perlnewmod - preparing a new module for distribution |
perlnewmod - preparing a new module for distribution
This document gives you some suggestions about how to go about writing Perl modules, preparing them for distribution, and making them available via CPAN.
One of the things that makes Perl really powerful is the fact that Perl hackers tend to want to share the solutions to problems they've faced, so you and I don't have to battle with the same problem again.
The main way they do this is by abstracting the solution into a Perl module. If you don't know what one of these is, the rest of this document isn't going to be much use to you. You're also missing out on an awful lot of useful code; consider having a look at the perlmod manpage, the perlmodlib manpage and the perlmodinstall manpage before coming back here.
When you've found that there isn't a module available for what you're trying to do, and you've had to write the code yourself, consider packaging up the solution into a module and uploading it to CPAN so that others can benefit.
We're going to primarily concentrate on Perl-only modules here, rather than XS modules. XS modules serve a rather different purpose, and you should consider different things before distributing them - the popularity of the library you are gluing, the portability to other operating systems, and so on. However, the notes on preparing the Perl side of the module and packaging and distributing it will apply equally well to an XS module as a pure-Perl one.
You should make a module out of any code that you think is going to be useful to others. Anything that's likely to fill a hole in the communal library and which someone else can slot directly into their program. Any part of your code which you can isolate and extract and plug into something else is a likely candidate.
Let's take an example. Suppose you're reading in data from a local format into a hash-of-hashes in Perl, turning that into a tree, walking the tree and then piping each node to an Acme Transmogrifier Server.
Now, quite a few people have the Acme Transmogrifier, and you've had to write something to talk the protocol from scratch - you'd almost certainly want to make that into a module. The level at which you pitch it is up to you: you might want protocol-level modules analogous to Net::SMTP which then talk to higher level modules analogous to Mail::Send. The choice is yours, but you do want to get a module out for that server protocol.
Nobody else on the planet is going to talk your local data format, so we can ignore that. But what about the thing in the middle? Building tree structures from Perl variables and then traversing them is a nice, general problem, and if nobody's already written a module that does that, you might want to modularise that code too.
So hopefully you've now got a few ideas about what's good to modularise. Let's now see how it's done.
Before we even start scraping out the code, there are a few things we'll want to do in advance.
Mail::*
modules if you're planning on writing object oriented code.
These should give you an overall feel for how modules are laid out and written.
comp.lang.perl.modules
newsgroup, or as a last resort, ask the
modules list at [email protected]
. Remember that this is a closed list
with a very long turn-around time - be prepared to wait a good while for
a response from them.
When you've got your name sorted out and you're sure that your module is wanted and not currently available, it's time to start coding.
h2xs -AX -n Net::Acme
The -A
omits the Autoloader code, -X
omits XS elements, and -n
specifies the name of the module.
warn "No hostname given";
the user will see something like this:
No hostname given at /usr/local/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.6.0/Net/Acme.pm line 123.
which looks like your module is doing something wrong. Instead, you want to put the blame on the user, and say this:
No hostname given at bad_code, line 10.
You do this by using Carp and replacing your warn
s with
carp
s. If you need to die
, say croak
instead. However, keep
warn
and die
in place for your sanity checks - where it really is
your module at fault.
h2xs
provides stubs for Exporter, which gives you a
standard way of exporting symbols and subroutines from your module into
the caller's namespace. For instance, saying use Net::Acme qw(&frob)
would import the frob
subroutine.
The package variable @EXPORT
will determine which symbols will get
exported when the caller simply says use Net::Acme
- you will hardly
ever want to put anything in there. @EXPORT_OK
, on the other hand,
specifies which symbols you're willing to export. If you do want to
export a bunch of symbols, use the %EXPORT_TAGS
and define a standard
export set - look at the Exporter manpage for more details.
h2xs
will provide a stub for you to fill in; if you're not sure about
the format, look at the perlpod manpage for an introduction. Provide a good
synopsis of how your module is used in code, a description, and then
notes on the syntax and function of the individual subroutines or
methods. Use Perl comments for developer notes and POD for end-user
notes.
h2xs
provides a test framework
which you can extend - you should do something more than just checking
your module will compile.
http://www.cpan.org/modules/04pause.html
(or
equivalent on your nearest mirror) to find out how to do this.
perl Makefile.PL; make test; make dist
h2xs
has done all the work for you. It produces the
standard Makefile.PL
you'll have seen when you downloaded and
installs modules, and this produces a Makefile with a dist
target.
Once you've ensured that your module passes its own tests - always a
good thing to make sure - you can make dist
, and the Makefile will
hopefully produce you a nice tarball of your module, ready for upload.
Net::Acme bdpOP Interface to Acme Frobnicator servers FOOBAR ^ ^^^^^ ^ ^ | ||||| Module description Your ID | ||||| | ||||\-Public Licence: (p)standard Perl, (g)GPL, (b)BSD, | |||| (l)LGPL, (a)rtistic, (o)ther | |||| | |||\- Interface: (O)OP, (r)eferences, (h)ybrid, (f)unctions | ||| | ||\-- Language: (p)ure Perl, C(+)+, (h)ybrid, (C), (o)ther | || Module |\--- Support: (d)eveloper, (m)ailing list, (u)senet, (n)one Name | \---- Development: (i)dea, (c)onstructions, (a)lpha, (b)eta, (R)eleased, (M)ature, (S)tandard
plus a description of the module and why you think it should be
included. If you hear nothing back, that means your module will
probably appear on the modules list at the next update. Don't try
subscribing to [email protected]
; it's not another mailing list. Just
have patience.
comp.lang.perl.announce
newsgroup.
Simon Cozens, [email protected]
the perlmod manpage, the perlmodlib manpage, the perlmodinstall manpage, h2xs, the strict manpage, the Carp manpage, the Exporter manpage, the perlpod manpage, the Test manpage, the ExtUtils::MakeMaker manpage, http://www.cpan.org/ , Ken Williams' tutorial on building your own module at http://mathforum.org/~ken/perl_modules.html
perlnewmod - preparing a new module for distribution |