Use warn () instead of print STDERR
[Data-Peek.git] / Peek.pm
blob69d37202b8822d0595210fdc22b2b540b41f12b1
1 package Data::Peek;
3 use strict;
4 use warnings;
6 use DynaLoader ();
8 use vars qw( $VERSION @ISA @EXPORT @EXPORT_OK );
9 $VERSION = "0.30";
10 @ISA = qw( DynaLoader Exporter );
11 @EXPORT = qw( DDumper DDsort DPeek DDisplay DDump DDual DGrow );
12 @EXPORT_OK = qw( triplevar );
13 $] >= 5.007003 and push @EXPORT, "DDump_IO";
15 bootstrap Data::Peek $VERSION;
17 ### ############# DDumper () ##################################################
19 use Data::Dumper;
21 my %sk = (
22 undef => 0,
23 "" => 0,
24 0 => 0,
25 1 => 1,
27 V => sub { # Sort by value
28 my $r = shift;
29 [ sort { $r->{$a} cmp $r->{$b} } keys %$r ];
31 VN => sub { # Sort by value numeric
32 my $r = shift;
33 [ sort { $r->{$a} <=> $r->{$b} } keys %$r ];
35 VNR => sub { # Sort by value numeric reverse
36 my $r = shift;
37 [ sort { $r->{$b} <=> $r->{$a} } keys %$r ];
39 VR => sub { # Sort by value reverse
40 my $r = shift;
41 [ sort { $r->{$b} cmp $r->{$a} } keys %$r ];
43 R => sub { # Sort reverse
44 my $r = shift;
45 [ reverse sort keys %$r ];
48 my $_sortkeys = 1;
50 sub DDsort
52 @_ or return;
54 $_sortkeys = exists $sk{$_[0]} ? $sk{$_[0]} : $_[0];
55 } # DDsort
57 sub import
59 my @exp = @_;
60 my @etl;
61 foreach my $p (@exp) {
62 exists $sk{$p} and DDsort ($p), next;
64 push @etl, $p;
66 __PACKAGE__->export_to_level (1, @etl);
67 } # import
69 sub DDumper
71 local $Data::Dumper::Sortkeys = $_sortkeys;
72 local $Data::Dumper::Indent = 1;
73 local $Data::Dumper::Quotekeys = 0;
74 local $Data::Dumper::Deparse = 1;
75 local $Data::Dumper::Terse = 1;
76 local $Data::Dumper::Useqq = 0; # I want unicode visible
78 my $s = Data::Dumper::Dumper @_;
79 $s =~ s/^(\s*)(.*?)\s*=>/sprintf "%s%-16s =>", $1, $2/gme; # Align =>
80 $s =~ s/\bbless\s*\(\s*/bless (/gm and $s =~ s/\s+\)([;,])$/)$1/gm;
81 $s =~ s/^(?= *[]}](?:[;,]|$))/ /gm;
82 $s =~ s/^(\s*[{[]) *\n *(?=\S)(?![{[])/$1 /gm;
83 $s =~ s/^(\s+)/$1$1/gm;
85 defined wantarray or warn $s;
86 return $s;
87 } # DDumper
89 ### ############# DDump () ####################################################
91 our $has_perlio;
93 BEGIN {
94 use Config;
95 $has_perlio = ($Config{useperlio} || "undef") eq "define";
98 sub _DDump_ref
100 my (undef, $down) = (@_, 0);
102 my $ref = ref $_[0];
103 if ($ref eq "SCALAR" || $ref eq "REF") {
104 my %hash = DDump (${$_[0]}, $down);
105 return { %hash };
107 if ($ref eq "ARRAY") {
108 my @list;
109 foreach my $list (@{$_[0]}) {
110 my %hash = DDump ($list, $down);
111 push @list, { %hash };
113 return [ @list ];
115 if ($ref eq "HASH") {
116 my %hash;
117 foreach my $key (sort keys %{$_[0]}) {
118 $hash{DPeek ($key)} = { DDump ($_[0]->{$key}, $down) };
120 return { %hash };
122 undef;
123 } # _DDump_ref
125 sub _DDump
127 my (undef, $down, $dump, $fh) = (@_, "");
129 if ($has_perlio and open $fh, ">", \$dump) {
130 #print STDERR "Using DDump_IO\n";
131 DDump_IO ($fh, $_[0], $down);
132 close $fh;
134 else {
135 #print STDERR "Using DDump_XS\n";
136 $dump = DDump_XS ($_[0]);
139 return $dump;
140 } # _DDump
142 sub DDump ($;$)
144 my (undef, $down) = (@_, 0);
145 my @dump = split m/[\r\n]+/, _DDump ($_[0], wantarray || $down) or return;
147 if (wantarray) {
148 my %hash;
149 ($hash{sv} = $dump[0]) =~ s/^SV\s*=\s*//;
150 m/^\s+(\w+)\s*=\s*(.*)/ and $hash{$1} = $2 for @dump;
152 if (exists $hash{FLAGS}) {
153 $hash{FLAGS} =~ tr/()//d;
154 $hash{FLAGS} = { map { $_ => 1 } split m/,/ => $hash{FLAGS} };
