This reinstates the libSystem selective symbol export machinery we used
to have, but locks it to the symbols that were present in 10.11 and skips
the actual compiled code we put into that library in favor of the system
initialization code. That should make it more stable and less likely to
do weird stuff than the last time we did this.
`stripHash` documentation states that it prints out the stripped name to
the stdout, but the function stored the value in `strippedName`
instead.
Basically all usages did something like
`$(stripHash $foo | echo $strippedName)` which is just braindamaged.
Fixed the implementation and all invocations.
The 3.8 upgrade was premature and appears to be breaking a load of stuff
that I can't look into right now. Will take it back to 3.8 and test more
thoroughly before pushing more broadly. I should learn to change fewer
variables at a time :)
It's a long build and generally painful to split into smaller commits,
so I apologize for lumping many changes into one commit but this is far
easier.
There are still several outdated parts of the darwin stdenv but these
changes should bring us closer to the goal.
Fixes#18461
I broke this in the cleanups I did in 171c7f0, the gcc inside the bootstrap
tarball is not getting built with the correct --with-fpu, --with-float
etc. options.
Revert a revert of a merge that shouldn't have been in master but was intentionally in staging.
Next time I'll do this right after the revert instead of so far down the line...
This reverts commit 9adad8612b.
This will break part of the bootstrap tools tests because the new tools
need some changes in the stdenv, but if I change them all at once, the
stdenv breaks with the old bootstrap tools. So I'm doing this first, then
will make changes to the stdenv once this bundle is built and I can use
it.
I also added some functionality to let me test one set of bootstrap tools
on another nixpkgs tree, which makes testing a lot more pleasant.
- cloog, ppl, cloogppl aren't used by recent GCCs. Kill references to them.
- Use correct versions of isl, as the current GCC depends
on non-default versions of them.
- Also clarify isl dynamic libraries are needed in cross
builds, but not in native builds
- Since aeb3d8c (bzip2: fix cross build on mingw by using autoconf patch),
it seems that the bzip2 binary depends on libbz2 when cross compiling.
So copy libbz2 into the bootstrap tarball as well.
- Curl isn't used in the bootstrap tools since e6f61b4cf3.
This reverts commit debd401b0f.
We must not use a single-binary build for the bootstrap since the common
binary gains a dynamic linkage to gmp (due to 'factor' and 'expr'
handling arbitrary-precision arithmetic).
Our coreutils now uses single-binary-build mode where, by default,
simple shebang scripts are used for all the binaries. That doesn't work
e.g. with the Linux unpacker which only handles standard binaries and
symlinks. Let's use the symlinked mode instead for boostrapping.
This does NOT change any stdenv hashes.
I only tested the case most important to me:
$ nix-build pkgs/top-level/release.nix -A stdenvBootstrapTools.x86_64-linux.test
Close#15803. This avoids the error:
while setting up the build environment: executing
‘/nix/store/7sb42axk5lrxqz45nldrb2pchlys14s1-bash-4.3-p42/bin/bash’:
Argument list too long
Note: I wanted to make it optional based on buildCommand length,
but that seems pointless as I'm sure it's less performant.
Amended by vcunat:
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/15803#issuecomment-224841225
On Linux, paxctl's setup hook should overwrite the paxmark stub, but the
stub is defined after the setup hooks are sourced, so the stub ends up
overwriting the real function. The result is that paxmark fails to do
anything. The fix is to define the stub before any setup hooks are
sourced. Thanks to @vcunat for figuring this out.
Closes#15492
This changes cygwin stdenv, but I don't think it will hurt much people.
This allows mkDerivation to get "dontRebase=true" to skip the usual cygwin
rebase. This is required, if we are using this stdenv to build DLLs for win32
inside x86_64-cygwin, because /bin/rebase crashes at finding an arch mismatch.
Additionally, we don't need any rebase for libraries built by visual studio and
meant for visual studio (my use case).
I'm using nix in x86_64-cygwin to build libraries with visual studio, both for
x86_64 and x86.