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[bug#27915] libnl additions
From: |
Dave Love |
Subject: |
[bug#27915] libnl additions |
Date: |
Wed, 23 Aug 2017 11:15:40 +0100 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/24.5 (gnu/linux) |
Marius Bakke <address@hidden> writes:
> Sorry for the delay, these fell through the cracks a bit.
No worries; thanks. I don't mean to argue below, just explain.
Apologies if this re-opens the issue -- I can't remember what debbugs does.
>> * gnu/packages/linux.scm (libnl)[native-inputs, outputs]: Add doc source.
>> [arguments]: New field.
>
> I ended up rewriting the install-doc phase so that it extracts directly
> to the "doc" output, and adjusted the commit message slightly.
I wondered about that, but just did it as in rpm. For info, are there
policy or technical reasons for it?
> Please mention all changed inputs here (e.g. for grepping purposes).
>
>> [outputs]: Add python2, python3.
>> [install-python]: New phase.
>> (native-inputs
>> - `(("flex" ,flex) ("bison" ,bison)
>> + `(("flex" ,flex)
>> + ("bison" ,bison)
>> + ("python-2" ,python-2)
>> + ("python-3" ,python-3)
>
> The Pythons here need to be regular inputs since they are referenced.
I think the documentation could do with clarification in this area; I'll
make a bug report about what's unclear to me. (For what it's worth, I
thought regular inputs would propagate to "out", and it wouldn't be
important to depend on Python for the Python outputs.)
>> + (add-after 'install 'install-python
>> + (lambda* (#:key outputs #:allow-other-keys)
>> + (define (python-inst python)
>> + (let ((ldflags (format #f "LDFLAGS=-Wl,-rpath=~a/lib"
>> + (assoc-ref %outputs "out")))
>> + (pyout (assoc-ref %outputs python)))
>> + (and
>> + ;; The rpm spec quoth "build twice, otherwise capi.py is
>> + ;; not copied to the build directory"
>
> I went ahead and removed this comment since we are not an RPM derived
> distro, and always run "setup.py build" before "install" anyway.
[I just meant to note an apparent deficiency documented elsewhere that
might be relevant before the install step, e.g. in tests; I do the same
for rpm if I'm looking at an existing dpkg.] It's probably worth
specifying using build before install in the manual if that's required.