nixpkgs/lib/trivial.nix

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Convert libs to a fixed-point This does break the API of being able to import any lib file and get its libs, however I'm not sure people did this. I made this while exploring being able to swap out docFn with a stub in #2305, to avoid functor performance problems. I don't know if that is going to move forward (or if it is a problem or not,) but after doing all this work figured I'd put it up anyway :) Two notable advantages to this approach: 1. when a lib inherits another lib's functions, it doesn't automatically get put in to the scope of lib 2. when a lib implements a new obscure functions, it doesn't automatically get put in to the scope of lib Using the test script (later in this commit) I got the following diff on the API: + diff master fixed-lib 11764a11765,11766 > .types.defaultFunctor > .types.defaultTypeMerge 11774a11777,11778 > .types.isOptionType > .types.isType 11781a11786 > .types.mkOptionType 11788a11794 > .types.setType 11795a11802 > .types.types This means that this commit _adds_ to the API, however I can't find a way to fix these last remaining discrepancies. At least none are _removed_. Test script (run with nix-repl in the PATH): #!/bin/sh set -eux repl() { suff=${1:-} echo "(import ./lib)$suff" \ | nix-repl 2>&1 } attrs_to_check() { repl "${1:-}" \ | tr ';' $'\n' \ | grep "\.\.\." \ | cut -d' ' -f2 \ | sed -e "s/^/${1:-}./" \ | sort } summ() { repl "${1:-}" \ | tr ' ' $'\n' \ | sort \ | uniq } deep_summ() { suff="${1:-}" depth="${2:-4}" depth=$((depth - 1)) summ "$suff" for attr in $(attrs_to_check "$suff" | grep -v "types.types"); do if [ $depth -eq 0 ]; then summ "$attr" | sed -e "s/^/$attr./" else deep_summ "$attr" "$depth" | sed -e "s/^/$attr./" fi done } ( cd nixpkgs #git add . #git commit -m "Auto-commit, sorry" || true git checkout fixed-lib deep_summ > ../fixed-lib git checkout master deep_summ > ../master ) if diff master fixed-lib; then echo "SHALLOW MATCH!" fi ( cd nixpkgs git checkout fixed-lib repl .types )
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{ lib }:
rec {
## Simple (higher order) functions
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/* The identity function
For when you need a function that does nothing.
Type: id :: a -> a
*/
id =
# The value to return
x: x;
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/* The constant function
Ignores the second argument. If called with only one argument,
constructs a function that always returns a static value.
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Type: const :: a -> b -> a
Example:
let f = const 5; in f 10
=> 5
*/
const =
# Value to return
x:
# Value to ignore
y: x;
/* Pipes a value through a list of functions, left to right.
Type: pipe :: a -> [<functions>] -> <return type of last function>
Example:
pipe 2 [
(x: x + 2) # 2 + 2 = 4
(x: x * 2) # 4 * 2 = 8
]
=> 8
# ideal to do text transformations
pipe [ "a/b" "a/c" ] [
# create the cp command
(map (file: ''cp "${src}/${file}" $out\n''))
# concatenate all commands into one string
lib.concatStrings
# make that string into a nix derivation
(pkgs.runCommand "copy-to-out" {})
]
=> <drv which copies all files to $out>
The output type of each function has to be the input type
of the next function, and the last function returns the
final value.
*/
pipe = val: functions:
let reverseApply = x: f: f x;
in builtins.foldl' reverseApply val functions;
# note please dont add a function like `compose = flip pipe`.
# This would confuse users, because the order of the functions
# in the list is not clear. With pipe, its obvious that it
# goes first-to-last. With `compose`, not so much.
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## Named versions corresponding to some builtin operators.
/* Concatenate two lists
Type: concat :: [a] -> [a] -> [a]
Example:
concat [ 1 2 ] [ 3 4 ]
=> [ 1 2 3 4 ]
*/
concat = x: y: x ++ y;
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/* boolean or */
or = x: y: x || y;
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/* boolean and */
and = x: y: x && y;
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/* bitwise and */
bitAnd = builtins.bitAnd
or (import ./zip-int-bits.nix
(a: b: if a==1 && b==1 then 1 else 0));
/* bitwise or */
bitOr = builtins.bitOr
or (import ./zip-int-bits.nix
(a: b: if a==1 || b==1 then 1 else 0));
/* bitwise xor */
bitXor = builtins.bitXor
or (import ./zip-int-bits.nix
(a: b: if a!=b then 1 else 0));
/* bitwise not */
bitNot = builtins.sub (-1);
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/* Convert a boolean to a string.
