doc: Add note about signing keys.
[jackhill/guix/guix.git] / doc / guix.texi
1 \input texinfo
2 @c -*-texinfo-*-
3
4 @c %**start of header
5 @setfilename guix.info
6 @documentencoding UTF-8
7 @settitle GNU Guix Reference Manual
8 @c %**end of header
9
10 @include version.texi
11
12 @c Identifier of the OpenPGP key used to sign tarballs and such.
13 @set OPENPGP-SIGNING-KEY-ID 3CE464558A84FDC69DB40CFB090B11993D9AEBB5
14 @set OPENPGP-SIGNING-KEY-URL https://sv.gnu.org/people/viewgpg.php?user_id=15145
15
16 @c Base URL for downloads.
17 @set BASE-URL https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/guix
18
19 @c The official substitute server used by default.
20 @set SUBSTITUTE-SERVER ci.guix.gnu.org
21 @set SUBSTITUTE-URL https://@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER}
22
23 @copying
24 Copyright @copyright{} 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 Ludovic Courtès@*
25 Copyright @copyright{} 2013, 2014, 2016 Andreas Enge@*
26 Copyright @copyright{} 2013 Nikita Karetnikov@*
27 Copyright @copyright{} 2014, 2015, 2016 Alex Kost@*
28 Copyright @copyright{} 2015, 2016 Mathieu Lirzin@*
29 Copyright @copyright{} 2014 Pierre-Antoine Rault@*
30 Copyright @copyright{} 2015 Taylan Ulrich Bayırlı/Kammer@*
31 Copyright @copyright{} 2015, 2016, 2017, 2019 Leo Famulari@*
32 Copyright @copyright{} 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 Ricardo Wurmus@*
33 Copyright @copyright{} 2016 Ben Woodcroft@*
34 Copyright @copyright{} 2016, 2017, 2018 Chris Marusich@*
35 Copyright @copyright{} 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 Efraim Flashner@*
36 Copyright @copyright{} 2016 John Darrington@*
37 Copyright @copyright{} 2016, 2017 ng0@*
38 Copyright @copyright{} 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 Jan Nieuwenhuizen@*
39 Copyright @copyright{} 2016 Julien Lepiller@*
40 Copyright @copyright{} 2016 Alex ter Weele@*
41 Copyright @copyright{} 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 Christopher Baines@*
42 Copyright @copyright{} 2017, 2018 Clément Lassieur@*
43 Copyright @copyright{} 2017, 2018 Mathieu Othacehe@*
44 Copyright @copyright{} 2017 Federico Beffa@*
45 Copyright @copyright{} 2017, 2018 Carlo Zancanaro@*
46 Copyright @copyright{} 2017 Thomas Danckaert@*
47 Copyright @copyright{} 2017 humanitiesNerd@*
48 Copyright @copyright{} 2017 Christopher Allan Webber@*
49 Copyright @copyright{} 2017, 2018 Marius Bakke@*
50 Copyright @copyright{} 2017 Hartmut Goebel@*
51 Copyright @copyright{} 2017 Maxim Cournoyer@*
52 Copyright @copyright{} 2017, 2018 Tobias Geerinckx-Rice@*
53 Copyright @copyright{} 2017 George Clemmer@*
54 Copyright @copyright{} 2017 Andy Wingo@*
55 Copyright @copyright{} 2017, 2018, 2019 Arun Isaac@*
56 Copyright @copyright{} 2017 nee@*
57 Copyright @copyright{} 2018 Rutger Helling@*
58 Copyright @copyright{} 2018 Oleg Pykhalov@*
59 Copyright @copyright{} 2018 Mike Gerwitz@*
60 Copyright @copyright{} 2018 Pierre-Antoine Rouby@*
61 Copyright @copyright{} 2018, 2019 Gábor Boskovits@*
62 Copyright @copyright{} 2018, 2019 Florian Pelz@*
63 Copyright @copyright{} 2018 Laura Lazzati@*
64 Copyright @copyright{} 2018 Alex Vong@*
65 Copyright @copyright{} 2019 Josh Holland@*
66 Copyright @copyright{} 2019 Diego Nicola Barbato@*
67 Copyright @copyright{} 2019 Ivan Petkov@*
68 Copyright @copyright{} 2019 Jakob L. Kreuze@*
69
70 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
71 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or
72 any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
73 Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A
74 copy of the license is included in the section entitled ``GNU Free
75 Documentation License''.
76 @end copying
77
78 @dircategory System administration
79 @direntry
80 * Guix: (guix). Manage installed software and system configuration.
81 * guix package: (guix)Invoking guix package. Installing, removing, and upgrading packages.
82 * guix gc: (guix)Invoking guix gc. Reclaiming unused disk space.
83 * guix pull: (guix)Invoking guix pull. Update the list of available packages.
84 * guix system: (guix)Invoking guix system. Manage the operating system configuration.
85 * guix deploy: (guix)Invoking guix deploy. Manage operating system configurations for remote hosts.
86 @end direntry
87
88 @dircategory Software development
89 @direntry
90 * guix environment: (guix)Invoking guix environment. Building development environments with Guix.
91 * guix build: (guix)Invoking guix build. Building packages.
92 * guix pack: (guix)Invoking guix pack. Creating binary bundles.
93 @end direntry
94
95 @titlepage
96 @title GNU Guix Reference Manual
97 @subtitle Using the GNU Guix Functional Package Manager
98 @author The GNU Guix Developers
99
100 @page
101 @vskip 0pt plus 1filll
102 Edition @value{EDITION} @*
103 @value{UPDATED} @*
104
105 @insertcopying
106 @end titlepage
107
108 @contents
109
110 @c *********************************************************************
111 @node Top
112 @top GNU Guix
113
114 This document describes GNU Guix version @value{VERSION}, a functional
115 package management tool written for the GNU system.
116
117 @c TRANSLATORS: You can replace the following paragraph with information on
118 @c how to join your own translation team and how to report issues with the
119 @c translation.
120 This manual is also available in Simplified Chinese (@pxref{Top,,, guix.zh_CN,
121 GNU Guix参考手册}), French (@pxref{Top,,, guix.fr, Manuel de référence de GNU
122 Guix}), German (@pxref{Top,,, guix.de, Referenzhandbuch zu GNU Guix}),
123 Spanish (@pxref{Top,,, guix.es, Manual de referencia de GNU Guix}), and
124 Russian (@pxref{Top,,, guix.ru, Руководство GNU Guix}). If you
125 would like to translate it in your native language, consider joining the
126 @uref{https://translationproject.org/domain/guix-manual.html, Translation
127 Project}.
128
129 @menu
130 * Introduction:: What is Guix about?
131 * Installation:: Installing Guix.
132 * System Installation:: Installing the whole operating system.
133 * Package Management:: Package installation, upgrade, etc.
134 * Development:: Guix-aided software development.
135 * Programming Interface:: Using Guix in Scheme.
136 * Utilities:: Package management commands.
137 * System Configuration:: Configuring the operating system.
138 * Documentation:: Browsing software user manuals.
139 * Installing Debugging Files:: Feeding the debugger.
140 * Security Updates:: Deploying security fixes quickly.
141 * Bootstrapping:: GNU/Linux built from scratch.
142 * Porting:: Targeting another platform or kernel.
143 * Contributing:: Your help needed!
144
145 * Acknowledgments:: Thanks!
146 * GNU Free Documentation License:: The license of this manual.
147 * Concept Index:: Concepts.
148 * Programming Index:: Data types, functions, and variables.
149
150 @detailmenu
151 --- The Detailed Node Listing ---
152
153 Introduction
154
155 * Managing Software the Guix Way:: What's special.
156 * GNU Distribution:: The packages and tools.
157
158 Installation
159
160 * Binary Installation:: Getting Guix running in no time!
161 * Requirements:: Software needed to build and run Guix.
162 * Running the Test Suite:: Testing Guix.
163 * Setting Up the Daemon:: Preparing the build daemon's environment.
164 * Invoking guix-daemon:: Running the build daemon.
165 * Application Setup:: Application-specific setup.
166
167 Setting Up the Daemon
168
169 * Build Environment Setup:: Preparing the isolated build environment.
170 * Daemon Offload Setup:: Offloading builds to remote machines.
171 * SELinux Support:: Using an SELinux policy for the daemon.
172
173 System Installation
174
175 * Limitations:: What you can expect.
176 * Hardware Considerations:: Supported hardware.
177 * USB Stick and DVD Installation:: Preparing the installation medium.
178 * Preparing for Installation:: Networking, partitioning, etc.
179 * Guided Graphical Installation:: Easy graphical installation.
180 * Manual Installation:: Manual installation for wizards.
181 * After System Installation:: When installation succeeded.
182 * Installing Guix in a VM:: Guix System playground.
183 * Building the Installation Image:: How this comes to be.
184
185 Manual Installation
186
187 * Keyboard Layout and Networking and Partitioning:: Initial setup.
188 * Proceeding with the Installation:: Installing.
189
190 Package Management
191
192 * Features:: How Guix will make your life brighter.
193 * Invoking guix package:: Package installation, removal, etc.
194 * Substitutes:: Downloading pre-built binaries.
195 * Packages with Multiple Outputs:: Single source package, multiple outputs.
196 * Invoking guix gc:: Running the garbage collector.
197 * Invoking guix pull:: Fetching the latest Guix and distribution.
198 * Channels:: Customizing the package collection.
199 * Inferiors:: Interacting with another revision of Guix.
200 * Invoking guix describe:: Display information about your Guix revision.
201 * Invoking guix archive:: Exporting and importing store files.
202
203 Substitutes
204
205 * Official Substitute Server:: One particular source of substitutes.
206 * Substitute Server Authorization:: How to enable or disable substitutes.
207 * Substitute Authentication:: How Guix verifies substitutes.
208 * Proxy Settings:: How to get substitutes via proxy.
209 * Substitution Failure:: What happens when substitution fails.
210 * On Trusting Binaries:: How can you trust that binary blob?
211
212 Development
213
214 * Invoking guix environment:: Setting up development environments.
215 * Invoking guix pack:: Creating software bundles.
216
217 Programming Interface
218
219 * Package Modules:: Packages from the programmer's viewpoint.
220 * Defining Packages:: Defining new packages.
221 * Build Systems:: Specifying how packages are built.
222 * The Store:: Manipulating the package store.
223 * Derivations:: Low-level interface to package derivations.
224 * The Store Monad:: Purely functional interface to the store.
225 * G-Expressions:: Manipulating build expressions.
226 * Invoking guix repl:: Fiddling with Guix interactively.
227
228 Defining Packages
229
230 * package Reference:: The package data type.
231 * origin Reference:: The origin data type.
232
233 Utilities
234
235 * Invoking guix build:: Building packages from the command line.
236 * Invoking guix edit:: Editing package definitions.
237 * Invoking guix download:: Downloading a file and printing its hash.
238 * Invoking guix hash:: Computing the cryptographic hash of a file.
239 * Invoking guix import:: Importing package definitions.
240 * Invoking guix refresh:: Updating package definitions.
241 * Invoking guix lint:: Finding errors in package definitions.
242 * Invoking guix size:: Profiling disk usage.
243 * Invoking guix graph:: Visualizing the graph of packages.
244 * Invoking guix publish:: Sharing substitutes.
245 * Invoking guix challenge:: Challenging substitute servers.
246 * Invoking guix copy:: Copying to and from a remote store.
247 * Invoking guix container:: Process isolation.
248 * Invoking guix weather:: Assessing substitute availability.
249 * Invoking guix processes:: Listing client processes.
250
251 Invoking @command{guix build}
252
253 * Common Build Options:: Build options for most commands.
254 * Package Transformation Options:: Creating variants of packages.
255 * Additional Build Options:: Options specific to 'guix build'.
256 * Debugging Build Failures:: Real life packaging experience.
257
258 System Configuration
259
260 * Using the Configuration System:: Customizing your GNU system.
261 * operating-system Reference:: Detail of operating-system declarations.
262 * File Systems:: Configuring file system mounts.
263 * Mapped Devices:: Block device extra processing.
264 * User Accounts:: Specifying user accounts.
265 * Keyboard Layout:: How the system interprets key strokes.
266 * Locales:: Language and cultural convention settings.
267 * Services:: Specifying system services.
268 * Setuid Programs:: Programs running with root privileges.
269 * X.509 Certificates:: Authenticating HTTPS servers.
270 * Name Service Switch:: Configuring libc's name service switch.
271 * Initial RAM Disk:: Linux-Libre bootstrapping.
272 * Bootloader Configuration:: Configuring the boot loader.
273 * Invoking guix system:: Instantiating a system configuration.
274 * Invoking guix deploy:: Deploying a system configuration to a remote host.
275 * Running Guix in a VM:: How to run Guix System in a virtual machine.
276 * Defining Services:: Adding new service definitions.
277
278 Services
279
280 * Base Services:: Essential system services.
281 * Scheduled Job Execution:: The mcron service.
282 * Log Rotation:: The rottlog service.
283 * Networking Services:: Network setup, SSH daemon, etc.
284 * X Window:: Graphical display.
285 * Printing Services:: Local and remote printer support.
286 * Desktop Services:: D-Bus and desktop services.
287 * Sound Services:: ALSA and Pulseaudio services.
288 * Database Services:: SQL databases, key-value stores, etc.
289 * Mail Services:: IMAP, POP3, SMTP, and all that.
290 * Messaging Services:: Messaging services.
291 * Telephony Services:: Telephony services.
292 * Monitoring Services:: Monitoring services.
293 * Kerberos Services:: Kerberos services.
294 * Web Services:: Web servers.
295 * Certificate Services:: TLS certificates via Let's Encrypt.
296 * DNS Services:: DNS daemons.
297 * VPN Services:: VPN daemons.
298 * Network File System:: NFS related services.
299 * Continuous Integration:: The Cuirass service.
300 * Power Management Services:: Extending battery life.
301 * Audio Services:: The MPD.
302 * Virtualization Services:: Virtualization services.
303 * Version Control Services:: Providing remote access to Git repositories.
304 * Game Services:: Game servers.
305 * Miscellaneous Services:: Other services.
306
307 Defining Services
308
309 * Service Composition:: The model for composing services.
310 * Service Types and Services:: Types and services.
311 * Service Reference:: API reference.
312 * Shepherd Services:: A particular type of service.
313
314 @end detailmenu
315 @end menu
316
317 @c *********************************************************************
318 @node Introduction
319 @chapter Introduction
320
321 @cindex purpose
322 GNU Guix@footnote{``Guix'' is pronounced like ``geeks'', or ``ɡiːks''
323 using the international phonetic alphabet (IPA).} is a package
324 management tool for and distribution of the GNU system.
325 Guix makes it easy for unprivileged
326 users to install, upgrade, or remove software packages, to roll back to a
327 previous package set, to build packages from source, and generally
328 assists with the creation and maintenance of software environments.
329
330 @cindex Guix System
331 @cindex GuixSD, now Guix System
332 @cindex Guix System Distribution, now Guix System
333 You can install GNU@tie{}Guix on top of an existing GNU/Linux system where it
334 complements the available tools without interference (@pxref{Installation}),
335 or you can use it as a standalone operating system distribution,
336 @dfn{Guix@tie{}System}@footnote{We used to refer to Guix System as ``Guix
337 System Distribution'' or ``GuixSD''. We now consider it makes more sense to
338 group everything under the ``Guix'' banner since, after all, Guix System is
339 readily available through the @command{guix system} command, even if you're
340 using a different distro underneath!}. @xref{GNU Distribution}.
341
342 @menu
343 * Managing Software the Guix Way:: What's special.
344 * GNU Distribution:: The packages and tools.
345 @end menu
346
347 @node Managing Software the Guix Way
348 @section Managing Software the Guix Way
349
350 @cindex user interfaces
351 Guix provides a command-line package management interface
352 (@pxref{Package Management}), tools to help with software development
353 (@pxref{Development}), command-line utilities for more advanced usage,
354 (@pxref{Utilities}), as well as Scheme programming interfaces
355 (@pxref{Programming Interface}).
356 @cindex build daemon
357 Its @dfn{build daemon} is responsible for building packages on behalf of
358 users (@pxref{Setting Up the Daemon}) and for downloading pre-built
359 binaries from authorized sources (@pxref{Substitutes}).
360
361 @cindex extensibility of the distribution
362 @cindex customization, of packages
363 Guix includes package definitions for many GNU and non-GNU packages, all
364 of which @uref{https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html, respect the
365 user's computing freedom}. It is @emph{extensible}: users can write
366 their own package definitions (@pxref{Defining Packages}) and make them
367 available as independent package modules (@pxref{Package Modules}). It
368 is also @emph{customizable}: users can @emph{derive} specialized package
369 definitions from existing ones, including from the command line
370 (@pxref{Package Transformation Options}).
371
372 @cindex functional package management
373 @cindex isolation
374 Under the hood, Guix implements the @dfn{functional package management}
375 discipline pioneered by Nix (@pxref{Acknowledgments}).
376 In Guix, the package build and installation process is seen
377 as a @emph{function}, in the mathematical sense. That function takes inputs,
378 such as build scripts, a compiler, and libraries, and
379 returns an installed package. As a pure function, its result depends
380 solely on its inputs---for instance, it cannot refer to software or
381 scripts that were not explicitly passed as inputs. A build function
382 always produces the same result when passed a given set of inputs. It
383 cannot alter the environment of the running system in
384 any way; for instance, it cannot create, modify, or delete files outside
385 of its build and installation directories. This is achieved by running
386 build processes in isolated environments (or @dfn{containers}), where only their
387 explicit inputs are visible.
388
389 @cindex store
390 The result of package build functions is @dfn{cached} in the file
391 system, in a special directory called @dfn{the store} (@pxref{The
392 Store}). Each package is installed in a directory of its own in the
393 store---by default under @file{/gnu/store}. The directory name contains
394 a hash of all the inputs used to build that package; thus, changing an
395 input yields a different directory name.
396
397 This approach is the foundation for the salient features of Guix: support
398 for transactional package upgrade and rollback, per-user installation, and
399 garbage collection of packages (@pxref{Features}).
400
401
402 @node GNU Distribution
403 @section GNU Distribution
404
405 @cindex Guix System
406 Guix comes with a distribution of the GNU system consisting entirely of
407 free software@footnote{The term ``free'' here refers to the
408 @url{https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html,freedom provided to
409 users of that software}.}. The
410 distribution can be installed on its own (@pxref{System Installation}),
411 but it is also possible to install Guix as a package manager on top of
412 an installed GNU/Linux system (@pxref{Installation}). When we need to
413 distinguish between the two, we refer to the standalone distribution as
414 Guix@tie{}System.
415
416 The distribution provides core GNU packages such as GNU libc, GCC, and
417 Binutils, as well as many GNU and non-GNU applications. The complete
418 list of available packages can be browsed
419 @url{https://www.gnu.org/software/guix/packages,on-line} or by
420 running @command{guix package} (@pxref{Invoking guix package}):
421
422 @example
423 guix package --list-available
424 @end example
425
426 Our goal is to provide a practical 100% free software distribution of
427 Linux-based and other variants of GNU, with a focus on the promotion and
428 tight integration of GNU components, and an emphasis on programs and
429 tools that help users exert that freedom.
430
431 Packages are currently available on the following platforms:
432
433 @table @code
434
435 @item x86_64-linux
436 Intel/AMD @code{x86_64} architecture, Linux-Libre kernel;
437
438 @item i686-linux
439 Intel 32-bit architecture (IA32), Linux-Libre kernel;
440
441 @item armhf-linux
442 ARMv7-A architecture with hard float, Thumb-2 and NEON,
443 using the EABI hard-float application binary interface (ABI),
444 and Linux-Libre kernel.
445
446 @item aarch64-linux
447 little-endian 64-bit ARMv8-A processors, Linux-Libre kernel.
448
449 @item mips64el-linux
450 little-endian 64-bit MIPS processors, specifically the Loongson series,
451 n32 ABI, and Linux-Libre kernel. This configuration is no longer fully
452 supported; in particular, the project's build farms no longer provide
453 substitutes for this architecture.
454
455 @end table
456
457 With Guix@tie{}System, you @emph{declare} all aspects of the operating system
458 configuration and Guix takes care of instantiating the configuration in a
459 transactional, reproducible, and stateless fashion (@pxref{System
460 Configuration}). Guix System uses the Linux-libre kernel, the Shepherd
461 initialization system (@pxref{Introduction,,, shepherd, The GNU Shepherd
462 Manual}), the well-known GNU utilities and tool chain, as well as the
463 graphical environment or system services of your choice.
464
465 Guix System is available on all the above platforms except
466 @code{mips64el-linux}.
467
468 @noindent
469 For information on porting to other architectures or kernels,
470 @pxref{Porting}.
471
472 Building this distribution is a cooperative effort, and you are invited
473 to join! @xref{Contributing}, for information about how you can help.
474
475
476 @c *********************************************************************
477 @node Installation
478 @chapter Installation
479
480 @cindex installing Guix
481
482 @quotation Note
483 We recommend the use of this
484 @uref{https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/guix.git/plain/etc/guix-install.sh,
485 shell installer script} to install Guix on top of a running GNU/Linux system,
486 thereafter called a @dfn{foreign distro}.@footnote{This section is concerned
487 with the installation of the package manager, which can be done on top of a
488 running GNU/Linux system. If, instead, you want to install the complete GNU
489 operating system, @pxref{System Installation}.} The script automates the
490 download, installation, and initial configuration of Guix. It should be run
491 as the root user.
492 @end quotation
493
494 @cindex foreign distro
495 @cindex directories related to foreign distro
496 When installed on a foreign distro, GNU@tie{}Guix complements the available
497 tools without interference. Its data lives exclusively in two directories,
498 usually @file{/gnu/store} and @file{/var/guix}; other files on your system,
499 such as @file{/etc}, are left untouched.
500
501 Once installed, Guix can be updated by running @command{guix pull}
502 (@pxref{Invoking guix pull}).
503
504 If you prefer to perform the installation steps manually or want to tweak
505 them, you may find the following subsections useful. They describe the
506 software requirements of Guix, as well as how to install it manually and get
507 ready to use it.
508
509 @menu
510 * Binary Installation:: Getting Guix running in no time!
511 * Requirements:: Software needed to build and run Guix.
512 * Running the Test Suite:: Testing Guix.
513 * Setting Up the Daemon:: Preparing the build daemon's environment.
514 * Invoking guix-daemon:: Running the build daemon.
515 * Application Setup:: Application-specific setup.
516 @end menu
517
518 @node Binary Installation
519 @section Binary Installation
520
521 @cindex installing Guix from binaries
522 @cindex installer script
523 This section describes how to install Guix on an arbitrary system from a
524 self-contained tarball providing binaries for Guix and for all its
525 dependencies. This is often quicker than installing from source, which
526 is described in the next sections. The only requirement is to have
527 GNU@tie{}tar and Xz.
528
529 @c Note duplicated from the ``Installation'' node.
530 @quotation Note
531 We recommend the use of this
532 @uref{https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/guix.git/plain/etc/guix-install.sh,
533 shell installer script}. The script automates the download, installation, and
534 initial configuration steps described below. It should be run as the root
535 user.
536 @end quotation
537
538 Installing goes along these lines:
539
540 @enumerate
541 @item
542 @cindex downloading Guix binary
543 Download the binary tarball from
544 @indicateurl{@value{BASE-URL}/guix-binary-@value{VERSION}.@var{system}.tar.xz},
545 where @var{system} is @code{x86_64-linux} for an @code{x86_64} machine
546 already running the kernel Linux, and so on.
547
548 @c The following is somewhat duplicated in ``System Installation''.
549 Make sure to download the associated @file{.sig} file and to verify the
550 authenticity of the tarball against it, along these lines:
551
552 @example
553 $ wget @value{BASE-URL}/guix-binary-@value{VERSION}.@var{system}.tar.xz.sig
554 $ gpg --verify guix-binary-@value{VERSION}.@var{system}.tar.xz.sig
555 @end example
556
557 If that command fails because you do not have the required public key,
558 then run this command to import it:
559
560 @example
561 $ wget @value{OPENPGP-SIGNING-KEY-URL} \
562 -qO - | gpg --import -
563 @end example
564
565 @noindent
566 and rerun the @code{gpg --verify} command.
567
568 Take note that a warning like ``This key is not certified with a trusted
569 signature!'' is normal.
570
571 @c end authentication part
572
573 @item
574 Now, you need to become the @code{root} user. Depending on your distribution,
575 you may have to run @code{su -} or @code{sudo -i}. As @code{root}, run:
576
577 @example
578 # cd /tmp
579 # tar --warning=no-timestamp -xf \
580 /path/to/guix-binary-@value{VERSION}.@var{system}.tar.xz
581 # mv var/guix /var/ && mv gnu /
582 @end example
583
584 This creates @file{/gnu/store} (@pxref{The Store}) and @file{/var/guix}.
585 The latter contains a ready-to-use profile for @code{root} (see next
586 step.)
587
588 Do @emph{not} unpack the tarball on a working Guix system since that
589 would overwrite its own essential files.
590
591 The @code{--warning=no-timestamp} option makes sure GNU@tie{}tar does
592 not emit warnings about ``implausibly old time stamps'' (such
593 warnings were triggered by GNU@tie{}tar 1.26 and older; recent
594 versions are fine.)
595 They stem from the fact that all the
596 files in the archive have their modification time set to zero (which
597 means January 1st, 1970.) This is done on purpose to make sure the
598 archive content is independent of its creation time, thus making it
599 reproducible.
600
601 @item
602 Make the profile available under @file{~root/.config/guix/current}, which is
603 where @command{guix pull} will install updates (@pxref{Invoking guix pull}):
604
605 @example
606 # mkdir -p ~root/.config/guix
607 # ln -sf /var/guix/profiles/per-user/root/current-guix \
608 ~root/.config/guix/current
609 @end example
610
611 Source @file{etc/profile} to augment @code{PATH} and other relevant
612 environment variables:
613
614 @example
615 # GUIX_PROFILE="`echo ~root`/.config/guix/current" ; \
616 source $GUIX_PROFILE/etc/profile
617 @end example
618
619 @item
620 Create the group and user accounts for build users as explained below
621 (@pxref{Build Environment Setup}).
622
623 @item
624 Run the daemon, and set it to automatically start on boot.
625
626 If your host distro uses the systemd init system, this can be achieved
627 with these commands:
628
629 @c Versions of systemd that supported symlinked service files are not
630 @c yet widely deployed, so we should suggest that users copy the service
631 @c files into place.
632 @c
633 @c See this thread for more information:
634 @c https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/guix-devel/2017-01/msg01199.html
635
636 @example
637 # cp ~root/.config/guix/current/lib/systemd/system/guix-daemon.service \
638 /etc/systemd/system/
639 # systemctl start guix-daemon && systemctl enable guix-daemon
640 @end example
641
642 If your host distro uses the Upstart init system:
643
644 @example
645 # initctl reload-configuration
646 # cp ~root/.config/guix/current/lib/upstart/system/guix-daemon.conf \
647 /etc/init/
648 # start guix-daemon
649 @end example
650
651 Otherwise, you can still start the daemon manually with:
652
653 @example
654 # ~root/.config/guix/current/bin/guix-daemon \
655 --build-users-group=guixbuild
656 @end example
657
658 @item
659 Make the @command{guix} command available to other users on the machine,
660 for instance with:
661
662 @example
663 # mkdir -p /usr/local/bin
664 # cd /usr/local/bin
665 # ln -s /var/guix/profiles/per-user/root/current-guix/bin/guix
666 @end example
667
668 It is also a good idea to make the Info version of this manual available
669 there:
670
671 @example
672 # mkdir -p /usr/local/share/info
673 # cd /usr/local/share/info
674 # for i in /var/guix/profiles/per-user/root/current-guix/share/info/* ;
675 do ln -s $i ; done
676 @end example
677
678 That way, assuming @file{/usr/local/share/info} is in the search path,
679 running @command{info guix} will open this manual (@pxref{Other Info
680 Directories,,, texinfo, GNU Texinfo}, for more details on changing the
681 Info search path.)
682
683 @item
684 @cindex substitutes, authorization thereof
685 To use substitutes from @code{@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER}} or one of its mirrors
686 (@pxref{Substitutes}), authorize them:
687
688 @example
689 # guix archive --authorize < \
690 ~root/.config/guix/current/share/guix/@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER}.pub
691 @end example
692
693 @item
694 Each user may need to perform a few additional steps to make their Guix
695 environment ready for use, @pxref{Application Setup}.
696 @end enumerate
697
698 Voilà, the installation is complete!
699
700 You can confirm that Guix is working by installing a sample package into
701 the root profile:
702
703 @example
704 # guix install hello
705 @end example
706
707 The binary installation tarball can be (re)produced and verified simply
708 by running the following command in the Guix source tree:
709
710 @example
711 make guix-binary.@var{system}.tar.xz
712 @end example
713
714 @noindent
715 ...@: which, in turn, runs:
716
717 @example
718 guix pack -s @var{system} --localstatedir \
719 --profile-name=current-guix guix
720 @end example
721
722 @xref{Invoking guix pack}, for more info on this handy tool.
723
724 @node Requirements
725 @section Requirements
726
727 This section lists requirements when building Guix from source. The
728 build procedure for Guix is the same as for other GNU software, and is
729 not covered here. Please see the files @file{README} and @file{INSTALL}
730 in the Guix source tree for additional details.
731
732 @cindex official website
733 GNU Guix is available for download from its website at
734 @url{https://www.gnu.org/software/guix/}.
735
736 GNU Guix depends on the following packages:
737
738 @itemize
739 @item @url{https://gnu.org/software/guile/, GNU Guile}, version 2.2.x;
740 @item @url{https://notabug.org/cwebber/guile-gcrypt, Guile-Gcrypt}, version
741 0.1.0 or later;
742 @item
743 @uref{https://gnutls.org/, GnuTLS}, specifically its Guile bindings
744 (@pxref{Guile Preparations, how to install the GnuTLS bindings for
745 Guile,, gnutls-guile, GnuTLS-Guile});
746 @item
747 @uref{https://notabug.org/guile-sqlite3/guile-sqlite3, Guile-SQLite3}, version 0.1.0
748 or later;
749 @item
750 @c FIXME: Specify a version number once a release has been made.
751 @uref{https://gitlab.com/guile-git/guile-git, Guile-Git}, from August
752 2017 or later;
753 @item @uref{https://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/guile-json/, Guile-JSON} 3.x;
754 @item @url{https://zlib.net, zlib};
755 @item @url{https://www.gnu.org/software/make/, GNU Make}.
756 @end itemize
757
758 The following dependencies are optional:
759
760 @itemize
761 @item
762 @c Note: We need at least 0.10.2 for 'channel-send-eof'.
763 Support for build offloading (@pxref{Daemon Offload Setup}) and
764 @command{guix copy} (@pxref{Invoking guix copy}) depends on
765 @uref{https://github.com/artyom-poptsov/guile-ssh, Guile-SSH},
766 version 0.10.2 or later.
767
768 @item
769 When @url{https://www.nongnu.org/lzip/lzlib.html, lzlib} is available, lzlib
770 substitutes can be used and @command{guix publish} can compress substitutes
771 with lzlib.
772
773 @item
774 When @url{http://www.bzip.org, libbz2} is available,
775 @command{guix-daemon} can use it to compress build logs.
776 @end itemize
777
778 Unless @code{--disable-daemon} was passed to @command{configure}, the
779 following packages are also needed:
780
781 @itemize
782 @item @url{https://gnupg.org/, GNU libgcrypt};
783 @item @url{https://sqlite.org, SQLite 3};
784 @item @url{https://gcc.gnu.org, GCC's g++}, with support for the
785 C++11 standard.
786 @end itemize
787
788 @cindex state directory
789 When configuring Guix on a system that already has a Guix installation,
790 be sure to specify the same state directory as the existing installation
791 using the @code{--localstatedir} option of the @command{configure}
792 script (@pxref{Directory Variables, @code{localstatedir},, standards,
793 GNU Coding Standards}). The @command{configure} script protects against
794 unintended misconfiguration of @var{localstatedir} so you do not
795 inadvertently corrupt your store (@pxref{The Store}).
796
797 @cindex Nix, compatibility
798 When a working installation of @url{https://nixos.org/nix/, the Nix package
799 manager} is available, you
800 can instead configure Guix with @code{--disable-daemon}. In that case,
801 Nix replaces the three dependencies above.
802
803 Guix is compatible with Nix, so it is possible to share the same store
804 between both. To do so, you must pass @command{configure} not only the
805 same @code{--with-store-dir} value, but also the same
806 @code{--localstatedir} value. The latter is essential because it
807 specifies where the database that stores metadata about the store is
808 located, among other things. The default values for Nix are
809 @code{--with-store-dir=/nix/store} and @code{--localstatedir=/nix/var}.
810 Note that @code{--disable-daemon} is not required if
811 your goal is to share the store with Nix.
812
813 @node Running the Test Suite
814 @section Running the Test Suite
815
816 @cindex test suite
817 After a successful @command{configure} and @code{make} run, it is a good
818 idea to run the test suite. It can help catch issues with the setup or
819 environment, or bugs in Guix itself---and really, reporting test
820 failures is a good way to help improve the software. To run the test
821 suite, type:
822
823 @example
824 make check
825 @end example
826
827 Test cases can run in parallel: you can use the @code{-j} option of
828 GNU@tie{}make to speed things up. The first run may take a few minutes
829 on a recent machine; subsequent runs will be faster because the store
830 that is created for test purposes will already have various things in
831 cache.
832
833 It is also possible to run a subset of the tests by defining the
834 @code{TESTS} makefile variable as in this example:
835
836 @example
837 make check TESTS="tests/store.scm tests/cpio.scm"
838 @end example
839
840 By default, tests results are displayed at a file level. In order to
841 see the details of every individual test cases, it is possible to define
842 the @code{SCM_LOG_DRIVER_FLAGS} makefile variable as in this example:
843
844 @example
845 make check TESTS="tests/base64.scm" SCM_LOG_DRIVER_FLAGS="--brief=no"
846 @end example
847
848 Upon failure, please email @email{bug-guix@@gnu.org} and attach the
849 @file{test-suite.log} file. Please specify the Guix version being used
850 as well as version numbers of the dependencies (@pxref{Requirements}) in
851 your message.
852
853 Guix also comes with a whole-system test suite that tests complete
854 Guix System instances. It can only run on systems where
855 Guix is already installed, using:
856
857 @example
858 make check-system
859 @end example
860
861 @noindent
862 or, again, by defining @code{TESTS} to select a subset of tests to run:
863
864 @example
865 make check-system TESTS="basic mcron"
866 @end example
867
868 These system tests are defined in the @code{(gnu tests @dots{})}
869 modules. They work by running the operating systems under test with
870 lightweight instrumentation in a virtual machine (VM). They can be
871 computationally intensive or rather cheap, depending on whether
872 substitutes are available for their dependencies (@pxref{Substitutes}).
873 Some of them require a lot of storage space to hold VM images.
874
875 Again in case of test failures, please send @email{bug-guix@@gnu.org}
876 all the details.
877
878 @node Setting Up the Daemon
879 @section Setting Up the Daemon
880
881 @cindex daemon
882 Operations such as building a package or running the garbage collector
883 are all performed by a specialized process, the @dfn{build daemon}, on
884 behalf of clients. Only the daemon may access the store and its
885 associated database. Thus, any operation that manipulates the store
886 goes through the daemon. For instance, command-line tools such as
887 @command{guix package} and @command{guix build} communicate with the
888 daemon (@i{via} remote procedure calls) to instruct it what to do.
889
890 The following sections explain how to prepare the build daemon's
891 environment. See also @ref{Substitutes}, for information on how to allow
892 the daemon to download pre-built binaries.
893
894 @menu
895 * Build Environment Setup:: Preparing the isolated build environment.
896 * Daemon Offload Setup:: Offloading builds to remote machines.
897 * SELinux Support:: Using an SELinux policy for the daemon.
898 @end menu
899
900 @node Build Environment Setup
901 @subsection Build Environment Setup
902
903 @cindex build environment
904 In a standard multi-user setup, Guix and its daemon---the
905 @command{guix-daemon} program---are installed by the system
906 administrator; @file{/gnu/store} is owned by @code{root} and
907 @command{guix-daemon} runs as @code{root}. Unprivileged users may use
908 Guix tools to build packages or otherwise access the store, and the
909 daemon will do it on their behalf, ensuring that the store is kept in a
910 consistent state, and allowing built packages to be shared among users.
911
912 @cindex build users
913 When @command{guix-daemon} runs as @code{root}, you may not want package
914 build processes themselves to run as @code{root} too, for obvious
915 security reasons. To avoid that, a special pool of @dfn{build users}
916 should be created for use by build processes started by the daemon.
917 These build users need not have a shell and a home directory: they will
918 just be used when the daemon drops @code{root} privileges in build
919 processes. Having several such users allows the daemon to launch
920 distinct build processes under separate UIDs, which guarantees that they
921 do not interfere with each other---an essential feature since builds are
922 regarded as pure functions (@pxref{Introduction}).
923
924 On a GNU/Linux system, a build user pool may be created like this (using
925 Bash syntax and the @code{shadow} commands):
926
927 @c See https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-guix/2013-01/msg00239.html
928 @c for why `-G' is needed.
929 @example
930 # groupadd --system guixbuild
931 # for i in `seq -w 1 10`;
932 do
933 useradd -g guixbuild -G guixbuild \
934 -d /var/empty -s `which nologin` \
935 -c "Guix build user $i" --system \
936 guixbuilder$i;
937 done
938 @end example
939
940 @noindent
941 The number of build users determines how many build jobs may run in
942 parallel, as specified by the @option{--max-jobs} option
943 (@pxref{Invoking guix-daemon, @option{--max-jobs}}). To use
944 @command{guix system vm} and related commands, you may need to add the
945 build users to the @code{kvm} group so they can access @file{/dev/kvm},
946 using @code{-G guixbuild,kvm} instead of @code{-G guixbuild}
947 (@pxref{Invoking guix system}).
948
949 The @code{guix-daemon} program may then be run as @code{root} with the
950 following command@footnote{If your machine uses the systemd init system,
951 dropping the @file{@var{prefix}/lib/systemd/system/guix-daemon.service}
952 file in @file{/etc/systemd/system} will ensure that
953 @command{guix-daemon} is automatically started. Similarly, if your
954 machine uses the Upstart init system, drop the
955 @file{@var{prefix}/lib/upstart/system/guix-daemon.conf}
956 file in @file{/etc/init}.}:
957
958 @example
959 # guix-daemon --build-users-group=guixbuild
960 @end example
961
962 @cindex chroot
963 @noindent
964 This way, the daemon starts build processes in a chroot, under one of
965 the @code{guixbuilder} users. On GNU/Linux, by default, the chroot
966 environment contains nothing but:
967
968 @c Keep this list in sync with libstore/build.cc! -----------------------
969 @itemize
970 @item
971 a minimal @code{/dev} directory, created mostly independently from the
972 host @code{/dev}@footnote{``Mostly'', because while the set of files
973 that appear in the chroot's @code{/dev} is fixed, most of these files
974 can only be created if the host has them.};
975
976 @item
977 the @code{/proc} directory; it only shows the processes of the container
978 since a separate PID name space is used;
979
980 @item
981 @file{/etc/passwd} with an entry for the current user and an entry for
982 user @file{nobody};
983
984 @item
985 @file{/etc/group} with an entry for the user's group;
986
987 @item
988 @file{/etc/hosts} with an entry that maps @code{localhost} to
989 @code{127.0.0.1};
990
991 @item
992 a writable @file{/tmp} directory.
993 @end itemize
994
995 You can influence the directory where the daemon stores build trees
996 @i{via} the @code{TMPDIR} environment variable. However, the build tree
997 within the chroot is always called @file{/tmp/guix-build-@var{name}.drv-0},
998 where @var{name} is the derivation name---e.g., @code{coreutils-8.24}.
999 This way, the value of @code{TMPDIR} does not leak inside build
1000 environments, which avoids discrepancies in cases where build processes
1001 capture the name of their build tree.
1002
1003 @vindex http_proxy
1004 The daemon also honors the @code{http_proxy} environment variable for
1005 HTTP downloads it performs, be it for fixed-output derivations
1006 (@pxref{Derivations}) or for substitutes (@pxref{Substitutes}).
1007
1008 If you are installing Guix as an unprivileged user, it is still possible
1009 to run @command{guix-daemon} provided you pass @code{--disable-chroot}.
1010 However, build processes will not be isolated from one another, and not
1011 from the rest of the system. Thus, build processes may interfere with
1012 each other, and may access programs, libraries, and other files
1013 available on the system---making it much harder to view them as
1014 @emph{pure} functions.
1015
1016
1017 @node Daemon Offload Setup
1018 @subsection Using the Offload Facility
1019
1020 @cindex offloading
1021 @cindex build hook
1022 When desired, the build daemon can @dfn{offload} derivation builds to
1023 other machines running Guix, using the @code{offload} @dfn{build
1024 hook}@footnote{This feature is available only when
1025 @uref{https://github.com/artyom-poptsov/guile-ssh, Guile-SSH} is
1026 present.}. When that
1027 feature is enabled, a list of user-specified build machines is read from
1028 @file{/etc/guix/machines.scm}; every time a build is requested, for
1029 instance via @code{guix build}, the daemon attempts to offload it to one
1030 of the machines that satisfy the constraints of the derivation, in
1031 particular its system type---e.g., @file{x86_64-linux}. Missing
1032 prerequisites for the build are copied over SSH to the target machine,
1033 which then proceeds with the build; upon success the output(s) of the
1034 build are copied back to the initial machine.
1035
1036 The @file{/etc/guix/machines.scm} file typically looks like this:
1037
1038 @example
1039 (list (build-machine
1040 (name "eightysix.example.org")
1041 (system "x86_64-linux")
1042 (host-key "ssh-ed25519 AAAAC3Nza@dots{}")
1043 (user "bob")
1044 (speed 2.)) ;incredibly fast!
1045
1046 (build-machine
1047 (name "meeps.example.org")
1048 (system "mips64el-linux")
1049 (host-key "ssh-rsa AAAAB3Nza@dots{}")
1050 (user "alice")
1051 (private-key
1052 (string-append (getenv "HOME")
1053 "/.ssh/identity-for-guix"))))
1054 @end example
1055
1056 @noindent
1057 In the example above we specify a list of two build machines, one for
1058 the @code{x86_64} architecture and one for the @code{mips64el}
1059 architecture.
1060
1061 In fact, this file is---not surprisingly!---a Scheme file that is
1062 evaluated when the @code{offload} hook is started. Its return value
1063 must be a list of @code{build-machine} objects. While this example
1064 shows a fixed list of build machines, one could imagine, say, using
1065 DNS-SD to return a list of potential build machines discovered in the
1066 local network (@pxref{Introduction, Guile-Avahi,, guile-avahi, Using
1067 Avahi in Guile Scheme Programs}). The @code{build-machine} data type is
1068 detailed below.
1069
1070 @deftp {Data Type} build-machine
1071 This data type represents build machines to which the daemon may offload
1072 builds. The important fields are:
1073
1074 @table @code
1075
1076 @item name
1077 The host name of the remote machine.
1078
1079 @item system
1080 The system type of the remote machine---e.g., @code{"x86_64-linux"}.
1081
1082 @item user
1083 The user account to use when connecting to the remote machine over SSH.
1084 Note that the SSH key pair must @emph{not} be passphrase-protected, to
1085 allow non-interactive logins.
1086
1087 @item host-key
1088 This must be the machine's SSH @dfn{public host key} in OpenSSH format.
1089 This is used to authenticate the machine when we connect to it. It is a
1090 long string that looks like this:
1091
1092 @example
1093 ssh-ed25519 AAAAC3NzaC@dots{}mde+UhL hint@@example.org
1094 @end example
1095
1096 If the machine is running the OpenSSH daemon, @command{sshd}, the host
1097 key can be found in a file such as
1098 @file{/etc/ssh/ssh_host_ed25519_key.pub}.
1099
1100 If the machine is running the SSH daemon of GNU@tie{}lsh,
1101 @command{lshd}, the host key is in @file{/etc/lsh/host-key.pub} or a
1102 similar file. It can be converted to the OpenSSH format using
1103 @command{lsh-export-key} (@pxref{Converting keys,,, lsh, LSH Manual}):
1104
1105 @example
1106 $ lsh-export-key --openssh < /etc/lsh/host-key.pub
1107 ssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAAEOp8FoQAAAQEAs1eB46LV@dots{}
1108 @end example
1109
1110 @end table
1111
1112 A number of optional fields may be specified:
1113
1114 @table @asis
1115
1116 @item @code{port} (default: @code{22})
1117 Port number of SSH server on the machine.
1118
1119 @item @code{private-key} (default: @file{~root/.ssh/id_rsa})
1120 The SSH private key file to use when connecting to the machine, in
1121 OpenSSH format. This key must not be protected with a passphrase.
1122
1123 Note that the default value is the private key @emph{of the root
1124 account}. Make sure it exists if you use the default.
1125
1126 @item @code{compression} (default: @code{"zlib@@openssh.com,zlib"})
1127 @itemx @code{compression-level} (default: @code{3})
1128 The SSH-level compression methods and compression level requested.
1129
1130 Note that offloading relies on SSH compression to reduce bandwidth usage
1131 when transferring files to and from build machines.
1132
1133 @item @code{daemon-socket} (default: @code{"/var/guix/daemon-socket/socket"})
1134 File name of the Unix-domain socket @command{guix-daemon} is listening
1135 to on that machine.
1136
1137 @item @code{parallel-builds} (default: @code{1})
1138 The number of builds that may run in parallel on the machine.
1139
1140 @item @code{speed} (default: @code{1.0})
1141 A ``relative speed factor''. The offload scheduler will tend to prefer
1142 machines with a higher speed factor.
1143
1144 @item @code{features} (default: @code{'()})
1145 A list of strings denoting specific features supported by the machine.
1146 An example is @code{"kvm"} for machines that have the KVM Linux modules
1147 and corresponding hardware support. Derivations can request features by
1148 name, and they will be scheduled on matching build machines.
1149
1150 @end table
1151 @end deftp
1152
1153 The @command{guix} command must be in the search path on the build
1154 machines. You can check whether this is the case by running:
1155
1156 @example
1157 ssh build-machine guix repl --version
1158 @end example
1159
1160 There is one last thing to do once @file{machines.scm} is in place. As
1161 explained above, when offloading, files are transferred back and forth
1162 between the machine stores. For this to work, you first need to
1163 generate a key pair on each machine to allow the daemon to export signed
1164 archives of files from the store (@pxref{Invoking guix archive}):
1165
1166 @example
1167 # guix archive --generate-key
1168 @end example
1169
1170 @noindent
1171 Each build machine must authorize the key of the master machine so that
1172 it accepts store items it receives from the master:
1173
1174 @example
1175 # guix archive --authorize < master-public-key.txt
1176 @end example
1177
1178 @noindent
1179 Likewise, the master machine must authorize the key of each build machine.
1180
1181 All the fuss with keys is here to express pairwise mutual trust
1182 relations between the master and the build machines. Concretely, when
1183 the master receives files from a build machine (and @i{vice versa}), its
1184 build daemon can make sure they are genuine, have not been tampered
1185 with, and that they are signed by an authorized key.
1186
1187 @cindex offload test
1188 To test whether your setup is operational, run this command on the
1189 master node:
1190
1191 @example
1192 # guix offload test
1193 @end example
1194
1195 This will attempt to connect to each of the build machines specified in
1196 @file{/etc/guix/machines.scm}, make sure Guile and the Guix modules are
1197 available on each machine, attempt to export to the machine and import
1198 from it, and report any error in the process.
1199
1200 If you want to test a different machine file, just specify it on the
1201 command line:
1202
1203 @example
1204 # guix offload test machines-qualif.scm
1205 @end example
1206
1207 Last, you can test the subset of the machines whose name matches a
1208 regular expression like this:
1209
1210 @example
1211 # guix offload test machines.scm '\.gnu\.org$'
1212 @end example
1213
1214 @cindex offload status
1215 To display the current load of all build hosts, run this command on the
1216 main node:
1217
1218 @example
1219 # guix offload status
1220 @end example
1221
1222
1223 @node SELinux Support
1224 @subsection SELinux Support
1225
1226 @cindex SELinux, daemon policy
1227 @cindex mandatory access control, SELinux
1228 @cindex security, guix-daemon
1229 Guix includes an SELinux policy file at @file{etc/guix-daemon.cil} that
1230 can be installed on a system where SELinux is enabled, in order to label
1231 Guix files and to specify the expected behavior of the daemon. Since
1232 Guix System does not provide an SELinux base policy, the daemon policy cannot
1233 be used on Guix System.
1234
1235 @subsubsection Installing the SELinux policy
1236 @cindex SELinux, policy installation
1237 To install the policy run this command as root:
1238
1239 @example
1240 semodule -i etc/guix-daemon.cil
1241 @end example
1242
1243 Then relabel the file system with @code{restorecon} or by a different
1244 mechanism provided by your system.
1245
1246 Once the policy is installed, the file system has been relabeled, and
1247 the daemon has been restarted, it should be running in the
1248 @code{guix_daemon_t} context. You can confirm this with the following
1249 command:
1250
1251 @example
1252 ps -Zax | grep guix-daemon
1253 @end example
1254
1255 Monitor the SELinux log files as you run a command like @code{guix build
1256 hello} to convince yourself that SELinux permits all necessary
1257 operations.
1258
1259 @subsubsection Limitations
1260 @cindex SELinux, limitations
1261
1262 This policy is not perfect. Here is a list of limitations or quirks
1263 that should be considered when deploying the provided SELinux policy for
1264 the Guix daemon.
1265
1266 @enumerate
1267 @item
1268 @code{guix_daemon_socket_t} isn’t actually used. None of the socket
1269 operations involve contexts that have anything to do with
1270 @code{guix_daemon_socket_t}. It doesn’t hurt to have this unused label,
1271 but it would be preferrable to define socket rules for only this label.
1272
1273 @item
1274 @code{guix gc} cannot access arbitrary links to profiles. By design,
1275 the file label of the destination of a symlink is independent of the
1276 file label of the link itself. Although all profiles under
1277 $localstatedir are labelled, the links to these profiles inherit the
1278 label of the directory they are in. For links in the user’s home
1279 directory this will be @code{user_home_t}. But for links from the root
1280 user’s home directory, or @file{/tmp}, or the HTTP server’s working
1281 directory, etc, this won’t work. @code{guix gc} would be prevented from
1282 reading and following these links.
1283
1284 @item
1285 The daemon’s feature to listen for TCP connections might no longer work.
1286 This might require extra rules, because SELinux treats network sockets
1287 differently from files.
1288
1289 @item
1290 Currently all files with a name matching the regular expression
1291 @code{/gnu/store/.+-(guix-.+|profile)/bin/guix-daemon} are assigned the
1292 label @code{guix_daemon_exec_t}; this means that @emph{any} file with
1293 that name in any profile would be permitted to run in the
1294 @code{guix_daemon_t} domain. This is not ideal. An attacker could
1295 build a package that provides this executable and convince a user to
1296 install and run it, which lifts it into the @code{guix_daemon_t} domain.
1297 At that point SELinux could not prevent it from accessing files that are
1298 allowed for processes in that domain.
1299
1300 We could generate a much more restrictive policy at installation time,
1301 so that only the @emph{exact} file name of the currently installed
1302 @code{guix-daemon} executable would be labelled with
1303 @code{guix_daemon_exec_t}, instead of using a broad regular expression.
1304 The downside is that root would have to install or upgrade the policy at
1305 installation time whenever the Guix package that provides the
1306 effectively running @code{guix-daemon} executable is upgraded.
1307 @end enumerate
1308
1309 @node Invoking guix-daemon
1310 @section Invoking @command{guix-daemon}
1311
1312 The @command{guix-daemon} program implements all the functionality to
1313 access the store. This includes launching build processes, running the
1314 garbage collector, querying the availability of a build result, etc. It
1315 is normally run as @code{root} like this:
1316
1317 @example
1318 # guix-daemon --build-users-group=guixbuild
1319 @end example
1320
1321 @noindent
1322 For details on how to set it up, @pxref{Setting Up the Daemon}.
1323
1324 @cindex chroot
1325 @cindex container, build environment
1326 @cindex build environment
1327 @cindex reproducible builds
1328 By default, @command{guix-daemon} launches build processes under
1329 different UIDs, taken from the build group specified with
1330 @code{--build-users-group}. In addition, each build process is run in a
1331 chroot environment that only contains the subset of the store that the
1332 build process depends on, as specified by its derivation
1333 (@pxref{Programming Interface, derivation}), plus a set of specific
1334 system directories. By default, the latter contains @file{/dev} and
1335 @file{/dev/pts}. Furthermore, on GNU/Linux, the build environment is a
1336 @dfn{container}: in addition to having its own file system tree, it has
1337 a separate mount name space, its own PID name space, network name space,
1338 etc. This helps achieve reproducible builds (@pxref{Features}).
1339
1340 When the daemon performs a build on behalf of the user, it creates a
1341 build directory under @file{/tmp} or under the directory specified by
1342 its @code{TMPDIR} environment variable. This directory is shared with
1343 the container for the duration of the build, though within the container,
1344 the build tree is always called @file{/tmp/guix-build-@var{name}.drv-0}.
1345
1346 The build directory is automatically deleted upon completion, unless the
1347 build failed and the client specified @option{--keep-failed}
1348 (@pxref{Invoking guix build, @option{--keep-failed}}).
1349
1350 The daemon listens for connections and spawns one sub-process for each session
1351 started by a client (one of the @command{guix} sub-commands.) The
1352 @command{guix processes} command allows you to get an overview of the activity
1353 on your system by viewing each of the active sessions and clients.
1354 @xref{Invoking guix processes}, for more information.
1355
1356 The following command-line options are supported:
1357
1358 @table @code
1359 @item --build-users-group=@var{group}
1360 Take users from @var{group} to run build processes (@pxref{Setting Up
1361 the Daemon, build users}).
1362
1363 @item --no-substitutes
1364 @cindex substitutes
1365 Do not use substitutes for build products. That is, always build things
1366 locally instead of allowing downloads of pre-built binaries
1367 (@pxref{Substitutes}).
1368
1369 When the daemon runs with @code{--no-substitutes}, clients can still
1370 explicitly enable substitution @i{via} the @code{set-build-options}
1371 remote procedure call (@pxref{The Store}).
1372
1373 @item --substitute-urls=@var{urls}
1374 @anchor{daemon-substitute-urls}
1375 Consider @var{urls} the default whitespace-separated list of substitute
1376 source URLs. When this option is omitted,
1377 @indicateurl{https://@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER}} is used.
1378
1379 This means that substitutes may be downloaded from @var{urls}, as long
1380 as they are signed by a trusted signature (@pxref{Substitutes}).
1381
1382 @cindex build hook
1383 @item --no-build-hook
1384 Do not use the @dfn{build hook}.
1385
1386 The build hook is a helper program that the daemon can start and to
1387 which it submits build requests. This mechanism is used to offload
1388 builds to other machines (@pxref{Daemon Offload Setup}).
1389
1390 @item --cache-failures
1391 Cache build failures. By default, only successful builds are cached.
1392
1393 When this option is used, @command{guix gc --list-failures} can be used
1394 to query the set of store items marked as failed; @command{guix gc
1395 --clear-failures} removes store items from the set of cached failures.
1396 @xref{Invoking guix gc}.
1397
1398 @item --cores=@var{n}
1399 @itemx -c @var{n}
1400 Use @var{n} CPU cores to build each derivation; @code{0} means as many
1401 as available.
1402
1403 The default value is @code{0}, but it may be overridden by clients, such
1404 as the @code{--cores} option of @command{guix build} (@pxref{Invoking
1405 guix build}).
1406
1407 The effect is to define the @code{NIX_BUILD_CORES} environment variable
1408 in the build process, which can then use it to exploit internal
1409 parallelism---for instance, by running @code{make -j$NIX_BUILD_CORES}.
1410
1411 @item --max-jobs=@var{n}
1412 @itemx -M @var{n}
1413 Allow at most @var{n} build jobs in parallel. The default value is
1414 @code{1}. Setting it to @code{0} means that no builds will be performed
1415 locally; instead, the daemon will offload builds (@pxref{Daemon Offload
1416 Setup}), or simply fail.
1417
1418 @item --max-silent-time=@var{seconds}
1419 When the build or substitution process remains silent for more than
1420 @var{seconds}, terminate it and report a build failure.
1421
1422 The default value is @code{0}, which disables the timeout.
1423
1424 The value specified here can be overridden by clients (@pxref{Common
1425 Build Options, @code{--max-silent-time}}).
1426
1427 @item --timeout=@var{seconds}
1428 Likewise, when the build or substitution process lasts for more than
1429 @var{seconds}, terminate it and report a build failure.
1430
1431 The default value is @code{0}, which disables the timeout.
1432
1433 The value specified here can be overridden by clients (@pxref{Common
1434 Build Options, @code{--timeout}}).
1435
1436 @item --rounds=@var{N}
1437 Build each derivation @var{n} times in a row, and raise an error if
1438 consecutive build results are not bit-for-bit identical. Note that this
1439 setting can be overridden by clients such as @command{guix build}
1440 (@pxref{Invoking guix build}).
1441
1442 When used in conjunction with @option{--keep-failed}, the differing
1443 output is kept in the store, under @file{/gnu/store/@dots{}-check}.
1444 This makes it easy to look for differences between the two results.
1445
1446 @item --debug
1447 Produce debugging output.
1448
1449 This is useful to debug daemon start-up issues, but then it may be
1450 overridden by clients, for example the @code{--verbosity} option of
1451 @command{guix build} (@pxref{Invoking guix build}).
1452
1453 @item --chroot-directory=@var{dir}
1454 Add @var{dir} to the build chroot.
1455
1456 Doing this may change the result of build processes---for instance if
1457 they use optional dependencies found in @var{dir} when it is available,
1458 and not otherwise. For that reason, it is not recommended to do so.
1459 Instead, make sure that each derivation declares all the inputs that it
1460 needs.
1461
1462 @item --disable-chroot
1463 Disable chroot builds.
1464
1465 Using this option is not recommended since, again, it would allow build
1466 processes to gain access to undeclared dependencies. It is necessary,
1467 though, when @command{guix-daemon} is running under an unprivileged user
1468 account.
1469
1470 @item --log-compression=@var{type}
1471 Compress build logs according to @var{type}, one of @code{gzip},
1472 @code{bzip2}, or @code{none}.
1473
1474 Unless @code{--lose-logs} is used, all the build logs are kept in the
1475 @var{localstatedir}. To save space, the daemon automatically compresses
1476 them with bzip2 by default.
1477
1478 @item --disable-deduplication
1479 @cindex deduplication
1480 Disable automatic file ``deduplication'' in the store.
1481
1482 By default, files added to the store are automatically ``deduplicated'':
1483 if a newly added file is identical to another one found in the store,
1484 the daemon makes the new file a hard link to the other file. This can
1485 noticeably reduce disk usage, at the expense of slightly increased
1486 input/output load at the end of a build process. This option disables
1487 this optimization.
1488
1489 @item --gc-keep-outputs[=yes|no]
1490 Tell whether the garbage collector (GC) must keep outputs of live
1491 derivations.
1492
1493 @cindex GC roots
1494 @cindex garbage collector roots
1495 When set to ``yes'', the GC will keep the outputs of any live derivation
1496 available in the store---the @code{.drv} files. The default is ``no'',
1497 meaning that derivation outputs are kept only if they are reachable from a GC
1498 root. @xref{Invoking guix gc}, for more on GC roots.
1499
1500 @item --gc-keep-derivations[=yes|no]
1501 Tell whether the garbage collector (GC) must keep derivations
1502 corresponding to live outputs.
1503
1504 When set to ``yes'', as is the case by default, the GC keeps
1505 derivations---i.e., @code{.drv} files---as long as at least one of their
1506 outputs is live. This allows users to keep track of the origins of
1507 items in their store. Setting it to ``no'' saves a bit of disk space.
1508
1509 In this way, setting @code{--gc-keep-derivations} to ``yes'' causes liveness
1510 to flow from outputs to derivations, and setting @code{--gc-keep-outputs} to
1511 ``yes'' causes liveness to flow from derivations to outputs. When both are
1512 set to ``yes'', the effect is to keep all the build prerequisites (the
1513 sources, compiler, libraries, and other build-time tools) of live objects in
1514 the store, regardless of whether these prerequisites are reachable from a GC
1515 root. This is convenient for developers since it saves rebuilds or downloads.
1516
1517 @item --impersonate-linux-2.6
1518 On Linux-based systems, impersonate Linux 2.6. This means that the
1519 kernel's @code{uname} system call will report 2.6 as the release number.
1520
1521 This might be helpful to build programs that (usually wrongfully) depend
1522 on the kernel version number.
1523
1524 @item --lose-logs
1525 Do not keep build logs. By default they are kept under
1526 @code{@var{localstatedir}/guix/log}.
1527
1528 @item --system=@var{system}
1529 Assume @var{system} as the current system type. By default it is the
1530 architecture/kernel pair found at configure time, such as
1531 @code{x86_64-linux}.
1532
1533 @item --listen=@var{endpoint}
1534 Listen for connections on @var{endpoint}. @var{endpoint} is interpreted
1535 as the file name of a Unix-domain socket if it starts with
1536 @code{/} (slash sign). Otherwise, @var{endpoint} is interpreted as a
1537 host name or host name and port to listen to. Here are a few examples:
1538
1539 @table @code
1540 @item --listen=/gnu/var/daemon
1541 Listen for connections on the @file{/gnu/var/daemon} Unix-domain socket,
1542 creating it if needed.
1543
1544 @item --listen=localhost
1545 @cindex daemon, remote access
1546 @cindex remote access to the daemon
1547 @cindex daemon, cluster setup
1548 @cindex clusters, daemon setup
1549 Listen for TCP connections on the network interface corresponding to
1550 @code{localhost}, on port 44146.
1551
1552 @item --listen=128.0.0.42:1234
1553 Listen for TCP connections on the network interface corresponding to
1554 @code{128.0.0.42}, on port 1234.
1555 @end table
1556
1557 This option can be repeated multiple times, in which case
1558 @command{guix-daemon} accepts connections on all the specified
1559 endpoints. Users can tell client commands what endpoint to connect to
1560 by setting the @code{GUIX_DAEMON_SOCKET} environment variable
1561 (@pxref{The Store, @code{GUIX_DAEMON_SOCKET}}).
1562
1563 @quotation Note
1564 The daemon protocol is @emph{unauthenticated and unencrypted}. Using
1565 @code{--listen=@var{host}} is suitable on local networks, such as
1566 clusters, where only trusted nodes may connect to the build daemon. In
1567 other cases where remote access to the daemon is needed, we recommend
1568 using Unix-domain sockets along with SSH.
1569 @end quotation
1570
1571 When @code{--listen} is omitted, @command{guix-daemon} listens for
1572 connections on the Unix-domain socket located at
1573 @file{@var{localstatedir}/guix/daemon-socket/socket}.
1574 @end table
1575
1576
1577 @node Application Setup
1578 @section Application Setup
1579
1580 @cindex foreign distro
1581 When using Guix on top of GNU/Linux distribution other than Guix System---a
1582 so-called @dfn{foreign distro}---a few additional steps are needed to
1583 get everything in place. Here are some of them.
1584
1585 @subsection Locales
1586
1587 @anchor{locales-and-locpath}
1588 @cindex locales, when not on Guix System
1589 @vindex LOCPATH
1590 @vindex GUIX_LOCPATH
1591 Packages installed @i{via} Guix will not use the locale data of the
1592 host system. Instead, you must first install one of the locale packages
1593 available with Guix and then define the @code{GUIX_LOCPATH} environment
1594 variable:
1595
1596 @example
1597 $ guix install glibc-locales
1598 $ export GUIX_LOCPATH=$HOME/.guix-profile/lib/locale
1599 @end example
1600
1601 Note that the @code{glibc-locales} package contains data for all the
1602 locales supported by the GNU@tie{}libc and weighs in at around
1603 110@tie{}MiB. Alternatively, the @code{glibc-utf8-locales} is smaller but
1604 limited to a few UTF-8 locales.
1605
1606 The @code{GUIX_LOCPATH} variable plays a role similar to @code{LOCPATH}
1607 (@pxref{Locale Names, @code{LOCPATH},, libc, The GNU C Library Reference
1608 Manual}). There are two important differences though:
1609
1610 @enumerate
1611 @item
1612 @code{GUIX_LOCPATH} is honored only by the libc in Guix, and not by the libc
1613 provided by foreign distros. Thus, using @code{GUIX_LOCPATH} allows you
1614 to make sure the programs of the foreign distro will not end up loading
1615 incompatible locale data.
1616
1617 @item
1618 libc suffixes each entry of @code{GUIX_LOCPATH} with @code{/X.Y}, where
1619 @code{X.Y} is the libc version---e.g., @code{2.22}. This means that,
1620 should your Guix profile contain a mixture of programs linked against
1621 different libc version, each libc version will only try to load locale
1622 data in the right format.
1623 @end enumerate
1624
1625 This is important because the locale data format used by different libc
1626 versions may be incompatible.
1627
1628 @subsection Name Service Switch
1629
1630 @cindex name service switch, glibc
1631 @cindex NSS (name service switch), glibc
1632 @cindex nscd (name service caching daemon)
1633 @cindex name service caching daemon (nscd)
1634 When using Guix on a foreign distro, we @emph{strongly recommend} that
1635 the system run the GNU C library's @dfn{name service cache daemon},
1636 @command{nscd}, which should be listening on the
1637 @file{/var/run/nscd/socket} socket. Failing to do that, applications
1638 installed with Guix may fail to look up host names or user accounts, or
1639 may even crash. The next paragraphs explain why.
1640
1641 @cindex @file{nsswitch.conf}
1642 The GNU C library implements a @dfn{name service switch} (NSS), which is
1643 an extensible mechanism for ``name lookups'' in general: host name
1644 resolution, user accounts, and more (@pxref{Name Service Switch,,, libc,
1645 The GNU C Library Reference Manual}).
1646
1647 @cindex Network information service (NIS)
1648 @cindex NIS (Network information service)
1649 Being extensible, the NSS supports @dfn{plugins}, which provide new name
1650 lookup implementations: for example, the @code{nss-mdns} plugin allow
1651 resolution of @code{.local} host names, the @code{nis} plugin allows
1652 user account lookup using the Network information service (NIS), and so
1653 on. These extra ``lookup services'' are configured system-wide in
1654 @file{/etc/nsswitch.conf}, and all the programs running on the system
1655 honor those settings (@pxref{NSS Configuration File,,, libc, The GNU C
1656 Reference Manual}).
1657
1658 When they perform a name lookup---for instance by calling the
1659 @code{getaddrinfo} function in C---applications first try to connect to
1660 the nscd; on success, nscd performs name lookups on their behalf. If
1661 the nscd is not running, then they perform the name lookup by
1662 themselves, by loading the name lookup services into their own address
1663 space and running it. These name lookup services---the
1664 @file{libnss_*.so} files---are @code{dlopen}'d, but they may come from
1665 the host system's C library, rather than from the C library the
1666 application is linked against (the C library coming from Guix).
1667
1668 And this is where the problem is: if your application is linked against
1669 Guix's C library (say, glibc 2.24) and tries to load NSS plugins from
1670 another C library (say, @code{libnss_mdns.so} for glibc 2.22), it will
1671 likely crash or have its name lookups fail unexpectedly.
1672
1673 Running @command{nscd} on the system, among other advantages, eliminates
1674 this binary incompatibility problem because those @code{libnss_*.so}
1675 files are loaded in the @command{nscd} process, not in applications
1676 themselves.
1677
1678 @subsection X11 Fonts
1679
1680 @cindex fonts
1681 The majority of graphical applications use Fontconfig to locate and
1682 load fonts and perform X11-client-side rendering. The @code{fontconfig}
1683 package in Guix looks for fonts in @file{$HOME/.guix-profile}
1684 by default. Thus, to allow graphical applications installed with Guix
1685 to display fonts, you have to install fonts with Guix as well.
1686 Essential font packages include @code{gs-fonts}, @code{font-dejavu}, and
1687 @code{font-gnu-freefont-ttf}.
1688
1689 To display text written in Chinese languages, Japanese, or Korean in
1690 graphical applications, consider installing
1691 @code{font-adobe-source-han-sans} or @code{font-wqy-zenhei}. The former
1692 has multiple outputs, one per language family (@pxref{Packages with
1693 Multiple Outputs}). For instance, the following command installs fonts
1694 for Chinese languages:
1695
1696 @example
1697 guix install font-adobe-source-han-sans:cn
1698 @end example
1699
1700 @cindex @code{xterm}
1701 Older programs such as @command{xterm} do not use Fontconfig and instead
1702 rely on server-side font rendering. Such programs require to specify a
1703 full name of a font using XLFD (X Logical Font Description), like this:
1704
1705 @example
1706 -*-dejavu sans-medium-r-normal-*-*-100-*-*-*-*-*-1
1707 @end example
1708
1709 To be able to use such full names for the TrueType fonts installed in
1710 your Guix profile, you need to extend the font path of the X server:
1711
1712 @c Note: 'xset' does not accept symlinks so the trick below arranges to
1713 @c get at the real directory. See <https://bugs.gnu.org/30655>.
1714 @example
1715 xset +fp $(dirname $(readlink -f ~/.guix-profile/share/fonts/truetype/fonts.dir))
1716 @end example
1717
1718 @cindex @code{xlsfonts}
1719 After that, you can run @code{xlsfonts} (from @code{xlsfonts} package)
1720 to make sure your TrueType fonts are listed there.
1721
1722 @cindex @code{fc-cache}
1723 @cindex font cache
1724 After installing fonts you may have to refresh the font cache to use
1725 them in applications. The same applies when applications installed via
1726 Guix do not seem to find fonts. To force rebuilding of the font cache
1727 run @code{fc-cache -f}. The @code{fc-cache} command is provided by the
1728 @code{fontconfig} package.
1729
1730 @subsection X.509 Certificates
1731
1732 @cindex @code{nss-certs}
1733 The @code{nss-certs} package provides X.509 certificates, which allow
1734 programs to authenticate Web servers accessed over HTTPS.
1735
1736 When using Guix on a foreign distro, you can install this package and
1737 define the relevant environment variables so that packages know where to
1738 look for certificates. @xref{X.509 Certificates}, for detailed
1739 information.
1740
1741 @subsection Emacs Packages
1742
1743 @cindex @code{emacs}
1744 When you install Emacs packages with Guix, the elisp files may be placed
1745 either in @file{$HOME/.guix-profile/share/emacs/site-lisp/} or in
1746 sub-directories of
1747 @file{$HOME/.guix-profile/share/emacs/site-lisp/guix.d/}. The latter
1748 directory exists because potentially there may exist thousands of Emacs
1749 packages and storing all their files in a single directory may not be
1750 reliable (because of name conflicts). So we think using a separate
1751 directory for each package is a good idea. It is very similar to how
1752 the Emacs package system organizes the file structure (@pxref{Package
1753 Files,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}).
1754
1755 By default, Emacs (installed with Guix) ``knows'' where these packages
1756 are placed, so you do not need to perform any configuration. If, for
1757 some reason, you want to avoid auto-loading Emacs packages installed
1758 with Guix, you can do so by running Emacs with @code{--no-site-file}
1759 option (@pxref{Init File,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}).
1760
1761 @subsection The GCC toolchain
1762
1763 @cindex GCC
1764 @cindex ld-wrapper
1765
1766 Guix offers individual compiler packages such as @code{gcc} but if you
1767 are in need of a complete toolchain for compiling and linking source
1768 code what you really want is the @code{gcc-toolchain} package. This
1769 package provides a complete GCC toolchain for C/C++ development,
1770 including GCC itself, the GNU C Library (headers and binaries, plus
1771 debugging symbols in the @code{debug} output), Binutils, and a linker
1772 wrapper.
1773
1774 The wrapper's purpose is to inspect the @code{-L} and @code{-l} switches
1775 passed to the linker, add corresponding @code{-rpath} arguments, and
1776 invoke the actual linker with this new set of arguments. You can instruct the
1777 wrapper to refuse to link against libraries not in the store by setting the
1778 @code{GUIX_LD_WRAPPER_ALLOW_IMPURITIES} environment variable to @code{no}.
1779
1780 @c TODO What else?
1781
1782 @c *********************************************************************
1783 @node System Installation
1784 @chapter System Installation
1785
1786 @cindex installing Guix System
1787 @cindex Guix System, installation
1788 This section explains how to install Guix System
1789 on a machine. Guix, as a package manager, can
1790 also be installed on top of a running GNU/Linux system,
1791 @pxref{Installation}.
1792
1793 @ifinfo
1794 @quotation Note
1795 @c This paragraph is for people reading this from tty2 of the
1796 @c installation image.
1797 You are reading this documentation with an Info reader. For details on
1798 how to use it, hit the @key{RET} key (``return'' or ``enter'') on the
1799 link that follows: @pxref{Top, Info reader,, info-stnd, Stand-alone GNU
1800 Info}. Hit @kbd{l} afterwards to come back here.
1801
1802 Alternately, run @command{info info} in another tty to keep the manual
1803 available.
1804 @end quotation
1805 @end ifinfo
1806
1807 @menu
1808 * Limitations:: What you can expect.
1809 * Hardware Considerations:: Supported hardware.
1810 * USB Stick and DVD Installation:: Preparing the installation medium.
1811 * Preparing for Installation:: Networking, partitioning, etc.
1812 * Guided Graphical Installation:: Easy graphical installation.
1813 * Manual Installation:: Manual installation for wizards.
1814 * After System Installation:: When installation succeeded.
1815 * Installing Guix in a VM:: Guix System playground.
1816 * Building the Installation Image:: How this comes to be.
1817 @end menu
1818
1819 @node Limitations
1820 @section Limitations
1821
1822 We consider Guix System to be ready for a wide range of ``desktop'' and server
1823 use cases. The reliability guarantees it provides---transactional upgrades
1824 and rollbacks, reproducibility---make it a solid foundation.
1825
1826 Nevertheless, before you proceed with the installation, be aware of the
1827 following noteworthy limitations applicable to version @value{VERSION}:
1828
1829 @itemize
1830 @item
1831 Support for the Logical Volume Manager (LVM) is missing.
1832
1833 @item
1834 More and more system services are provided (@pxref{Services}), but some
1835 may be missing.
1836
1837 @item
1838 GNOME, Xfce, LXDE, and Enlightenment are available (@pxref{Desktop Services}),
1839 as well as a number of X11 window managers. However, KDE is currently
1840 missing.
1841 @end itemize
1842
1843 More than a disclaimer, this is an invitation to report issues (and success
1844 stories!), and to join us in improving it. @xref{Contributing}, for more
1845 info.
1846
1847
1848 @node Hardware Considerations
1849 @section Hardware Considerations
1850
1851 @cindex hardware support on Guix System
1852 GNU@tie{}Guix focuses on respecting the user's computing freedom. It
1853 builds around the kernel Linux-libre, which means that only hardware for
1854 which free software drivers and firmware exist is supported. Nowadays,
1855 a wide range of off-the-shelf hardware is supported on
1856 GNU/Linux-libre---from keyboards to graphics cards to scanners and
1857 Ethernet controllers. Unfortunately, there are still areas where
1858 hardware vendors deny users control over their own computing, and such
1859 hardware is not supported on Guix System.
1860
1861 @cindex WiFi, hardware support
1862 One of the main areas where free drivers or firmware are lacking is WiFi
1863 devices. WiFi devices known to work include those using Atheros chips
1864 (AR9271 and AR7010), which corresponds to the @code{ath9k} Linux-libre
1865 driver, and those using Broadcom/AirForce chips (BCM43xx with
1866 Wireless-Core Revision 5), which corresponds to the @code{b43-open}
1867 Linux-libre driver. Free firmware exists for both and is available
1868 out-of-the-box on Guix System, as part of @code{%base-firmware}
1869 (@pxref{operating-system Reference, @code{firmware}}).
1870
1871 @cindex RYF, Respects Your Freedom
1872 The @uref{https://www.fsf.org/, Free Software Foundation} runs
1873 @uref{https://www.fsf.org/ryf, @dfn{Respects Your Freedom}} (RYF), a
1874 certification program for hardware products that respect your freedom
1875 and your privacy and ensure that you have control over your device. We
1876 encourage you to check the list of RYF-certified devices.
1877
1878 Another useful resource is the @uref{https://www.h-node.org/, H-Node}
1879 web site. It contains a catalog of hardware devices with information
1880 about their support in GNU/Linux.
1881
1882
1883 @node USB Stick and DVD Installation
1884 @section USB Stick and DVD Installation
1885
1886 An ISO-9660 installation image that can be written to a USB stick or
1887 burnt to a DVD can be downloaded from
1888 @indicateurl{@value{BASE-URL}/guix-system-install-@value{VERSION}.@var{system}.iso.xz},
1889 where @var{system} is one of:
1890
1891 @table @code
1892 @item x86_64-linux
1893 for a GNU/Linux system on Intel/AMD-compatible 64-bit CPUs;
1894
1895 @item i686-linux
1896 for a 32-bit GNU/Linux system on Intel-compatible CPUs.
1897 @end table
1898
1899 @c start duplication of authentication part from ``Binary Installation''
1900 Make sure to download the associated @file{.sig} file and to verify the
1901 authenticity of the image against it, along these lines:
1902
1903 @example
1904 $ wget @value{BASE-URL}/guix-system-install-@value{VERSION}.@var{system}.iso.xz.sig
1905 $ gpg --verify guix-system-install-@value{VERSION}.@var{system}.iso.xz.sig
1906 @end example
1907
1908 If that command fails because you do not have the required public key,
1909 then run this command to import it:
1910
1911 @example
1912 $ wget @value{OPENPGP-SIGNING-KEY-URL} \
1913 -qO - | gpg --import -
1914 @end example
1915
1916 @noindent
1917 and rerun the @code{gpg --verify} command.
1918
1919 Take note that a warning like ``This key is not certified with a trusted
1920 signature!'' is normal.
1921
1922 @c end duplication
1923
1924 This image contains the tools necessary for an installation.
1925 It is meant to be copied @emph{as is} to a large-enough USB stick or DVD.
1926
1927 @unnumberedsubsec Copying to a USB Stick
1928
1929 To copy the image to a USB stick, follow these steps:
1930
1931 @enumerate
1932 @item
1933 Decompress the image using the @command{xz} command:
1934
1935 @example
1936 xz -d guix-system-install-@value{VERSION}.@var{system}.iso.xz
1937 @end example
1938
1939 @item
1940 Insert a USB stick of 1@tie{}GiB or more into your machine, and determine
1941 its device name. Assuming that the USB stick is known as @file{/dev/sdX},
1942 copy the image with:
1943
1944 @example
1945 dd if=guix-system-install-@value{VERSION}.@var{system}.iso of=/dev/sdX
1946 sync
1947 @end example
1948
1949 Access to @file{/dev/sdX} usually requires root privileges.
1950 @end enumerate
1951
1952 @unnumberedsubsec Burning on a DVD
1953
1954 To copy the image to a DVD, follow these steps:
1955
1956 @enumerate
1957 @item
1958 Decompress the image using the @command{xz} command:
1959
1960 @example
1961 xz -d guix-system-install-@value{VERSION}.@var{system}.iso.xz
1962 @end example
1963
1964 @item
1965 Insert a blank DVD into your machine, and determine
1966 its device name. Assuming that the DVD drive is known as @file{/dev/srX},
1967 copy the image with:
1968
1969 @example
1970 growisofs -dvd-compat -Z /dev/srX=guix-system-install-@value{VERSION}.@var{system}.iso
1971 @end example
1972
1973 Access to @file{/dev/srX} usually requires root privileges.
1974 @end enumerate
1975
1976 @unnumberedsubsec Booting
1977
1978 Once this is done, you should be able to reboot the system and boot from
1979 the USB stick or DVD. The latter usually requires you to get in the
1980 BIOS or UEFI boot menu, where you can choose to boot from the USB stick.
1981
1982 @xref{Installing Guix in a VM}, if, instead, you would like to install
1983 Guix System in a virtual machine (VM).
1984
1985
1986 @node Preparing for Installation
1987 @section Preparing for Installation
1988
1989 Once you have booted, you can use the guided graphical installer, which makes
1990 it easy to get started (@pxref{Guided Graphical Installation}). Alternately,
1991 if you are already familiar with GNU/Linux and if you want more control than
1992 what the graphical installer provides, you can choose the ``manual''
1993 installation process (@pxref{Manual Installation}).
1994
1995 The graphical installer is available on TTY1. You can obtain root shells on
1996 TTYs 3 to 6 by hitting @kbd{ctrl-alt-f3}, @kbd{ctrl-alt-f4}, etc. TTY2 shows
1997 this documentation and you can reach it with @kbd{ctrl-alt-f2}. Documentation
1998 is browsable using the Info reader commands (@pxref{Top,,, info-stnd,
1999 Stand-alone GNU Info}). The installation system runs the GPM mouse daemon,
2000 which allows you to select text with the left mouse button and to paste it
2001 with the middle button.
2002
2003 @quotation Note
2004 Installation requires access to the Internet so that any missing
2005 dependencies of your system configuration can be downloaded. See the
2006 ``Networking'' section below.
2007 @end quotation
2008
2009 @node Guided Graphical Installation
2010 @section Guided Graphical Installation
2011
2012 The graphical installer is a text-based user interface. It will guide you,
2013 with dialog boxes, through the steps needed to install GNU@tie{}Guix System.
2014
2015 The first dialog boxes allow you to set up the system as you use it during the
2016 installation: you can choose the language, keyboard layout, and set up
2017 networking, which will be used during the installation. The image below shows
2018 the networking dialog.
2019
2020 @image{images/installer-network,5in,, networking setup with the graphical installer}
2021
2022 Later steps allow you to partition your hard disk, as shown in the image
2023 below, to choose whether or not to use encrypted file systems, to enter the
2024 host name and root password, and to create an additional account, among other
2025 things.
2026
2027 @image{images/installer-partitions,5in,, partitioning with the graphical installer}
2028
2029 Note that, at any time, the installer allows you to exit the current
2030 installation step and resume at a previous step, as show in the image below.
2031
2032 @image{images/installer-resume,5in,, resuming the installation process}
2033
2034 Once you're done, the installer produces an operating system configuration and
2035 displays it (@pxref{Using the Configuration System}). At that point you can
2036 hit ``OK'' and installation will proceed. On success, you can reboot into the
2037 new system and enjoy. @xref{After System Installation}, for what's next!
2038
2039
2040 @node Manual Installation
2041 @section Manual Installation
2042
2043 This section describes how you would ``manually'' install GNU@tie{}Guix System
2044 on your machine. This option requires familiarity with GNU/Linux, with the
2045 shell, and with common administration tools. If you think this is not for
2046 you, consider using the guided graphical installer (@pxref{Guided Graphical
2047 Installation}).
2048
2049 The installation system provides root shells on TTYs 3 to 6; press
2050 @kbd{ctrl-alt-f3}, @kbd{ctrl-alt-f4}, and so on to reach them. It includes
2051 many common tools needed to install the system. But it is also a full-blown
2052 Guix System, which means that you can install additional packages, should you
2053 need it, using @command{guix package} (@pxref{Invoking guix package}).
2054
2055 @menu
2056 * Keyboard Layout and Networking and Partitioning:: Initial setup.
2057 * Proceeding with the Installation:: Installing.
2058 @end menu
2059
2060 @node Keyboard Layout and Networking and Partitioning
2061 @subsection Keyboard Layout, Networking, and Partitioning
2062
2063 Before you can install the system, you may want to adjust the keyboard layout,
2064 set up networking, and partition your target hard disk. This section will
2065 guide you through this.
2066
2067 @subsubsection Keyboard Layout
2068
2069 @cindex keyboard layout
2070 The installation image uses the US qwerty keyboard layout. If you want
2071 to change it, you can use the @command{loadkeys} command. For example,
2072 the following command selects the Dvorak keyboard layout:
2073
2074 @example
2075 loadkeys dvorak
2076 @end example
2077
2078 See the files under @file{/run/current-system/profile/share/keymaps} for
2079 a list of available keyboard layouts. Run @command{man loadkeys} for
2080 more information.
2081
2082 @subsubsection Networking
2083
2084 Run the following command to see what your network interfaces are called:
2085
2086 @example
2087 ifconfig -a
2088 @end example
2089
2090 @noindent
2091 @dots{} or, using the GNU/Linux-specific @command{ip} command:
2092
2093 @example
2094 ip a
2095 @end example
2096
2097 @c https://cgit.freedesktop.org/systemd/systemd/tree/src/udev/udev-builtin-net_id.c#n20
2098 Wired interfaces have a name starting with @samp{e}; for example, the
2099 interface corresponding to the first on-board Ethernet controller is
2100 called @samp{eno1}. Wireless interfaces have a name starting with
2101 @samp{w}, like @samp{w1p2s0}.
2102
2103 @table @asis
2104 @item Wired connection
2105 To configure a wired network run the following command, substituting
2106 @var{interface} with the name of the wired interface you want to use.
2107
2108 @example
2109 ifconfig @var{interface} up
2110 @end example
2111
2112 @item Wireless connection
2113 @cindex wireless
2114 @cindex WiFi
2115 To configure wireless networking, you can create a configuration file
2116 for the @command{wpa_supplicant} configuration tool (its location is not
2117 important) using one of the available text editors such as
2118 @command{nano}:
2119
2120 @example
2121 nano wpa_supplicant.conf
2122 @end example
2123
2124 As an example, the following stanza can go to this file and will work
2125 for many wireless networks, provided you give the actual SSID and
2126 passphrase for the network you are connecting to:
2127
2128 @example
2129 network=@{
2130 ssid="@var{my-ssid}"
2131 key_mgmt=WPA-PSK
2132 psk="the network's secret passphrase"
2133 @}
2134 @end example
2135
2136 Start the wireless service and run it in the background with the
2137 following command (substitute @var{interface} with the name of the
2138 network interface you want to use):
2139
2140 @example
2141 wpa_supplicant -c wpa_supplicant.conf -i @var{interface} -B
2142 @end example
2143
2144 Run @command{man wpa_supplicant} for more information.
2145 @end table
2146
2147 @cindex DHCP
2148 At this point, you need to acquire an IP address. On a network where IP
2149 addresses are automatically assigned @i{via} DHCP, you can run:
2150
2151 @example
2152 dhclient -v @var{interface}
2153 @end example
2154
2155 Try to ping a server to see if networking is up and running:
2156
2157 @example
2158 ping -c 3 gnu.org
2159 @end example
2160
2161 Setting up network access is almost always a requirement because the
2162 image does not contain all the software and tools that may be needed.
2163
2164 @cindex installing over SSH
2165 If you want to, you can continue the installation remotely by starting
2166 an SSH server:
2167
2168 @example
2169 herd start ssh-daemon
2170 @end example
2171
2172 Make sure to either set a password with @command{passwd}, or configure
2173 OpenSSH public key authentication before logging in.
2174
2175 @subsubsection Disk Partitioning
2176
2177 Unless this has already been done, the next step is to partition, and
2178 then format the target partition(s).
2179
2180 The installation image includes several partitioning tools, including
2181 Parted (@pxref{Overview,,, parted, GNU Parted User Manual}),
2182 @command{fdisk}, and @command{cfdisk}. Run it and set up your disk with
2183 the partition layout you want:
2184
2185 @example
2186 cfdisk
2187 @end example
2188
2189 If your disk uses the GUID Partition Table (GPT) format and you plan to
2190 install BIOS-based GRUB (which is the default), make sure a BIOS Boot
2191 Partition is available (@pxref{BIOS installation,,, grub, GNU GRUB
2192 manual}).
2193
2194 @cindex EFI, installation
2195 @cindex UEFI, installation
2196 @cindex ESP, EFI system partition
2197 If you instead wish to use EFI-based GRUB, a FAT32 @dfn{EFI System Partition}
2198 (ESP) is required. This partition can be mounted at @file{/boot/efi} for
2199 instance and must have the @code{esp} flag set. E.g., for @command{parted}:
2200
2201 @example
2202 parted /dev/sda set 1 esp on
2203 @end example
2204
2205 @quotation Note
2206 @vindex grub-bootloader
2207 @vindex grub-efi-bootloader
2208 Unsure whether to use EFI- or BIOS-based GRUB? If the directory
2209 @file{/sys/firmware/efi} exists in the installation image, then you should
2210 probably perform an EFI installation, using @code{grub-efi-bootloader}.
2211 Otherwise you should use the BIOS-based GRUB, known as
2212 @code{grub-bootloader}. @xref{Bootloader Configuration}, for more info on
2213 bootloaders.
2214 @end quotation
2215
2216 Once you are done partitioning the target hard disk drive, you have to
2217 create a file system on the relevant partition(s)@footnote{Currently
2218 Guix System only supports ext4 and btrfs file systems. In particular, code
2219 that reads file system UUIDs and labels only works for these file system
2220 types.}. For the ESP, if you have one and assuming it is
2221 @file{/dev/sda1}, run:
2222
2223 @example
2224 mkfs.fat -F32 /dev/sda1
2225 @end example
2226
2227 Preferably, assign file systems a label so that you can easily and
2228 reliably refer to them in @code{file-system} declarations (@pxref{File
2229 Systems}). This is typically done using the @code{-L} option of
2230 @command{mkfs.ext4} and related commands. So, assuming the target root
2231 partition lives at @file{/dev/sda2}, a file system with the label
2232 @code{my-root} can be created with:
2233
2234 @example
2235 mkfs.ext4 -L my-root /dev/sda2
2236 @end example
2237
2238 @cindex encrypted disk
2239 If you are instead planning to encrypt the root partition, you can use
2240 the Cryptsetup/LUKS utilities to do that (see @inlinefmtifelse{html,
2241 @uref{https://linux.die.net/man/8/cryptsetup, @code{man cryptsetup}},
2242 @code{man cryptsetup}} for more information.) Assuming you want to
2243 store the root partition on @file{/dev/sda2}, the command sequence would
2244 be along these lines:
2245
2246 @example
2247 cryptsetup luksFormat /dev/sda2
2248 cryptsetup open --type luks /dev/sda2 my-partition
2249 mkfs.ext4 -L my-root /dev/mapper/my-partition
2250 @end example
2251
2252 Once that is done, mount the target file system under @file{/mnt}
2253 with a command like (again, assuming @code{my-root} is the label of the
2254 root file system):
2255
2256 @example
2257 mount LABEL=my-root /mnt
2258 @end example
2259
2260 Also mount any other file systems you would like to use on the target
2261 system relative to this path. If you have opted for @file{/boot/efi} as an
2262 EFI mount point for example, mount it at @file{/mnt/boot/efi} now so it is
2263 found by @code{guix system init} afterwards.
2264
2265 Finally, if you plan to use one or more swap partitions (@pxref{Memory
2266 Concepts, swap space,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}), make
2267 sure to initialize them with @command{mkswap}. Assuming you have one
2268 swap partition on @file{/dev/sda3}, you would run:
2269
2270 @example
2271 mkswap /dev/sda3
2272 swapon /dev/sda3
2273 @end example
2274
2275 Alternatively, you may use a swap file. For example, assuming that in
2276 the new system you want to use the file @file{/swapfile} as a swap file,
2277 you would run@footnote{This example will work for many types of file
2278 systems (e.g., ext4). However, for copy-on-write file systems (e.g.,
2279 btrfs), the required steps may be different. For details, see the
2280 manual pages for @command{mkswap} and @command{swapon}.}:
2281
2282 @example
2283 # This is 10 GiB of swap space. Adjust "count" to change the size.
2284 dd if=/dev/zero of=/mnt/swapfile bs=1MiB count=10240
2285 # For security, make the file readable and writable only by root.
2286 chmod 600 /mnt/swapfile
2287 mkswap /mnt/swapfile
2288 swapon /mnt/swapfile
2289 @end example
2290
2291 Note that if you have encrypted the root partition and created a swap
2292 file in its file system as described above, then the encryption also
2293 protects the swap file, just like any other file in that file system.
2294
2295 @node Proceeding with the Installation
2296 @subsection Proceeding with the Installation
2297
2298 With the target partitions ready and the target root mounted on
2299 @file{/mnt}, we're ready to go. First, run:
2300
2301 @example
2302 herd start cow-store /mnt
2303 @end example
2304
2305 This makes @file{/gnu/store} copy-on-write, such that packages added to it
2306 during the installation phase are written to the target disk on @file{/mnt}
2307 rather than kept in memory. This is necessary because the first phase of
2308 the @command{guix system init} command (see below) entails downloads or
2309 builds to @file{/gnu/store} which, initially, is an in-memory file system.
2310
2311 Next, you have to edit a file and
2312 provide the declaration of the operating system to be installed. To
2313 that end, the installation system comes with three text editors. We
2314 recommend GNU nano (@pxref{Top,,, nano, GNU nano Manual}), which
2315 supports syntax highlighting and parentheses matching; other editors
2316 include GNU Zile (an Emacs clone), and
2317 nvi (a clone of the original BSD @command{vi} editor).
2318 We strongly recommend storing that file on the target root file system, say,
2319 as @file{/mnt/etc/config.scm}. Failing to do that, you will have lost your
2320 configuration file once you have rebooted into the newly-installed system.
2321
2322 @xref{Using the Configuration System}, for an overview of the
2323 configuration file. The example configurations discussed in that
2324 section are available under @file{/etc/configuration} in the
2325 installation image. Thus, to get started with a system configuration
2326 providing a graphical display server (a ``desktop'' system), you can run
2327 something along these lines:
2328
2329 @example
2330 # mkdir /mnt/etc
2331 # cp /etc/configuration/desktop.scm /mnt/etc/config.scm
2332 # nano /mnt/etc/config.scm
2333 @end example
2334
2335 You should pay attention to what your configuration file contains, and
2336 in particular:
2337
2338 @itemize
2339 @item
2340 Make sure the @code{bootloader-configuration} form refers to the target
2341 you want to install GRUB on. It should mention @code{grub-bootloader} if
2342 you are installing GRUB in the legacy way, or @code{grub-efi-bootloader}
2343 for newer UEFI systems. For legacy systems, the @code{target} field
2344 names a device, like @code{/dev/sda}; for UEFI systems it names a path
2345 to a mounted EFI partition, like @code{/boot/efi}; do make sure the path is
2346 currently mounted and a @code{file-system} entry is specified in your
2347 configuration.
2348
2349 @item
2350 Be sure that your file system labels match the value of their respective
2351 @code{device} fields in your @code{file-system} configuration, assuming
2352 your @code{file-system} configuration uses the @code{file-system-label}
2353 procedure in its @code{device} field.
2354
2355 @item
2356 If there are encrypted or RAID partitions, make sure to add a
2357 @code{mapped-devices} field to describe them (@pxref{Mapped Devices}).
2358 @end itemize
2359
2360 Once you are done preparing the configuration file, the new system must
2361 be initialized (remember that the target root file system is mounted
2362 under @file{/mnt}):
2363
2364 @example
2365 guix system init /mnt/etc/config.scm /mnt
2366 @end example
2367
2368 @noindent
2369 This copies all the necessary files and installs GRUB on
2370 @file{/dev/sdX}, unless you pass the @option{--no-bootloader} option. For
2371 more information, @pxref{Invoking guix system}. This command may trigger
2372 downloads or builds of missing packages, which can take some time.
2373
2374 Once that command has completed---and hopefully succeeded!---you can run
2375 @command{reboot} and boot into the new system. The @code{root} password
2376 in the new system is initially empty; other users' passwords need to be
2377 initialized by running the @command{passwd} command as @code{root},
2378 unless your configuration specifies otherwise
2379 (@pxref{user-account-password, user account passwords}).
2380 @xref{After System Installation}, for what's next!
2381
2382
2383 @node After System Installation
2384 @section After System Installation
2385
2386 Success, you've now booted into Guix System! From then on, you can update the
2387 system whenever you want by running, say:
2388
2389 @example
2390 guix pull
2391 sudo guix system reconfigure /etc/config.scm
2392 @end example
2393
2394 @noindent
2395 This builds a new system generation with the latest packages and services
2396 (@pxref{Invoking guix system}). We recommend doing that regularly so that
2397 your system includes the latest security updates (@pxref{Security Updates}).
2398
2399 @c See <https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/guix-devel/2019-01/msg00268.html>.
2400 @quotation Note
2401 @cindex sudo vs. @command{guix pull}
2402 Note that @command{sudo guix} runs your user's @command{guix} command and
2403 @emph{not} root's, because @command{sudo} leaves @code{PATH} unchanged. To
2404 explicitly run root's @command{guix}, type @command{sudo -i guix @dots{}}.
2405 @end quotation
2406
2407 Join us on @code{#guix} on the Freenode IRC network or on
2408 @email{guix-devel@@gnu.org} to share your experience!
2409
2410
2411 @node Installing Guix in a VM
2412 @section Installing Guix in a Virtual Machine
2413
2414 @cindex virtual machine, Guix System installation
2415 @cindex virtual private server (VPS)
2416 @cindex VPS (virtual private server)
2417 If you'd like to install Guix System in a virtual machine (VM) or on a
2418 virtual private server (VPS) rather than on your beloved machine, this
2419 section is for you.
2420
2421 To boot a @uref{https://qemu.org/,QEMU} VM for installing Guix System in a
2422 disk image, follow these steps:
2423
2424 @enumerate
2425 @item
2426 First, retrieve and decompress the Guix system installation image as
2427 described previously (@pxref{USB Stick and DVD Installation}).
2428
2429 @item
2430 Create a disk image that will hold the installed system. To make a
2431 qcow2-formatted disk image, use the @command{qemu-img} command:
2432
2433 @example
2434 qemu-img create -f qcow2 guixsd.img 50G
2435 @end example
2436
2437 The resulting file will be much smaller than 50 GB (typically less than
2438 1 MB), but it will grow as the virtualized storage device is filled up.
2439
2440 @item
2441 Boot the USB installation image in an VM:
2442
2443 @example
2444 qemu-system-x86_64 -m 1024 -smp 1 -enable-kvm \
2445 -net user -net nic,model=virtio -boot menu=on \
2446 -drive file=guix-system-install-@value{VERSION}.@var{system}.iso \
2447 -drive file=guixsd.img
2448 @end example
2449
2450 The ordering of the drives matters. @code{-enable-kvm} is optional, but
2451 significantly improves performance, @pxref{Running Guix in a VM}.
2452
2453 In the VM console, quickly press the @kbd{F12} key to enter the boot
2454 menu. Then press the @kbd{2} key and the @kbd{RET} key to validate your
2455 selection.
2456
2457 @item
2458 You're now root in the VM, proceed with the installation process.
2459 @xref{Preparing for Installation}, and follow the instructions.
2460 @end enumerate
2461
2462 Once installation is complete, you can boot the system that's on your
2463 @file{guixsd.img} image. @xref{Running Guix in a VM}, for how to do
2464 that.
2465
2466 @node Building the Installation Image
2467 @section Building the Installation Image
2468
2469 @cindex installation image
2470 The installation image described above was built using the @command{guix
2471 system} command, specifically:
2472
2473 @example
2474 guix system disk-image --file-system-type=iso9660 \
2475 gnu/system/install.scm
2476 @end example
2477
2478 Have a look at @file{gnu/system/install.scm} in the source tree,
2479 and see also @ref{Invoking guix system} for more information
2480 about the installation image.
2481
2482 @section Building the Installation Image for ARM Boards
2483
2484 Many ARM boards require a specific variant of the
2485 @uref{https://www.denx.de/wiki/U-Boot/, U-Boot} bootloader.
2486
2487 If you build a disk image and the bootloader is not available otherwise
2488 (on another boot drive etc), it's advisable to build an image that
2489 includes the bootloader, specifically:
2490
2491 @example
2492 guix system disk-image --system=armhf-linux -e '((@@ (gnu system install) os-with-u-boot) (@@ (gnu system install) installation-os) "A20-OLinuXino-Lime2")'
2493 @end example
2494
2495 @code{A20-OLinuXino-Lime2} is the name of the board. If you specify an invalid
2496 board, a list of possible boards will be printed.
2497
2498 @c *********************************************************************
2499 @node Package Management
2500 @chapter Package Management
2501
2502 @cindex packages
2503 The purpose of GNU Guix is to allow users to easily install, upgrade, and
2504 remove software packages, without having to know about their build
2505 procedures or dependencies. Guix also goes beyond this obvious set of
2506 features.
2507
2508 This chapter describes the main features of Guix, as well as the
2509 package management tools it provides. Along with the command-line
2510 interface described below (@pxref{Invoking guix package, @code{guix
2511 package}}), you may also use the Emacs-Guix interface (@pxref{Top,,,
2512 emacs-guix, The Emacs-Guix Reference Manual}), after installing
2513 @code{emacs-guix} package (run @kbd{M-x guix-help} command to start
2514 with it):
2515
2516 @example
2517 guix install emacs-guix
2518 @end example
2519
2520 @menu
2521 * Features:: How Guix will make your life brighter.
2522 * Invoking guix package:: Package installation, removal, etc.
2523 * Substitutes:: Downloading pre-built binaries.
2524 * Packages with Multiple Outputs:: Single source package, multiple outputs.
2525 * Invoking guix gc:: Running the garbage collector.
2526 * Invoking guix pull:: Fetching the latest Guix and distribution.
2527 * Channels:: Customizing the package collection.
2528 * Inferiors:: Interacting with another revision of Guix.
2529 * Invoking guix describe:: Display information about your Guix revision.
2530 * Invoking guix archive:: Exporting and importing store files.
2531 @end menu
2532
2533 @node Features
2534 @section Features
2535
2536 When using Guix, each package ends up in the @dfn{package store}, in its
2537 own directory---something that resembles
2538 @file{/gnu/store/xxx-package-1.2}, where @code{xxx} is a base32 string.
2539
2540 Instead of referring to these directories, users have their own
2541 @dfn{profile}, which points to the packages that they actually want to
2542 use. These profiles are stored within each user's home directory, at
2543 @code{$HOME/.guix-profile}.
2544
2545 For example, @code{alice} installs GCC 4.7.2. As a result,
2546 @file{/home/alice/.guix-profile/bin/gcc} points to
2547 @file{/gnu/store/@dots{}-gcc-4.7.2/bin/gcc}. Now, on the same machine,
2548 @code{bob} had already installed GCC 4.8.0. The profile of @code{bob}
2549 simply continues to point to
2550 @file{/gnu/store/@dots{}-gcc-4.8.0/bin/gcc}---i.e., both versions of GCC
2551 coexist on the same system without any interference.
2552
2553 The @command{guix package} command is the central tool to manage
2554 packages (@pxref{Invoking guix package}). It operates on the per-user
2555 profiles, and can be used @emph{with normal user privileges}.
2556
2557 @cindex transactions
2558 The command provides the obvious install, remove, and upgrade
2559 operations. Each invocation is actually a @emph{transaction}: either
2560 the specified operation succeeds, or nothing happens. Thus, if the
2561 @command{guix package} process is terminated during the transaction,
2562 or if a power outage occurs during the transaction, then the user's
2563 profile remains in its previous state, and remains usable.
2564
2565 In addition, any package transaction may be @emph{rolled back}. So, if,
2566 for example, an upgrade installs a new version of a package that turns
2567 out to have a serious bug, users may roll back to the previous instance
2568 of their profile, which was known to work well. Similarly, the global
2569 system configuration on Guix is subject to
2570 transactional upgrades and roll-back
2571 (@pxref{Using the Configuration System}).
2572
2573 All packages in the package store may be @emph{garbage-collected}.
2574 Guix can determine which packages are still referenced by user
2575 profiles, and remove those that are provably no longer referenced
2576 (@pxref{Invoking guix gc}). Users may also explicitly remove old
2577 generations of their profile so that the packages they refer to can be
2578 collected.
2579
2580 @cindex reproducibility
2581 @cindex reproducible builds
2582 Guix takes a @dfn{purely functional} approach to package
2583 management, as described in the introduction (@pxref{Introduction}).
2584 Each @file{/gnu/store} package directory name contains a hash of all the
2585 inputs that were used to build that package---compiler, libraries, build
2586 scripts, etc. This direct correspondence allows users to make sure a
2587 given package installation matches the current state of their
2588 distribution. It also helps maximize @dfn{build reproducibility}:
2589 thanks to the isolated build environments that are used, a given build
2590 is likely to yield bit-identical files when performed on different
2591 machines (@pxref{Invoking guix-daemon, container}).
2592
2593 @cindex substitutes
2594 This foundation allows Guix to support @dfn{transparent binary/source
2595 deployment}. When a pre-built binary for a @file{/gnu/store} item is
2596 available from an external source---a @dfn{substitute}, Guix just
2597 downloads it and unpacks it;
2598 otherwise, it builds the package from source, locally
2599 (@pxref{Substitutes}). Because build results are usually bit-for-bit
2600 reproducible, users do not have to trust servers that provide
2601 substitutes: they can force a local build and @emph{challenge} providers
2602 (@pxref{Invoking guix challenge}).
2603
2604 Control over the build environment is a feature that is also useful for
2605 developers. The @command{guix environment} command allows developers of
2606 a package to quickly set up the right development environment for their
2607 package, without having to manually install the dependencies of the
2608 package into their profile (@pxref{Invoking guix environment}).
2609
2610 @cindex replication, of software environments
2611 @cindex provenance tracking, of software artifacts
2612 All of Guix and its package definitions is version-controlled, and
2613 @command{guix pull} allows you to ``travel in time'' on the history of Guix
2614 itself (@pxref{Invoking guix pull}). This makes it possible to replicate a
2615 Guix instance on a different machine or at a later point in time, which in
2616 turn allows you to @emph{replicate complete software environments}, while
2617 retaining precise @dfn{provenance tracking} of the software.
2618
2619 @node Invoking guix package
2620 @section Invoking @command{guix package}
2621
2622 @cindex installing packages
2623 @cindex removing packages
2624 @cindex package installation
2625 @cindex package removal
2626 The @command{guix package} command is the tool that allows users to
2627 install, upgrade, and remove packages, as well as rolling back to
2628 previous configurations. It operates only on the user's own profile,
2629 and works with normal user privileges (@pxref{Features}). Its syntax
2630 is:
2631
2632 @example
2633 guix package @var{options}
2634 @end example
2635
2636 @cindex transactions
2637 Primarily, @var{options} specifies the operations to be performed during
2638 the transaction. Upon completion, a new profile is created, but
2639 previous @dfn{generations} of the profile remain available, should the user
2640 want to roll back.
2641
2642 For example, to remove @code{lua} and install @code{guile} and
2643 @code{guile-cairo} in a single transaction:
2644
2645 @example
2646 guix package -r lua -i guile guile-cairo
2647 @end example
2648
2649 @cindex aliases, for @command{guix package}
2650 For your convenience, we also provide the following aliases:
2651
2652 @itemize
2653 @item
2654 @command{guix search} is an alias for @command{guix package -s},
2655 @item
2656 @command{guix install} is an alias for @command{guix package -i},
2657 @item
2658 @command{guix remove} is an alias for @command{guix package -r},
2659 @item
2660 and @command{guix upgrade} is an alias for @command{guix package -u}.
2661 @end itemize
2662
2663 These aliases are less expressive than @command{guix package} and provide
2664 fewer options, so in some cases you'll probably want to use @command{guix
2665 package} directly.
2666
2667 @command{guix package} also supports a @dfn{declarative approach}
2668 whereby the user specifies the exact set of packages to be available and
2669 passes it @i{via} the @option{--manifest} option
2670 (@pxref{profile-manifest, @option{--manifest}}).
2671
2672 @cindex profile
2673 For each user, a symlink to the user's default profile is automatically
2674 created in @file{$HOME/.guix-profile}. This symlink always points to the
2675 current generation of the user's default profile. Thus, users can add
2676 @file{$HOME/.guix-profile/bin} to their @code{PATH} environment
2677 variable, and so on.
2678 @cindex search paths
2679 If you are not using Guix System, consider adding the
2680 following lines to your @file{~/.bash_profile} (@pxref{Bash Startup
2681 Files,,, bash, The GNU Bash Reference Manual}) so that newly-spawned
2682 shells get all the right environment variable definitions:
2683
2684 @example
2685 GUIX_PROFILE="$HOME/.guix-profile" ; \
2686 source "$HOME/.guix-profile/etc/profile"
2687 @end example
2688
2689 In a multi-user setup, user profiles are stored in a place registered as
2690 a @dfn{garbage-collector root}, which @file{$HOME/.guix-profile} points
2691 to (@pxref{Invoking guix gc}). That directory is normally
2692 @code{@var{localstatedir}/guix/profiles/per-user/@var{user}}, where
2693 @var{localstatedir} is the value passed to @code{configure} as
2694 @code{--localstatedir}, and @var{user} is the user name. The
2695 @file{per-user} directory is created when @command{guix-daemon} is
2696 started, and the @var{user} sub-directory is created by @command{guix
2697 package}.
2698
2699 The @var{options} can be among the following:
2700
2701 @table @code
2702
2703 @item --install=@var{package} @dots{}
2704 @itemx -i @var{package} @dots{}
2705 Install the specified @var{package}s.
2706
2707 Each @var{package} may specify either a simple package name, such as
2708 @code{guile}, or a package name followed by an at-sign and version number,
2709 such as @code{guile@@1.8.8} or simply @code{guile@@1.8} (in the latter
2710 case, the newest version prefixed by @code{1.8} is selected.)
2711
2712 If no version number is specified, the
2713 newest available version will be selected. In addition, @var{package}
2714 may contain a colon, followed by the name of one of the outputs of the
2715 package, as in @code{gcc:doc} or @code{binutils@@2.22:lib}
2716 (@pxref{Packages with Multiple Outputs}). Packages with a corresponding
2717 name (and optionally version) are searched for among the GNU
2718 distribution modules (@pxref{Package Modules}).
2719
2720 @cindex propagated inputs
2721 Sometimes packages have @dfn{propagated inputs}: these are dependencies
2722 that automatically get installed along with the required package
2723 (@pxref{package-propagated-inputs, @code{propagated-inputs} in
2724 @code{package} objects}, for information about propagated inputs in
2725 package definitions).
2726
2727 @anchor{package-cmd-propagated-inputs}
2728 An example is the GNU MPC library: its C header files refer to those of
2729 the GNU MPFR library, which in turn refer to those of the GMP library.
2730 Thus, when installing MPC, the MPFR and GMP libraries also get installed
2731 in the profile; removing MPC also removes MPFR and GMP---unless they had
2732 also been explicitly installed by the user.
2733
2734 Besides, packages sometimes rely on the definition of environment
2735 variables for their search paths (see explanation of
2736 @code{--search-paths} below). Any missing or possibly incorrect
2737 environment variable definitions are reported here.
2738
2739 @item --install-from-expression=@var{exp}
2740 @itemx -e @var{exp}
2741 Install the package @var{exp} evaluates to.
2742
2743 @var{exp} must be a Scheme expression that evaluates to a
2744 @code{<package>} object. This option is notably useful to disambiguate
2745 between same-named variants of a package, with expressions such as
2746 @code{(@@ (gnu packages base) guile-final)}.
2747
2748 Note that this option installs the first output of the specified
2749 package, which may be insufficient when needing a specific output of a
2750 multiple-output package.
2751
2752 @item --install-from-file=@var{file}
2753 @itemx -f @var{file}
2754 Install the package that the code within @var{file} evaluates to.
2755
2756 As an example, @var{file} might contain a definition like this
2757 (@pxref{Defining Packages}):
2758
2759 @example
2760 @verbatiminclude package-hello.scm
2761 @end example
2762
2763 Developers may find it useful to include such a @file{guix.scm} file
2764 in the root of their project source tree that can be used to test
2765 development snapshots and create reproducible development environments
2766 (@pxref{Invoking guix environment}).
2767
2768 @item --remove=@var{package} @dots{}
2769 @itemx -r @var{package} @dots{}
2770 Remove the specified @var{package}s.
2771
2772 As for @code{--install}, each @var{package} may specify a version number
2773 and/or output name in addition to the package name. For instance,
2774 @code{-r glibc:debug} would remove the @code{debug} output of
2775 @code{glibc}.
2776
2777 @item --upgrade[=@var{regexp} @dots{}]
2778 @itemx -u [@var{regexp} @dots{}]
2779 @cindex upgrading packages
2780 Upgrade all the installed packages. If one or more @var{regexp}s are
2781 specified, upgrade only installed packages whose name matches a
2782 @var{regexp}. Also see the @code{--do-not-upgrade} option below.
2783
2784 Note that this upgrades package to the latest version of packages found
2785 in the distribution currently installed. To update your distribution,
2786 you should regularly run @command{guix pull} (@pxref{Invoking guix
2787 pull}).
2788
2789 @item --do-not-upgrade[=@var{regexp} @dots{}]
2790 When used together with the @code{--upgrade} option, do @emph{not}
2791 upgrade any packages whose name matches a @var{regexp}. For example, to
2792 upgrade all packages in the current profile except those containing the
2793 substring ``emacs'':
2794
2795 @example
2796 $ guix package --upgrade . --do-not-upgrade emacs
2797 @end example
2798
2799 @item @anchor{profile-manifest}--manifest=@var{file}
2800 @itemx -m @var{file}
2801 @cindex profile declaration
2802 @cindex profile manifest
2803 Create a new generation of the profile from the manifest object
2804 returned by the Scheme code in @var{file}.
2805
2806 This allows you to @emph{declare} the profile's contents rather than
2807 constructing it through a sequence of @code{--install} and similar
2808 commands. The advantage is that @var{file} can be put under version
2809 control, copied to different machines to reproduce the same profile, and
2810 so on.
2811
2812 @c FIXME: Add reference to (guix profile) documentation when available.
2813 @var{file} must return a @dfn{manifest} object, which is roughly a list
2814 of packages:
2815
2816 @findex packages->manifest
2817 @example
2818 (use-package-modules guile emacs)
2819
2820 (packages->manifest
2821 (list emacs
2822 guile-2.0
2823 ;; Use a specific package output.
2824 (list guile-2.0 "debug")))
2825 @end example
2826
2827 @findex specifications->manifest
2828 In this example we have to know which modules define the @code{emacs}
2829 and @code{guile-2.0} variables to provide the right
2830 @code{use-package-modules} line, which can be cumbersome. We can
2831 instead provide regular package specifications and let
2832 @code{specifications->manifest} look up the corresponding package
2833 objects, like this:
2834
2835 @example
2836 (specifications->manifest
2837 '("emacs" "guile@@2.2" "guile@@2.2:debug"))
2838 @end example
2839
2840 @item --roll-back
2841 @cindex rolling back
2842 @cindex undoing transactions
2843 @cindex transactions, undoing
2844 Roll back to the previous @dfn{generation} of the profile---i.e., undo
2845 the last transaction.
2846
2847 When combined with options such as @code{--install}, roll back occurs
2848 before any other actions.
2849
2850 When rolling back from the first generation that actually contains
2851 installed packages, the profile is made to point to the @dfn{zeroth
2852 generation}, which contains no files apart from its own metadata.
2853
2854 After having rolled back, installing, removing, or upgrading packages
2855 overwrites previous future generations. Thus, the history of the
2856 generations in a profile is always linear.
2857
2858 @item --switch-generation=@var{pattern}
2859 @itemx -S @var{pattern}
2860 @cindex generations
2861 Switch to a particular generation defined by @var{pattern}.
2862
2863 @var{pattern} may be either a generation number or a number prefixed
2864 with ``+'' or ``-''. The latter means: move forward/backward by a
2865 specified number of generations. For example, if you want to return to
2866 the latest generation after @code{--roll-back}, use
2867 @code{--switch-generation=+1}.
2868
2869 The difference between @code{--roll-back} and
2870 @code{--switch-generation=-1} is that @code{--switch-generation} will
2871 not make a zeroth generation, so if a specified generation does not
2872 exist, the current generation will not be changed.
2873
2874 @item --search-paths[=@var{kind}]
2875 @cindex search paths
2876 Report environment variable definitions, in Bash syntax, that may be
2877 needed in order to use the set of installed packages. These environment
2878 variables are used to specify @dfn{search paths} for files used by some
2879 of the installed packages.
2880
2881 For example, GCC needs the @code{CPATH} and @code{LIBRARY_PATH}
2882 environment variables to be defined so it can look for headers and
2883 libraries in the user's profile (@pxref{Environment Variables,,, gcc,
2884 Using the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC)}). If GCC and, say, the C
2885 library are installed in the profile, then @code{--search-paths} will
2886 suggest setting these variables to @code{@var{profile}/include} and
2887 @code{@var{profile}/lib}, respectively.
2888
2889 The typical use case is to define these environment variables in the
2890 shell:
2891
2892 @example
2893 $ eval `guix package --search-paths`
2894 @end example
2895
2896 @var{kind} may be one of @code{exact}, @code{prefix}, or @code{suffix},
2897 meaning that the returned environment variable definitions will either
2898 be exact settings, or prefixes or suffixes of the current value of these
2899 variables. When omitted, @var{kind} defaults to @code{exact}.
2900
2901 This option can also be used to compute the @emph{combined} search paths
2902 of several profiles. Consider this example:
2903
2904 @example
2905 $ guix package -p foo -i guile
2906 $ guix package -p bar -i guile-json
2907 $ guix package -p foo -p bar --search-paths
2908 @end example
2909
2910 The last command above reports about the @code{GUILE_LOAD_PATH}
2911 variable, even though, taken individually, neither @file{foo} nor
2912 @file{bar} would lead to that recommendation.
2913
2914
2915 @item --profile=@var{profile}
2916 @itemx -p @var{profile}
2917 Use @var{profile} instead of the user's default profile.
2918
2919 @cindex collisions, in a profile
2920 @cindex colliding packages in profiles
2921 @cindex profile collisions
2922 @item --allow-collisions
2923 Allow colliding packages in the new profile. Use at your own risk!
2924
2925 By default, @command{guix package} reports as an error @dfn{collisions}
2926 in the profile. Collisions happen when two or more different versions
2927 or variants of a given package end up in the profile.
2928
2929 @item --bootstrap
2930 Use the bootstrap Guile to build the profile. This option is only
2931 useful to distribution developers.
2932
2933 @end table
2934
2935 In addition to these actions, @command{guix package} supports the
2936 following options to query the current state of a profile, or the
2937 availability of packages:
2938
2939 @table @option
2940
2941 @item --search=@var{regexp}
2942 @itemx -s @var{regexp}
2943 @cindex searching for packages
2944 List the available packages whose name, synopsis, or description matches
2945 @var{regexp} (in a case-insensitive fashion), sorted by relevance.
2946 Print all the metadata of matching packages in
2947 @code{recutils} format (@pxref{Top, GNU recutils databases,, recutils,
2948 GNU recutils manual}).
2949
2950 This allows specific fields to be extracted using the @command{recsel}
2951 command, for instance:
2952
2953 @example
2954 $ guix package -s malloc | recsel -p name,version,relevance
2955 name: jemalloc
2956 version: 4.5.0
2957 relevance: 6
2958
2959 name: glibc
2960 version: 2.25
2961 relevance: 1
2962
2963 name: libgc
2964 version: 7.6.0
2965 relevance: 1
2966 @end example
2967
2968 Similarly, to show the name of all the packages available under the
2969 terms of the GNU@tie{}LGPL version 3:
2970
2971 @example
2972 $ guix package -s "" | recsel -p name -e 'license ~ "LGPL 3"'
2973 name: elfutils
2974
2975 name: gmp
2976 @dots{}
2977 @end example
2978
2979 It is also possible to refine search results using several @code{-s} flags to
2980 @command{guix package}, or several arguments to @command{guix search}. For
2981 example, the following command returns a list of board games (this time using
2982 the @command{guix search} alias):
2983
2984 @example
2985 $ guix search '\<board\>' game | recsel -p name
2986 name: gnubg
2987 @dots{}
2988 @end example
2989
2990 If we were to omit @code{-s game}, we would also get software packages
2991 that deal with printed circuit boards; removing the angle brackets
2992 around @code{board} would further add packages that have to do with
2993 keyboards.
2994
2995 And now for a more elaborate example. The following command searches
2996 for cryptographic libraries, filters out Haskell, Perl, Python, and Ruby
2997 libraries, and prints the name and synopsis of the matching packages:
2998
2999 @example
3000 $ guix search crypto library | \
3001 recsel -e '! (name ~ "^(ghc|perl|python|ruby)")' -p name,synopsis
3002 @end example
3003
3004 @noindent
3005 @xref{Selection Expressions,,, recutils, GNU recutils manual}, for more
3006 information on @dfn{selection expressions} for @code{recsel -e}.
3007
3008 @item --show=@var{package}
3009 Show details about @var{package}, taken from the list of available packages, in
3010 @code{recutils} format (@pxref{Top, GNU recutils databases,, recutils, GNU
3011 recutils manual}).
3012
3013 @example
3014 $ guix package --show=python | recsel -p name,version
3015 name: python
3016 version: 2.7.6
3017
3018 name: python
3019 version: 3.3.5
3020 @end example
3021
3022 You may also specify the full name of a package to only get details about a
3023 specific version of it:
3024 @example
3025 $ guix package --show=python@@3.4 | recsel -p name,version
3026 name: python
3027 version: 3.4.3
3028 @end example
3029
3030
3031
3032 @item --list-installed[=@var{regexp}]
3033 @itemx -I [@var{regexp}]
3034 List the currently installed packages in the specified profile, with the
3035 most recently installed packages shown last. When @var{regexp} is
3036 specified, list only installed packages whose name matches @var{regexp}.
3037
3038 For each installed package, print the following items, separated by
3039 tabs: the package name, its version string, the part of the package that
3040 is installed (for instance, @code{out} for the default output,
3041 @code{include} for its headers, etc.), and the path of this package in
3042 the store.
3043
3044 @item --list-available[=@var{regexp}]
3045 @itemx -A [@var{regexp}]
3046 List packages currently available in the distribution for this system
3047 (@pxref{GNU Distribution}). When @var{regexp} is specified, list only
3048 installed packages whose name matches @var{regexp}.
3049
3050 For each package, print the following items separated by tabs: its name,
3051 its version string, the parts of the package (@pxref{Packages with
3052 Multiple Outputs}), and the source location of its definition.
3053
3054 @item --list-generations[=@var{pattern}]
3055 @itemx -l [@var{pattern}]
3056 @cindex generations
3057 Return a list of generations along with their creation dates; for each
3058 generation, show the installed packages, with the most recently
3059 installed packages shown last. Note that the zeroth generation is never
3060 shown.
3061
3062 For each installed package, print the following items, separated by
3063 tabs: the name of a package, its version string, the part of the package
3064 that is installed (@pxref{Packages with Multiple Outputs}), and the
3065 location of this package in the store.
3066
3067 When @var{pattern} is used, the command returns only matching
3068 generations. Valid patterns include:
3069
3070 @itemize
3071 @item @emph{Integers and comma-separated integers}. Both patterns denote
3072 generation numbers. For instance, @code{--list-generations=1} returns
3073 the first one.
3074
3075 And @code{--list-generations=1,8,2} outputs three generations in the
3076 specified order. Neither spaces nor trailing commas are allowed.
3077
3078 @item @emph{Ranges}. @code{--list-generations=2..9} prints the
3079 specified generations and everything in between. Note that the start of
3080 a range must be smaller than its end.
3081
3082 It is also possible to omit the endpoint. For example,
3083 @code{--list-generations=2..}, returns all generations starting from the
3084 second one.
3085
3086 @item @emph{Durations}. You can also get the last @emph{N}@tie{}days, weeks,
3087 or months by passing an integer along with the first letter of the
3088 duration. For example, @code{--list-generations=20d} lists generations
3089 that are up to 20 days old.
3090 @end itemize
3091
3092 @item --delete-generations[=@var{pattern}]
3093 @itemx -d [@var{pattern}]
3094 When @var{pattern} is omitted, delete all generations except the current
3095 one.
3096
3097 This command accepts the same patterns as @option{--list-generations}.
3098 When @var{pattern} is specified, delete the matching generations. When
3099 @var{pattern} specifies a duration, generations @emph{older} than the
3100 specified duration match. For instance, @code{--delete-generations=1m}
3101 deletes generations that are more than one month old.
3102
3103 If the current generation matches, it is @emph{not} deleted. Also, the
3104 zeroth generation is never deleted.
3105
3106 Note that deleting generations prevents rolling back to them.
3107 Consequently, this command must be used with care.
3108
3109 @end table
3110
3111 Finally, since @command{guix package} may actually start build
3112 processes, it supports all the common build options (@pxref{Common Build
3113 Options}). It also supports package transformation options, such as
3114 @option{--with-source} (@pxref{Package Transformation Options}).
3115 However, note that package transformations are lost when upgrading; to
3116 preserve transformations across upgrades, you should define your own
3117 package variant in a Guile module and add it to @code{GUIX_PACKAGE_PATH}
3118 (@pxref{Defining Packages}).
3119
3120 @node Substitutes
3121 @section Substitutes
3122
3123 @cindex substitutes
3124 @cindex pre-built binaries
3125 Guix supports transparent source/binary deployment, which means that it
3126 can either build things locally, or download pre-built items from a
3127 server, or both. We call these pre-built items @dfn{substitutes}---they
3128 are substitutes for local build results. In many cases, downloading a
3129 substitute is much faster than building things locally.
3130
3131 Substitutes can be anything resulting from a derivation build
3132 (@pxref{Derivations}). Of course, in the common case, they are
3133 pre-built package binaries, but source tarballs, for instance, which
3134 also result from derivation builds, can be available as substitutes.
3135
3136 @menu
3137 * Official Substitute Server:: One particular source of substitutes.
3138 * Substitute Server Authorization:: How to enable or disable substitutes.
3139 * Substitute Authentication:: How Guix verifies substitutes.
3140 * Proxy Settings:: How to get substitutes via proxy.
3141 * Substitution Failure:: What happens when substitution fails.
3142 * On Trusting Binaries:: How can you trust that binary blob?
3143 @end menu
3144
3145 @node Official Substitute Server
3146 @subsection Official Substitute Server
3147
3148 @cindex build farm
3149 The @code{@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER}} server is a front-end to an official build farm
3150 that builds packages from Guix continuously for some
3151 architectures, and makes them available as substitutes. This is the
3152 default source of substitutes; it can be overridden by passing the
3153 @option{--substitute-urls} option either to @command{guix-daemon}
3154 (@pxref{daemon-substitute-urls,, @code{guix-daemon --substitute-urls}})
3155 or to client tools such as @command{guix package}
3156 (@pxref{client-substitute-urls,, client @option{--substitute-urls}
3157 option}).
3158
3159 Substitute URLs can be either HTTP or HTTPS.
3160 HTTPS is recommended because communications are encrypted; conversely,
3161 using HTTP makes all communications visible to an eavesdropper, who
3162 could use the information gathered to determine, for instance, whether
3163 your system has unpatched security vulnerabilities.
3164
3165 Substitutes from the official build farm are enabled by default when
3166 using Guix System (@pxref{GNU Distribution}). However,
3167 they are disabled by default when using Guix on a foreign distribution,
3168 unless you have explicitly enabled them via one of the recommended
3169 installation steps (@pxref{Installation}). The following paragraphs
3170 describe how to enable or disable substitutes for the official build
3171 farm; the same procedure can also be used to enable substitutes for any
3172 other substitute server.
3173
3174 @node Substitute Server Authorization
3175 @subsection Substitute Server Authorization
3176
3177 @cindex security
3178 @cindex substitutes, authorization thereof
3179 @cindex access control list (ACL), for substitutes
3180 @cindex ACL (access control list), for substitutes
3181 To allow Guix to download substitutes from @code{@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER}} or a
3182 mirror thereof, you
3183 must add its public key to the access control list (ACL) of archive
3184 imports, using the @command{guix archive} command (@pxref{Invoking guix
3185 archive}). Doing so implies that you trust @code{@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER}} to not
3186 be compromised and to serve genuine substitutes.
