- I still have not understood why it worked without this fix before, and I think
this has been triggered by the gcc-4.4, but I have not investigated this much. I
went with the trivial fix.
Adding a glibc-2.10.1 expression, because the glibc-2.11 still does not have
a ports release, so it cannot be used in arm. I'm using it only in native
compilation by now.
Making the default glibc to be 2.10 instead of 2.11 in armv5tel-linux.
svn path=/nixpkgs/branches/stdenv-updates/; revision=18688
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
On MacOS X, we used to use the native perl interpreter from /usr/bin.
Unfortunately, that interpreter fails to build a number of packages
(Subversion, Git, etc. ...), because it assumes knowledge about the
underlying C compiler that is not valid for the compiler used by Nix.
For example, /usr/bin/perl assumes that the compiler can build binaries
for both the ppc and the x86 architecture. /usr/bin/gcc can do that, but
the gcc from Nix can't.
The solution is to compile Perl 5.10 in Nix so that the ./configure
phase can properly detect the system's capabilities. However, note that
the resulting binary is impure: it will find headers in /usr/include and
libraries in /usr/lib. In this respect, the Nix-compiled perl binary is
no different than the native one in /usr/bin -- it's just configured
more accurately.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=17870
On MacOS X, we used to use the native perl interpreter from /usr/bin.
Unfortunately, that interpreter fails to build a number of packages
(Subversion, Git, etc. ...), because it assumes knowledge about the underlying
C compiler that is not valid for the compiler used by Nix. For example,
/usr/bin/perl assumes that the compiler can build binaries for both the ppc and
the x86 architecture. /usr/bin/FCC can do that, but the gcc from Nix can't.
The solution is to compile Perl 5.10 via Nix so that it can properly configure
itself. However, note that the resulting binary is impure: it will find headers
in /usr/include and libraries in /usr/lib -- something a pure perl binary
wouldn't do. In this respect our Nix-compiled perl binary is not better than
the native one from /usr/bin -- it's just more accurately configured.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=17618
I thought I didn't change stdenv, but I did. This will go soon into the stdenv
branch then.
Reverse-merging r16467 through r16465.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=16468
default, but it didn't happen in Nixpkgs because the string "perl"
appeared in the prefix, and in that case Perl uses $out/lib.
* Enable thread-safe Perl while we're at it.
svn path=/nixpkgs/branches/stdenv-updates/; revision=15252
* setup.sh: removed some obsolete features, specifically some that
were only used by the old build farm.
* addToSearchPath: removed some parameters that weren't used
anywhere.
svn path=/nixpkgs/branches/stdenv-updates/; revision=15136