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Command: perlclassguts | Section: 1 | Source: OpenBSD | File: perlclassguts.1
PERLCLASSGUTS(1) Perl Programmers Reference Guide PERLCLASSGUTS(1)
NAME
perlclassguts - Internals of how "feature 'class'" and class syntax
works
DESCRIPTION
This document provides in-depth information about the way in which the
perl interpreter implements the "feature 'class'" syntax and overall
behaviour. It is not intended as an end-user guide on how to use the
feature. For that, see perlclass.
The reader is assumed to be generally familiar with the perl
interpreter internals overall. For a more general overview of these
details, see also perlguts.
DATA STORAGE
Classes
A class is fundamentally a package, and exists in the symbol table as
an HV with an aux structure in exactly the same way as a non-class
package. It is distinguished from a non-class package by the fact that
the HvSTASH_IS_CLASS() macro will return true on it.
Extra information relating to it being a class is stored in the "struct
xpvhv_aux" structure attached to the stash, in the following fields:
HV *xhv_class_superclass;
CV *xhv_class_initfields_cv;
AV *xhv_class_adjust_blocks;
PADNAMELIST *xhv_class_fields;
PADOFFSET xhv_class_next_fieldix;
HV *xhv_class_param_map;
o "xhv_class_superclass" will be "NULL" for a class with no
superclass. It will point directly to the stash of the parent class
if one has been set with the :isa() class attribute.
o "xhv_class_initfields_cv" will contain a "CV *" pointing to a
function to be invoked as part of the constructor of this class or
any subclass thereof. This CV is responsible for initializing all
the fields defined by this class for a new instance. This CV will
be an anonymous real function - i.e. while it has no name and no
GV, it is not a protosub and may be directly invoked.
o "xhv_class_adjust_blocks" may point to an AV containing CV pointers
to each of the "ADJUST" blocks defined on the class. If the class
has a superclass, this array will additionally contain duplicate
pointers of the CVs of its parent class. The AV is created lazily
the first time an element is pushed to it; it is valid for there
not to be one, and this pointer will be "NULL" in that case.
The CVs are stored directly, not via RVs. Each CV will be an
anonymous real function.
o "xhv_class_fields" will point to a "PADNAMELIST" containing
"PADNAME"s, each being one defined field of the class. They are
stored in order of declaration. Note however, that the index into
this array will not necessarily be equal to the "fieldix" of each
field, because in the case of a subclass, the array will begin at
zero but the index of the first field in it will be non-zero if its
parent class contains any fields at all.
For more information on how individual fields are represented, see
"Fields".
o "xhv_class_next_fieldix" gives the field index that will be
assigned to the next field to be added to the class. It is only
useful at compile-time.
o "xhv_class_param_map" may point to an HV which maps field ":param"
attribute names to the field index of the field with that name.
This mapping is copied from parent classes; each class will contain
the sum total of all its parents in addition to its own.
Fields
A field is still fundamentally a lexical variable declared in a scope,
and exists in the "PADNAMELIST" of its corresponding CV. Methods and
other method-like CVs can still capture them exactly as they can with
regular lexicals. A field is distinguished from other kinds of pad
entry in that the PadnameIsFIELD() macro will return true on it.
Extra information relating to it being a field is stored in an
additional structure accessible via the PadnameFIELDINFO() macro on the
padname. This structure has the following fields:
PADOFFSET fieldix;
HV *fieldstash;
OP *defop;
SV *paramname;
bool def_if_undef;
bool def_if_false;
o "fieldix" stores the "field index" of the field; that is, the index
into the instance field array where this field's value will be
stored. Note that the first index in the array is not specially
reserved. The first field in a class will start from field index 0.
o "fieldstash" stores a pointer to the stash of the class that
defined this field. This is necessary in case there are multiple
classes defined within the same scope; it is used to disambiguate
the fields of each.
{
class C1; field $x;
class C2; field $x;
}
o "defop" may store a pointer to a defaulting expression optree for
this field. Defaulting expressions are optional; this field may be
"NULL".
o "paramname" may point to a regular string SV containing the
":param" name attribute given to the field. If none, it will be
"NULL".
o One of "def_if_undef" and "def_if_false" will be true if the
defaulting expression was set using the "//=" or "||=" operators
respectively.
