1 # Buildsheet autogenerated by ravenadm tool -- Do not edit.
3 NAMEBASE= perl-Time-timegm
7 SDESC[530]= UTC version of mktime() (5.30)
8 SDESC[528]= UTC version of mktime() (5.28)
10 CONTACT= Perl_Automaton[perl@ironwolf.systems]
13 SITES[main]= CPAN/ID:P/PE/PEVANS
14 DISTFILE[1]= Time-timegm-0.01.tar.gz:main
19 OPTIONS_AVAILABLE= PERL_530 PERL_528
20 OPTIONS_STANDARD= none
21 VOPTS[530]= PERL_530=ON PERL_528=OFF
22 VOPTS[528]= PERL_530=OFF PERL_528=ON
24 DISTNAME= Time-timegm-0.01
30 [PERL_528].BUILD_DEPENDS_ON= perl-ExtUtils-CChecker:single:528
31 [PERL_528].USES_ON= perl:528,buildmod,run
33 [PERL_530].BUILD_DEPENDS_ON= perl-ExtUtils-CChecker:single:530
34 [PERL_530].USES_ON= perl:530,buildmod,run
36 [FILE:485:descriptions/desc.single]
37 The POSIX standard provides three functions for converting between integer
38 epoch values and 6-component "broken-down" time representations. localtime
39 and gmtime convert an epoch into the 6 components of seconds, minutes,
40 hours, day of month, month and year, in either local timezone or UTC. The
41 mktime function converts a local broken-down time into an epoch value.
42 However, POSIX does not provide a UTC version of this.
44 This module provides a function timegm which has this ability.
48 e721cdfda183146b895e04cee712e10ab1bc73c8bad1bbc84c04b19ef1052c98 13466 Time-timegm-0.01.tar.gz