46 lines
1.3 KiB
Nix
46 lines
1.3 KiB
Nix
{ fetchurl, stdenv, pkgconfig, exiv2, libxml2, gtk
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, libxslt, docbook_xsl, docbook_xml_dtd_42 }:
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stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
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name = "gpscorrelate-1.6.0";
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src = fetchurl {
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url = "http://freefoote.dview.net/linux/${name}.tar.gz";
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sha256 = "1j0b244xkvvf0i4iivp4dw9k4xgyasx4sapd91mnwki35fy49sp0";
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};
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buildInputs = [
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pkgconfig exiv2 libxml2 gtk
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libxslt docbook_xsl docbook_xml_dtd_42
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];
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patchPhase = ''
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sed -i "Makefile" \
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-es",^[[:blank:]]*prefix[[:blank:]]*=.*$,prefix = $out,g"
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'';
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meta = {
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description = "A GPS photo correlation tool, to add EXIF geotags";
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longDescription = ''
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Digital cameras are cool. So is GPS. And, EXIF tags are really
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cool too.
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What happens when you merge the three? You end up with a set of
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photos taken with a digital camera that are "stamped" with the
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location at which they were taken.
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The EXIF standard defines a number of tags that are for use with GPS.
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A variety of programs exist around the place to match GPS data
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with digital camera photos, but most of them are Windows or
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MacOS only. Which doesn't really suit me that much. Also, each
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one takes the GPS data in a different format.
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'';
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license = stdenv.lib.licenses.gpl2Plus;
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homepage = http://freefoote.dview.net/linux_gpscorr.html;
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};
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}
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