The configure scripts have been changed so that `--build` is now the
way to specify (non-cross compiling) build target, which is necessary
on darwin for binary compatibility across darwin versions.
execline: 2.1.4.5 -> 2.2.0.0
s6-dns: 2.0.0.7 -> 2.1.0.0
s6-linux-utils: 2.0.2.3 -> 2.2.0.0
s6-networking: 2.1.0.4 -> 2.2.1.0
s6-portable-utils: 2.1.0.0 -> 2.1.0.0 (no version change)
s6-rc: 0.0.2.1 -> 0.1.0.0
s6: 2.2.4.3 -> 2.4.0.0
skalibs: 2.3.9.0 -> 2.4.0.1
Also use new --enable-absolute-paths configure arg to correctly set
paths to runtime executables to point within the nix store rather than
relying on PATH resolution.
skalibs:
execline:
s6-dns:
s6-networking:
s6-portable-utils:
s6-rc:
s6:
The above software uses the target triplet from `cc -dumpmachine` as a
binary compatibility check. However, on darwin, the output includes the
darwin version number, which leads to build failures against a binary
skalibs package built a different version of darwin than the current
system.
Explicitly setting target ensures code can be compiled against a skalibs
binary built on a different version of darwin.
See http://www.skarnet.org/cgi-bin/archive.cgi?1:mss:623:heiodchokfjdkonfhdph
The website gives no indication that version 4.x is required to build
this package, and even it if were, then there should be an override in
all-packages.nix instead of referring to the 'gnumake40' attribute
directly in this expression.
New build system using configure script and GNU Make 4.0, and new
releases of the following using the new build system:
execline 2.0.0.0
s6 2.0.0.0
s6-dns 2.0.0.0
s6-linux-utils 2.0.0.0
s6-networking 2.0.0.0
s6-portable-utils 2.0.0.0
skalibs 2.0.0.0
s6-portable-utils is a set of tiny general Unix utilities, often
performing well-known tasks such as cut and grep, but optimized for
simplicity and small size.