We already have mini_httpd, but IMHO it is *too* minimal as in not very
flexible in configuration (for example, I haven't found any runtime
configuration for disabling logging), so that's why I decided to add
thttpd, which serves quite well as an ad-hoc HTTPd.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
This is a simple tool to scan Nixpkgs for violations of the packaging
guidelines, such as multiple packages with the same name, packages
that lack a description or license, and so on.
To use:
$ nix-env -i nixpkgs-lint
$ cd .../nixpkgs
$ nixpkgs-lint
Current statistics:
Number of packages: 8666
Number of missing maintainers: 3711
Number of missing licenses: 6159
Number of missing descriptions: 1337
Number of bad descriptions: 633
Number of name collisions: 277
KQEMU was a linux kernel module for accelerating the QEMU virtual
machine on x86 hardware. Since QEMU 0.11 (and up), there is no support
for KQEMU any more, the focus is now on KVM.
http://wiki.qemu.org/KQemu/Doc
I also added a patch that makes dovecot search for
plugins in /var/lib/dovecot/modules. This way, you
can add plugins from several packages without running
into circular dependencies. The module dir needs to
be populated before the dovecot service is started,
for example. This is currently not done in NixOS, so
you need to implement your own service in order to
get the plugins working.
The module patch has not been added to the old 2.1.x
package.
If no config.pulseaudio is explicitely set to false, build with pulse
support, because even if there is no pulse server available, chromium
will fall back to using ALSA.
And we definitely want to avoid that users have to build chromium for
themselves just for the sake of having pulse support. Thanks to @devhell
for actually helping me discovering this (I for myself do always rebuild
Chromium, so I won't notice those kind of things).
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>