USER MANUAL
This is the CPAN::Packager users manual.
DESCRIPTION
cpan-packager creates RPM and Deb packages of CPAN distributions. Given a module name, cpan-packager will automatically analyze dependencies, download, build, test, provision, and install packages.
CONFIGURATION
The configuration file is YAML-based and is comprised of two main sections, the "global" section, and the "modules" section. The configuration schema is defined in: CPAN::Packager::Config::Schema
The "global" configuration section.
This section defines common configuration entities.
cpan_mirrors
Accepts one or more CPAN mirror arguments. These mirrors are used to retrieve the module(s) being packaged in addition to their dependencies. For example, a local CPAN::Mini mirror, or a "real" mirror may be referenced:
file:///home/dann/minicpan/
http://cpan.pair.com/
ftp://cpan.pair.com/pub/CPAN/
An example configuration section for "cpan_mirrors" may look like:
--- global: cpan_mirrors: - http://ftp.funet.fi/pub/languages/perl/CPAN/ - file:///home/dann/minicpan
fix_package_depends
TODO
from
TODO
to
TODO
no_depends
TODO
module
TODO
skip_name_resolve_modules
TODO
module
TODO
fix_module_name
TODO
from
TODO
to
TODO
The "modules" configuration section
This section defines module-specific configuration entities.
module
Specifies the module to which this configuration applies. For example: Test::Reporter.
no_depends
Forcefully removes module dependencies.
module
Given module is removed from the dependency list of the package being built. For example: Test::Reporter.
depends
Forcefully adds module dependencies.
module
Given module is added to the dependency list of the package being built. For example: Test::Reporter.
skip_test
Causes "make test" to be skipped for given module. This is useful when you don't want a module's failing tests to prevent the module from being built and installed.
force_build
TODO
custom
TODO
tgz_path
TODO
src_dir
TODO
version
TODO
dist_name
TODO
patches
TODO
version
TODO
release
This specifies the release of the package itself (not the module that's being packaged). This is most commonly used when you want to re-package the same version of a given module. You may want to do this, for example, if the original packaging was somehow in error, or perhaps if you want to adjust the package's metadata.
pkg_name
Ordinarilly, a module like, for example, Test::Reporter would be given a package name of perl-Test-Reporter (RPM) or libtest-reporter-perl (Deb), by default. However, if for some reason you need to define your own package name, this option will allow you to do just that. This can be useful in conjunction with the "obsoletes" option, if you need to forcefully "override" an existing "identical" package on the system.
epoch
This option specifies the epoch of a package. This is primarily useful in the situation where, for example, RPM's version comparison algorithm isn't doing what you expect. Bumping the epoch integer up will force RPM to consider the package as being newer even if it would ordinarily consider it being older, version-wise.
obsoletes
Accepts multiple "package" arguments. Causes the package being built to obsolete the given packages.
package
In the case of RPM, an example package argument may be: perl-Compress-Zlib. For example, since the IO-Compress distribution superceeds and deprecates the Compress-Zlib distribution, the configuration section for the IO::Compress module may obsolete the perl-Compress-Zlib package, as above.
MISCELLANEOUS
Using cpan-packager with minicpan
You may use CPAN::Packager with minicpan. First, establish your local minicpan mirror:
minicpan -r http://ftp.funet.fi/pub/languages/perl/CPAN/ -l ~/minicpan
Then, just set the path to your local minicpan mirror in your configuration file:
---
global:
cpan_mirrors:
- file:///home/dann/minicpan
Applying patches to tarballs for RPM builds
Write the module's configuration as such:
- module: Acme
custom:
tgz_path: ~/.cpanpackager/custom_module/Acme-1.11111.tar.gz
patches:
- ~/.cpanpackager/custom_module/acme_test.patch
dist_name: Acme
version: 1.11111
The patch should, for example, look like:
--- Acme-1.11111/t/acme.t.orig 2010-01-26 22:26:51.000000000 +0900
+++ Acme-1.11111/t/acme.t 2010-01-26 22:26:39.000000000 +0900
@@ -1,8 +1,10 @@
use lib 't', 'lib';
use strict;
use warnings;
-use Test::More tests => 2;
+use Test::More tests => 3;
use Acme;
ok(acme->is_acme);
ok(acme->is_perfect);
+ok 1;
Specify installation location (optional)
It is possible for a CPAN::Packager user to explicitly specify installation locations for a distribution's libraries, documentation, man pages, binaries, and scripts. Setting both of the below environment variables, for example, will accomplish this.
PERL_MM_OPT="INSTALLVENDORMAN1DIR=/usr/local/share/man/man1
INSTALLVENDORMAN3DIR=/usr/local/share/man/man3
INSTALLVENDORBIN=/usr/local/bin INSTALLVENDORSCRIPT=/usr/local/bin"
PERL_MB_OPT="--config installvendorman1dir=/usr/local/share/man/man1
--config installvendorman3dir=/usr/local/share/man/man3 --config
installvendorbin=/usr/local/bin --config installvendorscript=/usr/local/bin"
Additionally, for RPMs, you may specify the directory in which non-man documentation (Changes, README, etc) are installed via adding an entry to your ~/.rpmmacros file:
%_defaultdocdir /usr/local/share/doc
Additional setup for debian users
Copy conf/debian/rules* to the ~/.dh-make-perl directory. Otherwise, you may experience conflicts. For example: perllocal.pod.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
Environment variable CPAN_PACKAGER_TEST_LIVE
can be used to execute live tests.
Environment variable CPAN_PACKAGER_ENABLE_DUMP
can be used to dump variables.
BUGS
Please report any bugs or feature requests to this project's GitHub repository at:
http://github.com/dann/p5-cpan-packager/issues
Thank you!
AUTHOR
Takatoshi Kitano <kitano.tk@gmail.com>