at least clang-tidy is not convinced that this initialized.
If this is not the case, the impact should be small and hopefully also
more robust if changed.
(cherry picked from commit 7e540059a3)
There are two big changes:
1. Public and private config is now separated. Configuration variables
that are only used internally do not go in a header which is
installed.
(Additionally, libutil has a unix-specific private config header,
which should only be used in unix-specific code. This keeps things a
bit more organized, in a purely private implementation-internal way.)
2. Secondly, there is no more `-include`. There are very few config
items that need to be publically exposed, so now it is feasible to
just make the headers that need them just including the (public)
configuration header.
And there are also a few more small cleanups on top of those:
- The configuration files have better names.
- The few CPP variables that remain exposed in the public headers are
now also renamed to always start with `NIX_`. This ensures they should
not conflict with variables defined elsewhere.
- We now always use `#if` and not `#ifdef`/`#ifndef` for our
configuration variables, which helps avoid bugs by requiring that
variables must be defined in all cases.
(cherry picked from commit c204e307ac)
The short answer for why we need to do this is so we can consistently do
`#include "nix/..."`. Without this change, there are ways to still make
that work, but they are hacky, and they have downsides such as making it
harder to make sure headers from the wrong Nix library (e..g.
`libnixexpr` headers in `libnixutil`) aren't being used.
The C API alraedy used `nix_api_*`, so its headers are *not* put in
subdirectories accordingly.
Progress on #7876
We resisted doing this for a while because it would be annoying to not
have the header source file pairs close by / easy to change file
path/name from one to the other. But I am ameliorating that with
symlinks in the next commit.
(cherry picked from commit f3e1c47f47)
Doing this makes catching non-obvious bugs easier. GHA CI workload is
already a concern and there isn't much benefit in running the tests with
and without sanitizers at the same time, so UBSAN is enabled for default
checks.
This change doesn't affect production builds in any way, but is rather a
step in the direction of improving automated testing during development.
Relates to #10969.
(cherry picked from commit 874587516c)
- Some headers were completely redundant and have been removed.
- Other headers have been turned private.
- Unnecessary meson.build code has been removed.
- libutil-tests now has a private config header, where previously
it had none. This removes the need to expose a package version
macro publicly.
(cherry picked from commit b86a76044e)
I encountered this with a misconfigured libutil. I doubt that a
non-lutimes config is viable, because tests were failing.
(cherry picked from commit 1cffcd91a9)
After the previous commit it should not be necessary. Furthermore, if we
*do* sleep, we'll exacerbate a race condition (in conjunction with
getting rid of the thread cancellation) that will cause test failures.
(cherry picked from commit 49f486d8e0)
This was filed as https://github.com/nixos/nix/issues/7584, but as far
as I can tell, the previous solution of POLLHUP works just fine on macOS
14. I've also tested on an ancient machine with macOS 10.15.7, which
also has POLLHUP work correctly.
It's possible this might regress some older versions of macOS that have
a kernel bug, but I went looking through the history on the sources and
didn't find anything that looked terribly convincingly like a bug fix
between 2020 and today. If such a broken version exists, it seems pretty
reasonable to suggest simply updating the OS.
Change-Id: I178a038baa000f927ea2cbc4587d69d8ab786843
Based off of commit 69e2ee5b25752ba5fd8644cef56fb9d627ca4a64. Ericson2314 added
additional other information.
(cherry picked from commit 9b3352c3c8)
On https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/8946, we faced a surprising
behaviour wrt. exception when using pthread_cancel. In a nutshell when
a thread is inside a catch block and it's getting pthread_cancel by
another one, then the original exception is bubbled up and crashes the
process.
We now poll on the notification pipe from the thread and exit when the
main thread closes its end. This solution does not exhibit surprising
behaviour wrt. exceptions.
Co-authored-by: Mic92 <joerg@thalheim.io>
Fixes https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/8946
See also Lix https://gerrit.lix.systems/c/lix/+/1605 which is very
similar by coincidence. Pulled a comment from that.
(cherry picked from commit 1c636284a3)
We now see exception beeing thrown when remote building in master
because of writing to a non-blocking file descriptor from our json logger.
