NAME

Data::Peek - A collection of low-level debug facilities

SYNOPSIS

use Data::Peek;

print DDumper \%hash;    # Same syntax as Data::Dumper
DTidy { ref => $ref };

print DPeek \$var;
my ($pv, $iv, $nv, $rv, $magic) = DDual ($var [, 1]);
print DPeek for DDual ($!, 1);
print DDisplay ("ab\nc\x{20ac}\rdef\n");
print DHexDump ("ab\nc\x{20ac}\rdef\n");

my $dump = DDump $var;
my %hash = DDump \@list;
DDump \%hash;

my %hash = DDump (\%hash, 5);  # dig 5 levels deep

my $dump;
open my $fh, ">", \$dump;
DDump_IO ($fh, \%hash, 6);
close $fh;
print $dump;

# Imports
use Data::Peek qw( :tidy VNR DGrow triplevar );
my $x = ""; DGrow ($x, 10000);
my $tv = triplevar ("\N{GREEK SMALL LETTER PI}", 3, "3.1415");
DDsort ("R");
DDumper [ $x ]; # use of :tidy make DDumper behave as DTidy

DESCRIPTION

Data::Peek started off as DDumper being a wrapper module over Data::Dumper, but grew out to be a set of low-level data introspection utilities that no other module provided yet, using the lowest level of the perl internals API as possible.

DDumper ($var, ...)

Not liking the default output of Data::Dumper, and always feeling the need to set $Data::Dumper::Sortkeys = 1;, and not liking any of the default layouts, this function is just a wrapper around Data::Dumper::Dumper with everything set as I like it.

$Data::Dumper::Sortkeys = 1;
$Data::Dumper::Indent   = 1;

If Data::Peek is used with import argument :tidy, the result is formatted according to Perl::Tidy, see DTidy below, otherwise the result is further beautified to meet my needs:

* quotation of hash keys has been removed (with the disadvantage
  that the output might not be parseable again).
* arrows for hashes are aligned at 16 (longer keys don't align)
* closing braces and brackets are now correctly aligned

In void context, DDumper () warn ()'s.

Example

$ perl -MDP \
  -e'DDumper { ape => 1, foo => "egg", bar => [ 2, "baz", undef ]};'

{   ape              => 1,
    bar              => [
        2,
        'baz',
        undef
        ],
    foo              => 'egg'
    };

DTidy ($var, ...)

DTidy is an alternative to DDumper, where the output of DDumper is formatted using Perl::Tidy (if available) according to your .perltidyrc instead of the default behavior, maybe somewhat like (YMMV):

$ perl -MDP=:tidy \
  -we'DDumper { ape => 1, foo => "egg", bar => [ 2, "baz", undef ]};'
{   'ape' => 1,
    'bar' => [2, 'baz', undef],
    'foo' => 'egg'
    }

If Data::Peek is used with import argument :tidy, this is the default output method for DDumper.

If Perl::Tidy is not available, DTidy will fallback to DDumper.

This idea was shamelessly copied from John McNamara's Data::Dumper::Perltidy.

DDsort ( 0 | 1 | R | V | VR | VN | VNR )

Set the hash sort algorithm for DDumper. The default is to sort by key value.

0   - Do not sort
1   - Sort by key
R   - Reverse sort by key
V   - Sort by value
VR  - Reverse sort by value
VN  - Sort by value numerical
VNR - Reverse sort by value numerical

These can also be passed to import:

$ perl -MDP=VNR \
  -we'DDumper { foo => 1, bar => 2, zap => 3, gum => 13 }'
{   gum              => 13,
    zap              => 3,
    bar              => 2,
    foo              => 1
    };
$ perl -MDP=V \
  -we'DDumper { foo => 1, bar => 2, zap => 3, gum => 13 }'
{   foo              => 1,
    gum              => 13,
    bar              => 2,
    zap              => 3
    };

DPeek

DPeek ($var)

Playing with sv_dump (), I found Perl_sv_peek (), and it might be very useful for simple checks. If $var is omitted, uses $_.

Example

print DPeek "abc\x{0a}de\x{20ac}fg";

PV("abc\nde\342\202\254fg"\0) [UTF8 "abc\nde\x{20ac}fg"]

In void context, DPeek () prints to STDERR plus a newline.

DDisplay

DDisplay ($var)

Show the PV content of a scalar the way perl debugging would have done. UTF-8 detection is on, so this is effectively the same as returning the first part the DPeek () returns for non-UTF8 PV's or the second part for UTF-8 PV's. DDisplay () returns the empty string for scalars that no have a valid PV.

