nix-super/src/libstore/unix/local-overlay-store.md
John Ericson 8433027e35 Build a minimized Nix with MinGW
At this point many features are stripped out, but this works:

- Can run libnix{util,store,expr} unit tests
- Can run some Nix commands

Co-Authored-By volth <volth@volth.com>
Co-Authored-By Brian McKenna <brian@brianmckenna.org>
2024-04-17 12:26:10 -04:00

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R"(

Store URL format: local-overlay

This store type is a variation of the [local store] designed to leverage Linux's Overlay Filesystem (OverlayFS for short). Just as OverlayFS combines a lower and upper filesystem by treating the upper one as a patch against the lower, the local overlay store combines a lower store with an upper almost-[local store]. ("almost" because while the upper fileystems for OverlayFS is valid on its own, the upper almost-store is not a valid local store on its own because some references will dangle.) To use this store, you will first need to configure an OverlayFS mountpoint appropriately as Nix will not do this for you (though it will verify the mountpoint is configured correctly).

Conceptual parts of a local overlay store

This is a more abstract/conceptual description of the parts of a layered store, an authoritative reference. For more "practical" instructions, see the worked-out example in the next subsection.

The parts of a local overlay store are as follows:

  • Lower store:

    This is any store implementation that includes a store directory as part of the native operating system filesystem. For example, this could be a [local store], [local daemon store], or even another local overlay store.

    The local overlay store never tries to modify the lower store in any way. Something else could modify the lower store, but there are restrictions on this Nix itself requires that this store only grow, and not change in other ways. For example, new store objects can be added, but deleting or modifying store objects is not allowed in general, because that will confuse and corrupt any local overlay store using those objects. (In addition, the underlying filesystem overlay mechanism may impose additional restrictions, see below.)

    The lower store must not change while it is mounted as part of an overlay store. To ensure it does not, you might want to mount the store directory read-only (which then requires the [read-only] parameter to be set to true).

    Specified with the lower-store setting.

    • Lower store directory:

      This is the directory used/exposed by the lower store.

      Specified with lower-store.real setting.

      As specified above, Nix requires the local store can only grow not change in other ways. Linux's OverlayFS in addition imposes the further requirement that this directory cannot change at all. That means that, while any local overlay store exists that is using this store as a lower store, this directory must not change.

    • Lower metadata source:

      This is abstract, just some way to read the metadata of lower store store objects. For example it could be a SQLite database (for the [local store]), or a socket connection (for the [local daemon store]).

      This need not be writable. As stated above a local overlay store never tries to modify its lower store. The lower store's metadata is considered part of the lower store, just as the store's file system objects that appear in the store directory are.

  • Upper almost-store:

    This is almost but not quite just a [local store]. That is because taken in isolation, not as part of a local overlay store, by itself, it would appear corrupted. But combined with everything else as part of an overlay local store, it is valid.

    • Upper layer directory:

      This contains additional store objects (or, strictly speaking, their file system objects that the local overlay store will extend the lower store with).

      Specified with upper-layer setting.

    • Upper store directory:

      This contains all the store objects from each of the two directories.

      The lower store directory and upper layer directory are combined via OverlayFS to create this directory. Nix doesn't do this itself, because it typically wouldn't have the permissions to do so, so it is the responsibility of the user to set this up first. Nix can, however, optionally check that that the OverlayFS mount settings appear as expected, matching Nix's own settings.

      Specified with the real setting.

    • Upper SQLite database:

      This contains the metadata of all of the upper layer store objects (everything beyond their file system objects), and also duplicate copies of some lower layer store object's metadta. The duplication is so the metadata for the closure of upper layer store objects can be found entirely within the upper layer. (This allows us to use the same SQL Schema as the [local store]'s SQLite database, as foreign keys in that schema enforce closure metadata to be self-contained in this way.)

      The location of the database is directly specified, but depends on the state setting. It is is always ${state}/db.

Example filesystem layout

Here is a worked out example of usage, following the concepts in the previous section.

Say we have the following paths:

  • /mnt/example/merged-store/nix/store

  • /mnt/example/store-a/nix/store

  • /mnt/example/store-b

Then the following store URI can be used to access a local-overlay store at /mnt/example/merged-store:

local-overlay://?root=/mnt/example/merged-store&lower-store=/mnt/example/store-a&upper-layer=/mnt/example/store-b

The lower store directory is located at /mnt/example/store-a/nix/store, while the upper layer is at /mnt/example/store-b.

Before accessing the overlay store you will need to ensure the OverlayFS mount is set up correctly:

mount -t overlay overlay \
  -o lowerdir="/mnt/example/store-a/nix/store" \
  -o upperdir="/mnt/example/store-b" \
  -o workdir="/mnt/example/workdir" \
  "/mnt/example/merged-store/nix/store"

Note that OverlayFS requires /mnt/example/workdir to be on the same volume as the upperdir.

By default, Nix will check that the mountpoint as been set up correctly and fail with an error if it has not. You can override this behaviour by passing check-mount=false if you need to.

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