575 lines
14 KiB
Markdown
575 lines
14 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: "How I Start: Nix"
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date: 2020-03-08
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series: howto
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tags:
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- nix
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- rust
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---
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# How I Start: Nix
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[Nix][nix] is a tool that helps people create reproducible builds. This means that
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given the a known input, you can get the same output on other machines.Let's
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build and deploy a small Rust service with Nix. This will not require the Rust
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compiler to be installed with [rustup][rustup] or similar.
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[nix]: https://nixos.org/nix/
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[rustup]: https://rustup.rs
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- Setting up your environment
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- A new project
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- Setting up the Rust compiler
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- Serving HTTP
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- A simple package build
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- Shipping it in a docker image
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## Setting up your environment
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The first step is to install Nix. If you are using a Linux machine, run this
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script:
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```console
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$ curl https://nixos.org/nix/install | sh
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```
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This will prompt you for more information as it goes on, so be sure to follow
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the instructions carefully. Once it is done, close and re-open your shell. After
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you have done this, `nix-env` should exist in your shell. Try to run it:
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```console
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$ nix-env
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error: no operation specified
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Try 'nix-env --help' for more information.
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```
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Let's install a few other tools to help us with development. First, let's
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install [lorri][lorri] to help us manage our development shell:
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[lorri]: https://github.com/target/lorri
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```
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$ nix-env --install --file https://github.com/target/lorri/archive/master.tar.gz
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```
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This will automatically download and build lorri for your system based on the
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latest possible version. Once that is done, open another shell window (the lorri
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docs include ways to do this more persistently, but this will work for now) and run:
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```console
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$ lorri daemon
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```
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Now go back to your main shell window and install [direnv][direnv]:
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[direnv]: https://direnv.net
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```console
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$ nix-env --install direnv
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```
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Next, follow the [shell setup][direnvsetup] needed for your shell. I personally
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use `fish` with [oh my fish][omf], so I would run this:
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[direnvsetup]: https://direnv.net/docs/hook.html
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[omf]: https://github.com/oh-my-fish/oh-my-fish
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```console
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$ omf install direnv
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```
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Finally, let's install [niv][niv] to help us handle dependencies for the
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project. This will allow us to make sure that our builds pin _everything_ to a
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specific set of versions, including operating system packages.
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[niv]: https://github.com/nmattia/niv
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```console
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$ nix-env --install niv
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```
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Now that we have all of the tools we will need installed, let's create the
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project.
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# A new project
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Go to your favorite place to put code and make a new folder. I personally prefer
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`~/code`, so I will be using that here:
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```console
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$ cd ~/code
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$ mkdir helloworld
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$ cd helloworld
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```
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Let's set up the basic skeleton of the project. First, initialize niv:
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```console
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$ niv init
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```
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This will add the latest versions of `niv` itself and the packages used for the
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system to `nix/sources.json`. This will allow us to pin exact versions so the
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environment is as predictable as possible. Sometimes the versions of software in
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the pinned nixpkgs are too old. If this happens, you can update to the
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"unstable" branch of nixpkgs with this command:
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```console
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$ niv update nixpkgs -b nixpkgs-unstable
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```
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Next, set up lorri using `lorri init`:
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```console
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$ lorri init
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```
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This will create `shell.nix` and `.envrc`. `shell.nix` will be where we define
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the development environment for this service. `.envrc` is used to tell direnv
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what it needs to do. Let's try and activate the `.envrc`:
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```console
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$ cd .
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direnv: error /home/cadey/code/helloworld/.envrc is blocked. Run `direnv allow`
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to approve its content
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```
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Let's review its content:
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```console
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$ cat .envrc
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eval "$(lorri direnv)"
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```
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This seems reasonable, so approve it with `direnv allow` like the error message
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suggests:
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```console
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$ direnv allow
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```
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Now let's customize the `shell.nix` file to use our pinned version of nixpkgs.
