NAME¶
Module::ExtractUse - Find out what modules are used
VERSION¶
version 0.27
SYNOPSIS¶
use Module::ExtractUse;
# get a parser
my $p=Module::ExtractUse->new;
# parse from a file
$p->extract_use('/path/to/module.pm');
# or parse from a ref to a string in memory
$p->extract_use(\$string_containg_code);
# use some reporting methods
my $used=$p->used; # $used is a HASHREF
print $p->used('strict') # true if code includes 'use strict'
my @used=$p->array;
my $used=$p->string;
DESCRIPTION¶
Module::ExtractUse is basically a Parse::RecDescent grammar to parse Perl code.
It tries very hard to find all modules (whether pragmas, Core, or from CPAN)
used by the parsed code.
"Usage" is defined by either calling "use" or
"require".
Methods¶
new
my $p=Module::ExtractUse->new;
Returns a parser object
extract_use
$p->extract_use('/path/to/module.pm');
$p->extract_use(\$string_containg_code);
Runs the parser.
$code_to_parse can be either a SCALAR, in which case Module::ExtractUse tries to
open the file specified in $code_to_parse. Or a reference to a SCALAR, in
which case Module::ExtractUse assumes the referenced scalar contains the
source code.
The code will be stripped from POD (using Pod::Strip) and split on ";"
(semicolon). Each statement (i.e. the stuff between two semicolons) is checked
by a simple regular expression.
If the statement contains either 'use' or 'require', the statment is handed over
to the parser, who then tries to figure out,
what is used or required.
The results will be saved in a data structure that you can examine afterwards.
You can call "extract_use" several times on different files. It will
count how many files where examined and how often each module was used.
Accessor Methods¶
Those are various ways to get at the result of the parse.
Note that "extract_use" returns the parser object, so you can say
print $p->extract_use($code_to_parse)->string;
used
my $used=$p->used; # $used is a HASHREF
print $p->used('strict') # true if code includes 'use strict'
If called without an argument, returns a reference to an hash of all used
modules. Keys are the names of the modules, values are the number of times
they were used.
If called with an argument, looks up the value of the argument in the hash and
returns the number of times it was found during parsing.
This is the preferred accessor.
string
print $p->string($seperator)
Returns a sorted string of all used modules, joined using the value of
$seperator or using a blank space as a default;
Module names are sorted by ascii value (i.e by "sort")
array
my @array = $p->array;
Returns an array of all used modules.
arrayref
my $arrayref = $p->arrayref;
Returns a reference to an array of all used modules. Surprise!
files
Returns the number of files parsed by the parser object.
RE-COMPILING THE GRAMMAR¶
If - for some reasons - you need to alter the grammar, edit the file
grammar and afterwards run:
perl -MParse::RecDescent - grammar Module::ExtractUse::Grammar
Make sure you're in the right directory, i.e. in
.../Module/ExtractUse/
EXPORTS¶
Nothing.
SEE ALSO¶
Parse::RecDescent, Module::ScanDeps, Module::Info, Module::CPANTS::Analyse
AUTHOR¶
Thomas Klausner <domm@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE¶
This software is copyright (c) 2012 by Thomas Klausner.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.