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inc/Module/Install.pm  view on Meta::CPAN






#####################################################################
# Common Utility Functions

sub _caller {
	my $depth = 0;
	my $call  = caller($depth);
	while ( $call eq __PACKAGE__ ) {
		$depth++;
		$call = caller($depth);
	}
	return $call;
}

# Done in evals to avoid confusing Perl::MinimumVersion
eval( $] >= 5.006 ? <<'END_NEW' : <<'END_OLD' ); die $@ if $@;
sub _read {
	local *FH;
	open( FH, '<', $_[0] ) or die "open($_[0]): $!";
	my $string = do { local $/; <FH> };

inc/Module/Install/Makefile.pm  view on Meta::CPAN

}

sub Makefile { $_[0] }

my %seen = ();

sub prompt {
	shift;

	# Infinite loop protection
	my @c = caller();
	if ( ++$seen{"$c[1]|$c[2]|$_[0]"} > 3 ) {
		die "Caught an potential prompt infinite loop ($c[1]|$c[2]|$_[0])";
	}

	# In automated testing or non-interactive session, always use defaults
	if ( ($ENV{AUTOMATED_TESTING} or -! -t STDIN) and ! $ENV{PERL_MM_USE_DEFAULT} ) {
		local $ENV{PERL_MM_USE_DEFAULT} = 1;
		goto &ExtUtils::MakeMaker::prompt;
	} else {
		goto &ExtUtils::MakeMaker::prompt;

inc/Test/More.pm  view on Meta::CPAN


#---- perlcritic exemptions. ----#

# We use a lot of subroutine prototypes
## no critic (Subroutines::ProhibitSubroutinePrototypes)

# Can't use Carp because it might cause use_ok() to accidentally succeed
# even though the module being used forgot to use Carp.  Yes, this
# actually happened.
sub _carp {
    my( $file, $line ) = ( caller(1) )[ 1, 2 ];
    return warn @_, " at $file line $line\n";
}

our $VERSION = '0.98';
$VERSION = eval $VERSION;    ## no critic (BuiltinFunctions::ProhibitStringyEval)

use Test::Builder::Module;
our @ISA    = qw(Test::Builder::Module);
our @EXPORT = qw(ok use_ok require_ok
  is isnt like unlike is_deeply



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