1=head1 NAME 2 3perlmodstyle - Perl module style guide 4 5=head1 INTRODUCTION 6 7This document attempts to describe the Perl Community's "best practice" 8for writing Perl modules. It extends the recommendations found in 9L<perlstyle> , which should be considered required reading 10before reading this document. 11 12While this document is intended to be useful to all module authors, it is 13particularly aimed at authors who wish to publish their modules on CPAN. 14 15The focus is on elements of style which are visible to the users of a 16module, rather than those parts which are only seen by the module's 17developers. However, many of the guidelines presented in this document 18can be extrapolated and applied successfully to a module's internals. 19 20This document differs from L<perlnewmod> in that it is a style guide 21rather than a tutorial on creating CPAN modules. It provides a 22checklist against which modules can be compared to determine whether 23they conform to best practice, without necessarily describing in detail 24how to achieve this. 25 26All the advice contained in this document has been gleaned from 27extensive conversations with experienced CPAN authors and users. Every 28piece of advice given here is the result of previous mistakes. This 29information is here to help you avoid the same mistakes and the extra 30work that would inevitably be required to fix them. 31 32The first section of this document provides an itemized checklist; 33subsequent sections provide a more detailed discussion of the items on 34the list. The final section, "Common Pitfalls", describes some of the 35most popular mistakes made by CPAN authors. 36 37=head1 QUICK CHECKLIST 38 39For more detail on each item in this checklist, see below. 40 41=head2 Before you start 42 43=over 4 44 45=item * 46 47Don't re-invent the wheel 48 49=item * 50 51Patch, extend or subclass an existing module where possible 52 53=item * 54 55Do one thing and do it well 56 57=item * 58 59Choose an appropriate name 60 61=back 62 63=head2 The API 64 65=over 4 66 67=item * 68 69API should be understandable by the average programmer 70 71=item * 72 73Simple methods for simple tasks 74 75=item * 76 77Separate functionality from output 78 79=item * 80 81Consistent naming of subroutines or methods 82 83=item * 84 85Use named parameters (a hash or hashref) when there are more than two 86parameters 87 88=back 89 90=head2 Stability 91 92=over 4 93 94=item * 95 96Ensure your module works under C<use strict> and C<-w> 97 98=item * 99 100Stable modules should maintain backwards compatibility 101 102=back 103 104=head2 Documentation 105 106=over 4 107 108=item * 109 110Write documentation in POD 111 112=item * 113 114Document purpose, scope and target applications 115 116=item * 117 118Document each publically accessible method or subroutine, including params and return values 119 120=item * 121 122Give examples of use in your documentation 123 124=item * 125 126Provide a README file and perhaps also release notes, changelog, etc 127 128=item * 129 130Provide links to further information (URL, email) 131 132=back 133 134=head2 Release considerations 135 136=over 4 137 138=item * 139 140Specify pre-requisites in Makefile.PL or Build.PL 141 142=item * 143 144Specify Perl version requirements with C<use> 145 146=item * 147 148Include tests with your module 149 150=item * 151 152Choose a sensible and consistent version numbering scheme (X.YY is the common Perl module numbering scheme) 153 154=item * 155 156Increment the version number for every change, no matter how small 157 158=item * 159 160Package the module using "make dist" 161 162=item * 163 164Choose an appropriate license (GPL/Artistic is a good default) 165 166=back 167 168=head1 BEFORE YOU START WRITING A MODULE 169 170Try not to launch headlong into developing your module without spending 171some time thinking first. A little forethought may save you a vast 172amount of effort later on. 173 174=head2 Has it been done before? 175 176You may not even need to write the module. Check whether it's already 177been done in Perl, and avoid re-inventing the wheel unless you have a 178good reason. 179 180Good places to look for pre-existing modules include 181http://search.cpan.org/ and asking on modules@perl.org 182 183If an existing module B<almost> does what you want, consider writing a 184patch, writing a subclass, or otherwise extending the existing module 185rather than rewriting it. 186 187=head2 Do one thing and do it well 188 189At the risk of stating the obvious, modules are intended to be modular. 