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I want to install, from source, Perl versions 5.005, v5.6, v5.8, v5.10

Right now I have 'v5.10.0' installed.

/opt/perl/bin
/opt/perl/html
/opt/perl/lib
/opt/perl/man
/opt/perl/lib/5.10.0
/opt/perl/lib/site_perl
/opt/perl/lib/site_perl/5.10.0


Will I have any problems if I install them all in /opt/perl?

Or should I split them up into their own, version specific, directories? Like /opt/perl-5.10.0/

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You should also take a look at this: stackoverflow.com/questions/398221/… – Manni Aug 17 at 18:48

5 Answers

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While installing into different directories is usually a better way to go, you can use the Configure switch -Dversiononly to use a single directory and include the version triplet in all pathnames (except man files, which you'd probably want to avoid installing altogether), giving you for example a perl5.10.0, cpan5.10.0, perldoc5.10.0, etc.

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vote up 1 vote down

I install all of my perls completely in their own directory so they don't share anything with any other perl. They all have their own bin and lib directories.

% ls -1 /usr/local/perls
perl-5.10.0
perl-5.10.1
perl-5.6.2
perl-5.8.8

Under each of those are their own bin, lib, etc.

% ls -1 /usr/local/perls/perl-5.10.0
bin
lib
man

Most of the common tools will figure out what to do if you call them with different perls:

/usr/local/perls/perl-5.10.0/bin/perl /usr/local/bin/cpan

However, you can take the perl you want to use the most and put it first in your path. I just make a symlink to /usr/local/bin/perl, but you can add directories to PATH as well.

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/usr/local/perls/bin could be a good place to put symlinks to the version specific Perls. Then I would only need to add that to PATH. – Brad Gilbert Aug 18 at 1:03
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You really should install the different versions into distinct directories.

When I want to try multiple versions of a package that doesn't exist as packages for my favorite Linux distribution, I use stow or xstow as a poor man's package manager:

  • Create a directory /usr/local/stow
  • Install individual packages into /usr/local/stow/$PACKAGE-$VERSION
  • map a "package" into /usr/local: stow -d /usr/local/stow $PACKAGE-$VERSION
  • deactivate a "package": stow -d /usr/local/stow -D $PACKAGE-$VERSION

stow does its work by creating and manipulating symlinks and it is able to detect conflicts.

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We develop with multiple versions of Perl here at work, and separate directories is the way to go. We've set up a small shell command that fixes up symlinks and environment variables so you can use the perl you want easily.

If you're worried about forgetting which perl is being used, you could have such a script add a version number to your shell prompt.

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vote up 6 vote down

Split them into their own version specific directories, and then symlink perl to the version you wish to use at the time. This is how having multiple JREs/JDKs installed works, so it would seem to make sense for Perl installations as well.

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