I think once is enough.
[p5sagit/p5-mst-13.2.git] / ext / Data / Dumper / Dumper.pm
CommitLineData
823edd99 1#
2# Data/Dumper.pm
3#
4# convert perl data structures into perl syntax suitable for both printing
5# and eval
6#
7# Documentation at the __END__
8#
9
10package Data::Dumper;
11
f93bb41e 12$VERSION = '2.121';
823edd99 13
14#$| = 1;
15
3b825e41 16use 5.006_001;
823edd99 17require Exporter;
9426adcd 18use XSLoader ();
823edd99 19require overload;
20
21use Carp;
22
9426adcd 23@ISA = qw(Exporter);
823edd99 24@EXPORT = qw(Dumper);
25@EXPORT_OK = qw(DumperX);
26
9426adcd 27XSLoader::load 'Data::Dumper';
823edd99 28
29# module vars and their defaults
30$Indent = 2 unless defined $Indent;
31$Purity = 0 unless defined $Purity;
32$Pad = "" unless defined $Pad;
33$Varname = "VAR" unless defined $Varname;
34$Useqq = 0 unless defined $Useqq;
35$Terse = 0 unless defined $Terse;
36$Freezer = "" unless defined $Freezer;
37$Toaster = "" unless defined $Toaster;
38$Deepcopy = 0 unless defined $Deepcopy;
39$Quotekeys = 1 unless defined $Quotekeys;
40$Bless = "bless" unless defined $Bless;
41#$Expdepth = 0 unless defined $Expdepth;
a2126434 42$Maxdepth = 0 unless defined $Maxdepth;
30b4f386 43$Pair = ' => ' unless defined $Pair;
31a725b3 44$Useperl = 0 unless defined $Useperl;
45$Sortkeys = 0 unless defined $Sortkeys;
8e5f9a6e 46$Deparse = 0 unless defined $Deparse;
823edd99 47
48#
49# expects an arrayref of values to be dumped.
50# can optionally pass an arrayref of names for the values.
51# names must have leading $ sign stripped. begin the name with *
52# to cause output of arrays and hashes rather than refs.
53#
54sub new {
55 my($c, $v, $n) = @_;
56
57 croak "Usage: PACKAGE->new(ARRAYREF, [ARRAYREF])"
58 unless (defined($v) && (ref($v) eq 'ARRAY'));
59 $n = [] unless (defined($n) && (ref($v) eq 'ARRAY'));
60
61 my($s) = {
62 level => 0, # current recursive depth
63 indent => $Indent, # various styles of indenting
64 pad => $Pad, # all lines prefixed by this string
65 xpad => "", # padding-per-level
66 apad => "", # added padding for hash keys n such
67 sep => "", # list separator
30b4f386 68 pair => $Pair, # hash key/value separator: defaults to ' => '
823edd99 69 seen => {}, # local (nested) refs (id => [name, val])
70 todump => $v, # values to dump []
71 names => $n, # optional names for values []
72 varname => $Varname, # prefix to use for tagging nameless ones
73 purity => $Purity, # degree to which output is evalable
74 useqq => $Useqq, # use "" for strings (backslashitis ensues)
75 terse => $Terse, # avoid name output (where feasible)
76 freezer => $Freezer, # name of Freezer method for objects
77 toaster => $Toaster, # name of method to revive objects
78 deepcopy => $Deepcopy, # dont cross-ref, except to stop recursion
79 quotekeys => $Quotekeys, # quote hash keys
80 'bless' => $Bless, # keyword to use for "bless"
81# expdepth => $Expdepth, # cutoff depth for explicit dumping
a2126434 82 maxdepth => $Maxdepth, # depth beyond which we give up
31a725b3 83 useperl => $Useperl, # use the pure Perl implementation
84 sortkeys => $Sortkeys, # flag or filter for sorting hash keys
8e5f9a6e 85 deparse => $Deparse, # use B::Deparse for coderefs
823edd99 86 };
87
88 if ($Indent > 0) {
89 $s->{xpad} = " ";
90 $s->{sep} = "\n";
91 }
92 return bless($s, $c);
93}
94
95#
96# add-to or query the table of already seen references
97#
98sub Seen {
99 my($s, $g) = @_;
100 if (defined($g) && (ref($g) eq 'HASH')) {
101 my($k, $v, $id);
102 while (($k, $v) = each %$g) {
103 if (defined $v and ref $v) {
104 ($id) = (overload::StrVal($v) =~ /\((.*)\)$/);
105 if ($k =~ /^[*](.*)$/) {
106 $k = (ref $v eq 'ARRAY') ? ( "\\\@" . $1 ) :
107 (ref $v eq 'HASH') ? ( "\\\%" . $1 ) :
108 (ref $v eq 'CODE') ? ( "\\\&" . $1 ) :
109 ( "\$" . $1 ) ;
110 }
111 elsif ($k !~ /^\$/) {
112 $k = "\$" . $k;
113 }
114 $s->{seen}{$id} = [$k, $v];
115 }
116 else {
117 carp "Only refs supported, ignoring non-ref item \$$k";
118 }
119 }
120 return $s;
121 }
122 else {
123 return map { @$_ } values %{$s->{seen}};
124 }
125}
126
127#
128# set or query the values to be dumped
129#
130sub Values {
131 my($s, $v) = @_;
132 if (defined($v) && (ref($v) eq 'ARRAY')) {
133 $s->{todump} = [@$v]; # make a copy
134 return $s;
135 }
136 else {
137 return @{$s->{todump}};
138 }
139}
140
141#
142# set or query the names of the values to be dumped
143#
144sub Names {
145 my($s, $n) = @_;
146 if (defined($n) && (ref($n) eq 'ARRAY')) {
147 $s->{names} = [@$n]; # make a copy
148 return $s;
149 }
150 else {
151 return @{$s->{names}};
152 }
153}
154
155sub DESTROY {}
156
0f1923bd 157sub Dump {
158 return &Dumpxs
31a725b3 159 unless $Data::Dumper::Useperl || (ref($_[0]) && $_[0]->{useperl}) ||
8e5f9a6e 160 $Data::Dumper::Useqq || (ref($_[0]) && $_[0]->{useqq}) ||
161 $Data::Dumper::Deparse || (ref($_[0]) && $_[0]->{deparse});
0f1923bd 162 return &Dumpperl;
163}
164
823edd99 165#
166# dump the refs in the current dumper object.
