Looks very interesting. how do you plan on versioning? e.g. if it's based on perl-5.22.1, and you release cperl-5.22.1, but then need to make fixes etc, would it be cperl-5.22.1.1? Also is it stable/production ready? I've not had a chance to test it yet, but I've always liked the idea of optional types in perl, as I guess have a fair few people, otherwise they wouldn't be there in perl6. There's a
Get Ready to Party! Larry Wall If you are reading this and you didn't hear that Larry bit the bullet, rolled the dice, flipped the coin, shattered the space time continuum...breathe... then you really are going to get a shock. Larry has announced that the Perl 6 Developers will attempt to make a development release of Version 1.0 of Perl 6.0 in time for his 61st Birthday this year and a Version 1.
In December last year released the first version of Time::Moment. I don't foresee any major changes in Time::Moment 0.16 API, so in next release I'll remove the "early preview release" notice in the description. I have been using 0.16 in production two different deployments with great success, by removing DateTime from the ORM we have seen significantly reduced the memory usage and CPU usage and i
A couple months back Schwern handed me the keys to Test::Builder and friends. Initially I planned to try and knock out little bugs and simply maintain stability... That plan failed and I ended up spending a lot of time giving it a major overhaul for a feature Schwern and I agreed would be very nice. Result Streaming. This was further prompted by a minor change to a specific diagnostic message that
We've been doing a lot of work behind the scenes on MetaCPAN lately and we've come to the realization that we needed some private repository hosting. In the past, we've reached out to companies where we had contacts, and they've been happy to help. Last night, I wondered if anyone on Twitter would be able to help us out. That was at 11:17 PM EST. By 12:27 AM Johannes Plunien had forwarded my reque
Everyone knows all that command-line stuff is for weirdo geeks, right? ;-) So let's bring Data::Dumper kicking and screaming into the 21st century and give it a pretty GUI! Introducing Data::Dumper::GUI; a GUI for Data::Dumper. It allows you to view your data structures as a tree with collapsible nodes. Data::Dumper::GUI is built using Prima (a rather nice GUI toolkit designed specifically for Per
A lot of people use MySQL, and these days, asynchronous-style programming has really taken off. If you're involved in both of these camps, you may be wondering how to send a query to MySQL and have it inform your event loop when it's ready with the results of that query. A common solution is to use a thread or child process for each connection, and exchange data using IPC. However, if you're using
Hello, everyone. I'm happy to announce the first release of nginx-perl, version 1.1.11.1: http://zzzcpan.github.com/nginx-perl/ Nginx-perl provides asynchronous functions for original embedded perl to resolve domain names, connect to external hosts, exchange data and most importantly respond to HTTP clients. Code sample can be found on the web page above. Features full official nginx perl API a
It's that time again! Time when I hammer the last few nails in the coffin of a version of Perl. A few years back, I killed 5.004 and 5.005 in a stroke by uping the minimum version of Test::More, upon which 80% of CPAN relies, from 5.004 to 5.6.0. In a few months I'll be doing it again. The next major release of Test::More (aka Test::Builder1.5) will support 5.8.1 and up. ExtUtils::MakeMaker will p
YAPC::Asia 2010 is over. Well, it actually ended more than two weeks ago. It was fabulous as a whole. Larry's keynote was quite interesting. Jesse's was fabulous in many ways (including that nico-nico-ish twitter stream). Miyagawa-san's was moving. This year we also had a special session where Japanese perl mongers group leaders were invited to discuss issues and encourage people to join or start
Lately I've been playing around with the OTRS ticketing system on one of my servers. OTRS is written in Perl, and is typically run as a CGI, mod_perl or FastCGI app. Usually I'd map it as a FastCGI app on Nginx and start the 2 FastCGI servers via a init.d script (one for the customer helpdesk and another for the management console). But this time I wanted to give Plack a try. I'm new to Plack and
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