running pinta after https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/31497
results in:
```
Unhandled Exception:
System.IO.FileNotFoundException: Could not load file or assembly 'glib-sharp, Version=2.12.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=35e10195dab3c99f' or one of its dependencies.
File name: 'glib-sharp, Version=2.12.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=35e10195dab3c99f'
[ERROR] FATAL UNHANDLED EXCEPTION: System.IO.FileNotFoundException: Could not load file or assembly 'glib-sharp, Version=2.12.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=35e10195dab3c99f' or one of its dependencies.
File name: 'glib-sharp, Version=2.12.0.0, Culture=neutral,
PublicKeyToken=35e10195dab3c99f'
```
The build for the version 5.4.0 of digiKam has been broken at the time
prior to this commit, which is the main reason for this update as I
don't think it makes sense to fix the build for 5.4.0 when we're going
to update it anyway.
A lot has changed upstream between version 5.4.0 and 5.7.0 and it's too
much to be summarized here, so here are the URLs to the upstream
announcements:
* https://www.digikam.org/news/2017-03-14_digiKam_5.5.0_is_released/
* https://www.digikam.org/news/2017-06-21-5.6.0-release-announcement/
* https://www.digikam.org/news/2017-09-11-5.7.0_release_announcement/
On the packaging side, we now no longer have the patch that disables
-fno-operator-names because the build runs fine without that patch
(which didn't even apply but I didn't check why) and IMO it doesn't make
sense to rebase that patch for no reason.
Additionally, there were build time dependencies lurking around in
propagatedBuildInputs, which is kinda pointless and the application just
runs fine if those dependencies are listed in buildInputs.
While looking for clues about why that might be necessary I haven't
found any comment about it in the source nor a clarification within the
message of the commit where this has been introduced.
The commit in question is be7b7d908f.
Apart from these changes, the rest is just adding a few dependencies
(kcalcore, libksane, mesa and pcre) to get less errors during
cmakeConfigurePhase.
I've tested digiKam by playing around within a VM using photos I
netcat'ed into it and it works so far. The VM was built using:
nix-build nixos --arg configuration '{ pkgs, ... }: {
imports = [ ./nixos/tests/common/user-account.nix ];
environment.systemPackages = [ pkgs.digikam ];
services.xserver.enable = true;
services.xserver.displayManager.sddm.enable = true;
services.xserver.desktopManager.plasma5.enable = true;
services.xserver.desktopManager.default = "plasma5";
virtualisation.memorySize = 1024;
}' -A vm
What I didn't test however was whether importing from a camera would
work (as I don't have one), but aside from that, the application seems
to run fine compared to the fact that it didn't even build until now :-)
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Cc: @the-kenny, @urkud, @viric, @cillianderoiste, @ttuegel
Cc: @jraygauthier, @fkz, @sh01, @lsix
New features since version 3.2.0:
* G'MIC Plugin
* Touch Painting
* Smart Patch Tool
* New Brush Presets
The full release notes can be found at:
https://krita.org/en/release-notes-for-krita-3-2/
Version 3.2.1 contains these fixes:
* Crash on startup if only OpenGL 2.1 is found: if you had to disable
opengl for 3.2.0, you can try to enable it again
* A crash when changing layer types in the gmic-qt plugin
* A bug where gmic-qt could crash on odd-sized images
* A regression where using the text tool would break the brush tool
* The option to use the native platform's file dialogs was restored
* A bug where selecting the line tool would disable the flow slider
* Some issues with the LUT docker were fixed
Upstream release notes for 3.2.1:
https://krita.org/en/item/krita-3-2-1-released/
I've dropped the patch, because it was already from the upstream
development version and thus is also included in this release.
Built and tested using a few images and just playing around with a few
new features.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Cc: @abbradar, @Mic92, @kragniz
This reverts commit 0a944b345e, reversing
changes made to 61733ed6cc.
I dislike these massive stdenv changes with unclear motivation,
especially when they involve gratuitous mass renames like NIX_CC ->
NIX_BINUTILS. The previous such rename (NIX_GCC -> NIX_CC) caused
months of pain, so let's not do that again.
Upstream bug fixes:
* pen and touchscreen input handling bugfixes
* fix a minor bug with save file paths in Windows (D. German)
* use GDK macros (not WIN32) to disable X11-specific code (T.
