Hi Florian, "pelzflorian (Florian Pelz)" <pelzflor...@pelzflorian.de> skribis:
> On Wed, Mar 06, 2019 at 02:17:49PM +0100, Ludovic Courtès wrote: >> Hi Florian, >> >> "pelzflorian (Florian Pelz)" <pelzflor...@pelzflorian.de> skribis: >> >> > The Guix manual contains the following description of gexp->file: >> > >> > -- Monadic Procedure: gexp->file NAME EXP [#:set-load-path? #t] >> > [#:module-path %load-path] [#:splice? #f] [#:guile >> > (default-guile)] Return a derivation that builds a file NAME >> > containing EXP. When SPLICE? is true, EXP is considered to be a >> > list of expressions that will be spliced in the resulting file. >> > >> > When SET-LOAD-PATH? is true, emit code in the resulting file to set >> > ‘%load-path’ and ‘%load-compiled-path’ to honor EXP’s imported >> > modules. Look up EXP’s modules in MODULE-PATH. >> > >> > The resulting file holds references to all the dependencies of EXP >> > or a subset thereof. >> > >> > I do not understand this last sentence. How can it be a subset? A >> > subset of what? Can this be explained more clearly or removed? >> >> It can be a subset of the references of EXP because, when a build >> completes, the daemon scan the output(s) to determine the set of >> residual references. That’s the difference between build-time and >> run-time dependencies. >> >> For instance, ‘sed’ depends on ‘gcc’ and ‘gcc:lib’ at build time, but >> its output depends only on ‘gcc:lib’. >> >> Does that make sense? >> >> Ludo’. > > Thank you. I did not know this is how the daemon determines outputs’ > references. In this case I would understand the manual more easily if > it said: > > The output(s) resulting from this derivation will be scanned for > references by the daemon. They can hold references to all the > dependencies of EXP or a subset thereof. > > Please make this more clear in the manual. The explanation isn’t specific to ‘gexp->file’ so I’ve added the following text under “Derivations”. Thanks, Ludo’.
modified doc/guix.texi @@ -6238,8 +6238,11 @@ The outputs of the derivation---derivations produce at least one file or directory in the store, but may produce more. @item -The inputs of the derivations, which may be other derivations or plain -files in the store (patches, build scripts, etc.) +@cindex build-time dependencies +@cindex dependencies, build-time +The inputs of the derivations---i.e., its build-time dependencies---which may +be other derivations or plain files in the store (patches, build scripts, +etc.) @item The system type targeted by the derivation---e.g., @code{x86_64-linux}. @@ -6270,6 +6273,16 @@ of a fixed-output derivation are independent of its inputs---e.g., a source code download produces the same result regardless of the download method and tools being used. +@cindex references +@cindex run-time dependencies +@cindex dependencies, run-time +The outputs of derivations---i.e., the build results---have a set of +@dfn{references}, as reported by the @code{references} RPC or the +@command{guix gc --references} command (@pxref{Invoking guix gc}). References +are the set of run-time dependencies of the build results. References are a +subset of the inputs of the derivation; this subset is automatically computed +by the build daemon by scanning all the files in the outputs. + The @code{(guix derivations)} module provides a representation of derivations as Scheme objects, along with procedures to create and otherwise manipulate derivations. The lowest-level primitive to create