App-FatPacker
view release on metacpan or search on metacpan
0.009011 - 2012-09-24
- RT #79835: install bin/fatpack (lost in 0.009009 in the
Module::Install -> Distar conversion)
0.009010 - 2012-09-19
- enable temp file deletion in pack.t on Win32
- RT #79489: %fatpacked keys need to be unix paths
0.009009 - 2012-08-03
- RT #78724: fix trace --to-stderr (ether)
0.009008 - 2012-07-16
- RT #78391: Avoid using $_ when requiring modules
0.009007 - 2012-07-12
- Allow capturing of trace information into return value
- Add repsoitory metadata to META.YML
0.009006 - 2011-01-18
- Use File::Path's "legacy" mkpath and rmtree functions. No longer needs
bin/fatpack view on Meta::CPAN
$ fatpack pack myscript.pl > myscript.packed.pl
A shortcut to do all the work of tracing, collecting packlists,
extracting modules in fatlib, then concatenating into a packed script
- in one shot. If you need more detailed controls for additional
modules, use the following commands separately (see L</RECIPES>).
=head2 trace
$ fatpack trace [--to=trace-file|--to-stderr] [--use=MODULE]
myscript.pl
Compiles myscript.pl (as in "perl -c") and writes out a trace file containing
every module require()d during the compilation.
The trace file is called 'fatpacker.trace' by default; the --to option
overrides this.
If you pass --to-stderr fatpack writes the trace to STDERR instead.
You cannot pass both --to and --to-stderr.
If the --use option specifies a module (or modules, if used multiple
times) those modules will be additionally included in the trace output.
=head2 packlists-for
$ fatpack packlists-for Module1 Module2 Module3
Searches your perl's @INC for .packlist files containing the .pm files for
the modules requested and emits a list of unique packlist files to STDOUT.
lib/App/FatPacker.pm view on Meta::CPAN
my $file = shift @$args;
print $self->fatpack_file($file);
}
sub script_command_trace {
my ($self, $args) = @_;
$args = $self->call_parser($args => [
'to=s' => \my $file,
'to-stderr' => \my $to_stderr,
'use=s' => \my @additional_use
]);
die "Can't use to and to-stderr on same call" if $file && $to_stderr;
$file ||= 'fatpacker.trace';
if (!$to_stderr and -e $file) {
unlink $file or die "Couldn't remove old trace file: $!";
}
my $arg = do {
if ($to_stderr) {
">&STDERR"
} elsif ($file) {
">>${file}"
}
};
$self->trace(
use => \@additional_use,
args => $args,
output => $arg,
( run in 0.331 second using v1.01-cache-2.11-cpan-26ccb49234f )