homebrew-core/Formula/scons.rb

48 lines
1.7 KiB
Ruby

class Scons < Formula
desc "Substitute for classic 'make' tool with autoconf/automake functionality"
homepage "http://www.scons.org"
url "https://downloads.sourceforge.net/project/scons/scons/3.0.1/scons-3.0.1.tar.gz"
sha256 "24475e38d39c19683bc88054524df018fe6949d70fbd4c69e298d39a0269f173"
bottle do
cellar :any_skip_relocation
sha256 "c791b4905477a5fbc33345cef5e412807ffc90ba6ea35bfc9a263f542702aa1c" => :high_sierra
sha256 "c791b4905477a5fbc33345cef5e412807ffc90ba6ea35bfc9a263f542702aa1c" => :sierra
sha256 "c791b4905477a5fbc33345cef5e412807ffc90ba6ea35bfc9a263f542702aa1c" => :el_capitan
end
def install
man1.install gzip("scons-time.1", "scons.1", "sconsign.1")
system "/usr/bin/python", "setup.py", "install",
"--prefix=#{prefix}",
"--standalone-lib",
# SCons gets handsy with sys.path---`scons-local` is one place it
# will look when all is said and done.
"--install-lib=#{libexec}/scons-local",
"--install-scripts=#{bin}",
"--install-data=#{libexec}",
"--no-version-script", "--no-install-man"
# Re-root scripts to libexec so they can import SCons and symlink back into
# bin. Similar tactics are used in the duplicity formula.
bin.children.each do |p|
mv p, "#{libexec}/#{p.basename}.py"
bin.install_symlink "#{libexec}/#{p.basename}.py" => p.basename
end
end
test do
(testpath/"test.c").write <<~EOS
#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
printf("Homebrew");
return 0;
}
EOS
(testpath/"SConstruct").write "Program('test.c')"
system bin/"scons"
assert_equal "Homebrew", shell_output("#{testpath}/test")
end
end