Home

Awesome

nix-output-monitor

Pipe your nix-build output through the nix-output-monitor (aka nom) to get additional information while building.

While your build runs, nom will draw something like this at the bottom of your build log:

(note that to reduce clutter nom only shows timers over 1s build or download time.)

Packaging status

Status

This was an experiment to write something fun and useful in Haskell, which proved to be useful to quite a lot of people. By now, nom is quite fully featured with support for nix v1 commands (e.g. nix-build) and nix v2 command (e.g. nix build). At this point it seems like I will maintain nom until better UX options for nix arrive.

You are free and very welcome to contribute feedback, issues or PRs. Issues and pull requests can be opened at GitHub.

Source and releases are available from code.maralorn.de. Starting from version 2.1.0, nom follows the SemVer versioning scheme. The versioning applies to the behavior of the executable. There are no stability guarantees for the library component in the cabal project.

Support

If your question is not answered in this README you can ask it in #nix-output-monitor:maralorn.de on matrix or open an issue on github.

Installing

Running

The Easy Way

Warning: The displayed build tree might be incomplete with new-style commands like nix build for nix versions <2.10.

The nom binary (starting from version 2.0) behaves as a nix drop in, with much more colorful output, but only for the following commands:

nom build <args>: Behaves like nix build <args>.
nom shell <args>: Behaves like nix shell <args>.
nom develop <args>: Behaves like nix develop <args>.

The latter two commands work by calling nix shell or nix develop twice, the first time with overridden --run exit and monitoring the output, the second time passing output through to the user. This will incur a performance cost by doubling eval time.

Furthermore when called via the corresponding provided symlinks, nom is also a drop-in for the following commands:
nom-build <args>: Behaves like nix-build <args>.
nom-shell <args>: Behaves like nix-shell <args>.

All aliases internally use the json-based approach (see next section) and propagate error codes. If you want nom support for other nix commands please open an issue.

The Flexible Way

JSON based

nix-build --log-format internal-json -v |& nom --json

Warning: Don‘t forget to redirect stderr. That's what the &, does.

Human readable log parsing

It his highly recommended to always append --log-format internal-json -v (or use the above mentioned aliases.) and call nom with --json. That will give you much more informative output.

If you are in a situation, where you can‘t use the json based nix output you can still use

nix-build |& nom

Warning: Don‘t forget to redirect stderr. That's what the &, does.

This has the advantage to also work with other commands like nixos-rebuild or home-manager, where it is not trivial to pass in the --log-format internal-json -v flag. nom will pass everything it reads through, if it does not understand it. This makes it ideal to attach it to scripts which output more then just nix output.

Preserving Colored Text

Colored text will work as expected in json-mode.

In human-readable log mode you can preserve the color of the redirected text by using the unbuffer command from the expect package.

unbuffer nix-build |& nom

Explanation

Legend

Nom tries to convey information via symbols and colors

If you can‘t see all icons you maybe need another terminal font. I recommend any font from pkgs.nerdfonts e.g. "JetBrainsMono Nerd Font". Also different terminals might work differently well. I recommend: pkgs.foot.

How to Read the Dependency Graph

Example Runs

An example remote build: asciicast

An example with a lot of downloads: asciicast

Implementation

Right now nom uses four sources of information:

  1. The parsed nix-build output (json or human-readable)
  2. it checks if build results exist in the nix-store (only in human-readable mode)
  3. it queries .drv files for information about the out output path.
  4. It caches build times in $XDG_CACHE_HOME/nix-output-monitor/build-reports.csv.

Limitations

For human-readable log parsing mode: