The build fails due to missing qt linguist tools. That's solved by
adding 'qttools'. But the build fails soon after with missing 'Sql'
module. I didn't manage to solve that, so use Qt 5.6 where it works.
Using libsForQt seems to be the way Qt packages are composed today, so
use that (seems safer).
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.
Many improvements were performed during the last 5+ years,
since the release: mostly minor fixes but *a lot* of them!
Plus, corrected and expanded the meta a little bit.
I removed cortex it is rather unmaintained. The last update (as of
writing) was 8 months ago, there was no release ever.
For a better alternative, have a look at `rtv`.
The new version needs TZ configured to a value other than "UTC" for the test
suite to succeed. Otherwise, an assumption in "reg-tests-1d.R" won't hold that
expects
d <- as.POSIXlt("2016-12-06"); d$zone <- 1; format(d)
to throw an error about an invalid time zone.
OVMF is built from edk2 sources so that's where its version number comes
from (logically). The edk2 version number is 2014-12-10, so this change
only ensures the version numbers won't drift apart in the future. (There
is no hash change.)
The main change here is a patch of SLiM to tread a log file of
/dev/stderr specially in that it now uses std::cerr instead of a file
for logging.
This allows us to set the logfile to stderr in NixOS for the generated
SLiM configuration file and we now get logging to the systemd journal.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
This basically does something similar than the AUR build:
https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/vlc-qt5/
On our side, all there is to do is to force compiling using C++11 mode
and use a patch that the AUR package took from the following upstream
patchwork URL:
https://patches.videolan.org/patch/14061/
Instead of passing CXXFLAGS to the configure script, I'm using sed here
to make sure we don't override flags figured out by configure.
For example if ./configure is used with CXXFLAGS=-std=c++11 appended or
prepended, we have something like:
... -I../include -std=c++11 -Wall -Wextra -Wsign-compare ...
While if we don't do that at all, we have something like:
... -I../include -g -O2 -Wall -Wextra -Wsign-compare ...
Another way would be to use NIX_CFLAGS_COMPILE, but that would affect
even compilation of C code and thus resulting in a bunch of warnings
like this:
cc1: warning: command line option '-std=c++11' is valid for C++/ObjC++
but not for C
So with our approach the flags during build look much better:
... -I../include -std=c++11 -g -O2 -Wall -Wextra -Wsign-compare ...
Another thing I've changed is that the vlc_qt5 attribute in
all-packages.nix now uses the latest Qt 5 version, because the build for
Qt >= 5.7.0 is now no longer broken.
I've also ordered the preConfigure attribute before the configureFlags
attribute, because it makes more sense in terms of context (pre ->
configure -> post).
Tested by building on x86_64-linux with libsForQt56.vlc, libsForQt58.vlc
and vlc (the Qt 4 version, just to be sure I didn't accidentally break
it).
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Cc: @ttuegel
Contains changes that require updating user configs:
- command `compat' and the various def* compat commands were removed
- `msgwait', `rudeness', `startupmessage', `warp' are now variables
See http://git.savannah.nongnu.org/cgit/ratpoison.git/tree/NEWS
Dropbox is again updated without a release announcement. I noticed on Friday
that the client was malfunctioning. I was waiting for a release announcement
with the new version number, but as one was not forthcoming, I simply guessed at it.
The refactoring in b023370f37 ported
changes from firefox-unwrpped, but dropped features in firefox's
wrapper.
Add the desktop item and remove useless dev files.
* jucipp: init at 1.2.3
* jucipp: removed imagemagick dependency
was used earlier during package development to raster the icon,
decided it was better to wait for svgs to get fixed, forgot to clean
* juicipp: fix static libraries weren't linking
Additionally:
- some minor cleanups
- define meta.platforms so hydra doesn't try to evaluate at all on i686 instead
of waiting for "assert" to fail.
As spotify is distributing a i686 version, there really is no reason not to
support that. Someone just has to add support for it.
From the announce email:
This is a bug fix release. In particular, it has fixes for setenv,
sidebar_whitelist, some refresh issues, and a potential segfault.
Details can be seen in the ChangeLog file.
Signed-off-by: Matthias Beyer <mail@beyermatthias.de>
CVE-2017-5055: Use after free in printing. Credit to Wadih Matar
CVE-2017-5054: Heap buffer overflow in V8. Credit to Nicolas Trippar of Zimperium zLabs
CVE-2017-5052: Bad cast in Blink. Credit to JeongHoon Shin
CVE-2017-5056: Use after free in Blink. Credit to anonymous
CVE-2017-5053: Out of bounds memory access in V8. Credit to Team Sniper (Keen Lab and PC Mgr) reported through ZDI (ZDI-CAN-4587)
Added the formerly deleted RTlib directory, included its
patchelf commands. Beforehand the client failed, because
TVGuiDelegate did not find all symbols.
fixes#24862
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>