NAME
    cpan-outdated-fresh - Indicate out-of-date modules by walking the
    metacpan releases backwards

VERSION
    version 0.001005

SYNOPSIS
      cpan-outdated-fresh [--args]

        --age  TIMESPEC  The maximum age for a release (default: 7d)
         -a    TIMESPEC

        --develop        Include development releases in output
        --devel
        --dev

        --no-develop     Exclude development releases from output (default)
        --no-devel
        --no-dev

        --authorized     Show only authorized releases in output (default)
        --authed

        --no-authorized  Show even unauthorized releases in output
        --no-authed

  TIMESPEC
      <int seconds>
      <int><multiplier>

   multipliers
      s = second
      m = minute
      h = hour
      d = day
      w = 7 days
      M = 31 days
      Y = 365 days

DESCRIPTION
    This application bears much resemblance to cpan-outdated, but with a few
    important differences.

    *   MetaCPAN Driven

    *   "--dev" supported

    *   Temporal difference comparison.

  Temporal difference comparison
    One of the big features of using the "MetaCPAN" API, is the ability to
    filter results into a time bracket.

    As such, this application can tell you only about updates that happened
    to things you have installed "IF" they've been recently updated.

    For instance, one problem I kept facing was this:

      $ cpan-outdated
      # Broken::Package
      $ cpanm Broken::Package
      # Broken::Package is broken!
      ... wait a few days
      $ cpan-outdated
      # Broken::Package
      $ cpanm Broken::Package
      # Broken::Package is broken!
      ... doh
      ... repeat.

    With this app, as soon as "Broken::Package" falls outside the "age"
    window, you stop getting told about it.

    DU;DC - Didn't Update, Don't Care.

    This also has a benefit that if you run it very frequently, you can get
    a speed boost by narrowing the update window.

      $ time
      # 12:00
      $ cpan-outdated
      # install ALL the things
      ... wait a while
      $ time
      #  1:00
      $ cpan-outdated-fresh -a 1h
      # One update

    Essentially rewarding you for frequent use by being fast for frequent
    use.

   Downside
    Unfortunately, this optimization has a trade-off, namely, it scales very
    poorly vs time, due to exponential growth.

    "cpan-outdated" uses "02packages", which has its limits, and its
    inefficiencies, but the inefficiencies are effectively constant due to
    old packages getting pruned from "02packages" as newer versions replace
    them.

    So:

      cpan-outdated-fresh -a 30d

    Will take substantially more time to execute than

      cpan-outdated

    We've tried to combat this by trimming some cycles, but they may still
    prove over-zealous.

    However, this approach is still going to give you "--dev" results that
    "cpan-outdated" can't deliver.

SEE ALSO
    *   "App::cpanoutdated::fresh"

AUTHOR
    Kent Fredric <kentnl@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
    This software is copyright (c) 2014 by Kent Fredric
    <kentfredric@gmail.com>.

    This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
    the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.