From dc92679e2c363f8c0d659fa428c138684455a6bd Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Kamil Dudka <kdudka@redhat.com>
Date: Wed, 11 May 2011 16:46:13 +0200
Subject: [PATCH 1/4] findutils-4.4.0-no-locate.patch
---
Makefile.am | 2 +-
configure.ac | 2 --
doc/find.texi | 24 ++++++++----------------
3 files changed, 9 insertions(+), 19 deletions(-)
diff --git a/Makefile.am b/Makefile.am
index c7f8f39..0dacb93 100644
--- a/Makefile.am
+++ b/Makefile.am
@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ DISTCLEANFILES = tool-versions.txt
# "tests" is the gnulib unit test dir.
-SUBDIRS = gl tests build-aux lib find xargs locate doc po m4
+SUBDIRS = gl tests build-aux lib find xargs doc po m4
ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS = -I gl/m4 -I m4
diff --git a/configure.ac b/configure.ac
index f31dd37..431f0ce 100644
--- a/configure.ac
+++ b/configure.ac
@@ -244,8 +244,6 @@ find/testsuite/Makefile
gl/Makefile
gl/lib/Makefile
lib/Makefile
-locate/Makefile
-locate/testsuite/Makefile
m4/Makefile
po/Makefile.in
po/Makefile
diff --git a/doc/find.texi b/doc/find.texi
index 1f278de..c584298 100644
--- a/doc/find.texi
+++ b/doc/find.texi
@@ -7,7 +7,6 @@
@c %**end of header
@include version.texi
-@include ../locate/dblocation.texi
@iftex
@finalout
@@ -571,8 +570,7 @@ the databases are updated, and the directories for which they contain
entries.
Here is how to select which file name databases @code{locate}
-searches. The default is system-dependent. At the time this document
-was generated, the default was @file{@value{LOCATE_DB}}.
+searches. The default is system-dependent.
@table @code
@item --database=@var{path}
@@ -2840,13 +2838,9 @@ thrashing the network.
directories are indexed by each database file.
The default location for the locate database depends on how findutils
-is built, but the findutils installation accompanying this manual uses
-the default location @file{@value{LOCATE_DB}}.
-
-If no database exists at @file{@value{LOCATE_DB}} but the user did not
-specify where to look (by using @samp{-d} or setting
-@code{LOCATE_PATH}), then @code{locate} will also check for a
-``secure'' database in @file{/var/lib/slocate/slocate.db}.
+is built. If user did not specify where to look (by using @samp{-d}
+or setting @code{LOCATE_PATH}), then @code{locate} will also check for
+a ``secure'' database in @file{/var/lib/slocate/slocate.db}.
@node Database Formats
@section Database Formats
@@ -3389,8 +3383,7 @@ present.
@item --database=@var{path}
@itemx -d @var{path}
-Instead of searching the default @code{locate} database
-@file{@value{LOCATE_DB}}, @code{locate} searches the file
+@code{locate} searches the file
name databases in @var{path}, which is a colon-separated list of
database file names. You can also use the environment variable
@code{LOCATE_PATH} to set the list of database files to search. The
@@ -3575,8 +3568,7 @@ The environment variable @code{PRUNEFS} also sets this value. Default
is @file{nfs NFS proc}.
@item --output=@var{dbfile}
-The database file to build. The default is system-dependent, but
-when this document was formatted it was @file{@value{LOCATE_DB}}.
+The database file to build.
@item --localuser=@var{user}
The user to search the non-network directories as, using @code{su}.
@@ -5583,7 +5575,7 @@ why @code{xargs} is confused by your operating system).
@section Error Messages From @code{locate}
@table @samp
-@item warning: database @file{@value{LOCATE_DB}} is more than 8 days old
+@item warning: database @file{LOCATE_DB} is more than 8 days old
The @code{locate} program relies on a database which is periodically
built by the @code{updatedb} program. That hasn't happened in a long
time. To fix this problem, run @code{updatedb} manually. This can
@@ -5591,7 +5583,7 @@ often happen on systems that are generally not left on, so the
periodic ``cron'' task which normally does this doesn't get a chance
to run.
-@item locate database @file{@value{LOCATE_DB}} is corrupt or invalid
+@item locate database @file{LOCATE_DB} is corrupt or invalid
This should not happen. Re-run @code{updatedb}. If that works, but
@code{locate} still produces this error, run @code{locate --version}
and @code{updatedb --version}. These should produce the same output.
--
1.7.4.4