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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers drwx------+ Post 302686383 by Corona688 on Tuesday 14th of August 2012 11:34:08 AM
Old 08-14-2012
Apple Inc. has cleverly hidden information on ls in ls' own manual, accessed by man ls.

Grepping for the first + in man ls' output finds this:

Code:
   The Long Format
     If the -l option is given, the following information is displayed for
     each file: file mode, number of links, owner name, group name, number of
     bytes in the file, abbreviated month, day-of-month file was last modi-
     fied, hour file last modified, minute file last modified, and the path-
     name.  In addition, for each directory whose contents are displayed, the
     total number of 512-byte blocks used by the files in the directory is
     displayed on a line by itself, immediately before the information for the
     files in the directory.  If the file or directory has extended
     attributes, the permissions field printed by the -l option is followed by
     a '@' character.  Otherwise, if the file or directory has extended secu-
     rity information (such as an access control list), the permissions field
     printed by the -l option is followed by a '+' character.

 

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Plack::Runner(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation					Plack::Runner(3pm)

NAME
Plack::Runner - plackup core SYNOPSIS
# Your bootstrap script use Plack::Runner; my $app = sub { ... }; my $runner = Plack::Runner->new; $runner->parse_options(@ARGV); $runner->run($app); DESCRIPTION
Plack::Runner is the core of plackup runner script. You can create your own frontend to run your application or framework, munge command line options and pass that to "run" method of this class. "run" method does exactly the same thing as the plackup script does, but one notable addition is that you can pass a PSGI application code reference directly to the method, rather than via ".psgi" file path or with "-e" switch. This would be useful if you want to make an installable PSGI application. Also, when "-h" or "--help" switch is passed, the usage text is automatically extracted from your own script using Pod::Usage. NOTES
Do not directly call this module from your ".psgi", since that makes your PSGI application unnecessarily depend on plackup and won't run other backends like Plack::Handler::Apache2 or mod_psgi. If you really want to make your ".psgi" runnable as a standalone script, you can do this: my $app = sub { ... }; unless (caller) { require Plack::Runner; my $runner = Plack::Runner->new; $runner->parse_options(@ARGV); return $runner->run($app); } return $app; WARNING: this section used to recommend "if (__FILE__ eq $0)" but it's known to be broken since Plack 0.9971, since $0 is now always set to the .psgi file path even when you run it from plackup. SEE ALSO
plackup perl v5.14.2 2012-03-21 Plack::Runner(3pm)
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