95c8277701
PR #26007 used these to avoid causing a mass rebuild. Now that we know things work, we do that to clean up.
54 lines
1.8 KiB
Nix
54 lines
1.8 KiB
Nix
{ stdenv
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, fetchurl, lzip
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, hostPlatform, buildPlatform
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}:
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let inherit (stdenv.lib) optionals; in
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stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
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name = "ddrescue-1.22";
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src = fetchurl {
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url = "mirror://gnu/ddrescue/${name}.tar.lz";
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sha256 = "19qhx9ggkkjl0g3a88g501wmybkj1y4n5lm5kp0km0blh0p7p189";
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};
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nativeBuildInputs = [ lzip ];
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doCheck = hostPlatform == buildPlatform;
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meta = with stdenv.lib; {
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description = "GNU ddrescue, a data recovery tool";
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longDescription =
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'' GNU ddrescue is a data recovery tool. It copies data from one file
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or block device (hard disc, cdrom, etc) to another, trying hard to
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rescue data in case of read errors.
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The basic operation of ddrescue is fully automatic. That is, you
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don't have to wait for an error, stop the program, read the log, run
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it in reverse mode, etc.
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If you use the logfile feature of ddrescue, the data is rescued very
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efficiently (only the needed blocks are read). Also you can
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interrupt the rescue at any time and resume it later at the same
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point.
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Automatic merging of backups: If you have two or more damaged copies
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of a file, cdrom, etc, and run ddrescue on all of them, one at a
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time, with the same output file, you will probably obtain a complete
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and error-free file. This is so because the probability of having
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damaged areas at the same places on different input files is very
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low. Using the logfile, only the needed blocks are read from the
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second and successive copies.
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'';
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homepage = http://www.gnu.org/software/ddrescue/ddrescue.html;
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license = licenses.gpl3Plus;
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platforms = platforms.all;
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maintainers = with maintainers; [ domenkozar fpletz ];
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};
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}
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