Right. And you realize that the code that you cite should never be called under normal circumstances. So "cpan -i mem" is only present to compensate for extraordinary failure conditions. The test code even tries to die in lack of pre-reqs, and dying doesn't work.

I tend to be a bit dense at times, but how does your advice about what I "should (or 'should never') do", help solve the problem so that such code would never have needed to have been written in the first place?


In reply to Re^2: cpan mod test probs by perl-diddler
in thread cpan mod test probs by perl-diddler

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