/usr/share/perl5/Module/Install/API.pod is in libmodule-install-perl 1.06-1.
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=head1 NAME
Module::Install::API - Command Reference for Module::Install
=head1 DESCRIPTION
L<Module::Install> has lots of commands scattered in the extensions.
Several common commands are described in the main
L<Module::Install>'s pod, but you usually need to know more to do
what you want.
This API document lists and describes all the public I<supported>
commands, grouped by the nature or importance of them.
If you are a module author and want to use L<Module::Install> in your
distributions, this is the document you should consult.
If you are a user (or a contributor) of distributions that use
L<Module::Install>, you may also want to check
L<Module::Install::FAQ> where you'll find some common glitches you
may encounter.
Note that commands not listed here should be deemed private utility
commands for the L<Module::Install> developers, or I<unsupported>
commands with various reasons (some are experimental and half-baked,
some are broken (by design or by implementation), some are simply
deprecated, and so on). You may find some of them are used rather
widely, but their use is discouraged. You have been warned.
=head1 COMMANDS TO PROVIDE BASIC META DATA
Most of these are also described in the main L<Module::Install>'s
pod. Basically, (almost) all you have to know is the B<all_from>
command that tries to extract all the necessary basic meta data from
a module file, but you can also specify one by one what is not
written in the module and can't be extracted (you usually want to
write these specific commands before C<all_from()> not to be warned
by the lack of information).
=head2 all_from (L<Module::Install::Metadata>)
all_from 'lib/Foo/Bar.pm';
B<all_from> command takes a module file path, and will try to extract
meta data from the module including a distribution name, a module
version, the minimum required perl version for the module, authors
information, a license, a short description of the module. See the
following commands for the extraction detail.
=head2 name, name_from, module_name (L<Module::Install::Metadata>)
name 'Foo-Bar';
name_from 'lib/Foo/Bar.pm';
B<name> commmand takes a distribution name. It usually differs
slightly from a module name (a module name is separated by double
colons; a distribution name is separated by hyphens). Just replacing
all the double colons of your main module with hyphens would be
enough for you.
B<name_from> takes a module file path, and looks for the topmost
C<package> declaration to extract a module name, and then converts it
to a distribution name.
You may optionally set B<module_name> to specify a main module name
(if you choose other naming scheme for your distribution). This value
is directly passed to L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker> in the backend as a
C<NAME> attribute (Module::Install usually creates this from the
distribution name set by B<name> or B<name_from>).
=head2 abstract, abstract_from (L<Module::Install::Metadata>)
abstract 'a short description of the distribution';
abstract_from 'lib/Foo/Bar.pm';
B<abstract> command takes a string to describe what that
module/distribution is for. B<abstract_from> takes a module file path
and looks for a string that follows the module's name and a hyphen
to separate in the C<NAME> section of the pod.
The value set by B<abstract> or B<abstract_from> is passed to
L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker> as an C<ABSTRACT> attribute.
=head2 version, version_from (L<Module::Install::Metadata>)
version '0.01';
version_from 'lib/Foo/Bar.pm';
B<version> command takes a version string for the distribution.
B<version_from> takes a module file path, and looks for the
C<$VERSION> of the module.
The value set by B<version> or B<version_from> is passed to
L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker> as a C<VERSION> attribute. B<version_from>
(and B<all_from>) also sets a C<VERSION_FROM> attribute to check
version integrity of the distribution.
=head2 perl_version, perl_version_from (L<Module::Install::Metadata>)
perl_version '5.008';
perl_version_from 'lib/Foo/Bar.pm';
B<perl_version> command takes a minimum required perl version for the
distribution. B<perl_version_from> takes a module file path, and
looks for a C<< use <perl_version> >> (or C<< require <perl_version>
>>) statement (note that now L<Module::Install> only supports perl
5.005 and newer).
The value set by B<perl_version> or B<perl_version_from> is passed to
L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker> as a C<MIN_PERL_VERSION> attribute (if
applicable).
