This is a replacement for using `darwin.apple_sdk_<ver>.callPackage`.
Instead of injecting the required packages, it provides a stdenv adapter
that modifies the derivation’s build inputs to use the requested SDK
versions. This modification extends to any build inputs propagated to it
as well. The `callPackage` approach is not deprecated yet, but it is
expected that it will be eventually.
Note that this is an MVP. It should work with most packages, but it only
handles build inputs and also only handles frameworks. Once more SDKs
are added (after #229210 is merged) and the SDK structure is normalized,
it can be extended to handle any package in the SDK namespace.
Cross-compilation may or may not work. Any cross-related issues can be
addressed after #256590 is merged.
Make both ready for cross with prefixes
Currently
`pkgsCross.aarch64-multiplatform.mold.passthru.tests.{wrapped,adapter}`
fail with
```
Testing running the 'hello' binary which should be linked with 'mold'
Hello, world!
Checking for mold in the '.comment' section
No mention of 'mold' detected in the '.comment' section
The command was:
aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu-readelf -p .comment ...bin/hello
The output was:
String dump of section '.comment':
[ 0] GCC: (GNU) 12.3.0
```
Without this, you get error messages during the install phase along the
lines of: "file RPATH_CHANGE could not write new RPATH:".
This is unsurprising because the static binaries do not have any dynamic
linker and thus, no runpath to rewrite either.
Tell cmake it doesn't need to do RPATH manipulation by passing
cmakeFlags.
While we're here, I also renamed `finalAttrs` to `args` and fixed the
indentation; this improves consistency with the surrounding code and
eliminates a point of confusion: because it was named `finalAttrs` I
presumed I should be able to influence it with an overrideAttrs setting
dontAddStaticConfigureFlags, but this turns out not to be possible;
adding prevAttrs as well doesn't work because of a limitation of
overrideAttrs whereby it gives an infinite recursion if the set of
attribute keys being returned depends on finalAttrs.
Signed-off-by: Peter Waller <p@pwaller.net>
When sandboxing is enabled, the hook tries to run `install_name_tool`
and fails because the system one is inaccessible. Having it use
`targetPrefix` allows it to find and use the cross-install_name_tool.
we have managed to migrate to NIX_CFLAGS_COMPILE to the env attrset well
enough that we don't need to support having it toplevel. mkDerivation
will throw if there's a attr in both env and toplevel so no need to
worry about that
with structuredAttrs lists will be bash arrays which cannot be exported
which will be a issue with some patches and some wrappers like cc-wrapper
this makes it clearer that NIX_CFLAGS_COMPILE must be a string as lists
in env cause a eval failure
stdenv: deprecate addCoverageInstrumentation adapter
this used to be used in nixos/tests but it hasn't been used in nixpkgs
for years
stdenv: deprecate replaceMaintainersField adapter
it was added in 2009 in 01e98e49b1
by nbp
there are no uses of it in nixpkgs now
stdenv: deprecate validateLicenses adapter
it was added in 2009 in b29073af25
unfreePredicate is now handled in ./pkgs/stdenv/generic/check-meta.nix
so this is unnecessary
Adds an easy method of appending compiler flags to your stdenv via a
list.
Co-authored-by: tomberek <tomberek@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Gytis Ivaskevicius <gytis02.21@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: sternenseemann <sternenseemann@systemli.org>
The old stdenv adapters were subtly wrong in two ways:
- `overrideAttrs` leaked the original, unoverridden `mkDerivation`.
- `stdenv.override` would throw away any manually-set `mkDerivation`
from a stdenv reverting to the original.
Now, `mkDerivation` is controlled (nearly directly) via an argument, and
always correctly closes over the final ("self") stdenv. This means the
adapters can work entirely via `.override` without any manual `stdenv //
...`, and both those issues are fixed.
Note hashes are changed, because stdenvs no previously overridden like
`stdenvNoCC` and `crossLibcStdenv` now are. I had to add some
`dontDisableStatic = true` accordingly. The flip side however is that
since the overrides compose, we no longer need to override anything but
the default `stdenv` from which all the others are created.
With removeUnknownConfigureFlags, it's impossible to express a package
that needs --enable-static, but will not accept --disable-shared,
without overriding the result of removeUnknownConfigureFlags _again_
in pkgs/top-level/static.nix.
It would be much better (and more in line with the rest of Nixpkgs) if
we encoded changes needed for static builds in package definitions
themselves, rather than in an ever-expanding list in static.nix. This
is especially true when doing it in static.nix is going to require
multiple overrides to express what could be expressed with stdenv
options.
So as a step in that direction, and to fix the problem described
above, here I replace removeUnknownConfigureFlags with a new stdenv
option, dontAddStaticConfigureFlags. With this mechanism, a package
that needs one but not both of the flags just needs to set
dontAddStaticConfigureFlags and then set up configureFlags manually
based on stdenv.hostPlatform.isStatic.
This logic should be in the pkgs/top-level/static.nix. We don’t want
to pollute Nixpkgs with =if stdenv.static=. Also, "static" is not
descriptive. We have two types of static stdenvs, ‘makeStaticLibaries’
and ‘makeStaticBinaries’. We shouldn’t rely on a static boolean like
this.
This allows one to force a compiler to use native machine optimizations. This
goes contrary to all the usual guarantees of Nix and so should be used only by
end-user and only in specific cases when they know what are they doing.
In my case this is needed to get a noticeable FPS boost in RPCS3 which is very
CPU-hungry PlayStation 3 emulator.