cpanfile(category33-ubuntu.html) - phpMan

cpanfile(3)           User Contributed Perl Documentation          cpanfile(3)
NAME
       cpanfile - A format for describing CPAN dependencies for Perl
       applications
SYNOPSIS
         requires 'Plack', '1.0'; # 1.0 or newer
         requires 'JSON', '>= 2.00, < 2.80';
         recommends 'JSON::XS', '2.0';
         conflicts 'JSON', '< 1.0';
         on 'test' => sub {
           requires 'Test::More', '>= 0.96, < 2.0';
           recommends 'Test::TCP', '1.12';
         };
         on 'develop' => sub {
           recommends 'Devel::NYTProf';
         };
         feature 'sqlite', 'SQLite support' => sub {
           recommends 'DBD::SQLite';
         };
VERSION
       This document describes cpanfile format version 1.0.
DESCRIPTION
       "cpanfile" describes CPAN dependencies required to execute associated
       Perl code.
SYNTAX
       requires, recommends, suggests, conflicts
             requires $module, $version_requirement;
           Describes the requirement for a module. See CPAN::Meta::Spec for
           the meanings of each requirement type.
           When version requirement is omitted, it is assumed that 0 is
           passed, meaning any version of the module would satisfy the
           requirement.
           Version requirement can either be a version number or a string that
           satisfies "Version Ranges" in CPAN::Meta::Spec, such as ">= 1.0, !=
           1.1".
           Note that, per CPAN::Meta::Spec, when a plain version number is
           given, it means the version or newer is required. If you want a
           specific version for a module, use the specific range syntax, i.e.
           " == 2.1 ".
       on
             on $phase => sub { ... };
           Describe requirements for a specific phase. Available phases are
           "configure", "build", "test", "runtime" and "develop".
       feature
             feature $identifier, $description => sub { ... };
           Group requirements with features. Description can be omitted, when
           it is assumed to be the same as identifier. See "optional_features"
           in CPAN::Meta::Spec for more details.
       configure_requires, build_requires, test_requires, author_requires
             configure_requires $module, $version;
             # on 'configure' => sub { requires $module, $version }
             build_requires $module, $version;
             # on 'build' => sub { requires $module, $version };
             test_requires $module, $version;
             # on 'test' => sub { requires $module, $version };
             author_requires $module, $version;
             # on 'develop' => sub { requires $module, $version };
           Shortcut for "requires" in specific phase. This is mainly provided
           for compatibilities with Module::Install DSL.
USAGE
       "cpanfile" is a format to describe dependencies. How to use this file
       is dependent on the tools reading/writing it.
       Usually, you're expected to place the "cpanfile" in the root of the
       directory containing the associated code.
       Tools supporting "cpanfile" format (e.g. cpanm and carton) will
       automatically detect the file and install dependencies for the code to
       run.
       There are also tools to support converting cpanfile to CPAN toolchain
       compatible formats, such as Module::CPANfile,
       Dist::Zilla::Plugin::Prereqs::FromCPANfile, Module::Install::CPANfile,
       so that "cpanfile" can be used to describe dependencies for a CPAN
       distribution as well.
       The cpanfile-dump tool can be used to dump dependencies.
AUTHOR
       Tatsuhiko Miyagawa
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
       The format (DSL syntax) is inspired by Module::Install and
       Module::Build::Functions.
       "cpanfile" specification (this document) is based on Ruby's Gemfile
       <http://bundler.io/v1.3/man/gemfile.5.html>; specification.
SEE ALSO
       CPAN::Meta::Spec Module::Install Carton
perl v5.26.3                      2016-02-12                       cpanfile(3)