nixpkgs/pkgs/tools/misc/coreutils/default.nix

118 lines
4.7 KiB
Nix
Raw Normal View History

{ stdenv, lib, buildPackages
, autoreconfHook, texinfo, fetchurl, perl, xz, libiconv, gmp ? null
, aclSupport ? stdenv.isLinux, acl ? null
, attrSupport ? stdenv.isLinux, attr ? null
, selinuxSupport? false, libselinux ? null, libsepol ? null
# No openssl in default version, so openssl-induced rebuilds aren't too big.
# It makes *sum functions significantly faster.
, minimal ? true, withOpenssl ? !minimal, openssl ? null
, withPrefix ? false
, singleBinary ? "symlinks" # you can also pass "shebangs" or false
}:
* The stdenv setup script now defines a generic builder that allows builders for typical Autoconf-style to be much shorten, e.g., . $stdenv/setup genericBuild The generic builder does lots of stuff automatically: - Unpacks source archives specified by $src or $srcs (it knows about gzip, bzip2, tar, zip, and unpacked source trees). - Determines the source tree. - Applies patches specified by $patches. - Fixes libtool not to search for libraries in /lib etc. - Runs `configure'. - Runs `make'. - Runs `make install'. - Strips debug information from static libraries. - Writes nested log information (in the format accepted by `log2xml'). There are also lots of hooks and variables to customise the generic builder. See `stdenv/generic/docs.txt'. * Adapted the base packages (i.e., the ones used by stdenv) to use the generic builder. * We now use `curl' instead of `wget' to download files in `fetchurl'. * Neither `curl' nor `wget' are part of stdenv. We shouldn't encourage people to download stuff in builders (impure!). * Updated some packages. * `buildinputs' is now `buildInputs' (but the old name also works). * `findInputs' in the setup script now prevents inputs from being processed multiple times (which could happen, e.g., if an input was a propagated input of several other inputs; this caused the size variables like $PATH to blow up exponentially in the worst case). * Patched GNU Make to write nested log information in the format accepted by `log2xml'. Also, prior to writing the build command, Make now writes a line `building X' to indicate what is being built. This is unfortunately often obscured by the gigantic tool invocations in many Makefiles. The actual build commands are marked `unimportant' so that they don't clutter pages generated by `log2html'. svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=845
2004-03-19 17:53:04 +01:00
assert aclSupport -> acl != null;
2012-09-18 20:48:48 +02:00
assert selinuxSupport -> libselinux != null && libsepol != null;
2016-02-18 21:58:41 +01:00
with lib;
stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
name = "coreutils-8.30";
src = fetchurl {
url = "mirror://gnu/coreutils/${name}.tar.xz";
sha256 = "0mxhw43d4wpqmvg0l4znk1vm10fy92biyh90lzdnqjcic2lb6cg8";
};
patches = optional stdenv.hostPlatform.isCygwin ./coreutils-8.23-4.cygwin.patch;
# The test tends to fail on btrfs and maybe other unusual filesystems.
postPatch = ''
sed '2i echo Skipping dd sparse test && exit 0' -i ./tests/dd/sparse.sh
sed '2i echo Skipping cp sparse test && exit 0' -i ./tests/cp/sparse.sh
sed '2i echo Skipping rm deep-2 test && exit 0' -i ./tests/rm/deep-2.sh
sed '2i echo Skipping du long-from-unreadable test && exit 0' -i ./tests/du/long-from-unreadable.sh
sed '2i echo Skipping chmod setgid test && exit 0' -i ./tests/chmod/setgid.sh
sed '2i print "Skipping env -S test"; exit 0;' -i ./tests/misc/env-S.pl
substituteInPlace ./tests/install/install-C.sh \
--replace 'mode3=2755' 'mode3=1755'
'';
outputs = [ "out" "info" ];
nativeBuildInputs = [ perl xz.bin ];
configureFlags = [ "--with-packager=https://NixOS.org" ]
++ optional (singleBinary != false)
("--enable-single-binary" + optionalString (isString singleBinary) "=${singleBinary}")
++ optional withOpenssl "--with-openssl"
++ optional stdenv.hostPlatform.isSunOS "ac_cv_func_inotify_init=no"
++ optional withPrefix "--program-prefix=g"
++ optionals (stdenv.hostPlatform != stdenv.buildPlatform && stdenv.hostPlatform.libc == "glibc") [
# TODO(19b98110126fde7cbb1127af7e3fe1568eacad3d): Needed for fstatfs() I
# don't know why it is not properly detected cross building with glibc.
"fu_cv_sys_stat_statfs2_bsize=yes"
];
buildInputs = [ gmp ]
++ optional aclSupport acl
++ optional attrSupport attr
++ optional withOpenssl openssl
++ optionals stdenv.hostPlatform.isCygwin [ autoreconfHook texinfo ] # due to patch
++ optionals selinuxSupport [ libselinux libsepol ]
# TODO(@Ericson2314): Investigate whether Darwin could benefit too
++ optional (stdenv.hostPlatform != stdenv.buildPlatform && stdenv.hostPlatform.libc != "glibc") libiconv;
# The tests are known broken on Cygwin
# (http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.gnu.core-utils.bugs/19025),
# Darwin (http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.gnu.core-utils.bugs/19351),
# and {Open,Free}BSD.
# With non-standard storeDir: https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/512
doCheck = stdenv.hostPlatform == stdenv.buildPlatform
&& stdenv.hostPlatform.libc == "glibc"
&& builtins.storeDir == "/nix/store";
# Prevents attempts of running 'help2man' on cross-built binaries.
PERL = if stdenv.hostPlatform == stdenv.buildPlatform then null else "missing";
# Saw random failures like help2man: can't get '--help' info from
# man/sha512sum.td/sha512sum.
enableParallelBuilding = false;
NIX_LDFLAGS = optionalString selinuxSupport "-lsepol";
FORCE_UNSAFE_CONFIGURE = optionalString stdenv.hostPlatform.isSunOS "1";
# Works around a bug with 8.26:
# Makefile:3440: *** Recursive variable 'INSTALL' references itself (eventually). Stop.
preInstall = optionalString (stdenv.hostPlatform != stdenv.buildPlatform) ''
sed -i Makefile -e 's|^INSTALL =.*|INSTALL = ${buildPackages.coreutils}/bin/install -c|'
'';
postInstall = optionalString (stdenv.hostPlatform != stdenv.buildPlatform && !minimal) ''
rm $out/share/man/man1/*
cp ${buildPackages.coreutils-full}/share/man/man1/* $out/share/man/man1
''
# du: 8.7 M locale + 0.4 M man pages
+ optionalString minimal ''
rm -r "$out/share"
'';
meta = {
homepage = http://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils/;
description = "The basic file, shell and text manipulation utilities of the GNU operating system";
longDescription = ''
The GNU Core Utilities are the basic file, shell and text
manipulation utilities of the GNU operating system. These are
the core utilities which are expected to exist on every
operating system.
'';
license = licenses.gpl3Plus;
platforms = platforms.unix;
maintainers = [ maintainers.eelco ];
};
}