3
0
Fork 0
forked from mirrors/nixpkgs
nixpkgs/pkgs/development/compilers/gnu-smalltalk/default.nix

56 lines
2.1 KiB
Nix
Raw Normal View History

2015-03-27 15:59:46 +00:00
{ stdenv, fetchurl, pkgconfig, libtool, zip, libffi, libsigsegv, readline, gmp,
gnutls, gnome2, cairo, SDL, sqlite, emacsSupport ? false, emacs ? null }:
2015-04-01 12:51:56 +01:00
assert emacsSupport -> (emacs != null);
2015-03-27 15:59:46 +00:00
let # The gnu-smalltalk project has a dependency to the libsigsegv library.
# The project ships with sources for this library, but deprecated this option.
# Using the vanilla libsigsegv library results in error: "cannot relocate [...]"
# Adding --enable-static=libsigsegv to the gnu-smalltalk configuration flags
# does not help, the error still occurs. The only solution is to build a
# shared version of libsigsegv.
libsigsegv-shared = stdenv.lib.overrideDerivation libsigsegv (oldAttrs: {
configureFlags = [ "--enable-shared" ];
});
in stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
version = "3.2.5";
name = "gnu-smalltalk-${version}";
src = fetchurl {
url = "mirror://gnu/smalltalk/smalltalk-${version}.tar.xz";
sha256 = "1k2ssrapfzhngc7bg1zrnd9n2vyxp9c9m70byvsma6wapbvib6l1";
};
# The dependencies and their justification are explained at
# http://smalltalk.gnu.org/download
buildInputs = [
pkgconfig libtool zip libffi libsigsegv-shared readline gmp gnutls gnome2.gtk
2015-03-27 15:59:46 +00:00
cairo SDL sqlite
2015-04-01 12:51:56 +01:00
]
++ stdenv.lib.optional emacsSupport emacs;
configureFlags = stdenv.lib.optional (!emacsSupport) "--without-emacs";
2015-03-27 15:59:46 +00:00
2015-04-01 12:51:56 +01:00
installFlags = stdenv.lib.optional emacsSupport "lispdir=$(out)/share/emacs/site-lisp";
2015-03-27 15:59:46 +00:00
# For some reason the tests fail if executated with nix-build, but pass if
# executed within nix-shell --pure.
doCheck = false;
meta = with stdenv.lib; {
description = "A free implementation of the Smalltalk-80 language";
longDescription = ''
GNU Smalltalk is a free implementation of the Smalltalk-80 language. It
runs on most POSIX compatible operating systems (including GNU/Linux, of
course), as well as under Windows. Smalltalk is a dynamic object-oriented
language, well-versed to scripting tasks.
'';
homepage = http://smalltalk.gnu.org/;
license = with licenses; [ gpl2 lgpl2 ];
platforms = platforms.linux;
maintainers = with maintainers; [ skeidel ];
};
}