Debian-Perl

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README  view on Meta::CPAN

    standards), you'd probably flip that switch.

    This module aspires to be that switch. It wants you to be a Debian
    Maintainer for free. You may end up becoming a full fledged Debian guru
    one day, but for now you just want to see your code available to a whole
    new world, without having to know the details. As long as this switch
    doesn't tell you otherwise, you know that you did the all right things.

    This module is just a helping hand that automates all the standard best
    practices for you. It bends over backwards to help you get that module
    to Debian without having to know any more than is expected of a busy
    Perl module author, like you.

    Specifically it uses things like "dh-make-perl", "debuild", "pbuilder"
    and "lintian". If you've never heard of these things, that's ok. Until
    this week, neither did I. They all do a lot of work, and they aren't
    that hard to use, but the learning curve is quite high. As soon as
    Debian::Perl is stable and shipping all my CPAN modules to Debian, I
    plan to forget about them as quickly as possible. :)

USAGE

lib/Debian/Perl.pm  view on Meta::CPAN

probably flip that switch.

This module aspires to be that switch. It wants you to be a Debian Maintainer
for free. You may end up becoming a full fledged Debian guru one day, but for
now you just want to see your code available to a whole new world, without
having to know the details. As long as this switch doesn't tell you
otherwise, you know that you did the all right things.

This module is just a helping hand that automates all the standard best
practices for you. It bends over backwards to help you get that module to
Debian without having to know any more than is expected of a busy Perl module
author, like you.

Specifically it uses things like C<dh-make-perl>, C<debuild>, C<pbuilder> and
C<lintian>. If you've never heard of these things, that's ok. Until this week,
neither did I. They all do a lot of work, and they aren't that hard to use,
but the learning curve is quite high. As soon as Debian::Perl is stable and
shipping all my CPAN modules to Debian, I plan to forget about them as quickly
as possible. :)

=head1 USAGE

lib/Debian/Perl.pod  view on Meta::CPAN

probably flip that switch.

This module aspires to be that switch. It wants you to be a Debian Maintainer
for free. You may end up becoming a full fledged Debian guru one day, but for
now you just want to see your code available to a whole new world, without
having to know the details. As long as this switch doesn't tell you
otherwise, you know that you did the all right things.

This module is just a helping hand that automates all the standard best
practices for you. It bends over backwards to help you get that module to
Debian without having to know any more than is expected of a busy Perl module
author, like you.

Specifically it uses things like C<dh-make-perl>, C<debuild>, C<pbuilder> and
C<lintian>. If you've never heard of these things, that's ok. Until this week,
neither did I. They all do a lot of work, and they aren't that hard to use,
but the learning curve is quite high. As soon as Debian::Perl is stable and
shipping all my CPAN modules to Debian, I plan to forget about them as quickly
as possible. :)

=head1 USAGE



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