Manpages - Alien_Build_Manual_Contributing.3pm
Table of Contents
NAME
Alien::Build::Manual::Contributing - Over-detailed contributing guide
VERSION
version 2.44
SYNOPSIS
perldoc Alien::Build::Manual::Contributing
DESCRIPTION
Thank you for considering to contribute to my open source project! If you have a small patch please consider just submitting it. Doing so through the project GitHub is probably the best way:
https://github.com/plicease/Alien-Build/issues
If you have a more invasive enhancement or bugfix to contribute, please
take the time to review these guidelines. In general it is good idea to
work closely with the Alien::Build developers, and the best way to
contact them is on the #native
IRC channel on irc.perl.org.
History
Joel Berger wrote the original Alien::Base. This distribution included the runtime code Alien::Base and an installer class Alien::Base::ModuleBuild. The significant thing about Alien::Base was that it provided tools to make it relatively easy for people to roll their own Alien distributions. Over time, the PerlAlien (github organization) or Alien::Base team has taken over development of Alien::Base with myself (Graham Ollis) being responsible for integration and releases. Joel Berger is still involved in the project.
Since the original development of Alien::Base, Module::Build, on which Alien::Base::ModuleBuild is based, has been removed from the core of Perl. It seemed worthwhile to write a replacement installer that works with ExtUtils::MakeMaker which IS still bundled with the Perl core. Because this is a significant undertaking it is my intention to integrate the many lessons learned by Joel Berger, myself and the Alien::Base team as possible. If the interface seems good then it is because I’ve stolen the ideas from some pretty good places.
Philosophy
Alien runtime should be as config-only as possible.
Ideally the code for an Alien::Base based Alien should simply inherit from Alien::Base, like so:
package Alien::libfoo; use parent qw( Alien::Base ); 1;
The detection logic should be done by the installer code (alienfile and Alien::Build) and saved into runtime properties (see runtime_prop in Alien::Build). And as much as possible the runtime should be implemented in the base class (Alien::Base). Where reasonable, the base class should be expanded to meet the needs of this arrangement.
when downloading a package grab the latest version
If the maintainer of an Alien disappears for a while, and if the version downloaded during a share install is hardcoded in the alienfile, it can be problematic for end-users.
There are exceptions, of course, in particular when a package provides a very unstable interface from version to version it makes sense to hard code the version and for the Alien developer and Alien consumer developer to coordinate closely.
when installing a package the operating system as a whole should not be affected
The convenience of using an Alien is that a user of a CPAN module that consumes an Alien doesn’t need to know the exact incantation to install the libraries on which it depends (or indeed it may not be easily installed through the package manager anyway).
As a corollary, a user of a CPAN module that consumes an Alien module
shouldn’t expect operating system level packages to be installed, or for
these packages to be installed in common system level directories, like
/usr/local
or /opt
. Instead a share directory associated with the
Perl install and Alien module should be used.
Plugins that require user opt-in could be written to prompt a user to automatically install operating system packages, but this should never be done by default or without consent by the user.
avoid dependencies
One of the challenges with Alien development is that you are by the nature of the problem, trying to make everyone happy. Developers working out of CPAN just want stuff to work, and some build environments can be hostile in terms of tool availability, so for reliability you end up pulling a lot of dependencies. On the other hand, operating system vendors who are building Perl modules usually want to use the system version of a library so that they do not have to patch libraries in multiple places. Such vendors have to package any extra dependencies and having to do so for packages that the don’t even use makes them understandably unhappy.
As general policy the Alien::Build core should have as few dependencies as possible, and should only pull extra dependencies if they are needed. Where dependencies cannot be avoidable, popular and reliable CPAN modules, which are already available as packages in the major Linux vendors (Debian, Red Hat) should be preferred.
As such Alien::Build is hyper aggressive at using dynamic prerequisites.
interface agnostic
One of the challenges with Alien::Buil::ModuleBuild was that Module::Build was pulled from the core. In addition, there is a degree of hostility toward Module::Build in some corners of the Perl community. I agree with Joel Berger’s rationale for choosing Module::Build at the time, as I believe its interface more easily lends itself to building Alien distributions.
That said, an important feature of Alien::Build is that it is installer agnostic. Although it is initially designed to work with ExtUtils::MakeMaker, it has been designed from the ground up to work with any installer (Perl, or otherwise).
As an extension of this, although Alien::Build may have external CPAN dependencies, they should not be exposed to developers USING Alien::Build. As an example, Path::Tiny is used heavily internally because it does what :Spec does, plus the things that it doesn’t, and uses forward slashes on Windows (backslashes are the “correct separator on windows, but actually using them tends to break everything). However, there aren’t any interfaces in Alien::Build that will return a Path::Tiny object (or if there are, then this is a bug).
This means that if we ever need to port Alien::Build to a platform that doesn’t support Path::Tiny (such as VMS), then it may require some work to Alien::Build itself, modules that USE Alien::Build shouldn’t need to be modified.
plugable
The actual logic that probes the system, downloads source and builds it
should be as pluggable as possible. One of the challenges with
Alien::Build::ModuleBuild was that it was designed to work well with
software that works with autoconf
and pkg-config
. While you can
build with other tools, you have to know a bit of how the installer
logic works, and which hooks need to be tweaked.
Alien::Build has plugins for autoconf
, pkgconf
(successor of
pkg-config
), vanilla Makefiles, and CMake. If your build system
doesn’t have a plugin, then all you have to do is write one! Plugins
that prove their worth may be merged into the Alien::Build core. Plugins
that after a while feel like maybe not such a good idea may be removed
from the core, or even from CPAN itself.
In addition, Alien::Build has a special type of plugin, called a negotiator which picks the best plugin for the particular environment that it is running in. This way, as development of the negotiator and plugins develop over time modules that use Alien::Build will benefit, without having to change the way they interface with Alien::Build
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
I would like to that Joel Berger for getting things running in the first place. Also important to thank other members of the Alien::Base team:
Zaki Mughal (SIVOAIS)
Ed J (ETJ, mohawk)
Also kind thanks to all of the developers who have contributed to Alien::Base over the years:
SEE ALSO
alienfile, Alien::Build::MM, Alien::Build::Plugin, Alien::Base, Alien
AUTHOR
Author: Graham Ollis <plicease@cpan.org>
Contributors:
Diab Jerius (DJERIUS)
Roy Storey (KIWIROY)
Ilya Pavlov
David Mertens (run4flat)
Mark Nunberg (mordy, mnunberg)
Christian Walde (Mithaldu)
Brian Wightman (MidLifeXis)
Zaki Mughal (zmughal)
mohawk (mohawk2, ETJ)
Vikas N Kumar (vikasnkumar)
Flavio Poletti (polettix)
Salvador Fandiño (salva)
Gianni Ceccarelli (dakkar)
Pavel Shaydo (zwon, trinitum)
Kang-min Liu (劉康民, gugod)
Nicholas Shipp (nshp)
Juan Julián Merelo Guervós (JJ)
Joel Berger (JBERGER)
Petr Písař (ppisar)
Lance Wicks (LANCEW)
Ahmad Fatoum (a3f, ATHREEF)
José Joaquín Atria (JJATRIA)
Duke Leto (LETO)
Shoichi Kaji (SKAJI)
Shawn Laffan (SLAFFAN)
Paul Evans (leonerd, PEVANS)
Håkon Hægland (hakonhagland, HAKONH)
nick nauwelaerts (INPHOBIA)
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2011-2020 by Graham Ollis.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.