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+Build references in derivations
+===============================
+
+This document describes how build references are calculated in Tvix. Build
+references are used to determine which store paths should be available to a
+builder during the execution of a build (i.e. the full build closure of a
+derivation).
+
+## String contexts in C++ Nix
+
+In C++ Nix, each string value in the evaluator carries an optional so-called
+"string context".
+
+These contexts are themselves a list of strings that take one of the following
+formats:
+
+1. `!<output_name>!<drv_path>`
+
+   This format describes a build reference to a specific output of a derivation.
+
+2. `=<drv_path>`
+
+   This format is used for a special case where a derivation attribute directly
+   refers to a derivation path (e.g. by accessing `.drvPath` on a derivation).
+
+   Note: In C++ Nix this case is quite special and actually requires a
+   store-database query during evaluation.
+
+3. `<path>` - a non-descript store path input, usually a plain source file (e.g.
+   from something like `src = ./.` or `src = ./foo.txt`).
+
+   In the case of `unsafeDiscardOutputDependency` this is used to pass a raw
+   derivation file, but *not* pull in its outputs.
+
+Lets introduce names for these (in the same order) to make them easier to
+reference below:
+
+```rust
+enum BuildReference {
+    /// !<output_name>!<drv_path>
+    SingleOutput(OutputName, DrvPath),
+
+    /// =<drv_path>
+    DrvClosure(DrvPath),
+
+    /// <path>
+    Path(StorePath),
+}
+```
+
+String contexts are, broadly speaking, created whenever a string is the result
+of a computation (e.g. string interpolation) that used a *computed* path or
+derivation in any way.
+
+Note: This explicitly does *not* include simply writing a literal string
+containing a store path (whether valid or not). That is only permitted through
+the `storePath` builtin.
+
+## Derivation inputs
+
+Based on the data above, the fields `inputDrvs` and `inputSrcs` of derivations
+are populated in `builtins.derivationStrict` (the function which
+`builtins.derivation`, which isn't actually a builtin, wraps).
+
+`inputDrvs` is represented by a map of derivation paths to the set of their
+outputs that were referenced by the context.
+
+TODO: What happens if the set is empty? Somebody claimed this means all outputs.
+
+`inputSrcs` is represented by a set of paths.
+
+These are populated by the above references as follows:
+
+* `SingleOutput` entries are merged into `inputDrvs`
+* `Path` entries are inserted into `inputSrcs`
+* `DrvClosure` leads to a special store computation (`computeFSClosure`), which
+  finds all paths referenced by the derivation and then inserts all of them into
+  the fields as above (derivations with _all_ their outputs)
+
+This is then serialised in the derivation and passed down the pipe.
+
+## Builtins interfacing with contexts
+
+C++ Nix has several builtins that interface directly with string contexts:
+
+* `unsafeDiscardStringContext`: throws away a string's string context (if
+  present)
+* `hasContext`: returns `true`/`false` depending on whether the string has
+  context
+* `unsafeDiscardOutputDependency`: drops dependencies on the *outputs* of a
+  `.drv` in the context, passing only the literal `.drv` itself
+
+  Note: This is only used for special test-cases in nixpkgs, and deprecated Nix
+  commands like `nix-push`.
+* `getContext`: returns the string context in serialised form as a Nix attribute
+  set
+* `appendContext`: adds a given string context to the string in the same format
+  as returned by `getContext`
+
+## Placeholders
+
+C++ Nix has `builtins.placeholder`, which given the name of an output (e.g.
+`out`) creates a hashed string representation of that output name. If that
+string is used anywhere in input attributes, the builder will replace it with
+the actual name of the corresponding output of the current derivation.
+
+C++ Nix does not use contexts for this, it blindly creates a rewrite map of
+these placeholder strings to the names of all outputs, and runs the output
+replacement logic on all environment variables it creates, attribute files it
+passes etc.
+
+## Tvix & string contexts
+
+Tvix does not track string contexts in its evaluator at all. Instead we are
+investigating implementing a system which allows us to drop string contexts in
+favour of reference scanning derivation attributes.
+
+This means that instead of maintaining and passing around a string context data
+structure in eval, we maintain a data structure of *known paths* from the same
+evaluation elsewhere in Tvix, and scan each derivation attribute against this
+set of known paths when instantiating derivations.
+
+Until proven otherwise, we take the stance that the system of string contexts as
+implemented in C++ Nix is likely an implementation detail that should not be
+leaking to the language surface as it does now.
+
+### Tracking "known paths"
+
+Every time a Tvix evaluation does something that causes a store interaction, a
+"known path" is created. On the language surface, this is the result of one of:
+
+1. Path literals (e.g. `src = ./.`).
+2. Calls to `builtins.derivationStrict` yielding a derivation and its output
+   paths.
+3. Calls to `builtins.path`.
+
+Whenever one of these occurs, some metadata that persists for the duration of
+one evaluation should be created in Nix. This metadata needs to be available in
+`builtins.derivationStrict`, and should be able to respond to these queries:
+
+1. What is the set of all known paths? (used for e.g. instantiating an
+   Aho-Corasick type string searcher)
+2. What is the _type_ of a path? (derivation path, derivation output, source
+   file)
+3. What are the outputs of a derivation?
+4. What is the derivation of an output?
+
+These queries will need to be asked of the metadata when populating the
+derivation fields.
+
+Note: Depending on how we implement `builtins.placeholder`, it might be useful
+to track created placeholders in this metadata, too.
+
+### Context builtins
+
+Context-reading builtins can be implemented in Tvix by adding `hasContext` and
+`getContext` with the appropriate reference-scanning logic. However, we should
+evaluate how these are used in nixpkgs and whether their uses can be removed.
+
+Context-mutating builtins can be implemented by tracking their effects in the
+value representation of Tvix, however we should consider not doing this at all.
+
+`unsafeDiscardOutputDependency` should probably never be used and we should warn
+or error on it.
+
+`unsafeDiscardStringContext` is often used as a workaround for avoiding IFD in
+inconvenient places (e.g. in the TVL depot pipeline generation). This is
+unnecessary in Tvix. We should evaluate which other uses exist, and act on them
+appropriately.
+
+The initial danger with diverging here is that we might cause derivation hash
+discrepancies between Tvix and C++ Nix, which can make initial comparisons of
+derivations generated by the two systems difficult. If this occurs we need to
+discuss how to approach it, but initially we will implement the mutating
+builtins as no-ops.