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manpages can be rendered using the markdown output of mdbook, the rest
of the manual can generated out of the main doc/manual source tree. we
still use lowdown to actually render manpages instead of eg mdbook-man
because lowdown does generate reasonably good manpages (though that is
also somewhat debatable, but they're a lot better than mdbook-man).
doing this not only lets us drastically simplify the lowdown pipeline,
but also remove all custom {{#include}} handling since now mdbook does
all of it, even for the manpage builds. even the lowdown wrapper isn't
entirely necessary because lowdown can take all wrapper arguments with
command line flags rather than bits of input file content.
This also implements running mdbook in Meson, in order to generate the
manpages. The mdbook outputs are also installed in the usual location.
Co-authored-by: Qyriad <qyriad@qyriad.me>
Change-Id: I60193f9fd0f15d48872f071af35855cda2a0f40b
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Change-Id: Ia1a72348336794b5fb9f2694dd750266089b904e
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Change-Id: I1165f6ef033a5f757ca3716d3f8008ba36b01fd0
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This reverts commit de2884b82b376d10de5c400d8e73bc7d98f195d2.
Change-Id: I1fa301149d7c2ed3d266a40c15b2d010e12e44e6
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This reverts commit 792844fb861ea7367ac2316c78fec055363f2f9e.
Change-Id: I3ca208b62edfd5cd1199478f75cd2edf19a364f6
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This reverts commit 8075541d82d05347321d35b9934ccee5f82142f4.
Change-Id: I05fa6a9de1308a4827a6557cf2807eb47ca64da6
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This reverts commit 1340807e30dba4b3972c31f02861bbaeaeb60e61.
Change-Id: I34d2a80eb3c3e9d79cb02b92cd1189da32d18cb6
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throwing exceptions is fine, but throwing exceptions during exception
handling is hard enough to do correctly that we should just forbid it
entirely out of an overabundance of caution. in cases where terminate
is the correct answer the users of Finally must call it manually now.
Change-Id: Ia51a2cb4a0638500550bfabc89cf01a6d8098983
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Change-Id: I86ead2f969c9e03c9edfa51bbc92ee06393fd7d6
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setting this only on exceptions caused by actual fd access is not
sufficient to diagnose all errors (such as SerialisationError) in
some cases. this usually does not have any negative effects since
those errors will end up killing the process in another way. this
is not a reliable assumption though and we should be using proper
error handling (and closing connections more often, preferring to
close over keeping something open that might be in a weird state)
Change-Id: I1b792cd7ad8ba9ff0f6bd174945ab2575ff2208e
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not needed yet, but returning a resource from the exception handling
path that has ownership of a handle is currently not well-supported.
we could also add a default constructor to Handle, but then we would
also need to change the pool reference to a pointer. eventually that
should be done since now resources can be swapped between pools with
clever moves, but since that's not a problem yet we won't do it now.
Change-Id: I26eb06581f7be34569e9e67a33da736128d167af
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* changes:
Make things that can throw not noexcept anymore
Fix various clang-tidy lints
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this is supposed to act like a finally block does in other languages. a
finally block should be able to throw exceptions of its own rather than
just crashing the entire program when it throws it own exceptions. even
in the rare case of a finally throwing an unexpected exception it might
be better to report the exception from Finally instead of the original,
at least that can keep our program running instead of letting it crash.
Change-Id: Id42011e46b1df369152b4564938c0e93fa1acf32
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it was used incorrectly (not swapped on handle move), only used in one
place (that is now handled with exception handling detection in Handle
itself), and if ever reintroduced should be replaced with a different,
more understandable mechanism (like an explicit dropAsInvalid method).
Change-Id: Ie3e5d5cfa81d335429cb2ee5c3ad85c74a9df17b
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this was never actually used, and bad design in the first place—why
should a bad resource be put back into the idle pool? just drop it.
Change-Id: Idab8774bee19dadae0209d404c4fb86dd4aeba1e
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if a scope owning a resource does not gracefully drop that resource
while handling exceptions from deeper down the call stack we should
assume the resource is invalid state and drop it. currently it *is*
true that such cases do not cause resources to be freed, but thanks
to validator misuses this has so far not caused any larger problem.
Change-Id: Ie4f91bcd60a64d05c5ff9d22cc97954816d13b97
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The big ones here are `trim-trailing-whitespace` and `end-of-file-fixer`
(which makes sure that every file ends with exactly one newline
character).
Change-Id: Idca73b640883188f068f9903e013cf0d82aa1123
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This does involve making a large number of destructors able to throw,
because we had to change it high in the class hierarchy. Oh well.
