This is a live mirror of the Perl 5 development currently hosted at https://github.com/perl/perl5
Update IO-Compress to CPAN version 2.040
[perl5.git] / pod / perlmod.pod
CommitLineData
a0d0e21e
LW
1=head1 NAME
2
f102b883 3perlmod - Perl modules (packages and symbol tables)
a0d0e21e
LW
4
5=head1 DESCRIPTION
6
7=head2 Packages
d74e8afc 8X<package> X<namespace> X<variable, global> X<global variable> X<global>
a0d0e21e 9
19799a22
GS
10Perl provides a mechanism for alternative namespaces to protect
11packages from stomping on each other's variables. In fact, there's
bc8df162 12really no such thing as a global variable in Perl. The package
19799a22
GS
13statement declares the compilation unit as being in the given
14namespace. The scope of the package declaration is from the
15declaration itself through the end of the enclosing block, C<eval>,
16or file, whichever comes first (the same scope as the my() and
17local() operators). Unqualified dynamic identifiers will be in
18this namespace, except for those few identifiers that if unqualified,
19default to the main package instead of the current one as described
20below. A package statement affects only dynamic variables--including
21those you've used local() on--but I<not> lexical variables created
22with my(). Typically it would be the first declaration in a file
23included by the C<do>, C<require>, or C<use> operators. You can
24switch into a package in more than one place; it merely influences
25which symbol table is used by the compiler for the rest of that
26block. You can refer to variables and filehandles in other packages
27by prefixing the identifier with the package name and a double
28colon: C<$Package::Variable>. If the package name is null, the
29C<main> package is assumed. That is, C<$::sail> is equivalent to
30C<$main::sail>.
a0d0e21e 31
d3ebb66b
GS
32The old package delimiter was a single quote, but double colon is now the
33preferred delimiter, in part because it's more readable to humans, and
34in part because it's more readable to B<emacs> macros. It also makes C++
35programmers feel like they know what's going on--as opposed to using the
36single quote as separator, which was there to make Ada programmers feel
14c715f4 37like they knew what was going on. Because the old-fashioned syntax is still
d3ebb66b
GS
38supported for backwards compatibility, if you try to use a string like
39C<"This is $owner's house">, you'll be accessing C<$owner::s>; that is,
40the $s variable in package C<owner>, which is probably not what you meant.
41Use braces to disambiguate, as in C<"This is ${owner}'s house">.
d74e8afc 42X<::> X<'>
a0d0e21e 43
19799a22
GS
44Packages may themselves contain package separators, as in
45C<$OUTER::INNER::var>. This implies nothing about the order of
46name lookups, however. There are no relative packages: all symbols
a0d0e21e
LW
47are either local to the current package, or must be fully qualified
48from the outer package name down. For instance, there is nowhere
19799a22 49within package C<OUTER> that C<$INNER::var> refers to
14c715f4 50C<$OUTER::INNER::var>. C<INNER> refers to a totally
19799a22
GS
51separate global package.
52
53Only identifiers starting with letters (or underscore) are stored
54in a package's symbol table. All other symbols are kept in package
55C<main>, including all punctuation variables, like $_. In addition,
56when unqualified, the identifiers STDIN, STDOUT, STDERR, ARGV,
57ARGVOUT, ENV, INC, and SIG are forced to be in package C<main>,
14c715f4 58even when used for other purposes than their built-in ones. If you
19799a22
GS
59have a package called C<m>, C<s>, or C<y>, then you can't use the
60qualified form of an identifier because it would be instead interpreted
61as a pattern match, a substitution, or a transliteration.
d74e8afc 62X<variable, punctuation>
19799a22
GS
63
64Variables beginning with underscore used to be forced into package
a0d0e21e 65main, but we decided it was more useful for package writers to be able
cb1a09d0 66to use leading underscore to indicate private variables and method names.
b58b0d99
AT
67However, variables and functions named with a single C<_>, such as
68$_ and C<sub _>, are still forced into the package C<main>. See also
96090e4f 69L<perlvar/"The Syntax of Variable Names">.
a0d0e21e 70
19799a22 71C<eval>ed strings are compiled in the package in which the eval() was
a0d0e21e 72compiled. (Assignments to C<$SIG{}>, however, assume the signal
748a9306 73handler specified is in the C<main> package. Qualify the signal handler
a0d0e21e
LW
74name if you wish to have a signal handler in a package.) For an
75example, examine F<perldb.pl> in the Perl library. It initially switches
76to the C<DB> package so that the debugger doesn't interfere with variables
19799a22 77in the program you are trying to debug. At various points, however, it
a0d0e21e
LW
78temporarily switches back to the C<main> package to evaluate various
79expressions in the context of the C<main> package (or wherever you came
80from). See L<perldebug>.
