NAME
File::SmartNL - slurp text files no matter the New Line (NL) sequence
SYNOPSIS
#####
# Subroutine Interface
#
use File::SmartNL qw(config fin fout smartnl);
$old_value = config( $option );
$old_value = config( $option => $new_value);
(@all_options) = config( );
$data = smart_nl($data);
$data = fin( $file_name, @options );
$char_count = fout($file_name, $data, @options);
######
# Object Interface
#
use File::SmartNL;
$default_options = File::SmartNL->default(@options);
$old_value = $default_options->config( $option );
$old_value = $default_options->config( $option => $new_value);
(@all_options) = $default_options->config( );
$data = File::SmartNL->smart_nl($data);
$data = File::SmartNL->fin( $file_name, @options );
$char_count = File::SmartNL->fout($file_name, $data, @options);
Generally, if a subroutine will process a list of options, "@options",
that subroutine will also process an array reference, "\@options",
"[@options]", or hash reference, "\%options", "{@options}". If a
subroutine will process an array reference, "\@options", "[@options]",
that subroutine will also process a hash reference, "\%options",
"{@options}". See the description for a subroutine for details and
exceptions.
DESCRIPTION
Different operating systems have different sequences for new-lines.
Historically when computers where first being born, one of the mainstays
was the teletype. The teletype understood ASCII. The teletype was an
automated typewriter that would perform a carriage return when it
received an ASCII Carriage Return (CR), \015, character and a new line
when it received a Line Feed (LF), \012 character.
After some time came Unix. Unix had a tty driver that had a raw mode
that sent data unprocessed to a teletype and a cooked mode that
performed all kinds of translations and manipulations. Unix stored data
internally using a single NL character at the ends of lines. The tty
driver in the cooked mode would translate the New Line (NL) character to
a CR,LF sequence. When driving a teletype, the physicall action of
performing a carriage return took some time. By always putting the CR
before the LF, the teletype would actually still be performing a
carriage return when it received the LF and started a line feed.
After some time came DOS. Since the tty driver is actually one of the
largest peices of code for UNIX and DOS needed to run in very cramp
space, the DOS designers decided, that instead of writing a tailored
down tty driver, they would stored a CR,LF in the internal memory. Data
internally would be either 'text' data or 'binary' data.
Needless to say, after many years and many operating systems about every
conceivable method of storing new lines may be found amoung the various
operating systems. This greatly complicates moving files from one
operating system to another operating system.
The smart NL methods in this package are designed to take any
combination of CR and NL and translate it into the special NL seqeunce
used on the site operating system. Thus, by using these methods, the
messy problem of moving files between operating systems is mostly hidden
in these methods. By using the "fin" and "fout" methods, text files may
be freely exchanged between operating systems without any other
processing.
The one thing not hidden is that the methods need to know if the data is
'text' data or 'binary' data. Normally, the assume the data is 'text'
and are overriden by setting the 'binary' option.
Perl 5.6 introduced a built-in smart nl functionality as an IO
discipline :crlf. See *Programming Perl* by Larry Wall, Tom Christiansen
and Jon Orwant, page 754, Chapter 29: Functions, open function. For Perl
5.6 or above, the :crlf IO discipline my be preferable over the smart_nl
method of this program module.
SUBROUTINES
config
$old_value = config( $option );
$old_value = config( $option => $new_value);
(@all_options) = config( );
When Perl loads the "File::SmartNL" program module, Perl creates a
"$File::Drawing::default_options" object using the "default" method.
Using the "config" as a subroutine
config(@_)
writes and reads the "$File::Drawing::default_options" object directly
using the Data::Startup::config method. Avoided the "config" and in
multi-threaded environments where separate threads are using
"File::Drawing". All other subroutines are multi-thread safe. They use
"override" to obtain a copy of the "$File::Drawing::default_options" and
apply any option changes to the copy keeping the original intact.
Using the "config" as a method,
$options->config(@_)
writes and reads the "$options" object using the Data::Startup::config
method. It goes without saying that that object should have been created
using one of the following or equivalent:
$default_options = $class->File::Drawing::defaults(@_);
The underlying object data for the "File::SmartNL" class of objects is a
hash. For object oriented conservative purist, the "config" subroutine
is the accessor function for the underlying object hash.
