package Class::Accessor::Grouped; use strict; use warnings; use Carp (); use Scalar::Util (); use Module::Runtime (); BEGIN { # use M::R to work around the 5.8 require bugs if ($] < 5.009_005) { Module::Runtime::require_module('MRO::Compat'); } else { require mro; } } our $VERSION = '0.10014'; $VERSION =~ tr/_//d; # numify for warning-free dev releases # when changing minimum version don't forget to adjust Makefile.PL as well our $__minimum_xsa_version; BEGIN { $__minimum_xsa_version = '1.19' } our $USE_XS; # the unless defined is here so that we can override the value # before require/use, *regardless* of the state of $ENV{CAG_USE_XS} $USE_XS = $ENV{CAG_USE_XS} unless defined $USE_XS; BEGIN { package # hide from PAUSE __CAG_ENV__; die "Huh?! No minimum C::XSA version?!\n" unless $__minimum_xsa_version; local $@; require constant; # individual (one const at a time) imports so we are 5.6.2 compatible # if we can - why not ;) constant->import( NO_SUBNAME => eval { Module::Runtime::require_module('Sub::Name') } ? 0 : "$@" ); my $found_cxsa; constant->import( NO_CXSA => ( NO_SUBNAME() || ( eval { Module::Runtime::require_module('Class::XSAccessor'); $found_cxsa = Class::XSAccessor->VERSION; Class::XSAccessor->VERSION($__minimum_xsa_version); } ? 0 : "$@" ) ) ); if (NO_CXSA() and $found_cxsa and !$ENV{CAG_OLD_XS_NOWARN}) { warn( 'The installed version of Class::XSAccessor is too old ' . "(v$found_cxsa < v$__minimum_xsa_version). Please upgrade " . "to instantly quadruple the performance of 'simple' accessors. " . 'Set $ENV{CAG_OLD_XS_NOWARN} if you wish to disable this ' . "warning.\n" ); } constant->import( BROKEN_GOTO => ($] < '5.008009') ? 1 : 0 ); constant->import( UNSTABLE_DOLLARAT => ($] < '5.013002') ? 1 : 0 ); constant->import( TRACK_UNDEFER_FAIL => ( $INC{'Test/Builder.pm'} || $INC{'Test/Builder2.pm'} and $0 =~ m{ ^ (?: \. \/ )? x?t / .+ \.t $}x ) ? 1 : 0 ); sub perlstring ($) { q{"}. quotemeta( shift ). q{"} }; } # Yes this method is undocumented # Yes it should be a private coderef like all the rest at the end of this file # No we can't do that (yet) because the DBIC-CDBI compat layer overrides it # %$*@!?&!&#*$!!! my $illegal_accessors_warned; sub _mk_group_accessors { my($self, $maker, $group, @fields) = @_; my $class = length (ref ($self) ) ? ref ($self) : $self; no strict 'refs'; no warnings 'redefine'; # So we don't have to do lots of lookups inside the loop. $maker = $self->can($maker) unless ref $maker; for (@fields) { my ($name, $field) = (ref $_) ? (@$_) : ($_, $_); if ($name !~ /\A[A-Z_a-z][0-9A-Z_a-z]*\z/) { if ($name =~ /\0/) { Carp::croak(sprintf "Illegal accessor name %s - nulls should never appear in stash keys", __CAG_ENV__::perlstring($name), ); } elsif (! $ENV{CAG_ILLEGAL_ACCESSOR_NAME_OK} ) { Carp::croak( "Illegal accessor name '$name'. If you want CAG to attempt creating " . 'it anyway (possible if Sub::Name is available) set ' . '$ENV{CAG_ILLEGAL_ACCESSOR_NAME_OK}' ); } elsif (__CAG_ENV__::NO_SUBNAME) { Carp::croak( "Unable to install accessor with illegal name '$name': " . 'Sub::Name not available' ); } elsif ( # Because one of the former maintainers of DBIC::SL is a raging # idiot, there is now a ton of DBIC code out there that attempts # to create column accessors with illegal names. In the interest # of not cluttering the logs of unsuspecting victims (unsuspecting # because these accessors are unusable anyway) we provide an # explicit "do not warn at all" escape, until all such code is # fixed (this will be a loooooong time >:( $ENV{CAG_ILLEGAL_ACCESSOR_NAME_OK} ne 'DO_NOT_WARN' and ! $illegal_accessors_warned->{$class}++ ) { Carp::carp( "Installing illegal accessor '$name' into $class, see " . 