In order to build the package databases that we will use when compiling
a Haskell package, we iterate over the relevant dependencies, and if
they contain a package db, we copy its contents over.
So far so good, except when one of those dependencies is GHC. This
doesn't happen ordinarily, but it will happen when we construct the
package database for compiling `Setup.hs`. This is compiled for the
build architecture, so we get the build deps, including both the native
and the cross GHC (if there is one).
In this case, we end up copying the packages from the GHC's package
database. This is at best unnecessary, since we will get those packages
from the GHC when we compile with it.
At worst, however, this is semantically questionable. We can end up
having multiple copies of e.g. Cabal with the same version, but
(potentially) different contents. At the moment, GHC will expose one of
these at semi-random depending on which one it looks at "first".
However, there is a MR open [in
GHC](https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/merge_requests/545) which as a
side effect will instead expose both, leading to ambiguous module
warnings (which is not unreasonable, since it *is* ambiguous).
So what can we do about it? The simplest solution is just to not copy
the package databases from GHC. GHC is special in this regard, so I
think it's okay to treat it specially.
This PR should have no effect on anything now, but will prevent any
breakage when/if the GHC patch lands.
Closes https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/57706.
Announcements with details of changes
can be found on the mailing list,
and since IIRC these are all from
this month they all are listed here:
https://lists.x.org/archives/xorg-announce/2019-March/thread.html
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Grab luit from mirror because our fetcher's
default behavior doesn't get along with
invisible-island's FTP server apparently (?).
Or perhaps server is problematic, not sure.
Example URL:
ftp://ftp.invisible-island.net/luit/luit-20190106.tgz
* Using curl or wget:
"Server denied you to change to the given directory"
(or so)
* Using curl with `--ftp-mode nocwd`: success
curl's manpage suggests this is less-compliant behavior
used for speed, offering a third option that's more
likely to work but not quite as fast.
So it seems like the more compliant behavior is
rejected but the fast behavior is accepted.
Dunno, hopefully it'll be on a content-addressed
server soon enough so it doesn't matter as much :).
Hash used here matches manually-fetched from official URL
as well as from the mirror.