Methods
A method is still fundamentally a CV, and has the same basic
representation as one. It has an optree and a pad, and is stored via a
GV in the stash of its containing package. It is distinguished from a
non-method CV by the fact that the CvIsMETHOD() macro will return true
on it.
(Note: This macro should not be confused with the one that was
previously called CvMETHOD(). That one does not relate to the class
system, and was renamed to CvNOWARN_AMBIGUOUS() to avoid this
confusion.)
There is currently no extra information that needs to be stored about a
method CV, so the structure does not add any new fields.
Instances
Object instances are represented by an entirely new SV type, whose base
type is "SVt_PVOBJ". This should still be blessed into its class stash
and wrapped in an RV in the usual manner for classical object.
As these are their own unique container type, distinct from hashes or
arrays, the core "builtin::reftype" function returns a new value when
asked about these. That value is "OBJECT".
Internally, such an object is an array of SV pointers whose size is
fixed at creation time (because the number of fields in a class is
known after compilation). An object instance stores the max field index
within it (for basic error-checking on access), and a fixed-size array
of SV pointers storing the individual field values.
Fields of array and hash type directly store AV or HV pointers into the
array; they are not stored via an intervening RV.
API
The data structures described above are supported by the following API
functions.
Class Manipulation
class_setup_stash
void class_setup_stash(HV *stash);
Called by the parser on encountering the "class" keyword. It upgrades
the stash into being a class and prepares it for receiving class-
specific items like methods and fields.
class_seal_stash
void class_seal_stash(HV *stash);
Called by the parser at the end of a "class" block, or for unit classes
its containing scope. This function performs various finalisation
activities that are required before instances of the class can be
constructed, but could not have been done until all the information
about the members of the class is known.
Any additions to or modifications of the class under compilation must
be performed between these two function calls. Classes cannot be
modified once they have been sealed.
class_add_field
void class_add_field(HV *stash, PADNAME *pn);
Called by pad.c as part of defining a new field name in the current
pad. Note that this function does not create the padname; that must
already be done by pad.c. This API function simply informs the class
that the new field name has been created and is now available for it.
class_add_ADJUST
void class_add_ADJUST(HV *stash, CV *cv);
Called by the parser once it has parsed and constructed a CV for a new
"ADJUST" block. This gets added to the list stored by the class.
Field Manipulation
class_prepare_initfield_parse
void class_prepare_initfield_parse();
Called by the parser just before parsing an initializing expression for
a field variable. This makes use of a suspended compcv to combine all
the field initializing expressions into the same CV.
class_set_field_defop
void class_set_field_defop(PADNAME *pn, OPCODE defmode, OP *defop);
Called by the parser after it has parsed an initializing expression for
the field. Sets the defaulting expression and mode of application.
"defmode" should either be zero, or one of "OP_ORASSIGN" or
"OP_DORASSIGN" depending on the defaulting mode.
padadd_FIELD
#define padadd_FIELD
This flag constant tells the "pad_add_name_*" family of functions that
the new name should be added as a field. There is no need to call
class_add_field(); this will be done automatically.
Method Manipulation
class_prepare_method_parse
void class_prepare_method_parse(CV *cv);
Called by the parser after start_subparse() but immediately before
doing anything else. This prepares the "PL_compcv" for parsing a
method; arranging for the "CvIsMETHOD" test to be true, adding the
$self lexical, and any other activities that may be required.
class_wrap_method_body
OP *class_wrap_method_body(OP *o);
Called by the parser at the end of parsing a method body into an optree
but just before wrapping it in the eventual CV. This function inserts
extra ops into the optree to make the method work correctly.
Object Instances
SVt_PVOBJ
#define SVt_PVOBJ
An SV type constant used for comparison with the SvTYPE() macro.
ObjectMAXFIELD
SSize_t ObjectMAXFIELD(sv);
A function-like macro that obtains the maximum valid field index that
can be accessed from the "ObjectFIELDS" array.
ObjectFIELDS
SV **ObjectFIELDS(sv);
A function-like macro that obtains the fields array directly out of an
object instance. Fields can be accessed by their field index, from 0 up
to the maximum valid index given by "ObjectMAXFIELD".
OPCODES
OP_METHSTART
newUNOP_AUX(OP_METHSTART, ...);
An "OP_METHSTART" is an "UNOP_AUX" which must be present at the start
of a method CV in order to make it work properly. This is inserted by
class_wrap_method_body(), and even appears before any optree fragment
associated with signature argument checking or extraction.
