Acme-ID-CompanyName

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script/gen-generic-ind-company-names  view on Meta::CPAN


=over

=item B<--config-path>=I<s>

Set path to configuration file.

Can be specified multiple times.

=item B<--config-profile>=I<s>

Set configuration profile to use.

=item B<--no-config>

Do not use any configuration file.

=back

=head2 Environment options

=over

=item B<--no-env>

Do not read environment for default options.

=back

=head2 Output options

=over

=item B<--format>=I<s>

Choose output format, e.g. json, text.

Default value:

 undef

=item B<--json>

Set output format to json.

=item B<--naked-res>

When outputing as JSON, strip result envelope.

Default value:

 0

By default, when outputing as JSON, the full enveloped result is returned, e.g.:

    [200,"OK",[1,2,3],{"func.extra"=>4}]

The reason is so you can get the status (1st element), status message (2nd
element) as well as result metadata/extra result (4th element) instead of just
the result (3rd element). However, sometimes you want just the result, e.g. when
you want to pipe the result for more post-processing. In this case you can use
`--naked-res` so you just get:

    [1,2,3]


=item B<--page-result>

Filter output through a pager.

=item B<--view-result>

View output using a viewer.

=back

=head2 Other options

=over

=item B<--help>, B<-h>, B<-?>

Display help message and exit.

=item B<--version>, B<-v>

Display program's version and exit.

=back

=head1 CONFIGURATION FILE

This script can read configuration files. Configuration files are in the format of L<IOD>, which is basically INI with some extra features.

By default, these names are searched for configuration filenames (can be changed using C<--config-path>): F<~/.config/gen-generic-ind-company-names.conf>, F<~/gen-generic-ind-company-names.conf>, or F</etc/gen-generic-ind-company-names.conf>.

All found files will be read and merged.

To disable searching for configuration files, pass C<--no-config>.

You can put multiple profiles in a single file by using section names like C<[profile=SOMENAME]> or C<[SOMESECTION profile=SOMENAME]>. Those sections will only be read if you specify the matching C<--config-profile SOMENAME>.

You can also put configuration for multiple programs inside a single file, and use filter C<program=NAME> in section names, e.g. C<[program=NAME ...]> or C<[SOMESECTION program=NAME]>. The section will then only be used when the reading program match...

You can also filter a section by environment variable using the filter C<env=CONDITION> in section names. For example if you only want a section to be read if a certain environment variable is true: C<[env=SOMEVAR ...]> or C<[SOMESECTION env=SOMEVAR ...

To load and configure plugins, you can use either the C<-plugins> parameter (e.g. C<< -plugins=DumpArgs >> or C<< -plugins=DumpArgs@before_validate_args >>), or use the C<[plugin=NAME ...]> sections, for example:

 [plugin=DumpArgs]
 -event=before_validate_args
 -prio=99
 
 [plugin=Foo]
 -event=after_validate_args
 arg1=val1
 arg2=val2

 

which is equivalent to setting C<< -plugins=-DumpArgs@before_validate_args@99,-Foo@after_validate_args,arg1,val1,arg2,val2 >>.

script/gen-generic-ind-company-names  view on Meta::CPAN

#    bless $copy, $class_name;
#    $copy->$CloneInitMethod() if $copy->can($CloneInitMethod);
#  }
#  
#  return $copy;
#}
#
#1;
#
#__END__
#
#=head1 NAME
#
#Clone::PP - Recursively copy Perl datatypes
#
#=head1 SYNOPSIS
#
#  use Clone::PP qw(clone);
#  
#  $item = { 'foo' => 'bar', 'move' => [ 'zig', 'zag' ]  };
#  $copy = clone( $item );
#
#  $item = [ 'alpha', 'beta', { 'gamma' => 'vlissides' } ];
#  $copy = clone( $item );
#
#  $item = Foo->new();
#  $copy = clone( $item );
#
#Or as an object method:
#
#  require Clone::PP;
#  push @Foo::ISA, 'Clone::PP';
#  
#  $item = Foo->new();
#  $copy = $item->clone();
#
#=head1 DESCRIPTION
#
#This module provides a general-purpose clone function to make deep
#copies of Perl data structures. It calls itself recursively to copy
#nested hash, array, scalar and reference types, including tied
#variables and objects.
#
#The clone() function takes a scalar argument to copy. To duplicate
#arrays or hashes, pass them in by reference:
#
#  my $copy = clone(\@array);    my @copy = @{ clone(\@array) };
#  my $copy = clone(\%hash);     my %copy = %{ clone(\%hash) };
#
#The clone() function also accepts an optional second parameter that
#can be used to limit the depth of the copy. If you pass a limit of
#0, clone will return the same value you supplied; for a limit of
#1, a shallow copy is constructed; for a limit of 2, two layers of
#copying are done, and so on.
#
#  my $shallow_copy = clone( $item, 1 );
#
#To allow objects to intervene in the way they are copied, the
#clone() function checks for a couple of optional methods. If an
#object provides a method named C<clone_self>, it is called and the
#result returned without further processing. Alternately, if an
#object provides a method named C<clone_init>, it is called on the
#copied object before it is returned.
#
#=head1 BUGS
#
#Some data types, such as globs, regexes, and code refs, are always copied shallowly.
#
#References to hash elements are not properly duplicated. (This is why two tests in t/dclone.t that are marked "todo".) For example, the following test should succeed but does not:
#
#  my $hash = { foo => 1 }; 
#  $hash->{bar} = \{ $hash->{foo} }; 
#  my $copy = clone( \%hash ); 
#  $hash->{foo} = 2; 
#  $copy->{foo} = 2; 
#  ok( $hash->{bar} == $copy->{bar} );
#
#To report bugs via the CPAN web tracking system, go to 
#C<http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=Clone-PP> or send mail 
#to C<Dist=Clone-PP#rt.cpan.org>, replacing C<#> with C<@>.
#
#=head1 SEE ALSO
#
#L<Clone> - a baseclass which provides a C<clone()> method.
#
#L<MooseX::Clone> - find-grained cloning for Moose objects.
#
#The C<dclone()> function in L<Storable>.
#
#L<Data::Clone> -
#polymorphic data cloning (see its documentation for what that means).
#
#L<Clone::Any> - use whichever of the cloning methods is available.
#
#=head1 REPOSITORY
#
#L<https://github.com/neilbowers/Clone-PP>
#
#=head1 AUTHOR AND CREDITS
#
#Developed by Matthew Simon Cavalletto at Evolution Softworks. 
#More free Perl software is available at C<www.evoscript.org>.
#
#
#=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
#
#Copyright 2003 Matthew Simon Cavalletto. You may contact the author
#directly at C<evo@cpan.org> or C<simonm@cavalletto.org>.
#
#Code initially derived from Ref.pm. Portions Copyright 1994 David Muir Sharnoff.
#
#Interface based by Clone by Ray Finch with contributions from chocolateboy.
#Portions Copyright 2001 Ray Finch. Portions Copyright 2001 chocolateboy. 
#
#You may use, modify, and distribute this software under the same terms as Perl.
#
#=cut
### Complete/Bash.pm ###
#package Complete::Bash;
#
#our $AUTHORITY = 'cpan:PERLANCAR'; # AUTHORITY

