The sha256 has changed upstream for 30.0.1566.2 and in addition there is
a new version available, so let's switch to the new version.
Unfortunately the user namespaces sandbox patch doesn't apply anymore
because of http://crbug.com/242290, so this adds a rebased version on
top of the current trunk of Chromium.
In order to build version 30, file is now needed as an additional build
input, because it is used by gyp.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
So, chromium 30 entered the dev release channel, so the overview of the
current versions is:
stable: 28.0.1500.52 -> 28.0.1500.71 (builds fine, tested)
beta: 28.0.1500.52 -> 29.0.1547.22 (builds fine, tested)
dev: 29.0.1547.0 -> 30.0.1566.2 (builds fine, tested)
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
As requested by some users, we finally have support for cloud sync,
spelling, geolocation and a lot more of the services that require API
keys from Google. Details about which services are involved can be found
at: http://www.chromium.org/developers/how-tos/api-keys
Thanks to Paweł Hajdan <phajdan@google.com> for giving us permission to
distribute the API keys with our build of Chromium:
> Note that the public Terms of Service do not allow distribution of the
> API keys in any form. To make this work for you, on behalf of Google
> Chrome Team I am providing you with:
> Official permission to include Google API keys in your packages and to
> distribute these packages. The remainder of the Terms of Service for
> each API applies, but at this time you are not bound by the
> requirement to only access the APIs for personal and development use,
> and Additional quota for each API in an effort to adequately support
> your users.
As noted in the source: Those keys are for use in NixOS/nixpkgs ONLY!
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
We already enable VNC and SDL support by default and adding spice only
increases the closure size from 513 MB to 518 MB.
Closure size:
du -sch $(nix-store -qR ./result)
Slic3r is a G-code generator for 3D printers.
- Math-Clipper and Boost-Geometry-Utils have been bumped to satisfy
Slic3r.
- Slic3r has problems with perl 5.16 due to a locale issue (comma vs
period in floating point numbers). So we use perl 5.14.
- The tests fail, so we skip them. According to the author of Slic3r,
that should be safe:
"Tests failed because of a typo when the 0.9.10b tag was applied.
You can safely ignore the test results, Slic3r will work."
See https://github.com/alexrj/Slic3r/issues/1303
For reference, the errors look like this:
Use of uninitialized value $deg in numeric eq (==) at /tmp/nix-build-perl-slic3r-0.9.10b.drv-0/git-export/t/../lib/Slic3r/TriangleMesh.pm line 328.
# Looks like your test exited with 255 before it could output anything.
For some reason, SANE suddenly stopped recognizing my scanner recently:
| $ scanimage -L
|
| No scanners were identified. If you were expecting something different,
| check that the scanner is plugged in, turned on and detected by the
| sane-find-scanner tool (if appropriate). Please read the documentation
| which came with this software (README, FAQ, manpages).
I was able to remedy this issue by building SANE with the latest version
of the backends package from Git, by adding the following override to
~/.nixpkgs/config.nix:
| {
| packageOverrides = pkgs:
| {
| saneBackends = pkgs.saneBackendsGit;
| };
| }
Easytag has moved to gnome.org and thus this commit also updates and cleans up a
few meta attributes. More information about the move can be found in the
announcement:
https://mail.gnome.org/archives/easytag-list/2012-November/msg00006.html
In order to get it to compile, we need to do a bit of patching, for example the
configure script tries to find libid3tag through pkg-config, but unfortunately
libid3tag doesn't have a *.pc script, so we're patching it out of the configure
script and use NIX_LDFLAGS to inject the library during linking (note the "-lz"
- it's a propagated dependency of libid3tag).
Also added for MP4 support: taglib.
Thanks to @devhell for the notification of the new upstream release.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Thanks to @jcumming for notifying me about this in #nixos:
03:47 < jack_c> aszlig: chromium builds with -Werror by default.
03:47 < jack_c> Putting: werror = "";
03:48 < jack_c> into gypFlags fixes that..
...
03:52 < jack_c> aszlig: agree -Werror is a good linting tool, but it should
probably disabled for distribution.
So, I guess it makes sense in our case, especially because different GCC
versions will issue different warnings.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>