#!./miniperl -w use strict; if (@ARGV) { my $dir = shift; chdir $dir or die "Can't chdir '$dir': $!"; unshift @INC, 'lib'; } unshift @INC, ('dist/Cwd', 'dist/Cwd/lib'); require File::Spec::Functions; # To clarify, this isn't the entire suite of modules considered "toolchain" # It's not even all modules needed to build ext/ # It's just the source paths of the (minimum complete set of) modules in ext/ # needed to build the nonxs modules # After which, all nonxs modules are in lib, which was always sufficient to # allow miniperl to build everything else. # Term::ReadLine is not here for building but for allowing the debugger to # run under miniperl when nothing but miniperl will build :-(. my @toolchain = qw(cpan/AutoLoader/lib dist/Carp/lib dist/Cwd dist/Cwd/lib dist/ExtUtils-Command/lib dist/ExtUtils-Install/lib cpan/ExtUtils-MakeMaker/lib dist/ExtUtils-Manifest/lib cpan/File-Path/lib ext/re dist/Term-ReadLine/lib ); # Used only in ExtUtils::Liblist::Kid::_win32_ext() push @toolchain, 'cpan/Text-ParseWords/lib' if $^O eq 'MSWin32'; # lib must be last, as the the toolchain modules write themselves into it # as they build, and it's important that @INC order ensures that the partially # written files are always masked by the complete versions. my $inc = join ",\n ", map { "q\0$_\0" } (map {File::Spec::Functions::rel2abs($_)} @toolchain, 'lib'), '.'; # If any of the system's build tools are written in Perl, then this module # may well be loaded by a much older version than we are building. So keep it # as backwards compatible as is easy. print <<"EOT"; #!perl # We are miniperl, building extensions # Reset \@INC completely, adding the directories we need, and removing the # installed directories (which we don't need to read, and may confuse us) \@INC = ($inc); EOT