Painless dependencies for Nix projects. Read more in the Getting started section below.
niv
is available in nixpkgs
as niv
:
$ nix-env -iA nixpkgs.niv
Alternatively, run the following command to install the development version:
$ nix-env -iA niv -f https://github.com/nmattia/niv/tarball/master \
--substituters https://niv.cachix.org \
--trusted-public-keys niv.cachix.org-1:X32PCg2e/zAm3/uD1ScqW2z/K0LtDyNV7RdaxIuLgQM=
Inside the provided nix shell:
$ repl
Run the test suite with this command:
$ ./script/test
niv
simplifies adding and updating dependencies in Nix
projects. It uses a single file, nix/sources.json
, where it stores the data
necessary for fetching and updating the packages.
- Add: inserts a package in
nix/sources.json
. - Update: updates one or all packages in
nix/sources.json
. - Drop: deletes a package from
nix/sources.json
.
niv
has some utility functions:
- Init: bootstraps a Nix project, in particular creates a
nix/sources.json
file containingniv
andnixpkgs
as well as anix/sources.nix
file that returns the sources as a Nix object. - Show: shows the packages' information.
- Modify: modifies attributes without performing an update.
The following environment variables are read by niv
:
Name | Note |
---|---|
GITHUB_TOKEN or NIV_GITHUB_TOKEN | When set, the value is used to authenticate GitHub API requests. |
GITHUB_HOST or NIV_GITHUB_HOST | The GitHub host to use when fetching packages. Port may be appended here. |
GITHUB_API_HOST or NIV_GITHUB_API_HOST | The host used when performing GitHub API requests. Use GITHUB_API_PORT for specifying the port. |
GITHUB_API_PORT or NIV_GITHUB_API_PORT | The port used when performing GitHub API requests. Defaults to 443 for secure requests. Defaults to 80 for insecure requests. See also: GITHUB_INSECURE . |
NIV_GITHUB_INSECURE | When set to anything but the empty string, requests are performed over http instead of https . |
NIV_GITHUB_PATH | The base path used when performing GitHub API requests. |
The next two sections cover common use cases and full command description.
This section covers common use cases:
- Bootstrapping a Nix project.
- Tracking a different nixpkgs branch.
- Importing packages from GitHub.
- Fetching packages from custom URLs.
Use the init
command when starting a new Nix project or when porting an
existing Nix project to niv:
$ niv init
...
$ tree
.
└── nix
├── sources.json
└── sources.nix
1 directory, 2 files
The file nix/sources.json
is the file used by niv to store versions and is
initialized with nixpkgs:
{
"nixpkgs": {
"branch": "release-21.05",
"description": "Nix Packages collection",
"homepage": "",
"owner": "NixOS",
"repo": "nixpkgs",
"rev": "5f244caea76105b63d826911b2a1563d33ff1cdc",
"sha256": "1xlgynfw9svy7nvh9nkxsxdzncv9hg99gbvbwv3gmrhmzc3sar75",
"type": "tarball",
"url": "https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/5f244caea76105b63d826911b2a1563d33ff1cdc.tar.gz",
"url_template": "https://github.com/<owner>/<repo>/archive/<rev>.tar.gz"
}
}
To use this dependency, import
the file nix/sources.nix
, e.g.:
{ sources ? import ./sources.nix }: # import the sources
import sources.nixpkgs # and use them again!
{ overlays = [] ; config = {}; }
For more information about importing sources to your nix files, check the frequently asked questions.
The init
command sets the nix/sources.json
to the content of the file
data/nixpkgs.json. Currently, you would be tracking the
release-21.05
branch.
Run the following command to
update it to the last commit of the configured branch:
$ niv update nixpkgs
To change the branch being tracked run this command:
$ niv update nixpkgs -b master # equivalent to --branch master
The add
command will infer information about the package being added, when
possible. This works very well for GitHub repositories. Run this command to add
jq to your project:
$ niv add stedolan/jq
The following data was added in nix/sources.json
for jq
:
{
"homepage": "http://stedolan.github.io/jq/",
"url": "https://github.com/stedolan/jq/archive/9fa2e51099c55af56e3e541dc4b399f11de74abe.tar.gz",
"owner": "stedolan",
"branch": "master",
"url_template": "https://github.com/<owner>/<repo>/archive/<rev>.tar.gz",
"repo": "jq",
"sha256": "0819rvk8057qgcqvgn7fpldvly2pfdw9fxcjrlqa8gr59p8a1cic",
"description": "Command-line JSON processor",
"rev": "9fa2e51099c55af56e3e541dc4b399f11de74abe"
}
It is possible to use niv to fetch packages from custom URLs. Run this command
to add the Haskell compiler GHC to your nix/sources.json
:
$ niv add ghc \
-v 8.4.3 \
-t 'https://downloads.haskell.org/~ghc/<version>/ghc-<version>-i386-deb8-linux.tar.xz'
The option -v
sets the "version" attribute to 8.4.3
. The option -t
sets a
template that can be reused by niv when fetching a new URL (see the
documentation for add and update).
