Introduced in 8f6b347abd without explanation.
Throwing anything that's not that is a programming mistake that we don't want
to ignore silently. A crash would be ok, because that means we/they can fix
the offending throw.
Otherwise, if checkInterrupt() in any of the supported store operations
would catch onto a user interrupt, the exception would bubble to the thread
start and be handled by std::terminate(): a crash.
... and remove a few unused arguments.
This adds pkg-config to a two or three packages that don't use it,
but we shouldn't let that bother us. It's like our personal stdenv.
If you have the Nix store mounted from a nonlocal filesystem whose
exporter is not running as root, making the directory mode 000 makes it
inaccessible to that remote unprivileged user and therefore breaks the
build. (Specifically, I am running into this with a virtiofs mount using
Apple Virtualization.framework as a non-root user, but I expect the
same thing would happen with virtiofs in qemu on Linux as a non-root
user or with various userspace network file servers.)
Make the directory mode 500 (dr-x------) to make the sandbox work in
this use case, which explicitly conveys our intention to read and search
the directory. The code only works because root can already bypass
directory checks, so this does not actually grant more permissions to
the directory owner / does not make the sandbox less secure.
This caused nlohmann/json.hpp to leak into a lot of compilation units,
which is slow (when not using precompiled headers).
Cuts build time from 46m24s to 42m5s (real time with -j24: 2m42s to
2m24s).
These versions are more than 3 years old and were very early in the
existence of CA derivations support (which was and is experimental),
so they're unlikely to still exist in the real world. So let's get rid
of support for them.
The previous documentation was inaccurate, stating that it would not update existing inputs. However these inputs will be updated if they are outdated (for example the version of an existing input has been changed). The new text properly reflects this behaviour.
A test added recently checks that when trying to deserialize a NAR with
two files that Unicode-normalize to the same result either succeeds on
Linux, or fails with an "already exists" error on Darwin. However,
failing with an "already exists" error can in fact also happen on Linux,
when using ZFS with the proper utf8 and Unicode normalization options
set.
This commit fixes the issue by not assuming the behavior from the
current system, but just by blindly checking that either one of the two
aforementioned possibilities happen, whether on Darwin or on Linux.
Additionally, we check that the Unicode normalization behaviour of
nix-store is the same as the host file system.
This leads to confusion about what the command does.
E.g. https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/9359
- Move the description up
- Remove details about the individual formatters
This patch has been manually adapted from
14dc84ed03
Tested with:
$ NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE=$(nix-build '<nixpkgs>' -A cacert)/etc/ssl/certs/ca-bundle.crt nix-build --store $(mktemp -d) -E 'import <nix/fetchurl.nix> { url = https://google.com; }'
Finished at 16:57:50 after 1s
warning: found empty hash, assuming 'sha256-AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA='
this derivation will be built:
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
/nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
google.com> building '/nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv'
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
google.com> error:
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
google.com> … writing file '/nix/store/0zynn4n8yx59bczy1mgh1lq2rnprvvrc-google.com'
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
google.com>
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
google.com> error: unable to download 'https://google.com': Problem with the SSL CA cert (path? access rights?) (77) error setting certificate file: /nix/store/nlgbippbbgn38hynjkp1ghiybcq1dqhx-nss-cacert-3.101.1/etc/ssl/certs/ca-bundle.crt
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
error: builder for '/nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv' failed with exit code 1
Now returns:
nix-env % NIX_SSL_CERT_FILE=$(nix-build '<nixpkgs>' -A cacert)/etc/ssl/certs/ca-bundle.crt nix-build --store $(mktemp -d) -E 'import <nix/fetchurl.nix> { url = https://google.com; }'
Finished at 17:05:48 after 0s
warning: found empty hash, assuming 'sha256-AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA='
this derivation will be built:
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
/nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
google.com> building '/nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv'
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
nix-output-monitor error: DerivationReadError /nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
error: hash mismatch in fixed-output derivation '/nix/store/4qljhy0jj2b0abjzpsbyarpia1bqylwc-google.com.drv':
specified: sha256-AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA=
This method is marked as `noexcept`, but `enqueueFileTransfer()` can
throw `Interrupted` if the user has hit Ctrl-C or if the `ThreadPool`
that the thread is a part of is shutting down.
When working on speeding up the CI,
I triggered a race condition in the creation of the tarball cache.
This code now instead will ensure that half-initialized repositories
are no longer visible to any other nix process.
This is the error message that I got before:
error: opening Git repository '"/Users/runner/.cache/nix/tarball-cache"': could not find repository at '/Users/runner/.cache/nix/tarball-cache'
* docs: specify that flake.lock files are JSON
Recently, I decided that I was going to write some code that would parse
flake.lock files. I went to the Nix Reference Manual in order to look up
information on the format of flake.lock files, and I realized that a key
detail was missing from the Nix Reference Manual: it never says that
flake.lock files are JSON files. This commit fixes that issue.
This commit makes sure to specify that flake.lock files are encoded in
UTF-8. Confusingly, there’s multiple different JSON standards. Neither
ECMA-404, 2nd Edition [1] nor ISO/IEC 21778:2017 [2] mention UTF-8. RFC
8259 requires UTF-8, but only sometimes [3]. I chose to explicitly
specify that flake.lock files are UTF-8 in order to avoid any possible
ambiguities from the JSON standards.
[1]: <https://ecma-international.org/publications-and-standards/standards/ecma-404>
[2]: <https://www.iso.org/standard/71616.html>
[3]: <https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc8259.html#section-8.1>
Most of the time people run single tests for debugging reason,
so it's a sane default to have them see all the console output.
