man Debug::Trace () - Perl extension to trace subroutine calls

NAME

Debug::Trace - Perl extension to trace subroutine calls

SYNOPSIS

  perl -MDebug::Trace=foo,bar yourprogram.pl

DESCRIPTION

Debug::Trace instruments subroutines to provide tracing information upon every call and return.

Using Debug::Trace does not require any changes to your sources. Most often, it will be used from the command line:

  perl -MDebug::Trace=foo,bar yourprogram.pl

This will have your subroutines foo() and bar() printing call and return information.

Subroutine names may be fully qualified to denote subroutines in other packages than the default main::.

By default, the trace information is output using the standard warn() function.

MODIFIERS

Modifiers can be inserted in the list of subroutines to change the default behavior of this module. All modifiers can be used in three ways:

•
CW:name to enable a specific feature.
•
CW:noname to disable a specific feature.
•
CW:nameCW(valueCW) to set a feature to a specific value. In general, CW:name is equivalent to CW:nameCW(1), while CW:noname corresponds to CW:nameCW(0).

The following modifiers are recognized:

:warn
Uses warn() to produce the trace output (default). CW:nowarn Sends trace output directly to STDERR.
:caller
Add basic call information to the trace message, including from where the routine was called, and by whom. This is enabled by default.
:stacktrace
Add a stack trace (call history).
:maxlen(length)
Truncate the length of the lines of trace information to length characters.

The following modifiers can be used to control the way Data::Dumper prints the values of parameters and return values. See also Data::Dumper.

:indent
Controls the style of indentation. It can be set to 0, 1, 2 or 3. Style 0 spews output without any newlines, indentation, or spaces between list items. CW:indent(0) is the default.
:useqq
When enabled, uses double quotes for representing string values. Whitespace other than space will be represented as CW[\n\t\r], unsafe characters will be backslashed, and unprintable characters will be output as quoted octal integers. This is the default, use CW:nouseqq to disable.
:maxdepth(depth)
Can be set to a positive integer that specifies the depth beyond which which we don't print structure contents. The default is 2, which means one level of array/hashes in argument lists and return values is expanded. If you use CW:nomaxdepth or CW:maxdepth(0), nested structures are fully expanded.
:quotekeys
Controls wether hash keys are always printed quoted. The default is CW:noquotekeys.
sortkeys
Controls whether hash keys are dumped in sorted order. The default is CW:nosortkeys.

Modifiers apply only to the subroutines that follow in the list of arguments.

METHODS

None, actually. Everything is handled by the module's import.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

Environment variable CWPERL5DEBUGTRACE can be used to preset initial modifiers, e.g.:

    export PERL5DEBUGTRACE=":warn:indent(2):nomaxdepth:quotekeys"

SEE ALSO

Data::Dumper, Carp

AUTHOR

Jan-Pieter Cornet <jpc@cpan.org>; Jos Boumans <kane@cpan.org>; Johan Vromans <jv@cpan.org>;

This is an Amsterdam.pm production. See http://amsterdam.pm.org.

COPYRIGHT

Copyright 2002 Amsterdam.pm. All rights reserved.

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