This function uses the strings "true" and "false" to represent
boolean values. Calling `toString` on a bool instead returns "1"
and "" (sic!).
Type: boolToString :: bool -> string
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*/
boolToString = b: if b then "true" else "false";
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/* Merge two attribute sets shallowly, right side trumps left
mergeAttrs :: attrs -> attrs -> attrs
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Example:
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mergeAttrs { a = 1; b = 2; } { b = 3; c = 4; }
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=> { a = 1; b = 3; c = 4; }
*/
mergeAttrs =
# Left attribute set
x:
# Right attribute set (higher precedence for equal keys)
y: x // y;
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/* Flip the order of the arguments of a binary function.
Type: flip :: (a -> b -> c) -> (b -> a -> c)
Example:
flip concat [1] [2]
=> [ 2 1 ]
*/
flip = f: a: b: f b a;
/* Apply function if the supplied argument is non-null.
Example:
mapNullable (x: x+1) null
=> null
mapNullable (x: x+1) 22
=> 23
*/
mapNullable =
# Function to call
f:
# Argument to check for null before passing it to `f`
a: if a == null then a else f a;
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# Pull in some builtins not included elsewhere.
inherit (builtins)
pathExists readFile isBool
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isInt isFloat add sub lessThan
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seq deepSeq genericClosure;
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## nixpkgs version strings
/* Returns the current full nixpkgs version number. */
version = release + versionSuffix;
/* Returns the current nixpkgs release number as string. */
release = lib.strings.fileContents ../.version;
/* The latest release that is supported, at the time of release branch-off,
if applicable.
Ideally, out-of-tree modules should be able to evaluate cleanly with all
supported Nixpkgs versions (master, release and old release until EOL).
So if possible, deprecation warnings should take effect only when all
out-of-tree expressions/libs/modules can upgrade to the new way without
losing support for supported Nixpkgs versions.
This release number allows deprecation warnings to be implemented such that
they take effect as soon as the oldest release reaches end of life. */
oldestSupportedRelease =
# Update on master only. Do not backport.
2305;
/* Whether a feature is supported in all supported releases (at the time of
release branch-off, if applicable). See `oldestSupportedRelease`. */
isInOldestRelease =
/* Release number of feature introduction as an integer, e.g. 2111 for 21.11.
Set it to the upcoming release, matching the nixpkgs/.version file.
*/
release:
release <= lib.trivial.oldestSupportedRelease;
/* Returns the current nixpkgs release code name.
On each release the first letter is bumped and a new animal is chosen
starting with that new letter.
*/
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codeName = "Uakari";
/* Returns the current nixpkgs version suffix as string. */
versionSuffix =
let suffixFile = ../.version-suffix;
in if pathExists suffixFile
then lib.strings.fileContents suffixFile
else "pre-git";
/* Attempts to return the the current revision of nixpkgs and
returns the supplied default value otherwise.
Type: revisionWithDefault :: string -> string
*/
revisionWithDefault =
# Default value to return if revision can not be determined
default:
let
revisionFile = "${toString ./..}/.git-revision";
gitRepo = "${toString ./..}/.git";
in if lib.pathIsGitRepo gitRepo
then lib.commitIdFromGitRepo gitRepo
else if lib.pathExists revisionFile then lib.fileContents revisionFile
else default;
nixpkgsVersion = builtins.trace "`lib.nixpkgsVersion` is deprecated, use `lib.version` instead!" version;
/* Determine whether the function is being called from inside a Nix
shell.
Type: inNixShell :: bool
*/
inNixShell = builtins.getEnv "IN_NIX_SHELL" != "";
/* Determine whether the function is being called from inside pure-eval mode
by seeing whether `builtins` contains `currentSystem`. If not, we must be in
pure-eval mode.