3187
3188 The public key for @code{@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER}} is installed along with Guix, in
3189 @code{@var{prefix}/share/guix/@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER}.pub}, where @var{prefix} is
3190 the installation prefix of Guix. If you installed Guix from source,
3191 make sure you checked the GPG signature of
3192 @file{guix-@value{VERSION}.tar.gz}, which contains this public key file.
3193 Then, you can run something like this:
3194
3195 @example
3196 # guix archive --authorize < @var{prefix}/share/guix/@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER}.pub
3197 @end example
3198
3199 Once this is in place, the output of a command like @code{guix build}
3200 should change from something like:
3201
3202 @example
3203 $ guix build emacs --dry-run
3204 The following derivations would be built:
3205 /gnu/store/yr7bnx8xwcayd6j95r2clmkdl1qh688w-emacs-24.3.drv
3206 /gnu/store/x8qsh1hlhgjx6cwsjyvybnfv2i37z23w-dbus-1.6.4.tar.gz.drv
3207 /gnu/store/1ixwp12fl950d15h2cj11c73733jay0z-alsa-lib-1.0.27.1.tar.bz2.drv
3208 /gnu/store/nlma1pw0p603fpfiqy7kn4zm105r5dmw-util-linux-2.21.drv
3209 @dots{}
3210 @end example
3211
3212 @noindent
3213 to something like:
3214
3215 @example
3216 $ guix build emacs --dry-run
3217 112.3 MB would be downloaded:
3218 /gnu/store/pk3n22lbq6ydamyymqkkz7i69wiwjiwi-emacs-24.3
3219 /gnu/store/2ygn4ncnhrpr61rssa6z0d9x22si0va3-libjpeg-8d
3220 /gnu/store/71yz6lgx4dazma9dwn2mcjxaah9w77jq-cairo-1.12.16
3221 /gnu/store/7zdhgp0n1518lvfn8mb96sxqfmvqrl7v-libxrender-0.9.7
3222 @dots{}
3223 @end example
3224
3225 @noindent
3226 This indicates that substitutes from @code{@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER}} are usable and
3227 will be downloaded, when possible, for future builds.
3228
3229 @cindex substitutes, how to disable
3230 The substitute mechanism can be disabled globally by running
3231 @code{guix-daemon} with @code{--no-substitutes} (@pxref{Invoking
3232 guix-daemon}). It can also be disabled temporarily by passing the
3233 @code{--no-substitutes} option to @command{guix package}, @command{guix
3234 build}, and other command-line tools.
3235
3236 @node Substitute Authentication
3237 @subsection Substitute Authentication
3238
3239 @cindex digital signatures
3240 Guix detects and raises an error when attempting to use a substitute
3241 that has been tampered with. Likewise, it ignores substitutes that are
3242 not signed, or that are not signed by one of the keys listed in the ACL.
3243
3244 There is one exception though: if an unauthorized server provides
3245 substitutes that are @emph{bit-for-bit identical} to those provided by
3246 an authorized server, then the unauthorized server becomes eligible for
3247 downloads. For example, assume we have chosen two substitute servers
3248 with this option:
3249
3250 @example
3251 --substitute-urls="https://a.example.org https://b.example.org"
3252 @end example
3253
3254 @noindent
3255 @cindex reproducible builds
3256 If the ACL contains only the key for @code{b.example.org}, and if
3257 @code{a.example.org} happens to serve the @emph{exact same} substitutes,
3258 then Guix will download substitutes from @code{a.example.org} because it
3259 comes first in the list and can be considered a mirror of
3260 @code{b.example.org}. In practice, independent build machines usually
3261 produce the same binaries, thanks to bit-reproducible builds (see
3262 below).
3263
3264 When using HTTPS, the server's X.509 certificate is @emph{not} validated
3265 (in other words, the server is not authenticated), contrary to what
3266 HTTPS clients such as Web browsers usually do. This is because Guix
3267 authenticates substitute information itself, as explained above, which
3268 is what we care about (whereas X.509 certificates are about
3269 authenticating bindings between domain names and public keys.)
3270
3271 @node Proxy Settings
3272 @subsection Proxy Settings
3273
3274 @vindex http_proxy
3275 Substitutes are downloaded over HTTP or HTTPS.
3276 The @code{http_proxy} environment
3277 variable can be set in the environment of @command{guix-daemon} and is
3278 honored for downloads of substitutes. Note that the value of
3279 @code{http_proxy} in the environment where @command{guix build},
3280 @command{guix package}, and other client commands are run has
3281 @emph{absolutely no effect}.
3282
3283 @node Substitution Failure
3284 @subsection Substitution Failure
3285
3286 Even when a substitute for a derivation is available, sometimes the
3287 substitution attempt will fail. This can happen for a variety of
3288 reasons: the substitute server might be offline, the substitute may
3289 recently have been deleted, the connection might have been interrupted,
3290 etc.
3291
3292 When substitutes are enabled and a substitute for a derivation is
3293 available, but the substitution attempt fails, Guix will attempt to
3294 build the derivation locally depending on whether or not
3295 @code{--fallback} was given (@pxref{fallback-option,, common build
3296 option @code{--fallback}}). Specifically, if @code{--fallback} was
3297 omitted, then no local build will be performed, and the derivation is
3298 considered to have failed. However, if @code{--fallback} was given,
3299 then Guix will attempt to build the derivation locally, and the success
3300 or failure of the derivation depends on the success or failure of the
3301 local build. Note that when substitutes are disabled or no substitute
3302 is available for the derivation in question, a local build will
3303 @emph{always} be performed, regardless of whether or not
3304 @code{--fallback} was given.
3305
3306 To get an idea of how many substitutes are available right now, you can
3307 try running the @command{guix weather} command (@pxref{Invoking guix
3308 weather}). This command provides statistics on the substitutes provided
3309 by a server.
3310
3311 @node On Trusting Binaries
3312 @subsection On Trusting Binaries
3313
3314 @cindex trust, of pre-built binaries
3315 Today, each individual's control over their own computing is at the
3316 mercy of institutions, corporations, and groups with enough power and
3317 determination to subvert the computing infrastructure and exploit its
3318 weaknesses. While using @code{@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER}} substitutes can be
3319 convenient, we encourage users to also build on their own, or even run
3320 their own build farm, such that @code{@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER}} is less of an
3321 interesting target. One way to help is by publishing the software you
3322 build using @command{guix publish} so that others have one more choice
3323 of server to download substitutes from (@pxref{Invoking guix publish}).
3324
3325 Guix has the foundations to maximize build reproducibility
3326 (@pxref{Features}). In most cases, independent builds of a given
3327 package or derivation should yield bit-identical results. Thus, through
3328 a diverse set of independent package builds, we can strengthen the
3329 integrity of our systems. The @command{guix challenge} command aims to
3330 help users assess substitute servers, and to assist developers in
3331 finding out about non-deterministic package builds (@pxref{Invoking guix
3332 challenge}). Similarly, the @option{--check} option of @command{guix
3333 build} allows users to check whether previously-installed substitutes
3334 are genuine by rebuilding them locally (@pxref{build-check,
3335 @command{guix build --check}}).
3336
3337 In the future, we want Guix to have support to publish and retrieve
3338 binaries to/from other users, in a peer-to-peer fashion. If you would
3339 like to discuss this project, join us on @email{guix-devel@@gnu.org}.
3340
3341 @node Packages with Multiple Outputs
3342 @section Packages with Multiple Outputs
3343
3344 @cindex multiple-output packages
3345 @cindex package outputs
3346 @cindex outputs
3347
3348 Often, packages defined in Guix have a single @dfn{output}---i.e., the
3349 source package leads to exactly one directory in the store. When running
3350 @command{guix install glibc}, one installs the default output of the
3351 GNU libc package; the default output is called @code{out}, but its name
3352 can be omitted as shown in this command. In this particular case, the
3353 default output of @code{glibc} contains all the C header files, shared
3354 libraries, static libraries, Info documentation, and other supporting
3355 files.
3356
3357 Sometimes it is more appropriate to separate the various types of files
3358 produced from a single source package into separate outputs. For
3359 instance, the GLib C library (used by GTK+ and related packages)
3360 installs more than 20 MiB of reference documentation as HTML pages.
3361 To save space for users who do not need it, the documentation goes to a
3362 separate output, called @code{doc}. To install the main GLib output,
3363 which contains everything but the documentation, one would run:
3364
3365 @example
3366 guix install glib
3367 @end example
3368
3369 @cindex documentation
3370 The command to install its documentation is:
3371
3372 @example
3373 guix install glib:doc
3374 @end example
3375
3376 Some packages install programs with different ``dependency footprints''.
3377 For instance, the WordNet package installs both command-line tools and
3378 graphical user interfaces (GUIs). The former depend solely on the C
3379 library, whereas the latter depend on Tcl/Tk and the underlying X
3380 libraries. In this case, we leave the command-line tools in the default
3381 output, whereas the GUIs are in a separate output. This allows users
3382 who do not need the GUIs to save space. The @command{guix size} command
3383 can help find out about such situations (@pxref{Invoking guix size}).
3384 @command{guix graph} can also be helpful (@pxref{Invoking guix graph}).
3385
3386 There are several such multiple-output packages in the GNU distribution.
3387 Other conventional output names include @code{lib} for libraries and
3388 possibly header files, @code{bin} for stand-alone programs, and
3389 @code{debug} for debugging information (@pxref{Installing Debugging
3390 Files}). The outputs of a packages are listed in the third column of
3391 the output of @command{guix package --list-available} (@pxref{Invoking
3392 guix package}).
3393
3394
3395 @node Invoking guix gc
3396 @section Invoking @command{guix gc}
3397
3398 @cindex garbage collector
3399 @cindex disk space
3400 Packages that are installed, but not used, may be @dfn{garbage-collected}.
3401 The @command{guix gc} command allows users to explicitly run the garbage
3402 collector to reclaim space from the @file{/gnu/store} directory. It is
3403 the @emph{only} way to remove files from @file{/gnu/store}---removing
3404 files or directories manually may break it beyond repair!
3405
3406 @cindex GC roots
3407 @cindex garbage collector roots
3408 The garbage collector has a set of known @dfn{roots}: any file under
3409 @file{/gnu/store} reachable from a root is considered @dfn{live} and
3410 cannot be deleted; any other file is considered @dfn{dead} and may be
3411 deleted. The set of garbage collector roots (``GC roots'' for short)
3412 includes default user profiles; by default, the symlinks under
3413 @file{/var/guix/gcroots} represent these GC roots. New GC roots can be
3414 added with @command{guix build --root}, for example (@pxref{Invoking
3415 guix build}). The @command{guix gc --list-roots} command lists them.
3416
3417 Prior to running @code{guix gc --collect-garbage} to make space, it is
3418 often useful to remove old generations from user profiles; that way, old
3419 package builds referenced by those generations can be reclaimed. This
3420 is achieved by running @code{guix package --delete-generations}
3421 (@pxref{Invoking guix package}).
3422
3423 Our recommendation is to run a garbage collection periodically, or when
3424 you are short on disk space. For instance, to guarantee that at least
3425 5@tie{}GB are available on your disk, simply run:
3426
3427 @example
3428 guix gc -F 5G
3429 @end example
3430
3431 It is perfectly safe to run as a non-interactive periodic job
3432 (@pxref{Scheduled Job Execution}, for how to set up such a job).
3433 Running @command{guix gc} with no arguments will collect as
3434 much garbage as it can, but that is often inconvenient: you may find
3435 yourself having to rebuild or re-download software that is ``dead'' from
3436 the GC viewpoint but that is necessary to build other pieces of
3437 software---e.g., the compiler tool chain.
3438
3439 The @command{guix gc} command has three modes of operation: it can be
3440 used to garbage-collect any dead files (the default), to delete specific
3441 files (the @code{--delete} option), to print garbage-collector
3442 information, or for more advanced queries. The garbage collection
3443 options are as follows:
3444
3445 @table @code
3446 @item --collect-garbage[=@var{min}]
3447 @itemx -C [@var{min}]
3448 Collect garbage---i.e., unreachable @file{/gnu/store} files and
3449 sub-directories. This is the default operation when no option is
3450 specified.
3451
3452 When @var{min} is given, stop once @var{min} bytes have been collected.
3453 @var{min} may be a number of bytes, or it may include a unit as a
3454 suffix, such as @code{MiB} for mebibytes and @code{GB} for gigabytes
3455 (@pxref{Block size, size specifications,, coreutils, GNU Coreutils}).
3456
3457 When @var{min} is omitted, collect all the garbage.
3458
3459 @item --free-space=@var{free}
3460 @itemx -F @var{free}
3461 Collect garbage until @var{free} space is available under
3462 @file{/gnu/store}, if possible; @var{free} denotes storage space, such
3463 as @code{500MiB}, as described above.
3464
3465 When @var{free} or more is already available in @file{/gnu/store}, do
3466 nothing and exit immediately.
3467
3468 @item --delete-generations[=@var{duration}]
3469 @itemx -d [@var{duration}]
3470 Before starting the garbage collection process, delete all the generations
3471 older than @var{duration}, for all the user profiles; when run as root, this
3472 applies to all the profiles @emph{of all the users}.
3473
3474 For example, this command deletes all the generations of all your profiles
3475 that are older than 2 months (except generations that are current), and then
3476 proceeds to free space until at least 10 GiB are available:
3477
3478 @example
3479 guix gc -d 2m -F 10G
3480 @end example
3481
3482 @item --delete
3483 @itemx -D
3484 Attempt to delete all the store files and directories specified as
3485 arguments. This fails if some of the files are not in the store, or if
3486 they are still live.
3487
3488 @item --list-failures
3489 List store items corresponding to cached build failures.
3490
3491 This prints nothing unless the daemon was started with
3492 @option{--cache-failures} (@pxref{Invoking guix-daemon,
3493 @option{--cache-failures}}).
3494
3495 @item --list-roots
3496 List the GC roots owned by the user; when run as root, list @emph{all} the GC
3497 roots.
3498
3499 @item --clear-failures
3500 Remove the specified store items from the failed-build cache.
3501
3502 Again, this option only makes sense when the daemon is started with
3503 @option{--cache-failures}. Otherwise, it does nothing.
3504
3505 @item --list-dead
3506 Show the list of dead files and directories still present in the
3507 store---i.e., files and directories no longer reachable from any root.
3508
3509 @item --list-live
3510 Show the list of live store files and directories.
3511
3512 @end table
3513
3514 In addition, the references among existing store files can be queried:
3515
3516 @table @code
3517
3518 @item --references
3519 @itemx --referrers
3520 @cindex package dependencies
3521 List the references (respectively, the referrers) of store files given
3522 as arguments.
3523
3524 @item --requisites
3525 @itemx -R
3526 @cindex closure
3527 List the requisites of the store files passed as arguments. Requisites
3528 include the store files themselves, their references, and the references
3529 of these, recursively. In other words, the returned list is the
3530 @dfn{transitive closure} of the store files.
3531
3532 @xref{Invoking guix size}, for a tool to profile the size of the closure
3533 of an element. @xref{Invoking guix graph}, for a tool to visualize
3534 the graph of references.
3535
3536 @item --derivers
3537 @cindex derivation
3538 Return the derivation(s) leading to the given store items
3539 (@pxref{Derivations}).
3540
3541 For example, this command:
3542
3543 @example
3544 guix gc --derivers `guix package -I ^emacs$ | cut -f4`
3545 @end example
3546
3547 @noindent
3548 returns the @file{.drv} file(s) leading to the @code{emacs} package
3549 installed in your profile.
3550
3551 Note that there may be zero matching @file{.drv} files, for instance
3552 because these files have been garbage-collected. There can also be more
3553 than one matching @file{.drv} due to fixed-output derivations.
3554 @end table
3555
3556 Lastly, the following options allow you to check the integrity of the
3557 store and to control disk usage.
3558
3559 @table @option
3560
3561 @item --verify[=@var{options}]
3562 @cindex integrity, of the store
3563 @cindex integrity checking
3564 Verify the integrity of the store.
3565
3566 By default, make sure that all the store items marked as valid in the
3567 database of the daemon actually exist in @file{/gnu/store}.
3568
3569 When provided, @var{options} must be a comma-separated list containing one
3570 or more of @code{contents} and @code{repair}.
3571
3572 When passing @option{--verify=contents}, the daemon computes the
3573 content hash of each store item and compares it against its hash in the
3574 database. Hash mismatches are reported as data corruptions. Because it
3575 traverses @emph{all the files in the store}, this command can take a
3576 long time, especially on systems with a slow disk drive.
3577
3578 @cindex repairing the store
3579 @cindex corruption, recovering from
3580 Using @option{--verify=repair} or @option{--verify=contents,repair}
3581 causes the daemon to try to repair corrupt store items by fetching
3582 substitutes for them (@pxref{Substitutes}). Because repairing is not
3583 atomic, and thus potentially dangerous, it is available only to the
3584 system administrator. A lightweight alternative, when you know exactly
3585 which items in the store are corrupt, is @command{guix build --repair}
3586 (@pxref{Invoking guix build}).
3587
3588 @item --optimize
3589 @cindex deduplication
3590 Optimize the store by hard-linking identical files---this is
3591 @dfn{deduplication}.
3592
3593 The daemon performs deduplication after each successful build or archive
3594 import, unless it was started with @code{--disable-deduplication}
3595 (@pxref{Invoking guix-daemon, @code{--disable-deduplication}}). Thus,
3596 this option is primarily useful when the daemon was running with
3597 @code{--disable-deduplication}.
3598
3599 @end table
3600
3601 @node Invoking guix pull
3602 @section Invoking @command{guix pull}
3603
3604 @cindex upgrading Guix
3605 @cindex updating Guix
3606 @cindex @command{guix pull}
3607 @cindex pull
3608 Packages are installed or upgraded to the latest version available in
3609 the distribution currently available on your local machine. To update
3610 that distribution, along with the Guix tools, you must run @command{guix
3611 pull}: the command downloads the latest Guix source code and package
3612 descriptions, and deploys it. Source code is downloaded from a
3613 @uref{https://git-scm.com, Git} repository, by default the official
3614 GNU@tie{}Guix repository, though this can be customized.
3615
3616 On completion, @command{guix package} will use packages and package
3617 versions from this just-retrieved copy of Guix. Not only that, but all
3618 the Guix commands and Scheme modules will also be taken from that latest
3619 version. New @command{guix} sub-commands added by the update also
3620 become available.
3621
3622 Any user can update their Guix copy using @command{guix pull}, and the
3623 effect is limited to the user who run @command{guix pull}. For
3624 instance, when user @code{root} runs @command{guix pull}, this has no
3625 effect on the version of Guix that user @code{alice} sees, and vice
3626 versa.
3627
3628 The result of running @command{guix pull} is a @dfn{profile} available
3629 under @file{~/.config/guix/current} containing the latest Guix. Thus,
3630 make sure to add it to the beginning of your search path so that you use
3631 the latest version, and similarly for the Info manual
3632 (@pxref{Documentation}):
3633
3634 @example
3635 export PATH="$HOME/.config/guix/current/bin:$PATH"
3636 export INFOPATH="$HOME/.config/guix/current/share/info:$INFOPATH"
3637 @end example
3638
3639 The @code{--list-generations} or @code{-l} option lists past generations
3640 produced by @command{guix pull}, along with details about their provenance:
3641
3642 @example
3643 $ guix pull -l
3644 Generation 1 Jun 10 2018 00:18:18
3645 guix 65956ad
3646 repository URL: https://git.savannah.gnu.org/git/guix.git
3647 branch: origin/master
3648 commit: 65956ad3526ba09e1f7a40722c96c6ef7c0936fe
3649
3650 Generation 2 Jun 11 2018 11:02:49
3651 guix e0cc7f6
3652 repository URL: https://git.savannah.gnu.org/git/guix.git
3653 branch: origin/master
3654 commit: e0cc7f669bec22c37481dd03a7941c7d11a64f1d
3655 2 new packages: keepalived, libnfnetlink
3656 6 packages upgraded: emacs-nix-mode@@2.0.4,
3657 guile2.0-guix@@0.14.0-12.77a1aac, guix@@0.14.0-12.77a1aac,
3658 heimdal@@7.5.0, milkytracker@@1.02.00, nix@@2.0.4
3659
3660 Generation 3 Jun 13 2018 23:31:07 (current)
3661 guix 844cc1c
3662 repository URL: https://git.savannah.gnu.org/git/guix.git
3663 branch: origin/master
3664 commit: 844cc1c8f394f03b404c5bb3aee086922373490c
3665 28 new packages: emacs-helm-ls-git, emacs-helm-mu, @dots{}
3666 69 packages upgraded: borg@@1.1.6, cheese@@3.28.0, @dots{}
3667 @end example
3668
3669 @xref{Invoking guix describe, @command{guix describe}}, for other ways to
3670 describe the current status of Guix.
3671
3672 This @code{~/.config/guix/current} profile works like any other profile
3673 created by @command{guix package} (@pxref{Invoking guix package}). That
3674 is, you can list generations, roll back to the previous
3675 generation---i.e., the previous Guix---and so on:
3676
3677 @example
3678 $ guix package -p ~/.config/guix/current --roll-back
3679 switched from generation 3 to 2
3680 $ guix package -p ~/.config/guix/current --delete-generations=1
3681 deleting /var/guix/profiles/per-user/charlie/current-guix-1-link
3682 @end example
3683
3684 The @command{guix pull} command is usually invoked with no arguments,
3685 but it supports the following options:
3686
3687 @table @code
3688 @item --url=@var{url}
3689 @itemx --commit=@var{commit}
3690 @itemx --branch=@var{branch}
3691 Download code for the @code{guix} channel from the specified @var{url}, at the
3692 given @var{commit} (a valid Git commit ID represented as a hexadecimal
3693 string), or @var{branch}.
3694
3695 @cindex @file{channels.scm}, configuration file
3696 @cindex configuration file for channels
3697 These options are provided for convenience, but you can also specify your
3698 configuration in the @file{~/.config/guix/channels.scm} file or using the
3699 @option{--channels} option (see below).
3700
3701 @item --channels=@var{file}
3702 @itemx -C @var{file}
3703 Read the list of channels from @var{file} instead of
3704 @file{~/.config/guix/channels.scm}. @var{file} must contain Scheme code that
3705 evaluates to a list of channel objects. @xref{Channels}, for more
3706 information.
3707
3708 @item --news
3709 @itemx -N
3710 Display the list of packages added or upgraded since the previous generation.
3711
3712 This is the same information as displayed upon @command{guix pull} completion,
3713 but without ellipses; it is also similar to the output of @command{guix pull
3714 -l} for the last generation (see below).
3715
3716 @item --list-generations[=@var{pattern}]
3717 @itemx -l [@var{pattern}]
3718 List all the generations of @file{~/.config/guix/current} or, if @var{pattern}
3719 is provided, the subset of generations that match @var{pattern}.
3720 The syntax of @var{pattern} is the same as with @code{guix package
3721 --list-generations} (@pxref{Invoking guix package}).
3722
3723 @xref{Invoking guix describe}, for a way to display information about the
3724 current generation only.
3725
3726 @item --profile=@var{profile}
3727 @itemx -p @var{profile}
3728 Use @var{profile} instead of @file{~/.config/guix/current}.
3729
3730 @item --dry-run
3731 @itemx -n
3732 Show which channel commit(s) would be used and what would be built or
3733 substituted but do not actually do it.
3734
3735 @item --system=@var{system}
3736 @itemx -s @var{system}
3737 Attempt to build for @var{system}---e.g., @code{i686-linux}---instead of
3738 the system type of the build host.
3739
3740 @item --verbose
3741 Produce verbose output, writing build logs to the standard error output.
3742
3743 @item --bootstrap
3744 Use the bootstrap Guile to build the latest Guix. This option is only
3745 useful to Guix developers.
3746 @end table
3747
3748 The @dfn{channel} mechanism allows you to instruct @command{guix pull} which
3749 repository and branch to pull from, as well as @emph{additional} repositories
3750 containing package modules that should be deployed. @xref{Channels}, for more
3751 information.
3752
3753 In addition, @command{guix pull} supports all the common build options
3754 (@pxref{Common Build Options}).
3755
3756 @node Channels
3757 @section Channels
3758
3759 @cindex channels
3760 @cindex @file{channels.scm}, configuration file
3761 @cindex configuration file for channels
3762 @cindex @command{guix pull}, configuration file
3763 @cindex configuration of @command{guix pull}
3764 Guix and its package collection are updated by running @command{guix pull}
3765 (@pxref{Invoking guix pull}). By default @command{guix pull} downloads and
3766 deploys Guix itself from the official GNU@tie{}Guix repository. This can be
3767 customized by defining @dfn{channels} in the
3768 @file{~/.config/guix/channels.scm} file. A channel specifies a URL and branch
3769 of a Git repository to be deployed, and @command{guix pull} can be instructed
3770 to pull from one or more channels. In other words, channels can be used to
3771 @emph{customize} and to @emph{extend} Guix, as we will see below.
3772
3773 @subsection Using a Custom Guix Channel
3774
3775 The channel called @code{guix} specifies where Guix itself---its command-line
3776 tools as well as its package collection---should be downloaded. For instance,
3777 suppose you want to update from your own copy of the Guix repository at
3778 @code{example.org}, and specifically the @code{super-hacks} branch, you can
3779 write in @code{~/.config/guix/channels.scm} this specification:
3780
3781 @lisp
3782 ;; Tell 'guix pull' to use my own repo.
3783 (list (channel
3784 (name 'guix)
3785 (url "https://example.org/my-guix.git")
3786 (branch "super-hacks")))
3787 @end lisp
3788
3789 @noindent
3790 From there on, @command{guix pull} will fetch code from the @code{super-hacks}
3791 branch of the repository at @code{example.org}.
3792
3793 @subsection Specifying Additional Channels
3794
3795 @cindex extending the package collection (channels)
3796 @cindex personal packages (channels)
3797 @cindex channels, for personal packages
3798 You can also specify @emph{additional channels} to pull from. Let's say you
3799 have a bunch of custom package variants or personal packages that you think
3800 would make little sense to contribute to the Guix project, but would like to
3801 have these packages transparently available to you at the command line. You
3802 would first write modules containing those package definitions (@pxref{Package
3803 Modules}), maintain them in a Git repository, and then you and anyone else can
3804 use it as an additional channel to get packages from. Neat, no?
3805
3806 @c What follows stems from discussions at
3807 @c <https://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/bugreport.cgi?bug=22629#134> as well as
3808 @c earlier discussions on guix-devel@gnu.org.
3809 @quotation Warning
3810 Before you, dear user, shout---``woow this is @emph{soooo coool}!''---and
3811 publish your personal channel to the world, we would like to share a few words
3812 of caution:
3813
3814 @itemize
3815 @item
3816 Before publishing a channel, please consider contributing your package
3817 definitions to Guix proper (@pxref{Contributing}). Guix as a project is open
3818 to free software of all sorts, and packages in Guix proper are readily
3819 available to all Guix users and benefit from the project's quality assurance
3820 process.
3821
3822 @item
3823 When you maintain package definitions outside Guix, we, Guix developers,
3824 consider that @emph{the compatibility burden is on you}. Remember that
3825 package modules and package definitions are just Scheme code that uses various
3826 programming interfaces (APIs). We want to remain free to change these APIs to
3827 keep improving Guix, possibly in ways that break your channel. We never
3828 change APIs gratuitously, but we will @emph{not} commit to freezing APIs
3829 either.
3830
3831 @item
3832 Corollary: if you're using an external channel and that channel breaks, please
3833 @emph{report the issue to the channel authors}, not to the Guix project.
3834 @end itemize
3835
3836 You've been warned! Having said this, we believe external channels are a
3837 practical way to exert your freedom to augment Guix' package collection and to
3838 share your improvements, which are basic tenets of
3839 @uref{https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html, free software}. Please
3840 email us at @email{guix-devel@@gnu.org} if you'd like to discuss this.
3841 @end quotation
3842
3843 To use a channel, write @code{~/.config/guix/channels.scm} to instruct
3844 @command{guix pull} to pull from it @emph{in addition} to the default Guix
3845 channel(s):
3846
3847 @vindex %default-channels
3848 @lisp
3849 ;; Add my personal packages to those Guix provides.
3850 (cons (channel
3851 (name 'my-personal-packages)
3852 (url "https://example.org/personal-packages.git"))
3853 %default-channels)
3854 @end lisp
3855
3856 @noindent
3857 Note that the snippet above is (as always!)@: Scheme code; we use @code{cons} to
3858 add a channel the list of channels that the variable @code{%default-channels}
3859 is bound to (@pxref{Pairs, @code{cons} and lists,, guile, GNU Guile Reference
3860 Manual}). With this file in place, @command{guix pull} builds not only Guix
3861 but also the package modules from your own repository. The result in
3862 @file{~/.config/guix/current} is the union of Guix with your own package
3863 modules:
3864
3865 @example
3866 $ guix pull --list-generations
3867 @dots{}
3868 Generation 19 Aug 27 2018 16:20:48
3869 guix d894ab8
3870 repository URL: https://git.savannah.gnu.org/git/guix.git
3871 branch: master
3872 commit: d894ab8e9bfabcefa6c49d9ba2e834dd5a73a300
3873 my-personal-packages dd3df5e
3874 repository URL: https://example.org/personal-packages.git
3875 branch: master
3876 commit: dd3df5e2c8818760a8fc0bd699e55d3b69fef2bb
3877 11 new packages: my-gimp, my-emacs-with-cool-features, @dots{}
3878 4 packages upgraded: emacs-racket-mode@@0.0.2-2.1b78827, @dots{}
3879 @end example
3880
3881 @noindent
3882 The output of @command{guix pull} above shows that Generation@tie{}19 includes
3883 both Guix and packages from the @code{my-personal-packages} channel. Among
3884 the new and upgraded packages that are listed, some like @code{my-gimp} and
3885 @code{my-emacs-with-cool-features} might come from
3886 @code{my-personal-packages}, while others come from the Guix default channel.
3887
3888 To create a channel, create a Git repository containing your own package
3889 modules and make it available. The repository can contain anything, but a
3890 useful channel will contain Guile modules that export packages. Once you
3891 start using a channel, Guix will behave as if the root directory of that
3892 channel's Git repository has been added to the Guile load path (@pxref{Load
3893 Paths,,, guile, GNU Guile Reference Manual}). For example, if your channel
3894 contains a file at @file{my-packages/my-tools.scm} that defines a Guile
3895 module, then the module will be available under the name @code{(my-packages
3896 my-tools)}, and you will be able to use it like any other module
3897 (@pxref{Modules,,, guile, GNU Guile Reference Manual}).
3898
3899 @cindex dependencies, channels
3900 @cindex meta-data, channels
3901 @subsection Declaring Channel Dependencies
3902
3903 Channel authors may decide to augment a package collection provided by other
3904 channels. They can declare their channel to be dependent on other channels in
3905 a meta-data file @file{.guix-channel}, which is to be placed in the root of
3906 the channel repository.
3907
3908 The meta-data file should contain a simple S-expression like this:
3909
3910 @lisp
3911 (channel
3912 (version 0)
3913 (dependencies
3914 (channel
3915 (name some-collection)
3916 (url "https://example.org/first-collection.git"))
3917 (channel
3918 (name some-other-collection)
3919 (url "https://example.org/second-collection.git")
3920 (branch "testing"))))
3921 @end lisp
3922
3923 In the above example this channel is declared to depend on two other channels,
3924 which will both be fetched automatically. The modules provided by the channel
3925 will be compiled in an environment where the modules of all these declared
3926 channels are available.
3927
3928 For the sake of reliability and maintainability, you should avoid dependencies
3929 on channels that you don't control, and you should aim to keep the number of
3930 dependencies to a minimum.
3931
3932 @cindex subdirectory, channels
3933 @subsection Package Modules in a Sub-directory
3934
3935 As a channel author, you may want to keep your channel modules in a
3936 sub-directory. If your modules are in the sub-directory @file{guix}, you must
3937 add a meta-data file @file{.guix-channel} that contains:
3938
3939 @lisp
3940 (channel
3941 (version 0)
3942 (directory "guix"))
3943 @end lisp
3944
3945 @subsection Replicating Guix
3946
3947 @cindex pinning, channels
3948 @cindex replicating Guix
3949 @cindex reproducibility, of Guix
3950 The @command{guix pull --list-generations} output above shows precisely which
3951 commits were used to build this instance of Guix. We can thus replicate it,
3952 say, on another machine, by providing a channel specification in
3953 @file{~/.config/guix/channels.scm} that is ``pinned'' to these commits:
3954
3955 @lisp
3956 ;; Deploy specific commits of my channels of interest.
3957 (list (channel
3958 (name 'guix)
3959 (url "https://git.savannah.gnu.org/git/guix.git")
3960 (commit "d894ab8e9bfabcefa6c49d9ba2e834dd5a73a300"))
3961 (channel
3962 (name 'my-personal-packages)
3963 (url "https://example.org/personal-packages.git")
3964 (branch "dd3df5e2c8818760a8fc0bd699e55d3b69fef2bb")))
3965 @end lisp
3966
3967 The @command{guix describe --format=channels} command can even generate this
3968 list of channels directly (@pxref{Invoking guix describe}).
3969
3970 At this point the two machines run the @emph{exact same Guix}, with access to
3971 the @emph{exact same packages}. The output of @command{guix build gimp} on
3972 one machine will be exactly the same, bit for bit, as the output of the same
3973 command on the other machine. It also means both machines have access to all
3974 the source code of Guix and, transitively, to all the source code of every
3975 package it defines.
3976
3977 This gives you super powers, allowing you to track the provenance of binary
3978 artifacts with very fine grain, and to reproduce software environments at
3979 will---some sort of ``meta reproducibility'' capabilities, if you will.
3980 @xref{Inferiors}, for another way to take advantage of these super powers.
3981
3982 @node Inferiors
3983 @section Inferiors
3984
3985 @c TODO: Remove this once we're more confident about API stability.
3986 @quotation Note
3987 The functionality described here is a ``technology preview'' as of version
3988 @value{VERSION}. As such, the interface is subject to change.
3989 @end quotation
3990
3991 @cindex inferiors
3992 @cindex composition of Guix revisions
3993 Sometimes you might need to mix packages from the revision of Guix you're
3994 currently running with packages available in a different revision of Guix.
3995 Guix @dfn{inferiors} allow you to achieve that by composing different Guix
3996 revisions in arbitrary ways.
3997
3998 @cindex inferior packages
3999 Technically, an ``inferior'' is essentially a separate Guix process connected
4000 to your main Guix process through a REPL (@pxref{Invoking guix repl}). The
4001 @code{(guix inferior)} module allows you to create inferiors and to
4002 communicate with them. It also provides a high-level interface to browse and
4003 manipulate the packages that an inferior provides---@dfn{inferior packages}.
4004
4005 When combined with channels (@pxref{Channels}), inferiors provide a simple way
4006 to interact with a separate revision of Guix. For example, let's assume you
4007 want to install in your profile the current @code{guile} package, along with
4008 the @code{guile-json} as it existed in an older revision of Guix---perhaps
4009 because the newer @code{guile-json} has an incompatible API and you want to
4010 run your code against the old API@. To do that, you could write a manifest for
4011 use by @code{guix package --manifest} (@pxref{Invoking guix package}); in that
4012 manifest, you would create an inferior for that old Guix revision you care
4013 about, and you would look up the @code{guile-json} package in the inferior:
4014
4015 @lisp
4016 (use-modules (guix inferior) (guix channels)
4017 (srfi srfi-1)) ;for 'first'
4018
4019 (define channels
4020 ;; This is the old revision from which we want to
4021 ;; extract guile-json.
4022 (list (channel
4023 (name 'guix)
4024 (url "https://git.savannah.gnu.org/git/guix.git")
4025 (commit
4026 "65956ad3526ba09e1f7a40722c96c6ef7c0936fe"))))
4027
4028 (define inferior
4029 ;; An inferior representing the above revision.
4030 (inferior-for-channels channels))
4031
4032 ;; Now create a manifest with the current "guile" package
4033 ;; and the old "guile-json" package.
4034 (packages->manifest
4035 (list (first (lookup-inferior-packages inferior "guile-json"))
4036 (specification->package "guile")))
4037 @end lisp
4038
4039 On its first run, @command{guix package --manifest} might have to build the
4040 channel you specified before it can create the inferior; subsequent runs will
4041 be much faster because the Guix revision will be cached.
4042
4043 The @code{(guix inferior)} module provides the following procedures to open an
4044 inferior:
4045
4046 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} inferior-for-channels @var{channels} @
4047 [#:cache-directory] [#:ttl]
4048 Return an inferior for @var{channels}, a list of channels. Use the cache at
4049 @var{cache-directory}, where entries can be reclaimed after @var{ttl} seconds.
4050 This procedure opens a new connection to the build daemon.
4051
4052 As a side effect, this procedure may build or substitute binaries for
4053 @var{channels}, which can take time.
4054 @end deffn
4055
4056 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} open-inferior @var{directory} @
4057 [#:command "bin/guix"]
4058 Open the inferior Guix in @var{directory}, running
4059 @code{@var{directory}/@var{command} repl} or equivalent. Return @code{#f} if
4060 the inferior could not be launched.
4061 @end deffn
4062
4063 @cindex inferior packages
4064 The procedures listed below allow you to obtain and manipulate inferior
4065 packages.
4066
4067 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} inferior-packages @var{inferior}
4068 Return the list of packages known to @var{inferior}.
4069 @end deffn
4070
4071 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} lookup-inferior-packages @var{inferior} @var{name} @
4072 [@var{version}]
4073 Return the sorted list of inferior packages matching @var{name} in
4074 @var{inferior}, with highest version numbers first. If @var{version} is true,
4075 return only packages with a version number prefixed by @var{version}.
4076 @end deffn
4077
4078 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} inferior-package? @var{obj}
4079 Return true if @var{obj} is an inferior package.
4080 @end deffn
4081
4082 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} inferior-package-name @var{package}
4083 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} inferior-package-version @var{package}
4084 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} inferior-package-synopsis @var{package}
4085 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} inferior-package-description @var{package}
4086 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} inferior-package-home-page @var{package}
4087 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} inferior-package-location @var{package}
4088 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} inferior-package-inputs @var{package}
4089 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} inferior-package-native-inputs @var{package}
4090 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} inferior-package-propagated-inputs @var{package}
4091 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} inferior-package-transitive-propagated-inputs @var{package}
4092 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} inferior-package-native-search-paths @var{package}
4093 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} inferior-package-transitive-native-search-paths @var{package}
4094 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} inferior-package-search-paths @var{package}
4095 These procedures are the counterpart of package record accessors
4096 (@pxref{package Reference}). Most of them work by querying the inferior
4097 @var{package} comes from, so the inferior must still be live when you call
4098 these procedures.
4099 @end deffn
4100
4101 Inferior packages can be used transparently like any other package or
4102 file-like object in G-expressions (@pxref{G-Expressions}). They are also
4103 transparently handled by the @code{packages->manifest} procedure, which is
4104 commonly use in manifests (@pxref{Invoking guix package, the
4105 @option{--manifest} option of @command{guix package}}). Thus you can insert
4106 an inferior package pretty much anywhere you would insert a regular package:
4107 in manifests, in the @code{packages} field of your @code{operating-system}
4108 declaration, and so on.
4109
4110 @node Invoking guix describe
4111 @section Invoking @command{guix describe}
4112
4113 @cindex reproducibility
4114 @cindex replicating Guix
4115 Often you may want to answer questions like: ``Which revision of Guix am I
4116 using?'' or ``Which channels am I using?'' This is useful information in many
4117 situations: if you want to @emph{replicate} an environment on a different
4118 machine or user account, if you want to report a bug or to determine what
4119 change in the channels you are using caused it, or if you want to record your
4120 system state for reproducibility purposes. The @command{guix describe}
4121 command answers these questions.
4122
4123 When run from a @command{guix pull}ed @command{guix}, @command{guix describe}
4124 displays the channel(s) that it was built from, including their repository URL
4125 and commit IDs (@pxref{Channels}):
4126
4127 @example
4128 $ guix describe
4129 Generation 10 Sep 03 2018 17:32:44 (current)
4130 guix e0fa68c
4131 repository URL: https://git.savannah.gnu.org/git/guix.git
4132 branch: master
4133 commit: e0fa68c7718fffd33d81af415279d6ddb518f727
4134 @end example
4135
4136 If you're familiar with the Git version control system, this is similar in
4137 spirit to @command{git describe}; the output is also similar to that of
4138 @command{guix pull --list-generations}, but limited to the current generation
4139 (@pxref{Invoking guix pull, the @option{--list-generations} option}). Because
4140 the Git commit ID shown above unambiguously refers to a snapshot of Guix, this
4141 information is all it takes to describe the revision of Guix you're using, and
4142 also to replicate it.
4143
4144 To make it easier to replicate Guix, @command{guix describe} can also be asked
4145 to return a list of channels instead of the human-readable description above:
4146
4147 @example
4148 $ guix describe -f channels
4149 (list (channel
4150 (name 'guix)
4151 (url "https://git.savannah.gnu.org/git/guix.git")
4152 (commit
4153 "e0fa68c7718fffd33d81af415279d6ddb518f727")))
4154 @end example
4155
4156 @noindent
4157 You can save this to a file and feed it to @command{guix pull -C} on some
4158 other machine or at a later point in time, which will instantiate @emph{this
4159 exact Guix revision} (@pxref{Invoking guix pull, the @option{-C} option}).
4160 From there on, since you're able to deploy the same revision of Guix, you can
4161 just as well @emph{replicate a complete software environment}. We humbly
4162 think that this is @emph{awesome}, and we hope you'll like it too!
4163
4164 The details of the options supported by @command{guix describe} are as
4165 follows:
4166
4167 @table @code
4168 @item --format=@var{format}
4169 @itemx -f @var{format}
4170 Produce output in the specified @var{format}, one of:
4171
4172 @table @code
4173 @item human
4174 produce human-readable output;
4175 @item channels
4176 produce a list of channel specifications that can be passed to @command{guix
4177 pull -C} or installed as @file{~/.config/guix/channels.scm} (@pxref{Invoking
4178 guix pull});
4179 @item json
4180 @cindex JSON
4181 produce a list of channel specifications in JSON format;
4182 @item recutils
4183 produce a list of channel specifications in Recutils format.
4184 @end table
4185
4186 @item --profile=@var{profile}
4187 @itemx -p @var{profile}
4188 Display information about @var{profile}.
4189 @end table
4190
4191 @node Invoking guix archive
4192 @section Invoking @command{guix archive}
4193
4194 @cindex @command{guix archive}
4195 @cindex archive
4196 The @command{guix archive} command allows users to @dfn{export} files
4197 from the store into a single archive, and to later @dfn{import} them on
4198 a machine that runs Guix.
4199 In particular, it allows store files to be transferred from one machine
4200 to the store on another machine.
4201
4202 @quotation Note
4203 If you're looking for a way to produce archives in a format suitable for
4204 tools other than Guix, @pxref{Invoking guix pack}.
4205 @end quotation
4206
4207 @cindex exporting store items
4208 To export store files as an archive to standard output, run:
4209
4210 @example
4211 guix archive --export @var{options} @var{specifications}...
4212 @end example
4213
4214 @var{specifications} may be either store file names or package
4215 specifications, as for @command{guix package} (@pxref{Invoking guix
4216 package}). For instance, the following command creates an archive
4217 containing the @code{gui} output of the @code{git} package and the main
4218 output of @code{emacs}:
4219
4220 @example
4221 guix archive --export git:gui /gnu/store/...-emacs-24.3 > great.nar
4222 @end example
4223
4224 If the specified packages are not built yet, @command{guix archive}
4225 automatically builds them. The build process may be controlled with the
4226 common build options (@pxref{Common Build Options}).
4227
4228 To transfer the @code{emacs} package to a machine connected over SSH,
4229 one would run:
4230
4231 @example
4232 guix archive --export -r emacs | ssh the-machine guix archive --import
4233 @end example
4234
4235 @noindent
4236 Similarly, a complete user profile may be transferred from one machine
4237 to another like this:
4238
4239 @example
4240 guix archive --export -r $(readlink -f ~/.guix-profile) | \
4241 ssh the-machine guix archive --import
4242 @end example
4243
4244 @noindent
4245 However, note that, in both examples, all of @code{emacs} and the
4246 profile as well as all of their dependencies are transferred (due to
4247 @code{-r}), regardless of what is already available in the store on the
4248 target machine. The @code{--missing} option can help figure out which
4249 items are missing from the target store. The @command{guix copy}
4250 command simplifies and optimizes this whole process, so this is probably
4251 what you should use in this case (@pxref{Invoking guix copy}).
4252
4253 @cindex nar, archive format
4254 @cindex normalized archive (nar)
4255 Archives are stored in the ``normalized archive'' or ``nar'' format, which is
4256 comparable in spirit to `tar', but with differences
4257 that make it more appropriate for our purposes. First, rather than
4258 recording all Unix metadata for each file, the nar format only mentions
4259 the file type (regular, directory, or symbolic link); Unix permissions
4260 and owner/group are dismissed. Second, the order in which directory
4261 entries are stored always follows the order of file names according to
4262 the C locale collation order. This makes archive production fully
4263 deterministic.
4264
4265 When exporting, the daemon digitally signs the contents of the archive,
4266 and that digital signature is appended. When importing, the daemon
4267 verifies the signature and rejects the import in case of an invalid
4268 signature or if the signing key is not authorized.
4269 @c FIXME: Add xref to daemon doc about signatures.
4270
4271 The main options are:
4272
4273 @table @code
4274 @item --export
4275 Export the specified store files or packages (see below.) Write the
4276 resulting archive to the standard output.
4277
4278 Dependencies are @emph{not} included in the output, unless
4279 @code{--recursive} is passed.
4280
4281 @item -r
4282 @itemx --recursive
4283 When combined with @code{--export}, this instructs @command{guix
4284 archive} to include dependencies of the given items in the archive.
4285 Thus, the resulting archive is self-contained: it contains the closure
4286 of the exported store items.
4287
4288 @item --import
4289 Read an archive from the standard input, and import the files listed
4290 therein into the store. Abort if the archive has an invalid digital
4291 signature, or if it is signed by a public key not among the authorized
4292 keys (see @code{--authorize} below.)
4293
4294 @item --missing
4295 Read a list of store file names from the standard input, one per line,
4296 and write on the standard output the subset of these files missing from
4297 the store.
4298
4299 @item --generate-key[=@var{parameters}]
4300 @cindex signing, archives
4301 Generate a new key pair for the daemon. This is a prerequisite before
4302 archives can be exported with @code{--export}. Note that this operation
4303 usually takes time, because it needs to gather enough entropy to
4304 generate the key pair.
4305
4306 The generated key pair is typically stored under @file{/etc/guix}, in
4307 @file{signing-key.pub} (public key) and @file{signing-key.sec} (private
4308 key, which must be kept secret.) When @var{parameters} is omitted,
4309 an ECDSA key using the Ed25519 curve is generated, or, for Libgcrypt
4310 versions before 1.6.0, it is a 4096-bit RSA key.
4311 Alternatively, @var{parameters} can specify
4312 @code{genkey} parameters suitable for Libgcrypt (@pxref{General
4313 public-key related Functions, @code{gcry_pk_genkey},, gcrypt, The
4314 Libgcrypt Reference Manual}).
4315
4316 @item --authorize
4317 @cindex authorizing, archives
4318 Authorize imports signed by the public key passed on standard input.
4319 The public key must be in ``s-expression advanced format''---i.e., the
4320 same format as the @file{signing-key.pub} file.
4321
4322 The list of authorized keys is kept in the human-editable file
4323 @file{/etc/guix/acl}. The file contains
4324 @url{https://people.csail.mit.edu/rivest/Sexp.txt, ``advanced-format
4325 s-expressions''} and is structured as an access-control list in the
4326 @url{https://theworld.com/~cme/spki.txt, Simple Public-Key Infrastructure
4327 (SPKI)}.
4328
4329 @item --extract=@var{directory}
4330 @itemx -x @var{directory}
4331 Read a single-item archive as served by substitute servers
4332 (@pxref{Substitutes}) and extract it to @var{directory}. This is a
4333 low-level operation needed in only very narrow use cases; see below.
4334
4335 For example, the following command extracts the substitute for Emacs
4336 served by @code{@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER}} to @file{/tmp/emacs}:
4337
4338 @example
4339 $ wget -O - \
4340 https://@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER}/nar/@dots{}-emacs-24.5 \
4341 | bunzip2 | guix archive -x /tmp/emacs
4342 @end example
4343
4344 Single-item archives are different from multiple-item archives produced
4345 by @command{guix archive --export}; they contain a single store item,
4346 and they do @emph{not} embed a signature. Thus this operation does
4347 @emph{no} signature verification and its output should be considered
4348 unsafe.
4349
4350 The primary purpose of this operation is to facilitate inspection of
4351 archive contents coming from possibly untrusted substitute servers.
4352
4353 @end table
4354
4355
4356 @c *********************************************************************
4357 @node Development
4358 @chapter Development
4359
4360 @cindex software development
4361 If you are a software developer, Guix provides tools that you should find
4362 helpful---independently of the language you're developing in. This is what
4363 this chapter is about.
4364
4365 The @command{guix environment} command provides a convenient way to set up
4366 @dfn{development environments} containing all the dependencies and tools
4367 necessary to work on the software package of your choice. The @command{guix
4368 pack} command allows you to create @dfn{application bundles} that can be
4369 easily distributed to users who do not run Guix.
4370
4371 @menu
4372 * Invoking guix environment:: Setting up development environments.
4373 * Invoking guix pack:: Creating software bundles.
4374 @end menu
4375
4376 @node Invoking guix environment
4377 @section Invoking @command{guix environment}
4378
4379 @cindex reproducible build environments
4380 @cindex development environments
4381 @cindex @command{guix environment}
4382 @cindex environment, package build environment
4383 The purpose of @command{guix environment} is to assist hackers in
4384 creating reproducible development environments without polluting their
4385 package profile. The @command{guix environment} tool takes one or more
4386 packages, builds all of their inputs, and creates a shell
4387 environment to use them.
4388
4389 The general syntax is:
4390
4391 @example
4392 guix environment @var{options} @var{package}@dots{}
4393 @end example
4394
4395 The following example spawns a new shell set up for the development of
4396 GNU@tie{}Guile:
4397
4398 @example
4399 guix environment guile
4400 @end example
4401
4402 If the needed dependencies are not built yet, @command{guix environment}
4403 automatically builds them. The environment of the new shell is an augmented
4404 version of the environment that @command{guix environment} was run in.
4405 It contains the necessary search paths for building the given package
4406 added to the existing environment variables. To create a ``pure''
4407 environment, in which the original environment variables have been unset,
4408 use the @code{--pure} option@footnote{Users sometimes wrongfully augment
4409 environment variables such as @code{PATH} in their @file{~/.bashrc}
4410 file. As a consequence, when @code{guix environment} launches it, Bash
4411 may read @file{~/.bashrc}, thereby introducing ``impurities'' in these
4412 environment variables. It is an error to define such environment
4413 variables in @file{.bashrc}; instead, they should be defined in
4414 @file{.bash_profile}, which is sourced only by log-in shells.
4415 @xref{Bash Startup Files,,, bash, The GNU Bash Reference Manual}, for
4416 details on Bash start-up files.}.
4417
4418 @vindex GUIX_ENVIRONMENT
4419 @command{guix environment} defines the @code{GUIX_ENVIRONMENT}
4420 variable in the shell it spawns; its value is the file name of the
4421 profile of this environment. This allows users to, say, define a
4422 specific prompt for development environments in their @file{.bashrc}
4423 (@pxref{Bash Startup Files,,, bash, The GNU Bash Reference Manual}):
4424
4425 @example
4426 if [ -n "$GUIX_ENVIRONMENT" ]
4427 then
4428 export PS1="\u@@\h \w [dev]\$ "
4429 fi
4430 @end example
4431
4432 @noindent
4433 ...@: or to browse the profile:
4434
4435 @example
4436 $ ls "$GUIX_ENVIRONMENT/bin"
4437 @end example
4438
4439 Additionally, more than one package may be specified, in which case the
4440 union of the inputs for the given packages are used. For example, the
4441 command below spawns a shell where all of the dependencies of both Guile
4442 and Emacs are available:
4443
4444 @example
4445 guix environment guile emacs
4446 @end example
4447
4448 Sometimes an interactive shell session is not desired. An arbitrary
4449 command may be invoked by placing the @code{--} token to separate the
4450 command from the rest of the arguments:
4451
4452 @example
4453 guix environment guile -- make -j4
4454 @end example
4455
4456 In other situations, it is more convenient to specify the list of
4457 packages needed in the environment. For example, the following command
4458 runs @command{python} from an environment containing Python@tie{}2.7 and
4459 NumPy:
4460
4461 @example
4462 guix environment --ad-hoc python2-numpy python-2.7 -- python
4463 @end example
4464
4465 Furthermore, one might want the dependencies of a package and also some
4466 additional packages that are not build-time or runtime dependencies, but
4467 are useful when developing nonetheless. Because of this, the
4468 @code{--ad-hoc} flag is positional. Packages appearing before
4469 @code{--ad-hoc} are interpreted as packages whose dependencies will be
4470 added to the environment. Packages appearing after are interpreted as
4471 packages that will be added to the environment directly. For example,
4472 the following command creates a Guix development environment that
4473 additionally includes Git and strace:
4474
4475 @example
4476 guix environment guix --ad-hoc git strace
4477 @end example
4478
4479 Sometimes it is desirable to isolate the environment as much as
4480 possible, for maximal purity and reproducibility. In particular, when
4481 using Guix on a host distro that is not Guix System, it is desirable to
4482 prevent access to @file{/usr/bin} and other system-wide resources from
4483 the development environment. For example, the following command spawns
4484 a Guile REPL in a ``container'' where only the store and the current
4485 working directory are mounted:
4486
4487 @example
4488 guix environment --ad-hoc --container guile -- guile
4489 @end example
4490
4491 @quotation Note
4492 The @code{--container} option requires Linux-libre 3.19 or newer.
4493 @end quotation
4494
4495 The available options are summarized below.
4496
4497 @table @code
4498 @item --root=@var{file}
4499 @itemx -r @var{file}
4500 @cindex persistent environment
4501 @cindex garbage collector root, for environments
4502 Make @var{file} a symlink to the profile for this environment, and
4503 register it as a garbage collector root.
4504
4505 This is useful if you want to protect your environment from garbage
4506 collection, to make it ``persistent''.
4507
4508 When this option is omitted, the environment is protected from garbage
4509 collection only for the duration of the @command{guix environment}
4510 session. This means that next time you recreate the same environment,
4511 you could have to rebuild or re-download packages. @xref{Invoking guix
4512 gc}, for more on GC roots.
4513
4514 @item --expression=@var{expr}
4515 @itemx -e @var{expr}
4516 Create an environment for the package or list of packages that
4517 @var{expr} evaluates to.
4518
4519 For example, running:
4520
4521 @example
4522 guix environment -e '(@@ (gnu packages maths) petsc-openmpi)'
4523 @end example
4524
4525 starts a shell with the environment for this specific variant of the
4526 PETSc package.
4527
4528 Running:
4529
4530 @example
4531 guix environment --ad-hoc -e '(@@ (gnu) %base-packages)'
4532 @end example
4533
4534 starts a shell with all the base system packages available.
4535
4536 The above commands only use the default output of the given packages.
4537 To select other outputs, two element tuples can be specified:
4538
4539 @example
4540 guix environment --ad-hoc -e '(list (@@ (gnu packages bash) bash) "include")'
4541 @end example
4542
4543 @item --load=@var{file}
4544 @itemx -l @var{file}
4545 Create an environment for the package or list of packages that the code
4546 within @var{file} evaluates to.
4547
4548 As an example, @var{file} might contain a definition like this
4549 (@pxref{Defining Packages}):
4550
4551 @example
4552 @verbatiminclude environment-gdb.scm
4553 @end example
4554
4555 @item --manifest=@var{file}
4556 @itemx -m @var{file}
4557 Create an environment for the packages contained in the manifest object
4558 returned by the Scheme code in @var{file}.
4559
4560 This is similar to the same-named option in @command{guix package}
4561 (@pxref{profile-manifest, @option{--manifest}}) and uses the same
4562 manifest files.
4563
4564 @item --ad-hoc
4565 Include all specified packages in the resulting environment, as if an
4566 @i{ad hoc} package were defined with them as inputs. This option is
4567 useful for quickly creating an environment without having to write a
4568 package expression to contain the desired inputs.
4569
4570 For instance, the command:
4571
4572 @example
4573 guix environment --ad-hoc guile guile-sdl -- guile
4574 @end example
4575
4576 runs @command{guile} in an environment where Guile and Guile-SDL are
4577 available.
4578
4579 Note that this example implicitly asks for the default output of
4580 @code{guile} and @code{guile-sdl}, but it is possible to ask for a
4581 specific output---e.g., @code{glib:bin} asks for the @code{bin} output
4582 of @code{glib} (@pxref{Packages with Multiple Outputs}).
4583
4584 This option may be composed with the default behavior of @command{guix
4585 environment}. Packages appearing before @code{--ad-hoc} are interpreted
4586 as packages whose dependencies will be added to the environment, the
4587 default behavior. Packages appearing after are interpreted as packages
4588 that will be added to the environment directly.
4589
4590 @item --pure
4591 Unset existing environment variables when building the new environment, except
4592 those specified with @option{--preserve} (see below.) This has the effect of
4593 creating an environment in which search paths only contain package inputs.
4594
4595 @item --preserve=@var{regexp}
4596 @itemx -E @var{regexp}
4597 When used alongside @option{--pure}, preserve the environment variables
4598 matching @var{regexp}---in other words, put them on a ``white list'' of
4599 environment variables that must be preserved. This option can be repeated
4600 several times.
4601
4602 @example
4603 guix environment --pure --preserve=^SLURM --ad-hoc openmpi @dots{} \
4604 -- mpirun @dots{}
4605 @end example
4606
4607 This example runs @command{mpirun} in a context where the only environment
4608 variables defined are @code{PATH}, environment variables whose name starts
4609 with @code{SLURM}, as well as the usual ``precious'' variables (@code{HOME},
4610 @code{USER}, etc.)
4611
4612 @item --search-paths
4613 Display the environment variable definitions that make up the
4614 environment.
4615
4616 @item --system=@var{system}
4617 @itemx -s @var{system}
4618 Attempt to build for @var{system}---e.g., @code{i686-linux}.
4619
4620 @item --container
4621 @itemx -C
4622 @cindex container
4623 Run @var{command} within an isolated container. The current working
4624 directory outside the container is mapped inside the container.
4625 Additionally, unless overridden with @code{--user}, a dummy home
4626 directory is created that matches the current user's home directory, and
4627 @file{/etc/passwd} is configured accordingly.
4628
4629 The spawned process runs as the current user outside the container. Inside
4630 the container, it has the same UID and GID as the current user, unless
4631 @option{--user} is passed (see below.)
4632
4633 @item --network
4634 @itemx -N
4635 For containers, share the network namespace with the host system.
4636 Containers created without this flag only have access to the loopback
4637 device.
4638
4639 @item --link-profile
4640 @itemx -P
4641 For containers, link the environment profile to
4642 @file{~/.guix-profile} within the container. This is equivalent to
4643 running the command @command{ln -s $GUIX_ENVIRONMENT ~/.guix-profile}
4644 within the container. Linking will fail and abort the environment if
4645 the directory already exists, which will certainly be the case if
4646 @command{guix environment} was invoked in the user's home directory.
4647
4648 Certain packages are configured to look in
4649 @code{~/.guix-profile} for configuration files and data;@footnote{For
4650 example, the @code{fontconfig} package inspects
4651 @file{~/.guix-profile/share/fonts} for additional fonts.}
4652 @code{--link-profile} allows these programs to behave as expected within
4653 the environment.
4654
4655 @item --user=@var{user}
4656 @itemx -u @var{user}
4657 For containers, use the username @var{user} in place of the current
4658 user. The generated @file{/etc/passwd} entry within the container will
4659 contain the name @var{user}, the home directory will be
4660 @file{/home/@var{user}}, and no user GECOS data will be copied. Furthermore,
4661 the UID and GID inside the container are 1000. @var{user}
4662 need not exist on the system.
4663
4664 Additionally, any shared or exposed path (see @code{--share} and
4665 @code{--expose} respectively) whose target is within the current user's
4666 home directory will be remapped relative to @file{/home/USER}; this
4667 includes the automatic mapping of the current working directory.
4668
4669 @example
4670 # will expose paths as /home/foo/wd, /home/foo/test, and /home/foo/target
4671 cd $HOME/wd
4672 guix environment --container --user=foo \
4673 --expose=$HOME/test \
4674 --expose=/tmp/target=$HOME/target
4675 @end example
4676
4677 While this will limit the leaking of user identity through home paths
4678 and each of the user fields, this is only one useful component of a
4679 broader privacy/anonymity solution---not one in and of itself.
4680
4681 @item --no-cwd
4682 For containers, the default behavior is to share the current working
4683 directory with the isolated container and immediately change to that
4684 directory within the container. If this is undesirable, @code{--no-cwd}
4685 will cause the current working directory to @emph{not} be automatically
4686 shared and will change to the user's home directory within the container
4687 instead. See also @code{--user}.
4688
4689 @item --expose=@var{source}[=@var{target}]
4690 For containers, expose the file system @var{source} from the host system
4691 as the read-only file system @var{target} within the container. If
4692 @var{target} is not specified, @var{source} is used as the target mount
4693 point in the container.
4694
4695 The example below spawns a Guile REPL in a container in which the user's
4696 home directory is accessible read-only via the @file{/exchange}
4697 directory:
4698
4699 @example
4700 guix environment --container --expose=$HOME=/exchange --ad-hoc guile -- guile
4701 @end example
4702
4703 @item --share=@var{source}[=@var{target}]
4704 For containers, share the file system @var{source} from the host system
4705 as the writable file system @var{target} within the container. If
4706 @var{target} is not specified, @var{source} is used as the target mount
4707 point in the container.
4708
4709 The example below spawns a Guile REPL in a container in which the user's
4710 home directory is accessible for both reading and writing via the
4711 @file{/exchange} directory:
4712
4713 @example
4714 guix environment --container --share=$HOME=/exchange --ad-hoc guile -- guile
4715 @end example
4716 @end table
4717
4718 @command{guix environment}
4719 also supports all of the common build options that @command{guix
4720 build} supports (@pxref{Common Build Options}) as well as package
4721 transformation options (@pxref{Package Transformation Options}).
4722
4723 @node Invoking guix pack
4724 @section Invoking @command{guix pack}
4725
4726 Occasionally you want to pass software to people who are not (yet!)
4727 lucky enough to be using Guix. You'd tell them to run @command{guix
4728 package -i @var{something}}, but that's not possible in this case. This
4729 is where @command{guix pack} comes in.
4730
4731 @quotation Note
4732 If you are looking for ways to exchange binaries among machines that
4733 already run Guix, @pxref{Invoking guix copy}, @ref{Invoking guix
4734 publish}, and @ref{Invoking guix archive}.
4735 @end quotation
4736
4737 @cindex pack
4738 @cindex bundle
4739 @cindex application bundle
4740 @cindex software bundle
4741 The @command{guix pack} command creates a shrink-wrapped @dfn{pack} or
4742 @dfn{software bundle}: it creates a tarball or some other archive
4743 containing the binaries of the software you're interested in, and all
4744 its dependencies. The resulting archive can be used on any machine that
4745 does not have Guix, and people can run the exact same binaries as those
4746 you have with Guix. The pack itself is created in a bit-reproducible
4747 fashion, so anyone can verify that it really contains the build results
4748 that you pretend to be shipping.
4749
4750 For example, to create a bundle containing Guile, Emacs, Geiser, and all
4751 their dependencies, you can run:
4752
4753 @example
4754 $ guix pack guile emacs geiser
4755 @dots{}
4756 /gnu/store/@dots{}-pack.tar.gz
4757 @end example
4758
4759 The result here is a tarball containing a @file{/gnu/store} directory
4760 with all the relevant packages. The resulting tarball contains a
4761 @dfn{profile} with the three packages of interest; the profile is the
4762 same as would be created by @command{guix package -i}. It is this
4763 mechanism that is used to create Guix's own standalone binary tarball
4764 (@pxref{Binary Installation}).
4765
4766 Users of this pack would have to run
4767 @file{/gnu/store/@dots{}-profile/bin/guile} to run Guile, which you may
4768 find inconvenient. To work around it, you can create, say, a
4769 @file{/opt/gnu/bin} symlink to the profile:
4770
4771 @example
4772 guix pack -S /opt/gnu/bin=bin guile emacs geiser
4773 @end example
4774
4775 @noindent
4776 That way, users can happily type @file{/opt/gnu/bin/guile} and enjoy.
4777
4778 @cindex relocatable binaries, with @command{guix pack}
4779 What if the recipient of your pack does not have root privileges on
4780 their machine, and thus cannot unpack it in the root file system? In
4781 that case, you will want to use the @code{--relocatable} option (see
4782 below). This option produces @dfn{relocatable binaries}, meaning they
4783 they can be placed anywhere in the file system hierarchy: in the example
4784 above, users can unpack your tarball in their home directory and
4785 directly run @file{./opt/gnu/bin/guile}.
4786
4787 @cindex Docker, build an image with guix pack
4788 Alternatively, you can produce a pack in the Docker image format using
4789 the following command:
4790
4791 @example
4792 guix pack -f docker guile emacs geiser
4793 @end example
4794
4795 @noindent
4796 The result is a tarball that can be passed to the @command{docker load}
4797 command. See the
4798 @uref{https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/commandline/load/, Docker
4799 documentation} for more information.
4800
4801 @cindex Singularity, build an image with guix pack
4802 @cindex SquashFS, build an image with guix pack
4803 Yet another option is to produce a SquashFS image with the following
4804 command:
4805
4806 @example
4807 guix pack -f squashfs guile emacs geiser
4808 @end example
4809
4810 @noindent
4811 The result is a SquashFS file system image that can either be mounted or
4812 directly be used as a file system container image with the
4813 @uref{https://singularity.lbl.gov, Singularity container execution
4814 environment}, using commands like @command{singularity shell} or
4815 @command{singularity exec}.
4816
4817 Several command-line options allow you to customize your pack:
4818
4819 @table @code
4820 @item --format=@var{format}
4821 @itemx -f @var{format}
4822 Produce a pack in the given @var{format}.
4823
4824 The available formats are:
4825
4826 @table @code
4827 @item tarball
4828 This is the default format. It produces a tarball containing all the
4829 specified binaries and symlinks.
4830
4831 @item docker
4832 This produces a tarball that follows the
4833 @uref{https://github.com/docker/docker/blob/master/image/spec/v1.2.md,
4834 Docker Image Specification}.
4835
4836 @item squashfs
4837 This produces a SquashFS image containing all the specified binaries and
4838 symlinks, as well as empty mount points for virtual file systems like
4839 procfs.
4840 @end table
4841
4842 @cindex relocatable binaries
4843 @item --relocatable
4844 @itemx -R
4845 Produce @dfn{relocatable binaries}---i.e., binaries that can be placed
4846 anywhere in the file system hierarchy and run from there.
4847
4848 When this option is passed once, the resulting binaries require support for
4849 @dfn{user namespaces} in the kernel Linux; when passed
4850 @emph{twice}@footnote{Here's a trick to memorize it: @code{-RR}, which adds
4851 PRoot support, can be thought of as the abbreviation of ``Really
4852 Relocatable''. Neat, isn't it?}, relocatable binaries fall to back to PRoot
4853 if user namespaces are unavailable, and essentially work anywhere---see below
4854 for the implications.
4855
4856 For example, if you create a pack containing Bash with:
4857
4858 @example
4859 guix pack -RR -S /mybin=bin bash
4860 @end example
4861
4862 @noindent
4863 ...@: you can copy that pack to a machine that lacks Guix, and from your
4864 home directory as a normal user, run:
4865
4866 @example
4867 tar xf pack.tar.gz
4868 ./mybin/sh
4869 @end example
4870
4871 @noindent
4872 In that shell, if you type @code{ls /gnu/store}, you'll notice that
4873 @file{/gnu/store} shows up and contains all the dependencies of
4874 @code{bash}, even though the machine actually lacks @file{/gnu/store}
4875 altogether! That is probably the simplest way to deploy Guix-built
4876 software on a non-Guix machine.
4877
4878 @quotation Note
4879 By default, relocatable binaries rely on the @dfn{user namespace} feature of
4880 the kernel Linux, which allows unprivileged users to mount or change root.
4881 Old versions of Linux did not support it, and some GNU/Linux distributions
4882 turn it off.
4883
4884 To produce relocatable binaries that work even in the absence of user
4885 namespaces, pass @option{--relocatable} or @option{-R} @emph{twice}. In that
4886 case, binaries will try user namespace support and fall back to PRoot if user
4887 namespaces are not supported.
4888
4889 The @uref{https://proot-me.github.io/, PRoot} program provides the necessary
4890 support for file system virtualization. It achieves that by using the
4891 @code{ptrace} system call on the running program. This approach has the
4892 advantage to work without requiring special kernel support, but it incurs
4893 run-time overhead every time a system call is made.
4894 @end quotation
4895
4896 @cindex entry point, for Docker images
4897 @item --entry-point=@var{command}
4898 Use @var{command} as the @dfn{entry point} of the resulting pack, if the pack
4899 format supports it---currently @code{docker} and @code{squashfs} (Singularity)
4900 support it. @var{command} must be relative to the profile contained in the
4901 pack.
4902
4903 The entry point specifies the command that tools like @code{docker run} or
4904 @code{singularity run} automatically start by default. For example, you can
4905 do:
4906
4907 @example
4908 guix pack -f docker --entry-point=bin/guile guile
4909 @end example
4910
4911 The resulting pack can easily be loaded and @code{docker run} with no extra
4912 arguments will spawn @code{bin/guile}:
4913
4914 @example
4915 docker load -i pack.tar.gz
4916 docker run @var{image-id}
4917 @end example
4918
4919 @item --expression=@var{expr}
4920 @itemx -e @var{expr}
4921 Consider the package @var{expr} evaluates to.
4922
4923 This has the same purpose as the same-named option in @command{guix
4924 build} (@pxref{Additional Build Options, @code{--expression} in
4925 @command{guix build}}).
4926
4927 @item --manifest=@var{file}
4928 @itemx -m @var{file}
4929 Use the packages contained in the manifest object returned by the Scheme
4930 code in @var{file}.
4931
4932 This has a similar purpose as the same-named option in @command{guix
4933 package} (@pxref{profile-manifest, @option{--manifest}}) and uses the
4934 same manifest files. It allows you to define a collection of packages
4935 once and use it both for creating profiles and for creating archives
4936 for use on machines that do not have Guix installed. Note that you can
4937 specify @emph{either} a manifest file @emph{or} a list of packages,
4938 but not both.
4939
4940 @item --system=@var{system}
4941 @itemx -s @var{system}
4942 Attempt to build for @var{system}---e.g., @code{i686-linux}---instead of
4943 the system type of the build host.
4944
4945 @item --target=@var{triplet}
4946 @cindex cross-compilation
4947 Cross-build for @var{triplet}, which must be a valid GNU triplet, such
4948 as @code{"mips64el-linux-gnu"} (@pxref{Specifying target triplets, GNU
4949 configuration triplets,, autoconf, Autoconf}).
4950
4951 @item --compression=@var{tool}
4952 @itemx -C @var{tool}
4953 Compress the resulting tarball using @var{tool}---one of @code{gzip},
4954 @code{bzip2}, @code{xz}, @code{lzip}, or @code{none} for no compression.
4955
4956 @item --symlink=@var{spec}
4957 @itemx -S @var{spec}
4958 Add the symlinks specified by @var{spec} to the pack. This option can
4959 appear several times.
4960
4961 @var{spec} has the form @code{@var{source}=@var{target}}, where
4962 @var{source} is the symlink that will be created and @var{target} is the
4963 symlink target.
4964
4965 For instance, @code{-S /opt/gnu/bin=bin} creates a @file{/opt/gnu/bin}
4966 symlink pointing to the @file{bin} sub-directory of the profile.
4967
4968 @item --save-provenance
4969 Save provenance information for the packages passed on the command line.
4970 Provenance information includes the URL and commit of the channels in use
4971 (@pxref{Channels}).
4972
4973 Provenance information is saved in the
4974 @file{/gnu/store/@dots{}-profile/manifest} file in the pack, along with the
4975 usual package metadata---the name and version of each package, their
4976 propagated inputs, and so on. It is useful information to the recipient of
4977 the pack, who then knows how the pack was (supposedly) obtained.
4978
4979 This option is not enabled by default because, like timestamps, provenance
4980 information contributes nothing to the build process. In other words, there
4981 is an infinity of channel URLs and commit IDs that can lead to the same pack.
4982 Recording such ``silent'' metadata in the output thus potentially breaks the
4983 source-to-binary bitwise reproducibility property.
4984
4985 @item --root=@var{file}
4986 @itemx -r @var{file}
4987 @cindex garbage collector root, for packs
4988 Make @var{file} a symlink to the resulting pack, and register it as a garbage
4989 collector root.
4990
4991 @item --localstatedir
4992 @itemx --profile-name=@var{name}
4993 Include the ``local state directory'', @file{/var/guix}, in the resulting
4994 pack, and notably the @file{/var/guix/profiles/per-user/root/@var{name}}
4995 profile---by default @var{name} is @code{guix-profile}, which corresponds to
4996 @file{~root/.guix-profile}.
4997
4998 @file{/var/guix} contains the store database (@pxref{The Store}) as well
4999 as garbage-collector roots (@pxref{Invoking guix gc}). Providing it in
5000 the pack means that the store is ``complete'' and manageable by Guix;
5001 not providing it pack means that the store is ``dead'': items cannot be
5002 added to it or removed from it after extraction of the pack.
5003
5004 One use case for this is the Guix self-contained binary tarball
5005 (@pxref{Binary Installation}).
5006
5007 @item --bootstrap
5008 Use the bootstrap binaries to build the pack. This option is only
5009 useful to Guix developers.
5010 @end table
5011
5012 In addition, @command{guix pack} supports all the common build options
5013 (@pxref{Common Build Options}) and all the package transformation
5014 options (@pxref{Package Transformation Options}).
5015
5016
5017 @c *********************************************************************
5018 @node Programming Interface
5019 @chapter Programming Interface
5020
5021 GNU Guix provides several Scheme programming interfaces (APIs) to
5022 define, build, and query packages. The first interface allows users to
5023 write high-level package definitions. These definitions refer to
5024 familiar packaging concepts, such as the name and version of a package,
5025 its build system, and its dependencies. These definitions can then be
5026 turned into concrete build actions.
5027
5028 Build actions are performed by the Guix daemon, on behalf of users. In a
5029 standard setup, the daemon has write access to the store---the
5030 @file{/gnu/store} directory---whereas users do not. The recommended
5031 setup also has the daemon perform builds in chroots, under a specific
5032 build users, to minimize interference with the rest of the system.
5033
5034 @cindex derivation
5035 Lower-level APIs are available to interact with the daemon and the
5036 store. To instruct the daemon to perform a build action, users actually
5037 provide it with a @dfn{derivation}. A derivation is a low-level
5038 representation of the build actions to be taken, and the environment in
5039 which they should occur---derivations are to package definitions what
5040 assembly is to C programs. The term ``derivation'' comes from the fact
5041 that build results @emph{derive} from them.
5042
5043 This chapter describes all these APIs in turn, starting from high-level
5044 package definitions.
5045
5046 @menu
5047 * Package Modules:: Packages from the programmer's viewpoint.
5048 * Defining Packages:: Defining new packages.
5049 * Build Systems:: Specifying how packages are built.
5050 * The Store:: Manipulating the package store.
5051 * Derivations:: Low-level interface to package derivations.
5052 * The Store Monad:: Purely functional interface to the store.
5053 * G-Expressions:: Manipulating build expressions.
5054 * Invoking guix repl:: Fiddling with Guix interactively.
5055 @end menu
5056
5057 @node Package Modules
5058 @section Package Modules
5059
5060 From a programming viewpoint, the package definitions of the
5061 GNU distribution are provided by Guile modules in the @code{(gnu packages
5062 @dots{})} name space@footnote{Note that packages under the @code{(gnu
5063 packages @dots{})} module name space are not necessarily ``GNU
5064 packages''. This module naming scheme follows the usual Guile module
5065 naming convention: @code{gnu} means that these modules are distributed
5066 as part of the GNU system, and @code{packages} identifies modules that
5067 define packages.} (@pxref{Modules, Guile modules,, guile, GNU Guile
5068 Reference Manual}). For instance, the @code{(gnu packages emacs)}
5069 module exports a variable named @code{emacs}, which is bound to a
5070 @code{<package>} object (@pxref{Defining Packages}).
5071
5072 The @code{(gnu packages @dots{})} module name space is
5073 automatically scanned for packages by the command-line tools. For
5074 instance, when running @code{guix install emacs}, all the @code{(gnu
5075 packages @dots{})} modules are scanned until one that exports a package
5076 object whose name is @code{emacs} is found. This package search
5077 facility is implemented in the @code{(gnu packages)} module.
5078
5079 @cindex customization, of packages
5080 @cindex package module search path
5081 Users can store package definitions in modules with different
5082 names---e.g., @code{(my-packages emacs)}@footnote{Note that the file
5083 name and module name must match. For instance, the @code{(my-packages
5084 emacs)} module must be stored in a @file{my-packages/emacs.scm} file
5085 relative to the load path specified with @option{--load-path} or
5086 @code{GUIX_PACKAGE_PATH}. @xref{Modules and the File System,,,
5087 guile, GNU Guile Reference Manual}, for details.}. There are two ways to make
5088 these package definitions visible to the user interfaces:
5089
5090 @enumerate
5091 @item
5092 By adding the directory containing your package modules to the search path
5093 with the @code{-L} flag of @command{guix package} and other commands
5094 (@pxref{Common Build Options}), or by setting the @code{GUIX_PACKAGE_PATH}
5095 environment variable described below.
5096
5097 @item
5098 By defining a @dfn{channel} and configuring @command{guix pull} so that it
5099 pulls from it. A channel is essentially a Git repository containing package
5100 modules. @xref{Channels}, for more information on how to define and use
5101 channels.
5102 @end enumerate
5103
5104 @code{GUIX_PACKAGE_PATH} works similarly to other search path variables:
5105
5106 @defvr {Environment Variable} GUIX_PACKAGE_PATH
5107 This is a colon-separated list of directories to search for additional
5108 package modules. Directories listed in this variable take precedence
5109 over the own modules of the distribution.
5110 @end defvr
5111
5112 The distribution is fully @dfn{bootstrapped} and @dfn{self-contained}:
5113 each package is built based solely on other packages in the
5114 distribution. The root of this dependency graph is a small set of
5115 @dfn{bootstrap binaries}, provided by the @code{(gnu packages
5116 bootstrap)} module. For more information on bootstrapping,
5117 @pxref{Bootstrapping}.
5118
5119 @node Defining Packages
5120 @section Defining Packages
5121
5122 The high-level interface to package definitions is implemented in the
5123 @code{(guix packages)} and @code{(guix build-system)} modules. As an
5124 example, the package definition, or @dfn{recipe}, for the GNU Hello
5125 package looks like this:
5126
5127 @example
5128 (define-module (gnu packages hello)
5129 #:use-module (guix packages)
5130 #:use-module (guix download)
5131 #:use-module (guix build-system gnu)
5132 #:use-module (guix licenses)
5133 #:use-module (gnu packages gawk))
5134
5135 (define-public hello
5136 (package
5137 (name "hello")
5138 (version "2.10")
5139 (source (origin
5140 (method url-fetch)
5141 (uri (string-append "mirror://gnu/hello/hello-" version
5142 ".tar.gz"))
5143 (sha256
5144 (base32
5145 "0ssi1wpaf7plaswqqjwigppsg5fyh99vdlb9kzl7c9lng89ndq1i"))))
5146 (build-system gnu-build-system)
5147 (arguments '(#:configure-flags '("--enable-silent-rules")))
5148 (inputs `(("gawk" ,gawk)))
5149 (synopsis "Hello, GNU world: An example GNU package")
5150 (description "Guess what GNU Hello prints!")
5151 (home-page "https://www.gnu.org/software/hello/")
5152 (license gpl3+)))
5153 @end example
5154
5155 @noindent
5156 Without being a Scheme expert, the reader may have guessed the meaning
5157 of the various fields here. This expression binds the variable
5158 @code{hello} to a @code{<package>} object, which is essentially a record
5159 (@pxref{SRFI-9, Scheme records,, guile, GNU Guile Reference Manual}).
5160 This package object can be inspected using procedures found in the
5161 @code{(guix packages)} module; for instance, @code{(package-name hello)}
5162 returns---surprise!---@code{"hello"}.
5163
5164 With luck, you may be able to import part or all of the definition of
5165 the package you are interested in from another repository, using the
5166 @code{guix import} command (@pxref{Invoking guix import}).
5167
5168 In the example above, @var{hello} is defined in a module of its own,
5169 @code{(gnu packages hello)}. Technically, this is not strictly
5170 necessary, but it is convenient to do so: all the packages defined in
5171 modules under @code{(gnu packages @dots{})} are automatically known to
5172 the command-line tools (@pxref{Package Modules}).
5173
5174 There are a few points worth noting in the above package definition:
5175
5176 @itemize
5177 @item
5178 The @code{source} field of the package is an @code{<origin>} object
5179 (@pxref{origin Reference}, for the complete reference).
5180 Here, the @code{url-fetch} method from @code{(guix download)} is used,
5181 meaning that the source is a file to be downloaded over FTP or HTTP.
5182
5183 The @code{mirror://gnu} prefix instructs @code{url-fetch} to use one of
5184 the GNU mirrors defined in @code{(guix download)}.
5185
5186 The @code{sha256} field specifies the expected SHA256 hash of the file
5187 being downloaded. It is mandatory, and allows Guix to check the
5188 integrity of the file. The @code{(base32 @dots{})} form introduces the
5189 base32 representation of the hash. You can obtain this information with
5190 @code{guix download} (@pxref{Invoking guix download}) and @code{guix
5191 hash} (@pxref{Invoking guix hash}).
5192
5193 @cindex patches
5194 When needed, the @code{origin} form can also have a @code{patches} field
5195 listing patches to be applied, and a @code{snippet} field giving a
5196 Scheme expression to modify the source code.
5197
5198 @item
5199 @cindex GNU Build System
5200 The @code{build-system} field specifies the procedure to build the
5201 package (@pxref{Build Systems}). Here, @var{gnu-build-system}
5202 represents the familiar GNU Build System, where packages may be
5203 configured, built, and installed with the usual @code{./configure &&
5204 make && make check && make install} command sequence.
5205
5206 @item
5207 The @code{arguments} field specifies options for the build system
5208 (@pxref{Build Systems}). Here it is interpreted by
5209 @var{gnu-build-system} as a request run @file{configure} with the
5210 @code{--enable-silent-rules} flag.
5211
5212 @cindex quote
5213 @cindex quoting
5214 @findex '
5215 @findex quote
5216 What about these quote (@code{'}) characters? They are Scheme syntax to
5217 introduce a literal list; @code{'} is synonymous with @code{quote}.
5218 @xref{Expression Syntax, quoting,, guile, GNU Guile Reference Manual},
5219 for details. Here the value of the @code{arguments} field is a list of
5220 arguments passed to the build system down the road, as with @code{apply}
5221 (@pxref{Fly Evaluation, @code{apply},, guile, GNU Guile Reference
5222 Manual}).
5223
5224 The hash-colon (@code{#:}) sequence defines a Scheme @dfn{keyword}
5225 (@pxref{Keywords,,, guile, GNU Guile Reference Manual}), and
5226 @code{#:configure-flags} is a keyword used to pass a keyword argument
5227 to the build system (@pxref{Coding With Keywords,,, guile, GNU Guile
5228 Reference Manual}).
5229
5230 @item
5231 The @code{inputs} field specifies inputs to the build process---i.e.,
5232 build-time or run-time dependencies of the package. Here, we define an
5233 input called @code{"gawk"} whose value is that of the @var{gawk}
5234 variable; @var{gawk} is itself bound to a @code{<package>} object.
5235
5236 @cindex backquote (quasiquote)
5237 @findex `
5238 @findex quasiquote
5239 @cindex comma (unquote)
5240 @findex ,
5241 @findex unquote
5242 @findex ,@@
5243 @findex unquote-splicing
5244 Again, @code{`} (a backquote, synonymous with @code{quasiquote}) allows
5245 us to introduce a literal list in the @code{inputs} field, while
5246 @code{,} (a comma, synonymous with @code{unquote}) allows us to insert a
5247 value in that list (@pxref{Expression Syntax, unquote,, guile, GNU Guile
5248 Reference Manual}).
5249
5250 Note that GCC, Coreutils, Bash, and other essential tools do not need to
5251 be specified as inputs here. Instead, @var{gnu-build-system} takes care
5252 of ensuring that they are present (@pxref{Build Systems}).
5253
5254 However, any other dependencies need to be specified in the
5255 @code{inputs} field. Any dependency not specified here will simply be
5256 unavailable to the build process, possibly leading to a build failure.
5257 @end itemize
5258
5259 @xref{package Reference}, for a full description of possible fields.
5260
5261 Once a package definition is in place, the
5262 package may actually be built using the @code{guix build} command-line
5263 tool (@pxref{Invoking guix build}), troubleshooting any build failures
5264 you encounter (@pxref{Debugging Build Failures}). You can easily jump back to the
5265 package definition using the @command{guix edit} command
5266 (@pxref{Invoking guix edit}).
5267 @xref{Packaging Guidelines}, for
5268 more information on how to test package definitions, and
5269 @ref{Invoking guix lint}, for information on how to check a definition
5270 for style conformance.
5271 @vindex GUIX_PACKAGE_PATH
5272 Lastly, @pxref{Channels}, for information
5273 on how to extend the distribution by adding your own package definitions
5274 in a ``channel''.
5275
5276 Finally, updating the package definition to a new upstream version
5277 can be partly automated by the @command{guix refresh} command
5278 (@pxref{Invoking guix refresh}).
5279
5280 Behind the scenes, a derivation corresponding to the @code{<package>}
5281 object is first computed by the @code{package-derivation} procedure.
5282 That derivation is stored in a @code{.drv} file under @file{/gnu/store}.
5283 The build actions it prescribes may then be realized by using the
5284 @code{build-derivations} procedure (@pxref{The Store}).
5285
5286 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} package-derivation @var{store} @var{package} [@var{system}]
5287 Return the @code{<derivation>} object of @var{package} for @var{system}
5288 (@pxref{Derivations}).
5289
5290 @var{package} must be a valid @code{<package>} object, and @var{system}
5291 must be a string denoting the target system type---e.g.,
5292 @code{"x86_64-linux"} for an x86_64 Linux-based GNU system. @var{store}
5293 must be a connection to the daemon, which operates on the store
5294 (@pxref{The Store}).
5295 @end deffn
5296
5297 @noindent
5298 @cindex cross-compilation
5299 Similarly, it is possible to compute a derivation that cross-builds a
5300 package for some other system:
5301
5302 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} package-cross-derivation @var{store} @
5303 @var{package} @var{target} [@var{system}]
5304 Return the @code{<derivation>} object of @var{package} cross-built from
5305 @var{system} to @var{target}.
5306
5307 @var{target} must be a valid GNU triplet denoting the target hardware
5308 and operating system, such as @code{"mips64el-linux-gnu"}
5309 (@pxref{Specifying Target Triplets,,, autoconf, Autoconf}).
5310 @end deffn
5311
5312 @cindex package transformations
5313 @cindex input rewriting
5314 @cindex dependency tree rewriting
5315 Packages can be manipulated in arbitrary ways. An example of a useful
5316 transformation is @dfn{input rewriting}, whereby the dependency tree of
5317 a package is rewritten by replacing specific inputs by others:
5318
5319 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} package-input-rewriting @var{replacements} @
5320 [@var{rewrite-name}]
5321 Return a procedure that, when passed a package, replaces its direct and
5322 indirect dependencies (but not its implicit inputs) according to
5323 @var{replacements}. @var{replacements} is a list of package pairs; the
5324 first element of each pair is the package to replace, and the second one
5325 is the replacement.
5326
5327 Optionally, @var{rewrite-name} is a one-argument procedure that takes
5328 the name of a package and returns its new name after rewrite.
5329 @end deffn
5330
5331 @noindent
5332 Consider this example:
5333
5334 @example
5335 (define libressl-instead-of-openssl
5336 ;; This is a procedure to replace OPENSSL by LIBRESSL,
5337 ;; recursively.
5338 (package-input-rewriting `((,openssl . ,libressl))))
5339
5340 (define git-with-libressl
5341 (libressl-instead-of-openssl git))
5342 @end example
5343
5344 @noindent
5345 Here we first define a rewriting procedure that replaces @var{openssl}
5346 with @var{libressl}. Then we use it to define a @dfn{variant} of the
5347 @var{git} package that uses @var{libressl} instead of @var{openssl}.
5348 This is exactly what the @option{--with-input} command-line option does
5349 (@pxref{Package Transformation Options, @option{--with-input}}).
5350
5351 The following variant of @code{package-input-rewriting} can match packages to
5352 be replaced by name rather than by identity.
5353
5354 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} package-input-rewriting/spec @var{replacements}
5355 Return a procedure that, given a package, applies the given @var{replacements} to
5356 all the package graph (excluding implicit inputs). @var{replacements} is a list of
5357 spec/procedures pair; each spec is a package specification such as @code{"gcc"} or
5358 @code{"guile@@2"}, and each procedure takes a matching package and returns a
5359 replacement for that package.
5360 @end deffn
5361
5362 The example above could be rewritten this way:
5363
5364 @example
5365 (define libressl-instead-of-openssl
5366 ;; Replace all the packages called "openssl" with LibreSSL.
5367 (package-input-rewriting/spec `(("openssl" . ,(const libressl)))))
5368 @end example
5369
5370 The key difference here is that, this time, packages are matched by spec and
5371 not by identity. In other words, any package in the graph that is called
5372 @code{openssl} will be replaced.
5373
5374 A more generic procedure to rewrite a package dependency graph is
5375 @code{package-mapping}: it supports arbitrary changes to nodes in the
5376 graph.
5377
5378 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} package-mapping @var{proc} [@var{cut?}]
5379 Return a procedure that, given a package, applies @var{proc} to all the packages
5380 depended on and returns the resulting package. The procedure stops recursion
5381 when @var{cut?} returns true for a given package.
5382 @end deffn
5383
5384 @menu
5385 * package Reference:: The package data type.
5386 * origin Reference:: The origin data type.
5387 @end menu
5388
5389
5390 @node package Reference
5391 @subsection @code{package} Reference
5392
5393 This section summarizes all the options available in @code{package}
5394 declarations (@pxref{Defining Packages}).
5395
5396 @deftp {Data Type} package
5397 This is the data type representing a package recipe.
5398
5399 @table @asis
5400 @item @code{name}
5401 The name of the package, as a string.
5402
5403 @item @code{version}
5404 The version of the package, as a string.
5405
5406 @item @code{source}
5407 An object telling how the source code for the package should be
5408 acquired. Most of the time, this is an @code{origin} object, which
5409 denotes a file fetched from the Internet (@pxref{origin Reference}). It
5410 can also be any other ``file-like'' object such as a @code{local-file},
5411 which denotes a file from the local file system (@pxref{G-Expressions,
5412 @code{local-file}}).
5413
5414 @item @code{build-system}
5415 The build system that should be used to build the package (@pxref{Build
5416 Systems}).
5417
5418 @item @code{arguments} (default: @code{'()})
5419 The arguments that should be passed to the build system. This is a
5420 list, typically containing sequential keyword-value pairs.
5421
5422 @item @code{inputs} (default: @code{'()})
5423 @itemx @code{native-inputs} (default: @code{'()})
5424 @itemx @code{propagated-inputs} (default: @code{'()})
5425 @cindex inputs, of packages
5426 These fields list dependencies of the package. Each one is a list of
5427 tuples, where each tuple has a label for the input (a string) as its
5428 first element, a package, origin, or derivation as its second element,
5429 and optionally the name of the output thereof that should be used, which
5430 defaults to @code{"out"} (@pxref{Packages with Multiple Outputs}, for
5431 more on package outputs). For example, the list below specifies three
5432 inputs:
5433
5434 @example
5435 `(("libffi" ,libffi)
5436 ("libunistring" ,libunistring)
5437 ("glib:bin" ,glib "bin")) ;the "bin" output of Glib
5438 @end example
5439
5440 @cindex cross compilation, package dependencies
5441 The distinction between @code{native-inputs} and @code{inputs} is
5442 necessary when considering cross-compilation. When cross-compiling,
5443 dependencies listed in @code{inputs} are built for the @emph{target}
5444 architecture; conversely, dependencies listed in @code{native-inputs}
5445 are built for the architecture of the @emph{build} machine.
5446
5447 @code{native-inputs} is typically used to list tools needed at
5448 build time, but not at run time, such as Autoconf, Automake, pkg-config,
5449 Gettext, or Bison. @command{guix lint} can report likely mistakes in
5450 this area (@pxref{Invoking guix lint}).
5451
5452 @anchor{package-propagated-inputs}
5453 Lastly, @code{propagated-inputs} is similar to @code{inputs}, but the
5454 specified packages will be automatically installed alongside the package
5455 they belong to (@pxref{package-cmd-propagated-inputs, @command{guix
5456 package}}, for information on how @command{guix package} deals with
5457 propagated inputs.)
5458
5459 For example this is necessary when a C/C++ library needs headers of
5460 another library to compile, or when a pkg-config file refers to another
5461 one @i{via} its @code{Requires} field.
5462
5463 Another example where @code{propagated-inputs} is useful is for languages
5464 that lack a facility to record the run-time search path akin to the
5465 @code{RUNPATH} of ELF files; this includes Guile, Python, Perl, and
5466 more. To ensure that libraries written in those languages can find
5467 library code they depend on at run time, run-time dependencies must be
5468 listed in @code{propagated-inputs} rather than @code{inputs}.
5469
5470 @item @code{outputs} (default: @code{'("out")})
5471 The list of output names of the package. @xref{Packages with Multiple
5472 Outputs}, for typical uses of additional outputs.
5473
5474 @item @code{native-search-paths} (default: @code{'()})
5475 @itemx @code{search-paths} (default: @code{'()})
5476 A list of @code{search-path-specification} objects describing
5477 search-path environment variables honored by the package.
5478
5479 @item @code{replacement} (default: @code{#f})
5480 This must be either @code{#f} or a package object that will be used as a
5481 @dfn{replacement} for this package. @xref{Security Updates, grafts},
5482 for details.
5483
5484 @item @code{synopsis}
5485 A one-line description of the package.
5486
5487 @item @code{description}
5488 A more elaborate description of the package.
5489
5490 @item @code{license}
5491 @cindex license, of packages
5492 The license of the package; a value from @code{(guix licenses)},
5493 or a list of such values.
5494
5495 @item @code{home-page}
5496 The URL to the home-page of the package, as a string.
5497
5498 @item @code{supported-systems} (default: @var{%supported-systems})
5499 The list of systems supported by the package, as strings of the form
5500 @code{architecture-kernel}, for example @code{"x86_64-linux"}.
5501
5502 @item @code{maintainers} (default: @code{'()})
5503 The list of maintainers of the package, as @code{maintainer} objects.
5504
5505 @item @code{location} (default: source location of the @code{package} form)
5506 The source location of the package. It is useful to override this when
5507 inheriting from another package, in which case this field is not
5508 automatically corrected.
5509 @end table
5510 @end deftp
5511
5512 @deffn {Scheme Syntax} this-package
5513 When used in the @emph{lexical scope} of a package field definition, this
5514 identifier resolves to the package being defined.
5515
5516 The example below shows how to add a package as a native input of itself when
5517 cross-compiling:
5518
5519 @example
5520 (package
5521 (name "guile")
5522 ;; ...
5523
5524 ;; When cross-compiled, Guile, for example, depends on
5525 ;; a native version of itself. Add it here.
5526 (native-inputs (if (%current-target-system)
5527 `(("self" ,this-package))
5528 '())))
5529 @end example
5530
5531 It is an error to refer to @code{this-package} outside a package definition.
5532 @end deffn
5533
5534 @node origin Reference
5535 @subsection @code{origin} Reference
5536
5537 This section summarizes all the options available in @code{origin}
5538 declarations (@pxref{Defining Packages}).
5539
5540 @deftp {Data Type} origin
5541 This is the data type representing a source code origin.
5542
5543 @table @asis
5544 @item @code{uri}
5545 An object containing the URI of the source. The object type depends on
5546 the @code{method} (see below). For example, when using the
5547 @var{url-fetch} method of @code{(guix download)}, the valid @code{uri}
5548 values are: a URL represented as a string, or a list thereof.
5549
5550 @item @code{method}
5551 A procedure that handles the URI.
5552
5553 Examples include:
5554
5555 @table @asis
5556 @item @var{url-fetch} from @code{(guix download)}
5557 download a file from the HTTP, HTTPS, or FTP URL specified in the
5558 @code{uri} field;
5559
5560 @vindex git-fetch
5561 @item @var{git-fetch} from @code{(guix git-download)}
5562 clone the Git version control repository, and check out the revision
5563 specified in the @code{uri} field as a @code{git-reference} object; a
5564 @code{git-reference} looks like this:
5565
5566 @example
5567 (git-reference
5568 (url "git://git.debian.org/git/pkg-shadow/shadow")
5569 (commit "v4.1.5.1"))
5570 @end example
5571 @end table
5572
5573 @item @code{sha256}
5574 A bytevector containing the SHA-256 hash of the source. Typically the
5575 @code{base32} form is used here to generate the bytevector from a
5576 base-32 string.
5577
5578 You can obtain this information using @code{guix download}
5579 (@pxref{Invoking guix download}) or @code{guix hash} (@pxref{Invoking
5580 guix hash}).
5581
5582 @item @code{file-name} (default: @code{#f})
5583 The file name under which the source code should be saved. When this is
5584 @code{#f}, a sensible default value will be used in most cases. In case
5585 the source is fetched from a URL, the file name from the URL will be
5586 used. For version control checkouts, it is recommended to provide the
5587 file name explicitly because the default is not very descriptive.
5588
5589 @item @code{patches} (default: @code{'()})
5590 A list of file names, origins, or file-like objects (@pxref{G-Expressions,
5591 file-like objects}) pointing to patches to be applied to the source.
5592
5593 This list of patches must be unconditional. In particular, it cannot
5594 depend on the value of @code{%current-system} or
5595 @code{%current-target-system}.
5596
5597 @item @code{snippet} (default: @code{#f})
5598 A G-expression (@pxref{G-Expressions}) or S-expression that will be run
5599 in the source directory. This is a convenient way to modify the source,
5600 sometimes more convenient than a patch.
5601
5602 @item @code{patch-flags} (default: @code{'("-p1")})
5603 A list of command-line flags that should be passed to the @code{patch}
5604 command.
5605
5606 @item @code{patch-inputs} (default: @code{#f})
5607 Input packages or derivations to the patching process. When this is
5608 @code{#f}, the usual set of inputs necessary for patching are provided,
5609 such as GNU@tie{}Patch.
5610
5611 @item @code{modules} (default: @code{'()})
5612 A list of Guile modules that should be loaded during the patching
5613 process and while running the code in the @code{snippet} field.
5614
5615 @item @code{patch-guile} (default: @code{#f})
5616 The Guile package that should be used in the patching process. When
5617 this is @code{#f}, a sensible default is used.
5618 @end table
5619 @end deftp
5620
5621
5622 @node Build Systems
5623 @section Build Systems
5624
5625 @cindex build system
5626 Each package definition specifies a @dfn{build system} and arguments for
5627 that build system (@pxref{Defining Packages}). This @code{build-system}
5628 field represents the build procedure of the package, as well as implicit
5629 dependencies of that build procedure.
5630
5631 Build systems are @code{<build-system>} objects. The interface to
5632 create and manipulate them is provided by the @code{(guix build-system)}
5633 module, and actual build systems are exported by specific modules.
5634
5635 @cindex bag (low-level package representation)
5636 Under the hood, build systems first compile package objects to
5637 @dfn{bags}. A @dfn{bag} is like a package, but with less
5638 ornamentation---in other words, a bag is a lower-level representation of
5639 a package, which includes all the inputs of that package, including some
5640 that were implicitly added by the build system. This intermediate
5641 representation is then compiled to a derivation (@pxref{Derivations}).
5642
5643 Build systems accept an optional list of @dfn{arguments}. In package
5644 definitions, these are passed @i{via} the @code{arguments} field
5645 (@pxref{Defining Packages}). They are typically keyword arguments
5646 (@pxref{Optional Arguments, keyword arguments in Guile,, guile, GNU
5647 Guile Reference Manual}). The value of these arguments is usually
5648 evaluated in the @dfn{build stratum}---i.e., by a Guile process launched
5649 by the daemon (@pxref{Derivations}).
5650
5651 The main build system is @var{gnu-build-system}, which implements the
5652 standard build procedure for GNU and many other packages. It
5653 is provided by the @code{(guix build-system gnu)} module.
5654
5655 @defvr {Scheme Variable} gnu-build-system
5656 @var{gnu-build-system} represents the GNU Build System, and variants
5657 thereof (@pxref{Configuration, configuration and makefile conventions,,
5658 standards, GNU Coding Standards}).
5659
5660 @cindex build phases
5661 In a nutshell, packages using it are configured, built, and installed with
5662 the usual @code{./configure && make && make check && make install}
5663 command sequence. In practice, a few additional steps are often needed.
5664 All these steps are split up in separate @dfn{phases},
5665 notably@footnote{Please see the @code{(guix build gnu-build-system)}
5666 modules for more details about the build phases.}:
5667
5668 @table @code
5669 @item unpack
5670 Unpack the source tarball, and change the current directory to the
5671 extracted source tree. If the source is actually a directory, copy it
5672 to the build tree, and enter that directory.
5673
5674 @item patch-source-shebangs
5675 Patch shebangs encountered in source files so they refer to the right
5676 store file names. For instance, this changes @code{#!/bin/sh} to
5677 @code{#!/gnu/store/@dots{}-bash-4.3/bin/sh}.
5678
5679 @item configure
5680 Run the @file{configure} script with a number of default options, such
5681 as @code{--prefix=/gnu/store/@dots{}}, as well as the options specified
5682 by the @code{#:configure-flags} argument.
5683
5684 @item build
5685 Run @code{make} with the list of flags specified with
5686 @code{#:make-flags}. If the @code{#:parallel-build?} argument is true
5687 (the default), build with @code{make -j}.
5688
5689 @item check
5690 Run @code{make check}, or some other target specified with
5691 @code{#:test-target}, unless @code{#:tests? #f} is passed. If the
5692 @code{#:parallel-tests?} argument is true (the default), run @code{make
5693 check -j}.
5694
5695 @item install
5696 Run @code{make install} with the flags listed in @code{#:make-flags}.
5697
5698 @item patch-shebangs
5699 Patch shebangs on the installed executable files.
5700
5701 @item strip
5702 Strip debugging symbols from ELF files (unless @code{#:strip-binaries?}
5703 is false), copying them to the @code{debug} output when available
5704 (@pxref{Installing Debugging Files}).
5705 @end table
5706
5707 @vindex %standard-phases
5708 The build-side module @code{(guix build gnu-build-system)} defines
5709 @var{%standard-phases} as the default list of build phases.
5710 @var{%standard-phases} is a list of symbol/procedure pairs, where the
5711 procedure implements the actual phase.
5712
5713 The list of phases used for a particular package can be changed with the
5714 @code{#:phases} parameter. For instance, passing:
5715
5716 @example
5717 #:phases (modify-phases %standard-phases (delete 'configure))
5718 @end example
5719
5720 means that all the phases described above will be used, except the
5721 @code{configure} phase.
5722
5723 In addition, this build system ensures that the ``standard'' environment
5724 for GNU packages is available. This includes tools such as GCC, libc,
5725 Coreutils, Bash, Make, Diffutils, grep, and sed (see the @code{(guix
5726 build-system gnu)} module for a complete list). We call these the
5727 @dfn{implicit inputs} of a package, because package definitions do not
5728 have to mention them.
5729 @end defvr
5730
5731 Other @code{<build-system>} objects are defined to support other
5732 conventions and tools used by free software packages. They inherit most
5733 of @var{gnu-build-system}, and differ mainly in the set of inputs
5734 implicitly added to the build process, and in the list of phases
5735 executed. Some of these build systems are listed below.
5736
5737 @defvr {Scheme Variable} ant-build-system
5738 This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system ant)}. It
5739 implements the build procedure for Java packages that can be built with
5740 @url{https://ant.apache.org/, Ant build tool}.
5741
5742 It adds both @code{ant} and the @dfn{Java Development Kit} (JDK) as
5743 provided by the @code{icedtea} package to the set of inputs. Different
5744 packages can be specified with the @code{#:ant} and @code{#:jdk}
5745 parameters, respectively.
5746
5747 When the original package does not provide a suitable Ant build file,
5748 the parameter @code{#:jar-name} can be used to generate a minimal Ant
5749 build file @file{build.xml} with tasks to build the specified jar
5750 archive. In this case the parameter @code{#:source-dir} can be used to
5751 specify the source sub-directory, defaulting to ``src''.
5752
5753 The @code{#:main-class} parameter can be used with the minimal ant
5754 buildfile to specify the main class of the resulting jar. This makes the
5755 jar file executable. The @code{#:test-include} parameter can be used to
5756 specify the list of junit tests to run. It defaults to
5757 @code{(list "**/*Test.java")}. The @code{#:test-exclude} can be used to
5758 disable some tests. It defaults to @code{(list "**/Abstract*.java")},
5759 because abstract classes cannot be run as tests.
5760
5761 The parameter @code{#:build-target} can be used to specify the Ant task
5762 that should be run during the @code{build} phase. By default the
5763 ``jar'' task will be run.
5764
5765 @end defvr
5766
5767 @defvr {Scheme Variable} android-ndk-build-system
5768 @cindex Android distribution
5769 @cindex Android NDK build system
5770 This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system android-ndk)}. It
5771 implements a build procedure for Android NDK (native development kit)
5772 packages using a Guix-specific build process.
5773
5774 The build system assumes that packages install their public interface
5775 (header) files to the subdirectory "include" of the "out" output and
5776 their libraries to the subdirectory "lib" of the "out" output.
5777
5778 It's also assumed that the union of all the dependencies of a package
5779 has no conflicting files.
5780
5781 For the time being, cross-compilation is not supported - so right now
5782 the libraries and header files are assumed to be host tools.
5783
5784 @end defvr
5785
5786 @defvr {Scheme Variable} asdf-build-system/source
5787 @defvrx {Scheme Variable} asdf-build-system/sbcl
5788 @defvrx {Scheme Variable} asdf-build-system/ecl
5789
5790 These variables, exported by @code{(guix build-system asdf)}, implement
5791 build procedures for Common Lisp packages using
5792 @url{https://common-lisp.net/project/asdf/, ``ASDF''}. ASDF is a system
5793 definition facility for Common Lisp programs and libraries.
5794
5795 The @code{asdf-build-system/source} system installs the packages in
5796 source form, and can be loaded using any common lisp implementation, via
5797 ASDF. The others, such as @code{asdf-build-system/sbcl}, install binary
5798 systems in the format which a particular implementation understands.
5799 These build systems can also be used to produce executable programs, or
5800 lisp images which contain a set of packages pre-loaded.
5801
5802 The build system uses naming conventions. For binary packages, the
5803 package name should be prefixed with the lisp implementation, such as
5804 @code{sbcl-} for @code{asdf-build-system/sbcl}.
5805
5806 Additionally, the corresponding source package should be labeled using
5807 the same convention as python packages (see @ref{Python Modules}), using
5808 the @code{cl-} prefix.
5809
5810 For binary packages, each system should be defined as a Guix package.
5811 If one package @code{origin} contains several systems, package variants
5812 can be created in order to build all the systems. Source packages,
5813 which use @code{asdf-build-system/source}, may contain several systems.
5814
5815 In order to create executable programs and images, the build-side
5816 procedures @code{build-program} and @code{build-image} can be used.
5817 They should be called in a build phase after the @code{create-symlinks}
5818 phase, so that the system which was just built can be used within the
5819 resulting image. @code{build-program} requires a list of Common Lisp
5820 expressions to be passed as the @code{#:entry-program} argument.
5821
5822 If the system is not defined within its own @code{.asd} file of the same
5823 name, then the @code{#:asd-file} parameter should be used to specify
5824 which file the system is defined in. Furthermore, if the package
5825 defines a system for its tests in a separate file, it will be loaded
5826 before the tests are run if it is specified by the
5827 @code{#:test-asd-file} parameter. If it is not set, the files
5828 @code{<system>-tests.asd}, @code{<system>-test.asd}, @code{tests.asd},
5829 and @code{test.asd} will be tried if they exist.
5830
5831 If for some reason the package must be named in a different way than the
5832 naming conventions suggest, the @code{#:asd-system-name} parameter can
5833 be used to specify the name of the system.
5834
5835 @end defvr
5836
5837 @defvr {Scheme Variable} cargo-build-system
5838 @cindex Rust programming language
5839 @cindex Cargo (Rust build system)
5840 This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system cargo)}. It
5841 supports builds of packages using Cargo, the build tool of the
5842 @uref{https://www.rust-lang.org, Rust programming language}.
5843
5844 It adds @code{rustc} and @code{cargo} to the set of inputs.
5845 A different Rust package can be specified with the @code{#:rust} parameter.
5846
5847 Regular cargo dependencies should be added to the package definition via the
5848 @code{#:cargo-inputs} parameter as a list of name and spec pairs, where the
5849 spec can be a package or a source definition. Note that the spec must
5850 evaluate to a path to a gzipped tarball which includes a @code{Cargo.toml}
5851 file at its root, or it will be ignored. Similarly, cargo dev-dependencies
5852 should be added to the package definition via the
5853 @code{#:cargo-development-inputs} parameter.
5854
5855 In its @code{configure} phase, this build system will make any source inputs
5856 specified in the @code{#:cargo-inputs} and @code{#:cargo-development-inputs}
5857 parameters available to cargo. The @code{update-cargo-lock} phase will,
5858 when there is a @code{Cargo.lock} file, update the @code{Cargo.lock} file
5859 with the inputs and their versions available at build time. The
5860 @code{install} phase installs any crate the binaries if they are defined by
5861 the crate.
5862 @end defvr
5863
5864 @cindex Clojure (programming language)
5865 @cindex simple Clojure build system
5866 @defvr {Scheme Variable} clojure-build-system
5867 This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system clojure)}. It implements
5868 a simple build procedure for @uref{https://clojure.org/, Clojure} packages
5869 using plain old @code{compile} in Clojure. Cross-compilation is not supported
5870 yet.
5871
5872 It adds @code{clojure}, @code{icedtea} and @code{zip} to the set of inputs.
5873 Different packages can be specified with the @code{#:clojure}, @code{#:jdk} and
5874 @code{#:zip} parameters, respectively.
5875
5876 A list of source directories, test directories and jar names can be specified
5877 with the @code{#:source-dirs}, @code{#:test-dirs} and @code{#:jar-names}
5878 parameters, respectively. Compile directory and main class can be specified
5879 with the @code{#:compile-dir} and @code{#:main-class} parameters, respectively.
5880 Other parameters are documented below.
5881
5882 This build system is an extension of @var{ant-build-system}, but with the
5883 following phases changed:
5884
5885 @table @code
5886
5887 @item build
5888 This phase calls @code{compile} in Clojure to compile source files and runs
5889 @command{jar} to create jars from both source files and compiled files
5890 according to the include list and exclude list specified in
5891 @code{#:aot-include} and @code{#:aot-exclude}, respectively. The exclude list
5892 has priority over the include list. These lists consist of symbols
5893 representing Clojure libraries or the special keyword @code{#:all} representing
5894 all Clojure libraries found under the source directories. The parameter
5895 @code{#:omit-source?} decides if source should be included into the jars.
5896
5897 @item check
5898 This phase runs tests according to the include list and exclude list specified
5899 in @code{#:test-include} and @code{#:test-exclude}, respectively. Their
5900 meanings are analogous to that of @code{#:aot-include} and
5901 @code{#:aot-exclude}, except that the special keyword @code{#:all} now
5902 stands for all Clojure libraries found under the test directories. The
5903 parameter @code{#:tests?} decides if tests should be run.
5904
5905 @item install
5906 This phase installs all jars built previously.
5907 @end table
5908
5909 Apart from the above, this build system also contains an additional phase:
5910
5911 @table @code
5912
5913 @item install-doc
5914 This phase installs all top-level files with base name matching
5915 @var{%doc-regex}. A different regex can be specified with the
5916 @code{#:doc-regex} parameter. All files (recursively) inside the documentation
5917 directories specified in @code{#:doc-dirs} are installed as well.
5918 @end table
5919 @end defvr
5920
5921 @defvr {Scheme Variable} cmake-build-system
5922 This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system cmake)}. It
5923 implements the build procedure for packages using the
5924 @url{https://www.cmake.org, CMake build tool}.
5925
5926 It automatically adds the @code{cmake} package to the set of inputs.
5927 Which package is used can be specified with the @code{#:cmake}
5928 parameter.
5929
5930 The @code{#:configure-flags} parameter is taken as a list of flags
5931 passed to the @command{cmake} command. The @code{#:build-type}
5932 parameter specifies in abstract terms the flags passed to the compiler;
5933 it defaults to @code{"RelWithDebInfo"} (short for ``release mode with
5934 debugging information''), which roughly means that code is compiled with
5935 @code{-O2 -g}, as is the case for Autoconf-based packages by default.
5936 @end defvr
5937
5938 @defvr {Scheme Variable} dune-build-system
5939 This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system dune)}. It
5940 supports builds of packages using @uref{https://dune.build/, Dune}, a build
5941 tool for the OCaml programming language. It is implemented as an extension
5942 of the @code{ocaml-build-system} which is described below. As such, the
5943 @code{#:ocaml} and @code{#:findlib} parameters can be passed to this build
5944 system.
5945
5946 It automatically adds the @code{dune} package to the set of inputs.
5947 Which package is used can be specified with the @code{#:dune}
5948 parameter.
5949
5950 There is no @code{configure} phase because dune packages typically don't
5951 need to be configured. The @code{#:build-flags} parameter is taken as a
5952 list of flags passed to the @code{dune} command during the build.
5953
5954 The @code{#:jbuild?} parameter can be passed to use the @code{jbuild}
5955 command instead of the more recent @code{dune} command while building
5956 a package. Its default value is @code{#f}.
5957
5958 The @code{#:package} parameter can be passed to specify a package name, which
5959 is useful when a package contains multiple packages and you want to build
5960 only one of them. This is equivalent to passing the @code{-p} argument to
5961 @code{dune}.
5962 @end defvr
5963
5964 @defvr {Scheme Variable} go-build-system
5965 This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system go)}. It
5966 implements a build procedure for Go packages using the standard
5967 @url{https://golang.org/cmd/go/#hdr-Compile_packages_and_dependencies,
5968 Go build mechanisms}.
5969
5970 The user is expected to provide a value for the key @code{#:import-path}
5971 and, in some cases, @code{#:unpack-path}. The
5972 @url{https://golang.org/doc/code.html#ImportPaths, import path}
5973 corresponds to the file system path expected by the package's build
5974 scripts and any referring packages, and provides a unique way to
5975 refer to a Go package. It is typically based on a combination of the
5976 package source code's remote URI and file system hierarchy structure. In
5977 some cases, you will need to unpack the package's source code to a
5978 different directory structure than the one indicated by the import path,
5979 and @code{#:unpack-path} should be used in such cases.
5980
5981 Packages that provide Go libraries should install their source code into
5982 the built output. The key @code{#:install-source?}, which defaults to
5983 @code{#t}, controls whether or not the source code is installed. It can
5984 be set to @code{#f} for packages that only provide executable files.
5985 @end defvr
5986
5987 @defvr {Scheme Variable} glib-or-gtk-build-system
5988 This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system glib-or-gtk)}. It
5989 is intended for use with packages making use of GLib or GTK+.
5990
5991 This build system adds the following two phases to the ones defined by
5992 @var{gnu-build-system}:
5993
5994 @table @code
5995 @item glib-or-gtk-wrap
5996 The phase @code{glib-or-gtk-wrap} ensures that programs in
5997 @file{bin/} are able to find GLib ``schemas'' and
5998 @uref{https://developer.gnome.org/gtk3/stable/gtk-running.html, GTK+
5999 modules}. This is achieved by wrapping the programs in launch scripts
6000 that appropriately set the @code{XDG_DATA_DIRS} and @code{GTK_PATH}
6001 environment variables.
6002
6003 It is possible to exclude specific package outputs from that wrapping
6004 process by listing their names in the
6005 @code{#:glib-or-gtk-wrap-excluded-outputs} parameter. This is useful
6006 when an output is known not to contain any GLib or GTK+ binaries, and
6007 where wrapping would gratuitously add a dependency of that output on
6008 GLib and GTK+.
6009
6010 @item glib-or-gtk-compile-schemas
6011 The phase @code{glib-or-gtk-compile-schemas} makes sure that all
6012 @uref{https://developer.gnome.org/gio/stable/glib-compile-schemas.html,
6013 GSettings schemas} of GLib are compiled. Compilation is performed by the
6014 @command{glib-compile-schemas} program. It is provided by the package
6015 @code{glib:bin} which is automatically imported by the build system.
6016 The @code{glib} package providing @command{glib-compile-schemas} can be
6017 specified with the @code{#:glib} parameter.
6018 @end table
6019
6020 Both phases are executed after the @code{install} phase.
6021 @end defvr
6022
6023 @defvr {Scheme Variable} guile-build-system
6024 This build system is for Guile packages that consist exclusively of Scheme
6025 code and that are so lean that they don't even have a makefile, let alone a
6026 @file{configure} script. It compiles Scheme code using @command{guild
6027 compile} (@pxref{Compilation,,, guile, GNU Guile Reference Manual}) and
6028 installs the @file{.scm} and @file{.go} files in the right place. It also
6029 installs documentation.
6030
6031 This build system supports cross-compilation by using the @code{--target}
6032 option of @command{guild compile}.
6033
6034 Packages built with @code{guile-build-system} must provide a Guile package in
6035 their @code{native-inputs} field.
6036 @end defvr
6037
6038 @defvr {Scheme Variable} minify-build-system
6039 This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system minify)}. It
6040 implements a minification procedure for simple JavaScript packages.
6041
6042 It adds @code{uglify-js} to the set of inputs and uses it to compress
6043 all JavaScript files in the @file{src} directory. A different minifier
6044 package can be specified with the @code{#:uglify-js} parameter, but it
6045 is expected that the package writes the minified code to the standard
6046 output.
6047
6048 When the input JavaScript files are not all located in the @file{src}
6049 directory, the parameter @code{#:javascript-files} can be used to
6050 specify a list of file names to feed to the minifier.
6051 @end defvr
6052
6053 @defvr {Scheme Variable} ocaml-build-system
6054 This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system ocaml)}. It implements
6055 a build procedure for @uref{https://ocaml.org, OCaml} packages, which consists
6056 of choosing the correct set of commands to run for each package. OCaml
6057 packages can expect many different commands to be run. This build system will
6058 try some of them.
6059
6060 When the package has a @file{setup.ml} file present at the top-level, it will
6061 run @code{ocaml setup.ml -configure}, @code{ocaml setup.ml -build} and
6062 @code{ocaml setup.ml -install}. The build system will assume that this file
6063 was generated by @uref{http://oasis.forge.ocamlcore.org/, OASIS} and will take
6064 care of setting the prefix and enabling tests if they are not disabled. You
6065 can pass configure and build flags with the @code{#:configure-flags} and
6066 @code{#:build-flags}. The @code{#:test-flags} key can be passed to change the
6067 set of flags used to enable tests. The @code{#:use-make?} key can be used to
6068 bypass this system in the build and install phases.
6069
6070 When the package has a @file{configure} file, it is assumed that it is a
6071 hand-made configure script that requires a different argument format than
6072 in the @code{gnu-build-system}. You can add more flags with the
6073 @code{#:configure-flags} key.
6074
6075 When the package has a @file{Makefile} file (or @code{#:use-make?} is
6076 @code{#t}), it will be used and more flags can be passed to the build and
6077 install phases with the @code{#:make-flags} key.
6078
6079 Finally, some packages do not have these files and use a somewhat standard
6080 location for its build system. In that case, the build system will run
6081 @code{ocaml pkg/pkg.ml} or @code{ocaml pkg/build.ml} and take care of
6082 providing the path to the required findlib module. Additional flags can
6083 be passed via the @code{#:build-flags} key. Install is taken care of by
6084 @command{opam-installer}. In this case, the @code{opam} package must
6085 be added to the @code{native-inputs} field of the package definition.
6086
6087 Note that most OCaml packages assume they will be installed in the same
6088 directory as OCaml, which is not what we want in guix. In particular, they
6089 will install @file{.so} files in their module's directory, which is usually
6090 fine because it is in the OCaml compiler directory. In guix though, these
6091 libraries cannot be found and we use @code{CAML_LD_LIBRARY_PATH}. This
6092 variable points to @file{lib/ocaml/site-lib/stubslibs} and this is where
6093 @file{.so} libraries should be installed.
6094 @end defvr
6095
6096 @defvr {Scheme Variable} python-build-system
6097 This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system python)}. It
6098 implements the more or less standard build procedure used by Python
6099 packages, which consists in running @code{python setup.py build} and
6100 then @code{python setup.py install --prefix=/gnu/store/@dots{}}.
6101
6102 For packages that install stand-alone Python programs under @code{bin/},
6103 it takes care of wrapping these programs so that their @code{PYTHONPATH}
6104 environment variable points to all the Python libraries they depend on.
6105
6106 Which Python package is used to perform the build can be specified with
6107 the @code{#:python} parameter. This is a useful way to force a package
6108 to be built for a specific version of the Python interpreter, which
6109 might be necessary if the package is only compatible with a single
6110 interpreter version.
6111
6112 By default guix calls @code{setup.py} under control of
6113 @code{setuptools}, much like @command{pip} does. Some packages are not
6114 compatible with setuptools (and pip), thus you can disable this by
6115 setting the @code{#:use-setuptools} parameter to @code{#f}.
6116 @end defvr
6117
6118 @defvr {Scheme Variable} perl-build-system
6119 This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system perl)}. It
6120 implements the standard build procedure for Perl packages, which either
6121 consists in running @code{perl Build.PL --prefix=/gnu/store/@dots{}},
6122 followed by @code{Build} and @code{Build install}; or in running
6123 @code{perl Makefile.PL PREFIX=/gnu/store/@dots{}}, followed by
6124 @code{make} and @code{make install}, depending on which of
6125 @code{Build.PL} or @code{Makefile.PL} is present in the package
6126 distribution. Preference is given to the former if both @code{Build.PL}
6127 and @code{Makefile.PL} exist in the package distribution. This
6128 preference can be reversed by specifying @code{#t} for the
6129 @code{#:make-maker?} parameter.
6130
6131 The initial @code{perl Makefile.PL} or @code{perl Build.PL} invocation
6132 passes flags specified by the @code{#:make-maker-flags} or
6133 @code{#:module-build-flags} parameter, respectively.
6134
6135 Which Perl package is used can be specified with @code{#:perl}.
6136 @end defvr
6137
6138 @defvr {Scheme Variable} r-build-system
6139 This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system r)}. It
6140 implements the build procedure used by @uref{https://r-project.org, R}
6141 packages, which essentially is little more than running @code{R CMD
6142 INSTALL --library=/gnu/store/@dots{}} in an environment where
6143 @code{R_LIBS_SITE} contains the paths to all R package inputs. Tests
6144 are run after installation using the R function
6145 @code{tools::testInstalledPackage}.
6146 @end defvr
6147
6148 @defvr {Scheme Variable} rakudo-build-system
6149 This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system rakudo)}. It
6150 implements the build procedure used by @uref{https://rakudo.org/,
6151 Rakudo} for @uref{https://perl6.org/, Perl6} packages. It installs the
6152 package to @code{/gnu/store/@dots{}/NAME-VERSION/share/perl6} and
6153 installs the binaries, library files and the resources, as well as wrap
6154 the files under the @code{bin/} directory. Tests can be skipped by
6155 passing @code{#f} to the @code{tests?} parameter.
6156
6157 Which rakudo package is used can be specified with @code{rakudo}.
6158 Which perl6-tap-harness package used for the tests can be specified with
6159 @code{#:prove6} or removed by passing @code{#f} to the
6160 @code{with-prove6?} parameter.
6161 Which perl6-zef package used for tests and installing can be specified
6162 with @code{#:zef} or removed by passing @code{#f} to the
6163 @code{with-zef?} parameter.
6164 @end defvr
6165
6166 @defvr {Scheme Variable} texlive-build-system
6167 This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system texlive)}. It is
6168 used to build TeX packages in batch mode with a specified engine. The
6169 build system sets the @code{TEXINPUTS} variable to find all TeX source
6170 files in the inputs.
6171
6172 By default it runs @code{luatex} on all files ending on @code{ins}. A
6173 different engine and format can be specified with the
6174 @code{#:tex-format} argument. Different build targets can be specified
6175 with the @code{#:build-targets} argument, which expects a list of file
6176 names. The build system adds only @code{texlive-bin} and
6177 @code{texlive-latex-base} (both from @code{(gnu packages tex}) to the
6178 inputs. Both can be overridden with the arguments @code{#:texlive-bin}
6179 and @code{#:texlive-latex-base}, respectively.
6180
6181 The @code{#:tex-directory} parameter tells the build system where to
6182 install the built files under the texmf tree.
6183 @end defvr
6184
6185 @defvr {Scheme Variable} ruby-build-system
6186 This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system ruby)}. It
6187 implements the RubyGems build procedure used by Ruby packages, which
6188 involves running @code{gem build} followed by @code{gem install}.
6189
6190 The @code{source} field of a package that uses this build system
6191 typically references a gem archive, since this is the format that Ruby
6192 developers use when releasing their software. The build system unpacks
6193 the gem archive, potentially patches the source, runs the test suite,
6194 repackages the gem, and installs it. Additionally, directories and
6195 tarballs may be referenced to allow building unreleased gems from Git or
6196 a traditional source release tarball.
6197
6198 Which Ruby package is used can be specified with the @code{#:ruby}
6199 parameter. A list of additional flags to be passed to the @command{gem}
6200 command can be specified with the @code{#:gem-flags} parameter.
6201 @end defvr
6202
6203 @defvr {Scheme Variable} waf-build-system
6204 This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system waf)}. It
6205 implements a build procedure around the @code{waf} script. The common
6206 phases---@code{configure}, @code{build}, and @code{install}---are
6207 implemented by passing their names as arguments to the @code{waf}
6208 script.
6209
6210 The @code{waf} script is executed by the Python interpreter. Which
6211 Python package is used to run the script can be specified with the
6212 @code{#:python} parameter.
6213 @end defvr
6214
6215 @defvr {Scheme Variable} scons-build-system
6216 This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system scons)}. It
6217 implements the build procedure used by the SCons software construction
6218 tool. This build system runs @code{scons} to build the package,
6219 @code{scons test} to run tests, and then @code{scons install} to install
6220 the package.
6221
6222 Additional flags to be passed to @code{scons} can be specified with the
6223 @code{#:scons-flags} parameter. The version of Python used to run SCons
6224 can be specified by selecting the appropriate SCons package with the
6225 @code{#:scons} parameter.
6226 @end defvr
6227
6228 @defvr {Scheme Variable} haskell-build-system
6229 This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system haskell)}. It
6230 implements the Cabal build procedure used by Haskell packages, which
6231 involves running @code{runhaskell Setup.hs configure
6232 --prefix=/gnu/store/@dots{}} and @code{runhaskell Setup.hs build}.
