Commit Graph

479 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tuomas Tynkkynen
a241abf603 Revert "stdenv: aarch64 is also ARM"
This reverts commit a5f4e22289.

Breaks the stdenv build, e.g.: http://hydra.nixos.org/build/50015717
In general, the architectures are different enough that there is no
reason to consider both as ARM, just like we don't consider x86_64 as
32-bit x86.

cc @fpletz
2017-03-11 15:57:51 +02:00
Franz Pletz
a5f4e22289
stdenv: aarch64 is also ARM 2017-03-11 09:40:19 +01:00
Graham Christensen
a9c875fc2e
nixpkgs: allow packages to be marked insecure
If a package's meta has `knownVulnerabilities`, like so:

    stdenv.mkDerivation {
      name = "foobar-1.2.3";

      ...

      meta.knownVulnerabilities = [
        "CVE-0000-00000: remote code execution"
        "CVE-0000-00001: local privilege escalation"
      ];
    }

and a user attempts to install the package, they will be greeted with
a warning indicating that maybe they don't want to install it:

    error: Package ‘foobar-1.2.3’ in ‘...default.nix:20’ is marked as insecure, refusing to evaluate.

    Known issues:

     - CVE-0000-00000: remote code execution
     - CVE-0000-00001: local privilege escalation

    You can install it anyway by whitelisting this package, using the
    following methods:

    a) for `nixos-rebuild` you can add ‘foobar-1.2.3’ to
       `nixpkgs.config.permittedInsecurePackages` in the configuration.nix,
       like so:

         {
           nixpkgs.config.permittedInsecurePackages = [
             "foobar-1.2.3"
           ];
         }

    b) For `nix-env`, `nix-build`, `nix-shell` or any other Nix command you can add
    ‘foobar-1.2.3’ to `permittedInsecurePackages` in
    ~/.config/nixpkgs/config.nix, like so:

         {
           permittedInsecurePackages = [
             "foobar-1.2.3"
           ];
         }

Adding either of these configurations will permit this specific
version to be installed. A third option also exists:

  NIXPKGS_ALLOW_INSECURE=1 nix-build ...

though I specifically avoided having a global file-based toggle to
disable this check. This way, users don't disable it once in order to
get a single package, and then don't realize future packages are
insecure.
2017-02-24 07:41:05 -05:00
Graham Christensen
59d61ef34a Revert "nixpkgs: allow packages to be marked insecure" 2017-02-23 09:41:42 -05:00
Graham Christensen
38771badd3
nixpkgs: allow packages to be marked insecure
If a package's meta has `knownVulnerabilities`, like so:

    stdenv.mkDerivation {
      name = "foobar-1.2.3";

      ...

      meta.knownVulnerabilities = [
        "CVE-0000-00000: remote code execution"
        "CVE-0000-00001: local privilege escalation"
      ];
    }

and a user attempts to install the package, they will be greeted with
a warning indicating that maybe they don't want to install it:

    error: Package ‘foobar-1.2.3’ in ‘...default.nix:20’ is marked as insecure, refusing to evaluate.

    Known issues:

     - CVE-0000-00000: remote code execution
     - CVE-0000-00001: local privilege escalation

    You can install it anyway by whitelisting this package, using the
    following methods:

    a) for `nixos-rebuild` you can add ‘foobar-1.2.3’ to
       `nixpkgs.config.permittedInsecurePackages` in the configuration.nix,
       like so:

         {
           nixpkgs.config.permittedInsecurePackages = [
             "foobar-1.2.3"
           ];
         }

    b) For `nix-env`, `nix-build`, `nix-shell` or any other Nix command you can add
    ‘foobar-1.2.3’ to `permittedInsecurePackages` in
    ~/.config/nixpkgs/config.nix, like so:

         {
           permittedInsecurePackages = [
             "foobar-1.2.3"
           ];
         }

Adding either of these configurations will permit this specific
version to be installed. A third option also exists:

  NIXPKGS_ALLOW_INSECURE=1 nix-build ...

though I specifically avoided having a global file-based toggle to
disable this check. This way, users don't disable it once in order to
get a single package, and then don't realize future packages are
insecure.
2017-02-17 20:49:49 -05:00
Eelco Dolstra
9d6a55aefd
~/.nixpkgs -> ~/.config/nixpkgs
The former is still respected as a fallback for config.nix for
backwards compatibility (but not for overlays because they're a new
feature).
2017-02-01 16:07:55 +01:00
Tuomas Tynkkynen
18599495c4 stdenv: make is64bit evaluate true on aarch64
This should fix the NSS build.
2017-01-29 20:28:14 +02:00
Tuomas Tynkkynen
7c8a060c09 stdenv: Bringup aarch64 architecture support 2017-01-25 00:01:51 +02:00
John Ericson
bf17d6dacf top-level: Introduce buildPackages for resolving build-time deps
[N.B., this package also applies to the commits that follow it in the same
PR.]

