This requires bumping the version of camlimages used by glsurf to a
version that supports current giflib. The most recent versions of
camlimages (even of 4.x) don't support ocaml 4.01 any more, so I've
upgraded to 4.1.2 here, the last version that supports ocaml 4.01 (and
which happily supports current giflib).
* ocamlPackages.janeStreet_0_9_0: join the ocamlPackages fix point
Internal dependencies in the janeStreet sets were always taken from the
own rec attribute set. While this is pretty simple and convenient, it
has the disadvantage that it doesn't play nice with overriding: If you'd
override an attribute in a janeStreet set previously, it would be
changed when referenced directly, but the other packages in that
janeStreet set still would use the original, non-overridden version of
the derivation.
This is easily fixed by passing janeStreet_0_9_0 itself from the fix
point of ocamlPackages and using it to reference the dependencies.
Example showing it now works as expected:
test-overlay.nix:
self: super: {
ocamlPackages = super.ocamlPackages.overrideScope (old: _: {
janeStreet_0_9_0 = old.janeStreet_0_9_0 // {
base = old.janeStreet_0_9_0.base.overrideAttrs (_: {
meta.broken = true;
});
};
});
}
nix-repl> (import ./. {
overlays = [ (import ./test-overlay.nix) ];
}).ocamlPackages.janeStreet_0_9_0.stdio
error: Package ‘ocaml4.10.0-base-0.9.4’ in /home/lukas/src/nix/nixpkgs/pkgs/development/ocaml-modules/janestreet/janePackage.nix:6 is marked as broken, refusing to evaluate.
a) To temporarily allow broken packages, you can use an environment variable
for a single invocation of the nix tools.
$ export NIXPKGS_ALLOW_BROKEN=1
b) For `nixos-rebuild` you can set
{ nixpkgs.config.allowBroken = true; }
in configuration.nix to override this.
c) For `nix-env`, `nix-build`, `nix-shell` or any other Nix command you can add
{ allowBroken = true; }
to ~/.config/nixpkgs/config.nix.
* ocamlPackages.janeStreet: take part in fixpoint for OCaml >= 4.08
This change makes overrides to the janeStreet set work as expected by
making the janeStreet set take part in the ocamlPackages fixpoint for
janeStreet 0.14, i. e. OCaml >= 4.08
* ocamlPackages.janeStreet: take part in fixpoint for OCaml == 4.07
This change makes overrides to the janeStreet set work as expected by
making the janeStreet set take part in the ocamlPackages fixpoint for
janeStreet 0.12, i. e. OCaml == 4.07
* ocamlPackages.janeStreet: take part in fixpoint for OCaml < 4.07
This change makes overrides to the janeStreet set work as expected by
making the janeStreet set take part in the ocamlPackages fixpoint for
janeStreet 0.11, i. e. OCaml < 4.07
* ocamlPackages.janeStreet: remove self - super distinction
Previously, we inherited non-janestreet ocaml dependencies from super
and janestreet dependencies from self which always was super.janeStreet.
This behavior is however not really what we want due to liftJaneStreet:
Users and other packages will use ocamlPackages.base etc. instead of
ocamlPackages.janeStreet.base and the like. Consequently they also would
override the top-level attributes which would mean that other janestreet
packages would not pick up on it however.
As a consequence however, overriding ocamlPackages.janeStreet.base
doesn't work. Since this was never possible, I don't think this is an
issue. It is probably a good idea to deprecate that set anyways and
printing a warning when it is used via trace.
janeStreet_0_9_0 is unchanged as the disticniton between self and super
makes sense for it.
Below is an example showing how overriding would work from an user's
perspective:
test-overlay.nix:
self: super: {
ocamlPackages = super.ocamlPackages.overrideScope (old: _: {
base = old.base.overrideAttrs (_: {
meta.broken = true;
});
});
}
nix-repl> (import ./. { overlays = [ (import ./test-overlay.nix) ]; }).ocamlPackages.
stdio
error: Package ‘ocaml4.10.0-base-0.14.0’ in /home/lukas/src/nix/nixpkgs/pkgs/development/ocaml-modules/janestreet/janePackage_0_14.nix:12 is marked as broken, refusing to evaluate.
a) To temporarily allow broken packages, you can use an environment variable
for a single invocation of the nix tools.
$ export NIXPKGS_ALLOW_BROKEN=1
b) For `nixos-rebuild` you can set
{ nixpkgs.config.allowBroken = true; }
in configuration.nix to override this.
c) For `nix-env`, `nix-build`, `nix-shell` or any other Nix command you can add
{ allowBroken = true; }
to ~/.config/nixpkgs/config.nix.
Contains vendored in patches from https://github.com/mirage/ocaml-freestanding/pull/93
to make building within nixpkgs simpler. These serve as a makeshift
solution until ocaml-freestanding is released with its overhauled dune
based build system which will also support cross compiling. Upstream has
indicated that they are interested in making it work well with nix as
well.
1.7.8 changed the behavior of the minimal build type (which we are
keeping as the default because opam-repository does it as well): It now
excludes the Base64 module which is prone to namespacing problems.
Since google-drive-ocamlfuse still uses the Base64 module, we need to
override it to use extlib without the minimal build type. 1.7.9 (?)
should make this obsolete as it is planned to split the Base64 module
into a separate package.
Co-authored-by: sternenseemann <sternenseemann@systemli.org>
Enabling tests is not feasible as the test suite takes > 45min (haven't
even run it to completion yet) which is not a good idea in ocamlPackages
where you often have to build from source. Additionally it would require
fetching the git repository since the test suite is not contained in the
release tarball.
Co-authored-by: locallycompact <dan.firth@homotopic.tech>
ocamlPackages.ppx_deriving_yojson: 3.5.2 → 3.6.1
ocamlPackages.visitors: 20200210 → 20210127
ocamlPackages.pgocaml: disable for OCaml < 4.08
ocamlPackages.nocrypto: disable for OCaml < 4.08
ocamlPackages.lens: mark as broken
ocamlPackages.ppx_deriving_protobuf: mark as broken
Closes#108137