Man1 - perlpragma.1perl
Table of Contents
NAME
perlpragma - how to write a user pragma
DESCRIPTION
A pragma is a module which influences some aspect of the compile time or
run time behaviour of Perl, such as strict
or warnings
. With Perl
5.10 you are no longer limited to the built in pragmata; you can now
create user pragmata that modify the behaviour of user functions within
a lexical scope.
A basic example
For example, say you need to create a class implementing overloaded
mathematical operators, and would like to provide your own pragma that
functions much like use integer;
You’d like this code
use MyMaths; my $l = MyMaths->new(1.2); my $r = MyMaths->new(3.4); print “A: ”, $l + $r, “\n”; use myint; print “B: ”, $l + $r, “\n”; { no myint; print “C: ”, $l + $r, “\n”; } print “D: ”, $l + $r, “\n”; no myint; print “E: ”, $l + $r, “\n”;
to give the output
A: 4.6 B: 4 C: 4.6 D: 4 E: 4.6
i.e., where use myint;
is in effect, addition operations are forced
to integer, whereas by default they are not, with the default behaviour
being restored via no myint;
The minimal implementation of the package MyMaths
would be something
like this:
package MyMaths; use warnings; use strict; use myint(); use overload + => sub { my ($l, $r) = @_; # Pass 1 to check up one call level from here if (myint::in_effect(1)) { int(\[l) + int(\]r); } else { \[l + \]r; } }; sub new { my ($class, $value) = @_; bless \$value, $class; } 1;
Note how we load the user pragma myint
with an empty list ()
to
prevent its import
being called.
The interaction with the Perl compilation happens inside package
myint
:
package myint; use strict; use warnings; sub import { $^H{“myint/in_effect”} = 1; } sub unimport { $^H{“myint/in_effect”} = 0; } sub in_effect { my $level = shift // 0; my $hinthash = (caller($level))[10]; return $hinthash->{“myint/in_effect”}; } 1;
As pragmata are implemented as modules, like any other module,
use myint;
becomes
BEGIN { require myint; myint->import(); }
and no myint;
is
BEGIN { require myint; myint->unimport(); }
Hence the import
and unimport
routines are called at compile time
for the user’s code.
User pragmata store their state by writing to the magical hash %^H
,
hence these two routines manipulate it. The state information in %^H
is stored in the optree, and can be retrieved read-only at runtime with
caller()
, at index 10 of the list of returned results. In the example
pragma, retrieval is encapsulated into the routine in_effect()
, which
takes as parameter the number of call frames to go up to find the value
of the pragma in the user’s script. This uses caller()
to determine
the value of $^H{"myint/in_effect"}
when each line of the user’s
script was called, and therefore provide the correct semantics in the
subroutine implementing the overloaded addition.
Key naming
There is only a single %^H
, but arbitrarily many modules that want to
use its scoping semantics. To avoid stepping on each other’s toes, they
need to be sure to use different keys in the hash. It is therefore
conventional for a module to use only keys that begin with the module’s
name (the name of its main package) and a / character. After this
module-identifying prefix, the rest of the key is entirely up to the
module: it may include any characters whatsoever. For example, a module
Foo::Bar
should use keys such as Foo::Bar/baz
and Foo::Bar/$%/_!
.
Modules following this convention all play nicely with each other.
The Perl core uses a handful of keys in %^H
which do not follow this
convention, because they predate it. Keys that follow the convention
won’t conflict with the core’s historical keys.
Implementation details
The optree is shared between threads. This means there is a possibility
that the optree will outlive the particular thread (and therefore the
interpreter instance) that created it, so true Perl scalars cannot be
stored in the optree. Instead a compact form is used, which can only
store values that are integers (signed and unsigned), strings or
undef
- references and floating point values are stringified. If you
need to store multiple values or complex structures, you should
serialise them, for example with pack
. The deletion of a hash key from
%^H
is recorded, and as ever can be distinguished from the existence
of a key with value undef
with exists
.
Don’t attempt to store references to data structures as integers which
are retrieved via caller
and converted back, as this will not be
threadsafe. Accesses would be to the structure without locking (which is
not safe for Perl’s scalars), and either the structure has to leak, or
it has to be freed when its creating thread terminates, which may be
before the optree referencing it is deleted, if other threads outlive
it.