NAME

Alien::Build::Plugin::Download::Negotiate - Download negotiation plugin

VERSION

version 2.84

SYNOPSIS

use alienfile;
share {
  start_url 'http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/make';
  plugin 'Download' => (
    filter => qr/^make-.*\.tar\.gz$/,
    version => qr/([0-9\.]+)/,
  );
};

DESCRIPTION

This is a negotiator plugin for downloading packages from the internet. This plugin picks the best Fetch, Decode and Prefer plugins to do the actual work. Which plugins are picked depend on the properties you specify, your platform and environment. It is usually preferable to use a negotiator plugin rather than the Fetch, Decode and Prefer plugins directly from your alienfile.

PROPERTIES

url

[DEPRECATED] use start_url instead.

The Initial URL for your package. This may be a directory listing (either in HTML or ftp listing format) or the final tarball intended to be downloaded.

filter

This is a regular expression that lets you filter out files that you do not want to consider downloading. For example, if the directory listing contained tarballs and readme files like this:

foo-1.0.0.tar.gz
foo-1.0.0.readme

You could specify a filter of qr/\.tar\.gz$/ to make sure only tarballs are considered for download.

version

Regular expression to parse out the version from a filename. The regular expression should store the result in $1.

Note: if you provide a version property, this plugin will assume that you will be downloading an initial index to select package downloads from. Depending on the protocol (and typically this is the case for http and HTML) that may bring in additional dependencies. If start_url points to a tarball or other archive directly (without needing to do through an index selection process), it is recommended that you not specify this property.

ssl

If your initial URL does not need SSL, but you know ahead of time that a subsequent request will need it (for example, if your directory listing is on http, but includes links to https URLs), then you can set this property to true, and the appropriate Perl SSL modules will be loaded.

passive

If using FTP, attempt a passive mode transfer first, before trying an active mode transfer.

bootstrap_ssl

If set to true, then the download negotiator will avoid using plugins that have a dependency on Net::SSLeay, or other Perl SSL modules. The intent for this option is to allow OpenSSL to be alienized and be a useful optional dependency for Net::SSLeay.

The implementation may improve over time, but as of this writing, this option relies on you having a working curl or wget with SSL support in your PATH.

prefer

How to sort candidates for selection. This should be one of three types of values:

code reference

This will be used as the prefer hook.

true value

Use Alien::Build::Plugin::Prefer::SortVersions.

false value

Don't set any preference at all. A hook must be installed, or another prefer plugin specified.

decoder

Override the detected decoder.

METHODS

pick

my($fetch, @decoders) = $plugin->pick;

Returns the fetch plugin and any optional decoders that should be used.

SEE ALSO

Alien::Build::Plugin::Prefer::BadVersion, Alien::Build::Plugin::Prefer::GoodVersion

Alien::Build, alienfile, Alien::Build::MM, Alien

AUTHOR

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

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

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.