Binary Cache: Difference between revisions
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=== Using a binary cache on non-NixOS installations === | |||
To use a binary cache with a Nix that has been installed on an operating system other than NixOS (e.g. Ubuntu or macOS) {{ic|/etc/nix/nix.conf}} will need to be edited manually. This can be done by adding something similar to the following lines to {{ic|/etc/nix/nix.conf}}: | |||
<pre> | |||
trusted-public-keys = nix-community.cachix.org-1:mB9FSh9qf2dCimDSUo8Zy7bkq5CX+/rkCWyvRCYg3Fs= cache.nixos.org-1:6NCHdD59X431o0gWypbMrAURkbJ16ZPMQFGspcDShjY= | |||
trusted-substituters = https://nix-community.cachix.org https://cache.nixos.org | |||
trusted-users = root @wheel | |||
</pre> | |||
Note that not all of that information is needed, see the manual for the respective options ([https://nixos.org/manual/nix/stable/command-ref/conf-file.html#conf-trusted-public-keys trusted-public-keys], [https://nixos.org/manual/nix/stable/command-ref/conf-file.html#conf-trusted-substituters trusted-substituters], [https://nixos.org/manual/nix/stable/command-ref/conf-file.html#conf-trusted-users trusted-users]). | |||
With the {{ic|trusted-*}} options set correctly, a user can benefit permanently from a substituter by add the following to their {{ic|~/.config/nix/nix.conf}} | |||
<pre> | |||
substituters = https://nix-community.cachix.org https://cache.nixos.org | |||
</pre> | |||
or temporarily as explained above. | |||
== Populating a binary cache == | == Populating a binary cache == |
Revision as of 09:49, 22 May 2023
A binary cache builds Nix packages and caches the result for other machines. Any machine with Nix installed can be a binary cache for another one, no matter the operating system.
Setting up a binary cache
This tutorial explains how to setup a machine as a binary cache for other machines, serving the nix store on TCP port 80 with signing turned on. It assumes that an nginx
service is already running, that port 80 is open,[cf. 1] and that the hostname binarycache.example.com
resolves to the server.[cf. 2]
1. Generating a private/public keypair
A keypair is necessary to sign Nix packages. Replace binarycache.example.com
with your domain.
cd /var nix-store --generate-binary-cache-key binarycache.example.com cache-priv-key.pem cache-pub-key.pem chown nix-serve cache-priv-key.pem chmod 600 cache-priv-key.pem cat cache-pub-key.pem
The packages can be signed before adding them to the binary cache, or on the fly as they are served.
In this tutorial we'll set up nix-serve
to sign packages on the fly when it serves them.
In this case it is important that only nix-serve
can access the private key.
The location /var/cache-priv-key.pem
is just an example.
2. Activating nix-serve
nix-serve
is the service that speaks the binary cache protocol via HTTP.
To start it on NixOS:
services.nix-serve = {
enable = true;
secretKeyFile = "/var/cache-priv-key.pem";
};
To start it on a non-NixOS machine at boot, add to /etc/crontab
:
NIX_SECRET_KEY_FILE=/var/cache-priv-key.pem
@reboot /home/USER/.nix-profile/bin/nix-serve --listen :5000 --error-log /var/log/nix-serve.log --pid /var/run/nix-serve.pid --user USER --daemonize
nix-serve
will by default serve on port 5000. We are not going to open a firewall port for it, because we will let nginx
redirect to it.
3. Creating a virtual hostname in nginx
We redirect the HTTP(s) traffic from port 80 to nix-serve
. As nix-serve
is capable of serving only on IPv4, redirecting is also useful to make the binary cache available on IPv6.
services.nginx = {
enable = true;
recommendedProxySettings = true;
virtualHosts = {
# ... existing hosts config etc. ...
"binarycache.example.com" = {
locations."/".proxyPass = "http://${config.services.nix-serve.bindAddress}:${toString config.services.nix-serve.port}";
};
};
};
Add HTTPS settings to this config if possible.[cf. 3] This tutorial will simply continue with insecure HTTP.
