nixpkgs-suyu/pkgs/servers/mail/mailman/core.nix
2019-08-26 21:12:56 +02:00

42 lines
1.5 KiB
Nix

{ stdenv, buildPythonPackage, fetchPypi, alembic, aiosmtpd, dnspython
, flufl_bounce, flufl_i18n, flufl_lock, lazr_config, lazr_delegates, passlib
, requests, zope_configuration, click, falcon, importlib-resources
, zope_component
}:
buildPythonPackage rec {
pname = "mailman";
version = "3.2.2";
patches = [ ./0001-Find-external-tools-via-PATH-rather-than-hard-coding.patch ];
src = fetchPypi {
inherit pname version;
sha256 = "09s9p5pb8gff6zblwidyq830yfgcvv50p5drdaxj1qpy8w46lvc6";
};
propagatedBuildInputs = [
alembic aiosmtpd click dnspython falcon flufl_bounce flufl_i18n flufl_lock
importlib-resources lazr_config passlib requests zope_configuration
zope_component
];
# Mailman assumes that those scripts in $out/bin are Python scripts. Wrapping
# them in shell code breaks this assumption. The proper way to use mailman is
# to create a specialized python interpreter:
#
# python37.withPackages (ps: [ps.mailman])
#
# This gives a properly wrapped 'mailman' command plus an interpreter that
# has all the necessary search paths to execute unwrapped 'master' and
# 'runner' scripts. The setup is a little tricky, but fortunately NixOS is
# about to get a OS module that takes care of those details.
dontWrapPythonPrograms = true;
meta = {
homepage = https://www.gnu.org/software/mailman/;
description = "Free software for managing electronic mail discussion and newsletter lists";
license = stdenv.lib.licenses.gpl3Plus;
maintainers = with stdenv.lib.maintainers; [ peti ];
};
}