script/gen-generic-ind-company-names  view on Meta::CPAN

#
#    $word =~ s!\\(.)           |  # 1) escaped char
#               \$(\w+)            # 2) variable name
#              !
#                  $1 ? $1 :
#                      ($is_cur_word ? "\$$2" : $ENV{$2})
#                          !egx;
#    $word;
#}
#
#sub _add_single_quoted {
#    my $word = shift;
#    $word =~ s/\\(.)/$1/g;
#    $word;
#}
#
#$SPEC{point} = {
#    v => 1.1,
#    summary => 'Return line with point marked by a marker',
#    description => <<'_',
#
#This is a utility function useful for testing/debugging. `parse_cmdline()`
#expects a command-line and a cursor position (`$line`, `$point`). This routine
#expects `$line` with a marker character (by default it's the caret, `^`) and
#return (`$line`, `$point`) to feed to `parse_cmdline()`.
#
#Example:
#
#    point("^foo") # => ("foo", 0)
#    point("fo^o") # => ("foo", 2)
#
#_
#    args_as => 'array',
#    args => {
#        cmdline => {
#            summary => 'Command-line which contains a marker character',
#            schema => 'str*',
#            pos => 0,
#        },
#        marker => {
#            summary => 'Marker character',
#            schema => ['str*', len=>1],
#            default => '^',
#            pos => 1,
#        },
#    },
#    result_naked => 1,
#};
#sub point {
#    my ($line, $marker) = @_;
#    $marker //= '^';
#
#    my $point = index($line, $marker);
#    die "BUG: No marker '$marker' in line <$line>" unless $point >= 0;
#    $line =~ s/\Q$marker\E//;
#    ($line, $point);
#}
#
#$SPEC{parse_cmdline} = {
#    v => 1.1,
#    summary => 'Parse shell command-line for processing by completion routines',
#    description => <<'_',
#
#This function basically converts `COMP_LINE` (str) and `COMP_POINT` (int) into
#something like (but not exactly the same as) `COMP_WORDS` (array) and
#`COMP_CWORD` (int) that bash supplies to shell functions.
#
#The differences with bash are (these differences are mostly for parsing
#convenience for programs that use this routine; this comparison is made against
#bash versions 4.2-4.3):
#
#1) quotes and backslashes are stripped (bash's `COMP_WORDS` contains all the
#   quotes and backslashes);
#
#2) quoted phrase that contains spaces, or phrase that contains escaped spaces is
#   parsed as a single word. For example:
#
#    command "First argument" Second\ argument
#
#   bash would split it as (represented as Perl):
#
#    ["command", "\"First", "argument\"", "Second\\", "argument"]
#
#   which is not very convenient. We parse it into:
#
#    ["command", "First argument", "Second argument"]
#
#3) variables are substituted with their values from environment variables except
#   for the current word (`COMP_WORDS[COMP_CWORD]`) (bash does not perform
#   variable substitution for `COMP_WORDS`). However, note that special shell
#   variables that are not environment variables like `$0`, `$_`, `$IFS` will not
#   be replaced correctly because bash does not export those variables for us.
#
#4) tildes (`~`) are expanded with user's home directory except for the current
#   word (bash does not perform tilde expansion for `COMP_WORDS`);
#
#Caveats:
#
#* Like bash, we group non-whitespace word-breaking characters into its own word.
#  By default `COMP_WORDBREAKS` is:
#
#    "'@><=;|&(:
#
#  So if raw command-line is:
#
#    command --foo=bar http://example.com:80 mail@example.org Foo::Bar
#
#  then the parse result will be:
#
#    ["command", "--foo", "=", "bar", "http", ":", "//example.com", ":", "80", "Foo", "::", "Bar"]
#
#  which is annoying sometimes. But we follow bash here so we can more easily
#  accept input from a joined `COMP_WORDS` if we write completion bash functions,
#  e.g. (in the example, `foo` is a Perl script):
#
#    _foo ()
#    {
#        local words=(${COMP_CWORDS[@]})
#        # add things to words, etc
#        local point=... # calculate the new point
#        COMPREPLY=( `COMP_LINE="foo ${words[@]}" COMP_POINT=$point foo` )

script/gen-generic-ind-company-names  view on Meta::CPAN