167# expects same args as new() if called via package name.
168#
0f1923bd 169sub Dumpperl {
823edd99 170 my($s) = shift;
171 my(@out, $val, $name);
172 my($i) = 0;
173 local(@post);
174
175 $s = $s->new(@_) unless ref $s;
176
177 for $val (@{$s->{todump}}) {
178 my $out = "";
179 @post = ();
180 $name = $s->{names}[$i++];
181 if (defined $name) {
182 if ($name =~ /^[*](.*)$/) {
183 if (defined $val) {
184 $name = (ref $val eq 'ARRAY') ? ( "\@" . $1 ) :
185 (ref $val eq 'HASH') ? ( "\%" . $1 ) :
186 (ref $val eq 'CODE') ? ( "\*" . $1 ) :
187 ( "\$" . $1 ) ;
188 }
189 else {
190 $name = "\$" . $1;
191 }
192 }
193 elsif ($name !~ /^\$/) {
194 $name = "\$" . $name;
195 }
196 }
197 else {
198 $name = "\$" . $s->{varname} . $i;
199 }
200
201 my $valstr;
202 {
203 local($s->{apad}) = $s->{apad};
204 $s->{apad} .= ' ' x (length($name) + 3) if $s->{indent} >= 2;
205 $valstr = $s->_dump($val, $name);
206 }
207
208 $valstr = "$name = " . $valstr . ';' if @post or !$s->{terse};
209 $out .= $s->{pad} . $valstr . $s->{sep};
210 $out .= $s->{pad} . join(';' . $s->{sep} . $s->{pad}, @post)
211 . ';' . $s->{sep} if @post;
212
213 push @out, $out;
214 }
215 return wantarray ? @out : join('', @out);
216}
217
218#
219# twist, toil and turn;
220# and recurse, of course.
31a725b3 221# sometimes sordidly;
222# and curse if no recourse.
823edd99 223#
224sub _dump {
225 my($s, $val, $name) = @_;
226 my($sname);
227 my($out, $realpack, $realtype, $type, $ipad, $id, $blesspad);
228
823edd99 229 $type = ref $val;
230 $out = "";
231
232 if ($type) {
233
234 # prep it, if it looks like an object
982af928 235 if (my $freezer = $s->{freezer}) {
236 $val->$freezer() if UNIVERSAL::can($val, $freezer);
823edd99 237 }
238
239 ($realpack, $realtype, $id) =
240 (overload::StrVal($val) =~ /^(?:(.*)\=)?([^=]*)\(([^\(]*)\)$/);
a2126434 241
7820172a 242 # if it has a name, we need to either look it up, or keep a tab
243 # on it so we know when we hit it later
244 if (defined($name) and length($name)) {
245 # keep a tab on it so that we dont fall into recursive pit
246 if (exists $s->{seen}{$id}) {
247# if ($s->{expdepth} < $s->{level}) {
248 if ($s->{purity} and $s->{level} > 0) {
249 $out = ($realtype eq 'HASH') ? '{}' :
250 ($realtype eq 'ARRAY') ? '[]' :
5df59fb6 251 'do{my $o}' ;
7820172a 252 push @post, $name . " = " . $s->{seen}{$id}[0];
823edd99 253 }
254 else {
7820172a 255 $out = $s->{seen}{$id}[0];
256 if ($name =~ /^([\@\%])/) {
257 my $start = $1;
258 if ($out =~ /^\\$start/) {
259 $out = substr($out, 1);
260 }
261 else {
262 $out = $start . '{' . $out . '}';
263 }
264 }
265 }
266 return $out;
267# }
268 }
269 else {
270 # store our name
271 $s->{seen}{$id} = [ (($name =~ /^[@%]/) ? ('\\' . $name ) :
272 ($realtype eq 'CODE' and
273 $name =~ /^[*](.*)$/) ? ('\\&' . $1 ) :
274 $name ),
275 $val ];
823edd99 276 }
823edd99 277 }
278
a2126434 279 if ($realpack and $realpack eq 'Regexp') {
7894fbab 280 $out = "$val";
281 $out =~ s,/,\\/,g;
282 return "qr/$out/";
a2126434 283 }
284
285 # If purity is not set and maxdepth is set, then check depth:
286 # if we have reached maximum depth, return the string
287 # representation of the thing we are currently examining
288 # at this depth (i.e., 'Foo=ARRAY(0xdeadbeef)').
289 if (!$s->{purity}
290 and $s->{maxdepth} > 0
291 and $s->{level} >= $s->{maxdepth})
292 {
293 return qq['$val'];
294 }
295
296 # we have a blessed ref
297 if ($realpack) {
298 $out = $s->{'bless'} . '( ';
299 $blesspad = $s->{apad};
300 $s->{apad} .= ' ' if ($s->{indent} >= 2);
7894fbab 301 }
302
823edd99 303 $s->{level}++;
304 $ipad = $s->{xpad} x $s->{level};
305
54964f74 306 if ($realtype eq 'SCALAR' || $realtype eq 'REF') {
823edd99 307 if ($realpack) {
7820172a 308 $out .= 'do{\\(my $o = ' . $s->_dump($$val, "\${$name}") . ')}';
823edd99 309 }
310 else {
7820172a 311 $out .= '\\' . $s->_dump($$val, "\${$name}");
823edd99 312 }
313 }
314 elsif ($realtype eq 'GLOB') {
7820172a 315 $out .= '\\' . $s->_dump($$val, "*{$name}");
823edd99 316 }
317 elsif ($realtype eq 'ARRAY') {
318 my($v, $pad, $mname);
319 my($i) = 0;
320 $out .= ($name =~ /^\@/) ? '(' : '[';
321 $pad = $s->{sep} . $s->{pad} . $s->{apad};
322 ($name =~ /^\@(.*)$/) ? ($mname = "\$" . $1) :
7820172a 323 # omit -> if $foo->[0]->{bar}, but not ${$foo->[0]}->{bar}
324 ($name =~ /^\\?[\%\@\*\$][^{].*[]}]$/) ? ($mname = $name) :
325 ($mname = $name . '->');
823edd99 326 $mname .= '->' if $mname =~ /^\*.+\{[A-Z]+\}$/;
327 for $v (@$val) {
328 $sname = $mname . '[' . $i . ']';
329 $out .= $pad . $ipad . '#' . $i if $s->{indent} >= 3;
330 $out .= $pad . $ipad . $s->_dump($v, $sname);
331 $out .= "," if $i++ < $#$val;
332 }
333 $out .= $pad . ($s->{xpad} x ($s->{level} - 1)) if $i;
334 $out .= ($name =~ /^\@/) ? ')' : ']';
335 }
336 elsif ($realtype eq 'HASH') {
30b4f386 337 my($k, $v, $pad, $lpad, $mname, $pair);
823edd99 338 $out .= ($name =~ /^\%/) ? '(' : '{';
339 $pad = $s->{sep} . $s->{pad} . $s->{apad};
340 $lpad = $s->{apad};
30b4f386 341 $pair = $s->{pair};
7820172a 342 ($name =~ /^\%(.*)$/) ? ($mname = "\$" . $1) :
343 # omit -> if $foo->[0]->{bar}, but not ${$foo->[0]}->{bar}
344 ($name =~ /^\\?[\%\@\*\$][^{].*[]}]$/) ? ($mname = $name) :
345 ($mname = $name . '->');
823edd99 346 $mname .= '->' if $mname =~ /^\*.+\{[A-Z]+\}$/;
31a725b3 347 my ($sortkeys, $keys, $key) = ("$s->{sortkeys}");
348 if ($sortkeys) {
349 if (ref($s->{sortkeys}) eq 'CODE') {
350 $keys = $s->{sortkeys}($val);
351 unless (ref($keys) eq 'ARRAY') {
352 carp "Sortkeys subroutine did not return ARRAYREF";
353 $keys = [];
354 }
355 }
356 else {
357 $keys = [ sort keys %$val ];
358 }
359 }
360 while (($k, $v) = ! $sortkeys ? (each %$val) :
361 @$keys ? ($key = shift(@$keys), $val->{$key}) :
362 () )
363 {
823edd99 364 my $nk = $s->_dump($k, "");
365 $nk = $1 if !$s->{quotekeys} and $nk =~ /^[\"\']([A-Za-z_]\w*)[\"\']$/;
366 $sname = $mname . '{' . $nk . '}';
30b4f386 367 $out .= $pad . $ipad . $nk . $pair;
823edd99 368
369 # temporarily alter apad
370 $s->{apad} .= (" " x (length($nk) + 4)) if $s->{indent} >= 2;
371 $out .= $s->_dump($val->{$k}, $sname) . ",";
372 $s->{apad} = $lpad if $s->{indent} >= 2;
373 }
374 if (substr($out, -1) eq ',') {
375 chop $out;
376 $out .= $pad . ($s->{xpad} x ($s->{level} - 1));
377 }
378 $out .= ($name =~ /^\%/) ? ')' : '}';
379 }
380 elsif ($realtype eq 'CODE') {
8e5f9a6e 381 if ($s->{deparse}) {
382 require B::Deparse;
383 my $sub = 'sub ' . (B::Deparse->new)->coderef2text($val);
384 $pad = $s->{sep} . $s->{pad} . $s->{xpad} . $s->{apad} . ' ';
385 $sub =~ s/\n/$pad/gse;
386 $out .= $sub;
387 } else {
388 $out .= 'sub { "DUMMY" }';
389 carp "Encountered CODE ref, using dummy placeholder" if $s->{purity};
390 }
823edd99 391 }
392 else {
393 croak "Can\'t handle $realtype type.";
394 }
395
396 if ($realpack) { # we have a blessed ref
397 $out .= ', \'' . $realpack . '\'' . ' )';
398 $out .= '->' . $s->{toaster} . '()' if $s->{toaster} ne '';
399 $s->{apad} = $blesspad;
400 }
401 $s->{level}--;
402
403 }
404 else { # simple scalar
405
406 my $ref = \$_[1];
407 # first, catalog the scalar
408 if ($name ne '') {
409 ($id) = ("$ref" =~ /\(([^\(]*)\)$/);
410 if (exists $s->{seen}{$id}) {
7820172a 411 if ($s->{seen}{$id}[2]) {
412 $out = $s->{seen}{$id}[0];
413 #warn "[<$out]\n";
414 return "\${$out}";
415 }
823edd99 416 }
417 else {
7820172a 418 #warn "[>\\$name]\n";
419 $s->{seen}{$id} = ["\\$name", $ref];
823edd99 420 }
421 }
422 if (ref($ref) eq 'GLOB' or "$ref" =~ /=GLOB\([^()]+\)$/) { # glob
423 my $name = substr($val, 1);
424 if ($name =~ /^[A-Za-z_][\w:]*$/) {
425 $name =~ s/^main::/::/;
426 $sname = $name;
427 }
428 else {
429 $sname = $s->_dump($name, "");
430 $sname = '{' . $sname . '}';
431 }
432 if ($s->{purity}) {
433 my $k;
434 local ($s->{level}) = 0;
435 for $k (qw(SCALAR ARRAY HASH)) {
7820172a 436 my $gval = *$val{$k};
437 next unless defined $gval;
438 next if $k eq "SCALAR" && ! defined $$gval; # always there
439
823edd99 440 # _dump can push into @post, so we hold our place using $postlen
441 my $postlen = scalar @post;
442 $post[$postlen] = "\*$sname = ";
443 local ($s->{apad}) = " " x length($post[$postlen]) if $s->{indent} >= 2;
7820172a 444 $post[$postlen] .= $s->_dump($gval, "\*$sname\{$k\}");
823edd99 445 }
446 }
447 $out .= '*' . $sname;
448 }
7820172a 449 elsif (!defined($val)) {
