273 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
273 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
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TIP: This blog post was originally published as a design document for
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[Nixery][] and is not written in the same style
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as other blog posts.
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Thanks to my colleagues at Google and various people from the Nix community for
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reviewing this.
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------
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# Nixery: Improved Layering
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**Authors**: tazjin@
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**Reviewers**: so...@, en...@, pe...@
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**Status**: Implemented
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**Last Updated**: 2019-08-10
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## Introduction
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This document describes a design for an improved image layering method for use
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in Nixery. The algorithm [currently used][grhmc] is designed for a slightly
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different use-case and we can improve upon it by making use of more of the
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available data.
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## Background / Motivation
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Nixery is a service that uses the [Nix package manager][nix] to build container
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images (for runtimes such as Docker), that are served on-demand via the
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container [registry protocols][]. A demo instance is available at
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[nixery.dev][].
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In practice this means users can simply issue a command such as `docker pull
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nixery.dev/shell/git` and receive an image that was built ad-hoc containing a
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shell environment and git.
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One of the major advantages of building container images via Nix (as described
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for `buildLayeredImage` in [this blog post][grhmc]) is that the
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content-addressable nature of container image layers can be used to provide more
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efficient caching characteristics (caching based on layer content) than what is
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common with Dockerfiles and other image creation methods (caching based on layer
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creation method).
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However, this is constrained by the maximum number of layers supported in an
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image (125). A naive approach such as putting each included package (any
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library, binary, etc.) in its own layer quickly runs into this limitation due to
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the large number of dependencies more complex systems tend to have. In addition,
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users wanting to extend images created by Nixery (e.g. via `FROM nixery.dev/…`)
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share this layer maximum with the created image - limiting extensibility if all
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layers are used up by Nixery.
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In theory the layering strategy of `buildLayeredImage` should already provide
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good caching characteristics, but in practice we are seeing many images with
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significantly more packages than the number of layers configured, leading to
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more frequent cache-misses than desired.
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The current implementation of `buildLayeredImage` inspects a graph of image
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dependencies and determines the total number of references (direct & indirect)
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to any node in the graph. It then sorts all dependencies by this popularity
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metric and puts the first `n - 2` (for `n` being the maximum number of layers)
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packages in their own layers, all remaining packages in one layer and the image
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configuration in the final layer.
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## Design / Proposal
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## (Close-to) ideal layer-layout using more data
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We start out by considering what a close to ideal layout of layers would look
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like for a simple use-case.
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![Ideal layout](/static/img/nixery/ideal_layout.webp)
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In this example, counting the total number of references to each node in the
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graph yields the following result:
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| pkg | refs |
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|-------|------|
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| E | 3 |
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| D | 2 |
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| F | 2 |
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| A,B,C | 1 |
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Assuming we are constrained to 4 layers, the current algorithm would yield these layers:
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```
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L1: E
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L2: D
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L3: F
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L4: A, B, C
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```
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The initial proposal for this design is that additional data should be
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considered in addition to the total number of references, in particular a
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distinction should be made between direct and indirect references. Packages that
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are only referenced indirectly should be merged with their parents.
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This yields the following table:
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| pkg | direct | indirect |
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|-------|--------|----------|
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| E | 3 | 3 |
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| D | 2 | 2 |
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| F | *1* | 2 |
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| A,B,C | 1 | 1 |
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Despite having two indirect references, F is in fact only being referred to
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once. Assuming that we have no other data available outside of this graph, we
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have no reason to assume that F has any popularity outside of the scope of D.
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This might yield the following layers:
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```
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L1: E
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L2: D, F
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L3: A
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L4: B, C
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```
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D and F were grouped, while the top-level references (i.e. the packages
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explicitly requested by the user) were split up.
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An assumption is introduced here to justify this split: The top-level packages
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is what the user is modifying directly, and those groupings are likely
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unpredictable. Thus it is opportune to not group top-level packages in the same
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layer.
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This raises a new question: Can we make better decisions about where to split
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the top-level?
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## (Even closer to) ideal layering using (even) more data
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So far when deciding layer layouts, only information immediately available in
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the build graph of the image has been considered. We do however have much more
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information available, as we have both the entire nixpkgs-tree and potentially
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other information (such as download statistics).
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We can calculate the total number of references to any derivation in nixpkgs and
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use that to rank the popularity of each package. Packages within some percentile
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can then be singled out as good candidates for a separate layer.
