nixpkgs/pkgs/development/libraries/tokyo-cabinet/default.nix
Ludovic Courtès eb40c213dd Add Tokyo Cabinet, a key-value database that performs better.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=24548
2010-10-30 21:44:29 +00:00

46 lines
1.5 KiB
Nix

{ fetchurl, stdenv, zlib, bzip2 }:
stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
name = "tokyocabinet-1.4.46";
src = fetchurl {
url = "http://www.1978th.net/tokyocabinet/${name}.tar.gz";
sha256 = "18rkv6kq43cqabc9mvfw534nsv6v8bc2i2r2bmax0yxnbhqa7ahf";
};
buildInputs = [ zlib bzip2 ];
doCheck = true;
postInstall =
'' sed -i "$out/lib/pkgconfig/tokyocabinet.pc" \
-e 's|-lz|-L${zlib}/lib -lz|g;
s|-lbz2|-L${bzip2}/lib -lbz2|g'
'';
meta = {
description = "Tokyo Cabinet: a modern implementation of DBM";
longDescription =
'' Tokyo Cabinet is a library of routines for managing a database. The
database is a simple data file containing records, each is a pair of
a key and a value. Every key and value is serial bytes with
variable length. Both binary data and character string can be used
as a key and a value. There is neither concept of data tables nor
data types. Records are organized in hash table, B+ tree, or
fixed-length array.
Tokyo Cabinet is developed as the successor of GDBM and QDBM on the
following purposes. They are achieved and Tokyo Cabinet replaces
conventional DBM products: improves space efficiency, improves time
efficiency, improves parallelism, improves usability, improves
robustness, supports 64-bit architecture.
'';
license = "LGPLv2+";
maintainers = [ stdenv.lib.maintainers.ludo ];
platforms = stdenv.lib.platforms.unix;
};
}