Re-enable the setlocale() tests for Windows XP onwards
[p5sagit/p5-mst-13.2.git] / lib / IPC / Cmd.pm
CommitLineData
0d4ddeff 1package IPC::Cmd;
2
3use strict;
4
5BEGIN {
6
7 use constant IS_VMS => $^O eq 'VMS' ? 1 : 0;
8 use constant IS_WIN32 => $^O eq 'MSWin32' ? 1 : 0;
9 use constant IS_WIN98 => (IS_WIN32 and !Win32::IsWinNT()) ? 1 : 0;
10
11 use Exporter ();
12 use vars qw[ @ISA $VERSION @EXPORT_OK $VERBOSE $DEBUG
13 $USE_IPC_RUN $USE_IPC_OPEN3 $WARN
14 ];
15
5c444d3e 16 $VERSION = '0.36_01';
0d4ddeff 17 $VERBOSE = 0;
18 $DEBUG = 0;
19 $WARN = 1;
20 $USE_IPC_RUN = IS_WIN32 && !IS_WIN98;
21 $USE_IPC_OPEN3 = not IS_VMS;
22
23 @ISA = qw[Exporter];
24 @EXPORT_OK = qw[can_run run];
25}
26
27require Carp;
28use Params::Check qw[check];
29use Module::Load::Conditional qw[can_load];
30use Locale::Maketext::Simple Style => 'gettext';
31
32=pod
33
34=head1 NAME
35
36IPC::Cmd - finding and running system commands made easy
37
38=head1 SYNOPSIS
39
40 use IPC::Cmd qw[can_run run];
41
42 my $full_path = can_run('wget') or warn 'wget is not installed!';
43
44 ### commands can be arrayrefs or strings ###
45 my $cmd = "$full_path -b theregister.co.uk";
46 my $cmd = [$full_path, '-b', 'theregister.co.uk'];
47
48 ### in scalar context ###
49 my $buffer;
50 if( scalar run( command => $cmd,
51 verbose => 0,
52 buffer => \$buffer )
53 ) {
54 print "fetched webpage successfully: $buffer\n";
55 }
56
57
58 ### in list context ###
59 my( $success, $error_code, $full_buf, $stdout_buf, $stderr_buf ) =
60 run( command => $cmd, verbose => 0 );
61
62 if( $success ) {
63 print "this is what the command printed:\n";
64 print join "", @$full_buf;
65 }
66
67 ### check for features
68 print "IPC::Open3 available: " . IPC::Cmd->can_use_ipc_open3;
69 print "IPC::Run available: " . IPC::Cmd->can_use_ipc_run;
70 print "Can capture buffer: " . IPC::Cmd->can_capture_buffer;
71
72 ### don't have IPC::Cmd be verbose, ie don't print to stdout or
73 ### stderr when running commands -- default is '0'
74 $IPC::Cmd::VERBOSE = 0;
75
76=head1 DESCRIPTION
77
78IPC::Cmd allows you to run commands, interactively if desired,
79platform independent but have them still work.
80
81The C<can_run> function can tell you if a certain binary is installed
82and if so where, whereas the C<run> function can actually execute any
83of the commands you give it and give you a clear return value, as well
84as adhere to your verbosity settings.
85
86=head1 CLASS METHODS
87
88=head2 $bool = IPC::Cmd->can_use_ipc_run( [VERBOSE] )
89
90Utility function that tells you if C<IPC::Run> is available.
91If the verbose flag is passed, it will print diagnostic messages
92if C<IPC::Run> can not be found or loaded.
93
94=cut
95
96
97sub can_use_ipc_run {
98 my $self = shift;
99 my $verbose = shift || 0;
100
101 ### ipc::run doesn't run on win98
102 return if IS_WIN98;
103
104 ### if we dont have ipc::run, we obviously can't use it.
105 return unless can_load(
106 modules => { 'IPC::Run' => '0.55' },
107 verbose => ($WARN && $verbose),
108 );
109
110 ### otherwise, we're good to go
111 return 1;
112}
113
114=head2 $bool = IPC::Cmd->can_use_ipc_open3( [VERBOSE] )
115
116Utility function that tells you if C<IPC::Open3> is available.
117If the verbose flag is passed, it will print diagnostic messages
118if C<IPC::Open3> can not be found or loaded.