To set up Nginx on a non-NixOS machine, create for example /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/nix-serve.conf
:
server {
listen 80 default_server;
listen [::]:80 default_server;
location / {
proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:5000;
}
}
4. Testing
To apply the previous settings to your NixOS machine, run:
# nixos-rebuild switch
Check the general availability:
$ curl http://binarycache.example.com/nix-cache-info
StoreDir: /nix/store
WantMassQuery: 1
Priority: 30
On the binary cache server, build some package:
$ nix-build '<nixpkgs>' -A pkgs.hello
/nix/store/gdh8165b7rg4y53v64chjys7mbbw89f9-hello-2.10
To verify the signing on the fly, make sure the following request contains a Sig:
line:
$ curl http://binarycache.example.com/gdh8165b7rg4y53v64chjys7mbbw89f9.narinfo
StorePath: /nix/store/gdh8165b7rg4y53v64chjys7mbbw89f9-hello-2.10
URL: nar/gdh8165b7rg4y53v64chjys7mbbw89f9.nar
Compression: none
NarHash: sha256:0mkfk4iad66xkld3b7x34n9kxri9lrpkgk8m17p97alacx54h5c7
NarSize: 205920
References: 6yaj6n8l925xxfbcd65gzqx3dz7idrnn-glibc-2.27 gdh8165b7rg4y53v64chjys7mbbw89f9-hello-2.10
Deriver: r6h5b3wy0kwx38rn6s6qmmfq0svcnf86-hello-2.10.drv
Sig: binarycache.example.com:EmAANryZ1FFHGmz5P+HXLSDbc0KckkBEAkHsht7gEIOUXZk9yhhZSBV+eSX9Kj+db/b36qmYmffgiOZbAe21Ag==
Next, with the public key that was generated to cache-pub-key.pem
, setup a client machine to use the binary cache, and see if Nix successfully fetches the cached package.
Using a binary cache
To configure Nix to use a certain binary cache, refer to the Nix manual.[cf. 4] Add the binary cache as substituter (see the options substituters
and extra-substituters
) and the public key to the trusted keys (see trusted-public-keys
).
Permanent use of binary cache:
# /etc/nixos/configuration.nix
nix = {
settings = {
substituters = [
"http://binarycache.example.com"
"https://nix-community.cachix.org"
"https://cache.nixos.org/"
];
trusted-public-keys = [
"binarycache.example.com-1:dsafdafDFW123fdasfa123124FADSAD"
"nix-community.cachix.org-1:mB9FSh9qf2dCimDSUo8Zy7bkq5CX+/rkCWyvRCYg3Fs="
];
};
};
Temporary use of binary cache:
$ nix-store -r /nix/store/gdh8165b7rg4y53v64chjys7mbbw89f9-hello-2.10 --option substituters http://binarycache.example.com --option trusted-public-keys binarycache.example.com:dsafdafDFW123fdasfa123124FADSAD
these paths will be fetched (0.00 MiB download, 24.04 MiB unpacked):
/nix/store/7gx4kiv5m0i7d7qkixq2cwzbr10lvxwc-glibc-2.27
/nix/store/gdh8165b7rg4y53v64chjys7mbbw89f9-hello-2.10
copying path '/nix/store/7gx4kiv5m0i7d7qkixq2cwzbr10lvxwc-glibc-2.27' from 'http://binarycache.example.com'...
copying path '/nix/store/gdh8165b7rg4y53v64chjys7mbbw89f9-hello-2.10' from 'http://binarycache.example.com'...
warning: you did not specify '--add-root'; the result might be removed by the garbage collector
/nix/store/gdh8165b7rg4y53v64chjys7mbbw89f9-hello-2.10
Using a binary cache on non-NixOS installations
To use a binary cache with a Nix that has been installed on an operating system other than NixOS (e.g. Ubuntu or macOS) /etc/nix/nix.conf
will need to be edited manually. This can be done by adding something similar to the following lines to /etc/nix/nix.conf
:
trusted-public-keys = nix-community.cachix.org-1:mB9FSh9qf2dCimDSUo8Zy7bkq5CX+/rkCWyvRCYg3Fs= cache.nixos.org-1:6NCHdD59X431o0gWypbMrAURkbJ16ZPMQFGspcDShjY= trusted-substituters = https://nix-community.cachix.org https://cache.nixos.org trusted-users = root @wheel
Note that not all of that information is needed, see the manual for the respective options (trusted-public-keys, trusted-substituters, trusted-users).
