dropbox-cli, part of dropbox-nautilus is a small self-contained python
script to control the dropbox daemon.
Signed-off-by: Moritz Ulrich <moritz@tarn-vedra.de>
Add these new attributes (all default to true):
notebookSupport
qtconsoleSupport
pylabSupport
pylabQtSupport
This adds jinja2, matplotlib, pyqt4 and sip as new dependencies of
ipython.
This commit fixes "ipython --pylab" so that it no more errors out with
"ImportError: No module named matplotlib" (which was my initial goal).
IPython 0.13.1: minor bugfix release for 0.13, on October 20, 2012. This
release includes 41 Pull Requests and closing 21 Issues backported from
0.14-dev, including significant fixes for ipcluster and Python 3.3
compatibility.
Actually only pyGtkGlade was missing in propagatedBuildInputs. In addition,
buildInputs is quite redundant in this case, so let's drop it.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
stable: 25.0.1364.152 -> 26.0.1410.43 (builds fine, tested)
beta: 26.0.1410.28 -> 26.0.1410.43 (builds fine, tested)
dev: 26.0.1410.28 -> 27.0.1448.0 (build fixed and tested)
For version 27, this introduces a new dependency on libXtst and removes the
patch for siginfo_t and the pulseaudio array bounds error.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
This patch was introduced before (7e5109a) the stdenv-updates merge and is no
longer needed, as the current C library doesn't use this flag anymore.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
The updater was actually getting the -lite version, which our expression won't
build with, except if we switch some bundled dependencies to those in nixpkgs.
Of course the problem with fetching version 27 was me being stupid and using a
case statement in the updater, as if there won't be any version after 26 ;-)
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Now, our builds shouldn't break anymore once there is a new change in ocamllibs.
I've used revision 256 from ocamllibs, because this was approximately the
revision we had back then when Haxe 2.10 got released.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
This is required in order to support Haxe 3, but won't hurt (tested with a few
projects) even in Haxe 2.x.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
There are some SVN repositories out there which don't have revision information
tied to externals. By using ignoreExternals, fetchsvn won't fetch these
externals anymore, so the fetch won't fail with a checksum mismatch, should
there be some changes in some of those external repositories.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Now that we don't need to pass "system" arguments anymore, this thing
is *almost* obsolete. (Except for the need to handle assertion
failures, you could just do "nix-instantiate --eval-only ..." on
release.nix.)
That is, there are now distinct jobs like ‘coreutils.x86_64-linux’ and
‘coreutils.x86_64-darwin’, rather than a single job ‘coreutils’ with
multiple builds. This means that testing a job is simpler:
$ nix-build pkgs/top-level/release.nix -A coreutils.x86_64-linux
See https://github.com/NixOS/hydra/issues/60 for the motivation.
An aggregate is a trivial build that depends on other builds. This is
intended to provide a declarative replacement of Hydra's "view"
mechanism.
For instance, you can define an aggregate named "critical" that
depends on a selected set of jobs:
critical = releaseTools.aggregate
{ name = "foo-${tarball.version}";
members =
[ tarball
build.x86_64-linux
...
];
meta.description = "Release-critical builds";
};
The "critical" build will only succeed if all its members
(dependencies) succeed.
Without the --disable-nptl-bug-check configure option LinuxSampler
refuses to build. It seems to be a long standing bug. Despite this, I
have used LinuxSampler for over a week now and it seems OK.
libxslt has optional dependencies which may be found in /usr or
/usr/local on platforms that have a native stdenv. With those features
enabled, the build generated binaries that depend on libraries outside
of the store. In this particular case, the NixOS channel had binaries
for FreeBSD that depended on libgcrypt, apparently because that packages
happens to be installed outside of Nix on the build machine. On other
machines, however, those binaries failed with unresolvable references.