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gcc (GCC) 8.3.0 | gcc (GCC) 8.3.0 | ||
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Those stdenv instances can be also constructed using the <code>overrideCC</code> function: | |||
Here we are creating a shell environment that will always have the latest available gcc: | |||
<syntaxHighlight lang=nix> | |||
(overrideCC stdenv gcc_latest).mkDerivation { | |||
name = "env"; | |||
} | |||
</syntaxHighlight> | |||
Note that this will only affect compiler and not the used linker. To overwrite the linker and maybe also the used libc | |||
Check out the <code>wrapCCWith</code> example in the next section. | |||
See also: [[Using Clang instead of GCC]] | See also: [[Using Clang instead of GCC]] |
Revision as of 07:09, 15 November 2022
This is a collection of recipes for working on C/C++ projects with Nix. They do not just apply to C but also C++.
Differences between nixpkgs and the rest
The way nixpkgs and its stdenv handles compiling and linking is very different from other linux distributions.
Usually header files are put into well known paths i.e. /usr/include
, where the compiler will
look for them. Same is true when linking against libraries, which are put in a few places, where the build-time
linker will find them. Dynamically linked libraries will have a run-time linker (also known as ld.so
) set as an interpreter.
This linker reads /etc/ld.so.conf
to figure out where to find libraries.
In nixpkgs in contrast this information is provided by environment variables.
Those will be set based on the build inputs that are given when building a package or
when loading a nix expression into a nix-shell
.
Therefore it is not sufficient to just install libraries with nix-env
into the profile
since the compiler will not look in those paths when compiling.
The compiler wrapper
When inspecting the compiler or linker executable one will notice that those are not binaries but shell scripts:
$ nix-shell -p hello --command 'which $CC'
/nix/store/isg8rxaxkijl9x3hr2gzsf8pqfnqxg3k-gcc-wrapper-7.4.0/bin/gcc
$ nix-shell -p hello --command 'which $LD'
/nix/store/isg8rxaxkijl9x3hr2gzsf8pqfnqxg3k-gcc-wrapper-7.4.0/bin/ld
$ file /nix/store/isg8rxaxkijl9x3hr2gzsf8pqfnqxg3k-gcc-wrapper-7.4.0/bin/gcc /nix/store/isg8rxaxkijl9x3hr2gzsf8pqfnqxg3k-gcc-wrapper-7.4.0/bin/ld
/nix/store/isg8rxaxkijl9x3hr2gzsf8pqfnqxg3k-gcc-wrapper-7.4.0/bin/gcc: a /nix/store/vs6d2fjkl4kb3jb7rwibsd76k9v2n4xy-bash-4.4-p23/bin/bash script, ASCII text executable
/nix/store/isg8rxaxkijl9x3hr2gzsf8pqfnqxg3k-gcc-wrapper-7.4.0/bin/ld: symbolic link to /nix/store/lwdkm354f3zzsvkf7pqmnc8w6r164b42-binutils-wrapper-2.30/bin/ld
These shell-scripts wrap around the actual compiler and add additional compiler flags depending
on environment variables. In particular the wrapper around the C compiler,
will also look for a NIX_CFLAGS_COMPILE
variable and prepend the content
to command line arguments passed to the underlying compiler.
A different variable is called NIX_LDFLAGS
, which will be provided as input to the build time linker.
Nixpkgs use these variables to influence what kind of header files and libraries are visible to the build tools when running.
For example when we add zlib
to buildInputs
of a stdenv.mkDerivation
call and
load the resulting file in a nix-shell
, we can see the effect on both NIX_CFLAGS_COMPILE
and NIX_LDFLAGS
$ cat > shell.nix <<EOF ;nix-shell
with import <nixpkgs> {};
stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "myenv";
buildInputs = [ zlib ];
}
EOF
[nix-shell:~] $ echo $NIX_CFLAGS_COMPILE
-isystem /nix/store/bjl5kk674rmdzzpmcsvmw73hvf35jwh8-zlib-1.2.11-dev/include -isystem /nix/store/bjl5kk674rmdzzpmcsvmw73hvf35jwh8-zlib-1.2.11-dev/include
[nix-shell:~] $ echo $NIX_LDFLAGS
-rpath /nix/store/d5dzr90q2wy2nlw0z7s0pgxkjfjv1jrj-myenv/lib64 -rpath /nix/store/d5dzr90q2wy2nlw0z7s0pgxkjfjv1jrj-myenv/lib -L/nix/store/5dphwv1xs46n0qbhynny2lbhmx4xh1fc-zlib-1.2.11/lib -L/nix/store/5dphwv1xs46n0qbhynny2lbhmx4xh1fc-zlib-1.2.11/lib
In $NIX_CFLAGS_COMPILE
we see that the include search path is extended by appending new directories
using the -isystem
flag.
