File-Which-1.09/0000755000175100017510000000000011257447626011770 5ustar adamadamFile-Which-1.09/META.yml0000644000175100017510000000121411257447626013237 0ustar adamadam--- #YAML:1.0 name: File-Which version: 1.09 abstract: Portable implementation of the "which" utility author: - Adam Kennedy license: perl distribution_type: module configure_requires: ExtUtils::MakeMaker: 0 build_requires: ExtUtils::MakeMaker: 0 requires: Exporter: 0 File::Spec: 0.60 Getopt::Std: 0 Test::More: 0.80 Test::Script: 1.05 no_index: directory: - t - inc generated_by: ExtUtils::MakeMaker version 6.50 meta-spec: url: http://module-build.sourceforge.net/META-spec-v1.4.html version: 1.4 File-Which-1.09/LICENSE0000644000175100017510000004737111257447614013006 0ustar adamadam Terms of Perl itself a) the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 1, or (at your option) any later version, or b) the "Artistic License" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- The General Public License (GPL) Version 2, June 1991 Copyright (C) 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. 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The End File-Which-1.09/Makefile.PL0000644000175100017510000000106011257447614013734 0ustar adamadamuse 5.004; use strict; use ExtUtils::MakeMaker; WriteMakefile( 'NAME' => 'File::Which', 'ABSTRACT' => 'Portable implementation of the "which" utility', 'VERSION_FROM' => 'lib/File/Which.pm', 'PREREQ_PM' => { 'Exporter' => 0, 'Getopt::Std' => 0, 'File::Spec' => '0.60', 'Test::More' => '0.80', 'Test::Script' => '1.05', }, 'EXE_FILES' => [ 'script/pwhich', ], ( $] >= 5.005 ? ( AUTHOR => 'Adam Kennedy ', ) : () ), ( $ExtUtils::MakeMaker::VERSION ge '6.31' ? ( LICENSE => 'perl', ) : () ), ); File-Which-1.09/README0000644000175100017510000000775611257447614012664 0ustar adamadamNAME File::Which - Portable implementation of the `which' utility SYNOPSIS use File::Which; # exports which() use File::Which qw(which where); # exports which() and where() my $exe_path = which('perldoc'); my @paths = where('perl'); - Or - my @paths = which('perl'); # an array forces search for all of them DESCRIPTION "File::Which" was created to be able to get the paths to executable programs on systems under which the `which' program wasn't implemented in the shell. "File::Which" searches the directories of the user's "PATH" (as returned by "File::Spec->path()"), looking for executable files having the name specified as a parameter to "which()". Under Win32 systems, which do not have a notion of directly executable files, but uses special extensions such as ".exe" and ".bat" to identify them, "File::Which" takes extra steps to assure that you will find the correct file (so for example, you might be searching for "perl", it'll try perl.exe, perl.bat, etc.) Steps Used on Win32, DOS, OS2 and VMS Windows NT Windows NT has a special environment variable called "PATHEXT", which is used by the shell to look for executable files. Usually, it will contain a list in the form ".EXE;.BAT;.COM;.JS;.VBS" etc. If "File::Which" finds such an environment variable, it parses the list and uses it as the different extensions. Windows 9x and other ancient Win/DOS/OS2 This set of operating systems don't have the "PATHEXT" variable, and usually you will find executable files there with the extensions ".exe", ".bat" and (less likely) ".com". "File::Which" uses this hardcoded list if it's running under Win32 but does not find a "PATHEXT" variable. VMS Same case as Windows 9x: uses ".exe" and ".com" (in that order). Functions which($short_exe_name) Exported by default. $short_exe_name is the name used in the shell to call the program (for example, "perl"). If it finds an executable with the name you specified, "which()" will return the absolute path leading to this executable (for example, /usr/bin/perl or C:\Perl\Bin\perl.exe). If it does *not* find the executable, it returns "undef". If "which()" is called in list context, it will return *all* the matches. where($short_exe_name) Not exported by default. Same as "which($short_exe_name)" in array context. Same as the `where' utility, will return an