`
will fetch it from [crates.io](https://crates.io). A `sha256`
attribute is still needed for Nix purity.
### Handling external dependencies
Some crates require external libraries. For crates from
[crates.io](https://crates.io), such libraries can be specified in
`defaultCrateOverrides` package in nixpkgs itself.
Starting from that file, one can add more overrides, to add features
or build inputs by overriding the hello crate in a seperate file.
```
with import <nixpkgs> {};
((import ./hello.nix).hello {}).override {
crateOverrides = defaultCrateOverrides // {
hello = attrs: { buildInputs = [ openssl ]; };
};
}
```
Here, `crateOverrides` is expected to be a attribute set, where the
key is the crate name without version number and the value a function.
The function gets all attributes passed to `buildRustCrate` as first
argument and returns a set that contains all attribute that should be
overwritten.
For more complicated cases, such as when parts of the crate's
derivation depend on the the crate's version, the `attrs` argument of
the override above can be read, as in the following example, which
patches the derivation:
```
with import <nixpkgs> {};
((import ./hello.nix).hello {}).override {
crateOverrides = defaultCrateOverrides // {
hello = attrs: lib.optionalAttrs (lib.versionAtLeast attrs.version "1.0") {
postPatch = ''
substituteInPlace lib/zoneinfo.rs \
--replace "/usr/share/zoneinfo" "${tzdata}/share/zoneinfo"
'';
};
};
}
```
Another situation is when we want to override a nested
dependency. This actually works in the exact same way, since the
`crateOverrides` parameter is forwarded to the crate's
dependencies. For instance, to override the build inputs for crate
`libc` in the example above, where `libc` is a dependency of the main
crate, we could do:
```
with import <nixpkgs> {};
((import hello.nix).hello {}).override {
crateOverrides = defaultCrateOverrides // {
libc = attrs: { buildInputs = []; };
};
}
```
### Options and phases configuration
Actually, the overrides introduced in the previous section are more
general. A number of other parameters can be overridden:
- The version of rustc used to compile the crate:
```
(hello {}).override { rust = pkgs.rust; };
```
- Whether to build in release mode or debug mode (release mode by
default):
```
(hello {}).override { release = false; };
```
- Whether to print the commands sent to rustc when building
(equivalent to `--verbose` in cargo:
```
(hello {}).override { verbose = false; };
```
- Extra arguments to be passed to `rustc`:
```
(hello {}).override { extraRustcOpts = "-Z debuginfo=2"; };
```
- Phases, just like in any other derivation, can be specified using
the following attributes: `preUnpack`, `postUnpack`, `prePatch`,
`patches`, `postPatch`, `preConfigure` (in the case of a Rust crate,
this is run before calling the "build" script), `postConfigure`
(after the "build" script),`preBuild`, `postBuild`, `preInstall` and
`postInstall`. As an example, here is how to create a new module
before running the build script:
```
(hello {}).override {
preConfigure = ''
echo "pub const PATH=\"${hi.out}\";" >> src/path.rs"
'';
};
```
### Features
One can also supply features switches. For example, if we want to
compile `diesel_cli` only with the `postgres` feature, and no default
features, we would write:
```
(callPackage ./diesel.nix {}).diesel {
default = false;
postgres = true;
}
```
Where `diesel.nix` is the file generated by Carnix, as explained above.
## Setting Up `nix-shell`
Oftentimes you want to develop code from within `nix-shell`. Unfortunately
`buildRustCrate` does not support common `nix-shell` operations directly
(see [this issue](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/37945))
so we will use `stdenv.mkDerivation` instead.
Using the example `hello` project above, we want to do the following:
- Have access to `cargo` and `rustc`
- Have the `openssl` library available to a crate through it's _normal_
compilation mechanism (`pkg-config`).
A typical `shell.nix` might look like:
```
with import <nixpkgs> {};
stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "rust-env";
nativeBuildInputs = [
rustc cargo
# Example Build-time Additional Dependencies
pkgconfig
];
buildInputs = [
# Example Run-time Additional Dependencies
openssl
];
# Set Environment Variables
RUST_BACKTRACE = 1;
}
```
You should now be able to run the following:
```
$ nix-shell --pure
$ cargo build
$ cargo test
```
### Controlling Rust Version Inside `nix-shell`
To control your rust version (i.e. use nightly) from within `shell.nix` (or
other nix expressions) you can use the following `shell.nix`
```
# Latest Nightly
with import <nixpkgs> {};
let src = fetchFromGitHub {
owner = "mozilla";
repo = "nixpkgs-mozilla";
# commit from: 2019-05-15
rev = "9f35c4b09fd44a77227e79ff0c1b4b6a69dff533";
sha256 = "18h0nvh55b5an4gmlgfbvwbyqj91bklf1zymis6lbdh75571qaz0";
};
in
with import "${src.out}/rust-overlay.nix" pkgs pkgs;
stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "rust-env";
buildInputs = [
# Note: to use use stable, just replace `nightly` with `stable`
latest.rustChannels.nightly.rust
# Add some extra dependencies from `pkgs`
pkgconfig openssl
];
# Set Environment Variables
RUST_BACKTRACE = 1;
}
```
Now run:
```
$ rustc --version
rustc 1.26.0-nightly (188e693b3 2018-03-26)
```
To see that you are using nightly.
## Using the Rust nightlies overlay
Mozilla provides an overlay for nixpkgs to bring a nightly version of Rust into scope.
This overlay can _also_ be used to install recent unstable or stable versions
of Rust, if desired.
To use this overlay, clone
[nixpkgs-mozilla](https://github.com/mozilla/nixpkgs-mozilla),
and create a symbolic link to the file
[rust-overlay.nix](https://github.com/mozilla/nixpkgs-mozilla/blob/master/rust-overlay.nix)
in the `~/.config/nixpkgs/overlays` directory.
$ git clone https://github.com/mozilla/nixpkgs-mozilla.git
$ mkdir -p ~/.config/nixpkgs/overlays
$ ln -s $(pwd)/nixpkgs-mozilla/rust-overlay.nix ~/.config/nixpkgs/overlays/rust-overlay.nix
The latest version can be installed with the following command:
$ nix-env -Ai nixos.latest.rustChannels.stable.rust
Or using the attribute with nix-shell:
$ nix-shell -p nixos.latest.rustChannels.stable.rust
To install the beta or nightly channel, "stable" should be substituted by
"nightly" or "beta", or
use the function provided by this overlay to pull a version based on a
build date.
The overlay automatically updates itself as it uses the same source as
[rustup](https://www.rustup.rs/).

View File

@@ -1,99 +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 xml:id="sec-language-texlive-users-guide">
<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><![CDATA[
$ nix repl
nix-repl> :l <nixpkgs>
nix-repl> texlive.collection-<TAB>
]]></programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Note that the wrapper assumes that the result has a chance to be useful.
For example, the core executables should be present, as well as some core
data files. The supported way of ensuring this is by including some
scheme, for example <varname>scheme-basic</varname>, into the combination.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-language-texlive-known-problems">
<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

@@ -1,115 +0,0 @@
---
title: Titanium
author: Sander van der Burg
date: 2018-11-18
---
# Titanium
The Nixpkgs repository contains facilities to deploy a variety of versions of
the [Titanium SDK](https://www.appcelerator.com) versions, a cross-platform
mobile app development framework using JavaScript as an implementation language,
and includes a function abstraction making it possible to build Titanium
applications for Android and iOS devices from source code.
Not all Titanium features supported -- currently, it can only be used to build
Android and iOS apps.
Building a Titanium app
-----------------------
We can build a Titanium app from source for Android or iOS and for debugging or
release purposes by invoking the `titaniumenv.buildApp {}` function:
```nix
titaniumenv.buildApp {
name = "myapp";
src = ./myappsource;
preBuild = "";
target = "android"; # or 'iphone'
tiVersion = "7.1.0.GA";
release = true;
androidsdkArgs = {
platformVersions = [ "25" "26" ];
};
androidKeyStore = ./keystore;
androidKeyAlias = "myfirstapp";
androidKeyStorePassword = "secret";
xcodeBaseDir = "/Applications/Xcode.app";
xcodewrapperArgs = {
version = "9.3";
};
iosMobileProvisioningProfile = ./myprovisioning.profile;
iosCertificateName = "My Company";
iosCertificate = ./mycertificate.p12;
iosCertificatePassword = "secret";
iosVersion = "11.3";
iosBuildStore = false;
enableWirelessDistribution = true;
installURL = "/installipa.php";
}
```
The `titaniumenv.buildApp {}` function takes the following parameters:
* The `name` parameter refers to the name in the Nix store.
* The `src` parameter refers to the source code location of the app that needs
to be built.
* `preRebuild` contains optional build instructions that are carried out before
the build starts.
* `target` indicates for which device the app must be built. Currently only
'android' and 'iphone' (for iOS) are supported.
* `tiVersion` can be used to optionally override the requested Titanium version
in `tiapp.xml`. If not specified, it will use the version in `tiapp.xml`.
* `release` should be set to true when building an app for submission to the
Google Playstore or Apple Appstore. Otherwise, it should be false.
When the `target` has been set to `android`, we can configure the following
parameters:
* The `androidSdkArgs` parameter refers to an attribute set that propagates all
parameters to the `androidenv.composeAndroidPackages {}` function. This can
be used to install all relevant Android plugins that may be needed to perform
the Android build. If no parameters are given, it will deploy the platform
SDKs for API-levels 25 and 26 by default.
When the `release` parameter has been set to true, you need to provide
parameters to sign the app:
* `androidKeyStore` is the path to the keystore file
* `androidKeyAlias` is the key alias
* `androidKeyStorePassword` refers to the password to open the keystore file.
When the `target` has been set to `iphone`, we can configure the following
parameters:
* The `xcodeBaseDir` parameter refers to the location where Xcode has been
installed. When none value is given, the above value is the default.
* The `xcodewrapperArgs` parameter passes arbitrary parameters to the
`xcodeenv.composeXcodeWrapper {}` function. This can, for example, be used
to adjust the default version of Xcode.
When `release` has been set to true, you also need to provide the following
parameters:
* `iosMobileProvisioningProfile` refers to a mobile provisioning profile needed
for signing.
* `iosCertificateName` refers to the company name in the P12 certificate.
* `iosCertificate` refers to the path to the P12 file.
* `iosCertificatePassword` contains the password to open the P12 file.
* `iosVersion` refers to the iOS SDK version to use. It defaults to the latest
version.
* `iosBuildStore` should be set to `true` when building for the Apple Appstore
submission. For enterprise or ad-hoc builds it should be set to `false`.
When `enableWirelessDistribution` has been enabled, you must also provide the
path of the PHP script (`installURL`) (that is included with the iOS build
environment) to enable wireless ad-hoc installations.
Emulating or simulating the app
-------------------------------
It is also possible to simulate the correspond iOS simulator build by using
`xcodeenv.simulateApp {}` and emulate an Android APK by using
`androidenv.emulateApp {}`.

View File

@@ -1,255 +0,0 @@
---
title: User's Guide for Vim in Nixpkgs
author: Marc Weber
date: 2016-06-25
---
# User's Guide to Vim Plugins/Addons/Bundles/Scripts in Nixpkgs
Both Neovim and Vim can be configured to include your favorite plugins
and additional libraries.
Loading can be deferred; see examples.
At the moment we support three different methods for managing plugins:
- Vim packages (*recommend*)
- VAM (=vim-addon-manager)
- Pathogen
- vim-plug
## Custom configuration
Adding custom .vimrc lines can be done using the following code:
```
vim_configurable.customize {
# `name` specifies the name of the executable and package
name = "vim-with-plugins";
vimrcConfig.customRC = ''
set hidden
'';
}
```
This configuration is used when vim is invoked with the command specified as name, in this case `vim-with-plugins`.
For Neovim the `configure` argument can be overridden to achieve the same:
```
neovim.override {
configure = {
customRC = ''
# here your custom configuration goes!
'';
};
}
```
If you want to use `neovim-qt` as a graphical editor, you can configure it by overriding neovim in an overlay
or passing it an overridden neovimn:
```
neovim-qt.override {
neovim = neovim.override {
configure = {
customRC = ''
# your custom configuration
'';
};
};
}
```
## Managing plugins with Vim packages
To store you plugins in Vim packages (the native vim plugin manager, see `:help packages`) the following example can be used:
```
vim_configurable.customize {
vimrcConfig.packages.myVimPackage = with pkgs.vimPlugins; {
# loaded on launch
start = [ youcompleteme fugitive ];
# manually loadable by calling `:packadd $plugin-name`
# however, if a vim plugin has a dependency that is not explicitly listed in
# opt that dependency will always be added to start to avoid confusion.
opt = [ phpCompletion elm-vim ];
# To automatically load a plugin when opening a filetype, add vimrc lines like:
# autocmd FileType php :packadd phpCompletion
};
}
```
`myVimPackage` is an arbitrary name for the generated package. You can choose any name you like.
For Neovim the syntax is:
```
neovim.override {
configure = {
customRC = ''
# here your custom configuration goes!
'';
packages.myVimPackage = with pkgs.vimPlugins; {
# see examples below how to use custom packages
start = [ ];
# If a vim plugin has a dependency that is not explicitly listed in
# opt that dependency will always be added to start to avoid confusion.
opt = [ ];
};
};
}
```
The resulting package can be added to `packageOverrides` in `~/.nixpkgs/config.nix` to make it installable:
```
{
packageOverrides = pkgs: with pkgs; {
myVim = vim_configurable.customize {
# `name` specifies the name of the executable and package
name = "vim-with-plugins";
# add here code from the example section
};
myNeovim = neovim.override {
configure = {
# add here code from the example section
};
};
};
}
```
After that you can install your special grafted `myVim` or `myNeovim` packages.
## Managing plugins with vim-plug
To use [vim-plug](https://github.com/junegunn/vim-plug) to manage your Vim
plugins the following example can be used:
```
vim_configurable.customize {
vimrcConfig.packages.myVimPackage = with pkgs.vimPlugins; {
# loaded on launch
plug.plugins = [ youcompleteme fugitive phpCompletion elm-vim ];
};
}
```
For Neovim the syntax is:
```
neovim.override {
configure = {
customRC = ''
# here your custom configuration goes!
'';
plug.plugins = with pkgs.vimPlugins; [
vim-go
];
};
}
```
## Managing plugins with VAM
### Handling dependencies of Vim plugins
VAM introduced .json files supporting dependencies without versioning
assuming that "using latest version" is ok most of the time.
### Example
First create a vim-scripts file having one plugin name per line. Example:
"tlib"
{'name': 'vim-addon-sql'}
{'filetype_regex': '\%(vim)$', 'names': ['reload', 'vim-dev-plugin']}
Such vim-scripts file can be read by VAM as well like this:
call vam#Scripts(expand('~/.vim-scripts'), {})
Create a default.nix file:
{ nixpkgs ? import <nixpkgs> {}, compiler ? "ghc7102" }:
nixpkgs.vim_configurable.customize { name = "vim"; vimrcConfig.vam.pluginDictionaries = [ "vim-addon-vim2nix" ]; }
Create a generate.vim file:
ActivateAddons vim-addon-vim2nix
let vim_scripts = "vim-scripts"
call nix#ExportPluginsForNix({
\ 'path_to_nixpkgs': eval('{"'.substitute(substitute(substitute($NIX_PATH, ':', ',', 'g'), '=',':', 'g'), '\([:,]\)', '"\1"',"g").'"}')["nixpkgs"],
\ 'cache_file': '/tmp/vim2nix-cache',
\ 'try_catch': 0,
\ 'plugin_dictionaries': ["vim-addon-manager"]+map(readfile(vim_scripts), 'eval(v:val)')
\ })
Then run
nix-shell -p vimUtils.vim_with_vim2nix --command "vim -c 'source generate.vim'"
You should get a Vim buffer with the nix derivations (output1) and vam.pluginDictionaries (output2).
You can add your vim to your system's configuration file like this and start it by "vim-my":
my-vim =
let plugins = let inherit (vimUtils) buildVimPluginFrom2Nix; in {
copy paste output1 here
}; in vim_configurable.customize {
name = "vim-my";
vimrcConfig.vam.knownPlugins = plugins; # optional
vimrcConfig.vam.pluginDictionaries = [
copy paste output2 here
];
# Pathogen would be
# vimrcConfig.pathogen.knownPlugins = plugins; # plugins
# vimrcConfig.pathogen.pluginNames = ["tlib"];
};
Sample output1:
"reload" = buildVimPluginFrom2Nix { # created by nix#NixDerivation
name = "reload";
src = fetchgit {
url = "git://github.com/xolox/vim-reload";
rev = "0a601a668727f5b675cb1ddc19f6861f3f7ab9e1";
sha256 = "0vb832l9yxj919f5hfg6qj6bn9ni57gnjd3bj7zpq7d4iv2s4wdh";
};
dependencies = ["nim-misc"];
};
[...]
Sample output2:
[
''vim-addon-manager''
''tlib''
{ "name" = ''vim-addon-sql''; }
{ "filetype_regex" = ''\%(vim)$$''; "names" = [ ''reload'' ''vim-dev-plugin'' ]; }
]
## Adding new plugins to nixpkgs
In `pkgs/misc/vim-plugins/vim-plugin-names` we store the plugin names
for all vim plugins we automatically generate plugins for.
The format of this file `github username/github repository`:
For example https://github.com/scrooloose/nerdtree becomes `scrooloose/nerdtree`.
After adding your plugin to this file run the `./update.py` in the same folder.
This will updated a file called `generated.nix` and make your plugin accessible in the
`vimPlugins` attribute set (`vimPlugins.nerdtree` in our example).
If additional steps to the build process of the plugin are required, add an
override to the `pkgs/misc/vim-plugins/default.nix` in the same directory.
## Important repositories
- [vim-pi](https://bitbucket.org/vimcommunity/vim-pi) is a plugin repository
from VAM plugin manager meant to be used by others as well used by
- [vim2nix](http://github.com/MarcWeber/vim-addon-vim2nix) which generates the
.nix code

View File

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

View File

@@ -1,85 +0,0 @@
{ pkgs ? (import ./.. { }), nixpkgs ? { }}:
let
revision = pkgs.lib.trivial.revisionWithDefault (nixpkgs.revision or "master");
libDefPos = set:
builtins.map
(name: {
name = name;
location = builtins.unsafeGetAttrPos name set;
})
(builtins.attrNames set);
libset = toplib:
builtins.map
(subsetname: {
subsetname = subsetname;
functions = libDefPos toplib."${subsetname}";
})
(builtins.filter
(name: builtins.isAttrs toplib."${name}")
(builtins.attrNames toplib));
nixpkgsLib = pkgs.lib;
flattenedLibSubset = { subsetname, functions }:
builtins.map
(fn: {
name = "lib.${subsetname}.${fn.name}";
value = fn.location;
})
functions;
locatedlibsets = libs: builtins.map flattenedLibSubset (libset libs);
removeFilenamePrefix = prefix: filename:
let
prefixLen = (builtins.stringLength prefix) + 1; # +1 to remove the leading /
filenameLen = builtins.stringLength filename;
substr = builtins.substring prefixLen filenameLen filename;
in substr;
removeNixpkgs = removeFilenamePrefix (builtins.toString pkgs.path);
liblocations =
builtins.filter
(elem: elem.value != null)
(nixpkgsLib.lists.flatten
(locatedlibsets nixpkgsLib));
fnLocationRelative = { name, value }:
{
inherit name;
value = value // { file = removeNixpkgs value.file; };
};
relativeLocs = (builtins.map fnLocationRelative liblocations);
sanitizeId = builtins.replaceStrings
[ "'" ]
[ "-prime" ];
urlPrefix = "https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/${revision}";
xmlstrings = (nixpkgsLib.strings.concatMapStrings
({ name, value }:
''
<section><title>${name}</title>
<para xml:id="${sanitizeId name}">
Located at
<link
xlink:href="${urlPrefix}/${value.file}#L${builtins.toString value.line}">${value.file}:${builtins.toString value.line}</link>
in <literal>&lt;nixpkgs&gt;</literal>.
</para>
</section>
'')
relativeLocs);
in pkgs.writeText
"locations.xml"
''
<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
version="5">
<title>All the locations for every lib function</title>
<para>This file is only for inclusion by other files.</para>
${xmlstrings}
</section>
''

View File

@@ -1,24 +1,25 @@
<book xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude">
<info>
<title>Nixpkgs Contributors Guide</title>
<subtitle>Version <xi:include href=".version" parse="text" />
</subtitle>
</info>
<xi:include href="introduction.chapter.xml" />
<xi:include href="quick-start.xml" />
<xi:include href="stdenv.xml" />
<xi:include href="multiple-output.xml" />
<xi:include href="cross-compilation.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="platform-notes.xml" />
<xi:include href="package-notes.xml" />
<xi:include href="overlays.xml" />
<xi:include href="coding-conventions.xml" />
<xi:include href="submitting-changes.xml" />
<xi:include href="reviewing-contributions.xml" />
<xi:include href="contributing.xml" />
<info>
<title>Nixpkgs Contributors Guide</title>
<subtitle>Version <xi:include href=".version" parse="text" /></subtitle>
</info>
<xi:include href="introduction.xml" />
<xi:include href="quick-start.xml" />
<xi:include href="stdenv.xml" />
<xi:include href="packageconfig.xml" />
<xi:include href="functions.xml" />
<xi:include href="meta.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="contributing.xml" />
</book>

