nixpkgs/pkgs/applications/editors/emacs-23/default.nix
Peter Simons 49afefdb19 emacs-23: hacky fix to libXaw linker errors on MacOS X
When building Emacs on MacOS X, the configure script believes that libXaw is
available and tries to link it (even when, in fact, libXaw is not available).
To work around that problem, we make Xaw support mandatory on MacOS X.

svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=17610
2009-10-02 13:57:26 +00:00

74 lines
2.6 KiB
Nix

{ xawSupport ? true
, xpmSupport ? true
, dbusSupport ? true
, xaw3dSupport ? false
, gtkGUI ? false
, xftSupport ? false
, stdenv, fetchurl, ncurses, x11, libXaw ? null, libXpm ? null, Xaw3d ? null
, pkgconfig ? null, gtk ? null, libXft ? null, dbus ? null
, libpng, libjpeg, libungif, libtiff, texinfo
}:
assert xawSupport -> libXaw != null;
assert xpmSupport -> libXpm != null;
assert dbusSupport -> dbus != null;
assert xaw3dSupport -> Xaw3d != null;
assert gtkGUI -> pkgconfig != null && gtk != null;
assert xftSupport -> libXft != null && libpng != null; # libpng = probably a bug
assert stdenv.system == "i686-darwin" -> xawSupport; # fails to link otherwise
stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
name = "emacs-23.1";
builder = ./builder.sh;
src = fetchurl {
url = "mirror://gnu/emacs/${name}.tar.bz2";
sha256 = "076b4ixdp29l4c02bwic26d14gxlj0lcqyam33wyj3ksgi2z8d9b";
};
buildInputs = [
ncurses x11 texinfo
(if xawSupport then libXaw else null)
(if xpmSupport then libXpm else null)
(if dbusSupport then dbus else null)
(if xaw3dSupport then Xaw3d else null)
libpng libjpeg libungif libtiff # maybe not strictly required?
]
++ (if gtkGUI then [pkgconfig gtk] else [])
++ (if xftSupport then [libXft] else []);
configureFlags = "
${if gtkGUI then "--with-x-toolkit=gtk --enable-font-backend --with-xft" else ""}
";
doCheck = true;
meta = {
description = "GNU Emacs 23.x, the extensible, customizable text editor";
longDescription = ''
GNU Emacs is an extensible, customizable text editorand more. At its
core is an interpreter for Emacs Lisp, a dialect of the Lisp
programming language with extensions to support text editing.
The features of GNU Emacs include: content-sensitive editing modes,
including syntax coloring, for a wide variety of file types including
plain text, source code, and HTML; complete built-in documentation,
including a tutorial for new users; full Unicode support for nearly all
human languages and their scripts; highly customizable, using Emacs
Lisp code or a graphical interface; a large number of extensions that
add other functionality, including a project planner, mail and news
reader, debugger interface, calendar, and more. Many of these
extensions are distributed with GNU Emacs; others are available
separately.
'';
homepage = http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/;
license = "GPLv3+";
maintainers = [ stdenv.lib.maintainers.ludo ];
platforms = stdenv.lib.platforms.linux; # GTK & co. are needed.
};
}