Schoonjans)
* export to PDF and printing: fix resolution loss on some pdf
backgrounds
* disable xinput during modal dialog boxes
* avoid data corruption when exporting to overwrite a PDF
* fix path search order for toolbar bitmaps
* text and image tools activate on button release instead of button
press to avoid subsequent confusion between clicks in toolbar and
drawing area
* fix "pen disable touch" when touchscreen sends prox events (A.
Kittenberger)
* fix crash when pasting text or images via xclip
* updated Italian translation (Marco Ciampa)
New upstream features:
* add space and shift-space bindings to page down/up (D. German)
* add A5 paper (D. German)
* config option to export successive layers to separate PDF pages
* config option to create new file when trying to open non-existent
.xoj
The full change log along with bug numbers can be found at:
https://sourceforge.net/p/xournal/code/ci/Release-0_4_8_2016/tree/ChangeLog
I've dropped gdk-quartz-backend.patch, because I believe it has been
fixed upstream.
Here are the upstream changes relevant for the patch (shortened, because
SourceForge has really long URLs):
http://bit.ly/2vXW8n0 -> src/Makefile.am
http://bit.ly/2gDnjl7 -> src/xo-file.c
http://bit.ly/2xJ5K7A -> src/xo-misc.c
Tested building and using the application.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Cc: @7c6f434c, @dguibert
Cc: @johbo who has introduced the patch in #21842
It's now the default. /cc #19456
This makes a real build simplification, because in our current
bootstrapping+aliases, `gcc6` attribute is not the default compiler
but a derivation *built by* the default compiler.
nix-exec didn't build before this commit already
* Add setupHook for meson/ninja build
* libhttpseverywhere: Use meson/ninja setupHooks
* jamomacore: Remove superfluous ninja buildInput
* Remove obsolete ninja buildPhases
These are all handled by ninja's setup hook.
* lean2, xcbuild: fix build with ninja setup hook
Ninja is a runtime dependency here. However, cmake can generate Ninja
build files as well to satisfy the setup hook.
* qtwebengine: fix build with ninja setup hook
* pgadmin: use https homepage
* msn-pecan: move homepage to github
google code is now unavailable
* pidgin-latex: use https for homepage
* pidgin-opensteamworks: use github for homepage
google code is unavailable
* putty: use https for homepage
* ponylang: use https for homepage
* picolisp: use https for homepage
* phonon: use https for homepage
* pugixml: use https for homepage
* pioneer: use https for homepage
* packer: use https for homepage
* pokerth: usee https for homepage
* procps-ng: use https for homepage
* pycaml: use https for homepage
* proot: move homepage to .github.io
* pius: use https for homepage
* pdfread: use https for homepage
* postgresql: use https for homepage
* ponysay: move homepage to new site
* prometheus: use https for homepage
* powerdns: use https for homepage
* pm-utils: use https for homepage
* patchelf: move homepage to https
* tesseract: move homepage to github
* quodlibet: move homepage from google code
* jbrout: move homepage from google code
* eiskaltdcpp: move homepage to github
* nodejs: use https to homepage
* nix: use https for homepage
* pdf2djvu: move homepage from google code
* game-music-emu: move homepage from google code
* vacuum: move homepae from google code
GitHub does a redirect to https:// when you use http://
repology complains with:
“Homepage link "https://github.com/…" is dead (HTTP error 404) for more than a month.”
This will fix some of them (not all though)
* pkgs: refactor needless quoting of homepage meta attribute
A lot of packages are needlessly quoting the homepage meta attribute
(about 1400, 22%), this commit refactors all of those instances.
* pkgs: Fixing some links that were wrongfully unquoted in the previous
commit
* Fixed some instances
First of all, we need a newer version of Vc, because at least version
1.1.0 is required for Krita 3.1.3.
Also, qtmultimedia and qtx11extras were missing.
Built and tested successfully on my machine.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Cc: @abbradar
It's necessary to do this in order to fix ckb's compilation, now that
fixupPhase rejects derivation results containing references to the temporary
build directory. It seems like good practice so I've added it to the
other packages that I maintain.
DraftSight is "a professional-grade 2D design and drafting solution
that lets you create, edit, view and markup any kind of 2D drawing."
