uboot: (firmwareOdroidC2/C4) don't invoke patch tool, use patches = [] instead

https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/stdenv/generic/setup.sh#L948
this can do it nicely.

Signed-off-by: Anton Arapov <anton@deadbeef.mx>
This commit is contained in:
Anton Arapov 2021-04-03 12:58:10 +02:00 committed by Alan Daniels
commit 56de2bcd43
30691 changed files with 3076956 additions and 0 deletions

View file

@ -0,0 +1,44 @@
{ lib, stdenv, fetchFromGitHub, automake, autoconf, pkg-config, gtk3 }:
stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
pname = "gsimplecal";
version = "2.2";
src = fetchFromGitHub {
owner = "dmedvinsky";
repo = "gsimplecal";
rev = "v${version}";
sha256 = "sha256-r7OitN7WSY7vxpQCraLyokgUNgvaVFjE17ghBGgxzuM=";
};
postPatch = ''
sed -ie '/sys\/sysctl.h/d' src/Unique.cpp
'';
enableParallelBuilding = true;
nativeBuildInputs = [ pkg-config automake autoconf ];
buildInputs = [ gtk3 ];
preConfigure = "./autogen.sh";
meta = {
homepage = "http://dmedvinsky.github.io/gsimplecal/";
description = "Lightweight calendar application written in C++ using GTK";
longDescription = ''
gsimplecal was intentionally made for use with tint2 panel in the
openbox environment to be launched upon clock click, but of course it
will work without it. In fact, binding the gsimplecal to some hotkey in
you window manager will probably make you happy. The thing is that when
it is started it first shows up, when you run it again it closes the
running instance. In that way it is very easy to integrate anywhere. No
need to write some wrapper scripts or whatever.
Also, you can configure it to not only show the calendar, but also
display multiple clocks for different world time zones.
'';
license = lib.licenses.bsd3;
maintainers = [ lib.maintainers.romildo ];
platforms = lib.platforms.linux;
};
}