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Updated documentation
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@ -2,92 +2,83 @@
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## Goals
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* To provide Nix repositories with an easy and standard way to
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reference other Nix repositories.
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* Standard and easy way for Nix repos to reference other Nix repos as
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dependencies
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* To allow such references to be queried and updated automatically.
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* Discoverability: Be able to query and update these references to Nix repos
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automatically
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* To provide a replacement for `nix-channel`, `NIX_PATH` and Hydra
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jobset definitions.
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* To provide a replacement for `nix-channel`, `NIX_PATH` and Hydra jobset
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definitions
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* To enable reproducible, hermetic evaluation of packages and NixOS
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configurations.
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* Reproducibility: Evaluate packages and NixOS configurations hermetic by
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default
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Things that we probably won't do in the initial iteration:
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Upcoming but not yet implemented:
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* Sophisticated flake versioning, such as the ability to specify
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version ranges on dependencies.
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* Sophisticated flake versioning, such as the ability to specify version ranges
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on dependencies.
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|
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* A way to specify the types of values provided by a flake. For the
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most part, flakes can provide arbitrary Nix values, but there will
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be some standard attribute names (e.g. `packages` must be a set of
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installable derivations).
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* A way to specify the types of values provided by a flake. For the most part,
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flakes can provide arbitrary Nix values, but there will be some standard
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attribute names (e.g. `packages` must be a set of installable derivations).
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## Overview
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* A flake is (usually) a Git repository that contains a file named
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`flake.nix` at top-level.
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* A flake is (usually) a Git repository that contains a file named `flake.nix`
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at top-level
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* Flakes *provide* an attribute set of values, such as packages,
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Nixpkgs overlays, NixOS modules, library functions, Hydra jobs,
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`nix-shell` definitions, etc.
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* A flake *provides* an attribute set of values, such as packages, Nixpkgs
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overlays, NixOS modules, library functions, Hydra jobs, `nix-shell`
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definitions, etc.
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|
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* Flakes can *depend* on other flakes.
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* Flakes can *depend* on other flakes or other repositories which aren't flakes
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|
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* Flakes are referred to using a *flake reference*, which is either a
|
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URL specifying its repository's location
|
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(e.g. `github:NixOS/nixpkgs/release-18.09`) or an identifier
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(e.g. `nixpkgs`) looked up in a *lock file* or *flake
|
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registry*. They can also specify revisions,
|
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e.g. `github:NixOS/nixpkgs/98a2a5b5370c1e2092d09cb38b9dcff6d98a109f`.
|
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* Flakes are referred to using a *flake reference*, which is either a URL
|
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specifying its repository's location or an identifier looked up in a *lock
|
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file* or *flake registry*.
|
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|
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* The *flake registry* is a centrally maintained mapping (on
|
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`nixos.org`) from flake identifiers to flake locations
|
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(e.g. `nixpkgs -> github:NixOS/nixpkgs/release-18.09`).
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* A *flake registry* is a mapping from flake identifiers to flake locations
|
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(e.g. `nixpkgs -> github:NixOS/nixpkgs/release-18.09`). There is a centrally
|
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maintained flake registry on `nixos.org`.
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|
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* A flake can contain a *lock file* (`flake.lock`) used when resolving
|
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the dependencies in `flake.nix`. It maps flake references to
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references containing revisions (e.g. `nixpkgs ->
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* A flake can contain a *lock file* (`flake.lock`) used when resolving the
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dependencies in `flake.nix`. It maps mutable flake references
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(e.g. `github:NixOS/nixpkgs/release-18.09`) to references containing revisions
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(e.g. `nixpkgs ->
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github:NixOS/nixpkgs/98a2a5b5370c1e2092d09cb38b9dcff6d98a109f`).
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|
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* The `nix` command uses the flake registry as its default
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installation source. For example, `nix build nixpkgs.hello` builds the
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`hello` package provided by the `nixpkgs` flake listed in the
|
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registry. `nix` will automatically download/upload the registry and
|
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flakes as needed.
|
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* The `nix` command uses the flake registry as its default installation source.
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For example, `nix build nixpkgs.hello` builds the `hello` package provided by
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the `nixpkgs` flake listed in the registry. `nix` will automatically
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download/upload the registry and flakes as needed.
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|
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* `nix build` without arguments will build the flake in the current
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directory (or some parent).
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|
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* The command `nix flake update` generates/updates `flake.lock` from
|
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`flake.nix`. This should probably also be done automatically when
|
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building from a local flake.
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* `nix flake update` generates `flake.lock` from `flake.nix`, ignoring the old
|
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lockfile.