6233 Instead of installing the package by running @code{runhaskell Setup.hs
6234 install}, to avoid trying to register libraries in the read-only
6235 compiler store directory, the build system uses @code{runhaskell
6236 Setup.hs copy}, followed by @code{runhaskell Setup.hs register}. In
6237 addition, the build system generates the package documentation by
6238 running @code{runhaskell Setup.hs haddock}, unless @code{#:haddock? #f}
6239 is passed. Optional Haddock parameters can be passed with the help of
6240 the @code{#:haddock-flags} parameter. If the file @code{Setup.hs} is
6241 not found, the build system looks for @code{Setup.lhs} instead.
6242
6243 Which Haskell compiler is used can be specified with the @code{#:haskell}
6244 parameter which defaults to @code{ghc}.
6245 @end defvr
6246
6247 @defvr {Scheme Variable} dub-build-system
6248 This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system dub)}. It
6249 implements the Dub build procedure used by D packages, which
6250 involves running @code{dub build} and @code{dub run}.
6251 Installation is done by copying the files manually.
6252
6253 Which D compiler is used can be specified with the @code{#:ldc}
6254 parameter which defaults to @code{ldc}.
6255 @end defvr
6256
6257 @defvr {Scheme Variable} emacs-build-system
6258 This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system emacs)}. It
6259 implements an installation procedure similar to the packaging system
6260 of Emacs itself (@pxref{Packages,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}).
6261
6262 It first creates the @code{@var{package}-autoloads.el} file, then it
6263 byte compiles all Emacs Lisp files. Differently from the Emacs
6264 packaging system, the Info documentation files are moved to the standard
6265 documentation directory and the @file{dir} file is deleted. Each
6266 package is installed in its own directory under
6267 @file{share/emacs/site-lisp/guix.d}.
6268 @end defvr
6269
6270 @defvr {Scheme Variable} font-build-system
6271 This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system font)}. It
6272 implements an installation procedure for font packages where upstream
6273 provides pre-compiled TrueType, OpenType, etc.@: font files that merely
6274 need to be copied into place. It copies font files to standard
6275 locations in the output directory.
6276 @end defvr
6277
6278 @defvr {Scheme Variable} meson-build-system
6279 This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system meson)}. It
6280 implements the build procedure for packages that use
6281 @url{https://mesonbuild.com, Meson} as their build system.
6282
6283 It adds both Meson and @uref{https://ninja-build.org/, Ninja} to the set
6284 of inputs, and they can be changed with the parameters @code{#:meson}
6285 and @code{#:ninja} if needed. The default Meson is
6286 @code{meson-for-build}, which is special because it doesn't clear the
6287 @code{RUNPATH} of binaries and libraries when they are installed.
6288
6289 This build system is an extension of @var{gnu-build-system}, but with the
6290 following phases changed to some specific for Meson:
6291
6292 @table @code
6293
6294 @item configure
6295 The phase runs @code{meson} with the flags specified in
6296 @code{#:configure-flags}. The flag @code{--build-type} is always set to
6297 @code{plain} unless something else is specified in @code{#:build-type}.
6298
6299 @item build
6300 The phase runs @code{ninja} to build the package in parallel by default, but
6301 this can be changed with @code{#:parallel-build?}.
6302
6303 @item check
6304 The phase runs @code{ninja} with the target specified in @code{#:test-target},
6305 which is @code{"test"} by default.
6306
6307 @item install
6308 The phase runs @code{ninja install} and can not be changed.
6309 @end table
6310
6311 Apart from that, the build system also adds the following phases:
6312
6313 @table @code
6314
6315 @item fix-runpath
6316 This phase ensures that all binaries can find the libraries they need.
6317 It searches for required libraries in subdirectories of the package being
6318 built, and adds those to @code{RUNPATH} where needed. It also removes
6319 references to libraries left over from the build phase by
6320 @code{meson-for-build}, such as test dependencies, that aren't actually
6321 required for the program to run.
6322
6323 @item glib-or-gtk-wrap
6324 This phase is the phase provided by @code{glib-or-gtk-build-system}, and it
6325 is not enabled by default. It can be enabled with @code{#:glib-or-gtk?}.
6326
6327 @item glib-or-gtk-compile-schemas
6328 This phase is the phase provided by @code{glib-or-gtk-build-system}, and it
6329 is not enabled by default. It can be enabled with @code{#:glib-or-gtk?}.
6330 @end table
6331 @end defvr
6332
6333 @defvr {Scheme Variable} linux-module-build-system
6334 @var{linux-module-build-system} allows building Linux kernel modules.
6335
6336 @cindex build phases
6337 This build system is an extension of @var{gnu-build-system}, but with the
6338 following phases changed:
6339
6340 @table @code
6341
6342 @item configure
6343 This phase configures the environment so that the Linux kernel's Makefile
6344 can be used to build the external kernel module.
6345
6346 @item build
6347 This phase uses the Linux kernel's Makefile in order to build the external
6348 kernel module.
6349
6350 @item install
6351 This phase uses the Linux kernel's Makefile in order to install the external
6352 kernel module.
6353 @end table
6354
6355 It is possible and useful to specify the Linux kernel to use for building
6356 the module (in the "arguments" form of a package using the
6357 linux-module-build-system, use the key #:linux to specify it).
6358 @end defvr
6359
6360 @defvr {Scheme Variable} node-build-system
6361 This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system node)}. It
6362 implements the build procedure used by @uref{http://nodejs.org,
6363 Node.js}, which implements an approximation of the @code{npm install}
6364 command, followed by an @code{npm test} command.
6365
6366 Which Node.js package is used to interpret the @code{npm} commands can
6367 be specified with the @code{#:node} parameter which defaults to
6368 @code{node}.
6369 @end defvr
6370
6371 Lastly, for packages that do not need anything as sophisticated, a
6372 ``trivial'' build system is provided. It is trivial in the sense that
6373 it provides basically no support: it does not pull any implicit inputs,
6374 and does not have a notion of build phases.
6375
6376 @defvr {Scheme Variable} trivial-build-system
6377 This variable is exported by @code{(guix build-system trivial)}.
6378
6379 This build system requires a @code{#:builder} argument. This argument
6380 must be a Scheme expression that builds the package output(s)---as
6381 with @code{build-expression->derivation} (@pxref{Derivations,
6382 @code{build-expression->derivation}}).
6383 @end defvr
6384
6385 @node The Store
6386 @section The Store
6387
6388 @cindex store
6389 @cindex store items
6390 @cindex store paths
6391
6392 Conceptually, the @dfn{store} is the place where derivations that have
6393 been built successfully are stored---by default, @file{/gnu/store}.
6394 Sub-directories in the store are referred to as @dfn{store items} or
6395 sometimes @dfn{store paths}. The store has an associated database that
6396 contains information such as the store paths referred to by each store
6397 path, and the list of @emph{valid} store items---results of successful
6398 builds. This database resides in @file{@var{localstatedir}/guix/db},
6399 where @var{localstatedir} is the state directory specified @i{via}
6400 @option{--localstatedir} at configure time, usually @file{/var}.
6401
6402 The store is @emph{always} accessed by the daemon on behalf of its clients
6403 (@pxref{Invoking guix-daemon}). To manipulate the store, clients
6404 connect to the daemon over a Unix-domain socket, send requests to it,
6405 and read the result---these are remote procedure calls, or RPCs.
6406
6407 @quotation Note
6408 Users must @emph{never} modify files under @file{/gnu/store} directly.
6409 This would lead to inconsistencies and break the immutability
6410 assumptions of Guix's functional model (@pxref{Introduction}).
6411
6412 @xref{Invoking guix gc, @command{guix gc --verify}}, for information on
6413 how to check the integrity of the store and attempt recovery from
6414 accidental modifications.
6415 @end quotation
6416
6417 The @code{(guix store)} module provides procedures to connect to the
6418 daemon, and to perform RPCs. These are described below. By default,
6419 @code{open-connection}, and thus all the @command{guix} commands,
6420 connect to the local daemon or to the URI specified by the
6421 @code{GUIX_DAEMON_SOCKET} environment variable.
6422
6423 @defvr {Environment Variable} GUIX_DAEMON_SOCKET
6424 When set, the value of this variable should be a file name or a URI
6425 designating the daemon endpoint. When it is a file name, it denotes a
6426 Unix-domain socket to connect to. In addition to file names, the
6427 supported URI schemes are:
6428
6429 @table @code
6430 @item file
6431 @itemx unix
6432 These are for Unix-domain sockets.
6433 @code{file:///var/guix/daemon-socket/socket} is equivalent to
6434 @file{/var/guix/daemon-socket/socket}.
6435
6436 @item guix
6437 @cindex daemon, remote access
6438 @cindex remote access to the daemon
6439 @cindex daemon, cluster setup
6440 @cindex clusters, daemon setup
6441 These URIs denote connections over TCP/IP, without encryption nor
6442 authentication of the remote host. The URI must specify the host name
6443 and optionally a port number (by default port 44146 is used):
6444
6445 @example
6446 guix://master.guix.example.org:1234
6447 @end example
6448
6449 This setup is suitable on local networks, such as clusters, where only
6450 trusted nodes may connect to the build daemon at
6451 @code{master.guix.example.org}.
6452
6453 The @code{--listen} option of @command{guix-daemon} can be used to
6454 instruct it to listen for TCP connections (@pxref{Invoking guix-daemon,
6455 @code{--listen}}).
6456
6457 @item ssh
6458 @cindex SSH access to build daemons
6459 These URIs allow you to connect to a remote daemon over
6460 SSH@footnote{This feature requires Guile-SSH (@pxref{Requirements}).}.
6461 A typical URL might look like this:
6462
6463 @example
6464 ssh://charlie@@guix.example.org:22
6465 @end example
6466
6467 As for @command{guix copy}, the usual OpenSSH client configuration files
6468 are honored (@pxref{Invoking guix copy}).
6469 @end table
6470
6471 Additional URI schemes may be supported in the future.
6472
6473 @c XXX: Remove this note when the protocol incurs fewer round trips
6474 @c and when (guix derivations) no longer relies on file system access.
6475 @quotation Note
6476 The ability to connect to remote build daemons is considered
6477 experimental as of @value{VERSION}. Please get in touch with us to
6478 share any problems or suggestions you may have (@pxref{Contributing}).
6479 @end quotation
6480 @end defvr
6481
6482 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} open-connection [@var{uri}] [#:reserve-space? #t]
6483 Connect to the daemon over the Unix-domain socket at @var{uri} (a string). When
6484 @var{reserve-space?} is true, instruct it to reserve a little bit of
6485 extra space on the file system so that the garbage collector can still
6486 operate should the disk become full. Return a server object.
6487
6488 @var{file} defaults to @code{%default-socket-path}, which is the normal
6489 location given the options that were passed to @command{configure}.
6490 @end deffn
6491
6492 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} close-connection @var{server}
6493 Close the connection to @var{server}.
6494 @end deffn
6495
6496 @defvr {Scheme Variable} current-build-output-port
6497 This variable is bound to a SRFI-39 parameter, which refers to the port
6498 where build and error logs sent by the daemon should be written.
6499 @end defvr
6500
6501 Procedures that make RPCs all take a server object as their first
6502 argument.
6503
6504 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} valid-path? @var{server} @var{path}
6505 @cindex invalid store items
6506 Return @code{#t} when @var{path} designates a valid store item and
6507 @code{#f} otherwise (an invalid item may exist on disk but still be
6508 invalid, for instance because it is the result of an aborted or failed
6509 build.)
6510
6511 A @code{&store-protocol-error} condition is raised if @var{path} is not
6512 prefixed by the store directory (@file{/gnu/store}).
6513 @end deffn
6514
6515 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} add-text-to-store @var{server} @var{name} @var{text} [@var{references}]
6516 Add @var{text} under file @var{name} in the store, and return its store
6517 path. @var{references} is the list of store paths referred to by the
6518 resulting store path.
6519 @end deffn
6520
6521 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} build-derivations @var{store} @var{derivations} @
6522 [@var{mode}]
6523 Build @var{derivations}, a list of @code{<derivation>} objects, @file{.drv}
6524 file names, or derivation/output pairs, using the specified
6525 @var{mode}---@code{(build-mode normal)} by default.
6526 @end deffn
6527
6528 Note that the @code{(guix monads)} module provides a monad as well as
6529 monadic versions of the above procedures, with the goal of making it
6530 more convenient to work with code that accesses the store (@pxref{The
6531 Store Monad}).
6532
6533 @c FIXME
6534 @i{This section is currently incomplete.}
6535
6536 @node Derivations
6537 @section Derivations
6538
6539 @cindex derivations
6540 Low-level build actions and the environment in which they are performed
6541 are represented by @dfn{derivations}. A derivation contains the
6542 following pieces of information:
6543
6544 @itemize
6545 @item
6546 The outputs of the derivation---derivations produce at least one file or
6547 directory in the store, but may produce more.
6548
6549 @item
6550 @cindex build-time dependencies
6551 @cindex dependencies, build-time
6552 The inputs of the derivations---i.e., its build-time dependencies---which may
6553 be other derivations or plain files in the store (patches, build scripts,
6554 etc.)
6555
6556 @item
6557 The system type targeted by the derivation---e.g., @code{x86_64-linux}.
6558
6559 @item
6560 The file name of a build script in the store, along with the arguments
6561 to be passed.
6562
6563 @item
6564 A list of environment variables to be defined.
6565
6566 @end itemize
6567
6568 @cindex derivation path
6569 Derivations allow clients of the daemon to communicate build actions to
6570 the store. They exist in two forms: as an in-memory representation,
6571 both on the client- and daemon-side, and as files in the store whose
6572 name end in @code{.drv}---these files are referred to as @dfn{derivation
6573 paths}. Derivations paths can be passed to the @code{build-derivations}
6574 procedure to perform the build actions they prescribe (@pxref{The
6575 Store}).
6576
6577 @cindex fixed-output derivations
6578 Operations such as file downloads and version-control checkouts for
6579 which the expected content hash is known in advance are modeled as
6580 @dfn{fixed-output derivations}. Unlike regular derivations, the outputs
6581 of a fixed-output derivation are independent of its inputs---e.g., a
6582 source code download produces the same result regardless of the download
6583 method and tools being used.
6584
6585 @cindex references
6586 @cindex run-time dependencies
6587 @cindex dependencies, run-time
6588 The outputs of derivations---i.e., the build results---have a set of
6589 @dfn{references}, as reported by the @code{references} RPC or the
6590 @command{guix gc --references} command (@pxref{Invoking guix gc}). References
6591 are the set of run-time dependencies of the build results. References are a
6592 subset of the inputs of the derivation; this subset is automatically computed
6593 by the build daemon by scanning all the files in the outputs.
6594
6595 The @code{(guix derivations)} module provides a representation of
6596 derivations as Scheme objects, along with procedures to create and
6597 otherwise manipulate derivations. The lowest-level primitive to create
6598 a derivation is the @code{derivation} procedure:
6599
6600 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} derivation @var{store} @var{name} @var{builder} @
6601 @var{args} [#:outputs '("out")] [#:hash #f] [#:hash-algo #f] @
6602 [#:recursive? #f] [#:inputs '()] [#:env-vars '()] @
6603 [#:system (%current-system)] [#:references-graphs #f] @
6604 [#:allowed-references #f] [#:disallowed-references #f] @
6605 [#:leaked-env-vars #f] [#:local-build? #f] @
6606 [#:substitutable? #t] [#:properties '()]
6607 Build a derivation with the given arguments, and return the resulting
6608 @code{<derivation>} object.
6609
6610 When @var{hash} and @var{hash-algo} are given, a
6611 @dfn{fixed-output derivation} is created---i.e., one whose result is
6612 known in advance, such as a file download. If, in addition,
6613 @var{recursive?} is true, then that fixed output may be an executable
6614 file or a directory and @var{hash} must be the hash of an archive
6615 containing this output.
6616
6617 When @var{references-graphs} is true, it must be a list of file
6618 name/store path pairs. In that case, the reference graph of each store
6619 path is exported in the build environment in the corresponding file, in
6620 a simple text format.
6621
6622 When @var{allowed-references} is true, it must be a list of store items
6623 or outputs that the derivation's output may refer to. Likewise,
6624 @var{disallowed-references}, if true, must be a list of things the
6625 outputs may @emph{not} refer to.
6626
6627 When @var{leaked-env-vars} is true, it must be a list of strings
6628 denoting environment variables that are allowed to ``leak'' from the
6629 daemon's environment to the build environment. This is only applicable
6630 to fixed-output derivations---i.e., when @var{hash} is true. The main
6631 use is to allow variables such as @code{http_proxy} to be passed to
6632 derivations that download files.
6633
6634 When @var{local-build?} is true, declare that the derivation is not a
6635 good candidate for offloading and should rather be built locally
6636 (@pxref{Daemon Offload Setup}). This is the case for small derivations
6637 where the costs of data transfers would outweigh the benefits.
6638
6639 When @var{substitutable?} is false, declare that substitutes of the
6640 derivation's output should not be used (@pxref{Substitutes}). This is
6641 useful, for instance, when building packages that capture details of the
6642 host CPU instruction set.
6643
6644 @var{properties} must be an association list describing ``properties'' of the
6645 derivation. It is kept as-is, uninterpreted, in the derivation.
6646 @end deffn
6647
6648 @noindent
6649 Here's an example with a shell script as its builder, assuming
6650 @var{store} is an open connection to the daemon, and @var{bash} points
6651 to a Bash executable in the store:
6652
6653 @lisp
6654 (use-modules (guix utils)
6655 (guix store)
6656 (guix derivations))
6657
6658 (let ((builder ; add the Bash script to the store
6659 (add-text-to-store store "my-builder.sh"
6660 "echo hello world > $out\n" '())))
6661 (derivation store "foo"
6662 bash `("-e" ,builder)
6663 #:inputs `((,bash) (,builder))
6664 #:env-vars '(("HOME" . "/homeless"))))
6665 @result{} #<derivation /gnu/store/@dots{}-foo.drv => /gnu/store/@dots{}-foo>
6666 @end lisp
6667
6668 As can be guessed, this primitive is cumbersome to use directly. A
6669 better approach is to write build scripts in Scheme, of course! The
6670 best course of action for that is to write the build code as a
6671 ``G-expression'', and to pass it to @code{gexp->derivation}. For more
6672 information, @pxref{G-Expressions}.
6673
6674 Once upon a time, @code{gexp->derivation} did not exist and constructing
6675 derivations with build code written in Scheme was achieved with
6676 @code{build-expression->derivation}, documented below. This procedure
6677 is now deprecated in favor of the much nicer @code{gexp->derivation}.
6678
6679 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} build-expression->derivation @var{store} @
6680 @var{name} @var{exp} @
6681 [#:system (%current-system)] [#:inputs '()] @
6682 [#:outputs '("out")] [#:hash #f] [#:hash-algo #f] @
6683 [#:recursive? #f] [#:env-vars '()] [#:modules '()] @
6684 [#:references-graphs #f] [#:allowed-references #f] @
6685 [#:disallowed-references #f] @
6686 [#:local-build? #f] [#:substitutable? #t] [#:guile-for-build #f]
6687 Return a derivation that executes Scheme expression @var{exp} as a
6688 builder for derivation @var{name}. @var{inputs} must be a list of
6689 @code{(name drv-path sub-drv)} tuples; when @var{sub-drv} is omitted,
6690 @code{"out"} is assumed. @var{modules} is a list of names of Guile
6691 modules from the current search path to be copied in the store,
6692 compiled, and made available in the load path during the execution of
6693 @var{exp}---e.g., @code{((guix build utils) (guix build
6694 gnu-build-system))}.
6695
6696 @var{exp} is evaluated in an environment where @code{%outputs} is bound
6697 to a list of output/path pairs, and where @code{%build-inputs} is bound
6698 to a list of string/output-path pairs made from @var{inputs}.
6699 Optionally, @var{env-vars} is a list of string pairs specifying the name
6700 and value of environment variables visible to the builder. The builder
6701 terminates by passing the result of @var{exp} to @code{exit}; thus, when
6702 @var{exp} returns @code{#f}, the build is considered to have failed.
6703
6704 @var{exp} is built using @var{guile-for-build} (a derivation). When
6705 @var{guile-for-build} is omitted or is @code{#f}, the value of the
6706 @code{%guile-for-build} fluid is used instead.
6707
6708 See the @code{derivation} procedure for the meaning of
6709 @var{references-graphs}, @var{allowed-references},
6710 @var{disallowed-references}, @var{local-build?}, and
6711 @var{substitutable?}.
6712 @end deffn
6713
6714 @noindent
6715 Here's an example of a single-output derivation that creates a directory
6716 containing one file:
6717
6718 @lisp
6719 (let ((builder '(let ((out (assoc-ref %outputs "out")))
6720 (mkdir out) ; create /gnu/store/@dots{}-goo
6721 (call-with-output-file (string-append out "/test")
6722 (lambda (p)
6723 (display '(hello guix) p))))))
6724 (build-expression->derivation store "goo" builder))
6725
6726 @result{} #<derivation /gnu/store/@dots{}-goo.drv => @dots{}>
6727 @end lisp
6728
6729
6730 @node The Store Monad
6731 @section The Store Monad
6732
6733 @cindex monad
6734
6735 The procedures that operate on the store described in the previous
6736 sections all take an open connection to the build daemon as their first
6737 argument. Although the underlying model is functional, they either have
6738 side effects or depend on the current state of the store.
6739
6740 The former is inconvenient: the connection to the build daemon has to be
6741 carried around in all those functions, making it impossible to compose
6742 functions that do not take that parameter with functions that do. The
6743 latter can be problematic: since store operations have side effects
6744 and/or depend on external state, they have to be properly sequenced.
6745
6746 @cindex monadic values
6747 @cindex monadic functions
6748 This is where the @code{(guix monads)} module comes in. This module
6749 provides a framework for working with @dfn{monads}, and a particularly
6750 useful monad for our uses, the @dfn{store monad}. Monads are a
6751 construct that allows two things: associating ``context'' with values
6752 (in our case, the context is the store), and building sequences of
6753 computations (here computations include accesses to the store). Values
6754 in a monad---values that carry this additional context---are called
6755 @dfn{monadic values}; procedures that return such values are called
6756 @dfn{monadic procedures}.
6757
6758 Consider this ``normal'' procedure:
6759
6760 @example
6761 (define (sh-symlink store)
6762 ;; Return a derivation that symlinks the 'bash' executable.
6763 (let* ((drv (package-derivation store bash))
6764 (out (derivation->output-path drv))
6765 (sh (string-append out "/bin/bash")))
6766 (build-expression->derivation store "sh"
6767 `(symlink ,sh %output))))
6768 @end example
6769
6770 Using @code{(guix monads)} and @code{(guix gexp)}, it may be rewritten
6771 as a monadic function:
6772
6773 @example
6774 (define (sh-symlink)
6775 ;; Same, but return a monadic value.
6776 (mlet %store-monad ((drv (package->derivation bash)))
6777 (gexp->derivation "sh"
6778 #~(symlink (string-append #$drv "/bin/bash")
6779 #$output))))
6780 @end example
6781
6782 There are several things to note in the second version: the @code{store}
6783 parameter is now implicit and is ``threaded'' in the calls to the
6784 @code{package->derivation} and @code{gexp->derivation} monadic
6785 procedures, and the monadic value returned by @code{package->derivation}
6786 is @dfn{bound} using @code{mlet} instead of plain @code{let}.
6787
6788 As it turns out, the call to @code{package->derivation} can even be
6789 omitted since it will take place implicitly, as we will see later
6790 (@pxref{G-Expressions}):
6791
6792 @example
6793 (define (sh-symlink)
6794 (gexp->derivation "sh"
6795 #~(symlink (string-append #$bash "/bin/bash")
6796 #$output)))
6797 @end example
6798
6799 @c See
6800 @c <https://syntaxexclamation.wordpress.com/2014/06/26/escaping-continuations/>
6801 @c for the funny quote.
6802 Calling the monadic @code{sh-symlink} has no effect. As someone once
6803 said, ``you exit a monad like you exit a building on fire: by running''.
6804 So, to exit the monad and get the desired effect, one must use
6805 @code{run-with-store}:
6806
6807 @example
6808 (run-with-store (open-connection) (sh-symlink))
6809 @result{} /gnu/store/...-sh-symlink
6810 @end example
6811
6812 Note that the @code{(guix monad-repl)} module extends the Guile REPL with
6813 new ``meta-commands'' to make it easier to deal with monadic procedures:
6814 @code{run-in-store}, and @code{enter-store-monad}. The former is used
6815 to ``run'' a single monadic value through the store:
6816
6817 @example
6818 scheme@@(guile-user)> ,run-in-store (package->derivation hello)
6819 $1 = #<derivation /gnu/store/@dots{}-hello-2.9.drv => @dots{}>
6820 @end example
6821
6822 The latter enters a recursive REPL, where all the return values are
6823 automatically run through the store:
6824
6825 @example
6826 scheme@@(guile-user)> ,enter-store-monad
6827 store-monad@@(guile-user) [1]> (package->derivation hello)
6828 $2 = #<derivation /gnu/store/@dots{}-hello-2.9.drv => @dots{}>
6829 store-monad@@(guile-user) [1]> (text-file "foo" "Hello!")
6830 $3 = "/gnu/store/@dots{}-foo"
6831 store-monad@@(guile-user) [1]> ,q
6832 scheme@@(guile-user)>
6833 @end example
6834
6835 @noindent
6836 Note that non-monadic values cannot be returned in the
6837 @code{store-monad} REPL.
6838
6839 The main syntactic forms to deal with monads in general are provided by
6840 the @code{(guix monads)} module and are described below.
6841
6842 @deffn {Scheme Syntax} with-monad @var{monad} @var{body} ...
6843 Evaluate any @code{>>=} or @code{return} forms in @var{body} as being
6844 in @var{monad}.
6845 @end deffn
6846
6847 @deffn {Scheme Syntax} return @var{val}
6848 Return a monadic value that encapsulates @var{val}.
6849 @end deffn
6850
6851 @deffn {Scheme Syntax} >>= @var{mval} @var{mproc} ...
6852 @dfn{Bind} monadic value @var{mval}, passing its ``contents'' to monadic
6853 procedures @var{mproc}@dots{}@footnote{This operation is commonly
6854 referred to as ``bind'', but that name denotes an unrelated procedure in
6855 Guile. Thus we use this somewhat cryptic symbol inherited from the
6856 Haskell language.}. There can be one @var{mproc} or several of them, as
6857 in this example:
6858
6859 @example
6860 (run-with-state
6861 (with-monad %state-monad
6862 (>>= (return 1)
6863 (lambda (x) (return (+ 1 x)))
6864 (lambda (x) (return (* 2 x)))))
6865 'some-state)
6866
6867 @result{} 4
6868 @result{} some-state
6869 @end example
6870 @end deffn
6871
6872 @deffn {Scheme Syntax} mlet @var{monad} ((@var{var} @var{mval}) ...) @
6873 @var{body} ...
6874 @deffnx {Scheme Syntax} mlet* @var{monad} ((@var{var} @var{mval}) ...) @
6875 @var{body} ...
6876 Bind the variables @var{var} to the monadic values @var{mval} in
6877 @var{body}, which is a sequence of expressions. As with the bind
6878 operator, this can be thought of as ``unpacking'' the raw, non-monadic
6879 value ``contained'' in @var{mval} and making @var{var} refer to that
6880 raw, non-monadic value within the scope of the @var{body}. The form
6881 (@var{var} -> @var{val}) binds @var{var} to the ``normal'' value
6882 @var{val}, as per @code{let}. The binding operations occur in sequence
6883 from left to right. The last expression of @var{body} must be a monadic
6884 expression, and its result will become the result of the @code{mlet} or
6885 @code{mlet*} when run in the @var{monad}.
6886
6887 @code{mlet*} is to @code{mlet} what @code{let*} is to @code{let}
6888 (@pxref{Local Bindings,,, guile, GNU Guile Reference Manual}).
6889 @end deffn
6890
6891 @deffn {Scheme System} mbegin @var{monad} @var{mexp} ...
6892 Bind @var{mexp} and the following monadic expressions in sequence,
6893 returning the result of the last expression. Every expression in the
6894 sequence must be a monadic expression.
6895
6896 This is akin to @code{mlet}, except that the return values of the
6897 monadic expressions are ignored. In that sense, it is analogous to
6898 @code{begin}, but applied to monadic expressions.
6899 @end deffn
6900
6901 @deffn {Scheme System} mwhen @var{condition} @var{mexp0} @var{mexp*} ...
6902 When @var{condition} is true, evaluate the sequence of monadic
6903 expressions @var{mexp0}..@var{mexp*} as in an @code{mbegin}. When
6904 @var{condition} is false, return @code{*unspecified*} in the current
6905 monad. Every expression in the sequence must be a monadic expression.
6906 @end deffn
6907
6908 @deffn {Scheme System} munless @var{condition} @var{mexp0} @var{mexp*} ...
6909 When @var{condition} is false, evaluate the sequence of monadic
6910 expressions @var{mexp0}..@var{mexp*} as in an @code{mbegin}. When
6911 @var{condition} is true, return @code{*unspecified*} in the current
6912 monad. Every expression in the sequence must be a monadic expression.
6913 @end deffn
6914
6915 @cindex state monad
6916 The @code{(guix monads)} module provides the @dfn{state monad}, which
6917 allows an additional value---the state---to be @emph{threaded} through
6918 monadic procedure calls.
6919
6920 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %state-monad
6921 The state monad. Procedures in the state monad can access and change
6922 the state that is threaded.
6923
6924 Consider the example below. The @code{square} procedure returns a value
6925 in the state monad. It returns the square of its argument, but also
6926 increments the current state value:
6927
6928 @example
6929 (define (square x)
6930 (mlet %state-monad ((count (current-state)))
6931 (mbegin %state-monad
6932 (set-current-state (+ 1 count))
6933 (return (* x x)))))
6934
6935 (run-with-state (sequence %state-monad (map square (iota 3))) 0)
6936 @result{} (0 1 4)
6937 @result{} 3
6938 @end example
6939
6940 When ``run'' through @var{%state-monad}, we obtain that additional state
6941 value, which is the number of @code{square} calls.
6942 @end defvr
6943
6944 @deffn {Monadic Procedure} current-state
6945 Return the current state as a monadic value.
6946 @end deffn
6947
6948 @deffn {Monadic Procedure} set-current-state @var{value}
6949 Set the current state to @var{value} and return the previous state as a
6950 monadic value.
6951 @end deffn
6952
6953 @deffn {Monadic Procedure} state-push @var{value}
6954 Push @var{value} to the current state, which is assumed to be a list,
6955 and return the previous state as a monadic value.
6956 @end deffn
6957
6958 @deffn {Monadic Procedure} state-pop
6959 Pop a value from the current state and return it as a monadic value.
6960 The state is assumed to be a list.
6961 @end deffn
6962
6963 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} run-with-state @var{mval} [@var{state}]
6964 Run monadic value @var{mval} starting with @var{state} as the initial
6965 state. Return two values: the resulting value, and the resulting state.
6966 @end deffn
6967
6968 The main interface to the store monad, provided by the @code{(guix
6969 store)} module, is as follows.
6970
6971 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %store-monad
6972 The store monad---an alias for @var{%state-monad}.
6973
6974 Values in the store monad encapsulate accesses to the store. When its
6975 effect is needed, a value of the store monad must be ``evaluated'' by
6976 passing it to the @code{run-with-store} procedure (see below.)
6977 @end defvr
6978
6979 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} run-with-store @var{store} @var{mval} [#:guile-for-build] [#:system (%current-system)]
6980 Run @var{mval}, a monadic value in the store monad, in @var{store}, an
6981 open store connection.
6982 @end deffn
6983
6984 @deffn {Monadic Procedure} text-file @var{name} @var{text} [@var{references}]
6985 Return as a monadic value the absolute file name in the store of the file
6986 containing @var{text}, a string. @var{references} is a list of store items that the
6987 resulting text file refers to; it defaults to the empty list.
6988 @end deffn
6989
6990 @deffn {Monadic Procedure} binary-file @var{name} @var{data} [@var{references}]
6991 Return as a monadic value the absolute file name in the store of the file
6992 containing @var{data}, a bytevector. @var{references} is a list of store
6993 items that the resulting binary file refers to; it defaults to the empty list.
6994 @end deffn
6995
6996 @deffn {Monadic Procedure} interned-file @var{file} [@var{name}] @
6997 [#:recursive? #t] [#:select? (const #t)]
6998 Return the name of @var{file} once interned in the store. Use
6999 @var{name} as its store name, or the basename of @var{file} if
7000 @var{name} is omitted.
7001
7002 When @var{recursive?} is true, the contents of @var{file} are added
7003 recursively; if @var{file} designates a flat file and @var{recursive?}
7004 is true, its contents are added, and its permission bits are kept.
7005
7006 When @var{recursive?} is true, call @code{(@var{select?} @var{file}
7007 @var{stat})} for each directory entry, where @var{file} is the entry's
7008 absolute file name and @var{stat} is the result of @code{lstat}; exclude
7009 entries for which @var{select?} does not return true.
7010
7011 The example below adds a file to the store, under two different names:
7012
7013 @example
7014 (run-with-store (open-connection)
7015 (mlet %store-monad ((a (interned-file "README"))
7016 (b (interned-file "README" "LEGU-MIN")))
7017 (return (list a b))))
7018
7019 @result{} ("/gnu/store/rwm@dots{}-README" "/gnu/store/44i@dots{}-LEGU-MIN")
7020 @end example
7021
7022 @end deffn
7023
7024 The @code{(guix packages)} module exports the following package-related
7025 monadic procedures:
7026
7027 @deffn {Monadic Procedure} package-file @var{package} [@var{file}] @
7028 [#:system (%current-system)] [#:target #f] @
7029 [#:output "out"]
7030 Return as a monadic
7031 value in the absolute file name of @var{file} within the @var{output}
7032 directory of @var{package}. When @var{file} is omitted, return the name
7033 of the @var{output} directory of @var{package}. When @var{target} is
7034 true, use it as a cross-compilation target triplet.
7035 @end deffn
7036
7037 @deffn {Monadic Procedure} package->derivation @var{package} [@var{system}]
7038 @deffnx {Monadic Procedure} package->cross-derivation @var{package} @
7039 @var{target} [@var{system}]
7040 Monadic version of @code{package-derivation} and
7041 @code{package-cross-derivation} (@pxref{Defining Packages}).
7042 @end deffn
7043
7044
7045 @node G-Expressions
7046 @section G-Expressions
7047
7048 @cindex G-expression
7049 @cindex build code quoting
7050 So we have ``derivations'', which represent a sequence of build actions
7051 to be performed to produce an item in the store (@pxref{Derivations}).
7052 These build actions are performed when asking the daemon to actually
7053 build the derivations; they are run by the daemon in a container
7054 (@pxref{Invoking guix-daemon}).
7055
7056 @cindex strata of code
7057 It should come as no surprise that we like to write these build actions
7058 in Scheme. When we do that, we end up with two @dfn{strata} of Scheme
7059 code@footnote{The term @dfn{stratum} in this context was coined by
7060 Manuel Serrano et al.@: in the context of their work on Hop. Oleg
7061 Kiselyov, who has written insightful
7062 @url{http://okmij.org/ftp/meta-programming/#meta-scheme, essays and code
7063 on this topic}, refers to this kind of code generation as
7064 @dfn{staging}.}: the ``host code''---code that defines packages, talks
7065 to the daemon, etc.---and the ``build code''---code that actually
7066 performs build actions, such as making directories, invoking
7067 @command{make}, etc.
7068
7069 To describe a derivation and its build actions, one typically needs to
7070 embed build code inside host code. It boils down to manipulating build
7071 code as data, and the homoiconicity of Scheme---code has a direct
7072 representation as data---comes in handy for that. But we need more than
7073 the normal @code{quasiquote} mechanism in Scheme to construct build
7074 expressions.
7075
7076 The @code{(guix gexp)} module implements @dfn{G-expressions}, a form of
7077 S-expressions adapted to build expressions. G-expressions, or
7078 @dfn{gexps}, consist essentially of three syntactic forms: @code{gexp},
7079 @code{ungexp}, and @code{ungexp-splicing} (or simply: @code{#~},
7080 @code{#$}, and @code{#$@@}), which are comparable to
7081 @code{quasiquote}, @code{unquote}, and @code{unquote-splicing},
7082 respectively (@pxref{Expression Syntax, @code{quasiquote},, guile,
7083 GNU Guile Reference Manual}). However, there are major differences:
7084
7085 @itemize
7086 @item
7087 Gexps are meant to be written to a file and run or manipulated by other
7088 processes.
7089
7090 @item
7091 When a high-level object such as a package or derivation is unquoted
7092 inside a gexp, the result is as if its output file name had been
7093 introduced.
7094
7095 @item
7096 Gexps carry information about the packages or derivations they refer to,
7097 and these dependencies are automatically added as inputs to the build
7098 processes that use them.
7099 @end itemize
7100
7101 @cindex lowering, of high-level objects in gexps
7102 This mechanism is not limited to package and derivation
7103 objects: @dfn{compilers} able to ``lower'' other high-level objects to
7104 derivations or files in the store can be defined,
7105 such that these objects can also be inserted
7106 into gexps. For example, a useful type of high-level objects that can be
7107 inserted in a gexp is ``file-like objects'', which make it easy to
7108 add files to the store and to refer to them in
7109 derivations and such (see @code{local-file} and @code{plain-file}
7110 below.)
7111
7112 To illustrate the idea, here is an example of a gexp:
7113
7114 @example
7115 (define build-exp
7116 #~(begin
7117 (mkdir #$output)
7118 (chdir #$output)
7119 (symlink (string-append #$coreutils "/bin/ls")
7120 "list-files")))
7121 @end example
7122
7123 This gexp can be passed to @code{gexp->derivation}; we obtain a
7124 derivation that builds a directory containing exactly one symlink to
7125 @file{/gnu/store/@dots{}-coreutils-8.22/bin/ls}:
7126
7127 @example
7128 (gexp->derivation "the-thing" build-exp)
7129 @end example
7130
7131 As one would expect, the @code{"/gnu/store/@dots{}-coreutils-8.22"} string is
7132 substituted to the reference to the @var{coreutils} package in the
7133 actual build code, and @var{coreutils} is automatically made an input to
7134 the derivation. Likewise, @code{#$output} (equivalent to @code{(ungexp
7135 output)}) is replaced by a string containing the directory name of the
7136 output of the derivation.
7137
7138 @cindex cross compilation
7139 In a cross-compilation context, it is useful to distinguish between
7140 references to the @emph{native} build of a package---that can run on the
7141 host---versus references to cross builds of a package. To that end, the
7142 @code{#+} plays the same role as @code{#$}, but is a reference to a
7143 native package build:
7144
7145 @example
7146 (gexp->derivation "vi"
7147 #~(begin
7148 (mkdir #$output)
7149 (system* (string-append #+coreutils "/bin/ln")
7150 "-s"
7151 (string-append #$emacs "/bin/emacs")
7152 (string-append #$output "/bin/vi")))
7153 #:target "mips64el-linux-gnu")
7154 @end example
7155
7156 @noindent
7157 In the example above, the native build of @var{coreutils} is used, so
7158 that @command{ln} can actually run on the host; but then the
7159 cross-compiled build of @var{emacs} is referenced.
7160
7161 @cindex imported modules, for gexps
7162 @findex with-imported-modules
7163 Another gexp feature is @dfn{imported modules}: sometimes you want to be
7164 able to use certain Guile modules from the ``host environment'' in the
7165 gexp, so those modules should be imported in the ``build environment''.
7166 The @code{with-imported-modules} form allows you to express that:
7167
7168 @example
7169 (let ((build (with-imported-modules '((guix build utils))
7170 #~(begin
7171 (use-modules (guix build utils))
7172 (mkdir-p (string-append #$output "/bin"))))))
7173 (gexp->derivation "empty-dir"
7174 #~(begin
7175 #$build
7176 (display "success!\n")
7177 #t)))
7178 @end example
7179
7180 @noindent
7181 In this example, the @code{(guix build utils)} module is automatically
7182 pulled into the isolated build environment of our gexp, such that
7183 @code{(use-modules (guix build utils))} works as expected.
7184
7185 @cindex module closure
7186 @findex source-module-closure
7187 Usually you want the @emph{closure} of the module to be imported---i.e.,
7188 the module itself and all the modules it depends on---rather than just
7189 the module; failing to do that, attempts to use the module will fail
7190 because of missing dependent modules. The @code{source-module-closure}
7191 procedure computes the closure of a module by looking at its source file
7192 headers, which comes in handy in this case:
7193
7194 @example
7195 (use-modules (guix modules)) ;for 'source-module-closure'
7196
7197 (with-imported-modules (source-module-closure
7198 '((guix build utils)
7199 (gnu build vm)))
7200 (gexp->derivation "something-with-vms"
7201 #~(begin
7202 (use-modules (guix build utils)
7203 (gnu build vm))
7204 @dots{})))
7205 @end example
7206
7207 @cindex extensions, for gexps
7208 @findex with-extensions
7209 In the same vein, sometimes you want to import not just pure-Scheme
7210 modules, but also ``extensions'' such as Guile bindings to C libraries
7211 or other ``full-blown'' packages. Say you need the @code{guile-json}
7212 package available on the build side, here's how you would do it:
7213
7214 @example
7215 (use-modules (gnu packages guile)) ;for 'guile-json'
7216
7217 (with-extensions (list guile-json)
7218 (gexp->derivation "something-with-json"
7219 #~(begin
7220 (use-modules (json))
7221 @dots{})))
7222 @end example
7223
7224 The syntactic form to construct gexps is summarized below.
7225
7226 @deffn {Scheme Syntax} #~@var{exp}
7227 @deffnx {Scheme Syntax} (gexp @var{exp})
7228 Return a G-expression containing @var{exp}. @var{exp} may contain one
7229 or more of the following forms:
7230
7231 @table @code
7232 @item #$@var{obj}
7233 @itemx (ungexp @var{obj})
7234 Introduce a reference to @var{obj}. @var{obj} may have one of the
7235 supported types, for example a package or a
7236 derivation, in which case the @code{ungexp} form is replaced by its
7237 output file name---e.g., @code{"/gnu/store/@dots{}-coreutils-8.22}.
7238
7239 If @var{obj} is a list, it is traversed and references to supported
7240 objects are substituted similarly.
7241
7242 If @var{obj} is another gexp, its contents are inserted and its
7243 dependencies are added to those of the containing gexp.
7244
7245 If @var{obj} is another kind of object, it is inserted as is.
7246
7247 @item #$@var{obj}:@var{output}
7248 @itemx (ungexp @var{obj} @var{output})
7249 This is like the form above, but referring explicitly to the
7250 @var{output} of @var{obj}---this is useful when @var{obj} produces
7251 multiple outputs (@pxref{Packages with Multiple Outputs}).
7252
7253 @item #+@var{obj}
7254 @itemx #+@var{obj}:output
7255 @itemx (ungexp-native @var{obj})
7256 @itemx (ungexp-native @var{obj} @var{output})
7257 Same as @code{ungexp}, but produces a reference to the @emph{native}
7258 build of @var{obj} when used in a cross compilation context.
7259
7260 @item #$output[:@var{output}]
7261 @itemx (ungexp output [@var{output}])
7262 Insert a reference to derivation output @var{output}, or to the main
7263 output when @var{output} is omitted.
7264
7265 This only makes sense for gexps passed to @code{gexp->derivation}.
7266
7267 @item #$@@@var{lst}
7268 @itemx (ungexp-splicing @var{lst})
7269 Like the above, but splices the contents of @var{lst} inside the
7270 containing list.
7271
7272 @item #+@@@var{lst}
7273 @itemx (ungexp-native-splicing @var{lst})
7274 Like the above, but refers to native builds of the objects listed in
7275 @var{lst}.
7276
7277 @end table
7278
7279 G-expressions created by @code{gexp} or @code{#~} are run-time objects
7280 of the @code{gexp?} type (see below.)
7281 @end deffn
7282
7283 @deffn {Scheme Syntax} with-imported-modules @var{modules} @var{body}@dots{}
7284 Mark the gexps defined in @var{body}@dots{} as requiring @var{modules}
7285 in their execution environment.
7286
7287 Each item in @var{modules} can be the name of a module, such as
7288 @code{(guix build utils)}, or it can be a module name, followed by an
7289 arrow, followed by a file-like object:
7290
7291 @example
7292 `((guix build utils)
7293 (guix gcrypt)
7294 ((guix config) => ,(scheme-file "config.scm"
7295 #~(define-module @dots{}))))
7296 @end example
7297
7298 @noindent
7299 In the example above, the first two modules are taken from the search
7300 path, and the last one is created from the given file-like object.
7301
7302 This form has @emph{lexical} scope: it has an effect on the gexps
7303 directly defined in @var{body}@dots{}, but not on those defined, say, in
7304 procedures called from @var{body}@dots{}.
7305 @end deffn
7306
7307 @deffn {Scheme Syntax} with-extensions @var{extensions} @var{body}@dots{}
7308 Mark the gexps defined in @var{body}@dots{} as requiring
7309 @var{extensions} in their build and execution environment.
7310 @var{extensions} is typically a list of package objects such as those
7311 defined in the @code{(gnu packages guile)} module.
7312
7313 Concretely, the packages listed in @var{extensions} are added to the
7314 load path while compiling imported modules in @var{body}@dots{}; they
7315 are also added to the load path of the gexp returned by
7316 @var{body}@dots{}.
7317 @end deffn
7318
7319 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} gexp? @var{obj}
7320 Return @code{#t} if @var{obj} is a G-expression.
7321 @end deffn
7322
7323 G-expressions are meant to be written to disk, either as code building
7324 some derivation, or as plain files in the store. The monadic procedures
7325 below allow you to do that (@pxref{The Store Monad}, for more
7326 information about monads.)
7327
7328 @deffn {Monadic Procedure} gexp->derivation @var{name} @var{exp} @
7329 [#:system (%current-system)] [#:target #f] [#:graft? #t] @
7330 [#:hash #f] [#:hash-algo #f] @
7331 [#:recursive? #f] [#:env-vars '()] [#:modules '()] @
7332 [#:module-path @var{%load-path}] @
7333 [#:effective-version "2.2"] @
7334 [#:references-graphs #f] [#:allowed-references #f] @
7335 [#:disallowed-references #f] @
7336 [#:leaked-env-vars #f] @
7337 [#:script-name (string-append @var{name} "-builder")] @
7338 [#:deprecation-warnings #f] @
7339 [#:local-build? #f] [#:substitutable? #t] @
7340 [#:properties '()] [#:guile-for-build #f]
7341 Return a derivation @var{name} that runs @var{exp} (a gexp) with
7342 @var{guile-for-build} (a derivation) on @var{system}; @var{exp} is
7343 stored in a file called @var{script-name}. When @var{target} is true,
7344 it is used as the cross-compilation target triplet for packages referred
7345 to by @var{exp}.
7346
7347 @var{modules} is deprecated in favor of @code{with-imported-modules}.
7348 Its meaning is to
7349 make @var{modules} available in the evaluation context of @var{exp};
7350 @var{modules} is a list of names of Guile modules searched in
7351 @var{module-path} to be copied in the store, compiled, and made available in
7352 the load path during the execution of @var{exp}---e.g., @code{((guix
7353 build utils) (guix build gnu-build-system))}.
7354
7355 @var{effective-version} determines the string to use when adding extensions of
7356 @var{exp} (see @code{with-extensions}) to the search path---e.g., @code{"2.2"}.
7357
7358 @var{graft?} determines whether packages referred to by @var{exp} should be grafted when
7359 applicable.
7360
7361 When @var{references-graphs} is true, it must be a list of tuples of one of the
7362 following forms:
7363
7364 @example
7365 (@var{file-name} @var{package})
7366 (@var{file-name} @var{package} @var{output})
7367 (@var{file-name} @var{derivation})
7368 (@var{file-name} @var{derivation} @var{output})
7369 (@var{file-name} @var{store-item})
7370 @end example
7371
7372 The right-hand-side of each element of @var{references-graphs} is automatically made
7373 an input of the build process of @var{exp}. In the build environment, each
7374 @var{file-name} contains the reference graph of the corresponding item, in a simple
7375 text format.
7376
7377 @var{allowed-references} must be either @code{#f} or a list of output names and packages.
7378 In the latter case, the list denotes store items that the result is allowed to
7379 refer to. Any reference to another store item will lead to a build error.
7380 Similarly for @var{disallowed-references}, which can list items that must not be
7381 referenced by the outputs.
7382
7383 @var{deprecation-warnings} determines whether to show deprecation warnings while
7384 compiling modules. It can be @code{#f}, @code{#t}, or @code{'detailed}.
7385
7386 The other arguments are as for @code{derivation} (@pxref{Derivations}).
7387 @end deffn
7388
7389 @cindex file-like objects
7390 The @code{local-file}, @code{plain-file}, @code{computed-file},
7391 @code{program-file}, and @code{scheme-file} procedures below return
7392 @dfn{file-like objects}. That is, when unquoted in a G-expression,
7393 these objects lead to a file in the store. Consider this G-expression:
7394
7395 @example
7396 #~(system* #$(file-append glibc "/sbin/nscd") "-f"
7397 #$(local-file "/tmp/my-nscd.conf"))
7398 @end example
7399
7400 The effect here is to ``intern'' @file{/tmp/my-nscd.conf} by copying it
7401 to the store. Once expanded, for instance @i{via}
7402 @code{gexp->derivation}, the G-expression refers to that copy under
7403 @file{/gnu/store}; thus, modifying or removing the file in @file{/tmp}
7404 does not have any effect on what the G-expression does.
7405 @code{plain-file} can be used similarly; it differs in that the file
7406 content is directly passed as a string.
7407
7408 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} local-file @var{file} [@var{name}] @
7409 [#:recursive? #f] [#:select? (const #t)]
7410 Return an object representing local file @var{file} to add to the store; this
7411 object can be used in a gexp. If @var{file} is a relative file name, it is looked
7412 up relative to the source file where this form appears. @var{file} will be added to
7413 the store under @var{name}--by default the base name of @var{file}.
7414
7415 When @var{recursive?} is true, the contents of @var{file} are added recursively; if @var{file}
7416 designates a flat file and @var{recursive?} is true, its contents are added, and its
7417 permission bits are kept.
7418
7419 When @var{recursive?} is true, call @code{(@var{select?} @var{file}
7420 @var{stat})} for each directory entry, where @var{file} is the entry's
7421 absolute file name and @var{stat} is the result of @code{lstat}; exclude
7422 entries for which @var{select?} does not return true.
7423
7424 This is the declarative counterpart of the @code{interned-file} monadic
7425 procedure (@pxref{The Store Monad, @code{interned-file}}).
7426 @end deffn
7427
7428 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} plain-file @var{name} @var{content}
7429 Return an object representing a text file called @var{name} with the given
7430 @var{content} (a string or a bytevector) to be added to the store.
7431
7432 This is the declarative counterpart of @code{text-file}.
7433 @end deffn
7434
7435 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} computed-file @var{name} @var{gexp} @
7436 [#:options '(#:local-build? #t)]
7437 Return an object representing the store item @var{name}, a file or
7438 directory computed by @var{gexp}. @var{options}
7439 is a list of additional arguments to pass to @code{gexp->derivation}.
7440
7441 This is the declarative counterpart of @code{gexp->derivation}.
7442 @end deffn
7443
7444 @deffn {Monadic Procedure} gexp->script @var{name} @var{exp} @
7445 [#:guile (default-guile)] [#:module-path %load-path] @
7446 [#:system (%current-system)] [#:target #f]
7447 Return an executable script @var{name} that runs @var{exp} using
7448 @var{guile}, with @var{exp}'s imported modules in its search path.
7449 Look up @var{exp}'s modules in @var{module-path}.
7450
7451 The example below builds a script that simply invokes the @command{ls}
7452 command:
7453
7454 @example
7455 (use-modules (guix gexp) (gnu packages base))
7456
7457 (gexp->script "list-files"
7458 #~(execl #$(file-append coreutils "/bin/ls")
7459 "ls"))
7460 @end example
7461
7462 When ``running'' it through the store (@pxref{The Store Monad,
7463 @code{run-with-store}}), we obtain a derivation that produces an
7464 executable file @file{/gnu/store/@dots{}-list-files} along these lines:
7465
7466 @example
7467 #!/gnu/store/@dots{}-guile-2.0.11/bin/guile -ds
7468 !#
7469 (execl "/gnu/store/@dots{}-coreutils-8.22"/bin/ls" "ls")
7470 @end example
7471 @end deffn
7472
7473 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} program-file @var{name} @var{exp} @
7474 [#:guile #f] [#:module-path %load-path]
7475 Return an object representing the executable store item @var{name} that
7476 runs @var{gexp}. @var{guile} is the Guile package used to execute that
7477 script. Imported modules of @var{gexp} are looked up in @var{module-path}.
7478
7479 This is the declarative counterpart of @code{gexp->script}.
7480 @end deffn
7481
7482 @deffn {Monadic Procedure} gexp->file @var{name} @var{exp} @
7483 [#:set-load-path? #t] [#:module-path %load-path] @
7484 [#:splice? #f] @
7485 [#:guile (default-guile)]
7486 Return a derivation that builds a file @var{name} containing @var{exp}.
7487 When @var{splice?} is true, @var{exp} is considered to be a list of
7488 expressions that will be spliced in the resulting file.
7489
7490 When @var{set-load-path?} is true, emit code in the resulting file to
7491 set @code{%load-path} and @code{%load-compiled-path} to honor
7492 @var{exp}'s imported modules. Look up @var{exp}'s modules in
7493 @var{module-path}.
7494
7495 The resulting file holds references to all the dependencies of @var{exp}
7496 or a subset thereof.
7497 @end deffn
7498
7499 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} scheme-file @var{name} @var{exp} [#:splice? #f]
7500 Return an object representing the Scheme file @var{name} that contains
7501 @var{exp}.
7502
7503 This is the declarative counterpart of @code{gexp->file}.
7504 @end deffn
7505
7506 @deffn {Monadic Procedure} text-file* @var{name} @var{text} @dots{}
7507 Return as a monadic value a derivation that builds a text file
7508 containing all of @var{text}. @var{text} may list, in addition to
7509 strings, objects of any type that can be used in a gexp: packages,
7510 derivations, local file objects, etc. The resulting store file holds
7511 references to all these.
7512
7513 This variant should be preferred over @code{text-file} anytime the file
7514 to create will reference items from the store. This is typically the
7515 case when building a configuration file that embeds store file names,
7516 like this:
7517
7518 @example
7519 (define (profile.sh)
7520 ;; Return the name of a shell script in the store that
7521 ;; initializes the 'PATH' environment variable.
7522 (text-file* "profile.sh"
7523 "export PATH=" coreutils "/bin:"
7524 grep "/bin:" sed "/bin\n"))
7525 @end example
7526
7527 In this example, the resulting @file{/gnu/store/@dots{}-profile.sh} file
7528 will reference @var{coreutils}, @var{grep}, and @var{sed}, thereby
7529 preventing them from being garbage-collected during its lifetime.
7530 @end deffn
7531
7532 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} mixed-text-file @var{name} @var{text} @dots{}
7533 Return an object representing store file @var{name} containing
7534 @var{text}. @var{text} is a sequence of strings and file-like objects,
7535 as in:
7536
7537 @example
7538 (mixed-text-file "profile"
7539 "export PATH=" coreutils "/bin:" grep "/bin")
7540 @end example
7541
7542 This is the declarative counterpart of @code{text-file*}.
7543 @end deffn
7544
7545 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} file-union @var{name} @var{files}
7546 Return a @code{<computed-file>} that builds a directory containing all of @var{files}.
7547 Each item in @var{files} must be a two-element list where the first element is the
7548 file name to use in the new directory, and the second element is a gexp
7549 denoting the target file. Here's an example:
7550
7551 @example
7552 (file-union "etc"
7553 `(("hosts" ,(plain-file "hosts"
7554 "127.0.0.1 localhost"))
7555 ("bashrc" ,(plain-file "bashrc"
7556 "alias ls='ls --color=auto'"))))
7557 @end example
7558
7559 This yields an @code{etc} directory containing these two files.
7560 @end deffn
7561
7562 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} directory-union @var{name} @var{things}
7563 Return a directory that is the union of @var{things}, where @var{things} is a list of
7564 file-like objects denoting directories. For example:
7565
7566 @example
7567 (directory-union "guile+emacs" (list guile emacs))
7568 @end example
7569
7570 yields a directory that is the union of the @code{guile} and @code{emacs} packages.
7571 @end deffn
7572
7573 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} file-append @var{obj} @var{suffix} @dots{}
7574 Return a file-like object that expands to the concatenation of @var{obj}
7575 and @var{suffix}, where @var{obj} is a lowerable object and each
7576 @var{suffix} is a string.
7577
7578 As an example, consider this gexp:
7579
7580 @example
7581 (gexp->script "run-uname"
7582 #~(system* #$(file-append coreutils
7583 "/bin/uname")))
7584 @end example
7585
7586 The same effect could be achieved with:
7587
7588 @example
7589 (gexp->script "run-uname"
7590 #~(system* (string-append #$coreutils
7591 "/bin/uname")))
7592 @end example
7593
7594 There is one difference though: in the @code{file-append} case, the
7595 resulting script contains the absolute file name as a string, whereas in
7596 the second case, the resulting script contains a @code{(string-append
7597 @dots{})} expression to construct the file name @emph{at run time}.
7598 @end deffn
7599
7600
7601 Of course, in addition to gexps embedded in ``host'' code, there are
7602 also modules containing build tools. To make it clear that they are
7603 meant to be used in the build stratum, these modules are kept in the
7604 @code{(guix build @dots{})} name space.
7605
7606 @cindex lowering, of high-level objects in gexps
7607 Internally, high-level objects are @dfn{lowered}, using their compiler,
7608 to either derivations or store items. For instance, lowering a package
7609 yields a derivation, and lowering a @code{plain-file} yields a store
7610 item. This is achieved using the @code{lower-object} monadic procedure.
7611
7612 @deffn {Monadic Procedure} lower-object @var{obj} [@var{system}] @
7613 [#:target #f]
7614 Return as a value in @var{%store-monad} the derivation or store item
7615 corresponding to @var{obj} for @var{system}, cross-compiling for
7616 @var{target} if @var{target} is true. @var{obj} must be an object that
7617 has an associated gexp compiler, such as a @code{<package>}.
7618 @end deffn
7619
7620 @node Invoking guix repl
7621 @section Invoking @command{guix repl}
7622
7623 @cindex REPL, read-eval-print loop
7624 The @command{guix repl} command spawns a Guile @dfn{read-eval-print loop}
7625 (REPL) for interactive programming (@pxref{Using Guile Interactively,,, guile,
7626 GNU Guile Reference Manual}). Compared to just launching the @command{guile}
7627 command, @command{guix repl} guarantees that all the Guix modules and all its
7628 dependencies are available in the search path. You can use it this way:
7629
7630 @example
7631 $ guix repl
7632 scheme@@(guile-user)> ,use (gnu packages base)
7633 scheme@@(guile-user)> coreutils
7634 $1 = #<package coreutils@@8.29 gnu/packages/base.scm:327 3e28300>
7635 @end example
7636
7637 @cindex inferiors
7638 In addition, @command{guix repl} implements a simple machine-readable REPL
7639 protocol for use by @code{(guix inferior)}, a facility to interact with
7640 @dfn{inferiors}, separate processes running a potentially different revision
7641 of Guix.
7642
7643 The available options are as follows:
7644
7645 @table @code
7646 @item --type=@var{type}
7647 @itemx -t @var{type}
7648 Start a REPL of the given @var{TYPE}, which can be one of the following:
7649
7650 @table @code
7651 @item guile
7652 This is default, and it spawns a standard full-featured Guile REPL.
7653 @item machine
7654 Spawn a REPL that uses the machine-readable protocol. This is the protocol
7655 that the @code{(guix inferior)} module speaks.
7656 @end table
7657
7658 @item --listen=@var{endpoint}
7659 By default, @command{guix repl} reads from standard input and writes to
7660 standard output. When this option is passed, it will instead listen for
7661 connections on @var{endpoint}. Here are examples of valid options:
7662
7663 @table @code
7664 @item --listen=tcp:37146
7665 Accept connections on localhost on port 37146.
7666
7667 @item --listen=unix:/tmp/socket
7668 Accept connections on the Unix-domain socket @file{/tmp/socket}.
7669 @end table
7670 @end table
7671
7672 @c *********************************************************************
7673 @node Utilities
7674 @chapter Utilities
7675
7676 This section describes Guix command-line utilities. Some of them are
7677 primarily targeted at developers and users who write new package
7678 definitions, while others are more generally useful. They complement
7679 the Scheme programming interface of Guix in a convenient way.
7680
7681 @menu
7682 * Invoking guix build:: Building packages from the command line.
7683 * Invoking guix edit:: Editing package definitions.
7684 * Invoking guix download:: Downloading a file and printing its hash.
7685 * Invoking guix hash:: Computing the cryptographic hash of a file.
7686 * Invoking guix import:: Importing package definitions.
7687 * Invoking guix refresh:: Updating package definitions.
7688 * Invoking guix lint:: Finding errors in package definitions.
7689 * Invoking guix size:: Profiling disk usage.
7690 * Invoking guix graph:: Visualizing the graph of packages.
7691 * Invoking guix publish:: Sharing substitutes.
7692 * Invoking guix challenge:: Challenging substitute servers.
7693 * Invoking guix copy:: Copying to and from a remote store.
7694 * Invoking guix container:: Process isolation.
7695 * Invoking guix weather:: Assessing substitute availability.
7696 * Invoking guix processes:: Listing client processes.
7697 @end menu
7698
7699 @node Invoking guix build
7700 @section Invoking @command{guix build}
7701
7702 @cindex package building
7703 @cindex @command{guix build}
7704 The @command{guix build} command builds packages or derivations and
7705 their dependencies, and prints the resulting store paths. Note that it
7706 does not modify the user's profile---this is the job of the
7707 @command{guix package} command (@pxref{Invoking guix package}). Thus,
7708 it is mainly useful for distribution developers.
7709
7710 The general syntax is:
7711
7712 @example
7713 guix build @var{options} @var{package-or-derivation}@dots{}
7714 @end example
7715
7716 As an example, the following command builds the latest versions of Emacs
7717 and of Guile, displays their build logs, and finally displays the
7718 resulting directories:
7719
7720 @example
7721 guix build emacs guile
7722 @end example
7723
7724 Similarly, the following command builds all the available packages:
7725
7726 @example
7727 guix build --quiet --keep-going \
7728 `guix package -A | cut -f1,2 --output-delimiter=@@`
7729 @end example
7730
7731 @var{package-or-derivation} may be either the name of a package found in
7732 the software distribution such as @code{coreutils} or
7733 @code{coreutils@@8.20}, or a derivation such as
7734 @file{/gnu/store/@dots{}-coreutils-8.19.drv}. In the former case, a
7735 package with the corresponding name (and optionally version) is searched
7736 for among the GNU distribution modules (@pxref{Package Modules}).
7737
7738 Alternatively, the @code{--expression} option may be used to specify a
7739 Scheme expression that evaluates to a package; this is useful when
7740 disambiguating among several same-named packages or package variants is
7741 needed.
7742
7743 There may be zero or more @var{options}. The available options are
7744 described in the subsections below.
7745
7746 @menu
7747 * Common Build Options:: Build options for most commands.
7748 * Package Transformation Options:: Creating variants of packages.
7749 * Additional Build Options:: Options specific to 'guix build'.
7750 * Debugging Build Failures:: Real life packaging experience.
7751 @end menu
7752
7753 @node Common Build Options
7754 @subsection Common Build Options
7755
7756 A number of options that control the build process are common to
7757 @command{guix build} and other commands that can spawn builds, such as
7758 @command{guix package} or @command{guix archive}. These are the
7759 following:
7760
7761 @table @code
7762
7763 @item --load-path=@var{directory}
7764 @itemx -L @var{directory}
7765 Add @var{directory} to the front of the package module search path
7766 (@pxref{Package Modules}).
7767
7768 This allows users to define their own packages and make them visible to
7769 the command-line tools.
7770
7771 @item --keep-failed
7772 @itemx -K
7773 Keep the build tree of failed builds. Thus, if a build fails, its build
7774 tree is kept under @file{/tmp}, in a directory whose name is shown at
7775 the end of the build log. This is useful when debugging build issues.
7776 @xref{Debugging Build Failures}, for tips and tricks on how to debug
7777 build issues.
7778
7779 This option has no effect when connecting to a remote daemon with a
7780 @code{guix://} URI (@pxref{The Store, the @code{GUIX_DAEMON_SOCKET}
7781 variable}).
7782
7783 @item --keep-going
7784 @itemx -k
7785 Keep going when some of the derivations fail to build; return only once
7786 all the builds have either completed or failed.
7787
7788 The default behavior is to stop as soon as one of the specified
7789 derivations has failed.
7790
7791 @item --dry-run
7792 @itemx -n
7793 Do not build the derivations.
7794
7795 @anchor{fallback-option}
7796 @item --fallback
7797 When substituting a pre-built binary fails, fall back to building
7798 packages locally (@pxref{Substitution Failure}).
7799
7800 @item --substitute-urls=@var{urls}
7801 @anchor{client-substitute-urls}
7802 Consider @var{urls} the whitespace-separated list of substitute source
7803 URLs, overriding the default list of URLs of @command{guix-daemon}
7804 (@pxref{daemon-substitute-urls,, @command{guix-daemon} URLs}).
7805
7806 This means that substitutes may be downloaded from @var{urls}, provided
7807 they are signed by a key authorized by the system administrator
7808 (@pxref{Substitutes}).
7809
7810 When @var{urls} is the empty string, substitutes are effectively
7811 disabled.
7812
7813 @item --no-substitutes
7814 Do not use substitutes for build products. That is, always build things
7815 locally instead of allowing downloads of pre-built binaries
7816 (@pxref{Substitutes}).
7817
7818 @item --no-grafts
7819 Do not ``graft'' packages. In practice, this means that package updates
7820 available as grafts are not applied. @xref{Security Updates}, for more
7821 information on grafts.
7822
7823 @item --rounds=@var{n}
7824 Build each derivation @var{n} times in a row, and raise an error if
7825 consecutive build results are not bit-for-bit identical.
7826
7827 This is a useful way to detect non-deterministic builds processes.
7828 Non-deterministic build processes are a problem because they make it
7829 practically impossible for users to @emph{verify} whether third-party
7830 binaries are genuine. @xref{Invoking guix challenge}, for more.
7831
7832 Note that, currently, the differing build results are not kept around,
7833 so you will have to manually investigate in case of an error---e.g., by
7834 stashing one of the build results with @code{guix archive --export}
7835 (@pxref{Invoking guix archive}), then rebuilding, and finally comparing
7836 the two results.
7837
7838 @item --no-build-hook
7839 Do not attempt to offload builds @i{via} the ``build hook'' of the daemon
7840 (@pxref{Daemon Offload Setup}). That is, always build things locally
7841 instead of offloading builds to remote machines.
7842
7843 @item --max-silent-time=@var{seconds}
7844 When the build or substitution process remains silent for more than
7845 @var{seconds}, terminate it and report a build failure.
7846
7847 By default, the daemon's setting is honored (@pxref{Invoking
7848 guix-daemon, @code{--max-silent-time}}).
7849
7850 @item --timeout=@var{seconds}
7851 Likewise, when the build or substitution process lasts for more than
7852 @var{seconds}, terminate it and report a build failure.
7853
7854 By default, the daemon's setting is honored (@pxref{Invoking
7855 guix-daemon, @code{--timeout}}).
7856
7857 @c Note: This option is actually not part of %standard-build-options but
7858 @c most programs honor it.
7859 @cindex verbosity, of the command-line tools
7860 @cindex build logs, verbosity
7861 @item -v @var{level}
7862 @itemx --verbosity=@var{level}
7863 Use the given verbosity @var{level}, an integer. Choosing 0 means that no
7864 output is produced, 1 is for quiet output, and 2 shows all the build log
7865 output on standard error.
7866
7867 @item --cores=@var{n}
7868 @itemx -c @var{n}
7869 Allow the use of up to @var{n} CPU cores for the build. The special
7870 value @code{0} means to use as many CPU cores as available.
7871
7872 @item --max-jobs=@var{n}
7873 @itemx -M @var{n}
7874 Allow at most @var{n} build jobs in parallel. @xref{Invoking
7875 guix-daemon, @code{--max-jobs}}, for details about this option and the
7876 equivalent @command{guix-daemon} option.
7877
7878 @item --debug=@var{level}
7879 Produce debugging output coming from the build daemon. @var{level} must be an
7880 integer between 0 and 5; higher means more verbose output. Setting a level of
7881 4 or more may be helpful when debugging setup issues with the build daemon.
7882
7883 @end table
7884
7885 Behind the scenes, @command{guix build} is essentially an interface to
7886 the @code{package-derivation} procedure of the @code{(guix packages)}
7887 module, and to the @code{build-derivations} procedure of the @code{(guix
7888 derivations)} module.
7889
7890 In addition to options explicitly passed on the command line,
7891 @command{guix build} and other @command{guix} commands that support
7892 building honor the @code{GUIX_BUILD_OPTIONS} environment variable.
7893
7894 @defvr {Environment Variable} GUIX_BUILD_OPTIONS
7895 Users can define this variable to a list of command line options that
7896 will automatically be used by @command{guix build} and other
7897 @command{guix} commands that can perform builds, as in the example
7898 below:
7899
7900 @example
7901 $ export GUIX_BUILD_OPTIONS="--no-substitutes -c 2 -L /foo/bar"
7902 @end example
7903
7904 These options are parsed independently, and the result is appended to
7905 the parsed command-line options.
7906 @end defvr
7907
7908
7909 @node Package Transformation Options
7910 @subsection Package Transformation Options
7911
7912 @cindex package variants
7913 Another set of command-line options supported by @command{guix build}
7914 and also @command{guix package} are @dfn{package transformation
7915 options}. These are options that make it possible to define @dfn{package
7916 variants}---for instance, packages built from different source code.
7917 This is a convenient way to create customized packages on the fly
7918 without having to type in the definitions of package variants
7919 (@pxref{Defining Packages}).
7920
7921 @table @code
7922
7923 @item --with-source=@var{source}
7924 @itemx --with-source=@var{package}=@var{source}
7925 @itemx --with-source=@var{package}@@@var{version}=@var{source}
7926 Use @var{source} as the source of @var{package}, and @var{version} as
7927 its version number.
7928 @var{source} must be a file name or a URL, as for @command{guix
7929 download} (@pxref{Invoking guix download}).
7930
7931 When @var{package} is omitted,
7932 it is taken to be the package name specified on the
7933 command line that matches the base of @var{source}---e.g.,
7934 if @var{source} is @code{/src/guile-2.0.10.tar.gz}, the corresponding
7935 package is @code{guile}.
7936
7937 Likewise, when @var{version} is omitted, the version string is inferred from
7938 @var{source}; in the previous example, it is @code{2.0.10}.
7939
7940 This option allows users to try out versions of packages other than the
7941 one provided by the distribution. The example below downloads
7942 @file{ed-1.7.tar.gz} from a GNU mirror and uses that as the source for
7943 the @code{ed} package:
7944
7945 @example
7946 guix build ed --with-source=mirror://gnu/ed/ed-1.7.tar.gz
7947 @end example
7948
7949 As a developer, @code{--with-source} makes it easy to test release
7950 candidates:
7951
7952 @example
7953 guix build guile --with-source=../guile-2.0.9.219-e1bb7.tar.xz
7954 @end example
7955
7956 @dots{} or to build from a checkout in a pristine environment:
7957
7958 @example
7959 $ git clone git://git.sv.gnu.org/guix.git
7960 $ guix build guix --with-source=guix@@1.0=./guix
7961 @end example
7962
7963 @item --with-input=@var{package}=@var{replacement}
7964 Replace dependency on @var{package} by a dependency on
7965 @var{replacement}. @var{package} must be a package name, and
7966 @var{replacement} must be a package specification such as @code{guile}
7967 or @code{guile@@1.8}.
7968
7969 For instance, the following command builds Guix, but replaces its
7970 dependency on the current stable version of Guile with a dependency on
7971 the legacy version of Guile, @code{guile@@2.0}:
7972
7973 @example
7974 guix build --with-input=guile=guile@@2.0 guix
7975 @end example
7976
7977 This is a recursive, deep replacement. So in this example, both
7978 @code{guix} and its dependency @code{guile-json} (which also depends on
7979 @code{guile}) get rebuilt against @code{guile@@2.0}.
7980
7981 This is implemented using the @code{package-input-rewriting} Scheme
7982 procedure (@pxref{Defining Packages, @code{package-input-rewriting}}).
7983
7984 @item --with-graft=@var{package}=@var{replacement}
7985 This is similar to @code{--with-input} but with an important difference:
7986 instead of rebuilding the whole dependency chain, @var{replacement} is
7987 built and then @dfn{grafted} onto the binaries that were initially
7988 referring to @var{package}. @xref{Security Updates}, for more
7989 information on grafts.
7990
7991 For example, the command below grafts version 3.5.4 of GnuTLS onto Wget
7992 and all its dependencies, replacing references to the version of GnuTLS
7993 they currently refer to:
7994
7995 @example
7996 guix build --with-graft=gnutls=gnutls@@3.5.4 wget
7997 @end example
7998
7999 This has the advantage of being much faster than rebuilding everything.
8000 But there is a caveat: it works if and only if @var{package} and
8001 @var{replacement} are strictly compatible---for example, if they provide
8002 a library, the application binary interface (ABI) of those libraries
8003 must be compatible. If @var{replacement} is somehow incompatible with
8004 @var{package}, then the resulting package may be unusable. Use with
8005 care!
8006
8007 @item --with-git-url=@var{package}=@var{url}
8008 @cindex Git, using the latest commit
8009 @cindex latest commit, building
8010 Build @var{package} from the latest commit of the @code{master} branch of the
8011 Git repository at @var{url}. Git sub-modules of the repository are fetched,
8012 recursively.
8013
8014 For example, the following command builds the NumPy Python library against the
8015 latest commit of the master branch of Python itself:
8016
8017 @example
8018 guix build python-numpy \
8019 --with-git-url=python=https://github.com/python/cpython
8020 @end example
8021
8022 This option can also be combined with @code{--with-branch} or
8023 @code{--with-commit} (see below).
8024
8025 @cindex continuous integration
8026 Obviously, since it uses the latest commit of the given branch, the result of
8027 such a command varies over time. Nevertheless it is a convenient way to
8028 rebuild entire software stacks against the latest commit of one or more
8029 packages. This is particularly useful in the context of continuous
8030 integration (CI).
8031
8032 Checkouts are kept in a cache under @file{~/.cache/guix/checkouts} to speed up
8033 consecutive accesses to the same repository. You may want to clean it up once
8034 in a while to save disk space.
8035
8036 @item --with-branch=@var{package}=@var{branch}
8037 Build @var{package} from the latest commit of @var{branch}. If the
8038 @code{source} field of @var{package} is an origin with the @code{git-fetch}
8039 method (@pxref{origin Reference}) or a @code{git-checkout} object, the
8040 repository URL is taken from that @code{source}. Otherwise you have to use
8041 @code{--with-git-url} to specify the URL of the Git repository.
8042
8043 For instance, the following command builds @code{guile-sqlite3} from the
8044 latest commit of its @code{master} branch, and then builds @code{guix} (which
8045 depends on it) and @code{cuirass} (which depends on @code{guix}) against this
8046 specific @code{guile-sqlite3} build:
8047
8048 @example
8049 guix build --with-branch=guile-sqlite3=master cuirass
8050 @end example
8051
8052 @item --with-commit=@var{package}=@var{commit}
8053 This is similar to @code{--with-branch}, except that it builds from
8054 @var{commit} rather than the tip of a branch. @var{commit} must be a valid
8055 Git commit SHA1 identifier or a tag.
8056 @end table
8057
8058 @node Additional Build Options
8059 @subsection Additional Build Options
8060
8061 The command-line options presented below are specific to @command{guix
8062 build}.
8063
8064 @table @code
8065
8066 @item --quiet
8067 @itemx -q
8068 Build quietly, without displaying the build log; this is equivalent to
8069 @code{--verbosity=0}. Upon completion, the build log is kept in @file{/var}
8070 (or similar) and can always be retrieved using the @option{--log-file} option.
8071
8072 @item --file=@var{file}
8073 @itemx -f @var{file}
8074 Build the package, derivation, or other file-like object that the code within
8075 @var{file} evaluates to (@pxref{G-Expressions, file-like objects}).
8076
8077 As an example, @var{file} might contain a package definition like this
8078 (@pxref{Defining Packages}):
8079
8080 @example
8081 @verbatiminclude package-hello.scm
8082 @end example
8083
8084 @item --expression=@var{expr}
8085 @itemx -e @var{expr}
8086 Build the package or derivation @var{expr} evaluates to.
8087
8088 For example, @var{expr} may be @code{(@@ (gnu packages guile)
8089 guile-1.8)}, which unambiguously designates this specific variant of
8090 version 1.8 of Guile.
8091
8092 Alternatively, @var{expr} may be a G-expression, in which case it is used
8093 as a build program passed to @code{gexp->derivation}
8094 (@pxref{G-Expressions}).
8095
8096 Lastly, @var{expr} may refer to a zero-argument monadic procedure
8097 (@pxref{The Store Monad}). The procedure must return a derivation as a
8098 monadic value, which is then passed through @code{run-with-store}.
8099
8100 @item --source
8101 @itemx -S
8102 Build the source derivations of the packages, rather than the packages
8103 themselves.
8104
8105 For instance, @code{guix build -S gcc} returns something like
8106 @file{/gnu/store/@dots{}-gcc-4.7.2.tar.bz2}, which is the GCC
8107 source tarball.
8108
8109 The returned source tarball is the result of applying any patches and
8110 code snippets specified in the package @code{origin} (@pxref{Defining
8111 Packages}).
8112
8113 @item --sources
8114 Fetch and return the source of @var{package-or-derivation} and all their
8115 dependencies, recursively. This is a handy way to obtain a local copy
8116 of all the source code needed to build @var{packages}, allowing you to
8117 eventually build them even without network access. It is an extension
8118 of the @code{--source} option and can accept one of the following
8119 optional argument values:
8120
8121 @table @code
8122 @item package
8123 This value causes the @code{--sources} option to behave in the same way
8124 as the @code{--source} option.
8125
8126 @item all
8127 Build the source derivations of all packages, including any source that
8128 might be listed as @code{inputs}. This is the default value.
8129
8130 @example
8131 $ guix build --sources tzdata
8132 The following derivations will be built:
8133 /gnu/store/@dots{}-tzdata2015b.tar.gz.drv
8134 /gnu/store/@dots{}-tzcode2015b.tar.gz.drv
8135 @end example
8136
8137 @item transitive
8138 Build the source derivations of all packages, as well of all transitive
8139 inputs to the packages. This can be used e.g.@: to
8140 prefetch package source for later offline building.
8141
8142 @example
8143 $ guix build --sources=transitive tzdata
8144 The following derivations will be built:
8145 /gnu/store/@dots{}-tzcode2015b.tar.gz.drv
8146 /gnu/store/@dots{}-findutils-4.4.2.tar.xz.drv
8147 /gnu/store/@dots{}-grep-2.21.tar.xz.drv
8148 /gnu/store/@dots{}-coreutils-8.23.tar.xz.drv
8149 /gnu/store/@dots{}-make-4.1.tar.xz.drv
8150 /gnu/store/@dots{}-bash-4.3.tar.xz.drv
8151 @dots{}
8152 @end example
8153
8154 @end table
8155
8156 @item --system=@var{system}
8157 @itemx -s @var{system}
8158 Attempt to build for @var{system}---e.g., @code{i686-linux}---instead of
8159 the system type of the build host. The @command{guix build} command allows
8160 you to repeat this option several times, in which case it builds for all the
8161 specified systems; other commands ignore extraneous @option{-s} options.
8162
8163 @quotation Note
8164 The @code{--system} flag is for @emph{native} compilation and must not
8165 be confused with cross-compilation. See @code{--target} below for
8166 information on cross-compilation.
8167 @end quotation
8168
8169 An example use of this is on Linux-based systems, which can emulate
8170 different personalities. For instance, passing
8171 @code{--system=i686-linux} on an @code{x86_64-linux} system or
8172 @code{--system=armhf-linux} on an @code{aarch64-linux} system allows you
8173 to build packages in a complete 32-bit environment.
8174
8175 @quotation Note
8176 Building for an @code{armhf-linux} system is unconditionally enabled on
8177 @code{aarch64-linux} machines, although certain aarch64 chipsets do not
8178 allow for this functionality, notably the ThunderX.
8179 @end quotation
8180
8181 Similarly, when transparent emulation with QEMU and @code{binfmt_misc}
8182 is enabled (@pxref{Virtualization Services,
8183 @code{qemu-binfmt-service-type}}), you can build for any system for
8184 which a QEMU @code{binfmt_misc} handler is installed.
8185
8186 Builds for a system other than that of the machine you are using can
8187 also be offloaded to a remote machine of the right architecture.
8188 @xref{Daemon Offload Setup}, for more information on offloading.
8189
8190 @item --target=@var{triplet}
8191 @cindex cross-compilation
8192 Cross-build for @var{triplet}, which must be a valid GNU triplet, such
8193 as @code{"mips64el-linux-gnu"} (@pxref{Specifying Target Triplets, GNU
8194 configuration triplets,, autoconf, Autoconf}).
8195
8196 @anchor{build-check}
8197 @item --check
8198 @cindex determinism, checking
8199 @cindex reproducibility, checking
8200 Rebuild @var{package-or-derivation}, which are already available in the
8201 store, and raise an error if the build results are not bit-for-bit
8202 identical.
8203
8204 This mechanism allows you to check whether previously installed
8205 substitutes are genuine (@pxref{Substitutes}), or whether the build result
8206 of a package is deterministic. @xref{Invoking guix challenge}, for more
8207 background information and tools.
8208
8209 When used in conjunction with @option{--keep-failed}, the differing
8210 output is kept in the store, under @file{/gnu/store/@dots{}-check}.
8211 This makes it easy to look for differences between the two results.
8212
8213 @item --repair
8214 @cindex repairing store items
8215 @cindex corruption, recovering from
8216 Attempt to repair the specified store items, if they are corrupt, by
8217 re-downloading or rebuilding them.
8218
8219 This operation is not atomic and thus restricted to @code{root}.
8220
8221 @item --derivations
8222 @itemx -d
8223 Return the derivation paths, not the output paths, of the given
8224 packages.
8225
8226 @item --root=@var{file}
8227 @itemx -r @var{file}
8228 @cindex GC roots, adding
8229 @cindex garbage collector roots, adding
8230 Make @var{file} a symlink to the result, and register it as a garbage
8231 collector root.
8232
8233 Consequently, the results of this @command{guix build} invocation are
8234 protected from garbage collection until @var{file} is removed. When
8235 that option is omitted, build results are eligible for garbage
8236 collection as soon as the build completes. @xref{Invoking guix gc}, for
8237 more on GC roots.
8238
8239 @item --log-file
8240 @cindex build logs, access
8241 Return the build log file names or URLs for the given
8242 @var{package-or-derivation}, or raise an error if build logs are
8243 missing.
8244
8245 This works regardless of how packages or derivations are specified. For
8246 instance, the following invocations are equivalent:
8247
8248 @example
8249 guix build --log-file `guix build -d guile`
8250 guix build --log-file `guix build guile`
8251 guix build --log-file guile
8252 guix build --log-file -e '(@@ (gnu packages guile) guile-2.0)'
8253 @end example
8254
8255 If a log is unavailable locally, and unless @code{--no-substitutes} is
8256 passed, the command looks for a corresponding log on one of the
8257 substitute servers (as specified with @code{--substitute-urls}.)
8258
8259 So for instance, imagine you want to see the build log of GDB on MIPS,
8260 but you are actually on an @code{x86_64} machine:
8261
8262 @example
8263 $ guix build --log-file gdb -s mips64el-linux
8264 https://@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER}/log/@dots{}-gdb-7.10
8265 @end example
8266
8267 You can freely access a huge library of build logs!
8268 @end table
8269
8270 @node Debugging Build Failures
8271 @subsection Debugging Build Failures
8272
8273 @cindex build failures, debugging
8274 When defining a new package (@pxref{Defining Packages}), you will
8275 probably find yourself spending some time debugging and tweaking the
8276 build until it succeeds. To do that, you need to operate the build
8277 commands yourself in an environment as close as possible to the one the
8278 build daemon uses.
8279
8280 To that end, the first thing to do is to use the @option{--keep-failed}
8281 or @option{-K} option of @command{guix build}, which will keep the
8282 failed build tree in @file{/tmp} or whatever directory you specified as
8283 @code{TMPDIR} (@pxref{Invoking guix build, @code{--keep-failed}}).
8284
8285 From there on, you can @command{cd} to the failed build tree and source
8286 the @file{environment-variables} file, which contains all the
8287 environment variable definitions that were in place when the build
8288 failed. So let's say you're debugging a build failure in package
8289 @code{foo}; a typical session would look like this:
8290
8291 @example
8292 $ guix build foo -K
8293 @dots{} @i{build fails}
8294 $ cd /tmp/guix-build-foo.drv-0
8295 $ source ./environment-variables
8296 $ cd foo-1.2
8297 @end example
8298
8299 Now, you can invoke commands as if you were the daemon (almost) and
8300 troubleshoot your build process.
8301
8302 Sometimes it happens that, for example, a package's tests pass when you
8303 run them manually but they fail when the daemon runs them. This can
8304 happen because the daemon runs builds in containers where, unlike in our
8305 environment above, network access is missing, @file{/bin/sh} does not
8306 exist, etc. (@pxref{Build Environment Setup}).
8307
8308 In such cases, you may need to run inspect the build process from within
8309 a container similar to the one the build daemon creates:
8310
8311 @example
8312 $ guix build -K foo
8313 @dots{}
8314 $ cd /tmp/guix-build-foo.drv-0
8315 $ guix environment --no-grafts -C foo --ad-hoc strace gdb
8316 [env]# source ./environment-variables
8317 [env]# cd foo-1.2
8318 @end example
8319
8320 Here, @command{guix environment -C} creates a container and spawns a new
8321 shell in it (@pxref{Invoking guix environment}). The @command{--ad-hoc
8322 strace gdb} part adds the @command{strace} and @command{gdb} commands to
8323 the container, which would may find handy while debugging. The
8324 @option{--no-grafts} option makes sure we get the exact same
8325 environment, with ungrafted packages (@pxref{Security Updates}, for more
8326 info on grafts).
8327
8328 To get closer to a container like that used by the build daemon, we can
8329 remove @file{/bin/sh}:
8330
8331 @example
8332 [env]# rm /bin/sh
8333 @end example
8334
8335 (Don't worry, this is harmless: this is all happening in the throw-away
8336 container created by @command{guix environment}.)
8337
8338 The @command{strace} command is probably not in the search path, but we
8339 can run:
8340
8341 @example
8342 [env]# $GUIX_ENVIRONMENT/bin/strace -f -o log make check
8343 @end example
8344
8345 In this way, not only you will have reproduced the environment variables
8346 the daemon uses, you will also be running the build process in a container
8347 similar to the one the daemon uses.
8348
8349
8350 @node Invoking guix edit
8351 @section Invoking @command{guix edit}
8352
8353 @cindex @command{guix edit}
8354 @cindex package definition, editing
8355 So many packages, so many source files! The @command{guix edit} command
8356 facilitates the life of users and packagers by pointing their editor at
8357 the source file containing the definition of the specified packages.
8358 For instance:
8359
8360 @example
8361 guix edit gcc@@4.9 vim
8362 @end example
8363
8364 @noindent
8365 launches the program specified in the @code{VISUAL} or in the
8366 @code{EDITOR} environment variable to view the recipe of GCC@tie{}4.9.3
8367 and that of Vim.
8368
8369 If you are using a Guix Git checkout (@pxref{Building from Git}), or
8370 have created your own packages on @code{GUIX_PACKAGE_PATH}
8371 (@pxref{Package Modules}), you will be able to edit the package
8372 recipes. In other cases, you will be able to examine the read-only recipes
8373 for packages currently in the store.
8374
8375
8376 @node Invoking guix download
8377 @section Invoking @command{guix download}
8378
8379 @cindex @command{guix download}
8380 @cindex downloading package sources
8381 When writing a package definition, developers typically need to download
8382 a source tarball, compute its SHA256 hash, and write that
8383 hash in the package definition (@pxref{Defining Packages}). The
8384 @command{guix download} tool helps with this task: it downloads a file
8385 from the given URI, adds it to the store, and prints both its file name
8386 in the store and its SHA256 hash.
8387
8388 The fact that the downloaded file is added to the store saves bandwidth:
8389 when the developer eventually tries to build the newly defined package
8390 with @command{guix build}, the source tarball will not have to be
8391 downloaded again because it is already in the store. It is also a
8392 convenient way to temporarily stash files, which may be deleted
8393 eventually (@pxref{Invoking guix gc}).
8394
8395 The @command{guix download} command supports the same URIs as used in
8396 package definitions. In particular, it supports @code{mirror://} URIs.
8397 @code{https} URIs (HTTP over TLS) are supported @emph{provided} the
8398 Guile bindings for GnuTLS are available in the user's environment; when
8399 they are not available, an error is raised. @xref{Guile Preparations,
8400 how to install the GnuTLS bindings for Guile,, gnutls-guile,
8401 GnuTLS-Guile}, for more information.
8402
8403 @command{guix download} verifies HTTPS server certificates by loading
8404 the certificates of X.509 authorities from the directory pointed to by
8405 the @code{SSL_CERT_DIR} environment variable (@pxref{X.509
8406 Certificates}), unless @option{--no-check-certificate} is used.
8407
8408 The following options are available:
8409
8410 @table @code
8411 @item --format=@var{fmt}
8412 @itemx -f @var{fmt}
8413 Write the hash in the format specified by @var{fmt}. For more
8414 information on the valid values for @var{fmt}, @pxref{Invoking guix hash}.
8415
8416 @item --no-check-certificate
8417 Do not validate the X.509 certificates of HTTPS servers.
8418
8419 When using this option, you have @emph{absolutely no guarantee} that you
8420 are communicating with the authentic server responsible for the given
8421 URL, which makes you vulnerable to ``man-in-the-middle'' attacks.
8422
8423 @item --output=@var{file}
8424 @itemx -o @var{file}
8425 Save the downloaded file to @var{file} instead of adding it to the
8426 store.
8427 @end table
8428
8429 @node Invoking guix hash
8430 @section Invoking @command{guix hash}
8431
8432 @cindex @command{guix hash}
8433 The @command{guix hash} command computes the SHA256 hash of a file.
8434 It is primarily a convenience tool for anyone contributing to the
8435 distribution: it computes the cryptographic hash of a file, which can be
8436 used in the definition of a package (@pxref{Defining Packages}).
8437
8438 The general syntax is:
8439
8440 @example
8441 guix hash @var{option} @var{file}
8442 @end example
8443
8444 When @var{file} is @code{-} (a hyphen), @command{guix hash} computes the
8445 hash of data read from standard input. @command{guix hash} has the
8446 following options:
8447
8448 @table @code
8449
8450 @item --format=@var{fmt}
8451 @itemx -f @var{fmt}
8452 Write the hash in the format specified by @var{fmt}.
8453
8454 Supported formats: @code{nix-base32}, @code{base32}, @code{base16}
8455 (@code{hex} and @code{hexadecimal} can be used as well).
8456
8457 If the @option{--format} option is not specified, @command{guix hash}
8458 will output the hash in @code{nix-base32}. This representation is used
8459 in the definitions of packages.
8460
8461 @item --recursive
8462 @itemx -r
8463 Compute the hash on @var{file} recursively.
8464
8465 In this case, the hash is computed on an archive containing @var{file},
8466 including its children if it is a directory. Some of the metadata of
8467 @var{file} is part of the archive; for instance, when @var{file} is a
8468 regular file, the hash is different depending on whether @var{file} is
8469 executable or not. Metadata such as time stamps has no impact on the
8470 hash (@pxref{Invoking guix archive}).
8471 @c FIXME: Replace xref above with xref to an ``Archive'' section when
8472 @c it exists.
8473
8474 @item --exclude-vcs
8475 @itemx -x
8476 When combined with @option{--recursive}, exclude version control system
8477 directories (@file{.bzr}, @file{.git}, @file{.hg}, etc.)
8478
8479 @vindex git-fetch
8480 As an example, here is how you would compute the hash of a Git checkout,
8481 which is useful when using the @code{git-fetch} method (@pxref{origin
8482 Reference}):
8483
8484 @example
8485 $ git clone http://example.org/foo.git
8486 $ cd foo
8487 $ guix hash -rx .
8488 @end example
8489 @end table
8490
8491 @node Invoking guix import
8492 @section Invoking @command{guix import}
8493
8494 @cindex importing packages
8495 @cindex package import
8496 @cindex package conversion
8497 @cindex Invoking @command{guix import}
8498 The @command{guix import} command is useful for people who would like to
8499 add a package to the distribution with as little work as
8500 possible---a legitimate demand. The command knows of a few
8501 repositories from which it can ``import'' package metadata. The result
8502 is a package definition, or a template thereof, in the format we know
8503 (@pxref{Defining Packages}).
8504
8505 The general syntax is:
8506
8507 @example
8508 guix import @var{importer} @var{options}@dots{}
8509 @end example
8510
8511 @var{importer} specifies the source from which to import package
8512 metadata, and @var{options} specifies a package identifier and other
8513 options specific to @var{importer}. Currently, the available
8514 ``importers'' are:
8515
8516 @table @code
8517 @item gnu
8518 Import metadata for the given GNU package. This provides a template
8519 for the latest version of that GNU package, including the hash of its
8520 source tarball, and its canonical synopsis and description.
8521
8522 Additional information such as the package dependencies and its
8523 license needs to be figured out manually.
8524
8525 For example, the following command returns a package definition for
8526 GNU@tie{}Hello:
8527
8528 @example
8529 guix import gnu hello
8530 @end example
8531
8532 Specific command-line options are:
8533
8534 @table @code
8535 @item --key-download=@var{policy}
8536 As for @code{guix refresh}, specify the policy to handle missing OpenPGP
8537 keys when verifying the package signature. @xref{Invoking guix
8538 refresh, @code{--key-download}}.
8539 @end table
8540
8541 @item pypi
8542 @cindex pypi
8543 Import metadata from the @uref{https://pypi.python.org/, Python Package
8544 Index}. Information is taken from the JSON-formatted description
8545 available at @code{pypi.python.org} and usually includes all the relevant
8546 information, including package dependencies. For maximum efficiency, it
8547 is recommended to install the @command{unzip} utility, so that the
8548 importer can unzip Python wheels and gather data from them.
8549
8550 The command below imports metadata for the @code{itsdangerous} Python
8551 package:
8552
8553 @example
8554 guix import pypi itsdangerous
8555 @end example
8556
8557 @table @code
8558 @item --recursive
8559 @itemx -r
8560 Traverse the dependency graph of the given upstream package recursively
8561 and generate package expressions for all those packages that are not yet
8562 in Guix.
8563 @end table
8564
8565 @item gem
8566 @cindex gem
8567 Import metadata from @uref{https://rubygems.org/, RubyGems}. Information
8568 is taken from the JSON-formatted description available at
8569 @code{rubygems.org} and includes most relevant information, including
8570 runtime dependencies. There are some caveats, however. The metadata
8571 doesn't distinguish between synopses and descriptions, so the same string
8572 is used for both fields. Additionally, the details of non-Ruby
8573 dependencies required to build native extensions is unavailable and left
8574 as an exercise to the packager.
8575
8576 The command below imports metadata for the @code{rails} Ruby package:
8577
8578 @example
8579 guix import gem rails
8580 @end example
8581
8582 @table @code
8583 @item --recursive
8584 @itemx -r
8585 Traverse the dependency graph of the given upstream package recursively
8586 and generate package expressions for all those packages that are not yet
8587 in Guix.
8588 @end table
8589
8590 @item cpan
8591 @cindex CPAN
8592 Import metadata from @uref{https://www.metacpan.org/, MetaCPAN}.
8593 Information is taken from the JSON-formatted metadata provided through
8594 @uref{https://fastapi.metacpan.org/, MetaCPAN's API} and includes most
8595 relevant information, such as module dependencies. License information
8596 should be checked closely. If Perl is available in the store, then the
8597 @code{corelist} utility will be used to filter core modules out of the
8598 list of dependencies.
8599
8600 The command command below imports metadata for the @code{Acme::Boolean}
8601 Perl module:
8602
8603 @example
8604 guix import cpan Acme::Boolean
8605 @end example
8606
8607 @item cran
8608 @cindex CRAN
8609 @cindex Bioconductor
8610 Import metadata from @uref{https://cran.r-project.org/, CRAN}, the
8611 central repository for the @uref{https://r-project.org, GNU@tie{}R
8612 statistical and graphical environment}.
8613
8614 Information is extracted from the @code{DESCRIPTION} file of the package.
8615
8616 The command command below imports metadata for the @code{Cairo}
8617 R package:
8618
8619 @example
8620 guix import cran Cairo
8621 @end example
8622
8623 When @code{--recursive} is added, the importer will traverse the
8624 dependency graph of the given upstream package recursively and generate
8625 package expressions for all those packages that are not yet in Guix.
8626
8627 When @code{--archive=bioconductor} is added, metadata is imported from
8628 @uref{https://www.bioconductor.org/, Bioconductor}, a repository of R
8629 packages for for the analysis and comprehension of high-throughput
8630 genomic data in bioinformatics.
8631
8632 Information is extracted from the @code{DESCRIPTION} file of a package
8633 published on the web interface of the Bioconductor SVN repository.
8634
8635 The command below imports metadata for the @code{GenomicRanges}
8636 R package:
8637
8638 @example
8639 guix import cran --archive=bioconductor GenomicRanges
8640 @end example
8641
8642 @item texlive
8643 @cindex TeX Live
8644 @cindex CTAN
8645 Import metadata from @uref{https://www.ctan.org/, CTAN}, the
8646 comprehensive TeX archive network for TeX packages that are part of the
8647 @uref{https://www.tug.org/texlive/, TeX Live distribution}.
8648
8649 Information about the package is obtained through the XML API provided
8650 by CTAN, while the source code is downloaded from the SVN repository of
8651 the Tex Live project. This is done because the CTAN does not keep
8652 versioned archives.
8653
8654 The command command below imports metadata for the @code{fontspec}
8655 TeX package:
8656
8657 @example
8658 guix import texlive fontspec
8659 @end example
8660
8661 When @code{--archive=DIRECTORY} is added, the source code is downloaded
8662 not from the @file{latex} sub-directory of the @file{texmf-dist/source}
8663 tree in the TeX Live SVN repository, but from the specified sibling
8664 directory under the same root.
8665
8666 The command below imports metadata for the @code{ifxetex} package from
8667 CTAN while fetching the sources from the directory
8668 @file{texmf/source/generic}:
8669
8670 @example
8671 guix import texlive --archive=generic ifxetex
8672 @end example
8673
8674 @item json
8675 @cindex JSON, import
8676 Import package metadata from a local JSON file. Consider the following
8677 example package definition in JSON format:
8678
8679 @example
8680 @{
8681 "name": "hello",
8682 "version": "2.10",
8683 "source": "mirror://gnu/hello/hello-2.10.tar.gz",
8684 "build-system": "gnu",
8685 "home-page": "https://www.gnu.org/software/hello/",
8686 "synopsis": "Hello, GNU world: An example GNU package",
8687 "description": "GNU Hello prints a greeting.",
8688 "license": "GPL-3.0+",
8689 "native-inputs": ["gettext"]
8690 @}
8691 @end example
8692
8693 The field names are the same as for the @code{<package>} record
8694 (@xref{Defining Packages}). References to other packages are provided
8695 as JSON lists of quoted package specification strings such as
8696 @code{guile} or @code{guile@@2.0}.
8697
8698 The importer also supports a more explicit source definition using the
8699 common fields for @code{<origin>} records:
8700
8701 @example
8702 @{
8703 @dots{}
8704 "source": @{
8705 "method": "url-fetch",
8706 "uri": "mirror://gnu/hello/hello-2.10.tar.gz",
8707 "sha256": @{
8708 "base32": "0ssi1wpaf7plaswqqjwigppsg5fyh99vdlb9kzl7c9lng89ndq1i"
8709 @}
8710 @}
8711 @dots{}
8712 @}
8713 @end example
8714
8715 The command below reads metadata from the JSON file @code{hello.json}
8716 and outputs a package expression:
8717
8718 @example
8719 guix import json hello.json
8720 @end example
8721
8722 @item nix
8723 Import metadata from a local copy of the source of the
8724 @uref{https://nixos.org/nixpkgs/, Nixpkgs distribution}@footnote{This
8725 relies on the @command{nix-instantiate} command of
8726 @uref{https://nixos.org/nix/, Nix}.}. Package definitions in Nixpkgs are
8727 typically written in a mixture of Nix-language and Bash code. This
8728 command only imports the high-level package structure that is written in
8729 the Nix language. It normally includes all the basic fields of a
8730 package definition.
8731
8732 When importing a GNU package, the synopsis and descriptions are replaced
8733 by their canonical upstream variant.
8734
8735 Usually, you will first need to do:
8736
8737 @example
8738 export NIX_REMOTE=daemon
8739 @end example
8740
8741 @noindent
8742 so that @command{nix-instantiate} does not try to open the Nix database.
8743
8744 As an example, the command below imports the package definition of
8745 LibreOffice (more precisely, it imports the definition of the package
8746 bound to the @code{libreoffice} top-level attribute):
8747
8748 @example
8749 guix import nix ~/path/to/nixpkgs libreoffice
8750 @end example
8751
8752 @item hackage
8753 @cindex hackage
8754 Import metadata from the Haskell community's central package archive
8755 @uref{https://hackage.haskell.org/, Hackage}. Information is taken from
8756 Cabal files and includes all the relevant information, including package
8757 dependencies.
8758
8759 Specific command-line options are:
8760
8761 @table @code
8762 @item --stdin
8763 @itemx -s
8764 Read a Cabal file from standard input.
8765 @item --no-test-dependencies
8766 @itemx -t
8767 Do not include dependencies required only by the test suites.
8768 @item --cabal-environment=@var{alist}
8769 @itemx -e @var{alist}
8770 @var{alist} is a Scheme alist defining the environment in which the
8771 Cabal conditionals are evaluated. The accepted keys are: @code{os},
8772 @code{arch}, @code{impl} and a string representing the name of a flag.
8773 The value associated with a flag has to be either the symbol
8774 @code{true} or @code{false}. The value associated with other keys
8775 has to conform to the Cabal file format definition. The default value
8776 associated with the keys @code{os}, @code{arch} and @code{impl} is
8777 @samp{linux}, @samp{x86_64} and @samp{ghc}, respectively.
8778 @item --recursive
8779 @itemx -r
8780 Traverse the dependency graph of the given upstream package recursively
8781 and generate package expressions for all those packages that are not yet
8782 in Guix.
8783 @end table
8784
8785 The command below imports metadata for the latest version of the
8786 @code{HTTP} Haskell package without including test dependencies and
8787 specifying the value of the flag @samp{network-uri} as @code{false}:
8788
8789 @example
8790 guix import hackage -t -e "'((\"network-uri\" . false))" HTTP
8791 @end example
8792
8793 A specific package version may optionally be specified by following the
8794 package name by an at-sign and a version number as in the following example:
8795
8796 @example
8797 guix import hackage mtl@@2.1.3.1
8798 @end example
8799
8800 @item stackage
8801 @cindex stackage
8802 The @code{stackage} importer is a wrapper around the @code{hackage} one.
8803 It takes a package name, looks up the package version included in a
8804 long-term support (LTS) @uref{https://www.stackage.org, Stackage}
8805 release and uses the @code{hackage} importer to retrieve its metadata.
8806 Note that it is up to you to select an LTS release compatible with the
8807 GHC compiler used by Guix.
8808
8809 Specific command-line options are:
8810
8811 @table @code
8812 @item --no-test-dependencies
8813 @itemx -t
8814 Do not include dependencies required only by the test suites.
8815 @item --lts-version=@var{version}
8816 @itemx -l @var{version}
8817 @var{version} is the desired LTS release version. If omitted the latest
8818 release is used.
8819 @item --recursive
8820 @itemx -r
8821 Traverse the dependency graph of the given upstream package recursively
8822 and generate package expressions for all those packages that are not yet
8823 in Guix.
8824 @end table
8825
8826 The command below imports metadata for the @code{HTTP} Haskell package
8827 included in the LTS Stackage release version 7.18:
8828
8829 @example
8830 guix import stackage --lts-version=7.18 HTTP
8831 @end example
8832
8833 @item elpa
8834 @cindex elpa
8835 Import metadata from an Emacs Lisp Package Archive (ELPA) package
8836 repository (@pxref{Packages,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}).
8837
8838 Specific command-line options are:
8839
8840 @table @code
8841 @item --archive=@var{repo}
8842 @itemx -a @var{repo}
8843 @var{repo} identifies the archive repository from which to retrieve the
8844 information. Currently the supported repositories and their identifiers
8845 are:
8846 @itemize -
8847 @item
8848 @uref{https://elpa.gnu.org/packages, GNU}, selected by the @code{gnu}
8849 identifier. This is the default.
8850
8851 Packages from @code{elpa.gnu.org} are signed with one of the keys
8852 contained in the GnuPG keyring at
8853 @file{share/emacs/25.1/etc/package-keyring.gpg} (or similar) in the
8854 @code{emacs} package (@pxref{Package Installation, ELPA package
8855 signatures,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}).
8856
8857 @item
8858 @uref{https://stable.melpa.org/packages, MELPA-Stable}, selected by the
8859 @code{melpa-stable} identifier.
8860
8861 @item
8862 @uref{https://melpa.org/packages, MELPA}, selected by the @code{melpa}
8863 identifier.
8864 @end itemize
8865
8866 @item --recursive
8867 @itemx -r
8868 Traverse the dependency graph of the given upstream package recursively
8869 and generate package expressions for all those packages that are not yet
8870 in Guix.
8871 @end table
8872
8873 @item crate
8874 @cindex crate
8875 Import metadata from the crates.io Rust package repository
8876 @uref{https://crates.io, crates.io}.
8877
8878 @item opam
8879 @cindex OPAM
8880 @cindex OCaml
8881 Import metadata from the @uref{https://opam.ocaml.org/, OPAM} package
8882 repository used by the OCaml community.
8883 @end table
8884
8885 The structure of the @command{guix import} code is modular. It would be
8886 useful to have more importers for other package formats, and your help
8887 is welcome here (@pxref{Contributing}).
8888
8889 @node Invoking guix refresh
8890 @section Invoking @command{guix refresh}
8891
8892 @cindex @command {guix refresh}
8893 The primary audience of the @command{guix refresh} command is developers
8894 of the GNU software distribution. By default, it reports any packages
8895 provided by the distribution that are outdated compared to the latest
8896 upstream version, like this:
8897
8898 @example
8899 $ guix refresh
8900 gnu/packages/gettext.scm:29:13: gettext would be upgraded from 0.18.1.1 to 0.18.2.1
8901 gnu/packages/glib.scm:77:12: glib would be upgraded from 2.34.3 to 2.37.0
8902 @end example
8903
8904 Alternately, one can specify packages to consider, in which case a
8905 warning is emitted for packages that lack an updater:
8906
8907 @example
8908 $ guix refresh coreutils guile guile-ssh
8909 gnu/packages/ssh.scm:205:2: warning: no updater for guile-ssh
8910 gnu/packages/guile.scm:136:12: guile would be upgraded from 2.0.12 to 2.0.13
8911 @end example
8912
8913 @command{guix refresh} browses the upstream repository of each package and determines
8914 the highest version number of the releases therein. The command
8915 knows how to update specific types of packages: GNU packages, ELPA
8916 packages, etc.---see the documentation for @option{--type} below. There
8917 are many packages, though, for which it lacks a method to determine
8918 whether a new upstream release is available. However, the mechanism is
8919 extensible, so feel free to get in touch with us to add a new method!
8920
8921 @table @code
8922
8923 @item --recursive
8924 Consider the packages specified, and all the packages upon which they depend.
8925
8926 @example
8927 $ guix refresh --recursive coreutils
8928 gnu/packages/acl.scm:35:2: warning: no updater for acl
8929 gnu/packages/m4.scm:30:12: info: 1.4.18 is already the latest version of m4
8930 gnu/packages/xml.scm:68:2: warning: no updater for expat
8931 gnu/packages/multiprecision.scm:40:12: info: 6.1.2 is already the latest version of gmp
8932 @dots{}
8933 @end example
8934
8935 @end table
8936
8937 Sometimes the upstream name differs from the package name used in Guix,
8938 and @command{guix refresh} needs a little help. Most updaters honor the
8939 @code{upstream-name} property in package definitions, which can be used
8940 to that effect:
8941
8942 @example
8943 (define-public network-manager
8944 (package
8945 (name "network-manager")
8946 ;; @dots{}
8947 (properties '((upstream-name . "NetworkManager")))))
8948 @end example
8949
8950 When passed @code{--update}, it modifies distribution source files to
8951 update the version numbers and source tarball hashes of those package
8952 recipes (@pxref{Defining Packages}). This is achieved by downloading
8953 each package's latest source tarball and its associated OpenPGP
8954 signature, authenticating the downloaded tarball against its signature
8955 using @command{gpg}, and finally computing its hash. When the public
8956 key used to sign the tarball is missing from the user's keyring, an
8957 attempt is made to automatically retrieve it from a public key server;
8958 when this is successful, the key is added to the user's keyring; otherwise,
8959 @command{guix refresh} reports an error.
8960
8961 The following options are supported:
8962
8963 @table @code
8964
8965 @item --expression=@var{expr}
8966 @itemx -e @var{expr}
8967 Consider the package @var{expr} evaluates to.
8968
8969 This is useful to precisely refer to a package, as in this example:
8970
8971 @example
8972 guix refresh -l -e '(@@@@ (gnu packages commencement) glibc-final)'
8973 @end example
8974
8975 This command lists the dependents of the ``final'' libc (essentially all
8976 the packages.)
8977
8978 @item --update
8979 @itemx -u
8980 Update distribution source files (package recipes) in place. This is
8981 usually run from a checkout of the Guix source tree (@pxref{Running
8982 Guix Before It Is Installed}):
8983
8984 @example
8985 $ ./pre-inst-env guix refresh -s non-core -u
8986 @end example
8987
8988 @xref{Defining Packages}, for more information on package definitions.
8989
8990 @item --select=[@var{subset}]
8991 @itemx -s @var{subset}
8992 Select all the packages in @var{subset}, one of @code{core} or
8993 @code{non-core}.
8994
8995 The @code{core} subset refers to all the packages at the core of the
8996 distribution---i.e., packages that are used to build ``everything
8997 else''. This includes GCC, libc, Binutils, Bash, etc. Usually,
8998 changing one of these packages in the distribution entails a rebuild of
8999 all the others. Thus, such updates are an inconvenience to users in
9000 terms of build time or bandwidth used to achieve the upgrade.
9001
9002 The @code{non-core} subset refers to the remaining packages. It is
9003 typically useful in cases where an update of the core packages would be
9004 inconvenient.
9005
9006 @item --manifest=@var{file}
9007 @itemx -m @var{file}
9008 Select all the packages from the manifest in @var{file}. This is useful to
9009 check if any packages of the user manifest can be updated.
9010
9011 @item --type=@var{updater}
9012 @itemx -t @var{updater}
9013 Select only packages handled by @var{updater} (may be a comma-separated
9014 list of updaters). Currently, @var{updater} may be one of:
9015
9016 @table @code
9017 @item gnu
9018 the updater for GNU packages;
9019 @item gnome
9020 the updater for GNOME packages;
9021 @item kde
9022 the updater for KDE packages;
9023 @item xorg
9024 the updater for X.org packages;
9025 @item kernel.org
9026 the updater for packages hosted on kernel.org;
9027 @item elpa
9028 the updater for @uref{https://elpa.gnu.org/, ELPA} packages;
9029 @item cran
9030 the updater for @uref{https://cran.r-project.org/, CRAN} packages;
9031 @item bioconductor
9032 the updater for @uref{https://www.bioconductor.org/, Bioconductor} R packages;
9033 @item cpan
9034 the updater for @uref{https://www.cpan.org/, CPAN} packages;
9035 @item pypi
9036 the updater for @uref{https://pypi.python.org, PyPI} packages.
9037 @item gem
9038 the updater for @uref{https://rubygems.org, RubyGems} packages.
9039 @item github
9040 the updater for @uref{https://github.com, GitHub} packages.
9041 @item hackage
9042 the updater for @uref{https://hackage.haskell.org, Hackage} packages.
9043 @item stackage
9044 the updater for @uref{https://www.stackage.org, Stackage} packages.
9045 @item crate
9046 the updater for @uref{https://crates.io, Crates} packages.
9047 @item launchpad
9048 the updater for @uref{https://launchpad.net, Launchpad} packages.
9049 @end table
9050
9051 For instance, the following command only checks for updates of Emacs
9052 packages hosted at @code{elpa.gnu.org} and for updates of CRAN packages:
9053
9054 @example
9055 $ guix refresh --type=elpa,cran
9056 gnu/packages/statistics.scm:819:13: r-testthat would be upgraded from 0.10.0 to 0.11.0
9057 gnu/packages/emacs.scm:856:13: emacs-auctex would be upgraded from 11.88.6 to 11.88.9
9058 @end example
9059
9060 @end table
9061
9062 In addition, @command{guix refresh} can be passed one or more package
9063 names, as in this example:
9064
9065 @example
9066 $ ./pre-inst-env guix refresh -u emacs idutils gcc@@4.8
9067 @end example
9068
9069 @noindent
9070 The command above specifically updates the @code{emacs} and
9071 @code{idutils} packages. The @code{--select} option would have no
9072 effect in this case.
9073
9074 When considering whether to upgrade a package, it is sometimes
9075 convenient to know which packages would be affected by the upgrade and
9076 should be checked for compatibility. For this the following option may
9077 be used when passing @command{guix refresh} one or more package names:
9078
9079 @table @code
9080
9081 @item --list-updaters
9082 @itemx -L
9083 List available updaters and exit (see @option{--type} above.)
9084
9085 For each updater, display the fraction of packages it covers; at the
9086 end, display the fraction of packages covered by all these updaters.
9087
9088 @item --list-dependent
9089 @itemx -l
9090 List top-level dependent packages that would need to be rebuilt as a
9091 result of upgrading one or more packages.
9092
9093 @xref{Invoking guix graph, the @code{reverse-package} type of
9094 @command{guix graph}}, for information on how to visualize the list of
9095 dependents of a package.
9096
9097 @end table
9098
9099 Be aware that the @code{--list-dependent} option only
9100 @emph{approximates} the rebuilds that would be required as a result of
9101 an upgrade. More rebuilds might be required under some circumstances.
9102
9103 @example
9104 $ guix refresh --list-dependent flex
9105 Building the following 120 packages would ensure 213 dependent packages are rebuilt:
9106 hop@@2.4.0 geiser@@0.4 notmuch@@0.18 mu@@0.9.9.5 cflow@@1.4 idutils@@4.6 @dots{}
9107 @end example
9108
9109 The command above lists a set of packages that could be built to check
9110 for compatibility with an upgraded @code{flex} package.
9111
9112 @table @code
9113
9114 @item --list-transitive
9115 List all the packages which one or more packages depend upon.
9116
9117 @example
9118 $ guix refresh --list-transitive flex
9119 flex@@2.6.4 depends on the following 25 packages: perl@@5.28.0 help2man@@1.47.6
9120 bison@@3.0.5 indent@@2.2.10 tar@@1.30 gzip@@1.9 bzip2@@1.0.6 xz@@5.2.4 file@@5.33 @dots{}
9121 @end example
9122
9123 @end table
9124
9125 The command above lists a set of packages which, when changed, would cause
9126 @code{flex} to be rebuilt.
9127
9128 The following options can be used to customize GnuPG operation:
9129
9130 @table @code
9131
9132 @item --gpg=@var{command}
9133 Use @var{command} as the GnuPG 2.x command. @var{command} is searched
9134 for in @code{$PATH}.
9135
9136 @item --keyring=@var{file}
9137 Use @var{file} as the keyring for upstream keys. @var{file} must be in the
9138 @dfn{keybox format}. Keybox files usually have a name ending in @file{.kbx}
9139 and the GNU@tie{}Privacy Guard (GPG) can manipulate these files
9140 (@pxref{kbxutil, @command{kbxutil},, gnupg, Using the GNU Privacy Guard}, for
9141 information on a tool to manipulate keybox files).
9142
9143 When this option is omitted, @command{guix refresh} uses
9144 @file{~/.config/guix/upstream/trustedkeys.kbx} as the keyring for upstream
9145 signing keys. OpenPGP signatures are checked against keys from this keyring;
9146 missing keys are downloaded to this keyring as well (see
9147 @option{--key-download} below.)
9148
9149 You can export keys from your default GPG keyring into a keybox file using
9150 commands like this one:
9151
9152 @example
9153 gpg --export rms@@gnu.org | kbxutil --import-openpgp >> mykeyring.kbx
9154 @end example
9155
9156 Likewise, you can fetch keys to a specific keybox file like this:
9157
9158 @example
9159 gpg --no-default-keyring --keyring mykeyring.kbx \
9160 --recv-keys @value{OPENPGP-SIGNING-KEY-ID}
9161 @end example
9162
9163 @ref{GPG Configuration Options, @option{--keyring},, gnupg, Using the GNU
9164 Privacy Guard}, for more information on GPG's @option{--keyring} option.
9165
9166 @item --key-download=@var{policy}
9167 Handle missing OpenPGP keys according to @var{policy}, which may be one
9168 of:
9169
9170 @table @code
9171 @item always
9172 Always download missing OpenPGP keys from the key server, and add them
9173 to the user's GnuPG keyring.
9174
9175 @item never
9176 Never try to download missing OpenPGP keys. Instead just bail out.
9177
9178 @item interactive
9179 When a package signed with an unknown OpenPGP key is encountered, ask
9180 the user whether to download it or not. This is the default behavior.
9181 @end table
9182
9183 @item --key-server=@var{host}
9184 Use @var{host} as the OpenPGP key server when importing a public key.
9185
9186 @end table
9187
9188 The @code{github} updater uses the
9189 @uref{https://developer.github.com/v3/, GitHub API} to query for new
9190 releases. When used repeatedly e.g.@: when refreshing all packages,
9191 GitHub will eventually refuse to answer any further API requests. By
9192 default 60 API requests per hour are allowed, and a full refresh on all
9193 GitHub packages in Guix requires more than this. Authentication with
9194 GitHub through the use of an API token alleviates these limits. To use
9195 an API token, set the environment variable @code{GUIX_GITHUB_TOKEN} to a
9196 token procured from @uref{https://github.com/settings/tokens} or
9197 otherwise.
9198
9199
9200 @node Invoking guix lint
9201 @section Invoking @command{guix lint}
9202
9203 @cindex @command{guix lint}
9204 @cindex package, checking for errors
9205 The @command{guix lint} command is meant to help package developers avoid
9206 common errors and use a consistent style. It runs a number of checks on
9207 a given set of packages in order to find common mistakes in their
9208 definitions. Available @dfn{checkers} include (see
9209 @code{--list-checkers} for a complete list):
9210
9211 @table @code
9212 @item synopsis
9213 @itemx description
9214 Validate certain typographical and stylistic rules about package
9215 descriptions and synopses.
9216
9217 @item inputs-should-be-native
9218 Identify inputs that should most likely be native inputs.
9219
9220 @item source
9221 @itemx home-page
9222 @itemx mirror-url
9223 @itemx github-url
9224 @itemx source-file-name
9225 Probe @code{home-page} and @code{source} URLs and report those that are
9226 invalid. Suggest a @code{mirror://} URL when applicable. If the
9227 @code{source} URL redirects to a GitHub URL, recommend usage of the GitHub
9228 URL. Check that the source file name is meaningful, e.g.@: is not just a
9229 version number or ``git-checkout'', without a declared @code{file-name}
9230 (@pxref{origin Reference}).
9231
9232 @item source-unstable-tarball
9233 Parse the @code{source} URL to determine if a tarball from GitHub is
9234 autogenerated or if it is a release tarball. Unfortunately GitHub's
9235 autogenerated tarballs are sometimes regenerated.
9236
9237 @item cve
9238 @cindex security vulnerabilities
9239 @cindex CVE, Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures
9240 Report known vulnerabilities found in the Common Vulnerabilities and
9241 Exposures (CVE) databases of the current and past year
9242 @uref{https://nvd.nist.gov/download.cfm#CVE_FEED, published by the US
9243 NIST}.
9244
9245 To view information about a particular vulnerability, visit pages such as:
9246
9247 @itemize
9248 @item
9249 @indicateurl{https://web.nvd.nist.gov/view/vuln/detail?vulnId=CVE-YYYY-ABCD}
9250 @item
9251 @indicateurl{https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-YYYY-ABCD}
9252 @end itemize
9253
9254 @noindent
9255 where @code{CVE-YYYY-ABCD} is the CVE identifier---e.g.,
9256 @code{CVE-2015-7554}.
9257
9258 Package developers can specify in package recipes the
9259 @uref{https://nvd.nist.gov/cpe.cfm,Common Platform Enumeration (CPE)}
9260 name and version of the package when they differ from the name or version
9261 that Guix uses, as in this example:
9262
9263 @example
9264 (package
9265 (name "grub")
9266 ;; @dots{}
9267 ;; CPE calls this package "grub2".
9268 (properties '((cpe-name . "grub2")
9269 (cpe-version . "2.3")))
9270 @end example
9271
9272 @c See <https://www.openwall.com/lists/oss-security/2017/03/15/3>.
9273 Some entries in the CVE database do not specify which version of a
9274 package they apply to, and would thus ``stick around'' forever. Package
9275 developers who found CVE alerts and verified they can be ignored can
9276 declare them as in this example:
9277
9278 @example
9279 (package
9280 (name "t1lib")
9281 ;; @dots{}
9282 ;; These CVEs no longer apply and can be safely ignored.
9283 (properties `((lint-hidden-cve . ("CVE-2011-0433"
9284 "CVE-2011-1553"
9285 "CVE-2011-1554"
9286 "CVE-2011-5244")))))
9287 @end example
9288
9289 @item formatting
9290 Warn about obvious source code formatting issues: trailing white space,
9291 use of tabulations, etc.
9292 @end table
9293
9294 The general syntax is:
9295
9296 @example
9297 guix lint @var{options} @var{package}@dots{}
9298 @end example
9299
9300 If no package is given on the command line, then all packages are checked.
9301 The @var{options} may be zero or more of the following:
9302
9303 @table @code
9304 @item --list-checkers
9305 @itemx -l
9306 List and describe all the available checkers that will be run on packages
9307 and exit.
9308
9309 @item --checkers
9310 @itemx -c
9311 Only enable the checkers specified in a comma-separated list using the
9312 names returned by @code{--list-checkers}.
9313
9314 @end table
9315
9316 @node Invoking guix size
9317 @section Invoking @command{guix size}
9318
9319 @cindex size
9320 @cindex package size
9321 @cindex closure
9322 @cindex @command{guix size}
9323 The @command{guix size} command helps package developers profile the
9324 disk usage of packages. It is easy to overlook the impact of an
9325 additional dependency added to a package, or the impact of using a
9326 single output for a package that could easily be split (@pxref{Packages
9327 with Multiple Outputs}). Such are the typical issues that
9328 @command{guix size} can highlight.
9329
9330 The command can be passed one or more package specifications
9331 such as @code{gcc@@4.8}
9332 or @code{guile:debug}, or a file name in the store. Consider this
9333 example:
9334
9335 @example
9336 $ guix size coreutils
9337 store item total self
9338 /gnu/store/@dots{}-gcc-5.5.0-lib 60.4 30.1 38.1%
9339 /gnu/store/@dots{}-glibc-2.27 30.3 28.8 36.6%
9340 /gnu/store/@dots{}-coreutils-8.28 78.9 15.0 19.0%
9341 /gnu/store/@dots{}-gmp-6.1.2 63.1 2.7 3.4%
9342 /gnu/store/@dots{}-bash-static-4.4.12 1.5 1.5 1.9%
9343 /gnu/store/@dots{}-acl-2.2.52 61.1 0.4 0.5%
9344 /gnu/store/@dots{}-attr-2.4.47 60.6 0.2 0.3%
9345 /gnu/store/@dots{}-libcap-2.25 60.5 0.2 0.2%
9346 total: 78.9 MiB
9347 @end example
9348
9349 @cindex closure
9350 The store items listed here constitute the @dfn{transitive closure} of
9351 Coreutils---i.e., Coreutils and all its dependencies, recursively---as
9352 would be returned by:
9353
9354 @example
9355 $ guix gc -R /gnu/store/@dots{}-coreutils-8.23
9356 @end example
9357
9358 Here the output shows three columns next to store items. The first column,
9359 labeled ``total'', shows the size in mebibytes (MiB) of the closure of
9360 the store item---that is, its own size plus the size of all its
9361 dependencies. The next column, labeled ``self'', shows the size of the
9362 item itself. The last column shows the ratio of the size of the item
9363 itself to the space occupied by all the items listed here.
9364
9365 In this example, we see that the closure of Coreutils weighs in at
9366 79@tie{}MiB, most of which is taken by libc and GCC's run-time support
9367 libraries. (That libc and GCC's libraries represent a large fraction of
9368 the closure is not a problem @i{per se} because they are always available
9369 on the system anyway.)
9370
9371 When the package(s) passed to @command{guix size} are available in the
9372 store@footnote{More precisely, @command{guix size} looks for the
9373 @emph{ungrafted} variant of the given package(s), as returned by
9374 @code{guix build @var{package} --no-grafts}. @xref{Security Updates},
9375 for information on grafts.}, @command{guix size} queries the daemon to determine its
9376 dependencies, and measures its size in the store, similar to @command{du
9377 -ms --apparent-size} (@pxref{du invocation,,, coreutils, GNU
9378 Coreutils}).
9379
9380 When the given packages are @emph{not} in the store, @command{guix size}
9381 reports information based on the available substitutes
9382 (@pxref{Substitutes}). This makes it possible it to profile disk usage of
9383 store items that are not even on disk, only available remotely.
9384
9385 You can also specify several package names:
9386
9387 @example
9388 $ guix size coreutils grep sed bash
9389 store item total self
9390 /gnu/store/@dots{}-coreutils-8.24 77.8 13.8 13.4%
9391 /gnu/store/@dots{}-grep-2.22 73.1 0.8 0.8%
9392 /gnu/store/@dots{}-bash-4.3.42 72.3 4.7 4.6%
9393 /gnu/store/@dots{}-readline-6.3 67.6 1.2 1.2%
9394 @dots{}
9395 total: 102.3 MiB
9396 @end example
9397
9398 @noindent
9399 In this example we see that the combination of the four packages takes
9400 102.3@tie{}MiB in total, which is much less than the sum of each closure
9401 since they have a lot of dependencies in common.
9402
9403 The available options are:
9404
9405 @table @option
9406
9407 @item --substitute-urls=@var{urls}
9408 Use substitute information from @var{urls}.
9409 @xref{client-substitute-urls, the same option for @code{guix build}}.
9410
9411 @item --sort=@var{key}
9412 Sort lines according to @var{key}, one of the following options:
9413
9414 @table @code
9415 @item self
9416 the size of each item (the default);
9417 @item closure
9418 the total size of the item's closure.
9419 @end table
9420
9421 @item --map-file=@var{file}
9422 Write a graphical map of disk usage in PNG format to @var{file}.
9423
9424 For the example above, the map looks like this:
9425
9426 @image{images/coreutils-size-map,5in,, map of Coreutils disk usage
9427 produced by @command{guix size}}
9428
9429 This option requires that
9430 @uref{https://wingolog.org/software/guile-charting/, Guile-Charting} be
9431 installed and visible in Guile's module search path. When that is not
9432 the case, @command{guix size} fails as it tries to load it.
