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Add the compile flag '-Wsign-compare' and adapt the code to fix all
cases of this warning.
Change-Id: I26b08fa5a03e4ac294daf697d32cf9140d84350d
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these two functions are now nearly trivial and much better inline into
makeGoalCommon. keeping them separate also separates information about
goal completion flows and how failure information ends up in `Worker`.
Change-Id: I6af86996e4a2346583371186595e3013c88fb082
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we can use our newfound powers of Goal::work Is A Real Promise to remove
completed goals from continuation promises. apart from being much easier
to follow it's also a lot more efficient because we have the iterator to
the item we are trying to remove, skipping a linear search of the cache.
Change-Id: Ie0190d051c5f4b81304d98db478348b20c209df5
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Goal::work() is a fully usable promise that does not rely on the worker
to report completion conditions. as such we no longer need the `notify`
field that enabled this interplay. we do have to clear goal caches when
destroying the worker though, otherwise goal promises may (incorrectly)
keep goals alive due to strong shared pointers created by childStarted.
Change-Id: Ie607209aafec064dbdf3464fe207d70ba9ee158a
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yet another duplicated field. it's the last one though.
Change-Id: I352df8d306794d262d8c9066f3be78acd40e82cf
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derivation goals still hold a BuildResult member variable since parts of
these results of accumulated in different places, but the Goal class now
no longer has such a field. substitution goals don't need it at all, and
derivation goals should also be refactored to not drop their buildResult
Change-Id: Ic6d3d471cdbe790a6e09a43445e25bedec6ed446
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the field is simply duplicated between the two, and now that we can
return WorkResults from Worker::run we no longer need both of them.
Change-Id: I82fc47d050b39b7bb7d1656445630d271f6c9830
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this will be needed to move all interesting result fields out of Goal
proper and into WorkResult. once that is done we can treat goals as a
totally internal construct of the worker mechanism, which also allows
us to fully stop exposing unclear intermediate state to Worker users.
Change-Id: I98d7778a4b5b2590b7b070bdfc164a22a0ef7190
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since we now propagate goal exceptions properly we no longer need to
check topGoals for a reason to abort early. any early abort reasons,
whether by exception or a clean top goal failure, can now be handled
by inspecting the goal result in the main loop. this greatly reduces
goal-to-goal interactions that do not happen at the main loop level.
since the underscore-free name is now available for use as variables
we'll migrate to that where we currently use `_topGoals` for locals.
Change-Id: I5727c5ea7799647c0a69ab76975b1a03a6558aa6
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drop childException since it's no longer needed. also makes
waitForInput, childFinished, and childTerminated redundant.
Change-Id: I05d88ffd323c5b5c909ac21056162f69ffb0eb9f
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Change-Id: Idd218ec1572eda84dc47accc0dcd8a954d36f098
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there's no reason to have the worker set information on goals that the
goals themselves return from their entry point. doing this in the goal
`work()` function is much cleaner, and a prerequisite to removing more
implicit strong shared references to goals that are currently running.
Change-Id: Ibb3e953ab8482a6a21ce2ed659d5023a991e7923
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this simplifies the worker loop, and lets us remove it entirely later.
note that ideally only one promise waiting for interrupts should exist
in the entire system. not one per event loop, one per *process*. extra
interrupt waiters make interrupt response nondeterministic and as such
aren't great for user experience. if anything wants to react to aborts
caused by explicit interruptions, or anything else, those things would
be much better served using RAII guards such as Finally (or KJ_DEFER).
Change-Id: I41d035ff40172d536e098153c7375b0972110d51
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this was a triumph. i'm making a note here: huge success. it's hard to
overstate my satisfaction! i'm not even angry. i'm being so sincere ri
actually, no. we *are* angry. this was one dumbass odyssey. nobody has
asked for this. but not doing it would have locked us into old, broken
protocols forever or (possibly worse) forced us to write our own async
framework building on the old did-you-mean-continuations in Worker. if
we had done that we'd be locked into ever more, and ever more complex,
manual state management all over the place. this just could not stand.
Change-Id: I43a6de1035febff59d2eff83be9ad52af4659871
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due to event loop scheduling behavior it's possible for a derivation
goal to fully finish (having seen all paths it was asked to create),
but to not notify the worker of this in time to prevent another goal
asking the recently-finished goal for more outputs. if this happened
the finished goal would ignore the request for more outputs since it
considered itself fully done, and the delayed result reporting would
cause the requesting goal to assume its request had been honored. if
the requested goal had finished *properly* the worker would recreate
it instead of asking for more outputs, and this would succeed. it is
thus safe to always recreate goals once they are done, so we now do.
