Module: Kernel

Defined in:
lib/zeitwerk/kernel.rb

Class Method Summary collapse

Class Method Details

.require(path) ⇒ Object



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# File 'lib/zeitwerk/kernel.rb', line 27

def require(path)
  if loader = Zeitwerk::Registry.loader_for(path)
    if path.end_with?(".rb")
      required = zeitwerk_original_require(path)
      loader.on_file_autoloaded(path) if required
      required
    else
      loader.on_dir_autoloaded(path)
      true
    end
  else
    required = zeitwerk_original_require(path)
    if required
      abspath = $LOADED_FEATURES.last
      if loader = Zeitwerk::Registry.loader_for(abspath)
        loader.on_file_autoloaded(abspath)
      end
    end
    required
  end
end

.zeitwerk_original_requireObject

Zeitwerk’s main idea is to define autoloads for project constants, and then intercept them when triggered in this thin ‘Kernel#require` wrapper.

That allows us to complete the circle, invoke callbacks, autovivify modules, define autoloads for just autoloaded namespaces, update internal state, etc.

On the other hand, if you publish a new version of a gem that is now managed by Zeitwerk, client code can reference directly your classes and modules and should not require anything. But if someone has legacy require calls around, they will work as expected, and in a compatible way. This feature is by now EXPERIMENTAL and UNDOCUMENTED.

We cannot decorate with prepend + super because Kernel has already been included in Object, and changes in ancestors don’t get propagated into already existing ancestor chains on Ruby < 3.0.



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# File 'lib/zeitwerk/kernel.rb', line 21

alias_method :zeitwerk_original_require, :require