LLD supports Windows-style linker arguments, but these previously
triggered purity check false positives, because it saw that they
started with a '/' and assumed they were paths.
This tweaks the path detection to allow through certain values that
could be paths, but are much more likely to be LINK.EXE-style flags.
The risk of false negatives here is low — the only things we'd now
fail to catch would be attempts to link with libraries in the root
directory, which doesn't happen in practice.
We also teach the wrapper how to apply its purity checks to library
paths specified with the /LIBPATH: option.
Tested that paths we expect to be rejected (like /lib/libfoo.so) still
are.
* pkgs/build-support: Quote variable name
* pkgs/build-support: Quote variable reference
* pkgs/build-support: Quote variable references
Leads to a minor behavior change: there's no trailing space in the
output when `[[ "$linkType" == "static-pie" ]]` is true.
Previously, mangleVarList would be used which would concatenate the
variables using a space as a separator. Paths are however separated by
`:` in PKG_CONFIG_PATH leading to entries being broken.
This is fixed by introducing mangleVarListGeneric which allows us to
specify the desired separator.
Reproducer for the issue prior to this change:
$ nix-shell -A pkgsLLVM.wayland
[nix-shell] $ pkg-config --libs expat
Package expat was not found in the pkg-config search path.
Perhaps you should add the directory containing `expat.pc'
to the PKG_CONFIG_PATH environment variable
No package 'expat' found
$ printf 'Host: %s\nBuild: %s' $PKG_CONFIG_PATH $PKG_CONFIG_PATH_FOR_BUILD
Host: /nix/store/5h308a4ab8w7prcp8iflh5pnl78mayi2-expat-2.2.10-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu-dev/lib/pkgconfig:/nix/store/z3y9ska2h4l1map25m195iq577g7g3gz-libxml2-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu-2.9.12-dev/lib/pkgconfig:/nix/store/lbz5m1s0r7zn0cxvl21czfspli6ribzb-zlib-1.2.11-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu-dev/lib/pkgconfig:/nix/store/rfhvp8r8n3ygpzh8j0l34lk8hwwi3z0h-libffi-3.3-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu-dev/lib/pkgconfig
Build: /nix/store/dw11ywy7qwfz53qisz0dggbgix88jah2-wayland-1.19.0-bin/lib/pkgconfig
strace reveals the issue:
stat("/nix/store/dw11ywy7qwfz53qisz0dggbgix88jah2-wayland-1.19.0-bin/lib/pkgconfig /nix/store/5h308a4ab8w7prcp8iflh5pnl78mayi2-expat-2.2.10-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu-dev/lib/pkgconfig/expat-uninstalled.pc", 0x7fff49829fa0) = -1 ENOENT (No such file or directory)
In the pkg-config wrapper $PKG_CONFIG_PATH_FOR_BUILD and
$PKG_CONFIG_PATH are concatenated with a space which leads to two paths
being messed up. This issue likely only affects native cross
compilation.
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.
I hate the thing too even though I made it, and rather just get rid of
it. But we can't do that yet. In the meantime, this brings us more
inline with autoconf and will make it slightly easier for me to write a
pkg-config wrapper, which we need.