How to Install and Uninstall perl-Pod-Eventual.noarch Package on Amazon Linux 2
Last updated: December 26,2024
1. Install "perl-Pod-Eventual.noarch" package
This is a short guide on how to install perl-Pod-Eventual.noarch on Amazon Linux 2
$
sudo yum makecache
Copied
$
sudo yum install
perl-Pod-Eventual.noarch
Copied
2. Uninstall "perl-Pod-Eventual.noarch" package
This tutorial shows how to uninstall perl-Pod-Eventual.noarch on Amazon Linux 2:
$
sudo yum remove
perl-Pod-Eventual.noarch
Copied
$
sudo yum autoremove
Copied
3. Information about the perl-Pod-Eventual.noarch package on Amazon Linux 2
Loaded plugins: ovl, priorities
Available Packages
Name : perl-Pod-Eventual
Arch : noarch
Version : 0.093330
Release : 12.amzn2
Size : 23 k
Repo : amzn2-core/2/x86_64
Summary : Read a POD document as a series of trivial events
URL : http://search.cpan.org/dist/Pod-Eventual/
License : GPL+ or Artistic
Description : POD is a pretty simple format to write, but it can be a big pain
: to deal with reading it and doing anything useful with it. Most
: existing POD parsers care about semantics, like whether a =item
: occurred after an =over but before a back, figuring out how to
: link a L<>, and other things like that.
:
: Pod::Eventual is much less ambitious and much more stupid.
: Fortunately, stupid is often better. (That's what I keep telling
: myself, anyway.)
:
: Pod::Eventual reads line-based input and produces events
: describing each POD paragraph or directive it finds. Once complete
: events are immediately passed to the handle_event method. This
: method should be implemented by Pod::Eventual sub-classes. If it
: isn't, Pod::Eventual's own handle_event will be called, and will
: raise an exception.
Available Packages
Name : perl-Pod-Eventual
Arch : noarch
Version : 0.093330
Release : 12.amzn2
Size : 23 k
Repo : amzn2-core/2/x86_64
Summary : Read a POD document as a series of trivial events
URL : http://search.cpan.org/dist/Pod-Eventual/
License : GPL+ or Artistic
Description : POD is a pretty simple format to write, but it can be a big pain
: to deal with reading it and doing anything useful with it. Most
: existing POD parsers care about semantics, like whether a =item
: occurred after an =over but before a back, figuring out how to
: link a L<>, and other things like that.
:
: Pod::Eventual is much less ambitious and much more stupid.
: Fortunately, stupid is often better. (That's what I keep telling
: myself, anyway.)
:
: Pod::Eventual reads line-based input and produces events
: describing each POD paragraph or directive it finds. Once complete
: events are immediately passed to the handle_event method. This
: method should be implemented by Pod::Eventual sub-classes. If it
: isn't, Pod::Eventual's own handle_event will be called, and will
: raise an exception.