Package: deb-perl-macros Version: 0.1-26.5 Architecture: all Maintainer: Victor Zhestkov Installed-Size: 42 Depends: perl Filename: all/deb-perl-macros_0.1-26.5_all.deb Size: 2700 MD5sum: a0dbcc61c6cc806531f633c3557b6699 SHA1: 2014b61a50d11c7e7828270c4ae8b5f653378ef2 SHA256: 0e4e9cdfb5f007621ca4bd47fa09210c87bb10b3ccd39d7fac068723ae9198bb Priority: optional Homepage: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/systemsmanagement:saltstack:bundle:debbuild/deb-perl-macros Description: Perl RPM macros for debbuild Perl RPM macros for debbuild Package: debbuild Version: 23.12.0-38.3 Architecture: all Maintainer: debbuild developers Installed-Size: 209 Depends: liblocale-gettext-perl,lsb-release,xz-utils,bash,bzip2,dpkg,dpkg-dev,fakeroot,gzip,patch,pax,perl Recommends: dpkg-sig,git-core,quilt,unzip,zip,zstd,debbuild-lua-support Suggests: rpm Filename: all/debbuild_23.12.0-38.3_all.deb Size: 54804 MD5sum: 69c589abde90880ecd94fbc30e031da1 SHA1: 687216419482a8ff92d9f2d242c30e67c44aa1f9 SHA256: 931b7a746e38fd97e5ebe46c0b7e504e8b3f2d7c5eeef82ff01e6751b17729e8 Section: devel Priority: optional Homepage: https://github.com/debbuild/debbuild Description: Build Debian-compatible .deb packages from RPM .spec files debbuild attempts to build Debian-friendly semi-native packages from RPM spec files, RPM-friendly tarballs, and RPM source packages (.src.rpm files). It accepts most of the options rpmbuild does, and should be able to interpret most spec files usefully. Package: debbuild-lua-support Version: 23.12.0-38.3 Architecture: all Maintainer: debbuild developers Installed-Size: 32 Depends: debbuild (= 23.12.0-38.3),liblua-api-perl Filename: all/debbuild-lua-support_23.12.0-38.3_all.deb Size: 8416 MD5sum: 5b2185c63de9b2698ae905aa37b4d315 SHA1: 6b5c4c742db7fefdce1ecc8daf992b0efb0b9d2c SHA256: 398ae56d8274064017f87fc35463d061b0d273c4119c883ee6382004d5565e4f Section: devel Priority: optional Homepage: https://github.com/debbuild/debbuild Description: Lua macro support for debbuild This package adds the dependencies to support RPM macros written the Lua programming language. Package: debbuild-macros Version: 0.0.7-27.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: debbuild developers Installed-Size: 126 Depends: debbuild (>= 22.02.1) Provides: debbuild-macros-debpkg,debbuild-macros-cmake,cmake-deb-macros,debbuild-macros-mga-mkrel,debbuild-macros-mga-mklibname,mga-deb-macros,debbuild-macros-python,debbuild-macros-python2,debbuild-macros-python3,python-deb-macros,python2-deb-macros,python3-deb-macros,debbuild-macros-perl,perl-deb-macros,debbuild-macros-ruby,ruby-deb-macros,debbuild-macros-golang,go-deb-macros,golang-deb-macros,debbuild-macros-apache2,apache2-deb-macros,debbuild-macros-gpgverify,debbuild-macros-vpath,debbuild-macros-ninja,ninja-deb-macros,debbuild-macros-meson,meson-deb-macros,debbuild-macros-apparmor,apparmor-deb-macros,debbuild-macros-firewalld,firewalld-deb-macros,debbuild-macros-systemd,systemd-deb-macros Filename: all/debbuild-macros_0.0.7-27.1_all.deb Size: 25500 MD5sum: f67571a1f38f21644118dd6c9c89edbd SHA1: 30dfcac1defe06cb56c43d3d1ce1c7486dd2797c SHA256: 0240af179d99c17f11acb644bc684b677c763c72aa0bbae049c5bc8c88d9ee4d Section: devel Priority: optional Homepage: https://github.com/debbuild/debbuild-macros Description: Various macros for extending debbuild functionality This package contains a set of RPM macros for debbuild, designed in such a manner that it is trivial to port RPM packaging to build Debian packages that are mostly in-line with Debian Policy. Package: liblua5-1-5 Version: 5.1.5-71.4 Architecture: ppc64el Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 401 Replaces: lua51-libs (<< 5.1.5),liblua5-1 (<< 5.1.5-71.4) Provides: lua51-libs (= 5.1.5-71.4),liblua5-1 (= 5.1.5-71.4) Filename: ppc64el/liblua5-1-5_5.1.5-71.4_ppc64el.deb Size: 77440 MD5sum: f5e7d4c0100864234850bd9f557d8f82 SHA1: 0164ed304200ee7704e23f3a5e6ba7da1bc43e89 SHA256: c9094e190aada74d76207a8976e784d572d4b2bfa037383a7744b6c41d8dba08 Section: System/Libraries Priority: optional Homepage: http://www.lua.org Description: The Lua integration library Lua is a programming language originally designed for extending applications, but is also frequently used as a general-purpose, stand-alone language. . Lua combines procedural syntax (similar to Pascal) with data description constructs based on associative arrays and extensible semantics. Lua is dynamically typed, interpreted from byte codes, and has automatic memory management, making it suitable for configuration, scripting, and rapid prototyping. Lua is implemented as a small library of C functions, written in ANSI C. Package: liblua5-1-5 Version: 5.1.5-71.4 Architecture: s390x Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 359 Replaces: lua51-libs (<< 5.1.5),liblua5-1 (<< 5.1.5-71.4) Provides: lua51-libs (= 5.1.5-71.4),liblua5-1 (= 5.1.5-71.4) Filename: s390x/liblua5-1-5_5.1.5-71.4_s390x.deb Size: 74656 MD5sum: 62a81096d8f18af1519432b0944249c8 SHA1: de86f72cc84fd9bf15d28297bc92aa47022dce2b SHA256: d8aa725c44a01e39bce559e6fa5a962ce728122135e4bfc12ab22981a619d491 Section: System/Libraries Priority: optional Homepage: http://www.lua.org Description: The Lua integration library Lua is a programming language originally designed for extending applications, but is also frequently used as a general-purpose, stand-alone language. . Lua combines procedural syntax (similar to Pascal) with data description constructs based on associative arrays and extensible semantics. Lua is dynamically typed, interpreted from byte codes, and has automatic memory management, making it suitable for configuration, scripting, and rapid prototyping. Lua is implemented as a small library of C functions, written in ANSI C. Package: liblua5-1-5 Version: 5.1.5-71.4 Architecture: armhf Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 840 Replaces: lua51-libs (<< 5.1.5),liblua5-1 (<< 5.1.5-71.4) Provides: lua51-libs (= 5.1.5-71.4),liblua5-1 (= 5.1.5-71.4) Filename: armhf/liblua5-1-5_5.1.5-71.4_armhf.deb Size: 277944 MD5sum: 5a77043c0694d8ef228c5b118bb1f8d7 SHA1: 64f047a9a10395f69a0ec43a0b7758bf79d5b437 SHA256: cf84e10c0de75d07a0890e364e00f21ebca22d52b3de9c7c861e48b36e33bdd9 Section: System/Libraries Priority: optional Homepage: http://www.lua.org Description: The Lua integration library Lua is a programming language originally designed for extending applications, but is also frequently used as a general-purpose, stand-alone language. . Lua combines procedural syntax (similar to Pascal) with data description constructs based on associative arrays and extensible semantics. Lua is dynamically typed, interpreted from byte codes, and has automatic memory management, making it suitable for configuration, scripting, and rapid prototyping. Lua is implemented as a small library of C functions, written in ANSI C. Package: liblua5-1-5 Version: 5.1.5-71.4 Architecture: i386 Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 885 Replaces: lua51-libs (<< 5.1.5),liblua5-1 (<< 5.1.5-71.4) Provides: lua51-libs (= 5.1.5-71.4),liblua5-1 (= 5.1.5-71.4) Filename: i386/liblua5-1-5_5.1.5-71.4_i386.deb Size: 299684 MD5sum: e61cd8be34894e8e455a8a8c897a1c77 SHA1: b0d890e0971d4c232da39f2d2f212228d3600af8 SHA256: 2b29ce4ae74a74d46079668fba0617d7c13bfca8f916950917ef50cce2dc40aa Section: System/Libraries Priority: optional Homepage: http://www.lua.org Description: The Lua integration library Lua is a programming language originally designed for extending applications, but is also frequently used as a general-purpose, stand-alone language. . Lua combines procedural syntax (similar to Pascal) with data description constructs based on associative arrays and extensible semantics. Lua is dynamically typed, interpreted from byte codes, and has automatic memory management, making it suitable for configuration, scripting, and rapid prototyping. Lua is implemented as a small library of C functions, written in ANSI C. Package: liblua5-1-5 Version: 5.1.5-71.4 Architecture: amd64 Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 1103 Replaces: lua51-libs (<< 5.1.5),liblua5-1 (<< 5.1.5-71.4) Provides: lua51-libs (= 5.1.5-71.4),liblua5-1 (= 5.1.5-71.4) Filename: amd64/liblua5-1-5_5.1.5-71.4_amd64.deb Size: 305176 MD5sum: 6626309129152dc1a4141e035fcb98c1 SHA1: 03cf9fe0e0aff91709242c080d2ca5124d31c2f7 SHA256: bb93788de933aeb5d896bd059d0a083689b8c03857abc875b2afae3f7e2f9624 Section: System/Libraries Priority: optional Homepage: http://www.lua.org Description: The Lua integration library Lua is a programming language originally designed for extending applications, but is also frequently used as a general-purpose, stand-alone language. . Lua combines procedural syntax (similar to Pascal) with data description constructs based on associative arrays and extensible semantics. Lua is dynamically typed, interpreted from byte codes, and has automatic memory management, making it suitable for configuration, scripting, and rapid prototyping. Lua is implemented as a small library of C functions, written in ANSI C. Package: liblua5-1-5 Version: 5.1.5-71.4 Architecture: arm64 Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 1124 Replaces: lua51-libs (<< 5.1.5),liblua5-1 (<< 5.1.5-71.4) Provides: lua51-libs (= 5.1.5-71.4),liblua5-1 (= 5.1.5-71.4) Filename: arm64/liblua5-1-5_5.1.5-71.4_arm64.deb Size: 293256 MD5sum: cc1f93d885e8f52ee6abdb00e1bacf9f SHA1: d6b3a13b7015860a715dc62242bd29a53662d325 SHA256: 74825effa3b1a4290a01ea0ebaa73e8cb3347f5baf99f135f752fef96a9328ec Section: System/Libraries Priority: optional Homepage: http://www.lua.org Description: The Lua integration library Lua is a programming language originally designed for extending applications, but is also frequently used as a general-purpose, stand-alone language. . Lua combines procedural syntax (similar to Pascal) with data description constructs based on associative arrays and extensible semantics. Lua is dynamically typed, interpreted from byte codes, and has automatic memory management, making it suitable for configuration, scripting, and rapid prototyping. Lua is implemented as a small library of C functions, written in ANSI C. Package: lua-macros Version: 20210827-50.