# Copyright 1999-2011 Gentoo Foundation # Distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License v2 # $Header: /var/cvsroot/gentoo-x86/eclass/elisp-common.eclass,v 1.78 2011/12/03 20:43:21 ulm Exp $ # # @ECLASS: elisp-common.eclass # @MAINTAINER: # Gentoo Emacs team # @AUTHOR: # Matthew Kennedy # Jeremy Maitin-Shepard # Mamoru Komachi # Christian Faulhammer # Ulrich Müller # @BLURB: Emacs-related installation utilities # @DESCRIPTION: # # Usually you want to use this eclass for (optional) GNU Emacs support # of your package. This is NOT for XEmacs! # # Many of the steps here are sometimes done by the build system of your # package (especially compilation), so this is mainly for standalone # elisp files you gathered from somewhere else. # # When relying on the emacs USE flag, you need to add # # emacs? ( virtual/emacs ) # # to your DEPEND/RDEPEND line and use the functions provided here to # bring the files to the correct locations. # # If your package requires a minimum Emacs version, e.g. Emacs 23, then # the dependency should be on >=virtual/emacs-23 instead. Because the # user can select the Emacs executable with eselect, you should also # make sure that the active Emacs version is sufficient. This can be # tested with function elisp-need-emacs(), which would typically be # called from pkg_setup(), as in the following example: # # elisp-need-emacs 23 || die "Emacs version too low" # # Please note that such tests should be limited to packages that are # known to fail with lower Emacs versions; the standard case is to # depend on virtual/emacs without version. # # .SS # src_compile() usage: # # An elisp file is compiled by the elisp-compile() function defined # here and simply takes the source files as arguments. The case of # interdependent elisp files is also supported, since the current # directory is added to the load-path which makes sure that all files # are loadable. # # elisp-compile *.el || die # # Function elisp-make-autoload-file() can be used to generate a file # with autoload definitions for the lisp functions. It takes the output # file name (default: "${PN}-autoloads.el") and a list of directories # (default: working directory) as its arguments. Use of this function # requires that the elisp source files contain magic ";;;###autoload" # comments. See the Emacs Lisp Reference Manual (node "Autoload") for # a detailed explanation. # # .SS # src_install() usage: # # The resulting compiled files (.elc) should be put in a subdirectory of # /usr/share/emacs/site-lisp/ which is named after the first argument # of elisp-install(). The following parameters are the files to be put # in that directory. Usually the subdirectory should be ${PN}, you can # choose something else, but remember to tell elisp-site-file-install() # (see below) the change, as it defaults to ${PN}. # # elisp-install ${PN} *.el *.elc || die # # To let the Emacs support be activated by Emacs on startup, you need # to provide a site file (shipped in ${FILESDIR}) which contains the # startup code (have a look in the documentation of your software). # Normally this would look like this: # # (add-to-list 'load-path "@SITELISP@") # (add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist '("\\.csv\\'" . csv-mode)) # (autoload 'csv-mode "csv-mode" "Major mode for csv files." t) # # If your Emacs support files are installed in a subdirectory of # /usr/share/emacs/site-lisp/ (which is strongly recommended), you need # to extend Emacs' load-path as shown in the first non-comment line. # The elisp-site-file-install() function of this eclass will replace # "@SITELISP@" and "@SITEETC@" by the actual paths. # # The next line tells Emacs to load the mode opening a file ending # with ".csv" and load functions depending on the context and needed # features. Be careful though. Commands as "load-library" or "require" # bloat the editor as they are loaded on every startup. When having # many Emacs support files, users may be annoyed by the start-up time. # Also avoid keybindings as they might interfere with the user's # settings. Give a hint in pkg_postinst(), which should be enough. # The guiding principle is that emerging your package should not by # itself cause a change of standard Emacs behaviour. # # The naming scheme for