In most cases, buildPackages = pkgs so things work just as before. For
cross compiling, however, buildPackages is resolved as the previous
bootstrapping stage. This allows us to avoid the mkDerivation hacks cross
compiling currently uses today.

To avoid a massive refactor, callPackage will splice together both package
sets. Again to avoid churn, it uses the old `nativeDrv` vs `crossDrv` to do
so. So now, whether cross compiling or not, packages with get a `nativeDrv`
and `crossDrv`---in the non-cross-compiling case they are simply the same
derivation. This is good because it reduces the divergence between the
cross and non-cross dataflow. See `pkgs/top-level/splice.nix` for a comment
along the lines of the preceding paragraph, and the code that does this
splicing.

Also, `forceNativeDrv` is replaced with `forceNativePackages`. The latter
resolves `pkgs` unless the host platform is different from the build
platform, in which case it resolves to `buildPackages`. Note that the
target platform is not important here---it will not prevent
`forcedNativePackages` from resolving to `pkgs`.

--------

Temporarily, we make preserve some dubious decisions in the name of preserving
hashes:

Most importantly, we don't distinguish between "host" and "target" in the
autoconf sense. This leads to the proliferation of *Cross derivations
currently used. What we ought to is resolve native deps of the cross "build
packages" (build = host != target) package set against the "vanilla
packages" (build = host = target) package set. Instead, "build packages"
uses itself, with (informally) target != build in all cases.

This is wrong because it violates the "sliding window" principle of
bootstrapping stages that shifting the platform triple of one stage to the
left coincides with the next stage's platform triple. Only because we don't
explicitly distinguish between "host" and "target" does it appear that the
"sliding window" principle is preserved--indeed it is over the reductionary
"platform double" of just "build" and "host/target".

Additionally, we build libc, libgcc, etc in the same stage as the compilers
themselves, which is wrong because they are used at runtime, not build
time. Fixing this is somewhat subtle, and the solution and problem will be
better explained in the commit that does fix it.

Commits after this will solve both these issues, at the expense of breaking
cross hashes. Native hashes won't be broken, thankfully.

--------

Did the temporary ugliness pan out? Of the packages that currently build in
`release-cross.nix`, the only ones that have their hash changed are
`*.gcc.crossDrv` and `bootstrapTools.*.coreutilsMinimal`. In both cases I
think it doesn't matter.

 1. GCC when doing a `build = host = target = foreign` build (maximally
    cross), still defines environment variables like `CPATH`[1] with
    packages.  This seems assuredly wrong because whether gcc dynamically
    links those, or the programs built by gcc dynamically link those---I
    have no idea which case is reality---they should be foreign. Therefore,
    in all likelihood, I just made the gcc less broken.

 2. Coreutils (ab)used the old cross-compiling infrastructure to depend on
    a native version of itself. When coreutils was overwritten to be built
    with fewer features, the native version it used would also be
    overwritten because the binding was tight. Now it uses the much looser
    `BuildPackages.coreutils` which is just fine as a richer build dep
    doesn't cause any problems and avoids a rebuild.

So, in conclusion I'd say the conservatism payed off. Onward to actually
raking the muck in the next PR!

[1]: https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Environment-Variables.html
2017-01-24 11:37:56 -05:00
John Ericson
0ef8b69d12 top-level: Modernize stdenv.overrides giving it self and super
Document breaking change in 17.03 release notes
2017-01-13 10:36:11 -05:00
Domen Kožar
45f579b9e7 allowUnfree: mention the solution that works for nix-shell as well 2016-11-16 15:14:19 +01:00
Domen Kožar
62edf873aa Merge pull request #18660 from aneeshusa/add-override-attrs
mkDerivation: add overrideAttrs function
2016-10-30 11:32:15 +01:00
Joachim F
3d5630fac9 Merge pull request #19769 from groxxda/license
stdenv.hasLicense: ? supports nested lookup
2016-10-24 15:19:12 +02:00
Alexander Ried
a0ac2ae35e stdenv: throwEvalHelp performance (#19779) 2016-10-22 20:24:56 +02:00
Alexander Ried
43ce115ca9 stdenv.hasLicense: ? supports nested lookup
this avoids one copy of the attrset
2016-10-22 02:43:13 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
af38c05587 stdenv stripHash(): fixup after #19324 2016-10-12 23:45:30 +02:00
Profpatsch
bef6bef0d2
stdenv/stripHash: print to stdout, not to variable
`stripHash` documentation states that it prints out the stripped name to
the stdout, but the function stored the value in `strippedName`
instead.

