NAME

Attribute::Contract - Design by contract via Perl attributes

SYNOPSIS

package Interface;
use Attribute::Contract -types => [qw/Str slurpy ArrayRef/];

sub do_smth :ContractRequires(Str, slurpy ArrayRef[Str]) :ContractEnsures(Str) {
    my $self = shift;
    my ($input_string, $array_ref_of_strings) = @_;

    return '...';
}

package Implementation;
use base 'Interface';
use Attribute::Contract;

sub do_smth {
    my $self = shift;
    my ($input_string, $array_ref_of_strings) = @_;

    return 'ok';
}

Implementation->do_smth('hi', 'there'); # works

Implementation->do_smth();              # croaks!
Implementation->do_smth(sub {});        # croaks!

DESCRIPTION

Attribute::Contract by using Perl attributes allows you to specify contract (Design by Contract) for every method in your class. You can check incoming and outgoing values by specifying ContractRequires and ContractEnsures attributes.

It's the most useful for interfaces or abstract classes when you want to control whether your implementation follows the same interface and respects the Liskov substitution principle.

This module uses Type::Tiny underneath so all the checks is done via that module. Check it out for more documention on type validation.

Why attributes? They feel and look natural and are applied during compile time.

IMPORTING

When using Attribute::Contract one may want to import various types in order to check them in attributes. Types themselves are not imported into the current module but rather used when compiling attributes.

Types

package MyClass;
use Attribute::Contract -types => [qw/ClassName Str/];

sub static_method : ContractRequires(ClassName, Str) {
};

...

MyClass->static_method('string');

Type libraries

When types are complex or the description is too long attributes might get not very readable. In this case one can use type libraries (implemented again via Type::Tiny):

package MyTypes;
use Type::Library -base, -declare => qw(MyInt);
use Type::Utils;
use Types::Standard qw(Int);

declare MyInt, as Int, where => {$_ > 0};

package MyClass;
use Attribute::Contract -library => 'MyTypes';

sub static_method : ContractRequires(ClassName, MyInt) {
}

...

MyClass->static_method(5);

Aliasing

If you don't like ContractRequires and ContractEnsures you can set your own names:

use Attribute::Contract -names => {requires => 'In', ensures => 'Out'}

sub method : In(ClassName, Str) Out(Str) {
}

IMPLEMENTATION

Inheritance

By default all the contracts are inherited. Just don't forget to use Attribute::Contract in the derived class. But if no methods are overriden then even using this module is not needed.

Caching

During the compile time for every contract a Perl subroutine is built and evaled. If the methods share the same contract they use the same checking code reference. This speeds up the checking and saves some memory.

Error reporting

Errors are as specific as possible. On error you will get a meaningful message and a stack trace.

SWITCHING OFF

You can switch off contract checking by specifying an environment variable NO_ATTRIBUTE_CONTRACT.

DEVELOPMENT

Repository

http://github.com/vti/attribute-contract

AUTHOR

Viacheslav Tykhanovskyi, vti@cpan.org.

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

Copyright (C) 2012-2013, Viacheslav Tykhanovskyi

This program is free software, you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the Artistic License version 2.0.