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Building Mina using Nix

Nix is a declarative package manager for Linux, macOS and other UNIX-like systems. You can read more about Nix on its official website.

Mina can be built using Nix, in multiple ways. Follow the steps below to get started and read the troubleshooting section if you encounter any problem.

TL;DR for those who know Nix

This is a flake. It provides a lot of different packages from the monorepo. Most of those packages require submodules to build. To simplify your life, there's nix/pin.sh script which creates the relevant registry entry with ?submodules=1, so that you can then use it like nix build mina, nix develop mina, etc. You can discover all the available packages as usual, by using tab completion or nix eval mina#packages.x86_64-linux --apply __attrNames or your favourite way.

1. Install Nix

If you don't already have Nix on your machine, you can install it with the following command:

sh <(curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install) --daemon

You may also install Nix from your distribution's official repository; Note however that it is preferrable you get a relatively recent version (⩾ 2.5), and the version from the repository may be rather old.

warning for macOS users: macOS updates will often break your nix installation. To prevent that, you can add the following to your ~/.bashrc or ~/.zshrc:

# avoid macOS updates to destroy nix
if [ -e '/nix/var/nix/profiles/default/etc/profile.d/nix-daemon.sh' ]; then
  source '/nix/var/nix/profiles/default/etc/profile.d/nix-daemon.sh'
fi

2. Enable Flakes (optional but recommended)

Mina is packaged using Nix Flakes, which are an experimental feature of Nix. However, compatibility with pre-flake Nix is provided. If you wish to contribute the Nix expressions in this repository, or want to get some convenience features and speed improvements, it is advisable to enable flakes. For this, you'll want to make sure you're running recent Nix (⩾2.5) and have enabled the relevant experimental features, either in /etc/nix/nix.conf or (recommended) in ~/.config/nix/nix.conf:

mkdir -p "${XDG_CONFIG_HOME-${HOME}/.config}/nix"
echo 'experimental-features = nix-command flakes' > "${XDG_CONFIG_HOME-${HOME}/.config}/nix/nix.conf"

You can check that your flake support is working by running nix flake metadata github:nixos/nixpkgs for example.

3. Add a nix registry entry

If you're using flakes (see previous section), you have to run the ./nix/pin.sh script to get the mina registry entry, since that's the easiest way to enable submodules to be available to the build. This is needed because by default Nix will not include submodules in the source tree it builds dependencies from, resulting in errors.

For the curious, mina registry entry will resolve to git+file:///path/to/your/mina/checkout?submodules=1. Should you want to hack on a different mina checkout, try e.g. nix develop "git+file://$PWD?submodules=1" from that checkout.

4. Use it

"Pure" development shell

TL;DR:

nix develop mina
dune build src/app/cli/src/mina.exe

You can use Nix to fetch all the dependencies, and then only use dune as a build system to build Mina itself.

If you wish to build Mina yourself, or work on some changes incrementally, run nix develop mina if you're using flakes (or nix-shell default.nix otherwise). This will drop you in a shell with all dependencies, including OCaml, Rust and Go ones available, so the only thing you have to do is run dune build src/app/cli/src/mina.exe. You can also just run eval "$buildPhase" to run the same command as would be run inside the nix sandbox. Running make build will not work due to it trying to build the already-built go dependencies. The produced executable can be found in _build/default/src/app/cli/src/mina.exe. You most likely want to run it from the same shell you've built it in, since the executable looks for certain dependencies at runtime via environment variables, meaning you either have to set those variables yourself or rely on the ones set by the devShell. The executable produced by nix build mina (see "Pure" build section) doesn't suffer from this limitation, since it is wrapped with all the necessary environment variables.

Note that opam will not be available in that shell, since Nix takes over the job of computing and installing dependencies. If you need to modify the opam switch, use the impure build (next section).

Don't forget to exit and re-enter the development shell after switching branches, or otherwise changing the dependency tree of Mina.

IDE with LSP support (vscode, emacs, (neo)vim, ...)

Just run

nix develop mina#with-lsp -c $EDITOR .

if you have your $EDITOR variable set correctly. Otherwise, replace it with the editor you want to edit Mina with.

