gnu: Add unicode-emoji.
[jackhill/guix/guix.git] / doc / guix-cookbook.texi
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1\input texinfo
2@c -*-texinfo-*-
3
4@c %**start of header
5@setfilename guix-cookbook.info
6@documentencoding UTF-8
7@settitle GNU Guix Cookbook
8@c %**end of header
9
10@copying
11Copyright @copyright{} 2019 Ricardo Wurmus@*
12Copyright @copyright{} 2019 Efraim Flashner@*
13Copyright @copyright{} 2019 Pierre Neidhardt@*
14
15Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
16under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or
17any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
18Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A
19copy of the license is included in the section entitled ``GNU Free
20Documentation License''.
21@end copying
22
23@dircategory System administration
24@direntry
25* Guix cookbook: (guix-cookbook). Tutorials and examples for GNU Guix.
26@end direntry
27
28@titlepage
29@title GNU Guix Cookbook
30@subtitle Tutorials and examples for using the GNU Guix Functional Package Manager
31@author The GNU Guix Developers
32
33@page
34@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
35
36@insertcopying
37@end titlepage
38
39@contents
40
41@c *********************************************************************
42@node Top
43@top GNU Guix Cookbook
44
45This document presents tutorials and detailed examples for GNU@tie{}Guix, a
46functional package management tool written for the GNU system. Please
47@pxref{Top,,, guix, GNU Guix reference manual} for details about the system,
48its API, and related concepts.
49
50@c TRANSLATORS: You can replace the following paragraph with information on
51@c how to join your own translation team and how to report issues with the
52@c translation.
53If you would like to translate this document in your native language, consider
54joining the @uref{https://translationproject.org/domain/guix-cookbook.html,
55Translation Project}.
56
57@menu
58* Scheme tutorials:: Meet your new favorite language!
59* Packaging:: Packaging tutorials
60* System Configuration:: Customizing the GNU System
4c463569 61* Advanced package management:: Power to the users!
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62
63* Acknowledgments:: Thanks!
64* GNU Free Documentation License:: The license of this document.
65* Concept Index:: Concepts.
66
67@detailmenu
68 --- The Detailed Node Listing ---
69
70Scheme tutorials
71
72* A Scheme Crash Course:: Learn the basics of Scheme
73
74Packaging
75
76* Packaging Tutorial:: Let's add a package to Guix!
77
78System Configuration
79
80* Customizing the Kernel:: Creating and using a custom Linux kernel
81
82
83@end detailmenu
84@end menu
85
86@c *********************************************************************
87@node Scheme tutorials
88@chapter Scheme tutorials
89
90GNU@tie{}Guix is written in the general purpose programming language Scheme,
91and many of its features can be accessed and manipulated programmatically.
92You can use Scheme to generate package definitions, to modify them, to build
93them, to deploy whole operating systems, etc.
94
95Knowing the basics of how to program in Scheme will unlock many of the
96advanced features Guix provides --- and you don't even need to be an
97experienced programmer to use them!
98
99Let's get started!
100
101@node A Scheme Crash Course
102@section A Scheme Crash Course
103
104@cindex Scheme, crash course
105
106Guix uses the Guile implementation of Scheme. To start playing with the
107language, install it with @code{guix install guile} and start a
108@uref{https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Read%E2%80%93eval%E2%80%93print_loop,
109REPL} by running @code{guile} from the command line.
110
111Alternatively you can also run @code{guix environment --ad-hoc guile -- guile}
112if you'd rather not have Guile installed in your user profile.
113
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114In the following examples, lines show what you would type at the REPL;
115lines starting with ``@result{}'' show evaluation results, while lines
116starting with ``@print{}'' show things that get printed. @xref{Using Guile
117Interactively,,, guile, GNU Guile Reference Manual}), for more details on the
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118REPL.
119
120@itemize
121@item
122Scheme syntax boils down to a tree of expressions (or @emph{s-expression} in
123Lisp lingo). An expression can be a literal such as numbers and strings, or a
124compound which is a parenthesized list of compounds and literals. @code{#t}
0cbef07b 125and @code{#f} stand for the Booleans ``true'' and ``false'', respectively.
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126
127Examples of valid expressions:
128
b1eecb5c 129@lisp
7bc46ecc 130"Hello World!"
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131@result{} "Hello World!"
132
7bc46ecc 13317
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134@result{} 17
135
136(display (string-append "Hello " "Guix" "\n"))
137@print{} Hello Guix!
138@result{} #<unspecified>
b1eecb5c 139@end lisp
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140
141@item
142This last example is a function call nested in another function call. When a
143parenthesized expression is evaluated, the first term is the function and the
144rest are the arguments passed to the function. Every function returns the
145last evaluated expression as its return value.
146
147@item
148Anonymous functions are declared with the @code{lambda} term:
149
b1eecb5c 150@lisp
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151(lambda (x) (* x x))
152@result{} #<procedure 120e348 at <unknown port>:24:0 (x)>
b1eecb5c 153@end lisp
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154
155The above procedure returns the square of its argument. Since everything is
156an expression, the @code{lambda} expression returns an anonymous procedure,
157which can in turn be applied to an argument:
158
b1eecb5c 159@lisp
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160((lambda (x) (* x x)) 3)
161@result{} 9
b1eecb5c 162@end lisp
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163
164@item
165Anything can be assigned a global name with @code{define}:
166
b1eecb5c 167@lisp
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168(define a 3)
169(define square (lambda (x) (* x x)))
170(square a)
171@result{} 9
b1eecb5c 172@end lisp
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173
174@item
175Procedures can be defined more concisely with the following syntax:
176
b1eecb5c 177@lisp
7bc46ecc 178(define (square x) (* x x))
b1eecb5c 179@end lisp
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180
181@item
182A list structure can be created with the @code{list} procedure:
183
b1eecb5c 184@lisp
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185(list 2 a 5 7)
186@result{} (2 3 5 7)
b1eecb5c 187@end lisp
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188
189@item
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190The @dfn{quote} disables evaluation of a parenthesized expression: the
191first term is not called over the other terms (@pxref{Expression Syntax,
192quote,, guile, GNU Guile Reference Manual}). Thus it effectively
193returns a list of terms.
7bc46ecc 194
b1eecb5c 195@lisp
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196'(display (string-append "Hello " "Guix" "\n"))
197@result{} (display (string-append "Hello " "Guix" "\n"))
198
199'(2 a 5 7)
200@result{} (2 a 5 7)
b1eecb5c 201@end lisp
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202
203@item
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204The @dfn{quasiquote} disables evaluation of a parenthesized expression
205until @dfn{unquote} (a comma) re-enables it. Thus it provides us with
206fine-grained control over what is evaluated and what is not.
7bc46ecc 207
b1eecb5c 208@lisp
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209`(2 a 5 7 (2 ,a 5 ,(+ a 4)))
210@result{} (2 a 5 7 (2 3 5 7))
b1eecb5c 211@end lisp
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212
213Note that the above result is a list of mixed elements: numbers, symbols (here
214@code{a}) and the last element is a list itself.
215
216@item
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217Multiple variables can be named locally with @code{let} (@pxref{Local
218Bindings,,, guile, GNU Guile Reference Manual}):
7bc46ecc 219
b1eecb5c 220@lisp
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221(define x 10)
222(let ((x 2)
223 (y 3))
224 (list x y))
225@result{} (2 3)
226
227x
228@result{} 10
229
230y
231@error{} In procedure module-lookup: Unbound variable: y
b1eecb5c 232@end lisp
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233
234Use @code{let*} to allow later variable declarations to refer to earlier
235definitions.
236
b1eecb5c 237@lisp
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238(let* ((x 2)
239 (y (* x 3)))
240 (list x y))
241@result{} (2 6)
b1eecb5c 242@end lisp
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243
244@item
245The keyword syntax is @code{#:}; it is used to create unique identifiers.
246@pxref{Keywords,,, guile, GNU Guile Reference Manual}.
247
248@item
249The percentage @code{%} is typically used for read-only global variables in
250the build stage. Note that it is merely a convention, like @code{_} in C.
251Scheme treats @code{%} exactly the same as any other letter.
252
253@item
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254Modules are created with @code{define-module} (@pxref{Creating Guile
255Modules,,, guile, GNU Guile Reference Manual}). For instance
7bc46ecc 256
b1eecb5c 257@lisp
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258(define-module (guix build-system ruby)
259 #:use-module (guix store)
260 #:export (ruby-build
261 ruby-build-system))
b1eecb5c 262@end lisp
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263
264defines the module @code{guix build-system ruby} which must be located in
265@file{guix/build-system/ruby.scm} somewhere in the Guile load path. It
266depends on the @code{(guix store)} module and it exports two variables,
267@code{ruby-build} and @code{ruby-build-system}.
268@end itemize
269
270For a more detailed introduction, check out
271@uref{http://www.troubleshooters.com/codecorn/scheme_guile/hello.htm, Scheme
272at a Glance}, by Steve Litt.
273
274One of the reference Scheme books is the seminal ``Structure and
275Interpretation of Computer Programs'', by Harold Abelson and Gerald Jay
276Sussman, with Julie Sussman. You'll find a
277@uref{https://mitpress.mit.edu/sites/default/files/sicp/index.html, free copy
278online}, together with
279@uref{https://ocw.mit.edu/courses/electrical-engineering-and-computer-science/6-001-structure-and-interpretation-of-computer-programs-spring-2005/video-lectures/,
280videos of the lectures by the authors}. The book is available in Texinfo
281format as the @code{sicp} Guix package. Go ahead, run @code{guix install
ed79636c 282sicp} and start reading with @code{info sicp} (@pxref{,,, sicp, Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs}).
