6.3 KiB
nte
nix template engine - takes some templates, entries and applies the templates to the entries
nte's main repository is on my forgejo instance
mirrors are available on github and codeberg, I accept contributions from anywhere
sites written in nte
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
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 use the mkNteDerivation
wrapper over stdenv.mkDerivation
available under
inputs.nte.functions.${system}.mkNteDerivation
it accepts an attrset of:
name
,version
,src
- passthrough tostdenv.mkDerivation
extraArgs
- an attrset of additional arguments passed to all entries and templatesentries
- a list of all entry files to be processedtemplates
- a list of all template files to be appliedextraFiles
- a list of either:- a string containing the path to the source file - will be copied to
$out
in theinstallPhase
- attrset of
source
anddestination
:source
- a string containing a path, if relative$PWD
is$src
in theinstallPhase
destination
- a string containing a path, never absolute, appended to$out
in theinstallPhase
- a string containing the path to the source file - will be copied to
make sure not to use nix paths in extraFiles
if you want the names of the files to match up
example usage of the wrapper function:
mkNteDerivation {
name = "nte-example";
version = "0.1";
src = ./.;
extraArgs = {
foo = 2137;
bar = "dupa";
baz = arg1: arg2: ''
here's arg1: ${arg1}
and here's arg2: ${arg2}
'';
};
entries = [
./entry1.nix
./foo/entry2.nix
./foo/entry3.nix
./bar/entry4.nix
./bar/entry5.nix
./bar/entry6.nix
];
templates = [
./template1.nix
./template2.nix
];
extraFiles = [
"./data.txt" # equivalent to { source = ./data.txt; destination = "/"; }
{ source = "./image.png"; destination = "/assets/"; }
{ source = "./image2.png"; destination = "/assets/dupa.png"; }
{ source = "./data/*"; destination = "/assets/data/"; }
{ source = fetchurl { ... }; destination = "/"; }
];
}
nte will handle creating directories if your source file structure isn't flat
if the mkNteDerivation
wrapper isn't enough for you, you can do things the old way - by putting the output of inputs.nte.functions.${system}.engine
in a derivation's buildPhase
:
mkDerivation {
# ...
buildPhase = ''
runHook preBuild
${engine {inherit extraArgs entries templates;}}
runHook postBuild
'';
}
in that case if you wish to replicate the functionality of extraFiles
you can use the derivation's installPhase
, manually mkdir
the needed directories and cp
your files into $out
nte offers a standard library that contains:
nixpkgs
getEntry
- a function that gives you access to the entry's attributesapplyTemplate
- a function that allows you to manually apply a template to an entry- 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 entriesformat
- the extension of the output file (ignored if an entry definesfile
)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)
there's a built-in passthrough
template, which (as the name might suggest) takes in a format
and output
and passes them through to the template with no changes
this is useful if you're using nte to create a single file - you won't have to create a boilerplate template
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
thanks
raf for helping me out with some of the nix and setting up mirrors
license
MIT