Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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I had forgotten to add this feature, apparently, so bild --test just didn't do
the test part.
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This is handy for looking at llm chat history.
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I forgot to add llm to this, instead I just added the extra libraries, which
meant I had the libraries present but not the binary for running them! And llm
is important in the base dev environment because I need to experiment with the
various llms independent of my application code.
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I was getting confused about what is a product and what is internal
infrastructure; I think it is good to keep those things separate. So I moved a
bunch of stuff to an Omni namespace, actually most stuff went there. Only things
that are explicitly external products are still in the Biz namespace.
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Hopefully I can use this with gpgme to code remotely.
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Ollama releases often, and nixos-24.05 has a very old version, it was preventing
me from doing work. Here I'm putting the newer nixos unstable as an overlay into
the 24.05 version so I can backpull versions as needed.
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This domain is also expired... dang I really need to cleanup my dead projects.
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Yeah I let it expire... I am basically giving up on the idea but I'll keep the
code around for now until I have time to comb through it.
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Trying to enable reaper and my microphone.
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So emacs can load the TAGS files automatically.
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I just wanted to connect to them and needed to fix these configs.
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The voyager needed some special udev rules, and a program to do the flashing. I
also made the barrier port explicit by moving to Ports.nix.
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I don't want the machine to suspend after some time period, instead I want to
manually turn off the monitors.
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These were just hanging around as I was doing other things. Included in this
commit are the following:
- Configure it in .ctags.d to only index the languages I use
- Add support for sources listed in Sources.json
- Fix broken link to inspekt3d repo
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I'm not sure when `lib.fileset` was introduced, but it allows me to easily
create a source that can be unpacked by the `unpackPhase` which also maintains
the directory structure. This means I can pass a subset of the whole repo to the
builder, and changing an unrelated file (outside of that subset) won't cause a
rebuild of bild, which wasn't the case before.
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This configures `=` to use `lint -f` as the formatter when some lines are
selected. As a shortcut, `,f` can be used to format the whole buffer.
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This cuts the env script short. Making tags was taking a long time and causing
git-branchless to fail. We don't need this in CI.
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This makes tags for all third-party dependencies, and uses universal-ctags
instead of fast-tags. It's so nice having tags for /everything/. It's also
pretty fast, and caches the result for third-party deps anyway.
Oh yeah this also added an explicit list of third-party Python packages. I need
to filter the entire pkgset down to just the ones I'm using in order to make
tags for them.
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Needed this for some LLM projects, basically I need it whenever I want to make
embeddings because it has all of the embedding models.
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I think this is the only "supported" nixos version now. But in any case scipy
seemed to be broken on the older version, and I couldn't build my code that uses
llm. Also, this allows me to get rid of the bild.os-unstable thing for
Beryllium, which was just a sitting timebomb of breaking stuff.
There are a lot of changes here because ruff updated to the very latest, and it
changed some minor lint things. Also with the new nixos I get a proper cgit
module, and some other breaking changes needed fixing.
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Mynion was a prototype and while it was cool and worked well, it is unused and
causing magma to build, which takes forever. I have settled on using ollama for
local inference and a hosted inference API for production.
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Otherwise it might change from underneath me (which it did already once).
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I first tried to make it into a two-level fzf menu, such that selecting a
namespace dropped you into a second fzf interface that let you select the
command you want to run. I did this because, often you want to perform multiple
actions on the same namespace, rather than jump between namespaces. But this
turned out to be unwieldy, so I went back to the single fzf with bindings for
actions, and I just cleaned up the code and tried to make everything easier to
read or use.
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I basically never want to not fix my code from here. Presumably if I'm invoking
lint from ns.sh, then I don't have the file open yet, or I just closed it. So
it's not super helpful to show me a bunch of things I need to fix and then tell
me that I could autofix them but don't actually fix them for me.
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This shouldn't be polluting the main namespace.
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It's just a simple test, but it effectively tests that the `CustomRepl` can be
instantiated for the ns and path. I also copied the unittest recipes I came up
with in the other place I used Python tests so far: Biz/Llamacpp.py.
Also, I'm beginning to see how a Biz/Cli.py module might work. Probably just a
simple abstract base class with move, test, help, and tidy methods, pretty
similar to the Haskell version.
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I think gitlint violations were sneaking through without this.
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This adds a few things I found from [this gist][1], but cleaned up quite a bit I
think, and designed a bit closer to the ghci user experience.
Along the way I figured out what ruff settings will autoformat my imports in one
alphabetized section, rather than splitting it into multiple sections for
builtins and external deps. So I made that change in the whole repo, but there
weren't too many changes.
[1]: https://gist.github.com/aliles/1153926
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This is meant to emulate the `:e` command in ghci.
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The regex would fail if there was text after the `import X`, so `import X as Y`
would fail, and bild wouldn't detect the local import. This adds a simple test
that guards against this regex failure.
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- ns.sh was broken because I never updated the commands to include the .sh
extensions
- changed a few other UI things in ns.sh to support my workflow
- run.sh was broken when the exe name had a hyphen in it, so just use bild
--plan instead of regex
- changed the noqa to include the English name of the ignored rule because
lets be real I'll never remember what A003 means
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Pretty sure I let this expire.
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Default is 3, which is too low, I keep banning myself.
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At some point I guess the activation script changed to no longer include the
domain, so I have to get it form the 'domainname' systemd service.
Also I switched to sshing as $USER instead of root, which just seems like better
security practice. I originally used root because I thought you had to be root
to do nix system stuff, but it turns out that's not the case.
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It's supposedly faster and actually maintained. Also make preview window in
ftags.sh a bit more robust.
