Alien::Build::Manual::FAQ - Frequently Asked Questions about Alien::Build
version 2.84
perldoc Alien::Build::Manual::FAQ
This document serves to answer the most frequently asked questions made by developers creating Alien modules using Alien::Build.
Alien in a Perl namespace for defining dependencies in CPAN for libraries and tools which are not "native" to CPAN. For a manifesto style description of the Why, and How see Alien. Alien::Base is a base class for the Alien runtime. Alien::Build is a tool for probing the operating system for existing libraries and tools, and downloading, building and installing packages. alienfile is a recipe format for describing how to probe, download, build and install a package.
Use the autoconf plugin (Alien::Build::Plugin::Build::Autoconf). If your package provides a pkg-config .pc
file, then you can also use the PkgConfig plugin (Alien::Build::Plugin::PkgConfig::Negotiate).
use alienfile plugin PkgConfig => 'libfoo'; share { start_url => 'http://example.org/dist'; plugin Download => ( version => qr/libfoo-([0-9\.])\.tar\.gz$/, ); plugin Extract => 'tar.gz'; plugin 'Build::Autoconf'; };
If you need to provide custom flags to configure, you can do that too:
share { plugin 'Build::Autoconf'; build [ '%{configure} --disable-shared --enable-foo', '%{make}', '%{make} install', ]; };
If your package requires GNU Make, use %{gmake}
instead of %{make}
.
A number of Open Source projects are using autotools, but do not provide the configure
script. When alienizing these types of packages you have a few choices:
The Alien Alien::Autotools is designed to provide autotools for building such packages from source. The advantage is that this is how the upstream developers intend on having their package built. The downside is that it is also adds more prereqs to your Alien. The silver lining is that if you require this Alien in the share
block (as you should), then these prereqs will only be pulled in during a share install when they are needed.
Please see the Alien::Autotools documentation for specifics on how it can be used in your alienfile.
You can use the "patch" in alienfile directive to patch the alienized package locally before building. This can sometimes be challenging because Autotools uses timestamps in order to decide what needs to be rebuilt, and patching can sometimes confuse it into thinking more needs to be rebuilt than what actually does.
You can also build the configure script during development of your alien, generate the tarball and provide it somewhere like GitHub and use that as the source instead of the original source. This should usually be a last resort if the other two methods prove too difficult.
If you see an error like this:
Unknown option "--with-pic".
It is because the autoconf plugin uses the --with-pic
option by default, since it makes sense most of the time, and autoconf usually ignores options that it does not recognize. Some autoconf style build systems fail when they see an option that they do not recognize. You can turn this behavior off for these packages:
plugin 'Build::Autoconf' => ( with_pic => 0, );
Another thing about the autoconf plugin is that it uses DESTDIR
to do a double staged install. If you see an error like "nothing was installed into destdir", that means that your package does not support DESTDIR
. You should instead use the MSYS plugin and use a command sequence to do the build like this:
share { plugin 'Build::MSYS'; build [ # explicitly running configure with "sh" will make sure that # it works on windows as well as UNIX. 'sh configure --prefix=%{.install.prefix} --disable-shared', '%{make}', '%{make} install', ]; };
There is an alien Alien::cmake3 that provides cmake
3.x or better (It is preferred to the older Alien::CMake). Though it is recommended that you use the cmake
(Alien::Build::Plugin::Build::CMake) plugin instead of using Alien::cmake3.
use alienfile; share { plugin 'Build::CMake'; build [ # this is the default build step, if you do not specify one. [ '%{cmake}', @{ meta->prop->{plugin_build_cmake}->{args} }, # ... put extra cmake args here ... '.' ], '%{make}', '%{make} install', ]; };
Alien::Build provides a helper (%{make}
) for the make
that is used by Perl and ExtUtils::MakeMaker (EUMM). Unfortunately the make
supported by Perl and EUMM on Windows (nmake
and dmake
) are not widely supported by most open source projects. (Thankfully recent perls and EUMM support GNU Make on windows now).
You can use the make
plugin (Alien::Build::Plugin::Build::Make) to tell the Alien::Build system which make the project that you are alienizing requires.
plugin 'Build::Make' => 'umake'; # umake makes %{make} either GNU Make or BSD Make on Unix and GNU Make on Windows. build { build [ # You can use the Perl config compiler and cflags using the %{perl.config...} helper [ '%{make}', 'CC=%{perl.config.cc}', 'CFLAGS=%{perl.config.cccdlflags} %{perl.config.optimize}' ], [ '%{make}', 'install', 'PREFIX=%{.install.prefix}' ], ], };
Some open source projects require GNU Make, and you can specify that, and Alien::gmake will be pulled in on platforms that do not already have it.
plugin 'Build::Make' => 'gmake'; ...
