package Algorithm::Dependency::Source;
# ABSTRACT: Implements a source of hierarchy items
#pod =pod
#pod
#pod =head1 DESCRIPTION
#pod
#pod The Algorithm::Dependency::Source class provides an abstract parent class for
#pod implementing sources for the hierarchy data the algorithm will use. For an
#pod example of an implementation of this, see
#pod L<Algorithm::Dependency::Source::File>, which is bundled with the main
#pod L<Algorithm::Dependency> package.
#pod
#pod =head1 METHODS
#pod
#pod =cut
use 5.005;
use strict;
use Algorithm::Dependency ();
use Params::Util qw{_SET};
our $VERSION = '1.112';
#####################################################################
# Constructor
#pod =pod
#pod
#pod =head2 new @arguments
#pod
#pod Although you cannot directly use the C<new> constructor for
#pod C<Algorithm::Dependency::Source>, it will work the same in all subclasses.
#pod
#pod The constructor takes zero or more subclass specific arguments to define the
#pod location of the source of the items, and returns a new object. Although it
#pod may check that the arguments you passed are valid, the source will usually
#pod NOT actually load the items from the source, instead deferring the loading
#pod until you need to use the items.
#pod
#pod Returns a new object on success, or C<undef> on error.
#pod
#pod =cut
sub new {
my $class = shift;
# This can't be created directly, it must be through
# a SUPER::new call
if ( $class eq __PACKAGE__ ) {
die "Cannot directly instantiate Algorithm::Dependency::Source."
. " You must use a subclass";
}
# Create the basic object
my $self = bless {
# Has the source been loaded
loaded => 0,
# Indexes
items_hash => undef,
items_array => undef,
}, $class;
$self;
}
#pod =pod
#pod
#pod =head2 load
#pod
#pod The C<load> method is the public method used to actually load the items from
#pod their storage location into the the source object. The method will
#pod automatically called, as needed, in most circumstances. You would generally
#pod only want to use C<load> manually if you think there may be some uncertainty
#pod that the source will load correctly, and want to check it will work.
#pod
#pod Returns true if the items are loaded successfully, or C<undef> on error.
#pod
#pod =cut
sub load {
my $self = shift;
# If this is a reload, clean up in preperation
if ( $self->{loaded} ) {
$self->{loaded} = 0;
$self->{items_hash} = undef;
$self->{items_array} = undef;
}
# Pass through to the real loader
my $items = $self->_load_item_list;
return $items unless $items;
unless ( _SET($items, 'Algorithm::Dependency::Item') ) {
die( ref($self) . "::_load_item_list did not return an Algorithm::Dependency::Item set" );
}
# Add the items
foreach my $item ( @$items ) {
# Have we added this one already?
my $id = $item->id;
if ( $self->{items_hash}->{ $id } ) {
# Duplicate entry
return undef;
}
# Add it
push @{ $self->{items_array} }, $item;
$self->{items_hash}->{$id} = $item;
}
$self->{loaded} = 1;
}
#pod =pod
#pod
#pod =head2 item $name
#pod
#pod The C<item> method fetches and returns the item object specified by the
#pod name argument.
#pod
#pod Returns an L<Algorithm::Dependency::Item> object on success, or C<undef> if
#pod the named item does not exist in the source.
#pod
#pod =cut
sub item {
my $self = shift;
my $id = (defined $_[0] and ! ref $_[0] and $_[0] ne '') ? shift : return undef;
$self->{loaded} or $self->load or return undef;
# Return the item (or undef)
$self->{items_hash}->{$id};
}
#pod =pod
#pod
#pod =head2 items
#pod
#pod The C<items> method returns, as a list of objects, all of the items
#pod contained in the source. The item objects will be returned in the same order
#pod as that in the storage location.
#pod
#pod Returns a list of L<Algorithm::Dependency::Item> objects on success, or
#pod C<undef> on error.
#pod
#pod =cut
sub items {
my $self = shift;
$self->{loaded} or $self->load or return undef;
@{ $self->{items_array} };
}
#pod =pod
#pod
#pod =head2 missing_dependencies
#pod
#pod By default, we are lenient with missing dependencies if the item is never
#pod used. For systems where having a missing dependency can be very bad, the
#pod C<missing_dependencies> method checks all Items to make sure their
#pod dependencies exist.