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 25 Filename: all/lua-macros_20210827-50.1_all.deb Size: 1520 MD5sum: 68c0529f45de0c87385f2356da70664a SHA1: 82cf567deebe0d48d71a7951208c2306bf62d9d4 SHA256: 9dd61d99de7523b76272b71e1e573571013e80a76f13d90bf4f1239e4a9161b1 Section: Development/Languages/Other Priority: optional Homepage: https://www.lua.org Description: Macros for lua language RPM macros for lua packaging Package: lua51 Version: 5.1.5-71.4 Architecture: ppc64el Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 645 Depends: dpkg,libc6,libreadline8,libtinfo6 Provides: lua (= 5.1.5-71.4),lua-api (= 5.1) Filename: ppc64el/lua51_5.1.5-71.4_ppc64el.deb Size: 92816 MD5sum: 785b3b7b8cb0789950e4db177ef8d4e5 SHA1: 836fa44d43025edd024f2187351f3fd2048650b8 SHA256: ec26f6701a7b40117dbc63ee271c102cdf7e5b502a28a91e2280cc623e4b7896 Section: Development/Languages/Other Priority: optional Homepage: http://www.lua.org Description: Small Embeddable Language with Procedural Syntax Lua is a programming language originally designed for extending applications, but is also frequently used as a general-purpose, stand-alone language. . Lua combines procedural syntax (similar to Pascal) with data description constructs based on associative arrays and extensible semantics. Lua is dynamically typed, interpreted from byte codes, and has automatic memory management, making it suitable for configuration, scripting, and rapid prototyping. Lua is implemented as a small library of C functions, written in ANSI C. Package: lua51 Version: 5.1.5-71.4 Architecture: s390x Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 604 Depends: dpkg,libc6,libreadline8,libtinfo6 Provides: lua (= 5.1.5-71.4),lua-api (= 5.1) Filename: s390x/lua51_5.1.5-71.4_s390x.deb Size: 89816 MD5sum: 56dff8cc5da42ca578fe74d21ea25433 SHA1: f059ac19f0fd10cf68e140dd6ca019c48eaf8750 SHA256: bd7cab6744d47a9e510cafbed28257f5a3c30b4c4f0c55608dc9508c88cf4e5a Section: Development/Languages/Other Priority: optional Homepage: http://www.lua.org Description: Small Embeddable Language with Procedural Syntax Lua is a programming language originally designed for extending applications, but is also frequently used as a general-purpose, stand-alone language. . Lua combines procedural syntax (similar to Pascal) with data description constructs based on associative arrays and extensible semantics. Lua is dynamically typed, interpreted from byte codes, and has automatic memory management, making it suitable for configuration, scripting, and rapid prototyping. Lua is implemented as a small library of C functions, written in ANSI C. Package: lua51 Version: 5.1.5-71.4 Architecture: armhf Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 1490 Depends: dpkg,libreadline8,libc6,libtinfo6 Provides: lua (= 5.1.5-71.4),lua-api (= 5.1) Filename: armhf/lua51_5.1.5-71.4_armhf.deb Size: 339260 MD5sum: d46a496d400a34d1200f62de2837c713 SHA1: a50cb6faefa648a38eff3f8a19458132fbf80bd4 SHA256: e566291e88c8e426cd8cc2885d9b227f139b0bf2b6b5cc0157a4abd4a0ca2227 Section: Development/Languages/Other Priority: optional Homepage: http://www.lua.org Description: Small Embeddable Language with Procedural Syntax Lua is a programming language originally designed for extending applications, but is also frequently used as a general-purpose, stand-alone language. . Lua combines procedural syntax (similar to Pascal) with data description constructs based on associative arrays and extensible semantics. Lua is dynamically typed, interpreted from byte codes, and has automatic memory management, making it suitable for configuration, scripting, and rapid prototyping. Lua is implemented as a small library of C functions, written in ANSI C. Package: lua51 Version: 5.1.5-71.4 Architecture: i386 Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 1558 Depends: dpkg,libc6,libreadline8,libtinfo6 Provides: lua (= 5.1.5-71.4),lua-api (= 5.1) Filename: i386/lua51_5.1.5-71.4_i386.deb Size: 376580 MD5sum: 547a9ae2db3fbd0281a000f0e442bbe4 SHA1: a159206a61e7d354cc3e2188737b2bf18f2324b4 SHA256: e50449358030ce93acf499c321230974c2f9ce2a20fee609dea1b11453492ab5 Section: Development/Languages/Other Priority: optional Homepage: http://www.lua.org Description: Small Embeddable Language with Procedural Syntax Lua is a programming language originally designed for extending applications, but is also frequently used as a general-purpose, stand-alone language. . Lua combines procedural syntax (similar to Pascal) with data description constructs based on associative arrays and extensible semantics. Lua is dynamically typed, interpreted from byte codes, and has automatic memory management, making it suitable for configuration, scripting, and rapid prototyping. Lua is implemented as a small library of C functions, written in ANSI C. Package: lua51 Version: 5.1.5-71.4 Architecture: amd64 Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 1942 Depends: dpkg,libreadline8,libc6,libtinfo6 Provides: lua (= 5.1.5-71.4),lua-api (= 5.1) Filename: amd64/lua51_5.1.5-71.4_amd64.deb Size: 384420 MD5sum: 692517952f2a60739b4ce6165ff23b6f SHA1: 974b4c3820346a7173ca1c80072935764a28c933 SHA256: f1cea399c5d0b25f86e23f2cd50684b7a43e28b46bdff4749e5596a9f7593626 Section: Development/Languages/Other Priority: optional Homepage: http://www.lua.org Description: Small Embeddable Language with Procedural Syntax Lua is a programming language originally designed for extending applications, but is also frequently used as a general-purpose, stand-alone language. . Lua combines procedural syntax (similar to Pascal) with data description constructs based on associative arrays and extensible semantics. Lua is dynamically typed, interpreted from byte codes, and has automatic memory management, making it suitable for configuration, scripting, and rapid prototyping. Lua is implemented as a small library of C functions, written in ANSI C. Package: lua51 Version: 5.1.5-71.4 Architecture: arm64 Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 1985 Depends: dpkg,libreadline8,libc6,libtinfo6 Provides: lua (= 5.1.5-71.4),lua-api (= 5.1) Filename: arm64/lua51_5.1.5-71.4_arm64.deb Size: 356220 MD5sum: 70acd9f2139d84ef15c39d49560dbf4f SHA1: d3696e59cf3bdc0efb4e84eb53bf8e72bd2798fa SHA256: 37d21c6b23709c7a157fb754b75200fb0a62356fb2686db59ee69dd2f469bdad Section: Development/Languages/Other Priority: optional Homepage: http://www.lua.org Description: Small Embeddable Language with Procedural Syntax Lua is a programming language originally designed for extending applications, but is also frequently used as a general-purpose, stand-alone language. . Lua combines procedural syntax (similar to Pascal) with data description constructs based on associative arrays and extensible semantics. Lua is dynamically typed, interpreted from byte codes, and has automatic memory management, making it suitable for configuration, scripting, and rapid prototyping. Lua is implemented as a small library of C functions, written in ANSI C. Package: lua51-devel Version: 5.1.5-71.4 Architecture: ppc64el Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 586 Depends: liblua5-1-5 (= 5.1.5-71.4),lua51 (= 5.1.5-71.4),lua-macros,dpkg Provides: lua-devel (= 5.1.5-71.4),lua-devel (= 5.1),pkgconfig-lua (= 5.1.5-71.4) Filename: ppc64el/lua51-devel_5.1.5-71.4_ppc64el.deb Size: 93216 MD5sum: 673b2b098aad0cbc0c882f6d84d7f5e4 SHA1: 90fb9b52ea5c0e62f27e5dd891f65b5f7c03d696 SHA256: 6e52d07694c0f4cc9b92a4a5740695896f1e7c6d4415300bd49d4013ab54a832 Section: Development/Libraries/C and C++ Priority: optional Homepage: http://www.lua.org Description: Development files for lua Lua is a programming language originally designed for extending applications, but is also frequently used as a general-purpose, stand-alone language. . This package contains files needed for embedding lua into your application. Package: lua51-devel Version: 5.1.5-71.4 Architecture: s390x Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 541 Depends: liblua5-1-5 (= 5.1.5-71.4),lua51 (= 5.1.5-71.4),lua-macros,dpkg Provides: lua-devel (= 5.1.5-71.4),lua-devel (= 5.1),pkgconfig-lua (= 5.1.5-71.4) Filename: s390x/lua51-devel_5.1.5-71.4_s390x.deb Size: 90160 MD5sum: 39dbe2999550744a61f8c01e5e06608d SHA1: c95616ce04faf5bf862ba63ac075d9cb4ad9f744 SHA256: 04f3f5b665ad25ab7ce0bf97afc3032cd9fd3ea5bded86934431492e2f72947e Section: Development/Libraries/C and C++ Priority: optional Homepage: http://www.lua.org Description: Development files for lua Lua is a programming language originally designed for extending applications, but is also frequently used as a general-purpose, stand-alone language. . This package contains files needed for embedding lua into your application. Package: lua51-devel Version: 5.1.5-71.4 Architecture: armhf Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 1206 Depends: liblua5-1-5 (= 5.1.5-71.4),lua51 (= 5.1.5-71.4),lua-macros,dpkg Provides: lua-devel (= 5.1.5-71.4),lua-devel (= 5.1),pkgconfig-lua (= 5.1.5-71.4) Filename: armhf/lua51-devel_5.1.5-71.4_armhf.deb Size: 355772 MD5sum: c314d760071bf707bcab0df8db68da93 SHA1: f90c36227bff39689d3d6d541260b3f09512747a SHA256: 48b815b910971cfd930b82a4234b08cef936bae0dc60726c4ee440965aa8f505 Section: Development/Libraries/C and C++ Priority: optional Homepage: http://www.lua.org Description: Development files for lua Lua is a programming language originally designed for extending applications, but is also frequently used as a general-purpose, stand-alone language. . This package contains files needed for embedding lua into your application. Package: lua51-devel Version: 5.1.5-71.4 Architecture: i386 Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 1320 Depends: liblua5-1-5 (= 5.1.5-71.4),lua51 (= 5.1.5-71.4),lua-macros,dpkg Provides: lua-devel (= 5.1.5-71.4),lua-devel (= 5.1),pkgconfig-lua (= 5.1.5-71.4) Filename: i386/lua51-devel_5.1.5-71.4_i386.deb Size: 380972 MD5sum: 4c19a17860ac0d3c503019c8e6b0b7ac SHA1: 972dbbcd34687632fbc9496b14ccaaf320705880 SHA256: f2ab88241dc51796e8f21c857a8f451153d6d4b5fd1938dcddbf9c2528ef6899 Section: Development/Libraries/C and C++ Priority: optional Homepage: http://www.lua.org Description: Development files for lua Lua is a programming language