builtins.abort s
Abort Nix expression evaluation and print the error message s.
builtins.add e1 e2
Return the sum of the numbers e1 and e2.
builtins.all pred list
Return true
if the function pred returns true
for all elements of list, and false
otherwise.
builtins.any pred list
Return true
if the function pred returns true
for at least one element of list, and false
otherwise.
builtins.attrNames set
Return the names of the attributes in the set set in an alphabetically sorted list. For instance, builtins.attrNames { y = 1; x = "foo"; }
evaluates to [ "x" "y" ]
.
builtins.attrValues set
Return the values of the attributes in the set set in the order corresponding to the sorted attribute names.
builtins.baseNameOf s
Return the base name of the string s, that is, everything following the final slash in the string. This is similar to the GNU basename
command.
builtins.bitAnd e1 e2
Return the bitwise AND of the integers e1 and e2.
builtins.bitOr e1 e2
Return the bitwise OR of the integers e1 and e2.
builtins.bitXor e1 e2
Return the bitwise XOR of the integers e1 and e2.
builtins.break v
In debug mode (enabled using --debugger
), pause Nix expression evaluation and enter the REPL. Otherwise, return the argument v
.
builtins.catAttrs attr list
Collect each attribute named attr from a list of attribute sets. Attrsets that don't contain the named attribute are ignored. For example,
builtins.catAttrs "a" [{a = 1;} {b = 0;} {a = 2;}]
evaluates to [1 2]
.
builtins.ceil double
Converts an IEEE-754 double-precision floating-point number (double) to the next higher integer.
If the datatype is neither an integer nor a "float", an evaluation error will be thrown.
builtins.compareVersions s1 s2
Compare two strings representing versions and return -1
if version s1 is older than version s2, 0
if they are the same, and 1
if s1 is newer than s2. The version comparison algorithm is the same as the one used by nix-env -u
.
builtins.concatLists lists
Concatenate a list of lists into a single list.
builtins.concatMap f list
This function is equivalent to builtins.concatLists (map f list)
but is more efficient.
builtins.concatStringsSep separator list
Concatenate a list of strings with a separator between each element, e.g. concatStringsSep "/" ["usr" "local" "bin"] == "usr/local/bin"
.
builtins.deepSeq e1 e2
This is like seq e1 e2
, except that e1 is evaluated deeply: if it’s a list or set, its elements or attributes are also evaluated recursively.
builtins.dirOf s
Return the directory part of the string s, that is, everything before the final slash in the string. This is similar to the GNU dirname
command.
builtins.div e1 e2
Return the quotient of the numbers e1 and e2.
builtins.elem x xs
Return true
if a value equal to x occurs in the list xs, and false
otherwise.
builtins.elemAt xs n
Return element n from the list xs. Elements are counted starting from 0. A fatal error occurs if the index is out of bounds.
builtins.fetchClosure args
Fetch a Nix store closure from a binary cache, rewriting it into content-addressed form. For example,
builtins.fetchClosure { fromStore = "https://cache.nixos.org"; fromPath = /nix/store/r2jd6ygnmirm2g803mksqqjm4y39yi6i-git-2.33.1; toPath = /nix/store/ldbhlwhh39wha58rm61bkiiwm6j7211j-git-2.33.1; }
fetches /nix/store/r2jd...
from the specified binary cache, and rewrites it into the content-addressed store path /nix/store/ldbh...
.
If fromPath
is already content-addressed, or if you are allowing impure evaluation (--impure
), then toPath
may be omitted.
To find out the correct value for toPath
given a fromPath
, you can use nix store make-content-addressed
:
# nix store make-content-addressed --from https://cache.nixos.org /nix/store/r2jd6ygnmirm2g803mksqqjm4y39yi6i-git-2.33.1 rewrote '/nix/store/r2jd6ygnmirm2g803mksqqjm4y39yi6i-git-2.33.1' to '/nix/store/ldbhlwhh39wha58rm61bkiiwm6j7211j-git-2.33.1'
This function is similar to builtins.storePath
in that it allows you to use a previously built store path in a Nix expression. However, it is more reproducible because it requires specifying a binary cache from which the path can be fetched. Also, requiring a content-addressed final store path avoids the need for users to configure binary cache public keys.
