Commit graph

108 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Eelco Dolstra
927034e7ac value.hh: Shut up warning about useless const qualifier 2024-05-20 10:25:04 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
ba5929c7be Merge InputAccessor into SourceAccessor
After the removal of the InputAccessor::fetchToStore() method, the
only remaining functionality in InputAccessor was `fingerprint` and
`getLastModified()`, and there is no reason to keep those in a
separate class.
2024-05-03 12:14:01 +02:00
José Luis Lafuente
9d7dee4a8f
nix::Value: Use more descriptive names 2024-04-21 22:44:13 +02:00
José Luis Lafuente
5cc4af5231
Add isInitialized to nix::Value
Add a method to check if a value has been initialized. This helps avoid
segfaults when calling `type()`.
Useful in the context of the new C API.

Closes #10524
2024-04-21 22:44:13 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
6a3ecdaa39 Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/master' into finish-value 2024-04-17 16:02:44 +02:00
Yorick van Pelt
e76652a5d3
libexpr: add C bindings 2024-03-28 10:39:04 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
c82623a6cc Remove value clearing since it no longer has an effect 2024-03-25 19:21:25 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
8c0590fa32 Never update values after setting the type
Thunks are now overwritten by a helper function
`Value::finishValue(newType, payload)` (where `payload` is the
original anonymous union inside `Value`). This helps to ensure we
never update a value elsewhere, since that would be incompatible with
parallel evaluation (i.e. after a value has transitioned from being a
thunk to being a non-thunk, it should be immutable).

There were two places where this happened: `Value::mkString()` and
`ExprAttrs::eval()`.

This PR also adds a bunch of accessor functions for value contents,
like `Value::integer()` to access the integer field in the union.
2024-03-25 19:21:25 +01:00
Robert Hensing
8c6e0df45f value.hh: Fix warning about {struct/class} Value 2024-03-20 23:25:28 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
3e6730ee62 Mark Value pointers in Value::elems as const
This catches modification of finalized values (e.g. in prim_sort).
2024-03-15 18:26:37 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
fecff520d7 Add a ListBuilder helper for constructing list values
Previously, `state.mkList()` would set the type of the value to tList
and allocate the list vector, but it would not initialize the values
in the list. This has two problems:

* If an exception occurs, the list is left in an undefined state.

* More importantly, for multithreaded evaluation, if a value
  transitions from thunk to non-thunk, it should be final (i.e. other
  threads should be able to access the value safely).

To address this, there now is a `ListBuilder` class (analogous to
`BindingsBuilder`) to build the list vector prior to the call to
`Value::mkList()`. Typical usage:

   auto list = state.buildList(size);
   for (auto & v : list)
       v = ... set value ...;
   vRes.mkList(list);
2024-03-15 18:26:37 +01:00
Rebecca Turner
c6a89c1a16
libexpr: Support structured error classes
While preparing PRs like #9753, I've had to change error messages in
dozens of code paths. It would be nice if instead of

    EvalError("expected 'boolean' but found '%1%'", showType(v))

we could write

    TypeError(v, "boolean")

or similar. Then, changing the error message could be a mechanical
refactor with the compiler pointing out places the constructor needs to
be changed, rather than the error-prone process of grepping through the
codebase. Structured errors would also help prevent the "same" error
from having multiple slightly different messages, and could be a first
step towards error codes / an error index.

This PR reworks the exception infrastructure in `libexpr` to
support exception types with different constructor signatures than
`BaseError`. Actually refactoring the exceptions to use structured data
will come in a future PR (this one is big enough already, as it has to
touch every exception in `libexpr`).

The core design is in `eval-error.hh`. Generally, errors like this:

    state.error("'%s' is not a string", getAttrPathStr())
      .debugThrow<TypeError>()

are transformed like this:

    state.error<TypeError>("'%s' is not a string", getAttrPathStr())
      .debugThrow()

The type annotation has moved from `ErrorBuilder::debugThrow` to
`EvalState::error`.
2024-02-01 16:39:38 -08:00
Rebecca Turner
0fa08b4516
Unify and refactor value printing
Previously, there were two mostly-identical value printers -- one in
`libexpr/eval.cc` (which didn't force values) and one in
`libcmd/repl.cc` (which did force values and also printed ANSI color
codes).

