NAME
Env::Modulecmd - Interface to modulecmd from Perl
SYNOPSIS
# import bootstraps, executed at compile-time
# explicit operations
use Env::Modulecmd { load => 'foo/1.0',
unload => ['bar/1.0', 'baz/1.0'],
};
# implied loading
use Env::Modulecmd qw(quux/1.0 quuux/1.0);
# hybrid
use Env::Modulecmd ('bazola/1.0', 'ztesch/1.0',
{ load => 'oogle/1.0',
unload => [qw(foogle/1.0 boogle/1.0)],
}
);
# implicit functions, executed at run-time
Env::Modulecmd::load (qw(fred/1.0 jim/1.0 sheila/barney/1.0));
Env::Modulecmd::unload ('corge/grault/1.0', 'flarp/1.0');
Env::Modulecmd::pippo ('pluto/paperino/1.0');
DESCRIPTION
Env::Modulecmd
provides an automated interface to modulecmd
from Perl. The most straightforward use of Env::Modulecmd is for loading and unloading modules at compile time, although many other uses are provided.
modulecmd Interface
In general, Env::Modulecmd
works by making a system call to 'modulecmd perl [cmd] [module]
', under the assumption that modulecmd
is in your PATH. If you set the environment variable PERL_MODULECMD
, Env::Modulecmd
will use that value in place of modulecmd
. If modulecmd
is not found, the shell will return an error and the script will die.
Note: a default path to modulecmd
, and a default setting for MODULEPATH
, can be built into Env::Modulecmd
when it's installed. See the README
file in the source tree for more information.
Modules may, by convention, output warnings and informational messages; modulecmd
directs these to standard error. If modulecmd
outputs anything to standard error, Env::Modulecmd
inspects that output and attempts to determine whether it represents a fatal error. If the output begins with "ERROR:", or if it matches modulecmd
's typical error message format, Env::Modulecmd
fails. Otherwise, Env::Modulecmd
emits that output as a warning, but only if Perl warnings are enabled (-w
, or use warnings
).
If there were no fatal errors, modulecmd
's output (if any) is eval
'ed. If the eval
operation fails, Env::Modulecmd
will fail.
If you attempt to load a module which has already been loaded, or perform some other benign operation, modulecmd
will generate neither output nor error; this condition is silently ignored.
Compile-Time Usage
You can specify compile-time arguments to Env::Modulecmd
on the use
line, as follows:
use Env::Modulecmd ('bazola/1.0', 'ztesch/1.0',
{ load => 'oogle/1.0',
unload => [qw(foogle/1.0 boogle/1.0)],
}
);
Each argument is assumed to be either a scalar or a hashref. If it's a scalar, Env::Modulecmd
assumes it's the name of a module you want to load. If it's a hashref, then each key is the name of a modulecmd operation (ie: load
, unload
) and each value is either a scalar (operate on one module) or an arrayref (operate on several modules).
In the example given above, bazola/1.0
and ztesch/1.0
will be loaded by implicit usage. oogle/1.0
will be loaded explicitly, and foogle/1.0
and boogle/1.0
will be unloaded.
Run-Time Usage
Additional module operations can be performed at run-time by using implicit functions. For example:
Env::Modulecmd::load (qw(fred/1.0 jim/1.0 sheila/barney/1.0));
Env::Modulecmd::unload ('corge/grault/1.0', 'flarp/1.0');
Env::Modulecmd::pippo ('pluto/paperino/1.0');
Each function name is passed as a command name to modulecmd
, and each call can include one or more modules to be processed. The example above will generate the following six calls to modulecmd
:
modulecmd perl load fred/1.0
modulecmd perl load jim/1.0
modulecmd perl load sheila/barney/1.0
modulecmd perl unload corge/grault/1.0
modulecmd perl unload flarp/1.0
modulecmd perl pippo pluto/paperino/1.0
SEE ALSO
For more information about modules, see the module(1) manpage or http://www.modules.org.
BUGS
If you find any bugs, or if you have any suggestions for improvement, please contact the author.
AUTHOR
Ron Isaacson <Ron.Isaacson@morganstanley.com>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2001-2014, Morgan Stanley.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
A copy of the GNU General Public License was distributed with this program in a file called LICENSE. For additional copies, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.