This should be a significant disk space saving for most NixOS
installations. This method is a bit more complicated than doing it in
the postInstall for the firmware derivations, but this way it's
automatic, so each firmware package doesn't have to separately
implement its compression.
Currently, only xz compression is supported, but it's likely that
future versions of Linux will additionally support zstd, so I've
written the code in such a way that it would be very easy to implement
zstd compression for those kernels when they arrive, falling back to
xz for older (current) kernels.
I chose the highest possible level of compression (xz -9) because even
at this level, decompression time is negligible. Here's how long it took
to decompress every firmware file my laptop uses:
i915/kbl_dmc_ver1_04.bin 2ms
regulatory.db 4ms
regulatory.db.p7s 3ms
iwlwifi-7265D-29.ucode 62ms
9d71-GOOGLE-EVEMAX-0-tplg.bin 22ms
intel/dsp_fw_kbl.bin 65ms
dsp_lib_dsm_core_spt_release.bin 6ms
intel/ibt-hw-37.8.10-fw-22.50.19.14.f.bseq 7ms
And since booting NixOS is a parallel process, it's unlikely (but
difficult to measure) that the time to user interaction was held up at
all by most of these.
Fixes (partially?) #148197
The old logic flow had the structure
if ( … ) {
if ( … ) {
…
} else {
…
}
} else {
…
}
which is quite hard to follow in Nix. Instead we ensure that no if
expression is inside a then branch.
This change is zero rebuild, as no logic was changed.
- use propagatedBuildInputs to make sure ocaml plugin stuff is in path
- updated coqPackage.heq (broken url)
- fixed use of `DESTDIR` and `COQMF_COQLIB` in mkCoqDerivation
- adding `COQCORELIB` environement variable to put ocaml plugin files in the right place
- make metaFetch available from `coqPackages`
A small shell script that can be used to extract a binary wrapper's
makeCWrapper call from its embedded docstring, without depending on
makeBinaryWrapper.
As far as I can tell, this has never actually done anything, as
LDEMULATION is not exported. I tried exporting it and builds broke,
and as it doesn't seem to have caused any problems as a noop all these
years it didn't seem worth investigating further.
This parameter is being set to `$NIX_BUILD_CORES` by default. This is a
standard practice but there's a suspicion that this can produce broken
builds. For some details see
https://github.com/cargo2nix/cargo2nix/issues/184 . As a
work-around/test, it'd be good if codegen-units can be set to something
constant, such as `1`. This PR allows it.
Note that the default of `$NIX_BUILD_CORES` is preserved so this MR
causes no change in default behaviour and no rebuilds.
Take a "nixSupport" argument that is an attrset of lists to append
to "$out/nix-support/${name}" where name is the name of the
attribute. This attrset is available from the passthru of the
wrapped compiler.
This is an alternative to imperatively issuing flags with
extraBuildCommands and makes it possible to append or filter
flags with an override.
Previously buildDotnetModule did not properly inherit some arguments from
derivations, take for example this expression:
dotnetFlags = [
"--runtime linux-x64"
];
It would error out as follows: "MSBUILD : error MSB1001: Unknown switch.".
Setting the same flag from bash would work fine. This fixes that, all
arguments should now be properly interpreted :)
There used to be a few issues with the way we generate the nuget source:
* The derivation generated for the deps would have "nuget-deps" in them twice:
/nix/store/...-foo-1.0-nuget-deps-nuget-deps
* We always tried to generate the dependencies for "projectReferences"
even when it wasn't set, causing a warning.
This fixes those issues :)
This improves the metadata generation, previously it would take any
"license" entry from the nuspec, and tried to match it to an spdx ID from
"lib.licenses".
Sometimes however licenses are provided in plain-text, which we
obviously cannot cleanly resolve. This resulted in in useless information
("LICENSE.txt") being written to "meta.license".
Examples: support has to be added to https://github.com/nix-community/nixdoc
'nixdoc --category testers --description "nixpkgs testers" --file ./pkgs/build-support/testers/default.nix'
we will have more testers in the future so they should have their own
location
putting 'testers' in args will also make it simpler to use multiple testers
This commits changes the Emacs wrapper, in order to preload all autoload
definitions when built with additional packages. The list of all
definitions is generated at build-time. Packages do not need to
be (require)d for them to work.
Before this change, a code like
```sh
nix-shell -I "nixpkgs=$PWD" -p "emacs.pkgs.withPackages(e:[e.magit])" \
--run "emacs -Q -nw -f magit"
```
will fail with the message `Symbol’s function definition is void: magit`
After the change, the same code above will open Emacs with magit
enabled.
A slightly longer startup time of ~10ms was detected in local, informal
experiments.
More information on autoloading:
https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/eintr/Autoload.html
These features are internal-only, have special characters that bash
doesn't support in variable names, and aren't normally given
environment variables by cargo as far as I can tell.
This commit fixes precise dependency ignorance by converting the
environment variable `autoPatchelfIgnoreMissingDeps` into a bash array
`ignoreMissingDepsArray`, passing `"${ignoreMissingDepsArray[@]}"`
instead of `"${autoPatchelfIgnoreMissingDeps[@]}"` to the python
script.
The original implementation does not work when
`autoPatchelfIgnoreMissingDeps` contains multiple dependency names.
Because it mistakenly passes `"${autoPatchelfIgnoreMissingDeps[@]}"`
to the python script. According to the Nix manual
(https://nixos.org/manual/nix/stable/expressions/derivations.html),
lists of strings are concatenated into whitespace-separated strings,
then passed to the builder as environment variables. So, if
`autoPatchelfIgnoreMissingDeps = [ "dep1" "dep2" "dep3" ]`,
`"${autoPatchelfIgnoreMissingDeps[@]}"` will be expanded to a single
argument `"dep1 dep2 dep3"`, which is not the intended behavior,
because the python script takes the long argument as a dependency
name.
With this commit, `"${ignoreMissingDepsArray[@]}"` will be expanded to
three arguments `"dep1" "dep2" "dep3"` arguments as expected, fixing
the issue.
cpio includes the number of directory hard links in archives it creates.
Some filesystems, like btrfs, do not count directory hard links the same
way as more common filesystems like ext4 or tmpfs, so archives built
when /tmp is on such a filesystem do not reproduce. This patch replaces
cpio with bsdtar, which does not have this issue. The specific
invocation is from this page:
https://reproducible-builds.org/docs/archives/
before
$ nix build ".#whipper.tests.version"
whipper> File "/nix/store/2iiyy58pmm1ys6dy8ycbmmmfm67iakv1-whipper-0.10.0/bin/.whipper-wrapped", line 6, in <module>
whipper> File "/nix/store/2iiyy58pmm1ys6dy8ycbmmmfm67iakv1-whipper-0.10.0/lib/python3.9/site-packages/whipper/__init__.py", line 5, in <module>
note: keeping build directory '/tmp/nix-build-whipper-0.10.0-test-version.drv-7'
after
$ nix build ".#whipper.tests.version"
whipper> Traceback (most recent call last):
whipper> File "/nix/store/2iiyy58pmm1ys6dy8ycbmmmfm67iakv1-whipper-0.10.0/bin/.whipper-wrapped", line 6, in <module>
whipper> from whipper.command.main import main
whipper> File "/nix/store/2iiyy58pmm1ys6dy8ycbmmmfm67iakv1-whipper-0.10.0/lib/python3.9/site-packages/whipper/__init__.py", line 5, in <module>
whipper> from pkg_resources import (get_distribution,
whipper> ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'pkg_resources'
note: keeping build directory '/tmp/nix-build-whipper-0.10.0-test-version.drv-34'
error: builder for '/nix/store/5lxjicdhwgmjcz9ddlxgq3s3gyaa6lz4-whipper-0.10.0-test-version.drv' failed with exit code 1;
Desktop files are only useful when accompanied by the binaries they
specify. So it makes more sense to put them next to the binaries rather
than `$out` which only usually contains the binaries.
This simplifies usages and makes the default value consistent.
In a few cases, the default value was interpreted to be `false`,
but this is useless, because virtually nobody will explicitly
set `allowAliases = true;`.
Similar to the implementation of the `%f` and `%u` field codes. In this
case the amount of arguments passed poses no problem but the position
could, at least in theory.
This finishes the implementation of all the non-deprecated field codes.
As a part of that, repetitions of field codes are left alone. Originally
all field codes were removed. Now we replace only the first occurence.
This is correct for at least `%f`, `%u`, `%F` and `%U` because at most
one of them is permitted.
Shortcomings:
1. We replace `%[cfFikuU]` patterns one at a time. This means if the
right field code appears as part of the rest of the `Exec` field or
in a field code that was substituted earlier.
2. If any field code is repeated, only the first occurence is
substituted.
`%f` and `%u` are used to signal the program only accepts a single file
or URI argument. I do not believe there's a way to signal this
information to macOS but it is possible the program really won't work if
multiple files are passed and it's possible the relative position of
`%i`, `%c` or `%k` matters. So we replace `%f` or `%u` with `$1`. That
way we only pass one file in the (possibly significant) position of the
field code.
`ls -1 "$iconsdir/"*` listed the source directory for me when the glob
had no matches. Switching to `-A` circumvents this problem and has the
added advantage that it cannot run into argument list length limits.
Checked the desktop entry spec, there's other field codes than `%[fFuU]`
and those can in fact occur more than once, hence dropping '$' and
adding `/g`.
The "Exec" key in desktop items sometimes has one of the `%f`, `%F`,
`%u` and `%U` suffixes, which specify whether the command takes a file,
multiple files or a generalized URL or URLs. Darwin application bundles
do no understand this syntax so we do the next best thing, which is
simply dropping it.