+++ /dev/null
-# Generated from XSLoader.pm.PL (resolved %Config::Config value)
-
-package XSLoader;
-
-$VERSION = "0.10";
-
-#use strict;
-
-# enable debug/trace messages from DynaLoader perl code
-# $dl_debug = $ENV{PERL_DL_DEBUG} || 0 unless defined $dl_debug;
-
- my $dl_dlext = 'so';
-
-package DynaLoader;
-
-# No prizes for guessing why we don't say 'bootstrap DynaLoader;' here.
-# NOTE: All dl_*.xs (including dl_none.xs) define a dl_error() XSUB
-boot_DynaLoader('DynaLoader') if defined(&boot_DynaLoader) &&
- !defined(&dl_error);
-package XSLoader;
-
-sub load {
- package DynaLoader;
-
- die q{XSLoader::load('Your::Module', $Your::Module::VERSION)} unless @_;
-
- my($module) = $_[0];
-
- # work with static linking too
- my $boots = "$module\::bootstrap";
- goto &$boots if defined &$boots;
-
- goto retry unless $module and defined &dl_load_file;
-
- my @modparts = split(/::/,$module);
- my $modfname = $modparts[-1];
-
- my $modpname = join('/',@modparts);
- my $modlibname = (caller())[1];
- my $c = @modparts;
- $modlibname =~ s,[\\/][^\\/]+$,, while $c--; # Q&D basename
- my $file = "$modlibname/auto/$modpname/$modfname.$dl_dlext";
-
-# print STDERR "XSLoader::load for $module ($file)\n" if $dl_debug;
-
- my $bs = $file;
- $bs =~ s/(\.\w+)?(;\d*)?$/\.bs/; # look for .bs 'beside' the library
-
- if (-s $bs) { # only read file if it's not empty
-# print STDERR "BS: $bs ($^O, $dlsrc)\n" if $dl_debug;
- eval { do $bs; };
- warn "$bs: $@\n" if $@;
- }
-
- goto retry if not -f $file or -s $bs;
-
- my $bootname = "boot_$module";
- $bootname =~ s/\W/_/g;
- @DynaLoader::dl_require_symbols = ($bootname);
-
- my $boot_symbol_ref;
-
- # Many dynamic extension loading problems will appear to come from
- # this section of code: XYZ failed at line 123 of DynaLoader.pm.
- # Often these errors are actually occurring in the initialisation
- # C code of the extension XS file. Perl reports the error as being
- # in this perl code simply because this was the last perl code
- # it executed.
-
- my $libref = dl_load_file($file, 0) or do {
- require Carp;
- Carp::croak("Can't load '$file' for module $module: " . dl_error());
- };
- push(@DynaLoader::dl_librefs,$libref); # record loaded object
-
- my @unresolved = dl_undef_symbols();
- if (@unresolved) {
- require Carp;
- Carp::carp("Undefined symbols present after loading $file: @unresolved\n");
- }
-
- $boot_symbol_ref = dl_find_symbol($libref, $bootname) or do {
- require Carp;
- Carp::croak("Can't find '$bootname' symbol in $file\n");
- };
-
- push(@DynaLoader::dl_modules, $module); # record loaded module
-
- boot:
- my $xs = dl_install_xsub($boots, $boot_symbol_ref, $file);
-
- # See comment block above
- push(@DynaLoader::dl_shared_objects, $file); # record files loaded
- return &$xs(@_);
-
- retry:
- my $bootstrap_inherit = DynaLoader->can('bootstrap_inherit') ||
- XSLoader->can('bootstrap_inherit');
- goto &$bootstrap_inherit;
-}
-
-# Versions of DynaLoader prior to 5.6.0 don't have this function.
-sub bootstrap_inherit {
- package DynaLoader;
-
- my $module = $_[0];
- local *DynaLoader::isa = *{"$module\::ISA"};
- local @DynaLoader::isa = (@DynaLoader::isa, 'DynaLoader');
- # Cannot goto due to delocalization. Will report errors on a wrong line?