Since the data are all options whose names and usage is frozen as part
of the "File::Drawing" interface, the more liberal minded, may avoid the
"config" accessor function layer, and access the object data directly.
defaults
The "defaults" subroutine establish "File::Drawing" class wide options
options as follows:
option initial value
--------------------------------------------
warn 1
binary 0
fin
$data = fin( $file_name )
$data = fin( $file_name, @options )
$data = fin( $file_name, [@options] )
$data = fin( $file_name, {@options} )
For the "binary" option, the "fin" subroutine reads "$data" from the
"$file_name" as it; otherwise, it converts any CR LF sequence to the the
logical Perl "\n" character for site.
fout
$success = fout($file_name, $data)
$success = fout($file_name, $data, @options)
$success = fout($file_name, $data, [@options])
$success = fout($file_name, $data, {@options})
For the "binary" option, the "fout" subroutine writes out the "$data" to
the "$file_name" as it; otherwise, it converts the logical Perl "\n"
character to th site CR LF sequence for a NL.
smart_nl
$data = smart_nl( $data )
The "smart_nl" subroutine converts any combination of CR and LF to the
NL of the site operationg system.
REQUIREMENTS
Someday.
DEMONSTRATION
#########
# perl SmartNL.d
###
~~~~~~ Demonstration overview ~~~~~
The results from executing the Perl Code follow on the next lines as
comments. For example,
2 + 2
# 4
~~~~~~ The demonstration follows ~~~~~
use File::Package;
my $fp = 'File::Package';
my $uut = 'File::SmartNL';
my $loaded = '';
my $expected = '';
my $data = '';
VO:
##################
# UUT not loaded
#
$loaded = $fp->is_package_loaded('File::Where')
# ''
#
##################
# Load UUT
#
my $errors = $fp->load_package($uut, 'config')
$errors
# ''
#
unlink 'test.pm';
$expected = "=head1 Title Page\n\nSoftware Version Description\n\nfor\n\n";
$uut->fout( 'test.pm', $expected, {binary => 1} );
##################
# fout Unix fin
#
$uut->fin( 'test.pm' )
# '=head1 Title Page
#Software Version Description
#for
#'
#
unlink 'test.pm';
$data = "=head1 Title Page\r\n\r\nSoftware Version Description\r\n\r\nfor\r\n\r\n";
$uut->fout( 'test.pm', $data, {binary => 1} );
##################
# fout Dos Fin
#
$uut->fin('test.pm')
# '=head1 Title Page
#Software Version Description
#for
#'
#
unlink 'test.pm';
$data = "line1\015\012line2\012\015line3\012line4\015";
$expected = "line1\nline2\nline3\nline4\n";
##################
# smart_nl
#
$uut->smart_nl($data)
# 'line1
#line2
#line3
#line4
#'
#
##################
# read configuration
#
[config('binary')]
# [
# 'binary',
# 0
# ]
#
##################
# write configuration
#
[config('binary',1)]
# [
# 'binary',
# 0
# ]
#
##################
# verify write configuration
#
[config('binary')]
# [
# 'binary',
# 1
# ]
#
QUALITY ASSURANCE
Running the test script "SmartNL.t" verifies the requirements for this
module. The "tmake.pl" cover script for Test::STDmaker automatically
generated the "SmartNL.t" test script, "SmartNL.d" demo script, and
"t::File::SmartNL" STD program module POD, from the "t::File::SmartNL"
program module contents. The "tmake.pl" cover script automatically ran
the "SmartNL.d" demo script and inserted the results into the
'DEMONSTRATION' section above. The "t::File::SmartNL" program module is
in the distribution file File-SmartNL-$VERSION.tar.gz.
NOTES
Author
The holder of the copyright and maintainer is
<support@SoftwareDiamonds.com>
Copyright
Copyrighted (c) 2002 Software Diamonds
All Rights Reserved
Binding Requirements Notice
Binding requirements are indexed with the pharse 'shall[dd]' where dd is
an unique number for each header section. This conforms to standard
federal government practices, STD490A 3.2.3.6. In accordance with the
License, Software Diamonds is not liable for any requirement, binding or
otherwise.
