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[perl5.git] / ext / B / B / Concise.pm
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c99ca59a 1package B::Concise;
c27ea44e 2# Copyright (C) 2000-2003 Stephen McCamant. All rights reserved.
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3# This program is free software; you can redistribute and/or modify it
4# under the same terms as Perl itself.
5
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6# Note: we need to keep track of how many use declarations/BEGIN
7# blocks this module uses, so we can avoid printing them when user
8# asks for the BEGIN blocks in her program. Update the comments and
9# the count in concise_specials if you add or delete one. The
10# -MO=Concise counts as use #1.
78ad9108 11
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12use strict; # use #2
13use warnings; # uses #3 and #4, since warnings uses Carp
78ad9108 14
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15use Exporter (); # use #5
16
9e0f9750 17our $VERSION = "0.74";
78ad9108 18our @ISA = qw(Exporter);
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19our @EXPORT_OK = qw( set_style set_style_standard add_callback
20 concise_subref concise_cv concise_main
21 add_style walk_output compile reset_sequence );
22our %EXPORT_TAGS =
23 ( io => [qw( walk_output compile reset_sequence )],
24 style => [qw( add_style set_style_standard )],
25 cb => [qw( add_callback )],
26 mech => [qw( concise_subref concise_cv concise_main )], );
78ad9108 27
8ec8fbef 28# use #6
c99ca59a 29use B qw(class ppname main_start main_root main_cv cstring svref_2object
6a077020 30 SVf_IOK SVf_NOK SVf_POK SVf_IVisUV SVf_FAKE OPf_KIDS OPf_SPECIAL
6c5e080d 31 CVf_ANON PAD_FAKELEX_ANON PAD_FAKELEX_MULTI);
c99ca59a 32
f95e3c3c 33my %style =
c99ca59a 34 ("terse" =>
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35 ["(?(#label =>\n)?)(*( )*)#class (#addr) #name (?([#targ])?) "
36 . "#svclass~(?((#svaddr))?)~#svval~(?(label \"#coplabel\")?)\n",
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37 "(*( )*)goto #class (#addr)\n",
38 "#class pp_#name"],
39 "concise" =>
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40 ["#hyphseq2 (*( (x( ;)x))*)<#classsym> #exname#arg(?([#targarglife])?)"
41 . "~#flags(?(/#private)?)(?(:#hints)?)(x(;~->#next)x)\n"
cc02ea56 42 , " (*( )*) goto #seq\n",
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43 "(?(<#seq>)?)#exname#arg(?([#targarglife])?)"],
44 "linenoise" =>
45 ["(x(;(*( )*))x)#noise#arg(?([#targarg])?)(x( ;\n)x)",
46 "gt_#seq ",
47 "(?(#seq)?)#noise#arg(?([#targarg])?)"],
48 "debug" =>
49 ["#class (#addr)\n\top_next\t\t#nextaddr\n\top_sibling\t#sibaddr\n\t"
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50 . "op_ppaddr\tPL_ppaddr[OP_#NAME]\n\top_type\t\t#typenum\n" .
51 ($] > 5.009 ? '' : "\top_seq\t\t#seqnum\n")
d5ec2987 52 . "\top_flags\t#flagval\n\top_private\t#privval\t#hintsval\n"
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53 . "(?(\top_first\t#firstaddr\n)?)(?(\top_last\t\t#lastaddr\n)?)"
54 . "(?(\top_sv\t\t#svaddr\n)?)",
55 " GOTO #addr\n",
56 "#addr"],
57 "env" => [$ENV{B_CONCISE_FORMAT}, $ENV{B_CONCISE_GOTO_FORMAT},
58 $ENV{B_CONCISE_TREE_FORMAT}],
59 );
60
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61# Renderings, ie how Concise prints, is controlled by these vars
62# primary:
63our $stylename; # selects current style from %style
64my $order = "basic"; # how optree is walked & printed: basic, exec, tree
65
66# rendering mechanics:
67# these 'formats' are the line-rendering templates
68# they're updated from %style when $stylename changes
69my ($format, $gotofmt, $treefmt);
70
71# lesser players:
72my $base = 36; # how <sequence#> is displayed
73my $big_endian = 1; # more <sequence#> display
74my $tree_style = 0; # tree-order details
75my $banner = 1; # print banner before optree is traversed
cc02ea56 76my $do_main = 0; # force printing of main routine
f18deeb9 77my $show_src; # show source code
724aa791 78
cc02ea56 79# another factor: can affect all styles!
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80our @callbacks; # allow external management
81
82set_style_standard("concise");
83
c99ca59a 84my $curcv;
c27ea44e 85my $cop_seq_base;
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86
87sub set_style {
88 ($format, $gotofmt, $treefmt) = @_;
724aa791 89 #warn "set_style: deprecated, use set_style_standard instead\n"; # someday
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90 die "expecting 3 style-format args\n" unless @_ == 3;
91}
92
93sub add_style {
94 my ($newstyle,@args) = @_;
95 die "style '$newstyle' already exists, choose a new name\n"
96 if exists $style{$newstyle};
97 die "expecting 3 style-format args\n" unless @args == 3;
98 $style{$newstyle} = [@args];
724aa791 99 $stylename = $newstyle; # update rendering state
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100}
101
31b49ad4 102sub set_style_standard {
724aa791 103 ($stylename) = @_; # update rendering state
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104 die "err: style '$stylename' unknown\n" unless exists $style{$stylename};
105 set_style(@{$style{$stylename}});
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106}
107
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108sub add_callback {
109 push @callbacks, @_;
110}
c99ca59a 111
f95e3c3c 112# output handle, used with all Concise-output printing
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113our $walkHandle; # public for your convenience
114BEGIN { $walkHandle = \*STDOUT }
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115
116sub walk_output { # updates $walkHandle
117 my $handle = shift;
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118 return $walkHandle unless $handle; # allow use as accessor
119
f95e3c3c 120 if (ref $handle eq 'SCALAR') {
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121 require Config;
122 die "no perlio in this build, can't call walk_output (\\\$scalar)\n"
123 unless $Config::Config{useperlio};
f95e3c3c 124 # in 5.8+, open(FILEHANDLE,MODE,REFERENCE) writes to string
2ce64696 125 open my $tmp, '>', $handle; # but cant re-set existing STDOUT
f95e3c3c 126 $walkHandle = $tmp; # so use my $tmp as intermediate var
cc02ea56 127 return $walkHandle;
f95e3c3c 128 }
cc02ea56 129 my $iotype = ref $handle;
f95e3c3c 130 die "expecting argument/object that can print\n"
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131 unless $iotype eq 'GLOB' or $iotype and $handle->can('print');
132 $walkHandle = $handle;
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133}
134
8ec8fbef 135sub concise_subref {
c0939cee 136 my($order, $coderef, $name) = @_;
f95e3c3c 137 my $codeobj = svref_2object($coderef);
cc02ea56 138
c0939cee 139 return concise_stashref(@_)
cc02ea56 140 unless ref $codeobj eq 'B::CV';
c0939cee 141 concise_cv_obj($order, $codeobj, $name);
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142}
143
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144sub concise_stashref {
145 my($order, $h) = @_;
6cc5d258 146 local *s;
cc02ea56 147 foreach my $k (sort keys %$h) {
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148 next unless defined $h->{$k};
149 *s = $h->{$k};
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150 my $coderef = *s{CODE} or next;
151 reset_sequence();
152 print "FUNC: ", *s, "\n";
153 my $codeobj = svref_2object($coderef);
154 next unless ref $codeobj eq 'B::CV';
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155 eval { concise_cv_obj($order, $codeobj, $k) };
156 warn "err $@ on $codeobj" if $@;
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157 }
158}
159
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160# This should have been called concise_subref, but it was exported
161# under this name in versions before 0.56
c0939cee 162*concise_cv = \&concise_subref;
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163
164sub concise_cv_obj {
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165 my ($order, $cv, $name) = @_;
166 # name is either a string, or a CODE ref (copy of $cv arg??)
167
c99ca59a 168 $curcv = $cv;
d51cf0c9 169
2018a5c3 170 if (ref($cv->XSUBANY) =~ /B::(\w+)/) {
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171 print $walkHandle "$name is a constant sub, optimized to a $1\n";
172 return;
173 }
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174 if ($cv->XSUB) {
175 print $walkHandle "$name is XS code\n";
176 return;
177 }
178 if (class($cv->START) eq "NULL") {
179 no strict 'refs';
180 if (ref $name eq 'CODE') {
181 print $walkHandle "coderef $name has no START\n";
182 }
183 elsif (exists &$name) {
e75702e9 184 print $walkHandle "$name exists in stash, but has no START\n";
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185 }
186 else {
187 print $walkHandle "$name not in symbol table\n";
188 }
189 return;
190 }
c27ea44e 191 sequence($cv->START);
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192 if ($order eq "exec") {
193 walk_exec($cv->START);
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194 }
195 elsif ($order eq "basic") {
196 # walk_topdown($cv->ROOT, sub { $_[0]->concise($_[1]) }, 0);
197 my $root = $cv->ROOT;
198 unless (ref $root eq 'B::NULL') {
199 walk_topdown($root, sub { $_[0]->concise($_[1]) }, 0);
200 } else {
201 print $walkHandle "B::NULL encountered doing ROOT on $cv. avoiding disaster\n";
202 }
c99ca59a 203 } else {
f95e3c3c 204 print $walkHandle tree($cv->ROOT, 0);
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205 }
206}
207
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208sub concise_main {
209 my($order) = @_;
210 sequence(main_start);
211 $curcv = main_cv;
212 if ($order eq "exec") {
213 return if class(main_start) eq "NULL";
214 walk_exec(main_start);
215 } elsif ($order eq "tree") {
216 return if class(main_root) eq "NULL";
f95e3c3c 217 print $walkHandle tree(main_root, 0);
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218 } elsif ($order eq "basic") {
219 return if class(main_root) eq "NULL";
220 walk_topdown(main_root,
221 sub { $_[0]->concise($_[1]) }, 0);
222 }
223}
224
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225sub concise_specials {
226 my($name, $order, @cv_s) = @_;
227 my $i = 1;
228 if ($name eq "BEGIN") {
c0939cee 229 splice(@cv_s, 0, 8); # skip 7 BEGIN blocks in this file. NOW 8 ??
