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-rw-r--r--debian/patches/0700-getopt_mixed.patch894
-rw-r--r--debian/patches/series1
2 files changed, 895 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/debian/patches/0700-getopt_mixed.patch b/debian/patches/0700-getopt_mixed.patch
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ccdae8b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/debian/patches/0700-getopt_mixed.patch
@@ -0,0 +1,894 @@
+Description: replace deprecated dependency libgetopt-mixed-perl
+Author: Jörg Frings-Fürst <debian@jff-webhosting.net>
+Bug: https://github.com/chilts/cil/issues/16
+Bug-Debian: https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=829577
+Last-Update: 2016-11-20
+---
+This patch header follows DEP-3: http://dep.debian.net/deps/dep3/
+Index: trunk/lib/CIL/Mixed.pm
+===================================================================
+--- /dev/null
++++ trunk/lib/CIL/Mixed.pm
+@@ -0,0 +1,804 @@
++#---------------------------------------------------------------------
++package CIL::Mixed;
++#
++# Copyright 1995 Christopher J. Madsen
++#
++# Author: Christopher J. Madsen <perl@cjmweb.net>
++# Created: 1 Jan 1995
++#
++# 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.
++#
++# ABSTRACT: [OBSOLETE] getopt processing with both long and short options
++#---------------------------------------------------------------------
++
++require 5.000;
++use strict;
++use Carp;
++
++use vars qw(
++ @EXPORT @EXPORT_OK @ISA %options
++ $PERMUTE $REQUIRE_ORDER $RETURN_IN_ORDER $VERSION
++ $badOption $checkArg $checkType $floatRegexp $group $ignoreCase
++ $intRegexp $option $optionEnd $optionStart $order $typeChars
++);
++
++require Exporter;
++@ISA = qw(Exporter);
++@EXPORT = ();
++@EXPORT_OK = qw(abortMsg getOptions nextOption);
++
++#=====================================================================
++# Package Global Variables:
++
++BEGIN
++{
++ $VERSION = '1.12';
++
++ # The permissible settings for $order:
++ $REQUIRE_ORDER = 0;
++ $PERMUTE = 1;
++ $RETURN_IN_ORDER = 2;
++
++ # Regular expressions:
++ $intRegexp = '^[-+]?\d+$'; # Match an integer
++ $floatRegexp = '^[-+]?(\d*\.?\d+|\d+\.)$'; # Match a real number
++ $typeChars = 'sif'; # Match type characters
++} # end BEGIN
++
++#=====================================================================
++# Subroutines:
++#---------------------------------------------------------------------
++# Initialize the option processor:
++#
++# You should set any customization variables *after* calling init.
++#
++# For a description of option declarations, see the documentation at
++# the end of this file.
++#
++# Input:
++# List of option declarations (separated by whitespace)
++# If the first argument is entirely non-alphanumeric characters
++# with no whitespace, it is the characters that start options.
++
++sub init
++{
++ undef %options;
++ my($opt,$type);
++
++ $ignoreCase = 1; # Ignore case by default
++ $optionStart = "-"; # Dash is the default option starter
++
++ # If the first argument is entirely non-alphanumeric characters
++ # with no whitespace, it is the desired value for $optionStart:
++ $optionStart = shift @_ if $_[0] =~ /^[^a-z0-9\s]+$/i;
++
++ foreach $group (@_) {
++ # Ignore case unless there are upper-case options:
++ $ignoreCase = 0 if $group =~ /[A-Z]/;
++ foreach $option (split(/\s+/,$group)) {
++ croak "Invalid option declaration `$option'"
++ unless $option =~ /^([^=:>]+)([=:][$typeChars]|>[^=:>]+)?$/o;
++ $opt = $1;
++ $type = $2 || "";
++ if ($type =~ /^>(.*)$/) {
++ $type = $1;
++ croak "Invalid synonym `$option'"
++ if (not defined $options{$type}
++ or $options{$type} =~ /^[^:=]/);
++ } # end if synonym
++ $options{$opt} = $type;
++ } # end foreach option
++ } # end foreach group
++
++ # Handle POSIX compliancy:
++ if (defined $ENV{"POSIXLY_CORRECT"}) {
++ $order = $REQUIRE_ORDER;
++ } else {
++ $order = $PERMUTE;
++ }
++
++ $optionEnd = 0;
++ $badOption = \&badOption;
++ $checkArg = \&checkArg;
++} # end init
++
++#---------------------------------------------------------------------
++# Clean up when we're done:
++#
++# This just releases the memory used by the %options hash.