This will drop you in your favorite editor within a Nix environment containing an OCaml LSP server. You might need to configure your editor appropriately; See Per-editor instructions.

However, for LSP to work its magic, you will need to have to make type informations available. They can for example be obtained by running dune build @check in src/app/cli, which might take a while, or by compiling the project.

Don't forget to exit and re-enter the editor using this command after switching branches, or otherwise changing the dependency tree of Mina.

Per-editor instructions

Visual Studio Code / vscodium

You have to install the "OCaml Platform" extension, either from official marketplace or openvsix.

After installing it, run code (or codium) from within the nix develop mina#with-lsp shell, click "Select Sandbox" in the extension menu, and then pick "Global Sandbox". From then on, it should just work.

Vim

Install CoC, and add the following to its configuration ($HOME/.config/nvim, or just enter command :CocConfig):

{
  "languageserver": {
    "ocaml-lsp": {
      "command": "ocamllsp",
      "args": [],
      "filetypes": [
        "ocaml", "reason"
      ]
    }
  }
}

Now, whenever you start vim from nix develop mina#with-lsp, it should just work.

Emacs

You need to install tuareg and a LSP client, like lsp-mode or eglot. You do not need to use merlin directly (through merlin-mode), as ocaml-lsp-server that LSP client will use uses merlin backend. Note that LSP with flycheck and similar tools will not provide the global project compilation functionality, they will focus on individual buffers instead. To compile the whole project you can still use M-x compile or anything else; compilation results will be then seen by the LSP/flycheck. This should just work without any configuration, as long as you start it from nix develop mina#with-lsp. If you prefer to have just one instance of emacs running, consider installing direnv as explained in the sections below: emacs packages envrc and emacs-direnv (just direnv in MELPA) provide integration with the tool, allowing emacs to use nix-defined sandbox variables when the open buffer is a repository file.

"Pure" build

TL;DR:

nix build mina

Alternatively, you can build the entirety of Mina inside the Nix sandbox fully automatically: run nix build mina if you're using flakes (or nix-build otherwise). You can find the resulting executable at result/bin/mina.

"Impure" development shell

TL;DR:

nix develop mina#impure
opam init --bare
opam repository add --yes --all --set-default o1-labs https://github.com/o1-labs/opam-repository.git
opam update
opam switch import src/opam.export --strict
eval $(opam env)
./scripts/pin-external-packages.sh

You can also use Nix to only fetch the "system" (native) dependencies of Mina, and let opam, cargo and go figure out the relevant language-specific dependencies. To do so, run nix develop mina#impure if you have flakes (or nix-shell otherwise).

It will drop you in a shell with all the relevant libraries and binaries available, and show you the instructions for building Mina.

Don't forget to exit and re-enter the development shell after switching branches, or otherwise changing the dependency tree of Mina.

Building a docker image

TL;DR:

$(nix build mina#mina-image-full) | docker load
# Also available: mina-image-slim, mina-image-instr, mina-archive-image-full,

Since a "pure" build can happen entirely inside the Nix sandbox, we can use its result to produce other useful artifacts with Nix. For example, we can build docker images. Due to /nix/store space usage concerns, instead of building the image itself Nix produces a script which, when executed, outputs a tarball of a docker image, suitable for consumption with docker load. After loading the image, it can be used as any other docker image would be (e.g. with docker run). The images for branches available on github can also be obtained from the registry at us-west2-docker.pkg.dev/o1labs-192920/nix-containers/$IMAGE:$BRANCH, e.g. docker run --rm -it us-west2-docker.pkg.dev/o1labs-192920/nix-containers/mina-image-full:develop .

The slim image only has the Mina daemon itself, whereas full images also contain many useful tools, such as coreutils, fake init, jq, etc.

The instr image is a replica of full image with additional instrumenation data.

Debian package

TL;DR:

nix build mina#mina-deb

The Debian package is for installing on .deb-based systems which don't have Nix installed. Installing it if you have Nix already won't work.

Demo nixos-container

If you're running NixOS, you can use nixos-container to run a demo of mina daemon from your local checkout. To do so, try

sudo nixos-container create mina --flake mina
sudo nixos-container start mina
sudo nixos-container root-login mina

From there, you can poke the mina daemon, e.g. with systemctl status mina.

