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nixpkgs/lib/strings.nix

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/* String manipulation functions. */
Convert libs to a fixed-point This does break the API of being able to import any lib file and get its libs, however I'm not sure people did this. I made this while exploring being able to swap out docFn with a stub in #2305, to avoid functor performance problems. I don't know if that is going to move forward (or if it is a problem or not,) but after doing all this work figured I'd put it up anyway :) Two notable advantages to this approach: 1. when a lib inherits another lib's functions, it doesn't automatically get put in to the scope of lib 2. when a lib implements a new obscure functions, it doesn't automatically get put in to the scope of lib Using the test script (later in this commit) I got the following diff on the API: + diff master fixed-lib 11764a11765,11766 > .types.defaultFunctor > .types.defaultTypeMerge 11774a11777,11778 > .types.isOptionType > .types.isType 11781a11786 > .types.mkOptionType 11788a11794 > .types.setType 11795a11802 > .types.types This means that this commit _adds_ to the API, however I can't find a way to fix these last remaining discrepancies. At least none are _removed_. Test script (run with nix-repl in the PATH): #!/bin/sh set -eux repl() { suff=${1:-} echo "(import ./lib)$suff" \ | nix-repl 2>&1 } attrs_to_check() { repl "${1:-}" \ | tr ';' $'\n' \ | grep "\.\.\." \ | cut -d' ' -f2 \ | sed -e "s/^/${1:-}./" \ | sort } summ() { repl "${1:-}" \ | tr ' ' $'\n' \ | sort \ | uniq } deep_summ() { suff="${1:-}" depth="${2:-4}" depth=$((depth - 1)) summ "$suff" for attr in $(attrs_to_check "$suff" | grep -v "types.types"); do if [ $depth -eq 0 ]; then summ "$attr" | sed -e "s/^/$attr./" else deep_summ "$attr" "$depth" | sed -e "s/^/$attr./" fi done } ( cd nixpkgs #git add . #git commit -m "Auto-commit, sorry" || true git checkout fixed-lib deep_summ > ../fixed-lib git checkout master deep_summ > ../master ) if diff master fixed-lib; then echo "SHALLOW MATCH!" fi ( cd nixpkgs git checkout fixed-lib repl .types )
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{ lib }:
let
inherit (builtins) length;
in
rec {
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inherit (builtins) stringLength substring head tail isString replaceStrings;
/* Concatenate a list of strings.
Example:
concatStrings ["foo" "bar"]
=> "foobar"
*/
concatStrings = builtins.concatStringsSep "";
/* Map a function over a list and concatenate the resulting strings.
Example:
concatMapStrings (x: "a" + x) ["foo" "bar"]
=> "afooabar"
*/
concatMapStrings = f: list: concatStrings (map f list);
/* Like `concatMapStrings' except that the f functions also gets the
position as a parameter.
Example:
concatImapStrings (pos: x: "${toString pos}-${x}") ["foo" "bar"]
=> "1-foo2-bar"
*/
concatImapStrings = f: list: concatStrings (lib.imap1 f list);
/* Place an element between each element of a list
Example:
intersperse "/" ["usr" "local" "bin"]
=> ["usr" "/" "local" "/" "bin"].
*/
intersperse = separator: list:
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if list == [] || length list == 1
then list
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else tail (lib.concatMap (x: [separator x]) list);
/* Concatenate a list of strings with a separator between each element
Example:
concatStringsSep "/" ["usr" "local" "bin"]
=> "usr/local/bin"
*/
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concatStringsSep = builtins.concatStringsSep or (separator: list:
concatStrings (intersperse separator list));
/* First maps over the list and then concatenates it.
Example:
concatMapStringsSep "-" (x: toUpper x) ["foo" "bar" "baz"]
=> "FOO-BAR-BAZ"
*/
concatMapStringsSep = sep: f: list: concatStringsSep sep (map f list);
/* First imaps over the list and then concatenates it.
Example:
concatImapStringsSep "-" (pos: x: toString (x / pos)) [ 6 6 6 ]
=> "6-3-2"
*/
concatImapStringsSep = sep: f: list: concatStringsSep sep (lib.imap1 f list);
/* Construct a Unix-style search path consisting of each `subDir"
directory of the given list of packages.