'documentation for more details' ); } } Carp::carp("Having a data accessor named '$name' in '$class' is unwise.") if $name =~ /\A(?: DESTROY | AUTOLOAD | CLONE )\z/x; my $alias = "_${name}_accessor"; for ($name, $alias) { # the maker may elect to not return anything, meaning it already # installed the coderef for us (e.g. lack of Sub::Name) my $cref = $self->$maker($group, $field, $_) or next; my $fq_meth = "${class}::$_"; *$fq_meth = Sub::Name::subname($fq_meth, $cref); #unless defined &{$class."\:\:$field"} } } }; # $gen_accessor coderef is setup at the end for clarity my $gen_accessor; =head1 NAME Class::Accessor::Grouped - Lets you build groups of accessors =head1 SYNOPSIS use base 'Class::Accessor::Grouped'; # make basic accessors for objects __PACKAGE__->mk_group_accessors(simple => qw(id name email)); # make accessor that works for objects and classes __PACKAGE__->mk_group_accessors(inherited => 'awesome_level'); # make an accessor which calls a custom pair of getters/setters sub get_column { ... this will be called when you do $obj->name() ... } sub set_column { ... this will be called when you do $obj->name('foo') ... } __PACKAGE__->mk_group_accessors(column => 'name'); =head1 DESCRIPTION This class lets you build groups of accessors that will call different getters and setters. The documentation of this module still requires a lot of work (B<< volunteers welcome >.> >>), but in the meantime you can refer to L for more information. =head2 Notes on accessor names In general method names in Perl are considered identifiers, and as such need to conform to the identifier specification of C. While it is rather easy to invoke methods with non-standard names (C<< $obj->${\"anything goes"} >>), it is not possible to properly declare such methods without the use of L. Since this module must be able to function identically with and without its optional dependencies, starting with version C<0.10008> attempting to declare an accessor with a non-standard name is a fatal error (such operations would silently succeed since version C<0.08004>, as long as L is present, or otherwise would result in a syntax error during a string eval). Unfortunately in the years since C<0.08004> a rather large body of code accumulated in the wild that does attempt to declare accessors with funny names. One notable perpetrator is L, which under certain conditions could create accessors of the C group which start with numbers and/or some other punctuation (the proper way would be to declare columns with the C attribute set to C). Therefore an escape mechanism is provided via the environment variable C. When set to a true value, one warning is issued B on attempts to declare an accessor with a non-conforming name, and as long as L is available all accessors will be properly created. Regardless of this setting, accessor names containing nulls C<"\0"> are disallowed, due to various deficiencies in perl itself. If your code base has too many instances of illegal accessor declarations, and a fix is not feasible due to time constraints, it is possible to disable the warnings altogether by setting C<$ENV{CAG_ILLEGAL_ACCESSOR_NAME_OK}> to C (observe capitalization). =head1 METHODS =head2 mk_group_accessors __PACKAGE__->mk_group_accessors(simple => 'hair_length', [ hair_color => 'hc' ]); =over 4 =item Arguments: $group, @fieldspec Returns: none =back Creates a set of accessors in a given group. $group is the name of the accessor group for the generated accessors; they will call get_$group($field) on get and set_$group($field, $value) on set. If you want to mimic Class::Accessor's