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B::Utils(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
B::Utils(3) |
B::Utils - Helper functions for op tree manipulation
To install this module, run the following commands:
perl Makefile.PL
make
make test
make install
- "$op->oldname"
- Returns the name of the op, even if it is currently optimized to null.
This helps you understand the structure of the op tree.
- "$op->kids"
- Returns an array of all this op's non-null children, in order.
- "$op->parent"
- Returns the parent node in the op tree, if possible. Currently
"possible" means "if the tree has already been
optimized"; that is, if we're during a
"CHECK" block. (and hence, if we have
valid "next" pointers.)
In the future, it may be possible to search for the parent
before we have the "next" pointers in
place, but it'll take me a while to figure out how to do that.
Warning: Since 5.21.2 B comes with its own version of
B::OP::parent which returns either B::NULL or the real parent when
ccflags contains -DPERL_OP_PARENT. In this case rather use
$op->_parent.
- "$op->ancestors"
- Returns all parents of this node, recursively. The list is ordered from
younger/closer parents to older/farther parents.
- "$op->descendants"
- Returns all children of this node, recursively. The list is
unordered.
- "$op->siblings"
- Returns all younger siblings of this node. The list is ordered from
younger/closer siblings to older/farther siblings.
- "$op->previous"
- Like " $op->next ", but not
quite.
- "$op->stringify"
- Returns a nice stringification of an opcode.
- "$op->as_opgrep_pattern(%options)"
- From the op tree it is called on,
"as_opgrep_pattern()" generates a data
structure suitable for use as a condition pattern for the
"opgrep()" function described below in
detail. Beware: When using such generated patterns, there may be
false positives: The pattern will most likely not match only the op
tree it was generated from since by default, not all properties of the op
are reproduced.
You can control which properties of the op to include in the
pattern by passing named arguments. The default behaviour is as if you
passed in the following options:
my $pattern = $op->as_opgrep_pattern(
attributes => [qw(name flags)],
max_recursion_depth => undef,
);
So obviously, you can set
"max_recursion_depth" to a number to
limit the maximum depth of recursion into the op tree. Setting it to
0 will limit the dump to the current op.
"attributes" is a list of
attributes to include in the produced pattern. The attributes that can
be checked against in this way are:
name targ type seq flags private pmflags pmpermflags.
- "all_starts"
- "all_roots"
- Returns a hash of all of the starting ops or root ops of optrees, keyed to
subroutine name; the optree for main program is simply keyed to
"__MAIN__".
Note: Certain "dangerous" stashes are not
scanned for subroutines: the list of such stashes can be found in
@B::Utils::bad_stashes. Feel free to examine
and/or modify this to suit your needs. The intention is that a simple
program which uses no modules other than
"B" and
"B::Utils" would show no addition
symbols.
This does not return the details of ops in anonymous
subroutines compiled at compile time. For instance, given
$a = sub { ... };
the subroutine will not appear in the hash. This is just as
well, since they're anonymous... If you want to get at them, use...
- "anon_subs"
- This returns an array of hash references. Each element has the keys
"start" and "root". These are the starting and root
ops of all of the anonymous subroutines in the program.
- "recalc_sub_cache"
- If PL_sub_generation has changed or you have some other reason to want to
force the re-examination of the optrees, everywhere, call this
function.
- "walkoptree_simple($op, \&callback, [$data])"
- The "B" module provides various
functions to walk the op tree, but they're all rather difficult to use,
requiring you to inject methods into the
"B::OP" class. This is a very simple op
tree walker with more expected semantics.
All the "walk" functions set
$B::Utils::file,
$B::Utils::line, and
$B::Utils::sub to the appropriate values of
file, line number, and sub name in the program being examined.
- "walkoptree_filtered($op, \&filter, \&callback,
[$data])"
- This is much the same as
"walkoptree_simple", but will only call
the callback if the "filter" returns
true. The "filter" is passed the op in
question as a parameter; the "opgrep"
function is fantastic for building your own filters.
- "walkallops_simple(\&callback, [$data])"
- This combines "walkoptree_simple" with
"all_roots" and
"anon_subs" to examine every op in the
program. $B::Utils::sub is set to the subroutine
name if you're in a subroutine,
"__MAIN__" if you're in the main program
and "__ANON__" if you're in an anonymous
subroutine.
- "walkallops_filtered(\&filter, \&callback,
[$data])"
- Same as above, but filtered.
- "opgrep(\%conditions, @ops)"
- Returns the ops which meet the given conditions. The conditions should be
specified like this:
@barewords = opgrep(
{ name => "const", private => OPpCONST_BARE },
@ops
);
where the first argument to
"opgrep()" is the condition to be
matched against the op structure. We'll henceforth refer to it as an
op-pattern.