Example:
makeSearchPath "bin" ["/root" "/usr" "/usr/local"]
=> "/root/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/bin"
makeSearchPath "bin" ["/"]
=> "//bin"
*/
makeSearchPath = subDir: packages:
concatStringsSep ":" (map (path: path + "/" + subDir) packages);
/* Construct a Unix-style search path, using given package output.
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If no output is found, fallback to `.out` and then to the default.
Example:
makeSearchPathOutput "dev" "bin" [ pkgs.openssl pkgs.zlib ]
=> "/nix/store/9rz8gxhzf8sw4kf2j2f1grr49w8zx5vj-openssl-1.0.1r-dev/bin:/nix/store/wwh7mhwh269sfjkm6k5665b5kgp7jrk2-zlib-1.2.8/bin"
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*/
makeSearchPathOutput = output: subDir: pkgs: makeSearchPath subDir (map (lib.getOutput output) pkgs);
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/* Construct a library search path (such as RPATH) containing the
libraries for a set of packages
Example:
makeLibraryPath [ "/usr" "/usr/local" ]
=> "/usr/lib:/usr/local/lib"
pkgs = import <nixpkgs> { }
makeLibraryPath [ pkgs.openssl pkgs.zlib ]
=> "/nix/store/9rz8gxhzf8sw4kf2j2f1grr49w8zx5vj-openssl-1.0.1r/lib:/nix/store/wwh7mhwh269sfjkm6k5665b5kgp7jrk2-zlib-1.2.8/lib"
*/
makeLibraryPath = makeSearchPathOutput "lib" "lib";
/* Construct a binary search path (such as $PATH) containing the
binaries for a set of packages.
Example:
makeBinPath ["/root" "/usr" "/usr/local"]
=> "/root/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/bin"
*/
makeBinPath = makeSearchPathOutput "bin" "bin";
/* Construct a perl search path (such as $PERL5LIB)
FIXME(zimbatm): this should be moved in perl-specific code
Example:
pkgs = import <nixpkgs> { }
makePerlPath [ pkgs.perlPackages.NetSMTP ]
=> "/nix/store/n0m1fk9c960d8wlrs62sncnadygqqc6y-perl-Net-SMTP-1.25/lib/perl5/site_perl"
*/
makePerlPath = makeSearchPathOutput "lib" "lib/perl5/site_perl";
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/* Depending on the boolean `cond', return either the given string
or the empty string. Useful to concatenate against a bigger string.
Example:
optionalString true "some-string"
=> "some-string"
optionalString false "some-string"
=> ""
*/
optionalString = cond: string: if cond then string else "";
/* Determine whether a string has given prefix.
Example:
hasPrefix "foo" "foobar"
=> true
hasPrefix "foo" "barfoo"
=> false
*/
hasPrefix = pref: str:
substring 0 (stringLength pref) str == pref;
/* Determine whether a string has given suffix.
Example:
hasSuffix "foo" "foobar"
=> false
hasSuffix "foo" "barfoo"
=> true
*/
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hasSuffix = suffix: content:
let
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lenContent = stringLength content;
lenSuffix = stringLength suffix;
in lenContent >= lenSuffix &&
substring (lenContent - lenSuffix) lenContent content == suffix;
/* Convert a string to a list of characters (i.e. singleton strings).
This allows you to, e.g., map a function over each character. However,
note that this will likely be horribly inefficient; Nix is not a
general purpose programming language. Complex string manipulations
should, if appropriate, be done in a derivation.
Also note that Nix treats strings as a list of bytes and thus doesn't
handle unicode.
Example:
stringToCharacters ""
=> [ ]
stringToCharacters "abc"
=> [ "a" "b" "c" ]
stringToCharacters "💩"
=> [ "<EFBFBD>" "<EFBFBD>" "<EFBFBD>" "<EFBFBD>" ]
*/
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stringToCharacters = s:
map (p: substring p 1 s) (lib.range 0 (stringLength s - 1));
/* Manipulate a string character by character and replace them by
strings before concatenating the results.
Example:
stringAsChars (x: if x == "a" then "i" else x) "nax"
=> "nix"
*/
stringAsChars = f: s:
concatStrings (
map f (stringToCharacters s)
);
/* Escape occurrence of the elements of list in string by
prefixing it with a backslash.
