nix template engine
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stdlib.nix


nte

nix template engine - takes some templates, entries and applies the templates to the entries

sites written in nte

https://jacekpoz.pl

if your site (or anything else) is written in nte, let me know and I'll add you to this list

you can also use this button on your site and link to one of the repos

examples

check example/ for a static website written in nte

build and run it using

nix shell nixpkgs#darkhttpd --command sh -c "nix build -L .#examples.x86_64-linux.default && darkhttpd ./result"

the site will be available at http://localhost:8080

the example is a cut down version of my own website (of course also written in nte)

usage

first add nte as an input in your project's flake

nte = {
  url = "git+https://git.jacekpoz.pl/jacekpoz/nte";
  inputs.nixpkgs.follows = "nixpkgs";
};

then the engine function will be available under

inputs.nte.engines.${system}.default

it accepts 3 arguments:

  • pkgs - nixpkgs
  • src - the directory containing all entries and templates
  • an attrset of:
    • extraArgs - an attrset of additional arguments passed to all entries and templates
    • entries - a list of all entry files to be processed
    • templates - a list of all template files to be applied

and returns a string containing a shell script that applies the templates to the entries

the flake gives the engine pkgs, so when passing the engine function to a derivation, only provide it with the source directory:

import ./project/default.nix {
  # ...
  nte = nte.engines.${system}.default ./project;
};

then you can use it as in the example derivation below:

{
  nte,
  stdenv,
  ...
}: let
  extraArgs = {
    foo = 2137;
    bar = "dupa";
    baz = arg1: arg2: ''
      here's arg1: ${arg1}
      and here's arg2: ${arg2}
    '';
  };

  entries = [
    ./entry1.nix
    ./foo/entry2.nix
    ./foo/entry3.nix
    ./bar/entry4.nix
    ./bar/entry5.nix
    ./bar/entry6.nix
  ];

  templates = [
    ./template1.nix
    ./template2.nix
  ];
in
  stdenv.mkDerivation {
    name = "nte-example";
    version = "0.1";
    src = ./.;
  
    buildPhase = ''
      runHook preBuild

      ${nte {inherit extraArgs entries templates;}}
  
      runHook postBuild
    '';
  }

nte will handle creating directories if your source file structure isn't flat

nte offers a standard library that contains nixpkgs, a getEntry function that handles an entry's file and utility functions found in stdlib.nix

templates

a template can take an arbitrary number of arguments and returns { name, format, output }:

  • name - used as a template ID for the entries
  • format - the extension of the output file (ignored if an entry defines file)
  • output - string if in a base template, entry to another template otherwise

example template:

{
  name,
  location,
  info,
  ...
}: {
  name = "greeting";
  format = "txt";

  output = ''
    Hello ${name}! Welcome to ${location}.

    Here's some more information:
    ${info}
  '';
}

a template's output can also be an entry to another template:

{
  name,
  location,
  date,
  time,
  ...
}: {
  name = "greeting-with-date";
  output = {
    template = "greeting";

    inherit name location;

    info = ''
      You're visiting ${location} on ${date} at ${time}!
    '';
  };
}

a template that's inherited from a different template also inherits its format - no need to define it again

entries

an entry can take an arbitrary number of arguments and returns { template, ... }, the ... being the desired template's arguments (sans extraArgs, those are passed either way)

example entries (using the previous example templates):

_: {
  template = "greeting";

  name = "Jacek";
  location = "Wrocław";
  info = ''
    As of 2023, the official population of Wrocław is 674132 making it the third largest city in Poland.
  '';
}

an entry using the stdlib:

{
  run,
  ...
}: {
  template = "greeting-with-date";

  name = "Rafał";
  location = "Osieck";
  date = run "date +%F";
  time = run "date +%T";
}

if a binary isn't in $PATH, remember that each entry gets pkgs:

{
  pkgs,
  run,
  ...
}: let
  date = "${pkgs.coreutils-full}/bin/date";
in {
  # ...
  date = run "${date} +%F";
  time = run "${date} +%T";
}

nte by default will follow your source file structure, if you want to specify the output location yourself use file:

_: {
  # ...
  file = "foo/bar.txt";
}

in this example the output of this entry will end up at $out/foo/bar.txt instead of the default location - a base template's format will also be ignored

license

MIT