canExecute is like isCompatible, but also checks that the Kernels are
_equal_, i.e. that both platforms use the same syscall interface. This
is crucial in order to actually be able to execute binaries for the
other platform.
isCompatible is dropped, since it has changed semantically and there's
no use case left in nixpkgs.
Since we (exclusively) use isCompatible to gauge whether platform a can
execute binaries built for platform b, mode switching CPUs are not to be
considered compatible for our purposes: Switching the mode of a CPU
usually requires a reset. At the very least we can't execute a mix of
executables for the two modes which would usually be the case in nixpkgs
where we may want to execute buildInputs for the hostPlatform in
addition to nativeBuildInputs for the buildPlatform.
Since the list only gates the platforms the nixpkgs flake exposes
packages to build on, the `hydra` label made little sense. It was also
only used for this purpose, so the `tier*` attributes were largely
unnecessary.
To reflect the intention more accurately, we expose
`lib.systems.flakeExposed` and use it to gate flake.nix's system list.
Currently the only way to set the description for a submodule type is to
use `freeformType`. This is not ideal as it requires setting a
freeform type, and evaluates the submodule config unnecessarily.
Instead, add a `description` argument to `submoduleWith`.
This reverts commit PR #167947.
Flakes aren't standardised and the `lib` namespace shouldn't be
polluted with utilities that serve only experimental uses.
This patch causes the autodetection code in lib/systems/platforms.nix
to return {} if it cannot detect the platform and one of the
platform.nix-detection-provided attributes (linux-kernel, gcc, and
rustc) are accessed, rather than silently assuming the "pc" platform
as was previously done.
It is definitely safe to assume that code using these attributes is
prepared to deal with `gcc` and `rustc` not being defined, because
many of the working entries in this file don't define it.
Regarding `linux-kernel` the situation is less certain, but some code
(`lib/systems/default.nix` for example) is already designed to deal
with that attribute being missing. At worst it would result in an
"attribute not found" error.
While adding mips64el bootstrap support to nixpkgs, the silent
assumption that mips64el routers are actually Intel PCs caused
significant frustration. This commit removes that assumption in order
to save people who port nixpkgs to new platforms in the future from
this frustration.
For other platforms like Intel and ARM, we can do
e.g. lib.platforms.aarch64 to get only the 64-bit ARM platorms, but
until now there were no equivalents for RISC-V.
There is only one ABI for 32-bit MIPS chips. Before mips64, it didn't
really have a name.
The 64-bit MIPS ABI comes in two flavors, "n64" and "n32". It is
commonplace to refer to the old 32-bit ABI as "o32" (MIPS and SGI
documents do this).
However, when configuring gcc, one must use --with-abi=32, not
--with-abi=o32.
Let's keep GCC happy with this commit.
Probably being the most prominent document demonstrating the problem,
configuration.nix(5) describes various types in plural, e.g.
- ` Type: list of strings`
- ` Type: list of systemd options`
However, there are other cases where appending "s" to the inner type
effectively changes the type, e.g.
- ```
Type: list of string matching the pattern
[a-zA-Z0-9@%:_.\-]+[.](service|socket|device|mount|automount|swap|target|path|timer|scope|slice)s
```
This should've read "list of string[s]..." but instead changes the
regular expression.
Simply drop the best-effort plural in favour of correctness and
simplicity rather than adding more grammar related logic/trying to fix
this.
* lib/strings: optimise hasInfix function
* lib/strings: optimise hasInfix further using regex
* rstudio: call hasInfix with a string
* lib/strings: remove let from hasInfix
Co-authored-by: pennae <82953136+pennae@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: pennae <82953136+pennae@users.noreply.github.com>
This commit creates flakes.nix, which is a library containing functions
which relate to interacting with flakes. It also moves related functions
from trivial.nix into it.
This is essentially a copy of the function of the same name, from
flake-compat. callLocklessFlake is useful when trying to utilise a
flake.nix without a lock file, often for when you want to create a
subflake from within a parent flake.
Co-authored-by: Tom Bereknyei <tomberek@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
Closes#168327
The issue reported there can be demonstrated with the following
expression:
→ nix-instantiate --eval -E "with import ./. {}; pkgs.lib.options.showDefs [ { file = \"foo\"; value = pkgs.rust.packages.stable.buildRustPackages; } ]"
error: attempt to call something which is not a function but a string
at /home/ma27/Projects/nixpkgs/lib/trivial.nix:442:35:
441| isFunction = f: builtins.isFunction f ||
442| (f ? __functor && isFunction (f.__functor f));
| ^
443|
Basically, if a `__functor` is in an attribute-set at depth-limit,
`__functor` will be set to `"<unevaluated>"`. This however breaks
`lib.isFunction` which checks for a `__functor` by invoking `__functor`
with `f` itself.
The same issue - "magic" attributes being shadowed by `withRecursion` -
also applies to others such as
`__pretty`/`__functionArgs`/`__toString`.
Since these attributes have a low-risk of causing a stack overflow
(because these are flat attr-sets or even functions), ignoring them in
`withRecursion` seems like a valid solution.
This allows other module system consumers to
disable these docs via option merging.
For instance arion uses asciidoc instead of
docbook so that would look awful.
This commit adds an `isPower64` predicate to the two existing
predicates for this architecture (`isPower` and `isPowerPC`).
Note that `isPowerPC` matches only 32-bit machines, whereas `isPower`
matches both 64-bit and 32-bit machines. Prior to this commit there
was no single `isXXX` predicate for `powerpc64le`.
Documents the _module.args option, motivated by many usages in Flakes,
especially with the deprecation of extraArgs
(78ada83361)
The documentation rendering for this option had to be handled a bit
specially, since it's not declared in nixos/modules like all the other
NixOS options.
Co-Authored-By: pennae <github@quasiparticle.net>
Co-Authored-By: Robert Hensing <robert@roberthensing.nl>
This uses the levenshtein distance to look through all possible
arguments to find ones that are close to what was requested:
error: Function in /home/infinisil/src/nixpkgs/pkgs/tools/text/ripgrep/default.nix
called without required argument "fetchFromGithub",
did you mean "fetchFromGitHub" or "fetchFromGitLab"?
With https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/3468 (in current nixUnstable) the error
message becomes even better, adding line location info
Adds some functions related to string similarity:
- lib.strings.commonPrefixLength
- lib.strings.commonSuffixLength
- lib.strings.levenshtein
- lib.strings.levenshteinAtMost
types.optionSet has been deprecated for almost 10 years now
(0e333688ce)! A removal
was already attempted in 2019
(27982b408e), but it was promptly
reinstantiated since some third-party uses were discovered
(f531ce75e4).
It's finally time to remove it for good :)
The current logic assumes that everything that isn't a derivation is a
store path, but it can also be something that's *coercible* to a store
path, like a flake input.
Unnecessary uses of `lib.toDerivation` result in errors in pure evaluation
mode when `builtins.storePath` is disabled.
Also document what a `package` is.