How can I create my Perl Moose class such that multiple mutually-dependent attributes are built in the proper order? In my case, I want to configure my Log::Log4perl object from a configuration file that is specified in my main configuration file.
2 Answers
If the initialization is truly mutually-dependent, you have a problem, since one of the attributes must necessarily be initialized before the other. But nothing about your description supports this. It sounds like creating the logger requires the config file, and that's it.
Just make the creation of logger
lazy, giving config
a chance to be set.
package Class;
use Moose;
has config => ( ... );
has logger => (
isa => 'Str',
is => 'ro',
lazy => 1,
default => sub {
my $self = shift;
my $config = $self->config
or die(...);
return Log::Log4perl->get_logger( $config->{logger} );
},
handles => [qw( info warn error fatal )],
);
Sample usage
my $o = Class->new( config => "..." );
$o->warn("...");
or
# Assuming config isn't required=>1.
my $o = Class->new();
$o->config("...");
$o->warn("...");
You can use the before
method modifier (method hook) to force the attributes to build in a specific order:
package Z;
use Moose;
has config => (
isa => 'HashRef',
is => 'ro',
lazy => 1,
default => sub { print STDERR "called 'config'\n"; return { a => 'b' }; },
);
has logger => (
isa => 'Str',
is => 'ro',
lazy => 1,
default => sub { print STDERR "called 'logger'\n"; return 'Fred'; }
);
before 'logger' => sub {
my $self = shift;
print STDERR "called before 'logger'\n";
die "No logger!: $!\n" if !defined $self->config;
return;
};
package A;
my $z = Z->new();
print "logger: ", $z->logger, "\n";
print "config{a}: ", $z->config->{a}, "\n";
The output of this sample code, showing that config
is built before logger
via the before
method modifier:
called before 'logger'
called 'config'
called 'logger'
logger: Fred
config{a}: b
-
3It's usually enough to have them all lazy and to use them within each other in the correct order. May 1, 2018 at 14:49
-
Agreed - but you might want to initialize your logger before you would normally tend to your configuration file. (I usually want loggers set up really, really early.) May 1, 2018 at 15:13