Provided by: libcpanplus-perl_0.9144-1_all bug

NAME

       CPANPLUS::Internals::Fetch - internals for fetching files

SYNOPSIS

           my $output = $cb->_fetch(
                               module      => $modobj,
                               fetchdir    => '/path/to/save/to',
                               verbose     => BOOL,
                               force       => BOOL,
                           );

           $cb->_add_fail_host( host => 'foo.com' );
           $cb->_host_ok(       host => 'foo.com' );

DESCRIPTION

       CPANPLUS::Internals::Fetch fetches files from either ftp, http, file or rsync mirrors.

       This is the rough flow:

           $cb->_fetch
               Delegate to File::Fetch;

METHODS

$path = _fetch( module => $modobj, [fetchdir => '/path/to/save/to', fetch_from =>

       'scheme://path/to/fetch/from', verbose => BOOL, force => BOOL, prefer_bin => BOOL, ttl =>
       $seconds] )
       "_fetch" will fetch files based on the information in a module object. You always need a
       module object. If you want a fake module object for a one-off fetch, look at
       "CPANPLUS::Module::Fake".

       "fetchdir" is the place to save the file to. Usually this information comes from your
       configuration, but you can override it expressly if needed.

       "fetch_from" lets you specify an URI to get this file from. If you do not specify one,
       your list of configured hosts will be probed to download the file from.

       "force" forces a new download, even if the file already exists.

       "verbose" simply indicates whether or not to print extra messages.

       "prefer_bin" indicates whether you prefer the use of commandline programs over perl
       modules. Defaults to your corresponding config setting.

       "ttl" (in seconds) indicates how long a cached copy is valid for. If the fetch time of the
       local copy is within the ttl, the cached copy is returned. Otherwise, the file is
       refetched.

       "_fetch" figures out, based on the host list, what scheme to use and from there, delegates
       to "File::Fetch" do the actual fetching.

       Returns the path of the output file on success, false on failure.

       Note that you can set a "blacklist" on certain methods in the config.  Simply add the
       identifying name of the method (ie, "lwp") to:
           $conf->_set_fetch( blacklist => ['lwp'] );

       And the "LWP" function will be skipped by "File::Fetch".

   _add_fail_host( host => $host_hashref )
       Mark a particular host as bad. This makes "CPANPLUS::Internals::Fetch" skip it in fetches
       until this cache is flushed.

   _host_ok( host => $host_hashref )
       Query the cache to see if this host is ok, or if it has been flagged as bad.

       Returns true if the host is ok, false otherwise.