nixpkgs/pkgs/build-support/gcc-wrapper/default.nix
Lluís Batlle i Rossell 43930b36d9 I had changed the gcc-wrapper shell attribute, for it to be a specific kind of
derivation instead of a string, but this did not cover all use cases we had.
Instead of updating the use cases, I made the wrapper accept also a string.

We saw this problem trying to build gcc43_multi.


svn path=/nixpkgs/branches/stdenv-updates/; revision=25029
2010-12-07 15:18:05 +00:00

92 lines
3.5 KiB
Nix

# The Nix `gcc' stdenv.mkDerivation is not directly usable, since it doesn't
# know where the C library and standard header files are. Therefore
# the compiler produced by that package cannot be installed directly
# in a user environment and used from the command line. This
# stdenv.mkDerivation provides a wrapper that sets up the right environment
# variables so that the compiler and the linker just "work".
{ name ? "", stdenv, nativeTools, nativeLibc, nativePrefix ? ""
, gcc ? null, libc ? null, binutils ? null, coreutils ? null, shell ? ""
, zlib ? null
}:
assert nativeTools -> nativePrefix != "";
assert !nativeTools -> gcc != null && binutils != null && coreutils != null;
assert !nativeLibc -> libc != null;
# For ghdl (the vhdl language provider to gcc) we need zlib in the wrapper
assert (gcc != null && gcc ? langVhdl && gcc.langVhdl) -> zlib != null;
let
gccVersion = (builtins.parseDrvName gcc.name).version;
gccName = (builtins.parseDrvName gcc.name).name;
in
stdenv.mkDerivation {
name =
(if name != "" then name else gccName + "-wrapper") +
(if gcc != null && gccVersion != "" then "-" + gccVersion else "");
builder = ./builder.sh;
setupHook = ./setup-hook.sh;
gccWrapper = ./gcc-wrapper.sh;
gnatWrapper = ./gnat-wrapper.sh;
gnatlinkWrapper = ./gnatlink-wrapper.sh;
ldWrapper = ./ld-wrapper.sh;
utils = ./utils.sh;
addFlags = ./add-flags;
inherit nativeTools nativeLibc nativePrefix gcc;
libc = if nativeLibc then null else libc;
binutils = if nativeTools then null else binutils;
# The wrapper scripts use 'cat', so we may need coreutils
coreutils = if nativeTools then null else coreutils;
langC = if nativeTools then true else gcc.langC;
langCC = if nativeTools then true else gcc.langCC;
langFortran = if nativeTools then false else gcc ? langFortran;
langAda = if nativeTools then false else gcc ? langAda && gcc.langAda;
langVhdl = if nativeTools then false else gcc ? langVhdl && gcc.langVhdl;
zlib = if (gcc != null && gcc ? langVhdl) then zlib else null;
shell = if shell == "" then stdenv.shell else
if builtins.isAttrs shell then (shell + shell.shellPath)
else shell;
crossAttrs = {
shell = shell.hostDrv + shell.hostDrv.shellPath;
libc = libc.hostDrv;
coreutils = coreutils.hostDrv;
binutils = binutils.hostDrv;
gcc = gcc.hostDrv;
#
# This is not the best way to do this. I think the reference should be
# the style in the gcc-cross-wrapper, but to keep a stable stdenv now I
# do this sufficient if/else.
dynamicLinker =
(if stdenv.cross.arch == "arm" then "ld-linux.so.3" else
if stdenv.cross.arch == "mips" then "ld.so.1" else
abort "don't know the name of the dynamic linker for this platform");
};
meta =
let gcc_ = if gcc != null then gcc else {}; in
(if gcc_ ? meta then removeAttrs gcc.meta ["priority"] else {}) //
{ description =
stdenv.lib.attrByPath ["meta" "description"] "System C compiler" gcc_
+ " (wrapper script)";
};
# The dynamic linker has different names on different Linux platforms.
dynamicLinker =
if !nativeLibc then
(if stdenv.system == "i686-linux" then "ld-linux.so.2" else
if stdenv.system == "x86_64-linux" then "ld-linux-x86-64.so.2" else
if stdenv.system == "armv5tel-linux" then "ld-linux.so.3" else
if stdenv.system == "powerpc-linux" then "ld.so.1" else
if stdenv.system == "mips64-linux" then "ld.so.1" else
abort "don't know the name of the dynamic linker for this platform")
else "";
}