Jump to content

FAQ/Pinning Nixpkgs: Difference between revisions

From Official NixOS Wiki
imported>Samueldr
m Adds missing `;`
Sandro (talk | contribs)
Drop pre nix 2.0, warn about negatives of pinning
 
(24 intermediate revisions by 14 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{FAQ/breadcrumb}}
It is possible (and indeed, fairly easy) to pin a specific version of
It is possible (and indeed, fairly easy) to pin a specific version of
Nixpkgs. This can be used to upgrade individual applications
Nixpkgs. This can be used to upgrade individual applications
Line 4: Line 5:
not impacted by other systems' requirements.
not impacted by other systems' requirements.


For example, the following code uses the host's Nixpkgs as a
Another reason why one would want to pin nixpkgs is to get older versions of a specific software. [https://lazamar.co.uk/nix-versions/ This site] can show you all the versions a package went through, and what nixpkgs revision to use to get your specific version.
springboard to fetch and import a specific, pinned version of Nixpkgs.
This is safe because the specific code we're using from the variable
host Nixpkgs is using a very stable API, and will be thrown away as
soon as we are done importing the pinned version of Nixpkgs.


Where before you would use <code>pkgs = import <nixpkgs> {}</code>
Note: You can <code>sudo nix-channel --remove nixpkgs</code>, but you still need a nix-channel for nixos
(which uses the host's Nixpkgs version) you can pin to an exact
version of Nixpkgs by instead using:


Be aware that this also pins all dependencies of the application which often causes issues for GUI applications and also brings in back outdated and potentially vulnerable dependencies.
<pre>
sudo nix-channel --list
nixos https://nixos.org/channels/nixos-21.05
</pre>
Nix 2.0 introduces new builtins, <code>fetchTarball</code> and <code>fetchGit</code>, which make it possible to fetch a specific version of nixpkgs without depending on an existing one:


<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
pkgs = let
import (builtins.fetchTarball {
  hostPkgs = import <nixpkgs> {};
   # Descriptive name to make the store path easier to identify
   pinnedPkgs = hostPkgs.fetchFromGitHub {
  name = "nixos-unstable-2018-09-12";
    owner = "NixOS";
  # Commit hash for nixos-unstable as of 2018-09-12
    repo = "nixpkgs-channels";
  url = "https://github.com/nixos/nixpkgs/archive/ca2ba44cab47767c8127d1c8633e2b581644eb8f.tar.gz";
    # nixos-unstable as of 2017-11-13T08:53:10-00:00
  # Hash obtained using `nix-prefetch-url --unpack <url>`
    rev = "ac355040656de04f59406ba2380a96f4124ebdad";
  sha256 = "1jg7g6cfpw8qvma0y19kwyp549k1qyf11a5sg6hvn6awvmkny47v";
    sha256 = "0frhc7mnx88sird6ipp6578k5badibsl0jfa22ab9w6qrb88j825";
}) {}
  };
in import pinnedPkgs {};
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


This can also be instead used to pull nixpkgs from an internal fork of
Or, to use git for fetching:
Nixpkgs, with your own changes on top. Note, however, as it stands
Nix 1.11 has difficulties fetching repositories which require
authentication, this is to be fixed in Nix 1.12.


The package <code>nix-prefetch-git</code> can be used to automatically
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
calculate the current version and hash of a branch, and output the
import (builtins.fetchGit {
information to a file:
  # Descriptive name to make the store path easier to identify
  name = "nixos-unstable-2018-09-12";
  url = "https://github.com/nixos/nixpkgs/";
  # Commit hash for nixos-unstable as of 2018-09-12
  # `git ls-remote https://github.com/nixos/nixpkgs nixos-unstable`
  ref = "refs/heads/nixos-unstable";
  rev = "ca2ba44cab47767c8127d1c8633e2b581644eb8f";
}) {}
</syntaxhighlight>
 
If the <code>ref</code> attribute is omitted, we get an error like this:


<syntaxhighlight>
<syntaxhighlight>
$ nix-shell -p nix-prefetch-git
fatal: not a tree object: 3d70d4ba0b6be256974910e635fadcc0e9579b2a
error: while evaluating the attribute 'buildInputs' of the derivation 'nix-shell' at /nix/store/b93cq865x6qxpn4dw9ivrk3yjcsm8r97-nixos-19.09/pkgs/build-support/mkshell/default.nix:28:3:
[nix-shell:~]$ nix-prefetch-git https://github.com/nixos/nixpkgs-channels.git refs/heads/nixos-unstable > nixpkgs-version.json
while evaluating 'getOutput' at /nix/store/b93cq865x6qxpn4dw9ivrk3yjcsm8r97-nixos-19.09/lib/attrsets.nix:464:23, called from undefined position:
while evaluating anonymous function at /nix/store/b93cq865x6qxpn4dw9ivrk3yjcsm8r97-nixos-19.09/pkgs/stdenv/generic/make-derivation.nix:142:17, called from undefined position:
...
program 'git' failed with exit code 128
</syntaxhighlight>
[nix-shell:~]$ cat nixpkgs-version.json
 
