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[bug#27628] [PATCH 3/3] gnu: maxima: Ensure gcc and binutils available a


From: Kei Kebreau
Subject: [bug#27628] [PATCH 3/3] gnu: maxima: Ensure gcc and binutils available at runtime.
Date: Tue, 18 Jul 2017 10:11:00 -0400
User-agent: Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/25.2 (gnu/linux)

address@hidden (Ludovic Courtès) writes:

> Hi Kei,
>
> Kei Kebreau <address@hidden> skribis:
>
>> address@hidden (Ludovic Courtès) writes:
>>
>>> Kei Kebreau <address@hidden> skribis:
>>>
>>>> + ;; Ensure that Maxima will have access to GCC and its required
>>>> +               ;; components at runtime.
>>>
>>> In fact, if it’s an optional feature, it would be better to take GCC &
>>> co. from $PATH, because GCC is a huge dependency.  (Same for the gcl
>>> change.)
>>>
>>> Thoughts?
>>>
>>
>> I started on this patchset because Guix's Maxima cannot graph functions.
>> This feature relies on GCL's 'compile' function. The 'compile' function
>> seems to be a Common Lisp standard since at least the publication of the
>> CLtL2 standard. Maxima assumes (correctly) that this function is present
>> and relies on it for various base functionalities (compiling Maxima math
>> functions to compiled Lisp functions, graphing, etc.).
>
> Good point, ‘compile’ is standard CL.
>
> So yes, that alone is probably a good reason to keep references to GCC
> and Binutils (maybe add a comment explaining this.)  Sorry for holding
> it back!
>
>> I turns out that fixing the underlying issue with GCL removes the need
>> for GCC's presence at runtime, but binutils is still necessary due to
>> Maxima using the 'compile' function from GCL directly. This stems from
>> the GCC package not finding the binutils at runtime, i.e.
>>
>>     guix environment --pure --ad-hoc gcc -- gcc hello-world.c
>>
>> returns
>>
>>     gcc: error trying to exec 'as': execvp: No such file or directory
>>
>> but
>>
>>     guix environment --pure --ad-hoc gcc -- gcc -S hello-world.c
>
> You would need ‘gcc-toolchain’ rather than ‘gcc’ here.
>
> Thank you,
> Ludo’.

Is gcc-toolchain a package one can use as an input? lisp.scm fails to
load properly when I use the commencement.scm module. Could this be due
to the circular dependency problem mentioned in the "Commentary" section
of commencement.scm?

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