NAME¶
FindBin::libs - locate and a 'use lib' or export directories based on
$FindBin::Bin.
SYNOPSIS¶
This version of FindBin::libs is suitable for Perl v5.10+.
# search up $FindBin::Bin looking for ./lib directories
# and "use lib" them.
use FindBin::libs;
# same as above with explicit defaults.
use FindBin::libs qw( base=lib use=1 noexport noprint );
# print the lib dir's before using them.
use FindBin::libs qw( print );
# find and use lib "altlib" dir's
use FindBin::libs qw( base=altlib );
# move starting point from $FindBin::Bin to '/tmp'
use FindBin::libs qw( Bin=/tmp base=altlib );
# skip "use lib", export "@altlib" instead.
use FindBin::libs qw( base=altlib export );
# find altlib directories, use lib them and export @mylibs
use FindBin::libs qw( base=altlib export=mylibs use );
# "export" defaults to "nouse", these two are identical:
use FindBin::libs qw( export nouse );
use FindBin::libs qw( export );
# use and export are not exclusive:
use FindBin::libs qw( use export ); # do both
use FindBin::libs qw( nouse noexport print ); # print only
use FindBin::libs qw( nouse noexport ); # do nothting at all
# print a few interesting messages about the
# items found.
use FindBinlibs qw( verbose );
# turn on a breakpoint after the args are prcoessed, before
# any search/export/use lib is handled.
use FindBin::libs qw( debug );
# prefix PERL5LIB with the lib's found.
use FindBin::libs qw( perl5lib );
# find a subdir of the lib's looked for.
# the first example will use both ../lib and
# ../lib/perl5; the second ../lib/perl5/frobnicate
# (if they exist). it can also be used with export
# and base to locate special configuration dir's.
#
# subonly with a base is useful for locating config
# files. this finds any "./config/mypackage" dir's
# without including any ./config dir's. the result
# ends up in @config (see also "export=", above).
use FindBin::libs qw( subdir=perl5 );
use FindBin::libs qw( subdir=perl5/frobnicate );
use FindBin::libs qw( base=config subdir=mypackage subonly export );
# base and subonly are also useful if your
# project is stored in multiple git
# repositories.
#
# say you need libs under api_foo/lib from api_bar: a
# base of the git repository directory with subdir of
# lib and subonly will pull in those lib dirs.
use FindBin::libs qw( base=api_foo subdir=lib subonly );
# no harm in using this multiple times to use
# or export multple layers of libs.
use FindBin::libs qw( export );
use FindBin::libs qw( export=found base=lib );
use FindBin::libs qw( export=binz base=bin ignore=/foo,/bar );
use FindBin::libs qw( export=junk base=frobnicatorium );
use FindBin::libs qw( export base=foobar );
DESCRIPTION¶
General Use¶
This module will locate directories along the path to $FindBin::Bin and
"use lib" or export an array of the directories found. The default
is to locate "lib" directories and "use lib" them without
printing the list.
Options controll whether the lib's found are exported into the caller's space,
exported to PERL5LIB, or printed. Exporting or setting perl5lib will turn off
the default of "use lib" so that:
use FindBin::libs qw( export );
use FindBin::libs qw( p5lib );
are equivalent to
use FindBin::libs qw( export nouse );
use FindBin::libs qw( p5lib nouse );
Combining export with use or p5lib may be useful, p5lib and use are probably not
all that useful together.
Alternate directory name: 'base'
The basename searched for can be changed via 'base=name' so that
use FindBin::libs qw( base=altlib );
will search for directories named "altlib" and "use lib"
them.
Exporting a variable: 'export'
The 'export' option will push an array of the directories found and takes an
optional argument of the array name, which defaults to the basename searched
for:
use FindBin::libs qw( export );
will find "lib" directories and export @lib with the list of
directories found.
use FindBin::libs qw( export=mylibs );
will find "lib" directories and export them as "@mylibs" to
the caller.