Example:
escape ["(" ")"] "(foo)"
=> "\\(foo\\)"
*/
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escape = list: replaceChars list (map (c: "\\${c}") list);
lib: Make escapeShellArg more robust Quoting various characters that the shell *may* interpret specially is a very fragile thing to do. I've used something more robust all over the place in various Nix expression I've written just because I didn't trust escapeShellArg. Here is a proof of concept showing that I was indeed right in distrusting escapeShellArg: with import <nixpkgs> {}; let payload = runCommand "payload" {} '' # \x00 is not allowed for Nix strings, so let's begin at 1 for i in $(seq 1 255); do echo -en "\\x$(printf %02x $i)" done > "$out" ''; escapers = with lib; { current = escapeShellArg; better = arg: let backslashEscapes = stringToCharacters "\"\\ ';$`()|<>\r\t*[]&!~#"; search = backslashEscapes ++ [ "\n" ]; replace = map (c: "\\${c}") backslashEscapes ++ [ "'\n'" ]; in replaceStrings search replace (toString arg); best = arg: "'${replaceStrings ["'"] ["'\\''"] (toString arg)}'"; }; testWith = escaper: let escaped = escaper (builtins.readFile payload); in runCommand "test" {} '' if ! r="$(bash -c ${escapers.best "echo -nE ${escaped}"} 2> /dev/null)" then echo bash eval error > "$out" exit 0 fi if echo -n "$r" | cmp -s "${payload}"; then echo success > "$out" else echo failed > "$out" fi ''; in runCommand "results" {} '' echo "Test results:" ${lib.concatStrings (lib.mapAttrsToList (name: impl: '' echo " ${name}: $(< "${testWith impl}")" '') escapers)} exit 1 '' The resulting output is the following: Test results: best: success better: success current: bash eval error I did the "better" implementation just to illustrate that the method of quoting only "harmful" characters results in madness in terms of implementation and performance. Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org> Cc: @edolstra, @zimbatm
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/* Quote string to be used safely within the Bourne shell.
Example:
lib: Make escapeShellArg more robust Quoting various characters that the shell *may* interpret specially is a very fragile thing to do. I've used something more robust all over the place in various Nix expression I've written just because I didn't trust escapeShellArg. Here is a proof of concept showing that I was indeed right in distrusting escapeShellArg: with import <nixpkgs> {}; let payload = runCommand "payload" {} '' # \x00 is not allowed for Nix strings, so let's begin at 1 for i in $(seq 1 255); do echo -en "\\x$(printf %02x $i)" done > "$out" ''; escapers = with lib; { current = escapeShellArg; better = arg: let backslashEscapes = stringToCharacters "\"\\ ';$`()|<>\r\t*[]&!~#"; search = backslashEscapes ++ [ "\n" ]; replace = map (c: "\\${c}") backslashEscapes ++ [ "'\n'" ]; in replaceStrings search replace (toString arg); best = arg: "'${replaceStrings ["'"] ["'\\''"] (toString arg)}'"; }; testWith = escaper: let escaped = escaper (builtins.readFile payload); in runCommand "test" {} '' if ! r="$(bash -c ${escapers.best "echo -nE ${escaped}"} 2> /dev/null)" then echo bash eval error > "$out" exit 0 fi if echo -n "$r" | cmp -s "${payload}"; then echo success > "$out" else echo failed > "$out" fi ''; in runCommand "results" {} '' echo "Test results:" ${lib.concatStrings (lib.mapAttrsToList (name: impl: '' echo " ${name}: $(< "${testWith impl}")" '') escapers)} exit 1 '' The resulting output is the following: Test results: best: success better: success current: bash eval error I did the "better" implementation just to illustrate that the method of quoting only "harmful" characters results in madness in terms of implementation and performance. Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org> Cc: @edolstra, @zimbatm
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escapeShellArg "esc'ape\nme"
=> "'esc'\\''ape\nme'"
*/
lib: Make escapeShellArg more robust Quoting various characters that the shell *may* interpret specially is a very fragile thing to do. I've used something more robust all over the place in various Nix expression I've written just because I didn't trust escapeShellArg. Here is a proof of concept showing that I was indeed right in distrusting escapeShellArg: with import <nixpkgs> {}; let payload = runCommand "payload" {} '' # \x00 is not allowed for Nix strings, so let's begin at 1 for i in $(seq 1 255); do echo -en "\\x$(printf %02x $i)" done > "$out" ''; escapers = with lib; { current = escapeShellArg; better = arg: let backslashEscapes = stringToCharacters "\"\\ ';$`()|<>\r\t*[]&!~#"; search = backslashEscapes ++ [ "\n" ]; replace = map (c: "\\${c}") backslashEscapes ++ [ "'\n'" ]; in replaceStrings search replace (toString arg); best = arg: "'${replaceStrings ["'"] ["'\\''"] (toString arg)}'"; }; testWith = escaper: let escaped = escaper (builtins.readFile payload); in runCommand "test" {} '' if ! r="$(bash -c ${escapers.best "echo -nE ${escaped}"} 2> /dev/null)" then echo bash eval error > "$out" exit 0 fi if echo -n "$r" | cmp -s "${payload}"; then echo success > "$out" else echo failed > "$out" fi ''; in runCommand "results" {} '' echo "Test results:" ${lib.concatStrings (lib.mapAttrsToList (name: impl: '' echo " ${name}: $(< "${testWith impl}")" '') escapers)} exit 1 '' The resulting output is the following: Test results: best: success better: success current: bash eval error I did the "better" implementation just to illustrate that the method of quoting only "harmful" characters results in madness in terms of implementation and performance. Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org> Cc: @edolstra, @zimbatm
