aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorUlrich Müller <ulm@gentoo.org>2022-08-17 08:57:22 +0200
committerUlrich Müller <ulm@gentoo.org>2022-08-17 08:57:22 +0200
commit65170e5755b44601f725d6c04e25ec2af3d6aba6 (patch)
treee6853c41ce8746eff401fb12a6e387dd5504547d /ebuild-writing
parentgeneral-concepts/copyright-policy: List licenses explicitly (diff)
downloaddevmanual-65170e5755b44601f725d6c04e25ec2af3d6aba6.tar.gz
devmanual-65170e5755b44601f725d6c04e25ec2af3d6aba6.tar.bz2
devmanual-65170e5755b44601f725d6c04e25ec2af3d6aba6.zip
ebuild-writing/variables: Demote single variable sections to subsections
Reorder subsections to follow the ordering of the tables. Signed-off-by: Ulrich Müller <ulm@gentoo.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'ebuild-writing')
-rw-r--r--ebuild-writing/variables/text.xml340
1 files changed, 170 insertions, 170 deletions
diff --git a/ebuild-writing/variables/text.xml b/ebuild-writing/variables/text.xml
index f07832e..4c7df4f 100644
--- a/ebuild-writing/variables/text.xml
+++ b/ebuild-writing/variables/text.xml
@@ -185,6 +185,57 @@ for these variables when writing ebuilds.
</table>
</body>
+
+<subsection>
+<title>ROOT</title>
+<body>
+
+<p>
+The idea behind <c>ROOT</c> is that one can build a system with
+<c>ROOT=/somewhere</c> and then chroot into it or tar up
+<c>/somewhere</c> as a system image. It is not designed to allow the
+user to run <c>/somewhere/usr/bin/foo</c>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ebuilds may reference <c>ROOT</c> only during <c>pkg_*</c> phases. It
+can't be used correctly in <c>src_*</c> phases, since <c>ROOT</c> may
+be different when merging a binary package. For example, a binary
+package may be built with <c>ROOT=/</c> and then installed onto a
+system using <c>ROOT=/somewhere</c>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When building a package, <c>ROOT</c> should not be used to satisfy the
+required dependencies on libraries, headers files etc. Instead, the
+files on the build system should be specified using <c>/</c>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a cross compiling environment, ebuilds must not call any of the
+binaries inside <c>ROOT</c> since they may not be executable on the
+build system.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Below is an example of an ebuild that uses <c>ROOT</c> in
+<c>pkg_postinst()</c> to conditionally print an error message if an
+old and obsolete configuration file still exists:
+</p>
+
+<codesample lang="ebuild">
+pkg_postinst() {
+ if [[ -e "${ROOT}/etc/oldconfig" ]]; then
+ ewarn "You still have the obsolete config file "
+ ewarn " ${ROOT}/etc/oldconfig."
+ ewarn "Please migrate your settings to ${ROOT}/etc/newconfig"
+ ewarn "and remove ${ROOT}/etc/oldconfig."
+ fi
+}
+</codesample>
+
+</body>
+</subsection>
</section>
<section>
@@ -348,45 +399,11 @@ The following variables may or must be defined by every ebuild.
</table>
</body>
-</section>
-<section>
-<title>SLOT</title>
-<body>
-
-<p>
-When slots are not needed, use <c>SLOT="0"</c>. Do <b>not</b> use
-<c>SLOT=""</c>, because the variable must not be empty.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-See <uri link="::general-concepts/slotting/" /> for more information on this
-variable and see <uri link="::ebuild-maintenance/package-moves/" />.
-</p>
-
-</body>
-</section>
-
-<section>
-<title>KEYWORDS</title>
-<body>
-
-<p>
-The only valid construct involving a <c>*</c> inside <c>KEYWORDS</c> is a <c>-*</c>. Do
-<b>not</b> use <c>KEYWORDS="*"</c> or <c>KEYWORDS="~*"</c>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-See <uri link="::keywording/"/> for how to handle this variable.
-</p>
-
-</body>
-</section>
-
-<section>
+<subsection>
<title>SRC_URI</title>
-<subsection>
+<subsubsection>
<title>Conditional Sources</title>
<body>
@@ -405,9 +422,9 @@ SRC_URI="https://example.com/files/${P}-core.tar.bz2
</codesample>
</body>
-</subsection>
+</subsubsection>
-<subsection>
+<subsubsection>
<title>Renaming Sources</title>
<body>
@@ -430,9 +447,9 @@ SRC_URI="https://example.com/files/${PV}.tar.gz -&gt; ${P}.tar.gz"
</codesample>
</body>
-</subsection>
+</subsubsection>
-<subsection>
+<subsubsection>
<title>Third-party mirrors</title>
<body>
@@ -487,9 +504,9 @@ list does not outweigh the burden of maintaining it.
</p>
</body>
-</subsection>
+</subsubsection>
-<subsection>
+<subsubsection>
<title>Lifting restrictions</title>
<body>
@@ -547,110 +564,161 @@ The following table shows the effects of the prefixes when <c>RESTRICT="mirror"<
</table>
</body>
+</subsubsection>
</subsection>
-</section>
-<section>
-<title>IUSE</title>
+<subsection>
+<title>LICENSE</title>
<body>
<p>
-Note that the <c>IUSE</c> variable is cumulative, so there is no need to specify
-USE flags used only within inherited eclasses within the ebuild's IUSE.
-</p>
-<note>
-You need not assign the IUSE variable in your ebuild if it is empty.
-</note>
-
-<p>
-Arch USE flags (<c>sparc</c>, <c>mips</c>, <c>x64-macos</c> and so on) should
-not be listed.
+It is possible to specify multiple <c>LICENSE</c> entries, and entries which only
+apply if a particular <c>USE</c> flag is set. The format is the same as for
+<c>DEPEND</c>. See <uri link="https://www.gentoo.org/glep/glep-0023.html">
+GLEP 23</uri> for details.
</p>
</body>
-</section>
+</subsection>
-<section>
-<title>LICENSE</title>
+<subsection>
+<title>SLOT</title>
<body>
<p>
-It is possible to specify multiple <c>LICENSE</c> entries, and entries which only
-apply if a particular <c>USE</c> flag is set. The format is the same as for
-<c>DEPEND</c>. See <uri link="https://www.gentoo.org/glep/glep-0023.html">
-GLEP 23</uri> for details.
+When slots are not needed, use <c>SLOT="0"</c>. Do <b>not</b> use
+<c>SLOT=""</c>, because the variable must not be empty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+See <uri link="::general-concepts/slotting/" /> for more information on this
+variable and see <uri link="::ebuild-maintenance/package-moves/" />.
</p>
</body>
-</section>
+</subsection>
-<section>
-<title>RESTRICT</title>
+<subsection>
+<title>KEYWORDS</title>
<body>
<p>
-While Portage may recognise several different <c>RESTRICT</c> tokens, it is
-important that you do not rely on them existing. That is, you should ensure
-your ebuild does not fail if those tokens are not exposed or given a different
-name by another package manager. You can make use of Portage-provided
-<c>RESTRICT</c> tokens, but do not fail hard without them. See
-<uri link="https://projects.gentoo.org/pms/7/pms.html#x1-810008.2.8">
-PMS</uri> for the list of standardised <c>RESTRICT</c> tokens, or the above
-table.
+The only valid construct involving a <c>*</c> inside <c>KEYWORDS</c> is a <c>-*</c>. Do
+<b>not</b> use <c>KEYWORDS="*"</c> or <c>KEYWORDS="~*"</c>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+See <uri link="::keywording/"/> for how to handle this variable.
</p>
</body>
-</section>
+</subsection>
-<section>
-<title>ROOT</title>
+<subsection>
+<title>IUSE</title>
<body>
<p>
-The idea behind <c>ROOT</c> is that one can build a system with
-<c>ROOT=/somewhere</c> and then chroot into it or tar up
-<c>/somewhere</c> as a system image. It is not designed to allow the
-user to run <c>/somewhere/usr/bin/foo</c>.
+Note that the <c>IUSE</c> variable is cumulative, so there is no need to specify
+USE flags used only within inherited eclasses within the ebuild's IUSE.
</p>
+<note>
+You need not assign the IUSE variable in your ebuild if it is empty.
+</note>
<p>
-Ebuilds may reference <c>ROOT</c> only during <c>pkg_*</c> phases. It
-can't be used correctly in <c>src_*</c> phases, since <c>ROOT</c> may
-be different when merging a binary package. For example, a binary
-package may be built with <c>ROOT=/</c> and then installed onto a
-system using <c>ROOT=/somewhere</c>.
+Arch USE flags (<c>sparc</c>, <c>mips</c>, <c>x64-macos</c> and so on) should
+not be listed.
</p>
+</body>
+</subsection>
+
+<subsection>
+<title>REQUIRED_USE</title>
+<body>
<p>
-When building a package, <c>ROOT</c> should not be used to satisfy the
-required dependencies on libraries, headers files etc. Instead, the
-files on the build system should be specified using <c>/</c>.
+The <c>REQUIRED_USE</c> variable contains a list of assertions that must be
+met by the configuration of USE flags to be valid for this ebuild. In order
+to be matched, a USE flag in a terminal element must be enabled
+(or disabled if it has an exclamation mark prefix).
</p>
<p>
-In a cross compiling environment, ebuilds must not call any of the
-binaries inside <c>ROOT</c> since they may not be executable on the
-build system.
+Essentially, <c>REQUIRED_USE</c> is an analogue of <c>DEPEND</c> style syntax.
+For example, to state that some combination is forbidden, i.e. "if foo is set,
+bar must be unset":
</p>
+<codesample lang="ebuild">
+REQUIRED_USE="foo? ( !bar )"
+</codesample>
<p>
-Below is an example of an ebuild that uses <c>ROOT</c> in
-<c>pkg_postinst()</c> to conditionally print an error message if an
-old and obsolete configuration file still exists:
+To state "if foo is set, then at least one of bar, baz, and quux must be activated":
+</p>
+<codesample lang="ebuild">
+REQUIRED_USE="foo? ( || ( bar baz quux ) )"
+</codesample>
+<p>
+To state "exactly one of foo, bar, or baz must be set, but not several":
</p>
+<codesample lang="ebuild">
+REQUIRED_USE="^^ ( foo bar baz )"
+</codesample>
+<p>
+Note that the last relationship is that of an Exclusive OR (XOR).