=head2 author, author_from (L<Module::Install::Metadata>)
author 'John Doe <john.doe at cpan.org>';
author_from 'lib/Foo/Bar.pm';
B<author> command takes a string to describe author(s). You can set
multiple authors with one B<author> command, or with multiple
B<author>s (you can also use B<authors> alias if you prefer).
B<author_from> takes a module file path, and looks for an C<AUTHOR>
(or C<AUTHORS>) section in the pod (and also license/copyright
sections if it can't find any author(s) section) to extract an
author.
The value set by B<author> or B<author_from> is concatenated and
passed to L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker> as an C<AUTHOR> attribute.
=head2 license, license_from (L<Module::Install::Metadata>)
license 'perl';
license_from 'lib/Foo/Bar.pm';
B<license> command takes an abbreviated license name including
C<perl>, C<artistic>, C<apache>, C<(l)gpl>, C<bsd>, C<mit>,
C<mozilla>, C<open_source>, and so on. If you don't (want to) specify
a particular license, it will be C<unknown>.
B<license_from> takes a module file path, and looks for a C<LICENSE>
(or C<LICENCE>) section in the pod (and also C<COPYRIGHT> section if
it can't find any) to extract a license.
The value set by B<license> or B<license_from> is passed to
L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker> as an C<LICENSE> attribute (if applicable).
You are also reminded that if the distribution is intended to be
uploaded to the CPAN, it B<must> be an OSI-approved open source
license. Commercial software is not permitted on the CPAN.
=head1 COMMANDS TO PROVIDE DEPENDENCIES
Most of these are described in the main pod, too.
=head2 requires (L<Module::Install::Metadata>)
requires 'Foo::Bar';
requires 'Foo::Baz' => '1.00';
B<requires> command takes a module name on which your distribution
depends, and its minimum required version if any. You may add
arbitrary numbers of C<requires>. You even can add multiple numbers
of dependencies on the same module with different required versions
(which will be sorted out later, though). Note that this dependency
is on the basis of a module, not of a distribution. This usually
doesn't matter, and you just need to call for a module you really
need (then you'll get the whole distribution it belongs to), but
sometimes you may need to call for all the modules that the required
module implicitly requires.
The values set by B<requires> are passed to L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker> as
a C<PREREQ_PM> attribute.
=head2 build_requires, test_requires (L<Module::Install::Metadata>)
build_requires 'ExtUtils::Foo::Bar';
build_requires 'ExtUtils::Foo::Baz' => '1.00';
test_requires 'Test::Foo::Bar';
test_requires 'Test::Foo::Baz' => '1.00';
B<build_requires> command also takes a module name and a minimum
required version if any. The difference from the C<requires> command
is that B<build_requires> is to call for modules you'll require while
building the distribution, or in the tests, and that in theory are
not required at run-time. This distinction is more for other system
package managers than for the CPAN, from where you usually want to
install everything for future reuse (unless you are too lazy to test
distributions).
As of this writing, C<test_requires> is just an alias for
C<build_requires>, but this may change in the future.
The values set by B<build_requires> and B<test_requires> are passed
to L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker> as a C<BUILD_REQUIRES> attribute, which may
fall back to C<PREREQ_PM> if your L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker> is not new
enough.
=begin experimental
=head2 install_requires (L<Module::Install::Metadata>)
install_requires 'Test::Foo::Bar';
install_requires 'Test::Foo::Baz' => '1.00';
B<install_requires> is yet another alias for C<build_requires>. This
is not used yet.
=end experimental
=head2 configure_requires (L<Module::Install::Metadata>)
configure_requires 'ExtUtils::Foo::Bar';
configure_requires 'ExtUtils::Foo::Baz' => '1.00';
B<configure_requires> command also takes a module name and a minimum
required version if any. The difference from the C<requires> command
is that B<configure_requires> is to call for modules you'll require
to run C<< perl Makefile.PL >>. This attribute only makes sense for
the latest CPAN toolchains that parse C<META.yml> before running C<<
perl Makefile.PL >>.
