- Make fromSource's missing file error message more consistent with others,
and add a test for it
- Indent some function arguments
- Fix an internal type
The aws-sdk-cpp tests are flaky.
Since pull requests to staging cause nix to be rebuilt, this means
that staging PRs end up getting false CI failures due to whatever is
flaky in the AWS SDK tests. Since none of our CI needs to (or
should be able to) contact AWS S3, let's just omit it all. Bonus:
the tests build way faster.
While this change is backwards-incompatible, I think it's okay because:
- The `fileFilter` function is not yet in a stable NixOS release, it was only merged about [a month ago](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/257356).
- All public uses of the function on GitHub only pass a path
- Any `fileFilter pred fileset` can also be expressed as `intersection fileset (fileFilter pred path)` without loss of functionality.
- This is furthermore pointed out in the new error message when a file set is passed
Along the lines of `assertOneOf`, but expects a list of values to be
compared. This gives a good error message and is useful for lists of
values, like `supportedGhcVersions` in the arguments of
`haskell-language-server`.
We need this stuff to be available in lib so make-derivation.nix can
access it to construct the Meson cross file.
This has a couple of other advantages:
- It makes Rust less special. Now figuring out what Rust calls a
platform is the same as figuring out what Linux or QEMU call it.
- We can unify the schema used to define Rust targets, and the schema
used to access those values later. Just like you can set "config"
or "system" in a platform definition, and then access those same
keys on the elaborated platform, you can now set "rustcTarget" in
your crossSystem, and then access "stdenv.hostPlatform.rustcTarget"
in your code.
"rustcTarget", "rustcTargetSpec", "cargoShortTarget", and
"cargoEnvVarTarget" have the "rustc" and "cargo" prefixes because
these are not exposed to code by the compiler, and are not
standardized. The arch/os/etc. variables are all named to match the
forms in the Rust target spec JSON.
The new rust.target-family only takes a list, since we don't need to
worry about backwards compatibility when that name is used.
The old APIs are all still functional with no warning for now, so that
it's possible for external code to use a single API on both 23.05 and
23.11. We can introduce the warnings once 23.05 is EOL, and make them
hard errors when 23.11 is EOL.
Just minor changes like:
- Always using "X is a Y, but it should be Z"
- "X is a path that does not exist" rather than "X does not exist"
- Always using multi-line strings for errors
- Always quoting string-like values and not quoting path-like values
- But do quote filesystem roots. Even though they're paths, they might
be very small, good to have quotes to know the start/end
- Capitalise the first word
- Distinguish root vs filesystem root more