81
f102b883 82The special symbol C<__PACKAGE__> contains the current package, but cannot
14c715f4 83(easily) be used to construct variable names.
f102b883 84
5f05dabc 85See L<perlsub> for other scoping issues related to my() and local(),
f102b883 86and L<perlref> regarding closures.
cb1a09d0 87
a0d0e21e 88=head2 Symbol Tables
d74e8afc 89X<symbol table> X<stash> X<%::> X<%main::> X<typeglob> X<glob> X<alias>
a0d0e21e 90
aa689395 91The symbol table for a package happens to be stored in the hash of that
92name with two colons appended. The main symbol table's name is thus
5803be0d 93C<%main::>, or C<%::> for short. Likewise the symbol table for the nested
aa689395 94package mentioned earlier is named C<%OUTER::INNER::>.
95
96The value in each entry of the hash is what you are referring to when you
8c44bff1 97use the C<*name> typeglob notation.
a0d0e21e 98
f102b883 99 local *main::foo = *main::bar;
bc8df162 100
a0d0e21e 101You can use this to print out all the variables in a package, for
4375e838 102instance. The standard but antiquated F<dumpvar.pl> library and
19799a22 103the CPAN module Devel::Symdump make use of this.
a0d0e21e 104
993e39b1 105The results of creating new symbol table entries directly or modifying any
fa4ec284 106entries that are not already typeglobs are undefined and subject to change
993e39b1
FC
107between releases of perl.
108
cb1a09d0 109Assignment to a typeglob performs an aliasing operation, i.e.,
a0d0e21e
LW
110
111 *dick = *richard;
112
5a964f20
TC
113causes variables, subroutines, formats, and file and directory handles
114accessible via the identifier C<richard> also to be accessible via the
115identifier C<dick>. If you want to alias only a particular variable or
19799a22 116subroutine, assign a reference instead:
a0d0e21e
LW
117
118 *dick = \$richard;
119
5a964f20 120Which makes $richard and $dick the same variable, but leaves
a0d0e21e
LW
121@richard and @dick as separate arrays. Tricky, eh?
122
5e76a0e2
MC
123There is one subtle difference between the following statements:
124
125 *foo = *bar;
126 *foo = \$bar;
127
128C<*foo = *bar> makes the typeglobs themselves synonymous while
129C<*foo = \$bar> makes the SCALAR portions of two distinct typeglobs
130refer to the same scalar value. This means that the following code:
131
132 $bar = 1;
133 *foo = \$bar; # Make $foo an alias for $bar
134
135 {
136 local $bar = 2; # Restrict changes to block
137 print $foo; # Prints '1'!
138 }
139
140Would print '1', because C<$foo> holds a reference to the I<original>
ac036724 141C<$bar>. The one that was stuffed away by C<local()> and which will be
5e76a0e2
MC
142restored when the block ends. Because variables are accessed through the
143typeglob, you can use C<*foo = *bar> to create an alias which can be
144localized. (But be aware that this means you can't have a separate
145C<@foo> and C<@bar>, etc.)
146
147What makes all of this important is that the Exporter module uses glob
148aliasing as the import/export mechanism. Whether or not you can properly
149localize a variable that has been exported from a module depends on how
150it was exported:
151
152 @EXPORT = qw($FOO); # Usual form, can't be localized
153 @EXPORT = qw(*FOO); # Can be localized
154
14c715f4 155You can work around the first case by using the fully qualified name
5e76a0e2
MC
156(C<$Package::FOO>) where you need a local value, or by overriding it
157by saying C<*FOO = *Package::FOO> in your script.