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|
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* `nixos-rebuild` will build a configuration from a (locked)
|
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flake. Evaluation will be done in pure mode to ensure there are no
|
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unaccounted inputs. Thus the NixOS configuration can be reproduced
|
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unambiguously from the top-level flake.
|
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* `nixos-rebuild` will build a configuration from a (locked) flake. Evaluation
|
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is done in pure mode to ensure there are no unaccounted inputs. Thus the
|
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NixOS configuration can be reproduced unambiguously from the top-level flake.
|
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|
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* Nix code can query flake metadata such as `commitHash` (the Git
|
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revision) or `date` (the date of the last commit). This is useful
|
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for NixOS to compute the NixOS version string (which will be the
|
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revision of the top-level configuration flake, uniquely identifying
|
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the configuration).
|
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* Nix code can query flake metadata such as `commitHash` (the Git revision) or
|
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`epoch` (the date of the last commit). This is useful for NixOS to compute
|
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the NixOS version string (which will be the revision of the top-level
|
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configuration flake, uniquely identifying the configuration).
|
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|
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* Hydra jobset configurations will consist of a single flake
|
||||
reference. Thus we can get rid of jobset inputs; any other needed
|
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repositories can be fetched by the top-level flake. The top-level
|
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flake can be locked or unlocked; if some dependencies are unlocked,
|
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then Nix will fetch the latest revision for each.
|
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* Hydra jobset configurations will consist of a single flake reference. Thus we
|
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can get rid of jobset inputs; any other needed repositories can be fetched by
|
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the top-level flake. The top-level flake can be locked or unlocked; if some
|
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dependencies are unlocked, then Nix will fetch the latest revision for each.
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|
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|
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## Example flake
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A flake is a Git repository that contains a file named
|
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`flake.nix`. For example, here is the `flake.nix` for `dwarffs`, a
|
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small repository that provides a single package and a single NixOS
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module.
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Let us look at an example of a `flake.nix` file, here for `dwarffs`, a small
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repository that provides a single package and a single NixOS module.
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```nix
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{
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@ -101,23 +92,26 @@ module.
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# Some other metadata.
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description = "A filesystem that fetches DWARF debug info from the Internet on demand";
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# A list of flake references denoting the flakes that this flake
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# depends on. Nix will resolve and fetch these flakes and pass them
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# as a function argument to `outputs` below.
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# The flake dependencies. Nix will resolve and fetch these flakes and pass
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# them as a function argument to `outputs` below.
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#
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# `flake:nixpkgs` denotes a flake named `nixpkgs` which is looked up
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# "nixpkgs" denotes a flake named `nixpkgs` which is looked up
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# in the flake registry, or in `flake.lock` inside this flake, if it
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# exists.
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inputs = [ flake:nixpkgs ];
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|
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# An attribute set listing dependencies which aren't flakes, also to be passed as
|
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# a function argument to `provides`.
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nonFlakeRequires = {};
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# The stuff provided by this flake. Flakes can provide whatever they
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# want (convention over configuration), but some attributes have
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# special meaning to tools / other flakes: for example, `packages`
|
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# special meaning to tools / other flakes. For example, `packages`
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# is used by the `nix` CLI to search for packages, and
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# `nixosModules` is used by NixOS to automatically pull in the
|
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# modules provided by a flake.
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#
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# `outputs` takes a single argument named `deps` that contains
|
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# `outputs` takes a single argument (`deps`) that contains
|
||||
# the resolved set of flakes. (See below.)
|
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outputs = deps: {
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@ -153,7 +147,11 @@ module.
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nixosModules.dwarffs = import ./module.nix deps;
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# Provide a single Hydra job (`hydraJobs.dwarffs`).
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hydraJobs = deps.this.packages;
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hydraJobs.build.x86_64-linux = packages.dwarffs;
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# A bunch of things which can be checked (through `nix flake check`) to
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# make sure the flake is well-defined.
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checks.build = packages.dwarffs;
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};
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}
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```
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outputs = deps:
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let pkgs = import ./. {}; in
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let pkgs = import ./. { system = "x86_64-linux"; }; in
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{
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lib = import ./lib;
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lib = (import ./lib) // {
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nixosSystem = import ./nixos/lib/eval-config.nix;
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};
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builders = {
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inherit (pkgs) stdenv fetchurl;
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@ -180,145 +181,124 @@ Similarly, a minimal `flake.nix` for Nixpkgs:
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packages = {
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inherit (pkgs) hello nix fuse nlohmann_json boost;
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};
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legacyPkgs = pkgs;
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};
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}
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```
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Note that `packages` is an unpolluted set of packages: non-package
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values like `lib` or `fetchurl` are not part of it.
