applying patch from Robert Norris for next::can
[gitmo/Class-C3.git] / lib / Class / C3.pm
CommitLineData
95bebf8c 1
2package Class::C3;
3
4use strict;
5use warnings;
6
95bebf8c 7use Scalar::Util 'blessed';
2ffffc6d 8use Algorithm::C3;
95bebf8c 9
5f01eb5f 10our $VERSION = '0.12';
d401eda1 11
12# this is our global stash of both
13# MRO's and method dispatch tables
14# the structure basically looks like
15# this:
16#
17# $MRO{$class} = {
18# MRO => [ <class precendence list> ],
19# methods => {
20# orig => <original location of method>,
21# code => \&<ref to original method>
680100b1 22# },
23# has_overload_fallback => (1 | 0)
d401eda1 24# }
25#
f7facd7b 26our %MRO;
95bebf8c 27
d0e2efe5 28# use these for debugging ...
d401eda1 29sub _dump_MRO_table { %MRO }
d401eda1 30our $TURN_OFF_C3 = 0;
31
95bebf8c 32sub import {
33 my $class = caller();
d401eda1 34 # skip if the caller is main::
35 # since that is clearly not relevant
95bebf8c 36 return if $class eq 'main';
d401eda1 37 return if $TURN_OFF_C3;
38 # make a note to calculate $class
39 # during INIT phase
f7facd7b 40 $MRO{$class} = undef unless exists $MRO{$class};
95bebf8c 41}
42
d401eda1 43## initializers
44
d401eda1 45sub initialize {
46 # why bother if we don't have anything ...
47 return unless keys %MRO;
48 _calculate_method_dispatch_tables();
49 _apply_method_dispatch_tables();
5d5c86d9 50 %next::METHOD_CACHE = ();
d401eda1 51}
52
d0e2efe5 53sub uninitialize {
54 # why bother if we don't have anything ...
55 return unless keys %MRO;
56 _remove_method_dispatch_tables();
5d5c86d9 57 %next::METHOD_CACHE = ();
d0e2efe5 58}
59
60sub reinitialize {
61 uninitialize();
62 # clean up the %MRO before we re-initialize
63 $MRO{$_} = undef foreach keys %MRO;
64 initialize();
65}
66
d401eda1 67## functions for applying C3 to classes
68
69sub _calculate_method_dispatch_tables {
95bebf8c 70 foreach my $class (keys %MRO) {
d401eda1 71 _calculate_method_dispatch_table($class);
95bebf8c 72 }
d401eda1 73}
74
75sub _calculate_method_dispatch_table {
76 my $class = shift;
77 no strict 'refs';
78 my @MRO = calculateMRO($class);
79 $MRO{$class} = { MRO => \@MRO };
680100b1 80 my $has_overload_fallback = 0;
d401eda1 81 my %methods;
82 # NOTE:
83 # we do @MRO[1 .. $#MRO] here because it
84 # makes no sense to interogate the class
85 # which you are calculating for.
