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Code Editor : Fatal.pm
package Fatal; # ABSTRACT: Replace functions with equivalents which succeed or die use 5.008; # 5.8.x needed for autodie use Carp; use strict; use warnings; use Tie::RefHash; # To cache subroutine refs use Config; use constant PERL510 => ( $] >= 5.010 ); use constant LEXICAL_TAG => q{:lexical}; use constant VOID_TAG => q{:void}; use constant INSIST_TAG => q{!}; use constant ERROR_NOARGS => 'Cannot use lexical %s with no arguments'; use constant ERROR_VOID_LEX => VOID_TAG.' cannot be used with lexical scope'; use constant ERROR_LEX_FIRST => LEXICAL_TAG.' must be used as first argument'; use constant ERROR_NO_LEX => "no %s can only start with ".LEXICAL_TAG; use constant ERROR_BADNAME => "Bad subroutine name for %s: %s"; use constant ERROR_NOTSUB => "%s is not a Perl subroutine"; use constant ERROR_NOT_BUILT => "%s is neither a builtin, nor a Perl subroutine"; use constant ERROR_NOHINTS => "No user hints defined for %s"; use constant ERROR_CANT_OVERRIDE => "Cannot make the non-overridable builtin %s fatal"; use constant ERROR_NO_IPC_SYS_SIMPLE => "IPC::System::Simple required for Fatalised/autodying system()"; use constant ERROR_IPC_SYS_SIMPLE_OLD => "IPC::System::Simple version %f required for Fatalised/autodying system(). We only have version %f"; use constant ERROR_AUTODIE_CONFLICT => q{"no autodie '%s'" is not allowed while "use Fatal '%s'" is in effect}; use constant ERROR_FATAL_CONFLICT => q{"use Fatal '%s'" is not allowed while "no autodie '%s'" is in effect}; use constant ERROR_58_HINTS => q{Non-subroutine %s hints for %s are not supported under Perl 5.8.x}; # Older versions of IPC::System::Simple don't support all the # features we need. use constant MIN_IPC_SYS_SIMPLE_VER => 0.12; our $VERSION = '2.16'; # VERSION: Generated by DZP::OurPkg::Version our $Debug ||= 0; # EWOULDBLOCK values for systems that don't supply their own. # Even though this is defined with our, that's to help our # test code. Please don't rely upon this variable existing in # the future. our %_EWOULDBLOCK = ( MSWin32 => 33, ); # the linux parisc port has separate EAGAIN and EWOULDBLOCK, # and the kernel returns EAGAIN my $try_EAGAIN = ($^O eq 'linux' and $Config{archname} =~ /hppa|parisc/) ? 1 : 0; # We have some tags that can be passed in for use with import. # These are all assumed to be CORE:: my %TAGS = ( ':io' => [qw(:dbm :file :filesys :ipc :socket read seek sysread syswrite sysseek )], ':dbm' => [qw(dbmopen dbmclose)], ':file' => [qw(open close flock sysopen fcntl fileno binmode ioctl truncate)], ':filesys' => [qw(opendir closedir chdir link unlink rename mkdir symlink rmdir readlink umask chmod chown utime)], ':ipc' => [qw(:msg :semaphore :shm pipe kill)], ':msg' => [qw(msgctl msgget msgrcv msgsnd)], ':threads' => [qw(fork)], ':semaphore'=>[qw(semctl semget semop)], ':shm' => [qw(shmctl shmget shmread)], ':system' => [qw(system exec)], # Can we use qw(getpeername getsockname)? What do they do on failure? # TODO - Can socket return false? ':socket' => [qw(accept bind connect getsockopt listen recv send setsockopt shutdown socketpair)], # Our defaults don't include system(), because it depends upon # an optional module, and it breaks the exotic form. # # This *may* change in the future. I'd love IPC::System::Simple # to be a dependency rather than a recommendation, and hence for # system() to be autodying by default. ':default' => [qw(:io :threads)], # Everything in v2.07 and brefore. This was :default less chmod and chown ':v207' => [qw(:threads :dbm :socket read seek sysread syswrite sysseek open close flock sysopen fcntl fileno binmode ioctl truncate opendir closedir chdir link unlink rename mkdir symlink rmdir readlink umask :msg :semaphore :shm pipe)], # Chmod was added in 2.13 ':v213' => [qw(:v207 chmod)], # chown, utime, kill were added in 2.14 ':v214' => [qw(:v213 chown utime kill)], # Version specific tags. These allow someone to specify # use autodie qw(:1.994) and know exactly what they'll get. ':1.994' => [qw(:v207)], ':1.995' => [qw(:v207)], ':1.996' => [qw(:v207)], ':1.997' => [qw(:v207)], ':1.998' => [qw(:v207)], ':1.999' => [qw(:v207)], ':1.999_01' => [qw(:v207)], ':2.00' => [qw(:v207)], ':2.01' => [qw(:v207)], ':2.02' => [qw(:v207)], ':2.03' => [qw(:v207)], ':2.04' => [qw(:v207)], ':2.05' => [qw(:v207)], ':2.06' => [qw(:v207)], ':2.06_01' => [qw(:v207)], ':2.07' => [qw(:v207)], # Last release without chmod ':2.08' => [qw(:v213)], ':2.09' => [qw(:v213)], ':2.10' => [qw(:v213)], ':2.11' => [qw(:v213)], ':2.12' => [qw(:v213)], ':2.13' => [qw(:v213)], ':2.14' => [qw(:default)], ':2.15' => [qw(:default)], ':2.16' => [qw(:default)], ); # chmod was only introduced in 2.07 # chown was only introduced in 2.14 $TAGS{':all'} = [ keys %TAGS ]; # This hash contains