stop the redefine warnings?
[gitmo/Class-C3.git] / lib / Class / C3.pm
CommitLineData
95bebf8c 1
2package Class::C3;
3
4use strict;
5use warnings;
6
0c2e9b71 7our $VERSION = '0.19';
e86d671c 8
e86d671c 9our $C3_IN_CORE;
0a4d4e25 10our $C3_XS;
ecb0388d 11
12BEGIN {
56215427 13 if($] > 5.009_004) {
14 $C3_IN_CORE = 1;
0c2e9b71 15 require mro;
56215427 16 }
17 else {
0a4d4e25 18 eval "require Class::C3::XS";
56215427 19 my $error = $@;
20 if(!$error) {
21 $C3_XS = 1;
22 }
23 else {
60e37513 24 die $error if $error !~ /\blocate\b/;
25 require Algorithm::C3;
26 require Class::C3::next;
0a4d4e25 27 }
e86d671c 28 }
29}
30
31# this is our global stash of both
32# MRO's and method dispatch tables
33# the structure basically looks like
34# this:
35#
36# $MRO{$class} = {
37# MRO => [ <class precendence list> ],
38# methods => {
39# orig => <original location of method>,
40# code => \&<ref to original method>
41# },
42# has_overload_fallback => (1 | 0)
43# }
44#
45our %MRO;
46
47# use these for debugging ...
48sub _dump_MRO_table { %MRO }
49our $TURN_OFF_C3 = 0;
50
51# state tracking for initialize()/uninitialize()
52our $_initialized = 0;
53
54sub import {
55 my $class = caller();
56 # skip if the caller is main::
57 # since that is clearly not relevant
58 return if $class eq 'main';
59
60 return if $TURN_OFF_C3;
61 mro::set_mro($class, 'c3') if $C3_IN_CORE;
62
63 # make a note to calculate $class
64 # during INIT phase
65 $MRO{$class} = undef unless exists $MRO{$class};
66}
67
68## initializers
69
ed5a2172 70# This prevents silly warnings when Class::C3 is
71# used explicitly along with MRO::Compat under 5.9.5+
72
73{ no warnings 'redefine';
74
e86d671c 75sub initialize {
76 %next::METHOD_CACHE = ();
77 # why bother if we don't have anything ...
78 return unless keys %MRO;
79 if($C3_IN_CORE) {
80 mro::set_mro($_, 'c3') for keys %MRO;
ac6b0914 81 }
e86d671c 82 else {
83 if($_initialized) {
84 uninitialize();
85 $MRO{$_} = undef foreach keys %MRO;
86 }
87 _calculate_method_dispatch_tables();
88 _apply_method_dispatch_tables();
89 $_initialized = 1;
90 }
91}
92
93sub uninitialize {
94 # why bother if we don't have anything ...
95 %next::METHOD_CACHE = ();
96 return unless keys %MRO;
97 if($C3_IN_CORE) {
98 mro::set_mro($_, 'dfs') for keys %MRO;
99 }
100 else {
101 _remove_method_dispatch_tables();
102 $_initialized = 0;
103 }
104}
105
106sub reinitialize { goto &initialize }
107
ed5a2172 108} # end of "no warnings 'redefine'"
109
e86d671c 110## functions for applying C3 to classes
111
112sub _calculate_method_dispatch_tables {
113 return if $C3_IN_CORE;
114 my %merge_cache;
115 foreach my $class (keys %MRO) {
116 _calculate_method_dispatch_table($class, \%merge_cache);
117 }
118}
119
120sub _calculate_method_dispatch_table {
121 return if $C3_IN_CORE;
122 my ($class, $merge_cache) = @_;
123 no strict 'refs';
124 my @MRO = calculateMRO($class, $merge_cache);
125 $MRO{$class} = { MRO => \@MRO };
bfcddb67 126 my $has_overload_fallback;
e86d671c 127 my %methods;
128 # NOTE:
129 # we do @MRO[1 .. $#MRO] here because it
130 # makes no sense to interogate the class
131 # which you are calculating for.