450 $out .= "undef";
451 }
c4cce848 452 elsif ($val =~ /^(?:0|-?[1-9]\d{0,8})\z/) { # safe decimal number
823edd99 453 $out .= $val;
454 }
455 else { # string
c4cce848 456 if ($s->{useqq} or $val =~ tr/\0-\377//c) {
457 # Fall back to qq if there's unicode
7820172a 458 $out .= qquote($val, $s->{useqq});
823edd99 459 }
460 else {
461 $val =~ s/([\\\'])/\\$1/g;
462 $out .= '\'' . $val . '\'';
463 }
464 }
465 }
7820172a 466 if ($id) {
467 # if we made it this far, $id was added to seen list at current
468 # level, so remove it to get deep copies
469 if ($s->{deepcopy}) {
470 delete($s->{seen}{$id});
471 }
472 elsif ($name) {
473 $s->{seen}{$id}[2] = 1;
474 }
475 }
823edd99 476 return $out;
477}
478
479#
480# non-OO style of earlier version
481#
482sub Dumper {
483 return Data::Dumper->Dump([@_]);
484}
485
0f1923bd 486# compat stub
823edd99 487sub DumperX {
488 return Data::Dumper->Dumpxs([@_], []);
489}
490
491sub Dumpf { return Data::Dumper->Dump(@_) }
492
493sub Dumpp { print Data::Dumper->Dump(@_) }
494
495#
496# reset the "seen" cache
497#
498sub Reset {
499 my($s) = shift;
500 $s->{seen} = {};
501 return $s;
502}
503
504sub Indent {
505 my($s, $v) = @_;
506 if (defined($v)) {
507 if ($v == 0) {
508 $s->{xpad} = "";
509 $s->{sep} = "";
510 }
511 else {
512 $s->{xpad} = " ";
513 $s->{sep} = "\n";
514 }
515 $s->{indent} = $v;
516 return $s;
517 }
518 else {
519 return $s->{indent};
520 }
521}
522
30b4f386 523sub Pair {
524 my($s, $v) = @_;
525 defined($v) ? (($s->{pair} = $v), return $s) : $s->{pair};
526}
527
823edd99 528sub Pad {
529 my($s, $v) = @_;
530 defined($v) ? (($s->{pad} = $v), return $s) : $s->{pad};
531}
532
533sub Varname {
534 my($s, $v) = @_;
535 defined($v) ? (($s->{varname} = $v), return $s) : $s->{varname};
536}
537
538sub Purity {
539 my($s, $v) = @_;
540 defined($v) ? (($s->{purity} = $v), return $s) : $s->{purity};
541}
542
543sub Useqq {
544 my($s, $v) = @_;
545 defined($v) ? (($s->{useqq} = $v), return $s) : $s->{useqq};
546}
547
548sub Terse {
549 my($s, $v) = @_;
550 defined($v) ? (($s->{terse} = $v), return $s) : $s->{terse};
551}
552
553sub Freezer {
554 my($s, $v) = @_;
555 defined($v) ? (($s->{freezer} = $v), return $s) : $s->{freezer};
556}
557
558sub Toaster {
559 my($s, $v) = @_;
560 defined($v) ? (($s->{toaster} = $v), return $s) : $s->{toaster};
561}
562
563sub Deepcopy {
564 my($s, $v) = @_;
565 defined($v) ? (($s->{deepcopy} = $v), return $s) : $s->{deepcopy};
566}
567
568sub Quotekeys {
569 my($s, $v) = @_;
570 defined($v) ? (($s->{quotekeys} = $v), return $s) : $s->{quotekeys};
571}
572
573sub Bless {
574 my($s, $v) = @_;
575 defined($v) ? (($s->{'bless'} = $v), return $s) : $s->{'bless'};
576}
577
a2126434 578sub Maxdepth {
579 my($s, $v) = @_;
580 defined($v) ? (($s->{'maxdepth'} = $v), return $s) : $s->{'maxdepth'};
581}
582
31a725b3 583sub Useperl {
584 my($s, $v) = @_;
585 defined($v) ? (($s->{'useperl'} = $v), return $s) : $s->{'useperl'};
586}
587
588sub Sortkeys {
589 my($s, $v) = @_;
590 defined($v) ? (($s->{'sortkeys'} = $v), return $s) : $s->{'sortkeys'};
591}
592
8e5f9a6e 593sub Deparse {
594 my($s, $v) = @_;
595 defined($v) ? (($s->{'deparse'} = $v), return $s) : $s->{'deparse'};
596}
a2126434 597
7820172a 598# used by qquote below
599my %esc = (
600 "\a" => "\\a",
601 "\b" => "\\b",
602 "\t" => "\\t",
603 "\n" => "\\n",
604 "\f" => "\\f",
605 "\r" => "\\r",
606 "\e" => "\\e",
607);
608
823edd99 609# put a string value in double quotes
610sub qquote {
611 local($_) = shift;
7820172a 612 s/([\\\"\@\$])/\\$1/g;
dc71dc59 613 my $bytes; { use bytes; $bytes = length }
614 s/([^\x00-\x7f])/'\x{'.sprintf("%x",ord($1)).'}'/ge if $bytes > length;
0407a77b 615 return qq("$_") unless
616 /[^ !"\#\$%&'()*+,\-.\/0-9:;<=>?\@A-Z[\\\]^_`a-z{|}~]/; # fast exit
7820172a 617
618 my $high = shift || "";
619 s/([\a\b\t\n\f\r\e])/$esc{$1}/g;
620
0407a77b 621 if (ord('^')==94) { # ascii
622 # no need for 3 digits in escape for these
623 s/([\0-\037])(?!\d)/'\\'.sprintf('%o',ord($1))/eg;
624 s/([\0-\037\177])/'\\'.sprintf('%03o',ord($1))/eg;
43948175 625 # all but last branch below not supported --BEHAVIOR SUBJECT TO CHANGE--
0407a77b 626 if ($high eq "iso8859") {
627 s/([\200-\240])/'\\'.sprintf('%o',ord($1))/eg;
628 } elsif ($high eq "utf8") {
629# use utf8;
630# $str =~ s/([^\040-\176])/sprintf "\\x{%04x}", ord($1)/ge;
631 } elsif ($high eq "8bit") {
632 # leave it as it is
633 } else {
634 s/([\200-\377])/'\\'.sprintf('%03o',ord($1))/eg;
c4cce848 635 s/([^\040-\176])/sprintf "\\x{%04x}", ord($1)/ge;
0407a77b 636 }
637 }
638 else { # ebcdic
43948175 639 s{([^ !"\#\$%&'()*+,\-.\/0-9:;<=>?\@A-Z[\\\]^_`a-z{|}~])(?!\d)}
640 {my $v = ord($1); '\\'.sprintf(($v <= 037 ? '%o' : '%03o'), $v)}eg;
641 s{([^ !"\#\$%&'()*+,\-.\/0-9:;<=>?\@A-Z[\\\]^_`a-z{|}~])}
642 {'\\'.sprintf('%03o',ord($1))}eg;
7820172a 643 }
0407a77b 644
7820172a 645 return qq("$_");
823edd99 646}
647
6481;
649__END__
650
651=head1 NAME
652
653Data::Dumper - stringified perl data structures, suitable for both printing and C<eval>
654
823edd99 655=head1 SYNOPSIS
656