119
120=cut
121
122
123sub can_use_ipc_open3 {
124 my $self = shift;
125 my $verbose = shift || 0;
126
127 ### ipc::open3 works on every platform, but it can't capture buffers
128 ### on win32 :(
129 return unless can_load(
130 modules => { map {$_ => '0.0'} qw|IPC::Open3 IO::Select Symbol| },
131 verbose => ($WARN && $verbose),
132 );
133
134 return 1;
135}
136
137=head2 $bool = IPC::Cmd->can_capture_buffer
138
139Utility function that tells you if C<IPC::Cmd> is capable of
140capturing buffers in it's current configuration.
141
142=cut
143
144sub can_capture_buffer {
145 my $self = shift;
146
147 return 1 if $USE_IPC_RUN && $self->can_use_ipc_run;
148 return 1 if $USE_IPC_OPEN3 && $self->can_use_ipc_open3 && !IS_WIN32;
149 return;
150}
151
152
153=head1 FUNCTIONS
154
155=head2 $path = can_run( PROGRAM );
156
157C<can_run> takes but a single argument: the name of a binary you wish
158to locate. C<can_run> works much like the unix binary C<which> or the bash
159command C<type>, which scans through your path, looking for the requested
160binary .
161
162Unlike C<which> and C<type>, this function is platform independent and
163will also work on, for example, Win32.
164
165It will return the full path to the binary you asked for if it was
166found, or C<undef> if it was not.
167
168=cut
169
170sub can_run {
171 my $command = shift;
172
173 # a lot of VMS executables have a symbol defined
174 # check those first
175 if ( $^O eq 'VMS' ) {
176 require VMS::DCLsym;
177 my $syms = VMS::DCLsym->new;
178 return $command if scalar $syms->getsym( uc $command );
179 }
180
181 require Config;
182 require File::Spec;
183 require ExtUtils::MakeMaker;
184
185 if( File::Spec->file_name_is_absolute($command) ) {
186 return MM->maybe_command($command);
187
188 } else {
5c444d3e 189 for my $dir ((split /\Q$Config::Config{path_sep}\E/, $ENV{PATH}),
190 File::Spec->curdir()
191 ) {
0d4ddeff 192 my $abs = File::Spec->catfile($dir, $command);
193 return $abs if $abs = MM->maybe_command($abs);
194 }
195 }
196}
197
198=head2 $ok | ($ok, $err, $full_buf, $stdout_buff, $stderr_buff) = run( command => COMMAND, [verbose => BOOL, buffer => \$SCALAR] );
199
200C<run> takes 3 arguments:
201
202=over 4
203
204=item command
205
206This is the command to execute. It may be either a string or an array
207reference.
208This is a required argument.
209
210See L<CAVEATS> for remarks on how commands are parsed and their
211limitations.
212
213=item verbose
214
215This controls whether all output of a command should also be printed
216to STDOUT/STDERR or should only be trapped in buffers (NOTE: buffers
217require C<IPC::Run> to be installed or your system able to work with
218C<IPC::Open3>).
219
220It will default to the global setting of C<$IPC::Cmd::VERBOSE>,
221which by default is 0.
222
223=item buffer
224
225This will hold all the output of a command. It needs to be a reference
226to a scalar.
227Note that this will hold both the STDOUT and STDERR messages, and you
228have no way of telling which is which.
229If you require this distinction, run the C<run> command in list context
230and inspect the individual buffers.
231
232Of course, this requires that the underlying call supports buffers. See
233the note on buffers right above.
234
235=back
236
237C<run> will return a simple C<true> or C<false> when called in scalar
238context.
239In list context, you will be returned a list of the following items:
240
241=over 4
242
243=item success
244
245A simple boolean indicating if the command executed without errors or
246not.
247
248=item errorcode
249
250If the first element of the return value (success) was 0, then some
251error occurred. This second element is the error code the command
252you requested exited with, if available.
253
254=item full_buffer
255
256This is an arrayreference containing all the output the command
257generated.
258Note that buffers are only available if you have C<IPC::Run> installed,
259or if your system is able to work with C<IPC::Open3> -- See below).
260This element will be C<undef> if this is not the case.
261
262=item out_buffer
263
264This is an arrayreference containing all the output sent to STDOUT the
265command generated.
266Note that buffers are only available if you have C<IPC::Run> installed,
267or if your system is able to work with C<IPC::Open3> -- See below).
268This element will be C<undef> if this is not the case.