subroutines for which we should # subroutine() // die() rather than subroutine() || die() my %Use_defined_or; # CORE::open returns undef on failure. It can legitimately return # 0 on success, eg: open(my $fh, '-|') || exec(...); @Use_defined_or{qw( CORE::fork CORE::recv CORE::send CORE::open CORE::fileno CORE::read CORE::readlink CORE::sysread CORE::syswrite CORE::sysseek CORE::umask )} = (); # Some functions can return true because they changed *some* things, but # not all of them. This is a list of offending functions, and how many # items to subtract from @_ to determine the "success" value they return. my %Returns_num_things_changed = ( 'CORE::chmod' => 1, 'CORE::chown' => 2, 'CORE::kill' => 1, # TODO: Could this return anything on negative args? 'CORE::unlink' => 0, 'CORE::utime' => 2, ); # Optional actions to take on the return value before returning it. my %Retval_action = ( "CORE::open" => q{ # apply the open pragma from our caller if( defined $retval ) { # Get the caller's hint hash my $hints = (caller 0)[10]; # Decide if we're reading or writing and apply the appropriate encoding # These keys are undocumented. # Match what PerlIO_context_layers() does. Read gets the read layer, # everything else gets the write layer. my $encoding = $_[1] =~ /^\+?>/ ? $hints->{"open>"} : $hints->{"open<"}; # Apply the encoding, if any. if( $encoding ) { binmode $_[0], $encoding; } } }, "CORE::sysopen" => q{ # apply the open pragma from our caller if( defined $retval ) { # Get the caller's hint hash my $hints = (caller 0)[10]; require Fcntl; # Decide if we're reading or writing and apply the appropriate encoding. # Match what PerlIO_context_layers() does. Read gets the read layer, # everything else gets the write layer. my $open_read_only = !($_[2] ^ Fcntl::O_RDONLY()); my $encoding = $open_read_only ? $hints->{"open<"} : $hints->{"open>"}; # Apply the encoding, if any. if( $encoding ) { binmode $_[0], $encoding; } } }, ); # Cached_fatalised_sub caches the various versions of our # fatalised subs as they're produced. This means we don't # have to build our own replacement of CORE::open and friends # for every single package that wants to use them. my %Cached_fatalised_sub = (); # Every time we're called with package scope, we record the subroutine # (including package or CORE::) in %Package_Fatal. This allows us # to detect illegal combinations of autodie and Fatal, and makes sure # we don't accidently make a Fatal function autodying (which isn't # very useful). my %Package_Fatal = (); # The first time we're called with a user-sub, we cache it here. # In the case of a "no autodie ..." we put back the cached copy. my %Original_user_sub = (); # Is_fatalised_sub simply records a big map of fatalised subroutine # refs. It means we can avoid repeating work, or fatalising something # we've already processed. my %Is_fatalised_sub = (); tie %Is_fatalised_sub, 'Tie::RefHash'; # We use our package in a few hash-keys. Having it in a scalar is # convenient. The "guard $PACKAGE" string is used as a key when # setting up lexical guards. my $PACKAGE = __PACKAGE__; my $PACKAGE_GUARD = "guard $PACKAGE"; my $NO_PACKAGE = "no $PACKAGE"; # Used to detect 'no autodie' # Here's where all the magic happens when someone write 'use Fatal' # or 'use autodie'. sub import { my $class = shift(@_); my @original_args = @_; my $void = 0; my $lexical = 0; my $insist_hints = 0; my ($pkg, $filename) = caller(); @_ or return; # 'use Fatal' is a no-op. # If we see the :lexical flag, then _all_ arguments are # changed lexically if ($_[0] eq LEXICAL_TAG) { $lexical = 1; shift @_; # If we see no arguments and :lexical, we assume they # wanted ':default'. if (@_ == 0) { push(@_, ':default'); } # Don't allow :lexical with :void, it's needlessly confusing. if ( grep { $_ eq VOID_TAG } @_ ) { croak(ERROR_VOID_LEX); } } if ( grep { $_ eq LEXICAL_TAG } @_ ) { # If we see the lexical tag as the non-first argument, complain. croak(ERROR_LEX_FIRST); } my @fatalise_these = @_; # Thiese subs will get unloaded at the end of lexical scope. my %unload_later; # This hash helps us track if we've alredy done work. my %done_this; # NB: we're using while/shift rather than foreach, since # we'll be modifying the array as we walk through it. while (my $func = shift @fatalise_these) { if ($func eq VOID_TAG) { # When we see :void, set the void flag. $void = 1; } elsif ($func eq INSIST_TAG) { $insist_hints = 1; } elsif (exists $TAGS{$func}) { # When it's a tag, expand it. push(@fatalise_these, @{ $TAGS{$func} }); } else { # Otherwise, fatalise it. # Check to see if there's an insist flag at the front. # If so, remove it, and insist we have hints for this sub. my $insist_this; if ($func =~ s/^!//) { $insist_this = 1; } # TODO: Even if we've already fatalised, we should # check we've done it with hints (if $insist_hints). # If we've already made something fatal this call, # then don't do it twice. next if $done_this{$func}; # We're going to make a subroutine fatalistic. # However if we're being invoked with 'use Fatal qw(x)' # and we've already been called with 'no autodie qw(x)' # in the same scope, we consider this to be an error. # Mixing Fatal and autodie effects was considered to be # needlessly confusing on p5p. my $sub = $func; $sub = "${pkg}::$sub" unless $sub =~ /::/; # If we're being called as Fatal, and we've previously # had a 'no X' in scope for the subroutine, then complain # bitterly. if (! $lexical and $^H{$NO_PACKAGE}{$sub}) { croak(sprintf(ERROR_FATAL_CONFLICT, $func, $func)); } # We're not being used in a confusing way, so make # the sub fatal. Note that _make_fatal returns the # old (original) version of the sub, or undef for # built-ins. my $sub_ref = $class->_make_fatal( $func, $pkg, $void, $lexical, $filename, ( $insist_this || $insist_hints ) ); $done_this{$func}++; $Original_user_sub{$sub} ||= $sub_ref; # If we're making lexical changes, we need to arrange # for them to be cleaned at the end of our scope, so # record them here. $unload_later{$func} = $sub_ref if $lexical; } } if ($lexical) { # Dark magic to have autodie work under 5.8 # Copied from namespace::clean, that copied it from # autobox, that found it on an ancient scroll written # in blood. # This magic bit causes %^H to be lexically scoped. $^H |= 0x020000; # Our package guard gets invoked when we leave our lexical # scope. push(@ { $^H{$PACKAGE_GUARD} }, autodie::Scope::Guard->new(sub { $class->_install_subs($pkg, \%unload_later); })); # To allow others to determine when autodie was in scope, # and with what arguments, we also set a %^H hint which # is how we were called. # This feature should be considered EXPERIMENTAL, and # may change without notice. Please e-mail pjf@cpan.org # if you're actually using it. $^H{autodie} = "$PACKAGE @original_args"; } return; } # The code here is originally lifted from namespace::clean, # by Robert "phaylon" Sedlacek. # # It's been redesigned after feedback from ikegami on perlmonks. # See http://perlmonks.org/?node_id=693338 . Ikegami rocks. # # Given a package, and hash of (subname => subref) pairs, # we install the given subroutines into the package. If # a subref is undef, the subroutine is removed. Otherwise # it replaces any existing subs which were already there. sub _install_subs { my ($class, $pkg, $subs_to_reinstate) = @_; my $pkg_sym = "${pkg}::"; # It does not hurt to do this in a predictable order, and might help debugging. foreach my $sub_name (sort keys %$subs_to_reinstate) { my $sub_ref= $subs_to_reinstate->{$sub_name}; my $full_path = $pkg_sym.$sub_name; # Copy symbols across to temp area. no strict 'refs'; ## no critic local *__tmp = *{ $full_path }; # Nuke the old glob. { no strict; delete $pkg_sym->{$sub_name}; } ## no critic # Copy innocent bystanders back. Note that we lose # formats; it seems that Perl versions up to 5.10.0 # have a bug which causes copying formats to end up in # the scalar slot. Thanks to Ben Morrow for spotting this. foreach my $slot (qw( SCALAR ARRAY HASH IO ) ) { next unless defined *__tmp{ $slot }; *{ $full_path } = *__tmp{ $slot }; } # Put back the old sub (if there was one). if ($sub_ref) { no strict; ## no critic *{ $pkg_sym . $sub_name } = $sub_ref; } } return; } sub unimport { my $class = shift; # Calling "no Fatal" must start with ":lexical" if ($_[0] ne LEXICAL_TAG) { croak(sprintf(ERROR_NO_LEX,$class)); } shift @_; # Remove :lexical my $pkg = (caller)[0]; # If we've been called with arguments, then the developer # has explicitly stated 'no autodie qw(blah)', # in which case, we disable Fatalistic behaviour for 'blah'. my @unimport_these = @_ ? @_ : ':all'; while (my $symbol = shift @unimport_these) { if ($symbol =~ /^:/) { # Looks like a tag! Expand it! push(@unimport_these, @{ $TAGS{$symbol} }); next; } my $sub = $symbol; $sub = "${pkg}::$sub" unless $sub =~ /::/; # If 'blah' was already enabled with Fatal (which has package # scope) then, this is considered an error. if (exists $Package_Fatal{$sub}) { croak(sprintf(ERROR_AUTODIE_CONFLICT,$symbol,$symbol)); } # Record 'no autodie qw($sub)' as being in effect. # This is to catch conflicting semantics elsewhere # (eg, mixing Fatal with no autodie) $^H{$NO_PACKAGE}{$sub} = 1; if (my $original_sub = $Original_user_sub{$sub}) { # Hey, we've got an original one of these, put it back. $class->_install_subs($pkg, { $symbol => $original_sub }); next; } # We don't have an original copy of the sub, on the assumption # it's core (or doesn't exist), we'll just nuke it. $class->_install_subs($pkg,{ $symbol => undef }); } return; } # TODO - This is rather terribly inefficient right now. # NB: Perl::Critic's dump-autodie-tag-contents