The values set by B<configure_requires> are passed to
L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker> as a C<CONFIGURE_REQUIRES> attribute, which
may fall back to C<PREREQ_PM> if your L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker> is not
new enough.
=begin experimental
=head2 requires_from, test_requires_from (L<Module::Install::Metadata>)
requires_from 'lib/Foo/Bar.pm';
test_requires_from 't/00-compile.t';
B<requires_from> command takes a module file path, and looks for
C<use> statements with explicit module version (like C<< use Foo::Bar
0.01 >>), and from which it sets C<requires> attributes.
B<test_requires_from> commands also takes a file path but of a test
file, and looks for the same C<use> statements to set
B<build_requires> attributes. Both are experimental and only work if
the statements have an explicit version number (which you rarely
append...).
This behavior may change in the future.
=end experimental
=head2 recommends (L<Module::Install::Metadata>)
recommends 'ExtUtils::Foo::Bar';
recommends 'ExtUtils::Foo::Baz' => '1.00';
B<recommends> command also takes a module name and a minimum required
version if any. As of this writing, C<recommends> is purely
advisory, only written in the C<META.yml>. Recommended modules will
B<not> usually be installed by the current CPAN toolchains (other
system package managers may possibly prompt you to install them).
=head2 features, feature (L<Module::Install::Metadata>)
feature( 'share directory support',
-default => 1,
'File::ShareDir' => '1.00',
);
features(
'JSON support', [
-default => 0,
'JSON' => '2.00',
'JSON::XS' => '2.00',
],
'YAML support', [
'YAML' => '0',
],
);
B<feature> command takes a string to describe what the feature is
for, and an array of (optional) modules and their recommended
versions if any. B<features> command takes an array of a description
and an array of modules.
As of this writing, both C<feature> and C<features> work only when
B<auto_install> (see below) is set. These are used to allow
distribution users to choose what they install along with the
distribution. This may be useful if the distribution has lots of
optional features that may not work on all the platforms, or that
require too many modules for average users.
However, prompting users also hinders automated installation or smoke
testing, and is considered a bad practice (giving sane default
values is much preferred).
Though C<feature>d modules are optional and can be chosen during the
installation, the chosen modules are treated the same as the ones
set by C<requires> command. (They are not listed in the
C<recommends> section in the C<META.yml>). This may change in the
future.
You can add C<< -default => [01] >> in an array of required modules
in the C<feature(s)>, to set a default value for the prompt.
=head1 COMMANDS TO WRITE METADATA
These are the commands to write actual meta files.
=head2 WriteAll (L<Module::Install::WriteAll>)
use inc::Module::Install;
all_from 'lib/Foo/Bar.pm';
WriteAll;
B<WriteAll> command is usually the last command in the
C<Makefile.PL>. It can take several attributes, but you usually don't
need to care unless you want to write a Makefile for an
L<Inline>-based module. This writes C<Makefile>, C<META.yml>, and
C<MYMETA.yml> (or C<MYMETA.json>) if you set an experimental
environmental variable C<X_MYMETA>.
=head2 WriteMakefile (L<Module::Install::MakeMaker>)
use inc::Module::Install;
requires 'Foo::Baz'; # a la Module::Install
WriteMakefile( # a la ExtUtils::MakeMaker
NAME => 'Foo::Bar',
VERSION_FROM => 'lib/Foo/Bar.pm',
);
If you're familiar with L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker> and generally want to
stick to its way, you can. Use as much L<Module::Install>'s magic as
you want, and then fall back to the good and old way. It just works.
