=head1 NAME
perlfilter - Source Filters
=head1 DESCRIPTION
This article is about a little-known feature of Perl called
I<source filters>. Source filters alter the program text of a module
before
Perl sees it, much as a C preprocessor alters the source text of
a C program
before
the compiler sees it. This article tells you more
about what source filters are, how they work, and how to
write
your
own.
The original purpose of source filters was to let you encrypt your
program source to prevent casual piracy. This isn't all they can
do
, as
you'll soon learn. But first, the basics.
=head1 CONCEPTS
Before the Perl interpreter can execute a Perl script, it must first
read
it from a file into memory
for
parsing and compilation. If that
script itself includes other scripts
with
a C<
use
> or C<
require
>
statement, then
each
of those scripts will have to be
read
from their
respective files as well.
Now think of
each
logical connection between the Perl parser and an
individual file as a I<source stream>. A source stream is created
when
the Perl parser opens a file, it continues to exist as the source code
is
read
into memory, and it is destroyed
when
Perl is finished parsing
the file. If the parser encounters a C<
require
> or C<
use
> statement in
a source stream, a new and distinct stream is created just
for
that
file.
The diagram below represents a single source stream,
with
the flow of
source from a Perl script file on the left into the Perl parser on the
right. This is how Perl normally operates.
file -------> parser
There are two important points to remember:
=over 5
=item 1.
Although there can be any number of source streams in existence at any
given
time
, only one will be active.
=item 2.
Every source stream is associated
with
only one file.
=back
A source filter is a special kind of Perl module that intercepts and
modifies a source stream
before
it reaches the parser. A source filter
changes
our
diagram like this:
file ----> filter ----> parser
If that doesn't make much sense, consider the analogy of a command
pipeline. Say you have a shell script stored in the compressed file
I<trial.gz>. The simple pipeline command below runs the script without
needing to create a temporary file to hold the uncompressed file.
gunzip -c trial.gz | sh
In this case, the data flow from the pipeline can be represented as follows:
trial.gz ----> gunzip ----> sh
With source filters, you can store the text of your script compressed and
use
a source filter to uncompress it
for
Perl's parser:
compressed gunzip
Perl program ---> source filter ---> parser
=head1 USING FILTERS
So how
do
you
use
a source filter in a Perl script? Above, I said that
a source filter is just a special kind of module. Like all Perl
modules, a source filter is invoked
with
a
use
statement.
Say you want to pass your Perl source through the C preprocessor
before
execution. As it happens, the source filters distribution comes
with
a C
preprocessor filter module called Filter::cpp.
Below is an example program, C<cpp_test>, which makes
use
of this filter.
Line numbers have been added to allow specific lines to be referenced
easily.
2:
3:
$a
= TRUE;
4:
print
"a = $a\n"
;
When you execute this script, Perl creates a source stream
for
the
file. Before the parser processes any of the lines from the file, the
source stream looks like this:
cpp_test ---------> parser
Line 1, C<
use
Filter::cpp>, includes and installs the C<cpp> filter
module. All source filters work this way. The
use
statement is compiled
and executed at compile
time
,
before
any more of the file is
read
, and
it attaches the cpp filter to the source stream behind the scenes. Now
the data flow looks like this:
cpp_test ----> cpp filter ----> parser
As the parser reads the second and subsequent lines from the source
stream, it feeds those lines through the C<cpp> source filter
before
processing them. The C<cpp> filter simply passes
each
line through the
real C preprocessor. The output from the C preprocessor is then
inserted back into the source stream by the filter.
