We then can discard the store dir to recover the conceptual pair that is a store path:
{
digest: "b6gvzjyb2pg0kjfwrjmg1vfhh54ad73z",
name: "firefox-33.1",
}
### Where did the "store directory" come from?
If you notice, the above references a "store directory", but that is *not* part of the definition of a store path.
We can discard it when parsing, but what about when printing?
We need to get a store directory from *somewhere*.
The answer is, the store directory is a property of the store that contains the store path.
The explanation for this is simple enough: a store is notionally mounted as a directory at some location, and the store object's root file system likewise mounted at this path within that directory.
This does, however, mean the string representation of a store path is not derived just from the store path itself, but is in fact "context dependent".
The later is our own creation to evoke a contrast with content addressing.
:::
Content addressing means that the store path digest ultimately derives from referred store object's contents, namely its file system objects and references.
Rather, the store object might come with the store path it expects to be referred to by, and a signature of that path, the contents of the store path, and other metadata.
The signature indicates that someone is vouching for the store object really being the results of a plan with that digest.