originally designed for extending applications, but is also frequently used as a general-purpose, stand-alone language. . This package contains files needed for embedding lua into your application. Package: lua51-devel Version: 5.1.5-71.4 Architecture: amd64 Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 2121 Depends: liblua5-1-5 (= 5.1.5-71.4),lua51 (= 5.1.5-71.4),lua-macros,dpkg Provides: lua-devel (= 5.1.5-71.4),lua-devel (= 5.1),pkgconfig-lua (= 5.1.5-71.4) Filename: amd64/lua51-devel_5.1.5-71.4_amd64.deb Size: 387580 MD5sum: ffa731a0eb222683a5bb4a78ce4dfa60 SHA1: f8f9a5b7813cf348f21451feed87e5efa644835f SHA256: a7707c086174bca0d5ceb874d32c52db80be63f9936f774c75bd042d7afd7f80 Section: Development/Libraries/C and C++ Priority: optional Homepage: http://www.lua.org Description: Development files for lua Lua is a programming language originally designed for extending applications, but is also frequently used as a general-purpose, stand-alone language. . This package contains files needed for embedding lua into your application. Package: lua51-devel Version: 5.1.5-71.4 Architecture: arm64 Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 1919 Depends: liblua5-1-5 (= 5.1.5-71.4),lua51 (= 5.1.5-71.4),lua-macros,dpkg Provides: lua-devel (= 5.1.5-71.4),lua-devel (= 5.1),pkgconfig-lua (= 5.1.5-71.4) Filename: arm64/lua51-devel_5.1.5-71.4_arm64.deb Size: 370276 MD5sum: ff3723d7e3bed54e9f30f35bb241fbf1 SHA1: de139ddc5bbecb38caec5ebba8f6ff770da36c5b SHA256: aafa8cbea23042cbe8d9cc71a579eb2cb052fb7697682c73929c23df36fe8a7a Section: Development/Libraries/C and C++ Priority: optional Homepage: http://www.lua.org Description: Development files for lua Lua is a programming language originally designed for extending applications, but is also frequently used as a general-purpose, stand-alone language. . This package contains files needed for embedding lua into your application. Package: lua51-doc Version: 5.1.5-71.4 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 330 Filename: all/lua51-doc_5.1.5-71.4_all.deb Size: 71688 MD5sum: 2ae16914d82246ac992c2e542167fb12 SHA1: 44a20a9119a5aa0f144a76b5acf478137b0a2658 SHA256: c4ee324d121ee537e2784782bb323ac00d659c53162a5010700423dee22d3da8 Section: Documentation/HTML Priority: optional Homepage: http://www.lua.org Description: Documentation for Lua, a small embeddable language Lua is a programming language originally designed for extending applications, but is also frequently used as a general-purpose, stand-alone language. . Lua combines procedural syntax (similar to Pascal) with data description constructs based on associative arrays and extensible semantics. Lua is dynamically typed, interpreted from byte codes, and has automatic memory management, making it suitable for configuration, scripting, and rapid prototyping. Lua is implemented as a small library of C functions, written in ANSI C. Package: perl-capture-tiny Version: 0.48-26.3 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 121 Filename: all/perl-capture-tiny_0.48-26.3_all.deb Size: 29988 MD5sum: c6bbbaa2ebf72cc169aff5fd76461b31 SHA1: 5ce231e7629571bd10351b9cdfcd14a098058fba SHA256: 6eab8b9f2e39db7636c2ac1777f879854c2ed93702854f62028047a84e1ec85b Section: Development/Libraries/Perl Priority: optional Homepage: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Capture-Tiny/ Description: Capture STDOUT and STDERR from Perl, XS or external programs Capture::Tiny provides a simple, portable way to capture almost anything sent to STDOUT or STDERR, regardless of whether it comes from Perl, from XS code or from an external program. Optionally, output can be teed so that it is captured while being passed through to the original filehandles. Yes, it even works on Windows (usually). Stop guessing which of a dozen capturing modules to use in any particular situation and just use this one. Package: perl-carp Version: 1.50-26.3 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 88 Filename: all/perl-carp_1.50-26.3_all.deb Size: 22668 MD5sum: da826afcc72dac229888cfdd01e95d85 SHA1: b67d6ca250da967b1b9c14f754bbdf5f4d60d527 SHA256: 68d3e03f3888ca0cfeac49f749a14b5a2a95a7de531594b10774194dd10270c9 Section: Development/Libraries/Perl Priority: optional Homepage: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Carp/ Description: Alternative Warn and Die for Modules The Carp routines are useful in your own modules because they act like 'die()' or 'warn()', but with a message which is more likely to be useful to a user of your module. In the case of 'cluck()' and 'confess()', that context is a summary of every call in the call-stack; 'longmess()' returns the contents of the error message. . For a shorter message you can use 'carp()' or 'croak()' which report the error as being from where your module was called. 'shortmess()' returns the contents of this error message. There is no guarantee that that is where the error was, but it is a good educated guess. . 'Carp' takes care not to clobber the status variables '$!' and '$^E' in the course of assembling its error messages. This means that a '$SIG{__DIE__}' or '$SIG{__WARN__}' handler can capture the error information held in those variables, if it is required to augment the error message, and if the code calling 'Carp' left useful values there. Of course, 'Carp' can't guarantee the latter. . You can also alter the way the output and logic of 'Carp' works, by changing some global variables in the 'Carp' namespace. See the section on 'GLOBAL VARIABLES' below. . Here is a more complete description of how 'carp' and 'croak' work. What they do is search the call-stack for a function call stack where they have not been told that there shouldn't be an error. If every call is marked safe, they give up and give a full stack backtrace instead. In other words they presume that the first likely looking potential suspect is guilty. Their rules for telling whether a call shouldn't generate errors work as follows: . * 1. . Any call from a package to itself is safe. . * 2. . Packages claim that there won't be errors on calls to or from packages explicitly marked as safe by inclusion in '@CARP_NOT', or (if that array is empty) '@ISA'. The ability to override what @ISA says is new in 5.8. . * 3. . The trust in item 2 is transitive. If A trusts B, and B trusts C, then A trusts C. So if you do not override '@ISA' with '@CARP_NOT', then this trust relationship is identical to, "inherits from". . * 4. . Any call from an internal Perl module is safe. (Nothing keeps user modules from marking themselves as internal to Perl, but this practice is discouraged.) . * 5. . Any call to Perl's warning system (eg Carp itself) is safe. (This rule is what keeps it from reporting the error at the point where you call 'carp' or 'croak'.) . * 6. . '$Carp::CarpLevel' can be set to skip a fixed number of additional call levels. Using this is not recommended because it is very difficult to get it to behave correctly. Package: perl-class-data-inheritable Version: 0.09-26.3 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 55 Filename: all/perl-class-data-inheritable_0.09-26.3_all.deb Size: 7232 MD5sum: 0db5e519ab5ddab271bfda7f6b612e9f SHA1: 830d4a50d7e8eefcde83ca0504d3861be2c64cae SHA256: 8ee490422ce85fd6fd9644efbb1a387bf3da3bcdf2e29b46d058d9100c385b24 Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/Class-Data-Inheritable Description: Inheritable, overridable class data Class::Data::Inheritable is for creating accessor/mutators to class data. That is, if you want to store something about your class as a whole (instead of about a single object). This data is then inherited by your subclasses and can be overridden. . For example: . Pere::Ubu->mk_classdata('Suitcase'); . will generate the method Suitcase() in the class Pere::Ubu. . This new method can be used to get and set a piece of class data. . Pere::Ubu->Suitcase('Red'); $suitcase = Pere::Ubu->Suitcase; . The interesting part happens when a class inherits from Pere::Ubu: . package Raygun; use base qw(Pere::Ubu); . # Raygun's suitcase is Red. $suitcase = Raygun->Suitcase; . Raygun inherits its Suitcase class data from Pere::Ubu. . Inheritance of class data works analogous to method inheritance. As long as Raygun does not "override" its inherited class data (by using Suitcase() to set a new value) it will continue to use whatever is set in Pere::Ubu and inherit further changes: . # Both Raygun's and Pere::Ubu's suitcases are now Blue Pere::Ubu->Suitcase('Blue'); . However, should Raygun decide to set its own Suitcase() it has now "overridden" Pere::Ubu and is on its own, just like if it had overridden a method: . # Raygun has an orange suitcase, Pere::Ubu's is still Blue. Raygun->Suitcase('Orange'); . Now that Raygun has overridden Pere::Ubu further changes by Pere::Ubu no longer effect Raygun. . # Raygun still has an orange suitcase, but Pere::Ubu is using Samsonite. Pere::Ubu->Suitcase('Samsonite'); Package: perl-devel-stacktrace Version: 2.04-26.3 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 113 Filename: all/perl-devel-stacktrace_2.04-26.3_all.deb Size: 28400 MD5sum: e6a312d8baf24452197ec10afd79fe26 SHA1: 2d7731af2d3bbdf40cc01713b6c90454e541b8f2 SHA256: bf8f50bf97892b0983c594a400063a1deb4ba5fc76046fa284d36527b461f806 Section: Development/Libraries/Perl Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/Devel-StackTrace Description: An object representing a stack trace The 'Devel::StackTrace' module contains two classes, 'Devel::StackTrace' and Devel::StackTrace::Frame. These objects encapsulate the information that can retrieved via Perl's 'caller' function, as well as providing a simple interface to this data. . The 'Devel::StackTrace' object contains a set of 'Devel::StackTrace::Frame' objects, one for each level of the stack. The frames contain all the data available from 'caller'. . This code was created to support my Exception::Class::Base class (part of Exception::Class) but may be useful in other contexts. Package: perl-devel-symdump Version: 2.18-26.3 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 76 Depends: perl Filename: all/perl-devel-symdump_2.18-26.3_all.deb Size: 14364 MD5sum: 0be08de9c8c4df1f7bc584cd929aee59 