The latest release of libyamlcpp in nixpkgs does not build because it
uses an older version of boost than the one in nixpkgs and therefore
expects a particular header file which does not exist in the latest
boost anymore. For this reason, a later (git) version of libyamlcpp is
used here (which actually doesn't even require boost).
The substituteInPlace in the prePatch phase is needed because libevdev
places its headers in non-standard places, meaning Nix cannot normally
find them. The `cut` command removes the first two "-I" characters from
the output of `pkg-config`. This needs to be in the prePatch phase
because otherwise Nix will patch these lines to `/var/empty`, meaning
you would have less specific replacement (in case other lines are also
patched to `/var/empty`).
I wrote the patch. (I believe it is NixOS specific.)
bluez no longer recommends spawning "hciconfig <device> up" from a udev rule as
the main bluez daemon now supports automatically enabling power for all devices.
Reference: http://www.bluez.org/release-of-bluez-5-35/
Otherwise it starts way too early, only to fail and having to restart
until devices are available. It is less wasteful to simply wait until
there's a reasonable chance of success. This is consistent with
upstream.
So far the module only allowed for the ccid driver, but there are a lot
of other PCSC driver modules out there, so let's add an option called
"plugins", which boils down to a store path that links together all the
paths specified.
We don't need to create stuff in /var/lib/pcsc anymore, because we
patched pcsclite to allow setting PCSCLITE_HP_DROPDIR.
Another new option is readerConfig, which is especially useful for
non-USB readers that aren't autodetected.
The systemd service now is no longer Type=forking, because we're now
passing the -f (foreground) option to pcscd.
Tested against a YubiKey 4, SCR335 and a REINER SCT USB reader.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Cc: @wkennington
A sane backend for recent brother scanners.
Depends on the presence of etc files generated by the
nixos module of the same name.
Supports network scanner specification through the
nixos module.
The test only checked for existence of the rule file in the output path
of the rulefile generator.
However, we also need to check whether the basename of the file is also
the one we're currently searching for.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>