This function is only available if you enable the experimental feature fetch-closure
.
builtins.fetchGit args
Fetch a path from git. args can be a URL, in which case the HEAD of the repo at that URL is fetched. Otherwise, it can be an attribute with the following attributes (all except url
optional):
url
The URL of the repo.
name
The name of the directory the repo should be exported to in the store. Defaults to the basename of the URL.
rev
The git revision to fetch. Defaults to the tip of ref
.
ref
The git ref to look for the requested revision under. This is often a branch or tag name. Defaults to HEAD
.
By default, the ref
value is prefixed with refs/heads/
. As of Nix 2.3.0 Nix will not prefix refs/heads/
if ref
starts with refs/
.
submodules
A Boolean parameter that specifies whether submodules should be checked out. Defaults to false
.
shallow
A Boolean parameter that specifies whether fetching a shallow clone is allowed. Defaults to false
.
allRefs
Whether to fetch all refs of the repository. With this argument being true, it's possible to load a rev
from any ref
(by default only rev
s from the specified ref
are supported).
Here are some examples of how to use fetchGit
.
To fetch a private repository over SSH:
builtins.fetchGit { url = "[email protected]:my-secret/repository.git"; ref = "master"; rev = "adab8b916a45068c044658c4158d81878f9ed1c3"; }
To fetch an arbitrary reference:
builtins.fetchGit { url = "https://github.com/NixOS/nix.git"; ref = "refs/heads/0.5-release"; }
If the revision you're looking for is in the default branch of the git repository you don't strictly need to specify the branch name in the ref
attribute.
However, if the revision you're looking for is in a future branch for the non-default branch you will need to specify the the ref
attribute as well.
builtins.fetchGit { url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; rev = "841fcbd04755c7a2865c51c1e2d3b045976b7452"; ref = "1.11-maintenance"; }
Note
It is nice to always specify the branch which a revision belongs to. Without the branch being specified, the fetcher might fail if the default branch changes. Additionally, it can be confusing to try a commit from a non-default branch and see the fetch fail. If the branch is specified the fault is much more obvious.
If the revision you're looking for is in the default branch of the git repository you may omit the ref
attribute.
builtins.fetchGit { url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; rev = "841fcbd04755c7a2865c51c1e2d3b045976b7452"; }
To fetch a specific tag:
builtins.fetchGit { url = "https://github.com/nixos/nix.git"; ref = "refs/tags/1.9"; }
To fetch the latest version of a remote branch:
builtins.fetchGit { url = "ssh://[email protected]/nixos/nix.git"; ref = "master"; }
Note
Nix will refetch the branch in accordance with the option
tarball-ttl
.
Note
This behavior is disabled in Pure evaluation mode.
builtins.fetchTarball args
Download the specified URL, unpack it and return the path of the unpacked tree. The file must be a tape archive (.tar
) compressed with gzip
, bzip2
or xz
. The top-level path component of the files in the tarball is removed, so it is best if the tarball contains a single directory at top level. The typical use of the function is to obtain external Nix expression dependencies, such as a particular version of Nixpkgs, e.g.
with import (fetchTarball https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-14.12.tar.gz) {}; stdenv.mkDerivation { … }
The fetched tarball is cached for a certain amount of time (1 hour by default) in ~/.cache/nix/tarballs/
. You can change the cache timeout either on the command line with --tarball-ttl
number-of-seconds or in the Nix configuration file by adding the line tarball-ttl =
number-of-seconds.
Note that when obtaining the hash with nix-prefetch-url
the option --unpack
is required.
This function can also verify the contents against a hash. In that case, the function takes a set instead of a URL. The set requires the attribute url
and the attribute sha256
, e.g.
with import (fetchTarball { url = "https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-14.12.tar.gz"; sha256 = "1jppksrfvbk5ypiqdz4cddxdl8z6zyzdb2srq8fcffr327ld5jj2"; }) {}; stdenv.mkDerivation { … }
This function is not available if restricted evaluation mode is enabled.
builtins.fetchurl url
Download the specified URL and return the path of the downloaded file. This function is not available if restricted evaluation mode is enabled.
builtins.filter f list
Return a list consisting of the elements of list for which the function f returns true
.
builtins.filterSource e1 e2
Warning
filterSource
should not be used to filter store paths. SincefilterSource
uses the name of the input directory while naming the output directory, doing so will produce a directory name in the form of<hash2>-<hash>-<name>
, where<hash>-<name>
is the name of the input directory. Since<hash>
depends on the unfiltered directory, the name of the output directory will indirectly depend on files that are filtered out by the function. This will trigger a rebuild even when a filtered out file is changed. Usebuiltins.path
instead, which allows specifying the name of the output directory.
