Lockable HTTP Tarball Protocol
Tarball flakes can be served as regular tarballs via HTTP or the file
system (for file://
URLs). Unless the server implements the Lockable
HTTP Tarball protocol, it is the responsibility of the user to make sure that
the URL always produces the same tarball contents.
An HTTP server can return an "immutable" HTTP URL appropriate for lock
files. This allows users to specify a tarball flake input in
flake.nix
that requests the latest version of a flake
(e.g. https://example.org/hello/latest.tar.gz
), while flake.lock
will record a URL whose contents will not change
(e.g. https://example.org/hello/<revision>.tar.gz
). To do so, the
server must return an HTTP Link
header with the rel
attribute set to
immutable
, as follows:
Link: <flakeref>; rel="immutable"
(Note the required <
and >
characters around flakeref.)
flakeref must be a tarball flakeref. It can contain the tarball flake attributes
narHash
, rev
, revCount
and lastModified
. If narHash
is included, its
value must be the NAR hash of the unpacked tarball (as computed via
nix hash path
). Lix checks the contents of the returned tarball
against the narHash
attribute. The rev
and revCount
attributes
are useful when the tarball flake is a mirror of a fetcher type that
has those attributes, such as Git or GitHub. They are not checked by
Lix.
Link: <https://example.org/hello/442793d9ec0584f6a6e82fa253850c8085bb150a.tar.gz
?rev=442793d9ec0584f6a6e82fa253850c8085bb150a
&revCount=835
&narHash=sha256-GUm8Uh/U74zFCwkvt9Mri4DSM%2BmHj3tYhXUkYpiv31M%3D>; rel="immutable"
(The linebreaks in this example are for clarity and must not be included in the actual response.)
For tarball flakes, the value of the lastModified
flake attribute is
defined as the timestamp of the newest file inside the tarball.