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Stephan Kulow

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The xz command is a very powerful program for compressing files.

* Average compression ratio of LZMA is about 30% better than that of
gzip, and 15% better than that of bzip2.

* Decompression speed is only little slower than that of gzip, being
two to five times faster than bzip2.

* In fast mode, compresses faster than bzip2 with a comparable
compression ratio.

* Achieving the best compression ratios takes four to even twelve
times longer than with bzip2. However. this doesn't affect
decompressing speed.

* Very similar command line interface to what gzip and bzip2 have.

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++++++++++ Note: We are going to change the version format of the modules. See https://github.com/openSUSE/cpanspec/issues/47 for context ++++++++++

Perl and a large number of important perl modules and tools.

Module updates from CPAN are regularly checked (with scripts from https://github.com/openSUSE/cpanspec ) and put into https://build.opensuse.org/project/show/devel:languages:perl:autoupdate .

Please check https://build.opensuse.org/project/show/devel:languages:perl:autoupdate first before doing your own update! An updated version of the module might already be there, just that there is no submit request yet.

How to submit a new module here: https://github.com/openSUSE/cpanspec/wiki/Submit-a-new-Perl-module-to-openSUSE

This Perl module helps to create differences between two files or
lists. It is used by 'perl-diffmk'

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Carp::Assert::More is a set of wrappers around the Carp::Assert functions to make the habit of writing assertions even easier.

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This action implements a sensible default end action, which will forward to
the first available view, unless '$c->res->status' is a 3xx code
(redirection, not modified, etc.), 204 (no content), or '$c->res->body' has
already been set. It also allows you to pass 'dump_info=1' to the url in
order to force a debug screen, while in debug mode.

If you have more than one view, you can specify which one to use with the
'default_view' config setting and the 'current_view' and
'current_view_instance' stash keys (see the Catalyst manpage's
'$c->view($name)' method -- this module simply calls '$c->view' with no
argument).

This Action handles doing automatic method dispatching for REST requests.
It takes a normal Catalyst action, and changes the dispatch to append an
underscore and method name. First it will try dispatching to an action with
the generated name, and failing that it will try to dispatch to a regular
method.

For example, in the synopsis above, calling GET on "/foo" would result in
the foo_GET method being dispatched.

If a method is requested that is not implemented, this action will return a
status 405 (Method Not Found). It will populate the "Allow" header with the
list of implemented request methods. You can override this behavior by
implementing a custom 405 handler like so:

sub foo_not_implemented {
... handle not implemented methods ...
}

If you do not provide an _OPTIONS subroutine, we will automatically respond
with a 200 OK. The "Allow" header will be populated with the list of
implemented request methods.

It is likely that you really want to look at the Catalyst::Controller::REST
manpage, which brings this class together with automatic Serialization of
requests and responses.

When you use this module, it adds the the Catalyst::TraitFor::Request::REST
manpage role to your request class.

Provides a Catalyst::Controller::ActionRole for user role-based
authorization. ACLs are applied via the assignment of attributes to
application action subroutines.

The Catalyst::Authentication::Store::DBIx::Class class provides access to authentication information stored in a database via DBIx::Class.

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