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Note that `packages` is an unpolluted set of packages: non-package values like
|
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`lib` or `fetchurl` are not part of it.
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## Flake registries
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## Flake identifiers
|
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A flake has an identifier (e.g. `nixpkgs` or `dwarffs`).
|
||||
Note: If a flake registry contains an entry `nixpkgs -> github:NixOS/nixpkgs`,
|
||||
then `nixpkgs/release-18.09` will match to become
|
||||
`github:NixOS/nixpkgs/release-18.09`. This is referred to as "fuzzymatching".
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
## Flake references
|
||||
|
||||
Flake references are a URI-like syntax to specify the physical
|
||||
location of a flake (e.g. a Git repository) or to denote a lookup in
|
||||
the flake registry or lock file.
|
||||
Flake references are a URI-like syntax to specify the physical location of a
|
||||
flake (e.g. a Git repository) or to denote a lookup in the flake registry or
|
||||
lock file. There are four options for the syntax:
|
||||
|
||||
* `(flake:)?<flake-id>(/rev-or-ref(/rev)?)?`
|
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* Flake aliases
|
||||
A flake alias is a name which requires a lookup in a flake
|
||||
registry or lock file.
|
||||
|
||||
Look up a flake by ID in the flake lock file or in the flake
|
||||
registry. These must specify an actual location for the flake using
|
||||
the formats listed below. Note that in pure evaluation mode, the
|
||||
flake registry is empty.
|
||||
Example: "nixpkgs"
|
||||
|
||||
Optionally, the `rev` or `ref` from the dereferenced flake can be
|
||||
overriden. For example,
|
||||
* GitHub repositories
|
||||
A repository which is stored on GitHub can easily be fetched using this type.
|
||||
Note:
|
||||
* Only the code in this particular commit is downloaded, not the entire repo
|
||||
* By default, the commit to download is the last commit on the `master` branch.
|
||||
See later for how to change this.
|
||||
|
||||
> nixpkgs/19.09
|
||||
Example: `github:NixOS/nixpkgs`
|
||||
|
||||
uses the `19.09` branch of the `nixpkgs` flake's GitHub repository,
|
||||
while
|
||||
|
||||
> nixpkgs/98a2a5b5370c1e2092d09cb38b9dcff6d98a109f
|
||||
|
||||
uses the specified revision. For Git (rather than GitHub)
|
||||
repositories, both the rev and ref must be given, e.g.
|
||||
|
||||
> nixpkgs/19.09/98a2a5b5370c1e2092d09cb38b9dcff6d98a109f
|
||||
|
||||
* `github:<owner>/<repo>(/<rev-or-ref>)?`
|
||||
|
||||
A repository on GitHub. These differ from Git references in that
|
||||
they're downloaded in a efficient way (via the tarball mechanism)
|
||||
and that they support downloading a specific revision without
|
||||
specifying a branch. `rev-or-ref` is either a commit hash (`rev`)
|
||||
or a branch or tag name (`ref`). The default is `master` if none is
|
||||
specified. Note that in pure evaluation mode, a commit hash must be
|
||||
used.
|
||||
|
||||
Flakes fetched in this manner expose `rev` and `date` attributes,
|
||||
but not `revCount`.
|
||||
|
||||
Examples:
|
||||
|
||||
> github:edolstra/dwarffs
|
||||
|
||||
> github:edolstra/dwarffs/unstable
|
||||
|
||||
> github:edolstra/dwarffs/41c0c1bf292ea3ac3858ff393b49ca1123dbd553
|
||||
|
||||
* > https://<server>/<path>.git(\?attr(&attr)*)?
|
||||
|
||||
> ssh://<server>/<path>.git(\?attr(&attr)*)?
|
||||
|
||||
> git://<server>/<path>.git(\?attr(&attr)*)?
|
||||
|
||||
> file:///<path>(\?attr(&attr)*)?
|
||||
|
||||
where `attr` is one of `rev=<rev>` or `ref=<ref>`.
|
||||
|
||||
A Git repository fetched through https. Note that the path must end
|
||||
in `.git`. The default for `ref` is `master`.
|
||||
|
||||
Examples:
|
||||
|
||||
> https://example.org/my/repo.git
|
||||
> https://example.org/my/repo.git?ref=release-1.2.3
|
||||
> https://example.org/my/repo.git?rev=e72daba8250068216d79d2aeef40d4d95aff6666
|
||||
|
||||
* > /path.git(\?attr(&attr)*)?
|
||||
|
||||
Like `file://path.git`, but if no `ref` or `rev` is specified, the
|
||||
(possibly dirty) working tree will be used. Using a working tree is
|
||||
not allowed in pure evaluation mode.
