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authorLudovic Courtès <ludo@gnu.org>2019-07-05 22:29:47 +0200
committerLudovic Courtès <ludo@gnu.org>2019-07-05 22:30:27 +0200
commitcce7b037084fe6680803850aed249950e0fdba09 (patch)
treeea1e3008bccc2771ec295156ab0676f1551bc23e
parent6b4a4318434522372a5f2c7476fbc1bacbcee278 (diff)
Revert "gnu: Add sbcl-cl-xmlspam."
The sbcl-cl-xmlspam package currently has no license information, which makes it non-free. Furthermore, the invalid 'license' field prevents evaluation from completing. This reverts commit ec982546941b59fdd14e0b08f023baf2e75d71a3.
-rw-r--r--gnu/packages/lisp.scm29
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 29 deletions
diff --git a/gnu/packages/lisp.scm b/gnu/packages/lisp.scm
index 64e5a16939..3aa2429595 100644
--- a/gnu/packages/lisp.scm
+++ b/gnu/packages/lisp.scm
@@ -6579,32 +6579,3 @@ This system contains the CFFI foreign slot access extension.")))
(description "Trivia is a pattern matching compiler that is compatible
with Optima, another pattern matching library for Common Lisp. It is meant to
be faster and more extensible than Optima.")))
-
-(define-public sbcl-cl-xmlspam
- (package
- (name "sbcl-cl-xmlspam")
- (build-system asdf-build-system/sbcl)
- (version "0.0.0")
- (home-page "https://common-lisp.net/project/cl-xmlspam/")
- (source
- (origin
- (method url-fetch)
- (uri "http://common-lisp.net/project/cl-xmlspam/cl-xmlspam.tgz")
- (file-name (string-append name "-" version))
- (sha256
- (base32
- "0r0pjh1yjcj2izxlbd3f3bwfwxllhag56wz8ijdl6442pf3gdazh"))))
- (inputs
- `(("cxml" ,sbcl-cxml)
- ("cl-ppcre" ,sbcl-cl-ppcre)))
- (synopsis "Concise, regexp-like pattern matching on streaming XML for Common Lisp")
- (description "CXML does an excellent job at parsing XML elements, but what
-do you do when you have a XML file that's larger than you want to fit in
-memory, and you want to extract some information from it? Writing code to deal
-with SAX events, or even using Klacks, quickly becomes tedious.
-@code{cl-xmlspam} (for XML Stream PAttern Matcher) is designed to make it easy
-to write code that mirrors the structure of the XML that it's parsing. It
-also makes it easy to shift paradigms when necessary - the usual Lisp control
-constructs can be used interchangeably with pattern matching, and the full
-power of CXML is available when necessary.")
- (license #f)))