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230 } elsif ($name eq "CHECK") {
231 pop @cv_s; # skip the CHECK block that calls us
232 }
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233 for my $cv (@cv_s) {
234 print $walkHandle "$name $i:\n";
8ec8fbef 235 $i++;
c0939cee 236 concise_cv_obj($order, $cv, $name);
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237 }
238}
239
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240my $start_sym = "\e(0"; # "\cN" sometimes also works
241my $end_sym = "\e(B"; # "\cO" respectively
242
f95e3c3c 243my @tree_decorations =
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244 ([" ", "--", "+-", "|-", "| ", "`-", "-", 1],
245 [" ", "-", "+", "+", "|", "`", "", 0],
246 [" ", map("$start_sym$_$end_sym", "qq", "wq", "tq", "x ", "mq", "q"), 1],
247 [" ", map("$start_sym$_$end_sym", "q", "w", "t", "x", "m"), "", 0],
248 );
78ad9108 249
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250my @render_packs; # collect -stash=<packages>
251
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252sub compileOpts {
253 # set rendering state from options and args
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254 my (@options,@args);
255 if (@_) {
256 @options = grep(/^-/, @_);
257 @args = grep(!/^-/, @_);
258 }
c99ca59a 259 for my $o (@options) {
cc02ea56 260 # mode/order
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261 if ($o eq "-basic") {
262 $order = "basic";
263 } elsif ($o eq "-exec") {
264 $order = "exec";
265 } elsif ($o eq "-tree") {
266 $order = "tree";
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267 }
268 # tree-specific
269 elsif ($o eq "-compact") {
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270 $tree_style |= 1;
271 } elsif ($o eq "-loose") {
272 $tree_style &= ~1;
273 } elsif ($o eq "-vt") {
274 $tree_style |= 2;
275 } elsif ($o eq "-ascii") {
276 $tree_style &= ~2;
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277 }
278 # sequence numbering
279 elsif ($o =~ /^-base(\d+)$/) {
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280 $base = $1;
281 } elsif ($o eq "-bigendian") {
282 $big_endian = 1;
283 } elsif ($o eq "-littleendian") {
284 $big_endian = 0;
cc02ea56 285 }
9e0f9750 286 # miscellaneous, presentation
cc02ea56 287 elsif ($o eq "-nobanner") {
724aa791 288 $banner = 0;
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289 } elsif ($o eq "-banner") {
290 $banner = 1;
291 }
292 elsif ($o eq "-main") {
293 $do_main = 1;
294 } elsif ($o eq "-nomain") {
295 $do_main = 0;
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296 } elsif ($o eq "-src") {
297 $show_src = 1;
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298 }
299 elsif ($o =~ /^-stash=(.*)/) {
300 my $pkg = $1;
301 no strict 'refs';
302 eval "require $pkg" unless defined %{$pkg.'::'};
303 push @render_packs, $pkg;
724aa791 304 }
cc02ea56 305 # line-style options
724aa791 306 elsif (exists $style{substr($o, 1)}) {
f95e3c3c 307 $stylename = substr($o, 1);
724aa791 308 set_style_standard($stylename);
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309 } else {
310 warn "Option $o unrecognized";
311 }
312 }
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313 return (@args);
314}
315
316sub compile {
317 my (@args) = compileOpts(@_);
c27ea44e 318 return sub {
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319 my @newargs = compileOpts(@_); # accept new rendering options
320 warn "disregarding non-options: @newargs\n" if @newargs;
321
322 for my $objname (@args) {
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323 next unless $objname; # skip null args to avoid noisy responses
324
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325 if ($objname eq "BEGIN") {
326 concise_specials("BEGIN", $order,
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327 B::begin_av->isa("B::AV") ?
328 B::begin_av->ARRAY : ());
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329 } elsif ($objname eq "INIT") {
330 concise_specials("INIT", $order,
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331 B::init_av->isa("B::AV") ?
332 B::init_av->ARRAY : ());
cc02ea56
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333 } elsif ($objname eq "CHECK") {
334 concise_specials("CHECK", $order,
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335 B::check_av->isa("B::AV") ?
336 B::check_av->ARRAY : ());
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337 } elsif ($objname eq "UNITCHECK") {
338 concise_specials("UNITCHECK", $order,
339 B::unitcheck_av->isa("B::AV") ?
340 B::unitcheck_av->ARRAY : ());
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341 } elsif ($objname eq "END") {
342 concise_specials("END", $order,
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343 B::end_av->isa("B::AV") ?
344 B::end_av->ARRAY : ());
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345 }
346 else {
347 # convert function names to subrefs
348 my $objref;
349 if (ref $objname) {
350 print $walkHandle "B::Concise::compile($objname)\n"
351 if $banner;
352 $objref = $objname;
8ec8fbef 353 } else {
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354 $objname = "main::" . $objname unless $objname =~ /::/;
355 print $walkHandle "$objname:\n";
356 no strict 'refs';
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357 unless (exists &$objname) {
358 print $walkHandle "err: unknown function ($objname)\n";
359 return;
360 }
cc02ea56 361 $objref = \&$objname;
8ec8fbef 362 }
c0939cee 363 concise_subref($order, $objref, $objname);
c99ca59a
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364 }
365 }
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366 for my $pkg (@render_packs) {
367 no strict 'refs';
368 concise_stashref($order, \%{$pkg.'::'});
369 }
370
371 if (!@args or $do_main or @render_packs) {
f95e3c3c 372 print $walkHandle "main program:\n" if $do_main;
31b49ad4 373 concise_main($order);
c99ca59a 374 }
cc02ea56 375 return @args; # something
c99ca59a
SM
376 }
377}
378
379my %labels;
724aa791 380my $lastnext; # remembers op-chain, used to insert gotos
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381
382my %opclass = ('OP' => "0", 'UNOP' => "1", 'BINOP' => "2", 'LOGOP' => "|",
383 'LISTOP' => "@", 'PMOP' => "/", 'SVOP' => "\$", 'GVOP' => "*",
051f02e9 384 'PVOP' => '"', 'LOOP' => "{", 'COP' => ";", 'PADOP' => "#");
c99ca59a 385
8ec8fbef 386no warnings 'qw'; # "Possible attempt to put comments..."; use #7
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387my @linenoise =
388 qw'# () sc ( @? 1 $* gv *{ m$ m@ m% m? p/ *$ $ $# & a& pt \\ s\\ rf bl
c99ca59a
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389 ` *? <> ?? ?/ r/ c/ // qr s/ /c y/ = @= C sC Cp sp df un BM po +1 +I
390 -1 -I 1+ I+ 1- I- ** * i* / i/ %$ i% x + i+ - i- . " << >> < i<
391 > i> <= i, >= i. == i= != i! <? i? s< s> s, s. s= s! s? b& b^ b| -0 -i
392 ! ~ a2 si cs rd sr e^ lg sq in %x %o ab le ss ve ix ri sf FL od ch cy
393 uf lf uc lc qm @ [f [ @[ eh vl ky dl ex % ${ @{ uk pk st jn ) )[ a@
394 a% sl +] -] [- [+ so rv GS GW MS MW .. f. .f && || ^^ ?: &= |= -> s{ s}
395 v} ca wa di rs ;; ; ;d }{ { } {} f{ it {l l} rt }l }n }r dm }g }e ^o
396 ^c ^| ^# um bm t~ u~ ~d DB db ^s se ^g ^r {w }w pf pr ^O ^K ^R ^W ^d ^v
397 ^e ^t ^k t. fc ic fl .s .p .b .c .l .a .h g1 s1 g2 s2 ?. l? -R -W -X -r
398 -w -x -e -o -O -z -s -M -A -C -S -c -b -f -d -p -l -u -g -k -t -T -B cd
399 co cr u. cm ut r. l@ s@ r@ mD uD oD rD tD sD wD cD f$ w$ p$ sh e$ k$ g3
400 g4 s4 g5 s5 T@ C@ L@ G@ A@ S@ Hg Hc Hr Hw Mg Mc Ms Mr Sg Sc So rq do {e