If you want to update the container to reflect the latest checkout, try

sudo nixos-container stop mina
sudo nixos-container update mina --flake mina
sudo nixos-container start mina

direnv

TL;DR

printf './nix/pin.sh\nuse flake mina\n' > .envrc
direnv allow

It is considered as a good practice to automatically enter the Nix shell instead of keeping in mind that you need to execute the nix develop mina command every time you enter the Mina repo directory. One way to do this is by using direnv + nix-direnv

How-To

  • Install the direnv and add hook into your shell:

  • Reload your shell

  • Configure the nix-direnv

    • The Via home-manager (Recommended) section
  • Create the .envrc file under the Mina repo root path with the following content: use flake mina:

    cd mina
    touch .envrc && echo "use flake mina" >> .envrc
    
  • Execute the following command within the Mina repo root path, in order to activate the direnv for current directory (it will read and apply previously created .envrc configuration file):

    direnv allow
    
  • Optional: Reload your shell

  • Now you will enter the Nix shell automatically should you cd into the Mina repo root path.

  • To build Mina, you can use all the same techniques as from within the nix develop shell mentioned above. For example, try dune build src/app/cli/src/mina.exe, or eval "$buildPhase". Please note though that make targets invocation won't work as usual, that is why it is preferably to use dune directly.

Check the shell

direnv will tell you which variables it added to your shell every time you enter the subject directory.

In addition to that you can:

  • Check if direnv loaded the configuration for particular directory by invoking the direnv status command within subject directory.
  • Check the IN_NIX_SHELL environment variable value:
    echo ${IN_NIX_SHELL}
    
    Where an empty string means that the Nix shell was not entered.

CLI prompt info

  • In addition you might want to update your CLI prompt environment information to automatically inform you if you've entered the Nix shell.

Miscellaneous & advanced

Contributing to Nix expressions

You probably want to enable flakes if you plan to contribute to the Nix expressions here.

Most Nix things (including this README ☺) are located inside the nix/ subfolder. The exceptions are flake.nix which defines inputs and combines the expressions from nix/, flake.lock which locks the input versions, and default.nix with shell.nix, which provide compatibility with pre-flake Nix.

Updating inputs

If you wish to update all the inputs of this flake, run nix flake update . If you want to update a particular input, run nix flake lock --update-input <input> .

Notes on the "pure" build

The "pure" build is performed with the help of opam-nix. The switch is imported from opam.export, and then external deps (from src/external) are added on top. Also, all in-tree Rust dependencies (kimchi_bindings in particular) are built as separate derivations using rustPlatform. Implicit native dependencies are taken from nixpkgs with some overlays applied. All the dependencies are then provided to the final Mina derivation. See ./ocaml.nix for more details.

Why are Rust, Go and OCaml bits built separately?

In order to enforce reproducibility, Nix doesn't generally allow networking from inside the sandbox, apart from specific circumstances. This means that just running cargo build or go build won't work. Instead, we're using Nix tooling that pre-downloads all Rust/Go/OCaml dependencies as separate steps, then provides those dependencies to the relevant build system, and builds the components that way. Since there are three separate tools to build Rust, Go, and OCaml packages, we have to package those components separately.

Updating dependencies of libp2p_helper requires me to update the hash. Why?

go.sum uses a really weird hashing algorithm that's incompatible with Nix. Because of this, fetching dependencies of Go's package is done with a fixed-output derivation (FOD), which allows networking inside the Nix sandbox (in order to vendor all the dependencies using go mod vendor), but in exchange requires the hash of the output to be specified explicitly. This is the hash you're updating by running ./nix/update-libp2p-hashes.sh.

Notes on instrumenation package

nix build mina#mina_with_instrumentation allows to build a special version on mina with instrumentation enabled. This can be helpful if one would like verify what is a code coverage of end-to-end/manual tests performed over mina under development. Additionally there is a docker image available which wraps up above mina build into full mina image. One can prepare it using command: $(nix build mina#mina-image-instr-full --print-out-paths) | docker load

Discovering all the packages this Flake provides

nix flake show doesn't work due to IFD.

