nix
A tool for reproducible and declarative configuration management.
Warning
This program is experimental and its interface is subject to change.
Synopsis
nix
[option...] subcommand
where subcommand is one of the following:
Help commands:
nix help
- show help aboutnix
or a particular subcommandnix help-stores
- show help about store types and their settings
Main commands:
nix build
- build a derivation or fetch a store pathnix develop
- run a bash shell that provides the build environment of a derivationnix flake
- manage Nix flakesnix profile
- manage Nix profilesnix run
- run a Nix applicationnix search
- search for packagesnix shell
- run a shell in which the specified packages are available
Main commands:
nix repl
- start an interactive environment for evaluating Nix expressions
Infrequently used commands:
nix bundle
- bundle an application so that it works outside of the Nix storenix copy
- copy paths between Nix storesnix edit
- open the Nix expression of a Nix package in $EDITORnix eval
- evaluate a Nix expressionnix fmt
- reformat your code in the standard stylenix log
- show the build log of the specified packages or paths, if availablenix path-info
- query information about store pathsnix registry
- manage the flake registrynix why-depends
- show why a package has another package in its closure
Utility/scripting commands:
nix config
- manipulate the Lix configurationnix daemon
- daemon to perform store operations on behalf of non-root clientsnix derivation
- Work with derivations, Nix's notion of a build plan.nix hash
- compute and convert cryptographic hashesnix key
- generate and convert Nix signing keysnix nar
- create or inspect NAR filesnix print-dev-env
- print shell code that can be sourced by bash to reproduce the build environment of a derivationnix realisation
- manipulate a Nix realisationnix store
- manipulate a Nix store
Commands for upgrading or troubleshooting your Nix installation:
nix doctor
- check your system for potential problems and print a PASS or FAIL for each checknix upgrade-nix
- upgrade Nix to the stable version declared in Nixpkgs
Examples
- Create a new flake:
## nix flake new hello
## cd hello
- Build the flake in the current directory:
## nix build
## ./result/bin/hello
Hello, world!
- Run the flake in the current directory:
## nix run
Hello, world!
- Start a development shell for hacking on this flake:
## nix develop
## unpackPhase
## cd hello-*
## configurePhase
## buildPhase
## ./hello
Hello, world!
## installPhase
## ../outputs/out/bin/hello
Hello, world!
Description
Lix is a tool for building software, configurations and other artifacts in a reproducible and declarative way. For more information, see the Lix homepage.
Lix is a fork of the original implementation CppNix.
Installables
Warning
Installables are part of the unstable
nix-command
experimental feature, and subject to change without notice.
Many nix
subcommands operate on one or more installables.
These are command line arguments that represent something that can be realised in the Nix store.
The following types of installable are supported by most commands:
- Flake output attribute (experimental)
- This is the default
- Store path
- This is assumed if the argument is a Nix store path or a symlink to a Nix store path
- Nix file, optionally qualified by an attribute path
- Specified with
--file
/-f
- Nix expression, optionally qualified by an attribute path
- Specified with
--expr
/-E
For most commands, if no installable is specified, .
is assumed.
That is, Lix will operate on the default flake output attribute of the flake in the current directory.
Flake output attribute
Warning
Flake output attribute installables depend on both the
flakes
andnix-command
experimental features, and subject to change without notice.
Example: nixpkgs#hello
These have the form flakeref[#
attrpath], where flakeref is a
flake reference and attrpath is an optional attribute path. For
more information on flakes, see the nix flake
manual
page. Flake references are most commonly a flake
identifier in the flake registry (e.g. nixpkgs
), or a raw path
(e.g. /path/to/my-flake
or .
or ../foo
), or a full URL
(e.g. github:nixos/nixpkgs
or path:.
)
When the flake reference is a raw path (a path without any URL
scheme), it is interpreted as a path:
or git+file:
url in the following
way:
- If the path is within a Git repository, then the url will be of the form
git+file://[GIT_REPO_ROOT]?dir=[RELATIVE_FLAKE_DIR_PATH]
whereGIT_REPO_ROOT
is the path to the root of the git repository, andRELATIVE_FLAKE_DIR_PATH
is the path (relative to the directory root) of the closest parent of the given path that contains aflake.nix
within the git repository. If no such directory exists, then Lix will error-out.
Note that the search will only include files indexed by git. In particular, files
which are matched by .gitignore
or have never been git add
-ed will not be
available in the flake. If this is undesirable, specify path:<directory>
explicitly;
For example, if /foo/bar
is a git repository with the following structure:
.
└── baz
├── blah
│ └── file.txt
└── flake.nix
Then /foo/bar/baz/blah
will resolve to git+file:///foo/bar?dir=baz
- If the supplied path is not a git repository, then the url will have the form
path:FLAKE_DIR_PATH
whereFLAKE_DIR_PATH
is the closest parent of the supplied path that contains aflake.nix
file (within the same file-system). If no such directory exists, then Lix will error-out.
For example, if /foo/bar/flake.nix
exists, then /foo/bar/baz/
will resolve to
path:/foo/bar
If attrpath is omitted, Lix tries some default values; for most
subcommands, the default is packages.
system.default
(e.g. packages.x86_64-linux.default
), but some subcommands have
other defaults. If attrpath is specified, attrpath is
interpreted as relative to one or more prefixes; for most
subcommands, these are packages.
system,
legacyPackages.*system*
and the empty prefix. Thus, on
x86_64-linux
nix build nixpkgs#hello
will try to build the
attributes packages.x86_64-linux.hello
,
legacyPackages.x86_64-linux.hello
and hello
.