+While an XOR could be formed from usual DEPEND syntax,
+a specific ^^ operator has been added for this case.
+</p>
+<p>
+Finally, to state "at least one of foo, bar, or baz must be set":
+</p>
+<codesample lang="ebuild">
+REQUIRED_USE="|| ( foo bar baz )"
+</codesample>
+<important>
+See section <uri link="::general-concepts/use-flags/#Conflicting USE Flags"/>
+for when (and when not) to use <c>REQUIRED_USE</c>.
+</important>
+</body>
+<subsubsection>
+<title>EAPI 5</title>
+<body>
+<p>
+EAPI 5 added an additional case to simplify conflicting USE flags.
+</p>
+<p>
+To state "zero or one of foo, bar, or baz must be set, but not several":
+</p>
<codesample lang="ebuild">
-pkg_postinst() {
- if [[ -e "${ROOT}/etc/oldconfig" ]]; then
- ewarn "You still have the obsolete config file "
- ewarn " ${ROOT}/etc/oldconfig."
- ewarn "Please migrate your settings to ${ROOT}/etc/newconfig"
- ewarn "and remove ${ROOT}/etc/oldconfig."
- fi
-}
+REQUIRED_USE="?? ( foo bar baz )"
+</codesample>
+<p>In the previous EAPI, this would be the same as:</p>
+<codesample lang="ebuild">
+REQUIRED_USE="foo? ( !bar !baz ) bar? ( !foo !baz ) baz? ( !foo !bar )"
</codesample>
+</body>
+</subsubsection>
+</subsection>
+
+<subsection>
+<title>RESTRICT</title>
+<body>
+
+<p>
+While Portage may recognise several different <c>RESTRICT</c> tokens, it is
+important that you do not rely on them existing. That is, you should ensure
+your ebuild does not fail if those tokens are not exposed or given a different
+name by another package manager. You can make use of Portage-provided
+<c>RESTRICT</c> tokens, but do not fail hard without them. See
+<uri link="https://projects.gentoo.org/pms/7/pms.html#x1-810008.2.8">
+PMS</uri> for the list of standardised <c>RESTRICT</c> tokens, or the above
+table.
+</p>
</body>
+</subsection>
</section>
<section>
@@ -826,74 +894,6 @@ have no direct correlation with the expected string should be avoided.
</section>
<section>
-<title>REQUIRED_USE</title>
-<body>
-<p>
-The <c>REQUIRED_USE</c> variable contains a list of assertions that must be
-met by the configuration of USE flags to be valid for this ebuild. In order
-to be matched, a USE flag in a terminal element must be enabled
-(or disabled if it has an exclamation mark prefix).
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Essentially, <c>REQUIRED_USE</c> is an analogue of <c>DEPEND</c> style syntax.
-For example, to state that some combination is forbidden, i.e. "if foo is set,
-bar must be unset":
-</p>
-
-<codesample lang="ebuild">
-REQUIRED_USE="foo? ( !bar )"
-</codesample>
-<p>
-To state "if foo is set, then at least one of bar, baz, and quux must be activated":
-</p>
-<codesample lang="ebuild">
-REQUIRED_USE="foo? ( || ( bar baz quux ) )"
-</codesample>
-<p>
-To state "exactly one of foo, bar, or baz must be set, but not several":
-</p>
-<codesample lang="ebuild">
-REQUIRED_USE="^^ ( foo bar baz )"
-</codesample>
-<p>
-Note that the last relationship is that of an Exclusive OR (XOR).
-While an XOR could be formed from usual DEPEND syntax,
-a specific ^^ operator has been added for this case.
-</p>
-<p>
-Finally, to state "at least one of foo, bar, or baz must be set":
-</p>
-<codesample lang="ebuild">
-REQUIRED_USE="|| ( foo bar baz )"
-</codesample>
-<important>
-See section <uri link="::general-concepts/use-flags/#Conflicting USE Flags"/>
-for when (and when not) to use <c>REQUIRED_USE</c>.
-</important>
-</body>
-
-<subsection>
-<title>EAPI 5</title>
-<body>
-<p>
-EAPI 5 added an additional case to simplify conflicting USE flags.
-</p>
-<p>
-To state "zero or one of foo, bar, or baz must be set, but not several":
-</p>
-<codesample lang="ebuild">
-REQUIRED_USE="?? ( foo bar baz )"
-</codesample>
-<p>In the previous EAPI, this would be the same as:</p>
-<codesample lang="ebuild">
-REQUIRED_USE="foo? ( !bar !baz ) bar? ( !foo !baz ) baz? ( !foo !bar )"
-</codesample>
-</body>
-</subsection>
-</section>
-
-<section>
<title>User environment</title>
<body>