botlib abuses strcpy (source and dest overlap), and the strcpy function for 64
bit intel CPU's in the latest glibc, does not like this causing the bots to not
load.
* rss-glx: fixed the build.
* Removed the OpenGL wrapper stuff, it's no longer needed (thanks to
the RUNPATH you just need to put the appropriate libGL.so in the
LD_LIBRARY_PATH).
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=12093
* Make the baseq3 files a fixed-output derivation, so that if
(say) stdenv changes, it doesn't have to be rebuilt. This
is nice because the baseq3 directory is pretty big.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=8781
allow the OpenGL implementation to be overriden through the
OPENGL_DRIVER environment variable. If it is not set, we use the
implementation installed in the profile
/nix/var/nix/profiles/opengl, allowing easy late binding by the
user, e.g.,
$ nix-env -p /nix/var/nix/profiles/opengl -i nvidia-sys-opengl
might install the NVidia OpenGL implementation.
The code that does this is not specific to Quake 3: it has been
factored out into build-support/opengl/mesa-switch.sh. Presumably
any application that requires hardware-accelerated OpenGL needs it.
* Add the Quake 3 demo to the cache.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=4612
quake3/demo takes care of downloading and patching the required PAK
files. quake3/wrapper calls the Quake binary with a synthesised
directory of symlinks to activated PAK files. This should make it
easy to plug in the commercial PAKs, or third-party mods.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=4611
to work "out of the box" with hardware acceleration and either the
shareware or full PAK files. But with some hackery, I have gotten
it to work with both Mesa software rendering and NVidia hardware
rendering.
svn path=/nixpkgs/trunk/; revision=4595