657 use Data::Dumper;
658
659 # simple procedural interface
660 print Dumper($foo, $bar);
661
662 # extended usage with names
663 print Data::Dumper->Dump([$foo, $bar], [qw(foo *ary)]);
664
665 # configuration variables
666 {
82df27e1 667 local $Data::Dumper::Purity = 1;
823edd99 668 eval Data::Dumper->Dump([$foo, $bar], [qw(foo *ary)]);
669 }
670
671 # OO usage
672 $d = Data::Dumper->new([$foo, $bar], [qw(foo *ary)]);
673 ...
674 print $d->Dump;
675 ...
676 $d->Purity(1)->Terse(1)->Deepcopy(1);
677 eval $d->Dump;
678
679
680=head1 DESCRIPTION
681
682Given a list of scalars or reference variables, writes out their contents in
683perl syntax. The references can also be objects. The contents of each
684variable is output in a single Perl statement. Handles self-referential
685structures correctly.
686
687The return value can be C<eval>ed to get back an identical copy of the
688original reference structure.
689
690Any references that are the same as one of those passed in will be named
691C<$VAR>I<n> (where I<n> is a numeric suffix), and other duplicate references
692to substructures within C<$VAR>I<n> will be appropriately labeled using arrow
693notation. You can specify names for individual values to be dumped if you
694use the C<Dump()> method, or you can change the default C<$VAR> prefix to
695something else. See C<$Data::Dumper::Varname> and C<$Data::Dumper::Terse>
696below.
697
698The default output of self-referential structures can be C<eval>ed, but the
699nested references to C<$VAR>I<n> will be undefined, since a recursive
700structure cannot be constructed using one Perl statement. You should set the
701C<Purity> flag to 1 to get additional statements that will correctly fill in
702these references.
703
704In the extended usage form, the references to be dumped can be given
705user-specified names. If a name begins with a C<*>, the output will
706describe the dereferenced type of the supplied reference for hashes and
707arrays, and coderefs. Output of names will be avoided where possible if
708the C<Terse> flag is set.
709
710In many cases, methods that are used to set the internal state of the
711object will return the object itself, so method calls can be conveniently
712chained together.
713
714Several styles of output are possible, all controlled by setting
715the C<Indent> flag. See L<Configuration Variables or Methods> below
716for details.
717
718
719=head2 Methods
720
721=over 4
722
723=item I<PACKAGE>->new(I<ARRAYREF [>, I<ARRAYREF]>)
724
725Returns a newly created C<Data::Dumper> object. The first argument is an
726anonymous array of values to be dumped. The optional second argument is an
727anonymous array of names for the values. The names need not have a leading
728C<$> sign, and must be comprised of alphanumeric characters. You can begin
729a name with a C<*> to specify that the dereferenced type must be dumped
730instead of the reference itself, for ARRAY and HASH references.
731
732The prefix specified by C<$Data::Dumper::Varname> will be used with a
733numeric suffix if the name for a value is undefined.
734
735Data::Dumper will catalog all references encountered while dumping the
736values. Cross-references (in the form of names of substructures in perl
737syntax) will be inserted at all possible points, preserving any structural
738interdependencies in the original set of values. Structure traversal is
739depth-first, and proceeds in order from the first supplied value to
740the last.
741
742=item I<$OBJ>->Dump I<or> I<PACKAGE>->Dump(I<ARRAYREF [>, I<ARRAYREF]>)
743
744Returns the stringified form of the values stored in the object (preserving
745the order in which they were supplied to C<new>), subject to the
91e74348 746configuration options below. In a list context, it returns a list
823edd99 747of strings corresponding to the supplied values.
748
749The second form, for convenience, simply calls the C<new> method on its
750arguments before dumping the object immediately.
751
823edd99 752=item I<$OBJ>->Seen(I<[HASHREF]>)
753
754Queries or adds to the internal table of already encountered references.
755You must use C<Reset> to explicitly clear the table if needed. Such
756references are not dumped; instead, their names are inserted wherever they
757are encountered subsequently. This is useful especially for properly
758dumping subroutine references.
759
d1be9408 760Expects an anonymous hash of name => value pairs. Same rules apply for names
823edd99 761as in C<new>. If no argument is supplied, will return the "seen" list of
91e74348 762name => value pairs, in a list context. Otherwise, returns the object
823edd99 763itself.
764
765=item I<$OBJ>->Values(I<[ARRAYREF]>)
766
767Queries or replaces the internal array of values that will be dumped.
768When called without arguments, returns the values. Otherwise, returns the
769object itself.
770
771=item I<$OBJ>->Names(I<[ARRAYREF]>)
772
773Queries or replaces the internal array of user supplied names for the values
774that will be dumped. When called without arguments, returns the names.