depends upon this # continuing to work. { my %tag_cache; sub _expand_tag { my ($class, $tag) = @_; if (my $cached = $tag_cache{$tag}) { return $cached; } if (not exists $TAGS{$tag}) { croak "Invalid exception class $tag"; } my @to_process = @{$TAGS{$tag}}; my @taglist = (); while (my $item = shift @to_process) { if ($item =~ /^:/) { # Expand :tags push(@to_process, @{$TAGS{$item}} ); } else { push(@taglist, "CORE::$item"); } } $tag_cache{$tag} = \@taglist; return \@taglist; } } # This code is from the original Fatal. It scares me. # It is 100% compatible with the 5.10.0 Fatal module, right down # to the scary 'XXXX' comment. ;) sub fill_protos { my $proto = shift; my ($n, $isref, @out, @out1, $seen_semi) = -1; while ($proto =~ /\S/) { $n++; push(@out1,[$n,@out]) if $seen_semi; push(@out, $1 . "{\$_[$n]}"), next if $proto =~ s/^\s*\\([\@%\$\&])//; push(@out, "\$_[$n]"), next if $proto =~ s/^\s*([_*\$&])//; push(@out, "\@_[$n..\$#_]"), last if $proto =~ s/^\s*(;\s*)?\@//; $seen_semi = 1, $n--, next if $proto =~ s/^\s*;//; # XXXX ???? die "Internal error: Unknown prototype letters: \"$proto\""; } push(@out1,[$n+1,@out]); return @out1; } # This is a backwards compatible version of _write_invocation. It's # recommended you don't use it. sub write_invocation { my ($core, $call, $name, $void, @args) = @_; return Fatal->_write_invocation( $core, $call, $name, $void, 0, # Lexical flag undef, # Sub, unused in legacy mode undef, # Subref, unused in legacy mode. @args ); } # This version of _write_invocation is used internally. It's not # recommended you call it from external code, as the interface WILL # change in the future. sub _write_invocation { my ($class, $core, $call, $name, $void, $lexical, $sub, $sref, @argvs) = @_; if (@argvs == 1) { # No optional arguments my @argv = @{$argvs[0]}; shift @argv; return $class->_one_invocation($core,$call,$name,$void,$sub,! $lexical, $sref, @argv); } else { my $else = "\t"; my (@out, @argv, $n); while (@argvs) { @argv = @{shift @argvs}; $n = shift @argv; my $condition = "\@_ == $n"; if (@argv and $argv[-1] =~ /#_/) { # This argv ends with '@' in the prototype, so it matches # any number of args >= the number of expressions in the # argv. $condition = "\@_ >= $n"; } push @out, "${else}if ($condition) {\n"; $else = "\t} els"; push @out, $class->_one_invocation($core,$call,$name,$void,$sub,! $lexical, $sref, @argv); } push @out, qq[ } die "Internal error: $name(\@_): Do not expect to get ", scalar(\@_), " arguments"; ]; return join '', @out; } } # This is a slim interface to ensure backward compatibility with # anyone doing very foolish things with old versions of Fatal. sub one_invocation { my ($core, $call, $name, $void, @argv) = @_; return Fatal->_one_invocation( $core, $call, $name, $void, undef, # Sub. Unused in back-compat mode. 1, # Back-compat flag undef, # Subref, unused in back-compat mode. @argv ); } # This is the internal interface that generates code. # NOTE: This interface WILL change in the future. Please do not # call this subroutine directly. # TODO: Whatever's calling this code has already looked up hints. Pass # them in, rather than look them up a second time. sub _one_invocation { my ($class, $core, $call, $name, $void, $sub, $back_compat, $sref, @argv) = @_; # If someone is calling us directly (a child class perhaps?) then # they could try to mix void without enabling backwards # compatibility. We just don't support this at all, so we gripe # about it rather than doing something unwise. if ($void and not $back_compat) { Carp::confess("Internal error: :void mode not supported with $class"); } # @argv only contains the results of the in-built prototype # function, and is therefore safe to interpolate in the # code generators below. # TODO - The following clobbers context, but that's what the # old Fatal did. Do we care? if ($back_compat) { # Use Fatal qw(system) will never be supported. It generated # a compile-time error with legacy Fatal, and there's no reason # to support it when autodie does a better job. if ($call eq 'CORE::system') { return q{ croak("UNIMPLEMENTED: use Fatal qw(system) not supported."); }; } local $" = ', '; if ($void) { return qq/return (defined wantarray)?$call(@argv): $call(@argv) || Carp::croak("Can't $name(\@_)/ . ($core ? ': $!' : ', \$! is \"$!\"') . '")' } else { return qq{return $call(@argv) || Carp::croak("Can't $name(\@_)} . ($core ? ': $!' : ', \$! is \"$!