I can use the
" command interactively, but when run from a script, it says it can't find the "module" command. Is there any way of loading modules in a script?
Hi There,
Does anyone knows what could be the problem if my apache server is running but unable to load JK2 module into the server. My HTTPS is running on Apache Server 2.0.49 with ssl enabled and compiled with Mod_ssl on HPUX-11.11i.
In fact we have try out the following parameter,
... (4 Replies)
hi all
need your help.
I am wrting a script that will load data into the table.
then on another load will append the data into the existing table.
Regards
Ankit (1 Reply)
Hi all,
I am working on USB data monitoring on Fedora Core 9. Kernel 2.6.25 has a built-in module (the one that isn't loadable, but compiles and links statically with the kernel during compilation) to snoop USB data. It is in <kernel_source_code>/drivers/usb/mon/.
I need to know if I can... (0 Replies)
Hey guys i got this error in my messages:
warning : mod_load: cannot load module sbd
- I dont know anything about this.
- How do i verify if there is a module sbd
- What are the reasons modules cant be loaded (1 Reply)
Hi, I'm trying to run the module load command in a Makefile and i'm getting the following error:
make: module: command not found
Why is this? Is there any way to run this command in a Makefile?
NOTE: command - module load msjava/sunjdk/1.5.0 works fine outside of the Makefile (2 Replies)
Hello,
like the title says, how can i measure the time it takes to load a module in Linux, and how how can i measure the time it takes to load a statically compiled module.
/Best Regards Olle
---------- Post updated at 01:13 PM ---------- Previous update was at 11:54 AM ----------
For... (0 Replies)
Greetings,
I've got a Zenoss v2.5 server monitoring a large video encoding farm. Needless to say, these systems are under high bandwidth and CPU utilization the majority of the time.
What I'm running into is that, occasionally, these systems will fail to respond to a standard SNMP request,... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
I am newbie to linux environment. I was trying to run an .so file manually which in turn call a method in bin folder.
Command given,
XXX_MODULES=libxxx.so /opt/servicename/bin/methodname -Le -c /opt/servicename/etc/methodname/methodname.conf -n -C -t -m ""
When i tried to... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
I am newbie to linux environment. I was trying to run an .so file manually which in turn call a method in bin folder.
Command given,
XXX_MODULES=libxxx.so /opt/servicename/bin/methodname -Le -c /opt/servicename/etc/methodname/methodname.conf -n -C -t -m ""
When i tried to execute... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sharathpadman
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
module::load
Module::Load(3pm) Perl Programmers Reference Guide Module::Load(3pm)NAME
Module::Load - runtime require of both modules and files
SYNOPSIS
use Module::Load;
my $module = 'Data:Dumper';
load Data::Dumper; # loads that module
load 'Data::Dumper'; # ditto
load $module # tritto
my $script = 'some/script.pl'
load $script;
load 'some/script.pl'; # use quotes because of punctuations
load thing; # try 'thing' first, then 'thing.pm'
load CGI, ':standard' # like 'use CGI qw[:standard]'
DESCRIPTION
"load" eliminates the need to know whether you are trying to require either a file or a module.
If you consult "perldoc -f require" you will see that "require" will behave differently when given a bareword or a string.
In the case of a string, "require" assumes you are wanting to load a file. But in the case of a bareword, it assumes you mean a module.
This gives nasty overhead when you are trying to dynamically require modules at runtime, since you will need to change the module notation
("Acme::Comment") to a file notation fitting the particular platform you are on.
"load" eliminates the need for this overhead and will just DWYM.
Rules
"load" has the following rules to decide what it thinks you want:
o If the argument has any characters in it other than those matching "w", ":" or "'", it must be a file
o If the argument matches only "[w:']", it must be a module
o If the argument matches only "w", it could either be a module or a file. We will try to find "file.pm" first in @INC and if that
fails, we will try to find "file" in @INC. If both fail, we die with the respective error messages.
Caveats
Because of a bug in perl (#19213), at least in version 5.6.1, we have to hardcode the path separator for a require on Win32 to be "/", like
on Unix rather than the Win32 "". Otherwise perl will not read its own %INC accurately double load files if they are required again, or in
the worst case, core dump.
"Module::Load" cannot do implicit imports, only explicit imports. (in other words, you always have to specify explicitly what you wish to
import from a module, even if the functions are in that modules' @EXPORT)
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Thanks to Jonas B. Nielsen for making explicit imports work.
BUG REPORTS
Please report bugs or other issues to <bug-module-load@rt.cpan.org<gt>.
AUTHOR
This module by Jos Boumans <kane@cpan.org>.
COPYRIGHT
This library is free software; you may redistribute and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.18.2 2013-11-04 Module::Load(3pm)