stdenv.cc may throw, e.g. in the case of pkgsCross.ghcjs where we must
not force it for the purpose of attribute accessing (`or` doesn't
implicitly tryEval…).
Regression introduced in 1a5bd697ad.
this makes it a lot easier to create a modified stdenv with a
different set of defaultHardeningFlags and as a bonus allows us
to inject the correct defaultHardeningFlags into toolchain wrapper
scripts, reducing repetition.
while most hardening flags are arguably more of a compiler thing,
it works better to put them in bintools-wrapper because cc-wrapper
can easily refer to bintools but not vice-versa.
mkDerivation can still easily refer to either when it is constructed.
this also switches fortran-hook.sh to use the same defaults for
NIX_HARDENING_ENABLE as for C. previously NIX_HARDENING_ENABLE
defaults were apparently used to avoid passing problematic flags
to a fortran compiler, but this falls apart as soon as mkDerivation
sets its own NIX_HARDENING_ENABLE - cc.hardeningUnsupportedFlags
is a more appropriate mechanism for this as it actively filters
out flags from being used by the wrapper, so switch to using that
instead.
this is still an imperfect mechanism because it doesn't handle a
compiler which has both langFortran *and* langC very well - applying
the superset of the two's hardeningUnsupportedFlags to either
compiler's invocation. however this is nothing new - cc-wrapper
already poorly handles a langFortran+langC compiler, applying two
setup hooks that have contradictory options.
If a CMake target has a non-default LINKER_LANGUAGE set, CMake will
manually add the libraries it has detected that language's compiler as
linking implicitly. When it does this, it'll pass -Bstatic and
-Bdynamic options based on the vibes it gets from each such detected
library. This in itself isn't a problem, because the compiler
toolchain, or our wrapper, or something, seems to be smart enough to
ignore -Bdynamic for those libraries. But it does create a problem if
the compiler adds extra libraries to the linker command line after
that final -Bdynamic, because those will be linked dynamically. Since
our compiler is static by default, CMake should reset to -Bstatic
after it's done manually specifying libraries, but CMake didn't
actually know that our compiler is static by default. The fix for
that is to tell it, like so.
Until recently, this problem was difficult to notice, because it would
result binaries that worked, but that were dynamically linked. Since
e08ce498f0 ("cc-wrapper: Account for NIX_LDFLAGS and NIX_CFLAGS_LINK
in linkType"), though, -Wl,-dynamic-linker is no longer mistakenly
passed for executables that are supposed to be static, so they end up
created with a /lib interpreter path, and so don't run at all on
NixOS.
This fixes pkgsStatic.graphite2.
While there is no fetcher or builder (in nixpkgs) that takes an `md5` parameter,
for some inscrutable reason the nix interpreter accepts the following:
```nix
fetchurl {
url = "https://www.perdu.com";
hash = "md5-rrdBU2a35b2PM2ZO+n/zGw==";
}
```
Note that neither MD5 nor SHA1 are allowed by the syntax of SRI hashes.
Fixes `pkgsCross.musl64.llvmPackages_16.clang.cc` on `x86_64-linux`,
which used to fail with `/bin/sh: clang-tblgen: not found`.
Same hack is used in other projects:
https://github.com/search?q=%2FCMAKE_CROSSCOMPILING_EMULATOR.%2B%5C%2Fusr%5C%2Fbin%5C%2Fenv%2F+NOT+is%3Afork&type=code
Comment from 30435a9d0f/build/cmake/HostLinuxToolchain.cmake (L64)
> Required to run host Linux executables during the build itself.
> An example would be https://gitub.com/KhronosGroup/Vulkan-Loader and
> its "asm_offset" program.
>
> NOTE: Alternatives have been tried unsuccessfully, i.e.:
>
> With $(set CMAKE_CROSSCOMPILING_EMULATOR), the build fails because
> the CMake ninja/Make script tries to find the executable in the current
> path, as in:
>
> [3/16] Generating gen_defines.asm
> FAILED: loader/gen_defines.asm
> cd /tmp/cc/build-Vulkan-Loader/loader && asm_offset GAS
> /bin/sh: asm_offset: command not found
> ninja: build stopped: subcommand failed.
>
> With $(set CMAKE_CROSSCOMPILING_EMULATOR ""), the build fails because
> the shell cannot find the "" program as in:
>
> [3/16] Generating gen_defines.asm
> FAILED: loader/gen_defines.asm
> cd /tmp/cc/build-Vulkan-Loader/loader && "" /tmp/cc/build-Vulkan-Loader/loader/asm_offset GAS
> /bin/sh: : command not found
> ninja: build stopped: subcommand failed.
>
> It seems that the root of the problem comes from how the CMake function
> cmCustomCommandGenerator::GetArgc0Location() computes the target
> executable's location. At this point it's unclear whether this is a CMake
> bug or a feature.
Risicle discovered this hack.
Co-authored-by: Robert Scott <code@humanleg.org.uk>
```
nix-repl> (pkgs.htop.overrideAttrs { pname = "hello-overriden"; }).pname
error:
… while evaluating a branch condition
at /nix/store/phn5cahwacv9wjgalygw62x8l4xbl6x3-source/lib/customisation.nix:86:7:
85| in
86| if builtins.isAttrs result then
| ^
87| result // {
… while calling the 'isAttrs' builtin
at /nix/store/phn5cahwacv9wjgalygw62x8l4xbl6x3-source/lib/customisation.nix:86:10:
85| in
86| if builtins.isAttrs result then
| ^
87| result // {
(stack trace truncated; use '--show-trace' to show the full trace)
error: attempt to call something which is not a function but a set
at /nix/store/phn5cahwacv9wjgalygw62x8l4xbl6x3-source/pkgs/stdenv/generic/make-derivation.nix:58:21:
57| f = self: super:
58| let x = f0 super;
| ^
59| in
```
Makes overrideAttrs usable in the same way that `override` can be used.
