Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
|
|
|
The `set -e` at the top of the script causes the installation to fail to
complete if the shell profile is not writeable. Checking file existence
only is not enough.
|
|
is not writable by the user
|
|
|
|
In some cases the bash builtin command "cd" can print the variable $CWD
to stdout. This caused the install script to fail while copying files
because the source path was wrong.
Fixes #476.
|
|
Also, make it more robust against incorrent SSL_CERT_FILE values.
|
|
This prevents having to fetch Nixpkgs or cacert over http.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
"cp -r" doesn't copy symlinks properly on Darwin, but "cp -R" does.
Fixes #215.
|
|
"echo -n" doesn't work with /bin/sh on Darwin.
|
|
The tarball can now be unpacked anywhere. The installation script
uses "sudo" to create /nix if it doesn't exist. It also fetches the
nixpkgs-unstable channel.
|
|
|
|
For several platforms we don't currently have "native" Nix packages
(e.g. Mac OS X and FreeBSD). This provides the next best thing: a
tarball containing the closure of Nix, plus a simple script
"nix-finish-install" that initialises the Nix database, registers the
paths in the closure as valid, and runs "nix-env -i /path/to/nix" to
initialise the user profile.
The tarball must be unpacked in the root directory. It creates
/nix/store/... and /usr/bin/nix-finish-install. Typical installation
is as follows:
$ cd /
$ tar xvf /path/to/nix-1.1pre1234_abcdef-x86_64-linux.tar.bz2
$ nix-finish-install
(if necessary add ~/.nix-profile/etc/profile.d/nix.sh to the shell
login scripts)
After this, /usr/bin/nix-finish-install can be deleted, if desired.
The downside to the binary tarball is that it's pretty big (~55 MiB
for x86_64-linux).
|