\"') . '")'; } } # The name of our original function is: # $call if the function is CORE # $sub if our function is non-CORE # The reason for this is that $call is what we're actualling # calling. For our core functions, this is always # CORE::something. However for user-defined subs, we're about to # replace whatever it is that we're calling; as such, we actually # calling a subroutine ref. my $human_sub_name = $core ? $call : $sub; # Should we be testing to see if our result is defined, or # just true? my $use_defined_or; my $hints; # All user-sub hints, including list hints. if ( $core ) { # Core hints are built into autodie. $use_defined_or = exists ( $Use_defined_or{$call} ); } else { # User sub hints are looked up using autodie::hints, # since users may wish to add their own hints. require autodie::hints; $hints = autodie::hints->get_hints_for( $sref ); # We'll look up the sub's fullname. This means we # get better reports of where it came from in our # error messages, rather than what imported it. $human_sub_name = autodie::hints->sub_fullname( $sref ); } # Checks for special core subs. if ($call eq 'CORE::system') { # Leverage IPC::System::Simple if we're making an autodying # system. local $" = ", "; # We need to stash $@ into $E, rather than using # local $@ for the whole sub. If we don't then # any exceptions from internal errors in autodie/Fatal # will mysteriously disappear before propogating # upwards. return qq{ my \$retval; my \$E; { local \$@; eval { \$retval = IPC::System::Simple::system(@argv); }; \$E = \$@; } if (\$E) { # TODO - This can't be overridden in child # classes! die autodie::exception::system->new( function => q{CORE::system}, args => [ @argv ], message => "\$E", errno => \$!, ); } return \$retval; }; } local $" = ', '; # If we're going to throw an exception, here's the code to use. my $die = qq{ die $class->throw( function => q{$human_sub_name}, args => [ @argv ], pragma => q{$class}, errno => \$!, context => \$context, return => \$retval, eval_error => \$@ ) }; if ($call eq 'CORE::flock') { # flock needs special treatment. When it fails with # LOCK_UN and EWOULDBLOCK, then it's not really fatal, it just # means we couldn't get the lock right now. require POSIX; # For POSIX::EWOULDBLOCK local $@; # Don't blat anyone else's $@. # Ensure that our vendor supports EWOULDBLOCK. If they # don't (eg, Windows), then we use known values for its # equivalent on other systems. my $EWOULDBLOCK = eval { POSIX::EWOULDBLOCK(); } || $_EWOULDBLOCK{$^O} || _autocroak("Internal error - can't overload flock - EWOULDBLOCK not defined on this system."); my $EAGAIN = $EWOULDBLOCK; if ($try_EAGAIN) { $EAGAIN = eval { POSIX::EAGAIN(); } || _autocroak("Internal error - can't overload flock - EAGAIN not defined on this system."); } require Fcntl; # For Fcntl::LOCK_NB return qq{ my \$context = wantarray() ? "list" : "scalar"; # Try to flock. If successful, return it immediately. my \$retval = $call(@argv); return \$retval if \$retval; # If we failed, but we're using LOCK_NB and # returned EWOULDBLOCK, it's not a real error. if (\$_[1] & Fcntl::LOCK_NB() and (\$! == $EWOULDBLOCK or ($try_EAGAIN and \$! == $EAGAIN ))) { return \$retval; } # Otherwise, we failed. Die noisily. $die; }; } if (exists $Returns_num_things_changed{$call}) { # Some things return the number of things changed (like # chown, kill, chmod, etc). We only consider these successful # if *all* the things are changed. return qq[ my \$num_things = \@_ - $Returns_num_things_changed{$call}; my \$retval = $call(@argv); if (\$retval != \$num_things) { # We need \$context to throw an exception. # It's *always* set to scalar, because that's how # autodie calls chown() above. my \$context = "scalar"; $die; } return \$retval; ]; } # AFAIK everything that can be given an unopned filehandle # will fail if it tries to use it, so we don't really need # the 'unopened' warning class here. Especially since they # then report the wrong line number. # Other warnings are disabled because they produce excessive # complaints from smart-match hints under 5.10.1. my $code = qq[ no warnings qw(unopened uninitialized numeric); if (wantarray) { my \@results = $call(@argv); my \$retval = \\\@results; my \$context = "list"; ]; my $retval_action = $Retval_action{$call} || ''; if ( $hints and ( ref($hints->{list} ) || "" ) eq 'CODE' ) { # NB: Subroutine hints are passed as a full list. # This differs from the 5.10.0 smart-match behaviour, # but means that context unaware subroutines can use # the same hints in both list and scalar context. $code .= qq{ if ( \$hints->{list}->(\@results) ) { $die }; }; } elsif ( PERL510 and $hints ) { $code .= qq{ if ( \@results ~~ \$hints->{list} ) { $die }; }; } elsif ( $hints ) { croak sprintf(ERROR_58_HINTS, 'list', $sub); } else { $code .= qq{ # An empty list, or a single undef is failure if (! \@results or (\@results == 1 and ! defined \$results[0])) { $die; } } } # Tidy up the end of our wantarray call. $code .= qq[ return \@results; } ]; # Otherwise, we're in scalar context. # We're never in a void context, since we have to look # at the result. $code .