# NAME
Import::Base - Import a set of modules into the calling module
# VERSION
version 1.000
# STATUS
# SYNOPSIS
### Static API
package My::Base;
use base 'Import::Base';
# Modules that are always imported
our @IMPORT_MODULES = (
'strict',
'warnings',
# Import only these subs
'My::Exporter' => [ 'foo', 'bar', 'baz' ],
# Disable uninitialized warnings
'-warnings' => [qw( uninitialized )],
# Test for minimum version
{ 'Getopt::Long' => 2.31 },
# Callback to generate modules to import
sub {
my ( $bundles, $args ) = @_;
return "My::MoreModule" => [qw( fuzz )];
},
);
# Optional bundles
our %IMPORT_BUNDLES = (
with_signatures => [
'feature' => [qw( signatures )],
# Put this last to make sure nobody else can re-enable this warning
'>-warnings' => [qw( experimental::signatures )]
],
Test => [qw( Test::More Test::Deep )],
Class => [
# Put this first so we can override what it enables later
' [ 'warnings', 'My::Exporter' => [ 'bar' ] ];
# DESCRIPTION
This module makes it easier to build and manage a base set of imports. Rather
than importing a dozen modules in each of your project's modules, you simply
import one module and get all the other modules you want. This reduces your
module boilerplate from 12 lines to 1.
# USAGE
## Base Module
Creating a base module means extending Import::Base and creating an
`@IMPORT_MODULES` package variable with a list of modules to import,
optionally with a arrayref of arguments to be passed to the module's import()
method.
A common base module should probably include [strict](https://metacpan.org/pod/strict),
[warnings](https://metacpan.org/pod/warnings), and a [feature](https://metacpan.org/pod/feature) set.
package My::Base;
use base 'Import::Base';
our @IMPORT_MODULES = (
'strict',
'warnings',
feature => [qw( :5.14 )],
);
Now we can consume our base module by doing:
package My::Module;
use My::Base;
Which is equivalent to:
package My::Module;
use strict;
use warnings;
use feature qw( :5.14 );
Now when we want to change our feature set, we only need to edit one file!
## Import Bundles
In addition to a set of modules, we can also create optional bundles with the
`%IMPORT_BUNDLES` package variable.
package My::Bundles;
use base 'My::Base';
# Modules that will always be included
our @IMPORT_MODULES
experimental => [qw( signatures )],
);
# Named bundles to include
our %IMPORT_BUNDLES = (
Class => [qw( Moose MooseX::Types )],
Role => [qw( Moose::Role MooseX::Types )],
Test => [qw( Test::More Test::Deep )],
);
Now we can choose one or more bundles to include:
# lib/MyClass.pm
use My::Base 'Class';
# t/mytest.t
use My::Base 'Test';
# t/lib/MyTest.pm
use My::Base 'Test', 'Class';
Bundles must always come before options. Bundle names cannot start with "-".
## Extended Base Module
We can further extend our base module to create more specialized modules for
classes and testing.
package My::Class;
use base 'My::Base';
our @IMPORT_MODULES = (
'Moo::Lax',
'Types::Standard' => [qw( :all )],
);
package My::Test;
use base 'My::Base';
our @IMPORT_MODULES = (
'Test::More',
'Test::Deep',
'Test::Exception',
'Test::Differences',
);
Now all our classes just need to `use My::Class` and all our test scripts just
need to `use My::Test`.
**NOTE:** Be careful when extending base modules from other projects! If the
module you are extending changes, your modules may unexpectedly break. It is
best to keep your base modules on a per-project scale.
## Unimporting
Sometimes instead of `use Module` we need to do `no Module`, to turn off
`strict` or `warnings` categories for example.
By prefixing the module name with a `-`, Import::Base will act like `no`
instead of `use`.
package My::Base;
use base 'Import::Base';
our @IMPORT_MODULES = (
'strict',
'warnings',
feature => [qw( :5.20 signatures )],
'-warnings' => [qw( experimental::signatures )],
);
Now the warnings for using the 5.20 subroutine signatures feature will be
disabled.
## Version Check
The standard Perl `use` function allows for a version check at compile
time to ensure that a module is at least a minimum version.
# Require Getopt::Long version 2.31 or higher
use Getopt::Long 2.31;
Generally, you should be declaring your dependency with the correct version,
but some modules (like Getopt::Long) change their behavior based on what
version you ask for.
To ask for a specific version, use a hashref with the key is the module and
the value as the required version.
our @IMPORT_MODULES = (
# Require a minimum version
{ 'Getopt::Long' => 2.31 },
# Version and imports
{ 'File::Spec::Functions' => 3.47 } => [qw( catfile )],
);
## -exclude
When importing a base module, you can use `-exclude` to prevent certain things
from being imported (if, for example, they would conflict with existing
things).