However, while the $out/include
folder will be included by default, it may sometimes not be enough when the lib puts the header in a subfolder (for instance, gtk2 and gtk3 uses subdirectories like $out/include/gtk-2.0
instead to avoid conflict between versions). To deal with this kind of libraries, one can use `pkg-config`: the idea is simply to add `pkg-config` in the nativeBuildInputs
, and then to start the buildPhase
with:
buildPhase = ''
NIX_CFLAGS_COMPILE="$(pkg-config --cflags gtk+-3.0) $NIX_CFLAGS_COMPILE"
# put the usual make/gcc code here
'';
For $NIX_LDFLAGS
see that the library link path is extended
using the -L
flag. We also notice that in addition to library paths the linker gets instructed
to extend the RPATH
of the program using the -rpath
flag.
This is needed when the executable is executed since the runtime linker will read the RPATH
from
the elf header to figure out where to find shared libraries.
We can print the RPATH
of executable using the patchelf
command.
$ nix-shell -p hello --command 'patchelf --print-rpath $(which hello)'
/nix/store/fivq0nbggp4y8mhy3ixprqd7qyn1hy2j-glibc-2.27/lib
Debugging the compiler wrapper
To inspect how the shell wrapper processes the variables one can set the NIX_DEBUG
environment variable:
$ nix-shell -p hello --command 'NIX_DEBUG=1 $CC -v'
HARDENING: disabled flags: pie
HARDENING: Is active (not completely disabled with "all" flag)
HARDENING: enabling fortify
HARDENING: enabling stackprotector
HARDENING: enabling strictoverflow
HARDENING: enabling format
HARDENING: enabling pic
extra flags before to /nix/store/4ga86h16l157r7bas9hcwxgl9d3r32s6-gcc-7.4.0/bin/gcc:
''
original flags to /nix/store/4ga86h16l157r7bas9hcwxgl9d3r32s6-gcc-7.4.0/bin/gcc:
-v
extra flags after to /nix/store/4ga86h16l157r7bas9hcwxgl9d3r32s6-gcc-7.4.0/bin/gcc:
''
Using built-in specs.
COLLECT_GCC=/nix/store/4ga86h16l157r7bas9hcwxgl9d3r32s6-gcc-7.4.0/bin/gcc
COLLECT_LTO_WRAPPER=/nix/store/4ga86h16l157r7bas9hcwxgl9d3r32s6-gcc-7.4.0/libexec/gcc/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/7.4.0/lto-wrapper
Target: x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu
Configured with:
Thread model: posix
gcc version 7.4.0 (GCC)
Hardening flags
To improve the security of applications the wrapper also injects additional hardening compile flags into the application.
Under some circumstances this can make programs fail to build or function.
To disable all hardening options one can export the environment variable hardeningDisable="all"
.
This also works for derivations like that:
with import <nixpkgs> {};
stdenv.mkDerivation {
hardeningDisable = [ "all" ];
};
It is also possible to only enable certain parts:
with import <nixpkgs> {};
stdenv.mkDerivation {
hardeningDisable = [ "format" ];
};
Further options are described in the manual
pkg-config
pkg-config is a tool and file format to describe what compiler and linker flags a build process needs to add
to use a certain library. It is often used as part of the build process to check if needed dependencies are
present and in the right version. In nix expression pkg-config will find its .pc
files
by looking up the PKG_CONFIG_PATH
variable. This variable is automatically set
when pkg-config
is present in nativeBuildInputs
by a build-support
hook provided by the pkg-config
package.
