<metapackage xmlns:os="http://opensuse.org/Standards/One_Click_Install" xmlns="http://opensuse.org/Standards/One_Click_Install">
<group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install perl-LWP-Online</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>perl-LWP-Online</name>
        <summary>Does your process have access to the web</summary>
        <description>This module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the
nastiest technical questions there is.

*Am I on the internet?*

The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example...

_Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip
them?_

_Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_

_If my request to the server breaks, is it because I&#x27;m offline, or because
the server is offline?_

And so on, and so forth.

But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very
difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly
behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all!

You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network
that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your
credit card details for paid access. Which means you don&#x27;t &quot;REALLY&quot; have
access.

The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable.

But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being
to ask the user &quot;duh... are you online?&quot; (when you might not have a user at
all) it&#x27;s my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt
to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install perl-LWP-Online</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>perl-LWP-Online</name>
        <summary>Does your process have access to the web</summary>
        <description>This module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the
nastiest technical questions there is.

*Am I on the internet?*

The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example...

_Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip
them?_

_Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_

_If my request to the server breaks, is it because I&#x27;m offline, or because
the server is offline?_

And so on, and so forth.

But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very
difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly
behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all!

You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network
that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your
credit card details for paid access. Which means you don&#x27;t &quot;REALLY&quot; have
access.

The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable.

But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being
to ask the user &quot;duh... are you online?&quot; (when you might not have a user at
all) it&#x27;s my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt
to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP1">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP1 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install perl-LWP-Online</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP1-Backports-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP1</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>perl-LWP-Online</name>
        <summary>Does your process have access to the web</summary>
        <description>This module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the
nastiest technical questions there is.

*Am I on the internet?*

The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example...

_Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip
them?_

_Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_

_If my request to the server breaks, is it because I&#x27;m offline, or because
the server is offline?_

And so on, and so forth.

But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very
difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly
behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all!

You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network
that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your
credit card details for paid access. Which means you don&#x27;t &quot;REALLY&quot; have
access.

The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable.

But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being
to ask the user &quot;duh... are you online?&quot; (when you might not have a user at
all) it&#x27;s my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt
to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 SP1">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP1 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install perl-LWP-Online</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP1-Backports-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP1</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>perl-LWP-Online</name>
        <summary>Does your process have access to the web</summary>
        <description>This module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the
nastiest technical questions there is.

*Am I on the internet?*

The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example...

_Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip
them?_

_Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_

_If my request to the server breaks, is it because I&#x27;m offline, or because
the server is offline?_

And so on, and so forth.

But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very
difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly
behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all!

You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network
that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your
credit card details for paid access. Which means you don&#x27;t &quot;REALLY&quot; have
access.

The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable.

But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being
to ask the user &quot;duh... are you online?&quot; (when you might not have a user at
all) it&#x27;s my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt
to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP2">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP2 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install perl-LWP-Online</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP2-Backports-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP2</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>perl-LWP-Online</name>
        <summary>Does your process have access to the web</summary>
        <description>This module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the
nastiest technical questions there is.

*Am I on the internet?*

The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example...

_Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip
them?_

_Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_

_If my request to the server breaks, is it because I&#x27;m offline, or because
the server is offline?_

And so on, and so forth.

But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very
difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly
behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all!

You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network
that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your
credit card details for paid access. Which means you don&#x27;t &quot;REALLY&quot; have
access.

The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable.

But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being
to ask the user &quot;duh... are you online?&quot; (when you might not have a user at
all) it&#x27;s my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt
to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 SP2">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP2 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install perl-LWP-Online</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP2-Backports-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP2</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>perl-LWP-Online</name>
        <summary>Does your process have access to the web</summary>
        <description>This module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the
nastiest technical questions there is.

*Am I on the internet?*

The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example...

_Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip
them?_

_Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_

_If my request to the server breaks, is it because I&#x27;m offline, or because
the server is offline?_

And so on, and so forth.

But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very
difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly
behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all!

You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network
that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your
credit card details for paid access. Which means you don&#x27;t &quot;REALLY&quot; have
access.

The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable.

