I don't know what a "mouse keyboard" is, but instead of fixing the
description, let's use the one from the upstream README file, which is
also shorter than what we previously had.
The homepage http://synergy-foss.org/ is outdate since ages, so let's
point to the new site.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Overview of the updated versions:
beta: 45.0.2454.15 -> 45.0.2454.26
dev: 45.0.2454.15 -> 46.0.2471.2
Changes for getting beta and dev channel to build:
* The reference for chrome::FILE_FLASH_PLUGIN doesn't exist anymore in
version 46, because it has been dropped upstream, see the following
review URL:
https://codereview.chromium.org/1255943002
We set the PPAPI Flash path using a command line flag anyway, so it
doesn't hurt us if we don't patch that path (which was an old
artifact from the NSAPI->PPAPI conversion anyway).
Changes for the dev channel only:
* It seems that in the SCM, chrome/test/data/webui/ contains a lot of
files, however they are missing in the tarball.
This has been reported upstream at: https://crbug.com/515917
Our fix is to just not include webui/i18n_process_css_test.html at
all, to avoid the configure (gyp) phase to fail, because we're not
building tests anyway.
All channels built and tested by my Hydra instance at:
https://headcounter.org/hydra/eval/218978
Test reports:
x86: https://headcounter.org/hydra/build/723341/download/1/log.html
x86_64: https://headcounter.org/hydra/build/723342/download/1/log.html
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Regression introduced by 032f0ffdd03fa4d836825bcbb7e89f1abcf7e57f.
The change doesn't look obvious at the first sight why it may cause
problems with lib.makePerlPath, but it introduces a Perl package called
"lib".
And using "with perlPackages;" uses the Perl library "lib" instead of
the lib attribute set from pkgs.
So let's use pkgs.lib.makePerlPath directly in hope that there won't be
a Perl package anytime soon which is called "pkgs".
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Some plugin bundles must be unpacked when used in Eclipse. With this
change the plugin manifest is checked for the setting indicating that
unpacking should happen.
Simplifies `buildEclipsePlugin` and `buildEclipseUpdateSite` functions
such that they require only absolutely necessary arguments. Also
add/expand comments slightly.
It does not really make sense to install the plugin packages directly as
they are intended for use with `eclipseWithPlugins`. Therefore it is
best not to present them to users as such.
This function provides functionality common to all Eclipse plugin
builders. In particular, it sets a package name and flags the derivation
as an Eclipse plugin.
Pipework lets you connect together containers in arbitrarily complex
scenarios. Pipework uses cgroups and namespace and works with "plain"
LXC containers (created with lxc-start), and with the awesome Docker.