9433
9434 @item --system=@var{system}
9435 @itemx -s @var{system}
9436 Consider packages for @var{system}---e.g., @code{x86_64-linux}.
9437
9438 @end table
9439
9440 @node Invoking guix graph
9441 @section Invoking @command{guix graph}
9442
9443 @cindex DAG
9444 @cindex @command{guix graph}
9445 @cindex package dependencies
9446 Packages and their dependencies form a @dfn{graph}, specifically a
9447 directed acyclic graph (DAG). It can quickly become difficult to have a
9448 mental model of the package DAG, so the @command{guix graph} command
9449 provides a visual representation of the DAG. By default,
9450 @command{guix graph} emits a DAG representation in the input format of
9451 @uref{https://www.graphviz.org/, Graphviz}, so its output can be passed
9452 directly to the @command{dot} command of Graphviz. It can also emit an
9453 HTML page with embedded JavaScript code to display a ``chord diagram''
9454 in a Web browser, using the @uref{https://d3js.org/, d3.js} library, or
9455 emit Cypher queries to construct a graph in a graph database supporting
9456 the @uref{https://www.opencypher.org/, openCypher} query language.
9457 The general syntax is:
9458
9459 @example
9460 guix graph @var{options} @var{package}@dots{}
9461 @end example
9462
9463 For example, the following command generates a PDF file representing the
9464 package DAG for the GNU@tie{}Core Utilities, showing its build-time
9465 dependencies:
9466
9467 @example
9468 guix graph coreutils | dot -Tpdf > dag.pdf
9469 @end example
9470
9471 The output looks like this:
9472
9473 @image{images/coreutils-graph,2in,,Dependency graph of the GNU Coreutils}
9474
9475 Nice little graph, no?
9476
9477 But there is more than one graph! The one above is concise: it is the
9478 graph of package objects, omitting implicit inputs such as GCC, libc,
9479 grep, etc. It is often useful to have such a concise graph, but
9480 sometimes one may want to see more details. @command{guix graph} supports
9481 several types of graphs, allowing you to choose the level of detail:
9482
9483 @table @code
9484 @item package
9485 This is the default type used in the example above. It shows the DAG of
9486 package objects, excluding implicit dependencies. It is concise, but
9487 filters out many details.
9488
9489 @item reverse-package
9490 This shows the @emph{reverse} DAG of packages. For example:
9491
9492 @example
9493 guix graph --type=reverse-package ocaml
9494 @end example
9495
9496 ...@: yields the graph of packages that @emph{explicitly} depend on OCaml (if
9497 you are also interested in cases where OCaml is an implicit dependency, see
9498 @code{reverse-bag} below.)
9499
9500 Note that for core packages this can yield huge graphs. If all you want
9501 is to know the number of packages that depend on a given package, use
9502 @command{guix refresh --list-dependent} (@pxref{Invoking guix refresh,
9503 @option{--list-dependent}}).
9504
9505 @item bag-emerged
9506 This is the package DAG, @emph{including} implicit inputs.
9507
9508 For instance, the following command:
9509
9510 @example
9511 guix graph --type=bag-emerged coreutils | dot -Tpdf > dag.pdf
9512 @end example
9513
9514 ...@: yields this bigger graph:
9515
9516 @image{images/coreutils-bag-graph,,5in,Detailed dependency graph of the GNU Coreutils}
9517
9518 At the bottom of the graph, we see all the implicit inputs of
9519 @var{gnu-build-system} (@pxref{Build Systems, @code{gnu-build-system}}).
9520
9521 Now, note that the dependencies of these implicit inputs---that is, the
9522 @dfn{bootstrap dependencies} (@pxref{Bootstrapping})---are not shown
9523 here, for conciseness.
9524
9525 @item bag
9526 Similar to @code{bag-emerged}, but this time including all the bootstrap
9527 dependencies.
9528
9529 @item bag-with-origins
9530 Similar to @code{bag}, but also showing origins and their dependencies.
9531
9532 @item reverse-bag
9533 This shows the @emph{reverse} DAG of packages. Unlike @code{reverse-package},
9534 it also takes implicit dependencies into account. For example:
9535
9536 @example
9537 guix graph -t reverse-bag dune
9538 @end example
9539
9540 @noindent
9541 ...@: yields the graph of all packages that depend on Dune, directly or
9542 indirectly. Since Dune is an @emph{implicit} dependency of many packages
9543 @i{via} @code{dune-build-system}, this shows a large number of packages,
9544 whereas @code{reverse-package} would show very few if any.
9545
9546 @item derivation
9547 This is the most detailed representation: It shows the DAG of
9548 derivations (@pxref{Derivations}) and plain store items. Compared to
9549 the above representation, many additional nodes are visible, including
9550 build scripts, patches, Guile modules, etc.
9551
9552 For this type of graph, it is also possible to pass a @file{.drv} file
9553 name instead of a package name, as in:
9554
9555 @example
9556 guix graph -t derivation `guix system build -d my-config.scm`
9557 @end example
9558
9559 @item module
9560 This is the graph of @dfn{package modules} (@pxref{Package Modules}).
9561 For example, the following command shows the graph for the package
9562 module that defines the @code{guile} package:
9563
9564 @example
9565 guix graph -t module guile | dot -Tpdf > module-graph.pdf
9566 @end example
9567 @end table
9568
9569 All the types above correspond to @emph{build-time dependencies}. The
9570 following graph type represents the @emph{run-time dependencies}:
9571
9572 @table @code
9573 @item references
9574 This is the graph of @dfn{references} of a package output, as returned
9575 by @command{guix gc --references} (@pxref{Invoking guix gc}).
9576
9577 If the given package output is not available in the store, @command{guix
9578 graph} attempts to obtain dependency information from substitutes.
9579
9580 Here you can also pass a store file name instead of a package name. For
9581 example, the command below produces the reference graph of your profile
9582 (which can be big!):
9583
9584 @example
9585 guix graph -t references `readlink -f ~/.guix-profile`
9586 @end example
9587
9588 @item referrers
9589 This is the graph of the @dfn{referrers} of a store item, as returned by
9590 @command{guix gc --referrers} (@pxref{Invoking guix gc}).
9591
9592 This relies exclusively on local information from your store. For
9593 instance, let us suppose that the current Inkscape is available in 10
9594 profiles on your machine; @command{guix graph -t referrers inkscape}
9595 will show a graph rooted at Inkscape and with those 10 profiles linked
9596 to it.
9597
9598 It can help determine what is preventing a store item from being garbage
9599 collected.
9600
9601 @end table
9602
9603 The available options are the following:
9604
9605 @table @option
9606 @item --type=@var{type}
9607 @itemx -t @var{type}
9608 Produce a graph output of @var{type}, where @var{type} must be one of
9609 the values listed above.
9610
9611 @item --list-types
9612 List the supported graph types.
9613
9614 @item --backend=@var{backend}
9615 @itemx -b @var{backend}
9616 Produce a graph using the selected @var{backend}.
9617
9618 @item --list-backends
9619 List the supported graph backends.
9620
9621 Currently, the available backends are Graphviz and d3.js.
9622
9623 @item --expression=@var{expr}
9624 @itemx -e @var{expr}
9625 Consider the package @var{expr} evaluates to.
9626
9627 This is useful to precisely refer to a package, as in this example:
9628
9629 @example
9630 guix graph -e '(@@@@ (gnu packages commencement) gnu-make-final)'
9631 @end example
9632
9633 @item --system=@var{system}
9634 @itemx -s @var{system}
9635 Display the graph for @var{system}---e.g., @code{i686-linux}.
9636
9637 The package dependency graph is largely architecture-independent, but there
9638 are some architecture-dependent bits that this option allows you to visualize.
9639 @end table
9640
9641
9642
9643 @node Invoking guix publish
9644 @section Invoking @command{guix publish}
9645
9646 @cindex @command{guix publish}
9647 The purpose of @command{guix publish} is to enable users to easily share
9648 their store with others, who can then use it as a substitute server
9649 (@pxref{Substitutes}).
9650
9651 When @command{guix publish} runs, it spawns an HTTP server which allows
9652 anyone with network access to obtain substitutes from it. This means
9653 that any machine running Guix can also act as if it were a build farm,
9654 since the HTTP interface is compatible with Cuirass, the software behind
9655 the @code{@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER}} build farm.
9656
9657 For security, each substitute is signed, allowing recipients to check
9658 their authenticity and integrity (@pxref{Substitutes}). Because
9659 @command{guix publish} uses the signing key of the system, which is only
9660 readable by the system administrator, it must be started as root; the
9661 @code{--user} option makes it drop root privileges early on.
9662
9663 The signing key pair must be generated before @command{guix publish} is
9664 launched, using @command{guix archive --generate-key} (@pxref{Invoking
9665 guix archive}).
9666
9667 The general syntax is:
9668
9669 @example
9670 guix publish @var{options}@dots{}
9671 @end example
9672
9673 Running @command{guix publish} without any additional arguments will
9674 spawn an HTTP server on port 8080:
9675
9676 @example
9677 guix publish
9678 @end example
9679
9680 Once a publishing server has been authorized (@pxref{Invoking guix
9681 archive}), the daemon may download substitutes from it:
9682
9683 @example
9684 guix-daemon --substitute-urls=http://example.org:8080
9685 @end example
9686
9687 By default, @command{guix publish} compresses archives on the fly as it
9688 serves them. This ``on-the-fly'' mode is convenient in that it requires
9689 no setup and is immediately available. However, when serving lots of
9690 clients, we recommend using the @option{--cache} option, which enables
9691 caching of the archives before they are sent to clients---see below for
9692 details. The @command{guix weather} command provides a handy way to
9693 check what a server provides (@pxref{Invoking guix weather}).
9694
9695 As a bonus, @command{guix publish} also serves as a content-addressed
9696 mirror for source files referenced in @code{origin} records
9697 (@pxref{origin Reference}). For instance, assuming @command{guix
9698 publish} is running on @code{example.org}, the following URL returns the
9699 raw @file{hello-2.10.tar.gz} file with the given SHA256 hash
9700 (represented in @code{nix-base32} format, @pxref{Invoking guix hash}):
9701
9702 @example
9703 http://example.org/file/hello-2.10.tar.gz/sha256/0ssi1@dots{}ndq1i
9704 @end example
9705
9706 Obviously, these URLs only work for files that are in the store; in
9707 other cases, they return 404 (``Not Found'').
9708
9709 @cindex build logs, publication
9710 Build logs are available from @code{/log} URLs like:
9711
9712 @example
9713 http://example.org/log/gwspk@dots{}-guile-2.2.3
9714 @end example
9715
9716 @noindent
9717 When @command{guix-daemon} is configured to save compressed build logs,
9718 as is the case by default (@pxref{Invoking guix-daemon}), @code{/log}
9719 URLs return the compressed log as-is, with an appropriate
9720 @code{Content-Type} and/or @code{Content-Encoding} header. We recommend
9721 running @command{guix-daemon} with @code{--log-compression=gzip} since
9722 Web browsers can automatically decompress it, which is not the case with
9723 bzip2 compression.
9724
9725 The following options are available:
9726
9727 @table @code
9728 @item --port=@var{port}
9729 @itemx -p @var{port}
9730 Listen for HTTP requests on @var{port}.
9731
9732 @item --listen=@var{host}
9733 Listen on the network interface for @var{host}. The default is to
9734 accept connections from any interface.
9735
9736 @item --user=@var{user}
9737 @itemx -u @var{user}
9738 Change privileges to @var{user} as soon as possible---i.e., once the
9739 server socket is open and the signing key has been read.
9740
9741 @item --compression[=@var{method}[:@var{level}]]
9742 @itemx -C [@var{method}[:@var{level}]]
9743 Compress data using the given @var{method} and @var{level}. @var{method} is
9744 one of @code{lzip} and @code{gzip}; when @var{method} is omitted, @code{gzip}
9745 is used.
9746
9747 When @var{level} is zero, disable compression. The range 1 to 9 corresponds
9748 to different compression levels: 1 is the fastest, and 9 is the best
9749 (CPU-intensive). The default is 3.
9750
9751 Usually, @code{lzip} compresses noticeably better than @code{gzip} for a small
9752 increase in CPU usage; see
9753 @uref{https://nongnu.org/lzip/lzip_benchmark.html,benchmarks on the lzip Web
9754 page}.
9755
9756 Unless @option{--cache} is used, compression occurs on the fly and
9757 the compressed streams are not
9758 cached. Thus, to reduce load on the machine that runs @command{guix
9759 publish}, it may be a good idea to choose a low compression level, to
9760 run @command{guix publish} behind a caching proxy, or to use
9761 @option{--cache}. Using @option{--cache} has the advantage that it
9762 allows @command{guix publish} to add @code{Content-Length} HTTP header
9763 to its responses.
9764
9765 This option can be repeated, in which case every substitute gets compressed
9766 using all the selected methods, and all of them are advertised. This is
9767 useful when users may not support all the compression methods: they can select
9768 the one they support.
9769
9770 @item --cache=@var{directory}
9771 @itemx -c @var{directory}
9772 Cache archives and meta-data (@code{.narinfo} URLs) to @var{directory}
9773 and only serve archives that are in cache.
9774
9775 When this option is omitted, archives and meta-data are created
9776 on-the-fly. This can reduce the available bandwidth, especially when
9777 compression is enabled, since this may become CPU-bound. Another
9778 drawback of the default mode is that the length of archives is not known
9779 in advance, so @command{guix publish} does not add a
9780 @code{Content-Length} HTTP header to its responses, which in turn
9781 prevents clients from knowing the amount of data being downloaded.
9782
9783 Conversely, when @option{--cache} is used, the first request for a store
9784 item (@i{via} a @code{.narinfo} URL) returns 404 and triggers a
9785 background process to @dfn{bake} the archive---computing its
9786 @code{.narinfo} and compressing the archive, if needed. Once the
9787 archive is cached in @var{directory}, subsequent requests succeed and
9788 are served directly from the cache, which guarantees that clients get
9789 the best possible bandwidth.
9790
9791 The ``baking'' process is performed by worker threads. By default, one
9792 thread per CPU core is created, but this can be customized. See
9793 @option{--workers} below.
9794
9795 When @option{--ttl} is used, cached entries are automatically deleted
9796 when they have expired.
9797
9798 @item --workers=@var{N}
9799 When @option{--cache} is used, request the allocation of @var{N} worker
9800 threads to ``bake'' archives.
9801
9802 @item --ttl=@var{ttl}
9803 Produce @code{Cache-Control} HTTP headers that advertise a time-to-live
9804 (TTL) of @var{ttl}. @var{ttl} must denote a duration: @code{5d} means 5
9805 days, @code{1m} means 1 month, and so on.
9806
9807 This allows the user's Guix to keep substitute information in cache for
9808 @var{ttl}. However, note that @code{guix publish} does not itself
9809 guarantee that the store items it provides will indeed remain available
9810 for as long as @var{ttl}.
9811
9812 Additionally, when @option{--cache} is used, cached entries that have
9813 not been accessed for @var{ttl} and that no longer have a corresponding
9814 item in the store, may be deleted.
9815
9816 @item --nar-path=@var{path}
9817 Use @var{path} as the prefix for the URLs of ``nar'' files
9818 (@pxref{Invoking guix archive, normalized archives}).
9819
9820 By default, nars are served at a URL such as
9821 @code{/nar/gzip/@dots{}-coreutils-8.25}. This option allows you to
9822 change the @code{/nar} part to @var{path}.
9823
9824 @item --public-key=@var{file}
9825 @itemx --private-key=@var{file}
9826 Use the specific @var{file}s as the public/private key pair used to sign
9827 the store items being published.
9828
9829 The files must correspond to the same key pair (the private key is used
9830 for signing and the public key is merely advertised in the signature
9831 metadata). They must contain keys in the canonical s-expression format
9832 as produced by @command{guix archive --generate-key} (@pxref{Invoking
9833 guix archive}). By default, @file{/etc/guix/signing-key.pub} and
9834 @file{/etc/guix/signing-key.sec} are used.
9835
9836 @item --repl[=@var{port}]
9837 @itemx -r [@var{port}]
9838 Spawn a Guile REPL server (@pxref{REPL Servers,,, guile, GNU Guile
9839 Reference Manual}) on @var{port} (37146 by default). This is used
9840 primarily for debugging a running @command{guix publish} server.
9841 @end table
9842
9843 Enabling @command{guix publish} on Guix System is a one-liner: just
9844 instantiate a @code{guix-publish-service-type} service in the @code{services} field
9845 of the @code{operating-system} declaration (@pxref{guix-publish-service-type,
9846 @code{guix-publish-service-type}}).
9847
9848 If you are instead running Guix on a ``foreign distro'', follow these
9849 instructions:”
9850
9851 @itemize
9852 @item
9853 If your host distro uses the systemd init system:
9854
9855 @example
9856 # ln -s ~root/.guix-profile/lib/systemd/system/guix-publish.service \
9857 /etc/systemd/system/
9858 # systemctl start guix-publish && systemctl enable guix-publish
9859 @end example
9860
9861 @item
9862 If your host distro uses the Upstart init system:
9863
9864 @example
9865 # ln -s ~root/.guix-profile/lib/upstart/system/guix-publish.conf /etc/init/
9866 # start guix-publish
9867 @end example
9868
9869 @item
9870 Otherwise, proceed similarly with your distro's init system.
9871 @end itemize
9872
9873 @node Invoking guix challenge
9874 @section Invoking @command{guix challenge}
9875
9876 @cindex reproducible builds
9877 @cindex verifiable builds
9878 @cindex @command{guix challenge}
9879 @cindex challenge
9880 Do the binaries provided by this server really correspond to the source
9881 code it claims to build? Is a package build process deterministic?
9882 These are the questions the @command{guix challenge} command attempts to
9883 answer.
9884
9885 The former is obviously an important question: Before using a substitute
9886 server (@pxref{Substitutes}), one had better @emph{verify} that it
9887 provides the right binaries, and thus @emph{challenge} it. The latter
9888 is what enables the former: If package builds are deterministic, then
9889 independent builds of the package should yield the exact same result,
9890 bit for bit; if a server provides a binary different from the one
9891 obtained locally, it may be either corrupt or malicious.
9892
9893 We know that the hash that shows up in @file{/gnu/store} file names is
9894 the hash of all the inputs of the process that built the file or
9895 directory---compilers, libraries, build scripts,
9896 etc. (@pxref{Introduction}). Assuming deterministic build processes,
9897 one store file name should map to exactly one build output.
9898 @command{guix challenge} checks whether there is, indeed, a single
9899 mapping by comparing the build outputs of several independent builds of
9900 any given store item.
9901
9902 The command output looks like this:
9903
9904 @smallexample
9905 $ guix challenge --substitute-urls="https://@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER} https://guix.example.org"
9906 updating list of substitutes from 'https://@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER}'... 100.0%
9907 updating list of substitutes from 'https://guix.example.org'... 100.0%
9908 /gnu/store/@dots{}-openssl-1.0.2d contents differ:
9909 local hash: 0725l22r5jnzazaacncwsvp9kgf42266ayyp814v7djxs7nk963q
9910 https://@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER}/nar/@dots{}-openssl-1.0.2d: 0725l22r5jnzazaacncwsvp9kgf42266ayyp814v7djxs7nk963q
9911 https://guix.example.org/nar/@dots{}-openssl-1.0.2d: 1zy4fmaaqcnjrzzajkdn3f5gmjk754b43qkq47llbyak9z0qjyim
9912 /gnu/store/@dots{}-git-2.5.0 contents differ:
9913 local hash: 00p3bmryhjxrhpn2gxs2fy0a15lnip05l97205pgbk5ra395hyha
9914 https://@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER}/nar/@dots{}-git-2.5.0: 069nb85bv4d4a6slrwjdy8v1cn4cwspm3kdbmyb81d6zckj3nq9f
9915 https://guix.example.org/nar/@dots{}-git-2.5.0: 0mdqa9w1p6cmli6976v4wi0sw9r4p5prkj7lzfd1877wk11c9c73
9916 /gnu/store/@dots{}-pius-2.1.1 contents differ:
9917 local hash: 0k4v3m9z1zp8xzzizb7d8kjj72f9172xv078sq4wl73vnq9ig3ax
9918 https://@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER}/nar/@dots{}-pius-2.1.1: 0k4v3m9z1zp8xzzizb7d8kjj72f9172xv078sq4wl73vnq9ig3ax
9919 https://guix.example.org/nar/@dots{}-pius-2.1.1: 1cy25x1a4fzq5rk0pmvc8xhwyffnqz95h2bpvqsz2mpvlbccy0gs
9920
9921 @dots{}
9922
9923 6,406 store items were analyzed:
9924 - 4,749 (74.1%) were identical
9925 - 525 (8.2%) differed
9926 - 1,132 (17.7%) were inconclusive
9927 @end smallexample
9928
9929 @noindent
9930 In this example, @command{guix challenge} first scans the store to
9931 determine the set of locally-built derivations---as opposed to store
9932 items that were downloaded from a substitute server---and then queries
9933 all the substitute servers. It then reports those store items for which
9934 the servers obtained a result different from the local build.
9935
9936 @cindex non-determinism, in package builds
9937 As an example, @code{guix.example.org} always gets a different answer.
9938 Conversely, @code{@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER}} agrees with local builds, except in the
9939 case of Git. This might indicate that the build process of Git is
9940 non-deterministic, meaning that its output varies as a function of
9941 various things that Guix does not fully control, in spite of building
9942 packages in isolated environments (@pxref{Features}). Most common
9943 sources of non-determinism include the addition of timestamps in build
9944 results, the inclusion of random numbers, and directory listings sorted
9945 by inode number. See @uref{https://reproducible-builds.org/docs/}, for
9946 more information.
9947
9948 To find out what is wrong with this Git binary, we can do something along
9949 these lines (@pxref{Invoking guix archive}):
9950
9951 @example
9952 $ wget -q -O - https://@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER}/nar/@dots{}-git-2.5.0 \
9953 | guix archive -x /tmp/git
9954 $ diff -ur --no-dereference /gnu/store/@dots{}-git.2.5.0 /tmp/git
9955 @end example
9956
9957 This command shows the difference between the files resulting from the
9958 local build, and the files resulting from the build on
9959 @code{@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER}} (@pxref{Overview, Comparing and Merging Files,,
9960 diffutils, Comparing and Merging Files}). The @command{diff} command
9961 works great for text files. When binary files differ, a better option
9962 is @uref{https://diffoscope.org/, Diffoscope}, a tool that helps
9963 visualize differences for all kinds of files.
9964
9965 Once you have done that work, you can tell whether the differences are due
9966 to a non-deterministic build process or to a malicious server. We try
9967 hard to remove sources of non-determinism in packages to make it easier
9968 to verify substitutes, but of course, this is a process that
9969 involves not just Guix, but a large part of the free software community.
9970 In the meantime, @command{guix challenge} is one tool to help address
9971 the problem.
9972
9973 If you are writing packages for Guix, you are encouraged to check
9974 whether @code{@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER}} and other substitute servers obtain the
9975 same build result as you did with:
9976
9977 @example
9978 $ guix challenge @var{package}
9979 @end example
9980
9981 @noindent
9982 where @var{package} is a package specification such as
9983 @code{guile@@2.0} or @code{glibc:debug}.
9984
9985 The general syntax is:
9986
9987 @example
9988 guix challenge @var{options} [@var{packages}@dots{}]
9989 @end example
9990
9991 When a difference is found between the hash of a locally-built item and
9992 that of a server-provided substitute, or among substitutes provided by
9993 different servers, the command displays it as in the example above and
9994 its exit code is 2 (other non-zero exit codes denote other kinds of
9995 errors.)
9996
9997 The one option that matters is:
9998
9999 @table @code
10000
10001 @item --substitute-urls=@var{urls}
10002 Consider @var{urls} the whitespace-separated list of substitute source
10003 URLs to compare to.
10004
10005 @item --verbose
10006 @itemx -v
10007 Show details about matches (identical contents) in addition to
10008 information about mismatches.
10009
10010 @end table
10011
10012 @node Invoking guix copy
10013 @section Invoking @command{guix copy}
10014
10015 @cindex copy, of store items, over SSH
10016 @cindex SSH, copy of store items
10017 @cindex sharing store items across machines
10018 @cindex transferring store items across machines
10019 The @command{guix copy} command copies items from the store of one
10020 machine to that of another machine over a secure shell (SSH)
10021 connection@footnote{This command is available only when Guile-SSH was
10022 found. @xref{Requirements}, for details.}. For example, the following
10023 command copies the @code{coreutils} package, the user's profile, and all
10024 their dependencies over to @var{host}, logged in as @var{user}:
10025
10026 @example
10027 guix copy --to=@var{user}@@@var{host} \
10028 coreutils `readlink -f ~/.guix-profile`
10029 @end example
10030
10031 If some of the items to be copied are already present on @var{host},
10032 they are not actually sent.
10033
10034 The command below retrieves @code{libreoffice} and @code{gimp} from
10035 @var{host}, assuming they are available there:
10036
10037 @example
10038 guix copy --from=@var{host} libreoffice gimp
10039 @end example
10040
10041 The SSH connection is established using the Guile-SSH client, which is
10042 compatible with OpenSSH: it honors @file{~/.ssh/known_hosts} and
10043 @file{~/.ssh/config}, and uses the SSH agent for authentication.
10044
10045 The key used to sign items that are sent must be accepted by the remote
10046 machine. Likewise, the key used by the remote machine to sign items you
10047 are retrieving must be in @file{/etc/guix/acl} so it is accepted by your
10048 own daemon. @xref{Invoking guix archive}, for more information about
10049 store item authentication.
10050
10051 The general syntax is:
10052
10053 @example
10054 guix copy [--to=@var{spec}|--from=@var{spec}] @var{items}@dots{}
10055 @end example
10056
10057 You must always specify one of the following options:
10058
10059 @table @code
10060 @item --to=@var{spec}
10061 @itemx --from=@var{spec}
10062 Specify the host to send to or receive from. @var{spec} must be an SSH
10063 spec such as @code{example.org}, @code{charlie@@example.org}, or
10064 @code{charlie@@example.org:2222}.
10065 @end table
10066
10067 The @var{items} can be either package names, such as @code{gimp}, or
10068 store items, such as @file{/gnu/store/@dots{}-idutils-4.6}.
10069
10070 When specifying the name of a package to send, it is first built if
10071 needed, unless @option{--dry-run} was specified. Common build options
10072 are supported (@pxref{Common Build Options}).
10073
10074
10075 @node Invoking guix container
10076 @section Invoking @command{guix container}
10077 @cindex container
10078 @cindex @command{guix container}
10079 @quotation Note
10080 As of version @value{VERSION}, this tool is experimental. The interface
10081 is subject to radical change in the future.
10082 @end quotation
10083
10084 The purpose of @command{guix container} is to manipulate processes
10085 running within an isolated environment, commonly known as a
10086 ``container'', typically created by the @command{guix environment}
10087 (@pxref{Invoking guix environment}) and @command{guix system container}
10088 (@pxref{Invoking guix system}) commands.
10089
10090 The general syntax is:
10091
10092 @example
10093 guix container @var{action} @var{options}@dots{}
10094 @end example
10095
10096 @var{action} specifies the operation to perform with a container, and
10097 @var{options} specifies the context-specific arguments for the action.
10098
10099 The following actions are available:
10100
10101 @table @code
10102 @item exec
10103 Execute a command within the context of a running container.
10104
10105 The syntax is:
10106
10107 @example
10108 guix container exec @var{pid} @var{program} @var{arguments}@dots{}
10109 @end example
10110
10111 @var{pid} specifies the process ID of the running container.
10112 @var{program} specifies an executable file name within the root file
10113 system of the container. @var{arguments} are the additional options that
10114 will be passed to @var{program}.
10115
10116 The following command launches an interactive login shell inside a
10117 Guix system container, started by @command{guix system container}, and whose
10118 process ID is 9001:
10119
10120 @example
10121 guix container exec 9001 /run/current-system/profile/bin/bash --login
10122 @end example
10123
10124 Note that the @var{pid} cannot be the parent process of a container. It
10125 must be PID 1 of the container or one of its child processes.
10126
10127 @end table
10128
10129 @node Invoking guix weather
10130 @section Invoking @command{guix weather}
10131
10132 Occasionally you're grumpy because substitutes are lacking and you end
10133 up building packages by yourself (@pxref{Substitutes}). The
10134 @command{guix weather} command reports on substitute availability on the
10135 specified servers so you can have an idea of whether you'll be grumpy
10136 today. It can sometimes be useful info as a user, but it is primarily
10137 useful to people running @command{guix publish} (@pxref{Invoking guix
10138 publish}).
10139
10140 @cindex statistics, for substitutes
10141 @cindex availability of substitutes
10142 @cindex substitute availability
10143 @cindex weather, substitute availability
10144 Here's a sample run:
10145
10146 @example
10147 $ guix weather --substitute-urls=https://guix.example.org
10148 computing 5,872 package derivations for x86_64-linux...
10149 looking for 6,128 store items on https://guix.example.org..
10150 updating list of substitutes from 'https://guix.example.org'... 100.0%
10151 https://guix.example.org
10152 43.4% substitutes available (2,658 out of 6,128)
10153 7,032.5 MiB of nars (compressed)
10154 19,824.2 MiB on disk (uncompressed)
10155 0.030 seconds per request (182.9 seconds in total)
10156 33.5 requests per second
10157
10158 9.8% (342 out of 3,470) of the missing items are queued
10159 867 queued builds
10160 x86_64-linux: 518 (59.7%)
10161 i686-linux: 221 (25.5%)
10162 aarch64-linux: 128 (14.8%)
10163 build rate: 23.41 builds per hour
10164 x86_64-linux: 11.16 builds per hour
10165 i686-linux: 6.03 builds per hour
10166 aarch64-linux: 6.41 builds per hour
10167 @end example
10168
10169 @cindex continuous integration, statistics
10170 As you can see, it reports the fraction of all the packages for which
10171 substitutes are available on the server---regardless of whether
10172 substitutes are enabled, and regardless of whether this server's signing
10173 key is authorized. It also reports the size of the compressed archives
10174 (``nars'') provided by the server, the size the corresponding store
10175 items occupy in the store (assuming deduplication is turned off), and
10176 the server's throughput. The second part gives continuous integration
10177 (CI) statistics, if the server supports it. In addition, using the
10178 @option{--coverage} option, @command{guix weather} can list ``important''
10179 package substitutes missing on the server (see below).
10180
10181 To achieve that, @command{guix weather} queries over HTTP(S) meta-data
10182 (@dfn{narinfos}) for all the relevant store items. Like @command{guix
10183 challenge}, it ignores signatures on those substitutes, which is
10184 innocuous since the command only gathers statistics and cannot install
10185 those substitutes.
10186
10187 The general syntax is:
10188
10189 @example
10190 guix weather @var{options}@dots{} [@var{packages}@dots{}]
10191 @end example
10192
10193 When @var{packages} is omitted, @command{guix weather} checks the availability
10194 of substitutes for @emph{all} the packages, or for those specified with
10195 @option{--manifest}; otherwise it only considers the specified packages. It
10196 is also possible to query specific system types with @option{--system}. The
10197 available options are listed below.
10198
10199 @table @code
10200 @item --substitute-urls=@var{urls}
10201 @var{urls} is the space-separated list of substitute server URLs to
10202 query. When this option is omitted, the default set of substitute
10203 servers is queried.
10204
10205 @item --system=@var{system}
10206 @itemx -s @var{system}
10207 Query substitutes for @var{system}---e.g., @code{aarch64-linux}. This
10208 option can be repeated, in which case @command{guix weather} will query
10209 substitutes for several system types.
10210
10211 @item --manifest=@var{file}
10212 Instead of querying substitutes for all the packages, only ask for those
10213 specified in @var{file}. @var{file} must contain a @dfn{manifest}, as
10214 with the @code{-m} option of @command{guix package} (@pxref{Invoking
10215 guix package}).
10216
10217 @item --coverage[=@var{count}]
10218 @itemx -c [@var{count}]
10219 Report on substitute coverage for packages: list packages with at least
10220 @var{count} dependents (zero by default) for which substitutes are
10221 unavailable. Dependent packages themselves are not listed: if @var{b} depends
10222 on @var{a} and @var{a} has no substitutes, only @var{a} is listed, even though
10223 @var{b} usually lacks substitutes as well. The result looks like this:
10224
10225 @example
10226 $ guix weather --substitute-urls=@value{SUBSTITUTE-URL} -c 10
10227 computing 8,983 package derivations for x86_64-linux...
10228 looking for 9,343 store items on @value{SUBSTITUTE-URL}...
10229 updating substitutes from '@value{SUBSTITUTE-URL}'... 100.0%
10230 @value{SUBSTITUTE-URL}
10231 64.7% substitutes available (6,047 out of 9,343)
10232 @dots{}
10233 2502 packages are missing from '@value{SUBSTITUTE-URL}' for 'x86_64-linux', among which:
10234 58 kcoreaddons@@5.49.0 /gnu/store/@dots{}-kcoreaddons-5.49.0
10235 46 qgpgme@@1.11.1 /gnu/store/@dots{}-qgpgme-1.11.1
10236 37 perl-http-cookiejar@@0.008 /gnu/store/@dots{}-perl-http-cookiejar-0.008
10237 @dots{}
10238 @end example
10239
10240 What this example shows is that @code{kcoreaddons} and presumably the 58
10241 packages that depend on it have no substitutes at @code{ci.guix.info};
10242 likewise for @code{qgpgme} and the 46 packages that depend on it.
10243
10244 If you are a Guix developer, or if you are taking care of this build farm,
10245 you'll probably want to have a closer look at these packages: they may simply
10246 fail to build.
10247 @end table
10248
10249 @node Invoking guix processes
10250 @section Invoking @command{guix processes}
10251
10252 The @command{guix processes} command can be useful to developers and system
10253 administrators, especially on multi-user machines and on build farms: it lists
10254 the current sessions (connections to the daemon), as well as information about
10255 the processes involved@footnote{Remote sessions, when @command{guix-daemon} is
10256 started with @option{--listen} specifying a TCP endpoint, are @emph{not}
10257 listed.}. Here's an example of the information it returns:
10258
10259 @example
10260 $ sudo guix processes
10261 SessionPID: 19002
10262 ClientPID: 19090
10263 ClientCommand: guix environment --ad-hoc python
10264
10265 SessionPID: 19402
10266 ClientPID: 19367
10267 ClientCommand: guix publish -u guix-publish -p 3000 -C 9 @dots{}
10268
10269 SessionPID: 19444
10270 ClientPID: 19419
10271 ClientCommand: cuirass --cache-directory /var/cache/cuirass @dots{}
10272 LockHeld: /gnu/store/@dots{}-perl-ipc-cmd-0.96.lock
10273 LockHeld: /gnu/store/@dots{}-python-six-bootstrap-1.11.0.lock
10274 LockHeld: /gnu/store/@dots{}-libjpeg-turbo-2.0.0.lock
10275 ChildProcess: 20495: guix offload x86_64-linux 7200 1 28800
10276 ChildProcess: 27733: guix offload x86_64-linux 7200 1 28800
10277 ChildProcess: 27793: guix offload x86_64-linux 7200 1 28800
10278 @end example
10279
10280 In this example we see that @command{guix-daemon} has three clients:
10281 @command{guix environment}, @command{guix publish}, and the Cuirass continuous
10282 integration tool; their process identifier (PID) is given by the
10283 @code{ClientPID} field. The @code{SessionPID} field gives the PID of the
10284 @command{guix-daemon} sub-process of this particular session.
10285
10286 The @code{LockHeld} fields show which store items are currently locked by this
10287 session, which corresponds to store items being built or substituted (the
10288 @code{LockHeld} field is not displayed when @command{guix processes} is not
10289 running as root.) Last, by looking at the @code{ChildProcess} field, we
10290 understand that these three builds are being offloaded (@pxref{Daemon Offload
10291 Setup}).
10292
10293 The output is in Recutils format so we can use the handy @command{recsel}
10294 command to select sessions of interest (@pxref{Selection Expressions,,,
10295 recutils, GNU recutils manual}). As an example, the command shows the command
10296 line and PID of the client that triggered the build of a Perl package:
10297
10298 @example
10299 $ sudo guix processes | \
10300 recsel -p ClientPID,ClientCommand -e 'LockHeld ~ "perl"'
10301 ClientPID: 19419
10302 ClientCommand: cuirass --cache-directory /var/cache/cuirass @dots{}
10303 @end example
10304
10305
10306 @node System Configuration
10307 @chapter System Configuration
10308
10309 @cindex system configuration
10310 Guix System supports a consistent whole-system configuration
10311 mechanism. By that we mean that all aspects of the global system
10312 configuration---such as the available system services, timezone and
10313 locale settings, user accounts---are declared in a single place. Such
10314 a @dfn{system configuration} can be @dfn{instantiated}---i.e., effected.
10315
10316 One of the advantages of putting all the system configuration under the
10317 control of Guix is that it supports transactional system upgrades, and
10318 makes it possible to roll back to a previous system instantiation,
10319 should something go wrong with the new one (@pxref{Features}). Another
10320 advantage is that it makes it easy to replicate the exact same configuration
10321 across different machines, or at different points in time, without
10322 having to resort to additional administration tools layered on top of
10323 the own tools of the system.
10324 @c Yes, we're talking of Puppet, Chef, & co. here. ↑
10325
10326 This section describes this mechanism. First we focus on the system
10327 administrator's viewpoint---explaining how the system is configured and
10328 instantiated. Then we show how this mechanism can be extended, for
10329 instance to support new system services.
10330
10331 @menu
10332 * Using the Configuration System:: Customizing your GNU system.
10333 * operating-system Reference:: Detail of operating-system declarations.
10334 * File Systems:: Configuring file system mounts.
10335 * Mapped Devices:: Block device extra processing.
10336 * User Accounts:: Specifying user accounts.
10337 * Keyboard Layout:: How the system interprets key strokes.
10338 * Locales:: Language and cultural convention settings.
10339 * Services:: Specifying system services.
10340 * Setuid Programs:: Programs running with root privileges.
10341 * X.509 Certificates:: Authenticating HTTPS servers.
10342 * Name Service Switch:: Configuring libc's name service switch.
10343 * Initial RAM Disk:: Linux-Libre bootstrapping.
10344 * Bootloader Configuration:: Configuring the boot loader.
10345 * Invoking guix system:: Instantiating a system configuration.
10346 * Invoking guix deploy:: Deploying a system configuration to a remote host.
10347 * Running Guix in a VM:: How to run Guix System in a virtual machine.
10348 * Defining Services:: Adding new service definitions.
10349 @end menu
10350
10351 @node Using the Configuration System
10352 @section Using the Configuration System
10353
10354 The operating system is configured by providing an
10355 @code{operating-system} declaration in a file that can then be passed to
10356 the @command{guix system} command (@pxref{Invoking guix system}). A
10357 simple setup, with the default system services, the default Linux-Libre
10358 kernel, initial RAM disk, and boot loader looks like this:
10359
10360 @findex operating-system
10361 @lisp
10362 @include os-config-bare-bones.texi
10363 @end lisp
10364
10365 This example should be self-describing. Some of the fields defined
10366 above, such as @code{host-name} and @code{bootloader}, are mandatory.
10367 Others, such as @code{packages} and @code{services}, can be omitted, in
10368 which case they get a default value.
10369
10370 Below we discuss the effect of some of the most important fields
10371 (@pxref{operating-system Reference}, for details about all the available
10372 fields), and how to @dfn{instantiate} the operating system using
10373 @command{guix system}.
10374
10375 @unnumberedsubsec Bootloader
10376
10377 @cindex legacy boot, on Intel machines
10378 @cindex BIOS boot, on Intel machines
10379 @cindex UEFI boot
10380 @cindex EFI boot
10381 The @code{bootloader} field describes the method that will be used to boot
10382 your system. Machines based on Intel processors can boot in ``legacy'' BIOS
10383 mode, as in the example above. However, more recent machines rely instead on
10384 the @dfn{Unified Extensible Firmware Interface} (UEFI) to boot. In that case,
10385 the @code{bootloader} field should contain something along these lines:
10386
10387 @example
10388 (bootloader-configuration
10389 (bootloader grub-efi-bootloader)
10390 (target "/boot/efi"))
10391 @end example
10392
10393 @xref{Bootloader Configuration}, for more information on the available
10394 configuration options.
10395
10396 @unnumberedsubsec Globally-Visible Packages
10397
10398 @vindex %base-packages
10399 The @code{packages} field lists packages that will be globally visible
10400 on the system, for all user accounts---i.e., in every user's @code{PATH}
10401 environment variable---in addition to the per-user profiles
10402 (@pxref{Invoking guix package}). The @code{%base-packages} variable
10403 provides all the tools one would expect for basic user and administrator
10404 tasks---including the GNU Core Utilities, the GNU Networking Utilities,
10405 the GNU Zile lightweight text editor, @command{find}, @command{grep},
10406 etc. The example above adds GNU@tie{}Screen to those,
10407 taken from the @code{(gnu packages screen)}
10408 module (@pxref{Package Modules}). The
10409 @code{(list package output)} syntax can be used to add a specific output
10410 of a package:
10411
10412 @lisp
10413 (use-modules (gnu packages))
10414 (use-modules (gnu packages dns))
10415
10416 (operating-system
10417 ;; ...
10418 (packages (cons (list bind "utils")
10419 %base-packages)))
10420 @end lisp
10421
10422 @findex specification->package
10423 Referring to packages by variable name, like @code{bind} above, has
10424 the advantage of being unambiguous; it also allows typos and such to be
10425 diagnosed right away as ``unbound variables''. The downside is that one
10426 needs to know which module defines which package, and to augment the
10427 @code{use-package-modules} line accordingly. To avoid that, one can use
10428 the @code{specification->package} procedure of the @code{(gnu packages)}
10429 module, which returns the best package for a given name or name and
10430 version:
10431
10432 @lisp
10433 (use-modules (gnu packages))
10434
10435 (operating-system
10436 ;; ...
10437 (packages (append (map specification->package
10438 '("tcpdump" "htop" "gnupg@@2.0"))
10439 %base-packages)))
10440 @end lisp
10441
10442 @unnumberedsubsec System Services
10443
10444 @cindex services
10445 @vindex %base-services
10446 The @code{services} field lists @dfn{system services} to be made
10447 available when the system starts (@pxref{Services}).
10448 The @code{operating-system} declaration above specifies that, in
10449 addition to the basic services, we want the OpenSSH secure shell
10450 daemon listening on port 2222 (@pxref{Networking Services,
10451 @code{openssh-service-type}}). Under the hood,
10452 @code{openssh-service-type} arranges so that @command{sshd} is started with the
10453 right command-line options, possibly with supporting configuration files
10454 generated as needed (@pxref{Defining Services}).
10455
10456 @cindex customization, of services
10457 @findex modify-services
10458 Occasionally, instead of using the base services as is, you will want to
10459 customize them. To do this, use @code{modify-services} (@pxref{Service
10460 Reference, @code{modify-services}}) to modify the list.
10461
10462 For example, suppose you want to modify @code{guix-daemon} and Mingetty
10463 (the console log-in) in the @code{%base-services} list (@pxref{Base
10464 Services, @code{%base-services}}). To do that, you can write the
10465 following in your operating system declaration:
10466
10467 @lisp
10468 (define %my-services
10469 ;; My very own list of services.
10470 (modify-services %base-services
10471 (guix-service-type config =>
10472 (guix-configuration
10473 (inherit config)
10474 (use-substitutes? #f)
10475 (extra-options '("--gc-keep-derivations"))))
10476 (mingetty-service-type config =>
10477 (mingetty-configuration
10478 (inherit config)))))
10479
10480 (operating-system
10481 ;; @dots{}
10482 (services %my-services))
10483 @end lisp
10484
10485 This changes the configuration---i.e., the service parameters---of the
10486 @code{guix-service-type} instance, and that of all the
10487 @code{mingetty-service-type} instances in the @code{%base-services} list.
10488 Observe how this is accomplished: first, we arrange for the original
10489 configuration to be bound to the identifier @code{config} in the
10490 @var{body}, and then we write the @var{body} so that it evaluates to the
10491 desired configuration. In particular, notice how we use @code{inherit}
10492 to create a new configuration which has the same values as the old
10493 configuration, but with a few modifications.
10494
10495 @cindex encrypted disk
10496 The configuration for a typical ``desktop'' usage, with an encrypted
10497 root partition, the X11 display
10498 server, GNOME and Xfce (users can choose which of these desktop
10499 environments to use at the log-in screen by pressing @kbd{F1}), network
10500 management, power management, and more, would look like this:
10501
10502 @lisp
10503 @include os-config-desktop.texi
10504 @end lisp
10505
10506 A graphical system with a choice of lightweight window managers
10507 instead of full-blown desktop environments would look like this:
10508
10509 @lisp
10510 @include os-config-lightweight-desktop.texi
10511 @end lisp
10512
10513 This example refers to the @file{/boot/efi} file system by its UUID,
10514 @code{1234-ABCD}. Replace this UUID with the right UUID on your system,
10515 as returned by the @command{blkid} command.
10516
10517 @xref{Desktop Services}, for the exact list of services provided by
10518 @code{%desktop-services}. @xref{X.509 Certificates}, for background
10519 information about the @code{nss-certs} package that is used here.
10520
10521 Again, @code{%desktop-services} is just a list of service objects. If
10522 you want to remove services from there, you can do so using the
10523 procedures for list filtering (@pxref{SRFI-1 Filtering and
10524 Partitioning,,, guile, GNU Guile Reference Manual}). For instance, the
10525 following expression returns a list that contains all the services in
10526 @code{%desktop-services} minus the Avahi service:
10527
10528 @example
10529 (remove (lambda (service)
10530 (eq? (service-kind service) avahi-service-type))
10531 %desktop-services)
10532 @end example
10533
10534 @unnumberedsubsec Instantiating the System
10535
10536 Assuming the @code{operating-system} declaration
10537 is stored in the @file{my-system-config.scm}
10538 file, the @command{guix system reconfigure my-system-config.scm} command
10539 instantiates that configuration, and makes it the default GRUB boot
10540 entry (@pxref{Invoking guix system}).
10541
10542 The normal way to change the system configuration is by updating this
10543 file and re-running @command{guix system reconfigure}. One should never
10544 have to touch files in @file{/etc} or to run commands that modify the
10545 system state such as @command{useradd} or @command{grub-install}. In
10546 fact, you must avoid that since that would not only void your warranty
10547 but also prevent you from rolling back to previous versions of your
10548 system, should you ever need to.
10549
10550 @cindex roll-back, of the operating system
10551 Speaking of roll-back, each time you run @command{guix system
10552 reconfigure}, a new @dfn{generation} of the system is created---without
10553 modifying or deleting previous generations. Old system generations get
10554 an entry in the bootloader boot menu, allowing you to boot them in case
10555 something went wrong with the latest generation. Reassuring, no? The
10556 @command{guix system list-generations} command lists the system
10557 generations available on disk. It is also possible to roll back the
10558 system via the commands @command{guix system roll-back} and
10559 @command{guix system switch-generation}.
10560
10561 Although the @command{guix system reconfigure} command will not modify
10562 previous generations, you must take care when the current generation is not
10563 the latest (e.g., after invoking @command{guix system roll-back}), since
10564 the operation might overwrite a later generation (@pxref{Invoking guix
10565 system}).
10566
10567 @unnumberedsubsec The Programming Interface
10568
10569 At the Scheme level, the bulk of an @code{operating-system} declaration
10570 is instantiated with the following monadic procedure (@pxref{The Store
10571 Monad}):
10572
10573 @deffn {Monadic Procedure} operating-system-derivation os
10574 Return a derivation that builds @var{os}, an @code{operating-system}
10575 object (@pxref{Derivations}).
10576
10577 The output of the derivation is a single directory that refers to all
10578 the packages, configuration files, and other supporting files needed to
10579 instantiate @var{os}.
10580 @end deffn
10581
10582 This procedure is provided by the @code{(gnu system)} module. Along
10583 with @code{(gnu services)} (@pxref{Services}), this module contains the
10584 guts of Guix System. Make sure to visit it!
10585
10586
10587 @node operating-system Reference
10588 @section @code{operating-system} Reference
10589
10590 This section summarizes all the options available in
10591 @code{operating-system} declarations (@pxref{Using the Configuration
10592 System}).
10593
10594 @deftp {Data Type} operating-system
10595 This is the data type representing an operating system configuration.
10596 By that, we mean all the global system configuration, not per-user
10597 configuration (@pxref{Using the Configuration System}).
10598
10599 @table @asis
10600 @item @code{kernel} (default: @var{linux-libre})
10601 The package object of the operating system kernel to use@footnote{Currently
10602 only the Linux-libre kernel is supported. In the future, it will be
10603 possible to use the GNU@tie{}Hurd.}.
10604
10605 @item @code{kernel-arguments} (default: @code{'("quiet")})
10606 List of strings or gexps representing additional arguments to pass on
10607 the command-line of the kernel---e.g., @code{("console=ttyS0")}.
10608
10609 @item @code{bootloader}
10610 The system bootloader configuration object. @xref{Bootloader Configuration}.
10611
10612 @item @code{label}
10613 This is the label (a string) as it appears in the bootloader's menu entry.
10614 The default label includes the kernel name and version.
10615
10616 @item @code{keyboard-layout} (default: @code{#f})
10617 This field specifies the keyboard layout to use in the console. It can be
10618 either @code{#f}, in which case the default keyboard layout is used (usually
10619 US English), or a @code{<keyboard-layout>} record.
10620
10621 This keyboard layout is in effect as soon as the kernel has booted. For
10622 instance, it is the keyboard layout in effect when you type a passphrase if
10623 your root file system is on a @code{luks-device-mapping} mapped device
10624 (@pxref{Mapped Devices}).
10625
10626 @quotation Note
10627 This does @emph{not} specify the keyboard layout used by the bootloader, nor
10628 that used by the graphical display server. @xref{Bootloader Configuration},
10629 for information on how to specify the bootloader's keyboard layout. @xref{X
10630 Window}, for information on how to specify the keyboard layout used by the X
10631 Window System.
10632 @end quotation
10633
10634 @item @code{initrd-modules} (default: @code{%base-initrd-modules})
10635 @cindex initrd
10636 @cindex initial RAM disk
10637 The list of Linux kernel modules that need to be available in the
10638 initial RAM disk. @xref{Initial RAM Disk}.
10639
10640 @item @code{initrd} (default: @code{base-initrd})
10641 A procedure that returns an initial RAM disk for the Linux
10642 kernel. This field is provided to support low-level customization and
10643 should rarely be needed for casual use. @xref{Initial RAM Disk}.
10644
10645 @item @code{firmware} (default: @code{%base-firmware})
10646 @cindex firmware
10647 List of firmware packages loadable by the operating system kernel.
10648
10649 The default includes firmware needed for Atheros- and Broadcom-based
10650 WiFi devices (Linux-libre modules @code{ath9k} and @code{b43-open},
10651 respectively). @xref{Hardware Considerations}, for more info on
10652 supported hardware.
10653
10654 @item @code{host-name}
10655 The host name.
10656
10657 @item @code{hosts-file}
10658 @cindex hosts file
10659 A file-like object (@pxref{G-Expressions, file-like objects}) for use as
10660 @file{/etc/hosts} (@pxref{Host Names,,, libc, The GNU C Library
10661 Reference Manual}). The default is a file with entries for
10662 @code{localhost} and @var{host-name}.
10663
10664 @item @code{mapped-devices} (default: @code{'()})
10665 A list of mapped devices. @xref{Mapped Devices}.
10666
10667 @item @code{file-systems}
10668 A list of file systems. @xref{File Systems}.
10669
10670 @item @code{swap-devices} (default: @code{'()})
10671 @cindex swap devices
10672 A list of strings identifying devices or files to be used for ``swap
10673 space'' (@pxref{Memory Concepts,,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference
10674 Manual}). For example, @code{'("/dev/sda3")} or @code{'("/swapfile")}.
10675 It is possible to specify a swap file in a file system on a mapped
10676 device, provided that the necessary device mapping and file system are
10677 also specified. @xref{Mapped Devices} and @ref{File Systems}.
10678
10679 @item @code{users} (default: @code{%base-user-accounts})
10680 @itemx @code{groups} (default: @code{%base-groups})
10681 List of user accounts and groups. @xref{User Accounts}.
10682
10683 If the @code{users} list lacks a user account with UID@tie{}0, a
10684 ``root'' account with UID@tie{}0 is automatically added.
10685
10686 @item @code{skeletons} (default: @code{(default-skeletons)})
10687 A list target file name/file-like object tuples (@pxref{G-Expressions,
10688 file-like objects}). These are the skeleton files that will be added to
10689 the home directory of newly-created user accounts.
10690
10691 For instance, a valid value may look like this:
10692
10693 @example
10694 `((".bashrc" ,(plain-file "bashrc" "echo Hello\n"))
10695 (".guile" ,(plain-file "guile"
10696 "(use-modules (ice-9 readline))
10697 (activate-readline)")))
10698 @end example
10699
10700 @item @code{issue} (default: @code{%default-issue})
10701 A string denoting the contents of the @file{/etc/issue} file, which is
10702 displayed when users log in on a text console.
10703
10704 @item @code{packages} (default: @code{%base-packages})
10705 The set of packages installed in the global profile, which is accessible
10706 at @file{/run/current-system/profile}.
10707
10708 The default set includes core utilities and it is good practice to
10709 install non-core utilities in user profiles (@pxref{Invoking guix
10710 package}).
10711
10712 @item @code{timezone}
10713 A timezone identifying string---e.g., @code{"Europe/Paris"}.
10714
10715 You can run the @command{tzselect} command to find out which timezone
10716 string corresponds to your region. Choosing an invalid timezone name
10717 causes @command{guix system} to fail.
10718
10719 @item @code{locale} (default: @code{"en_US.utf8"})
10720 The name of the default locale (@pxref{Locale Names,,, libc, The GNU C
10721 Library Reference Manual}). @xref{Locales}, for more information.
10722
10723 @item @code{locale-definitions} (default: @code{%default-locale-definitions})
10724 The list of locale definitions to be compiled and that may be used at
10725 run time. @xref{Locales}.
10726
10727 @item @code{locale-libcs} (default: @code{(list @var{glibc})})
10728 The list of GNU@tie{}libc packages whose locale data and tools are used
10729 to build the locale definitions. @xref{Locales}, for compatibility
10730 considerations that justify this option.
10731
10732 @item @code{name-service-switch} (default: @code{%default-nss})
10733 Configuration of the libc name service switch (NSS)---a
10734 @code{<name-service-switch>} object. @xref{Name Service Switch}, for
10735 details.
10736
10737 @item @code{services} (default: @code{%base-services})
10738 A list of service objects denoting system services. @xref{Services}.
10739
10740 @cindex essential services
10741 @item @code{essential-services} (default: ...)
10742 The list of ``essential services''---i.e., things like instances of
10743 @code{system-service-type} and @code{host-name-service-type} (@pxref{Service
10744 Reference}), which are derived from the operating system definition itself.
10745 As a user you should @emph{never} need to touch this field.
10746
10747 @item @code{pam-services} (default: @code{(base-pam-services)})
10748 @cindex PAM
10749 @cindex pluggable authentication modules
10750 Linux @dfn{pluggable authentication module} (PAM) services.
10751 @c FIXME: Add xref to PAM services section.
10752
10753 @item @code{setuid-programs} (default: @var{%setuid-programs})
10754 List of string-valued G-expressions denoting setuid programs.
10755 @xref{Setuid Programs}.
10756
10757 @item @code{sudoers-file} (default: @var{%sudoers-specification})
10758 @cindex sudoers file
10759 The contents of the @file{/etc/sudoers} file as a file-like object
10760 (@pxref{G-Expressions, @code{local-file} and @code{plain-file}}).
10761
10762 This file specifies which users can use the @command{sudo} command, what
10763 they are allowed to do, and what privileges they may gain. The default
10764 is that only @code{root} and members of the @code{wheel} group may use
10765 @code{sudo}.
10766
10767 @end table
10768
10769 @deffn {Scheme Syntax} this-operating-system
10770 When used in the @emph{lexical scope} of an operating system field definition,
10771 this identifier resolves to the operating system being defined.
10772
10773 The example below shows how to refer to the operating system being defined in
10774 the definition of the @code{label} field:
10775
10776 @example
10777 (use-modules (gnu) (guix))
10778
10779 (operating-system
10780 ;; ...
10781 (label (package-full-name
10782 (operating-system-kernel this-operating-system))))
10783 @end example
10784
10785 It is an error to refer to @code{this-operating-system} outside an operating
10786 system definition.
10787 @end deffn
10788
10789 @end deftp
10790
10791 @node File Systems
10792 @section File Systems
10793
10794 The list of file systems to be mounted is specified in the
10795 @code{file-systems} field of the operating system declaration
10796 (@pxref{Using the Configuration System}). Each file system is declared
10797 using the @code{file-system} form, like this:
10798
10799 @example
10800 (file-system
10801 (mount-point "/home")
10802 (device "/dev/sda3")
10803 (type "ext4"))
10804 @end example
10805
10806 As usual, some of the fields are mandatory---those shown in the example
10807 above---while others can be omitted. These are described below.
10808
10809 @deftp {Data Type} file-system
10810 Objects of this type represent file systems to be mounted. They
10811 contain the following members:
10812
10813 @table @asis
10814 @item @code{type}
10815 This is a string specifying the type of the file system---e.g.,
10816 @code{"ext4"}.
10817
10818 @item @code{mount-point}
10819 This designates the place where the file system is to be mounted.
10820
10821 @item @code{device}
10822 This names the ``source'' of the file system. It can be one of three
10823 things: a file system label, a file system UUID, or the name of a
10824 @file{/dev} node. Labels and UUIDs offer a way to refer to file
10825 systems without having to hard-code their actual device
10826 name@footnote{Note that, while it is tempting to use
10827 @file{/dev/disk/by-uuid} and similar device names to achieve the same
10828 result, this is not recommended: These special device nodes are created
10829 by the udev daemon and may be unavailable at the time the device is
10830 mounted.}.
10831
10832 @findex file-system-label
10833 File system labels are created using the @code{file-system-label}
10834 procedure, UUIDs are created using @code{uuid}, and @file{/dev} node are
10835 plain strings. Here's an example of a file system referred to by its
10836 label, as shown by the @command{e2label} command:
10837
10838 @example
10839 (file-system
10840 (mount-point "/home")
10841 (type "ext4")
10842 (device (file-system-label "my-home")))
10843 @end example
10844
10845 @findex uuid
10846 UUIDs are converted from their string representation (as shown by the
10847 @command{tune2fs -l} command) using the @code{uuid} form@footnote{The
10848 @code{uuid} form expects 16-byte UUIDs as defined in
10849 @uref{https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4122, RFC@tie{}4122}. This is the
10850 form of UUID used by the ext2 family of file systems and others, but it
10851 is different from ``UUIDs'' found in FAT file systems, for instance.},
10852 like this:
10853
10854 @example
10855 (file-system
10856 (mount-point "/home")
10857 (type "ext4")
10858 (device (uuid "4dab5feb-d176-45de-b287-9b0a6e4c01cb")))
10859 @end example
10860
10861 When the source of a file system is a mapped device (@pxref{Mapped
10862 Devices}), its @code{device} field @emph{must} refer to the mapped
10863 device name---e.g., @file{"/dev/mapper/root-partition"}.
10864 This is required so that
10865 the system knows that mounting the file system depends on having the
10866 corresponding device mapping established.
10867
10868 @item @code{flags} (default: @code{'()})
10869 This is a list of symbols denoting mount flags. Recognized flags
10870 include @code{read-only}, @code{bind-mount}, @code{no-dev} (disallow
10871 access to special files), @code{no-suid} (ignore setuid and setgid
10872 bits), @code{no-atime} (do not update file access times), and @code{no-exec}
10873 (disallow program execution). @xref{Mount-Unmount-Remount,,, libc, The GNU C
10874 Library Reference Manual}, for more information on these flags.
10875
10876 @item @code{options} (default: @code{#f})
10877 This is either @code{#f}, or a string denoting mount options passed to the
10878 file system driver. @xref{Mount-Unmount-Remount,,, libc, The GNU C Library
10879 Reference Manual}, for details and run @command{man 8 mount} for options for
10880 various file systems.
10881
10882 @item @code{mount?} (default: @code{#t})
10883 This value indicates whether to automatically mount the file system when
10884 the system is brought up. When set to @code{#f}, the file system gets
10885 an entry in @file{/etc/fstab} (read by the @command{mount} command) but
10886 is not automatically mounted.
10887
10888 @item @code{needed-for-boot?} (default: @code{#f})
10889 This Boolean value indicates whether the file system is needed when
10890 booting. If that is true, then the file system is mounted when the
10891 initial RAM disk (initrd) is loaded. This is always the case, for
10892 instance, for the root file system.
10893
10894 @item @code{check?} (default: @code{#t})
10895 This Boolean indicates whether the file system needs to be checked for
10896 errors before being mounted.
10897
10898 @item @code{create-mount-point?} (default: @code{#f})
10899 When true, the mount point is created if it does not exist yet.
10900
10901 @item @code{dependencies} (default: @code{'()})
10902 This is a list of @code{<file-system>} or @code{<mapped-device>} objects
10903 representing file systems that must be mounted or mapped devices that
10904 must be opened before (and unmounted or closed after) this one.
10905
10906 As an example, consider a hierarchy of mounts: @file{/sys/fs/cgroup} is
10907 a dependency of @file{/sys/fs/cgroup/cpu} and
10908 @file{/sys/fs/cgroup/memory}.
10909
10910 Another example is a file system that depends on a mapped device, for
10911 example for an encrypted partition (@pxref{Mapped Devices}).
10912 @end table
10913 @end deftp
10914
10915 The @code{(gnu system file-systems)} exports the following useful
10916 variables.
10917
10918 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %base-file-systems
10919 These are essential file systems that are required on normal systems,
10920 such as @var{%pseudo-terminal-file-system} and @var{%immutable-store} (see
10921 below.) Operating system declarations should always contain at least
10922 these.
10923 @end defvr
10924
10925 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %pseudo-terminal-file-system
10926 This is the file system to be mounted as @file{/dev/pts}. It supports
10927 @dfn{pseudo-terminals} created @i{via} @code{openpty} and similar
10928 functions (@pxref{Pseudo-Terminals,,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference
10929 Manual}). Pseudo-terminals are used by terminal emulators such as
10930 @command{xterm}.
10931 @end defvr
10932
10933 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %shared-memory-file-system
10934 This file system is mounted as @file{/dev/shm} and is used to support
10935 memory sharing across processes (@pxref{Memory-mapped I/O,
10936 @code{shm_open},, libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}).
10937 @end defvr
10938
10939 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %immutable-store
10940 This file system performs a read-only ``bind mount'' of
10941 @file{/gnu/store}, making it read-only for all the users including
10942 @code{root}. This prevents against accidental modification by software
10943 running as @code{root} or by system administrators.
10944
10945 The daemon itself is still able to write to the store: it remounts it
10946 read-write in its own ``name space.''
10947 @end defvr
10948
10949 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %binary-format-file-system
10950 The @code{binfmt_misc} file system, which allows handling of arbitrary
10951 executable file types to be delegated to user space. This requires the
10952 @code{binfmt.ko} kernel module to be loaded.
10953 @end defvr
10954
10955 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %fuse-control-file-system
10956 The @code{fusectl} file system, which allows unprivileged users to mount
10957 and unmount user-space FUSE file systems. This requires the
10958 @code{fuse.ko} kernel module to be loaded.
10959 @end defvr
10960
10961 @node Mapped Devices
10962 @section Mapped Devices
10963
10964 @cindex device mapping
10965 @cindex mapped devices
10966 The Linux kernel has a notion of @dfn{device mapping}: a block device,
10967 such as a hard disk partition, can be @dfn{mapped} into another device,
10968 usually in @code{/dev/mapper/},
10969 with additional processing over the data that flows through
10970 it@footnote{Note that the GNU@tie{}Hurd makes no difference between the
10971 concept of a ``mapped device'' and that of a file system: both boil down
10972 to @emph{translating} input/output operations made on a file to
10973 operations on its backing store. Thus, the Hurd implements mapped
10974 devices, like file systems, using the generic @dfn{translator} mechanism
10975 (@pxref{Translators,,, hurd, The GNU Hurd Reference Manual}).}. A
10976 typical example is encryption device mapping: all writes to the mapped
10977 device are encrypted, and all reads are deciphered, transparently.
10978 Guix extends this notion by considering any device or set of devices that
10979 are @dfn{transformed} in some way to create a new device; for instance,
10980 RAID devices are obtained by @dfn{assembling} several other devices, such
10981 as hard disks or partitions, into a new one that behaves as one partition.
10982 Other examples, not yet implemented, are LVM logical volumes.
10983
10984 Mapped devices are declared using the @code{mapped-device} form,
10985 defined as follows; for examples, see below.
10986
10987 @deftp {Data Type} mapped-device
10988 Objects of this type represent device mappings that will be made when
10989 the system boots up.
10990
10991 @table @code
10992 @item source
10993 This is either a string specifying the name of the block device to be mapped,
10994 such as @code{"/dev/sda3"}, or a list of such strings when several devices
10995 need to be assembled for creating a new one.
10996
10997 @item target
10998 This string specifies the name of the resulting mapped device. For
10999 kernel mappers such as encrypted devices of type @code{luks-device-mapping},
11000 specifying @code{"my-partition"} leads to the creation of
11001 the @code{"/dev/mapper/my-partition"} device.
11002 For RAID devices of type @code{raid-device-mapping}, the full device name
11003 such as @code{"/dev/md0"} needs to be given.
11004
11005 @item type
11006 This must be a @code{mapped-device-kind} object, which specifies how
11007 @var{source} is mapped to @var{target}.
11008 @end table
11009 @end deftp
11010
11011 @defvr {Scheme Variable} luks-device-mapping
11012 This defines LUKS block device encryption using the @command{cryptsetup}
11013 command from the package with the same name. It relies on the
11014 @code{dm-crypt} Linux kernel module.
11015 @end defvr
11016
11017 @defvr {Scheme Variable} raid-device-mapping
11018 This defines a RAID device, which is assembled using the @code{mdadm}
11019 command from the package with the same name. It requires a Linux kernel
11020 module for the appropriate RAID level to be loaded, such as @code{raid456}
11021 for RAID-4, RAID-5 or RAID-6, or @code{raid10} for RAID-10.
11022 @end defvr
11023
11024 @cindex disk encryption
11025 @cindex LUKS
11026 The following example specifies a mapping from @file{/dev/sda3} to
11027 @file{/dev/mapper/home} using LUKS---the
11028 @url{https://gitlab.com/cryptsetup/cryptsetup,Linux Unified Key Setup}, a
11029 standard mechanism for disk encryption.
11030 The @file{/dev/mapper/home}
11031 device can then be used as the @code{device} of a @code{file-system}
11032 declaration (@pxref{File Systems}).
11033
11034 @example
11035 (mapped-device
11036 (source "/dev/sda3")
11037 (target "home")
11038 (type luks-device-mapping))
11039 @end example
11040
11041 Alternatively, to become independent of device numbering, one may obtain
11042 the LUKS UUID (@dfn{unique identifier}) of the source device by a
11043 command like:
11044
11045 @example
11046 cryptsetup luksUUID /dev/sda3
11047 @end example
11048
11049 and use it as follows:
11050
11051 @example
11052 (mapped-device
11053 (source (uuid "cb67fc72-0d54-4c88-9d4b-b225f30b0f44"))
11054 (target "home")
11055 (type luks-device-mapping))
11056 @end example
11057
11058 @cindex swap encryption
11059 It is also desirable to encrypt swap space, since swap space may contain
11060 sensitive data. One way to accomplish that is to use a swap file in a
11061 file system on a device mapped via LUKS encryption. In this way, the
11062 swap file is encrypted because the entire device is encrypted.
11063 @xref{Preparing for Installation,,Disk Partitioning}, for an example.
11064
11065 A RAID device formed of the partitions @file{/dev/sda1} and @file{/dev/sdb1}
11066 may be declared as follows:
11067
11068 @example
11069 (mapped-device
11070 (source (list "/dev/sda1" "/dev/sdb1"))
11071 (target "/dev/md0")
11072 (type raid-device-mapping))
11073 @end example
11074
11075 The @file{/dev/md0} device can then be used as the @code{device} of a
11076 @code{file-system} declaration (@pxref{File Systems}).
11077 Note that the RAID level need not be given; it is chosen during the
11078 initial creation and formatting of the RAID device and is determined
11079 automatically later.
11080
11081
11082 @node User Accounts
11083 @section User Accounts
11084
11085 @cindex users
11086 @cindex accounts
11087 @cindex user accounts
11088 User accounts and groups are entirely managed through the
11089 @code{operating-system} declaration. They are specified with the
11090 @code{user-account} and @code{user-group} forms:
11091
11092 @example
11093 (user-account
11094 (name "alice")
11095 (group "users")
11096 (supplementary-groups '("wheel" ;allow use of sudo, etc.
11097 "audio" ;sound card
11098 "video" ;video devices such as webcams
11099 "cdrom")) ;the good ol' CD-ROM
11100 (comment "Bob's sister")
11101 (home-directory "/home/alice"))
11102 @end example
11103
11104 When booting or upon completion of @command{guix system reconfigure},
11105 the system ensures that only the user accounts and groups specified in
11106 the @code{operating-system} declaration exist, and with the specified
11107 properties. Thus, account or group creations or modifications made by
11108 directly invoking commands such as @command{useradd} are lost upon
11109 reconfiguration or reboot. This ensures that the system remains exactly
11110 as declared.
11111
11112 @deftp {Data Type} user-account
11113 Objects of this type represent user accounts. The following members may
11114 be specified:
11115
11116 @table @asis
11117 @item @code{name}
11118 The name of the user account.
11119
11120 @item @code{group}
11121 @cindex groups
11122 This is the name (a string) or identifier (a number) of the user group
11123 this account belongs to.
11124
11125 @item @code{supplementary-groups} (default: @code{'()})
11126 Optionally, this can be defined as a list of group names that this
11127 account belongs to.
11128
11129 @item @code{uid} (default: @code{#f})
11130 This is the user ID for this account (a number), or @code{#f}. In the
11131 latter case, a number is automatically chosen by the system when the
11132 account is created.
11133
11134 @item @code{comment} (default: @code{""})
11135 A comment about the account, such as the account owner's full name.
11136
11137 @item @code{home-directory}
11138 This is the name of the home directory for the account.
11139
11140 @item @code{create-home-directory?} (default: @code{#t})
11141 Indicates whether the home directory of this account should be created
11142 if it does not exist yet.
11143
11144 @item @code{shell} (default: Bash)
11145 This is a G-expression denoting the file name of a program to be used as
11146 the shell (@pxref{G-Expressions}).
11147
11148 @item @code{system?} (default: @code{#f})
11149 This Boolean value indicates whether the account is a ``system''
11150 account. System accounts are sometimes treated specially; for instance,
11151 graphical login managers do not list them.
11152
11153 @anchor{user-account-password}
11154 @cindex password, for user accounts
11155 @item @code{password} (default: @code{#f})
11156 You would normally leave this field to @code{#f}, initialize user
11157 passwords as @code{root} with the @command{passwd} command, and then let
11158 users change it with @command{passwd}. Passwords set with
11159 @command{passwd} are of course preserved across reboot and
11160 reconfiguration.
11161
11162 If you @emph{do} want to set an initial password for an account, then
11163 this field must contain the encrypted password, as a string. You can use the
11164 @code{crypt} procedure for this purpose:
11165
11166 @example
11167 (user-account
11168 (name "charlie")
11169 (group "users")
11170
11171 ;; Specify a SHA-512-hashed initial password.
11172 (password (crypt "InitialPassword!" "$6$abc")))
11173 @end example
11174
11175 @quotation Note
11176 The hash of this initial password will be available in a file in
11177 @file{/gnu/store}, readable by all the users, so this method must be used with
11178 care.
11179 @end quotation
11180
11181 @xref{Passphrase Storage,,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}, for
11182 more information on password encryption, and @ref{Encryption,,, guile, GNU
11183 Guile Reference Manual}, for information on Guile's @code{crypt} procedure.
11184
11185 @end table
11186 @end deftp
11187
11188 @cindex groups
11189 User group declarations are even simpler:
11190
11191 @example
11192 (user-group (name "students"))
11193 @end example
11194
11195 @deftp {Data Type} user-group
11196 This type is for, well, user groups. There are just a few fields:
11197
11198 @table @asis
11199 @item @code{name}
11200 The name of the group.
11201
11202 @item @code{id} (default: @code{#f})
11203 The group identifier (a number). If @code{#f}, a new number is
11204 automatically allocated when the group is created.
11205
11206 @item @code{system?} (default: @code{#f})
11207 This Boolean value indicates whether the group is a ``system'' group.
11208 System groups have low numerical IDs.
11209
11210 @item @code{password} (default: @code{#f})
11211 What, user groups can have a password? Well, apparently yes. Unless
11212 @code{#f}, this field specifies the password of the group.
11213
11214 @end table
11215 @end deftp
11216
11217 For convenience, a variable lists all the basic user groups one may
11218 expect:
11219
11220 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %base-groups
11221 This is the list of basic user groups that users and/or packages expect
11222 to be present on the system. This includes groups such as ``root'',
11223 ``wheel'', and ``users'', as well as groups used to control access to
11224 specific devices such as ``audio'', ``disk'', and ``cdrom''.
11225 @end defvr
11226
11227 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %base-user-accounts
11228 This is the list of basic system accounts that programs may expect to
11229 find on a GNU/Linux system, such as the ``nobody'' account.
11230
11231 Note that the ``root'' account is not included here. It is a
11232 special-case and is automatically added whether or not it is specified.
11233 @end defvr
11234
11235 @node Keyboard Layout
11236 @section Keyboard Layout
11237
11238 @cindex keyboard layout
11239 @cindex keymap
11240 To specify what each key of your keyboard does, you need to tell the operating
11241 system what @dfn{keyboard layout} you want to use. The default, when nothing
11242 is specified, is the US English QWERTY layout for 105-key PC keyboards.
11243 However, German speakers will usually prefer the German QWERTZ layout, French
11244 speakers will want the AZERTY layout, and so on; hackers might prefer Dvorak
11245 or bépo, and they might even want to further customize the effect of some of
11246 the keys. This section explains how to get that done.
11247
11248 @cindex keyboard layout, definition
11249 There are three components that will want to know about your keyboard layout:
11250
11251 @itemize
11252 @item
11253 The @emph{bootloader} may want to know what keyboard layout you want to use
11254 (@pxref{Bootloader Configuration, @code{keyboard-layout}}). This is useful if
11255 you want, for instance, to make sure that you can type the passphrase of your
11256 encrypted root partition using the right layout.
11257
11258 @item
11259 The @emph{operating system kernel}, Linux, will need that so that the console
11260 is properly configured (@pxref{operating-system Reference,
11261 @code{keyboard-layout}}).
11262
11263 @item
11264 The @emph{graphical display server}, usually Xorg, also has its own idea of
11265 the keyboard layout (@pxref{X Window, @code{keyboard-layout}}).
11266 @end itemize
11267
11268 Guix allows you to configure all three separately but, fortunately, it allows
11269 you to share the same keyboard layout for all three components.
11270
11271 @cindex XKB, keyboard layouts
11272 Keyboard layouts are represented by records created by the
11273 @code{keyboard-layout} procedure of @code{(gnu system keyboard)}. Following
11274 the X Keyboard extension (XKB), each layout has four attributes: a name (often
11275 a language code such as ``fi'' for Finnish or ``jp'' for Japanese), an
11276 optional variant name, an optional keyboard model name, and a possibly empty
11277 list of additional options. In most cases the layout name is all you care
11278 about. Here are a few example:
11279
11280 @example
11281 ;; The German QWERTZ layout. Here we assume a standard
11282 ;; "pc105" keyboard model.
11283 (keyboard-layout "de")
11284
11285 ;; The bépo variant of the French layout.
11286 (keyboard-layout "fr" "bepo")
11287
11288 ;; The Catalan layout.
11289 (keyboard-layout "es" "cat")
11290
11291 ;; The Latin American Spanish layout. In addition, the
11292 ;; "Caps Lock" key is used as an additional "Ctrl" key,
11293 ;; and the "Menu" key is used as a "Compose" key to enter
11294 ;; accented letters.
11295 (keyboard-layout "latam"
11296 #:options '("ctrl:nocaps" "compose:menu"))
11297
11298 ;; The Russian layout for a ThinkPad keyboard.
11299 (keyboard-layout "ru" #:model "thinkpad")
11300
11301 ;; The "US international" layout, which is the US layout plus
11302 ;; dead keys to enter accented characters. This is for an
11303 ;; Apple MacBook keyboard.
11304 (keyboard-layout "us" "intl" #:model "macbook78")
11305 @end example
11306
11307 See the @file{share/X11/xkb} directory of the @code{xkeyboard-config} package
11308 for a complete list of supported layouts, variants, and models.
11309
11310 @cindex keyboard layout, configuration
11311 Let's say you want your system to use the Turkish keyboard layout throughout
11312 your system---bootloader, console, and Xorg. Here's what your system
11313 configuration would look like:
11314
11315 @findex set-xorg-configuration
11316 @lisp
11317 ;; Using the Turkish layout for the bootloader, the console,
11318 ;; and for Xorg.
11319
11320 (operating-system
11321 ;; ...
11322 (keyboard-layout (keyboard-layout "tr")) ;for the console
11323 (bootloader (bootloader-configuration
11324 (bootloader grub-efi-bootloader)
11325 (target "/boot/efi")
11326 (keyboard-layout keyboard-layout))) ;for GRUB
11327 (services (cons (set-xorg-configuration
11328 (xorg-configuration ;for Xorg
11329 (keyboard-layout keyboard-layout)))
11330 %desktop-services)))
11331 @end lisp
11332
11333 In the example above, for GRUB and for Xorg, we just refer to the
11334 @code{keyboard-layout} field defined above, but we could just as well refer to
11335 a different layout. The @code{set-xorg-configuration} procedure communicates
11336 the desired Xorg configuration to the graphical log-in manager, by default
11337 GDM.
11338
11339 We've discussed how to specify the @emph{default} keyboard layout of your
11340 system when it starts, but you can also adjust it at run time:
11341
11342 @itemize
11343 @item
11344 If you're using GNOME, its settings panel has a ``Region & Language'' entry
11345 where you can select one or more keyboard layouts.
11346
11347 @item
11348 Under Xorg, the @command{setxkbmap} command (from the same-named package)
11349 allows you to change the current layout. For example, this is how you would
11350 change the layout to US Dvorak:
11351
11352 @example
11353 setxkbmap us dvorak
11354 @end example
11355
11356 @item
11357 The @code{loadkeys} command changes the keyboard layout in effect in the Linux
11358 console. However, note that @code{loadkeys} does @emph{not} use the XKB
11359 keyboard layout categorization described above. The command below loads the
11360 French bépo layout:
11361
11362 @example
11363 loadkeys fr-bepo
11364 @end example
11365 @end itemize
11366
11367 @node Locales
11368 @section Locales
11369
11370 @cindex locale
11371 A @dfn{locale} defines cultural conventions for a particular language
11372 and region of the world (@pxref{Locales,,, libc, The GNU C Library
11373 Reference Manual}). Each locale has a name that typically has the form
11374 @code{@var{language}_@var{territory}.@var{codeset}}---e.g.,
11375 @code{fr_LU.utf8} designates the locale for the French language, with
11376 cultural conventions from Luxembourg, and using the UTF-8 encoding.
11377
11378 @cindex locale definition
11379 Usually, you will want to specify the default locale for the machine
11380 using the @code{locale} field of the @code{operating-system} declaration
11381 (@pxref{operating-system Reference, @code{locale}}).
11382
11383 The selected locale is automatically added to the @dfn{locale
11384 definitions} known to the system if needed, with its codeset inferred
11385 from its name---e.g., @code{bo_CN.utf8} will be assumed to use the
11386 @code{UTF-8} codeset. Additional locale definitions can be specified in
11387 the @code{locale-definitions} slot of @code{operating-system}---this is
11388 useful, for instance, if the codeset could not be inferred from the
11389 locale name. The default set of locale definitions includes some widely
11390 used locales, but not all the available locales, in order to save space.
11391
11392 For instance, to add the North Frisian locale for Germany, the value of
11393 that field may be:
11394
11395 @example
11396 (cons (locale-definition
11397 (name "fy_DE.utf8") (source "fy_DE"))
11398 %default-locale-definitions)
11399 @end example
11400
11401 Likewise, to save space, one might want @code{locale-definitions} to
11402 list only the locales that are actually used, as in:
11403
11404 @example
11405 (list (locale-definition
11406 (name "ja_JP.eucjp") (source "ja_JP")
11407 (charset "EUC-JP")))
11408 @end example
11409
11410 @vindex LOCPATH
11411 The compiled locale definitions are available at
11412 @file{/run/current-system/locale/X.Y}, where @code{X.Y} is the libc
11413 version, which is the default location where the GNU@tie{}libc provided
11414 by Guix looks for locale data. This can be overridden using the
11415 @code{LOCPATH} environment variable (@pxref{locales-and-locpath,
11416 @code{LOCPATH} and locale packages}).
11417
11418 The @code{locale-definition} form is provided by the @code{(gnu system
11419 locale)} module. Details are given below.
11420
11421 @deftp {Data Type} locale-definition
11422 This is the data type of a locale definition.
11423
11424 @table @asis
11425
11426 @item @code{name}
11427 The name of the locale. @xref{Locale Names,,, libc, The GNU C Library
11428 Reference Manual}, for more information on locale names.
11429
11430 @item @code{source}
11431 The name of the source for that locale. This is typically the
11432 @code{@var{language}_@var{territory}} part of the locale name.
11433
11434 @item @code{charset} (default: @code{"UTF-8"})
11435 The ``character set'' or ``code set'' for that locale,
11436 @uref{https://www.iana.org/assignments/character-sets, as defined by
11437 IANA}.
11438
11439 @end table
11440 @end deftp
11441
11442 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %default-locale-definitions
11443 A list of commonly used UTF-8 locales, used as the default
11444 value of the @code{locale-definitions} field of @code{operating-system}
11445 declarations.
11446
11447 @cindex locale name
11448 @cindex normalized codeset in locale names
11449 These locale definitions use the @dfn{normalized codeset} for the part
11450 that follows the dot in the name (@pxref{Using gettextized software,
11451 normalized codeset,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}). So for
11452 instance it has @code{uk_UA.utf8} but @emph{not}, say,
11453 @code{uk_UA.UTF-8}.
11454 @end defvr
11455
11456 @subsection Locale Data Compatibility Considerations
11457
11458 @cindex incompatibility, of locale data
11459 @code{operating-system} declarations provide a @code{locale-libcs} field
11460 to specify the GNU@tie{}libc packages that are used to compile locale
11461 declarations (@pxref{operating-system Reference}). ``Why would I
11462 care?'', you may ask. Well, it turns out that the binary format of
11463 locale data is occasionally incompatible from one libc version to
11464 another.
11465
11466 @c See <https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2015-09/msg00575.html>
11467 @c and <https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/guix-devel/2015-08/msg00737.html>.
11468 For instance, a program linked against libc version 2.21 is unable to
11469 read locale data produced with libc 2.22; worse, that program
11470 @emph{aborts} instead of simply ignoring the incompatible locale
11471 data@footnote{Versions 2.23 and later of GNU@tie{}libc will simply skip
11472 the incompatible locale data, which is already an improvement.}.
11473 Similarly, a program linked against libc 2.22 can read most, but not
11474 all, of the locale data from libc 2.21 (specifically, @code{LC_COLLATE}
11475 data is incompatible); thus calls to @code{setlocale} may fail, but
11476 programs will not abort.
11477
11478 The ``problem'' with Guix is that users have a lot of freedom: They can
11479 choose whether and when to upgrade software in their profiles, and might
11480 be using a libc version different from the one the system administrator
11481 used to build the system-wide locale data.
11482
11483 Fortunately, unprivileged users can also install their own locale data
11484 and define @var{GUIX_LOCPATH} accordingly (@pxref{locales-and-locpath,
11485 @code{GUIX_LOCPATH} and locale packages}).
11486
11487 Still, it is best if the system-wide locale data at
11488 @file{/run/current-system/locale} is built for all the libc versions
11489 actually in use on the system, so that all the programs can access
11490 it---this is especially crucial on a multi-user system. To do that, the
11491 administrator can specify several libc packages in the
11492 @code{locale-libcs} field of @code{operating-system}:
11493
11494 @example
11495 (use-package-modules base)
11496
11497 (operating-system
11498 ;; @dots{}
11499 (locale-libcs (list glibc-2.21 (canonical-package glibc))))
11500 @end example
11501
11502 This example would lead to a system containing locale definitions for
11503 both libc 2.21 and the current version of libc in
11504 @file{/run/current-system/locale}.
11505
11506
11507 @node Services
11508 @section Services
11509
11510 @cindex system services
11511 An important part of preparing an @code{operating-system} declaration is
11512 listing @dfn{system services} and their configuration (@pxref{Using the
11513 Configuration System}). System services are typically daemons launched
11514 when the system boots, or other actions needed at that time---e.g.,
11515 configuring network access.
11516
11517 Guix has a broad definition of ``service'' (@pxref{Service
11518 Composition}), but many services are managed by the GNU@tie{}Shepherd
11519 (@pxref{Shepherd Services}). On a running system, the @command{herd}
11520 command allows you to list the available services, show their status,
11521 start and stop them, or do other specific operations (@pxref{Jump
11522 Start,,, shepherd, The GNU Shepherd Manual}). For example:
11523
11524 @example
11525 # herd status
11526 @end example
11527
11528 The above command, run as @code{root}, lists the currently defined
11529 services. The @command{herd doc} command shows a synopsis of the given
11530 service and its associated actions:
11531
11532 @example
11533 # herd doc nscd
11534 Run libc's name service cache daemon (nscd).
11535
11536 # herd doc nscd action invalidate
11537 invalidate: Invalidate the given cache--e.g., 'hosts' for host name lookups.
11538 @end example
11539
11540 The @command{start}, @command{stop}, and @command{restart} sub-commands
11541 have the effect you would expect. For instance, the commands below stop
11542 the nscd service and restart the Xorg display server:
11543
11544 @example
11545 # herd stop nscd
11546 Service nscd has been stopped.
11547 # herd restart xorg-server
11548 Service xorg-server has been stopped.
11549 Service xorg-server has been started.
11550 @end example
11551
11552 The following sections document the available services, starting with
11553 the core services, that may be used in an @code{operating-system}
11554 declaration.
11555
11556 @menu
11557 * Base Services:: Essential system services.
11558 * Scheduled Job Execution:: The mcron service.
11559 * Log Rotation:: The rottlog service.
11560 * Networking Services:: Network setup, SSH daemon, etc.
11561 * X Window:: Graphical display.
11562 * Printing Services:: Local and remote printer support.
11563 * Desktop Services:: D-Bus and desktop services.
11564 * Sound Services:: ALSA and Pulseaudio services.
11565 * Database Services:: SQL databases, key-value stores, etc.
11566 * Mail Services:: IMAP, POP3, SMTP, and all that.
11567 * Messaging Services:: Messaging services.
11568 * Telephony Services:: Telephony services.
11569 * Monitoring Services:: Monitoring services.
11570 * Kerberos Services:: Kerberos services.
11571 * LDAP Services:: LDAP services.
11572 * Web Services:: Web servers.
11573 * Certificate Services:: TLS certificates via Let's Encrypt.
11574 * DNS Services:: DNS daemons.
11575 * VPN Services:: VPN daemons.
11576 * Network File System:: NFS related services.
11577 * Continuous Integration:: The Cuirass service.
11578 * Power Management Services:: Extending battery life.
11579 * Audio Services:: The MPD.
11580 * Virtualization Services:: Virtualization services.
11581 * Version Control Services:: Providing remote access to Git repositories.
11582 * Game Services:: Game servers.
11583 * Miscellaneous Services:: Other services.
11584 @end menu
11585
11586 @node Base Services
11587 @subsection Base Services
11588
11589 The @code{(gnu services base)} module provides definitions for the basic
11590 services that one expects from the system. The services exported by
11591 this module are listed below.
11592
11593 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %base-services
11594 This variable contains a list of basic services (@pxref{Service Types
11595 and Services}, for more information on service objects) one would
11596 expect from the system: a login service (mingetty) on each tty, syslogd,
11597 the libc name service cache daemon (nscd), the udev device manager, and
11598 more.
11599
11600 This is the default value of the @code{services} field of
11601 @code{operating-system} declarations. Usually, when customizing a
11602 system, you will want to append services to @code{%base-services}, like
11603 this:
11604
11605 @example
11606 (append (list (service avahi-service-type)
11607 (service openssh-service-type))
11608 %base-services)
11609 @end example
11610 @end defvr
11611
11612 @defvr {Scheme Variable} special-files-service-type
11613 This is the service that sets up ``special files'' such as
11614 @file{/bin/sh}; an instance of it is part of @code{%base-services}.
11615
11616 The value associated with @code{special-files-service-type} services
11617 must be a list of tuples where the first element is the ``special file''
11618 and the second element is its target. By default it is:
11619
11620 @cindex @file{/bin/sh}
11621 @cindex @file{sh}, in @file{/bin}
11622 @example
11623 `(("/bin/sh" ,(file-append @var{bash} "/bin/sh")))
11624 @end example
11625
11626 @cindex @file{/usr/bin/env}
11627 @cindex @file{env}, in @file{/usr/bin}
11628 If you want to add, say, @code{/usr/bin/env} to your system, you can
11629 change it to:
11630
11631 @example
11632 `(("/bin/sh" ,(file-append @var{bash} "/bin/sh"))
11633 ("/usr/bin/env" ,(file-append @var{coreutils} "/bin/env")))
11634 @end example
11635
11636 Since this is part of @code{%base-services}, you can use
11637 @code{modify-services} to customize the set of special files
11638 (@pxref{Service Reference, @code{modify-services}}). But the simple way
11639 to add a special file is @i{via} the @code{extra-special-file} procedure
11640 (see below.)
11641 @end defvr
11642
11643 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} extra-special-file @var{file} @var{target}
11644 Use @var{target} as the ``special file'' @var{file}.
11645
11646 For example, adding the following lines to the @code{services} field of
11647 your operating system declaration leads to a @file{/usr/bin/env}
11648 symlink:
11649
11650 @example
11651 (extra-special-file "/usr/bin/env"
11652 (file-append coreutils "/bin/env"))
11653 @end example
11654 @end deffn
11655
11656 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} host-name-service @var{name}
11657 Return a service that sets the host name to @var{name}.
11658 @end deffn
11659
11660 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} login-service @var{config}
11661 Return a service to run login according to @var{config}, a
11662 @code{<login-configuration>} object, which specifies the message of the day,
11663 among other things.
11664 @end deffn
11665
11666 @deftp {Data Type} login-configuration
11667 This is the data type representing the configuration of login.
11668
11669 @table @asis
11670
11671 @item @code{motd}
11672 @cindex message of the day
11673 A file-like object containing the ``message of the day''.
11674
11675 @item @code{allow-empty-passwords?} (default: @code{#t})
11676 Allow empty passwords by default so that first-time users can log in when
11677 the 'root' account has just been created.
11678
11679 @end table
11680 @end deftp
11681
11682 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} mingetty-service @var{config}
11683 Return a service to run mingetty according to @var{config}, a
11684 @code{<mingetty-configuration>} object, which specifies the tty to run, among
11685 other things.
11686 @end deffn
11687
11688 @deftp {Data Type} mingetty-configuration
11689 This is the data type representing the configuration of Mingetty, which
11690 provides the default implementation of virtual console log-in.
11691
11692 @table @asis
11693
11694 @item @code{tty}
11695 The name of the console this Mingetty runs on---e.g., @code{"tty1"}.
11696
11697 @item @code{auto-login} (default: @code{#f})
11698 When true, this field must be a string denoting the user name under
11699 which the system automatically logs in. When it is @code{#f}, a
11700 user name and password must be entered to log in.
11701
11702 @item @code{login-program} (default: @code{#f})
11703 This must be either @code{#f}, in which case the default log-in program
11704 is used (@command{login} from the Shadow tool suite), or a gexp denoting
11705 the name of the log-in program.
11706
11707 @item @code{login-pause?} (default: @code{#f})
11708 When set to @code{#t} in conjunction with @var{auto-login}, the user
11709 will have to press a key before the log-in shell is launched.
11710
11711 @item @code{mingetty} (default: @var{mingetty})
11712 The Mingetty package to use.
11713
11714 @end table
11715 @end deftp
11716
11717 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} agetty-service @var{config}
11718 Return a service to run agetty according to @var{config}, an
11719 @code{<agetty-configuration>} object, which specifies the tty to run,
11720 among other things.
11721 @end deffn
11722
11723 @deftp {Data Type} agetty-configuration
11724 This is the data type representing the configuration of agetty, which
11725 implements virtual and serial console log-in. See the @code{agetty(8)}
11726 man page for more information.
11727
11728 @table @asis
11729
11730 @item @code{tty}
11731 The name of the console this agetty runs on, as a string---e.g.,
11732 @code{"ttyS0"}. This argument is optional, it will default to
11733 a reasonable default serial port used by the kernel Linux.
11734
11735 For this, if there is a value for an option @code{agetty.tty} in the kernel
11736 command line, agetty will extract the device name of the serial port
11737 from it and use that.
11738
11739 If not and if there is a value for an option @code{console} with a tty in
11740 the Linux command line, agetty will extract the device name of the
11741 serial port from it and use that.
11742
11743 In both cases, agetty will leave the other serial device settings
11744 (baud rate etc.)@: alone---in the hope that Linux pinned them to the
11745 correct values.
11746
11747 @item @code{baud-rate} (default: @code{#f})
11748 A string containing a comma-separated list of one or more baud rates, in
11749 descending order.
11750
11751 @item @code{term} (default: @code{#f})
11752 A string containing the value used for the @code{TERM} environment
11753 variable.
11754
11755 @item @code{eight-bits?} (default: @code{#f})
11756 When @code{#t}, the tty is assumed to be 8-bit clean, and parity detection is
11757 disabled.
11758
11759 @item @code{auto-login} (default: @code{#f})
11760 When passed a login name, as a string, the specified user will be logged
11761 in automatically without prompting for their login name or password.
11762
11763 @item @code{no-reset?} (default: @code{#f})
11764 When @code{#t}, don't reset terminal cflags (control modes).
11765
11766 @item @code{host} (default: @code{#f})
11767 This accepts a string containing the "login_host", which will be written
11768 into the @file{/var/run/utmpx} file.
11769
11770 @item @code{remote?} (default: @code{#f})
11771 When set to @code{#t} in conjunction with @var{host}, this will add an
11772 @code{-r} fakehost option to the command line of the login program
11773 specified in @var{login-program}.
11774
11775 @item @code{flow-control?} (default: @code{#f})
11776 When set to @code{#t}, enable hardware (RTS/CTS) flow control.
11777
11778 @item @code{no-issue?} (default: @code{#f})
11779 When set to @code{#t}, the contents of the @file{/etc/issue} file will
11780 not be displayed before presenting the login prompt.
11781
11782 @item @code{init-string} (default: @code{#f})
11783 This accepts a string that will be sent to the tty or modem before
11784 sending anything else. It can be used to initialize a modem.
11785
11786 @item @code{no-clear?} (default: @code{#f})
11787 When set to @code{#t}, agetty will not clear the screen before showing
11788 the login prompt.
11789
11790 @item @code{login-program} (default: (file-append shadow "/bin/login"))
11791 This must be either a gexp denoting the name of a log-in program, or
11792 unset, in which case the default value is the @command{login} from the
11793 Shadow tool suite.
11794
11795 @item @code{local-line} (default: @code{#f})
11796 Control the CLOCAL line flag. This accepts one of three symbols as
11797 arguments, @code{'auto}, @code{'always}, or @code{'never}. If @code{#f},
11798 the default value chosen by agetty is @code{'auto}.
11799
11800 @item @code{extract-baud?} (default: @code{#f})
11801 When set to @code{#t}, instruct agetty to try to extract the baud rate
11802 from the status messages produced by certain types of modems.
11803
11804 @item @code{skip-login?} (default: @code{#f})
11805 When set to @code{#t}, do not prompt the user for a login name. This
11806 can be used with @var{login-program} field to use non-standard login
11807 systems.
11808
11809 @item @code{no-newline?} (default: @code{#f})
11810 When set to @code{#t}, do not print a newline before printing the
11811 @file{/etc/issue} file.
11812
11813 @c Is this dangerous only when used with login-program, or always?
11814 @item @code{login-options} (default: @code{#f})
11815 This option accepts a string containing options that are passed to the
11816 login program. When used with the @var{login-program}, be aware that a
11817 malicious user could try to enter a login name containing embedded
11818 options that could be parsed by the login program.
11819
11820 @item @code{login-pause} (default: @code{#f})
11821 When set to @code{#t}, wait for any key before showing the login prompt.
11822 This can be used in conjunction with @var{auto-login} to save memory by
11823 lazily spawning shells.
11824
11825 @item @code{chroot} (default: @code{#f})
11826 Change root to the specified directory. This option accepts a directory
11827 path as a string.
11828
11829 @item @code{hangup?} (default: @code{#f})
11830 Use the Linux system call @code{vhangup} to do a virtual hangup of the
11831 specified terminal.
11832
11833 @item @code{keep-baud?} (default: @code{#f})
11834 When set to @code{#t}, try to keep the existing baud rate. The baud
11835 rates from @var{baud-rate} are used when agetty receives a @key{BREAK}
11836 character.
11837
11838 @item @code{timeout} (default: @code{#f})
11839 When set to an integer value, terminate if no user name could be read
11840 within @var{timeout} seconds.
11841
11842 @item @code{detect-case?} (default: @code{#f})
11843 When set to @code{#t}, turn on support for detecting an uppercase-only
11844 terminal. This setting will detect a login name containing only
11845 uppercase letters as indicating an uppercase-only terminal and turn on
11846 some upper-to-lower case conversions. Note that this will not support
11847 Unicode characters.
11848
11849 @item @code{wait-cr?} (default: @code{#f})
11850 When set to @code{#t}, wait for the user or modem to send a
11851 carriage-return or linefeed character before displaying
11852 @file{/etc/issue} or login prompt. This is typically used with the
11853 @var{init-string} option.
11854
11855 @item @code{no-hints?} (default: @code{#f})
11856 When set to @code{#t}, do not print hints about Num, Caps, and Scroll
11857 locks.
11858
11859 @item @code{no-hostname?} (default: @code{#f})
11860 By default, the hostname is printed. When this option is set to
11861 @code{#t}, no hostname will be shown at all.
11862
11863 @item @code{long-hostname?} (default: @code{#f})
11864 By default, the hostname is only printed until the first dot. When this
11865 option is set to @code{#t}, the fully qualified hostname by
11866 @code{gethostname} or @code{getaddrinfo} is shown.
11867
11868 @item @code{erase-characters} (default: @code{#f})
11869 This option accepts a string of additional characters that should be
11870 interpreted as backspace when the user types their login name.
11871
11872 @item @code{kill-characters} (default: @code{#f})
11873 This option accepts a string that should be interpreted to mean "ignore
11874 all previous characters" (also called a "kill" character) when the user
11875 types their login name.
11876
11877 @item @code{chdir} (default: @code{#f})
11878 This option accepts, as a string, a directory path that will be changed
11879 to before login.
11880
11881 @item @code{delay} (default: @code{#f})
11882 This options accepts, as an integer, the number of seconds to sleep
11883 before opening the tty and displaying the login prompt.
11884
11885 @item @code{nice} (default: @code{#f})
11886 This option accepts, as an integer, the nice value with which to run the
11887 @command{login} program.
11888
11889 @item @code{extra-options} (default: @code{'()})
11890 This option provides an "escape hatch" for the user to provide arbitrary
11891 command-line arguments to @command{agetty} as a list of strings.
11892
11893 @end table
11894 @end deftp
11895
11896 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} kmscon-service-type @var{config}
11897 Return a service to run @uref{https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/kmscon,kmscon}
11898 according to @var{config}, a @code{<kmscon-configuration>} object, which
11899 specifies the tty to run, among other things.
11900 @end deffn
11901
11902 @deftp {Data Type} kmscon-configuration
11903 This is the data type representing the configuration of Kmscon, which
11904 implements virtual console log-in.
11905
11906 @table @asis
11907
11908 @item @code{virtual-terminal}
11909 The name of the console this Kmscon runs on---e.g., @code{"tty1"}.
11910
11911 @item @code{login-program} (default: @code{#~(string-append #$shadow "/bin/login")})
11912 A gexp denoting the name of the log-in program. The default log-in program is
11913 @command{login} from the Shadow tool suite.
11914
11915 @item @code{login-arguments} (default: @code{'("-p")})
11916 A list of arguments to pass to @command{login}.
11917
11918 @item @code{auto-login} (default: @code{#f})
11919 When passed a login name, as a string, the specified user will be logged
11920 in automatically without prompting for their login name or password.
11921
11922 @item @code{hardware-acceleration?} (default: #f)
11923 Whether to use hardware acceleration.
11924
11925 @item @code{kmscon} (default: @var{kmscon})
11926 The Kmscon package to use.
11927
11928 @end table
11929 @end deftp
11930
11931 @cindex name service cache daemon
11932 @cindex nscd
11933 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} nscd-service [@var{config}] [#:glibc glibc] @
11934 [#:name-services '()]
11935 Return a service that runs the libc name service cache daemon (nscd) with the
11936 given @var{config}---an @code{<nscd-configuration>} object. @xref{Name
11937 Service Switch}, for an example.
11938
11939 For convenience, the Shepherd service for nscd provides the following actions:
11940
11941 @table @code
11942 @item invalidate
11943 @cindex cache invalidation, nscd
11944 @cindex nscd, cache invalidation
11945 This invalidate the given cache. For instance, running:
11946
11947 @example
11948 herd invalidate nscd hosts
11949 @end example
11950
11951 @noindent
11952 invalidates the host name lookup cache of nscd.
11953
11954 @item statistics
11955 Running @command{herd statistics nscd} displays information about nscd usage
11956 and caches.
11957 @end table
11958
11959 @end deffn
11960
11961 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %nscd-default-configuration
11962 This is the default @code{<nscd-configuration>} value (see below) used
11963 by @code{nscd-service}. It uses the caches defined by
11964 @var{%nscd-default-caches}; see below.
11965 @end defvr
11966
11967 @deftp {Data Type} nscd-configuration
11968 This is the data type representing the name service cache daemon (nscd)
11969 configuration.
11970
11971 @table @asis
11972
11973 @item @code{name-services} (default: @code{'()})
11974 List of packages denoting @dfn{name services} that must be visible to
11975 the nscd---e.g., @code{(list @var{nss-mdns})}.
11976
11977 @item @code{glibc} (default: @var{glibc})
11978 Package object denoting the GNU C Library providing the @command{nscd}
11979 command.
11980
11981 @item @code{log-file} (default: @code{"/var/log/nscd.log"})
11982 Name of the nscd log file. This is where debugging output goes when
11983 @code{debug-level} is strictly positive.
11984
11985 @item @code{debug-level} (default: @code{0})
11986 Integer denoting the debugging levels. Higher numbers mean that more
11987 debugging output is logged.
11988
11989 @item @code{caches} (default: @var{%nscd-default-caches})
11990 List of @code{<nscd-cache>} objects denoting things to be cached; see
11991 below.
11992
11993 @end table
11994 @end deftp
11995
11996 @deftp {Data Type} nscd-cache
11997 Data type representing a cache database of nscd and its parameters.
11998
11999 @table @asis
12000
12001 @item @code{database}
12002 This is a symbol representing the name of the database to be cached.
12003 Valid values are @code{passwd}, @code{group}, @code{hosts}, and
12004 @code{services}, which designate the corresponding NSS database
12005 (@pxref{NSS Basics,,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}).
12006
12007 @item @code{positive-time-to-live}
12008 @itemx @code{negative-time-to-live} (default: @code{20})
12009 A number representing the number of seconds during which a positive or
12010 negative lookup result remains in cache.
12011
12012 @item @code{check-files?} (default: @code{#t})
12013 Whether to check for updates of the files corresponding to
12014 @var{database}.
12015
12016 For instance, when @var{database} is @code{hosts}, setting this flag
12017 instructs nscd to check for updates in @file{/etc/hosts} and to take
12018 them into account.
12019
12020 @item @code{persistent?} (default: @code{#t})
12021 Whether the cache should be stored persistently on disk.
12022
12023 @item @code{shared?} (default: @code{#t})
12024 Whether the cache should be shared among users.
12025
12026 @item @code{max-database-size} (default: 32@tie{}MiB)
12027 Maximum size in bytes of the database cache.
12028
12029 @c XXX: 'suggested-size' and 'auto-propagate?' seem to be expert
12030 @c settings, so leave them out.
12031
12032 @end table
12033 @end deftp
12034
12035 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %nscd-default-caches
12036 List of @code{<nscd-cache>} objects used by default by
12037 @code{nscd-configuration} (see above).
12038
12039 It enables persistent and aggressive caching of service and host name
12040 lookups. The latter provides better host name lookup performance,
12041 resilience in the face of unreliable name servers, and also better
12042 privacy---often the result of host name lookups is in local cache, so
12043 external name servers do not even need to be queried.
12044 @end defvr
12045
12046 @anchor{syslog-configuration-type}
12047 @cindex syslog
12048 @cindex logging
12049 @deftp {Data Type} syslog-configuration
12050 This data type represents the configuration of the syslog daemon.
12051
12052 @table @asis
12053 @item @code{syslogd} (default: @code{#~(string-append #$inetutils "/libexec/syslogd")})
12054 The syslog daemon to use.
12055
12056 @item @code{config-file} (default: @code{%default-syslog.conf})
12057 The syslog configuration file to use.
12058
12059 @end table
12060 @end deftp
12061
12062 @anchor{syslog-service}
12063 @cindex syslog
12064 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} syslog-service @var{config}
12065 Return a service that runs a syslog daemon according to @var{config}.
12066
12067 @xref{syslogd invocation,,, inetutils, GNU Inetutils}, for more
12068 information on the configuration file syntax.
12069 @end deffn
12070
12071 @defvr {Scheme Variable} guix-service-type
12072 This is the type of the service that runs the build daemon,
12073 @command{guix-daemon} (@pxref{Invoking guix-daemon}). Its value must be a
12074 @code{guix-configuration} record as described below.
12075 @end defvr
12076
12077 @anchor{guix-configuration-type}
12078 @deftp {Data Type} guix-configuration
12079 This data type represents the configuration of the Guix build daemon.
12080 @xref{Invoking guix-daemon}, for more information.
12081
12082 @table @asis
12083 @item @code{guix} (default: @var{guix})
12084 The Guix package to use.
12085
12086 @item @code{build-group} (default: @code{"guixbuild"})
12087 Name of the group for build user accounts.
12088
12089 @item @code{build-accounts} (default: @code{10})
12090 Number of build user accounts to create.
12091
12092 @item @code{authorize-key?} (default: @code{#t})
12093 @cindex substitutes, authorization thereof
12094 Whether to authorize the substitute keys listed in
12095 @code{authorized-keys}---by default that of @code{@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER}}
12096 (@pxref{Substitutes}).
12097
12098 @vindex %default-authorized-guix-keys
12099 @item @code{authorized-keys} (default: @code{%default-authorized-guix-keys})
12100 The list of authorized key files for archive imports, as a list of
12101 string-valued gexps (@pxref{Invoking guix archive}). By default, it
12102 contains that of @code{@value{SUBSTITUTE-SERVER}} (@pxref{Substitutes}).
12103
12104 @item @code{use-substitutes?} (default: @code{#t})
12105 Whether to use substitutes.
12106
12107 @item @code{substitute-urls} (default: @code{%default-substitute-urls})
12108 The list of URLs where to look for substitutes by default.
12109
12110 @item @code{max-silent-time} (default: @code{0})
12111 @itemx @code{timeout} (default: @code{0})
12112 The number of seconds of silence and the number of seconds of activity,
12113 respectively, after which a build process times out. A value of zero
12114 disables the timeout.
12115
12116 @item @code{log-compression} (default: @code{'bzip2})
12117 The type of compression used for build logs---one of @code{gzip},
12118 @code{bzip2}, or @code{none}.
12119
12120 @item @code{extra-options} (default: @code{'()})
12121 List of extra command-line options for @command{guix-daemon}.
12122
12123 @item @code{log-file} (default: @code{"/var/log/guix-daemon.log"})
12124 File where @command{guix-daemon}'s standard output and standard error
12125 are written.
12126
12127 @item @code{http-proxy} (default: @code{#f})
12128 The HTTP proxy used for downloading fixed-output derivations and
12129 substitutes.
12130
12131 @item @code{tmpdir} (default: @code{#f})
12132 A directory path where the @command{guix-daemon} will perform builds.
12133
12134 @end table
12135 @end deftp
12136
12137 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} udev-service [#:udev @var{eudev} #:rules @code{'()}]
12138 Run @var{udev}, which populates the @file{/dev} directory dynamically.
12139 udev rules can be provided as a list of files through the @var{rules}
12140 variable. The procedures @code{udev-rule} and @code{file->udev-rule} from
12141 @code{(gnu services base)} simplify the creation of such rule files.
12142 @end deffn
12143
12144 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} udev-rule [@var{file-name} @var{contents}]
12145 Return a udev-rule file named @var{file-name} containing the rules
12146 defined by the @var{contents} literal.
12147
12148 In the following example, a rule for a USB device is defined to be
12149 stored in the file @file{90-usb-thing.rules}. The rule runs a script
12150 upon detecting a USB device with a given product identifier.
12151
12152 @example
12153 (define %example-udev-rule
12154 (udev-rule
12155 "90-usb-thing.rules"
12156 (string-append "ACTION==\"add\", SUBSYSTEM==\"usb\", "
12157 "ATTR@{product@}==\"Example\", "
12158 "RUN+=\"/path/to/script\"")))
12159 @end example
12160
12161 The @command{herd rules udev} command, as root, returns the name of the
12162 directory containing all the active udev rules.
12163 @end deffn
12164
12165 Here we show how the default @var{udev-service} can be extended with it.
12166
12167 @example
12168 (operating-system
12169 ;; @dots{}
12170 (services
12171 (modify-services %desktop-services
12172 (udev-service-type config =>
12173 (udev-configuration (inherit config)
12174 (rules (append (udev-configuration-rules config)
12175 (list %example-udev-rule))))))))
12176 @end example
12177
12178 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} file->udev-rule [@var{file-name} @var{file}]
12179 Return a udev file named @var{file-name} containing the rules defined
12180 within @var{file}, a file-like object.
12181
12182 The following example showcases how we can use an existing rule file.
12183
12184 @example
12185 (use-modules (guix download) ;for url-fetch
12186 (guix packages) ;for origin
12187 ;; @dots{})
12188
12189 (define %android-udev-rules
12190 (file->udev-rule
12191 "51-android-udev.rules"
12192 (let ((version "20170910"))
12193 (origin
12194 (method url-fetch)
12195 (uri (string-append "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/M0Rf30/"
12196 "android-udev-rules/" version "/51-android.rules"))
12197 (sha256
12198 (base32 "0lmmagpyb6xsq6zcr2w1cyx9qmjqmajkvrdbhjx32gqf1d9is003"))))))
12199 @end example
12200 @end deffn
12201
12202 Additionally, Guix package definitions can be included in @var{rules} in
12203 order to extend the udev rules with the definitions found under their
12204 @file{lib/udev/rules.d} sub-directory. In lieu of the previous
12205 @var{file->udev-rule} example, we could have used the
12206 @var{android-udev-rules} package which exists in Guix in the @code{(gnu
12207 packages android)} module.
12208
12209 The following example shows how to use the @var{android-udev-rules}
12210 package so that the Android tool @command{adb} can detect devices
12211 without root privileges. It also details how to create the
12212 @code{adbusers} group, which is required for the proper functioning of
12213 the rules defined within the @var{android-udev-rules} package. To
12214 create such a group, we must define it both as part of the
12215 @var{supplementary-groups} of our @var{user-account} declaration, as
12216 well as in the @var{groups} field of the @var{operating-system} record.
12217
12218 @example
12219 (use-modules (gnu packages android) ;for android-udev-rules
12220 (gnu system shadow) ;for user-group
12221 ;; @dots{})
12222
12223 (operating-system
12224 ;; @dots{}
12225 (users (cons (user-acount
12226 ;; @dots{}
12227 (supplementary-groups
12228 '("adbusers" ;for adb
12229 "wheel" "netdev" "audio" "video"))
12230 ;; @dots{})))
12231
12232 (groups (cons (user-group (system? #t) (name "adbusers"))
12233 %base-groups))
12234
12235 ;; @dots{}
12236
12237 (services
12238 (modify-services %desktop-services
12239 (udev-service-type
12240 config =>
12241 (udev-configuration (inherit config)
12242 (rules (cons android-udev-rules
12243 (udev-configuration-rules config))))))))
12244 @end example
12245
12246 @defvr {Scheme Variable} urandom-seed-service-type
12247 Save some entropy in @var{%random-seed-file} to seed @file{/dev/urandom}
12248 when rebooting. It also tries to seed @file{/dev/urandom} from
12249 @file{/dev/hwrng} while booting, if @file{/dev/hwrng} exists and is
12250 readable.
12251 @end defvr
12252
12253 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %random-seed-file
12254 This is the name of the file where some random bytes are saved by
12255 @var{urandom-seed-service} to seed @file{/dev/urandom} when rebooting.
12256 It defaults to @file{/var/lib/random-seed}.
12257 @end defvr
12258
12259 @cindex mouse
12260 @cindex gpm
12261 @defvr {Scheme Variable} gpm-service-type
12262 This is the type of the service that runs GPM, the @dfn{general-purpose
12263 mouse daemon}, which provides mouse support to the Linux console. GPM
12264 allows users to use the mouse in the console, notably to select, copy,
12265 and paste text.
12266
12267 The value for services of this type must be a @code{gpm-configuration}
12268 (see below). This service is not part of @code{%base-services}.
12269 @end defvr
12270
12271 @deftp {Data Type} gpm-configuration
12272 Data type representing the configuration of GPM.
12273
12274 @table @asis
12275 @item @code{options} (default: @code{%default-gpm-options})
12276 Command-line options passed to @command{gpm}. The default set of
12277 options instruct @command{gpm} to listen to mouse events on
12278 @file{/dev/input/mice}. @xref{Command Line,,, gpm, gpm manual}, for
12279 more information.
12280
12281 @item @code{gpm} (default: @code{gpm})
12282 The GPM package to use.
12283
12284 @end table
12285 @end deftp
12286
12287 @anchor{guix-publish-service-type}
12288 @deffn {Scheme Variable} guix-publish-service-type
12289 This is the service type for @command{guix publish} (@pxref{Invoking
12290 guix publish}). Its value must be a @code{guix-publish-configuration}
12291 object, as described below.
12292
12293 This assumes that @file{/etc/guix} already contains a signing key pair as
12294 created by @command{guix archive --generate-key} (@pxref{Invoking guix
12295 archive}). If that is not the case, the service will fail to start.
12296 @end deffn
12297
12298 @deftp {Data Type} guix-publish-configuration
12299 Data type representing the configuration of the @code{guix publish}
12300 service.
12301
12302 @table @asis
12303 @item @code{guix} (default: @code{guix})
12304 The Guix package to use.
12305
12306 @item @code{port} (default: @code{80})
12307 The TCP port to listen for connections.
12308
12309 @item @code{host} (default: @code{"localhost"})
12310 The host (and thus, network interface) to listen to. Use
12311 @code{"0.0.0.0"} to listen on all the network interfaces.
12312
12313 @item @code{compression} (default: @code{'(("gzip" 3))})
12314 This is a list of compression method/level tuple used when compressing
12315 substitutes. For example, to compress all substitutes with @emph{both} lzip
12316 at level 7 and gzip at level 9, write:
12317
12318 @example
12319 '(("lzip" 7) ("gzip" 9))
12320 @end example
12321
12322 Level 9 achieves the best compression ratio at the expense of increased CPU
12323 usage, whereas level 1 achieves fast compression.
12324
12325 An empty list disables compression altogether.
12326
12327 @item @code{nar-path} (default: @code{"nar"})
12328 The URL path at which ``nars'' can be fetched. @xref{Invoking guix
12329 publish, @code{--nar-path}}, for details.
12330
12331 @item @code{cache} (default: @code{#f})
12332 When it is @code{#f}, disable caching and instead generate archives on
12333 demand. Otherwise, this should be the name of a directory---e.g.,
12334 @code{"/var/cache/guix/publish"}---where @command{guix publish} caches
12335 archives and meta-data ready to be sent. @xref{Invoking guix publish,
12336 @option{--cache}}, for more information on the tradeoffs involved.
12337
12338 @item @code{workers} (default: @code{#f})
12339 When it is an integer, this is the number of worker threads used for
12340 caching; when @code{#f}, the number of processors is used.
12341 @xref{Invoking guix publish, @option{--workers}}, for more information.
12342
12343 @item @code{ttl} (default: @code{#f})
12344 When it is an integer, this denotes the @dfn{time-to-live} in seconds
12345 of the published archives. @xref{Invoking guix publish, @option{--ttl}},
12346 for more information.
12347 @end table
12348 @end deftp
12349
12350 @anchor{rngd-service}
12351 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} rngd-service [#:rng-tools @var{rng-tools}] @
12352 [#:device "/dev/hwrng"]
12353 Return a service that runs the @command{rngd} program from @var{rng-tools}
12354 to add @var{device} to the kernel's entropy pool. The service will fail if
12355 @var{device} does not exist.
12356 @end deffn
12357
12358 @anchor{pam-limits-service}
12359 @cindex session limits
12360 @cindex ulimit
12361 @cindex priority
12362 @cindex realtime
12363 @cindex jackd
12364 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} pam-limits-service [#:limits @code{'()}]
12365
12366 Return a service that installs a configuration file for the
12367 @uref{http://linux-pam.org/Linux-PAM-html/sag-pam_limits.html,
12368 @code{pam_limits} module}. The procedure optionally takes a list of
12369 @code{pam-limits-entry} values, which can be used to specify
12370 @code{ulimit} limits and nice priority limits to user sessions.
12371
12372 The following limits definition sets two hard and soft limits for all
12373 login sessions of users in the @code{realtime} group:
12374
12375 @example
12376 (pam-limits-service
12377 (list
12378 (pam-limits-entry "@@realtime" 'both 'rtprio 99)
12379 (pam-limits-entry "@@realtime" 'both 'memlock 'unlimited)))
12380 @end example
12381
12382 The first entry increases the maximum realtime priority for
12383 non-privileged processes; the second entry lifts any restriction of the
12384 maximum address space that can be locked in memory. These settings are
12385 commonly used for real-time audio systems.
12386 @end deffn
12387
12388 @node Scheduled Job Execution
12389 @subsection Scheduled Job Execution
12390
12391 @cindex cron
12392 @cindex mcron
12393 @cindex scheduling jobs
12394 The @code{(gnu services mcron)} module provides an interface to
12395 GNU@tie{}mcron, a daemon to run jobs at scheduled times (@pxref{Top,,,
12396 mcron, GNU@tie{}mcron}). GNU@tie{}mcron is similar to the traditional
12397 Unix @command{cron} daemon; the main difference is that it is
12398 implemented in Guile Scheme, which provides a lot of flexibility when
12399 specifying the scheduling of jobs and their actions.
12400
12401 The example below defines an operating system that runs the
12402 @command{updatedb} (@pxref{Invoking updatedb,,, find, Finding Files})
12403 and the @command{guix gc} commands (@pxref{Invoking guix gc}) daily, as
12404 well as the @command{mkid} command on behalf of an unprivileged user
12405 (@pxref{mkid invocation,,, idutils, ID Database Utilities}). It uses
12406 gexps to introduce job definitions that are passed to mcron
12407 (@pxref{G-Expressions}).
12408
12409 @lisp
12410 (use-modules (guix) (gnu) (gnu services mcron))
12411 (use-package-modules base idutils)
12412
12413 (define updatedb-job
12414 ;; Run 'updatedb' at 3AM every day. Here we write the
12415 ;; job's action as a Scheme procedure.
12416 #~(job '(next-hour '(3))
12417 (lambda ()
12418 (execl (string-append #$findutils "/bin/updatedb")
12419 "updatedb"
12420 "--prunepaths=/tmp /var/tmp /gnu/store"))))
12421
12422 (define garbage-collector-job
12423 ;; Collect garbage 5 minutes after midnight every day.
12424 ;; The job's action is a shell command.
12425 #~(job "5 0 * * *" ;Vixie cron syntax
12426 "guix gc -F 1G"))
12427
12428 (define idutils-job
12429 ;; Update the index database as user "charlie" at 12:15PM
12430 ;; and 19:15PM. This runs from the user's home directory.
12431 #~(job '(next-minute-from (next-hour '(12 19)) '(15))
12432 (string-append #$idutils "/bin/mkid src")
12433 #:user "charlie"))
12434
12435 (operating-system
12436 ;; @dots{}
12437 (services (cons (service mcron-service-type
12438 (mcron-configuration
12439 (jobs (list garbage-collector-job
12440 updatedb-job
12441 idutils-job))))
12442 %base-services)))
12443 @end lisp
12444
12445 @xref{Guile Syntax, mcron job specifications,, mcron, GNU@tie{}mcron},
12446 for more information on mcron job specifications. Below is the
12447 reference of the mcron service.
12448
12449 On a running system, you can use the @code{schedule} action of the service to
12450 visualize the mcron jobs that will be executed next:
12451
12452 @example
12453 # herd schedule mcron
12454 @end example
12455
12456 @noindent
12457 The example above lists the next five tasks that will be executed, but you can
12458 also specify the number of tasks to display:
12459
12460 @example
12461 # herd schedule mcron 10
12462 @end example
12463
12464 @defvr {Scheme Variable} mcron-service-type
12465 This is the type of the @code{mcron} service, whose value is an
12466 @code{mcron-configuration} object.
12467
12468 This service type can be the target of a service extension that provides
12469 it additional job specifications (@pxref{Service Composition}). In
12470 other words, it is possible to define services that provide additional
12471 mcron jobs to run.
12472 @end defvr
12473
12474 @deftp {Data Type} mcron-configuration
12475 Data type representing the configuration of mcron.
12476
12477 @table @asis
12478 @item @code{mcron} (default: @var{mcron})
12479 The mcron package to use.
12480
12481 @item @code{jobs}
12482 This is a list of gexps (@pxref{G-Expressions}), where each gexp
12483 corresponds to an mcron job specification (@pxref{Syntax, mcron job
12484 specifications,, mcron, GNU@tie{}mcron}).
12485 @end table
12486 @end deftp
12487
12488
12489 @node Log Rotation
12490 @subsection Log Rotation
12491
12492 @cindex rottlog
12493 @cindex log rotation
12494 @cindex logging
12495 Log files such as those found in @file{/var/log} tend to grow endlessly,
12496 so it's a good idea to @dfn{rotate} them once in a while---i.e., archive
12497 their contents in separate files, possibly compressed. The @code{(gnu
12498 services admin)} module provides an interface to GNU@tie{}Rot[t]log, a
12499 log rotation tool (@pxref{Top,,, rottlog, GNU Rot[t]log Manual}).
12500
12501 The example below defines an operating system that provides log rotation
12502 with the default settings, for commonly encountered log files.
12503
12504 @lisp
12505 (use-modules (guix) (gnu))
12506 (use-service-modules admin mcron)
12507 (use-package-modules base idutils)
12508
12509 (operating-system
12510 ;; @dots{}
12511 (services (cons (service rottlog-service-type)
12512 %base-services)))
12513 @end lisp
12514
12515 @defvr {Scheme Variable} rottlog-service-type
12516 This is the type of the Rottlog service, whose value is a
12517 @code{rottlog-configuration} object.
12518
12519 Other services can extend this one with new @code{log-rotation} objects
12520 (see below), thereby augmenting the set of files to be rotated.
12521
12522 This service type can define mcron jobs (@pxref{Scheduled Job
12523 Execution}) to run the rottlog service.
12524 @end defvr
12525
12526 @deftp {Data Type} rottlog-configuration
12527 Data type representing the configuration of rottlog.
12528
12529 @table @asis
12530 @item @code{rottlog} (default: @code{rottlog})
12531 The Rottlog package to use.
12532
12533 @item @code{rc-file} (default: @code{(file-append rottlog "/etc/rc")})
12534 The Rottlog configuration file to use (@pxref{Mandatory RC Variables,,,
12535 rottlog, GNU Rot[t]log Manual}).
12536
12537 @item @code{rotations} (default: @code{%default-rotations})
12538 A list of @code{log-rotation} objects as defined below.
12539
12540 @item @code{jobs}
12541 This is a list of gexps where each gexp corresponds to an mcron job
12542 specification (@pxref{Scheduled Job Execution}).
12543 @end table
12544 @end deftp
12545
12546 @deftp {Data Type} log-rotation
12547 Data type representing the rotation of a group of log files.
12548
12549 Taking an example from the Rottlog manual (@pxref{Period Related File
12550 Examples,,, rottlog, GNU Rot[t]log Manual}), a log rotation might be
12551 defined like this:
12552
12553 @example
12554 (log-rotation
12555 (frequency 'daily)
12556 (files '("/var/log/apache/*"))
12557 (options '("storedir apache-archives"
12558 "rotate 6"
12559 "notifempty"
12560 "nocompress")))
12561 @end example
12562
12563 The list of fields is as follows:
12564
12565 @table @asis
12566 @item @code{frequency} (default: @code{'weekly})
12567 The log rotation frequency, a symbol.
12568
12569 @item @code{files}
12570 The list of files or file glob patterns to rotate.
12571
12572 @item @code{options} (default: @code{'()})
12573 The list of rottlog options for this rotation (@pxref{Configuration
12574 parameters,,, rottlog, GNU Rot[t]lg Manual}).
12575
12576 @item @code{post-rotate} (default: @code{#f})
12577 Either @code{#f} or a gexp to execute once the rotation has completed.
12578 @end table
12579 @end deftp
12580
12581 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %default-rotations
12582 Specifies weekly rotation of @var{%rotated-files} and
12583 a couple of other files.
12584 @end defvr
12585
12586 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %rotated-files
12587 The list of syslog-controlled files to be rotated. By default it is:
12588 @code{'("/var/log/messages" "/var/log/secure")}.
12589 @end defvr
12590
12591 @node Networking Services
12592 @subsection Networking Services
12593
12594 The @code{(gnu services networking)} module provides services to configure
12595 the network interface.
12596
12597 @cindex DHCP, networking service
12598 @defvr {Scheme Variable} dhcp-client-service-type
12599 This is the type of services that run @var{dhcp}, a Dynamic Host Configuration
12600 Protocol (DHCP) client, on all the non-loopback network interfaces. Its value
12601 is the DHCP client package to use, @code{isc-dhcp} by default.
12602 @end defvr
12603
12604 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} dhcpd-service-type
12605 This type defines a service that runs a DHCP daemon. To create a
12606 service of this type, you must supply a @code{<dhcpd-configuration>}.
12607 For example:
12608
12609 @example
12610 (service dhcpd-service-type
12611 (dhcpd-configuration
12612 (config-file (local-file "my-dhcpd.conf"))
12613 (interfaces '("enp0s25"))))
12614 @end example
12615 @end deffn
12616
12617 @deftp {Data Type} dhcpd-configuration
12618 @table @asis
12619 @item @code{package} (default: @code{isc-dhcp})
12620 The package that provides the DHCP daemon. This package is expected to
12621 provide the daemon at @file{sbin/dhcpd} relative to its output
12622 directory. The default package is the
12623 @uref{https://www.isc.org/products/DHCP, ISC's DHCP server}.
