~ruther/guix-local

d67e4f0f9b10c7ddac8fb0ca68cbf1d6ad0a6e5d — Ludovic Courtès 2 years ago a2077e5
doc: Add “Source Tree Structure” section.

* doc/contributing.texi (Source Tree Structure): New node.
* doc/guix.texi (Programming Interface): Add cross-reference.

Change-Id: I141a1f4d806ae5f72c7a246e18c14dc63056a607
2 files changed, 255 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)

M doc/contributing.texi
M doc/guix.texi
M doc/contributing.texi => doc/contributing.texi +253 -1
@@ 23,7 23,8 @@ choice.
* Building from Git::           The latest and greatest.
* Running Guix Before It Is Installed::  Hacker tricks.
* The Perfect Setup::           The right tools.
* Alternative Setups::          Other posible tools that do the job.
* Alternative Setups::          Other possible tools that do the job.
* Source Tree Structure::       Source code guided tour.
* Packaging Guidelines::        Growing the distribution.
* Coding Style::                Hygiene of the contributor.
* Submitting Patches::          Share your work.


@@ 546,6 547,257 @@ In NeoVim you can even make a similar setup to Geiser using
process and inject your code there live (sadly it's not packaged in Guix yet).


@node Source Tree Structure
@section Source Tree Structure

@cindex structure, of the source tree
If you're willing to contribute to Guix beyond packages, or if you'd
like to learn how it all fits together, this section provides a guided
tour in the code base that you may find useful.

Overall, the Guix source tree contains almost exclusively Guile
@dfn{modules}, each of which can be seen as an independent library
(@pxref{Modules,,, guile, GNU Guile Reference Manual}).

The following table gives an overview of the main directories and what
they contain.  Remember that in Guile, each module name is derived from
its file name---e.g., the module in file @file{guix/packages.scm} is
called @code{(guix packages)}.

@table @file
@item guix
This is the location of core Guix mechanisms.  To illustrate what is
meant by ``core'', here are a few examples, starting from low-level
tools and going towards higher-level tools:

@table @code
@item (guix store)
Connecting to and interacting with the build daemon (@pxref{The Store}).
@item (guix derivations)
Creating derivations (@pxref{Derivations}).
@item (guix gexps)
Writing G-expressions (@pxref{G-Expressions}).
@item (guix packages)
Defining packages and origins (@pxref{package Reference}).
@item (guix download)
@itemx (guix git-download)
The @code{url-fetch} and @code{git-fetch} origin download methods
(@pxref{origin Reference}).
@item (guix swh)
Fetching source code from the
@uref{https://archive.softwareheritage.org,Software Heritage archive}.
@item (guix search-paths)
Implementing search paths (@pxref{Search Paths}).
@item (guix build-system)
The build system interface (@pxref{Build Systems}).
@item (guix profiles)
Implementing profiles.
@end table

@cindex build system, directory structure
@item guix/build-system
This directory contains specific build system implementations
(@pxref{Build Systems}), such as:

@table @code
@item (guix build-system gnu)
the GNU build system;
@item (guix build-system cmake)
the CMake build system;
@item (guix build-system pyproject)
The Python ``pyproject'' build system.
@end table

@item guix/build
This contains code generally used on the ``build side''
(@pxref{G-Expressions, strata of code}).  This includes code used to
build packages or other operating system components, as well as
utilities:

@table @code
@item (guix build utils)
Utilities for package definitions and more (@pxref{Build Utilities}).
@item (guix build gnu-build-system)
@itemx (guix build cmake-build-system)
@itemx (guix build pyproject-build-system)
Implementation of build systems, and in particular definition of their
build phases (@pxref{Build Phases}).
@item (guix build syscalls)
Interface to the C library and to Linux system calls.
@end table

@cindex command-line tools, as Guile modules
@cindex command modules
@item guix/scripts
This contains modules corresponding to @command{guix} sub-commands.  For
example, the @code{(guix scripts shell)} module exports the
@code{guix-shell} procedure, which directly corresponds to the
@command{guix shell} command (@pxref{Invoking guix shell}).

@cindex importer modules
@item guix/import
This contains supporting code for the importers and updaters
(@pxref{Invoking guix import}, and @pxref{Invoking guix refresh}).  For
example, @code{(guix import pypi)} defines the interface to PyPI, which
is used by the @code{guix import pypi} command.
@end table

The directories we have seen so far all live under @file{guix/}.  The
other important place is the @file{gnu/} directory, which contains
primarily package definitions as well as libraries and tools for Guix
System (@pxref{System Configuration}) and Guix Home (@pxref{Home
Configuration}), all of which build upon functionality provided by
@code{(guix @dots{})} modules@footnote{For this reason, @code{(guix
@dots{})} modules must generally not depend on @code{(gnu @dots{})}
modules, with notable exceptions: @code{(guix build-system @dots{})}
modules may look up packages at run time---e.g., @code{(guix
build-system cmake)} needs to access the @code{cmake} variable at run
time---, @code{(guix scripts @dots{})} often rely on @code{(gnu @dots{})}
modules, and the same goes for some of the @code{(guix import @dots{})}
modules.}.