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This small Llamacpp.py file is simply intended to test that llama.cpp can build.
This was previously not working, I guess, because the build system doesn't
verify that the final executable has its dependencies set properly in $PATH. Not
sure if it *should* do that verification or not.
Anyway, I rewrote this to actually test if it could call `llama`, and it could
not, because the Python builder needed the rundeps in its propagatedBuildInputs.
That alone makes `llama` available to the final artifact, but the test still
failed. This is because the wrapPythonPrograms function from nixpkgs (which adds
stuff to PATH) is called in postFixup, which happens after installPhase, but
checkPhase happens before installPhase. So I was testing a program that didn't
have PATH set yet.
Moving the test to installCheck fixed this because it runs after the postFixup
phase. I opted to keep the lint/typecheck stuff in the checkPhase because they
don't need any external dependencies, and having those fail earlier is probably
better? Maybe doesn't make a huge difference time-wise but it kinda makes the
intention clearer to be separate, in checkPhase you are checking the code
itself, in installCheck you are including the installation environment as well.
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This is basically exactly the client library that I would write myself. Some
parts of it are still beta quality, but it's the sort of thing that I would
contribute to anyway.
Unfortunately I couldn't get the llm-llama-cpp plugin to work because it depends
on llama-cpp-python which is not packaged for nix and is hard to package because
the upstream project vendors a patched version of llama.cpp. So I'm stuck with
ollama for now, but that's fine because it actually works.
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This superceedes exllama and tabbyAPI which I could never get working fully.
Unfortunately I had to switch to NixOS unstable to get all the Go builder stuff
to work, so this is a cause of yet another version drift, but I guess it's
inevitable and I should just learn to mitigate it with my nixpkgs shenanigans.
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Added docs to core libraries and expanded the Example.hs test to test for all
the things I want to support in a build.
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I actually thought these were turned on, but found that they weren't when I was
investigating Haddock stuff. There aren't many violations, so I just turned them
on and fixed the violations real quick.
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This brings a bunch of improvements. I got rid of some custom packages, I can
now build exllama without using a non-default cuda version. Oh yeah and I get to
use GHC 9.6.2 now, a huge upgrade from 9.4. Unfortunately I also updated ormolu
and some unrelated formatting changed, but that's life I guess.
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Apparently `$COLUMNS` is a POSIX standard, which allows us to set the print
width to however wide the user's terminal is. This is a better UI on both wide
and narrow terminal layouts: on very narrow layouts, the terminal will properly
clear the line instead of doing the wrap-print thing it does when the line
overflows, and on wide layouts you can see more of the log message if you're
curious. This only works if you export `$COLUMNS` though, because bash only sets
the variable in interactive mode, so by default a running program doesn't see it.
<https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/V1_chap08.html>
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On timeout, bild would leave it's child processes still running, which means
that a long build would continue to go in the background, and I'd have to
manually find and kill it. The fix was simply to use Conduit's
`closeStreamingProcessHandle` function, and make sure that Conduit created a
group for the processes (by default it doesn't).
I tested this by building and running `bild` with a very low timeout (1 minute)
and watching `gotop` to make sure it stopped the active build process. I
couldn't figure out a simple way to test this automatically.
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I guess this was the real cause of the constant reloads, it was getting
annoying.
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I didn't even realize this would happen, but obviously it would. So my CI system
was trying to run tests on all note commits, and throwing weird errors
obviously, and probably recursing into an endless void of git pushes.
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This was silly, maybe I should add a special case to Lint.hs to check these...
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Add ccache support to the OsBase definition, so it's automatically setup for all
machines. Hopefully this can speed up builds and at least prevent the worst case
performance.
Unfortunately, if I modify the stdenv of any upstream targets, the cache is
invalidated and I have to rebuild the whole package. In particular webkitgtk is
a pain to build, and it has crashed my machine a number of times. I was able to
build it once, after enabling zram, which should be enabled anyway like why not?
- https://nixos.wiki/wiki/CCache
- https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/195522#issuecomment-2043999608
- https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/216363#issuecomment-2043998790
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This is mostly helpful when debugging or writing programs, not during usage, but
I shouldn't be suppressing errors anyway.
My first version of this patch used `Biz.Log` instead of `panic`. Unfortunately
this exposed a bug in bild: Control/Concurrent/Go.hs (and others) failed to
build because it imported `Biz.Cli` which imported `Biz.Log`, and bild couldn't
find `Biz/Log.hs`. So apparently my function `detectHaskellImports` doesn't
detect all Haskell imports, somewhere along the lines I cut the graph short
instead of recursing. I guess that will be a project for another day.
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Apparently, docopt only parses short opts if they are separated by a single
space from the long opt. I used two spaces, to make it line up with -h below.
:facepalm: So anyway just flip them, to line up.
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This change was motivated by my testing of tabbyAPI. I kept doing like
`nix-build -A pkgs.tabbyAPI` and I thought, can't bild just do this? So I wrote
a file called TabbyAPI.nix with the following contents::
{ bild }: bild.pkgs.tabbyAPI
and it worked, I just needed this change to Bild.hs to supply the `bild`
argument. The benefit of using bild here is that I can get the logging,
concurrency settings, and linking to _/nix etc all by default. Plus, using a
standalone nix file like TabbyAPI.nix might be a good way to pin some package
in the build system and make sure it continues to build, test, and so on.
Also, thie means I don't sprinkle relative paths to the Bild.nix library
throughout the repo, which is bad practice anyway.
Re: explicitly exposing refernces to stable: This keeps things a bit more tidy
and less confusing when working on the nix library.
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