Data::Dump::Trace - Helpers to trace function and method calls
use Data::Dump::Trace qw(autowrap mcall); autowrap("LWP::UserAgent" => "ua", "HTTP::Response" => "res"); use LWP::UserAgent; $ua = mcall(LWP::UserAgent => "new"); # instead of LWP::UserAgent->new; $ua->get("http://www.example.com")->dump;
The following functions are provided:
Register classes whose objects are automatically wrapped when
returned by one of the call functions below. If $prefix
is
provided it will be used as to name the objects. Alternative is to pass
an %info
hash for each class. The recognized keys are:
- prefix => $string
The prefix string used to name objects of this type.
- proto => \%hash
A hash of prototypes to use for the methods when an object is wrapped.
Returns a wrapped function or object. When a wrapped function is
invoked then a trace is printed after the underlying function has
returned. When a method on a wrapped object is invoked then a trace is
printed after the methods on the underlying objects has returned. See
Prototypes for description of the proto
argument.
Calls the given function with the given arguments. The trace will use
$name
as the name of the function. See Prototypes for
description of the $proto
argument.
Calls the given method with the given arguments. See Prototypes for
description of the $proto
argument.
Replaces the function given by $symbol
with a wrapped
function.
Note: The prototype string syntax described here is experimental and likely to change in revisions of this interface.
The $proto
argument to call() and
mcall() can optionally provide a prototype for the
function call. This give the tracer hints about how to best format the
argument lists and if there are in/out or out
arguments. The general form for the prototype string is:
<arguments> = <return_value>
The default prototype is @ = @; list of values as input and list of values as output.
The value '%' can be used for both arguments and return value to say that key/value pair style lists are used.
Alternatively, individual positional arguments can be listed each represented by a letter:
input argument
output argument
both input and output argument
If the return value prototype has !
appended, then it
signals that this function sets errno ($!) when it returns a false
value. The trace will display the current value of errno in that
case.
If the return value prototype looks like a variable name (with
$
prefix), and the function returns a blessed object, then
the variable name will be used as prefix and the returned object
automatically traced.
Data::Dump