A decade in CPAN toolchain
I’m not going to object to Module::Build leaving the core. I’m sure there are good reasons, I just wish I knew what they are. I am, however, slightly disappointed to find that Schwern was wrong ten years ago and that ExtUtils::MakeMaker wasn’t doomed.
Schwern wasn’t wrong and MakeMaker remains doomed all these years later. It’s still around only because there hasn’t been anything to take its place. Module::Build looked like it was going to be that usurper – but didn’t work out.
Note that the reason that, between EUMM and M::B, M::B is the one leaving the core, is that EUMM is necessary to build the core and M::B is not. The reason for that is that no one bothered to port the existing MakeMaker-dependent infrastructure to Module::Build. And that never happened because M::B never gained the necessary features (XS support, mainly) fast enough for anyone to want to – because it wasn’t sufficiently much better than EUMM for anyone to want it enough to add the features.
However, EUMM is about as marginally maintained nowadays as M::B. Both are doomed, though their type of doomedness is one that’s accompanied by remarkable staying power. (Break-the-CPAN status tends to have that effect.) RJBS is on record that, should EUMM ever become unnecessary to building the core, it will make its exit stage left much the same as M::B is making now.
So… what happened?