#
#                      if (not(defined $cword)) {
#                          $pos_min_ws = $pos - length($2 ? $4 : $5 ? $7 : $9);
#                          #say "D:pos_min_ws=$pos_min_ws";
#                          if ($point <= $pos_min_ws) {
#                              $cword = @words - ($after_ws ? 0 : 1);
#                          } elsif ($point < $pos) {
#                              $cword = @words + 1 - ($after_ws ? 0 : 1);
#                              $add_blank = 1;
#                          }
#                      }
#
#                      if ($after_ws) {
#                          $is_cur_word = defined($cword) && $cword==@words;
#                      } else {
#                          $is_cur_word = defined($cword) && $cword==@words-1;
#                      }
#                      #say "D:is_cur_word=$is_cur_word";
#                      $chunk =
#                          $2 ? _add_double_quoted($3, $is_cur_word) :
#                              $5 ? _add_single_quoted($6) :
#                              _add_unquoted($8, $is_cur_word, $after_ws);
#                      if ($opts && $opts->{truncate_current_word} &&
#                              $is_cur_word && $pos > $point) {
#                          $chunk = substr(
#                              $chunk, 0, length($chunk)-($pos_min_ws-$point));
#                          #say "D:truncating current word to <$chunk>";
#                      }
#                      if ($after_ws) {
#                          push @words, $chunk;
#                      } else {
#                          $words[-1] .= $chunk;
#                      }
#                      if ($add_blank) {
#                          push @words, '';
#                          $add_blank = 0;
#                      }
#                      $after_ws = ($2 ? $4 : $5 ? $7 : $9) ? 1:0;
#
#                  } elsif ($10) {
#                      # non-whitespace word-breaking characters
#                      push @words, $10;
#                      $after_ws = 1;
#                  } else {
#                      # whitespace
#                      $after_ws = 1;
#                  }
#    !egx;
#
#    $cword //= @words;
#    $words[$cword] //= '';
#
#    log_trace "[compbash] parse_cmdline(): result: words=%s, cword=%s", \@words, $cword
#        if $ENV{COMPLETE_BASH_TRACE};
#
#    [\@words, $cword];
#}
#
#$SPEC{join_wordbreak_words} = {
#    v => 1.1,
#    summary => 'Post-process parse_cmdline() result by joining some words',
#    description => <<'_',
#
#`parse_cmdline()`, like bash, splits some characters that are considered as
#word-breaking characters:
#
#    "'@><=;|&(:
#
#So if command-line is:
#
#    command --module=Data::Dump bob@example.org
#
#then they will be parsed as:
#
#    ["command", "--module", "=", "Data", "::", "Dump", "bob", '@', "example.org"]
#
#Normally in Perl applications, we want `:`, `@` to be part of word. So this
#routine will convert the above into:
#
#    ["command", "--module=Data::Dump", 'bob@example.org']
#
#_
#};
#sub join_wordbreak_words {
#    my ($words, $cword) = @_;
#    my $new_words = [];
#    my $i = -1;
#    while (++$i < @$words) {
#        my $w = $words->[$i];
#        if ($w =~ /\A[\@=:]+\z/) {
#            if (@$new_words and $#$new_words != $cword) {
#                $new_words->[-1] .= $w;
#                $cword-- if $cword >= $i || $cword >= @$new_words;
#            } else {
#                push @$new_words, $w;
#            }
#            if ($i+1 < @$words) {
#                $i++;
#                $new_words->[-1] .= $words->[$i];
#                $cword-- if $cword >= $i || $cword >= @$new_words;
#            }
#        } else {
#            push @$new_words, $w;
#        }
#    }
#    log_trace "[compbash] join_wordbreak_words(): result: words=%s, cword=%d", $new_words, $cword
#        if $ENV{COMPLETE_BASH_TRACE};
#    [$new_words, $cword];
#}
#
#sub _terminal_width {
#    # XXX need to cache?
#    if (eval { require Term::Size; 1 }) {
#        my ($cols, undef) = Term::Size::chars(*STDOUT{IO});
#        $cols // 80;
#    } else {
#        $ENV{COLUMNS} // 80;
#    }
#}
#
## given terminal width & number of columns, calculate column width