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283An @uref{https://sarabander.github.io/sicp/, unofficial ebook is also
284available}.
285
286You'll find more books, tutorials and other resources at
287@url{https://schemers.org/}.
288
289
290@c *********************************************************************
291@node Packaging
292@chapter Packaging
293
294@cindex packaging
295
296This chapter is dedicated to teaching you how to add packages to the
297collection of packages that come with GNU Guix. This involves writing package
298definitions in Guile Scheme, organizing them in package modules, and building
299them.
300
301@menu
302* Packaging Tutorial:: A tutorial on how to add packages to Guix.
303@end menu
304
305@node Packaging Tutorial
306@section Packaging Tutorial
307
308GNU Guix stands out as the @emph{hackable} package manager, mostly because it
309uses @uref{https://www.gnu.org/software/guile/, GNU Guile}, a powerful
310high-level programming language, one of the
311@uref{https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scheme_%28programming_language%29, Scheme}
312dialects from the
313@uref{https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lisp_%28programming_language%29, Lisp family}.
314
315Package definitions are also written in Scheme, which empowers Guix in some
316very unique ways, unlike most other package managers that use shell scripts or
317simple languages.
318
319@itemize
320@item
321Use functions, structures, macros and all of Scheme expressiveness for your
322package definitions.
323
324@item
325Inheritance makes it easy to customize a package by inheriting from it and
326modifying only what is needed.
327
328@item
329Batch processing: the whole package collection can be parsed, filtered and
330processed. Building a headless server with all graphical interfaces stripped
331out? It's possible. Want to rebuild everything from source using specific
332compiler optimization flags? Pass the @code{#:make-flags "..."} argument to
333the list of packages. It wouldn't be a stretch to think
334@uref{https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/USE_flag, Gentoo USE flags} here, but this
335goes even further: the changes don't have to be thought out beforehand by the
336packager, they can be @emph{programmed} by the user!
337@end itemize
338
339The following tutorial covers all the basics around package creation with Guix.
340It does not assume much knowledge of the Guix system nor of the Lisp language.
341The reader is only expected to be familiar with the command line and to have some
342basic programming knowledge.
343
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344@node A ``Hello World'' package
345@subsection A ``Hello World'' package
7bc46ecc 346
0cbef07b 347The ``Defining Packages'' section of the manual introduces the basics of Guix
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348packaging (@pxref{Defining Packages,,, guix, GNU Guix Reference Manual}). In
349the following section, we will partly go over those basics again.
350
0cbef07b 351GNU@tie{}Hello is a dummy project that serves as an idiomatic example for
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352packaging. It uses the GNU build system (@code{./configure && make && make
353install}). Guix already provides a package definition which is a perfect
354example to start with. You can look up its declaration with @code{guix edit
355hello} from the command line. Let's see how it looks:
356
b1eecb5c 357@lisp
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358(define-public hello
359 (package
360 (name "hello")
361 (version "2.10")
362 (source (origin
363 (method url-fetch)
364 (uri (string-append "mirror://gnu/hello/hello-" version
365 ".tar.gz"))
366 (sha256
367 (base32
368 "0ssi1wpaf7plaswqqjwigppsg5fyh99vdlb9kzl7c9lng89ndq1i"))))
369 (build-system gnu-build-system)
370 (synopsis "Hello, GNU world: An example GNU package")
371 (description
372 "GNU Hello prints the message \"Hello, world!\" and then exits. It
373serves as an example of standard GNU coding practices. As such, it supports
374command-line arguments, multiple languages, and so on.")
375 (home-page "https://www.gnu.org/software/hello/")
376 (license gpl3+)))
b1eecb5c 377@end lisp
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378
379As you can see, most of it is rather straightforward. But let's review the
380fields together:
381
382@table @samp
383@item name
384The project name. Using Scheme conventions, we prefer to keep it
385lower case, without underscore and using dash-separated words.
386
387@item source
388This field contains a description of the source code origin. The
389@code{origin} record contains these fields:
390
391@enumerate
392@item The method, here @code{url-fetch} to download via HTTP/FTP, but other methods
393 exist, such as @code{git-fetch} for Git repositories.
394@item The URI, which is typically some @code{https://} location for @code{url-fetch}. Here
395 the special `mirror://gnu` refers to a set of well known locations, all of
396 which can be used by Guix to fetch the source, should some of them fail.
397@item The @code{sha256} checksum of the requested file. This is essential to ensure
398 the source is not corrupted. Note that Guix works with base32 strings,
399 hence the call to the @code{base32} function.
400@end enumerate
401
402@item build-system
403
404This is where the power of abstraction provided by the Scheme language really
405shines: in this case, the @code{gnu-build-system} abstracts away the famous
406@code{./configure && make && make install} shell invocations. Other build
407systems include the @code{trivial-build-system} which does not do anything and
408requires from the packager to program all the build steps, the
409@code{python-build-system}, the @code{emacs-build-system}, and many more
410(@pxref{Build Systems,,, guix, GNU Guix Reference Manual}).
411
412@item synopsis
413It should be a concise summary of what the package does. For many packages a
414tagline from the project's home page can be used as the synopsis.
415
416@item description
417Same as for the synopsis, it's fine to re-use the project description from the
418homepage. Note that Guix uses Texinfo syntax.
419
420@item home-page
421Use HTTPS if available.
422
423@item license
424See @code{guix/licenses.scm} in the project source for a full list of
425available licenses.
426@end table
427
428Time to build our first package! Nothing fancy here for now: we will stick to a
0cbef07b 429dummy @code{my-hello}, a copy of the above declaration.
7bc46ecc 430
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431As with the ritualistic ``Hello World'' taught with most programming languages,
432this will possibly be the most ``manual'' approach. We will work out an ideal
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433setup later; for now we will go the simplest route.
434
435Save the following to a file @file{my-hello.scm}.
436
b1eecb5c 437@lisp
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438(use-modules (guix packages)
439 (guix download)
440 (guix build-system gnu)
441 (guix licenses))
442
443(package
444 (name "my-hello")
445 (version "2.10")
446 (source (origin
447 (method url-fetch)
448 (uri (string-append "mirror://gnu/hello/hello-" version
449 ".tar.gz"))
450 (sha256
451 (base32
452 "0ssi1wpaf7plaswqqjwigppsg5fyh99vdlb9kzl7c9lng89ndq1i"))))
453 (build-system gnu-build-system)
454 (synopsis "Hello, Guix world: An example custom Guix package")
455 (description
456 "GNU Hello prints the message \"Hello, world!\" and then exits. It
457serves as an example of standard GNU coding practices. As such, it supports
458command-line arguments, multiple languages, and so on.")
459 (home-page "https://www.gnu.org/software/hello/")
460 (license gpl3+))
b1eecb5c 461@end lisp
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462
463We will explain the extra code in a moment.
464
465Feel free to play with the different values of the various fields. If you
466change the source, you'll need to update the checksum. Indeed, Guix refuses to
467build anything if the given checksum does not match the computed checksum of the
468source code. To obtain the correct checksum of the package declaration, we
469need to download the source, compute the sha256 checksum and convert it to
470base32.
471
472Thankfully, Guix can automate this task for us; all we need is to provide the
473URI:
474
475@c TRANSLATORS: This is example shell output.
476@example sh
477$ guix download mirror://gnu/hello/hello-2.10.tar.gz
478
479Starting download of /tmp/guix-file.JLYgL7
480From https://ftpmirror.gnu.org/gnu/hello/hello-2.10.tar.gz...
481following redirection to `https://mirror.ibcp.fr/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.10.tar.gz'...
482 …10.tar.gz 709KiB 2.5MiB/s 00:00 [##################] 100.0%
483/gnu/store/hbdalsf5lpf01x4dcknwx6xbn6n5km6k-hello-2.10.tar.gz
4840ssi1wpaf7plaswqqjwigppsg5fyh99vdlb9kzl7c9lng89ndq1i
485@end example
486
487In this specific case the output tells us which mirror was chosen.
488If the result of the above command is not the same as in the above snippet,
489update your @code{my-hello} declaration accordingly.
490
491Note that GNU package tarballs come with an OpenPGP signature, so you
492should definitely check the signature of this tarball with `gpg` to
493authenticate it before going further:
494
495@c TRANSLATORS: This is example shell output.
496@example sh
497$ guix download mirror://gnu/hello/hello-2.10.tar.gz.sig
498
499Starting download of /tmp/guix-file.03tFfb
500From https://ftpmirror.gnu.org/gnu/hello/hello-2.10.tar.gz.sig...
501following redirection to `https://ftp.igh.cnrs.fr/pub/gnu/hello/hello-2.10.tar.gz.sig'...
502 ….tar.gz.sig 819B 1.2MiB/s 00:00 [##################] 100.0%
503/gnu/store/rzs8wba9ka7grrmgcpfyxvs58mly0sx6-hello-2.10.tar.gz.sig
5040q0v86n3y38z17rl146gdakw9xc4mcscpk8dscs412j22glrv9jf
505$ gpg --verify /gnu/store/rzs8wba9ka7grrmgcpfyxvs58mly0sx6-hello-2.10.tar.gz.sig /gnu/store/hbdalsf5lpf01x4dcknwx6xbn6n5km6k-hello-2.10.tar.gz
506gpg: Signature made Sun 16 Nov 2014 01:08:37 PM CET
507gpg: using RSA key A9553245FDE9B739
508gpg: Good signature from "Sami Kerola <kerolasa@@iki.fi>" [unknown]
509gpg: aka "Sami Kerola (http://www.iki.fi/kerolasa/) <kerolasa@@iki.fi>" [unknown]
510gpg: WARNING: This key is not certified with a trusted signature!
