Commit Graph

269 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Chuck
5d4821141b stdenv: Remove isArm (use isAarch32 instead)
isArm has been deprecated for three releases.  All references have been
removed.  Tree-wide substitution was performed in #37401 21 months ago.
2020-02-05 10:56:14 -08:00
Andreas Rammhold
cb007e69a1 stdenv: make symlinks that refer to the same output relative
While looking at the graph of all the outputs in my personal binary
cache it became obvious that we have a lot of self references within the
package set. That isn't an isuse by itself. However it increases the
size of the binary cache for every (reproducible) build of a package
that carries references to itself. You can no longer deduplicate the
outputs since they are all unique. One of the ways to get rid of (a few)
references is to rewrite all the symlinks that are currently used to be
relative symlinks. Two build of something that didn't really change but
carries a self-reference can the be store as the same NAR file again.

I quickly hacked together this change to see if that would yield and
success. My bash scripting skills are probably not great but so far it
seem to somewhat work.
2020-01-15 09:26:40 +01:00
John Ericson
63bd851e95 stdenv: Introduce hasCC attribute
Before, we'd always use `cc = null`, and check for that. The problem is
this breaks for cross compilation to platforms that don't support a C
compiler.

It's a very subtle issue. One might think there is no problem because we
have `stdenvNoCC`, and presumably one would only build derivations that
use that. The problem is that one still wants to use tools at build-time
that are themselves built with a C compiler, and those are gotten via
"splicing". The runtime version of those deps will explode, but the
build time / `buildPackages` versions of those deps will be fine, and
splicing attempts to work this by using `builtins.tryEval` to filter out
any broken "higher priority" packages (runtime is the default and
highest priority) so that both `foo` and `foo.nativeDrv` works.

However, `tryEval` only catches certain evaluation failures (e.g.
exceptions), and not arbitrary failures (such as `cc.attr` when `cc` is
null). This means `tryEval` fails to let us use our build time deps, and
everything comes apart.

The right solution is, as usually, to get rid of splicing. Or, baring
that, to make it so `foo` never works and one has to explicitly do
`foo.*`. But that is a much larger change, and certaily one unsuitable
to be backported to stable.

Given that, we instead make an exception-throwing `cc` attribute, and
create a `hasCC` attribute for those derivations which wish to
condtionally use a C compiler: instead of doing `stdenv.cc or null ==
null` or something similar, one does `stdenv.hasCC`. This allows quering
without "tripping" the exception, while also allowing `tryEval` to work.

No platform without a C compiler is yet wired up by default. That will
be done in a following commit.
2019-11-25 00:12:38 +00:00
volth
08f68313a4 treewide: remove redundant rec 2019-08-28 11:07:32 +00:00
John Ericson
1a7a96a093 stdenv, compiler-rt: Compress WASI conditionals 2019-04-23 21:48:58 -04:00
Matthew Bauer
9abff4af4f wasm: init cross target
Adds pkgsCross.wasm32 and pkgsCross.wasm64. Use it to build Nixpkgs
with a WebAssembly toolchain.

stdenv/cross: use static overlay on isWasm

isWasm doesn’t make sense dynamically linked.
2019-04-23 21:48:57 -04:00
Orivej Desh (NixOS)
9a21967f0a
stdenv: prune libtool files by default (#51767)
See the motivation in fd97db43bc (#41819).
2019-01-11 13:20:46 +00:00
Daniel Goertzen
1c10efc912 add generic x86_32 support (#52634)
* add generic x86_32 support

- Add support for i386-i586.
- Add `isx86_32` predicate that can replace most uses of `isi686`.
- `isi686` is reinterpreted to mean "exactly i686 arch, and not say i585 or i386".
- This branch was used to build working i586 kernel running on i586 hardware.

* revert `isi[345]86`, remove dead code

- Remove changes to dead code in `doubles.nix` and `for-meta.nix`.
- Remove `isi[345]86` predicates since other cpu families don't have specific model predicates.

* remove i386-linux since linux not supported on that cpu
2019-01-06 12:57:36 -06:00
Jörg Thalheim
1b146a8c6f
treewide: remove paxutils from stdenv
More then one year ago we removed grsecurity kernels from nixpkgs:
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/25277

This removes now also paxutils from stdenv.
2018-12-22 12:55:05 +01:00
Piotr Bogdan
44c9c27d54 stdenv: prune libtool files by default 2018-12-09 22:45:15 +00:00
John Ericson
773233ca77 top-level, stdenv: Make system and stdenv.system describe the hostPlatform.
Intuitively, one cares mainly about the host platform: Platforms differ
in meaningful ways but compilation is morally a pure process and
probably doesn't care, or those difference are already abstracted away.
@Dezgeg also empirically confirmed that > 95% of checks are indeed of
the host platform.

Yet these attributes in the old cross infrastructure were defined to be
the build platform, for expediency. And this was never before changed.
(For native builds build and host coincide, so it isn't clear what the
intention was.)

