nixpkgs-suyu/doc/build-helpers/images/binarycache.section.md
DS f0fb6f0a26 doc: update mkBinaryCache section with admonitions and conventions
The mkBinaryCache section now follows the convention of using one
line per sentence, as well as using admonitions for notes and
examples.

The example syntax was updated to define a fully-working nix package.
2023-12-25 17:34:59 -08:00

2.4 KiB

pkgs.mkBinaryCache

pkgs.mkBinaryCache is a function for creating Nix flat-file binary caches. Such a cache exists as a directory on disk, and can be used as a Nix substituter by passing --substituter file:///path/to/cache to Nix commands.

Nix packages are most commonly shared between machines using HTTP, SSH, or S3, but a flat-file binary cache can still be useful in some situations. For example, you can copy it directly to another machine, or make it available on a network file system. It can also be a convenient way to make some Nix packages available inside a container via bind-mounting.

mkBinaryCache expects an argument with the rootPaths attribute. rootPaths must be a list of derivations. The transitive closure of these derivations' outputs will be copied into the cache.

::: {.note} This function is meant for advanced use cases. The more idiomatic way to work with flat-file binary caches is via the nix-copy-closure command. You may also want to consider dockerTools for your containerization needs. :::

[]{#sec-pkgs-binary-cache-example} :::{.example #ex-mkbinarycache-copying-package-closure}

Copying a package and its closure to another machine with mkBinaryCache

The following derivation will construct a flat-file binary cache containing the closure of hello.

{ mkBinaryCache, hello }:
mkBinaryCache {
  rootPaths = [hello];
}

Build the cache on a machine. Note that the command still builds the exact nix package above, but adds some boilerplate to build it directly from an expression.

$ nix-build -E 'let pkgs = import <nixpkgs> {}; in pkgs.callPackage ({ mkBinaryCache, hello }: mkBinaryCache { rootPaths = [hello]; }) {}'
/nix/store/azf7xay5xxdnia4h9fyjiv59wsjdxl0g-binary-cache

Copy the resulting directory to another machine, which we'll call host2:

$ scp result host2:/tmp/hello-cache

At this point, the cache can be used as a substituter when building derivations on host2:

$ nix-build -A hello '<nixpkgs>' \
  --option require-sigs false \
  --option trusted-substituters file:///tmp/hello-cache \
  --option substituters file:///tmp/hello-cache
/nix/store/zhl06z4lrfrkw5rp0hnjjfrgsclzvxpm-hello-2.12.1

:::