License
Software Diamonds permits the redistribution and use in source and
binary forms, with or without modification, provided that the following
conditions are met:
1 Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
2 Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
3 Commercial installation of the binary or source must visually
present to the installer the above copyright notice, this list of
conditions intact, that the original source is available at
http://softwarediamonds.com and provide means for the installer to
actively accept the list of conditions; otherwise, a license fee
must be paid to Softwareware Diamonds.
SOFTWARE DIAMONDS, http://www.softwarediamonds.com, PROVIDES THIS
SOFTWARE 'AS IS' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT
NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS
FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL SOFTWARE
DIAMONDS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
SPECIAL,EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED
TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,DATA, OR
PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF
LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING USE
OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN
ANY WAY OUT OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
SEE ALSO
Docs::Site_SVD::File_SmartNL
Test::STDmaker
ExtUtils::SVDmaker
NAME
Docs::Site_SVD::File_SmartNL - translates any combination of CR and NL
to the site \nl
Title Page
Software Version Description
for
Docs::Site_SVD::File_SmartNL - translates any combination of CR and NL to the site \nl
Revision: D
Version: 0.05
Date: 2004/05/13
Prepared for: General Public
Prepared by: SoftwareDiamonds.com E<lt>support@SoftwareDiamonds.comE<gt>
Copyright: copyright © 2003 Software Diamonds
Classification: NONE
1.0 SCOPE
This paragraph identifies and provides an overview of the released
files.
1.1 Identification
This release, identified in 3.2, is a collection of Perl modules that
extend the capabilities of the Perl language.
1.2 System overview
Different operating systems have different sequences for new-lines.
Historically when computers where first being born, one of the mainstays
was the teletype. The teletype understood ASCII. The teletype was an
automated typewriter that would perform a carriage return when it
received an ASCII Carriage Return (CR), \015, character and a new line
when it received a Line Feed (LF), \012 character.
After some time came Unix. Unix had a tty driver that had a raw mode
that sent data unprocessed to a teletype and a cooked mode that
performed all kinds of translations and manipulations. Unix stored data
internally using a single NL character at the ends of lines. The tty
driver in the cooked mode would translate the NL character to a CR,LF
sequence. When driving a teletype, the physicall action of performing a
carriage return took some time. By always putting the CR before the LF,
the teletype would actually still be performing a carriage return when
it received the LF and started a line feed.
After some time came DOS. Since the tty driver is actually one of the
largest peices of code for UNIX and DOS needed to run in very cramp
space, the DOS designers decided, that instead of writing a tailored
down tty driver, they would stored a CR,LF in the internal memory. Data
internally would be either 'text' data or 'binary' data.
Needless to say, after many years and many operating systems about every
conceivable method of storing new lines may be found amoung the various
operating systems. This greatly complicates moving files from one
operating system to another operating system.
The smart NL methods in this package are designed to take any
combination of CR and NL and translate it into the special NL seqeunce
used on the site operating system. Thus, by using these methods, the
messy problem of moving files between operating systems is mostly hidden
in these methods. The one thing not hidden is that the methods need to
know if the data is 'text' data or 'binary' data. Normally, the assume
the data is 'text' and are overriden by setting the 'binary' option.
Note that Perl 5.6 introduced a built-in smart nl functionality as an IO
discipline :crlf. See *Programming Perl* by Larry Wall, Tom Christiansen
and Jon Orwant, page 754, Chapter 29: Functions, open function. For Perl
5.6 or above, the :crlf IO discipline may be preferable over the
smart_nl method of this package. However, when moving code from one
operating system to another system, there will be target operating
systems for the near and probable far future that have not upgraded to
Perl 5.6.
1.3 Document overview.
This document releases File::SmartNL version 0.05 providing a
description of the inventory, installation instructions and other
information necessary to utilize and track this release.
3.0 VERSION DESCRIPTION
All file specifications in this SVD use the Unix operating system file
specification.
3.1 Inventory of materials released.
This document releases the file
File-SmartNL-0.05.tar.gz
found at the following repository(s):
http://www.softwarediamonds/packages/
http://www.perl.com/CPAN/authors/id/S/SO/SOFTDIA/
Restrictions regarding duplication and license provisions are as
follows:
Copyright.
copyright © 2003 Software Diamonds
Copyright holder contact.
