The examples fail with an opengl related issue:
Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
"SimpleOpenGL3App::SimpleOpenGL3App(char const*, int, int, bool)", referenced from:
_main in main_opengl_single_example.o
"_useShadowMap", referenced from:
GL_ShapeDrawer::drawScene(btDiscreteDynamicsWorld const*, bool, int) in GL_ShapeDrawer.o
ld: symbol(s) not found for architecture x86_64
And the tests need an extra dependencly, possibley related to
https://github.com/bulletphysics/bullet3/issues/819
ld: library not found for -lBussIK
/cc ZHF #45961
Create the top-level packages attribute
'hylafaxplus' that builds HylaFAX+ .
Note:
The nobody uid and the nogroup gid
are hardcoded in the package.
The package build recipe file
contains options to modify these ids.
See https://hydra.nixos.org/build/80998335.
Upstream doesn't support QT 5.11 ATM which broke compilation:
```
src/dialogs/savedialog.cpp: In constructor ‘SaveDialog::SaveDialog(QWidget*, Qt::WindowFlags)’:
src/dialogs/savedialog.cpp:37:34: error: invalid use of incomplete type ‘class QButtonGroup’
group = new QButtonGroup(this);
```
The Arch community recommends to use an older QT version to fix
this (https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/chessx/).
Furthermore the `QT_PLUGIN_PATH` wasn't set properly which broke the
runtime since QT coudln't find the `xcb` plugin:
```
qt.qpa.plugin: Could not find the Qt platform plugin "xcb" in ""
This application failed to start because no Qt platform plugin could be initialized.
Reinstalling the application may fix this problem.
```
Finally, some minor style fixes were made for consistent indentation.
Addresses #45960
- our version is from 2015
- it doesn't build
- upstream project is dead, last release 2012, last commit Oct 2016.
- used by only 1 nixpkgs package: `boo`, marked broken since 2016.
Fixes the build for `python3Packages.trio' for the next ZHF iteration.
Please refer to the Hydra build for further reference: https://hydra.nixos.org/build/80617356
`python3Packages.sniffio` is needed for the build, otherwise the build
aborts with an error like this:
```
Could not find a version that satisfies the requirement sniffio (from trio==0.6.0) (from versions: )
No matching distribution found for sniffio (from trio==0.6.0)
```
See #45960
This aims to make the `weechat` package even more configurable. It
allows to specify scripts and commands using the `configure` function
inside a `weechat.override` expression.
The package can be configured like this:
```
with import <nixpkgs> { };
weechat.override {
plugins = { availablePlugins, ... }: {
plugins = builtins.attrValues availablePlugins;
init = ''
/set foo bar
/server add freenode chat.freenode.org
'';
scripts = [ "/path/to/script.py" ];
};
}
```
All commands are passed to `weechat --run-command "/set foo bar;/server ..."`.
The `plugins' attribute is not necessarily required anymore, if it's
sufficient to add `init' commands, the `plugins' will be
`builtins.attrValues availablePlugins' by default.
Additionally the result contains `weechat` and `weechat-headless`
(introduced in WeeChat 2.1) now.
Intuitively, one cares mainly about the host platform: Platforms differ
in meaningful ways but compilation is morally a pure process and
probably doesn't care, or those difference are already abstracted away.
@Dezgeg also empirically confirmed that > 95% of checks are indeed of
the host platform.
Yet these attributes in the old cross infrastructure were defined to be
the build platform, for expediency. And this was never before changed.
(For native builds build and host coincide, so it isn't clear what the
intention was.)
Fixing this doesn't affect native builds, since again they coincide. It
also doesn't affect cross builds of anything in Nixpkgs, as these are no
longer used. It could affect external cross builds, but I deem that
unlikely as anyone thinking about cross would use more explicit
attributes for clarity, all the more so because the rarity of inspecting
the build platform.
Introduce a `skawarePackages.buildPackage` function that contains the
common setup, removing a lot of duplication.
In particular, we require that the build directory has to be empty
after the `fixupPhase`, to make sure every relevant file is moved to
the outputs.