157 $down && ref $_[0] and
158 $hash{RV} = _DDump_ref ($_[0], $down - 1) || $_[0];
159 return %hash;
162 my $dump = join "\n", @dump, "";
164 defined wantarray and return $dump;
166 warn $dump;
167 } # DDump
169 "Indent";
171 __END__
173 =head1 NAME
175 Data::Peek - A collection of low-level debug facilities
177 =head1 SYNOPSIS
179 use Data::Peek;
181 print DDumper \%hash; # Same syntax as Data::Dumper
183 print DPeek \$var;
184 my ($pv, $iv, $nv, $rv, $magic) = DDual ($var [, 1]);
185 print DPeek for DDual ($!, 1);
186 print DDisplay ("ab\nc\x{20ac}\rdef\n");
188 my $dump = DDump $var;
189 my %hash = DDump \@list;
190 DDump \%hash;
192 my %hash = DDump (\%hash, 5); # dig 5 levels deep
194 my $dump;
195 open my $fh, ">", \$dump;
196 DDump_IO ($fh, \%hash, 6);
197 close $fh;
198 print $dump;
200 use Data::Peek qw( DGrow triplevar );
201 my $x = ""; DGrow ($x, 10000);
202 my $tv = triplevar ("\N{GREEK SMALL LETTER PI}", 3, "3.1415");
204 =head1 DESCRIPTION
206 Data::Peek started off as C<DDumper> being a wrapper module over
207 L<Data::Dumper>, but grew out to be a set of low-level data
208 introspection utilities that no other module provided yet, using the
209 lowest level of the perl internals API as possible.
211 =head2 DDumper ($var, ...)
213 Not liking the default output of Data::Dumper, and always feeling the need
214 to set C<$Data::Dumper::Sortkeys = 1;>, and not liking any of the default
215 layouts, this function is just a wrapper around Data::Dumper::Dumper with
216 everything set as I like it.
218 $Data::Dumper::Sortkeys = 1;
219 $Data::Dumper::Indent = 1;
221 And the result is further beautified to meet my needs:
223 * quotation of hash keys has been removed (with the disadvantage
224 that the output might not be parseable again).
225 * arrows for hashes are aligned at 16 (longer keys don't align)
226 * closing braces and brackets are now correctly aligned
228 In void context, C<DDumper ()> warn ()'s.
230 Example
232 print DDumper { ape => 1, foo => "egg", bar => [ 2, "baz", undef ]};
234 { ape => 1,
235 bar => [
237 'baz',
238 undef
240 foo => 'egg'
243 =head2 DDsort ( 0 | 1 | R | V | VR | VN | VNR )
245 Set the hash sort algorithm for DDumper. The default is to sort by key value.
247 0 - Do not sort
248 1 - Sort by key
249 R - Reverse sort by key
250 V - Sort by value
251 VR - Reverse sort by value
252 VN - Sort by value numerical
253 VNR - Reverse sort by value numerical
255 These can also be passed to import:
257 $ perl -MDP=VNR -we'DDumper { foo => 1, bar => 2, zap => 3, gum => 13 }'
258 { gum => 13,
259 zap => 3,
260 bar => 2,
261 foo => 1
263 $ perl -MDP=V -we'DDumper { foo => 1, bar => 2, zap => 3, gum => 13 }'
264 { foo => 1,
265 gum => 13,
266 bar => 2,
267 zap => 3
270 =head2 DPeek
272 =head2 DPeek ($var)
274 Playing with C<sv_dump ()>, I found C<Perl_sv_peek ()>, and it might be
275 very useful for simple checks. If C<$var> is omitted, uses $_.
277 Example
279 print DPeek "abc\x{0a}de\x{20ac}fg";
281 PV("abc\nde\342\202\254fg"\0) [UTF8 "abc\nde\x{20ac}fg"]
283 In void context, C<DPeek ()> prints to C<STDERR> plus a newline.
285 =head2 DDisplay
287 =head2 DDisplay ($var)
289 Show the PV content of a scalar the way perl debugging would have done.
290 UTF-8 detection is on, so this is effectively the same as returning the
291 first part the C<DPeek ()> returns for non-UTF8 PV's or the second part
292 for UTF-8 PV's. C<DDisplay ()> returns the empty string for scalars that
293 no have a valid PV.
