use vars qw/$VERSION %released %version %families %upstream
%bug_tracker %deprecated/;
use Module::CoreList::TieHashDelta;
-$VERSION = '2.97';
+$VERSION = '2.98';
my $dumpinc = 0;
sub import {
5.019002 => '2013-07-22',
5.018001 => '2013-08-12',
5.019003 => '2013-08-20',
+ 5.019004 => '????-??-??',
);
for my $version ( sort { $a <=> $b } keys %released ) {
'Module::Build::Platform::RiscOS'=> 1,
}
},
+ 5.019004 => {
+ delta_from => 5.019003,
+ changed => {
+ 'Config' => '5.019004',
+ 'Module::CoreList' => '2.98',
+ 'Module::CoreList::TieHashDelta'=> '2.98',
+ 'Module::CoreList::Utils'=> '2.98',
+ 'XS::Typemap' => '0.11',
+ },
+ removed => {
+ }
+ },
);
for my $version (sort { $a <=> $b } keys %delta) {
removed => {
}
},
+ 5.019004 => {
+ delta_from => 5.019003,
+ changed => {
+ },
+ removed => {
+ }
+ },
);
for my $version (sort { $a <=> $b } keys %deprecated) {
5.15.0, 5.15.1, 5.15.2, 5.15.3, 5.15.4, 5.15.5, 5.15.6, 5.15.7, 5.15.8,
5.15.9, 5.16.0, 5.16.1, 5.16.2, 5.16.3, 5.17.0, 5.17.1, 5.17.2, 5.17.3,
5.17.4, 5.17.5, 5.17.6, 5.17.7, 5.17.8, 5.17.9, 5.17.10, 5.17.11, 5.18.0,
-5.19.0, 5.19.1, 5.19.2 and 5.19.3 releases of perl.
+5.19.0, 5.19.1, 5.19.2, 5.19.3 and 5.19.4 releases of perl.
=head1 HISTORY
=item *
-L<XXX> has been upgraded from version A.xx to B.yy.
+L<Module::CoreList> has been upgraded from version 2.97 to 2.98.
+
+The list of Perl versions covered has been updated.
=back