NAME

HPCI::Env - Role for controlled copying of the %ENV hash for child processes to use

DESCRIPTION

Makes a copy of %ENV (possibly from a previous copy).

Provides choice of whitelist (retaining only specified values), blacklist (removing specified values), and augmenting with a list of key value pairs that are determined by the user program.

Typically, only a whitelist or a blacklist would be used - not both at once (although some special circumstances might use both where patterns rather than explicit lists are used for one category). Augmenting can be useful in conjunction with either whitelist or blacklist.

This module provides both mechanisms, so that the caller can decide on policy. Choosing to whitelist has the danger of possibly removing something that is needed. Choosing to blacklist has the danger of possibly failing to remove something that permits a security failure). Your business context will determine which choice is right.

The method print_env_settings takes a filehandle and writes a series of bash export command lines for all specified env items (if any was specified).

The has_any_env attribute can be used to limit accessing the computed env to only be dome if there was at least one env control parameter provided:

# only use the env is there was something explicitly put there
if ($object->has_any_env) {
	use_env( $object->env );
}

# always use the env (default to %ENV if nothing explicit)
use_env( $object->env );

HPCI uses multiple HPCI::Env objects that are cascaded. The Group's env object (if any) is copied and modified for each Stage's own env object.

ATTRIBUTES

  • env_source

    A hash to be used as the basis of the copy.

    If env_source is not provided but any other env_* parameters are provided, then $self-default_env_source> is called to get the soruce. If this method is not over-ridden, it uses %ENV as the basis.

    As well as for cascading envs (as is done for Stage from Group) providing a value to env_source allows giving the entire desired env hash at once, rather than as a set of modifications from %ENV.

  • env_cascade Maybe[Object]

    If this attribute is provided, then it will be used as an object that does the Env role that provides the default env_source value. The HPCI::Stage object specifies its Group object for this parameter so that if any Group env parameters were set, they will get used as a basis for the Stage.

  • env_retain ArrayRef[Str]

  • env_retain_pat RegexpRef

    If either of these is provided, then only keys that are explicitly listed in env_retain, or which match the pattern in env_retain_pat will be kept. All other keys will be filtered out.

    This is done before processing env_remove, env_remove_pat, or env_set parameters, so additional keys might be filtered out, and some filtered keys might still be reinserted in the final resulting environment hash (but only with a new value that does not depend upon the previous one).

  • env_remove ArrayRef[Str]

  • env_remove_pat RegExp

    If either of these is provided, then any keys that are explicitly listed in env_remove, or which match the pattern in env_remove_pat will be deleted.

    This is done before processing the env_set parameter, so some filtered keys could still be reinserted in the final resulting environment hash (but only with a new value that does not depend upon the previous one).

  • env_set HashRef[Str|CodeRef]

    If provided, the env hash that results from applying the env_retain and env_remove filtering is augmented by adding additional values for each key in this hash.

    If the value is not a CodeRef, it is used (completely replacing the previous value for that key, if any).

    If the value in this hash is a CodeRef, then that function is called to compute the value to be stored. The function will be passed one or two arguments - the first is always the key name, and the second is the value for that key in the filtered source hash if it exists (or no second argument is provided if it does not exists).

    The function can then either modify the original value (if any was originally present and has not been filtered out by the previous steps) or replace it completely (regardless of whether it was present). A typical example of modifying would be to prepend a directory to PATH.

    ... env_set => { DIRS =>
            sub {
                shift; # throw away 'DIRS' argument
                # prepend DIRS, if present, create it if not present
                return join( ':', "home/joe/lib", @_ );
            }
  • has_any_env Bool (not settable)

    This attribute is true if any attributes were initialized that determine (potential) filtering of %ENV. (It is potential because if the values provided could end up "filtering" to a result that is identical to the original %ENV.) (The "filtering" attributes are env_source, env_retain, env_retain_pat, env_deletem env_delete_pat, and env_set._

    It is also true if there was an env_cascade object provided and it had any filtering attributes initialized.

  • env HashRef[Str]

    This is the hash resulting from the specified filtering and augmentation.

ATTRIBUTES

  • print_env_setting

    Prints a series of (Bourne-compatible) shel export command lines tp the provided file handle that will set the computed environment values.

    Prints nothing if no values have been set.

    (If you really want to have the entire %ENV hash expanded, you have a number of ways to do it:

    ... env_source => \%ENV, ...      # pull in %ENV explicitly
    
    ... env_retain_pat => qr/^/, ...  # retain everything
    
    ... env_delete_pat => qr/\0/, ... # delete nothing (NULL can't be in an env name
    
    ... env_set => { }. ...           # add nothing

    All of those would work, you can probably thing of others if your mind if sufficiently warped in the appropriate direction.)

  • has_any_env

    Returns true if any attribute was explicitly set.

    This allows the user to follow the convention (also used internally) that if no attributes were set, then no env is to be provided.

    This method can be wrapped with an around. That is done by a Stage object to have this attribute return true if either the Stage or the parent Group had an attribute set.

  • default_env_source

    Selects the default has to be used. The provided method selects %ENV but since this is a role, this method can be wrapped with an around that modifies that choice. This method gets called internally, and only if the env attribute is actually being set up. The env used in a Stage is wrapped to use the Group's env (if it was set up) as the default source.

1 POD Error

The following errors were encountered while parsing the POD:

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