|
||||
* `ssh/https/git/file`
|
||||
These are generic `FlakeRef`s for downloadding git repositories or tarballs.
|
||||
|
||||
Examples:
|
||||
- https://example.org/my/repo.git
|
||||
- ssh://git@github.com:NixOS/nix.git
|
||||
- git://github.com/edolstra/dwarffs.git
|
||||
- file:///home/my-user/some-repo/some-repo.git
|
||||
- https://releases.nixos.org/nixos/unstable/nixos-19.03pre167858.f2a1a4e93be/nixexprs.tar.xz
|
||||
- file:///<path>.tar.xz
|
||||
|
||||
> /path/to/my/repo
|
||||
* Local, dirty paths
|
||||
This `FlakeRef` is the equivalent of `file://<path>` used for dirty paths.
|
||||
|
||||
> /path/to/my/repo?ref=develop
|
||||
Example: /path/to/my/repo
|
||||
|
||||
> /path/to/my/repo?rev=e72daba8250068216d79d2aeef40d4d95aff6666
|
||||
|
||||
* > https://<server>/<path>.tar.xz(?hash=<sri-hash>)
|
||||
|
||||
> file:///<path>.tar.xz(?hash=<sri-hash>)
|
||||
|
||||
A flake distributed as a tarball. In pure evaluation mode, an SRI
|
||||
hash is mandatory. It exposes a `date` attribute, being the newest
|
||||
file inside the tarball.
|
||||
|
||||
Example:
|
||||
|
||||
> https://releases.nixos.org/nixos/unstable/nixos-19.03pre167858.f2a1a4e93be/nixexprs.tar.xz
|
||||
|
||||
> https://releases.nixos.org/nixos/unstable/nixos-19.03pre167858.f2a1a4e93be/nixexprs.tar.xz?hash=sha256-56bbc099995ea8581ead78f22832fee7dbcb0a0b6319293d8c2d0aef5379397c
|
||||
|
||||
Note: currently, there can be only one flake per Git repository, and
|
||||
it must be at top-level. In the future, we may want to add a field
|
||||
(e.g. `dir=<dir>`) to specify a subdirectory inside the repository.
|
||||
Notes:
|
||||
- Each FlakeRef (except for the Path option) allows for a Git revision (i.e.
|
||||
commit hash) and/or referenceo(i.e. git branch name) to be added. For
|
||||
tarbals, an SRI hash needs to be added.
|
||||
Examples:
|
||||
* `"nixpkgs/release-18.09"`
|
||||
* `github:NixOS/nixpkgs/1e9e709953e315ab004951248b186ac8e2306451`
|
||||
* `git://github.com/edolstra/dwarffs.git?ref=flake&rev=2efca4bc9da70fb001b26c3dc858c6397d3c4817`
|
||||
* file:///<path>.tar.xz(?hash=<sri-hash>)
|
||||
- In full pure mode, no mutable `FlakeRef`s can be used
|
||||
* No aliases, because they need to be looked up
|
||||
* `github` requires a specified `rev`
|
||||
* `ssh/https/git/file` require a specified `ref` _and_ `rev`
|
||||
* `path` is always mutable
|
||||
- Flakes don't need to be top-level, but can also reside in a subdirectory. This is shown by adding `dir=<subdir>` to the `FlakeRef`.
|
||||
Example: `./foo?dir=bar`
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
## Flake lock files
|
||||
|
||||
This is a JSON file named `flake.lock` that maps flake identifiers
|
||||
used in the corresponding `flake.nix` to "immutable" flake references;
|
||||
that is, flake references that contain a revision (for Git
|
||||
repositories) or a content hash (for tarballs).
|
||||
A lockfile is a JSON file named `flake.lock` which contains a forrest of
|
||||
entries mapping `FlakeRef`s to the immutable `FlakeRef` they were resolved to.
|
||||
|
||||
Example:
|
||||
|
||||
```json
|
||||
{
|
||||
"nixpkgs": "github:NixOS/nixpkgs/41c0c1bf292ea3ac3858ff393b49ca1123dbd553",
|
||||
"foo": "https://example.org/foo.tar.xz?hash=sha256-56bbc099995ea8581ead78f22832fee7dbcb0a0b6319293d8c2d0aef5379397c"
|
||||
"nixpkgs": {
|
||||
"uri": "github:NixOS/nixpkgs/41c0c1bf292ea3ac3858ff393b49ca1123dbd553",
|
||||
"content-hash": "sha256-vy2UmXQM66aS/Kn2tCtjt9RwxfBvV+nQVb5tJQFwi8E="
|
||||
},
|
||||
"foo": {
|
||||
"uri": "https://example.org/foo.tar.xz?hash=sha256-56bbc099995ea8581ead78f22832fee7dbcb0a0b6319293d8c2d0aef5379397c",
|
||||
"content-hash": "sha256-vy2UmXQM66aS/Kn2tCtjt9RwxfBvV+nQVb5tJQFwi8E="
|
||||
}
|
||||
}
|
||||
```
|
||||
|
||||
Lockfiles are used to help resolve the dependencies of a flake.