775Otherwise, returns the object itself.
776
777=item I<$OBJ>->Reset
778
779Clears the internal table of "seen" references and returns the object
780itself.
781
782=back
783
784=head2 Functions
785
786=over 4
787
788=item Dumper(I<LIST>)
789
790Returns the stringified form of the values in the list, subject to the
791configuration options below. The values will be named C<$VAR>I<n> in the
792output, where I<n> is a numeric suffix. Will return a list of strings
91e74348 793in a list context.
823edd99 794
823edd99 795=back
796
797=head2 Configuration Variables or Methods
798
799Several configuration variables can be used to control the kind of output
800generated when using the procedural interface. These variables are usually
801C<local>ized in a block so that other parts of the code are not affected by
802the change.
803
804These variables determine the default state of the object created by calling
805the C<new> method, but cannot be used to alter the state of the object
806thereafter. The equivalent method names should be used instead to query
807or set the internal state of the object.
808
809The method forms return the object itself when called with arguments,
810so that they can be chained together nicely.
811
812=over 4
813
28bf64cc 814=item *
815
816$Data::Dumper::Indent I<or> I<$OBJ>->Indent(I<[NEWVAL]>)
823edd99 817
818Controls the style of indentation. It can be set to 0, 1, 2 or 3. Style 0
819spews output without any newlines, indentation, or spaces between list
820items. It is the most compact format possible that can still be called
821valid perl. Style 1 outputs a readable form with newlines but no fancy
822indentation (each level in the structure is simply indented by a fixed
823amount of whitespace). Style 2 (the default) outputs a very readable form
824which takes into account the length of hash keys (so the hash value lines
825up). Style 3 is like style 2, but also annotates the elements of arrays
826with their index (but the comment is on its own line, so array output
827consumes twice the number of lines). Style 2 is the default.
828
28bf64cc 829=item *
830
831$Data::Dumper::Purity I<or> I<$OBJ>->Purity(I<[NEWVAL]>)
823edd99 832
833Controls the degree to which the output can be C<eval>ed to recreate the
834supplied reference structures. Setting it to 1 will output additional perl
835statements that will correctly recreate nested references. The default is
8360.
837
28bf64cc 838=item *
839
840$Data::Dumper::Pad I<or> I<$OBJ>->Pad(I<[NEWVAL]>)
823edd99 841
842Specifies the string that will be prefixed to every line of the output.
843Empty string by default.
844
28bf64cc 845=item *
846
847$Data::Dumper::Varname I<or> I<$OBJ>->Varname(I<[NEWVAL]>)
823edd99 848
849Contains the prefix to use for tagging variable names in the output. The
850default is "VAR".
851
28bf64cc 852=item *
853
854$Data::Dumper::Useqq I<or> I<$OBJ>->Useqq(I<[NEWVAL]>)
823edd99 855
856When set, enables the use of double quotes for representing string values.
857Whitespace other than space will be represented as C<[\n\t\r]>, "unsafe"
858characters will be backslashed, and unprintable characters will be output as
859quoted octal integers. Since setting this variable imposes a performance
0f1923bd 860penalty, the default is 0. C<Dump()> will run slower if this flag is set,
861since the fast XSUB implementation doesn't support it yet.
823edd99 862
28bf64cc 863=item *
864
865$Data::Dumper::Terse I<or> I<$OBJ>->Terse(I<[NEWVAL]>)
823edd99 866
867When set, Data::Dumper will emit single, non-self-referential values as
868atoms/terms rather than statements. This means that the C<$VAR>I<n> names
869will be avoided where possible, but be advised that such output may not
870always be parseable by C<eval>.
871
28bf64cc 872=item *
873
874$Data::Dumper::Freezer I<or> $I<OBJ>->Freezer(I<[NEWVAL]>)
823edd99 875
876Can be set to a method name, or to an empty string to disable the feature.
877Data::Dumper will invoke that method via the object before attempting to
878stringify it. This method can alter the contents of the object (if, for
879instance, it contains data allocated from C), and even rebless it in a
880different package. The client is responsible for making sure the specified
881method can be called via the object, and that the object ends up containing
882only perl data types after the method has been called. Defaults to an empty
883string.
884
28bf64cc 885=item *
886
887$Data::Dumper::Toaster I<or> $I<OBJ>->Toaster(I<[NEWVAL]>)
823edd99 888
889Can be set to a method name, or to an empty string to disable the feature.
890Data::Dumper will emit a method call for any objects that are to be dumped
8e5f9a6e 891using the syntax C<bless(DATA, CLASS)-E<gt>METHOD()>. Note that this means that
823edd99 892the method specified will have to perform any modifications required on the
893object (like creating new state within it, and/or reblessing it in a
894different package) and then return it. The client is responsible for making
895sure the method can be called via the object, and that it returns a valid
896object. Defaults to an empty string.
897
28bf64cc 898=item *
899
900$Data::Dumper::Deepcopy I<or> $I<OBJ>->Deepcopy(I<[NEWVAL]>)
823edd99 901
902Can be set to a boolean value to enable deep copies of structures.
903Cross-referencing will then only be done when absolutely essential
904(i.e., to break reference cycles). Default is 0.
905
28bf64cc 906=item *
907
908$Data::Dumper::Quotekeys I<or> $I<OBJ>->Quotekeys(I<[NEWVAL]>)
823edd99 909
910Can be set to a boolean value to control whether hash keys are quoted.
911A false value will avoid quoting hash keys when it looks like a simple
912string. Default is 1, which will always enclose hash keys in quotes.
913
28bf64cc 914=item *
915
916$Data::Dumper::Bless I<or> $I<OBJ>->Bless(I<[NEWVAL]>)
823edd99 917
918Can be set to a string that specifies an alternative to the C<bless>
919builtin operator used to create objects. A function with the specified
920name should exist, and should accept the same arguments as the builtin.
921Default is C<bless>.
