lix-doc is now built with Meson, with lix-doc's dependencies built as
Meson subprojects, either fetched on demand with .wrap files, or fetched
in advance by Nix with importCargoLock. It even builds statically.
Fixes#256.
Co-authored-by: Lunaphied <lunaphied@lunaphied.me>
Co-authored-by: Jade Lovelace <lix@jade.fyi>
Change-Id: I3a4731ff13278e7117e0316bc0d7169e85f5eb0c
This check is wrong and would cause the close_range() function being called even when it's not available
Change-Id: Ide65b36830e705fe772196c37349873353622761
The <() process substitution syntax doesn't work for this one testcase
in bash for FreeBSD. The exact reason for this is unknown, possibly to
do with pipe vs file vs fifo EOF behavior. The prior behavior was this
test hanging forever, with no children of the bash process.
Change-Id: I71822a4b9dea6059b34300568256c5b7848109ac
Closes#460
I managed to trigger the issue by having the following inputs (shortened):
authentik-nix.url = "github:nix-community/authentik-nix";
authentik-nix.inputs.poetry2nix.inputs.nixpkgs.follows = "nixpkgs";
When evaluating this using
nix-eval-jobs --flake .#hydraJobs
I got the following error:
error: cannot update unlocked flake input 'authentik-nix/poetry2nix' in pure mode
The issue we have here is that `authentik-nix/poetry2nix` was written
into the `overrideMap` which caused Nix to assume it's a new input and
tried to refetch it (#460) or errored out in pure mode
(nix-eval-jobs / Hydra).
The testcase unfortunately only involves checking for the output log
and makes sure that something *is* logged on the first fetch so that
the test doesn't rot when the logging changes since I didn't
manage to trigger the error above with the reproducer from #460. In
fact, I only managed to trigger the `cannot update unlocked flake input`
error in this context with `nix-eval-jobs`.
Change-Id: Ifd00091eec9a0067ed4bb3e5765a15d027328807
this can be a proper WorkResult now. childTerminated is unfortunately a
lot more stubborn and won't be made private for quite a while yet. once
we can get rid of the Worker poll loop that *should* be possible though
Change-Id: I2218df202da5cb84e852f6a37e4c20367495b617
we'll need this once we want to pass extra information out of accepting
replies, such as fd sets or possibly even async output reader promises.
Change-Id: I5e2f18cdb80b0d2faf3067703cc18bd263329b3f
don't keep fds open we're not using. currently this does not cause any
problems, but it does increase the size of our fd table needlessly and
in the future, when we have proper async processing, having builderOut
open in the daemon once the hook has been fully started is problematic
Change-Id: I6e7fb773b280b042873103638d3e04272ca1e4fc
this is useless to do on the face of it, but it'll make it easier to
convert the entire output handling to use async io and promises soon
Change-Id: I2d1eb62c4bbf8f57bd558b9599c08710a389b1a8
only DerivationGoal can set the hook to anything at all. it always sets
buildOutFD to something that is not related to fromHook in any way, and
mixing the two would have rather dire consequences for log consistency.
Change-Id: Ida86727fd1cd5e1ecd78f07f3bde330a346658a8
Apparently it was impolite to lint with 128 jobs on our CI machine with
128 threads. Let's fix it.
Change-Id: I9ca7306294c6773c6f233690ba49d45a1da6bf7a
This is incredibly haunted, but it can happen that you change libutil,
breaking the generation of the .json files, which then does not rebuild
the files. I don't expect they are slow to build, so it does not seem so
bad to just rebuild them every time instead of extracting a list of all
the possible deps.
We want to delete this nonsense anyway and replace it with generated
code.
Change-Id: Ia576d1a3bdee48fbaefbb5ac194354428d179a84
all derivation goals need a log fd of some description. let's save this
single fd in a dedicated pointer field for all subclasses so that later
we have just the one spot to change if we turn this into async promises
Change-Id: If223adf90909247363fb823d751cae34d25d0c0b
we don't need to expose information about how busy a Worker is if the
worker can instead tell its work items whether they are in a slot. in
the future we might use this to not start items waiting for a slot if
no slots are currently available, but that requires more preparation.
Change-Id: Ibe01ac536da7e6d6f80520164117c43e772f9bd9
They are like experimental features, but opt-in instead of opt-out. They
will allow us to gracefully remove language features. See #437
Change-Id: I9ca04cc48e6926750c4d622c2b229b25cc142c42
The target_machine variable is meant for the target
of cross compilers. We are not a cross compiler, so
instead reuse our host_machine based checks.
