NAME
    IPC::ShellCmd - Run a command with a given environment and capture
    output

SYNOPSIS
        my $isc = IPC::ShellCmd->new(["perl", "Makefile.PL"])
                ->working_dir("/path/to/IPC_ShellCmd-0.01")
                ->stdin(-filename => "/dev/null")
                ->add_envs(PERL5LIB => "/home/mbm/cpanlib/lib/perl5")
                ->add_timers(300 => 'TERM',
                             360 => 'KILL',
                             5   => \&display_progress),
                ->chain_prog(
                    IPC::ShellCmd::Sudo->new(
                            User => 'cpanbuild',
                            SetHome => 1,
                        )
                )->run();

        my $stdout = $isc->stdout();
        my $status = $isc->status();

DESCRIPTION
    This module comes from the nth time I've had to implement a select loop
    and wanted appropriate sudo/su privilege magic, environment variables
    that are set in the child, working directories set etc.

    It aims to provide a reasonable interface for setting up command
    execution environment (working directory, environment variables, stdin,
    stdout and stderr redirection if necessary), but allowing for ssh and
    sudo and magicking in the appropriate shell quoting.

    It tries to be flexible about how you might want to capture output, exit
    status and other such, but in such a way as it's hopefully easy to
    understand and make it work.

    Setup method calls are chain-able in a File::Find::Rule kind of a way.

  my *$isc* = IPC::ShellCmd->new(\*@cmd*, *%opts*)
    Creates a new IPC::ShellCmd object linking to the command and arguments.
    Possible options:

    "-nowarn"
        Don't throw warnings for overwriting values that have already been
        set

    "-debug"
        Set the debug level

  *$isc*->set_umask(*$mask*)
    Sets the umask that this command is going to have, and returns ** so
    that it can be chained.

  *$isc*->working_dir([*$path*])
    Sets the working directory that this command is going to run under, and
    returns *$isc* so that it can be chained, or returns the current setting
    with no arguments.

  *$isc*->add_envs(*$env1* => *$val1* [, *$env2* => *$val2*, ...])
    Adds environment variables to be setup when the command is run. Returns
    *$isc* so that it can be chained.

  *$isc*->add_timers(*$time1* => *$signame* [, *$time2* => \*&handler*, ...])
    Adds timers to be setup when the command is run. Returns *$isc* so that
    it can be chained.

  *$isc*->chain_prog(*$chain_obj*, [*$opt* => *$val*, ...])
    Adds a chain object, for example IPC::ShellCmd::Sudo->new(User =>
    'root') into the chain. Returns *$isc* so that it can be chained.

    Valid options are:

    "-include-stdin"
        If set, and stdin is a file name (rather than a pipe, open
        filehandle, or other type of descriptor) then the file will be
        included in the chain.

    "-include-stdout"
        As above but with stdout.

    "-include-stderr"
        As above but with stderr.

  *$isc*->stdin($stdin)
  *$isc*->stdin($type, $stdin)
    The 1 argument form takes either

    A scalar
        This is the input to the command in full.

    A scalar ref
        This is a reference to the input that will be passed.

    A code ref
        This is expected to generate the text to send to stdin. It is called
        with an argument of the number of bytes that the caller wants to
        read. If it generates more, some may be lost - you have been warned.

    The 2 argument form takes a type and then a ref, handle or other. Valid
    types:

    "-inherit"
        The argument to this is ignored. If specified this takes stdin from
        whatever the caller is reading from.

    "-file"
        The argument to this is a perl filehandle.

    "-fd"
        The argument to this is a system file descriptor.

    "-filename"
        The argument to this is a file name which is opened.

    Both of these return *$isc* for chaining. The default is an empty
    scalar.

  *$isc*->stdout()
  *$isc*->stderr()
    These 0-argument forms return the captured stdout/stderr if the default
    stdout/stderr handler is set and run() has been called. If either has
    been setup elsewhere, then these will croak() an error.

  *$isc*->stdout(*$value*)
  *$isc*->stderr(*$value*)
  *$isc*->stdout(*$type*, *$value*)
  *$isc*->stderr(*$type*, *$value*)
    These setup stdout/stderr as appropriate. The forms are similar to the
    stdin method above.

    The 1 argument form takes either

    A scalar ref
        This is a reference to a scalar that will have the output appended
        to it.

    A code ref
        This code will be called (probably more than once) with a scalar of
        text to be appended which has been read from stdout/stderr.

    The 2 argument form takes a type and then a ref, handle or other. Valid
    types:

    "-inherit"
        The argument to this is ignored. If specified this takes
        stdout/stderr from whatever the caller is set to.

    "-file"
        The argument to this is a perl filehandle.

    "-fd"
        The argument to this is a system file descriptor.

    "-filename"
        The argument to this is a file name which is opened.

    All of these forms return *$isc* for chaining. The default is that it
    will populate an internal variable to be used by the corresponding
    0-argument form.

  *$isc*->status()
    Returns the exit status of the command if it got run.

  *$isc*->run()
    Runs the command with all the setup that has been done.

BUGS
    Apart from the ones that are probably in there and that I don't know
    about, this is a very UNIX-centric view of the world, it really should
    cope with Win32 concepts etc.

SEE ALSO
    IPC::ShellCmd::Generic, IPC::ShellCmd::Sudo, IPC::ShellCmd::SSH,
    IO::Select, IPC::Open3

AUTHORS
        Matthew Byng-Maddick <matthew.byng-maddick@bbc.co.uk> <mbm@colondot.net>

        Tomas Doran (t0m) <bobtfish@bobtfish.net>

        Andrew Ford <andrew@ford-mason.co.uk>

COPYRIGHT
    Copyright (c) 2009 the British Broadcasting Corporation.

LICENSE
    This library is free software and may be distributed under the same
    terms as perl itself.