86 foreach my $local (@MRO[1 .. $#MRO]) {
680100b1 87 # if overload has tagged this module to
88 # have use "fallback", then we want to
89 # grab that value
90 $has_overload_fallback = ${"${local}::()"}
91 if defined ${"${local}::()"};
d401eda1 92 foreach my $method (grep { defined &{"${local}::$_"} } keys %{"${local}::"}) {
93 # skip if already overriden in local class
94 next unless !defined *{"${class}::$method"}{CODE};
95 $methods{$method} = {
96 orig => "${local}::$method",
97 code => \&{"${local}::$method"}
98 } unless exists $methods{$method};
95bebf8c 99 }
d401eda1 100 }
101 # now stash them in our %MRO table
680100b1 102 $MRO{$class}->{methods} = \%methods;
103 $MRO{$class}->{has_overload_fallback} = $has_overload_fallback;
d401eda1 104}
105
106sub _apply_method_dispatch_tables {
107 foreach my $class (keys %MRO) {
108 _apply_method_dispatch_table($class);
109 }
95bebf8c 110}
111
d401eda1 112sub _apply_method_dispatch_table {
113 my $class = shift;
114 no strict 'refs';
680100b1 115 ${"${class}::()"} = $MRO{$class}->{has_overload_fallback}
116 if $MRO{$class}->{has_overload_fallback};
d401eda1 117 foreach my $method (keys %{$MRO{$class}->{methods}}) {
118 *{"${class}::$method"} = $MRO{$class}->{methods}->{$method}->{code};
119 }
120}
121
d0e2efe5 122sub _remove_method_dispatch_tables {
123 foreach my $class (keys %MRO) {
124 _remove_method_dispatch_table($class);
125 }
126}
127
128sub _remove_method_dispatch_table {
129 my $class = shift;
130 no strict 'refs';
680100b1 131 delete ${"${class}::"}{"()"} if $MRO{$class}->{has_overload_fallback};
d0e2efe5 132 foreach my $method (keys %{$MRO{$class}->{methods}}) {
5dd9299c 133 delete ${"${class}::"}{$method}
134 if defined *{"${class}::${method}"}{CODE} &&
135 (*{"${class}::${method}"}{CODE} eq $MRO{$class}->{methods}->{$method}->{code});
d0e2efe5 136 }
137}
138
d401eda1 139## functions for calculating C3 MRO
140
95bebf8c 141sub calculateMRO {
142 my ($class) = @_;
2ffffc6d 143 return Algorithm::C3::merge($class, sub {
144 no strict 'refs';
145 @{$_[0] . '::ISA'};
146 });
95bebf8c 147}
148
5d5c86d9 149package # hide me from PAUSE
150 next;
151
152use strict;
153use warnings;
154
155use Scalar::Util 'blessed';
156
ac6b0914 157our $VERSION = '0.05';
5d5c86d9 158
159our %METHOD_CACHE;
160
322a5920 161sub _find {
162 my $level = 2;
7bb662d7 163 my ($method_caller, $label, @label);
ac6b0914 164 while ($method_caller = (caller($level++))[3]) {
7bb662d7 165 @label = (split '::', $method_caller);
166 $label = pop @label;
167 last unless
168 $label eq '(eval)' ||
169 $label eq '__ANON__';
ac6b0914 170 }
5d5c86d9 171 my $caller = join '::' => @label;
172 my $self = $_[0];
173 my $class = blessed($self) || $self;
174
322a5920 175 return $METHOD_CACHE{"$class|$caller|$label"} ||= do {
176
177 my @MRO = Class::C3::calculateMRO($class);
178
179 my $current;
180 while ($current = shift @MRO) {
181 last if $caller eq $current;
182 }
183
184 no strict 'refs';
185 my $found;
186 foreach my $class (@MRO) {
187 next if (defined $Class::C3::MRO{$class} &&
188 defined $Class::C3::MRO{$class}{methods}{$label});
189 last if (defined ($found = *{$class . '::' . $label}{CODE}));
190 }
191
192 die "No next::method '$label' found for $_[0]" if $_[1] && !$found;
193
194 $found;
195 };
196}
5d5c86d9 197
322a5920 198sub method { goto &{_find($_[0], 1)} }
5d5c86d9 199
322a5920 200sub can { return _find($_[0], 0) ? 1 : 0 }
5d5c86d9 201
95bebf8c 2021;
203
204__END__
205
206=pod
207
208=head1 NAME
209
210Class::C3 - A pragma to use the C3 method resolution order algortihm
211
212=head1 SYNOPSIS
213
214 package A;
215 use Class::C3;
216 sub hello { 'A::hello' }
217
218 package B;
219 use base 'A';
220 use Class::C3;
221
222 package C;
223 use base 'A';
224 use Class::C3;
225
226 sub hello { 'C::hello' }
227
228 package D;
229 use base ('B', 'C');
230 use Class::C3;
231
232 # Classic Diamond MI pattern
d401eda1 233 # <A>
234 # / \
235 # <B> <C>
236 # \ /
237 # <D>
95bebf8c 238
239 package main;
2ffffc6d 240
241 # initializez the C3 module
242 # (formerly called in INIT)
243 Class::C3::initialize();
95bebf8c 244
245 print join ', ' => Class::C3::calculateMRO('Diamond_D') # prints D, B, C, A
246
247 print D->hello() # prints 'C::hello' instead of the standard p5 'A::hello'
248
249 D->can('hello')->(); # can() also works correctly
250 UNIVERSAL::can('D', 'hello'); # as does UNIVERSAL::can()
251
252=head1 DESCRIPTION
253
2ffffc6d 254This is pragma to change Perl 5's standard method resolution order from depth-first left-to-right
255(a.k.a - pre-order) to the more sophisticated C3 method resolution order.