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Currently, it looks something like this:
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```nix
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# shell.nix
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let
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pkgs = import <nixpkgs> {};
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in
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pkgs.mkShell {
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buildInputs = [
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pkgs.hello
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];
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}
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```
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This currently imports nixpkgs from the system-level version of it. This means
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that different systems could have different versions of nixpkgs on it, and that
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could make the `shell.nix` file hard to reproduce between machines. Let's import
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the pinned version of nixpkgs that niv created:
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```nix
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# shell.nix
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let
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sources = import ./nix/sources.nix;
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pkgs = import sources.nixpkgs {};
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in
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pkgs.mkShell {
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buildInputs = [
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pkgs.hello
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];
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}
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```
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And then let's test it with `lorri shell`:
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```console
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$ lorri shell
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lorri: building environment........ done
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(lorri) $
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```
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And let's see if `hello` is available inside the shell:
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```console
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(lorri) $ hello
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Hello, world!
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```
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You can set environment variables inside the `shell.nix` file. Do so like this:
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```nix
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# shell.nix
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let
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sources = import ./nix/sources.nix;
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pkgs = import sources.nixpkgs {};
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in
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pkgs.mkShell {
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buildInputs = [
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pkgs.hello
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];
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# Environment variables
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HELLO="world";
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}
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```
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Wait a moment for lorri to finish rebuilding the development environment and
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then let's see if the environment variable shows up:
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```console
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$ cd .
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direnv: loading ~/code/helloworld/.envrc
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<output snipped>
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$ echo $HELLO
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world
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```
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Now that we have the basics of the environment set up, lets install the Rust
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compiler.
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# Setting up the Rust compiler
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First, add [nixpkgs-mozilla][nixpkgsmoz] to niv:
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[nixpkgsmoz]: https://github.com/mozilla/nixpkgs-mozilla
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```console
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$ niv add mozilla/nixpkgs-mozilla
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```
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Then create `nix/rust.nix` in your repo:
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```nix
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# nix/rust.nix
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{ sources ? import ./sources.nix }:
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let
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pkgs =
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import sources.nixpkgs { overlays = [ (import sources.nixpkgs-mozilla) ]; };
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channel = "nightly";
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date = "2020-03-08";
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targets = [ ];
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chan = pkgs.rustChannelOfTargets channel date targets;
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in chan
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```
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This creates a nix function that takes in the pre-imported list of sources,
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creates a copy of nixpkgs with Rust at the nightly version `2020-03-08` overlaid
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into it, and exposes the rust package out of it. Let's add this to `shell.nix`:
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```nix
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# shell.nix
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let
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sources = import ./nix/sources.nix;
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rust = import ./nix/rust.nix { inherit sources; };
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pkgs = import sources.nixpkgs { };
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in
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pkgs.mkShell {
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buildInputs = [
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rust
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];
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}
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```
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Then ask lorri to recreate the development environment. This may take a bit to
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run because it's setting up everything the Rust compiler requires to run.
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```console
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$ lorri shell
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(lorri) $
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```
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Let's see what version of Rust is installed:
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```console
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(lorri) $ rustc --version
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rustc 1.43.0-nightly (823ff8cf1 2020-03-07)
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```
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This is exactly what we expect. Rust nightly versions get released with the
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date of the previous day in them. To be extra sure, let's see what the shell
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thinks `rustc` resolves to:
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```console
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(lorri) $ which rustc
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/nix/store/w6zk1zijfwrnjm6xyfmrgbxb6dvvn6di-rust-1.43.0-nightly-2020-03-07-823ff8cf1/bin/rustc
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```
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And now exit that shell and reload direnv:
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```console
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(lorri) $ exit
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$ cd .
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direnv: loading ~/code/helloworld/.envrc
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$ which rustc
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/nix/store/w6zk1zijfwrnjm6xyfmrgbxb6dvvn6di-rust-1.43.0-nightly-2020-03-07-823ff8cf1/bin/rustc
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```
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And now we have Rust installed at an arbitrary nightly version for _that project
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only_. This will work on other machines too. Now that we have our development
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environment set up, let's serve HTTP.