Change-Id: Ifedd69ca153372c623abe9a9b49cd1523588814f
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This splits `ignoreException` into `ignoreExceptionExceptInterrupt`
(which ignores all exceptions except `Interrupt`, which indicates a
SIGINT/CTRL-C) and `ignoreExceptionInDestructor` (which ignores all
exceptions, so that destructors do not throw exceptions).
This prevents many cases where Nix ignores CTRL-C entirely.
See: https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/7245
Upstream-PR: https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/11618
Change-Id: Ie7d2467eedbe840d1b9fa2e88a4e88e4ab26a87b
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Change-Id: Ic2f7bc2bd6a1879ad614e4be81a7214f64eb0e85
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Change-Id: I2d4dcedff0a278d2d8f3d264a9186dfb399275e2
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Change-Id: I38cfe8c7059251b581f1013c4213804f36b985ea
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we'll now loop to update displayed statistics, and use this loop to
limit the update rate to 50 times per second. we could have updated
much more frequently before this (once per iteration of `runImpl`),
much faster than would ever be useful in practice. aggressive stats
updates can even impede progress due to terminal or network delays.
Change-Id: Ifba755a2569f73c919b1fbb06a142c0951395d6d
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Worker::run() is now entirely based on the kj event loop and promises,
so we need not handle awakeness of goals manually any more. every goal
can instead, once it has finished a partial work call, defer itself to
being called again in the next iteration of the loop. same end effect.
Change-Id: I320eee2fa60bcebaabd74d1323fa96d1402c1d15
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notably we will check whether we want to do GC at all only once during
startup, and we'll only attempt GC every ten seconds rather than every
time a goal has finished a partial work call. this shouldn't cause any
problems in practice since relying on auto-gc is not deterministic and
stores in which builds can fill all remaining free space in merely ten
seconds are severely troubled even when gargage collection runs a lot.
Change-Id: I1175a56bf7f4e531f8be90157ad88750ff2ddec4
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Change-Id: Ib112ea9a3e67d5cb3d7d0ded30bbd25c96262470
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Change-Id: I8355d8d3f6c43a812990c1912b048e5735b07f7b
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Revert submission 1946
Reason for revert: regression in building (found via bisection)
Reported by users:
> error: path '/nix/store/04ca5xwvasz6s3jg0k7njz6rzi0d225w-jq-1.7.1-dev' does not exist in the store
Reverted changes: /q/submissionid:1946
Change-Id: I6f1a4b2f7d7ef5ca430e477fc32bca62fd97036b
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nothing needs to signal being still active but not actively pollable,
only that immediate polling for the next goal work phase is in order.
Change-Id: Ia43c1015e94ba4f5f6b9cb92943da608c4a01555
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this was immensely inefficient on large caches, as can exist when many
derivations are buildable simultaneously. since we have smart pointers
to goals we can do cache maintenance in goal deleters instead, and use
the exact iterators instead of doing a linear search. this *does* rely
on goals being deleted to remove them from the cache, which isn't true
for toplevel goals. those would have previously been removed when done
in all cases, removing the cache entry when keep-going is set. this is
arguably incorrect since it might result in those goals being retried,
although that could only happen with dynamic derivations or the likes.
(luckily dynamic derivations not complete enough to allow this at all)
Change-Id: I8e750b868393588c33e4829333d370f2c509ce99
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makeDerivationGoalCommon had the right idea, but it didn't quite go far
enough. let's do the rest and remove the remaining factory duplication.
Change-Id: I1fe32446bdfb501e81df56226fd962f85720725b
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this was a debugging aid from day one that should not have any impact on
build semantics, and if it *does* have an impact on build semantics then
build semantics are seriously broken. keeping the order imposed by these
keys will be impossible once we let a real event loop schedule our jobs.
Change-Id: I5c313324e1f213ab6453d82f41ae5e59de809a5b
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without circular references we do not need weak goal pointers except for
caches, which should not prevent goal destructors running. caches though
cannot create circular references even when they keep strong references.
if we removed goals from caches when their work() is fully finished, not
when their destructors are run, we could keep strong pointers in caches.
since we do not gain much from this we keep those pointers weak for now.
