nixpkgs-suyu/pkgs/development/libraries/gobject-introspection/default.nix

75 lines
2.3 KiB
Nix

{ stdenv, fetchurl, glib, flex, bison, pkgconfig, libffi, python
, libintl, cctools, cairo, gnome3
, substituteAll, nixStoreDir ? builtins.storeDir
, x11Support ? true
}:
# now that gobjectIntrospection creates large .gir files (eg gtk3 case)
# it may be worth thinking about using multiple derivation outputs
# In that case its about 6MB which could be separated
let
pname = "gobject-introspection";
version = "1.56.0";
in
with stdenv.lib;
stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
name = "${pname}-${version}";
src = fetchurl {
url = "mirror://gnome/sources/${pname}/${gnome3.versionBranch version}/${name}.tar.xz";
sha256 = "1y50pbn5qqbcv2h9rkz96wvv5jls2gma9bkqjq6wapmaszx5jw0d";
};
outputs = [ "out" "dev" ];
outputBin = "dev";
outputMan = "dev"; # tiny pages
nativeBuildInputs = [ pkgconfig libintl ];
buildInputs = [ flex bison python setupHook/*move .gir*/ ]
++ stdenv.lib.optional stdenv.isDarwin cctools;
propagatedBuildInputs = [ libffi glib ];
preConfigure = ''
sed 's|/usr/bin/env ||' -i tools/g-ir-tool-template.in
'';
# outputs TODO: share/gobject-introspection-1.0/tests is needed during build
# by pygobject3 (and maybe others), but it's only searched in $out
setupHook = ./setup-hook.sh;
patches = [
(substituteAll {
src = ./absolute_shlib_path.patch;
inherit nixStoreDir;
})
] ++ stdenv.lib.optional x11Support # https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/34080
(substituteAll {
src = ./absolute_gir_path.patch;
cairoLib = "${getLib cairo}/lib";
});
doCheck = false; # fails
passthru = {
updateScript = gnome3.updateScript {
packageName = pname;
attrPath = "gobjectIntrospection";
};
};
meta = with stdenv.lib; {
description = "A middleware layer between C libraries and language bindings";
homepage = http://live.gnome.org/GObjectIntrospection;
maintainers = with maintainers; [ lovek323 lethalman ];
platforms = platforms.unix;
longDescription = ''
GObject introspection is a middleware layer between C libraries (using
GObject) and language bindings. The C library can be scanned at compile
time and generate a metadata file, in addition to the actual native C
library. Then at runtime, language bindings can read this metadata and
automatically provide bindings to call into the C library.
'';
};
}