If you save the following file as shell.nix
:
with import <nixpkgs> {};
stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "env";
nativeBuildInputs = [ pkg-config ];
buildInputs = [
cryptsetup
];
}
The PKG_CONFIG_PATH
variable will have the following content when running nix-shell
[nix-shell:~] $ echo $PKG_CONFIG_PATH
/nix/store/ypg1r7c8m0rkim7by4ikn68xc88bi53j-cryptsetup-2.0.6-dev/lib/pkgconfig:/nix/store/ypg1r7c8m0rkim7by4ikn68xc88bi53j-cryptsetup-2.0.6-dev/lib/pkgconfig
[nix-shell:~] $ pkg-config --cflags libcryptsetup
-I/nix/store/ypg1r7c8m0rkim7by4ikn68xc88bi53j-cryptsetup-2.0.6-dev/include
When using autoconf
, pkg-config is a required build input for providing the AC_CHECK_HEADERS
m4 macro.
pkg-config package names
To list all pkg-config package names of a Nix package:
$ nix-shell -p pkgconfig libglvnd
$ pkg-config --list-all
egl egl - EGL library and headers
libglvnd libglvnd - Vendor-neutral OpenGL dispatch library vendor interface
glx glx - GLX library and headers
glesv1_cm glesv1_cm - OpenGL ES-CM v1 library and headers
opengl opengl - OpenGL (without GLX) headers and interface
glesv2 gles2 - OpenGL ES v2/v3 library and headers
gl gl - Legacy OpenGL and GLX library and headers
cmake
Similar to pkg-config
cmake
relies on the $CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH
to finds its modules (files ending in .cmake
). Also see this example:
with import <nixpkgs> {};
stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "env";
nativeBuildInputs = [ cmake ];
buildInputs = [ zeromq ];
}
$ nix-shell
[nix-shell:~] $ echo $CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH
/nix/store/lw4xr0x2p6xyfgbk961lxh8vnnx7vn2r-cmake-3.12.1:/nix/store/j4x44bjjgwy7hm7lazj8xnr9mnlfiksh-patchelf-0.9:/nix/store/isg8rxaxkijl9x3hr2gzsf8pqfnqxg3k-gcc-wrapper-7.4.0:/nix/store/lwdkm354f3zzsvkf7pqmnc8w6r164b42-binutils-wrapper-2.30:/nix/store/biz7v9g4g6yrnp2h8wfn01d6pk3bj2m1-zeromq-4.3.0:/nix/store/lw4xr0x2p6xyfgbk961lxh8vnnx7vn2r-cmake-3.12.1:/nix/store/j4x44bjjgwy7hm7lazj8xnr9mnlfiksh-patchelf-0.9:/nix/store/isg8rxaxkijl9x3hr2gzsf8pqfnqxg3k-gcc-wrapper-7.4.0:/nix/store/lwdkm354f3zzsvkf7pqmnc8w6r164b42-binutils-wrapper-2.30:/nix/store/biz7v9g4g6yrnp2h8wfn01d6pk3bj2m1-zeromq-4.3.0
[nix-shell:~] $ cat >CMakeLists.txt <<EOF
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 2.8)
project(helloworld)
add_executable(helloworld hello.c)
find_package (ZeroMQ)
EOF
[nix-shell:~] $ echo 'int main {}' > hello.c
[nix-shell:~] $ cmake .
Cross-Compiling
To get access to a cross-compiling toolchain use pkgsCross
prefix.
In this example we load the compiler for the arm-embedded target (bare metal without operating system):
with import <nixpkgs> {};
pkgsCross.arm-embedded.stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "env";
}
This will set build environment variables like $CC
, $AR
and $LD
:
$ echo $CC $AR $CXX $LD
arm-none-eabi-gcc arm-none-eabi-ar arm-none-eabi-g++ arm-none-eabi-ld
Well behaved build systems should respect these environment variables when building projects. Also take a look in the Cross Compiling article for further information on cross-compiling.
Debug symbols
By default debug symbols are stripped of in the fixup phase of a package build.
To get a library with debug symbols one can use the enableDebugging
function to disable stripping:
with import <nixpkgs> {};
stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "env";
buildInputs = [ (enableDebugging zlib) ];
}
$ echo $NIX_LDFLAGS
-rpath /nix/store/fqpmgpcij4dddckkw4wh53ffn31yv1y6-env/lib64 -rpath /nix/store/fqpmgpcij4dddckkw4wh53ffn31yv1y6-env/lib -L/nix/store/g2y1122bwz5434w6nx34s40f2hmdkb1z-zlib-1.2.11/lib -L/nix/store/g2y1122bwz5434w6nx34s40f2hmdkb1z-zlib-1.2.11/lib
$ file /nix/store/g2y1122bwz5434w6nx34s40f2hmdkb1z-zlib-1.2.11/lib/libz.so.1.2.11
/nix/store/g2y1122bwz5434w6nx34s40f2hmdkb1z-zlib-1.2.11/lib/libz.so.1.2.11: ELF 64-bit LSB shared object, x86-64, version 1 (SYSV), dynamically linked, with debug_info, not stripped
It also possible to separate debug symbols from the actual binaries and store them in a different output by using the separateDebugInfo
option.
