The Perl Toolchain Summit needs more sponsors. If your company depends on Perl, please support this very important event.

NAME

Glib::ParseXSDoc - Parse POD and XSub declarations from XS files.

DESCRIPTION

This is the heart of an automatic API reference documentation system for XS-based Perl modules. FIXME more info here!!

FIXME document recognized POD directives and the output data structures

FUNCTIONS

xsdocparse (@filenames)

Parse xs files for xsub signatures and pod. Writes to standard output a data structure suitable for eval'ing in another Perl script, describing all the stuff found. The output contains three variables:

$xspods = ARRAYREF

array of pods found in the verbatim C portion of the XS file, listed in the order found. These are assumed to pertain to the XS/C api, not the Perl api. Any =for apidoc paragraphs following an =object paragraphs in the verbatim sections are stripped (as are the =object paragraphs), and will appear instead in $data->{$package}{pods}.

$data = HASHREF

big hash keyed by package name (as found in the MODULE line), containing under each key a hash with all the xsubs and pods in that package, in the order found. Packages are consolidated across multiple files.

FYI, this creates a new parser and calls parse_file on it for each input filename; then calls swizzle_pods to ensure that any =for apidoc name pods are matched up with their target xsubs; and finally calls Data::Dumper to write the data to stdout. So, if you want to get finer control over how the output is created, or keep all the data in-process, now you know how. :-)

METHODS

$Glib::ParseXSDoc::verbose

If true, this causes the parser to be verbose.

$parser = Glib::ParseXSDoc->new

Create a new xsub parser.

string = $parser->package

Get the current package name. Falls back to the module name. Will be undef if the parser hasn't reached the first MODULE line.

HASHREF = $parser->pkgdata

The data hash corresponding to the current package, honoring the most recently encounter =for object directive. Ensures that it exists. Returns a reference to the member of the main data structure, so modifications are permanent and useful.

$parser->parse_file (filename)

Parse one xs file. Stores all the collected data in $parser's internal data structures.

$parser->swizzle_pods

Match =for apidoc pods to xsubs.

$parser->hide_hidden

Honior the __hide__ directive in =for apidoc lines.

bool = $parser->is_module_line ($line)

Analyze $line to see if it contains an XS MODULE directive. If so, returns true after setting the $parser's module, package, and prefix accordingly.

$pod = $parser->slurp_pod_paragraph ($firstline, $term_regex=/^=cut\s*/)

Slurp up POD lines from $filehandle from here to the next $term_regex or EOF. Since you probably already read a line to determine that we needed to start a pod, you can pass that first line to be included.

$xsub = $parser->parse_xsub (@lines)

Parse an xsub header, in the form of a list of lines, into a data structure describing the xsub. That includes pulling out the argument types, aliases, and code type.

Without artificial intelligence, we cannot reliably determine anything about the types or number of parameters returned from xsubs with PPCODE bodies.

OUTLIST parameters are pulled from the args list and put into an "outlist" key. IN_OUTLIST parameters are put into both.

Data type names are not mangled at all.

$parser->clean_out_empty_pods

Looks throught the data memeber of the parser and removes any keys (and associated values) when no pod, enums, and xsubs exist for the package.

AUTHOR

muppet <scott at asofyet dot org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

Copyright (C) 2003 by muppet

This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Library General Public License for more details.

You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA.