"content-address*ed*" derivation is misleading because all derivations
are *themselves* content-addressed. What may or may not be
content-addressed is not derivation itself, but the *output* of the
derivation.
The outputs are not *part* of the derivation (for then the derivation
wouldn't be complete before we built it) but rather separate entities
produced by the derivation.
"content-adddress*ed*" is not correctly because it can only describe
what the derivation *is*, and that is not what we are trying to do.
"content-address*ing*" is correct because it describes what the
derivation *does* --- it produces content-addressed data.
This is a big step documenting the store layer on its own, separately from the evaluator (and `builtins.derivation`).
Co-authored-by: Robert Hensing <roberth@users.noreply.github.com>
This seems to be the way to do it now, even though I can't run them
without setting at least one env var.
I'll only fix shellcheck for now. Don't shoot the messenger.
It isn't quite clear to me why the previous commit masked this problem,
but I'm glad shellcheck has an effect or more effect now.
Note that this is just a script that is meant to run outside a
derivation (but also can be called by a derivation builder).
`touch $out` does not belong in it.
`touch $out` worked accidentally in the derivation-based check,
and also in the dev shell, but if pre-commit is invoked without
the dev shell it would fail.
This uses the single-threaded C-based routines from libblake3.
This is not optimal performance-wise but should be a good starting point
for nix compatibility with BLAKE3 hashing until a more performant
implementation based on the multi-threaded BLAKE3 routines
(written in Rust) can be developed.
Using `set --local` is better than using `set`/`set --erase`. `--local`
will preserve any existing `NIX_LINK` value. And the local variable is
automatically removed for any execution path.
It seems reasonable to add the `share` folder from the user profile into
`$XDG_DATA_DIRS` both for daemon and profile execution. Nix could add
package shared files into this folder regardless of how the nix daemon
itself is running.