NAME
Sysadm::Install - Typical installation tasks for system administrators
SYNOPSIS
use Sysadm::Install qw(:all);
my $INST_DIR = '/home/me/install/';
cd($INST_DIR);
cp("/deliver/someproj.tgz", ".");
untar("someproj.tgz");
cd("someproj");
# Write out ...
blurt("Builder: Mike\nDate: Today\n", "build.dat");
# Slurp back in ...
my $data = slurp("build.dat");
# or edit in place ...
pie(sub { s/Today/scalar localtime()/ge; $_; }, "build.dat");
make("test install");
# run a cmd and tap into stdout and stderr
my($stdout, $stderr) = tap("ls -R");
DESCRIPTION
Have you ever wished for your installation shell scripts to run reproducably, without much programming fuzz, and even with optional logging enabled? Then give up shell programming, use Perl.
Sysadm::Install
executes shell-like commands performing typical installation tasks: Copying files, extracting tarballs, calling make
. It has a fail once and die
policy, meticulously checking the result of every operation and calling die()
immeditatly if anything fails.
FUNCTIONS
cp($source, $target)
Copy a file from $source
to $target
. target
can be a directory.
mv($source, $target)
Move a file from $source
to $target
. target
can be a directory.
download($url)
Download a file specified by $url
and store it under the name returned by basename($url)
.
untar($tgz_file)
Untar the tarball in $tgz_file
, which typically adheres to the someproject-X.XX.tgz
convention. But regardless of whether the archive actually contains a top directory someproject-X.XX
, this function will behave if it had one. If it doesn't have one, a new directory is created before the unpacking takes place. Unpacks the tarball into the current directory, no matter where the tarfile is located.
mkd($dir)
Create a directory of arbitrary depth, just like File::Path::mkpath
.
rmf($dir)
Delete a directory and all of its descendents, just like rm -rf
in the shell.
cd($dir)
chdir to the given directory.
cdback()
chdir back to the last directory before a previous cd
.
make()
Call make
in the shell.
pie($coderef, $filename, ...)
Simulate "perl -pie 'do something' file". Edits files in-place. Expects a reference to a subroutine as its first argument. It will read out the file $filename
line by line and calls the subroutine setting a localized $_
to the current line. The return value of the subroutine will replace the previous value of the line.
Example:
# Replace all 'foo's by 'bar' in test.dat
pie(sub { s/foo/bar/g; $_; }, "test.dat");
Works with one or more file names.
my $data = slurp($file)
Slurps in the file and returns a scalar with the file's content.
blurt($data, $file, $append)
Opens a new file, prints the data in $data
to it and closes the file. If $append
is set to a true value, data will be appended to the file. Default is false, existing files will be overwritten.
($stdout, $stderr) = tap($cmd)
Rund a command $cmd
in the shell, capture STDOUT and STDERR, and return them as strings.
AUTHOR
Mike Schilli, <m@perlmeister.com>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2004 by Mike Schilli
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.3 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.
1 POD Error
The following errors were encountered while parsing the POD:
- Around line 97:
You can't have =items (as at line 103) unless the first thing after the =over is an =item