This add profanity and dependencies and a few cleanups from me for the
profanity package expression.
Thanks to @devhell and apologies for pestering him with my nitpicking.
* Commit summary:
profanity: Add option for autoAwaySupport.
profanity: Clean up package expression file.
profanity: Add libnotifySupport config option
all-packages: Add libnotify option to profanity
profanity: Add "platforms" meta information
profanity: Add libXScrnSaver and libX11 buildInputs
libstrophe: Add "platforms" meta information
libstrophe: Fix typo
profanity: Add profanity, a ncurses XMPP client
libstrophe: Add new package
Actually, two dependencies used for notifySupport are for
autoAwaySupport and have nothing to do with notifications, so let's
split them apart.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
No real changes in functionality, other than renaming libnotifySupport
to just notifySupport.
I've wrapped the lines to a maximum of 80 characters in width, so the
file looks less cluttered up. Which includes setting apart the attribute
for notifySupport and its respective dependencies from the main
dependencies.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Also now comes with a few more build dependencies in order to run tests,
which for this version now succeed.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
The primary use of beets is not as a Python library and users usually
would expect to install it into the env using "nix-env -i beets" rather
than "nix-env -i pythonX.Y-beets".
Having beets in its own package directory also allows for better
customization, where we're going to implement attributes that can be
used to turn on/off various features and plugins.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
OCaml-safepass is a library offering facilities for the safe storage of
user passwords. By "safe" we mean that passwords are salted and hashed
using the Bcrypt algorithm. Salting prevents rainbow-table based
attacks, whereas hashing by a very time-consuming algorithm such as
Bcrypt renders brute-force password cracking impractical.
Homepage: http://ocaml-safepass.forge.ocamlcore.org/
Note that elm has a different package split: The old Elm 0.13 package
is now elm-compiler, elm-make and elm-package.
Instead of invoking "elm" one now has to use "elm-make".
I kept the 0.13 version of elm around in case someone depends
on it.
Uuseg is an OCaml library for segmenting Unicode text. It implements the
locale independent Unicode text segmentation algorithms to detect
grapheme cluster, word and sentence boundaries and the Unicode line
breaking algorithm to detect line break opportunities.
Homepage: http://erratique.ch/software/uuseg
Tested on KDE4, fixed with xfce, and was used with GNOME before.
CC @lethalman.
I did not test e19, as it won't build, probably due to #5392 @shlevy.
CC maintainer @matejc.
Also removed a forgotten unused patch.
New build system using configure script and GNU Make 4.0, and new
releases of the following using the new build system:
execline 2.0.0.0
s6 2.0.0.0
s6-dns 2.0.0.0
s6-linux-utils 2.0.0.0
s6-networking 2.0.0.0
s6-portable-utils 2.0.0.0
skalibs 2.0.0.0
OCaml-safepass is a library offering facilities for the safe storage of
user passwords. By "safe" we mean that passwords are salted and hashed
using the Bcrypt algorithm. Salting prevents rainbow-table based
attacks, whereas hashing by a very time-consuming algorithm such as
Bcrypt renders brute-force password cracking impractical.
Homepage: http://ocaml-safepass.forge.ocamlcore.org/
Note that elm has a different package split: The old Elm 0.13 package
is now elm-compiler, elm-make and elm-package.
Instead of invoking "elm" one now has to use "elm-make".
I kept the 0.13 version of elm around in case someone depends
on it.
Uuseg is an OCaml library for segmenting Unicode text. It implements the
locale independent Unicode text segmentation algorithms to detect
grapheme cluster, word and sentence boundaries and the Unicode line
breaking algorithm to detect line break opportunities.
Homepage: http://erratique.ch/software/uuseg
Tested on KDE4, fixed with xfce, and was used with GNOME before.
CC @lethalman.
I did not test e19, as it won't build, probably due to #5392 @shlevy.
CC maintainer @matejc.
Also removed a forgotten unused patch.