This was achieved using the following command:
sd 'wrapGAppsHook\b' wrapGAppsHook3 (rg -l 'wrapGAppsHook\b')
And then manually reverted the following changes:
- alias in top-level.nix
- function name in wrap-gapps-hook.sh
- comment in postFixup of at-spi2-core
- comment in gtk4
- comment in preFixup of 1password-gui/linux.nix
- comment in postFixup of qgis/unwrapped-ltr.nix and qgis/unwrapped.nix
- comment in postFixup of telegram-desktop
- comment in postFixup of fwupd
- buildCommand of mongodb-compass
- postFixup of xflux-gui
- comment in a patch in kdePackages.kde-gtk-config and plasma5Packages.kde-gtk-config
- description of programs.sway.wrapperFeatures.gtk NixOS option (manual rebuild)
Closes#267442
$ nix path-info -Sh /nix/store/qj1dm7wfw5m3mxf1gn3fdm0az9y1h5ny-linux-firmware-20240312-xz
/nix/store/qj1dm7wfw5m3mxf1gn3fdm0az9y1h5ny-linux-firmware-20240312-xz 440.3M
$ nix path-info -Sh /nix/store/c3szcjxb3g990dbiz7llwmkaf0bi98j2-linux-firmware-20240312-zstd
/nix/store/c3szcjxb3g990dbiz7llwmkaf0bi98j2-linux-firmware-20240312-zstd 460.6M
This is an increase of 4.4%, but OTOH zstd has a significantly higher
decompression speed[1].
[1] https://gregoryszorc.com/blog/2017/03/07/better-compression-with-zstandard/
Closes#302291Closes#301536
The following things have changed:
* For 5.7+: ZSWAP compressor uses zstd now.
* For 5.11+: ZRAM compressor uses zstd now.
* For 5.13+: kernel modules are compressed with zstd instead of xz.
* For 5.19+: support zstd-compressed firmware.
The modules-closure functionality needed explicit support for copying
over `.zst` files. Also, the VM image builder used busybox's `insmod`
before which doesn't support zstd. Switched to `kmod` and added xz/zstd
as dependencies for it, similar to how it's done for the actual stage1
in d33e52b253. The use of `kmod` here
doesn't seem to be such a big deal since it's only a build-time
dependency.
Since the tool is exposed more prominently now, we should clear up what
it is and note that it is to be considered unstable, i.e. we may change
it if the necessity arises. (In practice it is probably going to be
fairly stable though, as compiler interfaces tend to be quite stable.)
Should we add a version?
The cc and bintools wrapper contained ad hoc bootstrapping logic for
expand-response-params (which was callPackage-ed in a let binding). This
lead to the strange situation that the bootstrapping logic related to
expand-response-params is split between the wrapper derivations (where
it is duplicated) and the actual stdenv bootstrapping.
To clean this up, the wrappers simply should take expand-response-params
as an ordinary input: They need an adjacent expand-response-params (i.e.
one that runs on their host platform), but don't care about the how.
Providing this is only problematic during stdenv bootstrapping where we
have to pull it from the previous stage at times.
We don't need to artificially make sure that we can execute the wrapper
scripts on the build platform by using stdenv's shell (which comes from
buildPackages) since our cross infrastructure will get us the wrapper
from buildPackages. The upside of this change is that cross-compiled
wrappers (e.g. pkgsCross.aarch64-multiplatform.gcc) will actually work
when executed!
For bootstrapping this is also not a problem, since we have a long
build->build platform chain so runtimeShell is just as good as
stdenvNoCC.shell. We do fall back to old ways, though, by explicitly
using the bootstrap-tools shell in stage2, so the adjacent bash is only
used from stage4 onwards. This is unnecessary in principle (I'll try
removing this hack in the future), but ensures this change causes zero
rebuilds.
To reduce dependencies (mainly nix-prefetch-git and through that git,
git-lfs) when we just need to fixup a lock file, eg when building electron.
This also tries to avoid needless rebuilds when eg. golang is updated.
Also this cleans up and combined the build/installPhase of both tools to
be a lot simpler.
In delicate code like this, it seems unwise to pass something of as
something it isn't for convenience's (?) sake. It causes a slight
possibility for confusion with `buildPackages.stdenv`. However, it
should be possible to eliminate the need for this in a separate change.
`stdenv.is*` defaults to `hostPlatform` which is technically incorrect
here, since what we are gating concerns the target platform only.
This would be a problem in practice if cross compiling from
x86_64-darwin to aarch64-darwin whilst using gcc which is probably
rare enough.
Replace `src = ./.` instances with more explicit source listings.
Otherwise, derivations will be rebuilt on any change to the files
defining them (e.g. formatting via nixfmt-rfc-style).
After enabling a separate binary output for the `Agda` Haskell package,
the new `bin` output measures ~100MiB, compared to the ~4.5GiB before.
