Commit | Line | Data |
---|---|---|
599cee73 | 1 | #!/usr/bin/perl |
c4a853d1 | 2 | # |
6294c161 DM |
3 | # Regenerate (overwriting only if changed): |
4 | # | |
5 | # lib/warnings.pm | |
6 | # warnings.h | |
7 | # | |
8 | # from information hardcoded into this script (the $tree hash), plus the | |
d2ec25a5 | 9 | # template for warnings.pm in the DATA section. |
6294c161 | 10 | # |
91efc02c KW |
11 | # When changing the number of warnings, t/op/caller.t should change to |
12 | # correspond with the value of $BYTES in lib/warnings.pm | |
8457b38f | 13 | # |
6294c161 DM |
14 | # With an argument of 'tree', just dump the contents of $tree and exits. |
15 | # Also accepts the standard regen_lib -q and -v args. | |
16 | # | |
17 | # This script is normally invoked from regen.pl. | |
599cee73 | 18 | |
05a64c17 | 19 | $VERSION = '1.45'; |
b75c8c73 | 20 | |
73f0cc2d | 21 | BEGIN { |
3d7c117d | 22 | require './regen/regen_lib.pl'; |
b6b9a099 | 23 | push @INC, './lib'; |
73f0cc2d | 24 | } |
599cee73 PM |
25 | use strict ; |
26 | ||
27 | sub DEFAULT_ON () { 1 } | |
28 | sub DEFAULT_OFF () { 2 } | |
29 | ||
30 | my $tree = { | |
3c3f8cd6 AB |
31 | 'all' => [ 5.008, { |
32 | 'io' => [ 5.008, { | |
33 | 'pipe' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
34 | 'unopened' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
35 | 'closed' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
36 | 'newline' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
37 | 'exec' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
38 | 'layer' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
39 | 'syscalls' => [ 5.019, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
40 | }], | |
41 | 'syntax' => [ 5.008, { | |
42 | 'ambiguous' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
43 | 'semicolon' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
44 | 'precedence' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
45 | 'bareword' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
46 | 'reserved' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
47 | 'digit' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
48 | 'parenthesis' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
49 | 'printf' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
50 | 'prototype' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
51 | 'qw' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
52 | 'illegalproto' => [ 5.011, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
53 | }], | |
54 | 'severe' => [ 5.008, { | |
55 | 'inplace' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_ON], | |
56 | 'internal' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
57 | 'debugging' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_ON], | |
58 | 'malloc' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_ON], | |
59 | }], | |
60 | 'deprecated' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_ON], | |
61 | 'void' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
62 | 'recursion' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
63 | 'redefine' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
64 | 'numeric' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
65 | 'uninitialized' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
66 | 'once' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
67 | 'misc' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
68 | 'regexp' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
69 | 'glob' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_ON], | |
70 | 'untie' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
71 | 'substr' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
72 | 'taint' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
73 | 'signal' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
74 | 'closure' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
75 | 'overflow' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
76 | 'portable' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
77 | 'utf8' => [ 5.008, { | |
78 | 'surrogate' => [ 5.013, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
79 | 'nonchar' => [ 5.013, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
80 | 'non_unicode' => [ 5.013, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
81 | }], | |
82 | 'exiting' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
83 | 'pack' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
84 | 'unpack' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
85 | 'threads' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
86 | 'imprecision' => [ 5.011, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
87 | 'experimental' => [ 5.017, { | |
88 | 'experimental::lexical_subs' => | |
89 | [ 5.017, DEFAULT_ON ], | |
90 | 'experimental::regex_sets' => | |
91 | [ 5.017, DEFAULT_ON ], | |
3c3f8cd6 AB |
92 | 'experimental::smartmatch' => |
93 | [ 5.017, DEFAULT_ON ], | |
94 | 'experimental::postderef' => | |
95 | [ 5.019, DEFAULT_ON ], | |
3c3f8cd6 AB |
96 | 'experimental::signatures' => |
97 | [ 5.019, DEFAULT_ON ], | |
98 | 'experimental::win32_perlio' => | |
99 | [ 5.021, DEFAULT_ON ], | |
100 | 'experimental::refaliasing' => | |
101 | [ 5.021, DEFAULT_ON ], | |
102 | 'experimental::re_strict' => | |
103 | [ 5.021, DEFAULT_ON ], | |
104 | 'experimental::const_attr' => | |
105 | [ 5.021, DEFAULT_ON ], | |
9f88e537 FC |
106 | 'experimental::bitwise' => |
107 | [ 5.021, DEFAULT_ON ], | |
88d5dae9 FC |
108 | 'experimental::declared_refs' => |
109 | [ 5.025, DEFAULT_ON ], | |
0d76344b KW |
110 | 'experimental::script_run' => |
111 | [ 5.027, DEFAULT_ON ], | |
948f26d8 KW |
112 | 'experimental::alpha_assertions' => |
113 | [ 5.027, DEFAULT_ON ], | |
21c34e97 KW |
114 | 'experimental::private_use' => |
115 | [ 5.029, DEFAULT_ON ], | |
4fa1c4b6 KW |
116 | 'experimental::uniprop_wildcards' => |
117 | [ 5.029, DEFAULT_ON ], | |
15a9bc0d KW |
118 | 'experimental::vlb' => |
119 | [ 5.029, DEFAULT_ON ], | |
3c3f8cd6 AB |
120 | }], |
121 | ||
122 | 'missing' => [ 5.021, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
123 | 'redundant' => [ 5.021, DEFAULT_OFF], | |
124 | 'locale' => [ 5.021, DEFAULT_ON], | |
52e3acf8 | 125 | 'shadow' => [ 5.027, DEFAULT_OFF], |
3c3f8cd6 AB |
126 | |
127 | #'default' => [ 5.008, DEFAULT_ON ], | |
ea5519d6 | 128 | }]}; |
599cee73 | 129 | |
7fc874e8 | 130 | my @def ; |
599cee73 PM |
131 | my %list ; |
132 | my %Value ; | |
0d658bf5 PM |
133 | my %ValueToName ; |
134 | my %NameToValue ; | |
599cee73 | 135 | |
0d658bf5 PM |
136 | my %v_list = () ; |
137 | ||
138 | sub valueWalk | |
139 | { | |
140 | my $tre = shift ; | |
141 | my @list = () ; | |
142 | my ($k, $v) ; | |
143 | ||
144 | foreach $k (sort keys %$tre) { | |
145 | $v = $tre->{$k}; | |
146 | die "duplicate key $k\n" if defined $list{$k} ; | |
147 | die "Value associated with key '$k' is not an ARRAY reference" | |
148 | if !ref $v || ref $v ne 'ARRAY' ; | |
149 | ||
150 | my ($ver, $rest) = @{ $v } ; | |
151 | push @{ $v_list{$ver} }, $k; | |
c4a853d1 | 152 | |
0d658bf5 PM |
153 | if (ref $rest) |
154 | { valueWalk ($rest) } | |
155 | ||
156 | } | |
157 | ||
158 | } | |
159 | ||
160 | sub orderValues | |
161 | { | |
162 | my $index = 0; | |
163 | foreach my $ver ( sort { $a <=> $b } keys %v_list ) { | |
164 | foreach my $name (@{ $v_list{$ver} } ) { | |
165 | $ValueToName{ $index } = [ uc $name, $ver ] ; | |
166 | $NameToValue{ uc $name } = $index ++ ; | |
167 | } | |
168 | } | |
169 | ||
170 | return $index ; | |
171 | } | |
172 | ||
