Clone of https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs.git (to stress-test knotserver)
1# Using resholve's Nix API 2resholve replaces bare references (subject to a PATH search at runtime) to external commands and scripts with absolute paths. 3 4This small super-power helps ensure script dependencies are declared, present, and don't unexpectedly shift when the PATH changes. 5 6resholve is developed to enable the Nix package manager to package and integrate Shell projects, but its features are not Nix-specific and inevitably have other applications. 7 8<!-- generated from resholve's repo; best to suggest edits there (or at least notify me) --> 9 10This will hopefully make its way into the Nixpkgs manual soon, but 11until then I'll outline how to use the functions: 12- `resholve.mkDerivation` (formerly `resholvePackage`) 13- `resholve.writeScript` (formerly `resholveScript`) 14- `resholve.writeScriptBin` (formerly `resholveScriptBin`) 15- `resholve.phraseSolution` (new in resholve 0.8.0) 16 17> Fair warning: resholve does *not* aspire to resolving all valid Shell 18> scripts. It depends on the OSH/Oil parser, which aims to support most (but 19> not all) Bash. resholve aims to be a ~90% sort of solution. 20 21## API Concepts 22 23The main difference between `resholve.mkDerivation` and other builder functions 24is the `solutions` attrset, which describes which scripts to resolve and how. 25Each "solution" (k=v pair) in this attrset describes one resholve invocation. 26 27> NOTE: For most shell packages, one invocation will probably be enough: 28> - Packages with a single script will only need one solution. 29> - Packages with multiple scripts can still use one solution if the scripts 30> don't require conflicting directives. 31> - Packages with scripts that require conflicting directives can use multiple 32> solutions to resolve the scripts separately, but produce a single package. 33 34`resholve.writeScript` and `resholve.writeScriptBin` support a _single_ 35`solution` attrset. This is basically the same as any single solution in `resholve.mkDerivation`, except that it doesn't need a `scripts` attr (it is automatically added). `resholve.phraseSolution` also only accepts a single solution--but it _does_ still require the `scripts` attr. 36 37## Basic `resholve.mkDerivation` Example 38 39Here's a simple example of how `resholve.mkDerivation` is already used in nixpkgs: 40 41<!-- TODO: figure out how to pull this externally? --> 42 43```nix 44{ lib 45, fetchFromGitHub 46, resholve 47, bash 48, coreutils 49, goss 50, which 51}: 52 53resholve.mkDerivation rec { 54 pname = "dgoss"; 55 version = "0.4.2"; 56 57 src = fetchFromGitHub { 58 owner = "goss-org"; 59 repo = "goss"; 60 rev = "refs/tags/v${version}"; 61 hash = "sha256-FDn1OETkYIpMenk8QAAHvfNZcSzqGl5xrD0fAZPVmRM="; 62 }; 63 64 dontConfigure = true; 65 dontBuild = true; 66 67 installPhase = '' 68 sed -i '2i GOSS_PATH=${goss}/bin/goss' extras/dgoss/dgoss 69 install -D extras/dgoss/dgoss $out/bin/dgoss 70 ''; 71 72 solutions = { 73 default = { 74 scripts = [ "bin/dgoss" ]; 75 interpreter = "${bash}/bin/bash"; 76 inputs = [ coreutils which ]; 77 keep = { 78 "$CONTAINER_RUNTIME" = true; 79 }; 80 }; 81 }; 82 83 meta = with lib; { 84 homepage = "https://github.com/goss-org/goss/blob/v${version}/extras/dgoss/README.md"; 85 changelog = "https://github.com/goss-org/goss/releases/tag/v${version}"; 86 description = "Convenience wrapper around goss that aims to bring the simplicity of goss to docker containers"; 87 license = licenses.asl20; 88 platforms = platforms.linux; 89 maintainers = with maintainers; [ hyzual anthonyroussel ]; 90 mainProgram = "dgoss"; 91 }; 92} 93``` 94 95 96## Basic `resholve.writeScript` and `resholve.writeScriptBin` examples 97 98Both of these functions have the same basic API. The examples are a little 99trivial, so I'll also link to some real-world examples: 100- [shell.nix from abathur/tdverpy](https://github.com/abathur/tdverpy/blob/e1f956df3ed1c7097a5164e0c85b178772e277f5/shell.nix#L6-L13) 101 102```nix 103{ 104 resholvedScript = resholve.writeScript "name" { 105 inputs = [ file ]; 106 interpreter = "${bash}/bin/bash"; 107 } '' 108 echo "Hello" 109 file . 