158
159The C<*x = \$y> mechanism may be used to pass and return cheap references
5803be0d 160into or from subroutines if you don't want to copy the whole
5a964f20
TC
161thing. It only works when assigning to dynamic variables, not
162lexicals.
cb1a09d0 163
5a964f20 164 %some_hash = (); # can't be my()
cb1a09d0
AD
165 *some_hash = fn( \%another_hash );
166 sub fn {
167 local *hashsym = shift;
168 # now use %hashsym normally, and you
169 # will affect the caller's %another_hash
170 my %nhash = (); # do what you want
5f05dabc 171 return \%nhash;
cb1a09d0
AD
172 }
173
5f05dabc 174On return, the reference will overwrite the hash slot in the
cb1a09d0 175symbol table specified by the *some_hash typeglob. This
c36e9b62 176is a somewhat tricky way of passing around references cheaply
5803be0d 177when you don't want to have to remember to dereference variables
cb1a09d0
AD
178explicitly.
179
19799a22 180Another use of symbol tables is for making "constant" scalars.
d74e8afc 181X<constant> X<scalar, constant>
cb1a09d0
AD
182
183 *PI = \3.14159265358979;
184
bc8df162 185Now you cannot alter C<$PI>, which is probably a good thing all in all.
5a964f20 186This isn't the same as a constant subroutine, which is subject to
5803be0d 187optimization at compile-time. A constant subroutine is one prototyped
14c715f4 188to take no arguments and to return a constant expression. See
5803be0d 189L<perlsub> for details on these. The C<use constant> pragma is a
5a964f20 190convenient shorthand for these.
cb1a09d0 191
55497cff 192You can say C<*foo{PACKAGE}> and C<*foo{NAME}> to find out what name and
193package the *foo symbol table entry comes from. This may be useful
5a964f20 194in a subroutine that gets passed typeglobs as arguments:
55497cff 195
196 sub identify_typeglob {
197 my $glob = shift;
198 print 'You gave me ', *{$glob}{PACKAGE}, '::', *{$glob}{NAME}, "\n";
199 }
200 identify_typeglob *foo;
201 identify_typeglob *bar::baz;
202
203This prints
204
205 You gave me main::foo
206 You gave me bar::baz
207
19799a22 208The C<*foo{THING}> notation can also be used to obtain references to the
5803be0d 209individual elements of *foo. See L<perlref>.
55497cff 210
9263d47b
GS
211Subroutine definitions (and declarations, for that matter) need
212not necessarily be situated in the package whose symbol table they
213occupy. You can define a subroutine outside its package by
214explicitly qualifying the name of the subroutine:
215
216 package main;
217 sub Some_package::foo { ... } # &foo defined in Some_package
218
219This is just a shorthand for a typeglob assignment at compile time:
220
221 BEGIN { *Some_package::foo = sub { ... } }
222
223and is I<not> the same as writing:
224
225 {
226 package Some_package;
227 sub foo { ... }
228 }
229
230In the first two versions, the body of the subroutine is
231lexically in the main package, I<not> in Some_package. So
232something like this:
233
234 package main;
235
236 $Some_package::name = "fred";
237 $main::name = "barney";
238
239 sub Some_package::foo {
240 print "in ", __PACKAGE__, ": \$name is '$name'\n";
241 }
242
243 Some_package::foo();
244
245prints:
246
247 in main: $name is 'barney'
248
249rather than:
250
251 in Some_package: $name is 'fred'
252
253This also has implications for the use of the SUPER:: qualifier
254(see L<perlobj>).
255
3c10abe3
AG
256=head2 BEGIN, UNITCHECK, CHECK, INIT and END
257X<BEGIN> X<UNITCHECK> X<CHECK> X<INIT> X<END>
ac90fb77 258
3c10abe3
AG
259Five specially named code blocks are executed at the beginning and at
260the end of a running Perl program. These are the C<BEGIN>,
261C<UNITCHECK>, C<CHECK>, C<INIT>, and C<END> blocks.
ac90fb77
EM
262
263These code blocks can be prefixed with C<sub> to give the appearance of a
264subroutine (although this is not considered good style). One should note
265that these code blocks don't really exist as named subroutines (despite
266their appearance). The thing that gives this away is the fact that you can
267have B<more than one> of these code blocks in a program, and they will get
268B<all> executed at the appropriate moment. So you can't execute any of
269these code blocks by name.
