Warning
This program is experimental and its interface is subject to change.
Name
nix derivation show
- show the contents of a store derivation
Synopsis
nix derivation show
[option...] installables...
Note: this command's interface is based heavily around installables, which you may want to read about first (nix --help
).
Examples
-
Show the store derivation that results from evaluating the Hello package:
# nix derivation show nixpkgs#hello { "/nix/store/s6rn4jz1sin56rf4qj5b5v8jxjm32hlk-hello-2.10.drv": { … } }
-
Show the full derivation graph (if available) that produced your NixOS system:
# nix derivation show -r /run/current-system
-
Print all files fetched using
fetchurl
by Firefox's dependency graph:# nix derivation show -r nixpkgs#firefox \ | jq -r '.[] | select(.outputs.out.hash and .env.urls) | .env.urls' \ | uniq | sort
Note that
.outputs.out.hash
selects fixed-output derivations (derivations that produce output with a specified content hash), while.env.urls
selects derivations with aurls
attribute.
Description
This command prints on standard output a JSON representation of the store derivations to which installables evaluate.
Store derivations are used internally by Nix. They are store paths with
extension .drv
that represent the build-time dependency graph to which
a Nix expression evaluates.
By default, this command only shows top-level derivations, but with
--recursive
, it also shows their dependencies.
The JSON output is a JSON object whose keys are the store paths of the derivations, and whose values are a JSON object with the following fields:
-
name
: The name of the derivation. This is used when calculating the store paths of the derivation's outputs. -
outputs
: Information about the output paths of the derivation. This is a JSON object with one member per output, where the key is the output name and the value is a JSON object with these fields:path
: The output path.hashAlgo
: For fixed-output derivations, the hashing algorithm (e.g.sha256
), optionally prefixed byr:
ifhash
denotes a NAR hash rather than a flat file hash.hash
: For fixed-output derivations, the expected content hash in base-16.
Example:
"outputs": { "out": { "path": "/nix/store/2543j7c6jn75blc3drf4g5vhb1rhdq29-source", "hashAlgo": "r:sha256", "hash": "6fc80dcc62179dbc12fc0b5881275898f93444833d21b89dfe5f7fbcbb1d0d62" } }
-
inputSrcs
: A list of store paths on which this derivation depends. -
inputDrvs
: A JSON object specifying the derivations on which this derivation depends, and what outputs of those derivations. For example,"inputDrvs": { "/nix/store/6lkh5yi7nlb7l6dr8fljlli5zfd9hq58-curl-7.73.0.drv": ["dev"], "/nix/store/fn3kgnfzl5dzym26j8g907gq3kbm8bfh-unzip-6.0.drv": ["out"] }
specifies that this derivation depends on the
dev
output ofcurl
, and theout
output ofunzip
. -
system
: The system type on which this derivation is to be built (e.g.x86_64-linux
). -
builder
: The absolute path of the program to be executed to run the build. Typically this is thebash
shell (e.g./nix/store/r3j288vpmczbl500w6zz89gyfa4nr0b1-bash-4.4-p23/bin/bash
). -
args
: The command-line arguments passed to thebuilder
. -
env
: The environment passed to thebuilder
.
Options
-
--recursive
/-r
Include the dependencies of the specified derivations. -
--stdin
Read installables from the standard input. No default installable applied.
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
,bar-with-logs
,multiline
ormultiline-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:
-
--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.