eg, it could be 'ccache cc'

FWIW, the C/Makefile.PL in Inline-0.45 seems to do a pretty good job of finding the C compiler (albeit rather kludgily).
I don't think it detects 'ccache cc', however.
Here's a C/Makefile.PL that should also detect 'ccache cc', though it has yet to be run by the intrepid cpan testers:
use strict; use ExtUtils::MakeMaker; use Config; use File::Spec; my ($cc, $exe) = @Config{'cc', '_exe'}; $cc =~ s/\s+-.+$//; #remove possible trailing options my $comp = (split /\./, $cc)[0]; my $found = 0; my $delim = $Config::Config{path_sep}; if ($cc =~ m|/:\[|) { $found = -f "$comp$exe"; } # $Config{cc} might be something like '/some/place/cc' elsif ($cc =~ m|/|) { $found = -f "$comp$exe" || -l $cc; } # $Config{cc} might be something like 'ccache cc' elsif ($cc =~ m|ccache|) { my @cc = split /\s+/, $cc; $found = -f "$cc[0]$exe" || -l $cc[0]; if($found && $cc[1]) {$found = -f "$cc[1]$exe" || -l $cc[1]} } else { my $comp = (split /\./, $cc)[0]; for my $lib (split $delim, $ENV{PATH}) { $found = -f File::Spec->catfile($lib,"$comp$exe") and last; } } print <<END; Inline::C is packaged with Inline.pm because it is the most commonly u +sed Inline Language Support Module (ILSM). See also: Inline::ASM, ::Awk, ::BC, ::Basic, ::Befunge, ::CPP (C++), : +:CPR, ::Foo, ::Guile, ::Java, ::Octave, ::PERL, ::Python, ::Ruby, +::TT, ::Tcl and ::WebChat. Config.pm indicates that your version of Perl was built with this C co +mpiler: $cc END if ($found) { print <<END; I have located this compiler on your system: END } else { print <<END; I cannot locate this compiler on your system. You can install Inline.pm without installing Inline::C. But you'll need to install another Inline language module (like Inline::Java for instance) to actually make use of it. If the aforementioned C compiler really is on your system, please make + sure it can be found in the PATH and then try running this program again. O +r if you think I made an error searching for this compiler, simply answer ' +Y' to the next question. END # ' } my $answer = ''; my $default = $found ? "y" : "n"; while (1) { $answer = prompt ('Do you want to install Inline::C?', $default); last if $answer =~ /^(y|yes|n|no)$/i; } if ($answer =~ /^(y|yes)$/i) { WriteMakefile( NAME => 'Inline::C', clean => {FILES => '_Inline_test'}, ) } else { open MF, "> Makefile" or die "Can't open Makefile for output"; print MF <<'END'; all:: test:: clean:: END close MF; }
Cheers,
Rob

In reply to Re^3: How to best detect availability of C compiler in Makefile.PL? by syphilis
in thread How to best detect availability of C compiler in Makefile.PL? by stbey

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