But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being
to ask the user &quot;duh... are you online?&quot; (when you might not have a user at
all) it&#x27;s my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt
to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP3">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP3 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install perl-LWP-Online</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP3-Backports-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP3</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>perl-LWP-Online</name>
        <summary>Does your process have access to the web</summary>
        <description>This module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the
nastiest technical questions there is.

*Am I on the internet?*

The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example...

_Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip
them?_

_Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_

_If my request to the server breaks, is it because I&#x27;m offline, or because
the server is offline?_

And so on, and so forth.

But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very
difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly
behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all!

You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network
that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your
credit card details for paid access. Which means you don&#x27;t &quot;REALLY&quot; have
access.

The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable.

But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being
to ask the user &quot;duh... are you online?&quot; (when you might not have a user at
all) it&#x27;s my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt
to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 SP3">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP3 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install perl-LWP-Online</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP3-Backports-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP3</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>perl-LWP-Online</name>
        <summary>Does your process have access to the web</summary>
        <description>This module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the
nastiest technical questions there is.

*Am I on the internet?*

The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example...

_Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip
them?_

_Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_

_If my request to the server breaks, is it because I&#x27;m offline, or because
the server is offline?_

And so on, and so forth.

But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very
difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly
behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all!

You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network
that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your
credit card details for paid access. Which means you don&#x27;t &quot;REALLY&quot; have
access.

The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable.

But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being
to ask the user &quot;duh... are you online?&quot; (when you might not have a user at
all) it&#x27;s my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt
to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP4">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP4 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install perl-LWP-Online</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP4-Backports-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP4</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>perl-LWP-Online</name>
        <summary>Does your process have access to the web</summary>
        <description>This module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the
nastiest technical questions there is.

*Am I on the internet?*

The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example...

_Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip
them?_

_Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_

_If my request to the server breaks, is it because I&#x27;m offline, or because
the server is offline?_

And so on, and so forth.

But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very
difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly
behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all!

You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network
that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your
credit card details for paid access. Which means you don&#x27;t &quot;REALLY&quot; have
access.

The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable.

But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being
to ask the user &quot;duh... are you online?&quot; (when you might not have a user at
all) it&#x27;s my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt
to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 SP4">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP4 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install perl-LWP-Online</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP4-Backports-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP4</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>perl-LWP-Online</name>
        <summary>Does your process have access to the web</summary>
        <description>This module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the
nastiest technical questions there is.

*Am I on the internet?*

The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example...

_Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip
them?_

_Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_

_If my request to the server breaks, is it because I&#x27;m offline, or because
the server is offline?_

And so on, and so forth.

But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very
difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly
behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all!

You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network
that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your
credit card details for paid access. Which means you don&#x27;t &quot;REALLY&quot; have
access.

The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable.

But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being
to ask the user &quot;duh... are you online?&quot; (when you might not have a user at
all) it&#x27;s my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt
to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP5">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP5 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install perl-LWP-Online</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP5-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP5</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>perl-LWP-Online</name>
        <summary>Does your process have access to the web</summary>
        <description>This module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the
nastiest technical questions there is.

*Am I on the internet?*

The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example...

_Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip
them?_

_Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_

_If my request to the server breaks, is it because I&#x27;m offline, or because
the server is offline?_

And so on, and so forth.

But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very
difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly
behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all!

You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network
that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your
credit card details for paid access. Which means you don&#x27;t &quot;REALLY&quot; have
access.

The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable.

But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being
to ask the user &quot;duh... are you online?&quot; (when you might not have a user at
all) it&#x27;s my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt
to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 SP5">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP5 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install perl-LWP-Online</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP5-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP5</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>perl-LWP-Online</name>
        <summary>Does your process have access to the web</summary>
        <description>This module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the
nastiest technical questions there is.

*Am I on the internet?*

The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example...

_Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip
them?_

_Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_

_If my request to the server breaks, is it because I&#x27;m offline, or because
the server is offline?_

And so on, and so forth.

But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very
difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly
behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all!

You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network
that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your
credit card details for paid access. Which means you don&#x27;t &quot;REALLY&quot; have
access.

The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable.

