RT4 and Plack

I’m not familiar with Plack, so forgive me if this should be obvious.
Is Plack an integral dependency of RT4, or is it just another type of
web handler that can be ignored if I’m using fastcgi?

I’m currently doing the lovely Perl dependency dance in Debian and I’d
like to know if I can skip a few of the steps or not :wink:

I’m not familiar with Plack, so forgive me if this should be obvious.
Is Plack an integral dependency of RT4, or is it just another type of
web handler that can be ignored if I’m using fastcgi?

Plack provides our interface to fastcgi

I’m currently doing the lovely Perl dependency dance in Debian and I’d
like to know if I can skip a few of the steps or not :wink:

I believe Dom has already begun packaging the rcs for 4.0.1
You may wish to start there.

-kevin

Plack provides our interface to fastcgi

Not something I can ignore then :slight_smile:

I believe Dom has already begun packaging the rcs for 4.0.1
You may wish to start there.

Ok. I went ahead and finished my list of Debian Squeeze dependencies
including what can be grabbed from squeeze-backports and what needs to
be built from Perl source, I’ll create an account on the wiki and add it
in there.

Plack provides our interface to fastcgi

Not something I can ignore then :slight_smile:

I believe Dom has already begun packaging the rcs for 4.0.1
You may wish to start there.

Ok. I went ahead and finished my list of Debian Squeeze dependencies
including what can be grabbed from squeeze-backports and what needs to
be built from Perl source, I’ll create an account on the wiki and add it
in there.

RT 4.0.1rc2 is in Debian experimental.

I’m gradually adding all missing dependencies in squeeze to
squeeze-backports.

Once 4.0.1 comes out, I’ll upload it unstable.

Once 4.0.1 migrates to testing, I’ll upload it to squeeze-backports.

Cheers,
Dominic.

Dominic Hargreaves, Systems Development and Support Team
Computing Services, University of Oxford

signature.asc (198 Bytes)