SHA1: 43c80ce61beb29ca03de71c10869384de487b08d SHA256: 5a1d334f7e6feeef8588558144446f1997a84238ef51f4a25fd4def131781bee Section: Development/Libraries/Perl Priority: optional Homepage: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Devel-Symdump/ Description: Dump Symbol Names or the Symbol Table This little package serves to access the symbol table of perl. Package: perl-exception-class Version: 1.45-26.12 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 142 Depends: perl-class-data-inheritable,perl-devel-stacktrace Filename: all/perl-exception-class_1.45-26.12_all.deb Size: 39044 MD5sum: 19537976f917d2c8aac9af3355f7dc15 SHA1: ca15408bccfc9e4675f161a19e9b7f1abcb41117 SHA256: f6b5b9bdad8ffa8b61da9992a7052a747f789a496a648633edd8617df5cea889 Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/Exception-Class Description: Module that allows you to declare real exception classes in Perl *RECOMMENDATION 1*: If you are writing modern Perl code with Moose or Moo I highly recommend using Throwable instead of this module. . *RECOMMENDATION 2*: Whether or not you use Throwable, you should use Try::Tiny. . Exception::Class allows you to declare exception hierarchies in your modules in a "Java-esque" manner. . It features a simple interface allowing programmers to 'declare' exception classes at compile time. It also has a base exception class, Exception::Class::Base, that can be easily extended. . It is designed to make structured exception handling simpler and better by encouraging people to use hierarchies of exceptions in their applications, as opposed to a single catch-all exception class. . This module does not implement any try/catch syntax. Please see the "OTHER EXCEPTION MODULES (try/catch syntax)" section for more information on how to get this syntax. . You will also want to look at the documentation for Exception::Class::Base, which is the default base class for all exception objects created by this module. Package: perl-extutils-cbuilder Version: 0.280236-25.18 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 155 Depends: perl,perl-ipc-cmd,perl-perl-ostype Filename: all/perl-extutils-cbuilder_0.280236-25.18_all.deb Size: 39248 MD5sum: 92730242c3f177fd518a0378dc327261 SHA1: b7ec7088e0479943e1a79fad7b4eed2cfc9a9c1a SHA256: b37af6c12b4f42f80910b72ad4f9ac4acceea0b0c8b4d676dccbc7168c0fbbd3 Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/ExtUtils-CBuilder Description: Compile and link C code for Perl modules This module can build the C portions of Perl modules by invoking the appropriate compilers and linkers in a cross-platform manner. It was motivated by the 'Module::Build' project, but may be useful for other purposes as well. However, it is _not_ intended as a general cross-platform interface to all your C building needs. That would have been a much more ambitious goal! Package: perl-extutils-makemaker Version: 7.66-11.5 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 890 Filename: all/perl-extutils-makemaker_7.66-11.5_all.deb Size: 304260 MD5sum: 425a444e0ded1775b7d5a5da0b4da14a SHA1: 4cf763568506ef801c417828d26850272336f146 SHA256: 4fd9b9fbba284539cfe206a0f2d255191cc4469f70471c1a810e4bf2d2a3065d Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/ExtUtils-MakeMaker Description: Create a module Makefile This utility is designed to write a Makefile for an extension module from a Makefile.PL. It is based on the Makefile.SH model provided by Andy Dougherty and the perl5-porters. . It splits the task of generating the Makefile into several subroutines that can be individually overridden. Each subroutine returns the text it wishes to have written to the Makefile. . As there are various Make programs with incompatible syntax, which use operating system shells, again with incompatible syntax, it is important for users of this module to know which flavour of Make a Makefile has been written for so they'll use the correct one and won't have to face the possibly bewildering errors resulting from using the wrong one. . On POSIX systems, that program will likely be GNU Make; on Microsoft Windows, it will be either Microsoft NMake, DMake or GNU Make. See the section on the L parameter for details. . ExtUtils::MakeMaker (EUMM) is object oriented. Each directory below the current directory that contains a Makefile.PL is treated as a separate object. This makes it possible to write an unlimited number of Makefiles with a single invocation of WriteMakefile(). . All inputs to WriteMakefile are Unicode characters, not just octets. EUMM seeks to handle all of these correctly. It is currently still not possible to portably use Unicode characters in module names, because this requires Perl to handle Unicode filenames, which is not yet the case on Windows. . See L for details of the design and usage. Package: perl-extutils-pkgconfig Version: 1.160000-26.3 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 61 Depends: pkg-config Provides: libextutils-pkgconfig-perl (= 1.160000-26.3) Filename: all/perl-extutils-pkgconfig_1.160000-26.3_all.deb Size: 10544 MD5sum: dc8099fe79a20a8cab8a29e4f99a20f3 SHA1: e3e480715a6262618144a00a981d8f5044ea075c SHA256: d22c7f3d4cdb895cd08de6443c272317971e630e079b208dbe0362822cfcfc72 Section: Development/Libraries/Perl Priority: optional Homepage: http://search.cpan.org/dist/ExtUtils-PkgConfig/ Description: Simplistic Interface to Pkg-Config The pkg-config program retrieves information about installed libraries, usually for the purposes of compiling against and linking to them. . ExtUtils::PkgConfig is a very simplistic interface to this utility, intended for use in the Makefile.PL of perl extensions which bind libraries that pkg-config knows. It is really just boilerplate code that you would've written yourself. Package: perl-file-path Version: 2.180000-26.4 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 107 Provides: libfile-path-perl (= 2.180000-26.4) Filename: all/perl-file-path_2.180000-26.4_all.deb Size: 30660 MD5sum: 6fb41e70f18f969465005e245fd5c947 SHA1: 02bd83306561de930d9f3b26d6a2ad112545067d SHA256: b523270293fe64f3dd55986516f32f39662532a455ab6d0cae8d6b3931843843 Section: Development/Libraries/Perl Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/File-Path Description: Create or remove directory trees This module provides a convenient way to create directories of arbitrary depth and to delete an entire directory subtree from the filesystem. Package: perl-file-temp Version: 0.2311-26.7 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 207 Depends: perl-file-path,perl-parent Filename: all/perl-file-temp_0.2311-26.7_all.deb Size: 53284 MD5sum: c966cc381b9fc9cb06ccf41c65d376a7 SHA1: eab7f680b1185a877e96adfcab7ae3e7123f8d42 SHA256: 9021cd6ade67a86205e9879889bc24818872f2db756df3a484c9638efafc4c8b Section: Development/Libraries/Perl Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/File-Temp Description: Return name and handle of a temporary file safely 'File::Temp' can be used to create and open temporary files in a safe way. There is both a function interface and an object-oriented interface. The File::Temp constructor or the tempfile() function can be used to return the name and the open filehandle of a temporary file. The tempdir() function can be used to create a temporary directory. . The security aspect of temporary file creation is emphasized such that a filehandle and filename are returned together. This helps guarantee that a race condition can not occur where the temporary file is created by another process between checking for the existence of the file and its opening. Additional security levels are provided to check, for example, that the sticky bit is set on world writable directories. See "safe_level" for more information. . For compatibility with popular C library functions, Perl implementations of the mkstemp() family of functions are provided. These are, mkstemp(), mkstemps(), mkdtemp() and mktemp(). . Additionally, implementations of the standard POSIX tmpnam() and tmpfile() functions are provided if required. . Implementations of mktemp(), tmpnam(), and tempnam() are provided, but should be used with caution since they return only a filename that was valid when function was called, so cannot guarantee that the file will not exist by the time the caller opens the filename. . Filehandles returned by these functions support the seekable methods. Package: perl-ipc-cmd Version: 1.04-26.3 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 127 Depends: perl Filename: all/perl-ipc-cmd_1.04-26.3_all.deb Size: 33148 MD5sum: 089359e9bac8f544f75a13e83c688d75 SHA1: ae7413d09337d6d6f2cf287e0af95ec5c1739d17 SHA256: e5d93a53fa9e8790cb2ddec8ea0515382c9e7bc6d742bf26ead6c835344a89f0 Section: Development/Libraries/Perl Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/IPC-Cmd Description: Finding and running system commands made easy IPC::Cmd allows you to run commands platform independently, interactively if desired, but have them still work. . The 'can_run' function can tell you if a certain binary is installed and if so where, whereas the 'run' function can actually execute any of the commands you give it and give you a clear return value, as well as adhere to your verbosity settings. Package: perl-lua-api Version: 0.04-27.99 Architecture: ppc64el Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 967 Depends: perl-base,liblua5-1-5,libc6 Filename: ppc64el/perl-lua-api_0.04-27.99_ppc64el.deb Size: 179976 MD5sum: 5f516f2e10d557309b190672e3fbce83 SHA1: 040c7379ac6e3983f05d063de177ab46fc7503c4 SHA256: f5bb75033267f64e45e0540a96a5eed62385f2f3d638f19dc7e28ac4b663b67b Section: Development/Libraries/Perl Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/Lua-API Description: Interface to Lua's embedding API *Lua* is a simple, expressive, extension programming language that is easily embeddable. *Lua::API* provides Perl bindings to Lua's C-based embedding API. It allows Perl routines to be called from Lua as if they were written in C, and allows Perl routines to directly manipulate the Lua interpreter and its environment. It presents a very low-level interface (essentially equivalent to the C interface), so is aimed at developers who need that