Use the pkg-config
plugin (Alien::Build::Plugin::PkgConfig::Negotiate):
use alienfile; plugin 'PkgConfig' => ( pkg_name => 'libfoo', );
It will probe for a system version of the library. It will also add the appropriate version
cflags
and libs
properties on either a system
or share
install.
The various pkg-config plugins all support atleast_version, exact_version and maximum_version fields, which have the same meaning as the pkg-config
command line interface:
use alienfile; plugin 'PkgConfig', pkg_name => 'foo', atleast_version => '1.2.3';
or
use alienfile; plugin 'PkgConfig', pkg_name => foo, exact_version => '1.2.3';
Each of the PkgConfig
plugins will take an array reference instead of a string:
use alienfile; plugin 'PkgConfig' => ( pkg_name => [ 'foo', 'bar', 'baz' ] );
The first pkg_name
given will be used by default once your alien is installed. To get the configuration for foo
and bar
you can use the Alien::Base alt method:
use Alien::libfoo; $cflags = Alien::libfoo->cflags; # compiler flags for 'foo' $cflags = Alien::libfoo->alt('bar')->cflags ; # compiler flags for 'bar' $cflags = Alien::libfoo->alt('baz')->cflags ; # compiler flags for 'baz'
Many packages provide a command that you can use to get the appropriate version, compiler and linker flags. For those packages you can just use the commands in your alienfile. Something like this:
use alienfile; probe [ 'foo-config --version' ]; share { ... build [ '%{make} PREFIX=%{.runtime.prefix}', '%{make} install PREFIX=%{.runtime.prefix}', ]; }; gather [ [ 'foo-config', '--version', \'%{.runtime.version}' ], [ 'foo-config', '--cflags', \'%{.runtime.cflags}' ], [ 'foo-config', '--libs', \'%{.runtime.libs}' ], ];
Some packages just expect you do know that -lfoo
will work. For those you can use the cbuilder
plugin (Alien::Build::Plugin::Probe::CBuilder).
use alienfile; plugin 'Probe::CBuilder' => ( cflags => '-I/opt/libfoo/include', libs => '-L/opt/libfoo/lib -lfoo', ); share { ... gather sub { my($build) = @_; my $prefix = $build->runtime_prop->{prefix}; $build->runtime_prop->{cflags} = "-I$prefix/include "; $build->runtime_prop->{libs} = "-L$prefix/lib -lfoo "; }; }
This plugin will build a small program with these flags and test that it works. (There are also options to provide a program that can make simple tests to ensure the library works). If the probe works, it will set the compiler and linker flags. (There are also options for extracting the version from the test program). If you do a share install you will need to set the compiler and linker flags yourself in the gather step, if you aren't using a build plugin that will do that for you.
Certainly. The original intent was to provide libraries, but tools are also quite doable using the Alien::Build toolset. A good example of how to do this is Alien::nasm. You will want to use the 'Probe::CommandLine':
use alienfile; plugin 'Probe::CommandLine' => ( command => 'gzip', );
Use Test::Alien. It has extensive documentation, and integrates nicely with Alien::Base.
If you have a diff file you can use patch:
use alienfile; probe sub { 'share' }; # replace with appropriate probe share { ... patch [ '%{patch} -p1 < %{.install.patch}/mypatch.diff' ]; build [ ... ] ; } ...
You can also patch using Perl if that is easier:
use alienfile; probe sub { 'share' }; share { ... patch sub { my($build) = @_; # make changes to source prior to build }; build [ ... ]; };
Sometimes, the compiler or linker flags that the PkgConfig plugin comes up with are not quite right. (Frequently this is actually because a package maintainer is providing a broken .pc
file). (Other plugins may also have problems). You could replace the plugin's gather
step but a better way is to provide a subroutine callback to be called after the gather stage is complete. You can do this with the alienfile after
directive:
use alienfile; plugin 'PkgConfig' => 'libfoo'; share { ... after 'gather' => sub { my($build) = @_; $build->runtime_prop->{libs} .= " -lbar"; # libfoo also requires libbar $build->runtime_prop->{libs_static} .= " -lbar -lbaz"; # libfoo also requires libbaz under static linkage }; };
Sometimes you only need to do this on certain platforms. You can adjust the logic based on $^O
appropriately.
