Since the program to be wrapped is already in a different path than
$out/bin, we don't need the complicated dance that wrapProgram uses to
put the wrapper in the same location as the original program. Just tell
makeWrapper to put the wrapper in the final desired output location
instead.
This package does not work on arbitrary Linux systems, only on platforms
for which upstream has provided prebuilt binaries. Fortunately, we have
a list of the platforms we know how to get binaries for: it's exactly
the ones in the `srcs` set.
* pkgs: refactor needless quoting of homepage meta attribute
A lot of packages are needlessly quoting the homepage meta attribute
(about 1400, 22%), this commit refactors all of those instances.
* pkgs: Fixing some links that were wrongfully unquoted in the previous
commit
* Fixed some instances
As reported on various news sites, and currently
on the skype linux download page it contains:
"Important notice: All Skype for Linux clients version 4.3 and older
will be retired on July 1, 2017. To keep chatting, please install the
latest version of Skype for Linux."
Rsync has its own patched compress function, and to be able to use the `-z` flag, it needs to use that one.
With `-zz` rsync can use an external zlib, but then it can't talk to older rsync versions.
More details at https://bugs.mageia.org/show_bug.cgi?id=13669
The `extraPrefs` parameter is injected verbatim into the mozilla.cfg
file.
Note that the syntax is a superset of the usual prefs.js syntax. The
following procedures are of particular interest:
pref() to set a preference as if it had been toggled in about:config
defaultPref() to set the *default* value of a preference
lockPref() to set a preference & prevent further modification
clearPref() to reset a preference to its default state
Example:
```nix
tor-browser-bundle-bin.override {
extraPrefs = ''
// Increase default security level
pref("extensions.torbutton.security_slider", 2);
'';
}
```