# Nix Archive (NAR) format This is the complete specification of the [Nix Archive] format. The Nix Archive format closely follows the abstract specification of a [file system object] tree, because it is designed to serialize exactly that data structure. [Nix Archive]: @docroot@/store/file-system-object/content-address.md#nix-archive [file system object]: @docroot@/store/file-system-object.md The format of this specification is close to [Extended Backus–Naur form](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extended_Backus%E2%80%93Naur_form), with the exception of the `str(..)` function / parameterized rule, which length-prefixes and pads strings. This makes the resulting binary format easier to parse. Regular users do *not* need to know this information. But for those interested in exactly how Nix works, e.g. if they are reimplementing it, this information can be useful. ```ebnf nar = str("nix-archive-1"), nar-obj; nar-obj = str("("), nar-obj-inner, str(")"); nar-obj-inner = str("type"), str("regular") regular | str("type"), str("symlink") symlink | str("type"), str("directory") directory ; regular = [ str("executable"), str("") ], str("contents"), str(contents); symlink = str("target"), str(target); (* side condition: directory entries must be ordered by their names *) directory = str("type"), str("directory") { directory-entry }; directory-entry = str("entry"), str("("), str("name"), str(name), str("node"), nar-obj, str(")"); ``` The `str` function / parameterized rule is defined as follows: - `str(s)` = `int(|s|), pad(s);` - `int(n)` = the 64-bit little endian representation of the number `n` - `pad(s)` = the byte sequence `s`, padded with 0s to a multiple of 8 byte