nixpkgs/pkgs/development/interpreters/erlang/R15.nix
Vladimír Čunát 88c9f8b574 xlibs: replace occurrences by xorg
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.
2015-09-15 12:54:34 +02:00

68 lines
2.1 KiB
Nix

{ stdenv, fetchurl, perl, gnum4, ncurses, openssl
, makeWrapper, gnused, gawk
, wxSupport ? false, mesa ? null, wxGTK ? null, xorg ? null }:
assert wxSupport -> mesa != null && wxGTK != null && xorg != null;
let version = "15B03"; in
stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "erlang-" + version;
src = fetchurl {
url = "http://www.erlang.org/download/otp_src_R15B03-1.tar.gz";
sha256 = "4bccac86dd76aec050252e44276a0283a0df9218e6470cf042a9b9f9dfc9476c";
};
buildInputs =
[ perl gnum4 ncurses openssl
makeWrapper
] ++ stdenv.lib.optional wxSupport [ mesa wxGTK xorg.libX11 ];
patchPhase = '' sed -i "s@/bin/rm@rm@" lib/odbc/configure erts/configure '';
preConfigure = ''
export HOME=$PWD/../
sed -e s@/bin/pwd@pwd@g -i otp_build
'';
configureFlags = "--with-ssl=${openssl}";
postInstall = let
manpages = fetchurl {
url = "http://www.erlang.org/download/otp_doc_man_R${version}.tar.gz";
sha256 = "0sqamzbd7qyz3klgl9vm1qvl0rhsfd1dx485pb0m2185qvw02nha";
};
in ''
tar xf "${manpages}" -C "$out/lib/erlang"
for i in "$out"/lib/erlang/man/man[0-9]/*.[0-9]; do
prefix="''${i%/*}"
ensureDir "$out/share/man/''${prefix##*/}"
ln -s "$i" "$out/share/man/''${prefix##*/}/''${i##*/}erl"
done
'';
# Some erlang bin/ scripts run sed and awk
postFixup = ''
wrapProgram $out/lib/erlang/bin/erl --prefix PATH ":" "${gnused}/bin/"
wrapProgram $out/lib/erlang/bin/start_erl --prefix PATH ":" "${gnused}/bin/:${gawk}/bin"
'';
meta = {
homepage = "http://www.erlang.org/";
description = "Programming language used for massively scalable soft real-time systems";
longDescription = ''
Erlang is a programming language used to build massively scalable
soft real-time systems with requirements on high availability.
Some of its uses are in telecoms, banking, e-commerce, computer
telephony and instant messaging. Erlang's runtime system has
built-in support for concurrency, distribution and fault
tolerance.
'';
platforms = stdenv.lib.platforms.linux;
maintainers = [ stdenv.lib.maintainers.simons ];
};
}