{ fetchurl, lib, stdenv, makeWrapper, gnum4, texinfo, texLive, automake, autoconf, libtool, ghostscript, ncurses, enableX11 ? false, xlibsWrapper }: let version = "11.2"; bootstrapFromC = ! ((stdenv.isLinux && stdenv.isAarch64) || stdenv.isx86_64); arch = if stdenv.isLinux && stdenv.isAarch64 then "-aarch64le" else "-x86-64"; in stdenv.mkDerivation { name = if enableX11 then "mit-scheme-x11-${version}" else "mit-scheme-${version}"; # MIT/GNU Scheme is not bootstrappable, so it's recommended to compile from # the platform-specific tarballs, which contain pre-built binaries. It # leads to more efficient code than when building the tarball that contains # generated C code instead of those binaries. src = if stdenv.isLinux && stdenv.isAarch64 then fetchurl { url = "mirror://gnu/mit-scheme/stable.pkg/${version}/mit-scheme-${version}-aarch64le.tar.gz"; sha256 = "11maixldk20wqb5js5p4imq221zz9nf27649v9pqkdf8fv7rnrs9"; } else fetchurl { url = "mirror://gnu/mit-scheme/stable.pkg/${version}/mit-scheme-${version}-x86-64.tar.gz"; sha256 = "17822hs9y07vcviv2af17p3va7qh79dird49nj50bwi9rz64ia3w"; }; buildInputs = [ ncurses ] ++ lib.optional enableX11 xlibsWrapper; configurePhase = '' runHook preConfigure (cd src && ./configure) (cd doc && ./configure) runHook postConfigure ''; buildPhase = '' runHook preBuild cd src ${if bootstrapFromC then "./etc/make-liarc.sh --prefix=$out" else "make compile-microcode"} cd ../doc make cd .. runHook postBuild ''; installPhase = '' runHook preInstall make prefix=$out install -C src make prefix=$out install -C doc runHook postInstall ''; postFixup = '' wrapProgram $out/bin/mit-scheme${arch}-${version} --set MITSCHEME_LIBRARY_PATH \ $out/lib/mit-scheme${arch}-${version} ''; nativeBuildInputs = [ makeWrapper gnum4 texinfo texLive automake ghostscript autoconf libtool ]; # XXX: The `check' target doesn't exist. doCheck = false; meta = with lib; { description = "MIT/GNU Scheme, a native code Scheme compiler"; longDescription = '' MIT/GNU Scheme is an implementation of the Scheme programming language, providing an interpreter, compiler, source-code debugger, integrated Emacs-like editor, and a large runtime library. MIT/GNU Scheme is best suited to programming large applications with a rapid development cycle. ''; homepage = "https://www.gnu.org/software/mit-scheme/"; license = licenses.gpl2Plus; maintainers = [ ]; # Build fails on Cygwin and Darwin: # . platforms = platforms.gnu ++ platforms.linux ++ platforms.freebsd; }; }