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83 lines
3.1 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _pinning-nixpkgs:
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Towards reproducibility: Pinning nixpkgs
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========================================
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In various Nix examples, you'll often see references to `<nixpkgs> <https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs>`_, as follows.
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.. code:: nix
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{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> {}
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}:
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...
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This is **convenient** to quickly demonstrate a Nix expression and get it working by importing Nix packages.
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However, the resulting Nix expression **is not fully reproducible**. The ``<nixpkgs>`` reference
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is set from the **local** ``$NIX_PATH`` environment variable. In most cases, this is set at the time Nix is installed
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to the ``nixpkgs-unstable`` channel, and therefore it is likely to differ from machine to machine.
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.. note::
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`Channels <https://nixos.wiki/wiki/Nix_channels>`_ are a way of distributing Nix software, but they are being phased out.
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Even though they are still used by default, it is recommended to avoid channels
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and ``<nixpkgs>`` by always setting ``NIX_PATH=`` to be empty.
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Pinning packages with URLs inside a Nix expression
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--------------------------------------------------
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To create **fully reproducible** Nix expressions, we can pin an exact versions of nixpkgs.
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The simplest way to do this is to fetch the required nixpkgs version as a tarball specified via the relevant git commit hash:
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.. code:: nix
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{ pkgs ? import (fetchTarball "https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/3590f02e7d5760e52072c1a729ee2250b5560746.tar.gz") {};
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}:
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...
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Picking the commit can be done via `status.nixos.org <https://status.nixos.org/>`_,
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which lists all the releases and the latest commit that has passed all tests.
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When choosing a commit, it is recommended to follow either
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* the **latest stable NixOS** release by using a specific version, such as ``nixos-20.03``, **or**
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* the latest **unstable release** via ``nixos-unstable``.
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Dependency management with niv
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------------------------------
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If you'd like a bit more automation around bumping dependencies, including nixpkgs,
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`niv <https://github.com/nmattia/niv/>`_ is made for exactly that. Niv itself is available
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in ``nixpkgs`` so using it is simple::
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$ nix-shell -p niv --run "niv init"
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This command will generate ``nix/sources.json`` with information about how and where
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dependencies are fetched. It will also create ``nix/sources.nix`` which glues the sources together in Nix.
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By default ``niv`` will use the **latest stable** NixOS release. However, you should check to see which version is currently specified in `the niv repository <https://github.com/nmattia/niv>`_ if you require a specific release, as it might lag behind.
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You can use the generated ``sources.nix`` file as follows:
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.. code:: nix
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{ sources ? import ./sources.nix
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, pkgs ? import sources.nixpkgs {}
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}:
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...
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And you can update all the dependencies by running::
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$ nix-shell -p niv --run "niv update"
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Going forward
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-------------
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- For more examples and details of the different ways to pin ``nixpkgs``, see :ref:`ref-pinning-nixpkgs`.
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- To quickly setup a Nix project read through
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`Getting started Nix template <https://github.com/nix-dot-dev/getting-started-nix-template>`_. |