nixpkgs/lib/debug.nix
Silvan Mosberger 4f0dadbf38 treewide: format all inactive Nix files
After final improvements to the official formatter implementation,
this commit now performs the first treewide reformat of Nix files using it.
This is part of the implementation of RFC 166.

Only "inactive" files are reformatted, meaning only files that
aren't being touched by any PR with activity in the past 2 months.
This is to avoid conflicts for PRs that might soon be merged.
Later we can do a full treewide reformat to get the rest,
which should not cause as many conflicts.

A CI check has already been running for some time to ensure that new and
already-formatted files are formatted, so the files being reformatted here
should also stay formatted.

This commit was automatically created and can be verified using

    nix-build a08b3a4d19.tar.gz \
      --argstr baseRev b32a094368
    result/bin/apply-formatting $NIXPKGS_PATH
2024-12-10 20:26:33 +01:00

481 lines
7.7 KiB
Nix

/**
Collection of functions useful for debugging
broken nix expressions.
* `trace`-like functions take two values, print
the first to stderr and return the second.
* `traceVal`-like functions take one argument
which both printed and returned.
* `traceSeq`-like functions fully evaluate their
traced value before printing (not just to weak
head normal form like trace does by default).
* Functions that end in `-Fn` take an additional
function as their first argument, which is applied
to the traced value before it is printed.
*/
{ lib }:
let
inherit (lib)
isList
isAttrs
substring
attrValues
concatLists
const
elem
generators
id
mapAttrs
trace
;
in
rec {
# -- TRACING --
/**
Conditionally trace the supplied message, based on a predicate.
# Inputs
`pred`
: Predicate to check
`msg`
: Message that should be traced
`x`
: Value to return
# Type
```
traceIf :: bool -> string -> a -> a
```
# Examples
:::{.example}
## `lib.debug.traceIf` usage example
```nix
traceIf true "hello" 3
trace: hello
=> 3
```
:::
*/
traceIf =
pred: msg: x:
if pred then trace msg x else x;
/**
Trace the supplied value after applying a function to it, and
return the original value.
# Inputs
`f`
: Function to apply
`x`
: Value to trace and return
# Type
```
traceValFn :: (a -> b) -> a -> a
```
# Examples
:::{.example}
## `lib.debug.traceValFn` usage example
```nix
traceValFn (v: "mystring ${v}") "foo"
trace: mystring foo
=> "foo"
```
:::
*/
traceValFn = f: x: trace (f x) x;
/**
Trace the supplied value and return it.
# Inputs
`x`
: Value to trace and return
# Type
```
traceVal :: a -> a
```
# Examples
:::{.example}
## `lib.debug.traceVal` usage example
```nix
traceVal 42
# trace: 42
=> 42
```
:::
*/
traceVal = traceValFn id;
/**
`builtins.trace`, but the value is `builtins.deepSeq`ed first.
# Inputs
`x`
: The value to trace
`y`
: The value to return
# Type
```
traceSeq :: a -> b -> b
```
# Examples
:::{.example}
## `lib.debug.traceSeq` usage example
```nix
trace { a.b.c = 3; } null
trace: { a = <CODE>; }
=> null
traceSeq { a.b.c = 3; } null
trace: { a = { b = { c = 3; }; }; }
=> null
```
:::
*/
traceSeq = x: y: trace (builtins.deepSeq x x) y;
/**
Like `traceSeq`, but only evaluate down to depth n.
This is very useful because lots of `traceSeq` usages
lead to an infinite recursion.
# Inputs
`depth`
: 1\. Function argument
`x`
: 2\. Function argument
`y`
: 3\. Function argument
# Type
```
traceSeqN :: Int -> a -> b -> b
```
# Examples
:::{.example}
## `lib.debug.traceSeqN` usage example
```nix
traceSeqN 2 { a.b.c = 3; } null
trace: { a = { b = {}; }; }
