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nixpkgs/pkgs/tools/archivers/sharutils/default.nix
Will Dietz 2b230efb7f sharutils: don't hardcode AR to 'ar' (doesn't exist on cross)
Instead, let the default value of $AR indicate what should be used.

(which will be something like `armv6l-unknown-linux-gnueabihf-ar`)
2018-01-06 14:44:36 -06:00

65 lines
2.6 KiB
Nix

{ stdenv, fetchurl, gettext, coreutils }:
stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
name = "sharutils-4.15.2";
src = fetchurl {
url = "mirror://gnu/sharutils/${name}.tar.xz";
sha256 = "16isapn8f39lnffc3dp4dan05b7x6mnc76v6q5nn8ysxvvvwy19b";
};
hardeningDisable = [ "format" ];
# GNU Gettext is needed on non-GNU platforms.
buildInputs = [ coreutils gettext ];
# These tests try to hit /etc/passwd to find out your username if pass in a submitter
# name on the command line. Since we block access to /etc/passwd on the Darwin sandbox
# that cause shar to just segfault. It isn't a problem on Linux because their sandbox
# remaps /etc/passwd to a trivial file, but we can't do that on Darwin so I do this
# instead. In this case, I pass in the very imaginative "submitter" as the submitter name
patchPhase = let
# This evaluates to a string containing:
#
# substituteInPlace tests/shar-2 --replace '${SHAR}' '${SHAR} -s submitter'
# substituteInPlace tests/shar-2 --replace '${SHAR}' '${SHAR} -s submitter'
shar_sub = "\${SHAR}";
in ''
substituteInPlace tests/shar-1 --replace '${shar_sub}' '${shar_sub} -s submitter'
substituteInPlace tests/shar-2 --replace '${shar_sub}' '${shar_sub} -s submitter'
substituteInPlace intl/Makefile.in --replace "AR = ar" ""
'';
doCheck = true;
crossAttrs = {
patches = [ ./sharutils-4.11.1-cross-binary-mode-popen.patch ];
};
meta = with stdenv.lib; {
description = "Tools for remote synchronization and `shell archives'";
longDescription =
'' GNU shar makes so-called shell archives out of many files, preparing
them for transmission by electronic mail services. A shell archive
is a collection of files that can be unpacked by /bin/sh. A wide
range of features provide extensive flexibility in manufacturing
shars and in specifying shar smartness. For example, shar may
compress files, uuencode binary files, split long files and
construct multi-part mailings, ensure correct unsharing order, and
provide simplistic checksums.
GNU unshar scans a set of mail messages looking for the start of
shell archives. It will automatically strip off the mail headers
and other introductory text. The archive bodies are then unpacked
by a copy of the shell. unshar may also process files containing
concatenated shell archives.
'';
homepage = http://www.gnu.org/software/sharutils/;
license = licenses.gpl3Plus;
maintainers = [ maintainers.ndowens ];
platforms = platforms.all;
};
}