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This is actually a DWIM-style hack. It does what we want but I cannot
think of a better name. The idea is that sometimes we want to clean
up path name, possibly following symbolic links, except for the last
component, which we want to keep as is.
$ sh -c '. scripts/functions; CanonPath /etc/init.d/functions'
/etc/rc.d/init.d/functions
$ sh -c '. scripts/functions; CanonPath /usr/bin/../bin/perl'
/usr/bin/perl
$
So actually it does a few different things: 1) prepend $PWD if needed;
2) cleanup dirname; 3) canonicalize dirname with respect to symbolic links.
Now the question is how to process symbolic links which
targets are directories, e.g. /etc/init.d ? My answer is that
both "/etc/init.d" and "/etc/init.d/", as well as "/etc/init.d/."
should yield the same result, which is "/etc/rc.d/init.d".
This function provides "standard calling conventions" for req/prov methods.
The idea is that the shell script which implements a req/prov method need
not know how exactly it was called and how it should process its arguments.
Instead, it should impelment a function which takes exactly one argument,
which is filename, say MyReq, and finally just call
ArgvFileAction MyReq "$@"
Standard input to argv conversion is then done automatically and transparently.
This will also enable scripts to process real argv arguments, if any,
instead of standard input (but fall back to standard input otherwise).
I also added --help and -v|--verbose options. Surprisingly enough,
the latter increases RPM_SCRIPTS_DEBUG level.
Also added non-intrusive canonicalization of pathnames, hence the name
ArgvFileAction. This is not going to affect rpm-build, but hopefully
this can help when the script is invoked manually.
I want some rpm scripts to be modular, so that e.g. adding new automatic
dependencies does not require ad hoc modifications.
The plan is as follows: I am going to manage methods. Methods
are scripts which e.g. implement particular dependency detection.
The set of methods is defined by its suffix, so that /usr/lib/rpm/*.req
are all "req" methods (the "req" method set).
Hereby I provide two functions which abstract the usage of method sets.
1)
methods=$(SetupMethods SETID WANTED_METHODS)
Returns (prints) the list of active methods identified by SETID.
The SETID argument, according to the above, should be filename suffix.
Performs a check if all WANTED_METHODS are available. WANTED_METHODS is
a space and/or comma separated list of method basenames, e.g. "perl" for
/usr/lib/rpm/perl.req. The list of WANTED_METHODS is also interpreted
according to AutoReqProv tag rules, i.e. "yes" to enable all methods,
"no" to disable all methods, "noperl" to exclude "perl" etc.
When no methods are active, the output string is guaranteed to be empty.
2)
RunMethods SETID "$methods" [CMD...]
Executes method set scripts identified by SETID; the list of methods
"$methods" must be obtained from SetupMethods. CMD can warp method script
execution.
I am going to make certain req/prov scripts work even with empty
RPM_BUILD_ROOT (so that I can analyze the dependencies within the
host system). This probably means that I will remove ValidateBuildRoot
clause from the script. However, since non-empty RPM_BUILD_ROOT still
must be valid, I place the check here.
Just setting -x is very noisy. Here is a better plan. I implement 3
debug levels: verbose (1), debug (2, implies verbose) and -x (3, implies
debug). I move RPM_SCRIPTS_DEBUG test from scripts to scripts/functions,
as well as provide Verbose() and Debug() shell functions for use in scripts.
Furthermore, _scripts_debug macro is now automatically set when rpmbuild
is invoked with --verbose option. Use -vv for debug and -vvv for -x.