401 e} {t t} g6 G6 6e g7 G7 7e g8 G8 8e g9 G9 9e 6s 7s 8s 9s 6E 7E 8E 9E Pn
c27ea44e 402 Pu GP SP EP Gn Gg GG SG EG g0 c$ lk t$ ;s n> // /= CO';
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403
404my $chars = "0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ";
405
19e169bf 406sub op_flags { # common flags (see BASOP.op_flags in op.h)
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407 my($x) = @_;
408 my(@v);
409 push @v, "v" if ($x & 3) == 1;
410 push @v, "s" if ($x & 3) == 2;
411 push @v, "l" if ($x & 3) == 3;
412 push @v, "K" if $x & 4;
413 push @v, "P" if $x & 8;
414 push @v, "R" if $x & 16;
415 push @v, "M" if $x & 32;
416 push @v, "S" if $x & 64;
417 push @v, "*" if $x & 128;
418 return join("", @v);
419}
420
421sub base_n {
422 my $x = shift;
423 return "-" . base_n(-$x) if $x < 0;
424 my $str = "";
425 do { $str .= substr($chars, $x % $base, 1) } while $x = int($x / $base);
426 $str = reverse $str if $big_endian;
427 return $str;
428}
429
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430my %sequence_num;
431my $seq_max = 1;
432
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433sub reset_sequence {
434 # reset the sequence
435 %sequence_num = ();
436 $seq_max = 1;
cc02ea56 437 $lastnext = 0;
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438}
439
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440sub seq {
441 my($op) = @_;
442 return "-" if not exists $sequence_num{$$op};
443 return base_n($sequence_num{$$op});
444}
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445
446sub walk_topdown {
447 my($op, $sub, $level) = @_;
448 $sub->($op, $level);
449 if ($op->flags & OPf_KIDS) {
450 for (my $kid = $op->first; $$kid; $kid = $kid->sibling) {
451 walk_topdown($kid, $sub, $level + 1);
452 }
453 }
c0939cee 454 elsif (class($op) eq "PMOP") {
c6e79e55
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455 my $maybe_root = $op->pmreplroot;
456 if (ref($maybe_root) and $maybe_root->isa("B::OP")) {
457 # It really is the root of the replacement, not something
458 # else stored here for lack of space elsewhere
459 walk_topdown($maybe_root, $sub, $level + 1);
460 }
c99ca59a
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461 }
462}
463
464sub walklines {
465 my($ar, $level) = @_;
466 for my $l (@$ar) {
467 if (ref($l) eq "ARRAY") {
468 walklines($l, $level + 1);
469 } else {
470 $l->concise($level);
471 }
472 }
473}
474
475sub walk_exec {
476 my($top, $level) = @_;
477 my %opsseen;
478 my @lines;
479 my @todo = ([$top, \@lines]);
480 while (@todo and my($op, $targ) = @{shift @todo}) {
481 for (; $$op; $op = $op->next) {
482 last if $opsseen{$$op}++;
483 push @$targ, $op;
484 my $name = $op->name;
62e36f8a 485 if (class($op) eq "LOGOP") {
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486 my $ar = [];
487 push @$targ, $ar;
488 push @todo, [$op->other, $ar];
489 } elsif ($name eq "subst" and $ {$op->pmreplstart}) {
490 my $ar = [];
491 push @$targ, $ar;
492 push @todo, [$op->pmreplstart, $ar];
493 } elsif ($name =~ /^enter(loop|iter)$/) {
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494 if ($] > 5.009) {
495 $labels{${$op->nextop}} = "NEXT";
496 $labels{${$op->lastop}} = "LAST";
497 $labels{${$op->redoop}} = "REDO";
498 } else {
499 $labels{$op->nextop->seq} = "NEXT";
500 $labels{$op->lastop->seq} = "LAST";
501 $labels{$op->redoop->seq} = "REDO";
502 }
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503 }
504 }
505 }
506 walklines(\@lines, 0);
507}
508
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509# The structure of this routine is purposely modeled after op.c's peep()
510sub sequence {
511 my($op) = @_;
512 my $oldop = 0;
513 return if class($op) eq "NULL" or exists $sequence_num{$$op};
514 for (; $$op; $op = $op->next) {
515 last if exists $sequence_num{$$op};
516 my $name = $op->name;
517 if ($name =~ /^(null|scalar|lineseq|scope)$/) {
518 next if $oldop and $ {$op->next};
519 } else {
520 $sequence_num{$$op} = $seq_max++;
521 if (class($op) eq "LOGOP") {
522 my $other = $op->other;
523 $other = $other->next while $other->name eq "null";
524 sequence($other);
525 } elsif (class($op) eq "LOOP") {
526 my $redoop = $op->redoop;
527 $redoop = $redoop->next while $redoop->name eq "null";
528 sequence($redoop);
529 my $nextop = $op->nextop;
530 $nextop = $nextop->next while $nextop->name eq "null";
531 sequence($nextop);
532 my $lastop = $op->lastop;
533 $lastop = $lastop->next while $lastop->name eq "null";
534 sequence($lastop);
535 } elsif ($name eq "subst" and $ {$op->pmreplstart}) {
536 my $replstart = $op->pmreplstart;
537 $replstart = $replstart->next while $replstart->name eq "null";
538 sequence($replstart);
539 }
540 }
541 $oldop = $op;
542 }
543}
544
724aa791 545sub fmt_line { # generate text-line for op.
cc02ea56
JC
546 my($hr, $op, $text, $level) = @_;
547
548 $_->($hr, $op, \$text, \$level, $stylename) for @callbacks;
549
724aa791 550 return '' if $hr->{SKIP}; # suppress line if a callback said so
cc02ea56 551 return '' if $hr->{goto} and $hr->{goto} eq '-'; # no goto nowhere
f95e3c3c 552
cc02ea56 553 # spec: (?(text1#varText2)?)
c99ca59a 554 $text =~ s/\(\?\(([^\#]*?)\#(\w+)([^\#]*?)\)\?\)/
f95e3c3c
JC
555 $hr->{$2} ? $1.$hr->{$2}.$3 : ""/eg;
556
cc02ea56 557 # spec: (x(exec_text;basic_text)x)
c99ca59a 558 $text =~ s/\(x\((.*?);(.*?)\)x\)/$order eq "exec" ? $1 : $2/egs;
cc02ea56
JC
559
560 # spec: (*(text)*)
c99ca59a 561 $text =~ s/\(\*\(([^;]*?)\)\*\)/$1 x $level/egs;
cc02ea56
JC
562
563 # spec: (*(text1;text2)*)
c99ca59a 564 $text =~ s/\(\*\((.*?);(.*?)\)\*\)/$1 x ($level - 1) . $2 x ($level>0)/egs;
cc02ea56
JC
565
566 # convert #Var to tag=>val form: Var\t#var
567 $text =~ s/\#([A-Z][a-z]+)(\d+)?/\t\u$1\t\L#$1$2/gs;
568
569 # spec: #varN
724aa791
JC
570 $text =~ s/\#([a-zA-Z]+)(\d+)/sprintf("%-$2s", $hr->{$1})/eg;
571
cc02ea56
JC
572 $text =~ s/\#([a-zA-Z]+)/$hr->{$1}/eg; # populate #var's
573 $text =~ s/[ \t]*~+[ \t]*/ /g; # squeeze tildes
f18deeb9
JC
574
575 $text = "# $hr->{src}\n$text" if $show_src and $hr->{src};
576
f95e3c3c
JC
577 chomp $text;
578 return "$text\n" if $text ne "";
579 return $text; # suppress empty lines
c99ca59a
SM
580}
581
19e169bf
JC
582our %priv; # used to display each opcode's BASEOP.op_private values
583
c99ca59a
SM
584$priv{$_}{128} = "LVINTRO"
585 for ("pos", "substr", "vec", "threadsv", "gvsv", "rv2sv", "rv2hv", "rv2gv",
586 "rv2av", "rv2arylen", "aelem", "helem", "aslice", "hslice", "padsv",
241416b8 587 "padav", "padhv", "enteriter");
c99ca59a
SM
588$priv{$_}{64} = "REFC" for ("leave", "leavesub", "leavesublv", "leavewrite");
589$priv{"aassign"}{64} = "COMMON";
461824dc 590$priv{"aassign"}{32} = $] < 5.009 ? "PHASH" : "STATE";
952306ac 591$priv{"sassign"}{32} = "STATE";
c99ca59a 592$priv{"sassign"}{64} = "BKWARD";
7abc42fc 593$priv{$_}{64} = "RTIME" for ("match", "subst", "substcont", "qr");
c99ca59a
SM
594@{$priv{"trans"}}{1,2,4,8,16,64} = ("<UTF", ">UTF", "IDENT", "SQUASH", "DEL",
595 "COMPL", "GROWS");
596$priv{"repeat"}{64} = "DOLIST";
597$priv{"leaveloop"}{64} = "CONT";
598@{$priv{$_}}{32,64,96} = ("DREFAV", "DREFHV", "DREFSV")
314d4778 599 for (qw(rv2gv rv2sv padsv aelem helem));
a5911867 600$priv{$_}{16} = "STATE" for ("padav", "padhv", "padsv");
d4797c1d 601@{$priv{"entersub"}}{16,32,64} = ("DBG","TARG","NOMOD");
c99ca59a
SM
602@{$priv{$_}}{4,8,128} = ("INARGS","AMPER","NO()") for ("entersub", "rv2cv");
603$priv{"gv"}{32} = "EARLYCV";
604$priv{"aelem"}{16} = $priv{"helem"}{16} = "LVDEFER";
241416b8
DM
605$priv{$_}{16} = "OURINTR" for ("gvsv", "rv2sv", "rv2av", "rv2hv", "r2gv",
606 "enteriter");
c99ca59a
SM
607$priv{$_}{16} = "TARGMY"