270
271A C<BEGIN> code block is executed as soon as possible, that is, the moment
272it is completely defined, even before the rest of the containing file (or
273string) is parsed. You may have multiple C<BEGIN> blocks within a file (or
ac036724 274eval'ed string); they will execute in order of definition. Because a C<BEGIN>
ac90fb77
EM
275code block executes immediately, it can pull in definitions of subroutines
276and such from other files in time to be visible to the rest of the compile
277and run time. Once a C<BEGIN> has run, it is immediately undefined and any
278code it used is returned to Perl's memory pool.
279
ac90fb77 280An C<END> code block is executed as late as possible, that is, after
4f25aa18
GS
281perl has finished running the program and just before the interpreter
282is being exited, even if it is exiting as a result of a die() function.
3bf5301d 283(But not if it's morphing into another program via C<exec>, or
4f25aa18
GS
284being blown out of the water by a signal--you have to trap that yourself
285(if you can).) You may have multiple C<END> blocks within a file--they
286will execute in reverse order of definition; that is: last in, first
287out (LIFO). C<END> blocks are not executed when you run perl with the
db517d64 288C<-c> switch, or if compilation fails.
a0d0e21e 289
ac90fb77
EM
290Note that C<END> code blocks are B<not> executed at the end of a string
291C<eval()>: if any C<END> code blocks are created in a string C<eval()>,
292they will be executed just as any other C<END> code block of that package
293in LIFO order just before the interpreter is being exited.
294
295Inside an C<END> code block, C<$?> contains the value that the program is
c36e9b62 296going to pass to C<exit()>. You can modify C<$?> to change the exit
19799a22 297value of the program. Beware of changing C<$?> by accident (e.g. by
c36e9b62 298running something via C<system>).
d74e8afc 299X<$?>
c36e9b62 300
191f4b8c
CO
301Inside of a C<END> block, the value of C<${^GLOBAL_PHASE}> will be
302C<"END">.
303
3c10abe3
AG
304C<UNITCHECK>, C<CHECK> and C<INIT> code blocks are useful to catch the
305transition between the compilation phase and the execution phase of
306the main program.
307
308C<UNITCHECK> blocks are run just after the unit which defined them has
309been compiled. The main program file and each module it loads are
310compilation units, as are string C<eval>s, code compiled using the
311C<(?{ })> construct in a regex, calls to C<do FILE>, C<require FILE>,
312and code after the C<-e> switch on the command line.
ca62f0fc 313
191f4b8c
CO
314C<BEGIN> and C<UNITCHECK> blocks are not directly related to the phase of
315the interpreter. They can be created and executed during any phase.
316
ac90fb77
EM
317C<CHECK> code blocks are run just after the B<initial> Perl compile phase ends
318and before the run time begins, in LIFO order. C<CHECK> code blocks are used
319in the Perl compiler suite to save the compiled state of the program.
ca62f0fc 320
191f4b8c
CO
321Inside of a C<CHECK> block, the value of C<${^GLOBAL_PHASE}> will be
322C<"CHECK">.
323
ca62f0fc 324C<INIT> blocks are run just before the Perl runtime begins execution, in
59f521f4 325"first in, first out" (FIFO) order.
4f25aa18 326
191f4b8c
CO
327Inside of an C<INIT> block, the value of C<${^GLOBAL_PHASE}> will be C<"INIT">.
328
9e923162
CO
329The C<CHECK> and C<INIT> blocks in code compiled by C<require>, string C<do>,
330or string C<eval> will not be executed if they occur after the end of the
331main compilation phase; that can be a problem in mod_perl and other persistent
332environments which use those functions to load code at runtime.
98107fc7 333
19799a22 334When you use the B<-n> and B<-p> switches to Perl, C<BEGIN> and
4375e838
GS
335C<END> work just as they do in B<awk>, as a degenerate case.
