publish: Do not publish nars for invalid store items.
[jackhill/guix/guix.git] / doc / guix.texi
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1\input texinfo
2@c -*-texinfo-*-
3
4@c %**start of header
5@setfilename guix.info
6@documentencoding UTF-8
f8348b91 7@settitle GNU Guix Reference Manual
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8@c %**end of header
9
10@include version.texi
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11
12@copying
db5a9444 13Copyright @copyright{} 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016 Ludovic Courtès@*
f97c9175 14Copyright @copyright{} 2013, 2014, 2016 Andreas Enge@*
87eafdbd 15Copyright @copyright{} 2013 Nikita Karetnikov@*
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16Copyright @copyright{} 2015 Mathieu Lirzin@*
17Copyright @copyright{} 2014 Pierre-Antoine Rault@*
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18Copyright @copyright{} 2015 Taylan Ulrich Bayırlı/Kammer@*
19Copyright @copyright{} 2015, 2016 Leo Famulari
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20
21Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
22under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or
23any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
24Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A
25copy of the license is included in the section entitled ``GNU Free
26Documentation License''.
27@end copying
568717fd 28
eeaf4427 29@dircategory Package management
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30@direntry
31* guix: (guix). Guix, the functional package manager.
e49951eb 32* guix package: (guix)Invoking guix package
eeaf4427 33 Managing packages with Guix.
e49951eb 34* guix build: (guix)Invoking guix build
568717fd 35 Building packages with Guix.
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36* guix system: (guix)Invoking guix system
37 Managing the operating system configuration.
568717fd 38@end direntry
568717fd 39
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40@dircategory Software development
41@direntry
42* guix environment: (guix)Invoking guix environment
43 Building development environments with Guix.
44@end direntry
45
568717fd 46@titlepage
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47@title GNU Guix Reference Manual
48@subtitle Using the GNU Guix Functional Package Manager
2cbed07e 49@author The GNU Guix Developers
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50
51@page
52@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
53Edition @value{EDITION} @*
54@value{UPDATED} @*
55
7df7a74e 56@insertcopying
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57@end titlepage
58
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59@contents
60
61@c *********************************************************************
62@node Top
f8348b91 63@top GNU Guix
568717fd 64
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65This document describes GNU Guix version @value{VERSION}, a functional
66package management tool written for the GNU system.
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67
68@menu
69* Introduction:: What is Guix about?
bd5e766b 70* Installation:: Installing Guix.
eeaf4427 71* Package Management:: Package installation, upgrade, etc.
c554de89 72* Emacs Interface:: Using Guix from Emacs.
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73* Programming Interface:: Using Guix in Scheme.
74* Utilities:: Package management commands.
a1ba8475 75* GNU Distribution:: Software for your friendly GNU system.
9bf3c1a7 76* Contributing:: Your help needed!
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77
78* Acknowledgments:: Thanks!
79* GNU Free Documentation License:: The license of this manual.
80* Concept Index:: Concepts.
a85b83d2 81* Programming Index:: Data types, functions, and variables.
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82
83@detailmenu
84 --- The Detailed Node Listing ---
85
86Installation
87
1b2b8177 88* Binary Installation:: Getting Guix running in no time!
aaa3eaa9 89* Requirements:: Software needed to build and run Guix.
ec0339cd 90* Running the Test Suite:: Testing Guix.
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91* Setting Up the Daemon:: Preparing the build daemon's environment.
92* Invoking guix-daemon:: Running the build daemon.
0e2d0213 93* Application Setup:: Application-specific setup.
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94
95Setting Up the Daemon
96
97* Build Environment Setup:: Preparing the isolated build environment.
98* Daemon Offload Setup:: Offloading builds to remote machines.
99
100Package Management
101
102* Features:: How Guix will make your life brighter.
103* Invoking guix package:: Package installation, removal, etc.
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104* Substitutes:: Downloading pre-built binaries.
105* Packages with Multiple Outputs:: Single source package, multiple outputs.
106* Invoking guix gc:: Running the garbage collector.
107* Invoking guix pull:: Fetching the latest Guix and distribution.
108* Invoking guix archive:: Exporting and importing store files.
109
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110Emacs Interface
111
112* Initial Setup: Emacs Initial Setup. Preparing @file{~/.emacs}.
113* Package Management: Emacs Package Management. Managing packages and generations.
687c9bc0 114* Licenses: Emacs Licenses. Interface for licenses of Guix packages.
9b0afb0d 115* Popup Interface: Emacs Popup Interface. Magit-like interface for guix commands.
c554de89 116* Prettify Mode: Emacs Prettify. Abbreviating @file{/gnu/store/@dots{}} file names.
34850cd5 117* Build Log Mode: Emacs Build Log. Highlighting Guix build logs.
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118* Completions: Emacs Completions. Completing @command{guix} shell command.
119* Development: Emacs Development. Tools for Guix developers.
32950fc8 120* Hydra: Emacs Hydra. Interface for Guix build farm.
c554de89 121
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122Programming Interface
123
124* Defining Packages:: Defining new packages.
125* Build Systems:: Specifying how packages are built.
126* The Store:: Manipulating the package store.
127* Derivations:: Low-level interface to package derivations.
128* The Store Monad:: Purely functional interface to the store.
129* G-Expressions:: Manipulating build expressions.
130
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131Defining Packages
132
133* package Reference:: The package data type.
134* origin Reference:: The origin data type.
135
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136Utilities
137
138* Invoking guix build:: Building packages from the command line.
fcc58db6 139* Invoking guix edit:: Editing package definitions.
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140* Invoking guix download:: Downloading a file and printing its hash.
141* Invoking guix hash:: Computing the cryptographic hash of a file.
142* Invoking guix import:: Importing package definitions.
143* Invoking guix refresh:: Updating package definitions.
144* Invoking guix lint:: Finding errors in package definitions.
fcc58db6 145* Invoking guix size:: Profiling disk usage.
88856916 146* Invoking guix graph:: Visualizing the graph of packages.
aaa3eaa9 147* Invoking guix environment:: Setting up development environments.
aff8ce7c 148* Invoking guix publish:: Sharing substitutes.
d23c20f1 149* Invoking guix challenge:: Challenging substitute servers.
32efa254 150* Invoking guix container:: Process isolation.
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151
152GNU Distribution
153
154* System Installation:: Installing the whole operating system.
35ed9306 155* System Configuration:: Configuring the operating system.
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156* Installing Debugging Files:: Feeding the debugger.
157* Security Updates:: Deploying security fixes quickly.
158* Package Modules:: Packages from the programmer's viewpoint.
159* Packaging Guidelines:: Growing the distribution.
160* Bootstrapping:: GNU/Linux built from scratch.
161* Porting:: Targeting another platform or kernel.
162
163System Configuration
164
165* Using the Configuration System:: Customizing your GNU system.
166* operating-system Reference:: Detail of operating-system declarations.
167* File Systems:: Configuring file system mounts.
168* Mapped Devices:: Block device extra processing.
169* User Accounts:: Specifying user accounts.
598e19dc 170* Locales:: Language and cultural convention settings.
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171* Services:: Specifying system services.
172* Setuid Programs:: Programs running with root privileges.
1b2b8177 173* X.509 Certificates:: Authenticating HTTPS servers.
996ed739 174* Name Service Switch:: Configuring libc's name service switch.
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175* Initial RAM Disk:: Linux-Libre bootstrapping.
176* GRUB Configuration:: Configuring the boot loader.
177* Invoking guix system:: Instantiating a system configuration.
97d76250 178* Running GuixSD in a VM:: How to run GuixSD in a virtual machine.
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179* Defining Services:: Adding new service definitions.
180
181Services
182
183* Base Services:: Essential system services.
184* Networking Services:: Network setup, SSH daemon, etc.
185* X Window:: Graphical display.
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186* Desktop Services:: D-Bus and desktop services.
187* Database Services:: SQL databases.
d8c18af8 188* Mail Services:: IMAP, POP3, SMTP, and all that.
cbd02397 189* Web Services:: Web servers.
aa4ed923 190* Various Services:: Other services.
aaa3eaa9 191
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192Defining Services
193
194* Service Composition:: The model for composing services.
195* Service Types and Services:: Types and services.
196* Service Reference:: API reference.
dd17bc38 197* Shepherd Services:: A particular type of service.
0adfe95a 198
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199Packaging Guidelines
200
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201* Software Freedom:: What may go into the distribution.
202* Package Naming:: What's in a name?
203* Version Numbers:: When the name is not enough.
cbd02397 204* Synopses and Descriptions:: Helping users find the right package.
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205* Python Modules:: Taming the snake.
206* Perl Modules:: Little pearls.
207* Fonts:: Fond of fonts.
aaa3eaa9 208
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209Contributing
210
211* Building from Git:: The latest and greatest.
212* Running Guix Before It Is Installed:: Hacker tricks.
213* The Perfect Setup:: The right tools.
214* Coding Style:: Hygiene of the contributor.
215* Submitting Patches:: Share your work.
216
217Coding Style
218
219* Programming Paradigm:: How to compose your elements.
220* Modules:: Where to store your code?
221* Data Types and Pattern Matching:: Implementing data structures.
222* Formatting Code:: Writing conventions.
223
aaa3eaa9 224@end detailmenu
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225@end menu
226
227@c *********************************************************************
228@node Introduction
229@chapter Introduction
230
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231GNU Guix@footnote{``Guix'' is pronounced like ``geeks'', or ``ɡiːks''
232using the international phonetic alphabet (IPA).} is a functional
233package management tool for the GNU system. Package management consists
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234of all activities that relate to building packages from sources,
235honoring their build-time and run-time dependencies,
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236installing packages in user environments, upgrading installed packages
237to new versions or rolling back to a previous set, removing unused
238software packages, etc.
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239
240@cindex functional package management
241The term @dfn{functional} refers to a specific package management
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242discipline pioneered by Nix (@pxref{Acknowledgments}).
243In Guix, the package build and installation process is seen
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244as a function, in the mathematical sense. That function takes inputs,
245such as build scripts, a compiler, and libraries, and
246returns an installed package. As a pure function, its result depends
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247solely on its inputs---for instance, it cannot refer to software or
248scripts that were not explicitly passed as inputs. A build function
4bfc4ea3 249always produces the same result when passed a given set of inputs. It
f97c9175 250cannot alter the environment of the running system in
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251any way; for instance, it cannot create, modify, or delete files outside
252of its build and installation directories. This is achieved by running
e900c503 253build processes in isolated environments (or @dfn{containers}), where only their
4bfc4ea3 254explicit inputs are visible.
568717fd 255
e531ac2a 256@cindex store
568717fd 257The result of package build functions is @dfn{cached} in the file
e531ac2a 258system, in a special directory called @dfn{the store} (@pxref{The
f97c9175 259Store}). Each package is installed in a directory of its own in the
834129e0 260store---by default under @file{/gnu/store}. The directory name contains
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261a hash of all the inputs used to build that package; thus, changing an
262input yields a different directory name.
263
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264This approach is the foundation for the salient features of Guix: support
265for transactional package upgrade and rollback, per-user installation, and
eeaf4427 266garbage collection of packages (@pxref{Features}).
568717fd 267
4bfc4ea3 268Guix has a command-line interface, which allows users to build, install,
568717fd 269upgrade, and remove packages, as well as a Scheme programming interface.
568717fd 270
3ca2731c 271@cindex Guix System Distribution
4705641f 272@cindex GuixSD
a1ba8475 273Last but not least, Guix is used to build a distribution of the GNU
3ca2731c 274system, with many GNU and non-GNU free software packages. The Guix
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275System Distribution, or GNU@tie{}GuixSD, takes advantage of the core
276properties of Guix at the system level. With GuixSD, users
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277@emph{declare} all aspects of the operating system configuration, and
278Guix takes care of instantiating that configuration in a reproducible,
279stateless fashion. @xref{GNU Distribution}.
a1ba8475 280
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281@c *********************************************************************
282@node Installation
283@chapter Installation
284
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285GNU Guix is available for download from its website at
286@url{http://www.gnu.org/software/guix/}. This section describes the
287software requirements of Guix, as well as how to install it and get
288ready to use it.
bd5e766b 289
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290Note that this section is concerned with the installation of the package
291manager, which can be done on top of a running GNU/Linux system. If,
292instead, you want to install the complete GNU operating system,
6621cdb6 293@pxref{System Installation}.
5af6de3e 294
bd5e766b 295@menu
09722b11 296* Binary Installation:: Getting Guix running in no time!
bd5e766b 297* Requirements:: Software needed to build and run Guix.
ec0339cd 298* Running the Test Suite:: Testing Guix.
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299* Setting Up the Daemon:: Preparing the build daemon's environment.
300* Invoking guix-daemon:: Running the build daemon.
0e2d0213 301* Application Setup:: Application-specific setup.
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302@end menu
303
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304@node Binary Installation
305@section Binary Installation
306
307This section describes how to install Guix on an arbitrary system from a
308self-contained tarball providing binaries for Guix and for all its
309dependencies. This is often quicker than installing from source, which
310is described in the next sections. The only requirement is to have
311GNU@tie{}tar and Xz.
312
313Installing goes along these lines:
314
315@enumerate
316@item
317Download the binary tarball from
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318@indicateurl{ftp://alpha.gnu.org/gnu/guix/guix-binary-@value{VERSION}.@var{system}.tar.xz},
319where @var{system} is @code{x86_64-linux} for an @code{x86_64} machine
320already running the kernel Linux, and so on.
321
322Make sure to download the associated @file{.sig} file and to verify the
323authenticity of the tarball against it, along these lines:
324
325@example
326$ wget ftp://alpha.gnu.org/gnu/guix/guix-binary-@value{VERSION}.@var{system}.tar.xz.sig
327$ gpg --verify guix-binary-@value{VERSION}.@var{system}.tar.xz.sig
328@end example
329
f97c9175 330If that command fails because you do not have the required public key,
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331then run this command to import it:
332
333@example
334$ gpg --keyserver keys.gnupg.net --recv-keys 3D9AEBB5
335@end example
336
337@noindent
338and rerun the @code{gpg --verify} command.
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339
340@item
341As @code{root}, run:
342
343@example
5dc42964 344# cd /tmp
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345# tar --warning=no-timestamp -xf \
346 guix-binary-@value{VERSION}.@var{system}.tar.xz
5dc42964 347# mv var/guix /var/ && mv gnu /
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348@end example
349
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350This creates @file{/gnu/store} (@pxref{The Store}) and @file{/var/guix}.
351The latter contains a ready-to-use profile for @code{root} (see next
352step.)
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354Do @emph{not} unpack the tarball on a working Guix system since that
355would overwrite its own essential files.
356
254b1c2e 357The @code{--warning=no-timestamp} option makes sure GNU@tie{}tar does
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358not emit warnings about ``implausibly old time stamps'' (such
359warnings were triggered by GNU@tie{}tar 1.26 and older; recent
360versions are fine.)
361They stem from the fact that all the
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362files in the archive have their modification time set to zero (which
363means January 1st, 1970.) This is done on purpose to make sure the
364archive content is independent of its creation time, thus making it
365reproducible.
366
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367@item
368Make @code{root}'s profile available under @file{~/.guix-profile}:
369
370@example
371# ln -sf /var/guix/profiles/per-user/root/guix-profile \
372 ~root/.guix-profile
373@end example
374
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375@item
376Create the group and user accounts for build users as explained below
377(@pxref{Build Environment Setup}).
378
09722b11 379@item
bf98aea9 380Run the daemon, and set it to automatically start on boot.
c8e26887 381
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382If your host distro uses the systemd init system, this can be achieved
383with these commands:
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384
385@example
386# cp ~root/.guix-profile/lib/systemd/system/guix-daemon.service \
387 /etc/systemd/system/
388# systemctl start guix-daemon && systemctl enable guix-daemon
389@end example
390
391If your host distro uses the Upstart init system:
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392
393@example
c8e26887 394# cp ~root/.guix-profile/lib/upstart/system/guix-daemon.conf /etc/init/
bf98aea9 395# start guix-daemon
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396@end example
397
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398Otherwise, you can still start the daemon manually with:
399
400@example
401# ~root/.guix-profile/bin/guix-daemon --build-users-group=guixbuild
402@end example
d2825c96 403
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404@item
405Make the @command{guix} command available to other users on the machine,
406for instance with:
407
408@example
409# mkdir -p /usr/local/bin
410# cd /usr/local/bin
d72d05f9 411# ln -s /var/guix/profiles/per-user/root/guix-profile/bin/guix
09722b11 412@end example
39f8ed14 413
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414It is also a good idea to make the Info version of this manual available
415there:
416
417@example
418# mkdir -p /usr/local/share/info
419# cd /usr/local/share/info
420# for i in /var/guix/profiles/per-user/root/guix-profile/share/info/* ;
421 do ln -s $i ; done
422@end example
423
424That way, assuming @file{/usr/local/share/info} is in the search path,
425running @command{info guix} will open this manual (@pxref{Other Info
426Directories,,, texinfo, GNU Texinfo}, for more details on changing the
427Info search path.)
428
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429@item
430To use substitutes from @code{hydra.gnu.org} (@pxref{Substitutes}),
431authorize them:
432
433@example
7acd3439 434# guix archive --authorize < ~root/.guix-profile/share/guix/hydra.gnu.org.pub
39f8ed14 435@end example
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436@end enumerate
437
bf98aea9 438This completes root-level install of Guix. Each user will need to
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439perform additional steps to make their Guix envionment ready for use,
440@pxref{Application Setup}.
09722b11 441
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442You can confirm that Guix is working by installing a sample package into
443the root profile:
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444
445@example
c8e26887 446# guix package -i hello
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447@end example
448
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449The @code{guix} package must remain available in @code{root}'s profile,
450or it would become subject to garbage collection---in which case you
451would find yourself badly handicapped by the lack of the @command{guix}
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452command. In other words, do not remove @code{guix} by running
453@code{guix package -r guix}.
454
455The binary installation tarball can be (re)produced and verified simply
456by running the following command in the Guix source tree:
457
458@example
459make guix-binary.@var{system}.tar.xz
460@end example
c8e26887 461
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463@node Requirements
464@section Requirements
465
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466This section lists requirements when building Guix from source. The
467build procedure for Guix is the same as for other GNU software, and is
468not covered here. Please see the files @file{README} and @file{INSTALL}
469in the Guix source tree for additional details.
470
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471GNU Guix depends on the following packages:
472
473@itemize
47c66da0 474@item @url{http://gnu.org/software/guile/, GNU Guile}, version 2.0.7 or later;
288dca55 475@item @url{http://gnupg.org/, GNU libgcrypt};
f0b98b84 476@item @url{http://www.gnu.org/software/make/, GNU Make}.
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477@end itemize
478
479The following dependencies are optional:
480
481@itemize
288dca55 482@item
8a96bd4b 483Installing
288dca55 484@url{http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/guile-json/, Guile-JSON} will
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485allow you to use the @command{guix import pypi} command (@pxref{Invoking
486guix import}). It is of
288dca55 487interest primarily for developers and not for casual users.
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488@item
489Installing @uref{http://gnutls.org/, GnuTLS-Guile} will
490allow you to access @code{https} URLs with the @command{guix download}
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491command (@pxref{Invoking guix download}), the @command{guix import pypi}
492command, and the @command{guix import cpan} command. This is primarily
493of interest to developers. @xref{Guile Preparations, how to install the
494GnuTLS bindings for Guile,, gnutls-guile, GnuTLS-Guile}.
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495@end itemize
496
497Unless @code{--disable-daemon} was passed to @command{configure}, the
498following packages are also needed:
499
500@itemize
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501@item @url{http://sqlite.org, SQLite 3};
502@item @url{http://www.bzip.org, libbz2};
503@item @url{http://gcc.gnu.org, GCC's g++}, with support for the
504C++11 standard.
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505@end itemize
506
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507When a working installation of @url{http://nixos.org/nix/, the Nix package
508manager} is available, you
bd5e766b 509can instead configure Guix with @code{--disable-daemon}. In that case,
4bfc4ea3 510Nix replaces the three dependencies above.
bd5e766b 511
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512Guix is compatible with Nix, so it is possible to share the same store
513between both. To do so, you must pass @command{configure} not only the
514same @code{--with-store-dir} value, but also the same
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515@code{--localstatedir} value. The latter is essential because it
516specifies where the database that stores metadata about the store is
834129e0 517located, among other things. The default values for Nix are
b22a12fd 518@code{--with-store-dir=/nix/store} and @code{--localstatedir=/nix/var}.
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519Note that @code{--disable-daemon} is not required if
520your goal is to share the store with Nix.
b22a12fd 521
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522@node Running the Test Suite
523@section Running the Test Suite
524
525After a successful @command{configure} and @code{make} run, it is a good
526idea to run the test suite. It can help catch issues with the setup or
527environment, or bugs in Guix itself---and really, reporting test
528failures is a good way to help improve the software. To run the test
529suite, type:
530
531@example
532make check
533@end example
534
535Test cases can run in parallel: you can use the @code{-j} option of
536GNU@tie{}make to speed things up. The first run may take a few minutes
537on a recent machine; subsequent runs will be faster because the store
538that is created for test purposes will already have various things in
539cache.
540
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541It is also possible to run a subset of the tests by defining the
542@code{TESTS} makefile variable as in this example:
543
544@example
545make check TESTS="tests/store.scm tests/cpio.scm"
546@end example
547
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548Upon failure, please email @email{bug-guix@@gnu.org} and attach the
549@file{test-suite.log} file. When @file{tests/@var{something}.scm}
550fails, please also attach the @file{@var{something}.log} file available
551in the top-level build directory. Please specify the Guix version being
552used as well as version numbers of the dependencies
553(@pxref{Requirements}) in your message.
554
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555@node Setting Up the Daemon
556@section Setting Up the Daemon
557
558@cindex daemon
559Operations such as building a package or running the garbage collector
49e6291a 560are all performed by a specialized process, the @dfn{build daemon}, on
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561behalf of clients. Only the daemon may access the store and its
562associated database. Thus, any operation that manipulates the store
563goes through the daemon. For instance, command-line tools such as
e49951eb 564@command{guix package} and @command{guix build} communicate with the
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565daemon (@i{via} remote procedure calls) to instruct it what to do.
566
49e6291a 567The following sections explain how to prepare the build daemon's
f97c9175 568environment. See also @ref{Substitutes}, for information on how to allow
225dafde 569the daemon to download pre-built binaries.
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570
571@menu
572* Build Environment Setup:: Preparing the isolated build environment.
573* Daemon Offload Setup:: Offloading builds to remote machines.
574@end menu
575
576@node Build Environment Setup
577@subsection Build Environment Setup
578
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579In a standard multi-user setup, Guix and its daemon---the
580@command{guix-daemon} program---are installed by the system
834129e0 581administrator; @file{/gnu/store} is owned by @code{root} and
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582@command{guix-daemon} runs as @code{root}. Unprivileged users may use
583Guix tools to build packages or otherwise access the store, and the
584daemon will do it on their behalf, ensuring that the store is kept in a
585consistent state, and allowing built packages to be shared among users.
586
587@cindex build users
588When @command{guix-daemon} runs as @code{root}, you may not want package
589build processes themselves to run as @code{root} too, for obvious
590security reasons. To avoid that, a special pool of @dfn{build users}
591should be created for use by build processes started by the daemon.
592These build users need not have a shell and a home directory: they will
593just be used when the daemon drops @code{root} privileges in build
594processes. Having several such users allows the daemon to launch
595distinct build processes under separate UIDs, which guarantees that they
596do not interfere with each other---an essential feature since builds are
597regarded as pure functions (@pxref{Introduction}).
598
599On a GNU/Linux system, a build user pool may be created like this (using
600Bash syntax and the @code{shadow} commands):
601
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602@c See http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-guix/2013-01/msg00239.html
603@c for why `-G' is needed.
bd5e766b 604@example
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605# groupadd --system guixbuild
606# for i in `seq -w 1 10`;
bd5e766b 607 do
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608 useradd -g guixbuild -G guixbuild \
609 -d /var/empty -s `which nologin` \
610 -c "Guix build user $i" --system \
611 guixbuilder$i;
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612 done
613@end example
614
615@noindent
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616The number of build users determines how many build jobs may run in
617parallel, as specified by the @option{--max-jobs} option
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618(@pxref{Invoking guix-daemon, @option{--max-jobs}}). The
619@code{guix-daemon} program may then be run as @code{root} with the
620following command@footnote{If your machine uses the systemd init system,
621dropping the @file{@var{prefix}/lib/systemd/system/guix-daemon.service}
622file in @file{/etc/systemd/system} will ensure that
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623@command{guix-daemon} is automatically started. Similarly, if your
624machine uses the Upstart init system, drop the
625@file{@var{prefix}/lib/upstart/system/guix-daemon.conf}
626file in @file{/etc/init}.}:
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627
628@example
cfc149dc 629# guix-daemon --build-users-group=guixbuild
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630@end example
631
e900c503 632@cindex chroot
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633@noindent
634This way, the daemon starts build processes in a chroot, under one of
cfc149dc 635the @code{guixbuilder} users. On GNU/Linux, by default, the chroot
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636environment contains nothing but:
637
638@c Keep this list in sync with libstore/build.cc! -----------------------
639@itemize
640@item
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641a minimal @code{/dev} directory, created mostly independently from the
642host @code{/dev}@footnote{``Mostly'', because while the set of files
643that appear in the chroot's @code{/dev} is fixed, most of these files
644can only be created if the host has them.};
645
646@item
f97c9175 647the @code{/proc} directory; it only shows the processes of the container
4743a4da 648since a separate PID name space is used;
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649
650@item
651@file{/etc/passwd} with an entry for the current user and an entry for
652user @file{nobody};
653
654@item
655@file{/etc/group} with an entry for the user's group;
656
657@item
658@file{/etc/hosts} with an entry that maps @code{localhost} to
659@code{127.0.0.1};
660
661@item
662a writable @file{/tmp} directory.
663@end itemize
b095792f 664
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665You can influence the directory where the daemon stores build trees
666@i{via} the @code{TMPDIR} environment variable. However, the build tree
f97c9175 667within the chroot is always called @file{/tmp/guix-build-@var{name}.drv-0},
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668where @var{name} is the derivation name---e.g., @code{coreutils-8.24}.
669This way, the value of @code{TMPDIR} does not leak inside build
670environments, which avoids discrepancies in cases where build processes
671capture the name of their build tree.
672
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673@vindex http_proxy
674The daemon also honors the @code{http_proxy} environment variable for
675HTTP downloads it performs, be it for fixed-output derivations
676(@pxref{Derivations}) or for substitutes (@pxref{Substitutes}).
677
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678If you are installing Guix as an unprivileged user, it is still possible
679to run @command{guix-daemon} provided you pass @code{--disable-chroot}.
680However, build processes will not be isolated from one another, and not
681from the rest of the system. Thus, build processes may interfere with
682each other, and may access programs, libraries, and other files
683available on the system---making it much harder to view them as
684@emph{pure} functions.
bd5e766b 685
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686
687@node Daemon Offload Setup
688@subsection Using the Offload Facility
689
690@cindex offloading
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691@cindex build hook
692When desired, the build daemon can @dfn{offload}
693derivation builds to other machines
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694running Guix, using the @code{offload} @dfn{build hook}. When that
695feature is enabled, a list of user-specified build machines is read from
f97c9175 696@file{/etc/guix/machines.scm}; every time a build is requested, for
49e6291a 697instance via @code{guix build}, the daemon attempts to offload it to one
f97c9175 698of the machines that satisfy the constraints of the derivation, in
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699particular its system type---e.g., @file{x86_64-linux}. Missing
700prerequisites for the build are copied over SSH to the target machine,
701which then proceeds with the build; upon success the output(s) of the
702build are copied back to the initial machine.
703
4ec2e92d 704The @file{/etc/guix/machines.scm} file typically looks like this:
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705
706@example
707(list (build-machine
708 (name "eightysix.example.org")
709 (system "x86_64-linux")
710 (user "bob")
711 (speed 2.)) ; incredibly fast!
712
713 (build-machine
714 (name "meeps.example.org")
715 (system "mips64el-linux")
716 (user "alice")
717 (private-key
718 (string-append (getenv "HOME")
c4fdfd6f 719 "/.lsh/identity-for-guix"))))
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720@end example
721
722@noindent
723In the example above we specify a list of two build machines, one for
724the @code{x86_64} architecture and one for the @code{mips64el}
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725architecture.
726
727In fact, this file is---not surprisingly!---a Scheme file that is
728evaluated when the @code{offload} hook is started. Its return value
729must be a list of @code{build-machine} objects. While this example
730shows a fixed list of build machines, one could imagine, say, using
731DNS-SD to return a list of potential build machines discovered in the
732local network (@pxref{Introduction, Guile-Avahi,, guile-avahi, Using
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733Avahi in Guile Scheme Programs}). The @code{build-machine} data type is
734detailed below.
4ec2e92d 735
c678a4ee 736@deftp {Data Type} build-machine
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737This data type represents build machines to which the daemon may offload
738builds. The important fields are:
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739
740@table @code
741
742@item name
f97c9175 743The host name of the remote machine.
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744
745@item system
f97c9175 746The system type of the remote machine---e.g., @code{"x86_64-linux"}.
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747
748@item user
749The user account to use when connecting to the remote machine over SSH.
750Note that the SSH key pair must @emph{not} be passphrase-protected, to
751allow non-interactive logins.
752
753@end table
754
4ec2e92d 755A number of optional fields may be specified:
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756
757@table @code
758
cecd72d5 759@item port
f97c9175 760Port number of SSH server on the machine (default: 22).
cecd72d5 761
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762@item private-key
763The SSH private key file to use when connecting to the machine.
764
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765Currently offloading uses GNU@tie{}lsh as its SSH client
766(@pxref{Invoking lsh,,, GNU lsh Manual}). Thus, the key file here must
767be an lsh key file. This may change in the future, though.
768
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769@item parallel-builds
770The number of builds that may run in parallel on the machine (1 by
771default.)
772
773@item speed
774A ``relative speed factor''. The offload scheduler will tend to prefer
775machines with a higher speed factor.
776
777@item features
778A list of strings denoting specific features supported by the machine.
779An example is @code{"kvm"} for machines that have the KVM Linux modules
780and corresponding hardware support. Derivations can request features by
781name, and they will be scheduled on matching build machines.
782
783@end table
c678a4ee 784@end deftp
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785
786The @code{guix} command must be in the search path on the build
787machines, since offloading works by invoking the @code{guix archive} and
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788@code{guix build} commands. In addition, the Guix modules must be in
789@code{$GUILE_LOAD_PATH} on the build machine---you can check whether
790this is the case by running:
791
792@example
74273b6f 793lsh build-machine guile -c "'(use-modules (guix config))'"
c4fdfd6f 794@end example
49e6291a 795
f97c9175 796There is one last thing to do once @file{machines.scm} is in place. As
49e6291a 797explained above, when offloading, files are transferred back and forth
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798between the machine stores. For this to work, you first need to
799generate a key pair on each machine to allow the daemon to export signed
800archives of files from the store (@pxref{Invoking guix archive}):
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801
802@example
803# guix archive --generate-key
804@end example
805
806@noindent
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807Each build machine must authorize the key of the master machine so that
808it accepts store items it receives from the master:
809
810@example
811# guix archive --authorize < master-public-key.txt
812@end example
813
814@noindent
815Likewise, the master machine must authorize the key of each build machine.
816
817All the fuss with keys is here to express pairwise mutual trust
818relations between the master and the build machines. Concretely, when
819the master receives files from a build machine (and @i{vice versa}), its
820build daemon can make sure they are genuine, have not been tampered
821with, and that they are signed by an authorized key.
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822
823
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824@node Invoking guix-daemon
825@section Invoking @command{guix-daemon}
826
827The @command{guix-daemon} program implements all the functionality to
828access the store. This includes launching build processes, running the
829garbage collector, querying the availability of a build result, etc. It
830is normally run as @code{root} like this:
831
832@example
cfc149dc 833# guix-daemon --build-users-group=guixbuild
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834@end example
835
836@noindent
081145cf 837For details on how to set it up, @pxref{Setting Up the Daemon}.
bd5e766b 838
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839@cindex chroot
840@cindex container, build environment
841@cindex build environment
842@cindex reproducible builds
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843By default, @command{guix-daemon} launches build processes under
844different UIDs, taken from the build group specified with
845@code{--build-users-group}. In addition, each build process is run in a
846chroot environment that only contains the subset of the store that the
847build process depends on, as specified by its derivation
848(@pxref{Programming Interface, derivation}), plus a set of specific
849system directories. By default, the latter contains @file{/dev} and
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850@file{/dev/pts}. Furthermore, on GNU/Linux, the build environment is a
851@dfn{container}: in addition to having its own file system tree, it has
852a separate mount name space, its own PID name space, network name space,
853etc. This helps achieve reproducible builds (@pxref{Features}).
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855When the daemon performs a build on behalf of the user, it creates a
856build directory under @file{/tmp} or under the directory specified by
857its @code{TMPDIR} environment variable; this directory is shared with
858the container for the duration of the build. Be aware that using a
859directory other than @file{/tmp} can affect build results---for example,
860with a longer directory name, a build process that uses Unix-domain
861sockets might hit the name length limitation for @code{sun_path}, which
862it would otherwise not hit.
863
864The build directory is automatically deleted upon completion, unless the
865build failed and the client specified @option{--keep-failed}
866(@pxref{Invoking guix build, @option{--keep-failed}}).
867
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868The following command-line options are supported:
869
870@table @code
871@item --build-users-group=@var{group}
872Take users from @var{group} to run build processes (@pxref{Setting Up
873the Daemon, build users}).
874
6858f9d1 875@item --no-substitutes
b5385b52 876@cindex substitutes
6858f9d1 877Do not use substitutes for build products. That is, always build things
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878locally instead of allowing downloads of pre-built binaries
879(@pxref{Substitutes}).
6858f9d1 880
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881By default substitutes are used, unless the client---such as the
882@command{guix package} command---is explicitly invoked with
883@code{--no-substitutes}.
884
885When the daemon runs with @code{--no-substitutes}, clients can still
886explicitly enable substitution @i{via} the @code{set-build-options}
887remote procedure call (@pxref{The Store}).
888
9176607e 889@item --substitute-urls=@var{urls}
f8a8e0fe 890@anchor{daemon-substitute-urls}
9176607e 891Consider @var{urls} the default whitespace-separated list of substitute
ae806096 892source URLs. When this option is omitted, @indicateurl{http://hydra.gnu.org}
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893is used.
894
895This means that substitutes may be downloaded from @var{urls}, as long
896as they are signed by a trusted signature (@pxref{Substitutes}).
897
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898@cindex build hook
899@item --no-build-hook
900Do not use the @dfn{build hook}.
901
902The build hook is a helper program that the daemon can start and to
903which it submits build requests. This mechanism is used to offload
904builds to other machines (@pxref{Daemon Offload Setup}).
905
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906@item --cache-failures
907Cache build failures. By default, only successful builds are cached.
908
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909When this option is used, @command{guix gc --list-failures} can be used
910to query the set of store items marked as failed; @command{guix gc
911--clear-failures} removes store items from the set of cached failures.
912@xref{Invoking guix gc}.
913
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914@item --cores=@var{n}
915@itemx -c @var{n}
916Use @var{n} CPU cores to build each derivation; @code{0} means as many
917as available.
918
6efc160e 919The default value is @code{0}, but it may be overridden by clients, such
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920as the @code{--cores} option of @command{guix build} (@pxref{Invoking
921guix build}).
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922
923The effect is to define the @code{NIX_BUILD_CORES} environment variable
924in the build process, which can then use it to exploit internal
925parallelism---for instance, by running @code{make -j$NIX_BUILD_CORES}.
926
927@item --max-jobs=@var{n}
928@itemx -M @var{n}
929Allow at most @var{n} build jobs in parallel. The default value is
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930@code{1}. Setting it to @code{0} means that no builds will be performed
931locally; instead, the daemon will offload builds (@pxref{Daemon Offload
932Setup}), or simply fail.
bd5e766b 933
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934@item --rounds=@var{N}
935Build each derivation @var{n} times in a row, and raise an error if
936consecutive build results are not bit-for-bit identical. Note that this
937setting can be overridden by clients such as @command{guix build}
938(@pxref{Invoking guix build}).
939
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940@item --debug
941Produce debugging output.
942
943This is useful to debug daemon start-up issues, but then it may be
944overridden by clients, for example the @code{--verbosity} option of
e49951eb 945@command{guix build} (@pxref{Invoking guix build}).
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946
947@item --chroot-directory=@var{dir}
948Add @var{dir} to the build chroot.
949
950Doing this may change the result of build processes---for instance if
951they use optional dependencies found in @var{dir} when it is available,
952and not otherwise. For that reason, it is not recommended to do so.
953Instead, make sure that each derivation declares all the inputs that it
954needs.
955
956@item --disable-chroot
957Disable chroot builds.
958
959Using this option is not recommended since, again, it would allow build
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960processes to gain access to undeclared dependencies. It is necessary,
961though, when @command{guix-daemon} is running under an unprivileged user
962account.
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963
964@item --disable-log-compression
965Disable compression of the build logs.
966
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967Unless @code{--lose-logs} is used, all the build logs are kept in the
968@var{localstatedir}. To save space, the daemon automatically compresses
969them with bzip2 by default. This option disables that.
970
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971@item --disable-deduplication
972@cindex deduplication
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973Disable automatic file ``deduplication'' in the store.
974
1da983b9 975By default, files added to the store are automatically ``deduplicated'':
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976if a newly added file is identical to another one found in the store,
977the daemon makes the new file a hard link to the other file. This can
4988dd40 978noticeably reduce disk usage, at the expense of slightly increased
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979input/output load at the end of a build process. This option disables
980this optimization.
1da983b9 981
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982@item --gc-keep-outputs[=yes|no]
983Tell whether the garbage collector (GC) must keep outputs of live
984derivations.
985
986When set to ``yes'', the GC will keep the outputs of any live derivation
987available in the store---the @code{.drv} files. The default is ``no'',
988meaning that derivation outputs are kept only if they are GC roots.
989
990@item --gc-keep-derivations[=yes|no]
991Tell whether the garbage collector (GC) must keep derivations
992corresponding to live outputs.
993
994When set to ``yes'', as is the case by default, the GC keeps
995derivations---i.e., @code{.drv} files---as long as at least one of their
996outputs is live. This allows users to keep track of the origins of
997items in their store. Setting it to ``no'' saves a bit of disk space.
998
999Note that when both @code{--gc-keep-derivations} and
1000@code{--gc-keep-outputs} are used, the effect is to keep all the build
1001prerequisites (the sources, compiler, libraries, and other build-time
1002tools) of live objects in the store, regardless of whether these
1003prerequisites are live. This is convenient for developers since it
1004saves rebuilds or downloads.
1005
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1006@item --impersonate-linux-2.6
1007On Linux-based systems, impersonate Linux 2.6. This means that the
1008kernel's @code{uname} system call will report 2.6 as the release number.
1009
1010This might be helpful to build programs that (usually wrongfully) depend
1011on the kernel version number.
1012
1013@item --lose-logs
1014Do not keep build logs. By default they are kept under
ce33631f 1015@code{@var{localstatedir}/guix/log}.
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1016
1017@item --system=@var{system}
1018Assume @var{system} as the current system type. By default it is the
1019architecture/kernel pair found at configure time, such as
1020@code{x86_64-linux}.
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1021
1022@item --listen=@var{socket}
1023Listen for connections on @var{socket}, the file name of a Unix-domain
1024socket. The default socket is
1025@file{@var{localstatedir}/daemon-socket/socket}. This option is only
1026useful in exceptional circumstances, such as if you need to run several
1027daemons on the same machine.
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1028@end table
1029
1030
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1031@node Application Setup
1032@section Application Setup
1033
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1034When using Guix on top of GNU/Linux distribution other than GuixSD---a
1035so-called @dfn{foreign distro}---a few additional steps are needed to
1036get everything in place. Here are some of them.
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1037
1038@subsection Locales
1039
5c3c1427 1040@anchor{locales-and-locpath}
0e2d0213 1041@cindex locales, when not on GuixSD
5c3c1427 1042@vindex LOCPATH
85e57214 1043@vindex GUIX_LOCPATH
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1044Packages installed @i{via} Guix will not use the locale data of the
1045host system. Instead, you must first install one of the locale packages
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1046available with Guix and then define the @code{GUIX_LOCPATH} environment
1047variable:
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1048
1049@example
1050$ guix package -i glibc-locales
85e57214 1051$ export GUIX_LOCPATH=$HOME/.guix-profile/lib/locale
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1052@end example
1053
1054Note that the @code{glibc-locales} package contains data for all the
1055locales supported by the GNU@tie{}libc and weighs in at around
f97c9175 1056110@tie{}MiB. Alternatively, the @code{glibc-utf8-locales} is smaller but
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1057limited to a few UTF-8 locales.
1058
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1059The @code{GUIX_LOCPATH} variable plays a role similar to @code{LOCPATH}
1060(@pxref{Locale Names, @code{LOCPATH},, libc, The GNU C Library Reference
1061Manual}). There are two important differences though:
1062
1063@enumerate
1064@item
f97c9175 1065@code{GUIX_LOCPATH} is honored only by the libc in Guix, and not by the libc
85e57214 1066provided by foreign distros. Thus, using @code{GUIX_LOCPATH} allows you
f97c9175 1067to make sure the programs of the foreign distro will not end up loading
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1068incompatible locale data.
1069
1070@item
1071libc suffixes each entry of @code{GUIX_LOCPATH} with @code{/X.Y}, where
1072@code{X.Y} is the libc version---e.g., @code{2.22}. This means that,
1073should your Guix profile contain a mixture of programs linked against
1074different libc version, each libc version will only try to load locale
1075data in the right format.
1076@end enumerate
1077
1078This is important because the locale data format used by different libc
1079versions may be incompatible.
1080
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1081@subsection X11 Fonts
1082
4988dd40 1083The majority of graphical applications use Fontconfig to locate and
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1084load fonts and perform X11-client-side rendering. The @code{fontconfig}
1085package in Guix looks for fonts in @file{$HOME/.guix-profile}
0e2d0213 1086by default. Thus, to allow graphical applications installed with Guix
f97c9175 1087to display fonts, you have to install fonts with Guix as well.
0e2d0213 1088Essential font packages include @code{gs-fonts}, @code{font-dejavu}, and
8fe5b1d1 1089@code{font-gnu-freefont-ttf}.
0e2d0213 1090
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1091To display text written in Chinese languages, Japanese, or Korean in
1092graphical applications, consider installing
1093@code{font-adobe-source-han-sans} or @code{font-wqy-zenhei}. The former
1094has multiple outputs, one per language family (@pxref{Packages with
1095Multiple Outputs}). For instance, the following command installs fonts
1096for Chinese languages:
1097
1098@example
1099guix package -i font-adobe-source-han-sans:cn
1100@end example
1101
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1102@subsection Emacs Packages
1103
1104When you install Emacs packages with Guix, the elisp files may be placed
1105either in @file{$HOME/.guix-profile/share/emacs/site-lisp/} or in
1106sub-directories of
1107@file{$HOME/.guix-profile/share/emacs/site-lisp/guix.d/}. The latter
1108directory exists because potentially there may exist thousands of Emacs
1109packages and storing all their files in a single directory may be not
1110reliable (because of name conflicts). So we think using a separate
1111directory for each package is a good idea. It is very similar to how
1112the Emacs package system organizes the file structure (@pxref{Package
1113Files,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}).
1114
1115By default, Emacs (installed with Guix) ``knows'' where these packages
f97c9175 1116are placed, so you do not need to perform any configuration. If, for
6d97319c 1117some reason, you want to avoid auto-loading Emacs packages installed
f97c9175 1118with Guix, you can do so by running Emacs with @code{--no-site-file}
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1119option (@pxref{Init File,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}).
1120
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1121@c TODO What else?
1122
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1123@c *********************************************************************
1124@node Package Management
1125@chapter Package Management
1126
f8348b91 1127The purpose of GNU Guix is to allow users to easily install, upgrade, and
eeaf4427 1128remove software packages, without having to know about their build
f97c9175 1129procedures or dependencies. Guix also goes beyond this obvious set of
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1130features.
1131
1132This chapter describes the main features of Guix, as well as the package
c1941588 1133management tools it provides. Two user interfaces are provided for
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1134routine package management tasks: A command-line interface described below
1135(@pxref{Invoking guix package, @code{guix package}}), as well as a visual user
1136interface in Emacs described in a subsequent chapter (@pxref{Emacs Interface}).
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1137
1138@menu
1139* Features:: How Guix will make your life brighter.
e49951eb 1140* Invoking guix package:: Package installation, removal, etc.
c4202d60 1141* Substitutes:: Downloading pre-built binaries.
760c60d6 1142* Packages with Multiple Outputs:: Single source package, multiple outputs.
e49951eb 1143* Invoking guix gc:: Running the garbage collector.
f651b477 1144* Invoking guix pull:: Fetching the latest Guix and distribution.
760c60d6 1145* Invoking guix archive:: Exporting and importing store files.
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1146@end menu
1147
1148@node Features
1149@section Features
1150
1151When using Guix, each package ends up in the @dfn{package store}, in its
1152own directory---something that resembles
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1153@file{/gnu/store/xxx-package-1.2}, where @code{xxx} is a base32 string
1154(note that Guix comes with an Emacs extension to shorten those file
081145cf 1155names, @pxref{Emacs Prettify}.)
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1156
1157Instead of referring to these directories, users have their own
1158@dfn{profile}, which points to the packages that they actually want to
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1159use. These profiles are stored within each user's home directory, at
1160@code{$HOME/.guix-profile}.
eeaf4427 1161
821b0015 1162For example, @code{alice} installs GCC 4.7.2. As a result,
eeaf4427 1163@file{/home/alice/.guix-profile/bin/gcc} points to
834129e0 1164@file{/gnu/store/@dots{}-gcc-4.7.2/bin/gcc}. Now, on the same machine,
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1165@code{bob} had already installed GCC 4.8.0. The profile of @code{bob}
1166simply continues to point to
834129e0 1167@file{/gnu/store/@dots{}-gcc-4.8.0/bin/gcc}---i.e., both versions of GCC
821b0015 1168coexist on the same system without any interference.
eeaf4427 1169
e49951eb 1170The @command{guix package} command is the central tool to manage
f97c9175 1171packages (@pxref{Invoking guix package}). It operates on the per-user
821b0015 1172profiles, and can be used @emph{with normal user privileges}.
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1173
1174The command provides the obvious install, remove, and upgrade
1175operations. Each invocation is actually a @emph{transaction}: either
ba55b1cb 1176the specified operation succeeds, or nothing happens. Thus, if the
e49951eb 1177@command{guix package} process is terminated during the transaction,
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1178or if a power outage occurs during the transaction, then the user's
1179profile remains in its previous state, and remains usable.
1180
1181In addition, any package transaction may be @emph{rolled back}. So, if,
1182for example, an upgrade installs a new version of a package that turns
1183out to have a serious bug, users may roll back to the previous instance
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1184of their profile, which was known to work well. Similarly, the global
1185system configuration is subject to transactional upgrades and roll-back
1186(@pxref{Using the Configuration System}).
eeaf4427 1187
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1188All packages in the package store may be @emph{garbage-collected}.
1189Guix can determine which packages are still referenced by user
fe8ff028 1190profiles, and remove those that are provably no longer referenced
e49951eb 1191(@pxref{Invoking guix gc}). Users may also explicitly remove old
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1192generations of their profile so that the packages they refer to can be
1193collected.
eeaf4427 1194
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1195@cindex reproducibility
1196@cindex reproducible builds
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1197Finally, Guix takes a @dfn{purely functional} approach to package
1198management, as described in the introduction (@pxref{Introduction}).
834129e0 1199Each @file{/gnu/store} package directory name contains a hash of all the
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1200inputs that were used to build that package---compiler, libraries, build
1201scripts, etc. This direct correspondence allows users to make sure a
1202given package installation matches the current state of their
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1203distribution. It also helps maximize @dfn{build reproducibility}:
1204thanks to the isolated build environments that are used, a given build
1205is likely to yield bit-identical files when performed on different
1206machines (@pxref{Invoking guix-daemon, container}).
eeaf4427 1207
c4202d60 1208@cindex substitutes
eeaf4427 1209This foundation allows Guix to support @dfn{transparent binary/source
c4202d60 1210deployment}. When a pre-built binary for a @file{/gnu/store} item is
18f2887b 1211available from an external source---a @dfn{substitute}, Guix just
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1212downloads it and unpacks it;
1213otherwise, it builds the package from source, locally
1214(@pxref{Substitutes}).
eeaf4427 1215
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1216Control over the build environment is a feature that is also useful for
1217developers. The @command{guix environment} command allows developers of
1218a package to quickly set up the right development environment for their
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1219package, without having to manually install the dependencies of the
1220package into their profile (@pxref{Invoking guix environment}).
f5fd4fd2 1221
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1222@node Invoking guix package
1223@section Invoking @command{guix package}
eeaf4427 1224
e49951eb 1225The @command{guix package} command is the tool that allows users to
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1226install, upgrade, and remove packages, as well as rolling back to
1227previous configurations. It operates only on the user's own profile,
1228and works with normal user privileges (@pxref{Features}). Its syntax
1229is:
1230
1231@example
e49951eb 1232guix package @var{options}
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1233@end example
1234
ba55b1cb 1235Primarily, @var{options} specifies the operations to be performed during
eeaf4427 1236the transaction. Upon completion, a new profile is created, but
99bd74d5 1237previous @dfn{generations} of the profile remain available, should the user
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1238want to roll back.
1239
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1240For example, to remove @code{lua} and install @code{guile} and
1241@code{guile-cairo} in a single transaction:
1242
1243@example
1244guix package -r lua -i guile guile-cairo
1245@end example
1246
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1247@command{guix package} also supports a @dfn{declarative approach}
1248whereby the user specifies the exact set of packages to be available and
1249passes it @i{via} the @option{--manifest} option
1250(@pxref{profile-manifest, @option{--manifest}}).
1251
b9e5c0a9 1252For each user, a symlink to the user's default profile is automatically
0ec1af59 1253created in @file{$HOME/.guix-profile}. This symlink always points to the
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1254current generation of the user's default profile. Thus, users can add
1255@file{$HOME/.guix-profile/bin} to their @code{PATH} environment
1256variable, and so on.
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1257@cindex search paths
1258If you are not using the Guix System Distribution, consider adding the
1259following lines to your @file{~/.bash_profile} (@pxref{Bash Startup
1260Files,,, bash, The GNU Bash Reference Manual}) so that newly-spawned
1261shells get all the right environment variable definitions:
1262
1263@example
1264GUIX_PROFILE="$HOME/.guix-profile" \
1265source "$HOME/.guix-profile/etc/profile"
1266@end example
b9e5c0a9 1267
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1268In a multi-user setup, user profiles are stored in a place registered as
1269a @dfn{garbage-collector root}, which @file{$HOME/.guix-profile} points
1270to (@pxref{Invoking guix gc}). That directory is normally
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1271@code{@var{localstatedir}/profiles/per-user/@var{user}}, where
1272@var{localstatedir} is the value passed to @code{configure} as
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1273@code{--localstatedir}, and @var{user} is the user name. The
1274@file{per-user} directory is created when @command{guix-daemon} is
1275started, and the @var{user} sub-directory is created by @command{guix
1276package}.
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1277
1278The @var{options} can be among the following:
1279
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1280@table @code
1281
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1282@item --install=@var{package} @dots{}
1283@itemx -i @var{package} @dots{}
1284Install the specified @var{package}s.
eeaf4427 1285
6447738c 1286Each @var{package} may specify either a simple package name, such as
eeaf4427 1287@code{guile}, or a package name followed by a hyphen and version number,
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1288such as @code{guile-1.8.8} or simply @code{guile-1.8} (in the latter
1289case, the newest version prefixed by @code{1.8} is selected.)
1290
1291If no version number is specified, the
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1292newest available version will be selected. In addition, @var{package}
1293may contain a colon, followed by the name of one of the outputs of the
6e721c4d 1294package, as in @code{gcc:doc} or @code{binutils-2.22:lib}
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1295(@pxref{Packages with Multiple Outputs}). Packages with a corresponding
1296name (and optionally version) are searched for among the GNU
1297distribution modules (@pxref{Package Modules}).
eeaf4427 1298
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1299@cindex propagated inputs
1300Sometimes packages have @dfn{propagated inputs}: these are dependencies
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1301that automatically get installed along with the required package
1302(@pxref{package-propagated-inputs, @code{propagated-inputs} in
1303@code{package} objects}, for information about propagated inputs in
1304package definitions).
461572cc 1305
21461f27 1306@anchor{package-cmd-propagated-inputs}
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1307An example is the GNU MPC library: its C header files refer to those of
1308the GNU MPFR library, which in turn refer to those of the GMP library.
1309Thus, when installing MPC, the MPFR and GMP libraries also get installed
1310in the profile; removing MPC also removes MPFR and GMP---unless they had
f97c9175 1311also been explicitly installed by the user.
461572cc 1312
ba7ea5ce 1313Besides, packages sometimes rely on the definition of environment
5924080d 1314variables for their search paths (see explanation of
ba7ea5ce 1315@code{--search-paths} below). Any missing or possibly incorrect
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1316environment variable definitions are reported here.
1317
ef010c0f 1318@c XXX: keep me up-to-date
5924080d 1319Finally, when installing a GNU package, the tool reports the
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1320availability of a newer upstream version. In the future, it may provide
1321the option of installing directly from the upstream version, even if
1322that version is not yet in the distribution.
1323
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1324@item --install-from-expression=@var{exp}
1325@itemx -e @var{exp}
1326Install the package @var{exp} evaluates to.
1327
1328@var{exp} must be a Scheme expression that evaluates to a
1329@code{<package>} object. This option is notably useful to disambiguate
1330between same-named variants of a package, with expressions such as
1331@code{(@@ (gnu packages base) guile-final)}.
1332
1333Note that this option installs the first output of the specified
1334package, which may be insufficient when needing a specific output of a
1335multiple-output package.
1336
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1337@item --install-from-file=@var{file}
1338@itemx -f @var{file}
1339Install the package that the code within @var{file} evaluates to.
1340
1341As an example, @var{file} might contain a definition like this
1342(@pxref{Defining Packages}):
1343
1344@example
1345@verbatiminclude package-hello.scm
1346@end example
1347
1348Developers may find it useful to include such a @file{package.scm} file
f97c9175 1349in the root of their project source tree that can be used to test
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1350development snapshots and create reproducible development environments
1351(@pxref{Invoking guix environment}).
1352
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1353@item --remove=@var{package} @dots{}
1354@itemx -r @var{package} @dots{}
1355Remove the specified @var{package}s.
eeaf4427 1356
6447738c 1357As for @code{--install}, each @var{package} may specify a version number
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1358and/or output name in addition to the package name. For instance,
1359@code{-r glibc:debug} would remove the @code{debug} output of
1360@code{glibc}.
1361
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1362@item --upgrade[=@var{regexp} @dots{}]
1363@itemx -u [@var{regexp} @dots{}]
1364Upgrade all the installed packages. If one or more @var{regexp}s are
1365specified, upgrade only installed packages whose name matches a
d5f01e48 1366@var{regexp}. Also see the @code{--do-not-upgrade} option below.
eeaf4427 1367
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1368Note that this upgrades package to the latest version of packages found
1369in the distribution currently installed. To update your distribution,
1370you should regularly run @command{guix pull} (@pxref{Invoking guix
1371pull}).
1372
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1373@item --do-not-upgrade[=@var{regexp} @dots{}]
1374When used together with the @code{--upgrade} option, do @emph{not}
1375upgrade any packages whose name matches a @var{regexp}. For example, to
1376upgrade all packages in the current profile except those containing the
1377substring ``emacs'':
1378
1379@example
1380$ guix package --upgrade . --do-not-upgrade emacs
1381@end example
1382
99bd74d5 1383@item @anchor{profile-manifest}--manifest=@var{file}
1b676447 1384@itemx -m @var{file}
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1385@cindex profile declaration
1386@cindex profile manifest
1387Create a new generation of the profile from the manifest object
1b676447
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1388returned by the Scheme code in @var{file}.
1389
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1390This allows you to @emph{declare} the profile's contents rather than
1391constructing it through a sequence of @code{--install} and similar
1392commands. The advantage is that @var{file} can be put under version
1393control, copied to different machines to reproduce the same profile, and
1394so on.
1395
1396@c FIXME: Add reference to (guix profile) documentation when available.
