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package LWP::Debug; # legacy our $VERSION = '6.34'; require Exporter; our @ISA = qw(Exporter); our @EXPORT_OK = qw(level trace debug conns); use Carp (); my @levels = qw(trace debug conns); our %current_level = (); sub import { my $pack = shift; my $callpkg = caller(0); my @symbols = (); my @levels = (); for (@_) { if (/^[-+]/) { push(@levels, $_); } else { push(@symbols, $_); } } Exporter::export($pack, $callpkg, @symbols); level(@levels); } sub level { for (@_) { if ($_ eq '+') { # all on # switch on all levels %current_level = map { $_ => 1 } @levels; } elsif ($_ eq '-') { # all off %current_level = (); } elsif (/^([-+])(\w+)$/) { $current_level{$2} = $1 eq '+'; } else { Carp::croak("Illegal level format $_"); } } } sub trace { _log(@_) if $current_level{'trace'}; } sub debug { _log(@_) if $current_level{'debug'}; } sub conns { _log(@_) if $current_level{'conns'}; } sub _log { my $msg = shift; $msg .= "\n" unless $msg =~ /\n$/; # ensure trailing "\n" my ($package, $filename, $line, $sub) = caller(2); print STDERR "$sub: $msg"; } 1; __END__ =pod =head1 NAME LWP::Debug - deprecated =head1 DESCRIPTION This module has been deprecated. Please see L<LWP::ConsoleLogger> for your debugging needs. LWP::Debug is used to provide tracing facilities, but these are not used by LWP any more. The code in this module is kept around (undocumented) so that 3rd party code that happens to use the old interfaces continue to run. One useful feature that LWP::Debug provided (in an imprecise and troublesome way) was network traffic monitoring. The following section provides some hints about recommended replacements. =head2 Network traffic monitoring The best way to monitor the network traffic that LWP generates is to use an external TCP monitoring program. The L<WireShark|http://www.wireshark.org/> program is highly recommended for this. Another approach it to use a debugging HTTP proxy server and make LWP direct all its traffic via this one. Call C<< $ua->proxy >> to set it up and then just use LWP as before. For less precise monitoring needs just setting up a few simple handlers might do. The following example sets up handlers to dump the request and response objects that pass through LWP: use LWP::UserAgent; $ua = LWP::UserAgent->new; $ua->default_header('Accept-Encoding' => scalar HTTP::Message::decodable()); $ua->add_handler("request_send", sub { shift->dump; return }); $ua->add_handler("response_done", sub { shift->dump; return }); $ua->get("http://www.example.com"); =head1 SEE ALSO L<LWP::ConsoleLogger>, L<LWP::ConsoleLogger::Everywhere>, L<LWP::UserAgent> =cut