title: The Filesystem Hierarchy Standard Comes to Guix Containers date: 2023-01-04 15:00 author: John Kehayias tags: Software development, Containers --- GNU Guix is different from most other GNU/Linux distributions and perhaps nowhere is that more obvious than the organization of the filesystem: Guix does not conform to the [Filesystem Hierarchy Standard](https://refspecs.linuxfoundation.org/fhs.shtml) (FHS). In practical terms, this means there is no global `/lib` containing libraries, `/bin` containing binaries,¹ and so on. This is very much at the core of how Guix works and some of the convenient features, like per-user installation of programs (different versions, for instance) and a declarative system configuration where the system is determined from a configuration file. However, this also leads to a difference in how many pieces of software expect their world to look like, relying on finding a library in `/lib` or an external tool in `/bin`. When these are hard coded and not overcome with appropriate build options, we patch code to refer to absolute paths in the store, like `/gnu/store/hrgqa7m498wfavq4awai3xz86ifkjxdr-grep-3.6/bin/grep`, to keep everything consistently contained within the store. It all works great and is thanks to the hard work of everyone that has contributed to Guix. But what if we need a more FHS-like environment for developing, testing, or running a piece of software? To that end, we've [recently added](https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/guix.git/commit/?id=c7ba5f38b80433b040d3946b8fc0b1e8621ba30a) (available in [Guix 1.4.0](https://guix.gnu.org/en/blog/2022/gnu-guix-1.4.0-released/)) a new option for [`guix shell`](https://guix.gnu.org/en/manual/devel/en/html_node/Invoking-guix-shell.html) (previously called [`guix environment`](https://guix.gnu.org/en/blog/2021/from-guix-environment-to-guix-shell/)): `--emulate-fhs` (or `-F`). This option is used in conjunction with the [`--container`](https://guix.gnu.org/en/cookbook/en/html_node/Containers.html) (or `-C`) option which creates an isolated, you guessed it, container. The new `--emulate-fhs` option will set up an environment in the container that follows FHS expectations, so that libraries are visible in `/lib` in the container, as an example. Here is a very simple example: ```sh $ guix shell --container --emulate-fhs coreutils -- ls /bin | head [ b2sum base32 base64 basename basenc cat catchsegv chcon chgrp ``` and ```sh $ guix shell --container --emulate-fhs coreutils -- ls /lib | head Mcrt1.o Scrt1.o audit crt1.o crti.o crtn.o gconv gcrt1.o ld-2.33.so ld-linux-x86-64.so.2 ``` Contrast that with `/bin` on a Guix system: ```sh $ ls /bin -l total 4 lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 61 Dec 12 09:57 sh -> \ /gnu/store/d99ykvj3axzzidygsmdmzxah4lvxd6hw-bash-5.1.8/bin/sh* ``` and `/lib` ```sh $ ls /lib ls: cannot access '/lib': No such file or directory ``` Or, if you like to see it more in motion, here's a gif (courtesy of Ludovic Courtès): ![An animated gif showing the above 'guix shell' output.](/static/blog/img/guix-shell-fhs.gif) Additionally, for the more technically-minded, the [`glibc` used in this container](https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/guix.git/commit/?id=3d1d29e440910a99531b738f8f090de2cd4df9da) will read from a global cache in `/etc/ld.so.cache` contrary to the [behavior in Guix](https://guix.gnu.org/blog/2021/taming-the-stat-storm-with-a-loader-cache/) otherwise. This can help ensure that libraries are found when querying the ld cache or using the output of `ldconfig -p`, for example. There are several uses that spring to mind for such a container in Guix. For developers, or those aspiring to hack on a project, this is a helpful tool when needing to emulate a different (non-Guix) environment. For example, one could use this to more easily follow build instructions meant for a general distribution, say when a Guix package is not (yet) available or easy to write immediately. Another usage is to be able to use tools that don't really fit into Guix's model, like ones that use pre-built binaries. There are many reasons why this is not ideal and Guix strives to replace or supplement such tools, but practically speaking they can be hard to avoid entirely. The FHS container helps bridge this gap, providing an isolated and reproducible environment as needed. Users not interested in development will also find the FHS container useful. For example, there may be software that is free and conforms to the [Free System Distribution Guidelines](https://www.gnu.org/distros/free-system-distribution-guidelines) (FSDG) Guix follows, yet is not feasible to be [packaged](https://hpc.guix.info/blog/2021/09/whats-in-a-package/) by our standards. JavaScript and particularly [Electron](https://www.electronjs.org/) applications are not yet packaged for Guix due to the [difficulties](https://dustycloud.org/blog/javascript-packaging-dystopia/) of a properly source-based and bootstrapable approach in this ecosystem. As a more interesting example for this last point, let's dive right into a big one: the popular [VSCodium](https://github.com/VSCodium/vscodium) editor. This is a [freely licensed](https://github.com/VSCodium/vscodium#why-does-this-exist) build of Microsoft's VS Code editor. This is based on Electron and pre-built [AppImages](https://appimage.org/) are available. [Downloading](https://github.com/VSCodium/vscodium/releases) and making the AppImage executable (with a `chmod +x`), we can run it in a container with ```sh guix shell --container --network --emulate-fhs \ --development ungoogled-chromium gcc:lib \ --preserve='^DISPLAY$' --preserve='^XAUTHORITY$' --share=$XAUTHORITY \ --preserve='^DBUS_' --expose=/var/run/dbus \ --expose=/sys/dev --expose=/sys/devices --expose=/dev/dri \ -- ./VSCodium-1.74.0.22342.glibc2.17-x86_64.AppImage --appimage-extract-and-run ``` The second line is a handy cheat to get lots of libraries often needed for graphical applications (development inputs of the package `ungoogled-chromium`) though it can be overkill if the AppImage does actually bundle everything (they don't!). The next line is for display on the host's X server, the one after for DBus communication, and lastly exposing some of the host hardware for rendering. This last part may be different on different hardware. That should do it, at least to see basic functionality of VSCodium. Note that we can't run an AppImage without the `--appimage-extract-and-run` option as it will want to use [FUSE](https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/filesystems/fuse.html) to mount the image which is not possible from the container.