The following is a debug session on Perl 5.12. Does this make any sense? Does UNIVERSAL cache a version of the @ISA variable, which if forever uses thereafer. Back before Class::ISA was deprecated, I used to call Class::ISA::self_and_super_path to get the internals to relook at the @ISA array. Since it is now considered unnecessary, how do you get perl to audit its internal records?
DB<开发者_如何学编程;34> p $papa
Papushka=HASH(0x16bc0300)
DB<35> p $papa->isa('Nanushka')
DB<36> p $papa->isa('Babushka')
1
DB<37> x @Papushka::ISA
0 'Nanushka'
1 'Babushka'
This is test code (obviously). It's getting the same results, run flat, run as a test, or run in debug. I should tell you that prior to this @ISA = qw<Babushka> and I performed
splice( @ISA, 0, 0, 'Nanushka' );
Is that the problem? Should you only ever push onto @ISA?
The replacement for Class::ISA::self_and_super_path is mro::get_linear_isa. That's available either from mro itself, or, if you want to support old perls, via MRO::Compat.
Also, @ISA is a magic variable.
$ perl -MDevel::Peek -e'Dump \@ISA'
SV = IV(0x1b92e20) at 0x1b92e28
REFCNT = 1
FLAGS = (TEMP,ROK)
RV = 0x1bbcd58
SV = PVAV(0x1b93cf8) at 0x1bbcd58
REFCNT = 2
FLAGS = (SMG,RMG)
MAGIC = 0x1bc0f68
MG_VIRTUAL = &PL_vtbl_isa
MG_TYPE = PERL_MAGIC_isa(I)
MG_OBJ = 0x1bbcd40
ARRAY = 0x0
FILL = -1
MAX = -1
ARYLEN = 0x0
FLAGS = (REAL)
Note the PERL_MAGIC_isa. That's what drives this particular mechanism.
Whenever it is changed, the contents of any caches that rely on its value are supposed to be updated.
$ perl -E'say Foo->isa(q[Bar]) || 0; @Foo::ISA = qw(Bar Baz); say Foo->isa(q[Bar]) || 0'
0
1
Apparently you've found a case where the cache invalidation doesn't happen. I consider this a bug. Chances are splice, for some reason, doesn't invoke the isa magic appropriately. You could try to modify @ISA in an alternative way, for example using unshift or an assignment, or possibly try mro::method_changed_in, which would invalidate the method resolution caches, which are bound to the various @ISAs.
If you could reduce this bug to a minimal testcase, that'd be hugely helpful in getting this bug fixed.
Update:
A minimal testcase turned out to be easy:
$ perl -E'say Foo->isa(q[Bar]) || 0; splice @Foo::ISA, 0, 0, q[Bar]; say Foo->isa(q[Bar]) || 0'
0
0
This is caused by pp_splice not doing something like mg_set((SV *)ary). push, unshift, and regular assignments do that correctly, so using one of these should fix your issue.
Another Update:
This change, which I just committed to perl, fixes the issue. However, as the odd behaviour of splice not invoking magic is already present in 5.8 and 5.10, it's not a regression and therefore not going to be part of 5.12.3 in a few months. 5.13.6, which will be released next week, and 5.14.0, next northern spring, will probably have it.
Yes, there is a cache. But if you can modify @ISA without invalidating that cache, I would consider it a bug in perl.
Does your problem disappear if you add the line @ISA = @ISA; after your splice line?
加载中,请稍侯......
精彩评论