mk_accessors $group has to be 'simple' to tell Class::Accessor::Grouped to use its own get_simple and set_simple methods. @fieldspec is a list of field/accessor names; if a fieldspec is a scalar this is used as both field and accessor name, if a listref it is expected to be of the form [ $accessor, $field ]. =cut sub mk_group_accessors { my ($self, $group, @fields) = @_; $self->_mk_group_accessors('make_group_accessor', $group, @fields); return; } =head2 mk_group_ro_accessors __PACKAGE__->mk_group_ro_accessors(simple => 'birthdate', [ social_security_number => 'ssn' ]); =over 4 =item Arguments: $group, @fieldspec Returns: none =back Creates a set of read only accessors in a given group. Identical to L but accessors will throw an error if passed a value rather than setting the value. =cut sub mk_group_ro_accessors { my($self, $group, @fields) = @_; $self->_mk_group_accessors('make_group_ro_accessor', $group, @fields); return; } =head2 mk_group_wo_accessors __PACKAGE__->mk_group_wo_accessors(simple => 'lie', [ subject => 'subj' ]); =over 4 =item Arguments: $group, @fieldspec Returns: none =back Creates a set of write only accessors in a given group. Identical to L but accessors will throw an error if not passed a value rather than getting the value. =cut sub mk_group_wo_accessors { my($self, $group, @fields) = @_; $self->_mk_group_accessors('make_group_wo_accessor', $group, @fields); return; } =head2 get_simple =over 4 =item Arguments: $field Returns: $value =back Simple getter for hash-based objects which returns the value for the field name passed as an argument. =cut sub get_simple { $_[0]->{$_[1]}; } =head2 set_simple =over 4 =item Arguments: $field, $new_value Returns: $new_value =back Simple setter for hash-based objects which sets and then returns the value for the field name passed as an argument. =cut sub set_simple { $_[0]->{$_[1]} = $_[2]; } =head2 get_inherited =over 4 =item Arguments: $field Returns: $value =back Simple getter for Classes and hash-based objects which returns the value for the field name passed as an argument. This behaves much like L where the field can be set in a base class, inherited and changed in subclasses, and inherited and changed for object instances. =cut sub get_inherited { if ( length (ref ($_[0]) ) ) { if (Scalar::Util::reftype $_[0] eq 'HASH') { return $_[0]->{$_[1]} if exists $_[0]->{$_[1]}; # everything in @_ is aliased, an assignment won't work splice @_, 0, 1, ref($_[0]); } else { Carp::croak('Cannot get inherited value on an object instance that is not hash-based'); } } # if we got this far there is nothing in the instance # OR this is a class call # in any case $_[0] contains the class name (see splice above) no strict 'refs'; no warnings 'uninitialized'; my $cag_slot = '::__cag_'. $_[1]; return ${$_[0].$cag_slot} if defined(${$_[0].$cag_slot}); do { return ${$_.$cag_slot} if defined(${$_.$cag_slot}) } for $_[0]->get_super_paths; return undef; } =head2 set_inherited =over 4 =item Arguments: $field, $new_value Returns: $new_value =back Simple setter for Classes and hash-based objects which sets and then returns the value for the field name passed as an argument. When called on a hash-based object it will set the appropriate hash key value. When called on a class, it will set a class level variable. B: This method will die if you try to set an object variable on a non hash-based object. =cut sub set_inherited { if (length (ref ($_[0]) ) ) { if (Scalar::Util::reftype $_[0] eq 'HASH') { return $_[0]->{$_[1]} = $_[2]; } else { Carp::croak('Cannot set inherited value on an object instance that is not hash-based'); }; } no strict 'refs'; ${$_[0].'::__cag_'.