gnu: Add libva.
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1-*- mode: org -*-
2
3[[http://www.gnu.org/software/guix/][GNU Guix]] (IPA: /ɡiːks/) is a purely functional package manager, and
4associated free software distribution, for the [[http://www.gnu.org/gnu/gnu.html][GNU system]]. In addition
5to standard package management features, Guix supports transactional
6upgrades and roll-backs, unprivileged package management, per-user
7profiles, and garbage collection.
8
9It provides [[http://www.gnu.org/software/guile/][Guile]] Scheme APIs, including a high-level embedded
10domain-specific languages (EDSLs) to describe how packages are to be
11built and composed.
12
13A user-land free software distribution for GNU/Linux comes as part of
14Guix.
15
16Guix is based on the [[http://nixos.org/nix/][Nix]] package manager.
17
18
19* Requirements
20
21GNU Guix currently depends on the following packages:
22
23 - [[http://gnu.org/software/guile/][GNU Guile 2.0.x]], version 2.0.5 or later
24 - [[http://gnupg.org/][GNU libgcrypt]]
25 - optionally [[http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/guile-json/][Guile-JSON]], for the 'guix import pypi' command
26 - optionally [[http://www.gnutls.org][GnuTLS]] compiled with guile support enabled, for HTTPS support
27 in the 'guix download' command. Note that 'guix import pypi' requires
28 this functionality.
29
30Unless `--disable-daemon' was passed, the following packages are needed:
31
32 - [[http://sqlite.org/][SQLite 3]]
33 - [[http://www.bzip.org][libbz2]]
34 - [[http://gcc.gnu.org][GCC's g++]]
35
36When `--disable-daemon' was passed, you instead need the following:
37
38 - [[http://nixos.org/nix/][Nix]]
39
40* Installation
41
42See the manual for the installation instructions, either by running
43
44 info -f doc/guix.info "(guix) Installation"
45
46or by checking the [[http://www.gnu.org/software/guix/manual/guix.html#Installation][web copy of the manual]].
47
48For information on installation from a Git checkout, please see the ‘HACKING’
49file.
50
51* Installing Guix from Guix
52
53You can re-build and re-install Guix using a system that already runs Guix.
54To do so:
55
56 - Install the dependencies (see 'Requirements' above) and build tools using
57 Guix:
58
59 guix package --install autoconf automake bzip2 gcc-toolchain gettext \
60 guile libgcrypt pkg-config sqlite
61
62 - Set the environment variables that Guix recommends you to set during the
63 package installation process:
64 ACLOCAL_PATH, CPATH, LIBRARY_PATH, PKG_CONFIG_PATH
65
66 - Set the PATH environment variable to refer to the profile:
67 PATH=$HOME/.guix-profile/bin:$PATH
68
69 - Re-run the 'configure' script passing it the option
70 '--with-libgcrypt-prefix=$HOME/.guix-profile/', as well as
71 '--localstatedir=/somewhere', where '/somewhere' is the 'localstatedir'
72 value of the currently installed Guix (failing to do that would lead the
73 new Guix to consider the store to be empty!).
74
75 - Run "make", "make check", and "make install".
76
77* How It Works
78
79Guix does the high-level preparation of a /derivation/. A derivation is
80the promise of a build; it is stored as a text file under
81=/gnu/store/xxx.drv=. The (guix derivations) module provides the
82`derivation' primitive, as well as higher-level wrappers such as
83`build-expression->derivation'.
84
85Guix does remote procedure calls (RPCs) to the Guix or Nix daemon (the
86=guix-daemon= or =nix-daemon= command), which in turn performs builds
87and accesses to the Nix store on its behalf. The RPCs are implemented
88in the (guix store) module.
89
90* Installing Guix as non-root
91
92The Guix daemon allows software builds to be performed under alternate
93user accounts, which are normally created specifically for this
94purpose. For instance, you may have a pool of accounts in the
95=guixbuild= group, and then you can instruct =guix-daemon= to use them
96like this:
97
98 $ guix-daemon --build-users-group=guixbuild
99
100However, unless it is run as root, =guix-daemon= cannot switch users.
101In that case, it falls back to using a setuid-root helper program call
102=nix-setuid-helper=. That program is not setuid-root by default when
103you install it; instead you should run a command along these lines
104(assuming Guix is installed under /usr/local):
105
106 # chown root.root /usr/local/libexec/nix-setuid-helper
107 # chmod 4755 /usr/local/libexec/nix-setuid-helper
108
109* Contact
110
111GNU Guix is hosted at https://savannah.gnu.org/projects/guix/.
112
113Please email <bug-guix@gnu.org> for bug reports or questions regarding
114Guix and its distribution; email <gnu-system-discuss@gnu.org> for
115general issues regarding the GNU system.
116
117Join #guix on irc.freenode.net.
118
119* Guix & Nix
120
121GNU Guix is based on [[http://nixos.org/nix/][the Nix package manager]]. It implements the same
122package deployment paradigm, and in fact it reuses some of its code.
123Yet, different engineering decisions were made for Guix, as described
124below.
125
126Nix is really two things: a package build tool, implemented by a library
127and daemon, and a special-purpose programming language. GNU Guix relies
128on the former, but uses Scheme as a replacement for the latter.
129
130Using Scheme instead of a specific language allows us to get all the
131features and tooling that come with Guile (compiler, debugger, REPL,
132Unicode, libraries, etc.) And it means that we have a general-purpose
133language, on top of which we can have embedded domain-specific languages
134(EDSLs), such as the one used to define packages. This broadens what
135can be done in package recipes themselves, and what can be done around them.
136
137Technically, Guix makes remote procedure calls to the ‘nix-worker’
138daemon to perform operations on the store. At the lowest level, Nix
139“derivations” represent promises of a build, stored in ‘.drv’ files in
140the store. Guix produces such derivations, which are then interpreted
141by the daemon to perform the build. Thus, Guix derivations can use
142derivations produced by Nix (and vice versa).
143
144With Nix and the [[http://nixos.org/nixpkgs][Nixpkgs]] distribution, package composition happens at
145the Nix language level, but builders are usually written in Bash.
146Conversely, Guix encourages the use of Scheme for both package
147composition and builders. Likewise, the core functionality of Nix is
148written in C++ and Perl; Guix relies on some of the original C++ code,
149but exposes all the API as Scheme.
150
151* Related software
152
153 - [[http://nixos.org][Nix, Nixpkgs, and NixOS]], functional package manager and associated
154 software distribution, are the inspiration of Guix
155 - [[http://www.gnu.org/software/stow/][GNU Stow]] builds around the idea of one directory per prefix, and a
156 symlink tree to create user environments
157 - [[http://www.pvv.ntnu.no/~arnej/store/storedoc_6.html][STORE]] shares the same idea
158 - [[https://live.gnome.org/OSTree/][GNOME's OSTree]] allows bootable system images to be built from a
159 specified set of packages
160 - The [[http://www.gnu.org/s/gsrc/][GNU Source Release Collection]] (GSRC) is a user-land software
161 distribution; unlike Guix, it relies on core tools available on the
162 host system