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Module::Runtime(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
Module::Runtime(3) |
Module::Runtime - runtime module handling
use Module::Runtime qw(
$module_name_rx is_module_name check_module_name
module_notional_filename require_module);
if($module_name =~ /\A$module_name_rx\z/o) { ...
if(is_module_name($module_name)) { ...
check_module_name($module_name);
$notional_filename = module_notional_filename($module_name);
require_module($module_name);
use Module::Runtime qw(use_module use_package_optimistically);
$bi = use_module("Math::BigInt", 1.31)->new("1_234");
$widget = use_package_optimistically("Local::Widget")->new;
use Module::Runtime qw(
$top_module_spec_rx $sub_module_spec_rx
is_module_spec check_module_spec
compose_module_name);
if($spec =~ /\A$top_module_spec_rx\z/o) { ...
if($spec =~ /\A$sub_module_spec_rx\z/o) { ...
if(is_module_spec("Standard::Prefix", $spec)) { ...
check_module_spec("Standard::Prefix", $spec);
$module_name = compose_module_name("Standard::Prefix", $spec);
The functions exported by this module deal with runtime handling of Perl
modules, which are normally handled at compile time. This module avoids using
any other modules, so that it can be used in low-level infrastructure.
The parts of this module that work with module names apply the
same syntax that is used for barewords in Perl source. In principle this
syntax can vary between versions of Perl, and this module applies the syntax
of the Perl on which it is running. In practice the usable syntax hasn't
changed yet. There's some intent for Unicode module names to be supported in
the future, but this hasn't yet amounted to any consistent facility.
The functions of this module whose purpose is to load modules
include workarounds for three old Perl core bugs regarding
"require". These workarounds are applied
on any Perl version where the bugs exist, except for a case where one of the
bugs cannot be adequately worked around in pure Perl.
The usable module name syntax has not changed from Perl 5.000 up to Perl 5.19.8.
The syntax is composed entirely of ASCII characters. From Perl 5.6 onwards
there has been some attempt to allow the use of non-ASCII Unicode characters
in Perl source, but it was fundamentally broken (like the entirety of Perl
5.6's Unicode handling) and remained pretty much entirely unusable until it
got some attention in the Perl 5.15 series. Although Unicode is now
consistently accepted by the parser in some places, it remains broken for
module names. Furthermore, there has not yet been any work on how to map
Unicode module names into filenames, so in that respect also Unicode module
names are unusable.
The module name syntax is, precisely: the string must consist of
one or more segments separated by "::";
each segment must consist of one or more identifier characters (ASCII
alphanumerics plus "_"); the first character of the string must
not be a digit. Thus
""IO::File"",
""warnings"", and
""foo::123::x_0"" are all valid
module names, whereas ""IO::""
and ""1foo::bar"" are not.
"'" separators are not permitted by this
module, though they remain usable in Perl source, being translated to
"::" in the parser.
The first bug worked around is core bug [perl #68590], which causes lexical
state in one file to leak into another that is
"require"d/"use"d
from it. This bug is present from Perl 5.6 up to Perl 5.10, and is fixed in
Perl 5.11.0. From Perl 5.9.4 up to Perl 5.10.0 no satisfactory workaround is
possible in pure Perl. The workaround means that modules loaded via this
module don't suffer this pollution of their lexical state. Modules loaded in
other ways, or via this module on the Perl versions where the pure Perl
workaround is impossible, remain vulnerable. The module
Lexical::SealRequireHints provides a complete workaround for this bug.
The second bug worked around causes some kinds of failure in
module loading, principally compilation errors in the loaded module, to be
recorded in %INC as if they were successful, so
later attempts to load the same module immediately indicate success. This
bug is present up to Perl 5.8.9, and is fixed in Perl 5.9.0. The workaround
means that a compilation error in a module loaded via this module won't be
cached as a success. Modules loaded in other ways remain liable to produce
bogus %INC entries, and if a bogus entry exists then
it will mislead this module if it is used to re-attempt loading.
The third bug worked around causes the wrong context to be seen at
file scope of a loaded module, if
"require" is invoked in a location that
inherits context from a higher scope. This bug is present up to Perl 5.11.2,
and is fixed in Perl 5.11.3. The workaround means that a module loaded via
this module will always see the correct context. Modules loaded in other
ways remain vulnerable.
These regular expressions do not include any anchors, so to check whether an
entire string matches a syntax item you must supply the anchors yourself.
- $module_name_rx
- Matches a valid Perl module name in bareword syntax.
- $top_module_spec_rx
- Matches a module specification for use with
"compose_module_name", where no prefix is being used.
- $sub_module_spec_rx
- Matches a module specification for use with
"compose_module_name", where a prefix is being used.
- is_module_name(ARG)
- Returns a truth value indicating whether ARG is a plain string
satisfying Perl module name syntax as described for
"$module_name_rx".
- is_valid_module_name(ARG)
- Deprecated alias for "is_module_name".
- check_module_name(ARG)
- Check whether ARG is a plain string satisfying Perl module name
syntax as described for "$module_name_rx". Return normally if it
is, or "die" if it is not.