$_[1]} = $_[2]; } =head2 get_component_class =over 4 =item Arguments: $field Returns: $value =back Gets the value of the specified component class. __PACKAGE__->mk_group_accessors('component_class' => 'result_class'); $self->result_class->method(); ## same as $self->get_component_class('result_class')->method(); =cut sub get_component_class { $_[0]->get_inherited($_[1]); }; =head2 set_component_class =over 4 =item Arguments: $field, $class Returns: $new_value =back Inherited accessor that automatically loads the specified class before setting it. This method will die if the specified class could not be loaded. __PACKAGE__->mk_group_accessors('component_class' => 'result_class'); __PACKAGE__->result_class('MyClass'); $self->result_class->method(); =cut sub set_component_class { if (defined $_[2] and length $_[2]) { # disable warnings, and prevent $_ being eaten away by a behind-the-scenes # module loading local ($^W, $_); if (__CAG_ENV__::UNSTABLE_DOLLARAT) { my $err; { local $@; eval { Module::Runtime::use_package_optimistically($_[2]) } or $err = $@; } Carp::croak("Could not load $_[1] '$_[2]': $err") if defined $err; } else { eval { Module::Runtime::use_package_optimistically($_[2]) } or Carp::croak("Could not load $_[1] '$_[2]': $@"); } }; $_[0]->set_inherited($_[1], $_[2]); }; =head1 INTERNAL METHODS These methods are documented for clarity, but are never meant to be called directly, and are not really meant for overriding either. =head2 get_super_paths Returns a list of 'parent' or 'super' class names that the current class inherited from. This is what drives the traversal done by L. =cut sub get_super_paths { # get_linear_isa returns the class itself as the 1st element # use @_ as a pre-allocated scratch array (undef, @_) = @{mro::get_linear_isa( length( ref($_[0]) ) ? ref($_[0]) : $_[0] )}; @_; }; =head2 make_group_accessor __PACKAGE__->make_group_accessor('simple', 'hair_length', 'hair_length'); __PACKAGE__->make_group_accessor('simple', 'hc', 'hair_color'); =over 4 =item Arguments: $group, $field, $accessor Returns: \&accessor_coderef ? =back Called by mk_group_accessors for each entry in @fieldspec. Either returns a coderef which will be installed at C<&__PACKAGE__::$accessor>, or returns C if it elects to install the coderef on its own. =cut sub make_group_accessor { $gen_accessor->('rw', @_) } =head2 make_group_ro_accessor __PACKAGE__->make_group_ro_accessor('simple', 'birthdate', 'birthdate'); __PACKAGE__->make_group_ro_accessor('simple', 'ssn', 'social_security_number'); =over 4 =item Arguments: $group, $field, $accessor Returns: \&accessor_coderef ? =back Called by mk_group_ro_accessors for each entry in @fieldspec. Either returns a coderef which will be installed at C<&__PACKAGE__::$accessor>, or returns C if it elects to install the coderef on its own. =cut sub make_group_ro_accessor { $gen_accessor->('ro', @_) } =head2 make_group_wo_accessor __PACKAGE__->make_group_wo_accessor('simple', 'lie', 'lie'); __PACKAGE__->make_group_wo_accessor('simple', 'subj', 'subject'); =over 4 =item Arguments: $group, $field, $accessor Returns: \&accessor_coderef ? =back Called by mk_group_wo_accessors for each entry in @fieldspec. Either returns a coderef which will be installed at C<&__PACKAGE__::$accessor>, or returns C if it elects to install the coderef on its own. =cut sub make_group_wo_accessor { $gen_accessor->('wo', @_) } =head1 PERFORMANCE To provide total flexibility L calls methods internally while performing get/set actions, which makes it noticeably slower than similar modules. To compensate, this module will automatically use the insanely fast