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I'd much rather use GPG for key infrastructure. I'm not ready yet to fully
switch over all of these keys, but this works well so far in the gitolite-admin
repo so I'll test it out for a while before removing the old keys.
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I don't really want my code to be discoverable, I only want people looking at it
if I have explicitly told them about it.
I tested it like so:
ϟ curl -v https://simatime.com/git/ 2>&1 | rg x-robots
< x-robots-tag: noindex, follow
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The gitolite documentation is a bit of a labyrinth, but this should allow me to
set 'gitweb.description' and whatever other git-config settings in the
gitolite.conf file directly.
I'm also disabling gerrit, because I'm not using it and the service fails to
startup for some reason.
Some relevant gitolite docs:
- https://gitolite.com/gitolite/gitweb-daemon.html#gitweb
- https://gitolite.com/gitolite/conf.html
- https://gitolite.com/gitolite/git-config
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BIZ_ROOT was too specific. CODEROOT allows for other (non-biz) projects to live
in the root of the repo. I didn't want to call it GIT_ROOT because maybe someday
I won't want to use git. But I'll never not use code.
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This allows me to specify runtime dependencies, not just system or
language deps.
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BIZ_ROOT was too specific. CODEROOT allows for other (non-biz) projects to live
in the root of the repo. I didn't want to call it GIT_ROOT because maybe someday
I won't want to use git. But I'll never not use code.
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A build should never take more than 10 minutes. If it does, then force the
programmer to make stuff faster. This should be a forcing function to either
delete unneeded code, or improve the build system.
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This implements a prototype Mynion, my chatbot which will eventually
help me write code here. In fact he's already helping me, and works
pretty well over xmpp.
The prompt is currently not checked in because I'm experimenting with it
a lot, and it should probably be a runtime parameter anyways.
In the course of writing this I added some helper libraries to get me
going, configured black (didn't even know that was possible), and added
'outlines' and its dependencies even though I didn't end up using it.
I'll keep outlines around for now, but I'm not sure how useful it really
is because afaict its just pre-defining some stop conditions. But it
took a while to get it working so I'll just keep it in for now.
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Deadnix was printing a bunch of unicode characters so it could draw lines to the
source location of an error, and it would mess up my output. Anyway I didn't
find that feature useful. Now I just get the json output and print the line
number and error message for the lint failure.
Also did some refactoring where I saw fit: added a log message so you know what
linter is currently running, and cleaned up some syntax.
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This is one of those things that's hard to get right because it depends
on the state of the git repo to exercise all code paths.
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Previously I would lint every file individually, in serial. This took
forever. Now I group the files by extension (by first getting the Namespace) and
run each linter on all relevant files at once. This is so much faster its
stupid.
Also I added formatters back into the dev env because my editor needs them to
autoformat.
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I only just now learned about watch_file.
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Ruff is like a million times faster, and I mostly ignored pylint's suggestions
anyway.
I also took this opportunity to move lint tools into a runtime dependency on
Lint.hs, which meant adding a wrapper to the Haskell builder, which was easy
enough. This paves the way for proper rundeps in bild.
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Turns out that gitlint by default enforces the exact commit-msg format that I
like to use. I'm enabling this because even I write poor commit messages
sometimes, and looking back on my commits from even a few days ago is sometimes
not very helpful.
I also made some minor comment and nix changes that I noticed while reviewing my
work from the last few days.
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Lots of changes here but the code is much improved. The nix code is clearer and
structured better.
The Haskell code improved in response to the nix changes. I needed to use a
qualified path instead of the abspath because the BIZ_ROOT changes based on
whether bild runs in nix or runs in the user environment.
Rather than passing every argument into Builder.nix, now I just pass the json
from bild and deconstruct it in nix. This is obviously a much better design and
it only came to be after sleeping on it the other night.
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Bild does not link libraries, and idk if it ever will, so just delete this for
now.
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This is working with libsodium as an example. Its unfortunate that we need the
extra ':arg -lsodium' but how else can I get the name of the library for
linking? Is that something in the nix attr metadata? Anyway, an optimization for
another day.
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Not getting deps yet but thats okay, I basically need to do a bunch of annoying
nix work to get rustPackages into a thing like pythonPackages.
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I added 'black' to Biz/Lint.hs, but not the others because they rely on
dependencies being in the PYTHONPATH to work, so they are only relevant
in nix builds and repls.
I also made some other tweaks to the python checkPhase and linted all
the files. Everything should be building and linting correctly now.
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The main change here is 'puts' now returns a value, this enables me to
collect the value from the conduit source while also doing stuff with
it, like printing or logging it as I want.
Previously I was running conduit over the source, *and then* kicking off
the concurrent processes to wait for the process and collect the output.
This would (I think) drain the source before it got to the 'puts'
conduit run, and so I wouldn't be able to get the output streamed in
real time.
It took a lot of refactoring and exploratory programming to get to this
relatively-small diff, but now puts works correctly. At least I think it
does... it seems to work more reliably from ghci than from the shell.
Maybe the shell or TERM is causing nix-store to do some buffering? Maybe
I need to use the threaded runtime in GHC? Not sure, but I will look out
for this issue and try to identify and fix.
Update: yep it was the threaded runtime. I enabled that and now it works
in the shell. I squashed that commit into this one.
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This is necessary because otherwise I have no record of when I had a
successful build.
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Idk why these missed the linter. Probably packages updated in the
nixpkgs version bump.
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Roughly a 2x speedup.
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I had to redo some of my python overrides and crib the bitsandbytes.nix
from upstream.
Ava is failing because:
ValueError: Tokenizer class LlamaTokenizer does not exist or is not
currently imported.
I think this means I need to update my nixpkgs pin, so I'm gonna
snapshot my work in git, do the update, and that might obviate the local
bitsandbytes.nix anyway.
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This represents quite a few evenings of hacking. It doesn't build all of my
Python code, because my Python code is not up to snuff, but it builds the
examples and pulls in third party dependencies.
Some design points:
- I'm using buildPythonApplication in Builder.nix because it was getting way too
annoying to wrap the Python script and set PYTHONPATH myself. Easier and more
robust to just use the upstream nix builder
- Because of this, I had to generate a setup.py. Maybe switch to pyproject.toml
in the future, whatever.
- Also because of this, Target.wrapper is becoming redundant. I'll just remove
it when I get Guile built in nix.
- Biz/Bild.nix is getting messy and could use a refactor.
- In Builder.nix, I worked around the empty directories bug by just finding and
deleting empty directories after unpacking. If its stupid but works it ain't
stupid!
- I had to touch __init__.py files in all directories before building. Annoying!
- `repl` just works, which is awesome
- To ensure good Python code, I moved lints and added type checking to the
build. So I can't build anything unless it passes those checks. This seems
restrictive, but if I want to run some non-passing code, I can still use
`repl`, so it's actually not inhibitory.
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This also fixed a bug where every dependency would get pulled into the Haskell
target while searching for transitive dependencies.
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This is prototype quality. For some reason I think it breaks when doing
`build **/*.hs`, which isn't good. But also it's working, and the code feels
good. Next I'd like to get Python builds working, as hopefully that will force
me to improve the existing code to support a second language.
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Only fully implemented for Haskell at the moment but that is okay.
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