Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Mon, May 27 2019, Eric Wong wrote: > > Chris Mayo <aklhfex@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> git-send-email uses the TLS support in the Net::SMTP core module from > >> recent versions of Perl. Documenting the minimum version is complex > >> because of separate numbering for Perl (5.21.5~169), Net:SMTP (2.34) > >> and libnet (3.01). Version numbers from commit: > >> bfbfc9a953 ("send-email: Net::SMTP::starttls was introduced in v2.34", > >> 2017-05-31) > > > > No disagreement for removing the doc requirement for Net::SMTP::SSL. > > > > But core modules can be split out by OS packagers. For > > Fedora/RH-based systems, the trend tends to be increasing > > granularity and having more optional packages. > > > > So I think documenting Net::SMTP (and Net::Domain) as > > requirements would still be good, perhaps with a note stating > > they're typically installed with Perl. > > > > Fwiw, I recently ran into some issues where core modules such as > > Devel::Peek, Encode, and autodie were separate packages on CentOS 7. > > I've done enough git-send-email patching in anger for a year at least > with what's sitting in "next" so I'm not working on this, but just my > 0.02: > > I wonder if we shouldn't just be much more aggressive about version > requirements for something like git-send-email. > > Do we really have git users who want a new git *and* have an old perl > *and* aren't just getting it from an OS package where the module is > dual-life, so the distributor can just package up the newer version if > we were to require it? I started writing this earlier, but dropped my connection. And brian said the same thing I was going to say. If OS packagers were to start making Net::SMTP/Net::Domain optional (which I sorta expect...), we should make them optional, too (and add descriptive error messages and manpage updates). I have no need for Net::SMTP with sendemail.smtpserver=/usr/bin/msmtp > I.e. couldn't we just remove the fallback code added in 0ead000c3a > ("send-email: Net::SMTP::SSL is obsolete, use only when necessary", > 2017-03-24) and do away with this version detection (which b.t.w. should > just do a $obj->can("starttls") check instead). Too soon for the fallback code removal; maybe when CentOS 6 is EOL.... However, the "->can" check is nicer, yes. > For shipping a newer Net::SMTP we aren't talking about upgrading > /usr/bin/perl, just that module, and anyone who's packaging git > (e.g. Debian) who cares about minimal dependencies is likely splitting > out git-send-email.perl anyway. > > We could then just add some flag similar to NO_PERL_CPAN_FALLBACKS so > we'd error out by default unless these modules were there when git was > built, packagers could then still set some "no I can't be bothered with > send-email at all" or "no I can't be bothered with its SSL support", in > the latter case git-send-email would work except for the SSL parts. > > That would take care of the communication about module dependencies via > manpage problem since we'd error by default. When I package things I > much prefer that error mode to "parts of package silently don't work > because we check at runtime and I didn't religiously scour the > docs/release notes". I prefer we check options passed to the program and decide which dependencies to require based on that. The manpage and --help could be listing the modules required for certain option groups, even. > I wouldn't say the same thing about git-add--interactive.perl due to > more common its use is. I wish to see git-send-email (and vendor-neutral messaging in general) gain more traction. IMHO, send-email should reach the commonality of other parts of git. (*) if/when I find the time, I'd make "git svn find-rev" work w/o SVN::Perl, too.