man Sub::Uplevel () - apparently run a function in a higher stack frame
NAME
Sub::Uplevel - apparently run a function in a higher stack frame
SYNOPSIS
use Sub::Uplevel;
sub foo { print join " - ", caller; }
sub bar { uplevel 1, \&foo; }
#line 11 bar(); # main - foo.plx - 11
DESCRIPTION
Like Tcl's uplevel() function, but not quite so dangerous. The idea is just to fool caller(). All the really naughty bits of Tcl's uplevel() are avoided.
THIS IS NOT THE SORT OF THING YOU WANT TO DO EVERYDAY
- uplevel
-
uplevel $num_frames, \&func, @args;
Makes the given function think it's being executed CW$num_frames higher than the current stack level. So when they use caller($frames) it will actually caller($frames + CW$num_frames) for them. CWuplevel(1, \&some_func, @_) is effectively CWgoto &some_func but you don't immediately exit the current subroutine. So while you can't do this:sub wrapper { print "Before\n"; goto &some_func; print "After\n"; }
you can do this:sub wrapper { print "Before\n"; my @out = uplevel 1, &some_func; print "After\n"; return @out; }
EXAMPLE
The main reason I wrote this module is so I could write wrappers around functions and they wouldn't be aware they've been wrapped.
use Sub::Uplevel;
my $original_foo = \&foo;
*foo = sub { my @output = uplevel 1, $original_foo; print "foo() returned: @output"; return @output; };
If this code frightens you you should not use this module.
BUGS and CAVEATS
Sub::Uplevel must be used as early as possible in your program's compilation.
Well, the bad news is uplevel() is about 5 times slower than a normal function call. XS implementation anyone?
Blows over any CORE::GLOBAL::caller you might have (and if you do, you're just sick).
HISTORY
Those who do not learn from HISTORY are doomed to repeat it.
The lesson here is simple: Don't sit next to a Tcl programmer at the dinner table.
THANKS
Thanks to Brent Welch, Damian Conway and Robin Houston.
AUTHOR
Michael G Schwern <schwern@pobox.com>
LICENSE
Copyright by Michael G Schwern
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
See http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html
SEE ALSO
PadWalker (for the similar idea with lexicals), Hook::LexWrap, Tcl's uplevel() at http://www.scriptics.com/man/tcl8.4/TclCmd/uplevel.htm