(Replaced by #4265.)
[p5sagit/p5-mst-13.2.git] / lib / Carp / Heavy.pm
CommitLineData
3b5ca523 1package Carp;
ca24dfc6 2
3=head1 NAME
4
5Carp::Heavy - Carp guts
6
7=head1 SYNOPIS
8
9(internal use only)
10
11=head1 DESCRIPTION
12
13No user-serviceable parts inside.
14
15=cut
16
3b5ca523 17# This package is heavily used. Be small. Be fast. Be good.
18
19# Comments added by Andy Wardley <abw@kfs.org> 09-Apr-98, based on an
20# _almost_ complete understanding of the package. Corrections and
21# comments are welcome.
22
23# longmess() crawls all the way up the stack reporting on all the function
24# calls made. The error string, $error, is originally constructed from the
25# arguments passed into longmess() via confess(), cluck() or shortmess().
26# This gets appended with the stack trace messages which are generated for
27# each function call on the stack.
28
29sub longmess_heavy {
30 return @_ if ref $_[0];
31 my $error = join '', @_;
32 my $mess = "";
33 my $i = 1 + $CarpLevel;
34 my ($pack,$file,$line,$sub,$hargs,$eval,$require);
35 my (@a);
36 #
37 # crawl up the stack....
38 #
39 while (do { { package DB; @a = caller($i++) } } ) {
40 # get copies of the variables returned from caller()
41 ($pack,$file,$line,$sub,$hargs,undef,$eval,$require) = @a;
42 #
43 # if the $error error string is newline terminated then it
44 # is copied into $mess. Otherwise, $mess gets set (at the end of
45 # the 'else {' section below) to one of two things. The first time
46 # through, it is set to the "$error at $file line $line" message.
47 # $error is then set to 'called' which triggers subsequent loop
48 # iterations to append $sub to $mess before appending the "$error
49 # at $file line $line" which now actually reads "called at $file line
50 # $line". Thus, the stack trace message is constructed:
51 #
52 # first time: $mess = $error at $file line $line
53 # subsequent times: $mess .= $sub $error at $file line $line
54 # ^^^^^^
55 # "called"
56 if ($error =~ m/\n$/) {
57 $mess .= $error;
58 } else {
59 # Build a string, $sub, which names the sub-routine called.
60 # This may also be "require ...", "eval '...' or "eval {...}"
61 if (defined $eval) {
62 if ($require) {
63 $sub = "require $eval";
64 } else {
65 $eval =~ s/([\\\'])/\\$1/g;
66 if ($MaxEvalLen && length($eval) > $MaxEvalLen) {
67 substr($eval,$MaxEvalLen) = '...';
68 }
69 $sub = "eval '$eval'";
70 }
71 } elsif ($sub eq '(eval)') {
72 $sub = 'eval {...}';
73 }
74 # if there are any arguments in the sub-routine call, format
75 # them according to the format variables defined earlier in
76 # this file and join them onto the $sub sub-routine string
77 if ($hargs) {
78 # we may trash some of the args so we take a copy
79 @a = @DB::args; # must get local copy of args
80 # don't print any more than $MaxArgNums
81 if ($MaxArgNums and @a > $MaxArgNums) {
82 # cap the length of $#a and set the last element to '...'
83 $#a = $MaxArgNums;
84 $a[$#a] = "...";
85 }
86 for (@a) {
87 # set args to the string "undef" if undefined
88 $_ = "undef", next unless defined $_;
89 if (ref $_) {
90 # dunno what this is for...
91 $_ .= '';
92 s/'/\\'/g;
93 }
94 else {
95 s/'/\\'/g;
96 # terminate the string early with '...' if too long
97 substr($_,$MaxArgLen) = '...'
98 if $MaxArgLen and $MaxArgLen < length;
99 }
100 # 'quote' arg unless it looks like a number
101 $_ = "'$_'" unless /^-?[\d.]+$/;
102 # print high-end chars as 'M-<char>'
103 s/([\200-\377])/sprintf("M-%c",ord($1)&0177)/eg;
104 # print remaining control chars as ^<char>
105 s/([\0-\37\177])/sprintf("^%c",ord($1)^64)/eg;
106 }
107 # append ('all', 'the', 'arguments') to the $sub string
108 $sub .= '(' . join(', ', @a) . ')';
109 }
110 # here's where the error message, $mess, gets constructed
111 $mess .= "\t$sub " if $error eq "called";
112 $mess .= "$error at $file line $line";
1db3cb89 113 if (defined &Thread::tid) {
3b5ca523 114 my $tid = Thread->self->tid;
115 $mess .= " thread $tid" if $tid;
116 }
117 $mess .= "\n";
118 }
119 # we don't need to print the actual error message again so we can
120 # change this to "called" so that the string "$error at $file line
121 # $line" makes sense as "called at $file line $line".