Example

print DDisplay "abc\x{0a}de\x{20ac}fg";

"abc\nde\x{20ac}fg"

DHexDump

DHexDump ($var)

Show the (stringified) content of a scalar as a hex-dump. If $var is omitted, $_ is dumped. Returns undef or an empty list if $var (or $_) is undefined.

In void context, the dump is done to STDERR. In scalar context, the complete dump is returned as a single string. In list context, the dump is returned as lines.

Example

print DHexDump "abc\x{0a}de\x{20ac}fg";

0000  61 62 63 0a 64 65 e2 82  ac 66 67                 abc.de...fg

my ($pv, $iv, $nv, $rv, $hm) = DDual ($var [, $getmagic])

DDual will return the basic elements in a variable, guaranteeing that no conversion takes place. This is very useful for dual-var variables, or when checking is a variable has defined entries for a certain type of scalar. For each String (PV), Integer (IV), Double (NV), and Reference (RV), the current value of $var is returned or undef if it is not set (yet). The 5th element is an indicator if $var has magic, which is not invoked in the returned values, unless explicitly asked for with a true optional second argument.

Example

print DPeek for DDual ($!, 1);

In void context, DDual does the equivalent of

{ my @d = DDual ($!, 1);
  print STDERR
    DPeek ($!), "\n",
    "  PV: ", DPeek ($d[0]), "\n",
    "  IV: ", DPeek ($d[1]), "\n",
    "  NV: ", DPeek ($d[2]), "\n",
    "  RV: ", DPeek ($d[3]), "\n";
  }

my $len = DGrow ($pv, $size)

Fastest way to preallocate space for a PV scalar. Returns the allocated length. If $size is smaller than the already allocated space, it will not shrink.

cmpthese (-2, {
    pack => q{my $x = ""; $x = pack "x20000"; $x = "";},
    op_x => q{my $x = ""; $x = "x"  x 20000;  $x = "";},
    grow => q{my $x = ""; DGrow ($x,  20000); $x = "";},
    });

          Rate  op_x  pack  grow
op_x   62127/s    --  -59%  -96%
pack  152046/s  145%    --  -91%
grow 1622943/s 2512%  967%    --

my $tp = triplevar ($pv, $iv, $nv)

When making DDual () I wondered if it were possible to create triple-val scalar variables. Scalar::Util already gives us dualvar (), that creates you a scalar with different numeric and string values that return different values in different context. Not that triplevar () would be very useful, compared to dualvar (), but at least this shows that it is possible.

triplevar () is not exported by default.

Example:

print DPeek for DDual
    Data::Peek::triplevar ("\N{GREEK SMALL LETTER PI}", 3, 3.1415);

PV("\317\200"\0) [UTF8 "\x{3c0}"]
IV(3)
NV(3.1415)
SV_UNDEF
IV(0)

DDump ($var [, $dig_level])

A very useful module when debugging is Devel::Peek, but is has one big disadvantage: it only prints to STDERR, which is not very handy when your code wants to inspect variables at a low level.

Perl itself has sv_dump (), which does something similar, but still prints to STDERR, and only one level deep.

DDump () is an attempt to make the innards available to the script level with a reasonable level of compatibility. DDump () is context sensitive.

In void context, it behaves exactly like Perl_sv_dump ().

In scalar context, it returns what Perl_sv_dump () would have printed.

In list context, it returns a hash of the variable's properties. In this mode you can pass an optional second argument that determines the depth of digging.

Example

print scalar DDump "abc\x{0a}de\x{20ac}fg"

SV = PV(0x723250) at 0x8432b0
  REFCNT = 1
  FLAGS = (PADBUSY,PADMY,POK,pPOK,UTF8)
  PV = 0x731ac0 "abc\nde\342\202\254fg"\0 [UTF8 "abc\nde\x{20ac}fg"]
  CUR = 11
  LEN = 16

my %h = DDump "abc\x{0a}de\x{20ac}fg";
print DDumper \%h;

{   CUR              => '11',
    FLAGS            => {
        PADBUSY          => 1,
        PADMY            => 1,
        POK              => 1,
        UTF8             => 1,
        pPOK             => 1
        },
    LEN              => '16',
    PV               => '0x731ac0 "abc\\nde\\342\\202\\254fg"\\0 [UTF8 "abc\\nde\\x{20ac}fg"]',
    REFCNT           => '1',
    sv               => 'PV(0x723250) at 0x8432c0'
    };

my %h = DDump {
    ape => 1,
    foo => "egg",
    bar => [ 2, "baz", undef ],
    }, 1;
print DDumper \%h;