++#
++# If 'help' was defined as an option, a new hash with just 'help' is
++# created, in case the program calls abortMsg.
++
++sub cleanup
++{
++ my $help = defined($options{'help'});
++ undef %options;
++ $options{'help'} = "" if $help;
++} # end cleanup
++
++#---------------------------------------------------------------------
++# Abort program with message:
++#
++# Prints program name and arguments to STDERR
++# If --help is an option, prints message saying 'Try --help'
++# Exits with code 1
++
++sub abortMsg
++{
++ my $name = $0;
++ $name =~ s|^.+[\\/]||; # Remove any directories from name
++ print STDERR $name,": ",@_,"\n";
++ print STDERR "Try `$name --help' for more information.\n"
++ if defined $options{"help"};
++ exit 1;
++} # end abortMsg
++
++#---------------------------------------------------------------------
++# Standard function for handling bad options:
++#
++# Prints an error message and exits.
++#
++# You can override this by setting $Getopt::Mixed::badOption to a
++# function reference.
++#
++# Input:
++# Index into @ARGV
++# The option that caused the error
++# An optional string describing the problem
++# Currently, this can be
++# undef The option was not recognized
++# 'ambiguous' The option could match several long options
++#
++# Note:
++# The option has already been removed from @ARGV. To put it back,
++# you can say:
++# splice(@ARGV,$_[0],0,$_[1]);
++#
++# If your function returns, it should return whatever you want
++# nextOption to return.
++
++sub badOption
++{
++ my ($index, $option, $problem) = @_;
++
++ $problem = 'unrecognized' unless $problem;
++
++ abortMsg("$problem option `$option'");
++} # end badOption
++
++#---------------------------------------------------------------------
++# Make sure we have the proper argument for this option:
++#
++# You can override this by setting $Getopt::Mixed::checkArg to a
++# function reference.
++#
++# Input:
++# $i: Position of argument in @ARGV
++# $value: The text appended to the option (undef if no text)
++# $option: The pretty name of the option (as the user typed it)
++# $type: The type of the option
++#
++# Returns:
++# The value of the option's argument
++
++sub checkArg
++{
++ my ($i,$value,$option,$type) = @_;
++
++ abortMsg("option `$option' does not take an argument")
++ if (not $type and defined $value);
++
++ if ($type =~ /^=/) {
++ # An argument is required for this option:
++ $value = splice(@ARGV,$i,1) unless defined $value;
++ abortMsg("option `$option' requires an argument")
++ unless defined $value;
++ }
++
++ if ($type =~ /i$/) {
++ abortMsg("option `$option' requires integer argument")
++ if (defined $value and $value !~ /$intRegexp/o);
++ }
++ elsif ($type =~ /f$/) {
++ abortMsg("option `$option' requires numeric argument")
++ if (defined $value and $value !~ /$floatRegexp/o);
++ }
++ elsif ($type =~ /^[=:]/ and ref($checkType)) {
++ $value = &$checkType($i,$value,$option,$type);
++ }
++
++ $value = "" if not defined $value and $type =~ /^:/;
++
++ $value;
++} # end checkArg
++
++#---------------------------------------------------------------------
++# Find a match for an incomplete long option:
++#
++# Input:
++# The option text to match
++#
++# Returns:
++# The option that matched, or
++# undef, if no option matched, or
++# (undef, 'ambiguous'), if multiple options matched
++
++sub findMatch
++{
++ my $opt = shift;
++
++ $opt =~ s/-/[^-]*-/g;
++ $opt .= ".*";
++
++ my @matches = grep(/^$opt$/, keys %options);
++
++ return undef if $#matches < 0;
++ return $matches[0] if $#matches == 0;
++
++ $opt = $matches[0];
++ $opt = $options{$opt} if $options{$opt} =~ /^[^=:]/;
++
++ foreach (@matches) {
++ return (undef, 'ambiguous')
++ unless $_ eq $opt or $options{$_} eq $opt;
++ }
++
++ $opt;
++} # end findMatch
++
++#---------------------------------------------------------------------
++# Return the next option:
++#
++# Returns a list of 3 elements: (OPTION, VALUE, PRETTYNAME), where
++# OPTION is the name of the option,
++# VALUE is its argument, and
++# PRETTYNAME is the option as the user entered it.