=head2 write_mymeta_yaml, write_mymeta_json (L<Module::Install::Metadata>)
write_mymeta_yaml;
write_mymeta_json;
B<write_mymeta_yaml> command and B<write_mymeta_json> command are to
write C<MYMETA.yml> and C<MYMETA.json> respectively, which are new
enhancement for the CPAN toolchains that eventually will allow
toolchain modules to know what modules are required without parsing
Makefile etc. These are mainly for internal use (in the C<WriteAll>
command) but you can explicitly write these commands in your
Makefile.PL.
=begin internal
=head2 Meta (L<Module::Install::Metadata>)
Meta->write;
B<Meta> represents a L<Module::Install::Metadata> object. You can use
it to do some OO-ish things but you usually have other ways to do
the same thing.
=head2 Makefile (L<Module::Install::Makefile>)
Makefile->write;
B<Makefile> represents a L<Module::Install::Makefile> object. You can
use it to do some OO-ish things but you usually have other ways to
do the same thing.
=head2 Inline (L<Module::Install::Inline>)
Inline->write;
B<Inline> represents a L<Module::Install::Inline> object. You can use
it to do some OO-ish things but you usually have other ways to do
the same thing.
=end internal
=head1 COMMANDS TO TWEAK MAKEFILE
=head2 makemaker_args (L<Module::Install::Makefile>)
makemaker_args(
PREREQ_FATAL => 1,
dist => { PREOP => 'pod2text lib/Foo/Bar.pm > README' },
);
B<makemaker_args> command is used in C<WriteMakefile> command, and
takes any attributes L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker> understands. See
L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker> for the available attributes.
=head2 preamble, postamble (L<Module::Install::Makefile>)
preamble "# my preamble\n";
postamble qq{my_done ::\n\t\$(PERL) -e "print qq/done\\n/"\n};
B<preamble> and B<postamble> commands take a string to be embedded in
the C<Makefile>. You can add custom targets with this. See
appropriate manuals to learn how to write Makefile.
=head1 COMMANDS FOR TESTS
These are to set test files.
=head2 tests (L<Module::Install::Metadata>)
tests 't/*.t t/*/*.t';
B<tests> command takes a string to specify test files. You can use
wildcard characters, and if you want to run tests under several
directories, concatenates the specs with white spaces.
If you haven't set C<tests> by any means (with explicit C<tests>
command, or extensions like L<Module::Install::AuthorTests> or
L<Module::Install::ExtraTests>), and if you have an C<xt> directory,
L<Module::Install> silently adds those tests under the C<xt>
directory when you are in the author mode, or you are doing release
testing (with C<RELEASE_TESTING> environmental variable).
The value set by B<tests> is passed to L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker> as a
C<test> attribute.
=head2 tests_recurisve (L<Module::Install::Makefile>)
tests_recursive;
tests_recursive('t');
B<tests_recursive> command may take a directory, and looks for test
files under it recursively. As of this writing, you can't use this
command with other test related commands.
=head1 COMMANDS TO TWEAK DIRECTORIES TO INSTALL
=head2 installdirs (L<Module::Install::Metadata>)
installdirs 'site';
B<installdirs> command takes a directory type, and changes a
directory to install modules and so on, though you usually don't
need to use this. The value set by B<installdirs> is passed to
L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker> as an C<INSTALLDIRS> attribute.
=head2 install_as_core, install_as_cpan, install_as_site, install_as_vendor (L<Module::Install::Metadata>)
install_as_core; # = installdirs 'perl';
install_as_cpan; # = installdirs 'site';
install_as_site; # = installdirs 'site';
install_as_vendor; # = installdirs 'vendor';
B<install_as_*> commands are aliases of the corresponding commands
shown in the comments above.
=head1 COMMANDS TO INSTALL SUBORDINATE FILES
These are to install files other than the ones under the C<lib>
directory.
=head2 install_script (L<Module::Install::Scripts>)
install_script('foo');
install_script('script/foo');
B<install_script> command takes a script file name, and installs it
into a C<script> directory for your Perl installation. If your script
is in a C<script> directory, you can omit the C<script/> part.
The value set by B<install_script> is passed to
L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker> as an C<EXE_FILES> attribute.
