I tried to fix some trivial conflicts.
I don't know if I merged well some more difficult conflicts on openssl/darwin_patch
or haskell-platform.
svn path=/nixpkgs/branches/stdenv-updates/; revision=22878
* libdbi / libdbi-drivers: updated to 0.8.3, and make it compile with
SQLite.
* qemu-image: fix the URL.
* gdmap: make it build again (requires an older GTK+).
* rlwrap: updated to 0.37.
* smbfs-fuse -> fusesmb to match the upstream name.
* x11vnc: updated to 0.9.10.
* clearlyU: fix the URL.
* Various packages: follow the coding conventions.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=22814
I've also set the 'platforms' attribute to ensure that Hydra actually
builds these packages. Thanks to Lluís Batlle i Rossell for pointing out
these mistakes.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=21688
That way, we don't need the patch anymore to fix what that part broke.
Also kde stops needing the findqt4 patch (for its own copy of the findqt4 cmake module).
I tested a nixos-rebuild with kde4, and it builds as far as hydra built with this configuration.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=20921
"meta" and "passthru", and these attributes will be appended to the usual
mkDerivation attributes only if the package is cross built.
This allows putting some of the cross-building logic in the mkDerivation
nix parameters, and not only in the final builder script, as it was until now.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=20272
I updated cmake to use CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH instead of CMAKE_INCLUDE_PATH and CMAKE_LIBRARY_PATH.
There were some expressions in kde that required CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH, and now they are not anymore
a special case.
I updated most kde-4.4 files to point to kde-4.4.0 sources instead of 4.3.4 .
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=19965
After having established the connection to the distcc server, time out after 20
minutes of inactivity -- rather than 5 minutes, which is too quick to build
large C++ files with complex template machinery.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=19600
Using nix-pkgs.conf, it is possible to disable avahi, python, and all other
optional dependencies of distcc in order to generate binaries that are as small
and simple as possible. Furthermore, there is now an option for static linking.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=19599
$out/<platform>/bin. Because the fixup phase causes those to be
replaced by identical copies, use symlinks instead of hardlinks.
This saves about 9 MB.
svn path=/nixpkgs/branches/stdenv-updates/; revision=19549
I fixed conflicts regarding the renaming 'kernel' -> 'linux' in all-packages.
Also a small conflict in all-packages about making openssl overridable.
And I some linux 2.6.31-zen kernel files also marked in conflict.
svn path=/nixpkgs/branches/stdenv-updates/; revision=19438
which deals only with a build time dependency. Let's better have hydra
build cscope (I set me as a maintainer), and prefer simpler expressions
to options on build-time dependencies.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=18902
source regions which are substituded by the tool nix-repository-manager.
See http://github.com/MarcWeber/nix-repository-manager/raw/master/README.
sourceByName is called sourceFromHead now.
updates: MPlayerTrunk, haxe, neko, netsurf, cinelerra, ctags
cinelerra does no longer build due to Xorg update
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=18894
stdenv.
In this gcc-wrapper2 I made the ld-wrapper.sh to handle the linking with shared
objects through direct pass as ld command arguments of the absolute path to shared
objects, instead of using the -L/-l combinations.
cmake 'FindXXX.cmake' modules make a strong usage of the dynamic linking directly
passing the absolute path to the shared object to the linker, and as our wrapper did
not add any -rpath for those, writting the nix expressions for some cmake packages
resulted in a lot of tricks, compared to using this gcc-wrapper2.
This gcc-wrapper2/ld-wrapper.sh should become the gcc-wrapper/ld-wrapper in a
stdenv update.
I also updated some cmake expressions to use this gcc-wrapper2, and reduced its
tricks.
I also updated the cmake setup-hook for it to make cmake not touch any rpath decided
at build time, when running the 'make install' of makefiles created by cmake.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=18885
renaming.
I think directory renaming breaks the usual merges... because it leaves the
'to be removed' directory in the working directory still. A manual 'rm' of the
'to be removed' directory fixed the commit.
svn merge ^/nixpkgs/trunk
svn path=/nixpkgs/branches/stdenv-updates/; revision=18661
- Before this changes, cflags and ldflags for the native and the cross compiler
got mixed. Not all the gcc-wrapper/gcc-cross-wrapper variables are
independant now, but enough, I think.
- Fixed the generic stdenv expression, which did a big mess on buildInputs and
buildNativeInputs. Now it distinguishes when there is a stdenvCross or not.