336Both C<BEGIN> and C<CHECK> blocks are run when you use the B<-c>
337switch for a compile-only syntax check, although your main code
338is not.
a0d0e21e 339
055634da
TP
340The B<begincheck> program makes it all clear, eventually:
341
342 #!/usr/bin/perl
343
344 # begincheck
345
3c10abe3 346 print "10. Ordinary code runs at runtime.\n";
055634da 347
3c10abe3
AG
348 END { print "16. So this is the end of the tale.\n" }
349 INIT { print " 7. INIT blocks run FIFO just before runtime.\n" }
350 UNITCHECK {
351 print " 4. And therefore before any CHECK blocks.\n"
352 }
353 CHECK { print " 6. So this is the sixth line.\n" }
055634da 354
3c10abe3 355 print "11. It runs in order, of course.\n";
055634da
TP
356
357 BEGIN { print " 1. BEGIN blocks run FIFO during compilation.\n" }
3c10abe3
AG
358 END { print "15. Read perlmod for the rest of the story.\n" }
359 CHECK { print " 5. CHECK blocks run LIFO after all compilation.\n" }
360 INIT { print " 8. Run this again, using Perl's -c switch.\n" }
055634da 361
3c10abe3 362 print "12. This is anti-obfuscated code.\n";
055634da 363
3c10abe3 364 END { print "14. END blocks run LIFO at quitting time.\n" }
055634da 365 BEGIN { print " 2. So this line comes out second.\n" }
3c10abe3
AG
366 UNITCHECK {
367 print " 3. UNITCHECK blocks run LIFO after each file is compiled.\n"
368 }
369 INIT { print " 9. You'll see the difference right away.\n" }
055634da 370
3c10abe3 371 print "13. It merely _looks_ like it should be confusing.\n";
055634da
TP
372
373 __END__
374
a0d0e21e 375=head2 Perl Classes
d74e8afc 376X<class> X<@ISA>
a0d0e21e 377
19799a22 378There is no special class syntax in Perl, but a package may act
5a964f20
TC
379as a class if it provides subroutines to act as methods. Such a
380package may also derive some of its methods from another class (package)
14c715f4 381by listing the other package name(s) in its global @ISA array (which
5a964f20 382must be a package global, not a lexical).
4633a7c4 383
82e1c0d9 384For more on this, see L<perlootut> and L<perlobj>.
a0d0e21e
LW
385
386=head2 Perl Modules
d74e8afc 387X<module>
a0d0e21e 388
5803be0d 389A module is just a set of related functions in a library file, i.e.,
14c715f4 390a Perl package with the same name as the file. It is specifically
5803be0d
GS
391designed to be reusable by other modules or programs. It may do this
392by providing a mechanism for exporting some of its symbols into the
14c715f4 393symbol table of any package using it, or it may function as a class
19799a22
GS
394definition and make its semantics available implicitly through
395method calls on the class and its objects, without explicitly
4375e838 396exporting anything. Or it can do a little of both.
a0d0e21e 397
19799a22
GS
398For example, to start a traditional, non-OO module called Some::Module,
399create a file called F<Some/Module.pm> and start with this template:
9607fc9c 400
401 package Some::Module; # assumes Some/Module.pm
402
403 use strict;
9f1b1f2d 404 use warnings;
9607fc9c 405
406 BEGIN {
01d915c0 407 require Exporter;
9607fc9c 408
409 # set the version for version checking
01d915c0 410 our $VERSION = 1.00;
9607fc9c 411
01d915c0
MS
412 # Inherit from Exporter to export functions and variables
413 our @ISA = qw(Exporter);
9607fc9c 414
01d915c0
MS
415 # Functions and variables which are exported by default
416 our @EXPORT = qw(func1 func2);
417
418 # Functions and variables which can be optionally exported
419 our @EXPORT_OK = qw($Var1 %Hashit func3);
9607fc9c 420 }
9607fc9c 421
3da4c8f2 422 # exported package globals go here
01d915c0
MS
423 our $Var1 = '';
424 our %Hashit = ();
3da4c8f2 425
9607fc9c 426 # non-exported package globals go here
01d915c0
MS
427 # (they are still accessible as $Some::Module::stuff)
428 our @more = ();
429 our $stuff = '';
9607fc9c 430
01d915c0 431 # file-private lexicals go here, before any functions which use them
9607fc9c 432 my $priv_var = '';
433 my %secret_hash = ();
434
435 # here's a file-private function as a closure,
01d915c0 436 # callable as $priv_func->();
9607fc9c 437 my $priv_func = sub {
01d915c0 438 ...
