Raul Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >About two months ago, I upgraded a CPAN bundle on a production server. > >Two interesting things happened: > > > >(1) perl itself got upgraded, and > >(2) wais got upgraded. Adam P. Harris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Huh??? Perl itself? I don't think this is possible.
Take a look at TIMB/perl5.004_04.tar.gz It is automatically brought in when you install something in CPAN that requires a more recent perl version that what you have. Of course, you can bail out of the install at that point, but that's not the issue here. In my opinion, once we've evolved a good cpan->debian packager, we should integrate it with the CPAN module so that it uses this mechanism to build, test and install cpan modules. Presumably, it should also archive the installed package somewhere (at least as an option), and manage minor revision numbers automatically. Further, it's going to be essential that we get dependencies *right* for the part of the system which can be managed via CPAN. This is going to be tricky -- since dependency information in cpan is embedded in makefile rules, we'll probably have to implement a shared database so that as people use the system we accumulate such information. [This might also be a fertile ground for people to get together when thrashing out problems with fringe packages.] CPAN is just too big, and too useful, to ignore. -- Raul -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .