#line 1 "/usr/local/lib/perl5/5.8.8/Carp.pm" package Carp; our $VERSION = '1.04'; #line 106 # This package is heavily used. Be small. Be fast. Be good. # Comments added by Andy Wardley 09-Apr-98, based on an # _almost_ complete understanding of the package. Corrections and # comments are welcome. # The members of %Internal are packages that are internal to perl. # Carp will not report errors from within these packages if it # can. The members of %CarpInternal are internal to Perl's warning # system. Carp will not report errors from within these packages # either, and will not report calls *to* these packages for carp and # croak. They replace $CarpLevel, which is deprecated. The # $Max(EvalLen|(Arg(Len|Nums)) variables are used to specify how the eval # text and function arguments should be formatted when printed. # Comments added by Jos I. Boumans 11-Aug-2004 # I can not get %CarpInternal or %Internal to work as advertised, # therefor leaving it out of the below documentation. # $CarpLevel may be decprecated according to the last comment, but # after 6 years, it's still around and in heavy use ;) #line 180 $CarpInternal{Carp}++; $CarpInternal{warnings}++; $CarpLevel = 0; # How many extra package levels to skip on carp. # How many calls to skip on confess. # Reconciling these notions is hard, use # %Internal and %CarpInternal instead. $MaxEvalLen = 0; # How much eval '...text...' to show. 0 = all. $MaxArgLen = 64; # How much of each argument to print. 0 = all. $MaxArgNums = 8; # How many arguments to print. 0 = all. $Verbose = 0; # If true then make shortmess call longmess instead require Exporter; @ISA = ('Exporter'); @EXPORT = qw(confess croak carp); @EXPORT_OK = qw(cluck verbose longmess shortmess); @EXPORT_FAIL = qw(verbose); # hook to enable verbose mode #line 206 # if the caller specifies verbose usage ("perl -MCarp=verbose script.pl") # then the following method will be called by the Exporter which knows # to do this thanks to @EXPORT_FAIL, above. $_[1] will contain the word # 'verbose'. sub export_fail { shift; $Verbose = shift if $_[0] eq 'verbose'; return @_; } # longmess() crawls all the way up the stack reporting on all the function # calls made. The error string, $error, is originally constructed from the # arguments passed into longmess() via confess(), cluck() or shortmess(). # This gets appended with the stack trace messages which are generated for # each function call on the stack. sub longmess { { local($@, $!); # XXX fix require to not clear $@ or $!? # don't use require unless we need to (for Safe compartments) require Carp::Heavy unless $INC{"Carp/Heavy.pm"}; } # Icky backwards compatibility wrapper. :-( my $call_pack = caller(); if ($Internal{$call_pack} or $CarpInternal{$call_pack}) { return longmess_heavy(@_); } else { local $CarpLevel = $CarpLevel + 1; return longmess_heavy(@_); } } # shortmess() is called by carp() and croak() to skip all the way up to # the top-level caller's package and report the error from there. confess() # and cluck() generate a full stack trace so they call longmess() to # generate that. In verbose mode shortmess() calls longmess() so # you always get a stack trace sub shortmess { # Short-circuit &longmess if called via multiple packages { local($@, $!); # XXX fix require to not clear $@ or $!? # don't use require unless we need to (for Safe compartments) require Carp::Heavy unless $INC{"Carp/Heavy.pm"}; } # Icky backwards compatibility wrapper. :-( my $call_pack = caller(); local @CARP_NOT = caller(); shortmess_heavy(@_); } # the following four functions call longmess() or shortmess() depending on # whether they should generate a full stack trace (confess() and cluck()) # or simply report the caller's package (croak() and carp()), respectively. # confess() and croak() die, carp() and cluck() warn. sub croak { die shortmess @_ } sub confess { die longmess @_ } sub carp { warn shortmess @_ } sub cluck { warn longmess @_ } 1;