# Prevent the "warnings" module from being imported
use My::Base -exclude => [ 'warnings' ];
# Prevent the "bar" sub from My::Exporter from being imported
use My::Base -exclude => [ 'My::Exporter' => [ 'bar' ] ];
NOTE: If you find yourself using `-exclude` often, you would be better off
removing the module or sub and creating a bundle, or only including it in those
modules that need it.
## Control Ordering
The order you import modules can be important!
use warnings;
no warnings 'uninitialized';
# Uninitialized warnings are disabled
no warnings 'uninitialized';
use warnings;
# Uninitialized warnings are enabled!
Due to modules enforcing their own strict and warnings, like [Moose](https://metacpan.org/pod/Moose) and
[Moo](https://metacpan.org/pod/Moo), you may not even know it's happening. This can make it hard to disable the
experimental warnings:
use feature qw( postderef );
no warnings 'experimental::postderef';
use Moo;
# The postderef warnings are back on!
To force a module to the front or the back of the list of imports, you can prefix
the module name with `<` or `>`.
package My::Base;
use base 'Import::Base';
our @IMPORT_MODULES = (
feature => [qw( postderef )],
# Disable this warning last!
'>-warnings' => [qw( experimental::postderef )],
);
our %IMPORT_BUNDLES = (
Class => [
# Import this module first!
'@*; # postderef!
In this case, either putting Moo first or putting `no warnings
'experimental::postderef'` last would solve the problem.
**NOTE:** `<` and `>` come before `-`.
If you need even more control over the order, consider the ["Dynamic API"](#dynamic-api).
## Subref Callbacks
To get a little bit of dynamic support in the otherwise static module lists, you may
add sub references to generate module imports.
package My::Base;
use base 'Import::Base';
our @IMPORT_MODULES = (
sub {
my ( $bundles, $args ) = @_;
return (
qw( strict warnings ),
feature => [qw( :5.20 )],
);
},
);
# strict, warnings, and 5.20 features will be imported
Plain strings are module names. Array references are arguments to import.
**NOTE:** Subrefs cannot return modules with `<` or `>` to control
ordering. Subrefs are run after the order has already been determined, while
the imports are being executed. Subrefs can assume that imports before them
have already been completed.
## Subref Arguments
Sub references get an arrayref of bundles being requested, and a hashref of
extra arguments. Arguments from the calling side start with a '-'. Arguments
from Import::Base do not. Possible arguments are:
package - The package we are exporting to
-exclude - The exclusions, see L"-exclude">.
Using `package`, a subref could check or alter `@ISA`, work with the object's
metaclass (if you're using one), or export additional symbols not set up for
export.
Here's an example for applying a role ([Moo::Role](https://metacpan.org/pod/Moo::Role), [Role::Tiny](https://metacpan.org/pod/Role::Tiny),
[Moose::Role](https://metacpan.org/pod/Moose::Role), and anything that uses `with`) when importing a bundle:
package My::Base;
use base 'Import::Base';
our %IMPORT_BUNDLES = (
'Plugin' => [
'Moo',
# Plugins require the "My::Plugin" role
sub {
my ( $bundles, $args ) = @_;
$args->{package}->can( 'with' )->( 'My::Plugin' );
return;
},
],
);
package My::Custom::Plugin;
use My::Base 'Plugin';
**NOTE:** This sub is still being called during the compile phase. If you need your
role to be applied later, if you get errors when trying to apply it at compile time,
use [the import\_bundle method](#import_bundle), below.
## Custom Arguments
When using ["Subref Callbacks"](#subref-callbacks), you can add additional arguments to the
`use` line. The arguments list starts after the first key that starts with a
'-'. To avoid conflicting with any future Import::Base feature, prefix all your
custom arguments with '--'.
use My::Base -exclude => [qw( strict )], --custom => "arguments";
# Subrefs will get $args{--custom} set to "arguments"
## Dynamic API
Instead of providing `@IMPORT_MODULES` and `%IMPORT_BUNDLES`, you can override the
`modules()` method to do anything you want.
package My::Bundles;
use base 'My::Base';
sub modules {
my ( $class, $bundles, $args ) = @_;
# Modules that will always be included
my @modules = (
experimental => [qw( signatures )],
);
# Named bundles to include
my %bundles = (
Class => [qw( Moose MooseX::Types )],
Role => [qw( Moose::Role MooseX::Types )],
Test => [qw( Test::More Test::Deep )],
);
# Go to our parent class first
return $class->SUPER::modules( $bundles, $args ),
# Then the always included modules
@modules,
# Then the bundles we asked for
map { @{ $bundles{ $_ } } } grep { exists $bundles{ $_ } } @$bundles;
}
Using the above boilerplate will ensure that you start with all the basic functionality.
One advantage the dynamic API has is the ability to remove modules from superclasses, or
completely control the order that modules are imported, even from superclasses.
