bitcoin/contrib/guix
fanquake d6cb4e8ff0
Merge bitcoin/bitcoin#24549: guix: Use $HOST instead of generic osx{64} for macOS artifacts
53dd6165b8 guix: Use "win64" for Windows artifacts consistently (Hennadii Stepanov)
4b4b04a66d guix: Drop "-signed" suffix for signed macOS .dmg files (Hennadii Stepanov)
933a43018f guix: Use $HOST instead of generic osx{64} for macOS artifacts (Hennadii Stepanov)

Pull request description:

  On master (f94784f5bc) and 23.x branches some GUIX artifacts for `x86_64` and `arm64` macOS have indistinguishable names:
  ```
  d34646cbaf05e03195eb1e426f72fb471fe2d87ab18c9a656600089597703a38  bitcoin-23.0rc2-arm64-apple-darwin.tar.gz
  968767b39442e179e5976b948112a0904374eb4cfb9cba22863408a70a1d99f9  bitcoin-23.0rc2-osx-unsigned.dmg
  d8a7037d5bb845a214e45a52abcf9119bfbe72a76d6370e9560c18fda74a70db  bitcoin-23.0rc2-osx-unsigned.tar.gz
  71092f37985d556bdd25d33fb8571e13664eacadda90efcf21eaa1ba8a32eabd  bitcoin-23.0rc2-osx-unsigned.dmg
  cb10c49b486085b89393955a7a168c32e2f2a4911f2b8d44494bd8f2bd0acf2f  bitcoin-23.0rc2-osx-unsigned.tar.gz
  6d4c44726cd45711c4cb7257c6b46731be1446fc85e79ac86f2def19be45ced3  bitcoin-23.0rc2-osx64.tar.gz
  ```

  With this PR:
  ```
  $ find guix-build-$(git rev-parse --short=12 HEAD)/output/ -type f -print0 | env LC_ALL=C sort -z | xargs -r0 sha256sum
  054c3765381b6d59c6ad8e5e3cbbdd23e330bd579f88b399f78f296d1a4536d0  guix-build-53dd6165b899/output/arm64-apple-darwin/SHA256SUMS.part
  18750c1ff71d014fe5f976da738bfa04a4cd02af6b0d575def8d83160552de2d  guix-build-53dd6165b899/output/arm64-apple-darwin/bitcoin-53dd6165b899-arm64-apple-darwin-unsigned.dmg
  fa2b16684060202d1918c658b446909ee10999a8b9a85018ca2f6a09eaa11c8e  guix-build-53dd6165b899/output/arm64-apple-darwin/bitcoin-53dd6165b899-arm64-apple-darwin-unsigned.tar.gz
  b865000eb4b291a51d1920eec63dcbc9b47dedb1cc7fda0af3ab9b321db36b82  guix-build-53dd6165b899/output/arm64-apple-darwin/bitcoin-53dd6165b899-arm64-apple-darwin.tar.gz
  dd88ce6660754987abf95fc2c4d09f6d2248f12ecee4ef2c03f4fa74bbd8e3ae  guix-build-53dd6165b899/output/dist-archive/bitcoin-53dd6165b899.tar.gz
  fb1871c134e079aa970c5317cad258540e2642cc7ff60a794c85651c85fc6fc4  guix-build-53dd6165b899/output/x86_64-apple-darwin/SHA256SUMS.part
  b1f4c04f7dbd85798ed7cd76fd7948299dfb5653c6c68df0b0839be1c1b295dd  guix-build-53dd6165b899/output/x86_64-apple-darwin/bitcoin-53dd6165b899-x86_64-apple-darwin-unsigned.dmg
  f1f8b2774ba3028d6cdde509076614067a6affc0fa176fdbb03829109ae47022  guix-build-53dd6165b899/output/x86_64-apple-darwin/bitcoin-53dd6165b899-x86_64-apple-darwin-unsigned.tar.gz
  20b9386a81e70f848db7c4f14bcb6cf2fbc1dc17aad1b9a2e6f04ac6fa86a4c9  guix-build-53dd6165b899/output/x86_64-apple-darwin/bitcoin-53dd6165b899-x86_64-apple-darwin.tar.gz
  6f764a8fe876359d3c377fd934eb6595cc06d746980e07320565566abe9409f9  guix-build-53dd6165b899/output/x86_64-w64-mingw32/SHA256SUMS.part
  446b24b2e01608d3dc09db29545db2cdb716c161b19356f4fae930d3ebb299f8  guix-build-53dd6165b899/output/x86_64-w64-mingw32/bitcoin-53dd6165b899-win64-debug.zip
  d1660e6839a1358ae2d164958b551b81338cca9b740b3dc314397a35b17ba2a6  guix-build-53dd6165b899/output/x86_64-w64-mingw32/bitcoin-53dd6165b899-win64-setup-unsigned.exe
  4ab0d948f3864f0d5d220c570b57a02e040f936a8f6b9dba3b4688c80667def9  guix-build-53dd6165b899/output/x86_64-w64-mingw32/bitcoin-53dd6165b899-win64-unsigned.tar.gz
  481177329998fcbb71ab1fc9542a6ffcea623cebddf567981cfa76a7320ec115  guix-build-53dd6165b899/output/x86_64-w64-mingw32/bitcoin-53dd6165b899-win64.zip
  ```