This should give you all the "user-facing" packages this flake provides for x86_64-linux:

nix eval mina#packages.x86_64-linux --apply __attrNames

nix repl

If you want to explore the entire packageset (including all of nixpkgs), enter nix repl, issue :lf mina command there, and explore the legacyPackages.${__currentSystem}.regular package set (e.g. using tab completion). It will have a lot of things, but it allows you to play around with and build the dependencies which are used to build Mina. nix repl --help and the :? command will likely be useful.

Example session:

❯ nix repl
Welcome to Nix 2.12.0pre20220901_4823067. Type :? for help.

nix-repl> :lf mina
warning: Git tree '/home/balsoft/projects/tweag/mina' is dirty
Added 19 variables.

nix-repl> legacyPackages.x86_64-linux.regular.ocamlPackages_mina.easy-format.version
"1.3.2"

nix-repl> :b legacyPackages.x86_64-linux.regular.ocamlPackages_mina.fmt

This derivation produced the following outputs:
  out -> /nix/store/3r9ralnsyzja44p006s98i903yjzipsx-fmt-0.8.6

nix-repl> :u legacyPackages.x86_64-linux.regular.ocamlPackages_mina.mina-dev.overrideAttrs (_: { DUNE_PROFILE = "dev"; })

❯ # Now you're in a shell with mina built with DUNE_PROFILE="dev"

Troubleshooting

Evaluation takes too long

Evaluating any output of this flake for the first time can take a substantial amount of time. This is because Nix wants to ensure purity, and thus copies all submodules to the store and checks them out individually, even if you already have them checked out in your work tree.

This is good for reproducibility, but can be inconvenient. Here are some steps you can take to circumvent this:

  • If you're using direnv, make sure to install and use nix-direnv. It has a caching mechanism that significantly speeds up subsequent re-entries into the environment. You might have to direnv reload manually once in a while as a trade-off.
  • If you are trying to evaluate something from a clean checkout, it will take longer, because Nix will try to ensure purity. You can circumvent this by making the index dirty, e.g. by doing touch foo; git add foo . This will make all Nix commands do a quick copy instead of checking everything out.

Error: File unavailable:, Undefined symbols for architecture ...:, Compiler version mismatch, missing dependency libraries, or incorrect dependency library versions

If you get an error like this:

File "src/lib/crypto/kimchi_bindings/stubs/dune", line 77, characters 0-237:
77 | (rule
78 |  (enabled_if
79 |   (<> %{env:MARLIN_PLONK_STUBS=n} n))
80 |  (targets libwires_15_stubs.a)
81 |  (deps
82 |   (env_var MARLIN_PLONK_STUBS))
83 |  (action
84 |   (progn
85 |    (copy
86 |     %{env:MARLIN_PLONK_STUBS=n}/lib/libwires_15_stubs.a
87 |     libwires_15_stubs.a))))
Error: File unavailable:
/nix/store/2i0iqm48p20mrn69nbgr0pf76vdzjxj6-marlin_plonk_bindings_stubs-0.1.0/lib/lib/libwires_15_stubs.a

or like this:

Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
  "____chkstk_darwin", referenced from:
      __GLOBAL__sub_I_clock_cache.cc in librocksdb_stubs.a(clock_cache.o)
      __GLOBAL__sub_I_lru_cache.cc in librocksdb_stubs.a(lru_cache.o)
      __GLOBAL__sub_I_sharded_cache.cc in librocksdb_stubs.a(sharded_cache.o)
      __GLOBAL__sub_I_builder.cc in librocksdb_stubs.a(builder.o)
      __GLOBAL__sub_I_c.cc in librocksdb_stubs.a(c.o)
      __GLOBAL__sub_I_column_family.cc in librocksdb_stubs.a(column_family.o)
      __GLOBAL__sub_I_compacted_db_impl.cc in librocksdb_stubs.a(compacted_db_impl.o)
      ...
ld: symbol(s) not found for architecture x86_64

or like this:

Compiler version mismatch: this project seems to be compiled with OCaml
compiler version 4.11, but the running OCaml LSP supports OCaml version 4.14.
OCaml language support will not work properly until this problem is fixed.
Hint: Make sure your editor runs OCaml LSP that supports this version of
compiler.

