Home > Enterprise >  How to build DBD::mysql with DBI in a custom @INC?
How to build DBD::mysql with DBI in a custom @INC?

Time:10-05

I'm building DBI and DBD::mysql in a continuous integration build server. The build of DBI is successful, as seen in the excerpt of the build log below. It clearly installs DBI/DBD.pm in the correct location.

pushd DBI-1.643

perl Makefile.PL INSTALL_BASE=/data/pods/mysql-tools/mysql-tools/current

...
Installing /data/pods/mysql-tools/mysql-tools/current/lib/perl5/x86_64-linux-thread-multi/DBI/DBD.pm
...
Appending installation info to /data/pods/mysql-tools/mysql-tools/current/lib/perl5/x86_64-linux-thread-multi/perllocal.pod

But the next part of the build for DBD::mysql fails because it can't find the files installed by DBI.

pushd DBD-mysql-4.050

perl Makefile.PL INSTALL_BASE=/data/pods/mysql-tools/mysql-tools/current --ssl

Can't locate DBI/DBD.pm in @INC (@INC contains:
/usr/local/lib64/perl5 
/usr/local/share/perl5
/usr/lib64/perl5/vendor_perl
/usr/share/perl5/vendor_perl
/usr/lib64/perl5 
/usr/share/perl5 .) 
at Makefile.PL line 15.

You can see, MakeMaker for DBD::mysql isn't adding the install location to its @INC at all. It just has default directories.

Is there a way to pass an argument to MakeMaker to add the install directory to @INC? I suppose I could hard-code it, but that seems improper and hard to maintain. Is there a better way to automatically add INSTALL_BASE/lib/perl5/<arch> to @INC?

Environment:

  • CentOS 7 Linux
  • Perl 5.16.3

I would have preferred to use cpanm of course. But the CI build server is isolated from the internet because of my employer's security policy. No http proxying is allowed from CI.

CodePudding user response:

According to the documentation, INSTALL_BASE is used for telling make install where to put the installed module:

INSTALL_BASE

INSTALL_BASE can be passed into Makefile.PL to change where your module will be installed. INSTALL_BASE is more like what everyone else calls "prefix" than PREFIX is.

but it does not tell perl where to look for installed modules. To do that you can use the environment variable PERL5LIB, according to the documentation :

PERL5LIB

A list of directories in which to look for Perl library files before looking in the standard library. Any architecture-specific and version-specific directories, such as version/archname/, version/, or archname/ under the specified locations are automatically included if they exist, with this lookup done at interpreter startup time. In addition, any directories matching the entries in $Config{inc_version_list} are added.

  • Related