View File

@@ -1,41 +1,44 @@
<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="chap-meta">
<title>Meta-attributes</title>
<para>
Nix packages can declare <emphasis>meta-attributes</emphasis> that contain
information about a package such as a description, its homepage, its license,
and so on. For instance, the GNU Hello package has a <varname>meta</varname>
declaration like this:
<title>Meta-attributes</title>
<para>Nix packages can declare <emphasis>meta-attributes</emphasis>
that contain information about a package such as a description, its
homepage, its license, and so on. For instance, the GNU Hello package
has a <varname>meta</varname> declaration like this:
<programlisting>
meta = with stdenv.lib; {
meta = {
description = "A program that produces a familiar, friendly greeting";
longDescription = ''
GNU Hello is a program that prints "Hello, world!" when you run it.
It is fully customizable.
'';
homepage = https://www.gnu.org/software/hello/manual/;
license = licenses.gpl3Plus;
maintainers = [ maintainers.eelco ];
platforms = platforms.all;
homepage = http://www.gnu.org/software/hello/manual/;
license = stdenv.lib.licenses.gpl3Plus;
maintainers = [ stdenv.lib.maintainers.eelco ];
platforms = stdenv.lib.platforms.all;
};
</programlisting>
</para>
<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>
<para>
The meta-attributes of a package can be queried from the command-line using
<command>nix-env</command>:
</para>
<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>
<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
$ nix-env -qa hello --meta --json
{
"hello": {
"meta": {
"description": "A program that produces a familiar, friendly greeting",
"homepage": "https://www.gnu.org/software/hello/manual/",
"homepage": "http://www.gnu.org/software/hello/manual/",
"license": {
"fullName": "GNU General Public License version 3 or later",
"shortName": "GPLv3+",
@@ -50,7 +53,7 @@ $ nix-env -qa hello --json
"x86_64-linux",
"armv5tel-linux",
"armv7l-linux",
"mips32-linux",
"mips64el-linux",
"x86_64-darwin",
"i686-cygwin",
"i686-freebsd",
@@ -67,365 +70,250 @@ $ nix-env -qa hello --json
</screen>
<command>nix-env</command> knows about the <varname>description</varname>
field specifically:
<command>nix-env</command> knows about the
<varname>description</varname> field specifically:
<screen>
$ nix-env -qa hello --description
hello-2.3 A program that produces a familiar, friendly greeting
</screen>
</para>
<section xml:id="sec-standard-meta-attributes">
<title>Standard meta-attributes</title>
<para>
It is expected that each meta-attribute is one of the following:
</para>
</para>
<section xml:id="sec-standard-meta-attributes"><title>Standard
meta-attributes</title>
<para>It is expected that each meta-attribute is one of the following:</para>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>description</varname></term>
<listitem><para>A short (one-line) description of the package.
This is shown by <command>nix-env -q --description</command> and
also on the Nixpkgs release pages.</para>
<para>Dont include a period at the end. Dont include newline
characters. Capitalise the first character. For brevity, dont
repeat the name of package — just describe what it does.</para>
<para>Wrong: <literal>"libpng is a library that allows you to decode PNG images."</literal></para>
<para>Right: <literal>"A library for decoding PNG images"</literal></para>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>description</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
A short (one-line) description of the package. This is shown by
<command>nix-env -q --description</command> and also on the Nixpkgs
release pages.
</para>
<para>
Dont include a period at the end. Dont include newline characters.
Capitalise the first character. For brevity, dont repeat the name of
package — just describe what it does.
</para>
<para>
Wrong: <literal>"libpng is a library that allows you to decode PNG
images."</literal>
</para>
<para>
Right: <literal>"A library for decoding PNG images"</literal>
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>longDescription</varname>
</term>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>longDescription</varname></term>
<listitem><para>An arbitrarily long description of the
package.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>version</varname></term>
<listitem><para>Package version.</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>
An arbitrarily long description of the 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>https://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>https://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
<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>
<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>
</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 yourself to
<link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/maintainers/maintainer-list.nix"><filename>nixpkgs/maintainers/maintainer-list.nix</filename></link>
and write something like <literal>[ stdenv.lib.maintainers.alice
stdenv.lib.maintainers.bob ]</literal>.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>priority</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
The <emphasis>priority</emphasis> of the package, used by
<command>nix-env</command> to resolve file name conflicts between
packages. See the Nix manual page for <command>nix-env</command> for
details. Example: <literal>"10"</literal> (a low-priority 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:
</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
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>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>priority</varname></term>
<listitem><para>The <emphasis>priority</emphasis> of the package,
used by <command>nix-env</command> to resolve file name conflicts
between packages. See the Nix manual page for
<command>nix-env</command> for details. Example:
<literal>"10"</literal> (a low-priority
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> defines
<link xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/lib/systems/doubles.nix">
various common lists</link> of platforms types.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>tests</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<warning>
<para>
This attribute is special in that it is not actually under the
<literal>meta</literal> attribute set but rather under the
<literal>passthru</literal> attribute set. This is due to a current
limitation of Nix, and will change as soon as Nixpkgs will be able to
depend on a new enough version of Nix. See
<link xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/2532">the relevant
issue</link> for more details.
</para>
</warning>
<para>
An attribute set with as values tests. A test is a derivation, which
builds successfully when the test passes, and fails to build otherwise. A
derivation that is a test needs to have <literal>meta.timeout</literal>
defined.
</para>
<para>
The NixOS tests are available as <literal>nixosTests</literal> in
parameters of derivations. For instance, the OpenSMTPD derivation
includes lines similar to:
<programlisting>
{ /* ... */, nixosTests }:
{
# ...
passthru.tests = {
basic-functionality-and-dovecot-integration = nixosTests.opensmtpd;
};
}
</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>timeout</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
A timeout (in seconds) for building the derivation. If the derivation
takes longer than this time to build, it can fail due to breaking the
timeout. However, all computers do not have the same computing power,
hence some builders may decide to apply a multiplicative factor to this
value. When filling this value in, try to keep it approximately
consistent with other values already present in
<literal>nixpkgs</literal>.
</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.
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>
</section>
<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>
</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>
</section>
<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.
A few generic options are available, although it's typically better
to indicate the specific license:
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term><varname>free</varname></term>
<listitem><para>Catch-all for free 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
<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
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
cannot be included in the Nixpkgs channel.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<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
channel.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<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
cares whether firmware is free.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
</para>
</section>
<para>
Although it's typically better to indicate the specific license, a few
generic options are available:
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname>stdenv.lib.licenses.free</varname>, <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>
<listitem>
<para>
Unfree package that can be redistributed in binary 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 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 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 can build it yourself,
but you cannot redistribute the output of 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>
<listitem>
<para>
This package supplies unfree, redistributable firmware. This is a
separate value from <varname>unfree-redistributable</varname> because
not everybody cares whether firmware is free.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
</para>
</section>
</chapter>

View File

@@ -1,323 +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 xml:id="sec-multiple-outputs-introduction">
<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 xml:id="sec-multiple-outputs-installing">
<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>
<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 xml:id="sec-multiple-outputs-using-split-packages">
<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 <varname>dev</varname> output is added if it exists,
otherwise the first output is added. In addition to that,
<varname>propagatedBuildOutputs</varname> of that package which by default
contain <varname>$outputBin</varname> and <varname>$outputLib</varname> are
also added. (See <xref linkend="multiple-output-file-type-groups" />.)
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-multiple-outputs-">
<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 = [ "bin" "dev" "out" "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. 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-binaries-first-convention">
<title><quote>Binaries first</quote></title>
<para>
A commonly adopted convention in <literal>nixpkgs</literal> is that
executables provided by the package are contained within its first output.
This convention allows the dependent packages to reference the executables
provided by packages in a uniform manner. For instance, provided with the
knowledge that the <literal>perl</literal> package contains a
<literal>perl</literal> executable it can be referenced as
<literal>${pkgs.perl}/bin/perl</literal> within a Nix derivation that needs
to execute a Perl script.
</para>
<para>
The <literal>glibc</literal> package is a deliberate single exception to
the <quote>binaries first</quote> convention. The <literal>glibc</literal>
has <literal>libs</literal> as its first output allowing the libraries
provided by <literal>glibc</literal> to be referenced directly (e.g.
<literal>${stdenv.glibc}/lib/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2</literal>). The
executables provided by <literal>glibc</literal> can be accessed via its
<literal>bin</literal> attribute (e.g.
<literal>${stdenv.glibc.bin}/bin/ldd</literal>).
</para>
<para>
The reason for why <literal>glibc</literal> deviates from the convention is
because referencing a library provided by <literal>glibc</literal> is a
very common operation among Nix packages. For instance, third-party
executables packaged by Nix are typically patched and relinked with the
relevant version of <literal>glibc</literal> libraries from Nix packages
(please see the documentation on
<link xlink:href="https://nixos.org/patchelf.html">patchelf</link> for more
details).
</para>
</section>
<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> $outputDevdoc</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
is for <emphasis>developer</emphasis> documentation. Currently we count
gtk-doc and devhelp books in there. It goes to <varname>devdoc</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> $outputMan</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
is for man pages (except for section 3). They go to
<varname>man</varname> or <varname>$outputBin</varname> by default.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname> $outputDevman</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
is for section 3 man pages. They go to <varname>devman</varname> or
<varname>$outputMan</varname> by default.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>
<varname> $outputInfo</varname>
</term>
<listitem>
<para>
is for info pages. They go to <varname>info</varname> or
<varname>$outputBin</varname> by default.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-multiple-outputs-caveats">
<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

@@ -61,10 +61,10 @@ stdenv.mkDerivation {
builder = ./builder.sh;
src = fetchurl {
url = http://ftp.nluug.nl/gnu/binutils/binutils-2.16.1.tar.bz2;
sha256 = "1ian3kwh2vg6hr3ymrv48s04gijs539vzrq62xr76bxbhbwnz2np";
md5 = "6a9d529efb285071dad10e1f3d2b2967";
};
inherit noSysDirs;
configureFlags = [ "--target=arm-linux" ];
configureFlags = "--target=arm-linux";
}
---
@@ -78,14 +78,14 @@ Step 2: build kernel headers for the target architecture
---
{stdenv, fetchurl}:
assert stdenv.buildPlatform.system == "i686-linux";
assert stdenv.system == "i686-linux";
stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "linux-headers-2.6.13.1-arm";
name = "linux-headers-2.6.13.4-arm";
builder = ./builder.sh;
src = fetchurl {
url = http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v2.6/linux-2.6.13.1.tar.bz2;
sha256 = "12qxmc827fjhaz53kjy7vyrzsaqcg78amiqsb3qm20z26w705lma";
url = http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v2.6/linux-2.6.13.4.tar.bz2;
md5 = "94768d7eef90a9d8174639b2a7d3f58d";
};
}
---
@@ -152,7 +152,9 @@ stdenv.mkDerivation {
builder = ./builder.sh;
src = fetchurl {
url = ftp://ftp.nluug.nl/pub/gnu/gcc/gcc-4.0.2/gcc-core-4.0.2.tar.bz2;
sha256 = "02fxh0asflm8825w23l2jq1wvs7hbnam0jayrivg7zdv2ifnc0rc";
md5 = "f7781398ada62ba255486673e6274b26";
#url = ftp://ftp.nluug.nl/pub/gnu/gcc/gcc-4.0.2/gcc-4.0.2.tar.bz2;
#md5 = "a659b8388cac9db2b13e056e574ceeb0";
};
# !!! apply only if noSysDirs is set
patches = [./no-sys-dirs.patch ./gcc-inhibit.patch];

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,14 @@
Semi-automatic source information updating using "update-upstream-data.sh" script and "src-{,info-}for-*.nix"
1. Recognizing when a pre-existing package uses this mechanism.
Packages using this automatical update mechanism have src-info-for-default.nix and src-for-default.nix next to default.nix. src-info-for-default.nix describes getting the freshest source from upstream web site; src-for-default.nix is a generated file with the current data about used source. Both files define a simple attrSet.
src-info-for-default.nix (for a file grabbed via http) contains at least downloadPage attribute - it is the page we need to look at to find out the latest version. It also contains baseName that is used for automatical generation of package name containing version. It can contain extra data for trickier cases.
src-for-default.nix will contain advertisedUrl (raw URL chosen on the site; its change prompts regeneration of source data), url for fetchurl, hash, version retrieved from the download URL and suggested package name.
2. Updating a package
nixpkgs/pkgs/build-support/upstream-updater directory contains some scripts. The worker script is called update-upstream-data.sh. This script requires main expression name (e.g. default.nix). It can optionally accpet a second parameter, URL which will be used instead of getting one by parsing the downloadPage (version extraction, mirror URL creation etc. will still be run). After running the script, check src-for-default.nix (or replace default.nix with expression name, if there are seceral expressions in the directory) for new version information.

View File

@@ -1,195 +0,0 @@
<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="chap-overlays">
<title>Overlays</title>
<para>
This chapter describes how to extend and change Nixpkgs using overlays.
Overlays are used to add layers in the fixed-point used by Nixpkgs to compose
the set of all packages.
</para>
<para>
Nixpkgs can be configured with a list of overlays, which are applied in
order. This means that the order of the overlays can be significant if
multiple layers override the same package.
</para>
<!--============================================================-->
<section xml:id="sec-overlays-install">
<title>Installing overlays</title>
<para>
The list of overlays can be set either explicitly in a Nix expression, or
through <literal>&lt;nixpkgs-overlays></literal> or user configuration
files.
</para>
<section xml:id="sec-overlays-argument">
<title>Set overlays in NixOS or Nix expressions</title>
<para>
On a NixOS system the value of the <literal>nixpkgs.overlays</literal>
option, if present, is passed to the system Nixpkgs directly as an
argument. Note that this does not affect the overlays for non-NixOS
operations (e.g. <literal>nix-env</literal>), which are
<link xlink:href="#sec-overlays-lookup">looked</link> up independently.
</para>
<para>
The list of overlays can be passed explicitly when importing nixpkgs, for
example <literal>import &lt;nixpkgs> { overlays = [ overlay1 overlay2 ];
}</literal>.
</para>
<para>
Further overlays can be added by calling the <literal>pkgs.extend</literal>
or <literal>pkgs.appendOverlays</literal>, although it is often preferable
to avoid these functions, because they recompute the Nixpkgs fixpoint,
which is somewhat expensive to do.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="sec-overlays-lookup">
<title>Install overlays via configuration lookup</title>
<para>
The list of overlays is determined as follows.
</para>
<para>
<orderedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
First, if an
<link xlink:href="#sec-overlays-argument"><varname>overlays</varname>
argument</link> to the Nixpkgs function itself is given, then that is
used and no path lookup will be performed.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Otherwise, if the Nix path entry
<literal>&lt;nixpkgs-overlays></literal> exists, we look for overlays at
that path, as described below.
</para>
<para>
See the section on <literal>NIX_PATH</literal> in the Nix manual for
more details on how to set a value for
<literal>&lt;nixpkgs-overlays>.</literal>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
If one of <filename>~/.config/nixpkgs/overlays.nix</filename> and
<filename>~/.config/nixpkgs/overlays/</filename> exists, then we look
for overlays at that path, as described below. It is an error if both
exist.
</para>
</listitem>
</orderedlist>
</para>
<para>
If we are looking for overlays at a path, then there are two cases:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
If the path is a file, then the file is imported as a Nix expression and
used as the list of overlays.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
If the path is a directory, then we take the content of the directory,
order it lexicographically, and attempt to interpret each as an overlay
by:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
Importing the file, if it is a <literal>.nix</literal> file.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Importing a top-level <filename>default.nix</filename> file, if it is
a directory.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
<para>
Because overlays that are set in NixOS configuration do not affect
non-NixOS operations such as <literal>nix-env</literal>, the
<filename>overlays.nix</filename> option provides a convenient way to use
the same overlays for a NixOS system configuration and user configuration:
the same file can be used as <filename>overlays.nix</filename> and imported
as the value of <literal>nixpkgs.overlays</literal>.
</para>
<!-- TODO: Example of sharing overlays between NixOS configuration
and configuration lookup. Also reference the example
from the sec-overlays-argument paragraph about NixOS.
-->
</section>
</section>
<!--============================================================-->
<section xml:id="sec-overlays-definition">
<title>Defining overlays</title>
<para>
Overlays are Nix functions which accept two arguments, conventionally called
<varname>self</varname> and <varname>super</varname>, and return a set of
packages. For example, the following is a valid overlay.
</para>
<programlisting>
self: super:
{
boost = super.boost.override {
python = self.python3;
};
rr = super.callPackage ./pkgs/rr {
stdenv = self.stdenv_32bit;
};
}
</programlisting>
<para>
The first argument (<varname>self</varname>) corresponds to the final
package set. You should use this set for the dependencies of all packages
specified in your overlay. For example, all the dependencies of
<varname>rr</varname> in the example above come from
<varname>self</varname>, as well as the overridden dependencies used in the
<varname>boost</varname> override.
</para>
<para>
The second argument (<varname>super</varname>) corresponds to the result of
the evaluation of the previous stages of Nixpkgs. It does not contain any of
the packages added by the current overlay, nor any of the following
overlays. This set should be used either to refer to packages you wish to
override, or to access functions defined in Nixpkgs. For example, the
original recipe of <varname>boost</varname> in the above example, comes from
<varname>super</varname>, as well as the <varname>callPackage</varname>
function.
</para>
<para>
The value returned by this function should be a set similar to
<filename>pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix</filename>, containing overridden
and/or new packages.
</para>
<para>
Overlays are similar to other methods for customizing Nixpkgs, in particular
the <literal>packageOverrides</literal> attribute described in
<xref linkend="sec-modify-via-packageOverrides"/>. Indeed,
<literal>packageOverrides</literal> acts as an overlay with only the
<varname>super</varname> argument. It is therefore appropriate for basic
use, but overlays are more powerful and easier to distribute.
</para>
</section>
</chapter>

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.screen img,
.programlisting img {
width: 1em;
}
.calloutlist img {
width: 1.5em;
}

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<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.
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</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>

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<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="chap-platform-nodes">
<title>Platform Notes</title>
<section xml:id="sec-darwin">
<title>Darwin (macOS)</title>
<para>
Some common issues when packaging software for Darwin:
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
The Darwin <literal>stdenv</literal> uses clang instead of gcc. When
referring to the compiler <varname>$CC</varname> or <command>cc</command>
will work in both cases. Some builds hardcode gcc/g++ in their build
scripts, that can usually be fixed with using something like
<literal>makeFlags = [ "CC=cc" ];</literal> or by patching the build
scripts.
</para>
<programlisting>
stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "libfoo-1.2.3";
# ...
buildPhase = ''
$CC -o hello hello.c
'';
}
</programlisting>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
On Darwin, libraries are linked using absolute paths, libraries are
resolved by their <literal>install_name</literal> at link time. Sometimes
packages won't set this correctly causing the library lookups to fail at
runtime. This can be fixed by adding extra linker flags or by running
<command>install_name_tool -id</command> during the
<function>fixupPhase</function>.
</para>
<programlisting>
stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "libfoo-1.2.3";
# ...
makeFlags = stdenv.lib.optional stdenv.isDarwin "LDFLAGS=-Wl,-install_name,$(out)/lib/libfoo.dylib";
}
</programlisting>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Even if the libraries are linked using absolute paths and resolved via
their <literal>install_name</literal> correctly, tests can sometimes fail
to run binaries. This happens because the <varname>checkPhase</varname>
runs before the libraries are installed.
</para>
<para>
This can usually be solved by running the tests after the
<varname>installPhase</varname> or alternatively by using
<varname>DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH</varname>. More information about this variable
can be found in the <citerefentry>
<refentrytitle>dyld</refentrytitle>
<manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry> manpage.
</para>
<programlisting>
dyld: Library not loaded: /nix/store/7hnmbscpayxzxrixrgxvvlifzlxdsdir-jq-1.5-lib/lib/libjq.1.dylib
Referenced from: /private/tmp/nix-build-jq-1.5.drv-0/jq-1.5/tests/../jq
Reason: image not found
./tests/jqtest: line 5: 75779 Abort trap: 6
</programlisting>
<programlisting>
stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "libfoo-1.2.3";
# ...
doInstallCheck = true;
installCheckTarget = "check";
}
</programlisting>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Some packages assume xcode is available and use <command>xcrun</command>
to resolve build tools like <command>clang</command>, etc. This causes
errors like <code>xcode-select: error: no developer tools were found at
'/Applications/Xcode.app'</code> while the build doesn't actually depend
on xcode.
</para>
<programlisting>
stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "libfoo-1.2.3";
# ...
prePatch = ''
substituteInPlace Makefile \
--replace '/usr/bin/xcrun clang' clang
'';
}
</programlisting>
<para>
The package <literal>xcbuild</literal> can be used to build projects that
really depend on Xcode. However, this replacement is not 100%
compatible with Xcode and can occasionally cause issues.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</section>
</chapter>

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@@ -1,219 +1,223 @@
<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="chap-quick-start">
<title>Quick Start to Adding a Package</title>
<para>
To add a package to Nixpkgs:
<orderedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
Checkout the Nixpkgs source tree:
<title>Quick Start to Adding a Package</title>
<para>To add a package to Nixpkgs:
<orderedlist>
<listitem>
<para>Checkout the Nixpkgs source tree:
<screen>
$ git clone https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs
$ git clone git://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs.git
$ cd nixpkgs</screen>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Find a good place in the Nixpkgs tree to add the Nix expression for your
package. For instance, a library package typically goes into
<filename>pkgs/development/libraries/<replaceable>pkgname</replaceable></filename>,
while a web browser goes into
<filename>pkgs/applications/networking/browsers/<replaceable>pkgname</replaceable></filename>.
See <xref linkend="sec-organisation" /> for some hints on the tree
organisation. Create a directory for your package, e.g.
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Find a good place in the Nixpkgs tree to add the Nix
expression for your package. For instance, a library package
typically goes into
<filename>pkgs/development/libraries/<replaceable>pkgname</replaceable></filename>,
while a web browser goes into
<filename>pkgs/applications/networking/browsers/<replaceable>pkgname</replaceable></filename>.
See <xref linkend="sec-organisation" /> for some hints on the tree
organisation. Create a directory for your package, e.g.
<screen>
$ mkdir pkgs/development/libraries/libfoo</screen>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
In the package directory, create a Nix expression — a piece of code that
describes how to build the package. In this case, it should be a
<emphasis>function</emphasis> that is called with the package dependencies
as arguments, and returns a build of the package in the Nix store. The
expression should usually be called <filename>default.nix</filename>.
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>In the package directory, create a Nix expression — a piece
of code that describes how to build the package. In this case, it
should be a <emphasis>function</emphasis> that is called with the
package dependencies as arguments, and returns a build of the
package in the Nix store. The expression should usually be called
<filename>default.nix</filename>.
<screen>
$ emacs pkgs/development/libraries/libfoo/default.nix
$ git add pkgs/development/libraries/libfoo/default.nix</screen>
</para>
<para>
You can have a look at the existing Nix expressions under
<filename>pkgs/</filename> to see how its done. Here are some good
ones:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
GNU Hello:
<link
<para>You can have a look at the existing Nix expressions under
<filename>pkgs/</filename> to see how its done. Here are some
good ones:
<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
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 no dependencies beyond
<varname>stdenv</varname>.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
GNU Multiple Precision arithmetic library (GMP):
<link
Also a simple 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 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>.
Also done by the generic builder, but has a dependency on
<varname>m4</varname>.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Pan, a GTK-based newsreader:
<link
Also done by the generic builder, but has a dependency on
<varname>m4</varname>.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Pan, a GTK-based newsreader: <link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/applications/networking/newsreaders/pan/default.nix"><filename>pkgs/applications/networking/newsreaders/pan/default.nix</filename></link>.
Has an optional dependency on <varname>gtkspell</varname>, which is
only built if <varname>spellCheck</varname> is <literal>true</literal>.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Apache HTTPD:
<link
Has an optional dependency on <varname>gtkspell</varname>,
which is only built if <varname>spellCheck</varname> is
<literal>true</literal>.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Apache HTTPD: <link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/servers/http/apache-httpd/2.4.nix"><filename>pkgs/servers/http/apache-httpd/2.4.nix</filename></link>.
A bunch of optional features, variable substitutions in the configure
flags, a post-install hook, and miscellaneous hackery.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Thunderbird:
<link
A bunch of optional features, variable substitutions in the
configure flags, a post-install hook, and miscellaneous
hackery.</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>.
Lots of dependencies.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
JDiskReport, a Java utility:
<link
Lots of dependencies.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>JDiskReport, a Java utility: <link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/tools/misc/jdiskreport/default.nix"><filename>pkgs/tools/misc/jdiskreport/default.nix</filename></link>
(and the
<link
(and the <link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/tools/misc/jdiskreport/builder.sh">builder</link>).
Nixpkgs doesnt have a decent <varname>stdenv</varname> for Java yet
so this is pretty ad-hoc.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
XML::Simple, a Perl module:
<link
Nixpkgs doesnt have a decent <varname>stdenv</varname> for
Java yet so this is pretty ad-hoc.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>XML::Simple, a Perl module: <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>
(search for the <varname>XMLSimple</varname> attribute). Most Perl
modules are so simple to build that they are defined directly in
<filename>perl-packages.nix</filename>; no need to make a separate file
for them.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Adobe Reader:
<link
(search for the <varname>XMLSimple</varname> attribute).
Most Perl modules are so simple to build that they are
defined directly in <filename>perl-packages.nix</filename>;
no need to make a separate file for them.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Adobe Reader: <link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/applications/misc/adobe-reader/default.nix"><filename>pkgs/applications/misc/adobe-reader/default.nix</filename></link>.
Shows how binary-only packages can be supported. In particular the
<link
Shows how binary-only packages can be supported. In
particular the <link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/applications/misc/adobe-reader/builder.sh">builder</link>
uses <command>patchelf</command> to set the RUNPATH and ELF interpreter
of the executables so that the right libraries are found at runtime.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
uses <command>patchelf</command> to set the RUNPATH and ELF
interpreter of the executables so that the right libraries
are found at runtime.</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
<para>
Some notes:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
All <varname linkend="chap-meta">meta</varname> attributes are
optional, but its still a good idea to provide at least the
<varname>description</varname>, <varname>homepage</varname> and
<varname
linkend="sec-meta-license">license</varname>.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<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>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
A list of schemes for <literal>mirror://</literal> URLs can be found in
<link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/build-support/fetchurl/mirrors.nix"><filename>pkgs/build-support/fetchurl/mirrors.nix</filename></link>.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
<para>Some notes:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>All <varname linkend="chap-meta">meta</varname>
attributes are optional, but its still a good idea to
provide at least the <varname>description</varname>,
<varname>homepage</varname> and <varname
linkend="sec-meta-license">license</varname>.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>You can use <command>nix-prefetch-url</command> (or similar nix-prefetch-git, etc)
<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>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>A list of schemes for <literal>mirror://</literal>
URLs can be found in <link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/build-support/fetchurl/mirrors.nix"><filename>pkgs/build-support/fetchurl/mirrors.nix</filename></link>.</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
<para>
The exact syntax and semantics of the Nix expression language, including
the built-in function, are described in the Nix manual in the
<link
<para>The exact syntax and semantics of the Nix expression
language, including the built-in function, are described 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>.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Add a call to the function defined in the previous step to
<link
on writing Nix expressions</link>.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Add a call to the function defined in the previous step to
<link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix"><filename>pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix</filename></link>
with some descriptive name for the variable, e.g.
<varname>libfoo</varname>.
<screen>
with some descriptive name for the variable,
e.g. <varname>libfoo</varname>.
<screen>
$ emacs pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix</screen>
</para>
<para>
The attributes in that file are sorted by category (like “Development /
Libraries”) that more-or-less correspond to the directory structure of
Nixpkgs, and then by attribute name.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
To test whether the package builds, run the following command from the
root of the nixpkgs source tree:
<screen>
<para>The attributes in that file are sorted by category (like
“Development / Libraries”) that more-or-less correspond to the
directory structure of Nixpkgs, and then by attribute name.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>To test whether the package builds, run the following command
from the root of the nixpkgs source tree:
<screen>
$ nix-build -A libfoo</screen>
where <varname>libfoo</varname> should be the variable name defined in the
previous step. You may want to add the flag <option>-K</option> to keep
the temporary build directory in case something fails. If the build
succeeds, a symlink <filename>./result</filename> to the package in the
Nix store is created.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
If you want to install the package into your profile (optional), do
<screen>
where <varname>libfoo</varname> should be the variable name
defined in the previous step. You may want to add the flag
<option>-K</option> to keep the temporary build directory in case
something fails. If the build succeeds, a symlink
<filename>./result</filename> to the package in the Nix store is
created.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>If you want to install the package into your profile
(optional), do
<screen>
$ nix-env -f . -iA libfoo</screen>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Optionally commit the new package and open a pull request, or send a patch
to <literal>https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/nix-devel</literal>.
</para>
</listitem>
</orderedlist>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Optionally commit the new package and open a pull request, or send a patch to
<literal>nix-dev@cs.uu.nl</literal>.</para>
</listitem>
</orderedlist>
</para>
</chapter>

