This is very similar to what we had in bb0b0822ef.
The xlocale.h header is no longer existing in glibc version 2.26, so we
need to avoid including it.
I've tested building against all of the libcxx attributes of LLVM 3.5,
3.7, 3.8, 3.9, 4 and 5.
All of them succeeded except version 3.5, which failed because of an
unrelated issue (build of libc++abi has failed, one of its
dependencies), so I only verified whether the patch applies cleanly.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@nix.build>
Cc: @vcunat
This requires some small changes in the stdenv, then working around the
weird choice LLVM made to hardcode @rpath in its install name, and then
lets us remove a ton of annoying workaround hacks in many of our Go
packages. With any luck this will mean less hackery going forward.
The source distribution contains binaries (probably for testing) that
make the Avira virus scanner treat it as malware on account of a “bad
ELF header”. Apart from being preferable in general, the HTTPS download
makes the file opaque to the overeager AV scanner in transparent
proxying setups.
Also adapt to the fact that the canonical downloads now point to a URL
like this:
https://releases.llvm.org/4.0.1/llvm-4.0.1.src.tar.xz
llvm-config is a tool to output compile and linker flags, when compiling against llvm.
The tool however outputs static library names despite libllvm is build
as shared library on nixos. This was fixed for llvm 3.4, 3.5 and 3.7.
For llvm 3.8 and 3.9 it printed the library extension twice (.so.so).
This was fixed in 4.0 and the patch is backported to 3.8 and 3.9 in
this pull request.
```
$ for i in 34 35 37 38 39; do echo "\nllvm-$i"; nix-shell -p llvmPackages_$i.llvm --run 'llvm-config --libnames'; done
llvm-34
libLLVMInstrumentation.so libLLVMIRReader.so libLLVMAsmParser.so
...
llvm-35
libLLVMLTO.so libLLVMObjCARCOpts.so libLLVMLinker.so libLLVMipo.so
...
llvm-37
libLLVMLTO.so libLLVMObjCARCOpts.so libLLVMLinker.so libLLVMBitWriter.so
...
llvm-38
libLLVM-3.8.1.so
llvm-39
libLLVM-3.9.so
```
fixes#26713
Needed to build an executable that uses OpenMP with clang. This
includes a header file and a library that clang will link into an
executable whose source makes use of ‘omp‘ pragmas.