= qq{ my \$retval = $call(@argv); my \$context = "scalar"; }; if ( $hints and ( ref($hints->{scalar} ) || "" ) eq 'CODE' ) { # We always call code refs directly, since that always # works in 5.8.x, and always works in 5.10.1 return $code .= qq{ if ( \$hints->{scalar}->(\$retval) ) { $die }; $retval_action return \$retval; }; } elsif (PERL510 and $hints) { return $code . qq{ if ( \$retval ~~ \$hints->{scalar} ) { $die }; $retval_action return \$retval; }; } elsif ( $hints ) { croak sprintf(ERROR_58_HINTS, 'scalar', $sub); } return $code . ( $use_defined_or ? qq{ $die if not defined \$retval; $retval_action return \$retval; } : qq{ $retval_action return \$retval || $die; } ) ; } # This returns the old copy of the sub, so we can # put it back at end of scope. # TODO : Check to make sure prototypes are restored correctly. # TODO: Taking a huge list of arguments is awful. Rewriting to # take a hash would be lovely. # TODO - BACKCOMPAT - This is not yet compatible with 5.10.0 sub _make_fatal { my($class, $sub, $pkg, $void, $lexical, $filename, $insist) = @_; my($name, $code, $sref, $real_proto, $proto, $core, $call, $hints); my $ini = $sub; $sub = "${pkg}::$sub" unless $sub =~ /::/; # Figure if we're using lexical or package semantics and # twiddle the appropriate bits. if (not $lexical) { $Package_Fatal{$sub} = 1; } # TODO - We *should* be able to do skipping, since we know when # we've lexicalised / unlexicalised a subroutine. $name = $sub; $name =~ s/.*::// or $name =~ s/^&//; warn "# _make_fatal: sub=$sub pkg=$pkg name=$name void=$void\n" if $Debug; croak(sprintf(ERROR_BADNAME, $class, $name)) unless $name =~ /^\w+$/; if (defined(&$sub)) { # user subroutine # NOTE: Previously we would localise $@ at this point, so # the following calls to eval {} wouldn't interfere with anything # that's already in $@. Unfortunately, it would also stop # any of our croaks from triggering(!), which is even worse. # This could be something that we've fatalised that # was in core. if ( $Package_Fatal{$sub} and do { local $@; eval { prototype "CORE::$name" } } ) { # Something we previously made Fatal that was core. # This is safe to replace with an autodying to core # version. $core = 1; $call = "CORE::$name"; $proto = prototype $call; # We return our $sref from this subroutine later # on, indicating this subroutine should be placed # back when we're finished. $sref = \&$sub; } else { # If this is something we've already fatalised or played with, # then look-up the name of the original sub for the rest of # our processing. $sub = $Is_fatalised_sub{\&$sub} || $sub; # A regular user sub, or a user sub wrapping a # core sub. $sref = \&$sub; $proto = prototype $sref; $call = '&$sref'; require autodie::hints; $hints = autodie::hints->get_hints_for( $sref ); # If we've insisted on hints, but don't have them, then # bail out! if ($insist and not $hints) { croak(sprintf(ERROR_NOHINTS, $name)); } # Otherwise, use the default hints if we don't have # any. $hints ||= autodie::hints::DEFAULT_HINTS(); } } elsif ($sub eq $ini && $sub !~ /^CORE::GLOBAL::/) { # Stray user subroutine croak(sprintf(ERROR_NOTSUB,$sub)); } elsif ($name eq 'system') { # If we're fatalising system, then we need to load # helper code. # The business with $E is to avoid clobbering our caller's # $@, and to avoid $@ being localised when we croak. my $E; { local $@; eval { require IPC::System::Simple; # Only load it if we need it. require autodie::exception::system; }; $E = $@; } if ($E) { croak ERROR_NO_IPC_SYS_SIMPLE; } # Make sure we're using a recent version of ISS that actually # support fatalised system. if ($IPC::System::Simple::VERSION < MIN_IPC_SYS_SIMPLE_VER) { croak sprintf( ERROR_IPC_SYS_SIMPLE_OLD, MIN_IPC_SYS_SIMPLE_VER, $IPC::System::Simple::VERSION ); } $call = 'CORE::system'; $name = 'system'; $core = 1; } elsif ($name eq 'exec') { # Exec doesn't have a prototype. We don't care. This # breaks the exotic form with lexical scope, and gives # the regular form a "do or die" beaviour as expected. $call = 'CORE::exec'; $name = 'exec'; $core = 1; } else { # CORE subroutine my $E; { local $@; $proto = eval { prototype "CORE::$name" }; $E = $@; } croak(sprintf(ERROR_NOT_BUILT,$name)) if $E; croak(sprintf(ERROR_CANT_OVERRIDE,$name)) if not defined $proto; $core = 1; $call = "CORE::$name"; } if (defined $proto) { $real_proto = " ($proto)"; } else { $real_proto = ''; $proto = '@'; } my $true_name = $core ? $call : $sub; # TODO: This caching works, but I don't like using $void and # $lexical as keys. In particular, I suspect our code may end up # wrapping already wrapped code when autodie and Fatal are used # together. # NB: We must use '$sub' (the name plus package) and not # just '$name' (the short name) here. Failing to do so # results code that's in the wrong package, and hence has # access to the wrong package filehandles. if (my $subref = $Cached_fatalised_sub{$class}{$sub}{$void}{$lexical}) { $class->_install_subs($pkg, { $name => $subref }); return $sref; } $code = qq[ sub$real_proto { local(\$", \$!) = (', ', 0); # TODO - Why do we do this? ]; # Don't have perl whine if exec fails, since we'll be handling # the exception now. $code .