Bumped version because 2020-12-04 is not available on mirrors.
Tested server and client on NixOS x86_64 with sway/wayland.
Played some rounds with old and new maps on public servers.
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/107497 broke booting on many systems that
use tmpOnTmpfs due to the lack of specifying the mount type.
This commit explicitly adds the mount type, which should fix booting
such systems.
The original change may want to be revisited however too.
co-log fails to compile due to its dependency on chronos, which fails to
compile because the doctests fail with newer GHC versions. So we just
disable the doctests and thus unbreak both.
https://github.com/andrewthad/chronos/issues/62
The change to GCC 10 did break this package as it does some conversation
from 32bit integer to the type "int" which might be "narrower" depending
on the platform. By default GCC 10 errors in these cases. Since this
code is fine (and has been for a long time) it is okay to disable the
error in this case.
Sparkleshare requires 'sh' to be in its PATH, or push-operations fail. Its PATH consists of a single entry, which is configured in the postInstall phase. The bash-derivative includes 'sh', and adding it to the dependencies resolves the issue.
I really hate the very concept of this file (the reason being that I
think "owner" implies some form of BDFL rather than just being
notified), but since there were recent[1] changes[2] in auto-patchelf.sh
which I missed it's probably a good idea to add myself there solely for
being notified, because ofborg can't seem to infer maintainer
information here.
To make indentation consistent with all the other entries in the
codeowners file, I also re-indented the other entries in the "Nixpkgs
Internals" block.
[1]: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/101142
[2]: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/106830
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@nix.build>
This is a program that just displays a static cat picture in a Wayland
window. I packaged it a while ago thinking it wouldn't be useful for
anybody else, but a conversation on IRC today made me realise it would
be!
hello-wayland is very useful as a minimal example when hacking on
Wayland ecosystem stuff -- even if Firefox doesn't work yet,
hello-wayland probably will and that can be useful to guide you in the
right direction!