* When a versioned keg_only formula installs the same set of executables
or libraries as a unversioned formula that links to $HOMEBREW_PREFIX,
install_name_tool will prefer to use the linked paths for files in
keg_only formula. This breaks software that should link to the
keg_only formula but links to the unversioned one instead.
* Add an additional "options" parameter with keg_only field to specify
the correct install path for keg_only formulae.
Currently Upgrade prints out:
"Upgrading 0 outdated package, with result:"
This change makes it print:
"Upgrading 0 outdated packages, with result:"
correctly pluralizing "packages".
ClosesHomebrew/homebrew#22854.
Signed-off-by: Adam Vandenberg <flangy@gmail.com>
* Aborting during reinstall will now restore the originally installed
keg.
- Change install code to pass on CannotInstallFormulaError exception
to caller so it can be reused in reinstall.
* Add "--force-new-install" flag to force installing a new formula.
ClosesHomebrew/homebrew#22190.
Signed-off-by: Samuel John <github@SamuelJohn.de>
For example `brew search homebrew/science` to get a list of all formulae
from that tap, even if not yet tapped.
`brew search <user>/<repo>/<substr>` or
`brew search <user>/<repo> <substr>` to grep for `<substr>`
inside of the tap `<user>/<repo>`.
- Show a one liner that will append to
the user's ~/.bash_profile. In 95% this will be
ok and we assume zsh people are smart enough
to know what they have to do.
Improve robustness of `PYTHONPATH` by first unsetting it (during
`satisfy`) so that the `PythonInstalled` can get the `python.version`
and so forth and then, after that, setting the `PYTHONPATH` to our
`global_site_packages`.
In the `python_helper` we append to the `PYTHONPATH` so if that var has
been set in a formula, it is respected.
Brew audit does no longer complain about setting the
`ENV['PYTHONPATH']`.
... and not just installed ones. Of course, strictly speaking,
reinstalling not-yet-installed formulae makes semantically little
sense, but the big win is that we can tell people (after we have
resolved an issue) to `brew reinstall <formula>` and even if a user
has removed that formula in the meantime, reinstall will do the right
thing. Basically adding --force to uninstall. I think this makes
reinstall more robust.