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#48452
28.0.50; flymake for elisp does not respect `load-path`
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> At some point in the past, Stefan was working on a "sandboxed" Emacs
> that could, in theory, pave the way for automatically enabled Elisp
> Flymake, but I haven't heard of that effort lately.
I need to get back to that indeed :-)
>> It seems to me that there's two useful values for load-path in the
>> Flymake backend: Either just the standard load-path (so that you
>> actually get the same results as when doing a batch byte-compile) or the
>> current running load-path (so that you get the same results as when you
>> `require' the file from your .emacs, say). Altering the load-path to
>> also include the ELPA directories doesn't really help much, because
>> people have all kinds of code that's not in ELPA (but is in their
>> load-path).
AFAIC, it's not just `load-path`: the set of autoloaded functions (and
a few other similar things) is also relevant.
> I think we have to ask ourselves: what is Flymake used for? The most
> useful answers will come from the people who actually use it, though
> potential uses are also interesting.
I don't think we can hope to make flymake-elisp work correctly in all
existing cases, because there are conflicting requirements there.
So, we should take it for granted that some use-cases will be considered
as "unsupported", and the important thing is to figure out what behavior
to provide such that all(?) use-cases can be adapted (and such that the
behavior is sane enough to be described, understandable, and
predictable).
> Having './' in the default load-path for elisp-flymake-byte-compile is
> fundamental for the accuracy of this prediction. Why? Because the
> clients of my packages -- regardless if they use package.el,
> straight.el, etc or just simply using a git checkout -- will always have
> the the files I have in some directory in some other directory in their
> machines, and _that_ directory will be in the load-path.
BTW, while the GNUmakefile of `elpa-admin` also adds `.` to the
`load-path`, there are cases where this is harmful.
E.g. the "pcase benchmark" in `elisp-benchmarks` used to be in the file
.../benchmarks/pcase.el and it (of course) required Emacs to load
`pcase.el` (the other one).
This required the hideous workaround:
(eval-and-compile
;; ¡FIXME! The GNUmakefile of elpa.git uses:
;;
;; ... -L $(dir $@) -f batch-byte-compile $<
;;
;; to compile each file. This is handy for some cases such as files in
;; `contrib' subdirectories but for this `pcase.el' file it causes this
;; `pcase.el' to hide the *real* `pcase.el'. So we workaround this problem
;; here by removing the offending element from `load-path'. Yuck!
;;
;; We should probably change GNUmakefile instead so it doesn't forcefully
;; add the directory to `load-path', e.g. make this dependent on the
;; presence of special file like `.dont-add-to-load-path'.
(when load-file-name
(setq load-path (remove (file-name-directory load-file-name) load-path))))
We have several files in `lisp` whose directory is not in `load-path`
(most of them under `lisp/cedet`).
But, note that I decided to use the above hack (later replaced by
the simpler solution of renaming the file to `elb-pcase.el`) in
preference to changing the GNUmakefile not to add `.` to `load-path`.
Stefan
This bug report was last modified 2 years and 298 days ago.
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