Using it in `agdaWithPackages` reduces the closure size of an Agda
installation from ~5GiB to ~3GiB. The remaining space is taken up
mostly by the GHC backend.
With this change, derivations depending on `haskellPackages.Agda`
directly need to pick the right (binary) output. This concerns in
particular `emacsPackages.agda2-mode`.
`lib.getExe pkgsCross.riscv64.buildPackages.pkg-config` should return
`<prefix>/bin/riscv64-unknown-linux-gnu-pkg-config` not `<prefix>/bin/pkg-config`
This was added in d83e9c9573,
but included substitution variables `@blas@` and `@lapack@` that were
never substituted. It's not used anywhere in `nixpkgs`.
Ignore vendorSha256 when vendorHash is specified.
Throw when vendorHash isn't specified:
- "buildGoModule: Expect vendorHash instead of vendorSha256" when
vendorSha256 is specified.
- "buildGoModule: vendorHash is missing" otherwise.
`goModules.outputHashAlgo` is specified as null when vendorHash is not
empty, "sha256" otherwise.
Co-authored-by: zowoq <59103226+zowoq@users.noreply.github.com>
This is convenient for debugging the underlying streamed image used by
`dockerTools.buildLayeredImage`.
Here's an example of how you might use this:
```console
$ nix repl ./.
nix-repl> dockerTools.examples.nginx.passthru.stream
«derivation /nix/store/9zczmlp2kraszx4ssmh6fawnlnsa5a4n-stream-nginx-container.drv»
```
The way we build python environments is subtly broken. A python
environment should be semantically identical to a vanilla Python
installation in, say, /usr/local. The current implementation, however,
differs in two important ways. The first is that it's impossible to use
python packages from the environment in python virtual environments. The
second is that the nix-generated environment appears to be a venv, but
it's not.
This commit changes the way python environments are built:
* When generating wrappers for python executables, we inherit argv[0]
from the wrapper. This causes python to initialize its configuration
in the environment with all the correct paths.
* We remove the sitecustomize.py file from the base python package.
This file was used tweak the python configuration after it was
incorrectly initialized. That's no longer necessary.
The end result is that python environments no longer appear to be venvs,
and behave more like a vanilla python installation. In addition it's
possible to create a venv using an environment and use packages from
both the environment and the venv.
We also renamed `filter` (as a name of a parameter) to `predicate` following the naming suggestion in code review. It's better!
Since it's not part of an attrset, the name can change with no impact to semantics, since it can't be observed with `builtins.functionArgs`.
```
$ nix-repl
Nix 2.21.0
Type :? for help.
nix-repl> f = x: y: z: (x + y + z)
nix-repl> builtins.functionArgs f
{ }
nix-repl> :doc builtins.functionArgs
Synopsis: builtins.functionArgs f
Return a set containing the names of the formal arguments expected by the function f. The value of each attribute is a Boolean denoting whether the corresponding argument has a default value. For instance, functionArgs ({ x, y ?
123}: ...) = { x = false; y = true; }.
"Formal argument" here refers to the attributes pattern-matched by the function. Plain lambdas are not included, e.g. functionArgs (x: ...) = { }.
```
The nixpkgs-unstable channel's programs.sqlite was used to identify
packages producing exactly one binary, and these automatically added
to their package definitions wherever possible.
The `-path` test of `find` does string comparison, not path comparison.
Hence, the format of `everythingFile` needed to be very specific. Now,
it can be denormalized (e.g. it can contain `/./`) and an error is
emitted if the everything file or its interface file can't be removed.
Upstream now provides a library file for the builtin library and ensured
that the existing interface files will be used regardless of whether
--local-interfaces is in effect. Hence, Agda will not try to write to
the Nix store anymore except if the build flags are changed.
Replace writeReferencesToFile with writeClosure.
Make writeClosure accept a list of paths instead of a path.
Re-implement with JSON-based exportReferencesGraph interface provided by
__structuredAttrs = true.
Reword the documentation.
Co-authored-by: Valentin Gagarin <valentin.gagarin@tweag.io>
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Someone Serge <sergei.kozlukov@aalto.fi>
In NixOS/nixpkgs#290081 it came to attention that autoPatchelfHook is
one of if not the only hook in Nixpkgs that is a multiline string
expression. Almost all hooks are functions, which guard with something
like `if [ -z "${dontDoTheThing-}" ]; then ...` in the function, or
single-line strings which include that guard inline and then call the
real function, e.g. `if [ -z "${dontDoTheThing-} ]; then doTheThing; fi`.
This commit moves autoPatchelfHook to the former, which seems to be the
most common style now.
swiftc uses cc-wrapper which sets the -march flag on some systems which
breaks the build. This change adds a flag, disableMarch, to cc-wrapper
which disables using the -march flag.
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/295322