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1=head1 NAME
2
f102b883 3perlmod - Perl modules (packages and symbol tables)
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4
5=head1 DESCRIPTION
6
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7=head2 Is this the document you were after?
8
9There are other documents which might contain the information that you're
10looking for:
11
12=over 2
13
14=item This doc
15
16Perl's packages, namespaces, and some info on classes.
17
18=item L<perlnewmod>
19
20Tutorial on making a new module.
21
22=item L<perlmodstyle>
23
24Best practices for making a new module.
25
26=back
27
a0d0e21e 28=head2 Packages
d74e8afc 29X<package> X<namespace> X<variable, global> X<global variable> X<global>
a0d0e21e 30
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31Unlike Perl 4, in which all the variables were dynamic and shared one
32global name space, causing maintainability problems, Perl 5 provides two
33mechanisms for protecting code from having its variables stomped on by
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34other code: lexically scoped variables created with C<my> or C<state> and
35namespaced global variables, which are exposed via the C<vars> pragma,
36or the C<our> keyword. Any global variable is considered to
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37be part of a namespace and can be accessed via a "fully qualified form".
38Conversely, any lexically scoped variable is considered to be part of
6bc3ceb8 39that lexical-scope, and does not have a "fully qualified form".
0ee4a8bd 40
6bc3ceb8 41In perl namespaces are called "packages" and
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42the C<package> declaration tells the compiler which
43namespace to prefix to C<our> variables and unqualified dynamic names.
44This both protects
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45against accidental stomping and provides an interface for deliberately
46clobbering global dynamic variables declared and used in other scopes or
47packages, when that is what you want to do.
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48
49The scope of the C<package> declaration is from the
19799a22 50declaration itself through the end of the enclosing block, C<eval>,
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51or file, whichever comes first (the same scope as the my(), our(), state(), and
52local() operators, and also the effect
53of the experimental "reference aliasing," which may change), or until
54the next C<package> declaration. Unqualified dynamic identifiers will be in
55this namespace, except for those few identifiers that, if unqualified,
19799a22 56default to the main package instead of the current one as described
0ee4a8bd 57below. A C<package> statement affects only dynamic global
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58symbols, including subroutine names, and variables you've used local()
59on, but I<not> lexical variables created with my(), our() or state().
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60
61Typically, a C<package> statement is the first declaration in a file
62included in a program by one of the C<do>, C<require>, or C<use> operators. You can
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63switch into a package in more than one place: C<package> has no
64effect beyond specifying which symbol table the compiler will use for
65dynamic symbols for the rest of that block or until the next C<package> statement.
66You can refer to variables and filehandles in other packages
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67by prefixing the identifier with the package name and a double
68colon: C<$Package::Variable>. If the package name is null, the
69C<main> package is assumed. That is, C<$::sail> is equivalent to
70C<$main::sail>.
a0d0e21e 71
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72The old package delimiter was a single quote, but double colon is now the
73preferred delimiter, in part because it's more readable to humans, and
74in part because it's more readable to B<emacs> macros. It also makes C++
75programmers feel like they know what's going on--as opposed to using the
76single quote as separator, which was there to make Ada programmers feel
14c715f4 77like they knew what was going on. Because the old-fashioned syntax is still
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78supported for backwards compatibility, if you try to use a string like
79C<"This is $owner's house">, you'll be accessing C<$owner::s>; that is,
80the $s variable in package C<owner>, which is probably not what you meant.
81Use braces to disambiguate, as in C<"This is ${owner}'s house">.
d74e8afc 82X<::> X<'>
a0d0e21e 83
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84Packages may themselves contain package separators, as in
85C<$OUTER::INNER::var>. This implies nothing about the order of
86name lookups, however. There are no relative packages: all symbols
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87are either local to the current package, or must be fully qualified
88from the outer package name down. For instance, there is nowhere
19799a22 89within package C<OUTER> that C<$INNER::var> refers to
14c715f4 90C<$OUTER::INNER::var>. C<INNER> refers to a totally
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91separate global package. The custom of treating package names as a
92hierarchy is very strong, but the language in no way enforces it.
