- Remove dependencies in core
- Put testing depends in TEST_DEPENDS
- Remove unnecessary bsd.port.options.mk inclusions
- Remove checks for Perl versions that no longer exist in the ports tree
- Sort plists, some of which were so jumbled that I have to assume
the plist was randomized before committing
A lot of the plist changes in this commit are moving PERL5_MAN3 after
SITE_PERL. It's repo churn now, but it makes updating the ports later
far easier.
Before, we had:
site_perl : lib/perl5/site_perl/5.18
site_perl/perl_arch : lib/perl5/site_perl/5.18/mach
perl_man3 : lib/perl5/5.18/man/man3
Now we have:
site_perl : lib/perl5/site_perl
site_arch : lib/perl5/site_perl/mach/5.18
perl_man3 : lib/perl5/site_perl/man/man3
Modules without any .so will be installed at the same place regardless of the
Perl version, minimizing the upgrade when the major Perl version is changed.
It uses a version dependent directory for modules with compiled bits.
As PERL_ARCH is no longer needed in plists, it has been removed from
PLIST_SUB.
The USE_PERL5=fixpacklist keyword is removed, the .packlist file is now
always removed, as is perllocal.pod.
The old site_perl and site_perl/arch directories have been kept in the
default Perl @INC for all Perl ports, and will be phased out as these old
Perl versions expire.
PR: 194969
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1019
Exp-run by: antoine
Reviewed by: perl@
Approved by: portmgr
variable references into a conventional SQL string and list
of bind values suitable for passing onto DBI. This simple
technique creates database calls that are simpler to create
and easier to read, while still giving you full access to
custom SQL.
SQL::Interp properly binds or escapes variables. This recommended
practice safeguards against "SQL injection" attacks. The DBI
documentation has several links on the topic.
Besides the simple techniques shown above, The SQL-Interpolate
distribution includes the optional DBIx::Interp module.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/SQL-Interp/