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escapeShellArg = arg: "'${replaceStrings ["'"] ["'\\''"] (toString arg)}'";
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lib: Make escapeShellArg more robust Quoting various characters that the shell *may* interpret specially is a very fragile thing to do. I've used something more robust all over the place in various Nix expression I've written just because I didn't trust escapeShellArg. Here is a proof of concept showing that I was indeed right in distrusting escapeShellArg: with import <nixpkgs> {}; let payload = runCommand "payload" {} '' # \x00 is not allowed for Nix strings, so let's begin at 1 for i in $(seq 1 255); do echo -en "\\x$(printf %02x $i)" done > "$out" ''; escapers = with lib; { current = escapeShellArg; better = arg: let backslashEscapes = stringToCharacters "\"\\ ';$`()|<>\r\t*[]&!~#"; search = backslashEscapes ++ [ "\n" ]; replace = map (c: "\\${c}") backslashEscapes ++ [ "'\n'" ]; in replaceStrings search replace (toString arg); best = arg: "'${replaceStrings ["'"] ["'\\''"] (toString arg)}'"; }; testWith = escaper: let escaped = escaper (builtins.readFile payload); in runCommand "test" {} '' if ! r="$(bash -c ${escapers.best "echo -nE ${escaped}"} 2> /dev/null)" then echo bash eval error > "$out" exit 0 fi if echo -n "$r" | cmp -s "${payload}"; then echo success > "$out" else echo failed > "$out" fi ''; in runCommand "results" {} '' echo "Test results:" ${lib.concatStrings (lib.mapAttrsToList (name: impl: '' echo " ${name}: $(< "${testWith impl}")" '') escapers)} exit 1 '' The resulting output is the following: Test results: best: success better: success current: bash eval error I did the "better" implementation just to illustrate that the method of quoting only "harmful" characters results in madness in terms of implementation and performance. Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org> Cc: @edolstra, @zimbatm
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/* Quote all arguments to be safely passed to the Bourne shell.
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Example:
lib: Make escapeShellArg more robust Quoting various characters that the shell *may* interpret specially is a very fragile thing to do. I've used something more robust all over the place in various Nix expression I've written just because I didn't trust escapeShellArg. Here is a proof of concept showing that I was indeed right in distrusting escapeShellArg: with import <nixpkgs> {}; let payload = runCommand "payload" {} '' # \x00 is not allowed for Nix strings, so let's begin at 1 for i in $(seq 1 255); do echo -en "\\x$(printf %02x $i)" done > "$out" ''; escapers = with lib; { current = escapeShellArg; better = arg: let backslashEscapes = stringToCharacters "\"\\ ';$`()|<>\r\t*[]&!~#"; search = backslashEscapes ++ [ "\n" ]; replace = map (c: "\\${c}") backslashEscapes ++ [ "'\n'" ]; in replaceStrings search replace (toString arg); best = arg: "'${replaceStrings ["'"] ["'\\''"] (toString arg)}'"; }; testWith = escaper: let escaped = escaper (builtins.readFile payload); in runCommand "test" {} '' if ! r="$(bash -c ${escapers.best "echo -nE ${escaped}"} 2> /dev/null)" then echo bash eval error > "$out" exit 0 fi if echo -n "$r" | cmp -s "${payload}"; then echo success > "$out" else echo failed > "$out" fi ''; in runCommand "results" {} '' echo "Test results:" ${lib.concatStrings (lib.mapAttrsToList (name: impl: '' echo " ${name}: $(< "${testWith impl}")" '') escapers)} exit 1 '' The resulting output is the following: Test results: best: success better: success current: bash eval error I did the "better" implementation just to illustrate that the method of quoting only "harmful" characters results in madness in terms of implementation and performance. Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org> Cc: @edolstra, @zimbatm
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escapeShellArgs ["one" "two three" "four'five"]
=> "'one' 'two three' 'four'\\''five'"
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*/
escapeShellArgs = concatMapStringsSep " " escapeShellArg;
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/* Turn a string into a Nix expression representing that string
Example:
escapeNixString "hello\${}\n"
=> "\"hello\\\${}\\n\""
*/
escapeNixString = s: escape ["$"] (builtins.toJSON s);
/* Obsolete - use replaceStrings instead. */
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replaceChars = builtins.replaceStrings or (
del: new: s:
let
substList = lib.zipLists del new;
subst = c:
let found = lib.findFirst (sub: sub.fst == c) null substList; in
if found == null then
c
else
found.snd;
in
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stringAsChars subst s);
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# Case conversion utilities.