This commit still retains the section about running tests directly with
meson, because in some debugging cases it's just nice to have less
abstractions i.e. when using strace.
Since #8766, invalid base64 is rendered in errors, but we don't actually
want to show this in the case of an invalid private keys.
Co-Authored-By: Eelco Dolstra <edolstra@gmail.com>
This is better for privacy and to avoid leaking netrc credentials in a
MITM attack, but also the assumption that we check the hash no longer
holds in some cases (in particular for impure derivations).
Partially reverts 5db358d4d7.
As a prelude to making "or" work like a normal variable, emit a warning
any time the "fn or" production is used in a context that will change
how it is parsed when that production is refactored.
In detail: in the future, OR_KW will be moved to expr_simple, and the
cursed ExprCall production that is currently part of the expr_select
nonterminal will be generated "normally" in expr_app instead. Any
productions that accept an expr_select will be affected, except for the
expr_app nonterminal itself (because, while expr_app has a production
accepting a bare expr_select, its other production will continue to
accept "fn or" expressions). So all we need to do is emit an appropriate
warning when an expr_simple representing a cursed ExprCall is accepted
in one of those productions without first going through expr_app.
As the warning message describes, users can suppress the warning by
wrapping their problematic "fn or" expressions in parentheses. For
example, "f g or" can be made future-proof by rewriting it as
"f (g or)"; similarly "[ x y or ]" can be rewritten as "[ x (y or) ]",
etc. The parentheses preserve the current grouping behavior, as in the
future "f g or" will be parsed as "(f g) or", just like
"f g anything-else" is grouped. (Mechanically, this suppresses the
warning because the problem ExprCalls go through the
"expr_app : expr_select" production, which resets the cursed status on
the ExprCall.)
@ -16,7 +16,7 @@ This has a small adverse affect on remote building --- the `build-remote` execut
This means that other applications linking `libnixstore` that wish to use remote building must arrange for the `nix` command to be on the PATH (or manually overriding `build-hook`) in order for that to work.
Long term we don't envision this being a downside, because we plan to [get rid of `build-remote` and the build hook setting entirely](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/1221).
There is simply no need to add a second layer of remote-procedure-calling when we want to connect to a remote builder.
There should simply be no need to have an extra, intermediate layer of remote-procedure-calling when we want to connect to a remote builder.
The build hook protocol did in principle support custom ways of remote building, but that can also be accomplished with a custom service for the ssh or daemon/ssh-ng protocols, or with a custom [store type](@docroot@/store/types/index.md) i.e. `Store` subclass. <!-- we normally don't mention classes, but consider that this release note is about a library use case -->
The Perl bindings no longer expose `getBinDir` either, since they libraries those bindings wrap no longer know the location of installed binaries as described above.
The Perl bindings no longer expose `getBinDir` either, since the underlying C++ libraries those bindings wrap no longer know the location of installed binaries as described above.
Previously `<nix/fetchurl.nix>` did not do TLS verification. This was because the Nix sandbox in the past did not have access to TLS certificates, and Nix checks the hash of the fetched file anyway. However, this can expose authentication data from `netrc` and URLs to man-in-the-middle attackers. In addition, Nix now in some cases (such as when using impure derivations) does *not* check the hash. Therefore we have now enabled TLS verification. This means that downloads by `<nix/fetchurl.nix>` will now fail if you're fetching from a HTTPS server that does not have a valid certificate.
`<nix/fetchurl.nix>` is also known as the builtin derivation builder `builtin:fetchurl`. It's not to be confused with the evaluation-time function `builtins.fetchurl`, which was not affected by this issue.
@ -62,7 +62,7 @@ These pages can be viewed offline:
Several operations, such as [`nix-env --query`](./nix-env/query.md) and [`nix-env --install`](./nix-env/install.md), take a list of *arguments* that specify the packages on which to operate.
Packages are identified based on a `name` part and a `version` part of a [symbolic derivation name](@docroot@/language/derivations.md#attr-names):
Packages are identified based on a `name` part and a `version` part of a [symbolic derivation name](@docroot@/language/derivations.md#attr-name):
- `name`: Everything up to but not including the first dash (`-`) that is *not* followed by a letter.
- `version`: The rest, excluding the separating dash.
The [URL to the Nix store](@docroot@/store/types/index.md#store-url-format) to use for evaluation, i.e. where to store derivations (`.drv` files) and inputs referenced by them.
Interpret the command line arguments as a list of Nix expressions to be parsed and evaluated, rather than as a list of file names of Nix expressions.
@ -194,6 +210,10 @@ Most Nix commands accept the following command-line options:
Paths added through `-I` take precedence over the [`nix-path` configuration setting](@docroot@/command-ref/conf-file.md#conf-nix-path) and the [`NIX_PATH` environment variable](@docroot@/command-ref/env-common.md#env-NIX_PATH).
@ -182,7 +182,7 @@ Please observe these guidelines to ease reviews:
`@docroot@` provides a base path for links that occur in reusable snippets or other documentation that doesn't have a base path of its own.
If a broken link occurs in a snippet that was inserted into multiple generated files in different directories, use `@docroot@` to reference the `doc/manual/src` directory.
If a broken link occurs in a snippet that was inserted into multiple generated files in different directories, use `@docroot@` to reference the `doc/manual/source` directory.
If the `@docroot@` literal appears in an error message from the [`mdbook-linkcheck`] tool, the `@docroot@` replacement needs to be applied to the generated source file that mentions it.
See existing `@docroot@` logic in the [Makefile for the manual].