Callsite

Caller/backtrace parser with some useful utilities for manipulating the load path, and doing other relative things.

Usage

The primary thing you can do is parse a caller line(s).

pp Callsite.parse(caller)

Gives back

=> [#<struct Callsite::Line
  filename="/opt/local/lib/ruby/1.8/irb/workspace.rb",
  line=52,
  method="irb_binding">,
 #<struct Callsite::Line filename="", line=0, method=nil>]

This is also suitable for parsing a backtrace, to get detailed information about it.

begin
  raise
rescue
  pp Callsite.parse($!)
end

Produces

=> [#<struct Callsite::Line filename="(irb)", line=27, method="irb_binding">,
 #<struct Callsite::Line
  filename="/opt/local/lib/ruby/1.8/irb/workspace.rb",
  line=52,
  method="irb_binding">,
 #<struct Callsite::Line filename="", line=0, method=nil>]

There are also six methods which patch existing objects to give you powerful usage of the caller.

Callsite.activate_string_methods

This gives you the ~@ method on String, which takes any string, and gives you a relative version of it, treating it as a file path. For example,

~'lib/callsite.rb'

Gives you (on my laptop)

=> "/Users/joshua/Development/callsite/lib/callsite.rb"

Callsite.activate_file_methods

This adds the File.relative method. File.relative(file_path) has the same effect as ~file_path.

Callsite.activate_module_methods

This adds autoload_relative onto Module. This allows you to do the following.

module MyModule
  autoload_relative :Whatever, "lib/whatever"
end

In this case, lib/whatever will be treated as a relative path from the definition of the module.

Callsite.activate_kernel_dir_methods

This adds the _\DIR_REL_ and optionally _\DIR_ and require_relative methods to Kernel. _\DIR_ or _\DIR_REL_ will give you your current directory, much like _\FILE_ gives you the current _\FILE_ you’re in. require_relative is like require .. only, it’s relative.

Callsite.activate_kernel_require_methods

This adds a couple of weird methods to Kernel, require_next and require_all. There search your current $LOAD_PATH, and require the next file (ingoring the current one you’re in on the load_path) or require all files of a given name.

Callsite.activate_load_path_methods

This adds some super useful methods to $LOAD_PATH. There are find_file (finds a single file on your load path), find_all_files (finds all of em), add_current (adds to the end of the load path your current dir) and add_current! (adds it to the beginning).

As well, this gives you add and add!, both of which guard against a path being added twice to the load path. Add appends to the end if it doesn’t exist, and add! forces it to the beginning.

This deprecates dirge and load_path_find

Once you have this installed, you can use require ‘dirge’ and require ‘load_path_find’ to get exactly the functionality you had before.