this site-init file matches the shell pattern # "[1-8][0-9]*-gentoo*.el", where the two digits at the beginning define # the loading order (numbers below 10 or above 89 are reserved for # internal use). So if your initialisation depends on another Emacs # package, your site file's number must be higher! If there are no such # interdependencies then the number should be 50. Otherwise, numbers # divisible by 10 are preferred. # # Best practice is to define a SITEFILE variable in the global scope of # your ebuild (e.g., right after S or RDEPEND): # # SITEFILE="50${PN}-gentoo.el" # # Which is then installed by # # elisp-site-file-install "${FILESDIR}/${SITEFILE}" || die # # in src_install(). Any characters after the "-gentoo" part and before # the extension will be stripped from the destination file's name. # For example, a file "50${PN}-gentoo-${PV}.el" will be installed as # "50${PN}-gentoo.el". If your subdirectory is not named ${PN}, give # the differing name as second argument. # # .SS # pkg_postinst() / pkg_postrm() usage: # # After that you need to recreate the start-up file of Emacs after # emerging and unmerging by using # # pkg_postinst() { # elisp-site-regen # } # # pkg_postrm() { # elisp-site-regen # } # # When having optional Emacs support, you should prepend "use emacs &&" # to above calls of elisp-site-regen(). # Don't use "has_version virtual/emacs"! When unmerging the state of # the emacs USE flag is taken from the package database and not from the # environment, so it is no problem when you unset USE=emacs between # merge and unmerge of a package. # @ECLASS-VARIABLE: SITELISP # @DESCRIPTION: # Directory where packages install Emacs Lisp files. SITELISP=/usr/share/emacs/site-lisp # @ECLASS-VARIABLE: SITEETC # @DESCRIPTION: # Directory where packages install miscellaneous (not Lisp) files. SITEETC=/usr/share/emacs/etc # @ECLASS-VARIABLE: EMACS # @DESCRIPTION: # Path of Emacs executable. EMACS=${EPREFIX}/usr/bin/emacs # @ECLASS-VARIABLE: EMACSFLAGS # @DESCRIPTION: # Flags for executing Emacs in batch mode. # These work for Emacs versions 18-23, so don't change them. EMACSFLAGS="-batch -q --no-site-file" # @ECLASS-VARIABLE: BYTECOMPFLAGS # @DESCRIPTION: # Emacs flags used for byte-compilation in elisp-compile(). BYTECOMPFLAGS="-L ." # @FUNCTION: elisp-emacs-version # @DESCRIPTION: # Output version of currently active Emacs. elisp-emacs-version() { local ret # The following will work for at least versions 18-23. echo "(princ emacs-version)" >"${T}"/emacs-version.el ${EMACS} ${EMACSFLAGS} -l "${T}"/emacs-version.el ret=$? rm -f "${T}"/emacs-version.el if [[ ${ret} -ne 0 ]]; then eerror "elisp-emacs-version: Failed to run ${EMACS}" fi return ${ret} } # @FUNCTION: elisp-need-emacs # @USAGE: # @RETURN: 0 if true, 1 otherwise # @DESCRIPTION: # Test if the eselected Emacs version is at least the major version # specified as argument. elisp-need-emacs() { local need_emacs=$1 have_emacs have_emacs=$(elisp-emacs-version) || return einfo "Emacs version: ${have_emacs}" if ! [[ ${have_emacs%%.*} -ge ${need_emacs%%.*} ]]; then eerror "This package needs at least Emacs ${need_emacs%%.*}." eerror "Use \"eselect emacs\" to select the active version." return 1 fi return 0 } # @FUNCTION: elisp-compile # @USAGE: # @DESCRIPTION: # Byte-compile Emacs Lisp files. # # This function uses GNU Emacs to byte-compile all ".el" specified by # its arguments. The resulting byte-code (".elc") files are placed in # the same directory as their corresponding source file. # # The current directory is added to the load-path. This will ensure # that interdependent Emacs Lisp files are visible between themselves, # in case they require or load one another. elisp-compile() { ebegin "Compiling GNU Emacs Elisp files" ${EMACS} ${EMACSFLAGS} ${BYTECOMPFLAGS} -f batch-byte-compile "$@" eend $? "elisp-compile: batch-byte-compile failed" } # @FUNCTION: elisp-make-autoload-file # @USAGE: [output file] [list of directories] # @DESCRIPTION: # Generate a file with autoload definitions for the lisp functions. elisp-make-autoload-file() { local f="${1:-${PN}-autoloads.el}" null="" page=$'\f' shift ebegin "Generating autoload file for GNU Emacs" cat >"${f}" <<-EOF ;;; ${f##*/} --- autoloads for ${PN} ;;; Commentary: ;; Automatically generated by elisp-common.eclass ;; DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE ;;; Code: ${page} ;; Local ${null}Variables: ;; version-control: never ;; no-byte-compile: t ;; no-update-autoloads: t ;; End: ;;; ${f##*/} ends here EOF ${EMACS} ${EMACSFLAGS} \ --eval "(setq make-backup-files nil)" \ --eval "(setq generated-autoload-file (expand-file-name \"${f}\"))" \ -f batch-update-autoloads "${@-.