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RELEASE(1) User Contributed Perl Documentation RELEASE(1)
NAME
release - give your Perl distros to the world
SYNOPSIS
release [OPTIONS] [ LOCAL_FILE [ REMOTE_FILE ] ]
# try a dry run without uploading anything
release -t
# skip dist while checking
release -D
# print a help message and exit
release -h
# skip kwalitee testing (e.g. a script distro)
release -k
# print debugging information
release -d
# print release number and exit
release -v
# set $ENV{AUTOMATED_TESTING} to a true value
release -a
DESCRIPTION
This is the prototype program for using "Module::Release". You should
modify it to fit your needs. If it doesn't do what you want, you can
change it however you like. This is how I like to release my modules,
and I'm happy to add features that do not get in my way. Beyond that,
you should write your own script to match your process.
This program automates Perl module releases. It makes the distribution,
tests it, checks that source control is up to date, tags source
control, uploads it to the PAUSE anonymous FTP directory and claims it
on PAUSE.
By default this script assumes that you use CVS, but recognizes SVN and
git and switches when appropriate.
Process
The release script checks many things before it actually releases the
file. Some of these are annoying, but they are also the last line of
defense against releasing bad distributions.
Read the configuration data
Look in the current working directory for ".releaserc". See the
Configuration section. If release cannot find the configuration
file, it dies.
Test and make the distribution
Run make realclean, perl Makefile.PL, make test, make dist, make
disttest. If testing fails, release dies. make dist provides the
name of the distribution if LOCAL_FILE is not provided on the
command line. Too test the distribution against several perl
binaries, see the "perls" configuration setting.
Check that source control is up-to-date
If there are modified files, added files, or extra files so that
source control complains, fail.
Upload to PAUSE
This program used to use FTP uploads, but PAUSE has turned that
feature. Now it uploads through the web form.
Tag the repository
Use the version number (in the distribution name) to tag the
repository. You should be able to checkout the code from any
release.
Command-line switches
-a Set $ENV{AUTOMATED_TESTING} to true. You can also set
automated_testing in the configuration file.
-d Show debugging information
-h Print a help message then exit
-k Skip the kwalitee checks. You can also set the skip_kwalitee
directive to a true value in the configuration file.
Have you considered just fixing the kwalitee though? :)
-p Skip the prereq checks. You can also set the skip_prereqs directive
to a true value in the configuration file.
Have you considered just fixing the prereqs though? :)
-t Run all checks then stop. Do not change any files or upload the
distribution.
-T Skip the tests. This is useful when you just want to upload.
-v Print the program name and version then exit
Configuration
The release script uses a configuration file in the current working
directory. The file name is .releaserc.
release's own .releaserc looks like this:
cpan_user BDFOY
If you would like to test with multiple perl binaries (version 1.21 and
later), list them as a colon-separated list in the "perls" setting:
perls /usr/local/bin/perl5.6.2:/usr/local/bin/perl5.10.0
release does not test the perls in any particular order.
automated_testing
Set "automated_testing" to the value you want for the
$ENV{AUTOMATED_TESTING} setting. By default this is 0, so testing
is started in interactive mode.
cpan_user
The PAUSE user
passive_ftp
Set "passive_ftp" to "y" or "yes" for passive FTP transfers.
Usually this is to get around a firewall issue. Note that PAUSE has
turned off FTP uploads, so this setting is useless now.
perls
A colon-separated list of perls to test with. If
"allow_glob_in_perls" is a true value, globs in paths will expand
to their paths so you can specify many perls.
Default: the perl that's running "release".
allow_glob_in_perls
If true, expand globs in the "perls" configuration.
Default: 0
skip_kwalitee
Set to a false value to skip kwalitee checks (such as for a script
distribution with no modules in it).
skip_prereqs
Set "skip_prereqs" to 1 if you don't want to run the Test::Prereq
checks. By default this is 0 and "release" will try to check
prerequisites.
release_subclass
DEPRECATED AND REMOVED. You should really just write your own
release script. Fork this one even!
Environment
o AUTOMATED_TESTING
Module::Release doesn't do anything with this other than set it for
Test::Harness.
o CPAN_PASS
release reads the "CPAN_PASS" environment variable to set the
password for PAUSE. Of course, you don't need to set the password
for a system you're not uploading to.
o RELEASE_DEBUG
The "RELEASE_DEBUG" environment variable sets the debugging value,
which is 0 by default. Set "RELEASE_DEBUG" to a true value to get
debugging output.
o PERL
The "PERL" environment variable sets the path to perl for use in
the make; otherwise, the perl used to run release will be used.
o RELEASE_OPTS
A string representing options to add to the command line.
TO DO
o break out functional groups into modules.
o more plugins!
SOURCE AVAILABILITY
This source is in Github as part of the Module::Release project:
https://github.com/briandfoy/module-release
AUTHOR
brian d foy, "<bdfoy@cpan.org>"
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2002-2014, brian d foy, All rights reserved.
You may use this software under the same terms as Perl itself.
CREDITS
Ken Williams turned the original release(1) script into a module.
Andy Lester contributed to the module and script.
H. Merijn Brand submitted patches to work with 5.005 and to create the
automated_testing feature.
perl v5.20.2 2014-09-14 RELEASE(1)