=head2 install_share (L<Module::Install::Share>)
install_share;
install_share('templates');
install_share('dist', 'templates');
install_share('module', 'My::WebApp', 'share');
B<install_share> command may take a directory type (either C<dist> or
C<module>), a module name if necessary, and a directory (C<share> by
default), and installs files under the directory into a C<share>
directory for the type, which is usually in a directory your perl is
installed in (but this may not be true if you're using L<local::lib>
and the likes).
You can access these shared files via L<File::ShareDir>'s
C<dist_file> or C<module_file> according to the type. Note also that
a shared directory is usually read-only. You can't use this as a
private temporary directory.
=head1 COMMANDS FOR AUTO INSTALLATION
=head2 auto_install (L<Module::Install::AutoInstall>)
auto_install;
The B<auto_install> command is used to allow users to install
dependencies of a local project when you run C<make> after C<<perl
Makefile.PL>>. In the past this was the only sane way to pull extra
dependencies without installing the actual module, although now there
are some alternatives (which however do B<not> completely replace
C<auto_install>). For example you can use C<< cpan . >> (with newer
L<CPAN>) or C<< cpanm --installdeps . >> (with L<App::cpanminus>).
C<auto_install> also enables C<feature(s)> commands to choose what
you install (keep in mind that using C<feature()> in CPAN distributions
is generally considered a bad practice).
=begin dangerous
=head2 auto_install_now (L<Module::Install::AutoInstall>)
auto_install_now;
B<auto_install_now> command tries to install dependencies when you
just run C<< perl Makefile.PL >>.
=end dangerous
=head1 COMMANDS TO SUBDIRECTORY INSTALLATION
L<Module::Install> 0.96 and above installs distributions in the
subdirectories by default as L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker> does. You also
can specify what to install one by one.
=head2 build_subdirs (L<Module::Install::Makefile>)
build_subdirs 'win32' if $^O eq 'MSWin32';
B<build_subdirs> command takes subdirectories where projects you want
to install are in. The values set by B<build_subdirs> are passed to
L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker> as a C<DIR> attribute.
=head1 COMMANDS TO PROVIDE OTHER OPTIONAL META DATA
These are to provide optional meta data mainly used by the PAUSE
indexer and the CPAN search site. See also the META-spec page
(L<http://module-build.sourceforge.net/META-spec.html>) for details.
=head2 no_index (L<Module::Install::Metadata>)
no_index file => 'lib/My/Test/Module.pm';
no_index directory => 'templates';
no_index package => 'Test::Foo::Bar';
no_index namespace => 'Test::Foo::Bar';
B<no_index> command takes a hash to describe what should be excluded
from the PAUSE index etc. L<Module::Install> provides several
C<no_index> directories by default, including C<inc>, C<share>,
C<(x)t>, C<test>, C<example(s)>, C<demo>.
=head2 resources (L<Module::Install::Metadata>)
resources
license => "http://dev.perl.org/licenses",
homepage => "http://yourproject.host.org",
bugtracker => "http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=Foo-Bar",
repository => "http://yourhost.com/myscm",
MailingList => "http://yourhost.com/listinfo/foo-bar";
B<resources> command takes a hash that contains various URLs for the
related resources. Keys in lower-case are reserved. These resources
are written in the C<META.yml>.
=head2 homepage, bugtracker, repository (L<Module::Install::Metadata>)
homepage 'http://example.com';
bugtracker 'http://rt.cpan.org';
repository 'http://github.com/foo/bar';
B<homepage>, B<bugtracker>, and C<repository> commands take a URL
for the corresponding resource.
=begin not_used
=head2 bugtracker_from (L<Module::Install::Metadata>)
=head2 provides, auto_provides (L<Module::Install::Metadata>)
=head2 dynamic_config (L<Module::Install::Metadata>)
=head2 keywords (L<Module::Install::Metadata>)
=head2 distribution_type (L<Module::Install::Metadata>)
=end not_used
=head1 COMMANDS TO BUNDLE DISTRIBUTIONS
There are several commands to bundle modules/distributions in your
distribution, but they are still broken in general. Don't use them
for now.
