DESCRIPTION
This program outputs the paths to all installed modules on your systems. This includes both the standard modules (which the stdpods command produces) and the site-specific ones (which the sitepods command produces).This is just a front-end for calling pminst -l, supplied to make it more obvious what it does.
EXAMPLE
This finds all the modules whose documentation mentions destructors, and cats it out at you.
$ podgrep -i destructor `modpods` =head1 /usr/local/devperl/lib/5.00554/i686-linux/DB_File.pm chunk 371 Having read L<perltie> you will probably have already guessed that the error is caused by the extra copy of the tied object stored in C<$X>. If you haven't, then the problem boils down to the fact that the B<DB_File> destructor, DESTROY, will not be called until I<all> references to the tied object are destroyed. Both the tied variable, C<%x>, and C<$X> above hold a reference to the object. The call to untie() will destroy the first, but C<$X> still holds a valid reference, so the destructor will not get called and the database file F<tst.fil> will remain open. The fact that Berkeley DB then reports the attempt to open a database that is alreday open via the catch-all "Invalid argument" doesn't help. =head1 /usr/local/devperl/lib/5.00554/Tie/Array.pm chunk 40 Normal object destructor method.
AUTHORS and COPYRIGHTS
Copyright (C) 1999 Tom Christiansen.Copyright (C) 2006-2014 Mark Leighton Fisher.
LICENSE
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of either: (a) the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 1, or (at your option) any later version, or (b) the Perl ``Artistic License''. (This is the Perl 5 licensing scheme.)Please note this is a change from the original pmtools-1.00 (still available on CPAN), as pmtools-1.00 were licensed only under the Perl ``Artistic License''.