The Carp routines are useful in your own modules because
they act like die() or warn(), but with a message which is more
likely to be useful to a user of your module. In the case of
cluck, confess, and longmess that context is a summary of every
call in the call-stack. For a shorter message you can use carp,
croak or shortmess which report the error as being from where
your module was called. There is no guarantee that that is where
the error was, but it is a good educated guess.
You can also alter the way the output and logic of Carp works, by
changing some global variables in the Carp namespace. See the
section on GLOBAL VARIABLES below.
Here is a more complete description of how shortmess works. What
it does is search the call-stack for a function call stack where
it hasn't been told that there shouldn't be an error. If every
call is marked safe, it then gives up and gives a full stack
backtrace instead. In other words it presumes that the first likely
looking potential suspect is guilty. Its rules for telling whether
a call shouldn't generate errors work as follows:
Any call from a package to itself is safe.
Packages claim that there won't be errors on calls to or from
packages explicitly marked as safe by inclusion in @CARP_NOT, or
(if that array is empty) @ISA. The ability to override what
@ISA says is new in 5.8.
The trust in item 2 is transitive. If A trusts B, and B trusts C, then A trusts C. So if you do not override @ISA
with @CARP_NOT, then this trust relationship is identical to,
``inherits from''.
Any call from an internal Perl module is safe. (Nothing keeps
user modules from marking themselves as internal to Perl, but
this practice is discouraged.)
Any call to Carp is safe. (This rule is what keeps it from
reporting the error where you call carp/croak/shortmess.)
As a debugging aid, you can force Carp to treat a croak as a confess
and a carp as a cluck across all modules. In other words, force a
detailed stack trace to be given. This can be very helpful when trying
to understand why, or from where, a warning or error is being generated.
This feature is enabled by 'importing' the non-existent symbol
'verbose'. You would typically enable it by saying
perl -MCarp=verbose script.pl
or by including the string MCarp=verbose in the PERL5OPT
environment variable.
Alternately, you can set the global variable $Carp::Verbose to true.
See the GLOBAL VARIABLES section below.
This variable determines how many call frames are to be skipped when
reporting where an error occurred on a call to one of Carp's
functions. For example:
$Carp::CarpLevel = 1;
sub bar { .... or _error('Wrong input') }
sub _error { Carp::carp(@_) }
This would make Carp report the error as coming from bar's caller,
rather than from _error's caller, as it normally would.
This variable makes Carp use the longmess function at all times.
This effectively means that all calls to carp become cluck and
all calls to croak become confess.
Note, this is analogous to using use Carp 'verbose'.
The Carp routines don't handle exception objects currently.
If called with a first argument that is a reference, they simply
call die() or warn(), as appropriate.