  Also naming of Windows artifacts has been improved.

ACKs for top commit:
  gruve-p:
    ACK 53dd6165b8
  achow101:
    ACK 53dd6165b8

Tree-SHA512: 2a60d8b33608aa18b8bc4376eccca813e482571138524b9e3f8f7ab9a085df79faa1f05bc6e07bbfaf01ddd7a3d17172a6061162ab055fb51ea01e8ccf3e4422
2022-03-16 20:41:36 +00:00
..
libexec guix: Use "win64" for Windows artifacts consistently 2022-03-16 12:03:22 +01:00
patches guix: use uptream nsis-x86_64 2022-01-05 10:32:24 +08:00
guix-attest guix: Don't include directory name in SHA256SUMS 2021-08-18 20:07:32 -04:00
guix-build guix: only check for the macOS SDK once 2022-03-10 11:14:26 +00:00
guix-clean test: Bump shellcheck version to 0.8.0 2021-11-30 21:15:40 +02:00
guix-codesign guix: Use $HOST instead of generic osx{64} for macOS artifacts 2022-03-13 11:04:52 +01:00
guix-verify guix-verify: Non-zero exit code when anything fails 2021-08-05 19:05:16 -04:00
INSTALL.md Enable TLS in links in documentation 2021-09-16 22:00:20 +00:00
manifest.scm Update signapple for platform identifier fix 2022-03-16 09:10:50 -04:00
README.md guix: add arm64-apple-darwin triplet 2022-01-26 17:32:46 +08:00

Bootstrappable Bitcoin Core Builds

This directory contains the files necessary to perform bootstrappable Bitcoin Core builds.

Bootstrappability furthers our binary security guarantees by allowing us to audit and reproduce our toolchain instead of blindly trusting binary downloads.

We achieve bootstrappability by using Guix as a functional package manager.

Requirements

Conservatively, you will need an x86_64 machine with:

  • 16GB of free disk space on the partition that /gnu/store will reside in
  • 8GB of free disk space per platform triple you're planning on building (see the HOSTS environment variable description)

Installation and Setup

If you don't have Guix installed and set up, please follow the instructions in INSTALL.md

Usage

If you haven't considered your security model yet, please read the relevant section before proceeding to perform a build.

Making the Xcode SDK available for macOS cross-compilation

In order to perform a build for macOS (which is included in the default set of platform triples to build), you'll need to extract the macOS SDK tarball using tools found in the macdeploy directory.

