System::Command is a class that launches external system commands
and return an object representing them, allowing to interact with
them through their STDIN, STDOUT and STDERR handles.
Term::Menus allows you to create powerful Terminal, Console and CMD
environment menus. Any perl script used in a Terminal, Console or CMD
environment can now include a menu facility that includes sub-menus,
forward and backward navigation, single or multiple selection
capabilities, dynamic item creation and customized banners. All this
power is simple to implement with a straight forward and very
intuitive configuration hash structure that mirrors the actual menu
architecture needed by the application. A separate configuration file
is optional. Term::Menus is cross platform compatible.
Test::LeakTrace provides several functions that trace memory leaks. This module
scans arenas, the memory allocation system, so it can detect any leaked SVs in
given blocks.
Leaked SVs are SVs which are not released after the end of the scope they have
been created. These SVs include global variables and internal caches. For
example, if you call a method in a tracing block, perl might prepare a cache for
the method. Thus, to trace true leaks, no_leaks_ok() and leaks_cmp_ok() executes
a block more than once.
Term::Size::Perl is yet another implementation of Term::Size in pure Perl, with
the exception of a C probe run on build time.
Test::CheckDeps adds a test that assures all dependencies have been
installed properly. If requested, it can bail out all testing on error.
Test::Compile lets you check the validity of a Perl module file or Perl script
file, and report its results in standard Test::Simple fashion.
This module provides a few subroutines for examining and modifying tied
variables, including those that hold weak references to the objects to
which they are tied (weak ties).
This module is used to check the portability across operating systems
of the names of the files present in the distribution of a module.
Swarm is both a global distributed registry, like gproc, and a
clustering utility. It was designed for the use case where large
numbers of persistent processes are created for things like devices,
and are unique across a cluster of Erlang nodes, and messages must
be routed to those processes, both individually, and in groups.
Additionally, Swarm is designed to distribute these processes evenly
across the cluster based on a consistent hashing algorithm, and
automatically move processes in response to cluster topology changes,
or node crashes.
libqb is a library with the primary purpose of providing high performance
client server reusable features. It provides high performance logging, tracing,
ipc, and poll.