But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being
to ask the user &quot;duh... are you online?&quot; (when you might not have a user at
all) it&#x27;s my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt
to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP6 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install perl-LWP-Online</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP6-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP6</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>perl-LWP-Online</name>
        <summary>Does your process have access to the web</summary>
        <description>This module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the
nastiest technical questions there is.

*Am I on the internet?*

The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example...

_Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip
them?_

_Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_

_If my request to the server breaks, is it because I&#x27;m offline, or because
the server is offline?_

And so on, and so forth.

But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very
difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly
behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all!

You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network
that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your
credit card details for paid access. Which means you don&#x27;t &quot;REALLY&quot; have
access.

The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable.

But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being
to ask the user &quot;duh... are you online?&quot; (when you might not have a user at
all) it&#x27;s my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt
to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 SP6">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP6 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install perl-LWP-Online</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP6-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP6</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>perl-LWP-Online</name>
        <summary>Does your process have access to the web</summary>
        <description>This module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the
nastiest technical questions there is.

*Am I on the internet?*

The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example...

_Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip
them?_

_Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_

_If my request to the server breaks, is it because I&#x27;m offline, or because
the server is offline?_

And so on, and so forth.

But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very
difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly
behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all!

You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network
that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your
credit card details for paid access. Which means you don&#x27;t &quot;REALLY&quot; have
access.

The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable.

But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being
to ask the user &quot;duh... are you online?&quot; (when you might not have a user at
all) it&#x27;s my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt
to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP7">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP7 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install perl-LWP-Online</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP7-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP7</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>perl-LWP-Online</name>
        <summary>Does your process have access to the web</summary>
        <description>This module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the
nastiest technical questions there is.

*Am I on the internet?*

The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example...

_Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip
them?_

_Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_

_If my request to the server breaks, is it because I&#x27;m offline, or because
the server is offline?_

And so on, and so forth.

But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very
difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly
behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all!

You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network
that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your
credit card details for paid access. Which means you don&#x27;t &quot;REALLY&quot; have
access.

The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable.

But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being
to ask the user &quot;duh... are you online?&quot; (when you might not have a user at
all) it&#x27;s my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt
to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 SP7">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP7 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install perl-LWP-Online</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP7-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP7</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>perl-LWP-Online</name>
        <summary>Does your process have access to the web</summary>
        <description>This module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the
nastiest technical questions there is.

*Am I on the internet?*

The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example...

_Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip
them?_

_Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_

_If my request to the server breaks, is it because I&#x27;m offline, or because
the server is offline?_

And so on, and so forth.

But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very
difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly
behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all!

You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network
that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your
credit card details for paid access. Which means you don&#x27;t &quot;REALLY&quot; have
access.

The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable.

But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being
to ask the user &quot;duh... are you online?&quot; (when you might not have a user at
all) it&#x27;s my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt
to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 16.0">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 16.0 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install perl-LWP-Online</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-16.0-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 16.0</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>perl-LWP-Online</name>
        <summary>Does your process have access to the web</summary>
        <description>This module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the
nastiest technical questions there is.

*Am I on the internet?*

The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example...

_Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip
them?_

_Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_

_If my request to the server breaks, is it because I&#x27;m offline, or because
the server is offline?_

And so on, and so forth.

But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very
difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly
behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all!

You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network
that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your
credit card details for paid access. Which means you don&#x27;t &quot;REALLY&quot; have
access.

The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable.

But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being
to ask the user &quot;duh... are you online?&quot; (when you might not have a user at
all) it&#x27;s my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt
to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 16.0">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 16.0 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install perl-LWP-Online</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-16.0-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 16.0</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>perl-LWP-Online</name>
        <summary>Does your process have access to the web</summary>
        <description>This module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the
nastiest technical questions there is.

*Am I on the internet?*

The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example...

_Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip
them?_

_Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_

_If my request to the server breaks, is it because I&#x27;m offline, or because
the server is offline?_

And so on, and so forth.

But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very
difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly
behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all!

You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network
that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your
credit card details for paid access. Which means you don&#x27;t &quot;REALLY&quot; have
access.

The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable.

But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being
to ask the user &quot;duh... are you online?&quot; (when you might not have a user at
all) it&#x27;s my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt
to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  </metapackage>