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260 lines
7.7 KiB
260 lines
7.7 KiB
@rem = '--*-Perl-*--
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@echo off
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if "%OS%" == "Windows_NT" goto WinNT
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perl -x -S "%0" %1 %2 %3 %4 %5 %6 %7 %8 %9
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goto endofperl
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:WinNT
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perl -x -S "%0" %*
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if NOT "%COMSPEC%" == "%SystemRoot%\system32\cmd.exe" goto endofperl
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if %errorlevel% == 9009 echo You do not have Perl in your PATH.
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goto endofperl
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@rem ';
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#!perl
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#line 14
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eval 'exec perl -x -S "$0" ${1+"$@"}'
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if 0; # In case running under some shell
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require 5;
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use Getopt::Std;
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use Config;
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$0 =~ s|.*[/\\]||;
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my $usage = <<EOT;
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Usage: $0 [-h]
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or: $0 [-w] [-u] [-a argstring] [-s stripsuffix] [files]
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or: $0 [-w] [-u] [-n ntargs] [-o otherargs] [-s stripsuffix] [files]
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-n ntargs arguments to invoke perl with in generated file
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when run from Windows NT. Defaults to
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'-x -S "%0" %*'.
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-o otherargs arguments to invoke perl with in generated file
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other than when run from Windows NT. Defaults
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to '-x -S "%0" %1 %2 %3 %4 %5 %6 %7 %8 %9'.
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-a argstring arguments to invoke perl with in generated file
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ignoring operating system (for compatibility
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with previous pl2bat versions).
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-u update files that may have already been processed
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by (some version of) pl2bat.
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-w include "-w" on the /^#!.*perl/ line (unless
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a /^#!.*perl/ line was already present).
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-s stripsuffix strip this suffix from file before appending ".bat"
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Not case-sensitive
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Can be a regex if it begins with `/'
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Defaults to "/\.plx?/"
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-h show this help
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EOT
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my %OPT = ();
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warn($usage), exit(0) if !getopts('whun:o:a:s:',\%OPT) or $OPT{'h'};
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$OPT{'n'} = '-x -S "%0" %*' unless exists $OPT{'n'};
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$OPT{'o'} = '-x -S "%0" %1 %2 %3 %4 %5 %6 %7 %8 %9' unless exists $OPT{'o'};
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$OPT{'s'} = '/\\.plx?/' unless exists $OPT{'s'};
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$OPT{'s'} = ($OPT{'s'} =~ m|^/([^/]*)| ? $1 : "\Q$OPT{'s'}\E");
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my $head;
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if( defined( $OPT{'a'} ) ) {
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$head = <<EOT;
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\@rem = '--*-Perl-*--
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\@echo off
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perl $OPT{'a'}
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goto endofperl
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\@rem ';
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EOT
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} else {
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$head = <<EOT;
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\@rem = '--*-Perl-*--
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\@echo off
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if "%OS%" == "Windows_NT" goto WinNT
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perl $OPT{'o'}
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goto endofperl
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:WinNT
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perl $OPT{'n'}
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if NOT "%COMSPEC%" == "%SystemRoot%\\system32\\cmd.exe" goto endofperl
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if %errorlevel% == 9009 echo You do not have Perl in your PATH.
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goto endofperl
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\@rem ';
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EOT
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}
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$head =~ s/^\t//gm;
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my $headlines = 2 + ($head =~ tr/\n/\n/);
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my $tail = "__END__\n:endofperl\n";
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@ARGV = ('-') unless @ARGV;
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foreach ( @ARGV ) {
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process($_);
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}
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sub process {
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my( $file )= @_;
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my $myhead = $head;
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my $linedone = 0;
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my $taildone = 0;
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my $linenum = 0;
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my $skiplines = 0;
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my $line;
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my $start= $Config{startperl};
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$start= "#!perl" unless $start =~ /^#!.*perl/;
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open( FILE, $file ) or die "$0: Can't open $file: $!";
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@file = <FILE>;
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foreach $line ( @file ) {
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$linenum++;
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if ( $line =~ /^:endofperl\b/ ) {
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if( ! exists $OPT{'u'} ) {
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warn "$0: $file has already been converted to a batch file!\n";
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return;
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}
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$taildone++;
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}
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if ( not $linedone and $line =~ /^#!.*perl/ ) {
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if( exists $OPT{'u'} ) {
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$skiplines = $linenum - 1;
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$line .= "#line ".(1+$headlines)."\n";
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} else {
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$line .= "#line ".($linenum+$headlines)."\n";
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}
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$linedone++;
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}
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if ( $line =~ /^#\s*line\b/ and $linenum == 2 + $skiplines ) {
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$line = "";
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}
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}
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close( FILE );
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$file =~ s/$OPT{'s'}$//oi;
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$file .= '.bat' unless $file =~ /\.bat$/i or $file =~ /^-$/;
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open( FILE, ">$file" ) or die "Can't open $file: $!";
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print FILE $myhead;
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print FILE $start, ( $OPT{'w'} ? " -w" : "" ),
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"\n#line ", ($headlines+1), "\n" unless $linedone;
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print FILE @file[$skiplines..$#file];
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print FILE $tail unless $taildone;
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close( FILE );
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}
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__END__
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=head1 NAME
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pl2bat - wrap perl code into a batch file
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=head1 SYNOPSIS
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B<pl2bat> B<-h>
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B<pl2bat> [B<-w>] S<[B<-a> I<argstring>]> S<[B<-s> I<stripsuffix>]> [files]
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B<pl2bat> [B<-w>] S<[B<-n> I<ntargs>]> S<[B<-o> I<otherargs>]> S<[B<-s> I<stripsuffix>]> [files]
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=head1 DESCRIPTION
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This utility converts a perl script into a batch file that can be
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executed on DOS-like operating systems.
