Awesome
nvfetcher
nvfetcher is a tool to automate nix package updates. It's built on top of shake, integrating nvchecker. nvfetcher cli program accepts a TOML file as config, which defines a set of package sources to run.
Overview
For example, feeding the following configuration tonvfetcher
:
# nvfetcher.toml
[feeluown]
src.pypi = "feeluown"
fetch.pypi = "feeluown"
it will create _sources/generated.nix
:
{ fetchgit, fetchurl, fetchFromGitHub }:
{
feeluown = {
pname = "feeluown";
version = "3.8.2";
src = fetchurl {
url = "https://pypi.io/packages/source/f/feeluown/feeluown-3.8.2.tar.gz";
sha256 = "sha256-V2yzpkmjRkipZOvQGB2mYRhiiEly6QPrTOMJ7BmyWBQ=";
};
};
}
and _sources/generated.json
:
{
"feeluown": {
"pinned": false,
"cargoLocks": null,
"name": "feeluown-core",
"version": "3.8.2",
"passthru": null,
"src": {
"url": "https://pypi.io/packages/source/f/feeluown/feeluown-3.8.2.tar.gz",
"name": null,
"type": "url",
"sha256": "sha256-V2yzpkmjRkipZOvQGB2mYRhiiEly6QPrTOMJ7BmyWBQ="
},
"extract": null,
"rustGitDeps": null
}
}
We tell nvfetcher how to get the latest version number of packages and how to fetch their sources given version numbers,
and nvfetcher will help us keep their version and prefetched SHA256 sums up-to-date, producing ready-to-use nix expressions in _sources/generated.nix
.
Nvfetcher reads generated.json
to produce version change message, such as feeluown: 3.8.1 → 3.8.2
.
We always check versions of packages during each run, but only do prefetch and further operations when needed.
Live examples
How to use the generated sources file? Here are several examples:
-
My flakes repo
-
Nick Cao's flakes repo
Installation
nvfetcher
package is available in nixpkgs, so you can try it with:
$ nix-shell -p nvfetcher
This repo also has flakes support:
$ nix run github:berberman/nvfetcher
To use it as a Haskell library, the package is available on Hackage.
If you want to use the Haskell library from flakes, there is also a shell ghcWithNvfetcher
:
$ nix develop github:berberman/nvfetcher#ghcWithNvfetcher
$ runghc Main.hs
where you can define packages in Main.hs
. See Haskell library for details.
Usage
Basically, there are two ways to use nvfetcher, where the difference is how we provide package sources definitions to it.
CLI
To run nvfetcher as a CLI program, you'll need to provide package sources defined in TOML.
Usage: nvfetcher [--version] [--help] [-o|--build-dir DIR] [--commit-changes]
[-l|--changelog FILE] [-j NUM] [-r|--retry NUM] [-t|--timing]
[-v|--verbose] [-f|--filter REGEX] [-k|--keyfile FILE]
[--keep-old] [--keep-going] [TARGET] [-c|--config FILE]
generate nix sources expr for the latest version of packages
Available options:
--version Show version
--help Show this help text
-o,--build-dir DIR Directory that nvfetcher puts artifacts to
(default: "_sources")
--commit-changes `git commit` build dir with version changes as commit
message
-l,--changelog FILE Dump version changes to a file
-j NUM Number of threads (0: detected number of processors)
(default: 0)
-r,--retry NUM Times to retry of some rules (nvchecker, prefetch,
nix-build, etc.) (default: 3)
-t,--timing Show build time
-v,--verbose Verbose mode
-f,--filter REGEX Regex to filter packages to be updated
-k,--keyfile FILE Nvchecker keyfile
--keep-old Don't remove old files other than generated json and
nix before build
--keep-going Don't stop if some packages failed to be fetched
TARGET Three targets are available: 1.build 2.clean (remove
all generated files) 3.purge (remove shake db)
(default: build)
-c,--config FILE Path to nvfetcher TOML config
(default: "nvfetcher.toml")
Each package corresponds to a TOML table, whose name is encoded as table key, with
two required fields and three optional fields in each table.
You can find an example of the configuration file, see nvfetcher_example.toml
.
Keyfile
You can specify nvchecker keyfile via command line option. For the format of this file, please refer to nvchecker documentation.
