<murdoch <at> stats.uwo.ca> writes:
: : On Thu, 18 Nov 2004 00:38:47 +0000 (UTC), Gabor Grothendieck : <ggrothendieck <at> myway.com> wrote : : : >DIFFERENCE BETWEEN USING .RBUILDIGNORE AND NOT : > : >The reason that the processing is different according to whether one : >uses .Rbuildignore or not is that : > R CMD build : >takes the .Rbuildignore file into account but : > R CMD install : > R CMD check : > R CMD build --binary : >do not take .Rbuildignore into account. : : Okay, now I understand. I think I'd call the last of those a bug, and : it would seem to me that the install and check scripts should also : respect this directive. I've now copied this to the r-bugs list. : (This was reported for Windows; I don't know if it applies to other : platforms as well.) : : Just for clarification: I can see you would use this when you have : S-PLUS code in the same directory as R code, and you don't want to : include that in an R build. Are there other files that must be : excluded? My primary directory is mirrored by svn and I put everything in there that I want other developers to be able to see, even if its not ready or not intended for inclusion in the build. The .Rbuildignore is important to distinguish what is to be built and what is just there to be shared. Some instances where this useful are: - have abc.R but don't want it in build until abc.Rd is available - have abc.Rd but don't want it in build until abc.R is written - abc.R is available but too buggy yet it needs to be shared with others so they know about it - interface code which interfaces with package X and will ultimately go into package X, not this one, but needs to be around in the meantime - code which depends on a package that we don't want to invoke for now and will probably be replaced anyways - certain notes to be shared among the developers Also it would really be nice to be able to turn the .Rbuildignore on and off using a command line switch on R CMD ... as someone on the thread has already suggested. It can be useful to check and install the ignored stuff to ensure its ready before actually removing it from .Rbuildignore. It might even be nice to be able to specify alternate .Rbuildignore files although I am not sure whether that is going too far or not. What I am doing in the meantime is that I have a Windows batch script that can be used like this: myscript install mypkg myscript check mypkg myscript binary mypkg where each of these first does a build creating a .tar.gz file and then detars it into another directory and invokes install, check or build --binary on the built copy of the source in that directory. If I want to do an install, check or build --binary without respecting the .Rbuildignore then I just use the original R CMD ... commands instead of my script. ______________________________________________ [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel