On 2021-01-24 08:29, Gary Mills wrote:
On Sat, Jan 23, 2021 at 02:35:01PM -0700, Nelson H. F. Beebe wrote:
I'm part of the TeX Live team that every (northern) winter produces a
new release; many O/S distributions then take up that release and
repackage it according to their preferences.
That's probably what Openindiana would do too. All software products
installed on OI systems are installed from IPS packages, the same as
on Solaris. The packages are built from source. Binaries are of no
use for OI packages.
First, though, there has to be demand for the software product. I,
myself, have no interest in Tex. In fact, I don't even know what Tex
is, except that it's used by mathematicians. I'm not one of those. I
have some doubts about the demand.
Type1 fonts are made available. Type1 fonts are often also embedded in
PDF files, and other places where fonts can be embedded.
IMHO Tex to be a valuable addition to OI.
[...]
However, at Utah, I make a point of doing test builds for many more,
and I can report that this year, with newer compilers on Oracle
Solaris 11.4, there were few problems in building a complete TeX Live
2021 set of binaries.
The current status report is here:
http://www.math.utah.edu/pub/texlive-utah/
I've read this quickly, and already see obstacles. OI packages have
some restrictions that may not arise when the software is installed
directly.
o All software is installed in system locations, mostly under /usr .
Configuration files go under /etc . Log files go under /var . PID
files are installed in /var/run .
o There are no private libraries, and no static libraries. All
libraries are shared, in both senses of the word. Libraries are
often supplied by other packages, and often other products.
o User software does not distinguish between Intel, AMD, or other
compatible CPUs.
o 32 and 64-bit binaries go in the same package, although omitting
the 32-bit versions is acceptable too.
o Packages cannot interfere with each other unless they are alternative
versions of similar products.
The package build process installs the files into a prototype
directory. Then the publish process builds the actual package from
files in the prototype directory. Packages are made available by a
package server, from which users can install them on their own
systems.
--Chris
--
~10yrs a FreeBSD maintainer of ~160 ports
~40yrs of UNIX
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