This could be caused by having some non-Nix setup polluting the environment in your shell init file. Try running nix develop mina -c bash --norc or nix develop mina -c zsh --no-rc and see if that helps. If it does, look through the corresponding shell init files for anything suspicious (e.g. eval $(opam env) or PATH modifications).

Alternatively, you might have switched branches but didn't re-enter the development shell. Exit the development shell (with exit, Ctrl+D, or however else you like exiting your shells) and re-enter it again with nix develop mina. direnv can also sometimes not reload the environment automatically, in that case, try direnv reload.

Finally, in some circumstances, dune is not smart enough to rebuild things even if the environment changed and they should be rebuilt. Try removing the _build directory (or running dune clean, which does the same thing).

MINA_LIBP2P_HELPER_PATH

If you get an error like

[
  "Failed to connect to libp2p_helper process",
  [
    "Could not start libp2p_helper. If you are a dev, did you forget to `make libp2p_helper` and set MINA_LIBP2P_HELPER_PATH? Try MINA_LIBP2P_HELPER_PATH=$PWD/src/app/libp2p_helper/result/bin/mina-libp2p_helper.",
    [
      "Unix.Unix_error", "No such file or directory",
      "Core.Unix.create_process",
      "((prog coda-libp2p_helper) (args ()) (env (Extend ())))"
    ]
  ]
]

This is most likely because you have built Mina yourself from nix develop mina or nix-shell default.nix, and then ran the resulting executable from outside the shell. This is not supported, see "Pure" development shell section. You can try re-entering the shell and running the executable from there, or building mina with nix build mina and running it with result/bin/mina instead.

Submodules

Nix will not fetch submodules for you. You have to make sure that you have the entire mina source code, including submodules, before you run any nix commands. This should make sure you have the right versions checked out (in most cases):

git submodule sync
git submodule update --init --recursive

If you don't do this, Nix may not always yell at you right away (especially if all the submodule directories are present in the tree somehow, but not correctly filled in). It will however fail with a strange error during the build, when it fails to find a dependency. Make sure you do this!

git LFS

If you have git LFS installed and configured on your system, the build may fail with strange errors similar to this:

Downloading docs/res/all_data_structures.dot.png (415 KB)
Error downloading object: docs/res/all_data_structures.dot.png (fed6771): Smudge error: Error downloading docs/res/all_data_structures.dot.png (fed6771190a9b063246074bbfe3b1fc0ba4240fdc41abcf026d5bc449ca4f9b8): batch request: missing protocol: ""

Errors logged to /tmp/nix-115798-1/lfs/logs/20220121T113801.442266054.log
Use `git lfs logs last` to view the log.
error: external filter 'git-lfs filter-process' failed
fatal: docs/res/all_data_structures.dot.png: smudge filter lfs failed
error: program 'git' failed with exit code 128
(use '--show-trace' to show detailed location information)

You can fix this by setting GIT_LFS_SKIP_SMUDGE=1 env variable, e.g. by running

export GIT_LFS_SKIP_SMUDGE=1

Before running any nix commands.

Warning: ignoring untrusted substituter

Update your /etc/nix/nix.conf with the following content (concatenating new values with possibly already existing):

trusted-substituters = https://storage.googleapis.com/mina-nix-cache https://cache.nixos.org
trusted-public-keys = nix-cache.minaprotocol.org:D3B1W+V7ND1Fmfii8EhbAbF1JXoe2Ct4N34OKChwk2c= nix-cache.minaprotocol.org:fdcuDzmnM0Kbf7yU4yywBuUEJWClySc1WIF6t6Mm8h4= nix-cache.minaprotocol.org:D3B1W+V7ND1Fmfii8EhbAbF1JXoe2Ct4N34OKChwk2c= cache.nixos.org-1:6NCHdD59X431o0gWypbMrAURkbJ16ZPMQFGspcDShjY=

And then reload your nix-daemon service.

gcc: Argument list too long

If you have a lot of big environment variables, especially on macOS, this might happen when you try to build anything inside the pure shell. It happens because the stack size for every process is limited, and it is shared between the current environment, the argument list, and some other things. Therefore, if your environment takes up too much space, not enough is left for the arguments. The way to fix the error is to unset some of the bigger enviornment variables, perhaps with

export XDG_DATA_DIRS= DIRENV_DIFF= <...>

Before running any dune commands.