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93
94Only identifiers starting with letters (or underscore) are stored
95in a package's symbol table. All other symbols are kept in package
96C<main>, including all punctuation variables, like $_. In addition,
97when unqualified, the identifiers STDIN, STDOUT, STDERR, ARGV,
98ARGVOUT, ENV, INC, and SIG are forced to be in package C<main>,
14c715f4 99even when used for other purposes than their built-in ones. If you
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100have a package called C<m>, C<s>, or C<y>, then you can't use the
101qualified form of an identifier because it would be instead interpreted
102as a pattern match, a substitution, or a transliteration.
d74e8afc 103X<variable, punctuation>
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104
105Variables beginning with underscore used to be forced into package
a0d0e21e 106main, but we decided it was more useful for package writers to be able
cb1a09d0 107to use leading underscore to indicate private variables and method names.
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108However, variables and functions named with a single C<_>, such as
109$_ and C<sub _>, are still forced into the package C<main>. See also
96090e4f 110L<perlvar/"The Syntax of Variable Names">.
a0d0e21e 111
19799a22 112C<eval>ed strings are compiled in the package in which the eval() was
a0d0e21e 113compiled. (Assignments to C<$SIG{}>, however, assume the signal
748a9306 114handler specified is in the C<main> package. Qualify the signal handler
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115name if you wish to have a signal handler in a package.) For an
116example, examine F<perldb.pl> in the Perl library. It initially switches
117to the C<DB> package so that the debugger doesn't interfere with variables
19799a22 118in the program you are trying to debug. At various points, however, it
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119temporarily switches back to the C<main> package to evaluate various
120expressions in the context of the C<main> package (or wherever you came
121from). See L<perldebug>.
122
f102b883 123The special symbol C<__PACKAGE__> contains the current package, but cannot
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124(easily) be used to construct variable names. After C<my($foo)> has hidden
125package variable C<$foo>, it can still be accessed, without knowing what
126package you are in, as C<${__PACKAGE__.'::foo'}>.
f102b883 127
5f05dabc 128See L<perlsub> for other scoping issues related to my() and local(),
f102b883 129and L<perlref> regarding closures.
cb1a09d0 130
a0d0e21e 131=head2 Symbol Tables
d74e8afc 132X<symbol table> X<stash> X<%::> X<%main::> X<typeglob> X<glob> X<alias>
a0d0e21e 133
aa689395 134The symbol table for a package happens to be stored in the hash of that
135name with two colons appended. The main symbol table's name is thus
5803be0d 136C<%main::>, or C<%::> for short. Likewise the symbol table for the nested
aa689395 137package mentioned earlier is named C<%OUTER::INNER::>.
138
139The value in each entry of the hash is what you are referring to when you
8c44bff1 140use the C<*name> typeglob notation.
a0d0e21e 141
f102b883 142 local *main::foo = *main::bar;
bc8df162 143
a0d0e21e 144You can use this to print out all the variables in a package, for
4375e838 145instance. The standard but antiquated F<dumpvar.pl> library and
19799a22 146the CPAN module Devel::Symdump make use of this.
a0d0e21e 147
993e39b1 148The results of creating new symbol table entries directly or modifying any
fa4ec284 149entries that are not already typeglobs are undefined and subject to change
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150between releases of perl.
151
cb1a09d0 152Assignment to a typeglob performs an aliasing operation, i.e.,
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153
154 *dick = *richard;
155
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156causes variables, subroutines, formats, and file and directory handles
157accessible via the identifier C<richard> also to be accessible via the
158identifier C<dick>. If you want to alias only a particular variable or
19799a22 159subroutine, assign a reference instead:
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160
161 *dick = \$richard;
162
5a964f20 163Which makes $richard and $dick the same variable, but leaves
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164@richard and @dick as separate arrays. Tricky, eh?
165
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166There is one subtle difference between the following statements:
167
168 *foo = *bar;
169 *foo = \$bar;
170
171C<*foo = *bar> makes the typeglobs themselves synonymous while
172C<*foo = \$bar> makes the SCALAR portions of two distinct typeglobs
173refer to the same scalar value. This means that the following code:
174
175 $bar = 1;
176 *foo = \$bar; # Make $foo an alias for $bar
177
178 {
179 local $bar = 2; # Restrict changes to block
180 print $foo; # Prints '1'!
