Package: deb-perl-macros Version: 0.1-27.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Victor Zhestkov Installed-Size: 6 Depends: perl Filename: all/deb-perl-macros_0.1-27.1_all.deb Size: 2900 MD5sum: b8bf32feb1ea766ea1f68afbc8cf61a4 SHA1: 27981ed4a9a8696050347bfdb9a1a5186dedb740 SHA256: 05a4206b1cd678dc03409701fb66e4c65a58fb06c7fee389da177ddfebf5454c 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: 24.12.0-39.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: debbuild developers Installed-Size: 153 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_24.12.0-39.1_all.deb Size: 54916 MD5sum: 1720bacf4981f2ed75e9eac3adc2ceea SHA1: c33f4825e5aaf91dbb505b7625eb3a49272e6cb2 SHA256: 0b5b576ded532bfca484696bfb50725db21186c55dc0f70d5fd3e878b7e83514 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: 24.12.0-39.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: debbuild developers Installed-Size: 8 Depends: debbuild (= 24.12.0-39.1),liblua-api-perl Filename: all/debbuild-lua-support_24.12.0-39.1_all.deb Size: 8624 MD5sum: 5c99d6da532885a6a206249b6fbb21a2 SHA1: 05f7f6a70f68516c9450232ab9dd5e88c8b5569f SHA256: a7262026b57cf67a5c91a77da70de2facc6fd17d2f8bbdb2f15bc17dd0fc2056 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: 0.0.8-28.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: debbuild developers Installed-Size: 90 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_0.0.8-28.1_all.deb Size: 25608 MD5sum: 9a7428340adc4a9074c2635486615ada SHA1: 40784067a861d297de6eba5c1636bba00b9c7f75 SHA256: 7faf5698a3548c928f4b771d8f6aeda2b8a18ed7af8f432f014684383ed915e8 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: 5.1.5-29.1 Architecture: s390x Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 327 Replaces: lua51-libs (<< 5.1.5),liblua5-1 (<< 5.1.5-29.1) Provides: lua51-libs (= 5.1.5-29.1),liblua5-1 (= 5.1.5-29.1) Filename: s390x/liblua5-1-5_5.1.5-29.1_s390x.deb Size: 74708 MD5sum: 142d955db582cda3c53646bd10fba32f SHA1: 7450d89dcdae31d3a9f8602a80c743c9522fe941 SHA256: 8440c43419571d519cc5ebdcd6dfe52b1ca762dc283395c00eed49297f9f20c3 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: 5.1.5-29.1 Architecture: arm64 Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 839 Replaces: lua51-libs (<< 5.1.5),liblua5-1 (<< 5.1.5-29.1) Provides: lua51-libs (= 5.1.5-29.1),liblua5-1 (= 5.1.5-29.1) Filename: arm64/liblua5-1-5_5.1.5-29.1_arm64.deb Size: 295604 MD5sum: a5f2aa0c9cc28602d717c60896ebe286 SHA1: 037d70b2c3ce45d3b737ce2ac06f16111e9f96fe SHA256: dcdbfaab5b9494e83da8199af5281eebc0beab81ef21ffd7321448894cc1f310 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: 5.1.5-29.1 Architecture: amd64 Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 833 Replaces: lua51-libs (<< 5.1.5),liblua5-1 (<< 5.1.5-29.1) Provides: lua51-libs (= 5.1.5-29.1),liblua5-1 (= 5.1.5-29.1) Filename: amd64/liblua5-1-5_5.1.5-29.1_amd64.deb Size: 309744 MD5sum: 844421640522bd5059211ec9bef30902 SHA1: 9bc46199de74b56351a143c4520baacdc5f315ca SHA256: 8a1e833765b60d6a8b4cf867632134e85da4616893eca60ceb378e09432b0f07 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: 5.1.5-29.1 Architecture: armhf Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 760 Replaces: lua51-libs (<< 5.1.5),liblua5-1 (<< 5.1.5-29.1) Provides: lua51-libs (= 5.1.5-29.1),liblua5-1 (= 5.1.5-29.1) Filename: armhf/liblua5-1-5_5.1.5-29.1_armhf.deb Size: 284568 MD5sum: 99b660ff3c4c50f076e162ed3231f3f7 SHA1: 804f97e970003c8df5f27baa0c4b781665f8114c SHA256: 392d9da60f85b651e0440582addb8d86219148ca540e85ee646b5add1bfdf625 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: 5.1.5-29.1 Architecture: ppc64el Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 369 Replaces: lua51-libs (<< 5.1.5),liblua5-1 (<< 5.1.5-29.1) Provides: lua51-libs (= 5.1.5-29.1),liblua5-1 (= 5.1.5-29.1) Filename: ppc64el/liblua5-1-5_5.1.5-29.1_ppc64el.deb Size: 76624 MD5sum: b609368365f6b0ab334f079a77fe8dd4 SHA1: 3d8dca32503b294b3e963a5cad1c636d26064941 SHA256: d9afc9f061e66774e328af423b8a8a2bd2ee603e3ab194516f29a7385a3640b5 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: 5.1.5-29.1 Architecture: i386 Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 785 Replaces: lua51-libs (<< 5.1.5),liblua5-1 (<< 5.1.5-29.1) Provides: lua51-libs (= 5.1.5-29.1),liblua5-1 (= 5.1.5-29.1) Filename: i386/liblua5-1-5_5.1.5-29.1_i386.deb Size: 306672 MD5sum: e0a19fd31de5f2609c3120b67b599134 SHA1: 0b635ab0fe59e8fea95110e5cfce16f0fca8856d SHA256: 161e9704e88af50fdc847f3da4f67ae3797580ed358306292cfe015cd4a69fee 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: 20210827-25.1 Architecture: all Installed-Size: 1 Depends: pkg-config Filename: all/lua-macros_20210827-25.1_all.deb Size: 1684 MD5sum: 83edb24456a0b17cd240b9c4e125f901 SHA1: 956273a850bc2e92f03385dba10eb5eec9412479 SHA256: e8072243071928344eb76d6195c0d062f6cf227ffb68016aed29d12153863e4d Section: Development/Languages/Other Priority: optional Homepage: https://www.lua.org Description: Macros for lua language RPM macros for lua packaging Package: lua51 Version: 5.1.5-29.1 Architecture: s390x Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 544 Depends: dpkg,libc6,libreadline8t64,libtinfo6 Provides: lua (= 5.1.5-29.1),lua-api (= 5.1) Filename: s390x/lua51_5.1.5-29.1_s390x.deb Size: 89188 MD5sum: 74832950a1061c7d17609eab83028be2 SHA1: 85f78778420b8f6b66804a7598026b605bfbb68f SHA256: b34bd7ea4d4283bdb82b33adaf0edbdc2a99d95ac82385a59ebcf48269fd3610 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: 5.1.5-29.1 Architecture: arm64 Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 1465 Depends: dpkg,libreadline8t64,libc6,libtinfo6 Provides: lua (= 5.1.5-29.1),lua-api (= 5.1) Filename: arm64/lua51_5.1.5-29.1_arm64.deb Size: 359868 MD5sum: 52f01abf9b31d01fc03de75565c753c1 SHA1: 8a59e13766f813085844aad97b89e07a7d771d60 SHA256: ffb89cadc804d1d417e09ae91f4fb8343bd73f135a7a4d6c858bc892b95f6984 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: 5.1.5-29.1 Architecture: amd64 Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 1444 Depends: dpkg,libreadline8t64,libc6,libtinfo6 Provides: lua (= 5.1.5-29.1),lua-api (= 5.1) Filename: amd64/lua51_5.1.5-29.1_amd64.deb Size: 378460 MD5sum: 27270c2fbac0f97bb2f673328163a0c0 SHA1: 8e20f49e71033356b4e2c05c77ce96bbc929ed62 SHA256: 03aecff4737b62f15d688b71ee5c8306e4ee858bd61cd927790d9d77e042dadd 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: 5.1.5-29.1 Architecture: armhf Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 