1397@var{file} must return a @dfn{manifest} object, which is roughly a list
1398of packages:
1b676447 1399
99bd74d5 1400@findex packages->manifest
1b676447 1401@example
99bd74d5 1402(use-package-modules guile emacs)
1b676447
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1403
1404(packages->manifest
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1405 (list emacs
1406 guile-2.0
1b676447 1407 ;; Use a specific package output.
99bd74d5 1408 (list guile-2.0 "debug")))
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1409@end example
1410
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1411@item --roll-back
1412Roll back to the previous @dfn{generation} of the profile---i.e., undo
1413the last transaction.
1414
1415When combined with options such as @code{--install}, roll back occurs
1416before any other actions.
1417
d9307267 1418When rolling back from the first generation that actually contains
4b2bc804 1419installed packages, the profile is made to point to the @dfn{zeroth
f97c9175 1420generation}, which contains no files apart from its own metadata.
d9307267 1421
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1422After having rolled back, installing, removing, or upgrading packages
1423overwrites previous future generations. Thus, the history of the
1424generations in a profile is always linear.
82fe08ed 1425
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1426@item --switch-generation=@var{pattern}
1427@itemx -S @var{pattern}
1428Switch to a particular generation defined by @var{pattern}.
1429
1430@var{pattern} may be either a generation number or a number prefixed
1431with ``+'' or ``-''. The latter means: move forward/backward by a
1432specified number of generations. For example, if you want to return to
1433the latest generation after @code{--roll-back}, use
1434@code{--switch-generation=+1}.
1435
1436The difference between @code{--roll-back} and
1437@code{--switch-generation=-1} is that @code{--switch-generation} will
1438not make a zeroth generation, so if a specified generation does not
1439exist, the current generation will not be changed.
1440
dbc31ab2 1441@item --search-paths[=@var{kind}]
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1442@cindex search paths
1443Report environment variable definitions, in Bash syntax, that may be
1444needed in order to use the set of installed packages. These environment
1445variables are used to specify @dfn{search paths} for files used by some
1446of the installed packages.
1447
1448For example, GCC needs the @code{CPATH} and @code{LIBRARY_PATH}
1449environment variables to be defined so it can look for headers and
1450libraries in the user's profile (@pxref{Environment Variables,,, gcc,
1451Using the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC)}). If GCC and, say, the C
1452library are installed in the profile, then @code{--search-paths} will
1453suggest setting these variables to @code{@var{profile}/include} and
1454@code{@var{profile}/lib}, respectively.
1455
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1456The typical use case is to define these environment variables in the
1457shell:
1458
1459@example
1460$ eval `guix package --search-paths`
1461@end example
1462
1463@var{kind} may be one of @code{exact}, @code{prefix}, or @code{suffix},
1464meaning that the returned environment variable definitions will either
1465be exact settings, or prefixes or suffixes of the current value of these
1466variables. When omitted, @var{kind} defaults to @code{exact}.
1467
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1468This option can also be used to compute the @emph{combined} search paths
1469of several profiles. Consider this example:
1470
1471@example
1472$ guix package -p foo -i guile
1473$ guix package -p bar -i guile-json
1474$ guix package -p foo -p bar --search-paths
1475@end example
1476
1477The last command above reports about the @code{GUILE_LOAD_PATH}
1478variable, even though, taken individually, neither @file{foo} nor
1479@file{bar} would lead to that recommendation.
1480
1481
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1482@item --profile=@var{profile}
1483@itemx -p @var{profile}
1484Use @var{profile} instead of the user's default profile.
1485
70915c1a 1486@item --verbose
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1487Produce verbose output. In particular, emit the build log of the
1488environment on the standard error port.
70915c1a 1489
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1490@item --bootstrap
1491Use the bootstrap Guile to build the profile. This option is only
1492useful to distribution developers.
1493
1494@end table
1495
f97c9175 1496In addition to these actions, @command{guix package} supports the
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1497following options to query the current state of a profile, or the
1498availability of packages:
eeaf4427 1499
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1500@table @option
1501
acc08466
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1502@item --search=@var{regexp}
1503@itemx -s @var{regexp}
b110869d 1504@cindex searching for packages
5763ad92 1505List the available packages whose name, synopsis, or description matches
f97c9175 1506@var{regexp}. Print all the metadata of matching packages in
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1507@code{recutils} format (@pxref{Top, GNU recutils databases,, recutils,
1508GNU recutils manual}).
acc08466 1509
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1510This allows specific fields to be extracted using the @command{recsel}
1511command, for instance:
1512
1513@example
e49951eb 1514$ guix package -s malloc | recsel -p name,version
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1515name: glibc
1516version: 2.17
1517
1518name: libgc
1519version: 7.2alpha6
1520@end example
acc08466 1521
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1522Similarly, to show the name of all the packages available under the
1523terms of the GNU@tie{}LGPL version 3:
1524
1525@example
1526$ guix package -s "" | recsel -p name -e 'license ~ "LGPL 3"'
1527name: elfutils
1528
1529name: gmp
1530@dots{}
1531@end example
1532
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1533It is also possible to refine search results using several @code{-s}
1534flags. For example, the following command returns a list of board
1535games:
1536
1537@example
1538$ guix package -s '\<board\>' -s game | recsel -p name
1539name: gnubg
1540@dots{}
1541@end example
1542
1543If we were to omit @code{-s game}, we would also get software packages
1544that deal with printed circuit boards; removing the angle brackets
1545around @code{board} would further add packages that have to do with
1546keyboards.
1547
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1548And now for a more elaborate example. The following command searches
1549for cryptographic libraries, filters out Haskell, Perl, Python, and Ruby
1550libraries, and prints the name and synopsis of the matching packages:
1551
1552@example
1553$ guix package -s crypto -s library | \
1554 recsel -e '! (name ~ "^(ghc|perl|python|ruby)")' -p name,synopsis
1555@end example
1556
1557@noindent
1558@xref{Selection Expressions,,, recutils, GNU recutils manual}, for more
1559information on @dfn{selection expressions} for @code{recsel -e}.
1560
2aa6efb0
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1561@item --show=@var{package}
1562Show details about @var{package}, taken from the list of available packages, in
1563@code{recutils} format (@pxref{Top, GNU recutils databases,, recutils, GNU
1564recutils manual}).
1565
1566@example
1567$ guix package --show=python | recsel -p name,version
1568name: python
1569version: 2.7.6
1570
1571name: python
1572version: 3.3.5
1573@end example
1574
1575You may also specify the full name of a package to only get details about a
1576specific version of it:
1577@example
1578$ guix package --show=python-3.3.5 | recsel -p name,version
1579name: python
1580version: 3.3.5
1581@end example
1582
1583
1584
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1585@item --list-installed[=@var{regexp}]
1586@itemx -I [@var{regexp}]
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1587List the currently installed packages in the specified profile, with the
1588most recently installed packages shown last. When @var{regexp} is
1589specified, list only installed packages whose name matches @var{regexp}.
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1590
1591For each installed package, print the following items, separated by
1592tabs: the package name, its version string, the part of the package that
1593is installed (for instance, @code{out} for the default output,
1594@code{include} for its headers, etc.), and the path of this package in
1595the store.
1596
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1597@item --list-available[=@var{regexp}]
1598@itemx -A [@var{regexp}]
5763ad92 1599List packages currently available in the distribution for this system
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1600(@pxref{GNU Distribution}). When @var{regexp} is specified, list only
1601installed packages whose name matches @var{regexp}.
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1602
1603For each package, print the following items separated by tabs: its name,
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1604its version string, the parts of the package (@pxref{Packages with
1605Multiple Outputs}), and the source location of its definition.
64fc89b6 1606
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1607@item --list-generations[=@var{pattern}]
1608@itemx -l [@var{pattern}]
1609Return a list of generations along with their creation dates; for each
1610generation, show the installed packages, with the most recently
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1611installed packages shown last. Note that the zeroth generation is never
1612shown.
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1613
1614For each installed package, print the following items, separated by
1615tabs: the name of a package, its version string, the part of the package
1616that is installed (@pxref{Packages with Multiple Outputs}), and the
1617location of this package in the store.
1618
1619When @var{pattern} is used, the command returns only matching
1620generations. Valid patterns include:
1621
1622@itemize
1623@item @emph{Integers and comma-separated integers}. Both patterns denote
1624generation numbers. For instance, @code{--list-generations=1} returns
1625the first one.
1626
1627And @code{--list-generations=1,8,2} outputs three generations in the
1628specified order. Neither spaces nor trailing commas are allowed.
1629
1630@item @emph{Ranges}. @code{--list-generations=2..9} prints the
1631specified generations and everything in between. Note that the start of
f97c9175 1632a range must be smaller than its end.
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1633
1634It is also possible to omit the endpoint. For example,
1635@code{--list-generations=2..}, returns all generations starting from the
1636second one.
1637
1638@item @emph{Durations}. You can also get the last @emph{N}@tie{}days, weeks,
1639or months by passing an integer along with the first letter of the
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1640duration. For example, @code{--list-generations=20d} lists generations
1641that are up to 20 days old.
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1642@end itemize
1643
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1644@item --delete-generations[=@var{pattern}]
1645@itemx -d [@var{pattern}]
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1646When @var{pattern} is omitted, delete all generations except the current
1647one.
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1648
1649This command accepts the same patterns as @option{--list-generations}.
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1650When @var{pattern} is specified, delete the matching generations. When
1651@var{pattern} specifies a duration, generations @emph{older} than the
1652specified duration match. For instance, @code{--delete-generations=1m}
1653deletes generations that are more than one month old.
1654
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1655If the current generation matches, it is @emph{not} deleted. Also, the
1656zeroth generation is never deleted.
b7884ca3 1657
f97c9175 1658Note that deleting generations prevents rolling back to them.
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1659Consequently, this command must be used with care.
1660
733b4130 1661@end table
eeaf4427 1662
70ee5642 1663Finally, since @command{guix package} may actually start build
ccd7158d 1664processes, it supports all the common build options (@pxref{Common Build
f97c9175 1665Options}). It also supports package transformation options, such as
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1666@option{--with-source} (@pxref{Package Transformation Options}).
1667However, note that package transformations are lost when upgrading; to
f97c9175 1668preserve transformations across upgrades, you should define your own
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1669package variant in a Guile module and add it to @code{GUIX_PACKAGE_PATH}
1670(@pxref{Defining Packages}).
1671
70ee5642 1672
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1673@node Substitutes
1674@section Substitutes
1675
1676@cindex substitutes
1677@cindex pre-built binaries
1678Guix supports transparent source/binary deployment, which means that it
1679can either build things locally, or download pre-built items from a
1680server. We call these pre-built items @dfn{substitutes}---they are
1681substitutes for local build results. In many cases, downloading a
1682substitute is much faster than building things locally.
1683
1684Substitutes can be anything resulting from a derivation build
1685(@pxref{Derivations}). Of course, in the common case, they are
1686pre-built package binaries, but source tarballs, for instance, which
1687also result from derivation builds, can be available as substitutes.
1688
1689The @code{hydra.gnu.org} server is a front-end to a build farm that
1690builds packages from the GNU distribution continuously for some
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1691architectures, and makes them available as substitutes (@pxref{Emacs
1692Hydra}, for information on how to query the continuous integration
1693server). This is the
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1694default source of substitutes; it can be overridden by passing the
1695@option{--substitute-urls} option either to @command{guix-daemon}
1696(@pxref{daemon-substitute-urls,, @code{guix-daemon --substitute-urls}})
1697or to client tools such as @command{guix package}
1698(@pxref{client-substitute-urls,, client @option{--substitute-urls}
1699option}).
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1700
1701@cindex security
1702@cindex digital signatures
1703To allow Guix to download substitutes from @code{hydra.gnu.org}, you
1704must add its public key to the access control list (ACL) of archive
1705imports, using the @command{guix archive} command (@pxref{Invoking guix
1706archive}). Doing so implies that you trust @code{hydra.gnu.org} to not
1707be compromised and to serve genuine substitutes.
1708
1709This public key is installed along with Guix, in
1710@code{@var{prefix}/share/guix/hydra.gnu.org.pub}, where @var{prefix} is
1711the installation prefix of Guix. If you installed Guix from source,
1712make sure you checked the GPG signature of
1713@file{guix-@value{VERSION}.tar.gz}, which contains this public key file.
1714Then, you can run something like this:
1715
1716@example
1717# guix archive --authorize < hydra.gnu.org.pub
1718@end example
1719
1720Once this is in place, the output of a command like @code{guix build}
1721should change from something like:
1722
1723@example
1724$ guix build emacs --dry-run
1725The following derivations would be built:
1726 /gnu/store/yr7bnx8xwcayd6j95r2clmkdl1qh688w-emacs-24.3.drv
1727 /gnu/store/x8qsh1hlhgjx6cwsjyvybnfv2i37z23w-dbus-1.6.4.tar.gz.drv
1728 /gnu/store/1ixwp12fl950d15h2cj11c73733jay0z-alsa-lib-1.0.27.1.tar.bz2.drv
1729 /gnu/store/nlma1pw0p603fpfiqy7kn4zm105r5dmw-util-linux-2.21.drv
1730@dots{}
1731@end example
1732
1733@noindent
1734to something like:
1735
1736@example
1737$ guix build emacs --dry-run
1738The following files would be downloaded:
1739 /gnu/store/pk3n22lbq6ydamyymqkkz7i69wiwjiwi-emacs-24.3
1740 /gnu/store/2ygn4ncnhrpr61rssa6z0d9x22si0va3-libjpeg-8d
1741 /gnu/store/71yz6lgx4dazma9dwn2mcjxaah9w77jq-cairo-1.12.16
1742 /gnu/store/7zdhgp0n1518lvfn8mb96sxqfmvqrl7v-libxrender-0.9.7
1743@dots{}
1744@end example
1745
1746@noindent
1747This indicates that substitutes from @code{hydra.gnu.org} are usable and
1748will be downloaded, when possible, for future builds.
1749
1750Guix ignores substitutes that are not signed, or that are not signed by
ef27aa9c 1751one of the keys listed in the ACL. It also detects and raises an error
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1752when attempting to use a substitute that has been tampered with.
1753
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1754@vindex http_proxy
1755Substitutes are downloaded over HTTP. The @code{http_proxy} environment
1756variable can be set in the environment of @command{guix-daemon} and is
1757honored for downloads of substitutes. Note that the value of
1758@code{http_proxy} in the environment where @command{guix build},
1759@command{guix package}, and other client commands are run has
1760@emph{absolutely no effect}.
1761
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1762The substitute mechanism can be disabled globally by running
1763@code{guix-daemon} with @code{--no-substitutes} (@pxref{Invoking
1764guix-daemon}). It can also be disabled temporarily by passing the
1765@code{--no-substitutes} option to @command{guix package}, @command{guix
1766build}, and other command-line tools.
1767
1768
1769Today, each individual's control over their own computing is at the
1770mercy of institutions, corporations, and groups with enough power and
1771determination to subvert the computing infrastructure and exploit its
1772weaknesses. While using @code{hydra.gnu.org} substitutes can be
1773convenient, we encourage users to also build on their own, or even run
1774their own build farm, such that @code{hydra.gnu.org} is less of an
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1775interesting target. One way to help is by publishing the software you
1776build using @command{guix publish} so that others have one more choice
1777of server to download substitutes from (@pxref{Invoking guix publish}).
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1778
1779Guix has the foundations to maximize build reproducibility
1780(@pxref{Features}). In most cases, independent builds of a given
1781package or derivation should yield bit-identical results. Thus, through
1782a diverse set of independent package builds, we can strengthen the
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1783integrity of our systems. The @command{guix challenge} command aims to
1784help users assess substitute servers, and to assist developers in
1785finding out about non-deterministic package builds (@pxref{Invoking guix
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1786challenge}). Similarly, the @option{--check} option of @command{guix
1787build} allows users to check whether previously-installed substitutes
1788are genuine by rebuilding them locally (@pxref{build-check,
1789@command{guix build --check}}).
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1790
1791In the future, we want Guix to have support to publish and retrieve
1792binaries to/from other users, in a peer-to-peer fashion. If you would
1793like to discuss this project, join us on @email{guix-devel@@gnu.org}.
1794
1795
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1796@node Packages with Multiple Outputs
1797@section Packages with Multiple Outputs
1798
1799@cindex multiple-output packages
1800@cindex package outputs
1801
1802Often, packages defined in Guix have a single @dfn{output}---i.e., the
f97c9175 1803source package leads to exactly one directory in the store. When running
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1804@command{guix package -i glibc}, one installs the default output of the
1805GNU libc package; the default output is called @code{out}, but its name
1806can be omitted as shown in this command. In this particular case, the
1807default output of @code{glibc} contains all the C header files, shared
1808libraries, static libraries, Info documentation, and other supporting
1809files.
1810
1811Sometimes it is more appropriate to separate the various types of files
1812produced from a single source package into separate outputs. For
1813instance, the GLib C library (used by GTK+ and related packages)
1814installs more than 20 MiB of reference documentation as HTML pages.
1815To save space for users who do not need it, the documentation goes to a
1816separate output, called @code{doc}. To install the main GLib output,
1817which contains everything but the documentation, one would run:
1818
1819@example
1820guix package -i glib
1821@end example
1822
1823The command to install its documentation is:
1824
1825@example
1826guix package -i glib:doc
1827@end example
1828
1829Some packages install programs with different ``dependency footprints''.
f97c9175 1830For instance, the WordNet package installs both command-line tools and
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1831graphical user interfaces (GUIs). The former depend solely on the C
1832library, whereas the latter depend on Tcl/Tk and the underlying X
1833libraries. In this case, we leave the command-line tools in the default
1834output, whereas the GUIs are in a separate output. This allows users
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1835who do not need the GUIs to save space. The @command{guix size} command
1836can help find out about such situations (@pxref{Invoking guix size}).
88856916 1837@command{guix graph} can also be helpful (@pxref{Invoking guix graph}).
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1838
1839There are several such multiple-output packages in the GNU distribution.
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1840Other conventional output names include @code{lib} for libraries and
1841possibly header files, @code{bin} for stand-alone programs, and
1842@code{debug} for debugging information (@pxref{Installing Debugging
1843Files}). The outputs of a packages are listed in the third column of
1844the output of @command{guix package --list-available} (@pxref{Invoking
1845guix package}).
6e721c4d 1846
eeaf4427 1847
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1848@node Invoking guix gc
1849@section Invoking @command{guix gc}
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1850
1851@cindex garbage collector
f97c9175 1852Packages that are installed, but not used, may be @dfn{garbage-collected}.
e49951eb 1853The @command{guix gc} command allows users to explicitly run the garbage
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1854collector to reclaim space from the @file{/gnu/store} directory. It is
1855the @emph{only} way to remove files from @file{/gnu/store}---removing
1856files or directories manually may break it beyond repair!
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1857
1858The garbage collector has a set of known @dfn{roots}: any file under
834129e0 1859@file{/gnu/store} reachable from a root is considered @dfn{live} and
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1860cannot be deleted; any other file is considered @dfn{dead} and may be
1861deleted. The set of garbage collector roots includes default user
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1862profiles, and may be augmented with @command{guix build --root}, for
1863example (@pxref{Invoking guix build}).
fe8ff028 1864
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1865Prior to running @code{guix gc --collect-garbage} to make space, it is
1866often useful to remove old generations from user profiles; that way, old
1867package builds referenced by those generations can be reclaimed. This
1868is achieved by running @code{guix package --delete-generations}
1869(@pxref{Invoking guix package}).
1870
e49951eb 1871The @command{guix gc} command has three modes of operation: it can be
fe8ff028 1872used to garbage-collect any dead files (the default), to delete specific
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1873files (the @code{--delete} option), to print garbage-collector
1874information, or for more advanced queries. The garbage collection
1875options are as follows:
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1876
1877@table @code
1878@item --collect-garbage[=@var{min}]
1879@itemx -C [@var{min}]
834129e0 1880Collect garbage---i.e., unreachable @file{/gnu/store} files and
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1881sub-directories. This is the default operation when no option is
1882specified.
1883
1884When @var{min} is given, stop once @var{min} bytes have been collected.
1885@var{min} may be a number of bytes, or it may include a unit as a
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1886suffix, such as @code{MiB} for mebibytes and @code{GB} for gigabytes
1887(@pxref{Block size, size specifications,, coreutils, GNU Coreutils}).
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1888
1889When @var{min} is omitted, collect all the garbage.
1890
1891@item --delete
1892@itemx -d
1893Attempt to delete all the store files and directories specified as
1894arguments. This fails if some of the files are not in the store, or if
1895they are still live.
1896
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1897@item --list-failures
1898List store items corresponding to cached build failures.
1899
1900This prints nothing unless the daemon was started with
1901@option{--cache-failures} (@pxref{Invoking guix-daemon,
1902@option{--cache-failures}}).
1903
1904@item --clear-failures
1905Remove the specified store items from the failed-build cache.
1906
1907Again, this option only makes sense when the daemon is started with
1908@option{--cache-failures}. Otherwise, it does nothing.
1909
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1910@item --list-dead
1911Show the list of dead files and directories still present in the
1912store---i.e., files and directories no longer reachable from any root.
1913
1914@item --list-live
1915Show the list of live store files and directories.
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1916
1917@end table
1918
1919In addition, the references among existing store files can be queried:
1920
1921@table @code
1922
1923@item --references
1924@itemx --referrers
1925List the references (respectively, the referrers) of store files given
1926as arguments.
1927
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1928@item --requisites
1929@itemx -R
fcc58db6 1930@cindex closure
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1931List the requisites of the store files passed as arguments. Requisites
1932include the store files themselves, their references, and the references
1933of these, recursively. In other words, the returned list is the
1934@dfn{transitive closure} of the store files.
1935
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1936@xref{Invoking guix size}, for a tool to profile the size of the closure
1937of an element. @xref{Invoking guix graph}, for a tool to visualize
88856916 1938the graph of references.
fcc58db6 1939
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1940@end table
1941
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1942Lastly, the following options allow you to check the integrity of the
1943store and to control disk usage.
1944
1945@table @option
1946
1947@item --verify[=@var{options}]
1948@cindex integrity, of the store
1949@cindex integrity checking
1950Verify the integrity of the store.
1951
1952By default, make sure that all the store items marked as valid in the
f97c9175 1953database of the daemon actually exist in @file{/gnu/store}.
7770aafc 1954
f97c9175 1955When provided, @var{options} must be a comma-separated list containing one
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1956or more of @code{contents} and @code{repair}.
1957
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1958When passing @option{--verify=contents}, the daemon computse the
1959content hash of each store item and compares it against its hash in the
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1960database. Hash mismatches are reported as data corruptions. Because it
1961traverses @emph{all the files in the store}, this command can take a
1962long time, especially on systems with a slow disk drive.
1963
1964@cindex repairing the store
1965Using @option{--verify=repair} or @option{--verify=contents,repair}
1966causes the daemon to try to repair corrupt store items by fetching
1967substitutes for them (@pxref{Substitutes}). Because repairing is not
1968atomic, and thus potentially dangerous, it is available only to the
1969system administrator.
1970
1971@item --optimize
1972@cindex deduplication
1973Optimize the store by hard-linking identical files---this is
1974@dfn{deduplication}.
1975
1976The daemon performs deduplication after each successful build or archive
1977import, unless it was started with @code{--disable-deduplication}
1978(@pxref{Invoking guix-daemon, @code{--disable-deduplication}}). Thus,
1979this option is primarily useful when the daemon was running with
1980@code{--disable-deduplication}.
1981
1982@end table
eeaf4427 1983
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1984@node Invoking guix pull
1985@section Invoking @command{guix pull}
1986
1987Packages are installed or upgraded to the latest version available in
1988the distribution currently available on your local machine. To update
1989that distribution, along with the Guix tools, you must run @command{guix
1990pull}: the command downloads the latest Guix source code and package
1991descriptions, and deploys it.
1992
1993On completion, @command{guix package} will use packages and package
1994versions from this just-retrieved copy of Guix. Not only that, but all
1995the Guix commands and Scheme modules will also be taken from that latest
1996version. New @command{guix} sub-commands added by the update also
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1997become available.
1998
1999Any user can update their Guix copy using @command{guix pull}, and the
2000effect is limited to the user who run @command{guix pull}. For
2001instance, when user @code{root} runs @command{guix pull}, this has no
2002effect on the version of Guix that user @code{alice} sees, and vice
2003versa@footnote{Under the hood, @command{guix pull} updates the
2004@file{~/.config/guix/latest} symbolic link to point to the latest Guix,
2005and the @command{guix} command loads code from there.}.
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2006
2007The @command{guix pull} command is usually invoked with no arguments,
2008but it supports the following options:
2009
2010@table @code
2011@item --verbose
2012Produce verbose output, writing build logs to the standard error output.
2013
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2014@item --url=@var{url}
2015Download the source tarball of Guix from @var{url}.
2016
2017By default, the tarball is taken from its canonical address at
2018@code{gnu.org}, for the stable branch of Guix.
2019
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2020@item --bootstrap
2021Use the bootstrap Guile to build the latest Guix. This option is only
2022useful to Guix developers.
2023@end table
2024
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2025
2026@node Invoking guix archive
2027@section Invoking @command{guix archive}
2028
2029The @command{guix archive} command allows users to @dfn{export} files
2030from the store into a single archive, and to later @dfn{import} them.
2031In particular, it allows store files to be transferred from one machine
4d4c4816
AE
2032to the store on another machine.
2033
2034To export store files as an archive to standard output, run:
2035
2036@example
2037guix archive --export @var{options} @var{specifications}...
2038@end example
2039
2040@var{specifications} may be either store file names or package
2041specifications, as for @command{guix package} (@pxref{Invoking guix
2042package}). For instance, the following command creates an archive
2043containing the @code{gui} output of the @code{git} package and the main
2044output of @code{emacs}:
2045
2046@example
2047guix archive --export git:gui /gnu/store/...-emacs-24.3 > great.nar
2048@end example
2049
2050If the specified packages are not built yet, @command{guix archive}
2051automatically builds them. The build process may be controlled with the
2052common build options (@pxref{Common Build Options}).
2053
2054To transfer the @code{emacs} package to a machine connected over SSH,
2055one would run:
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2056
2057@example
56607088 2058guix archive --export -r emacs | ssh the-machine guix archive --import
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2059@end example
2060
87236aed 2061@noindent
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2062Similarly, a complete user profile may be transferred from one machine
2063to another like this:
2064
2065@example
2066guix archive --export -r $(readlink -f ~/.guix-profile) | \
2067 ssh the-machine guix-archive --import
2068@end example
2069
2070@noindent
2071However, note that, in both examples, all of @code{emacs} and the
2072profile as well as all of their dependencies are transferred (due to
f97c9175
AE
2073@code{-r}), regardless of what is already available in the store on the
2074target machine. The @code{--missing} option can help figure out which
2075items are missing from the target store.
87236aed 2076
760c60d6 2077Archives are stored in the ``Nix archive'' or ``Nar'' format, which is
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2078comparable in spirit to `tar', but with a few noteworthy differences
2079that make it more appropriate for our purposes. First, rather than
f97c9175 2080recording all Unix metadata for each file, the Nar format only mentions
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2081the file type (regular, directory, or symbolic link); Unix permissions
2082and owner/group are dismissed. Second, the order in which directory
2083entries are stored always follows the order of file names according to
2084the C locale collation order. This makes archive production fully
2085deterministic.
2086
2087When exporting, the daemon digitally signs the contents of the archive,
2088and that digital signature is appended. When importing, the daemon
2089verifies the signature and rejects the import in case of an invalid
2090signature or if the signing key is not authorized.
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2091@c FIXME: Add xref to daemon doc about signatures.
2092
2093The main options are:
2094
2095@table @code
2096@item --export
2097Export the specified store files or packages (see below.) Write the
2098resulting archive to the standard output.
2099
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2100Dependencies are @emph{not} included in the output, unless
2101@code{--recursive} is passed.
2102
2103@item -r
2104@itemx --recursive
2105When combined with @code{--export}, this instructs @command{guix
2106archive} to include dependencies of the given items in the archive.
2107Thus, the resulting archive is self-contained: it contains the closure
2108of the exported store items.
2109
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2110@item --import
2111Read an archive from the standard input, and import the files listed
2112therein into the store. Abort if the archive has an invalid digital
f82cc5fd
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2113signature, or if it is signed by a public key not among the authorized
2114keys (see @code{--authorize} below.)
554f26ec 2115
87236aed
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2116@item --missing
2117Read a list of store file names from the standard input, one per line,
2118and write on the standard output the subset of these files missing from
2119the store.
2120
554f26ec 2121@item --generate-key[=@var{parameters}]
f82cc5fd 2122@cindex signing, archives
f97c9175 2123Generate a new key pair for the daemon. This is a prerequisite before
554f26ec
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2124archives can be exported with @code{--export}. Note that this operation
2125usually takes time, because it needs to gather enough entropy to
2126generate the key pair.
2127
2128The generated key pair is typically stored under @file{/etc/guix}, in
2129@file{signing-key.pub} (public key) and @file{signing-key.sec} (private
867d8473
LC
2130key, which must be kept secret.) When @var{parameters} is omitted,
2131an ECDSA key using the Ed25519 curve is generated, or, for Libgcrypt
2132versions before 1.6.0, it is a 4096-bit RSA key.
f97c9175 2133Alternatively, @var{parameters} can specify
554f26ec
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2134@code{genkey} parameters suitable for Libgcrypt (@pxref{General
2135public-key related Functions, @code{gcry_pk_genkey},, gcrypt, The
2136Libgcrypt Reference Manual}).
f82cc5fd
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2137
2138@item --authorize
2139@cindex authorizing, archives
2140Authorize imports signed by the public key passed on standard input.
2141The public key must be in ``s-expression advanced format''---i.e., the
2142same format as the @file{signing-key.pub} file.
2143
2144The list of authorized keys is kept in the human-editable file
2145@file{/etc/guix/acl}. The file contains
2146@url{http://people.csail.mit.edu/rivest/Sexp.txt, ``advanced-format
2147s-expressions''} and is structured as an access-control list in the
2148@url{http://theworld.com/~cme/spki.txt, Simple Public-Key Infrastructure
2149(SPKI)}.
c6f8e9dd
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2150
2151@item --extract=@var{directory}
2152@itemx -x @var{directory}
2153Read a single-item archive as served by substitute servers
2154(@pxref{Substitutes}) and extract it to @var{directory}. This is a
2155low-level operation needed in only very narrow use cases; see below.
2156
2157For example, the following command extracts the substitute for Emacs
2158served by @code{hydra.gnu.org} to @file{/tmp/emacs}:
2159
2160@example
2161$ wget -O - \
2162 http://hydra.gnu.org/nar/@dots{}-emacs-24.5 \
2163 | bunzip2 | guix archive -x /tmp/emacs
2164@end example
2165
2166Single-item archives are different from multiple-item archives produced
2167by @command{guix archive --export}; they contain a single store item,
2168and they do @emph{not} embed a signature. Thus this operation does
2169@emph{no} signature verification and its output should be considered
2170unsafe.
2171
2172The primary purpose of this operation is to facilitate inspection of
2173archive contents coming from possibly untrusted substitute servers.
2174
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2175@end table
2176
c554de89
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2177@c *********************************************************************
2178@include emacs.texi
760c60d6 2179
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2180@c *********************************************************************
2181@node Programming Interface
2182@chapter Programming Interface
2183
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2184GNU Guix provides several Scheme programming interfaces (APIs) to
2185define, build, and query packages. The first interface allows users to
2186write high-level package definitions. These definitions refer to
2187familiar packaging concepts, such as the name and version of a package,
2188its build system, and its dependencies. These definitions can then be
2189turned into concrete build actions.
2190
ba55b1cb 2191Build actions are performed by the Guix daemon, on behalf of users. In a
3dc1970d 2192standard setup, the daemon has write access to the store---the
834129e0 2193@file{/gnu/store} directory---whereas users do not. The recommended
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2194setup also has the daemon perform builds in chroots, under a specific
2195build users, to minimize interference with the rest of the system.
2196
2197@cindex derivation
2198Lower-level APIs are available to interact with the daemon and the
2199store. To instruct the daemon to perform a build action, users actually
2200provide it with a @dfn{derivation}. A derivation is a low-level
2201representation of the build actions to be taken, and the environment in
2202which they should occur---derivations are to package definitions what
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2203assembly is to C programs. The term ``derivation'' comes from the fact
2204that build results @emph{derive} from them.
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2205
2206This chapter describes all these APIs in turn, starting from high-level
2207package definitions.
2208
568717fd 2209@menu
b860f382 2210* Defining Packages:: Defining new packages.
7458bd0a 2211* Build Systems:: Specifying how packages are built.
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2212* The Store:: Manipulating the package store.
2213* Derivations:: Low-level interface to package derivations.
2214* The Store Monad:: Purely functional interface to the store.
21b679f6 2215* G-Expressions:: Manipulating build expressions.
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2216@end menu
2217
2218@node Defining Packages
2219@section Defining Packages
2220
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2221The high-level interface to package definitions is implemented in the
2222@code{(guix packages)} and @code{(guix build-system)} modules. As an
2223example, the package definition, or @dfn{recipe}, for the GNU Hello
2224package looks like this:
2225
2226@example
e7f34eb0
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2227(define-module (gnu packages hello)
2228 #:use-module (guix packages)
2229 #:use-module (guix download)
2230 #:use-module (guix build-system gnu)
a6dcdcac
SB
2231 #:use-module (guix licenses)
2232 #:use-module (gnu packages gawk))
b22a12fd 2233
79f5dd59 2234(define-public hello
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2235 (package
2236 (name "hello")
17d8e33f 2237 (version "2.10")
3dc1970d 2238 (source (origin
17d8e33f
ML
2239 (method url-fetch)
2240 (uri (string-append "mirror://gnu/hello/hello-" version
2241 ".tar.gz"))
2242 (sha256
2243 (base32
2244 "0ssi1wpaf7plaswqqjwigppsg5fyh99vdlb9kzl7c9lng89ndq1i"))))
3dc1970d 2245 (build-system gnu-build-system)
7458bd0a 2246 (arguments `(#:configure-flags '("--enable-silent-rules")))
3dc1970d 2247 (inputs `(("gawk" ,gawk)))
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2248 (synopsis "Hello, GNU world: An example GNU package")
2249 (description "Guess what GNU Hello prints!")
3dc1970d 2250 (home-page "http://www.gnu.org/software/hello/")
b22a12fd 2251 (license gpl3+)))
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2252@end example
2253
2254@noindent
2255Without being a Scheme expert, the reader may have guessed the meaning
f97c9175
AE
2256of the various fields here. This expression binds the variable
2257@code{hello} to a @code{<package>} object, which is essentially a record
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2258(@pxref{SRFI-9, Scheme records,, guile, GNU Guile Reference Manual}).
2259This package object can be inspected using procedures found in the
2260@code{(guix packages)} module; for instance, @code{(package-name hello)}
2261returns---surprise!---@code{"hello"}.
2262
2f7d2d91
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2263With luck, you may be able to import part or all of the definition of
2264the package you are interested in from another repository, using the
2265@code{guix import} command (@pxref{Invoking guix import}).
2266
f97c9175 2267In the example above, @var{hello} is defined in a module of its own,
e7f34eb0
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2268@code{(gnu packages hello)}. Technically, this is not strictly
2269necessary, but it is convenient to do so: all the packages defined in
2270modules under @code{(gnu packages @dots{})} are automatically known to
2271the command-line tools (@pxref{Package Modules}).
2272
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2273There are a few points worth noting in the above package definition:
2274
2275@itemize
2276@item
a2bf4907
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2277The @code{source} field of the package is an @code{<origin>} object
2278(@pxref{origin Reference}, for the complete reference).
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2279Here, the @code{url-fetch} method from @code{(guix download)} is used,
2280meaning that the source is a file to be downloaded over FTP or HTTP.
2281
2282The @code{mirror://gnu} prefix instructs @code{url-fetch} to use one of
2283the GNU mirrors defined in @code{(guix download)}.
2284
2285The @code{sha256} field specifies the expected SHA256 hash of the file
2286being downloaded. It is mandatory, and allows Guix to check the
2287integrity of the file. The @code{(base32 @dots{})} form introduces the
6c365eca 2288base32 representation of the hash. You can obtain this information with
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2289@code{guix download} (@pxref{Invoking guix download}) and @code{guix
2290hash} (@pxref{Invoking guix hash}).
3dc1970d 2291
f9cc8971
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2292@cindex patches
2293When needed, the @code{origin} form can also have a @code{patches} field
2294listing patches to be applied, and a @code{snippet} field giving a
2295Scheme expression to modify the source code.
2296
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2297@item
2298@cindex GNU Build System
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2299The @code{build-system} field specifies the procedure to build the
2300package (@pxref{Build Systems}). Here, @var{gnu-build-system}
2301represents the familiar GNU Build System, where packages may be
2302configured, built, and installed with the usual @code{./configure &&
2303make && make check && make install} command sequence.
2304
2305@item
2306The @code{arguments} field specifies options for the build system
2307(@pxref{Build Systems}). Here it is interpreted by
2308@var{gnu-build-system} as a request run @file{configure} with the
2309@code{--enable-silent-rules} flag.
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2310
2311@item
2312The @code{inputs} field specifies inputs to the build process---i.e.,
2313build-time or run-time dependencies of the package. Here, we define an
2314input called @code{"gawk"} whose value is that of the @var{gawk}
2315variable; @var{gawk} is itself bound to a @code{<package>} object.
2316
2317Note that GCC, Coreutils, Bash, and other essential tools do not need to
2318be specified as inputs here. Instead, @var{gnu-build-system} takes care
7458bd0a 2319of ensuring that they are present (@pxref{Build Systems}).
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2320
2321However, any other dependencies need to be specified in the
2322@code{inputs} field. Any dependency not specified here will simply be
2323unavailable to the build process, possibly leading to a build failure.
2324@end itemize
2325
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2326@xref{package Reference}, for a full description of possible fields.
2327
2f7d2d91 2328Once a package definition is in place, the
e49951eb 2329package may actually be built using the @code{guix build} command-line
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2330tool (@pxref{Invoking guix build}). You can easily jump back to the
2331package definition using the @command{guix edit} command
2332(@pxref{Invoking guix edit}).
2333@xref{Packaging Guidelines}, for
b4f5e0e8
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2334more information on how to test package definitions, and
2335@ref{Invoking guix lint}, for information on how to check a definition
2336for style conformance.
2337
f97c9175 2338Finally, updating the package definition to a new upstream version
7458bd0a
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2339can be partly automated by the @command{guix refresh} command
2340(@pxref{Invoking guix refresh}).
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2341
2342Behind the scenes, a derivation corresponding to the @code{<package>}
2343object is first computed by the @code{package-derivation} procedure.
834129e0 2344That derivation is stored in a @code{.drv} file under @file{/gnu/store}.
ba55b1cb 2345The build actions it prescribes may then be realized by using the
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2346@code{build-derivations} procedure (@pxref{The Store}).
2347
2348@deffn {Scheme Procedure} package-derivation @var{store} @var{package} [@var{system}]
59688fc4
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2349Return the @code{<derivation>} object of @var{package} for @var{system}
2350(@pxref{Derivations}).
3dc1970d
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2351
2352@var{package} must be a valid @code{<package>} object, and @var{system}
2353must be a string denoting the target system type---e.g.,
2354@code{"x86_64-linux"} for an x86_64 Linux-based GNU system. @var{store}
2355must be a connection to the daemon, which operates on the store
2356(@pxref{The Store}).
2357@end deffn
568717fd 2358
9c1edabd
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2359@noindent
2360@cindex cross-compilation
2361Similarly, it is possible to compute a derivation that cross-builds a
2362package for some other system:
2363
2364@deffn {Scheme Procedure} package-cross-derivation @var{store} @
2365 @var{package} @var{target} [@var{system}]
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2366Return the @code{<derivation>} object of @var{package} cross-built from
2367@var{system} to @var{target}.
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2368
2369@var{target} must be a valid GNU triplet denoting the target hardware
2370and operating system, such as @code{"mips64el-linux-gnu"}
2371(@pxref{Configuration Names, GNU configuration triplets,, configure, GNU
2372Configure and Build System}).
2373@end deffn
2374
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2375@menu
2376* package Reference :: The package data type.
2377* origin Reference:: The origin data type.
2378@end menu
2379
2380
2381@node package Reference
2382@subsection @code{package} Reference
2383
2384This section summarizes all the options available in @code{package}
2385declarations (@pxref{Defining Packages}).
2386
2387@deftp {Data Type} package
2388This is the data type representing a package recipe.
2389
2390@table @asis
2391@item @code{name}
2392The name of the package, as a string.
2393
2394@item @code{version}
2395The version of the package, as a string.
2396
2397@item @code{source}
2398An origin object telling how the source code for the package should be
2399acquired (@pxref{origin Reference}).
2400
2401@item @code{build-system}
2402The build system that should be used to build the package (@pxref{Build
2403Systems}).
2404
2405@item @code{arguments} (default: @code{'()})
2406The arguments that should be passed to the build system. This is a
2407list, typically containing sequential keyword-value pairs.
2408
2409@item @code{inputs} (default: @code{'()})
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2410@itemx @code{native-inputs} (default: @code{'()})
2411@itemx @code{propagated-inputs} (default: @code{'()})
2412@cindex inputs, of packages
2413These fields list dependencies of the package. Each one is a list of
2414tuples, where each tuple has a label for the input (a string) as its
2415first element, a package, origin, or derivation as its second element,
2416and optionally the name of the output thereof that should be used, which
2417defaults to @code{"out"} (@pxref{Packages with Multiple Outputs}, for
f97c9175 2418more on package outputs). For example, the list below specifies three
70650c68 2419inputs:
87eafdbd 2420
70650c68
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2421@example
2422`(("libffi" ,libffi)
2423 ("libunistring" ,libunistring)
2424 ("glib:bin" ,glib "bin")) ;the "bin" output of Glib
2425@end example
2426
2427@cindex cross compilation, package dependencies
2428The distinction between @code{native-inputs} and @code{inputs} is
2429necessary when considering cross-compilation. When cross-compiling,
2430dependencies listed in @code{inputs} are built for the @emph{target}
2431architecture; conversely, dependencies listed in @code{native-inputs}
2432are built for the architecture of the @emph{build} machine.
2433
f97c9175
AE
2434@code{native-inputs} is typically used to list tools needed at
2435build time, but not at run time, such as Autoconf, Automake, pkg-config,
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2436Gettext, or Bison. @command{guix lint} can report likely mistakes in
2437this area (@pxref{Invoking guix lint}).
2438
2439@anchor{package-propagated-inputs}
2440Lastly, @code{propagated-inputs} is similar to @code{inputs}, but the
f97c9175
AE
2441specified packages will be automatically installed alongside the package
2442they belong to (@pxref{package-cmd-propagated-inputs, @command{guix
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LC
2443package}}, for information on how @command{guix package} deals with
2444propagated inputs.)
21461f27 2445
e0508b6b
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2446For example this is necessary when a C/C++ library needs headers of
2447another library to compile, or when a pkg-config file refers to another
2448one @i{via} its @code{Requires} field.
2449
f97c9175
AE
2450Another example where @code{propagated-inputs} is useful is for languages
2451that lack a facility to record the run-time search path akin to the
2452@code{RUNPATH}of ELF files; this includes Guile, Python, Perl, GHC, and
e0508b6b
LC
2453more. To ensure that libraries written in those languages can find
2454library code they depend on at run time, run-time dependencies must be
2455listed in @code{propagated-inputs} rather than @code{inputs}.
87eafdbd 2456
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2457@item @code{self-native-input?} (default: @code{#f})
2458This is a Boolean field telling whether the package should use itself as
2459a native input when cross-compiling.
2460
2461@item @code{outputs} (default: @code{'("out")})
2462The list of output names of the package. @xref{Packages with Multiple
2463Outputs}, for typical uses of additional outputs.
2464
2465@item @code{native-search-paths} (default: @code{'()})
2466@itemx @code{search-paths} (default: @code{'()})
2467A list of @code{search-path-specification} objects describing
2468search-path environment variables honored by the package.
2469
2470@item @code{replacement} (default: @code{#f})
f97c9175 2471This must be either @code{#f} or a package object that will be used as a
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2472@dfn{replacement} for this package. @xref{Security Updates, grafts},
2473for details.
2474
2475@item @code{synopsis}
2476A one-line description of the package.
2477
2478@item @code{description}
2479A more elaborate description of the package.
2480
2481@item @code{license}
f97c9175
AE
2482The license of the package; a value from @code{(guix licenses)},
2483or a list of such values.
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2484
2485@item @code{home-page}
2486The URL to the home-page of the package, as a string.
2487
2488@item @code{supported-systems} (default: @var{%supported-systems})
2489The list of systems supported by the package, as strings of the form
2490@code{architecture-kernel}, for example @code{"x86_64-linux"}.
2491
2492@item @code{maintainers} (default: @code{'()})
2493The list of maintainers of the package, as @code{maintainer} objects.
2494
2495@item @code{location} (default: source location of the @code{package} form)
f97c9175 2496The source location of the package. It is useful to override this when
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2497inheriting from another package, in which case this field is not
2498automatically corrected.
2499@end table
2500@end deftp
2501
2502
2503@node origin Reference
2504@subsection @code{origin} Reference
2505
2506This section summarizes all the options available in @code{origin}
2507declarations (@pxref{Defining Packages}).
2508
2509@deftp {Data Type} origin
2510This is the data type representing a source code origin.
2511
2512@table @asis
2513@item @code{uri}
2514An object containing the URI of the source. The object type depends on
2515the @code{method} (see below). For example, when using the
2516@var{url-fetch} method of @code{(guix download)}, the valid @code{uri}
2517values are: a URL represented as a string, or a list thereof.
2518
2519@item @code{method}
f97c9175 2520A procedure that handles the URI.
87eafdbd
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2521
2522Examples include:
2523
2524@table @asis
2525@item @var{url-fetch} from @code{(guix download)}
f97c9175 2526download a file from the HTTP, HTTPS, or FTP URL specified in the
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2527@code{uri} field;
2528
2529@item @var{git-fetch} from @code{(guix git-download)}
2530clone the Git version control repository, and check out the revision
2531specified in the @code{uri} field as a @code{git-reference} object; a
2532@code{git-reference} looks like this:
2533
2534@example
2535(git-reference
2536 (url "git://git.debian.org/git/pkg-shadow/shadow")
2537 (commit "v4.1.5.1"))
2538@end example
2539@end table
2540
2541@item @code{sha256}
2542A bytevector containing the SHA-256 hash of the source. Typically the
2543@code{base32} form is used here to generate the bytevector from a
2544base-32 string.
2545
2546@item @code{file-name} (default: @code{#f})
2547The file name under which the source code should be saved. When this is
2548@code{#f}, a sensible default value will be used in most cases. In case
2549the source is fetched from a URL, the file name from the URL will be
f97c9175 2550used. For version control checkouts, it is recommended to provide the
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2551file name explicitly because the default is not very descriptive.
2552
2553@item @code{patches} (default: @code{'()})
2554A list of file names containing patches to be applied to the source.
2555
2556@item @code{snippet} (default: @code{#f})
2557A quoted piece of code that will be run in the source directory to make
2558any modifications, which is sometimes more convenient than a patch.
2559
2560@item @code{patch-flags} (default: @code{'("-p1")})
2561A list of command-line flags that should be passed to the @code{patch}
2562command.
2563
2564@item @code{patch-inputs} (default: @code{#f})
2565Input packages or derivations to the patching process. When this is
2566@code{#f}, the usual set of inputs necessary for patching are provided,
2567such as GNU@tie{}Patch.
2568
2569@item @code{modules} (default: @code{'()})
2570A list of Guile modules that should be loaded during the patching
2571process and while running the code in the @code{snippet} field.
2572
2573@item @code{imported-modules} (default: @code{'()})
2574The list of Guile modules to import in the patch derivation, for use by
2575the @code{snippet}.
2576
2577@item @code{patch-guile} (default: @code{#f})
2578The Guile package that should be used in the patching process. When
2579this is @code{#f}, a sensible default is used.
2580@end table
2581@end deftp
2582
9c1edabd 2583
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2584@node Build Systems
2585@section Build Systems
2586
2587@cindex build system
2588Each package definition specifies a @dfn{build system} and arguments for
2589that build system (@pxref{Defining Packages}). This @code{build-system}
f97c9175 2590field represents the build procedure of the package, as well as implicit
7458bd0a
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2591dependencies of that build procedure.
2592
2593Build systems are @code{<build-system>} objects. The interface to
2594create and manipulate them is provided by the @code{(guix build-system)}
2595module, and actual build systems are exported by specific modules.
2596
f5fd4fd2 2597@cindex bag (low-level package representation)
0d5a559f
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2598Under the hood, build systems first compile package objects to
2599@dfn{bags}. A @dfn{bag} is like a package, but with less
2600ornamentation---in other words, a bag is a lower-level representation of
2601a package, which includes all the inputs of that package, including some
2602that were implicitly added by the build system. This intermediate
2603representation is then compiled to a derivation (@pxref{Derivations}).
2604
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2605Build systems accept an optional list of @dfn{arguments}. In package
2606definitions, these are passed @i{via} the @code{arguments} field
2607(@pxref{Defining Packages}). They are typically keyword arguments
2608(@pxref{Optional Arguments, keyword arguments in Guile,, guile, GNU
2609Guile Reference Manual}). The value of these arguments is usually
2610evaluated in the @dfn{build stratum}---i.e., by a Guile process launched
2611by the daemon (@pxref{Derivations}).
2612
2613The main build system is @var{gnu-build-system}, which implements the
f97c9175 2614standard build procedure for GNU and many other packages. It
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2615is provided by the @code{(guix build-system gnu)} module.
2616
2617@defvr {Scheme Variable} gnu-build-system
2618@var{gnu-build-system} represents the GNU Build System, and variants
2619thereof (@pxref{Configuration, configuration and makefile conventions,,
2620standards, GNU Coding Standards}).
2621
2622@cindex build phases
f97c9175 2623In a nutshell, packages using it are configured, built, and installed with
7458bd0a
LC
2624the usual @code{./configure && make && make check && make install}
2625command sequence. In practice, a few additional steps are often needed.
2626All these steps are split up in separate @dfn{phases},
2627notably@footnote{Please see the @code{(guix build gnu-build-system)}
2628modules for more details about the build phases.}:
2629
2630@table @code
2631@item unpack
2632Unpack the source tarball, and change the current directory to the
2633extracted source tree. If the source is actually a directory, copy it
2634to the build tree, and enter that directory.
2635
2636@item patch-source-shebangs
2637Patch shebangs encountered in source files so they refer to the right
2638store file names. For instance, this changes @code{#!/bin/sh} to
2639@code{#!/gnu/store/@dots{}-bash-4.3/bin/sh}.
2640
2641@item configure
2642Run the @file{configure} script with a number of default options, such
2643as @code{--prefix=/gnu/store/@dots{}}, as well as the options specified
2644by the @code{#:configure-flags} argument.
2645
2646@item build
2647Run @code{make} with the list of flags specified with
0917e80e 2648@code{#:make-flags}. If the @code{#:parallel-build?} argument is true
7458bd0a
LC
2649(the default), build with @code{make -j}.
2650
2651@item check
2652Run @code{make check}, or some other target specified with
2653@code{#:test-target}, unless @code{#:tests? #f} is passed. If the
2654@code{#:parallel-tests?} argument is true (the default), run @code{make
2655check -j}.
2656
2657@item install
2658Run @code{make install} with the flags listed in @code{#:make-flags}.
2659
2660@item patch-shebangs
2661Patch shebangs on the installed executable files.
2662
2663@item strip
2664Strip debugging symbols from ELF files (unless @code{#:strip-binaries?}
2665is false), copying them to the @code{debug} output when available
2666(@pxref{Installing Debugging Files}).
2667@end table
2668
2669@vindex %standard-phases
2670The build-side module @code{(guix build gnu-build-system)} defines
2671@var{%standard-phases} as the default list of build phases.
2672@var{%standard-phases} is a list of symbol/procedure pairs, where the
2673procedure implements the actual phase.
2674
2675The list of phases used for a particular package can be changed with the
2676@code{#:phases} parameter. For instance, passing:
2677
2678@example
c2c5dc79 2679#:phases (modify-phases %standard-phases (delete 'configure))
7458bd0a
LC
2680@end example
2681
9bf404e9 2682means that all the phases described above will be used, except the
7458bd0a
LC
2683@code{configure} phase.
2684
2685In addition, this build system ensures that the ``standard'' environment
2686for GNU packages is available. This includes tools such as GCC, libc,
2687Coreutils, Bash, Make, Diffutils, grep, and sed (see the @code{(guix
f97c9175
AE
2688build-system gnu)} module for a complete list). We call these the
2689@dfn{implicit inputs} of a package, because package definitions do not
7458bd0a
LC
2690have to mention them.
2691@end defvr
2692
2693Other @code{<build-system>} objects are defined to support other
2694conventions and tools used by free software packages. They inherit most
2695of @var{gnu-build-system}, and differ mainly in the set of inputs
2696implicitly added to the build process, and in the list of phases
2697executed. Some of these build systems are listed below.
2698
2699@defvr {Scheme Variable} cmake-build-system
2700This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system cmake)}. It
2701implements the build procedure for packages using the
2702@url{http://www.cmake.org, CMake build tool}.
2703
2704It automatically adds the @code{cmake} package to the set of inputs.
2705Which package is used can be specified with the @code{#:cmake}
2706parameter.
9849cfc1
LC
2707
2708The @code{#:configure-flags} parameter is taken as a list of flags
2709passed to the @command{cmake} command. The @code{#:build-type}
2710parameter specifies in abstract terms the flags passed to the compiler;
2711it defaults to @code{"RelWithDebInfo"} (short for ``release mode with
2712debugging information''), which roughly means that code is compiled with
2713@code{-O2 -g}, as is the case for Autoconf-based packages by default.
7458bd0a
LC
2714@end defvr
2715
3afcf52b
FB
2716@defvr {Scheme Variable} glib-or-gtk-build-system
2717This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system glib-or-gtk)}. It
2718is intended for use with packages making use of GLib or GTK+.
2719
2720This build system adds the following two phases to the ones defined by
2721@var{gnu-build-system}:
2722
2723@table @code
2724@item glib-or-gtk-wrap
f97c9175
AE
2725The phase @code{glib-or-gtk-wrap} ensures that programs in
2726@file{bin/} are able to find GLib ``schemas'' and
3afcf52b
FB
2727@uref{https://developer.gnome.org/gtk3/stable/gtk-running.html, GTK+
2728modules}. This is achieved by wrapping the programs in launch scripts
2729that appropriately set the @code{XDG_DATA_DIRS} and @code{GTK_PATH}
2730environment variables.
2731
73aa8ddb
LC
2732It is possible to exclude specific package outputs from that wrapping
2733process by listing their names in the
2734@code{#:glib-or-gtk-wrap-excluded-outputs} parameter. This is useful
2735when an output is known not to contain any GLib or GTK+ binaries, and
2736where wrapping would gratuitously add a dependency of that output on
2737GLib and GTK+.
2738
3afcf52b 2739@item glib-or-gtk-compile-schemas
f97c9175 2740The phase @code{glib-or-gtk-compile-schemas} makes sure that all
3afcf52b 2741@uref{https://developer.gnome.org/gio/stable/glib-compile-schemas.html,
f97c9175 2742GSettings schemas} of GLib are compiled. Compilation is performed by the
3afcf52b
FB
2743@command{glib-compile-schemas} program. It is provided by the package
2744@code{glib:bin} which is automatically imported by the build system.
2745The @code{glib} package providing @command{glib-compile-schemas} can be
2746specified with the @code{#:glib} parameter.
2747@end table
2748
2749Both phases are executed after the @code{install} phase.
2750@end defvr
2751
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LC
2752@defvr {Scheme Variable} python-build-system
2753This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system python)}. It
2754implements the more or less standard build procedure used by Python
2755packages, which consists in running @code{python setup.py build} and
2756then @code{python setup.py install --prefix=/gnu/store/@dots{}}.
2757
2758For packages that install stand-alone Python programs under @code{bin/},
f97c9175 2759it takes care of wrapping these programs so that their @code{PYTHONPATH}
7458bd0a
LC
2760environment variable points to all the Python libraries they depend on.
2761
2762Which Python package is used can be specified with the @code{#:python}
2763parameter.
