in reply to Re^2: How best to validate the keys of hashref arguments?
in thread How best to validate the keys of hashref arguments?

I have been asking kind of the same question recently. I was told no such animal exists. Read through that discussion on how one might change privileged files securely, though. It's interesting. As pointed out in that thread, there are beasts out there like webmin (which I forgot about years ago) but it is full of security holes and it's ill-advised to use it.

For now, I'm just kind of writing modules for use on my own personal home network to help me automate set up of websites on local machines with an eye toward eventually being able to automate tasks on a live server as a long term goal. Thanks for the link to the book. Maybe I'll check it out.

$PM = "Perl Monk's";
$MCF = "Most Clueless Friar Abbot Bishop Pontiff Deacon Curate";
$nysus = $PM . ' ' . $MCF;
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Re^4: How best to validate the keys of hashref arguments?
by afoken (Chancellor) on Mar 17, 2017 at 07:33 UTC
    I have been asking kind of the same question recently. I was told no such animal exists.

    First, you should have linked to Re^12: Best way to write to a file owned by root?. Secondly, you were NOT told that no such tool exists:

    Is there some tool or module already out like that that would allow me safely automate updates to my /etc/hosts file?
    I don't know of any.

    One person stating lack of knowledge is quite different from non-existence. Automated, remote administration of a bunch of machines should be a common problem. So, some solutions should exist. How secure those solutions are, and how well they scale, are different questions.

    Alexander

    --
    Today I will gladly share my knowledge and experience, for there are no sweeter words than "I told you so". ;-)