You can then either point to the SDK using the SDK_PATH environment variable:

# Extract the SDK tarball to /path/to/parent/dir/of/extracted/SDK/Xcode-<foo>-<bar>-extracted-SDK-with-libcxx-headers
tar -C /path/to/parent/dir/of/extracted/SDK -xaf /path/to/Xcode-<foo>-<bar>-extracted-SDK-with-libcxx-headers.tar.gz

# Indicate where to locate the SDK tarball
export SDK_PATH=/path/to/parent/dir/of/extracted/SDK

or extract it into depends/SDKs:

mkdir -p depends/SDKs
tar -C depends/SDKs -xaf /path/to/SDK/tarball

Building

The author highly recommends at least reading over the common usage patterns and examples section below before starting a build. For a full list of customization options, see the recognized environment variables section.

To build Bitcoin Core reproducibly with all default options, invoke the following from the top of a clean repository:

./contrib/guix/guix-build

Codesigning build outputs

The guix-codesign command attaches codesignatures (produced by codesigners) to existing non-codesigned outputs. Please see the release process documentation for more context.

It respects many of the same environment variable flags as guix-build, with 2 crucial differences:

  1. Since only Windows and macOS build outputs require codesigning, the HOSTS environment variable will have a sane default value of x86_64-w64-mingw32 x86_64-apple-darwin instead of all the platforms.
  2. The guix-codesign command requires a DETACHED_SIGS_REPO flag.
    • DETACHED_SIGS_REPO

      Set the directory where detached codesignatures can be found for the current Bitcoin Core version being built.

      REQUIRED environment variable

An invocation with all default options would look like:

env DETACHED_SIGS_REPO=<path/to/bitcoin-detached-sigs> ./contrib/guix/guix-codesign

Cleaning intermediate work directories

By default, guix-build leaves all intermediate files or "work directories" (e.g. depends/work, guix-build-*/distsrc-*) intact at the end of a build so that they are available to the user (to aid in debugging, etc.). However, these directories usually take up a large amount of disk space. Therefore, a guix-clean convenience script is provided which cleans the current git worktree to save disk space:

./contrib/guix/guix-clean

Attesting to build outputs

Much like how Gitian build outputs are attested to in a gitian.sigs repository, Guix build outputs are attested to in the guix.sigs repository.

After you've cloned the guix.sigs repository, to attest to the current worktree's commit/tag:

env GUIX_SIGS_REPO=<path/to/guix.sigs> SIGNER=<gpg-key-name> ./contrib/guix/guix-attest

See ./contrib/guix/guix-attest --help for more information on the various ways guix-attest can be invoked.

Verifying build output attestations

After at least one other signer has uploaded their signatures to the guix.sigs repository:

git -C <path/to/guix.sigs> pull
env GUIX_SIGS_REPO=<path/to/guix.sigs> ./contrib/guix/guix-verify

Common guix-build invocation patterns and examples

Keeping caches and SDKs outside of the worktree

If you perform a lot of builds and have a bunch of worktrees, you may find it more efficient to keep the depends tree's download cache, build cache, and SDKs outside of the worktrees to avoid duplicate downloads and unnecessary builds. To help with this situation, the guix-build script honours the SOURCES_PATH, BASE_CACHE, and SDK_PATH environment variables and will pass them on to the depends tree so that you can do something like:

env SOURCES_PATH="$HOME/depends-SOURCES_PATH" BASE_CACHE="$HOME/depends-BASE_CACHE" SDK_PATH="$HOME/macOS-SDKs" ./contrib/guix/guix-build

Note that the paths that these environment variables point to must be directories, and NOT symlinks to directories.

See the recognized environment variables section for more details.

Building a subset of platform triples

Sometimes you only want to build a subset of the supported platform triples, in which case you can override the default list by setting the space-separated HOSTS environment variable:

env HOSTS='x86_64-w64-mingw32 x86_64-apple-darwin' ./contrib/guix/guix-build

See the recognized environment variables section for more details.

Controlling the number of threads used by guix build commands

Depending on your system's RAM capacity, you may want to decrease the number of threads used to decrease RAM usage or vice versa.

By default, the scripts under ./contrib/guix will invoke all guix build commands with --cores="$JOBS". Note that $JOBS defaults to $(nproc) if not specified. However, astute manual readers will also notice that guix build commands also accept a --max-jobs= flag (which defaults to 1 if unspecified).

