Prior to this change, the `importCargoLock` git dependency builder
assumed that the workspace root that needed to be passed to
`replace-workspace-values` will always be the root directory of the git
repository.
This is not always the case as independent workspace roots may be used
from subdirectories, and packages be referenced via paths. An example of
this is [1], where the `iced` subdirectory is its own independent
workspace, and workspace values for packages within it should be pulled
from the `iced` subdirectory as the workspace root, not from the
top-level of the fetched repository.
[1]: b8f1a366dd/Cargo.toml
Members of the [package] table in Cargo.toml can be either subtables, or
values like strings and bools. Python is happy to check for membership
of "workspace" in a string, since Python strings are iterables, but if
the value is a bool, Python will throw an exception.
Rust 1.64.0 added support for workspace inheritance, which allows
for crates to inherit values such as dependency version constraints or
package metadata information from their workspaces [0].
This works by having workspace members specify a value as a table, with
`workspace` set to true. Thus, supporting this in importCargoLock is as
simple as walking the crate's Cargo.toml, replacing inherited values
with their workspace counterpart.
This is also what a forthcoming Cargo release will do for `cargo vendor` [1],
but we can get ahead of it ;)
[0]: https://blog.rust-lang.org/2022/09/22/Rust-1.64.0.html#cargo-improvements-workspace-inheritance-and-multi-target-builds
[1]: https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/pull/11414
This is useful to teach `importCargoLock` how to download crates from a
registry other than crates.io. Specifically, we publish our own crates
to an internal registry and this feature lets us pull from it seamlessly.
v1 lock files (generated by default by Cargo versions 1.40 and below)
use a single table, `metadata`, to store the checksums of packages.
The primary motivation for doing this now is that we're considering
vendoring all Cargo lock files in Nixpkgs, some packages still use it
(e.g. cargo-asm), and adding support for it doesn't increase the
complexity of the function. No matter the outcome of the vendoring
discussion, this is a nice thing to have because Cargo still supports v1
lock files.
Some crates do not have a Cargo.toml at the top-level, but only in
nested directories. Before this change importCargoLock used to fail with:
error: manifest path `/nix/store/some-store-path/Cargo.toml` does not exist
In restricted mode (and therefore with flakes) `builtins.readFile` may not be the result of `builtins.toFile`,
making it impossible to use a generated lockFile (with or without IFD),
and thereby causing evaluation to fail if `system != builtins.currentSystem` on Hydra
so the jobs are not delegated to eligible build machines that support that system.
This is done in a way that avoids rebuilds.
near the end of 2019, the default Cargo.lock format was changed to
[[package]]
checksum = ...
This is what importCargoLock assumes. If the crate had not been `cargo
update`'d with a more recent toolchain than the one with the new
format as default, importCargoLock would fail when trying to access
pkg.checksum.
I ran into such a case (shamefully, in my own crate) and it took me a
while to figure out what was going on, so here is an assert with a
more user friendly message and a hint.
This function can be used to create an output path that is a cargo
vendor directory. In contrast to e.g. fetchCargoTarball all the
dependent crates are fetched using fixed-output derivations. The
hashes for the fixed-output derivations are gathered from the
Cargo.lock file.
Usage is very simple, e.g.:
importCargoLock {
lockFile = ./Cargo.lock;
}
would use the lockfile from the current directory.
The implementation of this function is based on Eelco Dolstra's
import-cargo:
https://github.com/edolstra/import-cargo/blob/master/flake.nix
Compared to upstream:
- We use fetchgit in place of builtins.fetchGit.
- Sync to current cargo vendoring.