1Perl::Critic::CORE_DEVEULsOePrERC(o3n)tributed Perl DocuPmeernlt:a:tCirointic::CORE_DEVELOPER(3)
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NAME

6       Perl::Critic::CORE_DEVELOPER - Hints for working on the Perl::Critic
7       core.
8

DESCRIPTION

10       This document is a grab-bag of notes for those who are working on the
11       underpinnings of Perl::Critic. They are intended to be informative, but
12       unfortunately can not really be considered authoritative. It is in the
13       nature of the task being described that the user of this document will
14       end up working out the details for him- or herself based on the actual
15       work being performed. Caveat lector.
16

BECOMING A CORE DEVELOPER

18       Here are my thoughts on how to get started. Note that the steps are not
19       numbered because I'm not sure there is a clear order to them. The items
20       with two stars in front of them are from the mailing list; the ones
21       with one star are my opinion. Although sometimes I have felt it helpful
22       to comment on the two-star items, just to make things thoroughly
23       unclear.
24
25       * If you're unsure of yourself, install Perl::Critic, then download the
26       source and rummage around in it.
27
28       ** Subscribe to the developers' mailing list. There are instructions in
29       "EXTENDING THE CRITIC" in Perl::Critic. The commits mailing list is
30       another good one.
31
32       ** If you are working on a GitHub issue, you should update the ticket
33       to say that you are, to keep other people from duplicating your effort.
34
35       * I personally would update GitHub at the point I was reasonably
36       confident I could hack it, just to prevent myself from having to update
37       GitHub again in a week or so saying "oops, bit off more than I could
38       chew."  But that's me talking.
39
40       * Development requires using Module::Build rather than
41       ExtUtils::MakeMaker.  In other words,
42
43           $ perl Build.PL
44           $ ./Build
45           $ ./Build test
46
47       * You need to run the suite of author tests by running
48
49           $ ./Build authortest
50
51       (but not 'make authortest', which is one of the reasons you should
52       start with Build.PL rather than Makefile.PL) These should run cleanly
53       before you declare your work done. My advice, though, is not to worry
54       about them until your code is functionally correct.
55
56   Modules required for authortest
57       The authortest requires a bunch of modules above and beyond those
58       required to run "Perl::Critic". The list probably depends on which
59       "Perl::Critic" you are testing, so the following should not be
60       considered definitive.  You need the following in addition to all
61       optional modules for Perl::Critic itself.
62
63           Devel::EnforceEncapsulation
64           Perl::Critic::More
65           Test::Kwalitee
66           Test::Memory::Cycle
67           Test::Perl::Critic
68           Test::Pod
69           Test::Pod::Coverage
70           Test::Without::Module
71
72       You can find out what the optional modules are by looking at
73       recommended_module_versions() in inc/Perl/Critic/BuildUtilities.pm.
74
75       In the absence of "Test::Memory::Cycle", the relevant tests are simply
76       skipped.  In the absence of the other modules, the tests die horribly.
77       Of course, either way they do not get run, so the difference is mainly
78       one of aesthetics.
79
80       Under Perl 5.12 and above, Devel::Cycle 1.11 needs to be patched to
81       handle a "Regexp" as a first-class Perl object. See
82       <https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Bug/Display.html?id=56681> for the details.
83

