Marius Bakke <mba...@fastmail.com> writes: > ng0 <n...@we.make.ritual.n0.is> writes: > >> + (arguments >> + `(;; XXX: make 'check' is run with 'make all', however the 'all' phase >> takes >> + ;; 30+ minutes on a AMD FX-4300 Quad-Core Processor buildmachine. >> + #:tests? #f > > 30 minutes isn't bad, we have packages that takes longer. As long as it > prints something to the console, it won't time out on slow machines > either (but they will hopefully get substitutes from Hydra!).
I suspect it will be much longer, but I can enable it and let it run today, see how much computing time it takes. > The #:test-target seems to be 'test', by the way. > >> + (inputs >> + `(("python" ,python))) > > Does it reference python at runtime, or is it only used for building? runtime: <DD>Build, install, and test Python* API for Intel TBB. See <A HREF="../python/index.html">details here</A>. > You can check for references with `guix gc -R /gnu/store/<item>`. > >> Thanks, that's what I had at first. What about the product name, what is >> it described as? Should I refer to debians description? I remember we >> don't include © and ® in synopsis and description, but company name + >> product works? > > I think I would phrase it as: "Threading Building Blocks (Intel TBB) is > a C++ library for writing parallel programs that take full advantage of > multicore performance." Okay > ~marius > -- ng0 For non-prism friendly talk find me on http://www.psyced.org