173 | ########################################################################### | |
174 | ||
599cee73 PM |
175 | sub walk |
176 | { | |
177 | my $tre = shift ; | |
178 | my @list = () ; | |
179 | my ($k, $v) ; | |
180 | ||
95dfd3ab GS |
181 | foreach $k (sort keys %$tre) { |
182 | $v = $tre->{$k}; | |
599cee73 | 183 | die "duplicate key $k\n" if defined $list{$k} ; |
0d658bf5 PM |
184 | die "Can't find key '$k'" |
185 | if ! defined $NameToValue{uc $k} ; | |
186 | push @{ $list{$k} }, $NameToValue{uc $k} ; | |
187 | die "Value associated with key '$k' is not an ARRAY reference" | |
188 | if !ref $v || ref $v ne 'ARRAY' ; | |
c4a853d1 | 189 | |
0d658bf5 PM |
190 | my ($ver, $rest) = @{ $v } ; |
191 | if (ref $rest) | |
192 | { push (@{ $list{$k} }, walk ($rest)) } | |
7fc874e8 FC |
193 | elsif ($rest == DEFAULT_ON) |
194 | { push @def, $NameToValue{uc $k} } | |
0d658bf5 | 195 | |
599cee73 PM |
196 | push @list, @{ $list{$k} } ; |
197 | } | |
198 | ||
199 | return @list ; | |
599cee73 PM |
200 | } |
201 | ||
202 | ########################################################################### | |
203 | ||
204 | sub mkRange | |
205 | { | |
206 | my @a = @_ ; | |
207 | my @out = @a ; | |
599cee73 | 208 | |
e95a9fc2 | 209 | for my $i (1 .. @a - 1) { |
0ca4541c | 210 | $out[$i] = ".." |
e95a9fc2 KW |
211 | if $a[$i] == $a[$i - 1] + 1 |
212 | && ($i >= @a - 1 || $a[$i] + 1 == $a[$i + 1] ); | |
599cee73 | 213 | } |
e95a9fc2 | 214 | $out[-1] = $a[-1] if $out[-1] eq ".."; |
599cee73 PM |
215 | |
216 | my $out = join(",",@out); | |
217 | ||
218 | $out =~ s/,(\.\.,)+/../g ; | |
219 | return $out; | |
220 | } | |
221 | ||
222 | ########################################################################### | |
e15f14b8 | 223 | sub warningsTree |
e476b1b5 GS |
224 | { |
225 | my $tre = shift ; | |
226 | my $prefix = shift ; | |
e476b1b5 GS |
227 | my ($k, $v) ; |
228 | ||
229 | my $max = (sort {$a <=> $b} map { length $_ } keys %$tre)[-1] ; | |
0d658bf5 | 230 | my @keys = sort keys %$tre ; |
e476b1b5 | 231 | |
e15f14b8 RS |
232 | my $rv = ''; |
233 | ||
0d658bf5 | 234 | while ($k = shift @keys) { |
e476b1b5 | 235 | $v = $tre->{$k}; |
0d658bf5 PM |
236 | die "Value associated with key '$k' is not an ARRAY reference" |
237 | if !ref $v || ref $v ne 'ARRAY' ; | |
c4a853d1 | 238 | |
0d658bf5 PM |
239 | my $offset ; |
240 | if ($tre ne $tree) { | |
e15f14b8 RS |
241 | $rv .= $prefix . "|\n" ; |
242 | $rv .= $prefix . "+- $k" ; | |
0d658bf5 PM |
243 | $offset = ' ' x ($max + 4) ; |
244 | } | |
245 | else { | |
e15f14b8 | 246 | $rv .= $prefix . "$k" ; |
0d658bf5 PM |
247 | $offset = ' ' x ($max + 1) ; |
248 | } | |
249 | ||
250 | my ($ver, $rest) = @{ $v } ; | |
f1d34ca8 | 251 | if (ref $rest) |
0ca4541c | 252 | { |
0d658bf5 | 253 | my $bar = @keys ? "|" : " "; |
e15f14b8 RS |
254 | $rv .= " -" . "-" x ($max - length $k ) . "+\n" ; |
255 | $rv .= warningsTree ($rest, $prefix . $bar . $offset ) | |
e476b1b5 GS |
256 | } |
257 | else | |
e15f14b8 | 258 | { $rv .= "\n" } |
e476b1b5 GS |
259 | } |
260 | ||
e15f14b8 | 261 | return $rv; |
e476b1b5 GS |
262 | } |
263 | ||
264 | ########################################################################### | |
599cee73 | 265 | |
317ea90d | 266 | sub mkHexOct |
599cee73 | 267 | { |
317ea90d | 268 | my ($f, $max, @a) = @_ ; |
599cee73 PM |
269 | my $mask = "\x00" x $max ; |
270 | my $string = "" ; | |
271 | ||
272 | foreach (@a) { | |
273 | vec($mask, $_, 1) = 1 ; | |
274 | } | |
275 | ||
599cee73 | 276 | foreach (unpack("C*", $mask)) { |
317ea90d MS |
277 | if ($f eq 'x') { |
278 | $string .= '\x' . sprintf("%2.2x", $_) | |
279 | } | |
280 | else { | |
281 | $string .= '\\' . sprintf("%o", $_) | |
282 | } | |
599cee73 PM |
283 | } |
284 | return $string ; | |
285 | } | |
286 | ||
317ea90d MS |
287 | sub mkHex |
288 | { | |
289 | my($max, @a) = @_; | |
290 | return mkHexOct("x", $max, @a); | |
291 | } | |
292 | ||
293 | sub mkOct | |
294 | { | |
295 | my($max, @a) = @_; | |
296 | return mkHexOct("o", $max, @a); | |
297 | } | |
298 | ||
599cee73 PM |
299 | ########################################################################### |
300 | ||
e476b1b5 GS |
301 | if (@ARGV && $ARGV[0] eq "tree") |
302 | { | |
3c3f8cd6 | 303 | print warningsTree($tree, " ") ; |
e476b1b5 GS |
304 | exit ; |
305 | } | |
599cee73 | 306 | |
cc49830d NC |
307 | my ($warn, $pm) = map { |
308 | open_new($_, '>', { by => 'regen/warnings.pl' }); | |
309 | } 'warnings.h', 'lib/warnings.pm'; | |
599cee73 | 310 | |
c4a853d1 RS |
311 | my ($index, $warn_size); |
312 | ||
313 | { | |
314 | # generate warnings.h | |
315 | ||
316 | print $warn <<'EOM'; | |
599cee73 | 317 | |
0453d815 PM |
318 | #define Off(x) ((x) / 8) |
319 | #define Bit(x) (1 << ((x) % 8)) | |
599cee73 PM |
320 | #define IsSet(a, x) ((a)[Off(x)] & Bit(x)) |
321 | ||
0453d815 | 322 | |
599cee73 | 323 | #define G_WARN_OFF 0 /* $^W == 0 */ |
0453d815 | 324 | #define G_WARN_ON 1 /* -w flag and $^W != 0 */ |
599cee73 PM |
325 | #define G_WARN_ALL_ON 2 /* -W flag */ |
326 | #define G_WARN_ALL_OFF 4 /* -X flag */ | |
0453d815 | 327 | #define G_WARN_ONCE 8 /* set if 'once' ever enabled */ |
599cee73 PM |
328 | #define G_WARN_ALL_MASK (G_WARN_ALL_ON|G_WARN_ALL_OFF) |
329 | ||
a0714e2c | 330 | #define pWARN_STD NULL |
8c165a32 KW |
331 | #define pWARN_ALL (STRLEN *) &PL_WARN_ALL /* use warnings 'all' */ |
332 | #define pWARN_NONE (STRLEN *) &PL_WARN_NONE /* no warnings 'all' */ | |
599cee73 | 333 | |
d3a7d8c7 GS |
334 | #define specialWARN(x) ((x) == pWARN_STD || (x) == pWARN_ALL || \ |
335 | (x) == pWARN_NONE) | |
5f2d9966 DM |
336 | |
337 | /* if PL_warnhook is set to this value, then warnings die */ | |
06dcd5bf | 338 | #define PERL_WARNHOOK_FATAL (&PL_sv_placeholder) |
599cee73 PM |
339 | EOM |
340 | ||
c4a853d1 | 341 | my $offset = 0 ; |
d3a7d8c7 | 342 | |
c4a853d1 RS |
343 | valueWalk ($tree) ; |
344 | $index = orderValues(); | |
599cee73 | 345 | |
c4a853d1 | 346 | die <<EOM if $index > 255 ; |
12bcd1a6 | 347 | Too many warnings categories -- max is 255 |
c4a853d1 | 348 | rewrite packWARN* & unpackWARN* macros |
12bcd1a6 | 349 | EOM |
599cee73 | 350 | |
c4a853d1 | 351 | walk ($tree) ; |
006c1a1d Z |
352 | for (my $i = $index; $i & 3; $i++) { |
353 | push @{$list{all}}, $i; | |
354 | } | |
0d658bf5 | 355 | |
c4a853d1 RS |
356 | $index *= 2 ; |
357 | $warn_size = int($index / 8) + ($index % 8 != 0) ; | |
599cee73 | 358 | |
c4a853d1 RS |
359 | my $k ; |
360 | my $last_ver = 0; | |
a1a5a9c8 | 361 | my @names; |
c4a853d1 RS |
362 | foreach $k (sort { $a <=> $b } keys %ValueToName) { |
363 | my ($name, $version) = @{ $ValueToName{$k} }; | |
364 | print $warn "\n/* Warnings Categories added in Perl $version */\n\n" | |
365 | if $last_ver != $version ; | |
366 | $name =~ y/:/_/; | |
a1a5a9c8 KW |
367 | $name = "WARN_$name"; |
368 | print $warn tab(6, "#define $name"), " $k\n" ; | |
369 | push @names, $name; | |
c4a853d1 RS |
370 | $last_ver = $version ; |
371 | } | |
a1a5a9c8 KW |
372 | print $warn "\n\n/*\n" ; |
373 | ||
374 | print $warn map { "=for apidoc Amnh||$_\n" } @names; | |
375 | print $warn "\n=cut\n*/\n\n" ; | |
599cee73 | 376 | |
3c3f8cd6 AB |
377 | print $warn tab(6, '#define WARNsize'), " $warn_size\n" ; |
378 | print $warn tab(6, '#define WARN_ALLstring'), ' "', ('\125' x $warn_size) , "\"\n" ; | |
379 | print $warn tab(6, '#define WARN_NONEstring'), ' "', ('\0' x $warn_size) , "\"\n" ; | |
599cee73 | 380 | |
c4a853d1 | 381 | print $warn <<'EOM'; |
599cee73 | 382 | |
a2637ca0 FC |
383 | #define isLEXWARN_on \ |
