`isl` is only needed to support `gcc` transformations enabled by
`-fgraphite*` options. Packages do not usually use those flags. None of
the bootstrap packages use it.
`nixpkgs` does not use up-to-date `isl` for `gcc` either. Let's drop
`isl` dependency from the bootstrap binary seed.
Most Linux distributions are enabling this these days and it does
protect against real world vulnerabilities as demonstrated by
CVE-2018-16864 and CVE-2018-16865.
Fix#53753.
Information on llvm version support gleaned from
6609892a2d68e07da3e5092507a730
Information on gcc version support a lot harder to gather,
but both 32bit and 64bit arm do appear to be supported
based on the test suite.
The cc and bintools wrapper contained ad hoc bootstrapping logic for
expand-response-params (which was callPackage-ed in a let binding). This
lead to the strange situation that the bootstrapping logic related to
expand-response-params is split between the wrapper derivations (where
it is duplicated) and the actual stdenv bootstrapping.
To clean this up, the wrappers simply should take expand-response-params
as an ordinary input: They need an adjacent expand-response-params (i.e.
one that runs on their host platform), but don't care about the how.
Providing this is only problematic during stdenv bootstrapping where we
have to pull it from the previous stage at times.
We don't need to artificially make sure that we can execute the wrapper
scripts on the build platform by using stdenv's shell (which comes from
buildPackages) since our cross infrastructure will get us the wrapper
from buildPackages. The upside of this change is that cross-compiled
wrappers (e.g. pkgsCross.aarch64-multiplatform.gcc) will actually work
when executed!
For bootstrapping this is also not a problem, since we have a long
build->build platform chain so runtimeShell is just as good as
stdenvNoCC.shell. We do fall back to old ways, though, by explicitly
using the bootstrap-tools shell in stage2, so the adjacent bash is only
used from stage4 onwards. This is unnecessary in principle (I'll try
removing this hack in the future), but ensures this change causes zero
rebuilds.
As of late, `final: prev: …` for overlays has become more prevalent in
newer code. This is also exhibited in some code (presumably added
recently) in stdenv. This change is not about any merits or demerits of
any naming convention, but rather aims to make the nomenclature in
stdenv bootstrapping consistent to lessen confusion.
I've chosen to stick to `self: super: …` convention because:
1. It is more common in the code as it stands.
2. Using `final: prev: …` makes the code more confusing, als it causes
`prev` to be in scope alongside `prevStage`. `prevStage` actually
bears no relation to `prev` even though their naming suggests it,
making it easy to confuse them (the former is the (final) package set
of the previous stage while the latter is just the `prev`/`super` of
the overlay “chaining” on a completely fresh package set, i.e. `prev`
doesn't even relate to the previous stage's `overrides` argument).
This change also corrects a naming error in stdenv/native which had no
effect, as the variables were unused.
this equates to -ftrivial-auto-var-init=pattern
clang has removed support for -ftrivial-auto-var-init=zero and
are unlikely to re-add it, so use -ftrivial-auto-var-init=pattern
on both compilers if only to make behaviour more consistent
between the two.
add to pkgsExtraHardening's defaultHardeningFlags.
The aarch64 musl bootstrap tools are woefully outdated. Just getting
them to the point of being able to build new versions of themselves
required a number of hacks[1] that can be reverted once we have new
bootstrap tools, and before that it stdenv didn't even build for the
preceding three years.
[1]: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/169764
So, following the script established by previous bootstrap tools
updates:
Files came from this Hydra build:
https://hydra.nixos.org/build/246470544
…which used nixpkgs revision dd5621df6d
to instantiate:
/nix/store/g480ass2vjmakaq03z7k2j95xnxh206a-stdenv-bootstrap-tools.drv
…and then built:
/nix/store/95lm0y33dayag4542s8bi83s31bw68dr-stdenv-bootstrap-tools
I downloaded these files from Hydra and prefetched them into the Nix
store with the following commands:
STOREPATH=95lm0y33dayag4542s8bi83s31bw68dr-stdenv-bootstrap-tools
OPTIONS="--option binary-caches https://cache.nixos.org --option trusted-public-keys cache.nixos.org-1:6NCHdD59X431o0gWypbMrAURkbJ16ZPMQFGspcDShjY="
nix --extra-experimental-features nix-command store prefetch-file \
file://$(nix --extra-experimental-features nix-command store add-file --name bootstrap-tools.tar.xz $(nix-store ${OPTIONS} -r /nix/store/${STOREPATH})/on-server/bootstrap-tools.tar.xz)
nix --extra-experimental-features nix-command store prefetch-file --executable \
file://$(nix --extra-experimental-features nix-command store add-path --name busybox $(nix-store ${OPTIONS} -r /nix/store/${STOREPATH})/on-server/busybox)
These commands produced the following output:
warning: you did not specify '--add-root'; the result might be removed by the garbage collector
Downloaded 'file:///nix/store/fm8ys5bb737j82xgyiciyzpcwmzyi9b2-bootstrap-tools.tar.xz' to '/nix/store/jml0gh0q2rnc9sgr87irz0jfbl0fq545-fm8ys5bb737j82xgyiciyzpcwmzyi9b2-bootstrap-tools.tar.xz' (hash 'sha256-ZY9IMOmx1VOn6uoFDpdJbTnPX59TEkrVCzWNtjQ8/QE=').
warning: you did not specify '--add-root'; the result might be removed by the garbage collector
Downloaded 'file:///nix/store/rn9fx55mw2s0qg90zdjxa9xn11nlmjpg-busybox' to '/nix/store/9qylz8gqll63pprwkwlyfs9g4zilak2m-rn9fx55mw2s0qg90zdjxa9xn11nlmjpg-busybox' (hash 'sha256-WuOaun7U5enbOy8SuuCo6G1fbGwsO16jhy/oM8K0lAs=').