= "no warnings qw(exec);\n" if $call eq "CORE::exec"; my @protos = fill_protos($proto); $code .= $class->_write_invocation($core, $call, $name, $void, $lexical, $sub, $sref, @protos); $code .= "}\n"; warn $code if $Debug; # I thought that changing package was a monumental waste of # time for CORE subs, since they'll always be the same. However # that's not the case, since they may refer to package-based # filehandles (eg, with open). # # There is potential to more aggressively cache core subs # that we know will never want to interact with package variables # and filehandles. { no strict 'refs'; ## no critic # to avoid: Can't use string (...) as a symbol ref ... my $E; { local $@; $code = eval("package $pkg; require Carp; $code"); ## no critic $E = $@; } if (not $code) { croak("Internal error in autodie/Fatal processing $true_name: $E"); } } # Now we need to wrap our fatalised sub inside an itty bitty # closure, which can detect if we've leaked into another file. # Luckily, we only need to do this for lexical (autodie) # subs. Fatal subs can leak all they want, it's considered # a "feature" (or at least backwards compatible). # TODO: Cache our leak guards! # TODO: This is pretty hairy code. A lot more tests would # be really nice for this. my $leak_guard; if ($lexical) { $leak_guard = qq< package $pkg; sub$real_proto { # If we're inside a string eval, we can end up with a # whacky filename. The following code allows autodie # to propagate correctly into string evals. my \$caller_level = 0; my \$caller; while ( (\$caller = (caller \$caller_level)[1]) =~ m{^\\(eval \\d+\\)\$} ) { # If our filename is actually an eval, and we # reach it, then go to our autodying code immediatately. goto &\$code if (\$caller eq \$filename); \$caller_level++; } # We're now out of the eval stack. # If we're called from the correct file, then use the # autodying code. goto &\$code if ((caller \$caller_level)[1] eq \$filename); # Oh bother, we've leaked into another file. Call the # original code. Note that \$sref may actually be a # reference to a Fatalised version of a core built-in. # That's okay, because Fatal *always* leaks between files. goto &\$sref if \$sref; >; # If we're here, it must have been a core subroutine called. # Warning: The following code may disturb some viewers. # TODO: It should be possible to combine this with # write_invocation(). foreach my $proto (@protos) { local $" = ", "; # So @args is formatted correctly. my ($count, @args) = @$proto; $leak_guard .= qq< if (\@_ == $count) { return $call(@args); } >; } $leak_guard .= qq< Carp::croak("Internal error in Fatal/autodie. Leak-guard failure"); } >; # warn "$leak_guard\n"; my $E; { local $@; $leak_guard = eval $leak_guard; ## no critic $E = $@; } die "Internal error in $class: Leak-guard installation failure: $E" if $E; } my $installed_sub = $leak_guard || $code; $class->_install_subs($pkg, { $name => $installed_sub }); $Cached_fatalised_sub{$class}{$sub}{$void}{$lexical} = $installed_sub; # Cache that we've now overriddent this sub. If we get called # again, we may need to find that find subroutine again (eg, for hints). $Is_fatalised_sub{$installed_sub} = $sref; return $sref; } # This subroutine exists primarily so that child classes can override # it to point to their own exception class. Doing this is significantly # less complex than overriding throw() sub exception_class { return "autodie::exception" }; { my %exception_class_for; my %class_loaded; sub throw { my ($class, @args) = @_; # Find our exception class if we need it. my $exception_class = $exception_class_for{$class} ||= $class->exception_class; if (not $class_loaded{$exception_class}) { if ($exception_class =~ /[^\w:']/) { confess "Bad exception class '$exception_class'.\nThe '$class->exception_class' method wants to use $exception_class\nfor exceptions, but it contains characters which are not word-characters or colons."; } # Alas, Perl does turn barewords into modules unless they're # actually barewords. As such, we're left doing a string eval # to make sure we load our file correctly. my $E; { local $@; # We can't clobber $@, it's wrong! my $pm_file = $exception_class . ".pm"; $pm_file =~ s{ (?: :: | ' ) }{/}gx; eval { require $pm_file }; $E = $@; # Save $E despite ending our local. } # We need quotes around $@ to make sure it's stringified # while still in scope. Without them, we run the risk of # $@ having been cleared by us exiting the local() block. confess "Failed to load '$exception_class'.