Crates.io | nix-index |
lib.rs | nix-index |
version | 0.1.7 |
source | src |
created_at | 2023-06-02 13:50:33.389401 |
updated_at | 2023-08-24 17:42:18.871268 |
description | Nix (package manager) indexing primitives |
homepage | https://github.com/nix-community/nix-index |
repository | https://github.com/nix-community/nix-index |
max_upload_size | |
id | 880850 |
size | 202,654 |
nix-index is a tool to quickly locate the package providing a certain file in nixpkgs
. It indexes built derivations found in binary caches.
$ nix-locate 'bin/hello'
hello.out 29,488 x /nix/store/bdjyhh70npndlq3rzmggh4f2dzdsj4xy-hello-2.10/bin/hello
linuxPackages_4_4.dpdk.examples 2,022,224 x /nix/store/jlnk3d38zsk0bp02rp9skpqk4vjfijnn-dpdk-16.07.2-4.4.52-examples/bin/helloworld
linuxPackages.dpdk.examples 2,022,224 x /nix/store/rzx4k0pb58gd1dr9kzwam3vk9r8bfyv1-dpdk-16.07.2-4.9.13-examples/bin/helloworld
linuxPackages_4_10.dpdk.examples 2,022,224 x /nix/store/wya1b0910qidfc9v3i6r9rnbnc9ykkwq-dpdk-16.07.2-4.10.1-examples/bin/helloworld
linuxPackages_grsec_nixos.dpdk.examples 2,022,224 x /nix/store/2wqv94290pa38aclld7sc548a7hnz35k-dpdk-16.07.2-4.9.13-examples/bin/helloworld
camlistore.out 7,938,952 x /nix/store/xn5ivjdyslxldhm5cb4x0lfz48zf21rl-camlistore-0.9/bin/hello
create the database:
$ nix run github:nix-community/nix-index#nix-index
query for a file:
$ nix run github:nix-community/nix-index#nix-locate -- bin/hello
To install the latest development version of nix-index, simply clone the repo and run nix-env -if.
:
$ git clone https://github.com/nix-community/nix-index
$ cd nix-index
$ nix-env -if.
For the stable version, you can either checkout the latest tag (see the list here) or use Nixpkgs' repositories' and install it with:
$ nix-env -iA nixos.nix-index
First, you need to generate an index by running nix-index
(it takes around 5 minutes) . Then, you can use nix-locate pattern
. For more information, see nix-locate --help
and nix-index --help
.
nix-index-database provides pre-generated databases if you don't want to generate a database locally. It also comes with nixos/home-manager modules to use those databases.
Nix-index provides a "command-not-found" script that can print for you the attribute path of unfound commands in your shell. You can either source ${pkgs.nix-index}/etc/command-not-found.sh
in your own shell init files (works for ZSH and Bash for as far as we know) or you can use the following in home-manager / /etc/nixos/configuration.nix
:
programs.command-not-found.enable = false;
# for home-manager, use programs.bash.initExtra instead
programs.bash.interactiveShellInit = ''
source ${pkgs.nix-index}/etc/profile.d/command-not-found.sh
'';
Replace bash
with zsh
if you use zsh
.
Example output:
$ blender
The program 'blender' is currently not installed. You can install it
by typing:
nix-env -iA nixpkgs.blender.out
Or run it once with:
nix-shell -p blender.out --run ...
A home-manager
module is now available to integrate nix-index
with bash
, zsh
, and fish
using this script.
If you find any missing features that you would like to implement, I'm very happy about any PRs! You can also create an issue first if the feature is more complex so we can discuss possible implementations.
Here is a quick description of all relevant files:
bin/{nix-index, nix-locate}.rs
: Implementation of the nix-index / nix-locate command line toolssrc/database.rs
: High-level functions for working with the database formatsrc/files.rs
: The data types for working with file listingssrc/frcode.rs
: Low-level implementation of an encoder to efficiently store many file paths (see comments in the file for more details). Used by database.rs
.src/hydra.rs
: Deals with everything that has to do with downloading from the binary cache (fetching file listings and references)src/nixpkgs.rs
: Implements the gathering of the packages (store paths and attributes) using nix-env
src/package.rs
: High-level data types for representing store paths (sometimes also refered to as a package)src/workset.rs
: A queue used by nix-index
to implement the recursive fetching (fetching references of everything)