NAME
Module::Build::Cookbook - Examples of Module::Build Usage
DESCRIPTION
Module::Build
isn't conceptually very complicated, but examples are
always helpful. The following recipes should help developers and/or
installers put together the pieces from the other parts of the
documentation.
BASIC RECIPES
Installing modules that use Module::Build
In most cases, you can just issue the following commands:
perl Build.PL ./Build ./Build test ./Build install
There's nothing complicated here - first you're running a script called Build.PL, then you're running a (newly-generated) script called Build and passing it various arguments.
The exact commands may vary a bit depending on how you invoke perl scripts on your system. For instance, if you have multiple versions of perl installed, you can install to one particular perl's library directories like so:
/usr/bin/perl5.8.1 Build.PL ./Build ./Build test ./Build install
If you're on Windows where the current directory is always searched first for scripts, you'll probably do something like this:
perl Build.PL Build Build test Build install
On the old Mac OS (version 9 or lower) using MacPerl, you can
double-click on the Build.PL script to create the Build script,
then double-click on the Build script to run its build
, test
,
and install
actions.
The Build script knows what perl was used to run Build.PL, so you don't need to re-invoke the Build script with the complete perl path each time. If you invoke it with the wrong perl path, you'll get a warning or a fatal error.
Modifying Config.pm values
Module::Build
relies heavily on various values from perl's
Config.pm
to do its work. For example, default installation paths
are given by installsitelib
and installvendorman3dir
and
friends, C linker & compiler settings are given by ld
,
lddlflags
, cc
, ccflags
, and so on. If you're pretty sure
you know what you're doing, you can tell Module::Build
to pretend
there are different values in Config.pm than what's really there,
by passing arguments for the --config
parameter on the command
line:
perl Build.PL --config cc=gcc --config ld=gcc
Inside the Build.PL
script the same thing can be accomplished by
passing values for the config
parameter to new()
:
my $build = Module::Build->new ( ... config => { cc => 'gcc', ld => 'gcc' }, ... );
In custom build code, the same thing can be accomplished by calling the "config" in Module::Build method:
$build->config( cc => 'gcc' ); # Set $build->config( ld => 'gcc' ); # Set ... my $linker = $build->config('ld'); # Get
Installing modules using the programmatic interface
If you need to build, test, and/or install modules from within some
other perl code (as opposed to having the user type installation
commands at the shell), you can use the programmatic interface.
Create a Module::Build object (or an object of a custom Module::Build
subclass) and then invoke its dispatch()
method to run various
actions.
my $build = Module::Build->new ( module_name => 'Foo::Bar', license => 'perl', requires => { 'Some::Module' => '1.23' }, ); $build->dispatch('build'); $build->dispatch('test', verbose => 1); $build->dispatch('install');
The first argument to dispatch()
is the name of the action, and any
following arguments are named parameters.
This is the interface we use to test Module::Build itself in the regression tests.
Installing to a temporary directory
To create packages for package managers like RedHat's rpm
or
Debian's deb
, you may need to install to a temporary directory
first and then create the package from that temporary installation.
To do this, specify the destdir
parameter to the install
action:
./Build install --destdir /tmp/my-package-1.003
This essentially just prepends all the installation paths with the /tmp/my-package-1.003 directory.
Installing to a non-standard directory
To install to a non-standard directory (for example, if you don't have
permission to install in the system-wide directories), you can use the
install_base
or prefix
parameters:
./Build install --install_base /foo/bar
See "INSTALL PATHS" in Module::Build for a much more complete discussion of how installation paths are determined.
Installing in the same location as ExtUtils::MakeMaker
With the introduction of --prefix
in Module::Build 0.28 and
INSTALL_BASE
in ExtUtils::MakeMaker 6.31 its easy to get them both
to install to the same locations.
First, ensure you have at least version 0.28 of Module::Build installed and 6.31 of ExtUtils::MakeMaker. Prior versions have differing (and in some cases quite strange) installation behaviors.
