Rather than trying to be smart and doing this ourselves in `brew cleanup` let’s just installed Bundler somewhere it doesn’t try to clean itself up and use `bundle install --cleanup` when we need cleanup done.
Also, use `ohai` and `odie` when possible as they look nicer.
It's always seemed a bit pointless to me that we have both of these
commands. Given we're doing more and more to recommend (and eventually,
safely, automatically run (see #4760) `brew cleanup` let's roll their
functionality into a single command.
In a number of Cask specs, the value of the `homepage` stanza is currently set
to https://example.com. As of 2018-11-28, the TLS certificate served by
example.com seems to be expired, possibly due to an oversight on ICANN’s side.
While the certificate is certainly going to be renewed soon, it would be
desirable for Homebrew’s test result to be less dependent on ICANN’s actions.
This commit changes the homepages of all test Casks to http://brew.sh, whose
domain and TLS certificate are both controlled by Homebrew.
This makes use of both the existing interfaces and could use the
existing cache file but we'll create a new one and cleanup the old one
to avoid issues and use a more consistent name.
After upgrading existing kegs, we now search and upgrade their
dependents as well. If any are detected that have broken linkage, they
are reinstalled from source.
If there are any formulae in the dependents tree that are pinned, they
are only reinstalled if they're not outdated; in all cases, a suitable
message is printed detailing the kegs that will be acted upon.
The change in #4441 broke the handling of the `elsif`s due to the
change in logic. As every block here has a `next` there's no need to do
an `elsif` in here at all. Additionally, reorder the conditions in here
so you get an appropriate message depending on what you're trying to do.
Finally, tweak some of the messaging to remove things that are ignored
and tell people correct commands to run to link things.