Instead of installing the files in /usr/lib/node/libraries and loading them
from the file system, the files are built-in to the node executable.
However, they are only compiled on demand.
The reasoning is:
1. Allow for more complex internal javascript. In particular,
process.stdout and process.stdin can be js implemented streams.
2. Ease system installs. Loading from disk each time is unnecessary
overhead. Note that there is no "system" path for modules anymore. Only
$HOME/.node_libraries.
Simply place this into the root of your nodejs git working copy and
run ./tools/osx-dist.sh. It will create an dist-osx folder which will
comprise of the resulting .dmg file (install path is
/usr/local/nodejs with symlinks added to /usr/local/bin) along with
other files used during its construction.
$ ls -1 dist-osx/
nodejs-v0.1.26-11-gcd6397c
nodejs-v0.1.26-11-gcd6397c.dmg
nodejs-v0.1.26-11-gcd6397c.pkg
nodejs-v0.1.26-11-gcd6397c.plist
The resulting installed package is going to be visible using the
OS X 'pkgutil --packages' command. You can even safely uninstall
sudoing 'pkgutil --unlink org.nodejs.NodeJS-...' and subsequently
let the system forget about the package being ever seen by
'pkgutil --forget org.nodejs.NodeJS-...'.
Here is the current package ID I have installed:
$ pkgutil --pkgs | grep node
org.nodejs.NodeJS-v0.1.26-11-gcd6397c
Use this patch freely without hesitation.
Signed-off-by: Standa Opichal <opichals@gmail.com>