nixpkgs/pkgs/development/tools/misc/gnum4/default.nix
Dan Peebles 0419452113 Fix Darwin stdenv to work on 10.13
The main changes are in libSystem, which lost the coretls component in 10.13
and some hardening changes that quietly crash any program that uses %n in
a non-constant format string, so we've needed to patch a lot of programs that
use gnulib.
2017-07-11 21:56:38 -04:00

47 lines
1.6 KiB
Nix

{ stdenv, hostPlatform, fetchurl }:
stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
name = "gnum4-1.4.18";
src = fetchurl {
url = "mirror://gnu/m4/m4-1.4.18.tar.bz2";
sha256 = "1xkwwq0sgv05cla0g0a01yzhk0wpsn9y40w9kh9miiiv0imxfh36";
};
doCheck = false;
configureFlags = "--with-syscmd-shell=${stdenv.shell}";
# Upstream is aware of it; it may be in the next release.
patches = [ ./s_isdir.patch ] ++ stdenv.lib.optional hostPlatform.isDarwin stdenv.secure-format-patch;
# FIXME needs gcc 4.9 in bootstrap tools
hardeningDisable = [ "stackprotector" ];
meta = {
homepage = http://www.gnu.org/software/m4/;
description = "GNU M4, a macro processor";
longDescription = ''
GNU M4 is an implementation of the traditional Unix macro
processor. It is mostly SVR4 compatible although it has some
extensions (for example, handling more than 9 positional
parameters to macros). GNU M4 also has built-in functions for
including files, running shell commands, doing arithmetic, etc.
GNU M4 is a macro processor in the sense that it copies its
input to the output expanding macros as it goes. Macros are
either builtin or user-defined and can take any number of
arguments. Besides just doing macro expansion, m4 has builtin
functions for including named files, running UNIX commands,
doing integer arithmetic, manipulating text in various ways,
recursion etc... m4 can be used either as a front-end to a
compiler or as a macro processor in its own right.
'';
license = stdenv.lib.licenses.gpl3Plus;
platforms = stdenv.lib.platforms.unix;
};
}