1CPAN::FirstTime(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation CPAN::FirstTime(3)
2
3
4
6 CPAN::FirstTime - Utility for CPAN::Config file Initialization
7
9 CPAN::FirstTime::init()
10
12 The init routine asks a few questions and writes a CPAN/Config.pm or
13 CPAN/MyConfig.pm file (depending on what it is currently using).
14
15 In the following all questions and explanations regarding config
16 variables are collected.
17
18 allow_installing_module_downgrades
19 The CPAN shell can watch the "blib/" directories that are built up
20 before running "make test" to determine whether the current
21 distribution will end up with modules being overwritten with
22 decreasing module version numbers. It can then let the build of this
23 distro fail when it discovers a downgrade.
24
25 Do you want to allow installing distros with decreasing module
26 versions compared to what you have installed (yes, no, ask/yes,
27 ask/no)?
28
29 allow_installing_outdated_dists
30 The CPAN shell can watch the "blib/" directories that are built up
31 before running "make test" to determine whether the current
32 distribution contains modules that are indexed with a distro with a
33 higher distro-version number than the current one. It can then let
34 the build of this distro fail when it would not represent the most
35 up-to-date version of the distro.
36
37 Note: choosing anything but 'yes' for this option will need
38 CPAN::DistnameInfo being installed for taking effect.
39
40 Do you want to allow installing distros that are not indexed as the
41 highest distro-version for all contained modules (yes, no, ask/yes,
42 ask/no)?
43
44 auto_commit
45 Normally CPAN.pm keeps config variables in memory and changes need to
46 be saved in a separate 'o conf commit' command to make them permanent
47 between sessions. If you set the 'auto_commit' option to true,
48 changes to a config variable are always automatically committed to
49 disk.
50
51 Always commit changes to config variables to disk?
52
53 build_cache
54 CPAN.pm can limit the size of the disk area for keeping the build
55 directories with all the intermediate files.
56
57 Cache size for build directory (in MB)?
58
59 build_dir
60 Directory where the build process takes place?
61
62 build_dir_reuse
63 Until version 1.88 CPAN.pm never trusted the contents of the
64 build_dir directory between sessions. Since 1.88_58 CPAN.pm has a
65 YAML-based mechanism that makes it possible to share the contents of
66 the build_dir/ directory between different sessions with the same
67 version of perl. People who prefer to test things several days before
68 installing will like this feature because it saves a lot of time.
69
70 If you say yes to the following question, CPAN will try to store
71 enough information about the build process so that it can pick up in
72 future sessions at the same state of affairs as it left a previous
73 session.
74
75 Store and re-use state information about distributions between
76 CPAN.pm sessions?
77
78 build_requires_install_policy
79 When a module declares another one as a 'build_requires' prerequisite
80 this means that the other module is only needed for building or
81 testing the module but need not be installed permanently. In this
82 case you may wish to install that other module nonetheless or just
83 keep it in the 'build_dir' directory to have it available only
84 temporarily. Installing saves time on future installations but makes
85 the perl installation bigger.
86
87 You can choose if you want to always install (yes), never install
88 (no) or be always asked. In the latter case you can set the default
89 answer for the question to yes (ask/yes) or no (ask/no).
90
91 Policy on installing 'build_requires' modules (yes, no, ask/yes,
92 ask/no)?
93
94 cache_metadata
95 To considerably speed up the initial CPAN shell startup, it is
96 possible to use Storable to create a cache of metadata. If Storable
97 is not available, the normal index mechanism will be used.
98
99 Note: this mechanism is not used when use_sqlite is on and SQLLite is
100 running.
101
102 Cache metadata (yes/no)?
103
104 check_sigs
105 CPAN packages can be digitally signed by authors and thus verified
106 with the security provided by strong cryptography. The exact
107 mechanism is defined in the Module::Signature module. While this is
108 generally considered a good thing, it is not always convenient to the
109 end user to install modules that are signed incorrectly or where the
110 key of the author is not available or where some prerequisite for
111 Module::Signature has a bug and so on.
112
113 With the check_sigs parameter you can turn signature checking on and
114 off. The default is off for now because the whole tool chain for the
115 functionality is not yet considered mature by some. The author of
116 CPAN.pm would recommend setting it to true most of the time and
117 turning it off only if it turns out to be annoying.
118
119 Note that if you do not have Module::Signature installed, no
120 signature checks will be performed at all.
121
122 Always try to check and verify signatures if a SIGNATURE file is in
123 the package and Module::Signature is installed (yes/no)?
124
125 cleanup_after_install
126 Users who install modules and do not intend to look back, can free
127 occupied disk space quickly by letting CPAN.pm cleanup each build
128 directory immediately after a successful install.
129
130 Remove build directory after a successful install? (yes/no)?
131
132 colorize_output
133 When you have Term::ANSIColor installed, you can turn on colorized
134 output to have some visual differences between normal CPAN.pm output,
135 warnings, debugging output, and the output of the modules being
136 installed. Set your favorite colors after some experimenting with the
137 Term::ANSIColor module.
138
139 Please note that on Windows platforms colorized output also requires
140 the Win32::Console::ANSI module.
141
142 Do you want to turn on colored output?
143
144 colorize_print
145 Color for normal output?
146
147 colorize_warn
148 Color for warnings?
149
150 colorize_debug
151 Color for debugging messages?
152
153 commandnumber_in_prompt
154 The prompt of the cpan shell can contain the current command number
155 for easier tracking of the session or be a plain string.
156
157 Do you want the command number in the prompt (yes/no)?
158
159 connect_to_internet_ok
160 If you have never defined your own "urllist" in your configuration
161 then "CPAN.pm" will be hesitant to use the built in default sites for
162 downloading. It will ask you once per session if a connection to the
163 internet is OK and only if you say yes, it will try to connect. But
164 to avoid this question, you can choose your favorite download sites
165 once and get away with it. Or, if you have no favorite download sites
166 answer yes to the following question.
167
168 If no urllist has been chosen yet, would you prefer CPAN.pm to
169 connect to the built-in default sites without asking? (yes/no)?
170
171 ftp_passive
172 Shall we always set the FTP_PASSIVE environment variable when dealing
173 with ftp download (yes/no)?
174
175 ftpstats_period
176 Statistics about downloads are truncated by size and period
177 simultaneously.
178
179 How many days shall we keep statistics about downloads?
180
181 ftpstats_size
182 Statistics about downloads are truncated by size and period
183 simultaneously. Setting this to zero or negative disables download
184 statistics.
185
186 How many items shall we keep in the statistics about downloads?
187
188 getcwd
189 CPAN.pm changes the current working directory often and needs to
190 determine its own current working directory. Per default it uses
191 Cwd::cwd but if this doesn't work on your system for some reason,
192 alternatives can be configured according to the following table:
193
194 cwd Cwd::cwd
195 getcwd Cwd::getcwd
196 fastcwd Cwd::fastcwd
197 getdcwd Cwd::getdcwd
198 backtickcwd external command cwd
199
200 Preferred method for determining the current working directory?
201
202 halt_on_failure
203 Normally, CPAN.pm continues processing the full list of targets and
204 dependencies, even if one of them fails. However, you can specify
205 that CPAN should halt after the first failure. (Note that optional
206 recommended or suggested modules that fail will not cause a halt.)
207
208 Do you want to halt on failure (yes/no)?
209
210 histfile
211 If you have one of the readline packages (Term::ReadLine::Perl,
212 Term::ReadLine::Gnu, possibly others) installed, the interactive CPAN
213 shell will have history support. The next two questions deal with the
214 filename of the history file and with its size. If you do not want to
215 set this variable, please hit SPACE ENTER to the following question.
216
217 File to save your history?
218
219 histsize
220 Number of lines to save?
221
222 inactivity_timeout
223 Sometimes you may wish to leave the processes run by CPAN alone
224 without caring about them. Because the Makefile.PL or the Build.PL
225 sometimes contains question you're expected to answer, you can set a
226 timer that will kill a 'perl Makefile.PL' process after the specified
227 time in seconds.
228
229 If you set this value to 0, these processes will wait forever. This
230 is the default and recommended setting.
