Why not adopt me?
NAME
Class::Refresh - refresh your classes during runtime
VERSION
version 0.05
SYNOPSIS
use Class::Refresh;
use Foo;
Class::Refresh->refresh;
# edit Foo.pm
Class::Refresh->refresh; # changes in Foo.pm are applied
DESCRIPTION
During development, it is fairly common to cycle between writing code and testing that code. Generally the testing happens within the test suite, but frequently it is more convenient to test things by hand when tracking down a bug, or when doing some exploratory coding. In many situations, however, this becomes inconvenient - for instance, in a REPL, or in a stateful web application, restarting from the beginning after every code change can get pretty tedious. This module allows you to reload your application classes on the fly, so that the code/test cycle becomes a lot easier.
This module takes a hash of import arguments, which can include:
- track_require
-
use Class::Refresh track_require => 1;
If set, a
require()
hook will be installed to track modules which are loaded. This will make the list of modules to reload whenrefresh
is called more accurate, but may cause issues with other modules which hook intorequire
(since the hook is global).
This module has several limitations, due to reloading modules in this way being an inherently fragile operation. Therefore, this module is recommended for use only in development environments - it should not be used for reloading things in production.
It makes several assumptions about how code is structured that simplify the logic involved quite a bit, and make it more reliable when those assumptions hold, but do make it inappropriate for use in certain cases. For instance, this module is named Class::Refresh
for a reason: it is only intended for refreshing classes, where each file contains a single namespace, and each namespace corresponds to a single file, and all function calls happen through method dispatch. Unlike Module::Refresh, which makes an effort to track the files where subs were defined, this module assumes that refreshing a class means wiping out everything in the class's namespace, and reloading the file corresponding to that class. If your code includes multiple files that all load things into a common namespace, or defines multiple classes in a single file, this will likely not work.
METHODS
refresh
The main entry point to the module. The first call to refresh
populates a cache of modification times for currently loaded modules, and subsequent calls will refresh any classes which have changed since the previous call.
modified_modules
Returns a list of modules which have changed since the last call to refresh
.
refresh_module $mod
This method calls unload_module
and load_module
on $mod
, as well as on any classes that depend on $mod
(for instance, subclasses if $mod
is a class, or classes that consume $mod
if $mod
is a role). This ensures that all of your classes are consistent, even when dealing with things like immutable Moose classes.
unload_module $mod
Unloads $mod
, using Class::Unload.
load_module $mod
Loads $mod
, using Class::Load.
CAVEATS
- Refreshing modules may miss modules which have been externally loaded since the last call to refresh
-
This is because it's not easily possible to tell if a module has been modified since it was loaded, if we haven't seen it so far. A workaround for this may be to set the
track_require
option in the import arguments (see above), although this comes with its own set of caveats (since it is global behavior). - Global variable accesses and function calls may not work as expected
-
Perl resolves accesses to global variables and functions in other packages at compile time, so if the package is later reloaded, changes to those will not be noticed. As mentioned above, this module is intended for refreshing classes.
- File modification times have a granularity of one second
-
If you modify a file and then immediately call
refresh
and then immediately modify it again, the modification may not be seen on the next call torefresh
. Note however that file size and inode number are also compared, so it still may be seen, depending on if either of those two things changed. - Tracking modules which
use
a given module isn't possible -
For instance, modifying a Moose::Exporter module which is used in a class won't cause the class to be refreshed, even if the change to the exporter would cause a change in the class's metaclass.
- Classes which build themselves differently based on the state of other classes may not work properly
-
This module attempts to handle several cases of this sort for Moose classes (modifying a class will refresh all of its subclasses, modifying a role will refresh all classes and roles which consume that role, modifying a metaclass will refresh all classes whose metaclass is an instance of that metaclass), but it's not a problem that's solvable in the general case.
BUGS
- Reloading classes when their metaclass is modified doesn't quite work yet
-
This will require modifications to Moose to support properly.
- Tracking changes to metaclasses other than the class metaclass isn't implemented yet
- Metacircularity probably has issues
-
Refreshing a class which is its own metaclass will likely break.
Please report any bugs through RT: email bug-class-refresh at rt.cpan.org
, or browse to http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Class-Refresh.
SEE ALSO
SUPPORT
You can find this documentation for this module with the perldoc command.
perldoc Class::Refresh
You can also look for information at:
MetaCPAN
RT: CPAN's request tracker
Github
CPAN Ratings
CREDITS
This module was based in large part on Module::Refresh by Jesse Vincent.
AUTHOR
Jesse Luehrs <doy at tozt dot net>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2013 by Jesse Luehrs.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.