Yae is a powerful yet minimal dependency manager intended for use with Nix,
which functions similar to niv and npins
.
Why should I consider Yae over niv or npins
?
-
No unnecessary helper Nix expressions are needed by Yae.
niv and
npins
spit out medium-to-large sized Nix expressions that vary in complexity in the form of a file that you need to keep in sync with their mainline sources. This requires additional upgrade commands in the CLI and more effort to maintain. A Yae environment is a single file and can be placed anywhere and read just as simply. -
Yae has a simple and coherent source tree. niv has a total of 10000 LOC (lines of code),
npins
sits at almost 6000 LOC flat, and Yae stands at just shy of 1500 LOC when looking at all files. Yae's core source code itself sits at just 462 LOC, which is much, much smaller than that of niv andnpins
' core trees. This is all to say that Yae implements everything needed to functionally replace niv andnpins
in any workflow, and in much more efficient and concise codebase. -
Yae is simple by nature in design and usage philosophy.
niv and
npins
are great, but are far toooverkilloverengineered for me and many other consumers. I say overengineered because I was able to write out Yae's initial implementation in just about thirty-minutes to an hour, and it was already complete enough for me to replace niv ornpins
in all of my production workflows. If you need some niche feature that niv ornpins
has, use them, but if not, Yae is here for you.
You can try out Yae without installing anything permanently on your system by running
nix run github:Fuwn/yae
.
Check out Tsutsumi to see an example of Yae running in a production environment. Tsutsumi fully leverages the power of Yae to manage and automagically update the sources of the Nix packages it provides using a simple GitHub Actions CRON workflow.
View the installations instructions below to set up Yae after
running yae init
.
# Initialises a Yae environment in the current directory by creating an empty `yae.json`
# file
yae init
# Adds a Yae dependency named `zen-browser-twilight-bin` using a floating tag
# (tag always remain `twilight`, but may receive frequent hash changes)
yae add \
--type binary \
--version twilight \
--unpack \
zen-browser-twilight-bin \
'https://github.com/zen-browser/desktop/releases/download/{version}/zen.linux-specific.tar.bz2'
# Adds a Yae dependency named `zen-browser-bin` pinned at tag `1.0.1-a.7`
yae add \
--type git \
--version 1.0.1-a.7 \
--unpack \
zen-browser-bin \
'https://github.com/zen-browser/desktop/releases/download/{version}/zen.linux-specific.tar.bz2'
# Adds a Yae dependency named `yaak` pinned at tag `2024.10.1` with tag trimming
# for updates
yae add \
--type git \
--unpack=false \
--version 2024.10.1 \
--trim-tag-prefix v \
yaak \
'https://github.com/yaakapp/app/releases/download/v{version}/yaak_{version}_amd64.AppImage.tar.gz'
# Updates all dependencies, e.g., updates the hash of `zen-browser-twilight-bin`
# and bumps the version of `zen-browser-bin` to `1.0.1-a.8`, handling URL and
# hash recalculations, etc.
yae update
# Only updates `zen-browser-twilight-bin`
yae update zen-browser-twilight-bin
You can either install Yae through the flake that this repository exposes or through Tsutsumi.
Tsutsumi provides both flake and flake-less installation
options, while this repository only provides installation support through flakes
using the exported inputs.yae.packages.${pkgs.system}.yae
package.
Click here to see a minimal Nix flake that exposes a development shell with Yae bundled.
# Enter the development shell using `nix develop --impure` (impure is used here because `nixpkgs` internally
# assigns `builtins.currentSystem` to `nixpkgs.system` for the sake of simplicity in this example)
{
inputs.nixpkgs.url = "github:NixOS/nixpkgs/nixpkgs-unstable";
inputs.tsutsumi = {
url = "github:Fuwn/tsutsumi";
inputs.nixpkgs.follows = "nixpkgs";
};
outputs = { nixpkgs, tsutsumi, self }:
let pkgs = import nixpkgs { inherit self; }; in {
devShells.${pkgs.system}.default = pkgs.mkShell {
buildInputs = [ tsutsumi.packages.${pkgs.system}.yae ];
};
};
}
To add Yae support to your Nix expression after running yae init
, just read
from the Yae environment file. See the example below for more details.
Check out the examples/
directory for a couple of great examples
of Yae managing different sources including Nixpkgs!
Here's an example snippet taken from Tsutsumi's zen-browser-bin
package
and yae.json
showcasing Yae in action.
Expand this!
# pkgs/zen-browser-bin.nix
# This expression produces the `zen-browser-bin` package that Tsutsumi exposes
# as a Nix package derivation.
#
# Since it is managed by Yae, it is kept 100% up to date with zero effort through
# a Github Actions CRON job workflow that executes `yae update` periodically.
{
pkgs,
self,
# This line imports Yae's environment configuration to be used below.
yae ? builtins.fromJSON (builtins.readFile "${self}/yae.json"),
}:
# Tsutsumi exposes two versions of the Zen browser, the latest stable release
# and the latest Twilight release (a bleeding edge, daily build). This library
# function is one that takes one of two Yae sources for the Zen browser, and produces
# a Nix package derivation for it.
import "${self}/lib/zen-browser-bin.nix" {
# Here, the latest SHA256 hash and release version from Yae are passed to Tsutsumi's
# Zen browser package function.
#
# If `yae update` is ran and a new release is detected, these values are
# updated by Yae, which then triggers another workflow to build and send the
# resulting derivation to Tsutsumi's binary cache.
inherit (yae.zen-browser-bin) sha256 version;
# To generate the Twilight release package, this is all that is changed.
# inherit (yae.zen-browser-twilight-bin) sha256 version;
} { inherit pkgs; }
NAME:
yae - Nix Dependency Manager
USAGE:
yae [global options] command [command options]
DESCRIPTION:
Nix Dependency Manager
AUTHOR:
Fuwn <[email protected]>
COMMANDS:
init Initialise a new Yae environment
add Add a source
drop Drop a source
update Update one or all sources
help, h Shows a list of commands or help for one command
GLOBAL OPTIONS:
--sources value Sources path (default: "./yae.json")
--debug Enable debug output (default: false)
--silent Silence log output (default: false)
--dry-run Prevents writing to disk (default: false)
--help, -h show help
COPYRIGHT:
Copyright (c) 2024-2024 Fuwn
This project is licensed with the GNU General Public License v3.0.