608 for (map(($_,"s$_"),"chop", "chomp"),
609 map(($_,"i_$_"), "postinc", "postdec", "multiply", "divide", "modulo",
610 "add", "subtract", "negate"), "pow", "concat", "stringify",
611 "left_shift", "right_shift", "bit_and", "bit_xor", "bit_or",
612 "complement", "atan2", "sin", "cos", "rand", "exp", "log", "sqrt",
613 "int", "hex", "oct", "abs", "length", "index", "rindex", "sprintf",
614 "ord", "chr", "crypt", "quotemeta", "join", "push", "unshift", "flock",
615 "chdir", "chown", "chroot", "unlink", "chmod", "utime", "rename",
616 "link", "symlink", "mkdir", "rmdir", "wait", "waitpid", "system",
617 "exec", "kill", "getppid", "getpgrp", "setpgrp", "getpriority",
618 "setpriority", "time", "sleep");
ef3e5ea9 619$priv{$_}{4} = "REVERSED" for ("enteriter", "iter");
d4797c1d 620@{$priv{"const"}}{4,8,16,32,64,128} = ("SHORT","STRICT","ENTERED",'$[',"BARE","WARN");
c99ca59a
SM
621$priv{"flip"}{64} = $priv{"flop"}{64} = "LINENUM";
622$priv{"list"}{64} = "GUESSED";
623$priv{"delete"}{64} = "SLICE";
624$priv{"exists"}{64} = "SUB";
7b9ef140 625@{$priv{"sort"}}{1,2,4,8,16,32,64} = ("NUM", "INT", "REV", "INPLACE","DESC","QSORT","STABLE");
c99ca59a 626$priv{"threadsv"}{64} = "SVREFd";
c27ea44e
SM
627@{$priv{$_}}{16,32,64,128} = ("INBIN","INCR","OUTBIN","OUTCR")
628 for ("open", "backtick");
c99ca59a 629$priv{"exit"}{128} = "VMS";
feaeca78
JH
630$priv{$_}{2} = "FTACCESS"
631 for ("ftrread", "ftrwrite", "ftrexec", "fteread", "ftewrite", "fteexec");
7b9ef140 632$priv{"entereval"}{2} = "HAS_HH";
32454ac8
NC
633if ($] >= 5.009) {
634 # Stacked filetests are post 5.8.x
635 $priv{$_}{4} = "FTSTACKED"
636 for ("ftrread", "ftrwrite", "ftrexec", "fteread", "ftewrite", "fteexec",
637 "ftis", "fteowned", "ftrowned", "ftzero", "ftsize", "ftmtime",
638 "ftatime", "ftctime", "ftsock", "ftchr", "ftblk", "ftfile", "ftdir",
639 "ftpipe", "ftlink", "ftsuid", "ftsgid", "ftsvtx", "fttty", "fttext",
640 "ftbinary");
641 # Lexical $_ is post 5.8.x
642 $priv{$_}{2} = "GREPLEX"
643 for ("mapwhile", "mapstart", "grepwhile", "grepstart");
644}
c99ca59a 645
d5ec2987
NC
646our %hints; # used to display each COP's op_hints values
647
648# strict refs, subs, vars
649@hints{2,512,1024} = ('$', '&', '*');
650# integers, locale, bytes, arybase
651@hints{1,4,8,16,32} = ('i', 'l', 'b', '[');
8b850bd5
NC
652# block scope, localise %^H, $^OPEN (in), $^OPEN (out)
653@hints{256,131072,262144,524288} = ('{','%','<','>');
d5ec2987
NC
654# overload new integer, float, binary, string, re
655@hints{4096,8192,16384,32768,65536} = ('I', 'F', 'B', 'S', 'R');
656# taint and eval
657@hints{1048576,2097152} = ('T', 'E');
584420f0
RGS
658# filetest access, UTF-8
659@hints{4194304,8388608} = ('X', 'U');
d5ec2987
NC
660
661sub _flags {
662 my($hash, $x) = @_;
c99ca59a 663 my @s;
d5ec2987
NC
664 for my $flag (sort {$b <=> $a} keys %$hash) {
665 if ($hash->{$flag} and $x & $flag and $x >= $flag) {
c99ca59a 666 $x -= $flag;
d5ec2987 667 push @s, $hash->{$flag};
c99ca59a
SM
668 }
669 }
670 push @s, $x if $x;
671 return join(",", @s);
672}
673
d5ec2987
NC
674sub private_flags {
675 my($name, $x) = @_;
676 _flags($priv{$name}, $x);
677}
678
679sub hints_flags {
680 my($x) = @_;
681 _flags(\%hints, $x);
682}
683
c27ea44e 684sub concise_sv {
2db5ca0a 685 my($sv, $hr, $preferpv) = @_;
c27ea44e 686 $hr->{svclass} = class($sv);
31b49ad4
SM
687 $hr->{svclass} = "UV"
688 if $hr->{svclass} eq "IV" and $sv->FLAGS & SVf_IVisUV;
5b493bdf 689 Carp::cluck("bad concise_sv: $sv") unless $sv and $$sv;
c27ea44e
SM
690 $hr->{svaddr} = sprintf("%#x", $$sv);
691 if ($hr->{svclass} eq "GV") {
692 my $gv = $sv;
693 my $stash = $gv->STASH->NAME;
694 if ($stash eq "main") {
695 $stash = "";
696 } else {
697 $stash = $stash . "::";
698 }
699 $hr->{svval} = "*$stash" . $gv->SAFENAME;
700 return "*$stash" . $gv->SAFENAME;
701 } else {
702 while (class($sv) eq "RV") {
703 $hr->{svval} .= "\\";
704 $sv = $sv->RV;
705 }
706 if (class($sv) eq "SPECIAL") {
40b5b14f 707 $hr->{svval} .= ["Null", "sv_undef", "sv_yes", "sv_no"]->[$$sv];
2db5ca0a
YST
708 } elsif ($preferpv && $sv->FLAGS & SVf_POK) {
709 $hr->{svval} .= cstring($sv->PV);
c27ea44e 710 } elsif ($sv->FLAGS & SVf_NOK) {
40b5b14f 711 $hr->{svval} .= $sv->NV;
c27ea44e 712 } elsif ($sv->FLAGS & SVf_IOK) {
31b49ad4 713 $hr->{svval} .= $sv->int_value;
c27ea44e 714 } elsif ($sv->FLAGS & SVf_POK) {
40b5b14f 715 $hr->{svval} .= cstring($sv->PV);
31b49ad4
SM
716 } elsif (class($sv) eq "HV") {
717 $hr->{svval} .= 'HASH';
c27ea44e 718 }
cc02ea56
JC
719
720 $hr->{svval} = 'undef' unless defined $hr->{svval};
721 my $out = $hr->{svclass};
722 return $out .= " $hr->{svval}" ;
c27ea44e
SM
723 }
724}
725
f18deeb9
JC
726my %srclines;
727
728sub fill_srclines {
9e0f9750
JC
729 my $fullnm = shift;
730 if ($fullnm eq '-e') {
731 $srclines{$fullnm} = [ $fullnm, "-src not supported for -e" ];
732 return;
6cc5d258 733 }
9e0f9750 734 open (my $fh, '<', $fullnm)
6cc5d258 735 or warn "# $fullnm: $!, (chdirs not supported by this feature yet)\n"
f18deeb9
JC
736 and return;
737 my @l = <$fh>;
738 chomp @l;
9e0f9750
JC
739 unshift @l, $fullnm; # like @{_<$fullnm} in debug, array starts at 1
740 $srclines{$fullnm} = \@l;
f18deeb9
JC
741}
742
c99ca59a
SM
743sub concise_op {
744 my ($op, $level, $format) = @_;
745 my %h;
746 $h{exname} = $h{name} = $op->name;
747 $h{NAME} = uc $h{name};
748 $h{class} = class($op);
749 $h{extarg} = $h{targ} = $op->targ;
750 $h{extarg} = "" unless $h{extarg};
751 if ($h{name} eq "null" and $h{targ}) {
8ec8fbef 752 # targ holds the old type
c99ca59a
SM
753 $h{exname} = "ex-" . substr(ppname($h{targ}), 3);
754 $h{extarg} = "";
8ec8fbef
SM
755 } elsif ($op->name =~ /^leave(sub(lv)?|write)?$/) {
756 # targ potentially holds a reference count
757 if ($op->private & 64) {
758 my $refs = "ref" . ($h{targ} != 1 ? "s" : "");
759 $h{targarglife} = $h{targarg} = "$h{targ} $refs";
760 }
c99ca59a
SM
761 } elsif ($h{targ}) {
762 my $padname = (($curcv->PADLIST->ARRAY)[0]->ARRAY)[$h{targ}];
763 if (defined $padname and class($padname) ne "SPECIAL") {
0b40bd6d 764 $h{targarg} = $padname->PVX;
127212b2 765 if ($padname->FLAGS & SVf_FAKE) {
4ac6efe6
NC
766 if ($] < 5.009) {
767 $h{targarglife} = "$h{targarg}:FAKE";
768 } else {
769 # These changes relate to the jumbo closure fix.
770 # See changes 19939 and 20005
771 my $fake = '';
6c5e080d
NC
772 $fake .= 'a'
773 if $padname->PARENT_FAKELEX_FLAGS & PAD_FAKELEX_ANON;
774 $fake .= 'm'
775 if $padname->PARENT_FAKELEX_FLAGS & PAD_FAKELEX_MULTI;
809abb02
NC
776 $fake .= ':' . $padname->PARENT_PAD_INDEX
777 if $curcv->CvFLAGS & CVf_ANON;
4ac6efe6
NC
778 $h{targarglife} = "$h{targarg}:FAKE:$fake";
779 }
127212b2
DM
780 }
781 else {
809abb02
NC
782 my $intro = $padname->COP_SEQ_RANGE_LOW - $cop_seq_base;
783 my $finish = int($padname->COP_SEQ_RANGE_HIGH) - $cop_seq_base;
127212b2
DM
784 $finish = "end" if $finish == 999999999 - $cop_seq_base;
785 $h{targarglife} = "$h{targarg}:$intro,$finish";
786 }
c99ca59a
SM
787 } else {
788 $h{targarglife} = $h{targarg} = "t" . $h{targ};
789 }
790 }
791 $h{arg} = "";
792 $h{svclass} = $h{svaddr} = $h{svval} = "";
793 if ($h{class} eq "PMOP") {
794 my $precomp = $op->precomp;
7a9b44b9 795 if (defined $precomp) {
c27ea44e
SM
796 $precomp = cstring($precomp); # Escape literal control sequences
797 $precomp = "/$precomp/";
798 } else {
799 $precomp = "";
7a9b44b9 800 }
b2a3cfdd 801 my $pmreplroot = $op->pmreplroot;
34a48b4b 802 my $pmreplstart;
c6e79e55 803 if (ref($pmreplroot) eq "B::GV") {
b2a3cfdd 804 # with C<@stash_array = split(/pat/, str);>,
c6e79e55 805 # *stash_array is stored in /pat/'s pmreplroot.
