hi everyone! why when i "$ guix pull" i need to connect to ci.guix.gnu.org?
Adam Kandur via <help-guix@gnu.org> writes:
> why when i "$ guix pull" i need to connect to ci.guix.gnu.org?
ci.guix.gnu.org provides you with binaries, so that you don’t have to
build everything from source. By default Guix will fetch from
ci.guix.gnu.org, but you don’t have to download anything from
ci.guix.gnu.org if you don’t want to.
You can download from any other machine that runs “guix publish” or
contact the upstream servers directly to fetch source code and build
everything locally.
--
Ricardo
Le 3 juin 2020 10:03:34 GMT-04:00, Adam Kandur via <help-guix@gnu.org> a écrit :
>
>hi everyone! why when i "$ guix pull" i need to connect to
>ci.guix.gnu.org?
It's the build farm. Guix checks for the availability of substitutes, so you don't have to spend hours building something that was already built.
Of course you can disable substitutes (--no-substitutes) or specify another substitute server if you wish (--substitute-urls).
HTH!
You just need to be connected to the internet. Guix will do the rest. guix pull guix pull -u # will update all of your packages in your user profile sudo guix system reconfigure config.scm # will update your system -- Joshua Branson Sent from Emacs and Gnus
hi everyone! is there any example of command line application written in common lisp and packed with guix?
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 301 bytes --] Adam Kandur via <help-guix@gnu.org> skribis: > hi everyone! > is there any example of command line application written in common lisp and packed with guix? There is uglify-js or tinmop I think. If what you want is examples of standalone Common Lisp programs, you could also look at stumpwm or nyxt. [-- Attachment #2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 247 bytes --]
ohhhh, thank you =)
May 11, 2021, 18:22 by glv@posteo.net:
> Adam Kandur via <help-guix@gnu.org> skribis:
>
>> hi everyone!
>> is there any example of command line application written in common lisp and packed with guix?
>>
>
> There is uglify-js or tinmop I think.
> If what you want is examples of standalone Common Lisp programs, you
> could also look at stumpwm or nyxt.
>