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## Serving HTTP
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[Rocket][rocket] is a popular web framework for Rust programs. Let's use that to
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create a small "hello, world" server. We will need to do the following:
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[rocket]: https://rocket.rs
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- Create the new Rust project
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- Add Rocket as a dependency
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- Write our "hello world" route
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- Test a build of the service with `cargo build`
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### Create the new Rust project
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Create the new Rust project with `cargo init`:
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```console
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$ cargo init --vcs git .
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Created binary (application) package
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```
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This will create the directory `src` and a file named `Cargo.toml`. Rust code
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goes in `src` and the `Cargo.toml` file configures dependencies. Adding the
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`--vcs git` flag also has cargo create a [gitignore][gitignore] file so that the
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target folder isn't tracked by git.
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[gitignore]: https://git-scm.com/docs/gitignore
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### Add Rocket as a dependency
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Open `Cargo.toml` and add the following to it:
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```toml
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[dependencies]
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rocket = "0.4.3"
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```
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Then download/build Rocket with `cargo build`:
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```console
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$ cargo build
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```
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This will download all of the dependencies you need and precompile Rocket. This
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will help speed up later builds.
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### Write our "hello world" route
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Now put the following in `src/main.rs`:
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```rust
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#![feature(proc_macro_hygiene, decl_macro)] // language features needed by Rocket
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// Import the rocket macros
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#[macro_use]
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extern crate rocket;
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// Create route / that returns "Hello, world!"
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#[get("/")]
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fn index() -> &'static str {
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"Hello, world!"
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}
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fn main() {
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rocket::ignite().mount("/", routes![index]).launch();
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}
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```
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### Test a build
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Rerun `cargo build`:
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```console
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$ cargo build
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```
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This will create the binary at `target/debug/helloworld`. Let's run it locally
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and see if it works:
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```console
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$ ./target/debug/helloworld &
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$ curl http://127.0.0.1:8000
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Hello, world!
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$ fg
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<press control-c>
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```
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The HTTP service works. We have a binary that is created with the Rust compiler
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Nix installed.
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## A simple package build
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Now that we have the HTTP service working, let's put it inside a nix package. We
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will need to use [naersk][naersk] to do this. Add naersk to your project with
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niv:
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[naersk]: https://github.com/nmattia/naersk
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```console
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$ niv add nmattia/naersk
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```
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Now let's create `helloworld.nix`:
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```
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# import niv sources and the pinned nixpkgs
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{ sources ? import ./nix/sources.nix, pkgs ? import sources.nixpkgs { }}:
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let
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# import rust compiler
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rust = import ./nix/rust.nix { inherit sources; };
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# configure naersk to use our pinned rust compiler
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naersk = pkgs.callPackage sources.naersk {
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rustc = rust;
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cargo = rust;
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};
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# tell nix-build to ignore the `target` directory
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src = builtins.filterSource
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(path: type: type != "directory" || builtins.baseNameOf path != "target")
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./.;
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in naersk.buildPackage {
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inherit src;
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remapPathPrefix =
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true; # remove nix store references for a smaller output package
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}
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```
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And then build it with `nix-build`:
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```console
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$ nix-build helloworld.nix
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```
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This can take a bit to run, but it will do the following things:
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- Download naersk
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- Download every Rust crate your HTTP service depends on into the Nix store
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- Run your program's tests
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- Build your dependencies into a Nix package
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- Build your program with those dependencies
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- Place a link to the result at `./result`
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Once it is done, let's take a look at the result:
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```console
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$ du -hs ./result/bin/helloworld
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2.1M ./result/bin/helloworld
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$ ldd ./result/bin/helloworld
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linux-vdso.so.1 (0x00007fffae080000)
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libdl.so.2 => /nix/store/wx1vk75bpdr65g6xwxbj4rw0pk04v5j3-glibc-2.27/lib/libdl.so.2 (0x0
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0007f3a01666000)
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librt.so.1 => /nix/store/wx1vk75bpdr65g6xwxbj4rw0pk04v5j3-glibc-2.27/lib/librt.so.1 (0x0
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0007f3a0165c000)
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libpthread.so.0 => /nix/store/wx1vk75bpdr65g6xwxbj4rw0pk04v5j3-glibc-2.27/lib/libpthread
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.so.0 (0x00007f3a0163b000)
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libgcc_s.so.1 => /nix/store/wx1vk75bpdr65g6xwxbj4rw0pk04v5j3-glibc-2.27/lib/libgcc_s.so.
