For practical purposes, here are the changes in behavior:
- When fetching from a subdirectory of a repo, do not rebuild because of
changes elsewhere in the repo
- Fetch (not-ignored) untracked files too
It does this by letting git hash and export the directory in question,
which I believes makes for a cleaner implementation than the ad-hoc copying
and hashing that was there before.
Close#9790.
This fixes checkouting for a nasty combination:
1. To be checkouted is a revision which corresponds to tag in a form "<tag>^{}".
2. This revision is not fetched by default.
You can now pass
separateDebugInfo = true;
to mkDerivation. This causes debug info to be separated from ELF
binaries and stored in the "debug" output. The advantage is that it
enables installing lean binaries, while still having the ability to
make sense of core dumps, etc.
Fixes#9044, close#9667. Thanks to @taku0 for suggesting this solution.
Now we have no modes starting with `/` or `+`.
Rewrite the `-perm` parameters of find:
- completely safe: rewrite `/0100` and `+100` to `-0100`,
- slightly semantics-changing: rewrite `+111` to `-0100`.
I cross-verified the `find` manual pages for Linux, Darwin, FreeBSD.
Upstream likes to move "old" releases to an archive mirror as soon as a
new one is released. This is now handled for free by mirrors.nix.
(No idea why cs.utah.edu was used to begin with; it's now added to
mirrors.nix. Note that it doesn't support SSL, but that applies to
several others so I don't see the harm.)
By default `makeWrapper` will not set argv[0] (this is a reversion to
the old default behavior). Based on the breakage we have seen from
changing the default, this is what most people want. The `wrapProgram`
function will send `--argv0 '"$0"'` to `makeWrapper`, i.e. it will
continue to pass-through the argv[0] that the wrapper is called with.
Also, in some cases, the result of fetchBower is different depending on the
value of $out. For now, it seems that it works best if using a local output
directory before copying to $out.
(cherry picked from commit aa4c6b027163abe0891f9ad438899f9679298a64)
Comes in handy if we want to make additional modificiations to the
output file. While I wasn't sure whether to invoke the passed postFetch
directly before the patch or afterwards, I thought it would be better
afterwards because "postFetch of fetchpatch" at least to my intuition
would sound that after whatever "fetchpatch" does - it comes afterwards.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
- Update the instructions for re-generating each of the package set files.
- Provide test-evaluation.nix expression to verify that the package sets evaluates.
- Update list of known broken packages.
- fetchNuGet can fetch binaries from nuget servers
- buildDotnetPackage can build .NET packages using mono/xbuild
- Places nuget & paket as they would clash with nix
- Patch project files because F# targets are expected to be found in
the mono directory (and we know that's not going to happen on nix)
- Find DLLs that were copied from buildInputs and replace by symlink
for sharing
- Export produced DLL via the pkg-config mechanism
- Create wrappers for produced EXEs
- Repackaged this new infrastructure: keepass, monodevelop
- Newly packaged: ExtCore, UnionArgParser, FSharp.Data, Paket, and a
bunch more..
This is a combination of 73 commits.
The point of this is to be able to do `meta.homepage = src.meta.homepage;`
instead of the usual copy-paste for the packages that are hosted
on these hosting services.
Instead it is provided to the user who can choose whether or not
to include it in the final derivati. Example of including would
be:
```nix
callPackage ... (self: { inherit (self.extras) extraThing; })
```
These extras are also available downstream without being built by
default. This is achieved with `passthru`.
- Only they are added to the optional build path (share/agda)
- Only they are are passed as an include dir (share/agda)
- Only they are propigatedBuildInputs
Instead, discover it automatically when building the package.
This makes `buildRustPackage` more future-proof with respect to changes
in how `cargo` generates the hash.
Also, it fixes broken builds in i686 because apparently, cargo generates
a different registry index hash in this architecture (compared to
x86-64).
This is unused, future users can just use override `buildFlags`
and extend/replace as needed. `includeDirs` is provided for this
purpose.
We should add `dirOf self.everythingFile` rather than `.`, but
`dirOf` breaks on relative paths so that is not an option.
This reverts d927da8dae. Having a copy
of gcc-wrapper/setup-hook.sh is bad for maintainability - it had
already started to diverge. Also, gccStdInc gave a nix-env conflict
with the standard gcc. And it wasn't actually used in Nixpkgs.
Instead, if you really need to change "-isystem" to "-I", you can now
set ccIncludeFlag to "-I".
This makes buildRustPackage portable to non-Linux platforms.
Additionally, now we also save the `Cargo.lock` file into the fetch output, so
that we don't have to run $cargoUpdateHook again just before building.
... in a more generic way.
With this commit, if you need to patch a registry package to make it
work with Nix, you just need to add a script to patch-registry-deps
in the same style as the `pkg-config` script.
Instead, move that code into buildRustPackage.
The setup hook was only doing part of the work anyway, and having it in
a separate place was obscuring what was really going on.
Emacs will call package-initialize itself, if required, or the user will
call it in their initialization file. There is no reason to call it in
the wrapper and doing so only increases start-up time.
It turns out that `cargo`, with respect to registry dependencies, was
ignoring the package versions locked in `Cargo.lock` because we changed
the registry index URL.
Therefore, every time `rustRegistry` would be updated, we'd always try
to use the latest version available for every dependency and as a result
the deps' SHA256 hashes would almost always have to be changed.
To fix this, now we do a string substitution in `Cargo.lock` of the
`crates.io` registry URL with our URL. This should be safe because our
registry is just a copy of the `crates.io` registry at a certain point
in time.
Since now we don't always use the latest version of every dependency,
the build of `cargo` actually started to fail because two of the
dependencies specified in its `Cargo.lock` file have build failures.
To fix the latter problem, I've added a `cargoUpdateHook` variable that
gets ran both when fetching dependencies and just before building the
program. The purpose of `cargoUpdateHook` is to do any ad-hoc updating
of dependencies necessary to get the package to build. The use of the
'--precise' flag is needed so that cargo doesn't try to fetch an even
newer version whenever `rustRegistry` is updated (and therefore have to
change depsSha256 as a consequence).