Alternatively, you can just run your commands inside nix develop --ignore-environment mina, which unsets all the outside environment variables, resulting in a more reproducible but less convenient environment.

Granular nix

A new way to build Mina with nix goes by the catchname "granular nix". It's granular because it relies on splitting the task of building the Mina project to building each opam package defined by Mina in isolation (instead of invoking dune build for the whole filetree).

This has a benefit of allowing caching of artifacts and test results.

Build methodology

Dune files are analyzed by the o1-labs/describe-dune tool. Libraries, executables, tests and generated files, along with their mutual dependencies (as present by dune files) are extracted.

After that, dependencies between all of the units (libraries, executables, tests) and files are determined. Then a greedy algorithm attempts to "upgrade" each library/executable dependency to a package dependency. It ends with an error if it fails. But if it succeeds, it comes up with a dependency tree (that can be plotted with nix build mina#info.deps-graph) that allows compilation of project's Ocaml code to be executed package-by-package.

Then packages are compiled one by one using dune, with dependencies of a package built before it and then provided to the package via OCAMLPATH environment variable. Code of each package is isolated from its dependencies and packages that depend on it.

New nix derivations

There is a bunch of new derivations available using nix flake for Mina repository. In subsections there are some examples and the full list of new derivations.

A note on building process and treatment of packages. All of the code is build on a package level. That is, for compilation units (executables, libraries, tests) that are assigned to a package, they are compiled with dune build --only-packages <package>. Any of dependencies are pre-built the same way and are provided to dune via OCAMLPATH.

For compilation units that have no package defined, a synthetic package name is generated. Path to dune directory with these units is quoted by replacing . with __ and / with - in the package path, and also prepending and appending the resulting string with __. E.g. for path src/test/command_line_tests a synthetic package __src-test-command_line_tests__ is generated. Such synthetic packages are built with dune build <path-to-dune-directory> (isolation is ensured by filtering out all of irrelevant Ocaml sources).

Examples

CLI commands below assume to be executed from a directory with Mina repository checked out and ./nix/pin.sh executed.

Description Command
Build all Ocaml code, run same tests as in unit-test.sh nix build mina#granular
Build all Ocaml code and run all unit tests nix build mina#all-tested
Build all Ocaml code without running tests nix build mina#all
Build mina_lib package nix build mina#pkgs.mina_lib
Build mina_net2 package and run its tests nix build mina#tested.mina_net2
Build validate_keypair executable nix build mina#exes.validate_keypair
Run tests from src/lib/staged_ledger/test nix build mina#tested.__src-lib-staged_ledger-test__
Plot dependencies of package mina_lib nix build mina#info.deps-graphs.mina_lib
Plot dependency graph of Mina repository nix build mina#info.deps-graph
Extract json description of dependencies nix build mina#info.deps

Dependency description generated via nix build mina#info.deps --out-link deps.json is useful for investigation of depencies in a semi-automated way. E.g. to check which executables implicitly depend on mina_lib, just run the following jq command:

$ jq '[.units | to_entries | .[] | { key: .key, value: [ .value.exe? | to_entries? | .[]? | select(.value.pkgs? | contains(["mina_lib"])?) | .key ] } | select (.value != []) | .key ]' <deps.json
[
  "__src-app-batch_txn_tool__",
  "__src-app-graphql_schema_dump__",
  "__src-app-test_executive__",
  "cli",
  "zkapp_test_transaction"
]

Combined derivations

Derivations that combine all packages: all of the Ocaml code is built, three options vary in which unit tests are executed.

  • #all
    • builds all the Ocaml code discovered in the dune root (libraries, executables, tests)
    • tests aren't executed
  • #granular
    • #all + running all of tests except for tests in src/app (behavior similar to buildkite/scripts/unit-test.sh)
  • #all-tested
    • #all + running all discovered tests
    • discovery of tests is done by finding test stanzas and libraries with inline_tests stanza

Individual compilation units

These allow every package to be compiled/tested in isolation, without requiring all of the other packages to be built (except for dependencies, of course).

