package Aspect::Library::Singleton; use strict; use warnings; use Carp; use Aspect; use base 'Aspect::Modular'; my %Cache; sub get_advice { my ($self, $constructor_matcher) = @_; return before { my $context = shift; my $class = $context->self; $class = ref $class || $class; if (exists $Cache{$class}) { $context->return_value($Cache{$class}) } else { $Cache{$class} = $context->run_original } } call $constructor_matcher; } 1; =head1 NAME Aspect::Library::Singleton - A singleton aspect =head1 SYNOPSIS use Aspect::Singleton; aspect Singleton => 'Foo::new'; my $f1 = Foo->new; my $f2 = Foo->new; # now $f1 and $f2 refer to the same object =head1 SUPER L =head1 DESCRIPTION A reusable aspect that forces singleton behavior on a constructor. The constructor is defined by a pointcut spec: a string. regexp, or code ref. It is slightly different from C (L): =over =item * No specific name requirement on the constructor for the external interface, or for the implementation (C requires clients use C, and that subclasses override C<_new_instance()>). With aspects, you can change the cardinality of your objects without changing the clients, or the objects themselves. =item * No need to inherit from anything- use pointcuts to specify the constructors you want to memoize. Instead of I singleton behavior from a base class, you are I it in, using the aspect. =item * No package variable or method is added to the callers namespace =back Note that this is just a special case of memoizing. =head1 SEE ALSO See the L pods for a guide to the Aspect module. You can find an example comparing the OO and AOP solutions in the C directory of the distribution. =cut