- require DynaLoader;
- DynaLoader::bootstrap(@_);
-}
-
-1;
-
-
-__END__
-
-=head1 NAME
-
-XSLoader - Dynamically load C libraries into Perl code
-
-=head1 VERSION
-
-Version 0.10
-
-=head1 SYNOPSIS
-
- package YourPackage;
- use XSLoader;
-
- XSLoader::load 'YourPackage', $YourPackage::VERSION;
-
-=head1 DESCRIPTION
-
-This module defines a standard I<simplified> interface to the dynamic
-linking mechanisms available on many platforms. Its primary purpose is
-to implement cheap automatic dynamic loading of Perl modules.
-
-For a more complicated interface, see L<DynaLoader>. Many (most)
-features of C<DynaLoader> are not implemented in C<XSLoader>, like for
-example the C<dl_load_flags>, not honored by C<XSLoader>.
-
-=head2 Migration from C<DynaLoader>
-
-A typical module using L<DynaLoader|DynaLoader> starts like this:
-
- package YourPackage;
- require DynaLoader;
-
- our @ISA = qw( OnePackage OtherPackage DynaLoader );
- our $VERSION = '0.01';
- bootstrap YourPackage $VERSION;
-
-Change this to
-
- package YourPackage;
- use XSLoader;
-
- our @ISA = qw( OnePackage OtherPackage );
- our $VERSION = '0.01';
- XSLoader::load 'YourPackage', $VERSION;
-
-In other words: replace C<require DynaLoader> by C<use XSLoader>, remove
-C<DynaLoader> from C<@ISA>, change C<bootstrap> by C<XSLoader::load>. Do not
-forget to quote the name of your package on the C<XSLoader::load> line,
-and add comma (C<,>) before the arguments (C<$VERSION> above).
-
-Of course, if C<@ISA> contained only C<DynaLoader>, there is no need to have
-the C<@ISA> assignment at all; moreover, if instead of C<our> one uses the
-more backward-compatible
-
- use vars qw($VERSION @ISA);
-
-one can remove this reference to C<@ISA> together with the C<@ISA> assignment.
-
-If no C<$VERSION> was specified on the C<bootstrap> line, the last line becomes
-
- XSLoader::load 'YourPackage';
-
-=head2 Backward compatible boilerplate
-
-If you want to have your cake and eat it too, you need a more complicated
-boilerplate.
-
- package YourPackage;
- use vars qw($VERSION @ISA);
-
- @ISA = qw( OnePackage OtherPackage );
- $VERSION = '0.01';
- eval {
- require XSLoader;
- XSLoader::load('YourPackage', $VERSION);
- 1;
- } or do {
- require DynaLoader;
- push @ISA, 'DynaLoader';
- bootstrap YourPackage $VERSION;
- };
-
-The parentheses about C<XSLoader::load()> arguments are needed since we replaced
-C<use XSLoader> by C<require>, so the compiler does not know that a function
-C<XSLoader::load()> is present.
-
-This boilerplate uses the low-overhead C<XSLoader> if present; if used with
-an antic Perl which has no C<XSLoader>, it falls back to using C<DynaLoader>.
-
-=head1 Order of initialization: early load()
-
-I<Skip this section if the XSUB functions are supposed to be called from other
-modules only; read it only if you call your XSUBs from the code in your module,
-or have a C<BOOT:> section in your XS file (see L<perlxs/"The BOOT: Keyword">).
-What is described here is equally applicable to the L<DynaLoader|DynaLoader>
-interface.>
-
-A sufficiently complicated module using XS would have both Perl code (defined
-in F<YourPackage.pm>) and XS code (defined in F<YourPackage.xs>). If this
-Perl code makes calls into this XS code, and/or this XS code makes calls to
-the Perl code, one should be careful with the order of initialization.