b2a3cfdd 806 $h{arg} = "($precomp => \@" . $pmreplroot->NAME . ")";
c6e79e55
SM
807 } elsif (!ref($pmreplroot) and $pmreplroot) {
808 # same as the last case, except the value is actually a
809 # pad offset for where the GV is kept (this happens under
810 # ithreads)
811 my $gv = (($curcv->PADLIST->ARRAY)[1]->ARRAY)[$pmreplroot];
812 $h{arg} = "($precomp => \@" . $gv->NAME . ")";
b2a3cfdd 813 } elsif ($ {$op->pmreplstart}) {
c99ca59a
SM
814 undef $lastnext;
815 $pmreplstart = "replstart->" . seq($op->pmreplstart);
816 $h{arg} = "(" . join(" ", $precomp, $pmreplstart) . ")";
817 } else {
818 $h{arg} = "($precomp)";
819 }
820 } elsif ($h{class} eq "PVOP" and $h{name} ne "trans") {
821 $h{arg} = '("' . $op->pv . '")';
822 $h{svval} = '"' . $op->pv . '"';
823 } elsif ($h{class} eq "COP") {
824 my $label = $op->label;
c3caa09d 825 $h{coplabel} = $label;
c99ca59a
SM
826 $label = $label ? "$label: " : "";
827 my $loc = $op->file;
9e0f9750 828 my $pathnm = $loc;
c99ca59a 829 $loc =~ s[.*/][];
9e0f9750
JC
830 my $ln = $op->line;
831 $loc .= ":$ln";
c99ca59a
SM
832 my($stash, $cseq) = ($op->stash->NAME, $op->cop_seq - $cop_seq_base);
833 my $arybase = $op->arybase;
834 $arybase = $arybase ? ' $[=' . $arybase : "";
835 $h{arg} = "($label$stash $cseq $loc$arybase)";
f18deeb9 836 if ($show_src) {
9e0f9750 837 fill_srclines($pathnm) unless exists $srclines{$pathnm};
e9c69003
NC
838 # Would love to retain Jim's use of // but this code needs to be
839 # portable to 5.8.x
840 my $line = $srclines{$pathnm}[$ln];
841 $line = "-src unavailable under -e" unless defined $line;
842 $h{src} = "$ln: $line";
f18deeb9 843 }
c99ca59a
SM
844 } elsif ($h{class} eq "LOOP") {
845 $h{arg} = "(next->" . seq($op->nextop) . " last->" . seq($op->lastop)
846 . " redo->" . seq($op->redoop) . ")";
847 } elsif ($h{class} eq "LOGOP") {
848 undef $lastnext;
849 $h{arg} = "(other->" . seq($op->other) . ")";
5b493bdf
JC
850 }
851 elsif ($h{class} eq "SVOP" or $h{class} eq "PADOP") {
6a077020 852 unless ($h{name} eq 'aelemfast' and $op->flags & OPf_SPECIAL) {
5b493bdf 853 my $idx = ($h{class} eq "SVOP") ? $op->targ : $op->padix;
2db5ca0a 854 my $preferpv = $h{name} eq "method_named";
5b493bdf
JC
855 if ($h{class} eq "PADOP" or !${$op->sv}) {
856 my $sv = (($curcv->PADLIST->ARRAY)[1]->ARRAY)[$idx];
2db5ca0a 857 $h{arg} = "[" . concise_sv($sv, \%h, $preferpv) . "]";
6a077020
DM
858 $h{targarglife} = $h{targarg} = "";
859 } else {
2db5ca0a 860 $h{arg} = "(" . concise_sv($op->sv, \%h, $preferpv) . ")";
6a077020 861 }
c99ca59a
SM
862 }
863 }
864 $h{seq} = $h{hyphseq} = seq($op);
865 $h{seq} = "" if $h{seq} eq "-";
7252851f
NC
866 if ($] > 5.009) {
867 $h{opt} = $op->opt;
7252851f
NC
868 $h{label} = $labels{$$op};
869 } else {
870 $h{seqnum} = $op->seq;
871 $h{label} = $labels{$op->seq};
872 }
c99ca59a
SM
873 $h{next} = $op->next;
874 $h{next} = (class($h{next}) eq "NULL") ? "(end)" : seq($h{next});
875 $h{nextaddr} = sprintf("%#x", $ {$op->next});
876 $h{sibaddr} = sprintf("%#x", $ {$op->sibling});
877 $h{firstaddr} = sprintf("%#x", $ {$op->first}) if $op->can("first");
878 $h{lastaddr} = sprintf("%#x", $ {$op->last}) if $op->can("last");
879
880 $h{classsym} = $opclass{$h{class}};
881 $h{flagval} = $op->flags;
882 $h{flags} = op_flags($op->flags);
883 $h{privval} = $op->private;
884 $h{private} = private_flags($h{name}, $op->private);
d5ec2987
NC
885 if ($op->can("hints")) {
886 $h{hintsval} = $op->hints;
887 $h{hints} = hints_flags($h{hintsval});
888 } else {
889 $h{hintsval} = $h{hints} = '';
890 }
c99ca59a 891 $h{addr} = sprintf("%#x", $$op);
c99ca59a
SM
892 $h{typenum} = $op->type;
893 $h{noise} = $linenoise[$op->type];
f95e3c3c 894
cc02ea56 895 return fmt_line(\%h, $op, $format, $level);
c99ca59a
SM
896}
897
898sub B::OP::concise {
899 my($op, $level) = @_;
900 if ($order eq "exec" and $lastnext and $$lastnext != $$op) {
724aa791 901 # insert a 'goto' line
cc02ea56
JC
902 my $synth = {"seq" => seq($lastnext), "class" => class($lastnext),
903 "addr" => sprintf("%#x", $$lastnext),
904 "goto" => seq($lastnext), # simplify goto '-' removal
905 };
906 print $walkHandle fmt_line($synth, $op, $gotofmt, $level+1);
c99ca59a
SM
907 }
908 $lastnext = $op->next;
f95e3c3c 909 print $walkHandle concise_op($op, $level, $format);
c99ca59a
SM
910}
911
31b49ad4
SM
912# B::OP::terse (see Terse.pm) now just calls this
913sub b_terse {
914 my($op, $level) = @_;
915
916 # This isn't necessarily right, but there's no easy way to get
917 # from an OP to the right CV. This is a limitation of the
918 # ->terse() interface style, and there isn't much to do about
919 # it. In particular, we can die in concise_op if the main pad
920 # isn't long enough, or has the wrong kind of entries, compared to
921 # the pad a sub was compiled with. The fix for that would be to
922 # make a backwards compatible "terse" format that never even
923 # looked at the pad, just like the old B::Terse. I don't think
924 # that's worth the effort, though.
925 $curcv = main_cv unless $curcv;
926
927 if ($order eq "exec" and $lastnext and $$lastnext != $$op) {
724aa791 928 # insert a 'goto'
31b49ad4
SM
929 my $h = {"seq" => seq($lastnext), "class" => class($lastnext),
930 "addr" => sprintf("%#x", $$lastnext)};
cc02ea56
JC
931 print # $walkHandle
932 fmt_line($h, $op, $style{"terse"}[1], $level+1);
31b49ad4
SM
933 }
934 $lastnext = $op->next;
cc02ea56
JC
935 print # $walkHandle
936 concise_op($op, $level, $style{"terse"}[0]);
31b49ad4
SM
937}
938
c99ca59a
SM
939sub tree {
940 my $op = shift;
941 my $level = shift;
942 my $style = $tree_decorations[$tree_style];
943 my($space, $single, $kids, $kid, $nokid, $last, $lead, $size) = @$style;
944 my $name = concise_op($op, $level, $treefmt);
945 if (not $op->flags & OPf_KIDS) {
946 return $name . "\n";
947 }
948 my @lines;
949 for (my $kid = $op->first; $$kid; $kid = $kid->sibling) {
950 push @lines, tree($kid, $level+1);
951 }
952 my $i;
953 for ($i = $#lines; substr($lines[$i], 0, 1) eq " "; $i--) {
954 $lines[$i] = $space . $lines[$i];
955 }
956 if ($i > 0) {
957 $lines[$i] = $last . $lines[$i];
958 while ($i-- > 1) {
959 if (substr($lines[$i], 0, 1) eq " ") {
960 $lines[$i] = $nokid . $lines[$i];
961 } else {
f95e3c3c 962 $lines[$i] = $kid . $lines[$i];
c99ca59a
SM
963 }
964 }
965 $lines[$i] = $kids . $lines[$i];
966 } else {
967 $lines[0] = $single . $lines[0];
968 }
969 return("$name$lead" . shift @lines,
970 map(" " x (length($name)+$size) . $_, @lines));
971}
972
213a1a26
SM
973# *** Warning: fragile kludge ahead ***
974# Because the B::* modules run in the same interpreter as the code
2814eb74
PJ
975# they're compiling, their presence tends to distort the view we have of
976# the code we're looking at. In particular, perl gives sequence numbers
977# to COPs. If the program we're looking at were run on its own, this
978# would start at 1. Because all of B::Concise and all the modules it
979# uses are compiled first, though, by the time we get to the user's
980# program the sequence number is already pretty high, which could be
981# distracting if you're trying to tell OPs apart. Therefore we'd like to
982# subtract an offset from all the sequence numbers we display, to
983# restore the simpler view of the world. The trick is to know what that
984# offset will be, when we're still compiling B::Concise! If we
213a1a26 985# hardcoded a value, it would have to change every time B::Concise or
2814eb74
PJ
986# other modules we use do. To help a little, what we do here is compile
987# a little code at the end of the module, and compute the base sequence
988# number for the user's program as being a small offset later, so all we
989# have to worry about are changes in the offset.
7252851f
NC
990
991# [For 5.8.x and earlier perl is generating sequence numbers for all ops,
992# and using them to reference labels]
993
994
213a1a26
SM
995# When you say "perl -MO=Concise -e '$a'", the output should look like:
996
997# 4 <@> leave[t1] vKP/REFC ->(end)
998# 1 <0> enter ->2
999 #^ smallest OP sequence number should be 1
1000# 2 <;> nextstate(main 1 -e:1) v ->3
1001 # ^ smallest COP sequence number should be 1
1002# - <1> ex-rv2sv vK/1 ->4
1003# 3 <$> gvsv(*a) s ->4
1004
c27ea44e
SM
1005# If the second of the marked numbers there isn't 1, it means you need
1006# to update the corresponding magic number in the next line.
1007# Remember, this needs to stay the last things in the module.
e69a2255 1008
c27ea44e 1009# Why is this different for MacOS? Does it matter?
8ec8fbef 1010my $cop_seq_mnum = $^O eq 'MacOS' ? 12 : 11;
e69a2255 1011$cop_seq_base = svref_2object(eval 'sub{0;}')->START->cop_seq + $cop_seq_mnum;
c99ca59a
SM
1012
10131;
1014
1015__END__
1016
1017=head1 NAME
1018
1019B::Concise - Walk Perl syntax tree, printing concise info about ops
1020
1021=head1 SYNOPSIS
1022
1023 perl -MO=Concise[,OPTIONS] foo.pl
1024
78ad9108
PJ
1025 use B::Concise qw(set_style add_callback);
1026
c99ca59a
SM
1027=head1 DESCRIPTION
1028
1029This compiler backend prints the internal OPs of a Perl program's syntax
1030tree in one of several space-efficient text formats suitable for debugging
1031the inner workings of perl or other compiler backends. It can print OPs in
1032the order they appear in the OP tree, in the order they will execute, or
1033in a text approximation to their tree structure, and the format of the
3c4b39be 1034information displayed is customizable. Its function is similar to that of
c99ca59a
SM
1035perl's B<-Dx> debugging flag or the B<B::Terse> module, but it is more
1036sophisticated and flexible.