This PR unifies both of these printers into `print.cc` and provides a
`PrintOptions` struct for controlling the output, which allows for
toggling whether values are forced, whether repeated values are tracked,
and whether ANSI color codes are displayed.

Additionally, `PrintOptions` allows tuning the maximum number of
attributes, list items, and bytes in a string that will be displayed;
this makes it ideal for contexts where printing too much output (e.g.
all of Nixpkgs) is distracting. (As requested by @roberth in
https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/9554#issuecomment-1845095735)

Please read the tests for example output.

Future work:
- It would be nice to provide this function as a builtin, perhaps
  `builtins.toStringDebug` -- a printing function that never fails would
  be useful when debugging Nix code.
- It would be nice to support customizing `PrintOptions` members on the
  command line, e.g. `--option to-string-max-attrs 1000`.
2024-01-11 16:34:36 -08:00
Rebecca Turner
4feb7d9f71
Combine AbstractPos, PosAdapter, and Pos
Also move `SourcePath` into `libutil`.

These changes allow `error.hh` and `error.cc` to access source path and
position information, which we can use to produce better error messages
(for example, we could consider omitting filenames when two or more
consecutive stack frames originate from the same file).
2024-01-08 10:59:41 -08:00
pennae
2b0e95e7aa use singleton expr to generate black hole errors
this also reduces forceValue code size and removes the need for
hideInDiagnostics. coopting thunk forcing like this has the additional
benefit of clarifying how these errors can happen in the first place.
2023-12-19 19:32:16 +01:00
pennae
78353deb02 encode black holes as tApp values
checking for isBlackhole in the forceValue hot path is rather more
expensive than necessary, and with a little bit of trickery we can move
such handling into the isApp case. small performance benefit, but under
some circumstances we've seen 2% improvement as well.

〉 nix eval --raw --impure --expr 'with import <nixpkgs/nixos> {}; system'

before:

  Time (mean ± σ):      4.429 s ±  0.002 s    [User: 3.929 s, System: 0.500 s]
  Range (min … max):    4.427 s …  4.433 s    10 runs

after:

  Time (mean ± σ):      4.396 s ±  0.002 s    [User: 3.894 s, System: 0.501 s]
  Range (min … max):    4.393 s …  4.399 s    10 runs
2023-12-19 19:32:16 +01:00
Robert Hensing
d4f6b1d38b
Merge pull request #9497 from edolstra/move-access-control
Move restricted/pure-eval access control out of the evaluator and into the accessor
2023-12-08 22:21:50 +01:00
Robert Hensing
fcf09813c6
Merge pull request #6236 from obsidiansystems/store-dir-config
Factor out `StoreDirConfig`
2023-12-01 15:38:14 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
43d9fb6cf1 Remove InputAccessor::root() 2023-11-30 16:44:54 +01:00
Robert Hensing
260c614762 Value: use std::span, change use of const
**`Value` and `const`**

These two deserve some explanation. We'll get to lists later.

Values can normally be thought of as immutable, except they are
are also the vehicle for call by need, which must be implemented
using mutation.

This circumstance makes a `const Value` a rather useless thing:

 - If it's a thunk, you can't evaluate it, except by copying, but
   that would not be call by need.

 - If it's not a thunk, you know the type, so the method that
   acquired it for you should have returned something more specific,
   such as a `const Bindings &` (which actually does make sense
   because that's an immutable span of pointers to mutable `Value`s.

 - If you don't care about the type yet, you might establish the
   convention that `const Value` means `deepSeq`-ed data, but
   this is hardly useful and not actually as safe as you would
   supposedly want to trust it to be - just convention.

