A Ruby module loader inspired by the semantics of js modules.
One of Ruby's greatest weaknesses is that it lacks a good mechanism
for named imports and exports. When you require
a ruby file, its
constant declarations (like classes) get evaluated into your scope.
In contrast, the node.js commonjs module system allows developers
to explicitly declare exports that consumers can access on
the loaded module container. Many prefer the explicit and isolated aspects
of js modules. This module loader defines the primitives import
and
export
necessary for a cleaner modules abstraction in Ruby while
maintaining some interoperability with existing practices in the Ruby
standard library and community packages.
bundle install modules
require 'modules'
# Tell modules where it should look for code
modules.config(basepath: File.dirname(__FILE__))
# Now import and export are available globally throughout your program.
two = import('./two')
# import also hangs off of the modules global if you prefer
two = modules.import('./two')
export do
two + two
end
You can run your program through the modules
command-line interface
via modules run <path/to/main.rb>
. This invocation style doesn't
require your program to load the gem; main.rb
can use import
to load
local modules defined with export
as well as other ruby libraries.
Declare a module (one per file) that other modules can load by calling import
with a relative filepath. export
takes a single block parameter whose return
value is what gets exported from the module.
Declare a single export from a module. This will make it so that your
module exports a hash with {key => value}
. You can call this multiple times
in a module.
Load another module. import
works with local modules declared with export
as
well as other Ruby libraries that declare constants like classes and modules. In
the latter case when loading external libraries, you need to provide the module name
as the id
parameter and import
will return a Hash
containing all constants
declared. For instance
import('test/unit/assertions') =>
{
"Test"=>#<Class:0x00000001d08f58>,
"Test::Unit"=>#<Class:0x00000001ab38c0>,
"Test::Unit::Assertions"=>#<Class:0x00000001ab29e8>,
...
}
Configure the loader with an options hash. Currently supports
(String) :basepath
- base directory that the loader uses for filepath resolution
(Boolean) :save_the_environment
- whether or not to clean up global constants for interop loading
Clear a module previously declared with export(id)
from the modules internal cache.
### consts.rb
export :foo, 'foo'
export :bar, 'bar'
### foobar.rb
# Load the constants from consts.rb
consts = import './consts'
export do
lambda { consts[:foo] + consts[:bar] }
end
### test.rb
require 'modules'
modules.config(basepath: File.dirname(__FILE__))
# load local modules defined with an amd-inspired syntax
foobar = import './foobar'
# compatible with external globals-style ruby modules
assert = import('test/unit/assertions')['Test::Unit::Assertions']
assert.assert_equal(foobar.call(), 'foobar')
# No global namespace pollution \o/
assert.assert_equal(defined? Test, nil)
When import('bar/baz')
is called from /home/lambdabaa/foo
, modules
will build /home/lambdabaa/foo/bar/baz
(currently by composing
File.expand_path
and File.join
) and check whether this file exists.
If it does, modules
will assume this is a local import. Otherwise,
it will assume bar/baz
isn't a locally defined module and will try
require('bar/baz')
.
One important consideration is whether loading code through modules
incurs any performance penalties compared with other ruby mechanisms
such as globally available constants, global variables, or instance
variables on the main object. Preliminary testing suggests that
modules v1 (essentially caching code loaded via Kernel#load
in a
hash by filename) is even faster than these other strategies!
The module loader was able to load 1000 modules in an average of 80ms. That's 2x the speed of the next fastest method (global variables) and 2.5x the speed of the slowest method (ruby native modules / constants).
I'm glad you asked! Under the hood we load code into the modules cache
using Kernel#load
with wrap=true
. The interop layer's implementation is currently a bit sketchy
and relies on comparing snapshots of Module.constants
before and after issuing
a require
for a core lib or external package.