This modules provides an OS independent interface to 'at', the Unix
command that allows you to execute commands at a specified time.
Cross-platform functions emulating common shell commands
The Pipe Magic Tools (PMT) are a small collection of filters which
can be added to UNIX pipes. The filters include:
speed
Measures the speed of the data flowing through the pipe
throttle
Controls the speed of the data flowing through the pipe
rot13
The famous rot13 algorithm
rot47
The not-so-famous rot47 algorithm
tolower
Converts all alphabetic characters to lower case
toupper
Converts all alphabetic characters to upper case
Stat::lsMode generates mode and permission strings that look like
the ones generated by the Unix ls -l command. For example, a
regular file that is readable by everyone and writable only by its
owner has the mode string -rw-r--r--. Stat::lsMode will either
examine the file and produce the right mode string for you, or you
can pass it the mode that you get back from Perl's stat call.
This Perl5 module retrieves the 1 minute, 5 minute, and 15
minute load average of a machine.
Sys::HostIP does what it can to determine the IP address
of your machine. This module was tested on Irix, OpenBSD,
FreeBSD, NetBSD, Solaris, Linux, OSX, Win32, and Cygwin.
Sys::Load - Perl module for getting the current system load and uptime
C<Sys::Syslog> is an interface to the UNIX C<syslog(3)> program.
Call C<syslog()> with a string priority and a list of C<printf()> args
just like C<syslog(3)>.
rar2fs is a FUSE based file system that can mount a source RAR
archive/volume or a directory containing any number of RAR
archives and access (read only) the contents as plain files/directories.
Other files located in the source directory are handled transparently.
Both compressed and non-compressed archives/volumes are supported but
full media seek support (aka. indexing) is only available for
non-compressed plaintext archives.
This module allows you to tie a filehandle (output only) to
syslog. This becomes useful in general when you want to
capture any activity that happens on STDERR and see that it
is syslogged for later perusal. You can also create an arbitrary
filehandle, say LOG, and send stuff to syslog by printing to
this filehandle.