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When faced with a splitting decision such as in the last section, this data can
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aid the decision. Assume for example that package B in the above is actually
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`openssl`, which is a very popular package. Taking this into account would
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instead yield the following layers:
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```
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L1: E,
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L2: D, F
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L3: B,
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L4: A, C
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```
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## Layer budgets and download size considerations
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As described in the introduction, there is a finite amount of layers available
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for each image (the “layer budget”). When calculating the layer distribution, we
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might end up with the “ideal” list of layers that we would like to create. Using
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our previous example:
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```
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L1: E,
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L2: D, F
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L3: A
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L4: B
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L5: C
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```
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If we only have a layer budget of 4 available, something needs to be merged into
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the same layer. To make a decision here we could consider only the package
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popularity, but there is in fact another piece of information that has not come
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up yet: The actual size of the package.
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Presumably a user would not mind downloading a library that is a few kilobytes
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in size repeatedly, but they would if it was a 200 megabyte binary instead.
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Conversely if a large binary was successfully cached, but an extremely popular
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small library is not, the total download size might also grow to irritating
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levels.
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To avoid this we can calculate a merge rating:
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merge_rating(pkg) = popularity_percentile(pkg) × size(pkg.subtree)
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Packages with a low merge rating would be merged together before packages with
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higher merge ratings.
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## Implementation
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There are two primary components of the implementation:
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1. The layering component which, given an image specification, decides the image
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layers.
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2. The popularity component which, given the entire nixpkgs-tree, calculates the
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popularity of packages.
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## Layering component
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It turns out that graph theory’s concept of [dominator trees][] maps reasonably
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well onto the proposed idea of separating direct and indirect dependencies. This
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becomes visible when creating the dominator tree of a simple example:
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![Example without extra edges](/static/img/nixery/example_plain.webp)
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Before calculating the dominator tree, we inspect each node and insert extra
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edges from the root for packages that match a certain popularity or size
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threshold. In this example, G is popular and an extra edge is inserted:
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![Example with extra edges](/static/img/nixery/example_extra.webp)
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Calculating the dominator tree of this graph now yields our ideal layer
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distribution:
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![Dominator tree of example](/static/img/nixery/dominator.webp)
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The nodes immediately dominated by the root node can now be “harvested” as image
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layers, and merging can be performed as described above until the result fits
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into the layer budget.
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To implement this, the layering component uses the [gonum/graph][] library which
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supports calculating dominator trees. The program is fed with Nix’s
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`exportReferencesGraph` (which contains the runtime dependency graph and runtime
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closure size) as well as the popularity data and layer budget. It returns a list
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of layers, each specifying the paths it should contain.
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Nix invokes this program and uses the output to create a derivation for each
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layer, which is then built and returned to Nixery as usual.
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TIP: This is implemented in [`layers.go`][layers.go] in Nixery. The file starts
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with an explanatory comment that talks through the process in detail.
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## Popularity component
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The primary issue in calculating the popularity of each package in the tree is
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that we are interested in the runtime dependencies of a derivation, not its
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build dependencies.
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To access information about the runtime dependency, the derivation actually
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needs to be built by Nix - it can not be inferred because Nix does not know
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which store paths will still be referenced by the build output.
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However for packages that are cached in the NixOS cache, we can simply inspect
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the `narinfo`-files and use those to determine popularity.
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Not every package in nixpkgs is cached, but we can expect all *popular* packages
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to be cached. Relying on the cache should therefore be reasonable and avoids us
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having to rebuild/download all packages.
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The implementation will read the `narinfo` for each store path in the cache at a
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given commit and create a JSON-file containing the total reference count per
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package.
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For the public Nixery instance, these popularity files will be distributed via a
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GCS bucket.
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TIP: This is implemented in [popcount][] in Nixery.
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--------
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Hopefully this detailed design review was useful to you. You can also watch [my
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NixCon talk][talk] about Nixery for a review of some of this, and some demos.
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[Nixery]: https://github.com/google/nixery
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[grhmc]: https://grahamc.com/blog/nix-and-layered-docker-images
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[Nix]: https://nixos.org/nix
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[registry protocols]: https://github.com/opencontainers/distribution-spec/blob/master/spec.md
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[nixery.dev]: https://nixery.dev
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[dominator trees]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dominator_(graph_theory)
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[gonum/graph]: https://godoc.org/gonum.org/v1/gonum/graph
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[layers.go]: https://github.com/google/nixery/blob/master/builder/layers.go
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[popcount]: https://github.com/google/nixery/tree/master/popcount
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[talk]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pOI9H4oeXqA
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