NAME
OP - Objective Perl 5 (Overpowered)
VERSION
This documentation is for version 0.20 of OP.
$Id: //depotit/tools/source/snitchd-0.20/lib/OP.pm#30 $
STATUS
The usual pre-1.0 warnings apply. Consider this alpha code. It does what we currently ask of it, and maybe a little more, but it is a work in progress.
SYNOPSIS
use OP;
Using the OP module initializes all built-in object types, and causes strict, diagnostics, OP::Class, OP::Type, Perl6::Subs, and Error to be imported by the caller. These may alternately be imported individually.
DESCRIPTION
Compact and concise class prototyping, with object persistence.
OP is a Perl 5 dialect for deriving object classes and database schemas. Apps developed and executed under OP have a greater degree of formality and consistency than one may be accustomed to seeing in Perl.
This document covers the high-level concepts implemented in OP.
GETTING STARTED
Subclassing instructions are provided in the "Subclassing" section of this document, and also outlined in OP::Class.
Instance variable assertions are outlined in OP::Type and OP::Subtype.
See Perl6::Subs for an overview of the Perl 6-style methods used by OP.
See Error for an overview of exception handling in Perl 5.
PARTIAL FEATURE LIST
Assertions
Strict and straight-forward control of attribute types (OP::Type), subtypes (OP::Subtype), and duck-types.
Prototyping
Inspired by Prototype.js in the JavaScript world, OP::Class provides the create
function, enabling developers to craft database-backed Perl 5 classes in a compact and concise manner. Complex schemas may be quickly modeled in code and put to use.
Persistence
After a class has been prototyped, saving its instantiated objects to a SQL backing store is as easy as $object
->save()
.
Exceptions
Exception handling is brought in from the Error module. try
, throw
, and catch
are first-class citizens in the OP runtime.
Formal Methods
Perl 6-style method support is provided by the Perl6::Subs source filter, and is used extensively throughout OP source and its examples. OP also implements a generalized subset of Perl 6-derived object types.
Async Programming
OP provides first-class support for Coro and POE. See OP::Recur and OP::Persistence::Async.
FRAMEWORK ASSUMPTIONS
When using OP, a number of things "just happen" by design. Trying to go against the flow of any of these base assumptions is not recommended.
Default Modules
strict, warnings, Error, and Perl6::Subs are on by default.
Persistent Objects Extend OP::Node
Classes allocated with create
will receive an InnoDB backing store, by virtue of being a subclass of OP::Node. This can be overridden if needed, see "Inheritance" in OP::Class for details.
Various backing store options are covered in the OP::Persistence module.
Default Base Attributes
Unless overridden in __baseAsserts
, OP::Node subclasses have the following baseline attributes:
id
=> OP::IDid
is the primary key at the database table level.Objects will use a GUID (globally unique identifier) for their id, unless this behavior is overridden in the instance method
_newId()
, and__baseAsserts()
overridden to use a non-GUID data type such as OP::Int.id
is automatically set when saving an object to its backing store for the time. Modifyingid
manually is not recommended.name
=> OP::NameOP uses "named objects". By default,
name
is a human-readable unique secondary key. It's the name of the object being saved. Like all attributes,name
must be defined when saved, unless asserted as::optional
(see "undef
Requires Assertion").The value for
name
may be changed (as opposed toid
, which should not be tinkered with), as long as the new name does not conflict with any objects in the same class when saved.name
may be may be keyed in combination with multiple attributes via the::unique
OP::Subtype argument, which adds InnoDB reference options to the schema.create "My::Class" => { # # Don't require named objects: # name => OP::Name->assert(::optional), # ... };
ctime
=> OP::DateTimectime
is the Unix timestamp representing the object's creation time. OP sets this when saving an object for the first time.mtime
=> OP::DateTimemtime
is the Unix timestamp representing the object's last modified time. OP updates this each time an object is saved.
undef
Requires Assertion
Instance variables may not be undef
, unless asserted as ::optional
.
Object instances in OP may not normally be undef
. Generally, if a value is not defined, OP currently returns undef
rather than an undefined object instance. This may change at some point.
Namespace Matters
OP's core packages live under the OP:: namespace. Your classes should live in their own top-level namespace, e.g. "MyApp::".
OBJECT TYPES
OP implements the same object class types referred to in Perl6::Subs, several others which are specific to dealing with a SQL backing store (e.g. Double, ExtId), as well as datatypes commonly used in network operations (e.g. EmailAddr, IPv4Addr, URI).
Usage
OP object types are used when asserting attributes within a class, and are also suitable for instantiation or subclassing in a self-standing manner.
The usage of these types is not mandatory outside the context of creating a new class-- OP always returns data in object form, but these object types are not a replacement for Perl's native data types in general usage, unless you want them to be.
