package ExtUtils::MM;
use strict;
use Config;
use vars qw(@ISA $VERSION);
$VERSION = 0.04;
require ExtUtils::Liblist;
require ExtUtils::MakeMaker;
@ISA = qw(ExtUtils::Liblist ExtUtils::MakeMaker);
=head1 NAME
ExtUtils::MM - OS adjusted ExtUtils::MakeMaker subclass
=head1 SYNOPSIS
require ExtUtils::MM;
my $mm = MM->new(...);
=head1 DESCRIPTION
B<FOR INTERNAL USE ONLY>
ExtUtils::MM is a subclass of ExtUtils::MakeMaker which automatically
chooses the appropriate OS specific subclass for you
(ie. ExtUils::MM_Unix, etc...).
It also provides a convenient alias via the MM class (I didn't want
MakeMaker modules outside of ExtUtils/).
This class might turn out to be a temporary solution, but MM won't go
away.
=cut
{
# Convenient alias.
package MM;
use vars qw(@ISA);
@ISA = qw(ExtUtils::MM);
sub DESTROY {}
}
my %Is = ();
$Is{VMS} = 1 if $^O eq 'VMS';
$Is{OS2} = 1 if $^O eq 'os2';
$Is{MacOS} = 1 if $^O eq 'MacOS';
if( $^O eq 'MSWin32' ) {
Win32::IsWin95() ? $Is{Win95} = 1 : $Is{Win32} = 1;
}
$Is{UWIN} = 1 if $^O eq 'uwin';
$Is{Cygwin} = 1 if $^O eq 'cygwin';
$Is{NW5} = 1 if $Config{osname} eq 'NetWare'; # intentional
$Is{BeOS} = 1 if $^O =~ /beos/i; # XXX should this be that loose?
$Is{DOS} = 1 if $^O eq 'dos';
$Is{Unix} = 1 if !keys %Is;
if( $Is{NW5} ) {
$^O = 'NetWare';
delete $Is{Win32};
}
_assert( keys %Is == 1 );
my($OS) = keys %Is;
my $class = "ExtUtils::MM_$OS";
eval "require $class" unless $INC{"ExtUtils/MM_$OS.pm"};
die $@ if $@;
unshift @ISA, $class;
sub _assert {
my $sanity = shift;
die sprintf "Assert failed at %s line %d\n", (caller)[1,2] unless $sanity;
return;
}
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