++# Returns the null list if there are no more options to process
++#
++# If $order is $RETURN_IN_ORDER, and this is a normal argument (not an
++# option), OPTION will be the null string, VALUE will be the argument,
++# and PRETTYNAME will be undefined.
++
++sub nextOption
++{
++ return () if $#ARGV < 0; # No more arguments
++
++ if ($optionEnd) {
++ # We aren't processing any more options:
++ return ("", shift @ARGV) if $order == $RETURN_IN_ORDER;
++ return ();
++ }
++
++ # Find the next option:
++ my $i = 0;
++ while (length($ARGV[$i]) < 2 or
++ index($optionStart,substr($ARGV[$i],0,1)) < 0) {
++ return () if $order == $REQUIRE_ORDER;
++ return ("", shift @ARGV) if $order == $RETURN_IN_ORDER;
++ ++$i;
++ return () if $i > $#ARGV;
++ } # end while
++
++ # Process the option:
++ my($option,$opt,$value,$optType,$prettyOpt);
++ $option = $ARGV[$i];
++ if (substr($option,0,1) eq substr($option,1,1)) {
++ # If the option start character is repeated, it's a long option:
++ splice @ARGV,$i,1;
++ if (length($option) == 2) {
++ # A double dash by itself marks the end of the options:
++ $optionEnd = 1; # Don't process any more options
++ return nextOption();
++ } # end if bare double dash
++ $opt = substr($option,2);
++ if ($opt =~ /^([^=]+)=(.*)$/) {
++ $opt = $1;
++ $value = $2;
++ } # end if option is followed by value
++ $opt =~ tr/A-Z/a-z/ if $ignoreCase;
++ $prettyOpt = substr($option,0,2) . $opt;
++ my $problem;
++ ($opt, $problem) = findMatch($opt)
++ unless defined $options{$opt} and length($opt) > 1;
++ return &$badOption($i,$option,$problem) unless $opt;
++ $optType = $options{$opt};
++ if ($optType =~ /^[^:=]/) {
++ $opt = $optType;
++ $optType = $options{$opt};
++ }
++ $value = &$checkArg($i,$value,$prettyOpt,$optType);
++ } # end if long option
++ else {
++ # It's a short option:
++ $opt = substr($option,1,1);
++ $opt =~ tr/A-Z/a-z/ if $ignoreCase;
++ return &$badOption($i,$option) unless defined $options{$opt};
++ $optType = $options{$opt};
++ if ($optType =~ /^[^:=]/) {
++ $opt = $optType;
++ $optType = $options{$opt};
++ }
++ if (length($option) == 2 or $optType) {
++ # This is the last option in the group, so remove the group:
++ splice(@ARGV,$i,1);
++ } else {
++ # Just remove this option from the group:
++ substr($ARGV[$i],1,1) = "";
++ }
++ if ($optType) {
++ $value = (length($option) > 2) ? substr($option,2) : undef;
++ $value =~ s/^=// if $value; # Allow either -d3 or -d=3
++ } # end if option takes an argument
++ $prettyOpt = substr($option,0,2);
++ $value = &$checkArg($i,$value,$prettyOpt,$optType);
++ } # end else short option
++ ($opt,$value,$prettyOpt);
++} # end nextOption
++
++#---------------------------------------------------------------------
++# Get options:
++#
++# Input:
++# The same as for init()
++# If no parameters are supplied, init() is NOT called. This allows
++# you to call init() yourself and then change the configuration
++# variables.
