Commit Graph

11 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Michael Reilly
84cf00f980
treewide: Per RFC45, remove all unquoted URLs 2020-04-10 17:54:53 +01:00
Ben Wolsieffer
adf5ca2ce0 jemalloc450: disable transparent huge pages on ARM 2019-09-08 22:57:32 -04:00
volth
46420bbaa3 treewide: name -> pname (easy cases) (#66585)
treewide replacement of

stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
  name = "*-${version}";
  version = "*";

to pname
2019-08-15 13:41:18 +01:00
Jörg Thalheim
b5c1deca8a
treewide: remove wkennington as maintainer
He prefers to contribute to his own nixpkgs fork triton.
Since he is still marked as maintainer in many packages
this leaves the wrong impression he still maintains those.
2019-01-26 10:05:32 +00:00
Vladimír Čunát
666870d813
jemalloc nitpick: better semantics for stripPrefix 2019-01-23 21:01:59 +01:00
Izorkin
2489b4a8bf jemalloc: add option disable-initial-exec-tls 2018-12-02 13:37:14 +03:00
Symphorien Gibol
973eca740b rustc: fix build with unbundled jemalloc and llvm on darwin
jemalloc with stripped prefix would cause segfaults in free:
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/49557#issuecomment-436734677

Thanks to @danieldk for darwin testing/debugging.
2018-11-08 13:10:24 +01:00
Ignat Loskutov
1c7d246d81 drop the obsolete '--disable-thp' option 2018-10-31 01:44:55 +03:00
John Ericson
ba52ae5048 treewide: isArm -> isAarch32
Following legacy packing conventions, `isArm` was defined just for
32-bit ARM instruction set. This is confusing to non packagers though,
because Aarch64 is an ARM instruction set.

The official ARM overview for ARMv8[1] is surprisingly not confusing,
given the overall state of affairs for ARM naming conventions, and
offers us a solution. It divides the nomenclature into three levels:

```
ISA:             ARMv8   {-A, -R, -M}
                 /    \
Mode:     Aarch32     Aarch64
             |         /   \
Encoding:   A64      A32   T32
```

At the top is the overall v8 instruction set archicture. Second are the
two modes, defined by bitwidth but differing in other semantics too, and
buttom are the encodings, (hopefully?) isomorphic if they encode the
same mode.

The 32 bit encodings are mostly backwards compatible with previous
non-Thumb and Thumb encodings, and if so we can pun the mode names to
instead mean "sets of compatable or isomorphic encodings", and then
voilà we have nice names for 32-bit and 64-bit arm instruction sets
which do not use the word ARM so as to not confused either laymen or
experienced ARM packages.

[1]: https://developer.arm.com/products/architecture/a-profile
2018-04-25 15:28:55 -04:00
Yorick van Pelt
c03f5f5579
jemalloc: don't try to patch 4.5.0 2018-04-16 16:18:33 +02:00
Yorick van Pelt
d536542ee4
jemalloc: add 4.5.0 version 2018-04-16 12:31:26 +02:00