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User’s Guide to Lua Infrastructure
Using Lua
Overview of Lua
Several versions of the Lua interpreter are available: luajit, lua 5.1, 5.2, 5.3.
The attribute lua
refers to the default interpreter, it is also possible to refer to specific versions, e.g. lua5_2
refers to Lua 5.2.
Lua libraries are in separate sets, with one set per interpreter version.
The interpreters have several common attributes. One of these attributes is
pkgs
, which is a package set of Lua libraries for this specific
interpreter. E.g., the busted
package corresponding to the default interpreter
is lua.pkgs.busted
, and the lua 5.2 version is lua5_2.pkgs.busted
.
The main package set contains aliases to these package sets, e.g.
luaPackages
refers to lua5_1.pkgs
and lua52Packages
to
lua5_2.pkgs
.
Installing Lua and packages
Lua environment defined in separate .nix
file
Create a file, e.g. build.nix
, with the following expression
with import <nixpkgs> {};
lua5_2.withPackages (ps: with ps; [ busted luafilesystem ])
and install it in your profile with
nix-env -if build.nix
Now you can use the Lua interpreter, as well as the extra packages (busted
,
luafilesystem
) that you added to the environment.
Lua environment defined in ~/.config/nixpkgs/config.nix
If you prefer to, you could also add the environment as a package override to the Nixpkgs set, e.g.
using config.nix
,
{ # ...
packageOverrides = pkgs: with pkgs; {
myLuaEnv = lua5_2.withPackages (ps: with ps; [ busted luafilesystem ]);
};
}
and install it in your profile with
nix-env -iA nixpkgs.myLuaEnv
The environment is installed by referring to the attribute, and considering
the nixpkgs
channel was used.
Lua environment defined in /etc/nixos/configuration.nix
For the sake of completeness, here's another example how to install the environment system-wide.
{ # ...
environment.systemPackages = with pkgs; [
(lua.withPackages(ps: with ps; [ busted luafilesystem ]))
];
}
How to override a Lua package using overlays?
Use the following overlay template:
final: prev:
{
lua = prev.lua.override {
packageOverrides = luaself: luaprev: {
luarocks-nix = luaprev.luarocks-nix.overrideAttrs(oa: {
pname = "luarocks-nix";
src = /home/my_luarocks/repository;
});
};
luaPackages = lua.pkgs;
}
Temporary Lua environment with nix-shell
There are two methods for loading a shell with Lua packages. The first and recommended method
is to create an environment with lua.buildEnv
or lua.withPackages
and load that. E.g.
$ nix-shell -p 'lua.withPackages(ps: with ps; [ busted luafilesystem ])'
opens a shell from which you can launch the interpreter
[nix-shell:~] lua
The other method, which is not recommended, does not create an environment and requires you to list the packages directly,
$ nix-shell -p lua.pkgs.busted lua.pkgs.luafilesystem
Again, it is possible to launch the interpreter from the shell.
The Lua interpreter has the attribute pkgs
which contains all Lua libraries for that specific interpreter.
Developing with Lua
Now that you know how to get a working Lua environment with Nix, it is time to go forward and start actually developing with Lua. There are two ways to package lua software, either it is on luarocks and most of it can be taken care of by the luarocks2nix converter or the packaging has to be done manually. Let's present the luarocks way first and the manual one in a second time.
Packaging a library on luarocks
Luarocks.org is the main repository of lua packages.
The site proposes two types of packages, the rockspec and the src.rock
(equivalent of a rockspec but with the source).
These packages can have different build types such as cmake
, builtin
etc .
Luarocks-based packages are generated in pkgs/development/lua-modules/generated-packages.nix from the whitelist maintainers/scripts/luarocks-packages.csv and updated by running maintainers/scripts/update-luarocks-packages.
luarocks2nix is a tool capable of generating nix derivations from both rockspec and src.rock (and favors the src.rock).
The automation only goes so far though and some packages need to be customized.
These customizations go in pkgs/development/lua-modules/overrides.nix
.
For instance if the rockspec defines external_dependencies
, these need to be manually added to the overrides.nix.
