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Re: org 9.2.6 and org 9.1.9


From: Jean-Christophe Helary
Subject: Re: org 9.2.6 and org 9.1.9
Date: Wed, 27 Nov 2019 12:13:51 +0900


> On Nov 27, 2019, at 11:59, Cook, Malcolm <address@hidden> wrote:
> 
> Tim,
>  
> Yes, it is a bit of dependency hell.

I see 2 solutions here:

1) org is only provided as a built-in package and updated there when necessary
2) org is removed from the built in packages

The current situation is really weird.

Jean-Christophe

>  
> Quoting myself from Re: [O] How to safely update from ver. 8.2.10 to 8.3.x :
>  
>  
> Here's what I do, at the shell:
>  
>           emacs -Q -batch -eval "(progn (require 'package) (add-to-list 
> 'package-archives '(\"org\" . \"http://orgmode.org/elpa/\";;))  
> (package-initialize) (package-refresh-contents) (package-install 
> 'org-plus-contrib))"
>  
> This assures that org is not already loaded when org is compiled, which I've 
> learned is the source of creating a mess.
>  
> Note: I use org-plus-contrib from melpa instead of org.  If you want just 
> org, 
> you could simply:
>  
>           emacs -Q -batch -eval "(progn (require 'package) 
> (package-initialize) 
> (package-refresh-contents) (package-install 'org-plus-contrib))"
>  
> HTH,
>  
> Malcolm
>  
>  
>  
> From: Emacs-orgmode <emacs-orgmode-bounces+mec=address@hidden> On Behalf Of 
> Tim Cross
> Sent: Tuesday, November 26, 2019 3:41 PM
> To: Nick Dokos <address@hidden>
> Cc: Org-mode <address@hidden>; Emacs developers <address@hidden>
> Subject: Re: org 9.2.6 and org 9.1.9
>  
> CAUTION: This email was received from an External Source
>  
> 
> There is a very important rule which must be followed wrt org-mode 
> installation. It is critical that no version of org is already loaded before 
> installing a new version. This can be quite tricky as many of us have org 
> setups which automatically load some org functionality without explicitly 
> opening an org file or agenda view (for example, you might be using an org 
> add-on for email). Situation is worse if we are loading org as part of our 
> init.el.
>  
> I'm also not sure that tweaking the load-path order is sufficient if your 
> installing org via M-x package-install as there is a 'chicken and egg' 
> problem with the initial install. If your init.el file is loading org 
> functionality and you only have the built-in org version installed, that 
> version will be loaded before you run package-install. Probably works if you 
> install via your init.el though.
>  
> I've found the safest thing to do is only use autoload or use-package with 
> deferred loading for org and whenever updating org (I use the 
> org-plus-contrib package from the org elpa repo) only update immediately 
> after a fresh restart of emacs and before doing anything else.  Failing to do 
> this often results in a broken build as you get a set of new org elc files 
> which contains definitions from two different org versions. When the versions 
> are only different in minor version numbers, this mixed build may not even be 
> noticeable, but when major version differences exist, you get the symptom of 
> broken functionality, missing definitions or unbound symbols.
>  
> The situation is made worse by package maintainers specifying the latest org 
> version rather than the version built into Emacs when the bundled version 
> would be sufficient.
>  
> It took me a while to structure my init.el file such that no org 
> functionality was loaded until I used something which depends on it. However, 
> once I did, provided I only update org in a fresh new session, all works 
> flawlessly. I found use-package package really helped with this. 
>  
>  
>  
> On Wed, 27 Nov 2019 at 06:22, Nick Dokos <address@hidden> wrote:
> Jean-Christophe Helary <address@hidden> writes:
> 
> > org 9.1.9 is a built-in
> >
> > but org 9.2.6 comes as a dependency to some packages and having both 
> > installed creates conflicts.
> >
> 
> What conflicts are you seeing? I have the built-in 9.1.9 org that
> comes with emacs but I run (close to) latest master and I see no
> problems: the only thing I do is to set my load-path to point to the
> right place (and make sure that that setting precedes the
> /usr/local/share/emacs/27.0.50/lisp/org setting that emacs adds):
> 
>     (add-to-list 'load-path (expand-file-name "~/elisp/org-mode/lisp"))
> 
> Although that has been enough for me, it's probably safer to delete
> from load-path all other org entries, thereby making the built-in
> version invisible to emacs - in my case, I just have the one:
> 
>    (delete "/usr/local/share/emacs/27.0.50/lisp/org" load-path)
> 
> That way, if you happen to do something like `(require 'old-org-req)'
> with a requirement that is not satisfied by current org, but is
> satisfied by the built-in org, you'd get an error, rather than getting
> a mixed installation.
> 
> > Why does that happen ?
> >
> > Can't 9.2.6 override 9.1.9 ? It's not the first time I have issues
> > with that situation and that's extremely confusing. What is the best
> > way to solve that ?
> >
> 
> I think the above should be enough (and IME it is), but maybe someone can
> think of other things that might trip one up.
> 
> -- 
> Nick
> 
> "There are only two hard problems in computer science: cache
> invalidation, naming things, and off-by-one errors." -Martin Fowler
> 
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> regards,
>  
> Tim
>  
> --
> Tim Cross

Jean-Christophe Helary
-----------------------------------------------
http://mac4translators.blogspot.com @brandelune





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