2764@end defvr
2765
2766@defvr {Scheme Variable} perl-build-system
2767This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system perl)}. It
2d2a53fc
EB
2768implements the standard build procedure for Perl packages, which either
2769consists in running @code{perl Build.PL --prefix=/gnu/store/@dots{}},
2770followed by @code{Build} and @code{Build install}; or in running
2771@code{perl Makefile.PL PREFIX=/gnu/store/@dots{}}, followed by
f97c9175 2772@code{make} and @code{make install}, depending on which of
2d2a53fc
EB
2773@code{Build.PL} or @code{Makefile.PL} is present in the package
2774distribution. Preference is given to the former if both @code{Build.PL}
2775and @code{Makefile.PL} exist in the package distribution. This
2776preference can be reversed by specifying @code{#t} for the
2777@code{#:make-maker?} parameter.
2778
2779The initial @code{perl Makefile.PL} or @code{perl Build.PL} invocation
2780passes flags specified by the @code{#:make-maker-flags} or
2781@code{#:module-build-flags} parameter, respectively.
7458bd0a
LC
2782
2783Which Perl package is used can be specified with @code{#:perl}.
2784@end defvr
2785
f8f3bef6
RW
2786@defvr {Scheme Variable} r-build-system
2787This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system r)}. It
2788implements the build procedure used by @uref{http://r-project.org, R}
2789packages, which essentially is little more than running @code{R CMD
2790INSTALL --library=/gnu/store/@dots{}} in an environment where
2791@code{R_LIBS_SITE} contains the paths to all R package inputs. Tests
2792are run after installation using the R function
2793@code{tools::testInstalledPackage}.
2794@end defvr
2795
c08f9818
DT
2796@defvr {Scheme Variable} ruby-build-system
2797This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system ruby)}. It
2798implements the RubyGems build procedure used by Ruby packages, which
2799involves running @code{gem build} followed by @code{gem install}.
2800
5dc87623
DT
2801The @code{source} field of a package that uses this build system
2802typically references a gem archive, since this is the format that Ruby
2803developers use when releasing their software. The build system unpacks
2804the gem archive, potentially patches the source, runs the test suite,
2805repackages the gem, and installs it. Additionally, directories and
2806tarballs may be referenced to allow building unreleased gems from Git or
2807a traditional source release tarball.
e83c6d00 2808
c08f9818 2809Which Ruby package is used can be specified with the @code{#:ruby}
6e9f2913
PP
2810parameter. A list of additional flags to be passed to the @command{gem}
2811command can be specified with the @code{#:gem-flags} parameter.
c08f9818 2812@end defvr
7458bd0a 2813
a677c726
RW
2814@defvr {Scheme Variable} waf-build-system
2815This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system waf)}. It
2816implements a build procedure around the @code{waf} script. The common
2817phases---@code{configure}, @code{build}, and @code{install}---are
2818implemented by passing their names as arguments to the @code{waf}
2819script.
2820
2821The @code{waf} script is executed by the Python interpreter. Which
2822Python package is used to run the script can be specified with the
2823@code{#:python} parameter.
2824@end defvr
2825
14dfdf2e
FB
2826@defvr {Scheme Variable} haskell-build-system
2827This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system haskell)}. It
2828implements the Cabal build procedure used by Haskell packages, which
2829involves running @code{runhaskell Setup.hs configure
2830--prefix=/gnu/store/@dots{}} and @code{runhaskell Setup.hs build}.
2831Instead of installing the package by running @code{runhaskell Setup.hs
2832install}, to avoid trying to register libraries in the read-only
2833compiler store directory, the build system uses @code{runhaskell
2834Setup.hs copy}, followed by @code{runhaskell Setup.hs register}. In
2835addition, the build system generates the package documentation by
2836running @code{runhaskell Setup.hs haddock}, unless @code{#:haddock? #f}
2837is passed. Optional Haddock parameters can be passed with the help of
2838the @code{#:haddock-flags} parameter. If the file @code{Setup.hs} is
2839not found, the build system looks for @code{Setup.lhs} instead.
2840
2841Which Haskell compiler is used can be specified with the @code{#:haskell}
a54bd6d7 2842parameter which defaults to @code{ghc}.
14dfdf2e
FB
2843@end defvr
2844
e9137a53
FB
2845@defvr {Scheme Variable} emacs-build-system
2846This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system emacs)}. It
f97c9175
AE
2847implements an installation procedure similar to the packaging system
2848of Emacs itself (@pxref{Packages,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}).
e9137a53
FB
2849
2850It first creates the @code{@var{package}-autoloads.el} file, then it
2851byte compiles all Emacs Lisp files. Differently from the Emacs
2852packaging system, the Info documentation files are moved to the standard
2853documentation directory and the @file{dir} file is deleted. Each
2854package is installed in its own directory under
2855@file{share/emacs/site-lisp/guix.d}.
2856@end defvr
2857
7458bd0a
LC
2858Lastly, for packages that do not need anything as sophisticated, a
2859``trivial'' build system is provided. It is trivial in the sense that
2860it provides basically no support: it does not pull any implicit inputs,
2861and does not have a notion of build phases.
2862
2863@defvr {Scheme Variable} trivial-build-system
2864This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system trivial)}.
2865
2866This build system requires a @code{#:builder} argument. This argument
f97c9175 2867must be a Scheme expression that builds the package output(s)---as
7458bd0a
LC
2868with @code{build-expression->derivation} (@pxref{Derivations,
2869@code{build-expression->derivation}}).
2870@end defvr
2871
568717fd
LC
2872@node The Store
2873@section The Store
2874
e531ac2a
LC
2875@cindex store
2876@cindex store paths
2877
f97c9175
AE
2878Conceptually, the @dfn{store} is the place where derivations that have
2879been built successfully are stored---by default, @file{/gnu/store}.
e531ac2a 2880Sub-directories in the store are referred to as @dfn{store paths}. The
4988dd40 2881store has an associated database that contains information such as the
e531ac2a
LC
2882store paths referred to by each store path, and the list of @emph{valid}
2883store paths---paths that result from a successful build.
2884
2885The store is always accessed by the daemon on behalf of its clients
2886(@pxref{Invoking guix-daemon}). To manipulate the store, clients
f97c9175
AE
2887connect to the daemon over a Unix-domain socket, send requests to it,
2888and read the result---these are remote procedure calls, or RPCs.
e531ac2a
LC
2889
2890The @code{(guix store)} module provides procedures to connect to the
2891daemon, and to perform RPCs. These are described below.
2892
2893@deffn {Scheme Procedure} open-connection [@var{file}] [#:reserve-space? #t]
2894Connect to the daemon over the Unix-domain socket at @var{file}. When
2895@var{reserve-space?} is true, instruct it to reserve a little bit of
2896extra space on the file system so that the garbage collector can still
f97c9175 2897operate should the disk become full. Return a server object.
e531ac2a
LC
2898
2899@var{file} defaults to @var{%default-socket-path}, which is the normal
2900location given the options that were passed to @command{configure}.
2901@end deffn
2902
2903@deffn {Scheme Procedure} close-connection @var{server}
2904Close the connection to @var{server}.
2905@end deffn
2906
2907@defvr {Scheme Variable} current-build-output-port
2908This variable is bound to a SRFI-39 parameter, which refers to the port
2909where build and error logs sent by the daemon should be written.
2910@end defvr
2911
2912Procedures that make RPCs all take a server object as their first
2913argument.
2914
2915@deffn {Scheme Procedure} valid-path? @var{server} @var{path}
2916Return @code{#t} when @var{path} is a valid store path.
2917@end deffn
2918
cfbf9160 2919@deffn {Scheme Procedure} add-text-to-store @var{server} @var{name} @var{text} [@var{references}]
e531ac2a
LC
2920Add @var{text} under file @var{name} in the store, and return its store
2921path. @var{references} is the list of store paths referred to by the
2922resulting store path.
2923@end deffn
2924
874e6874 2925@deffn {Scheme Procedure} build-derivations @var{server} @var{derivations}
59688fc4
LC
2926Build @var{derivations} (a list of @code{<derivation>} objects or
2927derivation paths), and return when the worker is done building them.
2928Return @code{#t} on success.
874e6874
LC
2929@end deffn
2930
b860f382
LC
2931Note that the @code{(guix monads)} module provides a monad as well as
2932monadic versions of the above procedures, with the goal of making it
2933more convenient to work with code that accesses the store (@pxref{The
2934Store Monad}).
2935
e531ac2a
LC
2936@c FIXME
2937@i{This section is currently incomplete.}
568717fd
LC
2938
2939@node Derivations
2940@section Derivations
2941
874e6874
LC
2942@cindex derivations
2943Low-level build actions and the environment in which they are performed
2944are represented by @dfn{derivations}. A derivation contain the
2945following pieces of information:
2946
2947@itemize
2948@item
2949The outputs of the derivation---derivations produce at least one file or
2950directory in the store, but may produce more.
2951
2952@item
2953The inputs of the derivations, which may be other derivations or plain
2954files in the store (patches, build scripts, etc.)
2955
2956@item
2957The system type targeted by the derivation---e.g., @code{x86_64-linux}.
2958
2959@item
2960The file name of a build script in the store, along with the arguments
2961to be passed.
2962
2963@item
2964A list of environment variables to be defined.
2965
2966@end itemize
2967
2968@cindex derivation path
2969Derivations allow clients of the daemon to communicate build actions to
2970the store. They exist in two forms: as an in-memory representation,
2971both on the client- and daemon-side, and as files in the store whose
2972name end in @code{.drv}---these files are referred to as @dfn{derivation
2973paths}. Derivations paths can be passed to the @code{build-derivations}
2974procedure to perform the build actions they prescribe (@pxref{The
2975Store}).
2976
2977The @code{(guix derivations)} module provides a representation of
2978derivations as Scheme objects, along with procedures to create and
2979otherwise manipulate derivations. The lowest-level primitive to create
2980a derivation is the @code{derivation} procedure:
2981
1909431c
LC
2982@deffn {Scheme Procedure} derivation @var{store} @var{name} @var{builder} @
2983 @var{args} [#:outputs '("out")] [#:hash #f] [#:hash-algo #f] @
2096ef47 2984 [#:recursive? #f] [#:inputs '()] [#:env-vars '()] @
1909431c 2985 [#:system (%current-system)] [#:references-graphs #f] @
4a6aeb67
LC
2986 [#:allowed-references #f] [#:leaked-env-vars #f] [#:local-build? #f] @
2987 [#:substitutable? #t]
59688fc4
LC
2988Build a derivation with the given arguments, and return the resulting
2989@code{<derivation>} object.
874e6874 2990
2096ef47 2991When @var{hash} and @var{hash-algo} are given, a
874e6874 2992@dfn{fixed-output derivation} is created---i.e., one whose result is
36bbbbd1
LC
2993known in advance, such as a file download. If, in addition,
2994@var{recursive?} is true, then that fixed output may be an executable
2995file or a directory and @var{hash} must be the hash of an archive
2996containing this output.
5b0c9d16 2997
858e9282 2998When @var{references-graphs} is true, it must be a list of file
5b0c9d16
LC
2999name/store path pairs. In that case, the reference graph of each store
3000path is exported in the build environment in the corresponding file, in
3001a simple text format.
1909431c 3002
b53be755
LC
3003When @var{allowed-references} is true, it must be a list of store items
3004or outputs that the derivation's output may refer to.
3005
c0468155
LC
3006When @var{leaked-env-vars} is true, it must be a list of strings
3007denoting environment variables that are allowed to ``leak'' from the
3008daemon's environment to the build environment. This is only applicable
3009to fixed-output derivations---i.e., when @var{hash} is true. The main
3010use is to allow variables such as @code{http_proxy} to be passed to
3011derivations that download files.
3012
1909431c
LC
3013When @var{local-build?} is true, declare that the derivation is not a
3014good candidate for offloading and should rather be built locally
3015(@pxref{Daemon Offload Setup}). This is the case for small derivations
3016where the costs of data transfers would outweigh the benefits.
4a6aeb67
LC
3017
3018When @var{substitutable?} is false, declare that substitutes of the
3019derivation's output should not be used (@pxref{Substitutes}). This is
3020useful, for instance, when building packages that capture details of the
3021host CPU instruction set.
874e6874
LC
3022@end deffn
3023
3024@noindent
3025Here's an example with a shell script as its builder, assuming
3026@var{store} is an open connection to the daemon, and @var{bash} points
3027to a Bash executable in the store:
3028
3029@lisp
3030(use-modules (guix utils)
3031 (guix store)
3032 (guix derivations))
3033
59688fc4
LC
3034(let ((builder ; add the Bash script to the store
3035 (add-text-to-store store "my-builder.sh"
3036 "echo hello world > $out\n" '())))
3037 (derivation store "foo"
3038 bash `("-e" ,builder)
21b679f6 3039 #:inputs `((,bash) (,builder))
59688fc4 3040 #:env-vars '(("HOME" . "/homeless"))))
834129e0 3041@result{} #<derivation /gnu/store/@dots{}-foo.drv => /gnu/store/@dots{}-foo>
874e6874
LC
3042@end lisp
3043
21b679f6
LC
3044As can be guessed, this primitive is cumbersome to use directly. A
3045better approach is to write build scripts in Scheme, of course! The
3046best course of action for that is to write the build code as a
3047``G-expression'', and to pass it to @code{gexp->derivation}. For more
6621cdb6 3048information, @pxref{G-Expressions}.
21b679f6 3049
f2fadbc1
AE
3050Once upon a time, @code{gexp->derivation} did not exist and constructing
3051derivations with build code written in Scheme was achieved with
3052@code{build-expression->derivation}, documented below. This procedure
3053is now deprecated in favor of the much nicer @code{gexp->derivation}.
3054
3055@deffn {Scheme Procedure} build-expression->derivation @var{store} @
3056 @var{name} @var{exp} @
3057 [#:system (%current-system)] [#:inputs '()] @
3058 [#:outputs '("out")] [#:hash #f] [#:hash-algo #f] @
3059 [#:recursive? #f] [#:env-vars '()] [#:modules '()] @
3060 [#:references-graphs #f] [#:allowed-references #f] @
3061 [#:local-build? #f] [#:substitutable? #t] [#:guile-for-build #f]
3062Return a derivation that executes Scheme expression @var{exp} as a
3063builder for derivation @var{name}. @var{inputs} must be a list of
3064@code{(name drv-path sub-drv)} tuples; when @var{sub-drv} is omitted,
3065@code{"out"} is assumed. @var{modules} is a list of names of Guile
3066modules from the current search path to be copied in the store,
3067compiled, and made available in the load path during the execution of
3068@var{exp}---e.g., @code{((guix build utils) (guix build
3069gnu-build-system))}.
3070
3071@var{exp} is evaluated in an environment where @code{%outputs} is bound
3072to a list of output/path pairs, and where @code{%build-inputs} is bound
3073to a list of string/output-path pairs made from @var{inputs}.
3074Optionally, @var{env-vars} is a list of string pairs specifying the name
3075and value of environment variables visible to the builder. The builder
3076terminates by passing the result of @var{exp} to @code{exit}; thus, when
3077@var{exp} returns @code{#f}, the build is considered to have failed.
3078
3079@var{exp} is built using @var{guile-for-build} (a derivation). When
3080@var{guile-for-build} is omitted or is @code{#f}, the value of the
3081@code{%guile-for-build} fluid is used instead.
3082
3083See the @code{derivation} procedure for the meaning of
3084@var{references-graphs}, @var{allowed-references}, @var{local-build?},
3085and @var{substitutable?}.
3086@end deffn
3087
3088@noindent
3089Here's an example of a single-output derivation that creates a directory
3090containing one file:
3091
3092@lisp
3093(let ((builder '(let ((out (assoc-ref %outputs "out")))
3094 (mkdir out) ; create /gnu/store/@dots{}-goo
3095 (call-with-output-file (string-append out "/test")
3096 (lambda (p)
3097 (display '(hello guix) p))))))
3098 (build-expression->derivation store "goo" builder))
3099
3100@result{} #<derivation /gnu/store/@dots{}-goo.drv => @dots{}>
3101@end lisp
3102
568717fd 3103
b860f382
LC
3104@node The Store Monad
3105@section The Store Monad
3106
3107@cindex monad
3108
3109The procedures that operate on the store described in the previous
3110sections all take an open connection to the build daemon as their first
3111argument. Although the underlying model is functional, they either have
3112side effects or depend on the current state of the store.
3113
3114The former is inconvenient: the connection to the build daemon has to be
3115carried around in all those functions, making it impossible to compose
3116functions that do not take that parameter with functions that do. The
3117latter can be problematic: since store operations have side effects
3118and/or depend on external state, they have to be properly sequenced.
3119
3120@cindex monadic values
3121@cindex monadic functions
3122This is where the @code{(guix monads)} module comes in. This module
3123provides a framework for working with @dfn{monads}, and a particularly
3124useful monad for our uses, the @dfn{store monad}. Monads are a
3125construct that allows two things: associating ``context'' with values
3126(in our case, the context is the store), and building sequences of
561fb6c3 3127computations (here computations include accesses to the store.) Values
b860f382
LC
3128in a monad---values that carry this additional context---are called
3129@dfn{monadic values}; procedures that return such values are called
3130@dfn{monadic procedures}.
3131
3132Consider this ``normal'' procedure:
3133
3134@example
45adbd62
LC
3135(define (sh-symlink store)
3136 ;; Return a derivation that symlinks the 'bash' executable.
3137 (let* ((drv (package-derivation store bash))
3138 (out (derivation->output-path drv))
3139 (sh (string-append out "/bin/bash")))
3140 (build-expression->derivation store "sh"
3141 `(symlink ,sh %output))))
b860f382
LC
3142@end example
3143
c6f30b81
LC
3144Using @code{(guix monads)} and @code{(guix gexp)}, it may be rewritten
3145as a monadic function:
b860f382
LC
3146
3147@example
45adbd62 3148(define (sh-symlink)
b860f382 3149 ;; Same, but return a monadic value.
c6f30b81
LC
3150 (mlet %store-monad ((drv (package->derivation bash)))
3151 (gexp->derivation "sh"
3152 #~(symlink (string-append #$drv "/bin/bash")
3153 #$output))))
b860f382
LC
3154@end example
3155
c6f30b81
LC
3156There several things to note in the second version: the @code{store}
3157parameter is now implicit and is ``threaded'' in the calls to the
3158@code{package->derivation} and @code{gexp->derivation} monadic
3159procedures, and the monadic value returned by @code{package->derivation}
3160is @dfn{bound} using @code{mlet} instead of plain @code{let}.
3161
3162As it turns out, the call to @code{package->derivation} can even be
3163omitted since it will take place implicitly, as we will see later
3164(@pxref{G-Expressions}):
3165
3166@example
3167(define (sh-symlink)
3168 (gexp->derivation "sh"
3169 #~(symlink (string-append #$bash "/bin/bash")
3170 #$output)))
3171@end example
b860f382 3172
7ce21611
LC
3173@c See
3174@c <https://syntaxexclamation.wordpress.com/2014/06/26/escaping-continuations/>
3175@c for the funny quote.
3176Calling the monadic @code{sh-symlink} has no effect. As someone once
3177said, ``you exit a monad like you exit a building on fire: by running''.
3178So, to exit the monad and get the desired effect, one must use
3179@code{run-with-store}:
b860f382
LC
3180
3181@example
8e9aa37f
CAW
3182(run-with-store (open-connection) (sh-symlink))
3183@result{} /gnu/store/...-sh-symlink
b860f382
LC
3184@end example
3185
f97c9175 3186Note that the @code{(guix monad-repl)} module extends the Guile REPL with
b9b86078 3187new ``meta-commands'' to make it easier to deal with monadic procedures:
f97c9175 3188@code{run-in-store}, and @code{enter-store-monad}. The former is used
b9b86078
LC
3189to ``run'' a single monadic value through the store:
3190
3191@example
3192scheme@@(guile-user)> ,run-in-store (package->derivation hello)
3193$1 = #<derivation /gnu/store/@dots{}-hello-2.9.drv => @dots{}>
3194@end example
3195
3196The latter enters a recursive REPL, where all the return values are
3197automatically run through the store:
3198
3199@example
3200scheme@@(guile-user)> ,enter-store-monad
3201store-monad@@(guile-user) [1]> (package->derivation hello)
3202$2 = #<derivation /gnu/store/@dots{}-hello-2.9.drv => @dots{}>
3203store-monad@@(guile-user) [1]> (text-file "foo" "Hello!")
3204$3 = "/gnu/store/@dots{}-foo"
3205store-monad@@(guile-user) [1]> ,q
3206scheme@@(guile-user)>
3207@end example
3208
3209@noindent
3210Note that non-monadic values cannot be returned in the
3211@code{store-monad} REPL.
3212
e87f0591
LC
3213The main syntactic forms to deal with monads in general are provided by
3214the @code{(guix monads)} module and are described below.
b860f382
LC
3215
3216@deffn {Scheme Syntax} with-monad @var{monad} @var{body} ...
3217Evaluate any @code{>>=} or @code{return} forms in @var{body} as being
3218in @var{monad}.
3219@end deffn
3220
3221@deffn {Scheme Syntax} return @var{val}
3222Return a monadic value that encapsulates @var{val}.
3223@end deffn
3224
751630c9 3225@deffn {Scheme Syntax} >>= @var{mval} @var{mproc} ...
b860f382 3226@dfn{Bind} monadic value @var{mval}, passing its ``contents'' to monadic
751630c9
LC
3227procedures @var{mproc}@dots{}@footnote{This operation is commonly
3228referred to as ``bind'', but that name denotes an unrelated procedure in
3229Guile. Thus we use this somewhat cryptic symbol inherited from the
3230Haskell language.}. There can be one @var{mproc} or several of them, as
3231in this example:
3232
3233@example
3234(run-with-state
3235 (with-monad %state-monad
3236 (>>= (return 1)
3237 (lambda (x) (return (+ 1 x)))
3238 (lambda (x) (return (* 2 x)))))
3239 'some-state)
3240
3241@result{} 4
3242@result{} some-state
3243@end example
b860f382
LC
3244@end deffn
3245
3246@deffn {Scheme Syntax} mlet @var{monad} ((@var{var} @var{mval}) ...) @
3247 @var{body} ...
3248@deffnx {Scheme Syntax} mlet* @var{monad} ((@var{var} @var{mval}) ...) @
3249 @var{body} ...
3250Bind the variables @var{var} to the monadic values @var{mval} in
3251@var{body}. The form (@var{var} -> @var{val}) binds @var{var} to the
3252``normal'' value @var{val}, as per @code{let}.
3253
3254@code{mlet*} is to @code{mlet} what @code{let*} is to @code{let}
3255(@pxref{Local Bindings,,, guile, GNU Guile Reference Manual}).
3256@end deffn
3257
405a9d4e
LC
3258@deffn {Scheme System} mbegin @var{monad} @var{mexp} ...
3259Bind @var{mexp} and the following monadic expressions in sequence,
3260returning the result of the last expression.
3261
3262This is akin to @code{mlet}, except that the return values of the
3263monadic expressions are ignored. In that sense, it is analogous to
3264@code{begin}, but applied to monadic expressions.
3265@end deffn
3266
561fb6c3
LC
3267@cindex state monad
3268The @code{(guix monads)} module provides the @dfn{state monad}, which
3269allows an additional value---the state---to be @emph{threaded} through
3270monadic procedure calls.
3271
3272@defvr {Scheme Variable} %state-monad
3273The state monad. Procedures in the state monad can access and change
3274the state that is threaded.
3275
3276Consider the example below. The @code{square} procedure returns a value
3277in the state monad. It returns the square of its argument, but also
3278increments the current state value:
3279
3280@example
3281(define (square x)
3282 (mlet %state-monad ((count (current-state)))
3283 (mbegin %state-monad
3284 (set-current-state (+ 1 count))
3285 (return (* x x)))))
3286
3287(run-with-state (sequence %state-monad (map square (iota 3))) 0)
3288@result{} (0 1 4)
3289@result{} 3
3290@end example
3291
3292When ``run'' through @var{%state-monad}, we obtain that additional state
3293value, which is the number of @code{square} calls.
3294@end defvr
3295
3296@deffn {Monadic Procedure} current-state
3297Return the current state as a monadic value.
3298@end deffn
3299
3300@deffn {Monadic Procedure} set-current-state @var{value}
3301Set the current state to @var{value} and return the previous state as a
3302monadic value.
3303@end deffn
3304
3305@deffn {Monadic Procedure} state-push @var{value}
3306Push @var{value} to the current state, which is assumed to be a list,
3307and return the previous state as a monadic value.
3308@end deffn
3309
3310@deffn {Monadic Procedure} state-pop
3311Pop a value from the current state and return it as a monadic value.
3312The state is assumed to be a list.
3313@end deffn
3314
3315@deffn {Scheme Procedure} run-with-state @var{mval} [@var{state}]
3316Run monadic value @var{mval} starting with @var{state} as the initial
3317state. Return two values: the resulting value, and the resulting state.
3318@end deffn
3319
e87f0591
LC
3320The main interface to the store monad, provided by the @code{(guix
3321store)} module, is as follows.
b860f382
LC
3322
3323@defvr {Scheme Variable} %store-monad
561fb6c3
LC
3324The store monad---an alias for @var{%state-monad}.
3325
3326Values in the store monad encapsulate accesses to the store. When its
3327effect is needed, a value of the store monad must be ``evaluated'' by
3328passing it to the @code{run-with-store} procedure (see below.)
b860f382
LC
3329@end defvr
3330
3331@deffn {Scheme Procedure} run-with-store @var{store} @var{mval} [#:guile-for-build] [#:system (%current-system)]
3332Run @var{mval}, a monadic value in the store monad, in @var{store}, an
3333open store connection.
3334@end deffn
3335
ad372953 3336@deffn {Monadic Procedure} text-file @var{name} @var{text} [@var{references}]
b860f382 3337Return as a monadic value the absolute file name in the store of the file
ad372953
LC
3338containing @var{text}, a string. @var{references} is a list of store items that the
3339resulting text file refers to; it defaults to the empty list.
45adbd62
LC
3340@end deffn
3341
0a90af15
LC
3342@deffn {Monadic Procedure} interned-file @var{file} [@var{name}] @
3343 [#:recursive? #t]
3344Return the name of @var{file} once interned in the store. Use
3345@var{name} as its store name, or the basename of @var{file} if
3346@var{name} is omitted.
3347
3348When @var{recursive?} is true, the contents of @var{file} are added
3349recursively; if @var{file} designates a flat file and @var{recursive?}
3350is true, its contents are added, and its permission bits are kept.
3351
3352The example below adds a file to the store, under two different names:
3353
3354@example
3355(run-with-store (open-connection)
3356 (mlet %store-monad ((a (interned-file "README"))
3357 (b (interned-file "README" "LEGU-MIN")))
3358 (return (list a b))))
3359
3360@result{} ("/gnu/store/rwm@dots{}-README" "/gnu/store/44i@dots{}-LEGU-MIN")
3361@end example
3362
3363@end deffn
3364
e87f0591
LC
3365The @code{(guix packages)} module exports the following package-related
3366monadic procedures:
3367
b860f382 3368@deffn {Monadic Procedure} package-file @var{package} [@var{file}] @
4231f05b 3369 [#:system (%current-system)] [#:target #f] @
f97c9175
AE
3370 [#:output "out"]
3371Return as a monadic
b860f382
LC
3372value in the absolute file name of @var{file} within the @var{output}
3373directory of @var{package}. When @var{file} is omitted, return the name
4231f05b
LC
3374of the @var{output} directory of @var{package}. When @var{target} is
3375true, use it as a cross-compilation target triplet.
b860f382
LC
3376@end deffn
3377
b860f382 3378@deffn {Monadic Procedure} package->derivation @var{package} [@var{system}]
4231f05b
LC
3379@deffnx {Monadic Procedure} package->cross-derivation @var{package} @
3380 @var{target} [@var{system}]
3381Monadic version of @code{package-derivation} and
3382@code{package-cross-derivation} (@pxref{Defining Packages}).
b860f382
LC
3383@end deffn
3384
3385
21b679f6
LC
3386@node G-Expressions
3387@section G-Expressions
3388
3389@cindex G-expression
3390@cindex build code quoting
3391So we have ``derivations'', which represent a sequence of build actions
3392to be performed to produce an item in the store (@pxref{Derivations}).
f97c9175 3393These build actions are performed when asking the daemon to actually
21b679f6
LC
3394build the derivations; they are run by the daemon in a container
3395(@pxref{Invoking guix-daemon}).
3396
3397@cindex strata of code
f97c9175 3398It should come as no surprise that we like to write these build actions
21b679f6
LC
3399in Scheme. When we do that, we end up with two @dfn{strata} of Scheme
3400code@footnote{The term @dfn{stratum} in this context was coined by
ef4ab0a4
LC
3401Manuel Serrano et al.@: in the context of their work on Hop. Oleg
3402Kiselyov, who has written insightful
3403@url{http://okmij.org/ftp/meta-programming/#meta-scheme, essays and code
3404on this topic}, refers to this kind of code generation as
3405@dfn{staging}.}: the ``host code''---code that defines packages, talks
3406to the daemon, etc.---and the ``build code''---code that actually
3407performs build actions, such as making directories, invoking
3408@command{make}, etc.
21b679f6
LC
3409
3410To describe a derivation and its build actions, one typically needs to
3411embed build code inside host code. It boils down to manipulating build
f97c9175 3412code as data, and the homoiconicity of Scheme---code has a direct
21b679f6 3413representation as data---comes in handy for that. But we need more than
f97c9175 3414the normal @code{quasiquote} mechanism in Scheme to construct build
21b679f6
LC
3415expressions.
3416
3417The @code{(guix gexp)} module implements @dfn{G-expressions}, a form of
3418S-expressions adapted to build expressions. G-expressions, or
f97c9175 3419@dfn{gexps}, consist essentially of three syntactic forms: @code{gexp},
21b679f6 3420@code{ungexp}, and @code{ungexp-splicing} (or simply: @code{#~},
f97c9175
AE
3421@code{#$}, and @code{#$@@}), which are comparable to
3422@code{quasiquote}, @code{unquote}, and @code{unquote-splicing},
3423respectivel (@pxref{Expression Syntax, @code{quasiquote},, guile,
3424GNU Guile Reference Manual}). However, there are major differences:
21b679f6
LC
3425
3426@itemize
3427@item
3428Gexps are meant to be written to a file and run or manipulated by other
3429processes.
3430
3431@item
b39fc6f7
LC
3432When a high-level object such as a package or derivation is unquoted
3433inside a gexp, the result is as if its output file name had been
3434introduced.
ff40e9b7 3435
21b679f6
LC
3436@item
3437Gexps carry information about the packages or derivations they refer to,
3438and these dependencies are automatically added as inputs to the build
3439processes that use them.
3440@end itemize
3441
c2b84676 3442@cindex lowering, of high-level objects in gexps
343eacbe
LC
3443This mechanism is not limited to package and derivation
3444objects: @dfn{compilers} able to ``lower'' other high-level objects to
c2b84676
LC
3445derivations or files in the store can be defined,
3446such that these objects can also be inserted
f97c9175 3447into gexps. For example, a useful type of high-level objects that can be
343eacbe 3448inserted in a gexp is ``file-like objects'', which make it easy to
f97c9175 3449add files to the store and to refer to them in
558e8b11
LC
3450derivations and such (see @code{local-file} and @code{plain-file}
3451below.)
b39fc6f7 3452
21b679f6
LC
3453To illustrate the idea, here is an example of a gexp:
3454
3455@example
3456(define build-exp
3457 #~(begin
3458 (mkdir #$output)
3459 (chdir #$output)
aff8ce7c 3460 (symlink (string-append #$coreutils "/bin/ls")
21b679f6
LC
3461 "list-files")))
3462@end example
3463
3464This gexp can be passed to @code{gexp->derivation}; we obtain a
3465derivation that builds a directory containing exactly one symlink to
3466@file{/gnu/store/@dots{}-coreutils-8.22/bin/ls}:
3467
3468@example
3469(gexp->derivation "the-thing" build-exp)
3470@end example
3471
e20fd1bf 3472As one would expect, the @code{"/gnu/store/@dots{}-coreutils-8.22"} string is
21b679f6
LC
3473substituted to the reference to the @var{coreutils} package in the
3474actual build code, and @var{coreutils} is automatically made an input to
3475the derivation. Likewise, @code{#$output} (equivalent to @code{(ungexp
f97c9175
AE
3476output)}) is replaced by a string containing the directory name of the
3477output of the derivation.
667b2508
LC
3478
3479@cindex cross compilation
3480In a cross-compilation context, it is useful to distinguish between
3481references to the @emph{native} build of a package---that can run on the
3482host---versus references to cross builds of a package. To that end, the
3483@code{#+} plays the same role as @code{#$}, but is a reference to a
3484native package build:
3485
3486@example
3487(gexp->derivation "vi"
3488 #~(begin
3489 (mkdir #$output)
3490 (system* (string-append #+coreutils "/bin/ln")
3491 "-s"
3492 (string-append #$emacs "/bin/emacs")
3493 (string-append #$output "/bin/vi")))
3494 #:target "mips64el-linux")
3495@end example
3496
3497@noindent
3498In the example above, the native build of @var{coreutils} is used, so
3499that @command{ln} can actually run on the host; but then the
3500cross-compiled build of @var{emacs} is referenced.
3501
3502The syntactic form to construct gexps is summarized below.
21b679f6
LC
3503
3504@deffn {Scheme Syntax} #~@var{exp}
3505@deffnx {Scheme Syntax} (gexp @var{exp})
3506Return a G-expression containing @var{exp}. @var{exp} may contain one
3507or more of the following forms:
3508
3509@table @code
3510@item #$@var{obj}
3511@itemx (ungexp @var{obj})
b39fc6f7
LC
3512Introduce a reference to @var{obj}. @var{obj} may have one of the
3513supported types, for example a package or a
21b679f6
LC
3514derivation, in which case the @code{ungexp} form is replaced by its
3515output file name---e.g., @code{"/gnu/store/@dots{}-coreutils-8.22}.
3516
b39fc6f7
LC
3517If @var{obj} is a list, it is traversed and references to supported
3518objects are substituted similarly.
21b679f6
LC
3519
3520If @var{obj} is another gexp, its contents are inserted and its
3521dependencies are added to those of the containing gexp.
3522
3523If @var{obj} is another kind of object, it is inserted as is.
3524
b39fc6f7
LC
3525@item #$@var{obj}:@var{output}
3526@itemx (ungexp @var{obj} @var{output})
21b679f6 3527This is like the form above, but referring explicitly to the
b39fc6f7
LC
3528@var{output} of @var{obj}---this is useful when @var{obj} produces
3529multiple outputs (@pxref{Packages with Multiple Outputs}).
21b679f6 3530
667b2508
LC
3531@item #+@var{obj}
3532@itemx #+@var{obj}:output
3533@itemx (ungexp-native @var{obj})
3534@itemx (ungexp-native @var{obj} @var{output})
3535Same as @code{ungexp}, but produces a reference to the @emph{native}
3536build of @var{obj} when used in a cross compilation context.
3537
21b679f6
LC
3538@item #$output[:@var{output}]
3539@itemx (ungexp output [@var{output}])
3540Insert a reference to derivation output @var{output}, or to the main
3541output when @var{output} is omitted.
3542
3543This only makes sense for gexps passed to @code{gexp->derivation}.
3544
3545@item #$@@@var{lst}
3546@itemx (ungexp-splicing @var{lst})
3547Like the above, but splices the contents of @var{lst} inside the
3548containing list.
3549
667b2508
LC
3550@item #+@@@var{lst}
3551@itemx (ungexp-native-splicing @var{lst})
3552Like the above, but refers to native builds of the objects listed in
3553@var{lst}.
3554
21b679f6
LC
3555@end table
3556
3557G-expressions created by @code{gexp} or @code{#~} are run-time objects
3558of the @code{gexp?} type (see below.)
3559@end deffn
3560
3561@deffn {Scheme Procedure} gexp? @var{obj}
3562Return @code{#t} if @var{obj} is a G-expression.
3563@end deffn
3564
3565G-expressions are meant to be written to disk, either as code building
3566some derivation, or as plain files in the store. The monadic procedures
3567below allow you to do that (@pxref{The Store Monad}, for more
3568information about monads.)
3569
3570@deffn {Monadic Procedure} gexp->derivation @var{name} @var{exp} @
ce45eb4c 3571 [#:system (%current-system)] [#:target #f] [#:graft? #t] @
21b679f6
LC
3572 [#:hash #f] [#:hash-algo #f] @
3573 [#:recursive? #f] [#:env-vars '()] [#:modules '()] @
4684f301 3574 [#:module-path @var{%load-path}] @
c8351d9a 3575 [#:references-graphs #f] [#:allowed-references #f] @
c0468155 3576 [#:leaked-env-vars #f] @
0309e1b0 3577 [#:script-name (string-append @var{name} "-builder")] @
4a6aeb67 3578 [#:local-build? #f] [#:substitutable? #t] [#:guile-for-build #f]
21b679f6 3579Return a derivation @var{name} that runs @var{exp} (a gexp) with
0309e1b0
LC
3580@var{guile-for-build} (a derivation) on @var{system}; @var{exp} is
3581stored in a file called @var{script-name}. When @var{target} is true,
3582it is used as the cross-compilation target triplet for packages referred
3583to by @var{exp}.
21b679f6 3584
ce45eb4c
LC
3585Make @var{modules} available in the evaluation context of @var{exp};
3586@var{modules} is a list of names of Guile modules searched in
3587@var{module-path} to be copied in the store, compiled, and made available in
21b679f6
LC
3588the load path during the execution of @var{exp}---e.g., @code{((guix
3589build utils) (guix build gnu-build-system))}.
3590
ce45eb4c
LC
3591@var{graft?} determines whether packages referred to by @var{exp} should be grafted when
3592applicable.
3593
b53833b2
LC
3594When @var{references-graphs} is true, it must be a list of tuples of one of the
3595following forms:
3596
3597@example
3598(@var{file-name} @var{package})
3599(@var{file-name} @var{package} @var{output})
3600(@var{file-name} @var{derivation})
3601(@var{file-name} @var{derivation} @var{output})
3602(@var{file-name} @var{store-item})
3603@end example
3604
3605The right-hand-side of each element of @var{references-graphs} is automatically made
3606an input of the build process of @var{exp}. In the build environment, each
3607@var{file-name} contains the reference graph of the corresponding item, in a simple
3608text format.
3609
c8351d9a
LC
3610@var{allowed-references} must be either @code{#f} or a list of output names and packages.
3611In the latter case, the list denotes store items that the result is allowed to
3612refer to. Any reference to another store item will lead to a build error.
3613
e20fd1bf 3614The other arguments are as for @code{derivation} (@pxref{Derivations}).
21b679f6
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3615@end deffn
3616
343eacbe 3617@cindex file-like objects
e1c153e0
LC
3618The @code{local-file}, @code{plain-file}, @code{computed-file},
3619@code{program-file}, and @code{scheme-file} procedures below return
3620@dfn{file-like objects}. That is, when unquoted in a G-expression,
3621these objects lead to a file in the store. Consider this G-expression:
343eacbe
LC
3622
3623@example
3624#~(system* (string-append #$glibc "/sbin/nscd") "-f"
3625 #$(local-file "/tmp/my-nscd.conf"))
3626@end example
3627
3628The effect here is to ``intern'' @file{/tmp/my-nscd.conf} by copying it
3629to the store. Once expanded, for instance @i{via}
3630@code{gexp->derivation}, the G-expression refers to that copy under
3631@file{/gnu/store}; thus, modifying or removing the file in @file{/tmp}
3632does not have any effect on what the G-expression does.
3633@code{plain-file} can be used similarly; it differs in that the file
3634content is directly passed as a string.
3635
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3636@deffn {Scheme Procedure} local-file @var{file} [@var{name}] @
3637 [#:recursive? #t]
3638Return an object representing local file @var{file} to add to the store; this
9d3994f7
LC
3639object can be used in a gexp. If @var{file} is a relative file name, it is looked
3640up relative to the source file where this form appears. @var{file} will be added to
3641the store under @var{name}--by default the base name of @var{file}.
d9ae938f
LC
3642
3643When @var{recursive?} is true, the contents of @var{file} are added recursively; if @var{file}
3644designates a flat file and @var{recursive?} is true, its contents are added, and its
3645permission bits are kept.
3646
3647This is the declarative counterpart of the @code{interned-file} monadic
3648procedure (@pxref{The Store Monad, @code{interned-file}}).
3649@end deffn
3650
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3651@deffn {Scheme Procedure} plain-file @var{name} @var{content}
3652Return an object representing a text file called @var{name} with the given
3653@var{content} (a string) to be added to the store.
3654
3655This is the declarative counterpart of @code{text-file}.
3656@end deffn
3657
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3658@deffn {Scheme Procedure} computed-file @var{name} @var{gexp} @
3659 [#:modules '()] [#:options '(#:local-build? #t)]
3660Return an object representing the store item @var{name}, a file or
3661directory computed by @var{gexp}. @var{modules} specifies the set of
3662modules visible in the execution context of @var{gexp}. @var{options}
3663is a list of additional arguments to pass to @code{gexp->derivation}.
3664
3665This is the declarative counterpart of @code{gexp->derivation}.
3666@end deffn
3667
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3668@deffn {Monadic Procedure} gexp->script @var{name} @var{exp}
3669Return an executable script @var{name} that runs @var{exp} using
3670@var{guile} with @var{modules} in its search path.
3671
3672The example below builds a script that simply invokes the @command{ls}
3673command:
3674
3675@example
3676(use-modules (guix gexp) (gnu packages base))
3677
3678(gexp->script "list-files"
3679 #~(execl (string-append #$coreutils "/bin/ls")
3680 "ls"))
3681@end example
3682
3683When ``running'' it through the store (@pxref{The Store Monad,
e20fd1bf 3684@code{run-with-store}}), we obtain a derivation that produces an
21b679f6
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3685executable file @file{/gnu/store/@dots{}-list-files} along these lines:
3686
3687@example
3688#!/gnu/store/@dots{}-guile-2.0.11/bin/guile -ds
3689!#
3690(execl (string-append "/gnu/store/@dots{}-coreutils-8.22"/bin/ls")
3691 "ls")
3692@end example
3693@end deffn
3694
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3695@deffn {Scheme Procedure} program-file @var{name} @var{exp} @
3696 [#:modules '()] [#:guile #f]
3697Return an object representing the executable store item @var{name} that
3698runs @var{gexp}. @var{guile} is the Guile package used to execute that
3699script, and @var{modules} is the list of modules visible to that script.
3700
3701This is the declarative counterpart of @code{gexp->script}.
3702@end deffn
3703
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3704@deffn {Monadic Procedure} gexp->file @var{name} @var{exp}
3705Return a derivation that builds a file @var{name} containing @var{exp}.
3706
3707The resulting file holds references to all the dependencies of @var{exp}
3708or a subset thereof.
3709@end deffn
1ed19464 3710
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3711@deffn {Scheme Procedure} scheme-file @var{name} @var{exp}
3712Return an object representing the Scheme file @var{name} that contains
3713@var{exp}.
3714
3715This is the declarative counterpart of @code{gexp->file}.
3716@end deffn
3717
1ed19464
LC
3718@deffn {Monadic Procedure} text-file* @var{name} @var{text} @dots{}
3719Return as a monadic value a derivation that builds a text file
3720containing all of @var{text}. @var{text} may list, in addition to
d9ae938f
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3721strings, objects of any type that can be used in a gexp: packages,
3722derivations, local file objects, etc. The resulting store file holds
3723references to all these.
1ed19464
LC
3724
3725This variant should be preferred over @code{text-file} anytime the file
3726to create will reference items from the store. This is typically the
3727case when building a configuration file that embeds store file names,
3728like this:
3729
3730@example
3731(define (profile.sh)
3732 ;; Return the name of a shell script in the store that
3733 ;; initializes the 'PATH' environment variable.
3734 (text-file* "profile.sh"
3735 "export PATH=" coreutils "/bin:"
3736 grep "/bin:" sed "/bin\n"))
3737@end example
3738
3739In this example, the resulting @file{/gnu/store/@dots{}-profile.sh} file
3740will references @var{coreutils}, @var{grep}, and @var{sed}, thereby
3741preventing them from being garbage-collected during its lifetime.
3742@end deffn
21b679f6 3743
b751cde3
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3744@deffn {Scheme Procedure} mixed-text-file @var{name} @var{text} @dots{}
3745Return an object representing store file @var{name} containing
3746@var{text}. @var{text} is a sequence of strings and file-like objects,
3747as in:
3748
3749@example
3750(mixed-text-file "profile"
3751 "export PATH=" coreutils "/bin:" grep "/bin")
3752@end example
3753
3754This is the declarative counterpart of @code{text-file*}.
3755@end deffn
3756
21b679f6
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3757Of course, in addition to gexps embedded in ``host'' code, there are
3758also modules containing build tools. To make it clear that they are
3759meant to be used in the build stratum, these modules are kept in the
3760@code{(guix build @dots{})} name space.
3761
c2b84676
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3762@cindex lowering, of high-level objects in gexps
3763Internally, high-level objects are @dfn{lowered}, using their compiler,
3764to either derivations or store items. For instance, lowering a package
3765yields a derivation, and lowering a @code{plain-file} yields a store
3766item. This is achieved using the @code{lower-object} monadic procedure.
3767
3768@deffn {Monadic Procedure} lower-object @var{obj} [@var{system}] @
3769 [#:target #f]
3770Return as a value in @var{%store-monad} the derivation or store item
3771corresponding to @var{obj} for @var{system}, cross-compiling for
3772@var{target} if @var{target} is true. @var{obj} must be an object that
3773has an associated gexp compiler, such as a @code{<package>}.
3774@end deffn
3775
21b679f6 3776
568717fd
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3777@c *********************************************************************
3778@node Utilities
3779@chapter Utilities
3780
210cc920
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3781This section describes tools primarily targeted at developers and users
3782who write new package definitions. They complement the Scheme
3783programming interface of Guix in a convenient way.
3784
568717fd 3785@menu
37166310 3786* Invoking guix build:: Building packages from the command line.
39bee8a2 3787* Invoking guix edit:: Editing package definitions.
210cc920 3788* Invoking guix download:: Downloading a file and printing its hash.
37166310 3789* Invoking guix hash:: Computing the cryptographic hash of a file.
2f7d2d91 3790* Invoking guix import:: Importing package definitions.
37166310 3791* Invoking guix refresh:: Updating package definitions.
b4f5e0e8 3792* Invoking guix lint:: Finding errors in package definitions.
fcc58db6 3793* Invoking guix size:: Profiling disk usage.
88856916 3794* Invoking guix graph:: Visualizing the graph of packages.
372c4bbc 3795* Invoking guix environment:: Setting up development environments.
aff8ce7c 3796* Invoking guix publish:: Sharing substitutes.
d23c20f1 3797* Invoking guix challenge:: Challenging substitute servers.
32efa254 3798* Invoking guix container:: Process isolation.
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3799@end menu
3800
e49951eb
MW
3801@node Invoking guix build
3802@section Invoking @command{guix build}
568717fd 3803
e49951eb 3804The @command{guix build} command builds packages or derivations and
6798a8e4
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3805their dependencies, and prints the resulting store paths. Note that it
3806does not modify the user's profile---this is the job of the
e49951eb 3807@command{guix package} command (@pxref{Invoking guix package}). Thus,
6798a8e4
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3808it is mainly useful for distribution developers.
3809
3810The general syntax is:
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3811
3812@example
e49951eb 3813guix build @var{options} @var{package-or-derivation}@dots{}
c78bd12b
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3814@end example
3815
f97c9175 3816As an example, the following command builds the latest versions of Emacs
ccd7158d
LC
3817and of Guile, displays their build logs, and finally displays the
3818resulting directories:
3819
3820@example
3821guix build emacs guile
3822@end example
3823
3824Similarly, the following command builds all the available packages:
3825
3826@example
3827guix build --keep-going \
3828 `guix package -A | cut -f1,2 --output-delimiter=@@`
3829@end example
3830
c78bd12b 3831@var{package-or-derivation} may be either the name of a package found in
5401dd75
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3832the software distribution such as @code{coreutils} or
3833@code{coreutils-8.20}, or a derivation such as
834129e0 3834@file{/gnu/store/@dots{}-coreutils-8.19.drv}. In the former case, a
e7f34eb0
LC
3835package with the corresponding name (and optionally version) is searched
3836for among the GNU distribution modules (@pxref{Package Modules}).
3837
3838Alternatively, the @code{--expression} option may be used to specify a
3839Scheme expression that evaluates to a package; this is useful when
3840disambiguation among several same-named packages or package variants is
3841needed.
c78bd12b 3842
ccd7158d
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3843There may be zero or more @var{options}. The available options are
3844described in the subsections below.
3845
3846@menu
3847* Common Build Options:: Build options for most commands.
88ad6ded 3848* Package Transformation Options:: Creating variants of packages.
ccd7158d
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3849* Additional Build Options:: Options specific to 'guix build'.
3850@end menu
3851
3852@node Common Build Options
3853@subsection Common Build Options
3854
3855A number of options that control the build process are common to
3856@command{guix build} and other commands that can spawn builds, such as
3857@command{guix package} or @command{guix archive}. These are the
3858following:
3859
3860@table @code
3861
3862@item --load-path=@var{directory}
3863@itemx -L @var{directory}
3864Add @var{directory} to the front of the package module search path
3865(@pxref{Package Modules}).
3866
3867This allows users to define their own packages and make them visible to
3868the command-line tools.
3869
3870@item --keep-failed
3871@itemx -K
3872Keep the build tree of failed builds. Thus, if a build fail, its build
3873tree is kept under @file{/tmp}, in a directory whose name is shown at
3874the end of the build log. This is useful when debugging build issues.
3875
3876@item --keep-going
3877@itemx -k
3878Keep going when some of the derivations fail to build; return only once
3879all the builds have either completed or failed.
3880
3881The default behavior is to stop as soon as one of the specified
3882derivations has failed.
3883
3884@item --dry-run
3885@itemx -n
3886Do not build the derivations.
3887
3888@item --fallback
3889When substituting a pre-built binary fails, fall back to building
3890packages locally.
3891
3892@item --substitute-urls=@var{urls}
3893@anchor{client-substitute-urls}
3894Consider @var{urls} the whitespace-separated list of substitute source
3895URLs, overriding the default list of URLs of @command{guix-daemon}
3896(@pxref{daemon-substitute-urls,, @command{guix-daemon} URLs}).
3897
3898This means that substitutes may be downloaded from @var{urls}, provided
3899they are signed by a key authorized by the system administrator
3900(@pxref{Substitutes}).
3901
3902@item --no-substitutes
3903Do not use substitutes for build products. That is, always build things
3904locally instead of allowing downloads of pre-built binaries
3905(@pxref{Substitutes}).
3906
3907@item --rounds=@var{n}
3908Build each derivation @var{n} times in a row, and raise an error if
3909consecutive build results are not bit-for-bit identical.
3910
3911This is a useful way to detect non-deterministic builds processes.
3912Non-deterministic build processes are a problem because they make it
3913practically impossible for users to @emph{verify} whether third-party
3914binaries are genuine. @xref{Invoking guix challenge}, for more.
3915
3916Note that, currently, the differing build results are not kept around,
3917so you will have to manually investigate in case of an error---e.g., by
3918stashing one of the build results with @code{guix archive --export},
3919then rebuilding, and finally comparing the two results.
3920
3921@item --no-build-hook
f97c9175 3922Do not attempt to offload builds @i{via} the ``build hook'' of the daemon
ccd7158d
LC
3923(@pxref{Daemon Offload Setup}). That is, always build things locally
3924instead of offloading builds to remote machines.
3925
3926@item --max-silent-time=@var{seconds}
3927When the build or substitution process remains silent for more than
3928@var{seconds}, terminate it and report a build failure.
3929
3930@item --timeout=@var{seconds}
3931Likewise, when the build or substitution process lasts for more than
3932@var{seconds}, terminate it and report a build failure.
3933
3934By default there is no timeout. This behavior can be restored with
3935@code{--timeout=0}.
3936
3937@item --verbosity=@var{level}
3938Use the given verbosity level. @var{level} must be an integer between 0
3939and 5; higher means more verbose output. Setting a level of 4 or more
3940may be helpful when debugging setup issues with the build daemon.
3941
3942@item --cores=@var{n}
3943@itemx -c @var{n}
3944Allow the use of up to @var{n} CPU cores for the build. The special
3945value @code{0} means to use as many CPU cores as available.
3946
3947@item --max-jobs=@var{n}
3948@itemx -M @var{n}
3949Allow at most @var{n} build jobs in parallel. @xref{Invoking
3950guix-daemon, @code{--max-jobs}}, for details about this option and the
3951equivalent @command{guix-daemon} option.
3952
3953@end table
3954
3955Behind the scenes, @command{guix build} is essentially an interface to
3956the @code{package-derivation} procedure of the @code{(guix packages)}
3957module, and to the @code{build-derivations} procedure of the @code{(guix
3958derivations)} module.
3959
3960In addition to options explicitly passed on the command line,
3961@command{guix build} and other @command{guix} commands that support
3962building honor the @code{GUIX_BUILD_OPTIONS} environment variable.
3963
3964@defvr {Environment Variable} GUIX_BUILD_OPTIONS
3965Users can define this variable to a list of command line options that
3966will automatically be used by @command{guix build} and other
3967@command{guix} commands that can perform builds, as in the example
3968below:
3969
3970@example
3971$ export GUIX_BUILD_OPTIONS="--no-substitutes -c 2 -L /foo/bar"
3972@end example
3973
3974These options are parsed independently, and the result is appended to
3975the parsed command-line options.
3976@end defvr
3977
88ad6ded
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3978
3979@node Package Transformation Options
3980@subsection Package Transformation Options
3981
3982@cindex package variants
3983Another set of command-line options supported by @command{guix build}
b8638f03 3984and also @command{guix package} are @dfn{package transformation
f97c9175 3985options}. These are options that make it possible to define @dfn{package
b8638f03
LC
3986variants}---for instance, packages built from different source code.
3987This is a convenient way to create customized packages on the fly
3988without having to type in the definitions of package variants
3989(@pxref{Defining Packages}).
88ad6ded
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3990
3991@table @code
3992
3993@item --with-source=@var{source}
3994Use @var{source} as the source of the corresponding package.
3995@var{source} must be a file name or a URL, as for @command{guix
3996download} (@pxref{Invoking guix download}).
3997
f97c9175
AE
3998The ``corresponding package'' is taken to be the one specified on the
3999command line the name of which matches the base of @var{source}---e.g.,
4000if @var{source} is @code{/src/guile-2.0.10.tar.gz}, the corresponding
88ad6ded 4001package is @code{guile}. Likewise, the version string is inferred from
f97c9175 4002@var{source}; in the previous example, it is @code{2.0.10}.
88ad6ded
LC
4003
4004This option allows users to try out versions of packages other than the
4005one provided by the distribution. The example below downloads
4006@file{ed-1.7.tar.gz} from a GNU mirror and uses that as the source for
4007the @code{ed} package:
4008
4009@example
4010guix build ed --with-source=mirror://gnu/ed/ed-1.7.tar.gz
4011@end example
4012
4013As a developer, @code{--with-source} makes it easy to test release
4014candidates:
4015
4016@example
4017guix build guile --with-source=../guile-2.0.9.219-e1bb7.tar.xz
4018@end example
4019
4020@dots{} or to build from a checkout in a pristine environment:
4021
4022@example
4023$ git clone git://git.sv.gnu.org/guix.git
4024$ guix build guix --with-source=./guix
4025@end example
4026
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4027@item --with-input=@var{package}=@var{replacement}
4028Replace dependency on @var{package} by a dependency on
4029@var{replacement}. @var{package} must be a package name, and
4030@var{replacement} must be a package specification such as @code{guile}
4031or @code{guile@@1.8}.
4032
f97c9175 4033For instance, the following command builds Guix, but replaces its
47c0f92c
LC
4034dependency on the current stable version of Guile with a dependency on
4035the development version of Guile, @code{guile-next}:
4036
4037@example
4038guix build --with-input=guile=guile-next guix
4039@end example
4040
4041This is a recursive, deep replacement. So in this example, both
4042@code{guix} and its dependency @code{guile-json} (which also depends on
4043@code{guile}) get rebuilt against @code{guile-next}.
4044
4045However, implicit inputs are left unchanged.
88ad6ded
LC
4046@end table
4047
ccd7158d
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4048@node Additional Build Options
4049@subsection Additional Build Options
4050
4051The command-line options presented below are specific to @command{guix
4052build}.
c78bd12b
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4053
4054@table @code
4055
34a1783f
DT
4056@item --file=@var{file}
4057@itemx -f @var{file}
4058
4059Build the package or derivation that the code within @var{file}
4060evaluates to.