Type: inPureEvalMode :: bool
*/
inPureEvalMode = ! builtins ? currentSystem;
## Integer operations
/* Return minimum of two numbers. */
min = x: y: if x < y then x else y;
/* Return maximum of two numbers. */
max = x: y: if x > y then x else y;
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/* Integer modulus
Example:
mod 11 10
=> 1
mod 1 10
=> 1
*/
mod = base: int: base - (int * (builtins.div base int));
## Comparisons
/* C-style comparisons
a < b, compare a b => -1
a == b, compare a b => 0
a > b, compare a b => 1
*/
compare = a: b:
if a < b
then -1
else if a > b
then 1
else 0;
/* Split type into two subtypes by predicate `p`, take all elements
of the first subtype to be less than all the elements of the
second subtype, compare elements of a single subtype with `yes`
and `no` respectively.
Type: (a -> bool) -> (a -> a -> int) -> (a -> a -> int) -> (a -> a -> int)
Example:
let cmp = splitByAndCompare (hasPrefix "foo") compare compare; in
cmp "a" "z" => -1
cmp "fooa" "fooz" => -1
cmp "f" "a" => 1
cmp "fooa" "a" => -1
# while
compare "fooa" "a" => 1
*/
splitByAndCompare =
# Predicate
p:
# Comparison function if predicate holds for both values
yes:
# Comparison function if predicate holds for neither value
no:
# First value to compare
a:
# Second value to compare
b:
if p a
then if p b then yes a b else -1
else if p b then 1 else no a b;
/* Reads a JSON file.
Type: importJSON :: path -> any
*/
importJSON = path:
builtins.fromJSON (builtins.readFile path);
/* Reads a TOML file.
Type: importTOML :: path -> any
*/
importTOML = path:
builtins.fromTOML (builtins.readFile path);
## Warnings
# See https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/749. Eventually we'd like these
# to expand to Nix builtins that carry metadata so that Nix can filter out
# the INFO messages without parsing the message string.
#
# Usage:
# {
# foo = lib.warn "foo is deprecated" oldFoo;
# bar = lib.warnIf (bar == "") "Empty bar is deprecated" bar;
# }
#
# TODO: figure out a clever way to integrate location information from
# something like __unsafeGetAttrPos.
/*
Print a warning before returning the second argument. This function behaves
like `builtins.trace`, but requires a string message and formats it as a
warning, including the `warning: ` prefix.
To get a call stack trace and abort evaluation, set the environment variable
`NIX_ABORT_ON_WARN=true` and set the Nix options `--option pure-eval false --show-trace`
Type: string -> a -> a
*/
warn =
if lib.elem (builtins.getEnv "NIX_ABORT_ON_WARN") ["1" "true" "yes"]
then msg: builtins.trace "warning: ${msg}" (abort "NIX_ABORT_ON_WARN=true; warnings are treated as unrecoverable errors.")
else msg: builtins.trace "warning: ${msg}";
/*
Like warn, but only warn when the first argument is `true`.
Type: bool -> string -> a -> a
*/
warnIf = cond: msg: if cond then warn msg else x: x;
/*
Like warnIf, but negated (warn if the first argument is `false`).
Type: bool -> string -> a -> a
*/
warnIfNot = cond: msg: if cond then x: x else warn msg;
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/*
Like the `assert b; e` expression, but with a custom error message and
without the semicolon.
If true, return the identity function, `r: r`.
If false, throw the error message.
Calls can be juxtaposed using function application, as `(r: r) a = a`, so
`(r: r) (r: r) a = a`, and so forth.
Type: bool -> string -> a -> a
Example:
throwIfNot (lib.isList overlays) "The overlays argument to nixpkgs must be a list."
lib.foldr (x: throwIfNot (lib.isFunction x) "All overlays passed to nixpkgs must be functions.") (r: r) overlays
pkgs
*/
throwIfNot = cond: msg: if cond then x: x else throw msg;
/*
Like throwIfNot, but negated (throw if the first argument is `true`).
Type: bool -> string -> a -> a
*/
throwIf = cond: msg: if cond then throw msg else x: x;
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/* Check if the elements in a list are valid values from a enum, returning the identity function, or throwing an error message otherwise.