1310 Depends: dpkg,libc6,libreadline8t64,libtinfo6 Provides: lua (= 5.1.5-29.1),lua-api (= 5.1) Filename: armhf/lua51_5.1.5-29.1_armhf.deb Size: 347252 MD5sum: 1cfedbdd4fc45ec8e4599b340cd4e757 SHA1: 7b2f2dfbca0cadb10cbff45da2b48cc6e5583f28 SHA256: db24d834f07a027a30be081bb15a0512d6e595ef802ae1808c8e87d23dbcf4b3 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: 5.1.5-29.1 Architecture: ppc64el Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 585 Depends: dpkg,libreadline8t64,libc6,libtinfo6 Provides: lua (= 5.1.5-29.1),lua-api (= 5.1) Filename: ppc64el/lua51_5.1.5-29.1_ppc64el.deb Size: 92096 MD5sum: ccb8b8dd599493eae99e078bff2fce34 SHA1: f39bd0af8404bea43d4214aa41584db760ac28c0 SHA256: 9a271b22f94151e9d9b0b7b1b3d14f2a041927e57fd5aba589d6cb391aaaa7c5 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: 5.1.5-29.1 Architecture: i386 Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 1363 Depends: dpkg,libreadline8t64,libc6,libtinfo6 Provides: lua (= 5.1.5-29.1),lua-api (= 5.1) Filename: i386/lua51_5.1.5-29.1_i386.deb Size: 375140 MD5sum: 9d3ac1b2061bcc52d53c575151d88eb7 SHA1: 07644787bb7b16425bc16ccba2bdcae19a72c55d SHA256: d3de5b476b2d0ce0a3feffbdc923216097ab943322e69a6581a0a514a6cb9052 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: 5.1.5-29.1 Architecture: s390x Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 516 Depends: liblua5-1-5 (= 5.1.5-29.1),lua51 (= 5.1.5-29.1),lua-macros,dpkg Provides: lua-devel (= 5.1.5-29.1),lua-devel (= 5.1),pkgconfig-lua (= 5.1.5-29.1) Filename: s390x/lua51-devel_5.1.5-29.1_s390x.deb Size: 90104 MD5sum: 55c4739cea23dbf7b7db5f7709c164e9 SHA1: f761fd89fc2a5b06ca9f9a246169f87afca9581b SHA256: 478efb923d8d2eb306f9357bd0daa31a59ef9edc1036a816c3bafb0040a05fdb 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: 5.1.5-29.1 Architecture: arm64 Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 1630 Depends: liblua5-1-5 (= 5.1.5-29.1),lua51 (= 5.1.5-29.1),lua-macros,dpkg Provides: lua-devel (= 5.1.5-29.1),lua-devel (= 5.1),pkgconfig-lua (= 5.1.5-29.1) Filename: arm64/lua51-devel_5.1.5-29.1_arm64.deb Size: 373168 MD5sum: 3b6bac685c27622e7a6011b6853cf2c8 SHA1: a5a1571378e6319d9797c6b8f7a82e539f49089b SHA256: 7dd9d346bee67556efb8f9d2a6764e1698e18a2f119c258b2236b5ec1f03069e 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: 5.1.5-29.1 Architecture: amd64 Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 1651 Depends: liblua5-1-5 (= 5.1.5-29.1),lua51 (= 5.1.5-29.1),lua-macros,dpkg Provides: lua-devel (= 5.1.5-29.1),lua-devel (= 5.1),pkgconfig-lua (= 5.1.5-29.1) Filename: amd64/lua51-devel_5.1.5-29.1_amd64.deb Size: 385200 MD5sum: 63f2c3b07629429693dac99d1c773da8 SHA1: 7e09f5401cc12b56f4ce70da5f60f56eda3954e0 SHA256: c7cc091323211bee8134637cedd1574c8dde3e5ab066538565e2aa1598b00850 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: 5.1.5-29.1 Architecture: armhf Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 1084 Depends: liblua5-1-5 (= 5.1.5-29.1),lua51 (= 5.1.5-29.1),lua-macros,dpkg Provides: lua-devel (= 5.1.5-29.1),lua-devel (= 5.1),pkgconfig-lua (= 5.1.5-29.1) Filename: armhf/lua51-devel_5.1.5-29.1_armhf.deb Size: 358696 MD5sum: d8cac29215190fe2efa73539f026ad26 SHA1: e2f7c96560415ea7e26b1db928d03d291f7cbd19 SHA256: df0fd63e12b3dccdef9d5091eea993477d1eceb79329482bb3b4d3efd4656150 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: 5.1.5-29.1 Architecture: ppc64el Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 538 Depends: liblua5-1-5 (= 5.1.5-29.1),lua51 (= 5.1.5-29.1),lua-macros,dpkg Provides: lua-devel (= 5.1.5-29.1),lua-devel (= 5.1),pkgconfig-lua (= 5.1.5-29.1) Filename: ppc64el/lua51-devel_5.1.5-29.1_ppc64el.deb Size: 92952 MD5sum: 1d474a8805b4e74d0b10815f53177812 SHA1: 7e6e34defcbad14f3da451df15bc12eee22cac42 SHA256: 9cda072bf3cc6c8228a6667f418fc9a0fa06350dc610116d3f54782301ec9c5e 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: 5.1.5-29.1 Architecture: i386 Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 1154 Depends: liblua5-1-5 (= 5.1.5-29.1),lua51 (= 5.1.5-29.1),lua-macros,dpkg Provides: lua-devel (= 5.1.5-29.1),lua-devel (= 5.1),pkgconfig-lua (= 5.1.5-29.1) Filename: i386/lua51-devel_5.1.5-29.1_i386.deb Size: 382176 MD5sum: 6f9a2151abb53c281bbbbd2234fae235 SHA1: 78f410a83d6601701f79c1dd14de393e84556923 SHA256: c5ac551bd7b8d445f5e7a96bcc26ea67b923be162b71ae68c5b3da17d60ec06b 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: 5.1.5-29.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 306 Filename: all/lua51-doc_5.1.5-29.1_all.deb Size: 71652 MD5sum: cb7cc48a0e7a5f60e84f59340fb84cdf SHA1: 48d69b8ceff0ef8d0ebe60c80894495f074a1166 SHA256: c1ee5dd8c907aa6daf223055a0b6efac95756414ad2186f83eed488a6f38a7e1 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: 0.48-27.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 77 Filename: all/perl-capture-tiny_0.48-27.1_all.deb Size: 29680 MD5sum: 7c4eee5a71147d7242901b1e476e6683 SHA1: 36345053af2980f65d610b794221f9932538f600 SHA256: 4bbe4ca72790bc93ca76a28a783443114b73a1a4df2d758391a8cfc6704b5208 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: 1.50-27.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 48 Filename: all/perl-carp_1.50-27.1_all.deb Size: 22392 MD5sum: cc76a8c8387ea9d562f3cbdc55ef31a3 SHA1: d05bb50146f4c35a0b65d7195de32e66542d08ef SHA256: 45438f11e26e254062a2682df4dc7f430ed7232b0e33bd3330e4f8526db46604 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: 0.09-27.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 11 Filename: all/perl-class-data-inheritable_0.09-27.1_all.deb Size: 6968 MD5sum: ab19e40b66990b5981268ceecd4095fb SHA1: b5a6199fa53a3d4293f4a85e1632727064605974 SHA256: 60680eb0e82469a705b9119b0108470b20953aa939216f5028c85419bcb00bb0 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: 2.04-27.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 68 Filename: all/perl-devel-stacktrace_2.04-27.1_all.deb Size: 27876 MD5sum: d45c0b1c028ab4f9ea69ab25308e5380 SHA1: ec8c1ce103990c2d3a4316474bcc00a6473c93b6 SHA256: 28e92c092e0599bb79de308202887cb054cd5a04ac6bb4abe7f6569dda9f6068 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: 2.18-27.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 32 Depends: perl Filename: all/perl-devel-symdump_2.18-27.1_all.deb Size: 14100 MD5sum: 82c55bba0ecf9f38a024181f6b9851b1 SHA1: 1ea332142edd752df59e7006dbc41de58a658f35 SHA256: 8a6c13751dbcbf4b110dcffb6d0aca267f4d9cf6546dce69410d5d35af42cb0e 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: 1.45-27.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 97 Depends: perl-class-data-inheritable,perl-devel-stacktrace Filename: all/perl-exception-class_1.45-27.1_all.deb Size: 38492 MD5sum: 2fd3fd9fe2428c6d239590ee57bae6a6 SHA1: c40237bff727a49d0cbb66d2f3cc195fb052b491 SHA256: a1ac302a3fef8a969db17a8aac2def6e82a22d0df7d1aebae6e5b5d280ba5095 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: 0.280236-26.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 102 Depends: perl,perl-ipc-cmd,perl-perl-ostype Filename: all/perl-extutils-cbuilder_0.280236-26.1_all.deb Size: 38696 MD5sum: 8531d25f656a0c272677c00a4099818b SHA1: 84fc08ba603242e003da3e4a2ec4345e11181667 SHA256: 4b5c74179bba37c342a1eaa3eab542a29c6daf4d867127e833d685d0571557b3 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: 7.66-12.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 797 Filename: all/perl-extutils-makemaker_7.66-12.1_all.deb Size: 295540 MD5sum: 577e40f0c8d6bd6016b837ccf51c79c0 SHA1: f8f18b6b4280a0482b7448dfe70899f81f556435 SHA256: a48ccf1e2ab82b36482af78b9e2f77e9b0fa0625f2161c1b9b7e7d31ea1b9e3c 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: 1.160000-27.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 21 Depends: pkg-config Provides: libextutils-pkgconfig-perl (= 1.160000-27.1) Filename: all/perl-extutils-pkgconfig_1.160000-27.1_all.deb Size: 10216 MD5sum: e5ccd08099666724801efe904ccf8ccc SHA1: f6bc9409c5dea653b2dee8c1352eac6d380842a9 SHA256: 8aefff0fa6a5fe1f35f1e86015210748a1aee4b4ff6fe7a8a4af14ade79c69f2 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: 2.180000-27.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 67 Provides: libfile-path-perl (= 2.180000-27.1) Filename: all/perl-file-path_2.180000-27.1_all.deb Size: 30324 MD5sum: 4dca41a084cabc78c0bc7e76097826d1 SHA1: c426879e3b8ae34c3939368e713242b454cb07f5 SHA256: fb2bc5cbbdb21d9d807f3f2f5ec603669e5e81d9e68a7de78eae0e02a42ce1ab 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: 0.2311-27.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 166 Depends: perl-file-path,perl-parent Filename: all/perl-file-temp_0.2311-27.1_all.deb Size: 52936 MD5sum: f833ccd0072194ddc41397caa181ccb1 SHA1: 02c6bcbf6be8f6742cb4ef69f7e41f70ea7e7837 SHA256: 2931e8846ead26e62c48a667c36200513bc2469da2199419f8c4aea7e19f500c 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: 1.04-27.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 87 Depends: perl Filename: all/perl-ipc-cmd_1.04-27.1_all.deb Size: 32764 MD5sum: 79df259910f5358c58ca53a3148cafcf SHA1: 12e7ee16eca91105fec648f8116a65d355cc20cd SHA256: d60e06c1c62732d2dbb74e24bc1d249a03da400e12cc4a5b79dbf63497c1f157 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: 0.04-28.1 Architecture: s390x Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 718 Depends: perl-base,liblua5-1-5,libc6 Filename: s390x/perl-lua-api_0.04-28.1_s390x.deb Size: 192092 MD5sum: e06a2e1a9fc2776675bb2200e44de01b SHA1: a6b95f26b720b6df039beef197ed14fda878a3e2 SHA256: 1fec7c6f2b0efc3726be095490908a0f518d38fd1c6d3533ca81df1dfb72f285 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: 0.04-28.1 Architecture: arm64 Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 750 Depends: perl-base,liblua5-1-5,libc6 Filename: arm64/perl-lua-api_0.04-28.1_arm64.deb Size: 188348 MD5sum: c7d768b0bc3473cb9f3ffeb99bb78a1a SHA1: c7adab0883c7175ea3ffc889fbabb7d051c5d6a1 SHA256: b8fe5c0883e81225e7038a48424923d8220d374fdd9c6e77ed3c292197e3b0e7 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: 0.04-28.1 Architecture: amd64 Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 699 Depends: perl-base,liblua5-1-5,libc6 Filename: amd64/perl-lua-api_0.04-28.1_amd64.deb Size: 196892 MD5sum: 08cc93786395e1a5708052dae81a7df9 SHA1: d7d7173635d9371d9a39ea9a7e2717dc10fafc9a SHA256: 42493a71926c5ae0b5f2941255a0b1f601c4166a338dcc280fe5e341b2328d2a 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: 0.04-28.1 Architecture: armhf Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 669 Depends: perl-base,liblua5-1-5,libc6 Filename: armhf/perl-lua-api_0.04-28.1_armhf.deb Size: 190172 MD5sum: afe5f419a8c353fc9263d1b4a40a130b SHA1: 90273929959ad5aed8e6e943dd784b194c687c1c SHA256: 72feab1b2a37662b6fbfca2c4bb26f28bd740eb008ad6ae00f7a8cc5225bdef2 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: 0.04-28.1 Architecture: ppc64el Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 793 Depends: perl-base,liblua5-1-5,libc6 Filename: ppc64el/perl-lua-api_0.04-28.1_ppc64el.deb Size: 199188 MD5sum: b1ceea1722be657057e6a052749f0eef SHA1: 745b4916b682e7005ac3cd6260524969e6cdbdae SHA256: 72c29b37332b5057530d2b8995bef16a1c91065668f2343afee1cbdeae35b010 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: 0.04-28.1 Architecture: i386 Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 649 Depends: perl-base,liblua5-1-5,libc6 Filename: i386/perl-lua-api_0.04-28.1_i386.deb Size: 183520 MD5sum: 6772029f04848ad0765ca8c6853fe159 SHA1: dba71aa6e6a8d9990abebeedca8bbee2906b8ee3 SHA256: b9e2134485d73468aa1c34a8e5347301f644da7d551895c3ccd2bd21c02850ce 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: 0.423400-30.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 657 Depends: perl,perl-extutils-cbuilder,perl-base,perl-module-metadata,perl-perl-ostype Recommends: libextutils-manifest-perl (>= 1.54) Provides: libmodule-build-perl (= 0.423400-30.1) Filename: all/perl-module-build_0.423400-30.1_all.deb Size: 232600 MD5sum: 4c6a040c932fafd9d37f19d1dec20e08 SHA1: 254ab20da27691a2d3ae253977a8b47f6141ac81 SHA256: da3577cd5370e00b565407d1a63367e49bd93d59a50da5b9c08e161d572716b4 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: 1.000038-27.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 70 Depends: perl Filename: all/perl-module-metadata_1.000038-27.1_all.deb Size: 29340 MD5sum: b2fb11400c1496b64d9b99539793230e SHA1: b721b9fc4a8f477e1f80c8ae126d5bffb20ebbe2 SHA256: b9deab6c66a85187d96028b11ba3916bcd6c66ff7cd1cbaee536b1926c5f562f 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: 0.016-27.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 33 Filename: all/perl-module-runtime_0.016-27.1_all.deb Size: 17404 MD5sum: 59ea3880e4f3e3dce7ce2c6cf79f31c7 SHA1: 0601b6168eccd19d814654fa2f874b3ab2f162cb SHA256: 5b495d602d3383e8ac37abea7fce1f92a4a46194db755b86c14a173df14265c8 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: 0.15-27.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 40 Filename: all/perl-mro-compat_0.15-27.1_all.deb Size: 16928 MD5sum: 939f995fb8ed3372c01a703b6bf468d9 SHA1: 3b9ac905aac9f5fed2c456aa3f70249b89f3a71f SHA256: 4e2d35fffd3ad3bf087ea9b594d256af268ad3d832767634c7022eaa9b01f8ca 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: 0.241-2.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 12 Filename: all/perl-parent_0.241-2.1_all.deb Size: 8620 MD5sum: 527710d410352a59dc7049a2a099c956 SHA1: e37ad2733ea93dcf69f7a14dd0e7673d3ac5f62f SHA256: 3f2c5b64bd114d406d4c362f51c98bb383a55db3fb00f07e96c0d80ba5183691 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: 1.010-27.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 34 Filename: all/perl-perl-ostype_1.010-27.1_all.deb Size: 14960 MD5sum: c4ef0b077bbd4a428318045644604637 SHA1: dd5f125e6a883b5329f0bd9e7054718b4f454f1f SHA256: 8cf1e01dc80c7f3222a1554f3c93dd0cec85ae51ef84979e8ba95792c781bb87 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: 0.23-29.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 32 Depends: perl-devel-symdump,perl Filename: all/perl-pod-coverage_0.23-29.1_all.deb Size: 18028 MD5sum: 5e2fc8c482b2b6839ec853a5ab7a6719 SHA1: 49cd3ef68a9931559714fa4b5d412eba0551dee7 SHA256: b4b7c644e4177a357cca7a1ab3fb771663557e827f95210aca477f4ce356695c 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: 0.2800-26.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 56 Filename: all/perl-sub-uplevel_0.2800-26.1_all.deb Size: 21904 MD5sum: 7696ee377104410e8164f2b1c6c6d42f SHA1: 7474bd2cf2738f342ad9ebadcebb58a66076b0e2 SHA256: 1ab5f34a86963e8e0f306b2979fc1e4dc4e3239946e1cd11e094a3738fe01c4e 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: 0.52-27.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 163 Depends: perl-mro-compat,perl-module-runtime,perl,perl-try-tiny Filename: all/perl-test-class_0.52-27.1_all.deb Size: 55924 MD5sum: 4253a6162dbdb2dcef48f26a06463018 SHA1: aa4f740819f05862e59b38196d0bd502dddd48ba SHA256: 24fc11a2ac47c234b12046acec6e63d0caa0b984b212ddd0bb88eb72339cc2e8 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: 3.3.1-27.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 40 Depends: perl-base,perl-parent Provides: libtest-compile-perl (= 3.3.1-27.1),libtest-compile-internal-perl (= 3.3.1-27.1) Filename: all/perl-test-compile_3.3.1-27.1_all.deb Size: 19500 MD5sum: f0351a0ba2aed4afb110f39459a5fd4e SHA1: 9781e57c501f27c697b9c0f32e879c87c93b6bbe SHA256: 3b50cc2c260da9b988dcd253405a8523b7359b091b9aa77b915fc46372279e61 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: 1.204-28.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 266 Depends: perl Filename: all/perl-test-deep_1.204-28.1_all.deb Size: 86444 MD5sum: fd69a6a371122dfead34621562596018 SHA1: 362ae5748f7995f29d6905b5194eb6d5aabed137 SHA256: fc2de15474d47fd9c9504ce8fed3892a59685a54565b05cc2b77beef35b728ae 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: 0.710.0-27.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 33 Depends: perl-capture-tiny,perl,perl-text-diff Provides: libtest-differences-perl (= 0.710.0-27.1) Filename: all/perl-test-differences_0.710.0-27.1_all.deb Size: 18080 MD5sum: 6e4851126e396bb827911c7fbc869673 SHA1: 456c2fd29fb2e2cf57518064d51dea9ba069602f SHA256: 95b9d8d076d75b11024adc9fb0497dd96499297728777933363892e06e41000f 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: 0.430000-27.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 31 Depends: perl-sub-uplevel,perl Provides: libtest-exception-perl (= 0.430000-27.1) Filename: all/perl-test-exception_0.430000-27.1_all.deb Size: 17816 MD5sum: 7d89a4cf2f80e097047807a66ee0132a SHA1: 2c7926c1854784ac6665cafc6ce2ca38f1e96c7f SHA256: b8945d959b260b228ee8acc5c801cff97609bcc01e6ef0d4cd0bac9525dc5f53 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: 0.38-27.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 42 Depends: perl-exception-class,perl-test-deep,perl-test-differences,perl-test-exception,perl,perl-test-warn Filename: all/perl-test-most_0.38-27.1_all.deb Size: 22872 MD5sum: c26116de5c6b12452e3feb18e6da894e SHA1: b2752ba611e456139e791c81e2d1c71e9fba2c49 SHA256: da07249be32f87dba867a062dd4f63e56ecc800d5759a612fe3d623d137622b0 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: 1.52-27.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 22 Depends: perl Filename: all/perl-test-pod_1.52-27.1_all.deb Size: 13028 MD5sum: 79f758c9264d82b57d36de9987078a18 SHA1: e497833b073c9e0b72cf58b85b08b90ca8d9f208 SHA256: e89e89035fe59e04d8d516f1bf0ee7febfa355d619dd6cbbb661418190615688 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: 1.10-28.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 16 Depends: perl-pod-coverage Filename: all/perl-test-pod-coverage_1.10-28.1_all.deb Size: 10664 MD5sum: 3c51bb6433dbb1a132ba27015f491391 SHA1: 5b93f445ccf964e0493226e4a96f7642d349a22f SHA256: ad7d835ebdcbe43901259e56316915cb4af658e2d14b13d883f0be49426f46dd 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: 0.37-27.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 29 Depends: perl-carp,perl-sub-uplevel Filename: all/perl-test-warn_0.37-27.1_all.deb Size: 14528 MD5sum: 5ee5900b8021613dbb34ef2d3067efea SHA1: ae9cc2db1ee8c9e450cf6c9a05129b5266bb7cd5 SHA256: f8e5252d6f3b687031845fd7e823bd846695e8b61d37ea4d981a0f60e71e61e3 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: 1.45-27.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 84 Depends: libalgorithm-diff-perl Filename: all/perl-text-diff_1.45-27.1_all.deb Size: 32480 MD5sum: 70f20ee51d5bff0f215fdf91064c002d SHA1: 9584c7bb69e35dda2369154cf7014a203a3364de SHA256: 9dafb893077eab115cad20bbff2b7c5106e6ff4ff77d7b96257c5dde07e099bd 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: 0.31-27.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 40 Filename: all/perl-try-tiny_0.31-27.1_all.deb Size: 23668 MD5sum: 6f50dbad52c87f4743c1f3c761b683d7 SHA1: ce791256c34b70905b8b7525b83494de6aed0f65 SHA256: 4d81da8d2a0058b5442ec062ff8ce9714996ad1979fc5888fd54c13262fa1fb7 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: 0.19-27.1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Uyuni packagers Installed-Size: 12 Filename: all/perl-universal-require_0.19-27.1_all.deb Size: 8628 MD5sum: 0a364e8a6bf5a727c8ab39b0ac1a1083 SHA1: 087b609c780b20cdb7b83fe1937e6cc73e7f6619 SHA256: 812d5f3fd6bc7bfa3b74f9b244bc715081cc35f8061ac82a170bebacff41133b 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.