These modes of usage are shown below, and covered in greater detail in specific object class docs.
Subclassing
use OP;
create "MyApp::Example" => {
__BASE__ => "OP::Hash",
};
or
package My::Example;
use strict;
use warnings;
use base qw| OP::Hash |;
1;
Object Types as Attributes
When defining the allowed instance variables for a class, the assert()
method is used:
#
# File: Example.pm
#
use OP;
create "MyApp::Example" => {
someString => OP::Str->assert(),
someInt => OP::Int->assert(),
};
As Objects
When instantiating, the class method new()
is used, typically with a prototype object for its argument.
#
# File: somecaller.pl
#
use strict;
use warnings;
use MyApp::Example;
my $example = MyApp::Example->new(
name => "Hello",
someString => "foo",
someInt => 12345,
);
$example->save("Saving my first object");
$example->print();
In Method Args
To ensure method arguments are always of the appropriate type, specify the desired type(s) in a Perl6::Subs prototype.
You may specify OP object types or their more general Perl6::Subs counterparts (with the type names not prefixed by OP::), depending on how "picky" you want the receiver to be. If a specific OP object type is specified, the received arg must be of that object type or a subclass (ie, it must pass the UNIVERSAL::isa()
test). The Perl6::Subs equivalent pseudo-types are designed around Perl 5's native data types, and are suitable for testing non-objects.
As an academic example, here are less-picky and more-picky subs:
#
# Less-picky, duck-typey sub:
#
sub doSomethingWithHash(Hash $hash) {
say $hash ? "I'm happy with $hash" : "I got nothin'";
}
#
# Pickier sub:
#
sub pickyHashSub(OP::Hash $hash) {
doSomethingWithHash($hash);
}
Here is code to test the less-picky version:
#
# This says "I'm happy with OP::Hash=HASH(0xDEADBEEF)"
#
doSomethingWithHash(OP::Hash->new());
#
# This says "I'm happy with HASH(0xDEADBEEF)"
#
doSomethingWithHash({ });
And code to test its pickier counterpart:
#
# This says "I'm happy with OP::Hash=HASH(0xDEADBEEF)":
#
pickyHashSub(OP::Hash->new());
#
# But this will throw an exception like:
#
# - Unhandled OP::InvalidArgument Exception:
# Parameter $hash is not an OP::Hash in call to main::pickyHashSub ...
#
pickyHashSub({ });
Note that constructors and setter methods accept both native Perl 5 data types and their OP object class equivalents. The setters will automatically handle any necessary conversion, or throw an exception if the received arg doesn't quack like a duck.
Native types are OK for constructors:
my $example = MyApp::Example->new(
someString => "foo",
someInt => 123,
);
#
# someStr became a string object:
#
say $example->someString()->class();
# "OP::Str"
say $example->someString()->size();
# "3"
say $example->someString();
# "foo"
#
# someInt became an integer object:
#
say $example->someInt()->class();
# "OP::Int"
say $example->someInt()->sqrt();
# 11.0905365064094
Native types are OK for setters:
$example->setSomeInt(456);
say $example->someInt()->class();
# "OP::Int"
ABSTRACT CLASSES & MIX-INS
OP::Class
Abstract "Class" class
Base package for OP object classes, and lexical prototyping wrapper.
OP::Class::Dumper
Inspect attributes and methods
Introspection mix-in for classes and objects
OP::Object
Abstract object class
Extends OP::Class with constructor, getters, setters, asserts.
OP::Persistence
Object storage and retrieval
Mix-in for providing backing store support to objects
Specific DBI-type mix-ins are OP::Persistence::MySQL and OP::Persistence::SQLite. Asynchronous DB access is provided by the OP::Persistence::Async mix-in.
OP::Node
Abstract stored object class
Extends OP::Hash and OP::Persistence to form the abstract base storable object class in OP.
OP::Type
Instance variable typing
Extends OP::Class. Used by OP::Object subclasses to "assert" parameters for instance variables and database table columns.
OP::Subtype
Instance variable subtyping
Extends OP::Class. Used in OP::Type instances to define subtype restrictions for instance variables and database table columns.
The OP::Subtype module lists the available rule types.
OBJECT TYPES
These Perl 5 classes represent a generalization of their Perl 6 counterparts, at best, also introducing several object types specific to dealing with a SQL backing store. OP is not intended to be a Perl 6 implementation at all; there are inconsistencies and cut corners in the usage of these classes, compared to what Perl 6 will look like. OP borrows many of these class names for consistency with Perl6::Subs, and to have less things to remember when coding.
The basic types listed here may be instantiated as objects, or asserted as inline attributes.