If "export" only is given then the "use" option defaults to
false. So:
use FindBin::libs qw( export );
use FindBin::libs qw( export nouse );
are equivalent. This is mainly for use when looking for data directories with
the "base=" argument.
If base is used with export the default array name is the base directory value:
use FindBin::libs qw( export base=meta );
exports @meta while
use FindBin::libs qw( export=metadirs base=meta );
exports @metadirs.
The use and export switches are not exclusive:
use FindBin::libs qw( use export=mylibs );
will locate "lib" directories, use lib them, and export @mylibs into
the caller's package.
Subdirectories
The "subdir" and "subonly" settings will add or exclusively
use subdir's. This is useful if some of your lib's are in ../lib/perl5 along
with ../lib (subdir=perl5) or all of the lib's are in ../lib/perl5
(subonly=perl5).
This can also be handy for locating subdir's used for configuring packages:
use FindBin::libs qw( export base=config subonly=mypackage );
Will leave @config with any "mypacakge" holding any
"mypackage" subdir's.
Setting PERL5LIB: p5lib
For cases where the environment is more useful for setting up library paths
"p5lib" can be used to preload this variable. This is mainly useful
for automatically including directories outside of the parent tree of
$FindBin::bin.
For example, using:
$ export PERL5LIB="/usr/local/foo:/usr/local/bar";
$ myprog;
or simply
$ PERL5LIB="/usr/local/lib/foo:/usr/lib/bar" myprog;
(depending on your shell) with #! code including:
use FindBin::libs qw( p5lib );
will not "use lib" any dir's found but will update PERL5LIB to
something like:
/home/me/sandbox/branches/lib:/usr/local/lib/foo:/usr/lib/bar
This can make controlling the paths used simpler and avoid the use of symlinks
for some testing (see examples below).
Note that "p5lib" and "nouse" are proably worth
Skipping directories¶
By default, lib directories under / and /usr are sliently ignored. This normally
means that /lib, /usr/lib, and '/usr/local/lib' are skipped. The
"ignore" parameter provides a comma-separated list of directories to
ignore:
use FindBin::libs qw( ignore=/skip/this,/and/this/also );
will replace the standard list and thus skip "/skip/this/lib" and
"/and/this/also/lib". It will search "/lib" and
"/usr/lib" since the argument ignore list replaces the original one.
Homegrown Library Management¶
An all-too-common occurrance managing perly projects is being unable to install
new modules becuse "it might break things", and being unable to test
them because you can't install them. The usual outcome of this is a collection
of hard-coded
use lib qw( /usr/local/projectX ... )
code at the top of each #! file that has to be updated by hand for each new
project.
To get away from this you'll often see relative paths for the lib's, which
require running the code from one specific place. All this does is push the
hard-coding into cron, shell wrappers, and begin blocks.
With FindBin::libs you need suffer no more.
Automatically finding libraries in and above the executable means you can put
your modules into cvs/svn and check them out with the project, have multiple
copies shared by developers, or easily move a module up the directory tree in
a testbed to regression test the module with existing code. All without having
to modify a single line of code.
- Code-speicfic modules.
- Say your sandbox is in ./sandbox and you are currently
working in ./sandbox/projects/package/bin on a perl executable. You may
have some number of modules that are specific -- or customized -- for this
pacakge, share some modules within the project, and may want to use
company-wide modules that are managed out of ./sandbox in development. All
of this lives under a ./qc tree on the test boxes and under ./production
on production servers.
For simplicity, say that your sandbox lives in your home direcotry,
/home/jowbloe, as a directory or a symlink.
If your #! uses FindBin::libs in it then it will effectively
use lib
qw(
/home/jowbloe/sandbox/lib
/home/jowbloe/sandbox/project/lib
/home/jowbloe/sandbox/project/package/lib
);
if you run /home/jowbloe/sandbox/project/package/bin/foobar. This will
happen the same way if you use a relative or absolute path, perl -d the
thing, or if any of the lib directories are symlinks outside of your
sandbox.
