The hack of using `crossConfig` to enforce stricter handling of
dependencies is replaced with a dedicated `strictDeps` for that purpose.
(Experience has shown that my punning was a terrible idea that made more
difficult and embarrising to teach teach.)
Now that is is clear, a few packages now use `strictDeps`, to fix
various bugs:
- bintools-wrapper and cc-wrapper
gettext won't actually provide libintl unless we go out of
our way to tell it to do so [1][2].
We could add those flags on musl (as I initially did in [3]),
but then we have two different libintl.h files and generally
some confusion about which gettext is being used.
Instead of sorting that out, for now let's just continue on
without gettext providing libintl-- it's worked well enough so far.
Only change that needs to be made, then, is to avoid
adding -lintl on musl since there is no libintl.
[1] c739240fd2
[2] https://gitweb.gentoo.org/repo/gentoo.git/tree/dev-libs/libintl/libintl-0.19.8.1.ebuild?id=332e48712b6521697f992f923c9c985482dd1c36#n41
[3] 729302f29a
The following parameters are now available:
* hardeningDisable
To disable specific hardening flags
* hardeningEnable
To enable specific hardening flags
Only the cc-wrapper supports this right now, but these may be reused by
other wrappers, builders or setup hooks.
cc-wrapper supports the following flags:
* fortify
* stackprotector
* pie (disabled by default)
* pic
* strictoverflow
* format
* relro
* bindnow
- there were many easy merge conflicts
- cc-wrapper needed nontrivial changes
Many other problems might've been created by interaction of the branches,
but stdenv and a few other packages build fine now.
Should only affect cross-builds, however I didn't test whether
cross-building gettext actually works. But if it's broken now, it was
broken before as well and this at least unbreaks the non-cross-built
nixpkgs tarball job :-)
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
(My OCD kicked in today...)
Remove repeated package names, capitalize first word, remove trailing
periods and move overlong descriptions to longDescription.
I also simplified some descriptions as well, when they were particularly
long or technical, often based on Arch Linux' package descriptions.
I've tried to stay away from generated expressions (and I think I
succeeded).
Some specifics worth mentioning:
* cron, has "Vixie Cron" in its description. The "Vixie" part is not
mentioned anywhere else. I kept it in a parenthesis at the end of the
description.
* ctags description started with "Exuberant Ctags ...", and the
"exuberant" part is not mentioned elsewhere. Kept it in a parenthesis
at the end of description.
* nix has the description "The Nix Deployment System". Since that
doesn't really say much what it is/does (especially after removing
the package name!), I changed that to "Powerful package manager that
makes package management reliable and reproducible" (borrowed from
nixos.org).
* Tons of "GNU Foo, Foo is a [the important bits]" descriptions
is changed to just [the important bits]. If the package name doesn't
contain GNU I don't think it's needed to say it in the description
either.