You can try converting luarocks packages to nix packages with the command nix-shell -p luarocks-nix
and then luarocks nix PKG_NAME
.
Packaging a library manually
You can develop your package as you usually would, just don't forget to wrap it
within a toLuaModule
call, for instance
mynewlib = toLuaModule ( stdenv.mkDerivation { ... });
There is also the buildLuaPackage
function that can be used when lua modules
are not packaged for luarocks. You can see a few examples at pkgs/top-level/lua-packages.nix
.
Lua Reference
Lua interpreters
Versions 5.1, 5.2, 5.3 and 5.4 of the lua interpreter are available as
respectively lua5_1
, lua5_2
, lua5_3
and lua5_4
. Luajit is available too.
The Nix expressions for the interpreters can be found in pkgs/development/interpreters/lua-5
.
Attributes on lua interpreters packages
Each interpreter has the following attributes:
interpreter
. Alias for${pkgs.lua}/bin/lua
.buildEnv
. Function to build lua interpreter environments with extra packages bundled together. See section lua.buildEnv function for usage and documentation.withPackages
. Simpler interface tobuildEnv
.pkgs
. Set of Lua packages for that specific interpreter. The package set can be modified by overriding the interpreter and passingpackageOverrides
.
buildLuarocksPackage
function
The buildLuarocksPackage
function is implemented in pkgs/development/interpreters/lua-5/build-lua-package.nix
The following is an example:
luaposix = buildLuarocksPackage {
pname = "luaposix";
version = "34.0.4-1";
src = fetchurl {
url = "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/rocks-moonscript-org/moonrocks-mirror/master/luaposix-34.0.4-1.src.rock";
hash = "sha256-4mLJG8n4m6y4Fqd0meUDfsOb9RHSR0qa/KD5KCwrNXs=";
};
disabled = (luaOlder "5.1") || (luaAtLeast "5.4");
propagatedBuildInputs = [ bit32 lua std_normalize ];
meta = with lib; {
homepage = "https://github.com/luaposix/luaposix/";
description = "Lua bindings for POSIX";
maintainers = with maintainers; [ vyp lblasc ];
license.fullName = "MIT/X11";
};
};
The buildLuarocksPackage
delegates most tasks to luarocks:
- it adds
luarocks
as an unpacker forsrc.rock
files (zip files really). configurePhase
writes a temporary luarocks configuration file which location is exported via the environment variableLUAROCKS_CONFIG
.- the
buildPhase
does nothing. installPhase
callsluarocks make --deps-mode=none --tree $out
to build and install the package- In the
postFixup
phase, thewrapLuaPrograms
bash function is called to wrap all programs in the$out/bin/*
directory to include$PATH
environment variable and add dependent libraries to script'sLUA_PATH
andLUA_CPATH
.
By default meta.platforms
is set to the same value as the interpreter unless overridden otherwise.
buildLuaApplication
function
The buildLuaApplication
function is practically the same as buildLuaPackage
.
The difference is that buildLuaPackage
by default prefixes the names of the packages with the version of the interpreter.
Because with an application we're not interested in multiple version the prefix is dropped.
lua.withPackages function
The lua.withPackages
takes a function as an argument that is passed the set of lua packages and returns the list of packages to be included in the environment.
Using the withPackages
function, the previous example for the luafilesystem environment can be written like this:
with import <nixpkgs> {};
lua.withPackages (ps: [ps.luafilesystem])
withPackages
passes the correct package set for the specific interpreter version as an argument to the function. In the above example, ps
equals luaPackages
.
But you can also easily switch to using lua5_2
:
with import <nixpkgs> {};
lua5_2.withPackages (ps: [ps.lua])
Now, ps
is set to lua52Packages
, matching the version of the interpreter.
Possible Todos
- export/use version specific variables such as
LUA_PATH_5_2
/LUAROCKS_CONFIG_5_2
- let luarocks check for dependencies via exporting the different rocktrees in temporary config
Lua Contributing guidelines
Following rules should be respected:
- Make sure libraries build for all Lua interpreters.
- Commit names of Lua libraries should reflect that they are Lua libraries, so write for example
luaPackages.luafilesystem: 1.11 -> 1.12
.