4061
4062As an example, @var{file} might contain a package definition like this
4063(@pxref{Defining Packages}):
4064
4065@example
4066@verbatiminclude package-hello.scm
4067@end example
4068
c78bd12b
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4069@item --expression=@var{expr}
4070@itemx -e @var{expr}
ac5de156 4071Build the package or derivation @var{expr} evaluates to.
c78bd12b 4072
5401dd75 4073For example, @var{expr} may be @code{(@@ (gnu packages guile)
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4074guile-1.8)}, which unambiguously designates this specific variant of
4075version 1.8 of Guile.
4076
f97c9175 4077Alternatively, @var{expr} may be a G-expression, in which case it is used
56b82106
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4078as a build program passed to @code{gexp->derivation}
4079(@pxref{G-Expressions}).
4080
4081Lastly, @var{expr} may refer to a zero-argument monadic procedure
ac5de156
LC
4082(@pxref{The Store Monad}). The procedure must return a derivation as a
4083monadic value, which is then passed through @code{run-with-store}.
4084
c78bd12b
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4085@item --source
4086@itemx -S
f97c9175 4087Build the source derivations of the packages, rather than the packages
c78bd12b
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4088themselves.
4089
e49951eb 4090For instance, @code{guix build -S gcc} returns something like
f97c9175
AE
4091@file{/gnu/store/@dots{}-gcc-4.7.2.tar.bz2}, which is the GCC
4092source tarball.
c78bd12b 4093
f9cc8971 4094The returned source tarball is the result of applying any patches and
f97c9175 4095code snippets specified in the package @code{origin} (@pxref{Defining
f9cc8971
LC
4096Packages}).
4097
2cdfe13d
EB
4098@item --sources
4099Fetch and return the source of @var{package-or-derivation} and all their
4100dependencies, recursively. This is a handy way to obtain a local copy
4101of all the source code needed to build @var{packages}, allowing you to
4102eventually build them even without network access. It is an extension
4103of the @code{--source} option and can accept one of the following
4104optional argument values:
4105
4106@table @code
4107@item package
4108This value causes the @code{--sources} option to behave in the same way
4109as the @code{--source} option.
4110
4111@item all
f97c9175
AE
4112Build the source derivations of all packages, including any source that
4113might be listed as @code{inputs}. This is the default value.
2cdfe13d
EB
4114
4115@example
4116$ guix build --sources tzdata
4117The following derivations will be built:
4118 /gnu/store/@dots{}-tzdata2015b.tar.gz.drv
4119 /gnu/store/@dots{}-tzcode2015b.tar.gz.drv
4120@end example
4121
4122@item transitive
f97c9175
AE
4123Build the source derivations of all packages, as well of all transitive
4124inputs to the packages. This can be used e.g. to
2cdfe13d
EB
4125prefetch package source for later offline building.
4126
4127@example
4128$ guix build --sources=transitive tzdata
4129The following derivations will be built:
4130 /gnu/store/@dots{}-tzcode2015b.tar.gz.drv
4131 /gnu/store/@dots{}-findutils-4.4.2.tar.xz.drv
4132 /gnu/store/@dots{}-grep-2.21.tar.xz.drv
4133 /gnu/store/@dots{}-coreutils-8.23.tar.xz.drv
4134 /gnu/store/@dots{}-make-4.1.tar.xz.drv
4135 /gnu/store/@dots{}-bash-4.3.tar.xz.drv
4136@dots{}
4137@end example
4138
4139@end table
4140
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4141@item --system=@var{system}
4142@itemx -s @var{system}
4143Attempt to build for @var{system}---e.g., @code{i686-linux}---instead of
f97c9175 4144the system type of the build host.
c78bd12b
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4145
4146An example use of this is on Linux-based systems, which can emulate
4147different personalities. For instance, passing
4148@code{--system=i686-linux} on an @code{x86_64-linux} system allows users
4149to build packages in a complete 32-bit environment.
4150
e55ec43d
LC
4151@item --target=@var{triplet}
4152@cindex cross-compilation
4153Cross-build for @var{triplet}, which must be a valid GNU triplet, such
4154as @code{"mips64el-linux-gnu"} (@pxref{Configuration Names, GNU
4155configuration triplets,, configure, GNU Configure and Build System}).
4156
a8d65643
LC
4157@anchor{build-check}
4158@item --check
4159@cindex determinism, checking
4160@cindex reproducibility, checking
4161Rebuild @var{package-or-derivation}, which are already available in the
4162store, and raise an error if the build results are not bit-for-bit
4163identical.
4164
f97c9175
AE
4165This mechanism allows you to check whether previously installed
4166substitutes are genuine (@pxref{Substitutes}), or whether the build result
4167of a package is deterministic. @xref{Invoking guix challenge}, for more
a8d65643
LC
4168background information and tools.
4169
05962f29
LC
4170@item --no-grafts
4171Do not ``graft'' packages. In practice, this means that package updates
4172available as grafts are not applied. @xref{Security Updates}, for more
4173information on grafts.
7f3673f2 4174
c78bd12b
LC
4175@item --derivations
4176@itemx -d
4177Return the derivation paths, not the output paths, of the given
4178packages.
4179
70ee5642
LC
4180@item --root=@var{file}
4181@itemx -r @var{file}
4182Make @var{file} a symlink to the result, and register it as a garbage
4183collector root.
4184
4185@item --log-file
3f208ad7 4186Return the build log file names or URLs for the given
f97c9175 4187@var{package-or-derivation}, or raise an error if build logs are
70ee5642
LC
4188missing.
4189
4190This works regardless of how packages or derivations are specified. For
4191instance, the following invocations are equivalent:
4192
4193@example
4194guix build --log-file `guix build -d guile`
4195guix build --log-file `guix build guile`
4196guix build --log-file guile
4197guix build --log-file -e '(@@ (gnu packages guile) guile-2.0)'
4198@end example
4199
3f208ad7
LC
4200If a log is unavailable locally, and unless @code{--no-substitutes} is
4201passed, the command looks for a corresponding log on one of the
4202substitute servers (as specified with @code{--substitute-urls}.)
70ee5642 4203
f97c9175
AE
4204So for instance, imagine you want to see the build log of GDB on MIPS,
4205but you are actually on an @code{x86_64} machine:
3f208ad7
LC
4206
4207@example
4208$ guix build --log-file gdb -s mips64el-linux
4209http://hydra.gnu.org/log/@dots{}-gdb-7.10
4210@end example
4211
4212You can freely access a huge library of build logs!
70ee5642
LC
4213@end table
4214
16eb115e 4215
39bee8a2
LC
4216@node Invoking guix edit
4217@section Invoking @command{guix edit}
4218
4219@cindex package definition, editing
4220So many packages, so many source files! The @command{guix edit} command
4221facilitates the life of packagers by pointing their editor at the source
4222file containing the definition of the specified packages. For instance:
4223
4224@example
4225guix edit gcc-4.8 vim
4226@end example
4227
4228@noindent
6237b9fa
LC
4229launches the program specified in the @code{VISUAL} or in the
4230@code{EDITOR} environment variable to edit the recipe of GCC@tie{}4.8.4
4231and that of Vim.
39bee8a2 4232
f97c9175 4233If you are using Emacs, note that the Emacs user interface provides the
7c1b1ae2 4234@kbd{M-x guix-edit} command and a similar functionality in the ``package
f97c9175 4235info'' and ``package list'' buffers created by the @kbd{M-x
7c1b1ae2 4236guix-search-by-name} and similar commands (@pxref{Emacs Commands}).
39bee8a2
LC
4237
4238
210cc920
LC
4239@node Invoking guix download
4240@section Invoking @command{guix download}
4241
4242When writing a package definition, developers typically need to download
f97c9175 4243a source tarball, compute its SHA256 hash, and write that
210cc920
LC
4244hash in the package definition (@pxref{Defining Packages}). The
4245@command{guix download} tool helps with this task: it downloads a file
4246from the given URI, adds it to the store, and prints both its file name
4247in the store and its SHA256 hash.
4248
4249The fact that the downloaded file is added to the store saves bandwidth:
4250when the developer eventually tries to build the newly defined package
4251with @command{guix build}, the source tarball will not have to be
4252downloaded again because it is already in the store. It is also a
4253convenient way to temporarily stash files, which may be deleted
4254eventually (@pxref{Invoking guix gc}).
4255
4256The @command{guix download} command supports the same URIs as used in
4257package definitions. In particular, it supports @code{mirror://} URIs.
4258@code{https} URIs (HTTP over TLS) are supported @emph{provided} the
4259Guile bindings for GnuTLS are available in the user's environment; when
537c8bb3
LC
4260they are not available, an error is raised. @xref{Guile Preparations,
4261how to install the GnuTLS bindings for Guile,, gnutls-guile,
4262GnuTLS-Guile}, for more information.
210cc920
LC
4263
4264The following option is available:
4265
4266@table @code
4267@item --format=@var{fmt}
4268@itemx -f @var{fmt}
4269Write the hash in the format specified by @var{fmt}. For more
081145cf 4270information on the valid values for @var{fmt}, @pxref{Invoking guix hash}.
210cc920
LC
4271@end table
4272
6c365eca
NK
4273@node Invoking guix hash
4274@section Invoking @command{guix hash}
4275
210cc920 4276The @command{guix hash} command computes the SHA256 hash of a file.
6c365eca
NK
4277It is primarily a convenience tool for anyone contributing to the
4278distribution: it computes the cryptographic hash of a file, which can be
4279used in the definition of a package (@pxref{Defining Packages}).
4280
4281The general syntax is:
4282
4283@example
4284guix hash @var{option} @var{file}
4285@end example
4286
4287@command{guix hash} has the following option:
4288
4289@table @code
4290
4291@item --format=@var{fmt}
4292@itemx -f @var{fmt}
210cc920 4293Write the hash in the format specified by @var{fmt}.
6c365eca
NK
4294
4295Supported formats: @code{nix-base32}, @code{base32}, @code{base16}
4296(@code{hex} and @code{hexadecimal} can be used as well).
4297
4298If the @option{--format} option is not specified, @command{guix hash}
4299will output the hash in @code{nix-base32}. This representation is used
4300in the definitions of packages.
4301
3140f2df
LC
4302@item --recursive
4303@itemx -r
4304Compute the hash on @var{file} recursively.
4305
4306In this case, the hash is computed on an archive containing @var{file},
f97c9175
AE
4307including its children if it is a directory. Some of the metadata of
4308@var{file} is part of the archive; for instance, when @var{file} is a
3140f2df 4309regular file, the hash is different depending on whether @var{file} is
f97c9175 4310executable or not. Metadata such as time stamps has no impact on the
3140f2df
LC
4311hash (@pxref{Invoking guix archive}).
4312@c FIXME: Replace xref above with xref to an ``Archive'' section when
4313@c it exists.
4314
6c365eca
NK
4315@end table
4316
2f7d2d91
LC
4317@node Invoking guix import
4318@section Invoking @command{guix import}
4319
4320@cindex importing packages
4321@cindex package import
4322@cindex package conversion
f97c9175
AE
4323The @command{guix import} command is useful for people who would like to
4324add a package to the distribution with as little work as
4325possible---a legitimate demand. The command knows of a few
4326repositories from which it can ``import'' package metadata. The result
2f7d2d91
LC
4327is a package definition, or a template thereof, in the format we know
4328(@pxref{Defining Packages}).
4329
4330The general syntax is:
4331
4332@example
4333guix import @var{importer} @var{options}@dots{}
4334@end example
4335
4336@var{importer} specifies the source from which to import package
f97c9175 4337metadata, and @var{options} specifies a package identifier and other
2f7d2d91
LC
4338options specific to @var{importer}. Currently, the available
4339``importers'' are:
4340
4341@table @code
4342@item gnu
f97c9175 4343Import metadata for the given GNU package. This provides a template
2f7d2d91
LC
4344for the latest version of that GNU package, including the hash of its
4345source tarball, and its canonical synopsis and description.
4346
f97c9175 4347Additional information such as the package dependencies and its
2f7d2d91
LC
4348license needs to be figured out manually.
4349
4350For example, the following command returns a package definition for
4351GNU@tie{}Hello:
4352
4353@example
4354guix import gnu hello
4355@end example
4356
4357Specific command-line options are:
4358
4359@table @code
4360@item --key-download=@var{policy}
4361As for @code{guix refresh}, specify the policy to handle missing OpenPGP
f97c9175 4362keys when verifying the package signature. @xref{Invoking guix
2f7d2d91
LC
4363refresh, @code{--key-download}}.
4364@end table
4365
4366@item pypi
4367@cindex pypi
f97c9175 4368Import metadata from the @uref{https://pypi.python.org/, Python Package
2f7d2d91
LC
4369Index}@footnote{This functionality requires Guile-JSON to be installed.
4370@xref{Requirements}.}. Information is taken from the JSON-formatted
4371description available at @code{pypi.python.org} and usually includes all
4372the relevant information, including package dependencies.
4373
f97c9175 4374The command below imports metadata for the @code{itsdangerous} Python
2f7d2d91
LC
4375package:
4376
4377@example
4378guix import pypi itsdangerous
4379@end example
4380
3aae8145
DT
4381@item gem
4382@cindex gem
f97c9175 4383Import metadata from @uref{https://rubygems.org/,
3aae8145
DT
4384RubyGems}@footnote{This functionality requires Guile-JSON to be
4385installed. @xref{Requirements}.}. Information is taken from the
4386JSON-formatted description available at @code{rubygems.org} and includes
4387most relevant information, including runtime dependencies. There are
f97c9175 4388some caveats, however. The metadata doesn't distinguish between
3aae8145
DT
4389synopses and descriptions, so the same string is used for both fields.
4390Additionally, the details of non-Ruby dependencies required to build
4391native extensions is unavailable and left as an exercise to the
4392packager.
4393
f97c9175 4394The command below imports metadata for the @code{rails} Ruby package:
3aae8145
DT
4395
4396@example
4397guix import gem rails
4398@end example
4399
d45dc6da
EB
4400@item cpan
4401@cindex CPAN
3c192e4e
AE
4402Import metadata from @uref{https://www.metacpan.org/, MetaCPAN}@footnote{This
4403functionality requires Guile-JSON to be installed.
4404@xref{Requirements}.}.
f97c9175 4405Information is taken from the JSON-formatted metadata provided through
d45dc6da 4406@uref{https://api.metacpan.org/, MetaCPAN's API} and includes most
66392e47
EB
4407relevant information, such as module dependencies. License information
4408should be checked closely. If Perl is available in the store, then the
4409@code{corelist} utility will be used to filter core modules out of the
4410list of dependencies.
d45dc6da 4411
f97c9175 4412The command command below imports metadata for the @code{Acme::Boolean}
d45dc6da
EB
4413Perl module:
4414
4415@example
4416guix import cpan Acme::Boolean
4417@end example
4418
e1248602
RW
4419@item cran
4420@cindex CRAN
d0bd632f 4421@cindex Bioconductor
f97c9175 4422Import metadata from @uref{http://cran.r-project.org/, CRAN}, the
e1248602
RW
4423central repository for the @uref{http://r-project.org, GNU@tie{}R
4424statistical and graphical environment}.
4425
f97c9175 4426Information is extracted from the @code{DESCRIPTION} file of the package.
e1248602 4427
f97c9175 4428The command command below imports metadata for the @code{Cairo}
e1248602
RW
4429R package:
4430
4431@example
4432guix import cran Cairo
4433@end example
4434
f97c9175 4435When @code{--archive=bioconductor} is added, metadata is imported from
d0bd632f
RW
4436@uref{http://www.bioconductor.org/, Bioconductor}, a repository of R
4437packages for for the analysis and comprehension of high-throughput
4438genomic data in bioinformatics.
4439
f97c9175 4440Information is extracted from the @code{DESCRIPTION} file of a package
d0bd632f
RW
4441published on the web interface of the Bioconductor SVN repository.
4442
f97c9175 4443The command below imports metadata for the @code{GenomicRanges}
d0bd632f
RW
4444R package:
4445
4446@example
4447guix import cran --archive=bioconductor GenomicRanges
4448@end example
4449
2f7d2d91 4450@item nix
f97c9175 4451Import metadata from a local copy of the source of the
2f7d2d91
LC
4452@uref{http://nixos.org/nixpkgs/, Nixpkgs distribution}@footnote{This
4453relies on the @command{nix-instantiate} command of
4454@uref{http://nixos.org/nix/, Nix}.}. Package definitions in Nixpkgs are
4455typically written in a mixture of Nix-language and Bash code. This
4456command only imports the high-level package structure that is written in
4457the Nix language. It normally includes all the basic fields of a
4458package definition.
4459
4460When importing a GNU package, the synopsis and descriptions are replaced
4461by their canonical upstream variant.
4462
961d0d2d
LC
4463Usually, you will first need to do:
4464
4465@example
4466export NIX_REMOTE=daemon
4467@end example
4468
4469@noindent
4470so that @command{nix-instantiate} does not try to open the Nix database.
4471
2f7d2d91
LC
4472As an example, the command below imports the package definition of
4473LibreOffice (more precisely, it imports the definition of the package
4474bound to the @code{libreoffice} top-level attribute):
4475
4476@example
4477guix import nix ~/path/to/nixpkgs libreoffice
4478@end example
863af4e1
FB
4479
4480@item hackage
4481@cindex hackage
f97c9175 4482Import metadata from the Haskell community's central package archive
863af4e1
FB
4483@uref{https://hackage.haskell.org/, Hackage}. Information is taken from
4484Cabal files and includes all the relevant information, including package
4485dependencies.
4486
4487Specific command-line options are:
4488
4489@table @code
a4154748
FB
4490@item --stdin
4491@itemx -s
f97c9175 4492Read a Cabal file from standard input.
863af4e1
FB
4493@item --no-test-dependencies
4494@itemx -t
f97c9175 4495Do not include dependencies required only by the test suites.
a4154748
FB
4496@item --cabal-environment=@var{alist}
4497@itemx -e @var{alist}
4498@var{alist} is a Scheme alist defining the environment in which the
4499Cabal conditionals are evaluated. The accepted keys are: @code{os},
4500@code{arch}, @code{impl} and a string representing the name of a flag.
4501The value associated with a flag has to be either the symbol
4502@code{true} or @code{false}. The value associated with other keys
4503has to conform to the Cabal file format definition. The default value
4504associated with the keys @code{os}, @code{arch} and @code{impl} is
f97c9175 4505@samp{linux}, @samp{x86_64} and @samp{ghc}, respectively.
863af4e1
FB
4506@end table
4507
f97c9175 4508The command below imports metadata for the latest version of the
a4154748
FB
4509@code{HTTP} Haskell package without including test dependencies and
4510specifying the value of the flag @samp{network-uri} as @code{false}:
863af4e1
FB
4511
4512@example
a4154748 4513guix import hackage -t -e "'((\"network-uri\" . false))" HTTP
863af4e1
FB
4514@end example
4515
4516A specific package version may optionally be specified by following the
4517package name by a hyphen and a version number as in the following example:
4518
4519@example
4520guix import hackage mtl-2.1.3.1
4521@end example
7f74a931
FB
4522
4523@item elpa
4524@cindex elpa
f97c9175 4525Import metadata from an Emacs Lisp Package Archive (ELPA) package
7f74a931
FB
4526repository (@pxref{Packages,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}).
4527
4528Specific command-line options are:
4529
4530@table @code
4531@item --archive=@var{repo}
4532@itemx -a @var{repo}
4533@var{repo} identifies the archive repository from which to retrieve the
4534information. Currently the supported repositories and their identifiers
4535are:
4536@itemize -
4537@item
840bd1d3 4538@uref{http://elpa.gnu.org/packages, GNU}, selected by the @code{gnu}
7f74a931
FB
4539identifier. This is the default.
4540
4541@item
840bd1d3 4542@uref{http://stable.melpa.org/packages, MELPA-Stable}, selected by the
7f74a931
FB
4543@code{melpa-stable} identifier.
4544
4545@item
840bd1d3 4546@uref{http://melpa.org/packages, MELPA}, selected by the @code{melpa}
7f74a931
FB
4547identifier.
4548@end itemize
4549@end table
2f7d2d91
LC
4550@end table
4551
4552The structure of the @command{guix import} code is modular. It would be
4553useful to have more importers for other package formats, and your help
4554is welcome here (@pxref{Contributing}).
4555
37166310
LC
4556@node Invoking guix refresh
4557@section Invoking @command{guix refresh}
4558
4559The primary audience of the @command{guix refresh} command is developers
4560of the GNU software distribution. By default, it reports any packages
4561provided by the distribution that are outdated compared to the latest
4562upstream version, like this:
4563
4564@example
4565$ guix refresh
4566gnu/packages/gettext.scm:29:13: gettext would be upgraded from 0.18.1.1 to 0.18.2.1
4567gnu/packages/glib.scm:77:12: glib would be upgraded from 2.34.3 to 2.37.0
4568@end example
4569
f97c9175
AE
4570It does so by browsing the FTP directory of each package and determining
4571the highest version number of the source tarballs therein. The command
bcb571cb
LC
4572knows how to update specific types of packages: GNU packages, ELPA
4573packages, etc.---see the documentation for @option{--type} below. The
4574are many packages, though, for which it lacks a method to determine
4575whether a new upstream release is available. However, the mechanism is
4576extensible, so feel free to get in touch with us to add a new method!
37166310
LC
4577
4578When passed @code{--update}, it modifies distribution source files to
f97c9175 4579update the version numbers and source tarball hashes of those package
37166310
LC
4580recipes (@pxref{Defining Packages}). This is achieved by downloading
4581each package's latest source tarball and its associated OpenPGP
4582signature, authenticating the downloaded tarball against its signature
4583using @command{gpg}, and finally computing its hash. When the public
4584key used to sign the tarball is missing from the user's keyring, an
4585attempt is made to automatically retrieve it from a public key server;
f97c9175 4586when this is successful, the key is added to the user's keyring; otherwise,
37166310
LC
4587@command{guix refresh} reports an error.
4588
4589The following options are supported:
4590
4591@table @code
4592
2d7fc7da
LC
4593@item --expression=@var{expr}
4594@itemx -e @var{expr}
4595Consider the package @var{expr} evaluates to.
4596
4597This is useful to precisely refer to a package, as in this example:
4598
4599@example
4600guix refresh -l -e '(@@@@ (gnu packages commencement) glibc-final)'
4601@end example
4602
4603This command lists the dependents of the ``final'' libc (essentially all
4604the packages.)
4605
37166310
LC
4606@item --update
4607@itemx -u
38e16b49
LC
4608Update distribution source files (package recipes) in place. This is
4609usually run from a checkout of the Guix source tree (@pxref{Running
4610Guix Before It Is Installed}):
4611
4612@example
4613$ ./pre-inst-env guix refresh -s non-core
4614@end example
4615
081145cf 4616@xref{Defining Packages}, for more information on package definitions.
37166310
LC
4617
4618@item --select=[@var{subset}]
4619@itemx -s @var{subset}
4620Select all the packages in @var{subset}, one of @code{core} or
4621@code{non-core}.
4622
4623The @code{core} subset refers to all the packages at the core of the
4624distribution---i.e., packages that are used to build ``everything
4625else''. This includes GCC, libc, Binutils, Bash, etc. Usually,
4626changing one of these packages in the distribution entails a rebuild of
4627all the others. Thus, such updates are an inconvenience to users in
4628terms of build time or bandwidth used to achieve the upgrade.
4629
4630The @code{non-core} subset refers to the remaining packages. It is
4631typically useful in cases where an update of the core packages would be
4632inconvenient.
4633
bcb571cb
LC
4634@item --type=@var{updater}
4635@itemx -t @var{updater}
7191adc5
AK
4636Select only packages handled by @var{updater} (may be a comma-separated
4637list of updaters). Currently, @var{updater} may be one of:
bcb571cb
LC
4638
4639@table @code
4640@item gnu
4641the updater for GNU packages;
e80c0f85
LC
4642@item gnome
4643the updater for GNOME packages;
bcb571cb 4644@item elpa
d882c235
LC
4645the updater for @uref{http://elpa.gnu.org/, ELPA} packages;
4646@item cran
b9d044ef 4647the updater for @uref{http://cran.r-project.org/, CRAN} packages;
d0bd632f
RW
4648@item bioconductor
4649the updater for @uref{http://www.bioconductor.org/, Bioconductor} R packages;
bab020d7 4650@item pypi
b9d044ef 4651the updater for @uref{https://pypi.python.org, PyPI} packages.
fbc5b815
BW
4652@item gem
4653the updater for @uref{https://rubygems.org, RubyGems} packages.
bcb571cb
LC
4654@end table
4655
f97c9175
AE
4656For instance, the following command only checks for updates of Emacs
4657packages hosted at @code{elpa.gnu.org} and for updates of CRAN packages:
bcb571cb
LC
4658
4659@example
7191adc5 4660$ guix refresh --type=elpa,cran
d882c235 4661gnu/packages/statistics.scm:819:13: r-testthat would be upgraded from 0.10.0 to 0.11.0
bcb571cb
LC
4662gnu/packages/emacs.scm:856:13: emacs-auctex would be upgraded from 11.88.6 to 11.88.9
4663@end example
4664
37166310
LC
4665@end table
4666
4667In addition, @command{guix refresh} can be passed one or more package
4668names, as in this example:
4669
4670@example
38e16b49 4671$ ./pre-inst-env guix refresh -u emacs idutils gcc-4.8.4
37166310
LC
4672@end example
4673
4674@noindent
4675The command above specifically updates the @code{emacs} and
4676@code{idutils} packages. The @code{--select} option would have no
4677effect in this case.
4678
7d193ec3
EB
4679When considering whether to upgrade a package, it is sometimes
4680convenient to know which packages would be affected by the upgrade and
4681should be checked for compatibility. For this the following option may
4682be used when passing @command{guix refresh} one or more package names:
4683
4684@table @code
4685
6ffa706b
AK
4686@item --list-updaters
4687@itemx -L
4688List available updaters and exit (see @option{--type} above.)
4689
7d193ec3
EB
4690@item --list-dependent
4691@itemx -l
4692List top-level dependent packages that would need to be rebuilt as a
4693result of upgrading one or more packages.
4694
4695@end table
4696
4697Be aware that the @code{--list-dependent} option only
4698@emph{approximates} the rebuilds that would be required as a result of
4699an upgrade. More rebuilds might be required under some circumstances.
4700
4701@example
7779ab61
LC
4702$ guix refresh --list-dependent flex
4703Building the following 120 packages would ensure 213 dependent packages are rebuilt:
4704hop-2.4.0 geiser-0.4 notmuch-0.18 mu-0.9.9.5 cflow-1.4 idutils-4.6 @dots{}
7d193ec3
EB
4705@end example
4706
4707The command above lists a set of packages that could be built to check
4708for compatibility with an upgraded @code{flex} package.
4709
f9230085
LC
4710The following options can be used to customize GnuPG operation:
4711
4712@table @code
4713
f9230085
LC
4714@item --gpg=@var{command}
4715Use @var{command} as the GnuPG 2.x command. @var{command} is searched
4716for in @code{$PATH}.
4717
2bc53ba9
LC
4718@item --key-download=@var{policy}
4719Handle missing OpenPGP keys according to @var{policy}, which may be one
4720of:
4721
4722@table @code
4723@item always
4724Always download missing OpenPGP keys from the key server, and add them
4725to the user's GnuPG keyring.
4726
4727@item never
4728Never try to download missing OpenPGP keys. Instead just bail out.
4729
4730@item interactive
4731When a package signed with an unknown OpenPGP key is encountered, ask
4732the user whether to download it or not. This is the default behavior.
4733@end table
4734
4735@item --key-server=@var{host}
4736Use @var{host} as the OpenPGP key server when importing a public key.
4737
f9230085
LC
4738@end table
4739
b4f5e0e8
CR
4740@node Invoking guix lint
4741@section Invoking @command{guix lint}
f97c9175
AE
4742The @command{guix lint} command is meant to help package developers avoid
4743common errors and use a consistent style. It runs a number of checks on
4744a given set of packages in order to find common mistakes in their
873c4085
LC
4745definitions. Available @dfn{checkers} include (see
4746@code{--list-checkers} for a complete list):
4747
4748@table @code
4749@item synopsis
4750@itemx description
4751Validate certain typographical and stylistic rules about package
4752descriptions and synopses.
4753
4754@item inputs-should-be-native
4755Identify inputs that should most likely be native inputs.
4756
4757@item source
4758@itemx home-page
50f5c46d 4759@itemx source-file-name
873c4085 4760Probe @code{home-page} and @code{source} URLs and report those that are
50f5c46d 4761invalid. Check that the source file name is meaningful, e.g. is not
f97c9175
AE
4762just a version number or ``git-checkout'', without a declared
4763@code{file-name} (@pxref{origin Reference}).
40a7d4e5 4764
5432734b
LC
4765@item cve
4766Report known vulnerabilities found in the Common Vulnerabilities and
4767Exposures (CVE) database
4768@uref{https://nvd.nist.gov/download.cfm#CVE_FEED, published by the US
4769NIST}.
4770
40a7d4e5
LC
4771@item formatting
4772Warn about obvious source code formatting issues: trailing white space,
4773use of tabulations, etc.
873c4085 4774@end table
b4f5e0e8
CR
4775
4776The general syntax is:
4777
4778@example
4779guix lint @var{options} @var{package}@dots{}
4780@end example
4781
4782If no package is given on the command line, then all packages are checked.
4783The @var{options} may be zero or more of the following:
4784
4785@table @code
f97c9175
AE
4786@item --list-checkers
4787@itemx -l
4788List and describe all the available checkers that will be run on packages
4789and exit.
b4f5e0e8 4790
dd7c013d
CR
4791@item --checkers
4792@itemx -c
4793Only enable the checkers specified in a comma-separated list using the
4794names returned by @code{--list-checkers}.
4795
b4f5e0e8 4796@end table
37166310 4797
fcc58db6
LC
4798@node Invoking guix size
4799@section Invoking @command{guix size}
4800
4801The @command{guix size} command helps package developers profile the
4802disk usage of packages. It is easy to overlook the impact of an
4803additional dependency added to a package, or the impact of using a
4804single output for a package that could easily be split (@pxref{Packages
f97c9175 4805with Multiple Outputs}). Such are the typical issues that
fcc58db6
LC
4806@command{guix size} can highlight.
4807
4808The command can be passed a package specification such as @code{gcc-4.8}
4809or @code{guile:debug}, or a file name in the store. Consider this
4810example:
4811
4812@example
4813$ guix size coreutils
4814store item total self
4815/gnu/store/@dots{}-coreutils-8.23 70.0 13.9 19.8%
4816/gnu/store/@dots{}-gmp-6.0.0a 55.3 2.5 3.6%
4817/gnu/store/@dots{}-acl-2.2.52 53.7 0.5 0.7%
4818/gnu/store/@dots{}-attr-2.4.46 53.2 0.3 0.5%
4819/gnu/store/@dots{}-gcc-4.8.4-lib 52.9 15.7 22.4%
4820/gnu/store/@dots{}-glibc-2.21 37.2 37.2 53.1%
4821@end example
4822
4823@cindex closure
4824The store items listed here constitute the @dfn{transitive closure} of
4825Coreutils---i.e., Coreutils and all its dependencies, recursively---as
4826would be returned by:
4827
4828@example
4829$ guix gc -R /gnu/store/@dots{}-coreutils-8.23
4830@end example
4831
f97c9175 4832Here the output shows three columns next to store items. The first column,
fcc58db6
LC
4833labeled ``total'', shows the size in mebibytes (MiB) of the closure of
4834the store item---that is, its own size plus the size of all its
4835dependencies. The next column, labeled ``self'', shows the size of the
f97c9175
AE
4836item itself. The last column shows the ratio of the size of the item
4837itself to the space occupied by all the items listed here.
fcc58db6
LC
4838
4839In this example, we see that the closure of Coreutils weighs in at
484070@tie{}MiB, half of which is taken by libc. (That libc represents a
4841large fraction of the closure is not a problem @i{per se} because it is
4842always available on the system anyway.)
4843
4844When the package passed to @command{guix size} is available in the
4845store, @command{guix size} queries the daemon to determine its
4846dependencies, and measures its size in the store, similar to @command{du
4847-ms --apparent-size} (@pxref{du invocation,,, coreutils, GNU
4848Coreutils}).
4849
4850When the given package is @emph{not} in the store, @command{guix size}
f97c9175
AE
4851reports information based on the available substitutes
4852(@pxref{Substitutes}). This makes it possible it to profile disk usage of
4853store items that are not even on disk, only available remotely.
fcc58db6 4854
a8f996c6 4855The available options are:
fcc58db6
LC
4856
4857@table @option
4858
d490d06e
LC
4859@item --substitute-urls=@var{urls}
4860Use substitute information from @var{urls}.
4861@xref{client-substitute-urls, the same option for @code{guix build}}.
4862
a8f996c6 4863@item --map-file=@var{file}
f97c9175 4864Write a graphical map of disk usage in PNG format to @var{file}.
a8f996c6
LC
4865
4866For the example above, the map looks like this:
4867
4868@image{images/coreutils-size-map,5in,, map of Coreutils disk usage
4869produced by @command{guix size}}
4870
4871This option requires that
4872@uref{http://wingolog.org/software/guile-charting/, Guile-Charting} be
4873installed and visible in Guile's module search path. When that is not
4874the case, @command{guix size} fails as it tries to load it.
4875
fcc58db6
LC
4876@item --system=@var{system}
4877@itemx -s @var{system}
4878Consider packages for @var{system}---e.g., @code{x86_64-linux}.
4879
4880@end table
4881
88856916
LC
4882@node Invoking guix graph
4883@section Invoking @command{guix graph}
4884
4885@cindex DAG
4886Packages and their dependencies form a @dfn{graph}, specifically a
4887directed acyclic graph (DAG). It can quickly become difficult to have a
f97c9175
AE
4888mental model of the package DAG, so the @command{guix graph} command
4889provides a visual representation of the DAG. @command{guix graph}
4890emits a DAG representation in the input format of
88856916 4891@uref{http://www.graphviz.org/, Graphviz}, so its output can be passed
f97c9175 4892directly to the @command{dot} command of Graphviz. The general
88856916
LC
4893syntax is:
4894
4895@example
4896guix graph @var{options} @var{package}@dots{}
4897@end example
4898
4899For example, the following command generates a PDF file representing the
4900package DAG for the GNU@tie{}Core Utilities, showing its build-time
4901dependencies:
4902
4903@example
4904guix graph coreutils | dot -Tpdf > dag.pdf
4905@end example
4906
4907The output looks like this:
4908
4909@image{images/coreutils-graph,2in,,Dependency graph of the GNU Coreutils}
4910
4911Nice little graph, no?
4912
f97c9175 4913But there is more than one graph! The one above is concise: it is the
88856916 4914graph of package objects, omitting implicit inputs such as GCC, libc,
f97c9175
AE
4915grep, etc. It is often useful to have such a concise graph, but
4916sometimes one may want to see more details. @command{guix graph} supports
4917several types of graphs, allowing you to choose the level of detail:
88856916
LC
4918
4919@table @code
4920@item package
f97c9175 4921This is the default type used in the example above. It shows the DAG of
88856916
LC
4922package objects, excluding implicit dependencies. It is concise, but
4923filters out many details.
4924
4925@item bag-emerged
4926This is the package DAG, @emph{including} implicit inputs.
4927
4928For instance, the following command:
4929
4930@example
4931guix graph --type=bag-emerged coreutils | dot -Tpdf > dag.pdf
4932@end example
4933
4934... yields this bigger graph:
4935
4936@image{images/coreutils-bag-graph,,5in,Detailed dependency graph of the GNU Coreutils}
4937
4938At the bottom of the graph, we see all the implicit inputs of
4939@var{gnu-build-system} (@pxref{Build Systems, @code{gnu-build-system}}).
4940
f97c9175 4941Now, note that the dependencies of these implicit inputs---that is, the
88856916
LC
4942@dfn{bootstrap dependencies} (@pxref{Bootstrapping})---are not shown
4943here, for conciseness.
4944
4945@item bag
4946Similar to @code{bag-emerged}, but this time including all the bootstrap
4947dependencies.
4948
38b92daa
LC
4949@item bag-with-origins
4950Similar to @code{bag}, but also showing origins and their dependencies.
4951
88856916
LC
4952@item derivations
4953This is the most detailed representation: It shows the DAG of
4954derivations (@pxref{Derivations}) and plain store items. Compared to
4955the above representation, many additional nodes are visible, including
f97c9175 4956build scripts, patches, Guile modules, etc.
88856916
LC
4957
4958@end table
4959
f97c9175 4960All the types above correspond to @emph{build-time dependencies}. The
88856916
LC
4961following graph type represents the @emph{run-time dependencies}:
4962
4963@table @code
4964@item references
4965This is the graph of @dfn{references} of a package output, as returned
4966by @command{guix gc --references} (@pxref{Invoking guix gc}).
4967
4968If the given package output is not available in the store, @command{guix
4969graph} attempts to obtain dependency information from substitutes.
4970@end table
4971
4972The available options are the following:
4973
4974@table @option
4975@item --type=@var{type}
4976@itemx -t @var{type}
4977Produce a graph output of @var{type}, where @var{type} must be one of
4978the values listed above.
4979
4980@item --list-types
4981List the supported graph types.
4c8f997a
LC
4982
4983@item --expression=@var{expr}
4984@itemx -e @var{expr}
4985Consider the package @var{expr} evaluates to.
4986
4987This is useful to precisely refer to a package, as in this example:
4988
4989@example
4990guix graph -e '(@@@@ (gnu packages commencement) gnu-make-final)'
4991@end example
88856916
LC
4992@end table
4993
4994
372c4bbc
DT
4995@node Invoking guix environment
4996@section Invoking @command{guix environment}
4997
f5fd4fd2 4998@cindex reproducible build environments
fe36d84e 4999@cindex development environments
372c4bbc
DT
5000The purpose of @command{guix environment} is to assist hackers in
5001creating reproducible development environments without polluting their
5002package profile. The @command{guix environment} tool takes one or more
f97c9175 5003packages, builds all of their inputs, and creates a shell
372c4bbc
DT
5004environment to use them.
5005
5006The general syntax is:
5007
5008@example
5009guix environment @var{options} @var{package}@dots{}
5010@end example
5011
fe36d84e
LC
5012The following example spawns a new shell set up for the development of
5013GNU@tie{}Guile:
372c4bbc
DT
5014
5015@example
5016guix environment guile
5017@end example
5018
f97c9175
AE
5019If the needed dependencies are not built yet, @command{guix environment}
5020automatically builds them. The environment of the new shell is an augmented
372c4bbc
DT
5021version of the environment that @command{guix environment} was run in.
5022It contains the necessary search paths for building the given package
5023added to the existing environment variables. To create a ``pure''
f97c9175 5024environment, in which the original environment variables have been unset,
50500f7c
LC
5025use the @code{--pure} option@footnote{Users sometimes wrongfully augment
5026environment variables such as @code{PATH} in their @file{~/.bashrc}
5027file. As a consequence, when @code{guix environment} launches it, Bash
5028may read @file{~/.bashrc}, thereby introducing ``impurities'' in these
5029environment variables. It is an error to define such environment
5030variables in @file{.bashrc}; instead, they should be defined in
5031@file{.bash_profile}, which is sourced only by log-in shells.
5032@xref{Bash Startup Files,,, bash, The GNU Bash Reference Manual}, for
5033details on Bash start-up files.}.
372c4bbc 5034
28de8d25
LC
5035@vindex GUIX_ENVIRONMENT
5036@command{guix environment} defines the @code{GUIX_ENVIRONMENT}
f97c9175 5037variable in the shell it spawns. This allows users to, say, define a
28de8d25
LC
5038specific prompt for development environments in their @file{.bashrc}
5039(@pxref{Bash Startup Files,,, bash, The GNU Bash Reference Manual}):
5040
5041@example
5042if [ -n "$GUIX_ENVIRONMENT" ]
5043then
5044 export PS1="\u@@\h \w [dev]\$ "
5045fi
5046@end example
5047
372c4bbc
DT
5048Additionally, more than one package may be specified, in which case the
5049union of the inputs for the given packages are used. For example, the
5050command below spawns a shell where all of the dependencies of both Guile
5051and Emacs are available:
5052
5053@example
5054guix environment guile emacs
5055@end example
5056
1de2fe95
DT
5057Sometimes an interactive shell session is not desired. An arbitrary
5058command may be invoked by placing the @code{--} token to separate the
5059command from the rest of the arguments:
372c4bbc
DT
5060
5061@example
1de2fe95 5062guix environment guile -- make -j4
372c4bbc
DT
5063@end example
5064
fe36d84e
LC
5065In other situations, it is more convenient to specify the list of
5066packages needed in the environment. For example, the following command
5067runs @command{python} from an environment containing Python@tie{}2.7 and
5068NumPy:
5069
5070@example
1de2fe95 5071guix environment --ad-hoc python2-numpy python-2.7 -- python
fe36d84e
LC
5072@end example
5073
cc90fbbf
DT
5074Furthermore, one might want the dependencies of a package and also some
5075additional packages that are not build-time or runtime dependencies, but
5076are useful when developing nonetheless. Because of this, the
5077@code{--ad-hoc} flag is positional. Packages appearing before
5078@code{--ad-hoc} are interpreted as packages whose dependencies will be
5079added to the environment. Packages appearing after are interpreted as
5080packages that will be added to the environment directly. For example,
5081the following command creates a Guix development environment that
5082additionally includes Git and strace:
5083
5084@example
5085guix environment guix --ad-hoc git strace
5086@end example
5087
f535dcbe
DT
5088Sometimes it is desirable to isolate the environment as much as
5089possible, for maximal purity and reproducibility. In particular, when
5090using Guix on a host distro that is not GuixSD, it is desirable to
5091prevent access to @file{/usr/bin} and other system-wide resources from
5092the development environment. For example, the following command spawns
5093a Guile REPL in a ``container'' where only the store and the current
5094working directory are mounted:
5095
5096@example
5097guix environment --ad-hoc --container guile -- guile
5098@end example
5099
0f252e26 5100@quotation Note
cfd35b4e 5101The @code{--container} option requires Linux-libre 3.19 or newer.
0f252e26
DT
5102@end quotation
5103
fe36d84e 5104The available options are summarized below.
372c4bbc
DT
5105
5106@table @code
5107@item --expression=@var{expr}
5108@itemx -e @var{expr}
c9c282ce
DT
5109Create an environment for the package or list of packages that
5110@var{expr} evaluates to.
372c4bbc 5111
fe36d84e
LC
5112For example, running:
5113
5114@example
5115guix environment -e '(@@ (gnu packages maths) petsc-openmpi)'
5116@end example
5117
5118starts a shell with the environment for this specific variant of the
5119PETSc package.
5120
c9c282ce
DT
5121Running:
5122
5123@example
5c2b2f00 5124guix environment --ad-hoc -e '(@@ (gnu) %base-packages)'
c9c282ce
DT
5125@end example
5126
5127starts a shell with all the GuixSD base packages available.
5128
779aa003
DT
5129The above commands only the use default output of the given packages.
5130To select other outputs, two element tuples can be specified:
5131
5132@example
5133guix environment --ad-hoc -e '(list (@ (gnu packages bash) bash) "include")'
5134@end example
5135
372c4bbc
DT
5136@item --load=@var{file}
5137@itemx -l @var{file}
c9c282ce
DT
5138Create an environment for the package or list of packages that the code
5139within @var{file} evaluates to.
372c4bbc 5140
fe36d84e
LC
5141As an example, @var{file} might contain a definition like this
5142(@pxref{Defining Packages}):
5143
5144@example
5145@verbatiminclude environment-gdb.scm
5146@end example
5147
a54bd6d7
DT
5148@item --ad-hoc
5149Include all specified packages in the resulting environment, as if an
5150@i{ad hoc} package were defined with them as inputs. This option is
5151useful for quickly creating an environment without having to write a
5152package expression to contain the desired inputs.
5153
5154For instance, the command:
5155
5156@example
1de2fe95 5157guix environment --ad-hoc guile guile-sdl -- guile
a54bd6d7
DT
5158@end example
5159
5160runs @command{guile} in an environment where Guile and Guile-SDL are
5161available.
5162
417c39f1 5163Note that this example implicitly asks for the default output of
f97c9175 5164@code{guile} and @code{guile-sdl}, but it is possible to ask for a
417c39f1
LC
5165specific output---e.g., @code{glib:bin} asks for the @code{bin} output
5166of @code{glib} (@pxref{Packages with Multiple Outputs}).
5167
cc90fbbf
DT
5168This option may be composed with the default behavior of @command{guix
5169environment}. Packages appearing before @code{--ad-hoc} are interpreted
5170as packages whose dependencies will be added to the environment, the
5171default behavior. Packages appearing after are interpreted as packages
5172that will be added to the environment directly.
5173
372c4bbc
DT
5174@item --pure
5175Unset existing environment variables when building the new environment.
5176This has the effect of creating an environment in which search paths
5177only contain package inputs.
5178
5179@item --search-paths
5180Display the environment variable definitions that make up the
5181environment.
ce367ef3
LC
5182
5183@item --system=@var{system}
5184@itemx -s @var{system}
5185Attempt to build for @var{system}---e.g., @code{i686-linux}.
f535dcbe
DT
5186
5187@item --container
5188@itemx -C
5189@cindex container
5190Run @var{command} within an isolated container. The current working
56b6befb 5191directory outside the container is mapped inside the
f535dcbe
DT
5192container. Additionally, the spawned process runs as the current user
5193outside the container, but has root privileges in the context of the
5194container.
5195
5196@item --network
5197@itemx -N
5198For containers, share the network namespace with the host system.
5199Containers created without this flag only have access to the loopback
5200device.
5201
5202@item --expose=@var{source}[=@var{target}]
5203For containers, expose the file system @var{source} from the host system
5204as the read-only file system @var{target} within the container. If
5205@var{target} is not specified, @var{source} is used as the target mount
5206point in the container.
5207
5208The example below spawns a Guile REPL in a container in which the user's
5209home directory is accessible read-only via the @file{/exchange}
5210directory:
5211
5212@example
5213guix environment --container --expose=$HOME=/exchange guile -- guile
5214@end example
5215
5c2b2f00 5216@item --share=@var{source}[=@var{target}]
f535dcbe
DT
5217For containers, share the file system @var{source} from the host system
5218as the writable file system @var{target} within the container. If
5219@var{target} is not specified, @var{source} is used as the target mount
5220point in the container.
5221
5222The example below spawns a Guile REPL in a container in which the user's
5223home directory is accessible for both reading and writing via the
5224@file{/exchange} directory:
5225
5226@example
5227guix environment --container --share=$HOME=/exchange guile -- guile
5228@end example
372c4bbc
DT
5229@end table
5230
5231It also supports all of the common build options that @command{guix
ccd7158d 5232build} supports (@pxref{Common Build Options}).
372c4bbc 5233
aff8ce7c
DT
5234@node Invoking guix publish
5235@section Invoking @command{guix publish}
5236
5237The purpose of @command{guix publish} is to enable users to easily share
f97c9175 5238their store with others, who can then use it as a substitute server
8ce229fc
LC
5239(@pxref{Substitutes}).
5240
5241When @command{guix publish} runs, it spawns an HTTP server which allows
5242anyone with network access to obtain substitutes from it. This means
5243that any machine running Guix can also act as if it were a build farm,
5244since the HTTP interface is compatible with Hydra, the software behind
5245the @code{hydra.gnu.org} build farm.
aff8ce7c
DT
5246
5247For security, each substitute is signed, allowing recipients to check
5248their authenticity and integrity (@pxref{Substitutes}). Because
f97c9175 5249@command{guix publish} uses the signing key of the system, which is only
5463fe51
LC
5250readable by the system administrator, it must be started as root; the
5251@code{--user} option makes it drop root privileges early on.
aff8ce7c 5252
b18812b6
LC
5253The signing key pair must be generated before @command{guix publish} is
5254launched, using @command{guix archive --generate-key} (@pxref{Invoking
5255guix archive}).
5256
aff8ce7c
DT
5257The general syntax is:
5258
5259@example
5260guix publish @var{options}@dots{}
5261@end example
5262
5263Running @command{guix publish} without any additional arguments will
5264spawn an HTTP server on port 8080:
5265
5266@example
5267guix publish
5268@end example
5269
5270Once a publishing server has been authorized (@pxref{Invoking guix
5271archive}), the daemon may download substitutes from it:
5272
5273@example
5274guix-daemon --substitute-urls=http://example.org:8080
5275@end example
5276
5277The following options are available:
5278
5279@table @code
5280@item --port=@var{port}
5281@itemx -p @var{port}
5282Listen for HTTP requests on @var{port}.
5283
9e2292ef
LC
5284@item --listen=@var{host}
5285Listen on the network interface for @var{host}. The default is to
5286accept connections from any interface.
5287
5463fe51
LC
5288@item --user=@var{user}
5289@itemx -u @var{user}
5290Change privileges to @var{user} as soon as possible---i.e., once the
5291server socket is open and the signing key has been read.
5292
aff8ce7c
DT
5293@item --repl[=@var{port}]
5294@itemx -r [@var{port}]
5295Spawn a Guile REPL server (@pxref{REPL Servers,,, guile, GNU Guile
8ce229fc
LC
5296Reference Manual}) on @var{port} (37146 by default). This is used
5297primarily for debugging a running @command{guix publish} server.
aff8ce7c
DT
5298@end table
5299
1c52181f
LC
5300Enabling @command{guix publish} on a GuixSD system is a one-liner: just
5301add a call to @code{guix-publish-service} in the @code{services} field
5302of the @code{operating-system} declaration (@pxref{guix-publish-service,
5303@code{guix-publish-service}}).
5304
d23c20f1
LC
5305
5306@node Invoking guix challenge
5307@section Invoking @command{guix challenge}
5308
5309@cindex reproducible builds
5310@cindex verifiable builds
5311
5312Do the binaries provided by this server really correspond to the source
f97c9175 5313code it claims to build? Is a package build process deterministic?
d23c20f1
LC
5314These are the questions the @command{guix challenge} command attempts to
5315answer.
5316
5317The former is obviously an important question: Before using a substitute
f97c9175 5318server (@pxref{Substitutes}), one had better @emph{verify} that it
d23c20f1
LC
5319provides the right binaries, and thus @emph{challenge} it. The latter
5320is what enables the former: If package builds are deterministic, then
5321independent builds of the package should yield the exact same result,
5322bit for bit; if a server provides a binary different from the one
5323obtained locally, it may be either corrupt or malicious.
5324
5325We know that the hash that shows up in @file{/gnu/store} file names is
5326the hash of all the inputs of the process that built the file or
5327directory---compilers, libraries, build scripts,
5328etc. (@pxref{Introduction}). Assuming deterministic build processes,
5329one store file name should map to exactly one build output.
5330@command{guix challenge} checks whether there is, indeed, a single
5331mapping by comparing the build outputs of several independent builds of
5332any given store item.
5333
f97c9175 5334The command output looks like this:
d23c20f1
LC
5335
5336@smallexample
5337$ guix challenge --substitute-urls="http://hydra.gnu.org http://guix.example.org"
5338updating list of substitutes from 'http://hydra.gnu.org'... 100.0%
5339updating list of substitutes from 'http://guix.example.org'... 100.0%
5340/gnu/store/@dots{}-openssl-1.0.2d contents differ:
5341 local hash: 0725l22r5jnzazaacncwsvp9kgf42266ayyp814v7djxs7nk963q
5342 http://hydra.gnu.org/nar/@dots{}-openssl-1.0.2d: 0725l22r5jnzazaacncwsvp9kgf42266ayyp814v7djxs7nk963q
5343 http://guix.example.org/nar/@dots{}-openssl-1.0.2d: 1zy4fmaaqcnjrzzajkdn3f5gmjk754b43qkq47llbyak9z0qjyim
5344/gnu/store/@dots{}-git-2.5.0 contents differ:
5345 local hash: 00p3bmryhjxrhpn2gxs2fy0a15lnip05l97205pgbk5ra395hyha
5346 http://hydra.gnu.org/nar/@dots{}-git-2.5.0: 069nb85bv4d4a6slrwjdy8v1cn4cwspm3kdbmyb81d6zckj3nq9f
5347 http://guix.example.org/nar/@dots{}-git-2.5.0: 0mdqa9w1p6cmli6976v4wi0sw9r4p5prkj7lzfd1877wk11c9c73
5348/gnu/store/@dots{}-pius-2.1.1 contents differ:
5349 local hash: 0k4v3m9z1zp8xzzizb7d8kjj72f9172xv078sq4wl73vnq9ig3ax
5350 http://hydra.gnu.org/nar/@dots{}-pius-2.1.1: 0k4v3m9z1zp8xzzizb7d8kjj72f9172xv078sq4wl73vnq9ig3ax
5351 http://guix.example.org/nar/@dots{}-pius-2.1.1: 1cy25x1a4fzq5rk0pmvc8xhwyffnqz95h2bpvqsz2mpvlbccy0gs
5352@end smallexample
5353
5354@noindent
5355In this example, @command{guix challenge} first scans the store to
5356determine the set of locally-built derivations---as opposed to store
5357items that were downloaded from a substitute server---and then queries
5358all the substitute servers. It then reports those store items for which
5359the servers obtained a result different from the local build.
5360
5361@cindex non-determinism, in package builds
5362As an example, @code{guix.example.org} always gets a different answer.
5363Conversely, @code{hydra.gnu.org} agrees with local builds, except in the
5364case of Git. This might indicate that the build process of Git is
5365non-deterministic, meaning that its output varies as a function of
5366various things that Guix does not fully control, in spite of building
5367packages in isolated environments (@pxref{Features}). Most common
5368sources of non-determinism include the addition of timestamps in build
5369results, the inclusion of random numbers, and directory listings sorted
5370by inode number. See @uref{http://reproducible.debian.net/howto/}, for
5371more information.
5372
f97c9175 5373To find out what is wrong with this Git binary, we can do something along
d23c20f1
LC
5374these lines (@pxref{Invoking guix archive}):
5375
5376@example
5377$ wget -q -O - http://hydra.gnu.org/nar/@dots{}-git-2.5.0 \
5378 | guix archive -x /tmp/git
043f4698 5379$ diff -ur --no-dereference /gnu/store/@dots{}-git.2.5.0 /tmp/git
d23c20f1
LC
5380@end example
5381
5382This command shows the difference between the files resulting from the
5383local build, and the files resulting from the build on
5384@code{hydra.gnu.org} (@pxref{Overview, Comparing and Merging Files,,
5385diffutils, Comparing and Merging Files}). The @command{diff} command
5386works great for text files. When binary files differ, a better option
5387is @uref{http://diffoscope.org/, Diffoscope}, a tool that helps
5388visualize differences for all kinds of files.
5389
f97c9175 5390Once you have done that work, you can tell whether the differences are due
d23c20f1
LC
5391to a non-deterministic build process or to a malicious server. We try
5392hard to remove sources of non-determinism in packages to make it easier
f97c9175
AE
5393to verify substitutes, but of course, this is a process that
5394involves not just Guix, but a large part of the free software community.
d23c20f1
LC
5395In the meantime, @command{guix challenge} is one tool to help address
5396the problem.
5397
5398If you are writing packages for Guix, you are encouraged to check
5399whether @code{hydra.gnu.org} and other substitute servers obtain the
5400same build result as you did with:
5401
5402@example
5403$ guix challenge @var{package}
5404@end example
5405
5406@noindent
f97c9175 5407where @var{package} is a package specification such as
d23c20f1
LC
5408@code{guile-2.0} or @code{glibc:debug}.
5409
5410The general syntax is:
5411
5412@example
5413guix challenge @var{options} [@var{packages}@dots{}]
5414@end example
5415
5416The one option that matters is:
5417
5418@table @code
5419
5420@item --substitute-urls=@var{urls}
5421Consider @var{urls} the whitespace-separated list of substitute source
5422URLs to compare to.
5423
5424@end table
5425
5426
32efa254
DT
5427@node Invoking guix container
5428@section Invoking @command{guix container}
5429@cindex container
5430
5431@quotation Note
5432As of version @value{VERSION}, this tool is experimental. The interface
5433is subject to radical change in the future.
5434@end quotation
5435
5436The purpose of @command{guix container} is to manipulate processes
5437running within an isolated environment, commonly known as a
46c36586 5438``container'', typically created by the @command{guix environment}
32efa254
DT
5439(@pxref{Invoking guix environment}) and @command{guix system container}
5440(@pxref{Invoking guix system}) commands.
