The mkBinaryCache section now follows the convention of using one line per sentence, as well as using admonitions for notes and examples. The example syntax was updated to define a fully-working nix package.
2.4 KiB
pkgs.mkBinaryCache
pkgs.mkBinaryCache
is a function for creating Nix flat-file binary caches.
Such a cache exists as a directory on disk, and can be used as a Nix substituter by passing --substituter file:///path/to/cache
to Nix commands.
Nix packages are most commonly shared between machines using HTTP, SSH, or S3, but a flat-file binary cache can still be useful in some situations. For example, you can copy it directly to another machine, or make it available on a network file system. It can also be a convenient way to make some Nix packages available inside a container via bind-mounting.
mkBinaryCache
expects an argument with the rootPaths
attribute.
rootPaths
must be a list of derivations.
The transitive closure of these derivations' outputs will be copied into the cache.
::: {.note} This function is meant for advanced use cases. The more idiomatic way to work with flat-file binary caches is via the nix-copy-closure command. You may also want to consider dockerTools for your containerization needs. :::
[]{#sec-pkgs-binary-cache-example} :::{.example #ex-mkbinarycache-copying-package-closure}
Copying a package and its closure to another machine with mkBinaryCache
The following derivation will construct a flat-file binary cache containing the closure of hello
.
{ mkBinaryCache, hello }:
mkBinaryCache {
rootPaths = [hello];
}
Build the cache on a machine. Note that the command still builds the exact nix package above, but adds some boilerplate to build it directly from an expression.
$ nix-build -E 'let pkgs = import <nixpkgs> {}; in pkgs.callPackage ({ mkBinaryCache, hello }: mkBinaryCache { rootPaths = [hello]; }) {}'
/nix/store/azf7xay5xxdnia4h9fyjiv59wsjdxl0g-binary-cache
Copy the resulting directory to another machine, which we'll call host2
:
$ scp result host2:/tmp/hello-cache
At this point, the cache can be used as a substituter when building derivations on host2
:
$ nix-build -A hello '<nixpkgs>' \
--option require-sigs false \
--option trusted-substituters file:///tmp/hello-cache \
--option substituters file:///tmp/hello-cache
/nix/store/zhl06z4lrfrkw5rp0hnjjfrgsclzvxpm-hello-2.12.1
:::