This op is responsible for shifting the value of $self out of the
arguments list and binding any field variables that the method requires
access to into the pad. The AUX vector will contain details of the
field/pad index pairings required.
This op also performs sanity checking on the invocant value. It checks
that it is definitely an object reference of a compatible class type.
If not, an exception is thrown.
If the "op_private" field includes the "OPpINITFIELDS" flag, this
indicates that the op begins the special "xhv_class_initfields_cv" CV.
In this case it should additionally take the second value from the
arguments list, which should be a plain HV pointer (directly, not via
RV). and bind it to the second pad slot, where the generated optree
will expect to find it.
OP_INITFIELD
An "OP_INITFIELD" is only invoked as part of the
"xhv_class_initfields_cv" CV during the construction phase of an
instance. This is the time that the individual SVs that make up the
mutable fields of the instance (including AVs and HVs) are actually
assigned into the "ObjectFIELDS" array. The "OPpINITFIELD_AV" and
"OPpINITFIELD_HV" private flags indicate whether it is creating an AV
or HV; if neither is set then an SV is created.
If the op has the "OPf_STACKED" flag it expects to find an initializing
value on the stack. For SVs this is the topmost SV on the data stack.
For AVs and HVs it expects a marked list.
COMPILE-TIME BEHAVIOUR
"ADJUST" Phasers
During compiletime, parsing of an "ADJUST" phaser is handled in a
fundamentally different way to the existing perl phasers ("BEGIN",
etc...)
Rather than taking the usual route, the tokenizer recognises that the
"ADJUST" keyword introduces a phaser block. The parser then parses the
body of this block similarly to how it would parse an (anonymous)
method body, creating a CV that has no name GV. This is then inserted
directly into the class information by calling "class_add_ADJUST",
entirely bypassing the symbol table.
Attributes
During compilation, attributes of both classes and fields are handled
in a different way to existing perl attributes on subroutines and
lexical variables.
The parser still forms an "OP_LIST" optree of "OP_CONST" nodes, but
these are passed to the "class_apply_attributes" or
"class_apply_field_attributes" functions. Rather than using a class
lookup for a method in the class being parsed, a fixed internal list of
known attributes is used to find functions to apply the attribute to
the class or field. In future this may support user-supplied extension
attribute, though at present it only recognises ones defined by the
core itself.
Field Initializing Expressions
During compilation, the parser makes use of a suspended compcv when
parsing the defaulting expression for a field. All the expressions for
all the fields in the class share the same suspended compcv, which is
then compiled up into the same internal CV called by the constructor to
initialize all the fields provided by that class.
RUNTIME BEHAVIOUR
Constructor
The generated constructor for a class itself is an XSUB which performs
three tasks in order: it creates the instance SV itself, invokes the
field initializers, then invokes the ADJUST block CVs. The constructor
for any class is always the same basic shape, regardless of whether the
class has a superclass or not.
The field initializers are collected into a generated optree-based CV
called the field initializer CV. This is the CV which contains all the
optree fragments for the field initializing expressions. When invoked,
the field initializer CV might make a chained call to the superclass
initializer if one exists, before invoking all of the individual field
initialization ops. The field initializer CV is invoked with two items
on the stack; being the instance SV and a direct HV containing the
constructor parameters. Note carefully: this HV is passed directly, not
via an RV reference. This is permitted because both the caller and the
callee are directly generated code and not arbitrary pure-perl
subroutines.
The ADJUST block CVs are all collected into a single flat list, merging
all of the ones defined by the superclass as well. They are all invoked
in order, after the field initializer CV.
$self Access During Methods
When class_prepare_method_parse() is called, it arranges that the pad
of the new CV body will begin with a lexical called $self. Because the
pad should be freshly-created at this point, this will have the pad
index of 1. The function checks this and aborts if that is not true.
Because of this fact, code within the body of a method or method-like
CV can reliably use pad index 1 to obtain the invocant reference. The
"OP_INITFIELD" opcode also relies on this fact.
In similar fashion, during the "xhv_class_initfields_cv" the next pad
slot is relied on to store the constructor parameters HV, at pad index
2.
AUTHORS
Paul Evans
perl v5.40.1 2024-05-14 PERLCLASSGUTS(1)