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@@ -1,616 +0,0 @@
<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
version="5.0"
xml:id="sec-reviewing-contributions">
<title>Reviewing contributions</title>
<warning>
<para>
The following section is a draft, and the policy for reviewing is still
being discussed in issues such as
<link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/11166">#11166
</link> and
<link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/20836">#20836
</link>.
</para>
</warning>
<para>
The Nixpkgs project receives a fairly high number of contributions via GitHub
pull requests. Reviewing and approving these is an important task and a way
to contribute to the project.
</para>
<para>
The high change rate of Nixpkgs makes any pull request that remains open for
too long subject to conflicts that will require extra work from the submitter
or the merger. Reviewing pull requests in a timely manner and being responsive
to the comments is the key to avoid this issue. GitHub provides sort filters
that can be used to see the <link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pulls?q=is%3Apr+is%3Aopen+sort%3Aupdated-desc">most
recently</link> and the <link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pulls?q=is%3Apr+is%3Aopen+sort%3Aupdated-asc">least
recently</link> updated pull requests. We highly encourage looking at
<link xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pulls?q=is%3Apr+is%3Aopen+review%3Anone+status%3Asuccess+-label%3A%222.status%3A+work-in-progress%22+no%3Aproject+no%3Aassignee+no%3Amilestone">
this list of ready to merge, unreviewed pull requests</link>.
</para>
<para>
When reviewing a pull request, please always be nice and polite.
Controversial changes can lead to controversial opinions, but it is important
to respect every community member and their work.
</para>
<para>
GitHub provides reactions as a simple and quick way to provide feedback to
pull requests or any comments. The thumb-down reaction should be used with
care and if possible accompanied with some explanation so the submitter has
directions to improve their contribution.
</para>
<para>
pull request reviews should include a list of what has been reviewed in a
comment, so other reviewers and mergers can know the state of the review.
</para>
<para>
All the review template samples provided in this section are generic and
meant as examples. Their usage is optional and the reviewer is free to adapt
them to their liking.
</para>
<section xml:id="reviewing-contributions-package-updates">
<title>Package updates</title>
<para>
A package update is the most trivial and common type of pull request. These
pull requests mainly consist of updating the version part of the package
name and the source hash.
</para>
<para>
It can happen that non-trivial updates include patches or more complex
changes.
</para>
<para>
Reviewing process:
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
Add labels to the pull request. (Requires commit rights)
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
<literal>8.has: package (update)</literal> and any topic label that fit
the updated package.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Ensure that the package versioning fits the guidelines.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Ensure that the commit text fits the guidelines.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Ensure that the package maintainers are notified.
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
<link xlink:href="https://help.github.com/articles/about-codeowners/">CODEOWNERS</link>
will make GitHub notify users based on the submitted changes, but it can
happen that it misses some of the package maintainers.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Ensure that the meta field information is correct.
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
License can change with version updates, so it should be checked to
match the upstream license.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
If the package has no maintainer, a maintainer must be set. This can be
the update submitter or a community member that accepts to take
maintainership of the package.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Ensure that the code contains no typos.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Building the package locally.
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
pull requests are often targeted to the master or staging branch, and
building the pull request locally when it is submitted can trigger many
source builds.
</para>
<para>
It is possible to rebase the changes on nixos-unstable or
nixpkgs-unstable for easier review by running the following commands
from a nixpkgs clone.
<screen>
$ git remote add channels https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs-channels.git <co
xml:id='reviewing-rebase-1' />
$ git fetch channels nixos-unstable <co xml:id='reviewing-rebase-2' />
$ git fetch origin pull/PRNUMBER/head <co xml:id='reviewing-rebase-3' />
$ git rebase --onto nixos-unstable BASEBRANCH FETCH_HEAD <co
xml:id='reviewing-rebase-4' />
</screen>
<calloutlist>
<callout arearefs='reviewing-rebase-1'>
<para>
This should be done only once to be able to fetch channel branches
from the nixpkgs-channels repository.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='reviewing-rebase-2'>
<para>
Fetching the nixos-unstable branch.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='reviewing-rebase-3'>
<para>
Fetching the pull request changes, <varname>PRNUMBER</varname> is the
number at the end of the pull request title and
<varname>BASEBRANCH</varname> the base branch of the pull request.
</para>
</callout>
<callout arearefs='reviewing-rebase-4'>
<para>
Rebasing the pull request changes to the nixos-unstable branch.
</para>
</callout>
</calloutlist>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
The <link xlink:href="https://github.com/madjar/nox">nox</link> tool can
be used to review a pull request content in a single command. It doesn't
rebase on a channel branch so it might trigger multiple source builds.
<varname>PRNUMBER</varname> should be replaced by the number at the end
of the pull request title.
</para>
<screen>
$ nix-shell -p nox --run "nox-review -k pr PRNUMBER"
</screen>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Running every binary.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
<example xml:id="reviewing-contributions-sample-package-update">
<title>Sample template for a package update review</title>
<screen>
##### Reviewed points
- [ ] package name fits guidelines
- [ ] package version fits guidelines
- [ ] package build on ARCHITECTURE
- [ ] executables tested on ARCHITECTURE
- [ ] all depending packages build
##### Possible improvements
##### Comments
</screen>
</example>
</section>
<section xml:id="reviewing-contributions-new-packages">
<title>New packages</title>
<para>
New packages are a common type of pull requests. These pull requests
consists in adding a new nix-expression for a package.
</para>
<para>
Reviewing process:
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
Add labels to the pull request. (Requires commit rights)
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
<literal>8.has: package (new)</literal> and any topic label that fit the
new package.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Ensure that the package versioning is fitting the guidelines.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Ensure that the commit name is fitting the guidelines.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Ensure that the meta field contains correct information.
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
License must be checked to be fitting upstream license.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Platforms should be set or the package will not get binary substitutes.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
A maintainer must be set. This can be the package submitter or a
community member that accepts to take maintainership of the package.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Ensure that the code contains no typos.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Ensure the package source.
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
Mirrors urls should be used when available.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
The most appropriate function should be used (e.g. packages from GitHub
should use <literal>fetchFromGitHub</literal>).
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Building the package locally.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Running every binary.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
<example xml:id="reviewing-contributions-sample-new-package">
<title>Sample template for a new package review</title>
<screen>
##### Reviewed points
- [ ] package path fits guidelines
- [ ] package name fits guidelines
- [ ] package version fits guidelines
- [ ] package build on ARCHITECTURE
- [ ] executables tested on ARCHITECTURE
- [ ] `meta.description` is set and fits guidelines
- [ ] `meta.license` fits upstream license
- [ ] `meta.platforms` is set
- [ ] `meta.maintainers` is set
- [ ] build time only dependencies are declared in `nativeBuildInputs`
- [ ] source is fetched using the appropriate function
- [ ] phases are respected
- [ ] patches that are remotely available are fetched with `fetchpatch`
##### Possible improvements
##### Comments
</screen>
</example>
</section>
<section xml:id="reviewing-contributions-module-updates">
<title>Module updates</title>
<para>
Module updates are submissions changing modules in some ways. These often
contains changes to the options or introduce new options.
</para>
<para>
Reviewing process
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
Add labels to the pull request. (Requires commit rights)
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
<literal>8.has: module (update)</literal> and any topic label that fit
the module.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Ensure that the module maintainers are notified.
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
<link xlink:href="https://help.github.com/articles/about-codeowners/">CODEOWNERS</link>
will make GitHub notify users based on the submitted changes, but it can
happen that it misses some of the package maintainers.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Ensure that the module tests, if any, are succeeding.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Ensure that the introduced options are correct.
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
Type should be appropriate (string related types differs in their
merging capabilities, <literal>optionSet</literal> and
<literal>string</literal> types are deprecated).
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Description, default and example should be provided.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Ensure that option changes are backward compatible.
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
<literal>mkRenamedOptionModule</literal> and
<literal>mkAliasOptionModule</literal> functions provide way to make
option changes backward compatible.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Ensure that removed options are declared with
<literal>mkRemovedOptionModule</literal>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Ensure that changes that are not backward compatible are mentioned in
release notes.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Ensure that documentations affected by the change is updated.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
<example xml:id="reviewing-contributions-sample-module-update">
<title>Sample template for a module update review</title>
<screen>
##### Reviewed points
- [ ] changes are backward compatible
- [ ] removed options are declared with `mkRemovedOptionModule`
- [ ] changes that are not backward compatible are documented in release notes
- [ ] module tests succeed on ARCHITECTURE
- [ ] options types are appropriate
- [ ] options description is set
- [ ] options example is provided
- [ ] documentation affected by the changes is updated
##### Possible improvements
##### Comments
</screen>
</example>
</section>
<section xml:id="reviewing-contributions-new-modules">
<title>New modules</title>
<para>
New modules submissions introduce a new module to NixOS.
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
Add labels to the pull request. (Requires commit rights)
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
<literal>8.has: module (new)</literal> and any topic label that fit the
module.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Ensure that the module tests, if any, are succeeding.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Ensure that the introduced options are correct.
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
Type should be appropriate (string related types differs in their
merging capabilities, <literal>optionSet</literal> and
<literal>string</literal> types are deprecated).
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Description, default and example should be provided.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Ensure that module <literal>meta</literal> field is present
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
Maintainers should be declared in <literal>meta.maintainers</literal>.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Module documentation should be declared with
<literal>meta.doc</literal>.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
Ensure that the module respect other modules functionality.
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
For example, enabling a module should not open firewall ports by
default.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
<example xml:id="reviewing-contributions-sample-new-module">
<title>Sample template for a new module review</title>
<screen>
##### Reviewed points
- [ ] module path fits the guidelines
- [ ] module tests succeed on ARCHITECTURE
- [ ] options have appropriate types
- [ ] options have default
- [ ] options have example
- [ ] options have descriptions
- [ ] No unneeded package is added to environment.systemPackages
- [ ] meta.maintainers is set
- [ ] module documentation is declared in meta.doc
##### Possible improvements
##### Comments
</screen>
</example>
</section>
<section xml:id="reviewing-contributions-other-submissions">
<title>Other submissions</title>
<para>
Other type of submissions requires different reviewing steps.
</para>
<para>
If you consider having enough knowledge and experience in a topic and would
like to be a long-term reviewer for related submissions, please contact the
current reviewers for that topic. They will give you information about the
reviewing process. The main reviewers for a topic can be hard to find as
there is no list, but checking past pull requests to see who reviewed or
git-blaming the code to see who committed to that topic can give some hints.
</para>
<para>
Container system, boot system and library changes are some examples of the
pull requests fitting this category.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="reviewing-contributions--merging-pull-requests">
<title>Merging pull requests</title>
<para>
It is possible for community members that have enough knowledge and
experience on a special topic to contribute by merging pull requests.
</para>
<para>
TODO: add the procedure to request merging rights.
</para>
<!--
The following paragraph about how to deal with unactive contributors is just a
proposition and should be modified to what the community agrees to be the right
policy.
<para>Please note that contributors with commit rights unactive for more than
three months will have their commit rights revoked.</para>
-->
<para>
In a case a contributor definitively leaves the Nix community, they should
create an issue or post on
<link
xlink:href="https://discourse.nixos.org">Discourse</link> with
references of packages and modules they maintain so the maintainership can be
taken over by other contributors.
</para>
</section>
</chapter>

View File

@@ -1,5 +0,0 @@
{ pkgs ? import ../. {} }:
(import ./default.nix {}).overrideAttrs (x: {
buildInputs = x.buildInputs ++ [ pkgs.xmloscopy pkgs.ruby ];
})

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@@ -9,7 +9,6 @@
body
{
font-family: "Nimbus Sans L", sans-serif;
font-size: 1em;
background: white;
margin: 2em 1em 2em 1em;
}
@@ -29,28 +28,9 @@ h2 /* chapters, appendices, subtitle */
font-size: 180%;
}
div.book
{
text-align: center;
}
div.book > div
{
/*
* based on https://medium.com/@zkareemz/golden-ratio-62b3b6d4282a
* we do 70 characters per line to fit code listings better
* 70 * (font-size / 1.618)
* expression for emacs:
* (* 70 (/ 1 1.618))
*/
max-width: 43.2em;
text-align: left;
margin: auto;
}
/* Extra space between chapters, appendices. */
div.chapter > div.titlepage h2, div.appendix > div.titlepage h2
{
div.chapter > div.titlepage h2, div.appendix > div.titlepage h2
{
margin-top: 1.5em;
}
@@ -122,9 +102,9 @@ pre.screen, pre.programlisting
{
border: 1px solid #b0b0b0;
padding: 3px 3px;
margin-left: 0.5em;
margin-right: 0.5em;
margin-left: 1.5em;
margin-right: 1.5em;
color: #600000;
background: #f4f4f8;
font-family: monospace;
border-radius: 0.4em;
@@ -138,6 +118,7 @@ div.example pre.programlisting
margin: 0 0 0 0;
}
/***************************************************************************
Notes, warnings etc:
***************************************************************************/
@@ -191,7 +172,7 @@ div.navfooter *
/***************************************************************************
Links colors and highlighting:
Links colors and highlighting:
***************************************************************************/
a { text-decoration: none; }
@@ -228,7 +209,7 @@ tt, code
.term
{
font-weight: bold;
}
div.variablelist dd p, div.glosslist dd p
@@ -268,24 +249,7 @@ table
box-shadow: 0.4em 0.4em 0.5em #e0e0e0;
}
table.simplelist
{
text-align: left;
color: #005aa0;
border: 0;
padding: 5px;
background: #fffff5;
font-weight: normal;
font-style: italic;
box-shadow: none;
margin-bottom: 1em;
}
div.navheader table, div.navfooter table {
box-shadow: none;
}
div.affiliation
{
font-style: italic;
}
}

View File

@@ -1,523 +1,283 @@
<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 xml:id="submitting-changes-making-patches">
<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>
<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>
</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 | nixos/&lt;module>): (from -> to | init at version | refactor | etc)
(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: 54.0.1 -> 55.0</command>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
<command>nixos/hydra: add bazBaz option</command>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
<command>nixos/nginx: 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 xml:id="submitting-changes-submitting-changes">
<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 | nixos/&lt;module>):
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 xml:id="submitting-changes-pull-request-template">
<title>Pull Request Template</title>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>Examples:
<para>
The pull request template helps determine what steps have been made for a
contribution so far, and will help guide maintainers on the status of a
change. The motivation section of the PR should include any extra details
the title does not address and link any existing issues related to the pull
request.
</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
<command>nginx: init at 2.0.1</command>
</para>
</listitem>
<para>
When a PR is created, it will be pre-populated with some checkboxes detailed
below:
</para>
<listitem>
<para>
<command>firefox: 3.0 -> 3.1.1</command>
</para>
</listitem>
<section xml:id="submitting-changes-tested-with-sandbox">
<title>Tested using sandboxing</title>
<listitem>
<para>
<command>hydra service: add bazBaz option</command>
</para>
</listitem>
<para>
When sandbox builds are enabled, Nix will setup an isolated environment for
each build process. It is used to remove further hidden dependencies set by
the build environment to improve reproducibility. This includes access to
the network during the build outside of <function>fetch*</function>
functions and files outside the Nix store. Depending on the operating
system access to other resources are blocked as well (ex. inter process
communication is isolated on Linux); see
<link
xlink:href="https://nixos.org/nix/manual/#description-45">build-use-sandbox</link>
in Nix manual for details.
</para>
<listitem>
<para>
<command>nginx service: refactor config generation</command>
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</listitem>
<para>
Sandboxing is not enabled by default in Nix due to a small performance hit
on each build. In pull requests for
<link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/">nixpkgs</link>
people are asked to test builds with sandboxing enabled (see
<literal>Tested using sandboxing</literal> in the pull request template)
because
in<link
xlink:href="https://nixos.org/hydra/">https://nixos.org/hydra/</link>
sandboxing is also used.
</para>
<listitem>
<para>Test your changes. If you work with
<para>
Depending if you use NixOS or other platforms you can use one of the
following methods to enable sandboxing
<emphasis role="bold">before</emphasis> building the package:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
<emphasis role="bold">Globally enable sandboxing on NixOS</emphasis>:
add the following to <filename>configuration.nix</filename>
<screen>nix.useSandbox = true;</screen>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
<emphasis role="bold">Globally enable sandboxing on non-NixOS
platforms</emphasis>: add the following to:
<filename>/etc/nix/nix.conf</filename>
<screen>build-use-sandbox = true</screen>
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
</section>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>nixpkgs:
<section xml:id="submitting-changes-platform-diversity">
<title>Built on platform(s)</title>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>update pkg ->
<para>
Many Nix packages are designed to run on multiple platforms. As such, it's
important to let the maintainer know which platforms your changes have been
tested on. It's not always practical to test a change on all platforms, and
is not required for a pull request to be merged. Only check the systems you
tested the build on in this section.
</para>
</section>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
<command>nix-env -i pkg-name -f &lt;path to your local nixpkgs folder&gt;</command>
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
</listitem>
<section xml:id="submitting-changes-nixos-tests">
<title>Tested via one or more NixOS test(s) if existing and applicable for the change (look inside nixos/tests)</title>
<listitem>
<para>add pkg ->
<para>
Packages with automated tests are much more likely to be merged in a timely
fashion because it doesn't require as much manual testing by the maintainer
to verify the functionality of the package. If there are existing tests for
the package, they should be run to verify your changes do not break the
tests. Tests only apply to packages with NixOS modules defined and can only
be run on Linux. For more details on writing and running tests, see the
<link
xlink:href="https://nixos.org/nixos/manual/index.html#sec-nixos-tests">section
in the NixOS manual</link>.
</para>
</section>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>Make sure it's in <command>pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix</command>
</para>
</listitem>
<section xml:id="submitting-changes-tested-compilation">
<title>Tested compilation of all pkgs that depend on this change using <command>nox-review</command></title>
<listitem>
<para>
<command>nix-env -i pkg-name -f &lt;path to your local nixpkgs folder&gt;</command>
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
</listitem>
<para>
If you are updating a package's version, you can use nox to make sure all
packages that depend on the updated package still compile correctly. This
can be done using the nox utility. The <command>nox-review</command>
utility can look for and build all dependencies either based on uncommited
changes with the <literal>wip</literal> option or specifying a github pull
request number.
</para>
<listitem>
<para>
<emphasis>If you don't want to install pkg in you profile</emphasis>.
<para>
review uncommitted changes:
<screen>nix-shell -p nox --run "nox-review wip"</screen>
</para>
<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>
<para>
review changes from pull request number 12345:
<screen>nix-shell -p nox --run "nox-review pr 12345"</screen>
</para>
</section>
<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>
<section xml:id="submitting-changes-tested-execution">
<title>Tested execution of all binary files (usually in <filename>./result/bin/</filename>)</title>
<listitem>
<para>NixOS and its modules:
<para>
It's important to test any executables generated by a build when you change
or create a package in nixpkgs. This can be done by looking in
<filename>./result/bin</filename> and running any files in there, or at a
minimum, the main executable for the package. For example, if you make a
change to <package>texlive</package>, you probably would only check the
binaries associated with the change you made rather than testing all of
them.
</para>
</section>
<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>
<section xml:id="submitting-changes-contribution-standards">
<title>Meets Nixpkgs contribution standards</title>
<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>
<para>
The last checkbox is fits
<link
xlink:href="https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/.github/CONTRIBUTING.md">CONTRIBUTING.md</link>.
The contributing document has detailed information on standards the Nix
community has for commit messages, reviews, licensing of contributions you
make to the project, etc... Everyone should read and understand the
standards the community has for contributing before submitting a pull
request.
</para>
</section>
</section>
<section xml:id="submitting-changes-hotfixing-pull-requests">
<title>Hotfixing pull requests</title>
<listitem>
<para>Rebase you branch against current <command>master</command>.</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</section>
<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 xml:id="submitting-changes-commit-policy">
<title>Commit policy</title>
<section>
<title>Submitting changes</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>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>Push your changes to your fork of nixpkgs.</para>
</listitem>
<section xml:id="submitting-changes-master-branch">
<title>Master branch</title>
<listitem>
<para>Create pull request:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
It should only see non-breaking commits that do not cause mass rebuilds.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</section>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>Write the title in format <command>(pkg-name | service): improvement</command>.
<section xml:id="submitting-changes-staging-branch">
<title>Staging branch</title>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>If you update the pkg, write versions <command>from -> to</command>.</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
</listitem>
<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="https://web.archive.org/web/20160528180406/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>
<listitem>
<para>Write in comment if you have tested your patch. Do not rely much on <command>TravisCI</command>.</para>
</listitem>
<section xml:id="submitting-changes-stable-release-branches">
<title>Stable release branches</title>
<listitem>
<para>If you make an improvement, write about your motivation.</para>
</listitem>
<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.
<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>
The original commit message describing the reason why the world was torn apart.
<section>
<title>Hotfixing pull requests</title>
(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>
<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>Master should only see non-breaking commits that do not cause mass rebuilds.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Staging should only see 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 staging 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>.</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>
</chapter>

