| Name: | perl-IPC-System-Simple | 
|---|---|
| Version: | 1.25 | 
| Release: | 18.module+el8.3.0+7729+86a74f64 | 
| Architecture: | noarch | 
| Module: | perl:5.30:8030020200609055348:8af31532 perl:5.30:8040020200923213406:466ea64f  | 
| Group: | Unspecified | 
| Size: | 70458 | 
| License: | GPL+ or Artistic | 
| RPM: | perl-IPC-System-Simple-1.25-18.module+el8.3.0+7729+86a74f64.noarch.rpm | 
| Source RPM: | perl-IPC-System-Simple-1.25-18.module+el8.3.0+7729+86a74f64.src.rpm | 
| Build Date: | Tue Aug 11 2020 | 
| Build Host: | jenkins-10-147-72-125-df74590a-7496-4915-9dd0-d2fcdb1902bc.appad2iad.osdevelopmeniad.oraclevcn.com | 
| Vendor: | Oracle America | 
| URL: | http://search.cpan.org/dist/IPC-System-Simple | 
| Summary: | Run commands simply, with detailed diagnostics | 
| Description: | Calling Perl's in-built 'system()' function is easy; determining if it
was successful is _hard_. Let's face it, '$?' isn't the nicest variable
in the world to play with, and even if you _do_ check it, producing a
well-formatted error string takes a lot of work. 'IPC::System::Simple'
takes the hard work out of calling external commands. In fact, if you
want to be really lazy, you can just write:
    use IPC::System::Simple qw(system);
and all of your "system" commands will either succeed (run to completion and
return a zero exit value), or die with rich diagnostic messages. |