{
== Pinning an unstable service ==
  "url": "https://github.com/nixos/nixpkgs-channels.git",
How to upgrade a single package and service to an unstable version
   "rev": "f607771d0f5e4fa905afff1c772febd9f3103e1a",
 
   "date": "2018-01-09T11:18:25-05:00",
There is probably a better way, especially once flakes come around. Some packages let you specify which <code>package</code> to run as an option but most don't. The following is a generic way that also works for those which don't.
  "sha256": "1icphqpdcl8akqhfij2pxkfr7wfn86z5sr3jdjh88p9vv1550dx7",
 
   "fetchSubmodules": true
add to configuration.nix a set allowing unstable packages.
}
This assumes a channel named <code>nixpkgs-unstable</code> exists, like so:
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
nix-channel --add https://nixos.org/channels/nixpkgs-unstable nixpkgs-unstable
nix-channel --update
</syntaxhighlight>
 
then in <code>configuration.nix</code> allow unstable packages:
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
# Allow unstable packages.
nixpkgs.config = {
   allowUnfree = true;
   packageOverrides = pkgs: {
    unstable = import <nixpkgs-unstable> {
      config = config.nixpkgs.config;
    };
   };
};
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
 
This file can then be used to specify the version of Nixpkgs:
This means you can now refer to unstable packages as <code>pkgs.unstable.nameofpackage</code> which is great. 
For example:


<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
pkgs = let
environment.systemPackages = with pkgs; [
  hostPkgs = import <nixpkgs> {};
  unstable.bind
  pinnedVersion = hostPkgs.lib.importJSON ./nixpkgs-version.json;
  unstable.dnsutils
  pinnedPkgs = hostPkgs.fetchFromGitHub {
  vim
    owner = "NixOS";
];
    repo = "nixpkgs-channels";
    inherit (pinnedVersion) rev sha256;
  };
in import pinnedPkgs {};
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


Finally, this can be taken a step further, and you can apply extra
This will use unstable bind and dnsutils, but the stable vim.
patches to the pinned version of Nixpkgs, for perhaps PRs that are not
 
yet merged, or private internal changes that you need. If you take
Except bind is a service, and if you want a service....usually you just do something like:
this route, probably best to move the following in to its own file
that you then import.


<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
pkgs = let
services.bind.enable = true;
  hostPkgs = import <nixpkgs> {};
...
  pinnedVersion = hostPkgs.lib.importJSON ./nixpkgs-version.json;
  pinnedPkgs = hostPkgs.fetchFromGitHub {
    owner = "NixOS";
    repo = "nixpkgs-channels";
    inherit (pinnedVersion) rev sha256;
  };
  patches = [
    ./patches/0001-my-nixpkgs-change.patch
  ];
  patchedPkgs = hostPkgs.runCommand "nixpkgs-${pinnedVersion.rev}"
    {
      inherit pinnedPkgs;
      inherit patches;
    }
    ''
      cp -r $pinnedPkgs $out
      chmod -R +w $out
      for p in $patches; do
        echo "Applying patch $p";
        patch -d $out -p1 < "$p";
      done
    '';
in import patchedPkgs {};
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
Except services will refer to <code>pkgs.bind</code>, not <code>pkgs.unstable.bind</code>
so disable services.bind and create your own:
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
users.users.named = {
  uid = config.ids.uids.bind;
  description = "BIND daemon user";
};
systemd.services.mybind = {
  description = "BIND Domain Name Server";
  unitConfig.Documentation = "man:named(8)";
  after = [ "network.target" ];
  wantedBy = [ "multi-user.target" ];
  preStart = ''
    mkdir -m 0755 -p /etc/bind
    if ! [ -f "/etc/bind/rndc.key" ]; then
      ${pkgs.unstable.bind.out}/sbin/rndc-confgen -c /etc/bind/rndc.key -u named -a -A hmac-sha256 2>/dev/null
    fi
    ${pkgs.coreutils}/bin/mkdir -p /run/named
    chown named /run/named
  '';
  serviceConfig = {
    ExecStart = "${pkgs.unstable.bind.out}/sbin/named -u named -4 -c /etc/bind/named.conf -f";
    ExecReload = "${pkgs.unstable.bind.out}/sbin/rndc -k '/etc/bind/rndc.key' reload";
    ExecStop = "${pkgs.unstable.bind.out}/sbin/rndc -k '/etc/bind/rndc.key' stop";
  };
};
</syntaxhighlight>
where all the stuff just comes from the bind services definition(which you can get from the source link on the nixos options page.)
Just replace named variables, and replace <code>${pkgs.bind.out</code> with <code>${pkgs.unstable.bind.out}</code>
== See also ==
* [https://nix.dev/reference/pinning-nixpkgs Pinning Nixpkgs]
* [https://nix.dev/tutorials/first-steps/towards-reproducibility-pinning-nixpkgs Towards Reproducibility: Pinning Nixpkgs]
* [https://nix.dev/guides/recipes/dependency-management.html Dependency Management]

Latest revision as of 14:20, 21 October 2025

It is possible (and indeed, fairly easy) to pin a specific version of Nixpkgs. This can be used to upgrade individual applications separately on their own terms, and to ensure their deployability is not impacted by other systems' requirements.

