Apparently, generic builder sets `nullglob`, disappearing any flags containing square brackets
not resolving to file names (e.g. `mesonFlags = [ "-Dgl_winsys=[x11,wayland]" ];`). This caused
the `gl_winsys` flag default to `auto` and, since we were missing `wayland-protocols`, Wayland
support was not built.
Fortunately, Meson also supports simple array notation without square brackets, so we can use
that. No need to wait for `_structuredAttrs`.
We also no longer set `gl_platform` flag, since passing the default auto value is redundant.
I haven't been doing any maintenance for a long time now and not only
do I get notified, it also creates a fake impression that all these
packages had at least one maintainer when in practice they had none.
vifm includes some optional features what are currently no-op due
to missing dependencies. Once such example is `vifm-media`.
vimfm-media is a Linux script included with vifm which can be used to
mount/umount removable media from within vifm. However, vifm-media
has additional dependencies, namely Python, dbus, and a supported
back-end such as udisks2. While vimfm-media is currently installed,
it fails with the error "No supported backend found."
This change adds optional support for vifm-media via the new package
vifm-full; Opening for the opportunity to add whatever optional
dependencies I have not considered in this change in the future,
while not generously increasing the closure size of the original
vifm package.
For reference, vifm has a closure size of 41,164,432 while the new
vifm-full increases this to 382,642,536. Calculated with
`nix path-info -S`
Note: While vifm-media supports numerous back-ends, this change only
adds support for udisks2. In addition, vifm-media is not supported on
MacOS/OSX, for which upstream provides an alternative script.
4d392099 didn't quite do the trick, but this should finally fix
everything -- namely, the -secure.so symlink was broken, and
libmimalloc.so itself was also a symlink that needed to be replaced with
the real shared object file.
Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
We shouldn’t force the user to have a C compiler in scope, just
because the derivation is forced to build locally. That can’t be
counted as “lightweight” anymore.
Co-Authored-By: Silvan Mosberger<contact@infinisil.com>