.-> cpp --.
| |
| |
| <-'
cpp_test ----> cpp filter ----> parser
The parser then sees the following code:
$a
= 1;
print
"a = $a\n"
;
Let's consider what happens
when
the filtered code includes another
module
with
use
:
2:
4:
$a
= TRUE;
5:
print
"a = $a\n"
;
The C<cpp> filter does not apply to the text of the Fred module, only
to the text of the file that used it (C<cpp_test>). Although the
use
statement on line 3 will pass through the cpp filter, the module that
gets included (C<Fred>) will not. The source streams look like this
after
line 3
has
been parsed and
before
line 4 is parsed:
cpp_test ---> cpp filter ---> parser (INACTIVE)
Fred.pm ----> parser
As you can see, a new stream
has
been created
for
reading the source
from C<Fred.pm>. This stream will remain active
until
all of C<Fred.pm>
has
been parsed. The source stream
for
C<cpp_test> will still exist,
but is inactive. Once the parser
has
finished reading Fred.pm, the
source stream associated
with
it will be destroyed. The source stream
for
C<cpp_test> then becomes active again and the parser reads line 4
and subsequent lines from C<cpp_test>.
You can
use
more than one source filter on a single file. Similarly,
you can reuse the same filter in as many files as you like.
For example,
if
you have a uuencoded and compressed source file, it is
possible to stack a uudecode filter and an uncompression filter like
this:
M
'XL(".H<US4'
'V9I;F%L'
)Q;>7/;1I;_>_I3=
&E
=%:F
*I
"T?22Q/
M6]9*<IQCO
*XFT
"0[PL%%
'Y+IG?WN^ZYN-$'
J.[.JE$,20/?K=_[>
...
Once the first line
has
been processed, the flow will look like this:
file ---> uudecode ---> uncompress ---> parser
filter filter
Data flows through filters in the same order they appear in the source
file. The uudecode filter appeared
before
the uncompress filter, so the
source file will be uudecoded
before
it's uncompressed.
=head1 WRITING A SOURCE FILTER
There are three ways to
write
your own source filter. You can
write
it
in C,
use
an external program as a filter, or
write
the filter in Perl.
I won
't cover the first two in any great detail, so I'
ll get them out
of the way first. Writing the filter in Perl is most convenient, so
I'll devote the most space to it.
=head1 WRITING A SOURCE FILTER IN C
The first of the three available techniques is to
write
the filter
completely in C. The external module you create interfaces directly
with
the source filter hooks provided by Perl.
The advantage of this technique is that you have complete control over
the implementation of your filter. The big disadvantage is the
increased complexity required to
write
the filter - not only
do
you
need to understand the source filter hooks, but you also need a
reasonable knowledge of Perl guts. One of the few
times
it is worth
going to this trouble is
when
writing a source scrambler. The
C<decrypt> filter (which unscrambles the source
before
Perl parses it)
included
with
the source filter distribution is an example of a C
source filter (see Decryption Filters, below).
=over 5
=item B<Decryption Filters>
All decryption filters work on the principle of "security through
obscurity." Regardless of how well you
write
a decryption filter and
how strong your encryption algorithm is, anyone determined enough can
retrieve the original source code. The reason is quite simple - once
the decryption filter
has
decrypted the source back to its original
form, fragments of it will be stored in the computer's memory as Perl
parses it. The source might only be in memory
for
a short period of
time
, but anyone possessing a debugger, skill, and lots of patience can
eventually reconstruct your program.
That said, there are a number of steps that can be taken to make life
difficult
for
the potential cracker. The most important: Write your
decryption filter in C and statically
link
the decryption module into
the Perl binary. For further tips to make life difficult
for
the
potential cracker, see the file I<decrypt.pm> in the source filters
distribution.
=back
=head1 CREATING A SOURCE FILTER AS A SEPARATE EXECUTABLE
An alternative to writing the filter in C is to create a separate
executable in the language of your choice. The separate executable
reads from standard input, does whatever processing is necessary, and
writes the filtered data to standard output. C<Filter::cpp> is an
example of a source filter implemented as a separate executable - the
executable is the C preprocessor bundled
with
your C compiler.
The source filter distribution includes two modules that simplify this
task: C<Filter::
exec
> and C<Filter::sh>. Both allow you to run any
external executable. Both
use
a coprocess to control the flow of data
into and out of the external executable. (For details on coprocesses,
see Stephens, W.R.,
"Advanced Programming in the UNIX Environment."