use alienfile; plugin 'PkgConfig' => 'libfoo'; share { ... after 'gather' => sub { my($build) = @_; if($^O eq 'MSWin32') { $build->runtime_prop->{libs} .= " -lpsapi"; } }; };
The error looks something like this:
t/acme_alien_dontpanic2.t ....... 1/? # Failed test 'xs' # at t/acme_alien_dontpanic2.t line 13. # XSLoader failed # Can't load '/home/cip/.cpanm/work/1581635869.456/Acme-Alien-DontPanic2-2.0401/_alien/tmp/test-alien-lyiQNX/auto/Test/Alien/XS/Mod0/Mod0.so' for module Test::Alien::XS::Mod0: libdontpanic.so.0: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory at /opt/perl/5.30.1/lib/5.30.1/x86_64-linux/DynaLoader.pm line 193. # at /home/cip/perl5/lib/perl5/Test/Alien.pm line 414. # Compilation failed in require at /home/cip/perl5/lib/perl5/Test/Alien.pm line 414. # BEGIN failed--compilation aborted at /home/cip/perl5/lib/perl5/Test/Alien.pm line 414. t/acme_alien_dontpanic2.t ....... Dubious, test returned 1 (wstat 256, 0x100) Failed 1/6 subtests t/acme_alien_dontpanic2__ffi.t .. ok
This error happened at test time for the Alien, but depending on your environment and Alien it might happen later and the actual diagnostic wording might vary.
This is usually because your XS or Alien tries to use dynamic libraries instead of static ones. Please consult the section about dynamic vs. static libraries in Alien::Build::Manual::AlienAuthor. The TL;DR is that Alien::Build::Plugin::Gather::IsolateDynamic might help. If you are the Alien author and the package you are alienizing doesn't have a static option you can use Alien::Role::Dino, but please note the extended set of caveats!
Alien::Build::Plugin::Fetch::HTTPTiny> 599 Internal Exception fetching http://dist.libuv.org/dist/v1.15.0 Alien::Build::Plugin::Fetch::HTTPTiny> exception: IO::Socket::SSL 1.42 must be installed for https support Alien::Build::Plugin::Fetch::HTTPTiny> exception: Net::SSLeay 1.49 must be installed for https support Alien::Build::Plugin::Fetch::HTTPTiny> An attempt at a SSL URL https was made, but your HTTP::Tiny does not appear to be able to use https. Alien::Build::Plugin::Fetch::HTTPTiny> Please see: https://metacpan.org/pod/Alien::Build::Manual::FAQ#599-Internal-Exception-errors-downloading-packages-from-the-internet error fetching http://dist.libuv.org/dist/v1.15.0: 599 Internal Exception at /Users/ollisg/.perlbrew/libs/perl-5.26.0@test1/lib/perl5/Alien/Build/Plugin/Fetch/HTTPTiny.pm line 68.
(Older versions of Alien::Build produced a less verbose more confusing version of this diagnostic).
TL;DR, instead of this:
share { start_url => 'http://example.org/dist'; ... };
do this:
share { start_url => 'https://example.org/dist'; };
If the website is going to redirect to a secure URL anyway.
The "599 Internal Exception" indicates an "internal" exception from HTTP::Tiny and is not a real HTTP status code or error. This could mean a number of different problems, but most frequently indicates that a SSL request was made without the required modules (Net::SSLeay and IO::Socket::SSL). Normally the Alien::Build::Plugin::Download::Negotiate and Alien::Build::Plugin::Fetch::HTTPTiny will make sure that the appropriate modules are added to your prerequisites for you if you specify a https
URL. Some websites allow an initial request from http
but then redirect to https
. If you can it is better to specify https
, if you cannot, then you can instead use the ssl
property on either of those two plugins.
This could just be because the alien requires a more recent package that what is provided by your operating system.
It could also be because you do not have the development package installed. Many Linux vendors in particular separate packages into runtime and development pages. On RPM based systems these development packages usually have -devel
suffix (example runtime: libffi
and development: libffi-devel
). On Debian based systems these development packages usually have a -dev
suffix (example runtime: libffi
and development: libffi-dev
).