sort of access. . *Lua::API* is not the first place to turn to if you need a simple, more Perl-ish interface; for that, try *Inline::Lua*, which takes a much higher level approach and masks most of the underlying complexity in communicating between Lua and Perl. Unfortunately by hiding the complexity, this approach also prevents full operability. For *Inline::Lua* this is a necessary tradeoff, but it does mean that you cannot create as tight an integration with Lua. Package: perl-lua-api Version: 0.04-27.99 Architecture: s390x Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 891 Depends: perl-base,liblua5-1-5,libc6 Filename: s390x/perl-lua-api_0.04-27.99_s390x.deb Size: 173528 MD5sum: 2149549f5b9619bd6aab629ff8124062 SHA1: 2ea075c374b5e2379b245c6235c6bf0423a28c42 SHA256: 8f591138e2b873324863f5a07b8175b8070bff132ae071ecc67061b01c2fa2e9 Section: Development/Libraries/Perl Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/Lua-API Description: Interface to Lua's embedding API *Lua* is a simple, expressive, extension programming language that is easily embeddable. *Lua::API* provides Perl bindings to Lua's C-based embedding API. It allows Perl routines to be called from Lua as if they were written in C, and allows Perl routines to directly manipulate the Lua interpreter and its environment. It presents a very low-level interface (essentially equivalent to the C interface), so is aimed at developers who need that sort of access. . *Lua::API* is not the first place to turn to if you need a simple, more Perl-ish interface; for that, try *Inline::Lua*, which takes a much higher level approach and masks most of the underlying complexity in communicating between Lua and Perl. Unfortunately by hiding the complexity, this approach also prevents full operability. For *Inline::Lua* this is a necessary tradeoff, but it does mean that you cannot create as tight an integration with Lua. Package: perl-lua-api Version: 0.04-27.99 Architecture: armhf Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 672 Depends: perl-base,liblua5-1-5,libc6 Filename: armhf/perl-lua-api_0.04-27.99_armhf.deb Size: 169036 MD5sum: 2a3b6271188500a73b20d818e2866d97 SHA1: b4e45ededebf77845c911c0f4d0fb394f8952f46 SHA256: f188cf93b54de0a95da7e5b4843d7ad9a406f1c006c0d5a7c6ecdd4185a5fd69 Section: Development/Libraries/Perl Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/Lua-API Description: Interface to Lua's embedding API *Lua* is a simple, expressive, extension programming language that is easily embeddable. *Lua::API* provides Perl bindings to Lua's C-based embedding API. It allows Perl routines to be called from Lua as if they were written in C, and allows Perl routines to directly manipulate the Lua interpreter and its environment. It presents a very low-level interface (essentially equivalent to the C interface), so is aimed at developers who need that sort of access. . *Lua::API* is not the first place to turn to if you need a simple, more Perl-ish interface; for that, try *Inline::Lua*, which takes a much higher level approach and masks most of the underlying complexity in communicating between Lua and Perl. Unfortunately by hiding the complexity, this approach also prevents full operability. For *Inline::Lua* this is a necessary tradeoff, but it does mean that you cannot create as tight an integration with Lua. Package: perl-lua-api Version: 0.04-27.99 Architecture: i386 Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 722 Depends: perl-base,liblua5-1-5,libc6 Filename: i386/perl-lua-api_0.04-27.99_i386.deb Size: 170000 MD5sum: f289cec8ea7922d97a1724aceaebe920 SHA1: 08319a81e88d3e73968f4a66bd7870627ec9672a SHA256: 9321ebfed7adeb3410808656d1d6135411d763b0d2ea368d02a8791d9cdcfd8b Section: Development/Libraries/Perl Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/Lua-API Description: Interface to Lua's embedding API *Lua* is a simple, expressive, extension programming language that is easily embeddable. *Lua::API* provides Perl bindings to Lua's C-based embedding API. It allows Perl routines to be called from Lua as if they were written in C, and allows Perl routines to directly manipulate the Lua interpreter and its environment. It presents a very low-level interface (essentially equivalent to the C interface), so is aimed at developers who need that sort of access. . *Lua::API* is not the first place to turn to if you need a simple, more Perl-ish interface; for that, try *Inline::Lua*, which takes a much higher level approach and masks most of the underlying complexity in communicating between Lua and Perl. Unfortunately by hiding the complexity, this approach also prevents full operability. For *Inline::Lua* this is a necessary tradeoff, but it does mean that you cannot create as tight an integration with Lua. Package: perl-lua-api Version: 0.04-27.99 Architecture: amd64 Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 864 Depends: perl-base,liblua5-1-5,libc6 Filename: amd64/perl-lua-api_0.04-27.99_amd64.deb Size: 182964 MD5sum: 127a56f8169f069a832f3f539d57933a SHA1: 7fdc12118c5299bb4203f9a07ed8ede183b75bec SHA256: e3a7e4fc72819faf6a3ed59e038cfed3d62d45753324f9b59df532778df5de51 Section: Development/Libraries/Perl Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/Lua-API Description: Interface to Lua's embedding API *Lua* is a simple, expressive, extension programming language that is easily embeddable. *Lua::API* provides Perl bindings to Lua's C-based embedding API. It allows Perl routines to be called from Lua as if they were written in C, and allows Perl routines to directly manipulate the Lua interpreter and its environment. It presents a very low-level interface (essentially equivalent to the C interface), so is aimed at developers who need that sort of access. . *Lua::API* is not the first place to turn to if you need a simple, more Perl-ish interface; for that, try *Inline::Lua*, which takes a much higher level approach and masks most of the underlying complexity in communicating between Lua and Perl. Unfortunately by hiding the complexity, this approach also prevents full operability. For *Inline::Lua* this is a necessary tradeoff, but it does mean that you cannot create as tight an integration with Lua. Package: perl-lua-api Version: 0.04-27.99 Architecture: arm64 Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 874 Depends: perl-base,liblua5-1-5,libc6 Filename: arm64/perl-lua-api_0.04-27.99_arm64.deb Size: 178168 MD5sum: bed759cc28c9962b81e472cfe04ce85e SHA1: d9e95d4ac6ea4aec60b9ae948384b104254b61da SHA256: 8f9b9498bf1857fac23ccaaccdd93761f8b28d380b077169377089e671fc8ad9 Section: Development/Libraries/Perl Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/Lua-API Description: Interface to Lua's embedding API *Lua* is a simple, expressive, extension programming language that is easily embeddable. *Lua::API* provides Perl bindings to Lua's C-based embedding API. It allows Perl routines to be called from Lua as if they were written in C, and allows Perl routines to directly manipulate the Lua interpreter and its environment. It presents a very low-level interface (essentially equivalent to the C interface), so is aimed at developers who need that sort of access. . *Lua::API* is not the first place to turn to if you need a simple, more Perl-ish interface; for that, try *Inline::Lua*, which takes a much higher level approach and masks most of the underlying complexity in communicating between Lua and Perl. Unfortunately by hiding the complexity, this approach also prevents full operability. For *Inline::Lua* this is a necessary tradeoff, but it does mean that you cannot create as tight an integration with Lua. Package: perl-module-build Version: 0.423400-29.17 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 733 Depends: perl,perl-extutils-cbuilder,perl-base,perl-module-metadata,perl-perl-ostype Recommends: libextutils-manifest-perl (>= 1.54) Provides: libmodule-build-perl (= 0.423400-29.17) Filename: all/perl-module-build_0.423400-29.17_all.deb Size: 251868 MD5sum: 0e9fc4de5692f969cd8e406cabb09574 SHA1: 30b6876009e24d0cdb1d8e58094212369e477436 SHA256: d33bf88fefd80d6263fcd839a6336785c7969b3c9dc903e9f1f813fe50956e23 Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/Module-Build Description: Build and install Perl modules 'Module::Build' is a system for building, testing, and installing Perl modules. It is meant to be an alternative to 'ExtUtils::MakeMaker'. Developers may alter the behavior of the module through subclassing. It also does not require a 'make' on your system - most of the 'Module::Build' code is pure-perl and written in a very cross-platform way. . See "COMPARISON" for more comparisons between 'Module::Build' and other installer tools. . To install 'Module::Build', and any other module that uses 'Module::Build' for its installation process, do the following: . perl Build.PL # 'Build.PL' script creates the 'Build' script ./Build # Need ./ to ensure we're using this "Build" script ./Build test # and not another one that happens to be in the PATH ./Build install . This illustrates initial configuration and the running of three 'actions'. In this case the actions run are 'build' (the default action), 'test', and 'install'. Other actions defined so far include: . build manifest clean manifest_skip code manpages config_data pardist diff ppd dist ppmdist distcheck prereq_data distclean prereq_report distdir pure_install distinstall realclean distmeta retest distsign skipcheck disttest test docs testall fakeinstall testcover help testdb html testpod install testpodcoverage installdeps versioninstall . You can run the 'help' action for a complete list of actions. Package: perl-module-metadata Version: 1.000038-26.3 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 111 Depends: perl Filename: all/perl-module-metadata_1.000038-26.3_all.deb Size: 29652 MD5sum: 01d19ee1bd79fa3cf39286f11ee39253 SHA1: 363f374b46cf8d69ec3ba54c865a4093db53b4e8 SHA256: 3cffd00bcc6747d5e55f93db5adf13b4527569ece5cdd2a522b53b463fcb225e Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/Module-Metadata Description: Gather package and POD information from perl module files This module provides a standard way to