++#
++# Output Variables:
++# Sets $opt_X for each `-X' option encountered.
++#
++# Note that if --apple is a synonym for -a, then --apple will cause
++# $opt_a to be set, not $opt_apple.
++
++sub getOptions
++{
++ &init if $#_ >= 0; # Pass arguments (if any) on to init
++
++ # If you want to use $RETURN_IN_ORDER, you have to call
++ # nextOption yourself; getOptions doesn't support it:
++ $order = $PERMUTE if $order == $RETURN_IN_ORDER;
++
++ my ($option,$value,$package);
++
++ $package = (caller)[0];
++
++ while (($option, $value) = nextOption()) {
++ $option =~ s/\W/_/g; # Make a legal Perl identifier
++ $value = 1 unless defined $value;
++ my $code = "\$" . $package . "::opt_$option = \$value;";
++ $code =~ /(.+)/; # Untaint it
++ eval $1;
++ } # end while
++
++ cleanup();
++} # end getOptions
++
++#=====================================================================
++# Package return value:
++
++$VERSION;
++
++__END__
++
++=head1 NAME
++
++Getopt::Mixed - [OBSOLETE] getopt processing with both long and short options
++
++=head1 VERSION
++
++This document describes version 1.12 of
++Getopt::Mixed, released February 8, 2014.
++
++=head1 SYNOPSIS
++
++ use Getopt::Mixed;
++ Getopt::Mixed::getOptions(...option-descriptions...);
++ ...examine $opt_* variables...
++
++or
++
++ use Getopt::Mixed "nextOption";
++ Getopt::Mixed::init(...option-descriptions...);
++ while (($option, $value) = nextOption()) {
++ ...process option...
++ }
++ Getopt::Mixed::cleanup();
++
++=head1 DESCRIPTION
++
++B<This module is obsolete.>
++
++This package was my response to the standard modules Getopt::Std and
++Getopt::Long. Std doesn't support long options, and Long
++didn't support short options. I wanted both, since long options are
++easier to remember and short options are faster to type.
++
++However, years ago Getopt::Long was changed to support short
++options as well, and it has the huge advantage of being part of the
++standard Perl distribution. So, Getopt::Mixed is now effectively
++obsolete. I don't intend to make any more changes, but I'm leaving it
++available for people who have code that already uses it. For new
++modules, I recommend using Getopt::Long like this:
++
++ use Getopt::Long 2.17; # Released with Perl 5.005
++ Getopt::Long::Configure(qw(bundling no_getopt_compat));
++ GetOptions(...option-descriptions...);
++
++This package was intended to be the "Getopt-to-end-all-Getop's". It
++combines (I hope) flexibility and simplicity. It supports both short
++options (introduced by C<->) and long options (introduced by C<-->).
++Short options which do not take an argument can be grouped together.
++Short options which do take an argument must be the last option in
++their group, because everything following the option will be
++considered to be its argument.
++
++There are two methods for using Getopt::Mixed: the simple method and
++the flexible method. Both methods use the same format for option
++descriptions.
++
++=head2 Option Descriptions
++
++The option-description arguments required by C<init> and C<getOptions>
++are strings composed of individual option descriptions. Several
++option descriptions can appear in the same string if they are
++separated by whitespace.
++
++Each description consists of the option name and an optional trailing
++argument specifier. Option names may consist of any characters but
++whitespace, C<=>, C<:>, and C<E<gt>>.