|
||||
- `nix build github:<..>` uses the remote lockfile and update it
|
||||
- `nix build /home/user/dwarffs` uses the local lockfile, updates it and writes the result to file
|
||||
- `nix flake update <flakeref>` recreates the lockfile from scratch and writes it to file
|
||||
- `--no-registries` makes the command pure, also when fetching dependencies
|
||||
- `--no-save-lock-file`: Several commands will update the lockfile (e.g. `nix
|
||||
build`). This flag prevents the updated lockfile to be written to file.
|
||||
- `--recreate-lock-file` makes prevents the current lockfile from being used
|
||||
|
||||
## `outputs`
|
||||
|
||||
The flake attribute `outputs` is a function that takes an argument
|
||||
named `deps` and returns a (mostly) arbitrary attrset of values. Some
|
||||
of the standard result attributes:
|
||||
The function argument `deps` is an attrset containing all dependencies listed
|
||||
in `requires` and `nonFlakeRequires` as well as `path` (for the flake's source
|
||||
code) and an attribute `meta` with:
|
||||
- `description`
|
||||
- `commitHash` (not for tarball flakes): The Git commit hash.
|
||||
- `date`: The timestamp of the most recent commit (for Git repos), or of the
|
||||
most recently modified file (for tarballs)
|
||||
- `revCount` (for Git flakes, but not GitHub flakes): The number of ancestors
|
||||
of the revision. Useful for generating version strings.
|
||||
|
||||
* `packages`: A set of installable derivations used by the `nix`
|
||||
command. That is, commands such as `nix install` ignore all other
|
||||
flake attributes.
|
||||
The flake attribute `outputs` is a function that takes an argument named `deps`
|
||||
and returns an attribute set. Some of the members of this set have protected
|
||||
names:
|
||||
|
||||
* `packages`: A set of installable derivations used by the `nix` command. That
|
||||
is, commands such as `nix install` ignore all other flake attributes. It
|
||||
cannot be a nested set.
|
||||
|
||||
* `hydraJobs`: Used by Hydra.
|
||||
|
||||
|
@ -329,213 +309,155 @@ of the standard result attributes:
|
|||
we need to avoid a situation where `nixos-rebuild` needs to fetch
|
||||
its own `nixpkgs` just to do `evalModules`.)
|
||||
|
||||
* `devShell`: A specification of a development environment in some TBD
|
||||
format.
|
||||
* `devShell`: A derivation to create a development environment
|
||||
|
||||
The function argument `flakes` is an attrset that contains an
|
||||
attribute for each dependency specified in `inputs`. (Should it
|
||||
contain transitive dependencies? Probably not.) Each attribute is an
|
||||
attrset containing the `outputs` of the dependency, in addition to
|
||||
the following attributes:
|
||||
|
||||
* `path`: The path to the flake's source code. Useful when you want to
|
||||
use non-Nix artifacts from the flake, or if you want to *store* the
|
||||
source code of the dependency in a derivation. (For example, we
|
||||
could store the sources of all flake dependencies in a NixOS system
|
||||
configuration, as a generalization of
|
||||
`system.copySystemConfiguration`.)
|
||||
|
||||
* `meta`: An attrset containing the following:
|
||||
|
||||
* `description`
|
||||
|
||||
* `commitHash` (or `rev`?) (not for tarball flakes): The Git commit
|
||||
hash.
|
||||
|
||||
* `date`: The timestamp of the most recent commit (for Git
|
||||
repositories), or the timestamp of the most recently modified file
|
||||
(for tarballs).
|
||||
|
||||
* `revCount` (for Git flakes, but not GitHub flakes): The number of
|
||||
ancestors of the revision. Useful for generating version strings.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
## Non-flake dependencies
|
||||
|
||||
It may be useful to pull in repositories that are not flakes
|
||||
(i.e. don't contain a `flake.nix`). This could be done in two ways:
|
||||
|
||||
* Allow flakes not to have a `flake.nix` file, in which case it's a
|
||||
flake with no inputs and no outputs. The downside of this
|
||||
approach is that we can't detect accidental use of a non-flake
|
||||
repository. (Also, we need to conjure up an identifier somehow.)