**Lists**

`std::span` is a tuple of pointer and size - just what we need.

We don't return them as `const Value`, because considering the
first bullet point we discussed before, we'd have to force all
the list values, which isn't what we want.

So what we end up with is a nice representation of a list in
weak head normal form: the spine is immutable, but the
items may need some evaluation later.
2023-11-17 10:19:03 +01:00
Robert Hensing
7055c65285 Value: extract Value::Lambda 2023-11-17 10:19:03 +01:00
Robert Hensing
6af1d9f7b9 Value: extract Value::FunctionApplicationThunk 2023-11-17 10:19:03 +01:00
Robert Hensing
b55203e874 Value: extract Value::ClosureThunk 2023-11-17 10:19:03 +01:00
Robert Hensing
d8ff5cfe8e Value: extract Value::Path 2023-11-17 10:19:03 +01:00
Robert Hensing
2eb59c34b5 Value: extract Value::StringWithContext 2023-11-17 10:19:03 +01:00
Robert Hensing
0daccb1121 libexpr: Check primop arity earlier 2023-11-16 12:28:32 +01:00
John Ericson
dde1d86338 Restrict some code to StoreDirConfig
- part of eval cache
 - part of derivations
 - derived path
 - store path with outputs
 - serializers
2023-11-04 19:05:36 -04:00
Eelco Dolstra
ea38605d11 Introduce FSInputAccessor and use it
Backported from the lazy-trees branch. Note that this doesn't yet use
the access control features of FSInputAccessor.
2023-10-18 17:37:32 +02:00
Tom Bereknyei
399ef84420 refactor: use string accessors
Create context, string_view, and c_str, accessors throughout in order to
better support improvements to the underlying string representation.
2023-09-27 00:33:01 -04:00
Robert Hensing
7b39a388b3
Merge pull request #8566 from inclyc/nixd/value-print-depth
libexpr: extend `Value::print` to allow limited depth
2023-07-01 20:08:52 +02:00
John Ericson
22b278e011 Automatically document builtin constants
This is done in roughly the same way builtin functions are documented.

Also auto-link experimental features for primops, subsuming PR #8371.

Co-authored-by: Eelco Dolstra <edolstra@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Valentin Gagarin <valentin.gagarin@tweag.io>
2023-06-27 09:37:54 -04:00
Yingchi Long
1400fde144 libexpr: extend Value::print to allow limited depth 2023-06-22 18:28:30 +08:00
Eelco Dolstra
01232358ff Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/master' into source-path 2023-04-24 13:20:36 +02:00
John Ericson
85f0cdc370 Use std::set<StringContextElem> not PathSet for string contexts
Motivation

`PathSet` is not correct because string contexts have other forms
(`Built` and `DrvDeep`) that are not rendered as plain store paths.
Instead of wrongly using `PathSet`, or "stringly typed" using
`StringSet`, use `std::std<StringContextElem>`.

-----

In support of this change, `NixStringContext` is now defined as
`std::std<StringContextElem>` not `std:vector<StringContextElem>`. The
old definition was just used by a `getContext` method which was only
used by the eval cache. It can be deleted altogether since the types are
now unified and the preexisting `copyContext` function already suffices.

Summarizing the previous paragraph:

Old:

  - `value/context.hh`: `NixStringContext = std::vector<StringContextElem>`
  - `value.hh`: `NixStringContext Value::getContext(...)`
  - `value.hh`: `copyContext(...)`

New:

  - `value/context.hh`: `NixStringContext = std::set<StringContextElem>`
  - `value.hh`: `copyContext(...)`
----

The string representation of string context elements no longer contains
the store dir. The diff of `src/libexpr/tests/value/context.cc` should
make clear what the new representation is, so we recommend reviewing
that file first. This was done for two reasons:

Less API churn:

`Value::mkString` and friends did not take a `Store` before. But if
`NixStringContextElem::{parse, to_string}` *do* take a store (as they
did before), then we cannot have the `Value` functions use them (in
order to work with the fully-structured `NixStringContext`) without
adding that argument.