511gpg: There is no indication that the signature belongs to the owner.
512Primary key fingerprint: 8ED3 96E3 7E38 D471 A005 30D3 A955 3245 FDE9 B739
513@end example
514
515You can then happily run
516
517@c TRANSLATORS: Do not translate this command
518@example sh
519$ guix package --install-from-file=my-hello.scm
520@end example
521
522You should now have @code{my-hello} in your profile!
523
524@c TRANSLATORS: Do not translate this command
525@example sh
526$ guix package --list-installed=my-hello
527my-hello 2.10 out
528/gnu/store/f1db2mfm8syb8qvc357c53slbvf1g9m9-my-hello-2.10
529@end example
530
531We've gone as far as we could without any knowledge of Scheme. Before moving
532on to more complex packages, now is the right time to brush up on your Scheme
533knowledge. @pxref{A Scheme Crash Course} to get up to speed.
534
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535@node Setup
536@subsection Setup
7bc46ecc 537
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538In the rest of this chapter we will rely on some basic Scheme
539programming knowledge. Now let's detail the different possible setups
540for working on Guix packages.
541
542There are several ways to set up a Guix packaging environment.
543
544We recommend you work directly on the Guix source checkout since it makes it
545easier for everyone to contribute to the project.
546
547But first, let's look at other possibilities.
548
549@node Local file
550@subsubsection Local file
551
552This is what we previously did with @samp{my-hello}. With the Scheme basics we've
553covered, we are now able to explain the leading chunks. As stated in @code{guix
554package --help}:
555
556@example
557 -f, --install-from-file=FILE
558 install the package that the code within FILE
559 evaluates to
560@end example
561
562Thus the last expression @emph{must} return a package, which is the case in our
563earlier example.
564
565The @code{use-modules} expression tells which of the modules we need in the file.
566Modules are a collection of values and procedures. They are commonly called
0cbef07b 567``libraries'' or ``packages'' in other programming languages.
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568
569@node @samp{GUIX_PACKAGE_PATH}
570@subsubsection @samp{GUIX_PACKAGE_PATH}
571
0cbef07b 572@emph{Note: Starting from Guix 0.16, the more flexible Guix @dfn{channels} are the
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573preferred way and supersede @samp{GUIX_PACKAGE_PATH}. See next section.}
574
575It can be tedious to specify the file from the command line instead of simply
576calling @code{guix package --install my-hello} as you would do with the official
577packages.
578
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579Guix makes it possible to streamline the process by adding as many ``package
580declaration directories'' as you want.
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581
582Create a directory, say @samp{~./guix-packages} and add it to the @samp{GUIX_PACKAGE_PATH}
583environment variable:
584
585@example
586$ mkdir ~/guix-packages
587$ export GUIX_PACKAGE_PATH=~/guix-packages
588@end example
589
590To add several directories, separate them with a colon (@code{:}).
591
592Our previous @samp{my-hello} needs some adjustments though:
593
d482e13f 594@lisp
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595(define-module (my-hello)
596 #:use-module (guix licenses)
597 #:use-module (guix packages)
598 #:use-module (guix build-system gnu)
599 #:use-module (guix download))
600
601(define-public my-hello
602 (package
603 (name "my-hello")
604 (version "2.10")
605 (source (origin
606 (method url-fetch)
607 (uri (string-append "mirror://gnu/hello/hello-" version
608 ".tar.gz"))
609 (sha256
610 (base32
611 "0ssi1wpaf7plaswqqjwigppsg5fyh99vdlb9kzl7c9lng89ndq1i"))))
612 (build-system gnu-build-system)
613 (synopsis "Hello, Guix world: An example custom Guix package")
614 (description
615 "GNU Hello prints the message \"Hello, world!\" and then exits. It
616serves as an example of standard GNU coding practices. As such, it supports
617command-line arguments, multiple languages, and so on.")
618 (home-page "https://www.gnu.org/software/hello/")
619 (license gpl3+)))
d482e13f 620@end lisp
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621
622Note that we have assigned the package value to an exported variable name with
623@code{define-public}. This is effectively assigning the package to the @code{my-hello}
624variable so that it can be referenced, among other as dependency of other
625packages.
626
627If you use @code{guix package --install-from-file=my-hello.scm} on the above file, it
628will fail because the last expression, @code{define-public}, does not return a
629package. If you want to use @code{define-public} in this use-case nonetheless, make
630sure the file ends with an evaluation of @code{my-hello}:
631
d482e13f 632@lisp
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633; ...
634(define-public my-hello
635 ; ...
636 )
637
638my-hello
d482e13f 639@end lisp
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640
641This last example is not very typical.
642
643Now @samp{my-hello} should be part of the package collection like all other official
644packages. You can verify this with:
645
646@example
647$ guix package --show=my-hello
648@end example
649
650@node Guix channels
651@subsubsection Guix channels
652
653Guix 0.16 features channels, which is very similar to @samp{GUIX_PACKAGE_PATH} but
654provides better integration and provenance tracking. Channels are not
655necessarily local, they can be maintained as a public Git repository for
656instance. Of course, several channels can be used at the same time.
657
658@xref{Channels,,, guix, GNU Guix Reference Manual} for setup details.
659
660@node Direct checkout hacking
661@subsubsection Direct checkout hacking
662
663Working directly on the Guix project is recommended: it reduces the friction
664when the time comes to submit your changes upstream to let the community benefit
665from your hard work!
666
667Unlike most software distributions, the Guix repository holds in one place both
668the tooling (including the package manager) and the package definitions. This
669choice was made so that it would give developers the flexibility to modify the
670API without breakage by updating all packages at the same time. This reduces
671development inertia.
672
673Check out the official @uref{https://git-scm.com/, Git} repository:
674
675@example
676$ git clone https://git.savannah.gnu.org/git/guix.git
677@end example
678
679In the rest of this article, we use @samp{$GUIX_CHECKOUT} to refer to the location of
680the checkout.
681
682
e97a4a29 683Follow the instructions in the manual (@pxref{Contributing,,, guix, GNU Guix
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684Reference Manual}) to set up the repository environment.
685
686Once ready, you should be able to use the package definitions from the
687repository environment.
688
689Feel free to edit package definitions found in @samp{$GUIX_CHECKOUT/gnu/packages}.
690
691The @samp{$GUIX_CHECKOUT/pre-inst-env} script lets you use @samp{guix} over the package
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692collection of the repository (@pxref{Running Guix Before It Is
693Installed,,, guix, GNU Guix Reference Manual}).
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694
695@itemize
696@item
697Search packages, such as Ruby:
698
699@example
700 $ cd $GUIX_CHECKOUT
701 $ ./pre-inst-env guix package --list-available=ruby
702 ruby 1.8.7-p374 out gnu/packages/ruby.scm:119:2
703 ruby 2.1.6 out gnu/packages/ruby.scm:91:2
704 ruby 2.2.2 out gnu/packages/ruby.scm:39:2
705@end example
706
707@item
708Build a package, here Ruby version 2.1:
709
710@example
711 $ ./pre-inst-env guix build --keep-failed ruby@@2.1
712 /gnu/store/c13v73jxmj2nir2xjqaz5259zywsa9zi-ruby-2.1.6
713@end example
714
715@item
716Install it to your user profile:
717
718@example
719 $ ./pre-inst-env guix package --install ruby@@2.1
720@end example
721
722@item
723Check for common mistakes:
724
725@example
726 $ ./pre-inst-env guix lint ruby@@2.1
727@end example
728@end itemize
729
730Guix strives at maintaining a high packaging standard; when contributing to the
731Guix project, remember to
732
733@itemize
734@item
735follow the coding style (@pxref{Coding Style,,, guix, GNU Guix Reference Manual}),
736@item
737and review the check list from the manual (@pxref{Submitting Patches,,, guix, GNU Guix Reference Manual}).
738@end itemize
739
740Once you are happy with the result, you are welcome to send your contribution to
741make it part of Guix. This process is also detailed in the manual. (@pxref{Contributing,,, guix, GNU Guix Reference Manual})
742
743
744It's a community effort so the more join in, the better Guix becomes!
745
746@node Extended example
747@subsection Extended example
748
0cbef07b 749The above ``Hello World'' example is as simple as it goes. Packages can be more
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750complex than that and Guix can handle more advanced scenarios. Let's look at
751another, more sophisticated package (slightly modified from the source):
752
d482e13f 753@lisp
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754(define-module (gnu packages version-control)
755 #:use-module ((guix licenses) #:prefix license:)
756 #:use-module (guix utils)
757 #:use-module (guix packages)
758 #:use-module (guix git-download)
759 #:use-module (guix build-system cmake)
760 #:use-module (gnu packages ssh)
761 #:use-module (gnu packages web)
762 #:use-module (gnu packages pkg-config)
763 #:use-module (gnu packages python)
764 #:use-module (gnu packages compression)
765 #:use-module (gnu packages tls))
766
767(define-public my-libgit2
768 (let ((commit "e98d0a37c93574d2c6107bf7f31140b548c6a7bf")
769 (revision "1"))
770 (package
771 (name "my-libgit2")
772 (version (git-version "0.26.6" revision commit))
773 (source (origin
774 (method git-fetch)
775 (uri (git-reference
776 (url "https://github.com/libgit2/libgit2/")
777 (commit commit)))
778 (file-name (git-file-name name version))
779 (sha256
780 (base32
781 "17pjvprmdrx4h6bb1hhc98w9qi6ki7yl57f090n9kbhswxqfs7s3"))
782 (patches (search-patches "libgit2-mtime-0.patch"))
783 (modules '((guix build utils)))
784 (snippet '(begin
785 ;; Remove bundled software.