++
++Values for argument specifiers are:
++
++ <none> option does not take an argument
++ =s :s option takes a mandatory (=) or optional (:) string argument
++ =i :i option takes a mandatory (=) or optional (:) integer argument
++ =f :f option takes a mandatory (=) or optional (:) real number argument
++ >new option is a synonym for option `new'
++
++The C<E<gt>> specifier is not really an argument specifier. It
++defines an option as being a synonym for another option. For example,
++"a=i apples>a" would define B<-a> as an option that requires an
++integer argument and B<--apples> as a synonym for B<-a>. Only one
++level of synonyms is supported, and the root option must be listed
++first. For example, "apples>a a=i" and "a=i apples>a oranges>apples"
++are illegal; use "a=i apples>a oranges>a" if that's what you want.
++
++For example, in the option description:
++ "a b=i c:s apple baker>b charlie:s"
++ -a and --apple do not take arguments
++ -b takes a mandatory integer argument
++ --baker is a synonym for -b
++ -c and --charlie take an optional string argument
++
++If the first argument to C<init> or C<getOptions> is entirely
++non-alphanumeric characters with no whitespace, it represents the
++characters which can begin options.
++
++=head2 User Interface
++
++From the user's perspective, short options are introduced by a dash
++(C<->) and long options are introduced by a double dash (C<-->).
++Short options may be combined ("-a -b" can be written "-ab"), but an
++option that takes an argument must be the last one in its group,
++because anything following it is considered part of the argument. A
++double dash by itself marks the end of the options; all arguments
++following it are treated as normal arguments, not options. A single
++dash by itself is treated as a normal argument, I<not> an option.
++
++Long options may be abbreviated. An option B<--all-the-time> could be
++abbreviated B<--all>, B<--a--tim>, or even B<--a>. Note that B<--time>
++would not work; the abbreviation must start at the beginning of the
++option name. If an abbreviation is ambiguous, an error message will
++be printed.
++
++In the following examples, B<-i> and B<--int> take integer arguments,
++B<-f> and B<--float> take floating point arguments, and B<-s> and
++B<--string> take string arguments. All other options do not take an
++argument.
++
++ -i24 -f24.5 -sHello
++ -i=24 --int=-27 -f=24.5 --float=0.27 -s=Hello --string=Hello
++
++If the argument is required, it can also be separated by whitespace:
++
++ -i 24 --int -27 -f 24.5 --float 0.27 -s Hello --string Hello
++
++Note that if the option is followed by C<=>, whatever follows the C<=>
++I<is> the argument, even if it's the null string. In the example
++
++ -i= 24 -f= 24.5 -s= Hello
++
++B<-i> and B<-f> will cause an error, because the null string is not a
++number, but B<-s> is perfectly legal; its argument is the null string,
++not "Hello".
++
++Remember that optional arguments I<cannot> be separated from the
++option by whitespace.
++
++=head2 The Simple Method
++
++The simple method is
++
++ use Getopt::Mixed;
++ Getopt::Mixed::getOptions(...option-descriptions...);
++
++You then examine the C<$opt_*> variables to find out what options were
++specified and the C<@ARGV> array to see what arguments are left.
++
++If B<-a> is an option that doesn't take an argument, then C<$opt_a>
++will be set to 1 if the option is present, or left undefined if the
++option is not present.
++
++If B<-b> is an option that takes an argument, then C<$opt_b> will be
++set to the value of the argument if the option is present, or left
++undefined if the option is not present. If the argument is optional
++but not supplied, C<$opt_b> will be set to the null string.
++
++Note that even if you specify that an option I<requires> a string
++argument, you can still get the null string (if the user specifically
++enters it). If the option requires a numeric argument, you will never
++get the null string (because it isn't a number).
++
++When converting the option name to a Perl identifier, any non-word
++characters in the name will be converted to underscores (C<_>).
