excellent Storable module is used for storing sessions. I
                owe him much, as Storable is usefull in a lot of other
                modules.
    Perl itself and the above modules are available from any CPAN mirror,
    for example
           ftp://ftp.funet.fi/pub/languages/perl/CPAN/modules/by-module
    Note that you don't need to install these manually, the CPAN module will
    help you. See the the section on "Automatic Installation" below.
  Automatic Installation
    Installing this module (and the prerequisites from above) is quite
    simple, if you have the CPAN module available and network access, you
    might try an automatic installation:
        perl -MCPAN -e shell
    If the CPAN prompt appears, asking you for commands, enter
        install Bundle::HTML::EP
    Automatic installation typically doesn't work on Windows, due to a
    missing C development environment. However, you might try
        ppm install http://www.cpan.org/authors/id/J/JW/JWIED/HTML-EP.ppd
  Manual Installation
    If automatic installation doesn't work, you just fetch the archive,
    extract it with
        gzip -cd HTML-EP-0.1125.tar.gz | tar xf -
    (this is for Unix users, Windows users would prefer WinZip or something
    similar) and then enter the following:
        cd HTML-EP-0.1125
        perl Makefile.PL
        make
        make test
    If any tests fail, let me know. Otherwise go on with
        make install
    This will put the required Perl modules into a destination where Perl
    finds it by default. Additionally it will install a single CGI binary,
    called `ep.cgi'.
    The docs are available online with
        perldoc HTML::EP
    If you prefer an HTML version of the docs, try
        pod2html lib/HTML/EP.pm
    in the source directory.
  Using the CGI binary
    You have different options for integrating EP into your WWW server,
    depending on which server you are using and the permissions you have.
    The simplest possibility is running an external CGI binary. Another
    option is to use mod_perl with Apache, see the section on "Using
    mod_perl" below.
    I suggest that you choose an extension and configure your WWW server for
    feeding files with this extension into `ep.cgi'. For example, with
    Apache, you can add the following lines to your `srm.conf':
        ScriptAlias /cgi-bin/ep.cgi /usr/bin/ep.cgi
        AddType x-ep-script .ep
        Action x-ep-script /cgi-bin/ep.cgi
    This tells Apache that files with extension ep.cgi are handled by the
    CGI binary `/usr/bin/ep.cgi'. On Windows, you should replace ep.cgi with
    ep.cgi.bat. Make sure, that the ScriptAlias line is entered *before* any
    other ScriptAlias instruction! In particular, the following would be
    wrong:
        ScriptAlias /cgi-bin/ /home/httpd/cgi-bin/
        ...
        ScriptAlias /cgi-bin/ep.cgi /usr/bin/ep.cgi
    The first rule would be applied before our rule, so that it could never
    match.
    From now on your server will never return files with extension .ep
    directly! Verify your installation by creating the following file:
        Local time
        
        The current time is:
        scalar(localtime(time))
        
    (Note that this is a much shorter version of the example in the
    synopsis.) Store it as `/test.ep' on your web server and retrieve the
    file via your Web server. If you see the time displayed, you are up and
    running.
  Using mod_perl
    The EP package can be integrated into mod_perl, for example by using the
    following commands in `srm.conf':
        PerlModule Apache::EP
        
          SetHandler perl-script
          PerlHandler Apache::EP->handler
          Options ExecCGI
        
    Keep in mind, that mod_perl differs in many details from programming CGI
    binaries. In particular you might need to restart Apache for loading
    changes in modules.
  Using the Internet Information Server
    I am sure there is a better way of installation, in the sense of
    mod_perl, however, I am no IIS expert. I can only recommend using Perl
    as an external binary, in the sense of CGI.
    The idea is to advice the IIS, that files with extension .ep have to be
    executed by running
            C:\Perl\bin\perl.exe c:\Perl\bin\ep.cgi %s%s
    with %s%s being the path to the EP document. (Of course the paths have
    to be adjusted to your local Perl.) This can be done by creating a new
    extension in the window "Base directory/Configure". (Window name
    translated from the german IIS, itīs "Basisverzeichnis / Konfigurieren"
    here and might be different in english.)
  Available methods
    All EP tags are starting with the prefix *ep-*. Some available tags are:
    ep-comment
        This is a multi-line tag for embedding comments into your HTML page.
        But why use this tag, instead of the usual HTML comment, `
                
                    This is another comment, but you won't see it
                    in your browser. The HTML editor will show it
                    to you, however!
                
            
        Do not try to embed EP instructions into the comment section! They
        won't produce output, but they might be executed anyways.
    ep-perl
        This is for embedding Perl into your script. There are two versions
        of it: A multiline version is for embedding the Perl code
        immediately into your script. Example:
            
                The Date
                
                    The Date
                    Hello, today its the
                    
                    
                        # This little piece of Perl code will be executed
                        # while scanning the page.
                        #
                        # Let's calculate the date!
                        #
                        my($sec,$min,$hour,$mday,$mon,$year)
                            = localtime(time);
                        # Leave a string with the date as result. Will be
                        # inserted into the HTML stream:
                        sprintf("%02d.%02d.%04d", $mday, $mon+1, $year+1900);
                    
                    
                
            
        If you don't like to embed Perl code, you may store it into a
        different file. That's what the single-line version of ep-perl is
        for:
            
                The Date
                
                    The Date
                    Hello, today its the
                    
                    
                    
                
            
        You have noticed, that the little script's result was inserted into
        the HTML page, did you? It did return a date, in other words a
        string consisting of letters, digits and dots. There's no problem
        with inserting such a string into an HTML stream.
        But that's not always the case! Say you have a string like
            Use