ofborg relies on the behavior that existed prior to
1c00bf3948, where evaluation would
immediately abort due to a missing argument (whether it be an aliased
package when `allowAliases = false;` or a typo'd or otherwise
nonexistent package).
If `callPackageWith` `throw`s instead of `abort`s, the following
`nix-env` invocation does not fail fast but instead silently skips the
attribute (assuming there is a package that has an aliased package in
its `autoArgs`):
$ nix-env -qa --json --file . --arg config '{ allowAliases = false; }' &>/dev/null
$ echo $?
0
This does change the error output when there is a missing package (for
any of the reasons mentioned above), though. Before this change, the
errors looked like this:
$ nix-build -A hello --arg config '{ allowAliases = false; }'
error:
… while calling the 'throw' builtin
at /home/vin/workspace/vcs/nixpkgs/master/lib/customisation.nix:179:65:
178|
179| in if missingArgs == [] then makeOverridable f allArgs else throw error;
| ^
180|
error: Function called without required argument "bash_5" at /home/vin/workspace/vcs/nixpkgs/master/pkgs/applications/misc/hello/default.nix:8, did you mean "bash" or "bashdb"?
And the errors now look like this:
$ nix-build -A hello --arg config '{ allowAliases = false; }'
error:
… while calling the 'abort' builtin
at /home/vin/workspace/vcs/nixpkgs/master/lib/customisation.nix:179:65:
178|
179| in if missingArgs == [] then makeOverridable f allArgs else abort error;
| ^
180|
error: evaluation aborted with the following error message: 'Function called without required argument "bash_5" at /home/vin/workspace/vcs/nixpkgs/master/pkgs/applications/misc/hello/default.nix:8, did you mean "bash" or "bashdb"?'
TimescaleDB provides two types of licenses, Apache 2.0 and Timescale Community License (TSL), with different feature sets. While all the code is in the same repository, the build
system can build both versions depending on the build parameters set in.
Co-authored-by: Emily Lange <git@indeednotjames.com>
lib.{hasPrefix,hasInfix,hasSuffix} would otherwise return an
always-false result, which can be very unexpected:
nix-repl> lib.strings.hasPrefix ./lib ./lib/meta.nix
false
- Christmas is over!
- Upstream has changed the name of the target triplet used for the JS
backend from js-unknown-ghcjs to javascript-unknown-ghcjs, since Cabal
calls the architecture "javascript":
6636b67023
Since the triplet is made up anyways, i.e. autoconf does not support
it and Rust uses different triplets for its emscripten backends, we'll
just change it as well.
- Upstream fixed the problem with ar(1) being invoked incorrectly by stage0:
e987e345c8
nixdoc takes everything from Type: to Example: as the type, which
misrendered a large part of the docs. it also drops sorely needed spaces
where the type had line breaks, so all has to be on one line (or use
non-standard literal spaces, which is probably worse).
also clarify what the `?` for arguments mean while we're here.
This makes the following work
disabledModules = [ foo.nixosModules.bar ];
even if `bar` is not a path, but rather a module such as
{ key = "/path/to/foo#nixosModules.bar"; config = ...; }
By supporting this, the user will often be able to use the same syntax
for both importing and disabling a module. This is becoming more relevant
because flakes promote the use of attributes to reference modules. Not
all of these modules in flake attributes will be identifiable, but with
the help of a framework such as flake-parts, these attributes can be
guaranteed to be identifiable (by outPath + attribute path).
LLVM-exception only makes sense when used with the Apache 2.0 license,
so let's combine them, so it's not possible to forget one of them like
happened with llvm_15.
There are a number of different syntaxes used for attrset type
signatures in our doc strings, this change standardises upon one that
uses :: for specifying attribute type, and ; terminators to be
consistent with nix syntax. There are no bugs in the functions
themselves, just that different syntaxes may confuse new users.
By allowing null, we allow code to avoid filterAttrs, improving
laziness in real world use cases.
Specifically, this strategy prevents infinite recursion errors,
performance issues and possibly other errors that are unrelated to
the user's code.
There is no "aarch64" CPU family — it counts as "arm", as can be seen
from the definition of isAarch64 above.
Checked that stdenv.hostPlatform.isEfi is still true on aarch64-linux.
In the past, most (if not all) armv8 CPUs could also execute armv7. However,
with the advent of Apple Silicon, aarch64 CPUs without any aarch32 capabilities
are now wide-spread among users.
This makes bisecting nix a bit easier.
Example reproducer, invoked from nix directory:
```bash
nix-build ../nixpkgs/lib/tests/release.nix --arg nix '(builtins.getFlake "git+file://${toString ./.}").packages.x86_64-linux.default'
```
`hasUnsupportedPlatform` was not updated with #37395, so it does not
understand attrsets in `meta.[bad]platforms`. In particular,
attrsets in `meta.badPlatforms` will "fail open" and be ignored.
Let's use `lib.meta.availableOn` instead of duplicating its logic.
Thanks to @alyssais for [noticing][1].
[1][https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/194148#discussion_r990817610]
Co-authored-by: sternenseemann <sternenseemann@systemli.org>
When "-n" is generated by the property tests, it causes `echo` to not
output the string since it's interpreted as an option. Apparently
there's no good way to print "-n" with `echo` [1], so switching to
`printf` instead
[1]: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/85846/how-can-i-print-n-with-echo
unfortunately we can't unconditionally make this text markdown without
impacting downstream users of docs generation (as noted in #175586).
hide it entirely until the transition is complete.
mkAliasOptionModule should not default to mdDoc descriptions because
that can break out-of-tree users of documentation infrastructure. add an
explicitly-MD variant for now, to be removed some time after the MD
transition is complete.
Adds initial work towards a `lib.path` library
Originally proposed in https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/200718, but has
since gone through some revisions
Co-Authored-By: Valentin Gagarin <valentin.gagarin@tweag.io>
Co-Authored-By: Robert Hensing <robert@roberthensing.nl>
Cross-compilation of anything downstream of gtk3 requires qemu (due to
gobject-introspection) with --target-list=*-linux-user. Without this commit,
those qemu builds will fail on a powerpc64le host due to qemu being configured
with --cpu=powerpc64le instead of --cpu=ppc64le. Unfortunately the build
failure message from qemu in this situation is extremely cryptic.
The root cause turns out not to be the qemu expression, but rather the fact that
on powerpc64le hostPlatform.uname.processor returns the gnu-name (powerpc64le)
for the cpu instead of the linux-name (ppc64le) for the cpu.
uname.processor on mips64el also needs adjustment -- the Linux-name is "mips64"
for both big and little endian (unlike powerpc64, where the Linux-name includes
a "le" suffix):
```
nix@oak:/tmp$ uname -m; lscpu | head -n2
mips64
Architecture: mips64
Byte Order: Little Endian
```
uname.processor on powerpc32 has also been adjusted.
The new derivation should evaluate only if the old derivation does.
Sadly this means that the old derivation cannot depend on the new one
any more, which was used by xorgserver on Darwin. But this is not a
problem as `overrideAttrs` can (and should) usually be used instead.
This change allowed catching an invalid `meta.platforms` in the linux_rpi
kernels, which use `overrideDerivation`.
In the current implementation of Nix, this list would be allocated
over and over. Iirc pennae tried to optimize static list allocation,
but gained no significant performance improvement.
Yes, this function name is inconveniently long, but it is important
for the name to explicitly reference the function and not be mistaken
for the implicit string conversions, which only happen for a smaller
set of values.