The following installation flags are equivalent between ExtUtils::MakeMaker and Module::Build.
MakeMaker Module::Build PREFIX=... --prefix ... INSTALL_BASE=... --install_base ... DESTDIR=... --destdir ... LIB=... --install_path lib=... INSTALLDIRS=... --installdirs ... INSTALLDIRS=perl --installdirs core UNINST=... --uninst ... INC=... --extra_compiler_flags ... POLLUTE=1 --extra_compiler_flags -DPERL_POLLUTE
For example, if you are currently installing MakeMaker modules with this command:
perl Makefile.PL PREFIX=~ make test make install UNINST=1
You can install into the same location with Module::Build using this:
perl Build.PL --prefix ~ ./Build test ./Build install --uninst 1
prefix
vs install_base
The behavior of prefix
is complicated and depends on
how your Perl is configured. The resulting installation locations
will vary from machine to machine and even different installations of
Perl on the same machine. Because of this, it's difficult to document
where prefix
will place your modules.
In contrast, install_base
has predictable, easy to explain
installation locations. Now that Module::Build and MakeMaker both
have install_base
there is little reason to use prefix
other
than to preserve your existing installation locations. If you are
starting a fresh Perl installation we encourage you to use
install_base
. If you have an existing installation installed via
prefix
, consider moving it to an installation structure matching
install_base
and using that instead.
Running a single test file
Module::Build
supports running a single test, which enables you to
track down errors more quickly. Use the following format:
./Build test --test_files t/mytest.t
In addition, you may want to run the test in verbose mode to get more informative output:
./Build test --test_files t/mytest.t --verbose 1
I run this so frequently that I define the following shell alias:
alias t './Build test --verbose 1 --test_files'
So then I can just execute t t/mytest.t
to run a single test.
ADVANCED RECIPES
Making a CPAN.pm-compatible distribution
New versions of CPAN.pm understand how to use a Build.PL script,
but old versions don't. If authors want to help users who have old
versions, some form of Makefile.PL should be supplied. The easiest
way to accomplish this is to use the create_makefile_pl
parameter to
Module::Build->new()
in the Build.PL
script, which can
create various flavors of Makefile.PL during the dist
action.
As a best practice, we recommend using the "traditional" style of Makefile.PL unless your distribution has needs that can't be accomplished that way.
The Module::Build::Compat
module, which is part of
Module::Build
's distribution, is responsible for creating these
Makefile.PLs. Please see Module::Build::Compat for the details.
Changing the order of the build process
The build_elements
property specifies the steps Module::Build
will take when building a distribution. To change the build order,
change the order of the entries in that property:
# Process pod files first my @e = @{$build->build_elements}; my $i = grep {$e[$_] eq 'pod'} 0..$#e; unshift @e, splice @e, $i, 1;
Currently, build_elements
has the following default value:
[qw( PL support pm xs pod script )]
Do take care when altering this property, since there may be
non-obvious (and non-documented!) ordering dependencies in the
Module::Build
code.
Adding new file types to the build process
Sometimes you might have extra types of files that you want to install
alongside the standard types like .pm and .pod files. For
instance, you might have a Bar.dat file containing some data
related to the Foo::Bar
module and you'd like for it to end up as
Foo/Bar.dat somewhere in perl's @INC
path so Foo::Bar
can
access it easily at runtime. The following code from a sample
Build.PL
file demonstrates how to accomplish this:
use Module::Build; my $build = Module::Build->new ( module_name => 'Foo::Bar', ...other stuff here... ); $build->add_build_element('dat'); $build->create_build_script;
This will find all .dat files in the lib/ directory, copy them
to the blib/lib/ directory during the build
action, and install
them during the install
action.