{   FLAGS            => {
        PADBUSY          => 1,
        PADMY            => 1,
        ROK              => 1
        },
    REFCNT           => '1',
    RV               => {
        PVIV("ape")      => {
            FLAGS            => {
                IOK              => 1,
                PADBUSY          => 1,
                PADMY            => 1,
                pIOK             => 1
                },
            IV               => '1',
            REFCNT           => '1',
            sv               => 'IV(0x747020) at 0x843a10'
            },
        PVIV("bar")      => {
            CUR              => '0',
            FLAGS            => {
                PADBUSY          => 1,
                PADMY            => 1,
                ROK              => 1
                },
            IV               => '1',
            LEN              => '0',
            PV               => '0x720210 ""',
            REFCNT           => '1',
            RV               => '0x720210',
            sv               => 'PVIV(0x7223e0) at 0x843a10'
            },
        PVIV("foo")      => {
            CUR              => '3',
            FLAGS            => {
                PADBUSY          => 1,
                PADMY            => 1,
                POK              => 1,
                pPOK             => 1
                },
            IV               => '1',
            LEN              => '8',
            PV               => '0x7496c0 "egg"\\0',
            REFCNT           => '1',
            sv               => 'PVIV(0x7223e0) at 0x843a10'
            }
        },
    sv               => 'RV(0x79d058) at 0x843310'
    };

DDump_IO ($io, $var [, $dig_level])

A wrapper function around perl's internal Perl_do_sv_dump (), which makes Devel::Peek completely superfluous.

Example

my $dump;
open my $eh, ">", \$dump;
DDump_IO ($eh, { 3 => 4, ape => [5..8]}, 6);
close $eh;
print $dump;

SV = RV(0x79d9e0) at 0x843f00
  REFCNT = 1
  FLAGS = (TEMP,ROK)
  RV = 0x741090
    SV = PVHV(0x79c948) at 0x741090
      REFCNT = 1
      FLAGS = (SHAREKEYS)
      IV = 2
      NV = 0
      ARRAY = 0x748ff0  (0:7, 2:1)
      hash quality = 62.5%
      KEYS = 2
      FILL = 1
      MAX = 7
      RITER = -1
      EITER = 0x0
        Elt "ape" HASH = 0x97623e03
        SV = RV(0x79d9d8) at 0x8440e0
          REFCNT = 1
          FLAGS = (ROK)
          RV = 0x741470
            SV = PVAV(0x7264b0) at 0x741470
              REFCNT = 2
              FLAGS = ()
              IV = 0
              NV = 0
              ARRAY = 0x822f70
              FILL = 3
              MAX = 3
              ARYLEN = 0x0
              FLAGS = (REAL)
                Elt No. 0
                SV = IV(0x7467c8) at 0x7c1aa0
                  REFCNT = 1
                  FLAGS = (IOK,pIOK)
                  IV = 5
                Elt No. 1
                SV = IV(0x7467b0) at 0x8440f0
                  REFCNT = 1
                  FLAGS = (IOK,pIOK)
                  IV = 6
                Elt No. 2
                SV = IV(0x746810) at 0x75be00
                  REFCNT = 1
                  FLAGS = (IOK,pIOK)
                  IV = 7
                Elt No. 3
                SV = IV(0x746d38) at 0x7799d0
                  REFCNT = 1
                  FLAGS = (IOK,pIOK)
                  IV = 8
        Elt "3" HASH = 0xa400c7f3
        SV = IV(0x746fd0) at 0x7200e0
          REFCNT = 1
          FLAGS = (IOK,pIOK)
          IV = 4

INTERNALS

DDump () uses an XS wrapper around Perl_sv_dump () where the STDERR is temporarily caught to a pipe. The internal XS helper functions are not meant for user space

DDump_XS (SV *sv)

Base interface to internals for DDump ().

BUGS

Windows and AIX might be using a build where not all symbols that were supposed to be exported in the public API are not. Perl_pv_peek () is one of them.

Not all types of references are supported.

No idea how far back this goes in perl support, but Devel::PPPort has proven to be a big help.

SEE ALSO

Devel::Peek, Data::Dumper, Data::Dump, Devel::Dumpvar, Data::Dump::Streamer, Data::Dumper::Perltidy, Perl::Tidy.

AUTHOR

H.Merijn Brand <h.m.brand@xs4all.nl>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

Copyright (C) 2008-2011 H.Merijn Brand

This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.