This is described in the manual.
Also see Debug Symbols for further information about debug symbols.
Editor/IDE integration
Tooling that provides autocompletion or refactoring support also needs to be aware of the environments variables to find C/C++ header files. Nixpkgs adds wrapper to all language server clangd (recommend), ccls and cquery to extend the include path of these tools. CCLS also provides extensive documentation on how to setup a project/editors to make use of it.
Use a different compiler version
Adding a different c compiler to buildInputs
in a nix expression will not change the default compiler
available in $PATH
. Instead, nixpkgs provides a several alternative stdenv
which you can search with nix search stdenv
so for example:
gcc8Stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "env";
}
$ nix-shell --command 'gcc --version'
gcc (GCC) 8.3.0
Those stdenv instances can be also constructed using the overrideCC
function:
Here we are creating a shell environment that will always have the latest available gcc:
(overrideCC stdenv gcc_latest).mkDerivation {
name = "env";
}
Note that this will only affect compiler and not the used linker. To overwrite the linker and maybe also the used libc
Check out the wrapCCWith
example in the next section.
See also: Using Clang instead of GCC
Get a compiler without default libc
By default cc wrapper will include the libc headers (i.e. glibc). This can break for example projects that would bring their own libc (i.e. musl). However it is possible to get a cc wrapper that would include all build inputs without adding glibc:
let
gcc_nolibc = wrapCCWith {
cc = gcc.cc;
bintools = wrapBintoolsWith {
bintools = binutils-unwrapped;
libc = null;
};
};
in (overrideCC stdenv gcc_nolibc).mkDerivation {
name = "env";
}
Override binutils
This example shows how to apply changes to the binutils package and than use the override binutils package to compose a new stdenv.
with import <nixpkgs> {};
let
binutils-unwrapped' = binutils-unwrapped.overrideAttrs (old: {
name = "binutils-2.37";
src = pkgs.fetchurl {
url = "https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/binutils/binutils-2.37.tar.xz";
sha256 = "sha256-gg2XJPAgo+acszeJOgtjwtsWHa3LDgb8Edwp6x6Eoyw=";
};
patches = [];
});
cc = wrapCCWith rec {
cc = gcc-unwrapped;
bintools = wrapBintoolsWith {
bintools = binutils-unwrapped';
libc = glibc;
};
};
in
(overrideCC stdenv cc).mkDerivation {
name = "env";
}
Faster GCC compiler
The default gcc compiler in nixpkgs disables profile-guided optimization in order to achieve deterministic builds. There is a faster version available in nixpkgs via the fastStdenv
attribute (7-12% faster).
fastStdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "env";
}
Use a clang compiled from source
Unwrapped compilers usually do not have any access to libraries/headers in nix. This is an issue if you work on the clang/llvm code base. Assuming you have built llvm/clang like this
$ git clone https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project
$ cd llvm-project
$ nix-shell -p cmake --command 'mkdir build && cd build && cmake -DLLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS="clang;clang-tools-extra" -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=../install -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug ../llvm && make -j$(nproc)'
You can create a wrapper around your local build binaries like this:
# This file assumes that your llvm binaries are stored in ./build/bin
# impure-clang.nix
{ stdenv, wrapCC, runtimeShell }:
wrapCC (stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "impure-clang";
dontUnpack = true;
installPhase = ''
mkdir -p $out/bin
for bin in ${toString (builtins.attrNames (builtins.readDir ./build/bin))}; do
cat > $out/bin/$bin <<EOF
#!${runtimeShell}
exec "${toString ./.}/build/bin/$bin" "\$@"
EOF
chmod +x $out/bin/$bin
done
'';
passthru.isClang = true;
})
Then you can create a shell.nix
like this:
with import <nixpkgs> {};
pkgs.mkShell {
nativeBuildInputs = [
cmake
(callPackage ./impure-clang.nix {})
];
}
And use your self-compiled clang in a nix-shell:
$ nix-shell --command 'clang --version'