269
270=item error_buffer
271
272This is an arrayreference containing all the output sent to STDERR the
273command generated.
274Note that buffers are only available if you have C<IPC::Run> installed,
275or if your system is able to work with C<IPC::Open3> -- See below).
276This element will be C<undef> if this is not the case.
277
278=back
279
280See the C<HOW IT WORKS> Section below to see how C<IPC::Cmd> decides
281what modules or function calls to use when issuing a command.
282
283=cut
284
285sub run {
286 my %hash = @_;
287
288 ### if the user didn't provide a buffer, we'll store it here.
289 my $def_buf = '';
290
291 my($verbose,$cmd,$buffer);
292 my $tmpl = {
293 verbose => { default => $VERBOSE, store => \$verbose },
294 buffer => { default => \$def_buf, store => \$buffer },
295 command => { required => 1, store => \$cmd,
296 allow => sub { !ref($_[0]) or ref($_[0]) eq 'ARRAY' }
297 },
298 };
299
300 unless( check( $tmpl, \%hash, $VERBOSE ) ) {
301 Carp::carp(loc("Could not validate input: %1", Params::Check->last_error));
302 return;
303 };
304
305 print loc("Running [%1]...\n", (ref $cmd ? "@$cmd" : $cmd)) if $verbose;
306
307 ### did the user pass us a buffer to fill or not? if so, set this
308 ### flag so we know what is expected of us
309 ### XXX this is now being ignored. in the future, we could add diagnostic
310 ### messages based on this logic
311 #my $user_provided_buffer = $buffer == \$def_buf ? 0 : 1;
312
313 ### buffers that are to be captured
314 my( @buffer, @buff_err, @buff_out );
315
316 ### capture STDOUT
317 my $_out_handler = sub {
318 my $buf = shift;
319 return unless defined $buf;
320
321 print STDOUT $buf if $verbose;
322 push @buffer, $buf;
323 push @buff_out, $buf;
324 };
325
326 ### capture STDERR
327 my $_err_handler = sub {
328 my $buf = shift;
329 return unless defined $buf;
330
331 print STDERR $buf if $verbose;
332 push @buffer, $buf;
333 push @buff_err, $buf;
334 };
335
336
337 ### flag to indicate we have a buffer captured
338 my $have_buffer = __PACKAGE__->can_capture_buffer ? 1 : 0;
339
340 ### flag indicating if the subcall went ok
341 my $ok;
342
343 ### IPC::Run is first choice if $USE_IPC_RUN is set.
344 if( $USE_IPC_RUN and __PACKAGE__->can_use_ipc_run( 1 ) ) {
345 ### ipc::run handlers needs the command as a string or an array ref
346
347 __PACKAGE__->_debug( "# Using IPC::Run. Have buffer: $have_buffer" )
348 if $DEBUG;
349
350 $ok = __PACKAGE__->_ipc_run( $cmd, $_out_handler, $_err_handler );
351
352 ### since IPC::Open3 works on all platforms, and just fails on
353 ### win32 for capturing buffers, do that ideally
354 } elsif ( $USE_IPC_OPEN3 and __PACKAGE__->can_use_ipc_open3( 1 ) ) {
355
356 __PACKAGE__->_debug( "# Using IPC::Open3. Have buffer: $have_buffer" )
357 if $DEBUG;
358
359 ### in case there are pipes in there;
360 ### IPC::Open3 will call exec and exec will do the right thing
361 $ok = __PACKAGE__->_open3_run(
362 ( ref $cmd ? "@$cmd" : $cmd ),
363 $_out_handler, $_err_handler, $verbose
364 );
365
366 ### if we are allowed to run verbose, just dispatch the system command
367 } else {
368 __PACKAGE__->_debug( "# Using system(). Have buffer: $have_buffer" )
369 if $DEBUG;
370 $ok = __PACKAGE__->_system_run( (ref $cmd ? "@$cmd" : $cmd), $verbose );
371 }
372
373 ### fill the buffer;
374 $$buffer = join '', @buffer if @buffer;
375
376 ### return a list of flags and buffers (if available) in list
377 ### context, or just a simple 'ok' in scalar
378 return wantarray
379 ? $have_buffer
380 ? ($ok, $?, \@buffer, \@buff_out, \@buff_err)
381 : ($ok, $? )
382 : $ok
383
384
385}
386
387sub _open3_run {
388 my $self = shift;
389 my $cmd = shift;
390 my $_out_handler = shift;
391 my $_err_handler = shift;
392 my $verbose = shift || 0;
393
394 ### Following code are adapted from Friar 'abstracts' in the
395 ### Perl Monastery (http://www.perlmonks.org/index.pl?node_id=151886).
