Alvaro Herrera <alvhe...@alvh.no-ip.org> writes: > On 2023-Aug-10, Peter Eisentraut wrote: > >> I wanted to figure put if we can catch these more reliably, in the style of >> -Werror. AFAICT, there is no way to automatically turn all warnings into >> fatal errors. But there is a way to do it per script, by replacing >> >> use warnings; >> >> by >> >> use warnings FATAL => 'all'; >> >> See attached patch to try it out. > > BTW in case we do find that there's some unforeseen problem and we want > to roll back, it would be great to have a way to disable this without > having to edit every single Perl file again later. However, I didn't > find a way to do it -- I thought about creating a separate PgWarnings.pm > file that would do the "use warnings FATAL => 'all'" dance and which > every other Perl file would use or include; but couldn't make it work. > Maybe some Perl expert knows a good answer to this.
Like most pragmas (all-lower-case module names), `warnings` affects the currently-compiling lexical scope, so to have a module like PgWarnings inject it into the module that uses it, you'd call warnings->import in its import method (which gets called when the `use PgWarnings;`` statement is compiled, e.g.: package PgWarnings; sub import { warnings->import(FATAL => 'all'); } I wouldn't bother with a whole module just for that, but if we have a group of pragmas or modules we always want to enable/import and have the ability to change this set without having to edit all the files, it's quite common to have a ProjectName::Policy module that does that. For example, to exclude warnings that are unsafe, pointless, or impossible to fatalise (c.f. https://metacpan.org/pod/strictures#CATEGORY-SELECTIONS): package PostgreSQL::Policy; sub import { strict->import; warnings->import( FATAL => 'all', NONFATAL => qw(exec internal malloc recursion), ); warnings->uniport(qw(once)); } Now that we require Perl 5.14, we might want to consider enabling its feature bundle as well, with: feature->import(':5.14') Although the only features of note that adds are: - say: the `say` function, like `print` but appends a newline - state: `state` variables, like `my` but only initialised the first time the function they're in is called, and the value persists between calls (like function-scoped `static` variables in C) - unicode_strings: use unicode semantics for characters in the 128-255 range, regardless of internal representation > Maybe the BEGIN block of each file can `eval` a new PgWarnings.pm that > emits the "use warnings" line? That's ugly as sin, and thankfully not necessary. -ilmari