295 Example
297 print DDisplay "abc\x{0a}de\x{20ac}fg";
299 "abc\nde\x{20ac}fg"
301 =head2 my ($pv, $iv, $nv, $rv, $hm) = DDual ($var [, $getmagic])
303 DDual will return the basic elements in a variable, guaranteeing that no
304 conversion takes place. This is very useful for dual-var variables, or
305 when checking is a variable has defined entries for a certain type of
306 scalar. For each String (PV), Integer (IV), Double (NV), and Reference (RV),
307 the current value of C<$var> is returned or undef if it is not set (yet).
308 The 5th element is an indicator if C<$var> has magic, which is B<not> invoked
309 in the returned values, unless explicitly asked for with a true optional
310 second argument.
312 Example
314 print DPeek for DDual ($!, 1);
316 In void context, DDual does the equivalent of
318 { my @d = DDual ($!, 1);
319 print STDERR
320 DPeek ($!), "\n",
321 " PV: ", DPeek ($d[0]), "\n",
322 " IV: ", DPeek ($d[1]), "\n",
323 " NV: ", DPeek ($d[2]), "\n",
324 " RV: ", DPeek ($d[3]), "\n";
327 =head2 my $LEN = DGrow ($pv, $size)
329 Fastest way to preallocate space for a PV scalar. Returns the allocated
330 length. If $size is smaller than the already allocated space, it will
331 not shrink.
333 cmpthese (-2, {
334 pack => q{my $x = ""; $x = pack "x20000"; $x = "";},
335 op_x => q{my $x = ""; $x = "x" x 20000; $x = "";},
336 grow => q{my $x = ""; DGrow ($x, 20000); $x = "";},
339 Rate op_x pack grow
340 op_x 62127/s -- -59% -96%
341 pack 152046/s 145% -- -91%
342 grow 1622943/s 2512% 967% --
345 =head2 triplevar ($pv, $iv, $nv)
347 When making C<DDual ()> I wondered if it were possible to create triple-val
348 scalar variables. L<Scalar::Util> already gives us C<dualvar ()>, that creates
349 you a scalar with different numeric and string values that return different
350 values in different context. Not that C<triplevar ()> would be very useful,
351 compared to C<dualvar ()>, but at least this shows that it is possible.
353 C<triplevar ()> is not exported by default.
355 Example:
357 print DPeek for DDual
358 Data::Peek::triplevar ("\N{GREEK SMALL LETTER PI}", 3, 3.1415);
360 PV("\317\200"\0) [UTF8 "\x{3c0}"]
361 IV(3)
362 NV(3.1415)
363 SV_UNDEF
364 IV(0)
366 =head2 DDump ($var [, $dig_level])
368 A very useful module when debugging is C<Devel::Peek>, but is has one big
369 disadvantage: it only prints to STDERR, which is not very handy when your
370 code wants to inspect variables al a low level.
372 Perl itself has C<sv_dump ()>, which does something similar, but still
373 prints to STDERR, and only one level deep.
375 C<DDump ()> is an attempt to make the innards available to the script level
376 with a reasonable level of compatibility. C<DDump ()> is context sensitive.
378 In void context, it behaves exactly like C<Perl_sv_dump ()>.
380 In scalar context, it returns what C<Perl_sv_dump ()> would have printed.
382 In list context, it returns a hash of the variable's properties. In this mode
383 you can pass an optional second argument that determines the depth of digging.