Change-Id: I1d4a6850ff5e264443c90eb4531da89f5e97a3a0
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have DerivationGoal and its subclasses produce a wrapper promise for
their intermediate results instead, and return this wrapper promise.
Worker already handles promises that do not complete immediately, so
we do not have to duplicate this into an entire result type variant.
Change-Id: Iae8dbf63cfc742afda4d415922a29ac5a3f39348
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the new event loop could very occasionally notice that a dependency of
some goal has failed, process the failure, cause the depending goal to
fail accordingly, and in the doing of the latter two steps let further
dependencies that previously have not been reported as failed do their
reporting anyway. in such cases a goal could fail with "1 dependencies
failed", but more than one dependency failure message was shown. we'll
now report the correct number of failed dependency goals in all cases.
Change-Id: I5aa95dcb2db4de4fd5fee8acbf5db833531d81a8
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these can be unique rather than shared because shared_ptr has a
converting constructor. preparatory refactor for something else
and not necessary on its own, and the extra allocations we must
do for shared_ptr control blocks isn't usually relevant anyway.
Change-Id: I5391715545240c6ec8e83a031206edafdfc6462f
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also gets rid of explicit strong references to dependencies of any goal,
and weak references to dependers as well. those are now only held within
promises representing goal completion and thus independent of the goal's
relation to each other. the weak references to dependers was only needed
for notifications, and that's much better handled entirely by kj itself.
Change-Id: I00d06df9090f8d6336ee4bb0c1313a7052fb016b
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now that we have an event loop in the worker we can use it and its
magical execution suspending properties to replace the slot counts
we managed explicitly with semaphores and raii tokens. technically
this would not have needed an event loop base to be doable, but it
is a whole lot easier to wait for a token to be available if there
is a callback mechanism ready for use that doesn't require a whole
damn dedicated abstract method in Goal to work, and specific calls
to that dedicated method strewn all over the worker implementation
Change-Id: I1da7cf386d94e2bbf2dba9b53ff51dbce6a0cff7
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with waitForAWhile turned into promised the core functionality of
waitForInput is now merely to let gc run every so often if needed
Change-Id: I68da342bbc1d67653901cf4502dabfa5bc947628
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this simplifies waitForInput quite a lot, and at the same time makes
polling less thundering-herd-y. it even fixes early polling wakeups!
Change-Id: I6dfa62ce91729b8880342117d71af5ae33366414
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this removes the rather janky did-you-mean-async poll loop we had so
far. sadly kj does not play well with pty file descriptors, so we do
have to add our own async input stream that does not eat pty EIO and
turns it into an exception. that's still a *lot* better than the old
code, and using a real even loop makes everything else easier later.
Change-Id: Idd7e0428c59758602cc530bcad224cd2fed4c15e
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* changes:
Fix passing custom CA files into the builtin:fetchurl sandbox
[security] builtin:fetchurl: Enable TLS verification
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Without this, verifying TLS certificates would fail on macOS, as well
as any system that doesn't have a certificate file at /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt,
which includes e.g. Fedora.
Change-Id: Iaa2e0e9db3747645b5482c82e3e0e4e8f229f5f9
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This is better for privacy and to avoid leaking netrc credentials in a
MITM attack, but also the assumption that we check the hash no longer
holds in some cases (in particular for impure derivations).
Partially reverts https://github.com/NixOS/nix/commit/5db358d4d78aea7204a8f22c5bf2a309267ee038.
(cherry picked from commit c04bc17a5a0fdcb725a11ef6541f94730112e7b6)
(cherry picked from commit f2f47fa725fc87bfb536de171a2ea81f2789c9fb)
(cherry picked from commit 7b39cd631e0d3c3d238015c6f450c59bbc9cbc5b)
Upstream-PR: https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/11585
Change-Id: Ia973420f6098113da05a594d48394ce1fe41fbb9
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These stack traces kind of suck for the reasons mentioned on the
CppTrace page here (no symbols for inline functions is a major one):
https://github.com/jeremy-rifkin/cpptrace
I would consider using CppTrace if it were packaged, but to be honest, I
think that the more reasonable option is actually to move entirely to
out-of-process crash handling and symbolization.