Fixes Linux→FreeBSD cross, since Meson can't figure
out `target_machine.kernel()` in that case.
Fixes: https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/issues/469
Change-Id: Ia46a64c8d507c3b08987a1de1eda171ff5e50df4
This merge commit returns to the previous state prior to the release but leaves the tag in the branch history.
Release created with releng/create_release.xsh
Change-Id: I8fc975f856631dec7fb3314abd436675adabb59c
For years both the documentation and nixpkgs have said that CppNix is
LGPL-2.1-or-later, not LGPL-2.1-only as is somewhat implied by the
README. We are choosing to update the README to match the rest of the
references.
Related: https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/5218
Change-Id: I6a765ae7857a2f84872f80a25983c4c4b2b3b1c1
Seems a little bit Rich that musl does not implement close_range because
they suspect that the system call itself is a bad idea, so they uhhhh
are considering not implementing a wrapper. Let's just fix the problem
at hand by writing our own wrapper.
Change-Id: I1f8e5858e4561d58a5450503d9c4585aded2b216
Turns out strings do not like being resized to -4.
This was discovered while messing with the tests to remove unbuffer and
trying stdbuf instead. Turns out that was not the right approach.
This basically rewrites the handling of this case to be much more
correct, and fixes a bug where with small window sizes where it would
ALSO truncate the attr names in addition to the optional descriptions.
Change-Id: Ifd1beeaffdb47cbb5f4a462b183fcb6c0ff6c524
I was packaging Lix 2.91 for nixpkgs and was annoyed at the expect
dependency. Turns out that you can replace unbuffer with a pretty-short
Python script.
It became less short after I found out that Linux was converting \n to
\r\n in the terminal subsystem, which was not very funny, but is at
least solved by twiddling termios bits.
Change-Id: I8a2700abcbbf6a9902e01b05b40fa9340c0ab90c
This will stop printing stuff to dumb terminals that they don't support.
I've overall audited usage of isatty and replaced the ones with intent
to mean "is a Real terminal" with checking for that. I've also caught a
case of carelessly assuming "is a tty" means "should be colour" in
nix-env.
Change-Id: I6d83725d9a2d932ac94ff2294f92c0a1100d23c9
I noticed there was some stuff setting configureFlags that definitely do
not do anything with meson, so let's rip them out.
As for the empty file, it was added when I was thinking I needed a fake
C++ target to convince meson to create the necessary dependencies. That
was not in fact possible so it should have never been committed.
Change-Id: Ied4723d8a5d21aed85f352c48b080ab2c977a496
We're going for Dragon's Breath because horrors called dibs on it.
It's fine to merge this a little before the final release, since all the
dev versions have -pre in them anyway.
Change-Id: I763acb2fc1bf76030f7feaed983addf6ae2fdd53
This also fixes the script to not pass pre-commit by failing to parse an
int if this mistake is made again.
Change-Id: I714369f515dc9987cf0c600d54a2ac745ba56830
this is only used to close non-stdio files in derivation sandboxes. we
may as well encode that in its name, drop the unnecessary integer set,
and use close_range to deal with the actual closing of files. not only
is this clearer, it also makes sandbox setup on linux fast by 1ms each
Change-Id: Id90e259a49c7bc896189e76bfbbf6ef2c0bcd3b2
implementing a build hook is pretty much impossible without either being
a nix, or blindly forwarding the important bits of all build requests to
some kind of nix. we've found no uses of build-hook in the wild, and the
build-hook protocol (apart from being entirely undocumented) is not able
to convey any kind of versioning information between hook and daemon. if
we want to upgrade this infrastructure (which we do), this must not stay
Change-Id: I1ec4976a35adf8105b8ca9240b7984f8b91e147e
this is a bit of a hack, but it's apparently the cleanest way of doing
this in the absence of any kind of priority/provenance information for
values of some given setting. we'll need this to deprecate build-hook.
Change-Id: I03644a9c3f17681c052ecdc610b4f1301266ab9e
sure, linux has been providing argv[0] by default for a while now. other
OSes may not be as forthcoming though, and relying on the OS to create a
world in which we can just make assumptions we could test for instead is
unnecessarily lazy. we *could* default argv0, but that's a little silly.
notably we abort instead of returning normally to avoid confusions where
a caller interprets our exit status like a Worker build results bitmask.
Change-Id: Id73f8cd0a630293b789c59a8c4b0c4a2b936b505