script/gen-generic-ind-company-names  view on Meta::CPAN

#completion inside C<Term::ReadLine>, for example, where the library expects an
#array.
#
#=item * esc_mode
#
#Escaping mode for entries. Either C<default> (most nonalphanumeric characters
#will be escaped), C<shellvar> (like C<default>, but dollar sign C<$> will also be
#escaped, convenient when completing environment variables for example),
#C<filename> (currently equals to C<default>), C<option> (currently equals to
#C<default>), or C<none> (no escaping will be done).
#
#=item * word
#
#A workaround. String. For now, see source code for more details.
#
#=item * show_summaries
#
#Whether to show item's summaries. Boolean, default is from
#COMPLETE_BASH_SHOW_SUMMARIES environment variable or 1.
#
#An answer item contain summary, which is a short description about the item,
#e.g.:
#
#  [{word=>"-a"    , summary=>"Show hidden files"},
#   {word=>"-l"    , summary=>"Show details"},
#   {word=>"--sort", summary=>"Specify sort order"}],
#
#When summaries are not shown, user will just be seeing something like:
#
#  -a
#  -l
#  --sort
#
#But when summaries are shown, user will see:
#
#  -a         -- Show hidden files
#  -l         -- Show details
#  --sort     -- Specify sort order
#
#which is quite helpful.
#
#=item * workaround_with_wordbreaks
#
#Boolean. Default is true. See source code for more details.
#
#=back
#
#
#=back
#
#Return value: Formatted string (or array, if `as` is set to `array`) (str|array)
#
#
#
#=head2 join_wordbreak_words
#
#Usage:
#
# join_wordbreak_words() -> [status, msg, payload, meta]
#
#Post-process parse_cmdline() result by joining some words.
#
#C<parse_cmdline()>, like bash, splits some characters that are considered as
#word-breaking characters:
#
# "'@><=;|&(:
#
#So if command-line is:
#
# command --module=Data::Dump bob@example.org
#
#then they will be parsed as:
#
# ["command", "--module", "=", "Data", "::", "Dump", "bob", '@', "example.org"]
#
#Normally in Perl applications, we want C<:>, C<@> to be part of word. So this
#routine will convert the above into:
#
# ["command", "--module=Data::Dump", 'bob@example.org']
#
#This function is not exported by default, but exportable.
#
#No arguments.
#
#Returns an enveloped result (an array).
#
#First element (status) is an integer containing HTTP status code
#(200 means OK, 4xx caller error, 5xx function error). Second element
#(msg) is a string containing error message, or 'OK' if status is
#200. Third element (payload) is optional, the actual result. Fourth
#element (meta) is called result metadata and is optional, a hash
#that contains extra information.
#
#Return value:  (any)
#
#
#
#=head2 parse_cmdline
#
#Usage:
#
# parse_cmdline($cmdline, $point, $opts) -> array
#
#Parse shell command-line for processing by completion routines.
#
#This function basically converts C<COMP_LINE> (str) and C<COMP_POINT> (int) into
#something like (but not exactly the same as) C<COMP_WORDS> (array) and
#C<COMP_CWORD> (int) that bash supplies to shell functions.
#
#The differences with bash are (these differences are mostly for parsing
#convenience for programs that use this routine; this comparison is made against
#bash versions 4.2-4.3):
#
#1) quotes and backslashes are stripped (bash's C<COMP_WORDS> contains all the
#   quotes and backslashes);
#
#2) quoted phrase that contains spaces, or phrase that contains escaped spaces is
#   parsed as a single word. For example:
#
# command "First argument" Second\ argument
#
#   bash would split it as (represented as Perl):
#
# ["command", "\"First", "argument\"", "Second\\", "argument"]
#
#   which is not very convenient. We parse it into:
#
# ["command", "First argument", "Second argument"]
#
#3) variables are substituted with their values from environment variables except
#   for the current word (C<COMP_WORDS[COMP_CWORD]>) (bash does not perform
#   variable substitution for C<COMP_WORDS>). However, note that special shell
#   variables that are not environment variables like C<$0>, C<$_>, C<$IFS> will not
#   be replaced correctly because bash does not export those variables for us.
#
#4) tildes (C<~>) are expanded with user's home directory except for the current
#   word (bash does not perform tilde expansion for C<COMP_WORDS>);
#
#Caveats:
#
#=over
#
#=item * Like bash, we group non-whitespace word-breaking characters into its own word.
#By default C<COMP_WORDBREAKS> is:
#
#"'@><=;|&(:
#
#So if raw command-line is:
#
#command --foo=bar http://example.com:80 mail@example.org Foo::Bar
#
#then the parse result will be:
#
#["command", "--foo", "=", "bar", "http", ":", "//example.com", ":", "80", "Foo", "::", "Bar"]
#
#which is annoying sometimes. But we follow bash here so we can more easily
#accept input from a joined C<COMP_WORDS> if we write completion bash functions,
#e.g. (in the example, C<foo> is a Perl script):
#
#I<foo ()
#{
#    local words=(${COMP>CWORDS[@]})
#    # add things to words, etc
#    local point=... # calculate the new point

