depot/third_party/nixpkgs/pkgs/applications/misc/yambar/default.nix
Default email 81047829ea Project import generated by Copybara.
GitOrigin-RevId: 48d63e924a2666baf37f4f14a18f19347fbd54a2
2022-02-10 15:34:41 -05:00

111 lines
2.7 KiB
Nix

{ lib
, stdenv
, fetchFromGitea
, alsa-lib
, fcft
, json_c
, libmpdclient
, libxcb
, libyaml
, meson
, ninja
, pixman
, pkg-config
, scdoc
, tllist
, udev
, wayland
, wayland-protocols
, wayland-scanner
, xcbutil
, xcbutilcursor
, xcbutilerrors
, xcbutilwm
, waylandSupport ? true
, x11Support ? true
}:
let
# Courtesy of sternenseemann and FRidh
mesonFeatureFlag = opt: b: "-D${opt}=${if b then "enabled" else "disabled"}";
in
stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
pname = "yambar";
version = "1.8.0";
src = fetchFromGitea {
domain = "codeberg.org";
owner = "dnkl";
repo = "yambar";
rev = version;
sha256 = "0d8n9hvmxj7759pfqssqcl9wvb986qsph8bnjsjm9bf97mflhy6d";
};
nativeBuildInputs = [
pkg-config
meson
ninja
scdoc
wayland-scanner
];
buildInputs = [
alsa-lib
fcft
json_c
libmpdclient
libyaml
pixman
tllist
udev
] ++ lib.optionals (waylandSupport) [
wayland
wayland-protocols
] ++ lib.optionals (x11Support) [
xcbutil
xcbutilcursor
xcbutilerrors
xcbutilwm
];
mesonBuildType = "release";
mesonFlags = [
(mesonFeatureFlag "backend-x11" x11Support)
(mesonFeatureFlag "backend-wayland" waylandSupport)
];
meta = with lib; {
homepage = "https://codeberg.org/dnkl/yambar";
changelog = "https://codeberg.org/dnkl/yambar/releases/tag/${version}";
description = "Modular status panel for X11 and Wayland";
longDescription = ''
yambar is a lightweight and configurable status panel (bar, for short) for
X11 and Wayland, that goes to great lengths to be both CPU and battery
efficient - polling is only done when absolutely necessary.
It has a number of modules that provide information in the form of tags.
For example, the clock module has a date tag that contains the current
date.
The modules do not know how to present the information though. This is
instead done by particles. And the user, you, decides which particles (and
thus how to present the data) to use.
Furthermore, each particle can have a decoration - a background color or a
graphical underline, for example.
There is no support for images or icons. use an icon font (e.g. Font
Awesome, or Material Icons) if you want a graphical representation.
There are a number of modules and particles builtin. More can be added as
plugins. You can even write your own!
To summarize: a bar displays information provided by modules, using
particles and decorations. How is configured by you.
'';
license = licenses.mit;
maintainers = with maintainers; [ AndersonTorres ];
platforms = with platforms; unix;
};
}