603 882-0846 E<lt>support@SoftwareDiamonds.comE<gt>
License.
Software Diamonds permits the redistribution and use in source and
binary forms, with or without modification, provided that the
following conditions are met:
1 Redistributions of source code, modified or unmodified must
retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and
the following disclaimer.
2 Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above
copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following
disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided
with the distribution.
3 Commercial installation of the binary or source must visually
present to the installer the above copyright notice, this list
of conditions intact, that the original source is available at
http://softwarediamonds.com and provide means for the installer
to actively accept the list of conditions; otherwise, a license
fee must be paid to Softwareware Diamonds.
SOFTWARE DIAMONDS, http://www.SoftwareDiamonds.com, PROVIDES THIS
SOFTWARE 'AS IS' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING,
BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL
SOFTWARE DIAMONDS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
SPECIAL,EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF
USE,DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND
ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY,
OR TORT (INCLUDING USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF
NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE POSSIBILITY
OF SUCH DAMAGE.
3.2 Inventory of software contents
The content of the released, compressed, archieve file, consists of the
following files:
file version date comment
------------------------------------------------------------ ------- ---------- ------------------------
lib/Docs/Site_SVD/File_SmartNL.pm 0.05 2004/05/13 revised 0.04
MANIFEST 0.05 2004/05/13 generated, replaces 0.04
Makefile.PL 0.05 2004/05/13 generated, replaces 0.04
README 0.05 2004/05/13 generated, replaces 0.04
lib/File/SmartNL.pm 1.16 2004/05/13 revised 1.14
t/File/SmartNL.d 0.01 2004/05/03 unchanged
t/File/SmartNL.pm 0.01 2004/05/03 unchanged
t/File/SmartNL.t 0.11 2004/05/13 revised 0.1
t/File/File/Package.pm 1.17 2004/05/13 revised 1.16
t/File/Test/Tech.pm 1.25 2004/05/13 revised 1.22
t/File/Data/Secs2.pm 1.23 2004/05/13 revised 1.19
t/File/Data/SecsPack.pm 0.08 2004/05/13 revised 0.04
t/File/Data/Startup.pm 0.06 2004/05/13 revised 0.04
3.3 Changes
Changes are as follows:
Test-TestUtil-0.01
Originated
Test-TestUtil-0.02
Correct failure from Josts Smokehouse"
<Jost.Krieger+smokeback@ruhr-uni-bochum.de> test run
t/Test/TestUtil/TestUtil....Bareword "fspec_dirs" not allowed while
"strict subs" in use at
/net/sunu991/disc1/.cpanplus/5.8.0/build/Test-TestUtil-0.01/blib/lib/Test/TestUtil.pm line 56.
Changed line 56 from
my @dirs = (fspec_dirs) ? $from_package->splitdir( $fspec_dirs ) : ();
to
my @dirs = ($fspec_dirs) ? $from_package->splitdir( $fspec_dirs ) : ();
This error is troublesome since the test passed on my system using
Active Perl under Microsoft NT. It should never have passed. This
error is in a core method, *fspec2fspec*, that changes file
specifications from one operating system to another operating
system. This method has been in service unchanged for some time.
Test-TestUtil-0.03
Correct failure from Josts Smokehouse"
<Jost.Krieger+smokeback@ruhr-uni-bochum.de> test run
PERL_DL_NONLAZY=1 /usr/local/perl/bin/perl "-MExtUtils::Command::MM"
"-e" "test_harness(0, 'blib/lib', 'blib/arch')"
t/Test/TestUtil/TestUtil.t t/Test/TestUtil/TestUtil....# Test 18
got: '$VAR1 = ''; ' (t/Test/TestUtil/TestUtil.t at line 540 fail
#17) # Expected: '$VAR1 = '\\=head1 Title Page
The *pm2datah* method is not returning any data for Test 18. This
will also cause the test of *pm2data*, test 19 to fail. The
*pm2datah* is searching for the string "\n__DATA__\n".