This function allows you to copy sources into the Nix store while filtering certain files. For instance, suppose that you want to use the directory source-dir
as an input to a Nix expression, e.g.
stdenv.mkDerivation { ... src = ./source-dir; }
However, if source-dir
is a Subversion working copy, then all those annoying .svn
subdirectories will also be copied to the store. Worse, the contents of those directories may change a lot, causing lots of spurious rebuilds. With filterSource
you can filter out the .svn
directories:
src = builtins.filterSource (path: type: type != "directory" || baseNameOf path != ".svn") ./source-dir;
Thus, the first argument e1 must be a predicate function that is called for each regular file, directory or symlink in the source tree e2. If the function returns true
, the file is copied to the Nix store, otherwise it is omitted. The function is called with two arguments. The first is the full path of the file. The second is a string that identifies the type of the file, which is either "regular"
, "directory"
, "symlink"
or "unknown"
(for other kinds of files such as device nodes or fifos — but note that those cannot be copied to the Nix store, so if the predicate returns true
for them, the copy will fail). If you exclude a directory, the entire corresponding subtree of e2 will be excluded.
builtins.floor double
Converts an IEEE-754 double-precision floating-point number (double) to the next lower integer.
If the datatype is neither an integer nor a "float", an evaluation error will be thrown.
builtins.foldl' op nul list
Reduce a list by applying a binary operator, from left to right, e.g. foldl' op nul [x0 x1 x2 ...] = op (op (op nul x0) x1) x2) ...
. The operator is applied strictly, i.e., its arguments are evaluated first. For example, foldl' (x: y: x + y) 0 [1 2 3]
evaluates to 6.
builtins.fromJSON e
Convert a JSON string to a Nix value. For example,
builtins.fromJSON ''{"x": [1, 2, 3], "y": null}''
returns the value { x = [ 1 2 3 ]; y = null; }
.
builtins.functionArgs f
Return a set containing the names of the formal arguments expected by the function f. The value of each attribute is a Boolean denoting whether the corresponding argument has a default value. For instance, functionArgs ({ x, y ? 123}: ...) = { x = false; y = true; }
.
"Formal argument" here refers to the attributes pattern-matched by the function. Plain lambdas are not included, e.g. functionArgs (x: ...) = { }
.
builtins.genList generator length
Generate list of size length, with each element i equal to the value returned by generator i
. For example,
builtins.genList (x: x * x) 5
returns the list [ 0 1 4 9 16 ]
.
builtins.genericClosure attrset
Take an attrset with values named startSet
and operator
in order to return a list of attrsets by starting with the startSet
, recursively applying the operator
function to each element. The attrsets in the startSet
and produced by the operator
must each contain value named key
which are comparable to each other. The result is produced by repeatedly calling the operator for each element encountered with a unique key, terminating when no new elements are produced. For example,
builtins.genericClosure { startSet = [ {key = 5;} ]; operator = item: [{ key = if (item.key / 2 ) * 2 == item.key then item.key / 2 else 3 * item.key + 1; }]; }
evaluates to
[ { key = 5; } { key = 16; } { key = 8; } { key = 4; } { key = 2; } { key = 1; } ]
builtins.getAttr s set
getAttr
returns the attribute named s from set. Evaluation aborts if the attribute doesn’t exist. This is a dynamic version of the .
operator, since s is an expression rather than an identifier.
builtins.getEnv s
getEnv
returns the value of the environment variable s, or an empty string if the variable doesn’t exist. This function should be used with care, as it can introduce all sorts of nasty environment dependencies in your Nix expression.
getEnv
is used in Nix Packages to locate the file ~/.nixpkgs/config.nix
, which contains user-local settings for Nix Packages. (That is, it does a getEnv "HOME"
to locate the user’s home directory.)
builtins.getFlake args
Fetch a flake from a flake reference, and return its output attributes and some metadata. For example:
(builtins.getFlake "nix/55bc52401966fbffa525c574c14f67b00bc4fb3a").packages.x86_64-linux.nix
Unless impure evaluation is allowed (--impure
), the flake reference must be "locked", e.g. contain a Git revision or content hash. An example of an unlocked usage is:
(builtins.getFlake "github:edolstra/dwarffs").rev
This function is only available if you enable the experimental feature flakes
.
builtins.groupBy f list
Groups elements of list together by the string returned from the function f called on each element. It returns an attribute set where each attribute value contains the elements of list that are mapped to the same corresponding attribute name returned by f.
