NAME
Carmel - CPAN Artifact Repository Manager
SYNOPSIS
# Run with a directory with cpanfile
carmel install
# Manually pull a module if you don't have it
carmel inject DBI@1.633 Plack@1.0000
# list all the modules to be loaded
carmel list
# list all the modules in a tree
carmel tree
# show a location where a module is installed
carmel show Plack
# update Plack to the latest
carmel update Plack
# update all the modules in the snapshot
carmel update
# Runs your perl script with modules from artifacts
carmel exec perl ...
# Requires all your modules in cpanfile in one shot
carmel exec perl -e 'use Carmel::Preload;'
# Roll out the currently selected modules into ./local
carmel rollout
# package modules tarballs and index into ./vendor/cache
carmel package
# use Carmel packages inside a script (without carmel exec)
perl -e 'use Carmel::Setup; ...'
# prints export PATH=... etc for shell scripting
carmel export
# find a module in a repository
carmel find DBI
# find a module matching the version query
carmel find Plack ">= 1.0000, < 1.1000"
DESCRIPTION
Carmel is yet another CPAN module manager.
Unlike traditional CPAN module installer, Carmel keeps the build of your dependencies in a central repository, then select the library paths to include upon runtime in development.
Carmel also allows you to rollout all the files in a traditional perl INC directory structure, which is useful to use in a production environment, such as containers.
HOW IT WORKS
Carmel will keep the build directory (artifacts) after a cpanm installation in a repository, which defaults to $HOME/.carmel/{version}-{archname}/builds
, and your directory structure would look like:
$HOME/.carmel/5.20.1-darwin-2level/builds
Plack-1.0033/
blib/
arch/
lib/
URI-1.64/
blib/
arch/
lib/
URI-1.63/
blib/
arch/
lib/
Carmel scans this directory and creates the mapping of which version of any package belongs to which build directory.
Given the list of modules and requirements from cpanfile
, carmel install
computes which versions satisfy the requirements best, and if there isn't, installs the modules from CPAN to put it to the artifact repository. The computed mappings are preserved as a snapshot in cpanfile.snapshot
.
Once the snapshot is created, each following carmel
command runs uses both cpanfile
and cpanfile.snapshot
to determine the best versions to satisfy the requirements. When you update cpanfile
to bump a version or add a new module, carmel
will install the new dependencies and update the snapshot accordingly.
carmel exec
command, like install
command, lists the build directories and .pm
files you need from the repository, and then prepend the mappings of these files in the @INC
hook. This is a handy way to run a perl program using the dependencies pinned by Carmel, without changing any include path.
carmel update
command allows you to selectively update a dependency while preserving other dependencies in the snapshot. carmel update Plack
for example pulls the latest version of Plack from CPAN (and its dependencies, if it needs a newer version than pinned in the snapshot), and updates the snapshot properly. Running carmel update
without any arguments would update all the modules in cpanfile
, including its dependencies.
On a production environment, you might want to use the carmel rollout
command, which saves all the files included in the cpanfile
, pinned with cpanfile.snapshot
, to the local
directory. This directory can be included like a regular perl's library path, with PERL5LIB=/path/to/local/lib/perl5
, or with use lib
, and you don't need to use carmel
command in production this way.
SNAPSHOT SUPPORT
As of v0.1.29, Carmel supports saving and loading snapshot file in cpanfile.snapshot
, in a compatible format with Carton. Versions saved in the snapshot file will be preserved across multiple runs of Carmel across machines, so that versions frozen in one environment can be committed to a source code repository, and can be reproduced in another box, so long as the perl version and architecture is the same.
DIFFERENCES WITH CARTON
Carmel shares the same goal with Carton, where you can manage your dependencies by declaring them in cpanfile
, and pinning them in cpanfile.snapshot
. Most of the commands work the same way, so Carmel can most effectively be a drop-in replacement for Carton, if you're currently using it.
Here's a few key differences between Carmel and Carton:
Carton does not manage what's currently being installed in
local
directory. It just runscpanm
command with-L local
, with a hope that nothing has changed the directory except Carton, and whatever is in the directory won't conflict with the snapshot file. This can easily conflict whencpanfile.snapshot
is updated by multiple developers or when you continuously update the dependencies across multiple machines.Carmel manages all the dependencies for your project in the Carmel repository under
$HOME/.carmel
, and nothing is installed under your project directory on development. Thelocal
directory is only created when you request it viacarmel rollout
command, and it's safe to run multiple times. Runningcarmel install
after pulling the changes to the snapshot file will always install the correct dependencies from the snapshot file, as compared to Carton, which doesn't honor the snapshot on a regular install command.Carton has no easy way to undo a change once you update a version of a module in
local
, because which version is actually selected is only preserved as a file inside the directory, that's not managed by Carton. To undo a change you have to remove the entirelocal
directory to start over.Carmel preserves this information to the
cpanfile.snapshot
file, and every invocation of Carmel resolves the dependencies declared incpanfile
and pinned incpanfile.snapshot
dynamically, to create a stable dependency tree, without relying on anything in a directory under your project other than the snapshot file. Undoing the change incpanfile.snapshot
file immediately reverts the change.
COMMUNITY
- https://github.com/miyagawa/Carmel
-
Code repository, Wiki and Issue Tracker
AUTHOR
Tatsuhiko Miyagawa <miyagawa@bulknews.net>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2015- Tatsuhiko Miyagawa
LICENSE
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.