Basically all usages did something like
`$(stripHash $foo | echo $strippedName)` which is just braindamaged.
Fixed the implementation and all invocations.
2016-10-11 18:34:36 +02:00
Aneesh Agrawal
39b64b52ed mkDerivation: add overrideAttrs function
This is similar to `overrideDerivation`, but overrides the arguments to
`mkDerivation` instead of the underlying `derivation` call.

Also update `makeOverridable` so that uses of `overrideAttrs` can be
followed by `override` and `overrideDerivation`, i.e. they can be
mix-and-matched.
2016-10-02 11:08:34 -04:00
Chris Martin
10f2befa58 stdenv.mkDerivation: add comments w/ manual links (#18707) 2016-09-18 11:20:53 +02:00
Nikolay Amiantov
adaee7352b stdenv: leave SSL_CERT_FILE in shells (#15571) 2016-09-01 20:50:08 +02:00
Tuomas Tynkkynen
5326e85f3d stdenv.mkDerivation: Use chooseDevOutputs 2016-08-29 14:49:51 +03:00
Robin Gloster
e17bc25943
Merge remote-tracking branch 'upstream/master' into staging 2016-08-29 00:24:47 +00:00
Tuomas Tynkkynen
ff9491917f stdenv: Add platforms 2016-08-28 18:04:09 +03:00
Eelco Dolstra
8a84fc0217 Tweak error message 2016-08-26 18:58:49 +02:00
Robin Gloster
b6c204f088
stdenv substitute: fail on non-existant input file
fixes #9744
2016-08-26 16:27:36 +00:00
Domen Kožar
7a5b85cdda pkgs.runCommand: passAsFile (buildCommand can be very long)
Close #15803. This avoids the error:

while setting up the build environment: executing
‘/nix/store/7sb42axk5lrxqz45nldrb2pchlys14s1-bash-4.3-p42/bin/bash’:
Argument list too long

Note: I wanted to make it optional based on buildCommand length,
but that seems pointless as I'm sure it's less performant.

Amended by vcunat:
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/15803#issuecomment-224841225
2016-06-10 10:49:26 +02:00
Joachim Fasting
6648b04381
stdenv: fix paxmark
On Linux, paxctl's setup hook should overwrite the paxmark stub, but the
stub is defined after the setup hooks are sourced, so the stub ends up
overwriting the real function.  The result is that paxmark fails to do
anything.  The fix is to define the stub before any setup hooks are
sourced.  Thanks to @vcunat for figuring this out.

Closes #15492
2016-05-27 18:57:59 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
81df035429 stdenv setup.sh: revert most of changes around #14907
I'm giving this up. Feel free to find some reasonable variant that works
at least on Linux and Darwin. Problems encountered:
- During bootstrap of Darwin stdenv `env -0` and some bash features
  don't work.
- Without `env -0` the contents of some multi-line phases is taken as
  variable declarations, which wouldn't typically matter, but the PR
  wanted to refuse bash-invalid names which would be occasionally
  triggered. This commit dowgrades that to a warning with explanation.
2016-05-12 04:53:37 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
62fc8859c1 stdenv substituteAll: use yet another implementation
It turned out that process substitution fed into a while-cycle
isn't recognized during darwin bootstrap:
http://hydra.nixos.org/build/35382446/nixlog/1/raw

