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doc: Document 'wrap-program' and 'wrap-script'.

* doc/guix.texi (Build Utilities)[Wrappers]: New subsection.
Ludovic Courtès 2022-02-16 15:37:04 +01:00
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@ -9506,6 +9506,90 @@ executable files to be installed:
@c TODO: Add more examples.
@subsection Wrappers
@cindex program wrappers
@cindex wrapping programs
It is not unusual for a command to require certain environment variables
to be set for proper functioning, typically search paths (@pxref{Search
Paths}). Failing to do that, the command might fail to find files or
other commands it relies on, or it might pick the ``wrong''
ones---depending on the environment in which it runs. Examples include:
@itemize
@item
a shell script that assumes all the commands it uses are in @env{PATH};
@item
a Guile program that assumes all its modules are in @env{GUILE_LOAD_PATH}
and @env{GUILE_LOAD_COMPILED_PATH};
@item
a Qt application that expects to find certain plugins in
@env{QT_PLUGIN_PATH}.
@end itemize
For a package writer, the goal is to make sure commands always work the
same rather than depend on some external settings. One way to achieve
that is to @dfn{wrap} commands in a thin script that sets those
environment variables, thereby ensuring that those run-time dependencies
are always found. The wrapper would be used to set @env{PATH},
@env{GUILE_LOAD_PATH}, or @env{QT_PLUGIN_PATH} in the examples above.
To ease that task, the @code{(guix build utils)} module provides a
couple of helpers to wrap commands.
@deffn {Scheme Procedure} wrap-program @var{program} @
[#:sh @var{sh}] [#:rest @var{variables}]
Make a wrapper for @var{program}. @var{variables} should look like this:
@example
'(@var{variable} @var{delimiter} @var{position} @var{list-of-directories})
@end example
where @var{delimiter} is optional. @code{:} will be used if
@var{delimiter} is not given.
For example, this call:
@example
(wrap-program "foo"
'("PATH" ":" = ("/gnu/.../bar/bin"))
'("CERT_PATH" suffix ("/gnu/.../baz/certs"
"/qux/certs")))
@end example
will copy @file{foo} to @file{.foo-real} and create the file @file{foo}
with the following contents:
@example
#!location/of/bin/bash
export PATH="/gnu/.../bar/bin"
export CERT_PATH="$CERT_PATH$@{CERT_PATH:+:@}/gnu/.../baz/certs:/qux/certs"
exec -a $0 location/of/.foo-real "$@@"
@end example
If @var{program} has previously been wrapped by @code{wrap-program}, the
wrapper is extended with definitions for @var{variables}. If it is not,
@var{sh} will be used as the interpreter.
@end deffn
@deffn {Scheme Procedure} wrap-script @var{program} @
[#:guile @var{guile}] [#:rest @var{variables}]
Wrap the script @var{program} such that @var{variables} are set first.
The format of @var{variables} is the same as in the @code{wrap-program}
procedure. This procedure differs from @code{wrap-program} in that it
does not create a separate shell script. Instead, @var{program} is
modified directly by prepending a Guile script, which is interpreted as
a comment in the script's language.
Special encoding comments as supported by Python are recreated on the
second line.
Note that this procedure can only be used once per file as Guile scripts are
not supported.
@end deffn
@node Search Paths
@section Search Paths