29

I need to dynamically include a Perl module, but if possible would like to stay away from eval due to work coding standards. This works:

$module = "My::module";
eval("use $module;");

But I need a way to do it without eval if possible. All google searches lead to the eval method, but none in any other way.

Is it possible to do it without eval?

3
  • 1
    Duplicate: stackoverflow.com/questions/442710/… Dec 16, 2009 at 20:41
  • Sorry about that. I searched but couldn't find anything.
    – user226723
    Dec 16, 2009 at 20:45
  • 2
    I'd get your coding standards updated. There's nothing wrong or insecure about eval'ing what is basically a hard coded string. It's the simplest way to accomplish what you want. If you're passing in user input, that's another story...
    – runrig
    Dec 16, 2009 at 22:45

6 Answers 6

51

Use require to load modules at runtime. It often a good idea to wrap this in a block (not string) eval in case the module can't be loaded.

eval {
    require My::Module;
    My::Module->import();
    1;
} or do {
   my $error = $@;
   # Module load failed. You could recover, try loading
   # an alternate module, die with $error...
   # whatever's appropriate
};

The reason for the eval {...} or do {...} syntax and making a copy of $@ is because $@ is a global variable that can be set by many different things. You want to grab the value as atomically as possible to avoid a race condition where something else has set it to a different value.

If you don't know the name of the module until runtime you'll have to do the translation between module name (My::Module) and file name (My/Module.pm) manually:

my $module = 'My::Module';

eval {
    (my $file = $module) =~ s|::|/|g;
    require $file . '.pm';
    $module->import();
    1;
} or do {
    my $error = $@;
    # ...
};
12
  • Hmm. This is good because you wrap the require in an eval, but your require isn't particularly dynamic. If one could merge answers, Dan's and your's would be my top candidates.
    – innaM
    Dec 16, 2009 at 20:08
  • While his require wasn't dynamic, I was easily able to make it so (as Picard would say). Thanks for the answer!
    – user226723
    Dec 16, 2009 at 20:17
  • 2
    @Ether: You're right to say it's not safe, (before the edit) but it's not related to threads.
    – tsee
    Dec 16, 2009 at 21:01
  • 3
    s@'|::@/@g -- for hysterical raisins, ' and :: are interchangeable as package delimiters.
    – ephemient
    Dec 16, 2009 at 22:50
  • 3
    Anyone who uses ' as a package delimiter outside of a JAPH deserves to have their code break. Dec 17, 2009 at 0:04
17

How about using the core module Module::Load

With your example:

use Module::Load;
my $module = "My::module";
load $module;

"Module::Load - runtime require of both modules and files"

"load eliminates the need to know whether you are trying to require either a file or a module."

If it fails it will die with something of the like "Can't locate xxx in @INC (@INC contains: ...".

2
  • 1
    It's a core module, so should be used.
    – alexk
    Jun 20, 2014 at 1:03
  • Do you have an example of how to make this work with a dynamic string? When I try it, I just get Useless use of hash element in void context and/or Can't call method "autoload" on unblessed reference
    – Chris Dodd
    Sep 10, 2018 at 3:08
10

Well, there's always require as in

require 'My/Module.pm';
My::Module->import();

Note that you lose whatever effects you may have gotten from the import being called at compile time instead of runtime.

Edit: The tradeoffs between this and the eval way are: eval lets you use the normal module syntax and gives you a more explicit error if the module name is invalid (as opposed to merely not found). OTOH, the eval way is (potentially) more subject to arbitrary code injection.

1
  • Thanks for the answer. I voted you up since I can't select both answers :).
    – user226723
    Dec 16, 2009 at 20:17
4

No, it's not possible to without eval, as require() needs the bareword module name, as described at perldoc -f require. However, it's not an evil use of eval, as it doesn't allow injection of arbitrary code (assuming you have control over the contents of the file you are requireing, of course).

EDIT: Code amended below, but I'm leaving the first version up for completeness.

I use I used to use this little sugar module to do dynamic loads at runtime:

package MyApp::Util::RequireClass;

use strict;
use warnings;

use Exporter 'import'; # gives you Exporter's import() method directly
our @EXPORT_OK = qw(requireClass);

# Usage: requireClass(moduleName);
# does not do imports (wrong scope) -- you should do this after calling me: $class->import(@imports);
sub requireClass
{
    my ($class) = @_;
    eval "require $class" or do { die "Ack, can't load $class: $@" };
}

1;

PS. I'm staring at this definition (I wrote it quite a while ago) and I'm pondering adding this: $class->export_to_level(1, undef, @imports);... it should work, but is not tested.

EDIT: version 2 now, much nicer without an eval (thanks ysth): :)

package MyApp::Util::RequireClass;

use strict;
use warnings;

use Exporter 'import'; # gives you Exporter's import() method directly
our @EXPORT_OK = qw(requireClass);

# Usage: requireClass(moduleName);
# does not do imports (wrong scope) -- you should do this after calling me: $class->import(@imports);
sub requireClass
{
    my ($class) = @_;

    (my $file = $class) =~ s|::|/|g;
    $file .= '.pm';
    require $file;  # will die if there was an error
}

1;
2
  • 4
    "require() needs the bareword module name" - no, it doesn't; just s#::#/#g; and append '.pm' to get a pathname.
    – ysth
    Dec 16, 2009 at 20:30
  • @ysth: wow, you're right... the docs are very vague about this but it does indeed work. Well that's splendid, now I can revise my module to eliminate that evil eval :)
    – Ether
    Dec 16, 2009 at 21:16
1

Class::MOP on CPAN has a load_class method for this: http://metacpan.org/pod/Class::MOP

0

i like doing things like..

require Win32::Console::ANSI if ( $^O eq "MSWin32" );

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