On November 21, 2018 8:05:44 PM GMT+03:00, Alessandro Selli <alessandroselli@???> wrote:
>On 21/11/18 at 17:57, Rowland Penny wrote:
>> On Wed, 21 Nov 2018 17:43:12 +0100
>> Alessandro Selli <alessandroselli@???> wrote:
>>
>>> On 21/11/18 at 17:37, Rowland Penny wrote:
>>>> On Wed, 21 Nov 2018 17:28:40 +0100
>>>> Alessandro Selli <alessandroselli@???> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> On 21/11/18 at 17:22, Dr. Nikolaus Klepp wrote:
>>>>>> Am Mittwoch, 21. November 2018 schrieb Hendrik Boom:
>>>>> [...]
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>>> I read the discussion at
>>>>>>>
>https://www.mail-archive.com/debian-bugs-dist@lists.debian.org/msg1642443.html
>>>>>>> and it looks as if they fixed the discrepancy at version
>3.5.1-2.
>>>>>>> Which means if we want to keep sed in /bin instead of /usr/bin
>we
>>>>>>> may have to patch both packages sed and r-base.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Or maybe add a symblic link to make sed accessible from /usr/bin
>>>>>>> instead of just /bin.
>>>>>> Why would anybody hardcode the link to sed in the first place?
>>>>>> Isn't that what $PATH is all about?
>>>>> It's necessary to keep script shebangs from breaking.
>>>>>
>>>> No it isn't, ever heard of 'which' or 'type' or checking if the
>file
>>>> actually exists.
>>>>
>>>> Rowland
>>>>
>>> Of course it is. If you have a file with a shebang like this:
>>>
>>>
>>> #!/bin/sed
>>>
>>> , which is the norm, see:
>>>
>>> https://github.com/uuner/sedtris/blob/master/sedtris.sed
>>>
>>> , then you'd be in trouble if sed moved in /usr/bin.
>> Well it would if you were trying to run sed directly,
>
>
> Which side of "sed script with a shebang" do you fail to grasp?
This thread is about Debian breaking R. If you want to talk about she-bangs, make your own. /usr/bin/env is also a thing that is pretty standard on Linux distros.
>
>> but in this case
>> it is setting the path to sed as a variable, so, if the script
>> '/usr/bin/R' used something like this:
>>
>> SED="$(which sed)"
>> if [ -z "$SED" ]; then
>> echo 'sed is not installed'
>> exit 1
>> fi
>> export SED
>>
>> instead of:
>> SED=/bin/sed
>> export SED
>
>
> Try putting this in place of a sed shebang and see what happens to
>your sed script.
The discussion wasn't about a shell script before you interjected.
>
>> We wouldn't be having this conversation.
>
>
>... if you were any knowledgeable about shell scripting.
Are you trying to have some sort of pissing match?
>
>>>
>>> Of course you know you can't use commands or shell constructs in
>>> place of the shebang, you did shell_scripting-101, didn't you?
>>>
>> We are not talking about the shebang, you did know that, didn't you ?
>
>
> Of course we are, why don't you read before replying?
I can't be sure if you are in jest.
m712
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