384 | cBOOL(PL_curcop && PL_curcop->cop_warnings != pWARN_STD) | |
385 | #define isLEXWARN_off \ | |
386 | cBOOL(!PL_curcop || PL_curcop->cop_warnings == pWARN_STD) | |
d5a71f30 | 387 | #define isWARN_ONCE (PL_dowarn & (G_WARN_ON|G_WARN_ONCE)) |
72dc9ed5 NC |
388 | #define isWARN_on(c,x) (IsSet((U8 *)(c + 1), 2*(x))) |
389 | #define isWARNf_on(c,x) (IsSet((U8 *)(c + 1), 2*(x)+1)) | |
390 | ||
c1e47bad | 391 | #define DUP_WARNINGS(p) Perl_dup_warnings(aTHX_ p) |
d5a71f30 | 392 | |
feff94e1 KW |
393 | /* |
394 | ||
395 | =head1 Warning and Dieing | |
396 | ||
bb3eff5d KW |
397 | In all these calls, the C<U32 wI<n>> parameters are warning category |
398 | constants. You can see the ones currently available in | |
399 | L<warnings/Category Hierarchy>, just capitalize all letters in the names | |
400 | and prefix them by C<WARN_>. So, for example, the category C<void> used in a | |
401 | perl program becomes C<WARN_VOID> when used in XS code and passed to one of | |
402 | the calls below. | |
403 | ||
feff94e1 KW |
404 | =for apidoc Am|bool|ckWARN|U32 w |
405 | ||
406 | Returns a boolean as to whether or not warnings are enabled for the warning | |
407 | category C<w>. If the category is by default enabled even if not within the | |
408 | scope of S<C<use warnings>>, instead use the L</ckWARN_d> macro. | |
409 | ||
410 | =for apidoc Am|bool|ckWARN_d|U32 w | |
411 | ||
412 | Like C<L</ckWARN>>, but for use if and only if the warning category is by | |
413 | default enabled even if not within the scope of S<C<use warnings>>. | |
414 | ||
415 | =for apidoc Am|bool|ckWARN2|U32 w1|U32 w2 | |
416 | ||
417 | Like C<L</ckWARN>>, but takes two warnings categories as input, and returns | |
418 | TRUE if either is enabled. If either category is by default enabled even if | |
419 | not within the scope of S<C<use warnings>>, instead use the L</ckWARN2_d> | |
420 | macro. The categories must be completely independent, one may not be | |
421 | subclassed from the other. | |
422 | ||
423 | =for apidoc Am|bool|ckWARN2_d|U32 w1|U32 w2 | |
424 | ||
425 | Like C<L</ckWARN2>>, but for use if and only if either warning category is by | |
426 | default enabled even if not within the scope of S<C<use warnings>>. | |
427 | ||
428 | =for apidoc Am|bool|ckWARN3|U32 w1|U32 w2|U32 w3 | |
429 | ||
430 | Like C<L</ckWARN2>>, but takes three warnings categories as input, and returns | |
431 | TRUE if any is enabled. If any of the categories is by default enabled even | |
432 | if not within the scope of S<C<use warnings>>, instead use the L</ckWARN3_d> | |
433 | macro. The categories must be completely independent, one may not be | |
434 | subclassed from any other. | |
435 | ||
436 | =for apidoc Am|bool|ckWARN3_d|U32 w1|U32 w2|U32 w3 | |
437 | ||
438 | Like C<L</ckWARN3>>, but for use if and only if any of the warning categories | |
439 | is by default enabled even if not within the scope of S<C<use warnings>>. | |
440 | ||
441 | =for apidoc Am|bool|ckWARN4|U32 w1|U32 w2|U32 w3|U32 w4 | |
442 | ||
443 | Like C<L</ckWARN3>>, but takes four warnings categories as input, and returns | |
444 | TRUE if any is enabled. If any of the categories is by default enabled even | |
445 | if not within the scope of S<C<use warnings>>, instead use the L</ckWARN4_d> | |
446 | macro. The categories must be completely independent, one may not be | |
447 | subclassed from any other. | |
448 | ||
449 | =for apidoc Am|bool|ckWARN4_d|U32 w1|U32 w2|U32 w3|U32 w4 | |
450 | ||
451 | Like C<L</ckWARN4>>, but for use if and only if any of the warning categories | |
452 | is by default enabled even if not within the scope of S<C<use warnings>>. | |
453 | ||
454 | =cut | |
455 | ||
456 | */ | |
457 | ||
f54ba1c2 | 458 | #define ckWARN(w) Perl_ckwarn(aTHX_ packWARN(w)) |
7c08c4c5 KW |
459 | |
460 | /* The w1, w2 ... should be independent warnings categories; one shouldn't be | |
461 | * a subcategory of any other */ | |
462 | ||
f54ba1c2 DM |
463 | #define ckWARN2(w1,w2) Perl_ckwarn(aTHX_ packWARN2(w1,w2)) |
464 | #define ckWARN3(w1,w2,w3) Perl_ckwarn(aTHX_ packWARN3(w1,w2,w3)) | |
465 | #define ckWARN4(w1,w2,w3,w4) Perl_ckwarn(aTHX_ packWARN4(w1,w2,w3,w4)) | |
466 | ||
467 | #define ckWARN_d(w) Perl_ckwarn_d(aTHX_ packWARN(w)) | |
468 | #define ckWARN2_d(w1,w2) Perl_ckwarn_d(aTHX_ packWARN2(w1,w2)) | |
469 | #define ckWARN3_d(w1,w2,w3) Perl_ckwarn_d(aTHX_ packWARN3(w1,w2,w3)) | |
470 | #define ckWARN4_d(w1,w2,w3,w4) Perl_ckwarn_d(aTHX_ packWARN4(w1,w2,w3,w4)) | |
12bcd1a6 | 471 | |
98fe6610 NC |
472 | #define WARNshift 8 |
473 | ||
3b9e3074 | 474 | #define packWARN(a) (a ) |
7c08c4c5 KW |
475 | |
476 | /* The a, b, ... should be independent warnings categories; one shouldn't be | |
477 | * a subcategory of any other */ | |
478 | ||
3b9e3074 SH |
479 | #define packWARN2(a,b) ((a) | ((b)<<8) ) |
480 | #define packWARN3(a,b,c) ((a) | ((b)<<8) | ((c)<<16) ) | |
481 | #define packWARN4(a,b,c,d) ((a) | ((b)<<8) | ((c)<<16) | ((d) <<24)) | |
12bcd1a6 PM |
482 | |
483 | #define unpackWARN1(x) ((x) & 0xFF) | |
484 | #define unpackWARN2(x) (((x) >>8) & 0xFF) | |
485 | #define unpackWARN3(x) (((x) >>16) & 0xFF) | |
486 | #define unpackWARN4(x) (((x) >>24) & 0xFF) | |
487 | ||
488 | #define ckDEAD(x) \ | |
006c1a1d Z |
489 | (PL_curcop && \ |
490 | !specialWARN(PL_curcop->cop_warnings) && \ | |
491 | (isWARNf_on(PL_curcop->cop_warnings, unpackWARN1(x)) || \ | |
492 | (unpackWARN2(x) && \ | |
493 | (isWARNf_on(PL_curcop->cop_warnings, unpackWARN2(x)) || \ | |
494 | (unpackWARN3(x) && \ | |
495 | (isWARNf_on(PL_curcop->cop_warnings, unpackWARN3(x)) || \ | |
496 | (unpackWARN4(x) && \ | |
497 | isWARNf_on(PL_curcop->cop_warnings, unpackWARN4(x))))))))) | |
12bcd1a6 | 498 | |
4438c4b7 | 499 | /* end of file warnings.h */ |
599cee73 PM |
500 | EOM |
501 | ||
c4a853d1 RS |
502 | read_only_bottom_close_and_rename($warn); |
503 | } | |
599cee73 PM |
504 | |
505 | while (<DATA>) { | |
3d8ff825 TC |
506 | last if /^VERSION$/ ; |
507 | print $pm $_ ; | |
508 | } | |
509 | ||
510 | print $pm qq(our \$VERSION = "$::VERSION";\n); | |
511 | ||
512 | while (<DATA>) { | |
599cee73 | 513 | last if /^KEYWORDS$/ ; |
424a4936 | 514 | print $pm $_ ; |
599cee73 PM |
515 | } |
516 | ||
c4a853d1 | 517 | my $last_ver = 0; |
3c3f8cd6 | 518 | print $pm "our %Offsets = (" ; |
0d658bf5 PM |
519 | foreach my $k (sort { $a <=> $b } keys %ValueToName) { |
520 | my ($name, $version) = @{ $ValueToName{$k} }; | |
521 | $name = lc $name; | |
d3a7d8c7 | 522 | $k *= 2 ; |
0d658bf5 | 523 | if ( $last_ver != $version ) { |
424a4936 | 524 | print $pm "\n"; |
3c3f8cd6 AB |
525 | print $pm tab(6, " # Warnings Categories added in Perl $version"); |
526 | print $pm "\n"; | |
0d658bf5 | 527 | } |
3c3f8cd6 | 528 | print $pm tab(6, " '$name'"), "=> $k,\n" ; |
0d658bf5 | 529 | $last_ver = $version; |
d3a7d8c7 GS |
530 | } |
531 | ||
3c3f8cd6 | 532 | print $pm ");\n\n" ; |
d3a7d8c7 | 533 | |
424a4936 | 534 | print $pm "our %Bits = (\n" ; |
c4a853d1 | 535 | foreach my $k (sort keys %list) { |
599cee73 PM |
536 | |
537 | my $v = $list{$k} ; | |
538 | my @list = sort { $a <=> $b } @$v ; | |
539 | ||
3c3f8cd6 | 540 | print $pm tab(6, " '$k'"), '=> "', |
0ca4541c | 541 | mkHex($warn_size, map $_ * 2 , @list), |
599cee73 PM |
542 | '", # [', mkRange(@list), "]\n" ; |
543 | } | |
544 | ||
3c3f8cd6 | 545 | print $pm ");\n\n" ; |
599cee73 | 546 | |
424a4936 | 547 | print $pm "our %DeadBits = (\n" ; |
c4a853d1 | 548 | foreach my $k (sort keys %list) { |
599cee73 PM |
549 | |
550 | my $v = $list{$k} ; | |
551 | my @list = sort { $a <=> $b } @$v ; | |
552 | ||