This means that the most specific module directories ("closest" to
your executable) will be picked up first.
If you have a version of Frobnicate.pm in your ./package/lib for
modifications fine: you'll use it before the one in ./project or
./sandbox.
Using the "p5lib" argument can help in case where some of the code
lives outside of the sandbox. To test a sandbox version of some other
module:
use FindBin::libs qw( p5lib );
and
$ PERL5LIB=/other/sandbox/module foobar;
- Regression Testing
- Everntually, however, you'll need to regression test
Frobnicate.pm with other modules.
Fine: move, copy, or symlink it into ./project/lib and you can merrily run
./project/*/bin/* with it and see if there are any problems. In fact, so
can the nice folks in QC.
If you want to install and test a new module just prefix it into, say,
./sandbox/lib and all the code that has FindBin::libs will simply use it
first.
- Testing with Symlinks
- $FindBin::Bin is relative to where an executable is started
from. This allows a symlink to change the location of directories used by
FindBin::libs. Full regression testing of an executable can be
accomplished with a symlink:
./sandbox
./lib -> /homegrown/dir/lib
./lib/What/Ever.pm
./pre-change
./bin/foobar
./post-change
./lib/What/Ever.pm
./bin/foobar -> ../../pre-last-change/bin/foobar
Running foobar symlinked into the post-change directory will test it with
whatever collection of modules is in the post-change directory. A large
regression test on some collection of changed modules can be performed
with a few symlinks into a sandbox area.
- Managing Configuration and Meta-data Files
- The "base" option alters FindBin::libs standard
base directory. This allows for a heirarchical set of metadata
directories:
./sandbox
./meta
./project/
./meta
./project/package
./bin
./meta
with
use FindBin::libs qw( base=meta export );
sub read_meta
{
my $base = shift;
for my $dir ( @meta )
{
# open the first one and return
...
}
# caller gets back empty list if nothing was read.
()
}
- using "prove" with local modules.
- Modules that are not intended for CPAN will not usually
have a Makefile.PL or Build setup. This makes it harder to check the code
via "make test". Instead of hacking a one-time Makefile,
FindBin::libs can be used to locate modules in a "lib" directory
adjacent to the "t: directory. The setup for this module would look
like:
./t/01.t
./t/02.t
...
./lib/FindBin/libs.pm
since the *.t files use FindBin::libs they can locate the most recent
version of code without it having to be copied into a ./blib directory
(usually via make) before being processed. If the module did not have a
Makefile this would allow:
prove t/*.t;
to check the code.
Notes¶
Alternatives¶
FindBin::libs was developed to avoid pitfalls with the items listed below. As of
FindBin::libs-1.20, this is also mutli-platform, where other techniques may be
limited to *NIX or at least less portable.
- PERL5LIBS
- PERL5LIB can be used to accomplish the same directory
lookups as FindBin::libs. The problem is PERL5LIB often contains absolte
paths and does not automatically change depending on where tests are run.
This can leave you modifying a file, changing directory to see if it works
with some other code and testing an unmodified version of the code via
PERL5LIB. FindBin::libs avoids this by using $FindBin::bin to reference
where the code is running from.
The same is true of trying to use almost any environmental solution, with
Perl's built in mechanism or one based on $ENV{ PWD } or qx( pwd ).
Aside: Combining an existing PERL5LIB for out-of-tree lookups with the
"p5lib" option works well for most development situations.
- use lib qw( ../../../../Lib );
- This works, but how many dots do you need to get all the
working lib's into a module or #! code? Class distrubuted among several
levels subdirectories may have qw( ../../../lib ) vs. qw( ../../../../lib
) or various combinations of them. Validating these by hand (let alone
correcting them) leaves me crosseyed after only a short session.
- Anchor on a fixed lib directory.
- Given a standard directory, it is possible to use something
like:
BEGIN
{
my ( $libdir ) = $0 =~ m{ ^( .+? )/SOMEDIR/ }x;
eval "use lib qw( $libdir )";
}
This looks for a standard location (e.g., /path/to/Mylib) in the executable
path (or cwd) and uses that.
The main problem here is that if the anchor ever changes (e.g., when moving
code between projects or relocating directories now that SVN supports it)
the path often has to change in multiple files. The regex also may have to
support multiple platforms, or be broken into more complicated File::Spec
code that probably looks pretty much like what
use FindBin::libs qw( base=Mylib )
does anyway.
FindBin::libs-1.2+ uses File::Spec¶
In order to accmodate a wider range of filesystems, the code has been re-written
to use File::Spec for all directory and volume manglement.
There is one thing that File::Spec does not handle, hoever, which is fully
reolving absolute paths. That still has to be handled via abs_path, when it
works.
The issue is that File::Spec::rel2abs and Cwd::abs_path work differently:
abs_path only returns true for existing directories and resolves symlinks;
rel2abs simply prepends
cwd() to any non-absolute paths.
The difference for FinBin::libs is that including redundant directories can lead
to unexpected results in what gets included; looking up the contents of
heavily-symlinked paths is slow (and has some -- admittedly unlikely --
failures at runtime). So,
abs_path() is the preferred way to find where
the lib's really live after they are found looking up the tree. Using
abs_path() also avoids problems where the same directory is included
twice in a sandbox' tree via symlinks.
Due to previous complaints that abs_path did not work properly on all systems,
the current version of FindBin::libs uses File::Spec to break apart and
re-assemble directories, with abs_path used optinally. If "abs_path
cwd" works then abs_path is used on the directory paths handed by
File::Spec::catpath(); otherwise the paths are used as-is. This may
leave users on systms with non-working
abs_path() having extra copies
of external library directories in @INC.
Another issue is that I've heard reports of some systems failing the '-d' test
on symlinks, where '-e' would have succeded.
See Also¶
- File::Spec
- This is used for portability in dis- and re-assembling
directory paths based on $FindBin::Bin.
- Older code.
- FindBin::libs_5_8.pm is installed if $^V indicates that the
running perl is prior to v5.10.
BUGS¶
- •
- In order to avoid including junk, FindBin::libs uses '-d'
to test the items before including them on the library list. This works
fine so long as abs_path() is used to disambiguate any symlinks
first. If abs_path() is turned off then legitimate directories may
be left off in whatever local conditions might cause a valid symlink to
fail the '-d' test."
- •
- File::Spec 3.16 and prior have a bug in VMS of not
returning an absolute paths in splitdir for dir's without a leading '.'.
Fix for this is to unshift '', @dirpath if $dirpath[0]. While not a bug,
this is obviously a somewhat kludgy workaround and should be removed (with
an added test for a working version) once the File::Spec is fixed.
- •
- The hack for prior-to-5.12 versions of perl is messy, but
is the only I've found that works for the moment on *NIX, VMS, and MSW. I
am not sure whether any of these systems are normally configured to share
perl modules between versions. If the moduels are not shared on multiple
platforms then I can make this work by managing the installation rather
than checking this every time at startup.
For the moment, at least, this seems to work.
AUTHOR¶
Steven Lembark, Workhorse Computing <lembark@wrkhors.com>
COPYRIGHT¶
Copyright (C) 2003-2012, Steven Lembark, Workhorse Computing. This code is
released under the same terms as Perl-5.10 or any later version of Perl.
POD ERRORS¶
Hey!
The above document had some coding errors, which are explained
below:
- Around line 780:
- You forgot a '=back' before '=head1'
- Around line 789:
- '=item' outside of any '=over'
- Around line 844:
- You forgot a '=back' before '=head2'
- Around line 941:
- You forgot a '=back' before '=head1'