786 (delete-file-recursively "deps")
787 #t))))
788 (build-system cmake-build-system)
789 (outputs '("out" "debug"))
790 (arguments
791 `(#:tests? #t ; Run the test suite (this is the default)
792 #:configure-flags '("-DUSE_SHA1DC=ON") ; SHA-1 collision detection
793 #:phases
794 (modify-phases %standard-phases
795 (add-after 'unpack 'fix-hardcoded-paths
796 (lambda _
797 (substitute* "tests/repo/init.c"
798 (("#!/bin/sh") (string-append "#!" (which "sh"))))
799 (substitute* "tests/clar/fs.h"
800 (("/bin/cp") (which "cp"))
801 (("/bin/rm") (which "rm")))
802 #t))
803 ;; Run checks more verbosely.
804 (replace 'check
805 (lambda _ (invoke "./libgit2_clar" "-v" "-Q")))
806 (add-after 'unpack 'make-files-writable-for-tests
807 (lambda _ (for-each make-file-writable (find-files "." ".*")))))))
808 (inputs
809 `(("libssh2" ,libssh2)
810 ("http-parser" ,http-parser)
811 ("python" ,python-wrapper)))
812 (native-inputs
813 `(("pkg-config" ,pkg-config)))
814 (propagated-inputs
815 ;; These two libraries are in 'Requires.private' in libgit2.pc.
816 `(("openssl" ,openssl)
817 ("zlib" ,zlib)))
818 (home-page "https://libgit2.github.com/")
819 (synopsis "Library providing Git core methods")
820 (description
821 "Libgit2 is a portable, pure C implementation of the Git core methods
822provided as a re-entrant linkable library with a solid API, allowing you to
823write native speed custom Git applications in any language with bindings.")
824 ;; GPLv2 with linking exception
825 (license license:gpl2))))
d482e13f 826@end lisp
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827
828(In those cases were you only want to tweak a few fields from a package
829definition, you should rely on inheritance instead of copy-pasting everything.
830See below.)
831
832Let's discuss those fields in depth.
833
834@subsubsection @code{git-fetch} method
835
836Unlike the @code{url-fetch} method, @code{git-fetch} expects a @code{git-reference} which takes
837a Git repository and a commit. The commit can be any Git reference such as
838tags, so if the @code{version} is tagged, then it can be used directly. Sometimes
839the tag is prefixed with a @code{v}, in which case you'd use @code{(commit (string-append
840"v" version))}.
841
842To ensure that the source code from the Git repository is stored in a unique
843directory with a readable name we use @code{(file-name (git-file-name name
844version))}.
845
846Note that there is also a @code{git-version} procedure that can be used to derive the
847version when packaging programs for a specific commit.
848
849@subsubsection Snippets
850
851Snippets are quoted (i.e. non-evaluated) Scheme code that are a means of patching
852the source. They are a Guix-y alternative to the traditional @samp{.patch} files.
853Because of the quote, the code in only evaluated when passed to the Guix daemon
0cbef07b 854for building. There can be as many snippets as needed.
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855
856Snippets might need additional Guile modules which can be imported from the
857@code{modules} field.
858
859@subsubsection Inputs
860
861First, a syntactic comment: See the quasi-quote / comma syntax?
862
d482e13f 863@lisp
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864 (native-inputs
865 `(("pkg-config" ,pkg-config)))
d482e13f 866@end lisp
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867
868is equivalent to
869
d482e13f 870@lisp
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871 (native-inputs
872 (list (list "pkg-config" pkg-config)))
d482e13f 873@end lisp
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874
875You'll mostly see the former because it's shorter.
876
877There are 3 different input types. In short:
878
879@table @asis
880@item native-inputs
881Required for building but not runtime -- installing a package
882through a substitute won't install these inputs.
883@item inputs
884Installed in the store but not in the profile, as well as being
885present at build time.
886@item propagated-inputs
887Installed in the store and in the profile, as well as
888being present at build time.
889@end table
890
891@xref{Package Reference,,, guix, GNU Guix Reference Manual} for more details.
892
893The distinction between the various inputs is important: if a dependency can be
894handled as an @emph{input} instead of a @emph{propagated input}, it should be done so, or
0cbef07b 895else it ``pollutes'' the user profile for no good reason.
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896
897For instance, a user installing a graphical program that depends on a
898command line tool might only be interested in the graphical part, so there is no
899need to force the command line tool into the user profile. The dependency is a
900concern to the package, not to the user. @emph{Inputs} make it possible to handle
901dependencies without bugging the user by adding undesired executable files (or
902libraries) to their profile.
903
904Same goes for @emph{native-inputs}: once the program is installed, build-time
905dependencies can be safely garbage-collected.
906It also matters when a substitute is available, in which case only the @emph{inputs}
907and @emph{propagated inputs} will be fetched: the @emph{native inputs} are not required to
908install a package from a substitute.
909
910@subsubsection Outputs
911
912Just like how a package can have multiple inputs, it can also produce multiple
913outputs.
914
915Each output corresponds to a separate directory in the store.
916
917The user can choose which output to install; this is useful to save space or
918to avoid polluting the user profile with unwanted executables or libraries.
919
920Output separation is optional. When the @code{outputs} field is left out, the
921default and only output (the complete package) is referred to as @code{"out"}.
922
923Typical separate output names include @code{debug} and @code{doc}.
924
925It's advised to separate outputs only when you've shown it's worth it: if the
926output size is significant (compare with @code{guix size}) or in case the package is
927modular.
928
929@subsubsection Build system arguments
930
931The @code{arguments} is a keyword-value list used to configure the build process.
932
933The simplest argument @code{#:tests?} can be used to disable the test suite when
934building the package. This is mostly useful when the package does not feature
935any test suite. It's strongly recommended to keep the test suite on if there is
936one.
937
938Another common argument is @code{:make-flags}, which specifies a list of flags to
939append when running make, as you would from the command line. For instance, the
940following flags
941
d482e13f 942@lisp
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943#:make-flags (list (string-append "prefix=" (assoc-ref %outputs "out"))
944 "CC=gcc")
d482e13f 945@end lisp
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946
947translate into
948
949@example
950$ make CC=gcc prefix=/gnu/store/...-<out>
951@end example
952
953This sets the C compiler to @code{gcc} and the @code{prefix} variable (the installation
954directory in Make parlance) to @code{(assoc-ref %outputs "out")}, which is a build-stage
955global variable pointing to the destination directory in the store (something like
956@samp{/gnu/store/...-my-libgit2-20180408}).
957
0cbef07b 958Similarly, it's possible to set the configure flags:
ffe059af 959
d482e13f 960@lisp
ffe059af 961#:configure-flags '("-DUSE_SHA1DC=ON")
d482e13f 962@end lisp
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963
964The @code{%build-inputs} variable is also generated in scope. It's an association
965table that maps the input names to their store directories.
966
967The @code{phases} keyword lists the sequential steps of the build system. Typically
968phases include @code{unpack}, @code{configure}, @code{build}, @code{install} and @code{check}. To know
969more about those phases, you need to work out the appropriate build system
970definition in @samp{$GUIX_CHECKOUT/guix/build/gnu-build-system.scm}:
971
d482e13f 972@lisp
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973(define %standard-phases
974 ;; Standard build phases, as a list of symbol/procedure pairs.
975 (let-syntax ((phases (syntax-rules ()
976 ((_ p ...) `((p . ,p) ...)))))
977 (phases set-SOURCE-DATE-EPOCH set-paths install-locale unpack
978 bootstrap
979 patch-usr-bin-file
980 patch-source-shebangs configure patch-generated-file-shebangs
981 build check install
982 patch-shebangs strip
983 validate-runpath
984 validate-documentation-location
985 delete-info-dir-file
986 patch-dot-desktop-files
987 install-license-files
988 reset-gzip-timestamps
989 compress-documentation)))
d482e13f 990@end lisp
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991
992Or from the REPL:
993
d482e13f 994@lisp
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995(add-to-load-path "/path/to/guix/checkout")
996,use (guix build gnu-build-system)
997(map first %standard-phases)
998@result{} (set-SOURCE-DATE-EPOCH set-paths install-locale unpack bootstrap patch-usr-bin-file patch-source-shebangs configure patch-generated-file-shebangs build check install patch-shebangs strip validate-runpath validate-documentation-location delete-info-dir-file patch-dot-desktop-files install-license-files reset-gzip-timestamps compress-documentation)
d482e13f 999@end lisp
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1000
1001If you want to know more about what happens during those phases, consult the
1002associated procedures.
1003
1004For instance, as of this writing the definition of @code{unpack} for the GNU build
1005system is
1006
d482e13f 1007@lisp
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1008(define* (unpack #:key source #:allow-other-keys)
1009 "Unpack SOURCE in the working directory, and change directory within the
1010source. When SOURCE is a directory, copy it in a sub-directory of the current
1011working directory."
1012 (if (file-is-directory? source)
1013 (begin
1014 (mkdir "source")
1015 (chdir "source")
1016
1017 ;; Preserve timestamps (set to the Epoch) on the copied tree so that
1018 ;; things work deterministically.
1019 (copy-recursively source "."
1020 #:keep-mtime? #t))
1021 (begin
1022 (if (string-suffix? ".zip" source)
1023 (invoke "unzip" source)
1024 (invoke "tar" "xvf" source))
1025 (chdir (first-subdirectory "."))))
1026 #t)
d482e13f 1027@end lisp
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1028
1029Note the @code{chdir} call: it changes the working directory to where the source was
1030unpacked.