That would have been a lot of churn of threading the store, and this
diff is already large enough, so the easier and less invasive thing to
do was simply make the element `parse` and `to_string` functions not
take the `Store` reference, and the easiest way to do that was to simply
drop the store dir.

Space usage:

Dropping the `/nix/store/` (or similar) from the internal representation
will safe space in the heap of the Nix programming being interpreted. If
the heap contains many strings with non-trivial contexts, the saving
could add up to something significant.

----

The eval cache version is bumped.

The eval cache serialization uses `NixStringContextElem::{parse,
to_string}`, and since those functions are changed per the above, that
means the on-disk representation is also changed.

This is simply done by changing the name of the used for the eval cache
from `eval-cache-v4` to eval-cache-v5`.

----

To avoid some duplication `EvalCache::mkPathString` is added to abstract
over the simple case of turning a store path to a string with just that
string in the context.

Context

This PR picks up where #7543 left off. That one introduced the fully
structured `NixStringContextElem` data type, but kept `PathSet context`
as an awkward middle ground between internal `char[][]` interpreter heap
string contexts and `NixStringContext` fully parsed string contexts.

The infelicity of `PathSet context` was specifically called out during
Nix team group review, but it was agreeing that fixing it could be left
as future work. This is that future work.

A possible follow-up step would be to get rid of the `char[][]`
evaluator heap representation, too, but it is not yet clear how to do
that. To use `NixStringContextElem` there we would need to get the STL
containers to GC pointers in the GC build, and I am not sure how to do
that.

----

PR #7543 effectively is writing the inverse of a `mkPathString`,
`mkOutputString`, and one more such function for the `DrvDeep` case. I
would like that PR to have property tests ensuring it is actually the
inverse as expected.

This PR sets things up nicely so that reworking that PR to be in that
more elegant and better tested way is possible.

Co-authored-by: Théophane Hufschmitt <7226587+thufschmitt@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-04-21 01:05:49 -04:00
Robert Hensing
cb2615cf47 Merge remote-tracking branch 'upstream/master' into source-path 2023-04-17 11:41:50 +02:00
John Ericson
0746951be1
Finish converting existing comments for internal API docs (#8146)
* Finish converting existing comments for internal API docs

99% of this was just reformatting existing comments. Only two exceptions:

- Expanded upon `BuildResult::status` compat note

- Split up file-level `symbol-table.hh` doc comments to get
  per-definition docs

Also fixed a few whitespace goofs, turning leading tabs to spaces and
removing trailing spaces.

Picking up from #8133

* Fix two things from comments

* Use triple-backtick not indent for `dumpPath`

* Convert GNU-style `\`..'` quotes to markdown style in API docs

This will render correctly.
2023-04-07 13:55:28 +00:00
Eelco Dolstra
94812cca98 Backport SourcePath from the lazy-trees branch
This introduces the SourcePath type from lazy-trees as an abstraction
for accessing files from inputs that may not be materialized in the
real filesystem (e.g. Git repositories). Currently, however, it's just
a wrapper around CanonPath, so it shouldn't change any behaviour. (On
lazy-trees, SourcePath is a <InputAccessor, CanonPath> tuple.)
2023-04-06 13:15:50 +02:00
John Ericson
f4ab297b31 Ensure all headers have #pragma once and are in API docs
`///@file` makes them show up in the internal API dos. A tiny few were
missing `#pragma once`.
2023-03-31 23:19:44 -04:00
Robert Hensing
9b33ef3879 Revert "Merge pull request #6204 from layus/coerce-string"
This reverts commit a75b7ba30f, reversing
changes made to 9af16c5f74.
2023-01-18 01:34:07 +01:00
John Ericson
5576d5e987 Parse string context elements properly
Prior to this change, we had a bunch of ad-hoc string manipulation code
scattered around. This made it hard to figure out what data model for
string contexts is.

