nix-shell1Nixnix-shellstart an interactive shell based on a Nix expressionnix-shellnamevaluenamevalueattrPathcmdcmdregexppackagespathDescriptionThe command nix-shell will build the
dependencies of the specified derivation, but not the derivation
itself. It will then start an interactive shell in which all
environment variables defined by the derivation
path have been set to their corresponding
values, and the script $stdenv/setup has been
sourced. This is useful for reproducing the environment of a
derivation for development.If path is not given,
nix-shell defaults to
shell.nix if it exists, and
default.nix otherwise.If path starts with
http:// or https://, it is
interpreted as the URL of a tarball that will be downloaded and
unpacked to a temporary location. The tarball must include a single
top-level directory containing at least a file named
default.nix.If the derivation defines the variable
shellHook, it will be evaluated after
$stdenv/setup has been sourced. Since this hook is
not executed by regular Nix builds, it allows you to perform
initialisation specific to nix-shell. For example,
the derivation attribute
shellHook =
''
echo "Hello shell"
'';
will cause nix-shell to print Hello shell.OptionsAll options not listed here are passed to nix-store
--realise, except for and
/ which are passed to
nix-instantiate. See
also .cmdIn the environment of the derivation, run the
shell command cmd. This command is
executed in an interactive shell. (Use to
use a non-interactive shell instead.) However, a call to
exit is implicitly added to the command, so the
shell will exit after running the command. To prevent this, add
return at the end; e.g. --command
"echo Hello; return" will print Hello
and then drop you into the interactive shell. This can be useful
for doing any additional initialisation.cmdLike , but executes the
command in a non-interactive shell. This means (among other
things) that if you hit Ctrl-C while the command is running, the
shell exits.regexpDo not build any dependencies whose store path
matches the regular expression regexp.
This option may be specified multiple times.If this flag is specified, the environment is
almost entirely cleared before the interactive shell is started,
so you get an environment that more closely corresponds to the
“real” Nix build. A few variables, in particular
HOME, USER and
DISPLAY, are retained. Note that
~/.bashrc and (depending on your Bash
installation) /etc/bashrc are still sourced,
so any variables set there will affect the interactive
shell. / Set up an environment in which the specified
packages are present. The command line arguments are interpreted
as attribute names inside the Nix Packages collection. Thus,
nix-shell -p libjpeg openjdk will start a shell
in which the packages denoted by the attribute names
libjpeg and openjdk are
present.interpreterThe chained script interpreter to be invoked by
nix-shell. Only applicable in
#!-scripts (described below).The following common options are supported:Environment variablesNIX_BUILD_SHELLShell used to start the interactive environment.
Defaults to the bash found in PATH.ExamplesTo build the dependencies of the package Pan, and start an
interactive shell in which to build it:
$ nix-shell '<nixpkgs>' -A pan
[nix-shell]$ unpackPhase
[nix-shell]$ cd pan-*
[nix-shell]$ configurePhase
[nix-shell]$ buildPhase
[nix-shell]$ ./pan/gui/pan
To clear the environment first, and do some additional automatic
initialisation of the interactive shell:
$ nix-shell '<nixpkgs>' -A pan --pure \
--command 'export NIX_DEBUG=1; export NIX_CORES=8; return'
Nix expressions can also be given on the command line. For instance,
the following starts a shell containing the packages
sqlite and libX11:
$ nix-shell -E 'with import <nixpkgs> { }; runCommand "dummy" { buildInputs = [ sqlite xorg.libX11 ]; } ""'
A shorter way to do the same is:
$ nix-shell -p sqlite xorg.libX11
[nix-shell]$ echo $NIX_LDFLAGS
… -L/nix/store/j1zg5v…-sqlite-3.8.0.2/lib -L/nix/store/0gmcz9…-libX11-1.6.1/lib …
The -p flag looks up Nixpkgs in the Nix search
path. You can override it by passing or setting
NIX_PATH. For example, the following gives you a shell
containing the Pan package from a specific revision of Nixpkgs:
$ nix-shell -p pan -I nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs-channels/archive/8a3eea054838b55aca962c3fbde9c83c102b8bf2.tar.gz
[nix-shell:~]$ pan --version
Pan 0.139
Use as a #!-interpreterYou can use nix-shell as a script interpreter
to allow scripts written in arbitrary languages to obtain their own
dependencies via Nix. This is done by starting the script with the
following lines:
#! /usr/bin/env nix-shell
#! nix-shell -i real-interpreter -p packages
where real-interpreter is the “real” script
interpreter that will be invoked by nix-shell after
it has obtained the dependencies and initialised the environment, and
packages are the attribute names of the
dependencies in Nixpkgs.The lines starting with #! nix-shell specify
nix-shell options (see above). Note that you cannot
write #1 /usr/bin/env nix-shell -i ... because
many operating systems only allow one argument in
#! lines.For example, here is a Python script that depends on Python and
the prettytable package:
#! /usr/bin/env nix-shell
#! nix-shell -i python -p python pythonPackages.prettytable
import prettytable
# Print a simple table.
t = prettytable.PrettyTable(["N", "N^2"])
for n in range(1, 10): t.add_row([n, n * n])
print t
Similarly, the following is a Perl script that specifies that it
requires Perl and the HTML::TokeParser::Simple and
LWP packages:
#! /usr/bin/env nix-shell
#! nix-shell -i perl -p perl perlPackages.HTMLTokeParserSimple perlPackages.LWP
use HTML::TokeParser::Simple;
# Fetch nixos.org and print all hrefs.
my $p = HTML::TokeParser::Simple->new(url => 'http://nixos.org/');
while (my $token = $p->get_tag("a")) {
my $href = $token->get_attr("href");
print "$href\n" if $href;
}
Finally, the following Haskell script uses a specific branch of
Nixpkgs/NixOS (the 14.12 stable branch):
If you want to be even more precise, you can specify a specific
revision of Nixpkgs:
#! nix-shell -I nixpkgs=https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs-channels/archive/0672315759b3e15e2121365f067c1c8c56bb4722.tar.gz
The examples above all used to get
dependencies from Nixpkgs. You can also use a Nix expression to build
your own dependencies. For example, the Python example could have been
written as:
#! /usr/bin/env nix-shell
#! nix-shell deps.nix -i python
where the file deps.nix in the same directory
as the #!-script contains:
with import <nixpkgs> {};
runCommand "dummy" { buildInputs = [ python pythonPackages.prettytable ]; } ""
Environment variables