++
++If the same option occurs more than once, only the last occurrence
++will be recorded. If that's not acceptable, you'll have to use the
++flexible method instead.
++
++=head2 The Flexible Method
++
++The flexible method is
++
++ use Getopt::Mixed "nextOption";
++ Getopt::Mixed::init(...option-descriptions...);
++ while (($option, $value, $pretty) = nextOption()) {
++ ...process option...
++ }
++ Getopt::Mixed::cleanup();
++
++This lets you process arguments one at a time. You can then handle
++repeated options any way you want to. It also lets you see option
++names with non-alphanumeric characters without any translation. This
++is also the only method that lets you find out what order the options
++and other arguments were in.
++
++First, you call Getopt::Mixed::init with the option descriptions.
++Then, you keep calling nextOption until it returns an empty list.
++Finally, you call Getopt::Mixed::cleanup when you're done. The
++remaining (non-option) arguments will be found in C<@ARGV>.
++
++Each call to nextOption returns a list of the next option, its value,
++and the option as the user typed it. The value will be undefined if
++the option does not take an argument. The option is stripped of its
++starter (e.g., you get "a" and "foo", not "-a" or "--foo"). If you
++want to print an error message, use the third element, which does
++include the option starter.
++
++=head1 OTHER FUNCTIONS
++
++Getopt::Mixed provides one other function you can use. C<abortMsg>
++prints its arguments on STDERR, plus your program's name and a
++newline. It then exits with status 1. For example, if F<foo.pl>
++calls C<abortMsg> like this:
++
++ Getopt::Mixed::abortMsg("Error");
++
++The output will be:
++
++ foo.pl: Error
++
++=head1 CUSTOMIZATION
++
++There are several customization variables you can set. All of these
++variables should be set I<after> calling Getopt::Mixed::init and
++I<before> calling nextOption.
++
++If you set any of these variables, you I<must> check the version
++number first. The easiest way to do this is like this:
++
++ use Getopt::Mixed 1.006;
++
++If you are using the simple method, and you want to set these
++variables, you'll need to call init before calling getOptions, like
++this:
++
++ use Getopt::Mixed 1.006;
++ Getopt::Mixed::init(...option-descriptions...);
++ ...set configuration variables...
++ Getopt::Mixed::getOptions(); # IMPORTANT: no parameters
++
++=over 4
++
++=item $order
++
++$order can be set to $REQUIRE_ORDER, $PERMUTE, or $RETURN_IN_ORDER.
++The default is $REQUIRE_ORDER if the environment variable
++POSIXLY_CORRECT has been set, $PERMUTE otherwise.
++
++$REQUIRE_ORDER means that no options can follow the first argument
++which isn't an option.
++
++$PERMUTE means that all options are treated as if they preceded all
++other arguments.
++
++$RETURN_IN_ORDER means that all arguments maintain their ordering.
++When nextOption is called, and the next argument is not an option, it
++returns the null string as the option and the argument as the value.
++nextOption never returns the null list until all the arguments have
++been processed.
++
++=item $ignoreCase
++
++Ignore case when matching options. Default is 1 unless the option
++descriptions contain an upper-case letter.
++
++=item $optionStart
++
++A string of characters that can start options. Default is "-".
++
++=item $badOption
++
++A reference to a function that is called when an unrecognized option
++is encountered. The function receives three arguments. C<$_[0]> is the
++position in C<@ARGV> where the option came from. C<$_[1]> is the option as
++the user typed it (including the option start character). C<$_[2]> is
++either undef or a string describing the reason the option was not
++recognized (Currently, the only possible value is 'ambiguous', for a
++long option with several possible matches). The option has already
++been removed from C<@ARGV>. To put it back, you can say:
++
++ splice(@ARGV,$_[0],0,$_[1]);
++
++The function can do anything you want to C<@ARGV>. It should return
++whatever you want nextOption to return.
++
++The default is a function that prints an error message and exits the
++program.