1031Thus every phase following the @code{unpack} will use the source as a working
1032directory, which is why we can directly work on the source files.
1033That is to say, unless a later phase changes the working directory to something
1034else.
1035
1036We modify the list of @code{%standard-phases} of the build system with the
1037@code{modify-phases} macro as per the list of specified modifications, which may have
1038the following forms:
1039
1040@itemize
1041@item
1042@code{(add-before PHASE NEW-PHASE PROCEDURE)}: Run @code{PROCEDURE} named @code{NEW-PHASE} before @code{PHASE}.
1043@item
1044@code{(add-after PHASE NEW-PHASE PROCEDURE)}: Same, but afterwards.
1045@item
1046@code{(replace PHASE PROCEDURE)}.
1047@item
1048@code{(delete PHASE)}.
1049@end itemize
1050
1051The @code{PROCEDURE} supports the keyword arguments @code{inputs} and @code{outputs}. Each
1052input (whether @emph{native}, @emph{propagated} or not) and output directory is referenced
1053by their name in those variables. Thus @code{(assoc-ref outputs "out")} is the store
1054directory of the main output of the package. A phase procedure may look like
1055this:
1056
d482e13f 1057@lisp
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1058(lambda* (#:key inputs outputs #:allow-other-keys)
1059 (let (((bash-directory (assoc-ref inputs "bash"))
1060 (output-directory (assoc-ref outputs "out"))
1061 (doc-directory (assoc-ref outputs "doc"))
1062 ; ...
1063 #t)
d482e13f 1064@end lisp
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1065
1066The procedure must return @code{#t} on success. It's brittle to rely on the return
1067value of the last expression used to tweak the phase because there is no
1068guarantee it would be a @code{#t}. Hence the trailing @code{#t} to ensure the right value
1069is returned on success.
1070
1071@subsubsection Code staging
1072
1073The astute reader may have noticed the quasi-quote and comma syntax in the
1074argument field. Indeed, the build code in the package declaration should not be
1075evaluated on the client side, but only when passed to the Guix daemon. This
1076mechanism of passing code around two running processes is called @uref{https://arxiv.org/abs/1709.00833, code staging}.
1077
0cbef07b 1078@subsubsection Utility functions
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1079
1080When customizing @code{phases}, we often need to write code that mimics the
1081equivalent system invocations (@code{make}, @code{mkdir}, @code{cp}, etc.) commonly used during
0cbef07b 1082regular ``Unix-style'' installations.
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1083
1084Some like @code{chmod} are native to Guile.
1085@xref{,,, guile, Guile reference manual} for a complete list.
1086
1087Guix provides additional helper functions which prove especially handy in the
1088context of package management.
1089
1090Some of those functions can be found in
1091@samp{$GUIX_CHECKOUT/guix/guix/build/utils.scm}. Most of them mirror the behaviour
1092of the traditional Unix system commands:
1093
1094@table @asis
1095@item which
1096Like the @samp{which} system command.
1097@item find-files
1098Akin to the @samp{find} system command.
1099@item mkdir-p
1100Like @samp{mkdir -p}, which creates all parents as needed.
1101@item install-file
1102Similar to @samp{install} when installing a file to a (possibly
1103non-existing) directory. Guile has @code{copy-file} which works
1104like @samp{cp}.
1105@item copy-recursively
1106Like @samp{cp -r}.
1107@item delete-file-recursively
1108Like @samp{rm -rf}.
1109@item invoke
1110Run an executable. This should be used instead of @code{system*}.
1111@item with-directory-excursion
1112Run the body in a different working directory,
1113then restore the previous working directory.
1114@item substitute*
0cbef07b 1115A ``@command{sed}-like'' function.
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1116@end table
1117
1118@subsubsection Module prefix
1119
1120The license in our last example needs a prefix: this is because of how the
1121@code{license} module was imported in the package, as @code{#:use-module ((guix licenses)
1122#:prefix license:)}. The Guile module import mechanism
1123(@pxref{Using Guile Modules,,, guile, Guile reference manual})
1124gives the user full control over namespacing: this is needed to avoid
1125clashes between, say, the
1126@samp{zlib} variable from @samp{licenses.scm} (a @emph{license} value) and the @samp{zlib} variable
1127from @samp{compression.scm} (a @emph{package} value).
1128
1129@node Other build systems
1130@subsection Other build systems
1131
1132What we've seen so far covers the majority of packages using a build system
1133other than the @code{trivial-build-system}. The latter does not automate anything
1134and leaves you to build everything manually. This can be more demanding and we
1135won't cover it here for now, but thankfully it is rarely necessary to fall back
1136on this system.
1137
1138For the other build systems, such as ASDF, Emacs, Perl, Ruby and many more, the
1139process is very similar to the GNU build system except for a few specialized
1140arguments.
1141
a9e25512
LC
1142@xref{Build Systems,,, guix, GNU Guix Reference Manual}, for more
1143information on build systems, or check the source code in the
1144@samp{$GUIX_CHECKOUT/guix/build} and
ffe059af 1145@samp{$GUIX_CHECKOUT/guix/build-system} directories.
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1146
1147@node Programmable and automated package definition
1148@subsection Programmable and automated package definition
1149
1150We can't repeat it enough: having a full-fledged programming language at hand
1151empowers us in ways that reach far beyond traditional package management.
1152
1153Let's illustrate this with some awesome features of Guix!
1154
1155@node Recursive importers
1156@subsubsection Recursive importers
1157
1158You might find some build systems good enough that there is little to do at all
1159to write a package, to the point that it becomes repetitive and tedious after a
1160while. A @emph{raison d'être} of computers is to replace human beings at those
1161boring tasks. So let's tell Guix to do this for us and create the package
1162definition of an R package from CRAN (the output is trimmed for conciseness):
1163
1164@example
1165$ guix import cran --recursive walrus
1166
1167(define-public r-mc2d
1168 ; ...
1169 (license gpl2+)))
1170
1171(define-public r-jmvcore
1172 ; ...
1173 (license gpl2+)))
1174
1175(define-public r-wrs2
1176 ; ...
1177 (license gpl3)))
1178
1179(define-public r-walrus
1180 (package
1181 (name "r-walrus")
1182 (version "1.0.3")
1183 (source
1184 (origin
1185 (method url-fetch)
1186 (uri (cran-uri "walrus" version))
1187 (sha256
1188 (base32
1189 "1nk2glcvy4hyksl5ipq2mz8jy4fss90hx6cq98m3w96kzjni6jjj"))))
1190 (build-system r-build-system)
1191 (propagated-inputs
1192 `(("r-ggplot2" ,r-ggplot2)
1193 ("r-jmvcore" ,r-jmvcore)
1194 ("r-r6" ,r-r6)
1195 ("r-wrs2" ,r-wrs2)))
1196 (home-page "https://github.com/jamovi/walrus")
1197 (synopsis "Robust Statistical Methods")
1198 (description
1199 "This package provides a toolbox of common robust statistical
1200tests, including robust descriptives, robust t-tests, and robust ANOVA.
1201It is also available as a module for 'jamovi' (see
1202<https://www.jamovi.org> for more information). Walrus is based on the
1203WRS2 package by Patrick Mair, which is in turn based on the scripts and
1204work of Rand Wilcox. These analyses are described in depth in the book
1205'Introduction to Robust Estimation & Hypothesis Testing'.")
1206 (license gpl3)))
1207@end example
1208
1209The recursive importer won't import packages for which Guix already has package
1210definitions, except for the very first.
1211
1212Not all applications can be packaged this way, only those relying on a select
1213number of supported systems. Read about the full list of importers in
1214the guix import section of the manual
1215(@pxref{Invoking guix import,,, guix, GNU Guix Reference Manual}).
1216
1217@node Automatic update
1218@subsubsection Automatic update
1219
1220Guix can be smart enough to check for updates on systems it knows. It can
1221report outdated package definitions with
1222
1223@example
1224$ guix refresh hello
1225@end example
1226
1227In most cases, updating a package to a newer version requires little more than
1228changing the version number and the checksum. Guix can do that automatically as
1229well:
1230
1231@example
1232$ guix refresh hello --update
1233@end example
1234
1235@node Inheritance
1236@subsubsection Inheritance
1237
1238If you've started browsing the existing package definitions, you might have
1239noticed that a significant number of them have a @code{inherit} field:
1240
d482e13f 1241@lisp
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1242(define-public adwaita-icon-theme
1243 (package (inherit gnome-icon-theme)
1244 (name "adwaita-icon-theme")
1245 (version "3.26.1")
1246 (source (origin
1247 (method url-fetch)
1248 (uri (string-append "mirror://gnome/sources/" name "/"
1249 (version-major+minor version) "/"
1250 name "-" version ".tar.xz"))
1251 (sha256
1252 (base32
1253 "17fpahgh5dyckgz7rwqvzgnhx53cx9kr2xw0szprc6bnqy977fi8"))))
1254 (native-inputs
1255 `(("gtk-encode-symbolic-svg" ,gtk+ "bin")))))
d482e13f 1256@end lisp
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1257
1258All unspecified fields are inherited from the parent package. This is very
1259convenient to create alternative packages, for instance with different source,
1260version or compilation options.
1261
1262@node Getting help
1263@subsection Getting help
1264
1265Sadly, some applications can be tough to package. Sometimes they need a patch to
1266work with the non-standard filesystem hierarchy enforced by the store.
1267Sometimes the tests won't run properly. (They can be skipped but this is not
1268recommended.) Other times the resulting package won't be reproducible.
1269
1270Should you be stuck, unable to figure out how to fix any sort of packaging
1271issue, don't hesitate to ask the community for help.
