Server IP : 180.180.241.3 / Your IP : 216.73.216.252 Web Server : Microsoft-IIS/7.5 System : Windows NT NETWORK-NHRC 6.1 build 7601 (Windows Server 2008 R2 Standard Edition Service Pack 1) i586 User : IUSR ( 0) PHP Version : 5.3.28 Disable Function : NONE MySQL : ON | cURL : ON | WGET : OFF | Perl : OFF | Python : OFF | Sudo : OFF | Pkexec : OFF Directory : C:/Program Files (x86)/Git/lib/perl5/site_perl/Git/SVN/Memoize/ |
Upload File : |
package Git::SVN::Memoize::YAML; use warnings; use strict; use YAML::Any (); # based on Memoize::Storable. sub TIEHASH { my $package = shift; my $filename = shift; my $truehash = (-e $filename) ? YAML::Any::LoadFile($filename) : {}; my $self = {FILENAME => $filename, H => $truehash}; bless $self => $package; } sub STORE { my $self = shift; $self->{H}{$_[0]} = $_[1]; } sub FETCH { my $self = shift; $self->{H}{$_[0]}; } sub EXISTS { my $self = shift; exists $self->{H}{$_[0]}; } sub DESTROY { my $self = shift; YAML::Any::DumpFile($self->{FILENAME}, $self->{H}); } sub SCALAR { my $self = shift; scalar(%{$self->{H}}); } sub FIRSTKEY { 'Fake hash from Git::SVN::Memoize::YAML'; } sub NEXTKEY { undef; } 1; __END__ =head1 NAME Git::SVN::Memoize::YAML - store Memoized data in YAML format =head1 SYNOPSIS use Memoize; use Git::SVN::Memoize::YAML; tie my %cache => 'Git::SVN::Memoize::YAML', $filename; memoize('slow_function', SCALAR_CACHE => [HASH => \%cache]); slow_function(arguments); =head1 DESCRIPTION This module provides a class that can be used to tie a hash to a YAML file. The file is read when the hash is initialized and rewritten when the hash is destroyed. The intent is to allow L<Memoize> to back its cache with a file in YAML format, just like L<Memoize::Storable> allows L<Memoize> to back its cache with a file in Storable format. Unlike the Storable format, the YAML format is platform-independent and fairly stable. Carps on error. =head1 DIAGNOSTICS See L<YAML::Any>. =head1 DEPENDENCIES L<YAML::Any> from CPAN. =head1 INCOMPATIBILITIES None reported. =head1 BUGS The entire cache is read into a Perl hash when loading the file, so this is not very scalable.