Commit graph

9 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
seb
c3f1e700ad Bump the PKGREVISION for all packages which depend directly on perl,
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!
2010-08-21 16:32:42 +00:00
seb
18a0f5dd73 Update p5-common-sense from version 3.2 to version 3.3.
Upstream changes:
3.3  Fri Jul  2 22:40:14 CEST 2010
        - removed "exiting" category - this is too useful to create new
          control statements, and fails utterly with eval, as eval will
          catch the (fatal) warning itself. Kind of hurts, but this is
          just another warning category which is too broad and has to be
          disabled fully because of a minority of issues.
2010-07-12 00:35:18 +00:00
seb
c0ea52bdb5 Update p5-common-sense from version 3.1 to version 3.2.
Upstream changes:
3.2  Fri Apr 16 01:46:02 CEST 2010
	- removed "substr" warning - while it overall is a good category,
          "substr '', 2" is entirely sensible.
2010-04-24 16:50:16 +00:00
seb
fe1b8e51a7 Update p5-common-sense from version 3.00 to version 3.1.
Upstream changes:
3.1  Sat Apr  3 04:56:36 CEST 2010
        - removed "parenthesis" warning:
             sysread $fh, my $buf, -s $fh; # ok
             sysread $fh, my $buf, $size;  # warning
          Made no sense to me, especially as $size is in scope.
	- no longer hardcode warning/struct bits, calculate them at
          installation time, for when I will no longer be alive etc.
	- tweaked documentation.
2010-04-11 22:04:29 +00:00
sno
c89a4b3a05 Updating devel/p5-common-sense from 2.02 to 3.00
Upstream changes:
3.0  Tue Dec 15 03:24:28 CET 2009
	- enable "use utf8" effect by default.
	- removed "utf8" warning category. while this contains useful security
          stuff, it also makes implementing security stuff almost impossible,
          as it completely mangles perls internal utf8 encoding with actual
          utf-8 encoding, and confuses "unicode", "string codepoints" and
          "utf-8" so much that it becoems practically unusable.

2.03  Wed Dec  2 18:38:53 CET 2009
	- removed "unopened" warning category, as this breaks "stat _", which
          seems to be a bug in all perl versions (see perlbug #71002).
        - some doc updates.
2010-02-17 12:38:23 +00:00
seb
ff3e7d91ac Update p5-common-sense from version 2.0 to version 2.02.
Upstream changes:
2.02  Wed Nov  4 12:04:08 CET 2009
	- no functional changes.
	- add META.yml clarification to the faq, tune the docs a bit
          and add a "much reduced typing" section.
        - unfortunately, the tone of the manpage has tightened and is
          more serious in many parts now. We consider this a bug that we
          plan to fix before 2100.

2.01  Mon Oct  5 17:01:48 CEST 2009
	- add a FAQ section.
	- use a more future-proof way to set the warning mask.
2009-11-22 11:58:35 +00:00
sno
8fd03b3567 Updating devel/p5-common-sense from 1.0 to 2.0
Upstream changes:
2.0   Tue Sep  1 20:28:25 CEST 2009
	- codename "fatality", now with big doses of... fatality.
	- enabled an enourmous number of warnings and made them FATAL,
          as warned about in earlier releases. Of course we carefully
          tested the new warnings against our modules, as mentioned
          in the manpage, too.
2009-09-14 06:52:57 +00:00
seb
ef1cdde83d Update p5-common-sense from version 0.04 to version 1.0.
Upstream changes:
1.0   Sat Aug 22 22:08:50 CEST 2009
	- no functional changes.
	- really, the first version of common sense!
        - slightly improved documentation.
	- forgot to include license.
2009-08-23 23:12:25 +00:00
sno
6a374e7858 Importing package for p5 module common::sense-0.04 as dependency for
scheduled import of p5-EV-3.7

This module implements some sane defaults for Perl programs, as defined
by two typical (or not so typical - use your common sense) specimens of
Perl coders.
2009-08-08 20:11:07 +00:00