# Copyright 1999-2011 Gentoo Foundation # Distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License v2 # $Header: /var/cvsroot/gentoo-x86/dev-perl/libwww-perl/libwww-perl-6.20.0.ebuild,v 1.1 2011/03/29 07:38:58 tove Exp $ EAPI=3 MODULE_AUTHOR=GAAS MODULE_VERSION=6.02 inherit perl-module DESCRIPTION="A collection of Perl Modules for the WWW" SLOT="0" KEYWORDS="~amd64 ~x86" IUSE="ssl" RDEPEND=" >=dev-perl/File-Listing-6.0.0 >=dev-perl/HTTP-Cookies-6.0.0 >=dev-perl/HTTP-Daemon-6.0.0 >=dev-perl/HTTP-Date-6.0.0 >=dev-perl/HTTP-Negotiate-6.0.0 >=dev-perl/HTTP-Message-6.0.0 >=dev-perl/LWP-MediaTypes-6.0.0 >=dev-perl/Net-HTTP-6.0.0 >=dev-perl/WWW-RobotRules-6.0.0 >=virtual/perl-Digest-MD5-2.12 dev-perl/Encode-Locale >=dev-perl/HTML-Parser-3.34 >=virtual/perl-MIME-Base64-2.12 virtual/perl-libnet >=dev-perl/URI-1.10 " DEPEND="${RDEPEND}" PDEPEND=" ssl? ( dev-perl/LWP-Protocol-https ) " src_install() { perl-module_src_install # Perform a check to see if the live filesystem is case-INsensitive # or not. If it is, the symlinks GET, POST and in particular HEAD # will collide with e.g. head from coreutils. While under Linux # having a case-INsensitive filesystem is really unusual, most Mac # OS X users are on it, and also Interix users deal with # case-INsensitivity since Windows is underneath. # bash should always be there, if we can find it in capitals, we're # on a case-INsensitive filesystem. if [[ ! -f ${EROOT}/BIN/BASH ]] ; then dosym /usr/bin/lwp-request /usr/bin/GET dosym /usr/bin/lwp-request /usr/bin/POST dosym /usr/bin/lwp-request /usr/bin/HEAD fi } #SRC_TEST=do