corelist -v corelist [-a|-d] <ModuleName> | /<ModuleRegex>/ [<ModuleVersion>] ... corelist [-v <PerlVersion>] [ <ModuleName> | /<ModuleRegex>/ ] ... corelist [-r <PerlVersion>] ... corelist --feature <FeatureName> [<FeatureName>] ... corelist --diff PerlVersion PerlVersion corelist --upstream <ModuleName>
corelist -a Unicode Unicode was first released with perl v5.6.2 v5.6.2 3.0.1 v5.8.0 3.2.0 v5.8.1 4.0.0 v5.8.2 4.0.0 v5.8.3 4.0.0 v5.8.4 4.0.1 v5.8.5 4.0.1 v5.8.6 4.0.1 v5.8.7 4.1.0 v5.8.8 4.1.0 v5.8.9 5.1.0 v5.9.0 4.0.0 v5.9.1 4.0.0 v5.9.2 4.0.1 v5.9.3 4.1.0 v5.9.4 4.1.0 v5.9.5 5.0.0 v5.10.0 5.0.0 v5.10.1 5.1.0 v5.11.0 5.1.0 v5.11.1 5.1.0 v5.11.2 5.1.0 v5.11.3 5.2.0 v5.11.4 5.2.0 v5.11.5 5.2.0 v5.12.0 5.2.0 v5.12.1 5.2.0 v5.12.2 5.2.0 v5.12.3 5.2.0 v5.12.4 5.2.0 v5.13.0 5.2.0 v5.13.1 5.2.0 v5.13.2 5.2.0 v5.13.3 5.2.0 v5.13.4 5.2.0 v5.13.5 5.2.0 v5.13.6 5.2.0 v5.13.7 6.0.0 v5.13.8 6.0.0 v5.13.9 6.0.0 v5.13.10 6.0.0 v5.13.11 6.0.0 v5.14.0 6.0.0 v5.14.1 6.0.0 v5.15.0 6.0.0
If you pass a version argument (value of $], like 5.00503 or 5.008008), you get a list of all the modules and their respective versions. (If you have the "version" module, you can also use new-style version numbers, like 5.8.8.)
In module filtering context, it can be used as Perl version filter.
If you pass a perl version you get the release date for that version only.
As a special case, if you specify the module name "Unicode", you'll get the version number of the Unicode Character Database bundled with the requested perl versions.
$ corelist File::Spec File::Spec was first released with perl 5.005 $ corelist File::Spec 0.83 File::Spec 0.83 was released with perl 5.007003 $ corelist File::Spec 0.89 File::Spec 0.89 was not in CORE (or so I think) $ corelist File::Spec::Aliens File::Spec::Aliens was not in CORE (or so I think) $ corelist /IPC::Open/ IPC::Open2 was first released with perl 5 IPC::Open3 was first released with perl 5 $ corelist /MANIFEST/i ExtUtils::Manifest was first released with perl 5.001 $ corelist /Template/ /Template/ has no match in CORE (or so I think) $ corelist -v 5.8.8 B B 1.09_01 $ corelist -v 5.8.8 /^B::/ B::Asmdata 1.01 B::Assembler 0.07 B::Bblock 1.02_01 B::Bytecode 1.01_01 B::C 1.04_01 B::CC 1.00_01 B::Concise 0.66 B::Debug 1.02_01 B::Deparse 0.71 B::Disassembler 1.05 B::Lint 1.03 B::O 1.00 B::Showlex 1.02 B::Stackobj 1.00 B::Stash 1.00 B::Terse 1.03_01 B::Xref 1.01
Currently maintained by the perl 5 porters <perl5-porters@perl.org>.
This program is distributed under the same terms as perl itself. See http://perl.org/ or http://cpan.org/ for more info on that.