View File

@@ -1,44 +0,0 @@
{ lib }:
rec {
/* Print a trace message if pred is false.
Intended to be used to augment asserts with helpful error messages.
Example:
assertMsg false "nope"
=> false
stderr> trace: nope
assert (assertMsg ("foo" == "bar") "foo is not bar, silly"); ""
stderr> trace: foo is not bar, silly
stderr> assert failed at
Type:
assertMsg :: Bool -> String -> Bool
*/
# TODO(Profpatsch): add tests that check stderr
assertMsg = pred: msg:
if pred
then true
else builtins.trace msg false;
/* Specialized `assertMsg` for checking if val is one of the elements
of a list. Useful for checking enums.
Example:
let sslLibrary = "libressl"
in assertOneOf "sslLibrary" sslLibrary [ "openssl" "bearssl" ]
=> false
stderr> trace: sslLibrary must be one of "openssl", "bearssl", but is: "libressl"
Type:
assertOneOf :: String -> ComparableVal -> List ComparableVal -> Bool
*/
assertOneOf = name: val: xs: assertMsg
(lib.elem val xs)
"${name} must be one of ${
lib.generators.toPretty {} xs}, but is: ${
lib.generators.toPretty {} val}";
}

View File

@@ -1,26 +1,20 @@
{ lib }:
# Operations on attribute sets.
let
with {
inherit (builtins) head tail length;
inherit (lib.trivial) and;
inherit (lib.strings) concatStringsSep;
inherit (lib.lists) fold concatMap concatLists;
in
inherit (import ./trivial.nix) or;
inherit (import ./default.nix) fold;
inherit (import ./strings.nix) concatStringsSep;
inherit (import ./lists.nix) concatMap concatLists all deepSeqList;
};
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
@@ -29,47 +23,15 @@ rec {
then attrByPath (tail attrPath) default e.${attr}
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;
@@ -94,15 +56,6 @@ rec {
attrValues = builtins.attrValues or (attrs: attrVals (attrNames attrs) attrs);
/* Given a set of attribute names, return the set of the corresponding
attributes from the given set.
Example:
getAttrs [ "a" "b" ] { a = 1; b = 2; c = 3; }
=> { a = 1; b = 2; }
*/
getAttrs = names: attrs: genAttrs names (name: attrs.${name});
/* Collect each attribute named `attr' from a list of attribute
sets. Sets that don't contain the named attribute are ignored.
@@ -125,36 +78,14 @@ rec {
listToAttrs (concatMap (name: let v = set.${name}; in if pred name v then [(nameValuePair name v)] else []) (attrNames set));
/* Filter an attribute set recursively 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 // { ${name} = op n.${name} (a.${name} or nul); }
o // (listToAttrs [{inherit name; value = op n.${name} (a.${name} or nul); }])
) a (attrNames n)
) {} list_of_attrs;
@@ -165,7 +96,7 @@ rec {
Type:
collect ::
(AttrSet -> Bool) -> AttrSet -> [x]
(AttrSet -> Bool) -> AttrSet -> AttrSet
Example:
collect isList { a = { b = ["b"]; }; c = [1]; }
@@ -185,12 +116,7 @@ rec {
/* Utility function that creates a {name, value} pair as expected by
builtins.listToAttrs.
Example:
nameValuePair "some" 6
=> { name = "some"; value = 6; }
*/
builtins.listToAttrs. */
nameValuePair = name: value: { inherit name value; };
@@ -204,9 +130,8 @@ rec {
{ x = "foo"; y = "bar"; }
=> { x = "x-foo"; y = "y-bar"; }
*/
mapAttrs = builtins.mapAttrs or
(f: set:
listToAttrs (map (attr: { name = attr; value = f attr set.${attr}; }) (attrNames set)));
mapAttrs = f: set:
listToAttrs (map (attr: { name = attr; value = f attr set.${attr}; }) (attrNames set));
/* Like `mapAttrs', but allows the name of each attribute to be
@@ -292,78 +217,48 @@ 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. */
/* Convert a store path to a fake derivation. */
toDerivation = path:
let
path' = builtins.storePath path;
res =
{ type = "derivation";
name = builtins.unsafeDiscardStringContext (builtins.substring 33 (-1) (baseNameOf path'));
outPath = path';
outputs = [ "out" ];
out = res;
outputName = "out";
};
in res;
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);
/* Implementation 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 predicate is verified. The predicate should
merged until the given pedicate is verified. The predicate should
accept 3 arguments which are the path to reach the attribute, a part of
the first attribute set and a part of the second attribute set. When
the predicate is verified, the value of the first attribute set is
@@ -393,16 +288,15 @@ rec {
recursiveUpdateUntil = pred: lhs: rhs:
let f = attrPath:
zipAttrsWith (n: values:
let here = attrPath ++ [n]; in
if tail values == []
|| pred here (head (tail values)) (head values) then
|| pred attrPath (head (tail values)) (head values) then
head values
else
f here values
f (attrPath ++ [n]) values
);
in f [] [rhs lhs];
/* A recursive variant of the update operator //. The recursion
/* A recursive variant of the update operator //. The recusion
stops when one of the attribute values is not an attribute set,
in which case the right hand side value takes precedence over the
left hand side value.
@@ -426,57 +320,18 @@ rec {
!(isAttrs lhs && isAttrs rhs)
) lhs rhs;
/* Returns true if the pattern is contained in the set. False otherwise.
Example:
matchAttrs { cpu = {}; } { cpu = { bits = 64; }; }
=> true
*/
matchAttrs = pattern: attrs: assert isAttrs pattern;
fold and true (attrValues (zipAttrsWithNames (attrNames pattern) (n: values:
matchAttrs = pattern: attrs:
fold or false (attrValues (zipAttrsWithNames (attrNames pattern) (n: values:
let pat = head values; val = head (tail values); in
if length values == 1 then false
else if isAttrs pat then isAttrs val && matchAttrs pat val
else if isAttrs pat then isAttrs val && matchAttrs head values
else pat == val
) [pattern attrs]));
/* Override only the attributes that are already present in the old set
useful for deep-overriding.
Example:
overrideExisting {} { a = 1; }
=> {}
overrideExisting { b = 2; } { a = 1; }
=> { b = 2; }
overrideExisting { a = 3; b = 2; } { a = 1; }
=> { a = 1; b = 2; }
*/
# override only the attributes that are already present in the old set
# useful for deep-overriding
overrideExisting = old: new:
mapAttrs (name: value: new.${name} or value) old;
/* Get a package output.
If no output is found, fallback to `.out` and then to the default.
Example:
getOutput "dev" pkgs.openssl
=> "/nix/store/9rz8gxhzf8sw4kf2j2f1grr49w8zx5vj-openssl-1.0.1r-dev"
*/
getOutput = output: pkg:
if pkg.outputUnspecified or false
then pkg.${output} or pkg.out or pkg
else pkg;
getBin = getOutput "bin";
getLib = getOutput "lib";
getDev = getOutput "dev";
/* Pick the outputs of packages to place in buildInputs */
chooseDevOutputs = drvs: builtins.map getDev drvs;
/*** deprecated stuff ***/
zipWithNames = zipAttrsWithNames;
zip = builtins.trace
"lib.zip is deprecated, use lib.zipAttrsWith instead" zipAttrsWith;
old // listToAttrs (map (attr: nameValuePair attr (attrByPath [attr] old.${attr} new)) (attrNames old));
deepSeqAttrs = x: y: deepSeqList (attrValues x) y;
}

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,113 @@
{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
#
# 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.
composableDerivation = {
mkDerivation ? pkgs.stdenv.mkDerivation,
# list of functions to be applied before defaultOverridableDelayableArgs removes removeAttrs names
# prepareDerivationArgs handles derivation configurations
applyPreTidy ? [ lib.prepareDerivationArgs ],
# consider adding addtional elements by derivation.merge { removeAttrs = ["elem"]; };
removeAttrs ? ["cfg" "flags"]
}: (lib.defaultOverridableDelayableArgs ( a: mkDerivation a)
{
inherit applyPreTidy removeAttrs;
}).merge;
# some utility functions
# use this function to generate flag attrs for prepareDerivationArgs
# E nable D isable F eature
edf = {name, feat ? name, enable ? {}, disable ? {} , value ? ""}:
nvs name {
set = {
configureFlags = ["--enable-${feat}${if value == "" then "" else "="}${value}"];
} // enable;
unset = {
configureFlags = ["--disable-${feat}"];
} // disable;
};
# same for --with and --without-
# W ith or W ithout F eature
wwf = {name, feat ? name, enable ? {}, disable ? {}, value ? ""}:
nvs name {
set = enable // {
configureFlags = ["--with-${feat}${if value == "" then "" else "="}${value}"]
++ lib.maybeAttr "configureFlags" [] enable;
};
unset = disable // {
configureFlags = ["--without-${feat}"]
++ lib.maybeAttr "configureFlags" [] disable;
};
};
}

View File

@@ -1,19 +1,24 @@
{ lib }:
let
lib = import ./default.nix;
inherit (builtins) attrNames isFunction;
in
rec {
/* `overrideDerivation drv f' takes a derivation (i.e., the result
of a call to the builtin function `derivation') and returns a new
derivation in which the attributes of the original are overridden
derivation in which the attributes of the original are overriden
according to the function `f'. The function `f' is called with
the original derivation attributes.
`overrideDerivation' allows certain "ad-hoc" customisation
scenarios (e.g. in ~/.config/nixpkgs/config.nix). For instance,
if you want to "patch" the derivation returned by a package
function in Nixpkgs to build another version than what the
function itself provides, you can do something like this:
scenarios (e.g. in ~/.nixpkgs/config.nix). For instance, if you
want to "patch" the derivation returned by a package function in
Nixpkgs to build another version than what the function itself
provides, you can do something like this:
mySed = overrideDerivation pkgs.gnused (oldAttrs: {
name = "sed-4.2.2-pre";
@@ -31,7 +36,7 @@ rec {
overrideDerivation = drv: f:
let
newDrv = derivation (drv.drvAttrs // (f drv));
in lib.flip (extendDerivation true) newDrv (
in addPassthru newDrv (
{ meta = drv.meta or {};
passthru = if drv ? passthru then drv.passthru else {};
}
@@ -46,41 +51,21 @@ rec {
else { }));
/* `makeOverridable` takes a function from attribute set to attribute set and
injects `override` attibute which can be used to override arguments of
the function.
nix-repl> x = {a, b}: { result = a + b; }
nix-repl> y = lib.makeOverridable x { a = 1; b = 2; }
nix-repl> y
{ override = «lambda»; overrideDerivation = «lambda»; result = 3; }
nix-repl> y.override { a = 10; }
{ override = «lambda»; overrideDerivation = «lambda»; result = 12; }
Please refer to "Nixpkgs Contributors Guide" section
"<pkg>.overrideDerivation" to learn about `overrideDerivation` and caveats
related to its use.
*/
makeOverridable = f: origArgs:
let
ff = f origArgs;
overrideWith = newArgs: origArgs // (if lib.isFunction newArgs then newArgs origArgs else newArgs);
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;
${if ff ? overrideAttrs then "overrideAttrs" else null} = fdrv:
makeOverridable (args: (f args).overrideAttrs fdrv) origArgs;
})
else if lib.isFunction ff then {
override = newArgs: makeOverridable f (overrideWith newArgs);
__functor = self: ff;
overrideDerivation = throw "overrideDerivation not yet supported for functors";
}
if builtins.isAttrs ff then (ff //
{ override = newArgs: makeOverridable f (overrideWith newArgs);
overrideDerivation = fdrv:
makeOverridable (args: overrideDerivation (f args) fdrv) origArgs;
})
else if builtins.isFunction ff then
{ override = newArgs: makeOverridable f (overrideWith newArgs);
__functor = self: ff;
overrideDerivation = throw "overrideDerivation not yet supported for functors";
}
else ff;
@@ -107,8 +92,8 @@ rec {
*/
callPackageWith = autoArgs: fn: args:
let
f = if lib.isFunction fn then fn else import fn;
auto = builtins.intersectAttrs (lib.functionArgs f) autoArgs;
f = if builtins.isFunction fn then fn else import fn;
auto = builtins.intersectAttrs (builtins.functionArgs f) autoArgs;
in makeOverridable f (auto // args);
@@ -117,17 +102,19 @@ rec {
individual attributes. */
callPackagesWith = autoArgs: fn: args:
let
f = if lib.isFunction fn then fn else import fn;
auto = builtins.intersectAttrs (lib.functionArgs f) autoArgs;
origArgs = auto // args;
pkgs = f origArgs;
mkAttrOverridable = name: _: makeOverridable (newArgs: (f newArgs).${name}) origArgs;
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)).${name};
};
in lib.mapAttrs mkAttrOverridable pkgs;
/* Add attributes to each output of a derivation without changing
the derivation itself and check a given condition when evaluating. */
extendDerivation = condition: passthru: drv:
the derivation itself. */
addPassthru = drv: passthru:
let
outputs = drv.outputs or [ "out" ];
@@ -137,18 +124,13 @@ rec {
outputToAttrListElement = outputName:
{ name = outputName;
value = commonAttrs // {
inherit (drv.${outputName}) type outputName;
drvPath = assert condition; drv.${outputName}.drvPath;
outPath = assert condition; drv.${outputName}.outPath;
inherit (drv.${outputName}) outPath drvPath type outputName;
};
};
outputsList = map outputToAttrListElement outputs;
in commonAttrs // {
outputUnspecified = true;
drvPath = assert condition; drv.drvPath;
outPath = assert condition; drv.outPath;
};
in commonAttrs.${drv.outputName};
/* Strip a derivation of all non-essential attributes, returning
only those needed by hydra-eval-jobs. Also strictly evaluate the
@@ -182,25 +164,4 @@ rec {
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
`overrideScope'` 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 {};
overrideScope = g: lib.warn
"`overrideScope` (from `lib.makeScope`) is deprecated. Do `overrideScope' (self: super: { })` instead of `overrideScope (super: self: { })`. All other overrides have the parameters in that order, including other definitions of `overrideScope`. This was the only definition violating the pattern."
(makeScope newScope (lib.fixedPoints.extends (lib.flip g) f));
overrideScope' = g: makeScope newScope (lib.fixedPoints.extends g f);
packages = f;
};
in self;
}

View File

@@ -1,155 +1,62 @@
/* Collection of functions useful for debugging
broken nix expressions.
let lib = import ./default.nix;
inherit (builtins) trace attrNamesToStr isAttrs isFunction isList isInt
isString isBool head substring attrNames;
inherit (lib) all id mapAttrsFlatten elem;
* `trace`-like functions take two values, print
the first to stderr and return the second.
* `traceVal`-like functions take one argument
which both printed and returned.
* `traceSeq`-like functions fully evaluate their
traced value before printing (not just to weak
head normal form like trace does by default).
* Functions that end in `-Fn` take an additional
function as their first argument, which is applied
to the traced value before it is printed.
*/
{ lib }:
let
inherit (builtins) trace isAttrs isList isInt
head substring attrNames;
inherit (lib) id elem isFunction;
in
rec {
# -- TRACING --
inherit (builtins) addErrorContext;
/* Conditionally trace the supplied message, based on a predicate.
addErrorContextToAttrs = lib.mapAttrs (a: v: lib.addErrorContext "while evaluating ${a}" v);
Type: traceIf :: bool -> string -> a -> a
traceIf = p: msg: x: if p then trace msg x else x;
Example:
traceIf true "hello" 3
trace: hello
=> 3
traceVal = x: trace x x;
traceXMLVal = x: trace (builtins.toXML x) x;
traceXMLValMarked = str: x: trace (str + builtins.toXML x) x;
# this can help debug your code as well - designed to not produce thousands of lines
traceShowVal = x : trace (showVal x) x;
traceShowValMarked = str: x: trace (str + showVal x) x;
attrNamesToStr = a : lib.concatStringsSep "; " (map (x : "${x}=") (attrNames a));
showVal = x :
if isAttrs x then
if x ? outPath then "x is a derivation, name ${if x ? name then x.name else "<no name>"}, { ${attrNamesToStr x} }"
else "x is attr set { ${attrNamesToStr x} }"
else if isFunction x then "x is a function"
else if x == [] then "x is an empty list"
else if isList x then "x is a list, first element is: ${showVal (head x)}"
else if x == true then "x is boolean true"
else if x == false then "x is boolean false"
else if x == null then "x is null"
else if isInt x then "x is an integer `${toString x}'"
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
# 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;
/* Evaluate a set of tests. A test is an attribute set {expr,
expected}, denoting an expression and its expected result. The
result is a list of failed tests, each represented as {name,
expected, actual}, denoting the attribute name of the failing
test and its expected and actual results. Used for regression
testing of the functions in lib; see tests.nix for an example.
Only tests having names starting with "test" are run.
Add attr { tests = ["testName"]; } to run these test only
*/
traceIf =
# Predicate to check
pred:
# Message that should be traced
msg:
# Value to return
x: if pred then trace msg x else x;
/* Trace the supplied value after applying a function to it, and
return the original value.
Type: traceValFn :: (a -> b) -> a -> a
Example:
traceValFn (v: "mystring ${v}") "foo"
trace: mystring foo
=> "foo"
*/
traceValFn =
# Function to apply
f:
# Value to trace and return
x: trace (f x) x;
/* Trace the supplied value and return it.
Type: traceVal :: a -> a
Example:
traceVal 42
# trace: 42
=> 42
*/
traceVal = traceValFn id;
/* `builtins.trace`, but the value is `builtins.deepSeq`ed first.
Type: traceSeq :: a -> b -> b
Example:
trace { a.b.c = 3; } null
trace: { a = <CODE>; }
=> null
traceSeq { a.b.c = 3; } null
trace: { a = { b = { c = 3; }; }; }
=> null
*/
traceSeq =
# The value to trace
x:
# The value to return
y: trace (builtins.deepSeq x x) y;
/* Like `traceSeq`, but only evaluate down to depth n.
This is very useful because lots of `traceSeq` usages
lead to an infinite recursion.
Example:
traceSeqN 2 { a.b.c = 3; } null
trace: { a = { b = {}; }; }
=> null
*/
traceSeqN = depth: x: y: with lib;
let snip = v: if isList v then noQuotes "[]" v
else if isAttrs v then noQuotes "{}" v
else v;
noQuotes = str: v: { __pretty = const str; val = v; };
modify = n: fn: v: if (n == 0) then fn v
else if isList v then map (modify (n - 1) fn) v
else if isAttrs v then mapAttrs
(const (modify (n - 1) fn)) v
else v;
in trace (generators.toPretty { allowPrettyValues = true; }
(modify depth snip x)) y;
/* A combination of `traceVal` and `traceSeq` that applies a
provided function to the value to be traced after `deepSeq`ing
it.
*/
traceValSeqFn =
# Function to apply
f:
# Value to trace
v: traceValFn f (builtins.deepSeq v v);
/* A combination of `traceVal` and `traceSeq`. */
traceValSeq = traceValSeqFn id;
/* A combination of `traceVal` and `traceSeqN` that applies a
provided function to the value to be traced. */
traceValSeqNFn =
# Function to apply
f:
depth:
# Value to trace
v: traceSeqN depth (f v) v;
/* A combination of `traceVal` and `traceSeqN`. */
traceValSeqN = traceValSeqNFn id;
# -- TESTING --
/* Evaluate a set of tests. A test is an attribute set `{expr,
expected}`, denoting an expression and its expected result. The
result is a list of failed tests, each represented as `{name,
expected, actual}`, denoting the attribute name of the failing
test and its expected and actual results.
Used for regression testing of the functions in lib; see
tests.nix for an example. Only tests having names starting with
"test" are run.
Add attr { tests = ["testName"]; } to run these tests only.
*/
runTests =
# Tests to run
tests: lib.concatLists (lib.attrValues (lib.mapAttrs (name: test:
runTests = tests: lib.concatLists (lib.attrValues (lib.mapAttrs (name: test:
let testsToRun = if tests ? tests then tests.tests else [];
in if (substring 0 4 name == "test" || elem name testsToRun)
&& ((testsToRun == []) || elem name tests.tests)
@@ -158,75 +65,31 @@ rec {
then [ { inherit name; expected = test.expected; result = test.expr; } ]
else [] ) tests));
/* Create a test assuming that list elements are `true`.
# create a test assuming that list elements are true
# usage: { testX = allTrue [ true ]; }
testAllTrue = expr : { inherit expr; expected = map (x: true) expr; };
Example:
{ testX = allTrue [ true ]; }
*/
testAllTrue = expr: { inherit expr; expected = map (x: true) expr; };
# -- DEPRECATED --
traceShowVal = x: trace (showVal x) x;
traceShowValMarked = str: x: trace (str + showVal x) x;
attrNamesToStr = a:
trace ( "Warning: `attrNamesToStr` is deprecated "
+ "and will be removed in the next release. "
+ "Please use more specific concatenation "
+ "for your uses (`lib.concat(Map)StringsSep`)." )
(lib.concatStringsSep "; " (map (x: "${x}=") (attrNames a)));
showVal = with lib;
trace ( "Warning: `showVal` is deprecated "
+ "and will be removed in the next release, "
+ "please use `traceSeqN`" )
(let
modify = v:
let pr = f: { __pretty = f; val = v; };
in if isDerivation v then pr
(drv: "<δ:${drv.name}:${concatStringsSep ","
(attrNames drv)}>")
else if [] == v then pr (const "[]")
else if isList v then pr (l: "[ ${go (head l)}, ]")
else if isAttrs v then pr
(a: "{ ${ concatStringsSep ", " (attrNames a)} }")
else v;
go = x: generators.toPretty
{ allowPrettyValues = true; }
(modify x);
in go);
traceXMLVal = x:
trace ( "Warning: `traceXMLVal` is deprecated "
+ "and will be removed in the next release. "
+ "Please use `traceValFn builtins.toXML`." )
(trace (builtins.toXML x) x);
traceXMLValMarked = str: x:
trace ( "Warning: `traceXMLValMarked` is deprecated "
+ "and will be removed in the next release. "
+ "Please use `traceValFn (x: str + builtins.toXML x)`." )
(trace (str + builtins.toXML x) x);
# trace the arguments passed to function and its result
# maybe rewrite these functions in a traceCallXml like style. Then one function is enough
traceCall = n: f: a: let t = n2: x: traceShowValMarked "${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));
traceValIfNot = c: x:
trace ( "Warning: `traceValIfNot` is deprecated "
+ "and will be removed in the next release. "
+ "Please use `if/then/else` and `traceValSeq 1`.")
(if c x then true else traceSeq (showVal x) false);
addErrorContextToAttrs = attrs:
trace ( "Warning: `addErrorContextToAttrs` is deprecated "
+ "and will be removed in the next release. "
+ "Please use `builtins.addErrorContext` directly." )
(lib.mapAttrs (a: v: lib.addErrorContext "while evaluating ${a}" v) attrs);
# evaluate everything once so that errors will occur earlier
# hacky: traverse attrs by adding a dummy
# ignores functions (should this behavior change?) See strictf
#
# Note: This should be a primop! Something like seq of haskell would be nice to
# have as well. It's used fore debugging only anyway
strict = x :
let
traverse = x :
if isString x then true
else if isAttrs x then
if x ? outPath then true
else all id (mapAttrsFlatten (n: traverse) x)
else if isList x then
all id (map traverse x)
else if isBool x then true
else if isFunction x then true
else if isInt x then true
else if x == null then true
else true; # a (store) path?
in if traverse x then x else throw "else never reached";
# example: (traceCallXml "myfun" id 3) will output something like
# calling myfun arg 1: 3 result: 3
@@ -234,20 +97,17 @@ rec {
# note: if result doesn't evaluate you'll get no trace at all (FIXME)
# args should be printed in any case
traceCallXml = a:
trace ( "Warning: `traceCallXml` is deprecated "
+ "and will be removed in the next release. "
+ "Please complain if you use the function regularly." )
(if !isInt a then
if !isInt a then
traceCallXml 1 "calling ${a}\n"
else
let nr = a;
in (str: expr:
if isFunction expr then
(arg:
traceCallXml (builtins.add 1 nr) "${str}\n arg ${builtins.toString nr} is \n ${builtins.toXML (builtins.seq arg arg)}" (expr arg)
traceCallXml (builtins.add 1 nr) "${str}\n arg ${builtins.toString nr} is \n ${builtins.toXML (strict arg)}" (expr arg)
)
else
let r = builtins.seq expr expr;
let r = strict expr;
in trace "${str}\n result:\n${builtins.toXML r}" r
));
);
}