396 ### XXX that code didn't work.
397 ### we now use the following code, thanks to theorbtwo
398
399 ### define them beforehand, so we always have defined FH's
400 ### to read from.
401 use Symbol;
402 my $kidout = Symbol::gensym();
403 my $kiderror = Symbol::gensym();
404
405 ### Dup the filehandle so we can pass 'our' STDIN to the
406 ### child process. This stops us from having to pump input
407 ### from ourselves to the childprocess. However, we will need
408 ### to revive the FH afterwards, as IPC::Open3 closes it.
409 ### We'll do the same for STDOUT and STDERR. It works without
410 ### duping them on non-unix derivatives, but not on win32.
411 my @fds_to_dup = ( IS_WIN32 && !$verbose
412 ? qw[STDIN STDOUT STDERR]
413 : qw[STDIN]
414 );
415 __PACKAGE__->__dup_fds( @fds_to_dup );
416
417
418 my $pid = IPC::Open3::open3(
419 '<&STDIN',
420 (IS_WIN32 ? '>&STDOUT' : $kidout),
421 (IS_WIN32 ? '>&STDERR' : $kiderror),
422 $cmd
423 );
424
425 ### use OUR stdin, not $kidin. Somehow,
426 ### we never get the input.. so jump through
427 ### some hoops to do it :(
428 my $selector = IO::Select->new(
429 (IS_WIN32 ? \*STDERR : $kiderror),
430 \*STDIN,
431 (IS_WIN32 ? \*STDOUT : $kidout)
432 );
433
434 STDOUT->autoflush(1); STDERR->autoflush(1); STDIN->autoflush(1);
435 $kidout->autoflush(1) if UNIVERSAL::can($kidout, 'autoflush');
436 $kiderror->autoflush(1) if UNIVERSAL::can($kiderror, 'autoflush');
437
438 ### add an epxlicit break statement
439 ### code courtesy of theorbtwo from #london.pm
440 OUTER: while ( my @ready = $selector->can_read ) {
441
442 for my $h ( @ready ) {
443 my $buf;
444
445 ### $len is the amount of bytes read
446 my $len = sysread( $h, $buf, 4096 ); # try to read 4096 bytes
447
448 ### see perldoc -f sysread: it returns undef on error,
449 ### so bail out.
450 if( not defined $len ) {
451 warn(loc("Error reading from process: %1", $!));
452 last OUTER;
453 }
454
455 ### check for $len. it may be 0, at which point we're
456 ### done reading, so don't try to process it.
457 ### if we would print anyway, we'd provide bogus information
458 $_out_handler->( "$buf" ) if $len && $h == $kidout;
459 $_err_handler->( "$buf" ) if $len && $h == $kiderror;
460
461 ### child process is done printing.
462 last OUTER if $h == $kidout and $len == 0
463 }
464 }
465
466 waitpid $pid, 0; # wait for it to die
467
468 ### restore STDIN after duping, or STDIN will be closed for
469 ### this current perl process!
470 __PACKAGE__->__reopen_fds( @fds_to_dup );
471
472 return if $?; # some error occurred
473 return 1;
474}
475
476
477sub _ipc_run {
478 my $self = shift;
479 my $cmd = shift;
480 my $_out_handler = shift;
481 my $_err_handler = shift;
482
483 STDOUT->autoflush(1); STDERR->autoflush(1);
484
485 ### a command like:
486 # [
487 # '/usr/bin/gzip',
488 # '-cdf',
489 # '/Users/kane/sources/p4/other/archive-extract/t/src/x.tgz',
490 # '|',
491 # '/usr/bin/tar',
492 # '-tf -'
493 # ]
494 ### needs to become:
495 # [
496 # ['/usr/bin/gzip', '-cdf',
497 # '/Users/kane/sources/p4/other/archive-extract/t/src/x.tgz']
498 # '|',
499 # ['/usr/bin/tar', '-tf -']
500 # ]
501
502
503 my @command; my $special_chars;
504 if( ref $cmd ) {
505 my $aref = [];
506 for my $item (@$cmd) {
507 if( $item =~ /([<>|&])/ ) {
508 push @command, $aref, $item;
509 $aref = [];
510 $special_chars .= $1;
511 } else {
512 push @$aref, $item;
513 }
514 }
515 push @command, $aref;
516 } else {
517 @command = map { if( /([<>|&])/ ) {
518 $special_chars .= $1; $_;
519 } else {
520 [ split / +/ ]
521 }
522 } split( /\s*([<>|&])\s*/, $cmd );
523 }
524
525 ### if there's a pipe in the command, *STDIN needs to
526 ### be inserted *BEFORE* the pipe, to work on win32
527 ### this also works on *nix, so we should do it when possible
528 ### this should *also* work on multiple pipes in the command
529 ### if there's no pipe in the command, append STDIN to the back
530 ### of the command instead.
531 ### XXX seems IPC::Run works it out for itself if you just
532 ### dont pass STDIN at all.
533 # if( $special_chars and $special_chars =~ /\|/ ) {
534 # ### only add STDIN the first time..
535 # my $i;
536 # @command = map { ($_ eq '|' && not $i++)
537 # ? ( \*STDIN, $_ )
538 # : $_
539 # } @command;
540 # } else {
541 # push @command, \*STDIN;
542 # }
543
544
545 # \*STDIN is already included in the @command, see a few lines up
546 return IPC::Run::run( @command,
547 fileno(STDOUT).'>',
548 $_out_handler,
549 fileno(STDERR).'>',
550 $_err_handler
551 );
552}
553
554sub _system_run {
555 my $self = shift;
556 my $cmd = shift;
557 my $verbose = shift || 0;
558
559 my @fds_to_dup = $verbose ? () : qw[STDOUT STDERR];
560 __PACKAGE__->__dup_fds( @fds_to_dup );
561
562 ### system returns 'true' on failure -- the exit code of the cmd
563 system( $cmd );
564
565 __PACKAGE__->__reopen_fds( @fds_to_dup );
566
567 return if $?;
568 return 1;
569}
570
571{ use File::Spec;
572 use Symbol;
573
574 my %Map = (
575 STDOUT => [qw|>&|, \*STDOUT, Symbol::gensym() ],
576 STDERR => [qw|>&|, \*STDERR, Symbol::gensym() ],
577 STDIN => [qw|<&|, \*STDIN, Symbol::gensym() ],
578 );
579
580 ### dups FDs and stores them in a cache
581 sub __dup_fds {
582 my $self = shift;
583 my @fds = @_;
584
585 __PACKAGE__->_debug( "# Closing the following fds: @fds" ) if $DEBUG;
586
587 for my $name ( @fds ) {
588 my($redir, $fh, $glob) = @{$Map{$name}} or (
589 Carp::carp(loc("No such FD: '%1'", $name)), next );
590
591 ### MUST use the 2-arg version of open for dup'ing for
592 ### 5.6.x compatibilty. 5.8.x can use 3-arg open
593 ### see perldoc5.6.2 -f open for details
594 open $glob, $redir . fileno($fh) or (
595 Carp::carp(loc("Could not dup '$name': %1", $!)),
596 return
597 );
598
599 ### we should re-open this filehandle right now, not
600 ### just dup it
601 if( $redir eq '>&' ) {
602 open( $fh, '>', File::Spec->devnull ) or (
603 Carp::carp(loc("Could not reopen '$name': %1", $!)),
604 return
605 );
606 }
607 }
608
609 return 1;
610 }
611
612 ### reopens FDs from the cache
613 sub __reopen_fds {
614 my $self = shift;
615 my @fds = @_;
616
617 __PACKAGE__->_debug( "# Reopening the following fds: @fds" ) if $DEBUG;
618
619 for my $name ( @fds ) {
620 my($redir, $fh, $glob) = @{$Map{$name}} or (
621 Carp::carp(loc("No such FD: '%1'", $name)), next );
622
623 ### MUST use the 2-arg version of open for dup'ing for
624 ### 5.6.x compatibilty. 5.8.x can use 3-arg open
625 ### see perldoc5.6.2 -f open for details
626 open( $fh, $redir . fileno($glob) ) or (
627 Carp::carp(loc("Could not restore '$name': %1", $!)),
628 return
629 );
630
631 ### close this FD, we're not using it anymore
632 close $glob;
633 }
634 return 1;
635
636 }
637}
638
639sub _debug {
640 my $self = shift;
641 my $msg = shift or return;
642 my $level = shift || 0;
643
644 local $Carp::CarpLevel += $level;
645 Carp::carp($msg);
646
647 return 1;
648}
649
650
6511;
652
653
654__END__
655
656=head1 HOW IT WORKS
657
658C<run> will try to execute your command using the following logic:
659
660=over 4
661
662=item *
663
664If you have C<IPC::Run> installed, and the variable C<$IPC::Cmd::USE_IPC_RUN>
665is set to true (See the C<GLOBAL VARIABLES> Section) use that to execute
666the command. You will have the full output available in buffers, interactive commands are sure to work and you are guaranteed to have your verbosity
667settings honored cleanly.
