* [gentoo-dev] Understanding the LINGUAS variable and use-expand @ 2012-02-08 16:32 Mike Gilbert 2012-02-08 17:04 ` Mart Raudsepp 0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread From: Mike Gilbert @ 2012-02-08 16:32 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-dev I just want to sanity-check my brain here. LINGUAS seems to be mainly a variable to control the behavior of gettext's autoconf code, installed as /usr/share/aclocal/po.m4. If LINGUAS is set to a list of language codes, the build system will only build/install MO files for those languages. If LINGUAS is unset, the build system will build/install MO files for all available languages. Portage will also use-expand LINGUAS, so an ebuild *can* make use of it where USE flags are needed. For example, in SRC_URI, where the USE flags may be used to control downloading of extra language packs. Given this information, I come to a few conclusions: 1. There is technically no need to define IUSE="linguas_$x" if an ebuild is not using the USE flags in other ebuild metadata (like SRC_URI). 2. In cases where the USE flags are needed, they should be enabled by default to emulate the "default-all" behavior of the autoconf macros. For example: IUSE="+linguas_fr_FR +linguas_de_DE". 3. An ebuild could use LINGUAS to control installation of translation information which does not come from gettext PO files. It does not necessarily need to make use of the linguas_$x USE flags to do so. Does all of that make sense? I am considering simplifying www-client/chromium from the current mess based on the linguas USE flags to basically just this: if [[ ${LINGUAS} ]]; then for x in *.pak; do mylang=${x%.pak} mylang=%{x/-/_} has $mylang $LINGUAS || rm $x done fi As well, there are probably a few other places in the tree where conclusion #1 and #2 should be applied. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-dev] Understanding the LINGUAS variable and use-expand 2012-02-08 16:32 [gentoo-dev] Understanding the LINGUAS variable and use-expand Mike Gilbert @ 2012-02-08 17:04 ` Mart Raudsepp 2012-02-24 16:36 ` Mike Gilbert 0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread From: Mart Raudsepp @ 2012-02-08 17:04 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-dev On K, 2012-02-08 at 11:32 -0500, Mike Gilbert wrote: > I just want to sanity-check my brain here. > > LINGUAS seems to be mainly a variable to control the behavior of > gettext's autoconf code, installed as /usr/share/aclocal/po.m4. > > If LINGUAS is set to a list of language codes, the build system will > only build/install MO files for those languages. If LINGUAS is unset, > the build system will build/install MO files for all available > languages. > > Portage will also use-expand LINGUAS, so an ebuild *can* make use of > it where USE flags are needed. For example, in SRC_URI, where the USE > flags may be used to control downloading of extra language packs. > > Given this information, I come to a few conclusions: > > 1. There is technically no need to define IUSE="linguas_$x" if an > ebuild is not using the USE flags in other ebuild metadata (like > SRC_URI). I'm not sure, but it is not feasible to list them for exposing languages a package has been translated to via gettext/intltool. That's completely unmaintainable and unnecessary. Each version bump could change it, hard and time consuming to validate, etc. > 2. In cases where the USE flags are needed, they should be enabled by > default to emulate the "default-all" behavior of the autoconf macros. > For example: IUSE="+linguas_fr_FR +linguas_de_DE". I would like that, but I don't think any or many packages do so when they use it in SRC_URI > 3. An ebuild could use LINGUAS to control installation of translation > information which does not come from gettext PO files. It does not > necessarily need to make use of the linguas_$x USE flags to do so. One such widely used way is to use intltool, which amongst other things handles PO files as well (of course via gettext tools in the end), but also other things. > Does all of that make sense? > > I am considering simplifying www-client/chromium from the current mess > based on the linguas USE flags to basically just this: > > if [[ ${LINGUAS} ]]; then > for x in *.pak; do > mylang=${x%.pak} > mylang=%{x/-/_} > has $mylang $LINGUAS || rm $x > done > fi It would perhaps be nicer if upstream honored LINGUAS itself too or so... I think users could be surprised a bit about cases where you have variants or dialects, e.g currently as IUSE=linguas_fr_FR, when users only have LINGUAS=fr - in gettext they often don't have a fr_FR.po, just fr.po; if locale has LC_MESSAGE and LANG at fr_FR, it will look at "fr" if more specific fr_FR not found. I define things like LINGUAS="en en_US et et_EE" to be really sure, but I doubt many users do that (but that's just a guess). If it's exposed via IUSE, then they can at least have some visual cue of that. I guess it wouldn't be a concern if we had a tool to set the LINGUAS that handled this variant logic nicely, or just educating users in documentation, make.conf.example comments and so on. > As well, there are probably a few other places in the tree where > conclusion #1 and #2 should be applied. Best, Mart Raudsepp ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-dev] Understanding the LINGUAS variable and use-expand 2012-02-08 17:04 ` Mart Raudsepp @ 2012-02-24 16:36 ` Mike Gilbert 0 siblings, 0 replies; 3+ messages in thread From: Mike Gilbert @ 2012-02-24 16:36 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-dev On Wed, Feb 8, 2012 at 12:04 PM, Mart Raudsepp <leio@gentoo.org> wrote: > On K, 2012-02-08 at 11:32 -0500, Mike Gilbert wrote: >> I am considering simplifying www-client/chromium from the current mess >> based on the linguas USE flags to basically just this: >> >> if [[ ${LINGUAS} ]]; then >> for x in *.pak; do >> mylang=${x%.pak} >> mylang=%{x/-/_} >> has $mylang $LINGUAS || rm $x >> done >> fi > I think users could be surprised a bit about cases where you have > variants or dialects, e.g currently as IUSE=linguas_fr_FR, when users > only have LINGUAS=fr - in gettext they often don't have a fr_FR.po, just > fr.po; if locale has LC_MESSAGE and LANG at fr_FR, it will look at "fr" > if more specific fr_FR not found. > I define things like LINGUAS="en en_US et et_EE" to be really sure, but > I doubt many users do that (but that's just a guess). > If it's exposed via IUSE, then they can at least have some visual cue of > that. > I guess it wouldn't be a concern if we had a tool to set the LINGUAS > that handled this variant logic nicely, or just educating users in > documentation, make.conf.example comments and so on. Thanks for catching that Mart. I think I have addressed the dialect issue by more directly emulating the autoconf macro. See below. I would greatly appreciate any additional feedback anyone has on this subject. New code, currently used (experimentally) in google-chrome-19.0.1049.3_alpha123257.ebuild: if [[ "%UNSET%" != "${LINGUAS-%UNSET}" ]]; then local found desiredlang presentlang pak pakname pushd "${CHROME_HOME}locales" > /dev/null || die for pak in *.pak; do pakname="${pak%.pak}" pakname="${pakname/-/_}" presentlang="$(chromium_lang "${pakname}")" # Do not issue warning for en_US locale. This is the fallback # locale so it should always be installed. if [[ "${presentlang}" == "en_US" ]]; then continue fi found= for desiredlang in ${LINGUAS}; do if [[ "${desiredlang}" == "${presentlang}"* ]]; then found=1 break fi done if [[ -z ${found} ]]; then rm "${pak}" || die fi done popd > /dev/null fi ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2012-02-24 16:38 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 3+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2012-02-08 16:32 [gentoo-dev] Understanding the LINGUAS variable and use-expand Mike Gilbert 2012-02-08 17:04 ` Mart Raudsepp 2012-02-24 16:36 ` Mike Gilbert
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