---- On Mon, 17 Jan 2022 09:16:28 -0500 Ludovic Courtès <l...@gnu.org> wrote ----
> > This person spent a lot of time trying to understand the situation and > > writing the blog post, but their understanding is still rather weak. > > To be fair, the person didn’t look for “profile” in the manual. I’m not > blaming—mentioning it to clarify what it is we’re trying to fix. With all respect, I *did* look at "profile" in the manual. I spent a lot of time looking and trying to understand things. I hear you say you're not trying to blame me and I trust that's not your intent. However, what was said *does* blame me. It says what I did and did not do, independent of reality: you are not me and you were not present. Unfortunately, what was said carries all sorts of judgments and implications (ouch!) which, opposite to your intent, is not fair. I see you want clarification on what we're trying to fix. May I suggest instead asking, "What problem are we trying to solve?" I see several problems beyond what I've already said. However, I'll try to stick to just one that I encountered with the documentation. Leo is certainly working toward something specific which I suspect is different from what I see. I'll let them speak for themselves. I'm going to assume that you probably wanted to ask something like, "It looks to me like the manual adequately explains profiles. But, since I'm the main architect of this system, maybe I have knowledge that someone new doesn't have. Person who is confused, are you able to say where you're confused?" I would reply: There are several places I've been confused. Let me give you a specific example. The manual has at least four places that "profile" is defined: 1. [[https://guix.gnu.org/en/manual/en/html_node/Getting-Started.html#Getting-Started][(guix) Getting Started]] says, #+begin_quote "A profile is a directory containing installed packages" #+end_quote 2. [[https://guix.gnu.org/en/manual/en/html_node/Invoking-guix-package.html#Invoking-guix-package][(guix) Invoking guix package]] says, #+begin_quote "a directory of installed packages" #+end_quote and 3, yet in the guix package options: #+begin_quote '-p PROFILE' Use PROFILE instead of the user's default profile. PROFILE must be the name of a file that will be created upon completion. Concretely, PROFILE will be a mere symbolic link ("symlink") pointing to the actual profile where packages are installed: #+begin_example $ guix install hello -p ~/code/my-profile ... $ ~/code/my-profile/bin/hello Hello, world! #+end_example #+end_quote Elsewhere in (guix) Features is a 4th which says, #+begin_quote users have their own “profile”, which points to the packages that they actually want to use #+end_quote So, is the profile a directory or a pointer file (e.g. symlink)? I tend to think of a directory as a container, like a manilla folder that contains papers. To me, something that points is a file that contains a path to another location. I see that I used the word "contains" to describe both file and directory, so maybe that's a sign to me I'm missing something there. Regardless, I hope you can see that it's not always clear whether a profile is a directory or a file. Yes, on Unix-like systems, directories are files. But Guix throws an error if you call =guix package -p= with a directory: : guix package: error: rename-file: Is a directory If you follow the symlinks, the profile is indeed a directory; it is a directory in the store. But the way users interact with profiles is GUIX_PROFILE="$HOME/.guix-profile" . "$GUIX_PROFILE/etc/profile" which is a file. And there are a bunch of symlinks in general. Those appear to be implementation details. But I think it's reasonable to say the abstraction isn't airtight and that, as a user, I have to interact with the implementation details at some level. Certainly at the documentation level. Leo is 100% correct that my understanding is still rather weak. I'll do my best despite that to help make the documentation better.