There were two things to fix:
- Boost started shipping libboost_python.so as libboost_python{Major}{Minor}
- Make sure that mapnik and boost link to the correct version of python.
This adds roccat-tools and one required dependency (libgaminggear),
which I had laying around since June 2016 but never submitted upstream
until now.
The tools are required if you want to configure one of the hardware
devices from the manufactorer ROCCAT.
Builds for both have been tested against i686-linux, x86_64-linux and
aarch64-linux.
I had this package along with libgaminggear laying around since June
2016[1] and basically just did the setup for the ROCCAT device once and
never touched it again since then. However, I got requests from other
users who might need this, so I decided to finally upstream it along
with using the latest versions.
There were a few hardcoded paths to fix, like eg. /etc/xdg and another
one that used /var/lib/roccat, the latter I moved into $XDG_DATA_HOME
instead.
The reason why I put it in os-specific/linux is that the official site
explicitly states that it's for Linux only and I specified the platforms
attribute accordingly.
[1]: https://gist.github.com/aszlig/3a01c0c23254a68c2be4c6df59e26862
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@nix.build>
Cc: @devhell
This is a requirement for roccat-tools, which is going to be introduced
soon.
The reason why I'm using propagatedBuildInputs here is because the
pkg-config file lists *all* of the dependencies in Requires and
Requires.private, so those libraries are needed whenever any software
uses that library.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@nix.build>
Before, providers were only built indirectly. Since proviers don't
depend on terraform to build they can be moved into their own collection
of packages. This also has the advantage that they can be reached
directly using an attribute path (Eg: terraform-providers.nixos).
Co-authored-by: Wael Nasreddine <wael.nasreddine@gmail.com>
The per-version `default.nix`es just fill in default arguments. It is
much more useful to have the `.override` from the inner `callPackage`,
for finer control. Converting the outer `callPackage` to a plain import
makes the inner one the only one, revealing its `.override`.