|
||||
|
||||
* Add a flake attribute to specifiy non-flake dependencies, e.g.
|
||||
|
||||
> nonFlakeInputs.foobar = github:foo/bar;
|
||||
* `self`: The result of the flake's output which is passed to itself
|
||||
Example: `self.outputs.foo` works.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
## Flake registry
|
||||
|
||||
The flake registry maps flake IDs to flake references (where the
|
||||
latter cannot be another indirection, i.e. it must not be a
|
||||
`flake:<flake-id>` reference).
|
||||
|
||||
The default registry is kept at
|
||||
`https://nixos.org/flake-registry.json`. It looks like this:
|
||||
A flake registry is a JSON file mapping flake references to flake references.
|
||||
The default/global registry is kept at
|
||||
`https://github.com/NixOS/flake-registry/blob/master/flake-registry.json` and
|
||||
looks like this:
|
||||
|
||||
```json
|
||||
{
|
||||
"version": 1,
|
||||
"flakes": {
|
||||
"dwarffs": {
|
||||
"uri": "github:edolstra/dwarffs/flake"
|
||||
},
|
||||
"nix": {
|
||||
"uri": "github:NixOS/nix/flakes"
|
||||
},
|
||||
"nixpkgs": {
|
||||
"uri": "github:NixOS/nixpkgs/release-18.09"
|
||||
"uri": "github:edolstra/nixpkgs/release-19.03"
|
||||
},
|
||||
"hydra": {
|
||||
"uri": "github:NixOS/hydra/flake"
|
||||
},
|
||||
"patchelf": {
|
||||
"uri": "github:NixOS/patchelf"
|
||||
}
|
||||
}
|
||||
},
|
||||
"version": 1
|
||||
}
|
||||
```
|
||||
|
||||
Nix automatically (re)downloads the registry. The downloaded file is a
|
||||
GC root so the registry remains available if nixos.org is unreachable.
|
||||
TBD: when to redownload?
|
||||
Nix automatically (re)downloads this file whenever you have network access. The
|
||||
downloaded file is a GC root so the registry remains available if nixos.org is
|
||||
unreachable.
|
||||
|
||||
In addition to a global registry, there is also a user registry stored in
|
||||
`~/.config/nix/registry.json`.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
## Nix UI
|
||||
|
||||
Commands for registry / user flake configuration:
|
||||
There is a list of new commands added to the `nix` CLI:
|
||||
|
||||
* `nix flake list`: Show all flakes in the registry.
|
||||
* `nix flake list`: Show all flakes in the registry
|
||||
|
||||
* `nix flake add <flake-ref>`: Add or override a flake to/in the
|
||||
user's flake configuration (`~/.config/nix/flakes.nix`). For
|
||||
example, `nix flake add nixpkgs/nixos-18.03` overrides the `nixpkgs`
|
||||
flake to use the `nixos-18.03` branch. There should also be a way to
|
||||
add multiple branches/revisions of the same flake by giving them a
|
||||
different ID, e.g. `nix flake add --id nixpkgs-ancient
|
||||
nixpkgs/nixos-16.03`).
|
||||
* `nix flake add <alias FlakeRef> <resolved FlakeRef>`: Add or override a flake
|
||||
to/in the user flake registry.
|
||||
|
||||
* `nix flake remove <flake-id>`: Remove a flake from the user's flake
|
||||
configuration. Any flake with the same ID in the registry remains
|
||||
available.
|
||||
* `nix flake remove <alias FlakeRef>`: Remove a FlakeRef from the user flake
|
||||
registry.
|
||||
|
||||
* `nix flake lock <flake-id>`: Lock a flake. For example, `nix flake
|
||||
lock nixpkgs` pins `nixpkgs` to the current revision.
|
||||
* `nix flake pin <alias FlakeRef>`: Look up to which immutable FlakeRef the
|
||||
alias FlakeRef maps to currently, and store that map in the user registry.
|
||||
Example: `nix flake pin github:NixOS/nixpkgs` will create an entry
|
||||
`github:NixOS/nixpkgs ->
|
||||
github:NixOS/nixpkgs/444f22ca892a873f76acd88d5d55bdc24ed08757`.
|
||||
|
||||
Commands for creating/modifying a flake:
|
||||
* `nix flake init`: Create a `flake.nix` in the current directory
|
||||
|
||||
* `nix flake init`: Create a `flake.nix` in the current directory.