² The FHS container is also useful to be able to run the exact same binary as anyone else, as you might want to for privacy reasons with the [Tor Browser](https://www.torproject.org/). While there is a long-standing [set of patches](https://issues.guix.gnu.org/42380) to build the Tor Browser from source, with a container we can run the official build directly. After [downloading](https://www.torproject.org/download/), checking the [signature](https://support.torproject.org/tbb/how-to-verify-signature/), and [unpacking](https://tb-manual.torproject.org/installation/), we can launch the Tor Browser from the root of the unpacked directory with: ```sh guix shell --container --network --emulate-fhs \ --preserve='^DISPLAY$' --preserve='^XAUTHORITY$' --share=$XAUTHORITY \ alsa-lib bash coreutils dbus-glib file gcc:lib grep gtk+ \ libcxx libevent openssl@1 pciutils sed \ -- ./start-tor-browser.desktop -v ``` (Thanks to Jim Newsome for pointing out this example on the [guix-devel mailing list](https://lists.gnu.org/r/guix-devel/2022-12/msg00208.html).) Another example is to get the latest nightly builds of [Rust](https://www.rust-lang.org/), via [`rustup`](https://rustup.rs/). ```sh $ mkdir ~/temphome $ guix shell --network --container --emulate-fhs \ bash coreutils curl grep nss-certs gcc:lib gcc-toolchain \ pkg-config glib cairo atk pango@1.48.10 gdk-pixbuf gtk+ git \ --share=$HOME/temphome=$HOME ~/temphome [env]$ curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf | sh ``` First we created a `~/temphome` directory to use as `$HOME` in the container and then included a bunch of libraries in the container for the next example. This will proceed without problem and we'll see ```sh info: downloading installer Welcome to Rust! This will download and install the official compiler for the Rust programming language, and its package manager, Cargo. ... Rust is installed now. Great! To get started you may need to restart your current shell. This would reload your PATH environment variable to include Cargo's bin directory ($HOME/.cargo/bin). To configure your current shell, run: source "$HOME/.cargo/env" ``` After updating the shells environment as instructed, we can see it all worked ```sh ~/temphome [env]$ rustc --version rustc 1.65.0 (897e37553 2022-11-02) ``` as Guix's current Rust is at 1.61.0 and we didn't even include Rust in the container, of course. Finally, we can build a Rust project of desktop widgets, [ElKowars wacky widgets (eww)](https://github.com/elkowar/eww), following [their directions](https://elkowar.github.io/eww/). Ultimately this uses just the standard `cargo build --release` and builds after downloading all the needed libraries. ```sh ~/temphome/eww [env]$ git clone https://github.com/elkowar/eww ... ~/temphome/eww [env]$ cd eww ~/temphome/eww [env]$ cargo build --release info: syncing channel updates for 'nightly-2022-08-27-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu' info: latest update on 2022-08-27, rust version 1.65.0-nightly (c07a8b4e0 2022-08-26) ... Finished release [optimized] target(s) in 2m 06s ``` With this being a fresh container, you will need to make some directories that normally exist, like `~/.config` and `~/.cache` in this case. For basic display support, it is enough to add `--preserve='^DISPLAY$' --preserve='^XAUTHORITY$' --share=$XAUTHORITY` to the container launch options and run the first example widget in the [documentation](https://elkowar.github.io/eww/configuration.html). As we can see, with containers more generally we have to provide the right inputs and options as the environment is completely specified at creation. Once you want to run something that needs hardware from the host or to access host files, the container becomes increasingly porous for more functionality. This is certainly a trade-off, but one which we have agency with a container we wouldn't get otherwise. The FHS option provides another option to make a container in Guix to produce other environments, even those with a vastly different philosophy of the root filesystem! This is one more tool in the Guix toolbox for controlled and reproducible environments that also let's us do some things we couldn't (easily) do otherwise. ##### Notes ¹ Other than a symlink for `sh` from the `bash` package, for compatibility reasons. ² Actually, one can use `flatpak-spawn` from [`flatpak-xdg-utils`](https://github.com/flatpak/flatpak-xdg-utils/) to launch something on the host and get the AppImage to mount itself. However, it is not visible from the same container. Or, we can use a normal [mounting process](https://docs.appimage.org/user-guide/run-appimages.html#mount-an-appimage) outside of the container to inspect the contents, but AppImages will have an offset. We can use the FHS container option to get this offset and then mount in one line with `mount VSCodium-1.74.0.22342.glibc2.17-x86_64.AppImage -o offset=$(guix shell --container --emulate-fhs zlib -- ./VSCodium-1.74.0.22342.glibc2.17-x86_64.AppImage --appimage-offset)`