homebrew-core/Formula/gnu-sed.rb
2014-06-09 16:08:30 +01:00

46 lines
1.4 KiB
Ruby

require 'formula'
class GnuSed < Formula
homepage 'http://www.gnu.org/software/sed/'
url 'http://ftpmirror.gnu.org/sed/sed-4.2.2.tar.bz2'
mirror 'http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/sed/sed-4.2.2.tar.bz2'
sha1 'f17ab6b1a7bcb2ad4ed125ef78948092d070de8f'
bottle do
cellar :any
sha1 "4e97d284b3429838d296928a70bb700e38c33453" => :mavericks
sha1 "11a59857a6a4e87059a8c52aeaabfb3283be2113" => :mountain_lion
sha1 "a60cef42f2169074f1377fdf59dad5b652216d2c" => :lion
end
option 'default-names', "Do not prepend 'g' to the binary"
def install
args = ["--prefix=#{prefix}", "--disable-dependency-tracking"]
args << "--program-prefix=g" unless build.include? 'default-names'
system "./configure", *args
system "make install"
(libexec/'gnubin').install_symlink bin/"gsed" =>"sed"
(libexec/'gnuman/man1').install_symlink man1/"gsed.1" => "sed.1"
end
def caveats; <<-EOS.undent
The command has been installed with the prefix 'g'.
If you do not want the prefix, install using the 'default-names' option.
If you 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
end