Store path
Example: /nix/store/v5sv61sszx301i0x6xysaqzla09nksnd-hello-2.10
These are paths inside the Nix store, or symlinks that resolve to a path in the Nix store.
A store derivation is also addressed by store path.
Example: /nix/store/p7gp6lxdg32h4ka1q398wd9r2zkbbz2v-hello-2.10.drv
If you want to refer to an output path of that store derivation, add the output name preceded by a caret (^
).
Example: /nix/store/p7gp6lxdg32h4ka1q398wd9r2zkbbz2v-hello-2.10.drv^out
All outputs can be referred to at once with the special syntax ^*
.
Example: /nix/store/p7gp6lxdg32h4ka1q398wd9r2zkbbz2v-hello-2.10.drv^*
Nix file
Example: --file /path/to/nixpkgs hello
When the option -f
/ --file
path [attrpath...] is given, installables are interpreted as the value of the expression in the Nix file at path.
If attribute paths are provided, commands will operate on the corresponding values accessible at these paths.
The Nix expression in that file, or any selected attribute, must evaluate to a derivation.
To emulate the nix-build '<nixpkgs>' -A hello
pattern, use:
$ nix build -f '<nixpkgs>' hello
Nix expression
Example: --expr 'import <nixpkgs> {}' hello
When the option -E
/ --expr
expression [attrpath...] is given, installables are interpreted as the value of the of the Nix expression.
If attribute paths are provided, commands will operate on the corresponding values accessible at these paths.
The Nix expression, or any selected attribute, must evaluate to a derivation.
You may need to specify --impure
if the expression references impure inputs (such as <nixpkgs>
).
To emulate the `nix-build -E 'with import
$ nix build --impure -E 'with import <nixpkgs> { }; hello'
Derivation output selection
Derivations can have multiple outputs, each corresponding to a
different store path. For instance, a package can have a bin
output
that contains programs, and a dev
output that provides development
artifacts like C/C++ header files. The outputs on which nix
commands
operate are determined as follows:
- You can explicitly specify the desired outputs using the syntax installable
^
output1,
...,
outputN — that is, a caret followed immediately by a comma-separated list of derivation outputs to select. For installables specified as Flake output attributes or Store paths, the output is specified in the same argument:
For example, you can obtain the dev
and static
outputs of the glibc
package:
## nix build 'nixpkgs#glibc^dev,static'
## ls ./result-dev/include/ ./result-static/lib/
…
and likewise, using a store path to a "drv" file to specify the derivation:
## nix build '/nix/store/gzaflydcr6sb3567hap9q6srzx8ggdgg-glibc-2.33-78.drv^dev,static'
…
For -e
/--expr
and -f
/--file
, the derivation output is specified as part of the attribute path:
$ nix build -f '<nixpkgs>' 'glibc^dev,static'
$ nix build --impure -E 'import <nixpkgs> { }' 'glibc^dev,static'
This syntax is the same even if the actual attribute path is empty:
$ nix build -E 'let pkgs = import <nixpkgs> { }; in pkgs.glibc' '^dev,static'
- You can also specify that all outputs should be used using the
syntax installable
^*
. For example, the following shows the size of all outputs of theglibc
package in the binary cache:
## nix path-info --closure-size --eval-store auto --store https://cache.nixos.org 'nixpkgs#glibc^*'
/nix/store/g02b1lpbddhymmcjb923kf0l7s9nww58-glibc-2.33-123 33208200
/nix/store/851dp95qqiisjifi639r0zzg5l465ny4-glibc-2.33-123-bin 36142896
/nix/store/kdgs3q6r7xdff1p7a9hnjr43xw2404z7-glibc-2.33-123-debug 155787312
/nix/store/n4xa8h6pbmqmwnq0mmsz08l38abb06zc-glibc-2.33-123-static 42488328
/nix/store/q6580lr01jpcsqs4r5arlh4ki2c1m9rv-glibc-2.33-123-dev 44200560
and likewise, using a store path to a "drv" file to specify the derivation:
## nix path-info --closure-size '/nix/store/gzaflydcr6sb3567hap9q6srzx8ggdgg-glibc-2.33-78.drv^*'
…
meta.outputsToInstall
, Lix will use those outputs. For
example, since the package nixpkgs#libxml2
has this attribute:
## nix eval 'nixpkgs#libxml2.meta.outputsToInstall'
[ "bin" "man" ]
a command like nix shell nixpkgs#libxml2
will provide only those
two outputs by default.
Note that a store derivation (given by its .drv
file store path) doesn't have
any attributes like meta
, and thus this case doesn't apply to it.
- Otherwise, Lix will use all outputs of the derivation.
Nix stores
Most nix
subcommands operate on a Nix store. These are documented
in nix help-stores
.
Options
Logging-related options:
-
--debug
Set the logging verbosity level to 'debug'. -
--log-format
format Set the format of log output; one ofraw
,internal-json
,bar
orbar-with-logs
. -
--print-build-logs
/-L
Print full build logs on standard error. -
--quiet
Decrease the logging verbosity level. -
--verbose
/-v
Increase the logging verbosity level.
Miscellaneous global options:
-
--help
Show usage information. -
--offline
Disable substituters and consider all previously downloaded files up-to-date. -
--option
name value Set the Lix configuration setting name to value (overridingnix.conf
). -
--refresh
Consider all previously downloaded files out-of-date. -
--version
Show version information.
Note
See man nix.conf
for overriding configuration settings with command line flags.