Overlays
This chapter describes how to extend and change Nixpkgs using overlays. Overlays are used to add layers in the fixed-point used by Nixpkgs to compose the set of all packages.
Nixpkgs can be configured with a list of overlays, which are applied in order. This means that the order of the overlays can be significant if multiple layers override the same package.
Installing overlays
The list of overlays can be set either explicitly in a Nix expression, or through <nixpkgs-overlays> or user configuration files.
Set overlays in NixOS or Nix expressions
On a NixOS system the value of the nixpkgs.overlays option, if present, is passed to the system Nixpkgs directly as an argument. Note that this does not affect the overlays for non-NixOS operations (e.g. nix-env), which are looked up independently.
The list of overlays can be passed explicitly when importing nixpkgs, for example import <nixpkgs> { overlays = [ overlay1 overlay2 ]; }.
NOTE: DO NOT USE THIS in nixpkgs.
Further overlays can be added by calling the pkgs.extend or pkgs.appendOverlays, although it is often preferable to avoid these functions, because they recompute the Nixpkgs fixpoint, which is somewhat expensive to do.
Install overlays via configuration lookup
The list of overlays is determined as follows.
First, if an overlays argument to the Nixpkgs function itself is given, then that is used and no path lookup will be performed.
Otherwise, if the Nix path entry <nixpkgs-overlays> exists, we look for overlays at that path, as described below.
See the section on NIX_PATH in the Nix manual for more details on how to set a value for <nixpkgs-overlays>.
If one of ~/.config/nixpkgs/overlays.nix and ~/.config/nixpkgs/overlays/ exists, then we look for overlays at that path, as described below. It is an error if both exist.
If we are looking for overlays at a path, then there are two cases:
If the path is a file, then the file is imported as a Nix expression and used as the list of overlays.
If the path is a directory, then we take the content of the directory, order it lexicographically, and attempt to interpret each as an overlay by:
Importing the file, if it is a .nix file.
Importing a top-level default.nix file, if it is a directory.
Because overlays that are set in NixOS configuration do not affect non-NixOS operations such as nix-env, the overlays.nix option provides a convenient way to use the same overlays for a NixOS system configuration and user configuration: the same file can be used as overlays.nix and imported as the value of nixpkgs.overlays.
Defining overlays
Overlays are Nix functions which accept two arguments, conventionally called self and super, and return a set of packages. For example, the following is a valid overlay.
self: super:
{
boost = super.boost.override {
python = self.python3;
};
rr = super.callPackage ./pkgs/rr {
stdenv = self.stdenv_32bit;
};
}
The first argument (self) corresponds to the final package set. You should use this set for the dependencies of all packages specified in your overlay. For example, all the dependencies of rr in the example above come from self, as well as the overridden dependencies used in the boost override.
The second argument (super) corresponds to the result of the evaluation of the previous stages of Nixpkgs. It does not contain any of the packages added by the current overlay, nor any of the following overlays. This set should be used either to refer to packages you wish to override, or to access functions defined in Nixpkgs. For example, the original recipe of boost in the above example, comes from super, as well as the callPackage function.
The value returned by this function should be a set similar to pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix, containing overridden and/or new packages.
Overlays are similar to other methods for customizing Nixpkgs, in particular the packageOverrides attribute described in . Indeed, packageOverrides acts as an overlay with only the super argument. It is therefore appropriate for basic use, but overlays are more powerful and easier to distribute.
Using overlays to configure alternatives
Certain software packages have different implementations of the
same interface. Other distributions have functionality to switch
between these. For example, Debian provides DebianAlternatives.
Nixpkgs has what we call alternatives, which
are configured through overlays.
BLAS/LAPACK
In Nixpkgs, we have multiple implementations of the BLAS/LAPACK
numerical linear algebra interfaces. They are:
OpenBLAS
The Nixpkgs attribute is openblas for
ILP64 (integer width = 64 bits) and
openblasCompat for LP64 (integer width =
32 bits). openblasCompat is the default.
LAPACK
reference (also provides BLAS)
The Nixpkgs attribute is lapack-reference.
Intel
MKL (only works on the x86_64 architecture, unfree)
The Nixpkgs attribute is mkl.
BLIS
BLIS, available through the attribute
blis, is a framework for linear algebra kernels. In
addition, it implements the BLAS interface.
AMD
BLIS/LIBFLAME (optimized for modern AMD x86_64 CPUs)
The AMD fork of the BLIS library, with attribute
amd-blis, extends BLIS with optimizations for
modern AMD CPUs. The changes are usually submitted to
the upstream BLIS project after some time. However, AMD BLIS
typically provides some performance improvements on AMD Zen CPUs.
The complementary AMD LIBFLAME library, with attribute
amd-libflame, provides a LAPACK implementation.
Introduced in PR
#83888, we are able to override the blas
and lapack packages to use different implementations,
through the blasProvider and
lapackProvider argument. This can be used
to select a different provider. BLAS providers will have
symlinks in $out/lib/libblas.so.3 and
$out/lib/libcblas.so.3 to their respective
BLAS libraries. Likewise, LAPACK providers will have symlinks
in $out/lib/liblapack.so.3 and
$out/lib/liblapacke.so.3 to their respective
LAPACK libraries. For example, Intel MKL is both a BLAS and
LAPACK provider. An overlay can be created to use Intel MKL
that looks like:
self: super:
{
blas = super.blas.override {
blasProvider = self.mkl;
};
lapack = super.lapack.override {
lapackProvider = self.mkl;
};
}
This overlay uses Intel’s MKL library for both BLAS and LAPACK
interfaces. Note that the same can be accomplished at runtime
using LD_LIBRARY_PATH of
libblas.so.3 and
liblapack.so.3. For instance:
$ LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$(nix-build -A mkl)/lib:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH nix-shell -p octave --run octave
Intel MKL requires an openmp implementation
when running with multiple processors. By default,
mkl will use Intel’s iomp
implementation if no other is specified, but this is a
runtime-only dependency and binary compatible with the LLVM
implementation. To use that one instead, Intel recommends users
set it with LD_PRELOAD. Note that
mkl is only available on
x86_64-linux and
x86_64-darwin. Moreover, Hydra is not
building and distributing pre-compiled binaries using it.
For BLAS/LAPACK switching to work correctly, all packages must
depend on blas or lapack.
This ensures that only one BLAS/LAPACK library is used at one
time. There are two versions versions of BLAS/LAPACK currently
in the wild, LP64 (integer size = 32 bits)
and ILP64 (integer size = 64 bits). Some
software needs special flags or patches to work with
ILP64. You can check if
ILP64 is used in Nixpkgs with
blas.isILP64 and
lapack.isILP64. Some software does NOT work
with ILP64, and derivations need to specify
an assertion to prevent this. You can prevent
ILP64 from being used with the following:
{ stdenv, blas, lapack, ... }:
assert (!blas.isILP64) && (!lapack.isILP64);
stdenv.mkDerivation {
...
}
Switching the MPI implementation
All programs that are built with
MPI
support use the generic attribute mpi
as an input. At the moment Nixpkgs natively provides two different
MPI implementations:
Open MPI
(default), attribute name openmpi
MPICH,
attribute name mpich
To provide MPI enabled applications that use MPICH, instead
of the default Open MPI, simply use the following overlay:
self: super:
{
mpi = self.mpich;
}