Nvchecker
Version source -- how do we track upstream version updates?
src.github = owner/repo
- the latest github releasesrc.github_tag = owner/repo
- the max github tag, usually used with list options (see below)src.pypi = pypi_name
- the latest pypi releasesrc.git = git_url
(and an optionalsrc.branch = git_branch
) - the latest commit of a reposrc.archpkg = archlinux_pkg_name
-- the latest version of an archlinux packagesrc.aur = aur_pkg_name
-- the latest version of an aur packagesrc.manual = v
-- a fixed version, which never updatessrc.repology = project:repo
-- the latest version from repologysrc.webpage = web_url
andsrc.regex
-- a string in webpage that matches with regexsrc.httpheader = request_url
andsrc.regex
-- a string in http header that matches with regexsrc.openvsx = publisher.ext_name
-- the latest version of a vscode extension from open vsxsrc.vsmarketplace = publisher.ext_name
-- the latest version of a vscode extension from vscode marketplacesrc.cmd = cmd
-- the version from a shell command (e.g.echo Meow
)src.container = owner/name
- the latest tag of a container from the Docker registry
Optional list options for some version sources (src.github_tag
, src.webpage
, and src.httpheader
and src.container
),
see the corresponding nvchecker documentation for details.
src.include_regex
src.exclude_regex
src.sort_version_key
src.ignored
Optional global options for all kinds of version sources,
see the corresponding nvchecker documentation for details. You can tweak obtained version number using this option, e.g. stripping the prefix v
or transforming the result by regex.
src.prefix
src.from_pattern
src.to_pattern
Nix fetcher
How do we fetch the package source if we have the target version number?
$ver
is available in string, which will be set to the result of nvchecker.
fetch.github = owner/repo
fetch.pypi = pypi_name
fetch.git = git_url
fetch.url = url
fetch.openvsx = publisher.ext_name
fetch.vsmarketplace = publisher.ext_name
fetch.tarball = tarball_url
fetch.docker = owner/name
Optional config for nix-prefetch-url
, applies when the fetcher equals to fetch.url
.
$ver
is available in string, just like for the fetch config.
url.name = file_name
Optional config for nix-prefetch-git
, applies when the fetcher equals to fetch.github
or fetch.git
.
git.deepClone
git.fetchSubmodules
git.leaveDotGit
Optional config for fetch.docker
/dockerTools.pullImage
:
docker.os
docker.arch
docker.finalImageName
docker.finalImageTag
docker.tlsVerify
Extract src
Optional extract src config, files are extracted into build directory, and then read by readFile
in generated nix expr.
extract = [ "file_1", "file_2", ...]
- file paths are relative to the source root
Rust support
rustPlatform.buildRustPackage
now accepts an attribute cargoLock
to vendor dependencies from Cargo.lock
,
so we can use this instead of TOFU cargoSha256
for Rust packaging. nvfetcher
supports automating this process,
extracting the lock file to build and calculating cargoLock.outputHashes
, as long as you set the config.
There can be many lock files in one source.
cargo_locks = [ "cargo_lock_path_1", "cargo_lock_path_2", ...]
- relative to the source root
Passthru
passthru config, an additional set of attrs to be generated.
passthru = { k1 = "v1", k2 = "v2", ... }
Note: currently the values can only be strings
Pinned
If a package is pinned, we call nvchecker to check the new version iff there's no existing version.
pinned = true
Git commit date
If the version source of a package is git
, nvfetcher can finds out the commit date of this revision,
in the format of %Y-%m-%d
by default. You can provide your own strftime
format:
git.date_format = "strftime_format"
Force fetching
Always fetch the package, even if its version (nvchecker output) doesn't change. This is useful when the file to be downloaded cannot not be determined by the url.
fetch.force = true
Note: In such case, nvfetcher will not produce a version change log, since the version doesn't change at all. Only sha256 in generated files will be updated.
Haskell library
nvfetcher itself is a Haskell library as well, whereas the CLI program is just a trivial wrapper of the library.
You can create a Haskell program depending on it directly, by using the runNvFetcher
entry point.
In this case, we can define packages in Haskell language, getting rid of TOML constraints.
You can find an example of using nvfetcher in the library way, see Main_example.hs
.
Documentation
For details of the library, documentation of released versions is available on Hackage, and of master is on our github pages.
Contributing
Issues and PRs are always welcome. _(:з」∠)_
Building from source:
$ git clone https://github.com/berberman/nvfetcher
$ nix develop
$ cabal update
$ cabal build