Compiles fine on linux i686 and amd64. Adding myself as maintainer, even
though I'm not using the package by myself, but a friend is using it for
DJing from a NixOS live system I'm maintaining.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
This uses a patch from Gentoo to disable Java support for now, as it is
not needed for supporting Mixxx (which is the package I'm preparing).
Hopefully, the patch will be applied upstream so we can safely drop it
here.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Currently, the command btrfs scrub start <filesystem> attempts to invoke the pthread_cancel
routine and ends with an error melibgcc_sssage about it being missing. This prevents btrfs
scrub status from maintaining proper statistics about the running scrub.
Close #1127.
* There now is full support for building Haskell packages as shared libraries
for GHC versions 7.4.2 or later. The Cabal builder recognizes the following
attributes:
- enableSharedLibraries configures Cabal to build of shared libraries in
addition to static ones. This option requires that all dependencies of
the package have been compiled for use in shared libraries, too.
- enableSharedExecutables configures Cabal to prefer shared libraries when
linking executables.
The default values for these attributes are arguments to the haskellPackages
expression.
* Haskell builds now run in a LANG="en_US.UTF-8" environment to avoid plenty
of build and test suite errors. Without this setting, GHC seems unable to
deal with the UTF-8 character encoding that's generally considered standard
in the Haskell world.
* The Cabal builder supports a new attribute 'testTarget' to specify the exact
set of tests to be run during the check phase.
* The ghc-wrapper attribute ghcVersion has been removed. Instead, we use the
ghc.version attribute, which exists in unwrapped GHC derivations, too.
xc3sprog is command-line tools for programming FPGAs, microcontrollers
and PROMs via JTAG.
Homepage: http://xc3sprog.sourceforge.net/
I'm using the latest from subversion as xc3sprog doesn't seem to make
proper releases. There are only a few seemingly random snapshots at
sourceforge. And these snapshots are built binary packages, not source
archives.
NOTE: I haven't tested this on any hardware yet.