See previous commit for what was done to `binutils` to make this
possible.
There were some uses of `forcedNativePackages` added. The
combination of overrides with that attribute is highly spooky: it's
often important that if an overridden package comes from it, the
replaced arguments for that package come from it. Long term this
package set and all the spookiness should be gone and irrelevant:
"Move along, nothing to see here!"
No hashes should be changed with this commit
Use `buildPackages.binutils` to get build = host != target binutils,
i.e. the old `binutilsCross`, and use
`buildPackages.buildPackages.binutils` to get build = host = target
binutils, i.e. the old `binutils`.
`buildPackages` chains like this are supposed to remove the need for
all such `*Cross` derivations. We start with binutils because it's
comparatively easy.
No hashes of cross-tests should be changed
We want code such as `(pkg.override {}).overrideScope (self: super: {})` to
work. This didn't work before, since `override` will call the original package
again, and the attribute `overideScope`, which `callPackageWithScope` added,
wasn't added again. The fix for this is to modify the package function itself
to include the `callPackageWithScope` attribute, so it'll be re-added whenever
the function is overriden for with arguments.
There is a small problem here though: since callPackage uses some magic
(`builtins.functionArgs`) to determine the auto-arguments of a function, we
can't just write `callPackageWith scope drvScope`, since
`builtins.functionArgs drvScope` will be `{}`. To fix this, we implement our own
`callPackageWith`.
Fixes https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/7953.
Closes https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/9336.
Right now the `programs.zsh.syntax-highlighting.highlighters` option
lacks appropriate validation which can cause confusing things when
mistyping a higlighter for zsh-syntax-highlighting.
(this is reapplying 6b1957d17a, which got
lost in a merge)
Including apple_sdk.sdk is generally a recipe for a bad time on LLVM 3.8
and above, since you end up with bad headers in the wrong place that hurt
the new libc++ in 3.8 and above. In this case, qt only wanted the super-
generic SDK for CUPS headers, which we can just depend on directly now.