On Tue, Aug 28, 2012 at 07:12:15PM +0300, Aram H?v?rneanu wrote: > > Yes. This is what is done by the R.I.S.K. framework used for building > > KerGIS and kerTeX. > > I'm pretty sure that R.I.S.K has more than 2,250 lines of code. That's > the LOC count of \.(ba)?sh$ stuff in the Go tree. Also, nobody seemed > to mention that Go also ships with rc files to build on Plan 9...
$ wc -l rk* 838 rkbuild 1121 rkconfig 60 rkguess 247 rkinstall 256 rkpkg 2522 total This is with comments of course. The rest are the trivial parameters files for each system. (rkguess is used to sketch such a parameters file on a new system.) And this does what no other framework does: be able to remove intermediary products, such that you can compile a resulting n megabytes package with just slightly more than n megabytes of space... -- Thierry Laronde <tlaronde +AT+ polynum +dot+ com> http://www.kergis.com/ Key fingerprint = 0FF7 E906 FBAF FE95 FD89 250D 52B1 AE95 6006 F40C