++
++=item $checkArg
++
++A reference to a function that is called to make sure the argument
++type is correct. The function receives four arguments. C<$_[0]> is the
++position in C<@ARGV> where the option came from. C<$_[1]> is the text
++following the option, or undefined if there was no text following the
++option. C<$_[2]> is the name of the option as the user typed it
++(including the option start character), suitable for error messages.
++C<$_[3]> is the argument type specifier.
++
++The function can do anything you want to C<@ARGV>. It should return
++the value for this option.
++
++The default is a function that prints an error message and exits the
++program if the argument is not the right type for the option. You can
++also adjust the behavior of the default function by changing
++C<$intRegexp> or C<$floatRegexp>.
++
++=item $intRegexp
++
++A regular expression that matches an integer. Default is
++'^[-+]?\d+$', which matches a string of digits preceded by an
++optional sign. Unlike the other configuration variables, this cannot
++be changed after nextOption is called, because the pattern is compiled
++only once.
++
++=item $floatRegexp
++
++A regular expression that matches a floating point number. Default is
++'^[-+]?(\d*\.?\d+|\d+\.)$', which matches the following formats:
++"123", "123.", "123.45", and ".123" (plus an optional sign). It does
++not match exponential notation. Unlike the other configuration
++variables, this cannot be changed after nextOption is called, because
++the pattern is compiled only once.
++
++=item $typeChars
++
++A string of the characters which are legal argument types. The
++default is 'sif', for String, Integer, and Floating point arguments.
++The string should consist only of letters. Upper case letters are
++discouraged, since this will hamper the case-folding of options. If
++you change this, you should set $checkType to a function that will
++check arguments of your new type. Unlike the other configuration
++variables, this must be set I<before> calling init(), and cannot be
++changed afterwards.
++
++=item $checkType
++
++If you add new types to C<$typeChars>, you should set this to a function
++which will check arguments of the new types.
++
++=back
++
++=head1 SEE ALSO
++
++L<Getopt::Long>
++
++=head1 CONFIGURATION AND ENVIRONMENT
++
++Getopt::Mixed requires no configuration files or environment variables.
++
++=head1 INCOMPATIBILITIES
++
++None reported.
++
++=head1 BUGS AND LIMITATIONS
++
++=over 4
++
++=item *
++
++This document should be expanded.
++
++=item *
++
++A long option must be at least two characters long. Sorry.
++
++=item *
++
++The C<!> argument specifier of Getopt::Long is not supported, but you
++could have options B<--foo> and B<--nofoo> and then do something like:
++
++ $opt_foo = 0 if $opt_nofoo;
++
++=item *
++
++The C<@> argument specifier of Getopt::Long is not supported. If you
++want your values pushed into an array, you'll have to use nextOption
++and do it yourself.
++
++=back
++
++=head1 AUTHOR
++
++Christopher J. Madsen S<C<< <perl AT cjmweb.net> >>>
++
++Please report any bugs or feature requests
++to S<C<< <bug-Getopt-Mixed AT rt.cpan.org> >>>
++or through the web interface at
++L<< http://rt.cpan.org/Public/Bug/Report.html?Queue=Getopt-Mixed >>.
++
++You can follow or contribute to Getopt::Mixed's development at
++L<< http://github.com/madsen/getopt-mixed >>.
++
++Thanks are also due to Andreas Koenig for helping Getopt::Mixed
++conform to the standards for Perl modules and for answering a bunch of
++questions. Any remaining deficiencies are my fault.
++
++=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
++
++This software is copyright (c) 1995 by Christopher J. Madsen.
++
++This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
++the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
++
++=head1 DISCLAIMER OF WARRANTY
++
++BECAUSE THIS SOFTWARE IS LICENSED FREE OF CHARGE, THERE IS NO WARRANTY
++FOR THE SOFTWARE, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW. EXCEPT WHEN
++OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER PARTIES
++PROVIDE THE SOFTWARE "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER
++EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED
++WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. THE
++ENTIRE RISK AS TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE SOFTWARE IS WITH
++YOU. SHOULD THE SOFTWARE PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME THE COST OF ALL
++NECESSARY SERVICING, REPAIR, OR CORRECTION.
