Socket library built in C but provides bindings in many languages.
Highly efficient and easy to use.
[@bjornfor: whitespace fixes, quote shell variables and add meta.platforms]
This variant uses the more Mac-friendly aqua driver, but it requires
that you separately install the AquaTerm package.
Note that AquaTerm is open source and could perhaps be later included
as a nix derivation. If that happens, it would be nice to remove the
gnuplot_aquaterm top-level attribute and just make it the default.
- It now uses JavaScript for configuration (only),
so I had to "convert" config for NetworkManager.
- I tested suspend/restart/(un)mount on KDE/Xfce,
Phreedom tested NetworkManager config conversion.
The firmware file needs to be downloaded or extracted from the windows
driver file and configured in nixpkgs.config e.g.:
sane.snapscanFirmware = /firmware/esfw41.bin;
The default setting for extraLibs used to be the set of modules that come with
python by default but aren't usually enabled in our standard python derivation
because they require additional libraries. This meant that users who want to
*add* libraries to that set had to use a fairly complicated override, to add
more entries without loosing the ones set by default.
After this patch, the "standard libraries" such as "curses' are listed in
stdLibs while the extraLibs argument remains empty by default. This allows
users to override extraLibs without overriding the standard libraries.
Furthermore, the wrapper environment can be messed around with in an
additional 'postBuild' step. One nice application of this build step is
to patch scripts and binaries to use the wrapped python interpreter
instead of the pristine one, thereby enabling them to pick up all
modules that have been configured. The following example shows how this
is done for the 'pylint' utility:
pkgs.python27Full.override {
extraLibs = [pkgs.pylint];
postBuild = ''
cd ${pkgs.pylint}/bin
for i in *; do
rm $out/bin/$i
sed -r -e "s|^exec |exec $out/bin/python -- |" <$i >$out/bin/$i
chmod +x $out/bin/$i
done;
'';
};
There's a zlib version included with milkytracker,
but there's no makefiles for it. I've only included
the header here, but it fails at link-time with
several 'undefined reference' errors, which simply
means it can't find the definitions, e.g. compiled
zlib.
There's bug reports on other package systems although
unfortunately still unresolved.
https://bugs.archlinux.org/task/31324http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-ports/2013-March/082180.html
I actually had this breeding in my nixpkgs overrides for a year and only
recently took the time to fix it and thus revive my video feeds :-)
The package uses a patch which is removing the dependency on gconf and
switches to storage within a shelve in ~/.miro/config instead.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
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>
To prevent multiple Qt libraries when developing with a custom one, the Qt
support can now be activated by directly supplying the Qt libraries as an
argument (qtLib).
qtSDK and qtFull users/developers now just have to define an override such
as the following one in order to use it inside their development
environment:
vtk.override { qtLib = qt4SDK; };
The previous behavior is still the same for vtk and vtkWithQt4 end-users.
Change-Id: I517762d4ff7de46d32cc46e6e725fd62737caa52
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.
Consider this as a first step towards the integration of Qt5 into nixpkgs,
it does not yet intends to replace Qt4 on every packages even if possible.
My goal here is to have a first derivation in common between people who
needs qt5 for development purposes.
The derivation has been written from scratch but I took care to read at the
version 4 to re-integrate some patches which are still compatible. However,
I did not had enough time to test gtkStyle and flashplayerFix as I do not
use any of them. Also, OSX users will have to do some extra work because
I do not have any mac.
Finally, as some configure flags have changed and in an hope to provide a
clear package definition before it becomes mature, I voluntary added some
flags which are default. Once every option will be mastered, we will just
have to redo a pass on qt5 configure flags and remove the ones which are
set by default.
To give the ability to use a different Qt version than the default one
(which can build 3 different times Qt Libraries if we mixed the default
one, the qtcreator one and the version including all the examples and the
docs).
Right now a developer can choose to directly install the QtSDK which
includes a "full" (developerBuild + docs + examples) Qt version and uses
it to build QtCreator.
The possibility to only install QtCreator and its previous behavior has
been kept for flexibility purposes (we do not need to force someone on the
SDK approach).
FriBID is an open source software for the Swedish e-id system called
BankID. FriBID also supports processor architectures and Linux/BSD
distributions that the official software doesn't support.
https://fribid.se/index.en.html
FriBID plugin is a firefoxWrapper plugin. Enabled by setting:
nixpkgs.config.enableFriBIDPlugin = true
Kept the old hacks where they don't break the build in case they things
they fix are still relevant.
I checked that the upgrade doesn't break:
1) Asymptote and EProver builds.
2) My XeLaTeX demo from configurations/ repository.
3) Some of my own files.
The upgrade fixes problems with simultaneous use of 3D and LaTeX labels
in Asymptote.
Please provide a test that worked previously and is broken now if you
need to revert this update or its parts.
Features:
+ configurable via environment variables
+ can skip the actual launching of the lisp implementation (source it
with NIX_LISP_SKIP_CODE=1 to get all the settings)
+ currently supports SBCL, CLisp, ECL
+ determines lisp implementation from NIX_LISP_COMMAND variable or
from buildInputs
+ sets ASDF search path for packages using buildInputs
Somehow Dwarf Fortress suddenly started failing to use our libpng (or
zlib). I tried all possible combinations (supplying them via
LD_LIBRARY_PATH in the script) but it just won't work.
This solution was found in the Archlinux bug tracker: It just symlinks
all problematic .png files to their .bmp counterparts. It's ugly and
*sadly* breaks tileset support (unless you convert them to bmp) but I
think it's acceptable, as the whole expression is pretty problematic
in terms of purity.
Let's hope the next release of Dwarf Fortress will be easier to
support.
(fixes #710)
The current asciidoc expression is impure; it relies on several tools to
be found in PATH at runtime. This commit adds a enableStandardFeatures
parameter that, if true, pulls in all dependencies and patches asciidoc
to contain full paths to the tools.
I've set enableStandardFeatures = false for the existing asciidoc
attribute so that the closure size stays unchanged, at 255 MiB. The new
asciidocFull attribute (with enableStandardFeatures = true) has a
closure size of 1.5 GiB.
imagemagick, transfig, inkscape, fontconfig and ghostscript are missing
dependencies of dblatex. Instead of adding all those dependencies to the
existing dblatex attribute, make a new dblatexFull attribute for that.
Also pass --use-python-path at install time so that script shebangs end
up with #!/path/to/python instead of #!/path/to/env python (which is
impure when not run in a wrapper).
This reverts commit aef81d6eb6.
It's really not good to have every little package that depends on
asciidoc to pull in 1.5 GiB in dependencies (such as Lilypond).
The current asciidoc expression is impure; it relies on several tools to
be found in PATH at runtime. This commit adds a enableStandardFeatures
parameter that pulls in all dependencies and patches asciidoc to contain
full paths to the tools.
enableStandardFeatures defaults to true because asciidoc may attempt to
call all tools in its default configuration. With all standard features,
the closure size increases from 255 MiB to 1.5 GiB. Set
enableStandardFeatures = false if you want a minimal asciidoc.