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authorLudovic Courtès <ludo@gnu.org>2016-10-03 23:02:46 +0200
committerLudovic Courtès <ludo@gnu.org>2016-10-03 23:16:48 +0200
commit57bdd79e485801ccf405ca7389bd099809fe5d67 (patch)
treeb0c6df4c2a0eee45d64025fb7b157671173bbde1 /doc/guix.texi
parentb38e97e03b92d54524953949934884828a1683c1 (diff)
downloadpatches-57bdd79e485801ccf405ca7389bd099809fe5d67.tar
patches-57bdd79e485801ccf405ca7389bd099809fe5d67.tar.gz
grafts: Allow the replacement to have a different name.
* guix/build/graft.scm (replace-store-references): REPLACEMENT is now the full string, not just the hash. (rewrite-directory)[hash-mapping](valid-suffix?): Remove. (hash+suffix): Rename to... (hash+rest): ... this. Change to return the whole string as the second element of the list. Adjust 'match-lambda' expression accordingly; check whether the string length of the origin and replacement match. * tests/grafts.scm ("graft-derivation, grafted item uses a different name"): New test. * doc/guix.texi (Security Updates): Update sentence on the name/version restriction.
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/guix.texi')
-rw-r--r--doc/guix.texi8
1 files changed, 4 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/doc/guix.texi b/doc/guix.texi
index 73570277f6..9bd8b43582 100644
--- a/doc/guix.texi
+++ b/doc/guix.texi
@@ -11782,10 +11782,10 @@ minute for an ``average'' package on a recent machine. Grafting is
recursive: when an indirect dependency requires grafting, then grafting
``propagates'' up to the package that the user is installing.
-Currently, the graft and the package it replaces (@var{bash-fixed} and
-@var{bash} in the example above) must have the exact same @code{name}
-and @code{version} fields. This restriction mostly comes from the fact
-that grafting works by patching files, including binary files, directly.
+Currently, the length of the name and version of the graft and that of
+the package it replaces (@var{bash-fixed} and @var{bash} in the example
+above) must be equal. This restriction mostly comes from the fact that
+grafting works by patching files, including binary files, directly.
Other restrictions may apply: for instance, when adding a graft to a
package providing a shared library, the original shared library and its
replacement must have the same @code{SONAME} and be binary-compatible.