NAME
SelfLoader - load functions only on demand
SYNOPSIS
package FOOBAR;
use SelfLoader;
... (initializing code)
__DATA__
sub {....
DESCRIPTION
This module tells its users that functions in the FOOBAR package are to be autoloaded from after the
__DATA__ token. See also
perlsub, Autoloading.
The DATA token
The
__DATA__ token tells the perl compiler that the perl code for compilation is finished. Everything after the
__DATA__ token is available for reading via the filehandle FOOBAR::DATA, where FOOBAR is the name of the current package when the
__DATA__ token is reached. This works just the same as
__END__ does in package 'main', but for other modules data after
__END__ is not automatically retrievable, whereas data after
__DATA__ is. The
__DATA__ token is not recognized in versions of perl prior to 5.001m.
Note that it is possible to have
__DATA__ tokens in the same package in multiple files, and that the last
__DATA__ token in a given package that is encountered by the compiler is the one accessible by the filehandle. This also applies to
__END__ and main, i.e. if the 'main' program has an
__END__ , but a module 'require'd (
not 'use'd) by that program has a 'package main;' declaration followed by an '
__DATA__ ', then the
DATA filehandle is set to access the data after the
__DATA__ in the module,
not the data after the
__END__ token in the 'main' program, since the compiler encounters the 'require'd file later.
SelfLoader autoloading
The
SelfLoader works by the user placing the
__DATA__ token
after perl code which needs to be compiled and run at 'require' time, but
before subroutine declarations that can be loaded in later - usually because they may never be called.
The
SelfLoader will read from the FOOBAR::DATA filehandle to load in the data after
__DATA__ , and load in any subroutine when it is called. The costs are the one-time parsing of the data after
__DATA__ , and a load delay for the
first call of any autoloaded function. The benefits (hopefully) are a speeded up compilation phase, with no need to load functions which are never used.
The
SelfLoader will stop reading from
__DATA__ if it encounters the
__END__ token - just as you would expect. If the
__END__ token is present, and is followed by the token DATA, then the
SelfLoader leaves the FOOBAR::DATA filehandle open on the line after that token.
The
SelfLoader exports the
AUTOLOAD subroutine to the package using the
SelfLoader , and this loads the called subroutine when it is first called.
There is no advantage to putting subroutines which will
always be called after the
__DATA__ token.
Autoloading and package lexicals
A 'my $pack_lexical' statement makes the variable $pack_lexical local
only to the file up to the
__DATA__ token. Subroutines declared elsewhere
cannot see these types of variables, just as if you declared subroutines in the package but in another file, they cannot see these variables.
So specifically, autoloaded functions cannot see package lexicals (this applies to both the
SelfLoader and the Autoloader). The
vars pragma provides an alternative to defining package-level globals that will be visible to autoloaded routines. See the documentation on
vars in the pragma section of
perlmod.
SelfLoader and AutoLoader
The
SelfLoader can replace the AutoLoader - just change 'use AutoLoader' to 'use SelfLoader' (though note that the
SelfLoader exports the AUTOLOAD function - but if you have your own AUTOLOAD and are using the AutoLoader too, you probably know what you're doing), and the
__END__ token to
__DATA__ . You will need perl version 5.001m or later to use this (version 5.001 with all patches up to patch m).
There is no need to inherit from the
SelfLoader .
The
SelfLoader works similarly to the AutoLoader, but picks up the subs from after the
__DATA__ instead of in the 'lib/auto' directory. There is a maintenance gain in not needing to run AutoSplit on the module at installation, and a runtime gain in not needing to keep opening and closing files to load subs. There is a runtime loss in needing to parse the code after the
__DATA__ . Details of the
AutoLoader and another view of these distinctions can be found in that module's documentation.
DATA, END, and the FOOBAR::DATA filehandle.
This section is only relevant if you want to use the
FOOBAR::DATA together with the
SelfLoader .
Data after the
__DATA__ token in a module is read using the FOOBAR::DATA filehandle.
__END__ can still be used to denote the end of the
__DATA__ section if followed by the token DATA - this is supported by the
SelfLoader . The
FOOBAR::DATA filehandle is left open if an
__END__ followed by a DATA is found, with the filehandle positioned at the start of the line after the
__END__ token. If no
__END__ token is present, or an
__END__ token with no DATA token on the same line, then the filehandle is closed.
The
SelfLoader reads from wherever the current position of the
FOOBAR::DATA filehandle is, until the EOF or
__END__ . This means that if you want to use that filehandle (and ONLY if you want to), you should either
1. Put all your subroutine declarations immediately after the
__DATA__ token and put your own data after those declarations, using the
__END__ token to mark the end of subroutine declarations. You must also ensure that the
SelfLoader reads first by calling 'SelfLoader->load_stubs();', or by using a function which is selfloaded;
or
2. You should read the
FOOBAR::DATA filehandle first, leaving the handle open and positioned at the first line of subroutine declarations.
You could conceivably do both.
Classes and inherited methods.
For modules which are not classes, this section is not relevant. This section is only relevant if you have methods which could be inherited.
A subroutine stub (or forward declaration) looks like
sub stub;
i.e. it is a subroutine declaration without the body of the subroutine. For modules which are not classes, there is no real need for stubs as far as autoloading is concerned.
For modules which ARE classes, and need to handle inherited methods, stubs are needed to ensure that the method inheritance mechanism works properly. You can load the stubs into the module at 'require' time, by adding the statement 'SelfLoader->load_stubs();' to the module to do this.
The alternative is to put the stubs in before the
__DATA__ token BEFORE releasing the module, and for this purpose the
Devel::SelfStubber module is available. However this does require the extra step of ensuring that the stubs are in the module. If this is done I strongly recommend that this is done BEFORE releasing the module - it should NOT be done at install time in general.
Multiple packages and fully qualified subroutine names
Subroutines in multiple packages within the same file are supported - but you should note that this requires exporting the
SelfLoader::AUTOLOAD to every package which requires it. This is done automatically by the
SelfLoader when it first loads the subs into the cache, but you should really specify it in the initialization before the
__DATA__ by putting a 'use SelfLoader' statement in each package.
Fully qualified subroutine names are also supported. For example,
__DATA__
sub foo::bar {23}
package baz;
sub dob {32}
will all be loaded correctly by the
SelfLoader , and the
SelfLoader will ensure that the packages 'foo' and 'baz' correctly have the
SelfLoader AUTOLOAD method when the data after
__DATA__ is first parsed.
--
HaraldBongartz - 06 Nov 2004