For a while now, the only thing the 'uboot' attribute does is to tell
whether to add ubootTools to kernel/initrd builds. That can be
determined with platform.kernelTarget == "uImage" just as well.
Before:
<x> is not a integer between 0 and 100 (inclusively).
(notice that “a” is wrong, it should be “an”)
Now:
<x> is not of type `integer between 0 and 100 (inclusively)'.
This sounds a bit more formal, but circumvents the grammatical problems.
Multi-word type descriptions are also easier to see.
While the version listed on PyPI is "0.4.0.final.0", the actual tarball
however is called just "meliae-0.4.0.tar.gz", which is the same *name*
(but different hash) as the one before the update in
7ce848309e.
Here is the PyPI page for reference:
https://pypi.python.org/pypi/meliae/0.4.0.final.0
After checking the tarballs contents, the version string however *is*
"0.4.0.final.0", so I'm only changing the version in the download URL
rather than in the version attribute.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@nix.build>
Cc: @FRidh
This reverts commit 93c54acf97.
This reopens#30517 @nbp @Ma27
Breaking people's config for this is hardly reasonable as is. If it
absolutely cannot be avoided, at the very least, we need to provide
clear instructions on what people need to upgrade in their config. I
actually had to bisect to the commit, to even find out what property I
should change or define, as the error message was useless. It didn't
even mention a property name.
Discussion on the PR seems to be ongoing, so I'm reverting this, so we
don't break people's systems on unstable.
SBCL 1.2.0 was being retained for the acl2 package, which no longer
needs it. SBCL 1.3.12 was being retained for the maxima package,
which appears to no longer need it.
The `make regression` line was failing because the expression was
downloading a core-system-only, no-libraries source tarball. I
switched to using fetchFromGitHub, which downloads the full source
code -- the core system as well as the "community books",
i.e. libraries -- but the libraries unfortunately do not build yet
because they have more dependencies than the core system, and they
also run into some impurity problems during the build process.
This commit changes the ACL2 package so that at least the user will
obtain the latest version of the core system, even though they won't
get the community books. In a later commit I hope to fix this; it
will require either changes to ACL2 itself, or a patch to be applied
to ACL2 in nixpkgs.
ACL2 7.4 has no trouble building on the current version of SBCL in
nixpkgs, so I let it do so instead of using the ancient SBCL version
1.2.0 from 2014.
I also added myself as a maintainer to this package, since I'm an
active contributor to the ACL2 project and am interested in seeing it
working on Nix.