nixpkgs/doc/package-notes.xml

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<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xml:id="chap-introduction">
<title>Package Notes</title>
<para>This chapter contains information about how to use and maintain
the Nix expressions for a number of specific packages, such as the
Linux kernel or X.org.</para>
<!--============================================================-->
<section>
<title>Linux kernel</title>
<para>The Nix expressions to build the Linux kernel are in <link
xlink:href="https://svn.nixos.org/repos/nix/nixpkgs/trunk/pkgs/os-specific/linux/kernel"><filename>pkgs/os-specific/linux/kernel</filename></link>.</para>
<para>The function that builds the kernel has an argument
<varname>kernelPatches</varname> which should be a list of
<literal>{name, patch, extraConfig}</literal> attribute sets, where
<varname>name</varname> is the name of the patch (which is included in
the kernels <varname>meta.description</varname> attribute),
<varname>patch</varname> is the patch itself (possibly compressed),
and <varname>extraConfig</varname> (optional) is a string specifying
extra options to be concatenated to the kernel configuration file
(<filename>.config</filename>).</para>
<para>The kernel derivation exports an attribute
<varname>features</varname> specifying whether optional functionality
is or isnt enabled. This is used in NixOS to implement
kernel-specific behaviour. For instance, if the kernel has the
<varname>iwlwifi</varname> feature (i.e. has built-in support for
Intel wireless chipsets), then NixOS doesnt have to build the
external <varname>iwlwifi</varname> package:
<programlisting>
modulesTree = [kernel]
++ pkgs.lib.optional (!kernel.features ? iwlwifi) kernelPackages.iwlwifi
++ ...;
</programlisting>
</para>
<para>How to add a new (major) version of the Linux kernel to Nixpkgs:
<orderedlist>
<listitem>
<para>Copy (<command>svn cp</command>) the old Nix expression
(e.g. <filename>linux-2.6.21.nix</filename>) to the new one
(e.g. <filename>linux-2.6.22.nix</filename>) and update it.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Add the new kernel to <filename>all-packages.nix</filename>
(e.g., create an attribute
<varname>kernel_2_6_22</varname>).</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Now were going to update the kernel configuration. First
unpack the kernel. Then for each supported platform
(<literal>i686</literal>, <literal>x86_64</literal>,
<literal>uml</literal>) do the following:
<orderedlist>
<listitem>
<para>Make an <command>svn copy</command> from the old
config (e.g. <filename>config-2.6.21-i686-smp</filename>) to
the new one
(e.g. <filename>config-2.6.22-i686-smp</filename>).</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Copy the config file for this platform
(e.g. <filename>config-2.6.22-i686-smp</filename>) to
<filename>.config</filename> in the kernel source tree.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Run <literal>make oldconfig
ARCH=<replaceable>{i386,x86_64,um}</replaceable></literal>
and answer all questions. (For the uml configuration, also
add <literal>SHELL=bash</literal>.) Make sure to keep the
configuration consistent between platforms (i.e. dont
enable some feature on <literal>i686</literal> and disable
it on <literal>x86_64</literal>).
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>If needed you can also run <literal>make
menuconfig</literal>:
<screen>
$ nix-env -i ncurses
$ export NIX_CFLAGS_LINK=-lncurses
$ make menuconfig ARCH=<replaceable>arch</replaceable></screen>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Make sure that
<literal>CONFIG_FB_TILEBLITTING</literal> is <emphasis>not
set</emphasis> (otherwise <command>fbsplash</command> won't
work). This option has a tendency to be enabled as a
side-effect of other options. If it is, investigate why
(there's probably another option that forces it to be on)
and fix it.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Copy <filename>.config</filename> over the new config
file (e.g. <filename>config-2.6.22-i686-smp</filename>).</para>
</listitem>
</orderedlist>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Test building the kernel: <literal>nix-build -A
kernel_2_6_22</literal>. If it compiles, ship it! For extra
credit, try booting NixOS with it.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>It may be that the new kernel requires updating the external
kernel modules and kernel-dependent packages listed in the
<varname>kernelPackagesFor</varname> function in
<filename>all-packages.nix</filename> (such as the NVIDIA drivers,
AUFS, splashutils, etc.). If the updated packages arent
backwards compatible with older kernels, you need to keep the
older versions and use some conditionals. For example, new
kernels require splashutils 1.5 while old kernel require 1.3, so
<varname>kernelPackagesFor</varname> says:
<programlisting>
splashutils =
if kernel.features ? fbSplash then splashutils_13 else
if kernel.features ? fbConDecor then splashutils_15 else
null;
splashutils_13 = ...;
splashutils_15 = ...;</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
</orderedlist>
</para>
</section>
<!--============================================================-->
<section>
<title>X.org</title>
<para>The Nix expressions for the X.org packages reside in
<filename>pkgs/servers/x11/xorg/default.nix</filename>. This file is
automatically generated from lists of tarballs in an X.org release.
As such it should not be modified directly; rather, you should modify
the lists, the generator script or the file
<filename>pkgs/servers/x11/xorg/overrides.nix</filename>, in which you
can override or add to the derivations produced by the
generator.</para>
<para>The generator is invoked as follows:
<screen>
$ cd pkgs/servers/x11/xorg
$ cat tarballs-7.4.list extra.list old.list \
| perl ./generate-expr-from-tarballs.pl
</screen>
For each of the tarballs in the <filename>.list</filename> files, the
script downloads it, unpacks it, and searches its
<filename>configure.ac</filename> and <filename>*.pc.in</filename>
files for dependencies. This information is used to generate
<filename>default.nix</filename>. The generator caches downloaded
tarballs between runs. Pay close attention to the <literal>NOT FOUND:
<replaceable>name</replaceable></literal> messages at the end of the
run, since they may indicate missing dependencies. (Some might be
optional dependencies, however.)</para>
<para>A file like <filename>tarballs-7.4.list</filename> contains all
tarballs in a X.org release. It can be generated like this:
<screen>
$ export i="mirror://xorg/X11R7.4/src/everything/"
$ cat $(PRINT_PATH=1 nix-prefetch-url $i | tail -n 1) \
| perl -e 'while (&lt;>) { if (/(href|HREF)="([^"]*.bz2)"/) { print "$ENV{'i'}$2\n"; }; }' \
| sort > tarballs-7.4.list
</screen>
<filename>extra.list</filename> contains libraries that arent part of
X.org proper, but are closely related to it, such as
<literal>libxcb</literal>. <filename>old.list</filename> contains
some packages that were removed from X.org, but are still needed by
some people or by other packages (such as
<varname>imake</varname>).</para>
<para>If the expression for a package requires derivation attributes
that the generator cannot figure out automatically (say,
<varname>patches</varname> or a <varname>postInstall</varname> hook),
you should modify
<filename>pkgs/servers/x11/xorg/overrides.nix</filename>.</para>
</section>
<!--============================================================-->
<section>
<title>Gnome</title>
<para>* Expression is auto-generated</para>
<para>* How to update</para>
</section>
<!--============================================================-->
<section>
<title>GCC</title>
<para></para>
</section>
</chapter>