Global configuration
Nix comes with certain defaults about what packages can and
cannot be installed, based on a package's metadata. By default, Nix
will prevent installation if any of the following criteria are
true:
The package is thought to be broken, and has had
its meta.broken set to
true.
The package's meta.license is set
to a license which is considered to be unfree.
The package has known security vulnerabilities but
has not or can not be updated for some reason, and a list of issues
has been entered in to the package's
meta.knownVulnerabilities.
Note that all this is checked during evaluation already,
and the check includes any package that is evaluated.
In particular, all build-time dependencies are checked.
nix-env -qa will (attempt to) hide any packages
that would be refused.
Each of these criteria can be altered in the nixpkgs
configuration.
The nixpkgs configuration for a NixOS system is set in the
configuration.nix, as in the following example:
{
nixpkgs.config = {
allowUnfree = true;
};
}
However, this does not allow unfree software for individual users.
Their configurations are managed separately.
A user's of nixpkgs configuration is stored in a user-specific
configuration file located at
~/.config/nixpkgs/config.nix. For example:
{
allowUnfree = true;
}
Note that we are not able to test or build unfree software on Hydra
due to policy. Most unfree licenses prohibit us from either executing or
distributing the software.
Installing broken packages
There are two ways to try compiling a package which has been
marked as broken.
For allowing the build of a broken package once, you can use an
environment variable for a single invocation of the nix tools:
$ export NIXPKGS_ALLOW_BROKEN=1
For permanently allowing broken packages to be built, you may
add allowBroken = true; to your user's
configuration file, like this:
{
allowBroken = true;
}
Installing unfree packages
There are several ways to tweak how Nix handles a package
which has been marked as unfree.
To temporarily allow all unfree packages, you can use an
environment variable for a single invocation of the nix tools:
$ export NIXPKGS_ALLOW_UNFREE=1
It is possible to permanently allow individual unfree packages,
while still blocking unfree packages by default using the
allowUnfreePredicate configuration
option in the user configuration file.
This option is a function which accepts a package as a
parameter, and returns a boolean. The following example
configuration accepts a package and always returns false:
{
allowUnfreePredicate = (pkg: false);
}
A more useful example, the following configuration allows
only allows flash player and visual studio code:
{
allowUnfreePredicate = (pkg: elem (builtins.parseDrvName pkg.name).name [ "flashplayer" "vscode" ]);
}
It is also possible to whitelist and blacklist licenses
that are specifically acceptable or not acceptable, using
whitelistedLicenses and
blacklistedLicenses, respectively.
The following example configuration whitelists the
licenses amd and wtfpl:
{
whitelistedLicenses = with stdenv.lib.licenses; [ amd wtfpl ];
}
The following example configuration blacklists the
gpl3 and agpl3 licenses:
{
blacklistedLicenses = with stdenv.lib.licenses; [ agpl3 gpl3 ];
}
A complete list of licenses can be found in the file
lib/licenses.nix of the nixpkgs tree.
Installing insecure packages
There are several ways to tweak how Nix handles a package
which has been marked as insecure.
To temporarily allow all insecure packages, you can use an
environment variable for a single invocation of the nix tools:
$ export NIXPKGS_ALLOW_INSECURE=1
It is possible to permanently allow individual insecure
packages, while still blocking other insecure packages by
default using the permittedInsecurePackages
configuration option in the user configuration file.
The following example configuration permits the
installation of the hypothetically insecure package
hello, version 1.2.3:
{
permittedInsecurePackages = [
"hello-1.2.3"
];
}
It is also possible to create a custom policy around which
insecure packages to allow and deny, by overriding the
allowInsecurePredicate configuration
option.
The allowInsecurePredicate option is a
function which accepts a package and returns a boolean, much
like allowUnfreePredicate.
The following configuration example only allows insecure
packages with very short names:
{
allowInsecurePredicate = (pkg: (builtins.stringLength (builtins.parseDrvName pkg.name).name) <= 5);
}
Note that permittedInsecurePackages is
only checked if allowInsecurePredicate is not
specified.
Modify
packages via packageOverrides
You can define a function called
packageOverrides in your local
~/.config/nixpkgs/config.nix to override nix packages. It
must be a function that takes pkgs as an argument and return modified
set of packages.