132 foreach my $local (@MRO[1 .. $#MRO]) {
133 # if overload has tagged this module to
134 # have use "fallback", then we want to
135 # grab that value
136 $has_overload_fallback = ${"${local}::()"}
bfcddb67 137 if !defined $has_overload_fallback && defined ${"${local}::()"};
e86d671c 138 foreach my $method (grep { defined &{"${local}::$_"} } keys %{"${local}::"}) {
139 # skip if already overriden in local class
140 next unless !defined *{"${class}::$method"}{CODE};
141 $methods{$method} = {
142 orig => "${local}::$method",
143 code => \&{"${local}::$method"}
144 } unless exists $methods{$method};
145 }
146 }
147 # now stash them in our %MRO table
148 $MRO{$class}->{methods} = \%methods;
149 $MRO{$class}->{has_overload_fallback} = $has_overload_fallback;
150}
151
152sub _apply_method_dispatch_tables {
153 return if $C3_IN_CORE;
154 foreach my $class (keys %MRO) {
155 _apply_method_dispatch_table($class);
156 }
157}
158
159sub _apply_method_dispatch_table {
160 return if $C3_IN_CORE;
161 my $class = shift;
162 no strict 'refs';
163 ${"${class}::()"} = $MRO{$class}->{has_overload_fallback}
bfcddb67 164 if !defined &{"${class}::()"}
165 && defined $MRO{$class}->{has_overload_fallback};
e86d671c 166 foreach my $method (keys %{$MRO{$class}->{methods}}) {
030b48e2 167 if ( $method =~ /^\(/ ) {
168 my $orig = $MRO{$class}->{methods}->{$method}->{orig};
169 ${"${class}::$method"} = $$orig if defined $$orig;
170 }
e86d671c 171 *{"${class}::$method"} = $MRO{$class}->{methods}->{$method}->{code};
172 }
173}
174
175sub _remove_method_dispatch_tables {
176 return if $C3_IN_CORE;
177 foreach my $class (keys %MRO) {
178 _remove_method_dispatch_table($class);
60e37513 179 }
e86d671c 180}
181
182sub _remove_method_dispatch_table {
183 return if $C3_IN_CORE;
184 my $class = shift;
185 no strict 'refs';
186 delete ${"${class}::"}{"()"} if $MRO{$class}->{has_overload_fallback};
187 foreach my $method (keys %{$MRO{$class}->{methods}}) {
188 delete ${"${class}::"}{$method}
189 if defined *{"${class}::${method}"}{CODE} &&
190 (*{"${class}::${method}"}{CODE} eq $MRO{$class}->{methods}->{$method}->{code});
60e37513 191 }
e86d671c 192}
193
194sub calculateMRO {
195 my ($class, $merge_cache) = @_;
196
e86d671c 197 return Algorithm::C3::merge($class, sub {
198 no strict 'refs';
199 @{$_[0] . '::ISA'};
200 }, $merge_cache);
322a5920 201}
5d5c86d9 202
56215427 203# Method overrides to support 5.9.5+ or Class::C3::XS
204
9ecc7ab5 205sub _core_calculateMRO { @{mro::get_linear_isa($_[0], 'c3')} }
0a4d4e25 206
207if($C3_IN_CORE) {
208 no warnings 'redefine';
209 *Class::C3::calculateMRO = \&_core_calculateMRO;
210}
211elsif($C3_XS) {
212 no warnings 'redefine';
213 *Class::C3::calculateMRO = \&Class::C3::XS::calculateMRO;
60e37513 214 *Class::C3::_calculate_method_dispatch_table
215 = \&Class::C3::XS::_calculate_method_dispatch_table;
0a4d4e25 216}
217
95bebf8c 2181;
219
220__END__
221
222=pod
223
224=head1 NAME
225
226Class::C3 - A pragma to use the C3 method resolution order algortihm
227
228=head1 SYNOPSIS
229
230 package A;
231 use Class::C3;
232 sub hello { 'A::hello' }
233
234 package B;
235 use base 'A';
236 use Class::C3;
237
238 package C;
239 use base 'A';
240 use Class::C3;
241
242 sub hello { 'C::hello' }
243
244 package D;
245 use base ('B', 'C');
246 use Class::C3;
247
248 # Classic Diamond MI pattern
d401eda1 249 # <A>
250 # / \
251 # <B> <C>
252 # \ /
253 # <D>
95bebf8c 254
255 package main;
2ffffc6d 256
257 # initializez the C3 module
258 # (formerly called in INIT)
259 Class::C3::initialize();
95bebf8c 260
261 print join ', ' => Class::C3::calculateMRO('Diamond_D') # prints D, B, C, A
262
263 print D->hello() # prints 'C::hello' instead of the standard p5 'A::hello'
264
265 D->can('hello')->(); # can() also works correctly
266 UNIVERSAL::can('D', 'hello'); # as does UNIVERSAL::can()
267
268=head1 DESCRIPTION
269
2ffffc6d 270This is pragma to change Perl 5's standard method resolution order from depth-first left-to-right
271(a.k.a - pre-order) to the more sophisticated C3 method resolution order.
