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perl6::export(3pm) [debian man page]

Export(3pm)						User Contributed Perl Documentation					       Export(3pm)

NAME
Perl6::Export - Implements the Perl 6 'is export(...)' trait SYNOPSIS
# Perl 5 code... package Some::Module; use Perl6::Export; # Export &foo by default, when explicitly requested, # or when the ':ALL' export set is requested... sub foo is export(:DEFAULT) { print "phooo!"; } # Export &var by default, when explicitly requested, # or when the ':bees', ':pubs', or ':ALL' export set is requested... # the parens after 'is export' are like the parens of a qw(...) sub bar is export(:DEFAULT :bees :pubs) { print "baaa!"; } # Export &baz when explicitly requested # or when the ':bees' or ':ALL' export set is requested... sub baz is export(:bees) { print "baassss!"; } # Always export &qux # (no matter what else is explicitly or implicitly requested) sub qux is export(:MANDATORY) { print "quuuuuuuuux!"; } sub import { # This subroutine is called when the module is used (as usual), # but it is called after any export requests have been handled. # Those requests will have been stripped from its argument list } DESCRIPTION
Implements what I hope the Perl 6 symbol export mechanism might look like. It's very straightforward: o If you want a subroutine to be capable of being exported (when explicitly requested in the "use" arguments), you mark it with the "is export" trait. o If you want a subroutine to be automatically exported when the module is used (without specific overriding arguments), you mark it with the "is export(:DEFAULT)" trait. o If you want a subroutine to be automatically exported when the module is used (even if the user specifies overriding arguments), you mark it with the "is export(:MANDATORY)" trait. o If the subroutine should also be exported when particular export groups are requested, you add the names of those export groups to the trait's argument list. That's it. WARNING
The syntax and semantics of Perl 6 is still being finalized and consequently is at any time subject to change. That means the same caveat applies to this module. DEPENDENCIES
Requires Filter::Simple AUTHOR
Damian Conway (damian@conway.org) BUGS AND IRRITATIONS
Does not yet handle the export of variables. Comments, suggestions, and patches welcome. COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2003, Damian Conway. All Rights Reserved. This module is free software. It may be used, redistributed and/or modified under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.8.8 2008-03-12 Export(3pm)

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dsexport(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 					       dsexport(1)

NAME
dsexport -- export records from OpenDirectory SYNOPSIS
dsexport [--N] [-r record_list] [-e exclude_attributes] [-a address -u username [-p password]] output_file node_path record_type DESCRIPTION
The dsexport utility exports records from Open Directory. The first argument is the path to the output file. If the file already exists it will be overwritten. The second argument is the path to the OpenDirectory node from which the records will be read. The third argument is the type of record to export. If the record type does not begin with 'dsRecTypeStandard:' or 'dsRecTypeNative:', the dsexport utility will determine if the node supports a standard attribute by the specified name; otherwise, dsexport will assume that the record type is native. A warning will be printed if the record type is converted. Standard record types can be listed using the following command: 'dscl -raw . -list /'. OPTIONS
The options are as follows: --N Export all attributes, including native attributes. By default, dsexport only exports standard attributes. -r record_list Comma-separated list of records to export from the specified node. The -r option may be used multiple times to specify additional records to export. If the -r option is not specified, dsexport will attempt to export all records. -e exclude Comma-separated list of attributes that should not be exported. The -e option may be used multiple times to specify additional attributes to exclude. The following attributes are always excluded: 'dsAttrTypeStandard:AppleMetaNodeLocation', 'dsAttrTypeStandard:RecordType', 'dsAttrTypeNative:objectClass'. -a address Address of the desired proxy machine. -u username Username to use for the proxy connection -p password Password to use for the proxy connection. If the -p option is not specified, dsexport will interactively prompt for the password. NOTES
When using an LDAP node, please be aware that dsexport can only export as many records as the LDAP server is willing to return. If the LDAP server has several thousand users, you may want to raise the maximum number of search results that the server returns. This can be done in Server Admin (my.server.com>OpenDirectory>Settings>Protocols tab). By default this is set to 11000 results. EXAMPLES
Export all user records from the local node to 'export.out': $ dsexport export.out /Local/Default dsRecTypeStandard:Users Export the group records for 'admin' and 'staff' from the LDAPv3 node on a proxy machine 'proxy.machine.com': $ dsexport export.out /LDAPv3/127.0.0.1 dsRecTypeStandard:Groups -r admin,staff -a proxy.machine.com -u diradmin -p password Export augmented users from the LDAPv3 node, including native attributes but excluding the PasswordPlus attribute: $ dsexport augments.out /LDAPv3/127.0.0.1 dsRecTypeStandard:Augments --N -e "dsAttrTypeStandard:PasswordPlus" EXIT STATUS
The dsexport utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs. SEE ALSO
dscl(1), dsimport(1), DirectoryService(8) BSD
20 November 2008 BSD
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