}" eend $? "elisp-make-autoload-file: batch-update-autoloads failed" } # @FUNCTION: elisp-install # @USAGE: # @DESCRIPTION: # Install files in SITELISP directory. elisp-install() { local subdir="$1" shift ebegin "Installing Elisp files for GNU Emacs support" ( # subshell to avoid pollution of calling environment insinto "${SITELISP}/${subdir}" doins "$@" ) eend $? "elisp-install: doins failed" } # @FUNCTION: elisp-site-file-install # @USAGE: [subdirectory] # @DESCRIPTION: # Install Emacs site-init file in SITELISP directory. Automatically # inserts a standard comment header with the name of the package (unless # it is already present). Tokens @SITELISP@ and @SITEETC@ are replaced # by the path to the package's subdirectory in SITELISP and SITEETC, # respectively. elisp-site-file-install() { local sf="${1##*/}" my_pn="${2:-${PN}}" ret local header=";;; ${PN} site-lisp configuration" [[ ${sf} == [0-9][0-9]*-gentoo*.el ]] \ || ewarn "elisp-site-file-install: bad name of site-init file" sf="${T}/${sf/%-gentoo*.el/-gentoo.el}" ebegin "Installing site initialisation file for GNU Emacs" [[ $1 = "${sf}" ]] || cp "$1" "${sf}" sed -i -e "1{:x;/^\$/{n;bx;};/^;.*${PN}/I!s:^:${header}\n\n:;1s:^:\n:;}" \ -e "s:@SITELISP@:${EPREFIX}${SITELISP}/${my_pn}:g" \ -e "s:@SITEETC@:${EPREFIX}${SITEETC}/${my_pn}:g;\$q" "${sf}" ( # subshell to avoid pollution of calling environment insinto "${SITELISP}/site-gentoo.d" doins "${sf}" ) ret=$? rm -f "${sf}" eend ${ret} "elisp-site-file-install: doins failed" } # @FUNCTION: elisp-site-regen # @DESCRIPTION: # Regenerate the site-gentoo.el file, based on packages' site # initialisation files in the /usr/share/emacs/site-lisp/site-gentoo.d/ # directory. # # Note: Before December 2007, site initialisation files were installed # in /usr/share/emacs/site-lisp/. For backwards compatibility, this # location is still supported when generating site-gentoo.el. elisp-site-regen() { local sitelisp=${ROOT}${EPREFIX}${SITELISP} local sf i line null="" page=$'\f' local -a sflist if [[ ! -d ${sitelisp} ]]; then eerror "elisp-site-regen: Directory ${sitelisp} does not exist" return 1 fi if [[ ! -d ${T} ]]; then eerror "elisp-site-regen: Temporary directory ${T} does not exist" return 1 fi ebegin "Regenerating site-gentoo.el for GNU Emacs (${EBUILD_PHASE})" # Until January 2009, elisp-common.eclass sometimes created an # auxiliary file for backwards compatibility. Remove any such file. rm -f "${sitelisp}"/00site-gentoo.el for sf in "${sitelisp}"/[0-9][0-9]*-gentoo.el \ "${sitelisp}"/site-gentoo.d/[0-9][0-9]*.el do [[ -r ${sf} ]] || continue # sort files by their basename. straight insertion sort. for ((i=${#sflist[@]}; i>0; i--)); do [[ ${sf##*/} < ${sflist[i-1]##*/} ]] || break sflist[i]=${sflist[i-1]} done sflist[i]=${sf} done cat <<-EOF >"${T}"/site-gentoo.el ;;; site-gentoo.el --- site initialisation for Gentoo-installed packages ;;; Commentary: ;; Automatically generated by elisp-common.eclass ;; DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE ;;; Code: EOF # Use sed instead of cat here, since files may miss a trailing newline. sed '$q' "${sflist[@]}" >"${T}"/site-gentoo.el cat <<-EOF >>"${T}"/site-gentoo.el ${page} (provide 'site-gentoo) ;; Local ${null}Variables: ;; no-byte-compile: t ;; buffer-read-only: t ;; End: ;;; site-gentoo.el ends here EOF if cmp -s "${sitelisp}"/site-gentoo.el "${T}"/site-gentoo.el; then # This prevents outputting unnecessary text when there # was actually no change. # A case is a remerge where we have doubled output. rm -f "${T}"/site-gentoo.el eend einfo "... no changes." else mv "${T}"/site-gentoo.el "${sitelisp}"/site-gentoo.el eend case ${#sflist[@]} in 0) ewarn "... Huh? No site initialisation files found." ;; 1) einfo "... ${#sflist[@]} site initialisation file included." ;; *) einfo "... ${#sflist[@]} site initialisation files included." ;; esac fi return 0 }