ADDING A GLOBAL CONFIGURATION ITEM

85       Perlcritic handles global configuration items and command line options
86       in very similar ways. These notes will cover adding both a global
87       configuration item and a corresponding, same-named command option.
88       These notes can not, of course, cover implementing the functionality of
89       the new item, just the mechanics of getting the item into Perl::Critic.
90
91   Naming Conventions
92       All names are lower-case, except for the names of constants (if any),
93       which are upper-case. When a name contains multiple words, dashes will
94       be used to separate the words in the configuration item name and the
95       command line option, and underscores will be used in the accessor and
96       attribute value names, and constant names if any.
97
98       For example, if "new item" is being added, the configuration item is
99       "new-item", the command option is "--new-item", the accessors are
100       new_item(), and the value of the attribute will be stored in
101       "$self->{_new_item}". If there are constants involved, their names will
102       start with "NEW_ITEM_". These names will be used in the following
103       discussion.
104
105   Implementation
106       There are several files that must be modified to get your new
107       configuration item and/or command line option.
108
109       lib/Perl/Critic/Utils/Constants.pm
110
111       If there are manifest constants connected with your implementation they
112       go here. You may well at least have a
113
114           $NEW_ITEM_DEFAULT
115
116       to define. All the constants for your new item must be exported, and
117       should be exported not only individually but all together with export
118       tag
119
120           new_item
121
122       lib/Perl/Critic/Command.pm
123
124       If your new item is a command option, its Getopt::Long specification
125       must be defined in _get_option_specification(). If your new
126       configuration item does not have a corresponding command option, you do
127       not need to make any changes to this file.
128
129       lib/Perl/Critic/OptionsProcessor.pm
130
131       If your new item is a global configuration item, you need to add the
132       code to handle it here. Specifically:
133
134       You must add code to the _init() method to store the value of your item
135       as an attribute value, defaulting it if necessary. Using our naming
136       convention, a single-valued item would be stored like this:
137
138           $self->{_new_item} = delete $args{'new-item'} //
139               $NEW_ITEM_DEFAULT;
140
141       If the item has synonyms (e.g. both 'color' and 'colour' meaning the
142       same thing), you must check for all of them. If the item took a list of
143       values, they would be parsed apart and stored as an array reference.
144
145       You must also add and document an accessor for your new item. This
146       would look something like this:
147
148           sub new_item {
149               my ($self) = @_;
150               return $self->{_new_item};
151           }
152
153       In the case of multi-valued items, the accessor must return the array
154       reference, so the above specimen code works in that case also.
155
156       Note that no validation is done here -- this class is simply a bridge
157       between the physical .perlcriticrc file and Perl::Critic::Config, which
158       is where the action is.
159
160       If your new item is a command option without a corresponding global
161       configuration item, you do not need to modify this file.
162
163       lib/Perl/Critic/Config.pm
164
165       You must write a _validate_and_store_new_item() method to validate and
166       store the value of the new item. The signature of this method depends
167       on the details of your new item, but it must include at least the value
168       of the item, even if there is no corresponding global configuration
169       item. If it is possible to get validation failures, it will also need
170       an errors object to add the validation exception to.  Because the
171       details vary, the best way to proceed is probably to find a method
172       similar to the one you want to write, and implement from there. The
173       _validate_and_store_top() method is a reasonable starting point for an
174       item having a single value. The validated value needs to be stored in
175       "$self->{_new_item}".
176
177       You must call _validate_and_store_new_item() in the _init() method.
178
179       You must write and document an accessor method for the value of the new
180       item. The typical accessor method for a single-valued item is
181
182           sub new_item {
183               my ($self) = @_;
184               return $self->{_new_item};
185           }
186
187       but the accessor for a multi-valued item must return a list:
188
189           sub new_item {
190               my ($self) = @_;
191               return @{ $self->{_new_item} };
192           }
193
194       Last, you must document the item itself.
195
196       lib/Perl/Critic/ProfilePrototype.pm
197
198       If your new item has a corresponding global configuration item, you
199       must update the to_string() method to include the item in the string.
200       Your implementation of the item must be such that the generated string
201       is the same as the input string for the item, except for whitespace.
202
203       If your new item has no corresponding global configuration item, you do
204       not need to change this file.
205
206       bin/perlcriticrc
207
208       If your new item has a corresponding command option, you must document
209       it here. If it does not, you do not need to change this file.
210
211       examples/perlcriticrc
212
213       If your new item has a corresponding global configuration item, you
214       must add it here. If it does not, you do not need to change this file.
215
216   Testing
217       The following test files must be considered for modification:
218
219           t/00_modules.t
220           t/01_config.t
221           t/01_config_bad_perlcritic.t
222           t/04_options_processor.t
223           t/07_command.t
224           t/10_user_profile.t
225           t/16_roundtrip_defaults.t
226
227       Depending on your new item, you may not need to change all of these,
228       but you should at least review them. Depending on what your new item
229       actually does, other test files may need to be modified as well.
230

DEPRECATING AND REMOVING A PUBLIC SUBROUTINE OR METHOD

232       This is something to be done cautiously. The code in question may only
233       exist to serve Perl::Critic, but if it is documented as public it may
234       well be in use "in the wild", either in add-ons to Perl::Critic or by
235       users of Perl::Critic.
236
237       Before deprecating public code, the potential deprecator must discuss
238       the issues on the Perl::Critic developers' mailing list. There are
239       instructions on how to subscribe to this list in "EXTENDING THE CRITIC"
240       in Perl::Critic.
241
242       Once agreement is reached, the technical details of the deprecation are
243       fairly simple.
244
245       You must insert something like the following in the code to be
246       deprecated:
247
248           warnings::warnif(
249               'deprecated',
250               'Perl::Critic::Utils::foo() deprecated, use blah::foo() instead.',
251           );
252
253       You should have the deprecated subroutine delegate its functionality to
254       the new subroutine, if that is practical (it may not be).
255
256       You must update the documentation to say that the old code is
257       deprecated, and what the replacement is.
258
259       After the old code has been deprecated for a couple production
260       releases, it can be removed.
261

AUTHOR

263       Thomas R. Wyant, III wyant at cpan dot org
264
266       Copyright (c) 2009-2011 Thomas R. Wyant, III
267
268       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
269       under the same terms as Perl itself.  The full text of this license can
270       be found in the LICENSE file included with this module.
271
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274perl v5.36.0                      2023-03-05   Perl::Critic::CORE_DEVELOPER(3)
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