1272
1273See the @uref{https://www.gnu.org/software/guix/contact/, Guix homepage} for information on the mailing lists, IRC, etc.
1274
1275@node Conclusion
1276@subsection Conclusion
1277
1278This tutorial was a showcase of the sophisticated package management that Guix
1279boasts. At this point we have mostly restricted this introduction to the
1280@code{gnu-build-system} which is a core abstraction layer on which more advanced
1281abstractions are based.
1282
1283Where do we go from here? Next we ought to dissect the innards of the build
1284system by removing all abstractions, using the @code{trivial-build-system}: this
1285should give us a thorough understanding of the process before investigating some
1286more advanced packaging techniques and edge cases.
1287
1288Other features worth exploring are the interactive editing and debugging
1289capabilities of Guix provided by the Guile REPL@.
1290
1291Those fancy features are completely optional and can wait; now is a good time
1292to take a well-deserved break. With what we've introduced here you should be
1293well armed to package lots of programs. You can get started right away and
1294hopefully we will see your contributions soon!
1295
1296@node References
1297@subsection References
1298
1299@itemize
1300@item
1301The @uref{https://www.gnu.org/software/guix/manual/en/html_node/Defining-Packages.html, package reference in the manual}
1302
1303@item
1304@uref{https://gitlab.com/pjotrp/guix-notes/blob/master/HACKING.org, Pjotr’s hacking guide to GNU Guix}
1305
1306@item
0cbef07b 1307@uref{https://www.gnu.org/software/guix/guix-ghm-andreas-20130823.pdf, ``GNU Guix: Package without a scheme!''}, by Andreas Enge
ffe059af 1308@end itemize
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1309
1310@c *********************************************************************
1311@node System Configuration
1312@chapter System Configuration
1313
1314Guix offers a flexible language for declaratively configuring your Guix
1315System. This flexibility can at times be overwhelming. The purpose of this
1316chapter is to demonstrate some advanced configuration concepts.
1317
1318@pxref{System Configuration,,, guix, GNU Guix Reference Manual} for a complete
1319reference.
1320
1321@menu
1322* Customizing the Kernel:: Creating and using a custom Linux kernel on Guix System.
1323@end menu
1324
1325@node Customizing the Kernel
1326@section Customizing the Kernel
1327
1328Guix is, at its core, a source based distribution with substitutes
1329(@pxref{Substitutes,,, guix, GNU Guix Reference Manual}), and as such building
1330packages from their source code is an expected part of regular package
1331installations and upgrades. Given this starting point, it makes sense that
1332efforts are made to reduce the amount of time spent compiling packages, and
1333recent changes and upgrades to the building and distribution of substitutes
1334continues to be a topic of discussion within Guix.
1335
1336The kernel, while not requiring an overabundance of RAM to build, does take a
1337rather long time on an average machine. The official kernel configuration, as
1338is the case with many GNU/Linux distributions, errs on the side of
1339inclusiveness, and this is really what causes the build to take such a long
1340time when the kernel is built from source.
1341
1342The Linux kernel, however, can also just be described as a regular old
1343package, and as such can be customized just like any other package. The
1344procedure is a little bit different, although this is primarily due to the
1345nature of how the package definition is written.
1346
1347The @code{linux-libre} kernel package definition is actually a procedure which
1348creates a package.
1349
b1eecb5c 1350@lisp
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1351(define* (make-linux-libre version hash supported-systems
1352 #:key
1353 ;; A function that takes an arch and a variant.
1354 ;; See kernel-config for an example.
1355 (extra-version #f)
1356 (configuration-file #f)
1357 (defconfig "defconfig")
1358 (extra-options %default-extra-linux-options)
1359 (patches (list %boot-logo-patch)))
1360 ...)
b1eecb5c 1361@end lisp
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1362
1363The current @code{linux-libre} package is for the 5.1.x series, and is
1364declared like this:
1365
b1eecb5c 1366@lisp
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1367(define-public linux-libre
1368 (make-linux-libre %linux-libre-version
1369 %linux-libre-hash
1370 '("x86_64-linux" "i686-linux" "armhf-linux" "aarch64-linux")
1371 #:patches %linux-libre-5.1-patches
1372 #:configuration-file kernel-config))
b1eecb5c 1373@end lisp
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1374
1375Any keys which are not assigned values inherit their default value from the
1376@code{make-linux-libre} definition. When comparing the two snippets above,
1377you may notice that the code comment in the first doesn't actually refer to
1378the @code{#:extra-version} keyword; it is actually for
1379@code{#:configuration-file}. Because of this, it is not actually easy to
1380include a custom kernel configuration from the definition, but don't worry,
1381there are other ways to work with what we do have.
1382
1383There are two ways to create a kernel with a custom kernel configuration. The
1384first is to provide a standard @file{.config} file during the build process by
1385including an actual @file{.config} file as a native input to our custom
1386kernel. The following is a snippet from the custom @code{'configure} phase of
1387the @code{make-linux-libre} package definition:
1388
b1eecb5c 1389@lisp
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1390(let ((build (assoc-ref %standard-phases 'build))
1391 (config (assoc-ref (or native-inputs inputs) "kconfig")))
1392
1393 ;; Use a custom kernel configuration file or a default
1394 ;; configuration file.
1395 (if config
1396 (begin
1397 (copy-file config ".config")
1398 (chmod ".config" #o666))
1399 (invoke "make" ,defconfig))
b1eecb5c 1400@end lisp
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1401
1402Below is a sample kernel package. The @code{linux-libre} package is nothing
1403special and can be inherited from and have its fields overridden like any
1404other package:
1405
b1eecb5c 1406@lisp
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1407(define-public linux-libre/E2140
1408 (package
1409 (inherit linux-libre)
1410 (native-inputs
1411 `(("kconfig" ,(local-file "E2140.config"))
1412 ,@@(alist-delete "kconfig"
1413 (package-native-inputs linux-libre))))))
b1eecb5c 1414@end lisp
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1415
1416In the same directory as the file defining @code{linux-libre-E2140} is a file
1417named @file{E2140.config}, which is an actual kernel configuration file. The
1418@code{defconfig} keyword of @code{make-linux-libre} is left blank here, so the
1419only kernel configuration in the package is the one which was included in the
1420@code{native-inputs} field.
1421
1422The second way to create a custom kernel is to pass a new value to the
1423@code{extra-options} keyword of the @code{make-linux-libre} procedure. The
1424@code{extra-options} keyword works with another function defined right below
1425it:
1426
b1eecb5c 1427@lisp
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1428(define %default-extra-linux-options
1429 `(;; https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/guix-devel/2014-04/msg00039.html
1430 ("CONFIG_DEVPTS_MULTIPLE_INSTANCES" . #t)
1431 ;; Modules required for initrd:
1432 ("CONFIG_NET_9P" . m)
1433 ("CONFIG_NET_9P_VIRTIO" . m)
1434 ("CONFIG_VIRTIO_BLK" . m)
1435 ("CONFIG_VIRTIO_NET" . m)
1436 ("CONFIG_VIRTIO_PCI" . m)
1437 ("CONFIG_VIRTIO_BALLOON" . m)
1438 ("CONFIG_VIRTIO_MMIO" . m)
1439 ("CONFIG_FUSE_FS" . m)
1440 ("CONFIG_CIFS" . m)
1441 ("CONFIG_9P_FS" . m)))
1442
1443(define (config->string options)
1444 (string-join (map (match-lambda
1445 ((option . 'm)
1446 (string-append option "=m"))
1447 ((option . #t)
1448 (string-append option "=y"))
1449 ((option . #f)
1450 (string-append option "=n")))
1451 options)
1452 "\n"))
b1eecb5c 1453@end lisp
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1454
1455And in the custom configure script from the `make-linux-libre` package:
1456
b1eecb5c 1457@lisp
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1458;; Appending works even when the option wasn't in the
1459;; file. The last one prevails if duplicated.
1460(let ((port (open-file ".config" "a"))
1461 (extra-configuration ,(config->string extra-options)))
1462 (display extra-configuration port)
1463 (close-port port))
1464
1465(invoke "make" "oldconfig"))))
b1eecb5c 1466@end lisp
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1467
1468So by not providing a configuration-file the @file{.config} starts blank, and
1469then we write into it the collection of flags that we want. Here's another
1470custom kernel:
1471
b1eecb5c 1472@lisp
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1473(define %macbook41-full-config
1474 (append %macbook41-config-options
1475 %filesystems
1476 %efi-support
1477 %emulation
1478 (@@@@ (gnu packages linux) %default-extra-linux-options)))
1479
1480(define-public linux-libre-macbook41
1481 ;; XXX: Access the internal 'make-linux-libre' procedure, which is
1482 ;; private and unexported, and is liable to change in the future.
1483 ((@@@@ (gnu packages linux) make-linux-libre) (@@@@ (gnu packages linux) %linux-libre-version)
1484 (@@@@ (gnu packages linux) %linux-libre-hash)
1485 '("x86_64-linux")
1486 #:extra-version "macbook41"
1487 #:patches (@@@@ (gnu packages linux) %linux-libre-5.1-patches)
1488 #:extra-options %macbook41-config-options))
b1eecb5c 1489@end lisp
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1490
1491In the above example @code{%filesystems} is a collection of flags enabling
1492different filesystem support, @code{%efi-support} enables EFI support and
1493@code{%emulation} enables a x86_64-linux machine to act in 32-bit mode also.
1494@code{%default-extra-linux-options} are the ones quoted above, which had to be
1495added in since they were replaced in the @code{extra-options} keyword.
