This branch updates node to 0.10.8, as well as updating its
dependencies. It also updates node-packages to use the new style
generated by npm2nix (some packages may have been lost in the switch,
please check!).
Note that 0.10 had some backwards-compatability breaks with 0.8,
particularly for readable streams. Please see the official documentation
for migration help.
Note that I have not yet tested this on darwin (node.js was already
broken there), but will do so soon and fix it if it's broken.
Signed-off-by: Shea Levy <shea@shealevy.com>
Starting with 1.0.0 (which is not released at the time of this commit
but will be before it is pushed), npm2nix takes a JSON file with a list
of names (and optionally version ranges) and generates a data-only (no
functions, no rec, no let, etc.) nix expression representing the
packages with those names and their dependencies.
node-packages.nix now builds its package list from that generated
expression. If a package needs native dependencies as build inputs, they
can be added to the nativeDeps attribute set. If a package cannot be
generated by npm2nix for some reason, it can be added manually to the
set.
I tried to capture the packages represented by the previous
node-packages.nix in the new node-packages.json, but I almost certainly
missed some that will have to be added manually.
Signed-off-by: Shea Levy <shea@shealevy.com>
There is no new upstream version available and the latest upstream release is
still using calls to prehistoric versions of libnotify. Most other distro have
patched this already, so no need to patch again. Patch is from Fedora (which is
the most referenced source seen so far).
Additionally the configure script cannot find the correct path to the codegen
executable, so we're patching it accordingly as well.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
This should clean up the package expression significantly by actually using
explicit input attributes and setting PYTHONPATH and GST_PLUGIN_PATH from
environment variables in the builder.
In addition, this adds a small patch from the upstream Mercurial repository to
add an index.theme to the icons, so Gajim is able to load them correctly from
the store.
With this change, I'm adding myself to the maintainers list as well, because I'm
switching over from TKabber to Gajim.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Eagle is a schematic capture and PCB layout program from CadSoft. This
is proprietary software; CadSoft provide a self-extracting shell script
with embedded tarball of the prebuilt application.
Add the latest Eagle version, 6.4.0.
I've added a small LD_PRELOAD library that redirects operations on the
license file from <eagle_install_path>/bin/eagle.key to
$HOME/.eagle.key. Without this Eagle will never get past the license
dialog (because you cannot write to the nix store).
Eagle also has issues copying its example projects to other locations;
it seems that it wants to preserve the read-only permissions from the
source over to the destination. Because of this it cannot complete the
copy operation because it cannot write the project files into to the
(read-only) project directory it just created. So wrap chmod by OR'ing
in the write-by-owner bit.
Sourcery CodeBench toolchains are prebuilt GCC toolchains from Mentor
Graphics.
Start out by adding ARM EABI and ARM GNU/Linux toolchains. Sourcery
CodeBench is also available for MIPS, Power, SuperH, ColdFire (and
more), so it should be easy to add later, if needed.
AFAIK, the EABI toolchains use newlib and the GNU/Linux ones use glibc.
This also adds a new package "libbs2b", which is needed in order to support
Bauer stereophonic-to-binaural DSP as an audio filter.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
* Add needed dependencies:
coreutils, python, ruby, java and several Perl modules (Time::HiRes
1.9.724 is no longer available, bump to 1.9725)
* Use sha256 instead of md5 (more secure)
* Wrap munin perl scripts so they find their dependencies at runtime
* Rework meta description attributes.
FIXME/TODO: munin is still not usable; it tries to write log files and
web graphs to its installation path.
WildMIDI is a simple software midi player which has a core softsynth
library that can be use with other applications.
I have tested the wildmidi executable with a MIDI file. It works.
freepats is a project to create a free and open set of instrument
patches, in any format, that can be used with softsynths.
I'm adding it because it is needed for WildMIDI, which is needed for
MIDI support in Qmmp (audio player). I'll add WildMIDI and Qmmp in the
next commit(s).
tcptrack is a small libpcap based program (with ncurses UI) for live TCP
connection monitoring.
It seems upstream homepage is down, so download the source code from a
fedora server instead.
ninja is a build system written in C++ that just happens to use python
to build/install *itself*. It is not a "python package".
After this commit, ninja will be at pkgs.ninja instead of
pkgs.pythonPackages.ninja.
See #490 discussion.
This reverts commit 1278859d31, reversing
changes made to 0c020c98f9.
Conflicts:
pkgs/desktops/xfce/core/xfce4-session.nix (take master)
pkgs/lib/misc.nix (auto)
* 0.8.7p1 doesn't contain *.info documentation; use manpage
instead
* Update meta.description to not contain the package name (redundant)
* 0.8.7p1 only builds with python dateutil==1.5, so that has to be added
as well
Runtime tested with the buildbot slave that is added in the next commit.
Spyder says about itself that it has
...the support of IPython (enhanced interactive Python interpreter) and
popular Python libraries such as NumPy (linear algebra), SciPy (signal
and image processing) or matplotlib (interactive 2D/3D plotting).
So I think having those available as default is a the right thing to to.
(We can easily make a stripped down spyder expression if needed later.)
I've added the list of recommended and optional dependencies as
described here:
http://pythonhosted.org/spyder/installation.html#dependencies
Spyder (previously known as Pydee) is a powerful interactive development
environment for the Python language with advanced editing, interactive
testing, debugging and introspection features.
The name Spyder comes from Scientific PYthon Development EnviRonment.