Here is the difference between --cores= and --max-jobs=:

Note: When I say "derivation," think "package"

--cores=

  • controls the number of CPU cores to build each derivation. This is the value passed to make's --jobs= flag.

--max-jobs=

  • controls how many derivations can be built in parallel
  • defaults to 1

Therefore, the default is for guix build commands to build one derivation at a time, utilizing $JOBS threads.

Specifying the $JOBS environment variable will only modify --cores=, but you can also modify the value for --max-jobs= by specifying $ADDITIONAL_GUIX_COMMON_FLAGS. For example, if you have a LOT of memory, you may want to set:

export ADDITIONAL_GUIX_COMMON_FLAGS='--max-jobs=8'

Which allows for a maximum of 8 derivations to be built at the same time, each utilizing $JOBS threads.

Or, if you'd like to avoid spurious build failures caused by issues with parallelism within a single package, but would still like to build multiple packages when the dependency graph allows for it, you may want to try:

export JOBS=1 ADDITIONAL_GUIX_COMMON_FLAGS='--max-jobs=8'

See the recognized environment variables section for more details.

Recognized environment variables

  • HOSTS

    Override the space-separated list of platform triples for which to perform a bootstrappable build.

    (defaults to "x86_64-linux-gnu arm-linux-gnueabihf aarch64-linux-gnu riscv64-linux-gnu powerpc64-linux-gnu powerpc64le-linux-gnu x86_64-w64-mingw32 x86_64-apple-darwin arm64-apple-darwin")

  • SOURCES_PATH

    Set the depends tree download cache for sources. This is passed through to the depends tree. Setting this to the same directory across multiple builds of the depends tree can eliminate unnecessary redownloading of package sources.

    The path that this environment variable points to must be a directory, and NOT a symlink to a directory.

  • BASE_CACHE

    Set the depends tree cache for built packages. This is passed through to the depends tree. Setting this to the same directory across multiple builds of the depends tree can eliminate unnecessary building of packages.

    The path that this environment variable points to must be a directory, and NOT a symlink to a directory.

  • SDK_PATH

    Set the path where extracted SDKs can be found. This is passed through to the depends tree. Note that this is should be set to the parent directory of the actual SDK (e.g. SDK_PATH=$HOME/Downloads/macOS-SDKs instead of $HOME/Downloads/macOS-SDKs/Xcode-12.2-12B45b-extracted-SDK-with-libcxx-headers).

    The path that this environment variable points to must be a directory, and NOT a symlink to a directory.

  • JOBS

    Override the number of jobs to run simultaneously, you might want to do so on a memory-limited machine. This may be passed to:

    • guix build commands as in guix environment --cores="$JOBS"
    • make as in make --jobs="$JOBS"
    • xargs as in xargs -P"$JOBS"

    See here for more details.

    (defaults to the value of nproc outside the container)

  • SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH

    Override the reference UNIX timestamp used for bit-for-bit reproducibility, the variable name conforms to standard.

    (defaults to the output of $(git log --format=%at -1))

  • V

    If non-empty, will pass V=1 to all make invocations, making make output verbose.

    Note that any given value is ignored. The variable is only checked for emptiness. More concretely, this means that V= (setting V to the empty string) is interpreted the same way as not setting V at all, and that V=0 has the same effect as V=1.

  • SUBSTITUTE_URLS

    A whitespace-delimited list of URLs from which to download pre-built packages. A URL is only used if its signing key is authorized (refer to the substitute servers section for more details).

  • ADDITIONAL_GUIX_COMMON_FLAGS

    Additional flags to be passed to all guix commands.

  • ADDITIONAL_GUIX_TIMEMACHINE_FLAGS

    Additional flags to be passed to guix time-machine.

  • ADDITIONAL_GUIX_ENVIRONMENT_FLAGS

    Additional flags to be passed to the invocation of guix environment inside guix time-machine.

Choosing your security model

No matter how you installed Guix, you need to decide on your security model for building packages with Guix.

Guix allows us to achieve better binary security by using our CPU time to build everything from scratch. However, it doesn't sacrifice user choice in pursuit of this: users can decide whether or not to use substitutes (pre-built packages).

