NAME
Carp::Object - a replacement for Carp or Carp::Clan, object-oriented
SYNOPSIS
Object-oriented API
use Carp::Object ();
my $carper = Carp::Object->new(%options);
# warn of error (from the perspective of caller)
$carper->carp("this is very wrong") if some_bad_condition();
# die of error (from the perspective of caller)
$carper->croak("that's a dead end") if some_deadly_condition();
# warn with full stacktrace
$carper->cluck("this is very wrong");
# die with full stacktrace
$carper->confess("that's a dead end");
Functional API
use Carp::Object qw/:all/; # many other import options are available, see below
our %CARP_OBJECT_CONSTRUCTOR = (...); # optional opportunity to tune the carping behaviour
our @CARP_NOT = (...); # optional opportunity to exclude packages from stack traces
# warn of error (from the perspective of caller)
carp "this is very wrong" if some_bad_condition();
# die of error (from the perspective of caller)
croak "that's a dead end" if some_deadly_condition();
# full stacktrace
cluck "this is very wrong";
confess "that's a dead end";
# temporary change some parameters, like for example the "clan" of modules to ignore
{ local %CARP_OBJECT_CONSTRUCTOR = (clan => qw(^(Foo|Bar)));
croak "wrong call to Foo->.. or to Bar->.." if $something_is_wrong; }
DESCRIPTION
This is an object-oriented alternative to "croak" in Carp or "croak" in Carp::Clan, for reporting errors in modules from the perspective of the caller instead of reporting the internal implementation line where the error occurs.
Carp or Carp::Clan were designed long ago, at a time when Perl had no support yet for object-oriented programming; therefore they only have a functional API that is not very well suited for extensions. The present module attemps to mimic the same behaviour, but with an object-oriented implementation that offers more tuning options, and also supports errors raised as Exception objects.
Unlike Carp or Carp::Clan, where the presentation of stack frames is hard-coded, here it is delegated to Devel::StackFrame. This means that clients can also take advantage of options in Devel::StackFrame to tune the output -- or even replace it by another class.
Clients can choose between the object-oriented API, presented in the next chapter, or a traditional functional API compatible with Carp or Carp::Clan, presented in the following chapter.
DISCLAIMER: this module is very young and not battle-proofed yet. Despite many efforts to make it behave as close as possible to the original Carp, there might be some edge cases where it is not strictly equivalent. If you encounter such situations, please open an issue at https://github.com/damil/Carp-Object/issues.
METHODS
new
use Carp::Object (); # '()' to avoid importing any symbols
my $carper = Carp::Object->new(%options);
This is the constructor for a "carper" object. Options are :
- verbose
-
if true, a 'croak' method call is treated as a 'confess', and a 'carp' is treated as a 'cluck'.
- stacktrace_class
-
The class to be used for inspecting stack traces. Default is Devel::StackTrace.
- clan
-
A regexp for identifying packages that should be skipped in stack traces, like in Carp::Clan. This option internally computes a
frame_filter
and therefore is incompatible with theframe_filter
option. - display_frame
-
A reference to a subroutine for computing a textual representation of a stack frame. The default is _default_display_frame, which is a light wrapper on top of "as_string" in Devel::StackTrace::Frame, with improved representation of method calls. The given subroutine will receive three arguments :
a reference to a Devel::StackTrace::Frame instance
a boolean flag telling if this is the first stack frame in the list (because the display algorithm is usually different for the first stack frame).
A hashref of optional parameters. Currently there is only one option
max_arg_length
, discribed in "as_string(\%p)" in Devel::StackTrace.
- display_frame_param
-
The optional hashref to be supplied as third parameter to the
display_frame
subroutine. - ignore_class
-
an arrayref of classes that will be passed to Devel::StackTrace; any class that belongs to or inherits from that list will be ignored in stack traces.
Carp::Object
will automatically add itself to the list supplied by the client.