1037
f8a679e6
RGS
1038=head1 EXAMPLE
1039
f9f861ec
JC
1040Here's two outputs (or 'renderings'), using the -exec and -basic
1041(i.e. default) formatting conventions on the same code snippet.
19e169bf
JC
1042
1043 % perl -MO=Concise,-exec -e '$a = $b + 42'
1044 1 <0> enter
1045 2 <;> nextstate(main 1 -e:1) v
1046 3 <#> gvsv[*b] s
1047 4 <$> const[IV 42] s
1048 * 5 <2> add[t3] sK/2
1049 6 <#> gvsv[*a] s
1050 7 <2> sassign vKS/2
1051 8 <@> leave[1 ref] vKP/REFC
1052
f9f861ec
JC
1053In this -exec rendering, each opcode is executed in the order shown.
1054The add opcode, marked with '*', is discussed in more detail.
19e169bf
JC
1055
1056The 1st column is the op's sequence number, starting at 1, and is
f9f861ec
JC
1057displayed in base 36 by default. Here they're purely linear; the
1058sequences are very helpful when looking at code with loops and
1059branches.
19e169bf
JC
1060
1061The symbol between angle brackets indicates the op's type, for
1062example; <2> is a BINOP, <@> a LISTOP, and <#> is a PADOP, which is
1063used in threaded perls. (see L</"OP class abbreviations">).
1064
f9f861ec 1065The opname, as in B<'add[t1]'>, may be followed by op-specific
19e169bf
JC
1066information in parentheses or brackets (ex B<'[t1]'>).
1067
f9f861ec 1068The op-flags (ex B<'sK/2'>) are described in (L</"OP flags
19e169bf 1069abbreviations">).
f8a679e6
RGS
1070
1071 % perl -MO=Concise -e '$a = $b + 42'
8ec8fbef 1072 8 <@> leave[1 ref] vKP/REFC ->(end)
f8a679e6
RGS
1073 1 <0> enter ->2
1074 2 <;> nextstate(main 1 -e:1) v ->3
1075 7 <2> sassign vKS/2 ->8
19e169bf 1076 * 5 <2> add[t1] sK/2 ->6
f8a679e6
RGS
1077 - <1> ex-rv2sv sK/1 ->4
1078 3 <$> gvsv(*b) s ->4
1079 4 <$> const(IV 42) s ->5
1080 - <1> ex-rv2sv sKRM*/1 ->7
1081 6 <$> gvsv(*a) s ->7
1082
19e169bf
JC
1083The default rendering is top-down, so they're not in execution order.
1084This form reflects the way the stack is used to parse and evaluate
1085expressions; the add operates on the two terms below it in the tree.
f8a679e6 1086
19e169bf
JC
1087Nullops appear as C<ex-opname>, where I<opname> is an op that has been
1088optimized away by perl. They're displayed with a sequence-number of
1089'-', because they are not executed (they don't appear in previous
1090example), they're printed here because they reflect the parse.
f8a679e6 1091
19e169bf
JC
1092The arrow points to the sequence number of the next op; they're not
1093displayed in -exec mode, for obvious reasons.
f8a679e6 1094
19e169bf
JC
1095Note that because this rendering was done on a non-threaded perl, the
1096PADOPs in the previous examples are now SVOPs, and some (but not all)
1097of the square brackets have been replaced by round ones. This is a
1098subtle feature to provide some visual distinction between renderings
1099on threaded and un-threaded perls.
f8a679e6 1100
f8a679e6 1101
c99ca59a
SM
1102=head1 OPTIONS
1103
1104Arguments that don't start with a hyphen are taken to be the names of
9e0f9750
JC
1105subroutines to render; if no such functions are specified, the main
1106body of the program (outside any subroutines, and not including use'd
1107or require'd files) is rendered. Passing C<BEGIN>, C<UNITCHECK>,
1108C<CHECK>, C<INIT>, or C<END> will cause all of the corresponding
1109special blocks to be printed. Arguments must follow options.
c99ca59a 1110
724aa791
JC
1111Options affect how things are rendered (ie printed). They're presented
1112here by their visual effect, 1st being strongest. They're grouped
1113according to how they interrelate; within each group the options are
1114mutually exclusive (unless otherwise stated).
1115
1116=head2 Options for Opcode Ordering
1117
1118These options control the 'vertical display' of opcodes. The display
1119'order' is also called 'mode' elsewhere in this document.
1120
c99ca59a
SM
1121=over 4
1122
1123=item B<-basic>
1124
1125Print OPs in the order they appear in the OP tree (a preorder
1126traversal, starting at the root). The indentation of each OP shows its
19e169bf
JC
1127level in the tree, and the '->' at the end of the line indicates the
1128next opcode in execution order. This mode is the default, so the flag
1129is included simply for completeness.
c99ca59a
SM
1130
1131=item B<-exec>
1132
1133Print OPs in the order they would normally execute (for the majority
1134of constructs this is a postorder traversal of the tree, ending at the
1135root). In most cases the OP that usually follows a given OP will
1136appear directly below it; alternate paths are shown by indentation. In
1137cases like loops when control jumps out of a linear path, a 'goto'
1138line is generated.
1139
1140=item B<-tree>
1141
1142Print OPs in a text approximation of a tree, with the root of the tree
1143at the left and 'left-to-right' order of children transformed into
1144'top-to-bottom'. Because this mode grows both to the right and down,
1145it isn't suitable for large programs (unless you have a very wide
1146terminal).
1147
724aa791
JC
1148=back
1149
1150=head2 Options for Line-Style
1151
1152These options select the line-style (or just style) used to render
1153each opcode, and dictates what info is actually printed into each line.
1154
1155=over 4
1156
1157=item B<-concise>
1158
1159Use the author's favorite set of formatting conventions. This is the
1160default, of course.
1161
1162=item B<-terse>
1163
1164Use formatting conventions that emulate the output of B<B::Terse>. The
1165basic mode is almost indistinguishable from the real B<B::Terse>, and the
1166exec mode looks very similar, but is in a more logical order and lacks
1167curly brackets. B<B::Terse> doesn't have a tree mode, so the tree mode
1168is only vaguely reminiscent of B<B::Terse>.
1169
1170=item B<-linenoise>
1171
1172Use formatting conventions in which the name of each OP, rather than being
1173written out in full, is represented by a one- or two-character abbreviation.
1174This is mainly a joke.
1175
1176=item B<-debug>
1177
1178Use formatting conventions reminiscent of B<B::Debug>; these aren't
1179very concise at all.
1180
1181=item B<-env>
1182
1183Use formatting conventions read from the environment variables
1184C<B_CONCISE_FORMAT>, C<B_CONCISE_GOTO_FORMAT>, and C<B_CONCISE_TREE_FORMAT>.
1185
1186=back
1187
1188=head2 Options for tree-specific formatting
1189
1190=over 4
1191
c99ca59a
SM
1192=item B<-compact>
1193
1194Use a tree format in which the minimum amount of space is used for the
1195lines connecting nodes (one character in most cases). This squeezes out
1196a few precious columns of screen real estate.
1197
1198=item B<-loose>
1199
1200Use a tree format that uses longer edges to separate OP nodes. This format
1201tends to look better than the compact one, especially in ASCII, and is
1202the default.
1203
1204=item B<-vt>
1205
1206Use tree connecting characters drawn from the VT100 line-drawing set.
1207This looks better if your terminal supports it.
1208
1209=item B<-ascii>
1210
1211Draw the tree with standard ASCII characters like C<+> and C<|>. These don't
1212look as clean as the VT100 characters, but they'll work with almost any
1213terminal (or the horizontal scrolling mode of less(1)) and are suitable
1214for text documentation or email. This is the default.
1215
724aa791 1216=back
c99ca59a 1217
724aa791
JC
1218These are pairwise exclusive, i.e. compact or loose, vt or ascii.
1219
1220=head2 Options controlling sequence numbering
1221
1222=over 4
c99ca59a
SM
1223
1224=item B<-base>I<n>
1225
1226Print OP sequence numbers in base I<n>. If I<n> is greater than 10, the
1227digit for 11 will be 'a', and so on. If I<n> is greater than 36, the digit
1228for 37 will be 'A', and so on until 62. Values greater than 62 are not
1229currently supported. The default is 36.
1230
1231=item B<-bigendian>
1232
1233Print sequence numbers with the most significant digit first. This is the
1234usual convention for Arabic numerals, and the default.
1235
1236=item B<-littleendian>
1237
724aa791
JC
1238Print seqence numbers with the least significant digit first. This is
1239obviously mutually exclusive with bigendian.
c99ca59a 1240
724aa791 1241=back
c99ca59a 1242
724aa791 1243=head2 Other options
c99ca59a 1244
f18deeb9
JC
1245=over 4
1246
1247=item B<-src>
1248
e6665613
JC
1249With this option, the rendering of each statement (starting with the
1250nextstate OP) will be preceded by the 1st line of source code that
1251generates it. For example:
f18deeb9
JC
1252
1253 1 <0> enter
1254 # 1: my $i;
1255 2 <;> nextstate(main 1 junk.pl:1) v:{
1256 3 <0> padsv[$i:1,10] vM/LVINTRO
1257 # 3: for $i (0..9) {
1258 4 <;> nextstate(main 3 junk.pl:3) v:{
1259 5 <0> pushmark s
1260 6 <$> const[IV 0] s
1261 7 <$> const[IV 9] s
1262 8 <{> enteriter(next->j last->m redo->9)[$i:1,10] lKS
1263 k <0> iter s
1264 l <|> and(other->9) vK/1
1265 # 4: print "line ";
1266 9 <;> nextstate(main 2 junk.pl:4) v
1267 a <0> pushmark s
1268 b <$> const[PV "line "] s
1269 c <@> print vK
1270 # 5: print "$i\n";
e6665613 1271 ...
f18deeb9 1272
9e0f9750
JC
1273=item B<-stash="somepackage">
1274
1275With this, "somepackage" will be required, then the stash is
1276inspected, and each function is rendered.