For example,
builtins.groupBy (builtins.substring 0 1) ["foo" "bar" "baz"]
evaluates to
{ b = [ "bar" "baz" ]; f = [ "foo" ]; }
builtins.hasAttr s set
hasAttr
returns true
if set has an attribute named s, and false
otherwise. This is a dynamic version of the ?
operator, since s is an expression rather than an identifier.
builtins.hashFile type p
Return a base-16 representation of the cryptographic hash of the file at path p. The hash algorithm specified by type must be one of "md5"
, "sha1"
, "sha256"
or "sha512"
.
builtins.hashString type s
Return a base-16 representation of the cryptographic hash of string s. The hash algorithm specified by type must be one of "md5"
, "sha1"
, "sha256"
or "sha512"
.
builtins.head list
Return the first element of a list; abort evaluation if the argument isn’t a list or is an empty list. You can test whether a list is empty by comparing it with []
.
builtins.import path
Load, parse and return the Nix expression in the file path. If path is a directory, the file default.nix
in that directory is loaded. Evaluation aborts if the file doesn’t exist or contains an incorrect Nix expression. import
implements Nix’s module system: you can put any Nix expression (such as a set or a function) in a separate file, and use it from Nix expressions in other files.
Note
Unlike some languages,
import
is a regular function in Nix. Paths using the angle bracket syntax (e.g.,import
<foo>) are normal path values.
A Nix expression loaded by import
must not contain any free variables (identifiers that are not defined in the Nix expression itself and are not built-in). Therefore, it cannot refer to variables that are in scope at the call site. For instance, if you have a calling expression
rec { x = 123; y = import ./foo.nix; }
then the following foo.nix
will give an error:
x + 456
since x
is not in scope in foo.nix
. If you want x
to be available in foo.nix
, you should pass it as a function argument:
rec { x = 123; y = import ./foo.nix x; }
and
x: x + 456
(The function argument doesn’t have to be called x
in foo.nix
; any name would work.)
builtins.intersectAttrs e1 e2
Return a set consisting of the attributes in the set e2 that also exist in the set e1.
builtins.isAttrs e
Return true
if e evaluates to a set, and false
otherwise.
builtins.isBool e
Return true
if e evaluates to a bool, and false
otherwise.
builtins.isFloat e
Return true
if e evaluates to a float, and false
otherwise.
builtins.isFunction e
Return true
if e evaluates to a function, and false
otherwise.
builtins.isInt e
Return true
if e evaluates to an integer, and false
otherwise.
builtins.isList e
Return true
if e evaluates to a list, and false
otherwise.
builtins.isNull e
Return true
if e evaluates to null
, and false
otherwise.
Warning
This function is deprecated; just write
e == null
instead.
builtins.isPath e
Return true
if e evaluates to a path, and false
otherwise.
builtins.isString e
Return true
if e evaluates to a string, and false
otherwise.
builtins.length e
Return the length of the list e.
builtins.lessThan e1 e2
Return true
if the number e1 is less than the number e2, and false
otherwise. Evaluation aborts if either e1 or e2 does not evaluate to a number.
builtins.listToAttrs e
Construct a set from a list specifying the names and values of each attribute. Each element of the list should be a set consisting of a string-valued attribute name
specifying the name of the attribute, and an attribute value
specifying its value. Example:
builtins.listToAttrs [ { name = "foo"; value = 123; } { name = "bar"; value = 456; } ]
evaluates to
{ foo = 123; bar = 456; }
builtins.map f list
Apply the function f to each element in the list list. For example,
map (x: "foo" + x) [ "bar" "bla" "abc" ]
evaluates to [ "foobar" "foobla" "fooabc" ]
.
builtins.mapAttrs f attrset
Apply function f to every element of attrset. For example,
builtins.mapAttrs (name: value: value * 10) { a = 1; b = 2; }
evaluates to { a = 10; b = 20; }
.