Maybe we should have a single stdenv and forget about the stdenvCross
adapter - this could end in a stdenv a bit complex, but simpler than the
generic stdenv + adapter.
- Added basic support in pkgconfig for cross-builds: a single PKG_CONFIG_PATH
now works for both the cross and the native compilers, but I think this
should work well for most cases I can think of.
- I tried to fix the guile expression to cross-biuld; guile is built, but not
its manual, so the derivation still fails. Guile requires patching to
cross-build, as far as I understnad.
- Made the glibcCross build to be done through the usage of a
gcc-cross-wrapper over the gcc-cross-stage-static, instead of using it
directly.
- Trying to make physfs (a neverball dependency) cross build.
- Updated the gcc expression to support building a cross compiler without getting
derivation variables mixed with those of the stdenvCross.
svn path=/nixpkgs/branches/stdenv-updates/; revision=18534
linking path), and with this achieved bash being cross-compilable.
I fixed the few expressions involved in bash building, so they have well stated
native and non-native inputs.
I also tried to cross-build guile, and with this I found a problem in the
actual cross-gcc: it calls the binutils ld, instead of the ld wrapper. This
way, the programs/shared_libraries don't get the proper -rpath.
svn path=/nixpkgs/branches/stdenv-updates/; revision=18497
the cross compilation functionality.
- I renamed some expected stdenv.mkDerivation parameter attributes so we can
keep this branch properly updated from trunk. We agreed with Nicolas Pierron
doing a massive renaming, so all current buildInputs become hostInputs (input
as build for the host machine, in autotools terminology) , and
then buildInputs would mean "input as for the build machine".
By now, the specific "input as for the build machine" is specified through
buildNativeInputs. We should fix this in the merge to trunk.
- I made the generic stdenv understand the buildNativeInputs, otherwise if
we start changing nixpkgs expressions so they distinguish the current
buildInputs into buildInputs and buildNativeInputs, we could break even more
nixpkgs for other platforms.
- I changed the default result of mkDerivation so it becomes the derivation for
to be run in the build machine. This allows, without any special rewriting,
"fetchurl" derivations to be always results for the build machine to use
them.
- The change above implies that, for anyone wanting to cross-compile, has to
build the hostDrv of the wanted derivation. For example, after this commit,
the usual test of "nix-build -A bison.hostDrv arm.nix" works. I described
the contents of this arm.nix in r18398.
svn path=/nixpkgs/branches/stdenv-updates/; revision=18471
`selectVersion ./foo "bar"' instead of `import ./foo/bar.nix'.
* Replaced `with args' with formal function arguments in several
packages.
* Renamed several files to `default.nix'. As a general rule, version
numbers should only be included in the filename when there is a
reason to keep multiple versions of a package in Nixpkgs.
Otherwise, it just makes it harder to update the package.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=18403
My idea is to provide special stdenv expressions that will contain in the path
additional cross compilers. As most expressions for programs accept a stdenv parameter,
we could substitute this parameter with the special stdenv, which will have a
generic builder that attempts the usual "--target=..." and can additionally
have an env variable like "cross" with the target architecture set.
So, finally we could have additional expressions like this:
bashRealArm = makeOverridable (import ../shells/bash) {
inherit fetchurl bison;
stdenv = stdenvCross "armv5tel-unknown-linux-gnueabi";
};
Meanwhile it does not work - I still cannot get the cross-gcc to build.
I think it does not fill the previous expressions with a lot of noise, so I
think it may be a good path to follow.
I only touched some files of the current stdenv: gcc-4.3, kernel headers
2.6.28, glibc 2.9, ...
I tried to use the gcc-cross-wrapper, that may be very outdated. Maybe I will
update it, or update the gcc-wrapper expression to make it fit the cross tools,
but meanwhile I even cannot build gcc, so I have not tested the wrapper.
This new idea on cross compiling is not similar to that of the
nixpkgs/branches/cross-compilation, which mostly added bare new expressions for
anything to be cross compiled, if I understood it correctly.
I cared not to break anything of the usual stdenv in all this work.
svn path=/nixpkgs/branches/stdenv-updates/; revision=18343
This comes from:
svn diff ^/nixpkgs/trunk/@18255 ^/nixpkgs/branches/stdenv-updates/ > diff
patch -p0 < diff
and then adding into svn all files new from the patch.
trunk@18255 comes from the last time I updated stdenv-updates from trunk.
svn path=/nixpkgs/stdenv-updates2/; revision=18272
path relative to some arbitrary parent of the .gcno file. For
instance, this happens when building Subversion with coverage.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=16902