231
232 Timeout for inactivity during {Makefile,Build}.PL?
233
234 index_expire
235 The CPAN indexes are usually rebuilt once or twice per hour, but the
236 typical CPAN mirror mirrors only once or twice per day. Depending on
237 the quality of your mirror and your desire to be on the bleeding
238 edge, you may want to set the following value to more or less than
239 one day (which is the default). It determines after how many days
240 CPAN.pm downloads new indexes.
241
242 Let the index expire after how many days?
243
244 inhibit_startup_message
245 When the CPAN shell is started it normally displays a greeting
246 message that contains the running version and the status of readline
247 support.
248
249 Do you want to turn this message off?
250
251 keep_source_where
252 Unless you are accessing the CPAN on your filesystem via a file: URL,
253 CPAN.pm needs to keep the source files it downloads somewhere. Please
254 supply a directory where the downloaded files are to be kept.
255
256 Download target directory?
257
258 load_module_verbosity
259 When CPAN.pm loads a module it needs for some optional feature, it
260 usually reports about module name and version. Choose 'v' to get this
261 message, 'none' to suppress it.
262
263 Verbosity level for loading modules (none or v)?
264
265 makepl_arg
266 Every Makefile.PL is run by perl in a separate process. Likewise we
267 run 'make' and 'make install' in separate processes. If you have any
268 parameters (e.g. PREFIX, UNINST or the like) you want to pass to the
269 calls, please specify them here.
270
271 If you don't understand this question, just press ENTER.
272
273 Typical frequently used settings:
274
275 PREFIX=~/perl # non-root users (please see manual for more hints)
276
277 Parameters for the 'perl Makefile.PL' command?
278
279 make_arg
280 Parameters for the 'make' command? Typical frequently used setting:
281
282 -j3 # dual processor system (on GNU make)
283
284 Your choice:
285
286 make_install_arg
287 Parameters for the 'make install' command? Typical frequently used
288 setting:
289
290 UNINST=1 # to always uninstall potentially conflicting files
291 # (but do NOT use with local::lib or INSTALL_BASE)
292
293 Your choice:
294
295 make_install_make_command
296 Do you want to use a different make command for 'make install'?
297 Cautious people will probably prefer:
298
299 su root -c make
300 or
301 sudo make
302 or
303 /path1/to/sudo -u admin_account /path2/to/make
304
305 or some such. Your choice:
306
307 mbuildpl_arg
308 A Build.PL is run by perl in a separate process. Likewise we run
309 './Build' and './Build install' in separate processes. If you have
310 any parameters you want to pass to the calls, please specify them
311 here.
312
313 Typical frequently used settings:
314
315 --install_base /home/xxx # different installation directory
316
317 Parameters for the 'perl Build.PL' command?
318
319 mbuild_arg
320 Parameters for the './Build' command? Setting might be:
321
322 --extra_linker_flags -L/usr/foo/lib # non-standard library location
323
324 Your choice:
325
326 mbuild_install_arg
327 Parameters for the './Build install' command? Typical frequently used
328 setting:
329
330 --uninst 1 # uninstall conflicting files
331 # (but do NOT use with local::lib or INSTALL_BASE)
332
333 Your choice:
334
335 mbuild_install_build_command
336 Do you want to use a different command for './Build install'? Sudo
337 users will probably prefer:
338
339 su root -c ./Build
340 or
341 sudo ./Build
342 or
343 /path1/to/sudo -u admin_account ./Build
344
345 or some such. Your choice:
346
347 pager
348 What is your favorite pager program?
349
350 prefer_installer
351 When you have Module::Build installed and a module comes with both a
352 Makefile.PL and a Build.PL, which shall have precedence?
353
354 The main two standard installer modules are the old and well
355 established ExtUtils::MakeMaker (for short: EUMM) which uses the
356 Makefile.PL. And the next generation installer Module::Build (MB)
357 which works with the Build.PL (and often comes with a Makefile.PL
358 too). If a module comes only with one of the two we will use that one
359 but if both are supplied then a decision must be made between EUMM
360 and MB. See also http://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=29235 for
361 a discussion about the right default.
362
363 Or, as a third option you can choose RAND which will make a random
364 decision (something regular CPAN testers will enjoy).
365
366 In case you can choose between running a Makefile.PL or a Build.PL,
367 which installer would you prefer (EUMM or MB or RAND)?
