nixpkgs/pkgs/by-name/li/libossp_uuid/package.nix
aleksana 571c71e6f7 treewide: migrate packages to pkgs/by-name, take 1
We are migrating packages that meet below requirements:

1. using `callPackage`
2. called path is a directory
3. overriding set is empty (`{ }`)
4. not containing path expressions other than relative path (to
makenixpkgs-vet happy)
5. not referenced by nix files outside of the directory, other
than`pkgs/top-level/all-packages.nix`
6. not referencing nix files outside of the directory
7. not referencing `default.nix` (since it's changed to `package.nix`)
8. `outPath` doesn't change after migration

The tool is here: https://github.com/Aleksanaa/by-name-migrate.
2024-11-09 20:04:51 +08:00

47 lines
1.8 KiB
Nix

{lib, stdenv, fetchurl}:
stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
pname = "libossp-uuid";
version = "1.6.2";
src = fetchurl {
url = "ftp://ftp.ossp.org/pkg/lib/uuid/uuid-${version}.tar.gz";
sha256= "11a615225baa5f8bb686824423f50e4427acd3f70d394765bdff32801f0fd5b0";
};
configureFlags = [
"ac_cv_va_copy=yes"
] ++ lib.optional stdenv.hostPlatform.isFreeBSD "--with-pic";
patches = [ ./shtool.patch ];
meta = with lib; {
homepage = "http://www.ossp.org/pkg/lib/uuid/";
description = "OSSP uuid ISO-C and C++ shared library";
longDescription =
''
OSSP uuid is a ISO-C:1999 application programming interface
(API) and corresponding command line interface (CLI) for the
generation of DCE 1.1, ISO/IEC 11578:1996 and RFC 4122
compliant Universally Unique Identifier (UUID). It supports
DCE 1.1 variant UUIDs of version 1 (time and node based),
version 3 (name based, MD5), version 4 (random number based)
and version 5 (name based, SHA-1). Additional API bindings are
provided for the languages ISO-C++:1998, Perl:5 and
PHP:4/5. Optional backward compatibility exists for the ISO-C
DCE-1.1 and Perl Data::UUID APIs.
UUIDs are 128 bit numbers which are intended to have a high
likelihood of uniqueness over space and time and are
computationally difficult to guess. They are globally unique
identifiers which can be locally generated without contacting
a global registration authority. UUIDs are intended as unique
identifiers for both mass tagging objects with an extremely
short lifetime and to reliably identifying very persistent
objects across a network.
'';
license = licenses.bsd2;
platforms = platforms.all;
};
}