guix-mirrors/guix/build-system.scm
Nicolas Graves 4a33614dd9
build-system: Introduce @* macro for lazy module resolution.
* guix/build-system.scm (@*): New macro for runtime module resolution.
* guix/build-system/agda.scm (default-agda): Use @* instead of
resolve-interface and module-ref.
* guix/build-system/android-ndk.scm (default-android-build,
default-android-googletest): Likewise.
* guix/build-system/ant.scm (default-jdk, default-ant, default-zip):
Likewise.
* guix/build-system/cargo.scm (default-rust): Likewise.
* guix/build-system/chicken.scm (default-chicken): Likewise.
* guix/build-system/composer.scm (default-php,
default-composer-classloader): Likewise.
* guix/build-system/dub.scm (default-ldc, default-dub,
default-pkg-config, default-ld-gold-wrapper): Likewise.
* guix/build-system/elm.scm (default-elm, default-elm-core,
default-elm-json): Likewise.
* guix/build-system/emacs.scm (default-emacs): Likewise.
* guix/build-system/glib-or-gtk.scm (default-glib): Likewise.
* guix/build-system/go.scm (default-go, default-gccgo, make-go-std):
Likewise.
* guix/build-system/haskell.scm (default-haskell): Likewise.
* guix/build-system/julia.scm (default-julia): Likewise.
* guix/build-system/linux-module.scm (default-linux): Likewise.
* guix/build-system/luanti.scm (default-optipng, default-luanti,
default-luanti-game, default-xvfb-run): Likewise. Remove otherwise
unused individual plugin accessor functions.
* guix/build-system/maven.scm (default-maven, default-jdk,
default-maven-plugins): Likewise. Remove otherwise unused individual
plugin accessor functions.
* guix/build-system/meson.scm (default-ninja, default-meson):
Likewise.
* guix/build-system/minify.scm (default-esbuild): Use @* instead of
resolve-interface and module-ref.
* guix/build-system/mix.scm (default-elixir-hex,
default-rebar3, default-elixir): Likewise.
* guix/build-system/node.scm (default-node): Likewise.
* guix/build-system/ocaml.scm (default-ocaml, default-findlib,
default-dune-build-system, default-ocaml4.07,
default-ocaml4.07-findlib ,default-ocaml4.07-dune, default-ocaml4.09,
default-ocaml4.09-findlib, default-ocaml4.09-dune, default-ocaml5.0,
default-ocaml5.0-findlib, default-ocaml5.0-dune): Likewise.
* guix/build-system/perl.scm (default-perl): Likewise.
* guix/build-system/pyproject.scm (default-python): Likewise.
* guix/build-system/qt.scm (default-qtbase): Likewise.
* guix/build-system/r.scm (default-r): Likewise.
* guix/build-system/rakudo.scm (default-rakudo, default-prove6,
default-zef): Likewise.
* guix/build-system/rebar.scm (default-rebar3, default-erlang):
Likewise.
* guix/build-system/renpy.scm (default-renpy): Likewise.
* guix/build-system/ruby.scm (default-ruby): Likewise.
* guix/build-system/scons.scm (default-scons): Likewise.
* guix/build-system/texlive.scm (default-texlive-bin,
texlive-latex-bin): Likewise.
* guix/build-system/tree-sitter.scm (default-guile-json,
default-node, default-tree-sitter, default-tree-sitter-cli): Likewise.
* guix/build-system/vim.scm (default-vim, default-neovim): Likewise.
* guix/build-system/zig.scm (default-zig): Likewise.