5441
5442The general syntax is:
5443
5444@example
5445guix container @var{action} @var{options}@dots{}
5446@end example
5447
5448@var{action} specifies the operation to perform with a container, and
5449@var{options} specifies the context-specific arguments for the action.
5450
5451The following actions are available:
5452
5453@table @code
5454@item exec
5455Execute a command within the context of a running container.
5456
5457The syntax is:
5458
5459@example
5460guix container exec @var{pid} @var{program} @var{arguments}@dots{}
5461@end example
5462
5463@var{pid} specifies the process ID of the running container.
f97c9175
AE
5464@var{program} specifies an executable file name within the root file
5465system of the container. @var{arguments} are the additional options that
5466will be passed to @var{program}.
32efa254
DT
5467
5468The following command launches an interactive login shell inside a
5469GuixSD container, started by @command{guix system container}, and whose
5470process ID is 9001:
5471
5472@example
5473guix container exec 9001 /run/current-system/profile/bin/bash --login
5474@end example
5475
5476Note that the @var{pid} cannot be the parent process of a container. It
f97c9175 5477must be PID 1 of the container or one of its child processes.
32efa254
DT
5478
5479@end table
5480
a1ba8475
LC
5481@c *********************************************************************
5482@node GNU Distribution
5483@chapter GNU Distribution
5484
3ca2731c 5485@cindex Guix System Distribution
4705641f 5486@cindex GuixSD
3ca2731c
LC
5487Guix comes with a distribution of the GNU system consisting entirely of
5488free software@footnote{The term ``free'' here refers to the
a1ba8475 5489@url{http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html,freedom provided to
3ca2731c 5490users of that software}.}. The
35ed9306
LC
5491distribution can be installed on its own (@pxref{System Installation}),
5492but it is also possible to install Guix as a package manager on top of
5493an installed GNU/Linux system (@pxref{Installation}). To distinguish
3ca2731c 5494between the two, we refer to the standalone distribution as the Guix
4705641f 5495System Distribution, or GuixSD.
35ed9306
LC
5496
5497The distribution provides core GNU packages such as GNU libc, GCC, and
5498Binutils, as well as many GNU and non-GNU applications. The complete
5499list of available packages can be browsed
093ae1be 5500@url{http://www.gnu.org/software/guix/packages,on-line} or by
d03bb653 5501running @command{guix package} (@pxref{Invoking guix package}):
a1ba8475
LC
5502
5503@example
e49951eb 5504guix package --list-available
a1ba8475
LC
5505@end example
5506
f97c9175 5507Our goal is to provide a practical 100% free software distribution of
401c53c4
LC
5508Linux-based and other variants of GNU, with a focus on the promotion and
5509tight integration of GNU components, and an emphasis on programs and
5510tools that help users exert that freedom.
5511
3ca2731c 5512Packages are currently available on the following platforms:
c320011d
LC
5513
5514@table @code
5515
5516@item x86_64-linux
5517Intel/AMD @code{x86_64} architecture, Linux-Libre kernel;
5518
5519@item i686-linux
5520Intel 32-bit architecture (IA32), Linux-Libre kernel;
5521
aa1e1947 5522@item armhf-linux
aa725117 5523ARMv7-A architecture with hard float, Thumb-2 and NEON,
f97c9175
AE
5524using the EABI hard-float application binary interface (ABI),
5525and Linux-Libre kernel.
aa1e1947 5526
c320011d
LC
5527@item mips64el-linux
5528little-endian 64-bit MIPS processors, specifically the Loongson series,
f97c9175 5529n32 ABI, and Linux-Libre kernel.
c320011d
LC
5530
5531@end table
5532
4705641f 5533GuixSD itself is currently only available on @code{i686} and @code{x86_64}.
3ca2731c 5534
c320011d
LC
5535@noindent
5536For information on porting to other architectures or kernels,
f97c9175 5537@pxref{Porting}.
c320011d 5538
401c53c4 5539@menu
5af6de3e 5540* System Installation:: Installing the whole operating system.
35ed9306 5541* System Configuration:: Configuring the operating system.
91ef73d4 5542* Installing Debugging Files:: Feeding the debugger.
05962f29 5543* Security Updates:: Deploying security fixes quickly.
401c53c4 5544* Package Modules:: Packages from the programmer's viewpoint.
da7cabd4 5545* Packaging Guidelines:: Growing the distribution.
401c53c4 5546* Bootstrapping:: GNU/Linux built from scratch.
8b315a6d 5547* Porting:: Targeting another platform or kernel.
401c53c4
LC
5548@end menu
5549
5550Building this distribution is a cooperative effort, and you are invited
081145cf 5551to join! @xref{Contributing}, for information about how you can help.
401c53c4 5552
5af6de3e
LC
5553@node System Installation
5554@section System Installation
5555
3ca2731c
LC
5556@cindex Guix System Distribution
5557This section explains how to install the Guix System Distribution
5558on a machine. The Guix package manager can
35ed9306
LC
5559also be installed on top of a running GNU/Linux system,
5560@pxref{Installation}.
5af6de3e
LC
5561
5562@ifinfo
5563@c This paragraph is for people reading this from tty2 of the
5564@c installation image.
5565You're reading this documentation with an Info reader. For details on
5566how to use it, hit the @key{RET} key (``return'' or ``enter'') on the
6621cdb6 5567link that follows: @pxref{Help,,, info, Info: An Introduction}. Hit
5af6de3e
LC
5568@kbd{l} afterwards to come back here.
5569@end ifinfo
5570
dedb8d5e
LC
5571@menu
5572* Limitations:: What you can expect.
5573* USB Stick Installation:: Preparing the installation medium.
5574* Preparing for Installation:: Networking, partitioning, etc.
5575* Proceeding with the Installation:: The real thing.
5576* Building the Installation Image:: How this comes to be.
5577@end menu
5578
5579@node Limitations
8aaaae38
LC
5580@subsection Limitations
5581
4705641f 5582As of version @value{VERSION}, the Guix System Distribution (GuixSD) is
3ca2731c 5583not production-ready. It may contain bugs and lack important
8aaaae38
LC
5584features. Thus, if you are looking for a stable production system that
5585respects your freedom as a computer user, a good solution at this point
5586is to consider @url{http://www.gnu.org/distros/free-distros.html, one of
f97c9175 5587the more established GNU/Linux distributions}. We hope you can soon switch
4705641f 5588to the GuixSD without fear, of course. In the meantime, you can
8aaaae38
LC
5589also keep using your distribution and try out the package manager on top
5590of it (@pxref{Installation}).
5591
5592Before you proceed with the installation, be aware of the following
5593noteworthy limitations applicable to version @value{VERSION}:
5594
5595@itemize
5596@item
5597The installation process does not include a graphical user interface and
5598requires familiarity with GNU/Linux (see the following subsections to
5599get a feel of what that means.)
5600
5601@item
093ae1be 5602The system does not yet provide full GNOME and KDE desktops. Xfce and
f97c9175 5603Enlightenment are available, though, if graphical desktop environments
093ae1be 5604are your thing, as well as a number of X11 window managers.
8aaaae38
LC
5605
5606@item
dbcb0ab1 5607Support for the Logical Volume Manager (LVM) is missing.
8aaaae38
LC
5608
5609@item
5610Few system services are currently supported out-of-the-box
5611(@pxref{Services}).
5612
5613@item
dedb8d5e 5614More than 3,000 packages are available, but you may
8aaaae38
LC
5615occasionally find that a useful package is missing.
5616@end itemize
5617
f97c9175
AE
5618You have been warned! But more than a disclaimer, this is an invitation
5619to report issues (and success stories!), and to join us in improving it.
8aaaae38 5620@xref{Contributing}, for more info.
5af6de3e 5621
dedb8d5e 5622@node USB Stick Installation
5af6de3e
LC
5623@subsection USB Stick Installation
5624
5625An installation image for USB sticks can be downloaded from
4705641f 5626@indicateurl{ftp://alpha.gnu.org/gnu/guix/guixsd-usb-install-@value{VERSION}.@var{system}.xz},
5af6de3e
LC
5627where @var{system} is one of:
5628
5629@table @code
5630@item x86_64-linux
5631for a GNU/Linux system on Intel/AMD-compatible 64-bit CPUs;
5632
5633@item i686-linux
5634for a 32-bit GNU/Linux system on Intel-compatible CPUs.
5635@end table
5636
5637This image contains a single partition with the tools necessary for an
5638installation. It is meant to be copied @emph{as is} to a large-enough
5639USB stick.
5640
5641To copy the image to a USB stick, follow these steps:
5642
5643@enumerate
5644@item
5645Decompress the image using the @command{xz} command:
5646
5647@example
4705641f 5648xz -d guixsd-usb-install-@value{VERSION}.@var{system}.xz
5af6de3e
LC
5649@end example
5650
5651@item
f97c9175
AE
5652Insert a USB stick of 1@tie{}GiB or more into your machine, and determine
5653its device name. Assuming that the USB stick is known as @file{/dev/sdX},
5af6de3e
LC
5654copy the image with:
5655
5656@example
4705641f 5657dd if=guixsd-usb-install-@value{VERSION}.x86_64 of=/dev/sdX
5af6de3e
LC
5658@end example
5659
5660Access to @file{/dev/sdX} usually requires root privileges.
5661@end enumerate
5662
5663Once this is done, you should be able to reboot the system and boot from
5664the USB stick. The latter usually requires you to get in the BIOS' boot
5665menu, where you can choose to boot from the USB stick.
5666
dedb8d5e 5667@node Preparing for Installation
5af6de3e
LC
5668@subsection Preparing for Installation
5669
5670Once you have successfully booted the image on the USB stick, you should
5671end up with a root prompt. Several console TTYs are configured and can
5672be used to run commands as root. TTY2 shows this documentation,
5673browsable using the Info reader commands (@pxref{Help,,, info, Info: An
ae7ffa9e
LC
5674Introduction}). The installation system runs the GPM mouse daemon,
5675which allows you to select text with the left mouse button and to paste
5676it with the middle button.
5af6de3e 5677
dedb8d5e 5678@subsubsection Keyboard Layout
5af6de3e 5679
dedb8d5e
LC
5680@cindex keyboard layout
5681The installation image uses the US qwerty keyboard layout. If you want
5682to change it, you can use the @command{loadkeys} command. For example,
5683the following command selects the Dvorak keyboard layout:
5af6de3e 5684
dedb8d5e
LC
5685@example
5686loadkeys dvorak
5687@end example
5688
5689See the files under @file{/run/current-system/profile/share/keymaps} for
5690a list of available keyboard layouts. Run @command{man loadkeys} for
5691more information.
5692
5693@subsubsection Networking
5694
5695Run the following command see what your network interfaces are called:
235cba85
LC
5696
5697@example
dedb8d5e 5698ifconfig -a
235cba85
LC
5699@end example
5700
95c559c1 5701@c http://cgit.freedesktop.org/systemd/systemd/tree/src/udev/udev-builtin-net_id.c#n20
dedb8d5e
LC
5702Wired interfaces have a name starting with @samp{e}; for example, the
5703interface corresponding to the first on-board Ethernet controller is
5704called @samp{eno1}. Wireless interfaces have a name starting with
5705@samp{w}, like @samp{w1p2s0}.
5706
5707@table @asis
5708@item Wired connection
5709To configure a wired network run the following command, substituting
5710@var{interface} with the name of the wired interface you want to use.
5711
5712@example
5713ifconfig @var{interface} up
5714@end example
5715
5716@item Wireless connection
5717To configure wireless networking, you can create a configuration file
5718for the @command{wpa_supplicant} configuration tool (its location is not
5719important) using one of the available text editors such as
5720@command{zile}:
5721
5722@example
5723zile wpa_supplicant.conf
5724@end example
5725
5726As an example, the following stanza can go to this file and will work
5727for many wireless networks, provided you give the actual SSID and
5728passphrase for the network you are connecting to:
5729
5730@example
5731network=@{
5732 ssid=@var{my-ssid}
5733 key_mgmt=WPA-PSK
5734 psk="the network's secret passphrase"
5735@}
5736@end example
5737
5738Start the wireless service and run it in the background with the
5739following command (substitute @var{interface} with the name of the
5740network interface you want to use):
5741
5742@example
5743wpa_supplicant -c wpa_supplicant.conf -i @var{interface} -B
5744@end example
5745
5746Run @command{man wpa_supplication} for more information.
5747@end table
5748
5749At this point, you need to acquire an IP address. On a network where IP
5750addresses are automatically assigned @i{via} DHCP, you can run:
5751
5752@example
5753dhclient @var{interface}
5754@end example
5af6de3e 5755
dedb8d5e
LC
5756Try to ping a server to see if networking is up and running:
5757
5758@example
5759ping -c 3 gnu.org
5760@end example
5af6de3e
LC
5761
5762Setting up network access is almost always a requirement because the
5763image does not contain all the software and tools that may be needed.
5764
dedb8d5e
LC
5765@subsubsection Disk Partitioning
5766
5767Unless this has already been done, the next step is to partition, and
5768then format the target partition(s).
5769
5770The installation image includes several partitioning tools, including
5771Parted (@pxref{Overview,,, parted, GNU Parted User Manual}),
5772@command{fdisk}, and @command{cfdisk}. Run it and set up your disk with
5773the partition layout you want:
5774
5775@example
5776cfdisk
5777@end example
5778
5779Once you are done partitioning the target hard disk drive, you have to
5780create a file system on the relevant partition(s)@footnote{Currently
5781GuixSD pretty much assumes an ext4 file system. In particular, code
5782that reads partition UUIDs and labels only works with ext4. This will
5783be fixed in the future.}.
5af6de3e 5784
7ab44369
LC
5785Preferably, assign partitions a label so that you can easily and
5786reliably refer to them in @code{file-system} declarations (@pxref{File
5787Systems}). This is typically done using the @code{-L} option of
dedb8d5e
LC
5788@command{mkfs.ext4} and related commands. So, assuming the target root
5789partition lives at @file{/dev/sda1}, a file system with the label
5790@code{my-root} can be created with:
7ab44369 5791
dedb8d5e
LC
5792@example
5793mkfs.ext4 -L my-root /dev/sda1
5794@end example
dd816355 5795
316d65be
LC
5796@c FIXME: Uncomment this once GRUB fully supports encrypted roots.
5797@c A typical command sequence may be:
5798@c
5799@c @example
5800@c # fdisk /dev/sdX
5801@c @dots{} Create partitions etc.@dots{}
5802@c # cryptsetup luksFormat /dev/sdX1
5803@c # cryptsetup open --type luks /dev/sdX1 my-partition
5804@c # mkfs.ext4 -L my-root /dev/mapper/my-partition
5805@c @end example
6d6e6281 5806
dedb8d5e
LC
5807In addition to e2fsprogs, the suite of tools to manipulate
5808ext2/ext3/ext4 file systems, the installation image includes
5809Cryptsetup/LUKS for disk encryption.
5af6de3e 5810
dedb8d5e
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5811Once that is done, mount the target root partition under @file{/mnt}
5812with a command like (again, assuming @file{/dev/sda1} is the root
5813partition):
83a17b62 5814
dedb8d5e
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5815@example
5816mount /dev/sda1 /mnt
5817@end example
83a17b62 5818
dedb8d5e
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5819@node Proceeding with the Installation
5820@subsection Proceeding with the Installation
83a17b62 5821
dedb8d5e
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5822With the target partitions ready and the target root mounted on
5823@file{/mnt}, we're ready to go. First, run:
5af6de3e 5824
dedb8d5e
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5825@example
5826herd start cow-store /mnt
5827@end example
5af6de3e 5828
dedb8d5e
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5829This makes @file{/gnu/store} copy-on-write, such that packages added to
5830it during the installation phase are written to the target disk rather
5831than kept in memory.
5af6de3e 5832
dedb8d5e 5833Next, you have to edit a file and
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LC
5834provide the declaration of the operating system to be installed. To
5835that end, the installation system comes with two text editors: GNU nano
5836(@pxref{Top,,, nano, GNU nano Manual}), and GNU Zile, an Emacs clone.
5837It is better to store that file on the target root file system, say, as
5838@file{/mnt/etc/config.scm}.
5839
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5840@xref{Using the Configuration System}, for an overview of the
5841configuration file. The example configurations discussed in that
5842section are available under @file{/etc/configuration} in the
5843installation image. Thus, to get started with a system configuration
5844providing a graphical display server (a ``desktop'' system), you can run
5845something along these lines:
5846
5847@example
5848# mkdir /mnt/etc
5849# cp /etc/configuration/desktop.scm /mnt/etc/config.scm
5850# zile /mnt/etc/config.scm
5851@end example
5852
5853You should pay attention to what your configuration file contains, and
5854in particular:
5855
5856@itemize
5857@item
5858Make sure the @code{grub-configuration} form refers to the device you
5859want to install GRUB on.
5860
5861@item
5862Be sure that your partition labels match the value of their respective
5863@code{device} fields in your @code{file-system} configuration, assuming
5864your @code{file-system} configuration sets the value of @code{title} to
5865@code{'label}.
5866@end itemize
5af6de3e 5867
dd51caac
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5868Once you are done preparing the configuration file, the new system must
5869be initialized (remember that the target root file system is mounted
5870under @file{/mnt}):
5af6de3e
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5871
5872@example
5873guix system init /mnt/etc/config.scm /mnt
5874@end example
5875
5876@noindent
dedb8d5e 5877This copies all the necessary files and installs GRUB on
5af6de3e 5878@file{/dev/sdX}, unless you pass the @option{--no-grub} option. For
6621cdb6 5879more information, @pxref{Invoking guix system}. This command may trigger
5af6de3e
LC
5880downloads or builds of missing packages, which can take some time.
5881
1bd4e6db
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5882Once that command has completed---and hopefully succeeded!---you can run
5883@command{reboot} and boot into the new system. The @code{root} password
5884in the new system is initially empty; other users' passwords need to be
5885initialized by running the @command{passwd} command as @code{root},
5886unless your configuration specifies otherwise
5887(@pxref{user-account-password, user account passwords}).
5888
5889Join us on @code{#guix} on the Freenode IRC network or on
5af6de3e
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5890@file{guix-devel@@gnu.org} to share your experience---good or not so
5891good.
5892
dedb8d5e 5893@node Building the Installation Image
5af6de3e
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5894@subsection Building the Installation Image
5895
5896The installation image described above was built using the @command{guix
5897system} command, specifically:
5898
5899@example
8a225c66 5900guix system disk-image --image-size=850MiB gnu/system/install.scm
5af6de3e
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5901@end example
5902
5903@xref{Invoking guix system}, for more information. See
5904@file{gnu/system/install.scm} in the source tree for more information
5905about the installation image.
5906
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5907@node System Configuration
5908@section System Configuration
b208a005 5909
cf4a9129 5910@cindex system configuration
3ca2731c 5911The Guix System Distribution supports a consistent whole-system configuration
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5912mechanism. By that we mean that all aspects of the global system
5913configuration---such as the available system services, timezone and
5914locale settings, user accounts---are declared in a single place. Such
5915a @dfn{system configuration} can be @dfn{instantiated}---i.e., effected.
91ef73d4 5916
cf4a9129
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5917One of the advantages of putting all the system configuration under the
5918control of Guix is that it supports transactional system upgrades, and
5919makes it possible to roll-back to a previous system instantiation,
5920should something go wrong with the new one (@pxref{Features}). Another
5921one is that it makes it easy to replicate the exact same configuration
5922across different machines, or at different points in time, without
5923having to resort to additional administration tools layered on top of
5924the system's own tools.
5925@c Yes, we're talking of Puppet, Chef, & co. here. ↑
91ef73d4 5926
cf4a9129
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5927This section describes this mechanism. First we focus on the system
5928administrator's viewpoint---explaining how the system is configured and
5929instantiated. Then we show how this mechanism can be extended, for
5930instance to support new system services.
91ef73d4 5931
cf4a9129
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5932@menu
5933* Using the Configuration System:: Customizing your GNU system.
7313a52e 5934* operating-system Reference:: Detail of operating-system declarations.
cf4a9129 5935* File Systems:: Configuring file system mounts.
510f9d86 5936* Mapped Devices:: Block device extra processing.
cf4a9129 5937* User Accounts:: Specifying user accounts.
598e19dc 5938* Locales:: Language and cultural convention settings.
cf4a9129 5939* Services:: Specifying system services.
0ae8c15a 5940* Setuid Programs:: Programs running with root privileges.
efb5e833 5941* X.509 Certificates:: Authenticating HTTPS servers.
996ed739 5942* Name Service Switch:: Configuring libc's name service switch.
fd1b1fa2 5943* Initial RAM Disk:: Linux-Libre bootstrapping.
88faf933 5944* GRUB Configuration:: Configuring the boot loader.
cf4a9129 5945* Invoking guix system:: Instantiating a system configuration.
97d76250 5946* Running GuixSD in a VM:: How to run GuixSD in a virtual machine.
cf4a9129
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5947* Defining Services:: Adding new service definitions.
5948@end menu
91ef73d4 5949
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5950@node Using the Configuration System
5951@subsection Using the Configuration System
64d76fa6 5952
cf4a9129
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5953The operating system is configured by providing an
5954@code{operating-system} declaration in a file that can then be passed to
5955the @command{guix system} command (@pxref{Invoking guix system}). A
5956simple setup, with the default system services, the default Linux-Libre
5957kernel, initial RAM disk, and boot loader looks like this:
91ef73d4 5958
cf4a9129
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5959@findex operating-system
5960@lisp
dd51caac 5961@include os-config-bare-bones.texi
cf4a9129 5962@end lisp
401c53c4 5963
cf4a9129
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5964This example should be self-describing. Some of the fields defined
5965above, such as @code{host-name} and @code{bootloader}, are mandatory.
5966Others, such as @code{packages} and @code{services}, can be omitted, in
5967which case they get a default value.
e7f34eb0 5968
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5969Below we discuss the effect of some of the most important fields
5970(@pxref{operating-system Reference}, for details about all the available
5971fields), and how to @dfn{instantiate} the operating system using
5972@command{guix system}.
5973
5974@unnumberedsubsubsec Globally-Visible Packages
5975
cf4a9129 5976@vindex %base-packages
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5977The @code{packages} field lists packages that will be globally visible
5978on the system, for all user accounts---i.e., in every user's @code{PATH}
5979environment variable---in addition to the per-user profiles
5980(@pxref{Invoking guix package}). The @var{%base-packages} variable
5981provides all the tools one would expect for basic user and administrator
5982tasks---including the GNU Core Utilities, the GNU Networking Utilities,
5983the GNU Zile lightweight text editor, @command{find}, @command{grep},
5984etc. The example above adds tcpdump to those, taken from the @code{(gnu
5985packages admin)} module (@pxref{Package Modules}).
e7f34eb0 5986
f6c9fb1b
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5987@findex specification->package
5988Referring to packages by variable name, like @var{tcpdump} above, has
5989the advantage of being unambiguous; it also allows typos and such to be
5990diagnosed right away as ``unbound variables''. The downside is that one
5991needs to know which module defines which package, and to augment the
5992@code{use-package-modules} line accordingly. To avoid that, one can use
5993the @code{specification->package} procedure of the @code{(gnu packages)}
5994module, which returns the best package for a given name or name and
5995version:
5996
5997@lisp
5998(use-modules (gnu packages))
5999
6000(operating-system
6001 ;; ...
6002 (packages (append (map specification->package
6003 '("tcpdump" "htop" "gnupg-2.0"))
6004 %base-packages)))
6005@end lisp
6006
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6007@unnumberedsubsubsec System Services
6008
cf4a9129
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6009@vindex %base-services
6010The @code{services} field lists @dfn{system services} to be made
6011available when the system starts (@pxref{Services}).
6012The @code{operating-system} declaration above specifies that, in
6013addition to the basic services, we want the @command{lshd} secure shell
cd6f6c22
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6014daemon listening on port 2222 (@pxref{Networking Services,
6015@code{lsh-service}}). Under the hood,
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6016@code{lsh-service} arranges so that @code{lshd} is started with the
6017right command-line options, possibly with supporting configuration files
cd6f6c22
LC
6018generated as needed (@pxref{Defining Services}).
6019
6020@cindex customization, of services
6021@findex modify-services
6022Occasionally, instead of using the base services as is, you will want to
6023customize them. For instance, to change the configuration of
6024@code{guix-daemon} and Mingetty (the console log-in), you may write the
6025following instead of @var{%base-services}:
6026
6027@lisp
6028(modify-services %base-services
6029 (guix-service-type config =>
6030 (guix-configuration
6031 (inherit config)
6032 (use-substitutes? #f)
6033 (extra-options '("--gc-keep-outputs"))))
6034 (mingetty-service-type config =>
6035 (mingetty-configuration
6036 (inherit config)
6037 (motd (plain-file "motd" "Hi there!")))))
6038@end lisp
6039
6040@noindent
6041The effect here is to change the options passed to @command{guix-daemon}
6042when it is started, as well as the ``message of the day'' that appears
6043when logging in at the console. @xref{Service Reference,
6044@code{modify-services}}, for more on that.
a1ba8475 6045
dd51caac 6046The configuration for a typical ``desktop'' usage, with the X11 display
cd6f6c22 6047server, a desktop environment, network management, power management, and
dd51caac
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6048more, would look like this:
6049
6050@lisp
6051@include os-config-desktop.texi
6052@end lisp
6053
6054@xref{Desktop Services}, for the exact list of services provided by
efb5e833
LC
6055@var{%desktop-services}. @xref{X.509 Certificates}, for background
6056information about the @code{nss-certs} package that is used here.
dd51caac 6057
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6058Again, @var{%desktop-services} is just a list of service objects. If
6059you want to remove services from there, you can do so using the
6060procedures for list filtering (@pxref{SRFI-1 Filtering and
6061Partitioning,,, guile, GNU Guile Reference Manual}). For instance, the
6062following expression returns a list that contains all the services in
6063@var{%desktop-services} minus the Avahi service:
6064
6065@example
6066(remove (lambda (service)
6067 (eq? (service-kind service) avahi-service-type))
6068 %desktop-services)
6069@end example
6070
6071@unnumberedsubsubsec Instantiating the System
6072
6073Assuming the @code{operating-system} declaration
6074is stored in the @file{my-system-config.scm}
cf4a9129
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6075file, the @command{guix system reconfigure my-system-config.scm} command
6076instantiates that configuration, and makes it the default GRUB boot
65797bff
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6077entry (@pxref{Invoking guix system}).
6078
6079The normal way to change the system's configuration is by updating this
6080file and re-running @command{guix system reconfigure}. One should never
6081have to touch files in @command{/etc} or to run commands that modify the
6082system state such as @command{useradd} or @command{grub-install}. In
6083fact, you must avoid that since that would not only void your warranty
6084but also prevent you from rolling back to previous versions of your
6085system, should you ever need to.
6086
6087@cindex roll-back, of the operating system
6088Speaking of roll-back, each time you run @command{guix system
6089reconfigure}, a new @dfn{generation} of the system is created---without
6090modifying or deleting previous generations. Old system generations get
6091an entry in the GRUB boot menu, allowing you to boot them in case
6092something went wrong with the latest generation. Reassuring, no? The
6093@command{guix system list-generations} command lists the system
6094generations available on disk.
b81e1947 6095
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6096@unnumberedsubsubsec The Programming Interface
6097
cf4a9129
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6098At the Scheme level, the bulk of an @code{operating-system} declaration
6099is instantiated with the following monadic procedure (@pxref{The Store
6100Monad}):
b81e1947 6101
cf4a9129
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6102@deffn {Monadic Procedure} operating-system-derivation os
6103Return a derivation that builds @var{os}, an @code{operating-system}
6104object (@pxref{Derivations}).
b81e1947 6105
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6106The output of the derivation is a single directory that refers to all
6107the packages, configuration files, and other supporting files needed to
6108instantiate @var{os}.
6109@end deffn
b81e1947 6110
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6111This procedure is provided by the @code{(gnu system)} module. Along
6112with @code{(gnu services)} (@pxref{Services}), this module contains the
6113guts of GuixSD. Make sure to visit it!
6114
6115
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6116@node operating-system Reference
6117@subsection @code{operating-system} Reference
6118
6119This section summarizes all the options available in
6120@code{operating-system} declarations (@pxref{Using the Configuration
6121System}).
6122
6123@deftp {Data Type} operating-system
6124This is the data type representing an operating system configuration.
6125By that, we mean all the global system configuration, not per-user
6126configuration (@pxref{Using the Configuration System}).
6127
6128@table @asis
6129@item @code{kernel} (default: @var{linux-libre})
fbb25e56 6130The package object of the operating system kernel to use@footnote{Currently
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6131only the Linux-libre kernel is supported. In the future, it will be
6132possible to use the GNU@tie{}Hurd.}.
6133
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6134@item @code{kernel-arguments} (default: @code{'()})
6135List of strings or gexps representing additional arguments to pass on
6136the kernel's command-line---e.g., @code{("console=ttyS0")}.
6137
7313a52e 6138@item @code{bootloader}
88faf933 6139The system bootloader configuration object. @xref{GRUB Configuration}.
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6140
6141@item @code{initrd} (default: @code{base-initrd})
6142A two-argument monadic procedure that returns an initial RAM disk for
6143the Linux kernel. @xref{Initial RAM Disk}.
6144
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6145@item @code{firmware} (default: @var{%base-firmware})
6146@cindex firmware
6147List of firmware packages loadable by the operating system kernel.
6148
6149The default includes firmware needed for Atheros-based WiFi devices
6150(Linux-libre module @code{ath9k}.)
6151
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6152@item @code{host-name}
6153The host name.
6154
6155@item @code{hosts-file}
6156@cindex hosts file
24e02c28 6157A file-like object (@pxref{G-Expressions, file-like objects}) for use as
7313a52e 6158@file{/etc/hosts} (@pxref{Host Names,,, libc, The GNU C Library
24e02c28 6159Reference Manual}). The default is a file with entries for
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6160@code{localhost} and @var{host-name}.
6161
6162@item @code{mapped-devices} (default: @code{'()})
6163A list of mapped devices. @xref{Mapped Devices}.
6164
6165@item @code{file-systems}
6166A list of file systems. @xref{File Systems}.
6167
6168@item @code{swap-devices} (default: @code{'()})
6169@cindex swap devices
6170A list of strings identifying devices to be used for ``swap space''
6171(@pxref{Memory Concepts,,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}).
6172For example, @code{'("/dev/sda3")}.
6173
bf87f38a 6174@item @code{users} (default: @code{%base-user-accounts})
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6175@itemx @code{groups} (default: @var{%base-groups})
6176List of user accounts and groups. @xref{User Accounts}.
6177
6178@item @code{skeletons} (default: @code{(default-skeletons)})
6179A monadic list of pairs of target file name and files. These are the
6180files that will be used as skeletons as new accounts are created.
6181
6182For instance, a valid value may look like this:
6183
6184@example
6185(mlet %store-monad ((bashrc (text-file "bashrc" "\
6186 export PATH=$HOME/.guix-profile/bin")))
6187 (return `((".bashrc" ,bashrc))))
6188@end example
6189
6190@item @code{issue} (default: @var{%default-issue})
6191A string denoting the contents of the @file{/etc/issue} file, which is
6192what displayed when users log in on a text console.
6193
6194@item @code{packages} (default: @var{%base-packages})
6195The set of packages installed in the global profile, which is accessible
6196at @file{/run/current-system/profile}.
6197
6198The default set includes core utilities, but it is good practice to
6199install non-core utilities in user profiles (@pxref{Invoking guix
6200package}).
6201
6202@item @code{timezone}
6203A timezone identifying string---e.g., @code{"Europe/Paris"}.
6204
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6205You can run the @command{tzselect} command to find out which timezone
6206string corresponds to your region. Choosing an invalid timezone name
6207causes @command{guix system} to fail.
6208
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6209@item @code{locale} (default: @code{"en_US.utf8"})
6210The name of the default locale (@pxref{Locale Names,,, libc, The GNU C
6211Library Reference Manual}). @xref{Locales}, for more information.
6212
6213@item @code{locale-definitions} (default: @var{%default-locale-definitions})
6214The list of locale definitions to be compiled and that may be used at
6215run time. @xref{Locales}.
7313a52e 6216
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6217@item @code{locale-libcs} (default: @code{(list @var{glibc})})
6218The list of GNU@tie{}libc packages whose locale data and tools are used
6219to build the locale definitions. @xref{Locales}, for compatibility
6220considerations that justify this option.
6221
996ed739
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6222@item @code{name-service-switch} (default: @var{%default-nss})
6223Configuration of libc's name service switch (NSS)---a
6224@code{<name-service-switch>} object. @xref{Name Service Switch}, for
6225details.
6226
7313a52e 6227@item @code{services} (default: @var{%base-services})
28d939af 6228A list of service objects denoting system services. @xref{Services}.
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6229
6230@item @code{pam-services} (default: @code{(base-pam-services)})
6231@cindex PAM
6232@cindex pluggable authentication modules
6233Linux @dfn{pluggable authentication module} (PAM) services.
6234@c FIXME: Add xref to PAM services section.
6235
6236@item @code{setuid-programs} (default: @var{%setuid-programs})
6237List of string-valued G-expressions denoting setuid programs.
6238@xref{Setuid Programs}.
6239
f5a9ffa0
AK
6240@item @code{sudoers-file} (default: @var{%sudoers-specification})
6241@cindex sudoers file
84765839
LC
6242The contents of the @file{/etc/sudoers} file as a file-like object
6243(@pxref{G-Expressions, @code{local-file} and @code{plain-file}}).
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6244
6245This file specifies which users can use the @command{sudo} command, what
6246they are allowed to do, and what privileges they may gain. The default
6247is that only @code{root} and members of the @code{wheel} group may use
6248@code{sudo}.
6249
6250@end table
6251@end deftp
6252
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6253@node File Systems
6254@subsection File Systems
b81e1947 6255
cf4a9129
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6256The list of file systems to be mounted is specified in the
6257@code{file-systems} field of the operating system's declaration
6258(@pxref{Using the Configuration System}). Each file system is declared
6259using the @code{file-system} form, like this:
b81e1947
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6260
6261@example
cf4a9129
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6262(file-system
6263 (mount-point "/home")
6264 (device "/dev/sda3")
6265 (type "ext4"))
b81e1947
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6266@end example
6267
cf4a9129
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6268As usual, some of the fields are mandatory---those shown in the example
6269above---while others can be omitted. These are described below.
b81e1947 6270
cf4a9129
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6271@deftp {Data Type} file-system
6272Objects of this type represent file systems to be mounted. They
6273contain the following members:
5ff3c4b8 6274
cf4a9129
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6275@table @asis
6276@item @code{type}
6277This is a string specifying the type of the file system---e.g.,
6278@code{"ext4"}.
5ff3c4b8 6279
cf4a9129
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6280@item @code{mount-point}
6281This designates the place where the file system is to be mounted.
b81e1947 6282
cf4a9129
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6283@item @code{device}
6284This names the ``source'' of the file system. By default it is the name
6285of a node under @file{/dev}, but its meaning depends on the @code{title}
6286field described below.
401c53c4 6287
cf4a9129
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6288@item @code{title} (default: @code{'device})
6289This is a symbol that specifies how the @code{device} field is to be
6290interpreted.
401c53c4 6291
cf4a9129
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6292When it is the symbol @code{device}, then the @code{device} field is
6293interpreted as a file name; when it is @code{label}, then @code{device}
6294is interpreted as a partition label name; when it is @code{uuid},
6295@code{device} is interpreted as a partition unique identifier (UUID).
da7cabd4 6296
661a1d79
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6297UUIDs may be converted from their string representation (as shown by the
6298@command{tune2fs -l} command) using the @code{uuid} form, like this:
6299
6300@example
6301(file-system
6302 (mount-point "/home")
6303 (type "ext4")
6304 (title 'uuid)
6305 (device (uuid "4dab5feb-d176-45de-b287-9b0a6e4c01cb")))
6306@end example
6307
cf4a9129 6308The @code{label} and @code{uuid} options offer a way to refer to disk
661a1d79
LC
6309partitions without having to hard-code their actual device
6310name@footnote{Note that, while it is tempting to use
6311@file{/dev/disk/by-uuid} and similar device names to achieve the same
6312result, this is not recommended: These special device nodes are created
6313by the udev daemon and may be unavailable at the time the device is
6314mounted.}.
da7cabd4 6315
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6316However, when a file system's source is a mapped device (@pxref{Mapped
6317Devices}), its @code{device} field @emph{must} refer to the mapped
6318device name---e.g., @file{/dev/mapper/root-partition}---and consequently
6319@code{title} must be set to @code{'device}. This is required so that
6320the system knows that mounting the file system depends on having the
6321corresponding device mapping established.
6322
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LC
6323@item @code{flags} (default: @code{'()})
6324This is a list of symbols denoting mount flags. Recognized flags
2c071ce9
LC
6325include @code{read-only}, @code{bind-mount}, @code{no-dev} (disallow
6326access to special files), @code{no-suid} (ignore setuid and setgid
6327bits), and @code{no-exec} (disallow program execution.)
da7cabd4 6328
cf4a9129
LC
6329@item @code{options} (default: @code{#f})
6330This is either @code{#f}, or a string denoting mount options.
da7cabd4 6331
be21979d
LC
6332@item @code{mount?} (default: @code{#t})
6333This value indicates whether to automatically mount the file system when
6334the system is brought up. When set to @code{#f}, the file system gets
6335an entry in @file{/etc/fstab} (read by the @command{mount} command) but
6336is not automatically mounted.
6337
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LC
6338@item @code{needed-for-boot?} (default: @code{#f})
6339This Boolean value indicates whether the file system is needed when
6340booting. If that is true, then the file system is mounted when the
6341initial RAM disk (initrd) is loaded. This is always the case, for
6342instance, for the root file system.
da7cabd4 6343
cf4a9129
LC
6344@item @code{check?} (default: @code{#t})
6345This Boolean indicates whether the file system needs to be checked for
6346errors before being mounted.
f9cc8971 6347
4e469051
LC
6348@item @code{create-mount-point?} (default: @code{#f})
6349When true, the mount point is created if it does not exist yet.
6350
e51710d1
LC
6351@item @code{dependencies} (default: @code{'()})
6352This is a list of @code{<file-system>} objects representing file systems
6353that must be mounted before (and unmounted after) this one.
6354
6355As an example, consider a hierarchy of mounts: @file{/sys/fs/cgroup} is
6356a dependency of @file{/sys/fs/cgroup/cpu} and
6357@file{/sys/fs/cgroup/memory}.
6358
cf4a9129
LC
6359@end table
6360@end deftp
da7cabd4 6361
a69576ea
LC
6362The @code{(gnu system file-systems)} exports the following useful
6363variables.
6364
6365@defvr {Scheme Variable} %base-file-systems
6366These are essential file systems that are required on normal systems,
cc0e575a 6367such as @var{%pseudo-terminal-file-system} and @var{%immutable-store} (see
3392ce5d
LC
6368below.) Operating system declarations should always contain at least
6369these.
a69576ea
LC
6370@end defvr
6371
7f239fd3
LC
6372@defvr {Scheme Variable} %pseudo-terminal-file-system
6373This is the file system to be mounted as @file{/dev/pts}. It supports
6374@dfn{pseudo-terminals} created @i{via} @code{openpty} and similar
6375functions (@pxref{Pseudo-Terminals,,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference
6376Manual}). Pseudo-terminals are used by terminal emulators such as
6377@command{xterm}.
6378@end defvr
6379
db17ae5c
LC
6380@defvr {Scheme Variable} %shared-memory-file-system
6381This file system is mounted as @file{/dev/shm} and is used to support
6382memory sharing across processes (@pxref{Memory-mapped I/O,
6383@code{shm_open},, libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}).
6384@end defvr
6385
3392ce5d
LC
6386@defvr {Scheme Variable} %immutable-store
6387This file system performs a read-only ``bind mount'' of
6388@file{/gnu/store}, making it read-only for all the users including
6389@code{root}. This prevents against accidental modification by software
6390running as @code{root} or by system administrators.
6391
6392The daemon itself is still able to write to the store: it remounts it
6393read-write in its own ``name space.''
6394@end defvr
6395
a69576ea
LC
6396@defvr {Scheme Variable} %binary-format-file-system
6397The @code{binfmt_misc} file system, which allows handling of arbitrary
6398executable file types to be delegated to user space. This requires the
6399@code{binfmt.ko} kernel module to be loaded.
6400@end defvr
6401
6402@defvr {Scheme Variable} %fuse-control-file-system
6403The @code{fusectl} file system, which allows unprivileged users to mount
6404and unmount user-space FUSE file systems. This requires the
6405@code{fuse.ko} kernel module to be loaded.
6406@end defvr
6407
510f9d86
LC
6408@node Mapped Devices
6409@subsection Mapped Devices
6410
6411@cindex device mapping
6412@cindex mapped devices
6413The Linux kernel has a notion of @dfn{device mapping}: a block device,
6414such as a hard disk partition, can be @dfn{mapped} into another device,
6415with additional processing over the data that flows through
6416it@footnote{Note that the GNU@tie{}Hurd makes no difference between the
6417concept of a ``mapped device'' and that of a file system: both boil down
6418to @emph{translating} input/output operations made on a file to
6419operations on its backing store. Thus, the Hurd implements mapped
6420devices, like file systems, using the generic @dfn{translator} mechanism
6421(@pxref{Translators,,, hurd, The GNU Hurd Reference Manual}).}. A
6422typical example is encryption device mapping: all writes to the mapped
6423device are encrypted, and all reads are deciphered, transparently.
6424
6425Mapped devices are declared using the @code{mapped-device} form:
6426
6427@example
6428(mapped-device
6429 (source "/dev/sda3")
6430 (target "home")
6431 (type luks-device-mapping))
6432@end example
6433
6434@noindent
6435@cindex disk encryption
6436@cindex LUKS
6437This example specifies a mapping from @file{/dev/sda3} to
6438@file{/dev/mapper/home} using LUKS---the
6439@url{http://code.google.com/p/cryptsetup,Linux Unified Key Setup}, a
6440standard mechanism for disk encryption. The @file{/dev/mapper/home}
6441device can then be used as the @code{device} of a @code{file-system}
6442declaration (@pxref{File Systems}). The @code{mapped-device} form is
6443detailed below.
6444
6445@deftp {Data Type} mapped-device
6446Objects of this type represent device mappings that will be made when
6447the system boots up.
6448
9cb426b8
LC
6449@table @code
6450@item source
510f9d86
LC
6451This string specifies the name of the block device to be mapped, such as
6452@code{"/dev/sda3"}.
6453
9cb426b8 6454@item target
510f9d86
LC
6455This string specifies the name of the mapping to be established. For
6456example, specifying @code{"my-partition"} will lead to the creation of
6457the @code{"/dev/mapper/my-partition"} device.
6458
9cb426b8 6459@item type
510f9d86
LC
6460This must be a @code{mapped-device-kind} object, which specifies how
6461@var{source} is mapped to @var{target}.
6462@end table
6463@end deftp
6464
6465@defvr {Scheme Variable} luks-device-mapping
6466This defines LUKS block device encryption using the @command{cryptsetup}
6467command, from the same-named package. This relies on the
6468@code{dm-crypt} Linux kernel module.
6469@end defvr
6470
cf4a9129
LC
6471@node User Accounts
6472@subsection User Accounts
ee85f3db 6473
9bea87a5
LC
6474User accounts and groups are entirely managed through the
6475@code{operating-system} declaration. They are specified with the
6476@code{user-account} and @code{user-group} forms:
ee85f3db 6477
cf4a9129
LC
6478@example
6479(user-account
6480 (name "alice")
6481 (group "users")
24e752c0
LC
6482 (supplementary-groups '("wheel" ;allow use of sudo, etc.
6483 "audio" ;sound card
6484 "video" ;video devices such as webcams
6485 "cdrom")) ;the good ol' CD-ROM
cf4a9129
LC
6486 (comment "Bob's sister")
6487 (home-directory "/home/alice"))
6488@end example
25083588 6489
9bea87a5
LC
6490When booting or upon completion of @command{guix system reconfigure},
6491the system ensures that only the user accounts and groups specified in
6492the @code{operating-system} declaration exist, and with the specified
6493properties. Thus, account or group creations or modifications made by
6494directly invoking commands such as @command{useradd} are lost upon
6495reconfiguration or reboot. This ensures that the system remains exactly
6496as declared.
6497
cf4a9129
LC
6498@deftp {Data Type} user-account
6499Objects of this type represent user accounts. The following members may
6500be specified:
ee85f3db 6501
cf4a9129
LC
6502@table @asis
6503@item @code{name}
6504The name of the user account.
ee85f3db 6505
cf4a9129
LC
6506@item @code{group}
6507This is the name (a string) or identifier (a number) of the user group
6508this account belongs to.
ee85f3db 6509
cf4a9129
LC
6510@item @code{supplementary-groups} (default: @code{'()})
6511Optionally, this can be defined as a list of group names that this
6512account belongs to.
ee85f3db 6513
cf4a9129
LC
6514@item @code{uid} (default: @code{#f})
6515This is the user ID for this account (a number), or @code{#f}. In the
6516latter case, a number is automatically chosen by the system when the
6517account is created.
ee85f3db 6518
cf4a9129
LC
6519@item @code{comment} (default: @code{""})
6520A comment about the account, such as the account's owner full name.
c8c871d1 6521
cf4a9129
LC
6522@item @code{home-directory}
6523This is the name of the home directory for the account.
ee85f3db 6524
cf4a9129
LC
6525@item @code{shell} (default: Bash)
6526This is a G-expression denoting the file name of a program to be used as
6527the shell (@pxref{G-Expressions}).
ee85f3db 6528
cf4a9129
LC
6529@item @code{system?} (default: @code{#f})
6530This Boolean value indicates whether the account is a ``system''
6531account. System accounts are sometimes treated specially; for instance,
6532graphical login managers do not list them.
ee85f3db 6533
1bd4e6db 6534@anchor{user-account-password}
cf4a9129 6535@item @code{password} (default: @code{#f})
eb59595c
LC
6536You would normally leave this field to @code{#f}, initialize user
6537passwords as @code{root} with the @command{passwd} command, and then let
9bea87a5
LC
6538users change it with @command{passwd}. Passwords set with
6539@command{passwd} are of course preserved across reboot and
6540reconfiguration.
eb59595c
LC
6541
6542If you @emph{do} want to have a preset password for an account, then
6543this field must contain the encrypted password, as a string.
5d1f1177
LC
6544@xref{crypt,,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}, for more information
6545on password encryption, and @ref{Encryption,,, guile, GNU Guile Reference
eb59595c 6546Manual}, for information on Guile's @code{crypt} procedure.
c8c871d1 6547
cf4a9129
LC
6548@end table
6549@end deftp
ee85f3db 6550
cf4a9129 6551User group declarations are even simpler:
ee85f3db 6552
cf4a9129
LC
6553@example
6554(user-group (name "students"))
6555@end example
ee85f3db 6556
cf4a9129
LC
6557@deftp {Data Type} user-group
6558This type is for, well, user groups. There are just a few fields:
af8a56b8 6559
cf4a9129
LC
6560@table @asis
6561@item @code{name}
6562The group's name.
ee85f3db 6563
cf4a9129
LC
6564@item @code{id} (default: @code{#f})
6565The group identifier (a number). If @code{#f}, a new number is
6566automatically allocated when the group is created.
ee85f3db 6567
c8fa3426
LC
6568@item @code{system?} (default: @code{#f})
6569This Boolean value indicates whether the group is a ``system'' group.
6570System groups have low numerical IDs.
6571
cf4a9129
LC
6572@item @code{password} (default: @code{#f})
6573What, user groups can have a password? Well, apparently yes. Unless
6574@code{#f}, this field specifies the group's password.
ee85f3db 6575
cf4a9129
LC
6576@end table
6577@end deftp
401c53c4 6578
cf4a9129
LC
6579For convenience, a variable lists all the basic user groups one may
6580expect:
401c53c4 6581
cf4a9129
LC
6582@defvr {Scheme Variable} %base-groups
6583This is the list of basic user groups that users and/or packages expect
6584to be present on the system. This includes groups such as ``root'',
6585``wheel'', and ``users'', as well as groups used to control access to
6586specific devices such as ``audio'', ``disk'', and ``cdrom''.
6587@end defvr
401c53c4 6588
bf87f38a
LC
6589@defvr {Scheme Variable} %base-user-accounts
6590This is the list of basic system accounts that programs may expect to
6591find on a GNU/Linux system, such as the ``nobody'' account.
6592
6593Note that the ``root'' account is not included here. It is a
6594special-case and is automatically added whether or not it is specified.
6595@end defvr
6596
598e19dc
LC
6597@node Locales
6598@subsection Locales
6599
6600@cindex locale
6601A @dfn{locale} defines cultural conventions for a particular language
6602and region of the world (@pxref{Locales,,, libc, The GNU C Library
6603Reference Manual}). Each locale has a name that typically has the form
b2636518 6604@code{@var{language}_@var{territory}.@var{codeset}}---e.g.,
598e19dc
LC
6605@code{fr_LU.utf8} designates the locale for the French language, with
6606cultural conventions from Luxembourg, and using the UTF-8 encoding.
6607
6608@cindex locale definition
6609Usually, you will want to specify the default locale for the machine
6610using the @code{locale} field of the @code{operating-system} declaration
6611(@pxref{operating-system Reference, @code{locale}}).
6612
f5582b2c
LC
6613The selected locale is automatically added to the @dfn{locale
6614definitions} known to the system if needed, with its codeset inferred
6615from its name---e.g., @code{bo_CN.utf8} will be assumed to use the
6616@code{UTF-8} codeset. Additional locale definitions can be specified in
6617the @code{locale-definitions} slot of @code{operating-system}---this is
6618useful, for instance, if the codeset could not be inferred from the
6619locale name. The default set of locale definitions includes some widely
6620used locales, but not all the available locales, in order to save space.
6621
6622For instance, to add the North Frisian locale for Germany, the value of
6623that field may be:
598e19dc
LC
6624
6625@example
6626(cons (locale-definition
6627 (name "fy_DE.utf8") (source "fy_DE"))
6628 %default-locale-definitions)
6629@end example
6630
6631Likewise, to save space, one might want @code{locale-definitions} to
6632list only the locales that are actually used, as in:
6633
6634@example
6635(list (locale-definition
6636 (name "ja_JP.eucjp") (source "ja_JP")
6637 (charset "EUC-JP")))
6638@end example
6639
5c3c1427
LC
6640@vindex LOCPATH
6641The compiled locale definitions are available at
46bd6edd
LC
6642@file{/run/current-system/locale/X.Y}, where @code{X.Y} is the libc
6643version, which is the default location where the GNU@tie{}libc provided
6644by Guix looks for locale data. This can be overridden using the
6645@code{LOCPATH} environment variable (@pxref{locales-and-locpath,
5c3c1427
LC
6646@code{LOCPATH} and locale packages}).
6647
598e19dc
LC
6648The @code{locale-definition} form is provided by the @code{(gnu system
6649locale)} module. Details are given below.
6650
6651@deftp {Data Type} locale-definition
6652This is the data type of a locale definition.
6653
6654@table @asis
6655
6656@item @code{name}
6657The name of the locale. @xref{Locale Names,,, libc, The GNU C Library
6658Reference Manual}, for more information on locale names.
6659
6660@item @code{source}
6661The name of the source for that locale. This is typically the
6662@code{@var{language}_@var{territory}} part of the locale name.
6663
6664@item @code{charset} (default: @code{"UTF-8"})
6665The ``character set'' or ``code set'' for that locale,
6666@uref{http://www.iana.org/assignments/character-sets, as defined by
6667IANA}.
6668
6669@end table
6670@end deftp
6671
6672@defvr {Scheme Variable} %default-locale-definitions
b2636518
LC
6673An arbitrary list of commonly used UTF-8 locales, used as the default
6674value of the @code{locale-definitions} field of @code{operating-system}
598e19dc 6675declarations.
b2636518
LC
6676
6677@cindex locale name
6678@cindex normalized codeset in locale names
6679These locale definitions use the @dfn{normalized codeset} for the part
6680that follows the dot in the name (@pxref{Using gettextized software,
6681normalized codeset,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}). So for
6682instance it has @code{uk_UA.utf8} but @emph{not}, say,
6683@code{uk_UA.UTF-8}.
598e19dc 6684@end defvr
401c53c4 6685
34760ae7
LC
6686@subsubsection Locale Data Compatibility Considerations
6687
6688@cindex incompatibility, of locale data
6689@code{operating-system} declarations provide a @code{locale-libcs} field
6690to specify the GNU@tie{}libc packages that are used to compile locale
6691declarations (@pxref{operating-system Reference}). ``Why would I
6692care?'', you may ask. Well, it turns out that the binary format of
6693locale data is occasionally incompatible from one libc version to
6694another.
6695
6696@c See <https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2015-09/msg00575.html>
6697@c and <https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/guix-devel/2015-08/msg00737.html>.
6698For instance, a program linked against libc version 2.21 is unable to
6699read locale data produced with libc 2.22; worse, that program
6700@emph{aborts} instead of simply ignoring the incompatible locale
6701data@footnote{Versions 2.23 and later of GNU@tie{}libc will simply skip
6702the incompatible locale data, which is already an improvement.}.
6703Similarly, a program linked against libc 2.22 can read most, but not
6704all, the locale data from libc 2.21 (specifically, @code{LC_COLLATE}
6705data is incompatible); thus calls to @code{setlocale} may fail, but
6706programs will not abort.
6707
6708The ``problem'' in GuixSD is that users have a lot of freedom: They can
6709choose whether and when to upgrade software in their profiles, and might
6710be using a libc version different from the one the system administrator
6711used to build the system-wide locale data.
6712
6713Fortunately, unprivileged users can also install their own locale data
6714and define @var{GUIX_LOCPATH} accordingly (@pxref{locales-and-locpath,
6715@code{GUIX_LOCPATH} and locale packages}).
6716
6717Still, it is best if the system-wide locale data at
6718@file{/run/current-system/locale} is built for all the libc versions
6719actually in use on the system, so that all the programs can access
6720it---this is especially crucial on a multi-user system. To do that, the
6721administrator can specify several libc packages in the
6722@code{locale-libcs} field of @code{operating-system}:
6723
6724@example
6725(use-package-modules base)
6726
6727(operating-system
6728 ;; @dots{}
6729 (locale-libcs (list glibc-2.21 (canonical-package glibc))))
6730@end example
6731
6732This example would lead to a system containing locale definitions for
6733both libc 2.21 and the current version of libc in
6734@file{/run/current-system/locale}.
6735
6736
cf4a9129
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6737@node Services
6738@subsection Services
401c53c4 6739
cf4a9129
LC
6740@cindex system services
6741An important part of preparing an @code{operating-system} declaration is
6742listing @dfn{system services} and their configuration (@pxref{Using the
6743Configuration System}). System services are typically daemons launched
6744when the system boots, or other actions needed at that time---e.g.,
d8b94dbd
LC
6745configuring network access.
6746
dd17bc38
AK
6747Services are managed by the GNU@tie{}Shepherd (@pxref{Introduction,,,
6748shepherd, The GNU Shepherd Manual}). On a running system, the
6749@command{herd} command allows you to list the available services, show
6750their status, start and stop them, or do other specific operations
6751(@pxref{Jump Start,,, shepherd, The GNU Shepherd Manual}). For example:
d8b94dbd
LC
6752
6753@example
dd17bc38 6754# herd status
d8b94dbd
LC
6755@end example
6756
6757The above command, run as @code{root}, lists the currently defined
dd17bc38 6758services. The @command{herd doc} command shows a synopsis of the given
d8b94dbd
LC
6759service:
6760
6761@example
dd17bc38 6762# herd doc nscd
d8b94dbd
LC
6763Run libc's name service cache daemon (nscd).
6764@end example
6765
6766The @command{start}, @command{stop}, and @command{restart} sub-commands
6767have the effect you would expect. For instance, the commands below stop
6768the nscd service and restart the Xorg display server:
6769
6770@example
dd17bc38 6771# herd stop nscd
d8b94dbd 6772Service nscd has been stopped.
dd17bc38 6773# herd restart xorg-server
d8b94dbd
LC
6774Service xorg-server has been stopped.
6775Service xorg-server has been started.
6776@end example
401c53c4 6777
cf4a9129 6778The following sections document the available services, starting with
d8b94dbd
LC
6779the core services, that may be used in an @code{operating-system}
6780declaration.
401c53c4 6781
cf4a9129
LC
6782@menu
6783* Base Services:: Essential system services.
