From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: Thomas Petazzoni Date: Sun, 19 Apr 2015 11:30:40 +0200 Subject: [Buildroot] [PATCH 00/20] Some new Perl modules In-Reply-To: References: <1429432413-17038-1-git-send-email-bernd.kuhls@t-online.de> <20150419105007.411d3dd3@free-electrons.com> Message-ID: <20150419113040.1c46a6cb@free-electrons.com> List-Id: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit To: buildroot@busybox.net Dear Bernd Kuhls, On Sun, 19 Apr 2015 11:00:14 +0200, Bernd Kuhls wrote: > perl-mail-spamassassin checks for the presence of some dependency modules > during its configuration phase and stops if they can not be found, like: > > dependency check complete... > > REQUIRED module missing: HTML::Parser > REQUIRED module missing: Net::DNS > REQUIRED module missing: NetAddr::IP > > After > > $ make host-perl-html-parser > > this list will be shorter: > > dependency check complete... > > REQUIRED module missing: Net::DNS > REQUIRED module missing: NetAddr::IP > > This serves just as an example, having these host modules installed makes > SpamAssassin_s configure happy ;) Right, but isn't this an ugly workaround? They are not really needed on the host, only to make spamassassin believe they will be on the target. Isn't there a better solution? Fran?ois, maybe you have an idea? Thanks, Thomas -- Thomas Petazzoni, CTO, Free Electrons Embedded Linux, Kernel and Android engineering http://free-electrons.com