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This is needed to avoid this https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/13774 when we go back to making our subproject directory `src`.
142 lines
5.7 KiB
Markdown
142 lines
5.7 KiB
Markdown
# Complete Store Path Calculation
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This is the complete specification for how [store path]s are calculated.
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The format of this specification is close to [Extended Backus–Naur form](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extended_Backus%E2%80%93Naur_form), but must deviate for a few things such as hash functions which we treat as bidirectional for specification purposes.
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Regular users do *not* need to know this information --- store paths can be treated as black boxes computed from the properties of the store objects they refer to.
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But for those interested in exactly how Nix works, e.g. if they are reimplementing it, this information can be useful.
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[store path](@docroot@/store/store-path.md)
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## Store path proper
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```ebnf
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store-path = store-dir "/" digest "-" name
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```
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where
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- `name` = the name of the store object.
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- `store-dir` = the [store directory](@docroot@/store/store-path.md#store-directory)
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- `digest` = base-32 representation of the first 160 bits of a [SHA-256] hash of `fingerprint`
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This the hash part of the store name
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## Fingerprint
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- ```ebnf
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fingerprint = type ":" sha256 ":" inner-digest ":" store ":" name
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```
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Note that it includes the location of the store as well as the name to make sure that changes to either of those are reflected in the hash
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(e.g. you won't get `/nix/store/<digest>-name1` and `/nix/store/<digest>-name2`, or `/gnu/store/<digest>-name1`, with equal hash parts).
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- `type` = one of:
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- ```ebnf
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| "text" { ":" store-path }
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```
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This is for the
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["Text"](@docroot@/store/store-object/content-address.md#method-text)
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method of content addressing store objects.
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The optional trailing store paths are the references of the store object.
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- ```ebnf
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| "source" { ":" store-path } [ ":self" ]
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```
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This is for the
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["Nix Archive"](@docroot@/store/store-object/content-address.md#method-nix-archive)
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method of content addressing store objects,
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if the hash algorithm is [SHA-256].
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Just like in the "Text" case, we can have the store objects referenced by their paths.
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Additionally, we can have an optional `:self` label to denote self reference.
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- ```ebnf
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| "output:" id
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```
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For either the outputs built from derivations,
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or content-addressed store objects that are not using one of the two above cases.
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To be explicit about the latter, that is currently these methods:
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- ["Flat"](@docroot@/store/store-object/content-address.md#method-flat)
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- ["Git"](@docroot@/store/store-object/content-address.md#method-git)
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- ["Nix Archive"](@docroot@/store/store-object/content-address.md#method-nix-archive) if the hash algorithm is not [SHA-256].
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`id` is the name of the output (usually, "out").
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For content-addressed store objects, `id`, is always "out".
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- `inner-digest` = base-16 representation of a SHA-256 hash of `inner-fingerprint`
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## Inner fingerprint
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- `inner-fingerprint` = one of the following based on `type`:
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- if `type` = `"text:" ...`:
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the string written to the resulting store path.
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- if `type` = `"source:" ...`:
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the hash of the [Nix Archive (NAR)] serialization of the [file system object](@docroot@/store/file-system-object.md) of the store object.
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- if `type` = `"output:" id`:
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- For input-addressed derivation outputs:
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the [ATerm](@docroot@/protocols/derivation-aterm.md) serialization of the derivation modulo fixed output derivations.
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- For content-addressed store paths:
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```ebnf
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"fixed:out:" rec algo ":" hash ":"
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```
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where
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- `rec` = one of:
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- ```ebnf
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| ""
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```
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(empty string) for hashes of the flat (single file) serialization
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- ```ebnf
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| "r:"
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```
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hashes of the for [Nix Archive (NAR)] (arbitrary file system object) serialization
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- ```ebnf
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| "git:"
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```
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hashes of the [Git blob/tree](https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Internals-Git-Objects) [Merkel tree](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merkle_tree) format
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- ```ebnf
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algo = "md5" | "sha1" | "sha256"
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```
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- `hash` = base-16 representation of the path or flat hash of the contents of the path (or expected contents of the path for fixed-output derivations).
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Note that `id` = `"out"`, regardless of the name part of the store path.
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Also note that NAR + SHA-256 must not use this case, and instead must use the `type` = `"source:" ...` case.
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[Nix Archive (NAR)]: @docroot@/store/file-system-object/content-address.md#serial-nix-archive
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[SHA-256]: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/SHA-256
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### Historical Note
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The `type` = `"source:" ...` and `type` = `"output:out"` grammars technically overlap in purpose,
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in that both can represent data hashed by its SHA-256 NAR serialization.
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The original reason for this way of computing names was to prevent name collisions (for security).
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For instance, the thinking was that it shouldn't be feasible to come up with a derivation whose output path collides with the path for a copied source.
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The former would have an `inner-fingerprint` starting with `output:out:`, while the latter would have an `inner-fingerprint` starting with `source:`.
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Since `64519cfd657d024ae6e2bb74cb21ad21b886fd2a` (2008), however, it was decided that separating derivation-produced vs manually-hashed content-addressed data like this was not useful.
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Now, data that is content-addressed with SHA-256 + NAR-serialization always uses the `source:...` construction, regardless of how it was produced (manually or by derivation).
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This allows freely switching between using [fixed-output derivations](@docroot@/glossary.md#gloss-fixed-output-derivation) for fetching, and fetching out-of-band and then manually adding.
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It also removes the ambiguity from the grammar.
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