Another reason why one would want to pin nixpkgs is to get older versions of a specific software. This site can show you all the versions a package went through, and what nixpkgs revision to use to get your specific version.

Note: You can sudo nix-channel --remove nixpkgs, but you still need a nix-channel for nixos

Be aware that this also pins all dependencies of the application which often causes issues for GUI applications and also brings in back outdated and potentially vulnerable dependencies.

sudo nix-channel --list
nixos https://nixos.org/channels/nixos-21.05

Nix 2.0 introduces new builtins, fetchTarball and fetchGit, which make it possible to fetch a specific version of nixpkgs without depending on an existing one:

import (builtins.fetchTarball {
  # Descriptive name to make the store path easier to identify
  name = "nixos-unstable-2018-09-12";
  # Commit hash for nixos-unstable as of 2018-09-12
  url = "https://github.com/nixos/nixpkgs/archive/ca2ba44cab47767c8127d1c8633e2b581644eb8f.tar.gz";
  # Hash obtained using `nix-prefetch-url --unpack <url>`
  sha256 = "1jg7g6cfpw8qvma0y19kwyp549k1qyf11a5sg6hvn6awvmkny47v";
}) {}

Or, to use git for fetching:

import (builtins.fetchGit {
  # Descriptive name to make the store path easier to identify
  name = "nixos-unstable-2018-09-12";
  url = "https://github.com/nixos/nixpkgs/";
  # Commit hash for nixos-unstable as of 2018-09-12
  # `git ls-remote https://github.com/nixos/nixpkgs nixos-unstable`
  ref = "refs/heads/nixos-unstable";
  rev = "ca2ba44cab47767c8127d1c8633e2b581644eb8f";
}) {}

If the ref attribute is omitted, we get an error like this:

fatal: not a tree object: 3d70d4ba0b6be256974910e635fadcc0e9579b2a
error: while evaluating the attribute 'buildInputs' of the derivation 'nix-shell' at /nix/store/b93cq865x6qxpn4dw9ivrk3yjcsm8r97-nixos-19.09/pkgs/build-support/mkshell/default.nix:28:3:
while evaluating 'getOutput' at /nix/store/b93cq865x6qxpn4dw9ivrk3yjcsm8r97-nixos-19.09/lib/attrsets.nix:464:23, called from undefined position:
while evaluating anonymous function at /nix/store/b93cq865x6qxpn4dw9ivrk3yjcsm8r97-nixos-19.09/pkgs/stdenv/generic/make-derivation.nix:142:17, called from undefined position:
program 'git' failed with exit code 128

Pinning an unstable service

How to upgrade a single package and service to an unstable version

There is probably a better way, especially once flakes come around. Some packages let you specify which package to run as an option but most don't. The following is a generic way that also works for those which don't.

add to configuration.nix a set allowing unstable packages. This assumes a channel named nixpkgs-unstable exists, like so:

nix-channel --add https://nixos.org/channels/nixpkgs-unstable nixpkgs-unstable
nix-channel --update

then in configuration.nix allow unstable packages:

# Allow unstable packages.
nixpkgs.config = {
  allowUnfree = true;
  packageOverrides = pkgs: {
    unstable = import <nixpkgs-unstable> {
      config = config.nixpkgs.config;
    };
  };
};

This means you can now refer to unstable packages as pkgs.unstable.nameofpackage which is great. For example:

environment.systemPackages = with pkgs; [
  unstable.bind
  unstable.dnsutils
  vim
];

This will use unstable bind and dnsutils, but the stable vim.

Except bind is a service, and if you want a service....usually you just do something like:

services.bind.enable = true;
...

Except services will refer to pkgs.bind, not pkgs.unstable.bind

so disable services.bind and create your own:

users.users.named = {
  uid = config.ids.uids.bind;
  description = "BIND daemon user";
};
systemd.services.mybind = {
  description = "BIND Domain Name Server";
  unitConfig.Documentation = "man:named(8)";
  after = [ "network.target" ];
  wantedBy = [ "multi-user.target" ];
  preStart = ''
    mkdir -m 0755 -p /etc/bind
    if ! [ -f "/etc/bind/rndc.key" ]; then
      ${pkgs.unstable.bind.out}/sbin/rndc-confgen -c /etc/bind/rndc.key -u named -a -A hmac-sha256 2>/dev/null
    fi
    ${pkgs.coreutils}/bin/mkdir -p /run/named
    chown named /run/named
  '';
  serviceConfig = {
    ExecStart = "${pkgs.unstable.bind.out}/sbin/named -u named -4 -c /etc/bind/named.conf -f";
    ExecReload = "${pkgs.unstable.bind.out}/sbin/rndc -k '/etc/bind/rndc.key' reload";
    ExecStop = "${pkgs.unstable.bind.out}/sbin/rndc -k '/etc/bind/rndc.key' stop";
  };
};

where all the stuff just comes from the bind services definition(which you can get from the source link on the nixos options page.) Just replace named variables, and replace ${pkgs.bind.out with ${pkgs.unstable.bind.out}

See also