Change-Id: Ib62d3d6895b755f20322bb8acc9bf43daf0174b2
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* some things that can throw are marked noexcept
yet the linter seems to think not. Maybe they can't throw in practice.
I would rather not have the UB possibility in pretty obvious cold
paths.
* various default-case-missing complaints
* a fair pile of casts from integer to character, which are in fact
deliberate.
* an instance of <https://clang.llvm.org/extra/clang-tidy/checks/bugprone/move-forwarding-reference.html>
* bugprone-not-null-terminated-result on handing a string to curl in
chunks of bytes. our usage is fine.
* reassigning a unique_ptr by CRIMES instead of using release(), then
using release() and ignoring the result. wild. let's use release() for
its intended purpose.
Change-Id: Ic3e7affef12383576213a8a7c8145c27e662513d
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Change-Id: Ie5c954ec73c46c9d3c679ef99a83a29cc7a08352
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Without this, the Meson setup won't bail out if nlohmann_json is
missing, leading to subpar DX (and maybe worse, but I'm not entirely
sure).
Change-Id: I5913111060226b540dcf003257c99a08e84da0de
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one headers (args/root.hh) was simply missing, and the generated headers
were not installed. not all of them *should* be installed either, only a
select few (and sadly this needs a custom target for each one, it seems)
Change-Id: I37b25517895d0e5e521abc1202fa65624de57ed1
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Change-Id: Ia40549e5d0b78ece8dd0722c3a5a032b9915f24b
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This was achieved by running maintainers/buildtime_report.sh on the
build directory of a meson build, then asking "why the heck is json
eating our build times", and strategically moving the json using bits
out of widely included headers.
It turns out that putting literally any metrics whatsoever into the
build had immediate and predictable results.
Results are 1382.5s frontend time -> 1175.4s frontend time, back end
time approximately invariant.
Related: https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/issues/159
Change-Id: I7edea95c8536203325c8bb4dae5f32d727a21b2d
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Change-Id: I34c0ebfb6dcea49bf632d8880e04075335a132bf
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Change-Id: Ibcf1a7848b4b18ec9b0807628ff229079ae7a0fe
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HintFmt(string) invokes the HintFmt("%s", literal) constructor,
which is not what we want here. Add a constructor with a proper name
and call that.
Next step: rename all the other ones to HintFmt::literal(string).
Fixes: https://git.lix.systems/lix-project/lix/issues/178
Change-Id: If52d2eb8864ceb8663e05992e9d1fffef573d6b8
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Overhaul `nix flake update` and `nix flake lock` UX
(cherry picked from commit 12a0ae73dbb37becefa5a442eb4532ff0de9ce65)
Change-Id: Iff3b4f4235ebb1948ec612036b39ab29e4ca22b2
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As I complained in
https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/6784#issuecomment-1421777030 (a
comment on the wrong PR, sorry again!), #6693 introduced a second
completions mechanism to fix a bug. Having two completion mechanisms
isn't so nice.
As @thufschmitt also pointed out, it was a bummer to go from `FlakeRef`
to `std::string` when collecting flake refs. Now it is `FlakeRefs`
again.
The underlying issue that sought to work around was that completion of
arguments not at the end can still benefit from the information from
latter arguments.
To fix this better, we rip out that change and simply defer all
completion processing until after all the (regular, already-complete)
arguments have been passed.
In addition, I noticed the original completion logic used some global
variables. I do not like global variables, because even if they save
lines of code, they also obfuscate the architecture of the code.
I got rid of them moved them to a new `RootArgs` class, which now has
`parseCmdline` instead of `Args`. The idea is that we have many argument
parsers from subcommands and what-not, but only one root args that owns
the other per actual parsing invocation. The state that was global is
now part of the root args instead.
This did, admittedly, add a bunch of new code. And I do feel bad about
that. So I went and added a lot of API docs to try to at least make the
current state of things clear to the next person.
--
This is needed for RFC 134 (tracking issue #7868). It was very hard to
modularize `Installable` parsing when there were two completion
arguments. I wouldn't go as far as to say it is *easy* now, but at least
it is less hard (and the completions test finally passed).
Co-authored-by: Valentin Gagarin <valentin.gagarin@tweag.io>
Change-Id: If18cd5be78da4a70635e3fdcac6326dbfeea71a5
(cherry picked from commit 67eb37c1d0de28160cd25376e51d1ec1b1c8305b)
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this is not needed and introduces a bunch of memset calls, making up for
3% of valgrind cycle estimation *alone*. real-world impact is a lot
lower on our test machine, but we suspect that less powerful machines
would see an impact from dropping this.