builtins.match regex str
Returns a list if the extended POSIX regular expression regex matches str precisely, otherwise returns null
. Each item in the list is a regex group.
builtins.match "ab" "abc"
Evaluates to null
.
builtins.match "abc" "abc"
Evaluates to [ ]
.
builtins.match "a(b)(c)" "abc"
Evaluates to [ "b" "c" ]
.
builtins.match "[[:space:]]+([[:upper:]]+)[[:space:]]+" " FOO "
Evaluates to [ "FOO" ]
.
builtins.mul e1 e2
Return the product of the numbers e1 and e2.
builtins.parseDrvName s
Split the string s into a package name and version. The package name is everything up to but not including the first dash followed by a digit, and the version is everything following that dash. The result is returned in a set { name, version }
. Thus, builtins.parseDrvName "nix-0.12pre12876"
returns { name = "nix"; version = "0.12pre12876"; }
.
builtins.partition pred list
Given a predicate function pred, this function returns an attrset containing a list named right
, containing the elements in list for which pred returned true
, and a list named wrong
, containing the elements for which it returned false
. For example,
builtins.partition (x: x > 10) [1 23 9 3 42]
evaluates to
{ right = [ 23 42 ]; wrong = [ 1 9 3 ]; }
builtins.path args
An enrichment of the built-in path type, based on the attributes present in args. All are optional except path
:
path
The underlying path.
name
The name of the path when added to the store. This can used to reference paths that have nix-illegal characters in their names, like @
.
filter
A function of the type expected by builtins.filterSource
, with the same semantics.
recursive
When false
, when path
is added to the store it is with a flat hash, rather than a hash of the NAR serialization of the file. Thus, path
must refer to a regular file, not a directory. This allows similar behavior to fetchurl
. Defaults to true
.
sha256
When provided, this is the expected hash of the file at the path. Evaluation will fail if the hash is incorrect, and providing a hash allows builtins.path
to be used even when the pure-eval
nix config option is on.
builtins.pathExists path
Return true
if the path path exists at evaluation time, and false
otherwise.
builtins.placeholder output
Return a placeholder string for the specified output that will be substituted by the corresponding output path at build time. Typical outputs would be "out"
, "bin"
or "dev"
.
builtins.readDir path
Return the contents of the directory path as a set mapping directory entries to the corresponding file type. For instance, if directory A
contains a regular file B
and another directory C
, then builtins.readDir ./A
will return the set
{ B = "regular"; C = "directory"; }
The possible values for the file type are "regular"
, "directory"
, "symlink"
and "unknown"
.
builtins.readFile path
Return the contents of the file path as a string.
builtins.removeAttrs set list
Remove the attributes listed in list from set. The attributes don’t have to exist in set. For instance,
removeAttrs { x = 1; y = 2; z = 3; } [ "a" "x" "z" ]
evaluates to { y = 2; }
.
builtins.replaceStrings from to s
Given string s, replace every occurrence of the strings in from with the corresponding string in to. For example,
builtins.replaceStrings ["oo" "a"] ["a" "i"] "foobar"
evaluates to "fabir"
.
builtins.seq e1 e2
Evaluate e1, then evaluate and return e2. This ensures that a computation is strict in the value of e1.
builtins.sort comparator list
Return list in sorted order. It repeatedly calls the function comparator with two elements. The comparator should return true
if the first element is less than the second, and false
otherwise. For example,
builtins.sort builtins.lessThan [ 483 249 526 147 42 77 ]
produces the list [ 42 77 147 249 483 526 ]
.
This is a stable sort: it preserves the relative order of elements deemed equal by the comparator.
builtins.split regex str
Returns a list composed of non matched strings interleaved with the lists of the extended POSIX regular expression regex matches of str. Each item in the lists of matched sequences is a regex group.
builtins.split "(a)b" "abc"
Evaluates to [ "" [ "a" ] "c" ]
.
builtins.split "([ac])" "abc"
Evaluates to [ "" [ "a" ] "b" [ "c" ] "" ]
.
builtins.split "(a)|(c)" "abc"
Evaluates to [ "" [ "a" null ] "b" [ null "c" ] "" ]
.
builtins.split "([[:upper:]]+)" " FOO "
Evaluates to [ " " [ "FOO" ] " " ]
.
builtins.splitVersion s
Split a string representing a version into its components, by the same version splitting logic underlying the version comparison in nix-env -u
.
builtins.storePath path
This function allows you to define a dependency on an already existing store path. For example, the derivation attribute src = builtins.storePath /nix/store/f1d18v1y…-source
causes the derivation to depend on the specified path, which must exist or be substitutable. Note that this differs from a plain path (e.g. src = /nix/store/f1d18v1y…-source
) in that the latter causes the path to be copied again to the Nix store, resulting in a new path (e.g. /nix/store/ld01dnzc…-source-source
).