The "\n" character on Perl is a logical end of line character
sequence. The "\n" end of line is different on Mr. Smokehouse's Unix
operating system than on my Windows NT operating system. The test
file was created under MSWin32 and uses a MSWin32 "\n". Under UNIX,
*pm2datah* method will look for the Unix "\n" and there will not be
any.
Changed "\n__DATA__\n" to /[\012\015]__DATA__/.
During the clean-up for CPAN, broke the *format_hash_table* method
for tables in hash of hash format. Fixed the break, added test 29 to
the *t/Test/TestUtil/TestUtil.t* test script for this feature, and
added a discusssion of this feature in POD discription for
*format_hash_table*
Test-TestUtil-0.04
item our old friend visits again - DOS and UNIX text file
incompatibility
This impacts other modules. We have to examine all modules for this
portability defect and correct any found defects.
Correct failure from Josts Smokehouse"
<Jost.Krieger+smokeback@ruhr-uni-bochum.de> and Kingpin
<mthurn@carbon> test runs.
On Mr. Smokehouse's run email the got: VAR1 clearly showed extra
white space line that is not present in the expected: VAR1. In Mr.
Kingpin's run the got: VAR1 and expected: VAR1 look visually the
same. However, the Unix found a difference(s) and failed the test.
For Mr. Smokehouse's run:
PERL_DL_NONLAZY=1 /usr/local/bin/perl "-MExtUtils::Command::MM" "-e"
"test_harness(0, 'blib/lib', 'blib/arch')"
t/Test/TestUtil/TestUtil.t t/Test/TestUtil/TestUtil....NOK 18# Test
18 got: '$VAR1 = '\\=head1 Title Page
Software Version Description
for
Docs::Site_SVD::File_SmartNL - translates any combination of CR and NL to the site \nl
Revision: D
[snip]
(t/Test/TestUtil/TestUtil.t at line 565 fail #17) # Expected: '$VAR1
= '\\=head1 Title Page
Software Version Description
for
Docs::Site_SVD::File_SmartNL - translates any combination of CR and NL to the site \nl
What we have before, was a totally "failure to communicate." aka
Cool Hand Luke. VAR1 was empty. Now VAR1 has something. It is not
completely dead. One probable cause is the Unix operating system
must be producing two Unix \012 new lines for a Microsoft single
newline \015\012. Without being able to examine the test with a
debugger, the only way to verify this is to provide the fix and see
if the problem goes away when this great group of testers try for
the fourth time.
Revised *fin* method to take a handle, change *pm2datah* method
handle, *$fh*, to binary by adding a *binmode $fh* statement, and
pass the actual thru the *fin* method for test 18.
Use *fin($fh)* to read in the data for *pm2data*, test 19 Unit Under
Test (UUT), instead of using the raw file handle.
The *fin* method takes any \015\012 combination and changes it into
the logical Perl new line, *"\n"*, for the current operating system.
File-FileUtil-0.01
* At 02:44 AM 6/14/2003 +0200, Max Maischein wrote: A second thing
that I would like you to reconsider is the naming of
"Test::TestUtil" respectively "Test::Tech" - neither of those is
descriptive of what the routines actually do or what the module
implements. I would recommend renaming them to something closer
to your other modules, maybe "Test::SVDMaker::Util" and
"Test::SVDMaker::Tech", as some routines do not seem to be
specific to the Test::-suite but rather general
(format_array_table). Some parts (the "scrub" routines) might
even better live in another module namespace,
"Test::Util::ScrubData" or something like that.
Broke away all the file related methods from Test::TestUtil and
created this module File::FileUtil so the module name is more
descriptive of the methods within the module.
* Broke the smart nl code out of the fin method and made it is own
separate method, smart_nl method.
At 02:44 AM 6/14/2003 +0200, Max Maischein wrote: Perl, as Perl
already does smart newline handling, (even though with the
advent of 5.8 even Unix-people have to learn the word "binmode"
now :-))
The only place where I see Perl does smart newline handling is
the crlf IO displine introduce in Perl 5.6. The File::FileUtil
has a use 5.001 so that 5.6 Perl built-ins cannot be used. Added
comment to smart_nl that for users with 5.6 Perl that it may be
better to use the built-in crlf IO discipline.