gather metadata about a .pm file through (mostly) static analysis and (some) code execution. When determining the version of a module, the '$VERSION' assignment is 'eval'ed, as is traditional in the CPAN toolchain. Package: perl-module-runtime Version: 0.016-26.28 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 74 Filename: all/perl-module-runtime_0.016-26.28_all.deb Size: 18440 MD5sum: 2e75628700da38fc5945e3a100dbd5d4 SHA1: 899bc93556ce7ba1ed913446ce0b3a62e3203782 SHA256: 58a86019eda8a0188f3e57bed35639901e5074f55ae7bb34f42b689c17698e06 Section: Development/Libraries/Perl Priority: optional Homepage: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Module-Runtime/ Description: Runtime Module Handling The functions exported by this module deal with runtime handling of Perl modules, which are normally handled at compile time. This module avoids using any other modules, so that it can be used in low-level infrastructure. . The parts of this module that work with module names apply the same syntax that is used for barewords in Perl source. In principle this syntax can vary between versions of Perl, and this module applies the syntax of the Perl on which it is running. In practice the usable syntax hasn't changed yet. There's some intent for Unicode module names to be supported in the future, but this hasn't yet amounted to any consistent facility. . The functions of this module whose purpose is to load modules include workarounds for three old Perl core bugs regarding 'require'. These workarounds are applied on any Perl version where the bugs exist, except for a case where one of the bugs cannot be adequately worked around in pure Perl. Package: perl-mro-compat Version: 0.15-26.3 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 81 Filename: all/perl-mro-compat_0.15-26.3_all.deb Size: 17208 MD5sum: c9a50b97596c9813cd28f92683cb6187 SHA1: 0edf04c35cbedbb0fa34ac18b430c403ded44798 SHA256: f71cbe38c0147962658375fd77ffff43c76f8461cc11f7ad59643ee1227e055e Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/MRO-Compat Description: Mro::* interface compatibility for Perls < 5.9.5 The "mro" namespace provides several utilities for dealing with method resolution order and method caching in general in Perl 5.9.5 and higher. . This module provides those interfaces for earlier versions of Perl (back to 5.6.0 anyways). . It is a harmless no-op to use this module on 5.9.5+. That is to say, code which properly uses MRO::Compat will work unmodified on both older Perls and 5.9.5+. . If you're writing a piece of software that would like to use the parts of 5.9.5+'s mro:: interfaces that are supported here, and you want compatibility with older Perls, this is the module for you. . Some parts of this code will work better and/or faster with Class::C3::XS installed (which is an optional prereq of Class::C3, which is in turn a prereq of this package), but it's not a requirement. . This module never exports any functions. All calls must be fully qualified with the 'mro::' prefix. . The interface documentation here serves only as a quick reference of what the function basically does, and what differences between MRO::Compat and 5.9.5+ one should look out for. The main docs in 5.9.5's mro are the real interface docs, and contain a lot of other useful information. Package: perl-parent Version: 0.238-26.3 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 47 Filename: all/perl-parent_0.238-26.3_all.deb Size: 8352 MD5sum: c4337b08e80a215b2d7272164353fd78 SHA1: 3e0b9859f91f5b985baa7340f4c6a86480fdf15c SHA256: aa872cd900486ca5242cf7a7470ce230960ff6de2d16b988b821e4960f826292 Section: Development/Libraries/Perl Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/parent Description: Establish an ISA relationship with base classes at compile time Allows you to both load one or more modules, while setting up inheritance from those modules at the same time. Mostly similar in effect to . package Baz; BEGIN { require Foo; require Bar; push @ISA, qw(Foo Bar); } . By default, every base class needs to live in a file of its own. If you want to have a subclass and its parent class in the same file, you can tell 'parent' not to load any modules by using the '-norequire' switch: . package Foo; sub exclaim { "I CAN HAS PERL" } . package DoesNotLoadFooBar; use parent -norequire, 'Foo', 'Bar'; # will not go looking for Foo.pm or Bar.pm . This is equivalent to the following code: . package Foo; sub exclaim { "I CAN HAS PERL" } . package DoesNotLoadFooBar; push @DoesNotLoadFooBar::ISA, 'Foo', 'Bar'; . This is also helpful for the case where a package lives within a differently named file: . package MyHash; use Tie::Hash; use parent -norequire, 'Tie::StdHash'; . This is equivalent to the following code: . package MyHash; require Tie::Hash; push @ISA, 'Tie::StdHash'; . If you want to load a subclass from a file that 'require' would not consider an eligible filename (that is, it does not end in either '.pm' or '.pmc'), use the following code: . package MySecondPlugin; require './plugins/custom.plugin'; # contains Plugin::Custom use parent -norequire, 'Plugin::Custom'; Package: perl-perl-ostype Version: 1.010-26.4 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 74 Filename: all/perl-perl-ostype_1.010-26.4_all.deb Size: 15208 MD5sum: 77ce2230be5c612d746643f8b72184e7 SHA1: c409c929493b5324b11eac0dcd01f3d3069776fb SHA256: faa986ef1d458edf4b1c8d6a936105000ab2ef64677826f9339187cf8075c983 Section: Development/Libraries/Perl Priority: optional Homepage: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Perl-OSType/ Description: Map Perl operating system names to generic types Modules that provide OS-specific behaviors often need to know if the current operating system matches a more generic type of operating systems. For example, 'linux' is a type of 'Unix' operating system and so is 'freebsd'. . This module provides a mapping between an operating system name as given by '$^O' and a more generic type. The initial version is based on the OS type mappings provided in Module::Build and ExtUtils::CBuilder. (Thus, Microsoft operating systems are given the type 'Windows' rather than 'Win32'.) Package: perl-pod-coverage Version: 0.23-28.9 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 85 Depends: perl-devel-symdump,perl Filename: all/perl-pod-coverage_0.23-28.9_all.deb Size: 19112 MD5sum: f8bb4bb07700d57fd9fe05907b6b344e SHA1: 16862c0ad4ab6e1a23bdeb5075487aa481ddf27f SHA256: ddcc9a37377ecaaa159ce123224e19a51ff80dd9b42e52d3a66abac93eaabce7 Section: Development/Libraries/Perl Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/Pod-Coverage Description: Checks if the documentation of a module is comprehensive Developers hate writing documentation. They'd hate it even more if their computer tattled on them, but maybe they'll be even more thankful in the long run. Even if not, _perlmodstyle_ tells you to, so you must obey. . This module provides a mechanism for determining if the pod for a given module is comprehensive. . It expects to find either a '=head(n>1)' or an '=item' block documenting a subroutine. . Consider: # an imaginary Foo.pm package Foo; . =item foo . The foo sub . = cut . sub foo {} sub bar {} . 1; __END__ . In this example 'Foo::foo' is covered, but 'Foo::bar' is not, so the 'Foo' package is only 50% (0.5) covered Package: perl-sub-uplevel Version: 0.2800-25.36 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 112 Filename: all/perl-sub-uplevel_0.2800-25.36_all.deb Size: 22168 MD5sum: fd17ac5364f11c7c118c1d0e46b6a8ba SHA1: 49d8fd1ffcef29487d906b3ae7dd0d094139f691 SHA256: cff8f7b5cc8e2dda64b5b1b66b171069f90e9dd094cd51a5126af94a49393b24 Section: Development/Libraries/Perl Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/Sub-Uplevel Description: Apparently run a function in a higher stack frame Like Tcl's uplevel() function, but not quite so dangerous. The idea is just to fool caller(). All the really naughty bits of Tcl's uplevel() are avoided. Package: perl-test-class Version: 0.52-26.42 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 208 Depends: perl-mro-compat,perl-module-runtime,perl,perl-try-tiny Filename: all/perl-test-class_0.52-26.42_all.deb Size: 56788 MD5sum: fb6b0d72759ea98b6e9b32e501895ca7 SHA1: f233b9045f5c23750b0b3a7ece1812065630e871 SHA256: c92b7511b937574b20c75bdef606310981859c79e11b60038923763181d72919 Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/Test-Class Description: Easily create test classes in an xUnit/JUnit style Test::Class provides a simple way of creating classes and objects to test your code in an xUnit style. . Built using Test::Builder, it was designed to work with other Test::Builder based modules (Test::More, Test::Differences, Test::Exception, etc.). . _Note:_ This module will make more sense, if you are already familiar with the "standard" mechanisms for testing perl code. Those unfamiliar with Test::Harness, Test::Simple, Test::More and friends should go take a look at them now. Test::Tutorial is a good starting point. Package: perl-test-compile Version: 3.3.1-26.24 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 86 Depends: perl-base,perl-parent Provides: libtest-compile-perl (= 3.3.1-26.24),libtest-compile-internal-perl (= 3.3.1-26.24) Filename: all/perl-test-compile_3.3.1-26.24_all.deb Size: 21440 MD5sum: 206a34cbb58a55d079e2075cf93714f7 SHA1: dbe2b6b3fe6f5d228d601b515ea37bd3898d6f5b SHA256: feb4ffed03e1e4dcdcf3fa14f7585ba8548b72ac90ea5d5bfb71b3383675e2b7 Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/Test-Compile Description: Assert that your Perl files compile OK 'Test::Compile' lets you check the whether your perl modules and scripts compile properly, results are reported in standard 'Test::Simple' fashion. . The basic usage - as shown above, will locate your perl files and test that they all compile. . Module authors can (and probably should) include the following in a _t/00-compile.t_ file and have 'Test::Compile' automatically find and check all Perl files in a module distribution: . #!perl use strict; use warnings; use Test::Compile qw(); . my $test = Test::Compile->new(); $test->all_files_ok(); $test->done_testing(); Package: perl-test-deep Version: 