Provided by: libvitacilina-perl_0.2-1_all bug

NAME

       Vitacilina - AXAh, quA~X buena medicina!

DESCRIPTION

       A simple feeds engine exporter that uses YAML to get list of feeds and TT as templating
       system. Some people would call it an aggregator. It was intended to be a reliable Planet
       (<http://planetplanet.org>) alternative, then some development ideas evolved into rFeed
       (http://github.com/damog/rfeed).  Vitacilina runs on production services on a couple of
       systems.

SYNOPSIS

        use Vitacilina;

        my $v = Vitacilina->new(
          config => 'config.yaml',
          template => 'template.tt',
          output => 'output.html',
          limit => '20',
        );

        $v->render;

FILES

   config
       The "config" parameter specifies the path to a YAML file specifying a list of feeds. Use
       this format:

        http://myserver.com/myfeed:
          name: Some Cool Feed
        http://feeds.feedburner.com/InfinitePigTheorem:
          name: InfinitePigTheorem
        ...

   template
       A "Template::Toolkit" file which will be taken as the template for output. Format:

        [% FOREACH p IN data %]
         <a href="[% p.permalink %]">[% p.title %]</a>
          by <a href="[% p.channelUrl %]">[% p.author %]</a>
         <br />
        [% END %]

       The "data" is an ordered array with a bunch of hashes with the simple data such as
       "permalink", "title", "channelUrl", "author", etc.

   output
       File path where the output will be written.

EXAMPLES

       Take a look at the "examples/" directory for fully working example.

SEE ALSO

       Git repository is located at <http://github.com/damog/vitacilina>.  Also take a look at
       the Stereonaut! blog where similar developments from the author are announced and sampled,
       <http://log.damog.net/>.

AUTHOR

       David Moreno, david@axiombox.com. Alexandr Ciornii contributed with patches.

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (C) 2009 by David Moreno.

       This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
       terms as Perl itself.