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Revision: 1.10
Committed: Fri Jun 26 14:49:33 2009 UTC (14 years, 10 months ago) by root
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: rel-1_42, rel-1_41, rel-1_421, rel-1_422
Changes since 1.9: +10 -11 lines
Log Message:
1.41

File Contents

# Content
1 NAME
2 Devel::FindRef - where is that reference to my variable hiding?
3
4 SYNOPSIS
5 use Devel::FindRef;
6
7 print Devel::FindRef::track \$some_variable;
8
9 DESCRIPTION
10 Tracking down reference problems (e.g. you expect some object to be
11 destroyed, but there are still references to it that keep it alive) can
12 be very hard. Fortunately, perl keeps track of all its values, so
13 tracking references "backwards" is usually possible.
14
15 The "track" function can help track down some of those references back
16 to the variables containing them.
17
18 For example, for this fragment:
19
20 package Test;
21
22 use Devel::FindRef;
23 use Scalar::Util;
24
25 our $var = "hi\n";
26 my $global_my = \$var;
27 our %global_hash = (ukukey => \$var);
28 our $global_hashref = { ukukey2 => \$var };
29
30 sub testsub {
31 my $testsub_local = $global_hashref;
32 print Devel::FindRef::track \$var;
33 }
34
35
36 my $closure = sub {
37 my $closure_var = \$_[0];
38 Scalar::Util::weaken (my $weak_ref = \$var);
39 testsub;
40 };
41
42 $closure->($var);
43
44 The output is as follows (or similar to this, in case I forget to update
45 the manpage after some changes):
46
47 SCALAR(0x7cc888) [refcount 6] is
48 +- referenced by REF(0x8abcc8) [refcount 1], which is
49 | in the lexical '$closure_var' in CODE(0x8abc50) [refcount 4], which is
50 | +- the closure created at tst:18.
51 | +- referenced by REF(0x7d3c58) [refcount 1], which is
52 | | in the lexical '$closure' in CODE(0x7ae530) [refcount 2], which is
53 | | +- the containing scope for CODE(0x8ab430) [refcount 3], which is
54 | | | in the global &Test::testsub.
55 | | +- the main body of the program.
56 | +- in the lexical '&' in CODE(0x7ae530) [refcount 2], which was seen before.
57 +- referenced by REF(0x7cc7c8) [refcount 1], which is
58 | in the lexical '$global_my' in CODE(0x7ae530) [refcount 2], which was seen before.
59 +- in the global $Test::var.
60 +- referenced by REF(0x7cc558) [refcount 1], which is
61 | in the member 'ukukey2' of HASH(0x7ae140) [refcount 2], which is
62 | +- referenced by REF(0x8abad0) [refcount 1], which is
63 | | in the lexical '$testsub_local' in CODE(0x8ab430) [refcount 3], which was seen before.
64 | +- referenced by REF(0x8ab4f0) [refcount 1], which is
65 | in the global $Test::global_hashref.
66 +- referenced by REF(0x7ae518) [refcount 1], which is
67 | in the member 'ukukey' of HASH(0x7d3bb0) [refcount 1], which is
68 | in the global %Test::global_hash.
69 +- referenced by REF(0x7ae2f0) [refcount 1], which is
70 a temporary on the stack.
71
72 It is a bit convoluted to read, but basically it says that the value
73 stored in $var is referenced by:
74
75 - the lexical $closure_var (0x8abcc8), which is inside an instantiated
76 closure, which in turn is used quite a bit.
77 - the package-level lexical $global_my.
78 - the global package variable named $Test::var.
79 - the hash element "ukukey2", in the hash in the my variable
80 $testsub_local in the sub "Test::testsub" and also in the hash
81 "$referenced by Test::hash2".
82 - the hash element with key "ukukey" in the hash stored in %Test::hash.
83 - some anonymous mortalised reference on the stack (which is caused by
84 calling "track" with the expression "\$var", which creates the
85 reference).
86
87 And all these account for six reference counts.
88
89 EXPORTS
90 None.
91
92 FUNCTIONS
93 $string = Devel::FindRef::track $ref[, $depth]
94 Track the perl value pointed to by $ref up to a depth of $depth and
95 return a descriptive string. $ref can point at any perl value, be it
96 anonymous sub, hash, array, scalar etc.
97
98 This is the function you most often use.
99
100 @references = Devel::FindRef::find $ref
101 Return arrayrefs that contain [$message, $ref] pairs. The message
102 describes what kind of reference was found and the $ref is the
103 reference itself, which can be omitted if "find" decided to end the
104 search. The returned references are all weak references.
105
106 The "track" function uses this to find references to the value you
107 are interested in and recurses on the returned references.
108
109 $ref = Devel::FindRef::ptr2ref $integer
110 Sometimes you know (from debugging output) the address of a perl
111 scalar you are interested in (e.g. "HASH(0x176ff70)"). This function
112 can be used to turn the address into a reference to that scalar. It
113 is quite safe to call on valid addresses, but extremely dangerous to
114 call on invalid ones.
115
116 # we know that HASH(0x176ff70) exists, so turn it into a hashref:
117 my $ref_to_hash = Devel::FindRef::ptr2ref 0x176ff70;
118
119 $ref = Devel::FindRef::ref2ptr $reference
120 The opposite of "ptr2ref", above: returns the internal address of
121 the value pointed to by the passed reference. *No checks whatsoever
122 will be done*, so don't use this.
123
124 ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
125 You can set the environment variable "PERL_DEVEL_FINDREF_DEPTH" to an
126 integer to override the default depth in "track". If a call explicitly
127 specified a depth it is not overridden.
128
129 AUTHOR
130 Marc Lehmann <pcg@goof.com>.
131
132 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
133 Copyright (C) 2007, 2008 by Marc Lehmann.
134
135 This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
136 under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.8 or, at
137 your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.
138