This function is not available in pure evaluation mode.
builtins.stringLength e
Return the length of the string e. If e is not a string, evaluation is aborted.
builtins.sub e1 e2
Return the difference between the numbers e1 and e2.
builtins.substring start len s
Return the substring of s from character position start (zero-based) up to but not including start + len. If start is greater than the length of the string, an empty string is returned, and if start + len lies beyond the end of the string, only the substring up to the end of the string is returned. start must be non-negative. For example,
builtins.substring 0 3 "nixos"
evaluates to "nix"
.
builtins.tail list
Return the second to last elements of a list; abort evaluation if the argument isn’t a list or is an empty list.
Warning
This function should generally be avoided since it's inefficient: unlike Haskell's
tail
, it takes O(n) time, so recursing over a list by repeatedly callingtail
takes O(n^2) time.
builtins.throw s
Throw an error message s. This usually aborts Nix expression evaluation, but in nix-env -qa
and other commands that try to evaluate a set of derivations to get information about those derivations, a derivation that throws an error is silently skipped (which is not the case for abort
).
builtins.toFile name s
Store the string s in a file in the Nix store and return its path. The file has suffix name. This file can be used as an input to derivations. One application is to write builders “inline”. For instance, the following Nix expression combines the Nix expression for GNU Hello and its build script into one file:
{ stdenv, fetchurl, perl }: stdenv.mkDerivation { name = "hello-2.1.1"; builder = builtins.toFile "builder.sh" " source $stdenv/setup PATH=$perl/bin:$PATH tar xvfz $src cd hello-* ./configure --prefix=$out make make install "; src = fetchurl { url = "http://ftp.nluug.nl/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.1.1.tar.gz"; sha256 = "1md7jsfd8pa45z73bz1kszpp01yw6x5ljkjk2hx7wl800any6465"; }; inherit perl; }
It is even possible for one file to refer to another, e.g.,
builder = let configFile = builtins.toFile "foo.conf" " # This is some dummy configuration file. ... "; in builtins.toFile "builder.sh" " source $stdenv/setup ... cp ${configFile} $out/etc/foo.conf ";
Note that ${configFile}
is an antiquotation, so the result of the expression configFile
(i.e., a path like /nix/store/m7p7jfny445k...-foo.conf
) will be spliced into the resulting string.
It is however not allowed to have files mutually referring to each other, like so:
let foo = builtins.toFile "foo" "...${bar}..."; bar = builtins.toFile "bar" "...${foo}..."; in foo
This is not allowed because it would cause a cyclic dependency in the computation of the cryptographic hashes for foo
and bar
.
It is also not possible to reference the result of a derivation. If you are using Nixpkgs, the writeTextFile
function is able to do that.
builtins.toJSON e
Return a string containing a JSON representation of e. Strings, integers, floats, booleans, nulls and lists are mapped to their JSON equivalents. Sets (except derivations) are represented as objects. Derivations are translated to a JSON string containing the derivation’s output path. Paths are copied to the store and represented as a JSON string of the resulting store path.
builtins.toPath s
DEPRECATED. Use /. + "/path"
to convert a string into an absolute path. For relative paths, use ./. + "/path"
.
builtins.toString e
Convert the expression e to a string. e can be:
A string (in which case the string is returned unmodified).
A path (e.g., toString /foo/bar
yields "/foo/bar"
.
A set containing { __toString = self: ...; }
or { outPath = ...; }
.
An integer.
A list, in which case the string representations of its elements are joined with spaces.
A Boolean (false
yields ""
, true
yields "1"
).
null
, which yields the empty string.
builtins.toXML e
Return a string containing an XML representation of e. The main application for toXML
is to communicate information with the builder in a more structured format than plain environment variables.
