this post was submitted on 25 Jun 2023
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Linux is a family of open source Unix-like operating systems based on the Linux kernel, an operating system kernel first released on September 17, 1991 by Linus Torvalds. Linux is typically packaged in a Linux distribution (or distro for short).
Distributions include the Linux kernel and supporting system software and libraries, many of which are provided by the GNU Project. Many Linux distributions use the word "Linux" in their name, but the Free Software Foundation uses the name GNU/Linux to emphasize the importance of GNU software, causing some controversy.
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That is correct. You can even have programs from entirely different releases running on the same system without conflicting with another; one with i.e. glibc 3.34 and one with 3.37 for example. Or even wilder setups with some packages using musl, other glibc and others yet being built statically.
Each program references all of its (exact) dependencies. Nix then looks at the program and its references and builds a tree of dependencies.
Then it tries to "realise" these dependencies (make them, well, real), possibly by substituting (downloading) them from a binary cache or automatically building them on your machine if they're not available in any configured cache.
However, if some package with the same exact version already exists in the Nix store, no action will be taken. Why should it, it's already there.
For example, if you were in an empty world and built an environment with
hello
andcoreutils
in it, they'd both depend onglibc
. If both came from the same revision of Nixpkgs, chances are that they depend on the exact same version of glibc.What Nix would do here is fetch 1x glibc, 1x hello and 1x coreutils.
Note however that you don't need to manage any of this. You just say "I want
hello
andcoreutils
". Nix takes care of getting the correct dependencies in place but they won't be in your immediate environment. When you then say that your environment should no longer containhello
, it does that. At this pointhello
will still exist in the Nix store but it won't be in your PATH any longer, so it's not polluting any shared state; it just sits there on disk and the worst it could do is waste disk space. It's not "installed" in the same sense as what it'd mean to have an unused dependencies installed on an FHS system.In order to reclaim disk space from unused Nix store paths, you can simply run a garbage collection. You don't need to care about that one specific hello store path here though, you just say "remove all unused store paths for me, thanks" and Nix removes it along with all other unnecessary paths. In NixOS, you can even have that ran periodically for you.
(Note that this is distinct from
autoremove
and the like; those "clean up" the shared state and free up disk space. In NixOS, these are separate processes and dependencies which you don't explicitly declare are never in the shared state to begin with.)You see, while this could be seen as "bloat", it has none of the negative consequences bloat has on other systems such as more packages for you to manually manage, more binaries in your PATH or weird interactions of other programs. It's just easily managed disk space and disk space is honestly quite cheap.