libdbix-safe-perl_1.2.5-1_i386.changes is NEW

Archive Administrator installer at ftp-master.debian.org
Wed Oct 21 16:53:14 UTC 2009


(new) libdbix-safe-perl_1.2.5-1.diff.gz optional perl
(new) libdbix-safe-perl_1.2.5-1.dsc optional perl
(new) libdbix-safe-perl_1.2.5-1_all.deb optional perl
Safe wrapper to DBI interface
 The purpose of this module is to give controlled, limited access to an
 application, rather than simply passing it a raw database handle through DBI.
 DBIx::Safe acts as a wrapper to the database, by only allowing through the
 commands you tell it to. It filters all things related to the database handle
 - methods and attributes.
 .
 The typical usage is for your application to create a database handle via a
 normal DBI call to new(), then pass that to DBIx::Safe->new(), which will
 return you a DBIx::Safe object. After specifying exactly what is and what is
 not allowed, you can pass the object to the untrusted application. The object
 will act very similar to a DBI database handle, and in most cases can be used
 interchangeably.
 .
 By default, nothing is allowed to run at all. There are many things you can
 control. You can specify which SQL commands are allowed, by indicating the
 first word in the SQL statement (e.g. 'SELECT'). You can specify which
 database methods are allowed to run (e.g. 'ping'). You can specify a regular
 expression that allows matching SQL statements to run (e.g. 'qr{SET
 TIMEZONE}'). You can specify a regular expression that is NOT allowed to run
 (e.g. qr(UPDATE xxx}). Finally, you can indicate which database attributes
 are allowed to be read and changed (e.g. 'PrintError'). For all of the above,
 there are matching methods to remove them as well.
(new) libdbix-safe-perl_1.2.5.orig.tar.gz optional perl
Changes: libdbix-safe-perl (1.2.5-1) unstable; urgency=low
 .
  * Initial Release. (Closes: #528719)


Override entries for your package:

Announcing to debian-devel-changes at lists.debian.org
Closing bugs: 528719 


Your package contains new components which requires manual editing of
the override file.  It is ok otherwise, so please be patient.  New
packages are usually added to the override file about once a week.

You may have gotten the distribution wrong.  You'll get warnings above
if files already exist in other distributions.



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