nix-super/doc/manual/source/command-ref/nix-env.md
John Ericson eb7d7780b1 Rename doc/manual{src -> source}
This is needed to avoid this
https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/13774 when we go back to
making our subproject directory `src`.
2024-10-14 11:21:24 -04:00

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Name

nix-env - manipulate or query Nix user environments

Synopsis

nix-env operation [options] [arguments…] [--option name value] [--arg name value] [--argstr name value] [{--file | -f} path] [{--profile | -p} path] [--system-filter system] [--dry-run]

Description

The command nix-env is used to manipulate Nix user environments. User environments are sets of software packages available to a user at some point in time. In other words, they are a synthesised view of the programs available in the Nix store. There may be many user environments: different users can have different environments, and individual users can switch between different environments.

nix-env takes exactly one operation flag which indicates the subcommand to be performed. The following operations are available:

These pages can be viewed offline:

  • man nix-env-<operation>.

    Example: man nix-env-install

  • nix-env --help --<operation>

    Example: nix-env --help --install

Package sources

nix-env can obtain packages from multiple sources:

  • An attribute set of derivations from:
    • The default Nix expression (by default)
    • A Nix file, specified via --file
    • A profile, specified via --from-profile
    • A Nix expression that is a function which takes default expression as argument, specified via --from-expression
  • A store path

Selectors

Several operations, such as nix-env --query and nix-env --install, take a list of arguments that specify the packages on which to operate.

Packages are identified based on a name part and a version part of a symbolic derivation name:

  • name: Everything up to but not including the first dash (-) that is not followed by a letter.
  • version: The rest, excluding the separating dash.

Example

nix-env parses the symbolic derivation name apache-httpd-2.0.48 as:

{
  "name": "apache-httpd",
  "version": "2.0.48"
}

Example

nix-env parses the symbolic derivation name firefox.* as:

{
  "name": "firefox.*",
  "version": ""
}

The name parts of the arguments to nix-env are treated as extended regular expressions and matched against the name parts of derivation names in the package source. The match is case-sensitive. The regular expression can optionally be followed by a dash (-) and a version number; if omitted, any version of the package will match. For details on regular expressions, see regex(7).

Example

Common patterns for finding package names with nix-env:

  • firefox

    Matches the package name firefox and any version.

  • firefox-32.0

    Matches the package name firefox and version 32.0.

  • gtk\\+

    Matches the package name gtk+. The + character must be escaped using a backslash (\) to prevent it from being interpreted as a quantifier, and the backslash must be escaped in turn with another backslash to ensure that the shell passes it on.

  • .\*

    Matches any package name. This is the default for most commands.

  • '.*zip.*'

    Matches any package name containing the string zip. Note the dots: '*zip*' does not work, because in a regular expression, the character * is interpreted as a quantifier.

  • '.*(firefox|chromium).*'

    Matches any package name containing the strings firefox or chromium.

Files

nix-env operates on the following files.

{{#include ./files/default-nix-expression.md}}

{{#include ./files/profiles.md}}