nix-search
is a CLI client for search.nixos.org/packages
.
Use nix-search
to find packages by name, description, installed programs, version, or other metadata. Requires an active internet connection to work.
Major features and benefits:
- Find how to install the binary you need
- Searches work the same as the web interface by default
- Use flags to explicitly query attribute names, installed programs, and versions
- Each result is linked to the web interface (in supported terminals)
- Results are compact and nicely colorized by default (in supported terminals)
$ nix-search --help
search for packages via search.nixos.org
Usage:
nix-search ...query [flags]
Examples:
# Search
# ... like the web interface
nix-search python linter
nix-search --search "python linter"
# ... by package name
nix-search --name python
nix-search --name 'emacsPackages.*'
# ... by version
nix-search --version 1.20
nix-search --version '1.*'
# ... by installed programs
nix-search --program python
nix-search --program "py*"
# ... with ElasticSearch QueryString syntax
nix-search --query-string="package_programs:(crystal OR irb)"
nix-search --query-string='package_description:(MIT Scheme)'
# ... on a specific channel
nix-search --channel=unstable python3
# ... or flakes
nix-search --flakes wayland
# ... with multiple filters and options
nix-search --name go --version 1.20 --details
Flags:
-c, --channel string which channel to search in (default "unstable")
-d, --details show expanded details for each result
-f, --flakes search flakes instead of nixpkgs
-h, --help help for nix-search
-j, --json emit results in json-line format
-m, --max-results int maximum number of results to return (default 20)
-n, --name string search by package name
-p, --program string search by installed programs
-q, --query-string string search by elasticsearch querystring
-s, --search string default search, same as the website
-v, --version string search by version
For example, here's how you would find all packages that install a gcloud
binary. The results show the version of each package as well as the full set of installed binaries. In a supported terminal, we use nice colors:
$ ./bin/nix-search -p gcloud
google-cloud-sdk-gce @ 408.0.1: gcloud bq docker-credential-gcloud git-credential-gcloud.sh gsutil
google-cloud-sdk @ 408.0.1: gcloud bq docker-credential-gcloud git-credential-gcloud.sh gsutil
Here's how you would find out how to install python 3.12:
Golang:
# run it
go run github.com/peterldowns/nix-search-cli/cmd/nix-search@latest --help
# install it
go install github.com/peterldowns/nix-search-cli/cmd/nix-search@latest
Homebrew:
brew install peterldowns/tap/nix-search-cli
Nix (flakes):
# run it
nix run github:peterldowns/nix-search-cli -- --help
# install it
nix profile install github:peterldowns/nix-search-cli --refresh
Docker:
# run it
docker run --rm -it ghcr.io/peterldowns/nix-search-cli:latest --help
# pull it
docker pull ghcr.io/peterldowns/nix-search-cli:latest
Manual:
- Visit the latest Github release
- Download the appropriate binary:
nix-search-$os-$arch
Nix is useful as a way to install packages, but without this project there is no easy way to find the attribute name to use to install a given program.
The Nix Wiki page on "Searching Packages" recommends
using the search.nixos.org
interface, but doing this requires using a browser.
As for nix-env --query
, it supports searching over attribute names, but not
other fields or metadata (including the programs that the attribute installs).
For instance, you can use nix-env -qaP
to search for
attribute names:
# nix-env -qaP google-cloud-sdk
nixpkgs.google-cloud-sdk google-cloud-sdk-408.0.1
nixpkgs.google-cloud-sdk-gce google-cloud-sdk-408.0.1
but you cannot find an attribute name given a binary you'd like to install:
# nix-env -qaP gcloud
error: selector 'gcloud' matches no derivations
Common tasks are run by just
# show all available commands
just
just --list
This repository is compatible with nix (standard), nix (flakes), direnv, and
lorri. You can explicitly enter a development shell with all necessary
dependencies with either nix develop
(flakes) or nix shell
(standard).
This repository ships configuration details for VSCode. After entering a
development shell, run code .
from the root of the repository to open VSCode.
# get developer dependencies by entering a nix shell.
# if you have direnv / lorri installed, you just need to allow the config once.
nix develop # (flakes)
nix-shell # (standard)
direnv allow # direnv
just test
just lint
# build with `go build`, result is in `./bin/nix-search`
just build
# build with `nix`, result is in `./result/bin/nix-search`
nix build # (flakes)
nix-build # (standard)
# if built with `just build`:
./bin/nix-search --help
# if built with `nix build` or `nix-build`:
./result/bin/nix-search --help
# or, you can build + run directly through nix:
nix run . -- help # flakes
# or, you can open a new shell with the binary available on $PATH through nix:
nix shell # and then `nix-search`
nix shell -c nix-search --help # directly run `nix-search` from inside this shell
If you make changes that modify the golang dependencies, you'll need to update the pinned dependencies used in the Nix build process:
gomod2nix
# Re-generate the flake.lock file
nix flake lock
# Update all dependencies and update the flake.lock file
nix flake update
- package godocs completed
- package use documentation in README
- shell completions in nix package and generatable
- option searching