Addison-Wesley, ISBN 0-210-56317-7, pages 441-445.) The difference
between them is that C<Filter::
exec
> spawns the external command
directly,
while
C<Filter::sh> spawns a shell to execute the external
command. (Unix uses the Bourne shell; NT uses the cmd shell.) Spawning
a shell allows you to make
use
of the shell metacharacters and
redirection facilities.
Here is an example script that uses C<Filter::sh>:
$a
= 1;
print
"XYZ a = $a\n"
;
The output you'll get
when
the script is executed:
PQR a = 1
Writing a source filter as a separate executable works fine, but a
small performance penalty is incurred. For example,
if
you execute the
small example above, a separate subprocess will be created to run the
Unix C<
tr
> command. Each
use
of the filter requires its own subprocess.
If creating subprocesses is expensive on your
system
, you might want to
consider one of the other options
for
creating source filters.
=head1 WRITING A SOURCE FILTER IN PERL
The easiest and most portable option available
for
creating your own
source filter is to
write
it completely in Perl. To distinguish this
from the previous two techniques, I'll call it a Perl source filter.
To help understand how to
write
a Perl source filter we need an example
to
study
. Here is a complete source filter that performs rot13
decoding. (Rot13 is a very simple encryption scheme used in Usenet
postings to hide the contents of offensive posts. It moves every letter
forward thirteen places, so that A becomes N, B becomes O, and Z
becomes M.)
sub
import
{
my
(
$type
) =
@_
;
my
(
$ref
) = [];
filter_add(
bless
$ref
);
}
sub
filter {
my
(
$self
) =
@_
;
my
(
$status
);
tr
/n-za-mN-ZA-M/a-zA-Z/
if
(
$status
= filter_read()) > 0;
$status
;
}
1;
All Perl source filters are implemented as Perl classes and have the
same basic structure as the example above.
First, we include the C<Filter::Util::Call> module, which exports a
number of functions into your filter's namespace. The filter shown
above uses two of these functions, C<filter_add()> and
C<filter_read()>.
Next, we create the filter object and associate it
with
the source
stream by defining the C<
import
> function. If you know Perl well
enough, you know that C<
import
> is called automatically every
time
a
module is included
with
a
use
statement. This makes C<
import
> the ideal
place to both create and install a filter object.
In the example filter, the object (C<
$ref
>) is blessed just like any
other Perl object. Our example uses an anonymous array, but this isn't
a requirement. Because this example doesn't need to store any context
information, we could have used a
scalar
or hash reference just as
well. The
next
section demonstrates context data.
The association between the filter object and the source stream is made
with
the C<filter_add()> function. This takes a filter object as a
parameter (C<
$ref
> in this case) and installs it in the source stream.
Finally, there is the code that actually does the filtering. For this
type of Perl source filter, all the filtering is done in a method
called C<filter()>. (It is also possible to
write
a Perl source filter
using a closure. See the C<Filter::Util::Call> manual page
for
more
details.) It's called every
time
the Perl parser needs another line of
source to process. The C<filter()> method, in turn, reads lines from
the source stream using the C<filter_read()> function.
If a line was available from the source stream, C<filter_read()>
returns a status value greater than zero and appends the line to C<
$_
>.
A status value of zero indicates end-of-file, less than zero means an
error. The filter function itself is expected to
return
its status in
the same way, and put the filtered line it wants written to the source
stream in C<
$_
>. The
use
of C<
$_
> accounts
for
the brevity of most Perl
source filters.
