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xcat-dep/AIX/perl-Digest-SHA/Digest-SHA.spec

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#
# - Digest::SHA -
# This spec file was automatically generated by cpan2rpm [ver: 2.028]
# The following arguments were used:
# .
# For more information on cpan2rpm please visit: http://perl.arix.com/
#
%define pkgname Digest-SHA
%define filelist %{pkgname}-%{version}-filelist
%define NVR %{pkgname}-%{version}-%{release}
%define maketest 1
name: perl-Digest-SHA
summary: Digest-SHA - Perl extension for SHA-1/224/256/384/512
version: 5.48
release: 1
vendor: Mark Shelor <mshelor@cpan.org>
packager: Arix International <cpan2rpm@arix.com>
license: Artistic
group: Applications/CPAN
url: http://www.cpan.org
buildroot: %{_tmppath}/%{name}-%{version}-%(id -u -n)
buildarch: ppc
prefix: %(echo %{_prefix})
source: Digest-SHA-5.48.tar.gz
%description
Digest::SHA is written in C for speed. If your platform lacks a
C compiler, you can install the functionally equivalent (but much
slower) Digest::SHA::PurePerl module.
The programming interface is easy to use: it's the same one found
in CPAN's Digest module. So, if your applications currently
use Digest::MD5 and you'd prefer the stronger security of SHA,
it's a simple matter to convert them.
The interface provides two ways to calculate digests: all-at-once,
or in stages. To illustrate, the following short program computes
the SHA-256 digest of "hello world" using each approach:
use Digest::SHA qw(sha256_hex);
$data = "hello world";
@frags = split(//, $data);
# all-at-once (Functional style)
$digest1 = sha256_hex($data);
# in-stages (OOP style)
$state = Digest::SHA->new(256);
for (@frags) { $state->add($_) }
$digest2 = $state->hexdigest;
print $digest1 eq $digest2 ?
"whew!\n" : "oops!\n";
To calculate the digest of an n-bit message where *n* is not a
multiple of 8, use the *add_bits()* method. For example, consider
the 446-bit message consisting of the bit-string "110" repeated
148 times, followed by "11". Here's how to display its SHA-1
digest:
use Digest::SHA;
$bits = "110" x 148 . "11";
$sha = Digest::SHA->new(1)->add_bits($bits);
print $sha->hexdigest, "\n";
Note that for larger bit-strings, it's more efficient to use the
two-argument version *add_bits($data, $nbits)*, where *$data* is
in the customary packed binary format used for Perl strings.
The module also lets you save intermediate SHA states to disk, or
display them on standard output. The *dump()* method generates
portable, human-readable text describing the current state of
computation. You can subsequently retrieve the file with *load()*
to resume where the calculation left off.
To see what a state description looks like, just run the following:
use Digest::SHA;
Digest::SHA->new->add("Shaw" x 1962)->dump;
As an added convenience, the Digest::SHA module offers routines to
calculate keyed hashes using the HMAC-SHA-1/224/256/384/512
algorithms. These services exist in functional form only, and
mimic the style and behavior of the *sha()*, *sha_hex()*, and
*sha_base64()* functions.
# Test vector from draft-ietf-ipsec-ciph-sha-256-01.txt
use Digest::SHA qw(hmac_sha256_hex);
print hmac_sha256_hex("Hi There", chr(0x0b) x 32), "\n";
#
# This package was generated automatically with the cpan2rpm
# utility. To get this software or for more information
# please visit: http://perl.arix.com/
#
%prep
%setup -q -n %{pkgname}-%{version}
chmod -R u+w %{_builddir}/%{pkgname}-%{version}
%build
grep -rsl '^#!.*perl' . |
# modified
#grep -v '.bak$' |xargs --no-run-if-empty \
%__perl -MExtUtils::MakeMaker -e 'MY->fixin(@ARGV)'
CFLAGS="$RPM_OPT_FLAGS"
%{__perl} Makefile.PL `%{__perl} -MExtUtils::MakeMaker -e ' print qq|PREFIX=%{buildroot}%{_prefix}| if \$ExtUtils::MakeMaker::VERSION =~ /5\.9[1-6]|6\.0[0-5]/ '`
%{__make}
%if %maketest
%{__make} test
%endif
%install
[ "%{buildroot}" != "/" ] && rm -rf %{buildroot}
%{makeinstall} `%{__perl} -MExtUtils::MakeMaker -e ' print \$ExtUtils::MakeMaker::VERSION <= 6.05 ? qq|PREFIX=%{buildroot}%{_prefix}| : qq|DESTDIR=%{buildroot}| '`
cmd=/usr/share/spec-helper/compress_files
[ -x $cmd ] || cmd=/usr/lib/rpm/brp-compress
[ -x $cmd ] && $cmd
# modified
# SuSE Linux
#if [ -e /etc/SuSE-release -o -e /etc/UnitedLinux-release ]
#then
# %{__mkdir_p} %{buildroot}/var/adm/perl-modules
# %{__cat} `find %{buildroot} -name "perllocal.pod"` \
# | %{__sed} -e s+%{buildroot}++g \
# > %{buildroot}/var/adm/perl-modules/%{name}
#fi
# remove special files
find %{buildroot} -name "perllocal.pod" \
-o -name ".packlist" \
-o -name "*.bs" \
|xargs -i rm -f {}
#modified
# no empty directories
#find %{buildroot}%{_prefix} \
# -type d -depth \
# -exec rmdir {} \; 2>/dev/null
%{__perl} -MFile::Find -le '
find({ wanted => \&wanted, no_chdir => 1}, "%{buildroot}");
print "%doc src Changes examples README";
for my $x (sort @dirs, @files) {
push @ret, $x unless indirs($x);
}
print join "\n", sort @ret;
sub wanted {
return if /auto$/;
local $_ = $File::Find::name;
my $f = $_; s|^\Q%{buildroot}\E||;
return unless length;
return $files[@files] = $_ if -f $f;
$d = $_;
/\Q$d\E/ && return for reverse sort @INC;
$d =~ /\Q$_\E/ && return
for qw|/etc %_prefix/man %_prefix/bin %_prefix/share|;
$dirs[@dirs] = $_;
}
sub indirs {
my $x = shift;
$x =~ /^\Q$_\E\// && $x ne $_ && return 1 for @dirs;
}
' > %filelist
[ -z %filelist ] && {
echo "ERROR: empty %files listing"
exit -1
}
%clean
[ "%{buildroot}" != "/" ] && rm -rf %{buildroot}
%files -f %filelist
%defattr(-,root,root)
%changelog
* Tue Mar 30 2010 root@c68m3hvp01.ppd.pok.ibm.com
- Initial build.