[ SEA-GHOST MINI SHELL]
=pod
=head1 NAME
CPANPLUS::Hacking - developing CPANPLUS
=head1 DESCRIPTION
This document attempts to describe how to develop with the
CPANPLUS environment most easily, how certain things work and why.
This is basically a quick-start guide to people who want to add
features or patches to CPANPLUS.
=head1 OBTAINING CPANPLUS
Checkout CPANPLUS from its GIT repository at
L<https://github.com/jib/cpanplus-devel> .
=head1 INSTALLING CPANPLUS
CPANPLUS follows the standard perl module installation process:
perl Makefile.PL
make
make test
make install
=head1 CONFIGURING CPANPLUS
When running C<perl Makefile.PL> you will be prompted to configure.
If you have already done so, and merely wish to update the C<Makefile>,
simply run:
perl Makefile.PL JFDI=1
This will keep your configuration intact. Note however, if there are
changes to the default configuration file C<Config.pm-orig>, you should
either delete your current config file and reconfigure, or patch your
config file from the new entries in C<Config.pm-orig>.
=head1 RUNNING CPANPLUS FROM DEVELOPMENT ENVIRONMENT
If you'd rather not install the development version to your
C<site_perl> directory, that's no problem. You can set your C<PERL5LIB>
environment variable to CPANPLUS' C<lib> directory, and you can run it
from there.
=head1 RUNNING CPANPLUS TESTS
Tests are what tells us if CPANPLUS is working. If a test is not working,
try to run it explicitly like this:
perl -I/path/to/cpanplus/lib t/XX_name_of_test.t 1
The extra '1' makes sure that all the messages and errors (they might
be errors we're testing for!) are being printed rather than kept quiet.
This is a great way to find out the context of any failures that may
occur.
If you believe this test failure proves a bug in CPANPLUS, the long
output of the test file is something we'd like to see alongside your
bug report.
=head1 FINDING BUGS
Sometimes you might find bugs in CPANPLUS' behaviour. If you encounter
these in a development snapshot, we'd appreciate a complete patch (as
described below in the L<SENDING PATCHES> section.
If it's way over your head, then of course reporting the bug is always
better than not reporting it at all. Before you do so though, make
sure you have the B<latest> development snapshot, and the bug still
persists there. If so, report the bug to this address:
bug-cpanplus@rt.cpan.org
A good C<patch> would have the following characteristics:
=over 4
=item Problem description
Describe clearly what the bug is you found, and what it should have
done instead.
=item Program demonstrating the bug
Show us how to reproduce the bug, in a simple of a program as possible
=item [OPTIONAL] A patch to the test suite to test for the bug
Amend our test suite by making sure this bug will be found in this, and
future versions of CPANPLUS (see L<SUPPLYING PATCHES>)
=item [OPTIONAL] A patch to the code + tests + documentation
Fix the bug, update the docs & tests. That way your bug will be gone
forever :)
=back
=head1 SUPPLYING PATCHES
Patches are a good thing, and they are welcome. Especially if they fix
bugs you've found along the way, or that others have reported.
We prefer patches in the following format:
=over 4
=item * In C<diff -u> or C<diff -c> format
=item * From the root of the snapshot
=item * Including patches for code + tests + docs
=item * Sent per mail to bug-cpanplus@rt.cpan.org
=item * With subject containing C<[PATCH]> + description of the patch
=back
You will always be informed if a patch is applied or rejected, and in
case of rejection why that is (perhaps you can tweak the patch to have
it accepted after all).
=cut
__END__
* perl5lib
* perl t/foo 1
* patches to cpanplus-devel
* snap/devel.tgz
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