  • #pkgs.<package>
    • takes sources of the package and builds it with dune build <package>
    • all library dependencies are provided via OCAMLPATH
    • derivation contains everything from the _build directory
  • #src.pkgs.<package>
    • show sources of a package (and some relevant files, like dune from the parent directory), as filtered for building the #pkgs.<package>
  • #files.<path>
    • build all file rules in the <path> used by stanzas in other directories
    • defined only for generated files that are used outside <path>/dune scope
  • #src.files.<path>
    • source director used for building #files.<path>
  • #tested.<package>
    • same as #pkgs.<package>, but also runs tests for the package
    • note that tests for package's dependencies aren't executed

There are also a few derivations that help build a particular executable. These are merely shortcuts for building a package with an executable and then copying the executable to another directory.

  • #all-exes.<package>.<exe>
    • builds a derivation with a single file bin/<exe> that is executable with name <exe> from package <package>
    • when a public name is available, <exe> stands for executable's public name (and private name otherwise)
  • #exes.<exe>
    • shortcut for #all-exes.<package>.<exe>
    • if <exe> is defined for multiple packages, error is printed
    • if <exe> is defined in a single package <pkg>, it's same as #all-exes.<pkg>.<exe>

Metadata/debug information

  • #info.src
    • mapping from dune directory path dir to metadata related to files outside of dune directory that is needed for compilation
    • in particular the following fields:
      • subdirs, containing list of file paths (relative to the dir) that contain dune files with compilation units
      • file_deps, containing list of file paths from other dirs which should be included into source when compiling units from dir (e.g. some top-level dune files which use env stanza)
      • file_outs, containing a mapping from absolute path of a file generated by some rule stanza of the dune file to type of this file output (for type being one of promote, standard and fallback)
  • #info.exe
    • mapping from executable path (in format like src/app/archive/archive.exe) to an object with fields name and package
    • package field contains name of the package that declares the executable
    • name is either public_name of executable (if defined) or simply name
  • #info.package
    • mapping from package name to an object containing information about all of the units defined by the package
    • object schema is the following:
      { exe | lib | test : { name:  { public_name: string (optional), name: string, src: string, type: exe | lib | test, deps: [string] } }
      
    • this object contains raw data extracted from dune files
    • deps contains opam library names exactly as defined by dune (ppx-related libraries are concatenated to libraries)
  • #info.separated-libs
    • when there is a package-to-package circular dependency, this would be a non-empty object in the format similar to #info.deps containing information about edges in dependency graph that form a cycle
    • useful for debugging when an error Package ${pkg} has separated lib dependency to packages which may occur after future edits to dune files
  • #info.deps
    • mapping from files and units to their dependencies
    • external dependencies (defined outside of repository) are ignored
    • schema:
      { files: { <path> : { exes: { <package> : [<exe>] } } },
        units: { <package> : { exe | lib | test : { <name> : { 
           exes: { <package> : <exe> },
           files: [<dune dir path>],
           libs: { <package> : [<lib name>] },
           pkgs: [ <package> ]
        } } 
      }
      
  • #dune-description
  • #base-libs
    • a derivation that builds an opam repo-like file structure with all of the dependencies from opam.export (plus some extra opam packages for building)

Dependency graphs

  • #info.deps-graph
    • generates a dot graph of all of Mina packages (a huge one)
    • see example (after generating an svg with nix build mina#info.deps-graph --out-link all.dot && dot -Tsvg -o all.svg all.dot)
  • #info.deps-graphs.<package>
    • plots package dependencies for the <package>

Here's example of graph for mina_wire_types package:

Dependencies of mina_wire_types

Note that there are a few details of this graph. Graph generated for a package p displays may omit some of transitive dependencies of a dependency package if they're formed by units on which p has no dependency itself. And dependencies A -> B and B -> C do not always imply A -> C: package B may have a test dependent on package C, but A doesn't depend on that tests, only libraries it uses.

True meaning of this graph is that one can build package by package following edges backwards, building all of the units of a package all at once on each step. Interpretation of a graph for dependency analysis is handy, just it's useful to keep in mind certain details.