NAME
   CPAN::Mini::Visit - A generalised API version of David Golden's
   visitcpan

SYNOPSIS
     CPAN::Mini::Visit->new(
         minicpan => '/minicpan',
         acme     => 0,
         author   => 'ADAMK',
         warnings => 1,
         random   => 1,
         callback => sub {
             print "# counter: $_[0]->{counter}\n";
             print "# archive: $_[0]->{archive}\n";
             print "# tempdir: $_[0]->{tempdir}\n";
             print "# dist:    $_[0]->{dist}\n";
             print "# author:  $_[0]->{author}\n";
         }
     )->run;

 # counter: 1234
     # archive: /minicpan/authors/id/A/AD/ADAMK/Config-Tiny-1.00.tar.gz
     # tempdir: /tmp/1a4YRmFAJ3/Config-Tiny-1.00
     # dist:    ADAMK/Config-Tiny-1.00.tar.gz
     # author:  ADAMK

DESCRIPTION
   CPAN::Mini::Extract has been relatively successful at allowing processes
   to run across the contents (or a subset of the contents) of an entire
   minicpan checkout.

   However it has become evident that while it is useful (and theoretically
   optimal from a processing point of view) to maintain an expanded
   minicpan checkout the sheer size of an expanded minicpan is such that it
   becomes an undo burdon to manage, move, copy or even delete a directory
   tree with hundreds of thousands of file totalling in the high single
   gigabytes in size.

   Annoyed by this, David Golden created visitcpan which takes an
   alternative approach of sequentially expanding the tarball of each
   distribution into a temporary directory, do the processing on that
   distribution, and then delete the temporary directory before moving on
   to the next directory.

   This method results in a longer computation time, but with the benefit
   of dramatically reduced system overhead, greater adaptability, and allow
   for easy ad-hoc computations.

   This improvement in flexibility turns out to be worth the extra
   computation time in almost all cases.

   CPAN::Mini::Visit is a simplified and generalised API-based ersion of
   David Golden's visitcpan script.

   It implements only the process of discovering, iterating and expanding
   archives, before handing off control to an arbitrary callback function
   provided to the constructor.

 new
   Takes a variety of parameters and creates a new visitor object.

   The "minicpan" param should be the root directory of a CPAN::Mini
   download.

   The "callback" param should be a "CODE" reference that will be called
   for each visit. The first parameter passed to the callback will be a
   "HASH" reference containing the tarball location in the "archive" key,
   the location of the temporary directory in the "tempdir" key, the
   canonical CPAN distribution name in the "dist" key, and the author id in
   the "author" key.

   The "acme" param (true by default) can be set to false to exclude any
   distributions that contain the string "Acme", allowing the visit to
   ignore any of the joke modules.

   The "author" param can be provided to limit the visit to only the
   modules owned by a specific author.

   The "random" param will cause the archives to be processed in random
   order if enabled. If not, the archives will be processed in alphabetical
   order.

   The "warnings" param will turn on Archive::Extract warnings if enabled,
   or disable warnings otherwise.

   The "prefer_bin" param will tell Archive::Extract to use binary extract
   instead of CPAN module extract wherever possible. By default, it will
   use module-based extract.

   Returns a CPAN::Mini::Visit object, or throws an exception on error.

 run
   The "run" method executes the visit process, taking no parameters and
   returning true.

   Because the object contains no state information, you may call the "run"
   method multiple times for a single visit object with no ill effects.

SUPPORT
   Bugs should be reported via the CPAN bug tracker at

   <http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=CPAN-Mini-Visit>

   For other issues, contact the author.

AUTHOR
   Adam Kennedy <[email protected]>

COPYRIGHT
   Copyright 2009 Adam Kennedy.

   This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
   under the same terms as Perl itself.

   The full text of the license can be found in the LICENSE file included
   with this module.