|
||||
|
||||
* `nix flake update`: Update the lock file for the `flake.nix` in the
|
||||
current directory. In most cases, this should be done
|
||||
automatically. (E.g. `nix build` should automatically update the
|
||||
lock file is a new dependency is added to `flake.nix`.)
|
||||
* `nix flake update`: Recreate the lock file from scratch, from the `flake.nix`.
|
||||
|
||||
* `nix flake check`: Do some checks on the flake, e.g. check that all
|
||||
`packages` are really packages.
|
||||
|
||||
* `nix flake clone`: Do a Git clone of the flake repository. This is a
|
||||
convenience to easily start hacking on a flake. E.g. `nix flake
|
||||
clone dwarffs` clones the `dwarffs` GitHub repository to `./dwarffs`.
|
||||
|
||||
TODO: maybe the first set of commands should have a different name
|
||||
from the second set.
|
||||
* `nix flake clone`: `git clone` the flake repo
|
||||
|
||||
Flags / configuration options:
|
||||
|
||||
* `--flakes (<flake-id>=<flake-ref>)*`: add/override some flakes.
|
||||
* `--flakes (<alias FlakeRef>=<resolved FlakeRef>)*`: add/override some
|
||||
FlakeRef
|
||||
|
||||
* (In `nix`) `--flake <flake-ref>`: set the specified flake as the
|
||||
installation source. E.g. `nix build --flake ./my-nixpkgs hello`.
|
||||
* `--flake <flake-ref>`: set the specified flake as the installation source
|
||||
E.g. `nix build --flake ./my-nixpkgs hello`.
|
||||
|
||||
The default installation source in `nix` is the `packages` from all
|
||||
flakes in the registry, that is:
|
||||
The default installation source in `nix` is the `packages` from all flakes in
|
||||
the registry, that is:
|
||||
```
|
||||
builtins.mapAttrs (flakeName: flakeInfo:
|
||||
(getFlake flakeInfo.uri).${flakeName}.outputs.packages or {})
|
||||
builtins.flakeRegistry
|
||||
```
|
||||
(where `builtins.flakeRegistry` is the global registry with user
|
||||
overrides applied, and `builtins.getFlake` downloads a flake and
|
||||
resolves its dependencies.)
|
||||
|
||||
It may be nice to extend the default installation source with the
|
||||
`packages` from the flake in the current directory, so that
|
||||
|
||||
> nix build hello
|
||||
|
||||
does something similar to the old
|
||||
|
||||
> nix-build -A hello
|
||||
|
||||
Specifically, it builds `packages.hello` from the flake in the current
|
||||
directory. Of course, this creates some ambiguity if there is a flake
|
||||
in the registry named `hello`.
|
||||
|
||||
Maybe the command
|
||||
|
||||
> nix dev-shell
|
||||
|
||||
should do something like use `outputs.devShell` to initialize the
|
||||
shell, but probably we should ditch `nix shell` / `nix-shell` for
|
||||
direnv.
|
||||
where `builtins.flakeRegistry` is the global registry with user overrides
|
||||
applied, and `builtins.getFlake` downloads a flake and resolves its
|
||||
dependencies.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
## Pure evaluation and caching
|
||||
|
||||
Flake evaluation should be done in pure mode. Thus:
|
||||
Flake evaluation is done in pure mode. Thus:
|
||||
|
||||
* Flakes cannot do `NIX_PATH` lookups via the `<...>` syntax.
|
||||
* Flakes cannot use `NIX_PATH` via the `<...>` syntax.
|
||||
|
||||
* They can't read random stuff from non-flake directories, such as
|
||||
* Flakes cannot read random stuff from non-flake directories, such as
|
||||
`~/.nix/config.nix` or overlays.
|
||||
|
||||
This enables aggressive caching or precomputation of Nixpkgs package
|
||||
sets. For example, for a particular Nixpkgs flake closure (as
|
||||
identified by, say, a hash of the fully-qualified flake references
|
||||
after dependency resolution) and system type, an attribute like
|
||||
`packages.hello` should always evaluate to the same derivation. So we
|
||||
can:
|
||||
This enables aggressive caching or precomputation of Nixpkgs package sets. For
|
||||
example, for a particular Nixpkgs flake closure (as identified by, say, a hash
|
||||
of the fully-qualified flake references after dependency resolution) and system
|
||||
type, an attribute like `packages.hello` should always evaluate to the same
|
||||
derivation. So we can:
|
||||
|
||||
* Keep a local evaluation cache (say `~/.cache/nix/eval.sqlite`)
|
||||
* Keep a local evaluation cache (say `~/.cache/nix/eval-cache-v1.sqlite`)
|
||||
mapping `(<flake-closure-hash, <attribute>) -> (<drv-name>,
|
||||
<drv-output-paths>, <whatever other info we want to cache>)`.
