Instead of using execlineb to define the execlineb wrapper, we replace
it by a little C wrapper.
This is mainly done because on non-Linux systems (i.e. mainly macOS),
it is impossible for a shebang interpreter to be itself a shebang
script.
It is, however, perfectly fine to have a chain that goes
shebang -> ELF -> shebang -> ELF -> …
Co-Authored-By: Laurent Bercot <ska-skaware@skarnet.org>
Introduces the `execlineb-with-builtins` flag, which when
true (default) will add all execline builtins to the PATH of
`execlineb`.
This is usually what users expect.
If the flag is set to `false`, the unpatched execline derivation is
returned instead.
Using wrapProgram adds a call to `bash` around every call
of `execline`, which clearly misses the basic idea behind
`execline` in the first place …
This reverts commit b64d25c447.
Testdisk/Photorec has been packaged twice. This deduplicates
the packages by consolidating the packages into one and throwing
an error upon use of the outdated package.
this also adds qphotorec, which was previously not built and ensures
it's wrapped correctly.
Please note that I took the liberty to merge the maintainers lists.
WoeUSB contains a writeback buffering workaround for 64-bit Linux
systems, however this workaround relies on setting
/proc/sys/vm/dirty_background_bytes which no longer works on newer
versions of the Linux kernel.
elementary OS's ecosystem is curated around Ubuntu's LTS releases.
This means the development platform for their curated applications
always includes a LTS version of vala (in 18.04 it's 0.40).
Because of how vala development works it suspect some of these
applications to have serious issues if complied with the latest vala.
However in the past year or so, for Pantheon at least, I don't think
their applications will have much issues with latest vala, and if there
is I don't think they'd be difficult to fix. In this single regard they've
become more responsive since their preferred language is vala.
As for the curated applications I have less of this confidence in.
So I'd have to be accept less applications, but that's something
I'm willing to compromise on. And this is easily reversible or
could be done on a per-application basis. And nix already makes
this trivial.