In order to make
use
of the rot13 filter we need some way of encoding
the source file in rot13
format
. The script below, C<mkrot13>, does
just that.
die
"usage mkrot13 filename\n"
unless
@ARGV
;
my
$in
=
$ARGV
[0];
my
$out
=
"$in.tmp"
;
open
(IN,
"<$in"
) or
die
"Cannot open file $in: $!\n"
;
open
(OUT,
">$out"
) or
die
"Cannot open file $out: $!\n"
;
print
OUT
"use Rot13;\n"
;
while
(<IN>) {
tr
/a-zA-Z/n-za-mN-ZA-M/;
print
OUT;
}
close
IN;
close
OUT;
unlink
$in
;
rename
$out
,
$in
;
If we encrypt this
with
C<mkrot13>:
print
" hello fred \n"
;
the result will be this:
cevag
"uryyb serq\a"
;
Running it produces this output:
hello fred
=head1 USING CONTEXT: THE DEBUG FILTER
The rot13 example was a trivial example. Here's another demonstration
that shows off a few more features.
Say you wanted to include a lot of debugging code in your Perl script
during development, but you didn't want it available in the released
product. Source filters offer a solution. In order to keep the example
simple, let's
say
you wanted the debugging output to be controlled by
an environment variable, C<DEBUG>. Debugging code is enabled
if
the
variable
exists
, otherwise it is disabled.
Two special marker lines will bracket debugging code, like this:
if
(
$year
> 1999) {
warn
"Debug: millennium bug in year $year\n"
;
}
The filter ensures that Perl parses the code between the <DEBUG_BEGIN>
and C<DEBUG_END> markers only
when
the C<DEBUG> environment variable
exists
. That means that
when
C<DEBUG> does exist, the code above
should be passed through the filter unchanged. The marker lines can
also be passed through as-is, because the Perl parser will see them as
comment lines. When C<DEBUG> isn't set, we need a way to disable the
debug code. A simple way to achieve that is to convert the lines
between the two markers into comments:
Here is the complete Debug filter:
sub
import
{
my
(
$type
) =
@_
;
my
(
%context
) = (
Enabled
=>
defined
$ENV
{DEBUG},
InTraceBlock
=> FALSE,
Filename
=> (
caller
)[1],
LineNo
=> 0,
LastBegin
=> 0,
);
filter_add(
bless
\
%context
);
}
sub
Die {
my
(
$self
) =
shift
;
my
(
$message
) =
shift
;
my
(
$line_no
) =
shift
||
$self
->{LastBegin};
die
"$message at $self->{Filename} line $line_no.\n"
}
sub
filter {
my
(
$self
) =
@_
;
my
(
$status
);
$status
= filter_read();
++
$self
->{LineNo};
if
(
$status
<= 0) {
$self
->Die(
"DEBUG_BEGIN has no DEBUG_END"
)
if
$self
->{InTraceBlock};
return
$status
;
}
if
(
$self
->{InTraceBlock}) {
if
(/^\s*
$self
->Die(
"Nested DEBUG_BEGIN"
,
$self
->{LineNo})
}
elsif
(/^\s*
$self
->{InTraceBlock} = FALSE;
}
s/^/
}
elsif
( /^\s*
$self
->{InTraceBlock} = TRUE;
$self
->{LastBegin} =
$self
->{LineNo};
}
elsif
( /^\s*
$self
->Die(
"DEBUG_END has no DEBUG_BEGIN"
,
$self
->{LineNo});
}
return
$status
;
}
1;
The big difference between this filter and the previous example is the
use
of context data in the filter object. The filter object is based on
a hash reference, and is used to keep various pieces of context
information between calls to the filter function. All but two of the
hash fields are used
for
error reporting. The first of those two,
Enabled, is used by the filter to determine whether the debugging code
should be
given
to the Perl parser. The second, InTraceBlock, is true
when
the filter
has
encountered a C<DEBUG_BEGIN> line, but
has
not yet
encountered the following C<DEBUG_END> line.