190A Perl developer should be able to use modules to put together the 191building blocks of their application. However, it's important that the 192blocks are the right shape, and that the developer shouldn't have to use 193a big block when all they need is a small one. 194 195Your module should have a clearly defined scope which is no longer than 196a single sentence. Can your module be broken down into a family of 197related modules? 198 199Bad example: 200 201"FooBar.pm provides an implementation of the FOO protocol and the 202related BAR standard." 203 204Good example: 205 206"Foo.pm provides an implementation of the FOO protocol. Bar.pm 207implements the related BAR protocol." 208 209This means that if a developer only needs a module for the BAR standard, 210they should not be forced to install libraries for FOO as well. 211 212=head2 What's in a name? 213 214Make sure you choose an appropriate name for your module early on. This 215will help people find and remember your module, and make programming 216with your module more intuitive. 217 218When naming your module, consider the following: 219 220=over 4 221 222=item * 223 224Be descriptive (i.e. accurately describes the purpose of the module). 225 226=item * 227 228Be consistent with existing modules. 229 230=item * 231 232Reflect the functionality of the module, not the implementation. 233 234=item * 235 236Avoid starting a new top-level hierarchy, especially if a suitable 237hierarchy already exists under which you could place your module. 238 239=back 240 241You should contact modules@perl.org to ask them about your module name 242before publishing your module. You should also try to ask people who 243are already familiar with the module's application domain and the CPAN 244naming system. Authors of similar modules, or modules with similar 245names, may be a good place to start. 246 247=head1 DESIGNING AND WRITING YOUR MODULE 248 249Considerations for module design and coding: 250 251=head2 To OO or not to OO? 252 253Your module may be object oriented (OO) or not, or it may have both kinds 254of interfaces available. There are pros and cons of each technique, which 255should be considered when you design your API. 256 257In I<Perl Best Practices> (copyright 2004, Published by O'Reilly Media, Inc.), 258Damian Conway provides a list of criteria to use when deciding if OO is the 259right fit for your problem: 260 261=over 4 262 263=item * 264 265The system being designed is large, or is likely to become large. 266 267=item * 268 269The data can be aggregated into obvious structures, especially if 270there's a large amount of data in each aggregate. 271 272=item * 273 274The various types of data aggregate form a natural hierarchy that 275facilitates the use of inheritance and polymorphism. 276 277=item * 278 279You have a piece of data on which many different operations are 280applied. 281 282=item * 283 284You need to perform the same general operations on related types of 285data, but with slight variations depending on the specific type of data 286the operations are applied to. 287 288=item * 289 290It's likely you'll have to add new data types later. 291 292=item * 293 294The typical interactions between pieces of data are best represented by 295operators. 296 297=item * 298 299The implementation of individual components of the system is likely to 300change over time. 301 302=item * 303 304The system design is already object-oriented. 305 306=item * 307 308Large numbers of other programmers will be using your code modules. 309 310=back 311 312Think carefully about whether OO is appropriate for your module. 313Gratuitous object orientation results in complex APIs which are 314difficult for the average module user to understand or use. 315 316=head2 Designing your API 317 318Your interfaces should be understandable by an average Perl programmer. 319The following guidelines may help you judge whether your API is 320sufficiently straightforward: 321 322=over 4 323 324=item Write simple routines to do simple things. 325 326It's better to have numerous simple routines than a few monolithic ones. 327If your routine changes its behaviour significantly based on its 328arguments, it's a sign that you should have two (or more) separate 329routines. 330 331=item Separate functionality from output. 332 333Return your results in the most generic form possible and allow the user 334to choose how to use them. The most generic form possible is usually a 335Perl data structure which can then be used to generate a text report, 336HTML, XML, a database query, or whatever else your users require. 337 338If your routine iterates through some kind of list (such as a list of 339files, or records in a database) you may consider providing a callback 340so that users can manipulate each element of the list in turn. 341File::Find provides an example of this with its 342C<find(\&wanted, $dir)> syntax. 