Fixing this doesn't affect native builds, since again they coincide. It
also doesn't affect cross builds of anything in Nixpkgs, as these are no
longer used. It could affect external cross builds, but I deem that
unlikely as anyone thinking about cross would use more explicit
attributes for clarity, all the more so because the rarity of inspecting
the build platform.
2018-09-06 08:33:51 -04:00
John Ericson
51907d257c stdenv, neovim: Use lib.warn for deprecation warnings 2018-09-05 11:40:29 -04:00
John Ericson
82110ae656 stdenv: Better message for deprecated isArm
The message should say what to do instead.
2018-08-31 16:01:58 -04:00
Jörg Thalheim
9efffe0135 hurd: cleanup unmaintained target
This has been not touched in 6 years. Let's remove it to cause less
problems when adding new cross-compiling infrastructure.
This also simplify gcc significantly.
2018-08-28 22:18:02 +01:00
John Ericson
34da7e2ce2 treewide: Remove stdenv.isCross
I *want* cross-specific overrides to be verbose, so I rather not have
this shorthand. This makes the syntactic overhead more proportional to
the maintainence cost. Hopefully this pushes people towards fewer
conditionals and more abstractions.
2018-08-02 15:01:58 -04:00
John Ericson
983e74ae4e stdenv: Avoid targetPlatform.isDarwin causing a mass rebuild
We want `buildPackages` to be almost the same as
`buildPackages.buildPackges`, but that is only true if most packages
don't care about the target platform. The commented code however made
them all care about whether the target platform was Darwin.
2018-05-23 10:06:08 -04:00
John Ericson
302c4c5f2d stdenv: Put back isArm, with deprecation notice.
This was always meant to be deprecated rather than removed.
2018-05-07 20:14:52 -04:00
John Ericson
b9acfb4ecf treewide: isArm -> isAarch32
Following legacy packing conventions, `isArm` was defined just for
32-bit ARM instruction set. This is confusing to non packagers though,
because Aarch64 is an ARM instruction set.

The official ARM overview for ARMv8[1] is surprisingly not confusing,
given the overall state of affairs for ARM naming conventions, and
offers us a solution. It divides the nomenclature into three levels:

```
ISA:             ARMv8   {-A, -R, -M}
                 /    \
Mode:     Aarch32     Aarch64
             |         /   \
Encoding:   A64      A32   T32
```

At the top is the overall v8 instruction set archicture. Second are the
two modes, defined by bitwidth but differing in other semantics too, and
buttom are the encodings, (hopefully?) isomorphic if they encode the
same mode.

The 32 bit encodings are mostly backwards compatible with previous
non-Thumb and Thumb encodings, and if so we can pun the mode names to
instead mean "sets of compatable or isomorphic encodings", and then
voilà we have nice names for 32-bit and 64-bit arm instruction sets
which do not use the word ARM so as to not confused either laymen or
experienced ARM packages.

[1]: https://developer.arm.com/products/architecture/a-profile

(cherry picked from commit ba52ae5048)
2018-04-25 15:50:41 -04:00
Shea Levy
1c1a6dfd23
libgcrypt: Fix cross-compilation 2018-02-24 22:51:22 -05:00
Dan Peebles
b426c85ce2 Get rid of most @rpath nonsense on Darwin
This requires some small changes in the stdenv, then working around the
weird choice LLVM made to hardcode @rpath in its install name, and then
lets us remove a ton of annoying workaround hacks in many of our Go
packages. With any luck this will mean less hackery going forward.
2017-10-08 16:13:46 -04:00
Tuomas Tynkkynen
0c0fad6141 treewide: Consistently call ARM 'arm'
No need for silly differences.
2017-08-24 01:17:01 +03:00
John Ericson
fbab1d485b stdenvs: Distinguish between extraBuildInputs and extraNativeBuildInputs
This version continues to use bash + stdenv/setup for the default
inputs.
2017-08-18 12:02:13 -04:00
Tuomas Tynkkynen
7320fa9d45 Revert "stdenvs: Distinguish between extraBuildInputs and extraNativeBuildInputs"
This reverts commit eeabf85780.

This change suddenly makes tons of stdenv internals visible in
nativeBuildInputs of every derivation, which doesn't seem desirable.
E.g:

````
nix-repl> hello.nativeBuildInputs
[ «derivation /nix/store/bcfkyf6bhssxd2vzwgzmsbn7b5b9rpxc-patchelf-0.9.drv»
  «derivation /nix/store/4wnshnz9wwanpfzcrdd76rri7pyqn9sk-paxctl-0.9.drv»
  << snip 10+ lines >>
  «derivation /nix/store/d35pgh1lcg5nm0x28d899pxj30b8c9b2-gcc-wrapper-6.4.0.drv»
]
````
2017-08-18 13:21:56 +03:00
John Ericson
eeabf85780 stdenvs: Distinguish between extraBuildInputs and extraNativeBuildInputs
Additionally, instead of pulling them from `setup.sh`, route them via
Nix. This gets us one step closer to making stdenv be a plain attribute
set instead of a derivation.
2017-08-15 18:24:54 -04:00
John Ericson
a302d7360f top-level: {build,host,target}Platform are defined in the stdenv instead
See #27069 for a discussion of this
2017-07-07 12:55:02 -04:00
John Ericson
afc2023993 stdenv: Have mkDerivation pull the "extra" arguments from stdenv instead
Something more elaborate is needed for the "*Platform" arguments.
2017-07-07 12:16:51 -04:00
John Ericson
4cf4d7180d stdenv: Conservatively move mkDerivation into it's own file 2017-07-07 12:16:51 -04:00
Vladimír Čunát
e8e57452f4 stdenv: separate all meta-checking code (~200 lines)
Only cosmetic changes are done otherwise.
Real refactoring is left for later.

