NAME
git-cpan-import - Import a module into a git repository
SYNOPSIS
# takes any string CPANPLUS handles:
% git cpan-import Foo::Bar
% git cpan-import A/AU/AUTHORID/Foo-Bar-0.03.tar.gz
% git cpan-import http://backpan.cpan.org/authors/id/A/AU/AUTHORID/Foo-Bar-0.03.tar.gz
# If the repository is already initialized, can be run with no arguments to
# import the latest version
git cpan-import
DESCRIPTION
This command is used internally by git-cpan-init
, git-cpan-update
and git-backpan-init
.
This command takes a tarball, extracts it, and imports it into the repository.
It is only possible to update to a newer version of a module.
The module history is tracked in refs/remotes/cpan/master
.
Tags are created for each version of the module.
This command does not touch the working directory, and is safe to run even if you have pending work.
OPTIONS
- --backpan
-
Enables Backpan index fetching (to get the author and release date).
- --checkversion, --nocheckversion
-
Explicitly enables/disables version checking. If version checking is enabled, which is the default, git-cpan-import will refuse to import a version of the package that has a smaller version number than the HEAD of the branch cpan/master.
- --parent
-
Allows adding extra parents when importing, so that when a patch has been incorporated into an upstream version the generated commit is like a merge commit, incorporating both the CPAN history and the user's local history.
For example, this will set the current HEAD of the master branch as a parent of the imported CPAN package:
$ git checkout master $ git cpan-import --parent HEAD My-Module
More than one '--parent' can be specified.
VERSION
This document describes git-cpan-import version 0.2.0
BUGS AND LIMITATIONS
Please report any bugs or feature requests to bug-git-cpan-patch@rt.cpan.org
, or through the web interface at http://rt.cpan.org.
AUTHORS
Yuval Kogman <nothingmuch@woobling.org>
Yanick Champoux <yanick@cpan.org>
LICENCE
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See perlartistic.