Nix language version history
The Nix language (“Nix”) has its own versioning mechanism independent from its
most popular implementation (“C++ Nix”): builtins.langVersion
. It has been
increased whenever the language has changed syntactically or semantically in a
way that would not be introspectable otherwise. In particular, this does not
include addition (or removal) of builtins
, as this can be introspected using
standard attribute set operations.
Changes to builtins.langVersion
are best found by viewing the git history of
C++ Nix using git log -G 'mkInt\\(v, [0-9]\\)'
for builtins.langVersion
< 7.
After that point git log -G 'v\\.mkInt\\([0-9]+\\)'
should work. To reduce the
amount of false positives, specify the version number you are interested in
explicitly.
1
The first version of the Nix language is its state at the point when
builtins.langVersion
was added in 8b8ee53 which was first released
as part of C++ Nix 1.2.
2
Nix version 2 changed the behavior of builtins.storePath
: It would now try to
substitute the given path if missing, instead of creating
an evaluation failure. builtins.langVersion
was increased in e36229d.
3
Nix version 3 changed the behavior of the ==
behavior. Strings would now be
considered equal even if they had differing string context.
4
Nix version 4 added the float type to the language.
5
The increase of builtins.langVersion
to 5 did not signify a
language change, but added support for structured attributes to the Nix daemon.
Eelco Dolstra writes as to what changed:
The structured attributes support. Unfortunately that's not so much a language change as a build.cc (i.e. daemon) change, but we don't really have a way to express that...
Probably builtins.nixVersion
(which was added in version 1) should have been
used instead.
6
Nix version 6 added support for comparing two lists.