On Tuesday October 11 2016 09:21:09 Daniel J. Luke wrote:
>one way to handle it could be:
>+ # don't normalize absolute paths
See my previous message about why normalisation might be used here; completing
a relative path is clearly another reason.
I wonder a bit why `port provides` supports relative paths; is it used in
scripts (or even Portfiles)?
I could imagine this:
{{{
proc macports::normalize { filename } {
set nprefix [file dirname [file normalize "${macports::prefix}/foo"]]
return [string map {${nprefix} ${macports::prefix}} [file normalize
$filename]]
}
}}}
and then action_provides can use macports::normalize instead of [file
normalize].
I'll presume that [string map] will check if ${nprefix} and ${macports::prefix}
are equal before doing a replacement mapping.
R.
_______________________________________________
macports-dev mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.macosforge.org/mailman/listinfo/macports-dev