This adds support for `afl-fuzz -Q`, which can be used to instrument
arbitrary black-box binary code for fuzz testing using American Fuzzy
Lop through QEMU emulation.
This requires a custom QEMU 2.2.0 build of the Linux userspace emulators
(system emulators aren't required) with some custom patches. Furthermore
we have to patch the patches a little to make the build more sane (there
are some notes in the README about this).
Overall, the addition of this feature by default doesn't significantly
impact build times (since building QEMU for only one target builds only
a fraction of the source code, and many features are disabled), so it's
enabled by default.
Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
The default xorgserver is now on 1.16 and so the patch needs to change.
The 116 patch is not in 1.3.1 so we also need to upgrade.
I don't know how to compute this filename since the xorgserver derivation
doesn't have a version attribute.
This commit adds `profile-cleaner`.
Use profile-cleaner to reduce the size of browser profiles by organizing
their sqlite databases using sqlite3's vacuum and reindex functions. The
term "browser" is used loosely since profile-cleaner happily works on
some email clients and newsreaders too.
Supported browsers include:
* Aurora
* Chromium (stable, beta, and dev)
* Conkeror
* Firefox (stable, beta, and aurora)
* Google-chrome (stable, beta, and dev)
* Heftig's version of Aurora
* Icedove
* Midori
* Newsbeuter
* Palemoon
* Qupzilla
* Seamonkey
* Thunderbird
* Tor-browser
a2j_control fails because dbus is not in the python path. The exact error
message is:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File ".nix-profile/bin/a2j_control", line 11, in <module>
import dbus
ImportError: No module named dbus
The fix is to add the python dbus module to the build inputs and wrap the
python path for a2j_control.
Upstream is releasing bugfixes to kdelibs only through KDE Applications
releases, so this is the correct way to get updates until we discontinue
KDE 4. This also ensures that kdeApps and kde4 are using the same
version of kdelibs; different versions appear to be causing integration issues.