Unneded args.something replaced with
args: with args;
line. After this line args is the only place where we can recieve variables from.
Also removed several
buildInputs = [];
lines.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=10415
fetchurl {
url = http://heanet.dl.sourceforge.net/sourceforge/zapping/zapping-0.9.6.tar.bz2;
md5 = "8306775c6a11de4d72345b5eee970ea6";
};
you can write
fetchurl {
url = mirror://sourceforge/zapping/zapping-0.9.6.tar.bz2;
md5 = "8306775c6a11de4d72345b5eee970ea6";
};
which causes fetchurl to try the SourceForge mirrors listed in the
`sourceforge' attribute in build-support/fetchurl/mirrors.nix.
(They're currently tried in sequence, and the lists of mirrors are
not configurable yet.)
The syntax for mirror URLs is mirror://site/path/to/file, where
`site' is currently one of `sourceforge', `gnu' (mirrors of
ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu) and `kernel' (mirrors of
http://www.all.kernel.org/pub/).
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=9197
URLs to http://nix.cs.uu.nl/dist/tarballs. With content-addressable
mirror support (r9190, NIXPKGS-70) this is no longer necessary:
fetchurl will try to download from that location automatically. So
we can keep the original URLs.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=9192
* Make the baseq3 files a fixed-output derivation, so that if
(say) stdenv changes, it doesn't have to be rebuilt. This
is nice because the baseq3 directory is pretty big.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=8781
the new $NIX_GCC/nix-support/dynamic-linker file to locate the
dynamic linker directly (don't hardcode ld-linux.so.2).
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=6873
allow the OpenGL implementation to be overriden through the
OPENGL_DRIVER environment variable. If it is not set, we use the
implementation installed in the profile
/nix/var/nix/profiles/opengl, allowing easy late binding by the
user, e.g.,
$ nix-env -p /nix/var/nix/profiles/opengl -i nvidia-sys-opengl
might install the NVidia OpenGL implementation.
The code that does this is not specific to Quake 3: it has been
factored out into build-support/opengl/mesa-switch.sh. Presumably
any application that requires hardware-accelerated OpenGL needs it.
* Add the Quake 3 demo to the cache.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=4612
quake3/demo takes care of downloading and patching the required PAK
files. quake3/wrapper calls the Quake binary with a synthesised
directory of symlinks to activated PAK files. This should make it
easy to plug in the commercial PAKs, or third-party mods.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=4611
to work "out of the box" with hardware acceleration and either the
shareware or full PAK files. But with some hackery, I have gotten
it to work with both Mesa software rendering and NVidia hardware
rendering.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=4595
* Added NASM, the Netwide Assembler.
* Added Generator, an emulator for Sega Genesis / Mega Drive machines.
Built with XVideo patch. Strangely it crashes with a GDK error when
started in normal mode. However, with the "-a" switch (arcade mode)
it works, and subsequently switching back to windowed mode (Ctrl-F)
also works.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=1509
An interesting complication is that we have to change the ELF type
of the executable from `Linux' to `SVR4', otherwise the
`ld-linux.so.2' trick to override the glibc used doesn't work
(apparently `Linux' is not a recognised ELF type!).
UT doesn't work with software Mesa, so right now we impurily use
`/usr/lib/libGL.so'. I cannot really test whether it works with
hardware Mesa, since it barfs with an error about missing OpenGL
extensions. But that's probably because I'm testing this on an
iBook over an SSH connection to a Linux machine.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=1047