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1 (0x00007f3a013f5000)
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libc.so.6 => /nix/store/wx1vk75bpdr65g6xwxbj4rw0pk04v5j3-glibc-2.27/lib/libc.so.6 (0x000
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07f3a0123f000)
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/nix/store/wx1vk75bpdr65g6xwxbj4rw0pk04v5j3-glibc-2.27/lib/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2 => /lib6
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4/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2 (0x00007f3a0160b000)
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libm.so.6 => /nix/store/wx1vk75bpdr65g6xwxbj4rw0pk04v5j3-glibc-2.27/lib/libm.so.6 (0x000
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07f3a010a9000)
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```
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This means that the Nix build created a 2.1 megabyte binary that only depends on
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[glibc][glibc], the implementation of the C language standard library that Nix
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prefers.
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[glibc]: https://www.gnu.org/software/libc/
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For repo cleanliness, add the `result` link to the [gitignore][gitignore]:
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```console
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$ echo 'result*' >> .gitignore
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```
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## Shipping it in a Docker image
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Now that we have a package built, let's ship it in a docker image. nixpkgs
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provides [dockerTools][dockertools] which helps us create docker images out of
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Nix packages. Let's create `default.nix` with the following contents:
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[dockertools]: https://nixos.org/nixpkgs/manual/#sec-pkgs-dockerTools
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```nix
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{ system ? builtins.currentSystem }:
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let
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sources = import ./nix/sources.nix;
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pkgs = import sources.nixpkgs { };
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helloworld = import ./helloworld.nix { inherit sources pkgs; };
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name = "xena/helloworld";
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tag = "latest";
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in pkgs.dockerTools.buildLayeredImage {
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inherit name tag;
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contents = [ helloworld ];
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config = {
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Cmd = [ "/bin/helloworld" ];
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Env = [ "ROCKET_PORT=5000" ];
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WorkingDir = "/";
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};
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}
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```
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And then build it with `nix-build`:
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```console
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$ nix-build default.nix
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```
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This will create a tarball containing the docker image information as the result
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of the Nix build. Load it into docker using `docker load`:
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```console
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$ docker load -i result
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```
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And then run it using `docker run`:
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```console
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$ docker run --rm -itp 52340:5000 xena/helloworld
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```
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Now test it using curl:
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```console
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$ curl http://127.0.0.1:52340
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Hello, world!
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```
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And now you have a docker image you can run wherever you want. The
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`buildLayeredImage` function used in `default.nix` also makes Nix put each
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dependency of the package into its own docker layer. This makes new versions of
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your program very efficient to upgrade on your clusters, realistically this
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reduces the amount of data needed for new versions of the program down to what
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changed. If nothing but some resources in their own package were changed, only
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those packages get downloaded.
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This is how I start a new project with Nix. I put all of the code described in
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this post in [this GitHub repo][helloworldrepo] in case it helps. Have fun and
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be well.
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[helloworldrepo]: https://github.com/Xe/helloworld
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---
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For some "extra credit" tasks, try and see if you can do the following:
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- Use the version of [niv][niv] that niv pinned
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- Customize the environment of the container by following the [Rocket
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configuration documentation](https://rocket.rs/v0.4/guide/configuration/)
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- Add some more routes to the program
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- Read the [Nix
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documentation](https://nixos.org/nix/manual/#chap-writing-nix-expressions) and
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learn more about writing Nix expressions
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- Configure your editor/IDE to use the `direnv` path
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