lowerChars = stringToCharacters "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz";
upperChars = stringToCharacters "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ";
/* Converts an ASCII string to lower-case.
Example:
toLower "HOME"
=> "home"
*/
toLower = replaceChars upperChars lowerChars;
/* Converts an ASCII string to upper-case.
Example:
toUpper "home"
=> "HOME"
*/
toUpper = replaceChars lowerChars upperChars;
/* Appends string context from another string. This is an implementation
detail of Nix.
Strings in Nix carry an invisible `context' which is a list of strings
representing store paths. If the string is later used in a derivation
attribute, the derivation will properly populate the inputDrvs and
inputSrcs.
Example:
pkgs = import <nixpkgs> { };
addContextFrom pkgs.coreutils "bar"
=> "bar"
*/
addContextFrom = a: b: substring 0 0 a + b;
/* Cut a string with a separator and produces a list of strings which
were separated by this separator.
NOTE: this function is not performant and should never be used.
Example:
splitString "." "foo.bar.baz"
=> [ "foo" "bar" "baz" ]
splitString "/" "/usr/local/bin"
=> [ "" "usr" "local" "bin" ]
*/
splitString = _sep: _s:
let
sep = addContextFrom _s _sep;
s = addContextFrom _sep _s;
sepLen = stringLength sep;
sLen = stringLength s;
lastSearch = sLen - sepLen;
startWithSep = startAt:
substring startAt sepLen s == sep;
recurse = index: startAt:
let cutUntil = i: [(substring startAt (i - startAt) s)]; in
if index <= lastSearch then
if startWithSep index then
let restartAt = index + sepLen; in
cutUntil index ++ recurse restartAt restartAt
else
recurse (index + 1) startAt
else
cutUntil sLen;
in
recurse 0 0;
/* Return the suffix of the second argument if the first argument matches
its prefix.
Example:
removePrefix "foo." "foo.bar.baz"
=> "bar.baz"
removePrefix "xxx" "foo.bar.baz"
=> "foo.bar.baz"
*/
removePrefix = pre: s:
let
preLen = stringLength pre;
sLen = stringLength s;
in
if hasPrefix pre s then
substring preLen (sLen - preLen) s
else
s;
/* Return the prefix of the second argument if the first argument matches
its suffix.
Example:
removeSuffix "front" "homefront"
=> "home"
removeSuffix "xxx" "homefront"
=> "homefront"
*/
removeSuffix = suf: s:
let
sufLen = stringLength suf;
sLen = stringLength s;
in
if sufLen <= sLen && suf == substring (sLen - sufLen) sufLen s then
substring 0 (sLen - sufLen) s
else
s;
/* Return true iff string v1 denotes a version older than v2.
Example:
versionOlder "1.1" "1.2"
=> true
versionOlder "1.1" "1.1"
=> false
*/
versionOlder = v1: v2: builtins.compareVersions v2 v1 == 1;
/* Return true iff string v1 denotes a version equal to or newer than v2.
Example:
versionAtLeast "1.1" "1.0"
=> true
versionAtLeast "1.1" "1.1"
=> true
versionAtLeast "1.1" "1.2"
=> false
*/
versionAtLeast = v1: v2: !versionOlder v1 v2;
/* This function takes an argument that's either a derivation or a
derivation's "name" attribute and extracts the version part from that
argument.
