Seems to save some allocations and thus recover some performance
compared to the two separate folds we had before.
Change-Id: Ie3d283103e6a9b8aa702db633d9c988fda1b2903
Reviewed-on: https://cl.tvl.fyi/c/depot/+/4348
Tested-by: BuildkiteCI
Reviewed-by: sterni <sternenseemann@systemli.org>
For this we create a directory containing a nix-inject.el file using
writeTextFile where we can string interpolate as much as we please and
merge that into a single emacs.d directory with the config *.el files
tracked in the normal tree using symlinkJoin.
Change-Id: I0e39591587a54527214783d4380456d2763da091
Reviewed-on: https://cl.tvl.fyi/c/depot/+/4324
Tested-by: BuildkiteCI
Reviewed-by: sterni <sternenseemann@systemli.org>
Autosubmit: sterni <sternenseemann@systemli.org>
* Enforce the U+0000 to U+10FFFF range in `count` and throw an error if
the given codepoint exceeds the range (encoding U+0000 won't work of
course, but this is Nix's fault…).
* Check if the produced bytes are well formed and output an error if
not. This indicates that the codepoint can't be encoded as UTF-8, like
U+D800 which is reserved for UTF-16.
Change-Id: I18336e527484580f28cbfe784d51718ee15c5477
Previously we would check the first byte only when trying to figure out
the predicate for the second byte. If the first byte was invalid, we'd
then throw with a helpful error message. However this made
wellFormedByte a very weird function.
At the expense of doing the same check twice, we now check the first
byte, when it is first passed, and always return a boolean.
Change-Id: I32ab6051c844711849e5b4a115e2511b53682baa
This implementation is still a bit rough as it doesn't check if the
produced string is valid UTF-8 which may happen if an invalid Unicode
codepoint is passed.
Change-Id: Ibaa91dafa8937142ef704a175efe967b62e3ee7b
This is not really used anywhere and kind of useless. A better
decodeSafe would never return null and instead make use of replacement
characters to represent invalid bytes in the input.
Change-Id: Ib4111529bf0e472dbfa720a5d0b939c2d2511de5
builtins.genericClosure is a quite powerful (and undocumented) Nix
primop: It repeatedly applies a function to values it produces and
collects them into a list. Additionally individual results can be
identified via a key attribute.
Since genericClosure only ever creates a single list value internally,
we can eliminate a huge performance bottleneck when building a list in a
recursive algorithm: list concatenation. Because Nix needs to copy the
entire chunk of memory used internally to represent the list, building
big lists one element at a time grinds Nix to a halt.
After rewriting decode using genericClosure decoding the LaTeX source
of my 20 page term paper now takes 2s instead of 14min.
Change-Id: I33847e4e7dd95d7f4d78ac83eb0d74a9867bfe80
nixpkgs-crate-holes can build a markdown report detailing all vulnerable
crates pinned in cargoDeps vendors in nixpkgs according to RustSec's
advisory db. This report is intended to be pasted into a GitHub issue.
The report is produced by a derivation and can be obtained like this:
nix-build -A users.sterni.nixpkgs-crate-holes.full \
--argstr nixpkgsPath /path/to/nixpkgs
Example output: https://gist.github.com/sternenseemann/27509eece93d6eff35cd4b8ce75423b5
Additionally, you can obtain a more verbose report for a single
attribute of nixpkgs, in HTML format since we just reuse the command
line output of cargo-audit and convert it to HTML using ansi2html:
nix-build -A users.sterni.nixpkgs-crate-holes.single \
--argstr nixpkgsPath /path/to/nixpkgs --argstr attr ripgrep
Change-Id: Ic1c029ab67770fc41ba521b2acb798628357f9b2
Reviewed-on: https://cl.tvl.fyi/c/depot/+/3715
Tested-by: BuildkiteCI
Reviewed-by: sterni <sternenseemann@systemli.org>
For now mblog only contains the mnote-html executable which takes a mime
message from a maildir and prints the equivalent HTML fragment to
stdout. It is intended to work with the mblaze(7) utilities,
i. e. mnote-html resolves all `object` tags to proper `img` inclusions
with the correct filename, so mshow(1)'s -x version can supply the
needed image files. A note created using Apple's Notes app (tested with
the iOS version) can be converted in a viewable HTML file like this:
$ mnote-html path/to/msg > fragment.html
$ mshow -x path/to/msg
$ cat <(echo "<!DOCTYPE html>") fragment.html > document.html
$ xdg-open document.html
Note that only the limited feature set of Apple Notes when using the
IMAP backend is supported. The iCloud-based one has more (quite neat)
features, but its notes can only accessed via an internal API as far as
I know.
This CLI is a bit impractical due to the big startup overhead of loading
the lisp image. mblog should be become a fully fletched static site
generator in the future, but this is a good starting point and providing
the mnote-html tool is certainly useful.
Change-Id: Iee6d1558e939b932da1e70ca2d2ae75638d855df
Reviewed-on: https://cl.tvl.fyi/c/depot/+/3271
Tested-by: BuildkiteCI
Reviewed-by: sterni <sternenseemann@systemli.org>
This is mostly to yet another silly idea which turns out to be
possible. This may be actually useful should I implement more
sophisticated format specifiers like "%xd" or "%f".
Change-Id: Ia56cd6f5793a09fe5e19c91a8e8f9098f3244d57
Reviewed-on: https://cl.tvl.fyi/c/depot/+/3537
Tested-by: BuildkiteCI
Reviewed-by: sterni <sternenseemann@systemli.org>