Having the current bash hash present in the nixpkgs tree makes Nix
detect bash as a runtime dependency of nixpkgs, which in turns messes up
`fetchFromGitHub` due to https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/6660
toLosslessStringMaybe is not used by anything other than lib/tests,
so it can be private to that file.
I don't think this function was terribly well thought-through. If
people start using it, we will become permanently dependent on the
ability to test platforms for equality. It also makes the
elaboration process more fragile, because it encourages code outside
of nixpkgs to become sensitive to the minute details of how
elaboration happens.
This will let us make assertions involving _module.args.pkgs, which
is not an option but a value attribute, and therefore doesn't have
its own highestPrio to inspect. The new function gives us that info.
We already have examples for these, but since we didn't actually
recognise the doubles, it wasn't possible to build any packages for
them without setting allowUnsupportedSystem.
Previously it would fail with
error: attribute 'nonexistent' missing
at nixpkgs/lib/filesystem.nix:29:10:
28| if dirOf path == path then "directory"
29| else (readDir (dirOf path)).${baseNameOf path};
| ^
30|
Previously this function couldn't handle / being passed, it would throw
an error:
error: attribute '' missing
at nixpkgs/lib/filesystem.nix:24:20:
23| */
24| pathType = path: (readDir (dirOf path)).${baseNameOf path};
| ^
25|
Consequently this also fixes the
lib.filesystem.{pathIsDirectory,pathIsRegularFile} functions.
This is to avoid stealing keys from submodules. `class` might be
common enough that reinterpreting existing `class` attributes in
configurations as a declaration leads to fairly widespread problems.
This is appears to be a fairly common mistake for beginners who want
to build larger things from the system configurations, such as NixOps
networks, etc. Further explanation seems appropriate.
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).