class Pry class Command::Edit class MethodPatcher attr_accessor :_pry_ attr_accessor :code_object def initialize(_pry_, code_object) @_pry_ = _pry_ @code_object = code_object end # perform the patch def perform_patch if code_object.alias? with_method_transaction do _pry_.evaluate_ruby patched_code end else _pry_.evaluate_ruby patched_code end end private def patched_code @patched_code ||= wrap(Pry::Editor.edit_tempfile_with_content(adjusted_lines)) end # The method code adjusted so that the first line is rewritten # so that def self.foo --> def foo def adjusted_lines lines = code_object.source.lines.to_a lines[0] = definition_line_for_owner(lines.first) lines end # Run some code ensuring that at the end target#meth_name will not have changed. # # When we're redefining aliased methods we will overwrite the method at the # unaliased name (so that super continues to work). By wrapping that code in a # transation we make that not happen, which means that alias_method_chains, etc. # continue to work. # # @param [String] meth_name The method name before aliasing # @param [Module] target The owner of the method def with_method_transaction temp_name = "__pry_#{code_object.original_name}__" co = code_object code_object.owner.class_eval do alias_method temp_name, co.original_name yield alias_method co.name, co.original_name alias_method co.original_name, temp_name end ensure co.send(:remove_method, temp_name) rescue nil end # Update the definition line so that it can be eval'd directly on the Method's # owner instead of from the original context. # # In particular this takes `def self.foo` and turns it into `def foo` so that we # don't end up creating the method on the singleton class of the singleton class # by accident. # # This is necessarily done by String manipulation because we can't find out what # syntax is needed for the argument list by ruby-level introspection. # # @param String The original definition line. e.g. def self.foo(bar, baz=1) # @return String The new definition line. e.g. def foo(bar, baz=1) def definition_line_for_owner(line) if line =~ /^def (?:.*?\.)?#{Regexp.escape(code_object.original_name)}(?=[\(\s;]|$)/ "def #{code_object.original_name}#{$'}" else raise CommandError, "Could not find original `def #{code_object.original_name}` line to patch." end end # Apply wrap_for_owner and wrap_for_nesting successively to `source` # @param [String] source # @return [String] The wrapped source. def wrap(source) wrap_for_nesting(wrap_for_owner(source)) end # Update the source code so that when it has the right owner when eval'd. # # This (combined with definition_line_for_owner) is backup for the case that # wrap_for_nesting fails, to ensure that the method will stil be defined in # the correct place. # # @param [String] source The source to wrap # @return [String] def wrap_for_owner(source) Thread.current[:__pry_owner__] = code_object.owner source = "Thread.current[:__pry_owner__].class_eval do\n#{source}\nend" end # Update the new source code to have the correct Module.nesting. # # This method uses syntactic analysis of the original source file to determine # the new nesting, so that we can tell the difference between: # # class A; def self.b; end; end # class << A; def b; end; end # # The resulting code should be evaluated in the TOPLEVEL_BINDING. # # @param [String] source The source to wrap. # @return [String] def wrap_for_nesting(source) nesting = Pry::Code.from_file(code_object.source_file).nesting_at(code_object.source_line) (nesting + [source] + nesting.map{ "end" } + [""]).join("\n") rescue Pry::Indent::UnparseableNestingError => e source end end end end