It allows the first argument of `overrideAttrs` to be either a function
or an attrset, instead of only a function:
hello.overrideAttrs (old: { postBuild = "echo hello"; })
hello.overrideAttrs { postBuild = "echo hello"; }
Previously only the first example was possible.
Co-authored-by: adisbladis <adisbladis@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: matthewcroughan <matt@croughan.sh>
passAsFile passes the values of Nix bindings to the builder as
files, so if those values contained references, they wouldn't end up
in the inputDerivation output. To fix that, append the contents of
every such passed file to the output.
We only have shell builtins in this derivation, so we can't use cat.
The only way I know of appending the contents of one file to another
using only shell builtins is as I've done here, but it requires
putting the contents of the file on echo's argv. This might end up
causing problems with large files. Regardless, I think we should try
this, as a failure is better than silently producing an incorrect
result like the previous behavior.
`nix-2.4+` automatically filters `__contentAddressed` out of the
environment. But not `nix-2.3`. This make `.drv` to differ between
unset and `__contentAddressed = false` derivations.
This change makes them equal by filtering out `__contentAddressed`
unless it's set to `true`.
The primary motivating example is openssl:
Before the change full package build took 1m54s minutes.
After the change full package build takes 59s.
About a 2x speedup.
The difference is visible because openssl builds hundreds of manpages
spawning a perl process per manual in `install` phase. Such a workload
is very easy to parallelize.
Another example would be `autotools`+`libtool` based build system where
install step requires relinking. The more binaries there are to relink
the more gain it will be to do it in parallel.
The change enables parallel installs by default only for buiilds that
already have parallel builds enabled. There is a high chance those build
systems already handle parallelism well but some packages will fail.
Consistently propagated the enableParallelBuilding to:
- cmake (enabled by default, similar to builds)
- ninja (set parallelism explicitly, don't rely on default)
- bmake (enable when requested)
- scons (enable when requested)
- meson (set parallelism explicitly, don't rely on default)
- waf (set parallelism explicitly, don't rely on default)
- qmake-4/5/6 (enable by default, similar to builds)
- xorg (always enable, similar to builds)
This was disabled here: b86e62d30d (diff-282a02cc3871874f16401347d8fadc90d59d7ab11f6a99eaa5173c3867e1a160)
h/t to @teh: b86e62d30d (commitcomment-77916294)
for pointing out that the failure that @matthewbauer was
seeing was caused by the `separate-debug-info.sh` `build-id` length
requirement that #146275 will relax
`lld` has had `--build-id` support dating back to LLVM4: https://reviews.llvm.org/D18091
This predates every `llvmPackages_` version currently in nixpkgs (and
certainly every version actually still used in `useLLVM` stdenvs) so
with the previous commit (asking `ld` for sufficiently long SHA1 hashes)
I think we can safely enable `separateDebugInfo` when using LLVM
bintools.
platform.uname.processor seems to be what we want in many more cases
than what we were using before — it does the right thing for aarch64,
x86_64, riscv32, riscv64, mips, mips64, powerpc, and powerpc64 (the
latter three of which were broken before).
This fixes cross-compilation of systemd for PowerPC/POWER platforms.
Derivations listed as disallowedReferences or disallowedRequisites,
currently end up as build-time dependencies.
This is problematic since the disallowed derivations will be built by nix as
build-time dependencies, while those derivations might take a very long time
to build, or might not even build successfully on the platform used.
However, in order to scan for disallowed references in the final output,
knowing the out path is sufficient, and the out path can be calculated from
the derivation without needing to build it, saving time and resources.
While the problem is less severe for allowedReferences and allowedRequisites,
since we want the derivation to be built eventually, we would still like to
get the error early and without having to wait while nix builds a derivation
that might not be used (e.g. if we listed the wrong one).
Without the change we don't propagate `enableParallelBuilding = true`
and leave most builds sequential.
Noticed on `mythtv` package which did not specify parallelism and
`config.enableParallelBuildingByDefault = true` had no effect.
Derivations not using `__structuredAttrs` should not attempt to set
environment variables from `env`.
Derivations using `__structuredAttrs` should fail if `env` is not
exportable.
Co-authored-by: Robin Gloster <mail@glob.in>
stdenv: print message if structuredAttrs is enabled
stdenv: add _append
reduces the chance of a user doing it wrong
fix nix develop issue
output hooks don't work yet in nix develop though
making $outputs be the same on non-structuredAttrs and structuredAttrs
is too much trouble.
lets instead make a function that gets the output names
reading environment file '/nix/store/2x7m69a2sm2kh0r6v0q5s9z1dh41m4xf-xz-5.2.5-env-bin'
nix: src/nix/develop.cc:299: std::string Common::makeRcScript(nix::ref<nix::Store>, const BuildEnvironment&, const Path&): Assertion `outputs != buildEnvironment.vars.end()' failed.
use a function to get all output names instead of using $outputs
copy env functionality from https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/76732/commits