NAME

Tie::RefHash::Weak - A Tie::RefHash subclass with weakened references in the keys.

SYNOPSIS

use Tie::RefHash::Weak;
tie my %h, 'Tie::RefHash::Weak';

# OR:

use Tie::RefHash::Weak 'fieldhash';
fieldhash my %h;

{ # new scope
	my $val = "foo";

	$h{\$val} = "bar"; # key is weak ref

	print join(", ", keys %h); # contains \$val, returns regular reference
}
# $val goes out of scope, refcount goes to zero
# weak references to \$val are now undefined

keys %h; # no longer contains \$val

# see also Tie::RefHash

DESCRIPTION

The Tie::RefHash module can be used to access hashes by reference. This is useful when you index by object, for example.

The problem with Tie::RefHash, and cross indexing, is that sometimes the index should not contain strong references to the objecs. Tie::RefHash's internal structures contain strong references to the key, and provide no convenient means to make those references weak.

This subclass of Tie::RefHash has weak keys, instead of strong ones. The values are left unaltered, and you'll have to make sure there are no strong references there yourself.

FUNCTIONS

For compatibility with Hash::Util::FieldHash, this module will, upon request, export the following two functions. You may also write use Tie::RefHash::Weak ':all'.

fieldhash %hash

This ties the hash and returns a reference to it.

fieldhashes \%hash1, \%hash2 ...

This ties each hash that is passed to it as a reference. It returns the list of references in list context, or the number of hashes in scalar context.

THREAD SAFETY

Tie::RefHash version 1.32 and above have correct handling of threads (with respect to changing reference addresses). If your module requires Tie::RefHash::Weak to be thread aware you need to depend on both Tie::RefHash::Weak and Tie::RefHash version 1.32 (or later).

Version 0.02 and later of Tie::RefHash::Weak depend on a thread-safe version of Tie::RefHash anyway, so if you are using the latest version this should already be taken care of for you.

5.10.0 COMPATIBILITY

Due to a minor change in Perl 5.10.0 a bug in the handling of magic freeing was uncovered causing segmentation faults.

This has been patched but not released yet, as of 0.08.

CAVEAT

You can use an LVALUE reference (such as \substr ...) as a hash key, but due to a bug in perl (see http://rt.perl.org/rt3/Public/Bug/Display.html?id=46943) it might not be possible to weaken a reference to it, in which case the hash element will never be deleted automatically.

AUTHORS

Yuval Kogman <nothingmuch@woobling.org>

some maintenance by Hans Dieter Pearcey <hdp@pobox.com>

COPYRIGHT & LICENSE

Copyright (c) 2004 Yuval Kogman. All rights reserved
This program is free software; you can redistribute
it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

SEE ALSO

Tie::RefHash, Class::DBI (the live object cache), "Perl_magic_killbackrefs" in mg.c