moved the initial qtcurve package to mkLibsForQt5 function
to decouple from Qt5 version
added an alias qtcurve -> libsForQt5.qtcurve for backward compatibility
add option to disable gtk2 support (still enabled by default)
Intro:
Part of #101369: Every attribute from kdeApplications and kdeFrameworks
can be built with a few different qt5 versions. It's hard to tell the
difference between an application and a library and some applications
rely on inputs from kdeApplications and libsForQt5 alike.
Before this change, some applications that were defined with
`libsForQt5.callPackage` used libraries from the kde* sets compiled with
a specific qt5 version,
Due to `inherit (kde*) <lib or app>;` used in the widest scope, we had
issues with packages that depended on packages defined by this
`inherit`. This led to mismatched qt versions used in the same inputs,
or the inputs of inputs etc.
Hence, we added to all libsForQt5* sets, packages that will be used from
the correct libsForQt5 set, in accordance to the
`libsForQt5*.callPackage` used. All `inherit (kdeApplications) <pkgs>`
and similar inheritance was moved out of all-packages.nix to aliases.nix
only for backwards compatibility.
Now some KDE applications show up in the attribute sets `libsForQt5*`
which didn't show up there previously. This is sort of misleading, as
these are not necessary libraries, but they show up in the wider scope
thanks to them in aliases.nix. Hence it's the best that can be done
considering the circumstances and the urgency of the issue.
Change error messages to start with or at least mention the name of the
package being referenced. This avoids obscure error messages like
"error: Abandoned by upstream." when rebuilding your system.
Also do some trivial cosmetic changes while touching things.
Right now, running `nixos-rebuild` gives an obscure error:
```
$ nixos-rebuild switch
building Nix...
building the system configuration...
error: Abandoned by upstream. Consider switching to bottom instead
(use '--show-trace' to show detailed location information)
```
(And `--show-trace` adds no useful information.)
The error message doesn't indicate that `ytop` is what's causing the problem.
By adding `ytop` to the error message, configurations that still reference
`ytop` will be easier to debug and fix.
This plugin has been merged into the newer "mopidy-local" plugin which I
just added. "mopidy-local-images" and "mopidy-local-sqlite" were added
originally for Mopidy Iris, but Iris now works with mopidy-local, and
does not need the older ones any more.
This plugin has been merged into the newer "mopidy-local" plugin which I
just added. "mopidy-local-images" and "mopidy-local-sqlite" were added
originally for Mopidy Iris, but Iris now works with mopidy-local, and
does not need the older plugins any more.