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Note that by default, the ".pl" suffix will be stripped before adding
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a ".bat" suffix to the supplied file names. This can be controlled
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with the C<-s> option.
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The default behavior is to have the batch file compare the C<OS>
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environment variable against C<"Windows_NT">. If they match, it
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uses the C<%*> construct to refer to all the command line arguments
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that were given to it, so you'll need to make sure that works on your
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variant of the command shell. It is known to work in the cmd.exe shell
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under WindowsNT. 4DOS/NT users will want to put a C<ParameterChar = *>
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line in their initialization file, or execute C<setdos /p*> in
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the shell startup file.
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On Windows95 and other platforms a nine-argument limit is imposed
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on command-line arguments given to the generated batch file, since
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they may not support C<%*> in batch files.
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These can be overridden using the C<-n> and C<-o> options or the
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deprecated C<-a> option.
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=head1 OPTIONS
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=over 8
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=item B<-n> I<ntargs>
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Arguments to invoke perl with in generated batch file when run from
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Windows NT (or Windows 98, probably). Defaults to S<'-x -S "%0" %*'>.
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=item B<-o> I<otherargs>
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Arguments to invoke perl with in generated batch file except when
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run from Windows NT (ie. when run from DOS, Windows 3.1, or Windows 95).
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Defaults to S<'-x -S "%0" %1 %2 %3 %4 %5 %6 %7 %8 %9'>.
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=item B<-a> I<argstring>
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Arguments to invoke perl with in generated batch file. Specifying
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B<-a> prevents the batch file from checking the C<OS> environment
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variable to determine which operating system it is being run from.
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=item B<-s> I<stripsuffix>
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Strip a suffix string from file name before appending a ".bat"
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suffix. The suffix is not case-sensitive. It can be a regex if
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it begins with `/' (the trailing '/' is optional and a trailing
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C<$> is always assumed). Defaults to C</.plx?/>.
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=item B<-w>
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If no line matching C</^#!.*perl/> is found in the script, then such
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a line is inserted just after the new preamble. The exact line
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depends on C<$Config{startperl}> [see L<Config>]. With the B<-w>
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option, C<" -w"> is added after the value of C<$Config{startperl}>.
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If a line matching C</^#!.*perl/> already exists in the script,
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then it is not changed and the B<-w> option is ignored.
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=item B<-u>
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If the script appears to have already been processed by B<pl2bat>,
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then the script is skipped and not processed unless B<-u> was
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specified. If B<-u> is specified, the existing preamble is replaced.
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=item B<-h>
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Show command line usage.
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=back
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=head1 EXAMPLES
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C:\> pl2bat foo.pl bar.PM
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[..creates foo.bat, bar.PM.bat..]
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C:\> pl2bat -s "/\.pl|\.pm/" foo.pl bar.PM
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[..creates foo.bat, bar.bat..]
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C:\> pl2bat < somefile > another.bat
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C:\> pl2bat > another.bat
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print scalar reverse "rekcah lrep rehtona tsuj\n";
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^Z
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[..another.bat is now a certified japh application..]
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C:\> ren *.bat *.pl
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C:\> pl2bat -u *.pl
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[..updates the wrapping of some previously wrapped scripts..]
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C:\> pl2bat -u -s .bat *.bat
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[..same as previous example except more dangerous..]
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=head1 BUGS
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C<$0> will contain the full name, including the ".bat" suffix
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when the generated batch file runs. If you don't like this,
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see runperl.bat for an alternative way to invoke perl scripts.
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Default behavior is to invoke Perl with the B<-S> flag, so Perl will
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search the PATH to find the script. This may have undesirable
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effects.
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=head1 SEE ALSO
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perl, perlwin32, runperl.bat
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=cut
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__END__
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:endofperl
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