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We have seen an overview of service types (see Tipos de Service e Serviços). This section provides a reference on how to manipulate services
and service types. This interface is provided by the (gnu services)
module.
Return a new service of type, a <service-type>
object (see
below). value can be any object; it represents the parameters of this
particular service instance.
When value is omitted, the default value specified by type is used; if type does not specify a default value, an error is raised.
For instance, this:
(service openssh-service-type)
is equivalent to this:
(service openssh-service-type
(openssh-configuration))
In both cases the result is an instance of openssh-service-type
with
the default configuration.
Return true if obj is a service.
Return the type of service—i.e., a <service-type>
object.
Return the value associated with service. It represents its parameters.
Here is an example of how a service is created and manipulated:
(define s (service nginx-service-type (nginx-configuration (nginx nginx) (log-directory log-directory) (run-directory run-directory) (file config-file)))) (service? s) ⇒ #t (eq? (service-kind s) nginx-service-type) ⇒ #t
The modify-services
form provides a handy way to change the
parameters of some of the services of a list such as %base-services
(see %base-services
). It evaluates to a list of
services. Of course, you could always use standard list combinators such as
map
and fold
to do that (see List Library in GNU Guile Reference Manual); modify-services
simply provides a more
concise form for this common pattern.
Modify the services listed in services according to the given clauses. Each clause has the form:
(type variable => body)
where type is a service type—e.g., guix-service-type
—and
variable is an identifier that is bound within the body to the
service parameters—e.g., a guix-configuration
instance—of the
original service of that type.
The body should evaluate to the new service parameters, which will be
used to configure the new service. This new service will replace the
original in the resulting list. Because a service’s service parameters are
created using define-record-type*
, you can write a succinct
body that evaluates to the new service parameters by using the
inherit
feature that define-record-type*
provides.
Clauses can also have the following form:
(delete type)
Such a clause removes all services of the given type from services.
See Usando o sistema de configuração, for example usage.
Next comes the programming interface for service types. This is something
you want to know when writing new service definitions, but not necessarily
when simply looking for ways to customize your operating-system
declaration.
This is the representation of a service type (see Tipos de Service e Serviços).
name
This is a symbol, used only to simplify inspection and debugging.
extensions
A non-empty list of <service-extension>
objects (see below).
compose
(default: #f
)If this is #f
, then the service type denotes services that cannot be
extended—i.e., services that do not receive “values” from other
services.
Otherwise, it must be a one-argument procedure. The procedure is called by
fold-services
and is passed a list of values collected from
extensions. It may return any single value.
extend
(default: #f
)If this is #f
, services of this type cannot be extended.
Otherwise, it must be a two-argument procedure: fold-services
calls
it, passing it the initial value of the service as the first argument and
the result of applying compose
to the extension values as the second
argument. It must return a value that is a valid parameter value for the
service instance.
description
This is a string, possibly using Texinfo markup, describing in a couple of
sentences what the service is about. This string allows users to find about
the service through guix system search
(see Invoking guix system
).
default-value
(default: &no-default-value
)The default value associated for instances of this service type. This
allows users to use the service
form without its second argument:
(service type)
The returned service in this case has the default value specified by type.
See Tipos de Service e Serviços, for examples.
target-type. compute must be a one-argument procedure:
fold-services
calls it, passing it the value associated with the
service that provides the extension; it must return a valid value for the
target service.
Return true if obj is a service extension.
Occasionally, you might want to simply extend an existing service. This
involves creating a new service type and specifying the extension of
interest, which can be verbose; the simple-service
procedure provides
a shorthand for this.
Return a service that extends target with value. This works by creating a singleton service type name, of which the returned service is an instance.
For example, this extends mcron (see Execução de trabalho agendado) with an additional job:
(simple-service 'my-mcron-job mcron-service-type
#~(job '(next-hour (3)) "guix gc -F 2G"))
At the core of the service abstraction lies the fold-services
procedure, which is responsible for “compiling” a list of services down to
a single directory that contains everything needed to boot and run the
system—the directory shown by the guix system build
command
(see Invoking guix system
). In essence, it propagates service
extensions down the service graph, updating each node parameters on the way,
until it reaches the root node.
their extensions down to the root of type target-type; return the root service adjusted accordingly.
Lastly, the (gnu services)
module also defines several essential
service types, some of which are listed below.
This is the root of the service graph. It produces the system directory as
returned by the guix system build
command.
The type of the “boot service”, which produces the boot script. The boot script is what the initial RAM disk runs when booting.
The type of the /etc service. This service is used to create files under /etc and can be extended by passing it name/file tuples such as:
(list `("issue" ,(plain-file "issue" "Welcome!\n")))
In this example, the effect would be to add an /etc/issue file pointing to the given file.
Type for the “setuid-program service”. This service collects lists of executable file names, passed as gexps, and adds them to the set of setuid and setgid programs on the system (see Programas setuid).
Type of the service that populates the system profile—i.e., the programs under /run/current-system/profile. Other services can extend it by passing it lists of packages to add to the system profile.
This is the type of the service that records provenance meta-data in the system itself. It creates several files under /run/current-system:
This is a “channel file” that can be passed to guix pull -C
or
guix time-machine -C
, and which describes the channels used to
build the system, if that information was available (see Canais).
This is the file that was passed as the value for this
provenance-service-type
service. By default, guix system
reconfigure
automatically passes the OS configuration file it received on
the command line.
This contains the same information as the two other files but in a format that is more readily processable.
In general, these two pieces of information (channels and configuration file) are enough to reproduce the operating system “from source”.
Caveats: This information is necessary to rebuild your operating system, but it is not always sufficient. In particular, configuration.scm itself is insufficient if it is not self-contained—if it refers to external Guile modules or to extra files. If you want configuration.scm to be self-contained, we recommend that modules or files it refers to be part of a channel.
Besides, provenance meta-data is “silent” in the sense that it does not change the bits contained in your system, except for the meta-data bits themselves. Two different OS configurations or sets of channels can lead to the same system, bit-for-bit; when
provenance-service-type
is used, these two systems will have different meta-data and thus different store file names, which makes comparison less trivial.
This service is automatically added to your operating system configuration
when you use guix system reconfigure
, guix system init
,
or guix deploy
.
Type of the service that collects lists of packages containing kernel-loadable modules, and adds them to the set of kernel-loadable modules.
This service type is intended to be extended by other service types, such as below:
(simple-service 'installing-module
linux-loadable-module-service-type
(list module-to-install-1
module-to-install-2))
This does not actually load modules at bootup, only adds it to the kernel profile so that it can be loaded by other means.
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