nvfetcher
nvfetcher is a tool to automate packages updates in flakes repos. It's built on top of shake,
integrating nvchecker.
It's very simple -- most complicated works are done by nvchecker, nvfetcher just wires it with prefetch tools,
producing only one artifact as the result of build.
nvfetcher cli program accepts a TOML file as config, which defines a set of package sources to run.
Overview
For example, given the following configuration file:
# nvfetcher.toml
[feeluown-core]
src.pypi = "feeluown"
fetch.pypi = "feeluown"
[qliveplayer]
src.github = "IsoaSFlus/QLivePlayer"
fetch.github = "IsoaSFlus/QLivePlayer"
running nvfetcher build
will create sources.nix
like:
# sources.nix
{ fetchgit, fetchurl }:
{
feeluown-core = {
pname = "feeluown-core";
version = "3.7.6";
src = fetchurl {
sha256 = "1bsz149dv3j5sfbynjrqsqbkkxdxkdlq4sdx2vi8whvfwfg0j2f0";
url = "https://pypi.io/packages/source/f/feeluown/feeluown-3.7.6.tar.gz";
};
};
qliveplayer = {
pname = "qliveplayer";
version = "3.22.0";
src = fetchgit {
url = "https://github.com/IsoaSFlus/QLivePlayer";
rev = "3.22.0";
fetchSubmodules = false;
deepClone = false;
leaveDotGit = false;
sha256 = "192g42pvibms2rsjh68fck4bj59b10ay9zqcf2hqhcka0xmnyb09";
};
};
}
We tell nvfetcher how to get the latest version number of packages and how to fetch their sources given version numbers,
and nvfetcher will help us keep their version and prefetched SHA256 sums up-to-date, stored in sources.nix
.
Shake will help us handle necessary rebuilds -- we check versions of packages during each run, but only prefetch them when needed.
Live examples
How to use the generated sources file? Here are some examples:
Usage
Basically, there are two ways to use nvfetcher, where the difference is how we provide package sources definitions to it.
No matter which way you use it in, CLI options are inherited from shake with two targets, typically used as:
nvfetcher build
- our main purpose, creating sources.nix
nvfetcher clean
- clean up cache and remove sources.nix
nvfetcher uses build
as the target if no specified
You can specify -j
to enable parallelism
CLI
To run nvfetcher as a CLI program, you'll need to provide package sources defined in TOML.
Aavailable CLI options:
-c
(--config
) - path to the TOML configuration file
-o
(--output
) - path to the output nix file
-v
(--version
) - print nvfetcher version
-l
(--log
) - path to log file, where nvfetcher dumps the version changes
Each package corresponds to a TOML table, whose name is encoded as table key;
there are two pairs in each table:
- a nvchecker configuration, how to track version updates
src.github = owner/repo
- the latest gituhb release
src.pypi = pypi_name
- the latest pypi release
src.git = git_url
- the latest commit of a repo
src.archpkg = archlinux_pkg_name
-- the latest version of an archlinux package
src.aur = aur_pkg_name
-- the latest version of an aur package
src.manual = v
-- a fixed version, which never updates
src.repology = project:repo
-- the latest version from repology
- a nix fetcher function, how to fetch the package given the version number.
$ver
is available, which will be set to the result of nvchecker.
fetch.github = owner/repo
or owner/repo:rev
(default to $ver
if no rev
specified)
fetch.pypi = pypi_name
or pypi_name:ver
(default to $ver
if no ver
specified)
fetch.git = git_url
or git_url:rev
(default to $ver
if no rev
specified)
fetch.url = url
You can find an example of the configuration file, see nvfetcher_example.toml
.
Haskell library
nvfetcher itsetlf is a Haskell library as well, whereas the CLI program is just a trivial wrapper of the library. You can create a Haskell program depending on it directly, creating an entry point. In this case, we can define packages in Haskell language, getting rid of TOML constraints.
You can find an example of using nvfetcher in the library way, see Main_example.hs
.
Documentation
For details of the library, documentation of released versions is available on Hackage,
and of master is on our github pages.
Limitations
There is no way to check the equality over version sources and fetchers, so If you change either of them in a package,
you will need to rebuild everything, i.e. run nvfetcher clean
to remove shake databsae, to make sure that
our build system works correctly. We could automate this process, for example,
calculate the hash of the configuration file and bump shakeVersion
to trigger the rebuild.
However, this shouldn't happen frequently and we want to minimize the changes, so it's left for you to do manually.
Adding or removing a package doesn't require such rebuild
Contributing
Issues and PRs are always welcome. _(:з」∠)_