922
28bf64cc 923=item *
924
30b4f386 925$Data::Dumper::Pair I<or> $I<OBJ>->Pair(I<[NEWVAL]>)
926
927Can be set to a string that specifies the separator between hash keys
928and values. To dump nested hash, array and scalar values to JavaScript,
929use: C<$Data::Dumper::Pair = ' : ';>. Implementing C<bless> in JavaScript
930is left as an exercise for the reader.
931A function with the specified name exists, and accepts the same arguments
932as the builtin.
933
934Default is: C< =E<gt> >.
935
936=item *
937
28bf64cc 938$Data::Dumper::Maxdepth I<or> $I<OBJ>->Maxdepth(I<[NEWVAL]>)
a2126434 939
940Can be set to a positive integer that specifies the depth beyond which
941which we don't venture into a structure. Has no effect when
942C<Data::Dumper::Purity> is set. (Useful in debugger when we often don't
943want to see more than enough). Default is 0, which means there is
944no maximum depth.
945
28bf64cc 946=item *
947
948$Data::Dumper::Useperl I<or> $I<OBJ>->Useperl(I<[NEWVAL]>)
31a725b3 949
950Can be set to a boolean value which controls whether the pure Perl
951implementation of C<Data::Dumper> is used. The C<Data::Dumper> module is
952a dual implementation, with almost all functionality written in both
953pure Perl and also in XS ('C'). Since the XS version is much faster, it
954will always be used if possible. This option lets you override the
955default behavior, usually for testing purposes only. Default is 0, which
956means the XS implementation will be used if possible.
957
28bf64cc 958=item *
959
960$Data::Dumper::Sortkeys I<or> $I<OBJ>->Sortkeys(I<[NEWVAL]>)
31a725b3 961
962Can be set to a boolean value to control whether hash keys are dumped in
963sorted order. A true value will cause the keys of all hashes to be
964dumped in Perl's default sort order. Can also be set to a subroutine
965reference which will be called for each hash that is dumped. In this
966case C<Data::Dumper> will call the subroutine once for each hash,
967passing it the reference of the hash. The purpose of the subroutine is
968to return a reference to an array of the keys that will be dumped, in
969the order that they should be dumped. Using this feature, you can
970control both the order of the keys, and which keys are actually used. In
971other words, this subroutine acts as a filter by which you can exclude
972certain keys from being dumped. Default is 0, which means that hash keys
973are not sorted.
974
28bf64cc 975=item *
976
977$Data::Dumper::Deparse I<or> $I<OBJ>->Deparse(I<[NEWVAL]>)
8e5f9a6e 978
979Can be set to a boolean value to control whether code references are
980turned into perl source code. If set to a true value, C<B::Deparse>
981will be used to get the source of the code reference. Using this option
982will force using the Perl implementation of the dumper, since the fast
983XSUB implementation doesn't support it.
984
985Caution : use this option only if you know that your coderefs will be
986properly reconstructed by C<B::Deparse>.
987
823edd99 988=back
989
990=head2 Exports
991
992=over 4
993
994=item Dumper
995
996=back
997
998=head1 EXAMPLES
999
1000Run these code snippets to get a quick feel for the behavior of this
1001module. When you are through with these examples, you may want to
1002add or change the various configuration variables described above,
1003to see their behavior. (See the testsuite in the Data::Dumper
1004distribution for more examples.)
1005
1006
1007 use Data::Dumper;
1008
1009 package Foo;
1010 sub new {bless {'a' => 1, 'b' => sub { return "foo" }}, $_[0]};
1011
1012 package Fuz; # a weird REF-REF-SCALAR object
1013 sub new {bless \($_ = \ 'fu\'z'), $_[0]};
1014
1015 package main;
1016 $foo = Foo->new;
1017 $fuz = Fuz->new;
1018 $boo = [ 1, [], "abcd", \*foo,
1019 {1 => 'a', 023 => 'b', 0x45 => 'c'},
1020 \\"p\q\'r", $foo, $fuz];
3cb6de81 1021
823edd99 1022 ########
1023 # simple usage
1024 ########
1025
1026 $bar = eval(Dumper($boo));
1027 print($@) if $@;
1028 print Dumper($boo), Dumper($bar); # pretty print (no array indices)
1029
1030 $Data::Dumper::Terse = 1; # don't output names where feasible
1031 $Data::Dumper::Indent = 0; # turn off all pretty print
1032 print Dumper($boo), "\n";
1033
1034 $Data::Dumper::Indent = 1; # mild pretty print
1035 print Dumper($boo);
1036
1037 $Data::Dumper::Indent = 3; # pretty print with array indices
1038 print Dumper($boo);
1039
1040 $Data::Dumper::Useqq = 1; # print strings in double quotes
1041 print Dumper($boo);
3cb6de81 1042
30b4f386 1043 $Data::Dumper::Pair = " : "; # specify hash key/value separator
1044 print Dumper($boo);
1045
3cb6de81 1046
823edd99 1047 ########
1048 # recursive structures
1049 ########
3cb6de81 1050
823edd99 1051 @c = ('c');
1052 $c = \@c;
1053 $b = {};
1054 $a = [1, $b, $c];
1055 $b->{a} = $a;
1056 $b->{b} = $a->[1];
1057 $b->{c} = $a->[2];
1058 print Data::Dumper->Dump([$a,$b,$c], [qw(a b c)]);
3cb6de81 1059
1060
823edd99 1061 $Data::Dumper::Purity = 1; # fill in the holes for eval
1062 print Data::Dumper->Dump([$a, $b], [qw(*a b)]); # print as @a
1063 print Data::Dumper->Dump([$b, $a], [qw(*b a)]); # print as %b
3cb6de81 1064
1065
823edd99 1066 $Data::Dumper::Deepcopy = 1; # avoid cross-refs
1067 print Data::Dumper->Dump([$b, $a], [qw(*b a)]);
3cb6de81 1068
1069