385 Example
387 print scalar DDump "abc\x{0a}de\x{20ac}fg"
389 SV = PV(0x723250) at 0x8432b0
390 REFCNT = 1
391 FLAGS = (PADBUSY,PADMY,POK,pPOK,UTF8)
392 PV = 0x731ac0 "abc\nde\342\202\254fg"\0 [UTF8 "abc\nde\x{20ac}fg"]
393 CUR = 11
394 LEN = 16
396 my %h = DDump "abc\x{0a}de\x{20ac}fg";
397 print DDumper \%h;
399 { CUR => '11',
400 FLAGS => {
401 PADBUSY => 1,
402 PADMY => 1,
403 POK => 1,
404 UTF8 => 1,
405 pPOK => 1
407 LEN => '16',
408 PV => '0x731ac0 "abc\\nde\\342\\202\\254fg"\\0 [UTF8 "abc\\nde\\x{20ac}fg"]',
409 REFCNT => '1',
410 sv => 'PV(0x723250) at 0x8432c0'
413 my %h = DDump {
414 ape => 1,
415 foo => "egg",
416 bar => [ 2, "baz", undef ],
417 }, 1;
418 print DDumper \%h;
420 { FLAGS => {
421 PADBUSY => 1,
422 PADMY => 1,
423 ROK => 1
425 REFCNT => '1',
426 RV => {
427 PVIV("ape") => {
428 FLAGS => {
429 IOK => 1,
430 PADBUSY => 1,
431 PADMY => 1,
432 pIOK => 1
434 IV => '1',
435 REFCNT => '1',
436 sv => 'IV(0x747020) at 0x843a10'
438 PVIV("bar") => {
439 CUR => '0',
440 FLAGS => {
441 PADBUSY => 1,
442 PADMY => 1,
443 ROK => 1
445 IV => '1',
446 LEN => '0',
447 PV => '0x720210 ""',
448 REFCNT => '1',
449 RV => '0x720210',
450 sv => 'PVIV(0x7223e0) at 0x843a10'
452 PVIV("foo") => {
453 CUR => '3',
454 FLAGS => {
455 PADBUSY => 1,
456 PADMY => 1,
457 POK => 1,
458 pPOK => 1
460 IV => '1',
461 LEN => '8',
462 PV => '0x7496c0 "egg"\\0',
463 REFCNT => '1',
464 sv => 'PVIV(0x7223e0) at 0x843a10'
467 sv => 'RV(0x79d058) at 0x843310'
470 =head2 DDump_IO ($io, $var [, $dig_level])
472 A wrapper function around perl's internal C<Perl_do_sv_dump ()>, which
473 makes C<Devel::Peek> completely superfluous. As PerlIO is only available
474 perl version 5.7.3 and up, this function is not available in older perls.
476 Example
478 my $dump;
479 open my $eh, ">", \$dump;
480 DDump_IO ($eh, { 3 => 4, ape => [5..8]}, 6);
481 close $eh;
482 print $dump;
484 SV = RV(0x79d9e0) at 0x843f00
485 REFCNT = 1
486 FLAGS = (TEMP,ROK)
487 RV = 0x741090
488 SV = PVHV(0x79c948) at 0x741090
489 REFCNT = 1
490 FLAGS = (SHAREKEYS)
491 IV = 2
492 NV = 0
493 ARRAY = 0x748ff0 (0:7, 2:1)
494 hash quality = 62.5%
495 KEYS = 2
496 FILL = 1
497 MAX = 7
498 RITER = -1
499 EITER = 0x0
500 Elt "ape" HASH = 0x97623e03
501 SV = RV(0x79d9d8) at 0x8440e0
502 REFCNT = 1
503 FLAGS = (ROK)
504 RV = 0x741470
505 SV = PVAV(0x7264b0) at 0x741470
506 REFCNT = 2
507 FLAGS = ()
508 IV = 0
509 NV = 0
510 ARRAY = 0x822f70
511 FILL = 3
512 MAX = 3
513 ARYLEN = 0x0
514 FLAGS = (REAL)
515 Elt No. 0
516 SV = IV(0x7467c8) at 0x7c1aa0
517 REFCNT = 1
518 FLAGS = (IOK,pIOK)
519 IV = 5
520 Elt No. 1
521 SV = IV(0x7467b0) at 0x8440f0
522 REFCNT = 1
523 FLAGS = (IOK,pIOK)
524 IV = 6
525 Elt No. 2
526 SV = IV(0x746810) at 0x75be00
527 REFCNT = 1
528 FLAGS = (IOK,pIOK)
529 IV = 7
530 Elt No. 3
531 SV = IV(0x746d38) at 0x7799d0
532 REFCNT = 1
533 FLAGS = (IOK,pIOK)
534 IV = 8
535 Elt "3" HASH = 0xa400c7f3
536 SV = IV(0x746fd0) at 0x7200e0
537 REFCNT = 1
538 FLAGS = (IOK,pIOK)
539 IV = 4
541 =head1 INTERNALS
543 C<DDump ()> uses an XS wrapper around C<Perl_sv_dump ()> where the
544 STDERR is temporarily caught to a pipe. The internal XS helper functions
545 are not meant for user space
547 =head2 DDump_XS (SV *sv)
549 Base interface to internals for C<DDump ()>.
551 =head1 BUGS
553 Windows and AIX might be using a build where not all symbols that were
554 supposed to be exported in the public API are not. Perl_pv_peek () is
555 one of them.
557 Not all types of references are supported.
559 No idea how far back this goes in perl support, but Devel::PPPort has
560 proven to be a big help.
562 =head1 SEE ALSO
564 L<Devel::Peek(3)>, L<Data::Dumper(3)>, L<Data::Dump(3)>, L<Devel::Dumpvar>,
565 L<Data::Dump::Streamer(3)>
567 =head1 AUTHOR
569 H.Merijn Brand <h.m.brand@xs4all.nl>
571 =head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
573 Copyright (C) 2008-2010 H.Merijn Brand
575 This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
576 it under the same terms as Perl itself.
578 =cut