A next step would be to deduplicate the `configureFlags` attributes
and only require a `skawareInputs` field.
The github repository was downloaded instead of the pypi repository
for testing (needed `conftest.py`). Major work was done on the
underlying dependencies to make distributed work on python 2.7,
3+. Note that the test **do** take a significant amount of time (10-15
minutes).
- moved to `python-modules`
- compatible with 2.7, 3+
- all tests pass (previously tests were not run)
I don't know when we can/should remove them, but this at least gets
people to stop using them. The preferred alternatives also date back to
17.09 so writing forward-compatable code without extra conditions is
easy.
Beginning with these as they are the least controversial.
* libreoffice-still: -> 6.0.6.2
* (newer than our current 'fresh!')
* libreoffice-fresh: -> 6.1.0.3
* 6.1.1(.1) is currently pre-release, FWIW
* Use normal gcc, not gcc5
* dropping 'glibc' from buildInputs fixed this (?)
* remove many fixes/touchups/workarounds/hacks
* hopefully everything still works for everyone
* disable online update since that seems unlikely to work anyway
* fix autogen/configure invocations
* disable libnumbertext in 6.1.x since not packaged
* drop 'touch solenv/inc/target.mk' as unclear what it was for
and doesn't seem to be currently needed
* cleanup link gen a bit[1]
* split checks to check phase
[1]
primary motivation was to stop creating links like:
'libreoffice-6.0.5.2/src/-libxslt-1.1.32.tar.gz' -> '/nix/store/503v5hmhm430bld0h078gacmkniwdllr-libxslt-1.1.32.tar.gz'
'libreoffice-6.0.5.2/src/libxslt-1.1.32.tar.gz' -> '/nix/store/503v5hmhm430bld0h078gacmkniwdllr-libxslt-1.1.32.tar.gz'
This is mostly accomplished by simply using the 'md5name' field
which the python script kindly generates for us
(including the use of non-md5 if md5 is not set or empty).
This, apparently, is not an official release (it's tagged, but the tarball is not
available on the official site), but this repo is the official repo mentioned on
the official site.
This fixes a bunch of very annoying bugs present in 0.99.4, e.g.
```
$ FBReader filename
```
does not crash anymore. Yay!
- switch source to kernel.org
- libnfsidmap 2.3.2 is built from the nfs-utils source,
put it in nfs-utils.lib
- split outputs
- adapt sssd, the only other package using libnfsidmap
This package was marked as broken since
9cb0b49673.
Reason: The package is outdated and keeping up with the beta releases
isn't really worth it (there are regular stable releases).
this version is deprecated and no longer maintained by upstream:
https://awesomewm.org/download/
Two years should have been enough for people to upgrade.
- Move out of pkgs/top-level/python-packages.nix into
pkgs/development/python-modules/python-efl/default.nix.
- Add dependency on dbus-python.
- Remove hardeningDisable.
- Update some meta attributes.
* bunny: init at 1.1
Motivation for this change
Pretty useful not to have to think about what system you're on when
doing basic (un)installation tasks.
* Fixed typo
This has been not touched in 6 years. Let's remove it to cause less
problems when adding new cross-compiling infrastructure.
This also simplify gcc significantly.
- default coreutils is stripped of /share/ (11 -> 2 MiB)
- coreutils-full retains /share/ and adds openssl for faster *sum tools
- NixOS systemPackages contains coreutils-full
- *Support parameter defaults are moved inside
(it seemed confusing to have `? false` and "at once" with `? isLinux`)
Closure considerations:
+ typical build-time closure will get lighter by ~9 MiB
- typical closure of NixOS installation will grow by ~2 MiB,
due to referring to both versions. I think it would be possible to
re-use most of the utils between the two versions, but the expression
would get much more complex.
I considered having stdenv with minimal coreutils and the default
`coreutils` attribute being full, but it turned out there were too many
trivial references in nixpkgs, so it didn't seem easy to keep rebuild
impact of openssl from growing significantly.