9607fc9c 439 };
440
441 # make all your functions, whether exported or not;
442 # remember to put something interesting in the {} stubs
01d915c0
MS
443 sub func1 { ... }
444 sub func2 { ... }
9607fc9c 445
01d915c0
MS
446 # this one isn't exported, but could be called directly
447 # as Some::Module::func3()
448 sub func3 { ... }
4633a7c4 449
01d915c0 450 END { ... } # module clean-up code here (global destructor)
19799a22
GS
451
452 1; # don't forget to return a true value from the file
453
454Then go on to declare and use your variables in functions without
455any qualifications. See L<Exporter> and the L<perlmodlib> for
456details on mechanics and style issues in module creation.
4633a7c4
LW
457
458Perl modules are included into your program by saying
a0d0e21e
LW
459
460 use Module;
461
462or
463
464 use Module LIST;
465
466This is exactly equivalent to
467
76503c97 468 BEGIN { require 'Module.pm'; 'Module'->import; }
a0d0e21e
LW
469
470or
471
76503c97 472 BEGIN { require 'Module.pm'; 'Module'->import( LIST ); }
a0d0e21e 473
cb1a09d0
AD
474As a special case
475
476 use Module ();
477
478is exactly equivalent to
479
76503c97 480 BEGIN { require 'Module.pm'; }
cb1a09d0 481
19799a22
GS
482All Perl module files have the extension F<.pm>. The C<use> operator
483assumes this so you don't have to spell out "F<Module.pm>" in quotes.
484This also helps to differentiate new modules from old F<.pl> and
485F<.ph> files. Module names are also capitalized unless they're
486functioning as pragmas; pragmas are in effect compiler directives,
487and are sometimes called "pragmatic modules" (or even "pragmata"
488if you're a classicist).
a0d0e21e 489
5a964f20
TC
490The two statements:
491
492 require SomeModule;
14c715f4 493 require "SomeModule.pm";
5a964f20
TC
494
495differ from each other in two ways. In the first case, any double
496colons in the module name, such as C<Some::Module>, are translated
497into your system's directory separator, usually "/". The second
19799a22
GS
498case does not, and would have to be specified literally. The other
499difference is that seeing the first C<require> clues in the compiler
500that uses of indirect object notation involving "SomeModule", as
501in C<$ob = purge SomeModule>, are method calls, not function calls.
502(Yes, this really can make a difference.)
503
504Because the C<use> statement implies a C<BEGIN> block, the importing
505of semantics happens as soon as the C<use> statement is compiled,
a0d0e21e
LW
506before the rest of the file is compiled. This is how it is able
507to function as a pragma mechanism, and also how modules are able to
19799a22 508declare subroutines that are then visible as list or unary operators for
a0d0e21e 509the rest of the current file. This will not work if you use C<require>
19799a22 510instead of C<use>. With C<require> you can get into this problem:
a0d0e21e
LW
511
512 require Cwd; # make Cwd:: accessible
54310121 513 $here = Cwd::getcwd();
a0d0e21e 514
5f05dabc 515 use Cwd; # import names from Cwd::
a0d0e21e
LW
516 $here = getcwd();
517
518 require Cwd; # make Cwd:: accessible
519 $here = getcwd(); # oops! no main::getcwd()
520
5a964f20
TC
521In general, C<use Module ()> is recommended over C<require Module>,
522because it determines module availability at compile time, not in the
523middle of your program's execution. An exception would be if two modules
524each tried to C<use> each other, and each also called a function from
14c715f4 525that other module. In that case, it's easy to use C<require> instead.
cb1a09d0 526
a0d0e21e
LW
527Perl packages may be nested inside other package names, so we can have
528package names containing C<::>. But if we used that package name
5803be0d 529directly as a filename it would make for unwieldy or impossible
a0d0e21e
LW
530filenames on some systems. Therefore, if a module's name is, say,
531C<Text::Soundex>, then its definition is actually found in the library
532file F<Text/Soundex.pm>.