343 344=item Provide sensible shortcuts and defaults. 345 346Don't require every module user to jump through the same hoops to achieve a 347simple result. You can always include optional parameters or routines for 348more complex or non-standard behaviour. If most of your users have to 349type a few almost identical lines of code when they start using your 350module, it's a sign that you should have made that behaviour a default. 351Another good indicator that you should use defaults is if most of your 352users call your routines with the same arguments. 353 354=item Naming conventions 355 356Your naming should be consistent. For instance, it's better to have: 357 358 display_day(); 359 display_week(); 360 display_year(); 361 362than 363 364 display_day(); 365 week_display(); 366 show_year(); 367 368This applies equally to method names, parameter names, and anything else 369which is visible to the user (and most things that aren't!) 370 371=item Parameter passing 372 373Use named parameters. It's easier to use a hash like this: 374 375 $obj->do_something( 376 name => "wibble", 377 type => "text", 378 size => 1024, 379 ); 380 381... than to have a long list of unnamed parameters like this: 382 383 $obj->do_something("wibble", "text", 1024); 384 385While the list of arguments might work fine for one, two or even three 386arguments, any more arguments become hard for the module user to 387remember, and hard for the module author to manage. If you want to add 388a new parameter you will have to add it to the end of the list for 389backward compatibility, and this will probably make your list order 390unintuitive. Also, if many elements may be undefined you may see the 391following unattractive method calls: 392 393 $obj->do_something(undef, undef, undef, undef, undef, 1024); 394 395Provide sensible defaults for parameters which have them. Don't make 396your users specify parameters which will almost always be the same. 397 398The issue of whether to pass the arguments in a hash or a hashref is 399largely a matter of personal style. 400 401The use of hash keys starting with a hyphen (C<-name>) or entirely in 402upper case (C<NAME>) is a relic of older versions of Perl in which 403ordinary lower case strings were not handled correctly by the C<=E<gt>> 404operator. While some modules retain uppercase or hyphenated argument 405keys for historical reasons or as a matter of personal style, most new 406modules should use simple lower case keys. Whatever you choose, be 407consistent! 408 409=back 410 411=head2 Strictness and warnings 412 413Your module should run successfully under the strict pragma and should 414run without generating any warnings. Your module should also handle 415taint-checking where appropriate, though this can cause difficulties in 416many cases. 417 418=head2 Backwards compatibility 419 420Modules which are "stable" should not break backwards compatibility 421without at least a long transition phase and a major change in version 422number. 423 424=head2 Error handling and messages 425 426When your module encounters an error it should do one or more of: 427 428=over 4 429 430=item * 431 432Return an undefined value. 433 434=item * 435 436set C<$Module::errstr> or similar (C<errstr> is a common name used by 437DBI and other popular modules; if you choose something else, be sure to 438document it clearly). 439 440=item * 441 442C<warn()> or C<carp()> a message to STDERR. 443 444=item * 445 446C<croak()> only when your module absolutely cannot figure out what to 447do. (C<croak()> is a better version of C<die()> for use within 448modules, which reports its errors from the perspective of the caller. 449See L<Carp> for details of C<croak()>, C<carp()> and other useful 450routines.) 451 452=item * 453 454As an alternative to the above, you may prefer to throw exceptions using 455the Error module. 456 457=back 458 459Configurable error handling can be very useful to your users. Consider 460offering a choice of levels for warning and debug messages, an option to 461send messages to a separate file, a way to specify an error-handling 462routine, or other such features. Be sure to default all these options 463to the commonest use. 464 465=head1 DOCUMENTING YOUR MODULE 466 467=head2 POD 468 469Your module should include documentation aimed at Perl developers. 470You should use Perl's "plain old documentation" (POD) for your general 471technical documentation, though you may wish to write additional 472documentation (white papers, tutorials, etc) in some other format. 