6784* Networking Services:: Network setup, SSH daemon, etc.
6785* X Window:: Graphical display.
fe1a39d3 6786* Desktop Services:: D-Bus and desktop services.
105369a4 6787* Database Services:: SQL databases.
d8c18af8 6788* Mail Services:: IMAP, POP3, SMTP, and all that.
58724c48 6789* Web Services:: Web servers.
aa4ed923 6790* Various Services:: Other services.
cf4a9129 6791@end menu
401c53c4 6792
cf4a9129
LC
6793@node Base Services
6794@subsubsection Base Services
a1ba8475 6795
cf4a9129
LC
6796The @code{(gnu services base)} module provides definitions for the basic
6797services that one expects from the system. The services exported by
6798this module are listed below.
401c53c4 6799
cf4a9129 6800@defvr {Scheme Variable} %base-services
31771497
LC
6801This variable contains a list of basic services (@pxref{Service Types
6802and Services}, for more information on service objects) one would
cf4a9129
LC
6803expect from the system: a login service (mingetty) on each tty, syslogd,
6804libc's name service cache daemon (nscd), the udev device manager, and
6805more.
401c53c4 6806
cf4a9129
LC
6807This is the default value of the @code{services} field of
6808@code{operating-system} declarations. Usually, when customizing a
6809system, you will want to append services to @var{%base-services}, like
6810this:
401c53c4 6811
cf4a9129 6812@example
fa1e31b8 6813(cons* (avahi-service) (lsh-service) %base-services)
cf4a9129
LC
6814@end example
6815@end defvr
401c53c4 6816
be1c2c54 6817@deffn {Scheme Procedure} host-name-service @var{name}
cf4a9129
LC
6818Return a service that sets the host name to @var{name}.
6819@end deffn
401c53c4 6820
66e4f01c
LC
6821@deffn {Scheme Procedure} mingetty-service @var{config}
6822Return a service to run mingetty according to @var{config}, a
6823@code{<mingetty-configuration>} object, which specifies the tty to run, among
6824other things.
cf4a9129 6825@end deffn
401c53c4 6826
66e4f01c
LC
6827@deftp {Data Type} mingetty-configuration
6828This is the data type representing the configuration of Mingetty, which
6829implements console log-in.
6830
6831@table @asis
6832
6833@item @code{tty}
6834The name of the console this Mingetty runs on---e.g., @code{"tty1"}.
6835
6836@item @code{motd}
6837A file-like object containing the ``message of the day''.
6838
6839@item @code{auto-login} (default: @code{#f})
6840When true, this field must be a string denoting the user name under
f9b9a033 6841which the system automatically logs in. When it is @code{#f}, a
66e4f01c
LC
6842user name and password must be entered to log in.
6843
6844@item @code{login-program} (default: @code{#f})
6845This must be either @code{#f}, in which case the default log-in program
6846is used (@command{login} from the Shadow tool suite), or a gexp denoting
6847the name of the log-in program.
6848
6849@item @code{login-pause?} (default: @code{#f})
6850When set to @code{#t} in conjunction with @var{auto-login}, the user
6851will have to press a key before the log-in shell is launched.
6852
6853@item @code{mingetty} (default: @var{mingetty})
6854The Mingetty package to use.
6855
6856@end table
6857@end deftp
6858
6454b333
LC
6859@cindex name service cache daemon
6860@cindex nscd
be1c2c54 6861@deffn {Scheme Procedure} nscd-service [@var{config}] [#:glibc glibc] @
4aee6e60 6862 [#:name-services '()]
b893f1ae
LC
6863Return a service that runs libc's name service cache daemon (nscd) with the
6864given @var{config}---an @code{<nscd-configuration>} object. @xref{Name
6865Service Switch}, for an example.
cf4a9129 6866@end deffn
401c53c4 6867
6454b333
LC
6868@defvr {Scheme Variable} %nscd-default-configuration
6869This is the default @code{<nscd-configuration>} value (see below) used
6870by @code{nscd-service}. This uses the caches defined by
6871@var{%nscd-default-caches}; see below.
6872@end defvr
6873
6874@deftp {Data Type} nscd-configuration
6875This is the type representing the name service cache daemon (nscd)
6876configuration.
6877
6878@table @asis
6879
b893f1ae
LC
6880@item @code{name-services} (default: @code{'()})
6881List of packages denoting @dfn{name services} that must be visible to
6882the nscd---e.g., @code{(list @var{nss-mdns})}.
6883
6884@item @code{glibc} (default: @var{glibc})
6885Package object denoting the GNU C Library providing the @command{nscd}
6886command.
6887
6454b333
LC
6888@item @code{log-file} (default: @code{"/var/log/nscd.log"})
6889Name of nscd's log file. This is where debugging output goes when
6890@code{debug-level} is strictly positive.
6891
6892@item @code{debug-level} (default: @code{0})
6893Integer denoting the debugging levels. Higher numbers mean more
6894debugging output is logged.
6895
6896@item @code{caches} (default: @var{%nscd-default-caches})
6897List of @code{<nscd-cache>} objects denoting things to be cached; see
6898below.
6899
6900@end table
6901@end deftp
6902
6903@deftp {Data Type} nscd-cache
6904Data type representing a cache database of nscd and its parameters.
6905
6906@table @asis
6907
6908@item @code{database}
6909This is a symbol representing the name of the database to be cached.
6910Valid values are @code{passwd}, @code{group}, @code{hosts}, and
6911@code{services}, which designate the corresponding NSS database
6912(@pxref{NSS Basics,,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}).
6913
6914@item @code{positive-time-to-live}
6915@itemx @code{negative-time-to-live} (default: @code{20})
6916A number representing the number of seconds during which a positive or
6917negative lookup result remains in cache.
6918
6919@item @code{check-files?} (default: @code{#t})
6920Whether to check for updates of the files corresponding to
6921@var{database}.
6922
6923For instance, when @var{database} is @code{hosts}, setting this flag
6924instructs nscd to check for updates in @file{/etc/hosts} and to take
6925them into account.
6926
6927@item @code{persistent?} (default: @code{#t})
6928Whether the cache should be stored persistently on disk.
6929
6930@item @code{shared?} (default: @code{#t})
6931Whether the cache should be shared among users.
6932
6933@item @code{max-database-size} (default: 32@tie{}MiB)
6934Maximum size in bytes of the database cache.
6935
6936@c XXX: 'suggested-size' and 'auto-propagate?' seem to be expert
6937@c settings, so leave them out.
6938
6939@end table
6940@end deftp
6941
6942@defvr {Scheme Variable} %nscd-default-caches
6943List of @code{<nscd-cache>} objects used by default by
6944@code{nscd-configuration} (see above.)
6945
6946It enables persistent and aggressive caching of service and host name
6947lookups. The latter provides better host name lookup performance,
6948resilience in the face of unreliable name servers, and also better
6949privacy---often the result of host name lookups is in local cache, so
6950external name servers do not even need to be queried.
6951@end defvr
6952
6953
be1c2c54 6954@deffn {Scheme Procedure} syslog-service [#:config-file #f]
1bb76f75
AK
6955Return a service that runs @code{syslogd}. If configuration file name
6956@var{config-file} is not specified, use some reasonable default
cf4a9129
LC
6957settings.
6958@end deffn
401c53c4 6959
0adfe95a
LC
6960@anchor{guix-configuration-type}
6961@deftp {Data Type} guix-configuration
6962This data type represents the configuration of the Guix build daemon.
6963@xref{Invoking guix-daemon}, for more information.
6964
6965@table @asis
6966@item @code{guix} (default: @var{guix})
6967The Guix package to use.
401c53c4 6968
0adfe95a
LC
6969@item @code{build-group} (default: @code{"guixbuild"})
6970Name of the group for build user accounts.
401c53c4 6971
0adfe95a
LC
6972@item @code{build-accounts} (default: @code{10})
6973Number of build user accounts to create.
401c53c4 6974
0adfe95a
LC
6975@item @code{authorize-key?} (default: @code{#t})
6976Whether to authorize the substitute key for @code{hydra.gnu.org}
6977(@pxref{Substitutes}).
6978
6979@item @code{use-substitutes?} (default: @code{#t})
6980Whether to use substitutes.
6981
b0b9f6e0
LC
6982@item @code{substitute-urls} (default: @var{%default-substitute-urls})
6983The list of URLs where to look for substitutes by default.
6984
0adfe95a
LC
6985@item @code{extra-options} (default: @code{'()})
6986List of extra command-line options for @command{guix-daemon}.
6987
6988@item @code{lsof} (default: @var{lsof})
6989@itemx @code{lsh} (default: @var{lsh})
6990The lsof and lsh packages to use.
6991
6992@end table
6993@end deftp
6994
6995@deffn {Scheme Procedure} guix-service @var{config}
6996Return a service that runs the Guix build daemon according to
6997@var{config}.
cf4a9129 6998@end deffn
a1ba8475 6999
be1c2c54 7000@deffn {Scheme Procedure} udev-service [#:udev udev]
cf4a9129
LC
7001Run @var{udev}, which populates the @file{/dev} directory dynamically.
7002@end deffn
401c53c4 7003
be1c2c54 7004@deffn {Scheme Procedure} console-keymap-service @var{file}
dedb8d5e 7005@cindex keyboard layout
5eca9459
AK
7006Return a service to load console keymap from @var{file} using
7007@command{loadkeys} command.
7008@end deffn
7009
8664cc88
LC
7010@deffn {Scheme Procedure} gpm-service-type [#:gpm @var{gpm}] @
7011 [#:options]
7012Run @var{gpm}, the general-purpose mouse daemon, with the given
7013command-line @var{options}. GPM allows users to use the mouse in the console,
7014notably to select, copy, and paste text. The default value of @var{options}
7015uses the @code{ps2} protocol, which works for both USB and PS/2 mice.
7016
7017This service is not part of @var{%base-services}.
7018@end deffn
7019
1c52181f
LC
7020@anchor{guix-publish-service}
7021@deffn {Scheme Procedure} guix-publish-service [#:guix @var{guix}] @
7022 [#:port 80] [#:host "localhost"]
7023Return a service that runs @command{guix publish} listening on @var{host}
7024and @var{port} (@pxref{Invoking guix publish}).
7025
7026This assumes that @file{/etc/guix} already contains a signing key pair as
7027created by @command{guix archive --generate-key} (@pxref{Invoking guix
7028archive}). If that is not the case, the service will fail to start.
7029@end deffn
7030
a69576ea 7031
cf4a9129
LC
7032@node Networking Services
7033@subsubsection Networking Services
401c53c4 7034
fa1e31b8 7035The @code{(gnu services networking)} module provides services to configure
cf4a9129 7036the network interface.
a1ba8475 7037
a023cca8 7038@cindex DHCP, networking service
be1c2c54 7039@deffn {Scheme Procedure} dhcp-client-service [#:dhcp @var{isc-dhcp}]
a023cca8
LC
7040Return a service that runs @var{dhcp}, a Dynamic Host Configuration
7041Protocol (DHCP) client, on all the non-loopback network interfaces.
7042@end deffn
7043
be1c2c54 7044@deffn {Scheme Procedure} static-networking-service @var{interface} @var{ip} @
cf4a9129
LC
7045 [#:gateway #f] [#:name-services @code{'()}]
7046Return a service that starts @var{interface} with address @var{ip}. If
7047@var{gateway} is true, it must be a string specifying the default network
7048gateway.
7049@end deffn
8b315a6d 7050
b7d0c494 7051@cindex wicd
87f40011 7052@cindex network management
be1c2c54 7053@deffn {Scheme Procedure} wicd-service [#:wicd @var{wicd}]
87f40011
LC
7054Return a service that runs @url{https://launchpad.net/wicd,Wicd}, a network
7055management daemon that aims to simplify wired and wireless networking.
7056
7057This service adds the @var{wicd} package to the global profile, providing
7058several commands to interact with the daemon and configure networking:
7059@command{wicd-client}, a graphical user interface, and the @command{wicd-cli}
7060and @command{wicd-curses} user interfaces.
b7d0c494
MW
7061@end deffn
7062
c0a9589d
SB
7063@cindex NetworkManager
7064@deffn {Scheme Procedure} network-manager-service @
7065 [#:network-manager @var{network-manager}]
7066Return a service that runs NetworkManager, a network connection manager
7067that attempting to keep active network connectivity when available.
7068@end deffn
7069
be1c2c54 7070@deffn {Scheme Procedure} ntp-service [#:ntp @var{ntp}] @
63854bcb
LC
7071 [#:name-service @var{%ntp-servers}]
7072Return a service that runs the daemon from @var{ntp}, the
7073@uref{http://www.ntp.org, Network Time Protocol package}. The daemon will
7074keep the system clock synchronized with that of @var{servers}.
7075@end deffn
7076
7077@defvr {Scheme Variable} %ntp-servers
7078List of host names used as the default NTP servers.
7079@end defvr
7080
375c6108
LC
7081@deffn {Scheme Procedure} tor-service [@var{config-file}] [#:tor @var{tor}]
7082Return a service to run the @uref{https://torproject.org, Tor} anonymous
7083networking daemon.
8b315a6d 7084
375c6108 7085The daemon runs as the @code{tor} unprivileged user. It is passed
6331bde7
LC
7086@var{config-file}, a file-like object, with an additional @code{User tor} line
7087and lines for hidden services added via @code{tor-hidden-service}. Run
7088@command{man tor} for information about the configuration file.
7089@end deffn
7090
24a8ef3b 7091@cindex hidden service
6331bde7
LC
7092@deffn {Scheme Procedure} tor-hidden-service @var{name} @var{mapping}
7093Define a new Tor @dfn{hidden service} called @var{name} and implementing
7094@var{mapping}. @var{mapping} is a list of port/host tuples, such as:
7095
7096@example
24a8ef3b
LC
7097 '((22 "127.0.0.1:22")
7098 (80 "127.0.0.1:8080"))
6331bde7
LC
7099@end example
7100
7101In this example, port 22 of the hidden service is mapped to local port 22, and
7102port 80 is mapped to local port 8080.
7103
6629099a
LC
7104This creates a @file{/var/lib/tor/hidden-services/@var{name}} directory, where
7105the @file{hostname} file contains the @code{.onion} host name for the hidden
6331bde7
LC
7106service.
7107
7108See @uref{https://www.torproject.org/docs/tor-hidden-service.html.en, the Tor
7109project's documentation} for more information.
cf4a9129 7110@end deffn
8b315a6d 7111
be1c2c54 7112@deffn {Scheme Procedure} bitlbee-service [#:bitlbee bitlbee] @
4627a464
LC
7113 [#:interface "127.0.0.1"] [#:port 6667] @
7114 [#:extra-settings ""]
7115Return a service that runs @url{http://bitlbee.org,BitlBee}, a daemon that
7116acts as a gateway between IRC and chat networks.
7117
7118The daemon will listen to the interface corresponding to the IP address
7119specified in @var{interface}, on @var{port}. @code{127.0.0.1} means that only
7120local clients can connect, whereas @code{0.0.0.0} means that connections can
7121come from any networking interface.
7122
7123In addition, @var{extra-settings} specifies a string to append to the
7124configuration file.
7125@end deffn
7126
f4391bec 7127Furthermore, @code{(gnu services ssh)} provides the following service.
8b315a6d 7128
be1c2c54 7129@deffn {Scheme Procedure} lsh-service [#:host-key "/etc/lsh/host-key"] @
5833bf33 7130 [#:daemonic? #t] [#:interfaces '()] [#:port-number 22] @
cf4a9129
LC
7131 [#:allow-empty-passwords? #f] [#:root-login? #f] @
7132 [#:syslog-output? #t] [#:x11-forwarding? #t] @
7133 [#:tcp/ip-forwarding? #t] [#:password-authentication? #t] @
21cc905a 7134 [#:public-key-authentication? #t] [#:initialize? #t]
cf4a9129
LC
7135Run the @command{lshd} program from @var{lsh} to listen on port @var{port-number}.
7136@var{host-key} must designate a file containing the host key, and readable
7137only by root.
72e25e35 7138
5833bf33
DP
7139When @var{daemonic?} is true, @command{lshd} will detach from the
7140controlling terminal and log its output to syslogd, unless one sets
7141@var{syslog-output?} to false. Obviously, it also makes lsh-service
7142depend on existence of syslogd service. When @var{pid-file?} is true,
7143@command{lshd} writes its PID to the file called @var{pid-file}.
7144
cf4a9129
LC
7145When @var{initialize?} is true, automatically create the seed and host key
7146upon service activation if they do not exist yet. This may take long and
7147require interaction.
8b315a6d 7148
20dd519c
LC
7149When @var{initialize?} is false, it is up to the user to initialize the
7150randomness generator (@pxref{lsh-make-seed,,, lsh, LSH Manual}), and to create
7151a key pair with the private key stored in file @var{host-key} (@pxref{lshd
7152basics,,, lsh, LSH Manual}).
7153
cf4a9129
LC
7154When @var{interfaces} is empty, lshd listens for connections on all the
7155network interfaces; otherwise, @var{interfaces} must be a list of host names
7156or addresses.
9bf3c1a7 7157
20dd519c
LC
7158@var{allow-empty-passwords?} specifies whether to accept log-ins with empty
7159passwords, and @var{root-login?} specifies whether to accept log-ins as
cf4a9129 7160root.
4af2447e 7161
cf4a9129
LC
7162The other options should be self-descriptive.
7163@end deffn
4af2447e 7164
fa0c1d61
LC
7165@defvr {Scheme Variable} %facebook-host-aliases
7166This variable contains a string for use in @file{/etc/hosts}
7167(@pxref{Host Names,,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}). Each
7168line contains a entry that maps a known server name of the Facebook
7169on-line service---e.g., @code{www.facebook.com}---to the local
7170host---@code{127.0.0.1} or its IPv6 equivalent, @code{::1}.
7171
7172This variable is typically used in the @code{hosts-file} field of an
7313a52e
LC
7173@code{operating-system} declaration (@pxref{operating-system Reference,
7174@file{/etc/hosts}}):
fa0c1d61
LC
7175
7176@example
7177(use-modules (gnu) (guix))
7178
7179(operating-system
7180 (host-name "mymachine")
7181 ;; ...
7182 (hosts-file
7183 ;; Create a /etc/hosts file with aliases for "localhost"
7184 ;; and "mymachine", as well as for Facebook servers.
24e02c28
LC
7185 (plain-file "hosts"
7186 (string-append (local-host-aliases host-name)
7187 %facebook-host-aliases))))
fa0c1d61
LC
7188@end example
7189
7190This mechanism can prevent programs running locally, such as Web
7191browsers, from accessing Facebook.
7192@end defvr
7193
965a7332
LC
7194The @code{(gnu services avahi)} provides the following definition.
7195
be1c2c54 7196@deffn {Scheme Procedure} avahi-service [#:avahi @var{avahi}] @
965a7332
LC
7197 [#:host-name #f] [#:publish? #t] [#:ipv4? #t] @
7198 [#:ipv6? #t] [#:wide-area? #f] @
7199 [#:domains-to-browse '()]
7200Return a service that runs @command{avahi-daemon}, a system-wide
7201mDNS/DNS-SD responder that allows for service discovery and
cc9c1f39
LC
7202"zero-configuration" host name lookups (see @uref{http://avahi.org/}), and
7203extends the name service cache daemon (nscd) so that it can resolve
7204@code{.local} host names using
1065bed9
LC
7205@uref{http://0pointer.de/lennart/projects/nss-mdns/, nss-mdns}. Additionally,
7206add the @var{avahi} package to the system profile so that commands such as
7207@command{avahi-browse} are directly usable.
965a7332
LC
7208
7209If @var{host-name} is different from @code{#f}, use that as the host name to
7210publish for this machine; otherwise, use the machine's actual host name.
7211
7212When @var{publish?} is true, publishing of host names and services is allowed;
7213in particular, avahi-daemon will publish the machine's host name and IP
7214address via mDNS on the local network.
7215
7216When @var{wide-area?} is true, DNS-SD over unicast DNS is enabled.
7217
7218Boolean values @var{ipv4?} and @var{ipv6?} determine whether to use IPv4/IPv6
7219sockets.
7220@end deffn
7221
7222
cf4a9129
LC
7223@node X Window
7224@subsubsection X Window
68ad877c 7225
cf4a9129
LC
7226Support for the X Window graphical display system---specifically
7227Xorg---is provided by the @code{(gnu services xorg)} module. Note that
7228there is no @code{xorg-service} procedure. Instead, the X server is
7229started by the @dfn{login manager}, currently SLiM.
4af2447e 7230
be1c2c54 7231@deffn {Scheme Procedure} slim-service [#:allow-empty-passwords? #f] @
0ecc3bf3
LC
7232 [#:auto-login? #f] [#:default-user ""] [#:startx] @
7233 [#:theme @var{%default-slim-theme}] @
4bd43bbe 7234 [#:theme-name @var{%default-slim-theme-name}]
cf4a9129
LC
7235Return a service that spawns the SLiM graphical login manager, which in
7236turn starts the X display server with @var{startx}, a command as returned by
7237@code{xorg-start-command}.
4af2447e 7238
04e4e6ab
LC
7239@cindex X session
7240
7241SLiM automatically looks for session types described by the @file{.desktop}
7242files in @file{/run/current-system/profile/share/xsessions} and allows users
7243to choose a session from the log-in screen using @kbd{F1}. Packages such as
7244@var{xfce}, @var{sawfish}, and @var{ratpoison} provide @file{.desktop} files;
7245adding them to the system-wide set of packages automatically makes them
7246available at the log-in screen.
7247
7248In addition, @file{~/.xsession} files are honored. When available,
7249@file{~/.xsession} must be an executable that starts a window manager
7250and/or other X clients.
7251
cf4a9129
LC
7252When @var{allow-empty-passwords?} is true, allow logins with an empty
7253password. When @var{auto-login?} is true, log in automatically as
7254@var{default-user}.
0ecc3bf3
LC
7255
7256If @var{theme} is @code{#f}, the use the default log-in theme; otherwise
7257@var{theme} must be a gexp denoting the name of a directory containing the
7258theme to use. In that case, @var{theme-name} specifies the name of the
7259theme.
cf4a9129 7260@end deffn
4af2447e 7261
0ecc3bf3
LC
7262@defvr {Scheme Variable} %default-theme
7263@defvrx {Scheme Variable} %default-theme-name
7264The G-Expression denoting the default SLiM theme and its name.
7265@end defvr
7266
be1c2c54 7267@deffn {Scheme Procedure} xorg-start-command [#:guile] @
d1cdd7ba 7268 [#:configuration-file #f] [#:xorg-server @var{xorg-server}]
f703413e 7269Return a derivation that builds a @var{guile} script to start the X server
d1cdd7ba
LC
7270from @var{xorg-server}. @var{configuration-file} is the server configuration
7271file or a derivation that builds it; when omitted, the result of
7272@code{xorg-configuration-file} is used.
7273
7274Usually the X server is started by a login manager.
7275@end deffn
7276
be1c2c54 7277@deffn {Scheme Procedure} xorg-configuration-file @
12422c9d 7278 [#:drivers '()] [#:resolutions '()] [#:extra-config '()]
d1cdd7ba
LC
7279Return a configuration file for the Xorg server containing search paths for
7280all the common drivers.
f703413e
LC
7281
7282@var{drivers} must be either the empty list, in which case Xorg chooses a
7283graphics driver automatically, or a list of driver names that will be tried in
d1cdd7ba 7284this order---e.g., @code{(\"modesetting\" \"vesa\")}.
d2e59637
LC
7285
7286Likewise, when @var{resolutions} is the empty list, Xorg chooses an
7287appropriate screen resolution; otherwise, it must be a list of
7288resolutions---e.g., @code{((1024 768) (640 480))}.
12422c9d
LC
7289
7290Last, @var{extra-config} is a list of strings or objects appended to the
7291@code{text-file*} argument list. It is used to pass extra text to be added
7292verbatim to the configuration file.
f703413e 7293@end deffn
4af2447e 7294
6726282b
LC
7295@deffn {Scheme Procedure} screen-locker-service @var{package} [@var{name}]
7296Add @var{package}, a package for a screen-locker or screen-saver whose
7297command is @var{program}, to the set of setuid programs and add a PAM entry
7298for it. For example:
7299
7300@lisp
7301(screen-locker-service xlockmore "xlock")
7302@end lisp
7303
7304makes the good ol' XlockMore usable.
7305@end deffn
7306
7307
fe1a39d3
LC
7308@node Desktop Services
7309@subsubsection Desktop Services
aa4ed923 7310
fe1a39d3
LC
7311The @code{(gnu services desktop)} module provides services that are
7312usually useful in the context of a ``desktop'' setup---that is, on a
7313machine running a graphical display server, possibly with graphical user
7314interfaces, etc.
aa4ed923 7315
4467be21
LC
7316To simplify things, the module defines a variable containing the set of
7317services that users typically expect on a machine with a graphical
7318environment and networking:
7319
7320@defvr {Scheme Variable} %desktop-services
7321This is a list of services that builds upon @var{%base-services} and
7322adds or adjust services for a typical ``desktop'' setup.
7323
7324In particular, it adds a graphical login manager (@pxref{X Window,
6726282b
LC
7325@code{slim-service}}), screen lockers,
7326a network management tool (@pxref{Networking
4467be21 7327Services, @code{wicd-service}}), energy and color management services,
4650a77e 7328the @code{elogind} login and seat manager, the Polkit privilege service,
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7329the GeoClue location service, an NTP client (@pxref{Networking
7330Services}), the Avahi daemon, and has the name service switch service
7331configured to be able to use @code{nss-mdns} (@pxref{Name Service
7332Switch, mDNS}).
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LC
7333@end defvr
7334
7335The @var{%desktop-services} variable can be used as the @code{services}
7336field of an @code{operating-system} declaration (@pxref{operating-system
7337Reference, @code{services}}).
7338
0adfe95a
LC
7339The actual service definitions provided by @code{(gnu services dbus)}
7340and @code{(gnu services desktop)} are described below.
4467be21 7341
0adfe95a 7342@deffn {Scheme Procedure} dbus-service [#:dbus @var{dbus}] [#:services '()]
fe1a39d3
LC
7343Return a service that runs the ``system bus'', using @var{dbus}, with
7344support for @var{services}.
aa4ed923 7345
fe1a39d3
LC
7346@uref{http://dbus.freedesktop.org/, D-Bus} is an inter-process communication
7347facility. Its system bus is used to allow system services to communicate
7348and be notified of system-wide events.
aa4ed923 7349
fe1a39d3
LC
7350@var{services} must be a list of packages that provide an
7351@file{etc/dbus-1/system.d} directory containing additional D-Bus configuration
7352and policy files. For example, to allow avahi-daemon to use the system bus,
7353@var{services} must be equal to @code{(list avahi)}.
aa4ed923
AK
7354@end deffn
7355
0adfe95a 7356@deffn {Scheme Procedure} elogind-service [#:config @var{config}]
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7357Return a service that runs the @code{elogind} login and
7358seat management daemon. @uref{https://github.com/andywingo/elogind,
7359Elogind} exposes a D-Bus interface that can be used to know which users
7360are logged in, know what kind of sessions they have open, suspend the
7361system, inhibit system suspend, reboot the system, and other tasks.
7362
7363Elogind handles most system-level power events for a computer, for
7364example suspending the system when a lid is closed, or shutting it down
7365when the power button is pressed.
7366
7367The @var{config} keyword argument specifies the configuration for
7368elogind, and should be the result of a @code{(elogind-configuration
7369(@var{parameter} @var{value})...)} invocation. Available parameters and
7370their default values are:
7371
7372@table @code
7373@item kill-user-processes?
7374@code{#f}
7375@item kill-only-users
7376@code{()}
7377@item kill-exclude-users
7378@code{("root")}
7379@item inhibit-delay-max-seconds
7380@code{5}
7381@item handle-power-key
7382@code{poweroff}
7383@item handle-suspend-key
7384@code{suspend}
7385@item handle-hibernate-key
7386@code{hibernate}
7387@item handle-lid-switch
7388@code{suspend}
7389@item handle-lid-switch-docked
7390@code{ignore}
7391@item power-key-ignore-inhibited?
7392@code{#f}
7393@item suspend-key-ignore-inhibited?
7394@code{#f}
7395@item hibernate-key-ignore-inhibited?
7396@code{#f}
7397@item lid-switch-ignore-inhibited?
7398@code{#t}
7399@item holdoff-timeout-seconds
7400@code{30}
7401@item idle-action
7402@code{ignore}
7403@item idle-action-seconds
7404@code{(* 30 60)}
7405@item runtime-directory-size-percent
7406@code{10}
7407@item runtime-directory-size
7408@code{#f}
7409@item remove-ipc?
7410@code{#t}
7411@item suspend-state
7412@code{("mem" "standby" "freeze")}
7413@item suspend-mode
7414@code{()}
7415@item hibernate-state
7416@code{("disk")}
7417@item hibernate-mode
7418@code{("platform" "shutdown")}
7419@item hybrid-sleep-state
7420@code{("disk")}
7421@item hybrid-sleep-mode
7422@code{("suspend" "platform" "shutdown")}
7423@end table
7424@end deffn
7425
be1c2c54 7426@deffn {Scheme Procedure} polkit-service @
4650a77e 7427 [#:polkit @var{polkit}]
222e3319
LC
7428Return a service that runs the
7429@uref{http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/polkit/, Polkit privilege
7430management service}, which allows system administrators to grant access to
7431privileged operations in a structured way. By querying the Polkit service, a
7432privileged system component can know when it should grant additional
7433capabilities to ordinary users. For example, an ordinary user can be granted
7434the capability to suspend the system if the user is logged in locally.
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7435@end deffn
7436
be1c2c54 7437@deffn {Scheme Procedure} upower-service [#:upower @var{upower}] @
be234128
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7438 [#:watts-up-pro? #f] @
7439 [#:poll-batteries? #t] @
7440 [#:ignore-lid? #f] @
7441 [#:use-percentage-for-policy? #f] @
7442 [#:percentage-low 10] @
7443 [#:percentage-critical 3] @
7444 [#:percentage-action 2] @
7445 [#:time-low 1200] @
7446 [#:time-critical 300] @
7447 [#:time-action 120] @
7448 [#:critical-power-action 'hybrid-sleep]
7449Return a service that runs @uref{http://upower.freedesktop.org/,
7450@command{upowerd}}, a system-wide monitor for power consumption and battery
7451levels, with the given configuration settings. It implements the
7452@code{org.freedesktop.UPower} D-Bus interface, and is notably used by
7453GNOME.
7454@end deffn
7455
2b9e0a94
LC
7456@deffn {Scheme Procedure} udisks-service [#:udisks @var{udisks}]
7457Return a service for @uref{http://udisks.freedesktop.org/docs/latest/,
7458UDisks}, a @dfn{disk management} daemon that provides user interfaces with
7459notifications and ways to mount/unmount disks. Programs that talk to UDisks
7460include the @command{udisksctl} command, part of UDisks, and GNOME Disks.
7461@end deffn
7462
be1c2c54 7463@deffn {Scheme Procedure} colord-service [#:colord @var{colord}]
7ce597ff
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7464Return a service that runs @command{colord}, a system service with a D-Bus
7465interface to manage the color profiles of input and output devices such as
7466screens and scanners. It is notably used by the GNOME Color Manager graphical
7467tool. See @uref{http://www.freedesktop.org/software/colord/, the colord web
7468site} for more information.
7469@end deffn
7470
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7471@deffn {Scheme Procedure} geoclue-application name [#:allowed? #t] [#:system? #f] [#:users '()]
7472Return an configuration allowing an application to access GeoClue
7473location data. @var{name} is the Desktop ID of the application, without
7474the @code{.desktop} part. If @var{allowed?} is true, the application
7475will have access to location information by default. The boolean
7476@var{system?} value indicates that an application is a system component
7477or not. Finally @var{users} is a list of UIDs of all users for which
7478this application is allowed location info access. An empty users list
7479means that all users are allowed.
7480@end deffn
7481
7482@defvr {Scheme Variable} %standard-geoclue-applications
7483The standard list of well-known GeoClue application configurations,
7484granting authority to GNOME's date-and-time utility to ask for the
7485current location in order to set the time zone, and allowing the Firefox
7486(IceCat) and Epiphany web browsers to request location information.
7487Firefox and Epiphany both query the user before allowing a web page to
7488know the user's location.
7489@end defvr
7490
be1c2c54 7491@deffn {Scheme Procedure} geoclue-service [#:colord @var{colord}] @
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7492 [#:whitelist '()] @
7493 [#:wifi-geolocation-url "https://location.services.mozilla.com/v1/geolocate?key=geoclue"] @
7494 [#:submit-data? #f]
7495 [#:wifi-submission-url "https://location.services.mozilla.com/v1/submit?key=geoclue"] @
7496 [#:submission-nick "geoclue"] @
7497 [#:applications %standard-geoclue-applications]
7498Return a service that runs the GeoClue location service. This service
7499provides a D-Bus interface to allow applications to request access to a
7500user's physical location, and optionally to add information to online
7501location databases. See
7502@uref{https://wiki.freedesktop.org/www/Software/GeoClue/, the GeoClue
7503web site} for more information.
7504@end deffn
7505
105369a4
DT
7506@node Database Services
7507@subsubsection Database Services
7508
7509The @code{(gnu services databases)} module provides the following service.
7510
be1c2c54 7511@deffn {Scheme Procedure} postgresql-service [#:postgresql postgresql] @
105369a4
DT
7512 [#:config-file] [#:data-directory ``/var/lib/postgresql/data'']
7513Return a service that runs @var{postgresql}, the PostgreSQL database
7514server.
7515
7516The PostgreSQL daemon loads its runtime configuration from
7517@var{config-file} and stores the database cluster in
7518@var{data-directory}.
7519@end deffn
fe1a39d3 7520
d8c18af8
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7521@node Mail Services
7522@subsubsection Mail Services
7523
7524The @code{(gnu services mail)} module provides Guix service definitions
7525for mail services. Currently the only implemented service is Dovecot,
7526an IMAP, POP3, and LMTP server.
7527
7528Guix does not yet have a mail transfer agent (MTA), although for some
7529lightweight purposes the @code{esmtp} relay-only MTA may suffice. Help
7530is needed to properly integrate a full MTA, such as Postfix. Patches
7531welcome!
7532
7533To add an IMAP/POP3 server to a GuixSD system, add a
7534@code{dovecot-service} to the operating system definition:
7535
7536@deffn {Scheme Procedure} dovecot-service [#:config (dovecot-configuration)]
7537Return a service that runs the Dovecot IMAP/POP3/LMTP mail server.
7538@end deffn
7539
7540By default, Dovecot doesn't need much configuration; the default
7541configuration object created by @code{(dovecot-configuration)} will
7542suffice if your mail is delivered to @code{~/Maildir}. A self-signed
7543certificate will be generated for TLS-protected connections, though
7544Dovecot will also listen on cleartext ports by default. There are a
7545number of options though which mail administrators might need to change,
7546and as is the case with other services, Guix allows the system
7547administrator to specify these parameters via a uniform Scheme interface.
7548
7549For example, to specify that mail is located at @code{maildir~/.mail},
7550one would instantiate the Dovecot service like this:
7551
7552@example
7553(dovecot-service #:config
7554 (dovecot-configuration
7555 (mail-location "maildir:~/.mail")))
7556@end example
7557
7558The available configuration parameters follow. Each parameter
7559definition is preceded by its type; for example, @samp{string-list foo}
7560indicates that the @code{foo} parameter should be specified as a list of
7561strings. There is also a way to specify the configuration as a string,
7562if you have an old @code{dovecot.conf} file that you want to port over
7563from some other system; see the end for more details.
7564
7565@c The following documentation was initially generated by
7566@c (generate-documentation) in (gnu services mail). Manually maintained
7567@c documentation is better, so we shouldn't hesitate to edit below as
7568@c needed. However if the change you want to make to this documentation
7569@c can be done in an automated way, it's probably easier to change
7570@c (generate-documentation) than to make it below and have to deal with
7571@c the churn as dovecot updates.
7572
7573Available @code{dovecot-configuration} fields are:
7574
7575@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} package dovecot
7576The dovecot package.
7577@end deftypevr
7578
7579@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} comma-separated-string-list listen
7580A list of IPs or hosts where to listen in for connections. @samp{*}
7581listens in all IPv4 interfaces, @samp{::} listens in all IPv6
7582interfaces. If you want to specify non-default ports or anything more
7583complex, customize the address and port fields of the
7584@samp{inet-listener} of the specific services you are interested in.
7585@end deftypevr
7586
7587@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} protocol-configuration-list protocols
7588List of protocols we want to serve. Available protocols include
7589@samp{imap}, @samp{pop3}, and @samp{lmtp}.
7590
7591Available @code{protocol-configuration} fields are:
7592
7593@deftypevr {@code{protocol-configuration} parameter} string name
7594The name of the protocol.
7595@end deftypevr
7596
7597@deftypevr {@code{protocol-configuration} parameter} string auth-socket-path
7598UNIX socket path to master authentication server to find users.
7599This is used by imap (for shared users) and lda.
7600Defaults to @samp{"/var/run/dovecot/auth-userdb"}.
7601@end deftypevr
7602
7603@deftypevr {@code{protocol-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list mail-plugins
7604Space separated list of plugins to load.
7605@end deftypevr
7606
7607@deftypevr {@code{protocol-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer mail-max-userip-connections
7608Maximum number of IMAP connections allowed for a user from each IP
7609address. NOTE: The username is compared case-sensitively.
7610Defaults to @samp{10}.
7611@end deftypevr
7612
7613@end deftypevr
7614
7615@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} service-configuration-list services
7616List of services to enable. Available services include @samp{imap},
7617@samp{imap-login}, @samp{pop3}, @samp{pop3-login}, @samp{auth}, and
7618@samp{lmtp}.
7619
7620Available @code{service-configuration} fields are:
7621
7622@deftypevr {@code{service-configuration} parameter} string kind
7623The service kind. Valid values include @code{director},
7624@code{imap-login}, @code{pop3-login}, @code{lmtp}, @code{imap},
7625@code{pop3}, @code{auth}, @code{auth-worker}, @code{dict},
7626@code{tcpwrap}, @code{quota-warning}, or anything else.
7627@end deftypevr
7628
7629@deftypevr {@code{service-configuration} parameter} listener-configuration-list listeners
7630Listeners for the service. A listener is either an
7631@code{unix-listener-configuration}, a @code{fifo-listener-configuration}, or
7632an @code{inet-listener-configuration}.
7633Defaults to @samp{()}.
7634
7635Available @code{unix-listener-configuration} fields are:
7636
7637@deftypevr {@code{unix-listener-configuration} parameter} file-name path
7638The file name on which to listen.
7639@end deftypevr
7640
7641@deftypevr {@code{unix-listener-configuration} parameter} string mode
7642The access mode for the socket.
7643Defaults to @samp{"0600"}.
7644@end deftypevr
7645
7646@deftypevr {@code{unix-listener-configuration} parameter} string user
f9b9a033 7647The user to own the socket.
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7648Defaults to @samp{""}.
7649@end deftypevr
7650
7651@deftypevr {@code{unix-listener-configuration} parameter} string group
7652The group to own the socket.
7653Defaults to @samp{""}.
7654@end deftypevr
7655
7656
7657Available @code{fifo-listener-configuration} fields are:
7658
7659@deftypevr {@code{fifo-listener-configuration} parameter} file-name path
7660The file name on which to listen.
7661@end deftypevr
7662
7663@deftypevr {@code{fifo-listener-configuration} parameter} string mode
7664The access mode for the socket.
7665Defaults to @samp{"0600"}.
7666@end deftypevr
7667
7668@deftypevr {@code{fifo-listener-configuration} parameter} string user
f9b9a033 7669The user to own the socket.
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7670Defaults to @samp{""}.
7671@end deftypevr
7672
7673@deftypevr {@code{fifo-listener-configuration} parameter} string group
7674The group to own the socket.
7675Defaults to @samp{""}.
7676@end deftypevr
7677
7678
7679Available @code{inet-listener-configuration} fields are:
7680
7681@deftypevr {@code{inet-listener-configuration} parameter} string protocol
7682The protocol to listen for.
7683@end deftypevr
7684
7685@deftypevr {@code{inet-listener-configuration} parameter} string address
7686The address on which to listen, or empty for all addresses.
7687Defaults to @samp{""}.
7688@end deftypevr
7689
7690@deftypevr {@code{inet-listener-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer port
7691The port on which to listen.
7692@end deftypevr
7693
7694@deftypevr {@code{inet-listener-configuration} parameter} boolean ssl?
7695Whether to use SSL for this service; @samp{yes}, @samp{no}, or
7696@samp{required}.
7697Defaults to @samp{#t}.
7698@end deftypevr
7699
7700@end deftypevr
7701
7702@deftypevr {@code{service-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer service-count
7703Number of connections to handle before starting a new process.
7704Typically the only useful values are 0 (unlimited) or 1. 1 is more
7705secure, but 0 is faster. <doc/wiki/LoginProcess.txt>.
7706Defaults to @samp{1}.
7707@end deftypevr
7708
7709@deftypevr {@code{service-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer process-min-avail
7710Number of processes to always keep waiting for more connections.
7711Defaults to @samp{0}.
7712@end deftypevr
7713
7714@deftypevr {@code{service-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer vsz-limit
7715If you set @samp{service-count 0}, you probably need to grow
7716this.
7717Defaults to @samp{256000000}.
7718@end deftypevr
7719
7720@end deftypevr
7721
7722@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} dict-configuration dict
7723Dict configuration, as created by the @code{dict-configuration}
7724constructor.
7725
7726Available @code{dict-configuration} fields are:
7727
7728@deftypevr {@code{dict-configuration} parameter} free-form-fields entries
7729A list of key-value pairs that this dict should hold.
7730Defaults to @samp{()}.
7731@end deftypevr
7732
7733@end deftypevr
7734
7735@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} passdb-configuration-list passdbs
7736List of passdb configurations, each one created by the
7737@code{passdb-configuration} constructor.
7738
7739Available @code{passdb-configuration} fields are:
7740
7741@deftypevr {@code{passdb-configuration} parameter} string driver
7742The driver that the passdb should use. Valid values include
7743@samp{pam}, @samp{passwd}, @samp{shadow}, @samp{bsdauth}, and
7744@samp{static}.
7745Defaults to @samp{"pam"}.
7746@end deftypevr
7747
7748@deftypevr {@code{passdb-configuration} parameter} free-form-args args
7749A list of key-value args to the passdb driver.
7750Defaults to @samp{()}.
7751@end deftypevr
7752
7753@end deftypevr
7754
7755@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} userdb-configuration-list userdbs
7756List of userdb configurations, each one created by the
7757@code{userdb-configuration} constructor.
7758
7759Available @code{userdb-configuration} fields are:
7760
7761@deftypevr {@code{userdb-configuration} parameter} string driver
7762The driver that the userdb should use. Valid values include
7763@samp{passwd} and @samp{static}.
7764Defaults to @samp{"passwd"}.
7765@end deftypevr
7766
7767@deftypevr {@code{userdb-configuration} parameter} free-form-args args
7768A list of key-value args to the userdb driver.
7769Defaults to @samp{()}.
7770@end deftypevr
7771
7772@deftypevr {@code{userdb-configuration} parameter} free-form-args override-fields
7773Override fields from passwd.
7774Defaults to @samp{()}.
7775@end deftypevr
7776
7777@end deftypevr
7778
7779@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} plugin-configuration plugin-configuration
7780Plug-in configuration, created by the @code{plugin-configuration}
7781constructor.
7782@end deftypevr
7783
7784@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} list-of-namespace-configuration namespaces
7785List of namespaces. Each item in the list is created by the
7786@code{namespace-configuration} constructor.
7787
7788Available @code{namespace-configuration} fields are:
7789
7790@deftypevr {@code{namespace-configuration} parameter} string name
7791Name for this namespace.
7792@end deftypevr
7793
7794@deftypevr {@code{namespace-configuration} parameter} string type
7795Namespace type: @samp{private}, @samp{shared} or @samp{public}.
7796Defaults to @samp{"private"}.
7797@end deftypevr
7798
7799@deftypevr {@code{namespace-configuration} parameter} string separator
7800Hierarchy separator to use. You should use the same separator for
7801all namespaces or some clients get confused. @samp{/} is usually a good
7802one. The default however depends on the underlying mail storage
7803format.
7804Defaults to @samp{""}.
7805@end deftypevr
7806
7807@deftypevr {@code{namespace-configuration} parameter} string prefix
7808Prefix required to access this namespace. This needs to be
7809different for all namespaces. For example @samp{Public/}.
7810Defaults to @samp{""}.
7811@end deftypevr
7812
7813@deftypevr {@code{namespace-configuration} parameter} string location
7814Physical location of the mailbox. This is in same format as
7815mail_location, which is also the default for it.
7816Defaults to @samp{""}.
7817@end deftypevr
7818
7819@deftypevr {@code{namespace-configuration} parameter} boolean inbox?
7820There can be only one INBOX, and this setting defines which
7821namespace has it.
7822Defaults to @samp{#f}.
7823@end deftypevr
7824
7825@deftypevr {@code{namespace-configuration} parameter} boolean hidden?
7826If namespace is hidden, it's not advertised to clients via NAMESPACE
7827extension. You'll most likely also want to set @samp{list? #f}. This is mostly
7828useful when converting from another server with different namespaces
7829which you want to deprecate but still keep working. For example you can
7830create hidden namespaces with prefixes @samp{~/mail/}, @samp{~%u/mail/}
7831and @samp{mail/}.
7832Defaults to @samp{#f}.
7833@end deftypevr
7834
7835@deftypevr {@code{namespace-configuration} parameter} boolean list?
7836Show the mailboxes under this namespace with LIST command. This
7837makes the namespace visible for clients that don't support NAMESPACE
7838extension. The special @code{children} value lists child mailboxes, but
7839hides the namespace prefix.
7840Defaults to @samp{#t}.
7841@end deftypevr
7842
7843@deftypevr {@code{namespace-configuration} parameter} boolean subscriptions?
7844Namespace handles its own subscriptions. If set to @code{#f}, the
7845parent namespace handles them. The empty prefix should always have this
7846as @code{#t}.)
7847Defaults to @samp{#t}.
7848@end deftypevr
7849
7850@deftypevr {@code{namespace-configuration} parameter} mailbox-configuration-list mailboxes
7851List of predefined mailboxes in this namespace.
7852Defaults to @samp{()}.
7853
7854Available @code{mailbox-configuration} fields are:
7855
7856@deftypevr {@code{mailbox-configuration} parameter} string name
7857Name for this mailbox.
7858@end deftypevr
7859
7860@deftypevr {@code{mailbox-configuration} parameter} string auto
7861@samp{create} will automatically create this mailbox.
7862@samp{subscribe} will both create and subscribe to the mailbox.
7863Defaults to @samp{"no"}.
7864@end deftypevr
7865
7866@deftypevr {@code{mailbox-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list special-use
7867List of IMAP @code{SPECIAL-USE} attributes as specified by RFC 6154.
7868Valid values are @code{\All}, @code{\Archive}, @code{\Drafts},
7869@code{\Flagged}, @code{\Junk}, @code{\Sent}, and @code{\Trash}.
7870Defaults to @samp{()}.
7871@end deftypevr
7872
7873@end deftypevr
7874
7875@end deftypevr
7876
7877@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} file-name base-dir
7878Base directory where to store runtime data.
7879Defaults to @samp{"/var/run/dovecot/"}.
7880@end deftypevr
7881
7882@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string login-greeting
7883Greeting message for clients.
7884Defaults to @samp{"Dovecot ready."}.
7885@end deftypevr
7886
7887@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list login-trusted-networks
7888List of trusted network ranges. Connections from these IPs are
7889allowed to override their IP addresses and ports (for logging and for
7890authentication checks). @samp{disable-plaintext-auth} is also ignored
7891for these networks. Typically you'd specify your IMAP proxy servers
7892here.
7893Defaults to @samp{()}.
7894@end deftypevr
7895
7896@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list login-access-sockets
7897List of login access check sockets (e.g. tcpwrap).
7898Defaults to @samp{()}.
7899@end deftypevr
7900
7901@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean verbose-proctitle?
7902Show more verbose process titles (in ps). Currently shows user name
7903and IP address. Useful for seeing who are actually using the IMAP
7904processes (e.g. shared mailboxes or if same uid is used for multiple
7905accounts).
7906Defaults to @samp{#f}.
7907@end deftypevr
7908
7909@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean shutdown-clients?
7910Should all processes be killed when Dovecot master process shuts down.
7911Setting this to @code{#f} means that Dovecot can be upgraded without
7912forcing existing client connections to close (although that could also
7913be a problem if the upgrade is e.g. because of a security fix).
7914Defaults to @samp{#t}.
7915@end deftypevr
7916
7917@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer doveadm-worker-count
7918If non-zero, run mail commands via this many connections to doveadm
7919server, instead of running them directly in the same process.
7920Defaults to @samp{0}.
7921@end deftypevr
7922
7923@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string doveadm-socket-path
7924UNIX socket or host:port used for connecting to doveadm server.
7925Defaults to @samp{"doveadm-server"}.
7926@end deftypevr
7927
7928@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list import-environment
7929List of environment variables that are preserved on Dovecot startup
7930and passed down to all of its child processes. You can also give
7931key=value pairs to always set specific settings.
7932@end deftypevr
7933
7934@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean disable-plaintext-auth?
7935Disable LOGIN command and all other plaintext authentications unless
7936SSL/TLS is used (LOGINDISABLED capability). Note that if the remote IP
7937matches the local IP (i.e. you're connecting from the same computer),
7938the connection is considered secure and plaintext authentication is
7939allowed. See also ssl=required setting.
7940Defaults to @samp{#t}.
7941@end deftypevr
7942
7943@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer auth-cache-size
7944Authentication cache size (e.g. @samp{#e10e6}). 0 means it's disabled.
7945Note that bsdauth, PAM and vpopmail require @samp{cache-key} to be set
7946for caching to be used.
7947Defaults to @samp{0}.
7948@end deftypevr
7949
7950@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string auth-cache-ttl
7951Time to live for cached data. After TTL expires the cached record
7952is no longer used, *except* if the main database lookup returns internal
7953failure. We also try to handle password changes automatically: If
7954user's previous authentication was successful, but this one wasn't, the
7955cache isn't used. For now this works only with plaintext
7956authentication.
7957Defaults to @samp{"1 hour"}.
7958@end deftypevr
7959
7960@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string auth-cache-negative-ttl
7961TTL for negative hits (user not found, password mismatch).
79620 disables caching them completely.
7963Defaults to @samp{"1 hour"}.
7964@end deftypevr
7965
7966@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list auth-realms
7967List of realms for SASL authentication mechanisms that need them.
7968You can leave it empty if you don't want to support multiple realms.
7969Many clients simply use the first one listed here, so keep the default
7970realm first.
7971Defaults to @samp{()}.
7972@end deftypevr
7973
7974@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string auth-default-realm
7975Default realm/domain to use if none was specified. This is used for
7976both SASL realms and appending @@domain to username in plaintext
7977logins.
7978Defaults to @samp{""}.
7979@end deftypevr
7980
7981@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string auth-username-chars
7982List of allowed characters in username. If the user-given username
7983contains a character not listed in here, the login automatically fails.
7984This is just an extra check to make sure user can't exploit any
7985potential quote escaping vulnerabilities with SQL/LDAP databases. If
7986you want to allow all characters, set this value to empty.
7987Defaults to @samp{"abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ01234567890.-_@@"}.
7988@end deftypevr
7989
7990@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string auth-username-translation
7991Username character translations before it's looked up from
7992databases. The value contains series of from -> to characters. For
7993example @samp{#@@/@@} means that @samp{#} and @samp{/} characters are
7994translated to @samp{@@}.
7995Defaults to @samp{""}.
7996@end deftypevr
7997
7998@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string auth-username-format
7999Username formatting before it's looked up from databases. You can
8000use the standard variables here, e.g. %Lu would lowercase the username,
8001%n would drop away the domain if it was given, or @samp{%n-AT-%d} would
8002change the @samp{@@} into @samp{-AT-}. This translation is done after
8003@samp{auth-username-translation} changes.
8004Defaults to @samp{"%Lu"}.
8005@end deftypevr
8006
8007@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string auth-master-user-separator
8008If you want to allow master users to log in by specifying the master
8009username within the normal username string (i.e. not using SASL
8010mechanism's support for it), you can specify the separator character
8011here. The format is then <username><separator><master username>.
8012UW-IMAP uses @samp{*} as the separator, so that could be a good
8013choice.
8014Defaults to @samp{""}.
8015@end deftypevr
8016
8017@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string auth-anonymous-username
8018Username to use for users logging in with ANONYMOUS SASL
8019mechanism.
8020Defaults to @samp{"anonymous"}.
8021@end deftypevr
8022
8023@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer auth-worker-max-count
8024Maximum number of dovecot-auth worker processes. They're used to
8025execute blocking passdb and userdb queries (e.g. MySQL and PAM).
8026They're automatically created and destroyed as needed.
8027Defaults to @samp{30}.
8028@end deftypevr
8029
8030@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string auth-gssapi-hostname
8031Host name to use in GSSAPI principal names. The default is to use
8032the name returned by gethostname(). Use @samp{$ALL} (with quotes) to
8033allow all keytab entries.
8034Defaults to @samp{""}.
8035@end deftypevr
8036
8037@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string auth-krb5-keytab
8038Kerberos keytab to use for the GSSAPI mechanism. Will use the
8039system default (usually /etc/krb5.keytab) if not specified. You may
8040need to change the auth service to run as root to be able to read this
8041file.
8042Defaults to @samp{""}.
8043@end deftypevr
8044
8045@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean auth-use-winbind?
8046Do NTLM and GSS-SPNEGO authentication using Samba's winbind daemon
8047and @samp{ntlm-auth} helper.
8048<doc/wiki/Authentication/Mechanisms/Winbind.txt>.
8049Defaults to @samp{#f}.
8050@end deftypevr
8051
8052@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} file-name auth-winbind-helper-path
8053Path for Samba's @samp{ntlm-auth} helper binary.
8054Defaults to @samp{"/usr/bin/ntlm_auth"}.
8055@end deftypevr
8056
8057@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string auth-failure-delay
8058Time to delay before replying to failed authentications.
8059Defaults to @samp{"2 secs"}.
8060@end deftypevr
8061
8062@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean auth-ssl-require-client-cert?
8063Require a valid SSL client certificate or the authentication
8064fails.
8065Defaults to @samp{#f}.
8066@end deftypevr
8067
8068@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean auth-ssl-username-from-cert?
8069Take the username from client's SSL certificate, using
8070@code{X509_NAME_get_text_by_NID()} which returns the subject's DN's
8071CommonName.
8072Defaults to @samp{#f}.
8073@end deftypevr
8074
8075@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list auth-mechanisms
8076List of wanted authentication mechanisms. Supported mechanisms are:
8077@samp{plain}, @samp{login}, @samp{digest-md5}, @samp{cram-md5},
8078@samp{ntlm}, @samp{rpa}, @samp{apop}, @samp{anonymous}, @samp{gssapi},
8079@samp{otp}, @samp{skey}, and @samp{gss-spnego}. NOTE: See also
8080@samp{disable-plaintext-auth} setting.
8081@end deftypevr
8082
8083@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list director-servers
8084List of IPs or hostnames to all director servers, including ourself.
8085Ports can be specified as ip:port. The default port is the same as what
8086director service's @samp{inet-listener} is using.
8087Defaults to @samp{()}.
8088@end deftypevr
8089
8090@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list director-mail-servers
8091List of IPs or hostnames to all backend mail servers. Ranges are
8092allowed too, like 10.0.0.10-10.0.0.30.
8093Defaults to @samp{()}.
8094@end deftypevr
8095
8096@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string director-user-expire
8097How long to redirect users to a specific server after it no longer
8098has any connections.
8099Defaults to @samp{"15 min"}.
8100@end deftypevr
8101
8102@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer director-doveadm-port
8103TCP/IP port that accepts doveadm connections (instead of director
8104connections) If you enable this, you'll also need to add
8105@samp{inet-listener} for the port.
8106Defaults to @samp{0}.
8107@end deftypevr
8108
8109@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string director-username-hash
8110How the username is translated before being hashed. Useful values
8111include %Ln if user can log in with or without @@domain, %Ld if mailboxes
8112are shared within domain.
8113Defaults to @samp{"%Lu"}.