Now, we still store string contexts most of the time as encoded strings
--- I was wary of the performance implications of changing that --- but
whenever we parse them we do so only through the
`NixStringContextElem::parse` method, which handles all cases. This
creates a data type that is very similar to `DerivedPath` but:

 - Represents the funky `=<drvpath>` case as properly distinct from the
   others.

 - Only encodes a single output, no wildcards and no set, for the
   "built" case.

(I would like to deprecate `=<path>`, after which we are in spitting
distance of `DerivedPath` and could maybe get away with fewer types, but
that is another topic for another day.)
2023-01-10 13:10:49 -05:00
Eelco Dolstra
6b69652385 Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/master' into coerce-string 2023-01-02 20:53:39 +01:00
Yorick van Pelt
09f00dd4d0
Replace src/libutil/json.cc with nlohmann json generation 2022-11-16 16:50:50 +01:00
Guillaume Maudoux
eb460a9529 WIP: broken merge but need a git checkpoint 2022-09-07 00:34:03 +02:00
Naïm Favier
062e4fcdde
JSON: print paths as strings without copying them to the store
Makes `printValueAsJSON` not copy paths to the store for `nix eval
--json`, `nix-instantiate --eval --json` and `nix-env --json`.

Fixes https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/5612
2022-08-22 15:01:35 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
9acc770ce4
Remove pre-C++11 hackiness 2022-05-26 12:40:01 +02:00
Guillaume Maudoux
e93b59fbc5 Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/master' into coerce-string 2022-04-29 00:12:25 +02:00
Guillaume Maudoux
402ee8ab64 No point in passing string_views by reference 2022-04-28 13:02:39 +02:00
pennae
a385e51a08 rename SymbolIdx -> Symbol, Symbol -> SymbolStr
after #6218 `Symbol` no longer confers a uniqueness invariant on the
string it wraps, it is now possible to create multiple symbols that
compare equal but whose string contents have different addresses. this
guarantee is now only provided by `SymbolIdx`, leaving `Symbol` only as
a string wrapper that knows about the intricacies of how symbols need to
be formatted for output.

this change renames `SymbolIdx` to `Symbol` to restore the previous
semantics of `Symbol` to that name. we also keep the wrapper type and
rename it to `SymbolStr` instead of returning plain strings from lookups
into the symbol table because symbols are formatted for output in many
places. theoretically we do not need `SymbolStr`, only a function that
formats a string for output as a symbol, but having to wrap every symbol
that appears in a message into eg `formatSymbol()` is error-prone and
inconvient.
2022-04-25 15:37:01 +02:00
pennae
8775be3393 store Symbols in a table as well, like positions
this slightly increases the amount of memory used for any given symbol, but this
increase is more than made up for if the symbol is referenced more than once in
the EvalState that holds it. on average every symbol should be referenced at
least twice (once to introduce a binding, once to use it), so we expect no
increase in memory on average.

symbol tables are limited to 2³² entries like position tables, and similar
arguments apply to why overflow is not likely: 2³² symbols would require as many
string instances (at 24 bytes each) and map entries (at 24 bytes or more each,
assuming that the map holds on average at most one item per bucket as the docs
say). a full symbol table would require at least 192GB of memory just for
symbols, which is well out of reach. (an ofborg eval of nixpks today creates
less than a million symbols!)
2022-04-21 21:56:31 +02:00
pennae
6526d1676b replace most Pos objects/ptrs with indexes into a position table
Pos objects are somewhat wasteful as they duplicate the origin file name and
input type for each object. on files that produce more than one Pos when parsed
this a sizeable waste of memory (one pointer per Pos). the same goes for
ptr<Pos> on 64 bit machines: parsing enough source to require 8 bytes to locate
a position would need at least 8GB of input and 64GB of expression memory. it's
not likely that we'll hit that any time soon, so we can use a uint32_t index to
locate positions instead.
2022-04-21 21:46:06 +02:00