Example:
let colorVariants = ["bright" "dark" "black"]
in checkListOfEnum "color variants" [ "standard" "light" "dark" ] colorVariants;
=>
error: color variants: bright, black unexpected; valid ones: standard, light, dark
Type: String -> List ComparableVal -> List ComparableVal -> a -> a
*/
checkListOfEnum = msg: valid: given:
let
unexpected = lib.subtractLists valid given;
in
lib.throwIfNot (unexpected == [])
"${msg}: ${builtins.concatStringsSep ", " (builtins.map builtins.toString unexpected)} unexpected; valid ones: ${builtins.concatStringsSep ", " (builtins.map builtins.toString valid)}";
info = msg: builtins.trace "INFO: ${msg}";
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showWarnings = warnings: res: lib.foldr (w: x: warn w x) res warnings;
## Function annotations
/* Add metadata about expected function arguments to a function.
The metadata should match the format given by
builtins.functionArgs, i.e. a set from expected argument to a bool
representing whether that argument has a default or not.
setFunctionArgs : (a b) Map String Bool (a b)
This function is necessary because you can't dynamically create a
function of the { a, b ? foo, ... }: format, but some facilities
like callPackage expect to be able to query expected arguments.
*/
setFunctionArgs = f: args:
{ # TODO: Should we add call-time "type" checking like built in?
__functor = self: f;
__functionArgs = args;
};
/* Extract the expected function arguments from a function.
This works both with nix-native { a, b ? foo, ... }: style
functions and functions with args set with 'setFunctionArgs'. It
has the same return type and semantics as builtins.functionArgs.
setFunctionArgs : (a b) Map String Bool.
*/
functionArgs = f:
if f ? __functor
then f.__functionArgs or (lib.functionArgs (f.__functor f))
else builtins.functionArgs f;
/* Check whether something is a function or something
annotated with function args.
*/
isFunction = f: builtins.isFunction f ||
(f ? __functor && isFunction (f.__functor f));
/*
`mirrorFunctionArgs f g` creates a new function `g'` with the same behavior as `g` (`g' x == g x`)
but its function arguments mirroring `f` (`lib.functionArgs g' == lib.functionArgs f`).
Type:
mirrorFunctionArgs :: (a -> b) -> (a -> c) -> (a -> c)
Example:
addab = {a, b}: a + b
addab { a = 2; b = 4; }
=> 6
lib.functionArgs addab
=> { a = false; b = false; }
addab1 = attrs: addab attrs + 1
addab1 { a = 2; b = 4; }
=> 7
lib.functionArgs addab1
=> { }
addab1' = lib.mirrorFunctionArgs addab addab1
addab1' { a = 2; b = 4; }
=> 7
lib.functionArgs addab1'
=> { a = false; b = false; }
*/
mirrorFunctionArgs =
# Function to provide the argument metadata
f:
let
fArgs = functionArgs f;
in
# Function to set the argument metadata to
g:
setFunctionArgs g fArgs;
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/*
Turns any non-callable values into constant functions.
Returns callable values as is.
Example:
nix-repl> lib.toFunction 1 2
1
nix-repl> lib.toFunction (x: x + 1) 2
3
*/
toFunction =
# Any value
v:
if isFunction v
then v
else k: v;
/* Convert the given positive integer to a string of its hexadecimal
representation. For example:
toHexString 0 => "0"
toHexString 16 => "10"
toHexString 250 => "FA"
*/
toHexString = i:
let
toHexDigit = d:
if d < 10
then toString d
else
{
"10" = "A";
"11" = "B";
"12" = "C";
"13" = "D";
"14" = "E";
"15" = "F";
}.${toString d};
in
lib.concatMapStrings toHexDigit (toBaseDigits 16 i);
/* `toBaseDigits base i` converts the positive integer i to a list of its
digits in the given base. For example:
toBaseDigits 10 123 => [ 1 2 3 ]
toBaseDigits 2 6 => [ 1 1 0 ]
toBaseDigits 16 250 => [ 15 10 ]
*/
toBaseDigits = base: i:
let
go = i:
if i < base
then [i]
else
let
r = i - ((i / base) * base);
q = (i - r) / base;
in
[r] ++ go q;
in
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assert (isInt base);
assert (isInt i);
assert (base >= 2);
assert (i >= 0);
lib.reverseList (go i);
}