181 }
182
183Would print '1', because C<$foo> holds a reference to the I<original>
ac036724 184C<$bar>. The one that was stuffed away by C<local()> and which will be
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185restored when the block ends. Because variables are accessed through the
186typeglob, you can use C<*foo = *bar> to create an alias which can be
187localized. (But be aware that this means you can't have a separate
188C<@foo> and C<@bar>, etc.)
189
190What makes all of this important is that the Exporter module uses glob
191aliasing as the import/export mechanism. Whether or not you can properly
192localize a variable that has been exported from a module depends on how
193it was exported:
194
195 @EXPORT = qw($FOO); # Usual form, can't be localized
196 @EXPORT = qw(*FOO); # Can be localized
197
14c715f4 198You can work around the first case by using the fully qualified name
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199(C<$Package::FOO>) where you need a local value, or by overriding it
200by saying C<*FOO = *Package::FOO> in your script.
201
202The C<*x = \$y> mechanism may be used to pass and return cheap references
5803be0d 203into or from subroutines if you don't want to copy the whole
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204thing. It only works when assigning to dynamic variables, not
205lexicals.
cb1a09d0 206
5a964f20 207 %some_hash = (); # can't be my()
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208 *some_hash = fn( \%another_hash );
209 sub fn {
210 local *hashsym = shift;
211 # now use %hashsym normally, and you
212 # will affect the caller's %another_hash
213 my %nhash = (); # do what you want
5f05dabc 214 return \%nhash;
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215 }
216
5f05dabc 217On return, the reference will overwrite the hash slot in the
cb1a09d0 218symbol table specified by the *some_hash typeglob. This
c36e9b62 219is a somewhat tricky way of passing around references cheaply
5803be0d 220when you don't want to have to remember to dereference variables
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221explicitly.
222
19799a22 223Another use of symbol tables is for making "constant" scalars.
d74e8afc 224X<constant> X<scalar, constant>
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225
226 *PI = \3.14159265358979;
227
bc8df162 228Now you cannot alter C<$PI>, which is probably a good thing all in all.
5a964f20 229This isn't the same as a constant subroutine, which is subject to
5803be0d 230optimization at compile-time. A constant subroutine is one prototyped
14c715f4 231to take no arguments and to return a constant expression. See
5803be0d 232L<perlsub> for details on these. The C<use constant> pragma is a
5a964f20 233convenient shorthand for these.
cb1a09d0 234
55497cff 235You can say C<*foo{PACKAGE}> and C<*foo{NAME}> to find out what name and
236package the *foo symbol table entry comes from. This may be useful
5a964f20 237in a subroutine that gets passed typeglobs as arguments:
55497cff 238
239 sub identify_typeglob {
240 my $glob = shift;
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241 print 'You gave me ', *{$glob}{PACKAGE},
242 '::', *{$glob}{NAME}, "\n";
55497cff 243 }
244 identify_typeglob *foo;
245 identify_typeglob *bar::baz;
246
247This prints
248
249 You gave me main::foo
250 You gave me bar::baz
251
19799a22 252The C<*foo{THING}> notation can also be used to obtain references to the
5803be0d 253individual elements of *foo. See L<perlref>.
55497cff 254
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255Subroutine definitions (and declarations, for that matter) need
256not necessarily be situated in the package whose symbol table they
257occupy. You can define a subroutine outside its package by
258explicitly qualifying the name of the subroutine:
259
260 package main;
261 sub Some_package::foo { ... } # &foo defined in Some_package
262
263This is just a shorthand for a typeglob assignment at compile time:
264
265 BEGIN { *Some_package::foo = sub { ... } }
266
267and is I<not> the same as writing:
268
269 {
270 package Some_package;
271 sub foo { ... }
272 }
273
274In the first two versions, the body of the subroutine is
275lexically in the main package, I<not> in Some_package. So
276something like this:
277
278 package main;
279
280 $Some_package::name = "fred";
281 $main::name = "barney";
282
283 sub Some_package::foo {
284 print "in ", __PACKAGE__, ": \$name is '$name'\n";
285 }
286
287 Some_package::foo();
288
289prints:
290
291 in main: $name is 'barney'
292
293rather than:
294
295 in Some_package: $name is 'fred'
296
297This also has implications for the use of the SUPER:: qualifier
298(see L<perlobj>).
