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deployment - How can I determine CPAN dependencies before I deploy a Perl project?

Does anyone have any suggestions for a good approach to finding all the CPAN dependencies that might have arisen in a bespoke development project. As tends to be the case your local development environment rarely matches your live one and as you build more and more projects you tend to build up a local library of installed modules. These then lead to you not necessarily noticing that your latest project has a requirement on a non-core module. As there is generally a requirement to package the entire project up for deployment to another group (in our case our operations team), it is important to know what modules should be included in the package.

Does anyone have any insights into the problem.

Thanks

Peter

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I've had this problem myself. Devel::Modlist (as suggested by this answer) takes a dynamic approach. It reports the modules that were actually loaded during a particular run of your script. This catches modules that are loaded by any means, but it may not catch conditional requirements. That is, if you have code like this:

if ($some_condition) { require Some::Module }

and $some_condition happens to be false, Devel::Modlist will not list Some::Module as a requirement.

I decided to use Module::ExtractUse instead. It does a static analysis, which means that it will always catch Some::Module in the above example. On the other hand, it can't do anything about code like:

my $module = "Other::Module";
eval "use $module;";

Of course, you could use both approaches and then combine the two lists.

Anyway, here's the solution I came up with:

#! /usr/bin/perl
#---------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright 2008 Christopher J. Madsen <perl at cjmweb.net>
#
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the same terms as Perl itself.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See either the
# GNU General Public License or the Artistic License for more details.
#
# Recursively collect dependencies of Perl scripts
#---------------------------------------------------------------------

use strict;
use warnings;
use File::Spec ();
use Module::CoreList ();
use Module::ExtractUse ();

my %need;
my $core = $Module::CoreList::version{'5.008'};

# These modules have lots of dependencies.  I don't need to see them now.
my %noRecurse = map { $_ => 1 } qw(
  Log::Log4perl
  XML::Twig
);

foreach my $file (@ARGV) {
  findDeps($file);
}

foreach my $module (sort keys %need) {
  print "  $module
";
}

#---------------------------------------------------------------------
sub findDeps
{
  my ($file) = @_;

  my $p = Module::ExtractUse->new;

  $p->extract_use($file);

  foreach my $module ($p->array) {
    next if exists $core->{$module};
    next if $module =~ /^5[._d]+/; # Ignore "use MIN-PERL-VERSION"
    next if $module =~ /$/;        # Run-time specified module

    if (++$need{$module} == 1 and not $noRecurse{$module}) {
      my $path = findModule($module);
      if ($path) { findDeps($path) }
      else       { warn "WARNING: Can't find $module
" }
    } # end if first use of $module
  } # end foreach $module used
} # end findDeps

#---------------------------------------------------------------------
sub findModule
{
  my ($module) = @_;

  $module =~ s!::|'!/!g;
  $module .= '.pm';

  foreach my $dir (@INC) {
    my $path = File::Spec->catfile($dir, $module);
    return $path if -f $path;
  }

  return;
} # end findModule

You'd run this like:

perl finddeps.pl scriptToCheck.pl otherScriptToCheck.pl

It prints a list of all non-core modules necessary to run the scripts listed. (Unless they do fancy tricks with module loading that prevent Module::ExtractUse from seeing them.)


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