manpath change for ports ?
Steve Kargl
sgk at troutmask.apl.washington.edu
Fri Mar 10 16:38:31 UTC 2017
On Fri, Mar 10, 2017 at 05:03:08PM +0100, Tijl Coosemans wrote:
> On Fri, 10 Mar 2017 10:50:39 +0100 Dag-Erling Smørgrav <des at des.no> wrote:
> > John Baldwin <jhb at freebsd.org> writes:
> >> 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.
> >
> > The default MANPATH is constructed dynamically from PATH:
> >
> > 1. From each component of the user's PATH for the first of:
> > - pathname/man
> > - pathname/MAN
> > - If pathname ends with /bin: pathname/../man
> > Note: Special logic exists to make /bin and /usr/bin look in
> > /usr/share/man for manual files.
> >
> > If we change this to:
> >
> > 1. From each component of the user's PATH for the first of:
> > - pathname/man
> > - pathname/MAN
> > - If pathname ends with /bin or /sbin: pathname/../man and
> > pathname/../share/man
> >
> > we wouldn't need any "special logic", but I really don't like the idea
> > of having different ports installing man pages in different locations.
>
> I grepped the ports tree and found nearly 5700 ports. That's a lot to
> change all at once but it may be doable. It depends on how much fallout
> there is in the exp-run.
ln -s /usr/local/share/man /usr/local/man
should cause the manpages to land where you want. Then port
maintainers can sweep ports/ to allow for the removal of symlink.
On a side note, it is unfortunate that one cannot set the
environmental variable MANPATH as documented without either
a mysterious vanishing of man pages or an idiotic warning
appear with each invocation of man, apropos, ...
--
Steve
20161221 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IbCHE-hONow
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