405 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
405 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
# PODNAME: Moose::Cookbook::Extending::ExtensionOverview
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# ABSTRACT: Moose extension overview
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__END__
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=pod
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=encoding UTF-8
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=head1 NAME
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Moose::Cookbook::Extending::ExtensionOverview - Moose extension overview
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=head1 VERSION
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version 2.2207
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=head1 DESCRIPTION
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Moose provides several ways in which extensions can hook into Moose
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and change its behavior. Moose also has a lot of behavior that can be
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changed. This recipe will provide an overview of each extension method
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and give you some recommendations on what tools to use.
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If you haven't yet read the recipes on metaclasses, go read those
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first. You can't write Moose extensions without understanding the
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metaclasses, and those recipes also demonstrate some basic extension
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mechanisms, such as metaclass subclasses and traits.
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=head2 Playing Nice With Others
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One of the goals of this overview is to help you build extensions that
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cooperate well with other extensions. This is especially important if
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you plan to release your extension to CPAN.
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Moose comes with several modules that exist to help your write
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cooperative extensions. These are L<Moose::Exporter> and
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L<Moose::Util::MetaRole>. By using these two modules, you will ensure
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that your extension works with both the Moose core features and any
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other CPAN extension using those modules.
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=head1 PARTS OF Moose YOU CAN EXTEND
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The types of things you might want to do in Moose extensions fall into
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a few broad categories.
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=head2 Metaclass Extensions
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One way of extending Moose is by extending one or more Moose
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metaclasses. For example, in L<Moose::Cookbook::Meta::Table_MetaclassTrait> we saw
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a metaclass role that added a C<table> attribute to the
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metaclass. If you were writing an ORM, this would be a logical
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extension.
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Many of the Moose extensions on CPAN work by providing an attribute
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metaclass role. For example, the L<MooseX::Aliases> module
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provides an attribute metaclass trait that lets you specify aliases
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to install for methods and attribute accessors.
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A metaclass extension can be packaged as a role/trait or a subclass. If you
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can, we recommend using traits instead of subclasses, since it's much easier
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to combine disparate traits than it is to combine a bunch of subclasses.
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When your extensions are implemented as roles, you can apply them with
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the L<Moose::Util::MetaRole> module.
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=head2 Providing Sugar Functions
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As part of a metaclass extension, you may also want to provide some
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sugar functions, just like L<Moose.pm|Moose> does. Moose provides a
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helper module called L<Moose::Exporter> that makes this much
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simpler. We will be use L<Moose::Exporter> in several of the extension
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recipes.
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=head2 Object Class Extensions
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Another common Moose extension technique is to change the default object
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class's behavior. As with metaclass extensions, this can be done with a
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role/trait or with a subclass. For example, L<MooseX::StrictConstructor>
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extension applies a trait that makes the constructor reject arguments which
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don't match its attributes.
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Object class extensions often include metaclass extensions as well. In
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particular, if you want your object extension to work when a class is
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made immutable, you may need to modify the behavior of some or all of the
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L<Moose::Meta::Instance>, L<Moose::Meta::Method::Constructor>, and
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L<Moose::Meta::Method::Destructor> objects.
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The L<Moose::Util::MetaRole> module lets you apply roles to the base
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object class, as well as the meta classes just mentioned.
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=head2 Providing a Role
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Some extensions come in the form of a role for you to consume. The
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L<MooseX::Object::Pluggable> extension is a great example of this. In
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fact, despite the C<MooseX> name, it does not actually change anything
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about Moose's behavior. Instead, it is just a role that an object
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which wants to be pluggable can consume.
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If you are implementing this sort of extension, you don't need to do
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anything special. You simply create a role and document that it should
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be used via the normal C<with> sugar:
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package MyApp::User;
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use Moose;
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with 'My::Role';
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Don't use "MooseX" in the name for such packages.
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=head2 New Types
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Another common Moose extension is a new type for the Moose type
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system. In this case, you simply create a type in your module. When
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people load your module, the type is created, and they can refer to it
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by name after that. The L<MooseX::Types::URI> and
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L<MooseX::Types::DateTime> distributions are two good examples of how
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this works. These both build on top of the L<MooseX::Types> extension.
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=head1 ROLES VS TRAITS VS SUBCLASSES
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It is important to understand that B<roles and traits are the same thing>. A
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trait is simply a role applied to a instance. The only thing that may
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distinguish the two is that a trait can be packaged in a way that lets Moose
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resolve a short name to a class name. In other words, with a trait, the caller
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can refer to it by a short name like "Big", and Moose will resolve it to a
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class like C<MooseX::Embiggen::Meta::Attribute::Role::Big>.