View File

@@ -1,138 +1,30 @@
/* Library of low-level helper functions for nix expressions.
*
* Please implement (mostly) exhaustive unit tests
* for new functions in `./tests.nix'.
*/
let
let
inherit (import ./fixed-points.nix {}) makeExtensible;
trivial = import ./trivial.nix;
lists = import ./lists.nix;
strings = import ./strings.nix;
stringsWithDeps = import ./strings-with-deps.nix;
attrsets = import ./attrsets.nix;
sources = import ./sources.nix;
modules = import ./modules.nix;
options = import ./options.nix;
types = import ./types.nix;
meta = import ./meta.nix;
debug = import ./debug.nix;
misc = import ./deprecated.nix;
maintainers = import ./maintainers.nix;
platforms = import ./platforms.nix;
systems = import ./systems.nix;
customisation = import ./customisation.nix;
licenses = import ./licenses.nix;
lib = makeExtensible (self: let
callLibs = file: import file { lib = self; };
in with self; {
# often used, or depending on very little
trivial = callLibs ./trivial.nix;
fixedPoints = callLibs ./fixed-points.nix;
# datatypes
attrsets = callLibs ./attrsets.nix;
lists = callLibs ./lists.nix;
strings = callLibs ./strings.nix;
stringsWithDeps = callLibs ./strings-with-deps.nix;
# packaging
customisation = callLibs ./customisation.nix;
maintainers = import ../maintainers/maintainer-list.nix;
meta = callLibs ./meta.nix;
sources = callLibs ./sources.nix;
versions = callLibs ./versions.nix;
# module system
modules = callLibs ./modules.nix;
options = callLibs ./options.nix;
types = callLibs ./types.nix;
# constants
licenses = callLibs ./licenses.nix;
systems = callLibs ./systems;
# misc
asserts = callLibs ./asserts.nix;
debug = callLibs ./debug.nix;
generators = callLibs ./generators.nix;
misc = callLibs ./deprecated.nix;
# domain-specific
fetchers = callLibs ./fetchers.nix;
# Eval-time filesystem handling
filesystem = callLibs ./filesystem.nix;
# back-compat aliases
platforms = systems.forMeta;
inherit (builtins) add addErrorContext attrNames concatLists
deepSeq elem elemAt filter genericClosure genList getAttr
hasAttr head isAttrs isBool isInt isList isString length
lessThan listToAttrs pathExists readFile replaceStrings seq
stringLength sub substring tail;
inherit (trivial) id const concat or and bitAnd bitOr bitXor bitNot
boolToString mergeAttrs flip mapNullable inNixShell min max
importJSON warn info nixpkgsVersion version mod compare
splitByAndCompare functionArgs setFunctionArgs isFunction;
inherit (fixedPoints) fix fix' converge extends composeExtensions
makeExtensible makeExtensibleWithCustomName;
inherit (attrsets) attrByPath hasAttrByPath setAttrByPath
getAttrFromPath attrVals attrValues getAttrs catAttrs filterAttrs
filterAttrsRecursive foldAttrs collect nameValuePair mapAttrs
mapAttrs' mapAttrsToList mapAttrsRecursive mapAttrsRecursiveCond
genAttrs isDerivation toDerivation optionalAttrs
zipAttrsWithNames zipAttrsWith zipAttrs recursiveUpdateUntil
recursiveUpdate matchAttrs overrideExisting getOutput getBin
getLib getDev chooseDevOutputs zipWithNames zip;
inherit (lists) singleton foldr fold foldl foldl' imap0 imap1
concatMap flatten remove findSingle findFirst any all count
optional optionals toList range partition zipListsWith zipLists
reverseList listDfs toposort sort naturalSort compareLists take
drop sublist last init crossLists unique intersectLists
subtractLists mutuallyExclusive groupBy groupBy';
inherit (strings) concatStrings concatMapStrings concatImapStrings
intersperse concatStringsSep concatMapStringsSep
concatImapStringsSep makeSearchPath makeSearchPathOutput
makeLibraryPath makeBinPath optionalString
hasPrefix hasSuffix stringToCharacters stringAsChars escape
escapeShellArg escapeShellArgs replaceChars lowerChars
upperChars toLower toUpper addContextFrom splitString
removePrefix removeSuffix versionOlder versionAtLeast getVersion
nameFromURL enableFeature enableFeatureAs withFeature
withFeatureAs fixedWidthString fixedWidthNumber isStorePath
toInt readPathsFromFile fileContents;
inherit (stringsWithDeps) textClosureList textClosureMap
noDepEntry fullDepEntry packEntry stringAfter;
inherit (customisation) overrideDerivation makeOverridable
callPackageWith callPackagesWith extendDerivation hydraJob
makeScope;
inherit (meta) addMetaAttrs dontDistribute setName updateName
appendToName mapDerivationAttrset setPrio lowPrio lowPrioSet hiPrio
hiPrioSet;
inherit (sources) pathType pathIsDirectory cleanSourceFilter
cleanSource sourceByRegex sourceFilesBySuffices
commitIdFromGitRepo cleanSourceWith pathHasContext
canCleanSource;
inherit (modules) evalModules closeModules unifyModuleSyntax
applyIfFunction unpackSubmodule packSubmodule mergeModules
mergeModules' mergeOptionDecls evalOptionValue mergeDefinitions
pushDownProperties dischargeProperties filterOverrides
sortProperties fixupOptionType mkIf mkAssert mkMerge mkOverride
mkOptionDefault mkDefault mkForce mkVMOverride mkStrict
mkFixStrictness mkOrder mkBefore mkAfter mkAliasDefinitions
mkAliasAndWrapDefinitions fixMergeModules mkRemovedOptionModule
mkRenamedOptionModule mkMergedOptionModule mkChangedOptionModule
mkAliasOptionModule doRename filterModules;
inherit (options) isOption mkEnableOption mkSinkUndeclaredOptions
mergeDefaultOption mergeOneOption mergeEqualOption getValues
getFiles optionAttrSetToDocList optionAttrSetToDocList'
scrubOptionValue literalExample showOption showFiles
unknownModule mkOption;
inherit (types) isType setType defaultTypeMerge defaultFunctor
isOptionType mkOptionType;
inherit (asserts)
assertMsg assertOneOf;
inherit (debug) addErrorContextToAttrs traceIf traceVal traceValFn
traceXMLVal traceXMLValMarked traceSeq traceSeqN traceValSeq
traceValSeqFn traceValSeqN traceValSeqNFn traceShowVal
traceShowValMarked showVal traceCall traceCall2 traceCall3
traceValIfNot runTests testAllTrue traceCallXml attrNamesToStr;
inherit (misc) maybeEnv defaultMergeArg defaultMerge foldArgs
maybeAttrNullable maybeAttr ifEnable checkFlag getValue
checkReqs uniqList uniqListExt condConcat lazyGenericClosure
innerModifySumArgs modifySumArgs innerClosePropagation
closePropagation mapAttrsFlatten nvs setAttr setAttrMerge
mergeAttrsWithFunc mergeAttrsConcatenateValues
mergeAttrsNoOverride mergeAttrByFunc mergeAttrsByFuncDefaults
mergeAttrsByFuncDefaultsClean mergeAttrBy
fakeSha256 fakeSha512
nixType imap;
});
in lib
in
{ inherit trivial lists strings stringsWithDeps attrsets sources options
modules types meta debug maintainers licenses platforms systems;
}
# !!! don't include everything at top-level; perhaps only the most
# commonly used functions.
// trivial // lists // strings // stringsWithDeps // attrsets // sources
// options // types // meta // debug // misc // modules
// systems
// customisation

View File

@@ -1,12 +1,11 @@
{ lib }:
let
inherit (builtins) head tail isList isAttrs isInt attrNames;
let lib = import ./default.nix;
inherit (builtins) isFunction head tail isList isAttrs isInt attrNames;
in
with lib.lists;
with lib.attrsets;
with lib.strings;
with import ./lists.nix;
with import ./attrsets.nix;
with import ./strings.nix;
rec {
@@ -17,22 +16,90 @@ rec {
defaultMergeArg = x : y: if builtins.isAttrs y then
y
else
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;
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;
};
withStdOverrides = base // {
override = base.passthru.function;
} ;
in
withStdOverrides;
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
@@ -52,7 +119,7 @@ rec {
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
@@ -67,29 +134,29 @@ rec {
( 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
if (head x) == name then
(head (tail x))
else (getValue attrSet
else (getValue attrSet
(tail argList) name)) attrSet );
# Input : attrSet, [[name default] ...], [ [flagname reqs..] ... ]
# Output : are reqs satisfied? It's asserted.
checkReqs = attrSet: argList: condList:
checkReqs = attrSet : argList : condList :
(
fold lib.and true
(map (x: let name = (head x); in
((checkFlag attrSet name) ->
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));
(val!=null) && (val!=false))
(tail x))))) condList)) ;
# This function has O(n^2) performance.
uniqList = { inputList, acc ? [] }:
let go = xs: acc:
uniqList = {inputList, acc ? []} :
let go = xs : acc :
if xs == []
then []
else let x = head xs;
@@ -97,26 +164,26 @@ rec {
in y ++ go (tail xs) (y ++ acc);
in go inputList acc;
uniqListExt = { inputList,
outputList ? [],
getter ? (x: x),
compare ? (x: y: x==y) }:
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;
};
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))
if checker (head list) then
condConcat
(name + (head (tail list)))
(tail (tail list))
checker
else condConcat
name (tail (tail list)) checker;
@@ -135,12 +202,12 @@ rec {
in
work startSet [] [];
innerModifySumArgs = f: x: a: b: if b == null then (f a b) // x else
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:
innerClosePropagation = acc : xs :
if xs == []
then acc
else let y = head xs;
@@ -160,45 +227,45 @@ rec {
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);
mapAttrsFlatten = f : r : map (attr: f attr r.${attr}) (attrNames r);
# attribute set containing one attribute
nvs = name: value: listToAttrs [ (nameValuePair name value) ];
nvs = name : value : listToAttrs [ (nameValuePair name value) ];
# adds / replaces an attribute of an attribute set
setAttr = set: name: v: set // (nvs name v);
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:
# 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 //
# 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}
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) );
mergeAttrsConcatenateValues = mergeAttrsWithFunc ( a : b : (toList a) ++ (toList b) );
# merges attributes using //, if a name exists in both attributes
# 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 doesn't really make sense. The cases will be rare where appending /prefixing will fit your needs?
# 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:
} : attrs1 : attrs2 :
fold (n: set :
setAttr set n ( if set ? ${n}
then # merge
then # merge
if elem n mergeLists # attribute contains list, merge them by concatenating
then attrs2.${n} ++ attrs1.${n}
else if elem n overrideSnd
@@ -217,16 +284,16 @@ rec {
# };
# will result in
# { mergeAttrsBy = [...]; buildInputs = [ a b c d ]; }
# is used by defaultOverridableDelayableArgs and can be used when composing using
# 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:
mergeAttrByFunc = x : y :
let
mergeAttrBy2 = { mergeAttrBy = lib.mergeAttrs; }
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
(mapAttrs ( a : v : # merge special names using given functions
if x ? ${a}
then if y ? ${a}
then v x.${a} y.${a} # both have attr, use merge func
@@ -242,19 +309,110 @@ rec {
mergeAttrsByFuncDefaults = foldl mergeAttrByFunc { inherit mergeAttrBy; };
mergeAttrsByFuncDefaultsClean = list: removeAttrs (mergeAttrsByFuncDefaults list) ["mergeAttrBy"];
# merge attrs based on version key into mkDerivation args, see mergeAttrBy to learn about smart merge defaults
#
# This function is best explained by an example:
#
# {version ? "2.x"} :
#
# mkDerivation (mergeAttrsByVersion "package-name" version
# { # version specific settings
# "git" = { src = ..; preConfigre = "autogen.sh"; buildInputs = [automake autoconf libtool]; };
# "2.x" = { src = ..; };
# }
# { // shared settings
# buildInputs = [ common build inputs ];
# meta = { .. }
# }
# )
#
# Please note that e.g. Eelco Dolstra usually prefers having one file for
# each version. On the other hand there are valuable additional design goals
# - readability
# - do it once only
# - try to avoid duplication
#
# Marc Weber and Michael Raskin sometimes prefer keeping older
# versions around for testing and regression tests - as long as its cheap to
# do so.
#
# Very often it just happens that the "shared" code is the bigger part.
# Then using this function might be appropriate.
#
# Be aware that its easy to cause recompilations in all versions when using
# this function - also if derivations get too complex splitting into multiple
# files is the way to go.
#
# See misc.nix -> versionedDerivation
# discussion: nixpkgs: pull/310
mergeAttrsByVersion = name: version: attrsByVersion: base:
mergeAttrsByFuncDefaultsClean [ { name = "${name}-${version}"; } base (maybeAttr version (throw "bad version ${version} for ${name}") attrsByVersion)];
# sane defaults (same name as attr name so that inherit can be used)
mergeAttrBy = # { buildInputs = concatList; [...]; passthru = mergeAttr; [..]; }
listToAttrs (map (n: nameValuePair n lib.concat)
listToAttrs (map (n : nameValuePair n lib.concat)
[ "nativeBuildInputs" "buildInputs" "propagatedBuildInputs" "configureFlags" "prePhases" "postAll" "patches" ])
// listToAttrs (map (n: nameValuePair n lib.mergeAttrs) [ "passthru" "meta" "cfg" "flags" ])
// listToAttrs (map (n: nameValuePair n (a: b: "${a}\n${b}") ) [ "preConfigure" "postInstall" ])
// listToAttrs (map (n : nameValuePair n lib.mergeAttrs) [ "passthru" "meta" "cfg" "flags" ])
// listToAttrs (map (n : nameValuePair n (a: b: "${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 lib.isFunction x then "function"
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"
@@ -262,16 +420,4 @@ rec {
else if isInt x then "int"
else "string";
/* deprecated:
For historical reasons, imap has an index starting at 1.
But for consistency with the rest of the library we want an index
starting at zero.
*/
imap = imap1;
# Fake hashes. Can be used as hash placeholders, when computing hash ahead isn't trivial
fakeSha256 = "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000";
fakeSha512 = "00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000";
}

View File

@@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
# snippets that can be shared by multiple fetchers (pkgs/build-support)
{ lib }:
{
proxyImpureEnvVars = [
# We borrow these environment variables from the caller to allow
# easy proxy configuration. This is impure, but a fixed-output
# derivation like fetchurl is allowed to do so since its result is
# by definition pure.
"http_proxy" "https_proxy" "ftp_proxy" "all_proxy" "no_proxy"
];
}

View File

@@ -1,45 +0,0 @@
{ lib }:
{ # haskellPathsInDir : Path -> Map String Path
# A map of all haskell packages defined in the given path,
# identified by having a cabal file with the same name as the
# directory itself.
haskellPathsInDir = root:
let # Files in the root
root-files = builtins.attrNames (builtins.readDir root);
# Files with their full paths
root-files-with-paths =
map (file:
{ name = file; value = root + "/${file}"; }
) root-files;
# Subdirectories of the root with a cabal file.
cabal-subdirs =
builtins.filter ({ name, value }:
builtins.pathExists (value + "/${name}.cabal")
) root-files-with-paths;
in builtins.listToAttrs cabal-subdirs;
# locateDominatingFile : RegExp
# -> Path
# -> Nullable { path : Path;
# matches : [ MatchResults ];
# }
# Find the first directory containing a file matching 'pattern'
# upward from a given 'file'.
# Returns 'null' if no directories contain a file matching 'pattern'.
locateDominatingFile = pattern: file:
let go = path:
let files = builtins.attrNames (builtins.readDir path);
matches = builtins.filter (match: match != null)
(map (builtins.match pattern) files);
in
if builtins.length matches != 0
then { inherit path matches; }
else if path == /.
then null
else go (dirOf path);
parent = dirOf file;
isDir =
let base = baseNameOf file;
type = (builtins.readDir parent).${base} or null;
in file == /. || type == "directory";
in go (if isDir then file else parent);
}

View File

@@ -1,101 +0,0 @@
{ ... }:
rec {
# 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"; }
#
# Type: fix :: (a -> a) -> a
#
# 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;
# Return the fixpoint that `f` converges to when called recursively, starting
# with the input `x`.
#
# nix-repl> converge (x: x / 2) 16
# 0
converge = f: x:
if (f x) == x
then x
else converge f (f 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.
#
# To get a better understanding how `extends` turns a function with a fix
# point (the package set we start with) into a new function with a different fix
# point (the desired packages set) lets just see, how `extends g f`
# unfolds with `g` and `f` defined above:
#
# extends g f = self: let super = f self; in super // g self super;
# = self: let super = { foo = "foo"; bar = "bar"; foobar = self.foo + self.bar; }; in super // g self super
# = self: { foo = "foo"; bar = "bar"; foobar = self.foo + self.bar; } // g self { foo = "foo"; bar = "bar"; foobar = self.foo + self.bar; }
# = self: { foo = "foo"; bar = "bar"; foobar = self.foo + self.bar; } // { foo = "foo" + " + "; }
# = self: { foo = "foo + "; bar = "bar"; foobar = self.foo + self.bar; }
#
extends = f: rattrs: self: let super = rattrs self; in super // f self super;
# Compose two extending functions of the type expected by 'extends'
# into one where changes made in the first are available in the
# 'super' of the second
composeExtensions =
f: g: self: super:
let fApplied = f self super;
super' = super // fApplied;
in fApplied // g self super';
# Create an overridable, recursive attribute set. For example:
#
# nix-repl> obj = makeExtensible (self: { })
#
# nix-repl> obj
# { __unfix__ = «lambda»; extend = «lambda»; }
#
# nix-repl> obj = obj.extend (self: super: { foo = "foo"; })
#
# nix-repl> obj
# { __unfix__ = «lambda»; extend = «lambda»; foo = "foo"; }
#
# nix-repl> obj = obj.extend (self: super: { foo = super.foo + " + "; bar = "bar"; foobar = self.foo + self.bar; })
#
# nix-repl> obj
# { __unfix__ = «lambda»; bar = "bar"; extend = «lambda»; foo = "foo + "; foobar = "foo + bar"; }
makeExtensible = makeExtensibleWithCustomName "extend";
# Same as `makeExtensible` but the name of the extending attribute is
# customized.
makeExtensibleWithCustomName = extenderName: rattrs:
fix' rattrs // {
${extenderName} = f: makeExtensibleWithCustomName extenderName (extends f rattrs);
};
}

View File

@@ -1,227 +0,0 @@
/* Functions that generate widespread file
* formats from nix data structures.
*
* They all follow a similar interface:
* generator { config-attrs } data
*
* `config-attrs` are holes in the generators
* with sensible default implementations that
* can be overwritten. The default implementations
* are mostly generators themselves, called with
* their respective default values; they can be reused.
*
* Tests can be found in ./tests.nix
* Documentation in the manual, #sec-generators
*/
{ lib }:
with (lib).trivial;
let
libStr = lib.strings;
libAttr = lib.attrsets;
inherit (lib) isFunction;
in
rec {
## -- HELPER FUNCTIONS & DEFAULTS --
/* Convert a value to a sensible default string representation.
* The builtin `toString` function has some strange defaults,
* suitable for bash scripts but not much else.
*/
mkValueStringDefault = {}: v: with builtins;
let err = t: v: abort
("generators.mkValueStringDefault: " +
"${t} not supported: ${toPretty {} v}");
in if isInt v then toString v
# we default to not quoting strings
else if isString v then v
# isString returns "1", which is not a good default
else if true == v then "true"
# here it returns to "", which is even less of a good default
else if false == v then "false"
else if null == v then "null"
# if you have lists you probably want to replace this
else if isList v then err "lists" v
# same as for lists, might want to replace
else if isAttrs v then err "attrsets" v
else if isFunction v then err "functions" v
else err "this value is" (toString v);
/* Generate a line of key k and value v, separated by
* character sep. If sep appears in k, it is escaped.
* Helper for synaxes with different separators.
*
* mkValueString specifies how values should be formatted.
*
* mkKeyValueDefault {} ":" "f:oo" "bar"
* > "f\:oo:bar"
*/
mkKeyValueDefault = {
mkValueString ? mkValueStringDefault {}
}: sep: k: v:
"${libStr.escape [sep] k}${sep}${mkValueString v}";
## -- FILE FORMAT GENERATORS --
/* Generate a key-value-style config file from an attrset.
*
* mkKeyValue is the same as in toINI.
*/
toKeyValue = {
mkKeyValue ? mkKeyValueDefault {} "="
}: attrs:
let mkLine = k: v: mkKeyValue k v + "\n";
in libStr.concatStrings (libAttr.mapAttrsToList mkLine attrs);
/* Generate an INI-style config file from an
* attrset of sections to an attrset of key-value pairs.
*
* generators.toINI {} {
* foo = { hi = "${pkgs.hello}"; ciao = "bar"; };
* baz = { "also, integers" = 42; };
* }
*
*> [baz]
*> also, integers=42
*>
*> [foo]
*> ciao=bar
*> hi=/nix/store/y93qql1p5ggfnaqjjqhxcw0vqw95rlz0-hello-2.10
*
* The mk* configuration attributes can generically change
* the way sections and key-value strings are generated.
*
* For more examples see the test cases in ./tests.nix.
*/
toINI = {
# apply transformations (e.g. escapes) to section names
mkSectionName ? (name: libStr.escape [ "[" "]" ] name),
# format a setting line from key and value
mkKeyValue ? mkKeyValueDefault {} "="
}: attrsOfAttrs:
let
# map function to string for each key val
mapAttrsToStringsSep = sep: mapFn: attrs:
libStr.concatStringsSep sep
(libAttr.mapAttrsToList mapFn attrs);
mkSection = sectName: sectValues: ''
[${mkSectionName sectName}]
'' + toKeyValue { inherit mkKeyValue; } sectValues;
in
# map input to ini sections
mapAttrsToStringsSep "\n" mkSection attrsOfAttrs;
/* Generates JSON from an arbitrary (non-function) value.
* For more information see the documentation of the builtin.
*/
toJSON = {}: builtins.toJSON;
/* YAML has been a strict superset of JSON since 1.2, so we
* use toJSON. Before it only had a few differences referring
* to implicit typing rules, so it should work with older
* parsers as well.
*/
toYAML = {}@args: toJSON args;
/* Pretty print a value, akin to `builtins.trace`.
* Should probably be a builtin as well.
*/
toPretty = {
/* If this option is true, attrsets like { __pretty = fn; val = ; }
will use fn to convert val to a pretty printed representation.
(This means fn is type Val -> String.) */
allowPrettyValues ? false
}@args: v: with builtins;
let isPath = v: typeOf v == "path";
in if isInt v then toString v
else if isFloat v then "~${toString v}"
else if isString v then ''"${libStr.escape [''"''] v}"''
else if true == v then "true"
else if false == v then "false"
else if null == v then "null"
else if isPath v then toString v
else if isList v then "[ "
+ libStr.concatMapStringsSep " " (toPretty args) v
+ " ]"
else if isAttrs v then
# apply pretty values if allowed
if attrNames v == [ "__pretty" "val" ] && allowPrettyValues
then v.__pretty v.val
# TODO: there is probably a better representation?
else if v ? type && v.type == "derivation" then
"<δ:${v.name}>"
# "<δ:${concatStringsSep "," (builtins.attrNames v)}>"
else "{ "
+ libStr.concatStringsSep " " (libAttr.mapAttrsToList
(name: value:
"${toPretty args name} = ${toPretty args value};") v)
+ " }"
else if isFunction v then
let fna = lib.functionArgs v;
showFnas = concatStringsSep "," (libAttr.mapAttrsToList
(name: hasDefVal: if hasDefVal then "(${name})" else name)
fna);
in if fna == {} then "<λ>"
else "<λ:{${showFnas}}>"
else abort "generators.toPretty: should never happen (v = ${v})";
# PLIST handling
toPlist = {}: v: let
isFloat = builtins.isFloat or (x: false);
expr = ind: x: with builtins;
if isNull x then "" else
if isBool x then bool ind x else
if isInt x then int ind x else
if isString x then str ind x else
if isList x then list ind x else
if isAttrs x then attrs ind x else
if isFloat x then float ind x else
abort "generators.toPlist: should never happen (v = ${v})";
literal = ind: x: ind + x;
bool = ind: x: literal ind (if x then "<true/>" else "<false/>");
int = ind: x: literal ind "<integer>${toString x}</integer>";
str = ind: x: literal ind "<string>${x}</string>";
key = ind: x: literal ind "<key>${x}</key>";
float = ind: x: literal ind "<real>${toString x}</real>";
indent = ind: expr "\t${ind}";
item = ind: libStr.concatMapStringsSep "\n" (indent ind);
list = ind: x: libStr.concatStringsSep "\n" [
(literal ind "<array>")
(item ind x)
(literal ind "</array>")
];
attrs = ind: x: libStr.concatStringsSep "\n" [
(literal ind "<dict>")
(attr ind x)
(literal ind "</dict>")
];
attr = let attrFilter = name: value: name != "_module" && value != null;
in ind: x: libStr.concatStringsSep "\n" (lib.flatten (lib.mapAttrsToList
(name: value: lib.optional (attrFilter name value) [
(key "\t${ind}" name)
(expr "\t${ind}" value)
]) x));
in ''<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple Computer//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd">
<plist version="1.0">
${expr "" v}
</plist>'';
}