110 ''; 111 resholvedScriptBin = resholve.writeScriptBin "name" { 112 inputs = [ file ]; 113 interpreter = "${bash}/bin/bash"; 114 } '' 115 echo "Hello" 116 file . 117 ''; 118} 119``` 120 121 122## Basic `resholve.phraseSolution` example 123 124This function has a similar API to `writeScript` and `writeScriptBin`, except it does require a `scripts` attr. It is intended to make resholve a little easier to mix into more types of build. This example is a little 125trivial for now. If you have a real usage that you find helpful, please PR it. 126 127```nix 128{ stdenv, resholve, module1 }: 129 130stdenv.mkDerivation { 131 # pname = "testmod3"; 132 # version = "unreleased"; 133 # src = ...; 134 135 installPhase = '' 136 mkdir -p $out/bin 137 install conjure.sh $out/bin/conjure.sh 138 ${resholve.phraseSolution "conjure" { 139 scripts = [ "bin/conjure.sh" ]; 140 interpreter = "${bash}/bin/bash"; 141 inputs = [ module1 ]; 142 fake = { 143 external = [ "jq" "openssl" ]; 144 }; 145 }} 146 ''; 147} 148``` 149 150 151## Options 152 153`resholve.mkDerivation` maps Nix types/idioms into the flags and environment variables 154that the `resholve` CLI expects. Here's an overview: 155 156| Option | Type | Containing | 157|--------|------|------------| 158| scripts | `<list>` | scripts to resolve (`$out`-relative paths) | 159| interpreter | `"none"` `<path>` | The absolute interpreter `<path>` for the script's shebang. The special value `none` ensures there is no shebang. | 160| inputs | `<packages>` `<paths>` | A list of packages and string paths to directories/files to resolve external dependencies from. | 161| fake | `<directives>` | pretend some commands exist | 162| fix | `<directives>` | fix things we can't auto-fix/ignore | 163| keep | `<directives>` | keep things we can't auto-fix/ignore | 164| lore | `<directory>` | control nested resolution | 165| execer | `<statements>` | modify nested resolution | 166| wrapper | `<statements>` | modify nested resolution | 167| prologue | `<file>` | insert file before resolved script | 168| epilogue | `<file>` | insert file after resolved script | 169 170<!-- TODO: section below is largely custom for nixpkgs, but I would LIKE to wurst it. --> 171 172## Controlling resolution with directives 173 174In order to resolve a script, resholve will make you disambiguate how it should 175handle any potential problems it encounters with directives. There are currently 1763 types: 1771. `fake` directives tell resholve to pretend it knows about an identifier 178 such as a function, builtin, external command, etc. if there's a good reason 179 it doesn't already know about it. Common examples: 180 - builtins for a non-bash shell 181 - loadable builtins 182 - platform-specific external commands in cross-platform conditionals 1832. `fix` directives give resholve permission to fix something that it can't 184 safely fix automatically. Common examples: 185 - resolving commands in aliases (this is appropriate for standalone scripts 186 that use aliases non-interactively--but it would prevent profile/rc 187 scripts from using the latest current-system symlinks.) 188 - resolve commands in a variable definition 189 - resolve an absolute command path from inputs as if it were a bare reference 190 - force resholve to resolve known security wrappers 1913. `keep` directives tell resholve not to raise an error (i.e., ignore) 192 something it would usually object to. Common examples: 193 - variables used as/within the first word of a command 194 - pre-existing absolute or user-relative (~) command paths 195 - dynamic (variable) arguments to commands known to accept/run other commands 196 197> NOTE: resholve has a (growing) number of directives detailed in `man resholve` 198> via `nixpkgs.resholve` (though protections against run-time use of python2 in nixpkgs mean you'll have to set `NIXPKGS_ALLOW_INSECURE=1` to pull resholve into nix-shell). 199 200Each of these 3 types is represented by its own attrset, where you can think 201of the key as a scope. The value should be: 202- `true` for any directives that the resholve CLI accepts as a single word 203- a list of strings for all other options 204<!