depot/third_party/nixpkgs/pkgs/development/tools/misc/texinfo/common.nix
Default email 8ac5e011d6 Project import generated by Copybara.
GitOrigin-RevId: 2c3273caa153ee8eb5786bc8141b85b859e7efd7
2020-04-24 19:36:52 -04:00

76 lines
2.5 KiB
Nix

{ version, sha256 }:
{ stdenv, buildPackages, fetchurl, perl, xz
# we are a dependency of gcc, this simplifies bootstraping
, interactive ? false, ncurses, procps
}:
let
crossBuildTools = interactive && stdenv.hostPlatform != stdenv.buildPlatform;
in
with stdenv.lib;
stdenv.mkDerivation {
name = "texinfo-${optionalString interactive "interactive-"}${version}";
inherit version;
src = fetchurl {
url = "mirror://gnu/texinfo/texinfo-${version}.tar.xz";
inherit sha256;
};
patches = optional (version == "6.5") ./perl.patch
++ optional crossBuildTools ./cross-tools-flags.patch;
# ncurses is required to build `makedoc'
# this feature is introduced by the ./cross-tools-flags.patch
NATIVE_TOOLS_CFLAGS = if crossBuildTools then "-I${getDev buildPackages.ncurses}/include" else null;
NATIVE_TOOLS_LDFLAGS = if crossBuildTools then "-L${getLib buildPackages.ncurses}/lib" else null;
# We need a native compiler to build perl XS extensions
# when cross-compiling.
depsBuildBuild = [ buildPackages.stdenv.cc perl ];
buildInputs = [ xz.bin ]
++ optionals stdenv.isSunOS [ libiconv gawk ]
++ optional interactive ncurses;
configureFlags = [ "PERL=${buildPackages.perl}/bin/perl" ]
++ stdenv.lib.optional stdenv.isSunOS "AWK=${gawk}/bin/awk";
installFlags = [ "TEXMF=$(out)/texmf-dist" ];
installTargets = [ "install" "install-tex" ];
checkInputs = [ procps ];
doCheck = interactive
&& !stdenv.isDarwin
&& !stdenv.isSunOS; # flaky
meta = {
homepage = "https://www.gnu.org/software/texinfo/";
description = "The GNU documentation system";
license = licenses.gpl3Plus;
platforms = platforms.all;
maintainers = with maintainers; [ vrthra oxij ];
longDescription = ''
Texinfo is the official documentation format of the GNU project.
It was invented by Richard Stallman and Bob Chassell many years
ago, loosely based on Brian Reid's Scribe and other formatting
languages of the time. It is used by many non-GNU projects as
well.
Texinfo uses a single source file to produce output in a number
of formats, both online and printed (dvi, html, info, pdf, xml,
etc.). This means that instead of writing different documents
for online information and another for a printed manual, you
need write only one document. And when the work is revised, you
need revise only that one document. The Texinfo system is
well-integrated with GNU Emacs.
'';
branch = version;
};
}