nixpkgs/pkgs/desktops/e17/ecore/default.nix
2013-02-10 21:23:45 +04:00

33 lines
1.4 KiB
Nix

{ stdenv, fetchurl, pkgconfig, eina, evas, libX11, libXext, libXrender
, libXcomposite, libXfixes, libXdamage }:
stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
name = "ecore-${version}";
version = "1.7.5";
src = fetchurl {
url = "http://download.enlightenment.org/releases/${name}.tar.bz2";
sha256 = "08ljda6p0zj1h5sq3l0js6mihw8cr6ydynn42dnka36vachvmfjb";
};
buildInputs = [ pkgconfig eina evas ];
propagatedBuildInputs = [ libX11 libXext libXcomposite libXrender libXfixes
libXdamage
];
meta = {
description = "Enlightenment's core mainloop, display abstraction and utility library";
longDescription = ''
Enlightenment's Ecore is a clean and tiny event loop library
with many modules to do lots of convenient things for a
programmer, to save time and effort.
It's small and lean, designed to work on embedded systems all
the way to large and powerful multi-cpu workstations. It
serialises all system signals, events etc. into a single event
queue, that is easily processed without needing to worry about
concurrency. A properly written, event-driven program using this
kind of programming doesn't need threads, nor has to worry about
concurrency. It turns a program into a state machine, and makes
it very robust and easy to follow.
'';
homepage = http://enlightenment.org/;
license = stdenv.lib.licenses.bsd2; # not sure
};
}