There's a small slow-down on my machine:
$ time nix-env -qa -P >/dev/null
gets from ~2.8 to ~3.5 seconds (negligible change in RAM).
That's most likely caused by sharing less computation between different
mkDerivation calls, and I plan to improve that soon.
2017-07-07 12:16:26 -04:00
Vladimír Čunát
dfc004e69c lib.lists.mutuallyExclusive: add function 2017-07-07 12:02:29 -04:00
Vladimír Čunát
5afcdc88fa stdenv: simple refactor to get rid of pos'
Suggested by Ericson2314.
2017-07-07 12:02:29 -04:00
Vladimír Čunát
7fdf18e892 stdenv: refactor (no change in semantics)
This just moves some expressions around in preparation to further changes.
2017-07-07 12:02:29 -04:00
John Ericson
ad8d8fb2f5 stdenv: Simplify dependency code
This is a bit simpler now, but more importantly it scales better when I
double the number of sorts of dependencies as part of my cross
compilation work.
2017-06-29 17:45:08 -04:00
Vladimír Čunát
8004e79415
Merge branch 'master' into staging 2017-05-24 03:24:06 +02:00
John Ericson
eaa509f33a stdenv: Rename isGNU to isHurd as GNU is a userland
Elsewhere, things called GNU indeed includes GNU/Linux or GNU/Hurd, but this
predicate was defined excluding Linux regardless of userland.
2017-05-22 13:55:26 -04:00
John Ericson
1dc6f15de9 stdenv: define is* predicates with hostPlatform.is*
This is a saner default until stdenv's are removed altogether
2017-05-22 00:25:02 -04:00
John Ericson
c5c6606048 lib: Infer libc field of platform if not specified
This is especially useful when not cross compiling. It means we can
remove the `stdenv.isGlibc` predicate too.

Additionally, use this to simplify the logic to choose the
appropriate libiconv derivation.
2017-05-22 00:25:02 -04:00
Vladimír Čunát
ef5844be6c
stdenv: disable audit-tmpdir on non-Linux for now
Without changing any hashes.
2017-05-06 13:19:07 +02:00
Eelco Dolstra
94d164dd7f
Add a setup hook for detecting $TMPDIR references in RPATHs and wrapper scripts 2017-05-04 20:23:57 +02:00
Domen Kožar
e057e5927e Merge pull request #25427 from aneeshusa/fix-meta-priority-types
Fix meta priority types
2017-05-02 09:38:32 +02:00
Aneesh Agrawal
d3acf9891c stdenv: More useful error message on bad meta attrs
This helps in debugging meta attribute type errors,
which are now enforced as of commit
90b9719f4f.
2017-05-02 01:45:30 -04:00
Dan Peebles
f3a05a0fb3 stdenv: disable checkMeta by default until issues resolved
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/25304#issuecomment-298385426
2017-05-01 13:51:12 -04:00
Eric Sagnes
7004919243 stdenv-generic: add meta attributes checks 2017-04-29 17:07:01 +09:00
Dan Peebles
90b9719f4f treewide: fix the remaining issues with meta attributes 2017-04-29 04:24:34 +00:00
Dan Peebles
1a4ca220e1 treewide: fix assorted issues revealed by the meta checker
Turns out a couple of the licenses were wrong, as well as being strings.
2017-04-28 23:07:42 -04:00
Dan Peebles
32ae4bfc20 stdenv-generic: add meta attribute checking
This is turned off by default but I think we should fix all packages to
respect it and then turn it on by default
2017-04-28 18:12:18 -04:00
Tuomas Tynkkynen
ce56c99edc mkDerivation: Don't pass buildInputs to stdenv builder in nativeBuildInputs
When not cross compiling, nativeBuildInputs and buildInputs have
identical behaviour. Currently that is implemented by having
mkDerivation do a concatenation of those variables in Nix code and pass
that to the builder via the nativeBuildInputs attribute.

However, that has some annoying side effects, like `foo.buildInputs`
evaluating to `[ ]` even if buildInputs were specified in the nix
expression for foo.

Instead, pass buildInputs and nativeBuildInputs in separate variables as
usual, and move the logic of cross compilation vs. native compilation to
the stdenv builder script. This is probably a tiny bit uglier but
fixes the previous problem.

Issue #4855.
2017-03-02 03:26:48 +02:00
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