kalibrate-rtl calculates the local oscillator frequency offset in
RTL-SDR devices.
kalibrate-rtl has no tags/releases, so I'm using the latest commit from
git master (dated 2013-12-14). I made an upstream issue about making a
release back in May[1], but I've gotten no response yet.
[1] https://github.com/steve-m/kalibrate-rtl/issues/7
Currently, we have a 'jack' package with attrname 'jack1d' and a
'jackdbus' package with attrname 'jackaudio'. Make it consistent 'jack1'
and 'jack2' in both package name and attrname.
This aligns the naming with what can be found on the JACK homepage.
Q: what's the difference between jack1 and jack2?
A: http://trac.jackaudio.org/wiki/Q_differenc_jack1_jack2
[Bjørn Forsman:
* wrap some long lines
* tweak meta attrs (don't repeat package name, s/meta.maintainer/meta.maintainers/)
* provide a version number (v2.0) for 'evemu' (for nix-env)
]
- To fix build problems, I refactored the build process
according to Mozilla recommendations.
- 31.0 should become the next ESR branch (31 released today).
CC @nbp @edolstra
This is due to breaking evaluation; see the PR discussion.
This reverts commit 6a77d5fd3e, reversing
changes made to 07a09fbe63.
Conflicts:
nixos/modules/services/x11/desktop-managers/default.nix
There are zillions of lines of the form
foo = callPackage ../bla/foo { };
in all-packages.nix. To get rid of this verbosity, you can now list
such packages in pkgs/auto-packages.nix. This is just a list of
package file names, e.g.
development/libraries/libogg
development/libraries/libvorbis
tools/archivers/gnutar
If the package needs non-default function arguments, or if its
intended attribute name is different from its file name, then you
cannot put it in auto-packages.nix and instead need to specify it in
all-packages.nix.
If Nix had a glob function (https://github.com/NixOS/nix/pull/235), we
could even get rid of auto-packages.nix and have package expressions
be discovered automatically. However, that might not be desirable
because of the need to traverse the file system to find packages we
may not even use.
"OPC (OLE for Process Control) toolkit designed for use with Python"
This package contains a python module (OpenOPC) and a command line
client (opc). The OpenOPC Gateway Service for Windows is also copied to
$out, for reference.
It only works with python2.7 (not python3.x), so I'm not adding it to
python-packages.nix.
Also add needed dependency, python-pyro3, a distributed object
middleware for Python (IPC/RPC).
http://openopc.sourceforge.net/
Hydra: ?compare=1138350
Conflicts:
nixos/modules/services/x11/desktop-managers/default.nix
Two imports were added independently on the same line.
I split it as well, as it was very long now.
CC @viric. If someone has a better suggestion, do it.
IMHO the main problem is the lack of maintenance
from the side of mplayer2, e.g. latest release >3 years ago.
I don't see a reason for having wrapVim function and vimWrapper and
vimHugeXWrapper packages. If you need a system vimrc, whats wrong with
``environment.etc."vimrc".text`` ?
Also strictly speaking ``vimHugeXWrapper`` didn't wrap, X-version
properly. I.e. running ``gvim`` have console vim version.
libcredis is a client library for Redis (key-value database).
(libcredis is an optional dependency of collectd.)
Homepage: https://code.google.com/p/credis/
This includes another source-only derivation for the web interface (and
patches the path into the twister binary), so there shouldn't be a need
to move it into ~/.twister/html separately.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
keybinder-3.0 is for GTK+ 3, whereas keybinder (already in nixpkgs) is
for GTK+ 2.
This adds version 0.3.0 of keybinder-3.0, which we named "keybinder3" in
nixpkgs to (hopefully) lessen the confusion about what is package name
and what is version number.
[Bjørn: extend commit message beyond summary line]
libosinfo contains "info about OSs, hypervisors and (virtual) hardware
devices".
It is a dependency of gnome-boxes (a virtual and remote machine
application).
Merlin is an editor-independant tool to ease the developpement of
programs in OCaml. It aims to provide features available in modern IDEs.
Homepage: http://the-lambda-church.github.io/merlin/