If your extra files aren't located in the lib/
directory in your
distribution, you can explicitly say where they are, just as you'd do
with .pm or .pod files:
use Module::Build; my $build = new Module::Build ( module_name => 'Foo::Bar', dat_files => {'some/dir/Bar.dat' => 'lib/Foo/Bar.dat'}, ...other stuff here... ); $build->add_build_element('dat'); $build->create_build_script;
If your extra files actually need to be created on the user's machine,
or if they need some other kind of special processing, you'll probably
want to subclass Module::Build
and create a special method to
process them, named process_${kind}_files()
:
use Module::Build; my $class = Module::Build->subclass(code => <<'EOF'); sub process_dat_files { my $self = shift; ... locate and process *.dat files, ... and create something in blib/lib/ } EOF my $build = $class->new ( module_name => 'Foo::Bar', ...other stuff here... ); $build->add_build_element('dat'); $build->create_build_script;
If your extra files don't go in lib/ but in some other place, see "Adding new elements to the install process" for how to actually get them installed.
Please note that these examples use some capabilities of Module::Build that first appeared in version 0.26. Before that it could still be done, but the simple cases took a bit more work.
Adding new elements to the install process
By default, Module::Build creates seven subdirectories of the blib
directory during the build process: lib, arch, bin,
script, bindoc, libdoc, and html (some of these may be
missing or empty if there's nothing to go in them). Anything copied
to these directories during the build will eventually be installed
during the install
action (see "INSTALL PATHS" in Module::Build.
If you need to create a new custom type of installable element, e.g. conf
,
then you need to tell Module::Build where things in blib/conf/
should be installed. To do this, use the install_path
parameter to
the new()
method:
my $build = Module::Build->new ( ...other stuff here... install_path => { conf => $installation_path } );
Or you can call the install_path()
method later:
$build->install_path(conf => $installation_path);
The user may also specify the path on the command line:
perl Build.PL --install_path conf=/foo/path/etc
The important part, though, is that somehow the install path needs
to be set, or else nothing in the blib/conf/ directory will get
installed, and a runtime error during the install
action will
result.
See also "Adding new file types to the build process" for how to create the stuff in blib/conf/ in the first place.
EXAMPLES ON CPAN
Several distributions on CPAN are making good use of various features of Module::Build. They can serve as real-world examples for others.
SVN-Notify-Mirror
http://search.cpan.org/~jpeacock/SVN-Notify-Mirror/
John Peacock, author of the SVN-Notify-Mirror
distribution, says:
- Using
auto_features
, I check to see whether two optional modules are available - SVN::Notify::Config and Net::SSH; - If the S::N::Config module is loaded, I automatically
generate testfiles for it during Build (using the
PL_files
property). - If the
ssh_feature
is available, I ask if the user wishes to perform the ssh tests (since it requires a little preliminary setup); - Only if the user has
ssh_feature
and answers yes to the testing, do I generate a test file.I'm sure I could not have handled this complexity with EU::MM, but it was very easy to do with M::B.
Modifying an action
Sometimes you might need an to have an action, say ./Build install
,
do something unusual. For instance, you might need to change the
ownership of a file or do something else peculiar to your application.
You can subclass Module::Build
on the fly using the subclass()
method and override the methods that perform the actions. You may
need to read through Module::Build::Authoring
and
Module::Build::API
to find the methods you want to override. All
"action" methods are implemented by a method called "ACTION_" followed
by the action's name, so here's an example of how it would work for
the install
action:
# Build.PL use Module::Build; my $class = Module::Build->subclass( class => "Module::Build::Custom", code => <<'SUBCLASS' );
sub ACTION_install { my $self = shift; # YOUR CODE HERE $self->SUPER::ACTION_install; } SUBCLASS
$class->new( module_name => 'Your::Module', # rest of the usual Module::Build parameters )->create_build_script;
AUTHOR
Ken Williams <kwilliams@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2001-2006 Ken Williams. All rights reserved.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
SEE ALSO
perl(1), Module::Build(3), Module::Build::Authoring(3), Module::Build::API(3)