-- 205TODO: these should be fully-documented here, but I'm already maintaining 206more copies of their specification/behavior than I like, and continuing to 207add more at this early date will only ensure that I spend more time updating 208docs and less time filling in feature gaps. 209 210Full documentation may be greatly accelerated if someone can help me sort out 211single-sourcing. See: https://github.com/abathur/resholve/issues/19 212--> 213 214This will hopefully make more sense when you see it. Here are CLI examples 215from the manpage, and the Nix equivalents: 216 217```nix 218{ 219 # --fake 'f:setUp;tearDown builtin:setopt source:/etc/bashrc' 220 fake = { 221 # fake accepts the initial of valid identifier types as a CLI convenience. 222 # Use full names in the Nix API. 223 function = [ "setUp" "tearDown" ]; 224 builtin = [ "setopt" ]; 225 source = [ "/etc/bashrc" ]; 226 }; 227 228 # --fix 'aliases $GIT:gix /bin/bash' 229 fix = { 230 # all single-word directives use `true` as value 231 aliases = true; 232 "$GIT" = [ "gix" ]; 233 "/bin/bash" = true; 234 }; 235 236 # --keep 'source:$HOME /etc/bashrc ~/.bashrc' 237 keep = { 238 source = [ "$HOME" ]; 239 "/etc/bashrc" = true; 240 "~/.bashrc" = true; 241 }; 242} 243``` 244 245 246> **Note:** For now, at least, you'll need to reference the manpage to completely understand these examples. 247 248## Controlling nested resolution with lore 249 250Initially, resolution of commands in the arguments to command-executing 251commands was limited to one level for a hard-coded list of builtins and 252external commands. resholve can now resolve these recursively. 253 254This feature combines information (_lore_) that the resholve Nix API 255obtains via binlore ([nixpkgs](../../tools/analysis/binlore), [repo](https://github.com/abathur/resholve)), 256with some rules (internal to resholve) for locating sub-executions in 257some of the more common commands. 258 259- "execer" lore identifies whether an executable can, cannot, 260 or might execute its arguments. Every "can" or "might" verdict requires: 261 - an update to the matching rules in [binlore](https://github.com/abathur/binlore) 262 if there's absolutely no exec in the executable and binlore just lacks 263 rules for understanding this 264 - an override in [binlore](https://github.com/abathur/binlore) if there is 265 exec but it isn't actually under user control 266 - a parser in [resholve](https://github.com/abathur/resholve) capable of 267 isolating the exec'd words if the command does have exec under user 268 control 269 - overriding the execer lore for the executable if manual triage indicates 270 that all of the invocations in the current package don't include any 271 commands that the executable would exec 272 - if manual triage turns up any commands that would be exec'd, use some 273 non-resholve tool to patch/substitute/replace them before or after you 274 run resholve on them (if before, you may need to also add keep directives 275 for these absolute paths) 276 277- "wrapper" lore maps shell exec wrappers to the programs they exec so 278 that resholve can substitute an executable's verdict for its wrapper's. 279 280> **Caution:** At least when it comes to common utilities, it's best to treat 281> overrides as a stopgap until they can be properly handled in resholve and/or 282> binlore. Please report things you have to override and, if possible, help 283> get them sorted. 284 285There will be more mechanisms for controlling this process in the future 286(and your reports/experiences will play a role in shaping them...) For now, 287the main lever is the ability to substitute your own lore. This is how you'd 288do it piecemeal: 289 290```nix 291{ 292 # --execer 'cannot:${openssl.bin}/bin/openssl can:${openssl.bin}/bin/c_rehash' 293 execer = [ 294 /* 295 This is the same verdict binlore will 296 come up with. It's a no-op just to demo 297 how to fiddle lore via the Nix API. 298 */ 299 "cannot:${openssl.bin}/bin/openssl" 300 # different verdict, but not used 301 "can:${openssl.bin}/bin/c_rehash" 302 ]; 303 304 # --wrapper '${gnugrep}/bin/egrep:${gnugrep}/bin/grep' 305 wrapper = [ 306 /* 307 This is the same verdict binlore will 308 come up with. It's a no-op just to demo 309 how to fiddle lore via the Nix API. 310 */ 311 "${gnugrep}/bin/egrep:${gnugrep}/bin/grep" 312 ]; 313} 314``` 315 316 317The format is fairly simple to generate--you can script your own generator if 318you need to modify the lore.