299
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300=head2 BEGIN, UNITCHECK, CHECK, INIT and END
301X<BEGIN> X<UNITCHECK> X<CHECK> X<INIT> X<END>
ac90fb77 302
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303Five specially named code blocks are executed at the beginning and at
304the end of a running Perl program. These are the C<BEGIN>,
305C<UNITCHECK>, C<CHECK>, C<INIT>, and C<END> blocks.
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306
307These code blocks can be prefixed with C<sub> to give the appearance of a
308subroutine (although this is not considered good style). One should note
309that these code blocks don't really exist as named subroutines (despite
310their appearance). The thing that gives this away is the fact that you can
311have B<more than one> of these code blocks in a program, and they will get
312B<all> executed at the appropriate moment. So you can't execute any of
313these code blocks by name.
314
315A C<BEGIN> code block is executed as soon as possible, that is, the moment
316it is completely defined, even before the rest of the containing file (or
317string) is parsed. You may have multiple C<BEGIN> blocks within a file (or
ac036724 318eval'ed string); they will execute in order of definition. Because a C<BEGIN>
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319code block executes immediately, it can pull in definitions of subroutines
320and such from other files in time to be visible to the rest of the compile
321and run time. Once a C<BEGIN> has run, it is immediately undefined and any
322code it used is returned to Perl's memory pool.
323
ac90fb77 324An C<END> code block is executed as late as possible, that is, after
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325perl has finished running the program and just before the interpreter
326is being exited, even if it is exiting as a result of a die() function.
3bf5301d 327(But not if it's morphing into another program via C<exec>, or
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328being blown out of the water by a signal--you have to trap that yourself
329(if you can).) You may have multiple C<END> blocks within a file--they
330will execute in reverse order of definition; that is: last in, first
331out (LIFO). C<END> blocks are not executed when you run perl with the
db517d64 332C<-c> switch, or if compilation fails.
a0d0e21e 333
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334Note that C<END> code blocks are B<not> executed at the end of a string
335C<eval()>: if any C<END> code blocks are created in a string C<eval()>,
336they will be executed just as any other C<END> code block of that package
337in LIFO order just before the interpreter is being exited.
338
339Inside an C<END> code block, C<$?> contains the value that the program is
c36e9b62 340going to pass to C<exit()>. You can modify C<$?> to change the exit
19799a22 341value of the program. Beware of changing C<$?> by accident (e.g. by
c36e9b62 342running something via C<system>).
d74e8afc 343X<$?>
c36e9b62 344
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345Inside of a C<END> block, the value of C<${^GLOBAL_PHASE}> will be
346C<"END">.
347
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348Similar to an C<END> block are C<defer> blocks, though they operate on the
349lifetime of individual block scopes, rather than the program as a whole. They
350are documented in L<perlsyn/defer>.
351
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352C<UNITCHECK>, C<CHECK> and C<INIT> code blocks are useful to catch the
353transition between the compilation phase and the execution phase of
354the main program.
355
356C<UNITCHECK> blocks are run just after the unit which defined them has
357been compiled. The main program file and each module it loads are
68e2671b 358compilation units, as are string C<eval>s, run-time code compiled using the
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359C<(?{ })> construct in a regex, calls to C<do FILE>, C<require FILE>,
360and code after the C<-e> switch on the command line.
ca62f0fc 361
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362C<BEGIN> and C<UNITCHECK> blocks are not directly related to the phase of
363the interpreter. They can be created and executed during any phase.
364
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365C<CHECK> code blocks are run just after the B<initial> Perl compile phase ends
366and before the run time begins, in LIFO order. C<CHECK> code blocks are used
367in the Perl compiler suite to save the compiled state of the program.
ca62f0fc 368
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369Inside of a C<CHECK> block, the value of C<${^GLOBAL_PHASE}> will be
370C<"CHECK">.