823edd99 1070 $Data::Dumper::Purity = 0; # avoid cross-refs
1071 print Data::Dumper->Dump([$b, $a], [qw(*b a)]);
3cb6de81 1072
a2126434 1073 ########
1074 # deep structures
1075 ########
3cb6de81 1076
a2126434 1077 $a = "pearl";
1078 $b = [ $a ];
1079 $c = { 'b' => $b };
1080 $d = [ $c ];
1081 $e = { 'd' => $d };
1082 $f = { 'e' => $e };
1083 print Data::Dumper->Dump([$f], [qw(f)]);
1084
1085 $Data::Dumper::Maxdepth = 3; # no deeper than 3 refs down
1086 print Data::Dumper->Dump([$f], [qw(f)]);
1087
3cb6de81 1088
823edd99 1089 ########
1090 # object-oriented usage
1091 ########
3cb6de81 1092
823edd99 1093 $d = Data::Dumper->new([$a,$b], [qw(a b)]);
1094 $d->Seen({'*c' => $c}); # stash a ref without printing it
1095 $d->Indent(3);
1096 print $d->Dump;
1097 $d->Reset->Purity(0); # empty the seen cache
1098 print join "----\n", $d->Dump;
3cb6de81 1099
1100
823edd99 1101 ########
1102 # persistence
1103 ########
3cb6de81 1104
823edd99 1105 package Foo;
1106 sub new { bless { state => 'awake' }, shift }
1107 sub Freeze {
1108 my $s = shift;
1109 print STDERR "preparing to sleep\n";
1110 $s->{state} = 'asleep';
1111 return bless $s, 'Foo::ZZZ';
1112 }
3cb6de81 1113
823edd99 1114 package Foo::ZZZ;
1115 sub Thaw {
1116 my $s = shift;
1117 print STDERR "waking up\n";
1118 $s->{state} = 'awake';
1119 return bless $s, 'Foo';
1120 }
3cb6de81 1121
823edd99 1122 package Foo;
1123 use Data::Dumper;
1124 $a = Foo->new;
1125 $b = Data::Dumper->new([$a], ['c']);
1126 $b->Freezer('Freeze');
1127 $b->Toaster('Thaw');
1128 $c = $b->Dump;
1129 print $c;
1130 $d = eval $c;
1131 print Data::Dumper->Dump([$d], ['d']);
3cb6de81 1132
1133
823edd99 1134 ########
1135 # symbol substitution (useful for recreating CODE refs)
1136 ########
3cb6de81 1137
823edd99 1138 sub foo { print "foo speaking\n" }
1139 *other = \&foo;
1140 $bar = [ \&other ];
1141 $d = Data::Dumper->new([\&other,$bar],['*other','bar']);
1142 $d->Seen({ '*foo' => \&foo });
1143 print $d->Dump;
1144
1145
31a725b3 1146 ########
1147 # sorting and filtering hash keys
1148 ########
1149
1150 $Data::Dumper::Sortkeys = \&my_filter;
1151 my $foo = { map { (ord, "$_$_$_") } 'I'..'Q' };
1152 my $bar = { %$foo };
1153 my $baz = { reverse %$foo };
1154 print Dumper [ $foo, $bar, $baz ];
1155
1156 sub my_filter {
1157 my ($hash) = @_;
1158 # return an array ref containing the hash keys to dump
1159 # in the order that you want them to be dumped
1160 return [
1161 # Sort the keys of %$foo in reverse numeric order
1162 $hash eq $foo ? (sort {$b <=> $a} keys %$hash) :
1163 # Only dump the odd number keys of %$bar
1164 $hash eq $bar ? (grep {$_ % 2} keys %$hash) :
1165 # Sort keys in default order for all other hashes
1166 (sort keys %$hash)
1167 ];
1168 }
1169
823edd99 1170=head1 BUGS
1171
1172Due to limitations of Perl subroutine call semantics, you cannot pass an
1173array or hash. Prepend it with a C<\> to pass its reference instead. This
8e5f9a6e 1174will be remedied in time, now that Perl has subroutine prototypes.
1175For now, you need to use the extended usage form, and prepend the
823edd99 1176name with a C<*> to output it as a hash or array.
1177
1178C<Data::Dumper> cheats with CODE references. If a code reference is
8e5f9a6e 1179encountered in the structure being processed (and if you haven't set
1180the C<Deparse> flag), an anonymous subroutine that
823edd99 1181contains the string '"DUMMY"' will be inserted in its place, and a warning
1182will be printed if C<Purity> is set. You can C<eval> the result, but bear
1183in mind that the anonymous sub that gets created is just a placeholder.
1184Someday, perl will have a switch to cache-on-demand the string
1185representation of a compiled piece of code, I hope. If you have prior
1186knowledge of all the code refs that your data structures are likely
1187to have, you can use the C<Seen> method to pre-seed the internal reference
1188table and make the dumped output point to them, instead. See L<EXAMPLES>
1189above.
1190
8e5f9a6e 1191The C<Useqq> and C<Deparse> flags makes Dump() run slower, since the
1192XSUB implementation does not support them.
823edd99 1193
1194SCALAR objects have the weirdest looking C<bless> workaround.
1195
504f80c1 1196=head2 NOTE
1197
1198Starting from Perl 5.8.1 different runs of Perl will have different
1199ordering of hash keys. The change was done for greater security,
1200see L<perlsec/"Algorithmic Complexity Attacks">. This means that
1201different runs of Perl will have different Data::Dumper outputs if
1202the data contains hashes. If you need to have identical Data::Dumper
1203outputs from different runs of Perl, use the environment variable
1204PERL_HASH_SEED, see L<perlrun/PERL_HASH_SEED>. Using this restores
1205the old (platform-specific) ordering: an even prettier solution might
1206be to use the C<Sortkeys> filter of Data::Dumper.
823edd99 1207
1208=head1 AUTHOR
1209
6e238990 1210Gurusamy Sarathy gsar@activestate.com
823edd99 1211
1212Copyright (c) 1996-98 Gurusamy Sarathy. All rights reserved.
1213This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
1214modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
1215
823edd99 1216=head1 VERSION
1217
8e5f9a6e 1218Version 2.12 (unreleased)
823edd99 1219
1220=head1 SEE ALSO
1221
1222perl(1)
1223
1224=cut