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Re: Named environments
From: |
zimoun |
Subject: |
Re: Named environments |
Date: |
Mon, 13 Sep 2021 10:08:14 +0200 |
Hi,
On Sun, 12 Sep 2021 at 12:33, Sarah Morgensen <iskarian@mgsn.dev> wrote:
> Ryan Prior <rprior@protonmail.com> writes:
>> I've been thinking lately it would be convenient to create certain uniquely
>> named execution environments on my machine. For example, I might have one
>> set up with dependencies for my Python webapp & environment variables set to
>> autoconnect to a Postgres server. I might have another that's got test
>> dependencies and is containerized, such that it can only access the network
>> & not the rest of my filesystem. Suppose I name these two "webapp" and
>> "test" respectively.
>>
>> I picture running eg `guix env @webapp -- uvicorn main:app` to start my
>> server, then `guix env @test -- pytest` to run my tests.
>>
>> I might write a wrapper in some scripting language that sets up this kind of
>> system. Would anybody else be interested in using such a thing? Would it
>> make sense to integrate this capability into Guix itself?
>
> I like this idea! (And adding a built-in alias from "environment" to "env"
> might be worth it, too.)
>
> I actually use an ad-hoc version of this in my ~/.bashrc, using aliases. For
> example,
>
> alias geg='guix environment guix --pure --ad-hoc nano git git:send-email
> less help2man strace nss-certs'
>
> This also lets me add on any ad-hoc packages at the end, like
>
> geg dejagnu expect
You might be interested by GUIX_EXTENSIONS_PATH which is somehow
documented by this thread: :-)
<https://yhetil.org/guix/86k0sekkj8.fsf@gmail.com/>
It is a not-enough known feature but really handy to:
1) define your own flavour, e.g., “guix env --options you --like“
2) experiment for a new subcommand
Once a subcommand is in Guix, it is really hard to make a CLI change
so it seems better to experiment before, IMHO. :-)
For an instance of this last claim: <http://issues.guix.gnu.org/38529>.
> But also imagine portable environments (used, for example, for project dev
> environments, checked in with the source):
>
> --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
> $ guix env --export @myapp-test --pure -C -f guix.scm --ad-hoc strace
> coreutils
>
> (environment "@myapp-test"
> (load '("guix.scm"))
> (ad-hoc-packages '("strace" "coreutils" "findutils"))
> (flags '(pure container)))
> --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---
This kind of ideas is exposed here:
<https://yhetil.org/guix/877dvn10ro.fsf@dustycloud.org/>
or here and there:
<https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/guix-devel/2016-07/msg00120.html>
<https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/help-guix/2018-01/msg00056.html>
Thanks for the revival. :-)
> Of course, this isn't entirely reproducible, as packages could change as you
> update your Guix, even if you give a version spec (the same issue that exists
> for manifests). So, we could pin the channel used to make the environment:
>
> --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
> $ guix env --export @myapp-test --pin-channels ...
>
> (environment "@myapp-test"
> (channels (list (channel (name 'guix)
> (url ...)
> (commit ...)))
> (load '("guix.scm"))
> (ad-hoc-packages '("strace" "coreutils" "findutils"))
> (flags '(pure container))))
> --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---
>
> which, when evaluated, would internally do what `guix time-machine --channels
> file' does.
I think the correct workflow is:
$ guix describe -f channels > channels.scm
$ guix time-machine -C channels.scm -- subcommand --options
All the best,
simon