* For the load_package method that uses a eval "require $package"
to load the package, the $@ does not capture all the warnings
and error messages, at least not with ActiveState Perl. Added
code the captures also the warnings, by temporaily reassigning
$SIG(__WARN__), and added these to the $@ error messages.
* Added two new tests to verify the NOGO paths for the for the
load_package method. One tests for load module failure looking
for all the possilbe information on why the module did not load.
The other verifies that the vocabulary is present after the
loading the module. This information is very helpful when you
must remote debug a load failure from CPAN testing whose is
running on a different platform.
File:-FileUtil-0.02
Added the method *hex_dump*.
File-FileUtil-0.03
test_lib2inc
Returns to parent directory of the first t directory going up
from the test script instead of the t directory.
find_t_roots
Added the function find_t_roots that returns the parent
directory of all the directories in @INC
File-SmartNL-0.01
Removed the methods for addressing the different CR LF combinations
for NL between operating systems from the "File::FileUtil" module to
their own module "File::SmartNL" module. The module name is now much
more descriptive of the routines in the module.
File-SmartNL-0.02
Removed the dump_hex method. This was a quite diagnostic. If need to
permanently dump_hex, use the "Data::HexDump" or the
"Data::Hexdumper" module.
File-SmartNL-0.03
Change the test so that test support program modules resides in
distribution directory tlib directory instead of the lib directory.
Because they are no longer in the lib directory, test support files
will not be installed as a pre-condition for the test of this
module. The test of this module will precede immediately. The test
support files in the tlib directory will vanish after the
installtion.
File-SmartNL-0.04
The lastest build of Test::STDmaker expects the test library in the
same directory as the test script. Coordiated with the lastest
Test::STDmaker by moving the test library from tlib to t/File, the
same directory as the test script and deleting the test library
File::TestPath program module.
Added better option support by using the "Data::Startup" program
module.
Added a subroutine interface.
File-SmartNL-0.05
Better test for a file handle. Do not close a file handle.
Changed "$options-"warn>, function, to "$options-"{warn}>, a value.
3.4 Adaptation data.
This installation requires that the installation site has the Perl
programming language installed. There are no other additional
requirements or tailoring needed of configurations files, adaptation
data or other software needed for this installation particular to any
installation site.
3.5 Related documents.
There are no related documents needed for the installation and test of
this release.
3.6 Installation instructions.
Instructions for installation, installation tests and installation
support are as follows:
Installation Instructions.
To installed the release file, use the CPAN module pr PPM module in
the Perl release or the INSTALL.PL script at the following web site:
http://packages.SoftwareDiamonds.com
Follow the instructions for the the chosen installation software.
If all else fails, the file may be manually installed. Enter one of
the following repositories in a web browser:
http://www.softwarediamonds/packages/
http://www.perl.com/CPAN/authors/id/S/SO/SOFTDIA/
Right click on 'File-SmartNL-0.05.tar.gz' and download to a
temporary installation directory. Enter the following where $make is
'nmake' for microsoft windows; otherwise 'make'.
gunzip File-SmartNL-0.05.tar.gz
tar -xf File-SmartNL-0.05.tar
perl Makefile.PL
$make test
$make install
On Microsoft operating system, nmake, tar, and gunzip must be in the
exeuction path. If tar and gunzip are not install, download and
install unxutils from
http://packages.softwarediamonds.com
Prerequistes.
None.
Security, privacy, or safety precautions.
None.
Installation Tests.
Most Perl installation software will run the following test
script(s) as part of the installation:
t/File/SmartNL.t
Installation support.
If there are installation problems or questions with the
installation contact
603 882-0846 E<lt>support@SoftwareDiamonds.comE<gt>
3.7 Possible problems and known errors
There is still much work needed to ensure the quality of this module as
follows:
* State the functional requirements for each method including not only
the GO paths but also what to expect for the NOGO paths
* All the tests are GO path tests. Should add NOGO tests.
* Add the requirements addressed as *# R: * comment to the tests
4.0 NOTES
The following are useful acronyms:
.d extension for a Perl demo script file
.pm extension for a Perl Library Module
.t extension for a Perl test script file
POD Plain Old Documentation
2.0 SEE ALSO
File::SmartNL
Docs::US_DOD::SVD