95bebf8c 272
273=head2 What is C3?
274
275C3 is the name of an algorithm which aims to provide a sane method resolution order under multiple
276inheritence. It was first introduced in the langauge Dylan (see links in the L<SEE ALSO> section),
277and then later adopted as the prefered MRO (Method Resolution Order) for the new-style classes in
278Python 2.3. Most recently it has been adopted as the 'canonical' MRO for Perl 6 classes, and the
279default MRO for Parrot objects as well.
280
281=head2 How does C3 work.
282
283C3 works by always preserving local precendence ordering. This essentially means that no class will
284appear before any of it's subclasses. Take the classic diamond inheritence pattern for instance:
285
d401eda1 286 <A>
287 / \
288 <B> <C>
289 \ /
290 <D>
95bebf8c 291
292The standard Perl 5 MRO would be (D, B, A, C). The result being that B<A> appears before B<C>, even
293though B<C> is the subclass of B<A>. The C3 MRO algorithm however, produces the following MRO
294(D, B, C, A), which does not have this same issue.
295
296This example is fairly trival, for more complex examples and a deeper explaination, see the links in
297the L<SEE ALSO> section.
298
299=head2 How does this module work?
300
2ffffc6d 301This module uses a technique similar to Perl 5's method caching. When C<Class::C3::initialize> is
302called, this module calculates the MRO of all the classes which called C<use Class::C3>. It then
303gathers information from the symbol tables of each of those classes, and builds a set of method
304aliases for the correct dispatch ordering. Once all these C3-based method tables are created, it
305then adds the method aliases into the local classes symbol table.
95bebf8c 306
307The end result is actually classes with pre-cached method dispatch. However, this caching does not
308do well if you start changing your C<@ISA> or messing with class symbol tables, so you should consider
309your classes to be effectively closed. See the L<CAVEATS> section for more details.
310
d401eda1 311=head1 OPTIONAL LOWERCASE PRAGMA
312
313This release also includes an optional module B<c3> in the F<opt/> folder. I did not include this in
314the regular install since lowercase module names are considered I<"bad"> by some people. However I
315think that code looks much nicer like this:
316
317 package MyClass;
318 use c3;
319
320The the more clunky:
321
322 package MyClass;
323 use Class::C3;
324
325But hey, it's your choice, thats why it is optional.
326
95bebf8c 327=head1 FUNCTIONS
328
329=over 4
330
331=item B<calculateMRO ($class)>
332
333Given a C<$class> this will return an array of class names in the proper C3 method resolution order.
334
d401eda1 335=item B<initialize>
336
2ffffc6d 337This B<must be called> to initalize the C3 method dispatch tables, this module B<will not work> if
5f01eb5f 338you do not do this. It is advised to do this as soon as possible B<after> loading any classes which
339use C3. Here is a quick code example:
340
341 package Foo;
342 use Class::C3;
343 # ... Foo methods here
344
345 package Bar;
346 use Class::C3;
347 use base 'Foo';
348 # ... Bar methods here
349
350 package main;
351
352 Class::C3::initialize(); # now it is safe to use Foo and Bar
2ffffc6d 353
354This function used to be called automatically for you in the INIT phase of the perl compiler, but
355that lead to warnings if this module was required at runtime. After discussion with my user base
356(the L<DBIx::Class> folks), we decided that calling this in INIT was more of an annoyance than a
357convience. I apologize to anyone this causes problems for (although i would very suprised if I had
358any other users other than the L<DBIx::Class> folks). The simplest solution of course is to define
359your own INIT method which calls this function.
d401eda1 360
361NOTE:
ff168601 362
363If C<initialize> detects that C<initialize> has already been executed, it will L</uninitialize> and
364clear the MRO cache first.
d0e2efe5 365
366=item B<uninitialize>
367
368Calling this function results in the removal of all cached methods, and the restoration of the old Perl 5
369style dispatch order (depth-first, left-to-right).
