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authorLudovic Courtès <ludo@gnu.org>2022-01-24 09:26:39 +0100
committerLudovic Courtès <ludo@gnu.org>2022-01-24 10:38:13 +0100
commita00dff3ac113722a709dbe97a727777b3739a5c1 (patch)
tree158a0f2ea316855af7404bd8dbffef6c2ffa4063 /doc
parentce9363dd114095cf9c8d7310d4211b9d5f8c3a12 (diff)
downloadguix-a00dff3ac113722a709dbe97a727777b3739a5c1.tar.gz
guix-a00dff3ac113722a709dbe97a727777b3739a5c1.zip
doc: Clarify search path bits.
Suggested by Maxime Devos <maximedevos@telenet.be> and Maxim Cournoyer <maxim.cournoyer@gmail.com>. * doc/guix.texi (package Reference): Clarify 'native-search-paths' vs. 'search-paths'. (Search Paths): Link to it. Remove unnecessarily "define libxml2". Reword 'file-pattern' description that said "When true".
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r--doc/guix.texi44
1 files changed, 29 insertions, 15 deletions
diff --git a/doc/guix.texi b/doc/guix.texi
index 38090cb9a3..97674d0fa7 100644
--- a/doc/guix.texi
+++ b/doc/guix.texi
@@ -7245,6 +7245,19 @@ A list of @code{search-path-specification} objects describing
search-path environment variables honored by the package. @xref{Search
Paths}, for more on search path specifications.
+As for inputs, the distinction between @code{native-search-paths} and
+@code{search-paths} only matters when cross-compiling. In a
+cross-compilation context, @code{native-search-paths} applies
+exclusively to native inputs whereas @code{search-paths} applies only to
+host inputs.
+
+Packages such as cross-compilers care about target inputs---for
+instance, our (modified) GCC cross-compiler has
+@env{CROSS_C_INCLUDE_PATH} in @code{search-paths}, which allows it to
+pick @file{.h} files for the target system and @emph{not} those of
+native inputs. For the majority of packages though, only
+@code{native-search-paths} makes sense.
+
@item @code{replacement} (default: @code{#f})
This must be either @code{#f} or a package object that will be used as a
@dfn{replacement} for this package. @xref{Security Updates, grafts},
@@ -9408,7 +9421,7 @@ executable files to be installed:
Many programs and libraries look for input data in a @dfn{search path},
a list of directories: shells like Bash look for executables in the
command search path, a C compiler looks for @file{.h} files in its
-header search path, and the Python interpreter looks for @file{.py}
+header search path, the Python interpreter looks for @file{.py}
files in its search path, the spell checker has a search path for
dictionaries, and so on.
@@ -9470,7 +9483,8 @@ variable must be defined to include all the
@file{lib/python/3.9/site-packages} sub-directories encountered in its
environment. (The @code{native-} bit means that, if we are in a
cross-compilation environment, only native inputs may be added to the
-search path.) In the NumPy example above, the profile where
+search path; @pxref{package Reference, @code{search-paths}}.)
+In the NumPy example above, the profile where
@code{python} appears contains exactly one such sub-directory, and
@env{GUIX_PYTHONPATH} is set to that. When there are several
@file{lib/python/3.9/site-packages}---this is the case in package build
@@ -9507,17 +9521,16 @@ to be found in @file{xml} sub-directories---nothing less. The search
path specification looks like this:
@lisp
-(define libxml2
- (package
- (name "libxml2")
- ;; some fields omitted
- (native-search-paths
- (list (search-path-specification
- (variable "XML_CATALOG_FILES")
- (separator " ")
- (files '("xml"))
- (file-pattern "^catalog\\.xml$")
- (file-type 'regular))))))
+(package
+ (name "libxml2")
+ ;; some fields omitted
+ (native-search-paths
+ (list (search-path-specification
+ (variable "XML_CATALOG_FILES")
+ (separator " ")
+ (files '("xml"))
+ (file-pattern "^catalog\\.xml$")
+ (file-type 'regular)))))
@end lisp
Worry not, search path specifications are usually not this tricky.
@@ -9557,8 +9570,9 @@ In the libxml2 example above, we would match regular files; in the
Python example, we would match directories.
@item @code{file-pattern} (default: @code{#f})
-When true, this is a regular expression specifying files to be matched
-@emph{within} the sub-directories specified by the @code{files} field.
+This must be either @code{#f} or a regular expression specifying
+files to be matched @emph{within} the sub-directories specified by the
+@code{files} field.
Again, the libxml2 example shows a situation where this is needed.
@end table