Also fix broken NIX_DEBUG output, noticed by abbradar.
2016-05-08 19:41:50 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
9e0d0423fe stdenv substituteAll: use more robust code
The set/env fix in #14907 wasn't very good, so let's use a null-delimited
approach. Suggested by Aszlig.
In particular, this should fix a mass-breakage on Darwin, though I was
unable to test that.
2016-05-07 11:23:30 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
1dc36904d8 Merge #14920: windows improvements, mainly mingw 2016-05-05 08:30:19 +02:00
Nikolay Amiantov
62616ec5e2 Merge commit 'refs/pull/14907/head' of git://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs into staging 2016-04-25 18:02:47 +03:00
Nikolay Amiantov
d4794c3630 stdenv: clarify how outputsToInstall is chosen
See https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/14694/files#r60013871
2016-04-25 13:24:39 +03:00
Nikolay Amiantov
5ff40ddedf add get* helper functions and mass-replace manual outputs search with them 2016-04-25 13:24:39 +03:00
Profpatsch
a2d38bc7fc doc/stdenv.xml document substitution env variables
The filtering of environment variables that start with an uppercase
letter is documented in the manual.
2016-04-23 21:41:35 +02:00
Profpatsch
77fa336849 setup.hs: substitute uses only valid bash names
bash variable names may only contain alphanumeric ASCII-symbols and _,
and must not start with a number. Nix expression attribute names however
might contain nearly every character (in particular spaces and dashes).

Previously, a substitution that was not a valid bash name would be
expanded to an empty string. This commit introduce a check that throws
a (hopefully) helpful error when a wrong name is used in a substitution.
2016-04-23 17:54:32 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
6e7787e666 stdenv for windows: auto-link dependency DLLs
For every *.{exe,dll} in $output/bin/ we try to find all (potential)
transitive dependencies and symlink those DLLs into $output/bin
so they are found on invocation.
(DLLs are first searched in the directory of the running exe file.)

The links are relative, so relocating whole /nix/store won't break them.
The hook is activated on cygwin and when cross-compiling to mingw.
2016-04-23 10:52:00 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
710573ce6d Merge #12653: rework default outputs 2016-04-07 16:00:09 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
2995439003 buildEnv: respect meta.outputsToInstall
As a result `systemPackages` now also respect it.
Only nix-env remains and that has a PR filed:
    https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/815
2016-04-07 15:59:44 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
3342f717da stdenv: set meta.outputsToInstall unless overridden 2016-04-07 15:59:43 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
d1df28f8e5 Merge 'staging' into closure-size
This is mainly to get the update of bootstrap tools.
Otherwise there were mysterious segfaults:
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/7701#issuecomment-203389817
2016-04-07 14:40:51 +02:00
Charles Strahan
bde82098b8 stdenv: don't complain about configure script not existing
Close #14335.
Since 89036ef76a, when a package doesn't include a configure script,
the build complains with:

    grep: : No such file or directory
    grep: : No such file or directory

This prevents that.
2016-04-02 20:52:19 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
ab15a62c68 Merge branch 'master' into closure-size
Beware that stdenv doesn't build. It seems something more will be needed
than just resolution of merge conflicts.
2016-04-01 10:06:01 +02:00
Vladimír Čunát
09af15654f Merge master into closure-size
The kde-5 stuff still didn't merge well.
I hand-fixed what I saw, but there may be more problems.
2016-03-08 09:58:19 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
2040a9ac57 stdenv-linux: Ensure binutils comes before bootstrapTools in $PATH
Otherwise, when building glibc and other packages, the "strip" from
bootstrapTools is used, which doesn't recognise some tags produced by
the newer "ld" from binutils.
2016-02-28 01:13:15 +01:00
Nikolay Amiantov
39609a0c94 stdenv: set SSL_CERT_FILE only if it isn't already 2016-02-25 13:53:29 +03:00
Eelco Dolstra
d71a4851e8 Don't try to apply patchelf to non-ELF binaries 2016-02-18 22:54:11 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
89036ef76a stdenv: accept wider range of $configureScript options
Fixes #12632.

I think it's better to quote this variable in general, because it is
common and even documented to pass space-separated commands in there.
The greps should just fail in that case and `if` won't proceed
which seems fine for such cases, and it's certainly better than
passing additional unintended parameters to grep
(which was happening all the time before).
2016-02-03 17:15:11 +01:00
Vladimír Čunát
ae74c356d9 Merge recent 'staging' into closure-size
Let's get rid of those merge conflicts.
2016-02-03 16:57:19 +01:00
Eelco Dolstra
917ca8920d Move setting $SSL_CERT_FILE to stdenv
Doing it in an openssl setup hook only works if packages have openssl
as a build input - it doesn't work if they're using a program linked
against openssl.
2016-02-03 13:59:10 +01:00