Pager - long output best friend
Does all the magic to have you potentially long output piped through the
external pager.
Similar to what git does for its output.
Quick Start
use Pager;
Under the hood this forks the current process, connects child' stdout to
parent's stdin, and then replaces the parent with the pager of choice
(environment variable PAGER).
The child just continues as normal.
If PAGER environment variable is not present Pager probes current PATH for
more.
If found it is used as a default pager.
You can control pager to a limited degree. For example you can change the environment variable used for finding pager executable.
use Pager;
Also you can set alternative default (fallback) pager to be used instead of
more.
PAGER environment variable (if set) will still have precedence.
use Pager;
If no suitable pager found setup() does nothing and your executable keeps
running as usual.
Pager cleans after itself and doesn't leak resources in case of setup failure.
Alternatively you can specify directly the desired pager command, exactly as it would appear in PAGER environment variable. This is useful if you need some specific pager and/or flags (like "less -r") and would like to avoid forcing your consumers into modifying their existing PAGER configuration just for your application.
use Pager;
Sometimes you may want to bypass pager if the output of you executable is not a
tty.
If this case you may use .skip_on_notty() to get the desirable effect.
use Pager;
If you need to disable pager altogether set environment variable NOPAGER and
Pager::setup() will skip initialization.
The host application will continue as normal.
Pager::is_on() will reflect the fact that no Pager is active.