uboot: (firmwareOdroidC2/C4) don't invoke patch tool, use patches = [] instead

https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/stdenv/generic/setup.sh#L948
this can do it nicely.

Signed-off-by: Anton Arapov <anton@deadbeef.mx>
This commit is contained in:
Anton Arapov 2021-04-03 12:58:10 +02:00 committed by Alan Daniels
commit 56de2bcd43
30691 changed files with 3076956 additions and 0 deletions

View file

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{ lib, stdenv
, buildPythonPackage
, fetchPypi
, isPy3k
, pkgs
}:
buildPythonPackage rec {
pname = "pysqlite";
version = "2.8.3";
src = fetchPypi {
inherit pname version;
sha256 = "17d3335863e8cf8392eea71add33dab3f96d060666fe68ab7382469d307f4490";
};
# Need to use the builtin sqlite3 on Python 3
disabled = isPy3k;
# Since the `.egg' file is zipped, the `NEEDED' of the `.so' files
# it contains is not taken into account. Thus, we must explicitly make
# it a propagated input.
propagatedBuildInputs = [ pkgs.sqlite ];
patchPhase = ''
substituteInPlace "setup.cfg" \
--replace "/usr/local/include" "${pkgs.sqlite.dev}/include" \
--replace "/usr/local/lib" "${pkgs.sqlite.out}/lib"
${lib.optionalString (!stdenv.isDarwin) ''export LDSHARED="$CC -pthread -shared"''}
'';
meta = with lib; {
homepage = "https://pysqlite.org/";
description = "Python bindings for the SQLite embedded relational database engine";
longDescription = ''
pysqlite is a DB-API 2.0-compliant database interface for SQLite.
SQLite is a relational database management system contained in
a relatively small C library. It is a public domain project
created by D. Richard Hipp. Unlike the usual client-server
paradigm, the SQLite engine is not a standalone process with
which the program communicates, but is linked in and thus
becomes an integral part of the program. The library
implements most of SQL-92 standard, including transactions,
triggers and most of complex queries.
pysqlite makes this powerful embedded SQL engine available to
Python programmers. It stays compatible with the Python
database API specification 2.0 as much as possible, but also
exposes most of SQLite's native API, so that it is for example
possible to create user-defined SQL functions and aggregates
in Python.
'';
license = licenses.bsd3;
};
}