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.
From the upstream changelog:
* Tesseract development is now done with Git and hosted at github.com
(Previously we used Subversion as a VCS and code.google.com for
hosting).
So let's move over to the GitHub repository, where the organisation also
includes a full repository for tessdata, so we no longer need to fetch
it one-by-one.
The build also got significantly simpler, because we no longer need to
run autoconf, neither do we need to patch the configure script for
Leptonica headers.
This also has the advantage that we don't need to use the
enableLanguages attribute for the test runner anymore.
Full upstream changelog can be found at:
https://github.com/tesseract-ocr/tesseract/blob/c4d273d33cc36e/ChangeLog
Tested against all NixOS tests with enabled OCR (chromium, emacs-daemon,
installer.luksroot and lightdm).
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Cc: @viric
Bugfix release with the following fixes:
* Fix thumbnail creation for input files with dot
* Use native python to generate list of external commands
* Do not use commandline arguments in test mode
* Catch broken symlinks in the library and filter them
So everything but the last item is essentially what we had in
fixes.patch, hence we cane remove it.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Previously, the entire installation was copied to $out/opt/unigine/valley.
Using $out/lib instead of $out/opt would be more consistent with other Nix packages.
The upstream version is "1.0", so that's what the version of the Nix package should be too.
When I packaged this I wasn't aware that a Nix package could update without its version number
increasing, so I added an extra "release version" (like Arch Linux packages). Of course, this
isn't necessary.
The 16.09-nixpkgs source tarball Imagemagick-6.9.6-7.tar.xz source tarball is
not available on any of the existing mirrors. We here add one that has it.
Packaging itself is pretty much straightforward, the tests however
revealed a few issues, which I have fixed with a small patch that has
been upstreamed at https://github.com/karlch/vimiv/pull/32.
The other sed-based patches in postPatch are mostly NixOS-specific.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Fixes#20510.
The application now appears in system menus, and Konqueror now suggests
opening .xoj files with Xournal. Other file browsers should as well.