NAME

Eval::Closure - safely and cleanly create closures via string eval

VERSION

version 0.14

SYNOPSIS

  use Eval::Closure;

  my $code = eval_closure(
      source      => 'sub { $foo++ }',
      environment => {
          '$foo' => \1,
      },
  );

  warn $code->(); # 1
  warn $code->(); # 2

  my $code2 = eval_closure(
      source => 'sub { $code->() }',
  ); # dies, $code isn't in scope

DESCRIPTION

String eval is often used for dynamic code generation. For instance, Moose uses it heavily, to generate inlined versions of accessors and constructors, which speeds code up at runtime by a significant amount. String eval is not without its issues however - it's difficult to control the scope it's used in (which determines which variables are in scope inside the eval), and it's easy to miss compilation errors, since eval catches them and sticks them in $@ instead.

This module attempts to solve these problems. It provides an eval_closure function, which evals a string in a clean environment, other than a fixed list of specified variables. Compilation errors are rethrown automatically.

FUNCTIONS

eval_closure(%args)

This function provides the main functionality of this module. It is exported by default. It takes a hash of parameters, with these keys being valid:

source

The string to be evaled. It should end by returning a code reference. It can access any variable declared in the environment parameter (and only those variables). It can be either a string, or an arrayref of lines (which will be joined with newlines to produce the string).

environment

The environment to provide to the eval. This should be a hashref, mapping variable names (including sigils) to references of the appropriate type. For instance, a valid value for environment would be { '@foo' => [] } (which would allow the generated function to use an array named @foo). Generally, this is used to allow the generated function to access externally defined variables (so you would pass in a reference to a variable that already exists).

In perl 5.18 and greater, the environment hash can contain variables with a sigil of &. This will create a lexical sub in the evaluated code (see "The 'lexical_subs' feature" in feature). Using a & sigil on perl versions before lexical subs were available will throw an error.

alias

If set to true, the coderef returned closes over the variables referenced in the environment hashref. (This feature requires Devel::LexAlias.) If set to false, the coderef closes over a shallow copy of the variables.

If this argument is omitted, Eval::Closure will currently assume false, but this assumption may change in a future version.

description

This lets you provide a bit more information in backtraces. Normally, when a function that was generated through string eval is called, that stack frame will show up as "(eval n)", where 'n' is a sequential identifier for every string eval that has happened so far in the program. Passing a description parameter lets you override that to something more useful (for instance, Moose overrides the description for accessors to something like "accessor foo at MyClass.pm, line 123").

line

This lets you override the particular line number that appears in backtraces, much like the description option. The default is 1.

terse_error

Normally, this function appends the source code that failed to compile, and prepends some explanatory text. Setting this option to true suppresses that behavior so you get only the compilation error that Perl actually reported.

BUGS

No known bugs.

Please report any bugs to GitHub Issues at https://github.com/doy/eval-closure/issues.

SEE ALSO

SUPPORT

You can find this documentation for this module with the perldoc command.

    perldoc Eval::Closure

You can also look for information at:

NOTES

Based on code from Class::MOP::Method::Accessor, by Stevan Little and the Moose Cabal.

AUTHOR

Jesse Luehrs <doy@tozt.net>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

This software is copyright (c) 2016 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.