122 $error = "called";
123 }
124 # this kludge circumvents die's incorrect handling of NUL
125 my $msg = \($mess || $error);
126 $$msg =~ tr/\0//d;
127 $$msg;
128}
129
130
131# shortmess() is called by carp() and croak() to skip all the way up to
132# the top-level caller's package and report the error from there. confess()
133# and cluck() generate a full stack trace so they call longmess() to
134# generate that. In verbose mode shortmess() calls longmess() so
135# you always get a stack trace
136
137sub shortmess_heavy { # Short-circuit &longmess if called via multiple packages
138 goto &longmess_heavy if $Verbose;
139 return @_ if ref $_[0];
140 my $error = join '', @_;
141 my ($prevpack) = caller(1);
142 my $extra = $CarpLevel;
143 my $i = 2;
144 my ($pack,$file,$line);
145 # when reporting an error, we want to report it from the context of the
146 # calling package. So what is the calling package? Within a module,
147 # there may be many calls between methods and perhaps between sub-classes
148 # and super-classes, but the user isn't interested in what happens
149 # inside the package. We start by building a hash array which keeps
150 # track of all the packages to which the calling package belongs. We
151 # do this by examining its @ISA variable. Any call from a base class
152 # method (one of our caller's @ISA packages) can be ignored
153 my %isa = ($prevpack,1);
154
155 # merge all the caller's @ISA packages into %isa.
156 @isa{@{"${prevpack}::ISA"}} = ()
157 if(@{"${prevpack}::ISA"});
158
159 # now we crawl up the calling stack and look at all the packages in
160 # there. For each package, we look to see if it has an @ISA and then
161 # we see if our caller features in that list. That would imply that
162 # our caller is a derived class of that package and its calls can also
163 # be ignored
164 while (($pack,$file,$line) = caller($i++)) {
165 if(@{$pack . "::ISA"}) {
166 my @i = @{$pack . "::ISA"};
167 my %i;
168 @i{@i} = ();
169 # merge any relevant packages into %isa
170 @isa{@i,$pack} = ()
171 if(exists $i{$prevpack} || exists $isa{$pack});
172 }
173
174 # and here's where we do the ignoring... if the package in
175 # question is one of our caller's base or derived packages then
176 # we can ignore it (skip it) and go onto the next (but note that
177 # the continue { } block below gets called every time)
178 next
179 if(exists $isa{$pack});
180
181 # Hey! We've found a package that isn't one of our caller's
182 # clan....but wait, $extra refers to the number of 'extra' levels
183 # we should skip up. If $extra > 0 then this is a false alarm.
184 # We must merge the package into the %isa hash (so we can ignore it
185 # if it pops up again), decrement $extra, and continue.
186 if ($extra-- > 0) {
187 %isa = ($pack,1);
188 @isa{@{$pack . "::ISA"}} = ()
189 if(@{$pack . "::ISA"});
190 }
191 else {
192 # OK! We've got a candidate package. Time to construct the
193 # relevant error message and return it. die() doesn't like
194 # to be given NUL characters (which $msg may contain) so we
195 # remove them first.
196 my $msg;
197 $msg = "$error at $file line $line";
1db3cb89 198 if (defined &Thread::tid) {
3b5ca523 199 my $tid = Thread->self->tid;
200 $mess .= " thread $tid" if $tid;
201 }
202 $msg .= "\n";
203 $msg =~ tr/\0//d;
204 return $msg;
205 }
206 }
207 continue {
208 $prevpack = $pack;
209 }
210
211 # uh-oh! It looks like we crawled all the way up the stack and
212 # never found a candidate package. Oh well, let's call longmess
213 # to generate a full stack trace. We use the magical form of 'goto'
214 # so that this shortmess() function doesn't appear on the stack
215 # to further confuse longmess() about it's calling package.
216 goto &longmess_heavy;
217}
218
2191;