Provided by: libebook-tools-perl_0.5.4-1.1_amd64 bug

NAME

       EBook::Tools::Unpack - Object class for unpacking e-book files into their component parts
       and metadata

SYNOPSIS

        use EBook::Tools::Unpack;
        my $unpacker = EBook::Tools::Unpack->new(
           'file'     => $filename,
           'dir'      => $dir,
           'encoding' => $encoding,
           'format'   => $format,
           'raw'      => $raw,
           'author'   => $author,
           'title'    => $title,
           'opffile'  => $opffile,
           'tidy'     => $tidy,
           'nosave'   => $nosave,
           );
        $unpacker->unpack;

       or, more simply:

        use EBook::Tools::Unpack;
        my $unpacker = EBook::Tools::Unpack->new('file' => 'mybook.prc');
        $unpacker->unpack;

CONSTRUCTOR

   "new(%args)"
       Instantiates a new Ebook::Tools::Unpack object.

       Arguments

       •   "file"

           The file to unpack.  Specifying this is mandatory.

       •   "dir"

           The directory to unpack into.  If not specified, defaults to the basename of the file.

       •   "encoding"

           If specified, overrides the encoding to use when unpacking.  This is normally detected
           from the file and does not need to be specified.

           Valid values are '1252' (specifying Windows-1252) and '65001' (specifying UTF-8).

       •   "htmlconvert"

           If set to true, an attempt will be made to convert non-HTML output text to HTML where
           possible.

       •   "key"

           The decryption key to use if necessary (not yet implemented)

       •   "keyfile"

           The file holding the decryption keys to use if necessary (not yet implemented)

       •   "language"

           If specified, overrides the detected language information.

       •   "opffile"

           The name of the file in which the metadata will be stored.  If not specified, defaults
           to "content.opf".

       •   "raw"

           If set true, this forces no corrections to be done on any extracted text and a lot of
           raw, unparsed, unmodified data to be dumped into the directory along with everything
           else.  It's useful for debugging exactly what was in the file being unpacked, and
           (when combined with "nosave") reducing the time needed to extract parsed data from an
           ebook container without actually unpacking it.

       •   "author"

           Overrides the detected author name.

       •   "title"

           Overrides the detected title.

       •   "tidy"

           If set to true, the unpacker will run tidy on any HTML output files to convert them to
           valid XHTML.  Be warned that this can occasionally change the formatting, as Tidy
           isn't very forgiving on certain common tricks (such as empty <pre> elements with style
           elements) that abuse the standard.

       •   "nosave"

           If set to true, the unpacker will run through all of the unpacking steps except those
           that actually write to the disk.  This is useful for testing, but also (particularly
           when combined with "raw") can be used for extracting parsed data from an ebook
           container without actually unpacking it.

ACCESSOR METHODS

       See "new()" for more details on what some of these mean.  Note that some values cannot be
       autodetected until an unpack method executes.

   "author"
   "dir"
   "file"
   "filebase"
       In scalar context, this is the basename of "file".  In list context, it actually returns
       the basename, directory, and extension as per "fileparse" from File::Basename.

   "format"
   "key"
   "keyfile"
   "language"
       This returns the language specified by the user, if any.  It remains undefined if the user
       has not requested that a language code be set even if a language was autodetected.

   "opffile"
   "raw"
   "title"
       This returns the title specified by the user, if any.  It remains undefined if the user
       has not requested a title be set even if a title was autodetected.

   "detected"
       This returns a hash containing the autodetected metadata, if any.

MODIFIER METHODS

   "detect_format()"
       Attempts to automatically detect the format of the input file and set the internal object
       attributes "$self->{format}" and "$self->{formatinfo}", where the former is a one-word
       string used by the dispatcher to select the correct unpacking method and the latter may
       contain additional detected information (such as a title or version).

       Croaks if detection fails.

       In scalar context, returns "$self->{format}".  In list context, returns the two element
       list "($self->{format},$self->{formatinfo})"

       This is automatically called by "new()" if the "format" argument is not specified.

   "detect_from_mobi_exth()"
       Detects metadata values from the MOBI EXTH headers retrieved via "unpack_mobi_exth()" and
       places them into the "detected" attribute.

   "gen_opf(%args)"
       This generates an OPF file from detected and specified metadata.  It does not honor the
       "nosave" flag, and will always write its output.

       Normally this is called automatically from inside the "unpack" methods, but can be called
       manually after an unpack if the "nosave" flag was set to write an OPF anyway.

       Returns the filename of the OPF file.

       Arguments

       •   "opffile" (optional)

           If specified, this overrides the object attribute "opffile", and determines the
           filename to use for the generated OPF file.  If not specified, and the object
           attribute "opffile" has somehow been cleared (the attribute is set during "new()"), it
           will be generated by looking at the "textfile" argument.  If no value can be found,
           the method croaks.  If a value was found somewhere other than the object attribute
           "opffile", then the object attribute is updated to match.

       •   "textfile" (optional)

           The file containing the main text of the document.  If specified, the method will
           attempt to split metadata out of the file and add whatever remains to the manifest of
           the OPF.

       •   "mediatype" (optional)

           The media type (mime type) of the document specified via "textfile".  If "textfile" is
           not specified, this argument is ignored.  If "textfile" is specified, but

   "unpack()"
       This is a dispatcher for the specific unpacking methods needed to unpack a particular
       format.  Unless you feel a need to override the unpacking method specified or detected
       during object construction, it is probalby better to call this than the specific unpacking
       methods.

   "unpack_ereader()"
       Unpacks Fictionwise/PeanutPress eReader (-er.pdb) files.

   "unpack_imp()"
       Unpacks SoftBook/GEB/REB/eBookWise (.imp) files.

   "unpack_mobi()"
       Unpacks Mobipocket (.prc / .mobi) files.

   "unpack_msreader()"
       Unpacks Microsoft Reader (.lit) files

   "unpack_palmdoc()"
       Unpacks PalmDoc / AportisDoc (.pdb) files

   "unpack_zip()"
       Unpacks Zip archives (including ePub files).

BUGS AND LIMITATIONS

       •   DRM isn't handled.  Infrastructure to support this via an external plug-in module may
           eventually be built, but it will never become part of the main module for legal
           reasons.

       •   Unit tests are incomplete

       •   Documentation is incomplete.  Accessors in particular could use some cleaning up.

       •   Need to implement setter methods for object attributes

       •   Import/extraction/unpacking is currently limited to PalmDoc, Mobipocket, and eReader.
           Extraction from Microsoft Reader (.lit) and ePub is also eventually planned.  Other
           formats may follow from there.

AUTHOR

       Zed Pobre <zed@debian.org>

LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT

       Copyright 2008 Zed Pobre

       Licensed to the public under the terms of the GNU GPL, version 2