- module_notional_filename(NAME)
- Generates a notional relative filename for a module, which is used in some
Perl core interfaces. The NAME is a string, which should be a valid
module name (one or more "::"-separated
segments). If it is not a valid name, the function
"die"s.
The notional filename for the named module is generated and
returned. This filename is always in Unix style, with
"/" directory separators and a
".pm" suffix. This kind of filename
can be used as an argument to
"require", and is the key that appears
in %INC to identify a module, regardless of
actual local filename syntax.
- require_module(NAME)
- This is essentially the bareword form of
"require", in runtime form. The
NAME is a string, which should be a valid module name (one or more
"::"-separated segments). If it is not a
valid name, the function "die"s.
The module specified by NAME is loaded, if it hasn't
been already, in the manner of the bareword form of
"require". That means that a search
through @INC is performed, and a byte-compiled
form of the module will be used if available.
The return value is as for
"require". That is, it is the value
returned by the module itself if the module is loaded anew, or
1 if the module was already loaded.
- use_module(NAME[, VERSION])
- This is essentially "use" in runtime
form, but without the importing feature (which is fundamentally a
compile-time thing). The NAME is handled just like in
"require_module" above: it must be a
module name, and the named module is loaded as if by the bareword form of
"require".
If a VERSION is specified, the
"VERSION" method of the loaded module
is called with the specified VERSION as an argument. This
normally serves to ensure that the version loaded is at least the
version required. This is the same functionality provided by the
VERSION parameter of "use".
On success, the name of the module is returned. This is unlike
"require_module", and is done so that the entire call to
"use_module" can be used as a class name to call a
constructor, as in the example in the synopsis.
- use_package_optimistically(NAME[, VERSION])
- This is an analogue of "use_module" for the situation where
there is uncertainty as to whether a package/class is defined in its own
module or by some other means. It attempts to arrange for the named
package to be available, either by loading a module or by doing nothing
and hoping.
An attempt is made to load the named module (as if by the
bareword form of "require"). If the
module cannot be found then it is assumed that the package was actually
already loaded by other means, and no error is signalled. That's the
optimistic bit.
Warning: this optional module loading is liable to
cause unreliable behaviour, including security problems. It interacts
especially badly with having "." in
@INC, which was the default state of affairs in
Perls prior to 5.25.11. If a package is actually defined by some means
other than a module, then applying this function to it causes a spurious
attempt to load a module that is expected to be non-existent. If a
module actually exists under that name then it will be unintentionally
loaded. If "." is in
@INC and this code is ever run with the current
directory being one writable by a malicious user (such as /tmp),
then the malicious user can easily cause the victim to run arbitrary
code, by creating a module file under the predictable spuriously-loaded
name in the writable directory. Generally, optional module loading
should be avoided.
This is mostly the same operation that is performed by the
base pragma to ensure that the specified base classes are available. The
behaviour of base was simplified in version 2.18, and later improved in
version 2.20, and on both occasions this function changed to match.
If a VERSION is specified, the
"VERSION" method of the loaded package
is called with the specified VERSION as an argument. This
normally serves to ensure that the version loaded is at least the
version required. On success, the name of the package is returned. These
aspects of the function work just like "use_module".
- is_module_spec(PREFIX, SPEC)
- Returns a truth value indicating whether SPEC is valid input for
"compose_module_name". See below for what that entails. Whether
a PREFIX is supplied affects the validity of SPEC, but the
exact value of the prefix is unimportant, so this function treats
PREFIX as a truth value.
- is_valid_module_spec(PREFIX, SPEC)
- Deprecated alias for "is_module_spec".
- check_module_spec(PREFIX, SPEC)
- Check whether SPEC is valid input for
"compose_module_name". Return normally if it is, or
"die" if it is not.
- compose_module_name(PREFIX, SPEC)
- This function is intended to make it more convenient for a user to specify
a Perl module name at runtime. Users have greater need for abbreviations
and context-sensitivity than programmers, and Perl module names get a
little unwieldy. SPEC is what the user specifies, and this function
translates it into a module name in standard form, which it returns.
SPEC has syntax approximately that of a standard module
name: it should consist of one or more name segments, each of which
consists of one or more identifier characters. However,
"/" is permitted as a separator, in
addition to the standard "::". The two
separators are entirely interchangeable.
Additionally, if PREFIX is not
"undef" then it must be a module name
in standard form, and it is prefixed to the user-specified name. The
user can inhibit the prefix addition by starting SPEC with a
separator (either "/" or
"::").
On Perl versions 5.7.2 to 5.8.8, if "require"
is overridden by the "CORE::GLOBAL"
mechanism, it is likely to break the heuristics used by
"use_package_optimistically", making it signal an error for a
missing module rather than assume that it was already loaded. From Perl 5.8.9
onwards, and on 5.7.1 and earlier, this module can avoid being confused by
such an override. On the affected versions, a
"require" override might be installed by
Lexical::SealRequireHints, if something requires its bugfix but for some
reason its XS implementation isn't available.
Lexical::SealRequireHints, base, "require" in perlfunc,
"use" in perlfunc
Andrew Main (Zefram) <zefram@fysh.org>
Copyright (C) 2004, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2017 Andrew Main
(Zefram) <zefram@fysh.org>
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the
same terms as Perl itself.
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