You can specify alternation by giving an arrayref of
values:
@svs = opgrep ( { name => ["padsv", "gvsv"] }, @ops)
And you can specify inversion by making the first element of
the arrayref a "!". (Hint: if you want to say
"anything", say "not nothing":
"["!"]")
You may also specify the conditions to be matched in nearby
ops as nested patterns.
walkallops_filtered(
sub { opgrep( {name => "exec",
next => {
name => "nextstate",
sibling => { name => [qw(! exit warn die)] }
}
}, @_)},
sub {
carp("Statement unlikely to be reached");
carp("\t(Maybe you meant system() when you said exec()?)\n");
}
)
Get that?
Here are the things that can be tested in this way:
name targ type seq flags private pmflags pmpermflags
first other last sibling next pmreplroot pmreplstart pmnext
Additionally, you can use the
"kids" keyword with an array reference
to match the result of a call to
"$op->kids()". An example use is
given in the documentation for "op_or"
below.
For debugging, you can have many properties of an op that is
currently being matched against a given condition dumped to STDERR by
specifying "dump =" 1> in the
condition's hash reference.
If you match a complex condition against an op tree, you may
want to extract a specific piece of information from the tree if the
condition matches. This normally entails manually walking the tree a
second time down to the op you wish to extract, investigate or modify.
Since this is tedious duplication of code and information, you can
specify a special property in the pattern of the op you wish to extract
to capture the sub-op of interest. Example:
my ($result) = opgrep(
{ name => "exec",
next => { name => "nextstate",
sibling => { name => [qw(! exit warn die)]
capture => "notreached",
},
}
},
$root_op
);
if ($result) {
my $name = $result->{notreached}->name; # result is *not* the root op
carp("Statement unlikely to be reached (op name: $name)");
carp("\t(Maybe you meant system() when you said exec()?)\n");
}
While the above is a terribly contrived example, consider the
win for a deeply nested pattern or worse yet, a pattern with many
disjunctions. If a "capture" property
is found anywhere in the op pattern,
"opgrep()" returns an unblessed hash
reference on success instead of the tested op. You can tell them apart
using Scalar::Util's "blessed()". That
hash reference contains all captured ops plus the tested root up as the
hash entry "$result->{op}". Note
that you cannot use this feature with
"walkoptree_filtered" since that
function was specifically documented to pass the tested op itself to the
callback.
You cannot capture disjunctions, but that doesn't really make
sense anyway.
- "opgrep( \@conditions, @ops )"
- Same as above, except that you don't have to chain the conditions
yourself. If you pass an array-ref, opgrep will chain the conditions for
you using "next". The conditions can
either be strings (taken as op-names), or hash-refs, with the same
testable conditions as given above.
- "op_or( @conditions )"
- Unlike the chaining of conditions done by
"opgrep" itself if there are multiple
conditions, this function creates a disjunction
("$cond1 || $cond2 || ...") of the
conditions and returns a structure (hash reference) that can be passed to
opgrep as a single condition.
Example:
my $sub_structure = {
name => 'helem',
first => { name => 'rv2hv', },
'last' => { name => 'const', },
};
my @ops = opgrep( {
name => 'leavesub',
first => {
name => 'lineseq',
kids => [,
{ name => 'nextstate', },
op_or(
{
name => 'return',
first => { name => 'pushmark' },
last => $sub_structure,
},
$sub_structure,
),
],
},
}, $op_obj );
This example matches the code in a typical simplest-possible
accessor method (albeit not down to the last bit):
sub get_foo { $_[0]->{foo} }
But by adding an alternation we can also match optional op
layers. In this case, we optionally match a return statement, so the
following implementation is also recognized:
sub get_foo { return $_[0]->{foo} }
Essentially, this is syntactic sugar for the following
structure recognized by
"opgrep()":
{ disjunction => [@conditions] }
- "carp(@args)"
- "croak(@args)"
- Warn and die, respectively, from the perspective of the position of the op
in the program. Sounds complicated, but it's exactly the kind of error
reporting you expect when you're grovelling through an op tree.
This modules uses ExtUtils::Depends to export some useful functions for XS
modules to use. To use those, include in your Makefile.PL:
my $pkg = ExtUtils::Depends->new("Your::XSModule", "B::Utils");
WriteMakefile(
... # your normal makefile flags
$pkg->get_makefile_vars,
);
Your XS module can now include BUtils.h and
BUtils_op.h. To see document for the functions provided, use:
perldoc -m B::Utils::Install::BUtils.h
perldoc -m B::Utils::Install::BUtils_op.h
Originally written by Simon Cozens,
"simon@cpan.org" Maintained by Joshua ben
Jore, "jjore@cpan.org"
Contributions from Mattia Barbon, Jim Cromie, Steffen Mueller, and
Chia-liang Kao, Alexandr Ciornii, Reini Urban.
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the
same terms as Perl itself.
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