| package AutoLoader; |
| |
| use strict; |
| use 5.006_001; |
| |
| our($VERSION, $AUTOLOAD); |
| |
| my $is_dosish; |
| my $is_epoc; |
| my $is_vms; |
| my $is_macos; |
| |
| BEGIN { |
| $is_dosish = $^O eq 'dos' || $^O eq 'os2' || $^O eq 'MSWin32' || $^O eq 'NetWare'; |
| $is_epoc = $^O eq 'epoc'; |
| $is_vms = $^O eq 'VMS'; |
| $is_macos = $^O eq 'MacOS'; |
| $VERSION = '5.74'; |
| } |
| |
| AUTOLOAD { |
| my $sub = $AUTOLOAD; |
| autoload_sub($sub); |
| goto &$sub; |
| } |
| |
| sub autoload_sub { |
| my $sub = shift; |
| |
| my $filename = AutoLoader::find_filename( $sub ); |
| |
| my $save = $@; |
| local $!; # Do not munge the value. |
| eval { local $SIG{__DIE__}; require $filename }; |
| if ($@) { |
| if (substr($sub,-9) eq '::DESTROY') { |
| no strict 'refs'; |
| *$sub = sub {}; |
| $@ = undef; |
| } elsif ($@ =~ /^Can't locate/) { |
| # The load might just have failed because the filename was too |
| # long for some old SVR3 systems which treat long names as errors. |
| # If we can successfully truncate a long name then it's worth a go. |
| # There is a slight risk that we could pick up the wrong file here |
| # but autosplit should have warned about that when splitting. |
| if ($filename =~ s/(\w{12,})\.al$/substr($1,0,11).".al"/e){ |
| eval { local $SIG{__DIE__}; require $filename }; |
| } |
| } |
| if ($@){ |
| $@ =~ s/ at .*\n//; |
| my $error = $@; |
| require Carp; |
| Carp::croak($error); |
| } |
| } |
| $@ = $save; |
| |
| return 1; |
| } |
| |
| sub find_filename { |
| my $sub = shift; |
| my $filename; |
| # Braces used to preserve $1 et al. |
| { |
| # Try to find the autoloaded file from the package-qualified |
| # name of the sub. e.g., if the sub needed is |
| # Getopt::Long::GetOptions(), then $INC{Getopt/Long.pm} is |
| # something like '/usr/lib/perl5/Getopt/Long.pm', and the |
| # autoload file is '/usr/lib/perl5/auto/Getopt/Long/GetOptions.al'. |
| # |
| # However, if @INC is a relative path, this might not work. If, |
| # for example, @INC = ('lib'), then $INC{Getopt/Long.pm} is |
| # 'lib/Getopt/Long.pm', and we want to require |
| # 'auto/Getopt/Long/GetOptions.al' (without the leading 'lib'). |
| # In this case, we simple prepend the 'auto/' and let the |
| # C<require> take care of the searching for us. |
| |
| my ($pkg,$func) = ($sub =~ /(.*)::([^:]+)$/); |
| $pkg =~ s#::#/#g; |
| if (defined($filename = $INC{"$pkg.pm"})) { |
| if ($is_macos) { |
| $pkg =~ tr#/#:#; |
| $filename = undef |
| unless $filename =~ s#^(.*)$pkg\.pm\z#$1auto:$pkg:$func.al#s; |
| } else { |
| $filename = undef |
| unless $filename =~ s#^(.*)$pkg\.pm\z#$1auto/$pkg/$func.al#s; |
| } |
| |
| # if the file exists, then make sure that it is a |
| # a fully anchored path (i.e either '/usr/lib/auto/foo/bar.al', |
| # or './lib/auto/foo/bar.al'. This avoids C<require> searching |
| # (and failing) to find the 'lib/auto/foo/bar.al' because it |
| # looked for 'lib/lib/auto/foo/bar.al', given @INC = ('lib'). |
| |
| if (defined $filename and -r $filename) { |
| unless ($filename =~ m|^/|s) { |
| if ($is_dosish) { |
| unless ($filename =~ m{^([a-z]:)?[\\/]}is) { |
| if ($^O ne 'NetWare') { |
| $filename = "./$filename"; |
| } else { |
| $filename = "$filename"; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| elsif ($is_epoc) { |
| unless ($filename =~ m{^([a-z?]:)?[\\/]}is) { |
| $filename = "./$filename"; |
| } |
| } |
| elsif ($is_vms) { |
| # XXX todo by VMSmiths |
| $filename = "./$filename"; |
| } |
| elsif (!$is_macos) { |
| $filename = "./$filename"; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| else { |
| $filename = undef; |
| } |
| } |
| unless (defined $filename) { |
| # let C<require> do the searching |
| $filename = "auto/$sub.al"; |
| $filename =~ s#::#/#g; |
| } |
| } |
| return $filename; |
| } |
| |
| sub import { |
| my $pkg = shift; |
| my $callpkg = caller; |
| |
| # |
| # Export symbols, but not by accident of inheritance. |
| # |
| |
| if ($pkg eq 'AutoLoader') { |
| if ( @_ and $_[0] =~ /^&?AUTOLOAD$/ ) { |
| no strict 'refs'; |
| *{ $callpkg . '::AUTOLOAD' } = \&AUTOLOAD; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| # |
| # Try to find the autosplit index file. Eg., if the call package |
| # is POSIX, then $INC{POSIX.pm} is something like |
| # '/usr/local/lib/perl5/POSIX.pm', and the autosplit index file is in |
| # '/usr/local/lib/perl5/auto/POSIX/autosplit.ix', so we require that. |
| # |
| # However, if @INC is a relative path, this might not work. If, |
| # for example, @INC = ('lib'), then |
| # $INC{POSIX.pm} is 'lib/POSIX.pm', and we want to require |
| # 'auto/POSIX/autosplit.ix' (without the leading 'lib'). |
| # |
| |
| (my $calldir = $callpkg) =~ s#::#/#g; |
| my $path = $INC{$calldir . '.pm'}; |
| if (defined($path)) { |
| # Try absolute path name, but only eval it if the |
| # transformation from module path to autosplit.ix path |
| # succeeded! |
| my $replaced_okay; |
| if ($is_macos) { |
| (my $malldir = $calldir) =~ tr#/#:#; |
| $replaced_okay = ($path =~ s#^(.*)$malldir\.pm\z#$1auto:$malldir:autosplit.ix#s); |
| } else { |
| $replaced_okay = ($path =~ s#^(.*)$calldir\.pm\z#$1auto/$calldir/autosplit.ix#); |
| } |
| |
| eval { require $path; } if $replaced_okay; |
| # If that failed, try relative path with normal @INC searching. |
| if (!$replaced_okay or $@) { |
| $path ="auto/$calldir/autosplit.ix"; |
| eval { require $path; }; |
| } |
| if ($@) { |
| my $error = $@; |
| require Carp; |
| Carp::carp($error); |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| sub unimport { |
| my $callpkg = caller; |
| |
| no strict 'refs'; |
| |
| for my $exported (qw( AUTOLOAD )) { |
| my $symname = $callpkg . '::' . $exported; |
| undef *{ $symname } if \&{ $symname } == \&{ $exported }; |
| *{ $symname } = \&{ $symname }; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| 1; |
| |
| __END__ |
| |