473You need to cover the following subjects: 474 475=over 4 476 477=item * 478 479A synopsis of the common uses of the module 480 481=item * 482 483The purpose, scope and target applications of your module 484 485=item * 486 487Use of each publically accessible method or subroutine, including 488parameters and return values 489 490=item * 491 492Examples of use 493 494=item * 495 496Sources of further information 497 498=item * 499 500A contact email address for the author/maintainer 501 502=back 503 504The level of detail in Perl module documentation generally goes from 505less detailed to more detailed. Your SYNOPSIS section should contain a 506minimal example of use (perhaps as little as one line of code; skip the 507unusual use cases or anything not needed by most users); the 508DESCRIPTION should describe your module in broad terms, generally in 509just a few paragraphs; more detail of the module's routines or methods, 510lengthy code examples, or other in-depth material should be given in 511subsequent sections. 512 513Ideally, someone who's slightly familiar with your module should be able 514to refresh their memory without hitting "page down". As your reader 515continues through the document, they should receive a progressively 516greater amount of knowledge. 517 518The recommended order of sections in Perl module documentation is: 519 520=over 4 521 522=item * 523 524NAME 525 526=item * 527 528SYNOPSIS 529 530=item * 531 532DESCRIPTION 533 534=item * 535 536One or more sections or subsections giving greater detail of available 537methods and routines and any other relevant information. 538 539=item * 540 541BUGS/CAVEATS/etc 542 543=item * 544 545AUTHOR 546 547=item * 548 549SEE ALSO 550 551=item * 552 553COPYRIGHT and LICENSE 554 555=back 556 557Keep your documentation near the code it documents ("inline" 558documentation). Include POD for a given method right above that 559method's subroutine. This makes it easier to keep the documentation up 560to date, and avoids having to document each piece of code twice (once in 561POD and once in comments). 562 563=head2 README, INSTALL, release notes, changelogs 564 565Your module should also include a README file describing the module and 566giving pointers to further information (website, author email). 567 568An INSTALL file should be included, and should contain simple installation 569instructions. When using ExtUtils::MakeMaker this will usually be: 570 571=over 4 572 573=item perl Makefile.PL 574 575=item make 576 577=item make test 578 579=item make install 580 581=back 582 583When using Module::Build, this will usually be: 584 585=over 4 586 587=item perl Build.PL 588 589=item perl Build 590 591=item perl Build test 592 593=item perl Build install 594 595=back 596 597Release notes or changelogs should be produced for each release of your 598software describing user-visible changes to your module, in terms 599relevant to the user. 600 601Unless you have good reasons for using some other format 602(for example, a format used within your company), 603the convention is to name your changelog file C<Changes>, 604and to follow the simple format described in L<CPAN::Changes::Spec>. 605 606=head1 RELEASE CONSIDERATIONS 607 608=head2 Version numbering 609 610Version numbers should indicate at least major and minor releases, and 611possibly sub-minor releases. A major release is one in which most of 612the functionality has changed, or in which major new functionality is 613added. A minor release is one in which a small amount of functionality 614has been added or changed. Sub-minor version numbers are usually used 615for changes which do not affect functionality, such as documentation 616patches. 617 618The most common CPAN version numbering scheme looks like this: 619 620 1.00, 1.10, 1.11, 1.20, 1.30, 1.31, 1.32 621 622A correct CPAN version number is a floating point number with at least 6232 digits after the decimal. You can test whether it conforms to CPAN by 624using 625 626 perl -MExtUtils::MakeMaker -le 'print MM->parse_version(shift)' 'Foo.pm' 627 628If you want to release a 'beta' or 'alpha' version of a module but 629don't want CPAN.pm to list it as most recent use an '_' after the 630regular version number followed by at least 2 digits, eg. 1.20_01. If 631you do this, the following idiom is recommended: 632 633 $VERSION = "1.12_01"; 634 $XS_VERSION = $VERSION; # only needed if you have XS code 635 $VERSION = eval $VERSION; 636 637With that trick MakeMaker will only read the first line and thus read 638the underscore, while the perl interpreter will evaluate the $VERSION 639and convert the string into a number. Later operations that treat 640$VERSION as a number will then be able to do so without provoking a 641warning about $VERSION not being a number. 