wiki:snc

Version 11 (modified by nerdling (Jeremy Lavergne), 15 years ago) (diff)

--

Portfile Development

MacPorts Guide

It's a good idea to start out with the Portfile Development section of the MacPorts Guide. There's a line-by-line explanation in Section 4.2 that will help you.

Portindex

Once you've created your portfile, it's best to test it with your copy of MacPorts. The first step is to create a local repository to test your portfile. I suggest creating a directory named ports in your home directory. Inside this new directory, you should run portindex which will create the repository index of everything contained therein (following the ~/ports/group/port/Portfile heirarchy). Note: This command should be run everytime you make changes as it will include the new index data for MacPorts. Also watch out for any errors it reports, which stop the portfile from showing up in MacPorts.

Port Info

Once you have a repository setup and indexed, you can then instruct MacPorts to include the repository's path in ${prefix}/etc/macports/sources.conf — the order of this file's content is important as ports are loaded in a first-come-first-serve basis. To test if your port index is being included, run port info portname where portname is a port you've placed in your local repository. If everything works well, you'll notice information appearing from your local repository's portfile. Note: If you have a port named the same as an existing one, this will report that there are two copies found with the first it came across being displaying. This is why the order of repositories listed in sources.conf matters.

Port Lint

Now that your copy of MacPorts is able to interact with your portfile, run port lint --nitpick portname to do a maximum compliance check. If it reports 0 errors and 0 warnings then you're ready to submit your portfile to MacPorts. The Contributing to MacPorts section in the Guide shows how to create a ticket ensuring quick acceptance of your portfile.

Disabling Your Local Repository

Once you're done with development, you can disable your local repository by commenting the line out of your sources.conf file. You can optionally delete your repository's directory, however I suggest keeping it as you can use it for reference when working on future portfiles, and it saves you from having to recreate the directory.