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Operating Systems Linux Apache httpd configuration - Issues with APR Post 302992351 by zaxxon on Friday 24th of February 2017 04:21:19 AM
Old 02-24-2017
I don't know this special case, but extracting a tar-ball archive will usually have a version number in it's path/directory name and this is good.
What you refer to is that when it is finally installed, after something like
Code:
./configure
make
make install

it should not contain version numbers in the path. From the most software I have configured and installed this way, they were not using a version number neither in the path nor in the final binary.

I suggest you either try this on a test box and check if after the make install there is anything not ok with version names showing up somewhere OR you type ./configure --help and see if there is some --prefix=<somedestinationpathyouspecify> you can use to tell it at which destination it should be installed.
 

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install::TempContent::Objects::mod_perl-2.0.9::docs::apiUserRContributed Perinstall::TempContent::Objects::mod_perl-2.0.9::docs::api::APR::UUID(3)

NAME
APR::UUID - Perl API for manipulating APR UUIDs Synopsis use APR::UUID (); # get a random UUID and format it as a string my $uuid = APR::UUID->new->format; # $uuid = e.g. 'd48889bb-d11d-b211-8567-ec81968c93c6'; # same as the object returned by APR::UUID->new my $uuid_parsed = APR::UUID->parse($uuid); Description "APR::UUID" is used to get and manipulate random UUIDs. It allows you to "create" random UUIDs, which when "formatted" returns a string like: 'd48889bb-d11d-b211-8567-ec81968c93c6'; which can be parsed back into the "APR::UUID" object with "parse()". API
"APR::UUID" provides the following functions and/or methods: "format" Convert an "APR::UUID object" object into a string presentation: my $uuid_str = $uuid->format; obj: $uuid ( "APR::UUID object" ) ret: $uuid_str returns a string representation of the object (.e.g 'd48889bb-d11d-b211-8567-ec81968c93c6'). since: 2.0.00 "new" Create a "APR::UUID object" using the random engine: my $uuid = APR::UUID->new; class: "APR::UUID" ( "APR::UUID class" ) ret: $uuid ( "APR::UUID object" ) since: 2.0.00 "DESTROY" $uuid->DESTROY; obj: "APR::UUID" ( "APR::UUID object" ) ret: no return value since: 2.0.00 Do not call this method, it's designed to be only called by Perl when the variable goes out of scope. If you call it yourself you will get a segfault when perl will call DESTROY on its own. "parse" Convert a UUID string into an "APR::UUID object" object: $uuid = APR::UUID->parse($uuid_str) arg1: $uuid_str (string) UUID string (.e.g 'd48889bb-d11d-b211-8567-ec81968c93c6') ret: $uuid ( "APR::UUID object" ) The new object. since: 2.0.00 See Also mod_perl 2.0 documentation. Copyright mod_perl 2.0 and its core modules are copyrighted under The Apache Software License, Version 2.0. Authors The mod_perl development team and numerous contributors. perl v5.18.2 2015-06-install::TempContent::Objects::mod_perl-2.0.9::docs::api::APR::UUID(3)
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