12624 @item @code{config-file} (default: @code{#f})
12625 The configuration file to use. This is required. It will be passed to
12626 @code{dhcpd} via its @code{-cf} option. This may be any ``file-like''
12627 object (@pxref{G-Expressions, file-like objects}). See @code{man
12628 dhcpd.conf} for details on the configuration file syntax.
12629 @item @code{version} (default: @code{"4"})
12630 The DHCP version to use. The ISC DHCP server supports the values ``4'',
12631 ``6'', and ``4o6''. These correspond to the @code{dhcpd} program
12632 options @code{-4}, @code{-6}, and @code{-4o6}. See @code{man dhcpd} for
12633 details.
12634 @item @code{run-directory} (default: @code{"/run/dhcpd"})
12635 The run directory to use. At service activation time, this directory
12636 will be created if it does not exist.
12637 @item @code{pid-file} (default: @code{"/run/dhcpd/dhcpd.pid"})
12638 The PID file to use. This corresponds to the @code{-pf} option of
12639 @code{dhcpd}. See @code{man dhcpd} for details.
12640 @item @code{interfaces} (default: @code{'()})
12641 The names of the network interfaces on which dhcpd should listen for
12642 broadcasts. If this list is not empty, then its elements (which must be
12643 strings) will be appended to the @code{dhcpd} invocation when starting
12644 the daemon. It may not be necessary to explicitly specify any
12645 interfaces here; see @code{man dhcpd} for details.
12646 @end table
12647 @end deftp
12648
12649 @defvr {Scheme Variable} static-networking-service-type
12650 This is the type for statically-configured network interfaces.
12651 @c TODO Document <static-networking> data structures.
12652 @end defvr
12653
12654 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} static-networking-service @var{interface} @var{ip} @
12655 [#:netmask #f] [#:gateway #f] [#:name-servers @code{'()}] @
12656 [#:requirement @code{'(udev)}]
12657 Return a service that starts @var{interface} with address @var{ip}. If
12658 @var{netmask} is true, use it as the network mask. If @var{gateway} is true,
12659 it must be a string specifying the default network gateway. @var{requirement}
12660 can be used to declare a dependency on another service before configuring the
12661 interface.
12662
12663 This procedure can be called several times, one for each network
12664 interface of interest. Behind the scenes what it does is extend
12665 @code{static-networking-service-type} with additional network interfaces
12666 to handle.
12667
12668 For example:
12669
12670 @example
12671 (static-networking-service "eno1" "192.168.1.82"
12672 #:gateway "192.168.1.2"
12673 #:name-servers '("192.168.1.2"))
12674 @end example
12675 @end deffn
12676
12677 @cindex wicd
12678 @cindex wireless
12679 @cindex WiFi
12680 @cindex network management
12681 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} wicd-service [#:wicd @var{wicd}]
12682 Return a service that runs @url{https://launchpad.net/wicd,Wicd}, a network
12683 management daemon that aims to simplify wired and wireless networking.
12684
12685 This service adds the @var{wicd} package to the global profile, providing
12686 several commands to interact with the daemon and configure networking:
12687 @command{wicd-client}, a graphical user interface, and the @command{wicd-cli}
12688 and @command{wicd-curses} user interfaces.
12689 @end deffn
12690
12691 @cindex ModemManager
12692
12693 @defvr {Scheme Variable} modem-manager-service-type
12694 This is the service type for the
12695 @uref{https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/ModemManager, ModemManager}
12696 service. The value for this service type is a
12697 @code{modem-manager-configuration} record.
12698
12699 This service is part of @code{%desktop-services} (@pxref{Desktop
12700 Services}).
12701 @end defvr
12702
12703 @deftp {Data Type} modem-manager-configuration
12704 Data type representing the configuration of ModemManager.
12705
12706 @table @asis
12707 @item @code{modem-manager} (default: @code{modem-manager})
12708 The ModemManager package to use.
12709
12710 @end table
12711 @end deftp
12712
12713 @cindex USB_ModeSwitch
12714 @cindex Modeswitching
12715
12716 @defvr {Scheme Variable} usb-modeswitch-service-type
12717 This is the service type for the
12718 @uref{http://www.draisberghof.de/usb_modeswitch/, USB_ModeSwitch} service. The
12719 value for this service type is a @code{usb-modeswitch-configuration} record.
12720
12721 When plugged in, some USB modems (and other USB devices) initially present
12722 themselves as a read-only storage medium and not as a modem. They need to be
12723 @dfn{modeswitched} before they are usable. The USB_ModeSwitch service type
12724 installs udev rules to automatically modeswitch these devices when they are
12725 plugged in.
12726
12727 This service is part of @code{%desktop-services} (@pxref{Desktop
12728 Services}).
12729 @end defvr
12730
12731 @deftp {Data Type} usb-modeswitch-configuration
12732 Data type representing the configuration of USB_ModeSwitch.
12733
12734 @table @asis
12735 @item @code{usb-modeswitch} (default: @code{usb-modeswitch})
12736 The USB_ModeSwitch package providing the binaries for modeswitching.
12737
12738 @item @code{usb-modeswitch-data} (default: @code{usb-modeswitch-data})
12739 The package providing the device data and udev rules file used by
12740 USB_ModeSwitch.
12741
12742 @item @code{config-file} (default: @code{#~(string-append #$usb-modeswitch:dispatcher "/etc/usb_modeswitch.conf")})
12743 Which config file to use for the USB_ModeSwitch dispatcher. By default the
12744 config file shipped with USB_ModeSwitch is used which disables logging to
12745 @file{/var/log} among other default settings. If set to @code{#f}, no config
12746 file is used.
12747
12748 @end table
12749 @end deftp
12750
12751 @cindex NetworkManager
12752
12753 @defvr {Scheme Variable} network-manager-service-type
12754 This is the service type for the
12755 @uref{https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/NetworkManager, NetworkManager}
12756 service. The value for this service type is a
12757 @code{network-manager-configuration} record.
12758
12759 This service is part of @code{%desktop-services} (@pxref{Desktop
12760 Services}).
12761 @end defvr
12762
12763 @deftp {Data Type} network-manager-configuration
12764 Data type representing the configuration of NetworkManager.
12765
12766 @table @asis
12767 @item @code{network-manager} (default: @code{network-manager})
12768 The NetworkManager package to use.
12769
12770 @item @code{dns} (default: @code{"default"})
12771 Processing mode for DNS, which affects how NetworkManager uses the
12772 @code{resolv.conf} configuration file.
12773
12774 @table @samp
12775 @item default
12776 NetworkManager will update @code{resolv.conf} to reflect the nameservers
12777 provided by currently active connections.
12778
12779 @item dnsmasq
12780 NetworkManager will run @code{dnsmasq} as a local caching nameserver, using a
12781 @dfn{conditional forwarding} configuration if you are connected to a VPN, and
12782 then update @code{resolv.conf} to point to the local nameserver.
12783
12784 With this setting, you can share your network connection. For example when
12785 you want to share your network connection to another laptop @i{via} an
12786 Ethernet cable, you can open @command{nm-connection-editor} and configure the
12787 Wired connection's method for IPv4 and IPv6 to be ``Shared to other computers''
12788 and reestablish the connection (or reboot).
12789
12790 You can also set up a @dfn{host-to-guest connection} to QEMU VMs
12791 (@pxref{Installing Guix in a VM}). With a host-to-guest connection, you can
12792 e.g.@: access a Web server running on the VM (@pxref{Web Services}) from a Web
12793 browser on your host system, or connect to the VM @i{via} SSH
12794 (@pxref{Networking Services, @code{openssh-service-type}}). To set up a
12795 host-to-guest connection, run this command once:
12796
12797 @example
12798 nmcli connection add type tun \
12799 connection.interface-name tap0 \
12800 tun.mode tap tun.owner $(id -u) \
12801 ipv4.method shared \
12802 ipv4.addresses 172.28.112.1/24
12803 @end example
12804
12805 Then each time you launch your QEMU VM (@pxref{Running Guix in a VM}), pass
12806 @option{-nic tap,ifname=tap0,script=no,downscript=no} to
12807 @command{qemu-system-...}.
12808
12809 @item none
12810 NetworkManager will not modify @code{resolv.conf}.
12811 @end table
12812
12813 @item @code{vpn-plugins} (default: @code{'()})
12814 This is the list of available plugins for virtual private networks
12815 (VPNs). An example of this is the @code{network-manager-openvpn}
12816 package, which allows NetworkManager to manage VPNs @i{via} OpenVPN.
12817
12818 @end table
12819 @end deftp
12820
12821 @cindex Connman
12822 @deffn {Scheme Variable} connman-service-type
12823 This is the service type to run @url{https://01.org/connman,Connman},
12824 a network connection manager.
12825
12826 Its value must be an
12827 @code{connman-configuration} record as in this example:
12828
12829 @example
12830 (service connman-service-type
12831 (connman-configuration
12832 (disable-vpn? #t)))
12833 @end example
12834
12835 See below for details about @code{connman-configuration}.
12836 @end deffn
12837
12838 @deftp {Data Type} connman-configuration
12839 Data Type representing the configuration of connman.
12840
12841 @table @asis
12842 @item @code{connman} (default: @var{connman})
12843 The connman package to use.
12844
12845 @item @code{disable-vpn?} (default: @code{#f})
12846 When true, disable connman's vpn plugin.
12847 @end table
12848 @end deftp
12849
12850 @cindex WPA Supplicant
12851 @defvr {Scheme Variable} wpa-supplicant-service-type
12852 This is the service type to run @url{https://w1.fi/wpa_supplicant/,WPA
12853 supplicant}, an authentication daemon required to authenticate against
12854 encrypted WiFi or ethernet networks.
12855 @end defvr
12856
12857 @deftp {Data Type} wpa-supplicant-configuration
12858 Data type representing the configuration of WPA Supplicant.
12859
12860 It takes the following parameters:
12861
12862 @table @asis
12863 @item @code{wpa-supplicant} (default: @code{wpa-supplicant})
12864 The WPA Supplicant package to use.
12865
12866 @item @code{dbus?} (default: @code{#t})
12867 Whether to listen for requests on D-Bus.
12868
12869 @item @code{pid-file} (default: @code{"/var/run/wpa_supplicant.pid"})
12870 Where to store the PID file.
12871
12872 @item @code{interface} (default: @code{#f})
12873 If this is set, it must specify the name of a network interface that
12874 WPA supplicant will control.
12875
12876 @item @code{config-file} (default: @code{#f})
12877 Optional configuration file to use.
12878
12879 @item @code{extra-options} (default: @code{'()})
12880 List of additional command-line arguments to pass to the daemon.
12881 @end table
12882 @end deftp
12883
12884 @cindex iptables
12885 @defvr {Scheme Variable} iptables-service-type
12886 This is the service type to set up an iptables configuration. iptables is a
12887 packet filtering framework supported by the Linux kernel. This service
12888 supports configuring iptables for both IPv4 and IPv6. A simple example
12889 configuration rejecting all incoming connections except those to the ssh port
12890 22 is shown below.
12891
12892 @lisp
12893 (service iptables-service-type
12894 (iptables-configuration
12895 (ipv4-rules (plain-file "iptables.rules" "*filter
12896 :INPUT ACCEPT
12897 :FORWARD ACCEPT
12898 :OUTPUT ACCEPT
12899 -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 22 -j ACCEPT
12900 -A INPUT -j REJECT --reject-with icmp-port-unreachable
12901 COMMIT
12902 "))
12903 (ipv6-rules (plain-file "ip6tables.rules" "*filter
12904 :INPUT ACCEPT
12905 :FORWARD ACCEPT
12906 :OUTPUT ACCEPT
12907 -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 22 -j ACCEPT
12908 -A INPUT -j REJECT --reject-with icmp6-port-unreachable
12909 COMMIT
12910 "))))
12911 @end lisp
12912 @end defvr
12913
12914 @deftp {Data Type} iptables-configuration
12915 The data type representing the configuration of iptables.
12916
12917 @table @asis
12918 @item @code{iptables} (default: @code{iptables})
12919 The iptables package that provides @code{iptables-restore} and
12920 @code{ip6tables-restore}.
12921 @item @code{ipv4-rules} (default: @code{%iptables-accept-all-rules})
12922 The iptables rules to use. It will be passed to @code{iptables-restore}.
12923 This may be any ``file-like'' object (@pxref{G-Expressions, file-like
12924 objects}).
12925 @item @code{ipv6-rules} (default: @code{%iptables-accept-all-rules})
12926 The ip6tables rules to use. It will be passed to @code{ip6tables-restore}.
12927 This may be any ``file-like'' object (@pxref{G-Expressions, file-like
12928 objects}).
12929 @end table
12930 @end deftp
12931
12932 @cindex NTP (Network Time Protocol), service
12933 @cindex real time clock
12934 @defvr {Scheme Variable} ntp-service-type
12935 This is the type of the service running the @uref{http://www.ntp.org,
12936 Network Time Protocol (NTP)} daemon, @command{ntpd}. The daemon will keep the
12937 system clock synchronized with that of the specified NTP servers.
12938
12939 The value of this service is an @code{ntpd-configuration} object, as described
12940 below.
12941 @end defvr
12942
12943 @deftp {Data Type} ntp-configuration
12944 This is the data type for the NTP service configuration.
12945
12946 @table @asis
12947 @item @code{servers} (default: @code{%ntp-servers})
12948 This is the list of servers (host names) with which @command{ntpd} will be
12949 synchronized.
12950
12951 @item @code{allow-large-adjustment?} (default: @code{#f})
12952 This determines whether @command{ntpd} is allowed to make an initial
12953 adjustment of more than 1,000 seconds.
12954
12955 @item @code{ntp} (default: @code{ntp})
12956 The NTP package to use.
12957 @end table
12958 @end deftp
12959
12960 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %ntp-servers
12961 List of host names used as the default NTP servers. These are servers of the
12962 @uref{https://www.ntppool.org/en/, NTP Pool Project}.
12963 @end defvr
12964
12965 @cindex OpenNTPD
12966 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} openntpd-service-type
12967 Run the @command{ntpd}, the Network Time Protocol (NTP) daemon, as implemented
12968 by @uref{http://www.openntpd.org, OpenNTPD}. The daemon will keep the system
12969 clock synchronized with that of the given servers.
12970
12971 @example
12972 (service
12973 openntpd-service-type
12974 (openntpd-configuration
12975 (listen-on '("127.0.0.1" "::1"))
12976 (sensor '("udcf0 correction 70000"))
12977 (constraint-from '("www.gnu.org"))
12978 (constraints-from '("https://www.google.com/"))
12979 (allow-large-adjustment? #t)))
12980
12981 @end example
12982 @end deffn
12983
12984 @deftp {Data Type} openntpd-configuration
12985 @table @asis
12986 @item @code{openntpd} (default: @code{(file-append openntpd "/sbin/ntpd")})
12987 The openntpd executable to use.
12988 @item @code{listen-on} (default: @code{'("127.0.0.1" "::1")})
12989 A list of local IP addresses or hostnames the ntpd daemon should listen on.
12990 @item @code{query-from} (default: @code{'()})
12991 A list of local IP address the ntpd daemon should use for outgoing queries.
12992 @item @code{sensor} (default: @code{'()})
12993 Specify a list of timedelta sensor devices ntpd should use. @code{ntpd}
12994 will listen to each sensor that actually exists and ignore non-existent ones.
12995 See @uref{https://man.openbsd.org/ntpd.conf, upstream documentation} for more
12996 information.
12997 @item @code{server} (default: @var{%ntp-servers})
12998 Specify a list of IP addresses or hostnames of NTP servers to synchronize to.
12999 @item @code{servers} (default: @code{'()})
13000 Specify a list of IP addresses or hostnames of NTP pools to synchronize to.
13001 @item @code{constraint-from} (default: @code{'()})
13002 @code{ntpd} can be configured to query the ‘Date’ from trusted HTTPS servers via TLS.
13003 This time information is not used for precision but acts as an authenticated
13004 constraint, thereby reducing the impact of unauthenticated NTP
13005 man-in-the-middle attacks.
13006 Specify a list of URLs, IP addresses or hostnames of HTTPS servers to provide
13007 a constraint.
13008 @item @code{constraints-from} (default: @code{'()})
13009 As with constraint from, specify a list of URLs, IP addresses or hostnames of
13010 HTTPS servers to provide a constraint. Should the hostname resolve to multiple
13011 IP addresses, @code{ntpd} will calculate a median constraint from all of them.
13012 @item @code{allow-large-adjustment?} (default: @code{#f})
13013 Determines if @code{ntpd} is allowed to make an initial adjustment of more
13014 than 180 seconds.
13015 @end table
13016 @end deftp
13017
13018 @cindex inetd
13019 @deffn {Scheme variable} inetd-service-type
13020 This service runs the @command{inetd} (@pxref{inetd invocation,,,
13021 inetutils, GNU Inetutils}) daemon. @command{inetd} listens for
13022 connections on internet sockets, and lazily starts the specified server
13023 program when a connection is made on one of these sockets.
13024
13025 The value of this service is an @code{inetd-configuration} object. The
13026 following example configures the @command{inetd} daemon to provide the
13027 built-in @command{echo} service, as well as an smtp service which
13028 forwards smtp traffic over ssh to a server @code{smtp-server} behind a
13029 gateway @code{hostname}:
13030
13031 @example
13032 (service
13033 inetd-service-type
13034 (inetd-configuration
13035 (entries (list
13036 (inetd-entry
13037 (name "echo")
13038 (socket-type 'stream)
13039 (protocol "tcp")
13040 (wait? #f)
13041 (user "root"))
13042 (inetd-entry
13043 (node "127.0.0.1")
13044 (name "smtp")
13045 (socket-type 'stream)
13046 (protocol "tcp")
13047 (wait? #f)
13048 (user "root")
13049 (program (file-append openssh "/bin/ssh"))
13050 (arguments
13051 '("ssh" "-qT" "-i" "/path/to/ssh_key"
13052 "-W" "smtp-server:25" "user@@hostname")))))
13053 @end example
13054
13055 See below for more details about @code{inetd-configuration}.
13056 @end deffn
13057
13058 @deftp {Data Type} inetd-configuration
13059 Data type representing the configuration of @command{inetd}.
13060
13061 @table @asis
13062 @item @code{program} (default: @code{(file-append inetutils "/libexec/inetd")})
13063 The @command{inetd} executable to use.
13064
13065 @item @code{entries} (default: @code{'()})
13066 A list of @command{inetd} service entries. Each entry should be created
13067 by the @code{inetd-entry} constructor.
13068 @end table
13069 @end deftp
13070
13071 @deftp {Data Type} inetd-entry
13072 Data type representing an entry in the @command{inetd} configuration.
13073 Each entry corresponds to a socket where @command{inetd} will listen for
13074 requests.
13075
13076 @table @asis
13077 @item @code{node} (default: @code{#f})
13078 Optional string, a comma-separated list of local addresses
13079 @command{inetd} should use when listening for this service.
13080 @xref{Configuration file,,, inetutils, GNU Inetutils} for a complete
13081 description of all options.
13082 @item @code{name}
13083 A string, the name must correspond to an entry in @code{/etc/services}.
13084 @item @code{socket-type}
13085 One of @code{'stream}, @code{'dgram}, @code{'raw}, @code{'rdm} or
13086 @code{'seqpacket}.
13087 @item @code{protocol}
13088 A string, must correspond to an entry in @code{/etc/protocols}.
13089 @item @code{wait?} (default: @code{#t})
13090 Whether @command{inetd} should wait for the server to exit before
13091 listening to new service requests.
13092 @item @code{user}
13093 A string containing the user (and, optionally, group) name of the user
13094 as whom the server should run. The group name can be specified in a
13095 suffix, separated by a colon or period, i.e.@: @code{"user"},
13096 @code{"user:group"} or @code{"user.group"}.
13097 @item @code{program} (default: @code{"internal"})
13098 The server program which will serve the requests, or @code{"internal"}
13099 if @command{inetd} should use a built-in service.
13100 @item @code{arguments} (default: @code{'()})
13101 A list strings or file-like objects, which are the server program's
13102 arguments, starting with the zeroth argument, i.e.@: the name of the
13103 program itself. For @command{inetd}'s internal services, this entry
13104 must be @code{'()} or @code{'("internal")}.
13105 @end table
13106
13107 @xref{Configuration file,,, inetutils, GNU Inetutils} for a more
13108 detailed discussion of each configuration field.
13109 @end deftp
13110
13111 @cindex Tor
13112 @defvr {Scheme Variable} tor-service-type
13113 This is the type for a service that runs the @uref{https://torproject.org,
13114 Tor} anonymous networking daemon. The service is configured using a
13115 @code{<tor-configuration>} record. By default, the Tor daemon runs as the
13116 @code{tor} unprivileged user, which is a member of the @code{tor} group.
13117
13118 @end defvr
13119
13120 @deftp {Data Type} tor-configuration
13121 @table @asis
13122 @item @code{tor} (default: @code{tor})
13123 The package that provides the Tor daemon. This package is expected to provide
13124 the daemon at @file{bin/tor} relative to its output directory. The default
13125 package is the @uref{https://www.torproject.org, Tor Project's}
13126 implementation.
13127
13128 @item @code{config-file} (default: @code{(plain-file "empty" "")})
13129 The configuration file to use. It will be appended to a default configuration
13130 file, and the final configuration file will be passed to @code{tor} via its
13131 @code{-f} option. This may be any ``file-like'' object (@pxref{G-Expressions,
13132 file-like objects}). See @code{man tor} for details on the configuration file
13133 syntax.
13134
13135 @item @code{hidden-services} (default: @code{'()})
13136 The list of @code{<hidden-service>} records to use. For any hidden service
13137 you include in this list, appropriate configuration to enable the hidden
13138 service will be automatically added to the default configuration file. You
13139 may conveniently create @code{<hidden-service>} records using the
13140 @code{tor-hidden-service} procedure described below.
13141
13142 @item @code{socks-socket-type} (default: @code{'tcp})
13143 The default socket type that Tor should use for its SOCKS socket. This must
13144 be either @code{'tcp} or @code{'unix}. If it is @code{'tcp}, then by default
13145 Tor will listen on TCP port 9050 on the loopback interface (i.e., localhost).
13146 If it is @code{'unix}, then Tor will listen on the UNIX domain socket
13147 @file{/var/run/tor/socks-sock}, which will be made writable by members of the
13148 @code{tor} group.
13149
13150 If you want to customize the SOCKS socket in more detail, leave
13151 @code{socks-socket-type} at its default value of @code{'tcp} and use
13152 @code{config-file} to override the default by providing your own
13153 @code{SocksPort} option.
13154 @end table
13155 @end deftp
13156
13157 @cindex hidden service
13158 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} tor-hidden-service @var{name} @var{mapping}
13159 Define a new Tor @dfn{hidden service} called @var{name} and implementing
13160 @var{mapping}. @var{mapping} is a list of port/host tuples, such as:
13161
13162 @example
13163 '((22 "127.0.0.1:22")
13164 (80 "127.0.0.1:8080"))
13165 @end example
13166
13167 In this example, port 22 of the hidden service is mapped to local port 22, and
13168 port 80 is mapped to local port 8080.
13169
13170 This creates a @file{/var/lib/tor/hidden-services/@var{name}} directory, where
13171 the @file{hostname} file contains the @code{.onion} host name for the hidden
13172 service.
13173
13174 See @uref{https://www.torproject.org/docs/tor-hidden-service.html.en, the Tor
13175 project's documentation} for more information.
13176 @end deffn
13177
13178 The @code{(gnu services rsync)} module provides the following services:
13179
13180 You might want an rsync daemon if you have files that you want available
13181 so anyone (or just yourself) can download existing files or upload new
13182 files.
13183
13184 @deffn {Scheme Variable} rsync-service-type
13185 This is the service type for the @uref{https://rsync.samba.org, rsync} daemon,
13186 The value for this service type is a
13187 @command{rsync-configuration} record as in this example:
13188
13189 @example
13190 (service rsync-service-type)
13191 @end example
13192
13193 See below for details about @code{rsync-configuration}.
13194 @end deffn
13195
13196 @deftp {Data Type} rsync-configuration
13197 Data type representing the configuration for @code{rsync-service}.
13198
13199 @table @asis
13200 @item @code{package} (default: @var{rsync})
13201 @code{rsync} package to use.
13202
13203 @item @code{port-number} (default: @code{873})
13204 TCP port on which @command{rsync} listens for incoming connections. If port
13205 is less than @code{1024} @command{rsync} needs to be started as the
13206 @code{root} user and group.
13207
13208 @item @code{pid-file} (default: @code{"/var/run/rsyncd/rsyncd.pid"})
13209 Name of the file where @command{rsync} writes its PID.
13210
13211 @item @code{lock-file} (default: @code{"/var/run/rsyncd/rsyncd.lock"})
13212 Name of the file where @command{rsync} writes its lock file.
13213
13214 @item @code{log-file} (default: @code{"/var/log/rsyncd.log"})
13215 Name of the file where @command{rsync} writes its log file.
13216
13217 @item @code{use-chroot?} (default: @var{#t})
13218 Whether to use chroot for @command{rsync} shared directory.
13219
13220 @item @code{share-path} (default: @file{/srv/rsync})
13221 Location of the @command{rsync} shared directory.
13222
13223 @item @code{share-comment} (default: @code{"Rsync share"})
13224 Comment of the @command{rsync} shared directory.
13225
13226 @item @code{read-only?} (default: @var{#f})
13227 Read-write permissions to shared directory.
13228
13229 @item @code{timeout} (default: @code{300})
13230 I/O timeout in seconds.
13231
13232 @item @code{user} (default: @var{"root"})
13233 Owner of the @code{rsync} process.
13234
13235 @item @code{group} (default: @var{"root"})
13236 Group of the @code{rsync} process.
13237
13238 @item @code{uid} (default: @var{"rsyncd"})
13239 User name or user ID that file transfers to and from that module should take
13240 place as when the daemon was run as @code{root}.
13241
13242 @item @code{gid} (default: @var{"rsyncd"})
13243 Group name or group ID that will be used when accessing the module.
13244
13245 @end table
13246 @end deftp
13247
13248 Furthermore, @code{(gnu services ssh)} provides the following services.
13249 @cindex SSH
13250 @cindex SSH server
13251
13252 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} lsh-service [#:host-key "/etc/lsh/host-key"] @
13253 [#:daemonic? #t] [#:interfaces '()] [#:port-number 22] @
13254 [#:allow-empty-passwords? #f] [#:root-login? #f] @
13255 [#:syslog-output? #t] [#:x11-forwarding? #t] @
13256 [#:tcp/ip-forwarding? #t] [#:password-authentication? #t] @
13257 [#:public-key-authentication? #t] [#:initialize? #t]
13258 Run the @command{lshd} program from @var{lsh} to listen on port @var{port-number}.
13259 @var{host-key} must designate a file containing the host key, and readable
13260 only by root.
13261
13262 When @var{daemonic?} is true, @command{lshd} will detach from the
13263 controlling terminal and log its output to syslogd, unless one sets
13264 @var{syslog-output?} to false. Obviously, it also makes lsh-service
13265 depend on existence of syslogd service. When @var{pid-file?} is true,
13266 @command{lshd} writes its PID to the file called @var{pid-file}.
13267
13268 When @var{initialize?} is true, automatically create the seed and host key
13269 upon service activation if they do not exist yet. This may take long and
13270 require interaction.
13271
13272 When @var{initialize?} is false, it is up to the user to initialize the
13273 randomness generator (@pxref{lsh-make-seed,,, lsh, LSH Manual}), and to create
13274 a key pair with the private key stored in file @var{host-key} (@pxref{lshd
13275 basics,,, lsh, LSH Manual}).
13276
13277 When @var{interfaces} is empty, lshd listens for connections on all the
13278 network interfaces; otherwise, @var{interfaces} must be a list of host names
13279 or addresses.
13280
13281 @var{allow-empty-passwords?} specifies whether to accept log-ins with empty
13282 passwords, and @var{root-login?} specifies whether to accept log-ins as
13283 root.
13284
13285 The other options should be self-descriptive.
13286 @end deffn
13287
13288 @cindex SSH
13289 @cindex SSH server
13290 @deffn {Scheme Variable} openssh-service-type
13291 This is the type for the @uref{http://www.openssh.org, OpenSSH} secure
13292 shell daemon, @command{sshd}. Its value must be an
13293 @code{openssh-configuration} record as in this example:
13294
13295 @example
13296 (service openssh-service-type
13297 (openssh-configuration
13298 (x11-forwarding? #t)
13299 (permit-root-login 'without-password)
13300 (authorized-keys
13301 `(("alice" ,(local-file "alice.pub"))
13302 ("bob" ,(local-file "bob.pub"))))))
13303 @end example
13304
13305 See below for details about @code{openssh-configuration}.
13306
13307 This service can be extended with extra authorized keys, as in this
13308 example:
13309
13310 @example
13311 (service-extension openssh-service-type
13312 (const `(("charlie"
13313 ,(local-file "charlie.pub")))))
13314 @end example
13315 @end deffn
13316
13317 @deftp {Data Type} openssh-configuration
13318 This is the configuration record for OpenSSH's @command{sshd}.
13319
13320 @table @asis
13321 @item @code{pid-file} (default: @code{"/var/run/sshd.pid"})
13322 Name of the file where @command{sshd} writes its PID.
13323
13324 @item @code{port-number} (default: @code{22})
13325 TCP port on which @command{sshd} listens for incoming connections.
13326
13327 @item @code{permit-root-login} (default: @code{#f})
13328 This field determines whether and when to allow logins as root. If
13329 @code{#f}, root logins are disallowed; if @code{#t}, they are allowed.
13330 If it's the symbol @code{'without-password}, then root logins are
13331 permitted but not with password-based authentication.
13332
13333 @item @code{allow-empty-passwords?} (default: @code{#f})
13334 When true, users with empty passwords may log in. When false, they may
13335 not.
13336
13337 @item @code{password-authentication?} (default: @code{#t})
13338 When true, users may log in with their password. When false, they have
13339 other authentication methods.
13340
13341 @item @code{public-key-authentication?} (default: @code{#t})
13342 When true, users may log in using public key authentication. When
13343 false, users have to use other authentication method.
13344
13345 Authorized public keys are stored in @file{~/.ssh/authorized_keys}.
13346 This is used only by protocol version 2.
13347
13348 @item @code{x11-forwarding?} (default: @code{#f})
13349 When true, forwarding of X11 graphical client connections is
13350 enabled---in other words, @command{ssh} options @option{-X} and
13351 @option{-Y} will work.
13352
13353 @item @code{allow-agent-forwarding?} (default: @code{#t})
13354 Whether to allow agent forwarding.
13355
13356 @item @code{allow-tcp-forwarding?} (default: @code{#t})
13357 Whether to allow TCP forwarding.
13358
13359 @item @code{gateway-ports?} (default: @code{#f})
13360 Whether to allow gateway ports.
13361
13362 @item @code{challenge-response-authentication?} (default: @code{#f})
13363 Specifies whether challenge response authentication is allowed (e.g.@: via
13364 PAM).
13365
13366 @item @code{use-pam?} (default: @code{#t})
13367 Enables the Pluggable Authentication Module interface. If set to
13368 @code{#t}, this will enable PAM authentication using
13369 @code{challenge-response-authentication?} and
13370 @code{password-authentication?}, in addition to PAM account and session
13371 module processing for all authentication types.
13372
13373 Because PAM challenge response authentication usually serves an
13374 equivalent role to password authentication, you should disable either
13375 @code{challenge-response-authentication?} or
13376 @code{password-authentication?}.
13377
13378 @item @code{print-last-log?} (default: @code{#t})
13379 Specifies whether @command{sshd} should print the date and time of the
13380 last user login when a user logs in interactively.
13381
13382 @item @code{subsystems} (default: @code{'(("sftp" "internal-sftp"))})
13383 Configures external subsystems (e.g.@: file transfer daemon).
13384
13385 This is a list of two-element lists, each of which containing the
13386 subsystem name and a command (with optional arguments) to execute upon
13387 subsystem request.
13388
13389 The command @command{internal-sftp} implements an in-process SFTP
13390 server. Alternately, one can specify the @command{sftp-server} command:
13391 @example
13392 (service openssh-service-type
13393 (openssh-configuration
13394 (subsystems
13395 `(("sftp" ,(file-append openssh "/libexec/sftp-server"))))))
13396 @end example
13397
13398 @item @code{accepted-environment} (default: @code{'()})
13399 List of strings describing which environment variables may be exported.
13400
13401 Each string gets on its own line. See the @code{AcceptEnv} option in
13402 @code{man sshd_config}.
13403
13404 This example allows ssh-clients to export the @code{COLORTERM} variable.
13405 It is set by terminal emulators, which support colors. You can use it in
13406 your shell's ressource file to enable colors for the prompt and commands
13407 if this variable is set.
13408
13409 @example
13410 (service openssh-service-type
13411 (openssh-configuration
13412 (accepted-environment '("COLORTERM"))))
13413 @end example
13414
13415 @item @code{authorized-keys} (default: @code{'()})
13416 @cindex authorized keys, SSH
13417 @cindex SSH authorized keys
13418 This is the list of authorized keys. Each element of the list is a user
13419 name followed by one or more file-like objects that represent SSH public
13420 keys. For example:
13421
13422 @example
13423 (openssh-configuration
13424 (authorized-keys
13425 `(("rekado" ,(local-file "rekado.pub"))
13426 ("chris" ,(local-file "chris.pub"))
13427 ("root" ,(local-file "rekado.pub") ,(local-file "chris.pub")))))
13428 @end example
13429
13430 @noindent
13431 registers the specified public keys for user accounts @code{rekado},
13432 @code{chris}, and @code{root}.
13433
13434 Additional authorized keys can be specified @i{via}
13435 @code{service-extension}.
13436
13437 Note that this does @emph{not} interfere with the use of
13438 @file{~/.ssh/authorized_keys}.
13439
13440 @item @code{log-level} (default: @code{'info})
13441 This is a symbol specifying the logging level: @code{quiet}, @code{fatal},
13442 @code{error}, @code{info}, @code{verbose}, @code{debug}, etc. See the man
13443 page for @file{sshd_config} for the full list of level names.
13444
13445 @item @code{extra-content} (default: @code{""})
13446 This field can be used to append arbitrary text to the configuration file. It
13447 is especially useful for elaborate configurations that cannot be expressed
13448 otherwise. This configuration, for example, would generally disable root
13449 logins, but permit them from one specific IP address:
13450
13451 @example
13452 (openssh-configuration
13453 (extra-content "\
13454 Match Address 192.168.0.1
13455 PermitRootLogin yes"))
13456 @end example
13457
13458 @end table
13459 @end deftp
13460
13461 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} dropbear-service [@var{config}]
13462 Run the @uref{https://matt.ucc.asn.au/dropbear/dropbear.html,Dropbear SSH
13463 daemon} with the given @var{config}, a @code{<dropbear-configuration>}
13464 object.
13465
13466 For example, to specify a Dropbear service listening on port 1234, add
13467 this call to the operating system's @code{services} field:
13468
13469 @example
13470 (dropbear-service (dropbear-configuration
13471 (port-number 1234)))
13472 @end example
13473 @end deffn
13474
13475 @deftp {Data Type} dropbear-configuration
13476 This data type represents the configuration of a Dropbear SSH daemon.
13477
13478 @table @asis
13479 @item @code{dropbear} (default: @var{dropbear})
13480 The Dropbear package to use.
13481
13482 @item @code{port-number} (default: 22)
13483 The TCP port where the daemon waits for incoming connections.
13484
13485 @item @code{syslog-output?} (default: @code{#t})
13486 Whether to enable syslog output.
13487
13488 @item @code{pid-file} (default: @code{"/var/run/dropbear.pid"})
13489 File name of the daemon's PID file.
13490
13491 @item @code{root-login?} (default: @code{#f})
13492 Whether to allow @code{root} logins.
13493
13494 @item @code{allow-empty-passwords?} (default: @code{#f})
13495 Whether to allow empty passwords.
13496
13497 @item @code{password-authentication?} (default: @code{#t})
13498 Whether to enable password-based authentication.
13499 @end table
13500 @end deftp
13501
13502 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %facebook-host-aliases
13503 This variable contains a string for use in @file{/etc/hosts}
13504 (@pxref{Host Names,,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}). Each
13505 line contains a entry that maps a known server name of the Facebook
13506 on-line service---e.g., @code{www.facebook.com}---to the local
13507 host---@code{127.0.0.1} or its IPv6 equivalent, @code{::1}.
13508
13509 This variable is typically used in the @code{hosts-file} field of an
13510 @code{operating-system} declaration (@pxref{operating-system Reference,
13511 @file{/etc/hosts}}):
13512
13513 @example
13514 (use-modules (gnu) (guix))
13515
13516 (operating-system
13517 (host-name "mymachine")
13518 ;; ...
13519 (hosts-file
13520 ;; Create a /etc/hosts file with aliases for "localhost"
13521 ;; and "mymachine", as well as for Facebook servers.
13522 (plain-file "hosts"
13523 (string-append (local-host-aliases host-name)
13524 %facebook-host-aliases))))
13525 @end example
13526
13527 This mechanism can prevent programs running locally, such as Web
13528 browsers, from accessing Facebook.
13529 @end defvr
13530
13531 The @code{(gnu services avahi)} provides the following definition.
13532
13533 @defvr {Scheme Variable} avahi-service-type
13534 This is the service that runs @command{avahi-daemon}, a system-wide
13535 mDNS/DNS-SD responder that allows for service discovery and
13536 ``zero-configuration'' host name lookups (see @uref{https://avahi.org/}).
13537 Its value must be a @code{zero-configuration} record---see below.
13538
13539 This service extends the name service cache daemon (nscd) so that it can
13540 resolve @code{.local} host names using
13541 @uref{http://0pointer.de/lennart/projects/nss-mdns/, nss-mdns}. @xref{Name
13542 Service Switch}, for information on host name resolution.
13543
13544 Additionally, add the @var{avahi} package to the system profile so that
13545 commands such as @command{avahi-browse} are directly usable.
13546 @end defvr
13547
13548 @deftp {Data Type} avahi-configuration
13549 Data type representation the configuration for Avahi.
13550
13551 @table @asis
13552
13553 @item @code{host-name} (default: @code{#f})
13554 If different from @code{#f}, use that as the host name to
13555 publish for this machine; otherwise, use the machine's actual host name.
13556
13557 @item @code{publish?} (default: @code{#t})
13558 When true, allow host names and services to be published (broadcast) over the
13559 network.
13560
13561 @item @code{publish-workstation?} (default: @code{#t})
13562 When true, @command{avahi-daemon} publishes the machine's host name and IP
13563 address via mDNS on the local network. To view the host names published on
13564 your local network, you can run:
13565
13566 @example
13567 avahi-browse _workstation._tcp
13568 @end example
13569
13570 @item @code{wide-area?} (default: @code{#f})
13571 When true, DNS-SD over unicast DNS is enabled.
13572
13573 @item @code{ipv4?} (default: @code{#t})
13574 @itemx @code{ipv6?} (default: @code{#t})
13575 These fields determine whether to use IPv4/IPv6 sockets.
13576
13577 @item @code{domains-to-browse} (default: @code{'()})
13578 This is a list of domains to browse.
13579 @end table
13580 @end deftp
13581
13582 @deffn {Scheme Variable} openvswitch-service-type
13583 This is the type of the @uref{https://www.openvswitch.org, Open vSwitch}
13584 service, whose value should be an @code{openvswitch-configuration}
13585 object.
13586 @end deffn
13587
13588 @deftp {Data Type} openvswitch-configuration
13589 Data type representing the configuration of Open vSwitch, a multilayer
13590 virtual switch which is designed to enable massive network automation
13591 through programmatic extension.
13592
13593 @table @asis
13594 @item @code{package} (default: @var{openvswitch})
13595 Package object of the Open vSwitch.
13596
13597 @end table
13598 @end deftp
13599
13600 @node X Window
13601 @subsection X Window
13602
13603 @cindex X11
13604 @cindex X Window System
13605 @cindex login manager
13606 Support for the X Window graphical display system---specifically
13607 Xorg---is provided by the @code{(gnu services xorg)} module. Note that
13608 there is no @code{xorg-service} procedure. Instead, the X server is
13609 started by the @dfn{login manager}, by default the GNOME Display Manager (GDM).
13610
13611 @cindex GDM
13612 @cindex GNOME, login manager
13613 GDM of course allows users to log in into window managers and desktop
13614 environments other than GNOME; for those using GNOME, GDM is required for
13615 features such as automatic screen locking.
13616
13617 @cindex window manager
13618 To use X11, you must install at least one @dfn{window manager}---for
13619 example the @code{windowmaker} or @code{openbox} packages---preferably
13620 by adding it to the @code{packages} field of your operating system
13621 definition (@pxref{operating-system Reference, system-wide packages}).
13622
13623 @defvr {Scheme Variable} gdm-service-type
13624 This is the type for the @uref{https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/GDM/, GNOME
13625 Desktop Manager} (GDM), a program that manages graphical display servers and
13626 handles graphical user logins. Its value must be a @code{gdm-configuration}
13627 (see below.)
13628
13629 @cindex session types (X11)
13630 @cindex X11 session types
13631 GDM looks for @dfn{session types} described by the @file{.desktop} files in
13632 @file{/run/current-system/profile/share/xsessions} and allows users to choose
13633 a session from the log-in screen. Packages such as @code{gnome}, @code{xfce},
13634 and @code{i3} provide @file{.desktop} files; adding them to the system-wide
13635 set of packages automatically makes them available at the log-in screen.
13636
13637 In addition, @file{~/.xsession} files are honored. When available,
13638 @file{~/.xsession} must be an executable that starts a window manager
13639 and/or other X clients.
13640 @end defvr
13641
13642 @deftp {Data Type} gdm-configuration
13643 @table @asis
13644 @item @code{auto-login?} (default: @code{#f})
13645 @itemx @code{default-user} (default: @code{#f})
13646 When @code{auto-login?} is false, GDM presents a log-in screen.
13647
13648 When @code{auto-login?} is true, GDM logs in directly as
13649 @code{default-user}.
13650
13651 @item @code{gnome-shell-assets} (default: ...)
13652 List of GNOME Shell assets needed by GDM: icon theme, fonts, etc.
13653
13654 @item @code{xorg-configuration} (default: @code{(xorg-configuration)})
13655 Configuration of the Xorg graphical server.
13656
13657 @item @code{xsession} (default: @code{(xinitrc)})
13658 Script to run before starting a X session.
13659
13660 @item @code{dbus-daemon} (default: @code{dbus-daemon-wrapper})
13661 File name of the @code{dbus-daemon} executable.
13662
13663 @item @code{gdm} (default: @code{gdm})
13664 The GDM package to use.
13665 @end table
13666 @end deftp
13667
13668 @defvr {Scheme Variable} slim-service-type
13669 This is the type for the SLiM graphical login manager for X11.
13670
13671 Like GDM, SLiM looks for session types described by @file{.desktop} files and
13672 allows users to choose a session from the log-in screen using @kbd{F1}. It
13673 also honors @file{~/.xsession} files.
13674
13675 Unlike GDM, SLiM does not spawn the user session on a different VT after
13676 logging in, which means that you can only start one graphical session. If you
13677 want to be able to run multiple graphical sessions at the same time you have
13678 to add multiple SLiM services to your system services. The following example
13679 shows how to replace the default GDM service with two SLiM services on tty7
13680 and tty8.
13681
13682 @lisp
13683 (use-modules (gnu services)
13684 (gnu services desktop)
13685 (gnu services xorg)
13686 (srfi srfi-1)) ;for 'remove'
13687
13688 (operating-system
13689 ;; ...
13690 (services (cons* (service slim-service-type (slim-configuration
13691 (display ":0")
13692 (vt "vt7")))
13693 (service slim-service-type (slim-configuration
13694 (display ":1")
13695 (vt "vt8")))
13696 (remove (lambda (service)
13697 (eq? (service-kind service) gdm-service-type))
13698 %desktop-services))))
13699 @end lisp
13700
13701 @end defvr
13702
13703 @deftp {Data Type} slim-configuration
13704 Data type representing the configuration of @code{slim-service-type}.
13705
13706 @table @asis
13707 @item @code{allow-empty-passwords?} (default: @code{#t})
13708 Whether to allow logins with empty passwords.
13709
13710 @item @code{auto-login?} (default: @code{#f})
13711 @itemx @code{default-user} (default: @code{""})
13712 When @code{auto-login?} is false, SLiM presents a log-in screen.
13713
13714 When @code{auto-login?} is true, SLiM logs in directly as
13715 @code{default-user}.
13716
13717 @item @code{theme} (default: @code{%default-slim-theme})
13718 @itemx @code{theme-name} (default: @code{%default-slim-theme-name})
13719 The graphical theme to use and its name.
13720
13721 @item @code{auto-login-session} (default: @code{#f})
13722 If true, this must be the name of the executable to start as the default
13723 session---e.g., @code{(file-append windowmaker "/bin/windowmaker")}.
13724
13725 If false, a session described by one of the available @file{.desktop}
13726 files in @code{/run/current-system/profile} and @code{~/.guix-profile}
13727 will be used.
13728
13729 @quotation Note
13730 You must install at least one window manager in the system profile or in
13731 your user profile. Failing to do that, if @code{auto-login-session} is
13732 false, you will be unable to log in.
13733 @end quotation
13734
13735 @item @code{xorg-configuration} (default @code{(xorg-configuration)})
13736 Configuration of the Xorg graphical server.
13737
13738 @item @code{display} (default @code{":0"})
13739 The display on which to start the Xorg graphical server.
13740
13741 @item @code{vt} (default @code{"vt7"})
13742 The VT on which to start the Xorg graphical server.
13743
13744 @item @code{xauth} (default: @code{xauth})
13745 The XAuth package to use.
13746
13747 @item @code{shepherd} (default: @code{shepherd})
13748 The Shepherd package used when invoking @command{halt} and
13749 @command{reboot}.
13750
13751 @item @code{sessreg} (default: @code{sessreg})
13752 The sessreg package used in order to register the session.
13753
13754 @item @code{slim} (default: @code{slim})
13755 The SLiM package to use.
13756 @end table
13757 @end deftp
13758
13759 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %default-theme
13760 @defvrx {Scheme Variable} %default-theme-name
13761 The default SLiM theme and its name.
13762 @end defvr
13763
13764
13765 @deftp {Data Type} sddm-configuration
13766 This is the data type representing the sddm service configuration.
13767
13768 @table @asis
13769 @item @code{display-server} (default: "x11")
13770 Select display server to use for the greeter. Valid values are "x11"
13771 or "wayland".
13772
13773 @item @code{numlock} (default: "on")
13774 Valid values are "on", "off" or "none".
13775
13776 @item @code{halt-command} (default @code{#~(string-apppend #$shepherd "/sbin/halt")})
13777 Command to run when halting.
13778
13779 @item @code{reboot-command} (default @code{#~(string-append #$shepherd "/sbin/reboot")})
13780 Command to run when rebooting.
13781
13782 @item @code{theme} (default "maldives")
13783 Theme to use. Default themes provided by SDDM are "elarun" or "maldives".
13784
13785 @item @code{themes-directory} (default "/run/current-system/profile/share/sddm/themes")
13786 Directory to look for themes.
13787
13788 @item @code{faces-directory} (default "/run/current-system/profile/share/sddm/faces")
13789 Directory to look for faces.
13790
13791 @item @code{default-path} (default "/run/current-system/profile/bin")
13792 Default PATH to use.
13793
13794 @item @code{minimum-uid} (default: 1000)
13795 Minimum UID displayed in SDDM and allowed for log-in.
13796
13797 @item @code{maximum-uid} (default: 2000)
13798 Maximum UID to display in SDDM.
13799
13800 @item @code{remember-last-user?} (default #t)
13801 Remember last user.
13802
13803 @item @code{remember-last-session?} (default #t)
13804 Remember last session.
13805
13806 @item @code{hide-users} (default "")
13807 Usernames to hide from SDDM greeter.
13808
13809 @item @code{hide-shells} (default @code{#~(string-append #$shadow "/sbin/nologin")})
13810 Users with shells listed will be hidden from the SDDM greeter.
13811
13812 @item @code{session-command} (default @code{#~(string-append #$sddm "/share/sddm/scripts/wayland-session")})
13813 Script to run before starting a wayland session.
13814
13815 @item @code{sessions-directory} (default "/run/current-system/profile/share/wayland-sessions")
13816 Directory to look for desktop files starting wayland sessions.
13817
13818 @item @code{xorg-configuration} (default @code{(xorg-configuration)})
13819 Configuration of the Xorg graphical server.
13820
13821 @item @code{xauth-path} (default @code{#~(string-append #$xauth "/bin/xauth")})
13822 Path to xauth.
13823
13824 @item @code{xephyr-path} (default @code{#~(string-append #$xorg-server "/bin/Xephyr")})
13825 Path to Xephyr.
13826
13827 @item @code{xdisplay-start} (default @code{#~(string-append #$sddm "/share/sddm/scripts/Xsetup")})
13828 Script to run after starting xorg-server.
13829
13830 @item @code{xdisplay-stop} (default @code{#~(string-append #$sddm "/share/sddm/scripts/Xstop")})
13831 Script to run before stopping xorg-server.
13832
13833 @item @code{xsession-command} (default: @code{xinitrc})
13834 Script to run before starting a X session.
13835
13836 @item @code{xsessions-directory} (default: "/run/current-system/profile/share/xsessions")
13837 Directory to look for desktop files starting X sessions.
13838
13839 @item @code{minimum-vt} (default: 7)
13840 Minimum VT to use.
13841
13842 @item @code{auto-login-user} (default "")
13843 User to use for auto-login.
13844
13845 @item @code{auto-login-session} (default "")
13846 Desktop file to use for auto-login.
13847
13848 @item @code{relogin?} (default #f)
13849 Relogin after logout.
13850
13851 @end table
13852 @end deftp
13853
13854 @cindex login manager
13855 @cindex X11 login
13856 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} sddm-service config
13857 Return a service that spawns the SDDM graphical login manager for config of
13858 type @code{<sddm-configuration>}.
13859
13860 @example
13861 (sddm-service (sddm-configuration
13862 (auto-login-user "Alice")
13863 (auto-login-session "xfce.desktop")))
13864 @end example
13865 @end deffn
13866
13867 @cindex Xorg, configuration
13868 @deftp {Data Type} xorg-configuration
13869 This data type represents the configuration of the Xorg graphical display
13870 server. Note that there is not Xorg service; instead, the X server is started
13871 by a ``display manager'' such as GDM, SDDM, and SLiM. Thus, the configuration
13872 of these display managers aggregates an @code{xorg-configuration} record.
13873
13874 @table @asis
13875 @item @code{modules} (default: @code{%default-xorg-modules})
13876 This is a list of @dfn{module packages} loaded by the Xorg
13877 server---e.g., @code{xf86-video-vesa}, @code{xf86-input-keyboard}, and so on.
13878
13879 @item @code{fonts} (default: @code{%default-xorg-fonts})
13880 This is a list of font directories to add to the server's @dfn{font path}.
13881
13882 @item @code{drivers} (default: @code{'()})
13883 This must be either the empty list, in which case Xorg chooses a graphics
13884 driver automatically, or a list of driver names that will be tried in this
13885 order---e.g., @code{("modesetting" "vesa")}.
13886
13887 @item @code{resolutions} (default: @code{'()})
13888 When @code{resolutions} is the empty list, Xorg chooses an appropriate screen
13889 resolution. Otherwise, it must be a list of resolutions---e.g., @code{((1024
13890 768) (640 480))}.
13891
13892 @cindex keyboard layout, for Xorg
13893 @cindex keymap, for Xorg
13894 @item @code{keyboard-layout} (default: @code{#f})
13895 If this is @code{#f}, Xorg uses the default keyboard layout---usually US
13896 English (``qwerty'') for a 105-key PC keyboard.
13897
13898 Otherwise this must be a @code{keyboard-layout} object specifying the keyboard
13899 layout in use when Xorg is running. @xref{Keyboard Layout}, for more
13900 information on how to specify the keyboard layout.
13901
13902 @item @code{extra-config} (default: @code{'()})
13903 This is a list of strings or objects appended to the configuration file. It
13904 is used to pass extra text to be added verbatim to the configuration file.
13905
13906 @item @code{server} (default: @code{xorg-server})
13907 This is the package providing the Xorg server.
13908
13909 @item @code{server-arguments} (default: @code{%default-xorg-server-arguments})
13910 This is the list of command-line arguments to pass to the X server. The
13911 default is @code{-nolisten tcp}.
13912 @end table
13913 @end deftp
13914
13915 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} set-xorg-configuration @var{config} @
13916 [@var{login-manager-service-type}]
13917 Tell the log-in manager (of type @var{login-manager-service-type}) to use
13918 @var{config}, an @code{<xorg-configuration>} record.
13919
13920 Since the Xorg configuration is embedded in the log-in manager's
13921 configuration---e.g., @code{gdm-configuration}---this procedure provides a
13922 shorthand to set the Xorg configuration.
13923 @end deffn
13924
13925 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} xorg-start-command [@var{config}]
13926 Return a @code{startx} script in which the modules, fonts, etc. specified
13927 in @var{config}, are available. The result should be used in place of
13928 @code{startx}.
13929
13930 Usually the X server is started by a login manager.
13931 @end deffn
13932
13933
13934 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} screen-locker-service @var{package} [@var{program}]
13935 Add @var{package}, a package for a screen locker or screen saver whose
13936 command is @var{program}, to the set of setuid programs and add a PAM entry
13937 for it. For example:
13938
13939 @lisp
13940 (screen-locker-service xlockmore "xlock")
13941 @end lisp
13942
13943 makes the good ol' XlockMore usable.
13944 @end deffn
13945
13946
13947 @node Printing Services
13948 @subsection Printing Services
13949
13950 @cindex printer support with CUPS
13951 The @code{(gnu services cups)} module provides a Guix service definition
13952 for the CUPS printing service. To add printer support to a Guix
13953 system, add a @code{cups-service} to the operating system definition:
13954
13955 @deffn {Scheme Variable} cups-service-type
13956 The service type for the CUPS print server. Its value should be a valid
13957 CUPS configuration (see below). To use the default settings, simply
13958 write:
13959 @example
13960 (service cups-service-type)
13961 @end example
13962 @end deffn
13963
13964 The CUPS configuration controls the basic things about your CUPS
13965 installation: what interfaces it listens on, what to do if a print job
13966 fails, how much logging to do, and so on. To actually add a printer,
13967 you have to visit the @url{http://localhost:631} URL, or use a tool such
13968 as GNOME's printer configuration services. By default, configuring a
13969 CUPS service will generate a self-signed certificate if needed, for
13970 secure connections to the print server.
13971
13972 Suppose you want to enable the Web interface of CUPS and also add
13973 support for Epson printers @i{via} the @code{escpr} package and for HP
13974 printers @i{via} the @code{hplip-minimal} package. You can do that directly,
13975 like this (you need to use the @code{(gnu packages cups)} module):
13976
13977 @example
13978 (service cups-service-type
13979 (cups-configuration
13980 (web-interface? #t)
13981 (extensions
13982 (list cups-filters escpr hplip-minimal))))
13983 @end example
13984
13985 Note: If you wish to use the Qt5 based GUI which comes with the hplip
13986 package then it is suggested that you install the @code{hplip} package,
13987 either in your OS configuration file or as your user.
13988
13989 The available configuration parameters follow. Each parameter
13990 definition is preceded by its type; for example, @samp{string-list foo}
13991 indicates that the @code{foo} parameter should be specified as a list of
13992 strings. There is also a way to specify the configuration as a string,
13993 if you have an old @code{cupsd.conf} file that you want to port over
13994 from some other system; see the end for more details.
13995
13996 @c The following documentation was initially generated by
13997 @c (generate-documentation) in (gnu services cups). Manually maintained
13998 @c documentation is better, so we shouldn't hesitate to edit below as
13999 @c needed. However if the change you want to make to this documentation
14000 @c can be done in an automated way, it's probably easier to change
14001 @c (generate-documentation) than to make it below and have to deal with
14002 @c the churn as CUPS updates.
14003
14004
14005 Available @code{cups-configuration} fields are:
14006
14007 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} package cups
14008 The CUPS package.
14009 @end deftypevr
14010
14011 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} package-list extensions
14012 Drivers and other extensions to the CUPS package.
14013 @end deftypevr
14014
14015 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} files-configuration files-configuration
14016 Configuration of where to write logs, what directories to use for print
14017 spools, and related privileged configuration parameters.
14018
14019 Available @code{files-configuration} fields are:
14020
14021 @deftypevr {@code{files-configuration} parameter} log-location access-log
14022 Defines the access log filename. Specifying a blank filename disables
14023 access log generation. The value @code{stderr} causes log entries to be
14024 sent to the standard error file when the scheduler is running in the
14025 foreground, or to the system log daemon when run in the background. The
14026 value @code{syslog} causes log entries to be sent to the system log
14027 daemon. The server name may be included in filenames using the string
14028 @code{%s}, as in @code{/var/log/cups/%s-access_log}.
14029
14030 Defaults to @samp{"/var/log/cups/access_log"}.
14031 @end deftypevr
14032
14033 @deftypevr {@code{files-configuration} parameter} file-name cache-dir
14034 Where CUPS should cache data.
14035
14036 Defaults to @samp{"/var/cache/cups"}.
14037 @end deftypevr
14038
14039 @deftypevr {@code{files-configuration} parameter} string config-file-perm
14040 Specifies the permissions for all configuration files that the scheduler
14041 writes.
14042
14043 Note that the permissions for the printers.conf file are currently
14044 masked to only allow access from the scheduler user (typically root).
14045 This is done because printer device URIs sometimes contain sensitive
14046 authentication information that should not be generally known on the
14047 system. There is no way to disable this security feature.
14048
14049 Defaults to @samp{"0640"}.
14050 @end deftypevr
14051
14052 @deftypevr {@code{files-configuration} parameter} log-location error-log
14053 Defines the error log filename. Specifying a blank filename disables
14054 error log generation. The value @code{stderr} causes log entries to be
14055 sent to the standard error file when the scheduler is running in the
14056 foreground, or to the system log daemon when run in the background. The
14057 value @code{syslog} causes log entries to be sent to the system log
14058 daemon. The server name may be included in filenames using the string
14059 @code{%s}, as in @code{/var/log/cups/%s-error_log}.
14060
14061 Defaults to @samp{"/var/log/cups/error_log"}.
14062 @end deftypevr
14063
14064 @deftypevr {@code{files-configuration} parameter} string fatal-errors
14065 Specifies which errors are fatal, causing the scheduler to exit. The
14066 kind strings are:
14067
14068 @table @code
14069 @item none
14070 No errors are fatal.
14071
14072 @item all
14073 All of the errors below are fatal.
14074
14075 @item browse
14076 Browsing initialization errors are fatal, for example failed connections
14077 to the DNS-SD daemon.
14078
14079 @item config
14080 Configuration file syntax errors are fatal.
14081
14082 @item listen
14083 Listen or Port errors are fatal, except for IPv6 failures on the
14084 loopback or @code{any} addresses.
14085
14086 @item log
14087 Log file creation or write errors are fatal.
14088
14089 @item permissions
14090 Bad startup file permissions are fatal, for example shared TLS
14091 certificate and key files with world-read permissions.
14092 @end table
14093
14094 Defaults to @samp{"all -browse"}.
14095 @end deftypevr
14096
14097 @deftypevr {@code{files-configuration} parameter} boolean file-device?
14098 Specifies whether the file pseudo-device can be used for new printer
14099 queues. The URI @uref{file:///dev/null} is always allowed.
14100
14101 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
14102 @end deftypevr
14103
14104 @deftypevr {@code{files-configuration} parameter} string group
14105 Specifies the group name or ID that will be used when executing external
14106 programs.
14107
14108 Defaults to @samp{"lp"}.
14109 @end deftypevr
14110
14111 @deftypevr {@code{files-configuration} parameter} string log-file-perm
14112 Specifies the permissions for all log files that the scheduler writes.
14113
14114 Defaults to @samp{"0644"}.
14115 @end deftypevr
14116
14117 @deftypevr {@code{files-configuration} parameter} log-location page-log
14118 Defines the page log filename. Specifying a blank filename disables
14119 page log generation. The value @code{stderr} causes log entries to be
14120 sent to the standard error file when the scheduler is running in the
14121 foreground, or to the system log daemon when run in the background. The
14122 value @code{syslog} causes log entries to be sent to the system log
14123 daemon. The server name may be included in filenames using the string
14124 @code{%s}, as in @code{/var/log/cups/%s-page_log}.
14125
14126 Defaults to @samp{"/var/log/cups/page_log"}.
14127 @end deftypevr
14128
14129 @deftypevr {@code{files-configuration} parameter} string remote-root
14130 Specifies the username that is associated with unauthenticated accesses
14131 by clients claiming to be the root user. The default is @code{remroot}.
14132
14133 Defaults to @samp{"remroot"}.
14134 @end deftypevr
14135
14136 @deftypevr {@code{files-configuration} parameter} file-name request-root
14137 Specifies the directory that contains print jobs and other HTTP request
14138 data.
14139
14140 Defaults to @samp{"/var/spool/cups"}.
14141 @end deftypevr
14142
14143 @deftypevr {@code{files-configuration} parameter} sandboxing sandboxing
14144 Specifies the level of security sandboxing that is applied to print
14145 filters, backends, and other child processes of the scheduler; either
14146 @code{relaxed} or @code{strict}. This directive is currently only
14147 used/supported on macOS.
14148
14149 Defaults to @samp{strict}.
14150 @end deftypevr
14151
14152 @deftypevr {@code{files-configuration} parameter} file-name server-keychain
14153 Specifies the location of TLS certificates and private keys. CUPS will
14154 look for public and private keys in this directory: a @code{.crt} files
14155 for PEM-encoded certificates and corresponding @code{.key} files for
14156 PEM-encoded private keys.
14157
14158 Defaults to @samp{"/etc/cups/ssl"}.
14159 @end deftypevr
14160
14161 @deftypevr {@code{files-configuration} parameter} file-name server-root
14162 Specifies the directory containing the server configuration files.
14163
14164 Defaults to @samp{"/etc/cups"}.
14165 @end deftypevr
14166
14167 @deftypevr {@code{files-configuration} parameter} boolean sync-on-close?
14168 Specifies whether the scheduler calls fsync(2) after writing
14169 configuration or state files.
14170
14171 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
14172 @end deftypevr
14173
14174 @deftypevr {@code{files-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list system-group
14175 Specifies the group(s) to use for @code{@@SYSTEM} group authentication.
14176 @end deftypevr
14177
14178 @deftypevr {@code{files-configuration} parameter} file-name temp-dir
14179 Specifies the directory where temporary files are stored.
14180
14181 Defaults to @samp{"/var/spool/cups/tmp"}.
14182 @end deftypevr
14183
14184 @deftypevr {@code{files-configuration} parameter} string user
14185 Specifies the user name or ID that is used when running external
14186 programs.
14187
14188 Defaults to @samp{"lp"}.
14189 @end deftypevr
14190 @end deftypevr
14191
14192 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} access-log-level access-log-level
14193 Specifies the logging level for the AccessLog file. The @code{config}
14194 level logs when printers and classes are added, deleted, or modified and
14195 when configuration files are accessed or updated. The @code{actions}
14196 level logs when print jobs are submitted, held, released, modified, or
14197 canceled, and any of the conditions for @code{config}. The @code{all}
14198 level logs all requests.
14199
14200 Defaults to @samp{actions}.
14201 @end deftypevr
14202
14203 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} boolean auto-purge-jobs?
14204 Specifies whether to purge job history data automatically when it is no
14205 longer required for quotas.
14206
14207 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
14208 @end deftypevr
14209
14210 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} browse-local-protocols browse-local-protocols
14211 Specifies which protocols to use for local printer sharing.
14212
14213 Defaults to @samp{dnssd}.
14214 @end deftypevr
14215
14216 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} boolean browse-web-if?
14217 Specifies whether the CUPS web interface is advertised.
14218
14219 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
14220 @end deftypevr
14221
14222 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} boolean browsing?
14223 Specifies whether shared printers are advertised.
14224
14225 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
14226 @end deftypevr
14227
14228 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} string classification
14229 Specifies the security classification of the server. Any valid banner
14230 name can be used, including "classified", "confidential", "secret",
14231 "topsecret", and "unclassified", or the banner can be omitted to disable
14232 secure printing functions.
14233
14234 Defaults to @samp{""}.
14235 @end deftypevr
14236
14237 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} boolean classify-override?
14238 Specifies whether users may override the classification (cover page) of
14239 individual print jobs using the @code{job-sheets} option.
14240
14241 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
14242 @end deftypevr
14243
14244 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} default-auth-type default-auth-type
14245 Specifies the default type of authentication to use.
14246
14247 Defaults to @samp{Basic}.
14248 @end deftypevr
14249
14250 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} default-encryption default-encryption
14251 Specifies whether encryption will be used for authenticated requests.
14252
14253 Defaults to @samp{Required}.
14254 @end deftypevr
14255
14256 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} string default-language
14257 Specifies the default language to use for text and web content.
14258
14259 Defaults to @samp{"en"}.
14260 @end deftypevr
14261
14262 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} string default-paper-size
14263 Specifies the default paper size for new print queues. @samp{"Auto"}
14264 uses a locale-specific default, while @samp{"None"} specifies there is
14265 no default paper size. Specific size names are typically
14266 @samp{"Letter"} or @samp{"A4"}.
14267
14268 Defaults to @samp{"Auto"}.
14269 @end deftypevr
14270
14271 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} string default-policy
14272 Specifies the default access policy to use.
14273
14274 Defaults to @samp{"default"}.
14275 @end deftypevr
14276
14277 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} boolean default-shared?
14278 Specifies whether local printers are shared by default.
14279
14280 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
14281 @end deftypevr
14282
14283 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer dirty-clean-interval
14284 Specifies the delay for updating of configuration and state files, in
14285 seconds. A value of 0 causes the update to happen as soon as possible,
14286 typically within a few milliseconds.
14287
14288 Defaults to @samp{30}.
14289 @end deftypevr
14290
14291 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} error-policy error-policy
14292 Specifies what to do when an error occurs. Possible values are
14293 @code{abort-job}, which will discard the failed print job;
14294 @code{retry-job}, which will retry the job at a later time;
14295 @code{retry-this-job}, which retries the failed job immediately; and
14296 @code{stop-printer}, which stops the printer.
14297
14298 Defaults to @samp{stop-printer}.
14299 @end deftypevr
14300
14301 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer filter-limit
14302 Specifies the maximum cost of filters that are run concurrently, which
14303 can be used to minimize disk, memory, and CPU resource problems. A
14304 limit of 0 disables filter limiting. An average print to a
14305 non-PostScript printer needs a filter limit of about 200. A PostScript
14306 printer needs about half that (100). Setting the limit below these
14307 thresholds will effectively limit the scheduler to printing a single job
14308 at any time.
14309
14310 Defaults to @samp{0}.
14311 @end deftypevr
14312
14313 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer filter-nice
14314 Specifies the scheduling priority of filters that are run to print a
14315 job. The nice value ranges from 0, the highest priority, to 19, the
14316 lowest priority.
14317
14318 Defaults to @samp{0}.
14319 @end deftypevr
14320
14321 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} host-name-lookups host-name-lookups
14322 Specifies whether to do reverse lookups on connecting clients. The
14323 @code{double} setting causes @code{cupsd} to verify that the hostname
14324 resolved from the address matches one of the addresses returned for that
14325 hostname. Double lookups also prevent clients with unregistered
14326 addresses from connecting to your server. Only set this option to
14327 @code{#t} or @code{double} if absolutely required.
14328
14329 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
14330 @end deftypevr
14331
14332 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer job-kill-delay
14333 Specifies the number of seconds to wait before killing the filters and
14334 backend associated with a canceled or held job.
14335
14336 Defaults to @samp{30}.
14337 @end deftypevr
14338
14339 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer job-retry-interval
14340 Specifies the interval between retries of jobs in seconds. This is
14341 typically used for fax queues but can also be used with normal print
14342 queues whose error policy is @code{retry-job} or
14343 @code{retry-current-job}.
14344
14345 Defaults to @samp{30}.
14346 @end deftypevr
14347
14348 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer job-retry-limit
14349 Specifies the number of retries that are done for jobs. This is
14350 typically used for fax queues but can also be used with normal print
14351 queues whose error policy is @code{retry-job} or
14352 @code{retry-current-job}.
14353
14354 Defaults to @samp{5}.
14355 @end deftypevr
14356
14357 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} boolean keep-alive?
14358 Specifies whether to support HTTP keep-alive connections.
14359
14360 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
14361 @end deftypevr
14362
14363 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer keep-alive-timeout
14364 Specifies how long an idle client connection remains open, in seconds.
14365
14366 Defaults to @samp{30}.
14367 @end deftypevr
14368
14369 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer limit-request-body
14370 Specifies the maximum size of print files, IPP requests, and HTML form
14371 data. A limit of 0 disables the limit check.
14372
14373 Defaults to @samp{0}.
14374 @end deftypevr
14375
14376 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} multiline-string-list listen
14377 Listens on the specified interfaces for connections. Valid values are
14378 of the form @var{address}:@var{port}, where @var{address} is either an
14379 IPv6 address enclosed in brackets, an IPv4 address, or @code{*} to
14380 indicate all addresses. Values can also be file names of local UNIX
14381 domain sockets. The Listen directive is similar to the Port directive
14382 but allows you to restrict access to specific interfaces or networks.
14383 @end deftypevr
14384
14385 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer listen-back-log
14386 Specifies the number of pending connections that will be allowed. This
14387 normally only affects very busy servers that have reached the MaxClients
14388 limit, but can also be triggered by large numbers of simultaneous
14389 connections. When the limit is reached, the operating system will
14390 refuse additional connections until the scheduler can accept the pending
14391 ones.
14392
14393 Defaults to @samp{128}.
14394 @end deftypevr
14395
14396 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} location-access-control-list location-access-controls
14397 Specifies a set of additional access controls.
14398
14399 Available @code{location-access-controls} fields are:
14400
14401 @deftypevr {@code{location-access-controls} parameter} file-name path
14402 Specifies the URI path to which the access control applies.
14403 @end deftypevr
14404
14405 @deftypevr {@code{location-access-controls} parameter} access-control-list access-controls
14406 Access controls for all access to this path, in the same format as the
14407 @code{access-controls} of @code{operation-access-control}.
14408
14409 Defaults to @samp{()}.
14410 @end deftypevr
14411
14412 @deftypevr {@code{location-access-controls} parameter} method-access-control-list method-access-controls
14413 Access controls for method-specific access to this path.
14414
14415 Defaults to @samp{()}.
14416
14417 Available @code{method-access-controls} fields are:
14418
14419 @deftypevr {@code{method-access-controls} parameter} boolean reverse?
14420 If @code{#t}, apply access controls to all methods except the listed
14421 methods. Otherwise apply to only the listed methods.
14422
14423 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
14424 @end deftypevr
14425
14426 @deftypevr {@code{method-access-controls} parameter} method-list methods
14427 Methods to which this access control applies.
14428
14429 Defaults to @samp{()}.
14430 @end deftypevr
14431
14432 @deftypevr {@code{method-access-controls} parameter} access-control-list access-controls
14433 Access control directives, as a list of strings. Each string should be
14434 one directive, such as "Order allow,deny".
14435
14436 Defaults to @samp{()}.
14437 @end deftypevr
14438 @end deftypevr
14439 @end deftypevr
14440
14441 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer log-debug-history
14442 Specifies the number of debugging messages that are retained for logging
14443 if an error occurs in a print job. Debug messages are logged regardless
14444 of the LogLevel setting.
14445
14446 Defaults to @samp{100}.
14447 @end deftypevr
14448
14449 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} log-level log-level
14450 Specifies the level of logging for the ErrorLog file. The value
14451 @code{none} stops all logging while @code{debug2} logs everything.
14452
14453 Defaults to @samp{info}.
14454 @end deftypevr
14455
14456 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} log-time-format log-time-format
14457 Specifies the format of the date and time in the log files. The value
14458 @code{standard} logs whole seconds while @code{usecs} logs microseconds.
14459
14460 Defaults to @samp{standard}.
14461 @end deftypevr
14462
14463 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer max-clients
14464 Specifies the maximum number of simultaneous clients that are allowed by
14465 the scheduler.
14466
14467 Defaults to @samp{100}.
14468 @end deftypevr
14469
14470 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer max-clients-per-host
14471 Specifies the maximum number of simultaneous clients that are allowed
14472 from a single address.
14473
14474 Defaults to @samp{100}.
14475 @end deftypevr
14476
14477 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer max-copies
14478 Specifies the maximum number of copies that a user can print of each
14479 job.
14480
14481 Defaults to @samp{9999}.
14482 @end deftypevr
14483
14484 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer max-hold-time
14485 Specifies the maximum time a job may remain in the @code{indefinite}
14486 hold state before it is canceled. A value of 0 disables cancellation of
14487 held jobs.
14488
14489 Defaults to @samp{0}.
14490 @end deftypevr
14491
14492 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer max-jobs
14493 Specifies the maximum number of simultaneous jobs that are allowed. Set
14494 to 0 to allow an unlimited number of jobs.
14495
14496 Defaults to @samp{500}.
14497 @end deftypevr
14498
14499 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer max-jobs-per-printer
14500 Specifies the maximum number of simultaneous jobs that are allowed per
14501 printer. A value of 0 allows up to MaxJobs jobs per printer.
14502
14503 Defaults to @samp{0}.
14504 @end deftypevr
14505
14506 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer max-jobs-per-user
14507 Specifies the maximum number of simultaneous jobs that are allowed per
14508 user. A value of 0 allows up to MaxJobs jobs per user.
14509
14510 Defaults to @samp{0}.
14511 @end deftypevr
14512
14513 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer max-job-time
14514 Specifies the maximum time a job may take to print before it is
14515 canceled, in seconds. Set to 0 to disable cancellation of "stuck" jobs.
14516
14517 Defaults to @samp{10800}.
14518 @end deftypevr
14519
14520 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer max-log-size
14521 Specifies the maximum size of the log files before they are rotated, in
14522 bytes. The value 0 disables log rotation.
14523
14524 Defaults to @samp{1048576}.
14525 @end deftypevr
14526
14527 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer multiple-operation-timeout
14528 Specifies the maximum amount of time to allow between files in a
14529 multiple file print job, in seconds.
14530
14531 Defaults to @samp{300}.
14532 @end deftypevr
14533
14534 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} string page-log-format
14535 Specifies the format of PageLog lines. Sequences beginning with percent
14536 (@samp{%}) characters are replaced with the corresponding information,
14537 while all other characters are copied literally. The following percent
14538 sequences are recognized:
14539
14540 @table @samp
14541 @item %%
14542 insert a single percent character
14543
14544 @item %@{name@}
14545 insert the value of the specified IPP attribute
14546
14547 @item %C
14548 insert the number of copies for the current page
14549
14550 @item %P
14551 insert the current page number
14552
14553 @item %T
14554 insert the current date and time in common log format
14555
14556 @item %j
14557 insert the job ID
14558
14559 @item %p
14560 insert the printer name
14561
14562 @item %u
14563 insert the username
14564 @end table
14565
14566 A value of the empty string disables page logging. The string @code{%p
14567 %u %j %T %P %C %@{job-billing@} %@{job-originating-host-name@}
14568 %@{job-name@} %@{media@} %@{sides@}} creates a page log with the
14569 standard items.
14570
14571 Defaults to @samp{""}.
14572 @end deftypevr
14573
14574 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} environment-variables environment-variables
14575 Passes the specified environment variable(s) to child processes; a list
14576 of strings.
14577
14578 Defaults to @samp{()}.
14579 @end deftypevr
14580
14581 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} policy-configuration-list policies
14582 Specifies named access control policies.
14583
14584 Available @code{policy-configuration} fields are:
14585
14586 @deftypevr {@code{policy-configuration} parameter} string name
14587 Name of the policy.
14588 @end deftypevr
14589
14590 @deftypevr {@code{policy-configuration} parameter} string job-private-access
14591 Specifies an access list for a job's private values. @code{@@ACL} maps
14592 to the printer's requesting-user-name-allowed or
14593 requesting-user-name-denied values. @code{@@OWNER} maps to the job's
14594 owner. @code{@@SYSTEM} maps to the groups listed for the
14595 @code{system-group} field of the @code{files-config} configuration,
14596 which is reified into the @code{cups-files.conf(5)} file. Other
14597 possible elements of the access list include specific user names, and
14598 @code{@@@var{group}} to indicate members of a specific group. The
14599 access list may also be simply @code{all} or @code{default}.
14600
14601 Defaults to @samp{"@@OWNER @@SYSTEM"}.
14602 @end deftypevr
14603
14604 @deftypevr {@code{policy-configuration} parameter} string job-private-values
14605 Specifies the list of job values to make private, or @code{all},
14606 @code{default}, or @code{none}.
14607
14608 Defaults to @samp{"job-name job-originating-host-name
14609 job-originating-user-name phone"}.
14610 @end deftypevr
14611
14612 @deftypevr {@code{policy-configuration} parameter} string subscription-private-access
14613 Specifies an access list for a subscription's private values.
14614 @code{@@ACL} maps to the printer's requesting-user-name-allowed or
14615 requesting-user-name-denied values. @code{@@OWNER} maps to the job's
14616 owner. @code{@@SYSTEM} maps to the groups listed for the
14617 @code{system-group} field of the @code{files-config} configuration,
14618 which is reified into the @code{cups-files.conf(5)} file. Other
14619 possible elements of the access list include specific user names, and
14620 @code{@@@var{group}} to indicate members of a specific group. The
14621 access list may also be simply @code{all} or @code{default}.
14622
14623 Defaults to @samp{"@@OWNER @@SYSTEM"}.
14624 @end deftypevr
14625
14626 @deftypevr {@code{policy-configuration} parameter} string subscription-private-values
14627 Specifies the list of job values to make private, or @code{all},
14628 @code{default}, or @code{none}.
14629
14630 Defaults to @samp{"notify-events notify-pull-method notify-recipient-uri
14631 notify-subscriber-user-name notify-user-data"}.
14632 @end deftypevr
14633
14634 @deftypevr {@code{policy-configuration} parameter} operation-access-control-list access-controls
14635 Access control by IPP operation.
14636
14637 Defaults to @samp{()}.
14638 @end deftypevr
14639 @end deftypevr
14640
14641 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} boolean-or-non-negative-integer preserve-job-files
14642 Specifies whether job files (documents) are preserved after a job is
14643 printed. If a numeric value is specified, job files are preserved for
14644 the indicated number of seconds after printing. Otherwise a boolean
14645 value applies indefinitely.
14646
14647 Defaults to @samp{86400}.
14648 @end deftypevr
14649
14650 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} boolean-or-non-negative-integer preserve-job-history
14651 Specifies whether the job history is preserved after a job is printed.
14652 If a numeric value is specified, the job history is preserved for the
14653 indicated number of seconds after printing. If @code{#t}, the job
14654 history is preserved until the MaxJobs limit is reached.
14655
14656 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
14657 @end deftypevr
14658
14659 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer reload-timeout
14660 Specifies the amount of time to wait for job completion before
14661 restarting the scheduler.
14662
14663 Defaults to @samp{30}.
14664 @end deftypevr
14665
14666 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} string rip-cache
14667 Specifies the maximum amount of memory to use when converting documents
14668 into bitmaps for a printer.
14669
14670 Defaults to @samp{"128m"}.
14671 @end deftypevr
14672
14673 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} string server-admin
14674 Specifies the email address of the server administrator.
14675
14676 Defaults to @samp{"root@@localhost.localdomain"}.
14677 @end deftypevr
14678
14679 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} host-name-list-or-* server-alias
14680 The ServerAlias directive is used for HTTP Host header validation when
14681 clients connect to the scheduler from external interfaces. Using the
14682 special name @code{*} can expose your system to known browser-based DNS
14683 rebinding attacks, even when accessing sites through a firewall. If the
14684 auto-discovery of alternate names does not work, we recommend listing
14685 each alternate name with a ServerAlias directive instead of using
14686 @code{*}.
14687
14688 Defaults to @samp{*}.
14689 @end deftypevr
14690
14691 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} string server-name
14692 Specifies the fully-qualified host name of the server.
14693
14694 Defaults to @samp{"localhost"}.
14695 @end deftypevr
14696
14697 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} server-tokens server-tokens
14698 Specifies what information is included in the Server header of HTTP
14699 responses. @code{None} disables the Server header. @code{ProductOnly}
14700 reports @code{CUPS}. @code{Major} reports @code{CUPS 2}. @code{Minor}
14701 reports @code{CUPS 2.0}. @code{Minimal} reports @code{CUPS 2.0.0}.
14702 @code{OS} reports @code{CUPS 2.0.0 (@var{uname})} where @var{uname} is
14703 the output of the @code{uname} command. @code{Full} reports @code{CUPS
14704 2.0.0 (@var{uname}) IPP/2.0}.
14705
14706 Defaults to @samp{Minimal}.
14707 @end deftypevr
14708
14709 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} string set-env
14710 Set the specified environment variable to be passed to child processes.
14711
14712 Defaults to @samp{"variable value"}.
14713 @end deftypevr
14714
14715 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} multiline-string-list ssl-listen
14716 Listens on the specified interfaces for encrypted connections. Valid
14717 values are of the form @var{address}:@var{port}, where @var{address} is
14718 either an IPv6 address enclosed in brackets, an IPv4 address, or
14719 @code{*} to indicate all addresses.
14720
14721 Defaults to @samp{()}.
14722 @end deftypevr
14723
14724 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} ssl-options ssl-options
14725 Sets encryption options. By default, CUPS only supports encryption
14726 using TLS v1.0 or higher using known secure cipher suites. The
14727 @code{AllowRC4} option enables the 128-bit RC4 cipher suites, which are
14728 required for some older clients that do not implement newer ones. The
14729 @code{AllowSSL3} option enables SSL v3.0, which is required for some
14730 older clients that do not support TLS v1.0.
14731
14732 Defaults to @samp{()}.
14733 @end deftypevr
14734
14735 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} boolean strict-conformance?
14736 Specifies whether the scheduler requires clients to strictly adhere to
14737 the IPP specifications.
14738
14739 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
14740 @end deftypevr
14741
14742 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer timeout
14743 Specifies the HTTP request timeout, in seconds.
14744
14745 Defaults to @samp{300}.
14746
14747 @end deftypevr
14748
14749 @deftypevr {@code{cups-configuration} parameter} boolean web-interface?
14750 Specifies whether the web interface is enabled.
14751
14752 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
14753 @end deftypevr
14754
14755 At this point you're probably thinking ``oh dear, Guix manual, I like
14756 you but you can stop already with the configuration options''. Indeed.
14757 However, one more point: it could be that you have an existing
14758 @code{cupsd.conf} that you want to use. In that case, you can pass an
14759 @code{opaque-cups-configuration} as the configuration of a
14760 @code{cups-service-type}.
14761
14762 Available @code{opaque-cups-configuration} fields are:
14763
14764 @deftypevr {@code{opaque-cups-configuration} parameter} package cups
14765 The CUPS package.
14766 @end deftypevr
14767
14768 @deftypevr {@code{opaque-cups-configuration} parameter} string cupsd.conf
14769 The contents of the @code{cupsd.conf}, as a string.
14770 @end deftypevr
14771
14772 @deftypevr {@code{opaque-cups-configuration} parameter} string cups-files.conf
14773 The contents of the @code{cups-files.conf} file, as a string.
14774 @end deftypevr
14775
14776 For example, if your @code{cupsd.conf} and @code{cups-files.conf} are in
14777 strings of the same name, you could instantiate a CUPS service like
14778 this:
14779
14780 @example
14781 (service cups-service-type
14782 (opaque-cups-configuration
14783 (cupsd.conf cupsd.conf)
14784 (cups-files.conf cups-files.conf)))
14785 @end example
14786
14787
14788 @node Desktop Services
14789 @subsection Desktop Services
14790
14791 The @code{(gnu services desktop)} module provides services that are
14792 usually useful in the context of a ``desktop'' setup---that is, on a
14793 machine running a graphical display server, possibly with graphical user
14794 interfaces, etc. It also defines services that provide specific desktop
14795 environments like GNOME, Xfce or MATE.
14796
14797 To simplify things, the module defines a variable containing the set of
14798 services that users typically expect on a machine with a graphical
14799 environment and networking:
14800
14801 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %desktop-services
14802 This is a list of services that builds upon @code{%base-services} and
14803 adds or adjusts services for a typical ``desktop'' setup.
14804
14805 In particular, it adds a graphical login manager (@pxref{X Window,
14806 @code{gdm-service-type}}), screen lockers, a network management tool
14807 (@pxref{Networking Services, @code{network-manager-service-type}}) with modem
14808 support (@pxref{Networking Services, @code{modem-manager-service-type}}),
14809 energy and color management services, the @code{elogind} login and seat
14810 manager, the Polkit privilege service, the GeoClue location service, the
14811 AccountsService daemon that allows authorized users change system passwords,
14812 an NTP client (@pxref{Networking Services}), the Avahi daemon, and has the
14813 name service switch service configured to be able to use @code{nss-mdns}
14814 (@pxref{Name Service Switch, mDNS}).
14815 @end defvr
14816
14817 The @code{%desktop-services} variable can be used as the @code{services}
14818 field of an @code{operating-system} declaration (@pxref{operating-system
14819 Reference, @code{services}}).
14820
14821 Additionally, the @code{gnome-desktop-service-type},
14822 @code{xfce-desktop-service}, @code{mate-desktop-service-type} and
14823 @code{enlightenment-desktop-service-type} procedures can add GNOME, Xfce, MATE
14824 and/or Enlightenment to a system. To ``add GNOME'' means that system-level
14825 services like the backlight adjustment helpers and the power management
14826 utilities are added to the system, extending @code{polkit} and @code{dbus}
14827 appropriately, allowing GNOME to operate with elevated privileges on a
14828 limited number of special-purpose system interfaces. Additionally,
14829 adding a service made by @code{gnome-desktop-service-type} adds the GNOME
14830 metapackage to the system profile. Likewise, adding the Xfce service
14831 not only adds the @code{xfce} metapackage to the system profile, but it
14832 also gives the Thunar file manager the ability to open a ``root-mode''
14833 file management window, if the user authenticates using the
14834 administrator's password via the standard polkit graphical interface.
14835 To ``add MATE'' means that @code{polkit} and @code{dbus} are extended
14836 appropriately, allowing MATE to operate with elevated privileges on a
14837 limited number of special-purpose system interfaces. Additionally,
14838 adding a service of type @code{mate-desktop-service-type} adds the MATE
14839 metapackage to the system profile. ``Adding Enlightenment'' means that
14840 @code{dbus} is extended appropriately, and several of Enlightenment's binaries
14841 are set as setuid, allowing Enlightenment's screen locker and other
14842 functionality to work as expetected.
14843
14844 The desktop environments in Guix use the Xorg display server by
14845 default. If you'd like to use the newer display server protocol
14846 called Wayland, you need to use the @code{sddm-service} instead of
14847 GDM as the graphical login manager. You should then
14848 select the ``GNOME (Wayland)'' session in SDDM. Alternatively you can
14849 also try starting GNOME on Wayland manually from a TTY with the
14850 command ``XDG_SESSION_TYPE=wayland exec dbus-run-session
14851 gnome-session``. Currently only GNOME has support for Wayland.
14852
14853 @defvr {Scheme Variable} gnome-desktop-service-type
14854 This is the type of the service that adds the @uref{https://www.gnome.org,
14855 GNOME} desktop environment. Its value is a @code{gnome-desktop-configuration}
14856 object (see below.)
14857
14858 This service adds the @code{gnome} package to the system profile, and extends
14859 polkit with the actions from @code{gnome-settings-daemon}.
14860 @end defvr
14861
14862 @deftp {Data Type} gnome-desktop-configuration
14863 Configuration record for the GNOME desktop environment.
14864
14865 @table @asis
14866 @item @code{gnome} (default: @code{gnome})
14867 The GNOME package to use.
14868 @end table
14869 @end deftp
14870
14871 @defvr {Scheme Variable} xfce-desktop-service-type
14872 This is the type of a service to run the @uref{Xfce, https://xfce.org/}
14873 desktop environment. Its value is an @code{xfce-desktop-configuration} object
14874 (see below.)
14875
14876 This service adds the @code{xfce} package to the system profile, and
14877 extends polkit with the ability for @code{thunar} to manipulate the file
14878 system as root from within a user session, after the user has authenticated
14879 with the administrator's password.
14880 @end defvr
14881
14882 @deftp {Data Type} xfce-desktop-configuration
14883 Configuration record for the Xfce desktop environment.
14884
14885 @table @asis
14886 @item @code{xfce} (default: @code{xfce})
14887 The Xfce package to use.
14888 @end table
14889 @end deftp
14890
14891 @deffn {Scheme Variable} mate-desktop-service-type
14892 This is the type of the service that runs the @uref{https://mate-desktop.org/,
14893 MATE desktop environment}. Its value is a @code{mate-desktop-configuration}
14894 object (see below.)
14895
14896 This service adds the @code{mate} package to the system
14897 profile, and extends polkit with the actions from
14898 @code{mate-settings-daemon}.
14899 @end deffn
14900
14901 @deftp {Data Type} mate-desktop-configuration
14902 Configuration record for the MATE desktop environment.
14903
14904 @table @asis
14905 @item @code{mate} (default: @code{mate})
14906 The MATE package to use.
14907 @end table
14908 @end deftp
14909
14910 @deffn {Scheme Variable} enlightenment-desktop-service-type
14911 Return a service that adds the @code{enlightenment} package to the system
14912 profile, and extends dbus with actions from @code{efl}.
14913 @end deffn
14914
14915 @deftp {Data Type} enlightenment-desktop-service-configuration
14916 @table @asis
14917 @item @code{enlightenment} (default: @code{enlightenment})
14918 The enlightenment package to use.
14919 @end table
14920 @end deftp
14921
14922 Because the GNOME, Xfce and MATE desktop services pull in so many packages,
14923 the default @code{%desktop-services} variable doesn't include any of
14924 them by default. To add GNOME, Xfce or MATE, just @code{cons} them onto
14925 @code{%desktop-services} in the @code{services} field of your
14926 @code{operating-system}:
14927
14928 @example
14929 (use-modules (gnu))
14930 (use-service-modules desktop)
14931 (operating-system
14932 ...
14933 ;; cons* adds items to the list given as its last argument.
14934 (services (cons* (service gnome-desktop-service-type)
14935 (service xfce-desktop-service)
14936 %desktop-services))
14937 ...)
14938 @end example
14939
14940 These desktop environments will then be available as options in the
14941 graphical login window.
14942
14943 The actual service definitions included in @code{%desktop-services} and
14944 provided by @code{(gnu services dbus)} and @code{(gnu services desktop)}
14945 are described below.
14946
14947 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} dbus-service [#:dbus @var{dbus}] [#:services '()]
14948 Return a service that runs the ``system bus'', using @var{dbus}, with
14949 support for @var{services}.
14950
14951 @uref{https://dbus.freedesktop.org/, D-Bus} is an inter-process communication
14952 facility. Its system bus is used to allow system services to communicate
14953 and to be notified of system-wide events.
14954
14955 @var{services} must be a list of packages that provide an
14956 @file{etc/dbus-1/system.d} directory containing additional D-Bus configuration
14957 and policy files. For example, to allow avahi-daemon to use the system bus,
14958 @var{services} must be equal to @code{(list avahi)}.
14959 @end deffn
14960
14961 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} elogind-service [#:config @var{config}]
14962 Return a service that runs the @code{elogind} login and
14963 seat management daemon. @uref{https://github.com/elogind/elogind,
14964 Elogind} exposes a D-Bus interface that can be used to know which users
14965 are logged in, know what kind of sessions they have open, suspend the
14966 system, inhibit system suspend, reboot the system, and other tasks.
14967
14968 Elogind handles most system-level power events for a computer, for
14969 example suspending the system when a lid is closed, or shutting it down
14970 when the power button is pressed.
14971
14972 The @var{config} keyword argument specifies the configuration for
14973 elogind, and should be the result of an @code{(elogind-configuration
14974 (@var{parameter} @var{value})...)} invocation. Available parameters and
14975 their default values are:
14976
14977 @table @code
14978 @item kill-user-processes?
14979 @code{#f}
14980 @item kill-only-users
14981 @code{()}
14982 @item kill-exclude-users
14983 @code{("root")}
14984 @item inhibit-delay-max-seconds
14985 @code{5}
14986 @item handle-power-key
14987 @code{poweroff}
14988 @item handle-suspend-key
14989 @code{suspend}
14990 @item handle-hibernate-key
14991 @code{hibernate}
14992 @item handle-lid-switch
14993 @code{suspend}
14994 @item handle-lid-switch-docked
14995 @code{ignore}
14996 @item power-key-ignore-inhibited?
14997 @code{#f}
14998 @item suspend-key-ignore-inhibited?
14999 @code{#f}
15000 @item hibernate-key-ignore-inhibited?
15001 @code{#f}
15002 @item lid-switch-ignore-inhibited?
15003 @code{#t}
15004 @item holdoff-timeout-seconds
15005 @code{30}
15006 @item idle-action
15007 @code{ignore}
15008 @item idle-action-seconds
15009 @code{(* 30 60)}
15010 @item runtime-directory-size-percent
15011 @code{10}
15012 @item runtime-directory-size
15013 @code{#f}
15014 @item remove-ipc?
15015 @code{#t}
15016 @item suspend-state
15017 @code{("mem" "standby" "freeze")}
15018 @item suspend-mode
15019 @code{()}
15020 @item hibernate-state
15021 @code{("disk")}
15022 @item hibernate-mode
15023 @code{("platform" "shutdown")}
15024 @item hybrid-sleep-state
15025 @code{("disk")}
15026 @item hybrid-sleep-mode
15027 @code{("suspend" "platform" "shutdown")}
15028 @end table
15029 @end deffn
15030
15031 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} accountsservice-service @
15032 [#:accountsservice @var{accountsservice}]
15033 Return a service that runs AccountsService, a system service that can
15034 list available accounts, change their passwords, and so on.
15035 AccountsService integrates with PolicyKit to enable unprivileged users
15036 to acquire the capability to modify their system configuration.
15037 @uref{https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/AccountsService/, the
15038 accountsservice web site} for more information.
15039
15040 The @var{accountsservice} keyword argument is the @code{accountsservice}
15041 package to expose as a service.
15042 @end deffn
15043
15044 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} polkit-service @
15045 [#:polkit @var{polkit}]
15046 Return a service that runs the
15047 @uref{https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/polkit/, Polkit privilege
15048 management service}, which allows system administrators to grant access to
15049 privileged operations in a structured way. By querying the Polkit service, a
15050 privileged system component can know when it should grant additional
15051 capabilities to ordinary users. For example, an ordinary user can be granted
15052 the capability to suspend the system if the user is logged in locally.
15053 @end deffn
15054
15055 @defvr {Scheme Variable} upower-service-type
15056 Service that runs @uref{https://upower.freedesktop.org/, @command{upowerd}}, a
15057 system-wide monitor for power consumption and battery levels, with the given
15058 configuration settings.
15059
15060 It implements the @code{org.freedesktop.UPower} D-Bus interface, and is
15061 notably used by GNOME.
15062 @end defvr
15063
15064 @deftp {Data Type} upower-configuration
15065 Data type representation the configuration for UPower.
15066
15067 @table @asis
15068
15069 @item @code{upower} (default: @var{upower})
15070 Package to use for @code{upower}.
15071
15072 @item @code{watts-up-pro?} (default: @code{#f})
15073 Enable the Watts Up Pro device.
15074
15075 @item @code{poll-batteries?} (default: @code{#t})
15076 Enable polling the kernel for battery level changes.
15077
15078 @item @code{ignore-lid?} (default: @code{#f})
15079 Ignore the lid state, this can be useful if it's incorrect on a device.
15080
15081 @item @code{use-percentage-for-policy?} (default: @code{#f})
15082 Whether battery percentage based policy should be used. The default is to use
15083 the time left, change to @code{#t} to use the percentage.
15084
15085 @item @code{percentage-low} (default: @code{10})
15086 When @code{use-percentage-for-policy?} is @code{#t}, this sets the percentage
15087 at which the battery is considered low.
15088
15089 @item @code{percentage-critical} (default: @code{3})
15090 When @code{use-percentage-for-policy?} is @code{#t}, this sets the percentage
15091 at which the battery is considered critical.
15092
15093 @item @code{percentage-action} (default: @code{2})
15094 When @code{use-percentage-for-policy?} is @code{#t}, this sets the percentage
15095 at which action will be taken.
15096
15097 @item @code{time-low} (default: @code{1200})
15098 When @code{use-time-for-policy?} is @code{#f}, this sets the time remaining in
15099 seconds at which the battery is considered low.
15100
15101 @item @code{time-critical} (default: @code{300})
15102 When @code{use-time-for-policy?} is @code{#f}, this sets the time remaining in
15103 seconds at which the battery is considered critical.
15104
15105 @item @code{time-action} (default: @code{120})
15106 When @code{use-time-for-policy?} is @code{#f}, this sets the time remaining in
15107 seconds at which action will be taken.
15108
15109 @item @code{critical-power-action} (default: @code{'hybrid-sleep})
15110 The action taken when @code{percentage-action} or @code{time-action} is
15111 reached (depending on the configuration of @code{use-percentage-for-policy?}).
15112
15113 Possible values are:
15114
15115 @itemize @bullet
15116 @item
15117 @code{'power-off}
15118
15119 @item
15120 @code{'hibernate}
15121
15122 @item
15123 @code{'hybrid-sleep}.
15124 @end itemize
15125
15126 @end table
15127 @end deftp
15128
15129 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} udisks-service [#:udisks @var{udisks}]
15130 Return a service for @uref{https://udisks.freedesktop.org/docs/latest/,
15131 UDisks}, a @dfn{disk management} daemon that provides user interfaces with
15132 notifications and ways to mount/unmount disks. Programs that talk to UDisks
15133 include the @command{udisksctl} command, part of UDisks, and GNOME Disks.
15134 @end deffn
15135
15136 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} colord-service [#:colord @var{colord}]
15137 Return a service that runs @command{colord}, a system service with a D-Bus
15138 interface to manage the color profiles of input and output devices such as
15139 screens and scanners. It is notably used by the GNOME Color Manager graphical
15140 tool. See @uref{https://www.freedesktop.org/software/colord/, the colord web
15141 site} for more information.
15142 @end deffn
15143
15144 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} geoclue-application name [#:allowed? #t] [#:system? #f] [#:users '()]
15145 Return a configuration allowing an application to access GeoClue
15146 location data. @var{name} is the Desktop ID of the application, without
15147 the @code{.desktop} part. If @var{allowed?} is true, the application
15148 will have access to location information by default. The boolean
15149 @var{system?} value indicates whether an application is a system component
15150 or not. Finally @var{users} is a list of UIDs of all users for which
15151 this application is allowed location info access. An empty users list
15152 means that all users are allowed.
15153 @end deffn
15154
15155 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %standard-geoclue-applications
15156 The standard list of well-known GeoClue application configurations,
15157 granting authority to the GNOME date-and-time utility to ask for the
15158 current location in order to set the time zone, and allowing the
15159 IceCat and Epiphany web browsers to request location information.
15160 IceCat and Epiphany both query the user before allowing a web page to
15161 know the user's location.
15162 @end defvr
15163
15164 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} geoclue-service [#:colord @var{colord}] @
15165 [#:whitelist '()] @
15166 [#:wifi-geolocation-url "https://location.services.mozilla.com/v1/geolocate?key=geoclue"] @
15167 [#:submit-data? #f]
15168 [#:wifi-submission-url "https://location.services.mozilla.com/v1/submit?key=geoclue"] @
15169 [#:submission-nick "geoclue"] @
15170 [#:applications %standard-geoclue-applications]
15171 Return a service that runs the GeoClue location service. This service
15172 provides a D-Bus interface to allow applications to request access to a
15173 user's physical location, and optionally to add information to online
15174 location databases. See
15175 @uref{https://wiki.freedesktop.org/www/Software/GeoClue/, the GeoClue
15176 web site} for more information.
15177 @end deffn
15178
15179 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} bluetooth-service [#:bluez @var{bluez}] @
15180 [@w{#:auto-enable? #f}]
15181 Return a service that runs the @command{bluetoothd} daemon, which
15182 manages all the Bluetooth devices and provides a number of D-Bus
15183 interfaces. When AUTO-ENABLE? is true, the bluetooth controller is
15184 powered automatically at boot, which can be useful when using a
15185 bluetooth keyboard or mouse.
15186
15187 Users need to be in the @code{lp} group to access the D-Bus service.
15188 @end deffn
15189
15190 @node Sound Services
15191 @subsection Sound Services
15192
15193 @cindex sound support
15194 @cindex ALSA
15195 @cindex PulseAudio, sound support
15196
15197 The @code{(gnu services sound)} module provides a service to configure the
15198 Advanced Linux Sound Architecture (ALSA) system, which makes PulseAudio the
15199 preferred ALSA output driver.
15200
15201 @deffn {Scheme Variable} alsa-service-type
15202 This is the type for the @uref{https://alsa-project.org/, Advanced Linux Sound
15203 Architecture} (ALSA) system, which generates the @file{/etc/asound.conf}
15204 configuration file. The value for this type is a @command{alsa-configuration}
15205 record as in this example:
15206
15207 @example
15208 (service alsa-service-type)
15209 @end example
15210
15211 See below for details about @code{alsa-configuration}.
15212 @end deffn
15213
15214 @deftp {Data Type} alsa-configuration
15215 Data type representing the configuration for @code{alsa-service}.
15216
15217 @table @asis
15218 @item @code{alsa-plugins} (default: @var{alsa-plugins})
15219 @code{alsa-plugins} package to use.
15220
15221 @item @code{pulseaudio?} (default: @var{#t})
15222 Whether ALSA applications should transparently be made to use the
15223 @uref{http://www.pulseaudio.org/, PulseAudio} sound server.
15224
15225 Using PulseAudio allows you to run several sound-producing applications
15226 at the same time and to individual control them @i{via}
15227 @command{pavucontrol}, among other things.
15228
15229 @item @code{extra-options} (default: @var{""})
15230 String to append to the @file{/etc/asound.conf} file.
15231
15232 @end table
15233 @end deftp
15234
15235 Individual users who want to override the system configuration of ALSA can do
15236 it with the @file{~/.asoundrc} file:
15237
15238 @example
15239 # In guix, we have to specify the absolute path for plugins.
15240 pcm_type.jack @{
15241 lib "/home/alice/.guix-profile/lib/alsa-lib/libasound_module_pcm_jack.so"
15242 @}
15243
15244 # Routing ALSA to jack:
15245 # <http://jackaudio.org/faq/routing_alsa.html>.
15246 pcm.rawjack @{
15247 type jack
15248 playback_ports @{
15249 0 system:playback_1
15250 1 system:playback_2
15251 @}
15252
15253 capture_ports @{
15254 0 system:capture_1
15255 1 system:capture_2
15256 @}
15257 @}
15258
15259 pcm.!default @{
15260 type plug
15261 slave @{
15262 pcm "rawjack"
15263 @}
15264 @}
15265 @end example
15266
15267 See @uref{https://www.alsa-project.org/main/index.php/Asoundrc} for the
15268 details.
15269
15270
15271 @node Database Services
15272 @subsection Database Services
15273
15274 @cindex database
15275 @cindex SQL
15276 The @code{(gnu services databases)} module provides the following services.
15277
15278 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} postgresql-service [#:postgresql postgresql] @
15279 [#:config-file] [#:data-directory ``/var/lib/postgresql/data''] @
15280 [#:port 5432] [#:locale ``en_US.utf8''] [#:extension-packages '()]
15281 Return a service that runs @var{postgresql}, the PostgreSQL database
15282 server.
15283
15284 The PostgreSQL daemon loads its runtime configuration from @var{config-file},
15285 creates a database cluster with @var{locale} as the default
15286 locale, stored in @var{data-directory}. It then listens on @var{port}.
15287
15288 @cindex postgresql extension-packages
15289 Additional extensions are loaded from packages listed in
15290 @var{extension-packages}. Extensions are available at runtime. For instance,
15291 to create a geographic database using the @code{postgis} extension, a user can
15292 configure the postgresql-service as in this example:
15293
15294 @cindex postgis
15295 @example
15296 (use-package-modules databases geo)
15297
15298 (operating-system
15299 ...
15300 ;; postgresql is required to run `psql' but postgis is not required for
15301 ;; proper operation.
15302 (packages (cons* postgresql %base-packages))
15303 (services
15304 (cons*
15305 (postgresql-service #:extension-packages (list postgis))
15306 %base-services)))
15307 @end example
15308
15309 Then the extension becomes visible and you can initialise an empty geographic
15310 database in this way:
15311
15312 @example
15313 psql -U postgres
15314 > create database postgistest;
15315 > \connect postgistest;
15316 > create extension postgis;
15317 > create extension postgis_topology;
15318 @end example
15319
15320 There is no need to add this field for contrib extensions such as hstore or
15321 dblink as they are already loadable by postgresql. This field is only
15322 required to add extensions provided by other packages.
15323 @end deffn
15324
15325 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} mysql-service [#:config (mysql-configuration)]
15326 Return a service that runs @command{mysqld}, the MySQL or MariaDB
15327 database server.
15328
15329 The optional @var{config} argument specifies the configuration for
15330 @command{mysqld}, which should be a @code{<mysql-configuration>} object.
15331 @end deffn
15332
15333 @deftp {Data Type} mysql-configuration
15334 Data type representing the configuration of @var{mysql-service}.
15335
15336 @table @asis
15337 @item @code{mysql} (default: @var{mariadb})
15338 Package object of the MySQL database server, can be either @var{mariadb}
15339 or @var{mysql}.
15340
15341 For MySQL, a temporary root password will be displayed at activation time.
15342 For MariaDB, the root password is empty.
15343
15344 @item @code{port} (default: @code{3306})
15345 TCP port on which the database server listens for incoming connections.
15346 @end table
15347 @end deftp
15348
15349 @defvr {Scheme Variable} memcached-service-type
15350 This is the service type for the @uref{https://memcached.org/,
15351 Memcached} service, which provides a distributed in memory cache. The
15352 value for the service type is a @code{memcached-configuration} object.
15353 @end defvr
15354
15355 @example
15356 (service memcached-service-type)
15357 @end example
15358
15359 @deftp {Data Type} memcached-configuration
15360 Data type representing the configuration of memcached.
15361
15362 @table @asis
15363 @item @code{memcached} (default: @code{memcached})
15364 The Memcached package to use.
15365
15366 @item @code{interfaces} (default: @code{'("0.0.0.0")})
15367 Network interfaces on which to listen.
15368
15369 @item @code{tcp-port} (default: @code{11211})
15370 Port on which to accept connections on,
15371
15372 @item @code{udp-port} (default: @code{11211})
15373 Port on which to accept UDP connections on, a value of 0 will disable
15374 listening on a UDP socket.
15375
15376 @item @code{additional-options} (default: @code{'()})
15377 Additional command line options to pass to @code{memcached}.
15378 @end table
15379 @end deftp
15380
15381 @defvr {Scheme Variable} mongodb-service-type
15382 This is the service type for @uref{https://www.mongodb.com/, MongoDB}.
15383 The value for the service type is a @code{mongodb-configuration} object.
15384 @end defvr
15385
15386 @example
15387 (service mongodb-service-type)
15388 @end example
15389
15390 @deftp {Data Type} mongodb-configuration
15391 Data type representing the configuration of mongodb.
15392
15393 @table @asis
15394 @item @code{mongodb} (default: @code{mongodb})
15395 The MongoDB package to use.
15396
15397 @item @code{config-file} (default: @code{%default-mongodb-configuration-file})
15398 The configuration file for MongoDB.
15399
15400 @item @code{data-directory} (default: @code{"/var/lib/mongodb"})
15401 This value is used to create the directory, so that it exists and is
15402 owned by the mongodb user. It should match the data-directory which
15403 MongoDB is configured to use through the configuration file.
15404 @end table
15405 @end deftp
15406
15407 @defvr {Scheme Variable} redis-service-type
15408 This is the service type for the @uref{https://redis.io/, Redis}
15409 key/value store, whose value is a @code{redis-configuration} object.
15410 @end defvr
15411
15412 @deftp {Data Type} redis-configuration
15413 Data type representing the configuration of redis.
15414
15415 @table @asis
15416 @item @code{redis} (default: @code{redis})
15417 The Redis package to use.
15418
15419 @item @code{bind} (default: @code{"127.0.0.1"})
15420 Network interface on which to listen.
15421
15422 @item @code{port} (default: @code{6379})
15423 Port on which to accept connections on, a value of 0 will disable
15424 listening on a TCP socket.
15425
15426 @item @code{working-directory} (default: @code{"/var/lib/redis"})
15427 Directory in which to store the database and related files.
15428 @end table
15429 @end deftp
15430
15431 @node Mail Services
15432 @subsection Mail Services
15433
15434 @cindex mail
15435 @cindex email
15436 The @code{(gnu services mail)} module provides Guix service definitions
15437 for email services: IMAP, POP3, and LMTP servers, as well as mail
15438 transport agents (MTAs). Lots of acronyms! These services are detailed
15439 in the subsections below.
15440
15441 @subsubheading Dovecot Service
15442
15443 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} dovecot-service [#:config (dovecot-configuration)]
15444 Return a service that runs the Dovecot IMAP/POP3/LMTP mail server.
15445 @end deffn
15446
15447 By default, Dovecot does not need much configuration; the default
15448 configuration object created by @code{(dovecot-configuration)} will
15449 suffice if your mail is delivered to @code{~/Maildir}. A self-signed
15450 certificate will be generated for TLS-protected connections, though
15451 Dovecot will also listen on cleartext ports by default. There are a
15452 number of options, though, which mail administrators might need to change,
15453 and as is the case with other services, Guix allows the system
15454 administrator to specify these parameters via a uniform Scheme interface.
15455
15456 For example, to specify that mail is located at @code{maildir~/.mail},
15457 one would instantiate the Dovecot service like this:
15458
15459 @example
15460 (dovecot-service #:config
15461 (dovecot-configuration
15462 (mail-location "maildir:~/.mail")))
15463 @end example
15464
15465 The available configuration parameters follow. Each parameter
15466 definition is preceded by its type; for example, @samp{string-list foo}
15467 indicates that the @code{foo} parameter should be specified as a list of
15468 strings. There is also a way to specify the configuration as a string,
15469 if you have an old @code{dovecot.conf} file that you want to port over
15470 from some other system; see the end for more details.
15471
15472 @c The following documentation was initially generated by
15473 @c (generate-documentation) in (gnu services mail). Manually maintained
15474 @c documentation is better, so we shouldn't hesitate to edit below as
15475 @c needed. However if the change you want to make to this documentation
15476 @c can be done in an automated way, it's probably easier to change
15477 @c (generate-documentation) than to make it below and have to deal with
15478 @c the churn as dovecot updates.
15479
15480 Available @code{dovecot-configuration} fields are:
15481
15482 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} package dovecot
15483 The dovecot package.
15484 @end deftypevr
15485
15486 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} comma-separated-string-list listen
15487 A list of IPs or hosts where to listen for connections. @samp{*}
15488 listens on all IPv4 interfaces, @samp{::} listens on all IPv6
15489 interfaces. If you want to specify non-default ports or anything more
15490 complex, customize the address and port fields of the
15491 @samp{inet-listener} of the specific services you are interested in.
15492 @end deftypevr
15493
15494 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} protocol-configuration-list protocols
15495 List of protocols we want to serve. Available protocols include
15496 @samp{imap}, @samp{pop3}, and @samp{lmtp}.
15497
15498 Available @code{protocol-configuration} fields are:
15499
15500 @deftypevr {@code{protocol-configuration} parameter} string name
15501 The name of the protocol.
15502 @end deftypevr
15503
15504 @deftypevr {@code{protocol-configuration} parameter} string auth-socket-path
15505 UNIX socket path to the master authentication server to find users.
15506 This is used by imap (for shared users) and lda.
15507 It defaults to @samp{"/var/run/dovecot/auth-userdb"}.
15508 @end deftypevr
15509
15510 @deftypevr {@code{protocol-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list mail-plugins
15511 Space separated list of plugins to load.
15512 @end deftypevr
15513
15514 @deftypevr {@code{protocol-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer mail-max-userip-connections
15515 Maximum number of IMAP connections allowed for a user from each IP
15516 address. NOTE: The username is compared case-sensitively.
15517 Defaults to @samp{10}.
15518 @end deftypevr
15519
15520 @end deftypevr
15521
15522 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} service-configuration-list services
15523 List of services to enable. Available services include @samp{imap},
15524 @samp{imap-login}, @samp{pop3}, @samp{pop3-login}, @samp{auth}, and
15525 @samp{lmtp}.
15526
15527 Available @code{service-configuration} fields are:
15528
15529 @deftypevr {@code{service-configuration} parameter} string kind
15530 The service kind. Valid values include @code{director},
15531 @code{imap-login}, @code{pop3-login}, @code{lmtp}, @code{imap},
15532 @code{pop3}, @code{auth}, @code{auth-worker}, @code{dict},
15533 @code{tcpwrap}, @code{quota-warning}, or anything else.
15534 @end deftypevr
15535
15536 @deftypevr {@code{service-configuration} parameter} listener-configuration-list listeners
15537 Listeners for the service. A listener is either a
15538 @code{unix-listener-configuration}, a @code{fifo-listener-configuration}, or
15539 an @code{inet-listener-configuration}.
15540 Defaults to @samp{()}.
15541
15542 Available @code{unix-listener-configuration} fields are:
15543
15544 @deftypevr {@code{unix-listener-configuration} parameter} string path
15545 Path to the file, relative to @code{base-dir} field. This is also used as
15546 the section name.
15547 @end deftypevr
15548
15549 @deftypevr {@code{unix-listener-configuration} parameter} string mode
15550 The access mode for the socket.
15551 Defaults to @samp{"0600"}.
15552 @end deftypevr
15553
15554 @deftypevr {@code{unix-listener-configuration} parameter} string user
15555 The user to own the socket.
15556 Defaults to @samp{""}.
15557 @end deftypevr
15558
15559 @deftypevr {@code{unix-listener-configuration} parameter} string group
15560 The group to own the socket.
15561 Defaults to @samp{""}.
15562 @end deftypevr
15563
15564
15565 Available @code{fifo-listener-configuration} fields are:
15566
15567 @deftypevr {@code{fifo-listener-configuration} parameter} string path
15568 Path to the file, relative to @code{base-dir} field. This is also used as
15569 the section name.
15570 @end deftypevr
15571
15572 @deftypevr {@code{fifo-listener-configuration} parameter} string mode
15573 The access mode for the socket.
15574 Defaults to @samp{"0600"}.
15575 @end deftypevr
15576
15577 @deftypevr {@code{fifo-listener-configuration} parameter} string user
15578 The user to own the socket.
15579 Defaults to @samp{""}.
15580 @end deftypevr
15581
15582 @deftypevr {@code{fifo-listener-configuration} parameter} string group
15583 The group to own the socket.
15584 Defaults to @samp{""}.
15585 @end deftypevr
15586
15587
15588 Available @code{inet-listener-configuration} fields are:
15589
15590 @deftypevr {@code{inet-listener-configuration} parameter} string protocol
15591 The protocol to listen for.
15592 @end deftypevr
15593
15594 @deftypevr {@code{inet-listener-configuration} parameter} string address
15595 The address on which to listen, or empty for all addresses.
15596 Defaults to @samp{""}.
15597 @end deftypevr
15598
15599 @deftypevr {@code{inet-listener-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer port
15600 The port on which to listen.
15601 @end deftypevr
15602
15603 @deftypevr {@code{inet-listener-configuration} parameter} boolean ssl?
15604 Whether to use SSL for this service; @samp{yes}, @samp{no}, or
15605 @samp{required}.
15606 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
15607 @end deftypevr
15608
15609 @end deftypevr
15610
15611 @deftypevr {@code{service-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer client-limit
15612 Maximum number of simultaneous client connections per process. Once
15613 this number of connections is received, the next incoming connection
15614 will prompt Dovecot to spawn another process. If set to 0,
15615 @code{default-client-limit} is used instead.
15616
15617 Defaults to @samp{0}.
15618
15619 @end deftypevr
15620
15621 @deftypevr {@code{service-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer service-count
15622 Number of connections to handle before starting a new process.
15623 Typically the only useful values are 0 (unlimited) or 1. 1 is more
15624 secure, but 0 is faster. <doc/wiki/LoginProcess.txt>.
15625 Defaults to @samp{1}.
15626
15627 @end deftypevr
15628
15629 @deftypevr {@code{service-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer process-limit
15630 Maximum number of processes that can exist for this service. If set to
15631 0, @code{default-process-limit} is used instead.
15632
15633 Defaults to @samp{0}.
15634
15635 @end deftypevr
15636
15637 @deftypevr {@code{service-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer process-min-avail
15638 Number of processes to always keep waiting for more connections.
15639 Defaults to @samp{0}.
15640 @end deftypevr
15641
15642 @deftypevr {@code{service-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer vsz-limit
15643 If you set @samp{service-count 0}, you probably need to grow
15644 this.
15645 Defaults to @samp{256000000}.
15646 @end deftypevr
15647
15648 @end deftypevr
15649
15650 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} dict-configuration dict
15651 Dict configuration, as created by the @code{dict-configuration}
15652 constructor.
15653
15654 Available @code{dict-configuration} fields are:
15655
15656 @deftypevr {@code{dict-configuration} parameter} free-form-fields entries
15657 A list of key-value pairs that this dict should hold.
15658 Defaults to @samp{()}.
15659 @end deftypevr
15660
15661 @end deftypevr
15662
15663 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} passdb-configuration-list passdbs
15664 A list of passdb configurations, each one created by the
15665 @code{passdb-configuration} constructor.
15666
15667 Available @code{passdb-configuration} fields are:
15668
15669 @deftypevr {@code{passdb-configuration} parameter} string driver
15670 The driver that the passdb should use. Valid values include
15671 @samp{pam}, @samp{passwd}, @samp{shadow}, @samp{bsdauth}, and
15672 @samp{static}.
15673 Defaults to @samp{"pam"}.
15674 @end deftypevr
15675
15676 @deftypevr {@code{passdb-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list args
15677 Space separated list of arguments to the passdb driver.
15678 Defaults to @samp{""}.
15679 @end deftypevr
15680
15681 @end deftypevr
15682
15683 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} userdb-configuration-list userdbs
15684 List of userdb configurations, each one created by the
15685 @code{userdb-configuration} constructor.
15686
15687 Available @code{userdb-configuration} fields are:
15688
15689 @deftypevr {@code{userdb-configuration} parameter} string driver
15690 The driver that the userdb should use. Valid values include
15691 @samp{passwd} and @samp{static}.
15692 Defaults to @samp{"passwd"}.
15693 @end deftypevr
15694
15695 @deftypevr {@code{userdb-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list args
15696 Space separated list of arguments to the userdb driver.
15697 Defaults to @samp{""}.
15698 @end deftypevr
15699
15700 @deftypevr {@code{userdb-configuration} parameter} free-form-args override-fields
15701 Override fields from passwd.
15702 Defaults to @samp{()}.
15703 @end deftypevr
15704
15705 @end deftypevr
15706
15707 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} plugin-configuration plugin-configuration
15708 Plug-in configuration, created by the @code{plugin-configuration}
15709 constructor.
15710 @end deftypevr
15711
15712 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} list-of-namespace-configuration namespaces
15713 List of namespaces. Each item in the list is created by the
15714 @code{namespace-configuration} constructor.
15715
15716 Available @code{namespace-configuration} fields are:
15717
15718 @deftypevr {@code{namespace-configuration} parameter} string name
15719 Name for this namespace.
15720 @end deftypevr
15721
15722 @deftypevr {@code{namespace-configuration} parameter} string type
15723 Namespace type: @samp{private}, @samp{shared} or @samp{public}.
15724 Defaults to @samp{"private"}.
15725 @end deftypevr
15726
15727 @deftypevr {@code{namespace-configuration} parameter} string separator
15728 Hierarchy separator to use. You should use the same separator for
15729 all namespaces or some clients get confused. @samp{/} is usually a good
15730 one. The default however depends on the underlying mail storage
15731 format.
15732 Defaults to @samp{""}.
15733 @end deftypevr
15734
15735 @deftypevr {@code{namespace-configuration} parameter} string prefix
15736 Prefix required to access this namespace. This needs to be
15737 different for all namespaces. For example @samp{Public/}.
15738 Defaults to @samp{""}.
15739 @end deftypevr
15740
15741 @deftypevr {@code{namespace-configuration} parameter} string location
15742 Physical location of the mailbox. This is in the same format as
15743 mail_location, which is also the default for it.
15744 Defaults to @samp{""}.
15745 @end deftypevr
15746
15747 @deftypevr {@code{namespace-configuration} parameter} boolean inbox?
15748 There can be only one INBOX, and this setting defines which
15749 namespace has it.
15750 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
15751 @end deftypevr
15752
15753 @deftypevr {@code{namespace-configuration} parameter} boolean hidden?
15754 If namespace is hidden, it's not advertised to clients via NAMESPACE
15755 extension. You'll most likely also want to set @samp{list? #f}. This is mostly
15756 useful when converting from another server with different namespaces
15757 which you want to deprecate but still keep working. For example you can
15758 create hidden namespaces with prefixes @samp{~/mail/}, @samp{~%u/mail/}
15759 and @samp{mail/}.
15760 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
15761 @end deftypevr
15762
15763 @deftypevr {@code{namespace-configuration} parameter} boolean list?
15764 Show the mailboxes under this namespace with the LIST command. This
15765 makes the namespace visible for clients that do not support the NAMESPACE
15766 extension. The special @code{children} value lists child mailboxes, but
15767 hides the namespace prefix.
15768 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
15769 @end deftypevr
15770
15771 @deftypevr {@code{namespace-configuration} parameter} boolean subscriptions?
15772 Namespace handles its own subscriptions. If set to @code{#f}, the
15773 parent namespace handles them. The empty prefix should always have this
15774 as @code{#t}).
15775 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
15776 @end deftypevr
15777
15778 @deftypevr {@code{namespace-configuration} parameter} mailbox-configuration-list mailboxes
15779 List of predefined mailboxes in this namespace.
15780 Defaults to @samp{()}.
15781
15782 Available @code{mailbox-configuration} fields are:
15783
15784 @deftypevr {@code{mailbox-configuration} parameter} string name
15785 Name for this mailbox.
15786 @end deftypevr
15787
15788 @deftypevr {@code{mailbox-configuration} parameter} string auto
15789 @samp{create} will automatically create this mailbox.
15790 @samp{subscribe} will both create and subscribe to the mailbox.
15791 Defaults to @samp{"no"}.
15792 @end deftypevr
15793
15794 @deftypevr {@code{mailbox-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list special-use
15795 List of IMAP @code{SPECIAL-USE} attributes as specified by RFC 6154.
15796 Valid values are @code{\All}, @code{\Archive}, @code{\Drafts},
15797 @code{\Flagged}, @code{\Junk}, @code{\Sent}, and @code{\Trash}.
15798 Defaults to @samp{()}.
15799 @end deftypevr
15800
15801 @end deftypevr
15802
15803 @end deftypevr
15804
15805 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} file-name base-dir
15806 Base directory where to store runtime data.
15807 Defaults to @samp{"/var/run/dovecot/"}.
15808 @end deftypevr
15809
15810 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string login-greeting
15811 Greeting message for clients.
15812 Defaults to @samp{"Dovecot ready."}.
15813 @end deftypevr
15814
15815 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list login-trusted-networks
15816 List of trusted network ranges. Connections from these IPs are
15817 allowed to override their IP addresses and ports (for logging and for
15818 authentication checks). @samp{disable-plaintext-auth} is also ignored
15819 for these networks. Typically you would specify your IMAP proxy servers
15820 here.
15821 Defaults to @samp{()}.
15822 @end deftypevr
15823
15824 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list login-access-sockets
15825 List of login access check sockets (e.g.@: tcpwrap).
15826 Defaults to @samp{()}.
15827 @end deftypevr
15828
15829 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean verbose-proctitle?
15830 Show more verbose process titles (in ps). Currently shows user name
15831 and IP address. Useful for seeing who is actually using the IMAP
15832 processes (e.g.@: shared mailboxes or if the same uid is used for multiple
15833 accounts).
15834 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
15835 @end deftypevr
15836
15837 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean shutdown-clients?
15838 Should all processes be killed when Dovecot master process shuts down.
15839 Setting this to @code{#f} means that Dovecot can be upgraded without
15840 forcing existing client connections to close (although that could also
15841 be a problem if the upgrade is e.g.@: due to a security fix).
15842 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
15843 @end deftypevr
15844
15845 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer doveadm-worker-count
15846 If non-zero, run mail commands via this many connections to doveadm
15847 server, instead of running them directly in the same process.
15848 Defaults to @samp{0}.
15849 @end deftypevr
15850
15851 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string doveadm-socket-path
15852 UNIX socket or host:port used for connecting to doveadm server.
15853 Defaults to @samp{"doveadm-server"}.
15854 @end deftypevr
15855
15856 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list import-environment
15857 List of environment variables that are preserved on Dovecot startup
15858 and passed down to all of its child processes. You can also give
15859 key=value pairs to always set specific settings.
15860 @end deftypevr
15861
15862 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean disable-plaintext-auth?
15863 Disable LOGIN command and all other plaintext authentications unless
15864 SSL/TLS is used (LOGINDISABLED capability). Note that if the remote IP
15865 matches the local IP (i.e.@: you're connecting from the same computer),
15866 the connection is considered secure and plaintext authentication is
15867 allowed. See also ssl=required setting.
15868 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
15869 @end deftypevr
15870
15871 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer auth-cache-size
15872 Authentication cache size (e.g.@: @samp{#e10e6}). 0 means it's disabled.
15873 Note that bsdauth, PAM and vpopmail require @samp{cache-key} to be set
15874 for caching to be used.
15875 Defaults to @samp{0}.
15876 @end deftypevr
15877
15878 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string auth-cache-ttl
15879 Time to live for cached data. After TTL expires the cached record
15880 is no longer used, *except* if the main database lookup returns internal
15881 failure. We also try to handle password changes automatically: If
15882 user's previous authentication was successful, but this one wasn't, the
15883 cache isn't used. For now this works only with plaintext
15884 authentication.
15885 Defaults to @samp{"1 hour"}.
15886 @end deftypevr
15887
15888 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string auth-cache-negative-ttl
15889 TTL for negative hits (user not found, password mismatch).
15890 0 disables caching them completely.
15891 Defaults to @samp{"1 hour"}.
15892 @end deftypevr
15893
15894 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list auth-realms
15895 List of realms for SASL authentication mechanisms that need them.
15896 You can leave it empty if you don't want to support multiple realms.
15897 Many clients simply use the first one listed here, so keep the default
15898 realm first.
15899 Defaults to @samp{()}.
15900 @end deftypevr
15901
15902 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string auth-default-realm
15903 Default realm/domain to use if none was specified. This is used for
15904 both SASL realms and appending @@domain to username in plaintext
15905 logins.
15906 Defaults to @samp{""}.
15907 @end deftypevr
15908
15909 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string auth-username-chars
15910 List of allowed characters in username. If the user-given username
15911 contains a character not listed in here, the login automatically fails.
15912 This is just an extra check to make sure user can't exploit any
15913 potential quote escaping vulnerabilities with SQL/LDAP databases. If
15914 you want to allow all characters, set this value to empty.
15915 Defaults to @samp{"abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ01234567890.-_@@"}.
15916 @end deftypevr
15917
15918 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string auth-username-translation
15919 Username character translations before it's looked up from
15920 databases. The value contains series of from -> to characters. For
15921 example @samp{#@@/@@} means that @samp{#} and @samp{/} characters are
15922 translated to @samp{@@}.
