NAME
XAS::Utils - A Perl extension for the XAS environment
SYNOPSIS
use XAS::Class
version => '0.01',
base => 'XAS::Base',
utils => 'db2dt dt2db'
;
printf("%s\n", dt2db($dt));
DESCRIPTION
This module provides utility routines that can by loaded into your current namespace.
METHODS
db2dt($datestring)
This routine will take a date format of YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS and convert it into a DateTime object.
dt2db($datetime)
This routine will take a DateTime object and convert it into the following string: YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS
trim($string)
Trim the whitespace from the beginning and end of $string.
ltrim($string)
Trim the whitespace from the end of $string.
rtrim($string)
Trim the whitespace from the beginning of $string.
compress($string)
Reduces multiple whitespace to a single space in $string.
left($string, $offset)
Return the left chunk of $string up to $offset. Useful for porting VBS code. Makes allowances that VBS strings are ones based while Perls are zero based.
right($string, $offset)
Return the right chunk of $string starting at $offset. Useful for porting VBS code. Makes allowances that VBS strings are ones based while Perls are zero based.
mid($string, $offset, $length)
Return the chunk of $string starting at $offset for $length characters. Useful for porting VBS code. Makes allowances that VBS strings are ones based while Perls are zero based.
instr($start, $string, $compare)
Return the position in $string of $compare. You may offset within the string with $start. Useful for porting VBS code. Makes allowances that VBS strings are one based while Perls are zero based.
spawn
Run a cli command with timeout. Returns output from that command.
exitcode
Decodes Perls version of the exit code from a cli process. Returns two items.
Example:
my @output = spawn(-command => "ls -l");
my ($rc, $sig) = exitcode();
daemonize
Become a daemon. This will set the process as a session lead, change to '/', clear the protection mask and redirect stdin, stdout and stderr to /dev/null.
glob2regx($glob)
This method will take a shell glob pattern and convert it into a Perl regex. This also works with DOS/Windows wildcards.
hash_walk
This routine will walk a HOH and does a callback on the key/values that are found. It takes these parameters:
- -hash
-
The hashref of the HOH.
- -keys
-
An arrayref of the key levels.
- -callback
-
The routine to call with these parameters:
dir_walk
This will walk a directory structure and execute a callback for the found files. It takes these parameters:
- -directory
-
The root directory to start from.
- -filter
-
A compiled regex to compare files against.
- -callback
-
The callback to execute when matching files are found.
init_module($module, $options)
This routine will load and initialize a module. It takes one required parameter and one optinal parameter.
load_module($module)
This routine will load a module.
env_store
Remove all items from the $ENV variable and store them in a hash variable.
Example:
my $env = env_store();
env_restore
Remove all items from $ENV variable and restore it back to a saved hash variable.
Example:
env_restore($env);
env_create
Store all the items from a hash variable into the $ENV varable.
Example:
env_create($env);
env_parse
Take a formated string and parse it into a hash variable. The string must have this format: "item=value;;item2=value2";
Example:
my $string = "item=value;;item2=value2";
my $env = env_parse($string);
env_create($env);
env_dump
Take the items from the current $ENV variable and create a formated string.
Example:
my $string = env_dump();
my $env = env_create($string);
SEE ALSO
AUTHOR
Kevin L. Esteb, <kevin@kesteb.us>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2014 Kevin L. Esteb
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.8 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.
See http://dev.perl.org/licenses/ for more information.