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

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{ stdenv, fetchurl
, windows ? null, variant ? null, pcre
}:
with stdenv.lib;
* 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 $PATH to blow up exponentially in the worst case). * Patched GNU Make to write nested log information in the format accepted by `log2xml'. Also, prior to writing the build command, Make now writes a line `building X' to indicate what is being built. This is unfortunately often obscured by the gigantic tool invocations in many Makefiles. The actual build commands are marked `unimportant' so that they don't clutter pages generated by `log2html'. svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=845
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assert elem variant [ null "cpp" "pcre16" "pcre32" ];
let
version = "8.39";
pname = if (variant == null) then "pcre"
else if (variant == "cpp") then "pcre-cpp"
else variant;
in stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
name = "${pname}-${version}";
src = fetchurl {
url = "ftp://ftp.csx.cam.ac.uk/pub/software/programming/pcre/pcre-${version}.tar.bz2";
sha256 = "12wyajlqx2v7dsh39ra9v9m5hibjkrl129q90bp32c28haghjn5q";
};
outputs = [ "bin" "dev" "out" "doc" "man" ];
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configureFlags = [
"--enable-jit"
"--enable-unicode-properties"
"--disable-cpp"
]
++ optional (variant != null) "--enable-${variant}";
doCheck = with stdenv; !(isCygwin || isFreeBSD);
# XXX: test failure on Cygwin
# we are running out of stack on both freeBSDs on Hydra
postFixup = ''
moveToOutput bin/pcre-config "$dev"
''
+ optionalString (variant != null) ''
ln -sf -t "$out/lib/" '${pcre.out}'/lib/libpcre{,posix}.{so.*.*.*,*dylib}
'';
crossAttrs = optionalAttrs (stdenv.cross.libc == "msvcrt") {
buildInputs = [ windows.mingw_w64_pthreads.crossDrv ];
};
meta = {
homepage = "http://www.pcre.org/";
description = "A library for Perl Compatible Regular Expressions";
license = stdenv.lib.licenses.bsd3;
longDescription = ''
The PCRE library is a set of functions that implement regular
expression pattern matching using the same syntax and semantics as
Perl 5. PCRE has its own native API, as well as a set of wrapper
functions that correspond to the POSIX regular expression API. The
PCRE library is free, even for building proprietary software.
'';
platforms = platforms.all;
};
}