You'd like to load a very large module quickly.
Use the SelfLoader module:
require Exporter; require SelfLoader; @ISA = qw(Exporter SelfLoader); # # other initialization or declarations here # __DATA__ sub abc { .... } sub def { .... }
When you load a module using require
or use
, the entire module file must be read and compiled (into internal parse trees, not into byte code or native machine code) right then. For very large modules, this annoying delay is unnecessary if you need only a few functions from a particular file.
To address this problem, the SelfLoader module delays compilation of each subroutine until it is actually called. SelfLoader is easy to use: just place your module's subroutines underneath the __DATA__
marker so the compiler will ignore them, use a require
to pull in the SelfLoader, and include SelfLoader in the module's @ISA
array. That's all there is to it. When your module is loaded, the SelfLoader creates stub functions for all the routines below __DATA__
. The first time a function gets called, the stub replaces itself by compiling the real function and then calling it.
There is one significant restriction on modules that employ the SelfLoader (or the AutoLoader for that matter, which is described in Recipe 12.10). SelfLoaded or AutoLoaded subroutines have no access to lexical variables in the file whose __DATA__
block they are in because they are compiled via eval
in an imported AUTOLOAD block. Such dynamically generated subroutines are therefore compiled in the scope of SelfLoader's or AutoLoader's AUTOLOAD.
Whether using the SelfLoader helps or hinders performance depends on how many subroutines the module has, how large they are, and whether they'll all end up getting called over the lifetime of the program or not.
You should initially develop and test your module without the SelfLoader. Commenting out the __DATA__
line will take care of that, allowing those functions to be visible at compile time.
The documentation for the standard module SelfLoader, also in Chapter 7 of Programming Perl; Recipe 12.10
Copyright © 2002 O'Reilly & Associates. All rights reserved.