The reason for this is that if you want to generate anything of
substance on SIGSEGV or really any deadly signal, you are stuck in
async-signal-safe land, which is not a place to be trying to run a
symbolizer. LLVM does it anyway, probably carefully, and chromium *can*
do it on debug builds but in general uses crashpad:
https://source.chromium.org/chromium/chromium/src/+/main:base/debug/stack_trace_posix.cc;l=974;drc=82dff63dbf9db05e9274e11d9128af7b9f51ceaa;bpv=1;bpt=1
However, some stack traces are better than *no* stack traces when we get
mystery exceptions falling out the bottom of the program. I've also
promoted the path for "mystery exceptions falling out the bottom of the
program" to hard crash and generate a core dump because although there's
been some months since the last one of these, these are nonetheless
always *atrociously* diagnosed.
We can't improve the crash handling further until either we use Crashpad
(which involves more C++ deps, no thanks) or we put in the ostensibly
work in progress Rust minidump infrastructure, in which case we need to
finish full support for Rust in libutil first.
Sample report:
Lix crashed. This is a bug. We would appreciate if you report it at https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/issues with the following information included:
Exception: std::runtime_error: lol
Stack trace:
0# nix::printStackTrace() in /home/jade/lix/lix3/build/src/nix/../libutil/liblixutil.so
1# 0x000073C9862331F2 in /home/jade/lix/lix3/build/src/nix/../libmain/liblixmain.so
2# 0x000073C985F2E21A in /nix/store/p44qan69linp3ii0xrviypsw2j4qdcp2-gcc-13.2.0-lib/lib/libstdc++.so.6
3# 0x000073C985F2E285 in /nix/store/p44qan69linp3ii0xrviypsw2j4qdcp2-gcc-13.2.0-lib/lib/libstdc++.so.6
4# nix::handleExceptions(std::__cxx11::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char> > const&, std::function<void ()>) in /home/jade/lix/lix3/build/src/nix/../libmain/liblixmain.so
5# 0x00005CF65B6B048B in /home/jade/lix/lix3/build/src/nix/nix
6# 0x000073C985C8810E in /nix/store/dbcw19dshdwnxdv5q2g6wldj6syyvq7l-glibc-2.39-52/lib/libc.so.6
7# __libc_start_main in /nix/store/dbcw19dshdwnxdv5q2g6wldj6syyvq7l-glibc-2.39-52/lib/libc.so.6
8# 0x00005CF65B610335 in /home/jade/lix/lix3/build/src/nix/nix
Change-Id: I1a9f6d349b617fd7145a37159b78ecb9382cb4e9
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This caused an infinite loop before since it would just keep asking the
underlying source for more data.
In practice this happened because an HTTP server served a
response to a HEAD request (for which curl will not retrieve any body or
call our write callback function) with Content-Encoding: br, leading to
decompressing nothing at all and going into an infinite loop.
This adds a test to make sure none of our compression methods do that
again, as well as just patching the HTTP client to never feed empty data
into a compression algorithm (since they absolutely have the right to
throw CompressionError on unexpectedly-short streams!).
Reported on Matrix: https://matrix.to/#/!lymvtcwDJ7ZA9Npq:lix.systems/$8BWQR_zKxCQDJ40C5NnDo4bQPId3pZ_aoDj2ANP7Itc?via=lix.systems&via=matrix.org&via=tchncs.de
Change-Id: I027566e280f0f569fdb8df40e5ecbf46c211dad1
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into main
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* changes:
archive: refactor bad mutable-state API in the NAR parse listener
archive: rename ParseSink to NARParseVisitor
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* Move the extended attribute deletion after the hardlink sanity check. We
shouldn't be removing extended attributes on random files.
* Make the entity owner-writable before attempting to remove extended
attributes, since this operation usually requires write access on the file,
and we shouldn't fail xattr deletion on a file that has been made unwritable
by the builder or a previous canonicalisation pass.
Fixes: https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/issues/507
Change-Id: I7e6ccb71649185764cd5210f4a4794ee174afea6
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This is not a detailed diagnosis, and it's not worth writing one, tbh.
This error basically never happens in normal operation, so diagnosing it
by changing the error on macOS is good enough.
Relevant: https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix-installer/issues/24
Relevant: https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix-installer/issues/18
Relevant: https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/issues/521
Change-Id: I03701f917d116575c72a97502b8e1617679447f2
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Remove the mutable state stuff that assumes that one file is being
written a time. It's true that we don't write multiple files
interleaved, but that mutable state is evil.
Change-Id: Ia1481da48255d901e4b09a9b783e7af44fae8cff
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