rustc: 1.2.0 -> 1.3.0
rustcMaster: 2015-09-05 -> 2015-09-21
This also removes the llvm bundling which reduced immediate the closure size
by ~50MB. It also tries to reduce some of the superfluous dependencies
to help reduce the number of potential rebuilds (namely removing git).
This seems to have been confusing people, using both xlibs and xorg, etc.
- Avoided renaming local (and different) xlibs binding in gcc*.
- Fixed cases where both xorg and xlibs were used.
Hopefully everything still works as before.
Intercal needs gcc to build any executable, and in Nix/NixOS it needs to
be explicitly set in PATH environment variable. So, now ick is
conveniently wrapped.
Package changes from 3.6:
- CMake exports patch no longer necessary
- Cosmetic purity patch fix
- Build libc++ with private libc++abi headers visible from sources
- Work around bugs in lldb's configure scripts
The error was reported at HaxeFoundation/haxelib#152 and was fixed by
HaxeFoundation/neko#41 in HaxeFoundation/neko@ccc78c2, the latter being
fetchpatch'ed by us now.
This has caused the hxcpp build to fail on i686-linux with an "Invalid
array access" error.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
This effectively reverts 86c283824f
("If cuda headers are presented to nix [...]") and all the following
workarounds that was added due to that commit.
As far as I can tell[1] this hack isn't needed anymore. And moving
includes to $out/usr_include causes pain for cudatoolkit users, so
better get rid of it.
In patches that did more than the $out/usr_include workaround, I only
changed the line back to $out/include instead of re-generating the
patches and fully removing the changed line.
[1]: I build tested blender and caffe, and temporarily added
recurseIntoAttrs to rPackages and haskellPackages so that nox-review
could get proper coverage. However, many of the packages do not build
even before this patch. I also built CUDA samples with cudatoolkit7
that ran fine.
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.