Dist::Zilla::Plugin::Bootstrap::lib - A minimal boot-strapping for Dist::Zilla Plug-ins.
version 1.001002
[Bootstrap::lib]
try_built = 1 ; try using an existing built distribution named Dist-Name-*
fallback = 0 ; if try_built can't find a built distribution, or there's more than one, don't bootstrap
; using lib/ instead
This module exists for loading either /lib
or /Dist-Name-$VERSION/lib
into your @INC
early on.
This is mostly useful for writing Dist::Zilla
plug-ins, so that you may build and release
a plug-in using itself.
This module really is only useful in the case where you need to use something like
dzil -Ilib
For every call to Dist::Zilla
, and this is mainly a convenience.
For that
[Bootstrap::lib]
on its own will do the right thing.
The other useful case is when you would normally do
dzil build # pass 1 that generates Foo-1.234 with a pre-installed Foo-1.233
dzil -IFoo-1.234/lib build # pass 2 that generates Foo-1.234 with Foo-1.234
For that
[Bootstap::lib]
try_built = 1
fallback = 0
Will do what you want.
dzil build # pass1 -> creates Foo-1.234 without bootstrapping
dzil build # pass2 -> creates Foo-1.234 boot-strapped from the previous build
There's a 3rd useful case which is a hybrid of the 2, where you /can/ build from your own sources without needing a
pre-installed version, just you don't want that for release code ( e.g.: $VERSION being undef
in code that is run during
release is "bad" )
[Bootstrap::lib]
try_built = 1
fallback = 1
Then
dzil build # pass1 -> creates Foo-1.234 from bootstrapped $root/lib
dzil build # pass2 -> creates Foo-1.234 from bootstrapped $root/Foo-1.234
DO NOT use this library from inside a bundle. It will not likely work as expected, and you DO NOT want to bootstrap everything in all cases.
On its own,
[Bootstrap::lib]
At present, using this module in conjunction with a module with no explicitly defined version in the source will result in the executed instance of that plug-in also having NO VERSION.
If this is a problem for you, then its suggested you try either variation of using
[Bootstrap::lib]
try_built = 1
; no_fallback = 1 #
The core mechanism behind try_built
relies on looking in your project directory for a previous build directory of some kind.
And there's no way for it to presently pick a "best" version when there are more than one, or magically provide a better solution if there are "zero" versions readily available.
This is mostly because there is no way to determine the "current" version we are building for, because the point in the execution cycle is so early, no version plugins are likely to be even instantiated yet, and some version plugins are dependent on incredibly complex precursors ( like git ), so by even trying to garner the version we're currently building, we could be prematurely cutting off a vast majority of modules from even being able to bootstrap.
Even as it is, us using zilla->name
means that if your dist relies on some process to divine its name, the module that
does this must:
- be loaded and declared prior to
Bootstrap::lib
in thedist.ini
- not itself be the module you are presently developing/bootstrapping
The only way of working around that I can envision is adding parameters to Bootstrap::lib
to specify the dist name and version
name... but if you're going to do that, you may as well stop using external plugins to discover that, and hard-code those values
in dist.ini
to start with.
Starting at version 0.04000000 ( read: 0.04_0000_00 aka 0.04 + 0 x 4 + 0 x 2 ) this module is a fully fledged class, different
only from standard Dist::Zilla Plugins in that it doesn't partake in normal phase order, and only executes during a special
custom ::Bootstrap
phase, which is more or less a different name and implementation of BUILD
, in that bootstrap
is
invoked after plugin_from_config
is called ( where new
is called ), which occurs somewhere in the middle of
register_component
This module also appears on the plugin stash, and responds naturally to metaconfig
requests.
Kent Fredric [email protected]
This software is copyright (c) 2017 by Kent Fredric [email protected].
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.