* neovim-unwrapped: now use lua environments
* mpv: use lua environments
* luaPackages.inspect: init at 3.1.1-0
* luaPackages.lgi: mark as a lua module
* luaPackages.vicious: mark as a lua module
* lua: generate packages from luarocks
* luarocks-nix: update
* removed packages already available in nixpkgs
* adressing reviews
update script can now accept another csv file as input with -c
* Remove obsolete comment
luarocks-nix is a fork of luarocks that adds a "nix" command capable of
converting luarocks package descriptions into nix derivations (though nixpkgs is
still missing the lua infrastructure).
Set up lua packages for the v5.3.x interpreter.
Blacklist the set of lua-packages (luabitop, luaexpat, luazip,
luasqlite3) whose compilation fails against 5.3.4. The rest are at least
building.
Signed-off-by: Philipp Gesang <phg@phi-gamma.net>
Semi-automatic update generated by https://github.com/ryantm/nix-update tools. These checks were done:
- built on NixOS
- Warning: no binary found that responded to help or version flags. (This warning appears even if the package isn't expected to have binaries.)
- found 0.9.2 with grep in /nix/store/q6lcshhmi0dn8ndz2jz9nlircfww4fcm-lgi-0.9.2
- directory tree listing: https://gist.github.com/48d4d638fbd1169b1c96b7e506202b93
Since commit e44038bcca, cairo-1.0.typelib contains an absolute
path to cairo in the nix store so that no $LD_LIBRARY_PATH hacks are
needed. However, this did not yet work for lgi, because lgi does
dlopen("libcairo.so.2") without a full path, too.
To make this work, this commit ensures that lgi first uses
gobject-introspection to load libcairo. This uses the full path provided
by the typelib. Afterwards, dlopen("libcairo.so.2") does not hit the
filesystem anymore since the library is already loaded.
This commit adds a patch that reorders some code in lgi's cairo
initialisation. Previously, this started with core.module('cairo', 2),
which is where the dlopen happens. Now, this code is moved down and
instead core.gi.cairo.resolve is used to load the definitions of some
enums first. This part of the code goes through gobject-introspection
and causes libcairo to be loaded.
Signed-off-by: Uli Schlachter <psychon@znc.in>
These involve:
- Formatting and spacing.
- Switching to using fetchFromGitHub where possible.
- Adding missing meta attributes.
- Correcting license values or adding missing license values.
- Adding vyp as maintainer for unmaintained packages.
None of these changes should affect the build result.
A different revision is used for luasqlite3, however, the source code
between these revisions is actually the same. (And the advantage is that
the new revision is a tagged release.)
The shared objects are not available in 'pcre.dev', so to build the rex_pcre.so
file we must specify 'pcre.out' as the directory to obtain shared objects
from, 'pcre.dev' is still needed for the header files though.
This has surfaced due to 505d7bea3a and
the fixup commit 77f5a50c40.
The individial platform attributes are a list rather than single
elements, so in this case we got:
with platforms; [darwin linux freebsd illumos]
Which results in:
[ ["x86_64-darwin"]
["i686-linux" "x86_64-linux" "armv5tel-linux" "armv6l-linux"
"armv7l-linux" "aarch64-linux" "mips64el-linux"]
["i686-freebsd" "x86_64-freebsd"]
["x86_64-solaris"]
]
So if you don't have allowBroken set in nixpkgs config, you end up with
an evaluation error because meta.platforms is expected to be a list
instead of a list of lists which we got here.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Cc: @mornfall, @vcunat
In line with the Nixpkgs manual.
A mechanical change, done with this command:
find pkgs -name "*.nix" | \
while read f; do \
sed -e 's/description\s*=\s*"\([a-z]\)/description = "\u\1/' -i "$f"; \
done
I manually skipped some:
* Descriptions starting with an abbreviation, a user name or package name
* Frequently generated expressions (haskell-packages.nix)
* removing luaMessagePack (only used by neovim)
* using libmpack (updated to latest master since they fixed a lot of packaging
issues)
* package libmpack lua bidnings
* neovim expression now excepts luaPackages as an input and not individual
lua packages (to avoid depending on different lua version)
The most complex problems were from dealing with switches reverted in
the meantime (gcc5, gmp6, ncurses6).
It's likely that darwin is (still) broken nontrivially.