368
369 prefs_dir
370 CPAN.pm can store customized build environments based on regular
371 expressions for distribution names. These are YAML files where the
372 default options for CPAN.pm and the environment can be overridden and
373 dialog sequences can be stored that can later be executed by an
374 Expect.pm object. The CPAN.pm distribution comes with some prefab
375 YAML files that cover sample distributions that can be used as
376 blueprints to store your own prefs. Please check out the distroprefs/
377 directory of the CPAN.pm distribution to get a quick start into the
378 prefs system.
379
380 Directory where to store default options/environment/dialogs for
381 building modules that need some customization?
382
383 prerequisites_policy
384 The CPAN module can detect when a module which you are trying to
385 build depends on prerequisites. If this happens, it can build the
386 prerequisites for you automatically ('follow'), ask you for
387 confirmation ('ask'), or just ignore them ('ignore'). Choosing
388 'follow' also sets PERL_AUTOINSTALL and PERL_EXTUTILS_AUTOINSTALL for
389 "--defaultdeps" if not already set.
390
391 Please set your policy to one of the three values.
392
393 Policy on building prerequisites (follow, ask or ignore)?
394
395 randomize_urllist
396 CPAN.pm can introduce some randomness when using hosts for download
397 that are configured in the urllist parameter. Enter a numeric value
398 between 0 and 1 to indicate how often you want to let CPAN.pm try a
399 random host from the urllist. A value of one specifies to always use
400 a random host as the first try. A value of zero means no randomness
401 at all. Anything in between specifies how often, on average, a random
402 host should be tried first.
403
404 Randomize parameter
405
406 recommends_policy
407 (Experimental feature!) Some CPAN modules recommend additional,
408 optional dependencies. These should generally be installed except in
409 resource constrained environments. When this policy is true,
410 recommended modules will be included with required modules.
411
412 Include recommended modules?
413
414 scan_cache
415 By default, each time the CPAN module is started, cache scanning is
416 performed to keep the cache size in sync ('atstart'). Alternatively,
417 scanning and cleanup can happen when CPAN exits ('atexit'). To
418 prevent any cache cleanup, answer 'never'.
419
420 Perform cache scanning ('atstart', 'atexit' or 'never')?
421
422 shell
423 What is your favorite shell?
424
425 show_unparsable_versions
426 During the 'r' command CPAN.pm finds modules without version number.
427 When the command finishes, it prints a report about this. If you want
428 this report to be very verbose, say yes to the following variable.
429
430 Show all individual modules that have no $VERSION?
431
432 show_upload_date
433 The 'd' and the 'm' command normally only show you information they
434 have in their in-memory database and thus will never connect to the
435 internet. If you set the 'show_upload_date' variable to true, 'm' and
436 'd' will additionally show you the upload date of the module or
437 distribution. Per default this feature is off because it may require
438 a net connection to get at the upload date.
439
440 Always try to show upload date with 'd' and 'm' command (yes/no)?
441
442 show_zero_versions
443 During the 'r' command CPAN.pm finds modules with a version number of
444 zero. When the command finishes, it prints a report about this. If
445 you want this report to be very verbose, say yes to the following
446 variable.
447
448 Show all individual modules that have a $VERSION of zero?
449
450 suggests_policy
451 (Experimental feature!) Some CPAN modules suggest additional,
452 optional dependencies. These 'suggest' dependencies provide enhanced
453 operation. When this policy is true, suggested modules will be
454 included with required modules.
455
456 Include suggested modules?
457
458 tar_verbosity
459 When CPAN.pm uses the tar command, which switch for the verbosity
460 shall be used? Choose 'none' for quiet operation, 'v' for file name
461 listing, 'vv' for full listing.
462
463 Tar command verbosity level (none or v or vv)?
464
465 term_is_latin
466 The next option deals with the charset (a.k.a. character set) your
467 terminal supports. In general, CPAN is English speaking territory, so
468 the charset does not matter much but some CPAN have names that are
469 outside the ASCII range. If your terminal supports UTF-8, you should
470 say no to the next question. If it expects ISO-8859-1 (also known as
471 LATIN1) then you should say yes. If it supports neither, your answer
472 does not matter because you will not be able to read the names of
473 some authors anyway. If you answer no, names will be output in UTF-8.
474
475 Your terminal expects ISO-8859-1 (yes/no)?
476
477 term_ornaments
478 When using Term::ReadLine, you can turn ornaments on so that your
479 input stands out against the output from CPAN.pm.