script/gen-generic-ind-company-names  view on Meta::CPAN

#            ((defined($args->{"num_names"})) ? 1 : (($_sahv_err //= "Required but not specified"),0))
#            
#            &&
#            
#            # check type 'int'
#            ((Scalar::Util::Numeric::PP::isint($args->{"num_names"})) ? 1 : (($_sahv_err //= "Not of type integer"),0))
#            
#            &&
#            
#            (# clause: min
#            (($args->{"num_names"} >= 0) ? 1 : (($_sahv_err //= "Must be at least 0"),0)))
#             ; if ($_sahv_err) { return [400, "Argument validation failed: $_sahv_err"] }
#        } # if date arg exists
#        $args->{"num_words"} //= 3;
#        if (exists $args->{"num_words"}) {
#            $_sahv_dpath = [];
#            # req #0
#            ((defined($args->{"num_words"})) ? 1 : (($_sahv_err //= "Required but not specified"),0))
#            
#            &&
#            
#            # check type 'int'
#            ((Scalar::Util::Numeric::PP::isint($args->{"num_words"})) ? 1 : (($_sahv_err //= "Not of type integer"),0))
#            
#            &&
#            
#            (# clause: min
#            (($args->{"num_words"} >= 1) ? 1 : (($_sahv_err //= "Must be at least 1"),0)))
#             ; if ($_sahv_err) { return [400, "Argument validation failed: $_sahv_err"] }
#        } # if date arg exists
#        $args->{"type"} //= "PT";
#        if (exists $args->{"type"}) {
#            $_sahv_dpath = [];
#            # req #0
#            ((defined($args->{"type"})) ? 1 : (($_sahv_err //= "Required but not specified"),0))
#            
#            &&
#            
#            # check type 'str'
#            ((!ref($args->{"type"})) ? 1 : (($_sahv_err //= "Not of type text"),0))
#             ; if ($_sahv_err) { return [400, "Argument validation failed: $_sahv_err"] }
#        } # if date arg exists
#
#        # check required args
#        return [400, "Missing required value for argument: add_prefixes"] if exists($args->{"add_prefixes"}) && !defined($args->{"add_prefixes"});
#        return [400, "Missing required value for argument: add_suffixes"] if exists($args->{"add_suffixes"}) && !defined($args->{"add_suffixes"});
#        return [400, "Missing required value for argument: desired_initials"] if exists($args->{"desired_initials"}) && !defined($args->{"desired_initials"});
#        return [400, "Missing required value for argument: num_names"] if exists($args->{"num_names"}) && !defined($args->{"num_names"});
#        return [400, "Missing required value for argument: num_words"] if exists($args->{"num_words"}) && !defined($args->{"num_words"});
#        return [400, "Missing required value for argument: type"] if exists($args->{"type"}) && !defined($args->{"type"});
#        _pci_err([500, "Extraneous command-line argument(s): ".join(", ", @check_argv)]) if @check_argv;
#        [200];
#    } else { _pci_err([500, "Unknown subcommand1: $sc_name"]); }
#}
#1;
### Local/_pci_clean_json.pm ###
#sub _pci_clean_json { require Clone::PP; require Scalar::Util;  use feature 'state'; state $cleanser = sub {
#my $data = shift;
#state %refs;
#state $ctr_circ;
#state $process_array;
#state $process_hash;
#if (!$process_array) { $process_array = sub { my $a = shift; for my $e (@$a) { my $ref=ref($e);
#    if ($ref && $refs{ $e }++) { if (++$ctr_circ <= 1) { $e = Clone::PP::clone($e); redo } else { $e = 'CIRCULAR'; $ref = '' } }
#    elsif ($ref eq 'Cpanel::JSON::XS::Boolean') { $e = $e ? 1:0; $ref = '' }
#    elsif ($ref eq 'DateTime') { $e = $e->epoch; $ref = ref($e) }
#    elsif ($ref eq 'JSON::PP::Boolean') { $e = $e ? 1:0; $ref = '' }
#    elsif ($ref eq 'JSON::XS::Boolean') { $e = $e ? 1:0; $ref = '' }
#    elsif ($ref eq 'Math::BigInt') { $e = $e->bstr; $ref = ref($e) }
#    elsif ($ref eq 'Regexp') { $e = "$e"; $ref = "" }
#    elsif ($ref eq 'SCALAR') { $e = ${ $e }; $ref = ref($e) }
#    elsif ($ref eq 'Time::Moment') { $e = $e->epoch; $ref = ref($e) }
#    elsif ($ref eq 'version') { $e = "$e"; $ref = "" }
#    elsif (Scalar::Util::blessed($e)) { my $reftype = Scalar::Util::reftype($e); $e = $reftype eq "HASH" ? {%{ $e }} : $reftype eq "ARRAY" ? [@{ $e }] : $reftype eq "SCALAR" ? \(my $copy = ${ $e }) : $reftype eq "CODE" ? sub { goto &{ $e } } :(die "...
#    my $reftype=Scalar::Util::reftype($e)//"";
#    if ($reftype eq "ARRAY") { $process_array->($e) }
#    elsif ($reftype eq "HASH") { $process_hash->($e) }
#    elsif ($ref) { $e = $ref; $ref = "" }
#} } }