371
ca62f0fc 372C<INIT> blocks are run just before the Perl runtime begins execution, in
59f521f4 373"first in, first out" (FIFO) order.
4f25aa18 374
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375Inside of an C<INIT> block, the value of C<${^GLOBAL_PHASE}> will be C<"INIT">.
376
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377The C<CHECK> and C<INIT> blocks in code compiled by C<require>, string C<do>,
378or string C<eval> will not be executed if they occur after the end of the
379main compilation phase; that can be a problem in mod_perl and other persistent
380environments which use those functions to load code at runtime.
98107fc7 381
19799a22 382When you use the B<-n> and B<-p> switches to Perl, C<BEGIN> and
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383C<END> work just as they do in B<awk>, as a degenerate case.
384Both C<BEGIN> and C<CHECK> blocks are run when you use the B<-c>
385switch for a compile-only syntax check, although your main code
386is not.
a0d0e21e 387
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388The B<begincheck> program makes it all clear, eventually:
389
390 #!/usr/bin/perl
391
392 # begincheck
393
3c10abe3 394 print "10. Ordinary code runs at runtime.\n";
055634da 395
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396 END { print "16. So this is the end of the tale.\n" }
397 INIT { print " 7. INIT blocks run FIFO just before runtime.\n" }
398 UNITCHECK {
399 print " 4. And therefore before any CHECK blocks.\n"
400 }
401 CHECK { print " 6. So this is the sixth line.\n" }
055634da 402
3c10abe3 403 print "11. It runs in order, of course.\n";
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404
405 BEGIN { print " 1. BEGIN blocks run FIFO during compilation.\n" }
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406 END { print "15. Read perlmod for the rest of the story.\n" }
407 CHECK { print " 5. CHECK blocks run LIFO after all compilation.\n" }
408 INIT { print " 8. Run this again, using Perl's -c switch.\n" }
055634da 409
3c10abe3 410 print "12. This is anti-obfuscated code.\n";
055634da 411
3c10abe3 412 END { print "14. END blocks run LIFO at quitting time.\n" }
055634da 413 BEGIN { print " 2. So this line comes out second.\n" }
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414 UNITCHECK {
415 print " 3. UNITCHECK blocks run LIFO after each file is compiled.\n"
416 }
417 INIT { print " 9. You'll see the difference right away.\n" }
055634da 418
555bd962 419 print "13. It only _looks_ like it should be confusing.\n";
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420
421 __END__
422
a0d0e21e 423=head2 Perl Classes
d74e8afc 424X<class> X<@ISA>
a0d0e21e 425
19799a22 426There is no special class syntax in Perl, but a package may act
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427as a class if it provides subroutines to act as methods. Such a
428package may also derive some of its methods from another class (package)
14c715f4 429by listing the other package name(s) in its global @ISA array (which
5a964f20 430must be a package global, not a lexical).
4633a7c4 431
82e1c0d9 432For more on this, see L<perlootut> and L<perlobj>.
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433
434=head2 Perl Modules
d74e8afc 435X<module>
a0d0e21e 436
5803be0d 437A module is just a set of related functions in a library file, i.e.,
14c715f4 438a Perl package with the same name as the file. It is specifically
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439designed to be reusable by other modules or programs. It may do this
440by providing a mechanism for exporting some of its symbols into the
14c715f4 441symbol table of any package using it, or it may function as a class
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442definition and make its semantics available implicitly through
443method calls on the class and its objects, without explicitly
4375e838 444exporting anything. Or it can do a little of both.