8114@end deftypevr
8115
8116@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string log-path
8117Log file to use for error messages. @samp{syslog} logs to syslog,
8118@samp{/dev/stderr} logs to stderr.
8119Defaults to @samp{"syslog"}.
8120@end deftypevr
8121
8122@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string info-log-path
8123Log file to use for informational messages. Defaults to
8124@samp{log-path}.
8125Defaults to @samp{""}.
8126@end deftypevr
8127
8128@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string debug-log-path
8129Log file to use for debug messages. Defaults to
8130@samp{info-log-path}.
8131Defaults to @samp{""}.
8132@end deftypevr
8133
8134@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string syslog-facility
8135Syslog facility to use if you're logging to syslog. Usually if you
8136don't want to use @samp{mail}, you'll use local0..local7. Also other
8137standard facilities are supported.
8138Defaults to @samp{"mail"}.
8139@end deftypevr
8140
8141@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean auth-verbose?
8142Log unsuccessful authentication attempts and the reasons why they
8143failed.
8144Defaults to @samp{#f}.
8145@end deftypevr
8146
8147@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean auth-verbose-passwords?
8148In case of password mismatches, log the attempted password. Valid
8149values are no, plain and sha1. sha1 can be useful for detecting brute
8150force password attempts vs. user simply trying the same password over
8151and over again. You can also truncate the value to n chars by appending
8152":n" (e.g. sha1:6).
8153Defaults to @samp{#f}.
8154@end deftypevr
8155
8156@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean auth-debug?
8157Even more verbose logging for debugging purposes. Shows for example
8158SQL queries.
8159Defaults to @samp{#f}.
8160@end deftypevr
8161
8162@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean auth-debug-passwords?
8163In case of password mismatches, log the passwords and used scheme so
8164the problem can be debugged. Enabling this also enables
8165@samp{auth-debug}.
8166Defaults to @samp{#f}.
8167@end deftypevr
8168
8169@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean mail-debug?
8170Enable mail process debugging. This can help you figure out why
8171Dovecot isn't finding your mails.
8172Defaults to @samp{#f}.
8173@end deftypevr
8174
8175@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean verbose-ssl?
8176Show protocol level SSL errors.
8177Defaults to @samp{#f}.
8178@end deftypevr
8179
8180@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string log-timestamp
8181Prefix for each line written to log file. % codes are in
8182strftime(3) format.
8183Defaults to @samp{"\"%b %d %H:%M:%S \""}.
8184@end deftypevr
8185
8186@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list login-log-format-elements
8187List of elements we want to log. The elements which have a
8188non-empty variable value are joined together to form a comma-separated
8189string.
8190@end deftypevr
8191
8192@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string login-log-format
8193Login log format. %s contains @samp{login-log-format-elements}
8194string, %$ contains the data we want to log.
8195Defaults to @samp{"%$: %s"}.
8196@end deftypevr
8197
8198@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mail-log-prefix
8199Log prefix for mail processes. See doc/wiki/Variables.txt for list
8200of possible variables you can use.
8201Defaults to @samp{"\"%s(%u): \""}.
8202@end deftypevr
8203
8204@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string deliver-log-format
8205Format to use for logging mail deliveries. You can use variables:
8206@table @code
8207@item %$
8208Delivery status message (e.g. @samp{saved to INBOX})
8209@item %m
8210Message-ID
8211@item %s
8212Subject
8213@item %f
8214From address
8215@item %p
8216Physical size
8217@item %w
8218Virtual size.
8219@end table
8220Defaults to @samp{"msgid=%m: %$"}.
8221@end deftypevr
8222
8223@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mail-location
8224Location for users' mailboxes. The default is empty, which means
8225that Dovecot tries to find the mailboxes automatically. This won't work
8226if the user doesn't yet have any mail, so you should explicitly tell
8227Dovecot the full location.
8228
8229If you're using mbox, giving a path to the INBOX
8230file (e.g. /var/mail/%u) isn't enough. You'll also need to tell Dovecot
8231where the other mailboxes are kept. This is called the "root mail
8232directory", and it must be the first path given in the
8233@samp{mail-location} setting.
8234
8235There are a few special variables you can use, eg.:
8236
8237@table @samp
8238@item %u
8239username
8240@item %n
8241user part in user@@domain, same as %u if there's no domain
8242@item %d
8243domain part in user@@domain, empty if there's no domain
8244@item %h
8245home director
8246@end table
8247
8248See doc/wiki/Variables.txt for full list. Some examples:
8249@table @samp
8250@item maildir:~/Maildir
8251@item mbox:~/mail:INBOX=/var/mail/%u
8252@item mbox:/var/mail/%d/%1n/%n:INDEX=/var/indexes/%d/%1n/%
8253@end table
8254Defaults to @samp{""}.
8255@end deftypevr
8256
8257@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mail-uid
8258System user and group used to access mails. If you use multiple,
8259userdb can override these by returning uid or gid fields. You can use
8260either numbers or names. <doc/wiki/UserIds.txt>.
8261Defaults to @samp{""}.
8262@end deftypevr
8263
8264@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mail-gid
8265
8266Defaults to @samp{""}.
8267@end deftypevr
8268
8269@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mail-privileged-group
8270Group to enable temporarily for privileged operations. Currently
8271this is used only with INBOX when either its initial creation or
8272dotlocking fails. Typically this is set to "mail" to give access to
8273/var/mail.
8274Defaults to @samp{""}.
8275@end deftypevr
8276
8277@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mail-access-groups
8278Grant access to these supplementary groups for mail processes.
8279Typically these are used to set up access to shared mailboxes. Note
8280that it may be dangerous to set these if users can create
8281symlinks (e.g. if "mail" group is set here, ln -s /var/mail ~/mail/var
8282could allow a user to delete others' mailboxes, or ln -s
8283/secret/shared/box ~/mail/mybox would allow reading it).
8284Defaults to @samp{""}.
8285@end deftypevr
8286
8287@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean mail-full-filesystem-access?
8288Allow full filesystem access to clients. There's no access checks
8289other than what the operating system does for the active UID/GID. It
8290works with both maildir and mboxes, allowing you to prefix mailboxes
8291names with e.g. /path/ or ~user/.
8292Defaults to @samp{#f}.
8293@end deftypevr
8294
8295@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean mmap-disable?
8296Don't use mmap() at all. This is required if you store indexes to
8297shared filesystems (NFS or clustered filesystem).
8298Defaults to @samp{#f}.
8299@end deftypevr
8300
8301@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean dotlock-use-excl?
8302Rely on @samp{O_EXCL} to work when creating dotlock files. NFS
8303supports @samp{O_EXCL} since version 3, so this should be safe to use
8304nowadays by default.
8305Defaults to @samp{#t}.
8306@end deftypevr
8307
8308@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mail-fsync
8309When to use fsync() or fdatasync() calls:
8310@table @code
8311@item optimized
8312Whenever necessary to avoid losing important data
8313@item always
8314Useful with e.g. NFS when write()s are delayed
8315@item never
8316Never use it (best performance, but crashes can lose data).
8317@end table
8318Defaults to @samp{"optimized"}.
8319@end deftypevr
8320
8321@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean mail-nfs-storage?
8322Mail storage exists in NFS. Set this to yes to make Dovecot flush
8323NFS caches whenever needed. If you're using only a single mail server
8324this isn't needed.
8325Defaults to @samp{#f}.
8326@end deftypevr
8327
8328@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean mail-nfs-index?
8329Mail index files also exist in NFS. Setting this to yes requires
8330@samp{mmap-disable? #t} and @samp{fsync-disable? #f}.
8331Defaults to @samp{#f}.
8332@end deftypevr
8333
8334@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string lock-method
8335Locking method for index files. Alternatives are fcntl, flock and
8336dotlock. Dotlocking uses some tricks which may create more disk I/O
8337than other locking methods. NFS users: flock doesn't work, remember to
8338change @samp{mmap-disable}.
8339Defaults to @samp{"fcntl"}.
8340@end deftypevr
8341
8342@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} file-name mail-temp-dir
8343Directory in which LDA/LMTP temporarily stores incoming mails >128
8344kB.
8345Defaults to @samp{"/tmp"}.
8346@end deftypevr
8347
8348@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer first-valid-uid
8349Valid UID range for users. This is mostly to make sure that users can't
8350log in as daemons or other system users. Note that denying root logins is
8351hardcoded to dovecot binary and can't be done even if @samp{first-valid-uid}
8352is set to 0.
8353Defaults to @samp{500}.
8354@end deftypevr
8355
8356@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer last-valid-uid
8357
8358Defaults to @samp{0}.
8359@end deftypevr
8360
8361@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer first-valid-gid
8362Valid GID range for users. Users having non-valid GID as primary group ID
8363aren't allowed to log in. If user belongs to supplementary groups with
8364non-valid GIDs, those groups are not set.
8365Defaults to @samp{1}.
8366@end deftypevr
8367
8368@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer last-valid-gid
8369
8370Defaults to @samp{0}.
8371@end deftypevr
8372
8373@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer mail-max-keyword-length
8374Maximum allowed length for mail keyword name. It's only forced when
8375trying to create new keywords.
8376Defaults to @samp{50}.
8377@end deftypevr
8378
8379@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} colon-separated-file-name-list valid-chroot-dirs
8380List of directories under which chrooting is allowed for mail
8381processes (i.e. /var/mail will allow chrooting to /var/mail/foo/bar
8382too). This setting doesn't affect @samp{login-chroot}
8383@samp{mail-chroot} or auth chroot settings. If this setting is empty,
8384"/./" in home dirs are ignored. WARNING: Never add directories here
8385which local users can modify, that may lead to root exploit. Usually
8386this should be done only if you don't allow shell access for users.
8387<doc/wiki/Chrooting.txt>.
8388Defaults to @samp{()}.
8389@end deftypevr
8390
8391@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mail-chroot
8392Default chroot directory for mail processes. This can be overridden
8393for specific users in user database by giving /./ in user's home
8394directory (e.g. /home/./user chroots into /home). Note that usually
8395there is no real need to do chrooting, Dovecot doesn't allow users to
8396access files outside their mail directory anyway. If your home
8397directories are prefixed with the chroot directory, append "/." to
8398@samp{mail-chroot}. <doc/wiki/Chrooting.txt>.
8399Defaults to @samp{""}.
8400@end deftypevr
8401
8402@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} file-name auth-socket-path
8403UNIX socket path to master authentication server to find users.
8404This is used by imap (for shared users) and lda.
8405Defaults to @samp{"/var/run/dovecot/auth-userdb"}.
8406@end deftypevr
8407
8408@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} file-name mail-plugin-dir
8409Directory where to look up mail plugins.
8410Defaults to @samp{"/usr/lib/dovecot"}.
8411@end deftypevr
8412
8413@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list mail-plugins
8414List of plugins to load for all services. Plugins specific to IMAP,
8415LDA, etc. are added to this list in their own .conf files.
8416Defaults to @samp{()}.
8417@end deftypevr
8418
8419@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer mail-cache-min-mail-count
8420The minimum number of mails in a mailbox before updates are done to
8421cache file. This allows optimizing Dovecot's behavior to do less disk
8422writes at the cost of more disk reads.
8423Defaults to @samp{0}.
8424@end deftypevr
8425
8426@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mailbox-idle-check-interval
8427When IDLE command is running, mailbox is checked once in a while to
8428see if there are any new mails or other changes. This setting defines
8429the minimum time to wait between those checks. Dovecot can also use
8430dnotify, inotify and kqueue to find out immediately when changes
8431occur.
8432Defaults to @samp{"30 secs"}.
8433@end deftypevr
8434
8435@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean mail-save-crlf?
8436Save mails with CR+LF instead of plain LF. This makes sending those
8437mails take less CPU, especially with sendfile() syscall with Linux and
8438FreeBSD. But it also creates a bit more disk I/O which may just make it
8439slower. Also note that if other software reads the mboxes/maildirs,
8440they may handle the extra CRs wrong and cause problems.
8441Defaults to @samp{#f}.
8442@end deftypevr
8443
8444@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean maildir-stat-dirs?
8445By default LIST command returns all entries in maildir beginning
8446with a dot. Enabling this option makes Dovecot return only entries
8447which are directories. This is done by stat()ing each entry, so it
8448causes more disk I/O.
8449 (For systems setting struct @samp{dirent->d_type} this check is free
8450and it's done always regardless of this setting).
8451Defaults to @samp{#f}.
8452@end deftypevr
8453
8454@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean maildir-copy-with-hardlinks?
8455When copying a message, do it with hard links whenever possible.
8456This makes the performance much better, and it's unlikely to have any
8457side effects.
8458Defaults to @samp{#t}.
8459@end deftypevr
8460
8461@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean maildir-very-dirty-syncs?
8462Assume Dovecot is the only MUA accessing Maildir: Scan cur/
8463directory only when its mtime changes unexpectedly or when we can't find
8464the mail otherwise.
8465Defaults to @samp{#f}.
8466@end deftypevr
8467
8468@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list mbox-read-locks
8469Which locking methods to use for locking mbox. There are four
8470available:
8471
8472@table @code
8473@item dotlock
8474Create <mailbox>.lock file. This is the oldest and most NFS-safe
8475solution. If you want to use /var/mail/ like directory, the users will
8476need write access to that directory.
8477@item dotlock-try
8478Same as dotlock, but if it fails because of permissions or because there
8479isn't enough disk space, just skip it.
8480@item fcntl
8481Use this if possible. Works with NFS too if lockd is used.
8482@item flock
8483May not exist in all systems. Doesn't work with NFS.
8484@item lockf
8485May not exist in all systems. Doesn't work with NFS.
8486@end table
8487
8488You can use multiple locking methods; if you do the order they're declared
8489in is important to avoid deadlocks if other MTAs/MUAs are using multiple
8490locking methods as well. Some operating systems don't allow using some of
8491them simultaneously.
8492@end deftypevr
8493
8494@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list mbox-write-locks
8495
8496@end deftypevr
8497
8498@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mbox-lock-timeout
8499Maximum time to wait for lock (all of them) before aborting.
8500Defaults to @samp{"5 mins"}.
8501@end deftypevr
8502
8503@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mbox-dotlock-change-timeout
8504If dotlock exists but the mailbox isn't modified in any way,
8505override the lock file after this much time.
8506Defaults to @samp{"2 mins"}.
8507@end deftypevr
8508
8509@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean mbox-dirty-syncs?
8510When mbox changes unexpectedly we have to fully read it to find out
8511what changed. If the mbox is large this can take a long time. Since
8512the change is usually just a newly appended mail, it'd be faster to
8513simply read the new mails. If this setting is enabled, Dovecot does
8514this but still safely fallbacks to re-reading the whole mbox file
8515whenever something in mbox isn't how it's expected to be. The only real
8516downside to this setting is that if some other MUA changes message
8517flags, Dovecot doesn't notice it immediately. Note that a full sync is
8518done with SELECT, EXAMINE, EXPUNGE and CHECK commands.
8519Defaults to @samp{#t}.
8520@end deftypevr
8521
8522@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean mbox-very-dirty-syncs?
8523Like @samp{mbox-dirty-syncs}, but don't do full syncs even with SELECT,
8524EXAMINE, EXPUNGE or CHECK commands. If this is set,
8525@samp{mbox-dirty-syncs} is ignored.
8526Defaults to @samp{#f}.
8527@end deftypevr
8528
8529@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean mbox-lazy-writes?
8530Delay writing mbox headers until doing a full write sync (EXPUNGE
8531and CHECK commands and when closing the mailbox). This is especially
8532useful for POP3 where clients often delete all mails. The downside is
8533that our changes aren't immediately visible to other MUAs.
8534Defaults to @samp{#t}.
8535@end deftypevr
8536
8537@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer mbox-min-index-size
8538If mbox size is smaller than this (e.g. 100k), don't write index
8539files. If an index file already exists it's still read, just not
8540updated.
8541Defaults to @samp{0}.
8542@end deftypevr
8543
8544@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer mdbox-rotate-size
8545Maximum dbox file size until it's rotated.
8546Defaults to @samp{2000000}.
8547@end deftypevr
8548
8549@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mdbox-rotate-interval
8550Maximum dbox file age until it's rotated. Typically in days. Day
8551begins from midnight, so 1d = today, 2d = yesterday, etc. 0 = check
8552disabled.
8553Defaults to @samp{"1d"}.
8554@end deftypevr
8555
8556@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean mdbox-preallocate-space?
8557When creating new mdbox files, immediately preallocate their size to
8558@samp{mdbox-rotate-size}. This setting currently works only in Linux
8559with some filesystems (ext4, xfs).
8560Defaults to @samp{#f}.
8561@end deftypevr
8562
8563@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mail-attachment-dir
8564sdbox and mdbox support saving mail attachments to external files,
8565which also allows single instance storage for them. Other backends
8566don't support this for now.
8567
8568WARNING: This feature hasn't been tested much yet. Use at your own risk.
8569
8570Directory root where to store mail attachments. Disabled, if empty.
8571Defaults to @samp{""}.
8572@end deftypevr
8573
8574@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer mail-attachment-min-size
8575Attachments smaller than this aren't saved externally. It's also
8576possible to write a plugin to disable saving specific attachments
8577externally.
8578Defaults to @samp{128000}.
8579@end deftypevr
8580
8581@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mail-attachment-fs
8582Filesystem backend to use for saving attachments:
8583@table @code
8584@item posix
8585No SiS done by Dovecot (but this might help FS's own deduplication)
8586@item sis posix
8587SiS with immediate byte-by-byte comparison during saving
8588@item sis-queue posix
8589SiS with delayed comparison and deduplication.
8590@end table
8591Defaults to @samp{"sis posix"}.
8592@end deftypevr
8593
8594@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mail-attachment-hash
8595Hash format to use in attachment filenames. You can add any text and
8596variables: @code{%@{md4@}}, @code{%@{md5@}}, @code{%@{sha1@}},
8597@code{%@{sha256@}}, @code{%@{sha512@}}, @code{%@{size@}}. Variables can be
8598truncated, e.g. @code{%@{sha256:80@}} returns only first 80 bits.
8599Defaults to @samp{"%@{sha1@}"}.
8600@end deftypevr
8601
8602@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer default-process-limit
8603
8604Defaults to @samp{100}.
8605@end deftypevr
8606
8607@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer default-client-limit
8608
8609Defaults to @samp{1000}.
8610@end deftypevr
8611
8612@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer default-vsz-limit
8613Default VSZ (virtual memory size) limit for service processes.
8614This is mainly intended to catch and kill processes that leak memory
8615before they eat up everything.
8616Defaults to @samp{256000000}.
8617@end deftypevr
8618
8619@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string default-login-user
8620Login user is internally used by login processes. This is the most
8621untrusted user in Dovecot system. It shouldn't have access to anything
8622at all.
8623Defaults to @samp{"dovenull"}.
8624@end deftypevr
8625
8626@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string default-internal-user
8627Internal user is used by unprivileged processes. It should be
8628separate from login user, so that login processes can't disturb other
8629processes.
8630Defaults to @samp{"dovecot"}.
8631@end deftypevr
8632
8633@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string ssl?
8634SSL/TLS support: yes, no, required. <doc/wiki/SSL.txt>.
8635Defaults to @samp{"required"}.
8636@end deftypevr
8637
8638@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string ssl-cert
8639PEM encoded X.509 SSL/TLS certificate (public key).
8640Defaults to @samp{"</etc/dovecot/default.pem"}.
8641@end deftypevr
8642
8643@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string ssl-key
8644PEM encoded SSL/TLS private key. The key is opened before
8645dropping root privileges, so keep the key file unreadable by anyone but
8646root.
8647Defaults to @samp{"</etc/dovecot/private/default.pem"}.
8648@end deftypevr
8649
8650@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string ssl-key-password
8651If key file is password protected, give the password here.
8652Alternatively give it when starting dovecot with -p parameter. Since
8653this file is often world-readable, you may want to place this setting
8654instead to a different.
8655Defaults to @samp{""}.
8656@end deftypevr
8657
8658@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string ssl-ca
8659PEM encoded trusted certificate authority. Set this only if you
8660intend to use @samp{ssl-verify-client-cert? #t}. The file should
8661contain the CA certificate(s) followed by the matching
8662CRL(s). (e.g. @samp{ssl-ca </etc/ssl/certs/ca.pem}).
8663Defaults to @samp{""}.
8664@end deftypevr
8665
8666@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean ssl-require-crl?
8667Require that CRL check succeeds for client certificates.
8668Defaults to @samp{#t}.
8669@end deftypevr
8670
8671@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean ssl-verify-client-cert?
8672Request client to send a certificate. If you also want to require
8673it, set @samp{auth-ssl-require-client-cert? #t} in auth section.
8674Defaults to @samp{#f}.
8675@end deftypevr
8676
8677@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string ssl-cert-username-field
8678Which field from certificate to use for username. commonName and
8679x500UniqueIdentifier are the usual choices. You'll also need to set
8680@samp{auth-ssl-username-from-cert? #t}.
8681Defaults to @samp{"commonName"}.
8682@end deftypevr
8683
8684@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} hours ssl-parameters-regenerate
8685How often to regenerate the SSL parameters file. Generation is
8686quite CPU intensive operation. The value is in hours, 0 disables
8687regeneration entirely.
8688Defaults to @samp{168}.
8689@end deftypevr
8690
8691@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string ssl-protocols
8692SSL protocols to use.
8693Defaults to @samp{"!SSLv2"}.
8694@end deftypevr
8695
8696@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string ssl-cipher-list
8697SSL ciphers to use.
8698Defaults to @samp{"ALL:!LOW:!SSLv2:!EXP:!aNULL"}.
8699@end deftypevr
8700
8701@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string ssl-crypto-device
8702SSL crypto device to use, for valid values run "openssl engine".
8703Defaults to @samp{""}.
8704@end deftypevr
8705
8706@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string postmaster-address
8707Address to use when sending rejection mails.
8708Default is postmaster@@<your domain>. %d expands to recipient domain.
8709Defaults to @samp{""}.
8710@end deftypevr
8711
8712@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string hostname
8713Hostname to use in various parts of sent mails (e.g. in Message-Id)
8714and in LMTP replies. Default is the system's real hostname@@domain.
8715Defaults to @samp{""}.
8716@end deftypevr
8717
8718@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean quota-full-tempfail?
8719If user is over quota, return with temporary failure instead of
8720bouncing the mail.
8721Defaults to @samp{#f}.
8722@end deftypevr
8723
8724@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} file-name sendmail-path
8725Binary to use for sending mails.
8726Defaults to @samp{"/usr/sbin/sendmail"}.
8727@end deftypevr
8728
8729@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string submission-host
8730If non-empty, send mails via this SMTP host[:port] instead of
8731sendmail.
8732Defaults to @samp{""}.
8733@end deftypevr
8734
8735@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string rejection-subject
8736Subject: header to use for rejection mails. You can use the same
8737variables as for @samp{rejection-reason} below.
8738Defaults to @samp{"Rejected: %s"}.
8739@end deftypevr
8740
8741@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string rejection-reason
8742Human readable error message for rejection mails. You can use
8743variables:
8744
8745@table @code
8746@item %n
8747CRLF
8748@item %r
8749reason
8750@item %s
8751original subject
8752@item %t
8753recipient
8754@end table
8755Defaults to @samp{"Your message to <%t> was automatically rejected:%n%r"}.
8756@end deftypevr
8757
8758@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string recipient-delimiter
8759Delimiter character between local-part and detail in email
8760address.
8761Defaults to @samp{"+"}.
8762@end deftypevr
8763
8764@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string lda-original-recipient-header
8765Header where the original recipient address (SMTP's RCPT TO:
8766address) is taken from if not available elsewhere. With dovecot-lda -a
8767parameter overrides this. A commonly used header for this is
8768X-Original-To.
8769Defaults to @samp{""}.
8770@end deftypevr
8771
8772@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean lda-mailbox-autocreate?
8773Should saving a mail to a nonexistent mailbox automatically create
8774it?.
8775Defaults to @samp{#f}.
8776@end deftypevr
8777
8778@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean lda-mailbox-autosubscribe?
8779Should automatically created mailboxes be also automatically
8780subscribed?.
8781Defaults to @samp{#f}.
8782@end deftypevr
8783
8784@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer imap-max-line-length
8785Maximum IMAP command line length. Some clients generate very long
8786command lines with huge mailboxes, so you may need to raise this if you
8787get "Too long argument" or "IMAP command line too large" errors
8788often.
8789Defaults to @samp{64000}.
8790@end deftypevr
8791
8792@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string imap-logout-format
8793IMAP logout format string:
8794@table @code
8795@item %i
8796total number of bytes read from client
8797@item %o
8798total number of bytes sent to client.
8799@end table
8800Defaults to @samp{"in=%i out=%o"}.
8801@end deftypevr
8802
8803@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string imap-capability
8804Override the IMAP CAPABILITY response. If the value begins with '+',
8805add the given capabilities on top of the defaults (e.g. +XFOO XBAR).
8806Defaults to @samp{""}.
8807@end deftypevr
8808
8809@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string imap-idle-notify-interval
8810How long to wait between "OK Still here" notifications when client
8811is IDLEing.
8812Defaults to @samp{"2 mins"}.
8813@end deftypevr
8814
8815@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string imap-id-send
8816ID field names and values to send to clients. Using * as the value
8817makes Dovecot use the default value. The following fields have default
8818values currently: name, version, os, os-version, support-url,
8819support-email.
8820Defaults to @samp{""}.
8821@end deftypevr
8822
8823@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string imap-id-log
8824ID fields sent by client to log. * means everything.
8825Defaults to @samp{""}.
8826@end deftypevr
8827
8828@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list imap-client-workarounds
8829Workarounds for various client bugs:
8830
8831@table @code
8832@item delay-newmail
8833Send EXISTS/RECENT new mail notifications only when replying to NOOP and
8834CHECK commands. Some clients ignore them otherwise, for example OSX
8835Mail (<v2.1). Outlook Express breaks more badly though, without this it
8836may show user "Message no longer in server" errors. Note that OE6
8837still breaks even with this workaround if synchronization is set to
8838"Headers Only".
8839
8840@item tb-extra-mailbox-sep
8841Thunderbird gets somehow confused with LAYOUT=fs (mbox and dbox) and
8842adds extra @samp{/} suffixes to mailbox names. This option causes Dovecot to
8843ignore the extra @samp{/} instead of treating it as invalid mailbox name.
8844
8845@item tb-lsub-flags
8846Show \Noselect flags for LSUB replies with LAYOUT=fs (e.g. mbox).
8847This makes Thunderbird realize they aren't selectable and show them
8848greyed out, instead of only later giving "not selectable" popup error.
8849@end table
8850Defaults to @samp{()}.
8851@end deftypevr
8852
8853@deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string imap-urlauth-host
8854Host allowed in URLAUTH URLs sent by client. "*" allows all.
8855Defaults to @samp{""}.
8856@end deftypevr
8857
8858
8859Whew! Lots of configuration options. The nice thing about it though is
8860that GuixSD has a complete interface to Dovecot's configuration
8861language. This allows not only a nice way to declare configurations,
8862but also offers reflective capabilities as well: users can write code to
8863inspect and transform configurations from within Scheme.
8864
8865However, it could be that you just want to get a @code{dovecot.conf} up
8866and running. In that case, you can pass an
8867@code{opaque-dovecot-configuration} as the @code{#:config} paramter to
8868@code{dovecot-service}. As its name indicates, an opaque configuration
8869does not have easy reflective capabilities.
8870
8871Available @code{opaque-dovecot-configuration} fields are:
8872
8873@deftypevr {@code{opaque-dovecot-configuration} parameter} package dovecot
8874The dovecot package.
8875@end deftypevr
8876
8877@deftypevr {@code{opaque-dovecot-configuration} parameter} string string
8878The contents of the @code{dovecot.conf}, as a string.
8879@end deftypevr
8880
8881For example, if your @code{dovecot.conf} is just the empty string, you
8882could instantiate a dovecot service like this:
8883
8884@example
8885(dovecot-service #:config
8886 (opaque-dovecot-configuration
8887 (string "")))
8888@end example
8889
58724c48
DT
8890@node Web Services
8891@subsubsection Web Services
8892
8893The @code{(gnu services web)} module provides the following service:
8894
be1c2c54 8895@deffn {Scheme Procedure} nginx-service [#:nginx nginx] @
58724c48
DT
8896 [#:log-directory ``/var/log/nginx''] @
8897 [#:run-directory ``/var/run/nginx''] @
8898 [#:config-file]
8899
8900Return a service that runs @var{nginx}, the nginx web server.
8901
8902The nginx daemon loads its runtime configuration from @var{config-file}.
8903Log files are written to @var{log-directory} and temporary runtime data
8904files are written to @var{run-directory}. For proper operation, these
8905arguments should match what is in @var{config-file} to ensure that the
8906directories are created when the service is activated.
8907
8908@end deffn
8909
fe1a39d3
LC
8910@node Various Services
8911@subsubsection Various Services
8912
8913The @code{(gnu services lirc)} module provides the following service.
8914
be1c2c54 8915@deffn {Scheme Procedure} lirc-service [#:lirc lirc] @
fe1a39d3
LC
8916 [#:device #f] [#:driver #f] [#:config-file #f] @
8917 [#:extra-options '()]
8918Return a service that runs @url{http://www.lirc.org,LIRC}, a daemon that
8919decodes infrared signals from remote controls.
8920
8921Optionally, @var{device}, @var{driver} and @var{config-file}
8922(configuration file name) may be specified. See @command{lircd} manual
8923for details.
8924
8925Finally, @var{extra-options} is a list of additional command-line options
8926passed to @command{lircd}.
8927@end deffn
8928
8929
0ae8c15a
LC
8930@node Setuid Programs
8931@subsection Setuid Programs
8932
8933@cindex setuid programs
8934Some programs need to run with ``root'' privileges, even when they are
8935launched by unprivileged users. A notorious example is the
4d40227c
LC
8936@command{passwd} program, which users can run to change their
8937password, and which needs to access the @file{/etc/passwd} and
0ae8c15a
LC
8938@file{/etc/shadow} files---something normally restricted to root, for
8939obvious security reasons. To address that, these executables are
8940@dfn{setuid-root}, meaning that they always run with root privileges
8941(@pxref{How Change Persona,,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual},
f7e4ae7f 8942for more info about the setuid mechanism.)
0ae8c15a
LC
8943
8944The store itself @emph{cannot} contain setuid programs: that would be a
8945security issue since any user on the system can write derivations that
8946populate the store (@pxref{The Store}). Thus, a different mechanism is
8947used: instead of changing the setuid bit directly on files that are in
8948the store, we let the system administrator @emph{declare} which programs
8949should be setuid root.
8950
8951The @code{setuid-programs} field of an @code{operating-system}
8952declaration contains a list of G-expressions denoting the names of
8953programs to be setuid-root (@pxref{Using the Configuration System}).
8954For instance, the @command{passwd} program, which is part of the Shadow
8955package, can be designated by this G-expression (@pxref{G-Expressions}):
8956
8957@example
8958#~(string-append #$shadow "/bin/passwd")
8959@end example
8960
8961A default set of setuid programs is defined by the
8962@code{%setuid-programs} variable of the @code{(gnu system)} module.
8963
8964@defvr {Scheme Variable} %setuid-programs
8965A list of G-expressions denoting common programs that are setuid-root.
8966
8967The list includes commands such as @command{passwd}, @command{ping},
8968@command{su}, and @command{sudo}.
8969@end defvr
8970
8971Under the hood, the actual setuid programs are created in the
8972@file{/run/setuid-programs} directory at system activation time. The
8973files in this directory refer to the ``real'' binaries, which are in the
8974store.
8975
efb5e833
LC
8976@node X.509 Certificates
8977@subsection X.509 Certificates
8978
8979@cindex HTTPS, certificates
8980@cindex X.509 certificates
8981@cindex TLS
8982Web servers available over HTTPS (that is, HTTP over the transport-layer
8983security mechanism, TLS) send client programs an @dfn{X.509 certificate}
8984that the client can then use to @emph{authenticate} the server. To do
8985that, clients verify that the server's certificate is signed by a
8986so-called @dfn{certificate authority} (CA). But to verify the CA's
8987signature, clients must have first acquired the CA's certificate.
8988
8989Web browsers such as GNU@tie{}IceCat include their own set of CA
8990certificates, such that they are able to verify CA signatures
8991out-of-the-box.
8992
8993However, most other programs that can talk HTTPS---@command{wget},
8994@command{git}, @command{w3m}, etc.---need to be told where CA
8995certificates can be found.
8996
8997@cindex @code{nss-certs}
8998In GuixSD, this is done by adding a package that provides certificates
8999to the @code{packages} field of the @code{operating-system} declaration
9000(@pxref{operating-system Reference}). GuixSD includes one such package,
9001@code{nss-certs}, which is a set of CA certificates provided as part of
9002Mozilla's Network Security Services.
9003
9004Note that it is @emph{not} part of @var{%base-packages}, so you need to
9005explicitly add it. The @file{/etc/ssl/certs} directory, which is where
9006most applications and libraries look for certificates by default, points
9007to the certificates installed globally.
9008
9009Unprivileged users can also install their own certificate package in
9010their profile. A number of environment variables need to be defined so
9011that applications and libraries know where to find them. Namely, the
9012OpenSSL library honors the @code{SSL_CERT_DIR} and @code{SSL_CERT_FILE}
9013variables. Some applications add their own environment variables; for
9014instance, the Git version control system honors the certificate bundle
9015pointed to by the @code{GIT_SSL_CAINFO} environment variable.
9016
9017
996ed739
LC
9018@node Name Service Switch
9019@subsection Name Service Switch
9020
9021@cindex name service switch
9022@cindex NSS
9023The @code{(gnu system nss)} module provides bindings to the
9024configuration file of libc's @dfn{name service switch} or @dfn{NSS}
9025(@pxref{NSS Configuration File,,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference
9026Manual}). In a nutshell, the NSS is a mechanism that allows libc to be
9027extended with new ``name'' lookup methods for system databases, which
9028includes host names, service names, user accounts, and more (@pxref{Name
9029Service Switch, System Databases and Name Service Switch,, libc, The GNU
9030C Library Reference Manual}).
9031
9032The NSS configuration specifies, for each system database, which lookup
9033method is to be used, and how the various methods are chained
9034together---for instance, under which circumstances NSS should try the
9035next method in the list. The NSS configuration is given in the
9036@code{name-service-switch} field of @code{operating-system} declarations
9037(@pxref{operating-system Reference, @code{name-service-switch}}).
9038
4c9050c6
LC
9039@cindex nss-mdns
9040@cindex .local, host name lookup
996ed739 9041As an example, the declaration below configures the NSS to use the
4c9050c6
LC
9042@uref{http://0pointer.de/lennart/projects/nss-mdns/, @code{nss-mdns}
9043back-end}, which supports host name lookups over multicast DNS (mDNS)
9044for host names ending in @code{.local}:
996ed739
LC
9045
9046@example
9047(name-service-switch
9048 (hosts (list %files ;first, check /etc/hosts
9049
9050 ;; If the above did not succeed, try
9051 ;; with 'mdns_minimal'.
9052 (name-service
9053 (name "mdns_minimal")
9054
9055 ;; 'mdns_minimal' is authoritative for
9056 ;; '.local'. When it returns "not found",
9057 ;; no need to try the next methods.
9058 (reaction (lookup-specification
9059 (not-found => return))))
9060
9061 ;; Then fall back to DNS.
9062 (name-service
9063 (name "dns"))
9064
9065 ;; Finally, try with the "full" 'mdns'.
9066 (name-service
9067 (name "mdns")))))
9068@end example
9069
15137a29
LC
9070Don't worry: the @code{%mdns-host-lookup-nss} variable (see below)
9071contains this configuration, so you won't have to type it if all you
9072want is to have @code{.local} host lookup working.
9073
4c9050c6
LC
9074Note that, in this case, in addition to setting the
9075@code{name-service-switch} of the @code{operating-system} declaration,
cc9c1f39
LC
9076you also need to use @code{avahi-service} (@pxref{Networking Services,
9077@code{avahi-service}}), or @var{%desktop-services}, which includes it
9078(@pxref{Desktop Services}). Doing this makes @code{nss-mdns} accessible
9079to the name service cache daemon (@pxref{Base Services,
9080@code{nscd-service}}).
15137a29
LC
9081
9082For convenience, the following variables provide typical NSS
9083configurations.
9084
9085@defvr {Scheme Variable} %default-nss
9086This is the default name service switch configuration, a
9087@code{name-service-switch} object.
9088@end defvr
9089
9090@defvr {Scheme Variable} %mdns-host-lookup-nss
9091This is the name service switch configuration with support for host name
9092lookup over multicast DNS (mDNS) for host names ending in @code{.local}.
9093@end defvr
4c9050c6 9094
996ed739
LC
9095The reference for name service switch configuration is given below. It
9096is a direct mapping of the C library's configuration file format, so
9097please refer to the C library manual for more information (@pxref{NSS
9098Configuration File,,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}).
9099Compared to libc's NSS configuration file format, it has the advantage
9100not only of adding this warm parenthetic feel that we like, but also
9101static checks: you'll know about syntax errors and typos as soon as you
9102run @command{guix system}.
9103
996ed739
LC
9104@deftp {Data Type} name-service-switch
9105
9106This is the data type representation the configuration of libc's name
9107service switch (NSS). Each field below represents one of the supported
9108system databases.
9109
9110@table @code
9111@item aliases
9112@itemx ethers
9113@itemx group
9114@itemx gshadow
9115@itemx hosts
9116@itemx initgroups
9117@itemx netgroup
9118@itemx networks
9119@itemx password
9120@itemx public-key
9121@itemx rpc
9122@itemx services
9123@itemx shadow
9124The system databases handled by the NSS. Each of these fields must be a
9125list of @code{<name-service>} objects (see below.)
9126@end table
9127@end deftp
9128
9129@deftp {Data Type} name-service
9130
9131This is the data type representing an actual name service and the
9132associated lookup action.
9133
9134@table @code
9135@item name
9136A string denoting the name service (@pxref{Services in the NSS
9137configuration,,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}).
9138
4aee6e60
LC
9139Note that name services listed here must be visible to nscd. This is
9140achieved by passing the @code{#:name-services} argument to
9141@code{nscd-service} the list of packages providing the needed name
9142services (@pxref{Base Services, @code{nscd-service}}).
9143
996ed739
LC
9144@item reaction
9145An action specified using the @code{lookup-specification} macro
9146(@pxref{Actions in the NSS configuration,,, libc, The GNU C Library
9147Reference Manual}). For example:
9148
9149@example
9150(lookup-specification (unavailable => continue)
9151 (success => return))
9152@end example
9153@end table
9154@end deftp
0ae8c15a 9155
fd1b1fa2
LC
9156@node Initial RAM Disk
9157@subsection Initial RAM Disk
9158
9159@cindex initial RAM disk (initrd)
9160@cindex initrd (initial RAM disk)
9161For bootstrapping purposes, the Linux-Libre kernel is passed an
9162@dfn{initial RAM disk}, or @dfn{initrd}. An initrd contains a temporary
9163root file system, as well as an initialization script. The latter is
9164responsible for mounting the real root file system, and for loading any
9165kernel modules that may be needed to achieve that.
9166
9167The @code{initrd} field of an @code{operating-system} declaration allows
9168you to specify which initrd you would like to use. The @code{(gnu
9169system linux-initrd)} module provides two ways to build an initrd: the
9170high-level @code{base-initrd} procedure, and the low-level
9171@code{expression->initrd} procedure.
9172
9173The @code{base-initrd} procedure is intended to cover most common uses.
9174For example, if you want to add a bunch of kernel modules to be loaded
9175at boot time, you can define the @code{initrd} field of the operating
9176system declaration like this:
9177
9178@example
52ac153e 9179(initrd (lambda (file-systems . rest)
027981d6
LC
9180 ;; Create a standard initrd that has modules "foo.ko"
9181 ;; and "bar.ko", as well as their dependencies, in
9182 ;; addition to the modules available by default.
52ac153e 9183 (apply base-initrd file-systems
027981d6 9184 #:extra-modules '("foo" "bar")
52ac153e 9185 rest)))
fd1b1fa2
LC
9186@end example
9187
52ac153e
LC
9188The @code{base-initrd} procedure also handles common use cases that
9189involves using the system as a QEMU guest, or as a ``live'' system whose
9190root file system is volatile.
fd1b1fa2 9191
e90cf6c1
LC
9192The initial RAM disk produced by @code{base-initrd} honors several
9193options passed on the Linux kernel command line (that is, arguments
9194passed @i{via} GRUB's @code{linux} command, or with QEMU's
9195@code{-append} option), notably:
9196
9197@table @code
9198@item --load=@var{boot}
9199Tell the initial RAM disk to load @var{boot}, a file containing a Scheme
9200program, once it has mounted the root file system.
9201
9202GuixSD uses this option to yield control to a boot program that runs the
dd17bc38 9203service activation programs and then spawns the GNU@tie{}Shepherd, the
e90cf6c1
LC
9204initialization system.
9205
9206@item --root=@var{root}
9207Mount @var{root} as the root file system. @var{root} can be a device
9208device name like @code{/dev/sda1}, a partition label, or a partition
9209UUID.
9210
9211@item --system=@var{system}
9212Have @file{/run/booted-system} and @file{/run/current-system} point to
9213@var{system}.
9214
9215@item modprobe.blacklist=@var{modules}@dots{}
9216@cindex module, black-listing
9217@cindex black list, of kernel modules
9218Instruct the initial RAM disk as well as the @command{modprobe} command
9219(from the kmod package) to refuse to load @var{modules}. @var{modules}
9220must be a comma-separated list of module names---e.g.,
9221@code{usbkbd,9pnet}.
9222
9223@item --repl
9224Start a read-eval-print loop (REPL) from the initial RAM disk before it
9225tries to load kernel modules and to mount the root file system. Our
9226marketing team calls it @dfn{boot-to-Guile}. The Schemer in you will
9227love it. @xref{Using Guile Interactively,,, guile, GNU Guile Reference
9228Manual}, for more information on Guile's REPL.
9229
9230@end table
9231
9232Now that you know all the features that initial RAM disks produced by
9233@code{base-initrd} provide, here is how to use it and customize it
9234further.
9235
fd1b1fa2 9236@deffn {Monadic Procedure} base-initrd @var{file-systems} @
9059b97d 9237 [#:qemu-networking? #f] [#:virtio? #t] [#:volatile-root? #f] @
52ac153e 9238 [#:extra-modules '()] [#:mapped-devices '()]
fd1b1fa2
LC
9239Return a monadic derivation that builds a generic initrd. @var{file-systems} is
9240a list of file-systems to be mounted by the initrd, possibly in addition to
9241the root file system specified on the kernel command line via @code{--root}.
52ac153e
LC
9242@var{mapped-devices} is a list of device mappings to realize before
9243@var{file-systems} are mounted (@pxref{Mapped Devices}).
fd1b1fa2
LC
9244
9245When @var{qemu-networking?} is true, set up networking with the standard QEMU
9246parameters. When @var{virtio?} is true, load additional modules so the initrd can
9247be used as a QEMU guest with para-virtualized I/O drivers.
9248
9249When @var{volatile-root?} is true, the root file system is writable but any changes
9250to it are lost.
9251
9252The initrd is automatically populated with all the kernel modules necessary
9253for @var{file-systems} and for the given options. However, additional kernel
9254modules can be listed in @var{extra-modules}. They will be added to the initrd, and
9255loaded at boot time in the order in which they appear.
9256@end deffn
9257
9258Needless to say, the initrds we produce and use embed a
9259statically-linked Guile, and the initialization program is a Guile
9260program. That gives a lot of flexibility. The
9261@code{expression->initrd} procedure builds such an initrd, given the
9262program to run in that initrd.
9263
9264@deffn {Monadic Procedure} expression->initrd @var{exp} @
9265 [#:guile %guile-static-stripped] [#:name "guile-initrd"] @
42d10464 9266 [#:modules '()]
fd1b1fa2
LC
9267Return a derivation that builds a Linux initrd (a gzipped cpio archive)
9268containing @var{guile} and that evaluates @var{exp}, a G-expression,
df650fa8
LC
9269upon booting. All the derivations referenced by @var{exp} are
9270automatically copied to the initrd.
fd1b1fa2 9271
42d10464
LC
9272@var{modules} is a list of Guile module names to be embedded in the
9273initrd.
fd1b1fa2
LC
9274@end deffn
9275
88faf933
LC
9276@node GRUB Configuration
9277@subsection GRUB Configuration
9278
9279@cindex GRUB
9280@cindex boot loader
9281
9282The operating system uses GNU@tie{}GRUB as its boot loader
9283(@pxref{Overview, overview of GRUB,, grub, GNU GRUB Manual}). It is
9284configured using @code{grub-configuration} declarations. This data type
9285is exported by the @code{(gnu system grub)} module, and described below.
9286
9287@deftp {Data Type} grub-configuration
9288The type of a GRUB configuration declaration.
9289
9290@table @asis
9291
9292@item @code{device}
9293This is a string denoting the boot device. It must be a device name
9294understood by the @command{grub-install} command, such as
9295@code{/dev/sda} or @code{(hd0)} (@pxref{Invoking grub-install,,, grub,
9296GNU GRUB Manual}).
9297
9298@item @code{menu-entries} (default: @code{()})
9299A possibly empty list of @code{menu-entry} objects (see below), denoting
9300entries to appear in the GRUB boot menu, in addition to the current
9301system entry and the entry pointing to previous system generations.
9302
9303@item @code{default-entry} (default: @code{0})
9304The index of the default boot menu entry. Index 0 is for the current
9305system's entry.
9306
9307@item @code{timeout} (default: @code{5})
9308The number of seconds to wait for keyboard input before booting. Set to
93090 to boot immediately, and to -1 to wait indefinitely.
9310
9311@item @code{theme} (default: @var{%default-theme})
9312The @code{grub-theme} object describing the theme to use.
9313@end table
9314
9315@end deftp
9316
9317Should you want to list additional boot menu entries @i{via} the
9318@code{menu-entries} field above, you will need to create them with the
9319@code{menu-entry} form:
9320
9321@deftp {Data Type} menu-entry
9322The type of an entry in the GRUB boot menu.
9323
9324@table @asis
9325
9326@item @code{label}
35ed9306 9327The label to show in the menu---e.g., @code{"GNU"}.
88faf933
LC
9328
9329@item @code{linux}
9330The Linux kernel to boot.
9331
9332@item @code{linux-arguments} (default: @code{()})
9333The list of extra Linux kernel command-line arguments---e.g.,
9334@code{("console=ttyS0")}.
9335
9336@item @code{initrd}
9337A G-Expression or string denoting the file name of the initial RAM disk
9338to use (@pxref{G-Expressions}).
9339
9340@end table
9341@end deftp
9342
9343@c FIXME: Write documentation once it's stable.
9344Themes are created using the @code{grub-theme} form, which is not
9345documented yet.
9346
9347@defvr {Scheme Variable} %default-theme
9348This is the default GRUB theme used by the operating system, with a
9349fancy background image displaying the GNU and Guix logos.
9350@end defvr
9351
9352
cf4a9129
LC
9353@node Invoking guix system
9354@subsection Invoking @code{guix system}
0918e64a 9355
cf4a9129
LC
9356Once you have written an operating system declaration, as seen in the
9357previous section, it can be @dfn{instantiated} using the @command{guix
9358system} command. The synopsis is:
4af2447e 9359
cf4a9129
LC
9360@example
9361guix system @var{options}@dots{} @var{action} @var{file}
9362@end example
4af2447e 9363
cf4a9129
LC
9364@var{file} must be the name of a file containing an
9365@code{operating-system} declaration. @var{action} specifies how the
a40424bd 9366operating system is instantiated. Currently the following values are
cf4a9129 9367supported:
4af2447e 9368
cf4a9129
LC
9369@table @code
9370@item reconfigure
9371Build the operating system described in @var{file}, activate it, and
9372switch to it@footnote{This action is usable only on systems already
65797bff 9373running GuixSD.}.
4af2447e 9374
cf4a9129
LC
9375This effects all the configuration specified in @var{file}: user
9376accounts, system services, global package list, setuid programs, etc.
240b57f0
LC
9377The command starts system services specified in @var{file} that are not
9378currently running; if a service is currently running, it does not
9379attempt to upgrade it since it would not be possible without stopping it
9380first.
4af2447e 9381
cf4a9129
LC
9382It also adds a GRUB menu entry for the new OS configuration, and moves
9383entries for older configurations to a submenu---unless
9384@option{--no-grub} is passed.
4af2447e 9385
240b57f0 9386@quotation Note
bf2479c7
LC
9387@c The paragraph below refers to the problem discussed at
9388@c <http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/guix-devel/2014-08/msg00057.html>.
9389It is highly recommended to run @command{guix pull} once before you run
9390@command{guix system reconfigure} for the first time (@pxref{Invoking
9391guix pull}). Failing to do that you would see an older version of Guix
9392once @command{reconfigure} has completed.
240b57f0 9393@end quotation
bf2479c7 9394
cf4a9129
LC
9395@item build
9396Build the operating system's derivation, which includes all the
9397configuration files and programs needed to boot and run the system.
9398This action does not actually install anything.
113daf62 9399
cf4a9129
LC
9400@item init
9401Populate the given directory with all the files necessary to run the
9402operating system specified in @var{file}. This is useful for first-time
4705641f 9403installations of GuixSD. For instance:
113daf62
LC
9404
9405@example
cf4a9129 9406guix system init my-os-config.scm /mnt
113daf62
LC
9407@end example
9408
cf4a9129
LC
9409copies to @file{/mnt} all the store items required by the configuration
9410specified in @file{my-os-config.scm}. This includes configuration
9411files, packages, and so on. It also creates other essential files
9412needed for the system to operate correctly---e.g., the @file{/etc},
9413@file{/var}, and @file{/run} directories, and the @file{/bin/sh} file.
113daf62 9414
cf4a9129
LC
9415This command also installs GRUB on the device specified in
9416@file{my-os-config}, unless the @option{--no-grub} option was passed.
113daf62 9417
cf4a9129
LC
9418@item vm
9419@cindex virtual machine
0276f697 9420@cindex VM
f535dcbe 9421@anchor{guix system vm}
cf4a9129
LC
9422Build a virtual machine that contain the operating system declared in
9423@var{file}, and return a script to run that virtual machine (VM).
810568b3 9424Arguments given to the script are passed as is to QEMU.
113daf62 9425
cf4a9129 9426The VM shares its store with the host system.
113daf62 9427
0276f697
LC
9428Additional file systems can be shared between the host and the VM using
9429the @code{--share} and @code{--expose} command-line options: the former
9430specifies a directory to be shared with write access, while the latter
9431provides read-only access to the shared directory.
9432
9433The example below creates a VM in which the user's home directory is
9434accessible read-only, and where the @file{/exchange} directory is a
9435read-write mapping of the host's @file{$HOME/tmp}:
9436
9437@example
9438guix system vm my-config.scm \
9439 --expose=$HOME --share=$HOME/tmp=/exchange
9440@end example
9441
6aa260af
LC
9442On GNU/Linux, the default is to boot directly to the kernel; this has
9443the advantage of requiring only a very tiny root disk image since the
9444host's store can then be mounted.
9445
9446The @code{--full-boot} option forces a complete boot sequence, starting
9447with the bootloader. This requires more disk space since a root image
9448containing at least the kernel, initrd, and bootloader data files must
9449be created. The @code{--image-size} option can be used to specify the
9450image's size.
ab11f0be 9451
cf4a9129
LC
9452@item vm-image
9453@itemx disk-image
9454Return a virtual machine or disk image of the operating system declared
9455in @var{file} that stands alone. Use the @option{--image-size} option
9456to specify the size of the image.
113daf62 9457
cf4a9129 9458When using @code{vm-image}, the returned image is in qcow2 format, which
97d76250
LF
9459the QEMU emulator can efficiently use. @xref{Running GuixSD in a VM},
9460for more information on how to run the image in a virtual machine.
113daf62 9461
cf4a9129
LC
9462When using @code{disk-image}, a raw disk image is produced; it can be
9463copied as is to a USB stick, for instance. Assuming @code{/dev/sdc} is
9464the device corresponding to a USB stick, one can copy the image on it
9465using the following command:
113daf62 9466
cf4a9129
LC
9467@example
9468# dd if=$(guix system disk-image my-os.scm) of=/dev/sdc
9469@end example
113daf62 9470
1c8a81b1
DT
9471@item container
9472Return a script to run the operating system declared in @var{file}
9473within a container. Containers are a set of lightweight isolation
9474mechanisms provided by the kernel Linux-libre. Containers are
9475substantially less resource-demanding than full virtual machines since
9476the kernel, shared objects, and other resources can be shared with the
9477host system; this also means they provide thinner isolation.
9478
9479Currently, the script must be run as root in order to support more than
9480a single user and group. The container shares its store with the host
9481system.
9482
9483As with the @code{vm} action (@pxref{guix system vm}), additional file
9484systems to be shared between the host and container can be specified
9485using the @option{--share} and @option{--expose} options:
9486
9487@example
9488guix system container my-config.scm \
9489 --expose=$HOME --share=$HOME/tmp=/exchange
9490@end example
9491
0f252e26 9492@quotation Note
cfd35b4e 9493This option requires Linux-libre 3.19 or newer.
0f252e26
DT
9494@end quotation
9495
cf4a9129 9496@end table
113daf62 9497
ccd7158d
LC
9498@var{options} can contain any of the common build options (@pxref{Common
9499Build Options}). In addition, @var{options} can contain one of the
9500following:
113daf62 9501
cf4a9129
LC
9502@table @option
9503@item --system=@var{system}
9504@itemx -s @var{system}
9505Attempt to build for @var{system} instead of the host's system type.
9506This works as per @command{guix build} (@pxref{Invoking guix build}).
113daf62 9507
f3f427c2
LC
9508@item --derivation
9509@itemx -d
9510Return the derivation file name of the given operating system without
9511building anything.
9512
cf4a9129
LC
9513@item --image-size=@var{size}
9514For the @code{vm-image} and @code{disk-image} actions, create an image
9515of the given @var{size}. @var{size} may be a number of bytes, or it may
4a44d7bb
LC
9516include a unit as a suffix (@pxref{Block size, size specifications,,
9517coreutils, GNU Coreutils}).
db030303
LC
9518
9519@item --on-error=@var{strategy}
9520Apply @var{strategy} when an error occurs when reading @var{file}.
9521@var{strategy} may be one of the following:
9522
9523@table @code
9524@item nothing-special
9525Report the error concisely and exit. This is the default strategy.
9526
9527@item backtrace
9528Likewise, but also display a backtrace.
9529
9530@item debug
9531Report the error and enter Guile's debugger. From there, you can run
9532commands such as @code{,bt} to get a backtrace, @code{,locals} to
9533display local variable values, and more generally inspect the program's
9534state. @xref{Debug Commands,,, guile, GNU Guile Reference Manual}, for
9535a list of available debugging commands.
9536@end table
113daf62 9537@end table
113daf62 9538
cf4a9129
LC
9539Note that all the actions above, except @code{build} and @code{init},
9540rely on KVM support in the Linux-Libre kernel. Specifically, the
9541machine should have hardware virtualization support, the corresponding
9542KVM kernel module should be loaded, and the @file{/dev/kvm} device node
9543must exist and be readable and writable by the user and by the daemon's
9544build users.
8451a568 9545
65797bff
LC
9546Once you have built, configured, re-configured, and re-re-configured
9547your GuixSD installation, you may find it useful to list the operating
9548system generations available on disk---and that you can choose from the
9549GRUB boot menu:
9550
9551@table @code
9552
9553@item list-generations
9554List a summary of each generation of the operating system available on
9555disk, in a human-readable way. This is similar to the
9556@option{--list-generations} option of @command{guix package}
9557(@pxref{Invoking guix package}).
9558
9559Optionally, one can specify a pattern, with the same syntax that is used
9560in @command{guix package --list-generations}, to restrict the list of
9561generations displayed. For instance, the following command displays
9562generations up to 10-day old:
9563
9564@example
9565$ guix system list-generations 10d
9566@end example
9567
9568@end table
9569
d6c3267a
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9570The @command{guix system} command has even more to offer! The following
9571sub-commands allow you to visualize how your system services relate to
9572each other:
9573
9574@anchor{system-extension-graph}
9575@table @code
9576
9577@item extension-graph
9578Emit in Dot/Graphviz format to standard output the @dfn{service
9579extension graph} of the operating system defined in @var{file}
9580(@pxref{Service Composition}, for more information on service
9581extensions.)