1277
f18deeb9
JC
1278=back
1279
1280The following options are pairwise exclusive.
cc02ea56 1281
724aa791 1282=over 4
c99ca59a 1283
724aa791 1284=item B<-main>
c99ca59a 1285
724aa791 1286Include the main program in the output, even if subroutines were also
cc02ea56
JC
1287specified. This rendering is normally suppressed when a subroutine
1288name or reference is given.
1289
1290=item B<-nomain>
1291
1292This restores the default behavior after you've changed it with '-main'
1293(it's not normally needed). If no subroutine name/ref is given, main is
1294rendered, regardless of this flag.
1295
1296=item B<-nobanner>
1297
1298Renderings usually include a banner line identifying the function name
1299or stringified subref. This suppresses the printing of the banner.
1300
1301TBC: Remove the stringified coderef; while it provides a 'cookie' for
1302each function rendered, the cookies used should be 1,2,3.. not a
1303random hex-address. It also complicates string comparison of two
1304different trees.
c99ca59a 1305
724aa791 1306=item B<-banner>
c99ca59a 1307
cc02ea56
JC
1308restores default banner behavior.
1309
1310=item B<-banneris> => subref
1311
1312TBC: a hookpoint (and an option to set it) for a user-supplied
1313function to produce a banner appropriate for users needs. It's not
1314ideal, because the rendering-state variables, which are a natural
1315candidate for use in concise.t, are unavailable to the user.
c99ca59a 1316
724aa791 1317=back
c99ca59a 1318
724aa791 1319=head2 Option Stickiness
c99ca59a 1320
724aa791
JC
1321If you invoke Concise more than once in a program, you should know that
1322the options are 'sticky'. This means that the options you provide in
1323the first call will be remembered for the 2nd call, unless you
1324re-specify or change them.
c99ca59a 1325
cc02ea56
JC
1326=head1 ABBREVIATIONS
1327
1328The concise style uses symbols to convey maximum info with minimal
1329clutter (like hex addresses). With just a little practice, you can
1330start to see the flowers, not just the branches, in the trees.
1331
1332=head2 OP class abbreviations
1333
1334These symbols appear before the op-name, and indicate the
1335B:: namespace that represents the ops in your Perl code.
1336
1337 0 OP (aka BASEOP) An OP with no children
1338 1 UNOP An OP with one child
1339 2 BINOP An OP with two children
1340 | LOGOP A control branch OP
1341 @ LISTOP An OP that could have lots of children
1342 / PMOP An OP with a regular expression
1343 $ SVOP An OP with an SV
1344 " PVOP An OP with a string
1345 { LOOP An OP that holds pointers for a loop
1346 ; COP An OP that marks the start of a statement
1347 # PADOP An OP with a GV on the pad
1348
1349=head2 OP flags abbreviations
1350
19e169bf
JC
1351OP flags are either public or private. The public flags alter the
1352behavior of each opcode in consistent ways, and are represented by 0
1353or more single characters.
cc02ea56
JC
1354
1355 v OPf_WANT_VOID Want nothing (void context)
1356 s OPf_WANT_SCALAR Want single value (scalar context)
1357 l OPf_WANT_LIST Want list of any length (list context)
19e169bf 1358 Want is unknown
cc02ea56
JC
1359 K OPf_KIDS There is a firstborn child.
1360 P OPf_PARENS This operator was parenthesized.
1361 (Or block needs explicit scope entry.)
1362 R OPf_REF Certified reference.
1363 (Return container, not containee).
1364 M OPf_MOD Will modify (lvalue).
1365 S OPf_STACKED Some arg is arriving on the stack.
1366 * OPf_SPECIAL Do something weird for this op (see op.h)
1367
19e169bf
JC
1368Private flags, if any are set for an opcode, are displayed after a '/'
1369
1370 8 <@> leave[1 ref] vKP/REFC ->(end)
1371 7 <2> sassign vKS/2 ->8
1372
1373They're opcode specific, and occur less often than the public ones, so
1374they're represented by short mnemonics instead of single-chars; see
00baac8f 1375F<op.h> for gory details, or try this quick 2-liner:
19e169bf
JC
1376
1377 $> perl -MB::Concise -de 1
1378 DB<1> |x \%B::Concise::priv
1379
c99ca59a
SM
1380=head1 FORMATTING SPECIFICATIONS
1381
724aa791
JC
1382For each line-style ('concise', 'terse', 'linenoise', etc.) there are
13833 format-specs which control how OPs are rendered.
1384
1385The first is the 'default' format, which is used in both basic and exec
1386modes to print all opcodes. The 2nd, goto-format, is used in exec
1387mode when branches are encountered. They're not real opcodes, and are
1388inserted to look like a closing curly brace. The tree-format is tree
1389specific.
1390
cc02ea56
JC
1391When a line is rendered, the correct format-spec is copied and scanned
1392for the following items; data is substituted in, and other
1393manipulations like basic indenting are done, for each opcode rendered.
1394
1395There are 3 kinds of items that may be populated; special patterns,
1396#vars, and literal text, which is copied verbatim. (Yes, it's a set
1397of s///g steps.)
1398
1399=head2 Special Patterns
1400
1401These items are the primitives used to perform indenting, and to
1402select text from amongst alternatives.
c99ca59a
SM
1403
1404=over 4
1405
1406=item B<(x(>I<exec_text>B<;>I<basic_text>B<)x)>
1407
1408Generates I<exec_text> in exec mode, or I<basic_text> in basic mode.
1409
1410=item B<(*(>I<text>B<)*)>
1411
1412Generates one copy of I<text> for each indentation level.
1413
1414=item B<(*(>I<text1>B<;>I<text2>B<)*)>
1415
1416Generates one fewer copies of I<text1> than the indentation level, followed
1417by one copy of I<text2> if the indentation level is more than 0.
1418
1419=item B<(?(>I<text1>B<#>I<var>I<Text2>B<)?)>
1420
1421If the value of I<var> is true (not empty or zero), generates the
1422value of I<var> surrounded by I<text1> and I<Text2>, otherwise
1423nothing.
1424
cc02ea56
JC
1425=item B<~>
1426
1427Any number of tildes and surrounding whitespace will be collapsed to
1428a single space.
1429
1430=back
1431
1432=head2 # Variables
1433
1434These #vars represent opcode properties that you may want as part of
1435your rendering. The '#' is intended as a private sigil; a #var's
1436value is interpolated into the style-line, much like "read $this".
1437
1438These vars take 3 forms:
1439
1440=over 4
1441
c99ca59a
SM
1442=item B<#>I<var>
1443
cc02ea56
JC
1444A property named 'var' is assumed to exist for the opcodes, and is
1445interpolated into the rendering.
c99ca59a
SM
1446
1447=item B<#>I<var>I<N>
1448
cc02ea56
JC
1449Generates the value of I<var>, left justified to fill I<N> spaces.
1450Note that this means while you can have properties 'foo' and 'foo2',
1451you cannot render 'foo2', but you could with 'foo2a'. You would be
1452wise not to rely on this behavior going forward ;-)
c99ca59a 1453
cc02ea56 1454=item B<#>I<Var>
c99ca59a 1455
cc02ea56
JC
1456This ucfirst form of #var generates a tag-value form of itself for
1457display; it converts '#Var' into a 'Var => #var' style, which is then
1458handled as described above. (Imp-note: #Vars cannot be used for
1459conditional-fills, because the => #var transform is done after the check
1460for #Var's value).
c99ca59a
SM
1461
1462=back
1463
cc02ea56
JC
1464The following variables are 'defined' by B::Concise; when they are
1465used in a style, their respective values are plugged into the
1466rendering of each opcode.
1467
1468Only some of these are used by the standard styles, the others are
1469provided for you to delve into optree mechanics, should you wish to
1470add a new style (see L</add_style> below) that uses them. You can
00baac8f 1471also add new ones using L</add_callback>.
c99ca59a
SM
1472
1473=over 4
1474
1475=item B<#addr>
1476
cc02ea56 1477The address of the OP, in hexadecimal.
c99ca59a
SM
1478
1479=item B<#arg>
1480
1481The OP-specific information of the OP (such as the SV for an SVOP, the
cc02ea56 1482non-local exit pointers for a LOOP, etc.) enclosed in parentheses.
c99ca59a
SM
1483
1484=item B<#class>
1485
1486The B-determined class of the OP, in all caps.
1487
f8a679e6 1488=item B<#classsym>
c99ca59a
SM
1489
1490A single symbol abbreviating the class of the OP.
1491
c3caa09d
SM
1492=item B<#coplabel>
1493
1494The label of the statement or block the OP is the start of, if any.
1495
c99ca59a
SM
1496=item B<#exname>
1497
1498The name of the OP, or 'ex-foo' if the OP is a null that used to be a foo.
1499
1500=item B<#extarg>
1501
1502The target of the OP, or nothing for a nulled OP.
1503
1504=item B<#firstaddr>
1505
19e169bf 1506The address of the OP's first child, in hexadecimal.
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SM
1507
1508=item B<#flags>
1509
1510The OP's flags, abbreviated as a series of symbols.
1511
1512=item B<#flagval>
1513
1514The numeric value of the OP's flags.
1515
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NC
1516=item B<#hints>
1517
1518The COP's hint flags, rendered with abbreviated names if possible. An empty
4f948f3a
RGS
1519string if this is not a COP. Here are the symbols used:
1520
1521 $ strict refs
1522 & strict subs
1523 * strict vars
1524 i integers
1525 l locale
1526 b bytes
1527 [ arybase
1528 { block scope
1529 % localise %^H
1530 < open in
1531 > open out
1532 I overload int
1533 F overload float
1534 B overload binary
1535 S overload string
1536 R overload re
1537 T taint
1538 E eval
1539 X filetest access
1540 U utf-8
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NC
1541
1542=item B<#hintsval>
1543
1544The numeric value of the COP's hint flags, or an empty string if this is not
1545a COP.
1546
f8a679e6 1547=item B<#hyphseq>
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SM
1548
1549The sequence number of the OP, or a hyphen if it doesn't have one.
