01-10-2011
PERL draws input from the keyboard, a file, or a library references in a file, but it is all pretty much the same to PERL. Whatever PERL commands you want to run, that code can all be sent down the pipe as keyboard input to a remote PERL invocation, or you can send files down the pipe to /tmp and get PERL to take input from them. If you are using PERL libraries, it is a bit messy figuring how to turn them into one stream, and they may call additional libraries. Maybe PERL has a facility like CC -E or cpp, where all the includes are turned into one file.
Of course, it what you want to achieve on the far end an be reduced to the minimum, it makes it simpler. You can solicit a flow of data from the remote system using a few commands to a simple shell or PERL invocation there, and process it on the original system in the driving PERL script there. It is a classic choice of function shipping or data shipping. If there is too much remote data, then function shipping makes sense.
The perl expect script is just a media in place of something more script friendly like rcp/scp/scp2rsh/ssh/ssh2 passwordless access. What it runs on the far end is a completely divorced discussion, as well as what it feeds locally. There is not normally any expectation that a PERL expect script calls PERL modules. Trying to achieve more than access may just complicate the expect function. Usually, it is better to write something else to run locally and remotely to solve the problem, and the perl expect is just a building block to get the remote access necessary for the other local and remote code to solve the problem.
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
sub::delete
Sub::Delete(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Sub::Delete(3pm)
NAME
Sub::Delete - Perl module enabling one to delete subroutines
VERSION
1.00002
SYNOPSIS
use Sub::Delete;
sub foo {}
delete_sub 'foo';
eval 'foo();1' or die; # dies
DESCRIPTION
This module provides one function, "delete_sub", that deletes the subroutine whose name is passed to it. (To load the module without
importing the function, write "use Sub::Delete();".)
This does more than simply undefine the subroutine in the manner of "undef &foo", which leaves a stub that can trigger AUTOLOAD (and,
consequently, won't work for deleting methods). The subroutine is completely obliterated from the symbol table (though there may be
references to it elsewhere, including in compiled code).
PREREQUISITES
This module requires perl 5.8.3 or higher.
LIMITATIONS
If you take a reference to a glob containing a subroutine, and then delete the subroutine with "delete_sub", you will find that the glob
you referenced still has a subroutine in it. This is because "delete_sub" removes a glob, replaces it with another, and then copies the
contents of the old glob into the new one, except for the "CODE" slot. (This is nearly impossible to fix without breaking
constant::lexical.)
BUGS
If you find any bugs, please report them to the author via e-mail.
AUTHOR & COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2008-10 Father Chrysostomos (sprout at, um, cpan dot org)
This program is free software; you may redistribute or modify it (or both) under the same terms as perl.
SEE ALSO
perltodo, which has "delete &sub" listed as a possible future feature
Symbol::Glob and Symbol::Util, both of which predate this module (but I only discovered them recently), and which allow one to delete any
arbitrary slot from a glob. Neither of them takes perl 5.10 constants into account, however. They also both differ from this module, in
that a subroutine referenced in compiled code can no longer be called if deleted from its glob. The entire glob must be replaced (which
this module does).
perl v5.10.1 2010-11-06 Sub::Delete(3pm)