{
  fetchurl,
  lib,
  stdenv,
  zlib,
  bzip2,
}:

stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
  pname = "tokyocabinet";
  version = "1.4.48";

  src = fetchurl {
    url = "https://dbmx.net/tokyocabinet/${pname}-${version}.tar.gz";
    sha256 = "140zvr0n8kvsl0fbn2qn3f2kh3yynfwnizn4dgbj47m975yg80x0";
  };

  buildInputs = [
    zlib
    bzip2
  ];

  postInstall = ''
    sed -i "$out/lib/pkgconfig/tokyocabinet.pc" \
      -e 's|-lz|-L${zlib.out}/lib -lz|g;
          s|-lbz2|-L${bzip2.out}/lib -lbz2|g'
  '';

  meta = {
    description = "Tokyo Cabinet: a modern implementation of DBM";

    longDescription = ''
      Tokyo Cabinet is a library of routines for managing a database. The
      database is a simple data file containing records, each is a pair of
      a key and a value.  Every key and value is serial bytes with
      variable length.  Both binary data and character string can be used
      as a key and a value.  There is neither concept of data tables nor
      data types.  Records are organized in hash table, B+ tree, or
      fixed-length array.

      Tokyo Cabinet is developed as the successor of GDBM and QDBM on the
      following purposes.  They are achieved and Tokyo Cabinet replaces
      conventional DBM products: improves space efficiency, improves time
      efficiency, improves parallelism, improves usability, improves
      robustness, supports 64-bit architecture.
    '';

    license = lib.licenses.lgpl2Plus;

    maintainers = [ ];
    platforms = lib.platforms.unix;
  };
}