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See L<Moose::Cookbook::Meta::Labeled_AttributeTrait> and
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L<Moose::Cookbook::Meta::Table_MetaclassTrait> for examples of traits in
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action. In particular, both of these recipes demonstrate the trait resolution
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mechanism.
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Implementing an extension as a (set of) metaclass or base object
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role(s) will make your extension more cooperative. It is hard for an
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end-user to effectively combine together multiple metaclass
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subclasses, but it is very easy to combine roles.
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=head1 USING YOUR EXTENSION
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There are a number of ways in which an extension can be applied. In
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some cases you can provide multiple ways of consuming your extension.
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=head2 Extensions as Metaclass Traits
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If your extension is available as a trait, you can ask end users to
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simply specify it in a list of traits. Currently, this only works for
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(class) metaclass and attribute metaclass traits:
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use Moose -traits => [ 'Big', 'Blue' ];
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has 'animal' => (
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traits => [ 'Big', 'Blue' ],
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...
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);
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If your extension applies to any other metaclass, or the object base
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class, you cannot use the trait mechanism.
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The benefit of the trait mechanism is that is very easy to see where a
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trait is applied in the code, and consumers have fine-grained control
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over what the trait applies to. This is especially true for attribute
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traits, where you can apply the trait to just one attribute in a
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class.
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=head2 Extensions as Metaclass (and Base Object) Roles
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Implementing your extensions as metaclass roles makes your extensions
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easy to apply, and cooperative with other role-based extensions for
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metaclasses.
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Just as with a subclass, you will probably want to package your
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extensions for consumption with a single module that uses
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L<Moose::Exporter>. However, in this case, you will use
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L<Moose::Util::MetaRole> to apply all of your roles. The advantage of
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using this module is that I<it preserves any subclassing or roles
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already applied to the user's metaclasses>. This means that your
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extension is cooperative I<by default>, and consumers of your
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extension can easily use it with other role-based extensions. Most
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uses of L<Moose::Util::MetaRole> can be handled by L<Moose::Exporter>
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directly; see the L<Moose::Exporter> docs.
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package MooseX::Embiggen;
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use Moose::Exporter;
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use MooseX::Embiggen::Role::Meta::Class;
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use MooseX::Embiggen::Role::Meta::Attribute;
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use MooseX::Embiggen::Role::Meta::Method::Constructor;
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use MooseX::Embiggen::Role::Object;
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Moose::Exporter->setup_import_methods(
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class_metaroles => {
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class => ['MooseX::Embiggen::Role::Meta::Class'],
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attribute => ['MooseX::Embiggen::Role::Meta::Attribute'],
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constructor =>
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['MooseX::Embiggen::Role::Meta::Method::Constructor'],
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},
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base_class_roles => ['MooseX::Embiggen::Role::Object'],
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);
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As you can see from this example, you can use L<Moose::Util::MetaRole>
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to apply roles to any metaclass, as well as the base object class. If
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some other extension has already applied its own roles, they will be
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preserved when your extension applies its roles, and vice versa.
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=head2 Providing Sugar
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With L<Moose::Exporter>, you can also export your own sugar functions:
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package MooseX::Embiggen;
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use Moose::Exporter;
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Moose::Exporter->setup_import_methods(
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with_meta => ['embiggen'],
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class_metaroles => {
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class => ['MooseX::Embiggen::Role::Meta::Class'],
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},
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);
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sub embiggen {
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my $meta = shift;
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$meta->embiggen(@_);
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}
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And then the consumer of your extension can use your C<embiggen> sub:
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package Consumer;
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use Moose;
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use MooseX::Embiggen;
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extends 'Thing';
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embiggen ...;
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This can be combined with metaclass and base class roles quite easily.
