How to Install and Uninstall perl-HTTP-Negotiate Package on openSUSE Leap

Last updated: December 26,2024

1. Install "perl-HTTP-Negotiate" package

Please follow the guidance below to install perl-HTTP-Negotiate on openSUSE Leap

$ sudo zypper refresh $ sudo zypper install perl-HTTP-Negotiate

2. Uninstall "perl-HTTP-Negotiate" package

This guide let you learn how to uninstall perl-HTTP-Negotiate on openSUSE Leap:

$ sudo zypper remove perl-HTTP-Negotiate

3. Information about the perl-HTTP-Negotiate package on openSUSE Leap

Information for package perl-HTTP-Negotiate:
--------------------------------------------
Repository : Main Repository
Name : perl-HTTP-Negotiate
Version : 6.01-1.23
Arch : noarch
Vendor : SUSE LLC
Installed Size : 27.9 KiB
Installed : No
Status : not installed
Source package : perl-HTTP-Negotiate-6.01-1.23.src
Upstream URL : http://search.cpan.org/dist/HTTP-Negotiate/
Summary : choose a variant to serve
Description :
This module provides a complete implementation of the HTTP content
negotiation algorithm specified in _draft-ietf-http-v11-spec-00.ps_ chapter
12. Content negotiation allows for the selection of a preferred content
representation based upon attributes of the negotiable variants and the
value of the various Accept* header fields in the request.
The variants are ordered by preference by calling the function choose().
The first parameter is reference to an array of the variants to choose
among. Each element in this array is an array with the values [$id, $qs,
$content_type, $content_encoding, $charset, $content_language,
$content_length] whose meanings are described below. The $content_encoding
and $content_language can be either a single scalar value or an array
reference if there are several values.
The second optional parameter is either a HTTP::Headers or a HTTP::Request
object which is searched for "Accept*" headers. If this parameter is
missing, then the accept specification is initialized from the CGI
environment variables HTTP_ACCEPT, HTTP_ACCEPT_CHARSET,
HTTP_ACCEPT_ENCODING and HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE.
In an array context, choose() returns a list of [variant identifier,
calculated quality, size] tuples. The values are sorted by quality, highest
quality first. If the calculated quality is the same for two variants, then
they are sorted by size (smallest first). _E.g._:
(['var1', 1, 2000], ['var2', 0.3, 512], ['var3', 0.3, 1024]);
Note that also zero quality variants are included in the return list even
if these should never be served to the client.
In a scalar context, it returns the identifier of the variant with the
highest score or 'undef' if none have non-zero quality.
If the $HTTP::Negotiate::DEBUG variable is set to TRUE, then a lot of noise
is generated on STDOUT during evaluation of choose().