require 'formula' class Coreutils < Formula homepage 'http://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils' url 'http://ftpmirror.gnu.org/coreutils/coreutils-8.22.tar.xz' mirror 'http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/coreutils/coreutils-8.22.tar.xz' sha256 '5b3e94998152c017e6c75d56b9b994188eb71bf46d4038a642cb9141f6ff1212' conflicts_with 'ganglia', :because => 'both install `gstat` binaries' conflicts_with 'idutils', :because => 'both install `gid` and `gid.1`' def install system "./configure", "--prefix=#{prefix}", "--program-prefix=g", "--without-gmp" system "make install" # Symlink all commands into libexec/gnubin without the 'g' prefix coreutils_filenames(bin).each do |cmd| (libexec/'gnubin').install_symlink bin/"g#{cmd}" => cmd end # Symlink all man(1) pages into libexec/gnuman without the 'g' prefix coreutils_filenames(man1).each do |cmd| (libexec/'gnuman'/'man1').install_symlink man1/"g#{cmd}" => cmd end end def caveats; <<-EOS.undent All commands have been installed with the prefix 'g'. If you really need to use these commands with their normal names, you can add a "gnubin" directory to your PATH from your bashrc like: PATH="#{opt_libexec}/gnubin:$PATH" Additionally, you can access their man pages with normal names if you add the "gnuman" directory to your MANPATH from your bashrc as well: MANPATH="#{opt_libexec}/gnuman:$MANPATH" EOS end def coreutils_filenames (dir) filenames = [] dir.find do |path| next if path.directory? or path.basename.to_s == '.DS_Store' filenames << path.basename.to_s.sub(/^g/,'') end filenames.sort end end