Here is an example where this is the case:
{ stdenv, fetchurl, libxslt, jira, uberwiki }: stdenv.mkDerivation (rec { name = "web-server"; buildInputs = [ libxslt ]; builder = builtins.toFile "builder.sh" " source $stdenv/setup mkdir $out echo "$servlets" | xsltproc ${stylesheet} - > $out/server-conf.xml ① "; stylesheet = builtins.toFile "stylesheet.xsl" ② "<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?> <xsl:stylesheet xmlns:xsl='http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform' version='1.0'> <xsl:template match='/'> <Configure> <xsl:for-each select='/expr/list/attrs'> <Call name='addWebApplication'> <Arg><xsl:value-of select=\"attr[@name = 'path']/string/@value\" /></Arg> <Arg><xsl:value-of select=\"attr[@name = 'war']/path/@value\" /></Arg> </Call> </xsl:for-each> </Configure> </xsl:template> </xsl:stylesheet> "; servlets = builtins.toXML [ ③ { path = "/bugtracker"; war = jira + "/lib/atlassian-jira.war"; } { path = "/wiki"; war = uberwiki + "/uberwiki.war"; } ]; })
The builder is supposed to generate the configuration file for a Jetty servlet container. A servlet container contains a number of servlets (*.war
files) each exported under a specific URI prefix. So the servlet configuration is a list of sets containing the path
and war
of the servlet (①). This kind of information is difficult to communicate with the normal method of passing information through an environment variable, which just concatenates everything together into a string (which might just work in this case, but wouldn’t work if fields are optional or contain lists themselves). Instead the Nix expression is converted to an XML representation with toXML
, which is unambiguous and can easily be processed with the appropriate tools. For instance, in the example an XSLT stylesheet (at point ②) is applied to it (at point ①) to generate the XML configuration file for the Jetty server. The XML representation produced at point ③ by toXML
is as follows:
<?xml version='1.0' encoding='utf-8'?> <expr> <list> <attrs> <attr name="path"> <string value="/bugtracker" /> </attr> <attr name="war"> <path value="/nix/store/d1jh9pasa7k2...-jira/lib/atlassian-jira.war" /> </attr> </attrs> <attrs> <attr name="path"> <string value="/wiki" /> </attr> <attr name="war"> <path value="/nix/store/y6423b1yi4sx...-uberwiki/uberwiki.war" /> </attr> </attrs> </list> </expr>
Note that we used the toFile
built-in to write the builder and the stylesheet “inline” in the Nix expression. The path of the stylesheet is spliced into the builder using the syntax xsltproc ${stylesheet}
.
builtins.trace e1 e2
Evaluate e1 and print its abstract syntax representation on standard error. Then return e2. This function is useful for debugging.
builtins.traceVerbose e1 e2
Evaluate e1 and print its abstract syntax representation on standard error if --trace-verbose
is enabled. Then return e2. This function is useful for debugging.
builtins.tryEval e
Try to shallowly evaluate e. Return a set containing the attributes success
(true
if e evaluated successfully, false
if an error was thrown) and value
, equalling e if successful and false
otherwise. tryEval
will only prevent errors created by throw
or assert
from being thrown. Errors tryEval
will not catch are for example those created by abort
and type errors generated by builtins. Also note that this doesn't evaluate e deeply, so let e = { x = throw ""; }; in (builtins.tryEval e).success
will be true
. Using builtins.deepSeq
one can get the expected result: let e = { x = throw ""; }; in (builtins.tryEval (builtins.deepSeq e e)).success
will be false
.
builtins.typeOf e
Return a string representing the type of the value e, namely "int"
, "bool"
, "string"
, "path"
, "null"
, "set"
, "list"
, "lambda"
or "float"
.
builtins.zipAttrsWith f list
Transpose a list of attribute sets into an attribute set of lists, then apply mapAttrs
.
f
receives two arguments: the attribute name and a non-empty list of all values encountered for that attribute name.
The result is an attribute set where the attribute names are the union of the attribute names in each element of list
. The attribute values are the return values of f
.
builtins.zipAttrsWith (name: values: { inherit name values; }) [ { a = "x"; } { a = "y"; b = "z"; } ]
evaluates to
{ a = { name = "a"; values = [ "x" "y" ]; }; b = { name = "b"; values = [ "z" ]; }; }
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Licensed under the LGPL License.
https://nixos.org/manual/nix/stable/expressions/builtins.html