This module provides a single function called dump() that takes a
list of values as its argument and produces a string as its result.
The string contains Perl code that, when evaled, produces a deep
copy of the original arguments. The string is formatted for easy
reading.
If dump() is called in a void context, then the dump is printed on
STDERR instead of being returned.
If you don't like importing a function that overrides Perl's
not-so-useful builtin, then you can also import the same function
as pp(), mnemonic for "pretty-print".
2.7.0-0 Sun Jan 1 08:44:27 IST 2006
- first public 2.7 release
- working with SWIG-1.3.28 pre-release
- removed all uses of XMLString::transcode() from the Perl
callback handler classes in Handler/
2.6.0-2
- first public 2.6 release
- all known memory leaks fixed
- all known segfaults fixed (especially with regards to
exception handling) - perhaps this will fix AIX?
2.6.0-1
- second beta 2.6 release
2.6.0-0
- first attempt at 2.6 release
- most memory leaks resovlved
2.3.0-5
- fifth bugfix release of 2.3.0 series.
- added new samples: validator.pl, memtest.pl, xerces-memtest.pl
Update xerces-c to 2.7.0:
2006-06-07 - 3.01
Fix from Brian Cassidy in Devel::InnerPackage
2006-06-06 - 3.0
Big refactor to split stuff up into more manageable pieces
2006-04-05 - 2.98
Allow the ability to provide the file matching regex
2006-02-06 - 2.97
Patch from Ricardo Signes to fix bug where File::Find
is not topic-safe in 5.6.1
2005-09-01 - 2.96
Patch from Alex Vandiver to sort an edge case where the package
stash to contain "::"
2005-07-30 - 2.95
Patch from Alex Vandiver to sort ::ISA::CACHE issues.
More patches from Christopher H. Laco to sort out only and except
and to fix calling search_path( add => ... ) before plugins()
2005-07-09 - 2.9 More Tainting fixes
Patches from Christopher H. Laco and Joe McMahon to do more taint fixing
Suggestion from Christopher H. Laco to do a can check before instatiating
imapsync is a tool for facilitating incremental recursive IMAP
transfers from one mailbox to another. It is useful for mailbox
migration, and reduces the amount of data transferred by only
copying messages that are not present on both servers. Read, unread,
and deleted flags are preserved, and the process can be stopped
and resumed. The original messages can optionally be deleted after
a successful transfer.