\nThis may be a typo in the '$class->exception_class' method,\nor the '$exception_class' module may not exist.\n\n $E" if $E; $class_loaded{$exception_class}++; } return $exception_class->new(@args); } } # For some reason, dying while replacing our subs doesn't # kill our calling program. It simply stops the loading of # autodie and keeps going with everything else. The _autocroak # sub allows us to die with a vegence. It should *only* ever be # used for serious internal errors, since the results of it can't # be captured. sub _autocroak { warn Carp::longmess(@_); exit(255); # Ugh! } package autodie::Scope::Guard; # This code schedules the cleanup of subroutines at the end of # scope. It's directly inspired by chocolateboy's excellent # Scope::Guard module. sub new { my ($class, $handler) = @_; return bless $handler, $class; } sub DESTROY { my ($self) = @_; $self->(); } 1; __END__ =head1 NAME Fatal - Replace functions with equivalents which succeed or die =head1 SYNOPSIS use Fatal qw(open close); open(my $fh, "<", $filename); # No need to check errors! use File::Copy qw(move); use Fatal qw(move); move($file1, $file2); # No need to check errors! sub juggle { . . . } Fatal->import('juggle'); =head1 BEST PRACTICE B<Fatal has been obsoleted by the new L<autodie> pragma.> Please use L<autodie> in preference to C<Fatal>. L<autodie> supports lexical scoping, throws real exception objects, and provides much nicer error messages. The use of C<:void> with Fatal is discouraged. =head1 DESCRIPTION C<Fatal> provides a way to conveniently replace functions which normally return a false value when they fail with equivalents which raise exceptions if they are not successful. This lets you use these functions without having to test their return values explicitly on each call. Exceptions can be caught using C<eval{}>. See L<perlfunc> and L<perlvar> for details. The do-or-die equivalents are set up simply by calling Fatal's C<import> routine, passing it the names of the functions to be replaced. You may wrap both user-defined functions and overridable CORE operators (except C<exec>, C<system>, C<print>, or any other built-in that cannot be expressed via prototypes) in this way. If the symbol C<:void> appears in the import list, then functions named later in that import list raise an exception only when these are called in void context--that is, when their return values are ignored. For example use Fatal qw/:void open close/; # properly checked, so no exception raised on error if (not open(my $fh, '<', '/bogotic') { warn "Can't open /bogotic: $!"; } # not checked, so error raises an exception close FH; The use of C<:void> is discouraged, as it can result in exceptions not being thrown if you I<accidentally> call a method without void context. Use L<autodie> instead if you need to be able to disable autodying/Fatal behaviour for a small block of code. =head1 DIAGNOSTICS =over 4 =item Bad subroutine name for Fatal: %s You've called C<Fatal> with an argument that doesn't look like a subroutine name, nor a switch that this version of Fatal understands. =item %s is not a Perl subroutine You've asked C<Fatal> to try and replace a subroutine which does not exist, or has not yet been defined. =item %s is neither a builtin, nor a Perl subroutine You've asked C<Fatal> to replace a subroutine, but it's not a Perl built-in, and C<Fatal> couldn't find it as a regular subroutine. It either doesn't exist or has not yet been defined. =item Cannot make the non-overridable %s fatal You've tried to use C<Fatal> on a Perl built-in that can't be overridden, such as C<print> or C<system>, which means that C<Fatal> can't help you, although some other modules might. See the L</"SEE ALSO"> section of this documentation. =item Internal error: %s You've found a bug in C<Fatal>. Please report it using the C<perlbug> command. =back =head1 BUGS C<Fatal> clobbers the context in which a function is called and always makes it a scalar context, except when the C<:void> tag is used. This problem does not exist in L<autodie>. "Used only once" warnings can be generated when C<autodie> or C<Fatal> is used with package filehandles (eg, C<FILE>). It's strongly recommended you use scalar filehandles instead. =head1 AUTHOR Original module by Lionel Cons (CERN). Prototype updates by Ilya Zakharevich <ilya@math.ohio-state.edu>. L<autodie> support, bugfixes, extended diagnostics, C<system> support, and major overhauling by Paul Fenwick <pjf@perltraining.com.au> =head1 LICENSE This module is free software, you may distribute it under the same terms as Perl itself. =head1 SEE ALSO L<autodie> for a nicer way to use lexical Fatal. L<IPC::System::Simple> for a similar idea for calls to C<system()> and backticks. =for Pod::Coverage exception_class fill_protos one_invocation throw write_invocation =cut
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