3c3f8cd6 | 553 | print $pm tab(6, " '$k'"), '=> "', |
0ca4541c | 554 | mkHex($warn_size, map $_ * 2 + 1 , @list), |
599cee73 PM |
555 | '", # [', mkRange(@list), "]\n" ; |
556 | } | |
557 | ||
3c3f8cd6 AB |
558 | print $pm ");\n\n" ; |
559 | print $pm "# These are used by various things, including our own tests\n"; | |
560 | print $pm tab(6, 'our $NONE'), '= "', ('\0' x $warn_size) , "\";\n" ; | |
561 | print $pm tab(6, 'our $DEFAULT'), '= "', mkHex($warn_size, map $_ * 2, @def), | |
21a5c8db | 562 | '", # [', mkRange(sort { $a <=> $b } @def), "]\n" ; |
3c3f8cd6 AB |
563 | print $pm tab(6, 'our $LAST_BIT'), '= ' . "$index ;\n" ; |
564 | print $pm tab(6, 'our $BYTES'), '= ' . "$warn_size ;\n" ; | |
599cee73 | 565 | while (<DATA>) { |
effd17dc | 566 | if ($_ eq "=for warnings.pl tree-goes-here\n") { |
3c3f8cd6 | 567 | print $pm warningsTree($tree, " "); |
effd17dc DD |
568 | next; |
569 | } | |
424a4936 | 570 | print $pm $_ ; |
599cee73 PM |
571 | } |
572 | ||
ce716c52 | 573 | read_only_bottom_close_and_rename($pm); |
599cee73 PM |
574 | |
575 | __END__ | |
4438c4b7 | 576 | package warnings; |
599cee73 | 577 | |
3d8ff825 | 578 | VERSION |
f2c3e829 RGS |
579 | |
580 | # Verify that we're called correctly so that warnings will work. | |
67ba812d AP |
581 | # Can't use Carp, since Carp uses us! |
582 | # String regexps because constant folding = smaller optree = less memory vs regexp literal | |
f2c3e829 | 583 | # see also strict.pm. |
67ba812d AP |
584 | die sprintf "Incorrect use of pragma '%s' at %s line %d.\n", __PACKAGE__, +(caller)[1,2] |
585 | if __FILE__ !~ ( '(?x) \b '.__PACKAGE__.' \.pmc? \z' ) | |
586 | && __FILE__ =~ ( '(?x) \b (?i:'.__PACKAGE__.') \.pmc? \z' ); | |
b75c8c73 | 587 | |
effd17dc DD |
588 | KEYWORDS |
589 | ||
effd17dc DD |
590 | sub Croaker |
591 | { | |
592 | require Carp; # this initializes %CarpInternal | |
593 | local $Carp::CarpInternal{'warnings'}; | |
594 | delete $Carp::CarpInternal{'warnings'}; | |
595 | Carp::croak(@_); | |
596 | } | |
597 | ||
006c1a1d Z |
598 | sub _expand_bits { |
599 | my $bits = shift; | |
600 | my $want_len = ($LAST_BIT + 7) >> 3; | |
601 | my $len = length($bits); | |
602 | if ($len != $want_len) { | |
603 | if ($bits eq "") { | |
604 | $bits = "\x00" x $want_len; | |
605 | } elsif ($len > $want_len) { | |
606 | substr $bits, $want_len, $len-$want_len, ""; | |
607 | } else { | |
608 | my $a = vec($bits, $Offsets{all} >> 1, 2); | |
609 | $a |= $a << 2; | |
610 | $a |= $a << 4; | |
611 | $bits .= chr($a) x ($want_len - $len); | |
612 | } | |
613 | } | |
614 | return $bits; | |
615 | } | |
616 | ||
effd17dc DD |
617 | sub _bits { |
618 | my $mask = shift ; | |
619 | my $catmask ; | |
620 | my $fatal = 0 ; | |
621 | my $no_fatal = 0 ; | |
622 | ||
006c1a1d | 623 | $mask = _expand_bits($mask); |
effd17dc DD |
624 | foreach my $word ( @_ ) { |
625 | if ($word eq 'FATAL') { | |
626 | $fatal = 1; | |
627 | $no_fatal = 0; | |
628 | } | |
629 | elsif ($word eq 'NONFATAL') { | |
630 | $fatal = 0; | |
631 | $no_fatal = 1; | |
632 | } | |
633 | elsif ($catmask = $Bits{$word}) { | |
634 | $mask |= $catmask ; | |
635 | $mask |= $DeadBits{$word} if $fatal ; | |
006c1a1d | 636 | $mask = ~(~$mask | $DeadBits{$word}) if $no_fatal ; |
effd17dc DD |
637 | } |
638 | else | |
56873d42 | 639 | { Croaker("Unknown warnings category '$word'")} |
effd17dc DD |
640 | } |
641 | ||
642 | return $mask ; | |
643 | } | |
644 | ||
645 | sub bits | |
646 | { | |
647 | # called from B::Deparse.pm | |
648 | push @_, 'all' unless @_ ; | |
006c1a1d | 649 | return _bits("", @_) ; |
effd17dc DD |
650 | } |
651 | ||
652 | sub import | |
653 | { | |
654 | shift; | |
655 | ||
656 | my $mask = ${^WARNING_BITS} // ($^W ? $Bits{all} : $DEFAULT) ; | |
657 | ||
006c1a1d Z |
658 | # append 'all' when implied (empty import list or after a lone |
659 | # "FATAL" or "NONFATAL") | |
660 | push @_, 'all' | |
661 | if !@_ || (@_==1 && ($_[0] eq 'FATAL' || $_[0] eq 'NONFATAL')); | |
effd17dc | 662 | |
006c1a1d | 663 | ${^WARNING_BITS} = _bits($mask, @_); |
effd17dc DD |
664 | } |
665 | ||
666 | sub unimport | |
667 | { | |
668 | shift; | |
669 | ||
670 | my $catmask ; | |
671 | my $mask = ${^WARNING_BITS} // ($^W ? $Bits{all} : $DEFAULT) ; | |
672 | ||
effd17dc DD |
673 | # append 'all' when implied (empty import list or after a lone "FATAL") |
674 | push @_, 'all' if !@_ || @_==1 && $_[0] eq 'FATAL'; | |
675 | ||
006c1a1d | 676 | $mask = _expand_bits($mask); |
effd17dc DD |
677 | foreach my $word ( @_ ) { |
678 | if ($word eq 'FATAL') { | |
679 | next; | |
680 | } | |
681 | elsif ($catmask = $Bits{$word}) { | |
006c1a1d | 682 | $mask = ~(~$mask | $catmask | $DeadBits{$word}); |
effd17dc DD |
683 | } |
684 | else | |
56873d42 | 685 | { Croaker("Unknown warnings category '$word'")} |
effd17dc DD |
686 | } |
687 | ||
688 | ${^WARNING_BITS} = $mask ; | |
689 | } | |
690 | ||
691 | my %builtin_type; @builtin_type{qw(SCALAR ARRAY HASH CODE REF GLOB LVALUE Regexp)} = (); | |
692 | ||
c4583f59 | 693 | sub LEVEL () { 8 }; |
effd17dc DD |
694 | sub MESSAGE () { 4 }; |
695 | sub FATAL () { 2 }; | |
696 | sub NORMAL () { 1 }; | |
697 | ||
698 | sub __chk | |
699 | { | |
700 | my $category ; | |
701 | my $offset ; | |
702 | my $isobj = 0 ; | |
703 | my $wanted = shift; | |
704 | my $has_message = $wanted & MESSAGE; | |
c4583f59 FC |
705 | my $has_level = $wanted & LEVEL ; |
706 | ||
707 | if ($has_level) { | |
708 | if (@_ != ($has_message ? 3 : 2)) { | |
709 | my $sub = (caller 1)[3]; | |
710 | my $syntax = $has_message | |
711 | ? "category, level, 'message'" | |
712 | : 'category, level'; | |
713 | Croaker("Usage: $sub($syntax)"); | |
714 | } | |
715 | } | |
716 | elsif (not @_ == 1 || @_ == ($has_message ? 2 : 0)) { | |
effd17dc DD |
717 | my $sub = (caller 1)[3]; |
718 | my $syntax = $has_message ? "[category,] 'message'" : '[category]'; | |
719 | Croaker("Usage: $sub($syntax)"); | |
720 | } | |
721 | ||
722 | my $message = pop if $has_message; | |
723 | ||
724 | if (@_) { | |
56873d42 DD |
725 | # check the category supplied. |
726 | $category = shift ; | |
727 | if (my $type = ref $category) { | |
728 | Croaker("not an object") | |
729 | if exists $builtin_type{$type}; | |
effd17dc | 730 | $category = $type; |
56873d42 DD |
731 | $isobj = 1 ; |
732 | } | |
733 | $offset = $Offsets{$category}; | |
734 | Croaker("Unknown warnings category '$category'") | |
effd17dc DD |
735 | unless defined $offset; |
736 | } | |
737 | else { | |
56873d42 DD |
738 | $category = (caller(1))[0] ; |
739 | $offset = $Offsets{$category}; | |
740 | Croaker("package '$category' not registered for warnings") | |
effd17dc DD |
741 | unless defined $offset ; |
742 | } | |
743 | ||
744 | my $i; | |
745 | ||
746 | if ($isobj) { | |
56873d42 DD |
747 | my $pkg; |
748 | $i = 2; | |
749 | while (do { { package DB; $pkg = (caller($i++))[0] } } ) { | |
750 | last unless @DB::args && $DB::args[0] =~ /^$category=/ ; | |
751 | } | |
effd17dc DD |
752 | $i -= 2 ; |
753 | } | |
c4583f59 FC |
754 | elsif ($has_level) { |
755 | $i = 2 + shift; | |
756 | } | |
effd17dc | 757 | else { |
56873d42 | 758 | $i = _error_loc(); # see where Carp will allocate the error |
effd17dc DD |
759 | } |
760 | ||
761 | # Default to 0 if caller returns nothing. Default to $DEFAULT if it | |
762 | # explicitly returns undef. | |
763 | my(@callers_bitmask) = (caller($i))[9] ; | |
764 | my $callers_bitmask = | |
765 | @callers_bitmask ? $callers_bitmask[0] // $DEFAULT : 0 ; | |
006c1a1d | 766 | length($callers_bitmask) > ($offset >> 3) or $offset = $Offsets{all}; |
