Source: libmaxmind-db-reader-perl Maintainer: Debian Perl Group Uploaders: Florian Schlichting Section: perl Testsuite: autopkgtest-pkg-perl Priority: optional Build-Depends: debhelper (>= 11) Build-Depends-Indep: libdata-ieee754-perl, libdata-printer-perl, libdata-validate-ip-perl (>= 0.25), libdatetime-perl, liblist-allutils-perl, libmaxmind-db-common-perl, libmodule-implementation-perl, libmoo-perl (>= 1.003000), libmoox-strictconstructor-perl, libnamespace-autoclean-perl, libpath-class-perl (>= 0.27), librole-tiny-perl (>= 1.003002), libscalar-list-utils-perl (>= 1:1.42), libtest-bits-perl, libtest-fatal-perl, libtest-number-delta-perl, libtest-requires-perl, perl Standards-Version: 4.3.0 Vcs-Browser: https://salsa.debian.org/perl-team/modules/packages/libmaxmind-db-reader-perl Vcs-Git: https://salsa.debian.org/perl-team/modules/packages/libmaxmind-db-reader-perl.git Homepage: https://metacpan.org/release/MaxMind-DB-Reader Package: libmaxmind-db-reader-perl Architecture: all Depends: ${misc:Depends}, ${perl:Depends}, libdata-ieee754-perl, libdata-printer-perl, libdata-validate-ip-perl (>= 0.25), libdatetime-perl, liblist-allutils-perl, libmaxmind-db-common-perl, libmodule-implementation-perl, libmoo-perl (>= 1.003000), libmoox-strictconstructor-perl, libnamespace-autoclean-perl, librole-tiny-perl (>= 1.003002) Recommends: libmaxmind-db-reader-xs-perl Description: Perl module to read MaxMind DB files and look up IP addresses MaxMind::DB::Reader provides a low-level interface to the MaxMind DB file format as described at https://maxmind.github.io/MaxMind-DB/. . If you are looking for an interface to MaxMind's GeoIP2 or GeoLite2 downloadable databases, you should also check out the libgeoip2-perl package, which provides a higher level OO interface to those databases. . The MaxMind-DB-Reader distribution ships with a single pure Perl implementation of the Reader API. There is a separate distribution that provides an XS implementation, which links against libmaxminddb. It is packaged as libmaxmind-db-reader-xs-perl and approximately 100 times faster than the pure Perl implementation.