diff --git a/HTML-Strip-2.09.tar.gz b/HTML-Strip-2.09.tar.gz
deleted file mode 100644
index e37ce2b..0000000
--- a/HTML-Strip-2.09.tar.gz
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,3 +0,0 @@
-version https://git-lfs.github.com/spec/v1
-oid sha256:3f310370d0a677d17ca539508afb054be869b68acaec9aea239a057aa04d81d7
-size 15040
diff --git a/HTML-Strip-2.10.tar.gz b/HTML-Strip-2.10.tar.gz
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..03e4cb8
--- /dev/null
+++ b/HTML-Strip-2.10.tar.gz
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+version https://git-lfs.github.com/spec/v1
+oid sha256:2af30a61f1ecc0bea983043c8078e48380ccb0319388a74483e09aa782f1ccfa
+size 15333
diff --git a/perl-HTML-Strip.changes b/perl-HTML-Strip.changes
index a3de9f0..a9f9c15 100644
--- a/perl-HTML-Strip.changes
+++ b/perl-HTML-Strip.changes
@@ -1,3 +1,13 @@
+-------------------------------------------------------------------
+Thu May 5 09:22:45 UTC 2016 - coolo@suse.com
+
+- updated to 2.10
+ see /usr/share/doc/packages/perl-HTML-Strip/Changes
+
+ 2.10 Fri Apr 22 12:16:17 BST 2016
+ - fix to building on Windows / MSVC (RT#102389)
+ - fix duplicate DESTROY in Strip(.pm,.xs) warning (RT#104379, Debian bug #785032)
+
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Thu Apr 16 21:43:37 UTC 2015 - coolo@suse.com
diff --git a/perl-HTML-Strip.spec b/perl-HTML-Strip.spec
index 88d1e67..fbec401 100644
--- a/perl-HTML-Strip.spec
+++ b/perl-HTML-Strip.spec
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
#
# spec file for package perl-HTML-Strip
#
-# Copyright (c) 2015 SUSE LINUX GmbH, Nuernberg, Germany.
+# Copyright (c) 2016 SUSE LINUX GmbH, Nuernberg, Germany.
#
# All modifications and additions to the file contributed by third parties
# remain the property of their copyright owners, unless otherwise agreed
@@ -17,7 +17,7 @@
Name: perl-HTML-Strip
-Version: 2.09
+Version: 2.10
Release: 0
%define cpan_name HTML-Strip
Summary: Perl extension for stripping HTML markup from text
@@ -34,43 +34,43 @@ Requires: perl(Test::Exception)
%{perl_requires}
%description
-This module simply strips HTML-like markup from text in a very quick and
-brutal manner. It could quite easily be used to strip XML or SGML from text
-as well; but removing HTML markup is a much more common problem, hence this
-module lives in the HTML:: namespace.
+This module simply strips HTML-like markup from text rapidly and brutally.
+It could easily be used to strip XML or SGML markup instead; but as
+removing HTML is a much more common problem, this module lives in the
+HTML:: namespace.
It is written in XS, and thus about five times quicker than using regular
expressions for the same task.
-It does _not_ do any syntax checking (if you want that, use the
-HTML::Parser manpage), instead it merely applies the following rules:
+It does _not_ do any syntax checking (if you want that, use HTML::Parser),
+instead it merely applies the following rules:
* 1
- Anything that looks like a tag, or group of tags will be replaced with a
- single space character. Tags are considered to be anything that starts
- with a '<' and ends with a '>'; with the caveat that a '>' character may
- appear in either of the following without ending the tag:
+Anything that looks like a tag, or group of tags will be replaced with a
+single space character. Tags are considered to be anything that starts with
+a '<' and ends with a '>'; with the caveat that a '>' character may appear
+in either of the following without ending the tag:
* Quote
- Quotes are considered to start with either a ''' or a '"' character,
- and end with a matching character _not_ preceded by an even number or
- escaping slashes (i.e. '\"' does not end the quote but '\\\\"' does).
+Quotes are considered to start with either a ''' or a '"' character, and
+end with a matching character _not_ preceded by an even number or escaping
+slashes (i.e. '\"' does not end the quote but '\\\\"' does).
* Comment
- If the tag starts with an exclamation mark, it is assumed to be a
- declaration or a comment. Within such tags, '>' characters do not end
- the tag if they appear within pairs of double dashes (e.g. '' would be stripped completely). Inside
- a comment, no parsing for quotes is done as well. (That means '' are entirely stripped.)
+If the tag starts with an exclamation mark, it is assumed to be a
+declaration or a comment. Within such tags, '>' characters do not end the
+tag if they appear within pairs of double dashes (e.g. '' would be stripped completely). No parsing
+for quotes is performed within comments, so for instance '' would be entirely stripped.
* 2
- Anything the appears within so-called _strip tags_ is stripped as well.
- By default, these tags are 'title', 'script', 'style' and 'applet'.
+Anything the appears within what we term _strip tags_ is stripped as well.
+By default, these tags are 'title', 'script', 'style' and 'applet'.
HTML::Strip maintains state between calls, so you can parse a document in
chunks should you wish. If one chunk ends half-way through a tag, quote,