{ fetchurl, stdenv, mingw_headers }: # This file is tweaked for cross-compilation only. assert stdenv ? cross; stdenv.mkDerivation { name = "pthread-w32-1.10.0"; src = fetchurl { url = "ftp://sourceware.org/pub/pthreads-win32/pthreads-w32-1-10-0-release.tar.gz"; sha256 = "1vllxxfa9a7mssb1x98a2r736vsv5ll3sjizbr7a8hw8j9p18j7n"; }; configurePhase = '' sed -i GNUmakefile \ -e 's/CC=gcc/CC=i686-pc-mingw32-gcc/g ; s/windres/i686-pc-mingw32-windres/g ; s/dlltool/i686-pc-mingw32-dlltool/g' ''; buildInputs = [ mingw_headers ]; buildPhase = "make GC"; # to build the GNU C dll with C cleanup code installPhase = '' mkdir -p "$out" "$out/include" "$out/lib" cp -v *pthread*{dll,a} "$out/lib" cp -v pthread.h semaphore.h sched.h "$out/include" ''; postFixup = # By default `mingw_headers' is propagated. Prevent that, because # otherwise MinGW headers appear twice in `-I', and thus the # "#include_next " in MinGW's picks up itself instead # of picking up GCC's (hence, FLT_RADIX is left undefined, for instance.) '' rm -f "$out/nix-support/propagated-build-inputs" ''; meta = { description = "POSIX threads for Woe32"; longDescription = '' The POSIX 1003.1-2001 standard defines an application programming interface (API) for writing multithreaded applications. This interface is known more commonly as pthreads. A good number of modern operating systems include a threading library of some kind: Solaris (UI) threads, Win32 threads, DCE threads, DECthreads, or any of the draft revisions of the pthreads standard. The trend is that most of these systems are slowly adopting the pthreads standard API, with application developers following suit to reduce porting woes. Woe32 does not, and is unlikely to ever, support pthreads natively. This project seeks to provide a freely available and high-quality solution to this problem. ''; homepage = http://sourceware.org/pthreads-win32/; license = "LGPLv2.1+"; }; }