Commit graph

29 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Robert Hensing
40052c7613 fetchClosure: Docs and error message improvements
Co-authored-by: Valentin Gagarin <valentin.gagarin@tweag.io>
2023-06-30 18:23:42 +02:00
Robert Hensing
50de11d662 doc: Improve fetchClosure documentation 2023-06-30 18:23:24 +02:00
Robert Hensing
dc79636007 fetchClosure: Refactor: replace enableRewriting
A single variable is nice and self-contained.
2023-06-30 18:22:47 +02:00
Robert Hensing
5bdca46117 fetchClosure: Split into three cases 2023-06-30 18:22:47 +02:00
Robert Hensing
55888633dd makeContentAddressed: Add single path helper 2023-06-30 18:22:47 +02:00
Robert Hensing
8dca95386c fetchClosure: Disallow toPath for inputAddressed = true 2023-06-30 18:22:47 +02:00
Robert Hensing
508aa58e67 fetchClosure: Always check that inputAddressed matches the result 2023-06-30 18:22:47 +02:00
Robert Hensing
ea30f152b7 fetchClosure: Allow input addressed paths in pure mode
When explicitly requested by the caller, as suggested in the meeting
(https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/8090#issuecomment-1531139324)

> @edolstra: { toPath } vs { fromPath } is too implicit

I've opted for the `inputAddressed = true` requirement, because it
we did not agree on renaming the path attributes.

> @roberth: more explicit
> @edolstra: except for the direction; not immediately clear in which direction the rewriting happens

This is in fact the most explicit syntax and a bit redundant, which is
good, because that redundancy lets us deliver an error message that
reminds expression authors that CA provides a better experience to
their users.
2023-06-30 18:22:43 +02:00
Robert Hensing
7e5b6d2c45 fetchClosure: Refactor: rename toCA -> enableRewriting 2023-06-30 18:19:56 +02:00
Robert Hensing
0f6d596df5 fetchClosure: Factor out attribute hint 2023-06-30 18:19:56 +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
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
Guillaume Maudoux
e4726a0c79 Revert "Revert "Merge pull request #6204 from layus/coerce-string""
This reverts commit 9b33ef3879.
2023-01-19 13:23:04 +01:00
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
Guillaume Maudoux
e93b59fbc5 Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/master' into coerce-string 2022-04-29 00:12:25 +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
Eelco Dolstra
589f6f267b fetchClosure: Don't allow URL query parameters
Allowing this is a potential security hole, since it allows the user
to specify parameters like 'local-nar-cache'.
2022-04-06 11:52:51 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
86b05ccd54 Only provide builtin.{getFlake,fetchClosure} is the corresponding experimental feature is enabled
This allows writing fallback code like

  if builtins ? fetchClosure then
    builtins.fetchClose { ... }
  else
    builtins.storePath ...
2022-03-25 14:04:18 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
f902f3c2cb Add experimental feature 'fetch-closure' 2022-03-24 21:33:33 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
e5f7029ba4 nix store make-content-addressed: Support --from / --to 2022-03-24 21:33:33 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
98658ae9d2 Document fetchClosure 2022-03-24 21:33:33 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
28186b7044 Add a test for fetchClosure and 'nix store make-content-addressed' 2022-03-24 21:33:33 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
4120930ac1 fetchClosure: Only allow some "safe" store types 2022-03-24 21:33:33 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
7ffda0af6e fetchClosure: Skip makeContentAddressed() if toPath is already valid 2022-03-24 21:33:33 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
545c2d0d8c fetchClosure: Allow a path to be rewritten to CA on the fly
The advantage is that the resulting closure doesn't need to be signed,
so you don't need to configure any binary cache keys on the client.
2022-03-24 21:33:33 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
7f6fe8ca1d Rename 2022-03-24 21:33:33 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
41659418cf fetchClosure: Require a CA path in pure mode 2022-03-24 21:33:33 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
f4bafc412f Add builtins.fetchClosure
This allows closures to be imported at evaluation time, without
requiring the user to configure substituters. E.g.

  builtins.fetchClosure {
    storePath = /nix/store/f89g6yi63m1ywfxj96whv5sxsm74w5ka-python3.9-sqlparse-0.4.2;
    from = "https://cache.ngi0.nixos.org";
  }
2022-03-24 21:33:33 +01:00