The current asciidoc expression is impure; it relies on several tools to
be found in PATH at runtime. This commit adds a enableStandardFeatures
parameter that pulls in all dependencies and patches asciidoc to contain
full paths to the tools.
enableStandardFeatures defaults to true because asciidoc may attempt to
call all tools in its default configuration. With all standard features,
the closure size increases from 255 MiB to 1.5 GiB. Set
enableStandardFeatures = false if you want a minimal asciidoc.
imagemagick, transfig, inkscape, fontconfig and ghostscript was missing.
And pass --use-python-path at install time so that script shebangs end
up with #!/path/to/python instead of #!/path/to/env python.
pass is just a simple script to store passwords encrypted via gnupg in
a git repository. It uses many other tools, and until now relied on
them being in PATH.
This commit wraps the script and sets PATH.
See https://github.com/dagwieers/asciidoc-odf for more info.
This plugin has a shebang with /bin/env instead of /usr/bin/env, so update the
patchPhase to handle both cases.
WARNING/TODO: Libreoffice says "General Error. General input/output error."
when I try to open the generated .fodp files. So the odt backend works fine,
but the odp backend does not.
Also, slightly change the shebang fixup in the patchPhase so that it
handles optional [[:space:]] before the interpreter path (needed for the
filters).
To enable the extra filters, put this in packageOverrides:
asciidoc = pkgs.asciidoc.override {
enableDitaaFilter = true;
enableMscgenFilter = true;
enableDiagFilter = true;
};
The previous version (5.0.26) has been removed from the debian ftp.
As the source URL is now down, our own hydra (not hydra.nixos.org) failed
to build the package.
This problem will occur again in the future since I only updated the URL
without relying on a "more stable" alternative (this merits a specific
discussion).
Also some style cleanup.
Note that defining an empty-string variable *does* change the hash.
I would like to change this behaviour one day
(clean up attrs when compiling the derivation).
From https://lists.macosforge.org/pipermail/macports-dev/2011-July/015263.html:
5) Building with a compiler that doesn't support newer __builtins
If your port uses MacPorts compilers rather than the default compiler,
you may run into trouble with string functions. You'll see errors at
link time about undefined __builtin_* functions. If this happens, you
may want to compile with -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=0 to tell the headers to
use unfortified versions which do not use compiler builtins.
Ditaa is a small command-line utility written in Java, that can convert
diagrams drawn using ascii art ('drawings' that contain characters that
resemble lines like | / - ), into proper bitmap graphics.
Homepage: http://ditaa.sourceforge.net/
From NEWS file (version 3.1.7):
* fixed compilation bugs in MacOsX systems (thanks to
Trevor Spiteri)
* language definition for Lilypond (thanks to Federico Bruni)
* language definition for R statistics programming language
* language definition for ISLISP (thanks to Christian Jullien)
* improved Erlang definition file (thanks to Erik Søe Sørensen)
* new output format: ESC 256 ascii code (thanks to
Xavier-Emmanuel Vincent).
(It still needs boost 1.53 for all tests to pass.)
unoconv is a tool that converts between any document format supported by
LibreOffice/OpenOffice.
Example of how to convert an .odt file to .pdf:
unoconv -f pdf some-file.odt
Homepage: http://dag.wieers.com/home-made/unoconv/
Implementation notes:
unoconv must use the same python version as libreoffice (unless it will
not be able to load the pyuno module from libreoffice). And because we
recently switched to libreoffice 4.x, which uses python3, I had to
include unoconv-python3.patch. The patch comes from upstream unoconv.git
repo, so it will be included in the next release.
bup:
- update
- run make test (all tests seem to pass :-)
- add python.modules.readline
- add comment that there is no way to prune old revisions (yet)
BaseX is a very fast and light-weight, yet powerful XML database and
XPath/XQuery processor, including support for the latest W3C Full Text
and Update Recommendations. It supports large XML instances and offers a
highly interactive front-end (basexgui). Apart from two local standalone
modes, BaseX offers a client/server architecture.
Homepage: http://basex.org/
Implementation notes:
- I'm using the pre-built java package (because it's simple)
- I copied the basex.svg icon file from the Ubuntu package because I
couldn't find it anywhere else. It's 9.3 KiB.
This fixes building fcron. It was complaining it couldn't check root's
user name and the suggested flag (--with-rootname) didn't do anything.
Signed-off-by: Moritz Ulrich <moritz@tarn-vedra.de>
The jing expression now creates its own "jing" wrapper script, so there
is no need for jing_tools anymore.
jing hasn't been updated in years, so I assume (or hope) that not many
(if any) have jing_tools in their configuration.nix. If you do, just
change it to jing and it should behave the same.
Also add meta attributes and a wrapper for jing so that it can be
invoked directly from the shell as "jing" (similar to Debian/Ubuntu).
Trang already has such a wrapper.
Duply is a shell front end for the duplicity backup tool
http://duplicity.nongnu.org/. It greatly simplifies it's usage by
implementing backup job profiles, batch commands and more. Who says
secure backups on non-trusted spaces are no child's play?
Homepage: http://duply.net/