480
481 Do you want to turn ornaments on?
482
483 test_report
484 The goal of the CPAN Testers project (http://testers.cpan.org/) is to
485 test as many CPAN packages as possible on as many platforms as
486 possible. This provides valuable feedback to module authors and
487 potential users to identify bugs or platform compatibility issues and
488 improves the overall quality and value of CPAN.
489
490 One way you can contribute is to send test results for each module
491 that you install. If you install the CPAN::Reporter module, you have
492 the option to automatically generate and deliver test reports to CPAN
493 Testers whenever you run tests on a CPAN package.
494
495 See the CPAN::Reporter documentation for additional details and
496 configuration settings. If your firewall blocks outgoing traffic,
497 you may need to configure CPAN::Reporter before sending reports.
498
499 Generate test reports if CPAN::Reporter is installed (yes/no)?
500
501 perl5lib_verbosity
502 When CPAN.pm extends @INC via PERL5LIB, it prints a list of
503 directories added (or a summary of how many directories are added).
504 Choose 'v' to get this message, 'none' to suppress it.
505
506 Verbosity level for PERL5LIB changes (none or v)?
507
508 prefer_external_tar
509 Per default all untar operations are done with the perl module
510 Archive::Tar; by setting this variable to true the external tar
511 command is used if available; on Unix this is usually preferred
512 because they have a reliable and fast gnutar implementation.
513
514 Use the external tar program instead of Archive::Tar?
515
516 trust_test_report_history
517 When a distribution has already been tested by CPAN::Reporter on this
518 machine, CPAN can skip the test phase and just rely on the test
519 report history instead.
520
521 Note that this will not apply to distributions that failed tests
522 because of missing dependencies. Also, tests can be run regardless
523 of the history using "force".
524
525 Do you want to rely on the test report history (yes/no)?
526
527 urllist_ping_external
528 When automatic selection of the nearest cpan mirrors is performed,
529 turn on the use of the external ping via Net::Ping::External. This is
530 recommended in the case the local network has a transparent proxy.
531
532 Do you want to use the external ping command when autoselecting
533 mirrors?
534
535 urllist_ping_verbose
536 When automatic selection of the nearest cpan mirrors is performed,
537 this option can be used to turn on verbosity during the selection
538 process.
539
540 Do you want to see verbosity turned on when autoselecting mirrors?
541
542 use_prompt_default
543 When this is true, CPAN will set PERL_MM_USE_DEFAULT to a true value.
544 This causes ExtUtils::MakeMaker (and compatible) prompts to use
545 default values instead of stopping to prompt you to answer questions.
546 It also sets NONINTERACTIVE_TESTING to a true value to signal more
547 generally that distributions should not try to interact with you.
548
549 Do you want to use prompt defaults (yes/no)?
550
551 use_sqlite
552 CPAN::SQLite is a layer between the index files that are downloaded
553 from the CPAN and CPAN.pm that speeds up metadata queries and reduces
554 memory consumption of CPAN.pm considerably.
555
556 Use CPAN::SQLite if available? (yes/no)?
557
558 version_timeout
559 This timeout prevents CPAN from hanging when trying to parse a
560 pathologically coded $VERSION from a module.
561
562 The default is 15 seconds. If you set this value to 0, no timeout
563 will occur, but this is not recommended.
564
565 Timeout for parsing module versions?
566
567 yaml_load_code
568 Both YAML.pm and YAML::Syck are capable of deserialising code. As
569 this requires a string eval, which might be a security risk, you can
570 use this option to enable or disable the deserialisation of code via
571 CPAN::DeferredCode. (Note: This does not work under perl 5.6)
572
573 Do you want to enable code deserialisation (yes/no)?
574
575 yaml_module
576 At the time of this writing (2009-03) there are three YAML
577 implementations working: YAML, YAML::Syck, and YAML::XS. The latter
578 two are faster but need a C compiler installed on your system. There
579 may be more alternative YAML conforming modules. When I tried two
580 other players, YAML::Tiny and YAML::Perl, they seemed not powerful
581 enough to work with CPAN.pm. This may have changed in the meantime.
582
583 Which YAML implementation would you prefer?
584
586 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
587 under the same terms as Perl itself.
588
589
590
591perl v5.32.0 2020-09-23 CPAN::FirstTime(3)