Warning
This program is experimental and its interface is subject to change.
Name
nix store diff-closures
- show what packages and versions were added and removed between two closures
Synopsis
nix store diff-closures
[option...] before after
Note: this command's interface is based heavily around installables, which you may want to read about first (nix --help
).
Examples
-
Show what got added and removed between two versions of the NixOS system profile:
# nix store diff-closures /nix/var/nix/profiles/system-655-link /nix/var/nix/profiles/system-658-link acpi-call: 2020-04-07-5.8.16 → 2020-04-07-5.8.18 baloo-widgets: 20.08.1 → 20.08.2 bluez-qt: +12.6 KiB dolphin: 20.08.1 → 20.08.2, +13.9 KiB kdeconnect: 20.08.2 → ∅, -6597.8 KiB kdeconnect-kde: ∅ → 20.08.2, +6599.7 KiB …
Description
This command shows the differences between the two closures before and after with respect to the addition, removal, or version change of packages, as well as changes in store path sizes.
For each package name in the two closures (where a package name is defined as the name component of a store path excluding the version), if there is a change in the set of versions of the package, or a change in the size of the store paths of more than 8 KiB, it prints a line like this:
dolphin: 20.08.1 → 20.08.2, +13.9 KiB
No size change is shown if it's below the threshold. If the package
does not exist in either the before or after closures, it is
represented using ∅
(empty set) on the appropriate side of the
arrow. If a package has an empty version string, the version is
rendered as ε
(epsilon).
There may be multiple versions of a package in each closure. In that case, only the changed versions are shown. Thus,
libfoo: 1.2, 1.3 → 1.4
leaves open the possibility that there are other versions (e.g. 1.1
)
that exist in both closures.
Options
Common evaluation options:
-
--arg
name expr Pass the value expr as the argument name to Nix functions. -
--argstr
name string Pass the string string as the argument name to Nix functions. -
--debugger
Start an interactive environment if evaluation fails. -
--eval-store
store-url The URL of the Nix store to use for evaluation, i.e. to store derivations (.drv
files) and inputs referenced by them. -
--impure
Allow access to mutable paths and repositories. -
--include
/-I
path Add path to the Nix search path. The Nix search path is initialized from the colon-separatedNIX_PATH
environment variable, and is used to look up the location of Nix expressions using paths enclosed in angle brackets (i.e.,<nixpkgs>
).For instance, passing
-I /home/eelco/Dev -I /etc/nixos
will cause Lix to look for paths relative to
/home/eelco/Dev
and/etc/nixos
, in that order. This is equivalent to setting theNIX_PATH
environment variable to/home/eelco/Dev:/etc/nixos
It is also possible to match paths against a prefix. For example, passing
-I nixpkgs=/home/eelco/Dev/nixpkgs-branch -I /etc/nixos
will cause Lix to search for
<nixpkgs/path>
in/home/eelco/Dev/nixpkgs-branch/path
and/etc/nixos/nixpkgs/path
.If a path in the Nix search path starts with
http://
orhttps://
, it is interpreted as the URL of a tarball that will be downloaded and unpacked to a temporary location. The tarball must consist of a single top-level directory. For example, passing-I nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/master.tar.gz
tells Lix to download and use the current contents of the
master
branch in thenixpkgs
repository.The URLs of the tarballs from the official
nixos.org
channels (see the manual page fornix-channel
) can be abbreviated aschannel:<channel-name>
. For instance, the following two flags are equivalent:-I nixpkgs=channel:nixos-21.05 -I nixpkgs=https://nixos.org/channels/nixos-21.05/nixexprs.tar.xz
You can also fetch source trees using flake URLs and add them to the search path. For instance,
-I nixpkgs=flake:nixpkgs
specifies that the prefix
nixpkgs
shall refer to the source tree downloaded from thenixpkgs
entry in the flake registry. Similarly,-I nixpkgs=flake:github:NixOS/nixpkgs/nixos-22.05
makes
<nixpkgs>
refer to a particular branch of theNixOS/nixpkgs
repository on GitHub. -
--override-flake
original-ref resolved-ref Override the flake registries, redirecting original-ref to resolved-ref.
Common flake-related options:
-
--commit-lock-file
Commit changes to the flake's lock file. -
--inputs-from
flake-url Use the inputs of the specified flake as registry entries. -
--no-registries
Don't allow lookups in the flake registries. This option is deprecated; use--no-use-registries
. -
--no-update-lock-file
Do not allow any updates to the flake's lock file. -
--no-write-lock-file
Do not write the flake's newly generated lock file. -
--output-lock-file
flake-lock-path Write the given lock file instead offlake.lock
within the top-level flake. -
--override-input
input-path flake-url Override a specific flake input (e.g.dwarffs/nixpkgs
). This implies--no-write-lock-file
. -
--reference-lock-file
flake-lock-path Read the given lock file instead offlake.lock
within the top-level flake.
Logging-related options:
-
--debug
Set the logging verbosity level to 'debug'. -
--log-format
format Set the format of log output; one ofraw
,internal-json
,bar
orbar-with-logs
. -
--print-build-logs
/-L
Print full build logs on standard error. -
--quiet
Decrease the logging verbosity level. -
--verbose
/-v
Increase the logging verbosity level.
Miscellaneous global options:
-
--help
Show usage information. -
--offline
Disable substituters and consider all previously downloaded files up-to-date. -
--option
name value Set the Lix configuration setting name to value (overridingnix.conf
). -
--refresh
Consider all previously downloaded files out-of-date. -
--repair
During evaluation, rewrite missing or corrupted files in the Nix store. During building, rebuild missing or corrupted store paths. -
--version
Show version information.
Options that change the interpretation of installables:
-
--derivation
Operate on the store derivation rather than its outputs. -
--expr
/-E
expr Interpret installables as attribute paths relative to the Nix expression expr. -
--file
/-f
file Interpret installables as attribute paths relative to the Nix expression stored in file. If file is the character -, then a Nix expression will be read from standard input. Implies--impure
.
Note
See
man nix.conf
for overriding configuration settings with command line flags.