Checks for POD coverage in files for your distribution.
These routines are the inverse of built-in perl functions localtime() and
gmtime(). They accept a date as a six-element array, and return the
corresponding time(2) value in seconds since the system epoch (Midnight,
January 1, 1970 UTC on Unix, for example). This value can be positive or
negative, though POSIX only requires support for positive values, so dates
before the system's epoch may not work on all operating systems.
Time::Mock speeds up your sleep(), alarm(), and time() calls.
Test::MockTime is nice, but doesn't allow you to accelerate the timestep and
doesn't deal with Time::HiRes or give you any way to change the time across
forks.
This module is used to check the portability across operating systems
of the names of the files present in the distribution of a module.
This module replaces the standard localtime and gmtime functions
with implementations that return objects. It does so in a backwards
compatible manner, so that using localtime/gmtime in the way documented
in perlfunc will still return what you expect.
Time::Out provides an easy interface to alarm(2) based timeouts. Nested
timeouts are supported.
Period.pm is a Perl module that contains code to deal with time periods.
Currently, there is only a function in this module. That function is
called inPeriod().
inPeriod() determines if a given time is within a given time period.
It will return 1 if it is, 0 if not, and -1 if either the time or the
period passed to it were malformed. The time is specified in non-leap
year seconds past January 1, 1970, as per the time() function. The period
is a string which is of the form described in Period's man page.
Perl module for checking if Makefile.PL has the right
pre-requisites.
This module replaces the standard localtime and gmtime functions with
implementations that return objects. It does so in a backwards
compatible manner, so that using localtime/gmtime in the way documented
in perlfunc will still return what you expect.
The module actually implements most of an interface described by Larry
Wall on the perl5-porters mailing list here:
http://www.xray.mpe.mpg.de/mailing-lists/perl5-porters/2000-01/msg00241.html
This module aims to provide ways of testing functions that are meant to
return results that are random; that is, non-deterministic functions.
Some of the tests provided here might be easily achieved with other
testing modules. The reason why they're here is that this way users become
aware of how to test their non-deterministic functions.