95bebf8c 256
257=head2 What is C3?
258
259C3 is the name of an algorithm which aims to provide a sane method resolution order under multiple
260inheritence. It was first introduced in the langauge Dylan (see links in the L<SEE ALSO> section),
261and then later adopted as the prefered MRO (Method Resolution Order) for the new-style classes in
262Python 2.3. Most recently it has been adopted as the 'canonical' MRO for Perl 6 classes, and the
263default MRO for Parrot objects as well.
264
265=head2 How does C3 work.
266
267C3 works by always preserving local precendence ordering. This essentially means that no class will
268appear before any of it's subclasses. Take the classic diamond inheritence pattern for instance:
269
d401eda1 270 <A>
271 / \
272 <B> <C>
273 \ /
274 <D>
95bebf8c 275
276The standard Perl 5 MRO would be (D, B, A, C). The result being that B<A> appears before B<C>, even
277though B<C> is the subclass of B<A>. The C3 MRO algorithm however, produces the following MRO
278(D, B, C, A), which does not have this same issue.
279
280This example is fairly trival, for more complex examples and a deeper explaination, see the links in
281the L<SEE ALSO> section.
282
283=head2 How does this module work?
284
2ffffc6d 285This module uses a technique similar to Perl 5's method caching. When C<Class::C3::initialize> is
286called, this module calculates the MRO of all the classes which called C<use Class::C3>. It then
287gathers information from the symbol tables of each of those classes, and builds a set of method
288aliases for the correct dispatch ordering. Once all these C3-based method tables are created, it
289then adds the method aliases into the local classes symbol table.
95bebf8c 290
291The end result is actually classes with pre-cached method dispatch. However, this caching does not
292do well if you start changing your C<@ISA> or messing with class symbol tables, so you should consider
293your classes to be effectively closed. See the L<CAVEATS> section for more details.
294
d401eda1 295=head1 OPTIONAL LOWERCASE PRAGMA
296
297This release also includes an optional module B<c3> in the F<opt/> folder. I did not include this in
298the regular install since lowercase module names are considered I<"bad"> by some people. However I
299think that code looks much nicer like this:
300
301 package MyClass;
302 use c3;
303
304The the more clunky:
305
306 package MyClass;
307 use Class::C3;
308
309But hey, it's your choice, thats why it is optional.
310
95bebf8c 311=head1 FUNCTIONS
312
313=over 4
314
315=item B<calculateMRO ($class)>
316
317Given a C<$class> this will return an array of class names in the proper C3 method resolution order.
318
d401eda1 319=item B<initialize>
320
2ffffc6d 321This B<must be called> to initalize the C3 method dispatch tables, this module B<will not work> if
5f01eb5f 322you do not do this. It is advised to do this as soon as possible B<after> loading any classes which
323use C3. Here is a quick code example:
324
325 package Foo;
326 use Class::C3;
327 # ... Foo methods here
328
329 package Bar;
330 use Class::C3;
331 use base 'Foo';
332 # ... Bar methods here
333
334 package main;
335
336 Class::C3::initialize(); # now it is safe to use Foo and Bar
2ffffc6d 337
338This function used to be called automatically for you in the INIT phase of the perl compiler, but
339that lead to warnings if this module was required at runtime. After discussion with my user base
340(the L<DBIx::Class> folks), we decided that calling this in INIT was more of an annoyance than a
341convience. I apologize to anyone this causes problems for (although i would very suprised if I had
342any other users other than the L<DBIx::Class> folks). The simplest solution of course is to define
343your own INIT method which calls this function.
d401eda1 344
345NOTE:
d0e2efe5 346This can B<not> be used to re-load the dispatch tables for all classes. Use C<reinitialize> for that.
