libanyevent-perl 7.160-1build1 source package in Ubuntu

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libanyevent-perl (7.160-1build1) focal; urgency=medium

  * No-change rebuild for the perl update.

 -- Matthias Klose <email address hidden>  Sat, 19 Oct 2019 10:37:27 +0000

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Uploaded by:
Matthias Klose
Uploaded to:
Focal
Original maintainer:
Debian Perl Group
Architectures:
any
Section:
perl
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

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libanyevent-perl_7.160.orig.tar.gz 297.7 KiB 149fe8c3082dfb015fd15ad2b8fea5fb75e012238c790aa0398dcfaabfa0546c
libanyevent-perl_7.160-1build1.debian.tar.xz 12.2 KiB 4a44a7695c212ab92a7c1a1d4a12107e5809aa5d1e546978e2229bc66c7de3e1
libanyevent-perl_7.160-1build1.dsc 2.5 KiB 391e4daf3fa05d4b45120f00c507569506df953d6610fe53beaf048af3b607a6

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Binary packages built by this source

libanyevent-perl: event loop framework with multiple implementations

 AnyEvent is not an event model itself, it only interfaces to whatever event
 model the main program happens to use, in a pragmatic way. For event models,
 the statement "there can only be one" is a bitter reality: In general, only
 one event loop can be active at the same time in a process. This module
 cannot change this, but it can hide the differences between them.
 .
 The goal of AnyEvent is to offer module authors the ability to do event
 programming (waiting for I/O or timer events) without subscribing to a
 religion, a way of living, and most importantly: without forcing your module
 users into the same thing by forcing them to use the same event model you use.
 .
 During the first call of any watcher-creation method, the module tries to
 detect the currently loaded event loop by probing whether one of the
 following modules is already loaded: EV, AnyEvent::Loop, Event, Glib, Tk,
 Event::Lib, Qt, POE. The first one found is used. If none are detected, the
 module tries to load the first four modules in the order given; but note that
 if EV is not available, the pure-perl AnyEvent::Loop should always work, so
 the other two are not normally tried.