#pod
#pod If there are any missing dependencies, returns a reference to an array of
#pod their ids. If there are no missing dependencies, returns 0. Returns
#pod C<undef> on error.
#pod
#pod =cut
sub missing_dependencies {
my $self = shift;
$self->{loaded} or $self->load or return undef;
# Merged the depends of all the items, and see if
# any are missing.
my %missing = map { $_ => 1 }
grep { ! $self->item($_) }
map { $_->depends }
$self->items;
%missing ? [ sort keys %missing ] : 0;
}
#####################################################################
# Catch unimplemented methods in subclasses
sub _load_item_list {
die "Class $_[0] failed to define the method _load_item_list";
}
1;
__END__
=pod
=encoding UTF-8
=head1 NAME
Algorithm::Dependency::Source - Implements a source of hierarchy items
=head1 VERSION
version 1.112
=head1 DESCRIPTION
The Algorithm::Dependency::Source class provides an abstract parent class for
implementing sources for the hierarchy data the algorithm will use. For an
example of an implementation of this, see
L<Algorithm::Dependency::Source::File>, which is bundled with the main
L<Algorithm::Dependency> package.
=head1 METHODS
=head2 new @arguments
Although you cannot directly use the C<new> constructor for
C<Algorithm::Dependency::Source>, it will work the same in all subclasses.
The constructor takes zero or more subclass specific arguments to define the
location of the source of the items, and returns a new object. Although it
may check that the arguments you passed are valid, the source will usually
NOT actually load the items from the source, instead deferring the loading
until you need to use the items.
Returns a new object on success, or C<undef> on error.
=head2 load
The C<load> method is the public method used to actually load the items from
their storage location into the the source object. The method will
automatically called, as needed, in most circumstances. You would generally
only want to use C<load> manually if you think there may be some uncertainty
that the source will load correctly, and want to check it will work.
Returns true if the items are loaded successfully, or C<undef> on error.
=head2 item $name
The C<item> method fetches and returns the item object specified by the
name argument.
Returns an L<Algorithm::Dependency::Item> object on success, or C<undef> if
the named item does not exist in the source.
=head2 items
The C<items> method returns, as a list of objects, all of the items
contained in the source. The item objects will be returned in the same order
as that in the storage location.
Returns a list of L<Algorithm::Dependency::Item> objects on success, or
C<undef> on error.
=head2 missing_dependencies
By default, we are lenient with missing dependencies if the item is never
used. For systems where having a missing dependency can be very bad, the
C<missing_dependencies> method checks all Items to make sure their
dependencies exist.
If there are any missing dependencies, returns a reference to an array of
their ids. If there are no missing dependencies, returns 0. Returns
C<undef> on error.
=head1 EXTENDING
C<Algorithm::Dependency::Source> itself is a fairly thin module, and it
is intended that you will probably need to extend it to be able to
extract item data from whatever location you have stored them.
This is usually a fairly simple two step process.
=over 4
=item Overload the C<new> method.
Assuming your subclass takes some form or argument on creation, you will
need to overload the C<new> method to accept the arguments, validate them,
and store them in the source object.
=item Define the method C<_load_item_list>.
Leaving our parent's C<load> method to take care of conflict, errors, and
whatever, the C<_load_item_list> method is used to simply create a list of
L<Algorithm::Dependency::Item> objects from wherever you store the item,
and return them as a list.
=back
Having completed these two things, your subclass should be completed. For
an example of the code, have a look at the source for the simple subclass
L<Algorithm::Dependency::Source::File>.
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<Algorithm::Dependency>, L<Algorithm::Dependency::Source::File>
=head1 SUPPORT
Bugs may be submitted through L<the RT bug tracker|https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=Algorithm-Dependency>
(or L<[email protected]|mailto:[email protected]>).
=head1 AUTHOR
Adam Kennedy <[email protected]>
=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2003 by Adam Kennedy.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
=cut