370
371=item B<reinitialize>
372
ff168601 373This is an alias for L</initialize> above.
d401eda1 374
95bebf8c 375=back
376
5d5c86d9 377=head1 METHOD REDISPATCHING
378
379It is always useful to be able to re-dispatch your method call to the "next most applicable method". This
380module provides a pseudo package along the lines of C<SUPER::> or C<NEXT::> which will re-dispatch the
381method along the C3 linearization. This is best show with an examples.
382
383 # a classic diamond MI pattern ...
384 <A>
385 / \
386 <B> <C>
387 \ /
388 <D>
389
390 package A;
391 use c3;
392 sub foo { 'A::foo' }
393
394 package B;
395 use base 'A';
396 use c3;
397 sub foo { 'B::foo => ' . (shift)->next::method() }
398
399 package B;
400 use base 'A';
401 use c3;
402 sub foo { 'C::foo => ' . (shift)->next::method() }
403
404 package D;
405 use base ('B', 'C');
406 use c3;
407 sub foo { 'D::foo => ' . (shift)->next::method() }
408
409 print D->foo; # prints out "D::foo => B::foo => C::foo => A::foo"
410
411A few things to note. First, we do not require you to add on the method name to the C<next::method>
412call (this is unlike C<NEXT::> and C<SUPER::> which do require that). This helps to enforce the rule
413that you cannot dispatch to a method of a different name (this is how C<NEXT::> behaves as well).
414
415The next thing to keep in mind is that you will need to pass all arguments to C<next::method> it can
416not automatically use the current C<@_>.
417
322a5920 418If C<next::method> cannot find a next method to re-dispatch the call to, it will throw an exception.
419You can use C<next::can> to see if C<next::method> will succeed before you call it like so:
420
421 $self->next::method(@_) if $self->next::can;
422
fa91a1c7 423Additionally, you can use C<maybe::next::method> as a shortcut to only call the next method if it exists.
424The previous example could be simply written as:
425
426 $self->maybe::next::method(@_);
322a5920 427
2ffffc6d 428There are some caveats about using C<next::method>, see below for those.
95bebf8c 429
2ffffc6d 430=head1 CAVEATS
95bebf8c 431
2ffffc6d 432This module used to be labeled as I<experimental>, however it has now been pretty heavily tested by
433the good folks over at L<DBIx::Class> and I am confident this module is perfectly usable for
434whatever your needs might be.
95bebf8c 435
2ffffc6d 436But there are still caveats, so here goes ...
95bebf8c 437
438=over 4
439
440=item Use of C<SUPER::>.
441
442The idea of C<SUPER::> under multiple inheritence is ambigious, and generally not recomended anyway.
443However, it's use in conjuntion with this module is very much not recommended, and in fact very
5d5c86d9 444discouraged. The recommended approach is to instead use the supplied C<next::method> feature, see
445more details on it's usage above.
95bebf8c 446
447=item Changing C<@ISA>.
448
449It is the author's opinion that changing C<@ISA> at runtime is pure insanity anyway. However, people
450do it, so I must caveat. Any changes to the C<@ISA> will not be reflected in the MRO calculated by this
d0e2efe5 451module, and therefor probably won't even show up. If you do this, you will need to call C<reinitialize>
452in order to recalulate B<all> method dispatch tables. See the C<reinitialize> documentation and an example
453in F<t/20_reinitialize.t> for more information.
95bebf8c 454
455=item Adding/deleting methods from class symbol tables.
456
2ffffc6d 457This module calculates the MRO for each requested class by interogatting the symbol tables of said classes.
458So any symbol table manipulation which takes place after our INIT phase is run will not be reflected in
459the calculated MRO. Just as with changing the C<@ISA>, you will need to call C<reinitialize> for any
460changes you make to take effect.