@table @file
@cindex package modules
@item gnu/packages
This is by far the most crowded directory of the source tree: it
contains @dfn{package modules} that export package definitions
(@pxref{Package Modules}).  A few examples:

@table @code
@item (gnu packages base)
Module providing ``base'' packages: @code{glibc}, @code{coreutils},
@code{grep}, etc.
@item (gnu packages guile)
Guile and core Guile packages.
@item (gnu packages linux)
The Linux-libre kernel and related packages.
@item (gnu packages python)
Python and core Python packages.
@item (gnu packages python-xyz)
Miscellaneous Python packages (we were not very creative).
@end table

In any case, you can jump to a package definition using @command{guix
edit} (@pxref{Invoking guix edit}) and view its location with
@command{guix show} (@pxref{Invoking guix package}).

@findex search-patches
@item gnu/packages/patches
This directory contains patches applied against packages and obtained
using the @code{search-patches} procedure.

@item gnu/services
This contains service definitions, primarily for Guix System
(@pxref{Services}) but some of them are adapted and reused for Guix Home
as we will see below.  Examples:

@table @code
@item (gnu services)
The service framework itself, which defines the service and service type
data types (@pxref{Service Composition}).
@item (gnu services base)
``Base'' services (@pxref{Base Services}).
@item (gnu services desktop)
``Desktop'' services (@pxref{Desktop Services}).
@item (gnu services shepherd)
Support for Shepherd services (@pxref{Shepherd Services}).
@end table

You can jump to a service definition using @command{guix system edit}
and view its location with @command{guix system search} (@pxref{Invoking
guix system}).

@item gnu/system
These are core Guix System modules, such as:

@table @code
@item (gnu system)
Defines @code{operating-system} (@pxref{operating-system Reference}).
@item (gnu system file-systems)
Defines @code{file-system} (@pxref{File Systems}).
@item (gnu system mapped-devices)
Defines @code{mapped-device} (@pxref{Mapped Devices}).
@end table

@item gnu/build
These are modules that are either used on the ``build side'' when
building operating systems or packages, or at run time by operating
systems.

@table @code
@item (gnu build accounts)
Creating @file{/etc/passwd}, @file{/etc/shadow}, etc. (@pxref{User
Accounts}).
@item (gnu build activation)
Activating an operating system at boot time or reconfiguration time.
@item (gnu build file-systems)
Searching, checking, and mounting file systems.
@item (gnu build linux-boot)
@itemx (gnu build hurd-boot)
Booting GNU/Linux and GNU/Hurd operating systems.
@item (gnu build linux-initrd)
Creating a Linux initial RAM disk (@pxref{Initial RAM Disk}).
@end table

@item gnu/home
This contains all things Guix Home (@pxref{Home Configuration});
examples:

@table @code
@item (gnu home services)
Core services such as @code{home-files-service-type}.
@item (gnu home services ssh)
SSH-related services (@pxref{Secure Shell}).
@end table

@item gnu/installer
This contains the text-mode graphical system installer (@pxref{Guided
Graphical Installation}).

@item gnu/machine
These are the @dfn{machine abstractions} used by @command{guix deploy}
(@pxref{Invoking guix deploy}).

@item gnu/tests
This contains system tests---tests that spawn virtual machines to check
that system services work as expected (@pxref{Running the Test Suite}).
@end table

Last, there's also a few directories that contain files that are
@emph{not} Guile modules:

@table @file
@item nix
This is the C++ implementation of @command{guix-daemon}, inherited from
Nix (@pxref{Invoking guix-daemon}).

@item tests
These are unit tests, each file corresponding more or less to one
module, in particular @code{(guix @dots{})} modules (@pxref{Running the
Test Suite}).

@item doc
This is the documentation in the form of Texinfo files: this manual and
the Cookbook.  @xref{Writing a Texinfo File,,, texinfo, GNU Texinfo},
for information on Texinfo markup language.

@item po
This is the location of translations of Guix itself, of package synopses
and descriptions, of the manual, and of the cookbook.  Note that
@file{.po} files that live here are pulled directly from Weblate
(@pxref{Translating Guix}).

@item etc
Miscellaneous files: shell completions, support for systemd and other
init systems, Git hooks, etc.
@end table

With all this, a fair chunk of your operating system is at your
fingertips!  Beyond @command{grep} and @command{git grep}, @pxref{The
Perfect Setup} on how to navigate code from your editor, and
@pxref{Using Guix Interactively} for information on how to use Scheme
modules interactively.  Enjoy!

@node Packaging Guidelines
@section Packaging Guidelines


M doc/guix.texi => doc/guix.texi +2 -1
@@ 7680,7 7680,8 @@ assembly is to C programs.  The term ``derivation'' comes from the fact
that build results @emph{derive} from them.

This chapter describes all these APIs in turn, starting from high-level
package definitions.
package definitions.  @xref{Source Tree Structure}, for a more general
overview of the source code.

@menu
* Package Modules::             Packages from the programmer's viewpoint.