The type of the dependency is guessed from the provided URL template, if -T
is not specified.
For updating the version of GHC used run this command:
$ niv update ghc -v 8.6.2
replace_niv_help
replace_niv_add_help
replace_niv_update_help
replace_niv_modify_help
replace_niv_drop_help
replace_niv_init_help
replace_niv_show_help
- Can I use private GitHub repositories?
- How do I import and use the content of a source?
- How do I import a subpath of a source?
- How do I import NixOS modules
- Can I use local packages?
Yes. There are two ways:
When using the git protocol, your public SSH keypair is used to authenticate you:
$ niv add git [email protected]:my_user/my_private_repo
in order to niv add
a private github repo you'll need to:
- create a .netrc file with the following content
machine github.com
login YOUR_GITHUB_USER_NAME
password YOUR_GITHUB_TOKEN
- add the path to the above file to
/etc/nix/nix.conf
:
netrc-file = /PATH/TO/.netrc
- set
GITHUB_TOKEN
env var when callingniv add
GITHUB_TOKEN=$YOUR_GITHUB_TOKEN niv add ...
The way to import a source depend mainly on the content targetted by this source. A source could be a file, a repository with no knowledge of nix or a repository already in the nix ecosystem.
In the case of a nix based source, you'll often find a default.nix
at the
root. Let's take this repository as example. We can add it to our sources.json
with the following command.
$ niv add nmattia/niv
We can now import niv to use it a nix expression, e.g.:
{ sources ? import nix/sources.nix }:
let niv = import sources.niv {};
in { inherit niv; } # A glorious expression using the reference to niv
Rather than use the resulting derivation directly, you can add it to your custom nixpkgs via the overlay system.
{ sources ? import nix/sources.nix}:
let overlay = _: pkgs: {
niv = (import sources.niv {}).niv;
};
nixpkgs = import sources.nixpkgs { overlays = [ overlay ]; config = {}; };
in { inherit (nixpkgs) niv; } # A glorious expression where nixpkgs.niv is referenced
You can also reference a simple file, a folder or a repo without nix knowledge with niv. In these cases, you can use the source in your nix expression without importing it.
The following exemple will compile gnu hello while using this technique to retrieve the source. First, we need to add the new source.
$ niv add hello-src -v 2.10 -t 'https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/hello/hello-<version>.tar.gz'
Then, we can use it inside a nix expression.
{ sources ? import nix/sources.nix }:
let hello_src = sources.hello-src;
nixpkgs = import sources.nixpkgs {};
in nixpkgs.stdenv.mkDerivation {
pname = "hello";
version = "custom";
src = hello_src;
}
sources.hello-src.outPath
) instead of the source directly. See
this issue for more details.
In order to use the directory dir
of a my-package
, use the following
pattern:
let
sources = import ./nix/sources.nix;
in sources.my-package + "/dir"
in this example, sources.my-package
becomes my-package
's root directory, and + "/dir"
appends the
subdirectory.
After the package containing the modules has been niv add
ed, importing the
modules is straightforward:
let
sources = import ./nix/sources.nix;
in {
imports = [ (sources.package + "/path/to/module") ];
}
If you need to use a local path as a source -- especially convenient when
modifying dependencies -- niv
allows you to override the sources.json
via
environment variables. To override a source foo
with a local path
./bar/baz
, set the environment variable NIV_OVERRIDE_foo
to ./bar/baz
.
Generally, if the environment variable NIV_OVERRIDE_<name>
is set and you
have a source named <name>
then niv
will use the value of
NIV_OVERRIDE_<name>
as the outPath
of that source. All non-alphanumeric
characters in the source name are escaped to the character _
; i.e. to
override the package my package-foo
you need to set the environment variable
NIV_OVERRIDE_my_package_foo
.