nixpkgs/pkgs/development/libraries/ncurses/default.nix

97 lines
3.7 KiB
Nix
Raw Normal View History

2014-08-08 19:28:24 +02:00
{ lib, stdenv, fetchurl, unicode ? true }:
let
/* C++ bindings fail to build on `i386-pc-solaris2.11' with GCC 3.4.3:
<http://bugs.opensolaris.org/bugdatabase/view_bug.do?bug_id=6395191>.
It seems that it could be worked around by #including <wchar.h> in the
right place, according to
<http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-bugs-list/2006-September/035362.html>,
but this is left as an exercise to the reader.
So disable them for now. */
2013-02-28 16:20:03 +01:00
cxx = !stdenv.isSunOS;
in
2014-08-08 19:28:24 +02:00
stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
name = "ncurses-5.9";
src = fetchurl {
url = "mirror://gnu/ncurses/${name}.tar.gz";
sha256 = "0fsn7xis81za62afan0vvm38bvgzg5wfmv1m86flqcj0nj7jjilh";
};
2014-08-08 19:28:24 +02:00
patches = [ ./patch-ac ];
configureFlags = ''
--with-shared --without-debug --enable-pc-files --enable-symlinks
${if unicode then "--enable-widec" else ""}${if cxx then "" else "--without-cxx-binding"}
'';
# PKG_CONFIG_LIBDIR is where the *.pc files will be installed. If this
# directory doesn't exist, the configure script will disable installation of
# *.pc files. The configure script usually (on LSB distros) pick $(path of
# pkg-config)/../lib/pkgconfig. On NixOS that path doesn't exist and is not
# the place we want to put *.pc files from other packages anyway. So we must
# tell it explicitly where to install with PKG_CONFIG_LIBDIR.
preConfigure = ''
export configureFlags="$configureFlags --includedir=$out/include"
export PKG_CONFIG_LIBDIR="$out/lib/pkgconfig"
mkdir -p "$PKG_CONFIG_LIBDIR"
2014-08-08 19:28:24 +02:00
'' + lib.optionalString stdenv.isDarwin ''
substituteInPlace configure --replace -no-cpp-precomp ""
'';
2013-02-28 16:20:03 +01:00
selfNativeBuildInput = true;
enableParallelBuilding = true;
preBuild =
# On Darwin, we end up using the native `sed' during bootstrap, and it
# fails to run this command, which isn't needed anyway.
2014-08-08 19:28:24 +02:00
lib.optionalString (!stdenv.isDarwin)
''sed -e "s@\([[:space:]]\)sh @\1''${SHELL} @" -i */Makefile Makefile'';
# When building a wide-character (Unicode) build, create backward
# compatibility links from the the "normal" libraries to the
# wide-character libraries (e.g. libncurses.so to libncursesw.so).
postInstall = if unicode then ''
${if cxx then "chmod 644 $out/lib/libncurses++w.a" else ""}
for lib in curses ncurses form panel menu; do
if test -e $out/lib/lib''${lib}w.a; then
rm -f $out/lib/lib$lib.so
echo "INPUT(-l''${lib}w)" > $out/lib/lib$lib.so
ln -svf lib''${lib}w.a $out/lib/lib$lib.a
ln -svf lib''${lib}w.so.5 $out/lib/lib$lib.so.5
ln -svf ''${lib}w.pc $out/lib/pkgconfig/$lib.pc
fi
done;
ln -svf . $out/include/ncursesw
ln -svf ncursesw5-config $out/bin/ncurses5-config
'' else "";
2014-08-08 19:28:24 +02:00
postFixup = lib.optionalString stdenv.isDarwin "rm $out/lib/*.so";
meta = {
description = "Free software emulation of curses in SVR4 and more";
longDescription = ''
The Ncurses (new curses) library is a free software emulation of
curses in System V Release 4.0, and more. It uses Terminfo
format, supports pads and color and multiple highlights and
forms characters and function-key mapping, and has all the other
SYSV-curses enhancements over BSD Curses.
The ncurses code was developed under GNU/Linux. It has been in
use for some time with OpenBSD as the system curses library, and
on FreeBSD and NetBSD as an external package. It should port
easily to any ANSI/POSIX-conforming UNIX. It has even been
ported to OS/2 Warp!
'';
homepage = http://www.gnu.org/software/ncurses/;
2014-08-08 19:28:24 +02:00
license = lib.licenses.mit;
2014-08-08 19:28:24 +02:00
maintainers = [ lib.maintainers.ludo ];
platforms = lib.platforms.all;
};
2014-08-08 19:28:24 +02:00
}