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=head2 More advanced extensions
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Providing your extension simply as a set of traits that gets applied to the
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appropriate metaobjects is easy, but sometimes not sufficient. For instance,
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sometimes you need to supply not just a base object role, but an actual base
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object class (due to needing to interact with existing systems that only
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provide a base class). To write extensions like this, you will need to provide
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a custom C<init_meta> method in your exporter. For instance:
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package MooseX::Embiggen;
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use Moose::Exporter;
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my ($import, $unimport, $init_meta) = Moose::Exporter->build_import_methods(
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install => ['import', 'unimport'],
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with_meta => ['embiggen'],
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class_metaroles => {
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class => ['MooseX::Embiggen::Role::Meta::Class'],
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},
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);
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sub embiggen {
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my $meta = shift;
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$meta->embiggen(@_);
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}
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sub init_meta {
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my $package = shift;
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my %options = @_;
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if (my $meta = Class::MOP::class_of($options{for_class})) {
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if ($meta->isa('Class::MOP::Class')) {
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my @supers = $meta->superclasses;
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$meta->superclasses('MooseX::Embiggen::Base::Class')
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if @supers == 1 && $supers[0] eq 'Moose::Object';
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}
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}
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$package->$init_meta(%options);
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}
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In the previous examples, C<init_meta> was generated for you, but here you must
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override it in order to add additional functionality. Some differences to note:
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=over 4
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=item C<build_import_methods> instead of C<setup_import_methods>
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C<build_import_methods> simply returns the C<import>, C<unimport>, and
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C<init_meta> methods, rather than installing them under the appropriate names.
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This way, you can write your own methods which wrap the functionality provided
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by L<Moose::Exporter>. The C<build_import_methods> sub also takes an
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additional C<install> parameter, which tells it to just go ahead and install
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these methods (since we don't need to modify them).
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=item C<sub init_meta>
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Next, we must write our C<init_meta> wrapper. The important things to remember
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are that it is called as a method, and that C<%options> needs to be passed
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through to the existing implementation. We call the base implementation by
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using the C<$init_meta> subroutine reference that was returned by
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C<build_import_methods> earlier.
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=item Additional implementation
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This extension sets a different default base object class. To do so, it first
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checks to see if it's being applied to a class, and then checks to see if
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L<Moose::Object> is that class's only superclass, and if so, replaces that with
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the superclass that this extension requires.
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Note that two extensions that do this same thing will not work together
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properly (the second extension to be loaded won't see L<Moose::Object> as the
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base object, since it has already been overridden). This is why using a base
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object role is recommended for the general case.
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This C<init_meta> also works defensively, by only applying its functionality if
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a metaclass already exists. This makes sure it doesn't break with legacy
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extensions which override the metaclass directly (and so must be the first
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extension to initialize the metaclass). This is likely not necessary, since
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almost no extensions work this way anymore, but just provides an additional
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level of protection. The common case of C<use Moose; use MooseX::Embiggen;>
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is not affected regardless.
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=back
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This is just one example of what can be done with a custom C<init_meta> method.
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It can also be used for preventing an extension from being applied to a role,
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doing other kinds of validation on the class being applied to, or pretty much
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anything that would otherwise be done in an C<import> method.
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=head1 LEGACY EXTENSION MECHANISMS
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Before the existence of L<Moose::Exporter> and
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L<Moose::Util::MetaRole>, there were a number of other ways to extend
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Moose. In general, these methods were less cooperative, and only
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worked well with a single extension.
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These methods include L<metaclass.pm|metaclass>, L<Moose::Policy>
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(which uses L<metaclass.pm|metaclass> under the hood), and various
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hacks to do what L<Moose::Exporter> does. Please do not use these for
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your own extensions.
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Note that if you write a cooperative extension, it should cooperate
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with older extensions, though older extensions generally do not
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cooperate with each other.
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=head1 CONCLUSION
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If you can write your extension as one or more metaclass and base
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object roles, please consider doing so. Make sure to read the docs for
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L<Moose::Exporter> and L<Moose::Util::MetaRole> as well.
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=head1 AUTHORS
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=over 4
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=item *
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Stevan Little <stevan@cpan.org>
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=item *
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Dave Rolsky <autarch@urth.org>
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=item *
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Jesse Luehrs <doy@cpan.org>
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=item *
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Shawn M Moore <sartak@cpan.org>
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=item *
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יובל קוג'מן (Yuval Kogman) <nothingmuch@woobling.org>
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=item *
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Karen Etheridge <ether@cpan.org>
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=item *
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Florian Ragwitz <rafl@debian.org>
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=item *
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Hans Dieter Pearcey <hdp@cpan.org>
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=item *
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Chris Prather <chris@prather.org>
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=item *
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Matt S Trout <mstrout@cpan.org>
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=back
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=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
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This software is copyright (c) 2006 by Infinity Interactive, Inc.
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This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
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the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
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=cut
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