Change-Id: Iad10e9d556e64fdeb0bee0059a4e52520058d11e
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This commit adds several meson.build, which successfully build and
install Lix executables, libraries, and headers. Meson does not yet
build docs, Perl bindings, or run tests, which will be added in
following commits. As such, this commit does not remove the existing
build system, or make it the default, and also as such, this commit has
several FIXMEs and TODOs as notes for what should be done before the
existing autoconf + make buildsystem can be removed and Meson made the
default. This commit does not modify any source files.
A Meson-enabled build is also added as a Hydra job, and to
`nix flake check`.
Change-Id: I667c8685b13b7bab91e281053f807a11616ae3d4
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within lix itself this problem is caught by the test suite. outside of
lix itself three cases can be had: either the problem is fully inside
lix libs, fully inside user code, or it exists at the boundary. the
first is caught by the test suite, the second isn't caught at all, and
the third is something lix should not be responsible for.
Change-Id: I95aa35d8cb6f0ef5816a2941c467bc0c15916063
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* changes:
Release notes for builtins.nixVersion change
un-nixes ur lix, a little
issue importer: list issues that are *not* closed when finding existing issues
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I didn't really go attack the docs because we need to pull a bunch of
PRs. I went looking for strings in the code that called lix nix.
Change-Id: I2138bb4dd239096bc530946b281db7f875195b39
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add a reset() method to close the wrapped fd instead of assigning magic
constants. also make the from-fd constructor explicit so you can't
accidentally assign the *wrong* magic constant, or even an unrelated
integer that also just happens to be an fd by pure chance.
Change-Id: I51311b0f6e040240886b5103d39d1794a6acc325
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the parser treats a plain \r as a newline, error reports do not. this
can lead to interesting divergences if anything makes use of this
feature, with error reports pointing to wrong locations in the input (or
even outside the input altogether).
(cherry picked from commit 2be6b143289e5479cc4a2667bb84e879116c2447)
Change-Id: Ieb7f7655bac8cb0cf5734c60bd41723388f2973c
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vfork confers a large performance advantage over fork, measured locally
at 16µs per vfork agains 90µs per fork. however nix *almost always*
follows a vfork up with an execve-family call, melting the performance
advantage from 6x to only 15%. in most of those cases it's doing things
that are undefined behavior (like manipulating the heap, or even
throwing exceptions and trashing the parent process stack).
most notably the one place that could benefit from the vfork performance
improvement is linux derivation sandbox setup—which doesn't use vfork.
Change-Id: I2037b7384d5a4ca24da219a569e1b1f39531410e
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These now have equivalents in the standard lib in C++20. This change was
performed with a custom clang-tidy check which I will submit later.
Executed like so:
ninja -C build && run-clang-tidy -checks='-*,nix-*' -load=build/libnix-clang-tidy.so -p .. -fix ../tests | tee -a clang-tidy-result
Change-Id: I62679e315ff9e7ce72a40b91b79c3e9fc01b27e9
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This is definitely not a stable thing, but it does feel slightly crimes
to put it as an experimental feature. Shrug, up for bikeshedding.
Change-Id: I6ef176e3dee6fb1cac9c0a7a60d553a2c63ea728
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Change-Id: I6d0b5736893c44bddc6f5789b452b434f8671b9b
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This solves the problem of collections of boxed subclasses with virtual
dispatch, which should still be treated as values, since the
indirection is only there due to the virtual dispatch.
Change-Id: I368daedd3f31298e99c6e56a15606337a55494c6
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Copies part of the changes of ac89bb064aeea85a62b82a6daf0ecca7190a28b7
Change-Id: I9ce601875cd6d4db5eb1132d7835c5bab9f126d8
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Do not skip any stack frames when `--show-trace` is given
(cherry picked from commit 0b47783d0a879875d558f0b56e49584f25ceb2d0)
Change-Id: Ia0f18266dbcf97543110110c655c219c7a3e3270
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(cherry picked from commit 2a8fe9a93837733e9dd9ed5c078734a35b203e14)
Change-Id: I71dadfef6b24d9272b206e9e2c408040559d8a1c
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Cleanup `fmt.hh`
(cherry picked from commit 47a1dbb4b8e7913cbb9b4d604728b912e76e4ca0)
Change-Id: Id076a45cb39652f437fe3f8bda10c310a9894777
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We're on C++ 20 now, we don't need this
(cherry picked from commit faaccecbc82d98288582bdc8ca96991796561371)
Change-Id: I172fa336107fd18b1aac2262309682e0d7065d07
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