effd17dc DD |
767 | |
768 | my @results; | |
769 | foreach my $type (FATAL, NORMAL) { | |
770 | next unless $wanted & $type; | |
771 | ||
006c1a1d | 772 | push @results, vec($callers_bitmask, $offset + $type - 1, 1); |
effd17dc DD |
773 | } |
774 | ||
775 | # &enabled and &fatal_enabled | |
776 | return $results[0] unless $has_message; | |
777 | ||
778 | # &warnif, and the category is neither enabled as warning nor as fatal | |
c4583f59 FC |
779 | return if ($wanted & (NORMAL | FATAL | MESSAGE)) |
780 | == (NORMAL | FATAL | MESSAGE) | |
effd17dc DD |
781 | && !($results[0] || $results[1]); |
782 | ||
c4583f59 FC |
783 | # If we have an explicit level, bypass Carp. |
784 | if ($has_level and @callers_bitmask) { | |
a0da1e16 | 785 | # logic copied from util.c:mess_sv |
c4583f59 | 786 | my $stuff = " at " . join " line ", (caller $i)[1,2]; |
06afc688 FC |
787 | $stuff .= sprintf ", <%s> %s %d", |
788 | *${^LAST_FH}{NAME}, | |
789 | ($/ eq "\n" ? "line" : "chunk"), $. | |
a0da1e16 | 790 | if $. && ${^LAST_FH}; |
c4583f59 FC |
791 | die "$message$stuff.\n" if $results[0]; |
792 | return warn "$message$stuff.\n"; | |
793 | } | |
794 | ||
effd17dc DD |
795 | require Carp; |
796 | Carp::croak($message) if $results[0]; | |
797 | # will always get here for &warn. will only get here for &warnif if the | |
798 | # category is enabled | |
799 | Carp::carp($message); | |
800 | } | |
801 | ||
802 | sub _mkMask | |
803 | { | |
804 | my ($bit) = @_; | |
805 | my $mask = ""; | |
806 | ||
807 | vec($mask, $bit, 1) = 1; | |
808 | return $mask; | |
809 | } | |
810 | ||
811 | sub register_categories | |
812 | { | |
813 | my @names = @_; | |
814 | ||
815 | for my $name (@names) { | |
816 | if (! defined $Bits{$name}) { | |
006c1a1d Z |
817 | $Offsets{$name} = $LAST_BIT; |
818 | $Bits{$name} = _mkMask($LAST_BIT++); | |
819 | $DeadBits{$name} = _mkMask($LAST_BIT++); | |
820 | if (length($Bits{$name}) > length($Bits{all})) { | |
821 | $Bits{all} .= "\x55"; | |
822 | $DeadBits{all} .= "\xaa"; | |
effd17dc | 823 | } |
effd17dc DD |
824 | } |
825 | } | |
826 | } | |
827 | ||
828 | sub _error_loc { | |
829 | require Carp; | |
830 | goto &Carp::short_error_loc; # don't introduce another stack frame | |
831 | } | |
832 | ||
833 | sub enabled | |
834 | { | |
835 | return __chk(NORMAL, @_); | |
836 | } | |
837 | ||
838 | sub fatal_enabled | |
839 | { | |
840 | return __chk(FATAL, @_); | |
841 | } | |
842 | ||
843 | sub warn | |
844 | { | |
845 | return __chk(FATAL | MESSAGE, @_); | |
846 | } | |
847 | ||
848 | sub warnif | |
849 | { | |
850 | return __chk(NORMAL | FATAL | MESSAGE, @_); | |
851 | } | |
852 | ||
c4583f59 FC |
853 | sub enabled_at_level |
854 | { | |
855 | return __chk(NORMAL | LEVEL, @_); | |
856 | } | |
857 | ||
858 | sub fatal_enabled_at_level | |
859 | { | |
860 | return __chk(FATAL | LEVEL, @_); | |
861 | } | |
862 | ||
863 | sub warn_at_level | |
864 | { | |
865 | return __chk(FATAL | MESSAGE | LEVEL, @_); | |
866 | } | |
867 | ||
868 | sub warnif_at_level | |
869 | { | |
870 | return __chk(NORMAL | FATAL | MESSAGE | LEVEL, @_); | |
871 | } | |
872 | ||
effd17dc DD |
873 | # These are not part of any public interface, so we can delete them to save |
874 | # space. | |
c4583f59 | 875 | delete @warnings::{qw(NORMAL FATAL MESSAGE LEVEL)}; |
effd17dc DD |
876 | |
877 | 1; | |
878 | __END__ | |
4bbd41f5 | 879 | |
599cee73 PM |
880 | =head1 NAME |
881 | ||
4438c4b7 | 882 | warnings - Perl pragma to control optional warnings |
599cee73 PM |
883 | |
884 | =head1 SYNOPSIS | |
885 | ||
4438c4b7 JH |
886 | use warnings; |
887 | no warnings; | |
599cee73 | 888 | |
4438c4b7 JH |
889 | use warnings "all"; |
890 | no warnings "all"; | |
599cee73 | 891 | |
d3a7d8c7 GS |
892 | use warnings::register; |
893 | if (warnings::enabled()) { | |
894 | warnings::warn("some warning"); | |
895 | } | |
896 | ||
897 | if (warnings::enabled("void")) { | |
e476b1b5 GS |
898 | warnings::warn("void", "some warning"); |
899 | } | |
900 | ||
7e6d00f8 PM |
901 | if (warnings::enabled($object)) { |
902 | warnings::warn($object, "some warning"); | |
903 | } | |
904 | ||
721f911b PM |
905 | warnings::warnif("some warning"); |
906 | warnings::warnif("void", "some warning"); | |
907 | warnings::warnif($object, "some warning"); | |
7e6d00f8 | 908 | |
599cee73 PM |
909 | =head1 DESCRIPTION |
910 | ||
188c4f6f RS |
911 | The C<warnings> pragma gives control over which warnings are enabled in |
912 | which parts of a Perl program. It's a more flexible alternative for | |
913 | both the command line flag B<-w> and the equivalent Perl variable, | |
914 | C<$^W>. | |
33edcb80 RS |
915 | |
916 | This pragma works just like the C<strict> pragma. | |
917 | This means that the scope of the warning pragma is limited to the | |
918 | enclosing block. It also means that the pragma setting will not | |
919 | leak across files (via C<use>, C<require> or C<do>). This allows | |
920 | authors to independently define the degree of warning checks that will | |
921 | be applied to their module. | |
922 | ||
923 | By default, optional warnings are disabled, so any legacy code that | |
924 | doesn't attempt to control the warnings will work unchanged. | |
925 | ||
3c3f8cd6 | 926 | All warnings are enabled in a block by either of these: |
33edcb80 RS |
927 | |
928 | use warnings; | |
929 | use warnings 'all'; | |
930 | ||
3c3f8cd6 | 931 | Similarly all warnings are disabled in a block by either of these: |
33edcb80 RS |
932 | |
933 | no warnings; | |
934 | no warnings 'all'; | |
935 | ||
936 | For example, consider the code below: | |
937 | ||
938 | use warnings; | |
939 | my @a; | |
940 | { | |
941 | no warnings; | |
942 | my $b = @a[0]; | |
943 | } | |
944 | my $c = @a[0]; | |
945 | ||
946 | The code in the enclosing block has warnings enabled, but the inner | |
947 | block has them disabled. In this case that means the assignment to the | |
948 | scalar C<$c> will trip the C<"Scalar value @a[0] better written as $a[0]"> | |
949 | warning, but the assignment to the scalar C<$b> will not. | |
950 | ||
951 | =head2 Default Warnings and Optional Warnings | |
952 | ||
953 | Before the introduction of lexical warnings, Perl had two classes of | |
56873d42 | 954 | warnings: mandatory and optional. |
33edcb80 RS |
955 | |
956 | As its name suggests, if your code tripped a mandatory warning, you | |
957 | would get a warning whether you wanted it or not. | |
958 | For example, the code below would always produce an C<"isn't numeric"> | |
959 | warning about the "2:". | |
960 | ||
961 | my $a = "2:" + 3; | |
962 | ||
963 | With the introduction of lexical warnings, mandatory warnings now become | |
964 | I<default> warnings. The difference is that although the previously | |
965 | mandatory warnings are still enabled by default, they can then be | |
966 | subsequently enabled or disabled with the lexical warning pragma. For | |
967 | example, in the code below, an C<"isn't numeric"> warning will only | |
968 | be reported for the C<$a> variable. | |
969 | ||
970 | my $a = "2:" + 3; | |
971 | no warnings; | |
972 | my $b = "2:" + 3; | |
973 | ||
974 | Note that neither the B<-w> flag or the C<$^W> can be used to | |
975 | disable/enable default warnings. They are still mandatory in this case. | |
976 | ||
977 | =head2 What's wrong with B<-w> and C<$^W> | |
978 | ||
979 | Although very useful, the big problem with using B<-w> on the command | |
980 | line to enable warnings is that it is all or nothing. Take the typical | |
981 | scenario when you are writing a Perl program. Parts of the code you | |