array containing all the path names matching $short_exe_name. BUGS AND CAVEATS Not tested on VMS or MacOS, although there is platform specific code for those. Anyone who haves a second would be very kind to send me a report of how it went. File::Spec adds the current directory to the front of PATH if on Win32, VMS or MacOS. I have no knowledge of those so don't know if the current directory is searced first or not. Could someone please tell me? SUPPORT Bugs should be reported via the CPAN bug tracker at For other issues, contact the maintainer. AUTHOR Adam Kennedy Per Einar Ellefsen Originated in modperl-2.0/lib/Apache/Build.pm. Changed for use in DocSet (for the mod_perl site) and Win32-awareness by me, with slight modifications by Stas Bekman, then extracted to create "File::Which". Version 0.04 had some significant platform-related changes, taken from the Perl Power Tools `which' implementation by Abigail with enhancements from Peter Prymmer. See for more information. COPYRIGHT Copyright 2002 Per Einar Ellefsen. Some parts copyright 2009 Adam Kennedy. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. SEE ALSO File::Spec, which(1), Perl Power Tools: . File-Which-1.09/script/0000755000175100017510000000000011257447626013274 5ustar adamadamFile-Which-1.09/script/pwhich0000644000175100017510000000571111257447614014502 0ustar adamadam#!/usr/bin/perl use 5.004; use strict; use File::Which (); use Getopt::Std (); use vars qw{$VERSION}; BEGIN { $VERSION = '1.09'; } # Handle options my %opts = (); Getopt::Std::getopts('av', \%opts); if ( $opts{v} ) { print <<"END_TEXT"; This is pwhich running File::Which version $File::Which::VERSION Copyright 2002 Per Einar Ellefsen. Some parts copyright 2009 Adam Kennedy. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. END_TEXT exit(0); } unless ( @ARGV ) { print <<"END_TEXT"; Usage: $0 [-a] [-v] programname [programname ...] -a Print all matches in PATH, not just the first. -v Prints version and exits END_TEXT exit(0); } foreach my $file ( @ARGV ) { my @result = $opts{a} ? File::Which::which($file) # Need to force scalar : scalar File::Which::which($file); # We might end up with @result = (undef) -> 1 elem @result = () unless defined $result[0]; foreach my $result ( @result ) { print "$result\n" if $result; } unless ( @result ) { print STDERR "pwhich: no $file in PATH\n"; exit(255); } } exit(0); __END__ =pod =head1 NAME pwhich - Perl-only `which' =head1 SYNOPSIS $ pwhich perl $ pwhich -a perl # print all matches $ pwhich perl perldoc ... # look for multiple programs $ pwhich -a perl perldoc ... =head1 DESCRIPTION `pwhich' is a command-line utility program for finding paths to other programs based on the user's C. It is similar to the usualy Unix tool `which', and tries to emulate its functionality, but is written purely in Perl (uses the module C), so is portable. =head2 Calling syntax $ pwhich [-a] [-v] programname [programname ...] =head2 Options =over =item -a The option I<-a> will make C print all matches found in the C variable instead of just the first one. Each match is printed on a separate line. =item -v Prints version (of C) and copyright notice and exits. =back =head1 SUPPORT Bugs should be reported via the CPAN bug tracker at L For other issues, contact the maintainer. =head1 AUTHOR Adam Kennedy Eadamk@cpan.orgE Per Einar Ellefsen Epereinar@cpan.orgE Originated in F. Changed for use in DocSet (for the mod_perl site) and Win32-awareness by me, with slight modifications by Stas Bekman, then extracted to create C. Version 0.04 had some significant platform-related changes, taken from the Perl Power Tools C<`which'> implementation by Abigail with enhancements from Peter Prymmer. See L for more information. =head1 COPYRIGHT Copyright 2002 Per Einar Ellefsen. Some parts copyright 2009 Adam Kennedy. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. =head1 SEE ALSO L, L, L =cut File-Which-1.09/MANIFEST0000644000175100017510000000064711257447626013130 0ustar adamadamChanges lib/File/Which.pm LICENSE Makefile.PL MANIFEST This list of files README script/pwhich t/01_compile.t t/02_all.t t/03_simple.t t/04_pwhich.t t/97_meta.t t/98_pod.t t/99_pmv.t t/test-bin/all t/test-bin/all.bat t/test-bin/all.exe t/test-bin/README.txt t/test-bin/test1.exe t/test-bin/test2.bat t/test-bin/test3 t/test-bin/test4/foo.txt META.yml Module meta-data (added by MakeMaker) File-Which-1.09/Changes0000644000175100017510000000506011257447614013261 0ustar adamadamRevision history for File::Which. 1.09 Sun 27 Sep 2009 - Set svn:executable for the exe files so cygwin tests work 1.08 Tue 15 Sep 2009 - Fixing pwhich - Adding a proper test for it - Adds a dependency on Test::Script 1.08 1.07 Tue 28 Jul 2009 - CPAN Testers looks good for 1.06_01, moving to production release 1.06_01 Sat 25 Jul 2009 - Taking over this hugely old and very popular module to clean it up a bit. - Moved from Test.pm to Test::More. - Updated Changes - Cleaned up some code a bit to make it more readable. - Added an explicit minimum Perl version - Changed platform detection code to constants for less code size and compile-time if () optimisation. - Removed non-leading tabs and other whitespace nigglies. 0.05 Mon 24 Jun 2002 - Made sure the file wasn't a directory, as directories usually have x set. - made pwhich say so if it didn't find a file. - improve file searching: file doesn't have to be -x on MacOS, only -e. Same thing on DOSish, but only if the file extension is in PATHEXT (so we don't look for non-executable files that happen to be in PATH). - For DOSish, VMS and Mac, add current directory in front of path, as (on Win32) this one is searched first. (could someone tell me if this assumption is true on VMS and MacOS too?) - large updates to test suite: we now emulate executable files inside t/test-bin/. Like this we have more control. I hope this test suite will be better, but it is probably still shaky. Any reports would do me a lot of good. 0.04 Thu 20 Jun 2002 - Re-wrote some parts for more platform-specific code (Mac and VMS primarily). Thanks to Abigail and the PPT `which': http://www.perl.com/language/ppt/src/which/index.html - Removed the '~' handling: was probably broken anyway. - fixed a bug with pwhich -a where it would return the number of results instead of the results 0.03 Wed 24 Apr 2002 - Changed the '~' handling: last version was buggy, it needs to only replace it on Unix and if $ENV{HOME} exists, replacing it then with $ENV{HOME} (removes File::HomeDir dependency). - Added documentation to pwhich (you can run perldoc on it now) 0.02 Fri 19 Apr 2002 - Some documentation changes - Added where($short_exec_name) as an alias for which($short_exec_name, { all => 1 }). [Request from Jerrad Pierce ] - Added the which option --all. Other options just bloat everything. - Added `pwhich', perl-only replacement for `which'. 0.01 Sun 14 Apr 2002 - original version; extracted from DocSet. Only plain which() with docs and tests. File-Which-1.09/lib/0000755000175100017510000000000011257447626012536 5ustar adamadamFile-Which-1.09/lib/File/0000755000175100017510000000000011257447626013415 5ustar adamadamFile-Which-1.09/lib/File/Which.pm0000644000175100017510000001503211257447614015013 0ustar adamadampackage File::Which; use 5.004; use strict; use Exporter (); use File::Spec (); use vars qw{$VERSION @ISA @EXPORT @EXPORT_OK}; BEGIN { $VERSION = '1.09'; @ISA = 'Exporter'; @EXPORT = 'which'; @EXPORT_OK = 'where'; } use constant IS_VMS => ($^O eq 'VMS'); use constant IS_MAC => ($^O eq 'MacOS'); use constant IS_DOS => ($^O eq 'MSWin32' or $^O eq 'dos' or $^O eq 'os2'); # For Win32 systems, stores the extensions used for # executable files # For others, the empty string is used # because 'perl' . '' eq 'perl' => easier my @PATHEXT = (''); if ( IS_DOS ) { # WinNT. PATHEXT might be set on Cygwin, but not used. if ( $ENV{PATHEXT} ) { push @PATHEXT, split ';', $ENV{PATHEXT}; } else { # Win9X or other: doesn't have PATHEXT, so needs hardcoded. push @PATHEXT, qw{.com .exe .bat}; } } elsif ( IS_VMS ) { push @PATHEXT, qw{.exe .com}; } sub which { my ($exec) = @_; return undef unless $exec; my $all = wantarray; my @results = (); # check for aliases first if ( IS_VMS ) { my $symbol = `SHOW SYMBOL $exec`; chomp($symbol); unless ( $? ) { return $symbol unless $all; push @results, $symbol; } } if ( IS_MAC ) { my @aliases = split /\,/, $ENV{Aliases}; foreach my $alias ( @aliases ) { # This has not been tested!! # PPT which says MPW-Perl cannot resolve `Alias $alias`, # let's just hope it's fixed if ( lc($alias) eq lc($exec) ) { chomp(my $file = `Alias $alias`); last unless $file; # if it failed, just go on the normal way return $file unless $all; push @results, $file; # we can stop this loop as if it finds more aliases matching, # it'll just be the same result anyway last; } } } my @path = File::Spec->path; if ( IS_DOS or IS_VMS or IS_MAC ) { unshift @path, File::Spec->curdir; } foreach my $base ( map { File::Spec->catfile($_, $exec) } @path ) { for my $ext ( @PATHEXT ) { my $file = $base.$ext; # We don't want dirs (as they are -x) next if -d $file; if ( # Executable, normal case -x _ or ( # MacOS doesn't mark as executable so we check -e IS_MAC || ( IS_DOS and grep { $file =~ /$_\z/i } @PATHEXT[1..$#PATHEXT] ) # DOSish systems don't pass -x on # non-exe/bat/com files. so we check -e. # However, we don't want to pass -e on files # that aren't in PATHEXT, like README. and -e _ ) ) { return $file unless $all; push @results, $file; } } } if ( $all ) { return @results; } else { return undef; } } sub where { # force wantarray my @res = which($_[0]); return @res; } 1; __END__ =pod =head1 NAME File::Which - Portable implementation of the `which' utility =head1 SYNOPSIS use File::Which; # exports which() use File::Which qw(which where); # exports which() and where() my $exe_path = which('perldoc'); my @paths = where('perl'); - Or - my @paths = which('perl'); # an array forces search for all of them =head1 DESCRIPTION C was created to be able to get the paths to executable programs on systems under which the `which' program wasn't implemented in the shell. C searches the directories of the user's C (as returned by Cpath()>), looking for executable files having the name specified as a parameter to C. Under Win32 systems, which do not have a notion of directly executable files, but uses special extensions such as C<.exe> and C<.bat> to identify them, C takes extra steps to assure that you will find the correct file (so for example, you might be searching for C, it'll try F, F, etc.) =head1 Steps Used on Win32, DOS, OS2 and VMS =head2 Windows NT Windows NT has a special environment variable called C, which is used by the shell to look for executable files. Usually, it will contain a list in the form C<.EXE;.BAT;.COM;.JS;.VBS> etc. If C finds such an environment variable, it parses the list and uses it as the different extensions. =head2 Windows 9x and other ancient Win/DOS/OS2 This set of operating systems don't have the C variable, and usually you will find executable files there with the extensions C<.exe>, C<.bat> and (less likely) C<.com>. C uses this hardcoded list if it's running under Win32 but does not find a C variable. =head2 VMS Same case as Windows 9x: uses C<.exe> and C<.com> (in that order). =head1 Functions =head2 which($short_exe_name) Exported by default. C<$short_exe_name> is the name used in the shell to call the program (for example, C). If it finds an executable with the name you specified, C will return the absolute path leading to this executable (for example, F or F). If it does I find the executable, it returns C. If C is called in list context, it will return I the matches. =head2 where($short_exe_name) Not exported by default. Same as C in array context. Same as the C<`where'> utility, will return an array containing all the path names matching C<$short_exe_name>. =head1 BUGS AND CAVEATS Not tested on VMS or MacOS, although there is platform specific code for those. Anyone who haves a second would be very kind to send me a report of how it went. File::Spec adds the current directory to the front of PATH if on Win32, VMS or MacOS. I have no knowledge of those so don't know if the current directory is searced first or not. Could someone please tell me? =head1 SUPPORT Bugs should be reported via the CPAN bug tracker at L For other issues, contact the maintainer. =head1 AUTHOR Adam Kennedy Eadamk@cpan.orgE Per Einar Ellefsen Epereinar@cpan.orgE Originated in F. Changed for use in DocSet (for the mod_perl site) and Win32-awareness by me, with slight modifications by Stas Bekman, then extracted to create C. Version 0.04 had some significant platform-related changes, taken from the Perl Power Tools C<`which'> implementation by Abigail with enhancements from Peter Prymmer. See L for more information. =head1 COPYRIGHT Copyright 2002 Per Einar Ellefsen. Some parts copyright 2009 Adam Kennedy. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. =head1 SEE ALSO L, L, Perl Power Tools: L. =cut File-Which-1.09/t/0000755000175100017510000000000011257447626012233 5ustar adamadamFile-Which-1.09/t/04_pwhich.t0000644000175100017510000000100011257447614014171 0ustar adamadam#!/usr/bin/perl # Check the pwhich script by confirming it matches the function result use strict; BEGIN { $| = 1; $^W = 1; } use Test::More tests => 4; use Test::Script; use File::Which; # Look for a very common program my $tool = 'perl'; my $path = which($tool); ok( defined $path, "Found path to $tool" ); ok( $path, "Found path to $tool" ); ok( -f $path, "$tool exists" ); # Can we find the tool with the command line version? script_runs( [ 'script/pwhich', 'perl' ], 'Found perl with pwhich', ); File-Which-1.09/t/02_all.t0000644000175100017510000000134711257447614013473 0ustar adamadam#!/usr/bin/perl use strict; BEGIN { $| = 1; $^W = 1; } use Test::More tests => 4; use File::Spec (); use File::Which qw(which where); # Where is the test application my $test_bin = File::Spec->catdir( 't', 'test-bin' ); ok( -d $test_bin, 'Found test-bin' ); # Set up for running the test application local $ENV{PATH} = $test_bin; unless ( File::Which::IS_VMS or File::Which::IS_MAC or File::Which::IS_DOS ) { my $all = File::Spec->catfile( $test_bin, 'all' ); chmod 0755, $all; } my @result = which('all'); like( $result[0], qr/all/i, 'Found all' ); ok( scalar(@result), 'Found at least one result' ); # Should have as many elements. is( scalar(@result), scalar(where('all')), 'Scalar which result matches where result', ); File-Which-1.09/t/97_meta.t0000644000175100017510000000107311257447614013663 0ustar adamadam#!/usr/bin/perl # Test that our META.yml file matches the current specification. use strict; BEGIN { $| = 1; $^W = 1; } my $MODULE = 'Test::CPAN::Meta 0.12'; # Don't run tests for installs use Test::More; unless ( $ENV{AUTOMATED_TESTING} or $ENV{RELEASE_TESTING} ) { plan( skip_all => "Author tests not required for installation" ); } # Load the testing module eval "use $MODULE"; if ( $@ ) { $ENV{RELEASE_TESTING} ? die( "Failed to load required release-testing module $MODULE" ) : plan( skip_all => "$MODULE not available for testing" ); } meta_yaml_ok(); File-Which-1.09/t/01_compile.t0000644000175100017510000000026011257447614014343 0ustar adamadam#!/usr/bin/perl use 5.004; use strict; BEGIN { $| = 1; $^W = 1; } use Test::More tests => 2; use Test::Script; use_ok( 'File::Which' ); script_compiles('script/pwhich'); File-Which-1.09/t/98_pod.t0000644000175100017510000000116711257447614013524 0ustar adamadam#!/usr/bin/perl # Test that the syntax of our POD documentation is valid use strict; BEGIN { $| = 1; $^W = 1; } my @MODULES = ( 'Pod::Simple 3.07', 'Test::Pod 1.26', ); # Don't run tests for installs use Test::More; unless ( $ENV{AUTOMATED_TESTING} or $ENV{RELEASE_TESTING} ) { plan( skip_all => "Author tests not required for installation" ); } # Load the testing modules foreach my $MODULE ( @MODULES ) { eval "use $MODULE"; if ( $@ ) { $ENV{RELEASE_TESTING} ? die( "Failed to load required release-testing module $MODULE" ) : plan( skip_all => "$MODULE not available for testing" ); } } all_pod_files_ok(); File-Which-1.09/t/03_simple.t0000644000175100017510000000416611257447614014217 0ustar adamadam#!