View File

@@ -1,21 +0,0 @@
{ lib, version }:
with lib;
rec {
# Common patterns/legacy
whenAtLeast = ver: mkIf (versionAtLeast version ver);
whenOlder = ver: mkIf (versionOlder version ver);
# range is (inclusive, exclusive)
whenBetween = verLow: verHigh: mkIf (versionAtLeast version verLow && versionOlder version verHigh);
# Keeping these around in case we decide to change this horrible implementation :)
option = x:
x // { optional = true; };
yes = { tristate = "y"; };
no = { tristate = "n"; };
module = { tristate = "m"; };
freeform = x: { freeform = x; };
}

View File

@@ -1,8 +1,9 @@
{ lib }:
let
lib = import ./default.nix;
spdx = lic: lic // {
url = "http://spdx.org/licenses/${lic.spdxId}.html";
url = "http://spdx.org/licenses/${lic.spdxId}";
};
in
@@ -13,29 +14,19 @@ lib.mapAttrs (n: v: v // { shortName = n; }) rec {
* add it to this list. The URL mentioned above is a good source for inspiration.
*/
abstyles = spdx {
spdxId = "Abstyles";
fullName = "Abstyles License";
};
afl21 = spdx {
spdxId = "AFL-2.1";
fullName = "Academic Free License v2.1";
};
afl3 = spdx {
spdxId = "AFL-3.0";
fullName = "Academic Free License v3.0";
fullName = "Academic Free License";
};
agpl3 = spdx {
spdxId = "AGPL-3.0-only";
fullName = "GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 only";
spdxId = "AGPL-3.0";
fullName = "GNU Affero General Public License v3.0";
};
agpl3Plus = spdx {
spdxId = "AGPL-3.0-or-later";
agpl3Plus = {
fullName = "GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 or later";
inherit (agpl3) url;
};
amazonsl = {
@@ -47,7 +38,6 @@ lib.mapAttrs (n: v: v // { shortName = n; }) rec {
amd = {
fullName = "AMD License Agreement";
url = http://developer.amd.com/amd-license-agreement/;
free = false;
};
apsl20 = spdx {
@@ -55,11 +45,6 @@ lib.mapAttrs (n: v: v // { shortName = n; }) rec {
fullName = "Apple Public Source License 2.0";
};
arphicpl = {
fullName = "Arphic Public License";
url = https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Arphic_Public_License/;
};
artistic1 = spdx {
spdxId = "Artistic-1.0";
fullName = "Artistic License 1.0";
@@ -80,16 +65,6 @@ lib.mapAttrs (n: v: v // { shortName = n; }) rec {
fullName = "Boost Software License 1.0";
};
beerware = spdx {
spdxId = "Beerware";
fullName = ''Beerware License'';
};
bsd0 = spdx {
spdxId = "0BSD";
fullName = "BSD Zero Clause License";
};
bsd2 = spdx {
spdxId = "BSD-2-Clause";
fullName = ''BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License'';
@@ -105,58 +80,11 @@ lib.mapAttrs (n: v: v // { shortName = n; }) rec {
fullName = ''BSD 4-clause "Original" or "Old" License'';
};
bsl11 = {
fullName = "Business Source License 1.1";
url = https://mariadb.com/bsl11;
free = false;
};
clArtistic = spdx {
spdxId = "ClArtistic";
fullName = "Clarified Artistic License";
};
cc0 = spdx {
spdxId = "CC0-1.0";
fullName = "Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal";
};
cc-by-nc-sa-20 = spdx {
spdxId = "CC-BY-NC-SA-2.0";
fullName = "Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial Share Alike 2.0";
free = false;
};
cc-by-nc-sa-25 = spdx {
spdxId = "CC-BY-NC-SA-2.5";
fullName = "Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial Share Alike 2.5";
free = false;
};
cc-by-nc-sa-30 = spdx {
spdxId = "CC-BY-NC-SA-3.0";
fullName = "Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial Share Alike 3.0";
free = false;
};
cc-by-nc-sa-40 = spdx {
spdxId = "CC-BY-NC-SA-4.0";
fullName = "Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial Share Alike 4.0";
free = false;
};
cc-by-nc-40 = spdx {
spdxId = "CC-BY-NC-4.0";
fullName = "Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial 4.0 International";
free = false;
};
cc-by-nd-30 = spdx {
spdxId = "CC-BY-ND-3.0";
fullName = "Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works v3.00";
free = false;
};
cc-by-sa-25 = spdx {
spdxId = "CC-BY-SA-2.5";
fullName = "Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 2.5";
@@ -202,32 +130,11 @@ lib.mapAttrs (n: v: v // { shortName = n; }) rec {
fullName = "CeCILL-C Free Software License Agreement";
};
cpal10 = spdx {
spdxId = "CPAL-1.0";
fullName = "Common Public Attribution License 1.0";
};
cpl10 = spdx {
spdxId = "CPL-1.0";
fullName = "Common Public License 1.0";
};
curl = {
fullName = "MIT/X11 derivate";
url = "https://curl.haxx.se/docs/copyright.html";
};
doc = spdx {
spdxId = "DOC";
fullName = "DOC License";
};
eapl = {
fullName = "EPSON AVASYS PUBLIC LICENSE";
url = http://avasys.jp/hp/menu000000700/hpg000000603.htm;
free = false;
};
efl10 = spdx {
spdxId = "EFL-1.0";
fullName = "Eiffel Forum License v1.0";
@@ -238,94 +145,35 @@ lib.mapAttrs (n: v: v // { shortName = n; }) rec {
fullName = "Eiffel Forum License v2.0";
};
elastic = {
fullName = "ELASTIC LICENSE";
url = https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/blob/master/licenses/ELASTIC-LICENSE.txt;
free = false;
};
epl10 = spdx {
spdxId = "EPL-1.0";
fullName = "Eclipse Public License 1.0";
};
epl20 = spdx {
spdxId = "EPL-2.0";
fullName = "Eclipse Public License 2.0";
};
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;
};
eupl11 = spdx {
spdxId = "EUPL-1.1";
fullName = "European Union Public License 1.1";
};
fdl12 = spdx {
spdxId = "GFDL-1.2-only";
fullName = "GNU Free Documentation License v1.2 only";
};
fdl12Plus = spdx {
spdxId = "GFDL-1.2-or-later";
fullName = "GNU Free Documentation License v1.2 or later";
};
fdl13 = spdx {
spdxId = "GFDL-1.3-only";
fullName = "GNU Free Documentation License v1.3 only";
};
fdl13Plus = spdx {
spdxId = "GFDL-1.3-or-later";
fullName = "GNU Free Documentation License v1.3 or later";
};
ffsl = {
fullName = "Floodgap Free Software License";
url = http://www.floodgap.com/software/ffsl/license.html;
free = false;
spdxId = "GFDL-1.2";
fullName = "GNU Free Documentation License v1.2";
};
free = {
fullName = "Unspecified free software license";
};
g4sl = {
fullName = "Geant4 Software License";
url = https://geant4.web.cern.ch/geant4/license/LICENSE.html;
};
geogebra = {
fullName = "GeoGebra Non-Commercial License Agreement";
url = https://www.geogebra.org/license;
free = false;
};
gpl1 = spdx {
spdxId = "GPL-1.0-only";
spdxId = "GPL-1.0";
fullName = "GNU General Public License v1.0 only";
};
gpl1Plus = spdx {
spdxId = "GPL-1.0-or-later";
spdxId = "GPL-1.0+";
fullName = "GNU General Public License v1.0 or later";
};
gpl2 = spdx {
spdxId = "GPL-2.0-only";
spdxId = "GPL-2.0";
fullName = "GNU General Public License v2.0 only";
};
gpl2Classpath = spdx {
spdxId = "GPL-2.0-with-classpath-exception";
fullName = "GNU General Public License v2.0 only (with Classpath exception)";
};
gpl2ClasspathPlus = {
fullName = "GNU General Public License v2.0 or later (with Classpath exception)";
url = https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Licensing/GPL_Classpath_Exception;
@@ -333,21 +181,21 @@ lib.mapAttrs (n: v: v // { shortName = n; }) rec {
gpl2Oss = {
fullName = "GNU General Public License version 2 only (with OSI approved licenses linking exception)";
url = https://www.mysql.com/about/legal/licensing/foss-exception;
url = http://www.mysql.com/about/legal/licensing/foss-exception;
};
gpl2Plus = spdx {
spdxId = "GPL-2.0-or-later";
spdxId = "GPL-2.0+";
fullName = "GNU General Public License v2.0 or later";
};
gpl3 = spdx {
spdxId = "GPL-3.0-only";
spdxId = "GPL-3.0";
fullName = "GNU General Public License v3.0 only";
};
gpl3Plus = spdx {
spdxId = "GPL-3.0-or-later";
spdxId = "GPL-3.0+";
fullName = "GNU General Public License v3.0 or later";
};
@@ -356,11 +204,6 @@ lib.mapAttrs (n: v: v // { shortName = n; }) rec {
url = https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Licensing/GPL_Classpath_Exception;
};
hpnd = spdx {
spdxId = "HPND";
fullName = "Historic Permission Notice and Disclaimer";
};
# Intel's license, seems free
iasl = {
fullName = "iASL";
@@ -372,21 +215,9 @@ lib.mapAttrs (n: v: v // { shortName = n; }) rec {
fullName = "Independent JPEG Group License";
};
imagemagick = spdx {
fullName = "ImageMagick License";
spdxId = "imagemagick";
};
inria-compcert = {
fullName = "INRIA Non-Commercial License Agreement for the CompCert verified compiler";
inria = {
fullName = "INRIA Non-Commercial License Agreement";
url = "http://compcert.inria.fr/doc/LICENSE";
free = false;
};
inria-icesl = {
fullName = "INRIA Non-Commercial License Agreement for IceSL";
url = "http://shapeforge.loria.fr/icesl/EULA_IceSL_binary.pdf";
free = false;
};
ipa = spdx {
@@ -404,45 +235,33 @@ lib.mapAttrs (n: v: v // { shortName = n; }) rec {
fullName = "ISC License";
};
# Proprietary binaries; free to redistribute without modification.
issl = {
fullName = "Intel Simplified Software License";
url = https://software.intel.com/en-us/license/intel-simplified-software-license;
free = false;
};
jasper = spdx {
spdxId = "JasPer-2.0";
fullName = "JasPer License";
};
lgpl2 = spdx {
spdxId = "LGPL-2.0-only";
spdxId = "LGPL-2.0";
fullName = "GNU Library General Public License v2 only";
};
lgpl2Plus = spdx {
spdxId = "LGPL-2.0-or-later";
spdxId = "LGPL-2.0+";
fullName = "GNU Library General Public License v2 or later";
};
lgpl21 = spdx {
spdxId = "LGPL-2.1-only";
spdxId = "LGPL-2.1";
fullName = "GNU Library General Public License v2.1 only";
};
lgpl21Plus = spdx {
spdxId = "LGPL-2.1-or-later";
spdxId = "LGPL-2.1+";
fullName = "GNU Library General Public License v2.1 or later";
};
lgpl3 = spdx {
spdxId = "LGPL-3.0-only";
spdxId = "LGPL-3.0";
fullName = "GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0 only";
};
lgpl3Plus = spdx {
spdxId = "LGPL-3.0-or-later";
spdxId = "LGPL-3.0+";
fullName = "GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0 or later";
};
@@ -451,11 +270,6 @@ lib.mapAttrs (n: v: v // { shortName = n; }) rec {
fullName = "libpng License";
};
libpng2 = {
fullName = "libpng License v2"; # 1.6.36+
url = "http://www.libpng.org/pub/png/src/libpng-LICENSE.txt";
};
libtiff = spdx {
spdxId = "libtiff";
fullName = "libtiff License";
@@ -481,11 +295,6 @@ lib.mapAttrs (n: v: v // { shortName = n; }) rec {
fullName = "Lucent Public License v1.02";
};
miros = {
fullName = "MirOS License";
url = https://opensource.org/licenses/MirOS;
};
# 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 {
@@ -508,21 +317,9 @@ lib.mapAttrs (n: v: v // { shortName = n; }) rec {
fullName = "Mozilla Public License 2.0";
};
mspl = spdx {
spdxId = "MS-PL";
fullName = "Microsoft Public License";
};
msrla = {
fullName = "Microsoft Research License Agreement";
url = "http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/projects/pex/msr-la.txt";
free = false;
};
nasa13 = spdx {
spdxId = "NASA-1.3";
fullName = "NASA Open Source Agreement 1.3";
free = false;
};
ncsa = spdx {
@@ -534,18 +331,7 @@ lib.mapAttrs (n: v: v // { shortName = n; }) rec {
url = "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/raboof/notion/master/LICENSE";
fullName = "Notion modified LGPL";
};
nposl3 = spdx {
spdxId = "NPOSL-3.0";
fullName = "Non-Profit Open Software License 3.0";
};
ocamlpro_nc = {
fullName = "OCamlPro Non Commercial license version 1";
url = "https://alt-ergo.ocamlpro.com/http/alt-ergo-2.2.0/OCamlPro-Non-Commercial-License.pdf";
free = false;
};
ofl = spdx {
spdxId = "OFL-1.1";
fullName = "SIL Open Font License 1.1";
@@ -561,21 +347,6 @@ lib.mapAttrs (n: v: v // { shortName = n; }) rec {
fullName = "OpenSSL License";
};
osl2 = spdx {
spdxId = "OSL-2.0";
fullName = "Open Software License 2.0";
};
osl21 = spdx {
spdxId = "OSL-2.1";
fullName = "Open Software License 2.1";
};
osl3 = spdx {
spdxId = "OSL-3.0";
fullName = "Open Software License 3.0";
};
php301 = spdx {
spdxId = "PHP-3.01";
fullName = "PHP License v3.01";
@@ -586,12 +357,6 @@ lib.mapAttrs (n: v: v // { shortName = n; }) rec {
fullName = "PostgreSQL License";
};
postman = {
fullName = "Postman EULA";
url = https://www.getpostman.com/licenses/postman_base_app;
free = false;
};
psfl = spdx {
spdxId = "Python-2.0";
fullName = "Python Software Foundation License version 2";
@@ -602,11 +367,6 @@ lib.mapAttrs (n: v: v // { shortName = n; }) rec {
fullName = "Public Domain";
};
purdueBsd = {
fullName = " Purdue BSD-Style License"; # also know as lsof license
url = https://enterprise.dejacode.com/licenses/public/purdue-bsd;
};
qpl = spdx {
spdxId = "QPL-1.0";
fullName = "Q Public License 1.0";
@@ -622,11 +382,6 @@ lib.mapAttrs (n: v: v // { shortName = n; }) rec {
fullName = "Ruby License";
};
sendmail = spdx {
spdxId = "Sendmail";
fullName = "Sendmail License";
};
sgi-b-20 = spdx {
spdxId = "SGI-B-2.0";
fullName = "SGI Free Software License B v2.0";
@@ -637,22 +392,11 @@ lib.mapAttrs (n: v: v // { shortName = n; }) rec {
fullName = "Sleepycat License";
};
smail = {
shortName = "smail";
fullName = "SMAIL General Public License";
url = http://metadata.ftp-master.debian.org/changelogs/main/d/debianutils/debianutils_4.8.1_copyright;
};
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;
@@ -674,32 +418,16 @@ lib.mapAttrs (n: v: v // { shortName = n; }) rec {
fullName = "The Unlicense";
};
upl = {
fullName = "Universal Permissive License";
url = "https://oss.oracle.com/licenses/upl/";
};
vim = spdx {
spdxId = "Vim";
fullName = "Vim License";
};
virtualbox-puel = {
fullName = "Oracle VM VirtualBox Extension Pack Personal Use and Evaluation License (PUEL)";
url = "https://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/VirtualBox_PUEL";
free = false;
};
vsl10 = spdx {
spdxId = "VSL-1.0";
fullName = "Vovida Software License v1.0";
};
watcom = spdx {
spdxId = "Watcom-1.0";
fullName = "Sybase Open Watcom Public License 1.0";
};
w3c = spdx {
spdxId = "W3C";
fullName = "W3C Software Notice and License";
@@ -715,28 +443,19 @@ lib.mapAttrs (n: v: v // { shortName = n; }) rec {
fullName = "Do What The F*ck You Want To Public License";
};
wxWindows = spdx {
spdxId = "wxWindows";
fullName = "wxWindows Library Licence, Version 3.1";
};
xfig = {
fullName = "xfig";
url = "http://mcj.sourceforge.net/authors.html#xfig";
};
zlib = spdx {
spdxId = "Zlib";
fullName = "zlib License";
};
zpl20 = spdx {
zpt20 = spdx { # FIXME: why zpt* instead of zpl*
spdxId = "ZPL-2.0";
fullName = "Zope Public License 2.0";
};
zpl21 = spdx {
zpt21 = spdx {
spdxId = "ZPL-2.1";
fullName = "Zope Public License 2.1";
};
}

