Add some more content to Nix Blog post
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@ -61,7 +61,7 @@ me use flakes? Well, two things:
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contains the hashes of the Git-based dependencies of a flake, and thus prevents builds from
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accidentally pulling in something else. However, unlike my approach, which relies on custom
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scripts and extra tools such as `jq`, the locking mechanism used by flakes is provided with
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standard Nix tooling. Using Flakes also guarantees that my build process won't break with
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standard Nix tooling. Using flakes also guarantees that my build process won't break with
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updates to Hugo or Ruby, since the `nixpkgs` version is stored in `flake.lock`, too.
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### The Final Result
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@ -218,6 +218,60 @@ to configure the challenge path to be writeable. Click the `module.nix` link abo
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to check out the full file.
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#### Creating a Flake
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We now have two "things" that handle the deployment of the blog:
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the builder functions `english` and `russian` which help describe various
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blog versions, and the NixOS module that configures the server's Nginx to
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serve said versions. We now want to expose these to the NixOS system configuration,
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which describes the entire server. I decided to do this using a flake.
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[Yanik Sander](https://blog.ysndr.de/posts/internals/2021-01-01-flake-ification/index.html) wrote up
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a pretty comprehensive explanation of how their blog is deployed using flakes, which I often consulted
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while getting started -- check it out if you are looking for more details.
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In brief, a Nix flake has _inputs_ and _outputs_. Inputs can be other flakes or source files that
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the flake needs access to, and outputs are simply Nix expressions that the flake provides.
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The nice thing about flakes' inputs is that they can reference other flakes via Git. This means
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that, should I write a flake for my blog (as I am about to do) I will be able to reference its git URL
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in another flake, and Nix will automatically clone and import it. This helps provide the __adding custom packages__
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goal, since I can now easily write Nix expressions and reference them from my system configuration.
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Importantly, flakes track the versions of their inputs in a `flake.lock` file; this means that, unless explicitly told to do otherwise,
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they will use the same version of their inputs. This achieves the __versioning__ goal for my blog, too, since
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now it will pull the pre-defined commit from Git until I tell it to fetch the updated site.
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In addition to pinning the version of my blog, though, the flake also locks down the version of `nixpkgs` itself.
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This means that the same packages will be used in the build process, instead of those found on the host
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system at the time. This has the nice effect of preventing updates to dependencies from breaking the build;
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it's a nice step towards purity and reproducibility.
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Let's take a look at the inputs of my blog flake:
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{{< codelines "Nix" "blog-static-flake/flake.nix" 2 19 >}}
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Two of these inputs are my blog source code, pulled from its usual Git host. They are marked as
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`flake = false` (my blog is just a Hugo project!), and both require submodules to be fetched. One
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of them is set to the `localization` branch, once again because localization is not yet stabled
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and thus not merged into my blog's `master` branch. The other three inputs are flakes, one of
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which is just `nixpkgs`. The `flake-utils` flake provides some convenient functions for writing other
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flakes, and `katex-html` is my own creation, a KaTeX-to-HTML conversion script that I use to post-process the blog.
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So what outputs should this flake provide? Well, we've already defined a NixOS module for the blog, and we'd like
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our flake to expose this module to the world. This is the exact purpose of the `outputs.nixosModule` attribute.
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It's sufficient to simply import the module file:
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{{< codelines "Nix" "blog-static-flake/flake.nix" 28 28 >}}
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This is great, but it's not enough. Specifically, the module configuration requires a list of
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packages created using our builders. But how should the NixOS configuration even reference these builders?
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There's no "standard" way for exposing a pure function from a flake (as far as I know), but the good news is that
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if you add a non-standard attribute to the flake, it will be accessible from wherever it is imported.
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Thus, I simply provide a `buildersFor` function:
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{{< codelines "Nix" "blog-static-flake/flake.nix" 23 27 >}}
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The `nixpkgs` flake requires a `system` argument, which means that the builders themselves
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(which depend on packages from `nixpkgs`) need to be aware of what system they're being used for.
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This is why `buildersFor` is itself a function.
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{{< todo >}} This needs to be done {{< /todo >}}
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#### Using the Module
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