Option 1: Building with substitutes

Step 1: Authorize the signing keys

Depending on the installation procedure you followed, you may have already authorized the Guix build farm key. In particular, the official shell installer script asks you if you want the key installed, and the debian distribution package authorized the key during installation.

You can check the current list of authorized keys at /etc/guix/acl.

At the time of writing, a /etc/guix/acl with just the Guix build farm key authorized looks something like:

(acl
 (entry
  (public-key
   (ecc
    (curve Ed25519)
    (q #8D156F295D24B0D9A86FA5741A840FF2D24F60F7B6C4134814AD55625971B394#)
    )
   )
  (tag
   (guix import)
   )
  )
 )

If you've determined that the official Guix build farm key hasn't been authorized, and you would like to authorize it, run the following as root:

guix archive --authorize < /var/guix/profiles/per-user/root/current-guix/share/guix/ci.guix.gnu.org.pub

If /var/guix/profiles/per-user/root/current-guix/share/guix/ci.guix.gnu.org.pub doesn't exist, try:

guix archive --authorize < <PREFIX>/share/guix/ci.guix.gnu.org.pub

Where <PREFIX> is likely:

  • /usr if you installed from a distribution package
  • /usr/local if you installed Guix from source and didn't supply any prefix-modifying flags to Guix's ./configure

For dongcarl's substitute server at https://guix.carldong.io, run as root:

wget -qO- 'https://guix.carldong.io/signing-key.pub' | guix archive --authorize

Removing authorized keys

To remove previously authorized keys, simply edit /etc/guix/acl and remove the (entry (public-key ...)) entry.

Step 2: Specify the substitute servers

Once its key is authorized, the official Guix build farm at https://ci.guix.gnu.org is automatically used unless the --no-substitutes flag is supplied. This default list of substitute servers is overridable both on a guix-daemon level and when you invoke guix commands. See examples below for the various ways of adding dongcarl's substitute server after having authorized his signing key.

Change the default list of substitute servers by starting guix-daemon with the --substitute-urls option (you will likely need to edit your init script):

guix-daemon <cmd> --substitute-urls='https://guix.carldong.io https://ci.guix.gnu.org'

Override the default list of substitute servers by passing the --substitute-urls option for invocations of guix commands:

guix <cmd> --substitute-urls='https://guix.carldong.io https://ci.guix.gnu.org'

For scripts under ./contrib/guix, set the SUBSTITUTE_URLS environment variable:

export SUBSTITUTE_URLS='https://guix.carldong.io https://ci.guix.gnu.org'

Option 2: Disabling substitutes on an ad-hoc basis

If you prefer not to use any substitutes, make sure to supply --no-substitutes like in the following snippet. The first build will take a while, but the resulting packages will be cached for future builds.

For direct invocations of guix:

guix <cmd> --no-substitutes

For the scripts under ./contrib/guix/:

export ADDITIONAL_GUIX_COMMON_FLAGS='--no-substitutes'

Option 3: Disabling substitutes by default

guix-daemon accepts a --no-substitutes flag, which will make sure that, unless otherwise overridden by a command line invocation, no substitutes will be used.

If you start guix-daemon using an init script, you can edit said script to supply this flag.

Purging/Uninstalling Guix

In the extraordinarily rare case where you messed up your Guix installation in an irreversible way, you may want to completely purge Guix from your system and start over.

  1. Uninstall Guix itself according to the way you installed it (e.g. sudo apt purge guix for Ubuntu packaging, sudo make uninstall for a build from source).

  2. Remove all build users and groups

    You may check for relevant users and groups using:

    getent passwd | grep guix
    getent group | grep guix
    

    Then, you may remove users and groups using:

    sudo userdel <user>
    sudo groupdel <group>
    
  3. Remove all possible Guix-related directories

    • /var/guix/
    • /var/log/guix/
    • /gnu/
    • /etc/guix/
    • /home/*/.config/guix/
    • /home/*/.cache/guix/
    • /home/*/.guix-profile/
    • /root/.config/guix/
    • /root/.cache/guix/
    • /root/.guix-profile/