At the upstream URL at http://git.uclibc.org/uClibc/snapshot/, older
versions are dropped at a regular basis. Unfortunately the tarball
"uClibc-20150131.tar.bz2" has already been deleted from that directory
and I didn't find a mirror providing the same file.
So I've switched it to use fetchzip from the cgit site instead of using
fetchgit directly. The reason why I didn't use fetchgit is that we'd
need need git, which depends (indirectly? not sure, haven't checked) on
libiconv and that in turn triggers an assertion if we're on Linux and
are cross-building using uclibc.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Version 5 doesn't build because it depends on broken/EOL'd python 2.6. Better
switch to something that works. Most users of unversioned cudatoolkit attr are
r-packages, but they are already marked as broken.
Another user is haskellPackages.cuda, it builds fine with cuda 7.
firefoxWrapper: switch to GStreamer 1.0
This definitely fixes the compatibility issues. @peti We should open an issue to figure out what is wrong with audio for that machine.
wkennington@f6c1004 switched Firefox to GStreamer 1.0 by changing its
buildInput *only*, but that is not enough. We need to fix Firefox
wrappers by changing their buildInputs and set GST_PLUGIN_SYSTEM_PATH_1_0
instead of GST_PLUGIN_SYSTEM_PATH.
With above changes playing H.264/MP4 media works in firefoxWrapper and
conkerorWrapper as tested with
http://www.quirksmode.org/html5/tests/video.html and
https://soundcloud.com/immclovin33/synthetix-sundays-53-with-marko-maric-19715
It should help with peti#9247
Reviewed-by: kmicu <kmicu@protonmail.ch>
Tested-by: kmicu <kmicu@protonmail.ch>
antimicro is a graphical program used to map keyboard keys and mouse controls
to a gamepad. Useful for playing PC games with no gamepad or poor gamepad
support.
This provides support for Ubuntu Fan Networking [1].
This includes:
* The fanctl package, and a corresponding NixOS service.
* iproute patches.
* kernel patches.
closes#9188
1: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/FanNetworking
Pipework lets you connect together containers in arbitrarily complex
scenarios. Pipework uses cgroups and namespace and works with "plain"
LXC containers (created with lxc-start), and with the awesome Docker.