347
348=item B<uninitialize>
349
350Calling this function results in the removal of all cached methods, and the restoration of the old Perl 5
351style dispatch order (depth-first, left-to-right).
352
353=item B<reinitialize>
354
355This effectively calls C<uninitialize> followed by C<initialize> the result of which is a reloading of
356B<all> the calculated C3 dispatch tables.
357
358It should be noted that if you have a large class library, this could potentially be a rather costly
359operation.
d401eda1 360
95bebf8c 361=back
362
5d5c86d9 363=head1 METHOD REDISPATCHING
364
365It is always useful to be able to re-dispatch your method call to the "next most applicable method". This
366module provides a pseudo package along the lines of C<SUPER::> or C<NEXT::> which will re-dispatch the
367method along the C3 linearization. This is best show with an examples.
368
369 # a classic diamond MI pattern ...
370 <A>
371 / \
372 <B> <C>
373 \ /
374 <D>
375
376 package A;
377 use c3;
378 sub foo { 'A::foo' }
379
380 package B;
381 use base 'A';
382 use c3;
383 sub foo { 'B::foo => ' . (shift)->next::method() }
384
385 package B;
386 use base 'A';
387 use c3;
388 sub foo { 'C::foo => ' . (shift)->next::method() }
389
390 package D;
391 use base ('B', 'C');
392 use c3;
393 sub foo { 'D::foo => ' . (shift)->next::method() }
394
395 print D->foo; # prints out "D::foo => B::foo => C::foo => A::foo"
396
397A few things to note. First, we do not require you to add on the method name to the C<next::method>
398call (this is unlike C<NEXT::> and C<SUPER::> which do require that). This helps to enforce the rule
399that you cannot dispatch to a method of a different name (this is how C<NEXT::> behaves as well).
400
401The next thing to keep in mind is that you will need to pass all arguments to C<next::method> it can
402not automatically use the current C<@_>.
403
322a5920 404If C<next::method> cannot find a next method to re-dispatch the call to, it will throw an exception.
405You can use C<next::can> to see if C<next::method> will succeed before you call it like so:
406
407 $self->next::method(@_) if $self->next::can;
408
409
2ffffc6d 410There are some caveats about using C<next::method>, see below for those.
95bebf8c 411
2ffffc6d 412=head1 CAVEATS
95bebf8c 413
2ffffc6d 414This module used to be labeled as I<experimental>, however it has now been pretty heavily tested by
415the good folks over at L<DBIx::Class> and I am confident this module is perfectly usable for
416whatever your needs might be.
95bebf8c 417
2ffffc6d 418But there are still caveats, so here goes ...
95bebf8c 419
420=over 4
421
422=item Use of C<SUPER::>.
423
424The idea of C<SUPER::> under multiple inheritence is ambigious, and generally not recomended anyway.
425However, it's use in conjuntion with this module is very much not recommended, and in fact very
5d5c86d9 426discouraged. The recommended approach is to instead use the supplied C<next::method> feature, see
427more details on it's usage above.
95bebf8c 428
429=item Changing C<@ISA>.
430
431It is the author's opinion that changing C<@ISA> at runtime is pure insanity anyway. However, people
432do it, so I must caveat. Any changes to the C<@ISA> will not be reflected in the MRO calculated by this
d0e2efe5 433module, and therefor probably won't even show up. If you do this, you will need to call C<reinitialize>
434in order to recalulate B<all> method dispatch tables. See the C<reinitialize> documentation and an example
435in F<t/20_reinitialize.t> for more information.
95bebf8c 436
437=item Adding/deleting methods from class symbol tables.
438
2ffffc6d 439This module calculates the MRO for each requested class by interogatting the symbol tables of said classes.