982 | will write yourself, but it's very likely that you will make use of | |
983 | pre-written Perl modules. If you use the B<-w> flag in this case, you | |
984 | end up enabling warnings in pieces of code that you haven't written. | |
985 | ||
986 | Similarly, using C<$^W> to either disable or enable blocks of code is | |
987 | fundamentally flawed. For a start, say you want to disable warnings in | |
988 | a block of code. You might expect this to be enough to do the trick: | |
989 | ||
990 | { | |
991 | local ($^W) = 0; | |
992 | my $a =+ 2; | |
993 | my $b; chop $b; | |
994 | } | |
995 | ||
996 | When this code is run with the B<-w> flag, a warning will be produced | |
997 | for the C<$a> line: C<"Reversed += operator">. | |
998 | ||
999 | The problem is that Perl has both compile-time and run-time warnings. To | |
1000 | disable compile-time warnings you need to rewrite the code like this: | |
1001 | ||
1002 | { | |
1003 | BEGIN { $^W = 0 } | |
1004 | my $a =+ 2; | |
1005 | my $b; chop $b; | |
1006 | } | |
1007 | ||
1008 | The other big problem with C<$^W> is the way you can inadvertently | |
1009 | change the warning setting in unexpected places in your code. For example, | |
1010 | when the code below is run (without the B<-w> flag), the second call | |
1011 | to C<doit> will trip a C<"Use of uninitialized value"> warning, whereas | |
1012 | the first will not. | |
1013 | ||
1014 | sub doit | |
1015 | { | |
1016 | my $b; chop $b; | |
1017 | } | |
1018 | ||
1019 | doit(); | |
1020 | ||
1021 | { | |
1022 | local ($^W) = 1; | |
1023 | doit() | |
1024 | } | |
1025 | ||
1026 | This is a side-effect of C<$^W> being dynamically scoped. | |
1027 | ||
1028 | Lexical warnings get around these limitations by allowing finer control | |
1029 | over where warnings can or can't be tripped. | |
1030 | ||
1031 | =head2 Controlling Warnings from the Command Line | |
1032 | ||
1033 | There are three Command Line flags that can be used to control when | |
1034 | warnings are (or aren't) produced: | |
1035 | ||
1036 | =over 5 | |
1037 | ||
1038 | =item B<-w> | |
1039 | X<-w> | |
1040 | ||
1041 | This is the existing flag. If the lexical warnings pragma is B<not> | |
1042 | used in any of you code, or any of the modules that you use, this flag | |
05a64c17 | 1043 | will enable warnings everywhere. See L</Backward Compatibility> for |
33edcb80 RS |
1044 | details of how this flag interacts with lexical warnings. |
1045 | ||
1046 | =item B<-W> | |
1047 | X<-W> | |
1048 | ||
3c3f8cd6 | 1049 | If the B<-W> flag is used on the command line, it will enable all warnings |
33edcb80 RS |
1050 | throughout the program regardless of whether warnings were disabled |
1051 | locally using C<no warnings> or C<$^W =0>. | |
1052 | This includes all files that get | |
1053 | included via C<use>, C<require> or C<do>. | |
1054 | Think of it as the Perl equivalent of the "lint" command. | |
1055 | ||
1056 | =item B<-X> | |
1057 | X<-X> | |
1058 | ||
3c3f8cd6 | 1059 | Does the exact opposite to the B<-W> flag, i.e. it disables all warnings. |
33edcb80 RS |
1060 | |
1061 | =back | |
1062 | ||
1063 | =head2 Backward Compatibility | |
1064 | ||
1065 | If you are used to working with a version of Perl prior to the | |
1066 | introduction of lexically scoped warnings, or have code that uses both | |
1067 | lexical warnings and C<$^W>, this section will describe how they interact. | |
1068 | ||
1069 | How Lexical Warnings interact with B<-w>/C<$^W>: | |
1070 | ||
1071 | =over 5 | |
1072 | ||
1073 | =item 1. | |
1074 | ||
1075 | If none of the three command line flags (B<-w>, B<-W> or B<-X>) that | |
1076 | control warnings is used and neither C<$^W> nor the C<warnings> pragma | |
1077 | are used, then default warnings will be enabled and optional warnings | |
1078 | disabled. | |
1079 | This means that legacy code that doesn't attempt to control the warnings | |
1080 | will work unchanged. | |
1081 | ||
1082 | =item 2. | |
1083 | ||
1084 | The B<-w> flag just sets the global C<$^W> variable as in 5.005. This | |
1085 | means that any legacy code that currently relies on manipulating C<$^W> | |
56873d42 | 1086 | to control warning behavior will still work as is. |
33edcb80 RS |
1087 | |
1088 | =item 3. | |
1089 | ||
1090 | Apart from now being a boolean, the C<$^W> variable operates in exactly | |
1091 | the same horrible uncontrolled global way, except that it cannot | |
1092 | disable/enable default warnings. | |
1093 | ||
1094 | =item 4. | |
1095 | ||
1096 | If a piece of code is under the control of the C<warnings> pragma, | |
1097 | both the C<$^W> variable and the B<-w> flag will be ignored for the | |
1098 | scope of the lexical warning. | |
1099 | ||
1100 | =item 5. | |
1101 | ||
1102 | The only way to override a lexical warnings setting is with the B<-W> | |
1103 | or B<-X> command line flags. | |
1104 | ||
1105 | =back | |
1106 | ||
1107 | The combined effect of 3 & 4 is that it will allow code which uses | |
1108 | the C<warnings> pragma to control the warning behavior of $^W-type | |
1109 | code (using a C<local $^W=0>) if it really wants to, but not vice-versa. | |
1110 | ||
1111 | =head2 Category Hierarchy | |
1112 | X<warning, categories> | |
1113 | ||
1114 | A hierarchy of "categories" have been defined to allow groups of warnings | |
1115 | to be enabled/disabled in isolation. | |
1116 | ||
1117 | The current hierarchy is: | |
1118 | ||
1119 | =for warnings.pl tree-goes-here | |
1120 | ||
1121 | Just like the "strict" pragma any of these categories can be combined | |
1122 | ||
1123 | use warnings qw(void redefine); | |
1124 | no warnings qw(io syntax untie); | |
1125 | ||
1126 | Also like the "strict" pragma, if there is more than one instance of the | |
56873d42 | 1127 | C<warnings> pragma in a given scope the cumulative effect is additive. |
33edcb80 RS |
1128 | |
1129 | use warnings qw(void); # only "void" warnings enabled | |
1130 | ... | |
1131 | use warnings qw(io); # only "void" & "io" warnings enabled | |
1132 | ... | |
1133 | no warnings qw(void); # only "io" warnings enabled | |
1134 | ||
1135 | To determine which category a specific warning has been assigned to see | |
1136 | L<perldiag>. | |
1137 | ||
1138 | Note: Before Perl 5.8.0, the lexical warnings category "deprecated" was a | |
1139 | sub-category of the "syntax" category. It is now a top-level category | |
1140 | in its own right. | |
1141 | ||
3664866e AB |
1142 | Note: Before 5.21.0, the "missing" lexical warnings category was |
1143 | internally defined to be the same as the "uninitialized" category. It | |
1144 | is now a top-level category in its own right. | |
1145 | ||
33edcb80 RS |
1146 | =head2 Fatal Warnings |
1147 | X<warning, fatal> | |
1148 | ||
2e4abf26 DG |
1149 | The presence of the word "FATAL" in the category list will escalate |
1150 | warnings in those categories into fatal errors in that lexical scope. | |
1151 | ||
1152 | B<NOTE:> FATAL warnings should be used with care, particularly | |
1153 | C<< FATAL => 'all' >>. | |
1154 | ||
1155 | Libraries using L<warnings::warn|/FUNCTIONS> for custom warning categories | |
1156 | generally don't expect L<warnings::warn|/FUNCTIONS> to be fatal and can wind up | |
1157 | in an unexpected state as a result. For XS modules issuing categorized | |
1158 | warnings, such unanticipated exceptions could also expose memory leak bugs. | |
1159 | ||
1160 | Moreover, the Perl interpreter itself has had serious bugs involving | |
