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author | arcadia-devtools <arcadia-devtools@yandex-team.ru> | 2022-03-15 13:35:56 +0300 |
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committer | arcadia-devtools <arcadia-devtools@yandex-team.ru> | 2022-03-15 13:35:56 +0300 |
commit | 094638589de6a6c9f91fad0005843fc1c1adc957 (patch) | |
tree | 7d55b9e950eb724da222548997547bf6710b1b58 /contrib/libs/openssl/NOTES.PERL | |
parent | bc921e787bed8a51a43725b78382e806800c44c1 (diff) | |
download | ydb-094638589de6a6c9f91fad0005843fc1c1adc957.tar.gz |
intermediate changes
ref:ca7a95e8c9a9d780f96497136a152091d54e61b5
Diffstat (limited to 'contrib/libs/openssl/NOTES.PERL')
-rw-r--r-- | contrib/libs/openssl/NOTES.PERL | 119 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 119 deletions
diff --git a/contrib/libs/openssl/NOTES.PERL b/contrib/libs/openssl/NOTES.PERL deleted file mode 100644 index 201b143867..0000000000 --- a/contrib/libs/openssl/NOTES.PERL +++ /dev/null @@ -1,119 +0,0 @@ - TOC - === - - - Notes on Perl - - Notes on Perl on Windows - - Notes on Perl modules we use - - Notes on installing a perl module - - Notes on Perl - ------------- - - For our scripts, we rely quite a bit on Perl, and increasingly on - some core Perl modules. These Perl modules are part of the Perl - source, so if you build Perl on your own, you should be set. - - However, if you install Perl as binary packages, the outcome might - differ, and you may have to check that you do get the core modules - installed properly. We do not claim to know them all, but experience - has told us the following: - - - on Linux distributions based on Debian, the package 'perl' will - install the core Perl modules as well, so you will be fine. - - on Linux distributions based on RPMs, you will need to install - 'perl-core' rather than just 'perl'. - - You MUST have at least Perl version 5.10.0 installed. This minimum - requirement is due to our use of regexp backslash sequence \R among - other features that didn't exist in core Perl before that version. - - Notes on Perl on Windows - ------------------------ - - There are a number of build targets that can be viewed as "Windows". - Indeed, there are VC-* configs targeting VisualStudio C, as well as - MinGW and Cygwin. The key recommendation is to use "matching" Perl, - one that matches build environment. For example, if you will build - on Cygwin be sure to use the Cygwin package manager to install Perl. - For MSYS builds use the MSYS provided Perl. For VC-* builds we - recommend ActiveState Perl, available from - http://www.activestate.com/ActivePerl. - - Notes on Perl on VMS - -------------------- - - You will need to install Perl separately. One way to do so is to - download the source from http://perl.org/, unpacking it, reading - README.vms and follow the instructions. Another way is to download a - .PCSI file from http://www.vmsperl.com/ and install it using the - POLYCENTER install tool. - - Notes on Perl modules we use - ---------------------------- - - We make increasing use of Perl modules, and do our best to limit - ourselves to core Perl modules to keep the requirements down. There - are just a few exceptions: - - Test::More We require the minimum version to be 0.96, which - appeared in Perl 5.13.4, because that version was - the first to have all the features we're using. - This module is required for testing only! If you - don't plan on running the tests, you don't need to - bother with this one. - - Text::Template This module is not part of the core Perl modules. - As a matter of fact, the core Perl modules do not - include any templating module to date. - This module is absolutely needed, configuration - depends on it. - - To avoid unnecessary initial hurdles, we have bundled a copy of the - following modules in our source. They will work as fallbacks if - these modules aren't already installed on the system. - - Text::Template - - Notes on installing a perl module - --------------------------------- - - There are a number of ways to install a perl module. In all - descriptions below, Text::Template will serve as an example. - - 1. for Linux users, the easiest is to install with the use of your - favorite package manager. Usually, all you need to do is search - for the module name and to install the package that comes up. - - On Debian based Linux distributions, it would go like this: - - $ apt-cache search Text::Template - ... - libtext-template-perl - perl module to process text templates - $ sudo apt-get install libtext-template-perl - - Perl modules in Debian based distributions use package names like - the name of the module in question, with "lib" prepended and - "-perl" appended. - - 2. Install using CPAN. This is very easy, but usually requires root - access: - - $ cpan -i Text::Template - - Note that this runs all the tests that the module to be installed - comes with. This is usually a smooth operation, but there are - platforms where a failure is indicated even though the actual tests - were successful. Should that happen, you can force an - installation regardless (that should be safe since you've already - seen the tests succeed!): - - $ cpan -f -i Text::Template - - Note: on VMS, you must quote any argument that contains uppercase - characters, so the lines above would be: - - $ cpan -i "Text::Template" - - and: - - $ cpan -f -i "Text::Template" |