With the trusted-*
options set correctly, a user can benefit permanently from a substituter by add the following to their ~/.config/nix/nix.conf
substituters = https://nix-community.cachix.org https://cache.nixos.org
or temporarily as explained above.
Populating a binary cache
As the cache is served from the nix store of the machine serving the binary cache, one option is to build the packages directly on that machine.
Another option is to build the packages on a separate machine and push them only when all the checks pass using nix copy
:
$ nix copy --to ssh://binarycache.example.com PACKAGE
For details see the Sharing Packages Between Machines in the Nix manual.
Hosted binary cache
https://cachix.org provides hosted binary caches starting with a free plan for public caches.
How to check if content is on a binary cache
We can use curl to check if a binary cache contains a given derivation. curl https://cache/store_hash.narinfo
$ curl https://fzakaria.cachix.org/949dxjmz632id67hjic04x6f3ljldzxh.narinfo
StorePath: /nix/store/949dxjmz632id67hjic04x6f3ljldzxh-mvn2nix-0.1
URL: nar/4026897ef85219b5b697c1c4ef30d50275423857cb7a81e138c4b1025f550935.nar.xz
Compression: xz
FileHash: sha256:4026897ef85219b5b697c1c4ef30d50275423857cb7a81e138c4b1025f550935
FileSize: 24392
NarHash: sha256:0kk3d8rk82ynqwg8isk83hvq8vszh4354fqg4hhaz40kd49rmm9n
NarSize: 29208
References: 2hhmmj0vbb5d181nfx2mx3p7k54q44ij-apache-maven-3.6.3 6737cq9nvp4k5r70qcgf61004r0l2g3v-bash-4.4-p23 949dxjmz632id67hjic04x6f3ljldzxh-mvn2nix-0.1 hrlxlk768vy5rgl6hc4xiba6gxg6s0yz-mvn2nix-0.1-dependencies qybd7j6v7kb7yhizc7gklgg3lyrxf38y-openjdk-headless-11.0.8+10
Deriver: 585w6p8rclbvz97fwgixvfgnh5493ia2-mvn2nix-0.1.drv
Sig: fzakaria.cachix.org-1:MkOrZCa9qdxHFdE2mtFRsbEzmLUgWGgSrqD3advKfdHLW+SKxj/V2n6+4a/qy6dhCoR+gWQfGzda/jNkER10CQ==
Or use nix path-info:
$ nix path-info -r /nix/store/sb7nbfcc1ca6j0d0v18f7qzwlsyvi8fz-ocaml-4.10.0 --store https://cache.nixos.org/
[0.0 MiB DL] querying libunistring-0.9.10 on https://cache.nixos.org/nix/store/0gc9dr71ldp79cla2qbl3kwdd4ig46pi-linux-headers-5.5
/nix/store/2jysm3dfsgby5sw5jgj43qjrb5v79ms9-bash-4.4-p23
/nix/store/4wy9j24psf9ny4di3anjs7yk2fvfb0gq-glibc-2.31-dev
/nix/store/4z79ipgxqn80ns7mpax25zmb77i3ndfw-gawk-5.1.0
/nix/store/9df65igwjmf2wbw0gbrrgair6piqjgmi-glibc-2.31
/nix/store/czc3c1apx55s37qx4vadqhn3fhikchxi-libunistring-0.9.10
/nix/store/fgn3sih5vi7543jcw389a7qqax8nwkhz-glibc-2.31-bin
/nix/store/sb7nbfcc1ca6j0d0v18f7qzwlsyvi8fz-ocaml-4.10.0
/nix/store/xim9l8hym4iga6d4azam4m0k0p1nw2rm-libidn2-2.3.0
Example: Fetch metadata of bash
curl https://cache.nixos.org/$(readlink -f $(which bash) | cut -c12-43).narinfo