=> null
```
:::
*/
traceSeqN =
depth: x: y:
let
snip =
v:
if isList v then
noQuotes "[]" v
else if isAttrs v then
noQuotes "{}" v
else
v;
noQuotes = str: v: {
__pretty = const str;
val = v;
};
modify =
n: fn: v:
if (n == 0) then
fn v
else if isList v then
map (modify (n - 1) fn) v
else if isAttrs v then
mapAttrs (const (modify (n - 1) fn)) v
else
v;
in
trace (generators.toPretty { allowPrettyValues = true; } (modify depth snip x)) y;
/**
A combination of `traceVal` and `traceSeq` that applies a
provided function to the value to be traced after `deepSeq`ing
it.
# Inputs
`f`
: Function to apply
`v`
: Value to trace
*/
traceValSeqFn = f: v: traceValFn f (builtins.deepSeq v v);
/**
A combination of `traceVal` and `traceSeq`.
# Inputs
`v`
: Value to trace
*/
traceValSeq = traceValSeqFn id;
/**
A combination of `traceVal` and `traceSeqN` that applies a
provided function to the value to be traced.
# Inputs
`f`
: Function to apply
`depth`
: 2\. Function argument
`v`
: Value to trace
*/
traceValSeqNFn =
f: depth: v:
traceSeqN depth (f v) v;
/**
A combination of `traceVal` and `traceSeqN`.
# Inputs
`depth`
: 1\. Function argument
`v`
: Value to trace
*/
traceValSeqN = traceValSeqNFn id;
/**
Trace the input and output of a function `f` named `name`,
both down to `depth`.
This is useful for adding around a function call,
to see the before/after of values as they are transformed.
# Inputs
`depth`
: 1\. Function argument
`name`
: 2\. Function argument
`f`
: 3\. Function argument
`v`
: 4\. Function argument
# Examples
:::{.example}
## `lib.debug.traceFnSeqN` usage example
```nix
traceFnSeqN 2 "id" (x: x) { a.b.c = 3; }
trace: { fn = "id"; from = { a.b = {}; }; to = { a.b = {}; }; }
=> { a.b.c = 3; }
```
:::
*/
traceFnSeqN =
depth: name: f: v:
let
res = f v;
in
lib.traceSeqN (depth + 1) {
fn = name;
from = v;
to = res;
} res;
# -- TESTING --
/**
Evaluates a set of tests.
A test is an attribute set `{expr, expected}`,
denoting an expression and its expected result.
The result is a `list` of __failed tests__, each represented as
`{name, expected, result}`,
- expected
- What was passed as `expected`
- result
- The actual `result` of the test
Used for regression testing of the functions in lib; see
tests.nix for more examples.
Important: Only attributes that start with `test` are executed.
- If you want to run only a subset of the tests add the attribute `tests = ["testName"];`
# Inputs
`tests`
: Tests to run
# Type
```
runTests :: {
tests = [ String ];
${testName} :: {
expr :: a;
expected :: a;
};
}
->
[
{
name :: String;
expected :: a;
result :: a;
}
]
```
# Examples
:::{.example}
## `lib.debug.runTests` usage example
```nix
runTests {
testAndOk = {
expr = lib.and true false;
expected = false;
};
testAndFail = {
expr = lib.and true false;
expected = true;
};
}
->
[
{
name = "testAndFail";
expected = true;
result = false;
}
]
```
:::
*/
runTests =
tests:
concatLists (
attrValues (
mapAttrs (
name: test:
let
testsToRun = if tests ? tests then tests.tests else [ ];
in
if
(substring 0 4 name == "test" || elem name testsToRun)
&& ((testsToRun == [ ]) || elem name tests.tests)
&& (test.expr != test.expected)
then
[
{
inherit name;
expected = test.expected;
result = test.expr;
}
]
else
[ ]
) tests
)
);
/**
Create a test assuming that list elements are `true`.
# Inputs
`expr`
: 1\. Function argument
# Examples
:::{.example}
## `lib.debug.testAllTrue` usage example
```nix
{ testX = allTrue [ true ]; }
```
:::
*/
testAllTrue = expr: {
inherit expr;
expected = map (x: true) expr;
};
}