{
packageOverrides = pkgs: rec {
foo = pkgs.foo.override { ... };
};
}
Declarative Package Management
Build an environment
Using packageOverrides, it is possible to manage
packages declaratively. This means that we can list all of our desired
packages within a declarative Nix expression. For example, to have
aspell, bc,
ffmpeg, coreutils,
gdb, nixUnstable,
emscripten, jq,
nox, and silver-searcher, we could
use the following in ~/.config/nixpkgs/config.nix:
{
packageOverrides = pkgs: with pkgs; {
myPackages = pkgs.buildEnv {
name = "my-packages";
paths = [ aspell bc coreutils gdb ffmpeg nixUnstable emscripten jq nox silver-searcher ];
};
};
}
To install it into our environment, you can just run nix-env -iA
nixpkgs.myPackages. If you want to load the packages to be built
from a working copy of nixpkgs you just run
nix-env -f. -iA myPackages. To explore what's been
installed, just look through ~/.nix-profile/. You can
see that a lot of stuff has been installed. Some of this stuff is useful
some of it isn't. Let's tell Nixpkgs to only link the stuff that we want:
{
packageOverrides = pkgs: with pkgs; {
myPackages = pkgs.buildEnv {
name = "my-packages";
paths = [ aspell bc coreutils gdb ffmpeg nixUnstable emscripten jq nox silver-searcher ];
pathsToLink = [ "/share" "/bin" ];
};
};
}
pathsToLink tells Nixpkgs to only link the paths listed
which gets rid of the extra stuff in the profile.
/bin and /share are good
defaults for a user environment, getting rid of the clutter. If you are
running on Nix on MacOS, you may want to add another path as well,
/Applications, that makes GUI apps available.
Getting documentation
After building that new environment, look through
~/.nix-profile to make sure everything is there that
we wanted. Discerning readers will note that some files are missing. Look
inside ~/.nix-profile/share/man/man1/ to verify this.
There are no man pages for any of the Nix tools! This is because some
packages like Nix have multiple outputs for things like documentation (see
section 4). Let's make Nix install those as well.
{
packageOverrides = pkgs: with pkgs; {
myPackages = pkgs.buildEnv {
name = "my-packages";
paths = [ aspell bc coreutils ffmpeg nixUnstable emscripten jq nox silver-searcher ];
pathsToLink = [ "/share/man" "/share/doc" /bin" ];
extraOutputsToInstall = [ "man" "doc" ];
};
};
}
This provides us with some useful documentation for using our packages.
However, if we actually want those manpages to be detected by man, we need
to set up our environment. This can also be managed within Nix
expressions.
{
packageOverrides = pkgs: with pkgs; rec {
myProfile = writeText "my-profile" ''
export PATH=$HOME/.nix-profile/bin:/nix/var/nix/profiles/default/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin
export MANPATH=$HOME/.nix-profile/share/man:/nix/var/nix/profiles/default/share/man:/usr/share/man
'';
myPackages = pkgs.buildEnv {
name = "my-packages";
paths = [
(runCommand "profile" {} ''
mkdir -p $out/etc/profile.d
cp ${myProfile} $out/etc/profile.d/my-profile.sh
'')
aspell
bc
coreutils
ffmpeg
man
nixUnstable
emscripten
jq
nox
silver-searcher
];
pathsToLink = [ "/share/man" "/share/doc" /bin" "/etc" ];
extraOutputsToInstall = [ "man" "doc" ];
};
};
}
For this to work fully, you must also have this script sourced when you
are logged in. Try adding something like this to your
~/.profile file:
#!/bin/sh
if [ -d $HOME/.nix-profile/etc/profile.d ]; then
for i in $HOME/.nix-profile/etc/profile.d/*.sh; do
if [ -r $i ]; then
. $i
fi
done
fi
Now just run source $HOME/.profile and you can starting
loading man pages from your environent.
GNU info setup
Configuring GNU info is a little bit trickier than man pages. To work
correctly, info needs a database to be generated. This can be done with
some small modifications to our environment scripts.
{
packageOverrides = pkgs: with pkgs; rec {
myProfile = writeText "my-profile" ''
export PATH=$HOME/.nix-profile/bin:/nix/var/nix/profiles/default/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin
export MANPATH=$HOME/.nix-profile/share/man:/nix/var/nix/profiles/default/share/man:/usr/share/man
export INFOPATH=$HOME/.nix-profile/share/info:/nix/var/nix/profiles/default/share/info:/usr/share/info
'';
myPackages = pkgs.buildEnv {
name = "my-packages";
paths = [
(runCommand "profile" {} ''
mkdir -p $out/etc/profile.d
cp ${myProfile} $out/etc/profile.d/my-profile.sh
'')
aspell
bc
coreutils
ffmpeg
man
nixUnstable
emscripten
jq
nox
silver-searcher
texinfoInteractive
];
pathsToLink = [ "/share/man" "/share/doc" "/share/info" "/bin" "/etc" ];
extraOutputsToInstall = [ "man" "doc" "info" ];
postBuild = ''
if [ -x $out/bin/install-info -a -w $out/share/info ]; then
shopt -s nullglob
for i in $out/share/info/*.info $out/share/info/*.info.gz; do
$out/bin/install-info $i $out/share/info/dir
done
fi
'';
};
};
}
postBuild tells Nixpkgs to run a command after building
the environment. In this case, install-info adds the
installed info pages to dir which is GNU info's default
root node. Note that texinfoInteractive is added to the
environment to give the install-info command.