In addition to these options, the constructor also accepts all options to "new" in Devel::StackTrace, like for example ignore_package
, skip_frames
, frame_filter
, indent
, etc.
croak
Die of error, from the perspective of the caller.
carp
Warn of error, from the perspective of the caller.
confess
Die of error, with full stack backtrace.
cluck
Warn of error, with full stack backtrace.
msg
my $msg = $carper->msg($errstr, $n_frames);
Build the message to be used for dieing or warning. $errstr
is the initial error message; it may be a plain string or an exception object with a stringification method. $n_frames
is the number of stack frames to display (usually 1); if undefined, the whole stack trace is displayed.
FUNCTIONAL API: THE IMPORT() METHOD
use Carp::Object; # no import list => defaults to (':carp');
# or
use Carp::Object @import_list;
When using this functional API, subroutines equivalent to their corresponding object-oriented methods are exported into the caller's symbol table: the caller can then call carp
, croak
, etc. like with the venerable Carp module.
Import list
The import list accepts the following items :
carp
,croak
,confess
and/orcluck
-
Individual import of specific routines
:carp
-
Import group equivalent to the list
carp
,croak
,confess
. :all
-
Import group equivalent to the list
carp
,croak
,confess
,cluck
. \%options
-
A hashref within the import list is interpreted as a collection of importing options, in the spirit of Sub::Exporter or Exporter::Tiny. Admitted options are :
-as
-
use Carp::Object carp => {-as => 'complain'}, croak => {-as => 'explode'};
Local name for the last imported function.
-prefix
-
use Carp::Object qw/carp croak/, {-prefix => 'CO_'}; ... CO_croak "aargh";
Names of imported functions will be prefixed by this string.
-prefix
-
use Carp::Object qw/carp croak/, {-suffix => '_CO'}; ... croak_CO "ouch";
Names of imported functions will be suffixed by this string.
-constructor_args
-
use Carp::Object qw/carp croak/, {-constructor_args => {indent => 0}};
The given hashref will be passed to "new" in Carp::Object at each call to an imported function.
-reexport
-
use Carp::Object -reexport => qw/carp croak/;
Imported symbols will be reexported into the caller of the caller ! This is useful when several modules from a same family share a common carping module. See DBIx::DataModel::Carp for an example (actually, this was the initial motivation for working on
Carp::Object
(). - regexp
-
use Carp::Object qw(^(MyClan::|FriendlyOther::));
If the import item "looks like a regexp", it is interpreted as syntactic sugar for
use Carp::Object {-constructor_args => {clan => ..}}
, in order to be compatible with the API of Carp::Clan.The import item "looks like a regexp" if it starts with a
'^'
character, or contains a'|'
or a'('
.
Global variables
When using the functional API, customization of Carp::Object
can be done indirectly through global variables in the calling package. Such variables can be localized in inner blocks if some specific behaviour is needed.
%CARP_OBJECT_CONSTRUCTOR
{ local %CARP_OBJECT_CONSTRUCTOR = (indent => 0);
confess "I'm a great sinner"; # for this call, stack frames will not be indented
}
The content of this hash will be passed to "new" in Carp::Object at each call to an imported function.
@CARP_NOT
The content of this array will be passed as ignore_package
argument to to "new" in Carp::Object at each call to an imported function.
$Carp::Verbose
if true, a 'croak' method call is treated as a 'confess', and a 'carp' is treated as a 'cluck'.
INTERNAL SUBROUTINES
_default_display_frame
This is the internal routine for displaying a stack frame.
It calls "as_string" in Devel::StackTrace::Frame for doing most of the work. An additional feature is that the presentation string is rewritten for frames that "look like a method call" : instead of Foobar::method('Foobar=...', @other_args)
, we write Foobar=...->method(@other_args)
, so that method calls become apparent within the stack trace.
A frame "looks like a method call" if the first argument to the routine is a string identical to the class, or reference blessed into that class.
AUTHOR
Laurent Dami, <dami at cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2024 by Laurent Dami.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.