1496
1497This all sounds like it should be doable, but how does one even know which
1498modules are required for a particular system? Two places that can be helpful
1499in trying to answer this question is the
1500@uref{https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Handbook:AMD64/Installation/Kernel, Gentoo
1501Handbook} and the
1502@uref{https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/admin-guide/README.html?highlight=localmodconfig,
1503documentation from the kernel itself}. From the kernel documentation, it
1504seems that @code{make localmodconfig} is the command we want.
1505
1506In order to actually run @code{make localmodconfig} we first need to get and
1507unpack the kernel source code:
1508
1509@example shell
1510tar xf $(guix build linux-libre --source)
1511@end example
1512
1513Once inside the directory containing the source code run @code{touch .config}
1514to create an initial, empty @file{.config} to start with. @code{make
1515localmodconfig} works by seeing what you already have in @file{.config} and
1516letting you know what you're missing. If the file is blank then you're
1517missing everything. The next step is to run:
1518
1519@example shell
1520guix environment linux-libre -- make localmodconfig
1521@end example
1522
1523and note the output. Do note that the @file{.config} file is still empty.
1524The output generally contains two types of warnings. The first start with
1525"WARNING" and can actually be ignored in our case. The second read:
1526
1527@example shell
1528module pcspkr did not have configs CONFIG_INPUT_PCSPKR
1529@end example
1530
1531For each of these lines, copy the @code{CONFIG_XXXX_XXXX} portion into the
1532@file{.config} in the directory, and append @code{=m}, so in the end it looks
1533like this:
1534
1535@example shell
1536CONFIG_INPUT_PCSPKR=m
1537CONFIG_VIRTIO=m
1538@end example
1539
1540After copying all the configuration options, run @code{make localmodconfig}
0cbef07b 1541again to make sure that you don't have any output starting with ``module''.
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1542After all of these machine specific modules there are a couple more left that
1543are also needed. @code{CONFIG_MODULES} is necessary so that you can build and
1544load modules separately and not have everything built into the kernel.
1545@code{CONFIG_BLK_DEV_SD} is required for reading from hard drives. It is
1546possible that there are other modules which you will need.
1547
1548This post does not aim to be a guide to configuring your own kernel however,
1549so if you do decide to build a custom kernel you'll have to seek out other
1550guides to create a kernel which is just right for your needs.
1551
1552The second way to setup the kernel configuration makes more use of Guix's
1553features and allows you to share configuration segments between different
1554kernels. For example, all machines using EFI to boot have a number of EFI
1555configuration flags that they need. It is likely that all the kernels will
1556share a list of filesystems to support. By using variables it is easier to
1557see at a glance what features are enabled and to make sure you don't have
1558features in one kernel but missing in another.
1559
1560Left undiscussed however, is Guix's initrd and its customization. It is
1561likely that you'll need to modify the initrd on a machine using a custom
1562kernel, since certain modules which are expected to be built may not be
1563available for inclusion into the initrd.
1564
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1565@c *********************************************************************
1566@node Advanced package management
1567@chapter Advanced package management
1568
1569Guix is a functional package manager that offers many features beyond
1570what more traditional package managers can do. To the uninitiated,
1571those features might not have obvious use cases at first. The purpose
1572of this chapter is to demonstrate some advanced package management
1573concepts.
1574
1575@pxref{Package Management,,, guix, GNU Guix Reference Manual} for a complete
1576reference.
1577
1578@menu
1579* Guix Profiles in Practice:: Strategies for multiple profiles and manifests.
1580@end menu
1581
1582@node Guix Profiles in Practice
1583@section Guix Profiles in Practice
1584
1585Guix provides a very useful feature that may be quite foreign to newcomers:
1586@emph{profiles}. They are a way to group package installations together and all users
f6c27c55 1587on the same system are free to use as many profiles as they want.
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1588
1589Whether you're a developer or not, you may find that multiple profiles bring you
1590great power and flexibility. While they shift the paradigm somewhat compared to
1591@emph{traditional package managers}, they are very convenient to use once you've
1592understood how to set them up.
1593
1594If you are familiar with Python's @samp{virtualenv}, you can think of a profile as a
1595kind of universal @samp{virtualenv} that can hold any kind of software whatsoever, not
1596just Python software. Furthermore, profiles are self-sufficient: they capture
1597all the runtime dependencies which guarantees that all programs within a profile
1598will always work at any point in time.
1599
1600Multiple profiles have many benefits:
1601
1602@itemize
1603@item
1604Clean semantic separation of the various packages a user needs for different contexts.
1605
1606@item
1607Multiple profiles can be made available into the environment either on login
1608or within a dedicated shell.
1609
1610@item
1611Profiles can be loaded on demand. For instance, the user can use multiple
1612shells, each of them running different profiles.
1613
1614@item
1615Isolation: Programs from one profile will not use programs from the other, and
f6c27c55 1616the user can even install different versions of the same programs to the two
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1617profiles without conflict.
1618
1619@item
1620Deduplication: Profiles share dependencies that happens to be the exact same.
1621This makes multiple profiles storage-efficient.
1622
1623@item
1624Reproducible: when used with declarative manifests, a profile can be fully
1625specified by the Guix commit that was active when it was set up. This means
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1626that the exact same profile can be
1627@uref{https://guix.gnu.org/blog/2018/multi-dimensional-transactions-and-rollbacks-oh-my/,
1628set up anywhere and anytime}, with just the commit information. See the
1629section on @ref{Reproducible profiles}.
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1630
1631@item
1632Easier upgrades and maintenance: Multiple profiles make it easy to keep
1633package listings at hand and make upgrades completely friction-less.
1634@end itemize
1635
1636Concretely, here follows some typical profiles:
1637
1638@itemize
1639@item
1640The dependencies of a project you are working on.
1641
1642@item
1643Your favourite programming language libraries.
1644
1645@item
1646Laptop-specific programs (like @samp{powertop}) that you don't need on a desktop.
1647
1648@item
1649@TeX{}live (this one can be really useful when you need to install just one
1650package for this one document you've just received over email).
1651
1652@item
1653Games.
1654@end itemize
1655
1656Let's dive in the set up!
1657
1658@node Basic setup with manifests
1659@subsection Basic setup with manifests
1660
1661A Guix profile can be set up @emph{via} a so-called @emph{manifest specification} that looks like
1662this:
1663
b1eecb5c 1664@lisp
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1665(specifications->manifest
1666 '("package-1"
1667 ;; Version 1.3 of package-2.
1668 "package-2@@1.3"
1669 ;; The "lib" output of package-3.
1670 "package-3:lib"
1671 ; ...
1672 "package-N"))
b1eecb5c 1673@end lisp
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b1eecb5c 1675@pxref{Invoking guix package,,, guix, GNU Guix Reference Manual}, for
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1676the syntax details.
1677
1678We can create a manifest specification per profile and install them this way:
1679
1680@example
1681GUIX_EXTRA_PROFILES=$HOME/.guix-extra-profiles
1682mkdir -p "$GUIX_EXTRA_PROFILES"/my-project # if it does not exist yet
1683guix package --manifest=/path/to/guix-my-project-manifest.scm --profile="$GUIX_EXTRA_PROFILES"/my-project/my-project
1684@end example
1685
1686Here we set an arbitrary variable @samp{GUIX_EXTRA_PROFILES} to point to the directory
1687where we will store our profiles in the rest of this article.
1688
1689Placing all your profiles in a single directory, with each profile getting its
1690own sub-directory, is somewhat cleaner. This way, each sub-directory will
1691contain all the symlinks for precisely one profile. Besides, "looping over
1692profiles" becomes obvious from any programming language (e.g. a shell script) by
1693simply looping over the sub-directories of @samp{$GUIX_EXTRA_PROFILES}.
1694
1695Note that it's also possible to loop over the output of
1696
1697@example
1698guix package --list-profiles
1699@end example
1700
1701although you'll probably have to filter out @samp{~/.config/guix/current}.
1702
1703To enable all profiles on login, add this to your @samp{~/.bash_profile} (or similar):
1704
1705@example
1706for i in $GUIX_EXTRA_PROFILES/*; do
1707 profile=$i/$(basename "$i")
1708 if [ -f "$profile"/etc/profile ]; then
1709 GUIX_PROFILE="$profile"
1710 . "$GUIX_PROFILE"/etc/profile
1711 fi
1712 unset profile
1713done
1714@end example
1715
1716Note to Guix System users: the above reflects how your default profile
1717@samp{~/.guix-profile} is activated from @samp{/etc/profile}, that latter being loaded by
1718@samp{~/.bashrc} by default.
1719
1720You can obviously choose to only enable a subset of them:
1721
1722@example
1723for i in "$GUIX_EXTRA_PROFILES"/my-project-1 "$GUIX_EXTRA_PROFILES"/my-project-2; do
1724 profile=$i/$(basename "$i")
1725 if [ -f "$profile"/etc/profile ]; then
1726 GUIX_PROFILE="$profile"
1727 . "$GUIX_PROFILE"/etc/profile
1728 fi
1729 unset profile
1730done
1731@end example
1732
1733When a profile is off, it's straightforward to enable it for an individual shell
1734without "polluting" the rest of the user session:
1735
1736@example
1737GUIX_PROFILE="path/to/my-project" ; . "$GUIX_PROFILE"/etc/profile
1738@end example
1739
1740The key to enabling a profile is to @emph{source} its @samp{etc/profile} file. This file
1741contains shell code that exports the right environment variables necessary to
1742activate the software contained in the profile. It is built automatically by
1743Guix and meant to be sourced.
1744It contains the same variables you would get if you ran:
1745
1746@example
1747guix package --search-paths=prefix --profile=$my_profile"
1748@end example
1749
1750Once again, see (@pxref{Invoking guix package,,, guix, GNU Guix Reference Manual})
1751for the command line options.
1752
1753To upgrade a profile, simply install the manifest again:
1754
1755@example
1756guix package -m /path/to/guix-my-project-manifest.scm -p "$GUIX_EXTRA_PROFILES"/my-project/my-project
1757@end example
1758
1759To upgrade all profiles, it's easy enough to loop over them. For instance,
1760assuming your manifest specifications are stored in
1761@samp{~/.guix-manifests/guix-$profile-manifest.scm}, with @samp{$profile} being the name
1762of the profile (e.g. "project1"), you could do the following in Bourne shell:
1763
1764@example
1765for profile in "$GUIX_EXTRA_PROFILES"/*; do
1766 guix package --profile="$profile" --manifest="$HOME/.guix-manifests/guix-$profile-manifest.scm"
1767done
1768@end example
1769
1770Each profile has its own generations:
1771
1772@example
1773guix package -p "$GUIX_EXTRA_PROFILES"/my-project/my-project --list-generations
1774@end example
1775
1776You can roll-back to any generation of a given profile:
1777
1778@example
1779guix package -p "$GUIX_EXTRA_PROFILES"/my-project/my-project --switch-generations=17
1780@end example
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1781
1782Finally, if you want to switch to a profile without inheriting from the
1783current environment, you can activate it from an empty shell:
1784
1785@example
1786env -i $(which bash) --login --noprofile --norc
1787. my-project/etc/profile
1788@end example
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1789
1790@node Required packages
1791@subsection Required packages
1792
1793Activating a profile essentially boils down to exporting a bunch of
1794environmental variables. This is the role of the @samp{etc/profile} within the
1795profile.
1796
1797@emph{Note: Only the environmental variables of the packages that consume them will
1798be set.}
1799
1800For instance, @samp{MANPATH} won't be set if there is no consumer application for man
1801pages within the profile. So if you need to transparently access man pages once
1802the profile is loaded, you've got two options:
1803
1804@itemize
1805@item
1806Either export the variable manually, e.g.
1807@example
f6c27c55 1808export MANPATH=/path/to/profile$@{MANPATH:+:@}$MANPATH
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1809@end example
1810
1811@item
1812Or include @samp{man-db} to the profile manifest.
1813@end itemize
1814
1815The same is true for @samp{INFOPATH} (you can install @samp{info-reader}),
1816@samp{PKG_CONFIG_PATH} (install @samp{pkg-config}), etc.
1817
1818@node Default profile
1819@subsection Default profile
1820
1821What about the default profile that Guix keeps in @samp{~/.guix-profile}?
1822
1823You can assign it the role you want. Typically you would install the manifest
1824of the packages you want to use all the time.
1825
1826Alternatively, you could keep it "manifest-less" for throw-away packages
1827that you would just use for a couple of days.
1828This way makes it convenient to run
1829
1830@example
1831guix install package-foo
1832guix upgrade package-bar
1833@end example
1834
1835without having to specify the path to a profile.
1836
1837@node The benefits of manifests
1838@subsection The benefits of manifests
1839
1840Manifests are a convenient way to keep your package lists around and, say,
1841to synchronize them across multiple machines using a version control system.
1842
1843A common complaint about manifests is that they can be slow to install when they
1844contain large number of packages. This is especially cumbersome when you just
1845want get an upgrade for one package within a big manifest.
1846
1847This is one more reason to use multiple profiles, which happen to be just
1848perfect to break down manifests into multiple sets of semantically connected
1849packages. Using multiple, small profiles provides more flexibility and
1850usability.
1851
1852Manifests come with multiple benefits. In particular, they ease maintenance:
1853
1854@itemize
1855@item
1856When a profile is set up from a manifest, the manifest itself is
1857self-sufficient to keep a "package listing" around and reinstall the profile
1858later or on a different system. For ad-hoc profiles, we would need to
1859generate a manifest specification manually and maintain the package versions
1860for the packages that don't use the default version.
1861
1862@item
1863@code{guix package --upgrade} always tries to update the packages that have
1864propagated inputs, even if there is nothing to do. Guix manifests remove this
1865problem.
1866
1867@item
1868When partially upgrading a profile, conflicts may arise (due to diverging
1869dependencies between the updated and the non-updated packages) and they can be
1870annoying to resolve manually. Manifests remove this problem altogether since
1871all packages are always upgraded at once.
1872
1873@item
1874As mentioned above, manifests allow for reproducible profiles, while the
1875imperative @code{guix install}, @code{guix upgrade}, etc. do not, since they produce
1876different profiles every time even when they hold the same packages. See
1877@uref{https://issues.guix.gnu.org/issue/33285, the related discussion on the matter}.
1878
1879@item
1880Manifest specifications are usable by other @samp{guix} commands. For example, you
1881can run @code{guix weather -m manifest.scm} to see how many substitutes are
1882available, which can help you decide whether you want to try upgrading today
1883or wait a while. Another example: you can run @code{guix pack -m manifest.scm} to
1884create a pack containing all the packages in the manifest (and their
1885transitive references).
1886
1887@item
1888Finally, manifests have a Scheme representation, the @samp{<manifest>} record type.
1889They can be manipulated in Scheme and passed to the various Guix @uref{https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Api, APIs}.
1890@end itemize
1891
1892It's important to understand that while manifests can be used to declare
1893profiles, they are not strictly equivalent: profiles have the side effect that
1894they "pin" packages in the store, which prevents them from being
1895garbage-collected (@pxref{Invoking guix gc,,, guix, GNU Guix Reference Manual})
1896and ensures that they will still be available at any point in
1897the future.
1898
1899Let's take an example:
1900
1901@enumerate
1902@item
1903We have an environment for hacking on a project for which there isn't a Guix
1904package yet. We build the environment using a manifest, and then run @code{guix
1905 environment -m manifest.scm}. So far so good.
1906
1907@item
1908Many weeks pass and we have run a couple of @code{guix pull} in the mean time.
1909Maybe a dependency from our manifest has been updated; or we may have run
1910@code{guix gc} and some packages needed by our manifest have been
1911garbage-collected.
1912
1913@item
1914Eventually, we set to work on that project again, so we run @code{guix environment
1915 -m manifest.scm}. But now we have to wait for Guix to build and install
1916stuff!
1917@end enumerate
1918
1919Ideally, we could spare the rebuild time. And indeed we can, all we need is to
1920install the manifest to a profile and use @code{GUIX_PROFILE=/the/profile;
1921. "$GUIX_PROFILE"/etc/profile} as explained above: this guarantees that our
1922hacking environment will be available at all times.
1923
1924@emph{Security warning:} While keeping old profiles around can be convenient, keep in
1925mind that outdated packages may not have received the latest security fixes.
1926
1927@node Reproducible profiles
1928@subsection Reproducible profiles
1929
1930To reproduce a profile bit-for-bit, we need two pieces of information:
1931
1932@itemize
1933@item
1934a manifest,
1935@item
1936a Guix channel specification.
1937@end itemize
1938
1939Indeed, manifests alone might not be enough: different Guix versions (or
1940different channels) can produce different outputs for a given manifest.
1941
1942You can output the Guix channel specification with @samp{guix describe
1943--format=channels}.
1944Save this to a file, say @samp{channel-specs.scm}.
1945
1946On another computer, you can use the channel specification file and the manifest
1947to reproduce the exact same profile:
1948
1949@example
1950GUIX_EXTRA_PROFILES=$HOME/.guix-extra-profiles
1951GUIX_EXTRA=$HOME/.guix-extra
1952
1953mkdir "$GUIX_EXTRA"/my-project
1954guix pull --channels=channel-specs.scm --profile "$GUIX_EXTRA/my-project/guix"
1955
1956mkdir -p "$GUIX_EXTRA_PROFILES/my-project"
1957"$GUIX_EXTRA"/my-project/guix/bin/guix package --manifest=/path/to/guix-my-project-manifest.scm --profile="$GUIX_EXTRA_PROFILES"/my-project/my-project
1958@end example
1959
1960It's safe to delete the Guix channel profile you've just installed with the
1961channel specification, the project profile does not depend on it.
1962
7bc46ecc
RW
1963@c *********************************************************************
1964@node Acknowledgments
1965@chapter Acknowledgments
1966
1967Guix is based on the @uref{https://nixos.org/nix/, Nix package manager},
1968which was designed and
1969implemented by Eelco Dolstra, with contributions from other people (see
1970the @file{nix/AUTHORS} file in Guix.) Nix pioneered functional package
1971management, and promoted unprecedented features, such as transactional
1972package upgrades and rollbacks, per-user profiles, and referentially
1973transparent build processes. Without this work, Guix would not exist.
1974
1975The Nix-based software distributions, Nixpkgs and NixOS, have also been
1976an inspiration for Guix.
1977
1978GNU@tie{}Guix itself is a collective work with contributions from a
1979number of people. See the @file{AUTHORS} file in Guix for more
1980information on these fine people. The @file{THANKS} file lists people
1981who have helped by reporting bugs, taking care of the infrastructure,
1982providing artwork and themes, making suggestions, and more---thank you!
1983
1984This document includes adapted sections from articles that have previously
1985been published on the Guix blog at @uref{https://guix.gnu.org/blog}.
1986
1987
1988@c *********************************************************************
1989@node GNU Free Documentation License
1990@appendix GNU Free Documentation License
1991@cindex license, GNU Free Documentation License
1992@include fdl-1.3.texi
1993
1994@c *********************************************************************
1995@node Concept Index
1996@unnumbered Concept Index
1997@printindex cp
1998
1999@bye
2000
2001@c Local Variables:
2002@c ispell-local-dictionary: "american";
2003@c End: