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-rw-r--r--libbuild2/cc/link-rule.cxx18
1 files changed, 18 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/libbuild2/cc/link-rule.cxx b/libbuild2/cc/link-rule.cxx
index 96b9898..6b0c337 100644
--- a/libbuild2/cc/link-rule.cxx
+++ b/libbuild2/cc/link-rule.cxx
@@ -2585,6 +2585,24 @@ namespace build2
// We don't rpath system libraries. Why, you may ask? There are many
// good reasons and I have them written on a napkin somewhere...
//
+ // Well, the main reason is that we naturally assume the dynamic
+ // linker searches there by default and so there is no need for rpath.
+ // Plus, rpath would prevent "overriding" distribution-system
+ // (/usr/lib) libraries with user-system (/usr/local/lib).
+ //
+ // Note, however, that some operating systems don't search in
+ // /usr/local/lib by default (for example, Fedora, RHEL, Mac OS since
+ // version 13). In a sense, on these platforms /usr/local is
+ // "half-system" in that the system compiler by default searches in
+ // /usr/local/include and/or /usr/local/lib (see config_module::init()
+ // for background) but the dynamic linker does not. While we could
+ // hack this test for such platforms and add rpath for /usr/local/lib,
+ // this is still feels wrong (the user can always "fix" such an
+ // operating system by instructing the dynamic linker to search in
+ // /usr/local/lib, as many, including ourselves, do). So for now we
+ // are not going to do anything. In the end, the user can always add
+ // an rpath for /usr/local/lib manually.
+ //
// We also assume system libraries can only depend on other system
// libraries and so can prune the traversal.
//