This introduces the following changes:
* Fixes libPrefix in Tcl libraries I fucked up a few months ago and adds
missing meta attributes.
* Correctly set TKABBER_SITE_PLUGINS so Tkabber is able to find plugins, if
present.
* Rely on OPENSSL_X509_CERT_FILE instead of depending on cacert directly.
* Introduces a new license called "Tcl/Tk", which applies to some Tcl libraries
and is a variation of the BSD license with restrictions regarding
governmental use.
* New package tclgpg for GPG support in Tkabber.
This is actually one of my own programs I've written some years ago, but as I'm
still using it on several systems, I'm adding it to nixpkgs. As it is an (at the
moment, fanotify looks like it's more suitable) inotify based scrobbler, it of
course requires the inotify feature to be enabled in the kernel.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
This package as well as the patches are used from Debian, as the upstream
version is no longer maintained, plus other distributions seem to use the Debian
patched version aswell. And by looking at the patch from Debian, it seems
reasonable, because it contains a _lot_ of fixes that accrued over time.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Picard is the official MusicBrainz audio tagger which is able to use audio
fingerprinting to tag your files.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Version 1.50.0 should be dropped from Nixpkgs, if possible, once we're
reasonably sure that the update doesn't break any packages in ways that
cannot be trivially fixed.
The library has not been released so far, but it is used by Tkabber and some
other software in Tcl (none of them is in nixpkgs so far).
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
spice is a next-generation remote desktop protocol, aimed at virtual
machines.
focus is not just on display/input devices, but clipboard, audio,
video, opengl, smartcards, usb devices as well, no matter if the
virtual machine runs locally or on a remote host.
not everything is implemented yet, and I didn't enable all available
features yet.
Currently, spice is able to make qemu-kvm virtual machines very usable
for workstation guests, with good 2d video support, clipboard sharing,
full resolutions, auto-mouse-grab/ungrab, xinerama / multiple guest
monitors. Good drivers for windows 7 guests are available, as well as
linux Xorg drivers / agents.
Basically, kvm was already the best-performing VM solution (using
virtio drivers), but virtualbox, while slower, had better
desktop-integration support (still wins if you want opengl). Spice
fixes this, making the choice very easy.
With this change, java packages will build with openjdk by default. The
primary driver for this is legal: The build farm is not allowed to
distribute the proprietary Oracle jdk6, and so it is not allowed to
distribute any packages that depend on it. In my view, this is a purely
beneficial change: from the perspective of the build farm, packages will
go from undistributable due to licensing to either distributable or
undistributable due to failed build (if the package doesn't build
properly with openjdk), and from the perspective of the end user it is
very easy to override the jdk on a package-by-package basis or for all
of nixpkgs in the nixpkgs configuration.