15923 Defaults to @samp{""}.
15924 @end deftypevr
15925
15926 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string auth-username-format
15927 Username formatting before it's looked up from databases. You can
15928 use the standard variables here, e.g.@: %Lu would lowercase the username,
15929 %n would drop away the domain if it was given, or @samp{%n-AT-%d} would
15930 change the @samp{@@} into @samp{-AT-}. This translation is done after
15931 @samp{auth-username-translation} changes.
15932 Defaults to @samp{"%Lu"}.
15933 @end deftypevr
15934
15935 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string auth-master-user-separator
15936 If you want to allow master users to log in by specifying the master
15937 username within the normal username string (i.e.@: not using SASL
15938 mechanism's support for it), you can specify the separator character
15939 here. The format is then <username><separator><master username>.
15940 UW-IMAP uses @samp{*} as the separator, so that could be a good
15941 choice.
15942 Defaults to @samp{""}.
15943 @end deftypevr
15944
15945 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string auth-anonymous-username
15946 Username to use for users logging in with ANONYMOUS SASL
15947 mechanism.
15948 Defaults to @samp{"anonymous"}.
15949 @end deftypevr
15950
15951 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer auth-worker-max-count
15952 Maximum number of dovecot-auth worker processes. They're used to
15953 execute blocking passdb and userdb queries (e.g.@: MySQL and PAM).
15954 They're automatically created and destroyed as needed.
15955 Defaults to @samp{30}.
15956 @end deftypevr
15957
15958 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string auth-gssapi-hostname
15959 Host name to use in GSSAPI principal names. The default is to use
15960 the name returned by gethostname(). Use @samp{$ALL} (with quotes) to
15961 allow all keytab entries.
15962 Defaults to @samp{""}.
15963 @end deftypevr
15964
15965 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string auth-krb5-keytab
15966 Kerberos keytab to use for the GSSAPI mechanism. Will use the
15967 system default (usually @file{/etc/krb5.keytab}) if not specified. You may
15968 need to change the auth service to run as root to be able to read this
15969 file.
15970 Defaults to @samp{""}.
15971 @end deftypevr
15972
15973 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean auth-use-winbind?
15974 Do NTLM and GSS-SPNEGO authentication using Samba's winbind daemon
15975 and @samp{ntlm-auth} helper.
15976 <doc/wiki/Authentication/Mechanisms/Winbind.txt>.
15977 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
15978 @end deftypevr
15979
15980 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} file-name auth-winbind-helper-path
15981 Path for Samba's @samp{ntlm-auth} helper binary.
15982 Defaults to @samp{"/usr/bin/ntlm_auth"}.
15983 @end deftypevr
15984
15985 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string auth-failure-delay
15986 Time to delay before replying to failed authentications.
15987 Defaults to @samp{"2 secs"}.
15988 @end deftypevr
15989
15990 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean auth-ssl-require-client-cert?
15991 Require a valid SSL client certificate or the authentication
15992 fails.
15993 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
15994 @end deftypevr
15995
15996 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean auth-ssl-username-from-cert?
15997 Take the username from client's SSL certificate, using
15998 @code{X509_NAME_get_text_by_NID()} which returns the subject's DN's
15999 CommonName.
16000 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
16001 @end deftypevr
16002
16003 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list auth-mechanisms
16004 List of wanted authentication mechanisms. Supported mechanisms are:
16005 @samp{plain}, @samp{login}, @samp{digest-md5}, @samp{cram-md5},
16006 @samp{ntlm}, @samp{rpa}, @samp{apop}, @samp{anonymous}, @samp{gssapi},
16007 @samp{otp}, @samp{skey}, and @samp{gss-spnego}. NOTE: See also
16008 @samp{disable-plaintext-auth} setting.
16009 @end deftypevr
16010
16011 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list director-servers
16012 List of IPs or hostnames to all director servers, including ourself.
16013 Ports can be specified as ip:port. The default port is the same as what
16014 director service's @samp{inet-listener} is using.
16015 Defaults to @samp{()}.
16016 @end deftypevr
16017
16018 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list director-mail-servers
16019 List of IPs or hostnames to all backend mail servers. Ranges are
16020 allowed too, like 10.0.0.10-10.0.0.30.
16021 Defaults to @samp{()}.
16022 @end deftypevr
16023
16024 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string director-user-expire
16025 How long to redirect users to a specific server after it no longer
16026 has any connections.
16027 Defaults to @samp{"15 min"}.
16028 @end deftypevr
16029
16030 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string director-username-hash
16031 How the username is translated before being hashed. Useful values
16032 include %Ln if user can log in with or without @@domain, %Ld if mailboxes
16033 are shared within domain.
16034 Defaults to @samp{"%Lu"}.
16035 @end deftypevr
16036
16037 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string log-path
16038 Log file to use for error messages. @samp{syslog} logs to syslog,
16039 @samp{/dev/stderr} logs to stderr.
16040 Defaults to @samp{"syslog"}.
16041 @end deftypevr
16042
16043 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string info-log-path
16044 Log file to use for informational messages. Defaults to
16045 @samp{log-path}.
16046 Defaults to @samp{""}.
16047 @end deftypevr
16048
16049 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string debug-log-path
16050 Log file to use for debug messages. Defaults to
16051 @samp{info-log-path}.
16052 Defaults to @samp{""}.
16053 @end deftypevr
16054
16055 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string syslog-facility
16056 Syslog facility to use if you're logging to syslog. Usually if you
16057 don't want to use @samp{mail}, you'll use local0..local7. Also other
16058 standard facilities are supported.
16059 Defaults to @samp{"mail"}.
16060 @end deftypevr
16061
16062 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean auth-verbose?
16063 Log unsuccessful authentication attempts and the reasons why they
16064 failed.
16065 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
16066 @end deftypevr
16067
16068 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string auth-verbose-passwords
16069 In case of password mismatches, log the attempted password. Valid
16070 values are no, plain and sha1. sha1 can be useful for detecting brute
16071 force password attempts vs. user simply trying the same password over
16072 and over again. You can also truncate the value to n chars by appending
16073 ":n" (e.g.@: sha1:6).
16074 Defaults to @samp{"no"}.
16075 @end deftypevr
16076
16077 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean auth-debug?
16078 Even more verbose logging for debugging purposes. Shows for example
16079 SQL queries.
16080 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
16081 @end deftypevr
16082
16083 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean auth-debug-passwords?
16084 In case of password mismatches, log the passwords and used scheme so
16085 the problem can be debugged. Enabling this also enables
16086 @samp{auth-debug}.
16087 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
16088 @end deftypevr
16089
16090 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean mail-debug?
16091 Enable mail process debugging. This can help you figure out why
16092 Dovecot isn't finding your mails.
16093 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
16094 @end deftypevr
16095
16096 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean verbose-ssl?
16097 Show protocol level SSL errors.
16098 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
16099 @end deftypevr
16100
16101 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string log-timestamp
16102 Prefix for each line written to log file. % codes are in
16103 strftime(3) format.
16104 Defaults to @samp{"\"%b %d %H:%M:%S \""}.
16105 @end deftypevr
16106
16107 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list login-log-format-elements
16108 List of elements we want to log. The elements which have a
16109 non-empty variable value are joined together to form a comma-separated
16110 string.
16111 @end deftypevr
16112
16113 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string login-log-format
16114 Login log format. %s contains @samp{login-log-format-elements}
16115 string, %$ contains the data we want to log.
16116 Defaults to @samp{"%$: %s"}.
16117 @end deftypevr
16118
16119 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mail-log-prefix
16120 Log prefix for mail processes. See doc/wiki/Variables.txt for list
16121 of possible variables you can use.
16122 Defaults to @samp{"\"%s(%u)<%@{pid@}><%@{session@}>: \""}.
16123 @end deftypevr
16124
16125 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string deliver-log-format
16126 Format to use for logging mail deliveries. You can use variables:
16127 @table @code
16128 @item %$
16129 Delivery status message (e.g.@: @samp{saved to INBOX})
16130 @item %m
16131 Message-ID
16132 @item %s
16133 Subject
16134 @item %f
16135 From address
16136 @item %p
16137 Physical size
16138 @item %w
16139 Virtual size.
16140 @end table
16141 Defaults to @samp{"msgid=%m: %$"}.
16142 @end deftypevr
16143
16144 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mail-location
16145 Location for users' mailboxes. The default is empty, which means
16146 that Dovecot tries to find the mailboxes automatically. This won't work
16147 if the user doesn't yet have any mail, so you should explicitly tell
16148 Dovecot the full location.
16149
16150 If you're using mbox, giving a path to the INBOX
16151 file (e.g.@: /var/mail/%u) isn't enough. You'll also need to tell Dovecot
16152 where the other mailboxes are kept. This is called the "root mail
16153 directory", and it must be the first path given in the
16154 @samp{mail-location} setting.
16155
16156 There are a few special variables you can use, eg.:
16157
16158 @table @samp
16159 @item %u
16160 username
16161 @item %n
16162 user part in user@@domain, same as %u if there's no domain
16163 @item %d
16164 domain part in user@@domain, empty if there's no domain
16165 @item %h
16166 home director
16167 @end table
16168
16169 See doc/wiki/Variables.txt for full list. Some examples:
16170 @table @samp
16171 @item maildir:~/Maildir
16172 @item mbox:~/mail:INBOX=/var/mail/%u
16173 @item mbox:/var/mail/%d/%1n/%n:INDEX=/var/indexes/%d/%1n/%
16174 @end table
16175 Defaults to @samp{""}.
16176 @end deftypevr
16177
16178 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mail-uid
16179 System user and group used to access mails. If you use multiple,
16180 userdb can override these by returning uid or gid fields. You can use
16181 either numbers or names. <doc/wiki/UserIds.txt>.
16182 Defaults to @samp{""}.
16183 @end deftypevr
16184
16185 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mail-gid
16186
16187 Defaults to @samp{""}.
16188 @end deftypevr
16189
16190 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mail-privileged-group
16191 Group to enable temporarily for privileged operations. Currently
16192 this is used only with INBOX when either its initial creation or
16193 dotlocking fails. Typically this is set to "mail" to give access to
16194 /var/mail.
16195 Defaults to @samp{""}.
16196 @end deftypevr
16197
16198 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mail-access-groups
16199 Grant access to these supplementary groups for mail processes.
16200 Typically these are used to set up access to shared mailboxes. Note
16201 that it may be dangerous to set these if users can create
16202 symlinks (e.g.@: if "mail" group is set here, ln -s /var/mail ~/mail/var
16203 could allow a user to delete others' mailboxes, or ln -s
16204 /secret/shared/box ~/mail/mybox would allow reading it).
16205 Defaults to @samp{""}.
16206 @end deftypevr
16207
16208 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean mail-full-filesystem-access?
16209 Allow full file system access to clients. There's no access checks
16210 other than what the operating system does for the active UID/GID. It
16211 works with both maildir and mboxes, allowing you to prefix mailboxes
16212 names with e.g.@: /path/ or ~user/.
16213 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
16214 @end deftypevr
16215
16216 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean mmap-disable?
16217 Don't use mmap() at all. This is required if you store indexes to
16218 shared file systems (NFS or clustered file system).
16219 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
16220 @end deftypevr
16221
16222 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean dotlock-use-excl?
16223 Rely on @samp{O_EXCL} to work when creating dotlock files. NFS
16224 supports @samp{O_EXCL} since version 3, so this should be safe to use
16225 nowadays by default.
16226 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
16227 @end deftypevr
16228
16229 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mail-fsync
16230 When to use fsync() or fdatasync() calls:
16231 @table @code
16232 @item optimized
16233 Whenever necessary to avoid losing important data
16234 @item always
16235 Useful with e.g.@: NFS when write()s are delayed
16236 @item never
16237 Never use it (best performance, but crashes can lose data).
16238 @end table
16239 Defaults to @samp{"optimized"}.
16240 @end deftypevr
16241
16242 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean mail-nfs-storage?
16243 Mail storage exists in NFS. Set this to yes to make Dovecot flush
16244 NFS caches whenever needed. If you're using only a single mail server
16245 this isn't needed.
16246 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
16247 @end deftypevr
16248
16249 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean mail-nfs-index?
16250 Mail index files also exist in NFS. Setting this to yes requires
16251 @samp{mmap-disable? #t} and @samp{fsync-disable? #f}.
16252 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
16253 @end deftypevr
16254
16255 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string lock-method
16256 Locking method for index files. Alternatives are fcntl, flock and
16257 dotlock. Dotlocking uses some tricks which may create more disk I/O
16258 than other locking methods. NFS users: flock doesn't work, remember to
16259 change @samp{mmap-disable}.
16260 Defaults to @samp{"fcntl"}.
16261 @end deftypevr
16262
16263 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} file-name mail-temp-dir
16264 Directory in which LDA/LMTP temporarily stores incoming mails >128
16265 kB.
16266 Defaults to @samp{"/tmp"}.
16267 @end deftypevr
16268
16269 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer first-valid-uid
16270 Valid UID range for users. This is mostly to make sure that users can't
16271 log in as daemons or other system users. Note that denying root logins is
16272 hardcoded to dovecot binary and can't be done even if @samp{first-valid-uid}
16273 is set to 0.
16274 Defaults to @samp{500}.
16275 @end deftypevr
16276
16277 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer last-valid-uid
16278
16279 Defaults to @samp{0}.
16280 @end deftypevr
16281
16282 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer first-valid-gid
16283 Valid GID range for users. Users having non-valid GID as primary group ID
16284 aren't allowed to log in. If user belongs to supplementary groups with
16285 non-valid GIDs, those groups are not set.
16286 Defaults to @samp{1}.
16287 @end deftypevr
16288
16289 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer last-valid-gid
16290
16291 Defaults to @samp{0}.
16292 @end deftypevr
16293
16294 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer mail-max-keyword-length
16295 Maximum allowed length for mail keyword name. It's only forced when
16296 trying to create new keywords.
16297 Defaults to @samp{50}.
16298 @end deftypevr
16299
16300 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} colon-separated-file-name-list valid-chroot-dirs
16301 List of directories under which chrooting is allowed for mail
16302 processes (i.e.@: /var/mail will allow chrooting to /var/mail/foo/bar
16303 too). This setting doesn't affect @samp{login-chroot}
16304 @samp{mail-chroot} or auth chroot settings. If this setting is empty,
16305 "/./" in home dirs are ignored. WARNING: Never add directories here
16306 which local users can modify, that may lead to root exploit. Usually
16307 this should be done only if you don't allow shell access for users.
16308 <doc/wiki/Chrooting.txt>.
16309 Defaults to @samp{()}.
16310 @end deftypevr
16311
16312 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mail-chroot
16313 Default chroot directory for mail processes. This can be overridden
16314 for specific users in user database by giving /./ in user's home
16315 directory (e.g.@: /home/./user chroots into /home). Note that usually
16316 there is no real need to do chrooting, Dovecot doesn't allow users to
16317 access files outside their mail directory anyway. If your home
16318 directories are prefixed with the chroot directory, append "/."@: to
16319 @samp{mail-chroot}. <doc/wiki/Chrooting.txt>.
16320 Defaults to @samp{""}.
16321 @end deftypevr
16322
16323 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} file-name auth-socket-path
16324 UNIX socket path to master authentication server to find users.
16325 This is used by imap (for shared users) and lda.
16326 Defaults to @samp{"/var/run/dovecot/auth-userdb"}.
16327 @end deftypevr
16328
16329 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} file-name mail-plugin-dir
16330 Directory where to look up mail plugins.
16331 Defaults to @samp{"/usr/lib/dovecot"}.
16332 @end deftypevr
16333
16334 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list mail-plugins
16335 List of plugins to load for all services. Plugins specific to IMAP,
16336 LDA, etc.@: are added to this list in their own .conf files.
16337 Defaults to @samp{()}.
16338 @end deftypevr
16339
16340 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer mail-cache-min-mail-count
16341 The minimum number of mails in a mailbox before updates are done to
16342 cache file. This allows optimizing Dovecot's behavior to do less disk
16343 writes at the cost of more disk reads.
16344 Defaults to @samp{0}.
16345 @end deftypevr
16346
16347 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mailbox-idle-check-interval
16348 When IDLE command is running, mailbox is checked once in a while to
16349 see if there are any new mails or other changes. This setting defines
16350 the minimum time to wait between those checks. Dovecot can also use
16351 dnotify, inotify and kqueue to find out immediately when changes
16352 occur.
16353 Defaults to @samp{"30 secs"}.
16354 @end deftypevr
16355
16356 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean mail-save-crlf?
16357 Save mails with CR+LF instead of plain LF. This makes sending those
16358 mails take less CPU, especially with sendfile() syscall with Linux and
16359 FreeBSD. But it also creates a bit more disk I/O which may just make it
16360 slower. Also note that if other software reads the mboxes/maildirs,
16361 they may handle the extra CRs wrong and cause problems.
16362 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
16363 @end deftypevr
16364
16365 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean maildir-stat-dirs?
16366 By default LIST command returns all entries in maildir beginning
16367 with a dot. Enabling this option makes Dovecot return only entries
16368 which are directories. This is done by stat()ing each entry, so it
16369 causes more disk I/O.
16370 (For systems setting struct @samp{dirent->d_type} this check is free
16371 and it's done always regardless of this setting).
16372 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
16373 @end deftypevr
16374
16375 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean maildir-copy-with-hardlinks?
16376 When copying a message, do it with hard links whenever possible.
16377 This makes the performance much better, and it's unlikely to have any
16378 side effects.
16379 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
16380 @end deftypevr
16381
16382 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean maildir-very-dirty-syncs?
16383 Assume Dovecot is the only MUA accessing Maildir: Scan cur/
16384 directory only when its mtime changes unexpectedly or when we can't find
16385 the mail otherwise.
16386 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
16387 @end deftypevr
16388
16389 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list mbox-read-locks
16390 Which locking methods to use for locking mbox. There are four
16391 available:
16392
16393 @table @code
16394 @item dotlock
16395 Create <mailbox>.lock file. This is the oldest and most NFS-safe
16396 solution. If you want to use /var/mail/ like directory, the users will
16397 need write access to that directory.
16398 @item dotlock-try
16399 Same as dotlock, but if it fails because of permissions or because there
16400 isn't enough disk space, just skip it.
16401 @item fcntl
16402 Use this if possible. Works with NFS too if lockd is used.
16403 @item flock
16404 May not exist in all systems. Doesn't work with NFS.
16405 @item lockf
16406 May not exist in all systems. Doesn't work with NFS.
16407 @end table
16408
16409 You can use multiple locking methods; if you do the order they're declared
16410 in is important to avoid deadlocks if other MTAs/MUAs are using multiple
16411 locking methods as well. Some operating systems don't allow using some of
16412 them simultaneously.
16413 @end deftypevr
16414
16415 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list mbox-write-locks
16416
16417 @end deftypevr
16418
16419 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mbox-lock-timeout
16420 Maximum time to wait for lock (all of them) before aborting.
16421 Defaults to @samp{"5 mins"}.
16422 @end deftypevr
16423
16424 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mbox-dotlock-change-timeout
16425 If dotlock exists but the mailbox isn't modified in any way,
16426 override the lock file after this much time.
16427 Defaults to @samp{"2 mins"}.
16428 @end deftypevr
16429
16430 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean mbox-dirty-syncs?
16431 When mbox changes unexpectedly we have to fully read it to find out
16432 what changed. If the mbox is large this can take a long time. Since
16433 the change is usually just a newly appended mail, it'd be faster to
16434 simply read the new mails. If this setting is enabled, Dovecot does
16435 this but still safely fallbacks to re-reading the whole mbox file
16436 whenever something in mbox isn't how it's expected to be. The only real
16437 downside to this setting is that if some other MUA changes message
16438 flags, Dovecot doesn't notice it immediately. Note that a full sync is
16439 done with SELECT, EXAMINE, EXPUNGE and CHECK commands.
16440 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
16441 @end deftypevr
16442
16443 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean mbox-very-dirty-syncs?
16444 Like @samp{mbox-dirty-syncs}, but don't do full syncs even with SELECT,
16445 EXAMINE, EXPUNGE or CHECK commands. If this is set,
16446 @samp{mbox-dirty-syncs} is ignored.
16447 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
16448 @end deftypevr
16449
16450 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean mbox-lazy-writes?
16451 Delay writing mbox headers until doing a full write sync (EXPUNGE
16452 and CHECK commands and when closing the mailbox). This is especially
16453 useful for POP3 where clients often delete all mails. The downside is
16454 that our changes aren't immediately visible to other MUAs.
16455 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
16456 @end deftypevr
16457
16458 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer mbox-min-index-size
16459 If mbox size is smaller than this (e.g.@: 100k), don't write index
16460 files. If an index file already exists it's still read, just not
16461 updated.
16462 Defaults to @samp{0}.
16463 @end deftypevr
16464
16465 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer mdbox-rotate-size
16466 Maximum dbox file size until it's rotated.
16467 Defaults to @samp{10000000}.
16468 @end deftypevr
16469
16470 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mdbox-rotate-interval
16471 Maximum dbox file age until it's rotated. Typically in days. Day
16472 begins from midnight, so 1d = today, 2d = yesterday, etc. 0 = check
16473 disabled.
16474 Defaults to @samp{"1d"}.
16475 @end deftypevr
16476
16477 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean mdbox-preallocate-space?
16478 When creating new mdbox files, immediately preallocate their size to
16479 @samp{mdbox-rotate-size}. This setting currently works only in Linux
16480 with some file systems (ext4, xfs).
16481 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
16482 @end deftypevr
16483
16484 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mail-attachment-dir
16485 sdbox and mdbox support saving mail attachments to external files,
16486 which also allows single instance storage for them. Other backends
16487 don't support this for now.
16488
16489 WARNING: This feature hasn't been tested much yet. Use at your own risk.
16490
16491 Directory root where to store mail attachments. Disabled, if empty.
16492 Defaults to @samp{""}.
16493 @end deftypevr
16494
16495 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer mail-attachment-min-size
16496 Attachments smaller than this aren't saved externally. It's also
16497 possible to write a plugin to disable saving specific attachments
16498 externally.
16499 Defaults to @samp{128000}.
16500 @end deftypevr
16501
16502 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mail-attachment-fs
16503 File system backend to use for saving attachments:
16504 @table @code
16505 @item posix
16506 No SiS done by Dovecot (but this might help FS's own deduplication)
16507 @item sis posix
16508 SiS with immediate byte-by-byte comparison during saving
16509 @item sis-queue posix
16510 SiS with delayed comparison and deduplication.
16511 @end table
16512 Defaults to @samp{"sis posix"}.
16513 @end deftypevr
16514
16515 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string mail-attachment-hash
16516 Hash format to use in attachment filenames. You can add any text and
16517 variables: @code{%@{md4@}}, @code{%@{md5@}}, @code{%@{sha1@}},
16518 @code{%@{sha256@}}, @code{%@{sha512@}}, @code{%@{size@}}. Variables can be
16519 truncated, e.g.@: @code{%@{sha256:80@}} returns only first 80 bits.
16520 Defaults to @samp{"%@{sha1@}"}.
16521 @end deftypevr
16522
16523 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer default-process-limit
16524
16525 Defaults to @samp{100}.
16526 @end deftypevr
16527
16528 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer default-client-limit
16529
16530 Defaults to @samp{1000}.
16531 @end deftypevr
16532
16533 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer default-vsz-limit
16534 Default VSZ (virtual memory size) limit for service processes.
16535 This is mainly intended to catch and kill processes that leak memory
16536 before they eat up everything.
16537 Defaults to @samp{256000000}.
16538 @end deftypevr
16539
16540 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string default-login-user
16541 Login user is internally used by login processes. This is the most
16542 untrusted user in Dovecot system. It shouldn't have access to anything
16543 at all.
16544 Defaults to @samp{"dovenull"}.
16545 @end deftypevr
16546
16547 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string default-internal-user
16548 Internal user is used by unprivileged processes. It should be
16549 separate from login user, so that login processes can't disturb other
16550 processes.
16551 Defaults to @samp{"dovecot"}.
16552 @end deftypevr
16553
16554 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string ssl?
16555 SSL/TLS support: yes, no, required. <doc/wiki/SSL.txt>.
16556 Defaults to @samp{"required"}.
16557 @end deftypevr
16558
16559 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string ssl-cert
16560 PEM encoded X.509 SSL/TLS certificate (public key).
16561 Defaults to @samp{"</etc/dovecot/default.pem"}.
16562 @end deftypevr
16563
16564 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string ssl-key
16565 PEM encoded SSL/TLS private key. The key is opened before
16566 dropping root privileges, so keep the key file unreadable by anyone but
16567 root.
16568 Defaults to @samp{"</etc/dovecot/private/default.pem"}.
16569 @end deftypevr
16570
16571 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string ssl-key-password
16572 If key file is password protected, give the password here.
16573 Alternatively give it when starting dovecot with -p parameter. Since
16574 this file is often world-readable, you may want to place this setting
16575 instead to a different.
16576 Defaults to @samp{""}.
16577 @end deftypevr
16578
16579 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string ssl-ca
16580 PEM encoded trusted certificate authority. Set this only if you
16581 intend to use @samp{ssl-verify-client-cert? #t}. The file should
16582 contain the CA certificate(s) followed by the matching
16583 CRL(s). (e.g.@: @samp{ssl-ca </etc/ssl/certs/ca.pem}).
16584 Defaults to @samp{""}.
16585 @end deftypevr
16586
16587 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean ssl-require-crl?
16588 Require that CRL check succeeds for client certificates.
16589 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
16590 @end deftypevr
16591
16592 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean ssl-verify-client-cert?
16593 Request client to send a certificate. If you also want to require
16594 it, set @samp{auth-ssl-require-client-cert? #t} in auth section.
16595 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
16596 @end deftypevr
16597
16598 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string ssl-cert-username-field
16599 Which field from certificate to use for username. commonName and
16600 x500UniqueIdentifier are the usual choices. You'll also need to set
16601 @samp{auth-ssl-username-from-cert? #t}.
16602 Defaults to @samp{"commonName"}.
16603 @end deftypevr
16604
16605 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string ssl-min-protocol
16606 Minimum SSL protocol version to accept.
16607 Defaults to @samp{"TLSv1"}.
16608 @end deftypevr
16609
16610 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string ssl-cipher-list
16611 SSL ciphers to use.
16612 Defaults to @samp{"ALL:!kRSA:!SRP:!kDHd:!DSS:!aNULL:!eNULL:!EXPORT:!DES:!3DES:!MD5:!PSK:!RC4:!ADH:!LOW@@STRENGTH"}.
16613 @end deftypevr
16614
16615 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string ssl-crypto-device
16616 SSL crypto device to use, for valid values run "openssl engine".
16617 Defaults to @samp{""}.
16618 @end deftypevr
16619
16620 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string postmaster-address
16621 Address to use when sending rejection mails.
16622 %d expands to recipient domain.
16623 Defaults to @samp{"postmaster@@%d"}.
16624 @end deftypevr
16625
16626 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string hostname
16627 Hostname to use in various parts of sent mails (e.g.@: in Message-Id)
16628 and in LMTP replies. Default is the system's real hostname@@domain.
16629 Defaults to @samp{""}.
16630 @end deftypevr
16631
16632 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean quota-full-tempfail?
16633 If user is over quota, return with temporary failure instead of
16634 bouncing the mail.
16635 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
16636 @end deftypevr
16637
16638 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} file-name sendmail-path
16639 Binary to use for sending mails.
16640 Defaults to @samp{"/usr/sbin/sendmail"}.
16641 @end deftypevr
16642
16643 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string submission-host
16644 If non-empty, send mails via this SMTP host[:port] instead of
16645 sendmail.
16646 Defaults to @samp{""}.
16647 @end deftypevr
16648
16649 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string rejection-subject
16650 Subject: header to use for rejection mails. You can use the same
16651 variables as for @samp{rejection-reason} below.
16652 Defaults to @samp{"Rejected: %s"}.
16653 @end deftypevr
16654
16655 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string rejection-reason
16656 Human readable error message for rejection mails. You can use
16657 variables:
16658
16659 @table @code
16660 @item %n
16661 CRLF
16662 @item %r
16663 reason
16664 @item %s
16665 original subject
16666 @item %t
16667 recipient
16668 @end table
16669 Defaults to @samp{"Your message to <%t> was automatically rejected:%n%r"}.
16670 @end deftypevr
16671
16672 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string recipient-delimiter
16673 Delimiter character between local-part and detail in email
16674 address.
16675 Defaults to @samp{"+"}.
16676 @end deftypevr
16677
16678 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string lda-original-recipient-header
16679 Header where the original recipient address (SMTP's RCPT TO:
16680 address) is taken from if not available elsewhere. With dovecot-lda -a
16681 parameter overrides this. A commonly used header for this is
16682 X-Original-To.
16683 Defaults to @samp{""}.
16684 @end deftypevr
16685
16686 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean lda-mailbox-autocreate?
16687 Should saving a mail to a nonexistent mailbox automatically create
16688 it?.
16689 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
16690 @end deftypevr
16691
16692 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} boolean lda-mailbox-autosubscribe?
16693 Should automatically created mailboxes be also automatically
16694 subscribed?.
16695 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
16696 @end deftypevr
16697
16698 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer imap-max-line-length
16699 Maximum IMAP command line length. Some clients generate very long
16700 command lines with huge mailboxes, so you may need to raise this if you
16701 get "Too long argument" or "IMAP command line too large" errors
16702 often.
16703 Defaults to @samp{64000}.
16704 @end deftypevr
16705
16706 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string imap-logout-format
16707 IMAP logout format string:
16708 @table @code
16709 @item %i
16710 total number of bytes read from client
16711 @item %o
16712 total number of bytes sent to client.
16713 @end table
16714 See @file{doc/wiki/Variables.txt} for a list of all the variables you can use.
16715 Defaults to @samp{"in=%i out=%o deleted=%@{deleted@} expunged=%@{expunged@} trashed=%@{trashed@} hdr_count=%@{fetch_hdr_count@} hdr_bytes=%@{fetch_hdr_bytes@} body_count=%@{fetch_body_count@} body_bytes=%@{fetch_body_bytes@}"}.
16716 @end deftypevr
16717
16718 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string imap-capability
16719 Override the IMAP CAPABILITY response. If the value begins with '+',
16720 add the given capabilities on top of the defaults (e.g.@: +XFOO XBAR).
16721 Defaults to @samp{""}.
16722 @end deftypevr
16723
16724 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string imap-idle-notify-interval
16725 How long to wait between "OK Still here" notifications when client
16726 is IDLEing.
16727 Defaults to @samp{"2 mins"}.
16728 @end deftypevr
16729
16730 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string imap-id-send
16731 ID field names and values to send to clients. Using * as the value
16732 makes Dovecot use the default value. The following fields have default
16733 values currently: name, version, os, os-version, support-url,
16734 support-email.
16735 Defaults to @samp{""}.
16736 @end deftypevr
16737
16738 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string imap-id-log
16739 ID fields sent by client to log. * means everything.
16740 Defaults to @samp{""}.
16741 @end deftypevr
16742
16743 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list imap-client-workarounds
16744 Workarounds for various client bugs:
16745
16746 @table @code
16747 @item delay-newmail
16748 Send EXISTS/RECENT new mail notifications only when replying to NOOP and
16749 CHECK commands. Some clients ignore them otherwise, for example OSX
16750 Mail (<v2.1). Outlook Express breaks more badly though, without this it
16751 may show user "Message no longer in server" errors. Note that OE6
16752 still breaks even with this workaround if synchronization is set to
16753 "Headers Only".
16754
16755 @item tb-extra-mailbox-sep
16756 Thunderbird gets somehow confused with LAYOUT=fs (mbox and dbox) and
16757 adds extra @samp{/} suffixes to mailbox names. This option causes Dovecot to
16758 ignore the extra @samp{/} instead of treating it as invalid mailbox name.
16759
16760 @item tb-lsub-flags
16761 Show \Noselect flags for LSUB replies with LAYOUT=fs (e.g.@: mbox).
16762 This makes Thunderbird realize they aren't selectable and show them
16763 greyed out, instead of only later giving "not selectable" popup error.
16764 @end table
16765 Defaults to @samp{()}.
16766 @end deftypevr
16767
16768 @deftypevr {@code{dovecot-configuration} parameter} string imap-urlauth-host
16769 Host allowed in URLAUTH URLs sent by client. "*" allows all.
16770 Defaults to @samp{""}.
16771 @end deftypevr
16772
16773
16774 Whew! Lots of configuration options. The nice thing about it though is
16775 that Guix has a complete interface to Dovecot's configuration
16776 language. This allows not only a nice way to declare configurations,
16777 but also offers reflective capabilities as well: users can write code to
16778 inspect and transform configurations from within Scheme.
16779
16780 However, it could be that you just want to get a @code{dovecot.conf} up
16781 and running. In that case, you can pass an
16782 @code{opaque-dovecot-configuration} as the @code{#:config} parameter to
16783 @code{dovecot-service}. As its name indicates, an opaque configuration
16784 does not have easy reflective capabilities.
16785
16786 Available @code{opaque-dovecot-configuration} fields are:
16787
16788 @deftypevr {@code{opaque-dovecot-configuration} parameter} package dovecot
16789 The dovecot package.
16790 @end deftypevr
16791
16792 @deftypevr {@code{opaque-dovecot-configuration} parameter} string string
16793 The contents of the @code{dovecot.conf}, as a string.
16794 @end deftypevr
16795
16796 For example, if your @code{dovecot.conf} is just the empty string, you
16797 could instantiate a dovecot service like this:
16798
16799 @example
16800 (dovecot-service #:config
16801 (opaque-dovecot-configuration
16802 (string "")))
16803 @end example
16804
16805 @subsubheading OpenSMTPD Service
16806
16807 @deffn {Scheme Variable} opensmtpd-service-type
16808 This is the type of the @uref{https://www.opensmtpd.org, OpenSMTPD}
16809 service, whose value should be an @code{opensmtpd-configuration} object
16810 as in this example:
16811
16812 @example
16813 (service opensmtpd-service-type
16814 (opensmtpd-configuration
16815 (config-file (local-file "./my-smtpd.conf"))))
16816 @end example
16817 @end deffn
16818
16819 @deftp {Data Type} opensmtpd-configuration
16820 Data type representing the configuration of opensmtpd.
16821
16822 @table @asis
16823 @item @code{package} (default: @var{opensmtpd})
16824 Package object of the OpenSMTPD SMTP server.
16825
16826 @item @code{config-file} (default: @code{%default-opensmtpd-file})
16827 File-like object of the OpenSMTPD configuration file to use. By default
16828 it listens on the loopback network interface, and allows for mail from
16829 users and daemons on the local machine, as well as permitting email to
16830 remote servers. Run @command{man smtpd.conf} for more information.
16831
16832 @end table
16833 @end deftp
16834
16835 @subsubheading Exim Service
16836
16837 @cindex mail transfer agent (MTA)
16838 @cindex MTA (mail transfer agent)
16839 @cindex SMTP
16840
16841 @deffn {Scheme Variable} exim-service-type
16842 This is the type of the @uref{https://exim.org, Exim} mail transfer
16843 agent (MTA), whose value should be an @code{exim-configuration} object
16844 as in this example:
16845
16846 @example
16847 (service exim-service-type
16848 (exim-configuration
16849 (config-file (local-file "./my-exim.conf"))))
16850 @end example
16851 @end deffn
16852
16853 In order to use an @code{exim-service-type} service you must also have a
16854 @code{mail-aliases-service-type} service present in your
16855 @code{operating-system} (even if it has no aliases).
16856
16857 @deftp {Data Type} exim-configuration
16858 Data type representing the configuration of exim.
16859
16860 @table @asis
16861 @item @code{package} (default: @var{exim})
16862 Package object of the Exim server.
16863
16864 @item @code{config-file} (default: @code{#f})
16865 File-like object of the Exim configuration file to use. If its value is
16866 @code{#f} then use the default configuration file from the package
16867 provided in @code{package}. The resulting configuration file is loaded
16868 after setting the @code{exim_user} and @code{exim_group} configuration
16869 variables.
16870
16871 @end table
16872 @end deftp
16873
16874 @subsubheading Getmail service
16875
16876 @cindex IMAP
16877 @cindex POP
16878
16879 @deffn {Scheme Variable} getmail-service-type
16880 This is the type of the @uref{http://pyropus.ca/software/getmail/, Getmail}
16881 mail retriever, whose value should be an @code{getmail-configuration}.
16882 @end deffn
16883
16884 Available @code{getmail-configuration} fields are:
16885
16886 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-configuration} parameter} symbol name
16887 A symbol to identify the getmail service.
16888
16889 Defaults to @samp{"unset"}.
16890
16891 @end deftypevr
16892
16893 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-configuration} parameter} package package
16894 The getmail package to use.
16895
16896 @end deftypevr
16897
16898 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-configuration} parameter} string user
16899 The user to run getmail as.
16900
16901 Defaults to @samp{"getmail"}.
16902
16903 @end deftypevr
16904
16905 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-configuration} parameter} string group
16906 The group to run getmail as.
16907
16908 Defaults to @samp{"getmail"}.
16909
16910 @end deftypevr
16911
16912 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-configuration} parameter} string directory
16913 The getmail directory to use.
16914
16915 Defaults to @samp{"/var/lib/getmail/default"}.
16916
16917 @end deftypevr
16918
16919 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-configuration} parameter} getmail-configuration-file rcfile
16920 The getmail configuration file to use.
16921
16922 Available @code{getmail-configuration-file} fields are:
16923
16924 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-configuration-file} parameter} getmail-retriever-configuration retriever
16925 What mail account to retrieve mail from, and how to access that account.
16926
16927 Available @code{getmail-retriever-configuration} fields are:
16928
16929 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-retriever-configuration} parameter} string type
16930 The type of mail retriever to use. Valid values include @samp{passwd}
16931 and @samp{static}.
16932
16933 Defaults to @samp{"SimpleIMAPSSLRetriever"}.
16934
16935 @end deftypevr
16936
16937 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-retriever-configuration} parameter} string server
16938 Space separated list of arguments to the userdb driver.
16939
16940 Defaults to @samp{unset}.
16941
16942 @end deftypevr
16943
16944 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-retriever-configuration} parameter} string username
16945 Space separated list of arguments to the userdb driver.
16946
16947 Defaults to @samp{unset}.
16948
16949 @end deftypevr
16950
16951 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-retriever-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer port
16952 Space separated list of arguments to the userdb driver.
16953
16954 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
16955
16956 @end deftypevr
16957
16958 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-retriever-configuration} parameter} string password
16959 Override fields from passwd.
16960
16961 Defaults to @samp{""}.
16962
16963 @end deftypevr
16964
16965 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-retriever-configuration} parameter} list password-command
16966 Override fields from passwd.
16967
16968 Defaults to @samp{()}.
16969
16970 @end deftypevr
16971
16972 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-retriever-configuration} parameter} string keyfile
16973 PEM-formatted key file to use for the TLS negotiation
16974
16975 Defaults to @samp{""}.
16976
16977 @end deftypevr
16978
16979 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-retriever-configuration} parameter} string certfile
16980 PEM-formatted certificate file to use for the TLS negotiation
16981
16982 Defaults to @samp{""}.
16983
16984 @end deftypevr
16985
16986 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-retriever-configuration} parameter} string ca-certs
16987 CA certificates to use
16988
16989 Defaults to @samp{""}.
16990
16991 @end deftypevr
16992
16993 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-retriever-configuration} parameter} parameter-alist extra-parameters
16994 Extra retriever parameters
16995
16996 Defaults to @samp{()}.
16997
16998 @end deftypevr
16999
17000 @end deftypevr
17001
17002 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-configuration-file} parameter} getmail-destination-configuration destination
17003 What to do with retrieved messages.
17004
17005 Available @code{getmail-destination-configuration} fields are:
17006
17007 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-destination-configuration} parameter} string type
17008 The type of mail destination. Valid values include @samp{Maildir},
17009 @samp{Mboxrd} and @samp{MDA_external}.
17010
17011 Defaults to @samp{unset}.
17012
17013 @end deftypevr
17014
17015 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-destination-configuration} parameter} string-or-filelike path
17016 The path option for the mail destination. The behaviour depends on the
17017 chosen type.
17018
17019 Defaults to @samp{""}.
17020
17021 @end deftypevr
17022
17023 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-destination-configuration} parameter} parameter-alist extra-parameters
17024 Extra destination parameters
17025
17026 Defaults to @samp{()}.
17027
17028 @end deftypevr
17029
17030 @end deftypevr
17031
17032 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-configuration-file} parameter} getmail-options-configuration options
17033 Configure getmail.
17034
17035 Available @code{getmail-options-configuration} fields are:
17036
17037 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-options-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer verbose
17038 If set to @samp{0}, getmail will only print warnings and errors. A
17039 value of @samp{1} means that messages will be printed about retrieving
17040 and deleting messages. If set to @samp{2}, getmail will print messages
17041 about each of it's actions.
17042
17043 Defaults to @samp{1}.
17044
17045 @end deftypevr
17046
17047 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-options-configuration} parameter} boolean read-all
17048 If true, getmail will retrieve all available messages. Otherwise it
17049 will only retrieve messages it hasn't seen previously.
17050
17051 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
17052
17053 @end deftypevr
17054
17055 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-options-configuration} parameter} boolean delete
17056 If set to true, messages will be deleted from the server after
17057 retrieving and successfully delivering them. Otherwise, messages will
17058 be left on the server.
17059
17060 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
17061
17062 @end deftypevr
17063
17064 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-options-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer delete-after
17065 Getmail will delete messages this number of days after seeing them, if
17066 they have not been delivered. This means messages will be left on the
17067 server this number of days after delivering them. A value of @samp{0}
17068 disabled this feature.
17069
17070 Defaults to @samp{0}.
17071
17072 @end deftypevr
17073
17074 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-options-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer delete-bigger-than
17075 Delete messages larger than this of bytes after retrieving them, even if
17076 the delete and delete-after options are disabled. A value of @samp{0}
17077 disables this feature.
17078
17079 Defaults to @samp{0}.
17080
17081 @end deftypevr
17082
17083 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-options-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer max-bytes-per-session
17084 Retrieve messages totalling up to this number of bytes before closing
17085 the session with the server. A value of @samp{0} disables this feature.
17086
17087 Defaults to @samp{0}.
17088
17089 @end deftypevr
17090
17091 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-options-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer max-message-size
17092 Don't retrieve messages larger than this number of bytes. A value of
17093 @samp{0} disables this feature.
17094
17095 Defaults to @samp{0}.
17096
17097 @end deftypevr
17098
17099 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-options-configuration} parameter} boolean delivered-to
17100 If true, getmail will add a Delivered-To header to messages.
17101
17102 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
17103
17104 @end deftypevr
17105
17106 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-options-configuration} parameter} boolean received
17107 If set, getmail adds a Received header to the messages.
17108
17109 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
17110
17111 @end deftypevr
17112
17113 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-options-configuration} parameter} string message-log
17114 Getmail will record a log of its actions to the named file. A value of
17115 @samp{""} disables this feature.
17116
17117 Defaults to @samp{""}.
17118
17119 @end deftypevr
17120
17121 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-options-configuration} parameter} boolean message-log-syslog
17122 If true, getmail will record a log of its actions using the system
17123 logger.
17124
17125 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
17126
17127 @end deftypevr
17128
17129 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-options-configuration} parameter} boolean message-log-verbose
17130 If true, getmail will log information about messages not retrieved and
17131 the reason for not retrieving them, as well as starting and ending
17132 information lines.
17133
17134 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
17135
17136 @end deftypevr
17137
17138 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-options-configuration} parameter} parameter-alist extra-parameters
17139 Extra options to include.
17140
17141 Defaults to @samp{()}.
17142
17143 @end deftypevr
17144
17145 @end deftypevr
17146
17147 @end deftypevr
17148
17149 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-configuration} parameter} list idle
17150 A list of mailboxes that getmail should wait on the server for new mail
17151 notifications. This depends on the server supporting the IDLE
17152 extension.
17153
17154 Defaults to @samp{()}.
17155
17156 @end deftypevr
17157
17158 @deftypevr {@code{getmail-configuration} parameter} list environment-variables
17159 Environment variables to set for getmail.
17160
17161 Defaults to @samp{()}.
17162
17163 @end deftypevr
17164
17165 @subsubheading Mail Aliases Service
17166
17167 @cindex email aliases
17168 @cindex aliases, for email addresses
17169
17170 @deffn {Scheme Variable} mail-aliases-service-type
17171 This is the type of the service which provides @code{/etc/aliases},
17172 specifying how to deliver mail to users on this system.
17173
17174 @example
17175 (service mail-aliases-service-type
17176 '(("postmaster" "bob")
17177 ("bob" "bob@@example.com" "bob@@example2.com")))
17178 @end example
17179 @end deffn
17180
17181 The configuration for a @code{mail-aliases-service-type} service is an
17182 association list denoting how to deliver mail that comes to this
17183 system. Each entry is of the form @code{(alias addresses ...)}, with
17184 @code{alias} specifying the local alias and @code{addresses} specifying
17185 where to deliver this user's mail.
17186
17187 The aliases aren't required to exist as users on the local system. In
17188 the above example, there doesn't need to be a @code{postmaster} entry in
17189 the @code{operating-system}'s @code{user-accounts} in order to deliver
17190 the @code{postmaster} mail to @code{bob} (which subsequently would
17191 deliver mail to @code{bob@@example.com} and @code{bob@@example2.com}).
17192
17193 @subsubheading GNU Mailutils IMAP4 Daemon
17194 @cindex GNU Mailutils IMAP4 Daemon
17195
17196 @deffn {Scheme Variable} imap4d-service-type
17197 This is the type of the GNU Mailutils IMAP4 Daemon (@pxref{imap4d,,,
17198 mailutils, GNU Mailutils Manual}), whose value should be an
17199 @code{imap4d-configuration} object as in this example:
17200
17201 @example
17202 (service imap4d-service-type
17203 (imap4d-configuration
17204 (config-file (local-file "imap4d.conf"))))
17205 @end example
17206 @end deffn
17207
17208 @deftp {Data Type} imap4d-configuration
17209 Data type representing the configuration of @command{imap4d}.
17210
17211 @table @asis
17212 @item @code{package} (default: @code{mailutils})
17213 The package that provides @command{imap4d}.
17214
17215 @item @code{config-file} (default: @code{%default-imap4d-config-file})
17216 File-like object of the configuration file to use, by default it will listen
17217 on TCP port 143 of @code{localhost}. @xref{Conf-imap4d,,, mailutils, GNU
17218 Mailutils Manual}, for details.
17219
17220 @end table
17221 @end deftp
17222
17223 @node Messaging Services
17224 @subsection Messaging Services
17225
17226 @cindex messaging
17227 @cindex jabber
17228 @cindex XMPP
17229 The @code{(gnu services messaging)} module provides Guix service
17230 definitions for messaging services: currently only Prosody is supported.
17231
17232 @subsubheading Prosody Service
17233
17234 @deffn {Scheme Variable} prosody-service-type
17235 This is the type for the @uref{https://prosody.im, Prosody XMPP
17236 communication server}. Its value must be a @code{prosody-configuration}
17237 record as in this example:
17238
17239 @example
17240 (service prosody-service-type
17241 (prosody-configuration
17242 (modules-enabled (cons "groups" "mam" %default-modules-enabled))
17243 (int-components
17244 (list
17245 (int-component-configuration
17246 (hostname "conference.example.net")
17247 (plugin "muc")
17248 (mod-muc (mod-muc-configuration)))))
17249 (virtualhosts
17250 (list
17251 (virtualhost-configuration
17252 (domain "example.net"))))))
17253 @end example
17254
17255 See below for details about @code{prosody-configuration}.
17256
17257 @end deffn
17258
17259 By default, Prosody does not need much configuration. Only one
17260 @code{virtualhosts} field is needed: it specifies the domain you wish
17261 Prosody to serve.
17262
17263 You can perform various sanity checks on the generated configuration
17264 with the @code{prosodyctl check} command.
17265
17266 Prosodyctl will also help you to import certificates from the
17267 @code{letsencrypt} directory so that the @code{prosody} user can access
17268 them. See @url{https://prosody.im/doc/letsencrypt}.
17269
17270 @example
17271 prosodyctl --root cert import /etc/letsencrypt/live
17272 @end example
17273
17274 The available configuration parameters follow. Each parameter
17275 definition is preceded by its type; for example, @samp{string-list foo}
17276 indicates that the @code{foo} parameter should be specified as a list of
17277 strings. Types starting with @code{maybe-} denote parameters that won't
17278 show up in @code{prosody.cfg.lua} when their value is @code{'disabled}.
17279
17280 There is also a way to specify the configuration as a string, if you
17281 have an old @code{prosody.cfg.lua} file that you want to port over from
17282 some other system; see the end for more details.
17283
17284 The @code{file-object} type designates either a file-like object
17285 (@pxref{G-Expressions, file-like objects}) or a file name.
17286
17287 @c The following documentation was initially generated by
17288 @c (generate-documentation) in (gnu services messaging). Manually maintained
17289 @c documentation is better, so we shouldn't hesitate to edit below as
17290 @c needed. However if the change you want to make to this documentation
17291 @c can be done in an automated way, it's probably easier to change
17292 @c (generate-documentation) than to make it below and have to deal with
17293 @c the churn as Prosody updates.
17294
17295 Available @code{prosody-configuration} fields are:
17296
17297 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} package prosody
17298 The Prosody package.
17299 @end deftypevr
17300
17301 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} file-name data-path
17302 Location of the Prosody data storage directory. See
17303 @url{https://prosody.im/doc/configure}.
17304 Defaults to @samp{"/var/lib/prosody"}.
17305 @end deftypevr
17306
17307 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} file-object-list plugin-paths
17308 Additional plugin directories. They are searched in all the specified
17309 paths in order. See @url{https://prosody.im/doc/plugins_directory}.
17310 Defaults to @samp{()}.
17311 @end deftypevr
17312
17313 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} file-name certificates
17314 Every virtual host and component needs a certificate so that clients and
17315 servers can securely verify its identity. Prosody will automatically load
17316 certificates/keys from the directory specified here.
17317 Defaults to @samp{"/etc/prosody/certs"}.
17318 @end deftypevr
17319
17320 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} string-list admins
17321 This is a list of accounts that are admins for the server. Note that you
17322 must create the accounts separately. See @url{https://prosody.im/doc/admins} and
17323 @url{https://prosody.im/doc/creating_accounts}.
17324 Example: @code{(admins '("user1@@example.com" "user2@@example.net"))}
17325 Defaults to @samp{()}.
17326 @end deftypevr
17327
17328 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} boolean use-libevent?
17329 Enable use of libevent for better performance under high load. See
17330 @url{https://prosody.im/doc/libevent}.
17331 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
17332 @end deftypevr
17333
17334 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} module-list modules-enabled
17335 This is the list of modules Prosody will load on startup. It looks for
17336 @code{mod_modulename.lua} in the plugins folder, so make sure that exists too.
17337 Documentation on modules can be found at:
17338 @url{https://prosody.im/doc/modules}.
17339 Defaults to @samp{("roster" "saslauth" "tls" "dialback" "disco" "carbons" "private" "blocklist" "vcard" "version" "uptime" "time" "ping" "pep" "register" "admin_adhoc")}.
17340 @end deftypevr
17341
17342 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} string-list modules-disabled
17343 @samp{"offline"}, @samp{"c2s"} and @samp{"s2s"} are auto-loaded, but
17344 should you want to disable them then add them to this list.
17345 Defaults to @samp{()}.
17346 @end deftypevr
17347
17348 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} file-object groups-file
17349 Path to a text file where the shared groups are defined. If this path is
17350 empty then @samp{mod_groups} does nothing. See
17351 @url{https://prosody.im/doc/modules/mod_groups}.
17352 Defaults to @samp{"/var/lib/prosody/sharedgroups.txt"}.
17353 @end deftypevr
17354
17355 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} boolean allow-registration?
17356 Disable account creation by default, for security. See
17357 @url{https://prosody.im/doc/creating_accounts}.
17358 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
17359 @end deftypevr
17360
17361 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} maybe-ssl-configuration ssl
17362 These are the SSL/TLS-related settings. Most of them are disabled so to
17363 use Prosody's defaults. If you do not completely understand these options, do
17364 not add them to your config, it is easy to lower the security of your server
17365 using them. See @url{https://prosody.im/doc/advanced_ssl_config}.
17366
17367 Available @code{ssl-configuration} fields are:
17368
17369 @deftypevr {@code{ssl-configuration} parameter} maybe-string protocol
17370 This determines what handshake to use.
17371 @end deftypevr
17372
17373 @deftypevr {@code{ssl-configuration} parameter} maybe-file-name key
17374 Path to your private key file.
17375 @end deftypevr
17376
17377 @deftypevr {@code{ssl-configuration} parameter} maybe-file-name certificate
17378 Path to your certificate file.
17379 @end deftypevr
17380
17381 @deftypevr {@code{ssl-configuration} parameter} file-object capath
17382 Path to directory containing root certificates that you wish Prosody to
17383 trust when verifying the certificates of remote servers.
17384 Defaults to @samp{"/etc/ssl/certs"}.
17385 @end deftypevr
17386
17387 @deftypevr {@code{ssl-configuration} parameter} maybe-file-object cafile
17388 Path to a file containing root certificates that you wish Prosody to trust.
17389 Similar to @code{capath} but with all certificates concatenated together.
17390 @end deftypevr
17391
17392 @deftypevr {@code{ssl-configuration} parameter} maybe-string-list verify
17393 A list of verification options (these mostly map to OpenSSL's
17394 @code{set_verify()} flags).
17395 @end deftypevr
17396
17397 @deftypevr {@code{ssl-configuration} parameter} maybe-string-list options
17398 A list of general options relating to SSL/TLS. These map to OpenSSL's
17399 @code{set_options()}. For a full list of options available in LuaSec, see the
17400 LuaSec source.
17401 @end deftypevr
17402
17403 @deftypevr {@code{ssl-configuration} parameter} maybe-non-negative-integer depth
17404 How long a chain of certificate authorities to check when looking for a
17405 trusted root certificate.
17406 @end deftypevr
17407
17408 @deftypevr {@code{ssl-configuration} parameter} maybe-string ciphers
17409 An OpenSSL cipher string. This selects what ciphers Prosody will offer to
17410 clients, and in what order.
17411 @end deftypevr
17412
17413 @deftypevr {@code{ssl-configuration} parameter} maybe-file-name dhparam
17414 A path to a file containing parameters for Diffie-Hellman key exchange. You
17415 can create such a file with:
17416 @code{openssl dhparam -out /etc/prosody/certs/dh-2048.pem 2048}
17417 @end deftypevr
17418
17419 @deftypevr {@code{ssl-configuration} parameter} maybe-string curve
17420 Curve for Elliptic curve Diffie-Hellman. Prosody's default is
17421 @samp{"secp384r1"}.
17422 @end deftypevr
17423
17424 @deftypevr {@code{ssl-configuration} parameter} maybe-string-list verifyext
17425 A list of "extra" verification options.
17426 @end deftypevr
17427
17428 @deftypevr {@code{ssl-configuration} parameter} maybe-string password
17429 Password for encrypted private keys.
17430 @end deftypevr
17431
17432 @end deftypevr
17433
17434 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} boolean c2s-require-encryption?
17435 Whether to force all client-to-server connections to be encrypted or not.
17436 See @url{https://prosody.im/doc/modules/mod_tls}.
17437 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
17438 @end deftypevr
17439
17440 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} string-list disable-sasl-mechanisms
17441 Set of mechanisms that will never be offered. See
17442 @url{https://prosody.im/doc/modules/mod_saslauth}.
17443 Defaults to @samp{("DIGEST-MD5")}.
17444 @end deftypevr
17445
17446 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} boolean s2s-require-encryption?
17447 Whether to force all server-to-server connections to be encrypted or not.
17448 See @url{https://prosody.im/doc/modules/mod_tls}.
17449 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
17450 @end deftypevr
17451
17452 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} boolean s2s-secure-auth?
17453 Whether to require encryption and certificate authentication. This
17454 provides ideal security, but requires servers you communicate with to support
17455 encryption AND present valid, trusted certificates. See
17456 @url{https://prosody.im/doc/s2s#security}.
17457 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
17458 @end deftypevr
17459
17460 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} string-list s2s-insecure-domains
17461 Many servers don't support encryption or have invalid or self-signed
17462 certificates. You can list domains here that will not be required to
17463 authenticate using certificates. They will be authenticated using DNS. See
17464 @url{https://prosody.im/doc/s2s#security}.
17465 Defaults to @samp{()}.
17466 @end deftypevr
17467
17468 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} string-list s2s-secure-domains
17469 Even if you leave @code{s2s-secure-auth?} disabled, you can still require
17470 valid certificates for some domains by specifying a list here. See
17471 @url{https://prosody.im/doc/s2s#security}.
17472 Defaults to @samp{()}.
17473 @end deftypevr
17474
17475 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} string authentication
17476 Select the authentication backend to use. The default provider stores
17477 passwords in plaintext and uses Prosody's configured data storage to store the
17478 authentication data. If you do not trust your server please see
17479 @url{https://prosody.im/doc/modules/mod_auth_internal_hashed} for information
17480 about using the hashed backend. See also
17481 @url{https://prosody.im/doc/authentication}
17482 Defaults to @samp{"internal_plain"}.
17483 @end deftypevr
17484
17485 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} maybe-string log
17486 Set logging options. Advanced logging configuration is not yet supported
17487 by the Prosody service. See @url{https://prosody.im/doc/logging}.
17488 Defaults to @samp{"*syslog"}.
17489 @end deftypevr
17490
17491 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} file-name pidfile
17492 File to write pid in. See @url{https://prosody.im/doc/modules/mod_posix}.
17493 Defaults to @samp{"/var/run/prosody/prosody.pid"}.
17494 @end deftypevr
17495
17496 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} maybe-non-negative-integer http-max-content-size
17497 Maximum allowed size of the HTTP body (in bytes).
17498 @end deftypevr
17499
17500 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} maybe-string http-external-url
17501 Some modules expose their own URL in various ways. This URL is built
17502 from the protocol, host and port used. If Prosody sits behind a proxy, the
17503 public URL will be @code{http-external-url} instead. See
17504 @url{https://prosody.im/doc/http#external_url}.
17505 @end deftypevr
17506
17507 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} virtualhost-configuration-list virtualhosts
17508 A host in Prosody is a domain on which user accounts can be created. For
17509 example if you want your users to have addresses like
17510 @samp{"john.smith@@example.com"} then you need to add a host
17511 @samp{"example.com"}. All options in this list will apply only to this host.
17512
17513 Note: the name "virtual" host is used in configuration to avoid confusion with
17514 the actual physical host that Prosody is installed on. A single Prosody
17515 instance can serve many domains, each one defined as a VirtualHost entry in
17516 Prosody's configuration. Conversely a server that hosts a single domain would
17517 have just one VirtualHost entry.
17518
17519 See @url{https://prosody.im/doc/configure#virtual_host_settings}.
17520
17521 Available @code{virtualhost-configuration} fields are:
17522
17523 all these @code{prosody-configuration} fields: @code{admins}, @code{use-libevent?}, @code{modules-enabled}, @code{modules-disabled}, @code{groups-file}, @code{allow-registration?}, @code{ssl}, @code{c2s-require-encryption?}, @code{disable-sasl-mechanisms}, @code{s2s-require-encryption?}, @code{s2s-secure-auth?}, @code{s2s-insecure-domains}, @code{s2s-secure-domains}, @code{authentication}, @code{log}, @code{http-max-content-size}, @code{http-external-url}, @code{raw-content}, plus:
17524 @deftypevr {@code{virtualhost-configuration} parameter} string domain
17525 Domain you wish Prosody to serve.
17526 @end deftypevr
17527
17528 @end deftypevr
17529
17530 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} int-component-configuration-list int-components
17531 Components are extra services on a server which are available to clients,
17532 usually on a subdomain of the main server (such as
17533 @samp{"mycomponent.example.com"}). Example components might be chatroom
17534 servers, user directories, or gateways to other protocols.
17535
17536 Internal components are implemented with Prosody-specific plugins. To add an
17537 internal component, you simply fill the hostname field, and the plugin you wish
17538 to use for the component.
17539
17540 See @url{https://prosody.im/doc/components}.
17541 Defaults to @samp{()}.
17542
17543 Available @code{int-component-configuration} fields are:
17544
17545 all these @code{prosody-configuration} fields: @code{admins}, @code{use-libevent?}, @code{modules-enabled}, @code{modules-disabled}, @code{groups-file}, @code{allow-registration?}, @code{ssl}, @code{c2s-require-encryption?}, @code{disable-sasl-mechanisms}, @code{s2s-require-encryption?}, @code{s2s-secure-auth?}, @code{s2s-insecure-domains}, @code{s2s-secure-domains}, @code{authentication}, @code{log}, @code{http-max-content-size}, @code{http-external-url}, @code{raw-content}, plus:
17546 @deftypevr {@code{int-component-configuration} parameter} string hostname
17547 Hostname of the component.
17548 @end deftypevr
17549
17550 @deftypevr {@code{int-component-configuration} parameter} string plugin
17551 Plugin you wish to use for the component.
17552 @end deftypevr
17553
17554 @deftypevr {@code{int-component-configuration} parameter} maybe-mod-muc-configuration mod-muc
17555 Multi-user chat (MUC) is Prosody's module for allowing you to create
17556 hosted chatrooms/conferences for XMPP users.
17557
17558 General information on setting up and using multi-user chatrooms can be found
17559 in the "Chatrooms" documentation (@url{https://prosody.im/doc/chatrooms}),
17560 which you should read if you are new to XMPP chatrooms.
17561
17562 See also @url{https://prosody.im/doc/modules/mod_muc}.
17563
17564 Available @code{mod-muc-configuration} fields are:
17565
17566 @deftypevr {@code{mod-muc-configuration} parameter} string name
17567 The name to return in service discovery responses.
17568 Defaults to @samp{"Prosody Chatrooms"}.
17569 @end deftypevr
17570
17571 @deftypevr {@code{mod-muc-configuration} parameter} string-or-boolean restrict-room-creation
17572 If @samp{#t}, this will only allow admins to create new chatrooms.
17573 Otherwise anyone can create a room. The value @samp{"local"} restricts room
17574 creation to users on the service's parent domain. E.g.@: @samp{user@@example.com}
17575 can create rooms on @samp{rooms.example.com}. The value @samp{"admin"}
17576 restricts to service administrators only.
17577 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
17578 @end deftypevr
17579
17580 @deftypevr {@code{mod-muc-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer max-history-messages
17581 Maximum number of history messages that will be sent to the member that has
17582 just joined the room.
17583 Defaults to @samp{20}.
17584 @end deftypevr
17585
17586 @end deftypevr
17587
17588 @end deftypevr
17589
17590 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} ext-component-configuration-list ext-components
17591 External components use XEP-0114, which most standalone components
17592 support. To add an external component, you simply fill the hostname field. See
17593 @url{https://prosody.im/doc/components}.
17594 Defaults to @samp{()}.
17595
17596 Available @code{ext-component-configuration} fields are:
17597
17598 all these @code{prosody-configuration} fields: @code{admins}, @code{use-libevent?}, @code{modules-enabled}, @code{modules-disabled}, @code{groups-file}, @code{allow-registration?}, @code{ssl}, @code{c2s-require-encryption?}, @code{disable-sasl-mechanisms}, @code{s2s-require-encryption?}, @code{s2s-secure-auth?}, @code{s2s-insecure-domains}, @code{s2s-secure-domains}, @code{authentication}, @code{log}, @code{http-max-content-size}, @code{http-external-url}, @code{raw-content}, plus:
17599 @deftypevr {@code{ext-component-configuration} parameter} string component-secret
17600 Password which the component will use to log in.
17601 @end deftypevr
17602
17603 @deftypevr {@code{ext-component-configuration} parameter} string hostname
17604 Hostname of the component.
17605 @end deftypevr
17606
17607 @end deftypevr
17608
17609 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer-list component-ports
17610 Port(s) Prosody listens on for component connections.
17611 Defaults to @samp{(5347)}.
17612 @end deftypevr
17613
17614 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} string component-interface
17615 Interface Prosody listens on for component connections.
17616 Defaults to @samp{"127.0.0.1"}.
17617 @end deftypevr
17618
17619 @deftypevr {@code{prosody-configuration} parameter} maybe-raw-content raw-content
17620 Raw content that will be added to the configuration file.
17621 @end deftypevr
17622
17623 It could be that you just want to get a @code{prosody.cfg.lua}
17624 up and running. In that case, you can pass an
17625 @code{opaque-prosody-configuration} record as the value of
17626 @code{prosody-service-type}. As its name indicates, an opaque configuration
17627 does not have easy reflective capabilities.
17628 Available @code{opaque-prosody-configuration} fields are:
17629
17630 @deftypevr {@code{opaque-prosody-configuration} parameter} package prosody
17631 The prosody package.
17632 @end deftypevr
17633
17634 @deftypevr {@code{opaque-prosody-configuration} parameter} string prosody.cfg.lua
17635 The contents of the @code{prosody.cfg.lua} to use.
17636 @end deftypevr
17637
17638 For example, if your @code{prosody.cfg.lua} is just the empty
17639 string, you could instantiate a prosody service like this:
17640
17641 @example
17642 (service prosody-service-type
17643 (opaque-prosody-configuration
17644 (prosody.cfg.lua "")))
17645 @end example
17646
17647 @c end of Prosody auto-generated documentation
17648
17649 @subsubheading BitlBee Service
17650
17651 @cindex IRC (Internet Relay Chat)
17652 @cindex IRC gateway
17653 @url{https://bitlbee.org,BitlBee} is a gateway that provides an IRC
17654 interface to a variety of messaging protocols such as XMPP.
17655
17656 @defvr {Scheme Variable} bitlbee-service-type
17657 This is the service type for the @url{https://bitlbee.org,BitlBee} IRC
17658 gateway daemon. Its value is a @code{bitlbee-configuration} (see
17659 below).
17660
17661 To have BitlBee listen on port 6667 on localhost, add this line to your
17662 services:
17663
17664 @example
17665 (service bitlbee-service-type)
17666 @end example
17667 @end defvr
17668
17669 @deftp {Data Type} bitlbee-configuration
17670 This is the configuration for BitlBee, with the following fields:
17671
17672 @table @asis
17673 @item @code{interface} (default: @code{"127.0.0.1"})
17674 @itemx @code{port} (default: @code{6667})
17675 Listen on the network interface corresponding to the IP address
17676 specified in @var{interface}, on @var{port}.
17677
17678 When @var{interface} is @code{127.0.0.1}, only local clients can
17679 connect; when it is @code{0.0.0.0}, connections can come from any
17680 networking interface.
17681
17682 @item @code{package} (default: @code{bitlbee})
17683 The BitlBee package to use.
17684
17685 @item @code{plugins} (default: @code{'()})
17686 List of plugin packages to use---e.g., @code{bitlbee-discord}.
17687
17688 @item @code{extra-settings} (default: @code{""})
17689 Configuration snippet added as-is to the BitlBee configuration file.
17690 @end table
17691 @end deftp
17692
17693 @subsubheading Quassel Service
17694
17695 @cindex IRC (Internet Relay Chat)
17696 @url{https://quassel-irc.org/,Quassel} is a distributed IRC client,
17697 meaning that one or more clients can attach to and detach from the
17698 central core.
17699
17700 @defvr {Scheme Variable} quassel-service-type
17701 This is the service type for the @url{https://quassel-irc.org/,Quassel}
17702 IRC backend daemon. Its value is a @code{quassel-configuration}
17703 (see below).
17704 @end defvr
17705
17706 @deftp {Data Type} quassel-configuration
17707 This is the configuration for Quassel, with the following fields:
17708
17709 @table @asis
17710 @item @code{quassel} (default: @code{quassel})
17711 The Quassel package to use.
17712
17713 @item @code{interface} (default: @code{"::,0.0.0.0"})
17714 @item @code{port} (default: @code{4242})
17715 Listen on the network interface(s) corresponding to the IPv4 or IPv6
17716 interfaces specified in the comma delimited @var{interface}, on
17717 @var{port}.
17718
17719 @item @code{loglevel} (default: @code{"Info"})
17720 The level of logging desired. Accepted values are Debug, Info, Warning
17721 and Error.
17722 @end table
17723 @end deftp
17724
17725 @node Telephony Services
17726 @subsection Telephony Services
17727
17728 @cindex Murmur (VoIP server)
17729 @cindex VoIP server
17730 This section describes how to set up and run a Murmur server. Murmur is
17731 the server of the @uref{https://mumble.info, Mumble} voice-over-IP
17732 (VoIP) suite.
17733
17734 @deftp {Data Type} murmur-configuration
17735 The service type for the Murmur server. An example configuration can
17736 look like this:
17737
17738 @example
17739 (service murmur-service-type
17740 (murmur-configuration
17741 (welcome-text
17742 "Welcome to this Mumble server running on Guix!")
17743 (cert-required? #t) ;disallow text password logins
17744 (ssl-cert "/etc/letsencrypt/live/mumble.example.com/fullchain.pem")
17745 (ssl-key "/etc/letsencrypt/live/mumble.example.com/privkey.pem")))
17746 @end example
17747
17748 After reconfiguring your system, you can manually set the murmur @code{SuperUser}
17749 password with the command that is printed during the activation phase.
17750
17751 It is recommended to register a normal Mumble user account
17752 and grant it admin or moderator rights.
17753 You can use the @code{mumble} client to
17754 login as new normal user, register yourself, and log out.
17755 For the next step login with the name @code{SuperUser} use
17756 the @code{SuperUser} password that you set previously,
17757 and grant your newly registered mumble user administrator or moderator
17758 rights and create some channels.
17759
17760 Available @code{murmur-configuration} fields are:
17761
17762 @table @asis
17763 @item @code{package} (default: @code{mumble})
17764 Package that contains @code{bin/murmurd}.
17765
17766 @item @code{user} (default: @code{"murmur"})
17767 User who will run the Murmur server.
17768
17769 @item @code{group} (default: @code{"murmur"})
17770 Group of the user who will run the murmur server.
17771
17772 @item @code{port} (default: @code{64738})
17773 Port on which the server will listen.
17774
17775 @item @code{welcome-text} (default: @code{""})
17776 Welcome text sent to clients when they connect.
17777
17778 @item @code{server-password} (default: @code{""})
17779 Password the clients have to enter in order to connect.
17780
17781 @item @code{max-users} (default: @code{100})
17782 Maximum of users that can be connected to the server at once.
17783
17784 @item @code{max-user-bandwidth} (default: @code{#f})
17785 Maximum voice traffic a user can send per second.
17786
17787 @item @code{database-file} (default: @code{"/var/lib/murmur/db.sqlite"})
17788 File name of the sqlite database.
17789 The service's user will become the owner of the directory.
17790
17791 @item @code{log-file} (default: @code{"/var/log/murmur/murmur.log"})
17792 File name of the log file.
17793 The service's user will become the owner of the directory.
17794
17795 @item @code{autoban-attempts} (default: @code{10})
17796 Maximum number of logins a user can make in @code{autoban-timeframe}
17797 without getting auto banned for @code{autoban-time}.
17798
17799 @item @code{autoban-timeframe} (default: @code{120})
17800 Timeframe for autoban in seconds.
17801
17802 @item @code{autoban-time} (default: @code{300})
17803 Amount of time in seconds for which a client gets banned
17804 when violating the autoban limits.
17805
17806 @item @code{opus-threshold} (default: @code{100})
17807 Percentage of clients that need to support opus
17808 before switching over to opus audio codec.
17809
17810 @item @code{channel-nesting-limit} (default: @code{10})
17811 How deep channels can be nested at maximum.
17812
17813 @item @code{channelname-regex} (default: @code{#f})
17814 A string in form of a Qt regular expression that channel names must conform to.
17815
17816 @item @code{username-regex} (default: @code{#f})
17817 A string in form of a Qt regular expression that user names must conform to.
17818
17819 @item @code{text-message-length} (default: @code{5000})
17820 Maximum size in bytes that a user can send in one text chat message.
17821
17822 @item @code{image-message-length} (default: @code{(* 128 1024)})
17823 Maximum size in bytes that a user can send in one image message.
17824
17825 @item @code{cert-required?} (default: @code{#f})
17826 If it is set to @code{#t} clients that use weak password authentication
17827 will not be accepted. Users must have completed the certificate wizard to join.
17828
17829 @item @code{remember-channel?} (default: @code{#f})
17830 Should murmur remember the last channel each user was in when they disconnected
17831 and put them into the remembered channel when they rejoin.
17832
17833 @item @code{allow-html?} (default: @code{#f})
17834 Should html be allowed in text messages, user comments, and channel descriptions.
17835
17836 @item @code{allow-ping?} (default: @code{#f})
17837 Setting to true exposes the current user count, the maximum user count, and
17838 the server's maximum bandwidth per client to unauthenticated users. In the
17839 Mumble client, this information is shown in the Connect dialog.
17840
17841 Disabling this setting will prevent public listing of the server.
17842
17843 @item @code{bonjour?} (default: @code{#f})
17844 Should the server advertise itself in the local network through the bonjour protocol.
17845
17846 @item @code{send-version?} (default: @code{#f})
17847 Should the murmur server version be exposed in ping requests.
17848
17849 @item @code{log-days} (default: @code{31})
17850 Murmur also stores logs in the database, which are accessible via RPC.
17851 The default is 31 days of months, but you can set this setting to 0 to keep logs forever,
17852 or -1 to disable logging to the database.
17853
17854 @item @code{obfuscate-ips?} (default: @code{#t})
17855 Should logged ips be obfuscated to protect the privacy of users.
17856
17857 @item @code{ssl-cert} (default: @code{#f})
17858 File name of the SSL/TLS certificate used for encrypted connections.
17859
17860 @example
17861 (ssl-cert "/etc/letsencrypt/live/example.com/fullchain.pem")
17862 @end example
17863 @item @code{ssl-key} (default: @code{#f})
17864 Filepath to the ssl private key used for encrypted connections.
17865 @example
17866 (ssl-key "/etc/letsencrypt/live/example.com/privkey.pem")
17867 @end example
17868
17869 @item @code{ssl-dh-params} (default: @code{#f})
17870 File name of a PEM-encoded file with Diffie-Hellman parameters
17871 for the SSL/TLS encryption. Alternatively you set it to
17872 @code{"@@ffdhe2048"}, @code{"@@ffdhe3072"}, @code{"@@ffdhe4096"}, @code{"@@ffdhe6144"}
17873 or @code{"@@ffdhe8192"} to use bundled parameters from RFC 7919.
17874
17875 @item @code{ssl-ciphers} (default: @code{#f})
17876 The @code{ssl-ciphers} option chooses the cipher suites to make available for use
17877 in SSL/TLS.
17878
17879 This option is specified using
17880 @uref{https://www.openssl.org/docs/apps/ciphers.html#CIPHER-LIST-FORMAT,
17881 OpenSSL cipher list notation}.
17882
17883 It is recommended that you try your cipher string using 'openssl ciphers <string>'
17884 before setting it here, to get a feel for which cipher suites you will get.
17885 After setting this option, it is recommend that you inspect your Murmur log
17886 to ensure that Murmur is using the cipher suites that you expected it to.
17887
17888 Note: Changing this option may impact the backwards compatibility of your
17889 Murmur server, and can remove the ability for older Mumble clients to be able
17890 to connect to it.
17891
17892 @item @code{public-registration} (default: @code{#f})
17893 Must be a @code{<murmur-public-registration-configuration>} record or @code{#f}.
17894
17895 You can optionally register your server in the public server list that the
17896 @code{mumble} client shows on startup.
17897 You cannot register your server if you have set a @code{server-password},
17898 or set @code{allow-ping} to @code{#f}.
17899
17900 It might take a few hours until it shows up in the public list.
17901
17902 @item @code{file} (default: @code{#f})
17903 Optional alternative override for this configuration.
17904 @end table
17905 @end deftp
17906
17907 @deftp {Data Type} murmur-public-registration-configuration
17908 Configuration for public registration of a murmur service.
17909
17910 @table @asis
17911 @item @code{name}
17912 This is a display name for your server. Not to be confused with the hostname.
17913
17914 @item @code{password}
17915 A password to identify your registration.
17916 Subsequent updates will need the same password. Don't lose your password.
17917
17918 @item @code{url}
17919 This should be a @code{http://} or @code{https://} link to your web
17920 site.
17921
17922 @item @code{hostname} (default: @code{#f})
17923 By default your server will be listed by its IP address.
17924 If it is set your server will be linked by this host name instead.
17925 @end table
17926 @end deftp
17927
17928
17929
17930 @node Monitoring Services
17931 @subsection Monitoring Services
17932
17933 @subsubheading Tailon Service
17934
17935 @uref{https://tailon.readthedocs.io/, Tailon} is a web application for
17936 viewing and searching log files.
17937
17938 The following example will configure the service with default values.
17939 By default, Tailon can be accessed on port 8080 (@code{http://localhost:8080}).
17940
17941 @example
17942 (service tailon-service-type)
17943 @end example
17944
17945 The following example customises more of the Tailon configuration,
17946 adding @command{sed} to the list of allowed commands.
17947
17948 @example
17949 (service tailon-service-type
17950 (tailon-configuration
17951 (config-file
17952 (tailon-configuration-file
17953 (allowed-commands '("tail" "grep" "awk" "sed"))))))
17954 @end example
17955
17956
17957 @deftp {Data Type} tailon-configuration
17958 Data type representing the configuration of Tailon.
17959 This type has the following parameters:
17960
17961 @table @asis
17962 @item @code{config-file} (default: @code{(tailon-configuration-file)})
17963 The configuration file to use for Tailon. This can be set to a
17964 @dfn{tailon-configuration-file} record value, or any gexp
17965 (@pxref{G-Expressions}).
17966
17967 For example, to instead use a local file, the @code{local-file} function
17968 can be used:
17969
17970 @example
17971 (service tailon-service-type
17972 (tailon-configuration
17973 (config-file (local-file "./my-tailon.conf"))))
17974 @end example
17975
17976 @item @code{package} (default: @code{tailon})
17977 The tailon package to use.
17978
17979 @end table
17980 @end deftp
17981
17982 @deftp {Data Type} tailon-configuration-file
17983 Data type representing the configuration options for Tailon.
17984 This type has the following parameters:
17985
17986 @table @asis
17987 @item @code{files} (default: @code{(list "/var/log")})
17988 List of files to display. The list can include strings for a single file
17989 or directory, or a list, where the first item is the name of a
17990 subsection, and the remaining items are the files or directories in that
17991 subsection.
17992
17993 @item @code{bind} (default: @code{"localhost:8080"})
17994 Address and port to which Tailon should bind on.
17995
17996 @item @code{relative-root} (default: @code{#f})
17997 URL path to use for Tailon, set to @code{#f} to not use a path.
17998
17999 @item @code{allow-transfers?} (default: @code{#t})
18000 Allow downloading the log files in the web interface.
18001
18002 @item @code{follow-names?} (default: @code{#t})
18003 Allow tailing of not-yet existent files.
18004
18005 @item @code{tail-lines} (default: @code{200})
18006 Number of lines to read initially from each file.
18007
18008 @item @code{allowed-commands} (default: @code{(list "tail" "grep" "awk")})
18009 Commands to allow running. By default, @code{sed} is disabled.
18010
18011 @item @code{debug?} (default: @code{#f})
18012 Set @code{debug?} to @code{#t} to show debug messages.
18013
18014 @item @code{wrap-lines} (default: @code{#t})
18015 Initial line wrapping state in the web interface. Set to @code{#t} to
18016 initially wrap lines (the default), or to @code{#f} to initially not
18017 wrap lines.
18018
18019 @item @code{http-auth} (default: @code{#f})
18020 HTTP authentication type to use. Set to @code{#f} to disable
18021 authentication (the default). Supported values are @code{"digest"} or
18022 @code{"basic"}.
18023
18024 @item @code{users} (default: @code{#f})
18025 If HTTP authentication is enabled (see @code{http-auth}), access will be
18026 restricted to the credentials provided here. To configure users, use a
18027 list of pairs, where the first element of the pair is the username, and
18028 the 2nd element of the pair is the password.
18029
18030 @example
18031 (tailon-configuration-file
18032 (http-auth "basic")
18033 (users '(("user1" . "password1")
18034 ("user2" . "password2"))))
18035 @end example
18036
18037 @end table
18038 @end deftp
18039
18040
18041 @subsubheading Darkstat Service
18042 @cindex darkstat
18043 Darkstat is a packet sniffer that captures network traffic, calculates
18044 statistics about usage, and serves reports over HTTP.
18045
18046 @defvar {Scheme Variable} darkstat-service-type
18047 This is the service type for the
18048 @uref{https://unix4lyfe.org/darkstat/, darkstat}
18049 service, its value must be a @code{darkstat-configuration} record as in
18050 this example:
18051
18052 @example
18053 (service darkstat-service-type
18054 (darkstat-configuration
18055 (interface "eno1")))
18056 @end example
18057 @end defvar
18058
18059 @deftp {Data Type} darkstat-configuration
18060 Data type representing the configuration of @command{darkstat}.
18061
18062 @table @asis
18063 @item @code{package} (default: @code{darkstat})
18064 The darkstat package to use.
18065
18066 @item @code{interface}
18067 Capture traffic on the specified network interface.
18068
18069 @item @code{port} (default: @code{"667"})
18070 Bind the web interface to the specified port.
18071
18072 @item @code{bind-address} (default: @code{"127.0.0.1"})
18073 Bind the web interface to the specified address.
18074
18075 @item @code{base} (default: @code{"/"})
18076 Specify the path of the base URL. This can be useful if
18077 @command{darkstat} is accessed via a reverse proxy.
18078
18079 @end table
18080 @end deftp
18081
18082 @subsubheading Prometheus Node Exporter Service
18083
18084 @cindex prometheus-node-exporter
18085 The Prometheus ``node exporter'' makes hardware and operating system statistics
18086 provided by the Linux kernel available for the Prometheus monitoring system.
18087 This service should be deployed on all physical nodes and virtual machines,
18088 where monitoring these statistics is desirable.
18089
18090 @defvar {Scheme variable} prometheus-node-exporter-service-type
18091 This is the service type for the
18092 @uref{https://github.com/prometheus/node_exporter/, prometheus-node-exporter}
18093 service, its value must be a @code{prometheus-node-exporter-configuration}
18094 record as in this example:
18095
18096 @example
18097 (service prometheus-node-exporter-service-type
18098 (prometheus-node-exporter-configuration
18099 (web-listen-address ":9100")))
18100 @end example
18101 @end defvar
18102
18103 @deftp {Data Type} prometheus-node-exporter-configuration
18104 Data type representing the configuration of @command{node_exporter}.
18105
18106 @table @asis
18107 @item @code{package} (default: @code{go-github-com-prometheus-node-exporter})
18108 The prometheus-node-exporter package to use.
18109
18110 @item @code{web-listen-address} (default: @code{":9100"})
18111 Bind the web interface to the specified address.
18112
18113 @end table
18114 @end deftp
18115
18116 @subsubheading Zabbix server
18117 @cindex zabbix zabbix-server
18118 Zabbix provides monitoring metrics, among others network utilization, CPU load
18119 and disk space consumption:
18120
18121 @itemize
18122 @item High performance, high capacity (able to monitor hundreds of thousands of devices).
18123 @item Auto-discovery of servers and network devices and interfaces.
18124 @item Low-level discovery, allows to automatically start monitoring new items, file systems or network interfaces among others.
18125 @item Distributed monitoring with centralized web administration.
18126 @item Native high performance agents.
18127 @item SLA, and ITIL KPI metrics on reporting.
18128 @item High-level (business) view of monitored resources through user-defined visual console screens and dashboards.
18129 @item Remote command execution through Zabbix proxies.
18130 @end itemize
18131
18132 @c %start of fragment
18133
18134 Available @code{zabbix-server-configuration} fields are:
18135
18136 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-server-configuration} parameter} package zabbix-server
18137 The zabbix-server package.
18138
18139 @end deftypevr
18140
18141 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-server-configuration} parameter} string user
18142 User who will run the Zabbix server.
18143
18144 Defaults to @samp{"zabbix"}.
18145
18146 @end deftypevr
18147
18148 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-server-configuration} parameter} group group
18149 Group who will run the Zabbix server.
18150
18151 Defaults to @samp{"zabbix"}.
18152
18153 @end deftypevr
18154
18155 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-server-configuration} parameter} string db-host
18156 Database host name.
18157
18158 Defaults to @samp{"127.0.0.1"}.
18159
18160 @end deftypevr
18161
18162 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-server-configuration} parameter} string db-name
18163 Database name.
18164
18165 Defaults to @samp{"zabbix"}.
18166
18167 @end deftypevr
18168
18169 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-server-configuration} parameter} string db-user
18170 Database user.
18171
18172 Defaults to @samp{"zabbix"}.
18173
18174 @end deftypevr
18175
18176 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-server-configuration} parameter} string db-password
18177 Database password. Please, use @code{include-files} with
18178 @code{DBPassword=SECRET} inside a specified file instead.
18179
18180 Defaults to @samp{""}.
18181
18182 @end deftypevr
18183
18184 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-server-configuration} parameter} number db-port
18185 Database port.
18186
18187 Defaults to @samp{5432}.
18188
18189 @end deftypevr
18190
18191 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-server-configuration} parameter} string log-type
18192 Specifies where log messages are written to:
18193
18194 @itemize @bullet
18195 @item
18196 @code{system} - syslog.
18197
18198 @item
18199 @code{file} - file specified with @code{log-file} parameter.
18200
18201 @item
18202 @code{console} - standard output.
18203
18204 @end itemize
18205
18206 Defaults to @samp{""}.
18207
18208 @end deftypevr
18209
18210 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-server-configuration} parameter} string log-file
18211 Log file name for @code{log-type} @code{file} parameter.
18212
18213 Defaults to @samp{"/var/log/zabbix/server.log"}.
18214
18215 @end deftypevr
18216
18217 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-server-configuration} parameter} string pid-file
18218 Name of PID file.
18219
18220 Defaults to @samp{"/var/run/zabbix/zabbix_server.pid"}.
18221
18222 @end deftypevr
18223
18224 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-server-configuration} parameter} string ssl-ca-location
18225 The location of certificate authority (CA) files for SSL server
18226 certificate verification.
18227
18228 Defaults to @samp{"/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt"}.
18229
18230 @end deftypevr
18231
18232 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-server-configuration} parameter} string ssl-cert-location
18233 Location of SSL client certificates.
18234
18235 Defaults to @samp{"/etc/ssl/certs"}.
18236
18237 @end deftypevr
18238
18239 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-server-configuration} parameter} string extra-options
18240 Extra options will be appended to Zabbix server configuration file.
18241
18242 Defaults to @samp{""}.
18243
18244 @end deftypevr
18245
18246 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-server-configuration} parameter} include-files include-files
18247 You may include individual files or all files in a directory in the
18248 configuration file.
18249
18250 Defaults to @samp{()}.
18251
18252 @end deftypevr
18253
18254 @c %end of fragment
18255
18256 @subsubheading Zabbix agent
18257 @cindex zabbix zabbix-agent
18258
18259 Zabbix agent gathers information for Zabbix server.
18260
18261 @c %start of fragment
18262
18263 Available @code{zabbix-agent-configuration} fields are:
18264
18265 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-agent-configuration} parameter} package zabbix-agent
18266 The zabbix-agent package.
18267
18268 @end deftypevr
18269
18270 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-agent-configuration} parameter} string user
18271 User who will run the Zabbix agent.
18272
18273 Defaults to @samp{"zabbix"}.
18274
18275 @end deftypevr
18276
18277 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-agent-configuration} parameter} group group
18278 Group who will run the Zabbix agent.
18279
18280 Defaults to @samp{"zabbix"}.
18281
18282 @end deftypevr
18283
18284 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-agent-configuration} parameter} string hostname
18285 Unique, case sensitive hostname which is required for active checks and
18286 must match hostname as configured on the server.
18287
18288 Defaults to @samp{"Zabbix server"}.
18289
18290 @end deftypevr
18291
18292 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-agent-configuration} parameter} string log-type
18293 Specifies where log messages are written to:
18294
18295 @itemize @bullet
18296 @item
18297 @code{system} - syslog.
18298
18299 @item
18300 @code{file} - file specified with @code{log-file} parameter.
18301
18302 @item
18303 @code{console} - standard output.
18304
18305 @end itemize
18306
18307 Defaults to @samp{""}.
18308
18309 @end deftypevr
18310
18311 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-agent-configuration} parameter} string log-file
18312 Log file name for @code{log-type} @code{file} parameter.
18313
18314 Defaults to @samp{"/var/log/zabbix/agent.log"}.
18315
18316 @end deftypevr
18317
18318 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-agent-configuration} parameter} string pid-file
18319 Name of PID file.
18320
18321 Defaults to @samp{"/var/run/zabbix/zabbix_agent.pid"}.
18322
18323 @end deftypevr
18324
18325 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-agent-configuration} parameter} list server
18326 List of IP addresses, optionally in CIDR notation, or hostnames of
18327 Zabbix servers and Zabbix proxies. Incoming connections will be
18328 accepted only from the hosts listed here.
18329
18330 Defaults to @samp{("127.0.0.1")}.
18331
18332 @end deftypevr
18333
18334 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-agent-configuration} parameter} list server-active
18335 List of IP:port (or hostname:port) pairs of Zabbix servers and Zabbix
18336 proxies for active checks. If port is not specified, default port is
18337 used. If this parameter is not specified, active checks are disabled.
18338
18339 Defaults to @samp{("127.0.0.1")}.
18340
18341 @end deftypevr
18342
18343 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-agent-configuration} parameter} string extra-options
18344 Extra options will be appended to Zabbix server configuration file.
18345
18346 Defaults to @samp{""}.
18347
18348 @end deftypevr
18349
18350 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-agent-configuration} parameter} include-files include-files
18351 You may include individual files or all files in a directory in the
18352 configuration file.
18353
18354 Defaults to @samp{()}.
18355
18356 @end deftypevr
18357
18358 @c %end of fragment
18359
18360 @subsubheading Zabbix front-end
18361 @cindex zabbix zabbix-front-end
18362
18363 This service provides a WEB interface to Zabbix server.
18364
18365 @c %start of fragment
18366
18367 Available @code{zabbix-front-end-configuration} fields are:
18368
18369 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-front-end-configuration} parameter} nginx-server-configuration-list nginx
18370 NGINX configuration.
18371
18372 @end deftypevr
18373
18374 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-front-end-configuration} parameter} string db-host
18375 Database host name.
18376
18377 Defaults to @samp{"localhost"}.
18378
18379 @end deftypevr
18380
18381 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-front-end-configuration} parameter} number db-port
18382 Database port.
18383
18384 Defaults to @samp{5432}.
18385
18386 @end deftypevr
18387
18388 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-front-end-configuration} parameter} string db-name
18389 Database name.
18390
18391 Defaults to @samp{"zabbix"}.
18392
18393 @end deftypevr
18394
18395 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-front-end-configuration} parameter} string db-user
18396 Database user.
18397
18398 Defaults to @samp{"zabbix"}.
18399
18400 @end deftypevr
18401
18402 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-front-end-configuration} parameter} string db-password
18403 Database password. Please, use @code{db-secret-file} instead.
18404
18405 Defaults to @samp{""}.
18406
18407 @end deftypevr
18408
18409 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-front-end-configuration} parameter} string db-secret-file
18410 Secret file which will be appended to @file{zabbix.conf.php} file. This
18411 file contains credentials for use by Zabbix front-end. You are expected
18412 to create it manually.
18413
18414 Defaults to @samp{""}.
18415
18416 @end deftypevr
18417
18418 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-front-end-configuration} parameter} string zabbix-host
18419 Zabbix server hostname.
18420
18421 Defaults to @samp{"localhost"}.
18422
18423 @end deftypevr
18424
18425 @deftypevr {@code{zabbix-front-end-configuration} parameter} number zabbix-port
18426 Zabbix server port.
18427
18428 Defaults to @samp{10051}.
18429
18430 @end deftypevr
18431
18432
18433 @c %end of fragment
18434
18435 @node Kerberos Services
18436 @subsection Kerberos Services
18437 @cindex Kerberos
18438
18439 The @code{(gnu services kerberos)} module provides services relating to
18440 the authentication protocol @dfn{Kerberos}.
18441
18442 @subsubheading Krb5 Service
18443
18444 Programs using a Kerberos client library normally
18445 expect a configuration file in @file{/etc/krb5.conf}.
18446 This service generates such a file from a definition provided in the
18447 operating system declaration.
18448 It does not cause any daemon to be started.
18449
18450 No ``keytab'' files are provided by this service---you must explicitly create them.
18451 This service is known to work with the MIT client library, @code{mit-krb5}.
18452 Other implementations have not been tested.
18453
18454 @defvr {Scheme Variable} krb5-service-type
18455 A service type for Kerberos 5 clients.
18456 @end defvr
18457
18458 @noindent
18459 Here is an example of its use:
18460 @lisp
18461 (service krb5-service-type
18462 (krb5-configuration
18463 (default-realm "EXAMPLE.COM")
18464 (allow-weak-crypto? #t)
18465 (realms (list
18466 (krb5-realm
18467 (name "EXAMPLE.COM")
18468 (admin-server "groucho.example.com")
18469 (kdc "karl.example.com"))
18470 (krb5-realm
18471 (name "ARGRX.EDU")
18472 (admin-server "kerb-admin.argrx.edu")
18473 (kdc "keys.argrx.edu"))))))
18474 @end lisp
18475
18476 @noindent
18477 This example provides a Kerberos@tie{}5 client configuration which:
18478 @itemize
18479 @item Recognizes two realms, @i{viz:} ``EXAMPLE.COM'' and ``ARGRX.EDU'', both
18480 of which have distinct administration servers and key distribution centers;
18481 @item Will default to the realm ``EXAMPLE.COM'' if the realm is not explicitly
18482 specified by clients;
18483 @item Accepts services which only support encryption types known to be weak.
18484 @end itemize
18485
18486 The @code{krb5-realm} and @code{krb5-configuration} types have many fields.
18487 Only the most commonly used ones are described here.
18488 For a full list, and more detailed explanation of each, see the MIT
18489 @uref{https://web.mit.edu/kerberos/krb5-devel/doc/admin/conf_files/krb5_conf.html,,krb5.conf}
18490 documentation.
18491
18492
18493 @deftp {Data Type} krb5-realm
18494 @cindex realm, kerberos
18495 @table @asis
18496 @item @code{name}
18497 This field is a string identifying the name of the realm.
18498 A common convention is to use the fully qualified DNS name of your organization,
18499 converted to upper case.
18500
18501 @item @code{admin-server}
18502 This field is a string identifying the host where the administration server is
18503 running.
18504
18505 @item @code{kdc}
18506 This field is a string identifying the key distribution center
18507 for the realm.
18508 @end table
18509 @end deftp
18510
18511 @deftp {Data Type} krb5-configuration
18512
18513 @table @asis
18514 @item @code{allow-weak-crypto?} (default: @code{#f})
18515 If this flag is @code{#t} then services which only offer encryption algorithms
18516 known to be weak will be accepted.
18517
18518 @item @code{default-realm} (default: @code{#f})
18519 This field should be a string identifying the default Kerberos
18520 realm for the client.
18521 You should set this field to the name of your Kerberos realm.
18522 If this value is @code{#f}
18523 then a realm must be specified with every Kerberos principal when invoking programs
18524 such as @command{kinit}.
18525
18526 @item @code{realms}
18527 This should be a non-empty list of @code{krb5-realm} objects, which clients may
18528 access.
18529 Normally, one of them will have a @code{name} field matching the @code{default-realm}
18530 field.
18531 @end table
18532 @end deftp
18533
18534
18535 @subsubheading PAM krb5 Service
18536 @cindex pam-krb5
18537
18538 The @code{pam-krb5} service allows for login authentication and password
18539 management via Kerberos.
18540 You will need this service if you want PAM enabled applications to authenticate
18541 users using Kerberos.
18542
18543 @defvr {Scheme Variable} pam-krb5-service-type
18544 A service type for the Kerberos 5 PAM module.
18545 @end defvr
18546
18547 @deftp {Data Type} pam-krb5-configuration
18548 Data type representing the configuration of the Kerberos 5 PAM module.
18549 This type has the following parameters:
18550 @table @asis
18551 @item @code{pam-krb5} (default: @code{pam-krb5})
18552 The pam-krb5 package to use.
18553
18554 @item @code{minimum-uid} (default: @code{1000})
18555 The smallest user ID for which Kerberos authentications should be attempted.
18556 Local accounts with lower values will silently fail to authenticate.
18557 @end table
18558 @end deftp
18559
18560
18561 @node LDAP Services
18562 @subsection LDAP Services
18563 @cindex LDAP
18564 @cindex nslcd, LDAP service
18565
18566 The @code{(gnu services authentication)} module provides the
18567 @code{nslcd-service-type}, which can be used to authenticate against an LDAP
18568 server. In addition to configuring the service itself, you may want to add
18569 @code{ldap} as a name service to the Name Service Switch. @xref{Name Service
18570 Switch} for detailed information.
18571
18572 Here is a simple operating system declaration with a default configuration of
18573 the @code{nslcd-service-type} and a Name Service Switch configuration that
18574 consults the @code{ldap} name service last:
18575
18576 @example
18577 (use-service-modules authentication)
18578 (use-modules (gnu system nss))
18579 ...
18580 (operating-system
18581 ...
18582 (services
18583 (cons*
18584 (service nslcd-service-type)
18585 (service dhcp-client-service-type)
18586 %base-services))
18587 (name-service-switch
18588 (let ((services (list (name-service (name "db"))
18589 (name-service (name "files"))
18590 (name-service (name "ldap")))))
18591 (name-service-switch
18592 (inherit %mdns-host-lookup-nss)
18593 (password services)
18594 (shadow services)
18595 (group services)
18596 (netgroup services)
18597 (gshadow services)))))
18598 @end example
18599
18600 @c %start of generated documentation for nslcd-configuration
18601
18602 Available @code{nslcd-configuration} fields are:
18603
18604 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} package nss-pam-ldapd
18605 The @code{nss-pam-ldapd} package to use.
18606
18607 @end deftypevr
18608
18609 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-number threads
18610 The number of threads to start that can handle requests and perform LDAP
18611 queries. Each thread opens a separate connection to the LDAP server.
18612 The default is to start 5 threads.
18613
18614 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18615
18616 @end deftypevr
18617
18618 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} string uid
18619 This specifies the user id with which the daemon should be run.
18620
18621 Defaults to @samp{"nslcd"}.
18622
18623 @end deftypevr
18624
18625 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} string gid
18626 This specifies the group id with which the daemon should be run.
18627
18628 Defaults to @samp{"nslcd"}.
18629
18630 @end deftypevr
18631
18632 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} log-option log
18633 This option controls the way logging is done via a list containing
18634 SCHEME and LEVEL. The SCHEME argument may either be the symbols "none"
18635 or "syslog", or an absolute file name. The LEVEL argument is optional
18636 and specifies the log level. The log level may be one of the following
18637 symbols: "crit", "error", "warning", "notice", "info" or "debug". All
18638 messages with the specified log level or higher are logged.
18639
18640 Defaults to @samp{("/var/log/nslcd" info)}.
18641
18642 @end deftypevr
18643
18644 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} list uri
18645 The list of LDAP server URIs. Normally, only the first server will be
18646 used with the following servers as fall-back.
18647
18648 Defaults to @samp{("ldap://localhost:389/")}.
18649
18650 @end deftypevr
18651
18652 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-string ldap-version
18653 The version of the LDAP protocol to use. The default is to use the
18654 maximum version supported by the LDAP library.
18655
18656 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18657
18658 @end deftypevr
18659
18660 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-string binddn
18661 Specifies the distinguished name with which to bind to the directory
18662 server for lookups. The default is to bind anonymously.
18663
18664 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18665
18666 @end deftypevr
18667
18668 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-string bindpw
18669 Specifies the credentials with which to bind. This option is only
18670 applicable when used with binddn.
18671
18672 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18673
18674 @end deftypevr
18675
18676 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-string rootpwmoddn
18677 Specifies the distinguished name to use when the root user tries to
18678 modify a user's password using the PAM module.
18679
18680 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18681
18682 @end deftypevr
18683
18684 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-string rootpwmodpw
18685 Specifies the credentials with which to bind if the root user tries to
18686 change a user's password. This option is only applicable when used with
18687 rootpwmoddn
18688
18689 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18690
18691 @end deftypevr
18692
18693 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-string sasl-mech
18694 Specifies the SASL mechanism to be used when performing SASL
18695 authentication.
18696
18697 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18698
18699 @end deftypevr
18700
18701 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-string sasl-realm
18702 Specifies the SASL realm to be used when performing SASL authentication.
18703
18704 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18705
18706 @end deftypevr
18707
18708 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-string sasl-authcid
18709 Specifies the authentication identity to be used when performing SASL
18710 authentication.
18711
18712 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18713
18714 @end deftypevr
18715
18716 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-string sasl-authzid
18717 Specifies the authorization identity to be used when performing SASL
18718 authentication.
18719
18720 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18721
18722 @end deftypevr
18723
18724 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-boolean sasl-canonicalize?
18725 Determines whether the LDAP server host name should be canonicalised. If
18726 this is enabled the LDAP library will do a reverse host name lookup. By
18727 default, it is left up to the LDAP library whether this check is
18728 performed or not.
18729
18730 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18731
18732 @end deftypevr
18733
18734 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-string krb5-ccname
18735 Set the name for the GSS-API Kerberos credentials cache.
18736
18737 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18738
18739 @end deftypevr
18740
18741 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} string base
18742 The directory search base.
18743
18744 Defaults to @samp{"dc=example,dc=com"}.
18745
18746 @end deftypevr
18747
18748 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} scope-option scope
18749 Specifies the search scope (subtree, onelevel, base or children). The
18750 default scope is subtree; base scope is almost never useful for name
18751 service lookups; children scope is not supported on all servers.
18752
18753 Defaults to @samp{(subtree)}.
18754
18755 @end deftypevr
18756
18757 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-deref-option deref
18758 Specifies the policy for dereferencing aliases. The default policy is
18759 to never dereference aliases.
18760
18761 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18762
18763 @end deftypevr
18764
18765 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-boolean referrals
18766 Specifies whether automatic referral chasing should be enabled. The
18767 default behaviour is to chase referrals.
18768
18769 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18770
18771 @end deftypevr
18772
18773 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} list-of-map-entries maps
18774 This option allows for custom attributes to be looked up instead of the
18775 default RFC 2307 attributes. It is a list of maps, each consisting of
18776 the name of a map, the RFC 2307 attribute to match and the query
18777 expression for the attribute as it is available in the directory.
18778
18779 Defaults to @samp{()}.
18780
18781 @end deftypevr
18782
18783 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} list-of-filter-entries filters
18784 A list of filters consisting of the name of a map to which the filter
18785 applies and an LDAP search filter expression.
18786
18787 Defaults to @samp{()}.
18788
18789 @end deftypevr
18790
18791 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-number bind-timelimit
18792 Specifies the time limit in seconds to use when connecting to the
18793 directory server. The default value is 10 seconds.
18794
18795 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18796
18797 @end deftypevr
18798
18799 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-number timelimit
18800 Specifies the time limit (in seconds) to wait for a response from the
18801 LDAP server. A value of zero, which is the default, is to wait
18802 indefinitely for searches to be completed.
18803
18804 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18805
18806 @end deftypevr
18807
18808 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-number idle-timelimit
18809 Specifies the period if inactivity (in seconds) after which the con‐
18810 nection to the LDAP server will be closed. The default is not to time
18811 out connections.
18812
18813 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18814
18815 @end deftypevr
18816
18817 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-number reconnect-sleeptime
18818 Specifies the number of seconds to sleep when connecting to all LDAP
18819 servers fails. By default one second is waited between the first
18820 failure and the first retry.
18821
18822 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18823
18824 @end deftypevr
18825
18826 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-number reconnect-retrytime
18827 Specifies the time after which the LDAP server is considered to be
18828 permanently unavailable. Once this time is reached retries will be done
18829 only once per this time period. The default value is 10 seconds.
18830
18831 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18832
18833 @end deftypevr
18834
18835 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-ssl-option ssl
18836 Specifies whether to use SSL/TLS or not (the default is not to). If
18837 'start-tls is specified then StartTLS is used rather than raw LDAP over
18838 SSL.
18839
18840 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18841
18842 @end deftypevr
18843
18844 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-tls-reqcert-option tls-reqcert
18845 Specifies what checks to perform on a server-supplied certificate. The
18846 meaning of the values is described in the ldap.conf(5) manual page.
18847
18848 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18849
18850 @end deftypevr
18851
18852 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-string tls-cacertdir
18853 Specifies the directory containing X.509 certificates for peer authen‐
18854 tication. This parameter is ignored when using GnuTLS.
18855
18856 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18857
18858 @end deftypevr
18859
18860 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-string tls-cacertfile
18861 Specifies the path to the X.509 certificate for peer authentication.
18862
18863 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18864
18865 @end deftypevr
18866
18867 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-string tls-randfile
18868 Specifies the path to an entropy source. This parameter is ignored when
18869 using GnuTLS.
18870
18871 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18872
18873 @end deftypevr
18874
18875 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-string tls-ciphers
18876 Specifies the ciphers to use for TLS as a string.
18877
18878 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18879
18880 @end deftypevr
18881
18882 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-string tls-cert
18883 Specifies the path to the file containing the local certificate for
18884 client TLS authentication.
18885
18886 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18887
18888 @end deftypevr
18889
18890 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-string tls-key
18891 Specifies the path to the file containing the private key for client TLS
18892 authentication.
18893
18894 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18895
18896 @end deftypevr
18897
18898 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-number pagesize
18899 Set this to a number greater than 0 to request paged results from the
18900 LDAP server in accordance with RFC2696. The default (0) is to not
18901 request paged results.
18902
18903 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18904
18905 @end deftypevr
18906
18907 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-ignore-users-option nss-initgroups-ignoreusers
18908 This option prevents group membership lookups through LDAP for the
18909 specified users. Alternatively, the value 'all-local may be used. With
18910 that value nslcd builds a full list of non-LDAP users on startup.
18911
18912 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18913
18914 @end deftypevr
18915
18916 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-number nss-min-uid
18917 This option ensures that LDAP users with a numeric user id lower than
18918 the specified value are ignored.
18919
18920 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18921
18922 @end deftypevr
18923
18924 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-number nss-uid-offset
18925 This option specifies an offset that is added to all LDAP numeric user
18926 ids. This can be used to avoid user id collisions with local users.
18927
18928 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18929
18930 @end deftypevr
18931
18932 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-number nss-gid-offset
18933 This option specifies an offset that is added to all LDAP numeric group
18934 ids. This can be used to avoid user id collisions with local groups.
18935
18936 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18937
18938 @end deftypevr
18939
18940 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-boolean nss-nested-groups
18941 If this option is set, the member attribute of a group may point to
18942 another group. Members of nested groups are also returned in the higher
18943 level group and parent groups are returned when finding groups for a
18944 specific user. The default is not to perform extra searches for nested
18945 groups.
18946
18947 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18948
18949 @end deftypevr
18950
18951 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-boolean nss-getgrent-skipmembers
18952 If this option is set, the group member list is not retrieved when
18953 looking up groups. Lookups for finding which groups a user belongs to
18954 will remain functional so the user will likely still get the correct
18955 groups assigned on login.
18956
18957 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18958
18959 @end deftypevr
18960
18961 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-boolean nss-disable-enumeration
18962 If this option is set, functions which cause all user/group entries to
18963 be loaded from the directory will not succeed in doing so. This can
18964 dramatically reduce LDAP server load in situations where there are a
18965 great number of users and/or groups. This option is not recommended for
18966 most configurations.
18967
18968 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18969
18970 @end deftypevr
18971
18972 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-string validnames
18973 This option can be used to specify how user and group names are verified
18974 within the system. This pattern is used to check all user and group
18975 names that are requested and returned from LDAP.
18976
18977 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18978
18979 @end deftypevr
18980
18981 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-boolean ignorecase
18982 This specifies whether or not to perform searches using case-insensitive
18983 matching. Enabling this could open up the system to authorization
18984 bypass vulnerabilities and introduce nscd cache poisoning
18985 vulnerabilities which allow denial of service.
18986
18987 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18988
18989 @end deftypevr
18990
18991 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-boolean pam-authc-ppolicy
18992 This option specifies whether password policy controls are requested and
18993 handled from the LDAP server when performing user authentication.
18994
18995 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
18996
18997 @end deftypevr
18998
18999 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-string pam-authc-search
19000 By default nslcd performs an LDAP search with the user's credentials
19001 after BIND (authentication) to ensure that the BIND operation was
19002 successful. The default search is a simple check to see if the user's
19003 DN exists. A search filter can be specified that will be used instead.
19004 It should return at least one entry.
19005
19006 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
19007
19008 @end deftypevr
19009
19010 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-string pam-authz-search
19011 This option allows flexible fine tuning of the authorisation check that
19012 should be performed. The search filter specified is executed and if any
19013 entries match, access is granted, otherwise access is denied.
19014
19015 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
19016
19017 @end deftypevr
19018
19019 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} maybe-string pam-password-prohibit-message
19020 If this option is set password modification using pam_ldap will be
19021 denied and the specified message will be presented to the user instead.
19022 The message can be used to direct the user to an alternative means of
19023 changing their password.
19024
19025 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
19026
19027 @end deftypevr
19028
19029 @deftypevr {@code{nslcd-configuration} parameter} list pam-services
19030 List of pam service names for which LDAP authentication should suffice.
19031
19032 Defaults to @samp{()}.
19033
19034 @end deftypevr
19035
19036 @c %end of generated documentation for nslcd-configuration
19037
19038
19039 @node Web Services
19040 @subsection Web Services
19041
19042 @cindex web
19043 @cindex www
19044 @cindex HTTP
19045 The @code{(gnu services web)} module provides the Apache HTTP Server,
19046 the nginx web server, and also a fastcgi wrapper daemon.
19047
19048 @subsubheading Apache HTTP Server
19049
19050 @deffn {Scheme Variable} httpd-service-type
19051 Service type for the @uref{https://httpd.apache.org/,Apache HTTP} server
19052 (@dfn{httpd}). The value for this service type is a
19053 @code{httpd-configuration} record.
19054
19055 A simple example configuration is given below.
19056
19057 @example
19058 (service httpd-service-type
19059 (httpd-configuration
19060 (config
19061 (httpd-config-file
19062 (server-name "www.example.com")
19063 (document-root "/srv/http/www.example.com")))))
19064 @end example
19065
19066 Other services can also extend the @code{httpd-service-type} to add to
19067 the configuration.
19068
19069 @example
19070 (simple-service 'my-extra-server httpd-service-type
19071 (list
19072 (httpd-virtualhost
19073 "*:80"
19074 (list (string-append
19075 "ServerName "www.example.com
19076 DocumentRoot \"/srv/http/www.example.com\"")))))
19077 @end example
19078 @end deffn
19079
19080 The details for the @code{httpd-configuration}, @code{httpd-module},
19081 @code{httpd-config-file} and @code{httpd-virtualhost} record types are
19082 given below.
19083
19084 @deffn {Data Type} httpd-configuration
19085 This data type represents the configuration for the httpd service.
19086
19087 @table @asis
19088 @item @code{package} (default: @code{httpd})
19089 The httpd package to use.
19090
19091 @item @code{pid-file} (default: @code{"/var/run/httpd"})
19092 The pid file used by the shepherd-service.
19093
19094 @item @code{config} (default: @code{(httpd-config-file)})
19095 The configuration file to use with the httpd service. The default value
19096 is a @code{httpd-config-file} record, but this can also be a different
19097 G-expression that generates a file, for example a @code{plain-file}. A
19098 file outside of the store can also be specified through a string.
19099
19100 @end table
19101 @end deffn
19102
19103 @deffn {Data Type} httpd-module
19104 This data type represents a module for the httpd service.
19105
19106 @table @asis
19107 @item @code{name}
19108 The name of the module.
19109
19110 @item @code{file}
19111 The file for the module. This can be relative to the httpd package being
19112 used, the absolute location of a file, or a G-expression for a file
19113 within the store, for example @code{(file-append mod-wsgi
19114 "/modules/mod_wsgi.so")}.
19115
19116 @end table
19117 @end deffn
19118
19119 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %default-httpd-modules
19120 A default list of @code{httpd-module} objects.
19121 @end defvr
19122
19123 @deffn {Data Type} httpd-config-file
19124 This data type represents a configuration file for the httpd service.
19125
19126 @table @asis
19127 @item @code{modules} (default: @code{%default-httpd-modules})
19128 The modules to load. Additional modules can be added here, or loaded by
19129 additional configuration.
19130
19131 For example, in order to handle requests for PHP files, you can use Apache’s
19132 @code{mod_proxy_fcgi} module along with @code{php-fpm-service-type}:
19133
19134 @example
19135 (service httpd-service-type
19136 (httpd-configuration
19137 (config
19138 (httpd-config-file
19139 (modules (cons*
19140 (httpd-module
19141 (name "proxy_module")
19142 (file "modules/mod_proxy.so"))
19143 (httpd-module
19144 (name "proxy_fcgi_module")
19145 (file "modules/mod_proxy_fcgi.so"))
19146 %default-httpd-modules))
19147 (extra-config (list "\
19148 <FilesMatch \\.php$>
19149 SetHandler \"proxy:unix:/var/run/php-fpm.sock|fcgi://localhost/\"
19150 </FilesMatch>"))))))
19151 (service php-fpm-service-type
19152 (php-fpm-configuration
19153 (socket "/var/run/php-fpm.sock")
19154 (socket-group "httpd")))
19155 @end example
19156
19157 @item @code{server-root} (default: @code{httpd})
19158 The @code{ServerRoot} in the configuration file, defaults to the httpd
19159 package. Directives including @code{Include} and @code{LoadModule} are
19160 taken as relative to the server root.
19161
19162 @item @code{server-name} (default: @code{#f})
19163 The @code{ServerName} in the configuration file, used to specify the
19164 request scheme, hostname and port that the server uses to identify
19165 itself.
19166
19167 This doesn't need to be set in the server config, and can be specifyed
19168 in virtual hosts. The default is @code{#f} to not specify a
19169 @code{ServerName}.
19170
19171 @item @code{document-root} (default: @code{"/srv/http"})
19172 The @code{DocumentRoot} from which files will be served.
19173
19174 @item @code{listen} (default: @code{'("80")})
19175 The list of values for the @code{Listen} directives in the config
19176 file. The value should be a list of strings, when each string can
19177 specify the port number to listen on, and optionally the IP address and
19178 protocol to use.
19179
19180 @item @code{pid-file} (default: @code{"/var/run/httpd"})
19181 The @code{PidFile} to use. This should match the @code{pid-file} set in
19182 the @code{httpd-configuration} so that the Shepherd service is
19183 configured correctly.
19184
19185 @item @code{error-log} (default: @code{"/var/log/httpd/error_log"})
19186 The @code{ErrorLog} to which the server will log errors.
19187
19188 @item @code{user} (default: @code{"httpd"})
19189 The @code{User} which the server will answer requests as.
19190
19191 @item @code{group} (default: @code{"httpd"})
19192 The @code{Group} which the server will answer requests as.
19193
19194 @item @code{extra-config} (default: @code{(list "TypesConfig etc/httpd/mime.types")})
19195 A flat list of strings and G-expressions which will be added to the end
19196 of the configuration file.
19197
19198 Any values which the service is extended with will be appended to this
19199 list.
19200
19201 @end table
19202 @end deffn
19203
19204 @deffn {Data Type} httpd-virtualhost
19205 This data type represents a virtualhost configuration block for the httpd service.
19206
19207 These should be added to the extra-config for the httpd-service.
19208
19209 @example
19210 (simple-service 'my-extra-server httpd-service-type
19211 (list
19212 (httpd-virtualhost
19213 "*:80"
19214 (list (string-append
19215 "ServerName "www.example.com
19216 DocumentRoot \"/srv/http/www.example.com\"")))))
19217 @end example
19218
19219 @table @asis
19220 @item @code{addresses-and-ports}
19221 The addresses and ports for the @code{VirtualHost} directive.
19222
19223 @item @code{contents}
19224 The contents of the @code{VirtualHost} directive, this should be a list
19225 of strings and G-expressions.
19226
19227 @end table
19228 @end deffn
19229
19230 @subsubheading NGINX
19231
19232 @deffn {Scheme Variable} nginx-service-type
19233 Service type for the @uref{https://nginx.org/,NGinx} web server. The
19234 value for this service type is a @code{<nginx-configuration>} record.
19235
19236 A simple example configuration is given below.
19237
19238 @example
19239 (service nginx-service-type
19240 (nginx-configuration
19241 (server-blocks
19242 (list (nginx-server-configuration
19243 (server-name '("www.example.com"))
19244 (root "/srv/http/www.example.com"))))))
19245 @end example
19246
19247 In addition to adding server blocks to the service configuration
19248 directly, this service can be extended by other services to add server
19249 blocks, as in this example:
19250
19251 @example
19252 (simple-service 'my-extra-server nginx-service-type
19253 (list (nginx-server-configuration
19254 (root "/srv/http/extra-website")
19255 (try-files (list "$uri" "$uri/index.html")))))
19256 @end example
19257 @end deffn
19258
19259 At startup, @command{nginx} has not yet read its configuration file, so
19260 it uses a default file to log error messages. If it fails to load its
19261 configuration file, that is where error messages are logged. After the
19262 configuration file is loaded, the default error log file changes as per
19263 configuration. In our case, startup error messages can be found in
19264 @file{/var/run/nginx/logs/error.log}, and after configuration in
19265 @file{/var/log/nginx/error.log}. The second location can be changed
19266 with the @var{log-directory} configuration option.
19267
19268 @deffn {Data Type} nginx-configuration
19269 This data type represents the configuration for NGinx. Some
19270 configuration can be done through this and the other provided record
19271 types, or alternatively, a config file can be provided.
19272
19273 @table @asis
19274 @item @code{nginx} (default: @code{nginx})
19275 The nginx package to use.
19276
19277 @item @code{log-directory} (default: @code{"/var/log/nginx"})
19278 The directory to which NGinx will write log files.
19279
19280 @item @code{run-directory} (default: @code{"/var/run/nginx"})
19281 The directory in which NGinx will create a pid file, and write temporary
19282 files.
19283
19284 @item @code{server-blocks} (default: @code{'()})
19285 A list of @dfn{server blocks} to create in the generated configuration
19286 file, the elements should be of type
19287 @code{<nginx-server-configuration>}.
19288
19289 The following example would setup NGinx to serve @code{www.example.com}
19290 from the @code{/srv/http/www.example.com} directory, without using
19291 HTTPS.
19292 @example
19293 (service nginx-service-type
19294 (nginx-configuration
19295 (server-blocks
19296 (list (nginx-server-configuration
19297 (server-name '("www.example.com"))
19298 (root "/srv/http/www.example.com"))))))
19299 @end example
19300
19301 @item @code{upstream-blocks} (default: @code{'()})
19302 A list of @dfn{upstream blocks} to create in the generated configuration
19303 file, the elements should be of type
19304 @code{<nginx-upstream-configuration>}.
19305
19306 Configuring upstreams through the @code{upstream-blocks} can be useful
19307 when combined with @code{locations} in the
19308 @code{<nginx-server-configuration>} records. The following example
19309 creates a server configuration with one location configuration, that
19310 will proxy requests to a upstream configuration, which will handle
19311 requests with two servers.
19312
19313 @example
19314 (service
19315 nginx-service-type
19316 (nginx-configuration
19317 (server-blocks
19318 (list (nginx-server-configuration
19319 (server-name '("www.example.com"))
19320 (root "/srv/http/www.example.com")
19321 (locations
19322 (list
19323 (nginx-location-configuration
19324 (uri "/path1")
19325 (body '("proxy_pass http://server-proxy;"))))))))
19326 (upstream-blocks
19327 (list (nginx-upstream-configuration
19328 (name "server-proxy")
19329 (servers (list "server1.example.com"
19330 "server2.example.com")))))))
19331 @end example
19332
19333 @item @code{file} (default: @code{#f})
19334 If a configuration @var{file} is provided, this will be used, rather than
19335 generating a configuration file from the provided @code{log-directory},
19336 @code{run-directory}, @code{server-blocks} and @code{upstream-blocks}. For
19337 proper operation, these arguments should match what is in @var{file} to ensure
19338 that the directories are created when the service is activated.
19339
19340 This can be useful if you have an existing configuration file, or it's
19341 not possible to do what is required through the other parts of the
19342 nginx-configuration record.
19343
19344 @item @code{server-names-hash-bucket-size} (default: @code{#f})
19345 Bucket size for the server names hash tables, defaults to @code{#f} to
19346 use the size of the processors cache line.
19347
19348 @item @code{server-names-hash-bucket-max-size} (default: @code{#f})
19349 Maximum bucket size for the server names hash tables.
19350
19351 @item @code{extra-content} (default: @code{""})
19352 Extra content for the @code{http} block. Should be string or a string
19353 valued G-expression.
19354
19355 @end table
19356 @end deffn
19357
19358 @deftp {Data Type} nginx-server-configuration
19359 Data type representing the configuration of an nginx server block.
19360 This type has the following parameters:
19361
19362 @table @asis
19363 @item @code{listen} (default: @code{'("80" "443 ssl")})
19364 Each @code{listen} directive sets the address and port for IP, or the
19365 path for a UNIX-domain socket on which the server will accept requests.
19366 Both address and port, or only address or only port can be specified.
19367 An address may also be a hostname, for example:
19368
19369 @example
19370 '("127.0.0.1:8000" "127.0.0.1" "8000" "*:8000" "localhost:8000")
19371 @end example
19372
19373 @item @code{server-name} (default: @code{(list 'default)})
19374 A list of server names this server represents. @code{'default} represents the
19375 default server for connections matching no other server.
19376
19377 @item @code{root} (default: @code{"/srv/http"})
19378 Root of the website nginx will serve.
19379
19380 @item @code{locations} (default: @code{'()})
19381 A list of @dfn{nginx-location-configuration} or
19382 @dfn{nginx-named-location-configuration} records to use within this
19383 server block.
19384
19385 @item @code{index} (default: @code{(list "index.html")})
19386 Index files to look for when clients ask for a directory. If it cannot be found,
19387 Nginx will send the list of files in the directory.
19388
19389 @item @code{try-files} (default: @code{'()})
19390 A list of files whose existence is checked in the specified order.
19391 @code{nginx} will use the first file it finds to process the request.
19392
19393 @item @code{ssl-certificate} (default: @code{#f})
19394 Where to find the certificate for secure connections. Set it to @code{#f} if
19395 you don't have a certificate or you don't want to use HTTPS.
19396
19397 @item @code{ssl-certificate-key} (default: @code{#f})
19398 Where to find the private key for secure connections. Set it to @code{#f} if
19399 you don't have a key or you don't want to use HTTPS.
19400
19401 @item @code{server-tokens?} (default: @code{#f})
19402 Whether the server should add its configuration to response.
19403
19404 @item @code{raw-content} (default: @code{'()})
19405 A list of raw lines added to the server block.
19406
19407 @end table
19408 @end deftp
19409
19410 @deftp {Data Type} nginx-upstream-configuration
19411 Data type representing the configuration of an nginx @code{upstream}
19412 block. This type has the following parameters:
19413
19414 @table @asis
19415 @item @code{name}
19416 Name for this group of servers.
19417
19418 @item @code{servers}
19419 Specify the addresses of the servers in the group. The address can be
19420 specified as a IP address (e.g.@: @samp{127.0.0.1}), domain name
19421 (e.g.@: @samp{backend1.example.com}) or a path to a UNIX socket using the
19422 prefix @samp{unix:}. For addresses using an IP address or domain name,
19423 the default port is 80, and a different port can be specified
19424 explicitly.
19425
19426 @end table
19427 @end deftp
19428
19429 @deftp {Data Type} nginx-location-configuration
19430 Data type representing the configuration of an nginx @code{location}
19431 block. This type has the following parameters:
19432
19433 @table @asis
19434 @item @code{uri}
19435 URI which this location block matches.
19436
19437 @anchor{nginx-location-configuration body}
19438 @item @code{body}
19439 Body of the location block, specified as a list of strings. This can contain
19440 many
19441 configuration directives. For example, to pass requests to a upstream
19442 server group defined using an @code{nginx-upstream-configuration} block,
19443 the following directive would be specified in the body @samp{(list "proxy_pass
19444 http://upstream-name;")}.
19445
19446 @end table
19447 @end deftp
19448
19449 @deftp {Data Type} nginx-named-location-configuration
19450 Data type representing the configuration of an nginx named location
19451 block. Named location blocks are used for request redirection, and not
19452 used for regular request processing. This type has the following
19453 parameters:
19454
19455 @table @asis
19456 @item @code{name}
19457 Name to identify this location block.
19458
19459 @item @code{body}
19460 @xref{nginx-location-configuration body}, as the body for named location
19461 blocks can be used in a similar way to the
19462 @code{nginx-location-configuration body}. One restriction is that the
19463 body of a named location block cannot contain location blocks.
19464
19465 @end table
19466 @end deftp
19467
19468 @subsubheading Varnish Cache
19469 @cindex Varnish
19470 Varnish is a fast cache server that sits in between web applications
19471 and end users. It proxies requests from clients and caches the
19472 accessed URLs such that multiple requests for the same resource only
19473 creates one request to the back-end.
19474
19475 @defvr {Scheme Variable} varnish-service-type
19476 Service type for the Varnish daemon.
19477 @end defvr
19478
19479 @deftp {Data Type} varnish-configuration
19480 Data type representing the @code{varnish} service configuration.
19481 This type has the following parameters:
19482
19483 @table @asis
19484 @item @code{package} (default: @code{varnish})
19485 The Varnish package to use.
19486
19487 @item @code{name} (default: @code{"default"})
19488 A name for this Varnish instance. Varnish will create a directory in
19489 @file{/var/varnish/} with this name and keep temporary files there. If
19490 the name starts with a forward slash, it is interpreted as an absolute
19491 directory name.
19492
19493 Pass the @code{-n} argument to other Varnish programs to connect to the
19494 named instance, e.g.@: @command{varnishncsa -n default}.
19495
19496 @item @code{backend} (default: @code{"localhost:8080"})
19497 The backend to use. This option has no effect if @code{vcl} is set.
19498
19499 @item @code{vcl} (default: #f)
19500 The @dfn{VCL} (Varnish Configuration Language) program to run. If this
19501 is @code{#f}, Varnish will proxy @code{backend} using the default
19502 configuration. Otherwise this must be a file-like object with valid
19503 VCL syntax.
19504
19505 @c Varnish does not support HTTPS, so keep this URL to avoid confusion.
19506 For example, to mirror @url{http://www.gnu.org,www.gnu.org} with VCL you
19507 can do something along these lines:
19508
19509 @example
19510 (define %gnu-mirror
19511 (plain-file
19512 "gnu.vcl"
19513 "vcl 4.1;
19514 backend gnu @{ .host = "www.gnu.org"; @}"))
19515
19516 (operating-system
19517 ...
19518 (services (cons (service varnish-service-type
19519 (varnish-configuration
19520 (listen '(":80"))
19521 (vcl %gnu-mirror)))
19522 %base-services)))
19523 @end example
19524
19525 The configuration of an already running Varnish instance can be inspected
19526 and changed using the @command{varnishadm} program.
19527
19528 Consult the @url{https://varnish-cache.org/docs/,Varnish User Guide} and
19529 @url{https://book.varnish-software.com/4.0/,Varnish Book} for
19530 comprehensive documentation on Varnish and its configuration language.
19531
19532 @item @code{listen} (default: @code{'("localhost:80")})
19533 List of addresses Varnish will listen on.
19534
19535 @item @code{storage} (default: @code{'("malloc,128m")})
19536 List of storage backends that will be available in VCL.
19537
19538 @item @code{parameters} (default: @code{'()})
19539 List of run-time parameters in the form @code{'(("parameter" . "value"))}.
19540
19541 @item @code{extra-options} (default: @code{'()})
19542 Additional arguments to pass to the @command{varnishd} process.
19543
19544 @end table
19545 @end deftp
19546
19547 @subsubheading Patchwork
19548 @cindex Patchwork
19549 Patchwork is a patch tracking system. It can collect patches sent to a
19550 mailing list, and display them in a web interface.
