makeOverridable is very careful to ensure the arguments to the
overridden function are the same as the input function. As a result,
the arguments of hello.override are exactly the same as the original
arguments of the hello function that produced the derivation.
However, callPackagesWith calls makeOverridable with a lambda that
does not propagate the arguments. The override function for a package
instantiated with callPackagesWith will not have the original
arguments.
For example:
nix-repl> lib.functionArgs hello.override
{ callPackage = false; fetchurl = false; hello = false; lib = false; nixos = false; stdenv = false; testers = false; }
nix-repl> lib.functionArgs openssl.override
{ }
By copying the arguments onto the inner lambda before passing it to
makeOverridable, we can make callPackage and callPackages behave the
same.
nix-repl> lib.functionArgs openssl.override
{ buildPackages = false; coreutils = false; cryptodev = false; enableSSL2 = true; enableSSL3 = true; fetchurl = false; lib = false; perl = false; removeReferencesTo = false; static = true; stdenv = false; withCryptodev = true; withPerl = true; }
This allows for adding new, conditionally set, derivation attributes
to an existing derivation without changing any output paths in the
case where the condition is not met.
It is useful that all (or almost all) .nix files in nixpkgs at least
parse since it allows for checking syntax in the repository
programmatically without evaluating anything.
This doesn't change uniq. Why not?
- In NixOS it seems that uniq is only used with
simple types that are fully checked by t.check.
- It exists for much longer and is used more widely.
- I believe we should deprecate it, because unique was
already better.
- unique can be a proving ground.
Type: either ints.positive (enum ["auto"])
Before: positive integer, meaning >0 or value "auto" (singular enum)
After: positive integer, meaning >0, or value "auto" (singular enum)
Currently, the `lib/tests/modules.sh` test checks the output of
`nix-instantiate --eval` without `--json`, which outputs an unspecified
human-readable format.
This patch modifies `modules.sh` to use the `--json` output instead, to
be robust against future changes to `nix-instantiate` output.
This commit temporarily adds pkgs/test/release to the
lib/tests/release.nix test suite, because ofborg already knows about
that entry point.
We should move the list of test entry points out of ofborg and into
a central place in nixpkgs:
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/272591
Once we do that we won't need to have this ugly kludge in an
inappropriate place.
A more efficient sort in some cases, and often convenient.
This exposes `lib.lists.sortOn` immediately on `lib`, because it is
a sibling of `sort`, which is already present there.
Omitting it would lead to more confusion, and worse outcomes.
There's no confusion about the types `sort` or `sortOn` operate on.
Haskell agrees about the type for `sortOn`, and it is in its `base`.
This type is necessary to have correct merging behavior for
`allowUnfreePredicate` and `allowInsecurePredicate`
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
The aws-sdk-cpp tests are flaky.
Since pull requests to staging cause nix to be rebuilt, this means
that staging PRs end up getting false CI failures due to whatever is
flaky in the AWS SDK tests. Since none of our CI needs to (or
should be able to) contact AWS S3, let's just omit it all. Bonus:
the tests build way faster.
For transforming back between lists and attrsets, it makes sense to have
a quasi-inverse of `builtins.listToAttrs` available as a library
function.
Co-authored-by: Silvan Mosberger <github@infinisil.com>
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
To maintain backwards compatibility, this can't be changed in the Nix language.
We can however ensure that the version Nixpkgs has the more intuitive behavior.