=begin may_be_supportable
=head2 bundle, auto_bundle (L<Module::Install::Bundle>)
=head2 bundle_deps, auto_bundle_deps (L<Module::Install::Bundle>)
=end may_be_supportable
=begin broken_and_highly_discouraged
=head2 include, auto_include (L<Module::Install::Include>)
=head2 include_deps, auto_include_deps (L<Module::Install::Include>)
=head2 auto_include_dependent_dists (L<Module::Install::Include>)
=end broken_and_highly_discouraged
=begin par
=head1 COMMANDS FOR PAR SUPPORT
=head2 par_base, fetch_par, extract_par, make_par (L<Module::Install::PAR>)
=end par
=head1 COMMANDS FOR XS SUPPORT
=head2 libs (L<Module::Install::Makefile>), cc_lib_paths, cc_lib_links (L<Module::Install::Compiler>)
libs '-lz';
libs [qw/-lz -Llibs/];
cc_lib_paths 'libs';
cc_lib_links qw/z iconv/;
B<libs> command takes a string, or an array reference of strings to
be passed to L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker> as a C<LIBS> attribute.
B<cc_lib_paths> and B<cc_lib_links> are its alternatives, both of
which take an array of strings. C<cc_lib_paths> is for upper-cased
C<-L> (directories), and C<cc_lib_links> is for lower-cased C<-l>
(libraries).
=head2 inc (L<Module::Install::Makefile>), cc_inc_paths (L<Module::Install::Compiler>)
inc '-I. -Iinclude';
cc_inc_paths qw/. include/;
B<inc> command takes a string to be passed to L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker>
as an C<INC> attribute. B<cc_inc_paths> is its alternative, and
takes an array of directories.
=head2 cc_optimize_flags (L<Module::Install::Compiler>)
cc_optimize_flags '-O2';
B<cc_optimize_flags> takes a string to be passed to
L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker> as an C<OPTIMIZE> attribute.
=head2 ppport (L<Module::Install::Compiler>)
ppport;
B<ppport> command is used to bundle C<ppport.h> to a distribution.
=head2 requires_external_cc (L<Module::Install::External>)
requires_external_cc;
B<requires_external_cc> command checks if the user has a working
compiler listed in the L<Config>, and exits the C<Makefile.PL> if
none is found.
=head2 can_cc (L<Module::Install::Can>)
exit 0 unless can_cc;
B<can_cc> command tells if the use has a working compiler or not.
=head1 COMMANDS FOR CLEANUP
=head2 clean_files, realclean_files (L<Module::Install::Makefile>)
clean_files '*.o Foo-*';
realclean_files '*.o Foo-*';
B<clean_files> command takes a string or an array of strings,
concatenates them with spaces, and passes the result to
L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker> as a C<clean> attribute. B<realclean_files>
does the same for a C<realclean> attribute.
=head1 UTILITY COMMANDS
=head2 can_use (L<Module::Install::Can>)
if (can_use('Some::Module', '0.05')) {
Some::Module::do_something();
}
B<can_use> command takes a module name, and optionally a version, and
checks if the module (with the version if appropriate) is installed
or not.
=head2 can_run (L<Module::Install::Can>)
if (can_run('svn')) {
# do something with the C<svn> binary
}
B<can_run> command takes a executable path, and checks if the
executable is available or not.
=head2 requires_external_bin (L<Module::Install::External>)
requires_external_bin 'svn';
B<requires_external_bin> command takes a executable path, and exits
the C<Makefile.PL> if none is available.
=head1 AUTHOR
Kenichi Ishigaki E<lt>ishigaki@cpan.orgE<gt>
=head1 COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2010 Kenichi Ishigaki.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the same terms as Perl itself.
=cut
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