Signed-off-by: Ludovic Courtès <ludo@gnu.org>
2025-09-04 12:19:55 +02:00

137 lines
5 KiB
Scheme

;;; GNU Guix --- Functional package management for GNU
;;; Copyright © 2012, 2013, 2014, 2020 Ludovic Courtès <ludo@gnu.org>
;;;
;;; This file is part of GNU Guix.
;;;
;;; GNU Guix is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
;;; under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
;;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at
;;; your option) any later version.
;;;
;;; GNU Guix is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
;;; WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
;;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
;;; GNU General Public License for more details.
;;;
;;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
;;; along with GNU Guix. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
(define-module (guix build-system)
#:use-module (guix records)
#:use-module (srfi srfi-1)
#:use-module (ice-9 match)
#:export (@*
build-system
build-system?
build-system-name
build-system-description
build-system-lower
bag
bag?
bag-name
bag-system
bag-target
bag-build-inputs
bag-host-inputs
bag-target-inputs
bag-outputs
bag-arguments
bag-build
make-bag
build-system-with-c-toolchain))
(define-syntax-rule (@* module name)
"Like (@ MODULE NAME), but resolves at run time."
(module-ref (resolve-interface 'module) 'name))
(define-record-type* <build-system> build-system make-build-system
build-system?
(name build-system-name) ; symbol
(description build-system-description) ; short description
(lower build-system-lower)) ; args ... -> bags
;; "Bags" are low-level representations of "packages". The system and target
;; of a bag is fixed when it's created. This is because build systems may
;; choose inputs as a function of the system and target.
(define-record-type* <bag> bag %make-bag
bag?
(name bag-name) ;string
(system bag-system) ;string
(target bag-target ;string | #f
(default #f))
;; Here we use build/host/target in the sense of the GNU tool chain (info
;; "(autoconf) Specifying Target Triplets").
(build-inputs bag-build-inputs ;list of packages
(default '()))
(host-inputs bag-host-inputs ;list of packages
(default '()))
;; "Target inputs" are packages that are built natively, but that are used
;; by target programs in a cross-compilation environment. Thus, they act
;; like 'inputs' as far as search paths are concerned. The only example of
;; that is the cross-libc: it is an input of 'cross-gcc', thus built
;; natively; yet, we want it to be considered as a target input for the
;; purposes of $CPATH, $LIBRARY_PATH, etc.
(target-inputs bag-target-inputs
(default '()))
(outputs bag-outputs ;list of strings
(default '("out")))
(arguments bag-arguments ;list
(default '()))
(build bag-build)) ;bag -> derivation
(define* (make-bag build-system name
#:key source (inputs '()) (native-inputs '())
(outputs '()) (arguments '())
system target)
"Ask BUILD-SYSTEM to return a 'bag' for NAME, with the given SOURCE,
INPUTS, NATIVE-INPUTS, OUTPUTS, and additional ARGUMENTS. If TARGET is not
#f, it must be a string with the GNU triplet of a cross-compilation target.
This is the mechanism by which a package is \"lowered\" to a bag, which is the
intermediate representation just above derivations."
(match build-system
(($ <build-system> _ description lower)
(apply lower name
#:system system
#:source source
#:inputs inputs
#:native-inputs native-inputs
#:outputs outputs
#:target target
arguments))))
(define (build-system-with-c-toolchain bs toolchain)
"Return a variant of BS, a build system, that uses TOOLCHAIN instead of the
default GNU C/C++ toolchain. TOOLCHAIN must be a list of
inputs (label/package tuples) providing equivalent functionality, such as the
'gcc-toolchain' package."
(define lower
(build-system-lower bs))
(define toolchain-packages
;; These are the GNU toolchain packages pulled in by GNU-BUILD-SYSTEM and
;; all the build systems that inherit from it. Keep the list in sync with
;; 'standard-packages' in (guix build-system gnu).
'("gcc" "binutils" "libc" "libc:static" "ld-wrapper"))
(define (lower* . args)
(let ((lowered (apply lower args)))
(bag
(inherit lowered)
(build-inputs
(append (fold alist-delete
(bag-build-inputs lowered)
toolchain-packages)
toolchain)))))
(build-system
(inherit bs)
(lower lower*)))