=head1 NAME User::Identity::System - physical system of a person =head1 INHERITANCE User::Identity::System is an User::Identity::Item =head1 SYNOPSIS use User::Identity; use User::Identity::System; my $me = User::Identity->new(...); my $server = User::Identity::System->new(...); $me->add(system => $server); # Simpler use User::Identity; my $me = User::Identity->new(...); my $addr = $me->add(system => ...); =head1 DESCRIPTION The C object contains the description of the user's presence on a system. The systems are collected by an L object. Nearly all methods can return undef. =head1 METHODS =head2 Constructors User::Identity::System-EB([NAME], OPTIONS) =over 4 Create a new system. You can specify a name as first argument, or in the OPTION list. Without a specific name, the organization is used as name. Option --Defined in --Default description User::Identity::Item undef hostname 'localhost' location undef name User::Identity::Item os undef parent User::Identity::Item undef password undef username undef . description STRING . hostname DOMAIN =over 4 The hostname of the described system. It is prefered to use full system names, not abbreviations. For instance, you can better use C than C to avoid confusion. =back . location NICKNAME|OBJECT =over 4 The NICKNAME of a location which is defined for the same user. You can also specify a L OBJECT. =back . name STRING . os STRING =over 4 The name of the operating system which is run on the server. It is adviced to use the names as used by Perl's C<$^O> variable. See the perlvar man-page for this variable, and perlport for the possible values. =back . parent OBJECT . password STRING =over 4 The password to be used to login. This password must be un-encoded: directly usable. Be warned that storing un-encoded passwords is a high security list. =back . username STRING =over 4 The username to be used to login to this host. =back =back =head2 Attributes $obj-EB =over 4 See L =back $obj-EB =over 4 =back $obj-EB =over 4 Returns the object which describes to which location this system relates. The location may be used to find the name of the organization involved, or to create a signature. If no location is specified, undef is returned. =back $obj-EB([NEWNAME]) =over 4 See L =back $obj-EB =over 4 =back $obj-EB =over 4 =back $obj-EB =over 4 =back =head2 Collections $obj-EB(COLLECTION, ROLE) =over 4 See L =back $obj-EB(OBJECT | ([TYPE], OPTIONS)) =over 4 See L =back $obj-EB(NAME) =over 4 See L =back $obj-EB(COLLECTION, ROLE) =over 4 See L =back $obj-EB([PARENT]) =over 4 See L =back $obj-EB(OBJECT|NAME) =over 4 See L =back $obj-EB User::Identity::System-EB =over 4 See L =back $obj-EB =over 4 See L =back =head1 DIAGNOSTICS I $object is not a collection. The first argument is an object, but not of a class which extends L. I Cannot load collection module for $type ($class). Either the specified $type does not exist, or that module named $class returns compilation errors. If the type as specified in the warning is not the name of a package, you specified a nickname which was not defined. Maybe you forgot the 'require' the package which defines the nickname. I Creation of a collection via $class failed. The $class did compile, but it was not possible to create an object of that class using the options you specified. I Don't know what type of collection you want to add. If you add a collection, it must either by a collection object or a list of options which can be used to create a collection object. In the latter case, the type of collection must be specified. I No collection $name The collection with $name does not exist and can not be created. =head1 SEE ALSO This module is part of User-Identity distribution version 0.91, built on January 08, 2007. Website: F =head1 LICENSE Copyrights 2003,2004,2007 by Mark Overmeer .For other contributors see Changes. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See F