In a typical build environment the toolchain will use the value of the
MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET environment variable to determine the version
of macOS to support. When cross compiling there are two distinct
toolchains, but they will look at this single environment variable. To
avoid contamination, we always set the equivalent command line flag
which effectively disables the toolchain's internal handling.
Prior to this change, the MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET variable was
ignored, and the toolchains always used the Nix platform
definition (`darwinMinVersion`) unless overridden with command line
arguments.
This change restores support for MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET, and adds
nix-specific MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET_FOR_BUILD and
MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET_FOR_TARGET for cross compilation.
Instead of always supplying flags, apply the flags as defaults. Use
clang's native flags instead of lifting the linker flags from binutils
with `-Wl,`.
If a project is using clang to drive linking, make clang do the right
thing with MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET. This can be overridden by command
line arguments. This will cause modern clang to pass
`-platform_version 10.12 0.0.0`, since it doesn't know about the SDK
settings. Older versions of clang will pass down `-macos_version_min`
flags with no sdk version.
At the linker layer, apply a default value for anything left
ambiguous. If nothing is specified, pass a full
`-platform_version`. If only `-macos_version_min` is specified, then
lock down the sdk_version explicitly with `-sdk_version`. If a min
version and sdk version is passed, do nothing.
It is now possible to pass a `fromImage` to `buildLayeredImage` and
`streamLayeredImage`, similar to what `buildImage` currently supports.
This will prepend the layers of the given base image to the resulting
image, while ensuring that at most `maxLayers` are used. It will also
ensure that environment variables from the base image are propagated
to the final image.
The check for including the C++ standard library headers was nested inside the
check for linking with the C++ standard library. As a result, the `-nostdlib`
flag incorrectly implied `-nostdinc++`, which made it virtually impossible to
partially link C++ objects.
runCommandWith receives an attribute set with options which previously
were positional arguments of runCommand' and a buildCommand. This
allows for overriding the used stdenv freely (so stuff like
llvmPackages.stdenv can be used). Additionally the possibility to change
arguments passed to stdenv.mkDerivation is made more explicit via the
derivationArgs argument.
Previously it was awkward to use the runCommand-variants with
passAsFile as a double definition of passAsFile would potentially
break runCommand: passAsFile would overwrite the previous definition,
defeating the purpose of setting it in runCommand in the first place.
This is now fixed by concatenating the [ "buildCommand" ] list with
one the one from env, if present.
Adjust buildEnv where passAsFile = null; was passed in some cases,
breaking evaluation since it'd evaluate to [ "buildCommand" ] ++ null.
When using `buildLayeredImage`, it is not possible to specify an image
name of the form `<registry>/my/image`, although it is a valid name.
This is due to derivations under `buildLayeredImage` using that image
name as their derivation name, but slashes are not permitted in that
context.
A while ago, #13099 fixed that exact same problem in `buildImage` by
using `baseNameOf name` in derivation names instead of `name`. This
change does the same thing for `buildLayeredImage`.
`stream_layered_image.py` currently assumes that the store root will be
at `/nix/store`, although the user might have configured this
differently. This makes `buildLayeredImage` unusable with stores having
a different root, as they will fail an assertion in the python script.
This change updates that assertion to use `builtins.storeDir` as the
source of truth about where the store lives, instead of assuming
`/nix/store`.
- This is the first packages which uses Dune in order to build and install
so I had to refactor build-support/coq/default.nix in order to support it.
- I added a new feature: one can now release.v.sha256 empty to try to download
with a fake sha256, hence failures are reported and one can copy paste the
sha256 given by the error message.
- I updated the documentation of languages-frameworks/coq.section.md accordingly.
Fixes build failures with clang:
clang-7: error: unknown argument: '-fPIC -target'
clang-7: error: no such file or directory: '@<(printf %qn -O2'
clang-7: error: no such file or directory: 'x86_64-apple-darwin'
Introduced by 60c5cf9cea in #112449