On Wednesday, March 08, 2017 04:39:50 PM Dag-Erling Smørgrav wrote: > Baptiste Daroussin <b...@freebsd.org> writes: > > I would like to propose a change in the localbase hier for ports > > > > I think we should add /usr/local/share/man in the manpath along with > > at first and maybe instead of in long term. > > 2) plus info -> share/info as suggested by jbeich > > 3) plus libdata/pkgconfig -> lib/pkgconfig > > These three items will ensure that "./configure --prefix=/usr/local && > make install" will do the right thing out of the box - by changing our > definition of "the right thing" to match what the GNU autotools have > been doing for at least 15 years. > > 4) Remove the hardcoded library path in lang/gcc* > > This makes it possible to work on software that includes both libraries > and programs while an earlier copy of the same software is already > installed. With the current state of gcc, the programs you are working > on will be linked against the version of the library that's already > installed instead of the version you just compiled, and there is nothing > you can do to prevent it. You won't notice anything if all you ever do > is "make && make install", because the new library will replace the old, > but if you try to run your program directly from the build tree, it will > use the wrong library. This can be incredibly frustrating if you're not > aware of it - imagine you're trying to fix a bug in that library and no > matter what you do, your regression test keeps failing...
+1 on all these. I think that ports compilers should not have /usr/local/include or /usr/local/lib as implicit paths either as others have stated. I wouldn't even mind if we had both /usr/local/man and /usr/local/share/man so long as our default MANPATH included both if that means applying fewer patches to ports. -- John Baldwin _______________________________________________ freebsd-ports@freebsd.org mailing list https://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-ports To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-ports-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"