#if (!$process_hash) { $process_hash = sub { my $h = shift; for my $k (keys %$h) { my $ref=ref($h->{$k});
#    if ($ref && $refs{ $h->{$k} }++) { if (++$ctr_circ <= 1) { $h->{$k} = Clone::PP::clone($h->{$k}); redo } else { $h->{$k} = 'CIRCULAR'; $ref = '' } }
#    elsif ($ref eq 'Cpanel::JSON::XS::Boolean') { $h->{$k} = $h->{$k} ? 1:0; $ref = '' }
#    elsif ($ref eq 'DateTime') { $h->{$k} = $h->{$k}->epoch; $ref = ref($h->{$k}) }
#    elsif ($ref eq 'JSON::PP::Boolean') { $h->{$k} = $h->{$k} ? 1:0; $ref = '' }
#    elsif ($ref eq 'JSON::XS::Boolean') { $h->{$k} = $h->{$k} ? 1:0; $ref = '' }
#    elsif ($ref eq 'Math::BigInt') { $h->{$k} = $h->{$k}->bstr; $ref = ref($h->{$k}) }
#    elsif ($ref eq 'Regexp') { $h->{$k} = "$h->{$k}"; $ref = "" }
#    elsif ($ref eq 'SCALAR') { $h->{$k} = ${ $h->{$k} }; $ref = ref($h->{$k}) }
#    elsif ($ref eq 'Time::Moment') { $h->{$k} = $h->{$k}->epoch; $ref = ref($h->{$k}) }
#    elsif ($ref eq 'version') { $h->{$k} = "$h->{$k}"; $ref = "" }
#    elsif (Scalar::Util::blessed($h->{$k})) { my $reftype = Scalar::Util::reftype($h->{$k}); $h->{$k} = $reftype eq "HASH" ? {%{ $h->{$k} }} : $reftype eq "ARRAY" ? [@{ $h->{$k} }] : $reftype eq "SCALAR" ? \(my $copy = ${ $h->{$k} }) : $reftype eq "...
#    my $reftype=Scalar::Util::reftype($h->{$k})//"";
#    if ($reftype eq "ARRAY") { $process_array->($h->{$k}) }
#    elsif ($reftype eq "HASH") { $process_hash->($h->{$k}) }
#    elsif ($ref) { $h->{$k} = $ref; $ref = "" }
#} } }
#%refs = (); $ctr_circ=0;
#for ($data) { my $ref=ref($_);
#    if ($ref && $refs{ $_ }++) { if (++$ctr_circ <= 1) { $_ = Clone::PP::clone($_); redo } else { $_ = 'CIRCULAR'; $ref = '' } }
#    elsif ($ref eq 'Cpanel::JSON::XS::Boolean') { $_ = $_ ? 1:0; $ref = '' }
#    elsif ($ref eq 'DateTime') { $_ = $_->epoch; $ref = ref($_) }
#    elsif ($ref eq 'JSON::PP::Boolean') { $_ = $_ ? 1:0; $ref = '' }
#    elsif ($ref eq 'JSON::XS::Boolean') { $_ = $_ ? 1:0; $ref = '' }
#    elsif ($ref eq 'Math::BigInt') { $_ = $_->bstr; $ref = ref($_) }
#    elsif ($ref eq 'Regexp') { $_ = "$_"; $ref = "" }
#    elsif ($ref eq 'SCALAR') { $_ = ${ $_ }; $ref = ref($_) }
#    elsif ($ref eq 'Time::Moment') { $_ = $_->epoch; $ref = ref($_) }
#    elsif ($ref eq 'version') { $_ = "$_"; $ref = "" }
#    elsif (Scalar::Util::blessed($_)) { my $reftype = Scalar::Util::reftype($_); $_ = $reftype eq "HASH" ? {%{ $_ }} : $reftype eq "ARRAY" ? [@{ $_ }] : $reftype eq "SCALAR" ? \(my $copy = ${ $_ }) : $reftype eq "CODE" ? sub { goto &{ $_ } } :(die "...
#    my $reftype=Scalar::Util::reftype($_)//"";
#    if ($reftype eq "ARRAY") { $process_array->($_) }
#    elsif ($reftype eq "HASH") { $process_hash->($_) }
#    elsif ($ref) { $_ = $ref; $ref = "" }
#}
#$data
#}
#;; $cleanser->(shift) }
#1;
### Log/ger.pm ###
#package Log::ger;
#
#our $AUTHORITY = 'cpan:PERLANCAR'; # AUTHORITY
#our $DATE = '2021-01-31'; # DATE
#our $DIST = 'Log-ger'; # DIST
#our $VERSION = '0.038'; # VERSION
#
##IFUNBUILT
## use strict 'subs', 'vars';
## use warnings;
##END IFUNBUILT
#
#our $re_addr = qr/\(0x([0-9a-f]+)/o;
#
#our %Levels = (
#    fatal   => 10,
#    error   => 20,
#    warn    => 30,
#    info    => 40,
#    debug   => 50,
#    trace   => 60,
#);
#
#our %Level_Aliases = (
#    off     => 0,
#    warning => 30,
#);
#
#our $Current_Level = 30;
#
#our $Caller_Depth_Offset = 0;
#
## a flag that can be used by null output to skip using formatter
#our $_outputter_is_null;
#
#our $_dumper;
#
#our %Global_Hooks;
#
## in Log/ger/Heavy.pm
## our %Default_Hooks = (
#
#our %Package_Targets; # key = package name, value = \%per_target_conf
#our %Per_Package_Hooks; # key = package name, value = { phase => hooks, ... }
#
#our %Hash_Targets; # key = hash address, value = [$hashref, \%per_target_conf]
#our %Per_Hash_Hooks; # key = hash address, value = { phase => hooks, ... }
#
#our %Object_Targets; # key = object address, value = [$obj, \%per_target_conf]
#our %Per_Object_Hooks; # key = object address, value = { phase => hooks, ... }
#
#my $sub0 = sub {0};
#my $sub1 = sub {1};