642 643Never release anything (even a one-word documentation patch) without 644incrementing the number. Even a one-word documentation patch should 645result in a change in version at the sub-minor level. 646 647=head2 Pre-requisites 648 649Module authors should carefully consider whether to rely on other 650modules, and which modules to rely on. 651 652Most importantly, choose modules which are as stable as possible. In 653order of preference: 654 655=over 4 656 657=item * 658 659Core Perl modules 660 661=item * 662 663Stable CPAN modules 664 665=item * 666 667Unstable CPAN modules 668 669=item * 670 671Modules not available from CPAN 672 673=back 674 675Specify version requirements for other Perl modules in the 676pre-requisites in your Makefile.PL or Build.PL. 677 678Be sure to specify Perl version requirements both in Makefile.PL or 679Build.PL and with C<require 5.6.1> or similar. See the section on 680C<use VERSION> of L<perlfunc/require> for details. 681 682=head2 Testing 683 684All modules should be tested before distribution (using "make disttest"), 685and the tests should also be available to people installing the modules 686(using "make test"). 687For Module::Build you would use the C<make test> equivalent C<perl Build test>. 688 689The importance of these tests is proportional to the alleged stability of a 690module. A module which purports to be stable or which hopes to achieve wide 691use should adhere to as strict a testing regime as possible. 692 693Useful modules to help you write tests (with minimum impact on your 694development process or your time) include Test::Simple, Carp::Assert 695and Test::Inline. 696For more sophisticated test suites there are Test::More and Test::MockObject. 697 698=head2 Packaging 699 700Modules should be packaged using one of the standard packaging tools. 701Currently you have the choice between ExtUtils::MakeMaker and the 702more platform independent Module::Build, allowing modules to be installed in a 703consistent manner. 704When using ExtUtils::MakeMaker, you can use "make dist" to create your 705package. Tools exist to help you to build your module in a MakeMaker-friendly 706style. These include ExtUtils::ModuleMaker and h2xs. See also L<perlnewmod>. 707 708=head2 Licensing 709 710Make sure that your module has a license, and that the full text of it 711is included in the distribution (unless it's a common one and the terms 712of the license don't require you to include it). 713 714If you don't know what license to use, dual licensing under the GPL 715and Artistic licenses (the same as Perl itself) is a good idea. 716See L<perlgpl> and L<perlartistic>. 717 718=head1 COMMON PITFALLS 719 720=head2 Reinventing the wheel 721 722There are certain application spaces which are already very, very well 723served by CPAN. One example is templating systems, another is date and 724time modules, and there are many more. While it is a rite of passage to 725write your own version of these things, please consider carefully 726whether the Perl world really needs you to publish it. 727 728=head2 Trying to do too much 729 730Your module will be part of a developer's toolkit. It will not, in 731itself, form the B<entire> toolkit. It's tempting to add extra features 732until your code is a monolithic system rather than a set of modular 733building blocks. 734 735=head2 Inappropriate documentation 736 737Don't fall into the trap of writing for the wrong audience. Your 738primary audience is a reasonably experienced developer with at least 739a moderate understanding of your module's application domain, who's just 740downloaded your module and wants to start using it as quickly as possible. 741 742Tutorials, end-user documentation, research papers, FAQs etc are not 743appropriate in a module's main documentation. If you really want to 744write these, include them as sub-documents such as C<My::Module::Tutorial> or 745C<My::Module::FAQ> and provide a link in the SEE ALSO section of the 746main documentation. 747 748=head1 SEE ALSO 749 750=over 4 751 752=item L<perlstyle> 753 754General Perl style guide 755 756=item L<perlnewmod> 757 758How to create a new module 759 760=item L<perlpod> 761 762POD documentation 763 764=item L<podchecker> 765 766Verifies your POD's correctness 767 768=item Packaging Tools 769 770L<ExtUtils::MakeMaker>, L<Module::Build> 771 772=item Testing tools 773 774L<Test::Simple>, L<Test::Inline>, L<Carp::Assert>, L<Test::More>, L<Test::MockObject> 775 776=item http://pause.perl.org/ 777 778Perl Authors Upload Server. Contains links to information for module 779authors. 780 781=item Any good book on software engineering 782 783=back 784 785=head1 AUTHOR 786 787Kirrily "Skud" Robert <skud@cpan.org> 788 789