snix/nix/utils/default.nix
Ilan Joselevich 91d02d8c84 style: Switch to nixfmt from nixpkgs-fmt
Most of the ecosystem has moved to this formatter,
and many people configured their editors to autoformat it with this formatter.

Closes: https://git.snix.dev/snix/snix/issues/62
Change-Id: Icf39e7836c91fc2ae49fbe22a40a639105bfb0bd
Reviewed-on: https://cl.snix.dev/c/snix/+/30671
Reviewed-by: Florian Klink <flokli@flokli.de>
Tested-by: besadii
Autosubmit: Ilan Joselevich <personal@ilanjoselevich.com>
2025-08-10 13:40:23 +00:00

185 lines
5.8 KiB
Nix

{ depot, lib, ... }:
let
/*
Get the basename of a store path without
the leading hash.
Type: (path | drv | string) -> string
Example:
storePathName ./foo.c
=> "foo.c"
storePathName (writeText "foo.c" "int main() { return 0; }")
=> "foo.c"
storePathName "${hello}/bin/hello"
=> "hello"
*/
storePathName =
p:
if lib.isDerivation p then
p.name
else if builtins.isPath p then
builtins.baseNameOf p
else if builtins.isString p || (builtins.isAttrs p && (p ? outPath || p ? __toString)) then
let
strPath = toString p;
# strip leading storeDir and trailing slashes
noStoreDir = lib.removeSuffix "/" (lib.removePrefix "${builtins.storeDir}/" strPath);
# a basename of a child of a store path isn't really
# referring to a store path, so removing the string
# context is safe (e. g. "hello" for "${hello}/bin/hello").
basename = builtins.unsafeDiscardStringContext (builtins.baseNameOf strPath);
in
# If p is a direct child of storeDir, we need to remove
# the leading hash as well to make sure that:
# `storePathName drv == storePathName (toString drv)`.
if noStoreDir == basename then builtins.substring 33 (-1) basename else basename
else
builtins.throw "Don't know how to get (base)name of " + lib.generators.toPretty { } p;
/*
Query the type of a path exposing the same information as would be by
`builtins.readDir`, but for a single, specific target path.
The information is returned as a tagged value, i. e. an attribute set with
exactly one attribute where the type of the path is encoded in the name
of the single attribute. The allowed tags and values are as follows:
* `regular`: is a regular file, always `true` if returned
* `directory`: is a directory, always `true` if returned
* `missing`: path does not exist, always `true` if returned
* `symlink`: path is a symlink, always `true` if returned
Type: path(-like) -> tag
`tag` refers to the attribute set format of `//nix/tag`.
Example:
pathType ./foo.c
=> { regular = true; }
pathType /home/lukas
=> { directory = true; }
pathType ./result
=> { symlink = true; }
pathType ./link-to-file
=> { symlink = true; }
pathType /does/not/exist
=> { missing = true; }
# Check if a path exists
!(pathType /file ? missing)
# Check if a path is a directory or a symlink to a directory
# A handy shorthand for this is provided as `realPathIsDirectory`.
pathType /path ? directory || (pathType /path).symlink or null == "directory"
# Match on the result using //nix/tag
nix.tag.match (nix.utils.pathType ./result) {
symlink = _: "symlink";
directory = _: "directory";
regular = _: "regular";
missing = _: "path does not exist";
}
=> "symlink"
# Query path type
nix.tag.tagName (pathType /path)
*/
pathType =
path:
let
# baseNameOf is very annoyed if we proceed with string context.
# We need to call toString to prevent unsafeDiscardStringContext
# from importing a path into store which messes with base- and
# dirname of course.
path' = builtins.unsafeDiscardStringContext (toString path);
# To read the containing directory we absolutely need
# to keep the string context, otherwise a derivation
# would not be realized before our check (at eval time)
containingDir = builtins.readDir (builtins.dirOf path);
# Construct tag to use for the value
thisPathType = containingDir.${builtins.baseNameOf path'} or "missing";
# Trick to check if the symlink target exists and is a directory:
# if we append a "/." to the string version of the path, Nix won't
# canocalize it (which would strip any "/." in the path), so if
# path' + "/." exists, we know that the symlink points to an existing
# directory. If not, either the target doesn't exist or is a regular file.
# TODO(sterni): is there a way to check reliably if the symlink target exists?
isSymlinkDir = builtins.pathExists (path' + "/.");
in
{
${thisPathType} = true;
};
pathType' =
path:
let
p = pathType path;
in
if p ? missing then builtins.throw "${lib.generators.toPretty { } path} does not exist" else p;
/*
Check whether the given path is a directory.
Throws if the path in question doesn't exist.
Type: path(-like) -> bool
*/
isDirectory = path: pathType' path ? directory;
/*
Check whether the given path is a regular file.
Throws if the path in question doesn't exist.
Type: path(-like) -> bool
*/
isRegularFile = path: pathType' path ? regular;
/*
Check whether the given path is a symbolic link.
Throws if the path in question doesn't exist.
Type: path(-like) -> bool
*/
isSymlink = path: pathType' path ? symlink;
/*
Checks whether the given value is (or contains) a reference to a
path that will be retained in the store path resulting from a derivation.
So if isReferencablePath returns true, the given value may be used in a
way that allows accessing it at runtime of any Nix built program.
Returns true for:
- Strings with context (if the string is/contains a single path is not verified!)
- Path values
- Derivations
Note that the value still needs to used in a way that forces string context
(and thus reference tracking) to be created, e.g. in string interpolation.
Type: any -> bool
*/
isReferencablePath =
value:
builtins.isPath value
|| lib.isDerivation value
|| (builtins.isString value && builtins.hasContext value);
in
{
inherit
storePathName
pathType
isDirectory
isRegularFile
isSymlink
isReferencablePath
;
}