View File

@@ -1,42 +1,23 @@
# General list operations.
{ lib }:
with lib.trivial;
let
inherit (lib.strings) toInt;
in
with import ./trivial.nix;
rec {
inherit (builtins) head tail length isList elemAt concatLists filter elem genList;
/* 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.
Type: singleton :: a -> [a]
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];
/* right fold a binary function `op` between successive elements of
`list` with `nul' as the starting value, i.e.,
`foldr op nul [x_1 x_2 ... x_n] == op x_1 (op x_2 ... (op x_n nul))`.
Type: foldr :: (a -> b -> b) -> b -> [a] -> b
Example:
concat = foldr (a: b: a + b) "z"
concat [ "a" "b" "c" ]
=> "abcz"
# different types
strange = foldr (int: str: toString (int + 1) + str) "a"
strange [ 1 2 3 4 ]
=> "2345a"
*/
foldr = op: nul: list:
# "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:
@@ -45,427 +26,156 @@ rec {
else op (elemAt list n) (fold' (n + 1));
in fold' 0;
/* `fold` is an alias of `foldr` for historic reasons */
# FIXME(Profpatsch): deprecate?
fold = foldr;
/* left fold, like `foldr`, but from the left:
`foldl op nul [x_1 x_2 ... x_n] == op (... (op (op nul x_1) x_2) ... x_n)`.
Type: foldl :: (b -> a -> b) -> b -> [a] -> b
Example:
lconcat = foldl (a: b: a + b) "z"
lconcat [ "a" "b" "c" ]
=> "zabc"
# different types
lstrange = foldl (str: int: str + toString (int + 1)) ""
strange [ 1 2 3 4 ]
=> "a2345"
*/
# 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
then nul
else op (foldl' (n - 1)) (elemAt list n);
in foldl' (length list - 1);
/* Strict version of `foldl`.
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.)
Type: foldl' :: (b -> a -> b) -> b -> [a] -> b
*/
# Strict version of foldl.
foldl' = builtins.foldl' or foldl;
/* Map with index starting from 0
Type: imap0 :: (int -> a -> b) -> [a] -> [b]
# Map with index: `imap (i: v: "${v}-${toString i}") ["a" "b"] ==
# ["a-1" "b-2"]'. FIXME: why does this start to count at 1?
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;
Example:
imap0 (i: v: "${v}-${toString i}") ["a" "b"]
=> [ "a-0" "b-1" ]
*/
imap0 = f: list: genList (n: f n (elemAt list n)) (length list);
/* Map with index starting from 1
# Map and concatenate the result.
concatMap = f: list: concatLists (map f list);
Type: imap1 :: (int -> a -> b) -> [a] -> [b]
Example:
imap1 (i: v: "${v}-${toString i}") ["a" "b"]
=> [ "a-1" "b-2" ]
*/
imap1 = f: list: genList (n: f (n + 1) (elemAt list n)) (length list);
/* Map and concatenate the result.
Type: concatMap :: (a -> [b]) -> [a] -> [b]
Example:
concatMap (x: [x] ++ ["z"]) ["a" "b"]
=> [ "a" "z" "b" "z" ]
*/
concatMap = builtins.concatMap or (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 concatMap (y: flatten y) x
then foldl' (x: y: x ++ (flatten y)) [] x
else [x];
/* Remove elements equal to 'e' from a list. Useful for buildInputs.
Type: remove :: a -> [a] -> [a]
# Remove elements equal to 'e' from a list. Useful for buildInputs.
remove = e: filter (x: x != e);
Example:
remove 3 [ 1 3 4 3 ]
=> [ 1 4 ]
*/
remove =
# Element to remove from the list
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.
Type: findSingle :: (a -> bool) -> a -> a -> [a] -> a
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"
*/
findSingle =
# Predicate
pred:
# Default value to return if element was not found.
default:
# Default value to return if more than one element was found
multiple:
# Input list
list:
# 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 return `default` if no such element exists.
Type: findFirst :: (a -> bool) -> a -> [a] -> a
Example:
findFirst (x: x > 3) 7 [ 1 6 4 ]
=> 6
findFirst (x: x > 9) 7 [ 1 6 4 ]
=> 7
*/
findFirst =
# Predicate
pred:
# Default value to return
default:
# Input list
list:
# 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 if function `pred` returns true for at least one
element of `list`.
Type: any :: (a -> bool) -> [a] -> bool
# Return true iff function `pred' returns true for at least element
# of `list'.
any = builtins.any or (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: foldr (x: y: if pred x then true else y) false);
/* Return true if function `pred` returns true for all elements of
`list`.
# Return true iff function `pred' returns true for all elements of
# `list'.
all = builtins.all or (pred: fold (x: y: if pred x then y else false) true);
Type: all :: (a -> bool) -> [a] -> bool
Example:
all (x: x < 3) [ 1 2 ]
=> true
all (x: x < 3) [ 1 2 3 ]
=> false
*/
all = builtins.all or (pred: foldr (x: y: if pred x then y else false) true);
# Count how many times function `pred' returns true for the elements
# of `list'.
count = pred: foldl' (c: x: if pred x then c + 1 else c) 0;
/* Count how many elements of `list` match the supplied predicate
function.
Type: count :: (a -> bool) -> [a] -> int
Example:
count (x: x == 3) [ 3 2 3 4 6 ]
=> 2
*/
count =
# Predicate
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').
Type: optional :: bool -> a -> [a]
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, depending on a boolean value.
Type: optionals :: bool -> [a] -> [a]
Example:
optionals true [ 2 3 ]
=> [ 2 3 ]
optionals false [ 2 3 ]
=> [ ]
*/
optionals =
# Condition
cond:
# List to return if condition is true
elems: if cond then elems else [];
# 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.
Example:
toList [ 1 2 ]
=> [ 1 2 ]
toList "hi"
=> [ "hi "]
*/
# 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 isList x then x else [x];
/* Return a list of integers from `first' up to and including `last'.
Type: range :: int -> int -> [int]
Example:
range 2 4
=> [ 2 3 4 ]
range 3 2
=> [ ]
*/
# Return a list of integers from `first' up to and including `last'.
range =
# First integer in the range
first:
# Last integer in the range
last:
if first > last then
[]
if builtins ? genList then
first: last:
if first > last
then []
else genList (n: first + n) (last - first + 1)
else
genList (n: first + n) (last - first + 1);
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.
Type: (a -> bool) -> [a] -> { right :: [a], wrong :: [a] }
Example:
partition (x: x > 2) [ 5 1 2 3 4 ]
=> { right = [ 5 3 4 ]; wrong = [ 1 2 ]; }
*/
partition = builtins.partition or (pred:
foldr (h: t:
# 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
then { right = [h] ++ t.right; wrong = t.wrong; }
else { right = t.right; wrong = [h] ++ t.wrong; }
) { right = []; wrong = []; });
) { right = []; wrong = []; };
/* Splits the elements of a list into many lists, using the return value of a predicate.
Predicate should return a string which becomes keys of attrset `groupBy' returns.
`groupBy'` allows to customise the combining function and initial value
Example:
groupBy (x: boolToString (x > 2)) [ 5 1 2 3 4 ]
=> { true = [ 5 3 4 ]; false = [ 1 2 ]; }
groupBy (x: x.name) [ {name = "icewm"; script = "icewm &";}
{name = "xfce"; script = "xfce4-session &";}
{name = "icewm"; script = "icewmbg &";}
{name = "mate"; script = "gnome-session &";}
]
=> { icewm = [ { name = "icewm"; script = "icewm &"; }
{ name = "icewm"; script = "icewmbg &"; } ];
mate = [ { name = "mate"; script = "gnome-session &"; } ];
xfce = [ { name = "xfce"; script = "xfce4-session &"; } ];
}
groupBy' builtins.add 0 (x: boolToString (x > 2)) [ 5 1 2 3 4 ]
=> { true = 12; false = 3; }
*/
groupBy' = op: nul: pred: lst:
foldl' (r: e:
let
key = pred e;
in
r // { ${key} = op (r.${key} or nul) e; }
) {} lst;
groupBy = groupBy' (sum: e: sum ++ [e]) [];
/* 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.
Type: zipListsWith :: (a -> b -> c) -> [a] -> [b] -> [c]
Example:
zipListsWith (a: b: a + b) ["h" "l"] ["e" "o"]
=> ["he" "lo"]
*/
zipListsWith =
# Function to zip elements of both lists
f:
# First list
fst:
# Second list
snd:
genList
(n: f (elemAt fst n) (elemAt snd n)) (min (length fst) (length snd));
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;
/* Merges two lists of the same size together. If the sizes aren't the same
the merging stops at the shortest.
Type: zipLists :: [a] -> [b] -> [{ fst :: a, snd :: b}]
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.
Type: reverseList :: [a] -> [a]
# Reverse the order of the elements of a list.
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 ]) [];
Example:
reverseList [ "b" "o" "j" ]
=> [ "j" "o" "b" ]
*/
reverseList = xs:
let l = length xs; in genList (n: elemAt xs (l - n - 1)) l;
/* Depth-First Search (DFS) for lists `list != []`.
`before a b == true` means that `b` depends on `a` (there's an
edge from `b` to `a`).
Example:
listDfs true hasPrefix [ "/home/user" "other" "/" "/home" ]
== { minimal = "/"; # minimal element
visited = [ "/home/user" ]; # seen elements (in reverse order)
rest = [ "/home" "other" ]; # everything else
}
listDfs true hasPrefix [ "/home/user" "other" "/" "/home" "/" ]
== { cycle = "/"; # cycle encountered at this element
loops = [ "/" ]; # and continues to these elements
visited = [ "/" "/home/user" ]; # elements leading to the cycle (in reverse order)
rest = [ "/home" "other" ]; # everything else
*/
listDfs = stopOnCycles: before: list:
let
dfs' = us: visited: rest:
let
c = filter (x: before x us) visited;
b = partition (x: before x us) rest;
in if stopOnCycles && (length c > 0)
then { cycle = us; loops = c; inherit visited rest; }
else if length b.right == 0
then # nothing is before us
{ minimal = us; inherit visited rest; }
else # grab the first one before us and continue
dfs' (head b.right)
([ us ] ++ visited)
(tail b.right ++ b.wrong);
in dfs' (head list) [] (tail list);
/* Sort a list based on a partial ordering using DFS. This
implementation is O(N^2), if your ordering is linear, use `sort`
instead.
`before a b == true` means that `b` should be after `a`
in the result.
Example:
toposort hasPrefix [ "/home/user" "other" "/" "/home" ]
== { result = [ "/" "/home" "/home/user" "other" ]; }
toposort hasPrefix [ "/home/user" "other" "/" "/home" "/" ]
== { cycle = [ "/home/user" "/" "/" ]; # path leading to a cycle
loops = [ "/" ]; } # loops back to these elements
toposort hasPrefix [ "other" "/home/user" "/home" "/" ]
== { result = [ "other" "/" "/home" "/home/user" ]; }
toposort (a: b: a < b) [ 3 2 1 ] == { result = [ 1 2 3 ]; }
*/
toposort = before: list:
let
dfsthis = listDfs true before list;
toporest = toposort before (dfsthis.visited ++ dfsthis.rest);
in
if length list < 2
then # finish
{ result = list; }
else if dfsthis ? "cycle"
then # there's a cycle, starting from the current vertex, return it
{ cycle = reverseList ([ dfsthis.cycle ] ++ dfsthis.visited);
inherit (dfsthis) loops; }
else if toporest ? "cycle"
then # there's a cycle somewhere else in the graph, return it
toporest
# Slow, but short. Can be made a bit faster with an explicit stack.
else # there are no cycles
{ result = [ dfsthis.minimal ] ++ toporest.result; };
/* 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 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 = builtins.sort or (
strictLess: list:
let
@@ -483,97 +193,42 @@ rec {
if len < 2 then list
else (sort strictLess pivot.left) ++ [ first ] ++ (sort strictLess pivot.right));
/* Compare two lists element-by-element.
Example:
compareLists compare [] []
=> 0
compareLists compare [] [ "a" ]
=> -1
compareLists compare [ "a" ] []
=> 1
compareLists compare [ "a" "b" ] [ "a" "c" ]
=> 1
*/
compareLists = cmp: a: b:
if a == []
then if b == []
then 0
else -1
else if b == []
then 1
else let rel = cmp (head a) (head b); in
if rel == 0
then compareLists cmp (tail a) (tail b)
else rel;
/* Sort list using "Natural sorting".
Numeric portions of strings are sorted in numeric order.
Example:
naturalSort ["disk11" "disk8" "disk100" "disk9"]
=> ["disk8" "disk9" "disk11" "disk100"]
naturalSort ["10.46.133.149" "10.5.16.62" "10.54.16.25"]
=> ["10.5.16.62" "10.46.133.149" "10.54.16.25"]
naturalSort ["v0.2" "v0.15" "v0.0.9"]
=> [ "v0.0.9" "v0.2" "v0.15" ]
*/
naturalSort = lst:
let
vectorise = s: map (x: if isList x then toInt (head x) else x) (builtins.split "(0|[1-9][0-9]*)" s);
prepared = map (x: [ (vectorise x) x ]) lst; # remember vectorised version for O(n) regex splits
less = a: b: (compareLists compare (head a) (head b)) < 0;
in
map (x: elemAt x 1) (sort less prepared);
/* Return the first (at most) N elements of a list.
Type: take :: int -> [a] -> [a]
Example:
take 2 [ "a" "b" "c" "d" ]
=> [ "a" "b" ]
take 2 [ ]
=> [ ]
*/
# Return the first (at most) N elements of a list.
take =
# Number of elements to take
count: sublist 0 count;
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;
/* Remove the first (at most) N elements of a list.
Type: drop :: int -> [a] -> [a]
Example:
drop 2 [ "a" "b" "c" "d" ]
=> [ "c" "d" ]
drop 2 [ ]
=> [ ]
*/
# Remove the first (at most) N elements of a list.
drop =
# Number of elements to drop
count:
# Input list
list: sublist count (length list) list;
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`.
Type: sublist :: int -> int -> [a] -> [a]
Example:
sublist 1 3 [ "a" "b" "c" "d" "e" ]
=> [ "b" "c" "d" ]
sublist 1 3 [ ]
=> [ ]
*/
sublist =
# Index at which to start the sublist
start:
# Number of elements to take
count:
# Input list
list:
# Return a list consisting of at most count elements of list,
# starting at index start.
sublist = start: count: list:
let len = length list; in
genList
(n: elemAt list (n + start))
@@ -581,52 +236,23 @@ rec {
else if start + count > len then len - start
else count);
/* Return the last element of a list.
This function throws an error if the list is empty.
Type: last :: [a] -> a
Example:
last [ 1 2 3 ]
=> 3
*/
# Return the last element of a list.
last = list:
assert lib.assertMsg (list != []) "lists.last: list must not be empty!";
elemAt list (length list - 1);
/* Return all elements but the last.
This function throws an error if the list is empty.
Type: init :: [a] -> [a]
Example:
init [ 1 2 3 ]
=> [ 1 2 ]
*/
init = list:
assert lib.assertMsg (list != []) "lists.init: list must not be empty!";
take (length list - 1) list;
assert list != []; elemAt list (length list - 1);
/* Return the image of the cross product of some lists by a function.
# Return all elements but the last
init = list: assert list != []; take (length list - 1) list;
deepSeqList = xs: y: if any (x: deepSeq x false) xs then y else y;
Example:
crossLists (x:y: "${toString x}${toString y}") [[1 2] [3 4]]
=> [ "13" "14" "23" "24" ]
*/
crossLists = f: foldl (fs: args: concatMap (f: map f args) fs) [f];
/* Remove duplicate elements from the list. O(n^2) complexity.
Type: unique :: [a] -> [a]
Example:
unique [ 3 2 3 4 ]
=> [ 3 2 4 ]
*/
# Remove duplicate elements from the list. O(n^2) complexity.
unique = list:
if list == [] then
[]
@@ -636,28 +262,12 @@ rec {
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 ]
*/
# Intersects list 'e' and another list. O(nm) complexity.
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 ]
*/
# Subtracts list 'e' from another list. O(nm) complexity.
subtractLists = e: filter (x: !(elem x e));
/* Test if two lists have no common element.
It should be slightly more efficient than (intersectLists a b == [])
*/
mutuallyExclusive = a: b:
(builtins.length a) == 0 ||
(!(builtins.elem (builtins.head a) b) &&
mutuallyExclusive (builtins.tail a) b);
}

290
lib/maintainers.nix Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,290 @@
/* -*- coding: utf-8; -*- */
{
/* Add your name and email address here.
Keep the list alphabetically sorted.
Prefer the same attrname as your github username, please,
so it's easy to ping a package @maintainer.
*/
abaldeau = "Andreas Baldeau <andreas@baldeau.net>";
abbradar = "Nikolay Amiantov <ab@fmap.me>";
adev = "Adrien Devresse <adev@adev.name>";
aforemny = "Alexander Foremny <alexanderforemny@googlemail.com>";
aflatter = "Alexander Flatter <flatter@fastmail.fm>";
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>";
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>";
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>";
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>";
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>";
bennofs = "Benno Fünfstück <benno.fuenfstueck@gmail.com>";
benley = "Benjamin Staffin <benley@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>";
bramd = "Bram Duvigneau <bram@bramd.nl>";
bstrik = "Berno Strik <dutchman55@gmx.com>";
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>";
christopherpoole = "Christopher Mark Poole <mail@christopherpoole.net>";
coconnor = "Corey O'Connor <coreyoconnor@gmail.com>";
codyopel = "Cody Opel <codyopel@gmail.com>";
copumpkin = "Dan Peebles <pumpkingod@gmail.com>";
coroa = "Jonas Hörsch <jonas@chaoflow.net>";
couchemar = "Andrey Pavlov <couchemar@yandex.ru>";
cstrahan = "Charles Strahan <charles.c.strahan@gmail.com>";
cwoac = "Oliver Matthews <oliver@codersoffortune.net>";
DamienCassou = "Damien Cassou <damien@cassou.me>";
davidrusu = "David Rusu <davidrusu.me@gmail.com>";
dbohdan = "Danyil Bohdan <danyil.bohdan@gmail.com>";
DerGuteMoritz = "Moritz Heidkamp <moritz@twoticketsplease.de>";
deepfire = "Kosyrev Serge <_deepfire@feelingofgreen.ru>";
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>";
dmalikov = "Dmitry Malikov <malikov.d.y@gmail.com>";
doublec = "Chris Double <chris.double@double.co.nz>";
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>";
eikek = "Eike Kettner <eike.kettner@posteo.de>";
ellis = "Ellis Whitehead <nixos@ellisw.net>";
emery = "Emery Hemingway <emery@vfemail.net>";
epitrochoid = "Mabry Cervin <mpcervin@uncg.edu>";
ericbmerritt = "Eric Merritt <eric@afiniate.com>";
ertes = "Ertugrul Söylemez <ertesx@gmx.de>";
exlevan = "Alexey Levan <exlevan@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>";
fpletz = "Franz Pletz <fpletz@fnordicwalking.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>";
gal_bolle = "Florent Becker <florent.becker@ens-lyon.org>";
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>";
giogadi = "Luis G. Torres <lgtorres42@gmail.com>";
globin = "Robin Gloster <robin@glob.in>";
goibhniu = "Cillian de Róiste <cillian.deroiste@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 <mail@elfsechsundzwanzig.de>";
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>";
ikervagyok = "Balázs Lengyel <ikervagyok@gmail.com>";
iyzsong = "Song Wenwu <iyzsong@gmail.com>";
j-keck = "Jürgen Keck <jhyphenkeck@gmail.com>";
jagajaga = "Arseniy Seroka <ars.seroka@gmail.com>";
jb55 = "William Casarin <bill@casarin.me>";
jcumming = "Jack Cummings <jack@mudshark.org>";
jefdaj = "Jeffrey David Johnson <jefdaj@gmail.com>";
jfb = "James Felix Black <james@yamtime.com>";
jgeerds = "Jascha Geerds <jg@ekby.de>";
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>";
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>";
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 <kragniz@gmail.com>";
ktosiek = "Tomasz Kontusz <tomasz.kontusz@gmail.com>";
lassulus = "Lassulus <lassulus@gmail.com>";
lebastr = "Alexander Lebedev <lebastr@gmail.com>";
leonardoce = "Leonardo Cecchi <leonardo.cecchi@gmail.com>";
lethalman = "Luca Bruno <lucabru@src.gnome.org>";
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>";
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>";
maurer = "Matthew Maurer <matthew.r.maurer+nix@gmail.com>";
matejc = "Matej Cotman <cotman.matej@gmail.com>";
mathnerd314 = "Mathnerd314 <mathnerd314.gph+hs@gmail.com>";
matthiasbeyer = "Matthias Beyer <mail@beyermatthias.de>";
mbakke = "Marius Bakke <ymse@tuta.io>";
meditans = "Carlo Nucera <meditans@gmail.com>";
meisternu = "Matt Miemiec <meister@krutt.org>";
michelk = "Michel Kuhlmann <michel@kuhlmanns.info>";
mirdhyn = "Merlin Gaillard <mirdhyn@gmail.com>";
mschristiansen = "Mikkel Christiansen <mikkel@rheosystems.com>";
modulistic = "Pablo Costa <modulistic@gmail.com>";
mornfall = "Petr Ročkai <me@mornfall.net>";
MP2E = "Cray Elliott <MP2E@archlinux.us>";
msackman = "Matthew Sackman <matthew@wellquite.org>";
mtreskin = "Max Treskin <zerthurd@gmail.com>";
mudri = "James Wood <lamudri@gmail.com>";
muflax = "Stefan Dorn <mail@muflax.com>";
nathan-gs = "Nathan Bijnens <nathan@nathan.gs>";
nckx = "Tobias Geerinckx-Rice <tobias.geerinckx.rice@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 <dav-nixos@odav.org>";
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>";
page = "Carles Pagès <page@cubata.homelinux.net>";
paholg = "Paho Lurie-Gregg <paho@paholg.com>";
pakhfn = "Fedor Pakhomov <pakhfn@gmail.com>";
pashev = "Igor Pashev <pashev.igor@gmail.com>";
pesterhazy = "Paulus Esterhazy <pesterhazy@gmail.com>";
phausmann = "Philipp Hausmann <nix@314.ch>";
philandstuff = "Philip Potter <philip.g.potter@gmail.com>";
phreedom = "Evgeny Egorochkin <phreedom@yandex.ru>";
pierron = "Nicolas B. Pierron <nixos@nbp.name>";
piotr = "Piotr Pietraszkiewicz <ppietrasa@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>";
psibi = "Sibi <sibi@psibi.in>";
pSub = "Pascal Wittmann <mail@pascal-wittmann.de>";
puffnfresh = "Brian McKenna <brian@brianmckenna.org>";
qknight = "Joachim Schiele <js@lastlog.de>";
ragge = "Ragnar Dahlen <r.dahlen@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>";
rick68 = "Wei-Ming Yang <rick68@gmail.com>";
rickynils = "Rickard Nilsson <rickynils@gmail.com>";
rob = "Rob Vermaas <rob.vermaas@gmail.com>";
robberer = "Longrin Wischnewski <robberer@freakmail.de>";
robbinch = "Robbin C. <robbinch33@gmail.com>";
roconnor = "Russell O'Connor <roconnor@theorem.ca>";
roelof = "Roelof Wobben <rwobben@hotmail.com>";
romildo = "José Romildo Malaquias <malaquias@gmail.com>";
rszibele = "Richard Szibele <richard_szibele@hotmail.com>";
rushmorem = "Rushmore Mushambi <rushmore@webenchanter.com>";
rycee = "Robert Helgesson <robert@rycee.net>";
sander = "Sander van der Burg <s.vanderburg@tudelft.nl>";
schmitthenner = "Fabian Schmitthenner <development@schmitthenner.eu>";
schristo = "Scott Christopher <schristopher@konputa.com>";
sepi = "Raffael Mancini <raffael@mancini.lu>";
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>";
skeidel = "Sven Keidel <svenkeidel@gmail.com>";
smironov = "Sergey Mironov <ierton@gmail.com>";
spacefrogg = "Michael Raitza <spacefrogg-nixos@meterriblecrew.net>";
sprock = "Roger Mason <rmason@mun.ca>";
spwhitt = "Spencer Whitt <sw@swhitt.me>";
stephenmw = "Stephen Weinberg <stephen@q5comm.com>";
szczyp = "Szczyp <qb@szczyp.com>";
sztupi = "Attila Sztupak <attila.sztupak@gmail.com>";
tailhook = "Paul Colomiets <paul@colomiets.name>";
taktoa = "Remy Goldschmidt <taktoa@gmail.com>";
telotortium = "Robert Irelan <rirelan@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>";
titanous = "Jonathan Rudenberg <jonathan@titanous.com>";
tomberek = "Thomas Bereknyei <tomberek@gmail.com>";
travisbhartwell = "Travis B. Hartwell <nafai@travishartwell.net>";
trino = "Hubert Mühlhans <muehlhans.hubert@ekodia.de>";
tstrobel = "Thomas Strobel <ts468@cam.ac.uk>";
ttuegel = "Thomas Tuegel <ttuegel@gmail.com>";
tv = "Tomislav Viljetić <tv@shackspace.de>";
twey = "James Twey Kay <twey@twey.co.uk>";
urkud = "Yury G. Kudryashov <urkud+nix@ya.ru>";
vandenoever = "Jos van den Oever <jos@vandenoever.info>";
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>";
winden = "Antonio Vargas Gonzalez <windenntw@gmail.com>";
wizeman = "Ricardo M. Correia <rcorreia@wizy.org>";
wjlroe = "William Roe <willroe@gmail.com>";
womfoo = "Kranium Gikos Mendoza <kranium@gikos.net>";
wkennington = "William A. Kennington III <william@wkennington.com>";
wmertens = "Wout Mertens <Wout.Mertens@gmail.com>";
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>";
zef = "Zef Hemel <zef@zef.me>";
zimbatm = "zimbatm <zimbatm@zimbatm.com>";
zoomulator = "Kim Simmons <zoomulator@gmail.com>";
Gonzih = "Max Gonzih <gonzih@gmail.com>";
}

