depot/third_party/nixpkgs/pkgs/development/libraries/lief/default.nix
Default email 8a45d4525b Project import generated by Copybara.
GitOrigin-RevId: 710fed5a2483f945b14f4a58af2cd3676b42d8c8
2022-03-30 11:31:56 +02:00

70 lines
1.8 KiB
Nix

{ lib
, stdenv
, fetchFromGitHub
, python
, cmake
}:
let
pyEnv = python.withPackages (ps: [ ps.setuptools ]);
in
stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
pname = "lief";
version = "0.12.0";
src = fetchFromGitHub {
owner = "lief-project";
repo = "LIEF";
rev = version;
sha256 = "sha256-ONU/geAkqVf8SDIi9dUvHxbJkmykHMCe2UVgUyRk0gg=";
};
outputs = [ "out" "py" ];
nativeBuildInputs = [
cmake
];
# Not a propagatedBuildInput because only the $py output needs it; $out is
# just the library itself (e.g. C/C++ headers).
buildInputs = [
python
];
dontUseCmakeConfigure = true;
buildPhase = ''
runHook preBuild
substituteInPlace setup.py \
--replace 'cmake_args = []' "cmake_args = [ \"-DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=$prefix\" ]"
${pyEnv.interpreter} setup.py --sdk build --parallel=$NIX_BUILD_CORES
runHook postBuild
'';
# I was unable to find a way to build the library itself and have it install
# to $out, while also installing the Python bindings to $py without building
# the project twice (using cmake), so this is the best we've got. It uses
# something called CPack to create the tarball, but it's not obvious to me
# *how* that happens, or how to intercept it to just get the structured
# library output.
installPhase = ''
runHook preInstall
mkdir -p $out $py/nix-support
echo "${python}" >> $py/nix-support/propagated-build-inputs
tar xf build/*.tar.gz --directory $out --strip-components 1
${pyEnv.interpreter} setup.py install --skip-build --root=/ --prefix=$py
runHook postInstall
'';
meta = with lib; {
description = "Library to Instrument Executable Formats";
homepage = "https://lief.quarkslab.com/";
license = [ licenses.asl20 ];
platforms = platforms.linux;
maintainers = [ maintainers.lassulus ];
};
}