1161 | fatalized warnings. For a summary of resolved and unresolved problems as | |
1162 | of January 2015, please see | |
1163 | L<this perl5-porters post|http://www.nntp.perl.org/group/perl.perl5.porters/2015/01/msg225235.html>. | |
1164 | ||
1165 | While some developers find fatalizing some warnings to be a useful | |
1166 | defensive programming technique, using C<< FATAL => 'all' >> to fatalize | |
1167 | all possible warning categories -- including custom ones -- is particularly | |
1168 | risky. Therefore, the use of C<< FATAL => 'all' >> is | |
1169 | L<discouraged|perlpolicy/discouraged>. | |
1170 | ||
1171 | The L<strictures|strictures/VERSION-2> module on CPAN offers one example of | |
1172 | a warnings subset that the module's authors believe is relatively safe to | |
1173 | fatalize. | |
1174 | ||
1175 | B<NOTE:> users of FATAL warnings, especially those using | |
1176 | C<< FATAL => 'all' >>, should be fully aware that they are risking future | |
1177 | portability of their programs by doing so. Perl makes absolutely no | |
1178 | commitments to not introduce new warnings or warnings categories in the | |
1179 | future; indeed, we explicitly reserve the right to do so. Code that may | |
1180 | not warn now may warn in a future release of Perl if the Perl5 development | |
1181 | team deems it in the best interests of the community to do so. Should code | |
1182 | using FATAL warnings break due to the introduction of a new warning we will | |
1183 | NOT consider it an incompatible change. Users of FATAL warnings should | |
1184 | take special caution during upgrades to check to see if their code triggers | |
1185 | any new warnings and should pay particular attention to the fine print of | |
1186 | the documentation of the features they use to ensure they do not exploit | |
1187 | features that are documented as risky, deprecated, or unspecified, or where | |
1188 | the documentation says "so don't do that", or anything with the same sense | |
1189 | and spirit. Use of such features in combination with FATAL warnings is | |
1190 | ENTIRELY AT THE USER'S RISK. | |
1191 | ||
1192 | The following documentation describes how to use FATAL warnings but the | |
1193 | perl5 porters strongly recommend that you understand the risks before doing | |
1194 | so, especially for library code intended for use by others, as there is no | |
1195 | way for downstream users to change the choice of fatal categories. | |
1196 | ||
1197 | In the code below, the use of C<time>, C<length> | |
33edcb80 RS |
1198 | and C<join> can all produce a C<"Useless use of xxx in void context"> |
1199 | warning. | |
1200 | ||
1201 | use warnings; | |
1202 | ||
1203 | time; | |
1204 | ||
1205 | { | |
1206 | use warnings FATAL => qw(void); | |
1207 | length "abc"; | |
1208 | } | |
1209 | ||
1210 | join "", 1,2,3; | |
1211 | ||
1212 | print "done\n"; | |
1213 | ||
1214 | When run it produces this output | |
1215 | ||
1216 | Useless use of time in void context at fatal line 3. | |
56873d42 | 1217 | Useless use of length in void context at fatal line 7. |
33edcb80 RS |
1218 | |
1219 | The scope where C<length> is used has escalated the C<void> warnings | |
1220 | category into a fatal error, so the program terminates immediately when it | |
1221 | encounters the warning. | |
1222 | ||
1223 | To explicitly turn off a "FATAL" warning you just disable the warning | |
1224 | it is associated with. So, for example, to disable the "void" warning | |
1225 | in the example above, either of these will do the trick: | |
1226 | ||
1227 | no warnings qw(void); | |
1228 | no warnings FATAL => qw(void); | |
1229 | ||
1230 | If you want to downgrade a warning that has been escalated into a fatal | |
1231 | error back to a normal warning, you can use the "NONFATAL" keyword. For | |
1232 | example, the code below will promote all warnings into fatal errors, | |
1233 | except for those in the "syntax" category. | |
1234 | ||
1235 | use warnings FATAL => 'all', NONFATAL => 'syntax'; | |
1236 | ||
1237 | As of Perl 5.20, instead of C<< use warnings FATAL => 'all'; >> you can | |
1238 | use: | |
1239 | ||
1240 | use v5.20; # Perl 5.20 or greater is required for the following | |
1241 | use warnings 'FATAL'; # short form of "use warnings FATAL => 'all';" | |
1242 | ||
1243 | If you want your program to be compatible with versions of Perl before | |
1244 | 5.20, you must use C<< use warnings FATAL => 'all'; >> instead. (In | |
1245 | previous versions of Perl, the behavior of the statements | |
1246 | C<< use warnings 'FATAL'; >>, C<< use warnings 'NONFATAL'; >> and | |
1247 | C<< no warnings 'FATAL'; >> was unspecified; they did not behave as if | |
1248 | they included the C<< => 'all' >> portion. As of 5.20, they do.) | |
1249 | ||
33edcb80 RS |
1250 | =head2 Reporting Warnings from a Module |
1251 | X<warning, reporting> X<warning, registering> | |
1252 | ||
1253 | The C<warnings> pragma provides a number of functions that are useful for | |
1254 | module authors. These are used when you want to report a module-specific | |
1255 | warning to a calling module has enabled warnings via the C<warnings> | |
1256 | pragma. | |
1257 | ||
1258 | Consider the module C<MyMod::Abc> below. | |
1259 | ||
1260 | package MyMod::Abc; | |
1261 | ||
1262 | use warnings::register; | |
1263 | ||
1264 | sub open { | |
1265 | my $path = shift; | |
1266 | if ($path !~ m#^/#) { | |
1267 | warnings::warn("changing relative path to /var/abc") | |
1268 | if warnings::enabled(); | |
1269 | $path = "/var/abc/$path"; | |
1270 | } | |
1271 | } | |
1272 | ||
1273 | 1; | |
1274 | ||
1275 | The call to C<warnings::register> will create a new warnings category | |
1276 | called "MyMod::Abc", i.e. the new category name matches the current | |
1277 | package name. The C<open> function in the module will display a warning | |
1278 | message if it gets given a relative path as a parameter. This warnings | |
1279 | will only be displayed if the code that uses C<MyMod::Abc> has actually | |
1280 | enabled them with the C<warnings> pragma like below. | |
1281 | ||
1282 | use MyMod::Abc; | |
1283 | use warnings 'MyMod::Abc'; | |
1284 | ... | |
1285 | abc::open("../fred.txt"); | |
1286 | ||
1287 | It is also possible to test whether the pre-defined warnings categories are | |
1288 | set in the calling module with the C<warnings::enabled> function. Consider | |
1289 | this snippet of code: | |
1290 | ||
1291 | package MyMod::Abc; | |
1292 | ||
1293 | sub open { | |
4a21999a TC |
1294 | if (warnings::enabled("deprecated")) { |
1295 | warnings::warn("deprecated", | |
1296 | "open is deprecated, use new instead"); | |
1297 | } | |
33edcb80 RS |
1298 | new(@_); |
1299 | } | |
1300 | ||
1301 | sub new | |
1302 | ... | |
1303 | 1; | |
1304 | ||
1305 | The function C<open> has been deprecated, so code has been included to | |
1306 | display a warning message whenever the calling module has (at least) the | |
1307 | "deprecated" warnings category enabled. Something like this, say. | |
1308 | ||
1309 | use warnings 'deprecated'; | |
1310 | use MyMod::Abc; | |
1311 | ... | |
1312 | MyMod::Abc::open($filename); | |
1313 | ||
1314 | Either the C<warnings::warn> or C<warnings::warnif> function should be | |
1315 | used to actually display the warnings message. This is because they can | |
1316 | make use of the feature that allows warnings to be escalated into fatal | |
1317 | errors. So in this case | |
1318 | ||
1319 | use MyMod::Abc; | |
1320 | use warnings FATAL => 'MyMod::Abc'; | |
1321 | ... | |
1322 | MyMod::Abc::open('../fred.txt'); | |