L to generate the C-group accessors if this module is available on your system. =head2 Benchmark This is the benchmark of 200 get/get/set/get/set cycles on perl 5.16.2 with thread support, showcasing how this modules L, L and L accessors stack up against most popular accessor builders: L, L, L, L (both pure-perl and XS variant), L, L, L, L, L and L Rate CAG_INHP CAG_INH CA CAG_S CAF moOse OTRW CAL mo moUse HANDMADE moo CAF_XS moUse_XS XSA CAG_INHP 287.021+-0.02/s -- -0.3% -10.0% -37.1% -53.1% -53.6% -53.7% -54.1% -56.9% -59.0% -59.6% -59.8% -78.7% -81.9% -83.5% CAG_INH 288.025+-0.031/s 0.3% -- -9.7% -36.9% -52.9% -53.5% -53.5% -53.9% -56.7% -58.8% -59.5% -59.7% -78.6% -81.9% -83.5% CA 318.967+-0.047/s 11.1% 10.7% -- -30.1% -47.9% -48.5% -48.5% -49.0% -52.1% -54.4% -55.1% -55.3% -76.3% -79.9% -81.7% CAG_S 456.107+-0.054/s 58.9% 58.4% 43.0% -- -25.4% -26.3% -26.4% -27.0% -31.5% -34.8% -35.8% -36.1% -66.1% -71.3% -73.9% CAF 611.745+-0.099/s 113.1% 112.4% 91.8% 34.1% -- -1.2% -1.2% -2.1% -8.1% -12.6% -14.0% -14.3% -54.5% -61.5% -64.9% moOse 619.051+-0.059/s 115.7% 114.9% 94.1% 35.7% 1.2% -- -0.1% -1.0% -7.0% -11.6% -12.9% -13.3% -54.0% -61.0% -64.5% OTRW 619.475+-0.1/s 115.8% 115.1% 94.2% 35.8% 1.3% 0.1% -- -0.9% -6.9% -11.5% -12.9% -13.2% -54.0% -61.0% -64.5% CAL 625.106+-0.085/s 117.8% 117.0% 96.0% 37.1% 2.2% 1.0% 0.9% -- -6.1% -10.7% -12.1% -12.5% -53.5% -60.6% -64.2% mo 665.44+-0.12/s 131.8% 131.0% 108.6% 45.9% 8.8% 7.5% 7.4% 6.5% -- -4.9% -6.4% -6.8% -50.5% -58.1% -61.9% moUse 699.9+-0.15/s 143.9% 143.0% 119.4% 53.5% 14.4% 13.1% 13.0% 12.0% 5.2% -- -1.6% -2.0% -48.0% -55.9% -59.9% HANDMADE 710.98+-0.16/s 147.7% 146.8% 122.9% 55.9% 16.2% 14.9% 14.8% 13.7% 6.8% 1.6% -- -0.4% -47.2% -55.2% -59.2% moo 714.04+-0.13/s 148.8% 147.9% 123.9% 56.6% 16.7% 15.3% 15.3% 14.2% 7.3% 2.0% 0.4% -- -46.9% -55.0% -59.1% CAF_XS 1345.55+-0.051/s 368.8% 367.2% 321.8% 195.0% 120.0% 117.4% 117.2% 115.3% 102.2% 92.2% 89.3% 88.4% -- -15.3% -22.9% moUse_XS 1588+-0.036/s 453.3% 451.3% 397.9% 248.2% 159.6% 156.5% 156.3% 154.0% 138.6% 126.9% 123.4% 122.4% 18.0% -- -9.0% XSA 1744.67+-0.052/s 507.9% 505.7% 447.0% 282.5% 185.2% 181.8% 181.6% 179.1% 162.2% 149.3% 145.4% 144.3% 29.7% 9.9% -- Benchmarking program is available in the root of the L: =head2 Notes on Class::XSAccessor You can force (or disable) the use of L before creating a particular C accessor by either manipulating the global variable C<$Class::Accessor::Grouped::USE_XS> to true or false (preferably with L, or you can do so before runtime via the C environment variable. Since L has no knowledge of L and L this module does its best to detect if you are overriding one of these methods and will fall back to using the perl version of the accessor in order to maintain consistency. However be aware that if you enable use of C (automatically or explicitly), create an object, invoke a simple accessor on that object, and B manipulate the symbol table to install a C override - you get to keep all the pieces. =head1 AUTHORS Matt S. Trout Christopher H. Laco =head1 CONTRIBUTORS Caelum: Rafael Kitover frew: Arthur Axel "fREW" Schmidt groditi: Guillermo Roditi Jason Plum ribasushi: Peter Rabbitson =head1 COPYRIGHT & LICENSE Copyright (c) 2006-2010 Matt S. Trout This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as perl itself. =cut ######################################################################## ######################################################################## ######################################################################## # # Here be many angry dragons # (all code is in private coderefs since everything inherits CAG) # ######################################################################## ######################################################################## # Autodetect unless flag supplied my $xsa_autodetected; if (! defined $USE_XS) { $USE_XS = __CAG_ENV__::NO_CXSA ? 