OP::Any
Overloaded, any value
Extends OP::Scalar. Generally treats the value in a string-like manner, but may be any Perl 5 value.
OP::Array
List
Extends OP::Object with Ruby-esque collectors and other array methods.
OP::Bool
Overloaded binary boolean
Extends OP::Scalar. Implements methods around OP::Enum::Bool in a transparent manner, where true
= 1 and false
= 0.
OP::Code
Any CODE reference
Extends OP::Ref
Differs from the Perl 6 spec, in that it is more of an envelope for any CODE ref than a base for other classes of executable code.
OP::DateTime
Overloaded time object class
Extends OP::Array, Time::Piece. Overloaded for numeric comparisons, stringifies as unix timestamp unless overridden.
OP::Domain
Overloaded domain name object class
Extends OP::Str. Uses Data::Validate::Domain to verify input.
OP::Double
Overloaded double-precision number
Extends OP::Float. Perl 5 number. Use bignum to control runtime precision. This datatype is specific to OP, and is used when asserting a double-precision database table column. It is otherwise just a scalar value.
OP::EmailAddr
Overloaded RFC 2822 email address object class
Extends Email::Address, OP::Array. Uses Data::Validate::Email to verify input.
OP::ExtID
Overloaded foreign GUID value
Extends OP::ID. Scalar GUID object. This datatype is specific to OP, and represents the ID of a foreign object. When asserting a property backed by an InnoDB table, ExtID sets up foreign key constraints.
OP::Float
Overloaded floating point number
Extends OP::Num and Data::Float
OP::Hash
Hash reference
Extends OP::Object with Ruby-esque collectors and other hashtable methods.
OP::ID
Overloaded primary GUID value
Extends OP::Scalar and Data::GUID. Represents the primary key in an object.
OP::Int
Overloaded integer
Extends OP::Num and Data::Integer
OP::IPv4Addr
Overloaded IPv4 address object class
Extends OP::Str. Uses Data::Validate::IP to verify input.
OP::Name
Human-readable secondary key
Extends OP::Str. Represents the secondary key within a class.
OP::Num
Overloaded, any number
Extends OP::Scalar and Scalar::Number. Implements instance methods around Perl 5's built-in math functions.
OP::Ref
Any reference value
Extends OP::Any
OP::Rule
Regex reference (qr/ /)
Extends OP::Ref
OP::Scalar
Any Perl 5 scalar
Extends OP::Object. Overloaded with overload.
OP::Str
Overloaded unicode string
Extends OP::Scalar, Mime::Base64, and Unicode::String. Implements instance methods around Perl 5's built-in string functions.
OP::TimeSpan
Overloaded time range object class
Extends OP::Scalar, Time::Seconds. Represents a number of seconds.
OP::URI
Overloaded URI object class
Extends URI, OP::Str. Uses Data::Validate::URI to verify input.
CONSTANTS & ENUMERATIONS
OP::Constants
"dot rc" values as constants
Exposes values from the .oprc
file as Perl 5 constants
OP::Enum
C-style enumerated types as constants
Enumerations are groups of hard-coded constants used internally by OP.
HELPER MODULES
OP::Utility
System functions required globally by OP
OP::Exceptions
Exceptions are subclasses of Error which may be thrown by OP
EXPERIMENTAL*: INFOMATICS
Experimental classes are subject to radical upheaval, questionable documentation, and unexplained disappearances. They represent proof of concept in their respective areas, and may move out of experimental status at some point.
OP::Log
OP::RRNode factory class
Generates and loads OP::RRNode subclasses on the fly.
OP::RRNode
Round Robin Database Table
Objects live in a FIFO table of fixed length.
OP::Series
Cooked OP::RRNode Series Data
Consolidate OP::RRNode data for easy plotting.
EXPERIMENTAL: SCHEDULING
OP::Recur
Recurring time specification
Experimental class for describing recurring points in time.
EXPERIMENTAL: FOREIGN DB ACCESS
OP::ForeignTable
Any Non-OP Database Table
Experimental class for using an arbitrary table as a backing store.
EXPERMENTAL: INTERACTIVE SHELL
OP::Shell
Interactive Perl Shell
Interactive shell with ReadLine support and lexical persistence.
SEE ALSO
Perl6::Subs, OP::Class, OP::Type
Object Types from perl6 Synopsis 2: - http://dev.perl.org/perl6/doc/design/syn/S02.html
AUTHOR
Alex Ayars <pause@nodekit.org>
COPYRIGHT
File: OP.pm
Copyright (c) 2009 TiVo Inc.
All rights reserved. This program and the accompanying materials
are made available under the terms of the Common Public License v1.0
which accompanies this distribution, and is available at
http://opensource.org/licenses/cpl1.0.txt