NAME
Data::Lock - makes variables (im)?mutable
VERSION
$Id: Lock.pm,v 0.2 2008/06/27 19:50:52 dankogai Exp dankogai $
SYNOPSIS
use Data::Lock qw/dlock dunlock/;
# note parentheses and equal
dlock( my $sv = $initial_value );
dlock( my $ar = [@values] );
dlock( my $hr = { key => value, key => value, ... } );
dunlock $sv;
dunlock $ar; dunlock \@av;
dunlock $hr; dunlock \%hv;
DESCRIPTION
dlock
makes the specified variable immutable like Readonly. Unlike Readonly which implements immutability via tie
, dlock
makes use of the internal flag of perl SV so it imposes almost no penalty.
Like Readonly, dlock locks not only the variable itself but also elements therein.
The only exception is objects. It does NOT lock its internals and for good reason.
Suppose you have a typical class like:
package Foo;
sub new { my $pkg = shift; bless { @_ }, $pkg }
sub get_foo { $_[0]->{foo} }
sub set_foo { $_[0]->{foo} = $_[1] };
And
dlock( my $o = Foo->new(foo=>1) );
You cannot change $o but you can still use mutators.
$o = Foo->new(foo => 2); # BOOM!
$o->set_foo(2); # OK
If you want to make $o->{foo}
immutable, Define Foo::new like:
sub new {
my $pkg = shift;
dlock(my $self = { @_ });
bless $self, $pkg
}
Or consider using Moose.
EXPORT
Like List::Util and Scalar::Util, functions are exported only explicitly. This module comes with dlock
and dunlock
.
use Data::Lock; # nothing imported;
use Data::Lock qw/dlock dunlock/; # imports dlock() and dunlock()
FUNCTIONS
dlock
dlock($scalar);
Locks $scalar and if $scalar is a reference, recursively locks referents.
dunlock
Does the opposite of dlock
.
SEE ALSO
AUTHOR
Dan Kogai, <dankogai at dan.co.jp>
BUGS & SUPPORT
See Attribute::Constant.
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Copyright 2008 Dan Kogai, all rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.