Until now, if e.g. the user passed "en_US.UTF-8" instead of "en_US.UTF-8/UTF-8",
the locales would be generated without failing but wouldn't work well.
Now we guard against such mistakes. Real life examples:
https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/1927
This reverts commit cd52c04456 and
others.
Managing certificates (including revoking certificates and adding
custom certificates) becomes extremely painful if every package in the
system potentially depends on a different copy of cacert. Also, it
makes updating cacert rather expensive.
The last commit that touched this library updated the version number but
not the hash. I opted into fixing the version number rather than the
hash because actually updating libraw into version 0.16.1 or later
causes a build failure in libkdcraw and therefore breaks gwenview (which
is one of the main KDE apps).
GTK+ 2 is still our default, so packages should generally not depend
on GTK+ 3. For instance, this causes Emacs to depend on both GTK+ 2
and 3, which is obviously a bad thing.
Issue #8990.
I'm updating to 1.1 because that's the version that the patch from
Fedora, which fixes ptrdiff_t build error, applies to.
Removing old patch that doesn't apply anymore. (The patch seems to be
fixing a build error that no longer exist, see
https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=447928.)
An interesting thing is that: stdenv != overrideCC stdenv gcc49;
I'm not sure why that is, but it doesn't seem important.
/cc maintainers: @nckx, @garbas, @abbradar, @cstrahan, @grwlf.
(cherry picked from commit 3064b6a0cc)
An interesting thing is that: stdenv != overrideCC stdenv gcc49;
I'm not sure why that is, but it doesn't seem important.
/cc maintainers: @nckx, @garbas, @abbradar, @cstrahan, @grwlf.