From 7749af635a20151f337661fe2cf04216604cd4e7 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Boris Kolpackov Date: Wed, 27 Jul 2022 12:58:30 +0200 Subject: Documentation fixes --- doc/manual.cli | 54 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++----------------------- 1 file changed, 31 insertions(+), 23 deletions(-) (limited to 'doc') diff --git a/doc/manual.cli b/doc/manual.cli index 7dac6b0..6767f22 100644 --- a/doc/manual.cli +++ b/doc/manual.cli @@ -401,7 +401,7 @@ subset of the build system files along with the package's standard metadata the package build system skeleton, or just package skeleton for short, and includes the \c{build/bootstrap.build} and \c{build/root.build} files (or their alternative naming scheme variants) as well as any files that may be -sources by \c{root.build}. +sourced by \c{root.build}. The inclusion of \c{build/bootstrap.build} and \c{build/root.build} (if present) as well as any \c{build/config/*.build} (or their alternative naming @@ -559,10 +559,10 @@ The problem with the above attempt is that the default value could be greater than 4KB, in which case \c{bpkg} will have no idea that there is a dependent relying on this configuration value. -Before each \c{prefer} clause re-evaluation, values that were first set by -this dependent are reset to their defaults thus allowing the dependent to -change its mind, for instance, in response to other configuration changes. -For example: +Before each \c{prefer} clause re-evaluation, variables that were first set to +their current values by this dependent are reset to their defaults thus +allowing the dependent to change its mind, for instance, in response to other +configuration changes. For example: \ # While we have no preference about the cache, if enabled/disabled, @@ -587,7 +587,7 @@ to defaults semantics the \c{prefer} clause would have kept the buffer at 8KB \N|Currently \c{accept} is always evaluated after \c{prefer} and temporary variables (like \c{min_buffer} in the above example) set in \c{prefer} are -visible in \c{accept}. But it's best not to rely on this in case this changes +visible in \c{accept}. But it's best not to rely on this in case it changes in the future. For example, we may try harder to resolve the \"yo-yo'ing\" case mentioned above by checking if one of the alternating configurations are acceptable to everyone without re-evaluation. @@ -603,7 +603,7 @@ are only visible until the immediately following \c{reflect} clause. For example, in the above listing, \c{config.libfoo.cache} would still be visible in the \c{reflect} clause if it were to follow \c{accept} but no further. As a result, if we need to make decisions based on configuration variables that we -have no preference about, they need to be saved in the \c{prefer} clause. For +have no preference about, they need to be saved in the \c{reflect} clause. For example: \ @@ -1638,10 +1638,10 @@ details). The condition expression is evaluated after loading the package build system skeleton, that is, after loading its \c{root.build} (see \l{#package-skeleton Package Build System Skeleton} for details). As a result, variable values set -by build system modules that are loaded in \c{root.build} as well as package's -configuration (including previously reflected; see below) or computed values -can be referenced in dependency conditions. For example, given the following -\c{root.build}: +by build system modules that are loaded in \c{root.build} as well as the +package's configuration (including previously reflected; see below) or +computed values can be referenced in dependency conditions. For example, given +the following \c{root.build}: \ # root.build @@ -1661,7 +1661,7 @@ config [bool] config.hello.regex ?= false We could have the following conditional dependencies: \ -depends: libposix-getopt ^1.0.0 ? ($need_getop) ; Windows && !MinGW. +depends: libposix-getopt ^1.0.0 ? ($need_getopt) ; Windows && !MinGW. depends: libposix-regex ^1.0.0 ? ($config.hello.regex && \ $cxx.target.class == 'windows') \ @@ -1703,7 +1703,7 @@ if $config.hello.external_regex exe{hello}: ... $libs \ -In the above example, if the \c{hello} package is built on Windows, then the +In the above example, if the \c{hello} package is built for Windows, then the dependency on \c{libposix-regex} will be enabled and the package will be configured with \c{config.hello.external_regex=true}. This is used in the \c{buildfile} to decide whether to import \c{libposix-regex}. While in this @@ -1764,10 +1764,10 @@ practical experience shows that such extra user-friendliness would rarely justify the potential confusion that it may cause. Also note that it's not only the user that can pick a certain alternative but -also a dependent package. Continue with the above example, if we had \c{hello} -that depended on \c{libhello} but only supported MariaDB (or provided a -configuration variable to explicitly select the database), then we could -have the following in its \c{manifest}: +also a dependent package. Continuing with the above example, if we had +\c{hello} that depended on \c{libhello} but only supported MariaDB (or +provided a configuration variable to explicitly select the database), then we +could have the following in its \c{manifest}: \ depends: libmariadb ; Select MariaDB in libhello. @@ -1779,7 +1779,7 @@ depends: libhello ^1.0.0 Dependency alternatives can be combined with all the other features discussed above: groups, conditional dependencies, and reflect. As mentioned earlier, reflect is the only way to communicate the selection to subsequent \c{depends} -values and package configuration. For example: +values and the package configuration. For example: \ depends: libmysqlclient >= 5.0.3 config.hello.db='mysql' | \ @@ -1886,11 +1886,12 @@ libmariadb ^10.2.2 } \ -For more complex dependency configurations we use the \c{prefer} and -\c{accept} clauses. The \c{prefer} clause can set configuration variables of -any type and to any value in order to express the package's preferred -configuration while the \c{accept} condition evaluates whether any given -configuration is acceptable. For example: +For more complex dependency configurations instead of \c{require} we can use +the \c{prefer} and \c{accept} clauses. The \c{prefer} clause can set +configuration variables of any type and to any value in order to express the +package's preferred configuration while the \c{accept} condition evaluates +whether any given configuration is acceptable. If used instead of \c{require}, +both \c{prefer} and \c{accept} must be present. For example: \ libmariadb ^10.2.2 @@ -1911,6 +1912,13 @@ libmariadb ^10.2.2 } \ +\N|The \c{require} clause is essentially a shortcut for specifying the +\c{prefer}/\c{accept} clauses where the \c{accept} condition simply verifies +all the variable values assigned in the \c{prefer} clause. It is, however, +further restricted to the common case of only setting \c{bool} variables and +only to \c{true} to allow additional optimizations during the configuration +negotiation.| + The \c{require} and \c{prefer} clauses are arbitrary \c{buildfile} fragments similar to \c{reflect} while the \c{accept} clause is a \c{buildfile} eval context expression that should evaluate to \c{true} or \c{false}, similar to -- cgit v1.1