If you get an error like this:
Alien::Build> install type share requested or detected, but network fetch is turned off Alien::Build> see see https://metacpan.org/pod/Alien::Build::Manual::FAQ#Network-fetch-is-turned-off
This is because your environment is setup not to install aliens that require the network. You can turn network fetch back on by setting ALIEN_INSTALL_NETWORK
to true, or by unsetting it. This environment variable is designed for environments that don't ever want to install aliens that require downloading source packages over the internet.
The idea of Alien is to download missing packages and build them automatically to make installing easier. Some people may not like this, or may even have security requirements that they not download random package over the internet (caveat, downloading random stuff off of CPAN may not be any safer, so make sure you audit all of the open source software that you use appropriately). Another reason you may not want to download from the internet is if you are packaging up an alien for an operating system vendor, which will always want to use the system version of a library. In that situation you don't want Alien::Build to go off and download something from the internet because the probe failed for some reason.
This is easy to take care of, simply set ALIEN_INSTALL_TYPE
to system
and a build from source code will never be attempted. On systems that do not provide system versions of the library or tool you will get an error, allowing you to install the library, and retry the alien install. You can also set the environment variable on just some aliens.
% export ALIEN_INSTALL_TYPE=system # for everyone % env ALIEN_INSTALL_TYPE=system cpanm -v Alien::libfoo
You can use the ALIEN_INSTALL_TYPE
environment variable. It will force either a share
or system
install depending on how it is set. For Travis-CI you can do something like this:
env: matrix: - ALIEN_INSTALL_TYPE=share - ALIEN_INSTALL_TYPE=system
For creating Alien::Base and Alien::Build based dist from Dist::Zilla you can use the dzil plugin Dist::Zilla::Plugin::AlienBuild.
If you see an error like this:
Cannot find either a share directory or a ConfigData module for Alien::libfoo. (Alien::libfoo loaded from lib/Alien/libfoo.pm) Please see https://metacpan.org/pod/distribution/Alien-Build/lib/Alien/Build/Manual/FAQ.pod#Cannot-find-either-a-share-directory-or-a-ConfigData-module Can't locate Alien/libfoo/ConfigData.pm in @INC (you may need to install the Alien::libfoo::ConfigData module) (@INC contains: ...)
it means you are trying to use an Alien that hasn't been properly installed. An Alien::Base based Alien needs to have either the share directory build during the install process or for older legacy Alien::Base::ModuleBuild based Aliens, a ConfigData module generated by Module::Build.
This usually happens if you try to use an Alien module from the lib directory as part of the Alien's distribution. You need to build the alien and use blib/lib
instead of lib
or install the alien and use the installed path.
It is also possible that your Alien installer is not set up correctly. Make sure your Makefile.PL
is using Alien::Build::MM correctly.
There are a number of forums available to people working on Alien, Alien::Base and Alien::Build modules:
#native
on irc.perl.orgThis is intended for native interfaces in general so is a good place for questions about Alien generally or Alien::Base and Alien::Build specifically.
The perl5-alien
google group is intended for Alien issues generally, including Alien::Base and Alien::Build.
If you have an issue with Alien::Build itself, then please open a support ticket on the project's GitHub issue tracker.
Other Alien::Build manuals.
Author: Graham Ollis <plicease@cpan.org>
Contributors:
Diab Jerius (DJERIUS)
Roy Storey (KIWIROY)
Ilya Pavlov
David Mertens (run4flat)
Mark Nunberg (mordy, mnunberg)
Christian Walde (Mithaldu)
Brian Wightman (MidLifeXis)
Zaki Mughal (zmughal)
mohawk (mohawk2, ETJ)
Vikas N Kumar (vikasnkumar)
Flavio Poletti (polettix)
Salvador Fandiño (salva)
Gianni Ceccarelli (dakkar)
Pavel Shaydo (zwon, trinitum)
Kang-min Liu (劉康民, gugod)
Nicholas Shipp (nshp)
Juan Julián Merelo Guervós (JJ)
Joel Berger (JBERGER)
Petr Písař (ppisar)
Lance Wicks (LANCEW)
Ahmad Fatoum (a3f, ATHREEF)
José Joaquín Atria (JJATRIA)
Duke Leto (LETO)
Shoichi Kaji (SKAJI)
Shawn Laffan (SLAFFAN)
Paul Evans (leonerd, PEVANS)
Håkon Hægland (hakonhagland, HAKONH)
nick nauwelaerts (INPHOBIA)
Florian Weimer
This software is copyright (c) 2011-2022 by Graham Ollis.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.