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From: metabase:user:31d414ea-2aae-11df-837a-5e0a49663a4f
Subject: PASS String-Unescape-v0.0.1 v5.16.0 GNU/Linux
Date: 2013-11-25T18:23:36Z
This distribution has been tested as part of the CPAN Testers
project, supporting the Perl programming language. See
http://wiki.cpantesters.org/ for more information or email
questions to cpan-testers-discuss@perl.org
--
Dear Yasutaka ATARASHI,
This is a computer-generated report for String-Unescape-v0.0.1
on perl 5.16.0, created by CPAN-Reporter-1.2006.
Thank you for uploading your work to CPAN. Congratulations!
All tests were successful.
Sections of this report:
* Tester comments
* Program output
* Prerequisites
* Environment and other context
------------------------------
TESTER COMMENTS
------------------------------
Additional comments from tester:
this report is from an automated smoke testing program
and was not reviewed by a human for accuracy
------------------------------
PROGRAM OUTPUT
------------------------------
Output from '/usr/bin/make test':
PERL_DL_NONLAZY=1 /home/david/cpantesting/perl-5.16.0/bin/perl "-MExtUtils::Command::MM" "-e" "test_harness(0, 'blib/lib', 'blib/arch')" t/*.t
t/00-compile.t ............ ok
t/author-critic.t ......... skipped: these tests are for testing by the author
"\c " is more clearly written simply as "\@" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "A" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "B" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "C" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "D" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "E" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "F" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "G" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "H" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c " is more clearly written simply as "I" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c
" is more clearly written simply as "J" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "K" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "L" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c
" is more clearly written simply as "M" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "N" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "O" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "P" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "Q" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "R" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "S" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "T" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "U" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "V" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "W" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "X" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "Y" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "Z" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "\[" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "\\" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "\]" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "\^" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "_" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c " is more clearly written simply as "\`" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c!" is more clearly written simply as "a" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c#" is more clearly written simply as "c" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c$" is more clearly written simply as "d" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c%" is more clearly written simply as "e" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c&" is more clearly written simply as "f" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c'" is more clearly written simply as "g" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c(" is more clearly written simply as "h" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c)" is more clearly written simply as "i" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c*" is more clearly written simply as "j" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c+" is more clearly written simply as "k" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c," is more clearly written simply as "l" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c-" is more clearly written simply as "m" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c." is more clearly written simply as "n" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c/" is more clearly written simply as "o" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c0" is more clearly written simply as "p" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c1" is more clearly written simply as "q" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c2" is more clearly written simply as "r" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c3" is more clearly written simply as "s" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c4" is more clearly written simply as "t" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c5" is more clearly written simply as "u" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c6" is more clearly written simply as "v" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c7" is more clearly written simply as "w" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c8" is more clearly written simply as "x" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c9" is more clearly written simply as "y" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c:" is more clearly written simply as "z" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c;" is more clearly written simply as "\{" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c<" is more clearly written simply as "\|" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c=" is more clearly written simply as "\}" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c>" is more clearly written simply as "\~" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c`" is more clearly written simply as "\ " at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c{" is deprecated and is more clearly written as ";" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c|" is more clearly written simply as "\<" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c}" is more clearly written simply as "\=" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c~" is more clearly written simply as "\>" at (eval 14) line 1.
"\c" is more clearly written simply as "\?" at (eval 14) line 1.
Illegal hexadecimal digit 'x' ignored at (eval 17) line 1.
Illegal hexadecimal digit '\' ignored at (eval 20) line 1.
Illegal hexadecimal digit '\' ignored at (eval 20) line 1.
Illegal hexadecimal digit 'q' ignored at (eval 20) line 1.
Illegal octal digit '8' ignored at (eval 23) line 1.
Illegal octal digit '8' ignored at (eval 23) line 1.
Non-octal character 'x'. Resolved as "\o{1}" at (eval 29) line 1.
t/basic.t ................. ok
t/case_and_meta.t ......... ok
Useless use of \E at (eval 10) line 1.
Useless use of \E at (eval 10) line 1.
Useless use of \E at (eval 10) line 1.
Useless use of \E at (eval 14) line 1.
t/exceptional.t ........... ok
Useless use of \E at (eval 10) line 1.
t/quirks_in_perl.t ........ ok
t/release-kwalitee.t ...... skipped: these tests are for release candidate testing
t/release-pod-coverage.t .. skipped: these tests are for release candidate testing
t/release-pod-syntax.t .... skipped: these tests are for release candidate testing
All tests successful.