If you ignore all the error checking that most of the code does, the
essence of the filter is as follows:
sub
filter {
my
(
$self
) =
@_
;
my
(
$status
);
$status
= filter_read();
return
$status
if
$status
<= 0;
if
(
$self
->{InTraceBlock}) {
if
(/^\s*
$self
->{InTraceBlock} = FALSE
}
s/^/
}
elsif
( /^\s*
$self
->{InTraceBlock} = TRUE;
}
return
$status
;
}
Be warned: just as the C-preprocessor doesn't know C, the Debug filter
doesn't know Perl. It can be fooled quite easily:
print
<<EOM;
EOM
Such things aside, you can see that a lot can be achieved
with
a modest
amount of code.
=head1 CONCLUSION
You now have better understanding of what a source filter is, and you
might even have a possible
use
for
them. If you feel like playing
with
source filters but need a bit of inspiration, here are some extra
features you could add to the Debug filter.
First, an easy one. Rather than having debugging code that is
all-or-nothing, it would be much more useful to be able to control
which specific blocks of debugging code get included. Try extending the
syntax
for
debug blocks to allow
each
to be identified. The contents of
the C<DEBUG> environment variable can then be used to control which
blocks get included.
Once you can identify individual blocks,
try
allowing them to be
nested. That isn't difficult either.
Here is an interesting idea that doesn't involve the Debug filter.
Currently Perl subroutines have fairly limited support
for
formal
parameter lists. You can specify the number of parameters and their
type, but you still have to manually take them out of the C<
@_
> array
yourself. Write a source filter that allows you to have a named
parameter list. Such a filter would turn this:
sub
MySub (
$first
,
$second
,
@rest
) { ... }
into this:
sub
MySub($$@) {
my
(
$first
) =
shift
;
my
(
$second
) =
shift
;
my
(
@rest
) =
@_
;
...
}
Finally,
if
you feel like a real challenge, have a go at writing a
full-blown Perl macro preprocessor as a source filter. Borrow the
useful features from the C preprocessor and any other macro processors
you know. The tricky bit will be choosing how much knowledge of Perl's
syntax you want your filter to have.
=head1 LIMITATIONS
Source filters only work on the string level, thus are highly limited
in its ability to change source code on the fly. It cannot detect
comments, quoted strings, heredocs, it is
no
replacement
for
a real
parser.
The only stable usage
for
source filters are encryption, compression,
or the byteloader, to translate binary code back to source code.
See
for
example the limitations in L<Switch>, which uses source filters,
and thus is does not work inside a string
eval
, the presence of
regexes
with
embedded newlines that are specified
with
raw C</.../>
delimiters and don't have a modifier C<//x> are indistinguishable from
code chunks beginning
with
the division operator C</>. As a workaround
you must
use
C<m/.../> or C<m?...?>
for
such patterns. Also, the presence of
regexes specified
with
raw C<?...?> delimiters may cause mysterious
errors. The workaround is to
use
C<m?...?> instead. See
Currently the content of the C<__DATA__> block is not filtered.
Currently internal buffer lengths are limited to 32-bit only.
=head1 THINGS TO LOOK OUT FOR
=over 5
=item Some Filters Clobber the C<DATA> Handle
Some source filters
use
the C<DATA> handle to
read
the calling program.
When using these source filters you cannot rely on this handle, nor expect
any particular kind of behavior
when
operating on it. Filters based on
Filter::Util::Call (and therefore Filter::Simple)
do
not alter the C<DATA>
filehandle, but on the other hand totally ignore the text
after
C<__DATA__>.
=back
=head1 REQUIREMENTS
The Source Filters distribution is available on CPAN, in
CPAN/modules/by-module/Filter
Starting from Perl 5.8 Filter::Util::Call (the core part of the
Source Filters distribution) is part of the standard Perl distribution.
Also included is a friendlier interface called Filter::Simple, by
Damian Conway.
=head1 AUTHOR
Paul Marquess E<lt>Paul.Marquess
@btinternet
.comE<gt>
Reini Urban E<lt>rurban
@cpan
.orgE<gt>
=head1 Copyrights
The first version of this article originally appeared in The Perl
Journal
courtesy of Jon Orwant and The Perl Journal. This document may be
distributed under the same terms as Perl itself.