Revision history for Perl extension ExtUtils::ParseXS. 2.04 Thu Sep 4 13:10:59 CDT 2003 - Added a COPYRIGHT section to the documentation. [Spotted by Ville Skytta] 2.03 Sat Aug 16 17:49:03 CST 2003 - Fixed a warning that occurs if a regular expression (buried deep within the bowels of the code here) fails. [Spotted by Michael Schwern] - Fixed a testing error on Cygwin. [Reini Urban] 2.02 Sun Mar 30 18:20:12 CST 2003 - Now that we know this module doesn't work (yet?) with perl 5.005, put a couple 'use 5.006' statements in the module & Makefile.PL so we're explicit about the dependency. [Richard Clamp] 2.01 Thu Mar 20 08:22:36 CST 2003 - Allow -C++ flag for backward compatibility. It's a no-op, and has been since perl5.003_07. [crazyinsomniac@yahoo.com] 2.00 Sun Feb 23 16:40:17 CST 2003 - Tests now function under all three of the supported compilers on Windows environments. [Randy W. Sims] - Will now install to the 'core' perl module directory instead of to 'site_perl' or the like, because this is the only place MakeMaker will look for the xsubpp script. - Explicitly untie and close the output file handle because ParseXS was holding the file handle open, preventing the compiler from opening it on Win32. [Randy W. Sims] - Added an '--output FILENAME' flag to xsubpp and changed ParseXS to use the named file in the #line directives when the output file has an extension other than '.c' (i.e. '.cpp'). [Randy W. Sims] - Added conditional definition of the PERL_UNUSED_VAR macro to the output file in case it's not already defined for backwards compatibility with pre-5.8 versions of perl. (Not sure if this is the best solution.) [Randy W. Sims] 1.99 Wed Feb 5 10:07:47 PST 2003 - Version bump to 1.99 so it doesn't look like a 'beta release' to CPAN.pm. No code changes, since I haven't had any bug reports. - Fixed a minor problem in the regression tests that was creating an XSTest..o file instead of XSTest.o 1.98_01 Mon Dec 9 11:50:41 EST 2002 - Converted from ExtUtils::xsubpp in bleadperl - Basic set of regression tests written