1.204-27.7 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 353 Depends: perl Filename: all/perl-test-deep_1.204-27.7_all.deb Size: 92688 MD5sum: 3e041ea387dde47be367b9cc3604f0fc SHA1: f42d65a0c3aadf98ee4c0951bc766126176f7def SHA256: 502be602cd969e6537dcc86f08b76340caa48ea39c7ab3d845bf82f0670c56ed Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/Test-Deep Description: Extremely flexible deep comparison If you don't know anything about automated testing in Perl then you should probably read about Test::Simple and Test::More before preceding. Test::Deep uses the Test::Builder framework. . Test::Deep gives you very flexible ways to check that the result you got is the result you were expecting. At its simplest it compares two structures by going through each level, ensuring that the values match, that arrays and hashes have the same elements and that references are blessed into the correct class. It also handles circular data structures without getting caught in an infinite loop. . Where it becomes more interesting is in allowing you to do something besides simple exact comparisons. With strings, the 'eq' operator checks that 2 strings are exactly equal but sometimes that's not what you want. When you don't know exactly what the string should be but you do know some things about how it should look, 'eq' is no good and you must use pattern matching instead. Test::Deep provides pattern matching for complex data structures . Test::Deep has *_a lot_* of exports. See EXPORTS below. Package: perl-test-differences Version: 0.710.0-26.11 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 73 Depends: perl-capture-tiny,perl,perl-text-diff Provides: libtest-differences-perl (= 0.710.0-26.11) Filename: all/perl-test-differences_0.710.0-26.11_all.deb Size: 18376 MD5sum: 99c1f15bf94ca60fb60a13019e7d25d1 SHA1: b128cbddfb161f2f7cf57bed07574002839957b3 SHA256: cfc28e70f68a3290254c72324e7e4928c52f5c3fa4e194052d4f225f95ef80f7 Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/Test-Differences Description: Test strings and data structures and show differences if not ok When the code you're testing returns multiple lines, records or data structures and they're just plain wrong, an equivalent to the Unix 'diff' utility may be just what's needed. Here's output from an example test script that checks two text documents and then two (trivial) data structures: . t/99example....1..3 not ok 1 - differences in text # Failed test ((eval 2) at line 14) # +---+----------------+----------------+ # | Ln|Got |Expected | # +---+----------------+----------------+ # | 1|this is line 1 |this is line 1 | # * 2|this is line 2 |this is line b * # | 3|this is line 3 |this is line 3 | # +---+----------------+----------------+ not ok 2 - differences in whitespace # Failed test ((eval 2) at line 20) # +---+------------------+------------------+ # | Ln|Got |Expected | # +---+------------------+------------------+ # | 1| indented | indented | # * 2| indented |\tindented * # | 3| indented | indented | # +---+------------------+------------------+ not ok 3 # Failed test ((eval 2) at line 22) # +----+-------------------------------------+----------------------------+ # | Elt|Got |Expected | # +----+-------------------------------------+----------------------------+ # * 0|bless( [ |[ * # * 1| 'Move along, nothing to see here' | 'Dry, humorless message' * # * 2|], 'Test::Builder' ) |] * # +----+-------------------------------------+----------------------------+ # Looks like you failed 3 tests of 3. . eq_or_diff_...() compares two strings or (limited) data structures and either emits an ok indication or a side-by-side diff. Test::Differences is designed to be used with Test.pm and with Test::Simple, Test::More, and other Test::Builder based testing modules. As the SYNOPSIS shows, another testing module must be used as the basis for your test suite. Package: perl-test-exception Version: 0.430000-26.30 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 71 Depends: perl-sub-uplevel,perl Provides: libtest-exception-perl (= 0.430000-26.30) Filename: all/perl-test-exception_0.430000-26.30_all.deb Size: 18076 MD5sum: 0e6b97a145d744564cd207f04378b657 SHA1: 4c60079e165318e81b40c0e91e9a15779dc78440 SHA256: 749816efdc125359b1ad55defccc313df98e2ae1cb468e24b567df9940483406 Section: Development/Libraries/Perl Priority: optional Homepage: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Test-Exception/ Description: Test exception-based code This module provides a few convenience methods for testing exception based code. It is built with Test::Builder and plays happily with Test::More and friends. . If you are not already familiar with Test::More now would be the time to go take a look. . You can specify the test plan when you 'use Test::Exception' in the same way as 'use Test::More'. See Test::More for details. . NOTE: Test::Exception only checks for exceptions. It will ignore other methods of stopping program execution - including exit(). If you have an exit() in evalled code Test::Exception will not catch this with any of its testing functions. . NOTE: This module uses Sub::Uplevel and relies on overriding 'CORE::GLOBAL::caller' to hide your test blocks from the call stack. If this use of global overrides concerns you, the Test::Fatal module offers a more minimalist alternative. . * *throws_ok* . Tests to see that a specific exception is thrown. throws_ok() has two forms: . throws_ok BLOCK REGEX, TEST_DESCRIPTION throws_ok BLOCK CLASS, TEST_DESCRIPTION . In the first form the test passes if the stringified exception matches the give regular expression. For example: . throws_ok { read_file( 'unreadable' ) } qr/No file/, 'no file'; . If your perl does not support 'qr//' you can also pass a regex-like string, for example: . throws_ok { read_file( 'unreadable' ) } '/No file/', 'no file'; . The second form of throws_ok() test passes if the exception is of the same class as the one supplied, or a subclass of that class. For example: . throws_ok { $foo->bar } "Error::Simple", 'simple error'; . Will only pass if the 'bar' method throws an Error::Simple exception, or a subclass of an Error::Simple exception. . You can get the same effect by passing an instance of the exception you want to look for. The following is equivalent to the previous example: . my $SIMPLE = Error::Simple->new; throws_ok { $foo->bar } $SIMPLE, 'simple error'; . Should a throws_ok() test fail it produces appropriate diagnostic messages. For example: . not ok 3 - simple error # Failed test (test.t at line 48) # expecting: Error::Simple exception # found: normal exit . Like all other Test::Exception functions you can avoid prototypes by passing a subroutine explicitly: . throws_ok( sub {$foo->bar}, "Error::Simple", 'simple error' ); . A true value is returned if the test succeeds, false otherwise. On exit $@ is guaranteed to be the cause of death (if any). . A description of the exception being checked is used if no optional test description is passed. . NOTE: Remember when you 'die $string_without_a_trailing_newline' perl will automatically add the current script line number, input line number and a newline. This will form part of the string that throws_ok regular expressions match against. . * *dies_ok* . Checks that a piece of code dies, rather than returning normally. For example: . sub div { my ( $a, $b ) = @_; return $a / $b; }; . dies_ok { div( 1, 0 ) } 'divide by zero detected'; . # or if you don't like prototypes dies_ok( sub { div( 1, 0 ) }, 'divide by zero detected' ); . A true value is returned if the test succeeds, false otherwise. On exit $@ is guaranteed to be the cause of death (if any). . Remember: This test will pass if the code dies for any reason. If you care about the reason it might be more sensible to write a more specific test using throws_ok(). . The test description is optional, but recommended. . * *lives_ok* . Checks that a piece of code doesn't die. This allows your test script to continue, rather than aborting if you get an unexpected exception. For example: . sub read_file { my $file = shift; local $/; open my $fh, '<', $file or die "open failed ($!)\n"; $file = ; return $file; }; . my $file; lives_ok { $file = read_file('test.txt') } 'file read'; . # or if you don't like prototypes lives_ok( sub { $file = read_file('test.txt') }, 'file read' ); . Should a lives_ok() test fail it produces appropriate diagnostic messages. For example: . not ok 1 - file read # Failed test (test.t at line 15) # died: open failed (No such file or directory) . A true value is returned if the test succeeds, false otherwise. On exit $@ is guaranteed to be the cause of death (if any). . The test description is optional, but recommended. . * *lives_and* . Run a test that may throw an exception. For example, instead of doing: . my $file; lives_ok { $file = read_file('answer.txt') } 'read_file worked'; is $file, "42", 'answer was 42'; . You can use lives_and() like this: . lives_and { is read_file('answer.txt'), "42" } 'answer is 42'; # or if you don't like prototypes lives_and(sub {is read_file('answer.txt'), "42"}, 'answer is 42'); . Which is the same as doing . is read_file('answer.txt'), "42\n", 'answer is 42'; . unless 'read_file('answer.txt')' dies, in which case you get the same kind of error as lives_ok() . not ok 1 - answer is 42 # Failed test (test.t at line 15) # died: open failed (No such file or directory) . A true value is returned if the test succeeds, false otherwise. On exit $@ is guaranteed to be the cause of death (if any). . The test description is optional, but recommended. Package: perl-test-most Version: 0.38-26.46 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 87 Depends: perl-exception-class,perl-test-deep,perl-test-differences,perl-test-exception,perl,perl-test-warn Filename: all/perl-test-most_0.38-26.46_all.deb Size: 23420 MD5sum: 82d76343a8e066262169b9149966eb5c SHA1: 12f8f6c96814b9f2f6e42ce2f72ccb9683fa72a0 SHA256: 1a9fa6f60d354cf2da62a0ea7242e0870d80a61746cbbbbc4bb2d07472be78ef Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/Test-Most Description: Most commonly needed test functions and features Test::Most exists to reduce boilerplate and to make