These are the old tools that later became part of ACPICA.
It is obsolete and we already have newer acpica-tools.
Alias to acpica-tools for out of tree backward-compat
TrueCrypt has been retired for a while now and the source archive we
pointed to is gone. Moreover the VeraCrypt fork is available, maintained
and fixes issues previous audits found in TrueCrypt.
Nixpkgs' channel currently can't move forward so long as there is a
trace in evaluating the top-level arguments. Which means that it isn't
possible to add a warning message to warn users of future package
removal.
So the only way forward appears to be just removing the alias
altogether.
(cherry picked from commit b4133ebc17c2742a76d912f4f0bf46719bc7800e)
This requires removing also the Coq 8.3 and Matita 0.5.8 packages.
Coq 8.3 was released 8 years ago (2010) and there is no trace left
of users of this version (contrary to Coq 8.4, released 2012).
It is well over time to remove it.
Matita 0.5.8 was released in 2010 and because this version was still
used for teaching according to the official website, a legacy release
(0.5.9) was released in 5 years later to compile with more recent
OCaml libraries.
Updating to 0.5.9 (or a more recent version like 0.99.3) should allow
getting rid of the dependency on older OCaml but it is hard to test
given that the package is already broken before this update.
Before, providers were only built indirectly. Since proviers don't
depend on terraform to build they can be moved into their own collection
of packages. This also has the advantage that they can be reached
directly using an attribute path (Eg: terraform-providers.nixos).
Co-authored-by: Wael Nasreddine <wael.nasreddine@gmail.com>
morituri has been dead for a while now and uses gst-python which is
no longer supported wth Python 2. whipper is a maintained fork,
packaged, for example, in Arch.
This aims to make the `weechat` package even more configurable. It
allows to specify scripts and commands using the `configure` function
inside a `weechat.override` expression.
The package can be configured like this:
```
with import <nixpkgs> { };
weechat.override {
plugins = { availablePlugins, ... }: {
plugins = builtins.attrValues availablePlugins;
init = ''
/set foo bar
/server add freenode chat.freenode.org
'';
scripts = [ "/path/to/script.py" ];
};
}
```
All commands are passed to `weechat --run-command "/set foo bar;/server ..."`.
The `plugins' attribute is not necessarily required anymore, if it's
sufficient to add `init' commands, the `plugins' will be
`builtins.attrValues availablePlugins' by default.
Additionally the result contains `weechat` and `weechat-headless`
(introduced in WeeChat 2.1) now.
This reverts commit 0b124c1e91. We
should really stop adding things that are not packages to
all-packages.nix. For example, having nixos-rebuild.nix in
all-packages.nix causes 'nix-env -qa' to evaluate a NixOS
configuration, which obviously is not good for performance. (We should
probably also remove the 'nixos' attribute from all-packages.nix, but
at least that's a function so nix-env will ignore it.)
* mpich2 -> mpich
* remove slurm dependency
* use most recent gfortran
* turn enableParallelBulding on
* ensure mpi[cc,cxx,fort] uses default compilers it was built with
This makes the command ‘nix-env -qa -f. --arg config '{skipAliases =
true;}'’ work in Nixpkgs.
Misc...
- qtikz: use libsForQt5.callPackage
This ensures we get the right poppler.
- rewrites:
docbook5_xsl -> docbook_xsl_ns
docbook_xml_xslt -> docbook_xsl
diffpdf: fixup