View File

@@ -1,7 +1,8 @@
/* Some functions for manipulating meta attributes, as well as the
name attribute. */
{ lib }:
let lib = import ./default.nix;
in
rec {
@@ -16,11 +17,6 @@ rec {
drv // { meta = (drv.meta or {}) // newAttrs; };
/* Disable Hydra builds of given derivation.
*/
dontDistribute = drv: addMetaAttrs { hydraPlatforms = []; } drv;
/* Change the symbolic name of a package for presentation purposes
(i.e., so that nix-env users can tell them apart).
*/
@@ -41,18 +37,16 @@ rec {
let x = builtins.parseDrvName name; in "${x.name}-${suffix}-${x.version}");
/* Apply a function to each derivation and only to derivations in an attrset.
/* Apply a function to each derivation and only to derivations in an attrset
*/
mapDerivationAttrset = f: set: lib.mapAttrs (name: pkg: if lib.isDerivation pkg then (f pkg) else pkg) set;
/* Set the nix-env priority of the package.
*/
setPrio = priority: addMetaAttrs { inherit priority; };
/* Decrease the nix-env priority of the package, i.e., other
versions/variants of the package will be preferred.
*/
lowPrio = setPrio 10;
lowPrio = drv: addMetaAttrs { priority = "10"; } drv;
/* Apply lowPrio to an attrset with derivations
*/
@@ -62,29 +56,11 @@ rec {
/* Increase the nix-env priority of the package, i.e., this
version/variant of the package will be preferred.
*/
hiPrio = setPrio (-10);
hiPrio = drv: addMetaAttrs { priority = "-10"; } drv;
/* Apply hiPrio to an attrset with derivations
*/
hiPrioSet = set: mapDerivationAttrset hiPrio set;
/* Check to see if a platform is matched by the given `meta.platforms`
element.
A `meta.platform` pattern is either
1. (legacy) a system string.
2. (modern) a pattern for the platform `parsed` field.
We can inject these into a patten for the whole of a structured platform,
and then match that.
*/
platformMatch = platform: elem: let
pattern =
if builtins.isString elem
then { system = elem; }
else { parsed = elem; };
in lib.matchAttrs pattern platform;
}

View File

@@ -1,2 +0,0 @@
# Expose the minimum required version for evaluating Nixpkgs
"2.0"

View File

@@ -1,12 +1,9 @@
{ lib }:
with lib.lists;
with lib.strings;
with lib.trivial;
with lib.attrsets;
with lib.options;
with lib.debug;
with lib.types;
with import ./lists.nix;
with import ./trivial.nix;
with import ./attrsets.nix;
with import ./options.nix;
with import ./debug.nix;
with import ./types.nix;
rec {
@@ -22,8 +19,7 @@ rec {
, 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. If specialArgs.modulesPath is defined it will be
# used as the base path for disabledModules.
# there's _module.args.
specialArgs ? {}
, # This would be remove in the future, Prefer _module.args option instead.
args ? {}
@@ -59,9 +55,12 @@ rec {
};
};
closed = closeModules (modules ++ [ internalModule ]) ({ inherit config options lib; } // specialArgs);
closed = closeModules (modules ++ [ internalModule ]) ({ inherit config options; lib = import ./.; } // specialArgs);
options = mergeModules prefix (reverseList (filterModules (specialArgs.modulesPath or "") closed));
# 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
@@ -87,20 +86,10 @@ rec {
result = { inherit options config; };
in result;
# Filter disabled modules. Modules can be disabled allowing
# their implementation to be replaced.
filterModules = modulesPath: modules:
let
moduleKey = m: if isString m then toString modulesPath + "/" + m else toString m;
disabledKeys = map moduleKey (concatMap (m: m.disabledModules) modules);
in
filter (m: !(elem m.key disabledKeys)) modules;
/* Close a set of modules under the imports relation. */
closeModules = modules: args:
let
toClosureList = file: parentKey: imap1 (n: x:
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)
@@ -116,29 +105,23 @@ rec {
/* Massage a module into canonical form, that is, a set consisting
of options, config and imports attributes. */
unifyModuleSyntax = file: key: m:
let metaSet = if m ? meta
then { meta = m.meta; }
else {};
in
if m ? config || m ? options then
let badAttrs = removeAttrs m ["_file" "key" "disabledModules" "imports" "options" "config" "meta"]; in
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'."
else
{ file = m._file or file;
key = toString m.key or key;
disabledModules = m.disabledModules or [];
imports = m.imports or [];
options = m.options or {};
config = mkMerge [ (m.config or {}) metaSet ];
config = m.config or {};
}
else
{ file = m._file or file;
key = toString m.key or key;
disabledModules = m.disabledModules or [];
imports = m.require or [] ++ m.imports or [];
options = {};
config = mkMerge [ (removeAttrs m ["_file" "key" "disabledModules" "require" "imports"]) metaSet ];
config = removeAttrs m ["key" "_file" "require" "imports"];
};
applyIfFunction = key: f: args@{ config, options, lib, ... }: if isFunction f then
@@ -155,11 +138,11 @@ rec {
# 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 (lib.functionArgs f);
requiredArgs = builtins.attrNames (builtins.functionArgs f);
context = name: ''while evaluating the module argument `${name}' in "${key}":'';
extraArgs = builtins.listToAttrs (map (name: {
inherit name;
value = builtins.addErrorContext (context name)
value = addErrorContext (context name)
(args.${name} or config._module.args.${name});
}) requiredArgs);
@@ -192,55 +175,29 @@ rec {
(concatMap (m: map (config: { inherit (m) file; inherit config; }) (pushDownProperties m.config)) modules);
mergeModules' = prefix: options: configs:
let
/* byName is like foldAttrs, but will look for attributes to merge in the
specified attribute name.
byName "foo" (module: value: ["module.hidden=${module.hidden},value=${value}"])
[
{
hidden="baz";
foo={qux="bar"; gla="flop";};
}
{
hidden="fli";
foo={qux="gne"; gli="flip";};
}
]
===>
{
gla = [ "module.hidden=baz,value=flop" ];
gli = [ "module.hidden=fli,value=flip" ];
qux = [ "module.hidden=baz,value=bar" "module.hidden=fli,value=gne" ];
}
*/
byName = attr: f: modules:
foldl' (acc: module:
acc // (mapAttrs (n: v:
(acc.${n} or []) ++ f module v
) module.${attr}
)
) {} modules;
# an attrset 'name' => list of submodules that declare name.
declsByName = byName "options" (module: option:
[{ inherit (module) file; options = option; }]
) options;
# an attrset 'name' => list of submodules that define name.
defnsByName = byName "config" (module: value:
map (config: { inherit (module) file; inherit config; }) (pushDownProperties value)
) configs;
# extract the definitions for each loc
defnsByName' = byName "config" (module: value:
[{ inherit (module) file; inherit value; }]
) configs;
in
(flip mapAttrs declsByName (name: decls:
listToAttrs (map (name: {
# We're descending into attribute name.
inherit name;
value =
let
loc = prefix ++ [name];
defns = defnsByName.${name} or [];
defns' = defnsByName'.${name} or [];
# Get all submodules that declare name.
decls = concatMap (m:
if m.options ? ${name}
then [ { inherit (m) file; options = m.options.${name}; } ]
else []
) options;
# Get all submodules that define name.
defns = concatMap (m:
if m.config ? ${name}
then map (config: { inherit (m) file; inherit config; })
(pushDownProperties m.config.${name})
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 ? ${name}) configs);
in
if nrOptions == length decls then
let opt = fixupOptionType loc (mergeOptionDecls loc decls);
@@ -252,8 +209,8 @@ rec {
in
throw "The option `${showOption loc}' in `${firstOption.file}' is a prefix of options in `${firstNonOption.file}'."
else
mergeModules' loc decls defns
))
mergeModules' loc decls defns;
}) (concatMap (m: attrNames m.options) options))
// { _definedNames = map (m: { inherit (m) file; names = attrNames m.config; }) configs; };
/* Merge multiple option declarations into a single declaration. In
@@ -269,20 +226,12 @@ rec {
correspond to the definition of 'loc' in 'opt.file'. */
mergeOptionDecls = loc: opts:
foldl' (res: opt:
let t = res.type;
t' = opt.options.type;
mergedType = t.typeMerge t'.functor;
typesMergeable = mergedType != null;
typeSet = if (bothHave "type") && typesMergeable
then { type = mergedType; }
else {};
bothHave = k: opt.options ? ${k} && res ? ${k};
in
if bothHave "default" ||
bothHave "example" ||
bothHave "description" ||
bothHave "apply" ||
(bothHave "type" && (! typesMergeable))
if opt.options ? default && res ? default ||
opt.options ? example && res ? example ||
opt.options ? description && res ? description ||
opt.options ? apply && res ? apply ||
# Accept to merge options which have identical types.
opt.options ? type && res ? type && opt.options.type.name != res.type.name
then
throw "The option `${showOption loc}' in `${opt.file}' is already declared in ${showFiles res.declarations}."
else
@@ -304,7 +253,7 @@ rec {
in opt.options // res //
{ declarations = res.declarations ++ [opt.file];
options = submodules;
} // typeSet
}
) { inherit loc; declarations = []; options = []; } opts;
/* Merge all the definitions of an option to produce the final
@@ -335,8 +284,7 @@ rec {
res.mergedValue;
in opt //
{ value = builtins.addErrorContext "while evaluating the option `${showOption loc}':" value;
inherit (res.defsFinal') highestPrio;
{ value = addErrorContext "while evaluating the option `${showOption loc}':" value;
definitions = map (def: def.value) res.defsFinal;
files = map (def: def.file) res.defsFinal;
inherit (res) isDefined;
@@ -344,7 +292,7 @@ rec {
# Merge definitions of a value of a given type.
mergeDefinitions = loc: type: defs: rec {
defsFinal' =
defsFinal =
let
# Process mkMerge and mkIf properties.
defs' = concatMap (m:
@@ -352,24 +300,20 @@ rec {
) defs;
# Process mkOverride properties.
defs'' = filterOverrides' defs';
defs'' = filterOverrides defs';
# Sort mkOrder properties.
defs''' =
# Avoid sorting if we don't have to.
if any (def: def.value._type or "" == "order") defs''.values
then sortProperties defs''.values
else defs''.values;
in {
values = defs''';
inherit (defs'') highestPrio;
};
defsFinal = defsFinal'.values;
if any (def: def.value._type or "" == "order") defs''
then sortProperties defs''
else defs'';
in defs''';
# Type-check the remaining definitions, and merge them.
mergedValue = foldl' (res: def:
if type.check def.value then res
else throw "The option value `${showOption loc}' in `${def.file}' is not of type `${type.description}'.")
else throw "The option value `${showOption loc}' in `${def.file}' is not a ${type.name}.")
(type.merge loc defsFinal) defsFinal;
isDefined = defsFinal != [];
@@ -418,13 +362,10 @@ rec {
if def._type or "" == "merge" then
concatMap dischargeProperties def.contents
else if def._type or "" == "if" then
if isBool def.condition then
if def.condition then
dischargeProperties def.content
else
[ ]
if def.condition then
dischargeProperties def.content
else
throw "mkIf called with a non-Boolean condition"
[ ]
else
[ def ];
@@ -447,20 +388,16 @@ rec {
Note that "z" has the default priority 100.
*/
filterOverrides = defs: (filterOverrides' defs).values;
filterOverrides' = defs:
filterOverrides = defs:
let
getPrio = def: if def.value._type or "" == "override" then def.value.priority else defaultPriority;
defaultPrio = 100;
getPrio = def: if def.value._type or "" == "override" then def.value.priority else defaultPrio;
highestPrio = foldl' (prio: def: min (getPrio def) prio) 9999 defs;
strip = def: if def.value._type or "" == "override" then def // { value = def.value.content; } else def;
in {
values = concatMap (def: if getPrio def == highestPrio then [(strip def)] else []) defs;
inherit highestPrio;
};
in concatMap (def: if getPrio def == highestPrio then [(strip def)] else []) defs;
/* Sort a list of properties. The sort priority of a property is
1000 by default, but can be overridden by wrapping the property
1000 by default, but can be overriden by wrapping the property
using mkOrder. */
sortProperties = defs:
let
@@ -480,14 +417,12 @@ rec {
options = opt.options or
(throw "Option `${showOption loc'}' has type optionSet but has no option attribute, in ${showFiles opt.declarations}.");
f = tp:
let optionSetIn = type: (tp.name == type) && (tp.functor.wrapped.name == "optionSet");
in
if tp.name == "option set" || tp.name == "submodule" then
throw "The option ${showOption loc} uses submodules without a wrapping type, in ${showFiles opt.declarations}."
else if optionSetIn "attrsOf" then types.attrsOf (types.submodule options)
else if optionSetIn "loaOf" then types.loaOf (types.submodule options)
else if optionSetIn "listOf" then types.listOf (types.submodule options)
else if optionSetIn "nullOr" then types.nullOr (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
@@ -517,7 +452,7 @@ rec {
inherit priority content;
};
mkOptionDefault = mkOverride 1500; # priority of option defaults
mkOptionDefault = mkOverride 1001; # priority of option defaults
mkDefault = mkOverride 1000; # used in config sections of non-user modules to set a default
mkForce = mkOverride 50;
mkVMOverride = mkOverride 10; # used by nixos-rebuild build-vm
@@ -534,9 +469,6 @@ rec {
mkBefore = mkOrder 500;
mkAfter = mkOrder 1500;
# The default priority for things that don't have a priority specified.
defaultPriority = 100;
# 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
@@ -558,177 +490,12 @@ rec {
#
mkAliasDefinitions = mkAliasAndWrapDefinitions id;
mkAliasAndWrapDefinitions = wrap: option:
mkAliasIfDef option (wrap (mkMerge option.definitions));
mkMerge
(optional (isOption option && option.isDefined)
(wrap (mkMerge option.definitions)));
# Similar to mkAliasAndWrapDefinitions but copies over the priority from the
# option as well.
#
# If a priority is not set, it assumes a priority of defaultPriority.
mkAliasAndWrapDefsWithPriority = wrap: option:
let
prio = option.highestPrio or defaultPriority;
defsWithPrio = map (mkOverride prio) option.definitions;
in mkAliasIfDef option (wrap (mkMerge defsWithPrio));
mkAliasIfDef = option:
mkIf (isOption option && option.isDefined);
/* 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" ] "<replacement instructions>"
causes a warning if the user defines boot.loader.grub.bootDevice.
replacementInstructions is a string that provides instructions on
how to achieve the same functionality without the removed option,
or alternatively a reasoning why the functionality is not needed.
replacementInstructions SHOULD be provided!
*/
mkRemovedOptionModule = optionName: replacementInstructions:
{ 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.
${replacementInstructions}'';
};
/* Return a module that causes a warning to be shown if the
specified "from" option is defined; the defined value is however
forwarded to the "to" option. This can be used to rename options
while providing backward compatibility. For example,
mkRenamedOptionModule [ "boot" "copyKernels" ] [ "boot" "loader" "grub" "copyKernels" ]
forwards any definitions of boot.copyKernels to
boot.loader.grub.copyKernels while printing a warning.
This also copies over the priority from the aliased option to the
non-aliased option.
*/
mkRenamedOptionModule = from: to: doRename {
inherit from to;
visible = false;
warn = true;
use = builtins.trace "Obsolete option `${showOption from}' is used. It was renamed to `${showOption to}'.";
};
/* Return a module that causes a warning to be shown if any of the "from"
option is defined; the defined values can be used in the "mergeFn" to set
the "to" value.
This function can be used to merge multiple options into one that has a
different type.
"mergeFn" takes the module "config" as a parameter and must return a value
of "to" option type.
mkMergedOptionModule
[ [ "a" "b" "c" ]
[ "d" "e" "f" ] ]
[ "x" "y" "z" ]
(config:
let value = p: getAttrFromPath p config;
in
if (value [ "a" "b" "c" ]) == true then "foo"
else if (value [ "d" "e" "f" ]) == true then "bar"
else "baz")
- options.a.b.c is a removed boolean option
- options.d.e.f is a removed boolean option
- options.x.y.z is a new str option that combines a.b.c and d.e.f
functionality
This show a warning if any a.b.c or d.e.f is set, and set the value of
x.y.z to the result of the merge function
*/
mkMergedOptionModule = from: to: mergeFn:
{ config, options, ... }:
{
options = foldl recursiveUpdate {} (map (path: setAttrByPath path (mkOption {
visible = false;
# To use the value in mergeFn without triggering errors
default = "_mkMergedOptionModule";
})) from);
config = {
warnings = filter (x: x != "") (map (f:
let val = getAttrFromPath f config;
opt = getAttrFromPath f options;
in
optionalString
(val != "_mkMergedOptionModule")
"The option `${showOption f}' defined in ${showFiles opt.files} has been changed to `${showOption to}' that has a different type. Please read `${showOption to}' documentation and update your configuration accordingly."
) from);
} // setAttrByPath to (mkMerge
(optional
(any (f: (getAttrFromPath f config) != "_mkMergedOptionModule") from)
(mergeFn config)));
};
/* Single "from" version of mkMergedOptionModule.
Return a module that causes a warning to be shown if the "from" option is
defined; the defined value can be used in the "mergeFn" to set the "to"
value.
This function can be used to change an option into another that has a
different type.
"mergeFn" takes the module "config" as a parameter and must return a value of
"to" option type.
mkChangedOptionModule [ "a" "b" "c" ] [ "x" "y" "z" ]
(config:
let value = getAttrFromPath [ "a" "b" "c" ] config;
in
if value > 100 then "high"
else "normal")
- options.a.b.c is a removed int option
- options.x.y.z is a new str option that supersedes a.b.c
This show a warning if a.b.c is set, and set the value of x.y.z to the
result of the change function
*/
mkChangedOptionModule = from: to: changeFn:
mkMergedOptionModule [ from ] to changeFn;
/* Like mkRenamedOptionModule, but doesn't show a warning. */
mkAliasOptionModule = from: to: doRename {
inherit from to;
visible = true;
warn = false;
use = id;
};
doRename = { from, to, visible, warn, use, withPriority ? true }:
{ config, options, ... }:
let
fromOpt = getAttrFromPath from options;
toOf = attrByPath to
(abort "Renaming error: option `${showOption to}' does not exist.");
in
{
options = setAttrByPath from (mkOption {
inherit visible;
description = "Alias of <option>${showOption to}</option>.";
apply = x: use (toOf config);
});
config = mkMerge [
{
warnings = optional (warn && fromOpt.isDefined)
"The option `${showOption from}' defined in ${showFiles fromOpt.files} has been renamed to `${showOption to}'.";
}
(if withPriority
then mkAliasAndWrapDefsWithPriority (setAttrByPath to) fromOpt
else mkAliasAndWrapDefinitions (setAttrByPath to) fromOpt)
];
};
}

View File

@@ -1,79 +1,40 @@
# Nixpkgs/NixOS option handling.
{ lib }:
with lib.trivial;
with lib.lists;
with lib.attrsets;
with lib.strings;
let lib = import ./default.nix; in
with import ./trivial.nix;
with import ./lists.nix;
with import ./attrsets.nix;
with import ./strings.nix;
rec {
/* Returns true when the given argument is an option
Type: isOption :: a -> bool
Example:
isOption 1 // => false
isOption (mkOption {}) // => true
*/
isOption = lib.isType "option";
/* Creates an Option attribute set. mkOption accepts an attribute set with the following keys:
All keys default to `null` when not given.
Example:
mkOption { } // => { _type = "option"; }
mkOption { defaultText = "foo"; } // => { _type = "option"; defaultText = "foo"; }
*/
mkOption =
{
# Default value used when no definition is given in the configuration.
default ? null,
# Textual representation of the default, for the manual.
defaultText ? null,
# Example value used in the manual.
example ? null,
# String describing the option.
description ? null,
# Related packages used in the manual (see `genRelatedPackages` in ../nixos/doc/manual/default.nix).
relatedPackages ? null,
# Option type, providing type-checking and value merging.
type ? null,
# Function that converts the option value to something else.
apply ? null,
# Whether the option is for NixOS developers only.
internal ? null,
# Whether the option shows up in the manual.
visible ? null,
# Whether the option can be set only once
readOnly ? null,
# Deprecated, used by types.optionSet.
options ? null
{ default ? null # Default value used when no definition is given in the configuration.
, defaultText ? null # Textual representation of the default, for in the manual.
, example ? null # Example value used in the manual.
, description ? null # String describing the option.
, type ? null # Option type, providing type-checking and value merging.
, 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"; };
/* Creates an Option attribute set for a boolean value option i.e an
option to be toggled on or off:
Example:
mkEnableOption "foo"
=> { _type = "option"; default = false; description = "Whether to enable foo."; example = true; type = { ... }; }
*/
mkEnableOption =
# Name for the created option
name: mkOption {
mkEnableOption = name: mkOption {
default = false;
example = true;
description = "Whether to enable ${name}.";
type = lib.types.bool;
};
/* This option accepts anything, but it does not produce any result.
This is useful for sharing a module across different module sets
without having to implement similar features as long as the
values of the options are not accessed. */
# This option accept anything, but it does not produce any result. This
# is useful for sharing a module across different module sets without
# having to implement similar features as long as the value of the options
# are not expected.
mkSinkUndeclaredOptions = attrs: mkOption ({
internal = true;
visible = false;
@@ -113,26 +74,10 @@ rec {
else
val) (head defs).value defs;
/* Extracts values of all "value" keys of the given list.
Type: getValues :: [ { value :: a } ] -> [a]
Example:
getValues [ { value = 1; } { value = 2; } ] // => [ 1 2 ]
getValues [ ] // => [ ]
*/
getValues = map (x: x.value);
/* Extracts values of all "file" keys of the given list
Type: getFiles :: [ { file :: a } ] -> [a]
Example:
getFiles [ { file = "file1"; } { file = "file2"; } ] // => [ "file1" "file2" ]
getFiles [ ] // => [ ]
*/
getFiles = map (x: x.file);
# Generate documentation template from the list of option declaration like
# the set generated with filterOptionSets.
optionAttrSetToDocList = optionAttrSetToDocList' [];
@@ -141,19 +86,17 @@ rec {
concatMap (opt:
let
docOption = rec {
loc = opt.loc;
name = showOption opt.loc;
description = opt.description or (throw "Option `${name}' has no description.");
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.description or null;
type = opt.type.name or null;
}
// optionalAttrs (opt ? example) { example = scrubOptionValue opt.example; }
// optionalAttrs (opt ? default) { default = scrubOptionValue opt.default; }
// optionalAttrs (opt ? defaultText) { default = opt.defaultText; }
// optionalAttrs (opt ? relatedPackages && opt.relatedPackages != null) { inherit (opt) relatedPackages; };
// (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 {});
subOptions =
let ss = opt.type.getSubOptions opt.loc;
@@ -163,13 +106,10 @@ rec {
/* This function recursively removes all derivation attributes from
`x` except for the `name` attribute.
This is to make the generation of `options.xml` much more
efficient: the XML representation of derivations is very large
(on the order of megabytes) and is not actually used by the
manual generator.
*/
`x' except for the `name' attribute. This is to make the
generation of `options.xml' much more efficient: the XML
representation of derivations is very large (on the order of
megabytes) and is not actually used by the manual generator. */
scrubOptionValue = x:
if isDerivation x then
{ type = "derivation"; drvPath = x.name; outPath = x.name; name = x.name; }
@@ -178,29 +118,15 @@ rec {
else x;
/* For use in the `example` option attribute. It causes the given
text to be included verbatim in documentation. This is necessary
for example values that are not simple values, e.g., functions.
*/
/* For use in the example option attribute. It causes the given
text to be included verbatim in documentation. This is necessary
for example values that are not simple values, e.g.,
functions. */
literalExample = text: { _type = "literalExample"; inherit text; };
# Helper functions.
/* Convert an option, described as a list of the option parts in to a
safe, human readable version.
Example:
(showOption ["foo" "bar" "baz"]) == "foo.bar.baz"
(showOption ["foo" "bar.baz" "tux"]) == "foo.\"bar.baz\".tux"
*/
showOption = parts: let
escapeOptionPart = part:
let
escaped = lib.strings.escapeNixString part;
in if escaped == "\"${part}\""
then part
else escaped;
in (concatStringsSep ".") (map escapeOptionPart parts);
/* Helper functions. */
showOption = concatStringsSep ".";
showFiles = files: concatStringsSep " and " (map (f: "`${f}'") files);
unknownModule = "<unknown-file>";

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