your testing life easier. We provide "one stop shopping" for most commonly used testing modules. In fact, we often require the latest versions so that you get bug fixes through Test::Most and don't have to keep upgrading these modules separately. . This module provides you with the most commonly used testing functions, along with automatically turning on strict and warning and gives you a bit more fine-grained control over your test suite. . use Test::Most tests => 4, 'die'; . ok 1, 'Normal calls to ok() should succeed'; is 2, 2, '... as should all passing tests'; eq_or_diff [3], [4], '... but failing tests should die'; ok 4, '... will never get to here'; . As you can see, the 'eq_or_diff' test will fail. Because 'die' is in the import list, the test program will halt at that point. . If you do not want strict and warnings enabled, you must explicitly disable them. Thus, you must be explicit about what you want and no longer need to worry about accidentally forgetting them. . use Test::Most tests => 4; no strict; no warnings; Package: perl-test-pod Version: 1.52-26.3 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 62 Depends: perl Filename: all/perl-test-pod_1.52-26.3_all.deb Size: 13308 MD5sum: da36ea43565e0795b33a074fa3ee786c SHA1: 1674f48325c8dd83b6819134a832f68a6bda49ce SHA256: a3b64b76ba2fe8bb026c0b1caffee543f3e68cf6f37f18c44e0ed93d4b4af298 Section: Development/Libraries/Perl Priority: optional Homepage: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Test-Pod/ Description: Check for Pod Errors in Files Check POD files for errors or warnings in a test file, using 'Pod::Simple' to do the heavy lifting. Package: perl-test-pod-coverage Version: 1.10-27.16 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 61 Depends: perl-pod-coverage Filename: all/perl-test-pod-coverage_1.10-27.16_all.deb Size: 10932 MD5sum: e0fe17f5f1cd02beae52fdba5a253388 SHA1: 6a21c0da4f9a2fc021c0ddb55dbbecda31f542a2 SHA256: cf1e79346f1b6591ee99b7ab95bbede38c96723367414c1b7ac7a54aa37869d0 Section: Development/Libraries/Perl Priority: optional Homepage: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Test-Pod-Coverage/ Description: Check for pod coverage in your distribution. Test::Pod::Coverage is used to create a test for your distribution, to ensure that all relevant files in your distribution are appropriately documented in pod. . Can also be called with the Pod::Coverage manpage parms. . use Test::Pod::Coverage tests=>1; pod_coverage_ok( "Foo::Bar", { also_private => [ qr/^[A-Z_]+$/ ], }, "Foo::Bar, with all-caps functions as privates", ); . The the Pod::Coverage manpage parms are also useful for subclasses that don't re-document the parent class's methods. Here's an example from the Mail::SRS manpage. . pod_coverage_ok( "Mail::SRS" ); # No exceptions . # Define the three overridden methods. my $trustme = { trustme => [qr/^(new|parse|compile)$/] }; pod_coverage_ok( "Mail::SRS::DB", $trustme ); pod_coverage_ok( "Mail::SRS::Guarded", $trustme ); pod_coverage_ok( "Mail::SRS::Reversable", $trustme ); pod_coverage_ok( "Mail::SRS::Shortcut", $trustme ); . Alternately, you could use the Pod::Coverage::CountParents manpage, which always allows a subclass to reimplement its parents' methods without redocumenting them. For example: . my $trustparents = { coverage_class => 'Pod::Coverage::CountParents' }; pod_coverage_ok( "IO::Handle::Frayed", $trustparents ); . (The 'coverage_class' parameter is not passed to the coverage class with other parameters.) . If you want POD coverage for your module, but don't want to make Test::Pod::Coverage a prerequisite for installing, create the following as your _t/pod-coverage.t_ file: . use Test::More; eval "use Test::Pod::Coverage"; plan skip_all => "Test::Pod::Coverage required for testing pod coverage" if $@; . plan tests => 1; pod_coverage_ok( "Pod::Master::Html"); . Finally, Module authors can include the following in a _t/pod-coverage.t_ file and have 'Test::Pod::Coverage' automatically find and check all modules in the module distribution: . use Test::More; eval "use Test::Pod::Coverage 1.00"; plan skip_all => "Test::Pod::Coverage 1.00 required for testing POD coverage" if $@; all_pod_coverage_ok(); Package: perl-test-warn Version: 0.37-26.32 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 70 Depends: perl-carp,perl-sub-uplevel Filename: all/perl-test-warn_0.37-26.32_all.deb Size: 14844 MD5sum: 2bce9fac76a4f419c18ee748eb02d0ec SHA1: ccb7d0d3cffa490809534588bee0e125eff574c3 SHA256: bf71cdb84f161d1a7bdc2a1aaa25b4099f30d04fd9b2995256be5a2cff56999d Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/Test-Warn Description: Perl extension to test methods for warnings A good style of Perl programming calls for a lot of diverse regression tests. . This module provides a few convenience methods for testing warning based-code. . If you are not already familiar with the Test::More manpage now would be the time to go take a look. Package: perl-text-diff Version: 1.45-26.3 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 129 Depends: libalgorithm-diff-perl Filename: all/perl-text-diff_1.45-26.3_all.deb Size: 33352 MD5sum: e091e82a8b225ecc3c4bed65ea56eadc SHA1: f7d6d4985d5d4c61fb31deef31690b07f19bc836 SHA256: 4c40ac21dee44934865472805897a595568797613234b906fa016396a67b70f3 Section: Development/Libraries/Perl Priority: optional Homepage: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Text-Diff/ Description: Perform diffs on files and record sets 'diff()' provides a basic set of services akin to the GNU 'diff' utility. It is not anywhere near as feature complete as GNU 'diff', but it is better integrated with Perl and available on all platforms. It is often faster than shelling out to a system's 'diff' executable for small files, and generally slower on larger files. . Relies on Algorithm::Diff for, well, the algorithm. This may not produce the same exact diff as a system's local 'diff' executable, but it will be a valid diff and comprehensible by 'patch'. We haven't seen any differences between Algorithm::Diff's logic and GNU 'diff''s, but we have not examined them to make sure they are indeed identical. . *Note*: If you don't want to import the 'diff' function, do one of the following: . use Text::Diff (); . require Text::Diff; . That's a pretty rare occurrence, so 'diff()' is exported by default. . If you pass a filename, but the file can't be read, then 'diff()' will 'croak'. Package: perl-try-tiny Version: 0.31-26.3 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 80 Filename: all/perl-try-tiny_0.31-26.3_all.deb Size: 23976 MD5sum: 18edd6b0301f5cbbec869a952c5fd600 SHA1: 039ac8a1bddac35e59659c8206e013892d33fb6e SHA256: 3a59f98df40efadf12b6e3b82f76bb7668b335b3a9c7cc7fceb34ded0613c183 Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/Try-Tiny Description: Minimal try/catch with proper preservation of $@ This module provides bare bones 'try'/'catch'/'finally' statements that are designed to minimize common mistakes with eval blocks, and NOTHING else. . This is unlike TryCatch which provides a nice syntax and avoids adding another call stack layer, and supports calling 'return' from the 'try' block to return from the parent subroutine. These extra features come at a cost of a few dependencies, namely Devel::Declare and Scope::Upper which are occasionally problematic, and the additional catch filtering uses Moose type constraints which may not be desirable either. . The main focus of this module is to provide simple and reliable error handling for those having a hard time installing TryCatch, but who still want to write correct 'eval' blocks without 5 lines of boilerplate each time. . It's designed to work as correctly as possible in light of the various pathological edge cases (see BACKGROUND) and to be compatible with any style of error values (simple strings, references, objects, overloaded objects, etc). . If the 'try' block dies, it returns the value of the last statement executed in the 'catch' block, if there is one. Otherwise, it returns 'undef' in scalar context or the empty list in list context. The following examples all assign '"bar"' to '$x': . my $x = try { die "foo" } catch { "bar" }; my $x = try { die "foo" } || "bar"; my $x = (try { die "foo" }) // "bar"; . my $x = eval { die "foo" } || "bar"; . You can add 'finally' blocks, yielding the following: . my $x; try { die 'foo' } finally { $x = 'bar' }; try { die 'foo' } catch { warn "Got a die: $_" } finally { $x = 'bar' }; . 'finally' blocks are always executed making them suitable for cleanup code which cannot be handled using local. You can add as many 'finally' blocks to a given 'try' block as you like. . Note that adding a 'finally' block without a preceding 'catch' block suppresses any errors. This behaviour is consistent with using a standalone 'eval', but it is not consistent with 'try'/'finally' patterns found in other programming languages, such as Java, Python, Javascript or C#. If you learned the 'try'/'finally' pattern from one of these languages, watch out for this. Package: perl-universal-require Version: 0.19-26.3 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 52 Filename: all/perl-universal-require_0.19-26.3_all.deb Size: 8924 MD5sum: 322078fd423395c0cfbbf5bbf4d651a8 SHA1: 0fea78984164fad5b2d4df36b732a8939c359f3e SHA256: a56fe8264ed26e7f1a037388db446b83bce575a87cb7f32b8427af3f9810a9dd Priority: optional Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/UNIVERSAL-require Description: Require() modules from a variable [deprecated] Before using this module, you should look at the alternatives, some of which are listed in SEE ALSO below. . This module provides a safe mechanism for loading a module at runtime, when you have the name of the module in a variable. . If you've ever had to do this... . eval "require $module"; . to get around the bareword caveats on require(), this module is for you. It creates a universal require() class method that will work with every Perl module and its secure. So instead of doing some arcane eval() work, you can do this: . $module->require; . It doesn't save you much typing, but it'll make a lot more sense to someone who's not a ninth level Perl acolyte.