/usr/bin/perl use strict; BEGIN { $| = 1; $^W = 1; } use Test::More tests => 10; use File::Spec (); use File::Which qw{which where}; use constant IS_VMS => ($^O eq 'VMS'); use constant IS_MAC => ($^O eq 'MacOS'); use constant IS_DOS => ($^O eq 'MSWin32' or $^O eq 'dos' or $^O eq 'os2'); use constant IS_CYGWIN => ($^O eq 'cygwin'); # Check that it returns undef if no file is passed is( scalar(which('')), undef, 'Null-length false result', ); is( scalar(which('non_existent_very_unlinkely_thingy_executable')), undef, 'Positive length false result', ); # Where is the test application my $test_bin = File::Spec->catdir( 't', 'test-bin' ); ok( -d $test_bin, 'Found test-bin' ); # Set up for running the test application local $ENV{PATH} = $test_bin; unless ( File::Which::IS_VMS or File::Which::IS_MAC or File::Which::IS_DOS ) { my $test3 = File::Spec->catfile( $test_bin, 'test3' ); chmod 0755, $test3; } SKIP: { skip("Not on DOS-like filesystem", 3) unless IS_DOS; is( lc scalar which('test1'), 't\test-bin\test1.exe', 'Looking for test1.exe' ); is( lc scalar which('test2'), 't\test-bin\test2.bat', 'Looking for test2.bat' ); is( scalar which('test3'), undef, 'test3 returns undef' ); } SKIP: { skip("Not on a UNIX filesystem", 1) if IS_DOS; skip("Not on a UNIX filesystem", 1) if IS_MAC; skip("Not on a UNIX filesystem", 1) if IS_VMS; is( scalar(which('test3')), File::Spec->catfile( $test_bin, 'test3'), 'Check test3 for Unix', ); } SKIP: { skip("Not on a cygwin filesystem", 2) unless IS_CYGWIN; # Cygwin: should make test1.exe transparent is( scalar(which('test1')), File::Spec->catfile( $test_bin, 'test1' ), 'Looking for test1 on Cygwin: transparent to test1.exe', ); is( scalar(which('test4')), undef, 'Make sure that which() doesn\'t return a directory', ); } # Make sure that .\ stuff works on DOSish, VMS, MacOS (. is in PATH implicitly). SKIP: { unless ( IS_DOS or IS_VMS ) { skip("Not on a DOS or VMS filesystem", 1); } chdir( $test_bin ); is( lc scalar which('test1'), File::Spec->catfile(File::Spec->curdir(), 'test1.exe'), 'Looking for test1.exe in curdir', ); } File-Which-1.09/t/99_pmv.t0000644000175100017510000000124711257447614013544 0ustar adamadam#!/usr/bin/perl # Test that our declared minimum Perl version matches our syntax use strict; BEGIN { $| = 1; $^W = 1; } my @MODULES = ( 'Perl::MinimumVersion 1.20', 'Test::MinimumVersion 0.008', ); # Don't run tests for installs use Test::More; unless ( $ENV{AUTOMATED_TESTING} or $ENV{RELEASE_TESTING} ) { plan( skip_all => "Author tests not required for installation" ); } # Load the testing modules foreach my $MODULE ( @MODULES ) { eval "use $MODULE"; if ( $@ ) { $ENV{RELEASE_TESTING} ? die( "Failed to load required release-testing module $MODULE" ) : plan( skip_all => "$MODULE not available for testing" ); } } all_minimum_version_from_metayml_ok(); File-Which-1.09/t/test-bin/0000755000175100017510000000000011257447626013760 5ustar adamadamFile-Which-1.09/t/test-bin/test2.bat0000644000175100017510000000011511257447614015503 0ustar adamadam@echo off echo This is for testing File::Which echo Nothing interesting here!File-Which-1.09/t/test-bin/all0000755000175100017510000000006711257447614014456 0ustar adamadam#!bash # above shebang needed so Cygwin treats it as -xFile-Which-1.09/t/test-bin/test1.exe0000755000175100017510000000006711257447614015526 0ustar adamadamDO NOT RUN THIS PROGRAM IT IS ONLY TO TEST File::Which File-Which-1.09/t/test-bin/all.exe0000755000175100017510000000000011257447614015221 0ustar adamadamFile-Which-1.09/t/test-bin/README.txt0000644000175100017510000000042511257447614015454 0ustar adamadamThe files included in this directory are only used for testing: they should not be executed: especially the *.exe files which aren't really compiled programs, only empty files with special filenames (as File::Which only cares about special attributes). Do NOT try to run them. File-Which-1.09/t/test-bin/all.bat0000644000175100017510000000000011257447614015203 0ustar adamadamFile-Which-1.09/t/test-bin/test4/0000755000175100017510000000000011257447626015023 5ustar adamadamFile-Which-1.09/t/test-bin/test4/foo.txt0000644000175100017510000000007411257447614016345 0ustar adamadamThis file only needs to be here to test4 dir is copied over.File-Which-1.09/t/test-bin/test30000755000175100017510000000015511257447614014746 0ustar adamadam#!sh # ^ above shebang is needed for Cygwin echo "Just testing File::Which" echo "Nothing interesting here"