At some point, I'd like to make another attempt at
71f1f4884b ("openssl: stop static binaries referencing libs"), which
was reverted in 195c7da07d. One problem with my previous attempt is
that I moved OpenSSL's libraries to a lib output, but many dependent
packages were hardcoding the out output as the location of the
libraries. This patch fixes every such case I could find in the tree.
It won't have any effect immediately, but will mean these packages
will automatically use an OpenSSL lib output if it is reintroduced in
future.
This patch should cause very few rebuilds, because it shouldn't make
any change at all to most packages I'm touching. The few rebuilds
that are introduced come from when I've changed a package builder not
to use variable names like openssl.out in scripts / substitution
patterns, which would be confusing since they don't hardcode the
output any more.
I started by making the following global replacements:
${pkgs.openssl.out}/lib -> ${lib.getLib pkgs.openssl}/lib
${openssl.out}/lib -> ${lib.getLib openssl}/lib
Then I removed the ".out" suffix when part of the argument to
lib.makeLibraryPath, since that function uses lib.getLib internally.
Then I fixed up cases where openssl was part of the -L flag to the
compiler/linker, since that unambigously is referring to libraries.
Then I manually investigated and fixed the following packages:
- pycurl
- citrix-workspace
- ppp
- wraith
- unbound
- gambit
- acl2
I'm reasonably confindent in my fixes for all of them.
For acl2, since the openssl library paths are manually provided above
anyway, I don't think openssl is required separately as a build input
at all. Removing it doesn't make a difference to the output size, the
file list, or the closure.
I've tested evaluation with the OfBorg meta checks, to protect against
introducing evaluation failures.
python38 appears to work just as well, so it seems better to use that rather
than python2. This also resolves some build flakiness seen due to parallel
invocations of python2 that are fixed in python3.
Note that the scripts aren't compatible with python39 or later, some patching
would be required to resolve that.
qtModule was defined outside of addPackages, which caused it to use a self
variable that isn't affected by updates using overrideScope. This caused
overrides to qtbase to be incompletely applied. I also entirely removed the
outer self variable to prevent it from being accidently used again.
Qt Base is built with LLVM 5 on Darwin. LLVM 11 causes problems for
WebEngine because of the "version" includes in libc++abi. LLVM 7 would
work but since parts are built with LLVM 5 anyway it seemed like a more
straightforward option.
Make Qt applications work on macOS Big Sur even if they're built with
an older version of the macOS SDK (<10.14 - we're currently using
10.12). This issue is fixed in 5.12.11, but it requires macOS SDK
10.13 to build. See https://bugreports.qt.io/browse/QTBUG-87014 for
more info.
Qt 5.15.3 does not have an official open source release, but the KDE team
maintains a collection of patches (pulled from Qt upstream) that they expect us
to carry.