NAME
Zilla::Dist - Dist::Zilla Mixed Up
VERSION
This document describes Zilla::Dist version 0.1.2.
SYNOPSIS
> zild Meta
> # Edit the Meta file.
> zild release
DESCRIPTION
This module is a formalization of a Perl package directory layout and release process that I have been evolving for some time. I use the same layout for Bash, Ruby, Python and Node.js package publishing.
Zilla::Dist provides a Makefile and set of scripts that take a modern code layout and transform it into something that looks like a standard old Perl distribution. Under the hood zild
generates everything that Dist::Zilla wants and lets dzil
do the heavy lifting, but you never need to interact with Dist::Zilla
stuff directly.
Directory Layout
A fully stacked top level CPAN package repository might look like this:
Changes # History in YAML
Contributing # A generated instruction file for contributing
Meta # Meta info for all metadata needs (including dzil)
ReadMe.pod # Generated from `doc/Module.swim`
.travis.yml # Travis file (generated)
bin/ # Scripts
doc/ # Swim docs
ext/ # External repos (subrepos)
eg/ # Examples
lib/ # Perl `.pm` code
pkg/ # Packaging related files
note/ # Project notes, todo lists, ideas, specs, etc
share/ # Shared files to distribute
test/ # Test suite
Note a few things:
Sane/Readable names
Directories are lowercase. Never plural
Files are TitleCase
No file extensions (if possible)
No extra meta files like
dist.ini
,.travis.yml
,bower.json
etc
These are the best of from all the package systems I've used. They make me happy, and not tied to poor legacy standards.
Zilla::Dist
Zilla::Dist uses a Makefile to do everything, but you never see it. You run commands like:
zild make test
Run zild make help
to get a list of all the targets.
The most common targets don't require you to type make
. For instance, you can simply:
zild test
Here are the most important targets:
zild release
-
Build the dist, then
cpan-upload
it. zild test
-
Run the test suite.
zild install
-
Build and install the software. Same as install from CPAN.
zild update
-
Rebuild the ReadMe.pod and other generated files.
zild prereqs
-
Install the prereqs from CPAN that are listed in the
Meta
file'srequires:
field. zild cpan
-
Turn repo into a
Dist::Zilla
ready subdirectory called./cpan/
. This directory has adist.ini
file. zild dist
-
Basically the same as
zild cpan; cd cpan; dzil build
.
USAGE
Start by running:
cp `zild sharedir`/Meta .
and you'll get a Meta
file template. You need to customize the Meta
file with information specific to your project.
To do a release, just set a new version
in the Meta file and add a Changes
section using the same version. Then run:
zild release
This will:
Make sure things are ready for release.
Update the modules with
$VERSION
to the new version.Make a dzil ready directory of your stuff called
./cpan/
.Call
dzil build
.Call
cpan-upload
to send the dist to CPAN.Tag the git repo with the version string.
git push
the repo and tag upstream.
Release in Depth
This section lists all the things that actually happen during the zild release
step.
…to be completed…
RATIONALE RANTING
I've published a lot of packages in a lot of programming languages. I like taking the best ideas and spreading them around. I like reusing ideas and code and tools as much as possible between these packages.
I trust dzil to DTRT with regard to the CPAN release process. I use almost the exact same dist.ini
for some 50 CPAN packages that I've converted so far.
I don't like cluttered repos and adding new metadata files for each new tool that needs one. The dist.ini
file is not bad, but I can generate it from metadata easily. So I do.
As much as these great new ideas differ from the norm, I want my CPAN publishings to be normal to normal mongers (if there's such a thing). The zild release
process does just that. End users would have to look hard to know this wasn't a "normal" dzil release.
I'm packaging this packaging process as Zilla::Dist for others to use. It's also a decent example of a CPAN package packaged with itself.
NOTES
Some of the tools in Zilla::Dist are Bash, some are Perl. I'm doing a lot in the area of Bash Package packaging. See http://bpan.org.
I use the term Package
where CPAN people have used the term Distribution
. Perl is the only language (in my packaging experience) to do so.
The name t/
is another outlier. The most common is test/
followed by tests/
.
I don't like plural directory names. Try singular. I think you'll like it too.
ALLCAPSFILENAMES ARE TOO LOUD! ChillOut.
Commiting Generated Code/Files
People think that committing generated code/files is a bad idea and in general I concur, but there are exceptions.
Sometimes tools like Travis-CI require you to commit a config file. Zilla::Dist generates these files from metadata, which is a whole lot easier than maintaining them yourself, but you end up commiting generated code.
The dist.ini
file is only needed locally, however, during dist build time, so no need to commit that.
In general, when an external tool requires files, and it's easiest to generate those files, it's OK to commit generated code.
Modules Published to CPAN w/ zild
https://github.com/ingydotnet/dist-zilla-plugin-testbaseincluder-pm
https://github.com/ingydotnet/dist-zilla-plugin-testmlincluder-pm
https://github.com/ingydotnet/dist-zilla-plugin-testml1includer-pm
https://github.com/ingydotnet/module-install-manifestskip-pm
https://github.com/ingydotnet/module-install-requireslist-pm
https://github.com/ingydotnet/module-install-versioncheck-pm
AUTHOR
Ingy döt Net <ingy@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2014-2020. Ingy döt Net.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.