> #0 0x00007f2ea97aea9c in __pthread_kill_implementation () from /nix/store/wn7v2vhyyyi6clcyn0s9ixvl7d4d87ic-glibc-2.40-36/lib/libc.so.6
> #1 0x00007f2ea975c576 in raise () from /nix/store/wn7v2vhyyyi6clcyn0s9ixvl7d4d87ic-glibc-2.40-36/lib/libc.so.6
> #2 0x00007f2ea9744935 in abort () from /nix/store/wn7v2vhyyyi6clcyn0s9ixvl7d4d87ic-glibc-2.40-36/lib/libc.so.6
> #3 0x00007f2ea99e8c2b in __gnu_cxx::__verbose_terminate_handler() [clone .cold] () from /nix/store/ybjcla5bhj8g1y84998pn4a2drfxybkv-gcc-13.3.0-lib/lib/libstdc++.so.6
> #4 0x00007f2ea99f820a in __cxxabiv1::__terminate(void (*)()) () from /nix/store/ybjcla5bhj8g1y84998pn4a2drfxybkv-gcc-13.3.0-lib/lib/libstdc++.so.6
> #5 0x00007f2ea99f8275 in std::terminate() () from /nix/store/ybjcla5bhj8g1y84998pn4a2drfxybkv-gcc-13.3.0-lib/lib/libstdc++.so.6
> #6 0x00007f2ea99f84c7 in __cxa_throw () from /nix/store/ybjcla5bhj8g1y84998pn4a2drfxybkv-gcc-13.3.0-lib/lib/libstdc++.so.6
> #7 0x00007f2eaa5035c2 in nix::writeFull (fd=2, s=..., allowInterrupts=true) at ../unix/file-descriptor.cc:43
> #8 0x00007f2eaa5633c4 in nix::JSONLogger::write (this=this@entry=0x249a7d40, json=...) at /nix/store/4krab2h0hd4wvxxmscxrw21pl77j4i7j-gcc-13.3.0/include/c++/13.3.0/bits/char_traits.h:358
> #9 0x00007f2eaa5658d7 in nix::JSONLogger::logEI (this=<optimized out>, ei=...) at ../logging.cc:242
> #10 0x00007f2ea9c5d048 in nix::Logger::logEI (ei=..., lvl=nix::lvlError, this=0x249a7d40) at /nix/store/a7cq5bqh0ryvnkv4m19ffchnvi8l9qx6-nix-util-2.27.0-dev/include/nix/logging.hh:108
> #11 nix::handleExceptions (programName="nix", fun=...) at ../shared.cc:343
> #12 0x0000000000465b1f in main (argc=<optimized out>, argv=<optimized out>) at /nix/store/4krab2h0hd4wvxxmscxrw21pl77j4i7j-gcc-13.3.0/include/c++/13.3.0/bits/allocator.h:163
> (gdb) frame 10
> #10 0x00007f2ea9c5d048 in nix::Logger::logEI (ei=..., lvl=nix::lvlError, this=0x249a7d40) at /nix/store/a7cq5bqh0ryvnkv4m19ffchnvi8l9qx6-nix-util-2.27.0-dev/include/nix/logging.hh:108
> 108 logEI(ei);
So far only drainFD sets the non-blocking flag on a "readable" file descriptor,
while this is a "writeable" file descriptor.
It's not clear to me yet, why we see logs after that point, but it's
also not that bad to handle EAGAIN in read/write functions after all.
(cherry picked from commit 2790f5f9ae)
All of this code doesn't actually depend on anything from
libexpr. Because Pos is so tigtly coupled with Error, it
makes sense to have in the same library.
(cherry picked from commit a53b184e63)
Note that in pure mode, we don't need to use the union FS even when
using a chroot store, since the user shouldn't have access to the
physical /nix/store.
Logging to another Logger was kind of nonsensical - it was really just
an easy way to get it to write its output to stderr, but that only
works if the underlying logger writes to stderr.
This change is needed to make it easy to log JSON output somewhere
else (like a file or socket).
This is a first step towards PR #10760, and the issues it addresses.
See the Doxygen for details.
Thanks to these changes, we are able to drastically restrict how the
rest of the code-base uses `ParseDerivation`.
Co-Authored-By: HaeNoe <git@haenoe.party>
It's best we teach users that the "foo" derivation is less than pure in the sense that it cannot be built just on any system, in particular that builders cannot be selected arbitrarily but based on their system-features. The `"recursive-nix"` system-feature is automatically defined by `--extra-experimental-features recursive-nix`
This uses the single-threaded C-based routines from libblake3.
This is not optimal performance-wise but should be a good starting point
for nix compatibility with BLAKE3 hashing until a more performant
implementation based on the multi-threaded BLAKE3 routines
(written in Rust) can be developed.