nixpkgs/flake.nix

63 lines
2.3 KiB
Nix

# Experimental flake interface to Nixpkgs.
# See https://github.com/NixOS/rfcs/pull/49 for details.
{
description = "A collection of packages for the Nix package manager";
outputs = { self }:
let
jobs = import ./pkgs/top-level/release.nix {
nixpkgs = self;
};
lib = import ./lib;
forAllSystems = f: lib.genAttrs lib.systems.flakeExposed (system: f system);
in
{
lib = lib.extend (final: prev: {
nixos = import ./nixos/lib { lib = final; };
nixosSystem = args:
import ./nixos/lib/eval-config.nix (
args // {
modules = args.modules ++ [{
system.nixos.versionSuffix =
".${final.substring 0 8 (self.lastModifiedDate or self.lastModified or "19700101")}.${self.shortRev or "dirty"}";
system.nixos.revision = final.mkIf (self ? rev) self.rev;
}];
} // lib.optionalAttrs (! args?system) {
# Allow system to be set modularly in nixpkgs.system.
# We set it to null, to remove the "legacy" entrypoint's
# non-hermetic default.
system = null;
}
);
});
checks.x86_64-linux.tarball = jobs.tarball;
htmlDocs = {
nixpkgsManual = jobs.manual;
nixosManual = (import ./nixos/release-small.nix {
nixpkgs = self;
}).nixos.manual.x86_64-linux;
};
# The "legacy" in `legacyPackages` doesn't imply that the packages exposed
# through this attribute are "legacy" packages. Instead, `legacyPackages`
# is used here as a substitute attribute name for `packages`. The problem
# with `packages` is that it makes operations like `nix flake show
# nixpkgs` unusably slow due to the sheer number of packages the Nix CLI
# needs to iterate through. But when the Nix CLI sees a `legacyPackages`
# attribute it displays `omitted` instead of iterating through all
# packages, which keeps `nix flake show` on Nixpkgs reasonably fast,
# though less information rich.
legacyPackages = forAllSystems (system: import ./. { inherit system; });
nixosModules = {
notDetected = import ./nixos/modules/installer/scan/not-detected.nix;
};
};
}