9582
9583The command:
9584
9585@example
9586$ guix system extension-graph @var{file} | dot -Tpdf > services.pdf
9587@end example
9588
9589produces a PDF file showing the extension relations among services.
9590
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9591@anchor{system-shepherd-graph}
9592@item shepherd-graph
6f305ea5 9593Emit in Dot/Graphviz format to standard output the @dfn{dependency
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9594graph} of shepherd services of the operating system defined in
9595@var{file}. @xref{Shepherd Services}, for more information and for an
9596example graph.
6f305ea5 9597
d6c3267a
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9598@end table
9599
97d76250
LF
9600@node Running GuixSD in a VM
9601@subsection Running GuixSD in a virtual machine
9602
9603One way to run GuixSD in a virtual machine (VM) is to build a GuixSD
9604virtual machine image using @command{guix system vm-image}
9605(@pxref{Invoking guix system}). The returned image is in qcow2 format,
9606which the @uref{http://qemu.org/, QEMU emulator} can efficiently use.
9607
9608To run the image in QEMU, copy it out of the store (@pxref{The Store})
9609and give yourself permission to write to the copy. When invoking QEMU,
9610you must choose a system emulator that is suitable for your hardware
9611platform. Here is a minimal QEMU invocation that will boot the result
9612of @command{guix system vm-image} on x86_64 hardware:
9613
9614@example
9615$ qemu-system-x86_64 \
9616 -net user -net nic,model=virtio \
9617 -enable-kvm -m 256 /tmp/qemu-image
9618@end example
9619
9620Here is what each of these options means:
9621
9622@table @code
9623@item qemu-system-x86_64
9624This specifies the hardware platform to emulate. This should match the
9625host.
9626
9627@item -net user
9628Enable the unprivileged user-mode network stack. The guest OS can
9629access the host but not vice versa. This is the simplest way to get the
9630guest OS online. If you don't choose a network stack, the boot will
9631fail.
9632
9633@item -net nic,model=virtio
9634You must create a network interface of a given model. If you don't
9635create a NIC, the boot will fail. Assuming your hardware platform is
9636x86_64, you can get a list of available NIC models by running
9637@command{qemu-system-x86_64 -net nic,model=help}.
9638
9639@item -enable-kvm
9640If your system has hardware virtualization extensions, enabling the
9641Linux kernel's virtual machine support (KVM) will make things run
9642faster.
9643
9644@item -m 256
9645RAM available to the guest OS, in mebibytes. Defaults to 128@tie{}MiB,
9646which may be insufficent for some operations.
9647
9648@item /tmp/qemu-image
9649The file name of the qcow2 image.
9650@end table
d6c3267a 9651
cf4a9129
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9652@node Defining Services
9653@subsection Defining Services
8451a568 9654
eb524192 9655The previous sections show the available services and how one can combine
0adfe95a
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9656them in an @code{operating-system} declaration. But how do we define
9657them in the first place? And what is a service anyway?
8451a568 9658
0adfe95a
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9659@menu
9660* Service Composition:: The model for composing services.
9661* Service Types and Services:: Types and services.
9662* Service Reference:: API reference.
dd17bc38 9663* Shepherd Services:: A particular type of service.
0adfe95a
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9664@end menu
9665
9666@node Service Composition
9667@subsubsection Service Composition
9668
9669@cindex services
9670@cindex daemons
9671Here we define a @dfn{service} as, broadly, something that extends the
9672operating system's functionality. Often a service is a process---a
9673@dfn{daemon}---started when the system boots: a secure shell server, a
9674Web server, the Guix build daemon, etc. Sometimes a service is a daemon
9675whose execution can be triggered by another daemon---e.g., an FTP server
9676started by @command{inetd} or a D-Bus service activated by
9677@command{dbus-daemon}. Occasionally, a service does not map to a
9678daemon. For instance, the ``account'' service collects user accounts
9679and makes sure they exist when the system runs; the ``udev'' service
9680collects device management rules and makes them available to the eudev
9681daemon; the @file{/etc} service populates the system's @file{/etc}
9682directory.
9683
d6c3267a 9684@cindex service extensions
0adfe95a 9685GuixSD services are connected by @dfn{extensions}. For instance, the
dd17bc38
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9686secure shell service @emph{extends} the Shepherd---GuixSD's
9687initialization system, running as PID@tie{}1---by giving it the command
9688lines to start and stop the secure shell daemon (@pxref{Networking
9689Services, @code{lsh-service}}); the UPower service extends the D-Bus
9690service by passing it its @file{.service} specification, and extends the
9691udev service by passing it device management rules (@pxref{Desktop
9692Services, @code{upower-service}}); the Guix daemon service extends the
9693Shepherd by passing it the command lines to start and stop the daemon,
9694and extends the account service by passing it a list of required build
9695user accounts (@pxref{Base Services}).
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9696
9697All in all, services and their ``extends'' relations form a directed
9698acyclic graph (DAG). If we represent services as boxes and extensions
9699as arrows, a typical system might provide something like this:
9700
9701@image{images/service-graph,,5in,Typical service extension graph.}
9702
d62e201c
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9703@cindex system service
9704At the bottom, we see the @dfn{system service}, which produces the
9705directory containing everything to run and boot the system, as returned
9706by the @command{guix system build} command. @xref{Service Reference},
9707to learn about the other service types shown here.
d6c3267a
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9708@xref{system-extension-graph, the @command{guix system extension-graph}
9709command}, for information on how to generate this representation for a
9710particular operating system definition.
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9711
9712@cindex service types
9713Technically, developers can define @dfn{service types} to express these
9714relations. There can be any number of services of a given type on the
9715system---for instance, a system running two instances of the GNU secure
9716shell server (lsh) has two instances of @var{lsh-service-type}, with
9717different parameters.
9718
9719The following section describes the programming interface for service
9720types and services.
9721
9722@node Service Types and Services
9723@subsubsection Service Types and Services
9724
9725A @dfn{service type} is a node in the DAG described above. Let us start
9726with a simple example, the service type for the Guix build daemon
9727(@pxref{Invoking guix-daemon}):
9728
9729@example
9730(define guix-service-type
9731 (service-type
9732 (name 'guix)
9733 (extensions
d4053c71 9734 (list (service-extension shepherd-root-service-type guix-shepherd-service)
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9735 (service-extension account-service-type guix-accounts)
9736 (service-extension activation-service-type guix-activation)))))
9737@end example
8451a568 9738
cf4a9129 9739@noindent
0adfe95a
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9740It defines a two things:
9741
9742@enumerate
9743@item
9744A name, whose sole purpose is to make inspection and debugging easier.
9745
9746@item
9747A list of @dfn{service extensions}, where each extension designates the
9748target service type and a procedure that, given the service's
9749parameters, returns a list of object to extend the service of that type.
9750
9751Every service type has at least one service extension. The only
9752exception is the @dfn{boot service type}, which is the ultimate service.
9753@end enumerate
9754
9755In this example, @var{guix-service-type} extends three services:
9756
9757@table @var
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9758@item shepherd-root-service-type
9759The @var{guix-shepherd-service} procedure defines how the Shepherd
9760service is extended. Namely, it returns a @code{<shepherd-service>}
9761object that defines how @command{guix-daemon} is started and stopped
9762(@pxref{Shepherd Services}).
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9763
9764@item account-service-type
9765This extension for this service is computed by @var{guix-accounts},
9766which returns a list of @code{user-group} and @code{user-account}
9767objects representing the build user accounts (@pxref{Invoking
9768guix-daemon}).
9769
9770@item activation-service-type
9771Here @var{guix-activation} is a procedure that returns a gexp, which is
9772a code snippet to run at ``activation time''---e.g., when the service is
9773booted.
9774@end table
9775
9776A service of this type is instantiated like this:
9777
9778@example
9779(service guix-service-type
9780 (guix-configuration
9781 (build-accounts 5)
9782 (use-substitutes? #f)))
9783@end example
9784
9785The second argument to the @code{service} form is a value representing
9786the parameters of this specific service instance.
9787@xref{guix-configuration-type, @code{guix-configuration}}, for
9788information about the @code{guix-configuration} data type.
9789
9790@var{guix-service-type} is quite simple because it extends other
9791services but is not extensible itself.
9792
9793@c @subsubsubsection Extensible Service Types
9794
9795The service type for an @emph{extensible} service looks like this:
9796
9797@example
9798(define udev-service-type
9799 (service-type (name 'udev)
9800 (extensions
d4053c71
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9801 (list (service-extension shepherd-root-service-type
9802 udev-shepherd-service)))
0adfe95a
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9803
9804 (compose concatenate) ;concatenate the list of rules
9805 (extend (lambda (config rules)
9806 (match config
9807 (($ <udev-configuration> udev initial-rules)
9808 (udev-configuration
9809 (udev udev) ;the udev package to use
9810 (rules (append initial-rules rules)))))))))
9811@end example
9812
9813This is the service type for the
9814@uref{https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Project:Eudev, eudev device
9815management daemon}. Compared to the previous example, in addition to an
d4053c71 9816extension of @var{shepherd-root-service-type}, we see two new fields:
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9817
9818@table @code
9819@item compose
9820This is the procedure to @dfn{compose} the list of extensions to
9821services of this type.
9822
9823Services can extend the udev service by passing it lists of rules; we
9824compose those extensions simply by concatenating them.
9825
9826@item extend
9827This procedure defines how the service's value is @dfn{extended} with
9828the composition of the extensions.
9829
9830Udev extensions are composed into a list of rules, but the udev service
9831value is itself a @code{<udev-configuration>} record. So here, we
a40424bd 9832extend that record by appending the list of rules it contains to the
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9833list of contributed rules.
9834@end table
9835
9836There can be only one instance of an extensible service type such as
9837@var{udev-service-type}. If there were more, the
9838@code{service-extension} specifications would be ambiguous.
9839
9840Still here? The next section provides a reference of the programming
9841interface for services.
9842
9843@node Service Reference
9844@subsubsection Service Reference
9845
9846We have seen an overview of service types (@pxref{Service Types and
9847Services}). This section provides a reference on how to manipulate
9848services and service types. This interface is provided by the
9849@code{(gnu services)} module.
9850
9851@deffn {Scheme Procedure} service @var{type} @var{value}
9852Return a new service of @var{type}, a @code{<service-type>} object (see
9853below.) @var{value} can be any object; it represents the parameters of
9854this particular service instance.
9855@end deffn
9856
9857@deffn {Scheme Procedure} service? @var{obj}
9858Return true if @var{obj} is a service.
9859@end deffn
8451a568 9860
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9861@deffn {Scheme Procedure} service-kind @var{service}
9862Return the type of @var{service}---i.e., a @code{<service-type>} object.
9863@end deffn
9864
9865@deffn {Scheme Procedure} service-parameters @var{service}
9866Return the value associated with @var{service}. It represents its
9867parameters.
9868@end deffn
9869
9870Here is an example of how a service is created and manipulated:
9871
9872@example
9873(define s
9874 (service nginx-service-type
9875 (nginx-configuration
9876 (nginx nginx)
9877 (log-directory log-directory)
9878 (run-directory run-directory)
9879 (file config-file))))
9880
9881(service? s)
9882@result{} #t
9883
9884(eq? (service-kind s) nginx-service-type)
9885@result{} #t
9886@end example
9887
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9888The @code{modify-services} form provides a handy way to change the
9889parameters of some of the services of a list such as
9890@var{%base-services} (@pxref{Base Services, @code{%base-services}}). Of
9891course, you could always use standard list combinators such as
9892@code{map} and @code{fold} to do that (@pxref{SRFI-1, List Library,,
9893guile, GNU Guile Reference Manual}); @code{modify-services} simply
9894provides a more concise form for this common pattern.
9895
9896@deffn {Scheme Syntax} modify-services @var{services} @
9897 (@var{type} @var{variable} => @var{body}) @dots{}
9898
9899Modify the services listed in @var{services} according to the given
9900clauses. Each clause has the form:
9901
9902@example
9903(@var{type} @var{variable} => @var{body})
9904@end example
9905
9906where @var{type} is a service type, such as @var{guix-service-type}, and
9907@var{variable} is an identifier that is bound within @var{body} to the
9908value of the service of that @var{type}. @xref{Using the Configuration
9909System}, for an example.
9910
9911This is a shorthand for:
9912
9913@example
9914(map (lambda (service) @dots{}) @var{services})
9915@end example
9916@end deffn
9917
9918Next comes the programming interface for service types. This is
9919something you want to know when writing new service definitions, but not
9920necessarily when simply looking for ways to customize your
9921@code{operating-system} declaration.
9922
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9923@deftp {Data Type} service-type
9924@cindex service type
9925This is the representation of a @dfn{service type} (@pxref{Service Types
9926and Services}).
9927
9928@table @asis
9929@item @code{name}
9930This is a symbol, used only to simplify inspection and debugging.
9931
9932@item @code{extensions}
9933A non-empty list of @code{<service-extension>} objects (see below.)
9934
9935@item @code{compose} (default: @code{#f})
9936If this is @code{#f}, then the service type denotes services that cannot
9937be extended---i.e., services that do not receive ``values'' from other
9938services.
9939
9940Otherwise, it must be a one-argument procedure. The procedure is called
9941by @code{fold-services} and is passed a list of values collected from
9942extensions. It must return a value that is a valid parameter value for
9943the service instance.
9944
9945@item @code{extend} (default: @code{#f})
9946If this is @code{#f}, services of this type cannot be extended.
9947
9948Otherwise, it must be a two-argument procedure: @code{fold-services}
9949calls it, passing it the service's initial value as the first argument
9950and the result of applying @code{compose} to the extension values as the
9951second argument.
9952@end table
9953
9954@xref{Service Types and Services}, for examples.
9955@end deftp
9956
9957@deffn {Scheme Procedure} service-extension @var{target-type} @
9958 @var{compute}
9959Return a new extension for services of type @var{target-type}.
9960@var{compute} must be a one-argument procedure: @code{fold-services}
9961calls it, passing it the value associated with the service that provides
9962the extension; it must return a valid value for the target service.
9963@end deffn
9964
9965@deffn {Scheme Procedure} service-extension? @var{obj}
9966Return true if @var{obj} is a service extension.
9967@end deffn
9968
9969At the core of the service abstraction lies the @code{fold-services}
9970procedure, which is responsible for ``compiling'' a list of services
d62e201c
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9971down to a single directory that contains everything needed to boot and
9972run the system---the directory shown by the @command{guix system build}
9973command (@pxref{Invoking guix system}). In essence, it propagates
9974service extensions down the service graph, updating each node parameters
9975on the way, until it reaches the root node.
0adfe95a
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9976
9977@deffn {Scheme Procedure} fold-services @var{services} @
d62e201c 9978 [#:target-type @var{system-service-type}]
0adfe95a
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9979Fold @var{services} by propagating their extensions down to the root of
9980type @var{target-type}; return the root service adjusted accordingly.
9981@end deffn
9982
9983Lastly, the @code{(gnu services)} module also defines several essential
9984service types, some of which are listed below.
9985
d62e201c
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9986@defvr {Scheme Variable} system-service-type
9987This is the root of the service graph. It produces the system directory
9988as returned by the @command{guix system build} command.
9989@end defvr
9990
0adfe95a 9991@defvr {Scheme Variable} boot-service-type
d62e201c
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9992The type of the ``boot service'', which produces the @dfn{boot script}.
9993The boot script is what the initial RAM disk runs when booting.
0adfe95a
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9994@end defvr
9995
9996@defvr {Scheme Variable} etc-service-type
9997The type of the @file{/etc} service. This service can be extended by
9998passing it name/file tuples such as:
9999
10000@example
10001(list `("issue" ,(plain-file "issue" "Welcome!\n")))
10002@end example
10003
10004In this example, the effect would be to add an @file{/etc/issue} file
10005pointing to the given file.
10006@end defvr
10007
10008@defvr {Scheme Variable} setuid-program-service-type
10009Type for the ``setuid-program service''. This service collects lists of
10010executable file names, passed as gexps, and adds them to the set of
10011setuid-root programs on the system (@pxref{Setuid Programs}).
10012@end defvr
10013
af4c3fd5
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10014@defvr {Scheme Variable} profile-service-type
10015Type of the service that populates the @dfn{system profile}---i.e., the
10016programs under @file{/run/current-system/profile}. Other services can
10017extend it by passing it lists of packages to add to the system profile.
10018@end defvr
10019
0adfe95a 10020
dd17bc38
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10021@node Shepherd Services
10022@subsubsection Shepherd Services
0adfe95a
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10023
10024@cindex PID 1
10025@cindex init system
a40424bd
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10026The @code{(gnu services shepherd)} module provides a way to define
10027services managed by the GNU@tie{}Shepherd, which is the GuixSD
10028initialization system---the first process that is started when the
10029system boots, aka. PID@tie{}1 (@pxref{Introduction,,, shepherd, The GNU
10030Shepherd Manual}).
6f305ea5 10031
dd17bc38
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10032Services in the Shepherd can depend on each other. For instance, the
10033SSH daemon may need to be started after the syslog daemon has been
10034started, which in turn can only happen once all the file systems have
10035been mounted. The simple operating system defined earlier (@pxref{Using
10036the Configuration System}) results in a service graph like this:
6f305ea5 10037
710fa231 10038@image{images/shepherd-graph,,5in,Typical shepherd service graph.}
6f305ea5
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10039
10040You can actually generate such a graph for any operating system
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10041definition using the @command{guix system shepherd-graph} command
10042(@pxref{system-shepherd-graph, @command{guix system shepherd-graph}}).
6f305ea5 10043
d4053c71
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10044The @var{%shepherd-root-service} is a service object representing
10045PID@tie{}1, of type @var{shepherd-root-service-type}; it can be extended
10046by passing it lists of @code{<shepherd-service>} objects.
0adfe95a 10047
d4053c71 10048@deftp {Data Type} shepherd-service
dd17bc38 10049The data type representing a service managed by the Shepherd.
0adfe95a
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10050
10051@table @asis
10052@item @code{provision}
10053This is a list of symbols denoting what the service provides.
10054
dd17bc38
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10055These are the names that may be passed to @command{herd start},
10056@command{herd status}, and similar commands (@pxref{Invoking herd,,,
10057shepherd, The GNU Shepherd Manual}). @xref{Slots of services, the
10058@code{provides} slot,, shepherd, The GNU Shepherd Manual}, for details.
0adfe95a
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10059
10060@item @code{requirements} (default: @code{'()})
dd17bc38 10061List of symbols denoting the Shepherd services this one depends on.
0adfe95a
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10062
10063@item @code{respawn?} (default: @code{#t})
10064Whether to restart the service when it stops, for instance when the
10065underlying process dies.
10066
10067@item @code{start}
10068@itemx @code{stop} (default: @code{#~(const #f)})
dd17bc38
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10069The @code{start} and @code{stop} fields refer to the Shepherd's
10070facilities to start and stop processes (@pxref{Service De- and
10071Constructors,,, shepherd, The GNU Shepherd Manual}). They are given as
10072G-expressions that get expanded in the Shepherd configuration file
10073(@pxref{G-Expressions}).
0adfe95a
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10074
10075@item @code{documentation}
10076A documentation string, as shown when running:
10077
10078@example
dd17bc38 10079herd doc @var{service-name}
0adfe95a
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10080@end example
10081
10082where @var{service-name} is one of the symbols in @var{provision}
dd17bc38 10083(@pxref{Invoking herd,,, shepherd, The GNU Shepherd Manual}).
fae685b9
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10084
10085@item @code{modules} (default: @var{%default-modules})
10086This is the list of modules that must be in scope when @code{start} and
10087@code{stop} are evaluated.
10088
10089@item @code{imported-modules} (default: @var{%default-imported-modules})
10090This is the list of modules to import in the execution environment of
dd17bc38 10091the Shepherd.
fae685b9 10092
0adfe95a
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10093@end table
10094@end deftp
10095
d4053c71 10096@defvr {Scheme Variable} shepherd-root-service-type
dd17bc38 10097The service type for the Shepherd ``root service''---i.e., PID@tie{}1.
0adfe95a
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10098
10099This is the service type that extensions target when they want to create
dd17bc38 10100shepherd services (@pxref{Service Types and Services}, for an example).
d4053c71 10101Each extension must pass a list of @code{<shepherd-service>}.
0adfe95a
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10102@end defvr
10103
d4053c71 10104@defvr {Scheme Variable} %shepherd-root-service
0adfe95a
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10105This service represents PID@tie{}1.
10106@end defvr
8451a568 10107
8451a568 10108
cf4a9129
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10109@node Installing Debugging Files
10110@section Installing Debugging Files
8451a568 10111
cf4a9129
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10112@cindex debugging files
10113Program binaries, as produced by the GCC compilers for instance, are
10114typically written in the ELF format, with a section containing
10115@dfn{debugging information}. Debugging information is what allows the
10116debugger, GDB, to map binary code to source code; it is required to
10117debug a compiled program in good conditions.
8451a568 10118
cf4a9129
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10119The problem with debugging information is that is takes up a fair amount
10120of disk space. For example, debugging information for the GNU C Library
10121weighs in at more than 60 MiB. Thus, as a user, keeping all the
10122debugging info of all the installed programs is usually not an option.
10123Yet, space savings should not come at the cost of an impediment to
10124debugging---especially in the GNU system, which should make it easier
10125for users to exert their computing freedom (@pxref{GNU Distribution}).
8451a568 10126
cf4a9129
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10127Thankfully, the GNU Binary Utilities (Binutils) and GDB provide a
10128mechanism that allows users to get the best of both worlds: debugging
10129information can be stripped from the binaries and stored in separate
10130files. GDB is then able to load debugging information from those files,
10131when they are available (@pxref{Separate Debug Files,,, gdb, Debugging
10132with GDB}).
8451a568 10133
cf4a9129
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10134The GNU distribution takes advantage of this by storing debugging
10135information in the @code{lib/debug} sub-directory of a separate package
10136output unimaginatively called @code{debug} (@pxref{Packages with
10137Multiple Outputs}). Users can choose to install the @code{debug} output
10138of a package when they need it. For instance, the following command
10139installs the debugging information for the GNU C Library and for GNU
10140Guile:
8451a568
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10141
10142@example
cf4a9129 10143guix package -i glibc:debug guile:debug
8451a568
LC
10144@end example
10145
cf4a9129
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10146GDB must then be told to look for debug files in the user's profile, by
10147setting the @code{debug-file-directory} variable (consider setting it
10148from the @file{~/.gdbinit} file, @pxref{Startup,,, gdb, Debugging with
10149GDB}):
8451a568 10150
cf4a9129
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10151@example
10152(gdb) set debug-file-directory ~/.guix-profile/lib/debug
10153@end example
8451a568 10154
cf4a9129
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10155From there on, GDB will pick up debugging information from the
10156@code{.debug} files under @file{~/.guix-profile/lib/debug}.
8451a568 10157
cf4a9129
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10158In addition, you will most likely want GDB to be able to show the source
10159code being debugged. To do that, you will have to unpack the source
10160code of the package of interest (obtained with @code{guix build
10161--source}, @pxref{Invoking guix build}), and to point GDB to that source
10162directory using the @code{directory} command (@pxref{Source Path,
10163@code{directory},, gdb, Debugging with GDB}).
8451a568 10164
cf4a9129
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10165@c XXX: keep me up-to-date
10166The @code{debug} output mechanism in Guix is implemented by the
10167@code{gnu-build-system} (@pxref{Build Systems}). Currently, it is
10168opt-in---debugging information is available only for those packages
10169whose definition explicitly declares a @code{debug} output. This may be
10170changed to opt-out in the future, if our build farm servers can handle
10171the load. To check whether a package has a @code{debug} output, use
10172@command{guix package --list-available} (@pxref{Invoking guix package}).
8451a568 10173
8451a568 10174
05962f29
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10175@node Security Updates
10176@section Security Updates
10177
843858b8
LC
10178@quotation Note
10179As of version @value{VERSION}, the feature described in this section is
10180experimental.
10181@end quotation
05962f29
LC
10182
10183@cindex security updates
10184Occasionally, important security vulnerabilities are discovered in core
10185software packages and must be patched. Guix follows a functional
10186package management discipline (@pxref{Introduction}), which implies
10187that, when a package is changed, @emph{every package that depends on it}
10188must be rebuilt. This can significantly slow down the deployment of
10189fixes in core packages such as libc or Bash, since basically the whole
10190distribution would need to be rebuilt. Using pre-built binaries helps
10191(@pxref{Substitutes}), but deployment may still take more time than
10192desired.
10193
10194@cindex grafts
10195To address that, Guix implements @dfn{grafts}, a mechanism that allows
10196for fast deployment of critical updates without the costs associated
10197with a whole-distribution rebuild. The idea is to rebuild only the
10198package that needs to be patched, and then to ``graft'' it onto packages
10199explicitly installed by the user and that were previously referring to
10200the original package. The cost of grafting is typically very low, and
10201order of magnitudes lower than a full rebuild of the dependency chain.
10202
10203@cindex replacements of packages, for grafts
10204For instance, suppose a security update needs to be applied to Bash.
10205Guix developers will provide a package definition for the ``fixed''
10206Bash, say @var{bash-fixed}, in the usual way (@pxref{Defining
10207Packages}). Then, the original package definition is augmented with a
10208@code{replacement} field pointing to the package containing the bug fix:
10209
10210@example
10211(define bash
10212 (package
10213 (name "bash")
10214 ;; @dots{}
10215 (replacement bash-fixed)))
10216@end example
10217
10218From there on, any package depending directly or indirectly on Bash that
10219is installed will automatically be ``rewritten'' to refer to
10220@var{bash-fixed} instead of @var{bash}. This grafting process takes
10221time proportional to the size of the package, but expect less than a
10222minute for an ``average'' package on a recent machine.
10223
10224Currently, the graft and the package it replaces (@var{bash-fixed} and
10225@var{bash} in the example above) must have the exact same @code{name}
10226and @code{version} fields. This restriction mostly comes from the fact
10227that grafting works by patching files, including binary files, directly.
10228Other restrictions may apply: for instance, when adding a graft to a
10229package providing a shared library, the original shared library and its
10230replacement must have the same @code{SONAME} and be binary-compatible.
10231
10232
cf4a9129
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10233@node Package Modules
10234@section Package Modules
8451a568 10235
cf4a9129
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10236From a programming viewpoint, the package definitions of the
10237GNU distribution are provided by Guile modules in the @code{(gnu packages
10238@dots{})} name space@footnote{Note that packages under the @code{(gnu
10239packages @dots{})} module name space are not necessarily ``GNU
10240packages''. This module naming scheme follows the usual Guile module
10241naming convention: @code{gnu} means that these modules are distributed
10242as part of the GNU system, and @code{packages} identifies modules that
10243define packages.} (@pxref{Modules, Guile modules,, guile, GNU Guile
10244Reference Manual}). For instance, the @code{(gnu packages emacs)}
10245module exports a variable named @code{emacs}, which is bound to a
10246@code{<package>} object (@pxref{Defining Packages}).
113daf62 10247
300868ba 10248The @code{(gnu packages @dots{})} module name space is
cf4a9129
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10249automatically scanned for packages by the command-line tools. For
10250instance, when running @code{guix package -i emacs}, all the @code{(gnu
10251packages @dots{})} modules are scanned until one that exports a package
10252object whose name is @code{emacs} is found. This package search
10253facility is implemented in the @code{(gnu packages)} module.
113daf62 10254
300868ba 10255@cindex customization, of packages
8689901f 10256@cindex package module search path
cf4a9129 10257Users can store package definitions in modules with different
60142854 10258names---e.g., @code{(my-packages emacs)}@footnote{Note that the file
c95ded7e
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10259name and module name must match. For instance, the @code{(my-packages
10260emacs)} module must be stored in a @file{my-packages/emacs.scm} file
10261relative to the load path specified with @option{--load-path} or
10262@code{GUIX_PACKAGE_PATH}. @xref{Modules and the File System,,,
10263guile, GNU Guile Reference Manual}, for details.}. These package definitions
300868ba
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10264will not be visible by default. Thus, users can invoke commands such as
10265@command{guix package} and @command{guix build} have to be used with the
c95ded7e
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10266@code{-e} option so that they know where to find the package. Better
10267yet, they can use the
300868ba 10268@code{-L} option of these commands to make those modules visible
8689901f
LC
10269(@pxref{Invoking guix build, @code{--load-path}}), or define the
10270@code{GUIX_PACKAGE_PATH} environment variable. This environment
10271variable makes it easy to extend or customize the distribution and is
10272honored by all the user interfaces.
10273
10274@defvr {Environment Variable} GUIX_PACKAGE_PATH
10275This is a colon-separated list of directories to search for package
10276modules. Directories listed in this variable take precedence over the
10277distribution's own modules.
10278@end defvr
ef5dd60a 10279
cf4a9129
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10280The distribution is fully @dfn{bootstrapped} and @dfn{self-contained}:
10281each package is built based solely on other packages in the
10282distribution. The root of this dependency graph is a small set of
10283@dfn{bootstrap binaries}, provided by the @code{(gnu packages
10284bootstrap)} module. For more information on bootstrapping,
081145cf 10285@pxref{Bootstrapping}.
ef5dd60a 10286
cf4a9129
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10287@node Packaging Guidelines
10288@section Packaging Guidelines
ef5dd60a 10289
cf4a9129
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10290The GNU distribution is nascent and may well lack some of your favorite
10291packages. This section describes how you can help make the distribution
10292grow. @xref{Contributing}, for additional information on how you can
10293help.
ef5dd60a 10294
cf4a9129
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10295Free software packages are usually distributed in the form of
10296@dfn{source code tarballs}---typically @file{tar.gz} files that contain
10297all the source files. Adding a package to the distribution means
10298essentially two things: adding a @dfn{recipe} that describes how to
10299build the package, including a list of other packages required to build
f97c9175 10300it, and adding @dfn{package metadata} along with that recipe, such as a
cf4a9129 10301description and licensing information.
ef5dd60a 10302
cf4a9129
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10303In Guix all this information is embodied in @dfn{package definitions}.
10304Package definitions provide a high-level view of the package. They are
10305written using the syntax of the Scheme programming language; in fact,
10306for each package we define a variable bound to the package definition,
10307and export that variable from a module (@pxref{Package Modules}).
10308However, in-depth Scheme knowledge is @emph{not} a prerequisite for
10309creating packages. For more information on package definitions,
081145cf 10310@pxref{Defining Packages}.
ef5dd60a 10311
cf4a9129
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10312Once a package definition is in place, stored in a file in the Guix
10313source tree, it can be tested using the @command{guix build} command
10314(@pxref{Invoking guix build}). For example, assuming the new package is
c71979f4
LC
10315called @code{gnew}, you may run this command from the Guix build tree
10316(@pxref{Running Guix Before It Is Installed}):
ef5dd60a
LC
10317
10318@example
cf4a9129 10319./pre-inst-env guix build gnew --keep-failed
ef5dd60a 10320@end example
ef5dd60a 10321
cf4a9129
LC
10322Using @code{--keep-failed} makes it easier to debug build failures since
10323it provides access to the failed build tree. Another useful
10324command-line option when debugging is @code{--log-file}, to access the
10325build log.
ef5dd60a 10326
cf4a9129
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10327If the package is unknown to the @command{guix} command, it may be that
10328the source file contains a syntax error, or lacks a @code{define-public}
10329clause to export the package variable. To figure it out, you may load
10330the module from Guile to get more information about the actual error:
ef5dd60a 10331
cf4a9129
LC
10332@example
10333./pre-inst-env guile -c '(use-modules (gnu packages gnew))'
10334@end example
ef5dd60a 10335
cf4a9129
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10336Once your package builds correctly, please send us a patch
10337(@pxref{Contributing}). Well, if you need help, we will be happy to
10338help you too. Once the patch is committed in the Guix repository, the
10339new package automatically gets built on the supported platforms by
2b1cee21 10340@url{http://hydra.gnu.org/jobset/gnu/master, our continuous integration
cf4a9129 10341system}.
ef5dd60a 10342
cf4a9129
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10343@cindex substituter
10344Users can obtain the new package definition simply by running
10345@command{guix pull} (@pxref{Invoking guix pull}). When
10346@code{hydra.gnu.org} is done building the package, installing the
10347package automatically downloads binaries from there
10348(@pxref{Substitutes}). The only place where human intervention is
10349needed is to review and apply the patch.
ef5dd60a 10350
ef5dd60a 10351
cf4a9129 10352@menu
ec0339cd
LC
10353* Software Freedom:: What may go into the distribution.
10354* Package Naming:: What's in a name?
10355* Version Numbers:: When the name is not enough.
cbd02397 10356* Synopses and Descriptions:: Helping users find the right package.
ec0339cd
LC
10357* Python Modules:: Taming the snake.
10358* Perl Modules:: Little pearls.
10359* Fonts:: Fond of fonts.
cf4a9129 10360@end menu
ef5dd60a 10361
cf4a9129
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10362@node Software Freedom
10363@subsection Software Freedom
ef5dd60a 10364
cf4a9129 10365@c Adapted from http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/philosophy.html.
c11a6eb1 10366
cf4a9129
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10367The GNU operating system has been developed so that users can have
10368freedom in their computing. GNU is @dfn{free software}, meaning that
10369users have the @url{http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html,four
10370essential freedoms}: to run the program, to study and change the program
10371in source code form, to redistribute exact copies, and to distribute
10372modified versions. Packages found in the GNU distribution provide only
10373software that conveys these four freedoms.
c11a6eb1 10374
cf4a9129
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10375In addition, the GNU distribution follow the
10376@url{http://www.gnu.org/distros/free-system-distribution-guidelines.html,free
10377software distribution guidelines}. Among other things, these guidelines
10378reject non-free firmware, recommendations of non-free software, and
10379discuss ways to deal with trademarks and patents.
ef5dd60a 10380
cf4a9129
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10381Some packages contain a small and optional subset that violates the
10382above guidelines, for instance because this subset is itself non-free
10383code. When that happens, the offending items are removed with
10384appropriate patches or code snippets in the package definition's
10385@code{origin} form (@pxref{Defining Packages}). That way, @code{guix
10386build --source} returns the ``freed'' source rather than the unmodified
10387upstream source.
ef5dd60a 10388
ef5dd60a 10389
cf4a9129
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10390@node Package Naming
10391@subsection Package Naming
ef5dd60a 10392
cf4a9129
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10393A package has actually two names associated with it:
10394First, there is the name of the @emph{Scheme variable}, the one following
10395@code{define-public}. By this name, the package can be made known in the
10396Scheme code, for instance as input to another package. Second, there is
10397the string in the @code{name} field of a package definition. This name
10398is used by package management commands such as
10399@command{guix package} and @command{guix build}.
ef5dd60a 10400
cf4a9129
LC
10401Both are usually the same and correspond to the lowercase conversion of
10402the project name chosen upstream, with underscores replaced with
10403hyphens. For instance, GNUnet is available as @code{gnunet}, and
10404SDL_net as @code{sdl-net}.
927097ef 10405
cf4a9129 10406We do not add @code{lib} prefixes for library packages, unless these are
081145cf 10407already part of the official project name. But @pxref{Python
cf4a9129
LC
10408Modules} and @ref{Perl Modules} for special rules concerning modules for
10409the Python and Perl languages.
927097ef 10410
1b366ee4 10411Font package names are handled differently, @pxref{Fonts}.
7fec52b7 10412
ef5dd60a 10413
cf4a9129
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10414@node Version Numbers
10415@subsection Version Numbers
ef5dd60a 10416
cf4a9129
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10417We usually package only the latest version of a given free software
10418project. But sometimes, for instance for incompatible library versions,
10419two (or more) versions of the same package are needed. These require
10420different Scheme variable names. We use the name as defined
10421in @ref{Package Naming}
10422for the most recent version; previous versions use the same name, suffixed
10423by @code{-} and the smallest prefix of the version number that may
10424distinguish the two versions.
ef5dd60a 10425
cf4a9129
LC
10426The name inside the package definition is the same for all versions of a
10427package and does not contain any version number.
ef5dd60a 10428
cf4a9129 10429For instance, the versions 2.24.20 and 3.9.12 of GTK+ may be packaged as follows:
ef5dd60a 10430
cf4a9129
LC
10431@example
10432(define-public gtk+
10433 (package
17d8e33f
ML
10434 (name "gtk+")
10435 (version "3.9.12")
10436 ...))
cf4a9129
LC
10437(define-public gtk+-2
10438 (package
17d8e33f
ML
10439 (name "gtk+")
10440 (version "2.24.20")
10441 ...))
cf4a9129
LC
10442@end example
10443If we also wanted GTK+ 3.8.2, this would be packaged as
10444@example
10445(define-public gtk+-3.8
10446 (package
17d8e33f
ML
10447 (name "gtk+")
10448 (version "3.8.2")
10449 ...))
cf4a9129 10450@end example
ef5dd60a 10451
880d647d
LC
10452@c See <https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/guix-devel/2016-01/msg00425.html>,
10453@c for a discussion of what follows.
10454@cindex version number, for VCS snapshots
10455Occasionally, we package snapshots of upstream's version control system
10456(VCS) instead of formal releases. This should remain exceptional,
10457because it is up to upstream developers to clarify what the stable
10458release is. Yet, it is sometimes necessary. So, what should we put in
10459the @code{version} field?
10460
10461Clearly, we need to make the commit identifier of the VCS snapshot
10462visible in the version string, but we also need to make sure that the
10463version string is monotonically increasing so that @command{guix package
10464--upgrade} can determine which version is newer. Since commit
10465identifiers, notably with Git, are not monotonically increasing, we add
10466a revision number that we increase each time we upgrade to a newer
10467snapshot. The resulting version string looks like this:
10468
10469@example
104702.0.11-3.cabba9e
10471 ^ ^ ^
10472 | | `-- upstream commit ID
10473 | |
10474 | `--- Guix package revision
10475 |
10476latest upstream version
10477@end example
10478
10479It is a good idea to strip commit identifiers in the @code{version}
10480field to, say, 7 digits. It avoids an aesthetic annoyance (assuming
10481aesthetics have a role to play here) as well as problems related to OS
10482limits such as the maximum shebang length (127 bytes for the Linux
10483kernel.) It is best to use the full commit identifiers in
561360a5
LC
10484@code{origin}s, though, to avoid ambiguities. A typical package
10485definition may look like this:
10486
10487@example
10488(define my-package
10489 (let ((commit "c3f29bc928d5900971f65965feaae59e1272a3f7"))
10490 (package
10491 (version (string-append "0.9-1."
10492 (string-take commit 7)))
10493 (source (origin
10494 (method git-fetch)
10495 (uri (git-reference
10496 (url "git://example.org/my-package.git")
10497 (commit commit)))
10498 (sha256 (base32 "1mbikn@dots{}"))
10499 (file-name (string-append "my-package-" version
10500 "-checkout"))))
10501 ;; @dots{}
10502 )))
10503@end example
880d647d 10504
cbd02397
LC
10505@node Synopses and Descriptions
10506@subsection Synopses and Descriptions
10507
10508As we have seen before, each package in GNU@tie{}Guix includes a
10509synopsis and a description (@pxref{Defining Packages}). Synopses and
10510descriptions are important: They are what @command{guix package
10511--search} searches, and a crucial piece of information to help users
10512determine whether a given package suits their needs. Consequently,
10513packagers should pay attention to what goes into them.
10514
10515Synopses must start with a capital letter and must not end with a
10516period. They must not start with ``a'' or ``the'', which usually does
10517not bring anything; for instance, prefer ``File-frobbing tool'' over ``A
10518tool that frobs files''. The synopsis should say what the package
10519is---e.g., ``Core GNU utilities (file, text, shell)''---or what it is
10520used for---e.g., the synopsis for GNU@tie{}grep is ``Print lines
10521matching a pattern''.
10522
10523Keep in mind that the synopsis must be meaningful for a very wide
10524audience. For example, ``Manipulate alignments in the SAM format''
10525might make sense for a seasoned bioinformatics researcher, but might be
10526fairly unhelpful or even misleading to a non-specialized audience. It
10527is a good idea to come up with a synopsis that gives an idea of the
10528application domain of the package. In this example, this might give
10529something like ``Manipulate nucleotide sequence alignments'', which
10530hopefully gives the user a better idea of whether this is what they are
10531looking for.
10532
10533@cindex Texinfo markup, in package descriptions
10534Descriptions should take between five and ten lines. Use full
10535sentences, and avoid using acronyms without first introducing them.
10536Descriptions can include Texinfo markup, which is useful to introduce
10537ornaments such as @code{@@code} or @code{@@dfn}, bullet lists, or
ba7d6c76
ML
10538hyperlinks (@pxref{Overview,,, texinfo, GNU Texinfo}). However you
10539should be careful when using some characters for example @samp{@@} and
10540curly braces which are the basic special characters in Texinfo
10541(@pxref{Special Characters,,, texinfo, GNU Texinfo}). User interfaces
10542such as @command{guix package --show} take care of rendering it
10543appropriately.
cbd02397
LC
10544
10545Synopses and descriptions are translated by volunteers
10546@uref{http://translationproject.org/domain/guix-packages.html, at the
10547Translation Project} so that as many users as possible can read them in
10548their native language. User interfaces search them and display them in
10549the language specified by the current locale.
10550
10551Translation is a lot of work so, as a packager, please pay even more
10552attention to your synopses and descriptions as every change may entail
ba7d6c76 10553additional work for translators. In order to help them, it is possible
36743e71 10554to make recommendations or instructions visible to them by inserting
ba7d6c76
ML
10555special comments like this (@pxref{xgettext Invocation,,, gettext, GNU
10556Gettext}):
10557
10558@example
10559;; TRANSLATORS: "X11 resize-and-rotate" should not be translated.
10560(description "ARandR is designed to provide a simple visual front end
10561for the X11 resize-and-rotate (RandR) extension. @dots{}")
10562@end example
cbd02397 10563
ef5dd60a 10564
cf4a9129
LC
10565@node Python Modules
10566@subsection Python Modules
ef5dd60a 10567
cf4a9129
LC
10568We currently package Python 2 and Python 3, under the Scheme variable names
10569@code{python-2} and @code{python} as explained in @ref{Version Numbers}.
10570To avoid confusion and naming clashes with other programming languages, it
10571seems desirable that the name of a package for a Python module contains
10572the word @code{python}.
ef5dd60a 10573
cf4a9129
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10574Some modules are compatible with only one version of Python, others with both.
10575If the package Foo compiles only with Python 3, we name it
10576@code{python-foo}; if it compiles only with Python 2, we name it
10577@code{python2-foo}. If it is compatible with both versions, we create two
10578packages with the corresponding names.
ef5dd60a 10579
cf4a9129
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10580If a project already contains the word @code{python}, we drop this;
10581for instance, the module python-dateutil is packaged under the names
10582@code{python-dateutil} and @code{python2-dateutil}.
113daf62 10583
523e4896 10584
cf4a9129
LC
10585@node Perl Modules
10586@subsection Perl Modules
523e4896 10587
cf4a9129
LC
10588Perl programs standing for themselves are named as any other package,
10589using the lowercase upstream name.
10590For Perl packages containing a single class, we use the lowercase class name,
10591replace all occurrences of @code{::} by dashes and prepend the prefix
10592@code{perl-}.
10593So the class @code{XML::Parser} becomes @code{perl-xml-parser}.
10594Modules containing several classes keep their lowercase upstream name and
10595are also prepended by @code{perl-}. Such modules tend to have the word
10596@code{perl} somewhere in their name, which gets dropped in favor of the
10597prefix. For instance, @code{libwww-perl} becomes @code{perl-libwww}.
523e4896 10598
523e4896 10599
7fec52b7
AE
10600@node Fonts
10601@subsection Fonts
10602
10603For fonts that are in general not installed by a user for typesetting
10604purposes, or that are distributed as part of a larger software package,
10605we rely on the general packaging rules for software; for instance, this
10606applies to the fonts delivered as part of the X.Org system or fonts that
10607are part of TeX Live.
10608
10609To make it easier for a user to search for fonts, names for other packages
10610containing only fonts are constructed as follows, independently of the
10611upstream package name.
10612
10613The name of a package containing only one font family starts with
10614@code{font-}; it is followed by the foundry name and a dash @code{-}
10615if the foundry is known, and the font family name, in which spaces are
10616replaced by dashes (and as usual, all upper case letters are transformed
10617to lower case).
10618For example, the Gentium font family by SIL is packaged under the name
10619@code{font-sil-gentium}.
10620
10621For a package containing several font families, the name of the collection
10622is used in the place of the font family name.
10623For instance, the Liberation fonts consist of three families,
10624Liberation Sans, Liberation Serif and Liberation Mono.
10625These could be packaged separately under the names
10626@code{font-liberation-sans} and so on; but as they are distributed together
10627under a common name, we prefer to package them together as
10628@code{font-liberation}.
10629
10630In the case where several formats of the same font family or font collection
10631are packaged separately, a short form of the format, prepended by a dash,
10632is added to the package name. We use @code{-ttf} for TrueType fonts,
1b366ee4 10633@code{-otf} for OpenType fonts and @code{-type1} for PostScript Type 1
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10634fonts.
10635
10636
b25937e3 10637
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10638@node Bootstrapping
10639@section Bootstrapping
b25937e3 10640
cf4a9129 10641@c Adapted from the ELS 2013 paper.
b25937e3 10642
cf4a9129 10643@cindex bootstrapping
7889394e 10644
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10645Bootstrapping in our context refers to how the distribution gets built
10646``from nothing''. Remember that the build environment of a derivation
10647contains nothing but its declared inputs (@pxref{Introduction}). So
10648there's an obvious chicken-and-egg problem: how does the first package
10649get built? How does the first compiler get compiled? Note that this is
10650a question of interest only to the curious hacker, not to the regular
10651user, so you can shamelessly skip this section if you consider yourself
10652a ``regular user''.
72b9d60d 10653
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10654@cindex bootstrap binaries
10655The GNU system is primarily made of C code, with libc at its core. The
10656GNU build system itself assumes the availability of a Bourne shell and
10657command-line tools provided by GNU Coreutils, Awk, Findutils, `sed', and
10658`grep'. Furthermore, build programs---programs that run
10659@code{./configure}, @code{make}, etc.---are written in Guile Scheme
10660(@pxref{Derivations}). Consequently, to be able to build anything at
10661all, from scratch, Guix relies on pre-built binaries of Guile, GCC,
10662Binutils, libc, and the other packages mentioned above---the
10663@dfn{bootstrap binaries}.
72b9d60d 10664
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10665These bootstrap binaries are ``taken for granted'', though we can also
10666re-create them if needed (more on that later).
72b9d60d 10667
cf4a9129 10668@unnumberedsubsec Preparing to Use the Bootstrap Binaries
c79d54fe 10669
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10670@c As of Emacs 24.3, Info-mode displays the image, but since it's a
10671@c large image, it's hard to scroll. Oh well.
10672@image{images/bootstrap-graph,6in,,Dependency graph of the early bootstrap derivations}
523e4896 10673
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10674The figure above shows the very beginning of the dependency graph of the
10675distribution, corresponding to the package definitions of the @code{(gnu
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10676packages bootstrap)} module. A similar figure can be generated with
10677@command{guix graph} (@pxref{Invoking guix graph}), along the lines of:
10678
10679@example
10680guix graph -t derivation \
10681 -e '(@@@@ (gnu packages bootstrap) %bootstrap-gcc)' \
10682 | dot -Tps > t.ps
10683@end example
10684
10685At this level of detail, things are
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10686slightly complex. First, Guile itself consists of an ELF executable,
10687along with many source and compiled Scheme files that are dynamically
10688loaded when it runs. This gets stored in the @file{guile-2.0.7.tar.xz}
10689tarball shown in this graph. This tarball is part of Guix's ``source''
10690distribution, and gets inserted into the store with @code{add-to-store}
10691(@pxref{The Store}).
2e7b5cea 10692
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10693But how do we write a derivation that unpacks this tarball and adds it
10694to the store? To solve this problem, the @code{guile-bootstrap-2.0.drv}
10695derivation---the first one that gets built---uses @code{bash} as its
10696builder, which runs @code{build-bootstrap-guile.sh}, which in turn calls
10697@code{tar} to unpack the tarball. Thus, @file{bash}, @file{tar},
10698@file{xz}, and @file{mkdir} are statically-linked binaries, also part of
10699the Guix source distribution, whose sole purpose is to allow the Guile
10700tarball to be unpacked.
fb729425 10701
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10702Once @code{guile-bootstrap-2.0.drv} is built, we have a functioning
10703Guile that can be used to run subsequent build programs. Its first task
10704is to download tarballs containing the other pre-built binaries---this
10705is what the @code{.tar.xz.drv} derivations do. Guix modules such as
10706@code{ftp-client.scm} are used for this purpose. The
10707@code{module-import.drv} derivations import those modules in a directory
10708in the store, using the original layout. The
10709@code{module-import-compiled.drv} derivations compile those modules, and
10710write them in an output directory with the right layout. This
10711corresponds to the @code{#:modules} argument of
10712@code{build-expression->derivation} (@pxref{Derivations}).
fb729425 10713
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10714Finally, the various tarballs are unpacked by the
10715derivations @code{gcc-bootstrap-0.drv}, @code{glibc-bootstrap-0.drv},
10716etc., at which point we have a working C tool chain.
fb729425 10717
fb729425 10718
cf4a9129 10719@unnumberedsubsec Building the Build Tools
523e4896 10720
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10721Bootstrapping is complete when we have a full tool chain that does not
10722depend on the pre-built bootstrap tools discussed above. This
10723no-dependency requirement is verified by checking whether the files of
10724the final tool chain contain references to the @file{/gnu/store}
10725directories of the bootstrap inputs. The process that leads to this
10726``final'' tool chain is described by the package definitions found in
1f6f57df 10727the @code{(gnu packages commencement)} module.
df2ce343 10728
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10729The @command{guix graph} command allows us to ``zoom out'' compared to
10730the graph above, by looking at the level of package objects instead of
10731individual derivations---remember that a package may translate to
10732several derivations, typically one derivation to download its source,
10733one to build the Guile modules it needs, and one to actually build the
10734package from source. The command:
10735
10736@example
10737guix graph -t bag \
10738 -e '(@@@@ (gnu packages commencement)
10739 glibc-final-with-bootstrap-bash)' | dot -Tps > t.ps
10740@end example
10741
10742@noindent
10743produces the dependency graph leading to the ``final'' C
10744library@footnote{You may notice the @code{glibc-intermediate} label,
10745suggesting that it is not @emph{quite} final, but as a good
10746approximation, we will consider it final.}, depicted below.
10747
10748@image{images/bootstrap-packages,6in,,Dependency graph of the early packages}
10749
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10750@c See <http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/gnu-system-discuss/2012-10/msg00000.html>.
10751The first tool that gets built with the bootstrap binaries is
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10752GNU@tie{}Make---noted @code{make-boot0} above---which is a prerequisite
10753for all the following packages. From there Findutils and Diffutils get
10754built.
523e4896 10755
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10756Then come the first-stage Binutils and GCC, built as pseudo cross
10757tools---i.e., with @code{--target} equal to @code{--host}. They are
10758used to build libc. Thanks to this cross-build trick, this libc is
10759guaranteed not to hold any reference to the initial tool chain.
4af2447e 10760
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10761From there the final Binutils and GCC (not shown above) are built.
10762GCC uses @code{ld}
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10763from the final Binutils, and links programs against the just-built libc.
10764This tool chain is used to build the other packages used by Guix and by
10765the GNU Build System: Guile, Bash, Coreutils, etc.
4af2447e 10766
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10767And voilà! At this point we have the complete set of build tools that
10768the GNU Build System expects. These are in the @code{%final-inputs}
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10769variable of the @code{(gnu packages commencement)} module, and are
10770implicitly used by any package that uses @code{gnu-build-system}
1f6f57df 10771(@pxref{Build Systems, @code{gnu-build-system}}).
4af2447e 10772
4af2447e 10773
cf4a9129 10774@unnumberedsubsec Building the Bootstrap Binaries
4af2447e 10775
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10776Because the final tool chain does not depend on the bootstrap binaries,
10777those rarely need to be updated. Nevertheless, it is useful to have an
10778automated way to produce them, should an update occur, and this is what
10779the @code{(gnu packages make-bootstrap)} module provides.
4af2447e 10780
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10781The following command builds the tarballs containing the bootstrap
10782binaries (Guile, Binutils, GCC, libc, and a tarball containing a mixture
10783of Coreutils and other basic command-line tools):
4b2615e1 10784
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10785@example
10786guix build bootstrap-tarballs
10787@end example
10788
10789The generated tarballs are those that should be referred to in the
10790@code{(gnu packages bootstrap)} module mentioned at the beginning of
10791this section.
10792
10793Still here? Then perhaps by now you've started to wonder: when do we
10794reach a fixed point? That is an interesting question! The answer is
10795unknown, but if you would like to investigate further (and have
10796significant computational and storage resources to do so), then let us
10797know.
10798
10799@node Porting
10800@section Porting to a New Platform
10801
10802As discussed above, the GNU distribution is self-contained, and
10803self-containment is achieved by relying on pre-built ``bootstrap
10804binaries'' (@pxref{Bootstrapping}). These binaries are specific to an
10805operating system kernel, CPU architecture, and application binary
10806interface (ABI). Thus, to port the distribution to a platform that is
10807not yet supported, one must build those bootstrap binaries, and update
10808the @code{(gnu packages bootstrap)} module to use them on that platform.
10809
10810Fortunately, Guix can @emph{cross compile} those bootstrap binaries.
10811When everything goes well, and assuming the GNU tool chain supports the
10812target platform, this can be as simple as running a command like this
10813one:
10814
10815@example
10816guix build --target=armv5tel-linux-gnueabi bootstrap-tarballs
10817@end example
10818
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10819For this to work, the @code{glibc-dynamic-linker} procedure in
10820@code{(gnu packages bootstrap)} must be augmented to return the right
10821file name for libc's dynamic linker on that platform; likewise,
10822@code{system->linux-architecture} in @code{(gnu packages linux)} must be
10823taught about the new platform.
10824
cf4a9129 10825Once these are built, the @code{(gnu packages bootstrap)} module needs
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10826to be updated to refer to these binaries on the target platform. That
10827is, the hashes and URLs of the bootstrap tarballs for the new platform
10828must be added alongside those of the currently supported platforms. The
10829bootstrap Guile tarball is treated specially: it is expected to be
10830available locally, and @file{gnu-system.am} has rules do download it for
10831the supported architectures; a rule for the new platform must be added
10832as well.
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10833
10834In practice, there may be some complications. First, it may be that the
10835extended GNU triplet that specifies an ABI (like the @code{eabi} suffix
10836above) is not recognized by all the GNU tools. Typically, glibc
10837recognizes some of these, whereas GCC uses an extra @code{--with-abi}
10838configure flag (see @code{gcc.scm} for examples of how to handle this).
10839Second, some of the required packages could fail to build for that
10840platform. Lastly, the generated binaries could be broken for some
10841reason.
4af2447e 10842
9bf3c1a7 10843@c *********************************************************************
8c01b9d0 10844@include contributing.texi
c78bd12b 10845
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10846@c *********************************************************************
10847@node Acknowledgments
10848@chapter Acknowledgments
10849
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10850Guix is based on the @uref{http://nixos.org/nix/, Nix package manager},
10851which was designed and
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10852implemented by Eelco Dolstra, with contributions from other people (see
10853the @file{nix/AUTHORS} file in Guix.) Nix pioneered functional package
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10854management, and promoted unprecedented features, such as transactional
10855package upgrades and rollbacks, per-user profiles, and referentially
10856transparent build processes. Without this work, Guix would not exist.
10857
10858The Nix-based software distributions, Nixpkgs and NixOS, have also been
10859an inspiration for Guix.
10860
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10861GNU@tie{}Guix itself is a collective work with contributions from a
10862number of people. See the @file{AUTHORS} file in Guix for more
10863information on these fine people. The @file{THANKS} file lists people
10864who have helped by reporting bugs, taking care of the infrastructure,
10865providing artwork and themes, making suggestions, and more---thank you!
10866
10867
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10868@c *********************************************************************
10869@node GNU Free Documentation License
10870@appendix GNU Free Documentation License
10871
10872@include fdl-1.3.texi
10873
10874@c *********************************************************************
10875@node Concept Index
10876@unnumbered Concept Index
10877@printindex cp
10878
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10879@node Programming Index
10880@unnumbered Programming Index
10881@syncodeindex tp fn
10882@syncodeindex vr fn
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10883@printindex fn
10884
10885@bye
10886
10887@c Local Variables:
10888@c ispell-local-dictionary: "american";
10889@c End: