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NAME

cpanx - A CPAN downloader script

SYNOPSIS

    cpanx [<options>] [<module>]

OPTIONS

    -c         clean module cache
    -d         dependencies only
    -f         displays info about what files would be installed
    -g         displays list of globally installed modules
    -G         displays list of globally installed packages
    -h         displays this help text
    -i         displays info about the module
    -l         look at module's contents in a shell
    -m <url>   sets the cpan mirror. default www.cpan.org
    -M         choose a cpan mirror
    -n         not interactive
    -p         display perldoc for the module
    -r         reinstall even if module is installed
    -S         do not use sudo
    -T         do not run tests
    -u         uninstalls module
    -v         displays version
    -w         displays where a module is located
    -W         displays all locations where a module is located

    -I <loc>   sets install base path. e.g. /usr/local
    -L <loc>   sets library install path. e.g. /Library/Perl/5.18
    -LL <loc>  sets library install path including the architecture dependent dirs.
    -B <loc>   sets the binary install path. e.g. ~/bin
    -SC <loc>  sets the script install path. e.g. ~/scripts
    -M1 <loc>  sets the man1 install path e.g. /usr/share/man/man1
    -M3 <loc>  sets the man3 install path e.g. /usr/share/man/man3

    <module>   name of the module you want to install
               e.g. DBD::mysql or DBD-mysql-4.046.tar.gz or ./

DESCRIPTION

This program will download, display, and install modules (and their dependencies) from CPAN. A public repository of user contributed perl code.

This script is different to scripts like cpan and cpanm in that it will show what it will do before it does anything. This is important when a module has a lot of dependencies.

Just run something like "cpanx Module", it will download what it needs, then display the dependencies in the order that they will need to be installed to install the module.

Use the -i option, it will just show the information, and not ask if you actually want to install it.

Use the -n option to set the script to not be interactive. It will install without asking first.

Use the -S option to disable sudo during "make install".

If the module is up to date, you can use the -r option to reinstall.

If the tests aren't passing and you want to install anyway, use the -T option.

Use the -d option to only install the dependencies, not the module itself.

Use the -l option to open a shell in the module's directory and then you can look around.

Use the -p option to open perldoc for the module.

The -f option can be used to display what files will be installed. Use along with the -I, -L, -LL, -B, -SC, -M1, -M3 or the PERL_MM_OPT or PERL_MB_OPT environment variables, to make sure you set the right settings before you install.

You can uninstall the module with -u. It will show you what files will be removed before actually removing them.

Set the CPAN mirror with the -m option. By default it uses http://www.cpan.org.

Find the best CPAN mirror by running the command with -M. It will ping all CPAN mirrors and show you the 10 servers with the best time and let you choose which one you want.

Modules are cached and reused between calls, so you can look at the contents of the module in a shell, then get info about the install, then install the module and the module only downloads from cpan once. The cache is stored in ~/.cpanx.

This script has no dependencies. It uses the curl program to download.

This script is self contained. It's runnable if all you have is the one file.

EXAMPLE OUTPUT

    jacob@prism ~ $ cpanx Acme::MetaSyntactic
    curl http://www.cpan.org/modules/02packages.details.txt.gz -z /Users/jacob/.cpanx/02packages.details.txt.gz -R
      % Total    % Received % Xferd  Average Speed   Time    Time     Time  Current
                                     Dload  Upload   Total   Spent    Left  Speed
    100 2028k  100 2028k    0     0   910k      0  0:00:02  0:00:02 --:--:--  911k
    curl http://www.cpan.org/modules/by-authors/id/B/BO/BOOK/Acme-MetaSyntactic-1.014.tar.gz -R
      % Total    % Received % Xferd  Average Speed   Time    Time     Time  Current
                                     Dload  Upload   Total   Spent    Left  Speed
    100 56300  100 56300    0     0  70964      0 --:--:-- --:--:-- --:--:-- 70906
    tar -x -v -f ~/.cpanx/Acme-MetaSyntactic-1.014.tar.gz -C ~/.cpanx
    x Acme-MetaSyntactic-1.014/
    curl http://www.cpan.org/modules/by-authors/id/S/SB/SBURKE/Win32-Locale-0.04.tar.gz -R
      % Total    % Received % Xferd  Average Speed   Time    Time     Time  Current
                                     Dload  Upload   Total   Spent    Left  Speed
    100  7598  100  7598    0     0  49572      0 --:--:-- --:--:-- --:--:-- 49660
    tar -x -v -f ~/.cpanx/Win32-Locale-0.04.tar.gz -C ~/.cpanx
    x Win32-Locale-0.04/
    /usr/bin/perl Makefile.PL
    Checking if your kit is complete...
    Looks good
    Generating a Unix-style Makefile
    Writing Makefile for Win32::Locale
    Writing MYMETA.yml and MYMETA.json

    Acme-MetaSyntactic 1.014 (not installed)
    Themed metasyntactic variables names
    By Philippe Bruhat (BooK) <book@cpan.org>
    Repository http://github.com/book/Acme-MetaSyntactic

    Dependencies:
    Carp 0 (have 1.29)
    Cwd 0 (have 3.40)
    ExtUtils::MakeMaker 0 (have 7.34)
    File::Basename 0 (have 2.84)
    File::Find 0 (have 1.23)
    File::Glob 0 (have 1.20_01)
    File::Spec 0 (have 3.40)
    File::Spec::Functions 0 (have 3.40)
    Getopt::Long 0 (have 2.49)
    IO::Handle 0 (have 1.34)
    IPC::Open3 0 (have 1.13)
    LWP::UserAgent 0 (have 6.15)
    List::Util 0 (have 1.50)
    Test::Builder::Module 0 (have 1.302136)
    Test::More 0 (have 1.302136)
    Win32::Locale 0 (not installed) *
        ExtUtils::MakeMaker 0 (have 7.34)
    base 0 (have 2.18)
    lib 0 (have 0.63)
    perl 5.006 (have 5.018002)
    strict 0 (have 1.07)
    warnings 0 (have 1.18)

    Install Order:
    Win32::Locale 0.04 (not installed)
    Acme::MetaSyntactic 1.014 (not installed)

    Do you want to install? [n]
    Not installing.

POSSIBLE ALTERNATIVE

If you don't want to install this module, you can use the existing cpan program to see what will actually be installed. Run "cpan" on the command line to enter its shell. Run "test Module", it will test the module and all it's dependencies, then run "is_tested", it will show the list of modules that will be installed. The format isn't as good as what would be shown by this program, but might be good enough.

METACPAN

https://metacpan.org/pod/App::Cpanx

AUTHOR

Jacob Gelbman <gelbman@gmail.com>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

Copyright (C) 2018 by Jacob Gelbman

This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.18.2 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.