Per RFC 9110, [section 8.8.1][1], different representations of the same
resource should have different Etags:
> A strong validator is unique across all versions of all
> representations associated with a particular resource over time.
> However, there is no implication of uniqueness across representations
> of different resources (i.e., the same strong validator might be in
> use for representations of multiple resources at the same time and
> does not imply that those representations are equivalent)
When serving statically compressed files (ie, when there is an existing
corresponding .gz/.br/etc. file on disk), Nginx sends the Etag marked
as strong. These tags should be different for each compressed format
(as shown in an explicit example in section [8.8.3.3][2] of the RFC).
Upstream Etags are composed of the file modification timestamp and
content length, and the latter generally changes between these
representations.
Previous implementation of Nix-specific Etags for things served from
store used the store hash. This is fine to share between different
files, but it becomes a problem for statically compressed versions of
the same file, as it means Nginx was serving different representations
of the same resource with the same Etag, marked as strong.
This patch addresses this by imitating the upstream Nginx behavior, and
appending the value of content length to the store hash.
[1]: https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc9110.html#name-validator-fields
[2]:
https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc9110.html#name-example-entity-tags-varying
lualatex assumes a writeable font cache relative to `$HOME`, for nix this has two implications.
First, the cache might diverge from the nix store if users use LuaLaTeX.
Second, `$HOME` needs to be set to a writable path in derivations.
All other functions are in the form of `*{c,C}heckpointBuild*`, so we
deprecate the `mkCheckpointedBuild` function in favor of `mkCheckpointBuild`.
Also address some inconsistencies in the docs: some `buildOutput` should
actually be `incrementalBuildArtifacts`.
https://www.pcre.org/
The `pcre` library is "now at end of life, and is no longer being
maintained," according to the upstream maintainers. Accordingly, we
should replace uses of `pcre` with its actively maintained successor,
`pcre2`, wherever possible .
It is fine to use `with` on the inputs, since that increases the
overall readability of the package.
Removes `wheel` from `nativeBuildInputs`, since it is a result of
cargo culting from an earlier setuptools example, that was wrong, and
it is not required, since it is provided by setuptools itself.
The python-updates branch was formerly called python-unstable, but the
new branch name was never mentioned in the docs. This commit changes the
branch name in the docs to python-updates.
We get a dependency list with pub2nix now. We can no longer easily distinguish between development dependency dependencies and regular dependency dependencies, but we weren't doing this anyway.
The mkBinaryCache section now follows the convention of using one
line per sentence, as well as using admonitions for notes and
examples.
The example syntax was updated to define a fully-working nix package.
The following changes are made:
- Document how `wrapType2` and `wrapType1` are the same thing.
- Expand on how `wrapType2` works and additional arguments it uses.
- Document `extract` and show how it's used in combination with
`wrapType2`.
- Provide full working examples using the new admonition syntax.
Fixes some mistakes regarding the references to cargoHash in the codes referenced.
Fixes a typo for cargoSha256.
States that cargoHash should be preferred.
Without this, it's impossible to override the lockFile as the default
overrideAttrs is applied after the composition in buildNimPackage has
read the lock file and generated the nim flags from it.
For the time being, we're moving towards https://nix.dev/ containing
all tutorials and guides. The Nixpkgs manual is reinforced to be a
_reference_ manual. While it's not just reference for now, that's what
the docs team is working towards.
This commits rewrites the Nixpkgs manual introduction to reflect that
and point to some more useful links. The contribution docs are updated
similarly so it's not missed.
Co-authored-by: Valentin Gagarin <valentin.gagarin@tweag.io>
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
GitHub supported special markdown syntax for emphasising blocks for some
time. This was however a beta feature, and still is, so it's subject to
changes.
Recently such a change happened: The syntax is different now.
See https://github.com/orgs/community/discussions/16925 for more
information
We keep running into situations where we can't get the right
combination of rustc flags through build systems into rustc.
RUSTFLAGS is the only variable supported across build systems, but if
RUSTFLAGS is set, Cargo will ignore all other ways of specifying rustc
flags, including the target-specific ones, which we need to make
dynamic musl builds work. (This is why pkgsCross.musl64.crosvm is
currently broken — it works if you unset separateDebugInfo, which
causes RUSTFLAGS not to be set.)
So, we need to do the same thing we do for C and C++ compilers, and
add a compiler wrapper so we can inject the flags we need, regardless
of the build system.
Currently the wrapper only supports a single mechanism for injecting
flags — the NIX_RUSTFLAGS environment variable. As time goes on,
we'll probably want to add additional features, like target-specific
environment variables.
The Nixpkgs documentation on the linux kernel builders focused on
using and extending kernels that were already packaged, but never
mentioned that it's possible to also build a kernel almost "from
scratch".
The NixOS documentation went a bit deeper on manual linux kernel
configs, but that information wasn't particularly NixOS-specific.
This commit consolidates the information related to building the
kernel on Nixpkgs's documentation, while keeping any additional
NixOS-specific information on NixOS's documentation.
An additional README.md was created for contributor-facing
documentation.
Update instructions for manual build phases execution via `nix-shell` to
cover all phases. There is no easy way of getting those commands, so it
makes a sense to have them all properly documented.