a0d0e21e 445
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446For example, to start a traditional, non-OO module called Some::Module,
447create a file called F<Some/Module.pm> and start with this template:
9607fc9c 448
449 package Some::Module; # assumes Some/Module.pm
450
451 use strict;
9f1b1f2d 452 use warnings;
9607fc9c 453
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454 # Get the import method from Exporter to export functions and
455 # variables
456 use Exporter 5.57 'import';
9607fc9c 457
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458 # set the version for version checking
459 our $VERSION = '1.00';
9607fc9c 460
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461 # Functions and variables which are exported by default
462 our @EXPORT = qw(func1 func2);
9607fc9c 463
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464 # Functions and variables which can be optionally exported
465 our @EXPORT_OK = qw($Var1 %Hashit func3);
9607fc9c 466
3da4c8f2 467 # exported package globals go here
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468 our $Var1 = '';
469 our %Hashit = ();
3da4c8f2 470
9607fc9c 471 # non-exported package globals go here
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472 # (they are still accessible as $Some::Module::stuff)
473 our @more = ();
474 our $stuff = '';
9607fc9c 475
01d915c0 476 # file-private lexicals go here, before any functions which use them
9607fc9c 477 my $priv_var = '';
478 my %secret_hash = ();
479
480 # here's a file-private function as a closure,
01d915c0 481 # callable as $priv_func->();
9607fc9c 482 my $priv_func = sub {
01d915c0 483 ...
9607fc9c 484 };
485
486 # make all your functions, whether exported or not;
487 # remember to put something interesting in the {} stubs
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488 sub func1 { ... }
489 sub func2 { ... }
9607fc9c 490
b634e872 491 # this one isn't always exported, but could be called directly
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492 # as Some::Module::func3()
493 sub func3 { ... }
4633a7c4 494
01d915c0 495 END { ... } # module clean-up code here (global destructor)
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496
497 1; # don't forget to return a true value from the file
498
499Then go on to declare and use your variables in functions without
500any qualifications. See L<Exporter> and the L<perlmodlib> for
501details on mechanics and style issues in module creation.
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502
503Perl modules are included into your program by saying
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504
505 use Module;
506
507or
508
509 use Module LIST;
510
511This is exactly equivalent to
512
76503c97 513 BEGIN { require 'Module.pm'; 'Module'->import; }
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514
515or
516
76503c97 517 BEGIN { require 'Module.pm'; 'Module'->import( LIST ); }
a0d0e21e 518
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519As a special case
520
521 use Module ();
522
523is exactly equivalent to
524
76503c97 525 BEGIN { require 'Module.pm'; }
cb1a09d0 526
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527All Perl module files have the extension F<.pm>. The C<use> operator
528assumes this so you don't have to spell out "F<Module.pm>" in quotes.
529This also helps to differentiate new modules from old F<.pl> and
530F<.ph> files. Module names are also capitalized unless they're
531functioning as pragmas; pragmas are in effect compiler directives,
532and are sometimes called "pragmatic modules" (or even "pragmata"
533if you're a classicist).
a0d0e21e 534
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535The two statements:
536
537 require SomeModule;
14c715f4 538 require "SomeModule.pm";
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539
540differ from each other in two ways. In the first case, any double
541colons in the module name, such as C<Some::Module>, are translated
542into your system's directory separator, usually "/". The second
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543case does not, and would have to be specified literally. The other
544difference is that seeing the first C<require> clues in the compiler
545that uses of indirect object notation involving "SomeModule", as
546in C<$ob = purge SomeModule>, are method calls, not function calls.
547(Yes, this really can make a difference.)
548
549Because the C<use> statement implies a C<BEGIN> block, the importing
550of semantics happens as soon as the C<use> statement is compiled,
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551before the rest of the file is compiled. This is how it is able
552to function as a pragma mechanism, and also how modules are able to
19799a22 553declare subroutines that are then visible as list or unary operators for
a0d0e21e 554the rest of the current file. This will not work if you use C<require>
19799a22 555instead of C<use>. With C<require> you can get into this problem:
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556
557 require Cwd; # make Cwd:: accessible
54310121 558 $here = Cwd::getcwd();
a0d0e21e 559
5f05dabc 560 use Cwd; # import names from Cwd::
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561 $here = getcwd();
562
563 require Cwd; # make Cwd:: accessible
564 $here = getcwd(); # oops! no main::getcwd()
565
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566In general, C<use Module ()> is recommended over C<require Module>,
567because it determines module availability at compile time, not in the
568middle of your program's execution. An exception would be if two modules
569each tried to C<use> each other, and each also called a function from
14c715f4 570that other module. In that case, it's easy to use C<require> instead.
cb1a09d0 571
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572Perl packages may be nested inside other package names, so we can have
573package names containing C<::>. But if we used that package name
5803be0d 574directly as a filename it would make for unwieldy or impossible
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575filenames on some systems. Therefore, if a module's name is, say,
576C<Text::Soundex>, then its definition is actually found in the library
577file F<Text/Soundex.pm>.
