The @ISA
variable is a package variable that is used by all classes to indicate the class's parent (or parents). While this variable can be safely read to learn a class's inheritance hierarchy, it must not be modified at runtime [Conway 2005].
Noncompliant Code Example (@ISA
)
This noncompliant code example defines a base class and an object class with simple methods:
{ package Base; sub new { my $class = shift; my $self = {}; # no parent bless $self, $class; print "new Base\n"; return $self; }; sub base_value {return 1;} } { package Derived; our @ISA = qw(Base); # establishes inheritance sub new { my $class = shift; my $self = $class->SUPER::new(@_); # relies on established inheritance print "new Derived\n"; return $self; }; sub derived_value {return 2;} } BEGIN { my $derived = Derived->new(); my $b = $derived->base_value(); my $d = $derived->derived_value(); print "base_value = $d\n"; print "derived_value = $d\n"; }
When the code is run, we get a program error:
Can't locate object method "new" via package "Derived::SUPER" at ...
This error occurs because the BEGIN
block is evaluated at the beginning of runtime, before the @ISA
statement can be evaluated. Consequently, when the Derived::new()
constructor is invoked, the Derived
class has an empty parents list and therefore fails to invoke Base::new()
.
Compliant Solution (parent
)
This compliant solution uses the parent
module rather than directly modifying the @ISA
variable.
# ... package Base is unchanged { package Derived; use parent qw(Base); sub new { my $class = shift; my $self = $class->SUPER::new(@_); # relies on established inheritance print "new Derived\n"; return $self; }; sub derived_value {return 2;} } # ... The rest of the code is unchanged
The parent
module establishes the inheritance hierarchy at parse time, before any runtime code, including the BEGIN
block, is evaluated. When the Derived::new()
constructor is invoked, Perl knows that Derived
is an instance of Base
, and the program produces the correct output:
new Base new Derived derived_value = 2 base_value = 1
Risk Assessment
Modifying class inheritance at runtime can introduce subtle bugs and is usually a sign of poor design.
Recommendation | Severity | Likelihood | Remediation Cost | Priority | Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
OOP00-PL | Low | Unlikely | Low | P3 | L3 |
Automated Detection
Tool | Diagnostic |
---|---|
Perl::Critic | ClassHierarchies::ProhibitExplicitISA |
Bibliography
[Conway 2005] | "Inheritance," p. 360 |
---|---|
[CPAN] | Maischein, Max, parent |
[CPAN] | Shank, Elliot, Perl-Critic-1.116 ClassHierarchies::ProhibitExplicitISA |