nixpkgs-suyu/pkgs/development/tools/misc/coccinelle/default.nix
Will Dietz 9614ebf137
coccinelle: 1.0.0-r23 -> 1.0.6
* Remove camlp4 dependency, no longer needed
* Keep pycaml to use ours over bundled version
* Enable tests for sanity (broken on darwin)
* no longer need to force specific ocaml version
* don't create python wrappers, they don't seem to be needed
* remove deprecated configure flag.
* fix spgen by removing bytecode version.
2017-03-06 17:50:11 -05:00

57 lines
2.1 KiB
Nix

{ fetchurl, stdenv, python, ncurses, ocamlPackages, pkgconfig }:
stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
name = "coccinelle-${version}";
version = "1.0.6";
src = fetchurl {
url = "http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/distrib/${name}.tgz";
sha256 = "02g9hmwkvfl838zz690yra5jzrqjg6y6ffxkrfcsx790bhkfsll4";
};
buildInputs = with ocamlPackages; [
ocaml findlib menhir
ocaml_pcre pycaml
python ncurses pkgconfig
];
doCheck = !stdenv.isDarwin;
# The build system builds two versions of spgen:
# 'spgen' with ocamlc -custom (bytecode specially linked)
# and 'spgen.opt' using ocamlopt.
# I'm not sure of the intentions here, but the way
# the 'spgen' binary is produced results in an
# invalid/incorrect interpreter path (/lib/ld-linux*).
# We could patch it, but without knowing why it's
# finding the wrong path it seems safer to use
# the .opt version that is built correctly.
# All that said, our fix here is simple: remove 'spgen'.
# The bin/spgen entrypoint is really a bash script
# and will use spgen.opt if 'spgen' doesn't exist.
postInstall = ''
rm $out/lib/coccinelle/spgen/spgen
'';
meta = {
description = "Program to apply semantic patches to C code";
longDescription = ''
Coccinelle is a program matching and transformation engine which
provides the language SmPL (Semantic Patch Language) for
specifying desired matches and transformations in C code.
Coccinelle was initially targeted towards performing collateral
evolutions in Linux. Such evolutions comprise the changes that
are needed in client code in response to evolutions in library
APIs, and may include modifications such as renaming a function,
adding a function argument whose value is somehow
context-dependent, and reorganizing a data structure. Beyond
collateral evolutions, Coccinelle is successfully used (by us
and others) for finding and fixing bugs in systems code.
'';
homepage = http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/;
license = stdenv.lib.licenses.gpl2;
platforms = stdenv.lib.platforms.unix;
maintainers = [ stdenv.lib.maintainers.thoughtpolice ];
};
}