578
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579Perl modules always have a F<.pm> file, but there may also be
580dynamically linked executables (often ending in F<.so>) or autoloaded
5803be0d 581subroutine definitions (often ending in F<.al>) associated with the
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582module. If so, these will be entirely transparent to the user of
583the module. It is the responsibility of the F<.pm> file to load
584(or arrange to autoload) any additional functionality. For example,
585although the POSIX module happens to do both dynamic loading and
5803be0d 586autoloading, the user can say just C<use POSIX> to get it all.
a0d0e21e 587
f2fc0a40 588=head2 Making your module threadsafe
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589X<threadsafe> X<thread safe>
590X<module, threadsafe> X<module, thread safe>
591X<CLONE> X<CLONE_SKIP> X<thread> X<threads> X<ithread>
f2fc0a40 592
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593Perl supports a type of threads called interpreter threads (ithreads).
594These threads can be used explicitly and implicitly.
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595
596Ithreads work by cloning the data tree so that no data is shared
14c715f4 597between different threads. These threads can be used by using the C<threads>
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598module or by doing fork() on win32 (fake fork() support). When a
599thread is cloned all Perl data is cloned, however non-Perl data cannot
8f416bb0 600be cloned automatically. Perl after 5.8.0 has support for the C<CLONE>
4d5ff0dd 601special subroutine. In C<CLONE> you can do whatever
9660f481 602you need to do,
4ebc451b 603like for example handle the cloning of non-Perl data, if necessary.
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604C<CLONE> will be called once as a class method for every package that has it
605defined (or inherits it). It will be called in the context of the new thread,
606so all modifications are made in the new area. Currently CLONE is called with
7698aede 607no parameters other than the invocant package name, but code should not assume
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608that this will remain unchanged, as it is likely that in future extra parameters
609will be passed in to give more information about the state of cloning.
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610
611If you want to CLONE all objects you will need to keep track of them per
612package. This is simply done using a hash and Scalar::Util::weaken().
613
4d5ff0dd 614Perl after 5.8.7 has support for the C<CLONE_SKIP> special subroutine.
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615Like C<CLONE>, C<CLONE_SKIP> is called once per package; however, it is
616called just before cloning starts, and in the context of the parent
617thread. If it returns a true value, then no objects of that class will
618be cloned; or rather, they will be copied as unblessed, undef values.
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619For example: if in the parent there are two references to a single blessed
620hash, then in the child there will be two references to a single undefined
621scalar value instead.
9660f481 622This provides a simple mechanism for making a module threadsafe; just add
bca52ca1 623C<sub CLONE_SKIP { 1 }> at the top of the class, and C<DESTROY()> will
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624now only be called once per object. Of course, if the child thread needs
625to make use of the objects, then a more sophisticated approach is
626needed.
627
628Like C<CLONE>, C<CLONE_SKIP> is currently called with no parameters other
7698aede 629than the invocant package name, although that may change. Similarly, to
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630allow for future expansion, the return value should be a single C<0> or
631C<1> value.
632
f102b883 633=head1 SEE ALSO
cb1a09d0 634
f102b883 635See L<perlmodlib> for general style issues related to building Perl
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636modules and classes, as well as descriptions of the standard library
637and CPAN, L<Exporter> for how Perl's standard import/export mechanism
82e1c0d9 638works, L<perlootut> and L<perlobj> for in-depth information on
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639creating classes, L<perlobj> for a hard-core reference document on
640objects, L<perlsub> for an explanation of functions and scoping,
641and L<perlxstut> and L<perlguts> for more information on writing
642extension modules.