|
||||
|
||||
* Download a precomputed cache
|
||||
(e.g. `https://releases.nixos.org/eval/<flake-closure-hash>.sqlite`). So
|
||||
a command like `nix search` could avoid evaluating Nixpkgs entirely.
|
||||
* Download a precomputed cache, e.g.
|
||||
`https://releases.nixos.org/eval/<flake-closure-hash>.sqlite`. So a command
|
||||
like `nix search` could avoid evaluating Nixpkgs entirely.
|
||||
|
||||
Of course, this doesn't allow overlays. With pure evaluation, the only
|
||||
way to have these is to define a top-level flake that depends on the
|
||||
Nixpkgs flake and somehow passes in a set of overlays.
|
||||
|
||||
TODO: in pure mode we have to pass the system type explicitly!
|
||||
Of course, this doesn't allow overlays. With pure evaluation, the only way to
|
||||
have these is to define a top-level flake that depends on the Nixpkgs flake and
|
||||
somehow passes in a set of overlays.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
## Hydra jobset dependencies
|
||||
|
||||
Hydra can use the flake dependency resolution mechanism to fetch
|
||||
dependencies. This allows us to get rid of jobset configuration in the
|
||||
web interface: a jobset only requires a flake reference. That is, *a
|
||||
jobset is a flake*. Hydra then just builds the `hydraJobs` attrset
|
||||
`provide`d by the flake. (It omitted, maybe it can build `packages`.)
|
||||
Hydra can use the flake dependency resolution mechanism to fetch dependencies.
|
||||
This allows us to get rid of jobset configuration in the web interface: a
|
||||
jobset only requires a flake reference. That is, a jobset *is* a flake. Hydra
|
||||
then just builds the `hydraJobs` attrset
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
## NixOS system configuration
|
||||
|
||||
NixOS currently contains a lot of modules that really should be moved
|
||||
into their own repositories. For example, it contains a Hydra module
|
||||
that duplicates the one in the Hydra repository. Also, we want
|
||||
reproducible evaluation for NixOS system configurations. So NixOS
|
||||
system configurations should be stored as flakes in (local) Git
|
||||
repositories.
|
||||
NixOS currently contains a lot of modules that really should be moved into
|
||||
their own repositories. For example, it contains a Hydra module that duplicates
|
||||
the one in the Hydra repository. Also, we want reproducible evaluation for
|
||||
NixOS system configurations. So NixOS system configurations should be stored as
|
||||
flakes in (local) Git repositories.
|
||||
|
||||
`my-system/flake.nix`:
|
||||
|
||||
```nix
|
||||
{
|
||||
name = "my-system";
|
||||
|
||||
epoch = 201906;
|
||||
|
||||
inputs =
|
||||
[ "nixpkgs/nixos-18.09"
|
||||
"dwarffs"
|
||||
"hydra"
|
||||
... lots of other module flakes ...
|
||||
];
|
||||
|
||||
outputs = flakes: {
|
||||
nixosSystems.default =
|
||||
flakes.nixpkgs.lib.evalModules {
|
||||
|
@ -549,13 +471,6 @@ repositories.
|
|||
];
|
||||
};
|
||||
};
|
||||
|
||||
inputs =
|
||||
[ "nixpkgs/nixos-18.09"
|
||||
"dwarffs"
|
||||
"hydra"
|
||||
... lots of other module flakes ...
|
||||
];
|
||||
}
|
||||
```
|
||||
|
||||
|
@ -563,5 +478,5 @@ We can then build the system:
|
|||
```
|
||||
nixos-rebuild switch --flake ~/my-system
|
||||
```
|
||||
This performs dependency resolution starting at `~/my-system/flake.nix`
|
||||
and builds the `system` attribute in `nixosSystems.default`.
|
||||
This performs dependency resolution starting at `~/my-system/flake.nix` and
|
||||
builds the `system` attribute in `nixosSystems.default`.
|
||||
|
|
|
@ -128,14 +128,6 @@ static void printNonFlakeInfo(const NonFlake & nonFlake)
|
|||
printSourceInfo(nonFlake.sourceInfo);
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
static nlohmann::json nonFlakeToJson(const NonFlake & nonFlake)
|
||||
{
|
||||
nlohmann::json j;
|
||||
j["id"] = nonFlake.alias;
|
||||
sourceInfoToJson(nonFlake.sourceInfo, j);
|
||||
return j;
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
// FIXME: merge info CmdFlakeInfo?
|
||||
struct CmdFlakeDeps : FlakeCommand
|
||||
{
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in a new issue