440So any symbol table manipulation which takes place after our INIT phase is run will not be reflected in
441the calculated MRO. Just as with changing the C<@ISA>, you will need to call C<reinitialize> for any
442changes you make to take effect.
95bebf8c 443
2ffffc6d 444=item Calling C<next::method> from methods defined outside the class
95bebf8c 445
2ffffc6d 446There is an edge case when using C<next::method> from within a subroutine which was created in a different
447module than the one it is called from. It sounds complicated, but it really isn't. Here is an example which
448will not work correctly:
15eeb546 449
2ffffc6d 450 *Foo::foo = sub { (shift)->next::method(@_) };
451
452The problem exists because the anonymous subroutine being assigned to the glob C<*Foo::foo> will show up
453in the call stack as being called C<__ANON__> and not C<foo> as you might expect. Since C<next::method>
454uses C<caller> to find the name of the method it was called in, it will fail in this case.
15eeb546 455
2ffffc6d 456But fear not, there is a simple solution. The module C<Sub::Name> will reach into the perl internals and
457assign a name to an anonymous subroutine for you. Simply do this:
458
459 use Sub::Name 'subname';
460 *Foo::foo = subname 'Foo::foo' => sub { (shift)->next::method(@_) };
15eeb546 461
2ffffc6d 462and things will Just Work. Of course this is not always possible to do, but to be honest, I just can't
463manage to find a workaround for it, so until someone gives me a working patch this will be a known
464limitation of this module.
15eeb546 465
5d5c86d9 466=back
15eeb546 467
5d5c86d9 468=head1 CODE COVERAGE
15eeb546 469
ac6b0914 470I use B<Devel::Cover> to test the code coverage of my tests, below is the B<Devel::Cover> report on this
471module's test suite.
5d5c86d9 472
473 ---------------------------- ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
474 File stmt bran cond sub pod time total
475 ---------------------------- ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
58f0eafe 476 Class/C3.pm 98.3 84.4 80.0 96.2 100.0 98.4 94.4
5d5c86d9 477 ---------------------------- ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
58f0eafe 478 Total 98.3 84.4 80.0 96.2 100.0 98.4 94.4
5d5c86d9 479 ---------------------------- ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
15eeb546 480
95bebf8c 481=head1 SEE ALSO
482
483=head2 The original Dylan paper
484
485=over 4
486
487=item L<http://www.webcom.com/haahr/dylan/linearization-oopsla96.html>
488
489=back
490
491=head2 The prototype Perl 6 Object Model uses C3
492
493=over 4
494
495=item L<http://svn.openfoundry.org/pugs/perl5/Perl6-MetaModel/>
496
497=back
498
499=head2 Parrot now uses C3
500
501=over 4
502
503=item L<http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Mail/Message/perl6-internals/2746631>
504
505=item L<http://use.perl.org/~autrijus/journal/25768>
506
507=back
508
509=head2 Python 2.3 MRO related links
510
511=over 4
512
513=item L<http://www.python.org/2.3/mro.html>
514
515=item L<http://www.python.org/2.2.2/descrintro.html#mro>
516
517=back
518
519=head2 C3 for TinyCLOS
520
521=over 4
522
523=item L<http://www.call-with-current-continuation.org/eggs/c3.html>
524
525=back
526
bad9dc59 527=head1 ACKNOWLEGEMENTS
528
529=over 4
530
531=item Thanks to Matt S. Trout for using this module in his module L<DBIx::Class>
532and finding many bugs and providing fixes.
533
534=item Thanks to Justin Guenther for making C<next::method> more robust by handling
535calls inside C<eval> and anon-subs.
536
537=back
538
95bebf8c 539=head1 AUTHOR
540
d401eda1 541Stevan Little, E<lt>stevan@iinteractive.comE<gt>
95bebf8c 542
543=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
544
08c29211 545Copyright 2005, 2006 by Infinity Interactive, Inc.
95bebf8c 546
547L<http://www.iinteractive.com>
548
549This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
550it under the same terms as Perl itself.
551
552=cut