nixpkgs/pkgs/development/libraries/libiconv/default.nix
2015-05-28 10:53:34 +02:00

52 lines
1.7 KiB
Nix

{ fetchurl, stdenv }:
assert (!stdenv.isLinux);
stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
name = "libiconv-1.14";
src = fetchurl {
url = "mirror://gnu/libiconv/${name}.tar.gz";
sha256 = "04q6lgl3kglmmhw59igq1n7v3rp1rpkypl366cy1k1yn2znlvckj";
};
patches = if stdenv.isCygwin then [
./libiconv-1.14-reloc.patch
./libiconv-1.14-wchar.patch
] else null;
# On Cygwin, Libtool produces a `.dll.a', which is not a "real" DLL
# (Windows' linker would need to be used somehow to produce an actual
# DLL.) Thus, build the static library too, and this is what Gettext
# will actually use.
configureFlags = if stdenv.isCygwin then [ "--enable-static" ] else null;
crossAttrs = {
# Disable stripping to avoid "libiconv.a: Archive has no index" (MinGW).
dontStrip = true;
dontCrossStrip = true;
};
meta = {
description = "An iconv(3) implementation";
longDescription = ''
Some programs, like mailers and web browsers, must be able to convert
between a given text encoding and the user's encoding. Other programs
internally store strings in Unicode, to facilitate internal processing,
and need to convert between internal string representation (Unicode)
and external string representation (a traditional encoding) when they
are doing I/O. GNU libiconv is a conversion library for both kinds of
applications.
'';
homepage = http://www.gnu.org/software/libiconv/;
license = stdenv.lib.licenses.lgpl2Plus;
maintainers = [ ];
# This library is not needed on GNU platforms.
hydraPlatforms = stdenv.lib.platforms.cygwin ++ stdenv.lib.platforms.darwin ++ stdenv.lib.platforms.freebsd;
};
}