## Exporting symbols from the base class
Import::Base inherits from Exporter and allows for EXPORT\_OK usage.
package My::Base;
use base 'Import::Base';
our @EXPORT_OK = qw($joy);
our @IMPORT_MODULES = (
'strict',
'warnings',
feature => [qw( :5.10 )],
'My::Base' => [qw( $joy )],
);
our $joy = "Is everywhere";
package main;
use My::Base;
say $joy;
Notice how the base class 'My::Base' is in it's own IMPORT\_MODULES definition.
# METHODS
## modules( $bundles, $args )
Prepare the list of modules to import. $bundles is an array ref of bundles, if any.
$args is a hash ref of generic arguments, if any.
Returns a list of MODULE => \[ import() args \]. MODULE may appear multiple times.
## import\_bundle( @bundles, @args )
Import a bundle at runtime. This method takes the exact same arguments as in
the `use My::Base ...` compile-time API, but allows it to happen at runtime,
so that all of the current package's subs have been made available, and all
`BEGIN` blocks have been executed.
This is useful when using bundles to apply roles that have dependencies or
other esoteric use-cases. It is not necessary for most things.
# DOCUMENTATION BOILERPLATE
Here is an example for documenting your own base modules
=head1 SYNOPSIS
package MyModule;
use My::Base;
use My::Base 'Class';
use My::Base 'Role';
use My::Base 'Test';
=head1 DESCRIPTION
This is the base module that all {{PROJECT}} files should use.
This module always imports the following into your namespace:
=over
=item L
=item L
=item L
Currently the 5.20 feature bundle
=item L 'signatures' 'postderef'
We are using the 5.20 experimental signatures and postfix deref syntax.
=back
=head1 BUNDLES
The following bundles are available. You may import one or more of these by name.
=head2 Class
The class bundle makes your package into a class and includes:
=over 4
=item L
=item L ':all'
=back
=head2 Role
The role bundle makes your package into a role and includes:
=over 4
=item L
=item L ':all'
=back
=head2 Test
The test bundle includes:
=over 4
=item L
=item L
=item L
=item L
=back
=head1 SEE ALSO
=over
=item L
=back
# BEST PRACTICES
## One Per Project
Every project of at least medium size should have its own base module.
Consolidating a bunch of common base modules into a single distribution and
releasing to CPAN may sound like a good idea, but it opens you up to
difficult-to-diagnose problems.
If many projects all depend on the same base, any change to the central base
module could potentially break one of the consuming modules. In a single,
well-tested project, it is easy to track down and address issues due to changes
in the base module. If the base module is released to CPAN, breakage may not
appear until someone tries to install a module that depends on your base.
Version incompatibility, where project Foo depends on version 1 of the base,
while project Bar depends on version 2, will create very frustrating situations
for your users.
Having to track down another project to figure out what modules are active in
the current package is a lot of work, creating frustration for contributing
authors.
# KNOWN ISSUES
- Moo::Role does not work if base module shares the same file as role package
When trying to import [Moo::Role](https://metacpan.org/pod/Moo::Role) using Import::Base, the role will not
be applied if it shares the same file as the Import::Base module. For
safety and sanity, you should keep your Import::Base module separate
from classes and roles.
- Dancer plugins do not work when applied with Import::Base
Dancer plugins check, at compile time, to see if they can be imported into
the consuming class by looking for the Dancer DSL. Because Import::Base uses
Module::Runtime to load the class, Dancer::Plugin thinks Module::Runtime is
the calling class, sees there is no DSL to register itself with, and bails.
See [https://github.com/PerlDancer/Dancer2/pull/1136](https://github.com/PerlDancer/Dancer2/pull/1136) for more information.
# SEE ALSO
- [Import::Into](https://metacpan.org/pod/Import::Into)
The module that provides the functionality to create this module. If Import::Base
doesn't do what you want, look at Import::Into to build your own.
- [Importer](https://metacpan.org/pod/Importer)
This module wraps the `import` method of other modules, allowing you to rename
the symbols you import. If you need to change a name, use this module together
with Import::Base.
- [perl5](https://metacpan.org/pod/perl5)
This module is very similar, and has a bunch of built-in bundles and features for
quickly importing Perl feature sets. It is also flexible, allowing you to specify
your own module bundles.
- [ToolSet](https://metacpan.org/pod/ToolSet)
ToolSet is very similar. Its API just uses package methods instead of package
variables. It also allows for exporting symbols directly from the bundle.
- [sanity](https://metacpan.org/pod/sanity)
Sanity is more consise, but not as flexible. If you don't need the wild
flexibility of Import::Base or the above solutions, take a look.
- [Toolkit](https://metacpan.org/pod/Toolkit)
This one requires configuration files in a home directory, so is not shippable.
- [rig](https://metacpan.org/pod/rig)
This one also requires configuration files in a home directory, so is not shippable.
# AUTHOR
Doug Bell
# CONTRIBUTOR
Brian Medley
# COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2015 by Doug Bell.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.