533
19799a22
GS
534Perl modules always have a F<.pm> file, but there may also be
535dynamically linked executables (often ending in F<.so>) or autoloaded
5803be0d 536subroutine definitions (often ending in F<.al>) associated with the
19799a22
GS
537module. If so, these will be entirely transparent to the user of
538the module. It is the responsibility of the F<.pm> file to load
539(or arrange to autoload) any additional functionality. For example,
540although the POSIX module happens to do both dynamic loading and
5803be0d 541autoloading, the user can say just C<use POSIX> to get it all.
a0d0e21e 542
f2fc0a40 543=head2 Making your module threadsafe
d74e8afc
ITB
544X<threadsafe> X<thread safe>
545X<module, threadsafe> X<module, thread safe>
546X<CLONE> X<CLONE_SKIP> X<thread> X<threads> X<ithread>
f2fc0a40 547
14c715f4
CP
548Since 5.6.0, Perl has had support for a new type of threads called
549interpreter threads (ithreads). These threads can be used explicitly
550and implicitly.
f2fc0a40
AB
551
552Ithreads work by cloning the data tree so that no data is shared
14c715f4 553between different threads. These threads can be used by using the C<threads>
4ebc451b
JH
554module or by doing fork() on win32 (fake fork() support). When a
555thread is cloned all Perl data is cloned, however non-Perl data cannot
14c715f4 556be cloned automatically. Perl after 5.7.2 has support for the C<CLONE>
4d5ff0dd 557special subroutine. In C<CLONE> you can do whatever
9660f481 558you need to do,
4ebc451b 559like for example handle the cloning of non-Perl data, if necessary.
38e4e52d
NC
560C<CLONE> will be called once as a class method for every package that has it
561defined (or inherits it). It will be called in the context of the new thread,
562so all modifications are made in the new area. Currently CLONE is called with
7698aede 563no parameters other than the invocant package name, but code should not assume
38e4e52d
NC
564that this will remain unchanged, as it is likely that in future extra parameters
565will be passed in to give more information about the state of cloning.
f2fc0a40
AB
566
567If you want to CLONE all objects you will need to keep track of them per
568package. This is simply done using a hash and Scalar::Util::weaken().
569
4d5ff0dd 570Perl after 5.8.7 has support for the C<CLONE_SKIP> special subroutine.
9660f481
DM
571Like C<CLONE>, C<CLONE_SKIP> is called once per package; however, it is
572called just before cloning starts, and in the context of the parent
573thread. If it returns a true value, then no objects of that class will
574be cloned; or rather, they will be copied as unblessed, undef values.
33de8e4a
DM
575For example: if in the parent there are two references to a single blessed
576hash, then in the child there will be two references to a single undefined
577scalar value instead.
9660f481 578This provides a simple mechanism for making a module threadsafe; just add
bca52ca1 579C<sub CLONE_SKIP { 1 }> at the top of the class, and C<DESTROY()> will
9660f481
DM
580now only be called once per object. Of course, if the child thread needs
581to make use of the objects, then a more sophisticated approach is
582needed.
583
584Like C<CLONE>, C<CLONE_SKIP> is currently called with no parameters other
7698aede 585than the invocant package name, although that may change. Similarly, to
9660f481
DM
586allow for future expansion, the return value should be a single C<0> or
587C<1> value.
588
f102b883 589=head1 SEE ALSO
cb1a09d0 590
f102b883 591See L<perlmodlib> for general style issues related to building Perl
19799a22
GS
592modules and classes, as well as descriptions of the standard library
593and CPAN, L<Exporter> for how Perl's standard import/export mechanism
82e1c0d9 594works, L<perlootut> and L<perlobj> for in-depth information on
19799a22
GS
595creating classes, L<perlobj> for a hard-core reference document on
596objects, L<perlsub> for an explanation of functions and scoping,
597and L<perlxstut> and L<perlguts> for more information on writing
598extension modules.