Class::Load - A working (require "Class::Name") and more

  1. VERSION
  2. SYNOPSIS
  3. DESCRIPTION
  4. FUNCTIONS
    1. load_class Class::Name, \%options
    2. try_load_class Class::Name, \%options -> (0|1, error message)
    3. is_class_loaded Class::Name, \%options -> 0|1
    4. load_first_existing_class Class::Name, \%options, ...
    5. load_optional_class Class::Name, \%options -> 0|1
  5. CAVEATS
  6. SEE ALSO
  7. SUPPORT
  8. AUTHOR
  9. CONTRIBUTORS
  10. COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

VERSION

version 0.25

SYNOPSIS

use Class::Load ':all';

try_load_class('Class::Name')
    or plan skip_all => "Class::Name required to run these tests";

load_class('Class::Name');

is_class_loaded('Class::Name');

my $baseclass = load_optional_class('Class::Name::MightExist')
    ? 'Class::Name::MightExist'
    : 'Class::Name::Default';

DESCRIPTION

require EXPR only accepts Class/Name.pm style module names, not Class::Name. How frustrating! For that, we provide load_class 'Class::Name'.

It's often useful to test whether a module can be loaded, instead of throwing an error when it's not available. For that, we provide try_load_class 'Class::Name'.

Finally, sometimes we need to know whether a particular class has been loaded. Asking %INC is an option, but that will miss inner packages and any class for which the filename does not correspond to the package name. For that, we provide is_class_loaded 'Class::Name'.

FUNCTIONS

load_class Class::Name, \%options

load_class will load Class::Name or throw an error, much like require.

If Class::Name is already loaded (checked with is_class_loaded) then it will not try to load the class. This is useful when you have inner packages which require does not check.

The %options hash currently accepts one key, -version. If you specify a version, then this subroutine will call Class::Name->VERSION( $options{-version} ) internally, which will throw an error if the class's version is not equal to or greater than the version you requested.

This method will return the name of the class on success.

try_load_class Class::Name, \%options -> (0|1, error message)

Returns 1 if the class was loaded, 0 if it was not. If the class was not loaded, the error will be returned as a second return value in list context.

Again, if Class::Name is already loaded (checked with is_class_loaded) then it will not try to load the class. This is useful when you have inner packages which require does not check.

Like load_class, you can pass a -version in %options. If the version is not sufficient, then this subroutine will return false.

is_class_loaded Class::Name, \%options -> 0|1

This uses a number of heuristics to determine if the class Class::Name is loaded. There heuristics were taken from Class::MOP's old pure-perl implementation.

Like load_class, you can pass a -version in %options. If the version is not sufficient, then this subroutine will return false.

load_first_existing_class Class::Name, \%options, ...

This attempts to load the first loadable class in the list of classes given. Each class name can be followed by an options hash reference.

If any one of the classes loads and passes the optional version check, that class name will be returned. If none of the classes can be loaded (or none pass their version check), then an error will be thrown.

If, when attempting to load a class, it fails to load because of a syntax error, then an error will be thrown immediately.

load_optional_class Class::Name, \%options -> 0|1

load_optional_class is a lot like try_load_class, but also a lot like load_class.

If the class exists, and it works, then it will return 1. If you specify a version in %options, then the version check must succeed or it will return 0.

If the class doesn't exist, and it appears to not exist on disk either, it will return 0.

If the class exists on disk, but loading from disk results in an error (e.g.: a syntax error), then it will croak with that error.

This is useful for using if you want a fallback module system, i.e.:

my $class = load_optional_class($foo) ? $foo : $default;

That way, if $foo does exist, but can't be loaded due to error, you won't get the behaviour of it simply not existing.

CAVEATS

Because of some of the heuristics that this module uses to infer whether a module has been loaded, some false positives may occur in is_class_loaded checks (which are also performed internally in other interfaces) -- if a class has started to be loaded but then dies, it may appear that it has already been loaded, which can cause other things to make the wrong decision. Module::Runtime doesn't have this issue, but it also doesn't do some things that this module does -- for example gracefully handle packages that have been defined inline in the same file as another package.

SEE ALSO

http://blog.fox.geek.nz/2010/11/searching-design-spec-for-ultimate.html

This blog post is a good overview of the current state of the existing modules for loading other modules in various ways.

http://blog.fox.geek.nz/2010/11/handling-optional-requirements-with.html

This blog post describes how to handle optional modules with Class::Load.

http://d.hatena.ne.jp/tokuhirom/20110202/1296598578

This Japanese blog post describes why DBIx::Skinny now uses Class::Load over its competitors.

Moose, Jifty, Prophet, etc

This module was designed to be used anywhere you have if (eval "require $module"; 1), which occurs in many large projects.

Module::Runtime

A leaner approach to loading modules

SUPPORT

Bugs may be submitted through the RT bug tracker (or [email protected]).

There is also a mailing list available for users of this distribution, at http://lists.perl.org/list/moose.html.

There is also an irc channel available for users of this distribution, at #moose on irc.perl.org.

AUTHOR

Shawn M Moore <sartak at bestpractical.com>

CONTRIBUTORS

This software is copyright (c) 2008 by Shawn M Moore.

This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.