I'm sorry for the wrong combination of URL and hash.
These release tarballs are much smaller; I don't know the difference,
but they still seem to work (openscad, rpacad).
Also comment on modules that aren't built.
antimicro is a graphical program used to map keyboard keys and mouse controls
to a gamepad. Useful for playing PC games with no gamepad or poor gamepad
support.
Now it generates notifications for auto-detected devices as well as
for explicitly configured ones, sends well formed e-mails and supports
immediate `wall` and `xmessage` notifications.
`cups.desktop` that depends on some fixed version of `xdg-open` is not
particularly useful; it should use `xdg-open` from the environment
it's being run from.
As a side effect, one can now fiddle with `xdg_utils` package without
rebuilding pretty much every single one of graphical packages (they
all depend on `cups` through their graphical toolkits).
It was broken by cmake updates (between 3.2.2 and 3.3.1).
I chose the github tarballs because they have a predictable URL,
although they're much larger due to not supporting xz.
/cc maintainer @7c6f434c.
Unbreaks some packages because they require py>=1.4.29. Example build
error, from the 'argh' package:
The 'py>=1.4.29' distribution was not found and is required by pytest
`nox-review wip` shows that there is a net reduction in build errors with
this patch.
Avoids this warning when running `nixos-rebuild switch`:
````
building Nix...
building the system configuration...
trace: Obsolete option `services.virtualboxGuest.enable' is used. It was renamed to `virtualisation.virtualbox.guest.enable'.
````
Currently the lightdm test detects a successful login by OCR'ing the
screen and searching for the clock widget's text. Since the last
IceWM update (commit bdd20ced), either the font or the colors of the
clock changed such that the OCR doesn't pick it up anymore.
Instead, just look for a matching (root) window title, e.g.
"IceWM 1.3.9 (Linux/i686)"