++
++IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WRITING
++WILL ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDER, OR ANY OTHER PARTY WHO MAY MODIFY AND/OR
++REDISTRIBUTE THE SOFTWARE AS PERMITTED BY THE ABOVE LICENSE, BE
++LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES, INCLUDING ANY GENERAL, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL,
++OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE
++THE SOFTWARE (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING
++RENDERED INACCURATE OR LOSSES SUSTAINED BY YOU OR THIRD PARTIES OR A
++FAILURE OF THE SOFTWARE TO OPERATE WITH ANY OTHER SOFTWARE), EVEN IF
++SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
++SUCH DAMAGES.
++
++=cut
+Index: trunk/Build.PL
+===================================================================
+--- trunk.orig/Build.PL
++++ trunk/Build.PL
+@@ -21,7 +21,6 @@ my $builder = Module::Build->new(
+ 'File::Spec' => 0,
+ 'File::Temp' => 0,
+ 'File::Touch' => 0,
+- 'Getopt::Mixed' => 0,
+ 'MIME::Base64' => 0,
+ 'Test::More' => 0,
+ },
+Index: trunk/MANIFEST
+===================================================================
+--- trunk.orig/MANIFEST
++++ trunk/MANIFEST
+@@ -10,6 +10,7 @@ lib/CIL/Base.pm
+ lib/CIL/Comment.pm
+ lib/CIL/Issue.pm
+ lib/CIL/Utils.pm
++lib/CIL/Mixed.pm
+ MANIFEST This list of files
+ README
+ t/00_files.t
+Index: trunk/bin/cil
+===================================================================
+--- trunk.orig/bin/cil
++++ trunk/bin/cil
+@@ -20,7 +20,7 @@
+ use strict;
+ use warnings;
+
+-use Getopt::Mixed "nextOption";
++#use Getopt::Mixed "nextOption";
+ use File::Touch;
+ use File::Glob ':glob';
+ use File::Basename;
+@@ -33,6 +33,7 @@ use CIL::Issue;
+ use CIL::Comment;
+ use CIL::Attachment;
+ use CIL::Utils;
++use CIL::Mixed "nextOption";
+
+ ## ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ # constants
+@@ -100,12 +101,12 @@ my %BOOLEAN_ARGS = (
+ }
+
+ # make sure that the command given is valid
+- Getopt::Mixed::abortMsg('specify a command')
++ CIL::Mixed::abortMsg('specify a command')
+ if @ARGV == 0;
+
+ my $command_name = shift @ARGV;
+ my( $command ) = grep { $command_name eq $_->name } CIL->commands
+- or Getopt::Mixed::abortMsg("'$command_name' is not a valid cil command.");
++ or CIL::Mixed::abortMsg("'$command_name' is not a valid cil command.");
+
+ # make a new $cil object
+ my $cil = CIL->new();
+@@ -136,7 +137,7 @@ sub get_options {
+ my ($in_opts, $booleans) = @_;
+
+ my $args = {};
+- Getopt::Mixed::init( @$in_opts );
++ CIL::Mixed::init( @$in_opts );
+ while( my($opt, $val) = nextOption() ) {
+ # if boolean, keep a count of how many there is only
+ if ( exists $booleans->{$opt} ) {
+@@ -154,7 +155,7 @@ sub get_options {
+ $args->{$opt} = $val;
+ }
+ }
+- Getopt::Mixed::cleanup();
++ CIL::Mixed::cleanup();
+ return $args;
+ }
+
diff --git a/debian/patches/series b/debian/patches/series
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a7b46c7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/debian/patches/series
@@ -0,0 +1 @@
+0700-getopt_mixed.patch