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author | Ludovic Courtès <ludo@gnu.org> | 2017-03-16 22:59:33 +0100 |
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committer | Ludovic Courtès <ludo@gnu.org> | 2017-03-16 22:59:33 +0100 |
commit | 107b8da6228fca888a0801c3eadf4bb23a6b46a4 (patch) | |
tree | c905427c5dbd103010c4fdcae42671923c2f25bf /doc/guix.texi | |
parent | db3f2b61adfe56d69029ec5f6d962462a50a1f33 (diff) | |
download | patches-107b8da6228fca888a0801c3eadf4bb23a6b46a4.tar patches-107b8da6228fca888a0801c3eadf4bb23a6b46a4.tar.gz |
doc: Mention 'guix pack' reproducibility.
* doc/guix.texi (Invoking guix pack): Mention reproducibility.
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/guix.texi')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/guix.texi | 4 |
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/doc/guix.texi b/doc/guix.texi index 45d171c52d..bdbfedfdb5 100644 --- a/doc/guix.texi +++ b/doc/guix.texi @@ -2405,7 +2405,9 @@ The @command{guix pack} command creates a shrink-wrapped @dfn{pack} or containing the binaries of the software you're interested in, and all its dependencies. The resulting archive can be used on any machine that does not have Guix, and people can run the exact same binaries as those -you have with Guix. +you have with Guix. The pack itself is created in a bit-reproducible +fashion, so anyone can verify that it really contains the build results +that you pretend to be shipping. For example, to create a bundle containing Guile, Emacs, Geiser, and all their dependencies, you can run: |