script/gen-generic-ind-company-names  view on Meta::CPAN

##         no warnings 'redefine';
##END IFUNBUILT
#        my $pkg = ref $target_arg;
#        for my $r (@$routines) {
#            my ($code, $name, $lnum, $type) = @$r;
#            next unless $type =~ /_method\z/;
#            *{"$pkg\::$name"} = $code;
#            subname("$pkg\::$name", $code) if $name_routines;
#        }
#    } elsif ($target eq 'hash') {
#        for my $r (@$routines) {
#            my ($code, $name, $lnum, $type) = @$r;
#            next unless $type =~ /_sub\z/;
#            $target_arg->{$name} = $code;
#        }
#    }
#}
#
#sub add_target {
#    my ($target_type, $target_name, $per_target_conf, $replace) = @_;
#    $replace = 1 unless defined $replace;
#
#    if ($target_type eq 'package') {
#        unless ($replace) { return if $Package_Targets{$target_name} }
#        $Package_Targets{$target_name} = $per_target_conf;
#    } elsif ($target_type eq 'object') {
#        my ($addr) = "$target_name" =~ $re_addr;
#        unless ($replace) { return if $Object_Targets{$addr} }
#        $Object_Targets{$addr} = [$target_name, $per_target_conf];
#    } elsif ($target_type eq 'hash') {
#        my ($addr) = "$target_name" =~ $re_addr;
#        unless ($replace) { return if $Hash_Targets{$addr} }
#        $Hash_Targets{$addr} = [$target_name, $per_target_conf];
#    }
#}
#
#sub _set_default_null_routines {
#    $default_null_routines ||= [
#        (map {(
#            [$sub0, "log_$_", $Levels{$_}, 'logger_sub'],
#            [$Levels{$_} > $Current_Level ? $sub0 : $sub1, "log_is_$_", $Levels{$_}, 'level_checker_sub'],
#            [$sub0, $_, $Levels{$_}, 'logger_method'],
#            [$Levels{$_} > $Current_Level ? $sub0 : $sub1, "is_$_", $Levels{$_}, 'level_checker_method'],
#        )} keys %Levels),
#    ];
#}
#
#sub get_logger {
#    my ($package, %per_target_conf) = @_;
#
#    my $caller = caller(0);
#    $per_target_conf{category} = $caller
#        if !defined($per_target_conf{category});
#    my $obj = []; $obj =~ $re_addr;
#    my $pkg = "Log::ger::Obj$1"; bless $obj, $pkg;
#    add_target(object => $obj, \%per_target_conf);
#    if (keys %Global_Hooks) {
#        require Log::ger::Heavy;
#        init_target(object => $obj, \%per_target_conf);
#    } else {
#        # if we haven't added any hooks etc, skip init_target() process and use
#        # this preconstructed routines as shortcut, to save startup overhead
#        _set_default_null_routines();
#        install_routines(object => $obj, $default_null_routines, 0);
#    }
#    $obj; # XXX add DESTROY to remove from list of targets
#}
#
#sub _import_to {
#    my ($package, $target_pkg, %per_target_conf) = @_;
#
#    $per_target_conf{category} = $target_pkg
#        if !defined($per_target_conf{category});
#    add_target(package => $target_pkg, \%per_target_conf);
#    if (keys %Global_Hooks) {
#        require Log::ger::Heavy;
#        init_target(package => $target_pkg, \%per_target_conf);
#    } else {
#        # if we haven't added any hooks etc, skip init_target() process and use
#        # this preconstructed routines as shortcut, to save startup overhead
#        _set_default_null_routines();
#        install_routines(package => $target_pkg, $default_null_routines, 0);
#    }
#}
#
#sub import {
#    my ($package, %per_target_conf) = @_;
#
#    my $caller = caller(0);
#    $package->_import_to($caller, %per_target_conf);
#}
#
#1;
## ABSTRACT: A lightweight, flexible logging framework
#
#__END__
#
#=pod
#
#=encoding UTF-8
#
#=head1 NAME
#
#Log::ger - A lightweight, flexible logging framework
#
#=head1 VERSION
#
#version 0.038
#
#=head1 SYNOPSIS
#
#=head2 Producing logs
#
#In your module (producer):
#
# package Foo;
# use Log::ger; # will install some logger routines e.g. log_warn, log_error
#
# sub foo {
#     ...
#     # produce some logs. no need to configure output or level.
#     log_error "an error occured: %03d - %s", $errcode, $errmsg;
#     ...
#     log_debug "http response: %s", $http; # automatic dumping of data
# }
# 1;
#
#=head2 Consuming logs
#
#=head3 Choosing an output
#
#In your application (consumer/listener):
#
# use Foo;
# use Log::ger::Output 'Screen'; # configure output
# # level is by default 'warn'
# foo(); # the error message is shown, but debug message is not.
#
#=head3 Choosing multiple outputs



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