Do it for all packages that
* mention perl, or
* have a directory name starting with p5-*, or
* depend on a package starting with p5-
like last time, for 5.18, where this didn't lead to complaints.
Let me know if you have any this time.
Upstream changes:
1.04 2013-08-22, caugustin.de
Fixed typos from bug report #87187.
Rejected bug report #83073 (UUID::Tiny correctly sets the variant).
Thread-tests still not running (Mac OS X 10.8.x and other machines).
Thread-tests removed, bug report #57188 deferred.
POD changed to better reflect the new standard interface.
Fixed a bug in Makefile.PL reported by Matt Koscica.
1.03_01 2010-05-04, caugustin.de
Thread-patches from Michael C. Schwern applied.
Test not running on Mac OS X 10.6.3 ...
a) refer 'perl' in their Makefile, or
b) have a directory name of p5-*, or
c) have any dependency on any p5-* package
Like last time, where this caused no complaints.
to trigger/signal a rebuild for the transition 5.10.1 -> 5.12.1.
The list of packages is computed by finding all packages which end
up having either of PERL5_USE_PACKLIST, BUILDLINK_API_DEPENDS.perl,
or PERL5_PACKLIST defined in their make setup (tested via
"make show-vars VARNAMES=..."), minus the packages updated after
the perl package update.
sno@ was right after all, obache@ kindly asked and he@ led the
way. Thanks!
pkgsrc changes:
- Add license definition
- Adjust dependencies (Digest::MD5 is in core since ages ...)
Upstream changes:
1.03 2010-01-31, caugustin.de
Once again clk_seq uniqueness and fixing some small bugs with
_get_clk_seq() (due to failed CPAN Tester's ID 6750882).
Changed COPYRIGHT due to rt.cpan.org Bug #53642.
License should now be shown in CPAN.
Collection.
The Perl 5 module UUID::Tiny is a lightweight, low dependency Pure
Perl module for UUID creation and testing. This module provides the
creation of version 1 time based UUIDs (using random multicast MAC
addresses), version 3 MD5 based UUIDs, version 4 random UUIDs, and
version 5 SHA-1 based UUIDs. ATTENTION! UUID::Tiny uses Perl's
rand() to create the basic random numbers, so the created v4 UUIDs
are not cryptographically strong!