;;; GNU Guix --- Functional package management for GNU ;;; Copyright @ 2016 ;;; ;;; This file is part of GNU Guix. ;;; ;;; GNU Guix is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it ;;; under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by ;;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at ;;; your option) any later version. ;;; ;;; GNU Guix is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but ;;; WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of ;;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the ;;; GNU General Public License for more details. ;;; ;;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License ;;; along with GNU Guix. If not, see . (define-module (gnu packages loudmouth) #:use-module (guix licenses) #:use-module (guix packages) #:use-module (guix download) #:use-module (guix build-system gnu) #:use-module (gnu packages) #:use-module (gnu packages autotools) ;; #:use-module (gnu packages guile) #:use-module (gnu packages glib) #:use-module (gnu packages tls) #:use-module (gnu packages pkg-config) ; #:use-module (gnu packages readline) ; #:use-module (gnu packages ncurses) ) (define-public loudmouth (package (name "loudmouth") (version "1.4.3") (source (origin (method url-fetch) (uri (string-append "http://ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/sources/loudmouth/1.4" "/loudmouth-" version ".tar.bz2")) (sha256 (base32 "1qr9z73i33y49pbpq6zy7q537g0iyc8sm56rjf0ylwcv01fkzacm")))) (build-system gnu-build-system) (inputs `(("automake" ,automake) ("autoconf" ,autoconf) ("libtool" ,libtool) ("glib" ,glib) ("openssl" ,openssl) ("pkg-config" ,pkg-config) ;("readline" ,readline) ;("ncurses" ,ncurses) )) (arguments `(#:configure-flags (list "--with-ssl=openssl"))) (home-page "http://www.imendio.com/projects/loudmouth") (synopsis "Loudmouth is a lightweight Jabber client library written in C/Glib.") (description "Loudmouth is a lightweight and easy-to-use C library for programming with the Jabber protocol. It's designed to be easy to get started with and yet extensible to let you do anything the Jabber protocol allows. The goal is to fully support Linux, *BSD, Mac OSX and Windows. It has currently only been tested on Linux (Red Hat 8.0, Debian Unstable) and FreeBSD that I know of. If someone with access to other machines can provide feedback I would be most grateful.") (license lgpl2.1+))) loudmouth