On 15 Aug 2022, at 13:19, amano.kenji
wrote: I was trying to translate instructions in install.sh and dependencies of install.sh into shell commands in a Gentoo Linux package.
Gentoo Linux downloads all dependencies and builds a package in a network namespace where there is no internet access.
If you must use a Linux that makes life hard... ;-) I'm guessing you're trying to prepare ConTeXt for use in a private repository on a LAN so that your users can install it without needing Internet access? ConTeXt only depends on glibc (iirc) - and it assumes it is present already. So do an install on a machine that does have Internet access and everything you need will then be self-contained in the directory you chose to install into. Zip up that directory and use it for subsequent installs as many times as you want just by unzipping it - no further Internet access required. You'll need to set up the PATH for where you unzipped the file - but the install.sh file has the necessary information towards the end. Try it and see - it's not like typical modern bloatware that pulls down 100's of Gbytes of dependencies willy-nilly.
Thus, install.sh cannot be directly used in a gentoo linux package. I have to translate instructions used in install.sh into shell commands.
How can I do that? Can I somehow execute mtx-install.lua, mtxrun.lua, or mtxrun in a way that doesn't require internet access?
------- Original Message ------- On Monday, August 15th, 2022 at 12:12 PM, Bruce Horrocks
wrote: On 15 Aug 2022, at 13:03, amano.kenji via ntg-context ntg-context@ntg.nl wrote:
TexLive has texmfcnf.lua that doesn't really work with texlive-context installed by linux distributions.
Arch Linux has its own patched version of texmfcnf.lua.
It seems I'd be better off with a linux package for ConTeXt LMTX.
How can I build and install ConTeXt LMTX on Gentoo Linux or any linux distribution?
I wish it was as simple as ./configure, make, and make install.
Install instructions for LMTX on Linux are here: https://wiki.contextgarden.net/Installation
It's pre-built so there are no make steps.
Try it and ask again if you have problems. :-)
— Bruce Horrocks Hampshire, UK
— Bruce Horrocks Hampshire, UK