19551
19552 @defvr {Scheme Variable} patchwork-service-type
19553 Service type for Patchwork.
19554 @end defvr
19555
19556 The following example is an example of a minimal service for Patchwork, for
19557 the @code{patchwork.example.com} domain.
19558
19559 @example
19560 (service patchwork-service-type
19561 (patchwork-configuration
19562 (domain "patchwork.example.com")
19563 (settings-module
19564 (patchwork-settings-module
19565 (allowed-hosts (list domain))
19566 (default-from-email "patchwork@@patchwork.example.com")))
19567 (getmail-retriever-config
19568 (getmail-retriever-configuration
19569 (type "SimpleIMAPSSLRetriever")
19570 (server "imap.example.com")
19571 (port 993)
19572 (username "patchwork")
19573 (password-command
19574 (list (file-append coreutils "/bin/cat")
19575 "/etc/getmail-patchwork-imap-password"))
19576 (extra-parameters
19577 '((mailboxes . ("Patches"))))))))
19578
19579 @end example
19580
19581 There are three records for configuring the Patchwork service. The
19582 @code{<patchwork-configuration>} relates to the configuration for Patchwork
19583 within the HTTPD service.
19584
19585 The @code{settings-module} field within the @code{<patchwork-configuration>}
19586 record can be populated with the @code{<patchwork-settings-module>} record,
19587 which describes a settings module that is generated within the Guix store.
19588
19589 For the @code{database-configuration} field within the
19590 @code{<patchwork-settings-module>}, the
19591 @code{<patchwork-database-configuration>} must be used.
19592
19593 @deftp {Data Type} patchwork-configuration
19594 Data type representing the Patchwork service configuration. This type has the
19595 following parameters:
19596
19597 @table @asis
19598 @item @code{patchwork} (default: @code{patchwork})
19599 The Patchwork package to use.
19600
19601 @item @code{domain}
19602 The domain to use for Patchwork, this is used in the HTTPD service virtual
19603 host.
19604
19605 @item @code{settings-module}
19606 The settings module to use for Patchwork. As a Django application, Patchwork
19607 is configured with a Python module containing the settings. This can either be
19608 an instance of the @code{<patchwork-settings-module>} record, any other record
19609 that represents the settings in the store, or a directory outside of the
19610 store.
19611
19612 @item @code{static-path} (default: @code{"/static/"})
19613 The path under which the HTTPD service should serve the static files.
19614
19615 @item @code{getmail-retriever-config}
19616 The getmail-retriever-configuration record value to use with
19617 Patchwork. Getmail will be configured with this value, the messages will be
19618 delivered to Patchwork.
19619
19620 @end table
19621 @end deftp
19622
19623 @deftp {Data Type} patchwork-settings-module
19624 Data type representing a settings module for Patchwork. Some of these
19625 settings relate directly to Patchwork, but others relate to Django, the web
19626 framework used by Patchwork, or the Django Rest Framework library. This type
19627 has the following parameters:
19628
19629 @table @asis
19630 @item @code{database-configuration} (default: @code{(patchwork-database-configuration)})
19631 The database connection settings used for Patchwork. See the
19632 @code{<patchwork-database-configuration>} record type for more information.
19633
19634 @item @code{secret-key-file} (default: @code{"/etc/patchwork/django-secret-key"})
19635 Patchwork, as a Django web application uses a secret key for cryptographically
19636 signing values. This file should contain a unique unpredictable value.
19637
19638 If this file does not exist, it will be created and populated with a random
19639 value by the patchwork-setup shepherd service.
19640
19641 This setting relates to Django.
19642
19643 @item @code{allowed-hosts}
19644 A list of valid hosts for this Patchwork service. This should at least include
19645 the domain specified in the @code{<patchwork-configuration>} record.
19646
19647 This is a Django setting.
19648
19649 @item @code{default-from-email}
19650 The email address from which Patchwork should send email by default.
19651
19652 This is a Patchwork setting.
19653
19654 @item @code{static-url} (default: @code{#f})
19655 The URL to use when serving static assets. It can be part of a URL, or a full
19656 URL, but must end in a @code{/}.
19657
19658 If the default value is used, the @code{static-path} value from the
19659 @code{<patchwork-configuration>} record will be used.
19660
19661 This is a Django setting.
19662
19663 @item @code{admins} (default: @code{'()})
19664 Email addresses to send the details of errors that occur. Each value should
19665 be a list containing two elements, the name and then the email address.
19666
19667 This is a Django setting.
19668
19669 @item @code{debug?} (default: @code{#f})
19670 Whether to run Patchwork in debug mode. If set to @code{#t}, detailed error
19671 messages will be shown.
19672
19673 This is a Django setting.
19674
19675 @item @code{enable-rest-api?} (default: @code{#t})
19676 Whether to enable the Patchwork REST API.
19677
19678 This is a Patchwork setting.
19679
19680 @item @code{enable-xmlrpc?} (default: @code{#t})
19681 Whether to enable the XML RPC API.
19682
19683 This is a Patchwork setting.
19684
19685 @item @code{force-https-links?} (default: @code{#t})
19686 Whether to use HTTPS links on Patchwork pages.
19687
19688 This is a Patchwork setting.
19689
19690 @item @code{extra-settings} (default: @code{""})
19691 Extra code to place at the end of the Patchwork settings module.
19692
19693 @end table
19694 @end deftp
19695
19696 @deftp {Data Type} patchwork-database-configuration
19697 Data type representing the database configuration for Patchwork.
19698
19699 @table @asis
19700 @item @code{engine} (default: @code{"django.db.backends.postgresql_psycopg2"})
19701 The database engine to use.
19702
19703 @item @code{name} (default: @code{"patchwork"})
19704 The name of the database to use.
19705
19706 @item @code{user} (default: @code{"httpd"})
19707 The user to connect to the database as.
19708
19709 @item @code{password} (default: @code{""})
19710 The password to use when connecting to the database.
19711
19712 @item @code{host} (default: @code{""})
19713 The host to make the database connection to.
19714
19715 @item @code{port} (default: @code{""})
19716 The port on which to connect to the database.
19717
19718 @end table
19719 @end deftp
19720
19721 @subsubheading FastCGI
19722 @cindex fastcgi
19723 @cindex fcgiwrap
19724 FastCGI is an interface between the front-end and the back-end of a web
19725 service. It is a somewhat legacy facility; new web services should
19726 generally just talk HTTP between the front-end and the back-end.
19727 However there are a number of back-end services such as PHP or the
19728 optimized HTTP Git repository access that use FastCGI, so we have
19729 support for it in Guix.
19730
19731 To use FastCGI, you configure the front-end web server (e.g., nginx) to
19732 dispatch some subset of its requests to the fastcgi backend, which
19733 listens on a local TCP or UNIX socket. There is an intermediary
19734 @code{fcgiwrap} program that sits between the actual backend process and
19735 the web server. The front-end indicates which backend program to run,
19736 passing that information to the @code{fcgiwrap} process.
19737
19738 @defvr {Scheme Variable} fcgiwrap-service-type
19739 A service type for the @code{fcgiwrap} FastCGI proxy.
19740 @end defvr
19741
19742 @deftp {Data Type} fcgiwrap-configuration
19743 Data type representing the configuration of the @code{fcgiwrap} service.
19744 This type has the following parameters:
19745 @table @asis
19746 @item @code{package} (default: @code{fcgiwrap})
19747 The fcgiwrap package to use.
19748
19749 @item @code{socket} (default: @code{tcp:127.0.0.1:9000})
19750 The socket on which the @code{fcgiwrap} process should listen, as a
19751 string. Valid @var{socket} values include
19752 @code{unix:@var{/path/to/unix/socket}},
19753 @code{tcp:@var{dot.ted.qu.ad}:@var{port}} and
19754 @code{tcp6:[@var{ipv6_addr}]:port}.
19755
19756 @item @code{user} (default: @code{fcgiwrap})
19757 @itemx @code{group} (default: @code{fcgiwrap})
19758 The user and group names, as strings, under which to run the
19759 @code{fcgiwrap} process. The @code{fastcgi} service will ensure that if
19760 the user asks for the specific user or group names @code{fcgiwrap} that
19761 the corresponding user and/or group is present on the system.
19762
19763 It is possible to configure a FastCGI-backed web service to pass HTTP
19764 authentication information from the front-end to the back-end, and to
19765 allow @code{fcgiwrap} to run the back-end process as a corresponding
19766 local user. To enable this capability on the back-end., run
19767 @code{fcgiwrap} as the @code{root} user and group. Note that this
19768 capability also has to be configured on the front-end as well.
19769 @end table
19770 @end deftp
19771
19772 @cindex php-fpm
19773 PHP-FPM (FastCGI Process Manager) is an alternative PHP FastCGI implementation
19774 with some additional features useful for sites of any size.
19775
19776 These features include:
19777 @itemize @bullet
19778 @item Adaptive process spawning
19779 @item Basic statistics (similar to Apache's mod_status)
19780 @item Advanced process management with graceful stop/start
19781 @item Ability to start workers with different uid/gid/chroot/environment
19782 and different php.ini (replaces safe_mode)
19783 @item Stdout & stderr logging
19784 @item Emergency restart in case of accidental opcode cache destruction
19785 @item Accelerated upload support
19786 @item Support for a "slowlog"
19787 @item Enhancements to FastCGI, such as fastcgi_finish_request() -
19788 a special function to finish request & flush all data while continuing to do
19789 something time-consuming (video converting, stats processing, etc.)
19790 @end itemize
19791 ...@: and much more.
19792
19793 @defvr {Scheme Variable} php-fpm-service-type
19794 A Service type for @code{php-fpm}.
19795 @end defvr
19796
19797 @deftp {Data Type} php-fpm-configuration
19798 Data Type for php-fpm service configuration.
19799 @table @asis
19800 @item @code{php} (default: @code{php})
19801 The php package to use.
19802 @item @code{socket} (default: @code{(string-append "/var/run/php" (version-major (package-version php)) "-fpm.sock")})
19803 The address on which to accept FastCGI requests. Valid syntaxes are:
19804 @table @asis
19805 @item @code{"ip.add.re.ss:port"}
19806 Listen on a TCP socket to a specific address on a specific port.
19807 @item @code{"port"}
19808 Listen on a TCP socket to all addresses on a specific port.
19809 @item @code{"/path/to/unix/socket"}
19810 Listen on a unix socket.
19811 @end table
19812
19813 @item @code{user} (default: @code{php-fpm})
19814 User who will own the php worker processes.
19815 @item @code{group} (default: @code{php-fpm})
19816 Group of the worker processes.
19817 @item @code{socket-user} (default: @code{php-fpm})
19818 User who can speak to the php-fpm socket.
19819 @item @code{socket-group} (default: @code{php-fpm})
19820 Group that can speak to the php-fpm socket.
19821 @item @code{pid-file} (default: @code{(string-append "/var/run/php" (version-major (package-version php)) "-fpm.pid")})
19822 The process id of the php-fpm process is written to this file
19823 once the service has started.
19824 @item @code{log-file} (default: @code{(string-append "/var/log/php" (version-major (package-version php)) "-fpm.log")})
19825 Log for the php-fpm master process.
19826 @item @code{process-manager} (default: @code{(php-fpm-dynamic-process-manager-configuration)})
19827 Detailed settings for the php-fpm process manager.
19828 Must be either:
19829 @table @asis
19830 @item @code{<php-fpm-dynamic-process-manager-configuration>}
19831 @item @code{<php-fpm-static-process-manager-configuration>}
19832 @item @code{<php-fpm-on-demand-process-manager-configuration>}
19833 @end table
19834 @item @code{display-errors} (default @code{#f})
19835 Determines whether php errors and warning should be sent to clients
19836 and displayed in their browsers.
19837 This is useful for local php development, but a security risk for public sites,
19838 as error messages can reveal passwords and personal data.
19839 @item @code{timezone} (default @code{#f})
19840 Specifies @code{php_admin_value[date.timezone]} parameter.
19841 @item @code{workers-logfile} (default @code{(string-append "/var/log/php" (version-major (package-version php)) "-fpm.www.log")})
19842 This file will log the @code{stderr} outputs of php worker processes.
19843 Can be set to @code{#f} to disable logging.
19844 @item @code{file} (default @code{#f})
19845 An optional override of the whole configuration.
19846 You can use the @code{mixed-text-file} function or an absolute filepath for it.
19847 @end table
19848 @end deftp
19849
19850 @deftp {Data type} php-fpm-dynamic-process-manager-configuration
19851 Data Type for the @code{dynamic} php-fpm process manager. With the
19852 @code{dynamic} process manager, spare worker processes are kept around
19853 based on it's configured limits.
19854 @table @asis
19855 @item @code{max-children} (default: @code{5})
19856 Maximum of worker processes.
19857 @item @code{start-servers} (default: @code{2})
19858 How many worker processes should be started on start-up.
19859 @item @code{min-spare-servers} (default: @code{1})
19860 How many spare worker processes should be kept around at minimum.
19861 @item @code{max-spare-servers} (default: @code{3})
19862 How many spare worker processes should be kept around at maximum.
19863 @end table
19864 @end deftp
19865
19866 @deftp {Data type} php-fpm-static-process-manager-configuration
19867 Data Type for the @code{static} php-fpm process manager. With the
19868 @code{static} process manager, an unchanging number of worker processes
19869 are created.
19870 @table @asis
19871 @item @code{max-children} (default: @code{5})
19872 Maximum of worker processes.
19873 @end table
19874 @end deftp
19875
19876 @deftp {Data type} php-fpm-on-demand-process-manager-configuration
19877 Data Type for the @code{on-demand} php-fpm process manager. With the
19878 @code{on-demand} process manager, worker processes are only created as
19879 requests arrive.
19880 @table @asis
19881 @item @code{max-children} (default: @code{5})
19882 Maximum of worker processes.
19883 @item @code{process-idle-timeout} (default: @code{10})
19884 The time in seconds after which a process with no requests is killed.
19885 @end table
19886 @end deftp
19887
19888
19889 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} nginx-php-fpm-location @
19890 [#:nginx-package nginx] @
19891 [socket (string-append "/var/run/php" @
19892 (version-major (package-version php)) @
19893 "-fpm.sock")]
19894 A helper function to quickly add php to an @code{nginx-server-configuration}.
19895 @end deffn
19896
19897 A simple services setup for nginx with php can look like this:
19898 @example
19899 (services (cons* (service dhcp-client-service-type)
19900 (service php-fpm-service-type)
19901 (service nginx-service-type
19902 (nginx-server-configuration
19903 (server-name '("example.com"))
19904 (root "/srv/http/")
19905 (locations
19906 (list (nginx-php-location)))
19907 (listen '("80"))
19908 (ssl-certificate #f)
19909 (ssl-certificate-key #f)))
19910 %base-services))
19911 @end example
19912
19913 @cindex cat-avatar-generator
19914 The cat avatar generator is a simple service to demonstrate the use of php-fpm
19915 in @code{Nginx}. It is used to generate cat avatar from a seed, for instance
19916 the hash of a user's email address.
19917
19918 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} cat-avatar-generator-service @
19919 [#:cache-dir "/var/cache/cat-avatar-generator"] @
19920 [#:package cat-avatar-generator] @
19921 [#:configuration (nginx-server-configuration)]
19922 Returns an nginx-server-configuration that inherits @code{configuration}. It
19923 extends the nginx configuration to add a server block that serves @code{package},
19924 a version of cat-avatar-generator. During execution, cat-avatar-generator will
19925 be able to use @code{cache-dir} as its cache directory.
19926 @end deffn
19927
19928 A simple setup for cat-avatar-generator can look like this:
19929 @example
19930 (services (cons* (cat-avatar-generator-service
19931 #:configuration
19932 (nginx-server-configuration
19933 (server-name '("example.com"))))
19934 ...
19935 %base-services))
19936 @end example
19937
19938 @subsubheading Hpcguix-web
19939
19940 @cindex hpcguix-web
19941 The @uref{https://github.com/UMCUGenetics/hpcguix-web/, hpcguix-web}
19942 program is a customizable web interface to browse Guix packages,
19943 initially designed for users of high-performance computing (HPC)
19944 clusters.
19945
19946 @defvr {Scheme Variable} hpcguix-web-service-type
19947 The service type for @code{hpcguix-web}.
19948 @end defvr
19949
19950 @deftp {Data Type} hpcguix-web-configuration
19951 Data type for the hpcguix-web service configuration.
19952
19953 @table @asis
19954 @item @code{specs}
19955 A gexp (@pxref{G-Expressions}) specifying the hpcguix-web service
19956 configuration. The main items available in this spec are:
19957
19958 @table @asis
19959 @item @code{title-prefix} (default: @code{"hpcguix | "})
19960 The page title prefix.
19961
19962 @item @code{guix-command} (default: @code{"guix"})
19963 The @command{guix} command.
19964
19965 @item @code{package-filter-proc} (default: @code{(const #t)})
19966 A procedure specifying how to filter packages that are displayed.
19967
19968 @item @code{package-page-extension-proc} (default: @code{(const '())})
19969 Extension package for @code{hpcguix-web}.
19970
19971 @item @code{menu} (default: @code{'()})
19972 Additional entry in page @code{menu}.
19973
19974 @item @code{channels} (default: @code{%default-channels})
19975 List of channels from which the package list is built (@pxref{Channels}).
19976
19977 @item @code{package-list-expiration} (default: @code{(* 12 3600)})
19978 The expiration time, in seconds, after which the package list is rebuilt from
19979 the latest instances of the given channels.
19980 @end table
19981
19982 See the hpcguix-web repository for a
19983 @uref{https://github.com/UMCUGenetics/hpcguix-web/blob/master/hpcweb-configuration.scm,
19984 complete example}.
19985
19986 @item @code{package} (default: @code{hpcguix-web})
19987 The hpcguix-web package to use.
19988 @end table
19989 @end deftp
19990
19991 A typical hpcguix-web service declaration looks like this:
19992
19993 @example
19994 (service hpcguix-web-service-type
19995 (hpcguix-web-configuration
19996 (specs
19997 #~(define site-config
19998 (hpcweb-configuration
19999 (title-prefix "Guix-HPC - ")
20000 (menu '(("/about" "ABOUT"))))))))
20001 @end example
20002
20003 @quotation Note
20004 The hpcguix-web service periodically updates the package list it publishes by
20005 pulling channels from Git. To that end, it needs to access X.509 certificates
20006 so that it can authenticate Git servers when communicating over HTTPS, and it
20007 assumes that @file{/etc/ssl/certs} contains those certificates.
20008
20009 Thus, make sure to add @code{nss-certs} or another certificate package to the
20010 @code{packages} field of your configuration. @ref{X.509 Certificates}, for
20011 more information on X.509 certificates.
20012 @end quotation
20013
20014 @node Certificate Services
20015 @subsection Certificate Services
20016
20017 @cindex Web
20018 @cindex HTTP, HTTPS
20019 @cindex Let's Encrypt
20020 @cindex TLS certificates
20021 The @code{(gnu services certbot)} module provides a service to
20022 automatically obtain a valid TLS certificate from the Let's Encrypt
20023 certificate authority. These certificates can then be used to serve
20024 content securely over HTTPS or other TLS-based protocols, with the
20025 knowledge that the client will be able to verify the server's
20026 authenticity.
20027
20028 @url{https://letsencrypt.org/, Let's Encrypt} provides the
20029 @code{certbot} tool to automate the certification process. This tool
20030 first securely generates a key on the server. It then makes a request
20031 to the Let's Encrypt certificate authority (CA) to sign the key. The CA
20032 checks that the request originates from the host in question by using a
20033 challenge-response protocol, requiring the server to provide its
20034 response over HTTP. If that protocol completes successfully, the CA
20035 signs the key, resulting in a certificate. That certificate is valid
20036 for a limited period of time, and therefore to continue to provide TLS
20037 services, the server needs to periodically ask the CA to renew its
20038 signature.
20039
20040 The certbot service automates this process: the initial key
20041 generation, the initial certification request to the Let's Encrypt
20042 service, the web server challenge/response integration, writing the
20043 certificate to disk, the automated periodic renewals, and the deployment
20044 tasks associated with the renewal (e.g.@: reloading services, copying keys
20045 with different permissions).
20046
20047 Certbot is run twice a day, at a random minute within the hour. It
20048 won't do anything until your certificates are due for renewal or
20049 revoked, but running it regularly would give your service a chance of
20050 staying online in case a Let's Encrypt-initiated revocation happened for
20051 some reason.
20052
20053 By using this service, you agree to the ACME Subscriber Agreement, which
20054 can be found there:
20055 @url{https://acme-v01.api.letsencrypt.org/directory}.
20056
20057 @defvr {Scheme Variable} certbot-service-type
20058 A service type for the @code{certbot} Let's Encrypt client. Its value
20059 must be a @code{certbot-configuration} record as in this example:
20060
20061 @example
20062 (define %nginx-deploy-hook
20063 (program-file
20064 "nginx-deploy-hook"
20065 #~(let ((pid (call-with-input-file "/var/run/nginx/pid" read)))
20066 (kill pid SIGHUP))))
20067
20068 (service certbot-service-type
20069 (certbot-configuration
20070 (email "foo@@example.net")
20071 (certificates
20072 (list
20073 (certificate-configuration
20074 (domains '("example.net" "www.example.net"))
20075 (deploy-hook %nginx-deploy-hook))
20076 (certificate-configuration
20077 (domains '("bar.example.net")))))))
20078 @end example
20079
20080 See below for details about @code{certbot-configuration}.
20081 @end defvr
20082
20083 @deftp {Data Type} certbot-configuration
20084 Data type representing the configuration of the @code{certbot} service.
20085 This type has the following parameters:
20086
20087 @table @asis
20088 @item @code{package} (default: @code{certbot})
20089 The certbot package to use.
20090
20091 @item @code{webroot} (default: @code{/var/www})
20092 The directory from which to serve the Let's Encrypt challenge/response
20093 files.
20094
20095 @item @code{certificates} (default: @code{()})
20096 A list of @code{certificates-configuration}s for which to generate
20097 certificates and request signatures. Each certificate has a @code{name}
20098 and several @code{domains}.
20099
20100 @item @code{email}
20101 Mandatory email used for registration, recovery contact, and important
20102 account notifications.
20103
20104 @item @code{rsa-key-size} (default: @code{2048})
20105 Size of the RSA key.
20106
20107 @item @code{default-location} (default: @i{see below})
20108 The default @code{nginx-location-configuration}. Because @code{certbot}
20109 needs to be able to serve challenges and responses, it needs to be able
20110 to run a web server. It does so by extending the @code{nginx} web
20111 service with an @code{nginx-server-configuration} listening on the
20112 @var{domains} on port 80, and which has a
20113 @code{nginx-location-configuration} for the @code{/.well-known/} URI
20114 path subspace used by Let's Encrypt. @xref{Web Services}, for more on
20115 these nginx configuration data types.
20116
20117 Requests to other URL paths will be matched by the
20118 @code{default-location}, which if present is added to all
20119 @code{nginx-server-configuration}s.
20120
20121 By default, the @code{default-location} will issue a redirect from
20122 @code{http://@var{domain}/...} to @code{https://@var{domain}/...}, leaving
20123 you to define what to serve on your site via @code{https}.
20124
20125 Pass @code{#f} to not issue a default location.
20126 @end table
20127 @end deftp
20128
20129 @deftp {Data Type} certificate-configuration
20130 Data type representing the configuration of a certificate.
20131 This type has the following parameters:
20132
20133 @table @asis
20134 @item @code{name} (default: @i{see below})
20135 This name is used by Certbot for housekeeping and in file paths; it
20136 doesn't affect the content of the certificate itself. To see
20137 certificate names, run @code{certbot certificates}.
20138
20139 Its default is the first provided domain.
20140
20141 @item @code{domains} (default: @code{()})
20142 The first domain provided will be the subject CN of the certificate, and
20143 all domains will be Subject Alternative Names on the certificate.
20144
20145 @item @code{challenge} (default: @code{#f})
20146 The challenge type that has to be run by certbot. If @code{#f} is specified,
20147 default to the HTTP challenge. If a value is specified, defaults to the
20148 manual plugin (see @code{authentication-hook}, @code{cleanup-hook} and
20149 the documentation at @url{https://certbot.eff.org/docs/using.html#hooks}).
20150
20151 @item @code{authentication-hook} (default: @code{#f})
20152 Command to be run in a shell once for each certificate challenge to be
20153 answered. For this command, the shell variable @code{$CERTBOT_DOMAIN}
20154 will contain the domain being authenticated, @code{$CERTBOT_VALIDATION}
20155 contains the validation string and @code{$CERTBOT_TOKEN} contains the
20156 file name of the resource requested when performing an HTTP-01 challenge.
20157
20158 @item @code{cleanup-hook} (default: @code{#f})
20159 Command to be run in a shell once for each certificate challenge that
20160 have been answered by the @code{auth-hook}. For this command, the shell
20161 variables available in the @code{auth-hook} script are still available, and
20162 additionally @code{$CERTBOT_AUTH_OUTPUT} will contain the standard output
20163 of the @code{auth-hook} script.
20164
20165 @item @code{deploy-hook} (default: @code{#f})
20166 Command to be run in a shell once for each successfully issued
20167 certificate. For this command, the shell variable
20168 @code{$RENEWED_LINEAGE} will point to the config live subdirectory (for
20169 example, @samp{"/etc/letsencrypt/live/example.com"}) containing the new
20170 certificates and keys; the shell variable @code{$RENEWED_DOMAINS} will
20171 contain a space-delimited list of renewed certificate domains (for
20172 example, @samp{"example.com www.example.com"}.
20173
20174 @end table
20175 @end deftp
20176
20177 For each @code{certificate-configuration}, the certificate is saved to
20178 @code{/etc/letsencrypt/live/@var{name}/fullchain.pem} and the key is
20179 saved to @code{/etc/letsencrypt/live/@var{name}/privkey.pem}.
20180 @node DNS Services
20181 @subsection DNS Services
20182 @cindex DNS (domain name system)
20183 @cindex domain name system (DNS)
20184
20185 The @code{(gnu services dns)} module provides services related to the
20186 @dfn{domain name system} (DNS). It provides a server service for hosting
20187 an @emph{authoritative} DNS server for multiple zones, slave or master.
20188 This service uses @uref{https://www.knot-dns.cz/, Knot DNS}. And also a
20189 caching and forwarding DNS server for the LAN, which uses
20190 @uref{http://www.thekelleys.org.uk/dnsmasq/doc.html, dnsmasq}.
20191
20192 @subsubheading Knot Service
20193
20194 An example configuration of an authoritative server for two zones, one master
20195 and one slave, is:
20196
20197 @lisp
20198 (define-zone-entries example.org.zone
20199 ;; Name TTL Class Type Data
20200 ("@@" "" "IN" "A" "127.0.0.1")
20201 ("@@" "" "IN" "NS" "ns")
20202 ("ns" "" "IN" "A" "127.0.0.1"))
20203
20204 (define master-zone
20205 (knot-zone-configuration
20206 (domain "example.org")
20207 (zone (zone-file
20208 (origin "example.org")
20209 (entries example.org.zone)))))
20210
20211 (define slave-zone
20212 (knot-zone-configuration
20213 (domain "plop.org")
20214 (dnssec-policy "default")
20215 (master (list "plop-master"))))
20216
20217 (define plop-master
20218 (knot-remote-configuration
20219 (id "plop-master")
20220 (address (list "208.76.58.171"))))
20221
20222 (operating-system
20223 ;; ...
20224 (services (cons* (service knot-service-type
20225 (knot-configuration
20226 (remotes (list plop-master))
20227 (zones (list master-zone slave-zone))))
20228 ;; ...
20229 %base-services)))
20230 @end lisp
20231
20232 @deffn {Scheme Variable} knot-service-type
20233 This is the type for the Knot DNS server.
20234
20235 Knot DNS is an authoritative DNS server, meaning that it can serve multiple
20236 zones, that is to say domain names you would buy from a registrar. This server
20237 is not a resolver, meaning that it can only resolve names for which it is
20238 authoritative. This server can be configured to serve zones as a master server
20239 or a slave server as a per-zone basis. Slave zones will get their data from
20240 masters, and will serve it as an authoritative server. From the point of view
20241 of a resolver, there is no difference between master and slave.
20242
20243 The following data types are used to configure the Knot DNS server:
20244 @end deffn
20245
20246 @deftp {Data Type} knot-key-configuration
20247 Data type representing a key.
20248 This type has the following parameters:
20249
20250 @table @asis
20251 @item @code{id} (default: @code{""})
20252 An identifier for other configuration fields to refer to this key. IDs must
20253 be unique and must not be empty.
20254
20255 @item @code{algorithm} (default: @code{#f})
20256 The algorithm to use. Choose between @code{#f}, @code{'hmac-md5},
20257 @code{'hmac-sha1}, @code{'hmac-sha224}, @code{'hmac-sha256}, @code{'hmac-sha384}
20258 and @code{'hmac-sha512}.
20259
20260 @item @code{secret} (default: @code{""})
20261 The secret key itself.
20262
20263 @end table
20264 @end deftp
20265
20266 @deftp {Data Type} knot-acl-configuration
20267 Data type representing an Access Control List (ACL) configuration.
20268 This type has the following parameters:
20269
20270 @table @asis
20271 @item @code{id} (default: @code{""})
20272 An identifier for ether configuration fields to refer to this key. IDs must be
20273 unique and must not be empty.
20274
20275 @item @code{address} (default: @code{'()})
20276 An ordered list of IP addresses, network subnets, or network ranges represented
20277 with strings. The query must match one of them. Empty value means that
20278 address match is not required.
20279
20280 @item @code{key} (default: @code{'()})
20281 An ordered list of references to keys represented with strings. The string
20282 must match a key ID defined in a @code{knot-key-configuration}. No key means
20283 that a key is not require to match that ACL.
20284
20285 @item @code{action} (default: @code{'()})
20286 An ordered list of actions that are permitted or forbidden by this ACL. Possible
20287 values are lists of zero or more elements from @code{'transfer}, @code{'notify}
20288 and @code{'update}.
20289
20290 @item @code{deny?} (default: @code{#f})
20291 When true, the ACL defines restrictions. Listed actions are forbidden. When
20292 false, listed actions are allowed.
20293
20294 @end table
20295 @end deftp
20296
20297 @deftp {Data Type} zone-entry
20298 Data type represnting a record entry in a zone file.
20299 This type has the following parameters:
20300
20301 @table @asis
20302 @item @code{name} (default: @code{"@@"})
20303 The name of the record. @code{"@@"} refers to the origin of the zone. Names
20304 are relative to the origin of the zone. For example, in the @code{example.org}
20305 zone, @code{"ns.example.org"} actually refers to @code{ns.example.org.example.org}.
20306 Names ending with a dot are absolute, which means that @code{"ns.example.org."}
20307 refers to @code{ns.example.org}.
20308
20309 @item @code{ttl} (default: @code{""})
20310 The Time-To-Live (TTL) of this record. If not set, the default TTL is used.
20311
20312 @item @code{class} (default: @code{"IN"})
20313 The class of the record. Knot currently supports only @code{"IN"} and
20314 partially @code{"CH"}.
20315
20316 @item @code{type} (default: @code{"A"})
20317 The type of the record. Common types include A (IPv4 address), AAAA (IPv6
20318 address), NS (Name Server) and MX (Mail eXchange). Many other types are
20319 defined.
20320
20321 @item @code{data} (default: @code{""})
20322 The data contained in the record. For instance an IP address associated with
20323 an A record, or a domain name associated with an NS record. Remember that
20324 domain names are relative to the origin unless they end with a dot.
20325
20326 @end table
20327 @end deftp
20328
20329 @deftp {Data Type} zone-file
20330 Data type representing the content of a zone file.
20331 This type has the following parameters:
20332
20333 @table @asis
20334 @item @code{entries} (default: @code{'()})
20335 The list of entries. The SOA record is taken care of, so you don't need to
20336 put it in the list of entries. This list should probably contain an entry
20337 for your primary authoritative DNS server. Other than using a list of entries
20338 directly, you can use @code{define-zone-entries} to define a object containing
20339 the list of entries more easily, that you can later pass to the @code{entries}
20340 field of the @code{zone-file}.
20341
20342 @item @code{origin} (default: @code{""})
20343 The name of your zone. This parameter cannot be empty.
20344
20345 @item @code{ns} (default: @code{"ns"})
20346 The domain of your primary authoritative DNS server. The name is relative to
20347 the origin, unless it ends with a dot. It is mandatory that this primary
20348 DNS server corresponds to an NS record in the zone and that it is associated
20349 to an IP address in the list of entries.
20350
20351 @item @code{mail} (default: @code{"hostmaster"})
20352 An email address people can contact you at, as the owner of the zone. This
20353 is translated as @code{<mail>@@<origin>}.
20354
20355 @item @code{serial} (default: @code{1})
20356 The serial number of the zone. As this is used to keep track of changes by
20357 both slaves and resolvers, it is mandatory that it @emph{never} decreases.
20358 Always increment it when you make a change in your zone.
20359
20360 @item @code{refresh} (default: @code{(* 2 24 3600)})
20361 The frequency at which slaves will do a zone transfer. This value is a number
20362 of seconds. It can be computed by multiplications or with
20363 @code{(string->duration)}.
20364
20365 @item @code{retry} (default: @code{(* 15 60)})
20366 The period after which a slave will retry to contact its master when it fails
20367 to do so a first time.
20368
20369 @item @code{expiry} (default: @code{(* 14 24 3600)})
20370 Default TTL of records. Existing records are considered correct for at most
20371 this amount of time. After this period, resolvers will invalidate their cache
20372 and check again that it still exists.
20373
20374 @item @code{nx} (default: @code{3600})
20375 Default TTL of inexistant records. This delay is usually short because you want
20376 your new domains to reach everyone quickly.
20377
20378 @end table
20379 @end deftp
20380
20381 @deftp {Data Type} knot-remote-configuration
20382 Data type representing a remote configuration.
20383 This type has the following parameters:
20384
20385 @table @asis
20386 @item @code{id} (default: @code{""})
20387 An identifier for other configuration fields to refer to this remote. IDs must
20388 be unique and must not be empty.
20389
20390 @item @code{address} (default: @code{'()})
20391 An ordered list of destination IP addresses. Addresses are tried in sequence.
20392 An optional port can be given with the @@ separator. For instance:
20393 @code{(list "1.2.3.4" "2.3.4.5@@53")}. Default port is 53.
20394
20395 @item @code{via} (default: @code{'()})
20396 An ordered list of source IP addresses. An empty list will have Knot choose
20397 an appropriate source IP. An optional port can be given with the @@ separator.
20398 The default is to choose at random.
20399
20400 @item @code{key} (default: @code{#f})
20401 A reference to a key, that is a string containing the identifier of a key
20402 defined in a @code{knot-key-configuration} field.
20403
20404 @end table
20405 @end deftp
20406
20407 @deftp {Data Type} knot-keystore-configuration
20408 Data type representing a keystore to hold dnssec keys.
20409 This type has the following parameters:
20410
20411 @table @asis
20412 @item @code{id} (default: @code{""})
20413 The id of the keystore. It must not be empty.
20414
20415 @item @code{backend} (default: @code{'pem})
20416 The backend to store the keys in. Can be @code{'pem} or @code{'pkcs11}.
20417
20418 @item @code{config} (default: @code{"/var/lib/knot/keys/keys"})
20419 The configuration string of the backend. An example for the PKCS#11 is:
20420 @code{"pkcs11:token=knot;pin-value=1234 /gnu/store/.../lib/pkcs11/libsofthsm2.so"}.
20421 For the pem backend, the string reprensents a path in the file system.
20422
20423 @end table
20424 @end deftp
20425
20426 @deftp {Data Type} knot-policy-configuration
20427 Data type representing a dnssec policy. Knot DNS is able to automatically
20428 sign your zones. It can either generate and manage your keys automatically or
20429 use keys that you generate.
20430
20431 Dnssec is usually implemented using two keys: a Key Signing Key (KSK) that is
20432 used to sign the second, and a Zone Signing Key (ZSK) that is used to sign the
20433 zone. In order to be trusted, the KSK needs to be present in the parent zone
20434 (usually a top-level domain). If your registrar supports dnssec, you will
20435 have to send them your KSK's hash so they can add a DS record in their zone.
20436 This is not automated and need to be done each time you change your KSK.
20437
20438 The policy also defines the lifetime of keys. Usually, ZSK can be changed
20439 easily and use weaker cryptographic functions (they use lower parameters) in
20440 order to sign records quickly, so they are changed often. The KSK however
20441 requires manual interaction with the registrar, so they are changed less often
20442 and use stronger parameters because they sign only one record.
20443
20444 This type has the following parameters:
20445
20446 @table @asis
20447 @item @code{id} (default: @code{""})
20448 The id of the policy. It must not be empty.
20449
20450 @item @code{keystore} (default: @code{"default"})
20451 A reference to a keystore, that is a string containing the identifier of a
20452 keystore defined in a @code{knot-keystore-configuration} field. The
20453 @code{"default"} identifier means the default keystore (a kasp database that
20454 was setup by this service).
20455
20456 @item @code{manual?} (default: @code{#f})
20457 Whether the key management is manual or automatic.
20458
20459 @item @code{single-type-signing?} (default: @code{#f})
20460 When @code{#t}, use the Single-Type Signing Scheme.
20461
20462 @item @code{algorithm} (default: @code{"ecdsap256sha256"})
20463 An algorithm of signing keys and issued signatures.
20464
20465 @item @code{ksk-size} (default: @code{256})
20466 The length of the KSK. Note that this value is correct for the default
20467 algorithm, but would be unsecure for other algorithms.
20468
20469 @item @code{zsk-size} (default: @code{256})
20470 The length of the ZSK. Note that this value is correct for the default
20471 algorithm, but would be unsecure for other algorithms.
20472
20473 @item @code{dnskey-ttl} (default: @code{'default})
20474 The TTL value for DNSKEY records added into zone apex. The special
20475 @code{'default} value means same as the zone SOA TTL.
20476
20477 @item @code{zsk-lifetime} (default: @code{(* 30 24 3600)})
20478 The period between ZSK publication and the next rollover initiation.
20479
20480 @item @code{propagation-delay} (default: @code{(* 24 3600)})
20481 An extra delay added for each key rollover step. This value should be high
20482 enough to cover propagation of data from the master server to all slaves.
20483
20484 @item @code{rrsig-lifetime} (default: @code{(* 14 24 3600)})
20485 A validity period of newly issued signatures.
20486
20487 @item @code{rrsig-refresh} (default: @code{(* 7 24 3600)})
20488 A period how long before a signature expiration the signature will be refreshed.
20489
20490 @item @code{nsec3?} (default: @code{#f})
20491 When @code{#t}, NSEC3 will be used instead of NSEC.
20492
20493 @item @code{nsec3-iterations} (default: @code{5})
20494 The number of additional times the hashing is performed.
20495
20496 @item @code{nsec3-salt-length} (default: @code{8})
20497 The length of a salt field in octets, which is appended to the original owner
20498 name before hashing.
20499
20500 @item @code{nsec3-salt-lifetime} (default: @code{(* 30 24 3600)})
20501 The validity period of newly issued salt field.
20502
20503 @end table
20504 @end deftp
20505
20506 @deftp {Data Type} knot-zone-configuration
20507 Data type representing a zone served by Knot.
20508 This type has the following parameters:
20509
20510 @table @asis
20511 @item @code{domain} (default: @code{""})
20512 The domain served by this configuration. It must not be empty.
20513
20514 @item @code{file} (default: @code{""})
20515 The file where this zone is saved. This parameter is ignored by master zones.
20516 Empty means default location that depends on the domain name.
20517
20518 @item @code{zone} (default: @code{(zone-file)})
20519 The content of the zone file. This parameter is ignored by slave zones. It
20520 must contain a zone-file record.
20521
20522 @item @code{master} (default: @code{'()})
20523 A list of master remotes. When empty, this zone is a master. When set, this
20524 zone is a slave. This is a list of remotes identifiers.
20525
20526 @item @code{ddns-master} (default: @code{#f})
20527 The main master. When empty, it defaults to the first master in the list of
20528 masters.
20529
20530 @item @code{notify} (default: @code{'()})
20531 A list of slave remote identifiers.
20532
20533 @item @code{acl} (default: @code{'()})
20534 A list of acl identifiers.
20535
20536 @item @code{semantic-checks?} (default: @code{#f})
20537 When set, this adds more semantic checks to the zone.
20538
20539 @item @code{disable-any?} (default: @code{#f})
20540 When set, this forbids queries of the ANY type.
20541
20542 @item @code{zonefile-sync} (default: @code{0})
20543 The delay between a modification in memory and on disk. 0 means immediate
20544 synchronization.
20545
20546 @item @code{zonefile-load} (default: @code{#f})
20547 The way the zone file contents are applied during zone load. Possible values
20548 are:
20549
20550 @itemize
20551 @item @code{#f} for using the default value from Knot,
20552 @item @code{'none} for not using the zone file at all,
20553 @item @code{'difference} for computing the difference between already available
20554 contents and zone contents and applying it to the current zone contents,
20555 @item @code{'difference-no-serial} for the same as @code{'difference}, but
20556 ignoring the SOA serial in the zone file, while the server takes care of it
20557 automatically.
20558 @item @code{'whole} for loading zone contents from the zone file.
20559 @end itemize
20560
20561 @item @code{journal-content} (default: @code{#f})
20562 The way the journal is used to store zone and its changes. Possible values
20563 are @code{'none} to not use it at all, @code{'changes} to store changes and
20564 @code{'all} to store contents. @code{#f} does not set this option, so the
20565 default value from Knot is used.
20566
20567 @item @code{max-journal-usage} (default: @code{#f})
20568 The maximum size for the journal on disk. @code{#f} does not set this option,
20569 so the default value from Knot is used.
20570
20571 @item @code{max-journal-depth} (default: @code{#f})
20572 The maximum size of the history. @code{#f} does not set this option, so the
20573 default value from Knot is used.
20574
20575 @item @code{max-zone-size} (default: @code{#f})
20576 The maximum size of the zone file. This limit is enforced for incoming
20577 transfer and updates. @code{#f} does not set this option, so the default
20578 value from Knot is used.
20579
20580 @item @code{dnssec-policy} (default: @code{#f})
20581 A reference to a @code{knot-policy-configuration} record, or the special
20582 name @code{"default"}. If the value is @code{#f}, there is no dnssec signing
20583 on this zone.
20584
20585 @item @code{serial-policy} (default: @code{'increment})
20586 A policy between @code{'increment} and @code{'unixtime}.
20587
20588 @end table
20589 @end deftp
20590
20591 @deftp {Data Type} knot-configuration
20592 Data type representing the Knot configuration.
20593 This type has the following parameters:
20594
20595 @table @asis
20596 @item @code{knot} (default: @code{knot})
20597 The Knot package.
20598
20599 @item @code{run-directory} (default: @code{"/var/run/knot"})
20600 The run directory. This directory will be used for pid file and sockets.
20601
20602 @item @code{includes} (default: @code{'()})
20603 A list of strings or file-like objects denoting other files that must be
20604 included at the top of the configuration file.
20605
20606 @cindex secrets, Knot service
20607 This can be used to manage secrets out-of-band. For example, secret
20608 keys may be stored in an out-of-band file not managed by Guix, and
20609 thus not visible in @file{/gnu/store}---e.g., you could store secret
20610 key configuration in @file{/etc/knot/secrets.conf} and add this file
20611 to the @code{includes} list.
20612
20613 One can generate a secret tsig key (for nsupdate and zone transfers with the
20614 keymgr command from the knot package. Note that the package is not automatically
20615 installed by the service. The following example shows how to generate a new
20616 tsig key:
20617
20618 @example
20619 keymgr -t mysecret > /etc/knot/secrets.conf
20620 chmod 600 /etc/knot/secrets.conf
20621 @end example
20622
20623 Also note that the generated key will be named @var{mysecret}, so it is the
20624 name that needs to be used in the @var{key} field of the
20625 @code{knot-acl-configuration} record and in other places that need to refer
20626 to that key.
20627
20628 It can also be used to add configuration not supported by this interface.
20629
20630 @item @code{listen-v4} (default: @code{"0.0.0.0"})
20631 An ip address on which to listen.
20632
20633 @item @code{listen-v6} (default: @code{"::"})
20634 An ip address on which to listen.
20635
20636 @item @code{listen-port} (default: @code{53})
20637 A port on which to listen.
20638
20639 @item @code{keys} (default: @code{'()})
20640 The list of knot-key-configuration used by this configuration.
20641
20642 @item @code{acls} (default: @code{'()})
20643 The list of knot-acl-configuration used by this configuration.
20644
20645 @item @code{remotes} (default: @code{'()})
20646 The list of knot-remote-configuration used by this configuration.
20647
20648 @item @code{zones} (default: @code{'()})
20649 The list of knot-zone-configuration used by this configuration.
20650
20651 @end table
20652 @end deftp
20653
20654 @subsubheading Dnsmasq Service
20655
20656 @deffn {Scheme Variable} dnsmasq-service-type
20657 This is the type of the dnsmasq service, whose value should be an
20658 @code{dnsmasq-configuration} object as in this example:
20659
20660 @example
20661 (service dnsmasq-service-type
20662 (dnsmasq-configuration
20663 (no-resolv? #t)
20664 (servers '("192.168.1.1"))))
20665 @end example
20666 @end deffn
20667
20668 @deftp {Data Type} dnsmasq-configuration
20669 Data type representing the configuration of dnsmasq.
20670
20671 @table @asis
20672 @item @code{package} (default: @var{dnsmasq})
20673 Package object of the dnsmasq server.
20674
20675 @item @code{no-hosts?} (default: @code{#f})
20676 When true, don't read the hostnames in /etc/hosts.
20677
20678 @item @code{port} (default: @code{53})
20679 The port to listen on. Setting this to zero completely disables DNS
20680 responses, leaving only DHCP and/or TFTP functions.
20681
20682 @item @code{local-service?} (default: @code{#t})
20683 Accept DNS queries only from hosts whose address is on a local subnet,
20684 ie a subnet for which an interface exists on the server.
20685
20686 @item @code{listen-addresses} (default: @code{'()})
20687 Listen on the given IP addresses.
20688
20689 @item @code{resolv-file} (default: @code{"/etc/resolv.conf"})
20690 The file to read the IP address of the upstream nameservers from.
20691
20692 @item @code{no-resolv?} (default: @code{#f})
20693 When true, don't read @var{resolv-file}.
20694
20695 @item @code{servers} (default: @code{'()})
20696 Specify IP address of upstream servers directly.
20697
20698 @item @code{cache-size} (default: @code{150})
20699 Set the size of dnsmasq's cache. Setting the cache size to zero
20700 disables caching.
20701
20702 @item @code{negative-cache?} (default: @code{#t})
20703 When false, disable negative caching.
20704
20705 @end table
20706 @end deftp
20707
20708 @subsubheading ddclient Service
20709
20710 @cindex ddclient
20711 The ddclient service described below runs the ddclient daemon, which takes
20712 care of automatically updating DNS entries for service providers such as
20713 @uref{https://dyn.com/dns/, Dyn}.
20714
20715 The following example show instantiates the service with its default
20716 configuration:
20717
20718 @example
20719 (service ddclient-service-type)
20720 @end example
20721
20722 Note that ddclient needs to access credentials that are stored in a
20723 @dfn{secret file}, by default @file{/etc/ddclient/secrets} (see
20724 @code{secret-file} below.) You are expected to create this file manually, in
20725 an ``out-of-band'' fashion (you @emph{could} make this file part of the
20726 service configuration, for instance by using @code{plain-file}, but it will be
20727 world-readable @i{via} @file{/gnu/store}.) See the examples in the
20728 @file{share/ddclient} directory of the @code{ddclient} package.
20729
20730 @c %start of fragment
20731
20732 Available @code{ddclient-configuration} fields are:
20733
20734 @deftypevr {@code{ddclient-configuration} parameter} package ddclient
20735 The ddclient package.
20736
20737 @end deftypevr
20738
20739 @deftypevr {@code{ddclient-configuration} parameter} integer daemon
20740 The period after which ddclient will retry to check IP and domain name.
20741
20742 Defaults to @samp{300}.
20743
20744 @end deftypevr
20745
20746 @deftypevr {@code{ddclient-configuration} parameter} boolean syslog
20747 Use syslog for the output.
20748
20749 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
20750
20751 @end deftypevr
20752
20753 @deftypevr {@code{ddclient-configuration} parameter} string mail
20754 Mail to user.
20755
20756 Defaults to @samp{"root"}.
20757
20758 @end deftypevr
20759
20760 @deftypevr {@code{ddclient-configuration} parameter} string mail-failure
20761 Mail failed update to user.
20762
20763 Defaults to @samp{"root"}.
20764
20765 @end deftypevr
20766
20767 @deftypevr {@code{ddclient-configuration} parameter} string pid
20768 The ddclient PID file.
20769
20770 Defaults to @samp{"/var/run/ddclient/ddclient.pid"}.
20771
20772 @end deftypevr
20773
20774 @deftypevr {@code{ddclient-configuration} parameter} boolean ssl
20775 Enable SSL support.
20776
20777 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
20778
20779 @end deftypevr
20780
20781 @deftypevr {@code{ddclient-configuration} parameter} string user
20782 Specifies the user name or ID that is used when running ddclient
20783 program.
20784
20785 Defaults to @samp{"ddclient"}.
20786
20787 @end deftypevr
20788
20789 @deftypevr {@code{ddclient-configuration} parameter} string group
20790 Group of the user who will run the ddclient program.
20791
20792 Defaults to @samp{"ddclient"}.
20793
20794 @end deftypevr
20795
20796 @deftypevr {@code{ddclient-configuration} parameter} string secret-file
20797 Secret file which will be appended to @file{ddclient.conf} file. This
20798 file contains credentials for use by ddclient. You are expected to
20799 create it manually.
20800
20801 Defaults to @samp{"/etc/ddclient/secrets.conf"}.
20802
20803 @end deftypevr
20804
20805 @deftypevr {@code{ddclient-configuration} parameter} list extra-options
20806 Extra options will be appended to @file{ddclient.conf} file.
20807
20808 Defaults to @samp{()}.
20809
20810 @end deftypevr
20811
20812
20813 @c %end of fragment
20814
20815
20816 @node VPN Services
20817 @subsection VPN Services
20818 @cindex VPN (virtual private network)
20819 @cindex virtual private network (VPN)
20820
20821 The @code{(gnu services vpn)} module provides services related to
20822 @dfn{virtual private networks} (VPNs). It provides a @emph{client} service for
20823 your machine to connect to a VPN, and a @emph{server} service for your machine
20824 to host a VPN. Both services use @uref{https://openvpn.net/, OpenVPN}.
20825
20826 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} openvpn-client-service @
20827 [#:config (openvpn-client-configuration)]
20828
20829 Return a service that runs @command{openvpn}, a VPN daemon, as a client.
20830 @end deffn
20831
20832 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} openvpn-server-service @
20833 [#:config (openvpn-server-configuration)]
20834
20835 Return a service that runs @command{openvpn}, a VPN daemon, as a server.
20836
20837 Both can be run simultaneously.
20838 @end deffn
20839
20840 @c %automatically generated documentation
20841
20842 Available @code{openvpn-client-configuration} fields are:
20843
20844 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-client-configuration} parameter} package openvpn
20845 The OpenVPN package.
20846
20847 @end deftypevr
20848
20849 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-client-configuration} parameter} string pid-file
20850 The OpenVPN pid file.
20851
20852 Defaults to @samp{"/var/run/openvpn/openvpn.pid"}.
20853
20854 @end deftypevr
20855
20856 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-client-configuration} parameter} proto proto
20857 The protocol (UDP or TCP) used to open a channel between clients and
20858 servers.
20859
20860 Defaults to @samp{udp}.
20861
20862 @end deftypevr
20863
20864 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-client-configuration} parameter} dev dev
20865 The device type used to represent the VPN connection.
20866
20867 Defaults to @samp{tun}.
20868
20869 @end deftypevr
20870
20871 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-client-configuration} parameter} string ca
20872 The certificate authority to check connections against.
20873
20874 Defaults to @samp{"/etc/openvpn/ca.crt"}.
20875
20876 @end deftypevr
20877
20878 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-client-configuration} parameter} string cert
20879 The certificate of the machine the daemon is running on. It should be
20880 signed by the authority given in @code{ca}.
20881
20882 Defaults to @samp{"/etc/openvpn/client.crt"}.
20883
20884 @end deftypevr
20885
20886 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-client-configuration} parameter} string key
20887 The key of the machine the daemon is running on. It must be the key whose
20888 certificate is @code{cert}.
20889
20890 Defaults to @samp{"/etc/openvpn/client.key"}.
20891
20892 @end deftypevr
20893
20894 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-client-configuration} parameter} boolean comp-lzo?
20895 Whether to use the lzo compression algorithm.
20896
20897 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
20898
20899 @end deftypevr
20900
20901 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-client-configuration} parameter} boolean persist-key?
20902 Don't re-read key files across SIGUSR1 or --ping-restart.
20903
20904 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
20905
20906 @end deftypevr
20907
20908 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-client-configuration} parameter} boolean persist-tun?
20909 Don't close and reopen TUN/TAP device or run up/down scripts across
20910 SIGUSR1 or --ping-restart restarts.
20911
20912 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
20913
20914 @end deftypevr
20915
20916 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-client-configuration} parameter} number verbosity
20917 Verbosity level.
20918
20919 Defaults to @samp{3}.
20920
20921 @end deftypevr
20922
20923 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-client-configuration} parameter} tls-auth-client tls-auth
20924 Add an additional layer of HMAC authentication on top of the TLS control
20925 channel to protect against DoS attacks.
20926
20927 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
20928
20929 @end deftypevr
20930
20931 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-client-configuration} parameter} key-usage verify-key-usage?
20932 Whether to check the server certificate has server usage extension.
20933
20934 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
20935
20936 @end deftypevr
20937
20938 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-client-configuration} parameter} bind bind?
20939 Bind to a specific local port number.
20940
20941 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
20942
20943 @end deftypevr
20944
20945 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-client-configuration} parameter} resolv-retry resolv-retry?
20946 Retry resolving server address.
20947
20948 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
20949
20950 @end deftypevr
20951
20952 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-client-configuration} parameter} openvpn-remote-list remote
20953 A list of remote servers to connect to.
20954
20955 Defaults to @samp{()}.
20956
20957 Available @code{openvpn-remote-configuration} fields are:
20958
20959 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-remote-configuration} parameter} string name
20960 Server name.
20961
20962 Defaults to @samp{"my-server"}.
20963
20964 @end deftypevr
20965
20966 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-remote-configuration} parameter} number port
20967 Port number the server listens to.
20968
20969 Defaults to @samp{1194}.
20970
20971 @end deftypevr
20972
20973 @end deftypevr
20974 @c %end of automatic openvpn-client documentation
20975
20976 @c %automatically generated documentation
20977
20978 Available @code{openvpn-server-configuration} fields are:
20979
20980 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-server-configuration} parameter} package openvpn
20981 The OpenVPN package.
20982
20983 @end deftypevr
20984
20985 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-server-configuration} parameter} string pid-file
20986 The OpenVPN pid file.
20987
20988 Defaults to @samp{"/var/run/openvpn/openvpn.pid"}.
20989
20990 @end deftypevr
20991
20992 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-server-configuration} parameter} proto proto
20993 The protocol (UDP or TCP) used to open a channel between clients and
20994 servers.
20995
20996 Defaults to @samp{udp}.
20997
20998 @end deftypevr
20999
21000 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-server-configuration} parameter} dev dev
21001 The device type used to represent the VPN connection.
21002
21003 Defaults to @samp{tun}.
21004
21005 @end deftypevr
21006
21007 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-server-configuration} parameter} string ca
21008 The certificate authority to check connections against.
21009
21010 Defaults to @samp{"/etc/openvpn/ca.crt"}.
21011
21012 @end deftypevr
21013
21014 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-server-configuration} parameter} string cert
21015 The certificate of the machine the daemon is running on. It should be
21016 signed by the authority given in @code{ca}.
21017
21018 Defaults to @samp{"/etc/openvpn/client.crt"}.
21019
21020 @end deftypevr
21021
21022 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-server-configuration} parameter} string key
21023 The key of the machine the daemon is running on. It must be the key whose
21024 certificate is @code{cert}.
21025
21026 Defaults to @samp{"/etc/openvpn/client.key"}.
21027
21028 @end deftypevr
21029
21030 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-server-configuration} parameter} boolean comp-lzo?
21031 Whether to use the lzo compression algorithm.
21032
21033 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
21034
21035 @end deftypevr
21036
21037 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-server-configuration} parameter} boolean persist-key?
21038 Don't re-read key files across SIGUSR1 or --ping-restart.
21039
21040 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
21041
21042 @end deftypevr
21043
21044 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-server-configuration} parameter} boolean persist-tun?
21045 Don't close and reopen TUN/TAP device or run up/down scripts across
21046 SIGUSR1 or --ping-restart restarts.
21047
21048 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
21049
21050 @end deftypevr
21051
21052 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-server-configuration} parameter} number verbosity
21053 Verbosity level.
21054
21055 Defaults to @samp{3}.
21056
21057 @end deftypevr
21058
21059 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-server-configuration} parameter} tls-auth-server tls-auth
21060 Add an additional layer of HMAC authentication on top of the TLS control
21061 channel to protect against DoS attacks.
21062
21063 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
21064
21065 @end deftypevr
21066
21067 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-server-configuration} parameter} number port
21068 Specifies the port number on which the server listens.
21069
21070 Defaults to @samp{1194}.
21071
21072 @end deftypevr
21073
21074 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-server-configuration} parameter} ip-mask server
21075 An ip and mask specifying the subnet inside the virtual network.
21076
21077 Defaults to @samp{"10.8.0.0 255.255.255.0"}.
21078
21079 @end deftypevr
21080
21081 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-server-configuration} parameter} cidr6 server-ipv6
21082 A CIDR notation specifying the IPv6 subnet inside the virtual network.
21083
21084 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
21085
21086 @end deftypevr
21087
21088 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-server-configuration} parameter} string dh
21089 The Diffie-Hellman parameters file.
21090
21091 Defaults to @samp{"/etc/openvpn/dh2048.pem"}.
21092
21093 @end deftypevr
21094
21095 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-server-configuration} parameter} string ifconfig-pool-persist
21096 The file that records client IPs.
21097
21098 Defaults to @samp{"/etc/openvpn/ipp.txt"}.
21099
21100 @end deftypevr
21101
21102 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-server-configuration} parameter} gateway redirect-gateway?
21103 When true, the server will act as a gateway for its clients.
21104
21105 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
21106
21107 @end deftypevr
21108
21109 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-server-configuration} parameter} boolean client-to-client?
21110 When true, clients are allowed to talk to each other inside the VPN.
21111
21112 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
21113
21114 @end deftypevr
21115
21116 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-server-configuration} parameter} keepalive keepalive
21117 Causes ping-like messages to be sent back and forth over the link so
21118 that each side knows when the other side has gone down. @code{keepalive}
21119 requires a pair. The first element is the period of the ping sending,
21120 and the second element is the timeout before considering the other side
21121 down.
21122
21123 @end deftypevr
21124
21125 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-server-configuration} parameter} number max-clients
21126 The maximum number of clients.
21127
21128 Defaults to @samp{100}.
21129
21130 @end deftypevr
21131
21132 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-server-configuration} parameter} string status
21133 The status file. This file shows a small report on current connection.
21134 It is truncated and rewritten every minute.
21135
21136 Defaults to @samp{"/var/run/openvpn/status"}.
21137
21138 @end deftypevr
21139
21140 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-server-configuration} parameter} openvpn-ccd-list client-config-dir
21141 The list of configuration for some clients.
21142
21143 Defaults to @samp{()}.
21144
21145 Available @code{openvpn-ccd-configuration} fields are:
21146
21147 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-ccd-configuration} parameter} string name
21148 Client name.
21149
21150 Defaults to @samp{"client"}.
21151
21152 @end deftypevr
21153
21154 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-ccd-configuration} parameter} ip-mask iroute
21155 Client own network
21156
21157 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
21158
21159 @end deftypevr
21160
21161 @deftypevr {@code{openvpn-ccd-configuration} parameter} ip-mask ifconfig-push
21162 Client VPN IP.
21163
21164 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
21165
21166 @end deftypevr
21167
21168 @end deftypevr
21169
21170
21171 @c %end of automatic openvpn-server documentation
21172
21173
21174 @node Network File System
21175 @subsection Network File System
21176 @cindex NFS
21177
21178 The @code{(gnu services nfs)} module provides the following services,
21179 which are most commonly used in relation to mounting or exporting
21180 directory trees as @dfn{network file systems} (NFS).
21181
21182 @subsubheading RPC Bind Service
21183 @cindex rpcbind
21184
21185 The RPC Bind service provides a facility to map program numbers into
21186 universal addresses.
21187 Many NFS related services use this facility. Hence it is automatically
21188 started when a dependent service starts.
21189
21190 @defvr {Scheme Variable} rpcbind-service-type
21191 A service type for the RPC portmapper daemon.
21192 @end defvr
21193
21194
21195 @deftp {Data Type} rpcbind-configuration
21196 Data type representing the configuration of the RPC Bind Service.
21197 This type has the following parameters:
21198 @table @asis
21199 @item @code{rpcbind} (default: @code{rpcbind})
21200 The rpcbind package to use.
21201
21202 @item @code{warm-start?} (default: @code{#t})
21203 If this parameter is @code{#t}, then the daemon will read a
21204 state file on startup thus reloading state information saved by a previous
21205 instance.
21206 @end table
21207 @end deftp
21208
21209
21210 @subsubheading Pipefs Pseudo File System
21211 @cindex pipefs
21212 @cindex rpc_pipefs
21213
21214 The pipefs file system is used to transfer NFS related data
21215 between the kernel and user space programs.
21216
21217 @defvr {Scheme Variable} pipefs-service-type
21218 A service type for the pipefs pseudo file system.
21219 @end defvr
21220
21221 @deftp {Data Type} pipefs-configuration
21222 Data type representing the configuration of the pipefs pseudo file system service.
21223 This type has the following parameters:
21224 @table @asis
21225 @item @code{mount-point} (default: @code{"/var/lib/nfs/rpc_pipefs"})
21226 The directory to which the file system is to be attached.
21227 @end table
21228 @end deftp
21229
21230
21231 @subsubheading GSS Daemon Service
21232 @cindex GSSD
21233 @cindex GSS
21234 @cindex global security system
21235
21236 The @dfn{global security system} (GSS) daemon provides strong security for RPC
21237 based protocols.
21238 Before exchanging RPC requests an RPC client must establish a security
21239 context. Typically this is done using the Kerberos command @command{kinit}
21240 or automatically at login time using PAM services (@pxref{Kerberos Services}).
21241
21242 @defvr {Scheme Variable} gss-service-type
21243 A service type for the Global Security System (GSS) daemon.
21244 @end defvr
21245
21246 @deftp {Data Type} gss-configuration
21247 Data type representing the configuration of the GSS daemon service.
21248 This type has the following parameters:
21249 @table @asis
21250 @item @code{nfs-utils} (default: @code{nfs-utils})
21251 The package in which the @command{rpc.gssd} command is to be found.
21252
21253 @item @code{pipefs-directory} (default: @code{"/var/lib/nfs/rpc_pipefs"})
21254 The directory where the pipefs file system is mounted.
21255
21256 @end table
21257 @end deftp
21258
21259
21260 @subsubheading IDMAP Daemon Service
21261 @cindex idmapd
21262 @cindex name mapper
21263
21264 The idmap daemon service provides mapping between user IDs and user names.
21265 Typically it is required in order to access file systems mounted via NFSv4.
21266
21267 @defvr {Scheme Variable} idmap-service-type
21268 A service type for the Identity Mapper (IDMAP) daemon.
21269 @end defvr
21270
21271 @deftp {Data Type} idmap-configuration
21272 Data type representing the configuration of the IDMAP daemon service.
21273 This type has the following parameters:
21274 @table @asis
21275 @item @code{nfs-utils} (default: @code{nfs-utils})
21276 The package in which the @command{rpc.idmapd} command is to be found.
21277
21278 @item @code{pipefs-directory} (default: @code{"/var/lib/nfs/rpc_pipefs"})
21279 The directory where the pipefs file system is mounted.
21280
21281 @item @code{domain} (default: @code{#f})
21282 The local NFSv4 domain name.
21283 This must be a string or @code{#f}.
21284 If it is @code{#f} then the daemon will use the host's fully qualified domain name.
21285
21286 @end table
21287 @end deftp
21288
21289 @node Continuous Integration
21290 @subsection Continuous Integration
21291
21292 @cindex continuous integration
21293 @uref{https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/guix/guix-cuirass.git, Cuirass} is a
21294 continuous integration tool for Guix. It can be used both for development and
21295 for providing substitutes to others (@pxref{Substitutes}).
21296
21297 The @code{(gnu services cuirass)} module provides the following service.
21298
21299 @defvr {Scheme Procedure} cuirass-service-type
21300 The type of the Cuirass service. Its value must be a
21301 @code{cuirass-configuration} object, as described below.
21302 @end defvr
21303
21304 To add build jobs, you have to set the @code{specifications} field of the
21305 configuration. Here is an example of a service that polls the Guix repository
21306 and builds the packages from a manifest. Some of the packages are defined in
21307 the @code{"custom-packages"} input, which is the equivalent of
21308 @code{GUIX_PACKAGE_PATH}.
21309
21310 @example
21311 (define %cuirass-specs
21312 #~(list
21313 '((#:name . "my-manifest")
21314 (#:load-path-inputs . ("guix"))
21315 (#:package-path-inputs . ("custom-packages"))
21316 (#:proc-input . "guix")
21317 (#:proc-file . "build-aux/cuirass/gnu-system.scm")
21318 (#:proc . cuirass-jobs)
21319 (#:proc-args . ((subset . "manifests")
21320 (systems . ("x86_64-linux"))
21321 (manifests . (("config" . "guix/manifest.scm")))))
21322 (#:inputs . (((#:name . "guix")
21323 (#:url . "git://git.savannah.gnu.org/guix.git")
21324 (#:load-path . ".")
21325 (#:branch . "master")
21326 (#:no-compile? . #t))
21327 ((#:name . "config")
21328 (#:url . "git://git.example.org/config.git")
21329 (#:load-path . ".")
21330 (#:branch . "master")
21331 (#:no-compile? . #t))
21332 ((#:name . "custom-packages")
21333 (#:url . "git://git.example.org/custom-packages.git")
21334 (#:load-path . ".")
21335 (#:branch . "master")
21336 (#:no-compile? . #t)))))))
21337
21338 (service cuirass-service-type
21339 (cuirass-configuration
21340 (specifications %cuirass-specs)))
21341 @end example
21342
21343 While information related to build jobs is located directly in the
21344 specifications, global settings for the @command{cuirass} process are
21345 accessible in other @code{cuirass-configuration} fields.
21346
21347 @deftp {Data Type} cuirass-configuration
21348 Data type representing the configuration of Cuirass.
21349
21350 @table @asis
21351 @item @code{log-file} (default: @code{"/var/log/cuirass.log"})
21352 Location of the log file.
21353
21354 @item @code{cache-directory} (default: @code{"/var/cache/cuirass"})
21355 Location of the repository cache.
21356
21357 @item @code{user} (default: @code{"cuirass"})
21358 Owner of the @code{cuirass} process.
21359
21360 @item @code{group} (default: @code{"cuirass"})
21361 Owner's group of the @code{cuirass} process.
21362
21363 @item @code{interval} (default: @code{60})
21364 Number of seconds between the poll of the repositories followed by the
21365 Cuirass jobs.
21366
21367 @item @code{database} (default: @code{"/var/lib/cuirass/cuirass.db"})
21368 Location of sqlite database which contains the build results and previously
21369 added specifications.
21370
21371 @item @code{ttl} (default: @code{(* 30 24 3600)})
21372 Specifies the time-to-live (TTL) in seconds of garbage collector roots that
21373 are registered for build results. This means that build results are protected
21374 from garbage collection for at least @var{ttl} seconds.
21375
21376 @item @code{port} (default: @code{8081})
21377 Port number used by the HTTP server.
21378
21379 @item @code{host} (default: @code{"localhost"})
21380 Listen on the network interface for @var{host}. The default is to
21381 accept connections from localhost.
21382
21383 @item @code{specifications} (default: @code{#~'()})
21384 A gexp (@pxref{G-Expressions}) that evaluates to a list of specifications,
21385 where a specification is an association list
21386 (@pxref{Associations Lists,,, guile, GNU Guile Reference Manual}) whose
21387 keys are keywords (@code{#:keyword-example}) as shown in the example
21388 above.
21389
21390 @item @code{use-substitutes?} (default: @code{#f})
21391 This allows using substitutes to avoid building every dependencies of a job
21392 from source.
21393
21394 @item @code{one-shot?} (default: @code{#f})
21395 Only evaluate specifications and build derivations once.
21396
21397 @item @code{fallback?} (default: @code{#f})
21398 When substituting a pre-built binary fails, fall back to building
21399 packages locally.
21400
21401 @item @code{cuirass} (default: @code{cuirass})
21402 The Cuirass package to use.
21403 @end table
21404 @end deftp
21405
21406 @node Power Management Services
21407 @subsection Power Management Services
21408
21409 @cindex tlp
21410 @cindex power management with TLP
21411 @subsubheading TLP daemon
21412
21413 The @code{(gnu services pm)} module provides a Guix service definition
21414 for the Linux power management tool TLP.
21415
21416 TLP enables various powersaving modes in userspace and kernel.
21417 Contrary to @code{upower-service}, it is not a passive,
21418 monitoring tool, as it will apply custom settings each time a new power
21419 source is detected. More information can be found at
21420 @uref{https://linrunner.de/en/tlp/tlp.html, TLP home page}.
21421
21422 @deffn {Scheme Variable} tlp-service-type
21423 The service type for the TLP tool. Its value should be a valid
21424 TLP configuration (see below). To use the default settings, simply
21425 write:
21426 @example
21427 (service tlp-service-type)
21428 @end example
21429 @end deffn
21430
21431 By default TLP does not need much configuration but most TLP parameters
21432 can be tweaked using @code{tlp-configuration}.
21433
21434 Each parameter definition is preceded by its type; for example,
21435 @samp{boolean foo} indicates that the @code{foo} parameter
21436 should be specified as a boolean. Types starting with
21437 @code{maybe-} denote parameters that won't show up in TLP config file
21438 when their value is @code{'disabled}.
21439
21440 @c The following documentation was initially generated by
21441 @c (generate-tlp-documentation) in (gnu services pm). Manually maintained
21442 @c documentation is better, so we shouldn't hesitate to edit below as
21443 @c needed. However if the change you want to make to this documentation
21444 @c can be done in an automated way, it's probably easier to change
21445 @c (generate-documentation) than to make it below and have to deal with
21446 @c the churn as TLP updates.
21447
21448 Available @code{tlp-configuration} fields are:
21449
21450 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} package tlp
21451 The TLP package.
21452
21453 @end deftypevr
21454
21455 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} boolean tlp-enable?
21456 Set to true if you wish to enable TLP.
21457
21458 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
21459
21460 @end deftypevr
21461
21462 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} string tlp-default-mode
21463 Default mode when no power supply can be detected. Alternatives are AC
21464 and BAT.
21465
21466 Defaults to @samp{"AC"}.
21467
21468 @end deftypevr
21469
21470 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer disk-idle-secs-on-ac
21471 Number of seconds Linux kernel has to wait after the disk goes idle,
21472 before syncing on AC.
21473
21474 Defaults to @samp{0}.
21475
21476 @end deftypevr
21477
21478 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer disk-idle-secs-on-bat
21479 Same as @code{disk-idle-ac} but on BAT mode.
21480
21481 Defaults to @samp{2}.
21482
21483 @end deftypevr
21484
21485 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer max-lost-work-secs-on-ac
21486 Dirty pages flushing periodicity, expressed in seconds.
21487
21488 Defaults to @samp{15}.
21489
21490 @end deftypevr
21491
21492 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer max-lost-work-secs-on-bat
21493 Same as @code{max-lost-work-secs-on-ac} but on BAT mode.
21494
21495 Defaults to @samp{60}.
21496
21497 @end deftypevr
21498
21499 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} maybe-space-separated-string-list cpu-scaling-governor-on-ac
21500 CPU frequency scaling governor on AC mode. With intel_pstate driver,
21501 alternatives are powersave and performance. With acpi-cpufreq driver,
21502 alternatives are ondemand, powersave, performance and conservative.
21503
21504 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
21505
21506 @end deftypevr
21507
21508 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} maybe-space-separated-string-list cpu-scaling-governor-on-bat
21509 Same as @code{cpu-scaling-governor-on-ac} but on BAT mode.
21510
21511 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
21512
21513 @end deftypevr
21514
21515 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} maybe-non-negative-integer cpu-scaling-min-freq-on-ac
21516 Set the min available frequency for the scaling governor on AC.
21517
21518 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
21519
21520 @end deftypevr
21521
21522 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} maybe-non-negative-integer cpu-scaling-max-freq-on-ac
21523 Set the max available frequency for the scaling governor on AC.
21524
21525 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
21526
21527 @end deftypevr
21528
21529 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} maybe-non-negative-integer cpu-scaling-min-freq-on-bat
21530 Set the min available frequency for the scaling governor on BAT.
21531
21532 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
21533
21534 @end deftypevr
21535
21536 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} maybe-non-negative-integer cpu-scaling-max-freq-on-bat
21537 Set the max available frequency for the scaling governor on BAT.
21538
21539 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
21540
21541 @end deftypevr
21542
21543 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} maybe-non-negative-integer cpu-min-perf-on-ac
21544 Limit the min P-state to control the power dissipation of the CPU, in AC
21545 mode. Values are stated as a percentage of the available performance.
21546
21547 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
21548
21549 @end deftypevr
21550
21551 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} maybe-non-negative-integer cpu-max-perf-on-ac
21552 Limit the max P-state to control the power dissipation of the CPU, in AC
21553 mode. Values are stated as a percentage of the available performance.
21554
21555 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
21556
21557 @end deftypevr
21558
21559 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} maybe-non-negative-integer cpu-min-perf-on-bat
21560 Same as @code{cpu-min-perf-on-ac} on BAT mode.
21561
21562 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
21563
21564 @end deftypevr
21565
21566 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} maybe-non-negative-integer cpu-max-perf-on-bat
21567 Same as @code{cpu-max-perf-on-ac} on BAT mode.
21568
21569 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
21570
21571 @end deftypevr
21572
21573 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} maybe-boolean cpu-boost-on-ac?
21574 Enable CPU turbo boost feature on AC mode.
21575
21576 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
21577
21578 @end deftypevr
21579
21580 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} maybe-boolean cpu-boost-on-bat?
21581 Same as @code{cpu-boost-on-ac?} on BAT mode.
21582
21583 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
21584
21585 @end deftypevr
21586
21587 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} boolean sched-powersave-on-ac?
21588 Allow Linux kernel to minimize the number of CPU cores/hyper-threads
21589 used under light load conditions.
21590
21591 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
21592
21593 @end deftypevr
21594
21595 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} boolean sched-powersave-on-bat?
21596 Same as @code{sched-powersave-on-ac?} but on BAT mode.
21597
21598 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
21599
21600 @end deftypevr
21601
21602 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} boolean nmi-watchdog?
21603 Enable Linux kernel NMI watchdog.
21604
21605 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
21606
21607 @end deftypevr
21608
21609 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} maybe-string phc-controls
21610 For Linux kernels with PHC patch applied, change CPU voltages. An
21611 example value would be @samp{"F:V F:V F:V F:V"}.
21612
21613 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
21614
21615 @end deftypevr
21616
21617 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} string energy-perf-policy-on-ac
21618 Set CPU performance versus energy saving policy on AC. Alternatives are
21619 performance, normal, powersave.
21620
21621 Defaults to @samp{"performance"}.
21622
21623 @end deftypevr
21624
21625 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} string energy-perf-policy-on-bat
21626 Same as @code{energy-perf-policy-ac} but on BAT mode.
21627
21628 Defaults to @samp{"powersave"}.
21629
21630 @end deftypevr
21631
21632 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list disks-devices
21633 Hard disk devices.
21634
21635 @end deftypevr
21636
21637 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list disk-apm-level-on-ac
21638 Hard disk advanced power management level.
21639
21640 @end deftypevr
21641
21642 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list disk-apm-level-on-bat
21643 Same as @code{disk-apm-bat} but on BAT mode.
21644
21645 @end deftypevr
21646
21647 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} maybe-space-separated-string-list disk-spindown-timeout-on-ac
21648 Hard disk spin down timeout. One value has to be specified for each
21649 declared hard disk.
21650
21651 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
21652
21653 @end deftypevr
21654
21655 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} maybe-space-separated-string-list disk-spindown-timeout-on-bat
21656 Same as @code{disk-spindown-timeout-on-ac} but on BAT mode.
21657
21658 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
21659
21660 @end deftypevr
21661
21662 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} maybe-space-separated-string-list disk-iosched
21663 Select IO scheduler for disk devices. One value has to be specified for
21664 each declared hard disk. Example alternatives are cfq, deadline and
21665 noop.
21666
21667 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
21668
21669 @end deftypevr
21670
21671 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} string sata-linkpwr-on-ac
21672 SATA aggressive link power management (ALPM) level. Alternatives are
21673 min_power, medium_power, max_performance.
21674
21675 Defaults to @samp{"max_performance"}.
21676
21677 @end deftypevr
21678
21679 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} string sata-linkpwr-on-bat
21680 Same as @code{sata-linkpwr-ac} but on BAT mode.
21681
21682 Defaults to @samp{"min_power"}.
21683
21684 @end deftypevr
21685
21686 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} maybe-string sata-linkpwr-blacklist
21687 Exclude specified SATA host devices for link power management.
21688
21689 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
21690
21691 @end deftypevr
21692
21693 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} maybe-on-off-boolean ahci-runtime-pm-on-ac?
21694 Enable Runtime Power Management for AHCI controller and disks on AC
21695 mode.
21696
21697 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
21698
21699 @end deftypevr
21700
21701 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} maybe-on-off-boolean ahci-runtime-pm-on-bat?
21702 Same as @code{ahci-runtime-pm-on-ac} on BAT mode.
21703
21704 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
21705
21706 @end deftypevr
21707
21708 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer ahci-runtime-pm-timeout
21709 Seconds of inactivity before disk is suspended.
21710
21711 Defaults to @samp{15}.
21712
21713 @end deftypevr
21714
21715 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} string pcie-aspm-on-ac
21716 PCI Express Active State Power Management level. Alternatives are
21717 default, performance, powersave.
21718
21719 Defaults to @samp{"performance"}.
21720
21721 @end deftypevr
21722
21723 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} string pcie-aspm-on-bat
21724 Same as @code{pcie-aspm-ac} but on BAT mode.
21725
21726 Defaults to @samp{"powersave"}.
21727
21728 @end deftypevr
21729
21730 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} string radeon-power-profile-on-ac
21731 Radeon graphics clock speed level. Alternatives are low, mid, high,
21732 auto, default.
21733
21734 Defaults to @samp{"high"}.
21735
21736 @end deftypevr
21737
21738 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} string radeon-power-profile-on-bat
21739 Same as @code{radeon-power-ac} but on BAT mode.
21740
21741 Defaults to @samp{"low"}.
21742
21743 @end deftypevr
21744
21745 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} string radeon-dpm-state-on-ac
21746 Radeon dynamic power management method (DPM). Alternatives are battery,
21747 performance.
21748
21749 Defaults to @samp{"performance"}.
21750
21751 @end deftypevr
21752
21753 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} string radeon-dpm-state-on-bat
21754 Same as @code{radeon-dpm-state-ac} but on BAT mode.
21755
21756 Defaults to @samp{"battery"}.
21757
21758 @end deftypevr
21759
21760 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} string radeon-dpm-perf-level-on-ac
21761 Radeon DPM performance level. Alternatives are auto, low, high.
21762
21763 Defaults to @samp{"auto"}.
21764
21765 @end deftypevr
21766
21767 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} string radeon-dpm-perf-level-on-bat
21768 Same as @code{radeon-dpm-perf-ac} but on BAT mode.
21769
21770 Defaults to @samp{"auto"}.
21771
21772 @end deftypevr
21773
21774 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} on-off-boolean wifi-pwr-on-ac?
21775 Wifi power saving mode.
21776
21777 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
21778
21779 @end deftypevr
21780
21781 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} on-off-boolean wifi-pwr-on-bat?
21782 Same as @code{wifi-power-ac?} but on BAT mode.
21783
21784 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
21785
21786 @end deftypevr
21787
21788 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} y-n-boolean wol-disable?
21789 Disable wake on LAN.
21790
21791 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
21792
21793 @end deftypevr
21794
21795 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer sound-power-save-on-ac
21796 Timeout duration in seconds before activating audio power saving on
21797 Intel HDA and AC97 devices. A value of 0 disables power saving.
21798
21799 Defaults to @samp{0}.
21800
21801 @end deftypevr
21802
21803 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} non-negative-integer sound-power-save-on-bat
21804 Same as @code{sound-powersave-ac} but on BAT mode.
21805
21806 Defaults to @samp{1}.
21807
21808 @end deftypevr
21809
21810 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} y-n-boolean sound-power-save-controller?
21811 Disable controller in powersaving mode on Intel HDA devices.
21812
21813 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
21814
21815 @end deftypevr
21816
21817 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} boolean bay-poweroff-on-bat?
21818 Enable optical drive in UltraBay/MediaBay on BAT mode. Drive can be
21819 powered on again by releasing (and reinserting) the eject lever or by
21820 pressing the disc eject button on newer models.
21821
21822 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
21823
21824 @end deftypevr
21825
21826 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} string bay-device
21827 Name of the optical drive device to power off.
21828
21829 Defaults to @samp{"sr0"}.
21830
21831 @end deftypevr
21832
21833 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} string runtime-pm-on-ac
21834 Runtime Power Management for PCI(e) bus devices. Alternatives are on
21835 and auto.
21836
21837 Defaults to @samp{"on"}.
21838
21839 @end deftypevr
21840
21841 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} string runtime-pm-on-bat
21842 Same as @code{runtime-pm-ac} but on BAT mode.
21843
21844 Defaults to @samp{"auto"}.
21845
21846 @end deftypevr
21847
21848 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} boolean runtime-pm-all?
21849 Runtime Power Management for all PCI(e) bus devices, except blacklisted
21850 ones.
21851
21852 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
21853
21854 @end deftypevr
21855
21856 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} maybe-space-separated-string-list runtime-pm-blacklist
21857 Exclude specified PCI(e) device addresses from Runtime Power Management.
21858
21859 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
21860
21861 @end deftypevr
21862
21863 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} space-separated-string-list runtime-pm-driver-blacklist
21864 Exclude PCI(e) devices assigned to the specified drivers from Runtime
21865 Power Management.
21866
21867 @end deftypevr
21868
21869 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} boolean usb-autosuspend?
21870 Enable USB autosuspend feature.
21871
21872 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
21873
21874 @end deftypevr
21875
21876 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} maybe-string usb-blacklist
21877 Exclude specified devices from USB autosuspend.
21878
21879 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
21880
21881 @end deftypevr
21882
21883 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} boolean usb-blacklist-wwan?
21884 Exclude WWAN devices from USB autosuspend.
21885
21886 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
21887
21888 @end deftypevr
21889
21890 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} maybe-string usb-whitelist
21891 Include specified devices into USB autosuspend, even if they are already
21892 excluded by the driver or via @code{usb-blacklist-wwan?}.
21893
21894 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
21895
21896 @end deftypevr
21897
21898 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} maybe-boolean usb-autosuspend-disable-on-shutdown?
21899 Enable USB autosuspend before shutdown.
21900
21901 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
21902
21903 @end deftypevr
21904
21905 @deftypevr {@code{tlp-configuration} parameter} boolean restore-device-state-on-startup?
21906 Restore radio device state (bluetooth, wifi, wwan) from previous
21907 shutdown on system startup.
21908
21909 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
21910
21911 @end deftypevr
21912
21913 @cindex thermald
21914 @cindex CPU frequency scaling with thermald
21915 @subsubheading Thermald daemon
21916
21917 The @code{(gnu services pm)} module provides an interface to
21918 thermald, a CPU frequency scaling service which helps prevent overheating.
21919
21920 @defvr {Scheme Variable} thermald-service-type
21921 This is the service type for
21922 @uref{https://01.org/linux-thermal-daemon/, thermald}, the Linux
21923 Thermal Daemon, which is responsible for controlling the thermal state
21924 of processors and preventing overheating.
21925 @end defvr
21926
21927 @deftp {Data Type} thermald-configuration
21928 Data type representing the configuration of @code{thermald-service-type}.
21929
21930 @table @asis
21931 @item @code{ignore-cpuid-check?} (default: @code{#f})
21932 Ignore cpuid check for supported CPU models.
21933
21934 @item @code{thermald} (default: @var{thermald})
21935 Package object of thermald.
21936
21937 @end table
21938 @end deftp
21939
21940 @node Audio Services
21941 @subsection Audio Services
21942
21943 The @code{(gnu services audio)} module provides a service to start MPD
21944 (the Music Player Daemon).
21945
21946 @cindex mpd
21947 @subsubheading Music Player Daemon
21948
21949 The Music Player Daemon (MPD) is a service that can play music while
21950 being controlled from the local machine or over the network by a variety
21951 of clients.
21952
21953 The following example shows how one might run @code{mpd} as user
21954 @code{"bob"} on port @code{6666}. It uses pulseaudio for output.
21955
21956 @example
21957 (service mpd-service-type
21958 (mpd-configuration
21959 (user "bob")
21960 (port "6666")))
21961 @end example
21962
21963 @defvr {Scheme Variable} mpd-service-type
21964 The service type for @command{mpd}
21965 @end defvr
21966
21967 @deftp {Data Type} mpd-configuration
21968 Data type representing the configuration of @command{mpd}.
21969
21970 @table @asis
21971 @item @code{user} (default: @code{"mpd"})
21972 The user to run mpd as.
21973
21974 @item @code{music-dir} (default: @code{"~/Music"})
21975 The directory to scan for music files.
21976
21977 @item @code{playlist-dir} (default: @code{"~/.mpd/playlists"})
21978 The directory to store playlists.
21979
21980 @item @code{db-file} (default: @code{"~/.mpd/tag_cache"})
21981 The location of the music database.
21982
21983 @item @code{state-file} (default: @code{"~/.mpd/state"})
21984 The location of the file that stores current MPD's state.
21985
21986 @item @code{sticker-file} (default: @code{"~/.mpd/sticker.sql"})
21987 The location of the sticker database.
21988
21989 @item @code{port} (default: @code{"6600"})
21990 The port to run mpd on.
21991
21992 @item @code{address} (default: @code{"any"})
21993 The address that mpd will bind to. To use a Unix domain socket,
21994 an absolute path can be specified here.
21995
21996 @end table
21997 @end deftp
21998
21999 @node Virtualization Services
22000 @subsection Virtualization services
22001
22002 The @code{(gnu services virtualization)} module provides services for
22003 the libvirt and virtlog daemons, as well as other virtualization-related
22004 services.
22005
22006 @subsubheading Libvirt daemon
22007 @code{libvirtd} is the server side daemon component of the libvirt
22008 virtualization management system. This daemon runs on host servers
22009 and performs required management tasks for virtualized guests.
22010
22011 @deffn {Scheme Variable} libvirt-service-type
22012 This is the type of the @uref{https://libvirt.org, libvirt daemon}.
22013 Its value must be a @code{libvirt-configuration}.
22014
22015 @example
22016 (service libvirt-service-type
22017 (libvirt-configuration
22018 (unix-sock-group "libvirt")
22019 (tls-port "16555")))
22020 @end example
22021 @end deffn
22022
22023 @c Auto-generated with (generate-libvirt-documentation)
22024 Available @code{libvirt-configuration} fields are:
22025
22026 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} package libvirt
22027 Libvirt package.
22028
22029 @end deftypevr
22030
22031 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} boolean listen-tls?
22032 Flag listening for secure TLS connections on the public TCP/IP port.
22033 must set @code{listen} for this to have any effect.
22034
22035 It is necessary to setup a CA and issue server certificates before using
22036 this capability.
22037
22038 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
22039
22040 @end deftypevr
22041
22042 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} boolean listen-tcp?
22043 Listen for unencrypted TCP connections on the public TCP/IP port. must
22044 set @code{listen} for this to have any effect.
22045
22046 Using the TCP socket requires SASL authentication by default. Only SASL
22047 mechanisms which support data encryption are allowed. This is
22048 DIGEST_MD5 and GSSAPI (Kerberos5)
22049
22050 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
22051
22052 @end deftypevr
22053
22054 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} string tls-port
22055 Port for accepting secure TLS connections This can be a port number, or
22056 service name
22057
22058 Defaults to @samp{"16514"}.
22059
22060 @end deftypevr
22061
22062 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} string tcp-port
22063 Port for accepting insecure TCP connections This can be a port number,
22064 or service name
22065
22066 Defaults to @samp{"16509"}.
22067
22068 @end deftypevr
22069
22070 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} string listen-addr
22071 IP address or hostname used for client connections.
22072
22073 Defaults to @samp{"0.0.0.0"}.
22074
22075 @end deftypevr
22076
22077 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} boolean mdns-adv?
22078 Flag toggling mDNS advertisement of the libvirt service.
22079
22080 Alternatively can disable for all services on a host by stopping the
22081 Avahi daemon.
22082
22083 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
22084
22085 @end deftypevr
22086
22087 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} string mdns-name
22088 Default mDNS advertisement name. This must be unique on the immediate
22089 broadcast network.
22090
22091 Defaults to @samp{"Virtualization Host <hostname>"}.
22092
22093 @end deftypevr
22094
22095 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} string unix-sock-group
22096 UNIX domain socket group ownership. This can be used to allow a
22097 'trusted' set of users access to management capabilities without
22098 becoming root.
22099
22100 Defaults to @samp{"root"}.
22101
22102 @end deftypevr
22103
22104 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} string unix-sock-ro-perms
22105 UNIX socket permissions for the R/O socket. This is used for monitoring
22106 VM status only.
22107
22108 Defaults to @samp{"0777"}.
22109
22110 @end deftypevr
22111
22112 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} string unix-sock-rw-perms
22113 UNIX socket permissions for the R/W socket. Default allows only root.
22114 If PolicyKit is enabled on the socket, the default will change to allow
22115 everyone (eg, 0777)
22116
22117 Defaults to @samp{"0770"}.
22118
22119 @end deftypevr
22120
22121 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} string unix-sock-admin-perms
22122 UNIX socket permissions for the admin socket. Default allows only owner
22123 (root), do not change it unless you are sure to whom you are exposing
22124 the access to.
22125
22126 Defaults to @samp{"0777"}.
22127
22128 @end deftypevr
22129
22130 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} string unix-sock-dir
22131 The directory in which sockets will be found/created.
22132
22133 Defaults to @samp{"/var/run/libvirt"}.
22134
22135 @end deftypevr
22136
22137 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} string auth-unix-ro
22138 Authentication scheme for UNIX read-only sockets. By default socket
22139 permissions allow anyone to connect
22140
22141 Defaults to @samp{"polkit"}.
22142
22143 @end deftypevr
22144
22145 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} string auth-unix-rw
22146 Authentication scheme for UNIX read-write sockets. By default socket
22147 permissions only allow root. If PolicyKit support was compiled into
22148 libvirt, the default will be to use 'polkit' auth.
22149
22150 Defaults to @samp{"polkit"}.
22151
22152 @end deftypevr
22153
22154 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} string auth-tcp
22155 Authentication scheme for TCP sockets. If you don't enable SASL, then
22156 all TCP traffic is cleartext. Don't do this outside of a dev/test
22157 scenario.
22158
22159 Defaults to @samp{"sasl"}.
22160
22161 @end deftypevr
22162
22163 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} string auth-tls
22164 Authentication scheme for TLS sockets. TLS sockets already have
22165 encryption provided by the TLS layer, and limited authentication is done
22166 by certificates.
22167
22168 It is possible to make use of any SASL authentication mechanism as well,
22169 by using 'sasl' for this option
22170
22171 Defaults to @samp{"none"}.
22172
22173 @end deftypevr
22174
22175 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} optional-list access-drivers
22176 API access control scheme.
22177
22178 By default an authenticated user is allowed access to all APIs. Access
22179 drivers can place restrictions on this.
22180
22181 Defaults to @samp{()}.
22182
22183 @end deftypevr
22184
22185 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} string key-file
22186 Server key file path. If set to an empty string, then no private key is
22187 loaded.
22188
22189 Defaults to @samp{""}.
22190
22191 @end deftypevr
22192
22193 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} string cert-file
22194 Server key file path. If set to an empty string, then no certificate is
22195 loaded.
22196
22197 Defaults to @samp{""}.
22198
22199 @end deftypevr
22200
22201 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} string ca-file
22202 Server key file path. If set to an empty string, then no CA certificate
22203 is loaded.
22204
22205 Defaults to @samp{""}.
22206
22207 @end deftypevr
22208
22209 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} string crl-file
22210 Certificate revocation list path. If set to an empty string, then no
22211 CRL is loaded.
22212
22213 Defaults to @samp{""}.
22214
22215 @end deftypevr
22216
22217 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} boolean tls-no-sanity-cert
22218 Disable verification of our own server certificates.
22219
22220 When libvirtd starts it performs some sanity checks against its own
22221 certificates.
22222
22223 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
22224
22225 @end deftypevr
22226
22227 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} boolean tls-no-verify-cert
22228 Disable verification of client certificates.
22229
22230 Client certificate verification is the primary authentication mechanism.
22231 Any client which does not present a certificate signed by the CA will be
22232 rejected.
22233
22234 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
22235
22236 @end deftypevr
22237
22238 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} optional-list tls-allowed-dn-list
22239 Whitelist of allowed x509 Distinguished Name.
22240
22241 Defaults to @samp{()}.
22242
22243 @end deftypevr
22244
22245 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} optional-list sasl-allowed-usernames
22246 Whitelist of allowed SASL usernames. The format for username depends on
22247 the SASL authentication mechanism.
22248
22249 Defaults to @samp{()}.
22250
22251 @end deftypevr
22252
22253 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} string tls-priority
22254 Override the compile time default TLS priority string. The default is
22255 usually "NORMAL" unless overridden at build time. Only set this is it
22256 is desired for libvirt to deviate from the global default settings.
22257
22258 Defaults to @samp{"NORMAL"}.
22259
22260 @end deftypevr
22261
22262 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} integer max-clients
22263 Maximum number of concurrent client connections to allow over all
22264 sockets combined.
22265
22266 Defaults to @samp{5000}.
22267
22268 @end deftypevr
22269
22270 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} integer max-queued-clients
22271 Maximum length of queue of connections waiting to be accepted by the
22272 daemon. Note, that some protocols supporting retransmission may obey
22273 this so that a later reattempt at connection succeeds.
22274
22275 Defaults to @samp{1000}.
22276
22277 @end deftypevr
22278
22279 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} integer max-anonymous-clients
22280 Maximum length of queue of accepted but not yet authenticated clients.
22281 Set this to zero to turn this feature off
22282
22283 Defaults to @samp{20}.
22284
22285 @end deftypevr
22286
22287 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} integer min-workers
22288 Number of workers to start up initially.
22289
22290 Defaults to @samp{5}.
22291
22292 @end deftypevr
22293
22294 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} integer max-workers
22295 Maximum number of worker threads.
22296
22297 If the number of active clients exceeds @code{min-workers}, then more
22298 threads are spawned, up to max_workers limit. Typically you'd want
22299 max_workers to equal maximum number of clients allowed.
22300
22301 Defaults to @samp{20}.
22302
22303 @end deftypevr
22304
22305 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} integer prio-workers
22306 Number of priority workers. If all workers from above pool are stuck,
22307 some calls marked as high priority (notably domainDestroy) can be
22308 executed in this pool.
22309
22310 Defaults to @samp{5}.
22311
22312 @end deftypevr
22313
22314 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} integer max-requests
22315 Total global limit on concurrent RPC calls.
22316
22317 Defaults to @samp{20}.
22318
22319 @end deftypevr
22320
22321 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} integer max-client-requests
22322 Limit on concurrent requests from a single client connection. To avoid
22323 one client monopolizing the server this should be a small fraction of
22324 the global max_requests and max_workers parameter.
22325
22326 Defaults to @samp{5}.
22327
22328 @end deftypevr
22329
22330 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} integer admin-min-workers
22331 Same as @code{min-workers} but for the admin interface.
22332
22333 Defaults to @samp{1}.
22334
22335 @end deftypevr
22336
22337 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} integer admin-max-workers
22338 Same as @code{max-workers} but for the admin interface.
22339
22340 Defaults to @samp{5}.
22341
22342 @end deftypevr
22343
22344 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} integer admin-max-clients
22345 Same as @code{max-clients} but for the admin interface.
22346
22347 Defaults to @samp{5}.
22348
22349 @end deftypevr
22350
22351 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} integer admin-max-queued-clients
22352 Same as @code{max-queued-clients} but for the admin interface.
22353
22354 Defaults to @samp{5}.
22355
22356 @end deftypevr
22357
22358 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} integer admin-max-client-requests
22359 Same as @code{max-client-requests} but for the admin interface.
22360
22361 Defaults to @samp{5}.
22362
22363 @end deftypevr
22364
22365 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} integer log-level
22366 Logging level. 4 errors, 3 warnings, 2 information, 1 debug.
22367
22368 Defaults to @samp{3}.
22369
22370 @end deftypevr
22371
22372 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} string log-filters
22373 Logging filters.
22374
22375 A filter allows to select a different logging level for a given category
22376 of logs The format for a filter is one of:
22377
22378 @itemize @bullet
22379 @item
22380 x:name
22381
22382 @item
22383 x:+name
22384
22385 @end itemize
22386
22387 where @code{name} is a string which is matched against the category
22388 given in the @code{VIR_LOG_INIT()} at the top of each libvirt source
22389 file, e.g., "remote", "qemu", or "util.json" (the name in the filter can
22390 be a substring of the full category name, in order to match multiple
22391 similar categories), the optional "+" prefix tells libvirt to log stack
22392 trace for each message matching name, and @code{x} is the minimal level
22393 where matching messages should be logged:
22394
22395 @itemize @bullet
22396 @item
22397 1: DEBUG
22398
22399 @item
22400 2: INFO
22401
22402 @item
22403 3: WARNING
22404
22405 @item
22406 4: ERROR
22407
22408 @end itemize
22409
22410 Multiple filters can be defined in a single filters statement, they just
22411 need to be separated by spaces.
22412
22413 Defaults to @samp{"3:remote 4:event"}.
22414
22415 @end deftypevr
22416
22417 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} string log-outputs
22418 Logging outputs.
22419
22420 An output is one of the places to save logging information. The format
22421 for an output can be:
22422
22423 @table @code
22424 @item x:stderr
22425 output goes to stderr
22426
22427 @item x:syslog:name
22428 use syslog for the output and use the given name as the ident
22429
22430 @item x:file:file_path
22431 output to a file, with the given filepath
22432
22433 @item x:journald
22434 output to journald logging system
22435
22436 @end table
22437
22438 In all case the x prefix is the minimal level, acting as a filter
22439
22440 @itemize @bullet
22441 @item
22442 1: DEBUG
22443
22444 @item
22445 2: INFO
22446
22447 @item
22448 3: WARNING
22449
22450 @item
22451 4: ERROR
22452
22453 @end itemize
22454
22455 Multiple outputs can be defined, they just need to be separated by
22456 spaces.
22457
22458 Defaults to @samp{"3:stderr"}.
22459
22460 @end deftypevr
22461
22462 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} integer audit-level
22463 Allows usage of the auditing subsystem to be altered
22464
22465 @itemize @bullet
22466 @item
22467 0: disable all auditing
22468
22469 @item
22470 1: enable auditing, only if enabled on host
22471
22472 @item
22473 2: enable auditing, and exit if disabled on host.
22474
22475 @end itemize
22476
22477 Defaults to @samp{1}.
22478
22479 @end deftypevr
22480
22481 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} boolean audit-logging
22482 Send audit messages via libvirt logging infrastructure.
22483
22484 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
22485
22486 @end deftypevr
22487
22488 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} optional-string host-uuid
22489 Host UUID. UUID must not have all digits be the same.
22490
22491 Defaults to @samp{""}.
22492
22493 @end deftypevr
22494
22495 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} string host-uuid-source
22496 Source to read host UUID.
22497
22498 @itemize @bullet
22499 @item
22500 @code{smbios}: fetch the UUID from @code{dmidecode -s system-uuid}
22501
22502 @item
22503 @code{machine-id}: fetch the UUID from @code{/etc/machine-id}
22504
22505 @end itemize
22506
22507 If @code{dmidecode} does not provide a valid UUID a temporary UUID will
22508 be generated.
22509
22510 Defaults to @samp{"smbios"}.
22511
22512 @end deftypevr
22513
22514 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} integer keepalive-interval
22515 A keepalive message is sent to a client after @code{keepalive_interval}
22516 seconds of inactivity to check if the client is still responding. If
22517 set to -1, libvirtd will never send keepalive requests; however clients
22518 can still send them and the daemon will send responses.
22519
22520 Defaults to @samp{5}.
22521
22522 @end deftypevr
22523
22524 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} integer keepalive-count
22525 Maximum number of keepalive messages that are allowed to be sent to the
22526 client without getting any response before the connection is considered
22527 broken.
22528
22529 In other words, the connection is automatically closed approximately
22530 after @code{keepalive_interval * (keepalive_count + 1)} seconds since
22531 the last message received from the client. When @code{keepalive-count}
22532 is set to 0, connections will be automatically closed after
22533 @code{keepalive-interval} seconds of inactivity without sending any
22534 keepalive messages.
22535
22536 Defaults to @samp{5}.
22537
22538 @end deftypevr
22539
22540 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} integer admin-keepalive-interval
22541 Same as above but for admin interface.
22542
22543 Defaults to @samp{5}.
22544
22545 @end deftypevr
22546
22547 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} integer admin-keepalive-count
22548 Same as above but for admin interface.
22549
22550 Defaults to @samp{5}.
22551
22552 @end deftypevr
22553
22554 @deftypevr {@code{libvirt-configuration} parameter} integer ovs-timeout
22555 Timeout for Open vSwitch calls.
22556
22557 The @code{ovs-vsctl} utility is used for the configuration and its
22558 timeout option is set by default to 5 seconds to avoid potential
22559 infinite waits blocking libvirt.
22560
22561 Defaults to @samp{5}.
22562
22563 @end deftypevr
22564
22565 @c %end of autogenerated docs
22566
22567 @subsubheading Virtlog daemon
22568 The virtlogd service is a server side daemon component of libvirt that is
22569 used to manage logs from virtual machine consoles.
22570
22571 This daemon is not used directly by libvirt client applications, rather it
22572 is called on their behalf by @code{libvirtd}. By maintaining the logs in a
22573 standalone daemon, the main @code{libvirtd} daemon can be restarted without
22574 risk of losing logs. The @code{virtlogd} daemon has the ability to re-exec()
22575 itself upon receiving @code{SIGUSR1}, to allow live upgrades without downtime.
22576
22577 @deffn {Scheme Variable} virtlog-service-type
22578 This is the type of the virtlog daemon.
22579 Its value must be a @code{virtlog-configuration}.
22580
22581 @example
22582 (service virtlog-service-type
22583 (virtlog-configuration
22584 (max-clients 1000)))
22585 @end example
22586 @end deffn
22587
22588 @deftypevr {@code{virtlog-configuration} parameter} integer log-level
22589 Logging level. 4 errors, 3 warnings, 2 information, 1 debug.
22590
22591 Defaults to @samp{3}.
22592
22593 @end deftypevr
22594
22595 @deftypevr {@code{virtlog-configuration} parameter} string log-filters
22596 Logging filters.
22597
22598 A filter allows to select a different logging level for a given category
22599 of logs The format for a filter is one of:
22600
22601 @itemize @bullet
22602 @item
22603 x:name
22604
22605 @item
22606 x:+name
22607
22608 @end itemize
22609
22610 where @code{name} is a string which is matched against the category
22611 given in the @code{VIR_LOG_INIT()} at the top of each libvirt source
22612 file, e.g., "remote", "qemu", or "util.json" (the name in the filter can
22613 be a substring of the full category name, in order to match multiple
22614 similar categories), the optional "+" prefix tells libvirt to log stack
22615 trace for each message matching name, and @code{x} is the minimal level
22616 where matching messages should be logged:
22617
22618 @itemize @bullet
22619 @item
22620 1: DEBUG
22621
22622 @item
22623 2: INFO
22624
22625 @item
22626 3: WARNING
22627
22628 @item
22629 4: ERROR
22630
22631 @end itemize
22632
22633 Multiple filters can be defined in a single filters statement, they just
22634 need to be separated by spaces.
22635
22636 Defaults to @samp{"3:remote 4:event"}.
22637
22638 @end deftypevr
22639
22640 @deftypevr {@code{virtlog-configuration} parameter} string log-outputs
22641 Logging outputs.
22642
22643 An output is one of the places to save logging information The format
22644 for an output can be:
22645
22646 @table @code
22647 @item x:stderr
22648 output goes to stderr
22649
22650 @item x:syslog:name
22651 use syslog for the output and use the given name as the ident
22652
22653 @item x:file:file_path
22654 output to a file, with the given filepath
22655
22656 @item x:journald
22657 output to journald logging system
22658
22659 @end table
22660
22661 In all case the x prefix is the minimal level, acting as a filter
22662
22663 @itemize @bullet
22664 @item
22665 1: DEBUG
22666
22667 @item
22668 2: INFO
22669
22670 @item
22671 3: WARNING
22672
22673 @item
22674 4: ERROR
22675
22676 @end itemize
22677
22678 Multiple outputs can be defined, they just need to be separated by
22679 spaces.
22680
22681 Defaults to @samp{"3:stderr"}.
22682
22683 @end deftypevr
22684
22685 @deftypevr {@code{virtlog-configuration} parameter} integer max-clients
22686 Maximum number of concurrent client connections to allow over all
22687 sockets combined.
22688
22689 Defaults to @samp{1024}.
22690
22691 @end deftypevr
22692
22693 @deftypevr {@code{virtlog-configuration} parameter} integer max-size
22694 Maximum file size before rolling over.
22695
22696 Defaults to @samp{2MB}
22697
22698 @end deftypevr
22699
22700 @deftypevr {@code{virtlog-configuration} parameter} integer max-backups
22701 Maximum number of backup files to keep.
22702
22703 Defaults to @samp{3}
22704
22705 @end deftypevr
22706
22707 @subsubheading Transparent Emulation with QEMU
22708
22709 @cindex emulation
22710 @cindex @code{binfmt_misc}
22711 @code{qemu-binfmt-service-type} provides support for transparent
22712 emulation of program binaries built for different architectures---e.g.,
22713 it allows you to transparently execute an ARMv7 program on an x86_64
22714 machine. It achieves this by combining the @uref{https://www.qemu.org,
22715 QEMU} emulator and the @code{binfmt_misc} feature of the kernel Linux.
22716
22717 @defvr {Scheme Variable} qemu-binfmt-service-type
22718 This is the type of the QEMU/binfmt service for transparent emulation.
22719 Its value must be a @code{qemu-binfmt-configuration} object, which
22720 specifies the QEMU package to use as well as the architecture we want to
22721 emulated:
22722
22723 @example
22724 (service qemu-binfmt-service-type
22725 (qemu-binfmt-configuration
22726 (platforms (lookup-qemu-platforms "arm" "aarch64" "mips64el"))))
22727 @end example
22728
22729 In this example, we enable transparent emulation for the ARM and aarch64
22730 platforms. Running @code{herd stop qemu-binfmt} turns it off, and
22731 running @code{herd start qemu-binfmt} turns it back on (@pxref{Invoking
22732 herd, the @command{herd} command,, shepherd, The GNU Shepherd Manual}).
22733 @end defvr
22734
22735 @deftp {Data Type} qemu-binfmt-configuration
22736 This is the configuration for the @code{qemu-binfmt} service.
22737
22738 @table @asis
22739 @item @code{platforms} (default: @code{'()})
22740 The list of emulated QEMU platforms. Each item must be a @dfn{platform
22741 object} as returned by @code{lookup-qemu-platforms} (see below).
22742
22743 @item @code{guix-support?} (default: @code{#f})
22744 When it is true, QEMU and all its dependencies are added to the build
22745 environment of @command{guix-daemon} (@pxref{Invoking guix-daemon,
22746 @code{--chroot-directory} option}). This allows the @code{binfmt_misc}
22747 handlers to be used within the build environment, which in turn means
22748 that you can transparently build programs for another architecture.
22749
22750 For example, let's suppose you're on an x86_64 machine and you have this
22751 service:
22752
22753 @example
22754 (service qemu-binfmt-service-type
22755 (qemu-binfmt-configuration
22756 (platforms (lookup-qemu-platforms "arm"))
22757 (guix-support? #t)))
22758 @end example
22759
22760 You can run:
22761
22762 @example
22763 guix build -s armhf-linux inkscape
22764 @end example
22765
22766 @noindent
22767 and it will build Inkscape for ARMv7 @emph{as if it were a native
22768 build}, transparently using QEMU to emulate the ARMv7 CPU. Pretty handy
22769 if you'd like to test a package build for an architecture you don't have
22770 access to!
22771
22772 @item @code{qemu} (default: @code{qemu})
22773 The QEMU package to use.
22774 @end table
22775 @end deftp
22776
22777 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} lookup-qemu-platforms @var{platforms}@dots{}
22778 Return the list of QEMU platform objects corresponding to
22779 @var{platforms}@dots{}. @var{platforms} must be a list of strings
22780 corresponding to platform names, such as @code{"arm"}, @code{"sparc"},
22781 @code{"mips64el"}, and so on.
22782 @end deffn
22783
22784 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} qemu-platform? @var{obj}
22785 Return true if @var{obj} is a platform object.
22786 @end deffn
22787
22788 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} qemu-platform-name @var{platform}
22789 Return the name of @var{platform}---a string such as @code{"arm"}.
22790 @end deffn
22791
22792 @node Version Control Services
22793 @subsection Version Control Services
22794
22795 The @code{(gnu services version-control)} module provides a service to
22796 allow remote access to local Git repositories. There are three options:
22797 the @code{git-daemon-service}, which provides access to repositories via
22798 the @code{git://} unsecured TCP-based protocol, extending the
22799 @code{nginx} web server to proxy some requests to
22800 @code{git-http-backend}, or providing a web interface with
22801 @code{cgit-service-type}.
22802
22803 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} git-daemon-service [#:config (git-daemon-configuration)]
22804
22805 Return a service that runs @command{git daemon}, a simple TCP server to
22806 expose repositories over the Git protocol for anonymous access.
22807
22808 The optional @var{config} argument should be a
22809 @code{<git-daemon-configuration>} object, by default it allows read-only
22810 access to exported@footnote{By creating the magic file
22811 "git-daemon-export-ok" in the repository directory.} repositories under
22812 @file{/srv/git}.
22813
22814 @end deffn
22815
22816 @deftp {Data Type} git-daemon-configuration
22817 Data type representing the configuration for @code{git-daemon-service}.
22818
22819 @table @asis
22820 @item @code{package} (default: @var{git})
22821 Package object of the Git distributed version control system.
22822
22823 @item @code{export-all?} (default: @var{#f})
22824 Whether to allow access for all Git repositories, even if they do not
22825 have the @file{git-daemon-export-ok} file.
22826
22827 @item @code{base-path} (default: @file{/srv/git})
22828 Whether to remap all the path requests as relative to the given path.
22829 If you run git daemon with @var{(base-path "/srv/git")} on example.com,
22830 then if you later try to pull @code{git://example.com/hello.git}, git
22831 daemon will interpret the path as @code{/srv/git/hello.git}.
22832
22833 @item @code{user-path} (default: @var{#f})
22834 Whether to allow @code{~user} notation to be used in requests. When
22835 specified with empty string, requests to @code{git://host/~alice/foo} is
22836 taken as a request to access @code{foo} repository in the home directory
22837 of user @code{alice}. If @var{(user-path "path")} is specified, the
22838 same request is taken as a request to access @code{path/foo} repository
22839 in the home directory of user @code{alice}.
22840
22841 @item @code{listen} (default: @var{'()})
22842 Whether to listen on specific IP addresses or hostnames, defaults to
22843 all.
22844
22845 @item @code{port} (default: @var{#f})
22846 Whether to listen on an alternative port, which defaults to 9418.
22847
22848 @item @code{whitelist} (default: @var{'()})
22849 If not empty, only allow access to this list of directories.
22850
22851 @item @code{extra-options} (default: @var{'()})
22852 Extra options will be passed to @code{git daemon}, please run
22853 @command{man git-daemon} for more information.
22854
22855 @end table
22856 @end deftp
22857
22858 The @code{git://} protocol lacks authentication. When you pull from a
22859 repository fetched via @code{git://}, you don't know whether the data you
22860 receive was modified or is even coming from the specified host, and your
22861 connection is subject to eavesdropping. It's better to use an authenticated
22862 and encrypted transport, such as @code{https}. Although Git allows you
22863 to serve repositories using unsophisticated file-based web servers,
22864 there is a faster protocol implemented by the @code{git-http-backend}
22865 program. This program is the back-end of a proper Git web service. It
22866 is designed to sit behind a FastCGI proxy. @xref{Web Services}, for more
22867 on running the necessary @code{fcgiwrap} daemon.
22868
22869 Guix has a separate configuration data type for serving Git repositories
22870 over HTTP.
22871
22872 @deftp {Data Type} git-http-configuration
22873 Data type representing the configuration for @code{git-http-service}.
22874
22875 @table @asis
22876 @item @code{package} (default: @var{git})
22877 Package object of the Git distributed version control system.
22878
22879 @item @code{git-root} (default: @file{/srv/git})
22880 Directory containing the Git repositories to expose to the world.
22881
22882 @item @code{export-all?} (default: @var{#f})
22883 Whether to expose access for all Git repositories in @var{git-root},
22884 even if they do not have the @file{git-daemon-export-ok} file.
22885
22886 @item @code{uri-path} (default: @file{/git/})
22887 Path prefix for Git access. With the default @code{/git/} prefix, this
22888 will map @code{http://@var{server}/git/@var{repo}.git} to
22889 @code{/srv/git/@var{repo}.git}. Requests whose URI paths do not begin
22890 with this prefix are not passed on to this Git instance.
22891
22892 @item @code{fcgiwrap-socket} (default: @code{127.0.0.1:9000})
22893 The socket on which the @code{fcgiwrap} daemon is listening. @xref{Web
22894 Services}.
22895 @end table
22896 @end deftp
22897
22898 There is no @code{git-http-service-type}, currently; instead you can
22899 create an @code{nginx-location-configuration} from a
22900 @code{git-http-configuration} and then add that location to a web
22901 server.
22902
22903 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} git-http-nginx-location-configuration @
22904 [config=(git-http-configuration)]
22905 Compute an @code{nginx-location-configuration} that corresponds to the
22906 given Git http configuration. An example nginx service definition to
22907 serve the default @file{/srv/git} over HTTPS might be:
22908
22909 @example
22910 (service nginx-service-type
22911 (nginx-configuration
22912 (server-blocks
22913 (list
22914 (nginx-server-configuration
22915 (listen '("443 ssl"))
22916 (server-name "git.my-host.org")
22917 (ssl-certificate
22918 "/etc/letsencrypt/live/git.my-host.org/fullchain.pem")
22919 (ssl-certificate-key
22920 "/etc/letsencrypt/live/git.my-host.org/privkey.pem")
22921 (locations
22922 (list
22923 (git-http-nginx-location-configuration
22924 (git-http-configuration (uri-path "/"))))))))))
22925 @end example
22926
22927 This example assumes that you are using Let's Encrypt to get your TLS
22928 certificate. @xref{Certificate Services}. The default @code{certbot}
22929 service will redirect all HTTP traffic on @code{git.my-host.org} to
22930 HTTPS. You will also need to add an @code{fcgiwrap} proxy to your
22931 system services. @xref{Web Services}.
22932 @end deffn
22933
22934 @subsubheading Cgit Service
22935
22936 @cindex Cgit service
22937 @cindex Git, web interface
22938 @uref{https://git.zx2c4.com/cgit/, Cgit} is a web frontend for Git
22939 repositories written in C.
22940
22941 The following example will configure the service with default values.
22942 By default, Cgit can be accessed on port 80 (@code{http://localhost:80}).
22943
22944 @example
22945 (service cgit-service-type)
22946 @end example
22947
22948 The @code{file-object} type designates either a file-like object
22949 (@pxref{G-Expressions, file-like objects}) or a string.
22950
22951 @c %start of fragment
22952
22953 Available @code{cgit-configuration} fields are:
22954
22955 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} package package
22956 The CGIT package.
22957
22958 @end deftypevr
22959
22960 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} nginx-server-configuration-list nginx
22961 NGINX configuration.
22962
22963 @end deftypevr
22964
22965 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} file-object about-filter
22966 Specifies a command which will be invoked to format the content of about
22967 pages (both top-level and for each repository).
22968
22969 Defaults to @samp{""}.
22970
22971 @end deftypevr
22972
22973 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} string agefile
22974 Specifies a path, relative to each repository path, which can be used to
22975 specify the date and time of the youngest commit in the repository.
22976
22977 Defaults to @samp{""}.
22978
22979 @end deftypevr
22980
22981 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} file-object auth-filter
22982 Specifies a command that will be invoked for authenticating repository
22983 access.
22984
22985 Defaults to @samp{""}.
22986
22987 @end deftypevr
22988
22989 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} string branch-sort
22990 Flag which, when set to @samp{age}, enables date ordering in the branch
22991 ref list, and when set @samp{name} enables ordering by branch name.
22992
22993 Defaults to @samp{"name"}.
22994
22995 @end deftypevr
22996
22997 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} string cache-root
22998 Path used to store the cgit cache entries.
22999
23000 Defaults to @samp{"/var/cache/cgit"}.
23001
23002 @end deftypevr
23003
23004 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} integer cache-static-ttl
23005 Number which specifies the time-to-live, in minutes, for the cached
23006 version of repository pages accessed with a fixed SHA1.
23007
23008 Defaults to @samp{-1}.
23009
23010 @end deftypevr
23011
23012 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} integer cache-dynamic-ttl
23013 Number which specifies the time-to-live, in minutes, for the cached
23014 version of repository pages accessed without a fixed SHA1.
23015
23016 Defaults to @samp{5}.
23017
23018 @end deftypevr
23019
23020 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} integer cache-repo-ttl
23021 Number which specifies the time-to-live, in minutes, for the cached
23022 version of the repository summary page.
23023
23024 Defaults to @samp{5}.
23025
23026 @end deftypevr
23027
23028 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} integer cache-root-ttl
23029 Number which specifies the time-to-live, in minutes, for the cached
23030 version of the repository index page.
23031
23032 Defaults to @samp{5}.
23033
23034 @end deftypevr
23035
23036 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} integer cache-scanrc-ttl
23037 Number which specifies the time-to-live, in minutes, for the result of
23038 scanning a path for Git repositories.
23039
23040 Defaults to @samp{15}.
23041
23042 @end deftypevr
23043
23044 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} integer cache-about-ttl
23045 Number which specifies the time-to-live, in minutes, for the cached
23046 version of the repository about page.
23047
23048 Defaults to @samp{15}.
23049
23050 @end deftypevr
23051
23052 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} integer cache-snapshot-ttl
23053 Number which specifies the time-to-live, in minutes, for the cached
23054 version of snapshots.
23055
23056 Defaults to @samp{5}.
23057
23058 @end deftypevr
23059
23060 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} integer cache-size
23061 The maximum number of entries in the cgit cache. When set to @samp{0},
23062 caching is disabled.
23063
23064 Defaults to @samp{0}.
23065
23066 @end deftypevr
23067
23068 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} boolean case-sensitive-sort?
23069 Sort items in the repo list case sensitively.
23070
23071 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
23072
23073 @end deftypevr
23074
23075 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} list clone-prefix
23076 List of common prefixes which, when combined with a repository URL,
23077 generates valid clone URLs for the repository.
23078
23079 Defaults to @samp{()}.
23080
23081 @end deftypevr
23082
23083 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} list clone-url
23084 List of @code{clone-url} templates.
23085
23086 Defaults to @samp{()}.
23087
23088 @end deftypevr
23089
23090 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} file-object commit-filter
23091 Command which will be invoked to format commit messages.
23092
23093 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23094
23095 @end deftypevr
23096
23097 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} string commit-sort
23098 Flag which, when set to @samp{date}, enables strict date ordering in the
23099 commit log, and when set to @samp{topo} enables strict topological
23100 ordering.
23101
23102 Defaults to @samp{"git log"}.
23103
23104 @end deftypevr
23105
23106 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} file-object css
23107 URL which specifies the css document to include in all cgit pages.
23108
23109 Defaults to @samp{"/share/cgit/cgit.css"}.
23110
23111 @end deftypevr
23112
23113 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} file-object email-filter
23114 Specifies a command which will be invoked to format names and email
23115 address of committers, authors, and taggers, as represented in various
23116 places throughout the cgit interface.
23117
23118 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23119
23120 @end deftypevr
23121
23122 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} boolean embedded?
23123 Flag which, when set to @samp{#t}, will make cgit generate a HTML
23124 fragment suitable for embedding in other HTML pages.
23125
23126 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
23127
23128 @end deftypevr
23129
23130 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} boolean enable-commit-graph?
23131 Flag which, when set to @samp{#t}, will make cgit print an ASCII-art
23132 commit history graph to the left of the commit messages in the
23133 repository log page.
23134
23135 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
23136
23137 @end deftypevr
23138
23139 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} boolean enable-filter-overrides?
23140 Flag which, when set to @samp{#t}, allows all filter settings to be
23141 overridden in repository-specific cgitrc files.
23142
23143 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
23144
23145 @end deftypevr
23146
23147 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} boolean enable-follow-links?
23148 Flag which, when set to @samp{#t}, allows users to follow a file in the
23149 log view.
23150
23151 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
23152
23153 @end deftypevr
23154
23155 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} boolean enable-http-clone?
23156 If set to @samp{#t}, cgit will act as an dumb HTTP endpoint for Git
23157 clones.
23158
23159 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
23160
23161 @end deftypevr
23162
23163 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} boolean enable-index-links?
23164 Flag which, when set to @samp{#t}, will make cgit generate extra links
23165 "summary", "commit", "tree" for each repo in the repository index.
23166
23167 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
23168
23169 @end deftypevr
23170
23171 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} boolean enable-index-owner?
23172 Flag which, when set to @samp{#t}, will make cgit display the owner of
23173 each repo in the repository index.
23174
23175 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
23176
23177 @end deftypevr
23178
23179 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} boolean enable-log-filecount?
23180 Flag which, when set to @samp{#t}, will make cgit print the number of
23181 modified files for each commit on the repository log page.
23182
23183 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
23184
23185 @end deftypevr
23186
23187 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} boolean enable-log-linecount?
23188 Flag which, when set to @samp{#t}, will make cgit print the number of
23189 added and removed lines for each commit on the repository log page.
23190
23191 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
23192
23193 @end deftypevr
23194
23195 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} boolean enable-remote-branches?
23196 Flag which, when set to @code{#t}, will make cgit display remote
23197 branches in the summary and refs views.
23198
23199 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
23200
23201 @end deftypevr
23202
23203 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} boolean enable-subject-links?
23204 Flag which, when set to @code{1}, will make cgit use the subject of the
23205 parent commit as link text when generating links to parent commits in
23206 commit view.
23207
23208 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
23209
23210 @end deftypevr
23211
23212 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} boolean enable-html-serving?
23213 Flag which, when set to @samp{#t}, will make cgit use the subject of the
23214 parent commit as link text when generating links to parent commits in
23215 commit view.
23216
23217 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
23218
23219 @end deftypevr
23220
23221 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} boolean enable-tree-linenumbers?
23222 Flag which, when set to @samp{#t}, will make cgit generate linenumber
23223 links for plaintext blobs printed in the tree view.
23224
23225 Defaults to @samp{#t}.
23226
23227 @end deftypevr
23228
23229 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} boolean enable-git-config?
23230 Flag which, when set to @samp{#f}, will allow cgit to use Git config to
23231 set any repo specific settings.
23232
23233 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
23234
23235 @end deftypevr
23236
23237 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} file-object favicon
23238 URL used as link to a shortcut icon for cgit.
23239
23240 Defaults to @samp{"/favicon.ico"}.
23241
23242 @end deftypevr
23243
23244 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} string footer
23245 The content of the file specified with this option will be included
23246 verbatim at the bottom of all pages (i.e.@: it replaces the standard
23247 "generated by..."@: message).
23248
23249 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23250
23251 @end deftypevr
23252
23253 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} string head-include
23254 The content of the file specified with this option will be included
23255 verbatim in the HTML HEAD section on all pages.
23256
23257 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23258
23259 @end deftypevr
23260
23261 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} string header
23262 The content of the file specified with this option will be included
23263 verbatim at the top of all pages.
23264
23265 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23266
23267 @end deftypevr
23268
23269 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} file-object include
23270 Name of a configfile to include before the rest of the current config-
23271 file is parsed.
23272
23273 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23274
23275 @end deftypevr
23276
23277 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} string index-header
23278 The content of the file specified with this option will be included
23279 verbatim above the repository index.
23280
23281 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23282
23283 @end deftypevr
23284
23285 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} string index-info
23286 The content of the file specified with this option will be included
23287 verbatim below the heading on the repository index page.
23288
23289 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23290
23291 @end deftypevr
23292
23293 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} boolean local-time?
23294 Flag which, if set to @samp{#t}, makes cgit print commit and tag times
23295 in the servers timezone.
23296
23297 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
23298
23299 @end deftypevr
23300
23301 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} file-object logo
23302 URL which specifies the source of an image which will be used as a logo
23303 on all cgit pages.
23304
23305 Defaults to @samp{"/share/cgit/cgit.png"}.
23306
23307 @end deftypevr
23308
23309 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} string logo-link
23310 URL loaded when clicking on the cgit logo image.
23311
23312 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23313
23314 @end deftypevr
23315
23316 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} file-object owner-filter
23317 Command which will be invoked to format the Owner column of the main
23318 page.
23319
23320 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23321
23322 @end deftypevr
23323
23324 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} integer max-atom-items
23325 Number of items to display in atom feeds view.
23326
23327 Defaults to @samp{10}.
23328
23329 @end deftypevr
23330
23331 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} integer max-commit-count
23332 Number of entries to list per page in "log" view.
23333
23334 Defaults to @samp{50}.
23335
23336 @end deftypevr
23337
23338 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} integer max-message-length
23339 Number of commit message characters to display in "log" view.
23340
23341 Defaults to @samp{80}.
23342
23343 @end deftypevr
23344
23345 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} integer max-repo-count
23346 Specifies the number of entries to list per page on the repository index
23347 page.
23348
23349 Defaults to @samp{50}.
23350
23351 @end deftypevr
23352
23353 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} integer max-repodesc-length
23354 Specifies the maximum number of repo description characters to display
23355 on the repository index page.
23356
23357 Defaults to @samp{80}.
23358
23359 @end deftypevr
23360
23361 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} integer max-blob-size
23362 Specifies the maximum size of a blob to display HTML for in KBytes.
23363
23364 Defaults to @samp{0}.
23365
23366 @end deftypevr
23367
23368 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} string max-stats
23369 Maximum statistics period. Valid values are @samp{week},@samp{month},
23370 @samp{quarter} and @samp{year}.