I used the hashes from the output above to create the fetchurl
invocation which is part of this commit.
I then started the bootstrap with the following command:
nix --extra-experimental-features nix-command build -L -f . --arg localSystem '(import ./lib).systems.examples.aarch64-multiplatform-musl' hello
As @lovesegfault requested, here are the the sha256sums of all the
on-server components for extra verification:
sha256sum /nix/store/${STOREPATH}/on-server/*
…which produced the following output:
658f4830e9b1d553a7eaea050e97496d39cf5f9f53124ad50b358db6343cfd01 /nix/store/95lm0y33dayag4542s8bi83s31bw68dr-stdenv-bootstrap-tools/on-server/bootstrap-tools.tar.xz
20cdfecb084ddb6b6b958f2b78fd2cc1d9641632f81ec7d5a48fae0a963ad0fa /nix/store/95lm0y33dayag4542s8bi83s31bw68dr-stdenv-bootstrap-tools/on-server/busybox
This PR updates the bootstrap tarballs for riscv64-linux with new Hydra-generated ones.
Fixes#275848 (bootstrap assembler too old to build gcc 13).
I'll be following the script used in #151399, #168199, #183487, and #188334.
Files came from [this](https://hydra.nixos.org/build/246376732#tabs-summary) Hydra build, which used nixpkgs revision 160cedc144 to instantiate:
```
/nix/store/cpiajh4l83b08pynwiwkpxj53d78pcxr-stdenv-bootstrap-tools-riscv64-unknown-linux-gnu.drv
```
and then built:
```
/nix/store/8a92pj40awdw585mcb9dvm4nyb03k3q3-stdenv-bootstrap-tools-riscv64-unknown-linux-gnu
```
I downloaded these files from Hydra and prefetched them into the nix store with the following commands:
```
STOREPATH=8a92pj40awdw585mcb9dvm4nyb03k3q3-stdenv-bootstrap-tools-riscv64-unknown-linux-gnu
OPTIONS="--option binary-caches https://cache.nixos.org --option trusted-public-keys cache.nixos.org-1:6NCHdD59X431o0gWypbMrAURkbJ16ZPMQFGspcDShjY="
nix store prefetch-file \
file://$(nix store add-file --name bootstrap-tools.tar.xz $(nix-store ${OPTIONS} -r /nix/store/${STOREPATH})/on-server/bootstrap-tools.tar.xz)
nix store prefetch-file --executable \
file://$(nix store add-path --name busybox $(nix-store ${OPTIONS} -r /nix/store/${STOREPATH})/on-server/busybox)
```
These commands produced the following output:
```
Downloaded 'file:///nix/store/xs74wcxq3qc12plfc70fds8inbndhcfm-bootstrap-tools.tar.xz' to '/nix/store/3fal4gikp92013kac6rdmfbrch2s859b-xs74wcxq3qc12plfc70fds8inbndhcfm-bootstrap-tools.tar.xz' (hash 'sha256-0LxRd7fdafQezNJ+N2tuOfm0KEwgfRSts5fhP0e0r0s=').
Downloaded 'file:///nix/store/9ndpna6jrlac4y9fappdjm0sxx0g2bja-busybox' to '/nix/store/kb7wyy30y1gxcmdajljr26kxxac606qa-9ndpna6jrlac4y9fappdjm0sxx0g2bja-busybox' (hash 'sha256-OGO96QUzs2n5pGipn/V87AxzUY9OWKZl417nE8HdZIE=').
```
I used the hashes from the output above to create the `fetchurl` invocation which is part of this commit.
I then started the bootstrap with the following command:
```
nix build -L -f . --arg localSystem '(import ./lib).systems.examples.riscv64' hello
```
As @lovesegfault requested, here are the the `sha256sum`s of all the `on-server` components for extra verification:
```
sha256sum /nix/store/${STOREPATH}/on-server/*
```
which produced the following output:
```
d0bc5177b7dd69f41eccd27e376b6e39f9b4284c207d14adb397e13f47b4af4b /nix/store/8a92pj40awdw585mcb9dvm4nyb03k3q3-stdenv-bootstrap-tools-riscv64-unknown-linux-gnu/on-server/bootstrap-tools.tar.xz
65f9433abb598f63c932d33351b14f686551512b1cece1e64c2d0e76aa0ec52e /nix/store/8a92pj40awdw585mcb9dvm4nyb03k3q3-stdenv-bootstrap-tools-riscv64-unknown-linux-gnu/on-server/busybox
```
Before the change `pkgsMusl.adobe-reader` was failing the interpreter:
$ nix-instantiate --eval --strict --expr 'with import ./. {}; builtins.tryEval pkgsMusl.adobe-reader'
error:
error: evaluation aborted with the following error message: 'unsupported platform for the pure Linux stdenv'
After the change `pkgsMusl.adobe-reader` returns catchable excation:
$ nix-instantiate --eval --strict --expr 'with import ./. {}; builtins.tryEval pkgsMusl.adobe-reader'
{ success = false; value = false; }
Noticed when was exploring `nixpkgs` for uncatchable evaluation errors.
Ideally those should only happen when there is a code bug in the use
site. In this case it's just a package with incompatible constraints for
`musl`.
Changed uncatchable `abort` to `throw`.