Kept the old hacks where they don't break the build in case they things
they fix are still relevant.
I checked that the upgrade doesn't break:
1) Asymptote and EProver builds.
2) My XeLaTeX demo from configurations/ repository.
3) Some of my own files.
The upgrade fixes problems with simultaneous use of 3D and LaTeX labels
in Asymptote.
Please provide a test that worked previously and is broken now if you
need to revert this update or its parts.
Features:
+ configurable via environment variables
+ can skip the actual launching of the lisp implementation (source it
with NIX_LISP_SKIP_CODE=1 to get all the settings)
+ currently supports SBCL, CLisp, ECL
+ determines lisp implementation from NIX_LISP_COMMAND variable or
from buildInputs
+ sets ASDF search path for packages using buildInputs
Somehow Dwarf Fortress suddenly started failing to use our libpng (or
zlib). I tried all possible combinations (supplying them via
LD_LIBRARY_PATH in the script) but it just won't work.
This solution was found in the Archlinux bug tracker: It just symlinks
all problematic .png files to their .bmp counterparts. It's ugly and
*sadly* breaks tileset support (unless you convert them to bmp) but I
think it's acceptable, as the whole expression is pretty problematic
in terms of purity.
Let's hope the next release of Dwarf Fortress will be easier to
support.
(fixes#710)
The current asciidoc expression is impure; it relies on several tools to
be found in PATH at runtime. This commit adds a enableStandardFeatures
parameter that, if true, pulls in all dependencies and patches asciidoc
to contain full paths to the tools.
I've set enableStandardFeatures = false for the existing asciidoc
attribute so that the closure size stays unchanged, at 255 MiB. The new
asciidocFull attribute (with enableStandardFeatures = true) has a
closure size of 1.5 GiB.
imagemagick, transfig, inkscape, fontconfig and ghostscript are missing
dependencies of dblatex. Instead of adding all those dependencies to the
existing dblatex attribute, make a new dblatexFull attribute for that.
Also pass --use-python-path at install time so that script shebangs end
up with #!/path/to/python instead of #!/path/to/env python (which is
impure when not run in a wrapper).