23371
23372 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23373
23374 @end deftypevr
23375
23376 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} mimetype-alist mimetype
23377 Mimetype for the specified filename extension.
23378
23379 Defaults to @samp{((gif "image/gif") (html "text/html") (jpg
23380 "image/jpeg") (jpeg "image/jpeg") (pdf "application/pdf") (png
23381 "image/png") (svg "image/svg+xml"))}.
23382
23383 @end deftypevr
23384
23385 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} file-object mimetype-file
23386 Specifies the file to use for automatic mimetype lookup.
23387
23388 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23389
23390 @end deftypevr
23391
23392 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} string module-link
23393 Text which will be used as the formatstring for a hyperlink when a
23394 submodule is printed in a directory listing.
23395
23396 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23397
23398 @end deftypevr
23399
23400 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} boolean nocache?
23401 If set to the value @samp{#t} caching will be disabled.
23402
23403 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
23404
23405 @end deftypevr
23406
23407 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} boolean noplainemail?
23408 If set to @samp{#t} showing full author email addresses will be
23409 disabled.
23410
23411 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
23412
23413 @end deftypevr
23414
23415 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} boolean noheader?
23416 Flag which, when set to @samp{#t}, will make cgit omit the standard
23417 header on all pages.
23418
23419 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
23420
23421 @end deftypevr
23422
23423 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} project-list project-list
23424 A list of subdirectories inside of @code{repository-directory}, relative
23425 to it, that should loaded as Git repositories. An empty list means that
23426 all subdirectories will be loaded.
23427
23428 Defaults to @samp{()}.
23429
23430 @end deftypevr
23431
23432 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} file-object readme
23433 Text which will be used as default value for @code{cgit-repo-readme}.
23434
23435 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23436
23437 @end deftypevr
23438
23439 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} boolean remove-suffix?
23440 If set to @code{#t} and @code{repository-directory} is enabled, if any
23441 repositories are found with a suffix of @code{.git}, this suffix will be
23442 removed for the URL and name.
23443
23444 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
23445
23446 @end deftypevr
23447
23448 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} integer renamelimit
23449 Maximum number of files to consider when detecting renames.
23450
23451 Defaults to @samp{-1}.
23452
23453 @end deftypevr
23454
23455 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} string repository-sort
23456 The way in which repositories in each section are sorted.
23457
23458 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23459
23460 @end deftypevr
23461
23462 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} robots-list robots
23463 Text used as content for the @code{robots} meta-tag.
23464
23465 Defaults to @samp{("noindex" "nofollow")}.
23466
23467 @end deftypevr
23468
23469 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} string root-desc
23470 Text printed below the heading on the repository index page.
23471
23472 Defaults to @samp{"a fast webinterface for the git dscm"}.
23473
23474 @end deftypevr
23475
23476 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} string root-readme
23477 The content of the file specified with this option will be included
23478 verbatim below thef "about" link on the repository index page.
23479
23480 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23481
23482 @end deftypevr
23483
23484 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} string root-title
23485 Text printed as heading on the repository index page.
23486
23487 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23488
23489 @end deftypevr
23490
23491 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} boolean scan-hidden-path
23492 If set to @samp{#t} and repository-directory is enabled,
23493 repository-directory will recurse into directories whose name starts
23494 with a period. Otherwise, repository-directory will stay away from such
23495 directories, considered as "hidden". Note that this does not apply to
23496 the ".git" directory in non-bare repos.
23497
23498 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
23499
23500 @end deftypevr
23501
23502 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} list snapshots
23503 Text which specifies the default set of snapshot formats that cgit
23504 generates links for.
23505
23506 Defaults to @samp{()}.
23507
23508 @end deftypevr
23509
23510 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} repository-directory repository-directory
23511 Name of the directory to scan for repositories (represents
23512 @code{scan-path}).
23513
23514 Defaults to @samp{"/srv/git"}.
23515
23516 @end deftypevr
23517
23518 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} string section
23519 The name of the current repository section - all repositories defined
23520 after this option will inherit the current section name.
23521
23522 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23523
23524 @end deftypevr
23525
23526 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} string section-sort
23527 Flag which, when set to @samp{1}, will sort the sections on the
23528 repository listing by name.
23529
23530 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23531
23532 @end deftypevr
23533
23534 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} integer section-from-path
23535 A number which, if defined prior to repository-directory, specifies how
23536 many path elements from each repo path to use as a default section name.
23537
23538 Defaults to @samp{0}.
23539
23540 @end deftypevr
23541
23542 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} boolean side-by-side-diffs?
23543 If set to @samp{#t} shows side-by-side diffs instead of unidiffs per
23544 default.
23545
23546 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
23547
23548 @end deftypevr
23549
23550 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} file-object source-filter
23551 Specifies a command which will be invoked to format plaintext blobs in
23552 the tree view.
23553
23554 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23555
23556 @end deftypevr
23557
23558 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} integer summary-branches
23559 Specifies the number of branches to display in the repository "summary"
23560 view.
23561
23562 Defaults to @samp{10}.
23563
23564 @end deftypevr
23565
23566 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} integer summary-log
23567 Specifies the number of log entries to display in the repository
23568 "summary" view.
23569
23570 Defaults to @samp{10}.
23571
23572 @end deftypevr
23573
23574 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} integer summary-tags
23575 Specifies the number of tags to display in the repository "summary"
23576 view.
23577
23578 Defaults to @samp{10}.
23579
23580 @end deftypevr
23581
23582 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} string strict-export
23583 Filename which, if specified, needs to be present within the repository
23584 for cgit to allow access to that repository.
23585
23586 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23587
23588 @end deftypevr
23589
23590 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} string virtual-root
23591 URL which, if specified, will be used as root for all cgit links.
23592
23593 Defaults to @samp{"/"}.
23594
23595 @end deftypevr
23596
23597 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} repository-cgit-configuration-list repositories
23598 A list of @dfn{cgit-repo} records to use with config.
23599
23600 Defaults to @samp{()}.
23601
23602 Available @code{repository-cgit-configuration} fields are:
23603
23604 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} repo-list snapshots
23605 A mask of snapshot formats for this repo that cgit generates links for,
23606 restricted by the global @code{snapshots} setting.
23607
23608 Defaults to @samp{()}.
23609
23610 @end deftypevr
23611
23612 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} repo-file-object source-filter
23613 Override the default @code{source-filter}.
23614
23615 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23616
23617 @end deftypevr
23618
23619 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} repo-string url
23620 The relative URL used to access the repository.
23621
23622 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23623
23624 @end deftypevr
23625
23626 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} repo-file-object about-filter
23627 Override the default @code{about-filter}.
23628
23629 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23630
23631 @end deftypevr
23632
23633 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} repo-string branch-sort
23634 Flag which, when set to @samp{age}, enables date ordering in the branch
23635 ref list, and when set to @samp{name} enables ordering by branch name.
23636
23637 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23638
23639 @end deftypevr
23640
23641 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} repo-list clone-url
23642 A list of URLs which can be used to clone repo.
23643
23644 Defaults to @samp{()}.
23645
23646 @end deftypevr
23647
23648 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} repo-file-object commit-filter
23649 Override the default @code{commit-filter}.
23650
23651 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23652
23653 @end deftypevr
23654
23655 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} repo-string commit-sort
23656 Flag which, when set to @samp{date}, enables strict date ordering in the
23657 commit log, and when set to @samp{topo} enables strict topological
23658 ordering.
23659
23660 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23661
23662 @end deftypevr
23663
23664 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} repo-string defbranch
23665 The name of the default branch for this repository. If no such branch
23666 exists in the repository, the first branch name (when sorted) is used as
23667 default instead. By default branch pointed to by HEAD, or "master" if
23668 there is no suitable HEAD.
23669
23670 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23671
23672 @end deftypevr
23673
23674 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} repo-string desc
23675 The value to show as repository description.
23676
23677 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23678
23679 @end deftypevr
23680
23681 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} repo-string homepage
23682 The value to show as repository homepage.
23683
23684 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23685
23686 @end deftypevr
23687
23688 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} repo-file-object email-filter
23689 Override the default @code{email-filter}.
23690
23691 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23692
23693 @end deftypevr
23694
23695 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} maybe-repo-boolean enable-commit-graph?
23696 A flag which can be used to disable the global setting
23697 @code{enable-commit-graph?}.
23698
23699 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
23700
23701 @end deftypevr
23702
23703 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} maybe-repo-boolean enable-log-filecount?
23704 A flag which can be used to disable the global setting
23705 @code{enable-log-filecount?}.
23706
23707 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
23708
23709 @end deftypevr
23710
23711 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} maybe-repo-boolean enable-log-linecount?
23712 A flag which can be used to disable the global setting
23713 @code{enable-log-linecount?}.
23714
23715 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
23716
23717 @end deftypevr
23718
23719 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} maybe-repo-boolean enable-remote-branches?
23720 Flag which, when set to @code{#t}, will make cgit display remote
23721 branches in the summary and refs views.
23722
23723 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
23724
23725 @end deftypevr
23726
23727 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} maybe-repo-boolean enable-subject-links?
23728 A flag which can be used to override the global setting
23729 @code{enable-subject-links?}.
23730
23731 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
23732
23733 @end deftypevr
23734
23735 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} maybe-repo-boolean enable-html-serving?
23736 A flag which can be used to override the global setting
23737 @code{enable-html-serving?}.
23738
23739 Defaults to @samp{disabled}.
23740
23741 @end deftypevr
23742
23743 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} repo-boolean hide?
23744 Flag which, when set to @code{#t}, hides the repository from the
23745 repository index.
23746
23747 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
23748
23749 @end deftypevr
23750
23751 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} repo-boolean ignore?
23752 Flag which, when set to @samp{#t}, ignores the repository.
23753
23754 Defaults to @samp{#f}.
23755
23756 @end deftypevr
23757
23758 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} repo-file-object logo
23759 URL which specifies the source of an image which will be used as a logo
23760 on this repo’s pages.
23761
23762 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23763
23764 @end deftypevr
23765
23766 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} repo-string logo-link
23767 URL loaded when clicking on the cgit logo image.
23768
23769 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23770
23771 @end deftypevr
23772
23773 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} repo-file-object owner-filter
23774 Override the default @code{owner-filter}.
23775
23776 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23777
23778 @end deftypevr
23779
23780 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} repo-string module-link
23781 Text which will be used as the formatstring for a hyperlink when a
23782 submodule is printed in a directory listing. The arguments for the
23783 formatstring are the path and SHA1 of the submodule commit.
23784
23785 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23786
23787 @end deftypevr
23788
23789 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} module-link-path module-link-path
23790 Text which will be used as the formatstring for a hyperlink when a
23791 submodule with the specified subdirectory path is printed in a directory
23792 listing.
23793
23794 Defaults to @samp{()}.
23795
23796 @end deftypevr
23797
23798 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} repo-string max-stats
23799 Override the default maximum statistics period.
23800
23801 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23802
23803 @end deftypevr
23804
23805 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} repo-string name
23806 The value to show as repository name.
23807
23808 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23809
23810 @end deftypevr
23811
23812 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} repo-string owner
23813 A value used to identify the owner of the repository.
23814
23815 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23816
23817 @end deftypevr
23818
23819 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} repo-string path
23820 An absolute path to the repository directory.
23821
23822 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23823
23824 @end deftypevr
23825
23826 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} repo-string readme
23827 A path (relative to repo) which specifies a file to include verbatim as
23828 the "About" page for this repo.
23829
23830 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23831
23832 @end deftypevr
23833
23834 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} repo-string section
23835 The name of the current repository section - all repositories defined
23836 after this option will inherit the current section name.
23837
23838 Defaults to @samp{""}.
23839
23840 @end deftypevr
23841
23842 @deftypevr {@code{repository-cgit-configuration} parameter} repo-list extra-options
23843 Extra options will be appended to cgitrc file.
23844
23845 Defaults to @samp{()}.
23846
23847 @end deftypevr
23848
23849 @end deftypevr
23850
23851 @deftypevr {@code{cgit-configuration} parameter} list extra-options
23852 Extra options will be appended to cgitrc file.
23853
23854 Defaults to @samp{()}.
23855
23856 @end deftypevr
23857
23858
23859 @c %end of fragment
23860
23861 However, it could be that you just want to get a @code{cgitrc} up and
23862 running. In that case, you can pass an @code{opaque-cgit-configuration}
23863 as a record to @code{cgit-service-type}. As its name indicates, an
23864 opaque configuration does not have easy reflective capabilities.
23865
23866 Available @code{opaque-cgit-configuration} fields are:
23867
23868 @deftypevr {@code{opaque-cgit-configuration} parameter} package cgit
23869 The cgit package.
23870 @end deftypevr
23871
23872 @deftypevr {@code{opaque-cgit-configuration} parameter} string string
23873 The contents of the @code{cgitrc}, as a string.
23874 @end deftypevr
23875
23876 For example, if your @code{cgitrc} is just the empty string, you
23877 could instantiate a cgit service like this:
23878
23879 @example
23880 (service cgit-service-type
23881 (opaque-cgit-configuration
23882 (cgitrc "")))
23883 @end example
23884
23885 @subsubheading Gitolite Service
23886
23887 @cindex Gitolite service
23888 @cindex Git, hosting
23889 @uref{https://gitolite.com/gitolite/, Gitolite} is a tool for hosting Git
23890 repositories on a central server.
23891
23892 Gitolite can handle multiple repositories and users, and supports flexible
23893 configuration of the permissions for the users on the repositories.
23894
23895 The following example will configure Gitolite using the default @code{git}
23896 user, and the provided SSH public key.
23897
23898 @example
23899 (service gitolite-service-type
23900 (gitolite-configuration
23901 (admin-pubkey (plain-file
23902 "yourname.pub"
23903 "ssh-rsa AAAA... guix@@example.com"))))
23904 @end example
23905
23906 Gitolite is configured through a special admin repository which you can clone,
23907 for example, if you setup Gitolite on @code{example.com}, you would run the
23908 following command to clone the admin repository.
23909
23910 @example
23911 git clone git@@example.com:gitolite-admin
23912 @end example
23913
23914 When the Gitolite service is activated, the provided @code{admin-pubkey} will
23915 be inserted in to the @file{keydir} directory in the gitolite-admin
23916 repository. If this results in a change in the repository, it will be
23917 committed using the message ``gitolite setup by GNU Guix''.
23918
23919 @deftp {Data Type} gitolite-configuration
23920 Data type representing the configuration for @code{gitolite-service-type}.
23921
23922 @table @asis
23923 @item @code{package} (default: @var{gitolite})
23924 Gitolite package to use.
23925
23926 @item @code{user} (default: @var{git})
23927 User to use for Gitolite. This will be user that you use when accessing
23928 Gitolite over SSH.
23929
23930 @item @code{group} (default: @var{git})
23931 Group to use for Gitolite.
23932
23933 @item @code{home-directory} (default: @var{"/var/lib/gitolite"})
23934 Directory in which to store the Gitolite configuration and repositories.
23935
23936 @item @code{rc-file} (default: @var{(gitolite-rc-file)})
23937 A ``file-like'' object (@pxref{G-Expressions, file-like objects}),
23938 representing the configuration for Gitolite.
23939
23940 @item @code{admin-pubkey} (default: @var{#f})
23941 A ``file-like'' object (@pxref{G-Expressions, file-like objects}) used to
23942 setup Gitolite. This will be inserted in to the @file{keydir} directory
23943 within the gitolite-admin repository.
23944
23945 To specify the SSH key as a string, use the @code{plain-file} function.
23946
23947 @example
23948 (plain-file "yourname.pub" "ssh-rsa AAAA... guix@@example.com")
23949 @end example
23950
23951 @end table
23952 @end deftp
23953
23954 @deftp {Data Type} gitolite-rc-file
23955 Data type representing the Gitolite RC file.
23956
23957 @table @asis
23958 @item @code{umask} (default: @code{#o0077})
23959 This controls the permissions Gitolite sets on the repositories and their
23960 contents.
23961
23962 A value like @code{#o0027} will give read access to the group used by Gitolite
23963 (by default: @code{git}). This is necessary when using Gitolite with software
23964 like cgit or gitweb.
23965
23966 @item @code{git-config-keys} (default: @code{""})
23967 Gitolite allows you to set git config values using the "config" keyword. This
23968 setting allows control over the config keys to accept.
23969
23970 @item @code{roles} (default: @code{'(("READERS" . 1) ("WRITERS" . ))})
23971 Set the role names allowed to be used by users running the perms command.
23972
23973 @item @code{enable} (default: @code{'("help" "desc" "info" "perms" "writable" "ssh-authkeys" "git-config" "daemon" "gitweb")})
23974 This setting controls the commands and features to enable within Gitolite.
23975
23976 @end table
23977 @end deftp
23978
23979
23980 @node Game Services
23981 @subsection Game Services
23982
23983 @subsubheading The Battle for Wesnoth Service
23984 @cindex wesnothd
23985 @uref{https://wesnoth.org, The Battle for Wesnoth} is a fantasy, turn
23986 based tactical strategy game, with several single player campaigns, and
23987 multiplayer games (both networked and local).
23988
23989 @defvar {Scheme Variable} wesnothd-service-type
23990 Service type for the wesnothd service. Its value must be a
23991 @code{wesnothd-configuration} object. To run wesnothd in the default
23992 configuration, instantiate it as:
23993
23994 @example
23995 (service wesnothd-service-type)
23996 @end example
23997 @end defvar
23998
23999 @deftp {Data Type} wesnothd-configuration
24000 Data type representing the configuration of @command{wesnothd}.
24001
24002 @table @asis
24003 @item @code{package} (default: @code{wesnoth-server})
24004 The wesnoth server package to use.
24005
24006 @item @code{port} (default: @code{15000})
24007 The port to bind the server to.
24008 @end table
24009 @end deftp
24010
24011 @node Miscellaneous Services
24012 @subsection Miscellaneous Services
24013
24014 @cindex fingerprint
24015 @subsubheading Fingerprint Service
24016
24017 The @code{(gnu services authentication)} module provides a DBus service to
24018 read and identify fingerprints via a fingerprint sensor.
24019
24020 @defvr {Scheme Variable} fprintd-service-type
24021 The service type for @command{fprintd}, which provides the fingerprint
24022 reading capability.
24023
24024 @example
24025 (service fprintd-service-type)
24026 @end example
24027 @end defvr
24028
24029 @cindex sysctl
24030 @subsubheading System Control Service
24031
24032 The @code{(gnu services sysctl)} provides a service to configure kernel
24033 parameters at boot.
24034
24035 @defvr {Scheme Variable} sysctl-service-type
24036 The service type for @command{sysctl}, which modifies kernel parameters
24037 under @file{/proc/sys/}. To enable IPv4 forwarding, it can be
24038 instantiated as:
24039
24040 @example
24041 (service sysctl-service-type
24042 (sysctl-configuration
24043 (settings '(("net.ipv4.ip_forward" . "1")))))
24044 @end example
24045 @end defvr
24046
24047 @deftp {Data Type} sysctl-configuration
24048 The data type representing the configuration of @command{sysctl}.
24049
24050 @table @asis
24051 @item @code{sysctl} (default: @code{(file-append procps "/sbin/sysctl"})
24052 The @command{sysctl} executable to use.
24053
24054 @item @code{settings} (default: @code{'()})
24055 An association list specifies kernel parameters and their values.
24056 @end table
24057 @end deftp
24058
24059 @cindex pcscd
24060 @subsubheading PC/SC Smart Card Daemon Service
24061
24062 The @code{(gnu services security-token)} module provides the following service
24063 to run @command{pcscd}, the PC/SC Smart Card Daemon. @command{pcscd} is the
24064 daemon program for pcsc-lite and the MuscleCard framework. It is a resource
24065 manager that coordinates communications with smart card readers, smart cards
24066 and cryptographic tokens that are connected to the system.
24067
24068 @defvr {Scheme Variable} pcscd-service-type
24069 Service type for the @command{pcscd} service. Its value must be a
24070 @code{pcscd-configuration} object. To run pcscd in the default
24071 configuration, instantiate it as:
24072
24073 @example
24074 (service pcscd-service-type)
24075 @end example
24076 @end defvr
24077
24078 @deftp {Data Type} pcscd-configuration
24079 The data type representing the configuration of @command{pcscd}.
24080
24081 @table @asis
24082 @item @code{pcsc-lite} (default: @code{pcsc-lite})
24083 The pcsc-lite package that provides pcscd.
24084 @item @code{usb-drivers} (default: @code{(list ccid)})
24085 List of packages that provide USB drivers to pcscd. Drivers are expected to be
24086 under @file{pcsc/drivers} in the store directory of the package.
24087 @end table
24088 @end deftp
24089
24090 @cindex lirc
24091 @subsubheading Lirc Service
24092
24093 The @code{(gnu services lirc)} module provides the following service.
24094
24095 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} lirc-service [#:lirc lirc] @
24096 [#:device #f] [#:driver #f] [#:config-file #f] @
24097 [#:extra-options '()]
24098 Return a service that runs @url{http://www.lirc.org,LIRC}, a daemon that
24099 decodes infrared signals from remote controls.
24100
24101 Optionally, @var{device}, @var{driver} and @var{config-file}
24102 (configuration file name) may be specified. See @command{lircd} manual
24103 for details.
24104
24105 Finally, @var{extra-options} is a list of additional command-line options
24106 passed to @command{lircd}.
24107 @end deffn
24108
24109 @cindex spice
24110 @subsubheading Spice Service
24111
24112 The @code{(gnu services spice)} module provides the following service.
24113
24114 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} spice-vdagent-service [#:spice-vdagent]
24115 Returns a service that runs @url{https://www.spice-space.org,VDAGENT}, a daemon
24116 that enables sharing the clipboard with a vm and setting the guest display
24117 resolution when the graphical console window resizes.
24118 @end deffn
24119
24120 @cindex inputattach
24121 @subsubheading inputattach Service
24122
24123 @cindex tablet input, for Xorg
24124 @cindex touchscreen input, for Xorg
24125 The @uref{https://linuxwacom.github.io/, inputattach} service allows you to
24126 use input devices such as Wacom tablets, touchscreens, or joysticks with the
24127 Xorg display server.
24128
24129 @deffn {Scheme Variable} inputattach-service-type
24130 Type of a service that runs @command{inputattach} on a device and
24131 dispatches events from it.
24132 @end deffn
24133
24134 @deftp {Data Type} inputattach-configuration
24135 @table @asis
24136 @item @code{device-type} (default: @code{"wacom"})
24137 The type of device to connect to. Run @command{inputattach --help}, from the
24138 @code{inputattach} package, to see the list of supported device types.
24139
24140 @item @code{device} (default: @code{"/dev/ttyS0"})
24141 The device file to connect to the device.
24142
24143 @item @code{log-file} (default: @code{#f})
24144 If true, this must be the name of a file to log messages to.
24145 @end table
24146 @end deftp
24147
24148 @subsection Dictionary Services
24149 @cindex dictionary
24150 The @code{(gnu services dict)} module provides the following service:
24151
24152 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} dicod-service [#:config (dicod-configuration)]
24153 Return a service that runs the @command{dicod} daemon, an implementation
24154 of DICT server (@pxref{Dicod,,, dico, GNU Dico Manual}).
24155
24156 The optional @var{config} argument specifies the configuration for
24157 @command{dicod}, which should be a @code{<dicod-configuration>} object, by
24158 default it serves the GNU Collaborative International Dictonary of English.
24159
24160 You can add @command{open localhost} to your @file{~/.dico} file to make
24161 @code{localhost} the default server for @command{dico} client
24162 (@pxref{Initialization File,,, dico, GNU Dico Manual}).
24163 @end deffn
24164
24165 @deftp {Data Type} dicod-configuration
24166 Data type representing the configuration of dicod.
24167
24168 @table @asis
24169 @item @code{dico} (default: @var{dico})
24170 Package object of the GNU Dico dictionary server.
24171
24172 @item @code{interfaces} (default: @var{'("localhost")})
24173 This is the list of IP addresses and ports and possibly socket file
24174 names to listen to (@pxref{Server Settings, @code{listen} directive,,
24175 dico, GNU Dico Manual}).
24176
24177 @item @code{handlers} (default: @var{'()})
24178 List of @code{<dicod-handler>} objects denoting handlers (module instances).
24179
24180 @item @code{databases} (default: @var{(list %dicod-database:gcide)})
24181 List of @code{<dicod-database>} objects denoting dictionaries to be served.
24182 @end table
24183 @end deftp
24184
24185 @deftp {Data Type} dicod-handler
24186 Data type representing a dictionary handler (module instance).
24187
24188 @table @asis
24189 @item @code{name}
24190 Name of the handler (module instance).
24191
24192 @item @code{module} (default: @var{#f})
24193 Name of the dicod module of the handler (instance). If it is @code{#f},
24194 the module has the same name as the handler.
24195 (@pxref{Modules,,, dico, GNU Dico Manual}).
24196
24197 @item @code{options}
24198 List of strings or gexps representing the arguments for the module handler
24199 @end table
24200 @end deftp
24201
24202 @deftp {Data Type} dicod-database
24203 Data type representing a dictionary database.
24204
24205 @table @asis
24206 @item @code{name}
24207 Name of the database, will be used in DICT commands.
24208
24209 @item @code{handler}
24210 Name of the dicod handler (module instance) used by this database
24211 (@pxref{Handlers,,, dico, GNU Dico Manual}).
24212
24213 @item @code{complex?} (default: @var{#f})
24214 Whether the database configuration complex. The complex configuration
24215 will need a corresponding @code{<dicod-handler>} object, otherwise not.
24216
24217 @item @code{options}
24218 List of strings or gexps representing the arguments for the database
24219 (@pxref{Databases,,, dico, GNU Dico Manual}).
24220 @end table
24221 @end deftp
24222
24223 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %dicod-database:gcide
24224 A @code{<dicod-database>} object serving the GNU Collaborative International
24225 Dictionary of English using the @code{gcide} package.
24226 @end defvr
24227
24228 The following is an example @code{dicod-service} configuration.
24229
24230 @example
24231 (dicod-service #:config
24232 (dicod-configuration
24233 (handlers (list (dicod-handler
24234 (name "wordnet")
24235 (module "dictorg")
24236 (options
24237 (list #~(string-append "dbdir=" #$wordnet))))))
24238 (databases (list (dicod-database
24239 (name "wordnet")
24240 (complex? #t)
24241 (handler "wordnet")
24242 (options '("database=wn")))
24243 %dicod-database:gcide))))
24244 @end example
24245
24246 @cindex Docker
24247 @subsubheading Docker Service
24248
24249 The @code{(gnu services docker)} module provides the following services.
24250
24251 @defvr {Scheme Variable} docker-service-type
24252
24253 This is the type of the service that runs @url{https://www.docker.com,Docker},
24254 a daemon that can execute application bundles (sometimes referred to as
24255 ``containers'') in isolated environments.
24256
24257 @end defvr
24258
24259 @deftp {Data Type} docker-configuration
24260 This is the data type representing the configuration of Docker and Containerd.
24261
24262 @table @asis
24263
24264 @item @code{package} (default: @code{docker})
24265 The Docker package to use.
24266
24267 @item @code{containerd} (default: @var{containerd})
24268 The Containerd package to use.
24269
24270 @end table
24271 @end deftp
24272
24273 @cindex Audit
24274 @subsubheading Auditd Service
24275
24276 The @code{(gnu services auditd)} module provides the following service.
24277
24278 @defvr {Scheme Variable} auditd-service-type
24279
24280 This is the type of the service that runs
24281 @url{https://people.redhat.com/sgrubb/audit/,auditd},
24282 a daemon that tracks security-relevant information on your system.
24283
24284 Examples of things that can be tracked:
24285
24286 @enumerate
24287 @item
24288 File accesses
24289 @item
24290 System calls
24291 @item
24292 Invoked commands
24293 @item
24294 Failed login attempts
24295 @item
24296 Firewall filtering
24297 @item
24298 Network access
24299 @end enumerate
24300
24301 @command{auditctl} from the @code{audit} package can be used in order
24302 to add or remove events to be tracked (until the next reboot).
24303 In order to permanently track events, put the command line arguments
24304 of auditctl into @file{/etc/audit/audit.rules}.
24305 @command{aureport} from the @code{audit} package can be used in order
24306 to view a report of all recorded events.
24307 The audit daemon usually logs into the directory @file{/var/log/audit}.
24308
24309 @end defvr
24310
24311 @deftp {Data Type} auditd-configuration
24312 This is the data type representing the configuration of auditd.
24313
24314 @table @asis
24315
24316 @item @code{audit} (default: @code{audit})
24317 The audit package to use.
24318
24319 @end table
24320 @end deftp
24321
24322 @defvr {Scheme Variable} singularity-service-type
24323 This is the type of the service that allows you to run
24324 @url{https://www.sylabs.io/singularity/, Singularity}, a Docker-style tool to
24325 create and run application bundles (aka. ``containers''). The value for this
24326 service is the Singularity package to use.
24327
24328 The service does not install a daemon; instead, it installs helper programs as
24329 setuid-root (@pxref{Setuid Programs}) such that unprivileged users can invoke
24330 @command{singularity run} and similar commands.
24331 @end defvr
24332
24333 @cindex Nix
24334 @subsubheading Nix service
24335
24336 The @code{(gnu services nix)} module provides the following service.
24337
24338 @defvr {Scheme Variable} nix-service-type
24339
24340 This is the type of the service that runs build daemon of the
24341 @url{https://nixos.org/nix/, Nix} package manager. Here is an example showing
24342 how to use it:
24343
24344 @example
24345 (use-modules (gnu))
24346 (use-service-modules nix)
24347 (use-package-modules package-management)
24348
24349 (operating-system
24350 ;; @dots{}
24351 (packages (append (list nix)
24352 %base-packages))
24353
24354 (services (append (list (service nix-service-type))
24355 %base-services)))
24356 @end example
24357
24358 After @command{guix system reconfigure} configure Nix for your user:
24359
24360 @itemize
24361 @item Add a Nix channel and update it. See
24362 @url{https://nixos.org/nix/manual/, Nix Package Manager Guide}.
24363
24364 @item Create a symlink to your profile and activate Nix profile:
24365 @end itemize
24366
24367 @example
24368 $ ln -s "/nix/var/nix/profiles/per-user/$USER/profile" ~/.nix-profile
24369 $ source /run/current-system/profile/etc/profile.d/nix.sh
24370 @end example
24371
24372 @end defvr
24373
24374 @node Setuid Programs
24375 @section Setuid Programs
24376
24377 @cindex setuid programs
24378 Some programs need to run with ``root'' privileges, even when they are
24379 launched by unprivileged users. A notorious example is the
24380 @command{passwd} program, which users can run to change their
24381 password, and which needs to access the @file{/etc/passwd} and
24382 @file{/etc/shadow} files---something normally restricted to root, for
24383 obvious security reasons. To address that, these executables are
24384 @dfn{setuid-root}, meaning that they always run with root privileges
24385 (@pxref{How Change Persona,,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual},
24386 for more info about the setuid mechanism.)
24387
24388 The store itself @emph{cannot} contain setuid programs: that would be a
24389 security issue since any user on the system can write derivations that
24390 populate the store (@pxref{The Store}). Thus, a different mechanism is
24391 used: instead of changing the setuid bit directly on files that are in
24392 the store, we let the system administrator @emph{declare} which programs
24393 should be setuid root.
24394
24395 The @code{setuid-programs} field of an @code{operating-system}
24396 declaration contains a list of G-expressions denoting the names of
24397 programs to be setuid-root (@pxref{Using the Configuration System}).
24398 For instance, the @command{passwd} program, which is part of the Shadow
24399 package, can be designated by this G-expression (@pxref{G-Expressions}):
24400
24401 @example
24402 #~(string-append #$shadow "/bin/passwd")
24403 @end example
24404
24405 A default set of setuid programs is defined by the
24406 @code{%setuid-programs} variable of the @code{(gnu system)} module.
24407
24408 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %setuid-programs
24409 A list of G-expressions denoting common programs that are setuid-root.
24410
24411 The list includes commands such as @command{passwd}, @command{ping},
24412 @command{su}, and @command{sudo}.
24413 @end defvr
24414
24415 Under the hood, the actual setuid programs are created in the
24416 @file{/run/setuid-programs} directory at system activation time. The
24417 files in this directory refer to the ``real'' binaries, which are in the
24418 store.
24419
24420 @node X.509 Certificates
24421 @section X.509 Certificates
24422
24423 @cindex HTTPS, certificates
24424 @cindex X.509 certificates
24425 @cindex TLS
24426 Web servers available over HTTPS (that is, HTTP over the transport-layer
24427 security mechanism, TLS) send client programs an @dfn{X.509 certificate}
24428 that the client can then use to @emph{authenticate} the server. To do
24429 that, clients verify that the server's certificate is signed by a
24430 so-called @dfn{certificate authority} (CA). But to verify the CA's
24431 signature, clients must have first acquired the CA's certificate.
24432
24433 Web browsers such as GNU@tie{}IceCat include their own set of CA
24434 certificates, such that they are able to verify CA signatures
24435 out-of-the-box.
24436
24437 However, most other programs that can talk HTTPS---@command{wget},
24438 @command{git}, @command{w3m}, etc.---need to be told where CA
24439 certificates can be found.
24440
24441 @cindex @code{nss-certs}
24442 In Guix, this is done by adding a package that provides certificates
24443 to the @code{packages} field of the @code{operating-system} declaration
24444 (@pxref{operating-system Reference}). Guix includes one such package,
24445 @code{nss-certs}, which is a set of CA certificates provided as part of
24446 Mozilla's Network Security Services.
24447
24448 Note that it is @emph{not} part of @code{%base-packages}, so you need to
24449 explicitly add it. The @file{/etc/ssl/certs} directory, which is where
24450 most applications and libraries look for certificates by default, points
24451 to the certificates installed globally.
24452
24453 Unprivileged users, including users of Guix on a foreign distro,
24454 can also install their own certificate package in
24455 their profile. A number of environment variables need to be defined so
24456 that applications and libraries know where to find them. Namely, the
24457 OpenSSL library honors the @code{SSL_CERT_DIR} and @code{SSL_CERT_FILE}
24458 variables. Some applications add their own environment variables; for
24459 instance, the Git version control system honors the certificate bundle
24460 pointed to by the @code{GIT_SSL_CAINFO} environment variable. Thus, you
24461 would typically run something like:
24462
24463 @example
24464 $ guix install nss-certs
24465 $ export SSL_CERT_DIR="$HOME/.guix-profile/etc/ssl/certs"
24466 $ export SSL_CERT_FILE="$HOME/.guix-profile/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt"
24467 $ export GIT_SSL_CAINFO="$SSL_CERT_FILE"
24468 @end example
24469
24470 As another example, R requires the @code{CURL_CA_BUNDLE} environment
24471 variable to point to a certificate bundle, so you would have to run
24472 something like this:
24473
24474 @example
24475 $ guix install nss-certs
24476 $ export CURL_CA_BUNDLE="$HOME/.guix-profile/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt"
24477 @end example
24478
24479 For other applications you may want to look up the required environment
24480 variable in the relevant documentation.
24481
24482
24483 @node Name Service Switch
24484 @section Name Service Switch
24485
24486 @cindex name service switch
24487 @cindex NSS
24488 The @code{(gnu system nss)} module provides bindings to the
24489 configuration file of the libc @dfn{name service switch} or @dfn{NSS}
24490 (@pxref{NSS Configuration File,,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference
24491 Manual}). In a nutshell, the NSS is a mechanism that allows libc to be
24492 extended with new ``name'' lookup methods for system databases, which
24493 includes host names, service names, user accounts, and more (@pxref{Name
24494 Service Switch, System Databases and Name Service Switch,, libc, The GNU
24495 C Library Reference Manual}).
24496
24497 The NSS configuration specifies, for each system database, which lookup
24498 method is to be used, and how the various methods are chained
24499 together---for instance, under which circumstances NSS should try the
24500 next method in the list. The NSS configuration is given in the
24501 @code{name-service-switch} field of @code{operating-system} declarations
24502 (@pxref{operating-system Reference, @code{name-service-switch}}).
24503
24504 @cindex nss-mdns
24505 @cindex .local, host name lookup
24506 As an example, the declaration below configures the NSS to use the
24507 @uref{http://0pointer.de/lennart/projects/nss-mdns/, @code{nss-mdns}
24508 back-end}, which supports host name lookups over multicast DNS (mDNS)
24509 for host names ending in @code{.local}:
24510
24511 @example
24512 (name-service-switch
24513 (hosts (list %files ;first, check /etc/hosts
24514
24515 ;; If the above did not succeed, try
24516 ;; with 'mdns_minimal'.
24517 (name-service
24518 (name "mdns_minimal")
24519
24520 ;; 'mdns_minimal' is authoritative for
24521 ;; '.local'. When it returns "not found",
24522 ;; no need to try the next methods.
24523 (reaction (lookup-specification
24524 (not-found => return))))
24525
24526 ;; Then fall back to DNS.
24527 (name-service
24528 (name "dns"))
24529
24530 ;; Finally, try with the "full" 'mdns'.
24531 (name-service
24532 (name "mdns")))))
24533 @end example
24534
24535 Do not worry: the @code{%mdns-host-lookup-nss} variable (see below)
24536 contains this configuration, so you will not have to type it if all you
24537 want is to have @code{.local} host lookup working.
24538
24539 Note that, in this case, in addition to setting the
24540 @code{name-service-switch} of the @code{operating-system} declaration,
24541 you also need to use @code{avahi-service-type} (@pxref{Networking Services,
24542 @code{avahi-service-type}}), or @code{%desktop-services}, which includes it
24543 (@pxref{Desktop Services}). Doing this makes @code{nss-mdns} accessible
24544 to the name service cache daemon (@pxref{Base Services,
24545 @code{nscd-service}}).
24546
24547 For convenience, the following variables provide typical NSS
24548 configurations.
24549
24550 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %default-nss
24551 This is the default name service switch configuration, a
24552 @code{name-service-switch} object.
24553 @end defvr
24554
24555 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %mdns-host-lookup-nss
24556 This is the name service switch configuration with support for host name
24557 lookup over multicast DNS (mDNS) for host names ending in @code{.local}.
24558 @end defvr
24559
24560 The reference for name service switch configuration is given below. It
24561 is a direct mapping of the configuration file format of the C library , so
24562 please refer to the C library manual for more information (@pxref{NSS
24563 Configuration File,,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}).
24564 Compared to the configuration file format of libc NSS, it has the advantage
24565 not only of adding this warm parenthetic feel that we like, but also
24566 static checks: you will know about syntax errors and typos as soon as you
24567 run @command{guix system}.
24568
24569 @deftp {Data Type} name-service-switch
24570
24571 This is the data type representation the configuration of libc's name
24572 service switch (NSS). Each field below represents one of the supported
24573 system databases.
24574
24575 @table @code
24576 @item aliases
24577 @itemx ethers
24578 @itemx group
24579 @itemx gshadow
24580 @itemx hosts
24581 @itemx initgroups
24582 @itemx netgroup
24583 @itemx networks
24584 @itemx password
24585 @itemx public-key
24586 @itemx rpc
24587 @itemx services
24588 @itemx shadow
24589 The system databases handled by the NSS. Each of these fields must be a
24590 list of @code{<name-service>} objects (see below).
24591 @end table
24592 @end deftp
24593
24594 @deftp {Data Type} name-service
24595
24596 This is the data type representing an actual name service and the
24597 associated lookup action.
24598
24599 @table @code
24600 @item name
24601 A string denoting the name service (@pxref{Services in the NSS
24602 configuration,,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}).
24603
24604 Note that name services listed here must be visible to nscd. This is
24605 achieved by passing the @code{#:name-services} argument to
24606 @code{nscd-service} the list of packages providing the needed name
24607 services (@pxref{Base Services, @code{nscd-service}}).
24608
24609 @item reaction
24610 An action specified using the @code{lookup-specification} macro
24611 (@pxref{Actions in the NSS configuration,,, libc, The GNU C Library
24612 Reference Manual}). For example:
24613
24614 @example
24615 (lookup-specification (unavailable => continue)
24616 (success => return))
24617 @end example
24618 @end table
24619 @end deftp
24620
24621 @node Initial RAM Disk
24622 @section Initial RAM Disk
24623
24624 @cindex initrd
24625 @cindex initial RAM disk
24626 For bootstrapping purposes, the Linux-Libre kernel is passed an
24627 @dfn{initial RAM disk}, or @dfn{initrd}. An initrd contains a temporary
24628 root file system as well as an initialization script. The latter is
24629 responsible for mounting the real root file system, and for loading any
24630 kernel modules that may be needed to achieve that.
24631
24632 The @code{initrd-modules} field of an @code{operating-system}
24633 declaration allows you to specify Linux-libre kernel modules that must
24634 be available in the initrd. In particular, this is where you would list
24635 modules needed to actually drive the hard disk where your root partition
24636 is---although the default value of @code{initrd-modules} should cover
24637 most use cases. For example, assuming you need the @code{megaraid_sas}
24638 module in addition to the default modules to be able to access your root
24639 file system, you would write:
24640
24641 @example
24642 (operating-system
24643 ;; @dots{}
24644 (initrd-modules (cons "megaraid_sas" %base-initrd-modules)))
24645 @end example
24646
24647 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %base-initrd-modules
24648 This is the list of kernel modules included in the initrd by default.
24649 @end defvr
24650
24651 Furthermore, if you need lower-level customization, the @code{initrd}
24652 field of an @code{operating-system} declaration allows
24653 you to specify which initrd you would like to use. The @code{(gnu
24654 system linux-initrd)} module provides three ways to build an initrd: the
24655 high-level @code{base-initrd} procedure and the low-level
24656 @code{raw-initrd} and @code{expression->initrd} procedures.
24657
24658 The @code{base-initrd} procedure is intended to cover most common uses.
24659 For example, if you want to add a bunch of kernel modules to be loaded
24660 at boot time, you can define the @code{initrd} field of the operating
24661 system declaration like this:
24662
24663 @example
24664 (initrd (lambda (file-systems . rest)
24665 ;; Create a standard initrd but set up networking
24666 ;; with the parameters QEMU expects by default.
24667 (apply base-initrd file-systems
24668 #:qemu-networking? #t
24669 rest)))
24670 @end example
24671
24672 The @code{base-initrd} procedure also handles common use cases that
24673 involves using the system as a QEMU guest, or as a ``live'' system with
24674 volatile root file system.
24675
24676 The @code{base-initrd} procedure is built from @code{raw-initrd} procedure.
24677 Unlike @code{base-initrd}, @code{raw-initrd} doesn't do anything high-level,
24678 such as trying to guess which kernel modules and packages should be included
24679 to the initrd. An example use of @code{raw-initrd} is when a user has
24680 a custom Linux kernel configuration and default kernel modules included by
24681 @code{base-initrd} are not available.
24682
24683 The initial RAM disk produced by @code{base-initrd} or @code{raw-initrd}
24684 honors several options passed on the Linux kernel command line
24685 (that is, arguments passed @i{via} the @code{linux} command of GRUB, or the
24686 @code{-append} option of QEMU), notably:
24687
24688 @table @code
24689 @item --load=@var{boot}
24690 Tell the initial RAM disk to load @var{boot}, a file containing a Scheme
24691 program, once it has mounted the root file system.
24692
24693 Guix uses this option to yield control to a boot program that runs the
24694 service activation programs and then spawns the GNU@tie{}Shepherd, the
24695 initialization system.
24696
24697 @item --root=@var{root}
24698 Mount @var{root} as the root file system. @var{root} can be a
24699 device name like @code{/dev/sda1}, a file system label, or a file system
24700 UUID.
24701
24702 @item --system=@var{system}
24703 Have @file{/run/booted-system} and @file{/run/current-system} point to
24704 @var{system}.
24705
24706 @item modprobe.blacklist=@var{modules}@dots{}
24707 @cindex module, black-listing
24708 @cindex black list, of kernel modules
24709 Instruct the initial RAM disk as well as the @command{modprobe} command
24710 (from the kmod package) to refuse to load @var{modules}. @var{modules}
24711 must be a comma-separated list of module names---e.g.,
24712 @code{usbkbd,9pnet}.
24713
24714 @item --repl
24715 Start a read-eval-print loop (REPL) from the initial RAM disk before it
24716 tries to load kernel modules and to mount the root file system. Our
24717 marketing team calls it @dfn{boot-to-Guile}. The Schemer in you will
24718 love it. @xref{Using Guile Interactively,,, guile, GNU Guile Reference
24719 Manual}, for more information on Guile's REPL.
24720
24721 @end table
24722
24723 Now that you know all the features that initial RAM disks produced by
24724 @code{base-initrd} and @code{raw-initrd} provide,
24725 here is how to use it and customize it further.
24726
24727 @cindex initrd
24728 @cindex initial RAM disk
24729 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} raw-initrd @var{file-systems} @
24730 [#:linux-modules '()] [#:mapped-devices '()] @
24731 [#:keyboard-layout #f] @
24732 [#:helper-packages '()] [#:qemu-networking? #f] [#:volatile-root? #f]
24733 Return a derivation that builds a raw initrd. @var{file-systems} is
24734 a list of file systems to be mounted by the initrd, possibly in addition to
24735 the root file system specified on the kernel command line via @code{--root}.
24736 @var{linux-modules} is a list of kernel modules to be loaded at boot time.
24737 @var{mapped-devices} is a list of device mappings to realize before
24738 @var{file-systems} are mounted (@pxref{Mapped Devices}).
24739 @var{helper-packages} is a list of packages to be copied in the initrd. It may
24740 include @code{e2fsck/static} or other packages needed by the initrd to check
24741 the root file system.
24742
24743 When true, @var{keyboard-layout} is a @code{<keyboard-layout>} record denoting
24744 the desired console keyboard layout. This is done before @var{mapped-devices}
24745 are set up and before @var{file-systems} are mounted such that, should the
24746 user need to enter a passphrase or use the REPL, this happens using the
24747 intended keyboard layout.
24748
24749 When @var{qemu-networking?} is true, set up networking with the standard QEMU
24750 parameters. When @var{virtio?} is true, load additional modules so that the
24751 initrd can be used as a QEMU guest with para-virtualized I/O drivers.
24752
24753 When @var{volatile-root?} is true, the root file system is writable but any changes
24754 to it are lost.
24755 @end deffn
24756
24757 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} base-initrd @var{file-systems} @
24758 [#:mapped-devices '()] [#:keyboard-layout #f] @
24759 [#:qemu-networking? #f] [#:volatile-root? #f] @
24760 [#:linux-modules '()]
24761 Return as a file-like object a generic initrd, with kernel
24762 modules taken from @var{linux}. @var{file-systems} is a list of file-systems to be
24763 mounted by the initrd, possibly in addition to the root file system specified
24764 on the kernel command line via @code{--root}. @var{mapped-devices} is a list of device
24765 mappings to realize before @var{file-systems} are mounted.
24766
24767 When true, @var{keyboard-layout} is a @code{<keyboard-layout>} record denoting
24768 the desired console keyboard layout. This is done before @var{mapped-devices}
24769 are set up and before @var{file-systems} are mounted such that, should the
24770 user need to enter a passphrase or use the REPL, this happens using the
24771 intended keyboard layout.
24772
24773 @var{qemu-networking?} and @var{volatile-root?} behaves as in @code{raw-initrd}.
24774
24775 The initrd is automatically populated with all the kernel modules necessary
24776 for @var{file-systems} and for the given options. Additional kernel
24777 modules can be listed in @var{linux-modules}. They will be added to the initrd, and
24778 loaded at boot time in the order in which they appear.
24779 @end deffn
24780
24781 Needless to say, the initrds we produce and use embed a
24782 statically-linked Guile, and the initialization program is a Guile
24783 program. That gives a lot of flexibility. The
24784 @code{expression->initrd} procedure builds such an initrd, given the
24785 program to run in that initrd.
24786
24787 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} expression->initrd @var{exp} @
24788 [#:guile %guile-static-stripped] [#:name "guile-initrd"]
24789 Return as a file-like object a Linux initrd (a gzipped cpio archive)
24790 containing @var{guile} and that evaluates @var{exp}, a G-expression,
24791 upon booting. All the derivations referenced by @var{exp} are
24792 automatically copied to the initrd.
24793 @end deffn
24794
24795 @node Bootloader Configuration
24796 @section Bootloader Configuration
24797
24798 @cindex bootloader
24799 @cindex boot loader
24800
24801 The operating system supports multiple bootloaders. The bootloader is
24802 configured using @code{bootloader-configuration} declaration. All the
24803 fields of this structure are bootloader agnostic except for one field,
24804 @code{bootloader} that indicates the bootloader to be configured and
24805 installed.
24806
24807 Some of the bootloaders do not honor every field of
24808 @code{bootloader-configuration}. For instance, the extlinux
24809 bootloader does not support themes and thus ignores the @code{theme}
24810 field.
24811
24812 @deftp {Data Type} bootloader-configuration
24813 The type of a bootloader configuration declaration.
24814
24815 @table @asis
24816
24817 @item @code{bootloader}
24818 @cindex EFI, bootloader
24819 @cindex UEFI, bootloader
24820 @cindex BIOS, bootloader
24821 The bootloader to use, as a @code{bootloader} object. For now
24822 @code{grub-bootloader}, @code{grub-efi-bootloader},
24823 @code{extlinux-bootloader} and @code{u-boot-bootloader} are supported.
24824
24825 @vindex grub-efi-bootloader
24826 @code{grub-efi-bootloader} allows to boot on modern systems using the
24827 @dfn{Unified Extensible Firmware Interface} (UEFI). This is what you should
24828 use if the installation image contains a @file{/sys/firmware/efi} directory
24829 when you boot it on your system.
24830
24831 @vindex grub-bootloader
24832 @code{grub-bootloader} allows you to boot in particular Intel-based machines
24833 in ``legacy'' BIOS mode.
24834
24835 @cindex ARM, bootloaders
24836 @cindex AArch64, bootloaders
24837 Available bootloaders are described in @code{(gnu bootloader @dots{})}
24838 modules. In particular, @code{(gnu bootloader u-boot)} contains definitions
24839 of bootloaders for a wide range of ARM and AArch64 systems, using the
24840 @uref{https://www.denx.de/wiki/U-Boot/, U-Boot bootloader}.
24841
24842 @item @code{target}
24843 This is a string denoting the target onto which to install the
24844 bootloader.
24845
24846 The interpretation depends on the bootloader in question. For
24847 @code{grub-bootloader}, for example, it should be a device name understood by
24848 the bootloader @command{installer} command, such as @code{/dev/sda} or
24849 @code{(hd0)} (@pxref{Invoking grub-install,,, grub, GNU GRUB Manual}). For
24850 @code{grub-efi-bootloader}, it should be the mount point of the EFI file
24851 system, usually @file{/boot/efi}.
24852
24853 @item @code{menu-entries} (default: @code{()})
24854 A possibly empty list of @code{menu-entry} objects (see below), denoting
24855 entries to appear in the bootloader menu, in addition to the current
24856 system entry and the entry pointing to previous system generations.
24857
24858 @item @code{default-entry} (default: @code{0})
24859 The index of the default boot menu entry. Index 0 is for the entry of the
24860 current system.
24861
24862 @item @code{timeout} (default: @code{5})
24863 The number of seconds to wait for keyboard input before booting. Set to
24864 0 to boot immediately, and to -1 to wait indefinitely.
24865
24866 @cindex keyboard layout, for the bootloader
24867 @item @code{keyboard-layout} (default: @code{#f})
24868 If this is @code{#f}, the bootloader's menu (if any) uses the default keyboard
24869 layout, usually US@tie{}English (``qwerty'').
24870
24871 Otherwise, this must be a @code{keyboard-layout} object (@pxref{Keyboard
24872 Layout}).
24873
24874 @quotation Note
24875 This option is currently ignored by bootloaders other than @code{grub} and
24876 @code{grub-efi}.
24877 @end quotation
24878
24879 @item @code{theme} (default: @var{#f})
24880 The bootloader theme object describing the theme to use. If no theme
24881 is provided, some bootloaders might use a default theme, that's true
24882 for GRUB.
24883
24884 @item @code{terminal-outputs} (default: @code{'(gfxterm)})
24885 The output terminals used for the bootloader boot menu, as a list of
24886 symbols. GRUB accepts the values: @code{console}, @code{serial},
24887 @code{serial_@{0-3@}}, @code{gfxterm}, @code{vga_text},
24888 @code{mda_text}, @code{morse}, and @code{pkmodem}. This field
24889 corresponds to the GRUB variable @code{GRUB_TERMINAL_OUTPUT} (@pxref{Simple
24890 configuration,,, grub,GNU GRUB manual}).
24891
24892 @item @code{terminal-inputs} (default: @code{'()})
24893 The input terminals used for the bootloader boot menu, as a list of
24894 symbols. For GRUB, the default is the native platform terminal as
24895 determined at run-time. GRUB accepts the values: @code{console},
24896 @code{serial}, @code{serial_@{0-3@}}, @code{at_keyboard}, and
24897 @code{usb_keyboard}. This field corresponds to the GRUB variable
24898 @code{GRUB_TERMINAL_INPUT} (@pxref{Simple configuration,,, grub,GNU GRUB
24899 manual}).
24900
24901 @item @code{serial-unit} (default: @code{#f})
24902 The serial unit used by the bootloader, as an integer from 0 to 3.
24903 For GRUB, it is chosen at run-time; currently GRUB chooses 0, which
24904 corresponds to COM1 (@pxref{Serial terminal,,, grub,GNU GRUB manual}).
24905
24906 @item @code{serial-speed} (default: @code{#f})
24907 The speed of the serial interface, as an integer. For GRUB, the
24908 default value is chosen at run-time; currently GRUB chooses
24909 9600@tie{}bps (@pxref{Serial terminal,,, grub,GNU GRUB manual}).
24910 @end table
24911
24912 @end deftp
24913
24914 @cindex dual boot
24915 @cindex boot menu
24916 Should you want to list additional boot menu entries @i{via} the
24917 @code{menu-entries} field above, you will need to create them with the
24918 @code{menu-entry} form. For example, imagine you want to be able to
24919 boot another distro (hard to imagine!), you can define a menu entry
24920 along these lines:
24921
24922 @example
24923 (menu-entry
24924 (label "The Other Distro")
24925 (linux "/boot/old/vmlinux-2.6.32")
24926 (linux-arguments '("root=/dev/sda2"))
24927 (initrd "/boot/old/initrd"))
24928 @end example
24929
24930 Details below.
24931
24932 @deftp {Data Type} menu-entry
24933 The type of an entry in the bootloader menu.
24934
24935 @table @asis
24936
24937 @item @code{label}
24938 The label to show in the menu---e.g., @code{"GNU"}.
24939
24940 @item @code{linux}
24941 The Linux kernel image to boot, for example:
24942
24943 @example
24944 (file-append linux-libre "/bzImage")
24945 @end example
24946
24947 For GRUB, it is also possible to specify a device explicitly in the
24948 file path using GRUB's device naming convention (@pxref{Naming
24949 convention,,, grub, GNU GRUB manual}), for example:
24950
24951 @example
24952 "(hd0,msdos1)/boot/vmlinuz"
24953 @end example
24954
24955 If the device is specified explicitly as above, then the @code{device}
24956 field is ignored entirely.
24957
24958 @item @code{linux-arguments} (default: @code{()})
24959 The list of extra Linux kernel command-line arguments---e.g.,
24960 @code{("console=ttyS0")}.
24961
24962 @item @code{initrd}
24963 A G-Expression or string denoting the file name of the initial RAM disk
24964 to use (@pxref{G-Expressions}).
24965 @item @code{device} (default: @code{#f})
24966 The device where the kernel and initrd are to be found---i.e., for GRUB,
24967 @dfn{root} for this menu entry (@pxref{root,,, grub, GNU GRUB manual}).
24968
24969 This may be a file system label (a string), a file system UUID (a
24970 bytevector, @pxref{File Systems}), or @code{#f}, in which case
24971 the bootloader will search the device containing the file specified by
24972 the @code{linux} field (@pxref{search,,, grub, GNU GRUB manual}). It
24973 must @emph{not} be an OS device name such as @file{/dev/sda1}.
24974
24975 @end table
24976 @end deftp
24977
24978 @c FIXME: Write documentation once it's stable.
24979 For now only GRUB has theme support. GRUB themes are created using
24980 the @code{grub-theme} form, which is not documented yet.
24981
24982 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %default-theme
24983 This is the default GRUB theme used by the operating system if no
24984 @code{theme} field is specified in @code{bootloader-configuration}
24985 record.
24986
24987 It comes with a fancy background image displaying the GNU and Guix
24988 logos.
24989 @end defvr
24990
24991
24992 @node Invoking guix system
24993 @section Invoking @code{guix system}
24994
24995 Once you have written an operating system declaration as seen in the
24996 previous section, it can be @dfn{instantiated} using the @command{guix
24997 system} command. The synopsis is:
24998
24999 @example
25000 guix system @var{options}@dots{} @var{action} @var{file}
25001 @end example
25002
25003 @var{file} must be the name of a file containing an
25004 @code{operating-system} declaration. @var{action} specifies how the
25005 operating system is instantiated. Currently the following values are
25006 supported:
25007
25008 @table @code
25009 @item search
25010 Display available service type definitions that match the given regular
25011 expressions, sorted by relevance:
25012
25013 @example
25014 $ guix system search console font
25015 name: console-fonts
25016 location: gnu/services/base.scm:729:2
25017 extends: shepherd-root
25018 description: Install the given fonts on the specified ttys (fonts are
25019 + per virtual console on GNU/Linux). The value of this service is a list
25020 + of tty/font pairs like:
25021 +
25022 + '(("tty1" . "LatGrkCyr-8x16"))
25023 relevance: 20
25024
25025 name: mingetty
25026 location: gnu/services/base.scm:1048:2
25027 extends: shepherd-root
25028 description: Provide console login using the `mingetty' program.
25029 relevance: 2
25030
25031 name: login
25032 location: gnu/services/base.scm:775:2
25033 extends: pam
25034 description: Provide a console log-in service as specified by its
25035 + configuration value, a `login-configuration' object.
25036 relevance: 2
25037
25038 @dots{}
25039 @end example
25040
25041 As for @command{guix package --search}, the result is written in
25042 @code{recutils} format, which makes it easy to filter the output
25043 (@pxref{Top, GNU recutils databases,, recutils, GNU recutils manual}).
25044
25045 @item reconfigure
25046 Build the operating system described in @var{file}, activate it, and
25047 switch to it@footnote{This action (and the related actions
25048 @code{switch-generation} and @code{roll-back}) are usable only on
25049 systems already running Guix System.}.
25050
25051 This effects all the configuration specified in @var{file}: user
25052 accounts, system services, global package list, setuid programs, etc.
25053 The command starts system services specified in @var{file} that are not
25054 currently running; if a service is currently running this command will
25055 arrange for it to be upgraded the next time it is stopped (e.g.@: by
25056 @code{herd stop X} or @code{herd restart X}).
25057
25058 This command creates a new generation whose number is one greater than
25059 the current generation (as reported by @command{guix system
25060 list-generations}). If that generation already exists, it will be
25061 overwritten. This behavior mirrors that of @command{guix package}
25062 (@pxref{Invoking guix package}).
25063
25064 It also adds a bootloader menu entry for the new OS configuration,
25065 ---unless @option{--no-bootloader} is passed. For GRUB, it moves
25066 entries for older configurations to a submenu, allowing you to choose
25067 an older system generation at boot time should you need it.
25068
25069 @quotation Note
25070 @c The paragraph below refers to the problem discussed at
25071 @c <https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/guix-devel/2014-08/msg00057.html>.
25072 It is highly recommended to run @command{guix pull} once before you run
25073 @command{guix system reconfigure} for the first time (@pxref{Invoking
25074 guix pull}). Failing to do that you would see an older version of Guix
25075 once @command{reconfigure} has completed.
25076 @end quotation
25077
25078 @item switch-generation
25079 @cindex generations
25080 Switch to an existing system generation. This action atomically
25081 switches the system profile to the specified system generation. It
25082 also rearranges the system's existing bootloader menu entries. It
25083 makes the menu entry for the specified system generation the default,
25084 and it moves the entries for the other generatiors to a submenu, if
25085 supported by the bootloader being used. The next time the system
25086 boots, it will use the specified system generation.
25087
25088 The bootloader itself is not being reinstalled when using this
25089 command. Thus, the installed bootloader is used with an updated
25090 configuration file.
25091
25092 The target generation can be specified explicitly by its generation
25093 number. For example, the following invocation would switch to system
25094 generation 7:
25095
25096 @example
25097 guix system switch-generation 7
25098 @end example
25099
25100 The target generation can also be specified relative to the current
25101 generation with the form @code{+N} or @code{-N}, where @code{+3} means
25102 ``3 generations ahead of the current generation,'' and @code{-1} means
25103 ``1 generation prior to the current generation.'' When specifying a
25104 negative value such as @code{-1}, you must precede it with @code{--} to
25105 prevent it from being parsed as an option. For example:
25106
25107 @example
25108 guix system switch-generation -- -1
25109 @end example
25110
25111 Currently, the effect of invoking this action is @emph{only} to switch
25112 the system profile to an existing generation and rearrange the
25113 bootloader menu entries. To actually start using the target system
25114 generation, you must reboot after running this action. In the future,
25115 it will be updated to do the same things as @command{reconfigure},
25116 like activating and deactivating services.
25117
25118 This action will fail if the specified generation does not exist.
25119
25120 @item roll-back
25121 @cindex rolling back
25122 Switch to the preceding system generation. The next time the system
25123 boots, it will use the preceding system generation. This is the inverse
25124 of @command{reconfigure}, and it is exactly the same as invoking
25125 @command{switch-generation} with an argument of @code{-1}.
25126
25127 Currently, as with @command{switch-generation}, you must reboot after
25128 running this action to actually start using the preceding system
25129 generation.
25130
25131 @item delete-generations
25132 @cindex deleting system generations
25133 @cindex saving space
25134 Delete system generations, making them candidates for garbage collection
25135 (@pxref{Invoking guix gc}, for information on how to run the ``garbage
25136 collector'').
25137
25138 This works in the same way as @command{guix package --delete-generations}
25139 (@pxref{Invoking guix package, @code{--delete-generations}}). With no
25140 arguments, all system generations but the current one are deleted:
25141
25142 @example
25143 guix system delete-generations
25144 @end example
25145
25146 You can also select the generations you want to delete. The example below
25147 deletes all the system generations that are more than two month old:
25148
25149 @example
25150 guix system delete-generations 2m
25151 @end example
25152
25153 Running this command automatically reinstalls the bootloader with an updated
25154 list of menu entries---e.g., the ``old generations'' sub-menu in GRUB no
25155 longer lists the generations that have been deleted.
25156
25157 @item build
25158 Build the derivation of the operating system, which includes all the
25159 configuration files and programs needed to boot and run the system.
25160 This action does not actually install anything.
25161
25162 @item init
25163 Populate the given directory with all the files necessary to run the
25164 operating system specified in @var{file}. This is useful for first-time
25165 installations of Guix System. For instance:
25166
25167 @example
25168 guix system init my-os-config.scm /mnt
25169 @end example
25170
25171 copies to @file{/mnt} all the store items required by the configuration
25172 specified in @file{my-os-config.scm}. This includes configuration
25173 files, packages, and so on. It also creates other essential files
25174 needed for the system to operate correctly---e.g., the @file{/etc},
25175 @file{/var}, and @file{/run} directories, and the @file{/bin/sh} file.
25176
25177 This command also installs bootloader on the target specified in
25178 @file{my-os-config}, unless the @option{--no-bootloader} option was
25179 passed.
25180
25181 @item vm
25182 @cindex virtual machine
25183 @cindex VM
25184 @anchor{guix system vm}
25185 Build a virtual machine that contains the operating system declared in
25186 @var{file}, and return a script to run that virtual machine (VM).
25187
25188 @quotation Note
25189 The @code{vm} action and others below
25190 can use KVM support in the Linux-libre kernel. Specifically, if the
25191 machine has hardware virtualization support, the corresponding
25192 KVM kernel module should be loaded, and the @file{/dev/kvm} device node
25193 must exist and be readable and writable by the user and by the
25194 build users of the daemon (@pxref{Build Environment Setup}).
25195 @end quotation
25196
25197 Arguments given to the script are passed to QEMU as in the example
25198 below, which enables networking and requests 1@tie{}GiB of RAM for the
25199 emulated machine:
25200
25201 @example
25202 $ /gnu/store/@dots{}-run-vm.sh -m 1024 -net user
25203 @end example
25204
25205 The VM shares its store with the host system.
25206
25207 Additional file systems can be shared between the host and the VM using
25208 the @code{--share} and @code{--expose} command-line options: the former
25209 specifies a directory to be shared with write access, while the latter
25210 provides read-only access to the shared directory.
25211
25212 The example below creates a VM in which the user's home directory is
25213 accessible read-only, and where the @file{/exchange} directory is a
25214 read-write mapping of @file{$HOME/tmp} on the host:
25215
25216 @example
25217 guix system vm my-config.scm \
25218 --expose=$HOME --share=$HOME/tmp=/exchange
25219 @end example
25220
25221 On GNU/Linux, the default is to boot directly to the kernel; this has
25222 the advantage of requiring only a very tiny root disk image since the
25223 store of the host can then be mounted.
25224
25225 The @code{--full-boot} option forces a complete boot sequence, starting
25226 with the bootloader. This requires more disk space since a root image
25227 containing at least the kernel, initrd, and bootloader data files must
25228 be created. The @code{--image-size} option can be used to specify the
25229 size of the image.
25230
25231 @cindex System images, creation in various formats
25232 @cindex Creating system images in various formats
25233 @item vm-image
25234 @itemx disk-image
25235 @itemx docker-image
25236 Return a virtual machine, disk image, or Docker image of the operating
25237 system declared in @var{file} that stands alone. By default,
25238 @command{guix system} estimates the size of the image needed to store
25239 the system, but you can use the @option{--image-size} option to specify
25240 a value. Docker images are built to contain exactly what they need, so
25241 the @option{--image-size} option is ignored in the case of
25242 @code{docker-image}.
25243
25244 You can specify the root file system type by using the
25245 @option{--file-system-type} option. It defaults to @code{ext4}.
25246
25247 When using @code{vm-image}, the returned image is in qcow2 format, which
25248 the QEMU emulator can efficiently use. @xref{Running Guix in a VM},
25249 for more information on how to run the image in a virtual machine.
25250
25251 When using @code{disk-image}, a raw disk image is produced; it can be
25252 copied as is to a USB stick, for instance. Assuming @code{/dev/sdc} is
25253 the device corresponding to a USB stick, one can copy the image to it
25254 using the following command:
25255
25256 @example
25257 # dd if=$(guix system disk-image my-os.scm) of=/dev/sdc
25258 @end example
25259
25260 When using @code{docker-image}, a Docker image is produced. Guix builds
25261 the image from scratch, not from a pre-existing Docker base image. As a
25262 result, it contains @emph{exactly} what you define in the operating
25263 system configuration file. You can then load the image and launch a
25264 Docker container using commands like the following:
25265
25266 @example
25267 image_id="`docker load < guix-system-docker-image.tar.gz`"
25268 container_id="`docker create $image_id`"
25269 docker start $container_id
25270 @end example
25271
25272 This command starts a new Docker container from the specified image. It
25273 will boot the Guix system in the usual manner, which means it will
25274 start any services you have defined in the operating system
25275 configuration. You can get an interactive shell running in the container
25276 using @command{docker exec}:
25277
25278 @example
25279 docker exec -ti $container_id /run/current-system/profile/bin/bash --login
25280 @end example
25281
25282 Depending on what you run in the Docker container, it
25283 may be necessary to give the container additional permissions. For
25284 example, if you intend to build software using Guix inside of the Docker
25285 container, you may need to pass the @option{--privileged} option to
25286 @code{docker create}.
25287
25288 @item container
25289 Return a script to run the operating system declared in @var{file}
25290 within a container. Containers are a set of lightweight isolation
25291 mechanisms provided by the kernel Linux-libre. Containers are
25292 substantially less resource-demanding than full virtual machines since
25293 the kernel, shared objects, and other resources can be shared with the
25294 host system; this also means they provide thinner isolation.
25295
25296 Currently, the script must be run as root in order to support more than
25297 a single user and group. The container shares its store with the host
25298 system.
25299
25300 As with the @code{vm} action (@pxref{guix system vm}), additional file
25301 systems to be shared between the host and container can be specified
25302 using the @option{--share} and @option{--expose} options:
25303
25304 @example
25305 guix system container my-config.scm \
25306 --expose=$HOME --share=$HOME/tmp=/exchange
25307 @end example
25308
25309 @quotation Note
25310 This option requires Linux-libre 3.19 or newer.
25311 @end quotation
25312
25313 @end table
25314
25315 @var{options} can contain any of the common build options (@pxref{Common
25316 Build Options}). In addition, @var{options} can contain one of the
25317 following:
25318
25319 @table @option
25320 @item --expression=@var{expr}
25321 @itemx -e @var{expr}
25322 Consider the operating-system @var{expr} evaluates to.
25323 This is an alternative to specifying a file which evaluates to an
25324 operating system.
25325 This is used to generate the Guix system installer @pxref{Building the
25326 Installation Image}).
25327
25328 @item --system=@var{system}
25329 @itemx -s @var{system}
25330 Attempt to build for @var{system} instead of the host system type.
25331 This works as per @command{guix build} (@pxref{Invoking guix build}).
25332
25333 @item --derivation
25334 @itemx -d
25335 Return the derivation file name of the given operating system without
25336 building anything.
25337
25338 @item --file-system-type=@var{type}
25339 @itemx -t @var{type}
25340 For the @code{disk-image} action, create a file system of the given
25341 @var{type} on the image.
25342
25343 When this option is omitted, @command{guix system} uses @code{ext4}.
25344
25345 @cindex ISO-9660 format
25346 @cindex CD image format
25347 @cindex DVD image format
25348 @code{--file-system-type=iso9660} produces an ISO-9660 image, suitable
25349 for burning on CDs and DVDs.
25350
25351 @item --image-size=@var{size}
25352 For the @code{vm-image} and @code{disk-image} actions, create an image
25353 of the given @var{size}. @var{size} may be a number of bytes, or it may
25354 include a unit as a suffix (@pxref{Block size, size specifications,,
25355 coreutils, GNU Coreutils}).
25356
25357 When this option is omitted, @command{guix system} computes an estimate
25358 of the image size as a function of the size of the system declared in
25359 @var{file}.
25360
25361 @item --network
25362 @itemx -N
25363 For the @code{container} action, allow containers to access the host network,
25364 that is, do not create a network namespace.
25365
25366 @item --root=@var{file}
25367 @itemx -r @var{file}
25368 Make @var{file} a symlink to the result, and register it as a garbage
25369 collector root.
25370
25371 @item --skip-checks
25372 Skip pre-installation safety checks.
25373
25374 By default, @command{guix system init} and @command{guix system
25375 reconfigure} perform safety checks: they make sure the file systems that
25376 appear in the @code{operating-system} declaration actually exist
25377 (@pxref{File Systems}), and that any Linux kernel modules that may be
25378 needed at boot time are listed in @code{initrd-modules} (@pxref{Initial
25379 RAM Disk}). Passing this option skips these tests altogether.
25380
25381 @cindex on-error
25382 @cindex on-error strategy
25383 @cindex error strategy
25384 @item --on-error=@var{strategy}
25385 Apply @var{strategy} when an error occurs when reading @var{file}.
25386 @var{strategy} may be one of the following:
25387
25388 @table @code
25389 @item nothing-special
25390 Report the error concisely and exit. This is the default strategy.
25391
25392 @item backtrace
25393 Likewise, but also display a backtrace.
25394
25395 @item debug
25396 Report the error and enter Guile's debugger. From there, you can run
25397 commands such as @code{,bt} to get a backtrace, @code{,locals} to
25398 display local variable values, and more generally inspect the state of the
25399 program. @xref{Debug Commands,,, guile, GNU Guile Reference Manual}, for
25400 a list of available debugging commands.
25401 @end table
25402 @end table
25403
25404 Once you have built, configured, re-configured, and re-re-configured
25405 your Guix installation, you may find it useful to list the operating
25406 system generations available on disk---and that you can choose from the
25407 bootloader boot menu:
25408
25409 @table @code
25410
25411 @item list-generations
25412 List a summary of each generation of the operating system available on
25413 disk, in a human-readable way. This is similar to the
25414 @option{--list-generations} option of @command{guix package}
25415 (@pxref{Invoking guix package}).
25416
25417 Optionally, one can specify a pattern, with the same syntax that is used
25418 in @command{guix package --list-generations}, to restrict the list of
25419 generations displayed. For instance, the following command displays
25420 generations that are up to 10 days old:
25421
25422 @example
25423 $ guix system list-generations 10d
25424 @end example
25425
25426 @end table
25427
25428 The @command{guix system} command has even more to offer! The following
25429 sub-commands allow you to visualize how your system services relate to
25430 each other:
25431
25432 @anchor{system-extension-graph}
25433 @table @code
25434
25435 @item extension-graph
25436 Emit in Dot/Graphviz format to standard output the @dfn{service
25437 extension graph} of the operating system defined in @var{file}
25438 (@pxref{Service Composition}, for more information on service
25439 extensions.)
25440
25441 The command:
25442
25443 @example
25444 $ guix system extension-graph @var{file} | dot -Tpdf > services.pdf
25445 @end example
25446
25447 produces a PDF file showing the extension relations among services.
25448
25449 @anchor{system-shepherd-graph}
25450 @item shepherd-graph
25451 Emit in Dot/Graphviz format to standard output the @dfn{dependency
25452 graph} of shepherd services of the operating system defined in
25453 @var{file}. @xref{Shepherd Services}, for more information and for an
25454 example graph.
25455
25456 @end table
25457
25458 @node Invoking guix deploy
25459 @section Invoking @code{guix deploy}
25460
25461 We've already seen @code{operating-system} declarations used to manage a
25462 machine's configuration locally. Suppose you need to configure multiple
25463 machines, though---perhaps you're managing a service on the web that's
25464 comprised of several servers. @command{guix deploy} enables you to use those
25465 same @code{operating-system} declarations to manage multiple remote hosts at
25466 once as a logical ``deployment''.
25467
25468 @quotation Note
25469 The functionality described in this section is still under development
25470 and is subject to change. Get in touch with us on
25471 @email{guix-devel@@gnu.org}!
25472 @end quotation
25473
25474 @example
25475 guix deploy @var{file}
25476 @end example
25477
25478 Such an invocation will deploy the machines that the code within @var{file}
25479 evaluates to. As an example, @var{file} might contain a definition like this:
25480
25481 @example
25482 ;; This is a Guix deployment of a "bare bones" setup, with
25483 ;; no X11 display server, to a machine with an SSH daemon
25484 ;; listening on localhost:2222. A configuration such as this
25485 ;; may be appropriate for virtual machine with ports
25486 ;; forwarded to the host's loopback interface.
25487
25488 (use-service-modules networking ssh)
25489 (use-package-modules bootloaders)
25490
25491 (define %system
25492 (operating-system
25493 (host-name "gnu-deployed")
25494 (timezone "Etc/UTC")
25495 (bootloader (bootloader-configuration
25496 (bootloader grub-bootloader)
25497 (target "/dev/vda")
25498 (terminal-outputs '(console))))
25499 (file-systems (cons (file-system
25500 (mount-point "/")
25501 (device "/dev/vda1")
25502 (type "ext4"))
25503 %base-file-systems))
25504 (services
25505 (append (list (service dhcp-client-service-type)
25506 (service openssh-service-type
25507 (openssh-configuration
25508 (permit-root-login #t)
25509 (allow-empty-passwords? #t))))
25510 %base-services))))
25511
25512 (list (machine
25513 (system %system)
25514 (environment managed-host-environment-type)
25515 (configuration (machine-ssh-configuration
25516 (host-name "localhost")
25517 (identity "./id_rsa")
25518 (port 2222)))))
25519 @end example
25520
25521 The file should evaluate to a list of @var{machine} objects. This example,
25522 upon being deployed, will create a new generation on the remote system
25523 realizing the @code{operating-system} declaration @var{%system}.
25524 @var{environment} and @var{configuration} specify how the machine should be
25525 provisioned---that is, how the computing resources should be created and
25526 managed. The above example does not create any resources, as a
25527 @code{'managed-host} is a machine that is already running the Guix system and
25528 available over the network. This is a particularly simple case; a more
25529 complex deployment may involve, for example, starting virtual machines through
25530 a Virtual Private Server (VPS) provider. In such a case, a different
25531 @var{environment} type would be used.
25532
25533 Do note that you first need to generate a key pair on the coordinator machine
25534 to allow the daemon to export signed archives of files from the store
25535 (@pxref{Invoking guix archive}).
25536
25537 @example
25538 # guix archive --generate-key
25539 @end example
25540
25541 @noindent
25542 Each target machine must authorize the key of the master machine so that it
25543 accepts store items it receives from the coordinator:
25544
25545 @example
25546 # guix archive --authorize < coordinator-public-key.txt
25547 @end example
25548
25549 @deftp {Data Type} machine
25550 This is the data type representing a single machine in a heterogeneous Guix
25551 deployment.
25552
25553 @table @asis
25554 @item @code{system}
25555 The object of the operating system configuration to deploy.
25556
25557 @item @code{environment}
25558 An @code{environment-type} describing how the machine should be provisioned.
25559 At the moment, the only supported value is
25560 @code{managed-host-environment-type}.
25561
25562 @item @code{configuration} (default: @code{#f})
25563 An object describing the configuration for the machine's @code{environment}.
25564 If the @code{environment} has a default configuration, @code{#f} maybe used.
25565 If @code{#f} is used for an environment with no default configuration,
25566 however, an error will be thrown.
25567 @end table
25568 @end deftp
25569
25570 @deftp {Data Type} machine-ssh-configuration
25571 This is the data type representing the SSH client parameters for a machine
25572 with an @code{environment} of @code{managed-host-environment-type}.
25573
25574 @table @asis
25575 @item @code{host-name}
25576 @item @code{port} (default: @code{22})
25577 @item @code{user} (default: @code{"root"})
25578 @item @code{identity} (default: @code{#f})
25579 If specified, the path to the SSH private key to use to authenticate with the
25580 remote host.
25581 @end table
25582 @end deftp
25583
25584 @node Running Guix in a VM
25585 @section Running Guix in a Virtual Machine
25586
25587 @cindex virtual machine
25588 To run Guix in a virtual machine (VM), one can use the pre-built Guix VM image
25589 distributed at
25590 @url{@value{BASE-URL}/guix-system-vm-image-@value{VERSION}.x86_64-linux.xz}.
25591 This image is a compressed image in QCOW format. You will first need to
25592 decompress with @command{xz -d}, and then you can pass it to an emulator such
25593 as QEMU (see below for details).
25594
25595 This image boots the Xfce graphical environment and it contains some
25596 commonly-used tools. You can install more software in the image by running
25597 @command{guix package} in a terminal (@pxref{Invoking guix package}). You can
25598 also reconfigure the system based on its initial configuration file available
25599 as @file{/etc/config.scm} (@pxref{Using the Configuration System}).
25600
25601 Instead of using this pre-built image, one can also build their own virtual
25602 machine image using @command{guix system vm-image} (@pxref{Invoking guix
25603 system}). The returned image is in qcow2 format, which the
25604 @uref{https://qemu.org/, QEMU emulator} can efficiently use.
25605
25606 @cindex QEMU
25607 If you built your own image, you must copy it out of the store
25608 (@pxref{The Store}) and give yourself permission to write to the copy
25609 before you can use it. When invoking QEMU, you must choose a system
25610 emulator that is suitable for your hardware platform. Here is a minimal
25611 QEMU invocation that will boot the result of @command{guix system
25612 vm-image} on x86_64 hardware:
25613
25614 @example
25615 $ qemu-system-x86_64 \
25616 -net user -net nic,model=virtio \
25617 -enable-kvm -m 1024 \
25618 -device virtio-blk,drive=myhd \
25619 -drive if=none,file=/tmp/qemu-image,id=myhd
25620 @end example
25621
25622 Here is what each of these options means:
25623
25624 @table @code
25625 @item qemu-system-x86_64
25626 This specifies the hardware platform to emulate. This should match the
25627 host.
25628
25629 @item -net user
25630 Enable the unprivileged user-mode network stack. The guest OS can
25631 access the host but not vice versa. This is the simplest way to get the
25632 guest OS online.
25633
25634 @item -net nic,model=virtio
25635 You must create a network interface of a given model. If you do not
25636 create a NIC, the boot will fail. Assuming your hardware platform is
25637 x86_64, you can get a list of available NIC models by running
25638 @command{qemu-system-x86_64 -net nic,model=help}.
25639
25640 @item -enable-kvm
25641 If your system has hardware virtualization extensions, enabling the
25642 virtual machine support (KVM) of the Linux kernel will make things run
25643 faster.
25644
25645 @c To run Xfce + 'guix pull', we need at least 1G of RAM.
25646 @item -m 1024
25647 RAM available to the guest OS, in mebibytes. Defaults to 128@tie{}MiB,
25648 which may be insufficient for some operations.
25649
25650 @item -device virtio-blk,drive=myhd
25651 Create a @code{virtio-blk} drive called ``myhd''. @code{virtio-blk} is a
25652 ``paravirtualization'' mechanism for block devices that allows QEMU to achieve
25653 better performance than if it were emulating a complete disk drive. See the
25654 QEMU and KVM documentation for more info.
25655
25656 @item -drive if=none,file=/tmp/qemu-image,id=myhd
25657 Use our QCOW image, the @file{/tmp/qemu-image} file, as the backing store the
25658 the ``myhd'' drive.
25659 @end table
25660
25661 The default @command{run-vm.sh} script that is returned by an invocation of
25662 @command{guix system vm} does not add a @command{-net user} flag by default.
25663 To get network access from within the vm add the @code{(dhcp-client-service)}
25664 to your system definition and start the VM using
25665 @command{`guix system vm config.scm` -net user}. An important caveat of using
25666 @command{-net user} for networking is that @command{ping} will not work, because
25667 it uses the ICMP protocol. You'll have to use a different command to check for
25668 network connectivity, for example @command{guix download}.
25669
25670 @subsection Connecting Through SSH
25671
25672 @cindex SSH
25673 @cindex SSH server
25674 To enable SSH inside a VM you need to add an SSH server like
25675 @code{openssh-service-type} to your VM (@pxref{Networking Services,
25676 @code{openssh-service-type}}). In addition you need to forward the SSH port,
25677 22 by default, to the host. You can do this with
25678
25679 @example
25680 `guix system vm config.scm` -net user,hostfwd=tcp::10022-:22
25681 @end example
25682
25683 To connect to the VM you can run
25684
25685 @example
25686 ssh -o UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no -p 10022
25687 @end example
25688
25689 The @command{-p} tells @command{ssh} the port you want to connect to.
25690 @command{-o UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null} prevents @command{ssh} from complaining
25691 every time you modify your @command{config.scm} file and the
25692 @command{-o StrictHostKeyChecking=no} prevents you from having to allow a
25693 connection to an unknown host every time you connect.
25694
25695 @subsection Using @command{virt-viewer} with Spice
25696
25697 As an alternative to the default @command{qemu} graphical client you can
25698 use the @command{remote-viewer} from the @command{virt-viewer} package. To
25699 connect pass the @command{-spice port=5930,disable-ticketing} flag to
25700 @command{qemu}. See previous section for further information on how to do this.
25701
25702 Spice also allows you to do some nice stuff like share your clipboard with your
25703 VM. To enable that you'll also have to pass the following flags to @command{qemu}:
25704
25705 @example
25706 -device virtio-serial-pci,id=virtio-serial0,max_ports=16,bus=pci.0,addr=0x5
25707 -chardev spicevmc,name=vdagent,id=vdagent
25708 -device virtserialport,nr=1,bus=virtio-serial0.0,chardev=vdagent,
25709 name=com.redhat.spice.0
25710 @end example
25711
25712 You'll also need to add the @pxref{Miscellaneous Services, Spice service}.
25713
25714 @node Defining Services
25715 @section Defining Services
25716
25717 The previous sections show the available services and how one can combine
25718 them in an @code{operating-system} declaration. But how do we define
25719 them in the first place? And what is a service anyway?
25720
25721 @menu
25722 * Service Composition:: The model for composing services.
25723 * Service Types and Services:: Types and services.
25724 * Service Reference:: API reference.
25725 * Shepherd Services:: A particular type of service.
25726 @end menu
25727
25728 @node Service Composition
25729 @subsection Service Composition
25730
25731 @cindex services
25732 @cindex daemons
25733 Here we define a @dfn{service} as, broadly, something that extends the
25734 functionality of the operating system. Often a service is a process---a
25735 @dfn{daemon}---started when the system boots: a secure shell server, a
25736 Web server, the Guix build daemon, etc. Sometimes a service is a daemon
25737 whose execution can be triggered by another daemon---e.g., an FTP server
25738 started by @command{inetd} or a D-Bus service activated by
25739 @command{dbus-daemon}. Occasionally, a service does not map to a
25740 daemon. For instance, the ``account'' service collects user accounts
25741 and makes sure they exist when the system runs; the ``udev'' service
25742 collects device management rules and makes them available to the eudev
25743 daemon; the @file{/etc} service populates the @file{/etc} directory
25744 of the system.
25745
25746 @cindex service extensions
25747 Guix system services are connected by @dfn{extensions}. For instance, the
25748 secure shell service @emph{extends} the Shepherd---the
25749 initialization system, running as PID@tie{}1---by giving it the command
25750 lines to start and stop the secure shell daemon (@pxref{Networking
25751 Services, @code{openssh-service-type}}); the UPower service extends the D-Bus
25752 service by passing it its @file{.service} specification, and extends the
25753 udev service by passing it device management rules (@pxref{Desktop
25754 Services, @code{upower-service}}); the Guix daemon service extends the
25755 Shepherd by passing it the command lines to start and stop the daemon,
25756 and extends the account service by passing it a list of required build
25757 user accounts (@pxref{Base Services}).
25758
25759 All in all, services and their ``extends'' relations form a directed
25760 acyclic graph (DAG). If we represent services as boxes and extensions
25761 as arrows, a typical system might provide something like this:
25762
25763 @image{images/service-graph,,5in,Typical service extension graph.}
25764
25765 @cindex system service
25766 At the bottom, we see the @dfn{system service}, which produces the
25767 directory containing everything to run and boot the system, as returned
25768 by the @command{guix system build} command. @xref{Service Reference},
25769 to learn about the other service types shown here.
25770 @xref{system-extension-graph, the @command{guix system extension-graph}
25771 command}, for information on how to generate this representation for a
25772 particular operating system definition.
25773
25774 @cindex service types
25775 Technically, developers can define @dfn{service types} to express these
25776 relations. There can be any number of services of a given type on the
25777 system---for instance, a system running two instances of the GNU secure
25778 shell server (lsh) has two instances of @code{lsh-service-type}, with
25779 different parameters.
25780
25781 The following section describes the programming interface for service
25782 types and services.
25783
25784 @node Service Types and Services
25785 @subsection Service Types and Services
25786
25787 A @dfn{service type} is a node in the DAG described above. Let us start
25788 with a simple example, the service type for the Guix build daemon
25789 (@pxref{Invoking guix-daemon}):
25790
25791 @example
25792 (define guix-service-type
25793 (service-type
25794 (name 'guix)
25795 (extensions
25796 (list (service-extension shepherd-root-service-type guix-shepherd-service)
25797 (service-extension account-service-type guix-accounts)
25798 (service-extension activation-service-type guix-activation)))
25799 (default-value (guix-configuration))))
25800 @end example
25801
25802 @noindent
25803 It defines three things:
25804
25805 @enumerate
25806 @item
25807 A name, whose sole purpose is to make inspection and debugging easier.
25808
25809 @item
25810 A list of @dfn{service extensions}, where each extension designates the
25811 target service type and a procedure that, given the parameters of the
25812 service, returns a list of objects to extend the service of that type.
25813
25814 Every service type has at least one service extension. The only
25815 exception is the @dfn{boot service type}, which is the ultimate service.
25816
25817 @item
25818 Optionally, a default value for instances of this type.
25819 @end enumerate
25820
25821 In this example, @code{guix-service-type} extends three services:
25822
25823 @table @code
25824 @item shepherd-root-service-type
25825 The @code{guix-shepherd-service} procedure defines how the Shepherd
25826 service is extended. Namely, it returns a @code{<shepherd-service>}
25827 object that defines how @command{guix-daemon} is started and stopped
25828 (@pxref{Shepherd Services}).
25829
25830 @item account-service-type
25831 This extension for this service is computed by @code{guix-accounts},
25832 which returns a list of @code{user-group} and @code{user-account}
25833 objects representing the build user accounts (@pxref{Invoking
25834 guix-daemon}).
25835
25836 @item activation-service-type
25837 Here @code{guix-activation} is a procedure that returns a gexp, which is
25838 a code snippet to run at ``activation time''---e.g., when the service is
25839 booted.
25840 @end table
25841
25842 A service of this type is instantiated like this:
25843
25844 @example
25845 (service guix-service-type
25846 (guix-configuration
25847 (build-accounts 5)
25848 (use-substitutes? #f)))
25849 @end example
25850
25851 The second argument to the @code{service} form is a value representing
25852 the parameters of this specific service instance.
25853 @xref{guix-configuration-type, @code{guix-configuration}}, for
25854 information about the @code{guix-configuration} data type. When the
25855 value is omitted, the default value specified by
25856 @code{guix-service-type} is used:
25857
25858 @example
25859 (service guix-service-type)
25860 @end example
25861
25862 @code{guix-service-type} is quite simple because it extends other
25863 services but is not extensible itself.
25864
25865 @c @subsubsubsection Extensible Service Types
25866
25867 The service type for an @emph{extensible} service looks like this:
25868
25869 @example
25870 (define udev-service-type
25871 (service-type (name 'udev)
25872 (extensions
25873 (list (service-extension shepherd-root-service-type
25874 udev-shepherd-service)))
25875
25876 (compose concatenate) ;concatenate the list of rules
25877 (extend (lambda (config rules)
25878 (match config
25879 (($ <udev-configuration> udev initial-rules)
25880 (udev-configuration
25881 (udev udev) ;the udev package to use
25882 (rules (append initial-rules rules)))))))))
25883 @end example
25884
25885 This is the service type for the
25886 @uref{https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Project:Eudev, eudev device
25887 management daemon}. Compared to the previous example, in addition to an
25888 extension of @code{shepherd-root-service-type}, we see two new fields:
25889
25890 @table @code
25891 @item compose
25892 This is the procedure to @dfn{compose} the list of extensions to
25893 services of this type.
25894
25895 Services can extend the udev service by passing it lists of rules; we
25896 compose those extensions simply by concatenating them.
25897
25898 @item extend
25899 This procedure defines how the value of the service is @dfn{extended} with
25900 the composition of the extensions.
25901
25902 Udev extensions are composed into a list of rules, but the udev service
25903 value is itself a @code{<udev-configuration>} record. So here, we
25904 extend that record by appending the list of rules it contains to the
25905 list of contributed rules.
25906
25907 @item description
25908 This is a string giving an overview of the service type. The string can
25909 contain Texinfo markup (@pxref{Overview,,, texinfo, GNU Texinfo}). The
25910 @command{guix system search} command searches these strings and displays
25911 them (@pxref{Invoking guix system}).
25912 @end table
25913
25914 There can be only one instance of an extensible service type such as
25915 @code{udev-service-type}. If there were more, the
25916 @code{service-extension} specifications would be ambiguous.
25917
25918 Still here? The next section provides a reference of the programming
25919 interface for services.
25920
25921 @node Service Reference
25922 @subsection Service Reference
25923
25924 We have seen an overview of service types (@pxref{Service Types and
25925 Services}). This section provides a reference on how to manipulate
25926 services and service types. This interface is provided by the
25927 @code{(gnu services)} module.
25928
25929 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} service @var{type} [@var{value}]
25930 Return a new service of @var{type}, a @code{<service-type>} object (see
25931 below.) @var{value} can be any object; it represents the parameters of
25932 this particular service instance.
25933
25934 When @var{value} is omitted, the default value specified by @var{type}
25935 is used; if @var{type} does not specify a default value, an error is
25936 raised.
25937
25938 For instance, this:
25939
25940 @example
25941 (service openssh-service-type)
25942 @end example
25943
25944 @noindent
25945 is equivalent to this:
25946
25947 @example
25948 (service openssh-service-type
25949 (openssh-configuration))
25950 @end example
25951
25952 In both cases the result is an instance of @code{openssh-service-type}
25953 with the default configuration.
25954 @end deffn
25955
25956 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} service? @var{obj}
25957 Return true if @var{obj} is a service.
25958 @end deffn
25959
25960 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} service-kind @var{service}
25961 Return the type of @var{service}---i.e., a @code{<service-type>} object.
25962 @end deffn
25963
25964 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} service-value @var{service}
25965 Return the value associated with @var{service}. It represents its
25966 parameters.
25967 @end deffn
25968
25969 Here is an example of how a service is created and manipulated:
25970
25971 @example
25972 (define s
25973 (service nginx-service-type
25974 (nginx-configuration
25975 (nginx nginx)
25976 (log-directory log-directory)
25977 (run-directory run-directory)
25978 (file config-file))))
25979
25980 (service? s)
25981 @result{} #t
25982
25983 (eq? (service-kind s) nginx-service-type)
25984 @result{} #t
25985 @end example
25986
25987 The @code{modify-services} form provides a handy way to change the
25988 parameters of some of the services of a list such as
25989 @code{%base-services} (@pxref{Base Services, @code{%base-services}}). It
25990 evaluates to a list of services. Of course, you could always use
25991 standard list combinators such as @code{map} and @code{fold} to do that
25992 (@pxref{SRFI-1, List Library,, guile, GNU Guile Reference Manual});
25993 @code{modify-services} simply provides a more concise form for this
25994 common pattern.
25995
25996 @deffn {Scheme Syntax} modify-services @var{services} @
25997 (@var{type} @var{variable} => @var{body}) @dots{}
25998
25999 Modify the services listed in @var{services} according to the given
26000 clauses. Each clause has the form:
26001
26002 @example
26003 (@var{type} @var{variable} => @var{body})
26004 @end example
26005
26006 where @var{type} is a service type---e.g.,
26007 @code{guix-service-type}---and @var{variable} is an identifier that is
26008 bound within the @var{body} to the service parameters---e.g., a
26009 @code{guix-configuration} instance---of the original service of that
26010 @var{type}.
26011
26012 The @var{body} should evaluate to the new service parameters, which will
26013 be used to configure the new service. This new service will replace the
26014 original in the resulting list. Because a service's service parameters
26015 are created using @code{define-record-type*}, you can write a succinct
26016 @var{body} that evaluates to the new service parameters by using the
26017 @code{inherit} feature that @code{define-record-type*} provides.
26018
26019 @xref{Using the Configuration System}, for example usage.
26020
26021 @end deffn
26022
26023 Next comes the programming interface for service types. This is
26024 something you want to know when writing new service definitions, but not
26025 necessarily when simply looking for ways to customize your
26026 @code{operating-system} declaration.
26027
26028 @deftp {Data Type} service-type
26029 @cindex service type
26030 This is the representation of a @dfn{service type} (@pxref{Service Types
26031 and Services}).
26032
26033 @table @asis
26034 @item @code{name}
26035 This is a symbol, used only to simplify inspection and debugging.
26036
26037 @item @code{extensions}
26038 A non-empty list of @code{<service-extension>} objects (see below).
26039
26040 @item @code{compose} (default: @code{#f})
26041 If this is @code{#f}, then the service type denotes services that cannot
26042 be extended---i.e., services that do not receive ``values'' from other
26043 services.
26044
26045 Otherwise, it must be a one-argument procedure. The procedure is called
26046 by @code{fold-services} and is passed a list of values collected from
26047 extensions. It may return any single value.
26048
26049 @item @code{extend} (default: @code{#f})
26050 If this is @code{#f}, services of this type cannot be extended.
26051
26052 Otherwise, it must be a two-argument procedure: @code{fold-services}
26053 calls it, passing it the initial value of the service as the first
26054 argument and the result of applying @code{compose} to the extension
26055 values as the second argument. It must return a value that is a valid
26056 parameter value for the service instance.
26057 @end table
26058
26059 @xref{Service Types and Services}, for examples.
26060 @end deftp
26061
26062 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} service-extension @var{target-type} @
26063 @var{compute}
26064 Return a new extension for services of type @var{target-type}.
26065 @var{compute} must be a one-argument procedure: @code{fold-services}
26066 calls it, passing it the value associated with the service that provides
26067 the extension; it must return a valid value for the target service.
26068 @end deffn
26069
26070 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} service-extension? @var{obj}
26071 Return true if @var{obj} is a service extension.
26072 @end deffn
26073
26074 Occasionally, you might want to simply extend an existing service. This
26075 involves creating a new service type and specifying the extension of
26076 interest, which can be verbose; the @code{simple-service} procedure
26077 provides a shorthand for this.
26078
26079 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} simple-service @var{name} @var{target} @var{value}
26080 Return a service that extends @var{target} with @var{value}. This works
26081 by creating a singleton service type @var{name}, of which the returned
26082 service is an instance.
26083
26084 For example, this extends mcron (@pxref{Scheduled Job Execution}) with
26085 an additional job:
26086
26087 @example
26088 (simple-service 'my-mcron-job mcron-service-type
26089 #~(job '(next-hour (3)) "guix gc -F 2G"))
26090 @end example
26091 @end deffn
26092
26093 At the core of the service abstraction lies the @code{fold-services}
26094 procedure, which is responsible for ``compiling'' a list of services
26095 down to a single directory that contains everything needed to boot and
26096 run the system---the directory shown by the @command{guix system build}
26097 command (@pxref{Invoking guix system}). In essence, it propagates
26098 service extensions down the service graph, updating each node parameters
26099 on the way, until it reaches the root node.
26100
26101 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} fold-services @var{services} @
26102 [#:target-type @var{system-service-type}]
26103 Fold @var{services} by propagating their extensions down to the root of
26104 type @var{target-type}; return the root service adjusted accordingly.
26105 @end deffn
26106
26107 Lastly, the @code{(gnu services)} module also defines several essential
26108 service types, some of which are listed below.
26109
26110 @defvr {Scheme Variable} system-service-type
26111 This is the root of the service graph. It produces the system directory
26112 as returned by the @command{guix system build} command.
26113 @end defvr
26114
26115 @defvr {Scheme Variable} boot-service-type
26116 The type of the ``boot service'', which produces the @dfn{boot script}.
26117 The boot script is what the initial RAM disk runs when booting.
26118 @end defvr
26119
26120 @defvr {Scheme Variable} etc-service-type
26121 The type of the @file{/etc} service. This service is used to create
26122 files under @file{/etc} and can be extended by
26123 passing it name/file tuples such as:
26124
26125 @example
26126 (list `("issue" ,(plain-file "issue" "Welcome!\n")))
26127 @end example
26128
26129 In this example, the effect would be to add an @file{/etc/issue} file
26130 pointing to the given file.
26131 @end defvr
26132
26133 @defvr {Scheme Variable} setuid-program-service-type
26134 Type for the ``setuid-program service''. This service collects lists of
26135 executable file names, passed as gexps, and adds them to the set of
26136 setuid-root programs on the system (@pxref{Setuid Programs}).
26137 @end defvr
26138
26139 @defvr {Scheme Variable} profile-service-type
26140 Type of the service that populates the @dfn{system profile}---i.e., the
26141 programs under @file{/run/current-system/profile}. Other services can
26142 extend it by passing it lists of packages to add to the system profile.
26143 @end defvr
26144
26145
26146 @node Shepherd Services
26147 @subsection Shepherd Services
26148
26149 @cindex shepherd services
26150 @cindex PID 1
26151 @cindex init system
26152 The @code{(gnu services shepherd)} module provides a way to define
26153 services managed by the GNU@tie{}Shepherd, which is the
26154 initialization system---the first process that is started when the
26155 system boots, also known as PID@tie{}1
26156 (@pxref{Introduction,,, shepherd, The GNU Shepherd Manual}).
26157
26158 Services in the Shepherd can depend on each other. For instance, the
26159 SSH daemon may need to be started after the syslog daemon has been
26160 started, which in turn can only happen once all the file systems have
26161 been mounted. The simple operating system defined earlier (@pxref{Using
26162 the Configuration System}) results in a service graph like this:
26163
26164 @image{images/shepherd-graph,,5in,Typical shepherd service graph.}
26165
26166 You can actually generate such a graph for any operating system
26167 definition using the @command{guix system shepherd-graph} command
26168 (@pxref{system-shepherd-graph, @command{guix system shepherd-graph}}).
26169
26170 The @code{%shepherd-root-service} is a service object representing
26171 PID@tie{}1, of type @code{shepherd-root-service-type}; it can be extended
26172 by passing it lists of @code{<shepherd-service>} objects.
26173
26174 @deftp {Data Type} shepherd-service
26175 The data type representing a service managed by the Shepherd.
26176
26177 @table @asis
26178 @item @code{provision}
26179 This is a list of symbols denoting what the service provides.
26180
26181 These are the names that may be passed to @command{herd start},
26182 @command{herd status}, and similar commands (@pxref{Invoking herd,,,
26183 shepherd, The GNU Shepherd Manual}). @xref{Slots of services, the
26184 @code{provides} slot,, shepherd, The GNU Shepherd Manual}, for details.
26185
26186 @item @code{requirement} (default: @code{'()})
26187 List of symbols denoting the Shepherd services this one depends on.
26188
26189 @cindex one-shot services, for the Shepherd
26190 @item @code{one-shot?} (default: @code{#f})
26191 Whether this service is @dfn{one-shot}. One-shot services stop immediately
26192 after their @code{start} action has completed. @xref{Slots of services,,,
26193 shepherd, The GNU Shepherd Manual}, for more info.
26194
26195 @item @code{respawn?} (default: @code{#t})
26196 Whether to restart the service when it stops, for instance when the
26197 underlying process dies.
26198
26199 @item @code{start}
26200 @itemx @code{stop} (default: @code{#~(const #f)})
26201 The @code{start} and @code{stop} fields refer to the Shepherd's
26202 facilities to start and stop processes (@pxref{Service De- and
26203 Constructors,,, shepherd, The GNU Shepherd Manual}). They are given as
26204 G-expressions that get expanded in the Shepherd configuration file
26205 (@pxref{G-Expressions}).
26206
26207 @item @code{actions} (default: @code{'()})
26208 @cindex actions, of Shepherd services
26209 This is a list of @code{shepherd-action} objects (see below) defining
26210 @dfn{actions} supported by the service, in addition to the standard
26211 @code{start} and @code{stop} actions. Actions listed here become available as
26212 @command{herd} sub-commands:
26213
26214 @example
26215 herd @var{action} @var{service} [@var{arguments}@dots{}]
26216 @end example
26217
26218 @item @code{auto-start?} (default: @code{#t})
26219 Whether this service should be started automatically by the Shepherd. If it
26220 is @code{#f} the service has to be started manually with @code{herd start}.
26221
26222 @item @code{documentation}
26223 A documentation string, as shown when running:
26224
26225 @example
26226 herd doc @var{service-name}
26227 @end example
26228
26229 where @var{service-name} is one of the symbols in @code{provision}
26230 (@pxref{Invoking herd,,, shepherd, The GNU Shepherd Manual}).
26231
26232 @item @code{modules} (default: @code{%default-modules})
26233 This is the list of modules that must be in scope when @code{start} and
26234 @code{stop} are evaluated.
26235
26236 @end table
26237 @end deftp
26238
26239 @deftp {Data Type} shepherd-action
26240 This is the data type that defines additional actions implemented by a
26241 Shepherd service (see above).
26242
26243 @table @code
26244 @item name
26245 Symbol naming the action.
26246
26247 @item documentation
26248 This is a documentation string for the action. It can be viewed by running:
26249
26250 @example
26251 herd doc @var{service} action @var{action}
26252 @end example
26253
26254 @item procedure
26255 This should be a gexp that evaluates to a procedure of at least one argument,
26256 which is the ``running value'' of the service (@pxref{Slots of services,,,
26257 shepherd, The GNU Shepherd Manual}).
26258 @end table
26259
26260 The following example defines an action called @code{say-hello} that kindly
26261 greets the user:
26262
26263 @example
26264 (shepherd-action
26265 (name 'say-hello)
26266 (documentation "Say hi!")
26267 (procedure #~(lambda (running . args)
26268 (format #t "Hello, friend! arguments: ~s\n"
26269 args)
26270 #t)))
26271 @end example
26272
26273 Assuming this action is added to the @code{example} service, then you can do:
26274
26275 @example
26276 # herd say-hello example
26277 Hello, friend! arguments: ()
26278 # herd say-hello example a b c
26279 Hello, friend! arguments: ("a" "b" "c")
26280 @end example
26281
26282 This, as you can see, is a fairly sophisticated way to say hello.
26283 @xref{Service Convenience,,, shepherd, The GNU Shepherd Manual}, for more
26284 info on actions.
26285 @end deftp
26286
26287 @defvr {Scheme Variable} shepherd-root-service-type
26288 The service type for the Shepherd ``root service''---i.e., PID@tie{}1.
26289
26290 This is the service type that extensions target when they want to create
26291 shepherd services (@pxref{Service Types and Services}, for an example).
26292 Each extension must pass a list of @code{<shepherd-service>}.
26293 @end defvr
26294
26295 @defvr {Scheme Variable} %shepherd-root-service
26296 This service represents PID@tie{}1.
26297 @end defvr
26298
26299
26300 @node Documentation
26301 @chapter Documentation
26302
26303 @cindex documentation, searching for
26304 @cindex searching for documentation
26305 @cindex Info, documentation format
26306 @cindex man pages
26307 @cindex manual pages
26308 In most cases packages installed with Guix come with documentation.
26309 There are two main documentation formats: ``Info'', a browseable
26310 hypertext format used for GNU software, and ``manual pages'' (or ``man
26311 pages''), the linear documentation format traditionally found on Unix.
26312 Info manuals are accessed with the @command{info} command or with Emacs,
26313 and man pages are accessed using @command{man}.
26314
26315 You can look for documentation of software installed on your system by
26316 keyword. For example, the following command searches for information
26317 about ``TLS'' in Info manuals:
26318
26319 @example
26320 $ info -k TLS
26321 "(emacs)Network Security" -- STARTTLS
26322 "(emacs)Network Security" -- TLS
26323 "(gnutls)Core TLS API" -- gnutls_certificate_set_verify_flags
26324 "(gnutls)Core TLS API" -- gnutls_certificate_set_verify_function
26325 @dots{}
26326 @end example
26327
26328 @noindent
26329 The command below searches for the same keyword in man pages:
26330
26331 @example
26332 $ man -k TLS
26333 SSL (7) - OpenSSL SSL/TLS library
26334 certtool (1) - GnuTLS certificate tool
26335 @dots {}
26336 @end example
26337
26338 These searches are purely local to your computer so you have the
26339 guarantee that documentation you find corresponds to what you have
26340 actually installed, you can access it off-line, and your privacy is
26341 respected.
26342
26343 Once you have these results, you can view the relevant documentation by
26344 running, say:
26345
26346 @example
26347 $ info "(gnutls)Core TLS API"
26348 @end example
26349
26350 @noindent
26351 or:
26352
26353 @example
26354 $ man certtool
26355 @end example
26356
26357 Info manuals contain sections and indices as well as hyperlinks like
26358 those found in Web pages. The @command{info} reader (@pxref{Top, Info
26359 reader,, info-stnd, Stand-alone GNU Info}) and its Emacs counterpart
26360 (@pxref{Misc Help,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}) provide intuitive key
26361 bindings to navigate manuals. @xref{Getting Started,,, info, Info: An
26362 Introduction}, for an introduction to Info navigation.
26363
26364 @node Installing Debugging Files
26365 @chapter Installing Debugging Files
26366
26367 @cindex debugging files
26368 Program binaries, as produced by the GCC compilers for instance, are
26369 typically written in the ELF format, with a section containing
26370 @dfn{debugging information}. Debugging information is what allows the
26371 debugger, GDB, to map binary code to source code; it is required to
26372 debug a compiled program in good conditions.
26373
26374 The problem with debugging information is that is takes up a fair amount
26375 of disk space. For example, debugging information for the GNU C Library
26376 weighs in at more than 60 MiB. Thus, as a user, keeping all the
26377 debugging info of all the installed programs is usually not an option.
26378 Yet, space savings should not come at the cost of an impediment to
26379 debugging---especially in the GNU system, which should make it easier
26380 for users to exert their computing freedom (@pxref{GNU Distribution}).
26381
26382 Thankfully, the GNU Binary Utilities (Binutils) and GDB provide a
26383 mechanism that allows users to get the best of both worlds: debugging
26384 information can be stripped from the binaries and stored in separate
26385 files. GDB is then able to load debugging information from those files,
26386 when they are available (@pxref{Separate Debug Files,,, gdb, Debugging
26387 with GDB}).
26388
26389 The GNU distribution takes advantage of this by storing debugging
26390 information in the @code{lib/debug} sub-directory of a separate package
26391 output unimaginatively called @code{debug} (@pxref{Packages with
26392 Multiple Outputs}). Users can choose to install the @code{debug} output
26393 of a package when they need it. For instance, the following command
26394 installs the debugging information for the GNU C Library and for GNU
26395 Guile:
26396
26397 @example
26398 guix install glibc:debug guile:debug
26399 @end example
26400
26401 GDB must then be told to look for debug files in the user's profile, by
26402 setting the @code{debug-file-directory} variable (consider setting it
26403 from the @file{~/.gdbinit} file, @pxref{Startup,,, gdb, Debugging with
26404 GDB}):
26405
26406 @example
26407 (gdb) set debug-file-directory ~/.guix-profile/lib/debug
26408 @end example
26409
26410 From there on, GDB will pick up debugging information from the
26411 @code{.debug} files under @file{~/.guix-profile/lib/debug}.
26412
26413 In addition, you will most likely want GDB to be able to show the source
26414 code being debugged. To do that, you will have to unpack the source
26415 code of the package of interest (obtained with @code{guix build
26416 --source}, @pxref{Invoking guix build}), and to point GDB to that source
26417 directory using the @code{directory} command (@pxref{Source Path,
26418 @code{directory},, gdb, Debugging with GDB}).
26419
26420 @c XXX: keep me up-to-date
26421 The @code{debug} output mechanism in Guix is implemented by the
26422 @code{gnu-build-system} (@pxref{Build Systems}). Currently, it is
26423 opt-in---debugging information is available only for the packages
26424 with definitions explicitly declaring a @code{debug} output. This may be
26425 changed to opt-out in the future if our build farm servers can handle
26426 the load. To check whether a package has a @code{debug} output, use
26427 @command{guix package --list-available} (@pxref{Invoking guix package}).
26428
26429
26430 @node Security Updates
26431 @chapter Security Updates
26432
26433 @cindex security updates
26434 @cindex security vulnerabilities
26435 Occasionally, important security vulnerabilities are discovered in software
26436 packages and must be patched. Guix developers try hard to keep track of
26437 known vulnerabilities and to apply fixes as soon as possible in the
26438 @code{master} branch of Guix (we do not yet provide a ``stable'' branch
26439 containing only security updates.) The @command{guix lint} tool helps
26440 developers find out about vulnerable versions of software packages in the
26441 distribution:
26442
26443 @smallexample
26444 $ guix lint -c cve
26445 gnu/packages/base.scm:652:2: glibc@@2.21: probably vulnerable to CVE-2015-1781, CVE-2015-7547
26446 gnu/packages/gcc.scm:334:2: gcc@@4.9.3: probably vulnerable to CVE-2015-5276
26447 gnu/packages/image.scm:312:2: openjpeg@@2.1.0: probably vulnerable to CVE-2016-1923, CVE-2016-1924
26448 @dots{}
26449 @end smallexample
26450
26451 @xref{Invoking guix lint}, for more information.
26452
26453 Guix follows a functional
26454 package management discipline (@pxref{Introduction}), which implies
26455 that, when a package is changed, @emph{every package that depends on it}
26456 must be rebuilt. This can significantly slow down the deployment of
26457 fixes in core packages such as libc or Bash, since basically the whole
26458 distribution would need to be rebuilt. Using pre-built binaries helps
26459 (@pxref{Substitutes}), but deployment may still take more time than
26460 desired.
26461
26462 @cindex grafts
26463 To address this, Guix implements @dfn{grafts}, a mechanism that allows
26464 for fast deployment of critical updates without the costs associated
26465 with a whole-distribution rebuild. The idea is to rebuild only the
26466 package that needs to be patched, and then to ``graft'' it onto packages
26467 explicitly installed by the user and that were previously referring to
26468 the original package. The cost of grafting is typically very low, and
26469 order of magnitudes lower than a full rebuild of the dependency chain.
26470
26471 @cindex replacements of packages, for grafts
26472 For instance, suppose a security update needs to be applied to Bash.
26473 Guix developers will provide a package definition for the ``fixed''
26474 Bash, say @code{bash-fixed}, in the usual way (@pxref{Defining
26475 Packages}). Then, the original package definition is augmented with a
26476 @code{replacement} field pointing to the package containing the bug fix:
26477
26478 @example
26479 (define bash
26480 (package
26481 (name "bash")
26482 ;; @dots{}
26483 (replacement bash-fixed)))
26484 @end example
26485
26486 From there on, any package depending directly or indirectly on Bash---as
26487 reported by @command{guix gc --requisites} (@pxref{Invoking guix
26488 gc})---that is installed is automatically ``rewritten'' to refer to
26489 @code{bash-fixed} instead of @code{bash}. This grafting process takes
26490 time proportional to the size of the package, usually less than a
26491 minute for an ``average'' package on a recent machine. Grafting is
26492 recursive: when an indirect dependency requires grafting, then grafting
26493 ``propagates'' up to the package that the user is installing.
26494
26495 Currently, the length of the name and version of the graft and that of
26496 the package it replaces (@code{bash-fixed} and @code{bash} in the example
26497 above) must be equal. This restriction mostly comes from the fact that
26498 grafting works by patching files, including binary files, directly.
26499 Other restrictions may apply: for instance, when adding a graft to a
26500 package providing a shared library, the original shared library and its
26501 replacement must have the same @code{SONAME} and be binary-compatible.
26502
26503 The @option{--no-grafts} command-line option allows you to forcefully
26504 avoid grafting (@pxref{Common Build Options, @option{--no-grafts}}).
26505 Thus, the command:
26506
26507 @example
26508 guix build bash --no-grafts
26509 @end example
26510
26511 @noindent
26512 returns the store file name of the original Bash, whereas:
26513
26514 @example
26515 guix build bash
26516 @end example
26517
26518 @noindent
26519 returns the store file name of the ``fixed'', replacement Bash. This
26520 allows you to distinguish between the two variants of Bash.
26521
26522 To verify which Bash your whole profile refers to, you can run
26523 (@pxref{Invoking guix gc}):
26524
26525 @example
26526 guix gc -R `readlink -f ~/.guix-profile` | grep bash
26527 @end example
26528
26529 @noindent
26530 @dots{} and compare the store file names that you get with those above.
26531 Likewise for a complete Guix system generation:
26532
26533 @example
26534 guix gc -R `guix system build my-config.scm` | grep bash
26535 @end example
26536
26537 Lastly, to check which Bash running processes are using, you can use the
26538 @command{lsof} command:
26539
26540 @example
26541 lsof | grep /gnu/store/.*bash
26542 @end example
26543
26544
26545 @node Bootstrapping
26546 @chapter Bootstrapping
26547
26548 @c Adapted from the ELS 2013 paper.
26549
26550 @cindex bootstrapping
26551
26552 Bootstrapping in our context refers to how the distribution gets built
26553 ``from nothing''. Remember that the build environment of a derivation
26554 contains nothing but its declared inputs (@pxref{Introduction}). So
26555 there's an obvious chicken-and-egg problem: how does the first package
26556 get built? How does the first compiler get compiled? Note that this is
26557 a question of interest only to the curious hacker, not to the regular
26558 user, so you can shamelessly skip this section if you consider yourself
26559 a ``regular user''.
26560
26561 @cindex bootstrap binaries
26562 The GNU system is primarily made of C code, with libc at its core. The
26563 GNU build system itself assumes the availability of a Bourne shell and
26564 command-line tools provided by GNU Coreutils, Awk, Findutils, `sed', and
26565 `grep'. Furthermore, build programs---programs that run
26566 @code{./configure}, @code{make}, etc.---are written in Guile Scheme
26567 (@pxref{Derivations}). Consequently, to be able to build anything at
26568 all, from scratch, Guix relies on pre-built binaries of Guile, GCC,
26569 Binutils, libc, and the other packages mentioned above---the
26570 @dfn{bootstrap binaries}.
26571
26572 These bootstrap binaries are ``taken for granted'', though we can also
26573 re-create them if needed (more on that later).
26574
26575 @unnumberedsec Preparing to Use the Bootstrap Binaries
26576
26577 @c As of Emacs 24.3, Info-mode displays the image, but since it's a
26578 @c large image, it's hard to scroll. Oh well.
26579 @image{images/bootstrap-graph,6in,,Dependency graph of the early bootstrap derivations}
26580
26581 The figure above shows the very beginning of the dependency graph of the
26582 distribution, corresponding to the package definitions of the @code{(gnu
26583 packages bootstrap)} module. A similar figure can be generated with
26584 @command{guix graph} (@pxref{Invoking guix graph}), along the lines of:
26585
26586 @example
26587 guix graph -t derivation \
26588 -e '(@@@@ (gnu packages bootstrap) %bootstrap-gcc)' \
26589 | dot -Tps > t.ps
26590 @end example
26591
26592 At this level of detail, things are
26593 slightly complex. First, Guile itself consists of an ELF executable,
26594 along with many source and compiled Scheme files that are dynamically
26595 loaded when it runs. This gets stored in the @file{guile-2.0.7.tar.xz}
26596 tarball shown in this graph. This tarball is part of Guix's ``source''
26597 distribution, and gets inserted into the store with @code{add-to-store}
26598 (@pxref{The Store}).
26599
26600 But how do we write a derivation that unpacks this tarball and adds it
26601 to the store? To solve this problem, the @code{guile-bootstrap-2.0.drv}
26602 derivation---the first one that gets built---uses @code{bash} as its
26603 builder, which runs @code{build-bootstrap-guile.sh}, which in turn calls
26604 @code{tar} to unpack the tarball. Thus, @file{bash}, @file{tar},
26605 @file{xz}, and @file{mkdir} are statically-linked binaries, also part of
26606 the Guix source distribution, whose sole purpose is to allow the Guile
26607 tarball to be unpacked.
26608
26609 Once @code{guile-bootstrap-2.0.drv} is built, we have a functioning
26610 Guile that can be used to run subsequent build programs. Its first task
26611 is to download tarballs containing the other pre-built binaries---this
26612 is what the @code{.tar.xz.drv} derivations do. Guix modules such as
26613 @code{ftp-client.scm} are used for this purpose. The
26614 @code{module-import.drv} derivations import those modules in a directory
26615 in the store, using the original layout. The
26616 @code{module-import-compiled.drv} derivations compile those modules, and
26617 write them in an output directory with the right layout. This
26618 corresponds to the @code{#:modules} argument of
26619 @code{build-expression->derivation} (@pxref{Derivations}).
26620
26621 Finally, the various tarballs are unpacked by the
26622 derivations @code{gcc-bootstrap-0.drv}, @code{glibc-bootstrap-0.drv},
26623 etc., at which point we have a working C tool chain.
26624
26625
26626 @unnumberedsec Building the Build Tools
26627
26628 Bootstrapping is complete when we have a full tool chain that does not
26629 depend on the pre-built bootstrap tools discussed above. This
26630 no-dependency requirement is verified by checking whether the files of
26631 the final tool chain contain references to the @file{/gnu/store}
26632 directories of the bootstrap inputs. The process that leads to this
26633 ``final'' tool chain is described by the package definitions found in
26634 the @code{(gnu packages commencement)} module.
26635
26636 The @command{guix graph} command allows us to ``zoom out'' compared to
26637 the graph above, by looking at the level of package objects instead of
26638 individual derivations---remember that a package may translate to
26639 several derivations, typically one derivation to download its source,
26640 one to build the Guile modules it needs, and one to actually build the
26641 package from source. The command:
26642
26643 @example
26644 guix graph -t bag \
26645 -e '(@@@@ (gnu packages commencement)
26646 glibc-final-with-bootstrap-bash)' | dot -Tps > t.ps
26647 @end example
26648
26649 @noindent
26650 produces the dependency graph leading to the ``final'' C
26651 library@footnote{You may notice the @code{glibc-intermediate} label,
26652 suggesting that it is not @emph{quite} final, but as a good
26653 approximation, we will consider it final.}, depicted below.
26654
26655 @image{images/bootstrap-packages,6in,,Dependency graph of the early packages}
26656
26657 @c See <https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/gnu-system-discuss/2012-10/msg00000.html>.
26658 The first tool that gets built with the bootstrap binaries is
26659 GNU@tie{}Make---noted @code{make-boot0} above---which is a prerequisite
26660 for all the following packages. From there Findutils and Diffutils get
26661 built.
26662
26663 Then come the first-stage Binutils and GCC, built as pseudo cross
26664 tools---i.e., with @code{--target} equal to @code{--host}. They are
26665 used to build libc. Thanks to this cross-build trick, this libc is
26666 guaranteed not to hold any reference to the initial tool chain.
26667
26668 From there the final Binutils and GCC (not shown above) are built.
26669 GCC uses @code{ld}
26670 from the final Binutils, and links programs against the just-built libc.
26671 This tool chain is used to build the other packages used by Guix and by
26672 the GNU Build System: Guile, Bash, Coreutils, etc.
26673
26674 And voilà! At this point we have the complete set of build tools that
26675 the GNU Build System expects. These are in the @code{%final-inputs}
26676 variable of the @code{(gnu packages commencement)} module, and are
26677 implicitly used by any package that uses @code{gnu-build-system}
26678 (@pxref{Build Systems, @code{gnu-build-system}}).
26679
26680
26681 @unnumberedsec Building the Bootstrap Binaries
26682
26683 @cindex bootstrap binaries
26684 Because the final tool chain does not depend on the bootstrap binaries,
26685 those rarely need to be updated. Nevertheless, it is useful to have an
26686 automated way to produce them, should an update occur, and this is what
26687 the @code{(gnu packages make-bootstrap)} module provides.
26688
26689 The following command builds the tarballs containing the bootstrap
26690 binaries (Guile, Binutils, GCC, libc, and a tarball containing a mixture
26691 of Coreutils and other basic command-line tools):
26692
26693 @example
26694 guix build bootstrap-tarballs
26695 @end example
26696
26697 The generated tarballs are those that should be referred to in the
26698 @code{(gnu packages bootstrap)} module mentioned at the beginning of
26699 this section.
26700
26701 Still here? Then perhaps by now you've started to wonder: when do we
26702 reach a fixed point? That is an interesting question! The answer is
26703 unknown, but if you would like to investigate further (and have
26704 significant computational and storage resources to do so), then let us
26705 know.
26706
26707 @unnumberedsec Reducing the Set of Bootstrap Binaries
26708
26709 Our bootstrap binaries currently include GCC, Guile, etc. That's a lot
26710 of binary code! Why is that a problem? It's a problem because these
26711 big chunks of binary code are practically non-auditable, which makes it
26712 hard to establish what source code produced them. Every unauditable
26713 binary also leaves us vulnerable to compiler backdoors as described by
26714 Ken Thompson in the 1984 paper @emph{Reflections on Trusting Trust}.
26715
26716 This is mitigated by the fact that our bootstrap binaries were generated
26717 from an earlier Guix revision. Nevertheless it lacks the level of
26718 transparency that we get in the rest of the package dependency graph,
26719 where Guix always gives us a source-to-binary mapping. Thus, our goal
26720 is to reduce the set of bootstrap binaries to the bare minimum.
26721
26722 The @uref{http://bootstrappable.org, Bootstrappable.org web site} lists
26723 on-going projects to do that. One of these is about replacing the
26724 bootstrap GCC with a sequence of assemblers, interpreters, and compilers
26725 of increasing complexity, which could be built from source starting from
26726 a simple and auditable assembler. Your help is welcome!
26727
26728
26729 @node Porting
26730 @chapter Porting to a New Platform
26731
26732 As discussed above, the GNU distribution is self-contained, and
26733 self-containment is achieved by relying on pre-built ``bootstrap
26734 binaries'' (@pxref{Bootstrapping}). These binaries are specific to an
26735 operating system kernel, CPU architecture, and application binary
26736 interface (ABI). Thus, to port the distribution to a platform that is
26737 not yet supported, one must build those bootstrap binaries, and update
26738 the @code{(gnu packages bootstrap)} module to use them on that platform.
26739
26740 Fortunately, Guix can @emph{cross compile} those bootstrap binaries.
26741 When everything goes well, and assuming the GNU tool chain supports the
26742 target platform, this can be as simple as running a command like this
26743 one:
26744
26745 @example
26746 guix build --target=armv5tel-linux-gnueabi bootstrap-tarballs
26747 @end example
26748
26749 For this to work, the @code{glibc-dynamic-linker} procedure in
26750 @code{(gnu packages bootstrap)} must be augmented to return the right
26751 file name for libc's dynamic linker on that platform; likewise,
26752 @code{system->linux-architecture} in @code{(gnu packages linux)} must be
26753 taught about the new platform.
26754
26755 Once these are built, the @code{(gnu packages bootstrap)} module needs
26756 to be updated to refer to these binaries on the target platform. That
26757 is, the hashes and URLs of the bootstrap tarballs for the new platform
26758 must be added alongside those of the currently supported platforms. The
26759 bootstrap Guile tarball is treated specially: it is expected to be
26760 available locally, and @file{gnu/local.mk} has rules to download it for
26761 the supported architectures; a rule for the new platform must be added
26762 as well.
26763
26764 In practice, there may be some complications. First, it may be that the
26765 extended GNU triplet that specifies an ABI (like the @code{eabi} suffix
26766 above) is not recognized by all the GNU tools. Typically, glibc
26767 recognizes some of these, whereas GCC uses an extra @code{--with-abi}
26768 configure flag (see @code{gcc.scm} for examples of how to handle this).
26769 Second, some of the required packages could fail to build for that
26770 platform. Lastly, the generated binaries could be broken for some
26771 reason.
26772
26773 @c *********************************************************************
26774 @include contributing.texi
26775
26776 @c *********************************************************************
26777 @node Acknowledgments
26778 @chapter Acknowledgments
26779
26780 Guix is based on the @uref{https://nixos.org/nix/, Nix package manager},
26781 which was designed and
26782 implemented by Eelco Dolstra, with contributions from other people (see
26783 the @file{nix/AUTHORS} file in Guix.) Nix pioneered functional package
26784 management, and promoted unprecedented features, such as transactional
26785 package upgrades and rollbacks, per-user profiles, and referentially
26786 transparent build processes. Without this work, Guix would not exist.
26787
26788 The Nix-based software distributions, Nixpkgs and NixOS, have also been
26789 an inspiration for Guix.
26790
26791 GNU@tie{}Guix itself is a collective work with contributions from a
26792 number of people. See the @file{AUTHORS} file in Guix for more
26793 information on these fine people. The @file{THANKS} file lists people
26794 who have helped by reporting bugs, taking care of the infrastructure,
26795 providing artwork and themes, making suggestions, and more---thank you!
26796
26797
26798 @c *********************************************************************
26799 @node GNU Free Documentation License
26800 @appendix GNU Free Documentation License
26801 @cindex license, GNU Free Documentation License
26802 @include fdl-1.3.texi
26803
26804 @c *********************************************************************
26805 @node Concept Index
26806 @unnumbered Concept Index
26807 @printindex cp
26808
26809 @node Programming Index
26810 @unnumbered Programming Index
26811 @syncodeindex tp fn
26812 @syncodeindex vr fn
26813 @printindex fn
26814
26815 @bye
26816
26817 @c Local Variables:
26818 @c ispell-local-dictionary: "american";
26819 @c End: