Provided by: libconfig-model-dpkg-perl_2.165_all
NAME
Config::Model::Backend::DpkgSyntax - Role to read and write files with Dpkg syntax
SYNOPSIS
With a dpkg file containing: Name: Foo Version: 1.2 # section comment Name: Bar # data comment Version: 1.3 Files: file1, # inline comment file2 Description: A very . long description Parse the file with: package MyParser ; use strict; use warnings; use 5.20.1; # DpkgSyntax uses Log4perl, so we must initialise this module use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy); Log::Log4perl->easy_init($WARN); # load role use Mouse ; with 'Config::Model::Backend::DpkgSyntax'; package main ; use Path::Tiny; use YAML::XS; # load control file my $file = path('dpkg-test'); # create your parser my $parser = MyParser->new() ; # convert control file data in a Perl data structure # documented in Synopsis my $data = $parser->parse_dpkg_file($file, 'yes', 1); Data contains: [ 1, # section 1 found in line 1 [ 'Name', # first parameter [ 'section comment', [ 'Foo', # first parameter data 1, # also found in line 1 '' # currently always empty ] ], 'Version', [ 'data comment', ['1.2', 2, '']] ], # end of section 1 4, # section 2 found in line 4 [ 'Name', [['Bar', 5, '']], 'Version', [['1.3', 7, '']], 'Files', # param with 2 lines [ ['file1,', 8, ''], [' file2', 10, '', 'inline comment'] # padding is kept ], 'Description', # param with 3 lines [ ['A very', 11, ''], ['', 12, ''], # empty line, note: dot was removed ['long description', 13, ''] ] ] # end of section 2 ]; # end of data To write Dpkg file back: package MyParser ; use strict; use warnings; use 5.20.1; # DpkgSyntax uses Log4perl, so we must initialise this module use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy); Log::Log4perl->easy_init($WARN); # load role use Mouse ; with 'Config::Model::Backend::DpkgSyntax'; package main ; use Path::Tiny; my $data = [ [ '# section comment', qw/Name Foo/, '# data comment', qw/Version 1.2/ ], [ qw/Name Bar Version 1.3/ , Files => [qw/file1/, [ 'file2' , '# inline comment'] ] , Description => "A very\n\nlong description" ] ]; my $parser = MyParser->new() ; # print control file content say $parser->write_dpkg_file($data) ;
DESCRIPTION
This module is a Moose role to read and write dpkg control files. Debian control file are read and transformed in a structure matching the control file. The top level list of a list of section. Each section is mapped to a structure containing the parameter names and values, comments and line numbers. See the synopsis for an example. Note: The description is changed into a paragraph without the Dpkg syntax idiosyncrasies. The leading white space is removed and the single dot is transformed in to a "\n". These characters are restored when the file is written back. Last not but not least, this module can be re-used outside of "Config::Model" with some small modifications in exception handling. Ask the author if you want this module shipped in its own distribution. parse_dpkg_file Parameters: "( file_path, file_handle, [ check, [ comment_allowed ]] )" Read a control file from "file_handle" and returns a nested list (or a list ref) containing data from the file. See synopsis for the returned structure. "check" is "yes", "skip" or "no" (default "yes"). "comment_allowed" is boolean (default 0) parse_dpkg_lines Parameters: " ( file_path, lines, check, comment_allowed ) " Parse the dpkg date from lines (which is an array ref) and return a data structure like parse_dpkg_file. write_dpkg_file Parameters " ( list_ref, list_sep ) " Munge the passed list ref into a string compatible with control files and write it in the passed file handle. The input is a list of list in a form similar to the one generated by parse_dpkg_file. See the synopsis for an example List items (like "Depends" field in "debian/control") are joined with the value "list_sep" before being written. Values are aligned in case of multi-line output of a list. Default value of "list_sep" is "",\n"" For instance, after the following code : my $ref = [ [ Foo => 'foo value' , Bar => [ 'v1', 'v2' ] ]; my $res = write_dpkg_file ( $ref, ', ' ) $res contains: Foo: foo value Bar: v1, v2 Here's an example using default $sep_list: print write_dpkg_file ( $ref ) yields: Foo: foo value Bar: v1, v2
AUTHOR
Dominique Dumont, (ddumont at cpan dot org)
SEE ALSO
Config::Model, Config::Model::BackendMgr, Config::Model::Backend::Any,