B::Lint - Perl lint
perl -MO=Lint[,OPTIONS] foo.pl
The B::Lint module is equivalent to an extended version of the -w option of perl. It is named after the program lint which carries out a similar process for C programs.
Option words are separated by commas (not whitespace) and follow the usual conventions of compiler backend options. Following any options (indicated by a leading -) come lint check arguments. Each such argument (apart from the special all and none options) is a word representing one possible lint check (turning on that check) or is no-foo (turning off that check). Before processing the check arguments, a standard list of checks is turned on. Later options override earlier ones. Available options are:
Produces a warning whenever the magic <>
readline is
used. Internally it uses perl's two-argument open which itself treats
filenames with special characters specially. This could allow
interestingly named files to have unexpected effects when reading.
- % touch 'rm *|'
- % perl -pe 1
The above creates a file named rm *|
. When perl opens it with
<>
it actually executes the shell program rm *
. This
makes <>
dangerous to use carelessly.
Produces a warning whenever an array is used in an implicit scalar context. For example, both of the lines
- $foo = length(@bar);
- $foo = @bar;
will elicit a warning. Using an explicit scalar() silences the warning. For example,
- $foo = scalar(@bar);
These options produce a warning whenever an operation implicitly reads or (respectively) writes to one of Perl's special variables. For example, implicit-read will warn about these:
- /foo/;
and implicit-write will warn about these:
- s/foo/bar/;
Both implicit-read and implicit-write warn about this:
- for (@a) { ... }
This option warns whenever a bareword is implicitly quoted, but is also the name of a subroutine in the current package. Typical mistakes that it will trap are:
- use constant foo => 'bar';
- @a = ( foo => 1 );
- $b{foo} = 2;
Neither of these will do what a naive user would expect.
This option warns whenever $_
is used either explicitly anywhere or
as the implicit argument of a print statement.
This option warns on each use of any variable, subroutine or
method name that lives in a non-current package but begins with
an underscore ("_"). Warnings aren't issued for the special case
of the single character name "_" by itself (e.g. $_
and @_
).
This option warns whenever an undefined subroutine is invoked.
This option will only catch explicitly invoked subroutines such
as foo()
and not indirect invocations such as &$subref()
or $obj->meth()
. Note that some programs or modules delay
definition of subs until runtime by means of the AUTOLOAD
mechanism.
This option warns whenever one of the regexp variables $`
, $&
or $'
is used. Any occurrence of any of these variables in your
program can slow your whole program down. See perlre for
details.
Turn all warnings on.
Turn all warnings off.
Normally, Lint only checks the main code of the program together with all subs defined in package main. The -u option lets you include other package names whose subs are then checked by Lint.
Lint can be extended by with plugins. Lint uses Module::Pluggable to find available plugins. Plugins are expected but not required to inform Lint of which checks they are adding.
The B::Lint->register_plugin( MyPlugin => \@new_checks )
method
adds the list of @new_checks
to the list of valid checks. If your
module wasn't loaded by Module::Pluggable then your class name is
added to the list of plugins.
You must create a match( \%checks )
method in your plugin class or one
of its parents. It will be called on every op as a regular method call
with a hash ref of checks as its parameter.
The class methods B::Lint->file
and B::Lint->line
contain
the current filename and line number.
This is only a very preliminary version.
Malcolm Beattie, mbeattie@sable.ox.ac.uk.
Sebastien Aperghis-Tramoni - bug fixes