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Diffstat (limited to '')
-rw-r--r-- | mail/mailman/files/patch-misc::paths.py.in | 41 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 41 deletions
diff --git a/mail/mailman/files/patch-misc::paths.py.in b/mail/mailman/files/patch-misc::paths.py.in deleted file mode 100644 index f7db8a1d5d8c..000000000000 --- a/mail/mailman/files/patch-misc::paths.py.in +++ /dev/null @@ -1,41 +0,0 @@ -Index: misc/paths.py.in ---- branches/Release_2_1-maint/mailman/misc/paths.py.in 2005/12/30 18:50:08 7694 -+++ branches/Release_2_1-maint/mailman/misc/paths.py.in 2006/10/12 00:48:48 8056 -@@ -35,6 +35,19 @@ - if exec_prefix == '${prefix}': - exec_prefix = prefix - -+# Check if ja/ko codecs are available before changing path. -+try: -+ s = unicode('OK', 'iso-2022-jp') -+ jaok = True -+except LookupError: -+ jaok = False -+ -+try: -+ s = unicode('OK', 'euc-kr') -+ kook = True -+except LookupError: -+ kook = False -+ - # Hack the path to include the parent directory of the $prefix/Mailman package - # directory. - sys.path.insert(0, prefix) -@@ -53,12 +66,14 @@ - # In a normal interactive Python environment, the japanese.pth and korean.pth - # files would be imported automatically. But because we inhibit the importing - # of the site module, we need to be explicit about importing these codecs. --import japanese -+if not jaok: -+ import japanese - # As of KoreanCodecs 2.0.5, you had to do the second import to get the Korean - # codecs installed, however leave the first import in there in case an upgrade - # changes this. --import korean --import korean.aliases -+if not kook: -+ import korean -+ import korean.aliases - # Arabic and Hebrew (RFC-1556) encoding aliases. (temporary solution) - import encodings.aliases - encodings.aliases.aliases.update({ |