-
-The call to C<XSLoader::load()> (or C<bootstrap()>) has three side effects:
-
-=over
-
-=item *
-
-if C<$VERSION> was specified, a sanity check is done to ensure that the
-versions of the F<.pm> and the (compiled) F<.xs> parts are compatible;
-
-=item *
-
-the XSUBs are made accessible from Perl;
-
-=item *
-
-if a C<BOOT:> section was present in the F<.xs> file, the code there is called.
-
-=back
-
-Consequently, if the code in the F<.pm> file makes calls to these XSUBs, it is
-convenient to have XSUBs installed before the Perl code is defined; for
-example, this makes prototypes for XSUBs visible to this Perl code.
-Alternatively, if the C<BOOT:> section makes calls to Perl functions (or
-uses Perl variables) defined in the F<.pm> file, they must be defined prior to
-the call to C<XSLoader::load()> (or C<bootstrap()>).
-
-The first situation being much more frequent, it makes sense to rewrite the
-boilerplate as
-
- package YourPackage;
- use XSLoader;
- use vars qw($VERSION @ISA);
-
- BEGIN {
- @ISA = qw( OnePackage OtherPackage );
- $VERSION = '0.01';
-
- # Put Perl code used in the BOOT: section here
-
- XSLoader::load 'YourPackage', $VERSION;
- }
-
- # Put Perl code making calls into XSUBs here
-
-=head2 The most hairy case
-
-If the interdependence of your C<BOOT:> section and Perl code is
-more complicated than this (e.g., the C<BOOT:> section makes calls to Perl
-functions which make calls to XSUBs with prototypes), get rid of the C<BOOT:>
-section altogether. Replace it with a function C<onBOOT()>, and call it like
-this:
-
- package YourPackage;
- use XSLoader;
- use vars qw($VERSION @ISA);
-
- BEGIN {
- @ISA = qw( OnePackage OtherPackage );
- $VERSION = '0.01';
- XSLoader::load 'YourPackage', $VERSION;
- }
-
- # Put Perl code used in onBOOT() function here; calls to XSUBs are
- # prototype-checked.
-
- onBOOT;
-
- # Put Perl initialization code assuming that XS is initialized here
-
-
-=head1 DIAGNOSTICS
-
-=over
-
-=item C<Can't find '%s' symbol in %s>
-
-B<(F)> The bootstrap symbol could not be found in the extension module.
-
-=item C<Can't load '%s' for module %s: %s>
-
-B<(F)> The loading or initialisation of the extension module failed.
-The detailed error follows.
-
-=item C<Undefined symbols present after loading %s: %s>
-
-B<(W)> As the message says, some symbols stay undefined although the
-extension module was correctly loaded and initialised. The list of undefined
-symbols follows.
-
-=item C<XSLoader::load('Your::Module', $Your::Module::VERSION)>
-
-B<(F)> You tried to invoke C<load()> without any argument. You must supply
-a module name, and optionally its version.
-
-=back
-
-
-=head1 LIMITATIONS
-
-To reduce the overhead as much as possible, only one possible location
-is checked to find the extension DLL (this location is where C<make install>
-would put the DLL). If not found, the search for the DLL is transparently
-delegated to C<DynaLoader>, which looks for the DLL along the C<@INC> list.
-
-In particular, this is applicable to the structure of C<@INC> used for testing
-not-yet-installed extensions. This means that running uninstalled extensions
-may have much more overhead than running the same extensions after
-C<make install>.
-
-
-=head1 BUGS
-
-Please report any bugs or feature requests via the perlbug(1) utility.
-
-
-=head1 SEE ALSO
-
-L<DynaLoader>
-
-
-=head1 AUTHORS
-
-Ilya Zakharevich originally extracted C<XSLoader> from C<DynaLoader>.
-
-CPAN version is currently maintained by SE<eacute>bastien Aperghis-Tramoni
-E<lt>sebastien@aperghis.netE<gt>.
-
-Previous maintainer was Michael G Schwern <schwern@pobox.com>.
-
-
-=head1 COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
-
-Copyright (C) 1990-2007 by Larry Wall and others.
-
-This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
-it under the same terms as Perl itself.
-
-=cut
+++ /dev/null
-package lib;
-
-# THIS FILE IS AUTOMATICALLY GENERATED FROM lib_pm.PL.
-# ANY CHANGES TO THIS FILE WILL BE OVERWRITTEN BY THE NEXT PERL BUILD.
-
-use Config;
-
-use strict;
-
-my $archname = $Config{archname};
-my $version = $Config{version};
-my @inc_version_list = reverse split / /, $Config{inc_version_list};
-
-
-our @ORIG_INC = @INC; # take a handy copy of 'original' value
-our $VERSION = '0.62';
-my $Is_MacOS = $^O eq 'MacOS';
-my $Mac_FS;
-if ($Is_MacOS) {
- require File::Spec;
- $Mac_FS = eval { require Mac::FileSpec::Unixish };
-}
-
-sub import {
- shift;
-
- my %names;
- foreach (reverse @_) {
- my $path = $_; # we'll be modifying it, so break the alias
- if ($path eq '') {
- require Carp;
- Carp::carp("Empty compile time value given to use lib");
- }
-
- $path = _nativize($path);
-
- if ($path !~ /\.par$/i && -e $path && ! -d _) {
- require Carp;
- Carp::carp("Parameter to use lib must be directory, not file");
- }
- unshift(@INC, $path);
- # Add any previous version directories we found at configure time
- foreach my $incver (@inc_version_list)
- {
- my $dir = $Is_MacOS
- ? File::Spec->catdir( $path, $incver )
- : "$path/$incver";
- unshift(@INC, $dir) if -d $dir;
- }
- # Put a corresponding archlib directory in front of $path if it
- # looks like $path has an archlib directory below it.
- my($arch_auto_dir, $arch_dir, $version_dir, $version_arch_dir)
- = _get_dirs($path);
- unshift(@INC, $arch_dir) if -d $arch_auto_dir;
- unshift(@INC, $version_dir) if -d $version_dir;
- unshift(@INC, $version_arch_dir) if -d $version_arch_dir;
- }
-
- # remove trailing duplicates
- @INC = grep { ++$names{$_} == 1 } @INC;
- return;
-}
-
-
-sub unimport {
- shift;
-
- my %names;
- foreach (@_) {
- my $path = _nativize($_);
-
- my($arch_auto_dir, $arch_dir, $version_dir, $version_arch_dir)
- = _get_dirs($path);
- ++$names{$path};
- ++$names{$arch_dir} if -d $arch_auto_dir;
- ++$names{$version_dir} if -d $version_dir;
- ++$names{$version_arch_dir} if -d $version_arch_dir;
- }
-
- # Remove ALL instances of each named directory.
- @INC = grep { !exists $names{$_} } @INC;
- return;
-}
-
-sub _get_dirs {
- my($dir) = @_;
- my($arch_auto_dir, $arch_dir, $version_dir, $version_arch_dir);
-
- # we could use this for all platforms in the future, but leave it
- # Mac-only for now, until there is more time for testing it.
- if ($Is_MacOS) {
- $arch_auto_dir = File::Spec->catdir( $dir, $archname, 'auto' );
- $arch_dir = File::Spec->catdir( $dir, $archname, );
- $version_dir = File::Spec->catdir( $dir, $version );
- $version_arch_dir = File::Spec->catdir( $dir, $version, $archname );
- } else {
- $arch_auto_dir = "$dir/$archname/auto";
- $arch_dir = "$dir/$archname";
- $version_dir = "$dir/$version";
- $version_arch_dir = "$dir/$version/$archname";
- }
- return($arch_auto_dir, $arch_dir, $version_dir, $version_arch_dir);
-}
-
-sub _nativize {
- my($dir) = @_;
-
- if ($Is_MacOS && $Mac_FS && ! -d $dir) {
- $dir = Mac::FileSpec::Unixish::nativize($dir);
- $dir .= ":" unless $dir =~ /:$/;
- }
-
- return $dir;
-}
-
-1;
-__END__
-
-=head1 NAME
-
-lib - manipulate @INC at compile time
-
-=head1 SYNOPSIS
-
- use lib LIST;
-
- no lib LIST;
-
-=head1 DESCRIPTION
-
-This is a small simple module which simplifies the manipulation of @INC
-at compile time.
-
-It is typically used to add extra directories to perl's search path so
-that later C<use> or C<require> statements will find modules which are
-not located on perl's default search path.
-
-=head2 Adding directories to @INC
-
-The parameters to C<use lib> are added to the start of the perl search
-path. Saying
-
- use lib LIST;
-
-is I<almost> the same as saying
-
- BEGIN { unshift(@INC, LIST) }
-
-For each directory in LIST (called $dir here) the lib module also
-checks to see if a directory called $dir/$archname/auto exists.
-If so the $dir/$archname directory is assumed to be a corresponding
-architecture specific directory and is added to @INC in front of $dir.
-lib.pm also checks if directories called $dir/$version and $dir/$version/$archname
-exist and adds these directories to @INC.
-
-The current value of C<$archname> can be found with this command:
-
- perl -V:archname
-
-The corresponding command to get the current value of C<$version> is:
-
- perl -V:version
-
-To avoid memory leaks, all trailing duplicate entries in @INC are
-removed.
-
-=head2 Deleting directories from @INC
-
-You should normally only add directories to @INC. If you need to
-delete directories from @INC take care to only delete those which you
-added yourself or which you are certain are not needed by other modules
-in your script. Other modules may have added directories which they
-need for correct operation.
-
-The C<no lib> statement deletes all instances of each named directory
-from @INC.
-
-For each directory in LIST (called $dir here) the lib module also
-checks to see if a directory called $dir/$archname/auto exists.
-If so the $dir/$archname directory is assumed to be a corresponding
-architecture specific directory and is also deleted from @INC.
-
-=head2 Restoring original @INC
-
-When the lib module is first loaded it records the current value of @INC
-in an array C<@lib::ORIG_INC>. To restore @INC to that value you
-can say
-
- @INC = @lib::ORIG_INC;
-
-=head1 CAVEATS
-
-In order to keep lib.pm small and simple, it only works with Unix
-filepaths. This doesn't mean it only works on Unix, but non-Unix
-users must first translate their file paths to Unix conventions.
-
- # VMS users wanting to put [.stuff.moo] into
- # their @INC would write
- use lib 'stuff/moo';
-
-=head1 NOTES
-
-In the future, this module will likely use File::Spec for determining
-paths, as it does now for Mac OS (where Unix-style or Mac-style paths
-work, and Unix-style paths are converted properly to Mac-style paths
-before being added to @INC).
-
-If you try to add a file to @INC as follows:
-
- use lib 'this_is_a_file.txt';
-
-C<lib> will warn about this. The sole exceptions are files with the
-C<.par> extension which are intended to be used as libraries.
-
-=head1 SEE ALSO
-
-FindBin - optional module which deals with paths relative to the source file.
-
-PAR - optional module which can treat C<.par> files as Perl libraries.
-
-=head1 AUTHOR
-
-Tim Bunce, 2nd June 1995.
-
-C<lib> is maintained by the perl5-porters. Please direct
-any questions to the canonical mailing list. Anything that
-is applicable to the CPAN release can be sent to its maintainer,
-though.
-
-Maintainer: The Perl5-Porters <perl5-porters@perl.org>
-
-Maintainer of the CPAN release: Steffen Mueller <smueller@cpan.org>
-
-=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
-
-This package has been part of the perl core since perl 5.001.
-It has been released separately to CPAN so older installations
-can benefit from bug fixes.
-
-This package has the same copyright and license as the perl core.
-
-=cut