7

Let's say I have a perl module file and I want to include and use it dynamically at runtime. Said module includes a class that I need to instantiate without knowing its name until runtime.

For example,

#inside module.pm

package module;

sub new {
#setup object
}

#inside main.pl

#get module.pm as argument
my $module_var = #load reference to module using text argument?
my $module_instance = $module_var->new();
1
  • 5
    A better more modern idea would make a base class, and factor off these dynamically loaded entities as MooseX::Traits, then you just instantiate the baseclass with said traits BaseClass->with_traits('Foobar::Baz')->new; Aug 12, 2010 at 18:46

3 Answers 3

11

This can be done without eval as follows:

my $module_name = 'Some::Module';

(my $require_name = $module_name . ".pm") =~ s{::}{/}g;

require $require_name;

my $obj = $module_name->new();

If you need to do this many times, just wrap up that code in a subroutine:

sub load_module {
    for (@_) {
        (my $file = "$_.pm") =~ s{::}{/}g;
        require $file;
    }
}

load_module 'Some::Module', 'Another::Module';
0
7
my $module_var = 'module';
eval "use $module_var; 1" or die $@;
my $module_instance = $module_var->new();

Note that the eval is a possible security hole. If $module_var contains code, it will get executed. One way around this is to use Class::MOP. Replace the eval line with:

use Class::MOP;
Class::MOP::load_class($module_var);

If you don't want to require Class::MOP, you could copy the _is_valid_class_name function from it into your code, and just make sure that $module_var contains a valid class before you eval it. (Note that if you're using Moose, you're already using Class::MOP behind-the-scenes.)

2
  • is there a safer way than eval? security is a concern for me
    – Mike
    Aug 12, 2010 at 18:25
  • 1
    Class::MOP::load_class() being deprecated, it's possible to find the same utility in Class::Load.
    – smonff
    Nov 17, 2022 at 15:34
1

You can do this with eval.

my $module = "Foo";
eval "use $module;1" or die($@); # Couldn't load module

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.