On Fri, Nov 04, 2011 at 08:32:40AM +0100, Lukas Fleischer wrote:
On Thu, Nov 03, 2011 at 07:56:56PM -0700, Linus Arver wrote:
On Thu, Nov 03, 2011 at 08:25:27AM +0100, Lukas Fleischer wrote:
On Wed, Nov 02, 2011 at 06:13:52PM -0700, Linus Arver wrote:
On Wed, Nov 02, 2011 at 08:59:15PM -0400, Dave Reisner wrote:
On Wed, Nov 02, 2011 at 05:49:27PM -0700, Linus Arver wrote:
For all vcs prototypes, we currently create a temporary build directory. However, we do not delete it after we are done creating the package. This wastes disk space.
We already do a "rm -rf" on the build directories every time after we do a checkout anyway, so this patch doesn't really change anything.
Big -1 from me. This prevents repackaging.
dave
[...]
I'm thinking of keeping this patch, but just as a comment for all the thousands of AUR packagers who blindly use the prototype without taking into account their particular needs.
Any objections?
Putting a comment there might encourage AUR packagers to uncomment that, especially if they don't know what they're doing. On the other side, users, who know how makepkg(1) works, also know how to clean/remove the build directory and don't need such a comment... My two cents.
So you're suggesting
# code
instead of
# comment # code
No, I'm suggesting not to patch anything. Don't mention the `rm -rf` stuff - just keep it as it is right now. The comment will confuse novice packagers (and novice users who try to repackage stuff!) and won't help advanced packagers.
Ok, I'm discarding this patch from the next series.
? Well, if that's the case then I must disagree --- I *despise* it when there's code commented out with zero explanation. Looking back, I can see that the comment I wrote is rather verbose; I'll shorten it to a one-liner, for now, like this:
# save disk space # rm -rf /temp/build/dir
Everyone loves one-liner comments, right?
-Linus
P.S. I'll wait and let the discussion die down for a few days this time before releasing v3 of this patch series... the traffic for ABS patches is nearly non-existant anyway.