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"The easy way is always mined.
The important things are always simple.
The simple things are always hard."
-- Some of Murphy's Laws of Combat
This is a short set of guidelines for those patching
ExtUtils::MakeMaker. Its not an iron-clad set of rules, but just
things which make life easier when reading and integrating a patch.
Lots of information can be found in makemaker.org.
MakerMaker is being maintained until something else can replace it.
Bugs will be fixed and compatibility improved, but I would like to
avoid new features. If you want to add something to MakeMaker,
consider instead working on Module::Build, MakeMaker's heir apparent.
Reporting bugs
- Often the only information we have for fixing a bug is contained in your
report. So...
- Please report your bugs via http://rt.cpan.org or by mailing to
makemaker@perl.org. RT is preferred.
- Please report your bug immediately upon encountering it. Do not wait
until you have a patch to fix the bug. Patches are good, but not at
the expense of timely bug reports.
- Please be as verbose as possible. Include the complete output of
your 'make test' or even 'make test TEST_VERBOSE=1' and a copy of the
generated Makefile. Err on the side of verbosity. The more data we
have to work with, the faster we can diagnose the problem.
- If you find an undocumented feature, or if a feature has changed/been
added which causes a problem, report it. Do not assume it was done
deliberately. Even if it was done deliberately, we still want to hear
if it caused problems.
- If you're testing MakeMaker against a development version of Perl,
please also check it against the latest stable version. This makes it
easier to figure out if its MakeMaker or Perl at fault.
Patching details
- Please use unified diffs. (diff -u)
- Patches against the latest development snapshot from makemaker.org are
preferred. Patches against the latest CPAN version are ok, too.
- Post your patch to makemaker@perl.org.
Code formatting
- No literal tabs (except where necessary inside Makefile code, obviously).
- 4 character indentation.
- this_style is prefered instead of studlyCaps.
- Private subroutine names (ie. those used only in the same package
they're declared in) should start with an underscore (_sekret_method).
- Protected subroutines (ie. ones intended to be used by other modules in
ExtUtils::*) should be named normally (no leading underscore) but
documented as protected (see Documentation below).
- Do not use indirect object syntax (ie. new Foo::Bar (@args))
- make variables use dollar signs like Perl scalars. This causes problems
when you have to mix them both in a string. If you find yourself
backwacking lots of dollar signs because you have one interpolated
perl variable, like this:
return <_foo_bar
Blah blah blah
=end private
=cut
sub _foo_bar {
...
- If you're overriding a method, document that its an override and
*why* its being overridden. Don't repeat the original documentation.