Files=9, Tests=47, 1 wallclock secs ( 0.05 usr 0.02 sys + 0.22 cusr 0.07 csys = 0.36 CPU)
Result: PASS
------------------------------
PREREQUISITES
------------------------------
Prerequisite modules loaded:
requires:
Module Need Have
------------------- ---- --------
File::Spec 0 3.40
IO::Handle 0 1.33
IPC::Open3 0 1.12
Test::Exception 0 0.31
Test::More 0 1.001002
build_requires:
Module Need Have
------------------- ---- --------
ExtUtils::MakeMaker 0 6.63_02
configure_requires:
Module Need Have
------------------- ---- --------
ExtUtils::MakeMaker 6.30 6.63_02
------------------------------
ENVIRONMENT AND OTHER CONTEXT
------------------------------
Environment variables:
AUTOMATED_TESTING = 1
PATH = /usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/games
PERL = 5.16.0
PERL5LIB =
PERL5OPT =
PERL5_CPANPLUS_IS_RUNNING = 23244
PERL5_CPAN_IS_RUNNING = 23244
PERLVER = 5.16.0
PERL_INLINE_DIRECTORY = /home/david/.Inline-5.16.0
PERL_MM_USE_DEFAULT = 1
SHELL = /bin/bash
TERM = screen
Perl special variables (and OS-specific diagnostics, for MSWin32):
$^X = /home/david/cpantesting/perl-5.16.0/bin/perl
$UID/$EUID = 1000 / 1000
$GID = 1000 1000
$EGID = 1000 1000
Perl module toolchain versions installed:
Module Have
------------------- --------
CPAN 1.9800
CPAN::Meta 2.132830
Cwd 3.40
ExtUtils::CBuilder 0.280206
ExtUtils::Command 1.17
ExtUtils::Install 1.58
ExtUtils::MakeMaker 6.63_02
ExtUtils::Manifest 1.61
ExtUtils::ParseXS 3.16
File::Spec 3.40
JSON 2.53
JSON::PP 2.27203
Module::Build 0.4202
Module::Signature n/a
Parse::CPAN::Meta 1.4409
Test::Harness 3.30
Test::More 1.001002
YAML 0.85
YAML::Syck 1.27
version 0.99
--
Summary of my perl5 (revision 5 version 16 subversion 0) configuration:
Platform:
osname=linux, osvers=2.6.32-5-xen-amd64, archname=x86_64-linux-thread-multi
uname='linux pigsty.barnyard.co.uk 2.6.32-5-xen-amd64 #1 smp mon jan 16 20:48:30 utc 2012 x86_64 gnulinux '
config_args='-de -Dprefix=/home/david/cpantesting/perl-5.16.0 -Dusethreads -Duse64bitall'
hint=recommended, useposix=true, d_sigaction=define
useithreads=define, usemultiplicity=define
useperlio=define, d_sfio=undef, uselargefiles=define, usesocks=undef
use64bitint=define, use64bitall=define, uselongdouble=undef
usemymalloc=n, bincompat5005=undef
Compiler:
cc='cc', ccflags ='-D_REENTRANT -D_GNU_SOURCE -fno-strict-aliasing -pipe -fstack-protector -I/usr/local/include -D_LARGEFILE_SOURCE -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64',
optimize='-O2',
cppflags='-D_REENTRANT -D_GNU_SOURCE -fno-strict-aliasing -pipe -fstack-protector -I/usr/local/include'
ccversion='', gccversion='4.1.2 20061115 (prerelease) (Debian 4.1.1-21)', gccosandvers=''
intsize=4, longsize=8, ptrsize=8, doublesize=8, byteorder=12345678
d_longlong=define, longlongsize=8, d_longdbl=define, longdblsize=16
ivtype='long', ivsize=8, nvtype='double', nvsize=8, Off_t='off_t', lseeksize=8
alignbytes=8, prototype=define
Linker and Libraries:
ld='cc', ldflags =' -fstack-protector -L/usr/local/lib'
libpth=/usr/local/lib /lib /usr/lib /lib64 /usr/lib64
libs=-lnsl -lgdbm -ldb -ldl -lm -lcrypt -lutil -lpthread -lc -lgdbm_compat
perllibs=-lnsl -ldl -lm -lcrypt -lutil -lpthread -lc
libc=/lib/libc-2.3.6.so, so=so, useshrplib=false, libperl=libperl.a
gnulibc_version='2.3.6'
Dynamic Linking:
dlsrc=dl_dlopen.xs, dlext=so, d_dlsymun=undef, ccdlflags='-Wl,-E'
cccdlflags='-fPIC', lddlflags='-shared -O2 -L/usr/local/lib -fstack-protector'
Characteristics of this binary (from libperl):
Compile-time options: HAS_TIMES MULTIPLICITY PERLIO_LAYERS
PERL_DONT_CREATE_GVSV PERL_IMPLICIT_CONTEXT
PERL_MALLOC_WRAP PERL_PRESERVE_IVUV USE_64_BIT_ALL
USE_64_BIT_INT USE_ITHREADS USE_LARGE_FILES
USE_LOCALE USE_LOCALE_COLLATE USE_LOCALE_CTYPE
USE_LOCALE_NUMERIC USE_PERLIO USE_PERL_ATOF
USE_REENTRANT_API
Built under linux
Compiled at May 21 2012 14:49:20
%ENV:
PERL="5.16.0"
PERL5LIB=""
PERL5OPT=""
PERL5_CPANPLUS_IS_RUNNING="23244"
PERL5_CPAN_IS_RUNNING="23244"
PERLVER="5.16.0"
PERL_INLINE_DIRECTORY="/home/david/.Inline-5.16.0"
PERL_MM_USE_DEFAULT="1"
@INC:
/home/david/cpantesting/perl-5.16.0/lib/site_perl/5.16.0/x86_64-linux-thread-multi
/home/david/cpantesting/perl-5.16.0/lib/site_perl/5.16.0
/home/david/cpantesting/perl-5.16.0/lib/5.16.0/x86_64-linux-thread-multi
/home/david/cpantesting/perl-5.16.0/lib/5.16.0
.