Class::C3::Adopt::NEXT - make NEXT suck less
version 0.14
package MyApp::Plugin::FooBar;
#use NEXT;
use Class::C3::Adopt::NEXT;
# or 'use Class::C3::Adopt::NEXT -no_warn;' to suppress warnings
# Or use warnings::register
# no warnings 'Class::C3::Adopt::NEXT';
# Or suppress warnings in a set of modules from one place
# no Class::C3::Adopt::NEXT qw/ Module1 Module2 Module3 /;
# Or suppress using a regex
# no Class::C3::Adopt::NEXT qr/^Module\d$/;
sub a_method {
my ($self) = @_;
# Do some stuff
# Re-dispatch method
# Note that this will generate a warning the _first_ time the package
# uses NEXT unless you un comment the 'no warnings' line above.
$self->NEXT::method();
}
NEXT was a good solution a few years ago, but isn't any more. It's slow, and the
order in which it re-dispatches methods appears random at times. It also
encourages bad programming practices, as you end up with code to re-dispatch
methods when all you really wanted to do was run some code before or after a
method fired.
However, if you have a large application, then weaning yourself off
"NEXT" isn't easy.
This module is intended as a drop-in replacement for NEXT, supporting the same
interface, but using Class::C3 to do the hard work. You can then write new
code without "NEXT", and migrate individual source files to use
"Class::C3" or method modifiers as appropriate, at whatever pace
you're comfortable with.
This module will warn once for each package using NEXT. It uses
warnings::register, and so can be disabled like by adding "no warnings
'Class::C3::Adopt::NEXT';" to each package which generates a warning, or
adding "use Class::C3::Adopt::NEXT -no_warn;", or disable multiple
modules at once by saying:
no Class::C3::Adopt::NEXT qw/ Module1 Module2 Module3 /;
somewhere before the warnings are first triggered. You can also setup entire
name spaces of modules which will not warn using a regex, e.g.
no Class::C3::Adopt::NEXT qr/^Module\d$/;
You add "use MRO::Compat" to the top of a package as you start
converting it, and gradually replace your calls to "NEXT::method()"
with "maybe::next::method()", and calls to
"NEXT::ACTUAL::method()" with "next::method()".
Example:
sub yourmethod {
my $self = shift;
# $self->NEXT::yourmethod(@_); becomes
$self->maybe::next::method();
}
sub othermethod {
my $self = shift;
# $self->NEXT::ACTUAL::yourmethodname(); becomes
$self->next::method();
}
On systems with Class::C3::XS present, this will automatically be used to speed
up method re-dispatch. If you are running perl version 5.9.5 or greater then
the C3 method resolution algorithm is included in perl. Correct use of
MRO::Compat as shown above allows your code to be seamlessly forward and
backwards compatible, taking advantage of native versions if available, but
falling back to using pure perl "Class::C3".
Use Moose and make all of your plugins Moose::Roles, then use method modifiers
to wrap methods.
Example:
package MyApp::Role::FooBar;
use Moose::Role;
before 'a_method' => sub {
my ($self) = @_;
# Do some stuff
};
around 'a_method' => sub {
my $orig = shift;
my $self = shift;
# Do some stuff before
my $ret = $self->$orig(@_); # Run wrapped method (or not!)
# Do some stuff after
return $ret;
};
package MyApp;
use Moose;
with 'MyApp::Role::FooBar';
There are some inheritance hierarchies that it is possible to create which
cannot be resolved to a simple C3 hierarchy. In that case, this module will
fall back to using "NEXT". In this case a warning will be emitted.
Because calculating the method resolution order of every class every time
"->NEXT::foo" is used from within it is too expensive, runtime
manipulations of @ISA are prohibited.
This module replaces "NEXT::AUTOLOAD" with its own version. If
warnings are enabled then a warning will be emitted on the first use of
"NEXT" by each package.
MRO::Compat and Class::C3 for method re-dispatch and Moose for method modifiers
and roles.
NEXT for documentation on the functionality you'll be removing.
- •
- Florian Ragwitz <[email protected]>
- •
- Tomas Doran <[email protected]>
Karen Etheridge <
[email protected]>
This software is copyright (c) 2015 by Florian Ragwitz.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.