It is available as a binary .deb package for Linux. This package jumps
through the necessary hoops to make it run properly.
After upgrade `qapitrace` have working "Buffers" tab where the data
can be inspected (it was always empty before).
There is no tags after `7.1`, but I think that fixing pretty important
piece of functionality warrants an upgrade to current `master` tip.
Tesseract 4 has got a new long short-term memory neural networking based
OCR engine which really helps a lot in terms of accuracy and our VM
tests.
I ran the new version across a bunch of different screenshots and
comparing the results to the 3.x branch and it really makes a big
difference, especially with various font rendering settings.
The only downside of this is that version 4 hasn't been released yet and
is in alpha state right now, but it will eventually get there and the
only solutions that came into my mind sticking to version 3 were really
sub-par:
* Use several passes with different color negation on the screenshots.
* Train Tesseract 3 specifically for screenshots. This is sub-par
because we'd need to do it for Tesseract 4 from scratch again.
* Change the test systems so that it specifically uses *only* OCR an
font when displaying. I've actually tried this but this also isn't
accurate enough with our default font rendering setup.
* Turn off special font rendering settings for our tests. In
conjunction with changing to an OCR font this might work but it won't
catch all the cases, because applications might use their own font
rendering.
Given that version 4 is faster[1] when it comes to OCR detection and also
the points just mentioned I think even using the alpha version just for
tests isn't going to hurt anybody.
[1]: https://github.com/tesseract-ocr/tesseract/wiki/4.0-Accuracy-and-Performance
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Upstream changelog:
* Made some fine tuning to the hOCR output.
* Added TSV as another optional output format.
* Fixed ABI break introduced in 3.04.00 with the AnalyseLayout()
method.
* text2image tool - Enable all OpenType ligatures available in a font.
This feature requires Pango 1.38 or newer.
* Training tools - Replaced asserts with tprintf() and exit(1).
* Fixed Cygwin compatibility.
* Improved multipage tiff processing.
* Improved the embedded pdf font (pdf.ttf).
* Enable selection of OCR engine mode from command line.
* Changed tesseract command line parameter '-psm' to '--psm'.
* Added new C API for orientation and script detection, removed the old
one.
* Increased minimum autoconf version to 2.59.
* Removed dead code.
* Fixed many compiler warning.
* Fixed memory and resource leaks.
* Fixed some issues with the 'Cube' OCR engine.
* Fixed some openCL issues.
* Added option to build Tesseract with CMake build system.
* Implemented CPPAN support for easy Windows building.
The upstream URL of the change log is:
https://github.com/tesseract-ocr/tesseract/releases/tag/3.05.00
Tested by building against the following packages that directly depend
on it:
* vapoursynth (with ocrSupport = true)
* pyocr (fails)
* vobsub2srt
Also tested against the following NixOS VM tests that have OCR enabled:
* nixos/tests/chromium.nix -A stable
* nixos/tests/emacs-daemon.nix
* nixos/tests/installer.nix -A luksroot
* nixos/tests/lightdm.nix
* nixos/tests/plasma5.nix
* nixos/tests/sddm.nix
All of the packages and tests except pyocr build/succeed on
x86_64-linux.
Fixing pyocr is outside of the scope of this commit and will happen very
soon.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
I've removed that attribute in 68bc260ca2,
because the language files no longer were distributed as seperate files,
but if we for example only want to use the English training data, the
closure size of Tesseract gets quite large (around 1.2 GB), which is a
bit much just to be able to run NixOS VM tests.
For this reason I've also switched the VM tests back to using only the
English language.
Tested using the following VM tests (the ones that have OCR enabled) on
x86_64-linux:
* nixos/tests/chromium.nix -A stable
* nixos/tests/emacs-daemon.nix
* nixos/tests/installer.nix -A luksroot
* nixos/tests/lightdm.nix
* nixos/tests/plasma5.nix
* nixos/tests/sddm.nix
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
* renderdoc: init at version 0.34pre
Initialising a few commits after the latest release due to some upstream
improvements to the build system.
* fix maintainer
Putting information in external JSON files is IMHO not an improvement
over the idiomatic style of Nix expressions. The use of JSON doesn't
add anything over Nix expressions (in fact it removes expressive
power). And scattering package info over lots of little files makes
packages less readable over having the info in one file.