95bebf8c 461
2ffffc6d 462=item Calling C<next::method> from methods defined outside the class
95bebf8c 463
2ffffc6d 464There is an edge case when using C<next::method> from within a subroutine which was created in a different
465module than the one it is called from. It sounds complicated, but it really isn't. Here is an example which
466will not work correctly:
15eeb546 467
2ffffc6d 468 *Foo::foo = sub { (shift)->next::method(@_) };
469
470The problem exists because the anonymous subroutine being assigned to the glob C<*Foo::foo> will show up
471in the call stack as being called C<__ANON__> and not C<foo> as you might expect. Since C<next::method>
472uses C<caller> to find the name of the method it was called in, it will fail in this case.
15eeb546 473
2ffffc6d 474But fear not, there is a simple solution. The module C<Sub::Name> will reach into the perl internals and
475assign a name to an anonymous subroutine for you. Simply do this:
476
477 use Sub::Name 'subname';
478 *Foo::foo = subname 'Foo::foo' => sub { (shift)->next::method(@_) };
15eeb546 479
2ffffc6d 480and things will Just Work. Of course this is not always possible to do, but to be honest, I just can't
481manage to find a workaround for it, so until someone gives me a working patch this will be a known
482limitation of this module.
15eeb546 483
5d5c86d9 484=back
15eeb546 485
0a4d4e25 486=head1 COMPATIBILITY
487
56215427 488If your software requires Perl 5.9.5 or higher, you do not need L<Class::C3>, you can simply C<use mro 'c3'>, and not worry about C<initialize()>, avoid some of the above caveats, and get the best possible performance. See L<mro> for more details.
0a4d4e25 489
490If your software is meant to work on earlier Perls, use L<Class::C3> as documented here. L<Class::C3> will detect Perl 5.9.5+ and take advantage of the core support when available.
491
492=head1 Class::C3::XS
493
494This module will load L<Class::C3::XS> if it's installed and you are running on a Perl version older than 5.9.5. Installing this is recommended when possible, as it results in significant performance improvements (but unlike the 5.9.5+ core support, it still has all of the same caveats as L<Class::C3>).
495
5d5c86d9 496=head1 CODE COVERAGE
15eeb546 497
9ecc7ab5 498L<Devel::Cover> was reporting 94.4% overall test coverage earlier in this module's life. Currently, the test suite does things that break under coverage testing, but it is fair to assume the coverage is still close to that value.
15eeb546 499
95bebf8c 500=head1 SEE ALSO
501
502=head2 The original Dylan paper
503
504=over 4
505
506=item L<http://www.webcom.com/haahr/dylan/linearization-oopsla96.html>
507
508=back
509
510=head2 The prototype Perl 6 Object Model uses C3
511
512=over 4
513
514=item L<http://svn.openfoundry.org/pugs/perl5/Perl6-MetaModel/>
515
516=back
517
518=head2 Parrot now uses C3
519
520=over 4
521
522=item L<http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Mail/Message/perl6-internals/2746631>
523
524=item L<http://use.perl.org/~autrijus/journal/25768>
525
526=back
527
528=head2 Python 2.3 MRO related links
529
530=over 4
531
532=item L<http://www.python.org/2.3/mro.html>
533
534=item L<http://www.python.org/2.2.2/descrintro.html#mro>
535
536=back
537
538=head2 C3 for TinyCLOS
539
540=over 4
541
542=item L<http://www.call-with-current-continuation.org/eggs/c3.html>
543
544=back
545
bad9dc59 546=head1 ACKNOWLEGEMENTS
547
548=over 4
549
550=item Thanks to Matt S. Trout for using this module in his module L<DBIx::Class>
551and finding many bugs and providing fixes.
552
553=item Thanks to Justin Guenther for making C<next::method> more robust by handling
554calls inside C<eval> and anon-subs.
555
f480cda1 556=item Thanks to Robert Norris for adding support for C<next::can> and
557C<maybe::next::method>.
558
bad9dc59 559=back
560
95bebf8c 561=head1 AUTHOR
562
d401eda1 563Stevan Little, E<lt>stevan@iinteractive.comE<gt>
95bebf8c 564
6262b4cf 565Brandon L. Black, E<lt>blblack@gmail.comE<gt>
566
95bebf8c 567=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
568
08c29211 569Copyright 2005, 2006 by Infinity Interactive, Inc.
95bebf8c 570
571L<http://www.iinteractive.com>
572
573This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
574it under the same terms as Perl itself.
575
f4a893b2 576=cut