1323 | ||
1324 | the C<warnings::warnif> function will detect this and die after | |
1325 | displaying the warning message. | |
1326 | ||
1327 | The three warnings functions, C<warnings::warn>, C<warnings::warnif> | |
1328 | and C<warnings::enabled> can optionally take an object reference in place | |
1329 | of a category name. In this case the functions will use the class name | |
1330 | of the object as the warnings category. | |
1331 | ||
1332 | Consider this example: | |
1333 | ||
1334 | package Original; | |
1335 | ||
1336 | no warnings; | |
1337 | use warnings::register; | |
1338 | ||
1339 | sub new | |
1340 | { | |
1341 | my $class = shift; | |
1342 | bless [], $class; | |
1343 | } | |
1344 | ||
1345 | sub check | |
1346 | { | |
1347 | my $self = shift; | |
1348 | my $value = shift; | |
1349 | ||
1350 | if ($value % 2 && warnings::enabled($self)) | |
1351 | { warnings::warn($self, "Odd numbers are unsafe") } | |
1352 | } | |
1353 | ||
1354 | sub doit | |
1355 | { | |
1356 | my $self = shift; | |
1357 | my $value = shift; | |
1358 | $self->check($value); | |
1359 | # ... | |
1360 | } | |
1361 | ||
1362 | 1; | |
1363 | ||
1364 | package Derived; | |
1365 | ||
1366 | use warnings::register; | |
1367 | use Original; | |
1368 | our @ISA = qw( Original ); | |
1369 | sub new | |
1370 | { | |
1371 | my $class = shift; | |
1372 | bless [], $class; | |
1373 | } | |
1374 | ||
1375 | ||
1376 | 1; | |
1377 | ||
56873d42 | 1378 | The code below makes use of both modules, but it only enables warnings from |
33edcb80 RS |
1379 | C<Derived>. |
1380 | ||
1381 | use Original; | |
1382 | use Derived; | |
1383 | use warnings 'Derived'; | |
1384 | my $a = Original->new(); | |
1385 | $a->doit(1); | |
1386 | my $b = Derived->new(); | |
1387 | $a->doit(1); | |
1388 | ||
1389 | When this code is run only the C<Derived> object, C<$b>, will generate | |
56873d42 | 1390 | a warning. |
33edcb80 RS |
1391 | |
1392 | Odd numbers are unsafe at main.pl line 7 | |
1393 | ||
1394 | Notice also that the warning is reported at the line where the object is first | |
1395 | used. | |
1396 | ||
1397 | When registering new categories of warning, you can supply more names to | |
1398 | warnings::register like this: | |
1399 | ||
1400 | package MyModule; | |
1401 | use warnings::register qw(format precision); | |
1402 | ||
1403 | ... | |
fe2e802c | 1404 | |
33edcb80 | 1405 | warnings::warnif('MyModule::format', '...'); |
599cee73 | 1406 | |
33edcb80 | 1407 | =head1 FUNCTIONS |
e476b1b5 | 1408 | |
c4583f59 FC |
1409 | Note: The functions with names ending in C<_at_level> were added in Perl |
1410 | 5.28. | |
1411 | ||
39b50539 Z |
1412 | =over 4 |
1413 | ||
d3a7d8c7 GS |
1414 | =item use warnings::register |
1415 | ||
7e6d00f8 PM |
1416 | Creates a new warnings category with the same name as the package where |
1417 | the call to the pragma is used. | |
1418 | ||
1419 | =item warnings::enabled() | |
1420 | ||
1421 | Use the warnings category with the same name as the current package. | |
1422 | ||
1423 | Return TRUE if that warnings category is enabled in the calling module. | |
1424 | Otherwise returns FALSE. | |
1425 | ||
1426 | =item warnings::enabled($category) | |
1427 | ||
1428 | Return TRUE if the warnings category, C<$category>, is enabled in the | |
1429 | calling module. | |
1430 | Otherwise returns FALSE. | |
1431 | ||
1432 | =item warnings::enabled($object) | |
1433 | ||
1434 | Use the name of the class for the object reference, C<$object>, as the | |
1435 | warnings category. | |
1436 | ||
1437 | Return TRUE if that warnings category is enabled in the first scope | |
1438 | where the object is used. | |
1439 | Otherwise returns FALSE. | |
1440 | ||
c4583f59 FC |
1441 | =item warnings::enabled_at_level($category, $level) |
1442 | ||
1443 | Like C<warnings::enabled>, but $level specifies the exact call frame, 0 | |
1444 | being the immediate caller. | |
1445 | ||
ec983580 AR |
1446 | =item warnings::fatal_enabled() |
1447 | ||
1448 | Return TRUE if the warnings category with the same name as the current | |
1449 | package has been set to FATAL in the calling module. | |
1450 | Otherwise returns FALSE. | |
1451 | ||
1452 | =item warnings::fatal_enabled($category) | |
1453 | ||
1454 | Return TRUE if the warnings category C<$category> has been set to FATAL in | |
1455 | the calling module. | |
1456 | Otherwise returns FALSE. | |
1457 | ||
1458 | =item warnings::fatal_enabled($object) | |
1459 | ||
1460 | Use the name of the class for the object reference, C<$object>, as the | |
1461 | warnings category. | |
1462 | ||
1463 | Return TRUE if that warnings category has been set to FATAL in the first | |
1464 | scope where the object is used. | |
1465 | Otherwise returns FALSE. | |
1466 | ||
c4583f59 FC |
1467 | =item warnings::fatal_enabled_at_level($category, $level) |
1468 | ||
1469 | Like C<warnings::fatal_enabled>, but $level specifies the exact call frame, | |
1470 | 0 being the immediate caller. | |
1471 | ||
7e6d00f8 PM |
1472 | =item warnings::warn($message) |
1473 | ||
1474 | Print C<$message> to STDERR. | |
1475 | ||
1476 | Use the warnings category with the same name as the current package. | |
1477 | ||
1478 | If that warnings category has been set to "FATAL" in the calling module | |
1479 | then die. Otherwise return. | |
1480 | ||
1481 | =item warnings::warn($category, $message) | |
1482 | ||
1483 | Print C<$message> to STDERR. | |
1484 | ||
1485 | If the warnings category, C<$category>, has been set to "FATAL" in the | |
1486 | calling module then die. Otherwise return. | |
d3a7d8c7 | 1487 | |
7e6d00f8 | 1488 | =item warnings::warn($object, $message) |
e476b1b5 | 1489 | |
7e6d00f8 | 1490 | Print C<$message> to STDERR. |
e476b1b5 | 1491 | |
7e6d00f8 PM |
1492 | Use the name of the class for the object reference, C<$object>, as the |
1493 | warnings category. | |
e476b1b5 | 1494 | |
7e6d00f8 PM |
1495 | If that warnings category has been set to "FATAL" in the scope where C<$object> |
1496 | is first used then die. Otherwise return. | |
599cee73 | 1497 | |
c4583f59 FC |
1498 | =item warnings::warn_at_level($category, $level, $message) |
1499 | ||
1500 | Like C<warnings::warn>, but $level specifies the exact call frame, | |
1501 | 0 being the immediate caller. | |
e476b1b5 | 1502 | |
7e6d00f8 PM |
1503 | =item warnings::warnif($message) |
1504 | ||
1505 | Equivalent to: | |
1506 | ||
1507 | if (warnings::enabled()) | |
1508 | { warnings::warn($message) } | |
1509 | ||
1510 | =item warnings::warnif($category, $message) | |
1511 | ||
1512 | Equivalent to: | |
1513 | ||
1514 | if (warnings::enabled($category)) | |
1515 | { warnings::warn($category, $message) } | |
1516 | ||
1517 | =item warnings::warnif($object, $message) | |
1518 | ||
1519 | Equivalent to: | |
1520 | ||
1521 | if (warnings::enabled($object)) | |
1522 | { warnings::warn($object, $message) } | |
d3a7d8c7 | 1523 | |
c4583f59 FC |
1524 | =item warnings::warnif_at_level($category, $level, $message) |
1525 | ||
1526 | Like C<warnings::warnif>, but $level specifies the exact call frame, | |
1527 | 0 being the immediate caller. | |
1528 | ||
5e7ad92a | 1529 | =item warnings::register_categories(@names) |
13781810 FR |
1530 | |
1531 | This registers warning categories for the given names and is primarily for | |
d2ec25a5 | 1532 | use by the warnings::register pragma. |
13781810 | 1533 | |
e476b1b5 GS |
1534 | =back |
1535 | ||
d2ec25a5 | 1536 | See also L<perlmodlib/Pragmatic Modules> and L<perldiag>. |
599cee73 PM |
1537 | |
1538 | =cut |