1550
1551=item B<#label>
1552
1553'NEXT', 'LAST', or 'REDO' if the OP is a target of one of those in exec
1554mode, or empty otherwise.
1555
1556=item B<#lastaddr>
1557
19e169bf 1558The address of the OP's last child, in hexadecimal.
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SM
1559
1560=item B<#name>
1561
1562The OP's name.
1563
1564=item B<#NAME>
1565
1566The OP's name, in all caps.
1567
1568=item B<#next>
1569
1570The sequence number of the OP's next OP.
1571
1572=item B<#nextaddr>
1573
19e169bf 1574The address of the OP's next OP, in hexadecimal.
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1575
1576=item B<#noise>
1577
c27ea44e 1578A one- or two-character abbreviation for the OP's name.
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1579
1580=item B<#private>
1581
1582The OP's private flags, rendered with abbreviated names if possible.
1583
1584=item B<#privval>
1585
1586The numeric value of the OP's private flags.
1587
1588=item B<#seq>
1589
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PJ
1590The sequence number of the OP. Note that this is a sequence number
1591generated by B::Concise.
c99ca59a 1592
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1593=item B<#seqnum>
1594
15955.8.x and earlier only. 5.9 and later do not provide this.
1596
1597The real sequence number of the OP, as a regular number and not adjusted
1598to be relative to the start of the real program. (This will generally be
1599a fairly large number because all of B<B::Concise> is compiled before
1600your program is).
1601
2814eb74 1602=item B<#opt>
c99ca59a 1603
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1604Whether or not the op has been optimised by the peephole optimiser.
1605
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NC
1606Only available in 5.9 and later.
1607
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1608=item B<#sibaddr>
1609
19e169bf 1610The address of the OP's next youngest sibling, in hexadecimal.
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SM
1611
1612=item B<#svaddr>
1613
19e169bf 1614The address of the OP's SV, if it has an SV, in hexadecimal.
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1615
1616=item B<#svclass>
1617
1618The class of the OP's SV, if it has one, in all caps (e.g., 'IV').
1619
1620=item B<#svval>
1621
1622The value of the OP's SV, if it has one, in a short human-readable format.
1623
1624=item B<#targ>
1625
1626The numeric value of the OP's targ.
1627
1628=item B<#targarg>
1629
1630The name of the variable the OP's targ refers to, if any, otherwise the
1631letter t followed by the OP's targ in decimal.
1632
1633=item B<#targarglife>
1634
1635Same as B<#targarg>, but followed by the COP sequence numbers that delimit
1636the variable's lifetime (or 'end' for a variable in an open scope) for a
1637variable.
1638
1639=item B<#typenum>
1640
1641The numeric value of the OP's type, in decimal.
1642
1643=back
1644
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JC
1645=head1 One-Liner Command tips
1646
1647=over 4
1648
1649=item perl -MO=Concise,bar foo.pl
1650
1651Renders only bar() from foo.pl. To see main, drop the ',bar'. To see
1652both, add ',-main'
1653
1654=item perl -MDigest::MD5=md5 -MO=Concise,md5 -e1
1655
1656Identifies md5 as an XS function. The export is needed so that BC can
1657find it in main.
1658
1659=item perl -MPOSIX -MO=Concise,_POSIX_ARG_MAX -e1
1660
1661Identifies _POSIX_ARG_MAX as a constant sub, optimized to an IV.
1662Although POSIX isn't entirely consistent across platforms, this is
1663likely to be present in virtually all of them.
1664
1665=item perl -MPOSIX -MO=Concise,a -e 'print _POSIX_SAVED_IDS'
1666
1667This renders a print statement, which includes a call to the function.
1668It's identical to rendering a file with a use call and that single
1669statement, except for the filename which appears in the nextstate ops.
1670
1671=item perl -MPOSIX -MO=Concise,a -e 'sub a{_POSIX_SAVED_IDS}'
1672
1673This is B<very> similar to previous, only the first two ops differ. This
1674subroutine rendering is more representative, insofar as a single main
1675program will have many subs.
1676
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JC
1677=item perl -MB::Concise -e 'B::Concise::compile("-exec","-src", \%B::Concise::)->()'
1678
1679This renders all functions in the B::Concise package with the source
1680lines. It eschews the O framework so that the stashref can be passed
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1681directly to B::Concise::compile(). See -stash option for a more
1682convenient way to render a package.
f9f861ec 1683
d5e42f17 1684=back
f9f861ec 1685
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1686=head1 Using B::Concise outside of the O framework
1687
cc02ea56
JC
1688The common (and original) usage of B::Concise was for command-line
1689renderings of simple code, as given in EXAMPLE. But you can also use
1690B<B::Concise> from your code, and call compile() directly, and
724aa791 1691repeatedly. By doing so, you can avoid the compile-time only
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JC
1692operation of O.pm, and even use the debugger to step through
1693B::Concise::compile() itself.
f95e3c3c 1694
cc02ea56
JC
1695Once you're doing this, you may alter Concise output by adding new
1696rendering styles, and by optionally adding callback routines which
1697populate new variables, if such were referenced from those (just
1698added) styles.
f95e3c3c 1699
724aa791 1700=head2 Example: Altering Concise Renderings
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PJ
1701
1702 use B::Concise qw(set_style add_callback);
cc02ea56 1703 add_style($yourStyleName => $defaultfmt, $gotofmt, $treefmt);
78ad9108 1704 add_callback
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1705 ( sub {
1706 my ($h, $op, $format, $level, $stylename) = @_;
78ad9108 1707 $h->{variable} = some_func($op);
cc02ea56
JC
1708 });
1709 $walker = B::Concise::compile(@options,@subnames,@subrefs);
1710 $walker->();
78ad9108 1711
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JC
1712=head2 set_style()
1713
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JC
1714B<set_style> accepts 3 arguments, and updates the three format-specs
1715comprising a line-style (basic-exec, goto, tree). It has one minor
1716drawback though; it doesn't register the style under a new name. This
1717can become an issue if you render more than once and switch styles.
1718Thus you may prefer to use add_style() and/or set_style_standard()
1719instead.
1720
1721=head2 set_style_standard($name)
1722
1723This restores one of the standard line-styles: C<terse>, C<concise>,
1724C<linenoise>, C<debug>, C<env>, into effect. It also accepts style
1725names previously defined with add_style().
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JC
1726
1727=head2 add_style()
78ad9108 1728
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JC
1729This subroutine accepts a new style name and three style arguments as
1730above, and creates, registers, and selects the newly named style. It is
1731an error to re-add a style; call set_style_standard() to switch between
1732several styles.
1733
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JC
1734=head2 add_callback()
1735
19e169bf
JC
1736If your newly minted styles refer to any new #variables, you'll need
1737to define a callback subroutine that will populate (or modify) those
1738variables. They are then available for use in the style you've
1739chosen.
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JC
1740
1741The callbacks are called for each opcode visited by Concise, in the
1742same order as they are added. Each subroutine is passed five
1743parameters.
1744
1745 1. A hashref, containing the variable names and values which are
1746 populated into the report-line for the op
1747 2. the op, as a B<B::OP> object
1748 3. a reference to the format string
1749 4. the formatting (indent) level
1750 5. the selected stylename
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PJ
1751
1752To define your own variables, simply add them to the hash, or change
1753existing values if you need to. The level and format are passed in as
1754references to scalars, but it is unlikely that they will need to be
1755changed or even used.
1756
724aa791 1757=head2 Running B::Concise::compile()
f95e3c3c
JC
1758
1759B<compile> accepts options as described above in L</OPTIONS>, and
1760arguments, which are either coderefs, or subroutine names.
1761
cc02ea56
JC
1762It constructs and returns a $treewalker coderef, which when invoked,
1763traverses, or walks, and renders the optrees of the given arguments to
1764STDOUT. You can reuse this, and can change the rendering style used
1765each time; thereafter the coderef renders in the new style.
f95e3c3c
JC
1766
1767B<walk_output> lets you change the print destination from STDOUT to
19e169bf
JC
1768another open filehandle, or into a string passed as a ref (unless
1769you've built perl with -Uuseperlio).
f95e3c3c 1770
cc02ea56 1771 my $walker = B::Concise::compile('-terse','aFuncName', \&aSubRef); # 1
f95e3c3c 1772 walk_output(\my $buf);
cc02ea56
JC
1773 $walker->(); # 1 renders -terse
1774 set_style_standard('concise'); # 2
1775 $walker->(); # 2 renders -concise
1776 $walker->(@new); # 3 renders whatever
1777 print "3 different renderings: terse, concise, and @new: $buf\n";
1778
1779When $walker is called, it traverses the subroutines supplied when it
1780was created, and renders them using the current style. You can change
1781the style afterwards in several different ways:
1782
1783 1. call C<compile>, altering style or mode/order
1784 2. call C<set_style_standard>
1785 3. call $walker, passing @new options
1786
1787Passing new options to the $walker is the easiest way to change
1788amongst any pre-defined styles (the ones you add are automatically
1789recognized as options), and is the only way to alter rendering order
1790without calling compile again. Note however that rendering state is
1791still shared amongst multiple $walker objects, so they must still be
1792used in a coordinated manner.
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JC
1793
1794=head2 B::Concise::reset_sequence()
1795
1796This function (not exported) lets you reset the sequence numbers (note
1797that they're numbered arbitrarily, their goal being to be human
1798readable). Its purpose is mostly to support testing, i.e. to compare
1799the concise output from two identical anonymous subroutines (but
1800different instances). Without the reset, B::Concise, seeing that
1801they're separate optrees, generates different sequence numbers in
1802the output.
1803
1804=head2 Errors
1805
9a3b3024
JC
1806Errors in rendering (non-existent function-name, non-existent coderef)
1807are written to the STDOUT, or wherever you've set it via
1808walk_output().
31b49ad4 1809
9a3b3024
JC
1810Errors using the various *style* calls, and bad args to walk_output(),
1811result in die(). Use an eval if you wish to catch these errors and
1812continue processing.
78ad9108 1813
c99ca59a
SM
1814=head1 AUTHOR
1815
31b49ad4 1816Stephen McCamant, E<lt>smcc@CSUA.Berkeley.EDUE<gt>.
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SM
1817
1818=cut