0 : 1; $xsa_autodetected++; } my $maker_templates = { rw => { cxsa_call => 'accessors', pp_generator => sub { # my ($group, $fieldname) = @_; my $quoted_fieldname = __CAG_ENV__::perlstring($_[1]); sprintf <<'EOS', ($_[0], $quoted_fieldname) x 2; @_ > 1 ? shift->set_%s(%s, @_) : shift->get_%s(%s) EOS }, }, ro => { cxsa_call => 'getters', pp_generator => sub { # my ($group, $fieldname) = @_; my $quoted_fieldname = __CAG_ENV__::perlstring($_[1]); sprintf <<'EOS', $_[0], $quoted_fieldname; @_ > 1 ? do { my ($meth) = (caller(0))[3] =~ /([^\:]+)$/; my $class = length( ref($_[0]) ) ? ref($_[0]) : $_[0]; Carp::croak( "'$meth' cannot alter its value (read-only attribute of class $class)" ); } : shift->get_%s(%s) EOS }, }, wo => { cxsa_call => 'setters', pp_generator => sub { # my ($group, $fieldname) = @_; my $quoted_fieldname = __CAG_ENV__::perlstring($_[1]); sprintf <<'EOS', $_[0], $quoted_fieldname; @_ > 1 ? shift->set_%s(%s, @_) : do { my ($meth) = (caller(0))[3] =~ /([^\:]+)$/; my $class = length( ref($_[0]) ) ? ref($_[0]) : $_[0]; Carp::croak( "'$meth' cannot access its value (write-only attribute of class $class)" ); } EOS }, }, }; my $cag_eval = sub { #my ($src, $no_warnings, $err_msg) = @_; my $src = sprintf "{ %s warnings; use strict; no strict 'refs'; %s }", $_[1] ? 'no' : 'use', $_[0], ; my (@rv, $err); { local $@ if __CAG_ENV__::UNSTABLE_DOLLARAT; wantarray ? @rv = eval $src : $rv[0] = eval $src ; $err = $@ if $@ ne ''; } Carp::croak(join ': ', ($_[2] || 'String-eval failed'), "$err\n$src\n" ) if defined $err; wantarray ? @rv : $rv[0]; }; my ($accessor_maker_cache, $no_xsa_warned_classes); # can't use pkg_gen to track this stuff, as it doesn't # detect superclass mucking my $original_simple_getter = __PACKAGE__->can ('get_simple'); my $original_simple_setter = __PACKAGE__->can ('set_simple'); my ($resolved_methods, $cag_produced_crefs); sub CLONE { my @crefs = grep { defined $_ } values %{$cag_produced_crefs||{}}; $cag_produced_crefs = @crefs ? { map { $_ => $_ } @crefs } : undef ; } # Note!!! Unusual signature $gen_accessor = sub { my ($type, $class, $group, $field, $methname) = @_; $class = ref $class if length ref $class; # When installing an XSA simple accessor, we need to make sure we are not # short-circuiting a (compile or runtime) get_simple/set_simple override. # What we do here is install a lazy first-access check, which will decide # the ultimate coderef being placed in the accessor slot # # Also note that the *original* class will always retain this shim, as # different branches inheriting from it may have different overrides. # Thus the final method (properly labeled and all) is installed in the # calling-package's namespace if ($USE_XS and $group eq 'simple') { die sprintf( "Class::XSAccessor requested but not available:\n%s\n", __CAG_ENV__::NO_CXSA ) if __CAG_ENV__::NO_CXSA; my $ret = sub { my $current_class = length (ref ($_[0] ) ) ? ref ($_[0]) : $_[0]; my $resolved_implementation = $resolved_methods->{$current_class}{$methname} ||= do { if ( ($current_class->can('get_simple')||0) == $original_simple_getter && ($current_class->can('set_simple')||0) == $original_simple_setter ) { # nothing has changed, might as well use the XS crefs # # note that by the time this code executes, we already have # *objects* (since XSA works on 'simple' only by definition). # If someone is mucking with the symbol table *after* there # are some objects already - look! many, shiny pieces! :) # # The weird breeder thingy is because XSA does not have an # interface returning *just* a coderef, without installing it # anywhere :( Class::XSAccessor->import( replace => 1, class => '__CAG__XSA__BREEDER__', $maker_templates->{$type}{cxsa_call} => { $methname => $field, }, ); __CAG__XSA__BREEDER__->can($methname); } else { if (! $xsa_autodetected and ! $no_xsa_warned_classes->{$current_class}++) { # not using Carp since the line where this happens doesn't mean much warn 'Explicitly requested use of Class::XSAccessor disabled for objects of class ' . "'$current_class' inheriting from '$class' due to an overriden get_simple and/or " . "set_simple\n"; } do { # that's faster than local $USE_XS = 0; my $c = $gen_accessor->($type, $class, 'simple', $field, $methname); $USE_XS = 1; $c; }; } }; # if after this shim was created someone wrapped it with an 'around', # we can not blindly reinstall the method slot - we will destroy the # wrapper. Silently chain execution further... if ( ! $cag_produced_crefs->{ $current_class->can($methname) || 0 } ) { # older perls segfault if the cref behind the goto throws # http://rt.perl.org/rt3/Public/Bug/Display.html?id=35878 return $resolved_implementation->(@_) if __CAG_ENV__::BROKEN_GOTO; goto $resolved_implementation; } if (__CAG_ENV__::TRACK_UNDEFER_FAIL) { my $deferred_calls_seen = do { no strict 'refs'; \%{"${current_class}::__cag_deferred_xs_shim_invocations"} }; my @cframe = caller(0); if (my $already_seen = $deferred_calls_seen->{$cframe[3]}) { Carp::carp ( "Deferred version of method $cframe[3] invoked more than once (originally " . "invoked at $already_seen). This is a strong indication your code has " . 'cached the original ->can derived method coderef, and is using it instead ' . 'of the proper method re-lookup, causing minor performance regressions' ); } else { $deferred_calls_seen->{$cframe[3]} = "$cframe[1] line $cframe[2]"; } } # install the resolved implementation into the code slot so we do not # come here anymore (hopefully) # since XSAccessor was available - so is Sub::Name { no strict 'refs'; no warnings 'redefine'; my $fq_name = "${current_class}::${methname}"; *$fq_name = Sub::Name::subname($fq_name, $resolved_implementation); } # now things are installed - one ref less to carry delete $resolved_methods->{$current_class}{$methname}; # but need to record it in the expectation registry *in case* it # was cached via ->can for some moronic reason Scalar::Util::weaken( $cag_produced_crefs->{$resolved_implementation} = $resolved_implementation ); # older perls segfault if the cref behind the goto throws # http://rt.perl.org/rt3/Public/Bug/Display.html?id=35878 return $resolved_implementation->(@_) if __CAG_ENV__::BROKEN_GOTO; goto $resolved_implementation; }; Scalar::Util::weaken($cag_produced_crefs->{$ret} = $ret); $ret; # returning shim } # no Sub::Name - just install the coderefs directly (compiling every time) elsif (__CAG_ENV__::NO_SUBNAME) { my $src = $accessor_maker_cache->{source}{$type}{$group}{$field} ||= $maker_templates->{$type}{pp_generator}->($group, $field); $cag_eval->( "no warnings 'redefine'; sub ${class}::${methname} { $src }; 1", ); undef; # so that no further attempt will be made to install anything } # a coderef generator with a variable pad (returns a fresh cref on every invocation) else { ($accessor_maker_cache->{pp}{$type}{$group}{$field} ||= do { my $src = $accessor_maker_cache->{source}{$type}{$group}{$field} ||= $maker_templates->{$type}{pp_generator}->($group, $field); $cag_eval->( "sub { my \$dummy; sub { \$dummy if 0; $src } }" ); })->() } }; 1;