Example:
getVersion "youtube-dl-2016.01.01"
=> "2016.01.01"
getVersion pkgs.youtube-dl
=> "2016.01.01"
*/
getVersion = x:
let
parse = drv: (builtins.parseDrvName drv).version;
in if isString x
then parse x
else x.version or (parse x.name);
/* Extract name with version from URL. Ask for separator which is
supposed to start extension.
Example:
nameFromURL "https://nixos.org/releases/nix/nix-1.7/nix-1.7-x86_64-linux.tar.bz2" "-"
=> "nix"
nameFromURL "https://nixos.org/releases/nix/nix-1.7/nix-1.7-x86_64-linux.tar.bz2" "_"
=> "nix-1.7-x86"
*/
nameFromURL = url: sep:
let
components = splitString "/" url;
filename = lib.last components;
name = builtins.head (splitString sep filename);
in assert name != filename; name;
/* Create an --{enable,disable}-<feat> string that can be passed to
standard GNU Autoconf scripts.
Example:
enableFeature true "shared"
=> "--enable-shared"
enableFeature false "shared"
=> "--disable-shared"
*/
enableFeature = enable: feat: "--${if enable then "enable" else "disable"}-${feat}";
/* Create a fixed width string with additional prefix to match
required width.
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Example:
fixedWidthString 5 "0" (toString 15)
=> "00015"
*/
fixedWidthString = width: filler: str:
let
strw = lib.stringLength str;
reqWidth = width - (lib.stringLength filler);
in
assert strw <= width;
if strw == width then str else filler + fixedWidthString reqWidth filler str;
/* Format a number adding leading zeroes up to fixed width.
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Example:
fixedWidthNumber 5 15
=> "00015"
*/
fixedWidthNumber = width: n: fixedWidthString width "0" (toString n);
/* Check whether a value can be coerced to a string */
isCoercibleToString = x:
builtins.elem (builtins.typeOf x) [ "path" "string" "null" "int" "float" "bool" ] ||
(builtins.isList x && lib.all isCoercibleToString x) ||
x ? outPath ||
x ? __toString;
/* Check whether a value is a store path.
Example:
isStorePath "/nix/store/d945ibfx9x185xf04b890y4f9g3cbb63-python-2.7.11/bin/python"
=> false
isStorePath "/nix/store/d945ibfx9x185xf04b890y4f9g3cbb63-python-2.7.11/"
=> true
isStorePath pkgs.python
=> true
isStorePath [] || isStorePath 42 || isStorePath {} ||
=> false
*/
isStorePath = x:
isCoercibleToString x
&& builtins.substring 0 1 (toString x) == "/"
&& dirOf (builtins.toPath x) == builtins.storeDir;
/* Convert string to int
Obviously, it is a bit hacky to use fromJSON that way.
Example:
toInt "1337"
=> 1337
toInt "-4"
=> -4
toInt "3.14"
=> error: floating point JSON numbers are not supported
*/
toInt = str:
let may_be_int = builtins.fromJSON str; in
if builtins.isInt may_be_int
then may_be_int
else throw "Could not convert ${str} to int.";
/* Read a list of paths from `file', relative to the `rootPath'. Lines
beginning with `#' are treated as comments and ignored. Whitespace
is significant.
NOTE: this function is not performant and should be avoided
Example:
readPathsFromFile /prefix
./pkgs/development/libraries/qt-5/5.4/qtbase/series
=> [ "/prefix/dlopen-resolv.patch" "/prefix/tzdir.patch"
"/prefix/dlopen-libXcursor.patch" "/prefix/dlopen-openssl.patch"
"/prefix/dlopen-dbus.patch" "/prefix/xdg-config-dirs.patch"
"/prefix/nix-profiles-library-paths.patch"
"/prefix/compose-search-path.patch" ]
*/
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readPathsFromFile = rootPath: file:
let
root = toString rootPath;
lines = lib.splitString "\n" (builtins.readFile file);
removeComments = lib.filter (line: line != "" && !(lib.hasPrefix "#" line));
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relativePaths = removeComments lines;
absolutePaths = builtins.map (path: builtins.toPath (root + "/" + path)) relativePaths;
in
absolutePaths;
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/* Read the contents of a file removing the trailing \n
Example:
$ echo "1.0" > ./version
fileContents ./version
=> "1.0"
*/
fileContents = file: removeSuffix "\n" (builtins.readFile file);
}