668
669=item *
670
671Otherwise, if the variable C<$IPC::Cmd::USE_IPC_OPEN3> is set to true
672(See the C<GLOBAL VARIABLES> Section), try to execute the command using
673C<IPC::Open3>. Buffers will be available on all platforms except C<Win32>,
674interactive commands will still execute cleanly, and also your verbosity
675settings will be adhered to nicely;
676
677=item *
678
679Otherwise, if you have the verbose argument set to true, we fall back
680to a simple system() call. We cannot capture any buffers, but
681interactive commands will still work.
682
683=item *
684
685Otherwise we will try and temporarily redirect STDERR and STDOUT, do a
686system() call with your command and then re-open STDERR and STDOUT.
687This is the method of last resort and will still allow you to execute
688your commands cleanly. However, no buffers will be available.
689
690=back
691
692=head1 Global Variables
693
694The behaviour of IPC::Cmd can be altered by changing the following
695global variables:
696
697=head2 $IPC::Cmd::VERBOSE
698
699This controls whether IPC::Cmd will print any output from the
700commands to the screen or not. The default is 0;
701
702=head2 $IPC::Cmd::USE_IPC_RUN
703
704This variable controls whether IPC::Cmd will try to use L<IPC::Run>
705when available and suitable. Defaults to true if you are on C<Win32>.
706
707=head2 $IPC::Cmd::USE_IPC_OPEN3
708
709This variable controls whether IPC::Cmd will try to use L<IPC::Open3>
710when available and suitable. Defaults to true.
711
712=head2 $IPC::Cmd::WARN
713
714This variable controls whether run time warnings should be issued, like
715the failure to load an C<IPC::*> module you explicitly requested.
716
717Defaults to true. Turn this off at your own risk.
718
719=head1 Caveats
720
721=over 4
722
723=item Whitespace
724
725When you provide a string as this argument, the string will be
726split on whitespace to determine the individual elements of your
727command. Although this will usually just Do What You Mean, it may
728break if you have files or commands with whitespace in them.
729
730If you do not wish this to happen, you should provide an array
731reference, where all parts of your command are already separated out.
732Note however, if there's extra or spurious whitespace in these parts,
733the parser or underlying code may not interpret it correctly, and
734cause an error.
735
736Example:
737The following code
738
739 gzip -cdf foo.tar.gz | tar -xf -
740
741should either be passed as
742
743 "gzip -cdf foo.tar.gz | tar -xf -"
744
745or as
746
747 ['gzip', '-cdf', 'foo.tar.gz', '|', 'tar', '-xf', '-']
748
749But take care not to pass it as, for example
750
751 ['gzip -cdf foo.tar.gz', '|', 'tar -xf -']
752
753Since this will lead to issues as described above.
754
755=item IO Redirect
756
757Currently it is too complicated to parse your command for IO
758Redirections. For capturing STDOUT or STDERR there is a work around
759however, since you can just inspect your buffers for the contents.
760
761=back
762
763=head1 See Also
764
765C<IPC::Run>, C<IPC::Open3>
766
767=head1 AUTHOR
768
769This module by
770Jos Boumans E<lt>kane@cpan.orgE<gt>.
771
772=head1 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
773
774Thanks to James Mastros and Martijn van der Streek for their
775help in getting IPC::Open3 to behave nicely.
776
777=head1 COPYRIGHT
778
779This module is
780copyright (c) 2002 - 2006 Jos Boumans E<lt>kane@cpan.orgE<gt>.
781All rights reserved.
782
783This library is free software;
784you may redistribute and/or modify it under the same
785terms as Perl itself.