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Module::Pluggable(3)                 User Contributed Perl Documentation                Module::Pluggable(3)



NAME
       Module::Pluggable - automatically give your module the ability to have plugins

SYNOPSIS
       Simple use Module::Pluggable -package Module::Pluggablepackage

           package MyClass;
           use Module::Pluggable;

       and then later ...

           use MyClass;
           my $mc = MyClass->new();
           # returns the names of all plugins installed under MyClass::Plugin::*
           my @plugins = $mc->plugins();

EXAMPLE
       Why would you want to do this? Say you have something that wants to pass an object to a number of
       different plugins in turn. For example you may want to extract meta-data from every email you get
       sent and do something with it. Plugins make sense here because then you can keep adding new meta data
       parsers and all the logic and docs for each one will be self contained and new handlers are easy to
       add without changing the core code. For that, you might do something like ...

           package Email::Examiner;

           use strict;
           use Email::Simple;
           use Module::Pluggable require => 1;

           sub handle_email {
               my $self  = shift;
               my $email = shift;

               foreach my $plugin ($self->plugins) {
                   $plugin->examine($email);
               }

               return 1;
           }

       .. and all the plugins will get a chance in turn to look at it.

       This can be trivally extended so that plugins could save the email somewhere and then no other plugin
       should try and do that.  Simply have it so that the "examine" method returns 1 if it has saved the
       email somewhere. You might also wnat to be paranoid and check to see if the plugin has an "examine"
       method.

               foreach my $plugin ($self->plugins) {
                   next unless $plugin->can('examine');
                   last if     $plugin->examine($email);
               }

       And so on. The sky's the limit.

DESCRIPTION
       Provides a simple but, hopefully, extensible way of having 'plugins' for your module. Obviously this
       isn't going to be the be all and end all of solutions but it works for me.

       Essentially all it does is export a method into your namespace that looks through a search path for
       .pm files and turn those into class names.

       Optionally it instantiates those classes for you.

ADVANCED USAGE
       Alternatively, if you don't want to use 'plugins' as the method ...

           package MyClass;
           use Module::Pluggable sub_name => 'foo';

       and then later ...

           my @plugins = $mc->foo();

       Or if you want to look in another namespace

           package MyClass;
           use Module::Pluggable search_path => ['Acme::MyClass::Plugin', 'MyClass::Extend'];

       or directory

           use Module::Pluggable search_dirs => ['mylibs/Foo'];

       Or if you want to instantiate each plugin rather than just return the name

           package MyClass;
           use Module::Pluggable instantiate => 'new';

       and then

           # whatever is passed to 'plugins' will be passed
           # to 'new' for each plugin
           my @plugins = $mc->plugins(@options);

       alternatively you can just require the module without instantiating it

           package MyClass;
           use Module::Pluggable require => 1;

       since requiring automatically searches inner packages, which may not be desirable, you can turn this
       off

           package MyClass;
           use Module::Pluggable require => 1, inner => 0;

       You can limit the plugins loaded using the except option, either as a string, array ref or regex

           package MyClass;
           use Module::Pluggable except => 'MyClass::Plugin::Foo';

       or

           package MyClass;
           use Module::Pluggable except => ['MyClass::Plugin::Foo', 'MyClass::Plugin::Bar'];

       or

           package MyClass;
           use Module::Pluggable except => qr/^MyClass::Plugin::(Foo|Bar)$/;

       and similarly for only which will only load plugins which match.

       Remember you can use the module more than once

           package MyClass;
           use Module::Pluggable search_path => 'MyClass::Filters' sub_name => 'filters';
           use Module::Pluggable search_path => 'MyClass::Plugins' sub_name => 'plugins';

       and then later ...

           my @filters = $self->filters;
           my @plugins = $self->plugins;

INNER PACKAGES
       If you have, for example, a file lib/Something/Plugin/Foo.pm that contains package definitions for
       both "Something::Plugin::Foo" and "Something::Plugin::Bar" then as long as you either have either the
       require or instantiate option set then we'll also find "Something::Plugin::Bar". Nifty!

OPTIONS
       You can pass a hash of options when importing this module.

       The options can be ...

       sub_name

       The name of the subroutine to create in your namespace.

       By default this is 'plugins'

       search_path

       An array ref of namespaces to look in.

       search_dirs

       An array ref of directorys to look in before @INC.

       instantiate

       Call this method on the class. In general this will probably be 'new' but it can be whatever you
       want. Whatever arguments are passed to 'plugins' will be passed to the method.

       The default is 'undef' i.e just return the class name.

       require

       Just require the class, don't instantiate (overrides 'instantiate');

       inner

       If set to 0 will not search inner packages.  If set to 1 will override "require".

       only

       Takes a string, array ref or regex describing the names of the only plugins to return. Whilst this
       may seem perverse ... well, it is. But it also makes sense. Trust me.

       except

       Similar to "only" it takes a description of plugins to exclude from returning. This is slightly less
       perverse.

       package

       This is for use by extension modules which build on "Module::Pluggable": passing a "package" option
       allows you to place the plugin method in a different package other than your own.

       file_regex

       By default "Module::Pluggable" only looks for .pm files.

       By supplying a new "file_regex" then you can change this behaviour e.g

           file_regex => qr/\.plugin$/

METHODs
       search_path

       The method "search_path" is exported into you namespace as well.  You can call that at any time to
       change or replace the search_path.

           $self->search_path( add => "New::Path" ); # add
           $self->search_path( new => "New::Path" ); # replace

FUTURE PLANS
       This does everything I need and I can't really think of any other features I want to add. Famous last
       words of course

       Recently tried fixed to find inner packages and to make it 'just work' with PAR but there are still
       some issues.

       However suggestions (and patches) are welcome.

AUTHOR
       Simon Wistow <simon@thegestalt.org>

COPYING
       Copyright, 2006 Simon Wistow

       Distributed under the same terms as Perl itself.

BUGS
       None known.

SEE ALSO
       File::Spec, File::Find, File::Basename, Class::Factory::Util, Module::Pluggable::Ordered



perl v5.8.8                                      2007-01-29                             Module::Pluggable(3)

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