buildFHSUserEnv
buildFHSUserEnv provides a way to build and run
FHS-compatible lightweight sandboxes. It creates an isolated root with bound
/nix/store, so its footprint in terms of disk space
needed is quite small. This allows one to run software which is hard or
unfeasible to patch for NixOS -- 3rd-party source trees with FHS assumptions,
games distributed as tarballs, software with integrity checking and/or
external self-updated binaries. It uses Linux namespaces feature to create
temporary lightweight environments which are destroyed after all child
processes exit, without root user rights requirement. Accepted arguments are:
name
Environment name.
targetPkgs
Packages to be installed for the main host's architecture (i.e. x86_64 on
x86_64 installations). Along with libraries binaries are also installed.
multiPkgs
Packages to be installed for all architectures supported by a host (i.e.
i686 and x86_64 on x86_64 installations). Only libraries are installed by
default.
extraBuildCommands
Additional commands to be executed for finalizing the directory structure.
extraBuildCommandsMulti
Like extraBuildCommands, but executed only on multilib
architectures.
extraOutputsToInstall
Additional derivation outputs to be linked for both target and
multi-architecture packages.
extraInstallCommands
Additional commands to be executed for finalizing the derivation with
runner script.
runScript
A command that would be executed inside the sandbox and passed all the
command line arguments. It defaults to bash.
One can create a simple environment using a shell.nix like
that:
{} }:
(pkgs.buildFHSUserEnv {
name = "simple-x11-env";
targetPkgs = pkgs: (with pkgs;
[ udev
alsaLib
]) ++ (with pkgs.xorg;
[ libX11
libXcursor
libXrandr
]);
multiPkgs = pkgs: (with pkgs;
[ udev
alsaLib
]);
runScript = "bash";
}).env
]]>
Running nix-shell would then drop you into a shell with
these libraries and binaries available. You can use this to run closed-source
applications which expect FHS structure without hassles: simply change
runScript to the application path, e.g.
./bin/start.sh -- relative paths are supported.