NAME
deep - Prettily displays the data from a log file generated by Log::Deep
VERSION
This documentation refers to deep version 0.0.5.
SYNOPSIS
deep [option]
OPTIONS:
-f --follow Keep monitoring the file once end is reached
-n --number int
Specifies the number of log lines to display from the end of
the file.
-s --session session_id
-t --time ???
-l --filter ???
Sets the filter for the log messages that are to be displayed
-d --display item=[ 1 | 0 | see below ]
Toggles the fields to display. This can be specified many
times to fully describe what to display.
Fields currently include:
data : The data supplied when the message was written
stack: The stack trace where the log was called
vars : The stored variables with the log object. A value
of 1 shows all vars other wise individual vars are
turned on by comma seperating their names.
-b --breaks Display blank lines to indicate gaps in time
-v --verbose Show more detailed option
--version Prints the version information
--help Prints this help information
--man Prints the full documentation for deep
DESCRIPTION
A full description of the module and its features.
May include numerous subsections (i.e., =head2, =head3, etc.).
SUBROUTINES/METHODS
A separate section listing the public components of the module's interface.
These normally consist of either subroutines that may be exported, or methods that may be called on objects belonging to the classes that the module provides.
Name the section accordingly.
In an object-oriented module, this section should begin with a sentence (of the form "An object of this class represents ...") to give the reader a high-level context to help them understand the methods that are subsequently described.
DIAGNOSTICS
A list of every error and warning message that the module can generate (even the ones that will "never happen"), with a full explanation of each problem, one or more likely causes, and any suggested remedies.
CONFIGURATION AND ENVIRONMENT
A full explanation of any configuration system(s) used by the module, including the names and locations of any configuration files, and the meaning of any environment variables or properties that can be set. These descriptions must also include details of any configuration language used.
DEPENDENCIES
A list of all of the other modules that this module relies upon, including any restrictions on versions, and an indication of whether these required modules are part of the standard Perl distribution, part of the module's distribution, or must be installed separately.
INCOMPATIBILITIES
A list of any modules that this module cannot be used in conjunction with. This may be due to name conflicts in the interface, or competition for system or program resources, or due to internal limitations of Perl (for example, many modules that use source code filters are mutually incompatible).
BUGS AND LIMITATIONS
A list of known problems with the module, together with some indication of whether they are likely to be fixed in an upcoming release.
Also, a list of restrictions on the features the module does provide: data types that cannot be handled, performance issues and the circumstances in which they may arise, practical limitations on the size of data sets, special cases that are not (yet) handled, etc.
The initial template usually just has:
There are no known bugs in this module.
Please report problems to Ivan Wills (ivan.wills@gmail.com).
Patches are welcome.
AUTHOR
Ivan Wills - (ivan.wills@gmail.com)
LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2009 Ivan Wills (14 Mullion Close, Hornsby Heights, NSW 2077). All rights reserved.
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See perlartistic. 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.